INSIDE:Milo and Opusreturn from thebasselope huntpage 14 Volleyball splitsover the weekend//x\page i7 KyJ r-rrm - . — ■ 11 "T1 v■';•« --—;w.«wr*”9.,. ? ■7?'Silent Voices*:: ' 'it ;: > ?f ,H £:k. : 1 £ ' i ■£$ y f |y.::. ■ ';:/: ' *,page seven.The Chricago MaroonVolume 98, No. 12 The University of Chicago (^Copyright 1986 Tuesday, October 14, 1986Dissident criticizes USSRBY REBECCA DONOMayor Harold Washington pauses during a speech hedelivered in Ida Noyes Hall Friday. Washington spokealong with Jesse Jackson at the Black MBA Conference.Changes rock WHPKby Steven LeslieStaff WriterScheduling changes thisfall at WHPK have provokedthe former chiefs of the sta¬tion’s three major formats —rock, jazz, and classicalmusic — to charge that Pat¬rick Moxey, the new pro¬gram director, is unfair inreassigning program air¬time.“For the last six yearsthere has been a com¬promise” over broadcastslots, said Lawrence Rock,former station manager andrecently replaced jazzformat chief. “This reallysets a precedent of a pro¬grammer having too muchpower.” But current StationManager Brett Bobly dis¬agrees; “It’s the right timeto change the schedule and itneeded change. Before wehad a lot of chaos and com¬plaints.”Lawrence Rock along with James Ginsburg, formerclassical music format chief,and Ken Yeglin, the ex-chieffor rock, have now begun apetition campaign amongWHPK Djs to recall Moxeyas program director. Formatchiefs assist the programdirector in one of the stationsformats. Moxey did notreappoint Ginsburg over thesummer.Haggling over schedulechanges started about thetime classes began this fallwhen Moxey returned withnew ideas about formattingof station broadcast time. Inoften heated discussions withDjs about scuttling of someshows and the consolidationof other broadcast slots,Moxey and station staffmade up numerous schedul¬ing schemes and eventuallyposted the latest of a seriesof compromises.This plan gave rock and anew dance category acontinued on page four By Tom MulhernContributing WriterVladimir Bukovsky, aformer Soviet dissident andspecialist on the abuse ofpsychiatry in the SovietUnion, spoke to a packedlecture hall in Kent on Oc¬tober 10. ripping into what hetermed “the monstrous sys¬tem of oppression and self¬occupation” in the SovietUnion..Bukovsky was the firstspeaker in a series of lec¬tures sponsored by the JohnM. Olin Center on “TheProblem of Evil in 20th Cen¬tury Politics.” He attributedthe durability of “evil” in theU.S.S.R. to a totalitariansystem which “will structureits society to the smallestdetails (such as) poetry styleand scientific research.” Hecharged that the Soviet gov¬ernment and the communistparty “divide the crime intosmall tasks which no oneBy Larrv PeskinStaff WriterThe votes have been tab¬ulated and the winners an¬nounced in the wake of lastweek’s Student Governmentelection. The election wascharacterized by a low voterComplete SG electionresults on page fiveturnout and a short list ofcandidates.SG President Amy Mosswas not surprised by thesmall number of graduateschool candidates—in thehumanities division only onevote was cast—but she was“very disappointed by the would object to carryingout,” but blamed as much ofthe “oppression” on thosewho remain silent as well ason those who actively partic¬ipate: “You can’t say thatStalin killed 66 million...oneman couldn't do that.”Bukovsky also condemnedwhat he termed “the doct¬rine of moral equivalence,which says that the behav¬iors of the U.S. and theU.S.S.R. are on a par witheach other.” This “doct¬rine.” he claimed, stemsfrom “relativism in moralissues.”“Don’t believe you canbuild a bridge with Gor¬bachev,” Bukovsky advised.In negotiating with the Sovi¬ets, he asserted, one must be“like a police psychologistnegotiating with a terroristmore than like a diplomat.”Bukovsky alleged that theSoviet government generates“propaganda aimed at cre¬ating a sense of resignation,”scarcity of undergraduatecandidates.” There was onlyone candidate from each ofthe two largest dorms.Woodward Court and theShoreland. on the ballot.Moss was particularlydisappointed because she feltthat SG had generated agood amount of interest inthe election at Student Ac¬tivities Night and through afull-page Maroon ad. Shereasoned that the smallnumber of candidates mightbe explained by the fact that“freshmen were intimidatedby running against upper¬classmen.”SG Vice President AlisonInafuku rated the election“not bad in terms of voterturnout, but poor in terms of and described the averageSoviet citizen's reaction asone of “learned help¬lessness.” Claiming thatRussians turn to alcohol toescape from Communistreality, Bukovsky cited arecent study and concludedthat “drinking is not just apastime (in the SovietUnion), it is an epidemic.”Other citizens, Bukovskysaid, respond to Sovietabuses with religion,stoicism or nationalism. Henoted that “humour is a veryimportant reaction.”As a leader of the HumanRights movement in theU.S.S.R. during the 1960 s.Bukovsky was arrested nu¬merous times for nonviolentprotests of government do¬mestic and foreign policies,and spent 12 years in Sovietprisons, work camps andpsychiatric hospitals. In 1976.he was released and exiled ina swap for a Chilean corn-continued on page fourthe number of candidates.”She noted that even thoughthe turnout was little morethan a third as large as thatfor last spring's election, itwas comparable to the turn¬out for the Spring 1985 elec¬tion. the last election inwhich assembly membersran. However, many morecandidates were slated thatelection. She reasoned thatmore candidates ran in thatelection “because it was heldin conjunction with the of¬ficers' election.” She furthernoted that she still prefers aspring election in which of¬fices and assembly membersare elected at the same timeto the new two-tier system ofelections (see Maroon, 10/3/86).SG election results announcedCulture, music makeBy Michael MonahanAssociate EditorThe University SymphonyOrchestra’s (USO) firstEuropean tour became areality in June, 1986, in re¬sponse to an invitation fromCultural Omnibus Inter¬national.Ninety-two players plus astaff of 7 comprised the en¬tourage which performedseven concerts in Austria,Hungary, and Yugoslavia.Despite the threat of two in¬ternational crises, the bomb¬ing of Libya and the nuclearaccident at Chernobyl, theadministration continued tosupport the project. Overall,most orchestra membersfound the two-week tourmusically as well as cultur¬ally enriching.Tlx- complete tour itiner¬ ary was planned by CulturalOmnibus International(COI), an organization whichsponsors touring perform¬ance groups, with modestinput from the USO’s MusicDirector, Barbara SchubertThe original itinerary calledfor concerts in Italy, but itwas altered due to securityrisks. Each student paid$300. which covered only one-fifth of the total cost. Inorder to defray the total ex¬pense, the USO sponsoredsmall projects in the winterand spring, raising fundsfrom concerts, grants, andprivate donations.The Orchestra departedfrom Chicago on June 17 andlanded in Zagreb, after in¬tervening connections in NewYork and Frankfurt. Thegroup was provided with twomotor coaches, drivers, and USO's European tour a successtour guides by a professionaltour company based inYugoslavia. Ac¬commodations were cited as“sufficient" or “bearable”by orchestra members.Food, on the other hand, was“terrible” in the opinion ofsome members. But, asCathy Schmidt, the tourmanager retorted, “the foodand hotels were just whatyou’d expect on a tour.”The first three concerts inYugoslavia-Dubrovnik.Belgrade, and Sub-otica—drew crowds from 600to 20,000. Despite jet-lag anduncomfortable humidity inDubrovnik, the orchestraperformed superbly in anold. charming Franciscanchurch. The following con¬cert in Belgrade was per¬formed in the university’scontinued on page five Van Bistrow, a resident head in Snell Hall, plays a pizzicatophrase in The University Symphony Orchestra.Law students advising underprivileged clientsBy Nelson SchwartzContributing WriterStudents at the U of C Law School’sEdward F. Mandel Legal Aid Clinicmay still follow everyone’s ex¬pectations and become corporatelawyers, but right now they are givinglegal advice to the poor.The Legal Aid Clinic is an organiza¬tion of seven lawyers and 70 to 80 lawstudents which handles certain casesof poor people who might not other¬wise get legal representation.The clinic’s job, according to StefanKrieger, a lawyer at the clinic and alaw school professor, is to “teach stu¬dents the methods of litigation throughthe representation of actual clientsand to provide excellent legal servicesto the low-income persons who are ourclients.”In addition to teaching students theintricacies of the law, the Clinic seeksto “sensitize law students to the prob¬lems of the poor,” Krieger said.Dan Taub, a law student who worksThe national service fraternityAlpha Phi Omega (APO) is opening achapter at the U of C with an in¬troductory meeting this Wednesday at7 pm in Broadview Hall.APO is a national greek-letter or¬ganization which is dedicated to pro¬viding service to campus, communityand nation through student projects.Founded at Lafayette College inPennsylvania in 1925, the service fra¬ternity now has over 180,000 membersin 635 chapters across the UnitedStates. Members participate in com¬munity cleanups, voter-registrationdrives, programs to aid handicappedand underprivileged children, literacyprograms, and food and clothingdrives. APO’s motto is “Be a leader,be a friend, be of service.”Alpha Phi Omega differs from typi¬cal fraternities. It started acceptingwomen in the late 1960’s. Its regula¬tions prohibit a residential house orthe hazing of pledges. To gain admit¬tance, pledges must demonstrate a at the Clinic, described his work at theClinic as “a great experience to helpsomeone get their job back ratherthan helping one oil company buyanother while working in a corporatefirm.”Trish Hanower, a second-year lawstudent who worked there during thesummer and hopes to work thereagain, said that the clinic instilled inher “the idea that it is important to dopublic work.”“Even if I went into corporate law,”she said, “I’d still have an interest inpro bono law (work done for the publicgood).” Like Taub, she felt that shegot more out of working for the clinicthan if she had worked in a corporatefirm.The clinic takes cases involvingemployment discrimination, peoplehaving difficulty with utilities, thementally ill, the handicapped, andconsumer groups. In addition, theclinic likes to take impact cases —cases that could change the law andcommitment to the service principlesof APO and do 10 hours of service perquarter. “We want students to meetother students with similar interestsand to become friends by workingtogether on projects,” said CarlosPaiz, a fourth-year economics under¬graduate, one of six university stu¬dents organizing the fraternity.“Everybody is welcome,” he said,“there’s so much we can do, so manywe can help.”The group plans to have three to fiveprojects this quarter, establish itselfin the community, develop its mem¬bership, and build up to a project aweek by spring. A Christmas party forthe children at the medical center anda community food and clothing driveare among the activities planned forthis quarter. The fraternity hopes tobe in contact with such service organ¬izations as The United Way andOXFAM, among others. “We have alot of ideas,” said Bennie Hu, anotherof the chapter’s organizers. “There’sroom for service anywhere.” “have an effect on 40 or 50,000 peo¬ple,” said Gary Palm, director of theclinic and a law school lecturer.Among the more notable cases thatthe clinic handled involved a man whowas fired because of physical hand¬icaps. The clinic took the case to theSupreme Court in 1982 and won, get¬ting the man’s job back with back pay.Two of their most successful actionsOver 75 students attended the pre¬law meeting last Thursday, which wassponsored by the Collegiate Dean ofStudents and the U of C Law School.Doreen Herlihy, pre-law adviser, in¬troduced each of the directors of ad¬missions from Harvard, North¬western, New York University (NYU),and the U of C, who discussed theadmissions process and the qualitiesof each of their respective institutions.The forum opened with a “Do yareally wanna go to law school?” chatby the Harvard representative. Shethen followed by discussing how lawschools select their applicants; thequality of the undergraduate in¬stitution and the quality of the coursewere foremost on the list. She began,“First of all, you’re going to one of thebest colleges in the country,” and,“the common core is great.” She re¬marked that the diversity of coursesrequired at the U of C is a superb edgethat many undergrads at other schoolsdo not think about or are not evenrequired to take.Next followed a discussion of LSATscores, and financial aid by the rep¬resentative from the U of C. He ad¬vised that it is best to take the LSATexam in the summer or early fall ofthe year prior to applying. Often, theanxieties of school or sudden emer¬gencies interfere with test-taking andapplicants must wait until the follow¬ing year to apply. There are no cut-offscores and one should not retake thetest if scores are low. Usually, theresults of the second test are verysimilar to the results of the first. Healso advised against prep-courses, involved those with utilities. In onecase they affirmed the right of poorpeople to pay no more than 12% oftheir income for heat and electricity.They also blocked a rate increase byPeople’s Gas, the bulk of which wouldhave fallen on residential customers.Students “concerned about the rightsof the poor” founded the clinic in the1950’s, Palm recalled.e.g., Kaplan and Barrons. “If youhave the self-discipline to review atest booklet every night that costs $14,then don’t throw away a few hundreddollars for someone to sit you down ata desk in a classroom and make youdo the same thing,” remarked thedirector. Financial aid for law schoolis primarily composed of loans, withsome academic scholarships for thecreme de la creme.The third representative, fromNYU, explained the personal state¬ment. She remarked, “Focus on a fewparticular things about you ratherthan an inventory...Leave them (theadmissions committee) with what isimportant about you.” And, of course,use your best writing skills. She ad¬vised students to write a draft, leave itfor a few weeks and then come back toit later, after having pondered it agreat deal.The final discussion was led by theadmissions director from North¬western. Her words of wisdom were to“have professors or employers whoknow you well, both academically andpersonally, write your recommend¬ation.” The recommendation shouldinclude a summary of one’s reading,writing, and general academic abi¬lities. It should not be written by some“impressive personality,” e.g. a sen¬ator, that has only met you once.”The panelists advocated early ap¬plications and prompt decisions. Themeeting closed with a reminder for allinterested applicants to attended thePre-Law Forum at the Palmer Houseduring the weekend for more detailedinformation.New service frat will openBv Christina VoulgarelisStaff Writer Law school admissions explainedBy Michael MonahanAssociate EditorPART TIMEEARN EXTRA MONEYBENEFIT FROM FLEXIBLE WORK SCHEDULES• RECEIVE 20% STOREWIDE DISCOUNT ♦HAVE SOME FUNMAKE NEW FRIENDSA P P L Y NOWFOR YOURPART • TIMER E T A I L JOBMONDAY 10:00am - 5:30pmTUESDAY 10:00am - 2:00pmWEDNESDAY 10:00am - 2 00pmSTATE STREET , DOWNTOWNequal opportunity employer NEW Data Entry & Cleaning Facilities! 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IN EUROPE444 N Michigan Avenue SPSS Europe BVChicago It 60611 PO Box 1154200 AC GonnchemVISA MasterCard The Netherlandsand American Phone ♦31183036711Express accepted TWX 21019c 'Me srstixPRODUCTIVITY RAISED TO THE HIGHEST POWER2—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 14, 1986Macintosh ProductsHardwareMacintosh Plus $1375Macintosh Enhanced 512K $1030Mac 800K External Drive $ 295Apple Hard Disk 20SC (New 20 MB SCSI Drive) $ 925ImageWriter II Printer $ 445LaserWriter Printer $3565LaserWriter Plus $4195SoftwareMacWrite $ 60 MS Word $ 60MacTermmal $ 85 MS File $110MacPaint $ 60 MS Chart $ 72Excel $218 MS Basic $ 85ServiceAppleCare service contracts are available for allproducts ... service center on campus ... competitiverates and quality service!!!A complete list of products and prices areavailable at Uslte (Weiboldt 310),the Computation Center (3rd floor, 1155 E. 60th St.),and the MDC. The MDC can only sell to Universitydepartments and its full time faculty, staff, and students.Microcomputer Distribution Center1307 East 60th St. (Rear Entrance)962-6086di S3RD KIMBARK PLAZA • 363-2i75meatsGOV'T INSPECTEDCENTER-CUTPORK CHOPSGOV'T INSPECTEDBONELESSPORK ROASTU.S.D.A. CHOICESHORT RIBOF BEEFGOV'T INSPECTEDFIRST-CUTPORK CHOPSFARMLAND SLICEDBACON 89$2j?$1S1 59lb.$1ftnoduce 59lb.6916 oz.""N]EARLYTANGELOSFRESHBROCCOLI 59559RUSSET POTATOES $110 lb. bag (lb.09CANADIANRUTABAGUS 255dl MaC ’WHERE YOU'RE A STRANG! JcBOLTTOWELS FINER FOODS j79<Big Roll7-UPDIET OR REG $1 KRAFTSALAD DRESSING 79(ASSORTED VARITIES 8oi.49RAML0SAWATER 23 oz. HEUMANN'SLIGHT79 < MAYONNAISE 32 nREAIEM0NLEMON JUICE $132 oz. I 39PR0GRESS0CANNEDTOMATOESCOUNTRY'S DELIGHTHONEY WHEATBREAD ni>io.i OCEAN SPRAYGRAPEFRUIT JUICE $ 1PINK OR REG. 64IPROGRESSOf\ A i rnUuncSSU89 C RED WINEVINEGAR 69993925 oz.69< LIPTONTEA BAGS lootoum $1$259dcti GSALE DATES OCT. 15th-19thSWISS LORRAINENOODLE PUDDINGBROWN & WILD RICE SALAD $^3999 <$319, STOUFFER'SPIZZASjnoj:enSIeach I 99GREEN GIANTENTREELASAGNA 12 oz $1 39TREE TOPAPPLE JUICE 69‘TOP NOTCHBUTTER , ibMAZOLA CORNMARGARINESALTED GR UNSALTED 1 lb sticks $1 8979<KRAFT'SCHEDDARib. CHEESE! SHARP OR EXTRA SHARP 8oz. $1 29ij i ond co»i«' p»'»The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. October 14. 1986—3WHPKcontinued from page oneslots, grouped jazz primarily on theweekend, and shifted the station'stwo folk music programs. It also cutout all but one of the five long-running rhythm and blues showswhich had been staffed by neigh¬borhood residents and which moststation members felt were to con¬ventional for the experimental col¬lege-radio format of WHPK.“[Moxey] only programs what helikes and doesn’t respect the othermusic,” charges Rock, who saysMoxey fired him after an argumentover the changes — Moxey statedthat Rock quit. After the new sched¬ule was posted, the jazz Djs, many ofwhom have held regular slots foryears, were especially upset aboutthe change in their schedules and thedifficulty involved in attracting lis¬teners to new time slots. They metwith Moxey and later elected tworepresentatives including the new-jazz format chief, Rick Sanger, todiscuss the plans further.As a result of those meeting theyreached a compromise that Moxeydefends; they moved jazz to theweekend. “We have the best jazzdepartment in the city and we’vestarted a publicity campaign to sup¬port jazz on the weekends,” he says.“They’re good slots and they makesense because most of that format isnon-students and they can come in onthe weekend.” Jazz actually gainedfour hours per week, to 40 hourstotal, under the new schedule Moxeymaintains.Moxey. took up his position this fallwith the idea of programming moreof the dance music that is popularwith both students and the South Sidecommunity. Most of WHPK’s Djsagreed that the dance format des¬erved more show's and shouldn’t besubsumed under the general cate¬gory of rock But in the scramble for radio slots Moxey hasn’t been able tomake much progress "Three rapprograms stayed, only three,” saidDj Ken Wissoker of “The RapShow,” one of the most popular slotsat the station. “Patrick had to giveaway so much that we can’t do whatwe wranted to do.”WHPK has alwrays been committedto playing alternative music of allvarieties, but they have not alwaysagreed on how' to achieve that goal.Though the station grew to 100 watts,current music changed, and classesof students came and went, the sta¬tion’s format remained little changedbecause of the resistance of the Djs.The dissenting former formatchiefs maintain that the old scheduleshould be returned to and thatMoxey’s tampering is a threat to themulti-format variety of the station.They say that the rock format, itselfwideranging, at 49% now makes uptoo much of the airtime. “The diver¬sity makes it interesting,” saysRock, whose jazz program now ap¬pears from nine to midnight on Sun¬days. “that’s the point of collegeradio.”The dissidents, though, are per¬haps most upset about the lack ofcommunication they perceive at thestation about programming changes.The R&B Djs w’ere hardly notifiedthat their shows were being cancel¬led. they say. and time slots for otherformats were set up without discuss¬ion. But Station Manager Brett Boblvdefends Moxey against thesecharges. “He talked to a lot of peopleand worked really hard. All the for¬mats will have easier access now.”For now jazz retains two slots onweekday evenings, six to nine bothWednesday and Thursday, and isconcentrated on the weekends Rockand dance music have picked upmany of the other evening slots, and can still be heard in the wee hours ofthe morning until nine am on weekdays. The station re cently hosted theNaked Raygun concert, is planning abig mailing and publicity campaign,and is pushing to get a microwavehookup to their transmitter on PierceHall. But the infighting and unsettledschedule at the station are slowingdown these plans.The former format chiefs claim tohave the support of most of the jazz,classical, and folk staffs and say thatthey have already gathered 25 sign¬atures calling for Moxey’s recall.Bobly, though, disputes their sup¬port, "These dissidents are in theminority.”A petition drive to replace Moxeywould be difficult to achieve. First,the petition would have to gather thesignatures of 25% of the students whowork for the station. The jazz andclassical staffs are dis-proportionatelv alumni and commu-Dissidentcontinued from page onemunist leader imprisoned by thePinochet RegimeOne audience member askedwhether dissidents could have anyeffect on policy once outside of theSoviet Union. Bukovsky, noting that"not everybody is trying to get out,”answered that "emigration has animpact on citizens' minds.” He alsoclaimed that, with more people mig¬rating, “the country becomes moreopen” to the West. nity members’ and thus cannot signthe petition. Only after the petitionrequirements were met could therecall motion reach the GoverningBoard, composed of staff and fac¬ulty, where the effort would have toreceive a 2/3 vote to succeed.Though the station dissidents arecirculating a petition for Moxey’srecall, they are not committed toseeing him actually removed. "W’edon’t want impeachment,” LawrenceRock said. “We want to convincethem not to make these changes.”The long-time chairman ofWHPK’s Governing Board, IssacAbella, an Associate Professor ofPhysics and in the College, hasscheduled a meeting of that com¬mittee for tomorrow at noon. Thoughno formal motion is prepared for thatmeeting, the issue of WHPK’sschedule changes is sure to beraised. Both sides of this controversysay they’re waiting to see what hap¬pens there.Bukovsky is the author of To Builda Castle: My Life as a Dissenter, andhas also been published extensivelyin Commentary, including the Sep¬tember. 1986 article "Will GorbachevReform the Soviet Union?”The next speaker in the Olin Centerseries will be Robert Conquest, ahistorian who has devoted muchstudy to the Soviet regime. All lec¬tures in the series during Autumnquarter will focus on the SovietGulag system and/or the Holocaust.i#VCHICK COREAELEKTRIC BAND**|\ Allan Holdsworthflandel Hall - November 7: 1 ■ at Reynold’s Club Box Office■ j : AVAILABLEj : 10/27 FOR STUDENTS:X; 11/3, NON-STUDENTS4—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 14, 1986— —Benton Fellows arrive to begin\TC*Uwa A 1 T~v _ /■By Sam I). MillerStaff WriterTwelve broadcast journalists rec¬eiving Benton Fellowships have ar¬rived at the University of Chicago tobegin six months of intensive studyhere under the guidance of John Cal¬loway.Calloway, the Benton DistinguishedProfessor at the U of C, directs theprogram —now in its fourthyear—honoring the late U.S. Senatorand U of C Trustee William Benton.This year’s class, demonstratingdiversity in both skill and geographicorigin, includes the following Fellows:M. Katherine Anderson of ABC News Chicago, Alexandro Benes ofSpanish International Network inMiami, Elizabeth Ann Clough of theBBC in London. Mike Edgerly ofWHAS Radio in Louisville, Chris C.A.Fletcher of TCN Nine Network inSydney, Australia. Margaret Major-ack of CTV Network in Toronto, Mi¬chael A. Maus of NBC News Radio inNew York, John J. Murphy of WBBM-TV in Chicago, Robert A. Petty ofWLS-TV in Chicago, Charlotte Raynorof KING-TV in Seattle. Richard Saiz ofKPIX-TV in San Francisco, and HenrySchuster of CNN in Washington, D.C.Edgerly, Maus, and Murphy havewon the Peabody Award, consideredSG Results the highest honor in broadcast jour¬nalism. Each Fellow was chosen froman applicant pool of over a thousandcandidates.Funded by the William BentonFoundation, the program matches theFellows' salary during their stay herewhile offering them apartments atRegents Park and trips to numerousevents around Chicago. Scholastic re¬sources are also varied and extensive.The program is very “academicallycentered.” explains Calloway. OnTuesdays they are required to take aseminar for credit, with topics rangingfrom public policy and research toarms control. Another seminar onThursdays allows the Fellows to meetcelebrated professionals in their field,and Fridays provide a chance to talkwith distinguished U of C facultyUndergraduate Winnersindependent HousingNed Hale 26Matt Oakey 24William Penn 21Adam Shepard 19PierceAndy Coleman 44Jennifer Chmura 41ShorelandJohn McGinn 58David Darland 23Allen Douglas 19Jay Polk 17BlackstoneLee Ann Yang 12BrsekmndggLinus Adler 8BroadviewAlan Schafer 19Burton JudsonMary Lynn Birck 54Kathryn Sam peck 45CommuntersDemetra Merikas 9Frats/SororitiesJimmy Ching 11 Undergraduate WinnersHitchcock/SnellDavid Schaffer 7Woodward CourtMark Rhee 29Sue Wrobel 3^FA-CounSugata Biswas 131Michael Ilagan 15Raj Nanda 15Kevin Jack 12Michelle Hughes 11Jim Park 10Rich Park 10Graduate WinnersBiological SciencesFarhong Farhangfor 4Dan Eads 2SSAMaria Vidal 2ScsMS.peneesBrian Threlkeld 8Ross Weiner 12Jeff Wright. 14David Lc Toumeou 2 Graduate WinnersBus.in.gsi SchoolKenneth Feldman 10James Malina 12Brent Packer 12Steve Mecklenburg 3John Yoshimura 3Ed White 2Gina Hoepler 2HumanitigsKaren Petersen 1Law SchoolBrian Fittipaldi 27Steve Kurtz 17Katherine Cuengross 11Lynn Zeisler 11MgdicaLScim!Joe Rosen 4Cara Lukin 4E-hysi£al_S£ign£gsGeoff Burks 3Nick Gentile 2Public PolicyCynthia Arnold 9 usocontinued from page one“amphitheater,” but the site wasmore like a large platform withbenches for the audience extendingalong an incline. Despite this beingthe orchestra’s first open air concert,the audience was appreciative andloved the Slavonic Dance by Dvorak.The large turnout for the third con¬cert in Subotica was due partly to thelocal soccer team’s victory in achampionship round. A handful ofthem distracted the symphony withdrums, cymbals, and shouting, al¬though the orchestra fared well.The next concert, in Budapest.Hungary, drew a crowd of 1500 to theacoustically superb Kongress Hall.Publicity was not at all obvious, andthe Hall placard featured “Univer¬sity of” in tiny lettering and “Chic¬ago Symphony Orchestra" in hugetype, the Villach, Austria, perform¬ance received the most media cov¬erage, including a front page picture studiesmembers over lunch. In addition, eachFellow will take two courses and mostwill audit a third in language with apersonal tutor.“This schedule usually keeps thembusy.” says Calloway, “and it doesn’teven include the time they can spendtalking to professors at lunch.” Over¬all, he estimates that the Fellows willencounter nearly thirty-five professorsduring their stay here. Such exposureto a plethora of academic and culturalopportunities is what has lured theFellows to Chicago.“I came for the education because Iknew I needed to know more,” saidRaynor. After studying under the ex¬tensive program, she thinks she willmore easily be able to “think aboutcovering different kinds of topics andstories” in her career.in the local newspaper and a featureby Austrian television. The concertwas performed on the hillside of amedieval castle and opened with ahelicopter filming the event. Not anote was heard. The frustrating cir¬cumstances plus an 8-hour bus ridefrom Vienna caused the performanceto be the weakest of the whole tour.With no publicity and a diminishedaudience of 50, due to the champion¬ship soccer match on the same night,the performance in Graz was quitedemoralizing. The final performancein Zagreb, Yugoslavia was thestrongest of the tour, heard by anadequate audience of 800.Despite the perceived languagebarrier, most natives spoke English,and USO members with a fluency inGerman aided greatly. In retrospect,Barbara Schubert remarked, “thecultural diversity was fascinat¬ing... Budapest was the most exotic.”HYDE PARKCOMPUTERS INC. InPEpson® EQUITY™ IIWhy Pay More?These Features are Standard!* Completely IBM compatible,only much faster than the PC orXT. (Dual Speed processor)* 640K RAM; clock/calendar.Epson® EQUITY'* II*1699 * 20 mg. hard disk, plus 360Kfloppy. (Dual floppy versionwithout hard disk alsoavailable).* Hercules CompatibleMonochrome Graphics withhigh resolution, tilt-and-swivelamber or green monitor. Colorsupport also standard.* Printer Port. Serial Port. MSDOS. BASIC. “AT"stylekeyboard and much more!Full One Year Warranty!Epson Durability!At the Corner of 53rd and Harper • 288-5971 HIThe Sack Realty Company, Inc.1459 east hyde park boulevard, Chicago, illinois 60615Choice Hyde Park locations. Close toUniversity, shopping, and transportation.New listings daily.5210 DrexelLarge 4 room -1 Bedroom and 5 room - 2 Bedroom apart¬ments. Rent starting $330.00 a month.Call Bruce 288-38984728 WoodlawnLarge studio apartment. Stove, refrig. Heat, hot water,included Rent $250.00To inspect call Bill 285-42595511 EverettLarge 4 room, heat, hot water, stove, refna. includedRent $450 00To inspect call Carl 684-89001022 Hyde ParkLarge 4 room, heat, hot water, stove & refng. includedRent $400.00.To inspect call Carl 684-8900The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 14. 1986—5oisnuoisnuoionuoisoulro55o nosionusio cioaicThe Department of Musicpresents:Thursday, October 16 * Noontime Concert Series12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallThe Goodspeed Woodwind OctetMozart: Serenade No. 12 in C minor, K.388Admission is free.Saturday, October 18 • Spindrift String Quartet8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallBenjamin Clark and Demetrios Braddock, violins:David Budil, viola; Amy Stambach, violincello.With guest artists: Caroline Girgis, viola; andChristopher Haritatos, violoncello.Mozart: String Quintet in G Minor, K.516;Schubert: String Quintet in C Major, Op. 163.Admission is free.Sunday, October 19 • Juliette Hayes, soprano;Philip Martineau, piano4:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallA program of Songs of the Romantic Masters.Music by Schubert. Brahms, Duparc, and Faure.Admission is free.UPCOMING CONCERTSFriday, October 24 -1 Solisti Italian!8:00 p.m., Mandel HallFirst concert of the Chamber Music Series.Music by Vivaldi, Mozart, Rossini and Mendelssohn.Tickets: $12 (UC students, $7). Tickets and information about the entire seriesavailable at the Department of Music Concert Office; Goodspeed 310: 962-8068.Thursday, October 30 * Les Arts Florissants8:00 p.m , Mandel HallFirst concert of the Early Music Festival.16th and 17th century French choral and dramatic works by Bouzignac, Moulinie,Charpentier, and Lambert.Tickets: $12 (UC students, $7): available at the Reynolds Club Box Office: 962-7300.Information and tickets for the entire series available at the Department of MusicConcert Office; 962-8068.c sWKJSiPnuaionasifgftJ H UNIVERSITY TRAVELThe lowest fares withthe least hassle.Do it all by phone.9-6 Monday-Friday9-4 Saturday667-6900MARIA SPINELLIHYDE PARK BANK BLDG.1525 E. 53rd StreetFifth Floor- ~szs~'r~-— » ' ~T.~ " 6r» .V* S'Please Come HelpBuild the Hillel SuccaliStarting today untilFriday afternoon, October 17Last day to sign up for Succot meals isTuesday, October 145715 S. Woodlawn 752-1127UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOMICROCOMPUTER DISTRIBUTION CENTER1307 E. 60TH STREET962-6086We offer excellent discounts to full-time students, faculty and staff ona variety of microcomputer hardware and software that can solveyour word processing, and computing needs -APPLEAT&THEWLETT-PACKARDIBMZENITH LOTUSMICROSOFTMINITABU.S. ROBOTICSWORDPERFECTFor more information and pricing callThe Microcomputer Distribution Center962-6086Come see the products and meet the vendors at the Bookstore Electronics Fair, Oct. 15, 16, 17, and register to win anApple Macintosh Plus, Zenith portable, & other great prizes!6—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 14, 1986A Book to Put DownMidtermby Joe SchmittReview of Midterm Reportby David Wallechinsky$18.95, hardcoverYesterday I physically put downDavid Wallechinsky's unawaitedsequel to What Really Happenedto the Class of '65? Today I verballyput down Midterm Report.Ever since Time called the classof '65 "American youth on thefringe of a golden era,” the mediahas bludgeoned the reading pub¬lic with stories on the baby-boomers strife with words like"flower children” and "yuppies.”All this convinced that generationthat they were something specialthat people wanted to knowSisterly FeelingsProbabilityComingInto Playby Nova Myhill"Sisterly Feelings” by AlanAyckbourne was presented by theUniversity Theater group in theReynolds Club first floor theater onOctober first through fourth. It wasbilled as "a nonaeterministiccomedy about decisions, relation¬ships, and relatives.” I supposethat's as good a description asany. It isn't especially easy to pro¬vide an accurate description ofthe play because it has the poten¬tial to be four different plays de¬pending on two spontaneous on¬stage decisions made in the firstact. As a detachea observer, Ifound the idea rather appealing,but I imagine that the cast andproduction staff found it less so—itmust be unnerving to be sure ofthe beginning and nothing else.They have my respect—not only fortheir considerable ability, but fortheir courage in attempting thissomewhat daunting production.The play involves the three chil¬dren of an aging doctor and theirrelationships. The characters aresomewhat stereotyped, but in¬tentionally so, and all are wellplayed enough that they are"real” and exist beyond their initialstereotypes.Dr. Ralph Matthews is played asa rather abrupt, decided old gen¬tleman—as he becomes senile, heis in no way confused. He maythink that Abigail is Dorcas or thatone of them is his dead wife or thatit is very important to maintain afriendly relationship with one's feet,but he is completely certain of allof these things.His eldest child, Abigail, is ratherlike most of us—she acts in an Report:about. This book is another in aschool of books featuring thebaby-boomers telling the worldwhat great people they are.Special note on "generation” —the term implies that somehoweveryone who graduated in 1965has something significant incommon, as if when one was bornwere more important than whatclass one was born into. The termmisses that those the media refer¬red to as baby-boomers really in¬cluded only the high middle andupper classes. The lower and lowermiddle classes enticed almostnone of the fads whether they were"political,” musical, or sexual innature. The sons of factory workersdidn't drop acid at the GratefulDead or Jefferson Airplane, butorganized, purposeful fashion, butshe knows that there's more to herthan that, and people don't seeher as she thinks she really is. Hermarriage to Patrick does not en¬tirely satisfy her because he ex¬emplifies the concept of prac tic-ality that she would like to escapePatrick avoids having to think agreat deal, either about himself orother people, by immersing himselfin time tables and newspapersand generally avoiding humancontact.Ralph's second child, Dorcas, isvery much a free spirit. She isinvolved with a bohemian poet,Stafford. She thinks that she maywant a more conventional rela¬tionship. Stafford is one of the mostinteresting characters in the play,and I think one of the best acted-the archetypical Angry YoungMan. listened to the Yardbirds and JimiHendrix and later to Led Zeppelin.The tone of the book is self-aggrandizing. The "subject”chapters are meaningless, their in¬troductions sounding much likebad, trite newspaper leads oropening sentences to over¬structured, mediocre essays.Through all this Wallechinsky con¬veys no insights, nothing mean¬ingful.The book achieves a corninessthroughout, climaxing in the lastchapter, the "Midterm Report.”Here, Wallechinsky puts on the af¬fected voice of a school teacherfrom "Leave It to Beaver” and"evaluate” his generation againstprevious generations. Reading thelast chapter is a roller coaster be-The youngest child Melvyn, isbasically a very relaxed agree¬able young man, who is perfectlycontent with his relationship withBrenda Bassett, who is not ascompletely vapid as she initiallyseems. It's rather difficult to con¬sider them as seperate charc-ters—they are a single entity, thehappily besotted young couple.Brenda's brother Simon is theromantic interest of either Dorcasor Abigail, depending on the out¬come of a coin toss in the firstscene Both are interested in himbecause he seems to offer whattheir relationships cannot. Simon isperfectly socially acceptable, hasa scmewhat exciting past, an at¬tractive present, but probably hasno particular future. His first con¬cern is and always will be himselfIn twenty years or so. he willprobably bear a striking resem- tween laughing and vomiting. It issimply ridiculous.Astute comments on the sixtiesgeneration are not here To findinsights into the successes andfailures of the sixties, one would be"This book is another in aschool of books featuringthe baby-boomers, tellingthe world what great peo¬ple they are."better off reading WoodstockCensus, turncoat Jerry Rugin'sGrowing (Up) at 37. or any ofAbbie Hoffman's books since hisresurfacing. Or maybe even SaulAlinsky (who once attenaed U of C]who in 1969 had this to say:Unless the young radicals getwith the scene as it is, we will seethat the present disillusionment,boredom, and sense of failurewill finally fertilize a rationale of"Well, I tried to fight this system,but people won't listen and thiswhole goddamned system hasjust got to collapse of its owninner moral decay. There's nosense in my demonstrating andstarving, so then...” So then theyget a job on Madison Avenueand at the ripe old age oftwenty-eight are "eiaer states¬man” of their own feveredimaginations, ready to startreminiscing aPout 'their raaicalyouth.” [Reville for Radicals, p231)This book is not worth thecosts: the $18.95 it takes to buy it,or the 6-7 hours it takes to read itAnd, besides, the baby-boomersworship themselves enough withoutus joining in.blance to Len—Ralph's brother-in-law the policeman. Len has stakedout his area of expertise—the fre¬quency of criminal acts—and re¬fuses to budge from it in conversa¬tion except to mount his otherhobby horse, the police road raceHe is splendidly patronizing towaraall women—an attitude which isnot helped by his wife, RitaRita is an almost completenonentity, and therefore a perfectfoil for Len's innane talke. It is, Isuppose, understandable Len'sconversation does not invite anycomments except "Yes. dear,”"No, dear,” and similar remarks.The characters were well drawnand reasonably memorable, and Iwas very impressed with the qualityof the acting and directingContinued on page twelve...The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 14. 1986—7Students and StaffWELCOME BACKfromDavid Itzkoff, DDS1525 E. 53rd Street752-7888 ■j iI Fall Coupon J| FREE EXAM |I to all {i New Patients j! or I- Additional jd 10% OFF |I on any appt. !! iDavid Itzkoff, DDS I‘1525 E. 53rd Street !752-7888 !IExp. 11/15/86 jWe offer•Year round U of C studentdiscount•Convenient evening & weekendappointments•Full range of dental servicesHAIR PHDPrecision Hair Design1315 E. 57th Street363-0700HAIRCUTSMENWOMENTEENS80YSGIRLSUNDER 12BOYSGIRLS *1300*18°°MO00*15*°JgOO*10°° PERMSs2000 * 4000REDKEN - MATRIX-HELEN CURTIS-NEXXUS - LOREAL - ZOTOS20% OFFRETAIL REDKEN -NEXXUS - MATRIX[includes shampoo, HOURS: MON-FRI9-8conditioner & styling) SAT 9-5SUN 10-5 STUDENT GOVERNMENTpresentsSTUDENT'\/jhuXVA&WEEKOCTOBER 13-17,1986Learn about volunteer opportunities at:• REYNOLDS CLUB• LAW SCHOOL (GREEN LOUNGE)• BUSINESS SCHOOL (STUART)• DIVINITY SCHOOL (SWIFT)• SSAFUNDED BY SCFCLIMITED TIME OFFER!systems and MICROCOMPUTER DISTRIBUTION CENTERis making available the$1080 Z-171 PORTABLE COMPUTERat a special price!$1080IBM-PC COMPATIBILITY IN A 14# LAPTOP PORTABLEFEATURES: OPTIONAL:• BACKLIT LCD SCREEN 384K MEMORY• 2 - S-Vi” FLOPPY DISK DRIVES AND RECHARGABLE BATTERY PACK• 256K RAM UPGRADABLE TO 640K• 1 SERIAL AND PARALLEL PORTS• BUILT-IN SOFTWARE INCLUDES:CALCULATORAPPOINTMENT SCHEDULERPHONE DIRECTORYTELECOMMUNICATIONSCLOCK/WORLD MAPCALENDAR• MS-DOS 3-1 $55.00FOR MORE INFORMATION AND DEMONSTRATION CONTACT:MICROCOMPUTER DISTRIBUTION CENTER1307 E. 60th STREET (REAR ENTRANCE)CHICAGO, IL 60637962-60868—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 14,1986Emotion, AnnihilationIn Ancient GreeceEasels and art at the Midway Studios.Midway StudiosThriving in Anonymityby Susan RossettiIt is, as Thomas Mapp says, "anaccumulation of private spaces,”where both graduate and undergraduate art students come towork on their creative projects. It isthat, and a great deal more.Mapp is the director of the oftenunnoticed Midway Studios.Midway is nestled between theSchool of Social Service Adminis¬tration and Cottage Grove on theside of the Plaisance frequentedmostly by Burton-Judson residentsand Law students. Constructed in1929 by Chicago sculptor LoradoTaft, Midway is now registered as aNational Historical Landmark.Midway became part of the Uni¬versity property during the 1950'sand currently houses the Com¬mittee on Art and Design.The Studios provide Art studentswith a private, quiet atmospherewhere they fuse their theoretical knowledge of color, light, form andspace with the real problems ofdealing with various media, at¬tempting to convert internal emo¬tions and ideas into visual display.The spaces within the Studios arehaphazardly arranged, creating akind of labyrinth of nooks andclosets. Some spaces are por¬tioned and secured by padlockwhile others, apparently occupiedby less secretive students, areconcealed only by drawn curtainsor tarps. • Scattered around thismaze are the remnants of long,hard work: paint cans, globs ofclay, sheets of wood and metal,discarded lithographs, even a tireThe Studios, however, functionas more than creative space forindividual artists. While many of theart classes at the U of C are taughton the fourth floor of Cobb Hall,Midway has spaces for instruction;five shared studios where studentslearn a variety of media. These by Elizabeth HaueterThe Oresteia is a difficult play towatch. The audience is forced intoan extended encounter with vio¬lence and barbarism; the tragedyplays upon our fears and dwells onour basest attributes.Matricide, cannibalism, adul¬tery, the mental and emotionalpolitics that attempt to justify theseacts; through the development ofthe trilogy Aeschylus shows theevolution of a civilization — theintroduction of a humane justiceinto the old retributional code ofethics. The play shows a battle forsupremacy between an ancientmatriarchy (based on instinctivedrives) and a new more controlledform of society, The concerns of theplay are of profound relevance tothe modern audience, in a worlawhere man's violent impulses andwarlike nature threaten not onlyruin and sorrow for the individualbut the annihilation of the humanspecies.This month's Court Theatre pro¬ duction of the Oresteia is an am¬bitious attempt to capture andconvey the questions posed bythese problems. The translationwas commissioned by CourtTheatre from U of C professorsDavid Grene and WendyO'Flaherty. The first play, Ag¬amemnon, is presented in total.The second and third [The LibationBearers and The Euminedes) havebeen cut and combined to form asecond act. The resulting con¬glomeration, directed by NickRudall, succeeds sporadically, butas a whole is hindered by pooracting and above all by the lackof a unified and consistent inter¬pretation. The two and one halfhour staging is crowded with ideaswhich fail to coalesce and fail toinspire an emotional response.An essential aspect of the Ures-teia is its treatment of and attitudetowards gender, Women in theplay represent the emotional fer¬ocity of instincts. Clytaemestra'sContinued on page twelve...include classes on drawing,graphics, sculpture, painting, film,and photography. Visiting artists atMidway also provide a source ofinstruction for art students, usuallythese artists are locally based andcome in regularly to present anddiscuss their work as well as sup¬plementing the art department'sprogram as "adjunct professors,”providing tutorials and constructivecriticism for interested students.In addition to its function as a teaching center and work space,Midway Studios becomes a galleryevery spring. Graduating studentsreceiving Bachelor's and Master ofFine Arts degrees exhibit their finalstudio projects. Many of theseshowings have the character ofprivate parties with food, drink andlively conversation and the art isusually impressive in its quality anddiversity. Interested students areencouraged to attend these end-of-the-quarter critiques.FELLOWSHIPS OPEN HOUSEThursday, October 16,7:00 p.m., 3RD Floor Lecture Hall,The Divinity SchoolPanel Discussion:Why And How To Select A Fellowship— Elizabeth Chadwick, Dean of Students In The CollegeWhat National Fellowship Committees Look For— Allan Sanderson, Assistant ProvostHow To Make An Effective Application— Janet Trubatch, Director of Research AdministrationWorkshops On:CambridgeMellonHertz Newcombe Fulbright Minority FellowshipsSSRC Luce and more...RhodesSponsored by the Office of Graduate Admissions and Aid, Career and Placement Services,Office of the Provost and the College.The Chicago Maroon—Tu^day, October 14, !98€ 9>yyyrff? wwrw wiTVWWW 9 WWWWWWW^W* ■■’Wf V V «|I 'October eighth marked the openir \ of the |I latest exhibition at the David and Alfr i Smart ;* Gallery, an eclectic display of the b? of the !> gallery's new acguisitions. Titled Ci Sec- JI tions," the exhibit indeed does cover , man- <► ners of artwork, from a Bauhaus desk to a plaster II sculpture titled "Man of Steel." So, if you d like to ;[ see some great new works at the Smart Gallery, <1 or you haven't yet seen any of the old ones, |I wander into the Gallery — you might be sur- j; prised how much you like it. (Located behind «! Regenstein Library, 5550 S. Greenwood Ave.) ;Film Fest Press Party (Manners Not Included)by Michael FellThe press previewed this year'sChicago International Film Festivalat the Press Party last Tuesday.Claude LeLouch, the French direc¬tor most famous for his film "A Manand a Woman", was to receive thefestival's highest award, the GoldHugo, at the press party. "SilentVoices", in its role as connoisseurof fine art and taste everywhere,attended the bash at the Rivieranight club. "Silent Voices" waslured to the Press Party with pro¬mises of free pizza, beer, cookies,and a chance to meet ClaudeLeLouch. For the first hour and ahalf, the press was occupied withbad music and nearly five hun¬dred bottles of liquor from fourbars. What did the Riviera nightclub, free food, and ample liquors have to do with Claude LeLouch?As "Silent Voices" would soon findout, not much.This is the 22nd Chicago Inter¬national Film Festival and it boastsa schedule of films from 33 coun¬tries. What the festival does best forthe avid moviegoer is to makeavailable foreign films thatcouldn't be seen anywhere else,not even in the art houses. Newfilmmakers and documentaryfilmmakers find a forum for theirfilms in the festival that does notexist in the established market. Thefestival claims to have discoveredFassbinder, Scorsese, Tavernier,Weir, and Wenders. DirectorSydney Pollack and actress Deb¬orah Kerr will each appear at thefestival for their separate tributes, aretrospective of their films and on¬stage discussions.Most of the films are entries intwelve categories that will bejudged by a jury of eight com¬ prised of filmmakers, critics, andactors from around the world. Thefestival runs from October 24 thruNovember 13 and the films arescreened at the McClurg Ct., Bio¬graph, and Music Box theatres. Theall purpose Festival hotline is 644-3400 and complete schedulesshould be available somewhereon campus.Meanwhile, the free cookieswere decent, the free pizza wasnot that good, and the free beer,well, it was Budweiser. Perhaps"Silent Voices" should invest somemoney to get a decent beverage?"Oh waiter, let's have your bestchampagne!""Certainly. That would be ourLouis Roeder Cristal, 1981, at $120a bottle."“Oh waiter, my palate isn't toodiscriminating this evening. Howabout a Bud'?"So the evening went on. A pizzaslice, a cookie, another cookie, two more pizza slices. The directorof the Festival, Michael Kutza,showed up around eight o'clock tointroduce Claude LeLouch. Onlyabout 75 people paid attention tohis introduction. Surely, "SilentVoices's" esteemed colleagueswould detach their lips from theirshot glasses and place their pizzasaside when Mr. LeLouch wouldspeak. No such luck. LeLouchspoke for about two minutesthrough a translator and no morethan the original 75 paid attention.The rest of the Philistine Press drank,ate, and jabbered on and made itdifficult for "Silent Voices" to hearthe translator. Seems they werethere for the party and the freeeats. Their attitude was, "You throwus a party and we will promote theFilm Festival with a nice little ar¬ticle." "Silent Voices", as a con¬noisseur of fine art and tasteseverywhere, attended a pressparty and found no taste.10—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 14, 1986^VJVN^«VWVVVV^wVV^Vl^-V^^VVVV^^«VVVW,«VVV*-VVVVVV-1j-«V^,^VVThe University of ChicagoCHINESE STUDENT ASSOCIATIONcordially invites you to• CHINESE DINNER PARTYin honor ofentering and returning students.Activities:• Delicious Chinese dinner• Dancing party fstart 9 p.m JProfessional DJ• Late night movie fstart 9 p.m J• Chinese chess, bridge, games...• Raffle fmore than 10 prizes)• and much moreOctober 18.1986 Ida Noyes HallSaturday. 6:30 p.m. Third FloorFee: $5/person 1212 E. 59th StreetWVWAV.VAVAVVVAV.W^VVNV\iWAV.VAVV%VAV\WAV.VAV.$25 OffWe've just taken what's already a terrific discount available to you on yourcollege campus and made it even better. On the only complete software for theApple® Macintosh™ personal computer. Fill out the coupon below and sendit along with your dated store receipt, completed Jazz® registration card andthe bar code label from the bottom of the Jazz package toLotus Development Corporation, PO Box 3006, Cambridge, MA 02139Name .□ StudentAddress .□ FacultyCity State Zip □ StaffLotus JazzFit e fu fiction software for the Apple Mon ntosh i nlegrati ng spreadsheet, graph ics,word process)ng. database and communicationsTins offer applies to students faculty and staff purchasing with personal fluids Institutional purchase do not applyOffer expires December HI. 1 !W> Mailings which do not include the four towns list'd above mil not he h<*nored V>facsimiles accepted Allow h-8 weeks deliveryL Jfate**, Bn I-r*■iM-rt with e\pfssM) irrmt The Chicago Maronn—Tuesday October M lOWt— II(?) lf*86 Lotus Development Corporation Lotus and Jazz an1 rcgistend trademarks of Lotus Ifc-voiopmeni Coq*»ration Manitf«*h & a traderEmotion...Continued from page nine.maternal rage against Ag¬amemnon's sacrifice of theirdaughter causes her to take alover and plot Agamemnon'sdeath. Electro's obsessive love ofher murdered father and jealousy9of her mother's love affair turnsher life into an intense meditationin revenge. The Furies, a chorus offemale monsters who pursue Ores¬tes after he murders Clytaemesta,represent the ultimate person¬ification of feminine irrationalityand thirst for blood. Essential to thecontrast between ancient mat¬riarchy and the new order, societyis a consistent portrayal of the fe¬male figures. This is not achieved inthe Court Theatre's production.Clytaemestra appears on stageperfectly coiffed and groomed,looking like a black-haired yuppieBarbie doll rather than a Greekqueen, mad with passionateanger. The actress (Deanne Dun-agen) does her best to conveyClytaemestra, alternately purringwith menacing sensuality andscreaming self-righteous threatsand promises, but she fails to bringacross the requisite combination offear and fascination.The theatre's costuming ofClytaemestra is equally prob¬lematic. In the murder scene inAgamemnon she is dressed in acostume adorned with a symbolicuterus: a red downward-pointingtriangle with curved shapes ex¬tending out of the top two vehiclesand rivulets of red fabric runningdownward along her legs. Had theCourt Thedtre felt comfortable withits ability to communicate emo¬ tionally with its audience, such anovert and heavy handed devicewould not have been needed.Electra and the Furies are sim¬ilarly misrepresented: the former asa shrill and masculine tomboy, thelatter as being partially male.Electra is made up with gapingred scratches traced down hercheeks, but her role is not actedout with the intense sense of griefAeschylus suggests: instead, shebehaves in a consistently self-righteous and snotty manner. Thefuries, transformed into a co-edteam, are entirely bereft of thesymbolism of their gender, andthus fail to enforce one of thetragedist's controlling themes.The play also fails in its treatmentof violence. The quantity and in¬tensity of the bloodshed in theOresteia necessitate a cautious yetfaithful presentation, to avoid theMidway...Continued from page seven.The plot is, very roughly, as fol¬lows: The action begins immedi¬ately after the funeral of Ralph'swife, Amy. Patrick decides that hecan't wait for everyone to finishlooking at the view, and drives offleaving all of the other characterswith only one car to get back totown. As a result, two of them haveto walk. Simon volunteers, andAbigail and Dorcas, having earlierdiscussed their dissatisfaction withtheir respective relationships andtheir interest in Simon, toss a coin tosee who walks back with him. OnFriday's performance, which wasthe only one I saw, Dorcas won thetoss, walked with, and becameinvolved with, Simon.The second scene is the mostvariable, because it is always thesame physical scene — a familypicnic — but the actual content ofCORNELL BAPTIST CHURCH5001 S. Elliswhere faith and intellect go hand-in-handWednesdays7:30 p.m Prayer and StudyOctober Topic: Economic Development8:30 p.m Choir RehearsalSundays9:40 a.m Christian Education11:00 a.m WorshipPick-up at Regenstein — 9:30 & 10:30 a.m.For information, contactRev. Susan Lockwood Wright, pastor,268-4910.SBC affiliatedThe Poetry CenterPresents PoetsJoan Colby andRobert DanaOpening the 13th SeasonFriday, October 17, 8:00 P.M.at The School of the Art Institute of ChicagoColumbus Drive and Jackson Boulevard$4, $3 students and senior citizens The Atrocity BookColbyIn a Fugitive SeasonDanaPartially supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts CouncilFree admission tq SAIC students danger of appearing ludicrous.Court Theatre certainly doesn'tshirk the carnage. It approachesthe gore with a strong stomach(maybe even with relish) not spar¬ing in its use of copious quantitiesof crimson liquid splattering amaniacal Clytaemestra as shethrusts a gleaming dagger intoAgamemnon's still-warm corpse.She likens this experience to anerotic event. Aegisthus, her lover,dips his fingers into the gushingwound, thrusts his hand into hismouth langourously tasting andswallowing the stuff. Court Theatreseems to have a well-lined diges¬tive system. Unfortunately the ac¬tors just aren't able to project themenace which would make thesescenes effective. They don'tabandon themselves to wantonbarbarism, the zen of murder; theytry too hard. The production does, uh, haveits good points (as do Kurosawafilms). The costuming of the Furies isinspired — instead of creatingmonster costumes, Court Theatreputs actors into stretchy opaquefabric bags allowing them,through physical contortions, torepresent the mental perversitiesand twistedness of nebulouslymenacing gods.TThe last scene offers some rec¬onciliation between the violenceand order. Athene encounters theFuries but somehow their blackbags seem more ominous thanAthene's unsubtle other-worldlygarb.If you are devoted to CourtTheatre or are mysteriously attrac¬ted to slasher movies (Friday theThirteenth pars 1-50), then youshould definitely see CourtTheatre's Oresteia.the scene depends on (a) whetherAbigail or Dorcas is involved withSimon and (b) whether she decidesto keep him or give him up at theend of the scene. On Friday,Dorcas brought Simon, Len per¬suaded him to run in the policerace, they found Stafford skulkingin the bushes, Simon threatenedhim, he declared his undying lovefor Dorcas, she rejected him andleft with Simon.The second act can begin intwo different ways. If Abigail keepsSimon or Dorcas rejects Simon, theact starts with Abigail camping. If,however, Abigail rejects Simon orDorcas keeps him the act starts asit did on Friday, with Dorcas actingas a racing steward at the policerace. Dorcas got into an argumentwith Simon about his egotism, he left to run the race, Stafford ap¬peared, pretending to have be¬come a respectable journalist, andDorcas decided that she was still inlove with him and didn't want himto change.In the last scene, which is like thesecond scene in that it alwaysinvolves the same setting andevents, but the dialogue variesdepending on the previous scene,Melvyn and Brenda get marriedand Dorcas and Abigail decidethat they're happy with Staffordand Patrick and that Simon isn'tparticularly nice after all.Given this somewhat unlikelyseries of possibilities, it would havebeen understandable if the playhad not flowed smoothly. The factthat it did should therefore be re¬spected all the more.wmDIVISION OF PHYSICAL SCIENCES (HUDNALL LECTURES)Department of the Geophysical SciencesDIVISION OF SOCIAL SCIENCESCommittee on Public Policy StudiesPHYSICAL HAZARDS: CAN WERESPONDOctober 16: Joseph V. SmithGeneral Introduction: Comets and AsteroidsOctober 23: Paul J. CrutzenNuclear Winter: Climate ChangesOctober 30: Hirro Kanar. inEarthquakes and Tidal WavesNovember 6: Robert I. TillingVolcanoesNovember 13: V. RamanathanGreenhouse Effect on World ClimateTHURSDAYS 3:00 P.M. KENT 120First part of a joint program on man-made and naturalhazards which threaten civilization and the human race.Ethical, economic, diplomatic, political and administrativeaspects will be covered in January and February 1987. Theseseminars are directed to the whole University community,and technical jargon will be minimized.12—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 14,1986FMALLYAFREE FUGHT PLANJUST FOR STUDENTS.YOU WON'T GET ABREAK UKE THISONCE YOU'RE OUT INTHE Rl IL WORLDINTRODUCING COLLEGIATE FLIGHTBANK, FROMCONTINENTAL AND NEW YORK AIR.If you’re a full-time student at an accredited college or uni¬versity you can join our Collegiate FlightBank™ You’ll receivea membership card and number that will allow you to get10% off Continental and New York Air’s already low fares. Inaddition, you’ll get a one-time certificate good for $25 off anydomestic roundtrip flight. Plus, you’ll be able to earn trips toplaces like Florida, Denver, Los Angeles, even London andthe South Pacific. Because every time you fly you’ll earn mile¬age towards a free trip. And if you sign up now you’ll alsoreceive 3 free issues of BusinessWeek Careers magazine. Or the grand prize, tor the number one student referralchampion in tire nation: a Porsche and one year of unlimitedcoach air travel..And how do you get to be the referral champion? Just signup as many friends as possible, and make sure your member¬ship number is on their application. In older to be eligible torany prize you and your reterrals must sign up before 12/31/86and each referral must fly 3 segments on Continental or NewYork Air before 6/15/87. And you’ll not only get credit tor theenrollment, you’ll also get 500 bonus miles.So cut the coupon, and send it in now. Be sure to includeyour current full time student ID number. That wuy it’ll onlycost you $10 tor one year ($15 after 12/31/86) and $40 for fouryears ($60 after 12/31/86). Your membership kit, includingreferral forms, will arrive in 3 to 4 weeks. If you have a creditcaid, you can call us at 1-800-255-4321 and enroll even fester.Now more than ever it pays to stay in school.r~TN ME UP NOW! (Please pnnt or tvpe)TTiis Porsche 924 can be yours if you are the nationalreferral champion.SIGN UP YOUR FRIENDS AND EARN A PORSCHE.But what’s more, for the 10 students on every campus w hoenroll the most active student flyers from their college thereare some great rewards: 1 free trip wherever Continental orNew York Air flies in the mainland U.S., Mexico or Canada. Name-College 'tear ($10) □ 2 'tears ($20) □ ) Years (530) — 4 Years ($40)Must he submitted K 12/31/86.Date of Birth. Address--Zip--Zip_.Year of Graduation-Permanent .AddressFull time student ID$ □ Check/Money Order Enclosed PLEASE DON'T SEND CASH□ Amencan Express □ YTsa □ MasterCard □ Diner’s ClubAccount Number Expiration DateSignature XFOR MEMBERSHIP APPLICANTS UNDER THE AGE OF 18: The undersigned is the parentguardiAn of the membership applicant named hereon, and I consent to his/her participation in theCollegiate FlightBank program.Signature XSend this coupon to: Collegiate FlightBankPO. Box 297847Houston, TX 77297 303G'mplete terms and conditions at program will aco >mpan\ membership kitCONTINENTAL (5 NEW YORK AIRSome blackout periods apply for discount travel and reward redemption. Ownplete terms and conditions *.4 program will accompany membership kit. Certain restrictions apply Cement full time student status required tor each vear of membership Toearn any prize a minimum of 12 referrals is required All referral award winners will be announced by 8/1/87 10% discount applies to mainland U S travel only. Students must be between the ages of 16 and z.5. Porsche 924 registration, license fees, andfaxes are the responsibility of the recipient © 1986 Continental Air Lines, Inc.Thp Chirago Maroon—Ortohpr 14 iQBfc—13LightstylesLook Once, and Again; Does This Make Sense?By Alexandra ConroyFeatures EditorI'm the sort of person who could talk myself intoalmost anything. I talk almost incessantly. I havea sneaking suspicion if I took a biofeedback test,my alpha waves would appear in quotation marks.I'm sure I’m the person most interested in what Ihave to say, and to top it all off, I’m rathergullible.I started off deciding these columns would beless than serious and have since taken the attitudeto heart. I can’t stop seeing latent frivolity pop¬ping up all around campus. Much of it seems dueto juxtaposition.Lightness has its limits so “Once upon a Time’’is out of the question as a beginning. Several daysago in class, it occurred to me that just becauseIsben could be considered the first modern play¬wright. that fact alone was insufficient to keep meawake. If everyone had been in somewhat thesame condition, no one would have noticed thesmall tan terrier scuttling under the tables. As weall thought about it, the professor voiced thequestion, “Where’d it come from?” The indirectThird Try — Out!by Joe SchmittStaff WriterReview of Third Stageby BostonMCA RecordsThey were just another band out of Boston onthe road to try and make ends meet. Playing allthe bars, sleeping in their cars, they practicedright out in the street. They didn’t have muchmoney—they barely made enough to survive. Butwhen they got up on stage and got ready to play,people came alive.No more. Once upon a time they signed a three-album contract. Two albums later they went theirseparate ways. Not amused, the record companytook them to court. The result: Third Stage, analbum which inspired someone on my floor to say.“It’s not even worth reviewing.”The album opens with “Amanda” which is agood, slow song. It works much the same way thatthe Scorpions' “Still Loving You" does—its charmis built on the tension created by its restraint, itcontinually denies each musical temptation to turnup the volume, scream, and burst into a wildguitar solo. The difference is that the Scorpionswent on to indulge the audience on other songs ontheir album: Boston didn't. reply came as a series of whistles—from the backof the classroom. The dog scuttled back to be putin a beat up black handbag. A brief explanation“Sorry, he usually doesn’t get out,” and classresumed.Friday, outside Cobb, a table displayed infor¬mation and t-shirts. The information was on SouthAmerican politics. I suspect that South Americawas on the t-shirts. The girl behind the table wasin earnest, so I passed by without commenting(also without donating.) The man on the Cobb Hallsteps yelling “Bake Sale,” also seemed in earnest.I paused to consider. I could drop thirty cents inthe Contra Can. The amount would perhaps coverits own postage. Or I could buy a yellow cupcakewhen I’d just finished breakfast and much pre¬ferred chocolate. Did the money provide suppliesto South America or banners for the downtowndemonstration? Were the cupcakes homemade orBetty Crocker?Listen, it’s O.K. if I think that way. This may notbe the Twilight Zone, but, after all, its hardly theREAL world. The REAL world does meet thequads at the periphery. Occasionally, it evenintrudes. En route from the language lab to homeComedyIke Soufk Side through a cutting breeze, I noticed a rather at¬tractive woman in silk (or a close facsimilethereof). She maintained a constant smile, flickedher hair back and placed her hands in obviouslyartificial poses. And she faced a photographer.Asking questions usually wastes time and I am, ifnot quite the nosy reporter, a habitual pro¬crastinator. Photographers are remarkably con¬cise, but I gathered that periodically, or evenfrequently, Marshall Fields shoots ads on campusbecause “It’s a pretty setting.” Photographiccreativity does not imply verbal. Other passersbyseemed intrigued with the activity but what dotypical U of C students really think of modeling?What do typical models really think of the U of C.Both questions seemed better off unanswered, butthey were diverting.So what? Nothing. I was just looking and a fewthings struck, me as strange. But it did occur tome that two-thirds of the column required in¬spiration and a little bizarre action on the part ofthe students—that is, you or someone similar. Ifthis place is too serious, i.e. if I have nothing towrite, it’s very possibly your fault. Just keep thatin mind.Editor’s Note BoxWe apologize to the Humanities Division forneglecting to cover the Open House in a futurestory. Those who came know what a great pro¬duction it was. For those who didn’t, today’scoverage gives a little idea of the event. Realizeyour expectations. Come next year.Thanks to Student Government for all the effortthat went into the Saturday night Safari party. We(seriously) appreciate the attempt.The Maroon proper has said it once, but I’ll sayit again. If you like to write, or think you might,PLEASE come by the office. We're proud of all ofyou who filled out info cards. It was a courageousfirst step. If I haven’t called you, assume the lineswere busy and I’m making contact now. Yourmove, my move...and next? That's right. YOUneed to show your face at the third floor Ida Noyesoffice. Try Tuesday (today) three to six pm.When it’s ambiguous, yes, the editor (singleperson) has adopted the royal we. For no reallygood reason.Finally, the strict description of these pages isnot humor exclusively but features. We are lightbut filling. This is not (just) fluff.The next song is quite a bore: “We re Ready”(and they're not, not for another six years atleast). The instrumental “The Launch” goes no¬where but leads to “Cool the Engines” which isless than thrilling, having the rich Boston sound,but without the fun or magic of “Long Time" or“Smokin’.” The side ends with “My Destination,”a variation of ■■Amanda.” but not a good one.Side two opens with “A New World.” an in¬strumental which segues into “To Be a Man.”which, like all the songs on the album, is cop¬yrighted by Hideaway Hits; appropriate becausenone of them will ever be hits anywhere big. Theguitars are good but not spectacular on “I Think ILike It.” but I don’t. “Can'tcha Say” has the lyric“some things in the past/are better left behind.”Right. The album ends with “Hollyann.” anotherslow, mellow song which has no tension like“Amanda” since at this point no one expects thesong to erupt.In general the album is unworthy of the previoustwo—there are no quick guitar licks or wild solosand it lacks the raw energy and fun which madethem famous.Nails in the coffin: The back cover bears theinscription— “It took nearly six years to conceiveand complete this album... Each individual pieceof music relates a human experience. And to¬gether they tell the story of a journey into life’sThird Stage.” Yes, they all relate the humanexperience of washed-up talent forced to put analbum together. At least the lawsuit is over.Comedy Missingby Joe SchmittStaff WriterReview of Absolutely Mahveiousby Billy Crystal (with Dick Schaap)G.P. Putnam’s Sons$9.95, hardcoverYou would think that a comedian whose fame derivesfrom his ability to do perfect impressions would not beable to translate his humor onto paper. Right.14—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 14, 1986 BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathedwe have retvrnepFROM THE W/LPS ANPHAVE SUCCESSfUUXRECORPEP we EXISTENCEof me elusive wssuore HOWEVER MYASSISTANT HERE ISSUFFERING FROMSEVERE SHOCKANP EXPOSURE. Kt'W ENCOUNTERMwemfycemim ... ANP WHENHE TOUR LIFE GETSTHINKS HES EXCITING. IT'SMARLIN GOOP TO HAVE MPERKINS. NICE PEOPLE ATMUTUAL OF OMAHATV TURN ID...ETC.,Annual Humanities Event Attracts a Full House“Who are all these people and why do theycome?” queried Stuart Tave, Dean of the Human¬ities Division. Following the rhetorical question,he added modestly, “I wonder what’s the secret ofour success.” The answer to the first questionmight require an hour-long recitation. The listwould include current students, faculty, prospies,and alumni, but there were many attendees thatdefied categorization. They were, well, just there.The success of the annual Humanities Open Houseremains a mystery although there are a fewhypotheses. As Tave remarked, “Professors liketo talk. You can’t stop them. They will talk to anempty room, but they like to have an audience.”This year’s coordinator, Con Hamel, attributedthe success to the quality of entertainment whichin turn occurred because participating facultyhad no ulterior motives. “The faculty volunteertheir time. You know what they get in return? A$3.50 lunch (at Morry’s). We’re here to have fun.”Alumns indulged their nostalgia. “I was herewhen Hutchins was in charge. It was a placewhere everyone was smarter than I was. I lovedit. Everything was going somewhere.” And thenthere was the ambiguous attractive quality, at¬mosphere. “That Barber shop quartet (part of the10 am session) kind of epitomized college youth forme,” a middle-aged gentleman stated firmly.“They’re so enthusiastic.” A nice ideal, anyway.Morry’s muffins were a sizeable attraction, too,but put that down to availability.Originally, the purpose of the Open House was toact in conjunction with the admissions office inattracting new students.“Linguists often talk about language in an ar¬cane manner so that it sounds as strange to you aspolymers do to me,” Karen Landahl began. Sitecontinued in quite understandable terms to discuss “Creative Imitation in Child Language Acquisi¬tion.”“This is a story, as it is in the Bible, about theweakness of women,” Milton Ehre said, referringto the tale of Lot’s wife versified by a modernRussian poet. This seminar proceeded very muchlike a class as “theme,” “tone,” and “character,”flew back and forth across the square of tables.“I’d like a couple of thousand years at mydisposal. I’d like to show you a version of theLord’s Prayer in which all the words hadchanged,” Christina Von Nolken said wistfully.Lacking such, she still managed to present theimmense change between Old English and thepresent day language.“One of the biggest difficulties is that peopledon’t realize this is not University theatre—that is,not student theatre (although we have a goodstudent theatre)—but a professional company at¬tached to the University... struggling to survive.”Despite the awkward appearance of dashes andparent heses, the vocal delivery of this preamblewas smooth. It preceded a discussion of CourtTheatre’s current production of the Oresteia.J.Z. Smith discussed “Columbus in the Bible;”Bernard McGinn attempted “Portraying the Anti-Christ: Scenes Hollywood Never Dreamed of.”Rebecca West discussed the overlap in Italianliterature between works for adults and works forchildren. These were only a few of the offerings.Tours of the Oriental Institute, the Robie House,and the Regenstein Library left every hour andthere were numerous musical events.The key speaker. Joel Snyder, photographer,professor, Chairman of the Committee for GeneralStudies in the Humanities, and editor of theCritical Inquiry, was the sole occupant of the 11am slot. “We range far to find out why these disciplines are called ‘Humanities.’ I first heard ofthem when I was 11 and though them a groupopposed to the disciplines the ‘in-humanities.’ ”Snyder continued, not without humor, to addresshis topic, “No Graven Images: Reflections onPainting and Photography.”The title of the talk was taken from the secondBiblical commandment. “For all of us who takethe 10 commandments seriously, there are at mostnine and one-half we follow,” Snyder explained.This commandment prohibits not only the wor¬ship, but also the creation of visual images such asstatues, paintings, and photos. The talk tried toexplore what effects art objects produce and whysuch might be undesirable. Snyder related thestory in which Aaron, the priest, creates a goldencalf to be worshipped as the god of Israel, andexcuses himself to Moses by explaining the calfmade itself. Rather than idol worship, the detail ofthe calf’s self-generation became the focus of thetalk.Also relevant to today’s works, Snyder said.“It’s as if they weren’t art at all, but anothercreation.” The danger comes when one asks“Who’s creation?” The speaker maintained that,although we seldom ascribe art works to GodHimself, there are times when we feel we cannotascribe them even to men, especially photos whichseem the work of the camera. “It’s as if theymake themselves,” a viewpoint which almostdefies the objects, though unintentionally. “Youreach a point at which you cannot explain whythese things are so compelling.” It’s not thatSnyder feels art to be damning. After all, he beganhis career and still continues as a professionalphotographer. “I think the compulsion of art iswonderful, but we have to have some idea ofwhat’s compelling.”We are pleased to announce that the following 1986 graduates ofThe University of Chicago have recently become associated with ourfirm.ATLANTA OFFICE CHICAGO WORLD HEADQUARTERSGary R. Langford, MS Edward T. Baum, BAConsulting ConsultingCort J. Swanson, MBA Mark D. Gross, BAConsulting ConsultingCHICAGO OFFICE MILWAUKEE OFFICEStephen R. Burns, MBA Anthony B. Glass, MBAAudit AuditPaul J. Demopoulos, BAConsulting PITTSBURGH OFFICERichard Fairfield, MBA Ellen W. Scibetta. MBAConsulting ConsultingMichael R. Gordon, MBAConsulting SAN FRANCISCO OFFICERichard X. Herrera, MBA Frank D. Crocitto, MBAConsulting ConsultingJames T. Ramey, MBA David Kriozere. MBAConsulting AuditJohn J. Snopkowski, MBAConsulting STAMFORD OFFICEElizabeth A. Thebeau, BA Philip K. Polishook. BAConsulting ConsultingOur Representatives Will Discuss Career Opportunities on Campus.Please Come.Graduate School of Business — October 20 at 12:30 p.m.College — November 11 at 7:00 p.m.We Will Be Conducting Campus Interviews onthe Following Dates:Graduate School of Business — November 18, 1986College — January 20, 1987Contact Your Placement Office to Sign Up for an Interview..ArthurAndersen33 West Monroe Street, Chicago, Illinois 60603 (312) 580-0033 0 Dn DD D GOODCOMPANYTed Burtis and187 other CEOssupportNeighborhoodHousingServices. Nowwe need YOU!Neighborhood Housing Services,a partnership of businessmen,residents and local governmenthas turned around threedepressed Philadelphia neighbor¬hoods by helping residentsimprove almost 5.000 homes.NHS is succeeding in 156 citiesEvery Si donated for supportof local NHS units results inan average S25 reinvested inthe neighborhoods by residents,financial institutions and localgovernment. We feel that's anexcellent return on our socialinvestment I’m one of 188CEOs of national corporationsactively participating along withexecutives of hundreds of localcompanies. NHS needs the helpof business leaders like us tocontinue its good work."THEODORE A BURTISChairman & CEO.Sun Company. IncYou can help Call toll-free(800) 544-6472. or write Neighborhood Housing Services ofAmerica. 1951 Webster StreetOakland. CA 94612.Local parmcrship kt*> lo neighborhood renewal§ I A Pubhc Service o» This PublicationfKM S The Advertising Council"The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. Ociobei i4. into— ti>Women's soccer team achieves several firstsby Janell DeterStaff WriterSome historical firsts to ponder ...first goal scored — “Killer” KimBayard, first yellow card received —Paula “Weirdo” White, first win —against Lake Forest, first Burger KingTown visted — Chesterton, Indiana.On Friday, October 3, Chicagowomen met Emory College on StaggField. Emory women flew up fromGeorgia for the game. This was anonconference game. However, Em¬ory will be a member of the newlyformed University Athletic Associ¬ation next year along with the Mar¬oons. Chicago women lost 3-0, but thegame was evenly contested and theteam looks forward to meeting Emorynext year. Coach Napoli and team members were encouraged by theperformance against the establishedEmory team.On Sunday, October 5, the womenMaroons traveled to Ripon, Wisconsin(suce a nice town) to take on theRed(wo)men. Janell “Animal” Deterscored on a penalty kick early in thefirst half. With the score 2-1 at thehalf, Chicago women were hangingtough. But aggressive play by Riponwore out Maroon players and thegame ended at 5-1.On Tuesday, October 7, the Maroonsposted their FIRST WIN againstarchrival Lake Forest. “Able” ArzouAhsan scored with an assist going toSarah “Mighty-Toe” Geenan. Madelyn “Mad Dog” Detloff had a fantasticperformance in goal and chalked upher first shut out.Friday, October 10, Ripon traveledto face the Maroons on Stagg. Againthe score was 2-1 at the half, butChicago women lost intensity in thesecond period, dropping the game 7-2to Ripon. Kathleen “Lefty” Livelyscored in the first half on a reboundfrom a shot by Sarah Geenan. In thesecond half a mass of Maroon playersrushed the goal to score, with KimBayard picking up an assist and An-nabelle “Afterburner” MacDonaldgetting the goal.Sunday, October 12, the Maroonstook on Lawrence at Stagg for the last game of their home stand. This timethe team was sluggish in the first 45minutes, and down 5-0 at the half. Butthe Maroons played with renewedvigor in the second half, giving up nogoals.With five games left in the session,the Maroons are presently 1-4 in con¬ference play. Coach Napoli would liketo see the team finish at .500.Congrats to the three illustrious,honorable Team Captains — ArzouAhsan, Kim Bayard, and KathleenLively.(But when is the Food, Beverage,and Carbohydrate Captain going to beelected?)Ladies, eat your pasta!5254 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and UnfurnishedUtilities IncludedLaundry RoomSundeck • Secure BuildingCampus Bus At Our DoorCall 9-5 for appointment324-0200STUDIOS ^from $343HYDE PARK WEST•On-sight security•Resident manager & engineer•Heat & electricity included•Commissary & cleaners•Laundry room•Carpeting & draperies•Convenient to transportationnMISTERWEST 285-3500,Studios, 1,2 & 3 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake Vie\'sGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-2333Student Discounts9:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M.Mondav thru Fridas9:00 A.M.-2 P.M.'Saturdasr DR. MORTON R. MASLOV NOPTOMETRIST•EYE EXAMINATIONS•FASHION EYEWEAR(one year warranty on eyeglassframes and glass lenses)SPECIALIZING IN• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSES•CONTACT SUPPLIESTHIHYDCPARKSHOPPING CKNTIR13101. 55th363-6100aArTrarOpometrc AiaocMonHIT. J mW&mSmvy//////"'1 1 I i O Ti juft] \ 1 > \'t l] I j 4 T | T |1 1 4 m 4 J OH i i I I I 14ij|L|i fl r*i s16—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 14. 1986Women's tennis tries for grand exit from MACWby Silvia JovelContributing Writer1986 marks a turning point forChicago athietics. As Chicago makesthe transition from the MACW to UAAconference in 1987, the athletes makea valiant effort against their oppo¬nents in hopes that they can exit theMACW stage in victory. Every effortput out; the strains and hard breath,the exhaustion felt in their muscles, intheir throats is in preparation for to¬morrow’s strength.Perhaps nowhere is it more appar¬ ent than on the tennis courts. For theMaroons this year proves to be morechallenging. Coach Simms and histeam have embarked on their mostambitious schedule to date. Among theteams they have faced already thisfall are national Division III powersWashington U. and Principia College.But the competition doesn't stop withDivision III. The Maroons have alsobattled against Division I teams —among them, U. of Illinois-Chicago,DePaul U., and Xavier at Ohio.Chicago’s talent is apparent on theCross-country places sixthBy Will BernardContributing WriterOn Saturday, October 11, the U of CCross-Country team traveled to Mich¬igan to compete in the SouthwesternMichigan Invitational. Of the nineteams that competed in the men’sdivision, U of C was the only privateschool and the only Division III school.The remaining schools were all eitherDivision II or high-powered juniorcolleges.Despite having to compete againstmany scholarship athletes and losingtwo of their top runners, Kevin Nelsonand Mark Albers, to GRE exams, theMaroons were able to hold their own,placing sixth. Stephen Thomas was the highest placing runner on theteam, finishing 12th with a fast time of26:37. For his efforts. Thomas wasawarded a trophy and a t-shirt. Thesecond Maroon to finish was ArmandMusey, completing the course in 27:46and placing 30th. Just ten secondsbehind him was David Navarro, whoplaced 32nd. Sean Love was the fourthU of C runner to finish, running a swift28:29. Freshman Mark Sasse wasnext, running 28:56 — a fine effort forhis first college race. The sixth Mar¬oon to finish was Rich Diaz, who ran arespectable 30:27. Jerry Klein, an¬other freshman, ran 30:56 — also agood effort for a first college race — toround out the top seven. courts despite their 0-7 dual meet re¬cord. Players Sarah Khoo, DorothyIsrael, and Sonal Shah, Amy Das, andCindy Cockrel all have the physicaltalent to develop into national-calibertennis performers. Junior playersJane Bohman and Shawn Stevens alsohave the potential to play with any¬body scheduled. Stevens, althoughslowed down by an ankle injury, hasbeen a fine, consistent performer allseason. As a team, the Maroons had theirbest showing last week against con¬ference rival Lake Forest. Though theMaroons dropped the contest 5-4, theplaying was superb. Khoo plaved anoutstanding match at #1 singles only tolose 6-3, 7-5. Israel (#2) and Bohman (#4) both won their singles matches inthree sets; with Cockrel (#6) losing inthree sets. Shah, despite her loss atLake Forest, has the best individualrecord (5-3) on the team.Volleyball goes up and downby Madelyn DetloffSports EditorHead Coach Rosalie Resch was“disappointed” with the performanceof the women's volleyball team intheir loss to conference opponent Bel¬oit Tuesday night. “Beloit is a muchimproved team this year, but hadeveryone been playing their bestgame, we could have won,” statedResch. Inconsistent serve receptionand poor passing hindered the Mar¬oons’ offensive attack, allowing Beloitto rack up a 15-9. 15-5, 15-5 victory.These lapses in concentration reallyhurt the Maroons in the WashingtonUniversity Tournament the weekend before last. U of C came home fromSt. Louis with only one victory andfour losses. Resch was impressed,however, with the steady play of hitterPhyllis Williamson and back rowplayers Paige Thompson and KellyKusch. W’illiamson rammed home 19kills and had 10 solo blocks during thetournament. Thompson and Kuschhave been playing outstanding defenseall year.Friday the Maroons recorded theirthird win of the season by defeatingLawrence University 15-13. 15-13, 15-2.Saturday they hosted Midwest AthleticConference powerhouse Saint NorbertCollege and were soundly defeated 5-15, 7-15, 7-15.QUESTION »2.HOW CAN THE BUDGET-CONSCIOUSCOLLEGE STUDENT SAVE MONEY?a) Save over 50% off AT&T’s weekday rates onout-of-state calls during nights and weekends.b) Don’t buy textbooks when “Monarch Notes” will dojust fine.c) Save 40% off AT&T’s weekday rate on out-of-starecalls during evenings. APARTMENTSFOR RENTGRAFF &CHECK1617 E. 55th St.Spacious, newly-decoratedlarge studios, one bedroomapartments in quiet, well-maintained buildings close tocampus.Immediate OccupancyBU 8-5566d) Count on AT&T for exceptional value and high qualityservice.e) Hang around with the richest kids in school; let thempick up the tab whenever possible.If you’re like most college students in the western hemisphere,you try to make your money go a long way. That’s why you shouldknow that AT&T Long Distance Service is the right choice for you.sfT AT&T offers so many terrific values. For example, youcan save over o0% off AT&T’s day rate on calls duringweekends ,y until 5 pm Sunday, and from 11 pmSunday through Friday.Call between 5 pm and 11 pm.Sunday through Friday, and you’ll save 40 Uoff our day rate.Ever dial a wrong number? AT&T gives you. immediate credit if you do. And of course, you can count onAT&T for clear long distance connections any place you call.To find out more about how AT&T can help save you money,give us a call. With a little luck, you won’t have to hang aroundwiththe rich kids. Call toll-free todav, at 1 800 222-0300 ^ ,/AT&TThe right choice.1986 AT&T Wemeanbusiness.Columbia University’slocation in New York Citymakes it the ideal place forgraduate study in busi¬ness. A representativefrom Columbia BusinessSchool will visit yourcampus to speak with stu¬dents from all majors whoare interested in theM.B.A. and Ph.D. pro¬grams in Business as wellas joint degrees with Law,International Affairs,Public Health and otherdisciplines. If a graduatedegree in Business is partof your future, start plan¬ning for it now by talkingwith our representative.Contact your undergradu¬ate placement office forfurther details.Date of visit:October 21, 1986ColumbiaBusinessSchool*The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. October 14 1986—17ViewpointNew format loses diversityBy James Ginsburg andKent YeglinFor at least the past decade and a half,WHPK, the campus radio station, has beena mixed-format station presenting manydifferent styles of music. Throughout the1980’s WHPK has preserved a similarschedule which balanced the needs of thestation’s different formats in a manneracceptable to all. This is something specialin the world of college radio. Many othercampus stations’ schedules change radi¬cally every year depending on the personalmusical tastes of their current programdirectors. Unfortunately, due to manydramatic and sudden changes effected bynew program director, Patrick Moxey,WHPK is now on its way to joining theseless far-sighted stations.WHPK's jazz, presented by a superbmixture of students, former students, andmembers of the South Side community, hasfor a long time been a source of specialpride, prestige, and respect for the station.Despite the quality of its presentation,WHPK’s jazz staff has had all of its prizedpost-9pm weekday shows moved to lessdesirable times, apparently because — ashe told one station member — the newprogram director “doesn’t like jazz."Meanwhile, all but one of WHPK's rhythm-and-blues shows — the station’s mostclosely followed and most enduring pro¬grams within the South Side community —have been eliminated.Moving jazz programs and killing R&Bshows has allowed the new program direc¬tor to reserve more and better slots for hisown rock format. Whatever one may thinkof the compilation of new wave, punk, funk,club, rap. and house music which WHPKpresently includes under the rubric of itsrock format, it should be clear that whenany one format comes to control just under50% of the station's musical programmingand all but one of its coveted post-9pmweekday slots, the station's existence as amixed-format entity is in jeopardy.Perhaps of even more concern than MrMoxey’s decision to alter to an unprece¬dented extent the station's well-establishedschedule, has been his way of dealing withthe people whom his decisions affect. Forexample, the jazz format chief was notdirectly informed of the plans to move hisformat’s program times. When he finally learned of these decisions and objected tothe changes (which, in their original form,also called for the elimination of twoshows), he — a former program directorhimself — was summarily dismissed fromhis office. As of Sunday, October 5th, someof the R&B Dj’s had not yet been informedthat effective October 6th, their shows werecancelled.The pattern is clear. Mr. Moxey makesdecisions without consulting or even noti¬fying those who are directly affected by hisdecrees. Instead, people are left to find outabout tho program director’s plans them¬selves. Before the schedule described herewas finalized, the new schedule-setter alsohad plans to move or cancel some of thestation’s folk and blues programs. Fortu¬nately, some of the jazz, folk, and bluesDj’s recently got the program director tomeet with them and convinced him toabandon some of his original proposalswhich would have altered the scheduleeven more drastically than the presentplan.We are concerned about the short¬sighted. even monolithic programmingagenda Mr. Moxey seems to want to im¬pose on WHPK. Even more disturbing to usis his capricious decision-making and hisarrogant way of dealing with station per¬sonnel. We do not question that a WHPKprogram director has the authority tomake the sweeping changes Patrick Moxeyhas instituted. However, when one suchstation officer decides to exploit his powerin the insensitive and selfish way this onehas, station members also have the right topetition the WHPK governing board torecall that program director. Many con¬cerned members of WHPK are now at¬tempting to do just that.While such a move is certainly extra¬ordinary, we believe that Mr. Moxey’s lackof regard for WHPK’s tradition as a trulymixed-format station and the concern of itsnon-rock Dj’s, along with his imperiousmanner of dealing with people, mandatesthis action. We hope the WHPK governingboard will accept and seriously consideracting upon any petitions it receives con¬cerning this unfortunate situation.Mr Ginsburg is the former classicalformat chief of WHPK, Mr. Yeglin isWHPK's former rock format chief andformer station manager.<> The University of ChicagoThe HiPSS ProgrampresentsSocial Inequality as Natural Law:The First Illustrations of the Female Skeletonin 18 th Century1 Anatomy’A Lecture byUonda Schiebinger (Harvard University)Wednesday, October 15, 4:00 p.m.Franklin R<x>m, Social Science Research Building 2241120 E. 59th St.I he lecture is sponsored bv The Program in the History, Philosophy, andSocial Studies of Science and Medicine (HiPSS). Refreshments will follow.For further information call the Fishbein Center at 962-8261$ For furth18—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 14, 1986 . official student newspaper of the University ofC^if%sues^are*av^lable6bytnaii only^t^U5^for^theissue and $1.00 forThe Maroon welcomes 1e‘tt • writing, photography, or other work forstaff, and others. Anyone »;ter^ted mdoH« wn^gj* f03 and 304, 1212 E. 59ththe Maroon should stop by our 13ll,ce~oaQUryStreet, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Phone. 962-9555.Larry KavanaghEditor-inChiefSteven K. AmsterdamAnjali K. FedsonGrey City Journal EditorsMolly McClainManaging EditorKrishna RamanujanChicago Literary Review EditorElizabeth BrooksSenior .\’ews Editor Steve LauSews AnalysisGreg MantellNews EditorHoward UllmanNews EditorMona El NaggarNews EditorKaren E. AndersonViewpoints EditorMadelyn DetloffSports Editor Mike SchoopSilent Voices EditorAlex ConroyFeatures EditorLouisa WilliamsCopy EditorLarry SteinBusiness ManagerSue SkufcaAdvertising ManagerJaimie WeihrichOffice ManagerAssociate Editor: Matthew Nickerson, Melissa Weisshaus.Maroon Staff Members: Arzou Ahsan. Stephanie Bacon. Steve Best, Robert Block.Brett Boblev Michele Bonnarens. Michael Breen, Jeff Brill, Theresa Brow n LaurelBuerk Gabriela Burghelea. Carole Byrd, John Conlon, Sue Chorvat, ElizabethdeGrazia Larrv DiPaolo T.D. Edwards, Robin Einhorn, Michael Fell, MikeFitzgerald Bill Flevares. Andv Forsaith. Jennifer Fortner, Beth Green, Kate Hill,Craig Joseph Justine Kalas, Ann Keen. Stefan Kertesz, Sanjay Khare. Bruce King,Mike Kotze, Lauren Kriz, Lara Langner, Janine Lanza Marcia Lehmberg MegLiebezeit Nadine McGann. Miles Mendenhall. Steve Meralevitz, Sam D. Miller,Patrick Moxey Karin Nelson, Brian Nichiporuk, Jordan Orlando, Jean Osnos,Chelcea Park Jacob Park. Larrv Peskin, Clark Peters, Geoff Potter, LauraRebeck Paul Reubens. Rich Rinaolo, Gary Roberts, Paul Rohr, Erika Rubel. TerryRudd Mary Sajna. Sahotra Sarkar, Rick Senger, Neal Silbert, Michael Sohn, SonjaSpear Dave Stogel. Johanna Stoyva. Kathy Szdygis. Bob Travis, Stephen Tsung,Martha Vertreace. Christina Vougarelis, Ann Whitney. Rick Wojcik, ChristineWright.LetterNew formatTo the editor:As Station Manager of WHPK since lastSpring, I have worked closely with Pro¬gram Director Patrick Moxey for sometime, and I feel Mr. Ginsburg and Mr.Yeglin judge him too harshly. While Iagree that it would have been better ifPatrick had been able to consult with allthe DJ’s early in the Summer to give themmore warning that the schedule wouldchange, I do feel that Patrick has thestation and the listener’s interests at heart.For years, students have complainedthat WHPK's schedule was too confusingand haphazard. Shows were on at seem¬ingly random times. I think Mr. Ginsburgand Mr. Yeglin overreact with thier ac¬cusations against Patrick. He has workedhard to make the schedule better for all ourlisteners. All he did was re-arrange thetimes of some of the programs — that’s the needed nowProgram Director’s jobWHPK is a station which is growing byleaps and bounds. This new schedule willhelp us grow even more. Now WHPK willhave rock programming beginning at 9pmweekdays instead of 3am, and reggae onFriday as well as Saturday. Patrick hasadded a terrific new Calypso show onFridays. Jazz will be on Saturday night.Sunday night, as well as several week-nights. The R&B programs which werereplaced by Jazz did have a following oflisteners, but this was because they wereplaying primarily Top 40 music — MichaelJackson and such. There are hundreds ofstations which play that kind of music. Thepoint of college radio is to play musicwhich can’t be heard on all the otherstations.Brett BoblevStation Manager, WHPK-FMPC/AT 512K, 30Mg Hard Drive1.2Mg Drive, 8mhzPC/XT 286. 640K, 20Mg Hard Drive S27001.2Mg Floppy Drive, 6mhzIBM Monochrome Monitor w/card $380 1IBM Color Monitor w/card $650IBM Enhanced Color Monitor w/EGAcard $995Complete IBM SystemIBM PC 2DRMonochrome MonitorMonitor AdapterDOS 2.1IBM ProPrinter $1573Printer Cable.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOMICROCOMPUTER DISTRIBUTION CENTER1307 E. 60TH STREET962-6086Complete price lists are available at Usite,the Computation Center, and the Micro Distribution Center.Our hours are Mon.-Fri. 10am-4pmCome see the products and meet the vendors at the Bookstore Electronics Fair Oct IS 16 17 andregister to win an Apple Macintosh Plus. Zenith ponabli & mher gr^ pn^es! ' ’vr ... ' • •• , -CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon is$3 for the first line and $2 for each additionalline. Lines are 45 characters long INCLUDINGspaces and punctuation. Special headings are 20character lines at $4 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 305. 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.Spacious Hyde Park 2-Bedroom Condo For SaleBy Owner. Secure parking lot, washer/dryer,approx. 1,300 sq. ft. Phone 493-7554.5 Room 2 Bedroom Vicinity CO-OP ShoppingCenter Newly Painted $520.00 ASAP ADULTSNO PETS 764 5290 or 525-3373.Furnished 3rd fl room & bath with seperatecooking/eating area. $190/mo. Opportunity (notreq'd) to reduce rent by babysitting(girl, 7)and/or other chores Call 752-6587.Fully furnished two room apt. in well main¬tained bldg. $300/mo includes heat, AC andelectricity. 285-5392.For Rent 3 room basement apt furnished 56th EMaryland 684-41632-BDRM APT. AVAIL IMMED. TENANTHEAT APPL. BALCONY $525 CALL 881-1664Townhouse 4BR 2’/j bath Ig yard parking closeto shopping & campus $1150/mo call 493-0543.SPACE WANTEDHELP! A cooperative household has lost itshome. If you have information on apartmentsor houses (4-6 bdrms) for rent in Hyde-ParkKenwood, please call 684-8340. Thank you.PEOPLE WANTEDHELP WANTED. Students for the La RabidaChildren's Hospital Phonathon the evening ofNovember 10th-$4.25 p/h - call Phyllis Monjarat 363-6700 for more information.Federal, State and Civil Service jobs nowavailable in your area. For info, call (805 ) 644-9550.COOK? Faculty member wishes to hire studentto cook, twice per week Call 548-4196, 8-10pm.Retired professor with vision problems living inE. HP. Desires one or two U of C students togroc. shop, cook and freeze food weekly. Andserve Sat. 8. Sun supper and sort businesspapers and write a few letters. 955-6728 Pleasebe aware that payment may be delayed for asubstantial period of time Maroon Ad Staff.VOCALISTS, Hyde Park Union Church, 5600Woodlawn, is auditioning soloists for churchservices: tenor, alto & soprano. Please call 3636063 to set up an audition.Work at home mailing sales literature. Write:S.C. & Assoc., Box 21514, Columbus, OH. 43221.Part-Time Survey Assistant for downtownmanagement consulting firm. Must be excellenttypist w/experience working in office setting.IR, B-School, Hospital Admin. Students wouldbe ideal. Flexible hours. $7.25 hr. to start. CallEllen Bernstein, 782-5588.Substitute teachers needed: NS-HS areas:Math, Soc. St., Eng, foreign Lang Also: Music,Art, Phys Ed Laboratory Schools 1362 E 59 St962-9450. Participants needed for paid experiments onmemory and reasoning conducted by membersof the Dept of Behavioral Sciences. Call 962 8861to arrange an appointment.TRAVEL AGENCY STUDENT REPSell travel on campus, organize trips, etc. CallMaria UNIVERSITY TRAVEL 667 6900.PIANIST/REPETITEUR To work with operasinger. 2-3 hrs/week. Call 752-4559.Experienced nonsmoking BABYSITTERneeded for infant late afternoons in my home inWindemere House. Schedule can be flexible.References required. Please phone 752-6154.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES and has a memory. Phone 955-4417.ALL TYPING-Thesis, letters, Resumes, Tables,French, Spanish, deutsch. Call Elaine 667-8657.Hyde Park movers serving the Hyde ParkKenwood surrounding Chgo area with prideHousehold moving free packing cts del n/c from12/hr many other services. 493-9122PASSPORT PHOTOS AND ID PHOTOSWhile you wait!MODEL CAMERA 8. VIDEO 493 67001342 EAST 55TH STREETVIDEO TRANSFERSWe offer excellent service transferring virtuallyall video formats, including VHS, BETA, U-MATIC, 1" & 8 MM. Call for price quotesMODEL CAMERA & VIDEO 493-67001342 EAST 55TH STREETEDITING, WORD PROCESSING, TYPINGJames Bone, 363-0522 Hourly feeTyping services available. All documents. CallNina 667 5688.Childcare, my home by UC, Exp. mom w/refs,Flexible, all ages, grad wife. Dalia 493-6220.REMINDER SERVICE Do you forget appointments, classes, special occasion? I'll jogyour memory. Cal! Eve 288-3855 fcr more info.FOR SALECan you buy Jeeps, cars, 4x4's seized in drugraids for under $100.00? Call for facts today. 1-602-837-3401. Ext. S564.OWN for the cost of renting! Large, sunny 1-BRin member-managed co-op. Excellent location.$7000, seller financing available. 324-5156Historic Pullman Townhouse. 3br, central a/c,exposed brick, enclosed backyard, garage; lowtaxes; 5-20 min to Hyde Park/Loop 549,000 785-7514.79 Olds 88 "loaded". Asking $2000. 324-9533.Dodge Colt 79/51K mi, 4sp, AM/FM cassette,snrf, clean, runs well. $1850 643-0520 Fox.'80 black VW rabbit for sale good condition lowmileage AM/FM cassette $2000 call 493-6527leave a message.1M & IF 10-spd bikes VG cond $125 ea/negot.962-7123/643 2706.Typewriter for sale: Can B yours For $65.Brother Cassette Correction Electric. Verygood condition. 947-9696.Can't book 14 days in advance? I have 2 Unitedbonus tickets, good for round-trip. $350 each.Call 363-6345.25 - 75% on Entire Stack. Sat. & Sun Oct. 18 1911-5. Helena Szepe, books 1525 E. 53rd Street,suite 902. 493-4470.57th STREET BOOKCASE: Solid pine book¬cases, various sizes, like those at 57th St. Books,can be ordered by calling 363-3038.SCENESPlay the survival game! Join U.C. group inOctober trip! 251-2910 Identify yourself as U.C.student we will mail brochure with detail.815-758-4313Phones are answered: 7:30 am to 11:30 am and 1:30 pm to 11:30 pm LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES—Reception forall new and returning students and faculty withan interest In Latin America in Center for LatinAmerican Studies, Kelly 310, 4 p.m. Oct. 15.The Workshop on Feminist Theory hosts ashowing of ''Born in Flames" Wed. Oct. 15, 7:30Cobb Hall, 4th floor. New and potentialworkshop members welcomed.EMPLOYMENT WANTEDMy hsekeeper needs new employer. 1 day/wk.Honest, reliable, hardworking. Likes children &pets. Call 241-7545 after 6.Expert house or apartment cleaning. Meticulous, efficient. Excellent references from Lawand English Dept, faculty. Call Mrs. Mims, 4346973.THE MEDICI DELIVERSDaily from 4pm call 667 7394EDWARDO'SHOT STUFFEDDelivered right to your door! Edwardo's - Thesuperstars of stuffed pizza. Open late everynight. Call 241 7960 1321 E 57th St.SEEKING TREATMENTFOR ANXIETY?*****Selected volunteers will receive 6 weeks of freetreatment for anxiety at the University ofChicago Medical Center. Treatment will be treeof charge in return for participating in a 3 weekstudy to evaluate drug preference Involvesonly commonly prescribed drugs. If you arebetween 21 & 55 yrs. old and in good health, callKaren at 962 3560 8 30 to 1130 a m. Refer tostudy A.SUBJECTS NEEDEDHow do your biorhythms match your partner's?Couples needed for a study of biorhythms at theU.C. If you and your partner have been livingtogether for at least 1 year, have no children,are over 20 years old, and would like to vol¬unteer tor a month long study, call 753-3872 andleave your name and number"MEN WANTED"Men With Proven Fertility Needed for SemenDonation. Reimbursement $125.00, Please Callin Confidence to Ron, Monday, Wednesday andFriday Mornings Only - 962-6640AV SERVICESQuick convenient, and inexpensive. Passportphotos while you wait. Same day ektachromedevelopment Many other services as well. Formore information call 962-6263 or stop by S-30 inthe basement ot Billings.LATIN MASSSt Thomas Aquinas Society sponsors novusordo (Vatican II). Latin Mass every Sat. 11 amSt Thomas Church, side chapel, 55th 8. Kim-bark. Everyone is welcome.GAY? LESBIAN?GALA has a discussion every Tues at 9pm at5615 S Woodlawn. Also Coming Out Group at 8and Social Hour at 10. Warm, friendly And allare welcome.BABYSITTER WANTEDStu spouse for infant, my home, T, W, Th, 8:30-2:30, for academic year, 752 3449WE'RE YOUR TYPEWord processing. Service includes ResumesTerm paper, charts, etc. Document retentionavailable Please call 667 5170 for more infoINQUIRING MINDSINQUIRY, THE Journal of essays and paperswritten by students in the College, is nowaccepting papers of general interest from allfields for its Aut. '86 Please submit papers toINQUIRY, Ida Noyes cloakroom by Oct. 24 Formore information, call Sam at 947-0747 x 471 orGlen at 955 6647JEWISH MEDICAL ETHICSClass begins tonight at 8.00 PM at Hillel House5715 S Woodlawn Rabbi Teacher Rabbi Daniel I.Leifer.MembershipSecretaryDO YOU HAVE the background and theinterpersonal skills for heavy public contact0Do you have the experience to assume respon¬sibility for membership registration, recordkeeping, data entry, and various secretarialduties? (Knowledge of Hyde Park KenwoodJewish community preferred)IF THIS SOUNDS LIKE THE JOB JUSTFOR YOU, send resume and references,complete with phone numbers, to: Hyde ParkJCC. 1100 E Hyde Park Blvd.. Chicago60615 (NO phone calls, please)e.o.e. Help bringthe worldtogether.Host anexchangestudentInternational YouthExchange, a PresidentialInitiative for peace, bringsteenagers from other coun¬tries to live for a time withAmerican families and at¬tend American schools.Learn about participatingas a volunteer host family.Write: YOUTH EXCHANGEPueblo, Colorado 8100955! The International Youth ExchangePrints andSlidesfrom thesame rollKodak MP film... EastmanKodak’s professional colormotion picture (MP) filmnow adapted for still use in35 mm cameras by SeattleFilmWorks. Its micro-finegrain and nch color satura¬tion meet the exaenngstandards of the movieindustry. Shoot in low orbnght light from 200 ASAup to 1200 ASA. Get pnntsor slides, or both, from thesame roll. Enjoy the verylatest in photographictechnology with substantialsavings.INTRODUCTORYOFFER□ Rush me two 20-exposurerolls of your leading KODAKMP film-Kodak 5247* (200ASA). Enclosed is $2.00. I'dlike to be able to get colorprints or slides (or both) fromthe same roll and experiencethe remarkable versanlity ofthis professional quality film.NAMEADDRESSCITYSTATE ZIPUnul 2 rolt per ouvtomerKodak 5247 o a regiatered trademark of theEastman Kodak CompanyThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 14. 1986—19UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOMICROCOMPUTER DISTRIBUTION CENTER1307 E. 60TH STREET962-6086Hardware & SoftwareAT&T6300 2 Floppy Drives, 640KMonochrome Monitor, Dos 3.1 $ 19256300 1 DR, 20MG Hard Drive, 640KMonochrome Monitor. Dos 3.1 $2270PLUS 1 DR, 20MG Hard Drive, 1MbMonochrome Monitor, Dos 3.1 $3245Hewlett-PackardLaserJet Printer $2000LaserJet Plus Printer $2675Vectra PC Model 45640K, 1.2Mg Drive $2175IBMPC/AT 512K, 30Mg Hard Drive1.2Mg Drive, 8mhz $3685PC/XT 286, 640K, 20Mg Hard Drive1.2Mg Floppy Drive, 6mhz $2700Convertible PC. 256K2 3.5” Drives $1360ZenithZ148, 512h, 2 DrivesSerial & Parallel, color adaptor1220A or 1230A composite monitor $ 1080Z158, 256K, 20Mg Hard Drive360K Floppy Drive $1510171 Portable, 256K, 2 DrivesSerial and Parallel parts $ 1080 LOTUS 123 $219LOTUS REPORT WRITER $67WORDPERFECT 4.1 $135Student WordPerfect $75Network WordPerfect also availableMICROSOFT WORD $85MICROSOFT Windows $55MICROSOFT Fortran $195Flight Simulator $35U.S. Robotics 1200 BaudModem w/cable $210U.S. Robotics 2400 BaudModem w/cable $375MINITAB $45See other display ads in this issue of the Maroon foradditional product and price information on theabove vendors and Apple computer.Use Your U of C Advantage!Micro Distribution Center1307 E. 60th Street962-0686 For a complete pricelist call 962-6086University departments and full-time faculty, staff, and students onlyCome see the products and meet the vendors at the Bookstore Electronics Fair, Oct. 15. 16. 17 andregister to win an Apple Macintosh Plus, Zenith portable, & other great prizes!