INSIDE:Newsportsleague page 13 Letters, have wesome letterspage 14 BIGBUDDHASINGREY CITYThe Chicago Maroonme 98, No. 1 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1986 Tuesday, July 1,1986VolumeStudent theatrecollective formsBy Beth GreenStaff WriterBlackfriars, UniversityPlayers, and The OtherTheatre Group united to form“University Theatre” inorder to make better use ofshared resources and to im¬prove student theatre. Conc¬rete Gothic Theatre was theonly student theatre groupthat refused to join.Steve Schroer, a Managingand Technical Director alongwith Bob James, said thatdiscussion of student theatreunification had been going onfor some time. Adminis¬trators and students intheatre felt that four auto¬nomous groups provided littlecontinuity and exchange ofknowledge or ideas and cre¬ated scheduling problems andcompetition. Schroer stated,“people were trying to bebetter than other people in away that’s not healthy.” Also,insufficient space andequipment was available toaccomodate all four groups.According to the final pro¬posal for theatre unification,each previously existingtheatre group will designatethree members to serve on agoverning board. The groupswill separate into threecommittees: Tech, Produc¬tion and Records, and Pub¬licity. Each committee willwork individually and deviseits own operational guide¬lines. In addition, onemember from each com¬mittee will join Schroer andJames to compose the fund¬ing committee.According to Frank Kin-ahan, Faculty Director ofUniversity theatre, fourseparate theatre groups wereessentially counter¬productive because thegroups competed for thesame actors and technicalworkers. He said, “unifica¬tion is a way to insure qualitytheatre without having to worry about finances, talentpool, etc...”Rebekah Greenberg, thePresident of Concrete Gothic,the one remaining auto¬nomous theatre group, stated,“there can be some benefitsto unified theatre, but not atthis university because peopleare so diverse and all havedifferent ideas on how playsshould be done.” Greenbergcited dissatisfaction with theold funding committee as onereason that Concrete Gothicremained autonomous:“Steve Schroer and his back¬up man, Bob James, spentmoney wildly and our fundswere wasted. Schroer waspre-approving budgets with¬out asking the committee’sapproval.” Greenberg notedthat after one full year inexistence, the old fundingcommittee had not made uppolicy or voting guidelines.“We also don’t feel that af¬ter four years we should haveto give up our name,”Greenberg concluded, “A lotof people are familiar with usana we feel we have the rightto keep our name.”The model for the Univer¬sity Theatre came fromgraduate student CherylForster. It was based on asimilar theatre scheme at heralma mater, Bowdoin Col¬lege. The model was adjustedto meet the specific needs ofthe U of C. The centralizedtheatre plan provides for acertain amount of expertisein each segment of theTheatre. “Over the years, theexpertise will perpetuate it¬self,” Forster said.The Governing Board ofUniversity Theatre met andchose the following plays forautumn quarter 1986: Tango,School for Scandal, Dracula,Morning Becomes Electraand Fiddler on the Roof.Concrete Gothic Theatre willperform Sweeney Todd inMandell Hall. Kinkos'computers stolenBy Molly McClainManaging EditorBurglar(s) smashed the win¬dow of Kinko’s Copies on 57thStreet and stole two Macintoshcomputers during the weekendof June 21-22.Kinko’s employee CraigChernosky said that the bur-glar(s) “threw a piece of a firehydrant through the plate glasswindow.” Two Macintosh com¬puters along with keyboards andlaser printer were taken. “Theyknew what they wanted,” Cher¬nosky commented.Assistant Director of Univer¬sity Security Robert McKennasaid that the store “should havehad an alarm system...Com¬puters are tempting targets.” Henoted that the computers hadbeen visable from the street.McKenna said that Universitypolice cars have been maintain¬ing their “usual patrol” of thearea.The burglary of Kinko’s rep¬resented an “isolated incident”according to Robert Mason, Di¬rector of the South East ChicagoCommission. “It.’s been a very BY CHRISTINE DYRUDThe burglar(s) shattered Kinkos’ front windowquiet area,” Mason said. “We’vehad one other residential bur¬glary on the 800 block...otherthan that there has been no oth¬ers.”McKenna attributed the fewnumber of burglaries along 57thStreet to the fact that “there's alot of cars over there.” McKenna said that cars “from all over thecity” could be seen along 57thStreet because officers liked toeat at the Agora.The other commercial bur¬glary that took place in HydePark recently was a June 18robbery of the Video Store on55th Street, Mason said.Hospital merger off for nowBy Greg MantellNews EditorThe proposal to combine theUniversity of Chicago Hospitaland Clinics and Michael ReeseMedical Center into a “pre¬eminent, world class medicalcenter” has been called off be¬cause of a determination by theBoard of Trustees of both in¬stitutions that the merger “is notfeasible.”Despite assurances by hospitalspokespersons that it is stillpossible for talks concerning themerger to be “revived,” the an¬nouncement has raised consid¬erable doubt about w’hether themerger will ever be ac¬complished.In a joint statement issuedJune 12 following separatemeetings of both Boards, Uni¬versity President Hannah Grayand Michael Reese ChairmanFranklin Cole stated that whilethe merger would not take place, a Joint Affiliation Committeewould be formed with the goal of“expanding joint programs andactivities.”According to a hospital officialwho requested anonymity, astruggle over which institution'sstaff would head certain im¬portant departments was thebiggest obstacle in the talks.Director of Public Relations atthe University Hospital WilliamBulger rejected that statementin a telephone interview Friday,commenting that “there wasconcern over who would headvarious departments — butthat’s only natural.”Another source of disagree¬ment the source pointed to, wasthe contrasting set up and pur¬pose of the two hospitals, whichBulger described as “differentas apples and oranges.” TheUniversity hospital is staffed bya full-time salaried facultywhose main responsibility is toconduct research and teach. Michael Reese’s doctors areprivate practitioners who rec¬eive payment for their service topatients and place less emphasison research.According to Bulger, the Uni¬versity hospital will not be hurtfinancially if the merger nevergoes through. When the negotia¬tions began in January severalErofessors criticized the talks aseing a bad solution to the hos¬pital’s financial woes. Since thehospital wrote off 22.0 million inbad debts in a one time onlymove last year, the hospital hassucceeded’ in cutting lossesthrough efforts to trim costssuch as closing a 24 bed unit.This year the hospital will be“at, or near" a balanced budget,and similar results are predictedfor the next year, he said.Joint programs between thetwo hospitals have not been ad¬versely affected by the can¬cellation, spokespersons for eachinstitution say.Updated diner to replace long familiar AgoraBy Jacob ParkContributing WriterAn updated coffee shop andrestaurant tentatively, namedThe Prairie City Diner, will re¬place the Agora at 57th andKenwood Avenue by the end ofthe year, according to DavidRosen, Associate Vice Presidentfor University Community Af¬fairs.The new restaurant will beoperated by Jerome Kliejunas,an owner of Jerome’s, a popularClark Street restaurant for thepast 8 years. Although as of June4 he had yet to find investorswilling to provide the $425,000 heplanned to use for renovations,Kliejunas signed a 15 year leasewith the U of C.Kliejunas said that the newrestaurant will be moderatelypriced and will feature both aself-service diner and a full ser¬vice dining room. Because RayElementary School js locatednearby, Kliejunas can not rec¬ BY CHRISTINE DYRUDThe Agora is relocating in the Hyde Park Shopping Centerlarge windows, and incorporatean “outdoor concept,” Kliejunassaid. Local seasonal produce willbe tegularlv featured in thpmenu and diners will be en¬couraged to stay as long as theyeive a liquor license. Kliejunasis, however, exploring the pos¬sibility of allowing customers tobring in their own liquor.Preliminary Dlans for the newrestaurant include a skylight, want, Kliejunas added (HydePark Herald 6-4-86).Dino Alexopoulos, owner of theAgora, had remained optimisticuntil early May that his leasewould be renewed. Despite a pe¬tition to save the Agora, signedby 4,000 Hyde Park residents,the University refused to renewhis le« ise.According to Jonathan Klein-bard, Vice-President for Uni¬versity Community Affairs, “itwas clear at the time that,”Alexopoulos was granted a yearlong “termination lease” Sep¬tember 30, when the fifteen yearlease he had taken over in 1972expired and, “that we were notwilling to renew the lease be¬yond that time” (Maroon 5-9-86).Alexopoulos said, “he(Kleinbard) never gave a firmanswer on the question of thelease renewal when t cign^H thetemporary lease on September30.” He charged that the Uni¬ versity decided a long time agothat his lease would not be re¬newed and that the only reasonfor the temporary lease on Sep¬tember 30 was to avoid pressurefrom returning students.Even when he was given onlyten days to submit a proposal torenovate the restaurant in thespring of 1985, Alexopoulos saidthat he submitted a proposal at acost of $6,000 which was neverresponded to. He added thataround the time of the signing ofthe temporary lease. Kleinbardbegan to indicate that proposalsfrom other interested partieslooked better. When Alexopoulostried to discuss his proposal, hesaid that he sensed that “Klein¬bard did not feel like talking."Having invested a lot of moneyand time on Agora, he said thathe feels he “has been pushed outby the University.”Alexopoulos has moved to theAgora’s business to Hemi¬ngway’s at 1550 East 55th Street.1215 students nowBy David RingContributing WriterThe 1215 Building, a residence hall at thecorner of 51st and Woodlawn, was officiallychristened Max Mason House in a Juneceremony attended by Associate Dean ofStudents Edward Turkington, Dean of theCollege Donald Levine, Resident HeadsDennis and Susan Weiss and residents.Max Mason was the third president of theUniversity. According to Turkington,Mason was responsible for laying thefoundations for the Common Core and forimproving undergraduate education. Be¬cause of Mason’s short term at the Uni¬versity, President Robert Maynard Hut¬chins generally receives credit for follow¬ing through Mason’s policies.Daria Pace, a recent graduate, sugges¬ted that the dorm be named after Masonbecause of his lack of recognition by theUniversity and because of his catchy name.However, several students who wished toremain anonymous cited another reasonfor wanting the name. “The real reason isthe rumors about his dismissal. Supposedlyhe was fired because he was caught havingan affair with a co-ed while he was mar¬ried. We wanted a scandal,” one studentsaid.According to Turkington, the whole storyis a fabrication. Mason left the Universityto become President of the RockefellerFoundation. Nevertheless, students have9 studentsBy Richard KoStaff WriterA total of six disciplinary hearings in¬volving nine students were conducted in theperiod from May, 1985, to April 1986. Threeof the cases were heard by the Under¬graduate Disciplinary Committee, one by acommittee in the Social Science Division,one in the Graduate School of Business, andone by the Divinity School.The Undergraduate Disciplinary Com¬mittee is a standing committee consistingof five faculty members, two under¬graduate students, and the Dean of Stu¬dents in the College, who has no vote. Themembers of disciplinary committees forvarious graduate divisions and schools, onthe other hand, are appointed by the deanof the division or school when such needarises. In addition, there are also an all-University discipline system and a housingdiscipline system.According to Charles O’Connell, vice-president and dean of students in the Uni¬versity, the all-University disciplinarycommittee deals with campus-scale of¬fenses such as student riot or disruption ofspeech. It has not met since 1972-1973.Of the 9 students heard by the variousarea disciplinary committees this pastyear, 5 were charged with academic dish¬onesty, 2 were charged with violating offi¬cial housing bans, and 2 were accused ofmisconduct. All 9 students were foundguilty. The actions taken ranged from already commissioned an unofficial T-Shirtthat states “Thank Heaven for little girls.”Resident Head Susan Weiss stressed thatshe found the T-shirt “tasteless and tacky”and added that the name change was “to¬tally done by students. We had absolutelynothing to do with it.”1215, the newest dorm in Hyde Park, wasmarried student housing before under¬graduates from condemned GreenwoodHall moved in two years ago. A significantnumber of the 100 students living at 1215are transfer students.When the new transfer students arrivedlast fall, many were disconcerted by thename or lack thereof, of the dorm. Becauseit was a recent addition to the Housingsystem, 1215 had a low name recognition.Residents said they felt frustrated thatthey needed to explain that 1215 was reallythe name of the dorm and not just theaddress.In November, Emily Karsina askedPresident Hannah Gray about the pos¬sibility of a name change. Gray supportedthe idea so long as the name was serious.disciplinedprobation to suspension. None of the stu¬dents appealed.The Dean of Students in the Universitymakes an annual report on university dis¬ciplinary actions to the Council of theUniversity Senate in May. The main pur¬pose of the release of the report is to serveas “factual information” for the students.In the undergraduate division, an aver¬age of 5-6 cases are brought to the attentionof the Dean of Students in the College everyquarter. Most of these come toward the endof the quarter, when students tend to reactto the pressures of final exams, accordingto Herman Sinaiko, dean of students in theCollege. Sometimes the charges turn out tobe due to miscommunication among theparties involved. Often times the chargescan not be proven. Only a few cases aresent to the Undergraduate DisciplinaryCommittee.For a student to report a complaint, theStudent Information Manual suggests dis¬cussing “the circumstances with a personwith whom he or she feels comfort¬able-such as a member of the faculty, anacademic adviser, a resident head, or theStudent Ombudsman. This person may beable to help resolve questions about anappropriate response or suggest sub¬sequent steps the student may wish totake.” To make a formal complaint, “thestudent should see the academic dean ofthe College or of the appropriate Divisionor School.” // party to the Max ffAt the time, popular names suggested bystudents included Taj Ma Hall, Mr. T. Hall,Monty Hall, and Robert Pirsig House.During Winter Quarter, Pace approachedGray with the name of Max Mason Hall. Apetition was circulated through the House.Approximately 40 per cent of the residentssupported the name, 15 per cent opposed itand the rest were ambivalent. According toone resident, “about the whole dorm exceptfor maybe ten people didn’t care and just agreed to it to get Daria off their backs.”Finally in June, the House was officiallychristened. “The College was willing tospend money to make the event beautiful,”Weiss said. Seven bottles of expensivechampaign and one cheap bottle to smashover the sign were purchased. After theceremony ended, students took the fes¬tivities outside to a House barbeque cele¬brating Mason and the House’s new slogan:“Party to the Max.”A new philosophyBy Sharon NorrisStaff WriterIn the 1986-87 academic year, the De¬partment of Philosophy will offer a newsequence called “The History of Philoso¬phy.” This sequence is designed to providemore undergraduate philosophy coursesand a chronological background in philos¬ophy which may serve as a basis forfurther studies or as an end in itself forstudents who are simply interested in phi¬losophy.“The History of Philosophy” is a four-quarter sequence open to undergraduatesin which none of the quarters is prerequi¬site for any other quarter. The four courseswhich comprise “the History of Philoso¬phy” will cover Ancient Philosophy(Philosophy 250, Autumn, 1986), Medievaland Early Modern Philosophy (Philosophy>60, Winter, 1987), Kant and the NineteenthCentury (Philosophy 270, Spring 1987), anditecent Philosophy (Philosophy 290, Spring,1987). Each quarter, various professorswill lecture on the area of philosophy whichis their specialty or area of current inter¬est. There will be three lectures a weekwith the possibility of an additional dis¬cussion session being offered. This formatwas designed so'that not only will studentslearns from people who have made ex¬ tensive studies in the field, but they willalso be exposed to the variety of styles andapproaches which the field of philosophyaffords.It is thought that because of the format ofthe class, students might experience dif¬ficulty in being able to put the variouspieces of any given quarter together as aunified whole. According to Assistant Pro¬fessors Christine Korsgaard of the De¬partment of Philosophy, if enrollment ishigh enough the department hopes to em¬ploy graduate students to lead discussionsessions each week. Though these plans arenot finalized, the discussion sessions wouldserve to draw together the various partsand aspects of the quarter and to examinethe interrelationships among the lecturematerial presented throughout the quarter.The Humanities Common Core is the onlyprerequisite for all four quarters, and afterthe 1986-87 academic year, the quarter onRecent Philosophy will only be offered inthe fall. It will be offered in the spring nextyear so that any Seniors wishing to com¬plete all four quarters next year will havethat opportunity available to them. Ac¬cording to Prof. Korsgaard, “As we see thecourse, it is not intended as just a prepara¬tion for a major, but it is also good forsomeone who is interested in philosophy.”Second rape suspect caughtBy Molly McClainManaging EditorPolice arrested and charged a secondman for the May 3 assault on two female Uof C students.Billy Wardell, 21, of 6547 South EllisAvenue, was arrested, charged and in¬dicted for aggravated criminal sexual as¬sault. The two victims identified Wardell ina police line-up, according to Area 1Detective Edward Winstead. Warden’sclaim that he had been driving a friend’sgirlfriend to work to a southwest suburbannursing home was disproved by police(Hyde Park Herald 6-18-86). Wardell isscheduled to be arraigned on July 17.Donald R. Reynolds, Warden’s allegedaccomplice, has been assigned to a trialcourt, but Judge Karnezis’ representativesaid that the trial of the two men will notoccur “for months.” Reynolds, 20, of 3616South State Street, pleaded not guilty tocharges of aggravated criminal sexual as¬ sault, aggravated battery, armed robbery,kidnapping, unlawful restraint and armedviolence at a June 10 arraignment.Reynolds, Wardell and a third man al¬legedly approached two 20-year-old U of Cstudents while they were walking south on.Woodlawn Avenue toward the Midway ataround 11pm. The men reportedly robbedthem at gunpoint and forced them to walktwo blocks south where one girl was sex¬ually assaulted.Police are still looking for the men whoreportedly raped a 14-year-old girl on May25 at the 5200 block of South Drexel Avenueand a 19-year-old North Kenwood womanon May 21 at 47th Street and CottageGrove.According to police reports, an at¬tempted rape of a 19-year-old woman wasreported to have taken place on the 5400block of Kimbark Avenue on the grounds ofthe St. Thomas the Apostles CatholicChurch (Hyde Park Herald 6-18-86).From Bartholdi, Eiffel, and PulitzerBy Molly McClainManaging EditorThe Museum of Science and Industrycelebrates 100 years of “Liberty: theFrench-American Statue in Art and His¬tory” through September 1.The centennial of the monumentalstatue Liberty Enlightening the Worldprovided an opportunity for the travellingexhibition to bring together photographicreproductions, sculptures, watercolors,models, and 20th-century artists ren¬derings and posters from public and pri¬vate collections in France and the UnitedStates.Photographs and models traced thework of Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi, asculptor fascinated by colossal mon¬uments. Before beginning work on Lib¬erty, Bartholdi had designed models for alighthouse to stand at the entrance to theSuez canal. The models were in the formof a woman in flowing robes, carrying atorch symbolizing the enlightenment ofcivilization. Elements of this design wereto be incorporated into plans for Liberty.The plan for Liberty was first suggestedin 1865 by French historian Edouard deLaboulaye^.a member of what was thenknown as the “liberal school.” He sug¬gested that the French people presentAmerica with a gift to commemorate the100th anniversary of American in¬dependence. The government underNapolean III, however, vigorously op¬posed the project. Only after France’sdefeat in the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71) were the plans revived.Laboulaye and Bartholdi, both mem¬bers of the liberty-defending Freemason2—The Chicago Marnon—Tuesday, July 1, movement, modified earlier classicalsymbols of Liberty. Bartholdi substitutedthe warlike Phrygian bonnets and theflame which was to set the world on fire— traditional symbols associated withLiberty — with the masonic seven-pointedstar and the flame of knowledge. Hedownplayed the broken shackles andadded tablets of law and order.Photographs of the Statue undef "con¬struction in the 19th-century showed thetechnological challenges faced by engi¬neers Viollet-le-Duc and Gustave Eiffel.The shell of the monument was con¬structed of thin sheets of copper, ham¬mered into plaster molds and assembledto form the body. The skeleton, designedby Eiffel, was created by constructingfour huge iron posts, which were sunkinto the base of the Statue. Horizontalstruts and crisscrossed diagonal bracingswere attached to provide increased rigid¬ity. The original six and one-half footcopper finger of the Statue was displayedin the exhibit.Cast in 1876, the copper finger wasexhibited in Paris to promote financialinterest in the Statue. Bartholdi neededsome 600,000 francs to complete theproject. With no assurance that his Statuewould become a world-renowed symbol,Bartholdi convinced members of theFrench business community to contributeto the Liberty fund. In return they re¬ceived permission to use the Statue as anadvertising logo.An unprecedented campaign began onboth sides of the Atlantic to influencepublic opinion and to raise funds for theStatue’s completion. Construction of the pedestal for the Statue had stopped as aresult of failed efforts by the AmericanCommittee to raise funds. An editorialdrawing from Puch (April 8,1885) showedthe Statue wearing a “Silker the Hatter”top hat and holding a bottle of Kat-BY CHRISTINE DYRUDzenyammer Extra Dry. The title of thecartoon was “Let the Advertising AgentsTake Charge of the Bartholdi Businessand the Money Will be Raised WithoutDelay.”The fundraising campaign to completethe pedestal was launched by JosephPulitzer in his newspaper, the World. He Libertypromised to publish the name of everycontributor to the project and within fivemonths he raised $101,000, almost all incontributions of $1 or less. The exhibitionincluded excerpts from the World.Mass press circulation established theidentity of Liberty and advertisers werequick to adopt the statue as a subject forparody. A 19th-century trade card forBrainerd Silk replaced the Statue’s ped¬estal and torch with spools of thread. Thelogo read, “The Bartholdi Statue of Lib¬erty. . . The Largest in the World. . . TheBrainerd Armstrong Co’s Spool Silk. . .The Best in the World.”A 1962 advertisement for the PeaceCorps Volunteer Campaign showed Lib¬erty with an outstretched torch, under thewords, “Make America a Better place. . .Leave the Country.”The exhibition was organized by theNew York Public Library and the OfficialFrench-American Committee for theCelebration of the Statue of Liberty Cen¬tennial. It was developed to complementa larger exhibit which will be on displayat the New York Public Library duringthe summer.After its stay in Chicago, the exhibitionwill travel to nine other museums andlibraries throughout the United Statesuntil December 1987.The Museum of Science and Industry islocated at 57th St. and Lake Shore Drive.Hours are 9:30am to 5:30pm daily. Openevery day of the year, the Museum ishandicapped accessible. General admis¬sion ana parking are free.Source: France Magazine, Volume 1. No.3f.*Rockefeller Memorial Chapel5850 S. Woodlawn962-7000SUNDAY, July 6th8:30 a.m. Service of Holy Communion10:00 a.m. University ReligiousServiceRobert Hamerton-Kellev,Dean of MemorialChurch, StanfordUniversity, preacher.11:15 a.m. Carillon recital and towertourg-r*Budgetcar andtruck rentalSIZZLIN’ SUMMER SPECIALforU.C. STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFFPERDAYFor reservations call: Cavalier RS Convertible493-7900Now through Aug. 30,1986, if you pick up your car after noon on Mondayand return it anytime before noon on Friday you can rent a 1986 CompactSeries Convertible for only $29.95 per day, with 100 free miles per day.Budget lives up to its name with this low midweek rate. Refueling services,taxes and optional coverage are additional. Mileage rate is 20* per mile. Carmust be returned to renting location. Offer subject to availability. Notavailable in conjunction with any other promotion.Offer good at 7234 Stony Island location only.Ask about our low rates on daily and weekend rentals - from economy toluxury type cars.Bring in this ad or University ID attime of rental to get reduced rateFree Cab Fare Reimbursement From Anv Point In Hvde ParkServing Hyde Park & South Shore7234 S. Stony Island Studentsheat upin summer*— ■- .The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, July 1,1986—3:eCiati<IINGA|jO NAME JUST AfiHttgl REDKIN, SEBA5TpWs SHAMPOm*CONDITIONER & SmiNGWOMEN $18°°MEN $1300PRECISION1315 E. 57th SPH.HAIR PHD WOULD LIKE^Of YOU FOR MAKIEOUR PRICESNAMES INMATRIX.WILUK NEXXUS,i nniK‘,#fHANKALWp JUSTTHAmHAIR S500 OFFANY NEW CARFORALLSTUDENTSAND FACULTYFAY TO THE ORDER OF August 30, 1986(Your Name) $ 500 00Five Hundred and no/100 DOLLARSNfBQTWBli 0W £T RUB1/ rWfTR0LFM70LR5(n35£f\JJust present this coupon & your UCID and you will receive $500 off thepurchase price of any new Chevrolet or Volkswagen in stock, or anyused car over $2000. This coupon cannot be used with any other dis¬count offers.Offer expires August 30.19867234 STONY ISLAND2 Miles-5 Minutes AwayFrom The UniversitySpecial College 684-0400Grad Program,financing. Come in CHEVROLET/VOLKSWAGENfor details.ANYNEW 1986PONTIACFOR ONLYPLUS YOUR CHOICE...■ A $250 General MotorsRebate CouponOR■ No Car Payments for90 Days.Graduates are eligible 6 monthsbefore graduation ^nd up untilone year aftar./ Vo'*4 N\f »«*?,aoc‘"«y/r Applies only to college graduateswith 4-year degrees You mustbe employed or must present aletter as proof that you havesecured future employment. BRAND NEW 1986 PONTIACGRAND AM SPORT COUPEExtra wide body side molding, elec, reardefogger, ale. AM/FM ETR stereo system. Il\LIST $10,266.00PIET SPECIAL DISCOUNT -70000PIET PRICED $9,566.00SALES TAX* 669 62COUNTY TAX 15.00D.S.F** 15.00TOTAL PRICES10.26562ONLY$51381-5°/o DowhMONTHLY PAYMENTS $206.72.99% annual percentage rate financing with no derogatory credit60 month maximum term License plates extra * Above sales taxbased on 7% tax " Documentary service fee6633 S. Western AvenueChicago, IL 434-8200 Share your good healthDONATEBLOODCall for an appointment962-6247BU&DBANK4—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, July 1,1986I> COMESTO CHICAGOby Steven K. AmsterdamWesterners have the tendency todismiss Japanese art. This is becausethe unknowns of Japanese cultureseem to be too large to tackle: Afeeling for the Buddhist aesthetic anda Japanese sensibility are things thatone is raised with, not things that onecan learn. Furthermore, in Japan’searly development the goal of mostartists was perfection and faithfulreproduction, not creativity. This ledto a certain institutionalization of art— an impersonal imagination which,to Westerners, brings to mind childrenwith big eyes painted on black velvet.Consequently, we are poorlyequipped to appreciate Japanese artas we would our own.We can only be perplexed to see aKannon (Goddess of Mercy) wearing acrown of eleven heads, standing inwooden solemnity. With the addedinformation that these heads repre¬sent protection for humans againstadversity, we have some under¬standing of the significance of thestatue and perhaps insight intoBuddhism. Objects that are regardedas art in Japan take on a largermeaning here. They become clues toanother culture. When viewing Jap¬anese art, we must take into accountour ignorance of their symbols. Beforewe can begin to appreciate it, wemust learn.The Great Eastern Temple: Treas¬ures of Japanese Buddhist Art fromTodaiji, which opened Saturday at theArt Institute, is an unprecedented ex¬hibition. Todaiji, a 1200 year old andstill active complex of temples inNara, is one of the first permanentcapitals of Japan (they used tochange the capital with each newemperor). The objects, many desig¬nated “National Treasure” or “Im¬portant Cultural Property,” havenever been outside Japan and haveonly left Todaiji once — in 1980 whenthe exhibition was taken to Tokyo fora week, it was the most popular showin Japan’s history. These sculptures,scrolls and ceremonial objects havesurvived earthquakes, fires, typhoons,civil wars and World War II. The factthat the present abbots of Todaijiallowed the objects to be shipped toAmerica is incredible, it’s as if theceiling of the Sistine Chapel weredoing a world tour.Emperor Shomu ordered the con¬struction of Todaiji in 743. Japan’scapita! was in Nara and Todaiji wouldbe the headquarters for the Kegonsect of Buddhism: religion had beenthe force which unified Japan andShomu wished to concentrate thispower. In 749, Shomu abdicated infavor of his daughter Koken, one ofthe few empresses in Japan’s history.She in turn tried to abdicate in favorof her lover Dokyo, who also hap¬pened to be a monk at Todaiji. Gov¬ernment officials feared the competi¬Monk Chogen tion of religion and state and blockedKoken’s abdication. They also movedthe Imperial capital to nearby Kyoto in784, presumably to steer clear ofinterference by the laity. Still, over thenext 15 years, using more than twomillion laborers and bringing thegovernment close to bankruptcy,Todaiji was completed.The temple, over 12 centuries oldhas suffered damage from manyforces but it has always been re¬paired. One notable miracle in itshistory was during World War II, whena Harvard professor persuaded Amer¬ican forces, who had been given or¬ders to attack all Japanese cities, notto use the Kyoto-Nara area as targets.Had our B-29s done to the historicalregion what they did to Tokyo, Osakaand Nagoya, Japan would have suf¬fered a loss of historical treasures thatwould have been incomprehensible.Certainly it is a peculiar Americansensitivity which priortizes the de¬struction of densely populated regionsbut understands the need to preservenational symbols.The first thing the exhibit does is letyou know just how big Buddha reallyis. The central and most famoustemple at Todadiji houses the Daib-utsu (Great Buddha), a 52 foot highbronze statue (largest in the world),which is the focal point of all prayer atTodaiji as well as an internationallyrecognized symbol of Buddhism.Since they couldn’t bring the Buddha,they offer a cast reproduction ofBuddha’s big hand, a tremendousimpression of the Lotus Petal uponwhich Buddha sits, and a very nicemodel of the shrine itself.Further on are ceremonial objectsthat were excavated from a sort of a Amkto Buddhatime capsule which was interred atthe time Todaiji was built. There arerepresentative sculptures from theKankei school of art which was prom¬inent in the 12th and 13th centuries,including a distinctive statue of AmidaBuddha. A handscroll, Pilgrimage to55 Places, is an elegant and detailednarrative of the quest for salvation.In the back of the exhibit, in threeattractive, humidity-controlled cases,are three of Japan’s most sacredsculptures, the wooden images ofHachiman, the God of Nature, MonkRoben who taught Buddhism to Em¬peror Shomu, and Monk Chogen whowas instrumental in rebuilding Todaijiwhen it was razed by a fire in the 12thcentury. These pieces are so fragilethat they are shown only one day ayear in Japan. They are amazinglypowerful representations of significantcontinued on page 4it* JAN EDKEQT & DANCEDS^AEROBICS AND DANCE CLASSES.SUMMER WORKSHOPBEGINNING MODERN ,MODERN II, PerformanceWorkshopJAZZ,BALLET II,AEROBICS.JUNE 23 - AUGUST 1INTERNATIONAL HOUSEASSEMBLY HALL1414 E. 59th St.753-2274 10% DISCOUNT FORPRE-REGISTRATION PAYMENTPRIOR TO JUNE/5. 1986.FOR FULLINFORMATION ON SCHEDULES AND FEES, CALL 753-2274OR 944-4208 Our 4thBLiMiiyersaniIn celebration of our AN¬NIVERSARY we’d like to ex¬tend a sincere ‘Thanks’ tothe people who made it allpossible . . . OURCLIENTS! And in honor ofthis we’d like to dosomething for you . . .Sunbed 10 Visits *40.00 Reg $50W/Coupon OnlyExp 8/9/86Not Valid W/Any Ot^ei OffetPermanent Waves Now M5-*30 Reg $30-560Hair Shaping & Styling Not IncludedNot Valid W/Any Othei Offer Exp 8/9/86'RelaxersNot Valid W/Any Othef Otfei T-Up And Styling $25.00T-Up, Haircut And Styling $35.00W/Coupon Only Exp 8/9/86Hair Shaping And Styling- New Clients Only - W/Coupon OnlyNot Valid W/Any Other Offer *5.00 OHExp 8/9/86Thehair performers1 €21 E. 55th StreetChicago, IL 6061 5 (312 ) 241-7778Open "7" DaysAIKIDOA Modern Japanese Approachto Understanding andNeutralizing AggressionSummer Classes:Tuesday, 7:00-8:30Saturday, 10:30-12:00Field House Wrestling RoomWear sweats or loose fitting clothingThe University of Chicago Aikido Club2—TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1986—GREY CITY JOURNAL U S Department of TransportationFamous last words from friendsTO FRIENDS. I’m perfectly fine. I candrive with my eyes closed. There’s nothingwrong with me. Are you joking—I feelgreat. What am I—a wimp? I’m in greatshape to drive. You’re not serious are you?What’s a couple of beers? Nobody drivesmy car but me. I’ve never felt better. I candrink with the best of them. But I only hada few. So I had a couple. I can drive ringsaround anybody I can drive my owTn car,thank you. I’m not drunk. I drive betterhen I’m like this. Who says I can’t drinkdrive? I can hold my booze. I knowYn doing. I always drive like this.~~’ist me. What’s a few^hing to me. I’m'T’th my eyesith me.drinkDRINKING AND DRIVINGCAN KILL A FRIENDSHIPARTLudwig Mies Van Der Rohe Another addi¬tion to the continuing hoopla over Mies.This exhibition features drawings, mural¬sized photos, mock-ups, steel platedcolumns from the German Pavillion andfourteen pieces of furniture. This exhibitwas organized by the Museum of Mod¬ern Art but is presented at the Museumof Contemporary Art here in Chicago.Thru August 10 at the MCA, 237 EOnartio St. For more information call280-2671.Post-ism Seven artist who work in a variety of media and who “hold no al¬legiances to any stylistic conventionsbeyond those demanded by their ownpersonal visions.” And if you believethat they have a bridge they’d like to sellyou... Works by Gene Coleman, PaulaGillen, Thomas Hancock, Bill Harding,Tim Porges, Donna Rae and JoanneVena. Thru June 14 at Bedrock Gallery,1550 Milwaukee. Fri 1-5, Sat and Sun12-5.Stone Country: Photographs by JeffreyA. Wolin is a documentation of thelimestone industry in the southern re¬gion of Indian. From quarry landscapesto portraits of stone workers to imagesof completed limestone buildings, Wolinhas in the past three years compiled thisvisual record, bringing to light the un¬canny and poignant relationship of hu¬mans and nature. This exhibit is free atthe Chicago Public Library CulturalCenter thru July 12. 78 E Washington.346-3278.Mickey Pallas: Photographs 1945-1960Finer art of photojournalism in thepostwar era. Runs until July 12, at theCultural Center, as above.Abstraction Eight artists are featured inthis exhibit which originates from Car-negie-Mellon University of Art Gallery.Your guess is as good as mine. ThruJuly 11 at the Klein Gallery, 356 WHuron. From more clues call 787-0400.Wildlife Requiem: Color Photographs byJames Balog examines the con¬troversial issue of hunting for sports inAmerica. His work, described by CornellCapa director of the International Centerof Photography in New York City, as“gut-wrenching and thought-provokingat the same time,” shows deer, bearand antelope in the Rocky Mountains,from the point when they are first spiedby hunters to their final resting places asTrophies. Cues thru July 31 at ColumbiaCollege Chicago, 600 S Michigan. M-F10-4 and Sat 12-4. 663-1600.Liberty: The French-American Statue inArt and History Haven’t had enoughyet? Go to the Museum of Science andIndustry, 57th and Lake. Daily 9:30-5:30.Open every day of the year, the Mu¬seum is handicapped accessible. All isfree.Patricia Bramsen: Mixed Media Paint¬ings. Color and more color. Opens July2, thru July 27History Lessons: Drawings. Paintingsand Collages of Buzz Spectator. At739 N Wells. Call 642-1606 for morenformation.FILMT-Men (Anthony Mann. 1947) Semi-oocumentary cops n’ robbers action,served up in the black-coffee mise-er-scene of Hollywood’s great harsh-meister. Anthony Mann. Refreshing viewing after such recent manneristpoliciers as To Live and Die in LA andYear o1 the Dragon (films described byBen Wolf as "no ‘police’ and all ’ier’ ”).Tues July 1, 8 pm, Cobb Hall, $2.50Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (HowardHawks, 1954) Despite the fact thatPrince’s Under the Cherry Moon opensthe same day, this is the movie to seeWednesday night. No higher complimentcan be paid. The only other info you’llneed to know follows: Marilyn Monroe,Jane Russell, Cinemascope, color. Likelyto be the campus movie event of thesummer. Wed July 2, 8 pm, $2.50Yojimbo (Akira Kurosawa, 1961) and StrayDog (Kurosawa, 1949) A Fourth of Julytribute to the grand old man of theJapanese cinema, Akira Kurosawa, asmuch a fixture of traditional In¬dependence Day celebrations as pa¬rades down Main street and fireworks inthe park. Dog is a Freudian film noir inwhich Toshiro Mifune loses his “gun”;Yojimbo may be the greatest adventurefilm ever made, again starring Mifune(this time with gun intact). Happy Fourth,and remember kids, don’t play with fire¬works: they could put your eye out. FriJuly 4, Dog at 9 pm, Yojimbo at 7 pmand 11:15, Cobb Hall, $2.50The Trouble with Harry (Alfred Hitchcock,1955) A Hitchcock comedy. Weird shit.Recommended. Sat July 5, 7 pm and 9pm, Cobb Hall, $2.50Lola Montes (Max Ophuls, 1955) Ophuls’romantic fantasy is, like Citizen Kane, amagnificent display of the possibilities ofthe cinema. Lola flips, and so will you.Sun July 6, 8 pm, Cobb Hall, $2.50Rancho Notorious (Fritz Lang, 1952) Partof one DOC’s Dietrich/Western series. Aman searches for his wife's killer inLang’s disturbing and distorted world.Tues July 8, 8 pm, $2.50Tarnished Angels (Douglas Sirk, 1957)Rock Hudson is an alcoholic reporterwho gets involved with a team of stuntflyers in New Orleans. It’s not what itsounds like. This movie also boastsRobert Stack. Dorothy Malone, Holly¬wood good guy Jack Carson, and a widescreen. This film comes to you highlyrecommended. Wed July 9, 8 pm, $2.50Destry Rides Again (George Marshall,1939) Part of DOC’s Dietrich/Westernseries. James Stewart is, as he always is(except in One Upon A Time In TheWest), a gunless hero. Dietrich’s finestmoment, say some. Thur July 10, 8 pm,$2.50Blood of a Poet (Jean Cocteau, 1930) Thisis a French film by a famous Frenchdirector. It can’t be bad. At Facets, 600 SMichigan, Wed July 9, at 6:30 and 8 pm.In The Realm of the Senses (NagisaOshima, 1977) A famous Japanesemovie with famous explicit sex, thismovie describes a couple’s isolation fromsociety and, one supposes, their bed¬room manners. At facets Multimedia,1517 W Fullerton. Tonight until Thur, at7 pm and 9 pm.THEATERFrank's Wild Years oy Kathleen Brennan.Inspired by a Waits song of the samename and starring Waits (as Frank, onesupposes) At the Steppenwolf Theater,2851 N Halsted, 348-4000.Small Arts And Crafts Warnings by TheSecond City E.T.C This, the SecondCity’s third revue, features apartheid, thehomeless, rock lyrics and more. Soundslike a real zany time. Thur and Sun at 9pm for $6, and Fri and Sat at 8:30 and THUR MON11 pm at $7, 1616 N Wells in Piper’sAlley, 664-4032.Penta/Benta by Steven Ivcich A surpriseparty and one woman's “surreal strugglefor personal identity.” Thur through Sunat 8:30 until July 13. $10. Victory Gar¬dens Studio Theater, 2257 N Lincoln,871-3000Anatol by Arthur Schnitzler. "Fall in lovethis spring as you follow the romanticexploits of a young gentleman amidsthigh society in turn-of-the-centuryVienna." Fri thru Sun, at the CenterTheater, 7001 N Glen wood. $9, 508-0200.MUSICCity Mustek Part of the Summer Nightsprogram, this is Chicago's newest pro¬fessional baroque orchestra "Clean,elegant and alive. " says the Tribune.Fh, 8 pm at Hutch Court, $6.50 forregular people, $5 50 for students andsenior citizens, 962-7300Independence Day Concert This is spon¬sored by Taste of Chicago and theMayor's office and others. Come hearSousa, Wagner and Tchaikovsky withfireworks This promises to be a greatbig deal. Thursday at 8 pm at GrantPark, 663-0600 Grant Park Symphony Chorus Come hearWest Side Story, An American in Pansand The Battle Hymn of the RepublicIndependence Day at Grant Park, sameas aboveJack Wright and Sobriety Unleashed Thisshow has it all — improv jazz, "languagepoets," performance art, and asynthesizer Al at Joz, upstairs at Met-roplex. Cabaret Metro, 3730 N Clark. $3Sat at 8 pm, 759-9303MISCBrookfield Zoo's Fourth of July Music, a"tasty” barbeque and Leah the Amen-can bald eagle The Zoo. Fri, 485-0263Chicago Gay Men's Chorus Pride WeekConcert The L.A. Gay Men’s Chorus, atOrchestra Hall, 220 S Michigan, tonightat 8 pm, 477-9380.National Hot Dog Month If you can provethat your name or address has a “frank”in it (i.e — your name is Francesca oryou live in Franklin Park), you can get acomplimentary Chicago-style hot dogJust imagine! At Fluky’s 6821 N West¬ern, all month,AIOS Patient Support Group Call TomPerdue at 493-9883 for informationabout how you can helpAnjali FedsonWEDGrey City Journal 1 July 861212 East 59th Street. Chicago IL 60637Staff: Stephanie Bacon, Steve Best, Brett Bobley, Michele Marie Bonnarens,Jeff Brill, Carole Byrd, John Conlon, Gideon D'Arcangelo, Frederick Dolan,Andrew Halpern, Justine Kalas, Stefan Kertesz, Bruce King, Mike Kotze,Carolyn Mancuso, Nadine McGann, David McNulty, Miles Mendenhall, DavidMiller, Patrick Moxey, Brian Mulligan, Jordan Orlando, John Porter, LauraRebeck, Geoffrey Rees, Max Renn, Paul Reubens, Laura Saltz, Rachel Saltz,Sahotra Sarkar, Ann Schaefer, Wayne Scott, Mark Toma, Bob Travis, AnnWhitney, Ken Wissoker, Rick Wojcik.Production. Steven K. Amsterdam, Anjali K Fedson, Steven M LeslieEditors Steven K. Amsterdam, Anjali K FedsonGREY CITY JOURNAL—TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1986—3PHOTOS BY ANJALI K. FEDSON“It is a message from the Todaiji hope that the American public willTemple to the American people, a respond to the gesture in the spirit intoken of the friendly relationship be- which it is offered...”tween the peoples of Japan and the —Kitagawa Koten, Chief Abbot ofcontinued from page 1 United States, and it is my sincerest Todaijifigures in Japan’s history. Althoughthe show wil be at the Art Instituteuntil September 7, these pieces willbe replaced on August 4 by otherimportant objects.An added feature to the exhibitionis daily prayer. Fifteen minutes afteropening every morning, in front of ashrine to the Thousand ArmedKannon, two monks from Todaiji in fullgarb, chant from the Buddhist scrip¬tures. The ceremony is not only tohonor the Kannon, it is a prayer forworld peace. The monks of the templeallowed these objects to be taken toAmerica because they wish tostrengthen relations between our twocountries, which over the past fewyears have become tense due toeconomic aggression. Indeed, every¬one in the press packet wants peace:4—TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1986—GREY CITY JOURNAL ”... the realization of this exhibitionof treasures from the Todaiji will, l feelpleased to think, serve to deepen stillfurther the understanding betweenour peoples.”—Toichiro Hitotsuyanagi, President ofthe Asahi Shinbun (one of Japan’slargest newspapers, which orches¬trated the exhibition, dealing with thetemple, the government of Japan andwith American museums)“I am extremely grateful to myfriend Prime Minister Nakasone andto everyone in Japan who has helpedmake this exhibition possible, it willcertainly serve to bring our twofriendly countries still closer together.”—Our Very Own Ronald ReaganThe Great Eastern Temple: Treas¬ures of Japanese Buddhist Art fromTodai-ji is a once a millenium op¬portunity for Americans to see what ismost sacred to the Japanese andwhat is so generously shared.☆ ☆☆☆☆☆☆The Week Of July 1stTue. 1st NOONTIME CONCERTMR.MEYERS . A CAYPSO BAND, IN HUTCH COURTWed. 2nd SOQ FILMSGENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES 8p.m. IN COBB HALL $2.50Thurs. 3rd. NOONTIME CONCERTANDREW THE JUGGLER IN HUTCH COURTFri. 4th SOQ FILMSYQJMBO 8p.m. IN COBB HALL $2.50Sat. 5th. SOQ FILMSTHE TROUBLE WITH HARRY 8 p.m. IN COBB HALL $2.50ECLECTIC ED MINI COURSESA series of non-credit special interest classesare available for anominal fee throughthe Student Activities Office.YOGA with Kathleen WrightCALLIGRAPHY with Linda WhiteAEROBICS with Rosealinda VorneAFRO-CARIBBEAN DANCEwith Harry DetryIKEBANA with Ikka NakashimaMIDDLE EASTERN DANCEwith Rosalinda VorneRegistration is 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.in the Student Activities Office rm.210 of Ida NoyesRegistration ends 8th For more info call (962-9554).(SORRY.NO PHONE REGISTRATIONS)RummerQn theQuads THEBARBEQUEKINGSBored with cheap doggies?Call those gourmet guys, theBarhegue Kings.We 'll cater a great barhegue atprices lower than you think.• Quality Dogs and Burgers• Keg and Bottled Beer4 Homemade Sauces.Charcuterle Salads & Pastries• Handmade Sausages.• Mesquite Wood GrillingirQ/fe ^MarcheKINK CATK R I N <.312.667.4600sagaJVliPuebbFIXE MEXICA N CUISIXE2908 W. 59th 737-2700Open 1" an- to 11 p rrRECOMMENDED BY...Chicago Tribune 84 Tempo 84Chicago Magazine - June 85 & Chicago Sun-Times - July 85Our Specialties ... and Yours Too• enchiladas MOLE • OUR SOMBRERO• AVACADO TACOSD.ne OutsideOn Our PatiosMi Pueblo is a Special FindGuitarist Win fcntertain OnWednesdays Thursdays & FridaysOurMargantasAreMagic!Do you like toSHOOTDEVELOPANDPRINT?Come join the MaroonPHOTOGRAPHYStaffTuesday, July 2Ida Noyes 3033:30 p.m.GRE Y Cl IY JOURNAL—TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1986—5,..... Put the pastin your future!LIVE IN AN HISTORIC LANDMARKThoroughly renovated apartments offer generous floor space com¬bined with old-fashioned high ceilings. Park and lakefront providea natural setting for affordable elegance with dramatic views.—All new kitchens and appliances—Wall-to-wall carpeting —Resident manager—Air conditioning —Round-the-clock security—Optional indoor or —Laundry facilities onoutdoor parking each floor—Piccolo Mondo European gourmet food shop and cafeStudios, One-, Two- and Three-Bedroom ApartmentsOne-bedroom from $555 * Two-bedroom from $765Rent includes heat, cooking gas and master TV antennaCall for information and a appointment—643-1406In Hyde Park. across the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryKcjtjal Housing Opportunity Managed by Metropiex. ln<NOTHING IMPRESSESAN EMPLOYER LIKEDROPPINGOUT OF SCHOOL.j After several years of intense study; a lot of college graduates finally learnsomething. They’re not qualified for the job they want.Fact is, many graduates never find a career in their field of study. All theirtime spent in study. Not enough time in the field.That’s why there’s a nationwide program for college students called Co¬operative Education. It allows students to alternate studies at the college oftheir choice with paid, practical work experience in the career of their choice.To participate in Co-op Education you don’t have to fit into any particularsocio-economic group. You don’t have to be a straight “A” student either.All you really need to be, is smart enough to leave school,IYou earn a future when you earn a degree.For a free booklet write: Co-op Education * P.O. Box 999 • Boston, MA 02115A Public Service of TN$ Publication * 1S85 National Commission for Cooperative Education 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 19805311S. Blackstone Ave.947*0200Open 11 a.m.-midnight Monday-Thursday11 a.m,-1 am. Friday and SaturdayNoon-Midnight Sunday(Kitchen closes hall hour earlier)6—TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1986—GREY CITY JOURNALNEVER AGAIN WHOLEidentity, progress from exclusive their desks, whip out their penises,possessiveness to mild condescen¬sion to outright contempt. As ayoungster, he insists that his femalecaretakers admit that he is the mostimportant man in their lives, becomingjealous of their lovers and husbands.After he begins kindergarten arid so- and lead the all-male class in a chant:“Miss Chavez fucks, Miss Chavezfucks....” The mass masturbationdrives her from the school and getsthe four exhibitionists expelled. An¬other teacher, Miss Gilead, convincesthe schoolboys that their obsceneby Wayne ScottMost men are fortunate not toremember being circumcised. Andsome men are lucky never to becircumcised at all. Jaime, the narratorof Victor Perera’s novel Rites: AGuatamalan Boyhood, is not fortunateon either account. While he doesn’trecall being circumcised as an infant,he does describe a second time,when he was six years old. A flap ofskin left over from the first cutting,performed by a Gentile doctor, dis¬turbed his Jewish parents. Jaimerecalls “howls, astonishing pain andthe bitter sinking knowledge that Iwould never again be whole.” Thissecond circumcision foreshadows aseries of rites that bring the youngnarrate?/ — painfully, reluctantly, joy¬fully — into the full meaning of hisidentity: as a minority Jew, as an alienin a far-away, war-torn land, and mostsignificantly as a man.Perera’s novel clings to such am¬azing details, heavy with symbolicovertones — heavy because most ofthem involve Jaime’s or other peo¬ples’ penises. But there’s no coher¬ence to these childhood episodes, nocontinuity from upset to disaster.Jaime is ostracized, humiliated, andharassed for his Judaism in onescene, then accepted unconditionallyby the same peers in the next. Thenovel would have been better de¬scribed as a collection of loosely-related short stories, given the factthat most of the chapters appeared inmagazines as such over the last four¬teen years. Perera’s choppy descrip¬tion of Jaime’s passage into manhoodmight be understood as the contin¬uous, building complexity of the nar¬rator — especially with all thosephallic symbols meeting, merging,and rebounding like bumper cars. ButI dismiss it as sloppy and confusing.Rites does not offer a compelling,individual account of the developmentof Jaime’s macho. Closely followingthe Freudian romance, Jaime movesfrom an intense attachment to hismother to awed regard for his mightyfather: “his impressive phallus... hisenormous size... his position of au¬thority at home and in business... andhis restrained capacity for violence.”Jaime’s attitudes toward women,which form the density of his macho cializes with other boys, his attitudesuggests less affection and less re¬spect. When his nanny doesn’t re¬trieve him from his caged-in bed — hesuspects that she ignores his callswhile she flirts with a lover — he aimsa stream of pee into his sister’s crib,bringing the nanny running to heroutraged screams.While male posturing begins in thecrib, it intensifies in sex-segregatedmilitary schools. Jaime and his schoolchums derive much of their collectivemacho identities by intimidating, ter¬rorizing, and ultimately driving awaytheir unglamorous female teachers. Atone point, four boys climb on top of posturing cannot drive her away bytelling of how she had survived ter¬rorist attacks in England. By connect¬ing their petty belligerence to nationalwar-mongering, she highlights one ofthe only consistent themes in thenovel: Perera’s tracing of the boys’individual role-learning and mandatorymacho to larger political conflicts inGuatamala and the world.Jaime’s development of macho isnot entirely predictable. The men inthe novel define masculinity largelynegatively — as what is not feminineor like the mother. Masculinity is nottender, empathic or nurturing. Con¬sequently the men in the novel are a group of brutes. But Jaime has anearly experience that spares him sucha nasty fate. The men do have onesense of masculinity that is positiveand self-contained: their glorified,sentimentalized, idealized notion ofsoldiering. Jaime’s buddy CoCo con¬vinces him to don his cub scoutsuniform and participate in a militarymarch to express law and order inchaotic Guatamala. Abandoned by hisfriend at the last moment, he is theyoungest member of the march — theonly cub and the only one in shortpants. At first he experiences a senseof grandeur and “real patriotism,” buthe falls out of step, then behind themarch. The onlookers laugh and jeerat him, jeer and laugh at the soldiers,start throwing things, poking the sol¬diers and ripping away their clothes.The leader orders the soldiers toretreat, and Jaime feels all the sour¬ness of their collective humiliation,their defeat in the eyes of, at thehands of, their countrymen.Jaime's experience of actual mili¬tary battle — an overthrow of thegovernment when he is twelve —leaves him frightened of war andunimpressed by the glamor of battle.He finds fighting chaotic and deh¬umanizing, as “friendly fire” dropsanonymously from the sky on theneutral town he lives in. Of the glori¬fied cousin who fights in the revolu¬tion, Jaime concludes, “It was not therevolution that intoxicated Jacob, buthis idea of it.”As Jaime grows older, his personalaccount degenerates into a samplingof ensuing revolutions and politicalupsets, largely ignoring his subjectiveexperiences and the man he hasbecome. He offers updates on most ofhis nasty, brutish school chums, sar¬donically comments on the men theyhave become, but leaves the readerwondering about who he is. Heavoided becoming a merchant or apolitician, like most of them, but it isquestionable whether his going tograduate school was any less brutalor masculinizing. By ignoring his sub¬jective experience and leaving off thesensitivity that characterized his boy¬hood narrative, he suggests he hasmet a fate similar to his schoolchums, though he has become cyni¬cal, jaded with .politics, and tired ofthe boys he grew up with.SOUNDhornIRCOIHIRG BOATShave TheRIGHT OF WAYphotographer unknown The Grey City Journal is here for you. We present,discuss, and review poetry, fiction, photography, mu¬sic, women s issues, gay and lesbian concerns, andindividual commentary on political events. It’s a bigworld, so what do you do? You write. You takepictures. You take pictures of your best friend writing.You send it to the Grey City Office in the attic of IdaNoyes.So come along to Grey City Brunch. Well give youbagels, coffee and free space.1221IF IT'STHE E 57 FLAT 1WSUNNY, COME AROUNDBACKGREY CITY JOURNAI —TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1986 -7I' PHILIP W. JACKSONI THE PRACTICE OF TEACHINGs ANNETTE E. DUMBACH +I JUd NEWBORN! SHATTERING THE GERMAN NIGHTSEMINARY COOP BOOKSTORE5757 S. UNIVERSITYMONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30-6:00i SATURDAY 10:00-5:00SUNDAY 12:00-5:00 CHiCAGoLITERARY REVIEWQUARTERLY■■ 1212 e 59th st|Chicago IL 60637312) 962 9555COME ONECOME ALL !JOIN the CLRmeetings mon.atIda Noyes 303* v * V * V y V ^ VHYDE PARK ipCOMPUTERS INC.Looking For A Word Processor?We Have The Answer!- Epson Equity I Computer (IBM Com&Kibto)- Epson LX-80 Printer (other onntor* •vaiUpio)- WordPerfect WordProcessing Software- Printer Cable plus 10 DisksFree On-Site DeliveryExpert Training and Support!Complete Package - s1499Corner of 53rd and Harper - 288-5971"Good friendsdon't let good friendssmoke cigarettes."Larry HagmanCigarettes aren't good for your friendsAdopt a friend who smokes and help 'em quittoday. You'll both be glad tomorrowT AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETYft-TUESDAY. JULY 1. 1986—GRFY CITY JOURNAL mvtarKei rpaclarket re¬sidentshe Chicarket irrpact *larket resldents ■ Journal, weekly arts & entertainment supplementareakly artsreach «* MarketementareaMarket reach * Market impact* The Grey City Journal, weekly artsThChicago Maroon, student newspaper of the U of C * Market reacharket impact * Over 10,000 students, faculty & staff * Market reach * Marketipact * The Grey City Journal, weekly arts & entertainment supplementlarket reach * Market impact * Over 60,000 Hyde Park-Kenwood areajsidents * Market reach * Market impact* The Grey City Journal, weekly artsheJiaicago Maroon, student r^mspapof oy^e U of C * Market reach *Summer Publicationsarket reach * Market impact * Over 60,000 Hyde Park-Kenwood arec:** Market« . . Mvrmi impact* Thg Grey City Journal, weekly artse Chicago Matjclj.Mde^rnewspaperlarket impact s%dents, facultpact * The Grey City Journal, weeklylarket reach * Market impact * Ovelesidents * Market reach * Market impacthe Chicago Maroon, student rtewsplarket impact * Over 10,000 students, fajnpact * The Grey City Journal, weeklylarket reach ♦ Market impact * Ovqesidents • Market reach • Market impa<^he Chicago Maroon, student newspaper of the U of C * Market reacharket impact * j^er 10,000 studenti, faculty staff • Market reach • Marked* The oA|tflfSMAftriy ar*S& entertainment supplement «arket reach 60l§00 Hyde Park-Kenwood areaesidents • Market reach ^Market impact* TJji|Grey City Journal, weekly artshe Chicago Maroon, student newspaper Xfhe U of C • Market reach «arket impact • Over 10,000 students, faculty staff • Market reach • Markempact • The Grey City Journal, weekl^rlgA entertainment supplement *arket reach ♦ Market impact ♦ OveJBQpO Hyde Park-Kenwood areaesidents • Market reach • Market impact* mrGrey City Journal, weekly artshe Chicago Maroon, student newspaper of the U of C • Market reach «arket impact • Over 10,000 students, faculty & staff • Market reach • Marketmpact ♦ The Grey City Journal, weekly arts & entertainment supplement •arket reach • Market impact • Over 60,000 Hyde Park-Kenwood areaarket impact • Over 10,000 students, faculty & staff • Market reach • Marke'the U of C * Market reachi staff * Market reach * Market& entertainment supplement00 Hyde Park-Kenwood areaGrey City Journal, weekly artshe U of C * Market reach *staff • Market reach • Market& entertainment supplement ♦)' Hyde Park-Kenwood arearey City Journal, weekly artsUniversities confederate for athleticsBy Larry Kavanagh New York, the University of Chicago andStaff Writer seven other research universities an-With news conferences in Chicago and nounced the formation of a new division IIIBruce Montella, Division III rushing champ 1985MODGL GjM€M 4ND VIlDCO1342 Cast 55th SmeeT493-6700FUJI FILM(24 exposure)with any roll ofCOLOR PRINT filmbrought in for developing atwith this ad, expires 6/15/86MODGL C4MGR4 4MD VIlDGO1342 Cast 55th Strcgt493-6700 athletic conference. The conference,named the University Athletic Association(UAA), will include Chicago, Carnegie-Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pa.; CaseWestern Reserve University, Cleveland,Ohio; Emory University, Atlanta, Ga.;Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.;New York University, New York City; theUniversity of Rochester, Rochester, N.Y.;and Washington University, St. Louis Mo.Provost Norman Bradburn explained therationale for the new conference saying,“The University of Chicago’s participationin the new association will further enhanceopportunities for our students to competeagainst student athletes from other re¬search universities that share a commonphilosophy concerning the role of athleticsin a college education. That philosophyholds that athletics is part of the overalleducational process and should be con¬ducted in a manner consistent with theuniversity’s central academic mission.”While some games between UAA mem¬bers are scheduled for 86-87 season, theconference will not formally play until the87-88 season. The schools will play out theirobligations to their present conferencesthis year.According to Mary Jean Muivaney,chairperson of physical education and ath¬letics, ten schools attended a meeting lastOctober to discuss the possibility of aleague of Universities. Two, Brandis andMIT, dropped out of the plans at an earlystage. Most of the final planning was con¬cluded by April, but the announcement waswithheld until "several details could betaken care of.”Muivaney stated that the conference wasset up to include major research uni¬versities located in metropolitan areasTo Dan Hall, dean of admissions for thecollege, the new conference could become afactor in recruiting students. How major afactor it is “depends on what happens withthe conference.” Hall said. He continued.“All of the schools must make a decision asto what sports will be emphasized ” Thedean pointed out that presently only five ofthe schools play football. Hall was op¬timistic, though, that the conference "coulddevelop into a model of what division IIIathletics should be. and that would attract students.”Observers note that, at the very least, thenew conference will be a platform fromwhich outstanding athletes, like GretchenGates and Bruce Montella, can be launchedinto national media coverage. While thename University of Chicago attracted someattention to these athletes this year, aconference of athletic scholars more easilydraws the eye of the press. The conferencealso fits into the continuing plans of theUniversity to improve campus life. Byproviding opponents with greater namerecognition, the University hopes to attractmore students to athletic events.Carneg* M*ton University - Cme WesiomBmnnUnwonny • University o» Ocogc Fmory UmversifvJorns Moo**'* Unwers*«• New University • Urwers«ty o' Rocnester W«sn*ng»or university m Si LowsSeveral of the schools in the new confer¬ence have been ranked in the top ten ofdivision III in recent years: Case-Westernin football, Johns Hopkins in swimmingand fencing, NYU in basketball and,Washington in soccer and tennis. Roch¬ester’s press packet boasts that it had 23individuals win all-american honors lastyear. Despite this competition Muivaneybelieves that U of C will compete effec¬tively in the UAA. “We are strong in allsports and don’t specialize in one or twolike some of the other schools,” she ob¬served. Muivaney pointed out that whileNYU has a basketball team that makes itto the NCAA division III playoffs yearly,they don’t field a football team.Muivaney admitted that playing in theUAA will mean more expenses for theathletic department but stated that thecosts “won t be as major as people mightexpect due to the deregulation of airfares.” She believes, however, that theMaroons will continue to play teams in theMCAC and MACW, their current confer¬ences. because of their proximity.■ ■ ■ "The University of ChicagoCenter for Clinical Medical EthicsMEDICAL ETHICS FILM SERIESJuly FilmsThursday, July 3 12:10-1:00 p.m. Rm J141Between A Rock and A Hard PlaceA compelling film which deals with issues aroundmedical care and training by presenting short dramasabout doctor-patient relationships and appropriatemedical training for the caring or a patient. This filmsensitively handles common ethical dilemmas in themedical profession around truth-telling and informedconsent.Thursday, July 17 5:30 - 7:30 p.m. RM J137FrancisThe popular full-length film starring Jessica Lange inthe true story of Francis Farmer. This film presents theyoung actress's rising career as a provocative star ofstage and screen who, at age 27, is arrested andinvoluntarily commited to a rriental institution due to aseries of relatively insignificant events. This filmexamines institutional oppression and ethicalconsideration of appropriate treatment in thepsychiatric profession.Thursday, July 31 12:10-1:15 p.m. Rm A133Boy or Girl: Should The Choice Be Ours?Emerging technologies now allow parents to detect thegender or their children. This film examines whether achoice should be available to continue a pregnancy ornot based on the baby's gender. If so, wnat will thismean to the children and our society?The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, July 1.1986—13. :• •; EDITORIAL Illiill.............Jh &The road to infamyThe University’s decision to join the University Athletic Associ¬ation is, at first glance, an exciting venture. It seems moreappropriate for the U of C to compete athletically against uni¬versities they compete with intellectually. More meaningful riv¬alries can be built around schools with which the student body isalready familiar. And if the concept of a rival athletic schoolcatches on, the quality of student life on campus will be improved bythis new diversion. More high school students will hear of theUniversity of Chicago. This leads to more and better applicants tothe college, and a larger class size. Alumni Associations will be ableto show off a new crop of bright, promising student-athletes toalumni hungry for contact with their old college. This leads to moredonations to the school. And with more students paying tuition andmore donations...This is the road that many major universities who use theirathletic program to stimulate interest in their schools have stum¬bled down; they allow less qualified students admittance to improveone team or another, they bend and break rules for financial aid andacademic eligibility, and they place their “student-athletes” in high-pressure, widely-viewed tournaments.None of this will happen to the college on a dramatic basis as aresult of entering the UAA. However, the University is, to a certainextent, using the athletic program to stimulate interest in thecollege. Currently athletes at U of C have a higher GPA andretention rate than the college student body as a whole. Currentlythey compete in low-pressure local conferences. Changing the latteris exciting and possibly quite a good move, as long as the formerdoes not also change.LETTERSReaction to B-J residentTo the editor:As a graduating senior who has lived inand worked for the University housingsystem, I must take strong exception to theremarks made in the recent letter from “AConcerned B-J Resident.’’(Maroon, May30. 1986)This resident writes: “If the ResidentHeads (of Hale and Breckinridge Houses)are not conducting themselves appropri¬ately, then obviously the Director of Hous¬ing must not be making appointments withcare and prudence.” I fail to see why thismust be the case; still less why it isobvious. Does this concerned residentreally believe that the miscalculated andirresponsible actions of a very few staffmembers are a sufficient indictment of the“policies of the University Housing Sys¬tem” as a whole? I would remind him thatit is not the Director of Student Housingwho selects staff members, but rather stu¬dents, like himself, who live in the HouseSystem; almost every successful applicantfor a staff position must go through arigorous interview process, in which he isevaluated by residents of the houses, aswell as by Resident Assistants and Resi¬dent Heads.As one who was very close to the situa¬tion in Breckinridge and familiar with thecircumstances surrounding the incidents atHale and 1215, I can testify that the Direc¬tor handled these difficult matters in amost courteous, professional, and effectivemanner. The writer complains that his sugges¬tions for activities have fallen upon deafears. Why did he not offer them to hisResident Head, Resident Assistant, orHouse Council? It is they, and not theResident Masters, who are responsible fororganizing house events. Is it possible thatthese suggestions were simply not feasibleor were inappropriate? Might the plans forthese activities have been formulatedsomewhat incoherently—like the writersletter to the Maroon? Would this individualcare to inquire about how many visitingfellows or sherry hours undergraduates atother major universities were provided inrecent months? Or does he believe that it isthe primary task of our housing system tokeep chronic complainers entertained at alltimes? In light of all that he knows aboutour housing system does he really believehe is competent to “evaluate” the Directorof Student Housing, who confronts moretruly important issues daily than the writereven knows exist?Certainly, the University Housing Systemhas shortcomings. But the vast majority ofHousing Staff members are not as ir¬responsible as those who recently aban¬doned their duties; nor are most Universitystudents filled with “foolish and absurdopinions,” like the one who wrote thisletter. One senses that the only thing thisindividual did with “care and prudence”was not signing his or her name.Michael FrenkelResident Assistant, Breckinridge HouseA sprinkle a day...To the Editor,As a full tuition-paying student in theUniversity, I am sick and tired of facingyearly, double-inflation-rate tuition in¬creases while suffering through blatantmismanagement of tuition money by vari¬ous departments here. Let me give atrivial, but very revealing example. I havecomplained to the physical plant severaltimes over the past two and a half yearsabout the sprinklers across campus, par¬ticularly those in front of the Reg. Most ofthose “sprinklers” are more like geysersthat waste incredible amounts of waternightly which puddle in the grass or draininto the street. I would really hate to knowjust how much money has been wasted bythis during the two year + period during which I complained. (Do I dare suggestthat it could have paid for at least one full-tuition scholarship?!) I have no doubt thatthe money mismanaged in this example isbut an inconsequential amount comparedto that wasted throughout the University. Icould list MANY more examples, but mypoint has been made. With one of thenation’s top business schools as part of thisUniversity, WHERE ARE THE MAN¬AGERS IN OUR ADMINISTRATION??!!The University of Chiqago deserves all thepraise it gets, and more, but I hope it doesnot continue to hide behind those kudos andforget that it is not perfect!Marjorie Thomas3rd year in the College14—Hie Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, July 1,1906 CAUSE blasts US policiesBy Katherine BowieSuzanne ErfurthHugh WilsonThe U of C-based organization CAUSE(Committee Assembled in Unity and Sol¬idarity with El Salvador), circulated apetition in Kimbark Plaza last week oppos¬ing US funding for contra attacks on Nic¬aragua, and calling for sanctions againstthe apartheid government of South Africaand an end to US sanctions against Nic¬aragua. In roughly six hours, 360 signed thepetition.The contras have been accused by theirown political affiliates in the United Statesof committing “damnable atrocities”against civilians (These are the words ofArturo Cruz, a leading contra diplomat).The nonpartisan human rights organizationAmericas Watch says the contras carry out“a planned strategy of terrorism,” andthat “the US cannot avoid responsibility forthese atrocities.”The Reagan Administration has pressedattacks and sanctions against Nicaragua,claiming without serious evidence that Nicaragua is a threat to its neighbors. Incontrast, the administration has opposedany serious sanctions against South Africa,which in addition to subjugating its ownBlack population has occupied all of Nam¬ibia and parts of Angola, and has raidedfour other nations in Southern Africa —Lesotho, Mozambique, Zambia, and Bot¬swana.Despite serious public opposition tocontra aid — reflected locally in the en¬thusiasm for our petition and nationally inthe polls — the House voted on June 25 toapprove $100 million in aid to the contras.It is deeply disturbing when both houses ofCongress, in disregard for internationallaw, US public opinion, and fundamentalhuman rights, support one of Reagan’scrudest and most destructive policies.The South Side Religious Task Force onCentral America, the Coalition for IllinoisDivestment from South Africa (CIDSA),and CAUSE are working on these issues.The Task Force can be reached at 288-5972:CIDSA at 922-3915, and CAUSE at 288-2629.The Maroon welcomes responses to thisviewpointLETTERSecurity doing its duty?To the Editor:Last month I discovered that regardlessof its reputation, University Security is notdedicated to protecting University ofChicago students.I volunteer at a shelter for homelesswomen and am committed to spending onenight a week there. The shelter is locatedat 65th and Woodlawn. Obviously, to gothere at night means that I have to leaveHyde Park sometime during the evening,preferably before dark. Because I don’thave a car and no bus travels near thehome, I ride my bike there and back. Thiswas frightening initially, but now I knowthe path and am comfortable with it.Wednesday night it was almost darkwhen I left so 1 called security and asked ifthey could give me umbrella coverage tothe home. The officer said no, that theyonly went to 61st, then proceeded to tell methat riding my bike into that area was,“not the smartest way to get there.” WhenI told him that I was aware of the dangers,that I had no choice, he asked me why Ihad to go there and then was completelydisinterested in my responsibility to theshelter. Again he told me that it wasn’tvery smart, and countered my responsewith, “look, I’m only trying to be consid¬erate to you,” then told me, “Well if youknow the dangers. . .” as if apprising me ofthe risks abnegated his responsibility as a security officer. Not once did he offer aconcrete solution, (e.g., a car could havefollowed me to 61st street and waited andwatched me ride on), not once did hesuggest that even though nothing could beworked out tonight something could bedone in the future. The message was clear:I should restructure my activities in orderto never again put myself in a dangeroussituation.Every time I go to the shelter I take acalculated risk, but I know that. I ask U ofC Security to keep their hypocritical “con¬sideration” to themselves; either they willdo something or they won’t, and gratuitousadvice from someone who demonstrates noreal interest in my well-being is useless. Ireject the implication that because I chooseto pursue activities outside the Universityconfines I am willfully endangering myself.I refuse to accept the officer’s position thatcautioning me is the limit of his responsi¬bility. Similar people believe that becauseI’m a woman I should passively acceptsocietally-imposed restrictions to mymovements, that in the name of safety Ishould become a recluse. I know the dan¬gers, what I needed was protection. If theUniversity police cannot offer real help andconcrete solutions, then what good arethey?Theresa L. Brownloin the MaroonThe Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University ofChicago. It is published twice weekly, on Tuesdays and Fridays.Back issues are available, by mail only, at $1.50 for the first issue and $1.00 foreach additional issue. Send full payment with the request.Mail subscriptions are available for $24 per year.The Maroon welcomes letters and other contributions from students, faculty,staff, and others. Anyone interested in doing writing, photography, or other work forthe Maroon should stop by our office, Ida Noyes rooms 303 and 304, 1212 E. 59thStreet, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Phone: 962-9555.Larry Kavanagh Molly McClain Greg Mantell Larry SteinEditor-in-Chief Managing Editor News Editor Business ManagerSteven K. Amsterdam Krishna Ramanujan Christine Dyrud Sue SkufcaGrey City Journal Editor Chicago Literary Review Editor Photography Editor Advertising ManagerAnjali K. Fedson Karen E. Anderson Susie Brady Jaimie WeihrichGrey City Journal Editor Development Editor Production Manager Office ManagerAssociate Editors: Alexandra Conroy, Mona El Naggar, Ingrid Gould, MichaelMonahan, Kristin Scott, Howard Ullman.Maroon Staff Members: Arzou Ahsan, Stephanie Bacon, Tony Berkley, Steve Best,Robert Block, Brett Bobley, Michele Bonnarens, Michael Breen, Jeff Brill, TheresaBrown, Laurel Buerk, Gabriela Burghelea, Carole Byrd, John Conlon, DennisChansky, Sue Chorvat, Odilon Couzin, Elizabeth deGrazia, Larry DiPaolo, T.D.Edwards, Michael Fell, Mike Fitzgerald, Bill Flevares, Andy Forsaith, Katie Fox,Beth Green, Kate Hill, Craig Joseph, Justine Kalas, Ann Keen, Bridget Kenny,Stefan Kertesz, Sanjay Khare, Bruce King, Mike Kotze, Lara Langner, Nick Lanyi,Janine Lanza, Marcia Lehmberg, Meg Liebezeit, Carolyn Mancuso, NadineMcGann, Miles Mendenhall, Steve Meralevitz, Sam D. Miller, Melissa Moore,Patrick Moxey, Karin Nelson, Brian Nichiporuk, Matt Nickerson, Jordan Orlando,Jean Osnos, Chalcea Park, Larry Peskin, Clark Peters, John Porter, Geoff Potter,Laura Rebeck, Geoffrey Rees, Paul Reubens, Rich Rinaolo, Gary Roberts, ErikaRubel, Terry Rudd, Sahotra Sarkar, Ann Schaefer, Michael Schoop, Wayne Scott,Rick Senger, Michael Sohn, Sonja Spear, Johanna Stoyva, Kathy Szdygis, MarkToma, Bob Travis, Francis Turner, Martha Vertreace, Christina Vougarelis,Melissa Weisshaus, Ann Whitney, Rick Wojcik, Christine Wright.Contributors: Richard Ko, Jacob Park, David Ring.CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon is$2 for the first line and $1 for each additionalline. Lines are 45 character long INCLUDINGspaces and punctuation. Special headings are 20character lines at $3 per line. Ads are notaccepted over the phone, and they must be paidin advance. Submit all ads in person or by mailto The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59th St., Chic¬ago IL 60637 ATTN Classified Ads. Our office isin Ida Noyes Rm. 304. Deadlines: Tuesday &Friday at 5:00 p.m., one week prior to pub¬lication. Absolutely no exceptions will be made!In case of errors for which the Maroon isresponsible, adjustments will be made or cor¬rections run only if the business office is noti¬fied WITHIN ONE CALENDAR WEEK of theoriginal publication. The Maroon is not liablefor any errors.SPACEAPARTMENTS AVAILABLEStudios, one, two 8. 3 bedrms some lake viewsnear 1C, CTA & U of C shuttle, laundry, facili¬ties, parking available, heat 8< water included.5% discounts for students. Herbert Realty 684-2333 9-4:30 Mon. Fri. 9-2 on Sat.GOVERNMENT HOMES trom $1 1U repair).Delinquent tax property. Repossessions. Call 1-805-687 6000 Ext. H-4534 for current repo list.Sublet studio (thru 9/30) with fall option 5500 S.Shore Dr. $399/mo. Includes heat, sep kitchen &dining areas, pool, laundry, restaurant, deli,good security, carpeting, great location. Call947 8486 evenings.5026 Woodlawn four large rooms S430/mo CallTom at 375-4728.APARTMENTS AVAILABLE5464-76 HARPER $325-440Studio, 3Vi & 4 room apts. Partially or com¬pletely remodeled apts. Additional outlets, re¬finished tubs & floors. Completely painted insome cases. New kitchen sinks 8. cabinets.Laundry facilities on site. Only four left foryour personal showing. Call 493-2525, ask forNancy or Steve. PARKE R-HOLSMAN COM¬PANY.APARTMENTS AVAILABLE5218 28 WOODLAWN4 Large Rooms $4755 Rooms-2 Bedrooms$575Completely refurbished with tiled baths andrefinished tubs. Apts, have burglar alarms.Laundry facilities on site. Call Nancy or Stevefor your personal showing.PARKE R-HOLSMAN COMPANY 493-2525.Quiet female non-smoking rmmate wanted: forfall (Jul Aug avail) at Regents Park w/ ownbath in 2 bed rm apt 324-3917 mornings & eves.APARTMENTMATE WANTED to share spec¬tacular two bedroom in secure and luxuriousREGENTS PARK. Private bathroom, lakeview, attractive furnishings, 22nd floor! Subletor Lease ASAP. Call anytime 955-8791 or leavemessage at 477-8111.APARTMENTSFOR RENTGRAFF &CHECK1617 E. 55th St.Spacious, newly-decoratedlarge studios, one and threebedroom apartments inquiet, well-maintainedbuildings close to campus.Immediate OccupancyBU8-55664marian realty,na mStudio and 1 BedroomApartments AvailableIn the Carolan— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus Line5480 S, Cornell684-5400 SPACE WANTEDFemale grad student seeks room w/privatebath from Sept. 1 to December 1. 667-0484.Looking for two bedroom apt. Must be able totake kids & pets. Prefer Hyde Park or S. Shorearea. Please call Pam days: 10-2 eves. 9-11.PEOPLE WANTEDGOVERNMENT JOBS $16,040-$59,230/yr. NowHiring. Call 805-687-6000 Ext. R-4534 for currentfederal lisf.Permanent, fulltime, M-F clinical lab techposition in Billings Hospital. Undergraduatedegree and lab experience in chem/Biologyrequired. Call Thyroid lab 962-6941.INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS: Guide toGreencard from F/J/H Visas. For details, send$1 (P8<H): Immigration Publications, DeptF161, P.O. Box 515991, Dallas, TX 75251.Affectionate and experienced babysitter for our1 yr. old. Part-time. 955-2148.Are you strong & handy? Kenwood family withold house needs maintenance help. Flexiblehours, minimum half day/week at $6/hr. Car¬pentry, electrical, plumbing experience helpfulPlease call 548-0016 with refs after 7/7.Are you a good manager of people? New com¬pany expanding in Chicago. Earn $72,000-94,000.Start immediately (part time also available)Call Cheryl Ordower 363-8747.SERVICESThe Better Image professional portrait andWedding photography. Call 643-6262.The Better Image, economic custom framingavailable, fast service. 1344 E. 55th St. 643-6262.JUDITH TYPES and has a memory. Phone 955-4417.PASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE-U-WAITModel Camera 8. Video 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.Typing Typing Typing. Dissertations, lettersetc. Grammar correct. Call Elaine 667-8657.JUDITH TYPES and has a memory. IBMcompatible. QuietWriter printer. Your disk ormine 955-4417.BABY childcare available near U of C. Experi¬enced, loving teacher to help your child grow.684-2820.BOOKKEEPING SERVICE INCORP. ManualSystem 7 days a week 9am to 10pm Kim Jones643-9293.EDITOR WOODPROCESSOR-TYPISTJames Bone, 363-0522 (hourly fee)DELIVERY Service for Hyde Park's PIN-EWOOD BOOKCASES is available to deliverfurniture, beds from North Side stores. Ask meabout best prices for BOOKCASES, LOCALDELIVERIES, or licensed moving company forlarger jobs. Larry, 743-1353.Studios, 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom-Apartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-2333Student Discounts9:00 A.\1.-4:30 P.M.Monday thru Friday9:00 A.M.-2 P.M.'Saturday5254 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and UnfurnishedUtilities IncludedLaundry RoomSundeck • Secure BuildingCampus Bus At Our DoorCall 9-5 for appointment324-0200 FOR SALE79 VW Rabbit automatic good + condition.$2000.00 955-7998 evenings.For Sale: Hitachi AM/FM cassette 8, stereo.Turntable needs repair. Cassette 8. radio ingood cond. 2 2ft. high spkrs. $25 (Heavy) Dormsized fridge. Exl cond. Kenmore (Heavy) $30.Prices final. Cash only. 667-0484.1977 dodge colt wagon $825 or offer 955-3622.STEREO SPEAKERS, TURNTABLES, CD ForSale-New 50% off, $90-500. AR, Advent Snell,Rega-Camber, Wharfedale, Call 752-0516."AUTOS FOR SALE"Does the Gov't sell Jeeps, cars, 4x4's con¬fiscated in drug raids for under $100.00? Get thefacts today. Call 602-837-3401 Ext S564.$400 FOR 6-WEEKSleep study. You must have an air conditionedbedroom and flexible daytime commitments topermit about 2 weeks of daytime sleeping.i_eave name 8. phone H for Dr. Eastman 955-6941. RESEARCH SUBJECTSNEEDEDEarn $100 for participating in a study on theeffects of recreational drugs on mood and be¬havior. Involves one evening (7-10pm.) perweek for 5 weeks. Volunteers must be between18 8> 35 years old in good health. For moreinformation call 962-3560 weekdays between3:30 & 5pm. Refer to study CD.SUMMER SUBLETRoom in spacious 2-bedroom apt, front andback porches, near Hyde Park Coop, on B-busroute. Rent negotiable. Call 947-9126.EDWARDO'S FOR LUNCH10 min service in dining rm for quick-lunchmenu or IT'S FREE! Also fast courteous lunchdelivery. Edwardo's 1321 E. 57th Ph 241 7960.MACINTOSH UPGRADES512K $195. 120 day warranty. Housecalls 400KSony disks $1.49, 800K Sony disks $2.49.CYBERSYSTEMS 667-4000ROOMMATE WANTEDFemale roommate wanted for 4 bdrm house.Bright and roomy with study space. Near coop$165/mo -I- utilities. Call 643-1568.FEELING TENSE& NERVOUS?If so, you may qualify to receive treatment foryour anxiety at the University of Chicago Med¬ical Center. Treatment will be free of charge inreturn for participating in a 3 week study toevaluate drug preference. Involves only com¬monly prescribed drugs. Participants must bebetween 21 8< 55 years old and in good health.For further information call Karen at 962-35608:30 to 11:30 a.m. Refer to study A.RECREATIONALPROPERTYS.W. Wisconsin. 82 Scenic Acres. Older House,Fields, Pasture, Trees/$41,500.- (312) 752-7205 or(219) 879-2596NEED EXTRA MONEY? RAVINIA TRIPSto hear Arlo Guthrie and Pete Seeger on ThursJuly 10, and to hear the CSO, conducted byJames Levine, Marvis Martin, soprano, andAndre Watts, pianist on Fri, July 11. The busleaves at 6pm. Round trip cost is $3, lawnadmission $5. Call 1-House at 753-2274.MEXICAN BARBECUEfeaturing MARIACHIS GUADALAJARA andserving Mexican Fajitas hot from the grill. OnFri, July 18, at 5pm, at the International Houseof Chicago. Call 753-2274 for details.BASEBALL OUTINGOn Mon. July 7, International House will take atrip to see the Chicago Whitesox play theCleveland Indians. Round trip transportationand box seat—$6.50. Bus leaves at 6:15pm. Freerefreshments on bus. Call 753-2274.DATSUN 240ZWhite 1973. Good condition. At a bargain price,$1000.00, or best offer. Call Carole at 753-2274,day or 363 0890, evening.Earn $150.00 for your participation in a 4-weekdrug preference study. Involves only over-the-counter or commonly prescribed, non-experimental drugs. Minimum time required.Call 962-3560 Monday-Friday between 8:30 A.M.-11:30 A.M. Volunteers must be between 21 and35, and in good health. Refer to study KS.THE MEDICI DELIVERS!Daily from 4 pm. Call 667-7394.bwffbriI PROFESSIONAL TESTING CENTERS ICALL (312) 855-1088P<x44ix$ the...an OPEN HOUSE^ I • Answers to the£ May 1986 examwj r• Drawing tor Vi7 tuition couponChicago Loop July 8 5:45 p.mOak Lawn July 14 6:30 p.m.O’Hare Area July 15 6:30 p.m.Oakbrook July 16 6.30 p.m.C all for information and reservations:782 5170convtsef-mBtefCR9 CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 1 1 A.-8:30 P MClosed Monday1318 £. 63rd M04-1043Spruce Up Your Smile forsNew Quarter por New Job Eor Summer Por Summer Job V1or the Beach 1or ?? AiDavid Itzkoff, DDS752-78881525 E. 53rd StSuite 604r DR. MORTON R. MASLOV AOPTOMETRIST•EYE EXAMINATIONS•FASHION EYEWEAR(one year warranty on eyeglassframes and glass lenses)SPECIALIZING IN• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSES•CONTACT SUPPLIES4THE HYDE PARKSHOPPINO CENTER1510 E. 55th363-0100The Chicago Maroor. Tuesday, July 1,138€ 15M;? TWHERE YOU'RE A STRANGER BUT ONCE HUSDA Choice BeefRibSteaksGovt. Insp. 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