INSIDE:Inti U of C. daycelebration on Sundaypage 2 'll la EnaMiriKini'ForrtRn Minister Botha also said that"It la encouraging that President Rea¬gan acknowledges the dramaticThis dispatch from South Africawo* written in compliance with pressrestrictions imposed at part of theemergency decree The restrictionsprohibit reporters from referringwithout official authorization to themovements and actions of securityforces and from reporting state¬ments deemed to be subversive. 'changes brought about" under theleadership of President P. W. BothaThe Foreign Minister made no directreference to six points listed by MrReagan as "necessary components ofprogress toward political peace " Thepoints Included the treeing of the Jailed Reagan'sS. Africapolicypage 10 NIEWLlOGiOSEE GREY CITYThe Chicago MaroonVolume 98, No. 4 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1986 Friday, July 25,1986Congress ponders GSLsBy Molly McClainManaging EditorHouse and Senate bills to ex¬tend the Higher Education Act of1965 contain provisions whichexpand the amount studentsmay borrow in Guaranteed Stu¬dent Loans (GSL). These provi¬sions have become a source ofcontroversy nationwide, accord¬ing to a Chronicle of Higher Ed¬ucation article.The bills, HR 3700 and S 1965,would increase the $2500 under¬graduate and $5000 graduatelimit on GSLs. They would alsolimit the portion of college coststhat could be covered by a PellGrant. The maximum grant,designed to aid low income stu¬dents, would be increasedslightly—by $200 to $2300.Student aid analysts fear thatif students borrow more money,the government will have to paya huge increase in the subsidiesit pays to back student loans.Analysts estimate that the gov¬ernment pays $1250 in subsidiesfor every $2500 a student bor¬rows. Under this scenario, lessfederal money would be avail¬able in the future to providegrants to students because itwould be locked into major ex¬penditures.While financial aid adminis¬trators recognize the fact thatstudents need access to more pay it back,” he said.The House and the Senate planto begin working on a com¬promise bill, but the formal ne¬gotiations may be extended untilearly August or indefinitely.Since many of the programs au¬thorized by the legislation expireat the end of September, Houseaides are accusing Senate staffmembers of stalling so that theSenate can allocate the moneyfor the programs. House rulesprohibit legislators from app¬ropriating money for programsthat have not been officially ex¬tended. The Senate does nothave this rule.Staff members have beenwrangling over the participantsto the conference committee.Over 50 legislators could endupon the committee, comparedto 22 on the committee to reviewtax reform legislation. The Sen¬ate delegates will include all 11members of its educational sub¬committee. Senator Orrin G.Hatch (R, Utah) will head thedelegation.The House chose to allow theparticipation of all 23 membersof the House Subcommittee onPostsecondary Education and tochoose Augustus F. Hawkins (D,California) as the head of thedelegation. Several other repre¬sentatives from various com¬mittees may also attend.(Source: The Chronicle ofHigher Education, 7-16-86, 7-23- 86)loan funds, they fear that stu¬dents will incur an unmanagabledebt.The University of Chicagogenerally supports increasedloans for students but does notwant loans to substitute forgrants, according to one admin¬istration official.Assistant Provost Alan Sand¬erson expressed doubt that thebills would significantly “affectthe college level,” yet he notedthat “we’re now reaching thepoint where a fairly high per¬centage of the senior class isleaving with substantial loans topay off.”“We’re concerned about theextent to which it would affectcareer choice,” Sanderson said.He cited a hypothetical exampleof a student wishing to earn aPh.D. in English but hesitatingbecause of the fear of incurringtoo great a debt. However, “ev¬idence is not persuasive one wayor another,” he noted.Graduate programs in the Artsand Sciences appear “luke¬warm” over the proposal for anincreased GSL award, Sand¬erson stated. A “high loan limitwould provide more access but !(they are) concerned with(students’) ability to pay themback.” Professional schoolgraduates, however, “have morelucrative job opportunities...theywould...earn enough money toU of C makes the top twentyGreg MantellNews EditorDuring the latest year forwhich statistics are available,total voluntary contributions tothe University of Chicago werethe 14th highest in the nation,while the University’s endow¬ment ranked ninth among majordoctoral institutions, accordingto a report by the Council forFinancial Aid to higher Educa¬tion (CFAE).In the 1984-85 fiscal year, theUniversity received $60,275,487in support from individuals andcorporations, the report shows.The University’s endowmentstood at $547,579,000.The CFAE’s figure for Uni¬versity fundraising is consider¬ably less than the $70,426,000 theUniversity disclosed in its 1984-85 annual report.According to Randy Holgate,assistant vice-president for de¬velopment, the reason for thediscrepancy is that the Univer¬sity and Council calculate fund¬raising differently. The CFAE reports cash thatactually came in the door duringthe fiscal period. In the devel¬opment office, however, wetrack progressive giving. Forexample, if a corporationpledges a gift that will be paidover five years, we count thetotal pledge for the first year,but none for the subsequentyears,” Holgate explained.Nationally, 20.3% of alumnisolicited by all universities con¬tributed an average of $118.45 tothe alma mater’s annual fund.At the U of C, 27.5% of alumnigave an average of $129.30, rais¬ing $2,196,417.“The annual fund is importantbecause it raises unrestrictedfunds which can be used wher¬ever the money is needed most,such as for the libraries, andscholarship,” Holgate stated.While alumni giving wasabove the national average, giftsby friends of the University,staff, and faculty whichamounted to over $20,000,000were the single biggest source of gifts for the university.“Our alumni give generously,but friends of the Universitycontribute even more substanti¬ally,” Holgate said. “There area lot of people from Chicago whobelieve the recognition the Uni¬versity has brought the city hasbeen important, and we receivea lot of community support fromthem.”Total corporate giving of$11,510,713 to the U of C laggedbehind the amount received bymost other doctoral institutions.• Holgate attributes the dis¬crepancy to the University’sacademics and location. “It’sdifficult to compare us to a lot ofthese universities because manyof them have engineering de¬partments which attract signif¬icant corporate gifts. And alsowe re located in the rust belt, notin high tech regions like Bostonor the Silicon Valley.’Educational expenditures atthe University were $276,168,000for the University’s 9,464 stu¬dents, the report shows. The University apartments, the twin buildings in the back¬ground, were the site of one of Saturday s shootings.Two women shotwithin a mile radiusPolice look for one suspectGreg MantellNews EditorPolice are investigating twocrimes apparently committed bythe same gun-wielding robberSaturday morning that left onewoman dead ana another seri¬ously injured.According to Robert Mason,director of the South East Chic¬ago Commission, Diane Kriz ofLa Grange, Illinois was shot inthe head between 4:40 am and7:00 am Saturday outside hercar parked at the rear of 5407 S.Hyde Park Boulevard. A personwalking through the alley dis¬covered Kriz’s body at 7:10 am.The passerby called UniversitySecurity, who responded to thecall, and then notified ChicagoPolice.Police believe robbery is themotive for the shooting, sinceKriz’s car was ransacked.Mason said.Kriz, a 46-year-old white fe¬male. was on her way to the Vivekanada Vendanta Society,an Indian religious society,where she attended morningservice regularly.At about 9:30 that same morn¬ing, Mason said, a woman wholives on the 3rd floor of Univer¬sity Apartments, 1450 E. 55thStreet, was shot five times in thehallway as she left her apart¬ment. the assailant fled with herpurse. The woman survived theattack and is in good condition atMetro Hospital, according toDet. Anthony Lowery of the AreaOne Violent Crimes Office of theChicago Police. The womandescribed the attacker as a six-foot tall black man about 30years of age.Because the same type of gunwas used in each crime, policebelieve the same man was re¬sponsible for both crimes, Masonsaid.“Police are tracking down anumber of leads.” Mason said.“A lot of police have been put onthe case.’Trial date set for U of C student accused of television theftBy Greg MantellNews EditorSeptember 8 has been set asthe pre-trial date for a criminalcase involving two graduatestudents that campus blackgroups charge is racially motivated.Paul Hardy, a black doctoralstudent in Near Eastern Lan¬guages and Civilization, ischarged with residential bur¬glary. He was arrested March 22for allegedly stealing a tele¬vision set from another U of Cstudent, according to RobertMason, directors of the SouthEast Chicago Commission.A white graduate student purportedly saw Hardy leavingher apartment building with atelevision set that was later re¬ported stolen from another U ofC student who lived in the build¬ing, a University official says.On his way out, Hardy allegedlythreatened her. Six days laterthe witness spotted Hardy inWieboldt Hall. He allegedlythreatened her again and shecalled University Security.Hardy went to the office of hisdean of students, PatriciaSuhrcke. According to Suhrcke,Hardy explained wnat had hap¬pened and the two then “soughtout Security.” Suhrcke informedSecurity, Ed Turkington, and thewitness, who were also present that she saw Hardy “within tenor fifteen minutes” of when thecrime was supposed to havehappened “at least half a mile”from the apartment buildingwhere television was stolen.The next day the witness fileda complaint with the ChicagoPolice which resulted in Hardy’sarrest later in the day.Because the result of his fin¬gerprint check wasn’t receivedthe same day, Hardy was heldovernight, a procedure thatpolice officials claim is followedwhenever anyone is arrested fora felony. The student’s in¬carceration aroused complaintsof racism from black groups.The University paid the re¬quired 10% of the $2,900 bail to get Hardy released. The Univer¬sity continued to pay for theaccused’s legal expenses until ajudge established “probablecause,” the source inside theUniversity reported.Complaints persist by blackstudent groups who believe theUniversity should have pres¬sured the State’s Attorney’s Of¬fice to have the case dropped.“The University didn’t supporthim as much as they shouldhave ” Cynthia Washington,president o'f the Organization ofBlack Students said in a tele¬phone interview.Hardy, who could not bereached for comment by theMaroon, said in his affidavit(according io the juiy 18 issue of the Reader) that “The problemis part of larger issues we faceon campus. I and others like meare confronting a situationwhere we have no credibilityamong the officials of the ad¬ministration. Whatever recklessor malicious charge is madeagainst a black student is be¬lieved and acted upon by theadministration.”If convicted. Hardy could facea sentence of four to fifteenyears plus possible restitution tothe victim.Previously, the case has cometo court four times, but eachtime both parties have requestedadditional time to prepare theircases, the State’s Attorney's office says.International U of C day set for SundayBy Karen E. AndersonViewpoints EditorStudents, alumni and faculty will sharediverse perspectives on life at the U of Cthis Sunday during the Second Annual In¬ternational U of C Day.The event, sponsored by the Alumni As¬sociation of the University, will be cele¬brated on campus and in other citiesaround the world, including Boston, Tokyo,Seattle and London. Christa Cabe, theChicago Area Program Director for theAlumni Association, noted that the day “isone of the only (University) functions inwhich the point is to bring together Uni¬versity alumni to celebrate that we’re partof an intellectual community.” Branches of the University Alumni As¬sociation are celebrating U of C Day in anumber of ways. According to Cabe abarbeque and bingo game are planned inTokyo, while the U of C community inLondon will be taking a cruise down theThames River. In Boston, U of C alumniwill cruise Boston Harbor and then picnicon George’s Island. Out west, there will befrisbee, volleyball, and a picnic in SanFrancisco. Over thirty cities in the US andabroad will have U of C Day celebrations,each with a distinct local flavor.Cabe, who is in charge of the celebrationhere on campus, said that it will feature abarbeque, a carillion concert, and a per¬New Cobb Coffeeshopopening this AutumnBy David Ringand Molly McClainStaff WritersThe dilapidated interior of Cobb CoffeeShop will be revamped this summer as theresult of a $30,000 allocation by the Qualityof Life Committee.New decorations should “bring someliveliness to the place,” says KatherineKarvunis, Assistant to the Dean of theCollege. The new plans include new paint,tile and track lighting. A TV monitor thatbrings in foreign broadcasts will also beinstalled. The existing counter on the eastside of the lounge is to receive a ruby-colored top and a gray bottom. Bar stoolsand a ledge at which to study will extendalong the north side. Round tables andchairs will replace the existing furniture.Karvunis noted that the committee whichprovided the funds felt that the renovationof the coffee shop would significantly im¬prove the quality of life on campus sinceCobb Hall is one of the most heavily traf¬ficked buildings on the Quads. The Quality of Life Committee operateswith a yearly budget of $100,000 and servesas a source of funds for projects which willlater be picked up by the budgets of otherorganizations. The Committee has spon¬sored such “seed projects” as the renova¬tion of Stagg Field, the Student ResourceCenter, various campus festivals, and atheatre improv-group. Larry Kavanagh,the College Student Association (CSA)Representative to the Committee, notedthat “the Cobb Coffeeshop is a good exam¬ple of how we operate as a seed organiza¬tion because the costs of operating it willbe picked up by someone else, namelyBrence Culp.” Culp, a student, will be incharge of running the coffeeshop.Culp hopes to match the improvements inthe surroundings with an improvement inthe food. Fresh pastries, yogurt and freshfruit, as well as espresso and popcorn areamong the offerings planned.While bids are still in the process ofgoing out to contractors, Karvunis expectsthe shop to be open for the first day ofclasses in autumn quarter. formance of “A Midsummer Night sDream” by the Chicago ShakespeareCompany. Cost for the entire day’s eventsis $15 for alumni and $9 for U of C studentsand children under 12.Student participation in the event hasbeen much better this year than last, ac¬cording to Cabe. She said that this is duenot only to better advertising on campus,but also to efforts by the Alumni Associ¬ation to let students know that the Associ¬ation “isn’t just a group that will call themup in the future to ask them for money.”Cabe said she feels that students are start¬ing to realize that the Association does takean interest in them.Cabe explained that the idea for a U of CDay was conceived by the Student Rela¬tions Committee of the Alumni Association.“Since we have alumni clubs all over, wefelt that it would be fun and interesting tomeet with alumni in their own areas.”Cabe said that planning started back in 1984. “We looked for a day in the summerthat would be a good one on which tocelebrate the University and its commu¬nity.” Cabe said that the day turned out tobe the birthday of one of the University’sfounders and its first president, WilliamRainey Harper. Harper’s birthday does notalways fall on a weekend, but Cabe ex¬plained, “We re like the Federal Govern¬ment, we just decided that Harper’s birth¬day will always occur on the last Sunday inJuly.”Although Cabe describes last year’s U ofC Day celebration here in Chicago as a“success,” she admits that there weresome problems. “It was a large event, andit wasn’t too cohesive.” She said that thisyear the celebration has been planned tomake participants feel like they are part ofa group. “After everyone has a chance toget something to eat, we’ll sing ‘HappyBirthday’ to Harper, and then a graduatestudent has offered to lead everyone insinging the alma mater, which almost noone knows.”PomerleauComputing systemsTHE MOST IBM COMPATIBILITYAT A NOT SO IBM PRICEPOMERLEAU COMPUTING IS NOW FEATURING:** Kaypro PC $1595Upgradable to AT CompatibilitySoftware Included** Kaypro PC w/ 20Iylb Hard Disk $1995* * Cauzin Softstrip Reader $190AUTHORIZED DEALER1743 1/2 E. 55th Street (312)667-2075Tools For The Mind...July 25, 26, & 27The Chicago Shakespeare Company Performing in repertoire, thecompany will present two of Shakespeare’s favorite masterpieces.A Midsummer Night’s Dream will be performed on July 25 and 27.And on Saturday, July 26, the production of Romeo and Julietwill present the story of the two star-crossed lovers. Shakespeareproductions have always been among the most popular productionsof Summer Nights. Buy your tickets early.INFORMATION AND TICKETS: 962-7300General Admission: $6.50 Students and Seniors $5.50All performances are at 8 PM at Hutchinson Courtyard, 57th Street and University Avenue.Chairs are available for rent at .50c. truck rentalSIZZLIN’ SUMMER SPECIALforU.C. STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFFCavalier RS ConvertibleFor reservations call: 493-7900Now 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 CompactSenes Convertible for only $29.95 per day, with 100 free miles per dayBudget lives up to its name with this low midweek rate. Refueling servicestaxes 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.luxury typecars *°W rat6S 0n anc* weQK©nd rentals - from economy toBring in this ad or University ID attime of rental to get reduced rateFree Cab Fare Reimbursement From Any Point in hy^? p?rkServing Hyde Park & South Shore7234 S. Stony Island» jAn independent BudgetSystem Licensee Car&TwckRental2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 25,1986VUnitedColors Of Benetton- COMING TO HYDE PARK IN AUGUST j—Qz benelfon Q:r*eneM V2ne Ion 1J (ftV benellon£ bene!' on!............. v Q benef aton_J53rd and Harper r;!>ene on*500 OFFANY NEW CARFORALLSTUDENTSAND FACULTYAugust 30, 19867234 Stony Island Ave . ChicagoIllinois 60649RAY TO THE ORDER OF. (Your Name) s 500.00Five Hundred and no/100 DOLLARSf\if5DTU9BLf Qf\JW KW M7RQLET-rOUi«IWKn) OJust 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 30,1986^ j 7234 STONY ISLAND_ 2 Miles-5 Minutes AwayML MMWWm From The University684-0400I Grad Program,financing Come in CHEVROLET/VOLKSWAGENfor details , Homocide hi Burglary, Robbery, Theft, & VandalismBattery & Assault • Automobile Related TheftCrime NumberHomicide 1Criminal Sexual Offense 2Robbery 15Burglary 21Auto Theft 20Theft From Auto 45Battery 25Theft 28Criminal Damage to Property 24Total Crimes 181Number of crimes committed on weekdays:Number of crimes committed on weekend: 11665 Percent OfTotal Crime0.5%1.1%8.3%11.6%11.0%24.9%13.8%15.5%13.3%100%(64%)(36%) M—Compared ToLast WeekN/AN/A-2.6%-8.0%-5.3%+ 8.6%-9.3%-7.3%N/A+ 89 crimes(- 20.8%)( + 20.8%)The map and statistics were compiled from the 24-hour reports of theChicago Police, 21st precinct July 14 - July 21.^ Rockefeller Memorial Chapel5850 S. Wood lawn962-7000Sundav, Julv 27thw ' w8:30 a.m. Service of Holy Communion10:00 a.m. University Religious ServiceRobin Lovin, UniversityPreacher and AssociateProfessor of Ethics, DivinitySchool, University of Chicago.11:15 a.m. Carillon recital/and towertour.The Chicago Maroon Friday, July 25,1986 3— —Cfiaz(otte ^Vi&stzomczReaf Estate Co.1638 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615312/493-0666Hyde Park phone number forHyde Park Location Your Hyde Park BrokerENGLISH GARDEN-YE OLDE COBBLESTONE WALK-CLOSE TO CAMPUS—Just named exclusive agent. Choicetwo bedroom with your private sun deck at 57th Kenwood. Ap¬pointments start July 19. This is a charmer. $64,000.NEAR REGENSTEIN LIBRARY on University Avenue-Newly sanded floors, nicely decorated, many updated features.Fireplace. Ready now. This is a co-op, $45,000. Two bedroomsand study.ENTER YOUR PRIVATE WORLD. ONE-TO-A-FLOORLIVING. Four bedrooms, three *hs. Views all directions fromyour 16th floor vantage. 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OUR PERMS WILL INCUTREDKIN, MATRIX, HELENE CURTIS, LOREAl, ZOTO’S TO NAMEFEW. WE WILL CONTINUE TO OFFER OUR RETAIL PRODUCTS. RESEBASTIAN, MATRIX, NEXXUS, AND JAMI AT 50% OFFHAIR CUTSWtncludes SHAMPOO,CONDITIONER & STYLINGWOMEN $18°°MEN $•1300< . fr.GIRLSi ER12 TEENSm $15°°*10™MmP'siAmmimi;mmmmMmmv Vg-f-ftf * copies,and that’s no bull!$JJJ COPYVrffCENTERFirst Floor of the Bookstore buildingSALES WITH SERVICE* Repair Specialists ontepoIBM, SCM, Olympia & Others*New & rebuilt typewriters*Free Estimates*Visa, MasterCard, American ExpressUniversity of Chicago BookstoreOffice Machine Department970 E. 58th Street, 2nd Floor962-3400Put the pastin yourfuture!IlVE IN AN HISTQRIC IANI)\lARKThoroughly 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 T hree-Bedroom ApartmentsOne-bedroom from $555 • Two-bedroom from $765Rent includes heat, cooking gas and master TV antennaCall for information and a appointment—643 1406CfOindermere/i(me1 (LAO CC.L1642 East 56th StreetIn Hyde Park, across the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryEqual Housing Opportunity Managed by Melrople*. In<4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 25,1986v>to •- ■■GREY CITYOU RlNlAlL y*vr 'Jm i $c 'g-• 7.dT;V.July 25, 1986 • 19th YearDROWNEDOUT BY THESUPPLY SIDEby Robin EinhornWhen John Kenneth Galbraith visited the Uof C a few years ago his public lecture wasbilled rather like a freak show. He began with afew jokes about the hostility with which he hadbeen received in undergraduate economicsseminars here and then proceeded to excoriatethe Reaganite supply-siders for the intellectualdishonesty of their claims to budget reductionduring a massive defense buildup and to thealleged novelty of tax cuts as economic policy.He exposed the obvious hypocrisy in theirrhetoric of trickle down prosperity. Severalmembers of the audience, perhaps realizingthat grace and charm are among Galbraith’smost potent weapons, actually hooted at him.He smiled and observed that they had beenwell taught. Their teachers must have beenproud indeed.We don’t read Galbraith at this university butwe certainly should. We are initiated into themysteries of the competitive model and taughtthat it describes reality well enough to dictateeconomic policy conclusions that somehow al¬ways seem to favor the rich at the expense ofthe poor, the employers at the expense of theworkers, and a mythical free enterprise at theexpense of ameliorative government inter¬vention. But any criticism of such conclusions iseasily dismissed by our teachers as “nor¬mative.” The model and its inexorable logicforce these conclusions and the model, afterall, is scientific and therefore value free.For those of us who chafe at such a defense,the economists provide few clues to the alter¬natives. So, since we’ve all heard of Marx andcan find shelves of Marxist tracts clearlymarked at the bookstores, we only read theleast worldly of Marxist scholars to find oppos¬ing viewpoints. We read Marx himself, whoserelevance to present conditions consists at themost general level of philosophy and prophecy,or we read Marxists whose infatuation withjargon matches that of our teachers, thoughbecause foreign to us it is strikingly offensive.Our teachers, needless to say, benefit fromsuch comparisons. For all of their abstractions,they look like realists.Galbraith writes in English, with a simplycharming urbanity. His method is empirical:look around and see how the economy isorganized. His books are accessible regardless of your economic training but better still if youhave some idea of the models he demolishes.Because he wrote his major books during the1950s and early 1960s, they contain minordated passages, though the main points are asfresh today as ever. In American Capitalism:the Concept of Countervailing Power (1952), forexample, he remarks that most economists areliberal and therefore annoying to big businessand to many politicians. Not a very importantpoint in itself, it nonetheless reminds us of thegiant rightward strides that economists, per¬haps among other academics, have taken dur¬ing the last few decades. In The AffluentSociety (1958) Galbraith worries about inflationand its politically unacceptable tradeoff, unem¬ployment. Yet these words were written notonly before stagflation had undermined faith inthe Phillips curve, but before the curve itselfhad formalized the tradeoff.In his masterwork, The New Industrial State(1967) he proceeds as though his major em¬pirical points had been accepted already,though he cites certain unrepentant conserva¬tives who just happen to be U of C heavy¬weights — Milton Friedman and George Stigler.The amazing thing is that the U of C stillfunctions as though Galbraith never wrote aword. Now that his books are a bit old and nolonger the talk of the east coast intelligentsia,they think they can bury him by turning outstudents in whom his name registers as only adim awareness. We must resist their efforts.Galbraith, whatever his other virtues, as aneconomist, a social critic and a writer, is rightwhile they are wrong. It is in this spirit that Ipresent the main arguments of three of hisbooks. But I cannot urge strongly enough thatstudents at the U of C read these books forthemselves.American Capitalism lays the groundwork forGalbraith’s assault on neoclassical economics.The textbook economic models rest on as¬sumptions that are patently untenable in light ofthe way the American economy actually worksSince the book was written in the early 1950s,Galbraith goes to great lengths to show thatalthough the economy does not conform to themodel it is nevertheless capitalistic, with themeans of production, distribution and exchangein private hands. Thus his readers needn’tworry about creeping socialism triumphant. Theprimary flaw of the neoclassical model is theWORLDS* iMargaret Bourke-White assumption of small competitive firms that lacksufficient bargaining power to determine prices.The economy is actually organized among hugecorporations and the “countervailing” powerstructures of trade unions, farmers' coope¬ratives, retail chains, etc. The countervailingstructures protect workers and consumers fromdomination by unchecked corporate power.The conclusion that countervailing poweracts as an effective check on corporate powermay be a bit too optimistic for a reader in the1980s But its theoretical implications are im¬portant. There is no such thing as an invisiblehand. Prices are fixed not by many small sellersfacing many small buyers but rather by fewlarge buyers and sellers who confront oneanother with their market power. Processedfoods, for example, are produced by hugecorporations whose market power allows themgreat freedom to set prices. But other largecorporations buy these products in sufficientbulk to interpose their own market power be¬tween producers and consumers. Jewel, incompeting against Dominicks, exerts its marketpower against Beatrice. Jewel can hurt Beatriceby refusing to stock its products. The individualconsumer cannot. Neoclassical competitivemarkets are irrelevant.The Affluent Society, famous now mainly forits indictment of advertising, contains a host ofinteresting arguments (and comes in well under300 pages). The central idea, however, iscrucial. The main lines of economic thoughtwere developed under conditions of scarcity.Because society was unable to produce enoughfood, clothing and shelter, economists searchedfor ways to increase production and built theirmodels so as to predict the economic forcesthat would lead to greater quantities of materialgoods. Now that the technological problems ofproducing “enough” have been more thansolved, these models are obsolete Two con¬sequences flow from this. First, continued useof these models, attractive to economists be¬cause they allow all sorts of apparently precisenumerical manipulations, keeps economistsbusy figuring out how to produce more ratherthan better or more useful goods. Great socialimbalances (by which Galbraith refers not onlyto inequality but also to the imbalance betweenpublicly and privately produced goods) persistwhile economists work on an irrelevant ques¬tion. They end up defending society's produc¬tion of too many televisions and too fewschools, too many cars and too few parks,because they are trapped by the “efficiency"goal of the neoclassical model.But how many is too many? Galbraith’sanswer to this question illustrates the secondconsequence of adherence to the obsoleteneoclassical model. The theory of consumerdemand (the indifference curves of Econ. 200)explains production outcomes as the result ofdesisions made by sovereign and rational con¬sumers about how to spend their incomes. Yetthe importance of advertising to the economybelies this formulation. In a poor society, Galb¬raith argues, people do not have to be told howto spend their money. They will purchase food,clothing and shelter. In an affluent society,however, consumers must be convinced tospend money on items they do not need and, ifnot for the persuasion of the advertisers, mightnot even wanl Through »rtv*»rti<smgcreate demand Therefore, analysis in terms ofsome independent consumer demand is not only useless as explanation because circular inreasoning, but functions to justify, through amyth that the sovereign people decide, deci¬sions actually made by the corporations them¬selves.Galbraith combines the insights from thesetwo books with an analysis of the inner struc¬ture of the corporations and their relationship togovernment in The New Industrial State. Mar¬kets are regulated and prices set through theexercise of countervailing power. Consumerdemand originates within the corporate struc¬ture through the “revised sequence" of wantcreation. These corporations, moreover, bearso little resemblance to the neoclassical ent¬repreneur that economic analysis in terms ofprofit maximization is irrelevant. Stockholdershave little or no power in most major corpora¬tions. Management selects the directors who inturn approve the management. Becausestockholders are separated from and subordi¬nated to the management teams of the bigcorporations, there is no reason to expectprofits to be the prime motivation of corporatedecisions. Rather, the corporations are run byand in the interests of what Galbraith calls the“technostructure.” everyone from top man¬agement to engineers to market researchers.The corporations’ products are so complicatedthat no single manager can make decisionswithout the input of all of these people. Beingcollectively indispensable, the salaried tech¬nostructure is able to make its goals the goalsof the corporation.The technostructure has minimal interest inprofits per se, it desires only enough profit tobuild internal capital reserves to secure in¬vestment decisions against outside inter¬ference The technostructure strives for stabi¬lity, for predictability through planning. Theycannot plan effectively without governmentregulation of aggregate demand to ensure thatpeople are able to buy their products, advertis¬ing to line up consumers in advance for newproduct lines, labor unions to discipline workersand sign multiyear wage agreements, govern¬ment contracts (especially military) to guaranteelarge portions of their incomes, and govern¬ment subsidy of risky research and develop¬ment (justified as military necessity) The cor¬porations therefore have a huge stake in gov¬ernment policies and the very last thing theywant is laissez-faire Top managers continue totalk on occasion as though they shared theentrepreneur’s distaste for government inter¬vention but they do not. Economists do thesecorporate spokesmen a great service by pro¬moting the myth of the entrepreneur. The truth,that Americans are manipulated and in someareas of their lives controlled by the corpora¬tions, would make the corporations unpopular.Better to be seen as weak entrepreneurs buf-fetted about by the exigencies of profit max¬imizing competition and the whims of thesovereign consumer.Galbraith’s ideas are a good deal morecomplex and far reaching than I have been ableto indicate in this sketch. Yet the central ironyis clear The professional interests of academiceconomists wedded to obsolete models andpyrotechnic mathematics coincide with the in¬terests of the major corporations in purveyingmyths that deny their actual power in society.Mo Hotter evidence o* fhls “coincidence” couldbe wanted than the suppression of Galbraithianeconomics at the University of Chicago.JTHE OFFICE MACHINE DEPARTMENTpresentsTHIS WEEK'S SPECIALAPPLE MACCARRYING CASE $4795DISK BOOKS $13”Sony V/i" SS DISKS $15,0/boxDS DISKS $255#/boxJuly 25 - July 31RENTALS BY THE WEEK OR MONTHThe University of Chicagoookstore970 East 58th Street Chicago, Illinois 60637 (312) 962-8729r i Easley Blackwoodq/{u oJ^archeFINE CATERINGWhere the emphasis is on good food,from hors d’oeuvres & dinnersto barbeques & box lunches.Mark BiresFormer Catering Director of Hyde Park Cafes.Craig HalperFormer Head Chef of Jimmy’s Place.(Chicago Magazine Dining Poll Winner)312.667.4600CONTACTS & SPECSUNLIMITEDPOCSPLACE FCONTACTS. 5 S E 3 ' • We make our living providingprofessional eye care; we'renot just selling lenses.• Exceptional Values:EYEGLASSES: Frames (hundredsto choose from) and lensescomplete only yg• Contacts:Bausch & Lomb extended wearonly $24.95. *#Professional fee required, exam not included,new patients only.Expires 7/30/86CONTACTS & SPECS UNLIMITED"More than a place with vision"EVANSTON NEW TOWN GOLD COAST1724 Sherman Ave., 2nd Floor 3144 N. Broadway 1051 N. Rush Street, 2nd FloorEvanston, Illinois 60201 Chicago, Illinois 60657 Chicago, Illinois 60611 •864-4441 880-5400 642-39372—FRIDAY JULY 25, 1Q86—OREV C!™ JOURNALF25 S26 S27 M28T29 W30 T31MUSIC GET OUT OF THE SUNAND INTO THE LIGHTCHICAGO LITERARYREVIEW SUN AT 7PM5605 DREXEL APT #1FORGET TANNINGHOURS COME TOGREY CITY BRUNCHEAT SPECIAL K1221 E 57 STSUN AT NOON COMEAROUND THE BACKThe New Checkerboard Lounge in it’s18th year is ecstatic to present: Lee“Shot” Williams, until Saturday, LeftyDiz and Shock Treatment, on Sunday,and Magic Slim and the TeardropsTuesday and Thursday. Also, there willbe a big bash next weekend as theCheckerboard celebrates the return ofJunior Wells from his European tour.We’ll keep you posted All at 423 E 43St, 624-3240The Ramones You know about the Ram-ones. Two nights at Cabaret Metro,3730 N Clark, 7.30, all ages. Tonight,the Dead Milkmen warm up. Accordingto the party line, one of their memberswill be attending our fine universitycome Autumn. Tomorrow, the openingact will be the Celibate Rifles. For moreinfo call 549-0203. $15G.B.H., with Cro Mags, and Lost CauseThree hardcore bands do their thing.Cabaret Metro, 3730 N Clark, Wed,6 30, all ages. $10The Jazz Butchers They’ll be butcheringjazz, pop, rock, and more, all at CabaretMetro, same address and phonenumber, Thur. at 8 pm, all ages. $7Hey World Tour ’86 This should prove tobe the reggae event of the summer. Thelineup includes The Melody Makers fea¬turing Ziggy Marley, I Three's featuringJudy Mowatt, Rita Marley, MarciaGriffths, and Nadine Sutherland, the 809Band, and Tyrone Downie, formerly ofthe Wailers. Aragon Ballroom, Lawrencejust off Broadway, tonight, $15 in ad¬vance, $17.50 at the doorEmmylou Harris I personally would ratherdrink ExLax all day than miss this show.Tonight, at the Park West, 322 W Ar-mitage. 7 and 11,929-5959Stevie Wonder Due to popular demand,he’s back for a second show at themassive Rosemont Horizon in neighbor¬ing Rosemont. Sun, 8 pm, $18.50After Hours Blues Cruise Rosa’s Loungepresents three hours of music, food, anddrinking, aboard the M/V Chicago 1.Bands Melvin Taylor, the Slack Bands.Chico Chism, and Audrey Queen Roy aswell as others will blues it up. 'tillsunrise. Ticket price includes bands andfood. Cash bar, Chicago Docks, Illinoisand Streeter Dr, tomorrow, 2:30 am. Formore information call 342-0452Masheen Company Pop-schlock r&b etcLinder the Picasso, Washington andDearborn. Mon, noon, freeThe Nine Piece will perform as part of the1986 Summer Latin Music Festival.The RackHumboldt Park, 1400 N Sacramento.Sun 3 pm, free, 276-0107Meditation at Sunrise with Sound Ther¬apy Research. This contemporary jazzband features Light Henry Huff, and isbeing billed as “Music to Put Us inTouch with Ourselves.” At the Point, SatMorning, 5 am. FreeJohnny Christian. Hot local blues atRosa's Lounge, 3420 W Armitage, Mon,first set at 8:00. 342-0452Jean-Luc Ponty is a pompous ass, but youcan go see him at Ravinia tonight at8:00 Seats $14-16, lawn $6. For moreinfo dial R-A-V-l-N-l-AWynton Marsalis with the David MurrayOctet. The opening act should make theshow. At Ravinia, Tue, 8 pm. Tickets$14-16, lawn $5Tribute to Gershwin. The CSO will per¬form "An American in Paris," “Rhap¬sody in Blue,” variations on "I GotRhythm," and selections from Porgy and Bess. Ravinia, Sun, 7:30 pm, Seats$22-$25, $5 LawnDesperate Measures. A contemporaryjazz group consisting of vocals, guitar,and percussion. At the Organic Theatre,3319 N Clark, tonight, 8 pm. $9, $6students. 327-5588Virtuoso Oboist Heinz Holliger makes hisRavinia debut. The CSO with Edo deWaart, conductor, and Heinz Holliger,oboist, will perform Bach’s Concerto forOboe d’amore, Strauss' Concerto forOboe, and Dvorak’s Symphony No. 8.Ravinia, Thu, 8 pm, seats $18-$22, lawn$5.THEATREInspector by Gogol. University Theater’sfirst summertime production is, appar¬ently, quite an experimental version ofthe Russian farce, with extensive por¬tions retranslated by directors Tania Feland Michael Wasserman Two actorsplay the same lead role, one in the firstand last acts, the other in acts two andthree, a la Bunuel’s movie That ObscureObject of Desire, to emphasize, it seems,the change in the audience's perception(they say). Also, a complex system of“secret signals” can interrupt the play atany moment and allow for improvisation,so the actors on stage will truly payattention to each other. The point of allthese gimmicks is still a bit unclear—itmay be that the directors want to createan electric atmosphere on stage, or itmay be that they just want to have funwith the paying customers. Through Sun,at the Reynold's Club Third Floor Thea¬ter. 8 pm, $4 —PRSisterly Feelings by Alan Ayckbourn. An¬other comedy by the prolific author ofThe Norman Conquests. Sisterly Feel¬ings deals with the results and effects ofchoice in the pursuit of love, centeringaround the toss of a coin, a deed whichcan lead to the performance of oneversion of scene two, or a completelydifferent version. At the end of that act,another decision is made, by one of thecharacters on stage, to do one version ofact two, or an utterly unlike alternate.What this means, is that at this produc¬tion, depending on which evening onecomes, one can see any number ofvariations on the play, with almost eachnight a completely different tangled webof lust, betrayal, infidelity, and wackylaughs. Mathematicians, and other realgeniuses, will realize that there are fourversions of the play, however, to see allthe possible acts, a person need onlycome to see the play twice. People whoplan to see both versions can get aspecial discount on the second show, therest can pay four bucks, and it’s worth it.Opens Thursday, July 31, in the FirstFloor Theater of the Reynold s Club. 8pm, $4-$5 —PRThe Rack by Avant Garfielde. Continuesthis weekend. "Followers of Avant Gar¬fielde realize the group attaches greatimportance to themes and ideas, ratherthan emphasizing 'trendy' skits. Criticismof conventional morality, of failed com¬munications, of intellectual falseness,and of prejudice, timeless subjects all,permeate the group’s efforts at Jimmy’s,and now at The Rack, and link themtogether in a unifying chain..The Rack,then, is not a show about filth andcruelty; a program which consisted sim¬ply of dismembered body organs, and sadists talking would be no fun at all.This show is about people's reactions tosuch nastiness...The results are good,the general quality of the skits is high,the songs are witty, the choreographyand direction [are] crisp, and the theateris air conditioned." —GCJ, 7/18/86. Atthe Theater Shoppe, 2636 N Lincoln, Satat 8, and Sun at 7. 241-5867. —PRSpoon River Antholgy by CharlesAidman. I hear it’s lyrical. See the re¬view, coming soon. At the O’RoarkeCenter For Performing Arts, 1145 WWilson Avenue, 271-2638A Midsummer’s Night Dream by Shake¬speare. If the mountain won’t go toMohammed, Mohammed will go to themountain, or theater comes to HydePark, as performed by the ChicagoShakespeare Company. You can’t gowrong with this bucolic notion of Shake¬speare staged in Hutch Court, behindMorry’s, unless it rains, and then itsMandel Hall for you. Tonight and Sun at8, 962-7300Romeo and Juliet by Shakespeare Justwhen you thought it was safe to fall inlove again, here comes this ChicagoShakespeare Company production to tellyou once again, that romance is just Hell.The cast is young and attractive, thedirector crisp, and any faults in thisstaging are more than made up for bythe actors’ sincerity (As seen at aTuesday dress rehearsal). Sat at 8 pm, inHutch Court, 962-7300FILMMommie Dearest (Frank Perry, 1981) Thisfilm begins DOC’s salute to the nastyside of matriarchy, another look at thosewonderful women who make us whatwe are. Ah, but Mommie Dearest has atwist, showing that those innocent tykesthat Mommie thinks are helpless dogrow up, becoming not only moreglamorous than Mommie herself, butcapable of trashing Mommie’s hard-earned reputation. We see the look ofdevilment in little Tina's eyes whenMommie pushes her around — wealmost expect this six-year old to whipout her notebook to take down some ofher Mommie’s eccentric habits Tooweird to mention. This film caters to thePeople crowd, showing that the starsare not only just like you and me, butthey’re wickedly insane. Don’t bring thekids to this one —■ they might get ideasCobb Hall, tonight 7 and 9 30, $2.50-WJSTerms of Endearment (James Brooks,1983) Another look at the bitchier sideof motherhood, but this one will makeyou cry and hard. Debra Winger suffersin the clutches of possesive motherShirley Maclaine until daughter marriescollege-stud-become-English-professorand moves to never-never land Nevertrust a college stud. This guy cheats onwife and kids, practically forcing her tohave an affair herself to even things upand to show that all mothers, evendaughters who become mothers, arewimpily human. Meanwhile, Mom’shaving a somewhat strained affair witha fat astronaut. If things aren’t confus¬ing enough, the daughter comes downwith a terminal illness, remains poig¬nantly brave to the end (this is the partwhere you need Kleenex), and showsthat revenge is possible, if somewhatcostly. When daughter goes, Mom andhusband feel like shit for the way theytreated her and nothing is resolved intheir relationships. Triumphant, sadfeelings for everyone in the end. CobbHall, Sat at 7 and 9:30, $2.50 —WJSBig Wednesday (John Milius, 1979) Betterthan a teen sex picture, this film in¬cludes surfing and a social conscience.In between waves, these three guys getdrunk and dodge the draft. There’ssome real sensitivity going on in thisone. Starring Jan-Michael Vincent, GaryBusey, and William Katt. Cobb Hall,Wed, 8 pm, $2.50—WJSCourt Jester (Norman Panama and MelvinFrank, 1956) With Danny Kaye andBasil Rathbone. Parody of Hollywoodhistorical cliches. Cobb Hall, Thur, 8pm, $2.50Man of Iron (Andrzej Wajda, 1981) TheGrand Prize winner at the 1981 CannesFilm Festival, Andrzej Wajda’s Man ofIron is “about a successful strike, theculmination of ten years of hope andstruggle an act of solidarity amongworkers who have understood that theonly guarantee of their material well¬being and their freedom is the union, anautonomous power of their own”—Adam Przeworski. For the first time, adirector has been successful in makingan instant record of recent history ef¬fectively explaining the course of eventsin Poland in the early 1980’s. — I-House, 1414 E 59, Sun at 8 pm, $2.50,753-2274Letter to Brezhnev (Chris Bernard. 1986)This film is divided into two halves: thefirst half being a romantic comedy, thesecond being a torpid indictment ofBritish society Bernard mixes the twothemes with little success, often strain¬ing to make his point — that freedom isworthless if you live in poverty Elaine(Alexandra Pigg) falls in love with aRussian sailor and after a night of justtalking, he asks her to marry him. Hepleads with her to trust him and shefalls for him with all the single-mindedness of a Juliet. She overcomesall odds to be with her man and in theend preaches to her closest friend todream. To say the least, many of thescenes are trite and passionless andthe narrative is often spoken as if it were a series of recitations among ac¬tors Still, Bernard makes the most ofhis camera — with tilted and high angleshots used to good effect — to show thedesperation of young English women inthe eighties At the Fine Arts. —BTARTGerman Art, Architecture, and Design“Mies,” "Made in Germany." and“Bauhaus,” three exhibitions exploringGerman influence in art, architecture,and design, will be featured at Chic¬ago's Museum of Science and Industry,57th and Lake Shore. Now through Sept1, 9:30 am to 5:30 pm dailyThe Great Eastern Temple: Treasures ofJapanese Art from Todai-ji At The ArtInstitute of Chicago. 443-3500 A once amilenia chance to see some of Japan’smost sacred art objects, dating back tothe 8th century.The Gods of Amageddon This exhibitionfeatures objects from the Oriental In¬stitute's permanent collection. The in¬stallation approximates the plan of theCanaanite fortress temple excavated byOriental Institute archaeologists atMegiddo, the Biblical Armageddon, dur¬ing eh 1930's, and highlights a gildedfigure of the Cansanite god Baai A freedetailed brochure accompanies the ex¬hibition. At the Oriental Institute Mu¬seum, 1155 E 58, through August 31,962-9520.Photographs of Italy and CanadianFrontier Life Two photography exhibi¬tions: Portraits of Italy: Photoghaphs byRegina Deluise, and A Delicate Wilder¬ness: The Photography of Elliott Barnes1905-1914 open this July at the ChicagoPublic Library Cultural Center, 78 EWashington, and run through August,744-8928Columbia College Museum of Con¬temporary Photography announcestwo summer exhibitions. Wildlife Re¬quiem: Color Photographs by JamesBalog examining the controversial issueof hunting for sport in America, andGregory Coniffs photographic essay.Common Ground, that uses 75 black-and-white photographs of yards, housesand other personal landscapes in waysthat transcend time, ownership andspecific locals At Columbia CollegeMuseum of Contemporary Photography,600 S Michigan, through July 31, 663-160020th “New Horizons In Art" exhibition ofworks by Illinois artists, in the ExhibitHall of the Chicago Public Library Cul¬tural Center, 78 E Washington, throughSept 20. 744-8928Robert Barnes 1956-1984 A survey at theHyde Park Art Center and the Ren¬aissance Society, 1701 E 53 and 5811 SEllis, through August 24, 324-5520 and962-8670.The Heart of Creation: The Art MartinRamirez An exhibition of figurativedrawings created in a mental institutionby an "outsider” artist. Ramirez workopens at the Chicago Public LibraryCultural Center in the Randolph Gallery,78 E Washington, Sat, July 26 andcontinue through Aug. 30, 744-8928Nancy Dwyer, Annette Lemieux, FrankMajors, Steve Miller, Peter Nagy andTim Rollins + K.O.S. will be exhibitedin a group show organized by Josh Baer(New York Gallery owner and exhibitor)and Rhona Hoffman at the Rhona Hoffman Gallery, 215 W Superior, formnow until Aug 29, Summer Hours areMon-Fri 10 to 5:30. In an art worldseason when discussion has centeredlargely on the novelty of the 'new ab¬straction’ in painting, the work of thesesix New York artists defies such easycategorization. And rightly so. Cate¬gories and simple definitions imply asense of certainty and sureness aboutthe world in which we live. But from ourvantage point in the latter part of the1980s such certainty seems somewhatmisplaced. As artist Richard Prince hasremarked, "...uncertainty is the onlything I can be certain of right now ”—Rosetta Brooks, Rhona Hoffman Gal¬lery.Fry Lecture: The Official Buddhist Sculp¬ture at Todai-ji During the 8th CenturyBy Samuel C. Morse, Professor of ArtHistory, Amherst College. At the ArtInstitute of Chicago, Tues at 6 pm. 443-3680MISCBaseball Outing The International House,1414 E 59, is offering tickets to TheChicago White Sox vs. the Boston RedSox on Monday night. $5 50 includesroundtrip transportation, refreshmentson the bus and grandstand seating. Busleaves at 6:15 pm. Call the ProgramOffice at 743-2274, for more information.The AIDS Mastery— a three-day intensiveworkshop designed for people with AIDSand families and friends of people withAIDS, to get in touch with their ability tomake positive choices about the qualityof their lives. Through exercises, dis¬cussions and games, people with AIDSare given the opportunity to see theirlives in a more positive way. "Thebottom line,” says Sally Fisher, directorof the program, “is choice If society,your family or church has made you feelbad about being gay, I want you torelease that self-directed anger out inthe right way, like at nuclear bombs.”“You create the quality of your life out ofoptions. Creativity is the product ofrecognition and choice, what you arewilling to do to have what your want.Choose to fall in love with yourself, toreally look at the truth, to peel back tosomething you recognize yourself,transformation happens " —Taken fromthe article, "AIDS HELP" in the ChelseaClinton News 3. 5/22/86 The AIDSMastery Workshop will be held at TheActors Institute, 1627 W Howard. Fri,Sat and Sun, For information call CarolMoss at 929-6805, or Gordon Munden at508-1993. Cost: Sliding scale from $50to $200. In certain cases scholarshipsmay be availableJohn The Father reading of a play byDeborah Homsher Recently read atCDW under the title Ride the Nightmareand since rewritten, John The Fatherfollows a family that tries to commu¬nicate and accept the changes thatengulf it, but succeeds only occasion¬ally. At the Chicago DramatistsWorkshop, 3315 N Clark (In the OrganicTheatre Complex), Sat at 3 pm, donationrequested.Aerobic dance classes are being taughtevery monday and Wednesday from 5 30to 6:30 pm by members of the JanErkert and Dancers Co. at InternationalHouse, 1414 E 59 The cost of the classis $3 and will run through August 27Call 753-2274.Grey City Journal 25 July 861212 East 59th Street, Chicago IL 60637Staff: Stephanie K. Bacon, Steve K. Best, Brett K. Bobley, Michele Marie K.Bonnarens, Jeff K. Brill, Carole K. Byrd, John K. Conlon, Gideon K.D’Arcangelo, Frederick K. Dolan, Andrew K. Halpern, Justine K. Kaias, StefanK Kertesz, Bruce K. King, Mike K. Kotze, Carolyn K. Mancuso, Nadine K.McGann, David K McNulty, Miles K Mendenhall, David K Miller, Patrick K.Moxey, Brian K. Mulligan. Jordan K. Orlando, John K. Porter, Laura K. Rebeck,Geoffrey K Rees, Max K. Renn, Paul K. Reubens, Laura K. Saltz, Rachel K.Saltz, Sahotra K. Sarkar, Ann K. Schaefer, Wayne K. Scott, Mark K Toma,Bob K. Travis, Ann K. Whitney, Ken K. Wissoker, Rick K. WojcikProduction: Steven K Amsterdam, Anjali K. Fedson, Steven K. LeslieEditors. Steven K. Amsterdam, Anjali K. FedsonGREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1986—3BOILED DRINKINGWATERby Krishna RamanujanThe first school I ever went to in Indiawas named Tiny Tots. Mother would sendlunch and boiled drinking water with meevery day. I took the lunch in a tin box andthe boiled water in a plastic container witha nozzle; if I squeezed the container waterwould shoot out of the nozzle. I neverdrank the water. Instead I saved it for thebus ride home, where I would squirt it outof the window at passersby.On a blistering day I ran to the bus withmy full water bottle in order to get awindow seat. I managed to get one andthe bus started on its route. The sun wasbeating down on the street. I could seethe imprints of where cars had been.Traffic was slow.My first target was a large black car.Inside was a chauffeur, two girls and theirmother. The girls sat in back. They hadfrilly white dresses on and their hair wasperfect. They looked prim and proper. Iaimed and squirted. My shot hadn’t theproper force as it landed on the seat justbelow the open window. The girls shun¬ned the water. I saw them yell at theirmother who in turn yelled at me. Our busmoved on.Just up the road, were four men labor¬ing with a huge cart full of bricks. Theywere slowly and steadily pushing it up hill.As we came nearer I saw their muscleswrithing and struggling with the deadweight. They wore tortured expressions ontheir faces, sweat on their burnt blackbodies and loin cloths around their waists.I squirted my water at them. I sawmomentary relief come to their faces asthey turned to me and waved, “God blessyou, God bless you.” by Jim HuffmanTHEY SAY IT'S THE IMPENDING WARThey say it is the impending warthis yearwhich bleeds in our muscles andstirs in our thighs;They say these earthquakes which gripour throatsare alive to the sound of fire within ice.They say the last wave is evennow risingand curls like a giant’s gloveover a diminishing flame;They say it is now timeto considerthe nature of these blue winds whichfinger our hair.Last night,while hailing a cab.I saw the seasons spinning off the map.I heard the confessions of dismemberedseas,the typewriters chattering on the rooftops. I watched the listless interplay of threefrozen cordsdrawn to the magnets of a young woman’slips.I heard you had forgotten on justwhat morningthere begins the spontaneous overflow ofopen doorswhere walk white butterflies dressed aslambs;I heard the last few faunas have strayedfromthe twilightand are headed out onto the impatientgeography of our persona.Strange,these strings around our thumbs.I had imagined it would all be differentsomehow.by B~Some rent just an apartment* Others... a Lifestyle!5050 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60615288-5050A lifestyle designed for you...by The Clinton Company 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. Black stone Ave.947-0200Open 11 a.m.-midnight Monday-Thursday11 a.m.-1 a.m. Friday and SaturdayNoon-Midnight Sunday(Kitchen closes half hour earlier)4—FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1986—GREY CITY JOURNALThe Fishing is always BETTERLATE in the Day...or on SUNDAYS,NEW EXTENDED HOURSIN COOP'S FRESH FISH DEPT.Mon-Thurs: 9 a.m. - 7 p.m.Fridays: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m.Saturday: 9 a.m. - 6 p.m.NOW OPEN SUNDAY10 a.m. - 5 p.m.LOCATED IN THEHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERLake Park & 55thThe Flamingo Apartments5500 South Shore DriveSTUDIOS & ONE BEDROOMSStarting at *384°°• Unfurnished and furnished• U. of C. Bus Stop• Free Pool Membership• Carpeting and Drapes Included• Secure Building• Delicatessen• T.J.'s RestaurantFREE PARKINGMr. Berning 752-3800QnluiKKennedy, Ryan, Monigal & Assoc.5508 S. Lake Park Ave.667-6666TOO NEW FOR A PICTURE. VICTORIAN GREYSTONE. And everything is still in¬tact! The gorgeous oak staircase; the gorgeous dining room sideboard with leadedglass cabinet doors; the gorgeous ceiling moldings and intricate plastermedallions And four bedrooms and a nice back yard $110,000 Sarah PressNEW LISTING. MORE SPACE THAN MOST HOUSES. Grand "Hyde Park Blvd"condo with side-by-side living and dining rooms; double hall with the kitchen and"servants" rooms (great for office, den, playrooms) and baths on one hall andfour family bedrooms and two baths down the other hall Spectacular woodworkand panelling lovingly restored Laundry and original butler's pantry $119,700Marie Wester (res 947-0557)NEW LISTING. NOT A RAILROAD in East Hyde Park The living room and diningroom are together in the front of the apartment with the beautiful updated kit¬chen behind the dining room Three bedrooms and two baths, laundry Lovely vin¬tage details $82,500 Jeanne Spurlock5618 BLACKSTONE. Spacious, five room condo in one of Hyde Park's most soughtafter buildings. The beautiful woodwork is intact. Lovely french doors lead you in¬to the elegant living room Two bedrooms, formal dining room, modern kitchen$75,900 HildeZurne (res 684-0151).5000 EAST END CO-OP. 25TH FLOOR. Exquisite city and lake views; elegantlayout in one of Hyde Park's most beautiful buildings Two bedrooms, two bathsplus laundry Amenities of the building include doorman, concierge and off-streetparking. Well priced at $65,000. Irene PillarsON CAMPUS. 57TH AND KIMBARK. Two bedroom condo in a great campuslocation Well maintained Formal dining room Well designed modern kitchen$63,000 Sarah PressJOG TO TRACK AND HOSPITALS from this lovely two bedroom condo The mon¬thly assessments are very moderate. Amenities of the building include a bikeroom, exercise room, laundry room and storage A bargain at $52,500 LouiseCooley.MORE SPACE FOR YOUR MONEY IN NEAR BY SOUTH SHORE••69TH AND OGLESBY. Sunny, spacious five bedroom, three bath condo oneblock from the lake and Country Club A balcony is off the knotty-pine panelledfamily room Lots of built-in book cases and storage Garage with automatic dooropener A surprising $77,500 Eleanor Graham••GREENWAY COURT. 70TH AND CRANDON. Mint, move in condition fiveroom condo Modern kitchen and bath, fully carpeted. Out-of-town seller is anx¬ious $31,500. E leanor Graham• •7000 PAXTON. Spacious three bedroom, two bath apartment with GARAGESPACE Beautifully renovated Kitchen appliances new since 1984 Gleaming oakfloors recently sanded $49,000 Eleanor Coe IT SALE DATESTHRUIMBARK LIQUORS & WINE SHOPPE1214 East $3rd Street • In Kimbark Plaxa 495 3355REDUCTIONS!BOHEMIA6-12 ox NO KT BTLS$349 STROHS30 12 01 CANS$799LOWENBRAU6-17 0* NO KT BTLS$2^9 HECKS61? ox o rt ns$3«»9BUD UGHT ( BUDWEISER12 12 01 CANS$399WINE$2**LANCERS /so mYAGO $049SANTGRIA 750 m,CHRISTIAN BROS.CHENIN BLANC 75< $399WHITE ZINFANDEL 5 inn *449$2” CELLAWINES -5o ™BARTLES A JAYMESWINE COOLER pa.INGLENOOK 5ijjgl SEBASTIANI COUNTRYRUFFINOORVIETO 750« $199$2”INGLENOOK 15 urn 3 /e m a ^7TABLE WINES $3.39 / ^ 1 U QA$8"$449PIMMS CUP soFRANZIAWINE-IN-BOX 5 LITERSPARKLING1 AIM ADEN BLUSH o.■ golden champagne■ 750 ml. BOCCA BRUT750 ml GANCIAASTI SPUMANTE750 ml1 $399 $599 $599SPIRITS |A GILBEY’Sf/v1 GIN175 LITERm $8" Jcoupon couponB GILBEY’S aVODKA ‘A 147" f-JSKOLVODKA i: i .5 liter ;$679: limit 1E WALKERSFLAVOREDA SCHNAPPSgg $449 1STOUCHNAYAM $899 CANADIAN ^LTD. J7x1 75 LITER —$399 mL M & RSk VERMOUTH#ii $339 ~1 v*io HENNESSY DCOGNAC750 mi$1 299^1 PASSPORT gSCOTCH ), 75UTER & B$999 ffjw. ret^ve the r>gW to Land correct printing errors Sole *efT,s no» <edAil prices subtect *0 Federal Excise To* Mon-Thurs 8 am-lam. Fri-$ot 8om 2om Son Noon MidnightWe occeot Visa Mastercard & checks Jj|iHYDE PARKHARPER CT. at 53rd St. 288-4900$2.50 'til 6, Mon-Fri$2.50 'til 1st show starts,Sat., Sun., & Holidays1 ALIENS2:00, 4:40, 7:20,10:00ABOUT LAST NIGHT1:30, 3:40, 5:50, 8:00,10:10RUTHLESS PEOPLE1:40, 3:40,5:40, 7:40, 9:40STUDENT SPECIALS★ SPECIAL PRICE - $2.50 Mon.-Thur. Last Show★ The drinks are on us -FREE DRINK with medium popcorn purchase★ M-Th $2.50 until 1st show starts*with U. of C. student I.D.CHILDREN UNDER 5 NOT ADMITTED AFTER 6 P.M.S2.50 UNTIL FIRST SHOW STARTSthe unicago Maroon—Friday, July 25,1986—9Time for constructive actionAs predicted, President Reagan’s speech this week did play wellin Pretoria, and played poorly everywhere else. At a time whenrevulsion and anger towards the apartheid system is growing bothin the US and abroad, Reagan chose the familiar, “stay the course”rhetoric rather than abandon the misnamed policy of constructiveengagement.Constructive engagement, as Reagan has used it, is lip service tosate the public’s appetite for morality, and not a policy for dealingwith the problem of apartheid. Under the reign of constructiveengagement violence in South Africa has increased, a sign in itselfof the president’s failure to truly address the situation. Martial lawhas been laid on the land and reports from the country have beencensored. People world-wide are awakening to the questions: Howcan it be that a US ally herds its inhabitants into camps calledhomelands? How can it be that a purportedly western (and there¬fore civilized) country regularly censors the world press? It isgranted that there are many other countries guilty of worseatrocities, but few have had the level of support from the US that thewhite minority in South Africa has enjoyed. Constructive engage¬ment has not been a force for peaceful change, but a force whichdams up the natural and just change in that country. And thepressure behind the dam is building.President Reagan argues against divestment saying that we mustnot “cut and run.” The question of divestment aside, we agree thatSouth Africa should not be run away from. The United States shouldremain involved with that country and help free those enslaved byapartheid. We should open real and meaningful dialogue with theAfrican National Congress. We should impose non-violent pressureto force Pretoria to accept all its inhabitants as full citizens. Weshould try to limit the bloodshed surely to come. And we should actnow. For too long the South Africa question has been constructivelyengaged. As a result, the chance for peace has almost slipped by.Now we must constructively act.The 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. I said I would take you fishingSo fish!!!The Chicago MaroonLarry KavanaghEditor-in-ChiefSteven K. AmsterdamAnjali K. FedsonGrey City Journal Editors Molly McClain Greg MantellManaging Editor News EditorChicago Literary Review Editor Photography EditorKaren E. Anderson Susie BradyViewpoints Editor Production Manager Larry SteinBusiness ManagerSue SkufcaAdvertising ManagerJaimie WeihrichOffice 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, Jacob Park, Larry Peskin, Clark Peters, John Porter,Geoff Potter, Laura Rebeck, Geoffrey Rees, Paul Reubens, Rich Rinaolo, GaryRoberts, Erika Rubel, Terry Rudd, Mary Sajna, Sahotra Sarkar, Ann Schaefer,Michael Schoop, Wayne Scott, Rick Senger, Michael Sohn, Sonja Spear, JohannaStoyva, Kathy Szdygis, Mark Toma, Bob Travis, Francis Turner, Martha Vert-reace, Christina Vougarelis, Melissa Weisshaus, Ann Whitney, Rick Wojcik,Christine Wright.Contributors: Jennifer Fortner, Anna RentmeestersHYDE PARK inCOMPUTERS INC.EPSON EQUITY ID“AT COMPATIBLE”• Dual-speed, 80286processor• 20, 30 and 40 MBhard disks available• Wide variety of memory and graphicoptions• Completely “AT” compatiblePlus Many Configurations ComeWith a Full 3-Year Epson WarrantyTremendous Savings!Priced Too Low To PrintCall for details and to arrangea demonstrationBest Prices Around for Paper, Printers, Software and Supplies!4* ICorner of 53rd and Harper • 288-5971 UNIVERSITY TRAVELBusiness or pleasure.Big plans or small.I We'll give you the most service and find you the lowest fares.| ji We can do it all by phone, or you can see us on the 5th floor ofthe Hyde Park Bank building • 1525 E. 53rd St. • Suite 501if •iIs Charters • Individual & Group Tours • Student Travel • AmtrakL i\i'l Maria A. Spinelli667-6900.«»» o10—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 25,1986CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified 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 publication. 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 & 3 bedrms some lake viewsnear 1C, CTA & U of C shuttle, laundry, facili¬ties, parking available, heat & water included.5% discounts for students. Herbert Realty 6842333 9-4:30 Mon Fri. 9-2 on Sat.GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U repair).Delinquent tax property. Repossessions. Call 1805-687 6000 Ext. H 4534 for current repo list.APARTMENTS AVAILABLE5464 76 HARPER $325 440Studio, 3'/2 & 4 room apts. Partially or com¬pletely remodeled apts. Additional outlets, refinished tubs & floors. Completely painted insome cases. New kitchen sinks & cabinets.Laundry facilities on site. Only four left foryour personal showing. Call 493-2525, ask forNancy or Steve. PARKER-HOLSMAN COMPANY.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.PARKER-HOLSMAN COMPANY 493 2525.10/1/86 Studio 1 Bedroom 2Bedroom Apts. ManyWith Private Balconies-Vicinity CO-OP Shop¬ping Center Studio $275 1BR $470 2BR $520ADULTS NO PETS 764 2493 525 33735020 Woodlawn Nice 5 large rooms 530/mo CallTom at 375-4728One Bdrm Unfurn. Condo Bldg. Exc. Sec. Avail.Immed. 864-8082Town House 4 br 2'/2b c/a Sec system Park.$1150/M Call 493 0543.Female graduate student seeks quiet nonsmoking female room-mate. Large sunny aptown bath, 2 balconies. Ten min walk fromcampus, on B bus route. Avail Sept 1. Rent 250+ utilities. Call 962-3511 (day), 752-2779 (eve).Room in sunny 3 bdrm apt. Non-smoking, gradstud/working woman. $185 mo. 2 blks fromcampus. 684 5498, 421-5429.Studio in University Park Condominiums at1451 E. 55th For sale or lease. Excel cond.Modern building with outstanding security.Days 750-6940 Evenings 359-0112.BDRM SUBLET in Irg 3-bedrm Hyde Prk apt.On or after Aug. 1. On C bus rte. $210 per mo.,heat included. Option to renew Sept lease. Callevenings 643 2087. 54 & Cornell.Large 1-bedroom Coop. Top Floor, 5 RoomsExcellent Condition, Good view And Lots OfSunlight, Borders University, 24K 955-6789.Apartment available one bedroom 53rd &Greenwood. New kitchen Sanded floors washer& Dryer in Bsmt grad student pref. Quiet Bldg$350.00/mo Call Silverwood Realty at 955 4600 orElex Walters at 375-0911.SUBLET TO 9 30-86 OR LONGER 3 Room 1Bedroom Vicinity CO-OP Shopping Center$360.00 ASAP ADULTS NO PETS 764 2493 OR525-3373.Share large 8 room apartment with cat and twograd students 53rd 8. Kenwood rent 190 optionfor fall Immediate occupancy call 667 6212.Quiet female non-smoking rmmte wanted: For1 yr lease-start Sept 1 at Regents Park w/ownbath in 2 bed rm apt 324 3917 mornings 8. evesA kmarian realtyina H«E*».TO»Studio and ^ BedroomApartments AvailableIn the Carolan— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus Line5480 S. Cornell684-5400^ b HELP-A great opportunity has come up. Mov¬ing to the North side. Need a reliable person tosublet my apartment for a monfh. $400.00/mo.Rent neg. Please call 288 0271.SPACE WANTEDLooking 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. 643-7183Non-smoking female grad, student, also em¬ployed by the University, looking to share anapt. or rent a small apt. in a house. Sept. 1 orOct. 1. Call Sarah, 667-0743.Responsible, secure 28 Yr old M. Chef/studentseeks room or roommates in Hyde Park areaStart. Sept. 1st. Moving to Chicago late Aug.Have good job prospects and Refs. Please writeDavid Hauser 12 Salmon St. Apt 111 Newmarket, NH 03857, or call collect, person toperson (603) 659-6666, aft. 5:00 weekdays.PEOPLE WANTEDGOVERNMENT JOBS $16,040 $59,230/yr. NowHiring. Call 805 687 6000 Ext. R 4534 for currentfederal list.ARE YOU COLOR BLIND? People with colorvision defects needed for experiments. Will pay$5 for screening test and additional money ifselected to participate in color perception ex¬periments. Call 962-1987.Female sitter/companion needed for two girlsages 14 & 10 3 days a week 8/16 9/16 799-9199.Preschool teacher mornings 288 1603. Studentswelcome to apply.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES and has a memory Phone 955-4417.The Better Image professional portrait andWedding photography. Call 643 6262The Better Image, economic custom framingavailable, fast service. 1344 E. 55th St. 643-6262.PASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE-U-WAITModel Camera 8. Video 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.EDITOR WORDPROCESSOR-TYPISTJames Bone, 363-0522 (hourly fee)Hyde Park movers serving the Hyde ParkKenwood surroundings chgo area with prideHousehold moving free packing cts del n/c from12/hr many other services. 493-9122TYPING TYPING TYPING Theses, Lettersetc. Grammar Correct. Call Elaine 667 8657Bookkeeping Service Incorp. Manual System 7days a week 9am to 10pm Kim Jones 643-9293.EXPERIENCED TYPING papers. 684-6882LARRY'S MOVING 8. DELIVERY SERVICE. Ideliver futons and furniture from north sidestores, also 57th st bookcases. Ask about smallor large household moves. 743-1353.FOR SALEBikes for sale & rent. Brad Lyttle 324-0654.82 Renault Le Car Hatchbk 4 speed Only 20Kmiles Exc cond $2350 or best offer. 324-3159after 7 pm.Great transportation '76 Dodge Colt $750 or bestoffer. 643 0613 between 7-10 P.M. & weekends.Desk chair, credenza, dining rm table, w/d,shelving, more. 324 7807.1976 BMW 2002 Good mech. cond., low mi. $2500288 1682 after 6pm.TAl|pY0NCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpeciolning in Contones#and American dishesOpen Doily 11 A 8 30 P MClosed Mondoy1311 E. 43rd MlH-1042 SCENESINSPECTOR by N. GogolthisExperimental production by 3 directors isdedicated to the principle that a stage charac¬ter is NOT a human being; nor is it an equiva¬lent of one. 3rd floor, Theater (Reynolds Club)JULY 24 27 8:00 P.M. Tickets $5.00 Students$4.00.TENSE& WORRIED?Selected volunteers will receive 6 weeks of freetreatment for anxiety at the University ofChicago Medical Center in return for partici¬pating in a 3 week study to evaluate drugpreference. Involves only commonly prescribeddrugs. Participants must be between 21 & 55years old and in good health. For furtherinformation call Karen at 962-3560 between 8:30& 11:30am Refer to study A.EDWARDO'SHOT STUFFEDDelivered right to your door! Edwardo's.-Thesuperstars of stuffed pizza. Open late everynight. Call 241-7960. 1321 E. 57th. Ph 241-7960MACINTOSH UPGRADES512K $195. 120 day warranty. Housecalls 400KSony disks $1.49, 800K Sony disks $2.49.CYBERSYSTEMS 667 4000-M-DELICIOUS-M-NUTRITIOUS_-!-H-EXPED1TIO USThe Medici on 57th delivers every menu itemfast and fresh! Try our new spinach pizza, it'ssecond to none. 667-7394.PREGNANT WOMENWe need pregnant women for a study. Only 4blood and urine specimens required. No xraysor drugs. Monetary reward. Call Patsy 962-1473APARTMENT FOR SALEOwn you own Co-Op Apt. near Quads $4150. Onebdrm. new kitchen and bath in renovated bldg,at 54th and Ellis. Hardwood floors, backyard,laundry, private parking lot. Call 493 9536 formore information.BLUES!!CHECKERBOARD!!The New Checkerboard Lounge, 423 E. 43rd Stpresents:Fri & Sat - Lee "SHOT'’ WilliamsSun - Lefty Diz & Shock TreatmentMo Lefty Diz/Magic Slim Mon Nite Bluz JamTu/Th Magic Slim 8. The TeardropsFri, Sat, Sun Aug 1-2-3: Welcome Home Weekend for JR. WELLS. Party for Jr. Wells on Sun.Aug. 3. Special Guests incl. Lee "Shot" Wil¬liams, Lefty Diz, BB Opom, Phil Guy, UddyWaters Jr. A/C Ample free parking 624-3240.r DR. NORTON R. MASLOV NOPTOMETRIST•EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR(one year warranty on eyeglassframes and glass lenses)SPECIALIZING IN• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSES•CONTACT SUPPLIESTHIHYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100 BROTHERCORRECTRONICTypewriter for sale. $200.00 Excellent condition.Call Carole at 363 0890 or 753 2274.FOLK DANCINGEven with three left feet and no partner, youcan have fun doing dances from Eastern Europe, the Middle East, etc. Come to Ida Noyesany Mon or Fri of the summer quarter 8:30pm.In the parking lot in nice weather, indoors inbad. Teaching 8:30-9:30, then request dancing.Questions call Tom 363-5214.UNIVERSITY PARK2 DELUXE STUDIO condos for rent Sept. 1 8.15. VERY NEAR UC yr. lease $449 8. $479 Lynn393-1034.INSTRUCTIONThe Chirago Counseling and PsychotherapyCenter offers "A Summer Institute in Listeningand Communication Skills" starting Wed. July23, at 7:30pm. at 5711 S. Woodlawn. Instituteincludes seminars, peer-listening and consulta¬tion with the Center's professional staff. Thecost for the six week course is $250.00 and isworth 1.6 CEU's. Call 684-1800 to register. Thereis still room available.DISSE R T AT I ON SMacintosh dissertations are possible. Call TopOf The Desk, Inc. at 947-0585 evenings andweekendsLASER PRINTINGLaser printing, and word Processing done byTop-Of-The-Desk, Inc. Call 947-0585 eveningsand weekends.SUBJECTS NEEDEDHow do your biorhythms match your partner's?Couples needed for a study of biorhythms at theUniversity of Chicago. If you and your partnerhave been living together for at least 1 year,have no children, are between 20-35 years oldand would like to participate in a month longstudy, call 753-3872 and leave your name andnumber.CONTACT MEHelp! Can you recommend a good Optometrist?Good w/contact lenses and not one of thoseVision Center guys. Please call Suzanne at 962-7209, 962-7952 days; 752-4590 late.RECRUIT YOURFRIENDS!Groups of 4 friends who are MODERATE drin¬kers needed to participate in a drug preferencestudy. You and your friends will each be paid$245 for participating. The study requires oneevening each week for 7 weeks in our recreational area. After each session an overnightstay is required. No experimental drugs in¬volved. You must be between 21 and 35. CALL962 3560 M-F 10:30 - 5 pm. Refer to study MDPSTUDIOS ^from $343HYDE PARK WEST•On-sight security•Resident manager & engineer• Heat & electricity included•Commissary & cleaners•Laundry room•Carpeting & draperies•Convenient to transportation^MISTER WEST 285-3500,APARTMENTSFOR RENTGRAFF &CHECK1617 E. 55th St.Spacious, newly-decoratedlarge studios, one and threebedroom apartments inquiet, well-maintainedbuildings close to campus.Immediate OccupancyBU8-5566 5254 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 Studios, 1, 2, & 3 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-2333Student Discounts9:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M.Mondav thru Frida\9:00 A.M.-2 P.M.SaturdayThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 25,1986—11Complimentary beignetsAll the fresh orange juice you cansqueeze - $1.25Reasonably priced house favoritessuch as eggs Florentine, apple pancakesand steak bearnaiseA full bar beginning at noonSummerOn The QuadsFOR THE WEEK OF JULY 28THTUESDAY JULY 29 FREE NOONTIME CONCERTChicago Chamber Brass, a classical brass group, in HutchCourt.SOQ/I-HOUSE RAVINIA TRIPS“Wynton Marsalis and the David Murray Octet, in Concert”Admission:$ 16/$ 14/$5 (lawn seating) Roundtrip bus transportation ($3)availableeat at the Reynolds Club Ticket Center or at l-HouseWEDNESDAY JULY 30 SOQ FILMS“Big Wednesday” 8:00 p.m. in Cobb Hall. Admission $2.50 THURSDAY JULY 31 FREE NOONTIME CONCERTO’Hara and Laffey, a Country-Folk due, in Hutch CourtFRIDAY AUGUST 1 SOQ FILMSThe Falcon and the Snowman” 7:00 & 9:00 p.m in CobbHall.Admission $2.50SATURDAY AUGUST 2 SOQ FILMS“A Passage to India” 7:00 & 10:00 p.m. in Cobb Hall.Admission $2.50The Great 53rd Street BrunchSunday 10:30 - 2:00On Harper