— - ■■ T,- ■"The drawings thrust him(the viewer) into a differentplane, and any sense ofmspace is destroyed."INSIDE:44 Aims of Educationaddresspage six Oriental\ Institute&excavationpage 18 : > V: Silent Voicespage 11The Chicago MaroonVolume 98, No. 14 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1986 Tuesday, October 21,1986Committee to study complaints about SecurityBy Mona ElNaggarNews EditorPresident Hanna Gray isforming a seven-membercommittee to evaluate com¬plaints concerning the Uni¬versity’s Security Depart¬ment.The two students who willserve on the panel have notyet been chosen by PresidentGray; however, three facultymembers and two adminis¬trators will serve on thecommittee. Geoffrey Stone,the Harry Kalven, Jr., Pro¬fessor in the Law School, willchair the committee, which will also include AssociateProfessor James Bruce(Germanic Literature andLanguages), MargaretRosenheim (Helen RoseProfessor in the School ofSocial Service Administra¬tion), Susan Sher (AssociateGeneral Counsel), and Deb¬orah Summers (AssistantDean of Students in the Uni¬versity ).According to JonathanKleinbard. vice-president ofUniversity News and Com¬munity Affairs, the com¬mittee was formed as anoutcome of talks betweenmembers of the BlackContra forum ends inBy Nelson SchwartzStaff WriterA forum featuring twoContra representatives wasdisrupted Thursday night asmembers of the CommitteeAssembled to Unite in Solid¬arity with the people of ElSalvador (CAUSE) sought toaddress questions to therepresentatives as the dis¬cussion was called off.The meeting, sponsored byCommon Sense, an organi¬zation of conservative stu¬dents at the U of C, featuredJorge Rosales, a representa¬tive of the NicaraguanDemocratic Force, a guer¬rilla group currently fightingthe Soviet-backed regime inNicaragua, and Maria Gon¬zalez, the director of pro¬grams and Central Americaproject director of the Na¬tional Center for Public Pol¬icy Research. Gonzalez is asupporter of the Contracause.The disruption occurredwhen members of CAUSEsought to question thespeakers as the moderatorwas ending the meeting. Ac¬ cording to CAUSE memberJohn Conlon, members of thegroup did not expect theforum to end so suddenly.The meeting ended after onlyforty minutes because thetwo representatives had aspeaking engagement atNorthwestern the samenight.“Chaos” was how Conlondescribed what happened asCAUSE members beganscreaming at the two speak¬ers. They were attempting toquestion the representativesabout an illicit poster thatseemed to announce aCAUSE-sponsored forum onContra atrocities in Nic¬aragua. Neither CAUSE norCommon Sense claimed toknow who put up the posters.One member of CAUSEquestioned the speaker’scredibility for allegedly ac-cepting money fromCommon Sense but claimingnot to be affiliated with thegroup. She went on to accusethe group of “spewing outlies.” According to Conlon.CAUSE members felt that“the discussion was beingended as it was heating up.” Graduate Forum (BGF) andthe Organization of Blackstudents (OBS) along withVice-President Caldwell,president Gray, and othermembers of the administra¬tion. “President Gray cameup with this committee toevaluate complaints(concerning Black harass¬ment),” Kleinbard ex¬plained.Stone saw the goals of hiscommittee as “first, at¬tempting to familiarize our¬selves with the way in whichsecurity operates, to seewhether it is appropriate.Secondly, whenever there is"chaos"Unlike the Common Sensemeeting of the week beforefeaturing a representative ofthe Angolan rebels, at leasttwo thirds of the forty or sopeople who turned outThursday were hostile to theContra position. Although afew snickers were heard, thecrowd was relatively politeuntil the meeting ended inscreaming.The meeting began withGonzalez describing whyNicaragua is strategicallyimportant to the US. Shewent on to describe anumber of Sandinista actionsincluding permitting theSoviet Union to build a sub¬marine base, the taking overof the nation’s radio andcontinued on page five a complaint, to see whetherit is followed up appropri¬ately.. We need to determinewhether the complaint iswarranted, and if so,whether appropriate actionis being taken, if it is notwarranted, well that needs tobe determined, too.”Indeed, determiningwhether complaints of blackharassment are “war¬ranted” seems to be the ma¬jor hurdle for the committee.“If it were a clear cut case,we could nip it in the bud in aminute. But it's not clear cut.We are dealing with a grayarea that makes it very dif¬ficult,” said Summers.Summers feels that one ofthe most important issues ofUniversity Security thatneeds to be addressed ispublic relations. For exam¬ple, when a black student ismistakenly thought to be asuspect that the police arelooking for and is subsequ¬ently stopped by security,“do we owe that person anapology?” Summers asked.“We have men and womenoperating as professional lawenforcement officers. Theirlives are literally on the linedaily. In the line of duty, wealso have a population that isbeing frequently stopped.The question is, ‘How caneach population be given itsdue respect?’ ”Despite the formation ofthe committee, TukufuZuberi, chairman of BGFdoes not see an immediate solution to the problems hisgroup is fighting against.“What we see as a problemis the posture of the admin¬istration. University Securityis just a supreme example.”he said. “We've noted a veryprejudicial attitude, and wehave yet to resolve it be¬cause they (administrators)have yet to realize that theproblem exists.”According to Summers, theadministration had no ideathat black harassment wasan issue at all until a rally inMay of 1984 at which thesesentiments were expressed.At that point, she explained,the University “took the in¬itiative to set up talks" withthe leaders of BGF and OBS.which consequently led to theformation of this committee.Agreeing with Summers onthe lack of awareness ofcontinued on page fiveFuture of Public Policy uncertainBy Howard UllmanNews EditorThe Administration is nowconsidering a report on thefuture of the Committee onPublic Policy Studies(CPPS), which recommendseither the establishment of aschool of public policy or thedissolution of the Committee.The five member com¬mittee that issued the reportwas split on the two options.Although the committeewarmly praised the CPPSstudents and faculty, twomembers opposed to theforming of a school wereconcerned about the staffingof core courses toward theMaster's degree and a rela¬tive rapid turnover in lead¬ershipThe two year M.A. pro¬gram had 83 students enrol¬led last spring, considered alarge number. ‘‘There hasbeen one problem which hasbeen real, that it’s been hardwithout a faculty with sub-stancial obligations to theCommittee program to or¬ganize all the required corecourses within the PublicPolicy curriculum,” admit¬ted CPPS Chairman RussellHardin. Addressing the leadershipissue, Hardin said “The firsttwo (committee chairmen)both left for very good per¬sonal reasons.” “It is un¬derstandable that there wasa rapid turnover; this is notevidence of anything wrongwith the program, but evi¬dence of opportunities theleaders had,” he added.Both the evaluation com¬mittee and Hardin felt that ifthe University decides tocreate a school of public pol¬icy, the school should aim tocompete with Harvard’sKennedy School and Prin¬ceton's Wilson School. “Isuspect that the recognition(for the Chicago school)would be different - the pro¬gram would be distinctivelya Chicago program,” saidHardin. “But, yes, that's theleague it should be in.”The formation of a schoolof public policy would firsthave to be approved by theCouncil of the Senate, a bodyof forty faculty members,and then would have to beapproved by the Board ofTrustees. Hardin speculatedthat, if approved, a schoolcould be created by the end of the 1987 academic year.The evaluation of CPPSwas initiated by Hardinhimself when he becamechairman almost three yearsago. Hardin asked PresidentHanna Gray to consider thecreation of a school of publicpolicy because at that timethere were two junior faculty-members who were going tocome up for tenure and “thatmeant that the committeestatus had to be reconsideredso that these people couldplausibly get tenure,” saidHardin.Founded in 1976, the CPPSoriginally offered an M.A.degree program in PublicPolicy Studies. It now hasthe original M.A. program, atwo year M.A. program, anda PhD. program. MostCPPS graduates take jobs ingovernment. “Federal gov¬ernment is probably thebiggest single employer, butmany also go to major re¬gional, city, and state gov¬ernments. A fair number gointo private enterprise orbanks. A smaller number gointo private not-for-profitorganizations; interestgroups and so forth,” saidHardin.Model of the 11-meter “Two-Shooter” telescope beingdeveloped by a team from the University of Arizona, theUniversity of Chicago, and the Ohio State University., Hanna GrayHomecoming activities to begin FridayBy Diana BigelowContributing WriterHomecoming weekend, which willbe held Friday and Saturday the 24thand 25th, will feature Maroon footballversus Lake Forest College and anumber of other related activitiessponsored by the College Student As¬sembly (CSA).One major event CSA is planning isIda Royale, or “Casino night,” whichwas attended by over 1,000 studentslast year. CSA director Sue Wrobelhopes that Casino night and the otheractivities planned will “get peoplehyped up” about Homecoming ingeneral.Festivities will kick off Friday eve¬ning with a pep rally on the field northof Bartlett Gym. This will include abonfire at 8 p.m. (taffy apples will bedistributed) and a 20 minute fireworksdisplay at 8:30.Ida Royale will commence at 9 p.m.Villas to speakBy Jon QuinlanContributing WriterThe Center for Latin AmericanStudies has announced that Carlos M.Vilas, research coordinator of theNicaraguan government's Center forResearch and Documentation on theAtlantic Coast, will be on campus tospeak October 29.The lecture, which will take place inSocial Studies 224 at 1 p.m., will con¬cern the Nicaraguan economy andNicaraguan’s Miskito Indian minority.Government policies concerning theMiskitos is a sensitive subject to theSandinistas because the Contras andtheir supporters have charged thegovernment with abuse and even ex¬termination of this minority.Vilas is an Argentinian social scien¬tist who has headed UNESCO spon¬sored projects and is currently func¬tioning as an advisor to the Sandinista There is a $3.00 admission for whichyou’ll receive 300 “Hanna dollars” —then try your luck at Black Jack,poker, craps, roulette and Lucky 6.There will be a Cabaret night clubwhich will offer free food and drinks,and entertainment provided by thehighly acclaimed Rich Juliano JazzQuartet and by Avant Garfield, animprovisational troupe well known toJimmy’s patrons.When the gambling concludes at 12a.m. there will be an auction at whichstudents can use their winnings eitherto bid on large prizes — gift cer¬tificates, games, artwork, etc. — or tobuy smaller ones, such as puzzles,small games, and stuffed animals.The prizes have been donated by var¬ious Hyde Park and downtown es¬tablishments, and proceeds, whichlast year amounted to $2,100, will onceagain be donated to the Ronald Mc¬Donald House on Drexel Avenue.on Nicaraguagovernment on the Miskito Indians ofNicaragua's Atlantic coast. His mostrecent work on Nicaragua is TheSandinista Revolution: National Lib¬eration and Social Transformation inCentral America. Vilas is in thiscountry to attend the Latin AmericanStudies Conference in Boston.The Center for Latin AmericanStudies is the focus for Latin Ameri¬can events, academics, and grantmoney on campus. Among the eventsit sponsors is a program that bringsacademics from this region to work atthe University for a limited time, andperiodic speakers such as Vilas.On October 22, the Center willsponsor a lecture by Chilean econo¬mist Sergio Bitar at 1:30 p.m. in Clas¬sics 10. Bitar was Minister of Miningunder the Marxist Allende govern¬ment and was later jailed and exiledafter the pro-U.S. Pinochet militarygroup. Activities begin on Saturday at 12:30when coffee and donuts will be servedat a pre-game “tailgate brunch.Then, at 1:30, the Maroons will take onLake Forest College (LFC). At lastyear’s homecoming, Chicago defeatedRipon 21-14 before an enthusiasticcrowd of 2,000. Although the Maroonshave not defeated LFC since 1976, lastyear’s score was a reasonable 27-14.Coach Mick Ewing encouraged students to “get some fresh air, get out ofthe Reg” and come support the team.Following the game, the Under¬graduate Order of the men s varsityclub will serve pizza and soda atBartlett field for alumni, parents, andstudents at minimal cost. Saturday evening caps off Home¬coming weekend with a dance/partyat Bartlett Gym. The CSA and theMajor Activities Board (MAB) are co¬sponsoring the event which includesfive different acts. MAB member StelValavanis described the entertain¬ment as “house music,” a “danc-eable” combination of synthesizers,drums, keyboards and vocals. Theprimary attraction is J.M. Silk, andthere are three other bands — JaimePrinciple, Fingers, Inc., and Farm-boy. The breaks between acts will becovered by d.j. Frankie Knuckles.CSA’s Wrobel said that both the musicand the visuals should be “reallvgood!”U of C releases new numberBy Tammy CummingsContributing WriterAs announced this summer, theUniversity will change its Direct In¬ward Dial (DID) telephone exchangefrom 962 to 702.According to Patricia Todus, direc-tor of the Office of Tele-communications, there are manyreasons for the proposed change,which will go into effect January 1.However, the main cause of the tran¬sition is a shortage of 962 numbers.When the IBX system was first in¬stalled in 1981, Illinois Bell was unableto provide the DID service from thelocal, less sophisticated office whichserves the Univesity.Thus, Telecommunications turned toa nearby, remote Illinois Bell branchand were granted use of about one-halfof the 10.000 available 962 numbers.Recently, however, as commu¬nications activity increased, an un¬expected shortage of 962 numbers a-rose, resulting in the need for a new-exchange number.Furthermore, as a result of negotia¬tions between Telecommunications and Illinois Bell, the last four digits ofthe previous 962 numbers will remainthe same.Todus went on to describe othersteps implemented in making thephone system change less traumaticto dialers. “As a reminder, we will doa lot of publicizing about the change inpublications both on and off campus.Also, the Office of Tele-communications will give free post¬cards to phone users to notify theirfriends and associates of the numberchange.”A final aid in a smooth transition isthe installation of an intercept mes¬sage system. Beginning with the ac¬tivation of the new exchange on Jan¬uary 1 and continuing through Febru¬ary, if the 962 exchange is dialed, thecall will be automatically transferredto the proper 702 exchange.Then, as of March 1, once the 962number is dialed, a ten second inter¬cept message recording will be playedand the caller will be reminded of thechange in the first two numbers. Cal¬lers will then have the option of redi¬aling or speaking to a Universityoperator.Mosionusic* nusicTHE DEPARTMENT OF MUSICpresents:Thursday, October 23 - Noontime Concert Series12:15 p.m. Goodspeed Recital HallSolo Vocal Recital by members of the UniversityChoruses.Mike Kotze. Tambra Black, Heather Jessen,Jon Hall, Ray Cullom, and Ruth Lidecka.Admission free.Friday, October 24 -1 Solisti Italiani8:00 p.m., Mandel HallVivaldi: Sinfoma da “Bajazet” for strings and continuo,RV 703;Mozart: Divertimento in F, K.138; Rossini:Sonata No. 3 for strings in C: Mendelssohn:Octet for Strings, Op.20.$12 (UC students, $7) Tickets and information aboutthe entire Chamber Music Series available at theConcert Office, Goodspeed Hall 310; 962-8068.UPCOMING CONCERTSThursday, October 30 - Les Arts Florissants8:00 p.m., Mandell HallWilliam Christie, director.First concert of the Early Music Festival.16th and 17th century French choral anddramatic works by Guillaume de Bouzignac,Etienne Moulime, Marc-Antoine Charpentierand Michel Lambert.$12 (UC students, $7) - available at the RC Box Office;962-7300.Tickets for the entire Festival available atthe Department of Music Concert Office;Goodspeed Hall 310; 962-8068.Friday, October 31 - UNIVERSITY SYMPHONYORCHESTRA: HALLOWEEN CONCERTFamily Concert - 8:00 p.m.; University Concert - 9:30 p.m.Both performances in Mandel Hall.Saint-Saens: Danse Macabre, Op. 40; Liszt; Toten-tanz: Paraphrase of Dies Irae (AbrahamStokman, piano); Liszt: Mephisto Waltz No. 1:Dance in the Village Inn.Donations requested: $2 - Costumes encouraged. WHAT IS A BI DDY?♦/ hr Right 14 ordst Al the Bight Tim*-1Hr kn<>u « u fry jokrt. can rmlr(hr Mart,rue linear for the /V»V\rn )orh )unk~» and ,*ea%umnUimanage* goad advice Hat •ametimmuord* aren't net rssary and hr(renerositv\otnnh u ould ftrohuhly a ant it.hr reall\ imulti gn r you thr urroff kn tank♦A Helping HandW hen he\ around, km don I hare tolouh for volunteer*♦—ResponsibilityEveryone has an idea of what theideal buddy, or friend, would bejike But it actually boils down tojust one thing — taking respon¬sibility for each other. That’s realfriendship. Please think about itthe next time you and yourfriends are in a drinking situa¬tion. Even when you are having agood time, you have the obliga¬tion to be responsible for yourown behavior, so that you don’tendanger or embarrass others.And you have the responsibilityto look out for your friends.It means not getting behind thewheel when you’ve had too muchto drink. Instead, - ♦1 (ritod Listener♦Strengthl‘u*hed to thr y oil tw might nothack him in the collrgr ftuh armumthnft tournament Hut in udifficult «. tarn turn ,t\ nor to hnoyhe II fitt to the mat for \uucall a friend for assistance in get¬ting home. And it means not let¬ting your friends drive whenthey’ve had too much of a goodtime.During the next few weeks,Anheuser-Busch will be in¬troducing a new program on yourcampus called the Buddy SystemWe will be talking about usingthe telephone when you are fac¬ed with a potential drunk drivingsituation And we will be givingyou other suggestions on how tohold parties in a safe, responsibleway We urge you to make theBuddy System a part of yoursocial life After all, what good isa party without your friends’ hometownDistributing CoJnc4841 So. CaliforniaChicago, II,. «Wi:t2 3l2/tt5U-'J200A Program ForResponsible Drinkins FromAnheuser-Busch2—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday Ortoh^r ?i iqrkCOME TO A BIRTHDAY PARTYWHERE YOU GET THE PRESENTSMark this Saturday on your calendar. ‘Cause Feasts,Mr. G’s gourmet deli, is having a first birthday bash.From 10:00 a.m. ’til 4:00 p.m., you’ll get to taste freesamples of our luscious dishes. Imagine. Spinach Quiche. ShrimpEgg Rolls. Even Sesame Chicken.At noon, you’ll get to watch a free cooking demonstration.Wendy Gerick, Hyde Park caterer and gourmet cook, will beteaching her “Deli-Licious Cuisine’.’ She’ll show you how to makescrumptious meals in minutes using foods from Feasts Deli asthe “secret” ingredient in her recipes. At 2:00 p.m.. Studs Terkel is scheduled to appear.Mr. Terkel, the Pulitzer Prize winning author and WFMT pro¬gram host, will be our special guest.And you'll have a chance to win prizes, too. You couldwin a $50.00 Mr. G’s food certificate. Or a wholeVegetable Lasagna worth $25.00.And more.So come to Feasts first birthdayparty. Only at Mr. G’s. Where you don’t # wG’sbring the presents. You get them. ' >^^Gourmet Deli.Mr. G’s 53rd & KimbarkTho Chicago Maroon—Tuosrlav rvtnKor 21. iq»g 2CAUSE to demonstrate beliefs in public rallyBy Neil RifkindContributing WriterA “march and rally for peace, jobs,and justice” will be held in ten citiesnationwide, including Chicago, Satur¬day, October 25th. A coalition of overninety groups will participate in theChicago march to “Stop the U. S. warin Central America and end inter¬vention in the Middle East; cut all tieswith South Africa and end racism athome; redirect resources from themilitary to meet human needs anddefend human rights; and abolish allnuclear weapons and nuclear power.”The protesters will meet at LakeShore Park at 11:00 am and march toFederal Plaza where the rally beginsat 1:00 pm. CAUSE, a University ofChicago student organization, hasbeen instrumental in the planning ofthe October 25th march and willcharter buses to Lake Shore Parkleaving from Ida Noyes at 10:30 am.Bus fare is $2.00 and tickets should be purchased in advance at tables inReynolds Club.CAUSE, the Committee Assembledin Unity and Solidarity with El Sal¬vador, was formed in 1981 as “a re¬sponse to U.S. aid to a governmentcommiting manifest atrocities againstits own people,” said Hugh Wilson, anundergraduate and founding member.Wilson cited the “rape, torture, andmurder of four North American nuns”and “murder of Archbishop OscarRomero” as examples of the atrocitiesthat prompted the formation ofCAUSE. The group is made up ofundergraduates, graduate students.Law School students and some facultymembers. CAUSE has no hierarchicalstructure and members take turnschairing the weekly planning meet¬ings.Over the past five years CAUSE hassponsored films, forums, slideshows,lectures, and debates on campus andin an attempt to educate people aboutCobb coffee shop re-opensBy Jennings B. WilsonContributing WriterCobb coffee shop plans to open onMonday, October 21. after undergoingrenovation and modernization. It willopen under new management with asubstantially different menu from lastyear.The coffee shop, in the northern endof the basement of Cobb Hall, had tobe renovated in order to meet cityhealth regulations. The main additionwas a triple-basin sink required forsanitary purposes, along with manyother more minor adjustments.Many changes were also made toimprove the shop for workers. A newfloor was laid down and track lightingwas installed above the counter. Amicrowave oven, two toasters, a self-serve beverage cooler, and a red-and-gray counter were also installed. Thetotal cost of renovation was $50,000. The Office of the Dean of the Collegeis running Cobb and Weiss coffeeshops this year. Brence Culp, a stu¬dent at the U of C, is taking the yearoff from academics to manage bothcoffee shops. Last year, the StudentActivities Office ran Cobb but decidedthat the task was not consistent withits other involvements.Culp plans to try to change theappearance of the shop. Artists will beinvited to display their woflt on thewalls. According* to Katherine Kar-vunis. Assistant to the Dean of theCollege, last year the shop could bedescribed as “dirty” and “grimy.”Art Durham, an employee of MediaElectric, one of the private contract¬ors for the renovation, said he neverwent there because he “didn’t like thelooks of the place.”The coffee shop will be looking forwork/study students to fill variouspositions. human rights issues in Central Amer¬ica and the rest of the world. One oftheir first events was a “Symposiumon Human Rights and Social Justice.”Among the speakers was then Con¬gressman Harold Washington whoaddressed the issue of apartheid inSouth Africa. CAUSE sent Congress apetition with 2,500 signatures againstaid to the contras.Since then CAUSE has sponsoredsuch films as El Salvador, anotherVietnam ?, Hearts and Minds, Seeds ofLiberty, Attack on the Americas (withJean Kirkpatrick), and Americans inTransition (with Ed Asner). CAUSEhas sponsored debates on Cuba andU.S. intervention in Grenada, as wellas a variety of speakers ranging fromLatin American specialists to thosewho can give eyewitness accounts.The emphasis on educa tional eventsis based on a belief “that if peoplereally knew what is happening, theywould not support it,” said KatherineBowie, a graduate student in anthro¬pology, who did her field work inThailand and member of CAUSE since1983. John Conlon, a graduate studentand one of the group s oldest mem¬bers, added, “We are always fightingagainst the illusion of free speech —it’s some academic abstraction thatdoesn’t translate into something real in the ability to reach people.’’Wilson, speaking of the nationalmovement against U.S. intervention inCentral America, said that “if you usethe analogy of the antiwar movement,we’ve already had an effect. We haveinhibited the administration in its ob¬vious desire to invade Nicaragua, butthe administration, in defiance ofpublic opinion, has given the $100 mil¬lion in aid, which is a De Facto decla¬ration of war. It is De Facto and notDe Jure because there is no popularsupport, because people know toomuch.”The first demand of the coalition, anend to the U.S. “war” in CentralAmerica would seem reason enoughfor members of CAUSE to march, butthe group has a broader interest. In¬dividual members are active in pro¬testing human righs violations, rep¬ression of civil liberties, U.S. inter¬vention, and the buildup of a nucleararsenal. In addition CAUSE carries itsmessage to community churches inHyde Park and Chicago’s south sideby showing films and answering ques¬tions. CAUSE is a member of theCoalition for Divestment and a co¬sponsor of a seven hour “vigil againstracism and apartheid” this Wednes¬day beginning at 6:00 pm on the stepsof the Regenstein Library.Deli celebrates with samplesOn Saturday, October 25, “Feasts,”the gourmet deli at Mr. G's FinerFoods at 53rd Street in Hyde Park,will be one year old. To celebrate,from 10:00 a.m. ’til 4:00 p.m., Mr. G’swill be giving away free samples ofthe deli’s luscious dishes includingSpinach Quiche. Shrimp Egg Rolls andSesame Chicken. At noon, there’ll be afree cooking demonstration. WendyGerick. Hyde Park caterer andgourmet cook, will be teaching her“Deli-Licious Cuisine.” Ms. Gerickwill show how to make impressively delicious meals in minutes using foodsfrom Feasts deli as the “secret” in¬gredient in her recipes. At 2:00 p.m.,Studs Terkel is scheduled to appear.Mr. Terkel, the Pulitzer Prize winningauthor and WFMT program host, willbe Mr. G’s special guest. There will bechances to win prizes and more“Come for the food, the fun, or to meetStuds,” says Bill Gerstein, the Mr. Gof Mr. G’s Finer Foods. “It’ll probablybe the best time you’ve ever had in adeli.”8:00-8:30 Bonfire- Bartlett Gym Field•cheerleaders•caramel apples•spirit8:50 Fireworks Displaycorner of 56th and Ellis12:00 Ida Royale•full scale gambling casino•cabaret with free refreshments•live music and entertainment•redeem script money forprizes at auction•profits to benefit localRonald McDonald house•s300 entrance fee for 300Hanna dollars8:30ft 9:00MamhomecomingWeekend®cto6er 2E25• Spon sored by CSA • r4—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21,1986 Su<SL 12:30-1:30 Pre-game Tailgate Party•free refreshments•get psyched before the game1:()()-? Homecoming Football Gannvs. Lake Forest *Stagg Field9:00-1:00 MAB Dance•82so with ITCH)Contra forumcontinued from page oneof the nation’s radio and televisionstations, and the recent shutting downof the nation’s only independentnewspaper. La Prensa. She describedthe current Nicaraguan regime as the“vanguard of the Marxist-Leninistmovement” and described Nicaraguatoday as a “totalitarian Marxist-Leninist state.”After Gonzalez spoke, Rosalesbegan to speak on why “the Nic¬araguan people are fighting.” Ac¬cording to Rosales, the group thatoverthrew dictator Anastasio Somozain 1979 and took power was formed by“different sectors in Nicaraguansociety.” He then claimed that withthe aid of 300 Cuban advisers theMarxist segment of the group tookpower.Rosales stated that “the propagandasays that we (America) forced theSandinistas to crack down.” But heclaimed that the Sandinistas began tocrack down even before Americabegan to aid the Contras. He allegedthat they forced out the Jewish pop¬ulation, arrested leaders of free en¬terprise such as the head of thechamber of commerce, and carried ona campaign against the Miskito In¬dians, driving many of them into exile.He also claimed that the Contrashave the support of the people ofNicaragua, he said that in spite of thecut off of U.S. aid in 1984 the number of Contra troops grew from 7,000 to20,000 in the last two years. He alsosaid that peasants in the area wherethe Contras operate give them logist¬ical support and information. In clos¬ing, he claimed that the Contras are“fighting against a government thatbetrayed the Nicaraguan Revolution”Complaintscontinued from page oneadministrators and University Secur¬ity officials, Mark Graham, Directorof University Security, explained,“What we became aware of are suchthings as have been printed in theMaroon — oftentimes by just readingabout them in the Maroon.”Graham, however, saw “no prob¬lems” with the present channels ofcommunication. Under the presentsystem, those who have complaintsabout University Security can addressthem to the Ombudsman, to the Deanof Students, to University News andCommunity Affairs, or directly to Se¬curity.The problem he felt existed was inthe vagueness of complaints they didreceive. “My understanding was thatthe complaints were never specificenough for us to investigate. They and that “the Nicaraguan people arefighting for freedom and democracy.”Rosales was an opponent of Somozaand founded a student group dedicatedto his overthrow. After the revolutionhe turned against the Sandinistas. Heleft the country in 1979.One member of CAUSE, Argenwere very general and very vague,”Graham saidZuberi. however, said that his groupmade their complaints “very clear.”Such complaints include “situationswhere students were walking acrosscampus and were asked to stop simplybecause they didn't ‘look- right. Peo¬ple have been stopped in the libraryby members of University Securityand asked to produce ID.” Zuberisaid.In reference to the vagueness of theissue. Stone emphasized that he hopeshis committee will be able to help“eliminate harassment or the per¬ception of harassment if there's notreally harassment. It's probably alittle of both.”Zuberi, who stressed that “we(BGF) were not asked for any input in Cuneratne, questioned Rosales as towhy rebels in El Salvador were able tohold territory while those in Nic¬aragua have not. Rosales respondedby saying that the Sandinista Armyhas the military capability to drive outthe Contras from any land they oc¬cupy.the formation of the committee,” saysthat he is angered by such suggestionsthat there is merely a perception ofharassment./‘I think Mr. Caldwell'sposition in part has been that we(black students) should be asked toexpect it (harassment) be causecrimes in this area are mostly com¬mitted by black people. My responsi¬bility is to confront it, not accept it.”Zuberi emphasized.Although the committee will besuggesting policy, and not forming orexecuting it, Kleinbard and Stoneagree that it could have a lot of poten¬tial if students utilize it. "If anybodyhas a complaint, they should contactme or any other person on the com¬mittee. Even if they’re not personallyinterested in pursuing it, it’s im¬portant that we know about it,” Stoneexplained.I jobopenings "II WANTED GRADUATE STUDENTS. OR OLDER jADULTS WITH PREVIOUS WORKI EXPERIENCE IN NON-SCHOOL |j SETTINGS FOR A FUNDED PROJECT jj PART - OR FULL-TIME POSITIONS OPEN ji • ASSISTANT SEMINAR COORDINATOR jf • PUBLIC RELATIONS ASSISTANT{ • TYPIST. GENERAL OFFICE {| • PROPOSAL WRITER j? • REPORT WRITER ASSISTANTI • OFFICE ASSISTANT TO ORGANIZE AN OFFICE I! DOWNTOWN OFFICE. PHONEJ82-8%7 J! MUSICIANS1 The long awaited end to the im- i[penetrable silence. "THE GROOVE!" j!j - The first attempt at collecting the ]|very finest of University of Chicago i| musical talent. Wanted: Bass. Piano/ \i| Synth. Drums Latin Percussion, (jJi Horns, and Voices.!' If you want to “Get Into the Groove” jCall Jeff 288-4314{\ for audition information KStudios, 1,2 & 3 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-2333Student Discounts9:00 A M.-4:30 P.M.Monda* thru Frida*9.00 A.M.-2 P.M ‘Saturda*' STUDIOS vfrom $343HYDE PARK WEST•On-sight security•Resident manager & engineer•Heat & electricity included•Commissary & cleaners•Laundry room•Carpeting & draperies•Convenient to transportation^MISTER WEST 285-3500/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-statecalls during evenings.d) 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.AT&T olferssomany terrific values. For example, youcan save over 50% off AT&T’s day rate on calls duringy weekends V until 5 pm Sunday, and from 11 pm7 | to 8 am, m Sunday through FridayCall between 5 pm and 11 pm,Sunday through Friday, and you’ll save 40%off our day rate.Ever dial a wrong number? AT&T gives youimmediate 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 wron’t have to hang"arouna withthe rich kids. Call toll-free todav, at^SOO 222-0300AT&TThe right choice.© 1986 AT&TThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. October 21, 1986—5Massey speaks of choices: Excerpts from 'Aims addressDr. Walter E. MasseyI was very pleased when Dean Levineasked me to give this year’s “Aims ofEducation” address. I have not spoken to agroup of entering college students since Iwas the dean of a college myself...at BrownUniversity. In order to prepare myself forthis evening, I looked back at some of thetalks that I had given during the yearsfrom 1974 to 1979. I will not inflict upon youthe important messages that I left withthose entering classes, but I can assure youthat much of the advice I gave themproved to be tfie same kinds of things that Iwould say to an entering class today, whichto me means one of two things.First, perhaps there are some enduringmessages which retain their validity overlong periods of time. That is the positiveinterpretation. Another interpretation isthat what I have to say is so limited andunimaginative, it has not changed in tenyears. I, of course, choose to believe theformer.In any event, it is a pleasure to have theopportunity to address you. Before sayinganything else, let me first wish you the bestof luck during you studies at Chicago. Ihope you not only profit from the experi¬ence. but that you also enjoy it. There arefew points in one’s life that are as im¬portant as this week will be for you nn: ishing high school, graduating' Tromcollege, the first job, getting married, andthe first child are among the most im¬portant milestones in anyone’s life. Enter¬ing college ranks among these events. Youare embarking on a new adventure...onethat will in many ways shape the rest ofyour life. For those of you who are trans¬fers from other institutions to Chicago,your Chicago experience will also be a newadventure.For everyone, new students and trans¬fers alike, the first aim of your educationwill be to master the curricular require¬ments of the College of The University ofChicago. I read the materials sent to you,including the catalogue and many of thecourse descriptions. On the one hand, I amvery much tempted to sit in on a number ofthe courses. They sound very excitingHowever, if I had to write out the scheduleof the requirements to obtain a bachelor’sdegree, I might be too intimidated by thewhole prospect and forego enrolling; but Iam sure you, with fresher, more imagina¬tive minds, and more energy and deter¬mination, will have no trouble masteringthese curricular requirements. I shouldpoint out that you have the advantage ofentering Chicago under the new, simplifiedcurriculum. I am sure there are seniorswandering around the quadrangle...lost ina daze...who have yet to master the oldrequirements.Education has many aims, some quitepragmatic and practical. You will, ofcourse, after leaving the University ofChicago, have acquired skills, knowledge,and tools that will allow you to function in amodern, complex society. Part of thatfunctioning means being gainfully em¬ployed. which will no doubt please yourparents.On a broader level, the goals of a liberaleducation are probably not expressed anybetter than in a statement made by yourown dean of the College. Donald LevineWriting in The Forum for Liberal Educa¬tion in March 1986. he described the inter¬disciplinary nature of the Chicago cur¬riculum As Dean Levine stated, “At Chic¬ago we hold in mind three principals asfoundational for constructing a liberalcurriculum. First, it should provide aninformed and thoughtfully articulated ori¬entation to the world and our place in it.Second, it should cultivate a range of ca¬pacities that enable persons to make in¬ quiries on their own, express themselvesdecently, and form sound judgement.Third, the liberal curriculum should bedesigned to enhance appreciation of someof the major experiences and achievementsof the world’s civilizations.”Those view's certainly coincide w’ith myown. The curriculum itself does not, ofcourse, constitute the sum total of theeducational environment in which you willparticipate for the next four years at Chic¬ago. That environment includes numerousactivities and experiences that will not befound in the classroom or in lectures. Itincludes you interactions with professors,with other students, and with the commu¬nity in which you will live. The values andgoals that will be reinforced by those ex¬tracurricular experiences will perhapscontribute as much to your education aswill the curriculum itself. I have used thew’ords “liberal curriculum”...to quote DeanLevine...and “liberal education” severaltimes. I use those terms deliberately asdistinct from the practical aspects, or aimsof an education, that I mentioned earlier.A liberal education should do more thansimply prepare you for a career or aprofession in life. One of the major aims ofa liberal education is to liberate, or freeyou...free you to make the significantdecisions and choices that will be so im¬portant in your life. Learning to makedecisions, and more importantly to makechoices, is to me what a liberal education isall about. College is not a preparation forlife; it is part of life. The habits, insights,goals, values, and modes of behavior thatyou will have reinforced or weakened whileat Chicago are already formed to a verylarge degree; and these habits, insights,goals, values, and modes of behavior willbe with you throughout your life. Educationalone cannot make you free or wise, but aproper liberal education can help by givingyou the tools, context, examples, and prac¬tice tone hopes) that will allow you tocreate and find your own vision of the goodand realize your own values and as¬pirations.If education is a matter of making deci¬sions and choices, then life is even moreso; and many of the important decisionsand choices your generation will have tomake are connected with matters that arescientific and technical. So many, in fact,that I thought I would say a few words thisevening about the nature of those kinds of decisions, and how a proper liberal educa¬tion ought to help us prepare to make theright choices in life.There is practically no aspect of our livesuntouched by scientific and technical de¬velopments; for example, the rapid com¬puterization of society due to advances inmicroelectronics; breakthroughs in rec¬ombinant DNA research that could lead tothe elimination or alleviation of entire cat¬egories of diseases and afflictions; andenergy-related research and developmentthat will have profound effects on ourquality of life. Although each of these areas(and many other which could be men¬tioned) have their base in science andtechnology, in each instance research inthe area, or application of the research,raises issues which go beyond the scientificand technical into the sociopolitical, economic, and moral and ethical realms.Rapid computerization has raised con¬cerns for the rights of privacy of in¬dividuals and questions concerning whoshould control access to information in aworld in which information in a world inwhich information is power Computeriza¬tion. especially as it relates to automation,has economic consequences which must beweighed in deciding how fast and in whatfashion society should accommodate to thistechnology. The debate about certain kindsof recombinant DNA research still contin¬ues, a debate in which many non¬scientists...and a significant number ofscientists themselves... question the moraland ethical appropriateness of work whichmight open the door to forms of geneticmanipulation, which could have det¬rimental as well as beneficial effects.Energy presents perhaps the mostgraphic illustration of an area where sci¬entific research and development andtechnological applications are intimatelyinterweaved w'ith social concerns, econo¬mic considerations, and value judgmentsabout the kind of future society we desire,and where the ultimate decisions andchoices have to be made by citizens in apolitical process. The recent accident atChernobyl and its implications for the con¬tinuing debate on the future of nuclearenergy and the grow ing concern about acidrain and carbon dioxide buildup in theatmosphere from the use of fossilfueis...coal in particular, are reminders ofthe decisions and choices that confront usin the energ\ area,continued on page sevenmedli jU.S.O.A. CHOICELAMB SHOULDERCHOPS 198■ lb.FRESHGROUND LAMB 129lb.GRADE "A"FRYER CHICKENWING 69!DUBUQUEPLUMPER FRANKS 12C JUlAdUfii )GREENCABBAGE 19!JONATHONAPPLES 3 lb. Bog 98< MAXWELL HOUSEMASTER BLEND 260:BREAD SHOPGRANOLAHAVE NUTS ONLY 16 oz.GEISHACRABMEAT 6oz.CAMPBELL'SCHUNKY SOUPCHICKEN RICE, OLD FASH. VEG.CHICKEN VEG. 19 oz.CELESTIAL SEASONINGSTEASCINNAMON, APPtE,CRANBERRY,PEPPERMINT, MINT MAGIC 24 cl. 9-LIVESCAT FOOD 6 oz.PAWPAW 029APPLE CIDER ,28oz. iJ SWANSON'SPOT PIES 9/$lCHICKEN & TURKEYMINUTE MAID 1 2916 oz.ORANGE JUICE89<29CALIF.BRUSSEL SPROUTS 59! SUE BEEHONEY 12 oz. 199< PROGRESSO SOUPSMINESTRONE, LENTIL, PEA,TOMATO, VEG. 19 oz.GEISHASOLID WHITETUNAJIFPEANUT BUTTER 28 79<99<059 EDY'SICE CREAM 11 5932 oz.r aLAND 0'LAKESMARGARINE 16 oz 59<J BAYSENGLISH OOtMUFFINS 07SLICEDSPINACH QUICHE CHICKEN SALAD TURKEY BREASTQQC 409 419t K lb. FRIGORICOTTACHEESE 1916 oz.6—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21,1986Masseycontinued from page sixHowever, having said this, I do not meanto imply that a college education should bestructured to meet the currently perceivedproblems of the times, no matter howimportant those problems may seem.Society’s needs change over time; and now-in particular, they change so rapidly that itwould be dangerous to design curriculasolely to educate students to meet theneeds of today. After all, many who feltquite proud, happy, and content with theeducation they received say twenty-fiveyears ago, now find themselves not in¬cluded in the “fellowship of educated menand women,” if that fellowship is definedas the ability to understand and contributeto solutions of the critical issues of ourtime. Who knows what issues and problemswill confront society twenty-five yearsfrom now, when most of you will be in theprime of your lives and at the mid-points ofyour careers.No education will be sufficiently broad orsufficiently detailed to allow even the well-educated person to become an expert in allareas, and indeed that is not the aim of aliberal education. The aim is to give onethe tools and the context that will allowhim or her to make choices in these andother important areas. No education willgive us the solutions to problems or theanswers to questions raised by progress inscience and technology, or any other field,but a proper education should prepare us toknow how to think about such issues.By examining the lives and writing ofothers who have dealt with these questions,we can gain some insight and guidance forourselves. Two people whose work I haveadmired for some time w’rote about theneed to be prepared to make decisions andchoices, especially in areas of science andtechnology...George Orwell and ArthurHolly Compton. Both men in their workemphasized the importance of makingright choices and the consequences ofmaking the wrong ones. George Orwell andArthur Holly Compton did some of theirmost important, and most significant,writing on this subject during a period ofrapid technological change...A period inwhich the potential for good from the de¬velopment of science and technology andthe awesome potential for destructivenesswas more publicly dramatized than at anyprevious time in history, and perhaps morethan any time since.Both men wrote the materials I askedyou to read in the period following WorldWar II...when the development of atomicenergy was made publicly manifest prim¬arily through the atomic bomb. The drop¬ping of that bomb on Hiroshima and Nag¬asaki was a vivid indication that the worldin which they lived had changed dramati¬cally. This period...from about 1946 to1956...was a time when great intellectual,political, and social ferment developedconcerning the appropriate uses of scienceand technology, and the kind of society thatwould or should grow out of the applicationof new scientific developments...atomicenergy being one of the most striking andvivid examples, but by no means the onlyone. This was the period when the firstlarge computers were made practical, andwhen aircraft that flew faster than thespeed of sound were first used for civilianpurposes. It is interesting and informativeto compare the visions of the kinds ofsociety that could grow out of advances inscience and technology, as seen respec¬tively by Compton and Orwell.Arthur Compton and George Orwell werecontemporaries, but from different back¬grounds. Orwell was born in 1903; hisparents w-ere members of the British CivilService serving in the Far East; and muchof Orwell’s early development was in¬fluenced by the growing power of the SovietUnion and the development of a totalitariansociety in Soviet-controlled countries, aswell as by his experiences with facism, notonly from the Nazis in Germany, but in theSpanish Civil War that preceded WorldWar II.Arthur Compton w-as born some yearsbefore Orwell in 1892 in the small town ofWooster, Ohio. It is difficult, if not im¬possible, to discuss any aspect of the in¬fluence of science and technology on soci¬ety in the 1940’s and 1950’s without discuss¬ing Arthur Compton and the role he playedin the developments of that time. ProfessorCompton was a leader of the ManhattanProject based here at The University ofChicago. The Manhattan Project was, ofcourse, the large, intensive effort devotedto the development of the atomic bomb.Compton was a long-time professor at TheUniversity of Chicago and a Nobel Prizewinner, who later became Chancellor ofWashington University. Science was, per¬haps after religion, the most importantthing in Compton’s life; and he saw scienceand scientists as having a special role toplay in society. This special role was ac¬ centuated and enhanced by the war-timedevelopment of atomic energy...and thebomb.Compton envisioned a deeper meaning tothe role of science in human affairs thansimply providing freedom from physicalwant, as important as that role was. Thegrowing realization that increased knowl¬edge of scientific and technical mattersimplied new, or at least enhanced, respon¬sibilities for individuals to make choices,was to Compton, ultimately a good thing.In the collection of his writings, TheCosmos of Arthur Holly Compton, by Mar¬jorie Johnston, he tells the following story-concerning his work on the atomic bomb(he was then at the University of Chicago).“When this work was just gettingstarted, one of my students came to mewith a question. ‘How do you satisfy yourconscience when working on such a hor¬rible weapon as the bomb we are making?’Remember,’ I answered, ‘that we in thislaboratory are the only persons in theworld who can possibly prepare thisweapon before the Nazis may have it. If wedo not do our part, the world is exposed tothe mercy of the Nazis. Can we be respon¬sible for that risk? Truly knowledge meanspower, and the fact that one learns newtruths gives one an inescapable responsi¬bility.’ ”Compton also recognized that science isonly one of the important forces in lifewhich offers the opportunity and the re¬sponsibility for making important choices.He used the word “science” in a repre¬senting sense, to illustrate several factorsresponsible for the rapid and widespreadchanges in society. “Science,” he said, “issymbolic of several great forces workingtogether to change our world.”By “several great forces.” he meant newdevelopments in the understanding of hu¬man behavior, changes in the politicalstructure of nations, and the changing inthe political structure of nations, and thechanging views of the importance of theindividual in society...views concerning theequality of individuals regardless of raceand/or nationality.George Orwell addressed these same is¬sues in the book 1984. This book is not oftendiscussed with respect to its comments onthe role of science in society and the effectsscience can have on society. The effects oftechnology...and by technology I mean theapplication of scientific research throughthe development of products, devices, ma¬chines. inventions, and the like...is a themethat is often discussed in relation to thebook 1984. Orwell w-rote 1984 in the sameperiod of Compton’s w-ritings. in 1948. andpublished the first edition in 1949. He, ofcourse, was also very much affected by thegreat event of this period...the develop¬ment and actual dropping of the atomicbomb.The vision of society that Orwell presentsus in 1984, however, is vastly different fromthat seen by Compton. Whereas Comptonenvisioned a world in which science andtechnology not only contributed to the tan¬gible, physical needs of individuals, butalso provided them intellectual, emotional,and indeed spiritual growth, Orwell showsus another world...A world in which tech¬nology is used to crush the human spiritand to restrict individual freedom, and aworld from u-hich science is excluded. Or¬well reminds us in 1984 that the visions heldby the Compton’s of that age would notinevitably be realized, and that the kind ofsociety which might result from progressin science and technology, and every otherfield of human endeavor, would be amatter of choice.Neither Orwell nor Compton saw sciencein isolation from the context of the largerhuman experience. Orwell's vision of aworld without real truth or beauty is aworld in which science is impossible, and inwhich technology is only needed for des¬tructive and constraining purposes.Compton paints us a vision of society wherescience is a necessary component for thegrowth of the human spirit, and wheretechnology is a valuable servant in helpingto create the environment in which thathuman spirit can prosper...and in whichhuman equality can be realized. It is thisdifference in visions of the possible that isthe major difference between the Orwellianview and Compton’s view.The most important aspect of Compton’swriting is his insistence that it is one’svision of the possible and one’s quest forthe good that is important in establishingthe context in which choices can be made.He says, “It is only insofar as we have avision of excellence for men’s lives thatscience has a human meaning.” This visionof excellence is what guides us to make theright choices, and it is making the rightchoices that is ultimately the most im¬portant thing.Orwell, of course, in writing 1984, pre¬sented a vision of society, not as he per¬haps thought it would come to pass, andcertainly not as he wished it to come tofruition, but as a warning of what couldhappen and what might happen if humansdid not make active and committed deci¬sions aoout the uses of science and tech¬nology, and if humankind did not share avision of equality and freedom and were committed to bringing it about.Both Orwell and Compton surely sharedthe same hope for the development ofsociety, but perhaps differed in their op¬timism concerning the possibility of theirhopes being realized. Both viewed scienceas an endeavor that could lead to theuplifting of humanity, but differed on thepropensity of human beings to misusetechnology, rather than using it for thebetterment of the human race.It is clear that Orwell’s vision as por¬trayed through the novel has not come topass. Although it is likely that some as¬pects of the repression and oppression de¬picted can be found in many present-day-societies... at least no one nation/state hasmanaged, so far, to combine them all withsuch efficiency and comprehensiveness.But if Orwell’s vision has not fully mate¬rialized, neither has Compton’s. We arestill confronted by many of the questionsCompton raised concerning the uses towhich science and technology will be put;and although it is clear that the humanrace is progressing and is by-and-largeusing and benefiting from the growth ofknowledge, we still see examples of soci¬eties which come closer to the Orwellianvision than that of Arthur Compton.Totalitarian, authoritarian, and rep¬ressive regimes exist throughout the worldand across all political persuasions andideological positions. However, one par¬ticular regime to me perhaps comes closerto the Orwellian vision than any I know ofat present... I refer to the republic of SouthAfrica. The situation in that country is acontemporary issue and concern aboutwhich you will be making decisions andchoices during your stay at The Universityof Chicago. It is at least ironic, and per¬haps significant, that the present regime inSouth Africa, the Nationalist Party, cameto power during this same period followingWorld War II in which Orwell and Comptondid their writings. The Nationalist Partvcame to power in the election of 1948 andactually assumed control of the govern¬ment in 1949.You may not be aware that prior to thattime some progress was being made inSouth Africa towards creating a multi¬racial society. In many respects in theperiod prior to 1948. minorities in SouthAfrica...at least the coloreds Ghat is. thoseof mixed races) and Indians...it could beargued, were no w-orse off than blacks inAmerica at the same time...at least manyblacks in many parts of America, andcertainly in the South. As a person whogrew up in the state of Mississippi duringthat period, I am sure that if I had beentransplanted to Cape Town, I would havenoticed little difference...the segregatedsigns specifying colored and white, thetotal segregation of the transportation fa¬cilities and of commercial, educational,and social institutions would have beenfairly similar. In fact, in South Africa priorto 1956, the coloreds were on the votingrolls in the Cape province. There weremultiracial labor unions, and there weregrowing movements to create integratededucational institutions. The NationalistParty, headed by Afrikaners...those ofmostly Dutch descent ..after coming topower in 1948, began to institute a societythat was frightening in its Orwellian mani¬festations. In the period from 1948 to about1960, a variety of laws were enacted thatled to further separation of the races,removed the few freedoms the blacks, col¬ored, and Asians had, and created a society-in which a small group has instituted asystem...the sole purpose of which is tokeep them in power.South Africa is the most prosperouscountry on the African continent, and oneof the most potentially prosperous in theworld. It has assimilated science andtechnology in every area; and the world inwhich the whites move is as modern as anypart of the United States or Europe. But.the benefits of science and technology arenot used principally to create a society inwhich all may prosper, or to increase thepotential for individual freedom and hu¬man equality. Science and technology arebeing used primarily- to enhance the controlthe Party has over the rest of Society.The very names of the myriad of lawsthat have been passed since 1948 remind usvividly of “newspeak” and "doublethink”as portrayed in the novel 1984. where wordsand phrases could simultaneously havecontradictory meanings...or have the op¬posite meanings form those commonly un¬derstood You will recall in 1984. theministry of truth was where propagandawas produced and history rewritten; theministry of love was a torture chamber;and the ministry of peace was where warwas prosecutedIn South Africa the law that removed thecoloreds in the Cape province from thevoting rolls was not called the Removal ofthe Colored from the Voting Rolls Act. butthe Separate Representation of Voter'sRights Bill. The law passed in 1949 whichforbade not only mixed marriages, but sexbetween individuals of different races, wascalled the Immorality Amendment ActThe law passed in 1950 that prescribedseparate residential areas for people ofdifferent races and resulted in the forced removal of thousands of blacks, coloreds,and Asians from places they had lived foryears, was not called the Removal Act orSeparation Act, but the Groups Areas Act.The law requiring each individual, at leastnon-whites, to carry a passbook that iden¬tifies them completely and gives theircomplete history is called the PopulationRegistration Act. The law that created theso-called homelands areas to which mostblacks are confined, and thereby deniedcitizenship in the Republic of South Africa,continued on page nineHarvardPaperbacks5 to curl upwith thiswinter.fMimmmmmmmmmM.Working SpaceFrank Stella"In this context of aesthetic crisisand reevaluation [the book] comesas something of a bombshell...explodes a great manv receivedideas about abstractions.. One ofthe most remarkable books everwritten on the subject.-Hilton KramerThe Atlantic55 b/w, 36 color halftones S14 95Prophets ofRegulationThomas K. McCrawWinner of the Pulitzer Prizein HistoryThe history of four powerful men;Charles Francis Adams. Louis DBrande is. James M. 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This misuse of the lan¬guage has deeper implications and has ledto the kind of internal contradictions inSouth Africa...some bordering on the ab¬surd...that also existed in 1984. It is thegoal of the Nationalist Party to classifyevery individual in South Africa accordingto a particular racial group. Given thehistory of South Africa, this is almostimpossible. Hundreds of years of inter¬racial sex led to the creation of the groupcalled coloreds, and given the variety ofindividuals...Asian, white, and Af¬rican...that exists in this society, to classifyeveryone into a particular group has be¬come a task equal to that of the rewritingof history on a daily basis that occurred in1984.In 1966, twenty years after the passing ofthe Immorality Amendment Act, therewere still approximately 150.000 borderlinecases of individuals who had yet to beclassified according to a race. Each year inParliament, the Minister of the Interior isobliged to give a report on the previousyear’s reclassifications. Let me read anexcerpt from the report given in 1980. Itreminds one of the attempt of the Party in1984 to control reality. As you recall,O'Brien said. “Truth is what the Partysays is truth.”the Nationalist Party reporting on racesin South Africa said. “As of this year(1980), a total of 101 colored people becamewhite, one Chinese became white, twowhites became colored, six w’hites becameChinese, two whites became Indians, tencolored people became Indians, ten Malaysbecame Indians, eleven Indians becamecolored, four Indians became Malays,three colored people became Chinese,while two Chinese were reclassified ascolored people.”Although this clearly has a ridiculous andabsurd side, the tragedy is the governmentbehaves as if what it has said is, in fact,true. People who were colored one dayhave to act, live, and work in placesreserved for Chinese, if they “becomeChinese” the next day. People who wereone day white and allowed all the privi¬leges of society, the next day have tobecome colored in every sense of the word,because the government does control thismuch of the reality of their environment.The Nationalist Party in South Africaalso fully appreciates the role educationplays in liberating individuals and creatingconditions that lead to the growth of anaspiration for human equality. Prior to theNationalists coming to power there were anumber of schools operated by mis¬sionaries, and many public schools, thatattempted to give blacks...called Bantus atthat time...an education that aspired to beas good as that given to whites. As leasteducation for all groups had the sameaims, even if they were not equally real¬ized. The aims of education for the so-called Bantu people were changed drastically after the assumption of power by theNationalist Party.Dr. Heindrick Verwoerds stated in afamous speech in 1953, “The school mustequip Bantu to meet the demands whichthe economic life of South Africa will impose on him. Until now he has been subjectto a school system which drew him awayfrom his own community and misled himby showing him the green pastures ofEuropean society in which he is not allowedDO-IT-YOURSELF IDEASLAWYER'S OAK BOOKCASEHeie s an oak reproduction ot a popular antique wnichanyone can make using our step-by-step plan Measur¬ing 5 n.gh * 4 wide x V deep the bookcase is built in4 units Two ot these stackable units are 14", one is12" and the fourth is 16" highSend check to □ *700 Oak Bookcase S4 50CM Pattern Dept □ 112-page catalog $3 95P 0 Box 2383 iPicturing 700 proiectsiVan Nuys CA 91409Name —Address —State ZipPrice Includes Postage & Handling to graze. What is the use of teaching aBantu child mathematics when he cannotuse it in practice? That is absurd. Education is not, after all, something that hangsin the air. Education must train and teachpeople in accordance with their oppor¬tunities in life. It is therefore necessarythat native education should be controlledin such a way that it should be in accord¬ance with the policy of the state.” GeorgeOrwell could have written that.The passage of the Bantu Education Actin 1953 led to the creation of totally separate universities for blacks, Asians, color¬eds and whites. In most of the black colleges, science and engineering were noteven offered, because these subjects wouldbe of no use to those people, and in fact inthe government's eyes would give themfalse hopes as to where they might even¬tually stand in society.The blacks of South Africa are the prolesof 1984. Of course. O’Brien well knew, it isimpossible to control any segment of society without controlling every segment. Ifone large segment of society is not free, nopart of it can be free. In 1984 the innerParty members, although they lived amore economically comfortable existence,were no more free to make individualdecisions about their lives or about societythan were the members of the outer party.Perhaps the freest people in the book 1984were the members of the proletariat, be¬cause they could live lives in which choicescould be made, even though those choicesmay have been restricted to a very smallrealm.The Nationalist Party of South Africa hasfound in its attempt to control blacks that ithas become necessary to control its ownpeople...the whites. The flow of informationto the society as a whole has to be re¬stricted, and the image of the society thatthe whites see in the media is the image theParty wishes them to see: this image is asociety in which the proles (the blacks) arehappy and do not wish to become equal,where the misery and suffering of thoseindividuals is over-exaggerated and due totheir own laziness, and where unrest iscaused by a few “agitators" and trouble¬makers.The educational system for whites, ofcourse, is also affected. A leading memberof the Broederbond, the innercircle of theAfrikaner leadership, gave an interview onthe role of education and the training ofteachers...not for blacks, but for whites. Hesaid, “Education is not open education. Itis education with a specific task. The aimis the preservation of the white man ingeneral, and of the Afrikaner in particular.If you come from twelve years in school,where you have been under Boederbondcontrol, then four years in a teacher train¬ing college, then indoctrinated withBroederbond thinking, with separation andthe whole of that philosophy, by the timeyou are a teacher, it is not importantwhether you are a Broeder or not. The factis that you would teach Broederbond phi¬losophy because you do not know any other.You have not been exposed to any otherthinking.”The aim of education, even for whites, atleast among this group, is not a liberaleducation...an education that leads tofreedom...but an education that has aspecific task...the preservation of the Afrikaner in particular. As O'Brien said, in1984 “Our only goal is the preservation ofthe power of the Party.”No perversion of reality becomes unthinkable, and no restriction of humapfreedom becomes too oppressive in such asociety. One might ask, “What is themeaning of a liberal education in a societysuch as South Africa? Is such a thingpossible? What is the meaning of freedomin such a society? Can one really be liberated or free while others are not. especiallywhen one's liberation and freedom isachieved at the expense of the oppressed0”I have no doubt in my mind who is most free in that country. If I compare the youngblacks in Soweto who have a vision of afuture and a commitment to achieving thatvision, and who are able to makechoices...and do make choices, in spite ofthe constraints that are placed uponthem...if I compare those youth to theyoung white soldiers, whose only vision ofthe future is to help sustain and keep inpower a regime that not only restricts andcrushes the freedom of all others, but ofthemselves, then it is clear in my mind whois the most free.Orwell recognized that a society whichhas as its primary aim to maintain powerfor itself has no choice but to eradicate thespirit of creativity, the search for newknowledge, and the spark of humanity inall its people, even those people, and per¬haps especially those people who are towield the power. In 1984. the goal of theParty was not only to eradicate humanqualities in the oppressed, but even amongthemselves. Concepts such as love, loyalty,respect, and understanding were to be re¬moved from the language.But even South Africa is changing andwill be forced to change more. Technologyplays a role in these changes. Advances incommunications and transportation havemade it much more difficult for grossinjustices to be perpetrated by repressiveregimes. The subjugation of blacks inSouth Africa is no longer a local affairwhich the world only hears bits and pieces,months or years after the events, but isnow the subject of daily news reports, andthe outpouring of anger against thatregime makes it much more difficult forthem to continue their present policies.South Africa is perhaps a graphic exam¬ple of an Orwellian vision manifested, butit is not the only one: and there are clearlyaspects of our own society here in theUnited States, though by no means aswidespread and as comprehensive as thatin South Africa, but nevertheless aspects,which come closer to an Orwellian woridrather than the vision painted by ArthurCompton.Choices continue to have to be made. We.you. all of us will face those choicesthroughout our lives. The aim of a liberaleducation is to give us the tools, and mostof all the vision and commitment, that willhelp us to make the right choices. But aproper liberal education goes even beyondthat. It instills in one a sense of responsiblity to act once those choices are made.As Arthur Holly Compton said. “We mustrealize with a new urgency that what we doaffects deeply the lives of other-s...(and)...that our moral choices must be¬come more insistent and of greater in¬tensity, because the effects of our choicesare of greater consequence.”Four years from now...give or take oneor two...you will take part in anotherceremony at The University of Chicago. Atgraduation the President of the Universitywill present you with your degree and say,“By the power vested in me. I now declareyou graduates and welcome you to thefellowship of educated men and women.” Itwill be a grand occasion. However, evenafter that auspicious intonation, and afterfour (more or less) years at The Universityof Chicago, I hope you will not consideryourselves educated, simply because youreceive a degree. I hope you will think ofyour experience here as just the beginningof your education, and that you will equipyourselves with the appropriate tools,skills, and background, and acquire themotivation to continually educate your¬selves throughout life.There is a fellowship of educated menand women, but the entry ticket is morethan simply a college degree. The entryticket to that fellowship is an attitude...astate of mind and vision of the world , thatrecognizes that education is not a matter offulfilling requirements, but of striving tounderstand the world as it is and ourselvesas we should be.HARPER FOODSFOOD FOR PEOPLE...NOT PROFIT!Tired of mediocre vegetables, bruised fruits,and tough, tasteless meats?Large food stores are forced to buy lower grade fruits, vegetables, and meats from foodwholesalers because of their high overhead. This food is then usually delivered sight unseen.Here at HARPER FOODS we practice the Old World tradition in which our family was raised:we personally go, each day at five A.M., to the wholesale produce and meat markets and selectonly the freshest “high grade" produce and Choice grade-A meats we can find. We also carryhard-to-find imported fruits and herbs. We use our own truck to bring the food to HARPERFOODS in time for you to shop...and our prices are 25-30% lower!Golden delicious apples .69/lbRomaine lettuce .59/lbCalifornia asparagus .99/lbThompson seedless grapes .99/lbGolden bananas .29/lbCalifornia broccoli .69/lb Baby Beef liver .79/lbFresh ground chuck 1.49/lbChoice sirloin steak 1.89/lbBoneless pork roast 2.29/lbSirloin tip roast 2.39/lbHALLOWEEN SPECIAL: Pumpkins (medium size) $1.50 each!Located at 1455 E. 57th Street (across from Medici)OPEN DAILY 8 A M.-8 P.M., SUNDAYS 8 A.M.-7 P.M.We also deliver! Phone 363-6251 It is obvious that you are not beginningyour education tonight, for you are alreadycapable of making some “right choices.”and you clearly have already made one ofthe most important right choices of yourlife. You have chosen the University ofChicago.Let me welcome you again to our community and to becoming one of us, andallow me to wish you again the best of luckin achieving the “aims of education” thatwill fit your vision of excellence. Thankyou.HarvardPaperbacks5 more,becausewinter'sso long.Cahiers du CinemaThe 1950s: Neo-Realism,Hollywood New WaveEdited by Jim Hillier“By treating movies as movies, notas poor relations to books or plays,the Cahiers critics helped introducea new art form to the century thatproduced it.”- New York Times Book RenewHarvard Film Studies $7 95RussiaThe Roots of ConfrontationRobert V DanielsForeword byEdwin Q. Reischauer“Lucid, level-headed, firmlygrounded, [the book] should serveas a perfect introduction to the Ageot Gorbachev” - New LeaderAmerican Foreign Policy Library $8 95Wallace StevensWords Chosen OutOf DesireHelen Vendler“[ Vendler] has found the right wayto talk about [Stevens], and is quitenght to say that he is a genuinelymisunderstood poet. Altogetherthis little book [is] a triumph$3 95 - Frank KermodeThe Use of Poetryand the Use ofCriticismStudies in the Relation otCriticism to Poetry in EnglandT.S. EliotThe 1932-33 Norton Lectures areamong the best, most important ofEliot s critical writings By tracingthe English critical tradition. Eiiotmakes a powerful case for poetry sautonomy and its pluralism $4 95MobilizingAgainst AIDSThe Unfinished Storyof a VirusBy the Institute ofMedicine NationalAcademy of Sciences"An outstanding piece of work, mak¬ing a complex subject clear andunderstandable . easily the bestavailable book that I have read onthis important subject "-MartinS Hirsch.M D$7 95 Harvard Medical SchoolHarvardPaperbacksAt bookstores or from Harvard University PressCambridge MA 02138The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21, 1986—9ANALLY AFREE FLIGHT PLANJUST FOR STUDENTS.YOU WON'T GET ABREAK LIKE THISONCE YOU'RE OUT INTHE REAL WORLD.INTRODUCING COLLEGIATE FUGHTBANK, FROMCONTINENTAL AND NEW YORK AIR.If you’re a full-time student at an accredited college or uni-versify you can join our Collegiate FlightBank.SM Yiu’ll receivea membership card and number that will allow' you to get10% off Continental and New York Air’s already low feres. 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 now7 you’ll alsoreceive 3 free issues of BusinessWeek Careers magazine.This Porsche 924 can be yours if you arereferral champion.SIGN UP YOUR FRIENDS AND EARN A PORSCHE.But what’s more, for the 10 students on every campus whoenroll the most active student flyers from their college thereare some great rewards: 1 free trip wherever Gntinental orNew York Air flies in the mainland U.S., Mexico or Canada. Or the grand prize, for the number one student referralchampion in the nation: a Porsche and one year of unlimitedcoach air travel.And how do you get to be the referral champion.7 Just signup as many friends as possible, and make sure your member¬ship number is on their application. In order to be eligible forany prize you and your referrals must sign up before 12/31/86and each referral must fly 3 segments on Continental or New'York Air before 6/15/87. And you’ll not only get credit for 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 way it’ll onlycost you $10 for one year ($L5 after 12/31/86) and $40 for fouryears ($60 after 12/31/86). Your membership kit, includingreferral forms, w ill arrive in 3 to 4 weeks. If you have a creditcard, you can call us at 1-800-255-4321 and enroll even faster.Now more than ever it pays to stay in school.r SIGN ME UP NOW! (Tlease print >ir type) D I Year ($10) □ 2 'tears (S20) □ 3 Years ($30) 12 4 Years ($40)Must he submitted bv 12/31/86.Name Date of Birth 1College. . Address-Permanent Address_Full time student ID #_ -Zip-Zip- Year of Graduation.□ Check/Money Older Enclosed PLEASE DON'T SENDCASH□ American Express □ Visa □ MasterCard □ Diner’s ClubAccount Number.Signature X .Expiration Date.FOR MEMBERSHIP APPLICANTS UNDER THE AGE OF 18: The undersigned is tKe parent/guatdian of the membership applicant named hereon, and I consent to his/her participation in the*Collegiate RightBank program.Signature XSend this coupon to: Collegiate RightBankPO. Box 297847Houston, TX 77297Complete terms and conditions of program will accompany membership kit _lCONTINENTAL 6 NEW YORK AIRSome blackout periods apply for discount travel and reward redemption. Complete terms and conditions (/program will accompany membership kir. Certain restnenons annlv Current full MiwaiiUi . , . , Team anv prize a minimum <i 12 referrals is required All referral award winners will he announced by 8/1/87. 10% discount applies to mainland U.S. travel only. Students must he between the a^es of 16 and 25 (Use he 924 raistr^ in k'<" ailtaxes are the responsibility of the recipient © 1986 Continental Air Lines, Inc10—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21, 1986SilentGlass and DrawingsHighlights at the Chicago Cultural CenterMoney slightly off colorDiversions of PenelopeDrawings by Susanna Coffey afthe Chicago Cultural Center.Until October 25, t986Erika Kachama-NkoyDiversions of Denelope, a sixteenpiece exhibition, refers to Pene¬lope's plight while she waited forOdysseus to return from the TrojanWar. Composed of black ink andgouache on large paper, thedrawings retell Penelope's decep¬tion of her persistent suitors. Afterpromising to choose among thesuitors after finishing a tapestry, shewould unravel it every evening. Aheroic theme runs through Coffey'swork. As Penelope wove and un¬ravelled, so did the artist. Herdrawings are loose tapestrieswoven boldly and dramatically.The viewer is stripped from his di¬mension. The drawings thrust himinto a different plane and anysense of space is destroyed.From the sixteen pieces, "Ave"struck me as the most exciting.Diversions of Persephone 1985depicts a faceless Persephonethrowing open the house doorsand gazing outside. She entersfrom the left and the doors areforeshortened, appearing to thrustout of the paper, The eye travelsalong the door's pathway and issuddenly thrown upward, abovethe trees and walkways. There isanother pathway in the back¬ground which finally leads out ofthe frame. Cyfherian Baths 1984-1985 manages to show a batherfrom many angles. At one point,the viewer believes he is observingfrom a bird's eye view. The bath'scolumns distort this perception forthey appear to be crashing downupon the relaxed bather. The wallon the right side rears up, rollingfrom the bath itself, and a mysteri¬ous figure enters from the doorway.Cyfherian Bath 1984 is a scenesimilar to the previous drawing.With the addition of red, yellow,green, and blue inks, however, thispiece explodes with drama andenergy above all the others. Thereare two male bathers struggling.Coffey's wide, sweeping lines em¬phasize their movements andstrength. A third figure, dark andhalf-formed, emerges from thewall-half way in and half way out.And finally. Diversions of PenelopeIII 1985 is striking through its bizarreconcept of space. On the left thereis a long hall with a gently curvingceiling. Two arched doors lead outto a garden behind. Another wallpokes in from the left, as with mostof the other pieces, to frame thepicture. In the foreground, the rightwall is intensely bright and reflec¬tive of some unknown source oflight. Suddenly this wall drops on itsside and becomes a waterfall,cascading from the top right. Andabove this, a small window in yetanother plane. by Michael FellThe Color of Money incites Ihesame critical reaction that mostmovies do: it's OK. In this case, it isone of the better of the OK films,but if does not manage to riseabove superior acceptableness. Itis better than mediocre but shy ofreally good. In its attitude andsentiment it excels, but in its exe¬cution if falters. While commend¬able lor its efforts, il is disappoint¬ing for its lost opportunities. TheColor of Money saw tne light butpulled down the shade. It baked ascrumptious pie, but forgot to setthe fable. It pulled an all-nighter,but slept through the text. What I'mtrying to say is. The Color ot Moneyis just shy of three stars. It is a fair B-.Where, of where, does the taultlie? fast Eddie is twenty-five yearsolder and out of the pool game.He hustles liquor to barkeeps nowinstead of hustling his talents at thepool fable. Whether it's a game ofnine-ball or a bottle of cheap li¬quor with an expensive label. FastEddie still gets what he wants outof the hustle: money.When he hears the thunderbreak of a talented young player.Eddie is tempted to rejoin the poolgame, this time as sponsor of theyoung player. In this openingscene, the director Martin Scorseseuses his idiosyncratic mixture of theedit and fast camera track to cre¬ate the impulsive triangle betweenEddie (Paul Newman), the youngplayer Vince (Tom Cruise) and thegame of pool. Vince is thelempfer. pool the temptation, andEddie the helpless seduced. Withhis camera. Scorsese creates andmaintains a tension and attraction that, intermittently, will continuethroughout the tilm.Next we see Vince's girlfriend,played by Mary Elizabeth Mast-rantonio. prompting him ficmpoolside. Mastrantonio is nowmaster of Cruise and Newmanwants in. Newman quickly finds outthat Mastrantonio is an amateur a!tne hustle and Mastrantonio real¬izes that Newman could teach hera loi. Meanwhile, both use Cruiseas they embark on a road trip 1onone Cruise's pool skills ana hisown hustle. This triangle of userand used, tempter and tempted,was the source for potential plottwists and character undulations.Cruise could become wise ana usethe other two or Newman andCruise could unite against Mastranfonio, the real user and temptress Cruise could become wiseand hustle the hustle out of bothNewman and Mastrantonio. andeverybody comes out a moralwinner. The exciting permutationsabound but merely become lostopportunitiesThe story that made it 1o thescreen is fine, in the B range andall that, but the potential that existsin the beginning of the movie iswhat makes the rest of the movieso disconcerting and disjointed,both emotionally and as a logicalplot. Later in Ihe movie. Cruise andMastrantonio become masters oitheir own game but the trianglehas long since been broken. Theabsence ot the third personagedilutes the dramatic force ofcharacter changes and evolution,and the resi of the movie strollstoward the end when it could havehopped, skipped, and jumped A Decade of GlassDale Chihuly glass sculpturesat the Cultural CenterUntil November 1, 1986by Christina Bernardi"It looks like plastic. Like acrylic,''Exhibition catalogs for DaleChihuly's Decade of Glass showwere sold out. I stood before a wallof information in the Chicago Cul¬tural Center's first floor gallery tak¬ing meticulous notes on ten yearsof the professional biography of a"leading figure in the studio glassmovement.""Pardon me?""I said it looks like acrylic I didn'tknow it was glass until I read that."He pointed to the wall.The wall traced the develop¬ment of the four forms Dale Chin-uly's work had taken over ten yearsfrom 1974-1984 Basic cylinder andbasket shapes dominated his workduring the 70's. The simplicity ofthese figures emphasize the glasson glass "drawings" which Mr.Chihuly created on the surface ofeach piece The earlier works in¬clude collections of mon¬ochromatic forms with correspond¬ing designs In 1984, the cylinderreappeared in single works. Theshape became a canvas for in¬tricate patterns and overlays ofmulticolored glass. My mind wan¬dered past the wail to one of themost recent cylinders and a mini¬ature cylinder set together in formand desert color and set apart bysize The miniature accentuates thesolid quality of the large cylinderas a foundation for Chihuly's de¬signs."Doesn't look fragile."I acknowledge the speaker'smismatched shoelaces. My hour inthe gallery has sharpened mysensitivity for detail and color. Hecontinued,"When I think of glass, I think of aprism. I always notice streetlampson wet nights when I'm walkinghome from my exercises. Glassgiving off color and light. Thesepieces hold color and light." Hepointed to a Chihuly sea formpiece behind meThe sea form pieces of fhe early80's work together in collections ofmonochromatic figures varying insize and shape. Fire, gravity, andcentrifugal force were the onlytools used. Chihuly employs a sen¬sitivity for balance through the ar¬rangement of each glass colonylending each composite move¬ment and energy. Sea Forms is themost delicate series of the fourpresented in this exhibit. The artistdraws attention to a single brightor muted color in each collection,supporting that color through pat¬terns and layers of consonant col¬ors. Silver accents the rims of the"shells" in a composite of palecontinued on page sixteen...The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. October 21.1986—11MurmuringsI strip the bed. As the sheetscome otf in my hands, they rip, shredlike tissue, such is their age.In the machinethe detergent attacksthe stains, the signs ofbve and sleep,and after the sheets dry, I cut themalong the edges of a patternand make myself a little girl's dress.Today I wash my skin of you.I take pains to scrubhardest the spotswhere I know you kissed me,harder the spots1 know you forgot.The shower is hot, and the soapsmells like something dead,I stand here for a long time,waiting for the waterto become cold, so thatI'll want to leave.I never really want to leave.■Pearl Klein On facing the fearIn high school, oh so manysleepless nights ago, myEnglish teacher offered me astandard (one might evensay trite) piece of adviceabout writing; " Write,” hesaid, "about what youknow.” But then he elabo¬rated saying, "whenever youwrite 'seriously'—if there issuch a thing—at leastchoose something that youbelieve is important enoughto be written down.” I oftenthink about that and occa¬sionally agonize over howinfrequently it is true of what Iwrite. In fact, writing terrifiesme.In discussion classes I oftenthink of a paraphrase fromLincoln's Gettsyburg address. . history will not longremember what was saidhere. . .” Though it was nottrue of those particular wordsit is true of most other spokenwords. The occasional in¬anities that roll off most of ourtongues are mercifully for¬gotten almost the instantthey are said. Written words,however, come back tohaunt us. Every poorly writtenor pointless piece of prosestands as a monument of ourtransgressions against lan¬guage and reason. Theyreveal our weakness in away that no confession evercould, leaving a public re¬ cord of our failings. It neverceases to amaze me thatwriters can face this situationand continue to write.When I place pen topaper (or fingers to key¬board in this case) it is asthough someone else is writ¬ing and I am only an ob¬server, After I take the fin¬ished piece of prose fromthe typewriter and read it forthe first time I almost neverread it again. Somehow thegood writing with well-reasoned arguments andoccasionally the merest hit ofeloquence do not seem tobe mine. They are neverreally my words—as though Iwere one of so many mon¬keys at a typewriter lettingchange guide my fingers.Only the pieces that I havewritten badly—where I havebeen clumsy or have failedcompletely in expressingmyself—only those piecesseem to be mine. But goodor bad writing it is all thesame. . . just as hard, just asterrifying.I have a good friend whois often told she writes ex¬actly the way she speaks (inher case, definitely a com¬pliment). I wish that were trueof me. Talking, unlike writingis something I truly enjoy.Most of the time when I speak the words just flow,when I write I always have todredge them up. I am, asIssac Asimov once said "Lul¬led by the sound of my ownvoice.” When I speak tosomeone I usually know myaudience and can adjustwhat I say and how I say itaccordingly I don't have thatluxury in writing. I write to anaudience I cannot see orhear, that is always sepa¬rated from me by the wordson the page. And the wordsdo not fully express what Iwant to say. They are onlyshadows of the feeling,thoughts and gestures thatwere their precursor. I wouldbe so much easier to talkand write the same way butit would not be enough.Because writing, when it istruly great writing, needs nosonorous voice to make itlive, no knowing glance orgesture to make its intentunderstood. It fuses clearthought and elegant lan¬guage into a moment in¬delible printed on a page.Only great writing canachieve this and in doing sosurpass the spoken word. Butonly a select few can aspireto such heights.So my fear remains. Andhere I am again hoping thistime will be my last.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MFUWWVVVWVMICROCOMPUTER DISTRIBUTION CENTER1307 E. 60TH STREET962-6086XWe 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 -: . - •. •• :■ : :•••v; ::; ■ : ’ ': : " ; •■ • APPLE LOTUSAT&T MICROSOFTHEWLETT-PACKARD MINITABIBM U.S. ROBOTICSZENITH WORDPERFECT .' ■ '' ■ ■'r iS' >:£•...•For more information and pricing call:■■ The Microcomputer Distribution Center:i • 1 962-6086WWWVWVW wwwwwww12—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21,1986MAB ar\d CSA present...HOMECOMINGDANCEa house music'O o wjack your bodyQ(/with... J.M.SILKJAMIE PRINCIPLEand...Fingers Inc. FarmboyVERY SPECIAL GUEST D.J.I FRANKIE KNUCKLES« WBMX Hotmix Artists »Bartlett Gym 6at.Oct.25 900 p.m. $250 with UCID%4o 6. University $500 withoutTICKETS ON SALE OCT. 20 at the Reynolds Club Box OfficeThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. October 21,1986—13r$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 conijtlfte 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 to:Lotus Development Corporation, P.O. Box 3006. Cambridge. MA 02139.FI StudentH FaniltvCitv State .. Zin FI StaffLot us JazzFiiv function sttfluure for the Apple Macintosh integrating spreadsheet, graphics,uvrd processing, database and communicationsThis ofto applies in students, faniln and staff |mrrh»in|t»iih ivramal funds Institutional | am-hast-, dn not apH>t tfler uxptivs [hsvmfier II |uxh Matlin*s*hKh d< inn inrludr iln- Hair items listfd alsisc »ill not tirhnnotrd Xuj fa«simik“sani*pf«i Allow b-K weeks iMtvm1 1mki/vj ibe (jnxle wtfbWe’re Celebrating Wcwuj d4th AnniversaryHUI atHufck!BECAUSE OF YOUR WIDE SUPPORT AND KINDPATRONAGE Mtttifs HAS BEEN ABLE TO:1. Lower the majority of our prices to 1983 level2. Offer a wider variety of food items for yourenjoyment3. Offer Fiee 12 oz. Pepsi with many lunch anddinner specials4. Offer Ftee Ice Cream with all dinners after4:30 pm5. Keep our Happy Hour Tradition of 39C HotDogs and 99C Burgers available to all ourstudents -6. Offer a 10% discount on all Saturday andSunday night dinners.Ta fke beat mlmm in the amid (sat mimq Wtatty'aycut |)te ta cat1 TIuwfe yaui WlattyWtcWUj'fl9h Hulch CmmmM-F 7:00 am to 10:00 pmSAT & SUN 11:00 am to 8:30 pm University of Chicago Folk Dancers 24thINTERNATIONAL FESTIVALOF DANCE AND MUSICOctober 24-26,1986Friday’s workshop — Bartlett Gym, 57th St. & University Ave.All other workshops — Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St.DANCE WORKSHOPS WITH:Atanas Kolarovski — MacedonianSteve Kotansky — Eastern EuropeanEvhen Litvinov — UkrainianSPECIAL WORKSHOPS WITH:Michael Flatley — Irish Step-Dancing^ Guo Bei-Man — Chinese Folk & Classical DanceMUSIC WORKSHOPS WITH:James stoynoff — Greek & Middle EasternLjupco Milenkovski —MacedonianFOLK CONCERTSaturday, October 25, 8:00 PMMandell Hall, 1131 E. 57th St.General $7, Student $5Featuring:Balkanske Igre Ethnic Dance Co.Flatley Brothers Guo Bei-ManLjupco MilenkovskiCambodian Folk Theaterand othersPOST-CONCERT PARTYSaturday, 10:00 PM, Ida Noyes Hallfeaturing outstanding live musicFor more information contact John (312) 324-1247Tom (312) 363-521414—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21, 1986Chicago is a city with a history, traditions, a cos¬mopolitan sense; unfortunately, the city in many im¬portant respects falls short of its biocoastal rivals towhich it frequently compares itself. It does not possessthe sense of newness that comes from discovery, artisticand cultural. Hence, that which is worn and tarnished isleft tucked away in corners where it eventually evolvesto cut all the new angles which have been so con¬spicuously positioned. This is Chicago, old over new.—Tom GuagliardoThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21, 1986—15TomGuagliardo-V :::y: V:; ^^ ^> ' fH^.' /{H H -You are Cordially Invited•\-. s:.IfH * IIPMIIIi;.SlSsSfSii::S@!S:¥SW: wmmmm \MMii MliWBmMm iHifisto meetthe Silent Voices staffFriday, Oct. 24,19863 p.m.:I§S$ I 1€i$ Ida Noyes |pi |§|for refreshments and conversation. iiiii:iiiiiillyiiiiii111118mi:mmmmmslmmmmiiiiiiliti. s•’••••.V.:x Glass...continued from page elevenblue. Iridescent glass blankets acomposite of deep reds, blues,and greens. Each collection ismoved by and moves light andcolor through patterns worked intoand onto the surface of eachpiece.The fluidity of the sea formsseries continues into the most re¬cent series entitled Macchia.Chihuly arranges these piecessingularly and in couples. Thepositioning and simplicity of thesefigures calls attention to the colorsand patterns within the glass. Thiscollection of works most effectivelydemonstrates his skill for fusingsshape, color, and pattern."I might have centered that in¬ner macchia," my speaker de¬clared.I considered the possibilities.Dale Chihuly's works are unified,but seem to demand active par¬ticipation. The artist himself sepa¬rates himself from the technicalexecution of his works, preferringinstead to employ "teams" of glassartists and students of glass tocarry out his concepts in his threestudios nationwide. Each studiobrings a unique character to hispieces and his direction bringsthese elements together in a formthat is uniquely Chihuly. Solid colorand solid light dispersed through¬out intricate patterns and subtleforms are on display in the first floorgallery of The Chicago CulturalCenter until November 1st.And it really is glass.ANYTIME IS A GREAT TIMEFOR Wt&tiy'd7:00 am to 10:30 am Complete breakfasts at low, lowprices10:30 am to 3:00 pm LUNCH ... Best variety, biggestsandwiches, lowest prices, FREEPepsi with many items.3:00 pm to 5:00 pm Afternoon Happy Hour... 39* HotDogs, 99* 1/4 lb. Cheeseburgers... A campus tradition5:00 pm to 8:00 pm Great dinners at great pricesFREE Ice Cream, FREE Pepsi*with dinners8:00 pm to 10:00 pm Nightly Happy Hour... If youmissed our afternoon HappyHour or just looking for a snack,Htfttty'j is the place to be.Weekend Special 10% OFF per dinner + FREE IceCream & FREE Pepsi from 4:30to 8:30 Saturday & Sunday* Only exception is our Vz lb. sirloin steak dinner comes without pepsi,but you still receive FREE Ice CreamfKcwufa9h Huick CmhumM-F 7:00 am to 10:00 pmSAT & SUN 11:00 am to 8:30 pm Pulitzer Prize winningauthor Studs Terkel willbe autographing copies ofhis latest book, Chicago,on Monday, October 27,from 5:00 - 6:00 p.m.flBOOKS k 5757 University Ave.752-4381752-195916—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21, 1986THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOJOHN M. OLIN CENTER LECTURE SERIESThe Problem of Evil in 20th Century ftriitiespresentsRobert ConquestSenior Research Fellow, the Hoover Institution,Stanford UniversityonStalinism andThe Morality of TerrorWednesday, October 22, 19864:00 p.m.Kent Chemical LaboratoryRoom 120, 1020 East 58th Street Over 100 sandwich selections to choose!Hfawq'tLUNCH «• DINNERSandwich SPECIALSCORNED BEEF Sowluuck 1.99ROAST BEEF SowW 1.99TURKEY Samkuidt 1.99PASTRAMI SokMc 1.99HAM Saiduitck 1.99SALAMI Sawitwcic 1.99CHECK OUR MENU FOR YOUR FAVORITE! ^Free 1202. Pepsi with any ~!CHICKEN SALAD, TUNA SALAD OR HAM SALAD SANDWICH !c &ci$ vONLY $1^9Wtowuj'ft9h Hulck CowwwuM-F 7:00 am to 10:00 pmSAT & SUN 11:00 am to 8:30 pmTHE RICHTER FUND FOR UNDERGRADUATERESEARCH IN THE COLLEGEThe Richter Fund to support undergraduateresearch is accepting research proposals forthe Winter and Spring quarters of 1987.Application forms are available in Harper241 - completed applications should besubmitted to the Assistant Dean of theCollege, Harper 241, no later than Friday,November 14.Proposals must contain a description of theproject and research method, an estimatedbudget indicating the quarter it is to beused, and a letter evaluating the proposalfrom a member of the Faculty.For research that requires the use of aUniversity facility (e.g., laboratory), a letteragreeing to this use must be submitted byan appropriate member of the Faculty.Awards may range up to $1,000. Onlyresearch related expenses will beconsidered for support (living expenses arenot supportable.) Hhwu't BREAKFAST MENU♦EGG MACMORRYegg omelette, cheese, pastrami, salamiserved on a heated bagel .89* BAGEL with creamed cheese .70* EGGS any style cooked to order1 egg served with homemade cheese biscuits .652 eggs served with homemade cheese biscuits .953 eggs served with homemade cheese biscuits 1.254 eggs served with homemade cheese biscuits 1.55♦OMELETTES3 egg cheese omelette, served with 2 cheese biscuits 1.653 egg vegetarian omelette, served with 2 cheese biscuits 1.953 egg Denver omelette, served with 2 cheese biscuits 2.47* PANCAKES4 buttermilk pancakes with syrup .994 blueberry pancakes with syrup 1.494 apple pancakes with syrup 1.494 cranberry pancakes with syrup 1.494 mixed fruit pancakes with syrup 1.49* CEREALSHot oatmeal .69Assorted KelloggsCold cereals served with Vi pt. milk .99♦FRENCH TOAST with syrup .99♦SIDE DISHESHam .75Bacon .75Sausage .75Hash browns .49Pancakes .55Grilled bagel .35Wto'uj'a9k Hutch CmumaM-F 7:00 am to 10:00 pmSAT & SUN 11:00 am to 8:30 pmThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, OctoUu 2i, — l?First uncovered in Adindan, Nubia, this terracotta bowl was recentlyrediscovered in the basement of the Oriental Institute. It and other pieces ofthe collection as yet unseen by the public will be displayed through January. A sixth century, B.C. bronzekushite of an Ethiopian King ofEgypt now on display in the Orien¬tal Institute.“Treasures from the Basement:”^In-House excavation providesnew exhibit tor Oriental InstituteBy Karen E. AndersonViewpoints EditorSorting through a basement is oftena boring, dusty task which brings littlevisible reward. But, as Kim Coventry,Museum Assistant at the Oriental In¬stitute argues, it all depends on whosebasement you happen to be in.Her recent rummaging in the In¬stitute’s lower recesses has revealedtwo Syrian gold arm bands, an Egyp¬tian cat figurine called a sekmetwhich will certainly delight those whoadmire felines, and many othertreasures. Coventry also has a tan¬gible reward. Many of the objectsfrom the basement go on display todayin the museum in an exhibit titled“The Unseen Collection: Treasuresfrom the Basement” which will runthrough January.Coventry said that she and MuseumCurator fhomas Logan started un¬packing boxes in the Oriental In¬stitute's basement in June of this year.“It was just like being on a dig!”exclaimed Coventry as she pulledphotographs of the rediscovered treasures from her desk. En¬thusiastically pointing out highlightsof the exhibit she continues, “We werewowed by what we found, absolutelyflabbergasted. It’s still incredible tog’tf down there. You open a drawer andsee 20 beautiful objects; one or tworeally jump at you.”Upon reading about these summerexcavations in the basement, onemight begin to think that the Instituteis somehow careless, leaving pricelessrelics from lost civilizations strewnaround in the basement. This is cer¬tainly not the case at all. The problemis one of, well, space. Coventry ex¬plained, “We simply don’t have thespace to display our entire collection.Every time we put up a temporary-exhibit like this one, we have to decidewhich part of our permanent displaywill get put away for a while.”While Coventry wryly agrees that itis a sign of success for the museum tohave more artifacts than it can dis¬play, she says that she wishes thefacility could* be expanded to providespace for the full collection. “For ex¬ample, at the Metropolitan they nowhave everything that was in storage out in their galleries. You can literallywalk through rooms and rooms ofnothing but vases. A museum canhave everything that would be instorage on display.”Since the Unseen Collection is amixture of remnants of the diverseancient civilizations of Egypt, Iran,Iraq, Nubia, Palistine, Syria, and theeastern Mediterranean, it is an at¬tractive exhibit for those who get“It’s still incredible to godown there. You open adrawer and see 20 beauti¬ful objects; one or tworeally jump out at you.”bored quickly at museums. Gone arethe days when a visit to a museumwas confusing unless you were a stu¬dent of ancient art. The exhibit is alsoset up so that it will convey to visitorsthe feeling that they are looking atreal objects which were used by realhumans from the past. “This is atrend in museums lately,” said Cov¬entry. “We are trying to make ourexhibits understandable, we wantpeople to understand that these ob¬jects had a purpose at one time.”The Unseen Collections exhibit hastaken over what is usually the SyrianRoom. Egyptian artifacts from thereign of Ramses III will be on display.According to some archeological ex¬perts, Ramses III may be the BiblicalPharoah who brought plague when heattempted to keep the Hebrews inEgypt. The exhibit also includes aplaster carrtonage mask. Staring outcoldly from another age, it was onceplaced over the face of a deceasedRoman noble woman to create theillusion of beauty and life after death.Among the items which were once ofmundane usage is a first-aid kit fromNubia. The kit includes a pair oftweezers which were once used topluck thorns and tiny insects frombeneath the skin during long deserttreks.The artifacts which Coventry andLogan finally selected to put on dis¬play in the new exhibit represent onlya small fraction of the basement’scontents, much of which has never been seen by the public, although theyhave been accessible to staff andscholars. Coventry said that the In¬stitute’s collection is especially im¬portant to those who do serious re¬search on ancient civilizations be¬cause so many of the pieces werefound intact at excavation sites andcan be precisely dated. Thus the iden¬tity of a recently found object can beestablished by comparing it with ob¬jects from the Institute collection. Butat least until January, parts of theUnseen Collection will be serving anequally important purpose, that ofteaching the public to appreciate thepast.Cheerful Communication—no freedom of choice!By Alexandra ConroyThere’s a smile-and-say-“hi” cult in this countryand it’s becoming dangerously prominent. Peopleexpect me to be constantly friendly, outgoing, andcheerful for which they have yet to give me a goldneckerchief or a merit badge. It’s an expectation Ican hardly fulfill and therefore an attitude I findsingularly obnoxious.I have friends, I like them;occasionally, I’ll even tell them so, but I’ll do it ofmy own free will, thank you.Some of the most obvious signs of this cheerfulcommunication mindset are the AT and T com¬mercials. The company which formerly urged meto reach out and touch someone now advocatesthat I phone home but the idea is still the same:Smile and say “hi.” It’s only a suggestion though,and I can always turn off my radio. The mostirritating aspect of the commercials is not even somuch the message as the audible grins with whichit is delivered. And in the final analysis, I can’treally complain. The telephone company is notreally half so interested in forcing me to commu¬nicate as in collecting my money when I choose todo so.I’m worried because the smile-and-say-“hi” at¬titude has permeated and polluted the air beyondthe realm of large, purely profit-minded corpora¬tions. The advocates of cheerful (compulsory)communication now include some of those for¬ merly reknown for their austere observation ofpreoccupied silence: namely folks on the U of Ccampus. Greeting a fellow student should signify adeliberate contact for a specific, justified purpose.Failure to do so should not be perceived asdisbelief in said student’s moral integrity. Unfor¬tunately, some tend to regard such imaginedslights as fair grounds for a verbal, if not me¬chanical duel.The smile-and-say-“hi” might better be termedthe smile-or-else attitude; at least when it pro¬motes responses similar to “You didn’t wave. Youdead or something?’.’ or maybe “What’s thematter, your mood ring stuck on black?”(Incidentally, these are much more effective andinfinitely less stupid before you see them writtendown.) Pointing out that such rhetorical questionscreate reverse not to mention adverse reactions,might insult the intelligence of my readers.Actually, although verbal statements are themost obvious testimony to the smile-cult influence,they are not the cult’s most irritating product.There are some subscribers to this smile-and-say-“hi” attitude that realize the futility of sarcasmand say nothing. They just make forcible eyecontact with you as you try to slip by, oblivious.Mournful, disappointed eye contact. I just knowthey’re thinking, “Why didn’t she (sniff) ac¬knowledge me?”Now the challenge. I knew it was coming. How do I know what “they” are thinking? Aren’t Iperhaps just a tiny bit paranoid. NO! I am Not!O.K. I’m calm. Let me explain. I know this smile-and-say-“hi” attitude is being accepted and main¬tained for a remarkably simple and empiricalreason. I’ve succumbed to it myself. I am guilty ofpassing an acquaintance and demanding recog¬nition and “friendliness.” A little voice inside myown head has, on such occasions, remarked sar¬castically, “So don’t say ‘hi,’ ” to the silent butotherwise inoffensive passerby. Now that I’veproved this attitude exists, you’ve decided that Imust be cold, closed and callous since I don’tapprove of it.I think I’ve been misunderstood. Perhaps it waseven my fault. Just to clear things up. I condonespontaneous and open greeting of specific persons.I even have criteria to delineate them. Try this.The next time you feel pressed to converse, beforeyou open your mouth, ask yourself: “Do I reallyknow this person? Can I give his middle initial?Do I know what color ink he uses. Would I lendhim money? Would I get it back?” In other words(not to mention less words) “Is there any justifi¬cation of acquaintance besides visual recog¬nition.”The answers to these questions are not par¬ticularity relevant. If you actually took the time toask and answer them all, rest assured. The personyou just passed (who is now 300 yards away) hadno claim on your “hi.”18—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21,19861The corporate ladder—laugh your way to the topBy Joe SchmittStaff WriferReview of Claw Your Way to the Top: How toBecome the Head of a Major Corporation inRoughly a weekBy Dave Barryillustrated by Jerry O’BrienRodale Press$5.95, paperbackDave Berry’s new book isn’t just punny. It’s thekind of book that causes you to laugh uncontrol¬lably as you read so that everyone around youkeeps giving you dirty looks. The kind of bookwhich keeps you nudging the person next to youwhile pointing at the book quoting half-sentenceswhich you can’t finish without laughing evenharder.Claw Your Way to the Top is the fourth in hisseries of self-help books which includes Babies andOther Hazards of Sex, Stay Fit and Healthy UntilYou’re Dead, and The Taming of the Screw (abouthome repairs). This book, like his previous ones,abounds in practical advice such as how to dis¬ tinguish between classy and non-classy res¬taurants just by name. The examples of classyrestaurants are “Eduardo’s, La Pleuve en Voit-ure, and Ye Reallie Olde Countrie Manour DownesInne;’’ the non-classy are “Booger’s, The Chew ’n’Swallow, and Commander Taco.”The book makes good use of charts, graphs anddrawings to illustrate (pun intended) a point. Oneparticularly useful bit of information is his “Listof Topics That Middle-Aged White Anglo-SaxonMales Talk To Each Other About When They’reNot Talking Business” which I have quoted in itsentirety:1. Sports.Aside from practical information on the businessworld, Dave also stoops to perceptive commentssuch as how he realized in 1967 that “Jimi Hendrixplayed guitar far better with his teeth than most people could with their hands.” Another commenthe had... Well, okay, the last comment isn’t fromthe book. It’s from one of his columns, but it wasfunny and I wanted to quote it.Yes, by the way, aside from books Dave Berryalso writes columns which are carried in theSunday Tribune. His columns are also funny un¬like other columnists (Andy Rooney, Mike Royko,Art Buchwald, etc.), his books are original mate¬rial and not half-funny, occasionally perceptivecolumns collected into expensive hardbacks.Of course you can’t trust me to be objectiveabout this book since I worship the paper he writeson. So I guess you’ll just have to run out (don’t justsit there, go. The stores aren’t open all night) andbuy the book and stay up reading it as a way ofavoiding doing homework (which is probably whyyou read this column in the first place).Tk^Switfi-SuteSecond. Annuo.[Ster-pa. SkiingChampionshipSTART S tephenWLat £<Jmund Hillary first Saxo on topHount Everest.j Comedy Loves MiseryH/C. 'iik ilk //a i7a %> VhWqfAu. W* V»>1W&H A \H AWHAT IT's LIKE To 8 E PPiRflMOiD ^ HaAll the Help You Needto Get through Collegeor into Graduate SchoolHBJ COLLEGEOUTLINE SERIESThe Most Efficient Way to Study:. complete course in outline lorm• key concepts clearly explained• extensive drill and problem-solving practice• full-length practice exams with answers• textbook correlation tableHBJ College Outlines NowAvailable For:Analytic GeometryApplied Fourier AnalysisApplied Vector AnalysisArithmeticBusiness CommunicationsBusiness LawBusiness StatisticsCalculusCollege ChemistryIntermediate AccountingIntermediate MicroeconomicsIntroduction to BASICIntroduction to FortranPrinciples of Economics MicroeconomicsTrigonometry HBJ TESTPREPARATION GUIDESThe Key to Success:• full-length practice exams• detailed explanations of answers• step-by-step test-taking strategies• scoring chartsStudy GuidesAvailable For:•GRE•GMAT• MCAT•MAT•LSAT•CLEP• NTE• TOEFL• NCLEX-PN• NCLEX-RNAvailable from University of Chicago BookstoreHarcourt Brace Jovanovich (Watty'sHAPPY HOURBURGER Specials3:30 pm to 5 pm 8 pm to 10 pm MONDAY thru FRIDAY1/4 lb. BEEF BURGER — All the Trimmings .991/4 lb. CHEESE BURGER — All the Trimmings .99O&et Butqet SpeciflfeV\ lb. BURGER, mushrooms, sweet green peppers 1.511/4 lb. SWISS BURGER, mushrooms a peppers 1.66DOUBLE BURGER 1/2 lb. 1.82DOUBLE CHEESEBURGER 2.12TRIPLE BURGER 2.69TRIPLE CHEESEBURGER 3.14Tin Bed Buy in Cltiaujal(Watty's "Happy Hour" BURGER DELUXE Special 1.99Vi lb. Burger Z&Z, Natural Wedge cut friesch#e“ Salad -REE 12 02 PEPSIF&t Hoi De4 £mufKcWUj & “Happy Hour" Hot Dogs All the trimmings .39(ffotty'd “Happy Hour" Hot Dog Deluxe with Fries 1.29rREE 12 OZ PEPSI9k Hutch CamumM-F 7:00 am to 10:00 pmSAT & SUN 11:00 am to 8:30 pmThe Chicago Maronn—Tuesday, October 21,1966— isDeli holds food testFree food samples will be offered all day Oc¬tober 25 as Mr. G s deli celebrates its first an¬niversary. Wendy Gerick. a Hyde Park catererand gourmet cook will conduct a cooking demon¬stration. Rumor has it Studs Turkel will put in anappearance. The celebration is partly promotionalbut mostly “We just wanted to give somethingback to Hyde Park.” Judy Markas explained.“The idea was not to have simply a gourmet’deli,” Bill Gerstein, proprieter of Mr. G's FinerFoods, said. “We have some real Jewish delistuff,” on the order of lox and bagles, “. . . andsome ‘fancy’ stuff.” The fancy stuff was morespecifically defined by Judy Markas. the delicoordinator. “We have everything from deviledtofu—a kind of eggless egg salad—down tochopped liver. The deli’s small, but we try to makeup for it in creativity. Other items, includingnoodle kugel, shrimp egg rolls, pasta primavera,curried chicken, and vegetable lasagna attest tothe variety. Some delicacies are carried consist¬ently, others very according to space.The revamped deli had a number of impeti. “Iwanted it, but it was Judy’s creation.” Gersteinsaid. Markas maintained the incentive was cus¬tomer demand combined with the attitude, “If weare going to do it, let’s make it special.” Appar¬ently Markas, who had recipes printed in BonApetite and a background in advertising and p.r.,succeeded. During the year, business for thatsection of the store trippled. Actually, the deli didexist long before Markas’ direction as a lesssophisticated dispenser of tuna salad.Both Markas and Gerstein would like to expandservices. “If I had more room. I'd have a sit downeating area.” Mr. G said. As it is. he plans to setup tables and chairs outside between the twobuildings of the Kimbark Plaza shopping cen¬ter—a purely warm-weather venture. “If every¬thing goes according to plan, we'll be making ourown premium ice cream.” On that score. Gersteinis concerned that the ice cream base be all naturalwith no stabilizers. “One of the reasons HaagenDaas sells so well is what’s in it. If it tasted thesame, but had extra ‘stuff in it, it wouldn't sell.People in Hyde Park are careful about what theyeat.” BLOOM COUNTYFEMININEACTION. THERE'SwroteANOTHER ONEOF YOUR SPECIESOUT THERESUTTASLE FORsnuggling. by Berke Breathed.SO WE'LL teSIGNING THECONTRACTSTOMORROW. SOON I'LL 3E SEEINGTHOUSANPS OF LITTLESTUFFEP M6 AU. MRSHOPPING MALLSAROUNO THE COUNTRY,.. TP PREFER TO 0EPULLEP CNER CARPET TACKSANP PfPPEP IN RUtRINGSON WC WANT TOSEE THIS PASSELOPETHING. MOW A SMALL TACTICAL WARHEAPWOULP FTT NEATLY 3ETWEENHIS ANTLERS. IT COULP tE THE REPS ARE RUMOREPTO HAVE A tASSELOPE.OUR SIPE HAS NONE.PO YOU KNOW WHAT THAT ABfimopETired of the same old campus coffee houses?Need a place to study?Visitfeaturing:fresh roasted coffee, delicious sandwiches, gourmet pastries, a wide assortment ofteas, imported hot chocolate, expresso and cappucinoNEWHOURS M-F 10:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.Sat. 9:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.Sun. 11:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.15% Discount on all coffee drinks10% discount on all other items5211 S. Harper288-4063 “YOU CAN GETFRESH WITH US”• Full-line Deli • Party Trays • Carry-outs5319 S. Hyde Park Blvd.955-DELI6AM-10PM 7 DAYS A WEEKWOMEN20% OFFRETAIL REDKEN-NEXXUS - MATRIXHAIR PHDPrecision Hair Design1315 E. 57th Street363-0700Join The HAIR PHD Closs of 1937Amidst the academic challenges of college life, the last thing youneed is hair that defies management You want to look your bestYour busy schedule demands simplicity. Enter our stylists. We’llcustom create a super hairstyle for you.Call today for your free hair design consulation. Academicchallenges are our speciality.HAIRCUTS*«*• PERMS*2000 * 4000REDKEN - MATRIX-HELEN CURTIS-NEXXUS - LOREAL - ZOTOSMEN■ kW«i4*1>•$»;t! 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 Hil20—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21, 1986YOU NO LONGER HAVETO GO TO THENORTH SIDE!1605 East 55th St. (312) 955-4800OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK...THE STORE FOR ALL YOURPARTY GOODS AND GIFTS!!T-SHIRTSGARY LARSON - FARSIDE CARDS1987 CALENDARS AND DATE BOOKSAND ALL YOUR RECYCLEDPAPER PRODUCTSInternational HousesGERMAN DINNERWED., OCT. 225 • 7:30 P.M.Soup: Clear Beef Broth (Fleischkeaftbruhe)Lentil(Linsensuppe)1. Cream Mushroom (Gedunstete Pilze)2. Duck Stewed in Beer (Ente in Bier)3. Fish Filets in Beer Batter(Fishchfleten in Beertrig)4. German Stuffed Breast of Veal(Gefullte Kalbsbrust)5. Sauerbraten (German Pot Roast)Potato DumplingsSauerkraut with Sherry WineDESSERTS: Apple Strudel Cheese StrudelCherry Strudel753-22741414 E. 59th St. GREA T DINNERS AT GREA T PRICESBUYDINNERAT ,♦ Fee 9ee Oteow J“A * IM AK Dimm *tHowujTONIGHT AND WE’LLGIVE YOU DESSERT FREE4:30 to 8:00 P.M.ALL OUR DINNERS ARE ALSO AVAILABLE AT LUNCHFREE• JUMBO RIB TIP DINNER with fries and salad 2 99 12 oz. PepsiFREE• JUMBO BBQ CHICKEN DINNER (Vi chicken) with fries and salad 2 ® ® 12 02 PePsiFREE• COMBINATION RIB TIP & CHICKEN DINNER with fries and salad 2®® 12 02 pepsiFREE• OUR SPECIAL Vi LB. STEAKBURGER DINNER with fries and salad 2®® 12oz. PepsiFREE• OUR SPECIAL BONELESS CHICKEN BREAST DINNER with fnes and salad .. 2 9 9 » «free• NEW GREEK STYLE BROILED CHICKEN DINNER with fries and salad 2" 12 oz PepsiFREE• OUR JUMBO V2 LB. KOSHER CHAR-DOG DINNER with fries and salad 2" 12 oz Pepsi• CHICKEN TERRIYAKI DINNER with rice, vegetable and salad 299 12 ozEpeps>• BEEF TERRIYAKI DINNER with rice, vegetable and salad 2" ,2%%*• JUMBO Vi LB. SIRLOIN STEAK DINNER with fnes and salad 299•HOUSE SPECIAL ‘TROUT DINNER" • Whole fish with fnes and salad 299 i2oz%Ps,COMPLETE LINE OF SANDWICHESAND SALAD BAR ARE ALSO AVAILABLE'‘SALAD BAR NOT A VAILABLE SA T. & SUN. 0NL Yk'kiriritirirititiririr'kiririritiriritiririt%mdibk WEEKEND SPECIAL-V • V-' !10% OFF ALL DINNERS EVERY SATURDAY AND SUNDAYNIGHT + FREE ICECREAM + FREE 12oz. PEPSI’kr- KK -JUMBO DINNERS AT LOW, LOW PRICESMAKE (fttWufd YOUR DINNER ALTERNATIVEWt<WU|,&9k Hutch ComumM-F 7:00 am to 10:00 pmSAT & SUN 11:00 am to 8:30 pmThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21, 1986—21Soccer team shut outby Madelyn DetloffSports Editor Championship results to dateVolleyballMonmouth def. Cornell, 11-15, 16-14, 15-9,15-6Beloit def. U-Chicago, 15-9,15-5,15-5Cornell def. Knox. 16-14,15-2,15-12Ripon def. Lake Forest, 3-15, 16-14, 8-15, 18-16, 15-5Beloit def. Lawrence, 15-1, 13-15, 15-10, 15-12U-Chicago def. Lawrence, 15-13,15-12, 15-2St. Norbert def U-Chicago, 15-5,15-7, 15-7Monmouth def. Illinois C., 15-10, 15-7, 15-11Cornell def. Grinnell, 15-2,15-6, 15-0 SoccerU-Chicago 1, Lake Forest 0St. Norbert 5, Lawrence 3Beloit 2, Ripon 1Ripon 7, U-Chicago 2Lake Forest 5, Lawrence 1Lawrence 5, U-Chicago 0Lake Forest 5. Ripon 3Volleyball team drops matchby Madelyn DetloffSports EditorThe women’s soccer team was shutout over the weekend, losing 5-0 to St.Norbert College on Friday and 4-0 toLawrence University Saturday. Thelosses dropped the Maroons’ confer¬ence record to 1 and 6. Chicago’s lonevictory, ironically, was over divisionleading Lake Forest College.According to Chicago Head CoachJanet Napoli, “St. Norbert has thefinest team in the conference. They’retough; they’re very seasoned.” TheGreen Knights’ experience and depthdefinitely showed against the Mar¬oons’ fledgling soccer club. Tradi¬tionally aggressive, St. Norbert at¬tacked the Chicago defense with afour-man front line, and containedChicago's offense with an excellentoffsides trap.The Maroons were hoping to farebetter against the less disciplinedLawrence club. “I still feel we couldhave pulled that game off.” com¬mented Napoli, “we were starting towork some good transition in theLawrence game. We held it reallysolid for about 30 to 35 minutes, so Ithought we were going to stay withNot content to compete againstsheltered local competition, the U of Ccross-country team competed againstthe “Big Fish” Saturday, when theytraveled to Oshkosh, Wisconsin to runin the prestigious Carthage In¬vitational. At the meet were 22 teams,including several Division I and Divi¬sion II schools with scholarship run¬ners. The remaining entrants were topDivision III teams. To add to thisalready stiff competition, the varsityrace was combined with the open di¬vision, which featured many national them the whole game.”Napoli feels that the turning point ofthe game was the first Lawrence goal,a booming shot from the 25 yard line.“The impact was devastating, fromthe attitude of the Maroons inconsist¬encies to their lack of experienceplaying together. “I don’t think thatthe team really believes in itself yet.We have to believe that what we workon in practice will work in a game.Winning will come with believing.”This week the Maroons take on thetop three teams in the conference. OnTuesday Chicago will travel to LakeForest, where the Foresters will, asNapoli expresses it, “be out for blood”to avenge their 1-0 loss in Chicago.Thursday Beloit will come to Chic¬ago for a 4 p.m. match on Stagg field.The Maroons will finish their seasonagainst the dreaded Green Knights onSunday at Stagg.* * * * *Women’s soccer will be the feature ofSouthside Sportsrap this week.Sportsrap, hosted by Jay Polk, is aregular program on WHPK (fm 88.5),airing Thursdays at 4:30. Intramuralscores and coverage of local highschool action will also be broadcast onthe show.and fringe world-class runners, bring¬ing the total number of runners to 399.The competition seemed to bring outthe best in the Maroons. They faredwell both as a team and as in¬dividuals. They outdid their spec¬tacular performance of last week.(The top five runners were all under28:27, compared to 28:52 on a muchfaster course.)The first U of C runner to finish wasSteven Thomas, who placed 47th witha spectacular time of 26:39 on therugged 8,000m course. Kevin Nelson,fully recovered from a case of GREexams that kept him from racing last Despite solid defense by KellyKusch and sparkling net play byPhyllis Williamson, the women’s vol¬leyball team dropped a non¬conference match to North Park Col¬lege 7-15, 12-15, 6-15. Thursday eve¬ning.Inconsistent passing and break¬downs in communication hamperedlast week, ran in impressive 27:36,earning him 96th place. The thirdMaroon to finish was Armand Museywho ran a swift 27:47 for 103rd place.Sean Love placed 109th, with a time of28:16. David Navarro was the fifthMaroon to finish, in a sterling time of28:27. Mark Sasse also ran an out¬standing race, finishing in 127th placewith at time of 29:30. Freshman MarkLevandoski. rounded out the top sevenby finishing in a strong 30:11 to take135th place. The team as a wholeplaced 16th out of 22 teams. HeadCoach Mike Karluk praised his run¬ners’ performance, remarking, “Thisis the best team we’ve had in years.” offensive attack. Several times duringthe course of a rally the Maroonsresorted to sending free balls over thenet. This allowed North Park time tomix up their offense and riddle theChicago defense with deep spikes,short sets and shoot sets.When the Maroons did set the ballup. hitters Williamson, Kelly Britson,and Vivian Eschenbach did a good jobof putting the ball down. FreshmanBritson inspired a Chicago rally late ingame two. With the score 10-6 in favorof North Park, Britson downed twokills to change the momentum of thegame. The Maroons then battled to a12-12 tie, but could not finish-off thescrappy Vikings.In game three Chicago jumped outto a quick lead, but several errors,both in passing and at the net, allowedNorth Park to take control of thegame.The Maroons take on conferencerival Lake Forest tonight at LakeForest. The Foresters are not as toughas they were last year, when they wonthe North Division title of the MACW.This year they have two wins and twolosses in the conference, but theyshould provide a challenge for theMaroons, who are one and three inconference matches.Cross-country fares well at InvitationalBy Will BernardContributing WriterPUBLIC LECTURE SERIESSponsored by the ENRICO FERMI INSTITUTEof theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE ARTHUR H. COMPTON LECTURESTwenty-fourth Series byYau-Wai WahThe Enrico Fermi InstituteSaturdays October 11 through December 13, 1986at 11 a.m.Paradoxes in PhysicsKersten Physics Bldg. - Room 115 - 5720 Ellis Ave.For further information, phone 962-7823 AUGUSTANA CONCERT SERIESFridays 5:00 p.m.Fall Schedule:Oct. 24 Cynthia Stone, flute; Jonathan Elliott,pianoOct. 31 Benjamin Lane, organNov. 7 Jeannie Schaefer, fluteNov. 14 Paul Manz, organNov. 21 Flute Quartet:Cynthia Stone, flute; Paula White,violin; Caroline Girgis, viola; LeoLorenzen, celloDec. 5 Karen Sande, organAll concerts are free of chargeAugustana Lutheran Church/Lutheran Campus Center55th and WoodlawnChicago, IllinoisSPONSORED BY LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY22—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21, 1986Red Sox vs Mets: World Series contenders analyzedBy Rick SnyderStaff WriterAnd now there remains only two —the best of the National League vs. thebest of the American League. TheBoston Red Sox, down three games toone vs. California in the ALCS, got atwo out, two strike homerun fromDave Henderson and the rest is his¬tory. The Mets never seemed to leadin any of the games vs. Houston ex¬cept when it counted — at the end.Both teams know what it is like to bedown for the count, only to get back upand knock out their opponents. TheLeague Championship Series’ weregreat, but the Fall Classic couldbe a classic.GAME ONE: Ron Darling andBruce Hurst locked up in a good old-fashioned pitching duel, with an un¬earned run beating the Mets 1-0. Afterpitching poorly in Game 3 of theNLCS, Darling rebounded beautifullyin GAME 1. During the regular sea¬son, Darling had 13 no-decisions, so heknows what it is like to pitch without much support. Hurst has been superbduring the post-season, and dominatedthe Mets the way Knepper was sup¬posed to have. Both teams lost theirfirst games in post-season, so the Metsare in a familiar position.MATCHUPSStarting Pitching:The Mets starting four of Gooden,Fernandez, Darling, and Ojeda hasonly one bad game to show for itself ineight games — they have done the job.Bruce Hurst has been Boston’s mostreliable starter, with Roger Clemenslooking better every time out. Theymay find themselves carrying the Sox'pitching staff, unless “Oil Can” cancontrol himself and pitch his game.Besides, the Red Sox don’t have MikeScott!!!EDGE TO METSRelief to Pitching:This is where New York enjoys itsbiggest advantage. With RogerMcDowell and Jesse Orosco (thewinner of three games in the NLCS),the Mets have a tremendous righty-lefty combination. Boston really has only one reliever, Calvin Schiraldi. Hehas pitched well in his last two ap¬pearances, but he is unproven anderratic.LARGE EDGE TO METSOffense:During post-season, the Mets havebeen hurting offensively. They haven’tcome up with the firepower to putaway the other team, but they havebeen coming up with the timely hits.Boston, meanwhile, has posted upsome numbers on the scoreboard, es¬pecially in Fenway. The removal ofBaylor’s bat when the series is in NewYork hurts Boston, more so than theaddition of Danny Heep or Kevin Mit¬chell when the series is in Boston. Onpaper, the offenses would rate very equal. However, Boston has showed itcan score runs in bunches off the bestof pitchers.EDGE TO RED SOXBoth teams arrived emotionallydrained, but feeling that they deservedto be in the series. Boston had shed itsimage of “choker” and the Mets won’thave to say to the world, “Wait ’tilnext year.” The Mets won 108 gamesand not because they are in a weakleague. They are a tremendous team,and they know it. I believe they aresimply...the best. And I think they’llprove that to Boston.Prediction:NEW YORK METS over BOSTONRED SOX4 GAMES TO 2Intramural season underwayBy Andy ColemanStaff WriterIt s the start of a new intramuralseason. Houses, Grad Schools, andindividuals competing for fun, relaxa¬tion, exercise, pride, glory, and yesthose coveted IM t-shirts. The in-Maroons only one game away from firstBy Geoff SherryStaff WriterThe Chicago Maroons defeated Bel¬oit College on Saturday 12-7 to even uptheir conference record at 2-2, andhead into this weekend's Homecomingshowdown with conference foe LakeForest College only one game out offirst place in the MCAC standings.Trailing 7-0 in the fourth quarter,Chicago scored its first touchdown in11 quarters of play on a 14-yard pass¬ing strike from quarterback MattSchaefer to tight end Doug Jackman.Paul Song missed the PAT and theMaroons trailed 7-8 midway throughthe final quarter.After stopping the next Beloit of¬ fensive drive, Chicago took to theground as senior Tony Lee capped offa career high 168-yard day with a 10-yard touchdown run to put Chicago up12-7. The Maroons attempted the twopoint conversion but failed, and thefinal score stood at 12-7.The Maroon defense continued tosparkle, as Chicago granted Beloitonly 167 total yards. The pass defensehas allowed only 103 yards per gamepassing and a stingy 40 percent aver¬age pass completion rate by opposingquarterbacks. One key has been theplay of sophomore safety Rob Wil¬liams. He has five interceptions in thelast six games, including a key pickoffin the end zone versus Beloit which hereturned 45 yards to set up the Chic¬ago offense with excellent field posi-Penguin seasonis here again!25% OFFon all Penguin paperbacks inthe General Book DepartmentOctober 17-November 1★ Contemporary Fiction ★Classics★ Mysteries ★ History★ and much more!The General Book Department is open from 9 to 5six days a week, Monday through Saturday.Bflic Inivcrsitv of Chicagoookstore•>70Kii^t 5Hlh Street • (.likraujo. Illinois7 • ( H21*W»2-77I- tion.The offense snapped out of its recentdoldrums in part due to a new of¬fensive game plan featuring a singlerunning back and a stacked receivingcorp. In addition. Coach Mick Ewinghas opted to employ a power-I on thirddown and short rushing situations.With Lee as an I-back, kicker JimBonebrake and middle linebacker TedRepass line up in the backfield in frontof Lee to serve as blockers. The for¬mation has yet to fail on a third downconversion.Aside from Lee’s career high rush¬ing day, Jackman had five receptionsfor 48 yards and 1 TD to round out hisbest day as a Maroon. Chicago hostsLake Forest Saturday at 1:30 pm atStagg Field. tramural program doesn’t waste any¬time, in fact, there were footballgames on the Midway before most ofyou finished your first 100 pages ofAdam Smith. A quick glance at thisquarter’s agenda shows football, vol¬leyball, and frisbee for the team sportenthusiast, and handball, table tennis,and badminton for the individuals. Aswith the start of any new season, thereare always questions to be answered.This writer will not embarrass himselfwith ridiculous, useless attempts atpredicting this season's final outcome,but I will pose a few questions whichmight prove interesting as the quarterprogresses. Can Upper Rickert sur¬vive without the theatrics of RajNanda0 Can the Henderson footballteam survive without any tight-ends9What the heck is a Fishbein9 Willevery house resort to stupid teamnames in a futile attempt to hide theirincompetence (Compton Crunch)?Will the referee suicide rate climbabove 50%? And finally, will an un¬dergraduate house ever win against agraduate team? Until next time,happy IM-ing and...don't take anyrotten calls.Pm9ee Cmm tat 'Ditutet At Matty'a Teuigld.and well (nuj you denett! Watik65PURCHASE DINNER (worth 2.99 or more)AND WE’LL BUY YOU A IttoVUj'jICE CREAM WORTH 65‘Good Cmyday 4:30 to 8:30 p.m.9t'i Chiitmi alt ym hwg at Btcwuj'aUM66’Wowuj'o9u Hutch CamumM-F 7:00 am to 10:00 pmSAT & SUN 11:00 am to 8:30 pm Fw*Oet Cm*The Chicago Maroon -Tuesaay, October 21, 1986—23WHPK DJ argues against format changesTo the Editor:As a WHPK DJ for the last threeyears, I would like to make two pointswhich have not been emphasizedenough in the present programmingdebate.First, Mr. Bobley’s statement thatthe old schedule was “confusing andhaphazard” is simply misguided. Forone thing, it certainly does not showmuch confidence in the average U of Cstudent’s intellect. Furthermore, thepeople who thought the format con¬fusing were probably not regular lis¬teners but listeners who turned on thestation at random times only to findmusic they didn’t want to hear. Thesepeople will be no better off with thepresent format, which is, schematic¬ally, much more haphazard. More¬ over, the regular listeners will now bealienated as well.Second, Bobley has stated that thepurpose of a college station is to pro¬gram music which can’t be heard onother stations. I agree completely. Thefact is, much of the “rap” and“house” music which Mr. Moxey is soin favor of can be heard not in¬frequently in Chicago on stations suchas WBMX and WGCI. The other “al¬ternative” rock which the staff puts oncan often be heard on college stationssuch as WNUR. The same cannot besaid for the jazz which is being played.No other station in Chicago plays thediversity of jazz which WHPK pre¬sents. In particular, the amount ofnew/experimental jazz would be veryhard to find on any station in thecountry.CAUSE disrupts forumTo the Editor,We are bemused at the infantileattempt by John Conlon, SohotraSarkar, and other U of C luminaries tohijack a recent Common Sense-sponsored presentation on the state ofaffairs in Nicaragua. What we hadintended to be a frank and sober dis¬cussion of the issues turned into acircus, as the leftists, as if on cue,leapt from their seats and startedscreaming at the top of their lungs,denouncing us and our speak¬ers—calling us “fascists,” “close-minded,” and charging us with “ob¬structing open and rational dis¬closure” of the issue.The controversy allegedly centersaround a fraudulent poster advertisingthe event, which for all intents andpurposes reads, “CAUSE sponsors aforum on Contra atrocities in Nic¬aragua/Witnesses tell all!” Conlon &Co. are charging us with having put upthose posters. But anyone familiarwith campus political activism willrealize that those posters play rightinto Conlon’s hands; since at least 2500people saw them, CAUSE has gained avaluable publicity and propagandisticcoup—and done it all in the mostinnocent of ways, coming out as "thehapless victim of the virulent Right” ^a common ploy of the hard left).And is it any coincidence that our(legitimate) posters advertising theevent mention CAUSE by name? Orthat the fraudulent posters began ap¬pearing up alongside Apartheid Vigilposters the very same night? TheCAUSE poster was obviously a hackjob, done on the spur of the moment.Then on Friday morning, we dis¬covered a poster on Harper (tapedbelow a CAUSE poster) which read“This is a lie put up (sic) by Commen(sic) Sense to build their (sic)meeting/Another dirty trick broughtto us by local Rightests (sic).” Morevictimization and more lies. We don'tmind close-minded leftists coming toour meetings but we will certainly notadvertise for them—and Conlon is afool if he thinks we would.As it turned out, about half theaudience was of the far left—andevery single one of them had a CAUSEposter which was pulled out when thecries of moral indignation arose. Weknow for a fact that Conlon & Co. don’tcare a whit about the suppression ofNicaragua’s only independent voice,La Prensa. Now it looks as thoughtthey’re bringing similar tactics home.Sincerely,Russell Miller and David White Moreover, the DJs who have put thismusic on are both authoritative andcreative forces in the area of newmusic: John Litweiler, a well-knownwriter on the modern jazz tradition.Edward Wilkerson, musician in theChicago Heritage Ensemble and amember of the AACM — the Chicagoschool which has been a long- standingforce behind the production of blackcreative music; and finally, LeoKrumpholz, present co-manager ofLinks Hall, which in its short existenceis already well-known as a consistentpresenter of new and innovative mu¬sic. Furthermore, as listeners of Leoknow, the type of show he presentedwas much more than a “jazz” radio program. His thoroughly worked-outprograms involved mixing music fromall spectrums, with spoken recordings(often rare), live readings, and evenoccasional live musicians (at times hehas broadcast seven or eight tracks atonce.) His WrHPK Anniversary pro¬gram, his program the day of thespace shuttle tragedy, and his pro¬grams during Black History Monthare beautiful examples of radio pro¬gramming that explores the ultimatepossibilities of the medium. The pre¬sent programming changes show alack of awareness and respect for ajazz staff of this dimension.Paul M. FotschFourth-year student in the CollegeThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University ofChicago. It is published twice weekly, on Tuesdays and Fridays.Back issues are available, by mail only, at $1.50 for the first issue and $1.00 foreach additional issue. Send full payment with the request.Mail subscriptions are available for $24 per year.The Maroon welcomes letters and other contributions from students, faculty,staff, and others. Anyone interested in doing writing, photography, or other work forthe Maroon should stop by our office, Ida Noyes rooms 303 and 304, 1212 E. 59thStreet. Chicago, Illinois 60637. Phone: 962-9555.Larry KavanaghEditor-in-ChiefSteven K. AmsterdamAnjali K. FedsonGrey City Journal EditorsMolly McClainManaging EditorKrishna RamanujanChicago Literary Review EditorElizabeth BrooksSenior Yews Editor Steve LauNews AnalysisMona El NaggarNews EditorGreg MantellNews EditorHoward UllmanNews 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. Diana Bigelow,Robert Block, Brett Bobley, Michele Bonnarens, Michael Breen, Sarah Brem, JeffBrill, Theresa Brown, Laurel Buerk, Gabriela Burghelea, Carole Byrd. RhodessaCapulong, John Conlon, Sue Chorvat. Elizabeth deGrazia, Larry DiPaolo, RebeccaE. Dono, T.D. Edwards, Robin Einhorn, Michael Fell, Mike Fitzgerald, BillFlevares, Andy Forsaith, Jennifer Fortner, Beth Green, Kate Hill, Craig Joseph,Justine Kalas, Ann Keen, Stefan Kertesz, Sanjay Khare, Bruce King, Mike Kotze,Lauren Kriz, Janine Lanza, Marcia Lehmberg, Meg Liebezeit, Nadine McGann,Miles Mendenhall, Steve Meralevitz, Sam D. Miller. Patrick Moxey, Karin Nelson,Brian Nichiporuk, Jordan Orlando. Jean Osnos, Chelcea Park. Jacob Park, LarryPeskin, Clark Peters, Geoff Potter, Laura Rebeck, Anna Rentmeesters, PaulReubens, Rich Rinaolo, Gary Roberts, Paul Rohr, Erika Rubel, Terry Rudd, MarySajna, Sahotra Sarkar, Nelson Schwartz, Rick Senger, Neal Silbert, Michael Sohn,Sonja Spear, Dave Stogel, Johanna Stoyva, Kathy Szdygis, Bob Travis, StephenTsung. Martha Vertreace, Christina Vougarelis, Ann Whitney. Rick Wojcik, Christ¬ine Wright.Contributors: Susan Conova, Sam Eels, Barbie McCluskey, Jon Quinlan, NeilRifkind, Jennings B. Wilson.MembershipSecretaryDO YOU HAVE the background and theinterpersonal skills for heavy public contact1Do you have the experience to assume respon¬sibility for membership registration, recordkeeping, data entry, and various secretarialduties1 (Knowledge of Hyde Park KenwoodJewish community preferred)IK THIS SOUNDS LIKE THE JOB JUSTKOR YOU, send resume and references,complete with phone numbers, to Hyde ParkJC'C. 1100 E Hyde Park Blvd.. Chicago60615 (NO phone calls, please)e.o.e.How to startyour law careerbefore you startlaw school.Start with the Kaplan LSATprep course After takingKaplan, thousands of LSATstudents score between 40 and48 And those scores give youthe best shot at getting into theschool of your choice and goingon to the top firms orcorporations Call todayKAPLANStANSlVH KAWANIQUCAIlONAl QNIlHUUCall Days, Eves & WeekendsOIAL-A-TEST HOTLINE (312) 508-0106ARLINGTON HEIGHTS 437-6650CHICAGO CENTER 764-5151HIGHLANO PARK 433-7410LA GRANGE CENTER 352-5840 HOW FAR WILL YOUR TALENT TAKE YOU?Apply for the TIME College AchievementAwards and find out. TIME Magazine is search¬ing for 100 col lege juniors who have distinguishedthemselves by their excellence, in academics and.more importantly, exceptional achievement out¬side the classroom.The top 20 winners will be awarded $2,500 and profiled in a special promotional section ofTIME. Eighty finalists will receive $250 each.All 100 students will be given first considerationfor internships with participating corporations.Deadline for applications is December 3I,1986. Details at your dean's office or call 1-800-523-5948. In Pennsylvania, call 1-800-637-8509.TIMEThe C Jlcge Achievement Awards24—The Chicago Maroon—Tup^Hay fwnhor 21, 1986Help bring the world together.Host an exchange student.As part of International Youth Exchange, a PresidentialInitiative for peace, your family welcomes a teenager fromanother country into your home and into your way of life.Volunteer host families from all segments of Americansociety are being selected. If youd like to be one of them,send for more information.Help bring the world together, one friendship at a time.A message fmm The Advertising Council and The International Youth Exchange. Write- YOCTH EXCHANGEPueblo. C olorado 81009COMPUTATION CENTER OPEN HOUSEOCTOBER 24, 3-5 P.M.1155 EAST 60TH STREET(DIRECTLY SOUTH OF ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL)- Machine room tours: see the Amdahl 5860,the DEC, the Pyramid, the 9700s, the Gandalf,and much, much more!- See fascinating exhibits:• Electronic printing and publishing• Electronic mail, including network maps• EPIC examples• Mainframe graphics• Historical exhibit of modems, computer cards, etc.• Communications display of cables, connections, etc.• Office Local Area Networks- See the inside of a Mac and an IBM PC!- Visit the Microcomputer Demonstration andDevelopment Laboratory and see a number ofmicros running different programs!- Plenty of refreshments!Bring your friends! THE LITTLE STORE THAT COULDMiiwuj's At Tice BeofototeWe offer....\J Sandwiches \/BeveragesV Ice Cream PastriesV and other SnacksIftoWUl'ftAt Tlte BocbtoicOPEN: 7:00AM~4:30PM Monday thru Friday9:00AM~4:00PM SaturdayClosed SundayLocated on the first floor of the U of C Bookstore.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21,1986—25CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified 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 fhe 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 pub¬lication. Absolutely no exceptions will be made!In case of errors for which the Maroon isresponsible, adjustments will be made or cor¬rections run only if the business office is noti¬fied WITHIN ONE CALENDAR WEEK of theoriginal publication. The Maroon is not liablefor anv errors.SPACEAPARTMENTS AVAILABLEStudios, one, two 8. 3 bedrms some lake viewsnear 1C, CTA 8. 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.For Rent 3 room basement apt furnished 56th EMaryland 684-4163Sublet 1 bdrm turn vie. 51 St & Cornell Nov-Feb.lake vw U bus $450 mo. + sec, 324 0876, 288 2014eves, wknds.52nd Blkstone furn rm in twnhse l'i bath airyard cptg all util inci S260.00 mo full kitchenfacil for info call 747-1062.Lovely two bedroom in a secure, fiscally wellrun building at 55th and Ingleside. The floorsare sanded hardwood, and there is a formaldiningroom, too! There is super storage spacethroughout the modern kitchen and the entireapartment. One can easily walk to +he U of CHospitals and to campus Very reasonablypriced at S55,000. URBAN SEARCH 337 24003 bdrm house in Brussels avail Dec. 14-Jan. 2 inexenange for dog sitting Call 947-9660.FOR RENT — One bedroom Apt. 54th & Cornell. Sanded Floors, Huge Closets, on "c: BusRoute. Available Now. Call Evenings — 752-1846Large studio for rent $328 total 955-1241PEOPLE WANTEDHELP WANTED: Students for the La RabidaChildren's Hospital Phonathon the evening ofNovember 10th-$4.25 p, h call Phyllis Monjarat 363-6700 tor more information.Federal, State and Civil Service jobs nowavailable in your area. For info, call (805; 6449550Work at home mailing sales literature. Write.S.C & Assoc., Box 21514, Columbus, OH. 43221. Participants needed for paid experiments onmemory and reasoning conducted by membersof the Dept of Behavioral Sciences. Call 962-8861to arrange an appointment.PIANIST/REPETITEUR To work with operasinger. 2-3 hrs/week. Call 752-4559.HOUSEHOLD JOB $7.00 HRWe need someone to clean our APT. We don'thave child or pet. Hours flexible. 493-1892Looking for undergraduate, graduate or profs todo comparative analysis of atomic modelstheoretical model of science 8. scriptural model.Call Wallace Rose, 921-7478.Experienced 8, affectionate babysitter wantedfor occasional daytime hours on campus foryear old boy 8. girl age 4. Please call 955-3119after 5.Art related business seeks administrative as¬sistant. Near N. loop. Typing required. 10-4pmM-F 6.50 per hr. Call 944-5401Part-time data entry and clinical position.Mathematical abilities required—will be tested.Hours: Mon-Fri 9am-12pm. Apply at: MidasMuffler Shop, 7419 S. Stoney Island, week-days,ask for Pat.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES and has a memory. Phone 955-4417.ALL TYPING Thesis, letters, Resumes, Tables,French, Spanish, deutsch. Call Elaine 667 8657Hyde 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 & VIDEO 493-67001342 EAST 55TH STREETVIDEO TRANSFERSWe offer excellent service transferring virtuallyallvideo formats, including VHS, BETA, U-MATIC, 1' & 3MM. Call for price quotes.MODEL CAMERA & VIDEO 493-67001342 EAS~ 55TH STREETEDITING, WORD PROCESSING, TYPINGJames Bone 363-0522 Hourly fee.Preschool/Daycare spaces still available atHyde Park Preschoc, Center, 5650 S. Woodlawn.Hours: 6 30am-6:00pm. Ages 2-6. After school,2-6pm, Ages 5-12. Cail for info: 667 7269Typing services available. All documents. CailNina 667-5688FOR SALE!M & IF 10-spd bikes VG cond $125 ea/negot.962-7123/643-2706.57th STREET BOOKCASE Soiid pine bookcases, various sizes, like those at 57th St. Books,can be ordered by calling 363-3038.Heavy grey boots, hiking/waffle stomper type,men's size 8’2. Brand new; good quality; pricenegotiable. 929 7592; leave message.WINTER SUMMER FALLScholarships Available for SuperiorStudents for Short-Term Study atTHEUNIVERSITYOF OXFORDSeveral colleges of Oxford University have invitedHampden-Sydney College to recommend a few highlyqualified students to study for one or two academicterms (or one academic year).Upper Sophomore status required.Transcripts wilj be issued to the home college in U.S.credit terms through Hampden-Sydney College,founded in Virginia by James Madison in 1776.Graduate Study is an option.A special summer program is offered under thedirection of Hampden-Sydney College.INTERNSHIPS IN LONDONand WASHINGTONAcademic Internships and Courses are also offered bythe Center.FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE WRITE TO:Washington International Studies CenterRoom 713A, 901 Sixth Street, S.W.Washington, DC 20024EO/AA 1975 BMW 2002, low miles, $1700 288-1682 atter 6pm.Cutlass 1980 Navy blue carefully maintained$3500. 493-5774.TURKISH CARPETS. Large selection of in¬dividually selected carpets and Kelims fromTurkey. Good quality, low prices 955-1225 eve.SCENESUC Folk Dancers present their 24th annual folkdance & music festival, with teaching 8, demonstration workshops. Featuring Chinese, Irish,Macedonian, Ukrainian, Eastern European andothers. Fri Oct 24 8 pm in Bartlett, Sat-Sun Oct25-26 in Ida Noyes. Questions call John 324-1247.or Tom 363-5214.Need More ORGANIZATION In your Life? Helpus organize the Annual U of C FOLK FESTI¬VAL. Come to our weekly meeting on Wednesday at 8 in Ida Noyes for Food, Music, Folks,and plenty of Organization.WANTEDHAVE CAR NEED GARAGE Rent negotiableaccording to location (prefer campus) andsafety. Contact Margie at 753-8342 x912.EDWARDO'S FOR LUNCH10 min service in dining rm from quick-lunchmenu or it's free! Also fast courteous lunchdelivery. Edwardo's , 1321 E 57th - Ph241-7960.THE MEDICI DELIVERSDaily from 4pm call 667 7394.SUBJECTS NEEDEDHow do your biorhythms match your partner's?Couples needed for a study of biorhythms at theU. of C. If you and your partner have beenliving together for at least 1 year, have nochildren, are over 20 years old, and would liketo volunteer for a month long study, call 753-3872 and leave your name and numberSEEKING TREATMENTFOR ANXIETY?Selected volunteers will receive 6 weeks offree treatment for anxiety at the University ofChicago Medical Center in return for partici¬pating in a 3 week study to evaluate drugpreference involves only commonly-prescribeddrugs. Participants must be between 21 8. 55years oid and in good health. For furtherinformation call Karen at 962 3560 between 8 30& 11:30 a.m. Refer to study A. AV 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 of Billings.INQUIRING MINDS...INQUIRY, THE journal of essays and paperswritten by students in the College, is nowaccepting papers of general interest from allfields for its Aut. '86 issue. Please submitpapers to INQUIRY, Ida Noyes cloakroom byOct. 24. For more information, call Sam at 9470747 x300 or Glen at 955 6647.FOLK DANCE CONCERTCome to a folk dance 8. music concert Sat Oct25, 8pm, in Mandel Hall. Presented by UC FolkDancers, this concert features Guo Beiman, theFlatleys, the Ethnic Dance Co., the CambodianFolk Theater and others. Don't miss it! $7/students $5.T A L ENTE DGIRLS!Established campus dance rock band seeks theimprobable: a female vocalist with guitar orkeyboard ability. Call Tom or Steve: 947-9593.CO E D-VO LLEYBALLSundays at noon in field house. Open for all.ALPHA DELTA PHICOMMUNITY EVENTSBLOCKBUSTER WEEK!!OCTOBER 20-24Monday Blood Drive 11-4. Please help donate!All week-2nd Annual TV Sit-a-thon. 100 hrscontinuous. Pledge money help needy. Pri niteParty at AlphaDel. Bring can of food all proceeds go to local charity organization. Come to5747 S. Univ and give a helping hand.GAY? LESBIAN? Bi?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.5400 FOR 4-WEEKat-home sleep study in which you go to bed andwake up 2 hrs iater each day. Leave name andphone « for Dr. Eastman at 942-5440.CORNELL 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 affiliatedASSET ALLOCATION ANDMANAGEMENT COMPANY(Investment Counselors and Financial Consultants to the Insurance Industry)Will be hosting an informational session at5:00 pm on October 22nd at the Career andPlacement Services. All students interestedin interviewing for the position of AssistantPortfolio Manager should attend.26—The Chicago Maroon-Tuesday. October 21. 1986PEACEFUL SOLUTIONSDan Kuhn, founder of Peaceful Solutions, willspeak on abortion & the arms race Weds Oct 22at 7:30pm in Ida Noyes Lib. Sponsored bvUCPLA, funded by SGFC. yNUKES & ABORTIONHow are they related? Dan Kuhn, founder ofPeaceful Solutions, will speak Weds Oct 22 at7:30pm, Ida Noyes Library. Sponsored byUCPLA, funded by SGFC. JAZZERCISE"TWO FOR ONE"Come join the fun at the JAZZERCISE "FREEFOR ALL" Open House 10-21-86 6:30 or 7:30pmat the Hyde Park Unitarian Church 57th 8.Woodlawn. For reservations call 239 4536. 2 for1 registration for Fall session!FANTASY GAMES CLUBAn important meeting of all members andprospective members will be held this Friday at7:00 pm in Ida Noyes 217.COMPUTER CENTEROPEN HOUSEWhere is the Business Office? Who sells magnetic tape? Does the Pyramid look like MarinaTowers? What's inside a Macintosh? How candocuments be scanned for editing on com¬puters? Find this out and more!Come to the Computation Center Open House at1155 East 60th Street on Friday, October 24, 1986between 3:00 and 5:00 p.m. Refreshments willbe served.FRENCH LANG. TUTORNative speaker/college instructor. 667-1354. DIVINE JUSTICE ANDHUMAN SUFFERING:BIBLICAL PERSPECTIVESTonight: The Book of Amos, The Book of Damentations, Psalm 22, Ezekiel 18. 7:30 9:30, Officeof the Dean, Rockefeller Chapel (north eastdoor).1 posmoNsAVAILABLEAREA REP MANAGEREarn salary, commission andfree travel Position involvesmanagement of area campusreps for a national collegetravel and marketing firm.Approximately 20 hours perweek, ideal for senior orgraduate student.CAMPUS REPEarn commission and freetravel. Market ski and beachtours on your campus.Call Steve Mandelman at414-276-7700 or write toAmerican Access Travel, 238W. Wisconsin Ave., Suite800, Milwaukee, WI 53203Your boss is onthe intercom.He’s havingchest pains.It could he nothing. Or itcould be a heart attack. Doessomeone there know CPR? Do you0It can mean the differencebetween life and death. Call us.Red Cross will teach youwhat you need to know.We’ll help. Will you?AmericanRed Cross CALLTOLLFREE(800) 992-3773HYCOMPUEpson® 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.* 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 • 288-5971Epson® EQUITY™ II$1699 New20"X30"posterprintsby Kodak!■ ’Wow-size” pictures.Your walls come alive.■ Full-frame, made fromyour favorite 35 mmKodacolor filmnegatives ortransparencies.■ Printed on KodakEktacolor paper.■ Adds a personal,special touch to thedecor of any room.Only ®14°®chMODEL CAMERA AND VIDEO1342 East 55th Street493-6700The Sack Realty Company, Inc.1459 east hyde park boulevard, Chicago, iilinois 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 Woodlawn =====Large studio apartment. Stove, refng. Heat, hot water,included. Rent $250.00To inspect call Bill 285-425911 5511 Everett =Large 4 room, heat, hot water, stove, refng. included.Rent $450.00To inspect call Carl 684-89001022 Hyde Park ========Large 4 room, heat, hot water, stove & refng. included.Rent $400.00.To inspect call Carl 684-8900The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21. 1986—27MARCH AND RALLYOCT. 25thSATURDAYWcnd> AllenDak AmbonJulie AndersonAugusuna Lutheran Church. Social Ministry CommitteeRalph A Austen. Professor of HistorySandra AustinPeter Barglow M D Associate Professor of PsychiatryLarry BasemStefan BauerMary EHen BeckerCatherine BerryBernice and Syd BddAnne BmfordKate BjorVFaith BisseliMichael Bisseli and Sheme LyonsJohn BechhorferRather-ne BowieCarol Moseley BraunDaniel BreslanBennett and Abie Brownard Brick. Instructor in College Social SciencesRev Michelle Briggs Proples Church of Chicago. UnitarianLniversahst Associationand Mrs Lee BruceDarnel Brudnev Assistant Professor of PhilosophyNancy BurkeAnne Carr. Associate Professor Divinity SchoolWalter CarlipCAUSEClare J CharlesJose CheihubPhil ClarkJohn H Coatswocth. Professor of HistorvSue and Milt CohenBill CoilmsJohn and Jean Comar off. Associate Professors of AnthropologyJohn CoitionFernando Coroml. Instructor in College Social Sciencesve CurranAnn CzyzcwskiHarriet de Wit Research Associate (Assistant Professor).Department of PsychiatryJohn DesperNorman DolmckMichael and Yolanda DuceyJ Ronald Engel. Stem ClubStephen Engstrom. Instructor m the CollegeArthur EvenchikFaculty for Divestment from South Africa (FDSArJames Fernandez. Professor of AnthropologyGrace L FinesingerAdam Reas FmkelSally and John Fish. South Side Sanctuary ProjectSusan M Fisher M D . Clinical Associate Professor ofPsychiatryTony J FisherRaymond D Fogelson. Professor of Anthropology andBehavioral SciencesHenry Forster4th-5th Wards Club Communist Party. USAPhilip and Eva FnedlanderElizabeth FullerRobert GaristnPatrick GilbertLangdon GtlkeyHersh GlagovDaniel GoldsteinChristina GomezBennett GraffBrian GreenbergSusan F. GresensJames Grossman. Assistant Professor of HistoryPeter Guardi noArjun GuneratneMr and Mrs John P HamAlvin and Sophie HanoverMiyo Morikawa HayashiCarol HendricksonBill HennessyStewart HermanBob HoldenHyde Park Kenwood Peace CouncilIlium* Synod of Lutheran Church in America. CentralAmerican Task ForceRohm JacksonDavid JessupKen KasaFriedrich KatzDennis KeefeBabak KhashnondBrian J Kiely Yong Jm KimChristine M Korsgaard. Associate Professor of PhilosophyStephen KrauseWilliam B KyesMartha l-ampiandMatthew LawsonMtndie Lazarus BlackJan LmfieldNoet L LockwoodWyatt MacGaffeyDas id L MankerMartin B Mathews Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics andBiochemist rsJane S and George C McElroyBernard McsGtnn. Professor. Divinity SchoolMiles MendenhallMaria Cristina N MendozaZoila Mendoza WalkerW illiam H Meyer Professor Emeritus of MathematicsEthan MichaelsDiane Pauli MinesChin See MingMr G. 53rd StreetEvemane MooreJanet H MorfordJane! Mueller Professor of EnglishMu ranSidnev Nagel Professor of PhysicsDuk and Catherine New houseCharles and Marilyn Nissim SabatPeter NovickPauline PantsiosCarole A Parks Parks Consulting AssociatesRitchie PattersonSaron PeshkmAnna PetersonPickenTom and Zeus PretkwinkleMike PuetiSue PurnngtonFrancis E QuinnAnne ReardonPhillip W F RobertsonPam RodriguezFannie RundryJames St AndrePaui Sally Professor of MathematicsJames W SavolamenAntonia Sc anonPeter Sc hertzRobert Schwartz. South Side Sanctuary ProjectRalph ScottDion Scon Kakures Harper Instructor in the HumanitiesGreg SechleTSusan E ShiayEthel ShufroMichael Silverstem Professor of AnthropologyHerman Sinaiko. Professor of HumanitiesSolidarityJulie Renee StaufferHoward Stein Professor of PhilosophyGeorge Stocking Professor of AnthropologyGeoffrey R StoneTed StromTod D Swanson and Lori E EahlemanWilliam Tan Professor of PhilosophyDavid TerrRebecca TolandPakaj Topi wailJennie Traschen Department of AstronomyTerence S Turner Profesvir of AnthropologyPeter UrkowitzStelios VaJavamsValerio Valeri. Professor of AnthropologyChuck WalkerJane WalterRichard WarrenElisaa Weaver Associate Professor of ItalianAnn WebsterMarcella WellsElizabeth WelshWayne WheelerJeanne WidenHugh WilsonIda WilsonEmily YoungLuis E Zayts MARCH FORPEACE, JOBS AND JUSTICEWe heartily support the thousands of Americans whowill dramatize their opposition to the foreign anddomestic policies of the Reagan Administration andthe failure of Congress to correct them, on the streetsof every major U.S. city on October 25th.From the abolitionist movement that sparked theelimination of slavery to the antiwar movement thathelped end the war in Vietnam, public action madethe difference.Join the March on October 25th.•STOP THE U.S. WAR IN CENTRAL AMERICAAND END INTERVENTION IN THE MIDDLEEAST. Illinois National Guard Out of Central America.Support the sanctuary movement of Central American refugees.•CUT ALL TIES WITH SOUTH AFRICA ANDEND RACISM AT HOME. Impose full economicsanctions against the apartheid regime. Support the struggle forfull equality and justice in this country.•REDIRECT RESOURCES FROM THEMILITARY TO MEET HUMAN NEEDS ANDDEFEND HUMAN RIGHTS. Create jobs by fundingsocially-useful production. Oppose right-wing attacks on civilliberties.•ABOLISH ALL NUCLEAR WEAPONS BY THEYEAR 2000. Begin with a ban on nuclear testing, followedby a comprehensive freeze. Ban Star Wars.MEET: LAKE SHORE PARK, CHICAGOChicago Ave. and Lake Shore DriveWHEN: SATURDAY, OCT. 25, 11:00 amMARCH: TO FEDERAL PLAZADearborn and Adams Sts.RALLY: 1:00 pm FEDERAL PLAZABus ride to and from the demonstration, leaving IdaNoyes at 10:30 pm. Please make reservations,752-4461.ENDORSEMENTS (list in formation): Access Living • African Islamic Mission • AFSCME Local 1215 (Chicago Public Library Employees) • American Committee on Africa • American Friends ServiceCommittee • American Peace Test • Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee • Catholic Peace Fellowship • CAUSE • Chicago Area War Resister Support Group • Chicago Committee in Support of theNicaraguan People • Chicago CALC • Chicago Catholic Worker • Chicago Gray Panthers • Chicago National Organization for Women • Chicago Peace Council • Chicago Pledge of Resistance • ChicagoProgressive Student Network • Chicago SANE • Christian Peace Conference • Church Women United • Clergy and Laity Concerned • Coalition for a New Foreign and Military Policy • Comite El Salvador •Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador • Coordinator de Los Comites Salvadorenos • Democratic Socialists of America • Disabled International Support Effort (DISE) • Eighth Day Center forJustice • Evanston Committee on Central America • Fellowship of Reconciliation • Free South Africa • Gay and Lesbian Network MFS • Hyde Park Committee Against US Intervention in Central America • 1stCD Nuclear Freeze • Hyde Park Peace Council • Hyde Park Sanctuary Movement • Illinois Council of Emma Lazarus (Jewish Womens Clubs) • Illinois Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign • Illinois Socialist Party• International Socialist Organization • Jo Daviess Peace Fellowship • Jobs with Peace Campaign • Lakeview Committee on Central America (Pledge of Resistance Affinity Group) • MADRE • Medical Aid for ElSalvador • Mobilization for Survival • National Committee for Independent Political Action • National Islamic Assembly • National Lawyers Guild • Nicaragua Network • National War Tax ResistanceCoordinating Committee • National Unemployed Network • Network in Solidarity with Guatemala • New Jewish Agenda • New Movement for Puerto Rican Independence and Socialism • New World ResourceCenter • Northern Illinois Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church • November 29th Committee for Palestine • Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign • Organization in Solidarity with the GuatemalanPeople (OSGUA) • Palestine Human Rights Campaign • Peace and Solidarity Alliance • Peoples Anti-War Mobilization • Puerto Rican Socialist Party (US Branch) • Religious Task Force • Socialist Action •Socialist Workers Party • Solidarity • South African Racism Task Force • South Chicago Religious Task Force • Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLE)-Chicago Metropolitan chapter • U1C Committeeon Central America • Unitarian Universalists Against Apartheid • Unity/LRS • Uptown Pledge of Resistance Affinity Group • US Peace Council • US Student Association • Vietnam Veterans Against the War •War Resisters League • Washington Office of Africa • Wheaton Sanctuary Task Force • Women for Peace • Women for Racial and Economic Equality • Women Organized for Reproductive Choice • WomenStrike for Peace • Womens International League for Peace and Freedom • Young Socialist AllianceThanks to Mr. G for his special assistance in placing this adHYDE PARK COMMITTEE AGAINST U.S. WAR ON NICARAGUA28—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, October 21, 1986