Volume 94, No. 48The Chicago MaroonThe University of Chicago Friday. May 3, 1985Rehnquist to give Olin lectureBEN FORESTHyde Park Theatre openingdelayed until May 24By Ciaran ObroinThe Hyde Park Theater,closed since April 1983, willreopen on May 24. The the¬ater, located in Harper Court,originally was scheduled toopen May 10, but extensiverenovations forced the date tobe moved. The theater hadbeen closed due to low reve¬nues and the poor condition ofthe building.Owner Bruce Sagan andnew managers, the M & RAmusements Corporation,have invested $700,000 to ren¬ovate and convert the one the¬ater into three theaters. Thiswas done by extending thebalcony to make a ceiling andthen dividing the lower roomin half. The three theaterscombined will hold between1400 and 1500 people. Newseats, sound and projectionsystems have also beenVadded. By showing three movies at the same time in¬stead of just one, the theaterexpects a higher number ofpatrons and increased reve¬nues. Bruce Sagan also ownsthe Hyde Park Herald and theSouthtown Economist.Louis Marks of the M & RAmusement Corporation doesnot see any competition be¬tween the reopening theatreand the film societies on thiscampus. Whereas the film so¬cieties show older movies, theHyde Park Theater will showregular first-run movies. Oneof the movies that will beshown opening day is the newJames Bond movie “A Viewto Kill.” The other two mov¬ies have not yet been chosen.Ticket prices will be between$4.50 and $5.00. The M & RCorporation, the second larg¬est movie chain, also man¬ages the Fine Arts Theater at418 S. Michigan and severalsuburban theaters. J By Max J. RheeA capacity crowd will hearUnited States Supreme CourtJustice William H. Rehnquistlecture on ‘‘TheLawyer-Statesman inAmerian History” next Mon¬day at 4 p.m. in the LawSchool auditorium. Rehn-quist’s lecture is being spon¬sored by the Law School’schapter of the Federalist So¬ciety for Law and Public Poli¬cy and the John M. Olin Foun¬dation. A short question andanswer session will follow thelecture.Tickets guaranteeing seat¬ing for the lecture are nolonger available, since theywere all distributed this pastTuesday. However, the tick¬ets only guarantee a seat inthe auditorium up untiltwenty minutes before thescheduled start. Seats notfilled at this time will then bealloted on a first-come first-serve basis. In addition, theadjoining courtroom will beused to accommodate up to150 more people who will lis¬ten to Justice Rehnquist viaintercom.It is no surprise that JusticeRehnquist, generally consi¬ dered to be one of the stron¬gest conservative voices onthe Court, is a guest of theFederalist Society, which is“organized to promote dis¬cussion of political issuesfrom a conservative perspec¬tive.” Rehnquist has built anentire career on the mainte¬nance of a stauchly conserva¬tive philosophy.Graduating first in his classin 1952 at Stanford Law-School, he entered the judi¬ciary as a clerk under JusticeRobert H. Jackson. Followinghis clerkship. Rehnquist setup a law practice in Phoenixwhere his conservative acti¬vism began to take shape. By1971, Rehnquist was head ofthe Office of Legal Counselfor the Nixon administration.Finally, following Congress’rejection of two Nixon appoin¬tees for the nation’s highestcourt, Nixon nominatedRehnquist.Justice Rehnquist’s earlyyears on the bench weremarked by a storm of acerbicone-man dissents. But withthe election of Ronald Reaganand the gradual rightwardshift of the Court, this 13-yearveteran is no longer the lone William Rehnquistvoice of the Court’s conserva¬tive conscience. Along withChief Justice Burger and theaddition of fellow Stanford \classmate and Arizonian,Sandra Day O’Connor, a newconservative bloc hasemerged and left its mark onsuch particularly crucialissues as civil liberties, theauthority of Federal govern¬ment, and the rights of ac¬cused criminals.Following his talk Monday,Justice Rehnquist will returnto the Law School the nextday to preside over theHinton Moot Court Competi¬tion.Bio core sequences receive faceliftMaIIv loir. ^ ~ ......By Molly McClainCounting dinosuar vertebraat the Field Museum, watch¬ing bacteria grow, examiningthe production of beer in “OurMouldy Earth”-these andother special joys may bepassed up by certain studentsbeginning next fall.The Biological Science Col¬legiate Division (BSCD) willFaculty shakes up the SocSci coreBy Ravi Rjijmane that of SCS the instructors cific attention to psychologBy Ravi najmaneThe Social Science Colle¬giate Division (SSCD) facultyhave approved a sweepingrestructure of the SocialScience Common Core. Thecurrent offering of four dis¬tinct core classes will be re¬placed next year by a “gener¬al conceptual rubric” to beaddressed by all coreclasses.SSCD Master Tetsuo Najitasays the change is designed toalleviate staff shortages andpromote intellectual coher¬ence within the Social ScienceCore. The change has metgeneral approval, with oppo¬sition centering around the lo¬gistics of the plan rather thanits intellectual integrity.Currently, four SocialScience courses, PoliticalOrder and Change (POC),Self/Culture/Society (SCS),Mind, and National Experi¬ence and InternationalThought (NEIT) are beingtaught in a total of 31 sections.Najita said that next year“there were not enoughteachers for each of the 3-term sequences to-staff the 31sections necessary to teachintroductory Social Sciencesto the incoming freshmanclass.“What we decided to do wasto have all sections in eachterm relate to a general con¬ceptual rubric,” Najita said.In fall quarter the course willconcentrate on the conceptualfoundations of political econ¬omy; in the winter, the focuswill be on “the individual andsociety; ” and the spring termwill cover “interpretations ofculture.” Within this overallframework, which resembles that of SCS the instructorswill divide into three groups.The teachers within eachgroup will cooperate amongthemselves to give their sec¬tions a unique specific per¬spective on the general topicof each term.Fundamental questions ofthe first quarter sequencewill be “what are the basicconcepts we use to describepolitical economy, and onwhat basis do we distributejustice, power and re¬sources?” said Najita.UTetsuo NajitaStudents will answer prob¬lems involving American po¬litical science, classical for¬mulations of political theory,or public policy study, de¬pending upon the backgroundof the professor.There will be no uniformreading list, stressed Najita.“While some teachers mayassign Smith, Marx andKeynes, others may decide togo with Jefferson and de Toc-queville.”During the winter quarterthe core course will addressthe individual and his rela¬tionship to society, with spe¬ cific attention to psychologi¬cal processes of the mind andsocial stratification and so¬cial order. Again, Najita cau¬tions that, whereas a teacherwith a Self, Culture, Societybackground will be likely tostress Weber and Freud, aMind professor will analyze“large aggregates of quanti¬fied social date or psychologi¬cal data.”Spring Quarter, the coursewill focus on cultural anthro¬pology. Students will learnwhy it is relevant to study thecultures of other societies andhow the comparitive methodworks in shedding light uponour own culture. The works ofDurkheim, Levi-Strauss andother cultural anthropologistswill be presented, said Naji¬ta.In Winter and SpringQuarters, under the new sys¬tem, four or five sections willremain specifically as Mind.These sections will approachthe general concepts from themore quantified perspectivecurrently used in Mind.The remaining sections willfollow the Self, Culture, Soci¬ety model. NEIT and POC. assuch, will basically disappearfrom the core program. Thiswill likely be balanced by theinflux of numerous PoliticalScience professors into theCommon Core and by the ex¬panded analysis of politicaleconomy in the first quarter.Reacting to potential staffshortage (31 sections weretaught by 27 professors thisWinter Quarter), the SSCDGoverning Committee consi¬dered recruiting more in¬structors to teach the core,continued on page 15 initiate a new program - theAdvanced Core Program - inwhich students submitting aformal application may be el¬igible to replace one, two. orall three of their 100 level Bi¬ology Core classes with 200level advanced biologyclasses. This two year experi¬ment, proposed by MartinFeder, assistant professor inthe department of Anatomyand the College, was enthu¬siastically received by the Bi¬ological Science CurriculumCommittee as a “way of in¬creasing the scope and..thedepth of the core offerings.”The Advanced Core Pro¬gram will not only provide amore rigorous introduction tobiology for students who areaccepted into the programbut also will provide thosestudents with an opportunityto take more advancedcourses in biology than theirdegree program presentlypermits.Current concentration re¬quirements for biologymajors allow for six ad¬vanced (200 level) courses,and the report of the TaskForce on Course Electives inProject ’84 shows that moststudents, wanting more ad¬vanced preparation, choose to use one of their electivesfor additional biologycourses. Involved in the grad¬uate admission program,Feder finds that students“often have to take more ofthose advanced courses whenthey begin graduate school.”The Advanced Core Pro¬gram. according to JamesTeeri, Master of the BSCD,will allow students who havehad greater contact with thesubject matter to “meet theletter and spirit of the com¬mon core” while allowingthem to earn more advancedcredits.What type of students arethese? Feder says. “We arelooking for two types of stu¬dents to participate in theprogram. The first type arestudents who want a morerigorous introduction to theBiology Core sequence. Thesecond are those who seethemselves majoring in thesciences in general, in biologyin particular.”Applications, available inthe BSCD office, are requiredso that the committee canchoose students with good re¬cords. who are able to handlethe work load entailed. Theprogram is not intended forcontinued on page 152The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985Earn Over $1150 A MonthWhile Still In School.Sophomores! Juniors! If you're a math, engineering or physical sciencesmajor, you might qualify to get a checkfor more than $1150 every month.It's part of the Navy's NuclearPropulsion Officer CandidateProgram. And the nearly$26,000 you can earn whilestill ia school is just thestart.When you successfullycomplete your studiesand become a Naval officeryou receive an additional$6,000 bonus. On top ofthat you receive a yearof graduate-leveltraining you can't get anywhere else at any price.As an officer in today's Nuclear Navy you have a career advantage nocivilian job can offer. The Navy operates over half the nuclear reactorsin America. The early responsibility and unequalled experience you get asa menfcer of the nuclear propulsion officer team place you among thenation's most respected professionals in one of the world's fastestgrowing fields.In addition to the professional advantages, as a nuclear-trained officer,after four- years with regular promotions and pay increases you can beearning as much as $40,000. That's in addition to a full benefits package.Find out more about the unique and rewarding Nuclear Propulsion Officer-Candidate Program. Call or write the Naval Management Programs Office:Send resume to U.S. Navy Management Opportunities, Bldg 41 NAS,Code 20, N101, Glenview, IL 60026 or call (collect) 312 724-7887for an appointment. Minorities encouraged to applyNavy Officers Get Responsibility Fast.• ••••• • • •The“North Side”MAROONEXPRESSSUPPORT THE MAROON. . . TAKE ITTHIS WEEKEND AND FIND OUT HOWEASY AND SAFE IT CAN BE . . .... catch “Shear Madness” the crazy who-dun-it with audienceparticipation —south of the Art Institute on Michigan.Beforehand have dinner at the Dearborn St. Oyster Bar ~great seafood (not open on Sat.) Pick up some Travelhost dis¬count dinner tickets for this restaurant and 50 others at theReynolds Club Box Office.... catch the evening jazz performance at “Orphans” couple ofblocks away from Grant Hospital stop on Lincoln — block pastBiograph and 3 Penny theatres. Also in this area is the BodyPolitic Theatre which is now showing “All My Sons,” and theApollo Theatre which is netting rave reviews for “Pump Boysand Dinettes.”Tickets for the Maroon Express can bepurchased with a U of C ID at the Ida Noyesinformation desk, Reynolds Club box office,or any Residence Hall front desk. Individualone-way tickets cost $1.25. Rockefeller Memorial ChapelSunday, May 5,Ecumenical Service of Holy Communion11:00 a.m.University Religious ServiceJAMES M. GUSTAFSONUniversity Preacher and University Professor ofTheological Ethics in the Divinity School and theCommittee on Social ThoughtTuesdayDame Myra Hess Memorial Concert SeriesOpen and free to the public8:00 p.m. thisSundayatRockefellerMemorialChapel59th 8l WoodlawnTimberlandDRY DOCKYOUR TIMBERLAND SCUPPERS ARE IN.VIBRAM SOLE • WATERPROOF LEATHERSBRASS EYELETS A iw$ 6495THE SHOE CORRAL1534 E. 55th St.HYDE PARK SHOPPING CTR • 667-9471Store Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-6:30, Sat. 9-6:00ONE O'CLOCK JUMPPRE-SPRING DANCEOOOOOOOOOOOQQOQftftMflftMQOOOOOQOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOwith instruction byARTURO PEREZ-REYESFRIDAY MAY 38:00 pm ida noyesFREE!!Sponsored by the Student Activities Officer,.inews 3^mmmmmm—mm—m—m—mmmmmmmm—mmm—mmmmmm The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985 mmmmmmmWirszup tells Senate about America’s “educational crisis”By Frank LubyUniversity of Chicago mathematicsprofessor Izaak Wirszup, an expert onSoviet education and a long-time cam¬paigner for American educational re¬forms, addressed a senate subcommit¬tee yesterday on proposed fundinglimits for the National Science Founda¬tion’s Directorate for Science and En¬gineering Education. Claiming “an ed¬ucational crisis’’ in the United States,Wirszup asked the appropriations sub¬committee on HUD and IndependentAgencies to “help prevent a major poli¬cy error. . .(which) will once again putthe agency (NSF) in an extremely pre¬carious situation.”Wirszup directed his prepared state¬ment to Senator Jake Garn, the sub¬committee chairman and a recent pas¬senger on the space shuttle Discovery.The statement powerfully illustratesthe “dangerous condition” of Ameri¬can science and mathematics educa¬tion by comparing the American edu¬cational system with systems in Japanand the Soviet Union. “Without aggres¬sive investment, US science and math¬ematics education will continue to reapthe meager returns it has shown in re¬cent years,” said Wirszup in callingupon Garn—who helped keep the NSFDirectorate functioning in 1981—to aidthe Directorate once again.The Directorate currently conductsprograms in research career develop¬ment, college science instrumentation,instructional materials and research,teacher enhancement, and studies andprogram assessment. It stresses “pro¬viding the Nation’s youth with a levelof education in mathematics, science,and technology that reflects the needsof the nation and is the highest qualityattained anywhere in the world,” andWirszup claims that thanks to gener¬ous funding during fiscal 1985 the Di¬rectorate “made real headway toward(that) goal.”Wirszup indicated that the fiscal 1986outlook resembles that of fiscal 1981, when budget restrictions placed the Di¬rectorate in jeopardy. Funding cutswill prevent the NSF, with a backlog of900 science education proposals at anestimated cost of $400 million, from un¬dertaking a substantial number of“high-quality” proposals.The Education Crisis“American elementary and secon¬dary education, especially, in the areasof science and mathematics, is in dan¬gerous condition,” said Wirszup, wholists several factors contributing to theUS’s decline in achievement levelssince 1966 and its lag behind the Sovietsand the Japanese in technical instruc¬tion.Izaak WirszupWhereas the American systemcovers physics, chemistry, and geome¬try in “packaged, one-year courses”the Soviets and Japanese treat thosetopics in sequences lasting five to tenyears. “In the USSR all secondaryschool students take a compulsory five-year sequence of physics courses de¬veloped in accordance with the latestresearch in educational psychology,”Wirszup said, adding that Soviet stu¬dent also “studies geometry contin¬uously over a ten-year span.”The differences occur throughout theeducational spectrum. While someAmerican high school graduates havehad no exposure to foreign language, Soviet students, according to Wirszup,“are obliged to take seven years of aforeign language.”The Japanese 12-year elementaryand secondary school program is somuch more rigorous, Wirszup claims,that “in terms of achievement a typi¬cal Japanese student graduates fromsecondary school with roughly fourmore years of education than theaverage American high school gradu¬ate.” Illustrating this in mathematics,Wirszup mentioned a recent Universityof Illinois at Chicago study which con¬cluded that “an average Illinois highschool mathematics student, whenmatched against 100 of his Japanesecounterparts, would rank 99th.”Wirszup adds,In sum, the vast majority of ourhigh school students have notstudied physics, chemistry, geog¬raphy, or a foreign language, andhave had only a modicum ofmathematics. Not only do theylack a solid foundation for furthertraining, they cannot even applybasic mathematics and science tosimple jobs. This results in a per¬sonal tragedy of shattered hopesfor countless young Americans. .. it is also a national tragedy, forit.. . places a tremendous burdenon the economy and society.This gap in educational achievementhas ramifications in the military aswell. In his 1979 report to the NSF.Wirszup said that “The disparity be¬tween the science and mathematicstraining of an average Soviet military-recruit and that of an average memberof our All-Volunteer army is so greatthat comparisons are almost meanin¬gless.”Because the Soviets have made acommitment to educational research,including learning psychology andcareful design of its curriculum in re¬sponse to its continuing research, the gap will widen because the US has “nonational commitment to essential re¬forms.” Wirszup sees the NSF Direc¬torate as fulfilling that role in the areasof science and mathematics.“The disparity between the scienceand mathematics training of anaverage Soviet military recruitand that of an average member ofour All-Volunteer army is so greatthat comparisons are almostmeaningless.”Wirszup cited the University of Chi¬cago’s School Mathematics Program,an “innovative mathematics pilot pro¬gram for Chicago-area schools,” as anexample of what the NSF Directoratecould help undertake, with properfunding, on a nationwide basis. Spon¬sored by the Amoco Corporation, theprogram relies on talent from the U ofC, other area schools, and industry inan effort to test a new approach tomathematics instruction. “Such devel¬opments could be multiplied aroundthe country, but there must be leader¬ship and seed money available from astrong NSF Directorate. . .” said Wirs¬zup.“Resolving our educational crisiswill mean undertaking of unprecedent¬ed magnitude,” he added. “The onlyanswer is a federally led national mo¬bilization for education and a coordin¬ated mobilization in each state.” Wirs¬zup realizes that the Americandemocratic system demands the au¬tonomy of individual school districts ina decentralized system (unlike Japan’sand the USSR's), but feels that makessuch a nationwide movement all themore necessary to accomplish the re¬forms needed to bring the Americanstudents on par with the Soviets andJapanese.HYDE PARK BY THE LAKE5500 So. Shore Drive643-3600Valet ParkingFor that special occasion,treat yourself to elegantdining and attentiveservice. «50'a & BO'o DaMce Partlyfeaturing the band ...Pocketwatch Paul and theRhythm RocketsSwing to your favorite tune,onINTERNATIONAL HOUSEASSEMBLY HALLAdmission $3.00 Over 21 admittedColumbia condemns apartheid4 viewpointsThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985 —^Ida’s gym a necessityEarlier this year FSACCSL asked several of its members to explore the issueof athletics at the University of Chicago. Looking specifically at the club sports,intramurals, the facilities, and the varsity sports, the FSACCSL members con¬tinued to make their presentations at Monday’s meeting, and the question ofspace poked its head into every report and every discussion. Clearly, the Uni¬versity of Chicago has overcrowding problems in its indoor and outdoor recrea¬tional facilities, and the impending closing of the Ida Noyes Gym will only wor¬sen the problem.The Dean of Students office has yet to release a formal list of alternative gym¬nasium sights, and meanwhile the University’s intramural program, which in¬cluded over 80 basketball teams and over 60 volleybal teams in 1984-85, contin¬ues to expand. Other groups, including open recreational users and classes suchas aerobics, compete for floor space as well. One of the aerobics classes hasalready sent a letter to President Gray and Dean of Students Charles O’Connellto request a reconsideration of the proposal to build a theatre to replace the IdaNoyes Gymnasium. The letter included a signed petition, and at least one otherindependent petition drive has been proposed. The Maroon urges other groupswith a special interest in this problem—the professional schools, residencehalls, and casual joggers to name a few—to join in the effect to have the Univer¬sity of Chicago reconsider its decision to build yet another theatre facility inVjjyde Park, where a gymnasium is a necessity, not a luxury. jA weekend pass can save Maroon ExpressTo the editor:When I read recently in The Maroonthat the Maroon Express is in jeo¬pardy, I thought of Gilligan's Island.Those crazy castaways; they came upwith a plan to get themselves off theirdeserted island but they never couldseem to hold everything together longenough to actually make it to the main¬land.With those antics in mind, I askedmyself if logic really dictates the ter¬mination of the under-used Maroon Ex¬press?Of course not. Aside from LawSchool Films and an isolated eventhere and there, this campus is a re¬creational basket case. Taking greateradvantage of the manifold cures down¬town Chicago offers is the patient’sonly real chance for improvement. TheMaroon Express, in turn, is the only re¬liable. realistic way of getting the pa¬tient in touch with the cure, as theQuality of Life Committee correctlyperceived in setting up the service. Forthe castaways, being marooned wasthe problem; for the students of thisschool, it can be part of the solution.Yes, statistics show that only tenpeople ride the bus on any given trip —but these are ten very valuable pecpJclSubsidies aren’t enough. Like the pio¬neers who blazed trails across this country, these people are vital rolemodels who should be held up for emu¬lation.For some reason, some students onthis campus seem to think the recrea¬tional and social pursuits normally as¬sociated with college life are some sortof harmful vice. They are wrong. Theyare good students but sorry collegians,and they’re missing out on manyenriching experiences. “Don’t let yourschooling interfere with your educa¬tion,” Mark Twain advised. He wasright.The Maroon Express is a laudablefirst step toward improved socialhealth on this campus. If ridership in¬creased, it would be good for the stu¬dents and good for the school.So. in the hope of making the MaroonExpress even more valuable, and cer¬tainly financially viable, I’d like tooffer a modest proposal that would nodoubt increase ridership some and rev¬enues a great deal: Instead of charging$1.25 per trip on the bus, the universityshould charge $10 for a weekend pass.What good would that do? Well yousee, under my plan students who wantto ride the bus could do so for free;those who want to stay home and studywould have to buy a weekend pass.Chris CryanMBA ’86Chairman ofMaybe it’s just because it’s fifthweek — I don’t know — but I feel ten¬sion in the air. I first started to notice itlast Friday standing in line at the Bur¬sar’s office.I went, of course, at 12:30. So did ev¬erybody else. (I’m sure you saw methere, I was the one with the glasses.)Sometimes I wonder why I trust themwith my money at all. It used to be thatany time of the day, there were about20 people in line, a dozen or so windowsthat could be used, and 3 tellers. Thencame the new office hours “To serveyou better!” (That’s what banksalways put on their posters when theyadvertise some new way to jerk thecustomer around.) Now there are 40 the Boredpeople in line, 12 windows, and still 3tellers. These people do math for a liv¬ing?While standing in line I couldn’t helpbut wonder (and believe me I hadplenty of time to do it) about the kind ofadministrative decision-making thatgoes into planning the operations of theBursar’s office. I imagined myself tobe an administrator trying to make mydepartment look good by cutting costs.I made the following case for curtailinghours and understaffing the office:A slight curtailing of the opera¬tive time frame in an effort tominimize capital outlay will pro¬duce a slight substitution effect ofthe clientele to the other avail¬able service locals. In addition, By Stan Smith“If they come for you in the morningthey’re going to have to come for us inthe evening,” Vernon Mason told thecheering demonstrators at Columbia’sHamilton Hall, now renamed “Mande¬la Hall.” He was leading a march of 200prominent Black figures from Har¬lem.Under the leadership of the Coalitionfor a Free South Africa, hundreds ofColumbia students have been sitting inat the main entrance to Hamilton Hallsince April 4. The coalition is demand¬ing that the university divest all of its$32.5 million invested in corporationsthat do business in South Africa. Thisdramatic protest is shaping up into amajor test of strength between pro¬divestment forces and Columbia Uni¬versity, an institution that mascaradesas a liberal defender of Black rights inSouth Africa.Prior to the sit-in some 70 studentswent on a symbolic hunger strike.Seven of them refused food for 15 days.The hunger strike finally ended onApril 8 when the Columbia administra¬tion agreed to meet with representa¬tives of the hunger strikers. By thattime two students had been hospitaliz¬ed. A prepared statement by thehunger strikers was read by Tanagui’lJones at the time of the meeting. Shesaid “in 1978 (the Columbia trustees)promised to divest from all corpora¬tions which ‘through act or omissionsupport apartheid’. These corporationshave yet to be divested. IBM is stillsupplying computers which keep trackof Blacks under the Pass Law system.Mobil is still providing oil to the SouthAfrican military, and all companiesare still obliged under the Key PointsAct to offer their factories to the mili¬tary in case of Black unrest.”The sit-in was a direct result of theBoard of Trustees’ refusal to complywith overwhelming student and facultyopinion in favor of divesting all the uni¬versity’s holdings in companies that in¬vest in South Africa. The trustees haveheld these investments in contradictionto their stated intentions in 1978 and de¬spite a unanimous vote for divestmentpassed in 1983 by the University Sen¬ate.an increase in the transactioncosts in terms of opportunity costof clientele’s time will enhancesaid substitution effect.In other words, “if we cut the hours tothe bone and make them stand in linefor as long as it would take to walk toUniversity Bank, they will take theirbusiness elsewhere.” (Don’t get mewrong! I’m not suggesting that the ad¬ministration doesn’t give a rat’s assthat they throw a monkey wrench intoour already busy schedules. No, I’mjust going to raise the prospect of suchan idea and then not refute it.)My middle management fantasy(now don’t get any dirty ideas aboutthat one; I like wearing ties, but notthat much) ended abruptly whenthings started to get ugly. Someonetried to cut in line by nonchalantly slid¬ing up to a friend and making conver¬sation. I think that in most cases thiswouldn’t be such a heinous crime, butat the lightning-fast speed one extratransaction is processed I’m sure youunderstand. Some guy who stood about6’4” (probably the same guy fromWarnke lecture) announced in the gen¬eral direction of the offender: “Theline starts back there.” Things weretense. “If that person doesn’t movequickly,” I thought, “there’s going tobe some bloodshed.” Luckily theymoved, but there was still a lot of ten¬sion. I had this really crazy notion. Ithought of yelling out: “Hey, what doyou say we take the elevator up to thefifth floor and demand the Bursar’shead on a platter from Hanna?” I res¬trained myself. It’s not that I was wor¬ried about the grotesqueness of the sit¬uation, I just didn’t want to deal withthe crowd when we got there only tofind she had gone to lunen.About ten after one I got out andpicked up a Maroon. About ten under¬graduates just jumped all over theMathews House bunrh The same irind The university administration hasresponded to the sit-in by trying to in¬timidate and divide the coalition. Se¬lective threats of expulsion were issuedfirst to one student, then to 10 others,and then to 48. Students identified bysecurity’s video cameras and othersources continue to be randomly sin¬gled out for disciplinary letters. Claim¬ing that the sit-in is disrupting the edu¬cational process, the administrationthen resorted to legal action, obtaininga restraining order and citing 14 stu¬dents for contempt of court.Not to be intimidated the coalitionsent a letter to the administrationsigned by 500 students giving theirnames and student ID numbers as par¬ticipants in the sit-in. The coalition wona big victory when it obtained a tempo¬rary restraining order from New YorkState Supreme Court Justice BruceWright preventing the university fromtaking any police action against thestudents pending a hearing April 15.The students then added the call forfull amnesty for the protesting stu¬dents to their list of demands.Responding to charges that they aredisrupting the educational process, onestudent replied “The best way to learnhistory is to make history. I’ve learnedmore out here in eight days then I’velearned in a whole year at Columbia.It’s a different kind of education. Itgives you insight into human relation¬ships. It changes you.”Solidarity has been pouring in fromall over the country and around theworld. The outside of Mandela Hall isplastered with banners, posters, lettersfrom different organizations, cam¬puses, and high schools. Every dayhundreds of supporters show up to ex¬press their solidarity. Music, an¬nouncements, and speeches go into thenight.Columbia students have rallied insupport of the protestors as have manylocal stores, restaurants and churches;they provide contributions of food, ser¬vices, blankets, money. There are soli¬darity marches up to Columbia everyday from different New York commu¬nities and other campuses.On April 11, 70 hospital workers fromthe American Federation of State,continued on pageby Joe Baraoskyof people who one week ago were prob¬ably sitting in front of the TV in theirhouse lounge, eating Harold’s, andwhining about how much fun theirfriends are having at “real schools”were suddenly transformed into val¬iant defenders of the U of C lifestyle. Iwas almost expecting to see a letterthat said: “The U of C, love it or leaveit. And Buy American, too.” I think itwas bloodlust. Everyone is so woundup by fourth or fifth week that they areready to go right for the jugular. Icould just feel the tension.I went to the library Monday to get abook. (Really, I’m not making this partup.) I left for the Reg at about mid¬night. There’s no sense starting beforethe last minute.) First I tried the com¬puter search. I figured it would saveme time digging through the card ca¬talogs. After waiting far too long for aresponse I saw the sign that said thecomputers were down after 10 p.m. Ithought that was a stupid time to shutthem down, until after I had searchedmy books the regular way and tried tocheck them out. Then it made sense,circulation was closed, and there wasno one to complain to. As I was stand¬ing there at the circulation counterwondering how I was going to get mybook out of the building I met with aguy who obviously had a morning duedate. Maybe it was the eleven booksand that look of panic that clued me in.We were both in such lousy moods thatwe went up to the Pakistan-Urdu sec¬tion and took about 200 books andmoved them down to the B-levelstacks. Let them figure it out.I think what this campus needs for itstension is some kind of protest. Some¬thing that everyone can get into. Afriend of mine told me about NancyReagan’s little shin-dig on the quadsnext Friday. I think it’s just what weneed, something both liberals and con¬servatives can get into.The Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago.It is published twice weekly, on Tuesdays and Fridays. The offices of the Maroon arein Ida Noyes Hall, rooms 303 and 304, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, Illinois, 60637. Phone962-9555.Frank LubyEditor in chiefRosemary BlinnEditor ElectHilary TillNews EditorKaren E. AndersonNews EditorRobert BarlingViewpoints Editor Dennis ChanskySports EditorCarolyn MancusoPhotography EditorCraig FarberCopy EditorPaul RohrCopy EditorBruce KingGrey City Journal Editor Stephanie BaconGrey City Journal EditorLisa CypraAdvertising ManagerTina EllerbeeBusiness ManagerJaimie WeihrichOffice ManagerDavid SullivanChicago Literary Review EditorStaff: Joe Barnosky, Tony Berkley, Scott Bernard, Mark Blocker, David Burke, MikeCarroll, Anthony Cashman, Frank Connolly, Tom Cox, Kathy Evans, Ben Forest,John Gasiewski, Jessie Goodwin. Ingrid Gould, Peter Grivas, Gussie, Chris Hill,Keith Horvath, Mike Ilagan, Jim Jozefowicz, Larry Kavanagh, A1 Knapp, Amy Le-semann, L.D. Lurvey, Helen Markey, David McNulty, Karin Nelson, Ciaran Obroin,Fiora Pizzo, Phil Pollard, James Ralston, Max Rhee, Francis Robicheaux, MattSchaefer, Rick Senger, Doug Shapiro, Geoff Sherry, Frank Singer, Jeff Smith, StanSmith, Paul Song, Rick Stabile, Joel Stitzel, Adena Svingos, Bob Travis, Terry Tro-janek.Associate Editors: Alexandra Conroy, Stephen “Skip” Lau.Contributors: Elizabeth Brooks, Clive Landis, Michelle McKechnie, Molly McLain.Osanka, Ruth Pennington, Judith Silverstein, Blithe SmithNews Editor Emeritus: Michael Elliott, David Lanchner.• ■ * Saturday, May4: TheFestival opens with a dancein Ida NoyesGym, 9 p.m., withChicago djs Gary of Wax Trax, me Rocksteady, me Tfmski, Derek Grey, andothers. Refreshments, hot mixing, dancing.Sunday, May 5: Old Time Music Convention/Fiddler’s Picnic in Hutch Court, 1 tildusk. Open mike, open grill, everyone bring your instrument.“That Apple Sure Don’t Shine”, 8 pm in Reynolds Club, 1st Floor Theater. Anoriginal show, conceived and written by an ensemble of recent graduates or drop¬outs of Chicago Public Schools, presenting their perspective on the system.Monday, May6:.Art Exhibition opening in the North Lounge of Reynolds Club, 6:30pm (Show will stay up all week). — work by campus and local Chicago people. Talkwith the artists, snack on the reception, then check out the Evening of PerformanceArt and Poetry, 8 pm in Reynolds Club, 1st Floor Theater — poets and performersfrom the universityand around the city,Jack Helbig’s “Dreams Remembered”, plusmusic by WHPK DJ Arthur Bailey.Tuesday, May7: Open Rehearsal with “Transit”, conducted byMarc Prentiss, 3 pmin Goodspeed Recital Haft. Composer Brian Ferneyhough oversees the preparationof his works Funerailles I & II for their American premiere, May 19 in Mandel Hall.Sponsored by MAB. Noontimeconcert: Bhakti3,in HutchCourt8 p.m. NoiseFest/RememberVietnam An evening of experimental musicincludingOno, TestPatterns,ShopBunch,AlgebraSuicide, and others.ReynoldsClub.Wednesday, May8; Noontime Concert in Hutch Court Praxis, 9 pm in the Reyn¬oldsClub, — Praxis makes perfect. Much madness goingdown in the first-floorthe¬ater .Thursday, May9: Noontimein Hutch: Mind Release . Brian Ferneyhough LectureandDemonstration, with Caroie Morgan playingpiccolo.3 pm in Goodspeed RecitalHall.Friday,May 10: Noontime concert in HutchCourt: John Melloncampand the EvilTwins, and Her and the Guys. Poets Matthew Graham and JudySchavrien readfrom recent work, noon in the North Lounge of Reynolds Club. Poet C. K.Williams to read some of his latest work, 4:30, Kent 107, reception to follow.Sponsored in conjunction with the Zabel fund of the English Department. All-night movies, a no-car drive-tn in Hitchcocu quad. ShowingValleyGirl, Piranha,Viva LasVegas, and other movies to be announced. Bringyour sleepingbags; abagelbrunch atdawnforthose whomake it through.the night. Following will be “Voice of Binky” and others.During the course of the week; check out for:Maze on Bartlett FieldOutdoor sculpture around the Quads, by Chicago artists.Street musicians from around town.Note: All spontaneous events have not been listed on the calendar.AH events at the Festival this year are free of charge. FOTA is financed in part byStudent Gov’t Finance Committee and in part by private donation. See FOTA’sMaroon ad for rain dates. Special thanks to Mrs. Singh, (Indian Food In Cobb) forproviding the feast, the Zabel Fund. MAB. Doc Films, and WHPK.% 6 lettersThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985Ljetfar/roi*''t'hQ' tdi'toT****The Army Ma+KInvhtutC-The year is 1970... students at the Universityof Wisconsin at Madison. in protest of Ameri¬ca's continued involvement in Vietnam, bombthe Army Math Institute building on campus inAugust. . . one graduate student diesNeatly packaged under its new name, “The Centerof Excellence in Mathematics'’, the place you justread about and its $12 million war chest may pay theUniversity of Chicago a permanent visit in June. TheU of C, along with Cornell, has reached the finals inthe quest to house the Army Math Institute, a tenantat Madison for the last 15 years. -Many faculty and students don’t want what theyterm “war research’’ conducted on the quadrangles,and in stark contrast to University of Chicago stu¬dent protocol, those people have gone public withtheir concerns. Over 100 students and the cast fromthe upcoming production of Hair staged a “die-in” atthe Regenstein, and several of the “dead” expresseda strong desire to keep the Army Math Instituteaway from the U of C.Well, staging an “anything-in” and marching tothe Ad Building at lunch time has to represent only achild’s step in the fight to prevent the Universityfrom housing the Institute. Otherwise, the U of C ad¬ministration—smug and confident enough to ignoresmall-scale protests—will laugh on its way to Ryer-son, which it will clean out to accommodate the“troops” in July, should the Department of Defensechoose Chicago as the Institute’s new home.The questions surrounding the Institute concernmoney and morals. As U of C math professor and op¬ponent of the Institute Mel Rothenberg will eagerlytell you, “we are not talking about some marginalenterprise, but an institute. . . with a proposed bud¬get of over two million dollars a year. . . the sameorder of magnitude as the entire mathematics de¬partment budget.” How then will the University of Chicago prevent ihe Institute (oops, I mean “Centerof Excellence”) from exerting influence over foreignvisiting professors, setting research goals, and clas¬sifying research when its wallet is as fat as itshost’s? Walter Massey, vice-president for researchprograms, assures everyone that “we (the U of C)don’t accept contracts or grants in which anybodycan tell us what to do once the money is here.” Ithink Massey means that no, Mel, the Army MathInstitute certainly won’t tell the U of C math depart¬ment what to do.Why does that seem so unlikely?Massey said that the new Institute will be indepen¬dent of the one that operated at UW-Madison for allthose years. He adds that there is nothing unusualfor American Universities to conduct research withDepartment of Defense money, some $800 million ayear. And that leads to the moral and philosophicalquestion: Is there something contradictory aboutthis liberal arts institution’s desire to house an insti¬tute whose research is designed and intended formilitary use? Should an “academically pure” schoolhouse such an Institute? After all, the University dida similar thing in the 1940’s when it undertook theManhattan Project. War research is nothing new toHyde Park.Massey, the man who brilliantly notes that “all re¬search sooner or later could possibly be used for de¬fense,” craftily claims that “it’s not possible to doclassified research nowadays.” That may be true,but because the Pentagon will be approving the re¬search budget for the “Center” the Pentagon willhave final say over the budget, and thus over the re¬search funded by that budget. That, logically, im¬plies Pentagon control over research which will en¬gage U of C professors and graduate students. AndRothenberg points out, if the Pentagon is not happywith the work done by its Army Math Institute, it willwithdraw its funding.Well, let’s take a second and uncover what mightmake the Pentagon happy. Normal everyday gradu¬ate student research? Maybe, but if that’s its goal,why have the Army Math Institute when all kinds ofswell research is already going on, and Massey al¬ready said that all reseach can possibly be used fordefense? If mere mathematical excellence is thegoal, then why can’t the National Science Founda¬tion receive more money and leave the Pentagon andits millions out of the picture?The Army Math Institute, as an organ of the Pen¬tagon, will do research specifically intended for mili¬tary use. There is a difference between doing inde¬pendent research with potential defenseapplications, and doing research intended specifical¬ly for such applications. That difference troubles many people here, who don’t want the artificial con¬straint of the Pentagon directing the course ofthought at the University of Chicago. Many, includ¬ing Rothenberg, see the Institute itself as an examp¬le of a trend toward militarism in the United States,and that is a trend he feels should bypass the Univer¬sity of Chicago.If the opponents of the Institute fail to make theirdesires heard through a major petition drive orthrough more demonstrations, the University willnot retract its bid for the Institute. If the current“wave of student activism” takes itself seriously, itshould seize this opportunity to send a message tothe University as well as the United States govern¬ment, and prevent the Pentagon from conductingwar research in Hyde Park before August 1970 re¬peats itself.Institute will restrict researchTo the editors:I would like to add to Prof. Rothenberg’s com¬ments on the possibility of bringing an Army MathInstitute to the U of C which appeared in the April 23Maroon. The presence of the institute at the universi¬ty, despite Vice President Massey’s assurances, willalmost surely hinder normal academic exchangeand discussion. Even if all of the research is declas¬sified, this will not guarantee noninterference undercurrent US Administration policy. At the last twomeetings of the American Optical Society, the Pen¬tagon has insisted on cancelling a number of talksreporting declassified research on national securitygrounds. They were allegedly concerned that someforeign scholars were spies. The Pentagon has alsotried to restrict the access of visiting scholars fromChina and the Soviet Union to university libraries (atStanford, for example) and supercomputers. Theseactions are being taken even though studies commis¬sioned by the government indicate that leaks of sen¬sitive material don’t occur through academic chan¬nels.So far these restrictions on academic freedomhave been applied primarily to research in lasersand computers, but Pentagon officials dealing with“national security” aren’t very discriminating. Freescientific exchange is essential for the high-qualityresearch which, ironically, attracted the Army’s in¬terest in locating at the U of C. I think these consi¬derations are secondary to Prof. Rothenberg’s con¬cern about the militarization of universities, but Ihope the university will weigh both these factorsagainst the Army’s funding and will reject the Insti¬tute- Sincerely,William CollinsOffice of the Dean of Students in The Collegeand College OrientationApplications for the volunteer position ofGENERAL ORIENTATION AIDEfor the 1985-1986 academic yearare now available inHARPER 269REQUIREMENTS:Applicants can be any year and need not live in the housing system. A desire towork hard, a willingness to function as part of a team (including takingdirections), a heightened sense of responsibility and a willingness to adapt todiverse tasks will be helpful attributes, but above all the applicant should beeager to introduce new students to life in the College in the best possible way.All applications are due May 27 in Harper 269Questions? Call 962-8614(Orientation Aides in The College Houses are chosenby the Student Housing Office; ask your Resident Headfor more information.)oThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985 7THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE PRESENTS9:oo p.m. ; ida noyes hallREFRESHMENTS AND HORS D' OEUVRES WILL BE SERVEDUC STUDENTS:$10.00 PER PERSON FACULTY, STAFF and ALUMNI:$18.00 PER PERSONTICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE REYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICE FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 962-7300■EBHMB8 featuresmmmh The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985The Shoreland: Looking Back on an Illustrious PastBy Alexandra ConroyShe was young, beautiful, sophisti¬cated, and energetic. Then came hardtimes: her main means of support de¬serted her, her appearance went down¬hill. But this was not the end—no, lifestill had meaning, she turned from alife of glamour to the noble effort ofsupporting education for aspiringyouth. After months of hard researchand planning, her protegees will pres¬ent the impressive, dialectic biographyof...THE Shoreland Hotel. The com¬plete story is only part of the festivitiesto occur on May 4 to celebrate theShoreland’s 60th anniversary. the last three could not be used in anyother room. Besides the French style,there was a choice of other ethnic fla¬vors for instance: the English Room,which still displays the original walnutpaneling; the Castillian Room; and theItalian room. Cocktails were oftenserved in the Crystal ballroom, andmembers of a nearby riding academycould refresh themselves with lemon¬ade on the terrace outside the LouisXIV Room.The food itself varied in kind accord¬ing to the preference or nationality ofThe Shoreland was designed andbegun in 1925-26 in response to thetrend towards hotel living, importedfrom France. The American elite, fol¬lowing continental fashion, left largerhomes in outlying areas for the conven¬ience and elegance of living in highclass housekeeping apartments. As aresult of the Parisian heritage, most ofthe Shoreland decor was French andmany of the rooms sported appella¬tions like the Louis XVI, Marie Antion-ette, and DuBonnet Rooms. The furni¬ture orders, totaling one milliondollars, and placed simultaneously,amounted to Marshall Field’s largestrequest. Harry J. Fawcett, financier,set the project in motion.One of the few complaints about theShoreland today might be its lack of adining hall. On the other hand, thismight be considered a plus. Some stu¬dents, however, have their own kitch¬ens which remain from the originalapartment plans. The Shoreland ofsixty years ago, boasted nine diningrooms. Each was unique. The DuBon¬net room was dedicated to coordina¬tion; wallpaper, rugs, tablecloths, sil¬verware, china service, and otheraccessories were so coordinated that Cocktails were often served inthe Crystal ballroom, andmembers of a nearby ridingacademy could refreshthemselves with lemonade onthe terrace outside the Louis XIVRoom.the head chef at the time. Customerscould make personal requests. Therewas a hierarchy of cooks and, in thefirst floor’s built-in bakery, two womenspecialized solely in the decoration ofwedding cakes, according to GeorgeWeir, who served as captain of the bell¬hops for 28 years and is now part of thesecurity. Waiters wore formal dresswith white gloves and served from cov¬ered silver platters.Because of a scarcity of old menusand the known diversity due to chang¬ing chefs, reseachers could say littleabout the specific foods. One anecdoterelated the misfortune of a politicalfunction. Two opposing parties wereholding dinners in the Shoreland simul¬taneously and each was eager to outdothe other. One planned for dessert adish contaning flaming strawberries.At the time, the hotel was one of themore modern and used air blownacross ice as an air-conditioning sys¬tem. Apparently when the flamingfruit was brought in, a draft caused itto fly across the room; one piece evenlanded in a ladies coiffured hair. Mostof the other dishes were probably mun¬dane in comparison, but the pricescould cause cardiac arrest in theaverage impoverished student. In 1939,martinis went fer 30 cents each andfilet mignon for $1.50. At full capacity, the facilities could hold up to 2000 pa¬trons.Even during the depression and Sec¬ond World War, Shoreland residentscontinued to eat well. Food rationingseemed to have little effect. During thefirst two years of the war, the hoteleven sent care packages to its enlistedemployees.Eating was far from being the onlypleasure the hotel offered. The base¬ment housed a valet shop (the startingblock for Cohn of Cohn and Stern mens-wear), a barber shop, a beauty par¬lour, and a grocery. Access to the facil¬ities was provided, via a tunnel, to theresidents across the street. Occasional¬ly their shopping might have been in-terupted by excited shouts from theeighteen-hole miniature golf course,also in the basement, site of the 1927hotel managers tournament.Residents could travel downtown toshop on State Street in the comfort ofthe Shoreland limousine. Parties,which could be catered for a range offour to 1000 people, and dances werefrequent. Sometimes in the warmweather, festivities took place near thelarge outdoor fountain, huge saucersspilling into each other which were litat night by colored lights. Weir remin¬isced about the Shoreland’s reputationas the “wedding hotel of the SouthSide.”Residents had little to keep themfrom enjoying the hotels accommoda¬tions to the fullest. There were three shifts of daily maids, the parlour andkitchen maids in the morning and athird at night to turn down the beds.Everything was arranged for the pa¬trons’ comfort even the to the tele¬grams, which, as Weir remembered,were delivered to the rooms on silvertrays.The Shoreland, in its day, was a giantin the residential/transient line ofglamorous hotels. It’s unfortunate de¬cline was due partially to the construc-During the first two years ofWorld War II, the hotel sent carepackages to its enlistedemployees.tion of O’Hare airport and its hotels inthe 1960’s which attracted the businessof those travelers who had once usedMidway airport and consequently pa¬tronized the Shoreland transientrooms. Weir found, too, that somewealthy, retired customers opted fornewer buildings or the climates ofFlorida or Colorado. Used to ferventactivity, it felt strange to him when theATTENTION BSCD STUDENTSINTERESTED IN UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCHSummer ResearchFellowship StipendsAre AvailableStudents interested in applying for a stipend shouldcontact Professor Gerson Rosenthal,Gates-Blake 17, no later than May 6, 1985.features 9The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985Shoreland “just slowed down.”Various managers tried to rekindleinterest in the facilities through novelentertainments. They hosted a catshow and a hair-dressing show. Thelatter offered a beehive affair, the‘Shindig Flip,” as its masterpiece. In1965, the hotel sponsored a game todraw attention to itself. People wereencouraged to guess the attendance atthe last Milwaukee Braves game be¬fore the team moved to Atlanta. Also in’65, all the residents were given flagsand asked to fly them on July 4th. Thisdisplay of patriotism must have beenimpressive, and probably gained theIn 1965, all the residents weregiven flags and were asked to flythem on July 4th,hotel local notoriety but, like all the at¬tempts, it did little to save the Shore-land. By 1974, the splendid buildingwas in disrepair at half capacity.That year, the University of Chicagobought the hotel as part of its urbanrenewal, a dual plan to save the histor¬ic neighborhood and prevent the school from being located in an undesirablearea. There was no intention of using itfor a dorm, but in 1975, there was ahousing overflow of 350 students. Thehousing department opted to use theShoreland over the Windermere be¬cause the layout of the Windemere wasnot conducive to dorm style life. Al¬though the hotel was to be only a tem¬ porary dorm, $6.5 million was spent onrenovation. The project was done overone summer and so rushed, as a result,that furniture was being arranged upuntil the day before the students ar¬rived. Hasty or not, the venture wassuccessful and the Shoreland todayhouses around 600 student residents.Most of the hotel’s original furniturewas removed, although remnants canstill be observed.The Crystal Ballroom is now alounge and the Moderne Room, a t.v.,room. Some of the planned improve¬ments to the building did not comeabout due to lack of funding. Theballroom was once destined to becomesquash courts. The University alsoplanned to put a swimming pool in theLouis XVI room until it was discoveredthat it would cost a half a million dol¬lars just to make the room safe afterwater damage had caused a portion ofthe roof to collapse. If the Universityhad money to spend on the Shoreland,most of the reseachers. as well as Weirwould like to see the Louis the XVIroom renovated to some of its pastgrandeur.The houses at the Shoreland followedthe general University policy and werenamed after famous faculty or alumni,or those who gave funds specificallyfor student housing. At first, therewere only six houses. Bishop accountedfor the fourth, fifth, and sixth floors;Fallers for the second and third (com¬posed of graduate students); Fishbeinthe seventh and eighth; Filbey theninth and tenth; Bradbury the elev¬enth; and Dudley the twelvth. Todayeach floor has its own name: Fallers, Bishop, Dewey, Michelson, Fishbein,Compton, Hale, Filbey, Bradbury, andDudley, respectively and the Shore-land no longer houses grad students.The Shoreland, as a dorm, does offercomputer and weight lifting facilitiesand jazzercise classes. Some nostalgicstudents carry on the traditional spiritof entertainment by playing an occa¬sional game of golf in the halls.Recreation at the Shoreland is re¬turning. if not in the same form, cer¬tainly in equal variety and intensity.Food has returned: pizza dinners anddonut-and-apple-cider study breaksare regular affairs and parties are fre¬quently initiated.The May 4th celebration, if not typi¬cal in purpose, certainly displays theBy 1974, the splendid buildingwas in disrepair.Shoreland commitment to entertain¬ment. Hors d’oeuvres will precede apresentation of the research commit¬tee’s historical findings complete witha slide show and comparison of Shore-land life today vs. Shoreland life of yes¬teryear. The rest of the evening will beoccupied with dancing. Dress is semi-formal, and some revelers plan to ar¬rive in 20’s costumes. Not only Shore-land students residents will attend, butalso the few remaining permanent res¬idents, figures of note in the hotel's his¬tory, and administrators. Dorm resi¬dents will provide the refreshments.Many thanks to Mrs. Brown for thephotosFront of the ShorelandThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985SPRING BREAKTen Gulf Shrimpin the shell for adollar with thepurchase of ahouse drink orother cocktail.Savor ourgourmethamburgerserved on freshlybaked frenchbread with agood portion offresh fruit.$395Now servingwhole wheatfrench breadbaked fresh onpremises.63rd<St. <fe 9larfter667-2000 We’re banking on your future.At The First National Bankof Chicago, students fromIllinois can borrow • up to $2,500 a year forundergraduate studies• up to $5,000 a year forgraduate studies• up to $3,000 a year forAuxiliary Loans to AssistStudentsTo request an application,call us at (312) 407-3413 or407-3420.Student Loansfrom The FirstFIRST CHICAGOThe First National Bank of ChicagoCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Doily 11 A,-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 41062 |£IMBARK LIQUORS 8 WINE SHOPPE SALE ENOS 5/7/851Z14 East sird Street • In Kimbark Plaza ' 493-3355MONDAYSSHAMPOO/BLOW DRY'♦lOOO'WITH DESIGNATEDDESIGNERS: LONG ORUNRELAXED HAIR IS EXTRA MUBCOORS24 12 02 CANS$1059WARM ONLY STROH’S24/12 02. 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Ma.lmchar^. 1 chock,The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985Michael Reese Health Planinvites you toCheck us outWe offer:Affordable ratesITS'efef Convenient evening and Saturday hoursFull coverage of doctor’s office visits andphysical check-ups.Full coverage of surgery, maternity care,hospital care, lab tests and x-rays.No doctor bills. No deductibles. No paper¬work. Just full-service, high quality healthcare.Easy-to-use Walgreens prescription drugbenefit—you pay only $3 per prescription. 0fiEfafS'Eyeglasses As of Jan. 1,1985, eyeglasses willbe provided at no charge.(One pair ofcorrective lenses and frames per memberevery two years.)Well-qualified doctors and excellenthospitals including Michael ReeseHospital, West Suburban Hospital,Little Company of Mary Hospital,Christ Hospital, South ChicagoCommunity Hospital, and IllinoisMasonic Medical Center.Full emergency care coverage—any time,anywhere in the world.Your own personal physician and theback-up specialists when you need them.Check us out at theHealth Center of your choice:Evergreen9435 S. Western Ave.ChicagoWednesday, Nov. 146-7 pm Oak Park ,1515 N. Harlep Ave.Oak ParkTuesday, Nov. 136-7 pm Lake Shore2545 King Dr.ChicagoCall 842-2936to schedule anindividual tour. Southeast2315 E. 93rd St.iChicagoCall 842-2936to schedule anindividual tour.Available toUniversity of Chicagoemployees and toemployee groups of 25or more. For moreinformationcall 842-293612 news■— The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985Raspberry calls for youth involvementBy Richard A. SengerStressing how public and youth con¬cerns have evolved over the past thirtyyears, Washington Post columnist Wil¬liam J. Raspberry spoke on “ThePress and Public Policy” Tuesday.Raspberry said that “The 1960’swere a time of concern over basichuman justice: racial discrimination,poverty, and peace corp involvementwere dominant themes. The main con¬cern of youth then was ‘how do I makethe world change?’ ”“The seventies,” he continued was“a time of disillusionment, with Viet¬nam, the Bomb, the Draft, and pollu¬tion being the popular issues. Theyouth concerns developed into an al¬most futile outlook, as the problemswere so difficult, the majority ofyouths began to buy into the theorythat if you’re booked on the Titanic,you might as well go first class. Thisied to the me generation, self-indul¬gence, and the ‘do it if it feels good’sexual revolution.The eighties, he noted, have“brought about a radical, pragmaticoutlook into youth thinking. Now thefocus isn’t on ‘how do I make the worldchange or will the world make it,’ but‘how will I make it in the world?’ Be¬cause of worries of the unstable econ¬omy, making money — which came inninth place in a 1971 freshman poll onpriorities — placed second on the 1985poll of college freshman. This is a dis¬tressing trend that is continuing tokeep college campuses too quiet anduneventful.”Chiding American youth’s noninvol¬vement in world issues, Raspberrysuggested that the press is not nearlyas powerful as the people and that thepresently inactive youth could be themost influential part of society.“We (the press) react to young peo¬ple, who tend to be the agenda setters.You (the youth) are the vanguard. Usold folks need to come to you to knowwhere we’re going. The problem with today’s youth is that they see few verysimple, uncomplicated conflicts. It’s alot easier to deal with a problem whenyou have a villain to lay blame upon,but there seems to be fewer obvious vil-lians around. A popular person to rallyagainst in the past for youth was thePresident, but for some reason, RonaldReagan is just not able to be villified,and has the ability to do monstrousthings and not take the blame. Still, Ihave seen a heartening rise in studentinterest during recent weeks, and hopethe trend will continue. Apartheid is avery popular issue among students asit seems to have its obvious ‘goodguys’and ‘badguys’.”Perhaps Raspberry’s most disturb¬ing point was on the outlook for the fu¬ture of present youths. “For a longtime, it was generally considered a given that you would do better thanyour parents did. Now, the trend hassharply reversed, and for the firsttime, I think I can safely say that a sig¬nificant number of University of Chica¬go students are already living in thebiggest house and best neighborhoodthat they ever will. Whereas we used toalways want to escape from our oldneighborhood to something better,today many people can only aspire todo almost as well or to live in a compa¬rable environment.”Raspberry’s lecture, which lastedforty-five minutes was followed by aquestion and answer period of similarlength, which featured, among otherquestions, a momentary disruption byan anti-apartheid supporter, whothought Raspberry should spearheadan organization to foster involvement in the Anti-Apartheid movement, andthen write about it. Answering thequery with grace, Raspberry ex¬plained that forming an organizationand then reporting on it was not jour¬nalistically ethical, and would bebiased and a conflict of interest. Afterrepeated questionings, Raspberry of¬fered to speak with the man (who hadapparently approached him before) af¬terwards, which he later did peacefullyoutside Swift Hall.Asked whether he felt journalismhad decayed in recent years, Raspber¬ry responded that, with the exceptionof writers “occasionally bending factsto make stories more interesting”,journalism was generally quite sound.Said Raspberry, “Across the board,there is not too much editorializingmixed in American newspapers.”The Adventures of RegmanWhat tmeahfY00L&W1H&TbWt&HT WEWbW?If icu'Bt War 600J& 2'u.fooeMYTo 6o, 7H&j What JuststhefcANE IDU6CMHGT0 MJbHfE.30? by Skip and Joelwhat's thePH06LEM?M l&J'ribu cdme WoTHaWks,um Me AWb 61F? xfc JUSTIt'll Be FOkI/ B£ tWTHeuAK HoW A&mJTJot>Y? five Me AHtStflWb MAKES MEUuuu>iaFetA&WMEN.WHATA&ioO6CAJ6 TO bOnew? 60TO P&TToWkW. He's RcallYhotIWKTgto FORAUHC Go/. THAfsTUEPPcBlbA.TbOMOWrr A SxAETMESCLOSES AT ftWHcUKSAiM/JasrtswTLive inHyde Park's renovatedlakefront aristocratfor as little as$290 per month.An intricate terra-cotta relief sculpture of the Indian chiefTecumseh—just one of Del Prado's architectural nuances.Stepping through Del Prado's entryway takes youback to tne subtie elegance of yesteryear. Intricatemouldings and ornate cornice-work highlights thisrecently revitalized landmark.Our high-ceilinged one-bedroom apartments arefully carpeted with functional floor plans,individually-controlled heating and air conditioningand modern kitchens that feature all-new appliancesand cabinetry.The Del Prado is perfectly situated to take advantageof the neighborhood's nearby parks (one right acrossthe street!) schools, beaches and shopping. And ac¬cess to the Loop is convenient with CTA, U of C shut¬tle, and IC commuting at the corner.Prices start at only $290 for studios & $395 for 1bedrooms (student discounts available) making theDel Prado Chicago's truly affordable grande dame.Call or stop and see our models today.Del ipPrado Daily 11-7 Weekends 11-5Baird & WarnerHyde Park Blvd. at 53rd Street285-1855 JEWS F^R JESUS’presents m,in concert ulcljUberatedWailing Wallan experienceof Messianic Joy!SUNDAY, May 5, 1985 10:00 amHyde Park Alliance Church Meetingat theHyde Park Hilton4900 S. Shore Dr.Oxford RoomEd Shuck, Pastor312-752-0469Admission FreeAn offering for the evangelistic work of Jews for Jesus will be received.JEWS FOR JESUS, 60 Haight Street, San Francisco, CA 94102FOTA startsFestival of the Arts (FOTA), a week-long annual campus arts celebrationwill begin Saturday. Daily events willhighlight Chicago and campus musi¬cians, dancers, designers and other ar¬tists.FOTA will begin with a kick-off partytomorrow night in Ida Noyes. Through¬out the week, there will be noontimeconcerts in Hutch Court, an industrialnoise fest, movies in Cobb, and a reg¬gae party next Saturday.Patrick Moxey, an organizer ofFOTA. sees it as both offering the ar¬tists a chance for exposure and show¬ing the campus “what’s going on in artand music in Chicago.” There arepockets of this so-called “progressive”music throughout the city which don’tusually come together because“there’s no structure” or it, Moxeysaid.The organizers have a budget of$9,500, $6000 of which they raised bycontacting alumni. The rest of themoney came from the Student Govern¬ment Finance Committee.Moxey noted that in his opinion, thisfestival would be different from pastyears because a group of studentswanted to organize FOTA, rather thanbeing prompted by the Student Activi¬ty Office. comics 13The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985BLOOM COUNTYsreehnss fz m fann/e cou'sBEAU FOR THE MNINS .'win you fetchHER, PLEASE r FANNIE LOU RAN OFF ANPmarriep a mzneRnamep "snake smith"IN LAS \P6AS YESTERPPtY. by Berke BreathedAS HER ROOMMATE, I'VEBeen ASKEP TV FILL IN. )TAKE NOTE THAT I LOATHE ftALL MEN. I'LL BE (XT’ ItN A MINUTE, SOME-FACE. [ mYESSIR-.I JUSTUVE FOR LIFE'SLmtE ROMANTICSURPRISES'MY NAME ISALFMUSHPlE. LEVSSET THINGS UNPERSTOOPFOR THIS PATE.-I IN FACT, SOME OF USCONSIDER THE MALE OF THESPECIES JUST ONE BIS, USLYBRUTISH ABERRATIONOF EVOLUTION.( m NOT SEWNSOKAY ANY HfCKfESLEVS SO. TONtSHT, AMI?mu. 1 JUST rve ALUM FELLTHINK T'SHKjH THAT ROMANTICTIME THAT LOVE" NAS AMICHAEL JACKSON MALE TOOL FOR(WEPOUTOF EMOTIONAL WELL!THE HERRINSSOUFFLE CERTAINLY LEONARDO50UNPS SOOO PA VINCIT0NISHT/ NAS SAY, CONVERSATIONALLY,TM YJALTZINS HATHA PORCUPINE.Variety?WE HAVE VARIETY28 BUILDINGS 1,135 APARTMENTSEFFICIENCY/STUDIO, 1,2, OR 3 BEDROOMSH:i§ FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHEDj*. - i * V' * *AtK-UP BUILDINGS U ELEVATORWIDE RANGE OF RATESNO SECUIRTY DEPOSIT OR LAST MONTH’S RENT REQUIREDON THE CAMPUS BUS ROUTESAPPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAKEN FOR THE 1986 SCHOOL YEARSTUDENT ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS APPLYNEIGHBORHOOD STUDENT APARTMENTS753-2218 824 EAST 58TH STREETOWNED AND MANAGED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOa14 crime map" 1 The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985This information was compiled from crime reports dated April 21-28Tut the pastin yourfuture!LIVE IN AN HISTORIC LANDMARKThoroughly renovated apartments offer the convenience ofcontemporary living space combined with all the best elementsof vintage design. 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Offer Expires 6/30/85 RUSTY JONESRUSTPROOFINGORCHAMPMANHOOD LOCK'&J*r 7234 STONY ISLAND2 Miles-5 Minutes AwayFrom The University684-0400CHEVROLET/VOLKSWAGENnews 15• ■ ■- — - ■ ■ — — - The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985 —■Faculty shakes up the SocSci corecontinued from page 1“The Governing Committee and I,”said Najita, “after considerable dis¬cussion, opted to rethink how we intro¬duce the Social Sciences as part of thecore program.” Although Najita con¬cluded that “We do have enough facul¬ty that can teach at least one of the 30or 31 sections,” he and the GoverningCommittee decided “that this is not thebest way to organize an introduction tothe Social Sciences. Rather, it would bebetter to have all the students talkingabout the same thing,” and learningfrom each other.“The new program gives us a broadmap that is intellectually plausible. Itmakes common sense of what we callthe common core,” said Najita. In¬stead of being tracked into learningabout a specific subject, each studentwill be able to encounter the many dis¬continued from page 4County and Municipal Employees(AFSCME) Local 420 arrived carryingbanners supporting divestment.AFSCME District Council 37 sent $250worth of food and coffee. Local 1199 ofthe hospital workers, Local 802 of theAmerican Federation of Musicians,and District 65 of the UAW extendedtheir solidarity by offering food, desks,and office equipment and by sendingdelegations.Faculty and staff of the universityhave shown their support despite theatmosphere of intimidation created bythe university administration. On April9, 200 members of the faculty issued astatement calling on the university ad¬ministration to refrain from usingforce or coercion against the protestorsand to divest all its stock in companieswith holdings in South Africa. On April11 the faculty organized a teach-in onapartheid in support of the sit-in, which ciplines that make up the SocialSciences. “Every student will receivean introductory exposure to the sophis¬ticated concepts, theory, philosophy,and language of the Social Sciences.”Perhaps the greatest casualty of thecore changes will be Political, Order,and Change. Said a disaffectedmember of the faculty of that deletedcourse, “This is not a surprise; the de¬partment knew this was going to benecessary as early as three years ago... POC is not necessarily the coursethat should be (entirely) the core ... butwhatever shortcomings it might havehad, it was an articulate, coherent,worthwhile course.”The professor was also very skepti¬cal of the new core proposals. He saidthat the fact that the new course is so“loosely and weakly designed” reflects“a lack of leadership in the depart-drew between 500 and 800 people.Messages of support have been re¬ceived from prominent individuals andgroups. This includes Jesse Jackson,Herbert Daughterty, the African Na¬tional Congress of South Africa, theAmerican Committee on Apartheid,the UN Special Commission on Aparth¬eid, the Committee in Solidarity withthe People of El Salvador, the US Stu¬dent Association, and others.On April 15, Jesse Jackson spoke to arally of some 1500 people at Columbiain support of the students. That sameday the students won another victory incourt. Judge Wright refused to permitColumbia’s administration to call inthe police to remove the students.Bishop Desmond Tutu, the South Af¬rican Nobel Peace Prize winner, sent amessage of support that was particu¬larly embarrassing to the universitypresident. Michael Sovern. Sovern had ment.” He further suggested that “theactual course will bear little resem¬blance to the pretty words that they aretelling you now.”Although the restructuring of thecore into a uniform course necessarilyobliterates the fine distinctions be¬tween the current Common Corecourses, opposition from teachers inother core courses, especially SCS hasbeen scant. “The tradition of thecourses, especially SCS, can dovetailvery nicely into the new program. Ifanything, this is an extension or modi¬fication of their tradition,” Najitasaid.Next year’s SCS chairman John Ma-cAloon’s reaction to the changes mir¬rors most of Najita’s expectations.“We will basically continue as in thepast; there is no major change for SCSsince most of the changes in the coreinvoked Tutu’s name in an attempt toconvince the students that divestmentwas counterproductive. Sovern said“More than any university in America,Columbia has reached out to help SouthAfricans in their struggle against ra¬cial oppression. Bishop Tutu proudlycalls Columbia his university.”On April 10, Tutu bluntly condemnedthe use of his name and telegrammedthe students the following message:“We welcome your effort to have eco¬nomic decision be based on moral prin¬ciple.”Here at the U of C we wish for thesame principles on the part of the ad¬ministration. The U of C invests twiceas much money ($65 million in 1978) incorporations that deal with South Afri¬ca as does Columbia! But so far the Uof C administration seems committedto placing profits made from the brutalexploitation of Black South Africansover moral principle. are modeled after our sequence,” saidMacAloon. “Our present course fitsunder those rubrics; it is just a matterof juggling the order in which we dothings,” he added.Because the faculty for SCS will re¬main intact next year, MacAloon hopesto identify and inform incoming stu¬dents of the sections taught by the SCScluster of teachers as a staff-taughtcourse. Students who decide to matri¬culate into any of these sections will berequired to complete the entire se¬quence. Crossing over of students fromunconnected sections will not be per¬mitted. Acknowledging possible disaf¬fection of POC faculty, MacAloon said“We think Self, Culture, Society is agood model, and we will continue withit, but we certainly do not presume tojudge what is good or bad for others.”Speaking of the proposed changes, Ma¬cAloon said further that “it is an ex¬periment, and I do have concernsabout it, especially if no coherence de¬velops between the three rubrics.”There are also changes being madein the structure of the Physical and Bi¬ological Sciences Collegiate Divisions’core courses, but these are not specif¬ically related to the changes in SocialSciences.Biologycontinued from page 1incoming freshman students,although the committee’s policies areflexible enough to allow' then to take anadvanced course in their third quarterThe committee will watch the chosenstudents’ progress and will evaluatethe experiment at the end of two years.The Advanced Core will provide, ac¬cording to Feder, an “extraordinaryopportunity for those students who canbenefit from the program.”Columbia condemns apartheidthe University of Chicago Democrats presentsA Speech ByAM F. LEWIS•National Director, Americans for Democratic Action•founder, National Women’s Political Caucus•former Political Director, Democratic National Committee“DO PROGRESSIVES HAVE AFUTURE IK AMERICAN POLITICS?”IDA NOYES HALL1212 E. 59th St.LIBRARYFunded by Student Activities FeeTUESDAYMAY 74:30 pm16 sports—■ The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985Tennis to defend conference title atBy Paul SongUnder the careful guidance of men’svarsity tennis coach Bill Simms, theMaroons finished their regular seasonby collecting one win, one loss and athird-place at the Midwest InvitationalTournament. The Maroons finished theregular season with a dual meet recordof 7-2 and an overall record of 13-4. De¬spite their success, the Maroons arenot at all content Instead, they havegeared their attention towards theMCAC Championships and their goal ofdefending their 1984 championshipcrown.Last Wednesday, the Maroons hostedtough Division I Marquette. The matchproved to be the first real let down ofthe year for Simms’ squad as they fellvictim to Marquette 8-1. Many of thematches were extremely close but Chi¬cago simply did not get any breaks. Phil MoweryNumber one singles player Bob Bu¬chanan collected the only victory of theday (6-3, 6-3). Simms summed up thematch by saying, “We played well butdidn’t get any breaks. They cameready to play and did a good job.”This past weekend, the Maroons travelled to Whitewater, Wisconsin tocompete in the Midwest Invitational,The tournament featured some out¬standing competition, and Chicagomanaged to place third despite quite afew injuries and some sickness.The Maroons’ success was highlight¬ed by the performance of senior co¬captain Phil Mowery, who at numberfive singles won all three of hismatches and took tournament champi¬on honors. Mowery later teamed upwith Clifford Ko to take second place atsecond doubles. Coach Simms was alsopleased with the play of Karl Stanleywho filled in for Henry Lujan.The Maroons also faced ElmhurstCollege last week, and avoided sweep¬ing their suburban foes by defaultingthe second doubles match.The Maroons have since been con¬centrating on the MCAC crown, as theyNo post-season games for softball teamBy Geoffrey SherryAfter a successful weekend featuringa doubleheader sweep over conferencefoe Beloit last Sunday, the Universityof Chicago women’s softball team en¬tered its final game of the season yes¬terday against North Park Collegewith a 7-2 overall record.Unfortunately, the Maroons will notbe participating in the post-season con¬ference tournament to be held thisweekend. Head Coach Rosalie Reschnoted, “We’ve had a very successfulyear and if we could replay a few ofthose games at the beginning of theseason we may have been traveling tothe tournament this weekend.”Chicago dropped both ends of lastSaturday’s doubleheader with DivisionI powerhouse Loyola University de¬spite “stellar defensive play” on thepart of the Maroons. Resch observed.“They were simply an excellent team. they had the best shortstop we havefaced so far and we had a hard timegetting the ball out of the infield.”The Ramblers shut down theMaroons in both games and went on towin the second game by the slaughterrule.Beloit visited North Field Sundayand was promptly dealt a double lossas the Maroons rebounded from Satur¬day’s defeats to notch two victories bycomfortable margins. KathleenMcGarvey and Mary Choldin picked upthe wins as Chicago won the first gameby the slaughter rule, and almost asconvincingly whipped Beloit in thenightcap.With a little momentum behindthem, the Maroons traveled to IllinoisBenedictine College and lost a hard-fought game 2-0 despite an outstandingdefense and excellent pitching contri¬ buted by McGarvey. As has been thecase all year, Chicago just could notget things going at the plate.Resch noted, “It’s too bad when apitcher only gives up two runs yet theteam cannot win. We just haven’t hadthe offensive support for our strong de¬fensive showings.”Head Coach Resch will step downnext year to make room for a newcoach yet to be named. Whoever getsthe job, the returning team will noneth¬eless be laden with talent, with onlytwo starters from this year’s teammissing. Seniors Dana Howd andKaren Waksh, both starters, will begraduated this spring.Resch concluded, “It has been a suc¬cessful year for the team on the whole.They are still young, but with anotheryear of experience under their belts,they have nowhere to go but up.” homeknow it will not be easy to repeat. De¬spite the fact that they are defendingchampions, Chicago is placed behindRipon as the early favorite for the title.Simms commented on the thoughts ofthe handicappers, “Ripon has been fa¬vored before and they have come upshort. We like being considered the un¬derdog.” Simms says the key to re¬peating depends on the racquets of his1984 MCAC champs Mowery, Lujanand Ko, all of whom have moved up onesingles spot from a year ago. Simmsalso stressed that Buchanan and Ley¬den have great chances to win the con¬ference.,SU1? everything up, Simms said.We ve had a good regular season butthis is where it counts. My only majorconcern is injuries. Almost the entiresquad has or has had some sort of ail-wfv' fi Ca? only hope for the best.We re the champs until someone takesour crown away.”The tournament starts today with thesingles competition and will concludetomorrow with the doubles. Matcheswill be held both days at Stagg Field, at55th and Ingleside and at 58th and Uni¬versity.Bob Buchanan COURTESY OF BILL SIMMSmarian realty,inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 DR. MORTON R. MASLOVOfTOMETtlST•EYE EXAMINATIONS•FASHION EYEWEAR(one year warranty on eyeglassframes and glass lenses)SPECIALIZING IN• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSES•CONTACT SUPPLIESTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100.11*—'ll!California Institute of the Artsannounces the creation of athree-year M.F.A. degree program inDIRECTING FOR THEATRE,TELEVISION & CINEMAEach year up to sixstudents will be admittedto the program with theinitial class to start inSeptember, 1985. For information on admissionrequirements and applicationprocedures, contact theOffice of Admissions. CalArts,24700 McBean Parkway,Valencia, California 91355 orgal* 18051.2.55.) C5fl4002-H C*t-«ye $62.00Black, blue. red. white, green, or gold 4006-H $62.00Black, greenORDER NOW TOLL FREE800-521-7225 m cam. 800-321-7645 Ex.50Receive FREE VUARNET-FRANCE sunglass leash withsunglass order!Meganet offers the complete line of VUARNET sunglasses. Send $1.00 forCatalog. Hurry, FREE leash offer limited.8530 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 309,Beverly Hills, CA 90211 lozLKENNEDY, RYAN, MONIGAL & ASSOC.5508 South Lake Park667-6666OPEN HOUSESSUNDAY, MAY 5,2 TO 4 PM1112 East 48th Street. New ListingCharming brick home with attached garage in the heart of Kenwood. Seven rooms, ex¬quisite marble fireplace in living room, beautiful oak floors, finished rec-room withbar in basement. $178,500. Jeanne Spurlock.1366 East Madison ParkUnique atrium townhouse with living room and bedrooms facing private court-patiowith lily pond. Perfect for couple. A retreat from the city hubbub. $119,500. Mrs.Ridlon.5317 South Dorchester.Freestanding frame home in Ray School District. Three bedrooms plus playroom, twofull baths. Nice-sized back yard. Only $95,000. Mimi Asbury.5466 South CornellVery attractive condo apartment with a “cottage-style" layout (not a railroad). Wood-burning fireplace in the living room. PRIVATE GARAGE. Two bedrooms. $65,500. IrenePillars.5608 South BlackstoneThis condo apartment has lovely leaded windows in the sun parlor and dining room.Three bedrooms, two baths, good family building with backyard. $77,500 MarieWester (947-0557).1355 East 57th StreetTerrific "on campus" two-bedroom, two-bath condo in move-in condition. The third-bedroom is now part of a lovely eat-in kitchen. Stripped woodwork. Woodburningfireplace. Moderate assessments. $72,000. Marie Wester (947-0557).6740 South OglesbyBeautiful 4-bedroom, 4-bath condo apartment. 33-foot living room with woodburningfireplace, breakfast area off kitchen, garage. Mint condition. $115,000. Hilde Zurne(6844)151).6900 South Constance. New ListingBeautiful 10-room, brick home on a large corner lot in Jackson Park Highlands Ex¬quisite kitchen with separate breakfast area. Very unusual stripped woodwork Land¬scaped yard and brick patio. Two-car garage. $198,500. Margaret Kennedy.6922 South JefferyTastefully decorated 2,400 sq. foot, three-bedroom, three-bath condo with owner-controlled, "zoned" baseboard heat. Updated kitchen with custom cabinets Excellentdowntown transportation. $89,200. Linda Batey.7007 South Bennettla5uS?/'< u3ru L°me 'n excellent condition. Four bedrooms, three full baths2 half baths. Finished basement with game room and wet bar. Two-car garage Land¬scaped yard with 115 rose bushes. $175,000. Tom Barber. 8 8 '7012 South Shore DriveElegant 3 000 sq. foot, four-bedroom, three-bath condo. Living room, dining room andsun porch face golf course. Private laundry in the basement. Garage. $91,500.sports 17Guess what this column is aboutby Craig FarberIt was more than the pressure of losing the gamethat caused Joe Cowlev to walk Ozzie Guillen andforce in the winning run this past Sunday. Cowley,along with all the other Yankees including YogiBerra, knew that this was Yogi’s last game as man-,ager of the Yankees. The official word came in theusual classless way of George Steinbrenner when aphone call from Kentucky reached the clubhouse inthe seventh inning, and Yogi was informed shortlyafter the end of the game.This move, although not unusual, surprised me. Ithought that George was too preoccupied with hisKentucky Derby hopeful Eternal Prince to be worry¬ing about his boys from the Bronx (remember, therun for the rose is tomorrow7, post time 4:38).I felt bad watching Yogi agonize in the dugout dur¬ing the ninth inning but now I’m sure this is best forYogi. After all how much longer could he expect tomanage the Yankees. His stint of 1 year 16 games isthe longest continual service as a Yankee managersince Billy Martin’s first hiring that lasted threeyears ending in mid-1978.The ax has been hanging over Yogi’s head for al¬most all of his tenure. In the process Yogi has beenberated by George in the papers. At least now theproblem of having a father-son combination on theteam is eliminated (Incidentally, the 16 games thatDale and Yogi had together broke the Macks’ recordby six games).Yogi will probably take some time off, and after allthe smoke clears, I hope to see him in his familiarspot in the corner of the Yankee dugout. Yogi was theonly Hall of Famer managing in the majors, and hedeserves to stay in the Yankee pinstripes.Even though Yogi’s firing surprised me, the choiceof his successor stunned me. Billy Martin will takehis fourth turn at the Yankee helm. After his last fir¬ing I’d thought I’d never see him in the pinstripesagain.The first two times Martin was fired it was be¬cause of personal conflicts. In 1978 a battle with Reg¬gie Jackson caused Martin’s dismissal. In 1979 he hitthe marshmallow salesman. But in 1983, Martin wasfired because of incompetence and drug abuse. Mar¬tin barely knew his players or what was going on.During the ’83 season several players requestedtrades if Martin continued managing. He was evenknown to leave the bench to talk a female companionseated next to the dugout.Martin had lost the magic called Billy Ball. He did The Third Stringnot know nor cared to concern himself with hisplayers. Unlike its care for Yogi, the Yankee teamdid not want to win for Billy. I do not see things thatmuch different for Billy this time around. He stillcannot deal with players who make millions.Martin’s hiring makes the future of Lou Pinellacertain. Martin will eventually be fired. Where andwhen are subjects of tabloid contests. That leaves avoid that will be filled by Pinella in Spring of ’86. Pin¬ella has been groomed by George to be the futuremanager and George delayed the hiring to give himanother year experience outside of the pressurecooker.But even George’s personal tutelage does not guar¬antee Pinella’s longevity. Gene Michael was onceGeorge’s protege, and he’s already been firedtwice...George’s hiring of Martin leads me to believe EarlWeaver will not be back in 1985. Weaver wasGeorge’s first choice whenever he decided to fireYogi, and Weaver did express a willingness to listento an offer. Apparently the offer of probably beingthe highest paid manager in baseball was notenough. If the challenge of managing the Yankeesdidn’t please Earl, nothing will.Maybe Earl was afraid that wearing a cap for 162games would ruin his perm.★★★★★★Guess what this column isn’t aboutby Dennis ChanskyThe San Francisco Giants mean no harm off, butespecially on the field. They are really nice guys. Sois that why three-to-four times as many people arecoming through the turnstiles at Candlestick Park tosee them, because they are so nice? I doubt it verymuch.But the Giants are even nicer this year than theywere last year, when they agreed to finish behindCincinnati. So why are so many people showing up tosee them. The answer is of course day baseball, thatoh-so-peaceful reserve of the National League. SanFrancisco has all but rejected night baseball. Theyhave rationalized this decision by saying that it getstoo cold at night to play, and especially to watchbaseball in the Bay City. But I doubt it is any coldernow than it has been any time since 1958 when theGiants first moved west.W. Mays, W. McCovey and J. Marichal packedthem in in the daytime and at night as well, and no The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985 ___one complained that it was too brisk then. So the newownership of the Giants is obviously lying about thereason for the switch.I think the real reason is that they, the owners, re¬ally adore day baseball. When Old Man Stonehamowned the Giants, he thought it was a sin to playnight ball, and so the Giants have traditionally sche¬duled at least one mid-week day game every weekthey play at home. Being heirs to this great legacy,the new owners seem to have realized that if onemid-week day game is so good, five would be thatmuch better.But you can’t say things like that because the Com¬missioner’s Office might be listening, and slap youwith some sort of law suit. But listen here Ueberroth,day baseball is where it’s at. The Giants are findingthat out. When Stoneham played in the daytime, hethought he was losing money. But now the Giants,who have no right to draw over 800,000, will probablydraw much better thanks to the special healingpower of day baseball.What makes more people show up in the daytime.Well, in San Francisco I guess warmth is one thing.But there are many other reasons. Mass transit issafer, one tans better in the daytime than at night,etc. But there are two overriding reasons why daybaseball is so great. First, if you absorb one gallon ofbeer one pint at a time at a night game, you have togo home and right to bed. If you do the same at a daygame, you can roll right into happy hour upon com¬pletion of the game, where, incidentally, you canmake back some of the money the beer vender ex¬torted from you. There are other variants on thistheme. Don’t drink at the ballpark, save it all forhappy hour. The other is drink like hell at the parkand sweat it out over dinner before you drivehome.But the other reason, the important reason is thatit is just so damn arrogant to play and watch base¬ball in the daytime. Seeing a day game says to yourboss, your professor, the keeper of the gross nationalproduct, “Buzz off you!” Mid-week day baseball atonce demonstrates both the paramount importanceand the absolute foolishness of baseball, and that’swhy everyone loves it.Cap Day. Sun Visor Day, Batting Helmet Day, SkiCap Day, Floppy Hat Day, Tribal HeaddressDay...what is all this. You know, there never used tobe such silly giveaway days because people, menthat is, could be expected to wear their own hats tothe park. They didn’t need to provide you with one.So do me a favor. Spend the 40 bucks for a hat, you'llalways have it, and then they can do away with thesestupid hat days and give us some real giveaways,like more Big Sunglasses Days.The Sack Realty Company, Inc.1459 east hyde park boulevardChicago, illinois 60615ApartmentShopping?Choice Hyde Park Locations!Students & Professors welcome. Immediate,occupancy! For more Information on anyapartment listed below, call Mr. Collina,Sack Realty Co.684-89005220 CornellOne bedroom, stove, refrig., heat, hot water &cooking gas furnished. To inspect call Annie955-1716. Rent 390.005212 CornellStudio apts., stove, refrig., heat, hot water,cooking gas and electric included. Rentstarting at 260.00 month. To inspect call Annie955-17165100 CornellOne bedroom apts., stove, refrig., heat, hot water,cooking gas & electric included. Rent starting370.00 per month. To inspect call Debbie643-7896 pegent sparkCompare our Luxurious LakefrontRental Apartments with any otherbuilding in Hyde ParkCOMPARE OUR AMENITIES:• Health Spa with fitness center, whirlpool,sauna and exercise programs•European-style supermarket with competitivepricing on nationally advertised brands,featured on Channel 5 as reporter BarryBernson's "favorite gourmet market”•Computer terminal access to University ofChicago’s mainframe• Nationally acclaimed 1 acre garden•Cable TV•Shuttle servide to the UniversityAND OUR RENTS (Centra! heat and•Studios from *470 - *540•One bedroom from *545 - *645 •O’Hare limousine service at our door•Enclosed, heated parking•24 hour doorman, concierge, security andmaintenance•Valet dry cleaning and laundry facilities•Hospitality suite•Across from tennis courts, playground andbeaches• Bus and commuter trains within a block•Fabulous Lake Viewsair included):•Two bedrooms from *655 - $795•Three bedrooms from $830 - $955WE RE A BIT ABOVE THE BEST AND AFFORDABLE5050 South Lake Shore Drive288-5050Model and rental office hours:11 A.M. to 7 P.M. weekdaysNoon to 5 P.M. Saturday and SundayLuxurious Rental Residences-by-The Clinton ComoanvThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3, 1985APARTMENTS aSiMlFOR RENTGRAFF &CHECK s1617 E. 55th St.1 Vi, 2Vi, studios, and1 bedroom apartmentsin a quiet, well-maintained building.Immediate Occupancy %1BU8-5566A CLASSIC RESIDENCEIN ACLASSIC LOCATIONFIFTY-TWO HUNDREDSOUTH BLACKSTONETHE BLACKWOODLuxury, high rise apartmentbuilding in the Hyde Park area nowoffering a limited selsction of oneand two bedroom apartments.Situated near the Illinois Central,University of Chicago, HarperCourt and only a short walk fromthe lake, our apartments feature cen¬tral air conditioning, individuallycontrolled heat, ceramic tile, securi¬ty intercom, new appliances andwall to wall carpeting. Onebedrooms from only $430, twobedrooms from *550. Ask about ourstudent and faculty discount.684-8666 EAST PARKTOWERSCharming, vintage building inEast Hyde Park now has alimited selection of lake andpark view apartments. Situatednear the I.C., we offer studios,one and two bedroom unitswith heat included in rent. Askabout our student and facultydiscount.324-6100SELECTION 0E ATTRACTIVE PAPERSQopy worteThe Copy Center in Harper Court5210 S HARPER AVENUE • 288 2233Hours MON FRI 8 30 AM 6 PM SAT 10 AM 5 PMCfiaz(otte ^UihtzomczReaf Estate Co.493-06661638 EAST 55thREHABBERS TAKE NOTE. Built in 1890 byarchitect Sprague, eleven spacious rooms — sidedrive, 2 car, brick garage. In Kenwood. Needs yourtender care. $115,000 flexible.LAKEFRONT-—COOP. National Registry ofHistoric Places for the building of integrity, sevenrooms — three baths. Near 73rd and South ShoreDrive. $35,000.ANOTHER LAKEFRONT CO-OP, 78thAND SOUTH SHORE. Woodburning fireplace,two bedrooms, plus study — $20,000 total price.Retiree leaving state.THREE BEDROOMS UNBELIEVABLELOW PRICE. $59,000. Ray School District, 54th& Kenwood, spacious, sunny, freshly painted, facingpark. Just Listed.56th & BLACKSTONE A VENUE.Threebedroom beauty, all south windows, A-1 condition.$89,000.VICTORIAN BROWNSTONE. Fivebedrooms, new kitchen — three fireplaces, parkingnear 50th and Dorchester, on campus bus line.$159,000.NEW ON MARKET. Small three bedroomnear 56th and Dorchester. $59,000. While you w$itFlyersBroadsidesHandbills100 4.50500 ... . 16.501000 . . . 25.508 . x 11 BondFrom Yout Camera Ready CopyVIVID COLORS AVAILABLE NUMBERSSAT-PSJTUT ACT BUTACMKVWENTS6RI ISAT IATMl III TIEFLGJCrSTUfUTMM CAT VATSfffiii PREPARATIONFRSdSCfif KS ■CMNCLE1SKEOKAOMG NC8 -IESI RCVKVV FUI1-2-31MfTM TULA* SCHOOLCall Days, Eves & WeekendsOUL-A-TEST HOTLINE (312) 508-0106ARLINGTON HEIGHTS 437-6650CHICAGO CENTER 764-5151HIGHLAND PARK 433-7410LA GRANGE CENTER 352-5840CLASSES FORMING NOWCopy works LtdTHE COPY CENTER INHARPER COURT5210 S. Harper • 288 2233MON FRI. 8:30 - 6:00 — SAT. 10 5HYDE PARK’SNEWEST ADDRESSOFDISTINCTIONCORNELL PLACE5346 South CornellYou must see our tastefullyrenovated high-rise In EastHyde Park. This classicbuilding has the traditionalelegance of a distinguishedHyde Park residence, yet theclean, refreshed interior of anew building. Each spaciousapartment features amplecloset room, modern ap¬pliances, wall to wallcarpeting, ceramic tile, in¬dividually controlled heat andbeautiful views overlooking thelovely surroundings of the HydePark Community or the Lake.We offer studios and onebedroom units with varyingfloor plans starting at $325.Parking available. Ask aboutour student and facultydisount.667-8776 PonicrlcauCOMPUTING SYSTEMSCOME SEE USFOR ALL OF YOURCOMPUTING NEEDSCP/M AND MSDOScomputers:KAYPROprinters:DYNAX AND STARmodems:US ROBOTICSAccessories& Suppliesin Harper Court5211 S. Harper Ave.667-2075Tools For Your Mind...FOOD ADDICTIONBULIMIA • COMPULSIVE OVEREATINGAre You Suffering From Any Three of The Following:□ Binge on high calorie food.□ Inconspicuous eating (hidden eating).□ Constant attempts at dieting.□ Frequent weight fluctuations.□ Eating to discomfort.□ Use of laxatives or diureticsNAPLES RESEARCH&. COUNSELING CENTER• A Complete Confidential Medical and Psychiatric Evaluation.• Private, Confidential, and Individual TYeatment.• 24-Hour Medical Supervision and Support.• Modern Residential Setting. • Special Familization Program.• Individual and Group Therapy.• Covered by Most Insurance Plans.(813)775450024-Hour Assistanceor Toll Free 1 (800) 722^)100 outs.d* Florida• Call for a complimentary copy ot our newest publication, "A Mini-Guideto Food Addiction.”• Call for fcomplete confidential information on our residential treatmentprogram or insurance approvalNAPLES RESEARCH & COUNSELING CENTERThe nation s most comprehensive system for the treatment of addictive disorders9001 Tamiami Trail South • Naples, Florida 33962J C A M accreditedMember of the American Hospital AssociationAn affiliate of WILMAC Health Care Partners in Family Progress19The Chicago Maroon—Friday, May 3,1985SPACESUBLET w/option for lease avail 6/17 spacious1 bedroom unfurn apt in luxury hi-risew/beautiful lake view (Regents Park) Call 324-1660.APARTMENTS AVAILABLEStudios, one, two & 3 bedrms some lake viewsnear 1C, CTA & U of C shuttle, laundryfacilities, parking available, heat & water in¬cluded. 5% discounts for students HerbertRealty 684-2333 9-4:30 Mon. Fri. 9-2 on Sat.For Rent option to buy avail July 1 large 4room apt 15th floor view lake Michigan and Uof Chicago $650 month call 241-5525 after 7:30p.m. Board approval required.1 BR sublet w/option to lease. Hardwood firs,kit w/dinette, shwr, lots clset space, Indry inbsmt, unfurnished or ptly furn, in ct yd bldg.5454 S. Cornell-Quiet st, 1 blk fr l-C, deli, 4restrnts, 3 grocery strs, Avail mid-June.$405/mo & dep, but negot. Call 643-5972.* arge 2 & 3 bdrm apts. New kitchens/baths.$5*.'-625 w/heat. Kimbark & 52nd. 684-5030.Very larv,* 4 bdrm 2 bath apt. sun rm, formaldining rm. kimbark & 52nd. $795 incl heat & op¬tion to buy. avail May 15. 684-5030.Summer sublet w/fall option beautiful 3bedroom w/lake view call 684-4983 after 6.1 bdrm & studio avail June. Non smkg, clean,quiet grad stud. pref. For more info pis callMrs. Irving 667-5153 or Iv. msg. at 684-8596.2 rms in charming 1895 condo 54th &Biackstone mod. kit. Ir. dr. tearm w/woodfireexerrm. Lg. yard w/porch & more nicely furn.nonsmk. grad prefer immediately availableS235/mo call 667-1166Stu. rent, condo bldg, exc sec. pool imm. occ or7/1 864-8082 or 440-4360Summer Sublet spacious 1-Brm Apt in 24 hrsecurity bldg with beautiful view of Chicagoskyline and Lake 4800 S. Lake Shore Dr. 285-8464UC Grad needs roommate for North Side apt..New Town area, nr CTA, shopping, rentS230/mo., available 5/1, call John 648-1233 (w)327 4820 (h).For Rent or Sale: U Park Condo 1 br w/garage,pool, health club. Summer or yr lease 667-0333.Large sunny studio for rent. Available 6/1.Near Groceries, 1C, Jeffrey Express. Air con¬ditioning, laundry, lots of storage. Located 57th& Biackstone. Call 955-1241.Subletter wanted for one bedroom in threebedroom apt from mid-June to mid-SeptemberRoom is large and furnished. Apt has frontporch. Rent negotiable. Call Steven 684-6287.SUBLEASE W/OPTION TO RENT avail. July1. Studio at 58th & Biackstone—quiet & safe.$320/month, all utilities incl. Cathy at 962-7034days/241-6823 eves/wknd.Sublet-Spacious 1 bedroom apt., 54th andWoodlawn. Available 6/1-9/15. Furnished,porch, utilities incl. $350/mo. Please call Curtat 753-2240x1625.Studios, 1, 2, & 3 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335 % Student Discounts9:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M.Monday thru Friday9:00 A.M.-2 P.M.Saturdayclass* s forming no*JUNE EXAMCall Days, Eves & WeekendsOUL-A-TEST HOTLINE (312) 506-0106ARLINGTON HEIGHTS 437-6650CHICAGO CENTER 764-5151HIGHLAND PARK 433-7410LA GRANGE CENTER 352-56404/WK INTENSIVE xhiiimiwir ■Tin CLASSIFIEDSSummer Sublet, 3-4 Bedrm Apt, Furnished.Univ. & 56th, CALL Terri 947-0747ext. 477.Reduced summer rent. If you take June 1 yearlease on our two bdrm Lakeview Regents ParkApt-241-6064.Female non-smoking graduate rmmatewanted: one bedrm w/own bath in two bedrmapt at Regents park Sept, lease please call 324-3917.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955-4417.PASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE-U-WAIT ModelCamera 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700WEDDINGS and other celebrationsphotographed. Call Leslie at 536-1626.LARRY'S MOVING & DELIVERY. To pick upa piece of furniture on the other side of the city,to move boxes or a small household, callanytime. Lowest rates in city. 743-1353.Accurate Typing, Any paper with format. 667-8657; Ask for James.University TYPING Service, fulltime profes¬sional EDITING and WORDPROCESSINGdeluxe by former English prof, hourly fee. 363-0522.CHILDCARE my home, mother -1-2, warm,exp in ed refs, on-emps, imm. Dalia 493-6220exc Feve/Sa.Exp typing: Student & Pro papers. Call 684-6882.WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHYThe Better I mage 643-6262TRIO CON BRIO: music for weddings, recep¬tions, etc. Classical and light popular. Call 643-5007 for details.FAST FRIENDLY TYPING-resumes, papers,all materials. Pick up & Delivery. Call 924-4449.SPACE WANTEDHOUSESITTERS AVAILABLE for '85 86academic year. References. Call 871-1330Professor (no children) working U of C sum¬mer would like to sublet. Call Carol 962-1130Education Department.Sublet - 2-3 bedrooms. June 15-Sept. 31. Tel#753-8342 #802 or 805. After 6pm weekdays aftermorning wkr.PEOPLE WANTEDApplicants for teaching positions sought byUnion Church Nursery School Begin Sept,teach AM, weekdays. Persons with earlychildhood development credentials, sendresume now to G. Stern, HPUC NurserySchool, 5600 S. Woodlawn, Chicago, IL 60637.The Chicago Counseling and PsychotherapyCenter. 5711 S. Woodlawn, needs people whoare willing to talk about their personal pro¬blems and feelings for ten sessions with apsychotherapist-in-training. Participationshould not be seen as psychotherapy or as asubstitute for psychotherapy. Although par¬ticipants may find it a useful experience. Par¬ticipants will neither be paid nor charged fortheir sessions. Call Pat at 684-1800.Seeking Experienced Marketing & Fundrais¬ing person for private non-profitpsychotherapy center in Hyde Park area, halfor 2/3 time work. There's much to give andtake if you're interested in the field. Acquain¬tance with client-centered therapy a definiteplus. Call Dr. Schvrien, 241-6193.Responsible female seeks same to share 2BRapt. near campus beginning June 15. CallCarol/Evenings 493-3955Reader and Research Asst. 12-20 Hrs/Week.Flexible Daytime Schedule. $3.75/Hr. Call 472-8092./■" \MAKE YOURSELFMARKETABLE!Is finding and getting the job you want importantto you? Your career search may be one of themost crucial steps you take. Get off to a goodstart with the help of Marsha Myerson, anexperienced Career Consultant and HumanResources Spepeialist Marsha has worked withsome of Chicago’s largest companies in the areasof recruitment and training and developmet t.Marsha can show you how to make yourselfmarketable for today’s competitive careers andoffer valuable insights into the employmentprocess.Learn how to strategically plan a job search,establish valuable professional contacts, when tosend and how to write resumes and cover letters,sharpen your interview skills and more LetMarsha Myerson put her experience to work foryou. For a confidential appointment at either herdowntown or Lincoln Park location call 5?S-3740. Call now and start planning your success! FOR SALEVery sturdy couch & matching chair $100.00.643-2706 or 962-7123.NEW LISTING-56th & DORCHESTER. 2bedroom, large eat-in kitchen, sep DR, excep¬tional yard. Ray school. Compare building,locations, and price. By owner, $62,500 . 643-9423 eve:CONDO FOR SALE. Big, sunny one-bedroom.Great location-56th and Kimbark. Low $40's.684-8299.Chevy Citation, 1980- automatic, PB, AC, PS,stereo, 4 doors. Good condition, very lowmileage. Call 363-8578.VW74 Bug Great for city excursion stick shiftam-fm stereo $600 Call Ray 947-01841975 Datsun station wagon 710 only $900 call752-8755 mornings - 7:30-8:30Technics SLB-200 turntable 3-1- yrs left on fullparts/labor warranty. $70 w/o or $110 withADC Series III cartridge Rick 962-8855, 348-0356.57/Blackstone condo: 3bdrm/2ba. 3rd fl. insafe, quiet bldg. Large sunny rms, excellentlayout. Lots of closet .. storage space. Built inbookcases, linen closets, breakfront. Refinish¬ed hdwd firs, fplc mantel. $100,000. Call Mellen962-9492 (day), 241-6315 (eve).1974 Pontiac Catalina. Engine has low com¬pression in 3 of 8 cylinders. Other minor pro¬blems. Asking $100. Call Steven 684-6287.VW72 Super Beetle. Dependable transporta¬tion, am-fm stereo $500, negotiable. Tracy 684-6628.Yard Sale - Household & kids stuff. Sat. May 4,10-4. Rochdale PI, between Dorchester andBiackstone just N. of 55th St. Raindate Sun.LOST & FOUNDFOUND 4/24 55th & Ellis medium-sized dogmostly white, black/brown head, blue collar241-6404.WANTEDModels or toys of VW Bug for children. 955-6462.PETSAdorable 8 week male tabby kitten free to goodhome. 924-1976RIDERider wanted. Leaving for New England areaMay 23 or 24. Call early eves 493-6879.PIANO LESSONSwifh EDWARD MONDELLO, piano teachermusic dept. 1960-82. 752-4485.THE MEDICI DELIVERSDaily from 4 pm call 667-7394.KIDS EARN MONEY!2nd thru 6th graders—Earn money the easyway. Be in a fun study especially for kids. CallMs. Heller 9-5 962-1548.CO-OP APT FOR SALEIDEAL CAMPUS LOCATION!56th & University. Quiet, spacious 1-2BR. Fullyfinished, move-in cond. Modern kit, bath.Fireplace, storage. Well-managed bldgw/large beautiful yard. $59,900. Arrangementfor furniture possible. Call 684-5702.THE GERAAAN CLUBSTAMMTISCH-German language table. Mon.12-lpm. The Blue Gargoyle. Tues. 6-7:30 pm. I-House. Bitte! Kommen Sie!COMING OUT GROUPTo discuss the problems (and possibilities) ofbeing gay and coming out. 8pm Tuesdays at5615 South Woodlawn.ORIENTAL CARPETSSpring Sale-until May 6th. All carpets at 20 per-cent discount. All sizes, all colors. Call 288 0524(leave message if necessary.)ELECTRICTYPEWRITERSBrand new Smith-Corona, daisy wheel type¬writers. One portable with special features,one office quality with memory. Offered atsubstantial savings and with original warran¬ties. Call 288-0524.NATIVE AMERICANOPERABenefit concert for Native American Educa¬tional Services May 5 at 2:30pm LutheranSchool of Theoloov Concert includes local In¬dian talent and features Bonnie Jo Hunt, aSioux Indian operatic artist. Contribution $15;group rates available. Call 761 5000 for info. CALL HOTLINE7PM to 7AM, 7 days a week. Talk. Information.Referral. Crisis Intervention. We're there foryou. 753-1777PSA BOOK SALEDivinity School Assoc. Book Sale, May 6-7,9am-4, Swift Hall Commons. Thousands of us¬ed & new discounted books, theology, ethics,lit, philosophy, history, anthropology, other. Ifyou want to sell your used books call Tod Swan¬son, 241-6722.PART TIMEEMPLOYMENTMystery shopping for day care centers, fastfood chains, health centers. Call or write Ms.Brown, Kufta & Assoc., 713/781-7001, P.0 Box771926, Houston, Texas 771926-1926.JOIN JAZZERCISE NOWGET FIT FOR SUMMERJoin Jazzercise now for a high energy totalbody conditioning program to get you in shapefor summer. Classes starting now in The BiueGargoyle, 5655 University Ave. Classes will beheld at 6 and 7pm on Tuesdays and Thursday.For more information call 436-4115.ELECT DEBA TE OFFICERSNominations open Sunday, April 28th at 7pm inIda Noyes East Lounge. Elections on Sunday,May 5th at 7pm in Ida Noyes. All members areexpected to attend.ORGAN RECITALSFree each Tues. 12:30 pm: Thomas Wikmanplays the magnificent new baroque organ atChicago Theological Seminary, 5757 S. Univer¬sity Ave.HAPPY FEETMake your feet happy by doing ethnic dancesfrom Europe, Middle East, and more, with UCFolkdancers every Monday at 8:30 forteaching, 10 pm for requests, in Ida Noyes hall.No experience or partners necessary.FEELING SAD,BLUE, DEPRESSED?Volunteers needed for a drug preferenceresearch study. Study involves onlycommonly-prescribed non-experimentatHrugs. This is not a treatment study. This fourweek study pays $150. Call 962-3560 morningsfor further information. Volunteers must bebetween 21-35 yrs. old and in good health.MOTHER'S DAY ROSES!Delivered FREE to Chicago area & NorthShore. Lowest prices in town! Guaranteed!Call John Kotz of Flowers, Ltd at 493-5511 mor¬nings, eves for more information. ALL ordersby May 5th. *$19.99/doz.*.BABY LANGUAGESTUDYChildren between 11 months and 20 months ofage to participate in a language developmentstudy. Both parents must be native Englishspeakers. Call the committee on Cognition andCommunication between 1 and 5. 962-8859.BLACK SUPPORT GROUPThe BLACK SUPPORT GROUP will meet Fri.May 3 at 6:30 pm at the Blue Gargoyle 5655 S.Univ. Sponsored by the Black Graduate Forumand ACM.ARE YOU AFRAID?Come see The Other Theater Group's produc¬tion of WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIAWOOLF Friday and Saturday at 8PM inReynold's Club, $3.00SUMMERHOUSE SITTINGSoc. Grad. Wants summer House sitting.Responsible couple, References available. Canlook after your house, pets, etc. Will pay forutilities. Please Call 643-7327.CALLIGRAPHERWANTEDHillel Foundation needs a work-study studentfor the academic year 85 86 to do posters &flyers. Knowledge of Hebrew Calligraphypreferred. Call Barbara 752-1127.ADOPTION WANTEDLoving couple in mid 30's will provide love fineeducation, suburban home for Caucasian in¬fant, our resume available confidential ex¬penses paid call friend Jan collect at 312-352-0312.FOTAVISUAL ARTISTS interested in showing incampus exhibition come to meeting Thursdayat 4, Ida Noyes 205. Bring work if possible.RIDE NEEDEDWEEKDAYSDo you drive from Northside to campus, M-FAM? I need a ride from Lakeview (3400N1400W) To arrive around SAM. Will pay. CallSandra X2-7359, days.May 3, 1985 • 17th YearHunka-hunka-burnin’ love: Elvis in his post¬mortem phaseby Franklin SoultsThe story goes that shortly after ElvisPresley died, his manager Col. TomParker, was asked what he would do now.He replied, “Why, I’ll go right on manag¬ing him.’’ That boast is memorable be¬cause it makes a lot of sense. Presley isthe grandest and probably the single mostimportant figure (if there is one) in rockand roll history; the cultural creations heleft in his wake reach into almost everycorner of our popular imagination, and themanagement of that cornucopia of culturalrelics has become its own source of culturalrecycling and reconstruction. RCA records,the managers of the raison d’etre of thePresley legacy — his music — have posthu¬mously released countless live recordsand cheap thematic repackages, but nowthat Presley’s 50th birthday marks asomewhat shaky but still universally ac¬cepted legitimization of the Great PresleyCelebration/Rip-off, they have also re¬leased a whole pile of more carefullypackaged compilations and higher qualityreissues. For the quality conscious musicfan or the discerning Elvis follower, thefruits from this Golden Celebration are agolden opportunity; it’s finally an Elvismarket ploy that is well worth support¬ing.One of the new compilations is Reconsid¬er Baby. The idea behind this particularpackage is to document the history of Elvisthe blues singer, thereby appealing to amore or less purist market of Elvis fanswho would like a memory of their hero ashe existed outside the corruptions of Hol¬lywood and Vegas. Peter Guralnick, therespected historian and biographer ofcountry bluesmen and other traditionalAmerican folk musicians, wrote the goodliner notes; and the sound has been digi¬tally remastered and all that stuff, so itcomes out as crisp as if you’d just put onone of the original pressings for the firsttime, maybe better. Plus, the cover is agreat nighttime photo of Elvis standing bya brick wall, looking fagged out, dazed, ascool and distanced as the various tones ofblues and greens and violets (but mostlyblues) that shade this stark picture. RCAeven went so far as to press the thing onblue vinyl. And the music, as a whole, livesup to the packaging concepts. So the ques¬tion is, does the concept live up to its ownambitions?"Elvis made his pull from the blues,’’Guralnick’s liner notes quote Howlin’ Wolfas saying, and he was right. But Elvis alsogave away the source of his power as soonas he had made something from it. “That’sAlright,” Elvis’ first single, was a bluestune, but it was played more like country,just as its flipside, ’’Blue Moon of Ken¬tucky,” was country read with a blues fla¬vor; and the result of the combinations —rockabilly — was more spectacular andmore important for Elvis than either of thesources it came from. It would seem, there¬fore, that to distill Elvis the blue singerfrom Elvis the American Star (king of rock‘n’ roll, prince of schlock, and duke of ev¬erything in between) is to look for thesource of Elvis’ power by chopping it up,by denying its complexity. But instead of coming off like a patchwork of songspulled out of context, or like a historycreated by the lie of documenting an au¬thenticity that never existed, the songs onthis record belie the purity of the album’sambitions while consistently confirmingthe idea that, even into the 70’s, Elvisdidn’t lose touch with his feel for theblues.This apparent contradiction isn’t funda¬mentally caused by the record’s misrepre¬sentation of Elvis, but by its misunder¬standing of what the blues must havemeant to a poor Southern white boy. Forthe white boy Elvis Presley there wasnothing “pure” about the blues — his en¬tire community understood that — so whenhe sang them he wasn’t making the mostunsullied music of his career, he was mak¬ing the most impure, corrupted music heknew how.“One Night,” a song that appears hereas an alternate take of Elvis’s hit from ’58,is a good example of what I mean. The fulltitle of the hit was “One Night (with You)”and its lyric is a dull, respectable storyabout how the singer’s girl can help himfulfill his dreams, with the chorus couplet,“The things we two could plan/ Wouldmake my dreams come true.” The alter¬nate take, with the original Smiley Lewislyrics, is called “One Night (of Sin),” andit’s about how this man’s participation inwhat might have been an orgy (the sin istoo depraved ever to be named) has led tothe loss of his girl, his respectability —and his liberation. It’s chorus couplet is,“The things I did and I saw/ Would makethe earth stand still,” which is both aboast and an admission of guilt. Thepurists have a very good case here forprefering the alternate take, becausewhile both versions are fairly compara¬ble, the lyrics in the hit have to be support¬ed by the blues-drenched tune, whereas inthe alternate take the two complementeach other, (as they do in all good songs)thereby doubling the impact of the piece.But the alternate take was sanitized for areason: the suggestion of the song arehardly amenable to the image a whole¬some pop star needs to project, which evenin the fifties was what Elvis ultimatelywanted to be accepted as. It’s true, the ,passion of the blues was what gave Elvisthe fuel to reach for more than any poorboy — white or black — could reasonablyhope to achieve, but when he had actuallyachieved it, the blues — which hadn’tchanged, though they’d changed him — be¬came the under-belly of his career.Most of Elvis’s best music suggests afreedom and celebration whose onlyequivalent could be found in the blues, butmostly it’s a freedom that has completelyseparated itself from the blue's concomi¬tant themes of guilt, exile, and decadance.The startling thing about this compilationis that with many of the songs here. Elvisplays the blues with these themes in mind— and most up front is the decadence. Onlythree of the twelve tracks are the kind ofcountry blues that began Elvis's success,most of the rest are the kind of city blues aman who already owned a pink Cadillaccould come to know, the kind of blues a Glon leave could come to know: burlesquebased, raunchy, strung out, and sugges¬tive as all hell. The best song on the recordis the title track, and it’s also one of Elvis’sbest sides ever thanks to his smooth andseductive singing, his super-miked, pound¬ing guitar, and Boots Randolph's supremesax work that stands as the equivalent ofBobby Keys work on “Brown Sugar.” It’sno surprise that this track from Elvis’smost blues-steeped album, Elvis is Back,was made right after Elvis’s release fromthe army. It was a time when his careerwas at stake, and to get it on firm groundagain he could pull no punches. This song,along with “When It Rams. It Really Pours,” “One Night,” and most of sidetwo, could be the aural accompaniment tothe cover photo, or to the pictures in abook that came out shortly after the kingdied called Private Elvis where we seePresley in the army, consorting withwhores, junkies and strippers in a Germannightclub.It’s truly surprising for some peoplewhen they hear this great, rampagingmusic because the only Elvis they came toknow was the one shrouded in the banalpart of American pop culture; a part so'vast it could make the vital side of Elvis’swork seem like a dream, or a myth, or alie. The thing to remember, however, isthat this blues isn’t an anomaly in Elvis'scareer. It is a fundamental part of thesame man who made “Blue Hawaii” and"No Room to Rhumba in a Sports Car,” be¬cause while the blues may have little to dodirectly with these and hundreds of otherthrowaways he cut, they have quite a bitto do with the best of their close relatives,not the real rockers, but the cute, jumpyditties and the more powerful balladswhich Elvis himself chose to sing. And justas it informs those songs’ unique strengths(who else woulc have pulled most of themoff?), so those songs inform his blues: ifyou know the history of Elvis' mainstreamstyles you can roughly date most of thesongs on this album without ever havingheard them before. The seven songs onside one cover the fifties, and the early rockabilly phase here is separable fromthe Teddy Bear phase, both of which aredistinguishable from the post-army Elvis.Side two, which goes from 1961 to 1970,neatly traces the movie Elvis to the come¬back, studio conscious Elvis, to the deepand lazy voiced singer of the last decade.All this through blues or blues derivedmusic.If you want a well rounded sample ofElvis’s music at the height of his powersthen the indispensible albums are The SunSessions and Elvis’ Gold Records (Vol. I)(now reissued in mono); those albums docu¬ment the songs that created rockabillyand that shaped the core of everythingrock and roll has ever been. They are alsotwo of rock’s finest records. But if thatdoesn’t satisfy you, or if you want to seehow far the best rock and roll singer in thehistory of the form could take the darkerside of his music, this compilation would bea good place to start. For the obsessed,the album is redundant because most ofthe tracks are available elsewhere inmore historically correct formats, but thisrecord reveals one side to the Elvis storythat shouldn’t be overlooked in whateverformat it’s presented. Still, the idea that itcaptures a side or part of Elvis in its wholedistinct essence is a pretension that underrates the depth and complexity of this iconof American pop. How many sides arethere to Elvis? I don’t know — how manysides are there to America?9 EXCITING NEW r^r-n, ri/rivifi PRES LEV —ti-V SOUVENIRS£ NON-SMEAR /fel qq6 EXCITING SHADES<</ Hound Dog Orange ^ Lovo-ya Fuchsia ^ Tender PinkHeartbreak Fink ^ Tutti Frutti Med ^ Cruel ked w~BONUS Of HR w,»h any order totaling S3 00 or more you w.ll;ece;ve absolutely FREE 8 Wjllef ^ phologr^ *f ^36637 H IInd ''' °rde,i ’° °ff,C,Al iTAR SOUVENIRS Bo.6631 Hollywood 36 Cal,forma Please —FULL FIGURE, BRONZEDINTRICATELY CARVEDSTATUETTEELVIS PRESLEYYou'll be positively amazed at the amount of detail inthese statutettes The original mold, from which theseare cast, was created by one of the country's foremostsculptors 8 inches tall Available now to his multitude offans at the sensationally low price ofonly $1.00 (Rial 25Cto covor mailingand handling costcj.MAIl YOUR ORDERS TOBONUS OFFER With any order totaling $2 00 or more you will receiveabsolutely FREE B Wallet Site Photographs of Elvis PresleyAll OUR PRODUCTS CARRY A FUll MONEY BACK GUARANTEE IF NOT COMPLETELY SATISFIEDHound Dog Orange??7THE UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO DEPARTMENT of MUSIC PRESENTS‘University Symplumv Ordwjtra ’fxuiora ScWvrT OinctorUniversity CltorusBrua Idmimn.DircctsrStravinsky: Jirelnr^ SuiteVaujduw Williams: Dana TlobisTflcgm \ELLEN T. HARRIS, SOPRANO BRUCE TAM MEN, BARITONESATURDAY Sc SUNDAY, MAY 11 Sc 12 b• 5:30 PM *HttanBfl Hall -57 tii &r 'University /DONATIONS REQUESTED: ^3 ADULTS, R1 STUDENTS INFORMATION > ^962-0404 / wWwwwwVwkwww\WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWwwwwwww\www\|WWW\WWWROBERT VON HAIlMiAmerican Poetry and fiH1945-1180MBIT HUH, EHwwwwwJwWWWWwwwwHabits of the HeartSBMNARV con* BOOKSnmE5757S.UHUVERSITY 7524381THE WATER ENGINEI by DAVID MAMET = GOODMAN THEATRESTUDENT SPECIALApril 26-June2Previews April 26- May 5Half-price tickets forall Goodman SeriespreviewsHalf-price rush tic¬kets for all regularperformances(except Saturdayevenings) when youpurchase tickets 15minutes beforecurtain.One ticket per validstudent IDCALL 443-3800Goodman Theatre200 S. Columbus Dr. blarkfriarsR E S E IMHAIR ss.3 B ° £h OZoy < < u5h z°i i8.00 pmMAY 9lIO.IIaIBlr7SJ8JEYNOLOS CLUB • 3RD PLR THEATER UU.P(11>•m□ui□23aKatherine Paterson...Newberry Award winning author of"Jacob I have Loved"and"Bridge to Terabithia" will be at57th Street Books onSaturday, May 4th from 12 to 2:00 p.m.to meet her readers and sign copies ofher latest book, "Come Sing, Jimmy Jo"copiesof nerotherbooksavailableClothandPaper¬backBooksAvailable57th Street Books1301E. 57th Street684-1300 OUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PANIS NOW AVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKCocktails • Pleasant Dining • Pick-Up"Chicago’s best pizza!” - Chicago Magazine, March 1977"The ultimate in pizza!” - New York Times, January 19805311 S. Blackstone Ave.947-0200Open 11 a. m. -midnight Monday-Thursday11 a.m.-1 a.m. Friday and SaturdayNoon-Midnight Sunday(Kitchen closes half hour earlier)2— FRIDAY. MAY 3. 1985—GREY CITY JOURNALfi* 9 su5 ffl6 lj> ft' TlPLITTLE QUEENIEANY NUMBER. OFADOLESCENT GIRLS LIF.FACE DOWN ON THE RFI)AND WORK. ON ENERGY.HOUSING, LABOR, JUSTICE,F. D UC AT ION, T R A N S PORT AT IO N,AGRICULTURE ANDBALANCE OF TRADE.o MISC OThe Ad Hoc Committee for a Free SouthAfrica is a newly formed organiza¬tion on the UC campus. Our concernwith the appalling situation in SouthAfrica brings us together; our un¬derstanding of recent events leadsus to believe that we, as members ofthe University community, can andshould express our solidarity withBlack South Africans. We are hold¬ing an open meeting Sunday May 5,2nd floor of Ida Noyes, 5 pm to dis¬cuss plans for action against theapartheid policies of South Africa,as well as possible strategies forreopening the issue of divestmentwithin the University Administra¬tion. Please join us, whether youhave specific questions and ideas ora general interest.Nancy Reagan’s Smoke Dope onCampus Day Fri May 10. MainQuads, starts 12 Noon. BYO. Tell ev¬eryone who should know.An Evening of Performance and PoetryFota sponsors Dreams Remembereddirected by Jack Helbig, The Photo-Electric Effect directed by BrianCampbell with music by Tim Brown,and a reading by the group Move-able Feet, consisting of poets Eliza¬beth Barnes-Clayton, Shawn Hall,David Sullivan, Mark Johnson, andBill Hayes. Also, music by WHPKReggae dj Arthur Bailey. Mon, 8p.m. in Reynolds Club first floor the¬ater. Free.Praxis Makes Perfect Fashion, music,film mixing, installation — sure tobe the high-tech post-mod bricollagethat’s been missing from your life.Free, sponsored by Fota Wed, Reyn¬olds Club first floor theater, 9 p.m.O THEATER OThat Apple Sure Don’t Shine Recentgraduates and drop-outs of the Chi¬cago public school system wrote thisplay, dealing with their feelingsabout being in and out of the sys¬tem. Vital and dynamic, this showpresents a nearby world that mostHyde Parkers don’t think about toomuch. Sponsored by Fota, this playis free. Sunday, 8 p.m. in the Reyn¬olds Club first floor theater.ART OFota Presents an exhibition of works insculpture, photography and paint¬ing by local and Chicago artists.Opening Monday, with a receptionat 6:30 p.m., in the Reynolds ClubNorth Lounge. The show will be upall week, as will several pieces ofoutdoor sculpture around the quads,also sponsored by Fota.Alumni Who Collect II: Sculpture From1900 To The Present: "Crass? Un¬doubtedly. Objectification? You bet.Smurf me out, man” — (GCJ, 4/26) Atthe David and Alfred Smart Gallery,5550 Greenwood. Tues-Sat, 10-4,Sun 12-4.Robert Barry Four walls and a sound in¬stallation of verbal/conceptualwork. Opens Sunday, with a recep¬tion from 4-6. At the ReniassanceSociety, 4th floor Cobb. Tues-Sat,10-4, Sun 12-4.Critical Messages: The Use of PublicMedia for Political Art by Women A fa¬scinating idea: the use of really pub¬lic media for really political art.Eighteen women designed signs andplacards for display on the CTAbuses and trains, about half of whichwere rejected by the CTA, apparent¬ly because of radical content. Aboutthirty women designed artist'sbooks, all of which are on display atthe Cultural Center, 78 E. Washing¬ton, thru May 31. Among the artistsshowing books are Sue Coe/HollyMetz, Jenny Holzer, and BarbaraKruger (the latter two also hadposters banned from the CTA). Re¬lated video programs will be airedon television later this month, all ofwhich are currently available forviewing at Artemisia, 341 W. Supe¬rior. For further information, call751-2016.Artists Call Against U.S. Intervention InCentral America and the Caribbean An exhibit of individual and collabora¬tive artworks and installations, inconjunction with a series of eventsand forums. Cail 733-0886 for de¬tails. At N.A.B. Gallery, 331 S.Peoria, Tues-Fri, 2-7, Sat 11:30-4.Audacious: Some Extremist Tendenciesin East Village Art Recent works ofeight New York artists, includingSue Coe (How To Commit Suicide InSouth Africa), Alan Belcher (icono¬graphy of advertising) MartinWong, Debby Davis, and others.Opens Saturday, with a receptionfrom 6-9 p.m. At Randolph StreetGallery, 756 N. Milwaukee. Tues-Sat, 11-5.Engagement Recent works by sixteenrather engaging artists representedby this gallery, including: SherrieLevine, Rene Santos, Richard Prince,Sarah Charlesworth, Bruce Clear¬field, Janet Cooling, others. Openstoday with a reception from 5-8 p.m.At Feature, 340 W. Huron. Tues-Sat11-5.Art of Cameroon Multi-media folk artfrom the western African nation. Atthe Field Museum, Columbus Driveat Jackson 922-9410.Contemporary German Drawings 123works by 43 contemporary artists,including Baselitz, Kovacs, Bueys,Hajek, and Penck. Through May 31at the Goethe Institute, 401 N. Mi¬chigan. For information, call329-0915.Drawings: The 81st Exhibition by Artistsof Chicago and Vicinity An opportuni¬ty to see some rising art stars: who¬ever made it into this show has beenChosen by the Powers That Be. ThruJune 16 at the Art Institute, Michi¬gan at Adams. 443-3625.Marc Chagall: Works On Paper 200 or soworks by the recently deceased andwidely acclaimed painter. I notethat the Institute is charging a fulladmission fee ($4.50 adults, $2.25students) for the show at all times. Ihope this doesn’t turn out to be likelast summer’s Degas show or thisyear’s Impressionist Landscapeshow — uneven work, badly hung,very overcrowded and not at allworth the money one reluctantlypaid. At the Art Institute, asabove.§ MUSIC oFunky Fresh and Free Dance An all-Uni-versity dance for Fota’s openingnight, with djs Gary of Wax Trax, meRocksteady, me Timski, Derek Grey,others. Free, free refreshments,sure to be a great time Saturday, 9p.m. in Ida Noyes gym.Open Rehearsal with Transit, conduct¬ed by Mark Prentiss. ComposerBrian Ferneyhough oversees thepreparation of his work FuneraillesI and II for their American premierenext week Sponsored by MABTues, 3 p.m. in Goodspeed RecitalHall.Bhakti 3 Fota noontime concert in HutchCourt, Tuesday.Mind Release Fota noontime concert inHutch Court, Thursday.Brian Ferneyhough British modernistcomposer Ferneyhough gives a lec¬ture/demonstration, with Carol Mor¬gan playing piccolo. Thursday, 3p.m. in Goodspeed Recital Hall.Noise Fest/Remember Vietnam? Exper¬imental music with film and othersurprises. Performers include TestPatterns, Ono, Shop Bunch, AlgebraSuicide, and others. You'll neveragain get so much for free — spon¬sored by Fota. Tues, Reynolds Clubfirst floor theater, 8 p.m.The Minutemen Along with their SSTlabel mates Husker Du, this triofrom San Pedro is the most criticallysuccessful hardcore band in Americatoday. It's also one of the most pop¬ular, as far as hardcore popularitygoes. And their music, with its medi¬um tempo, jerky beats, open soundsand audible lyrics, might not evenqualify as hardcore. If they need anew identifying label, call themavant-garde punks. Or, as Voicecritic Tom Carson said, American'smost conceptual bar band. Also callthem astute, full of ideas, and ascommitted and worthwhile as youcould want them to be. Tonight, Cab¬aret Metro, 3730 N Clark.549-0205. All Ages (as it should be).-FSThe Others, The Reducers If you're notinto hardcore but are into the indiescene in general and want to go outtonight, you might want to check outthis show instead of the one above. I've never heard of The Others, butThe Reducers are a fine garageband from New London with plentyof drive and anomie and enough me¬lodic sense to easily get by, which Iguess is the basic combination need¬ed That’s a pretty generic recom¬mendation, but the real plug here isfor the West End, which recently hasbeen putting on a whole lot of good,low key new music shows at greatprices, so it’s worth checking thisplace out when you want somewheredependable at which to spend yourleisure time. Tonight, West End,1170 W Armitage. 525-0808. —FSGeorge Thorogood and the DelewareDestroyers Thorogood is a popularcover artist, mostly of old R & B andChicago style blues numbers. Hisgruff, aggressive voice and hardrock guitar have earned him a loyalfollowing from the blue-collar teen¬agers who hear his songs on AORstations across the land. Those samesituations, however, would nevereven consider airing the originalmaterial were it to be releasedtoday because it’s so definitivelycoming from the other side of thecolor line. Too bad, because it’s a lotbetter than Thorogood s remakes,which hardly ever appropriate thesongs to make this signify eitherpersonally or in a meaningful tradi¬tion. For him. Hank Williams and BoDiddley get the same treatment. If itwere otherwise, he probablywouldn’t be aired either. Tonight at8, Aragon Ballroom, 1106 WLawrence 666-6667. —FSJulliard String Quartet: Robert Mannand Earl Carlyss, violins; SamuelRhodes, viola, and Joel Krosnick,cello, perform Haydn's Quartet in D,op. 50 no. 6 (The Frog); Irving Fine'sString Quarter (1952), and Tchai¬kovsky’s Quarter in E-flat, op. 30no. 3. Fri May 3 at 8 p.m. in MandellHatl. Tickets $12, (U of C students$7.50). 962-8068Yellowman, Mutabaruka, Freddie Mac¬Gregor, Gregory Isaacs, Lloyd Parks,and Others A couple of weeks agothere was a reggae festival at theAragon Ballroom called SunsplashU.S.A. I don't know what they'recalling this one (if anything at all),but it’s a shame it isn’t getting asmuch billing as the last show, be¬cause, as a whole, the headlinersthis time are a lot more interesting.Individually, most of these artistshave serious limitations or semi¬crippling faults, but together theymight be ironed out, or even con¬trasted, to the benefit of everyone.Sat May 4 at 8, Aragon Ballroom,1106 W Lawrence 666-6667. —FSDavid Atherton, presently principalconductor of the San Diego Sym¬phony, directs The Orchestra of Illi¬nois in a program of Bach (Ricer-care); Beethoven (SeventhSymphony), and Mozart (Conciertotor Flute and Harp). Fri May 3 at 8p.m., Auditorium Theater; Sat May4 at 8 p.m., Centre East in Skokie;Sun May 5 at 3 p.m., Pick StaigerHall, Evanston. Tickets $8.25-19.25.341-1975.New Music Ensemble: Barbara Schu¬bert directs the ensemble's producti¬on of Stravinsky’s L'Histoire du Sol-dat, and Christopher Coleman’sDisappearances, Part II; Dan Wel-cherts Abe/a Blance; Peter MaxwellDavies' 5 Pieces for Piano and Runesfrom a Holy Land, and works of Co-pelan, Wolpe, Schoenberg, andothers. Sat May 4 at 8 p.m., Good-speed Retical Hall. Free admission.Alfred Brendel, pianist, performsworks of Haydn, Schubert, and Mus¬sorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition.Sun May 5 at 3 p.m., Orchestra Hall,22 0 S. Michigan. Tickets$8.50-15.00. 435-8122.American Philharmonia Brass Quintet; Aconcert of brass masterpieces fromBaroque to Modern. Mon May 6 at12:15 p.m., Chicago Public LibraryCultural Center, Preston BradelyHall, 78 E. Washington 346-3278Chicago Symphony Chamber Music;CSO’s Montaganana Consort pres¬ents works by Mozart, Bruch, andBrahms. Free wine if you arrive atfive! Wed May 8 at 5:45 p.m., Or¬chestra Hall, 220 S. Michigan.435-8122.Noontime Concert Series; Mark Hup-pert, clarinet, and Nancy Newman,piano, will perform pieces byBrahms, Bernstein, and Messiaen.Thurs May 9 at 12:15 p m.. Good-speed Recital Hall.Chicago Symphony Orchestra; ErichLeinsdorf, conductor, with Erie Mills,soprano, present Bach’s Cantata No.51, Janchiet Gott in alien Landen!(Adolph Herseth, trumpet), selec¬tions from Alban Berg's opera, Lulu,and Bruckner’s symphony No. 1.Thurs May 9 at 8 p.m. OrchestraHall, 220 S. Michigan. .Tickets$10.00-28 00. 435-8122.N.R.B.Q. Their name stands for NewRhythm and Blues Quartet (or Quin¬tet, depending on the album), butthey don't quite play rhythm andblues, and they're certainly notnew. (Everyone says that, but it'sabout as much as you can pin downon these guys, so don't blame me forrepeating it). Semi-Southern rock- Jenny Holzer, Selections From Theing, Louisiana boogie, rolling, goodtime music that is reputed to be asfun as you can get in concert. Last Iheard a good time is not assured,it’s practically insured. Thurs May 9,Cubby Bear, Clark and Addison,327-1662 -FSo FILM oDorm of the Dead (Jeff Makos, 1984)Filmed on location at the Universityof Chicago, Dorm of the Dead tellsthe story of a campus gone mad.Tainted meat from Guam turns stu¬dents into zombies who gleefullymunch on human flesh until the Uni¬versity’s para-military forces strikeback. The zombies respond by team¬ing up to storm the administrationbuilding and kill the president. De¬spite its student-filmy flaws (weakacting, spoofy plot), Dorm of theDead features some sparkling pho¬tography, good special effects, stun¬ning makeup by GCJ's own Stepha¬nie Bacon, and direction by JeffMakos that is Swiftian in its excess.* Starring Brian Mulligan, MonicaKowalski, Bob Devendorf and BenWolf. To be seen before several Sci-Fi shows. Fri May 3. DOC. —DKGhidrah, The Three-Headed Monster (In-oshiro Hondo, 1965) No surprises inGhidrah, The Three-Headed Mon¬ster: Godzilla teams up with formerenemies Rodan (The Big Bird Thing)and Mothra (The Big CaterpillarThing) to fight Ghidrah who was sentfrom Mars to conquer the earth. Al¬though some people try to build acase for Godzilla as being represen¬tative of the inate desire of some lit¬tle children to mess up their roomsor destroy a major city or whatever,most of these projects deteriorateinto nonsense. But if you’ve neverseen Godzilla (designed by Giji Tsu-buraya) on the big screen, here'syour chance. Fri May 3 at 6. DOC$2.50 -DKTwenty Million Miles to Earth (NathanJuran, 1957) Once again, no sur¬prise A gelatinous egg from Venusgrows to a huge monster whenplaced in earth’s atmosphere andproceeds to terrorize Rome. Al¬though the creature lacks the famil¬iarity of Godzilla, it’s animation bypixillator Ray Harryhausen (anima¬tor for the Sinbad movies) is some ofthe most expressive since KingKong. But beyond that the film haslittle to offer. Fri May 3 at midnight.DOC $2 50 —DKIt’s Alive (Cohen, 1974) Invasion seemsto be the basic theme of this year’sSci-Fi Nite — they come from outerspace, from beneath the sea. fromungodly medical experiments, andnow, in the final betrayal, fromone's womb. A typical couple, gene¬tically mutated by commonly avail¬able non-perscription drugs, spawnsa horrific monster-child, a cretinousbe-fanged youth, who, after killingall the doctors in the delivery room,escapes through the skylight, andwreaks havoc upon the peacefulcommunity of Pacific Palisades Al¬though grainy, low-budget, and oc¬casionally amateurish in bothscreenplay and camerawork. It’sAlive somehow, through the use ofan almost clinical serio-documentarystyle, and through the seminal makeup effects by Rick Baker (An Ameri¬can Werewolf in London), managesto be legitimately frightening, itsunpleasantness notwithstanding FriMay 3 at 7:30. DOC. $2 50 —PRIf Uvea Again (Cohen, 1978) "Oh hid¬eous maw. gorged with the dearestmorsel of the earth, thus I enforcethy rotten mouth to open, and in de¬spite thee, I shall cram thee withmore food...” More alienated, canni¬balistic, monster-habies; more fun!Fri May 3 at 9 DOC —PRThe Tin Drum (Schlondorff, 1979) Ahighly Imaginative modern altego- “Living" Series, 1981.ry, The Tin Drum is the story ofOscar, a young Polish boy who ref¬uses to grow after the age of three.Confused and terrified by the vio¬lence of adults, he develops a pierc¬ing scream that he uses to attack thedark and frightening world of Na¬zism. Academy Award winner forthe Best Foreign Film, 1979, Fri May3 at 7:30 & 10. International House.$2 50 -BTInvasion of the Body Snatchers (Siegel,1956) The movie you’ve seen only onT.V. comes to the silver screen atlast! Oh, how I wish they d “snatch”that “body” who keeps stealing theVillage Voice from the Doc of¬fice...Sat May 4 at midnite. DOC$2.50 -PRThe Natural (Levinson, 1984) I went tosee The Natural because I found Le¬vinson's earlier feature Diner im¬mensely entertaining. What I foundwas a pompous, bloated vehicle forpretentious photography, hopeless¬ly bland mythology, and RobertRedford. Lacking any narrative mo¬tivation the shots seem to be chosenexclusively to show off the prod¬uction design or to provide a sooth¬ing visualization to the tritely mov¬ing score by Randy "Short People”Newman. Unlike the original novelin which the hero is not only a wo¬manizing lout but also sells out inthe end, the film allows only mobili¬ty for its heros and evil for its vil-lians. This is probably the worstmovie DOC will show this quarterand it's programmer should be cas¬trated. Sat May 4 at 7 and 9:30DOC $2.50 —DKThe Flavor Of Green Tea Over Rice (Ozu,1952), An early and excellent effortby one of Japan's greatest film¬makers, The Flavor of Green TeaOver Rice tells a standard story ofmarital distress with exquisite com¬passion and an emotional resonancerarely devoted to the subject. Thehusband is a placid, country-bornbusiness man whose stolidity andunsophitication drives his class con¬scious wife to boredom and con¬tempt. Into this scene arrives a fa¬vorite niece whose romanticoptimism stirs the couple into anoble fight for the return of graceand acceptance into their marriageDespite some uneasy crosscuttingduring dialogue, Ozu’s stable, lowangle (tatami eye-view) cameracreates a point-of-view that ele¬gantly and unobtrusively involvesthe viewer into the emotionalscheme while simultaneously main¬taining enough objectivity to allowfor an unexpectedly potent sense ofhumor to take hold DON’T MISS.Sun May 5 at 8 DOC $2. —DKThe Gotdrush (Chaplin, 1925) and TheKeystone Kops (Sennet) Yuks-o-rama. Sun May 5 at 8:30. LSF. $2.What Every Woman Knows (LaCava.1934) Film adaptation of the JamesBarrie play about the mild wife ofan unfaithful, up-and-coming politi¬cian, who is the real reason for herhusband’s success and social riseWith Helen Hayes, and BrianAherne. Watch for the chainsawmurder, and cannibal feast! MonMay 6 at 8. $2.00 —PRThe Caine Mutiny (Dymtryk, 1954) “Inthe navy/you can set your mind atease ." The lighter side of Querelle.Wed May 8 at 8:30. LSF. $2.Stray Dog (Kurosawa. 1949) A youngdetective has his revolver stolenfrom him on a crowded bus. and sev¬eral murders are committed with Kbefore he eventually captures thecriminal The detective himself is arestless and complex character andin some respects seems to be pursu¬ing his own reflection AlthoughStray Dog has the aura of a Hol¬lywood “film noir," it is more an ex¬pose of the corrupt side of postwarJapan than solely a thriller ThursMay 9 at 8 p.m International House.$2 -BTThe Lady Vanishes (Hitchcock, 1938)Truffaut went crazy over this one.Thur May 9 at 8.30 LSF $2Grey City Journal 3 May 85Staff: Steven K. Amsterdam, Abigail Asher, Rosemary Blinn, MicheleBonnarens, Suzanne Buchannon, Gideon D’Arcangelo, Susan Greenberg.Sabrina Guth, David Kay, Irwin Keller, Michael Kotze, Nadine McGann,David Miller, Patrick Moxey, Brian Mulligan, Susan Pawloski, JohnPorter, Ravi Rajmane, Max Renn, Paul Reubens, Laura Saltz, RachelSaltz, Wayne Scott, Franklin Soults, Mark Toma, Bob Travis, Ken Wis-soker, Rick Wojcik.Production: Steven K. Amsterdam, Stephanie Bacon, Laura SaltzEditors: Stephanie Bacon, Bruce KingGREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, MAY 3, 198S-3I HE CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWAnnounces an open meeting****%., Saturday May 4th at 1 ():0()amAU Writers, photographers, book-mongers, andinterested parties invited to attend.Bring yourself and a friend.Apt. 3c, 5401 S. Woodlawn. r; r k a T iM P I. A YStudent Rush 84Wed., Thurs., and Sun. eveningsJbifdhxioJ^OUR REGULAR PRICE• COMPLETEsingle visiondesigner glasses$337sOffer expires 5/4/85Contacts & SpecsUnlimitedGLASSES AT OURGOLD COAST LOCATION ONLY!1051 N. Rush St. • 642-EYES(At State/Cedar/Rush, above Solomon Cooper Drugs) CONTACTLENSESOUR REGULAR PRICE30 day extendedwear lenses$3375SOFTMATE AM) BAISCH AM)COMB ONLY. PROFESSIONAL TEEADDITIONAL REQUIRED.Offer expires 5/4/85Contact LensesUnlimitedEVANSTON1724 Sherman Ave.864-4441 NEWTOWN2566 N. Clark St.880-5400 GOLD COAST1051 N. Rush St.(At State/Cedar/Rush,above Solomon Cooper Drugs)642-EYES j4—FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1985-GREY CITY JOURNALby Matthew MaiskyComposer Igor has mused “if every goodpiece of music is marked by its own charac¬teristic sound — Le Marteau (by Boulez),for example, sounds like ice cubes clickingtogether in a glass, and Stockhausen’sCarree like low gurgles and high radiostatic — then the characteristic sounds ofHistoire are the scrape of the violin andthe punctuation of the drums.’’L’Histoire du Soldat, The Soldier's Tale,is Stavinsky’s “dramatic spectacle” for asmall travelling theatre group of narra¬tor, mimed and danced action and an ense¬mble of seven musicians which includes vi¬olin and percussion. Conceived byStravinsky and librettist C.F. Ramuz as atheatre ambulant, The Soldier’s Tale waswritten so as to allow it to travel on a cir¬cuit of Swiss villages; its complement ofplayers and the required props are smalland its story outline is simple.The project began in the spring of 1917near Lausanne, Switzerland when Stra¬vinsky, as a White Russian in exile, foundhis subject in two of Alexander Afana¬siev’s Russian folktales of the soldier andthe Devil; one in which a soldier tricks theDevil by plying him with vodka and thenkilling him by feeding him a handful ofshot while assuring him that its caviar,and another in which a soldier deserts andthe Devil comes to take his soul.Stravinsky’s original idea was to makethe setting of the drama timeless and un¬specified though, it would contain somecontemporary references through whichthe audience could be sympathetic withthe characters. Thus, the soldier of theoriginal production was dressed in the uni¬form of a Swiss army private of 1918 (theyear of the premier) while the Devil in hisfirst disguised appearance, is dressed as alepidopterist of 1830. As Stravinsky said,“Our soldier, in 1918 was very definitelyunderstood to be the victim of the thenworld conflict...despite the neutrality ofthe play in other respects.” It is the narra¬ tor who acts as a commentator and inter¬preter, both between the characters them¬selves as well as between the stage andthe audience, an idea borrowed fromPirandello.Stravinsky’s incidental music consists ofeleven concert pieces with five short cueswhich are simply fragments of the largerpieces. All of these complete, closed formpieces are highly stylized treatments ofpopular forms. The character of thesevarious marches and dances, including atango, a ragtime, a “French” waltz and aSpanish pasodole, are captured but clear¬ly “Stravinsky-ized.” Stavinsky's choiceof instruments, as well as the music itself,was also influenced by his discovery ofAmerican jazz. Introduced to jazz throughsheet music imported from the U.S., Stra¬vinsky chose his ensemble to resemble adixie-land band with bass and treble in¬struments from each group: violin and do¬uble bass, clarinet and bassoon (ratherthan saxaphone), trumpet and tromboneplus percussion. It is somewhat tellingthough that he never actually heard jazzperformed. He borrowed, in fact, its rhyth¬mic style not as it’s played but as it’s writ¬ten.A complete staged production of L’His-toire du Soldat will be performed this Sat¬urday and Sunday, May 4 and 5, at 8 pm(both nights at Goodspeed Recital Hall).Featured in this production will be MichaelKotze as the Reader, Randall Schults asthe Soldier, Alan Sierkowski and DavidLewis as the Devil and Katrina Barron asthe Princess. The stage direction is byDavid Anderson and the musical directionby Barbra Schubert. L'Histoire will be per¬formed both evenings while sharing theprogram Saturday evening will be musicof Ives, Karg-Elert, Schoenberg and PeterMaxwell Davis (in celebration of this com¬poser’s fiftieth birth year.) Sharing theprogram on Sunday evening will be musicby Copland, Wolpe, and Chistopher Cole¬man. By Rachel Saltz“Sex/Temptation / Lust/Everybody onthis earth has got a vice...” Sure Prince,sure but how many of us call it Paisley? InAround the World in A Day the man whotaught us more about ourselves than Ma¬donna, Buddha, Thomas Aquinas, andLieber & Stoller, proves he’s no longer justthe Purple-Preacher-O-Love, but the har¬binger of Raspberry Berets (“the kind ufind in a second/hand store”), and thesource of such compelling pop queries as“what’s it like inside your/tamborine?” IfI had a nickel for every time I’ve beenasked that...Around the World is riddled with psy¬chedelia, from the cover art (uglier andbetter than Purple Rain) to the title tune’scello and loud backing track. (Oud!?) TheHendrix aesthetic that Prince has alwayspurveyed with his ruffled shirts, purplecaftans, and bump-and-grind guitar, isgiven full shrift in this explosion of lime,raspberry, purple and orange. Not to men¬tion the weird psychedelic imagery thatkeeps popping up in the lyrics; “Purplelec-tricity whenever/our bodies touch,” Ev¬eryday is a yellow day/l’m blinded by thedaisies,” “Love is the color,” “red,white/and blue...places within your mind,”and of course the “raspberry beret." Isthis music or sherbet?Musically the record is a lot like whatyou’d expect of a Prince-funk/psychedeliccrossover. (Funkadelic?) The songs aremore tuneful than anything Prince hasever written and if nothing here is as driv¬ing as “Controversy” or “Little Red Cor¬vette,” there is a consistency in bothsound and quality throughout the ninesong album. We’re even treated to a bal¬lad, “Condition of the Heart” (of which thecredits claim “all instruments and voicesperformed by Prince”), and a gospel-tinged number “The Ladder.” The ar¬rangements include strings and the afore¬mentioned oud which, along with someecho-chamberish vocals, help to create thewall-of-purple sound.With the exception of “Temptation,”Prince seems to be backing away from theblatantly sexual content of almost all hisearlier music and moving towards some¬thing that might even be called romantic.Although the sex-beat is toned down andfleshed out in Around the World, there’sno need to accuse Prince of sell-out com- Prince, reknowned for his bizarre eatinghabitsmercialism; after all the oud-inflected psy¬chedelic sound (and graphic sense) hasn'treally been viable since Woodstock (evenif recreational hallucinogens are making acomeback.) The record, although differentfrom the earlier work, seems like a natu¬ral step foreward for Prince, into a soundthat has a clear late 60’s influence but isstill unmistakably his own.In May’s issue of Spin, Madonna asked(rhetorically?), “Do you think they’d bugPrince if he pulled out his dick on stage?”Sorrowfully the declaration by Minneso¬ta’s favorite Boy-Toy that touring is out ofthe question at least for the near future,puts such questions on hold. It does, how¬ever allow attention to be focused on thisnew record. While Around the World in aDay may disappoint fans of the earlierPrince, hopefully they will be able tojudge the new album on its own not-too-slight merits. So Prince what is it like in¬side your tamborine?PRINCE: PAISLEY RAINZlatko BatistichDan Sakura, recent winner of the Truman Scholarship, spoke briefly on first-strike wea¬ponryDemonstrators symbolically died for their causes The Regenstein was the origin of the protest♦ •• I• •• • • • •• •• t • •• •• • • •• • I • I• •• • • ♦• • • • NO-BUSINESS-AS USUAL:ANTINUCtEAR DEMONSTRATIONON CAMPUS• •••e|e(e»e|e|e|etefe»e|e«e|e«e|e»e|e• • •* • I •lelelelelelelelelelelelelelelelele• t*»«l*l*t*t«(*t*f*t*(*l***»*t*t*l*• • • • leleleleleleleleteteteleleleleleleleleleteleleGREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, Mat 3, 1900—bI counter his argument by calling itunrealistic: indeed, their ignorance ofwhat they were doing, their indifferenceor their malice informs our understandingof them: a necessary, if unsettling, com¬prehension of human belligerence orhuman indifference. What irritates memore about his statement is the ‘'WE.’llHow can he blame his general readershipJPk by Wayne Scott ‘t wasn’t there, but I saw the picture inthe newspaper: Elie Wiesel, Jewish writerand Holocaust survivor his eyes buggedout with intensity, leaning into the podi¬um, his hair haggard, clenching his fist andinsisting that Reagan’s visit to the Bdburgcemetery, burial site of German war deadincluding 47 SS men, comes down to a for crimes of 40 years ago? I wonder. Mes¬sages like these are common in the Ger¬man media. Guilt by national association,by birth on the same soil, oppresses mostGerman people %ven West German Chan-Nazi tyr-) shame”not.cemetery sh<latent expresNazism, but a$the wreafivfayfiii resell and a gene ra¬le, oppressed by theunary guilt his at-not relieve their com-I- and grief now, out-of a passionatei to remember thethe Second World temicaused — thinks, piexlas not their accounts olmfcafts and outside theno one experience ofootenh-CSiPs and JhildFr*ge and it’s frigbtet) — a attach so muchabases. The prnss, tikejnaoy orcorary German critic termedeach Schuler {the question of of Nazi Germany.LETTERTo the editors:Stephanie Bacon's review of the “Alum¬ni Who Collect II: Sculpture from 1600 tothe Present” was a striking example ofyellow journalism and art criticism at itsmost unprofessional. As we are unable toplumb the depths of the article’s inade¬quacies, we will limit our response to cor¬recting Bacon’s numerous factual errors.One must initially point out that there aremajor differences between a commericalgallery, an academic gallery, and a muse¬um, and that these differences lie mainlyin the manner that shows are mounted,curated, and documented. There are alsomajor differences in the sources of fundingsupporting these institutions—the SmartGallery relies on th University of Chicagoand private sources. Ms. Bacon's obses¬sion with monetary issues and dollar signsseems to be in her eyes only. After read¬ing her review we returned to the galleryto see if there were pricetags on eachpiece, but found none. Certainly the exhi¬bited works of art are valuable, but toharp on the monetary value seems to bean unfair blanket insult to all the lendersof the exhibition. Perhaps the reason forhaving a show drawing from alumni collec¬tions is simply that the gallery has accessto these internationally recognized collec¬tions through the lenders’ affiliation withthe university.In enumerating the shows “actuallycurated’’ by the Smart Gallery, Bacon in¬explicably omits the Fall exhibition “Du¬buffet From Chicago collections,” whichsubsequently travelled to St. Louis. Al¬though the “Art of the Insane” was notcurated here, the responsibilities for hous¬ing such an exhibition are great. Ratherthan ignore this show, the Smart Gallery should be commended for its achieve¬ments—the national attention this showdrew, the approx. 8,000 people whoviewed it, and the related symposium, to¬tally organized by the Smart Gallery.We agree that it would not be possiblefor a gallery the size of the Smart tomount a show that fully represented inter¬national sculpture from 1600 to the pres¬ent, but that was never stated as the goalof the show. One finds, however, an inter¬esting cross-section of works within thestated time limits. Bacon described thefirst two rooms as containing “littlecheesy statuettes,” thus dismissing worksby Gerome, Gericoult, and Messerschmidt!Several of these works were loaned by Dr.and Mrs. Edward Maser. Dr. Maser hap¬pens to be an internationally respectedauthority of Baroque decorative arts. Hisexpertise is indeed evident in his collec¬tion.Bacon proceeds to group works from thesixteenth through the nineteenth cen¬turies under the heading “neo-classical/ro-mantic stuff that was faddish at the time.”These works represent many movementsquite important to the evolution of art,and display political, religious, and socialsignificance well beyond mere faddism.Furthermore, Bacon’s characterization ofBarrias' Nature Revealing Herself toScience as a “cosmic ffoozy,” reveals acomplete lack of understanding concerningthe nature of allergory in the late nine¬teenth century.The Gauguin piece that Ms. Bacon“seems to remember” as part of a seminalstatement is certainly an important workof art but the “bowling trophies” that sherefers to as being nearby are, in fact, aRodin, a Maillol, and a Boudelie. Thosemust have been quite impressive bowlingscores! These works are behind glass be¬cause they are smaller pieces, and more fragile than the works that are not en¬cased. The damage that could be done tothe patina of bronze from the oils in thehuman hand makes it impossible to allowthese works to be placed where theywould need constant policing to protectthem. Bacon’s kitchen table reference wasdifficult to answer because it was nearlyimpossible to find—we saw only the lowpedestal that held the Giacometti and theHepworth. These works were placed out ofreach yet they were still clearly visable(the objectification of these works is ap¬parently a personal bias of Ms. Bacon andas difficult to address as her dollar signs.)The works admired by Bacon are indeedfine, but they are not the only fine worksin the 20th-century part of the show. Ap¬parently Bacon is unable to find worth inanything done before 1890.Bacon’s final attack on the gallery’sprofit motive is difficult to understand,and the matchbooks which represent toher the worst sort of commercialism havebeen on sale since 1974. They are hardly anew promotional device, nor are they pro¬minently displayed (they are kept in awicker basket behind the informationdesk). It is not at all uncommon for muse¬ums and galleries to reproduce works theyown in other forms, nearly every majormuseum has similar items. The gift shopsof the Metropolitan, MOMA, and the ArtInstitute reproduce works on everythingfrom postcards to playing cards. Ms.Bacon’s final “Smurf me out, man”, refersto the April Fools edition of the Maroon,and such a reference is perhaps right ontarget In that it clearly categorizesBacon’s spiteful “review” as a bad joke.Misinformed? Undoubtedly. Unprofession¬al? You bet.—Daniel A. Reich, Phd. student,Art History—Linda Moses, Ma. student, Art History6—FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1985—GREY CITY JOURNALy////////////////////////////////////////////////////M^ ♦ ♦The Poetry Center atThe School ofThe Art Instituteof ChicagoPresents o SpecialAppearance by Carl RakosiFriday, May 10th, 8 pmAt The School of theArt Institute of ChicagoColumbus Drive andJackson BoulevardAdmission $4.00 general,$0.00 students andsenior citizensFree admission toSchool of theArt Institute students PRICES DROP AGAIN!THANKS TO YOUR SUPPORT WE AREBUYING IN LARGER QUANTITIESMAXELL 3Vs” DISKETTES 39V3*o EA.DYSAN 3Vz” DISKETTES 36V380 EA.IMAGEWRITER RIBBONS $539UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREOFFICE MACHINE DEPARTMENT970 E. 58th St. 2nd FI.CABLESA SPECIAL PROGRAM FOR NEW GRADUATESCAN HELP YOU INTO A NEW CHRYSLER OR PLYMOUTH.With graduation here, you’re probably ready for a for a fraction of the purchase cost, with afford-new car. Chrysler Corporation understands the ably low monthly payments. You have six monthsgraduate’s problems establishing a credit history from the receipt of your degree to take advantageand getting together enough cash to finance a of this exclusive program,new car purchase. Now you can afford a new car, Mail the coupon below and get full detailsthanks to Chrysler’s specialGold Key program for col¬lege graduates.You can drive a new1985 Chrysler or Plymouth FINDOUTMORE.SEND MY MATERIALS TO THE ADDRESS BELOW.NameAddressCity State ZipCollege or UniversityGraduation DateMail to Chrysler Plymouth College Graduate Progran2751 E Jefferson AvenueDetroit. Ml 4*207 of this special Gold Keyprogram for you,the new collegegraduate. Act now. ChryslerPlymouthGREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1985—7HOT WOOLFby Susan PawloskiAnyone attempting to stage Who’sAfraid... must do so in the ponderous shad¬ow of the monumental movie version withLiz and Dick (playing themselves). TheOther Theater Group, seemingly unper¬turbed by this fact, manages to pull off aproduction that both shamelessly courtsand effectively differs from, the public’spreconceptions about what the playshould be like. The public expects scream¬ing matches and, to be sure, there areplenty of those. At the same time, theyounger cast succeeds, perhaps even morethan even Liz and Dick did, in capturingthe vulnerable, generous sides of theircharacters. Leann Morgan’s Martha, withher dyed red hair and tight black stirruppants, has a definite style of her own. Sheis at her weakest in her opening scene,where her choruses of “goddamn”s are abit strained. Although she has sufficientstage presence to carry off her difficultrole, she is better at being a brat than abitch. Sam Gassel’s George goes aroundthe stage delivering his lines in an in¬furiating monotone. He never lets us for¬get that it is twenty five or six to four on aSaturday night, and that he is tired. Hisvery solid, always in-character perfor¬mance is the pivot around which the rest ofthe cast turns. Bill Florida seems to playhimself as Nick, the smug, Hilter-youth bio¬logist from Kansas, tribute either to Bill’stalents as an actor or to Albee's insightabout the vast caches of self-righteousyoung people lurking in the Midwest. Al¬though Carol Berkower probably has theleast number of lines in the play, the mostcould be written about her. She deterio¬rates beautifully, under the influence ofnumerous tumbler-fulls of brandy, from amewing, squeaky-clean professiorial wifeto a visionary, squeaky-clean, drunk. Shehas a great voice, and she plays it like aninstrument. She is a combination of Bar¬bie, Ophelia, and Linda “Regan” BlairThe set on whicn all the clawing andscratching occurs is done in the classicdrama-club style, which means that itlooks like someone's finished basementplayroom, sans the pool table; the qualityof the acting, however, quickly removesthat University-theater taste from yourmouth. Who's Afiaid of Virginia Woolf?not only exposes a few raw nerves, butrakes them, blows on them, and spits onthem as well. Bravo. The Other TheaterGroup, Reynolds Club third-floor theater.Tonight and Saturday, at 8. $3 Students;$4 others. was what Hair was all about: being youngand free; doing a lot of drugs; being in.But today, Hair — Ragni, Rado McDermot— it’s like a museum piece. A block of his¬tory, for God's sake. It has nothing to dowith yuppie consciousness.Hair's director, Retha Oliver smiledsweetly, “This is not just a play about hip¬pies and Viet Nam. There’s a little more toit than that. Hair is essentially a playabout compromise — doing things youdon't want to.”“Yeah...and dreams and the death ofdreams...timeless stuff, man,” a blond girlsaid from a supine position. She raised atired fist.“Uh, right,” I shifted in my seat again. Ihadn’t considered that Hair had anythingrelevant to offer. But then again, likemost college students today, I’ve nverseen or read Hair — only heard about it.And most of what I had heard was limitedto nudity and drugs. “Timeless” stuff?RESTYLED HAIRby Mary St. Germaine“What can you tell me about Hair?" Iasked them.‘Well, I’ve been growing mine sinceJune,” one guy said running a handthrough his long, gold locks, “and it’s got¬ten to the point where I’ll pass a barbershop and have to force myself not to go in.It's all over the place,” he demonstrated,dipping his head so his long hair fell for¬ward into his eyes, “but it’s only for a fewmore weeks. After the show, it’s all com¬ing off.”I coughed and shifted in my seat. Thecast of Blackfriar’s production of Hair wassprawled all over the rug of Reynold’sClub North Lounge. It was 11:00 at nightand they were suffering “post rehearsalzonk” (can’t we make this quick? I want togo to sleep). I felt distinctly out of place,sitting on a chair, notebook and pen inhand. For one thing, these people were allover each other — heads pillowed on laps,on limbs, on other heads. They looked likethey had been living in North Lounge to¬gether for months (“We have practical¬ly,” one cast member told me, “We’re inhere six hours a night about six days aweek.”). They looked, in fact, almost likean authentic haggle of hippies. And there Iwas, drssed in oxford cloth and kakhi,wondering were to begin. I wanted toknow about Hair. Specifically I wanted toknow WHY in 1985 the Blackfriars weredoing “Hair” in the first place; and sincethey were, were they going to take it alloff?I started with my first question: “WhyHair?"“Why not?” they threw back in myface.“Well...isn’t it...a little...urn...dated?” Iventured.“How so?”Well, gee guys, the play hit Broadway in1968, and it was relevant then. But thosewere in the days of Viet Nam protests,civil rights demonstrations, free love andcosmic consciousness. That was back whenpeople wore old clothes and dropped acidand strung love beads in the sun. The latesixties was Woodstock, orgies, happen¬ings, bell bottoms and marijuana. 1968 Well, maybe...“But...Hair at the U of C? In 1985?” Itried again, “Do you think anyone willcome and see it?”“I’ve always wanted to see it,” a castmember said, laughing, “The music isgreat. I used to listen to the album all thetime when I was a kid.”She had a point there. If Hair has any¬thing, we all know it has great music. Thescore holds a number of hits —“Aquarius,” “I Got Life,” “Good MorningSunshine” — and less well-known butequally well loved tunes like “ManchesterEngland” and “Looking for Madonna.”There’s funk, soul, psychedelia, folk, rock,rhythm and blues. Yeah, Hair has music. Istarted tapping my foot, just thinkingabout the first time I heard the record, tenyears ago.“But...urn...it’s a different score isn’tit?” I asked“Oh, sure,” they told me.“Little too much, huh?” I said, realizingthat I had been right all along — Hair in1985 was impossible...Gray walls, graymatter and the Original Tribal Love-rockMusical? Pu-leese!“Oh yeah, it's been rough,” the supineblond woman said softly, “We’ve had toblow off going to the Reg, or sitting on ourbutts, or complaining about midterms —just so we can come in here every night,kick off our shoes, pull off our clothes,dance around, pretend we’re rock singers,turn cartwheels, get creative...boy, talkabout hard,” she shook her head and the cast clucked and murmured happily.“You mean...” this just simply was notwhat I had expected. Thse were not thedruggies, Dead-heads and drop-outs that Ihad expected to populate the cast of Hair.These were serious students who hadspent a lot of time having fun.“Well, it’s a fun show,” one cast membertold me, “ Hair, has something for every¬body — camp, kitch, blood, gore, sex andday-glo. You can’t go wrong.”“Obviously, some of the issues ad¬dressed in the play are not exactly cur¬rent,” someone else said, “but the mes¬sage of the play is very current.”The more the cast talked, the more inter¬ested I became in seeing Hair instead ofmaking fun of it. They threw out mysteri¬ous hints about what the show wouldoffer: strobe lights, fog machines, walkingin space (Walking in space?), electronicmusic, helicopters (what?), slow motionand people in drag (people in drag?) I be¬came so interested in hearing about what Iwould see on stage next week, that I for¬got completely about my second question.It was not until 12:00, when Reynold’sClub was closing and the cast collectingtheir things, that I remembered to ask:“Are you doing the nude scene?” No oneseemed to hear me. They were saying fondgood nights, some of them were driftingoff to Jimmy’s to talk about “choreo¬graphing the f—ing be-in.”“Hey,” one guy added before he wan¬dered off, “If you write that article, besure to include the fact that Hair is thefirst U of C show to have its own massuer.For the cast.”“The cast has its own massuer?” Iasked, incredulous"Well, yeah,” he shrugged, “it’s a veryphysical show.”Physical show...could that be a hint?“Does that mean you are doing the nudescene?” I asked.He stopped walking away. “The nudescene?” he turned to look at me, “Whotold you there was only one?” Then hegrinned and walked away.Hair will be performed in the Third FloorTheatre of Reynold’s Club on May 9, 10,11 and 17, 18, 19. Tickets will be on salenext week in Reynold’s Club and Cobb. Ihave a feeling it’s going to be good.“After all,” one cast member said to me,“There are worse things to do on a Springnight than let the sun shine in.”8—FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1985—GREY CITY JOURNAL