Harper Libraryw 61 Archives Univ.Ciiicaco, III. 60637 bulk RA1u. s. post;„u PA I.01 cfjs°emcAGo,Permit No. 6444 Maroon WEEKENDEDITIONrsary YearVol. 75-No. 31 The University of Chicago Friday, January 20, 1967Sunset over Botany Pond.Wick Explains UC RoleIn Germ Warfare StudyAll University research in the area of toxicity has been“fundamental research,” unclassified and applicable to manyfields, said Dean of Students Warner Wick in reply to chargesthat UC has been carrying out biological warefare research."SINCE WORLD War II we havehad no classified research projects;n the area of toxicity,” said Wick.“We have done work supported byvarious government agencies onthe fundamental biological andchemical effects of poisoning. Thiswould include relevance to air polu-tion. and all the things that poisonpeople.”Wick was replying to mention ofUC along with other universitiesand institutions as a participant inUnited States biological warfare re¬search in the January 13 issue ofScience Magazine and the January14 issue of the New York Times.The Science article said. ‘‘Anothergroup of institutions has done or isdoing research supported by theC.B.VV. (Chemical and BiologicalWarfare) Program, that is notclassified; it includes the Univer¬sities of Chicago, Minnesota, Mich¬igan. Texas, Ohio State University,and M.I.T.”WICK NOTED that almost anykind of research can be put to bothconstructive and destructive uses,and that biological and chemicalresearch is of course no exception.“The point is that this is fundamen¬tal research,” he said.The University has-not been de¬veloping new poisons, said Wick.“We have not been concerned withdeveloping new chemical poisons,” he explained. ‘‘We have just beenconcerned with existing poisons,and what helps or hinders their ac¬tion.” SDS Demands Continental Quit ConsortiumBank Sit-by David A. SatterA sit-in in the lobby of the Continental .Illinois National Bank is being planned for Mondayif talks between representatives of the Bank and members of the Students for a DemocraticSociety (SDS) do not result in the Bank’s” ending its complicity with apartheid.”SDS is demanding that the Bankrefuse to renew its membershipin a consortium of Amercian banksthat is loaning $40,000,000 annually to the government of the Unionof South Africa. Membership inthe consortium is renewed everytwo years and the Continental Bankwill have the option of renewing itsmembership this February.ORGANIZERS OF next Monday’sdemonstration against the Conti¬nental Illinois Bank hope to haveas many as 200 pickets downtownto protest what they call, "thebank’s complicity in perpetuatingapartheid in South Africa.”The protest, according tospokesman from SDS, is scheduledto begin at 12:30 in-the afternoonand last for an hour.Meet With OfficialsRepresentatives of SDS and theother protesting organizations willbe meeting with bank officialswhile the demonstration is going onand the sit-in will be held immedi¬ately after the demonstration ifbank officials, as expected, refuseto accede to SDS demands.Two weeks ago, members of SDSNo Hours DecisionUntil Monday—WickDean of Students Warner A. Wick won’t act on house hoursproposals approved by the Inter-House Council (IHC) untilMonday.Wick said he received the proposals only Monday of thisweek and will bake advantage of aprovision allowing him a week touse his veto power.If he doesn’t veto any of the pro¬posals by the end of seven days,the new hours will automaticallytake effect.ACCORDING TO an IHC spokes¬man, Wick should have acted onthe proposals yesterday since theywere approved by the Council at ameeting last Thursday. He said thedelay in getting the proposals toWick was a result only of secretari¬al inefficiency.Wick said he is interpreting thesituation to allow for the laterProfs To Discuss UC South Africa PolicyThree faculty members willanalyze and evaluate the pos¬sible “entangling effects” ofthe University’s associations ina special panel discussion on ‘‘Na¬tional Policy and Private Power”next Thursday.The faculty members are HansMorgenthau, professor of politicalscience and director of the Centerfor the Study of American Foreignand Military Policy, Arnold Har-herger, professor and chairman ofthe Economics Department, andWilliam Polk, professor of historyan;i chairman of the Committee on^ear Eastern Studies. ‘‘This is an important questionthat involves the University’s manyrelations,” observed Dean of Stu¬dents Warner Wick. One issue sureto come up, he noted, is that of theUniversity’s involvement with theContinental Illinois National Bank.Students for a Democratic Socie¬ty (SDS) has been attempting topersuade the University to with¬draw its accounts from the bankbecause it grants loans to South Af¬rica and Rhodesia.“When people raise a good ques¬tion it deserves to be aired,” ex¬plained Wick in urging students toattend the panel discussion.The discussion will be held at 4nm in Kent Hall. deadline so that he can study theproposals in detail.'Not Stalling'“Nobody’s trying to stall,” hemaintained. “I’d just like a chanceto balk with students in the housesand resident heads.”He siaid students from somehouses whose proposals hadn’t beenaccepted by IHC met with him yes¬terday afternoon in an attempt toappeal the IHC decisions, and thathe wants to discuss the meaningful¬ness of some houses’ proposalswith resident heads."MY DELIBERATIONS doa!t atall have to do with the total num¬ber of hours proposed,” Wickclaimed. “‘The most important is¬sues have to do with whether thehouses that proposed the hoursreally have going self-governmentsthat mean something.”“Some proposals are rather ab¬stract and look as if they’re justfloating in air,” he declared.Wick said he would issue a reportMonday specifying reasons for hisveto or acceptance of each house’sproposal.IHC ElectionsNew officers were elected at lastThursday’s Inter-House Councilmeeting. Paul Burstein, a third-year college student, was votedpresident. Larry Samuels, third-year College, was voted vice-pres-dent; and Dee Ann Holisky, second-vear College. secretary-treasurer. The Continental Illinois National Bank, 231 S. LaSalle St.sent out letters to the UC trusteesurging that the University with¬draw its funds from Continental Il¬linois Bank and place them in anon-consortium bank.Responses were received fromfive trustees, including UC Presi¬dent George W. Beadle, David M.Kennedy, the chief executive offi¬cer of the Continental Illinois Bank,and Emmett Dedmon, the editor ofthe Chicago Sun-Times.BEADLE WROTE that, “It isOfficials DenyHitchcock RumorsThe rumor that Snell-Hitchcock residents are aboutto be turned out into the coldto make room for new officeshas been denied.Asked if he knew anything aboutthe rumor, Dean of Students War¬ner A. Wick snapped, “I neverheard of it. It’s inherantly incredi¬ble. That’s solid.”James E. Newman, assistantdean of students in charge of activ¬ities and housing, was not quite assolid. “I would never be in a posi¬tion,” he said, “to deny anythingone hundred percent, because thisis just too complicated a universi¬ty.”Both men emphasized, however,that plans for housing next year in¬clude Snell-Hitchcock. Said Wick,“We can’t afford the housingspace.”Attempting to explain what hecalled an “annual” rumor, Wicknoted that Snell-Hitchcock is aboutthe age of Foster, Kelly, Green, andBeecher, the women’s dormitoriesthat were converted for the psy¬chology department in 1965 and1966.According to Wick, the idea thatSnell-Hitchcock will eventually beremodeled has been around forsome time, but no plans have ac¬tually been made. The houses, hesaid, are now being checked to seethat they conform to fire codes, sothat they can continue to be usedfor housing. clear that the matter of boycotts ofthe kind you propose is very com¬plex with many implications. Thereare arrangements under way fordiscussion of these by faculty andstudents, including knovvledgableand experienced persons in politi¬cal science, economics, and inter¬national relations. . .1 hope con¬cerned students will use this oppor¬tunity. . .to consider all aspects ofinvolvement in actions of the kindyou propose.”Kennedy wrote that the Continen¬tal Bank has pursued a policy ofnon-discrimination of necessity butadded, “It is encouraging to me tosee the young people in our col¬leges and universities expressingtheir concern for social justice, aconcern, I should add, which isshared fully by the management ofour bank and to which we try togive tangible support.”Dedmon RepliesDedmon wrote that as a trusteeof the University he was obliged tosee that the University has properfinancial relations with its banks.He pointed out, however, that hewas personally opposed to apart¬heid.Members of UC SDS werepleased to receive replies, but saidthat concern on the part of the re¬spondents was not enough as longas the University and its bank con¬tinue to “support apartheid.”SDS protests against the involve¬ment of American Banks in theeconomy of South Africa have beenheld for in other cities during thelast two years. The Monday protestis similar to the campaign wagedin New York City against theChase Manhattan Bank, which cul¬minated in the withdrawal of$25,000,000 from the Chase Man¬hattan and a second consortiumbank.THIS SUNDAY at 7:30 pm in IdaNoyes Hall, people who are inter¬ested in picketing and/or in setting-in at the Bank will meet to discussprocedure for the Monday protest.Protestors will gather on Mondayat 11:30 am in the New DormsParking lot. leaving in private carsfor the Bank, 231 S. La Salle St.A banker today is a lot more than a moneySpecialist who waits for the community to cometo him. He’s a well-rounded, imaginative indi¬vidual who knows how to present a package offinancial services to fill his client’s needs. He’sprofessionally involved with every kind of busi¬ness, from government to space exploration toproblems of emerging nations. And he can’t bepigeonholed because versatility is one of thekeys to his success.He has job status and pride of profession.And his compensation and employee benefitsare the envy of many.His training is thorough and guided by expe¬rienced seniors who cushion the rough spotsand put him on the high road when he’s ready in his own mind and deed.Before you make your big career decision,take a long look at banking. Ambition is thekey, and the best way to check yourself out isto set up a give-and-take session with a ChaseManhattan Banker.One more thing.Modern banking is in. It asks for versatile,creative, imaginative men who want to rangethe community, the nation and the whole wideworld.Discuss the possibilities of a career in modernbanking. A Chase Manhattan banker will be oncampus soon. Your Placement Office will tell youwhen and where.THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANKNational Association/1 Chase Manhattan Plaza, New York,New York 10015 • Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationAn Equal Opportunity EmployerICAGO MAROON • January 20, 1967Meeting with Store RepresentativesBookstore Committee Reports TodaySix months after its creation was recommended by a specialstudent panel, the student-faculty advisory committee on theBookstore will meet today with Bookstore representatives topresent its report. Although the contents of the report areconfidential, it is believed that theycover a wide range of possiblechanges.The original student panel,chaired by Steve Silver, proposedlast summer that the Bookstore de¬vote more space to books, improvedisplay and stock room techniques,institute some kind of rebate ordiscount system, and upgrade itsgeneral book selection*.ACCORDING TO Charles S.Hughes, Bookstore manager, thestore has already instituted manyof the changes recommended in theSilver report. In particular, thestore will begin within a few weeksan inventory control system utiliz¬ing notched cards which will be re¬moved from the books when theyare sold and later sorted to indi¬cate when new books are needed.Hughes also stated that the storehas sent a questionnaire to all 1298faculty members asking whatbooks they would like stocked. Todate, the store has received 48 re¬sponses.According to Hughes, the storehas also made an effort to breakdown the topics by which books aredisplayed into less general areas assuggested by the Silver Committee.Other SuggestionsHughes stated that the other sug¬gestions of the Silver committeehad been referred for study to the permanent student-faculty commit¬tee. These include the questions ofpricing policy, space allocation,window displays and hours.Hughes refused to say what spe¬cific recommendations the perma¬nent committee had made. “I don’tknow how these things will workout,” he said “but there should besome changes.”THE MANAGER indicated, how¬ ever, that it was unlikely that anew physical plant would emergefrom the discussions. ‘‘The big de¬lay in moving into a larger store,”he stated, “is a matter of priori¬ties. We seem to be way down onthe list and have been put off foryears and years.”Although the Bookstore and per¬manent committee can make rec¬ommendations final directives forany change in policy must comefrom William B. Harrell, vice-president for special projects. A re¬port outlining proposed changeswill be presented to Harrell aftertomorrow’s meeting.Student Faculty Committee To ConsiderAction Against “Disruptive" UC GroupsA student-faculty Committeeon Meetings has been formedto recommend administrationaction on potentially disruptivecampus assemblies according toWarner A. Wick, dean of students.Wick cited the illegal use of loud¬speakers on the quadrangles duringlast year’s sit-ins as the sort ofproblem to be examined by the"committee.Law School professor GeoffreyHazard has been named chairmanof the panel. Professors JulianGoldsmith, Leonard Meyer, JoshuaTaylor, and Carl Weintraub have also been appointed to the commit¬tee. Student members have notbeen picked, according to SG Presi¬dent Tom Heagy.The committee will base theirrecommendations on the StudentCode, which contains regulationsfor student gatherings.Heagy indicated that he will rep¬resent SG and the Committee onReorganized Student Organizations(CORSO) on the panel. No otherofficial groups will be represented,however.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060are you moving?save time & troubleLYONS MOVERS AND STORAGEa place to put things — your problemslocally — or further consider ourstorage facilities yes! we do coverfurniture and furnish cartons & wardrobesno! we don't charge a fortune servingthe University of Chicago area for FREEESTIMATE with no obligation callCALL363-41001220 E. 61st Street - Chicago SAMUEL A. 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SiteThe Metropolitan Fair Exposition Authority should takeadvantage of the McCormick Place fire and build a new ex¬position hall on another site, according to Leon Despres, FifthWard independent alderman.“The decision to rebuild on theold site is like the situation of thewoman at breakfast who com¬plained to her husband about thechauffeur,” Despres told the Ma¬roon. “ ‘He’s had so many acci¬dents, and the last one ruined thecar,’ the woman explained. ‘Let’sget rid of him.’ But the husband’sreply was, ‘Please give him anoth¬er chance.’ ”DESPRES CLAIMS the fire“gives the Board a remarkable op¬portunity to return the lakefront torecreational use and imposes onthem a responsibility to come to awise decision on the construction ofa new convention site.”He recommends calling in someof the best city planners in theworld and asking them to submitdesigns according to their concep¬tions of “urban greatness.”“I’m sure not one of them wouldrecommend another lakefront expo¬sition hall.”Suggests Loop SiteDespres suggests that a newMcCormick Place be constructed inTYPEWRITERLet us change your key board to anyapplication needed, may it be language,medical, mathematics, or any otherpurpose. Get our expert advice atour typewriter counter.TYPEWRITER DEPARTMENTUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. an area that will be upgraded bfits existence. He specifically reoomnu-nds a site immediately souttor west of the Loop, where hoteland public transportation will be i|easy access.The lakefront property can thenbe converted to public gardens,beaches, and other recreational fa¬cilities, he says.HE CLAIMS there will be no dif¬ficulty in overcoming legal obsta¬cles cited by the Board and theChicago Tribune “if the will to doso exists.”Despres says that the Board's de¬cision could be changed “if themen who hold the purse strings—the bankers and businessmen—would catch a glimpse of greatnessand communicate it to members ofthe Board.”“The men on the Board arelargely elderly and have trivial lifeexpectancies with not much chanceof enjoying the future of this city.If they could consider for a minutethose who have a stake in Chica¬go’s future, they might come to adifferent decision.”TAh5AM-\&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSp*ctoR*inf laCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 PM.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1118 Im* 68rd St. MU 4 -1062STATIONERYBOOKSGREETING CARDS■kk-kk-k-kTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student Discount You won't hav« to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow ii youcoll w today.PITER SON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12455 S. Doty A**.•44-4411CONTINENTAL BANK SUPPORTS APARTHEIDIn the last decade, while world opinion has cried out against the horror of SouthAfrican apartheid, American business, attracted by the highest profits andinterest rates in the world, has lent increasing support to the oppressive whiteminority. Over 200 corporations now have investments there, totaling more than$800 million. A major factor in the confidence of businessmen investing in S.Africa, is the revolving credit loan given directly to the racist S. African govern¬ment by ten of America’s biggest banks, including the University’s, Continentalof Illinois. We are protesting now against Continental’s participation in theconsortium and the Universities connection with the bank: because white SouthJOIN USPICKET: IN PROTESTContinental Illinois Bank231 S. La SalleMon., Jan. 23, 12:30-1:30• Call on Continental to withdraw from consortium.• Call on Continental depositors to change accounts.• Community Groups will join us.MEETING FOR PICKETERSSunday night, 7:30, Ida NoyesMEET MONDAY1:30 AM, New Dorms LobbyWE NEED: Cars, money, workers.Call 924-7045, or 493-4547ACTION AND INFORMATION CENTER: HITCHCOCK 28,224-7045 or 493-4547 Africans praise American economic support and blacks denounce it; because wesupport the cause of freedom in S. Africa; because we are convinced thatAmerican support, diplomatic, economic, or military, of a racist regime inS. Africa is contrary to the best interests of the huge majority of the Americanpeople, and finally, because we believe words are not enough; Please Join Us.U of C SDS (For a more complete analysis of our position please read TheUniversity, Continental Bank and Apartheid, available at our literature tablesor in room 28, Hitchcock Hall.)APPEAL:“We the undersigned appeal to the University of Chicago Board of Trusteesto transfer the University’s account and other banking business from Contin¬ental to a non consortium bank.”SIGNERS: U.C. SDSSusan Munaker, Ass't. Dir. Student ActivitiesRichard Flacks, SociologyJ. David Greenstone, Political ScienceJesse Lemisch, HistoryJohn Hope Franklin, HistoryJames D. McCawley, LinguisticsWilliam J. McGrath, HistoryThomas J. Crawford, Psych. & SociologyJack Sawyer, Psych. & SociologyMilton J. Rosenberg, PsychologyRichard K. Lashof, MathematicsArunas Liulevicius, Mathematics Christopher Bingham, StatisticsGeorge Glauberman, MathematicsI. D. Abel la, PhysicsMelvin Rothenberg, MathematicsI. N. Herstein, MathematicsAlvin Pitohev, DivinityMarlene Dixon, Human DevelopmentMarshall G. S. Hodgson, Comm. Social Thought(Chairman)John Dolan, PhilosophySuzanne McCormick, Humanities (College)Vere C. Chappell, PhilosophyRalph Shapey, Music(This list represents an as yet partial petition campaign.)Co-Signer(return vig fac Ex to SDS, Ida Noyes)RALLY and presentation of appealat Ad Bldg, Wed., Jan. 25, 12:30-1 pm.January 20, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Maroon InterviewYouth Problem Most Pressing to Candidate HokeIEditor's Note: The following inter¬view with Lamare L. Hoke, in¬dependent candidate for aldermanfrom the Fourth Ward, is the firstof this quarter's series of interviewswith candidates for uldermanic andcity wide offices.Hoke is running against the in-cumhent alderman, Claude Holman,who has represented the FourthWard for many years and has thehacking of the Regular Democra¬tic Organization. The Fourth WardWard includes the Oakland andKenwood neighborhoods, directlynorth of Hyde Park. Hoke was in¬terviewed for the Maroon by EllisLevin.)Maroon: What do you conceive ofas the role of an alderman?Hoke: I believe that an alderman has a dual role. First, he shouldhave a selfish interest in his owncommunity because he was elect¬ed by the people of that communi¬ty to be their representative. Andsecondly, he should have an inter¬est in how city-wide conditions af¬fect his particular community. Soyou see it is a general role, andat the same time quite an individ¬ualistic role.Maroon: Should he play a particu¬lar role within the community it¬self. within the ward?Hoke: Yes. he should make him¬self available to the community;he should always be receptive toindividual grievances as well astake the initiative in communicat¬ing to people generally about theHere's 25$to help get youthroughmid-year exams(When you can't afford to be dull)Twenty-five cents iswhat you get back onthe purchase of any sizepackage of NoDoz KeepAlert Tablets or newChewable Mints. Safe ascoffee, NoDoz helpsrestore your mentalvitality at a time whenyou really can’t affordto be dull.NoDoz won’t make youa genius. 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Box 4808, Clinton, Iowa 52732♦Enclosed is (check one): □ Wrapper from NoDoz Mints, or □ Frontpanel from package of 15 or 36 NoDoz Tablets, or □ Front labelfrom bottle of 60 NoDoz Tablets.Please return 25 cents (one quarter) to:NameAddress-City -State Zip Code-Offer void without this coupon.HH mH ■ HHI HI HH HI HI government in which he is repre¬senting them.Maroon: Do you feel that the in¬cumbent alderman is playing thisrole?Hoke: No, I do not. As a matterof fact, many persons have toldLamar Hokeme about specific instances inwhich they have tried to reachthe alderman any number oftimes to try to get him to respondto both individual and neighbor¬hood problems, and there was ab¬solutely no response.Maroon: What kind of role do youfeel he does play in the communi¬ty?Hoke: As far as I can see, and asfar as I have heard, he isn’t play¬ing any positive role. The rolethat he is playing is not a goodone because it is not in the bestinterests of the people.Maroon: What do you think heshould be doing?Hoke: I think he should be doingexactly - what his office callsfor—expressing the needs of hiscommunity to the City Council.And at the same time, using hisknowledge, judgement and influ¬ence in dealing with problems inthe community such as the 17%unemployment rate amongNegroes in the north end of theward, where 39.6% of the peopleare on some type of public assis¬tance, or the housing situation innorth Kenwood and Oakland,where 44% of the dwelling unitsare substandard. I think the ald¬erman is not giving the necessaryattention to possible solutions ofthese problems.Maroon: You have mentionedsome of the problems of the 4thWard; what do you see as someof the special problems of theward?Hoke: I think the biggest problemin the ward is the youth problem.In the north end of the ward,about half the population is under18. I think this must be given spe¬cial attention, with the gang situa¬tion growing fantastically everyday to the point now that kids joingangs at 6 or 7 years of age. Thisproblem must be given realisticconsideration now.Maroon: What might an aider-man do about this problem?Hoke: There are several thingsthat must be done simultaneouslyto achieve any success. We couldbegin fighting the unemploymentsituation both through private in¬dustry and the city government.We should be more deeply in¬volved in youth welfare pro¬grams, in social contacts with thekids.Maroon: You mentioned that youfeel one of the main functions ofthe alderman is to represent thepeople, keep in contact with them.How would you go about doingthis?Hoke: I think I would representthem best by maintaining an inde¬pendent position. In a governmentwhere there is a two-party sys¬ tem, the situation creates debatewhich in turn leads to action. Butin this city, and particularly inour neighborhood, in which oneparty dominates and one party ispractically nil, the opposition par¬ty doesn’t have the strength tocall for action.Maroon: Is there anything speci¬fically you’d like to accomplish?Hoke: Yes, there is. I would liketo do something about the youthproblem.Maroon: While we are on the sub¬ject of education, how would youevaluate the quality of educationthe kids are getting in Kenwoodand Oakland?Hoke: Poor. I think it is the con¬sensus that our schools couldstand a considerable degree of up¬grading in facilities, teachingmaterials, personnel. In manyschools a high percentage of theteachers are temporary.Maroon: I think one indication ofthe quality of education certainlyis if it prepares the student forcollege. Would you comment onthis?Hoke: Well, this is another areain which 1 have had experiencepersonally. I was almost a highschool drop-out. It was not be¬cause of mental capacity. Youknow it is a pretty hard thing totry to go to school when you don’thave lunch money or money totake the bus. These kids have fi¬nancial handicaps and at thesame time they are exposed tomass communications, wherethey see how students should live.They don’t worry about gettingthe car from Dad, because Dadcan t even give them the lunchmoney to go to school. Well, youknow the old problem about nofood and getting restless or sleepyin school. Again, 1 think thisrelates to the unemployment sit¬uation, to the multiplicity of illsin the community. To increase theeducational output you are goingto have to improve the unemploy¬ment rate, the welfare situationand a lot of other things that di¬rectly or indirectly involve thestudent.Maroon: What about the secondaspect of this situation. Namely,the student who endures this situ¬ation?Hoke: Well in this community, Ithink this kid should be applaud¬ed. It takes a heck of a lot for akid to face a situation such asForcstville and later go on to anyof the major universities, or eventhe city colleges, and there tocompete with students who havegone to private schools or schoolsthat are in better neighborhoods.It is not that the kid can’t com¬prehend. He hasn’t been exposedto the arts, to the cultural envi¬ronment that he needs as back¬ground before-\taking humanitiescourses. lie hasn’t been exposedto the sciences in depth, not evento the general sciences informa¬tion that he needs to take juniorcollege courses. He just doesn’thave the background. I think thatan example would be ForestvilleHigh where they don’t have anybiology or science labs. I thinkthis illustrates the point.Maroon: How would you char¬acterize the incumbent?Hoke: I don’t believe that he isin tune with the present Negroera. As a matter of fact the typeof “plantation politics” that headheres to is something of thelast century. We are now living inthe Atomic century—a century ofprogress, of medical advance.Why should I put up with a per¬son who in time actually belongsback on the big plantation back inthe South. There he could get afew pieces of silver for controllingthe rest of his race. I think youunderstand what I’m talkingabout here.Maroon: What is the “NewBreed”? Hoke: The New Breed is anon-partisan political action orga¬nization that is made up of youngNegroes, men and women fromthe West and South sides of Chi¬cago. According to the NewBreed, the only way you canachieve social reform is throughpositive political action. We noticemany inequities in the communityand we realize that the only youcan get anything done aboutmany city problems is throughthe city government.Maroon: Where do you think westand in relation to civil rightsand employment, especially afterthe summit conference last sum¬mer?Hoke; I think that if the summitconference is enforced and main¬tained we stand in a pretty goodcivil rights position. However,there has been some question asto the enforcement, and even tothe legality of the summit confer¬ence itself, as to how binding itactually is. And how responsiblethe Mayor will have to be to hisown commitments.Maroon: Do you favor open occupanc.v legislation?Hoke: Yes, I do. The Negrocommunity makes up about 1.4thof the population of the city ofChicago; but they occupy only1/10 of the.area of the city. Thedensity of the Negro areas of the4th Ward reflects the need forpeople to expand and move to lessdensely populated communities.There is a definite need for morespace—for more and better livingquarters for the Negro population.Other minority groups also faceproblems similar to the Negro—they may not be dramatized asmuch, but they are there nonethe¬less.Maroon: What about the problem of employment. Have therebeen any increase in job open¬ings?Hoke: Yes, there has been anincrease. Especially in private in¬dustry, there is a great demandfor Negroes. Part of the problemlies in the lack of communicationsbetween the industry and theyoung Negro. Neither knowswhere to look. This problem couldbe eased by setting up some typeof liaison. I have a plan I wouldlike to try if elected. As alderman1 would take job openings that arenot profitable for private employ¬ment agencies to fill.Maroon: Do you feel that thereis a need for more public housingin the Fourth Ward?Hoke: I wouldn t say we needmore public housing in the FourthWard per se. As an alderman 1would feel we need more publichousing scattered throughout thecity, moving people from denselypopulated areas to less congestedareas.Hoke: I would envision low risepublic housing. I think especiallyof the good example of the lowrise near 39th and Indiana underthe elevated.Maroon: Who would you build pub¬lic housing for?Hoke: For anyone who neededit. 1 don’t think public housingshould be segregated by race. TheNegro, because of his income,needs more of this type of hous¬ing, at the present time, but any¬one in the city of Chicago—in anyof the areas—should be able toget it.Maroon: Do you have anythingyou’d like to add?Hoke; There is a matter of rep¬resentation in the community.The alderman should understandboth parts of our community. Onone end we have a very middleclass community, and on the oth¬er almost the depths of poverty. Aperson would have to understandthe poverty as well as the middleclass community—and give com¬plete representation as opposed topartial representation.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 20, 1967CCNY Students: ‘No Grades to SSS’WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS)—New York City’s Board of Higher Education (BHE) has re¬jected student-faculty demands that City College of New York (CCNY) cease compiling classrankings for local draft boards.But the Board's decision, which came in the face of an overwhelming student-faculty voteagainst CCNY cooperation with theSelective Service System, will befought by the student government,according to SG President ShelleySachs.SACHS IS urging faculty mem¬bers to give only grades of passand fail, unless an individual re¬quests otherwise.The Board said that to withholdclass ranks would discriminateagainst students who want theirgrades sent to draft boards.Sachs charged in response thatIhe BHE resolution was “academi¬cally indefensible” and ‘‘destroysthe principle of student participa¬tion in decision-making.” He calledthe Board “closed-minded, politi¬cally-minded and totally unfit to bea board of trustees at any institu¬tion of learning ”Several students contended thatthe BHE passed the resolution, an¬nounced during Christmas recess,to save CCNY President Buell Gal¬Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of boots, over¬shoes, insulated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear, corduroys,"Levis", etc., etc., etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30 100 lagher from making a decision onthe issue.Gallagher had previously foughtwith students over the ranking is¬sue when protesters at a Novembersit-in demanded that the referen¬dum results be made binding onthe administration. Gallagher wasThree independent Negrocandidates for alderman metwith students in the ReynoldsClub Monday to ask for vol¬unteer assistance in their cam¬paigns.The candidates, Leo Holt andA. A. Rayner, running in the' sixthward, and Mrs. Anna Langford, ofthe 16th ward, were in essentialagreement on the importance ofbuilding organizations which willPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingB. 53rd ft. mr 3-8302 quoted as saying that the sit-in wasCommunist dominated.ALTHOUGH HE later chargedthat he had been misquoted, stu¬dents staged a week-long sit-in toprotest what they called the presi¬dent’s “smear” tactics and to re¬peat their demands.still exist after election day—win orlose.The candidates, listed a varietyof ways in which students couldcontribute, including canvassing,poll - watching, and office work.In response to a question .regardingthe communications problem be¬tween white canvassers and Negroresidents, Mr. Rayner said that a“soul brother” would accompanystudents, at least initially, to intro¬duce them to the neighborhood.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restNegro Candidates Ask Student HelpSermcn SeriesISSUES OF LIFE ANDFIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH57th and WoodlawnJack A. Kent, ministerSunday mornings at 11:00DRUG ADDICTIONLSDSUICIDEALIENATION, ISOLATIONAND LONELINESS February 12Who Are These Unitarians?Sunday evening discussions led byJack A. KentMinister, First Unitarian Church8:00 p.m.CHURCH PARLOR—Entrance 1174 E. 57thHOW UNITARIANISM CAME ABOUT January 22Many Unitarians have been important to the history of our country. Toname a few: Jefferson, John Adams and John Quincy Adams, ClaraBarton, Horace Mann, Ralph Waldo Emerson, John Marshall and OliverWendell Homes, Joseph Priestly and Charles Steinmetz. How did Unitar-ianism develop in America?WHY A CHURCH? January 29Is Unitarianism a religion? Why is it organized in churches and fellowshipswhen the religious authority rests with the individual? What is its rolein the community in civil rights, peace, and other pressing issues in today'sworld?Sponsored by the First Unitarian Church of Chicagoand The Student Religious Liborals DEATHJanuary 22January 29February 5 Lectures on a Broad Variety of TopicsWill Be Featured at Ministers' WeekLectures on topics rangingfrom “Philosophical Resourcesfor Christian Thought” to “HotIssues in Public Life” will com¬prise part of the 36th annual Minis¬ters’ Week at Chicago TheologicalSeminary, Jan 23 , 24 and 25.More than 250 ministers and cler¬gymen from Hawaii to the EastCoast will also attend classestaught by the Seminary faculty,and afternoon colloquies on prob¬lems facing the modern minister.As part of a program for contin¬uing education for ministers, theconference will present the crisisbetween Christian thought and ac¬tion, and emphasize new opportuni¬ties for communicating Christianfaith to the contemporary secular¬ized man.Four lectures around the themeof “Philosophical Resources forChristian Thought” will comprizethe Alden Tuthill lecture series.The lectures are “Process Philoso¬phy and Christian Thought” byCharles Hartshorne of the Universi¬ty of Texas; “Language Analysisand Christian Thought,” FredrickFerre of Dickson College; “Phen-ominology and Christian Thought.”Quinton Lauer S.J., Fordham Uni¬versity and “Existentialism andChristian Thought,” John Macquar-rie of Union Theological SeminaryEYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptom«trist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty Ditcount in New York. These lectures areopen to the public and will be givenat University Church, 5655 SouthUniversity Ave.“Hot Issues In Public Life” willbe reviewed by Hans Morganthauand Abner Mikva. Morganthau,director of the Center for the Studyof American Foreign and MilitaryPolicy of the University of Chicago,will speak on America’s presentforeign involvements, and Mikva,former state legislator, will speakon “Integrity and Corruption inState and Local Government.” Athird speaker will probably alsolecture.The afternoon colloquies willhave various speakers includingElizabeth Ross, M.D. of UC;George Pollock, M.D. of the Insti¬tute for Psychoanalysis; and Wal¬lace Lonergan of the Industrial Re¬lations Center.The colloquies themselves will in¬clude “Ministering to the Dying,”“Ministering to the Bereaved,”“Ministering to Youth,” “HandlingConflict in the Local Church,”“Christian Action,” and “TeachingTheology to Laymen.”Tickets are still availableto dormitory students andothers interested in attendingthe Beardsley Ruml Colloqui¬um dinner Friday, January27, in the Burton-Judson din¬ing room at 6 pm. Thecharge will be $1.75 for thosewho do not have dorm con¬tracts, and $3.25 for facultymembers.Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259NSA Discounts.January 20, 1967 • CHICAGO MARGON • 5he Bank ProtestThe proposed sit-in at the Continental Illinois National Bankis the kind of decisive action against injustice that has analmost automatic appeal for anyone with even mildly liberalinclinations.South Africa is in a class by itself when it comes to objectsof libertarian distaste and there is and has been a continuingdebate over what to do about the only police state in the worlddedicated to the proposition that diamonds are king and awhole race of people was created to mine them.YET UNIVERSITY officials are right; it is still wise to con¬sider carefully an action before one pursues it - even when thataction is directed against flagrant injustice.The demand being made of the Continental Illinois NationalBank is that they refuse to participate any longer in a consor¬tium of American banks that loan $40,000,000 annually to theUnion of South Africa. Protestors are also asking the Universi¬ty to withdraw its funds from the Continental if the Bankrefuses to change its policy.There are two obvious questions that come to mind. The firstis a question of effect. If the Continental Bank refused toparticipate in the consortium and indeed if the consortiumwere to collapse, would there be any net effect on South Africaor her policies. There prc-bably wouldn't be - at least in theshort run. A country that is as lucrative to foreign investors asSouth Africa is not likely to have a great deal of difficultyborrowing money. The effect on the Continental Illinois Bank,however, is likely to be equally negligible. A bank with theresources of the Continental is not likely to have difficultyfinding profitable places to invest them.THE SECOND QLTESYJON can be inferred from the first. Ifit is true that the collapse of the consortium will have no realeffect on policies as firmly rooted as South Africa’s, then it isimportant to consider what kind of measures will force achange in South African policy and whether these measureshave implications that make them undesirable alternatives.It seems to us that this is the question that raises the mostlegitimate doubts but it is a question that is not really broughtup by the present action against the Continental Illinois Bank.It is rather implied by the action of pressuring one bank towithdraw its financial support of South Africa.If the corporations of America and Great Britain were towithdraw their economic support of South Africa, that stillmight not be enough to force change, rather it might have theopposite effect by intensifying white resitance. This wouldalmost certainly have severe consequences for South Africa’sblacks.A successful use of economic pressure then, may consist ofthe approach being urged for the Continental Illinois Bankby those asking the Bank to withdraw from the consortium.The first hints of disapproval from the economic interests whohave never expressed disapproval before could prove a morepotent weapon against apartheid than any number of indignantresolutions.IF THE UNIVERSITY could use its massive influence withthat bank to convince the Board of Directors that apartheidshould not be financed with their funds, a real first step mightbe made.The issues are indeed complex, but this much is clear: if theContinental should refuse to make further loans to the govern¬ment of South Africa, there would be established a means ofexerting pressure within the economic and political structure ofthat country for important change.The consortium’s support will not have a radical effect onSouth Africa’s internal policies under any circumstances. Butthe Continental’s example could be an important pressure formoderation. Perhaps most important, the mere possibility thatother institutions may follow the Continental's example wouldmake if far easier for South African liberals to oppose theirgovernment’s policy.IN LIGHT OF THE total situation, it is well for the Univer¬sity and the Bank to suggest a careful analysis of all the impli¬cations. Even a cursory analysis points up a couple of theproblems of dealing with South Africa.At the same time, however, it seems to us, that a carefulmeasured approach by the nation’s corporations and banks,toward putting pressure on South Africa could prove impor¬tant in bringing about change.For this reason we support those asking the ContinentalIllinois National Bank to stop making loans to South Africaand urge the University to use its influence to persuade theBank to change its present policy. David L. AikenQuality of Teaching IsValid Student ConcernWhat place can students have inthe governing of this University?For too long, this question hasbeen enveloped in the fog of rhet¬oric. Some students rally to thecry of. “University Democracy!”Some faculty and administratorsview this demand with revulsionand trepidation, echoing thewarning issued in a recent NewYork Times Magazine article byLewis Feuer, entitled, “The Riskis Juvenocracy.”NOT MUCH HELP is offered bya recent much-heralded statementby three organizations which con¬sider themselves spokesmen forfaculty, administrators, andboards of regents and trustees.This statement suggests only thatstudents may have some rights,such as being able to “discussquestions of institutional policyand operation” (not specifyingwith whom they may discuss suchquestions—each other, presum¬ably).Unfortunately, on the otherside, not too much that’s reallyhelpful is offered by the studentswho cry “down with the bureau¬cracy.” For one thing, they ha¬ven’t inspected the actual situa¬tion at this university (which isnot Berkeley, thank heavens)enough to realize that it’s not abureaucracy, except fot the “busi¬ness side.”What is needed in an examina¬tion of the student’s place in deci¬sion-making is:• First, a definition of whatmatters are of real concern tostudents;• An examination of how deci¬sions are made on such matters;• Suggestions for how studentsmay best be brought into the pro¬cess for each area.There are some things in whichstudents have no direct interest.Who could care, for example,whether the new geophysical sci¬ences building has three floors orfour (except the geophysicists)?THERE ARE OTHER things students wouldn't know how tomess around with even if theywanted. Not too many studentscould help prepare the budget, forexample. The process is simplytoo complex.What do concern students, andare well within their competence,are such questions as:• What is the quality of teach¬ing?• What is the relevance andquality of the courses offered?• Do the programs availableprovide enough opportunity forthem to investigate problems theyfeel are relevant and worthwhile?• Do rules made by the Univer¬sity affect what should be a stu¬dent’s private life? For example,shouldn’t students themselves beable to decide whether and whenthey shall entertain guests intheir rooms, whether they shallsmoke pot or sip distilled spirits,etc.?Do any policies of the Uni¬versity affect them as citizens,such as men’s role as draftsubjects, or as residents of theUniversity neighborhood?Clearly, the students’ interest inthe quality of teaching is tied tothe process of hiring and promo¬ting faculty. Turning to the pre¬sent state of affairs at this Uni¬versity, how are decisions madein this area of decision making?The “collegial principle” is infull force here. A man is judgedby his colleagues. When a deci¬sion is to be made on whether aman is to get tenure by risingfrom assistant professor to associ¬ate professor, or to full professor,the faculty members who alreadyhold the higher rank vote him upor out.WHAT CRITERIA THEY use inthis decision may vary from de¬partment to department, but theprimary consideration is his pastprofessional performance, in mostcases. The alleged “conflict” be¬tween teaching and research hasbeen discussed ad nauseum; wewill be content with the not sur¬ prising observation that studentsthink teaching is important. Howdo they get faculty members tothink so, too?Perhaps the most useful mecha¬nism would attempt not only tojudge an instructor, but to offerhim suggestions for improvement.The most effective way studentscan affect the quality of teachingthey get, we feel, is by letting (heinstructor know just what in hisapproach has gone over well andwhiat hasn’t. This could take theform of a questionnaire adminis¬tered by each instructor, for hisown use.If, after a few years of usingthis method, an ineffective in¬structor has not improved, heshould be willing to cut bait andgo into research. His colleagues,who should at some point knowwhat sort of responses his stu¬dents have been making, shouldbe willing to give him a shove. (Isthere any rule saying everyonemust do both research and teach¬ing?)This proposal, it should be not¬ed, is not the same as the type ofquestionnaire Student Govern¬ment has attempted to use for apublished course evaluation book¬let. Publicizing a man’s shortcom¬ings is not always the best way ofhelping him. Besides, StudentGovernment, which would be themost likely body to carry out anysuch publishing project, has re¬peatedly demonstrated total lackof ability to carry such a projectto completion.THE PRESENT SYSTEM ofcollegial evaluation is quite effec¬tive, and should not be tamperedwith. A more reliable source ofinformation for one very impor¬tant aspect of a man’s perfor¬mance is needed, however, andsuch a system would provide it.This is an example of a way inwhich the concerns and compe¬tence of studens can play a rolein one area of decision-makingOther areas will be examined infuture columns.6 • CHICAGO., MAROON • January 20, 1967/wiiivcony ui vnn.dy\Beadle PurgedEx-President of the University of Chicago George Weils Beadle was arrested yesterday asthe purges which rocked the UC hierarchy continued into their fourth day.It is not yet clear who will emerge as the new leader of the University’s Presidium, butpossible successors are seen in the figures of Mrs. Beadle, Provost Edward Levi, andGeneral Walter Jeschke head of the —-—Secret Police.pending a change in libretto. Theperformance was to have been partof the University’s Seventy-FifthAnniversary celebration.Despite the outward calm oncampus, grumblings have beenreported in certain quarters,most notably the so-called Hutcbin-(C.ontinued on Page Ten)Who Owns Rocky?Highly reliable sources in the UC Administration admittedyesterday that Rockefeller Chapel has been sold to the Luther-the University is engaged in negotiations toans, and thatbuy it back.According to one official, whoasked that his name not be used,the sale resulted from a “smallmisunderstanding which will becleared up shortly.”Others in the Administration,however, were more pessimistic,noting that the sale has strong sup¬port from the Business Office. Asone Dean put it, “The Chapel isused only infrequently and eventhen by small groups of people. It’ssuch an inefficient operation that itis uneconomical to finance it.”A spokesman for the Lutheransconfirmed the purchase, but termed “nonsense” the rumor thatthey intended to use it to house per¬sons displaced by the constructionof the seminary on Fifty-FifthStreet. "We’re in business just likeeveryone else,” he claimed. “Wecan’t afford handouts.”According to the Music Depart¬ment, however, the terms of thesale preserve the University’s rightto use the Chapel for the annualperformances of Handel’s Messiah.It is as yet unclear whether anyother oratorios will be permitted.The tulip garden bordering thechapel grounds will be unaffected. Heated!Exciting!Sizzling!It is not often that Chicagotheatre-goers have the chanceto see a really spectacularshow anymore. Gone are thedays when the air raid marshalused to turn on all the sirens in thecity wrhen the White Sox won a pen¬nant, sending half the Loop into theshelters, clutching their bottles ofdistilled water and boxes of C-rations. Few are the times whenreally big happenings happen.Thus it was with a sense of realesthetic pleasure that a hardy bandof thrill-seekers ventured into thecold Monday morning for a trulyunique show.The lakeside setting added atouch of natural rawness to thescene, as the crowd gathered towatch the spectacle. The rest of theLoop provided a most unique back¬drop in the other direction.What drama! What terrifyingspeed of action! Nothing wilt evermatch it in Chicago theatre! Howthrilling it was to watch McCor-The Onee andFuture Pierceby Rachel OwlglassThe mother has learned exclusively that the much discussedsecond Pierce Tower really was built shortly after the firstone. but was torn down by a mob of furious students whenit was discovered that the second tower would not be co-ed,ns had been promised.Photographs of the building in itscomplete, two-towered state werefound among old, dusty files in theDean of Students’ office by a moth¬er reporter masquerading as an as¬sistant dean.The files also revealed that, inthe midst of the administration’seconomy drive, the second tower:• Lacked rest room facilities, ex¬cept for a three-hole privy a halfblock away, which had a lock thatcould be opened only with a dime;• Had plastic saran wrap in thewindows instead of glass;• Had ceilings 5Vi feet high;• Slept five boys in each room.At the time the second tower wasdue to open. Dean of Students War¬ner A. Wick had prepared a state¬ment praising the second tower as‘ a trail-blazing experiment in dor¬mitory design. We hope that thissecond tower will provide a modelfor future dormitories, in that it combines efficiency with closeadherence to the principle of to¬getherness.”Students had been under theimpression, before the second tow¬er was actually completed, that itwould be co-ed. “Mrs. Pierce” be¬came the popular nickname for thesecond tower. The riotous destruc¬tion of the second tower by dissat¬isfied students was known as “TheRape of Mrs. Pierce.”The photo accompanying thisstory shows Mrs. Pierce in an ad¬vanced stage of destruction. In thisshot, students have already melteddown the tih roof with Bunsenburners appropriated from chemis¬try labs, and are well on their wayto knocking down the walls, plasticbrick by plastic brick.Their job was made easier sincethe economy-style building had nomortar between the bricks, whichwere purhcased from a toy com¬pany. The exact ideological issues be¬hind the purge are still hazy toEastern observers, but it is be¬lieved to have cultural, rather thaneconomic, overtones. Already, theofficial campus flower has beenchanged from the tulip to the can-nibis sativa, and all courses in biol¬ogy have been temporarily elimi¬nated for revisions which will re¬place so called “darwinian” genet¬ics with Lysenkan. All English rockand roll music has been bannedfrom the campus.Interviewed while still under ar¬rest in his greenhouse. Beadle wasfull of glowing self-criticism. “I seethe errors of my ways,” he said,“and am grateful for those whohave so kindly helped me along thepath toward personal redemption.”Minister of Propaganda CharlesDaly had nothing to say about thearrest. When questioned on thematter, however, he provided along dissertation on the Univer¬sity’s Seventy-Fifth Anniversaryand the philosophy of WilliamRainey Harper, the University’s ide¬ological grandfather, and origina¬tor of the so-called “HarperCourt,” the same institution whichcondemned President Beadle.Other UC Adminstrators hadnothing to say about this particularissue, but much in praise of Chair¬man Harper. Dean of the CollegeWayne C. Booth, who earlier in theweek had retracted his prior philo¬sophy in a self-criticism entitled“The Fiction of Rhetoric” re¬marked, “It would be premature tomake any judgment before thismonth's Reader's Digest reachesthe stands.”Leonard Meyer, chairman of themusic department, announced thatthe planned performances of Eas¬ley Blackwood’s “Ode to the Presi¬dent,” for fourteen trombones andmixed chorus, had been postponedJanuary 20, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Unlike the ©lies on thatother servile and base newspa¬per you wrap your Friday f/shwith, m o t h e r’s opinionatesnever have a civil word to sayto one another, much lesscome to agreement. To pre¬vent fisticuffs and the duelloin the office, therefore, wehave insisted that writers signtheir art/cles. Also, the con¬servative ratfink Maroon edi¬ tors (1/ke the stick-in-the-mudsthey are) put all their boringanalyses on one page. We onthe mother like to keep thingsflopping, so we have scatteredour editorials willy-nillyaround the paper, and to makethings even more interestingfor you, we haven’t even la¬beled them as such. Let thereader beware. Remember ourmotto: no news is good news. Knockers Up! Hef Donates LibraryPresident George W. Beadle announced late today the receipt of a ten million dollar giftfrom Chicago philanthropist and philosopher Hugh M. Hefner to finance the constructionof a new undergraduate library.The library, to be constructed on the site of the present Administration Building, will beknown as the Hugh M. Hefner ——winteature ^tensive collections of his efforts that he is known to peo- the king-size root beer, will bepie the world over simply as “Mr. priced at $1.50.Makeout.” We are proud to have After a quick dip in the grottoperiodical literature and a photography file of over two million photographs and rare films from the his name associated with our great pool the student will take an eleva® * tt ft tnr t n t n n hmto tunn/i non/>l/,d i$ All IS HEADor, “Show me a radical that really delivers positive act/on, andI’ll eat my newspaper.”—Tsar Nicholas IIStudents Against the Rank (SAR) is dead. (I realize that thisis a reckless statement, but unlike the Moron (pardon the pun),we can’t afford to make pretenses at responsible journalism.We need to attract readers—after all, we’re only number two.)(Ha, ha).A friend whose Phy Sci lab partner went to a so-called SARmeeting described it as follows: “It was awfully disappointing.They just kept yelling and arguing about the war and thedraft—they just don’t seem interested in the real issues.” Thissimply proves our contention that the SAR-Milton Friedmanclique is unable to cope with the most significant developmenton campus this year: the increase in price, from eighteen centsto twenty, of C-Shop French Fries.This is hardly surprising! Our socio-economicos, acustomedto hiding from the world behind cartelized neo-mercantileshades, have finally stubbed their collective (no pun intended)toes on an issued which defies simple cost-displacement analy¬sis—an issue which, indeed, totally lacks any economic dimension. The fact is that the SAR-Tom Heagy coalition has nowplayed all their cards; only the American Association for theAdvancement of Alexander Skriabine can fill the vacuum andassume the campus leadership which has been so treacherouslybetrayed.The simpleminded fact that the rising price is an aestheticmanifestation. The French Fry was introduced into France inthe seventeenth century, at the height of Gallic neo-classicism,During this decadent period, it became indistinguishable fromthe Platonic principle of ten-ness (d/kaiosyne), with which itmerged into a tightly bound myth complex. Only thus was itable to repel both the Dionysian and the Apollinarian influ¬ences then rampant on the otherwise staid French stage, and toserve as a kind of idealized particular for the so-called “phi-osophes.” Famines (pardon the pun) and depressions aside, theprice remained at a stable ten cents (or francs) until the wholesuperstructure of neo-Hellenism was retched asunder bySchoenberg’s twelve-tone system.The fact that Schoenberg was a necessary outgrowth ofFreud’s own Vienna should not fool the Soc II staff, however,into relting this whole issue with the simultaneous, but farfrom parallel (much less perpendicular) rise in doughnutprices. To the contrary, it is necessary to view it rather in 4hecontext of Strauss’ Salome, seen as a viable antithesis to Shake¬speare's Measure for Measure and the entire linguistic tradi¬tion which resulted. The twelve cent price, like the “even doz¬en” (cf. Nabokov’s Dozen), having lost its scholastic church-vs-state orientation, was peculiarly unstable, and continued tofluctuate until the present.The final restabilizat/on, then, can be interpreted as a posi¬tive corollary to its built-in dynamism, the conflict betweenwhat the Germans erroneously call unstern (harmony) andwhat Skriabine himself vocieferously propounded under thename poshlost’ (invention). The entire sacerdotal hierarchy—from the throat to the lower entrails—has been reunified ina single vibrational pattern.There is no doubt that the Administrative Aristoteleans(need we mention names?) will continue their pressure for thereduction of the price and a subsequent return to the ancienlegume, the outmoded tragi-comical duality which fits so neat¬ly into their system but which, alas, is totally alien to the worldvision elicited from the works of Max Planck and Edith Hamil¬ton. The silence of the SAR-Free Choice aixs is only one moreroof of their implicit acceptance of the Administration posi¬tion, and complicity in the reactionary attempts to return tothe past. The New Left and their Tory counterparts, in fact,are but puppets of a perverted, feudal, and vigorously anti¬authoritarian ideology.P. Jacob Rabinowitz donor’s private collection.In accepting the gift on behalf of University.”The new library wi tor to the huge wood paneled read-be a three- ing room which fills the entirethe University, President Beadle story contemporary structure. Stu- third floor. There,coin “This maonifirent vesture is dents entering the main entrance conditioned comfort, to the strains‘another exam^eTf the* creative will have their coats taken by an of Miles Davis muted in the backharmony of interest which we are attractively dressed Coatroom Bun- ground, he Einstein of tomorrowseeking to achieve between the ny. They will proceed up the chintz will make the acquaintance otUniversity and public-spirited com- and velvet staircase to the Ursula great ideas.munity leaders Andress Memorial Mezzanine No site has been selected for theTn future venerations the Hefner where seats will be provided to new administration building whichLibrary wilf be a symbol of one overlook the happy scurryings will have to be constructed to re-man’s vision and outlook. In his back and forth of the Circulation place the one being torn down tolife Mr. Hefner has symbolized Bunnies. For the weary student, make room for the new library,those virtues of intelligence, deter- tired after a hard day of Sources close to President Beadlemination, pluck, and wealth which classes, the cool darkness of the ha\e indicated that it may be con-alone are the hallmarks of a liber- Playmate Snack Bar will provide structed on the site of the presentally-educated man. So intense has relief. All items, from the delicious bookstore.been his concentration, so fruitful Stewart’s Infra-Red Hamburgers to Tribulation Wholesome"Other’ Beadle Q-Club Vila iterby Hieronymous MadaginPatrons of the QuadrangleClub have noticed recently anuncanny resemblance betweenthe No. 7 waiter, known toregular patrons as Herman theWaiter, and University of ChicagoPresident George Wells Beadle.Yesterday, the mother learned thata clandestine committee hasturned up evidence which provesconclusively that Herman is reallyPresident Beadle’s twin brotherDoug.Doug entered the service at the beginning of the Second WorldWar, and remained in basic train¬ing until 1945, when he was droppedbehind enemy lines as a last resort.Shortly thereafter the enemy sur¬rendered.Back in civilian life, Doug driftedfrom one job to another, untilachieving a succes d' estime as thedesigner of the Administrationbuilding. He then went on to writetelevision commercials for Edsel.When his faculties went into afurther decline, the newly-appointed President Beadle foundemployment for his brother as aPhy Sci staff instructor. But Doug’s unique sense of humor forced thePresident to transfer him to hispresent job at the Quad club.DEAR MOTHER:I am not in the habit of writ¬ing letters to newspapers, butthe mother’s flagrant mis¬representation of my speechlast Thursday compells me topen a correction. In the firstplace, I did not advocate“Black Power;” to the con¬trary, in my one mention of thesubject, I took a firm stand inopposition to it, both as an ide¬ology, and as a practical politi¬cal philosophy.Nor did I condone the use ofviolence “when necessary.”Had your reporter listened tomy speech was not given inrealized that I was propound¬ing a doctrine of completenon-violence, although thiswas hardly the major point ofmy arguments. Furthermore,my speech was not given inMandel Hall, but rather inBreasted. And finally, forGod’s sake, my name is notStokely Carmichael.TONY SALIERIDEPARTMENT OFLINGUISTICS No writer in this century—not evenGide or Genet—has probed the depthsof human desire with such shatteringhonesty, impact, and insightPAULGOODMAN'SFIVEYEARSThis is an overwhelming spiritualautobiography, a masterpiece ofself-analysis by the author ofGrowing Up Absurd.With characteristic openness, Paul Good¬man describes his years of frustration andfailure; he reveals, without fear of the con¬sequences, his desperate efforts to findsexual happiness in and out of marriage,and with both sexes; he records his bitterarguments with Cod; discourses on hisvarious careers; reflects on the men andwomen who have been his teachers, friends,lovers, colleagues, critics; and he shareshis exultations — in art, literature, sexu¬ality, science and his faith in the future.Best of all, this is a fascinating book, agreat "confessional" of lasting value andsignificance. To read it is to embark on themost imperative journey of man-towardsthe goal of self-fulfillment, and political,moral and sexual freedom. "FIVE YEARS"is one of his finest creations-from the In¬troduction by Harold Rosenberg. >.00At Your Bookstort or fromBRUSSEL & BRUSSEL80 Fifth Avenue, New York 10011WORKSHOPIN IMPR0VISATI0NAL THEATRESTARTS TONIGHTHYDE PARK Y M C A.6:30 P M. INTERNALREVENUESERVICERECRUITERS WILL BE ON CAMPUSFEBRUARY 7, 1967TO INTERVIEW LIBERAL ARTS MAJORSwho seek a career and a sense of purposeMr. L. S. Calvin, Placement CounselorMl 2-0800 Ext. 3284Reynolds Club Room 200CONTEMPORARY MUSIC SOCIETYANDREW HILLWITH RICHARD DAVIS, SAM RIVERS l TEDDY ROBINSONIN CONCERTLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM SUN. 8 PM $18 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 2D, 1967Machiavellian Sec’ysWASHINGTON—A nationaleducational organization hasrecently issued a statementshowing the true power con¬figuration at many colleges anduniversities is not what most peo¬ple think it is.The Council for Rectification ofAcademic Problems (CRAP) re¬leased the results of a seven-yearstudy of 1,235 institutions acrossthe country. Their finding—the sec¬retary to a dean runs the wholedepartment single-handedly.President of the Council, P.E.Dantic, commented, “I suspectedas much all along. I always didwonder what my secretary wasdoing out there on her three-hourlunch breaks. Now I know—shewas plotting with all the other sec¬retaries on how things should real¬ly be run.”The study was made with a$523,456.72 Ford Foundation grant.Among the techniques used in thestudy were:• Comparing the dictaphonetapes of letters dictated by deanswith the actual letters as typed.It was found that 75 percent ofletters sent differed significantlyfrom the way they were dictated.• Secretly combing the mail andphone calls received privately bythe secretaries. It was found thatsecretaries of officers in a universi¬ty have a secret communicationnetwork, to alert each pther to howthe “official” communications be¬tween their supposed bosses arereally to be interpreted. • Observing the typical tasks of asecretary. While deans and admin¬istrators are closeted in confer¬ences, working on speeches, etc., itwas found that secretaries haveusually already prepared the no¬tices of decisions made.One finding which should sur¬prise few administrators is that no¬body would know where anybody issupposed to be at any given time ifit weren’t for the secretaries whokeep everybody’s calendars.“The appointment calendar is thesecretary’s secret weapon,” the re¬port said.It was also found that adminis¬trators may come and go, but sec¬retaries stay on forever. In thesame time that one average secre¬tary spends in a post, 4'/2 adminis¬trators are used up, the studyfound.Yoshiye Suzuki, who has helddown the College Dean’s secretary¬ship for many years, and has seenat least two deans and one actingdean in her time, smiled inscruta¬bly when asked for her commenton the report.The secretary to the Provost,Mrs. Lucille Schott, refused tocomment.It was reported that a massmeeting of deans, administrators,and a number of faculty membersis planned to discuss ways of wrest¬ing power away from their secre¬taries. The secretaries were plan¬ning to retaliate by schedulingout-of-town trips for everyone’s cal¬endar. SC's Bloom Advocates Cock-Fighting as UC Varsity SportThe oft-noted resemblance of this year’s Student Government (SG) to the “fire-ball” Eight¬ieth Congress was proven again at its last meeting this Monday night. In its determinationto confirm the trust shown SG by its constituents (who voted last spring not to abolish it en¬tirely), the assembly passed a number of important bills in rapid succession. Here are thehighlights.• Representative Alan Bloom(Ind.-New Dorms) moved thatcock-fighting be made an officialvarsity sport at UC. He cited thepresent unfairness to cock-fightersin the college, who are unable toreceive a major letter for theirparticipation. In response to objec¬tions from the floor, Bloom opinedthat “There is no danger to this ruled Adelman out of order, as themotion had already been carried.Mr. Boggs then asked Heagy fora five minute recess. After the re¬cess Boggs proposed that the word“and” be inserted as the last wordin paragraph 4 retroactively tosome time before the passage ofthe last motion. The motion waspassed unanimously. Boggsuniversity from cock-fighting. The su§2este<3 that the word “ordanger would be if cock-fightingbecame big cock-fighting. And thisjust won’t happen.” RepresentativeGerry Hyman (GNOSIS Soc. Sci.)asked Bloom where this sport waspresently being practiced. Bloomand sits in the chair. That’s politics.Cathedra means a chair. That’sLatin. Therefore Heagy is infalliblein his decisions ex cathedra. That’slogic.”Representative Irving Wladawsky(GNOSIS-Phy. Sci.) pointed outthat Richter had no right to makethe motion at all, since he had beenthen kicked out of the assembly at the’ be last meeting. “Actually,” Wladaws¬ky animadverted, “Richter isn’there at all. That’s physics. Or is itontology?”In a monumental decision fromthe chair, Heagy closed debate bydeclaring himself infallible. Wla-kissing hisstricken from the passage. The mo¬tion was carried, 38-1. “That wasalmost a tight one,” Boggsbreathed.• Jerry Lipsch (Ind.-At Large),r 0 , Chairman of the Campus Actionreplied that usually it took place in Committee, reported that the per- dawsky responded byBusiness East 103 on Thursday formance of the American Opera s theology. And that’snights, but that Mondays were also Company last Saturday had been all‘occasionally favored. Bloom’s mo- “a tremendous success—financially, I mean.” He told hisplans to bring Mrs. Elva Miller to i A <the campus later this quarter, andof his intention, in the Spring, toreturn the American Opera Com¬pany in a non-stop performance oftion was then voted upon,passed by a vote of 23-16.• Representative Danny Boggs(Law School Party), Chairman ofthe Election and Rules Committee,moved the following change in theSG By-Laws: that in article I, sec- Wagner’s Das Ring der Nibelun-tion A, sub-section 1, paragraph 4, 9en- COMPACTCONTACTthe word “and” be stricken and re¬placed by “or.” The motion waspassed unanimously. Representa¬tive Cliff Adelman (GNOSIS-Hum.)pointed out that there was no“and” in the paragraph in ques¬tion. SG President Tom Heagy • Representative David Richter(Gnosis-Hum.) moved that SGPresident Heagy be declared infal¬lible in his decisions ex cathedra.“We all agree to abide by the deci¬sions of the chair,” assertedRichter. “That’s democracy. HeagyMathematicianswith Versatility& Imagination... Look tonsa!Mathematicians are key members of theprofessional fraternity at the NationalSecurity Agency, a scientific and techno¬logical community unique in the UnitedStates, perhaps in the world. NSA is theAgency responsible for developing “se¬cure" communications systems to trans¬mit and receive vital information.YOU AND NSAAs a mathematician at NSA, you will bedefining, formulating and solving com-munications-related problems, many ofmajor national significance. Statisticalmathematics, matrix algebra, finite fields,probability, combinatorial analysis, pro¬gramming and symbolic logic are but a fewof the tools applied by Agency mathema¬ticians. They enjoy the full support ofNSA’s completely equipped computerlaboratory where many of them often be¬come involved in both hardware and soft¬ware of advanced computing systems.Theoretical research is also a primary con¬cern at NSA, owing to the fact that thepresent state of knowledge in certain fieldsof mathematics is not sufficiently advancedto satisfy NSA requirements. IMAGINATION .. .A REAL REQUIREMENTMathematical problems at NSA will sel¬dom be formulated and handed to you, themathematician, for solution. Instead, youwill help define the problem by observingits origin and characteristics, and thetrends of data associated with it. You willthen determine whether the problem anddata are susceptible to mathematicaltreatment, and if so, how. As you grow inyour appreciation of this approach to math¬ematical problems, and the relationship ofyour discipline to non-mathematical sub¬ject matter, both your personal satisfactionand your value to NSA will increase, aswill your responsibility.CAREER BENEFITSNSA's liberal graduate study program per¬mits you to pursue two semesters of full¬time graduate study at full salary. Nearlyall academic costs are borne by NSA, whoseproximity to seven universities is an addi¬tional asset.Starting salaries, depending on educa¬tion and experience, range from $7,729 to The "Cipher Disk”... NSA symboland one of the oldest and most effec-tiva cryptographic devices known.$12,873, and increases follow swiftly as youassume additional responsibility. Policiesrelating to vacations, insurance and retire¬ment are more than liberal, and at NSAyou enjoy the advantages of Federal em¬ployment without the necessity of CivilService certification.NSA is located between Washingtonand Baltimore, permitting your choice ofcity, suburban or country living, and allow¬ing easy access to the Chesapeake Bay,ocean beaches, and other summer andwinter recreation areas.Check with your Placement Office forfurther information about NSA, or write to:Chief, College Relations Branch, Suite 10,4435 Wisconsin Avenue, N. W., Wash¬ington, D. C. 20016. An equal opportunityemployer, M&F.national security agency. . . where imagination is the essential qualification Why carry around a wholechemistry set full of potionsfor wetting, cleaning andsoaking contact lenses?f Lensine is here! It's an all¬purpose solution for complete[Tens care, made by the1 Murine Company.So what else is new?(Well, the removablelens carrying caseon the bottom ofevery bottle, that'snew, too. And it's! exclusive withj Lensine, the| solution for[ all your contact|lens problems.for contacts r w f/January 20, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9Sun-Times ****Daily News —"Director should be saluted."Students $1.25 with I.D. card every daybut Saturday.Weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. & Sun.open 1:30 FACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNT We’re No. 2 "Satyr is a sort of Glass,wherein Beholders do gen¬erally discover every body'sFace but their Own . .mm mm m. wm ■* a mmm tAMERICAN JAZZ MASSby Frank P. TirroTHE MILLIKIN UNIVERSITYwith MILLIKIN JAZZ ENSEMBLEST. PAUL'S CHURCH50th & DorchesterMonday, January 308:30 P.M. $1.50/1.00 When you're number two, you've just got to try harder. That'swhy registration is lickety-split, why the Bursar's lines move sofast, why the bookstore is so well stocked and equipped. By 1970we should beat out Harvard. It was Harvard, wasn't it George?And not Yale? Or Berkeley? Or Princeton? Or Columbia? . . .i •*> * * ^ rOFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SH0RELAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000JOBS AVAILABLE FOR STUDENTSpart-time or full-timebusboysdishwasherswaitressesCall BU 8-7402, 9 am. to 5 pm. except Sundays.MORTON'S RESTAURANT5600 South Shore Kfcrive "That's right, and I haven'tmoved since he left me hereSaturday night."Wanted!Female Singer with Funky Voice.Lead Guitar Man with Funky Fingers and Voice.To Join Funky Five Piece Rock Group.Record Contract! Phone: 5624186CHICAGO MAROON • January 20, 1967PIERRE ANDREThe NoiseThe concert we’ve all been waiting for is finally coming.Yes. The Beatles, Rolling Stones, Supremes, Paul Revere andthe Raiders, the Mamas and the Papas, and the Four Tops allon one super program-—at McCormick Place February 1st.Th s is the concert of concerts: asBarney Pip put it. “It will quicklyturn all others into peanut butter.”Dont’ miss it.Campus inierest is being cen¬tered on folk music in the next fewweeks. Once again the UC FolkFestival brings its groovy programof “stars” to Mandel January 27.28. and 29. But as always it’s thesame old bag. Nothing but com¬monplace everyday names like LizHurtig. But nicely a new farce infolk music has shined on UC, bring¬ing in some new blood. StudentGovernment is sponsoring a neatconcert series which will finallybring Judy Collins to Campus onJanuary 26th—to be followed byTom Paxton and Phil Ochs. Sug- . , „ ... „geslion: please continue this excit- 1 »'*>> thf*e «uvs *e'ing thing next quarter with. say. practice they could be OK.uary 27th .... If you can scrapeup the bread, and it’s not much, byall means catch it.. . . The Club now has somecampus competition for the title ofSouth Side Cheetah—the new discoat the Reynolds Club Saturdaynights . . . sounds like a goodthing ... the band calls them¬selves “The American DreamBlues Band” (formerly “TheAmerican Sexual Tragedy”) is byfar the finest on campus. Theyeven make a good effort at R&B,considering they’re white andtherefore have no soul . . . Any¬way, there’s a lot of truth to thestatement that white soul beganand ended with Pat Boone. Well,Peter, Paul and Mary, the King¬ston Trio, and the new Chad Mitch¬ell. whom we’re aii dying to hearalso. Roses to SG for finally doingsomething to round out the musicscene here—after all I’m tired of naughty songs are so bad that theyR&B, jazz and popWhat’s Happening: The RegalTheater’s new show' opens todaywith Herman's Hermits, followedby James Darren and Nancy Sina¬tra—should be a riot . .. The Gal¬lant Men review is booked for Jan-CINEMACHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANCannes Prize Winner In Color"A MAN & A WOMAN" won’t play them on the radio? Dig?Also—don’t miss B. B. King’snew swinging rendition of "All theWay”—and the reissue I’d beenwaiting for for years—Little PeggyMarsh singing "Great Balls ofFire.”One last word—gee whizzikers—don’t forget the CCP electronicconcert with the world premiereof the 75th Anniversary commis¬sioned rock oratorio by McCartneyand Lennon, “Sodom and Gomor¬rah.” Tribunal considering the fate of G. W. BeadleBloom Leads Levi YouthRecommendations: "Ruby Tues¬day” by the Stones is a great,great song, but I warn you, in caseyou hadn’t heard—the other side isdirty and nasty—I mean how many (Continued from Page Seven)son Commons, a gaudy monumenterected in celebration of the Chica¬go demos. Since the recent sale ofRockefeller Chapel, the word"masses” has been banned oncampus.Another complicating factor inthe situation is the emergence ofthe so-called "Levi Youth,” a mili¬tant young organization led by for¬mer boy scout Alan Bloom. Bloom,a vigorous opponent of bureaucracy,intellectualism, and apartments,expressed the group’s philosphy."What we need,” he said, "is. . .”We Try Harder.The sentence was interrupted bygurgling noises, as Bloom tried to•disengage the bloody hands of Ma¬roon music editor Edward Chikof-sky from his throat.The last unexplained phenomenonis the unaccountable performanceof the Cobb Hall clock, which sud¬denly started again after atwenty-six year period of inactivity.The clock began, coincidentially asformer chairman of RHC, LilasKaye, was dragged past Cobb Hallby University police. She is underarrest for crimes against the peo¬ple. What Knowledge IsMost Worth HavingA new major field has beencreated in the Collegiate Di¬vision of the Social Sciences,it was announced yesterday.The Private Affairs program, for¬mulated as a humanistic counter¬part to the recently inauguratedPublic Affairs major, is expectedto be open to students next quarter."We thought the spring quarterwould be a good time to introducethe program.” explained one ad¬ministrator. "because the programoffers excellent opportunities forsublimation of energies that nor¬mally come with warm weather.”Dean of ohe CoHege Wayne C.Booth said that he inaugurated thenew major when he found out thatmost undergraduates responded tohis question: "What knowledge ismost worth having?” with theanswer: "Carnal knowledge, ofcourse.”The program is interdisciplinaryand includes the following courserequirements for the Private Af¬fairs B.A.: Psychology of Love.Nude as Art Form. MammalianBiclogy, and Gross Anatomy.■- ' if fjWM -iiiim fiiiiiiriaiMMiAlMMMMMM- - - ■ncy *-'C ' \ %Letters to the Editor of the Maroon.Apartheid BankingTO THE EDITOR:I am grateful to the Maroon forinforming me that the pay-check Ireceive from the University ev¬ery month is drawn from a bankwhich is making sizable loans tothe government of South Africa:the Continental Bank of Illinois.These loans help sustain a gov¬ernment the illogic of which is il¬lustrated by the fact that it con¬siders Japanese as White (be¬cause Japan has a lot of invest¬ments in South Africa) andChinese as Asiatic (because Chinadoesn’t), while its inhumanity willsoon rival its spiritual ancestor,Nazi Germany.Leaders of the native populationof South Africa, as well as manywhites who do not support thegovernment policy, have calledrepeatedly for an economic boy¬cott of their country as the solemeans of ending apartheid with¬out resorting to violence. If we do not heed their call, then we willbe much to blame for the inevita¬ble bloodshed when the people ofSouth Africa will rise to over¬throw their oppressors whom wehave sustained.Of all of the many banks in Chi¬cago, only one besides Continentalparticipates in the South AfricanLoan Program; therefore, theUniversity cannot claim that ithas no choice but to bank there.Why does the University of Chi¬cago bank on apartheid?CHARLES NISSIM-SABATFERMI INSTITUTEIs Pike Certain?TO THE EDITOR:With all due respect to BishopPike’s bravado as a churchman,his remarks at Rockefeller Chap¬el last Sunday hardly soundedvery new. Indeed, his thesis cropsup every few centuries (if mychurch history memory servesme correctly). „ ,4 'If we follow his reasoning, whathe calls “pre-fab” faith should bereplaced by beliefs arrived atonly by the scientific method (testtubes and math perhaps?). Sayshe, Biblical beliefs are not basedon the experiences of “ordinarymen.” This idea demonstrateswhat we suspected all along—it’sevidently been a long time sincePike picked up the dusty old Bookand read any of it. Is he trying tosay that no scientist ever took any¬thing on faith? Is he saying thelikes of Moses, David, Amos, Pe¬ter and Paul were not “ordinarymen” who said or did anythingthat can be relevant today? Idare him to read the prophetAmos and say this needs up¬dating.Further, after chucking the Bi¬ble, Pike proceeds to state whathe can believe. This consists ofthree things: (1) there must be asupreme being “because the uni¬verse seems to hang together”;(2) we must treat people as peo-SEA II-ANNU AL SALEi ALL SPORT COATSFormerly NOW$42.50 $34.5059.50 47.50 & 43.5079.50 63.50100.00 79.50ALL SUITS79.50 63.50100.00 79.50125.00 99.50150.00 to 175.00 119.50 to 139.50FLANNEL & WORSTED TROUSERSReg. 1 5.95 Now 12.95ALL ( DUTERWEAR-SCARFS-GLOVESREDUCED 20>!! SPECIAL!!VAN HEUSEN DRESS SHIRTSDISCONTINUED STYLESReg. $ 5.00 NowA 4 t.59 3 for $ia5°VGbttm & (Eampua &f|opin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 pie and not things; (3) our styleof life should consist of truth-courage-love. O.K., so how aboutproving those three facts scientifi¬cally. He admits he doesn’t haveenough data on the first point.Where did he get that second ideaor “belief based on fact”? (Don’ttell him, but the Sermon on theMount had a little to say on thesubject). The third talks aboutthree, neat little ideals which arehardly in the realm of the tangi¬ble. You see, the Bible puts it thisway—“we look not at the thingswhich are seen, but at the thingswhich are not seen; for the thingswhich are seen are temporal; butthe things which are not seen areeternal.” At the same time, thiswhole principle is beautifully“demonstrated” in action on thepages of the dusty old book.Admittedly, religion could bemade a lot more relevant in ourchurches today. But I submit youdon’t begin by throwing to thewolves the very things which car¬ried millions of committed Chris¬tians through 2,000 year of histo¬ry. Is Dr. Pike so sure sciencewill be saying the same thingeven 50 years from now? The Bi¬ble was never meant to be a sci¬ence text. It is meant to revealwhat God is like in terms mancan understand, to explain man’sdilemma and to offer a cure. Ifurther submit it does those threethings better than any other bookyou can name.MADELYN POWELLBudding Art FormTO THE EDITOR:“Name Withheld’s’ disparagingremark’s about the ContemporaryMusic Society’s “ ‘experience’ ”are well-founded but premature.The art form he condemns is stillin a state of development; indeed,from this growth arises its excite¬ment. Yet this nascent mode of expression is already too impor¬tant to ignore. Its relation tosuch contemporary movements asthose of consciousness expansionand Black Freedom makes it im¬perative that more, not fewer,people be exposed to it. In thisdirection, for it is only a direc¬tion, lies our collective salvation.REX ROY KINGSociety RebuttalTO THE EDITOR:At the beginning of each quar¬ter the Contemporary Music So¬ciety reserves Reynolds Club forevery open Friday night; i.e.,those nights when there would beno possible conflict with othercampus activities. But last Fridaynight, the Leonard Meyer factionof the Music Department was out¬rageous in its attempt to followup certain unspoken, but apparentattitudes.Why is it that these people feelthat they can order a cop to stopan ongoing performance, especial¬ly after the cop had spoken withan official representative of theSociety and discovered each ac¬tivity was in its authorized place?Why is it that the representativeof the Music Department wouldnot even speak directly to the or¬ganization’s present official? Whydoes Mr. Meyer feel that he mayrudely “command” not only ourorganization, but also the artistsand audience involved in any ses¬sion? Would these events havetranspired if the music were clas¬sical (“art” music) or at least“respectable,” or if the musiciansinvolved were white instead ofblack, or if the people associatedwith this music were not classi¬fied as “post bohemians”?Dig, Mr. Meyer: “We play, butwe’re not always dumb.”What’s happening?CONTEMPORARYMUSIC SOCIETYHave You Seen the TummyTubes at Toad Hall?**l wouldn't be without mine”—Hieronymous BoschTOAD HALL1444 E. 57th ST. BU 8-4500January 20, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11 K '^ f IiSurvey Results in AMA Journal Indicate Q Athletes to Dine, DancePoor Students Are More Likely To SmokeWASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) —Freshmen who have poor gradesand participate in few campus ac¬tivities are also likely to besmokers, a recent University of Il¬linois study has shown.Published in the current issue ofthe Amerian Medical Association'sJournal, the study of 3,557 fresh¬men showed 40 per cent to besmokers.The director of the study, Dr.Dorothy Dunn, said ‘ there was aninverse association between gradeaverages and smoking.” She re¬ported 16.7 per cent of the “A” stu¬dents smoke while 59.1 per cent ofCareersRecruiting representatives of the fol¬lowing organizations will visit the Officeof Career Counseling and Placementduring the week of January 23. Inter¬view appointments for 1966-67 graduatesmay be arranged through Mr. L. S.Calvin, Room 200, Reynolds Club, Ex¬tension 3284.JANUARY 23Stauffer Chemical Company: DobbsFerry, N.Y.; Richmond Calif.; Houston,Texas; Western and Adrian, Mich.Chemists (analytical, inorganic, organ¬ic) at all degree levels.-U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity;Chicago, Ill. Positions involving reviewand analysis of proposals made for Fed¬eral funds by communities in actionprograms, in War on Poverty.JANUARY 24Strasenburgh Laboratories: Rochester,N.Y. Analytical, organic, and biochem¬ists at all degree levels; pharmacolo¬gists.Hart, Schaffner & Marx: Chicago, Ill.Management training program for mengraduates of any department.JANUARY 25Sears, Roebuck & Co: Chicago, HI.Men and women for career programs indata processing, systems analysis, andoperations research.JANUARY 25Kemper Insurance Co.: Chicago, Ill.—Training programs in underwriting, ac¬tuarial, operations, claims, and dataprocessing.Uarco, Inc.: Chicago, Ill. Businesstraining program or sales training pro¬gram for men graduates of any depart¬ment.JANUARY 27Sperry Gyroscope Co.: Great Neck,N.Y. S.M. and PhD candidates in math¬ematics and statistics; all degree levelsin physics.Caywood-Schiller Associates: Chicago.Ill. All degree levels in mathematics orstatistics for work in operations re¬search.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856You're under 25but you drivelike an expert.Why should youhave to payextra for yourcar insurance?Sentry says you maynot have to. A simplequestionnaire could saveyou up to $50 or more.Call the Sentry manfor fast facts.JIM CRANE8124 S. Woodlawn Ave.374-0350SENTRY.INSURANCEr.fr the students below the “D” levelhave the nicotine habit.Dr. Dunn reported that participa¬tion in campus activities reducedthe odds of a student’s smoking. Athird of campus organization lead¬ers and 39 per cent of their clubs’members smoked; almost 50 percent of the non-joiners smoked.The first organizationalmeeting of the StudentMobilization Committee toEnd the War in Vietnamto plan campus, city andnational action in April willbe held Tuesday at 7:30pm in Ida Noyes Hall. Areport on the StudentStrike Conference will befollowed by discussion offuture plans. Everyone in¬terested is invited to at¬tend. by Syd UngerWhen teams such as Notre Dame and Michigan State gettogether to play football the players are often “billed” (onnational television) as “scholar-athletes.”The average UCer is a “scholar” by his very presence onthis campus and every member ofa varsity team is an “athlete” bydefinition—but on Saturday, Janu¬ary 28, our “scholar-atnietes” aregoing to prove they are gentlemenas well.ON THAT DATE the Order of theC will hold its ‘‘First Annual Mid-India CelebrationThe India Association will cele¬brate the seventeenth anniversaryof the Republic of India this Satur¬day from 6 to 10 pm in the Interna¬tional House assembly hall. A foodbazaar featuring Indian dishes atnominal prices and a variety pro¬gram of Indian music, dance, andsongs will be featured. Admissionwill be free of charge. Winter Order of the C Reunion”.The affair promises to be an “en¬tire evening of entertainment for avery nominal cost.” After a dinnerat the Quadrangle Club (whichstarts at 6:00 pm) the festivitieswill move to the Field House whereguests will have reserved seats forthe Tulane - UC game. This will befollowed by a dance back at theQuadrangle Club.All lettermen, alumni membersof the Order of the C, members ofthe Physical Education Departmentand members of the University’sadministration are invited. Thoselettermen (both major and minorletter winners) who have not as yetreceived invitations should contactJim Block (President of the OnCampus Order of the C) atPI, 2-9874. sometime in the immedi¬ate future. Undoubtedly a UC victory overTulane would increase the successof the ‘‘Order of the C Reunion."Thus it is sad to note that UC’sMaroons took a double beating thispast weekend, losing to IllinoisCentral College 74-54 and then toMacMurray College 74-70.A combination of good outsideshooting by the opposition and“turnovers” by the Maroons costUC vietory-this was especially truein the MacMurray game where UChad 17 turnovers. There is notmuch a defense can do against ateam that is hitting its outsideshots.UC's FRED DIETZ played agreat game against MacMurray-hisperformance was described as“clutch” by Coach Angelus. Dietzscored 16 points including somecrucial freethrows.The Maroons were shooting bel¬ter than they had been doing oflate. They hit 50fc from the fieldand 677. from the charity stripe.UC’s record is now 4 and 4.CAMP CHITHE JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTERS OF CHICAGOOffer Summer Employment Opportunities In Social WorkOriented Day and Country CampsDAY CAMPS located throughout ChicagoPositions: Counselors — Male onlySupervisory StaffSpecialistslocated 50 miles North of Madison and theUniversity of WisconsinPositions: Counselors — Male & FemaleSupervisory StaffSpecialistsWaterfrontCampcraftArts & CraftsDriversNursesCooksSCHOLARSHIPS FOR GRADUATE EDUCATIOHStudents receiving their Bachelor's Degree inJune who are interested in advanced study lead¬ing to a Master's Degree in Social Group Workwill be interviewed for Scholarship Awards of$2,100 per year for each of the two years of study.If you are interested in any of the above, please call ST 2-3085, CampChi, to make an appointment for an interview. Interviews will be held onTuesday, January 24, 1967, at the Hillel Foundation, 5715 S. Woodlawn.12 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 20, 1967Theatre ReviewBetter "Summer and Smoke nIt is not beyond reason to imagine that the Goodman Thea¬tre can produce a craftsmanlike production of a play. I pre¬face with this to allay all rumors that I have gone ’round thebend. I say that Goodman has, at last, failed to apall me Theyhave gone and done a pretty fairjob on Tennessee Williams’ newversion of Summer and Smoke,called The Eccentricities of a Night¬ingale. That the strength of theproduction resides almost entirelyin the leading actress does not de¬tract from its merits, because thefigure of Alma Winemiller domi¬nates the action anyway.The new play is substantially bet¬tor than the old. The characters ofRosa, Gonzales, and Nellie havebeen replaced by the single personof Mrs. Buchanan, a monster-mother. and by complicating JohnHuchanan’s sexual drives with Ocd-ipal tendencies, his motives for re¬jecting Alma throughout most ofthe play are internalized, madeless dependent upon external cir¬cumstance, and so rendered morebelieveable. When he and Alma fi¬nally repair to bed near the end ofthe play, a momentary fire is litwhich exposes potential fulfillmentTape RecordersRent a recorder and tape your lecture*.If you decide to buy the machine threemonths rental will apply. Call on usand find out how easy it is to operatethe machine.Typewriter DepartmentTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave. without mitigating the necessity ofa final separation.IT IS MOST UNFORTUNATEthat Lee Richardson, as John Bu¬chanan, seems to have chosen toplay the old rakish character instead of the new vapid, mother-haunted one. His indolent perfor¬mance amounts to a sketchy read¬ing of the part which neverachieves dramatic reality. He doesWilliams, not to mention the audi¬ence, a disservice.But his role does not place him ina crucial position with regard tothe success of the play. As Mrs.Buchanan, Beverly Younger deliv¬ers an accurate portrait of a greatsouthern lady determined that herson will be the bcstest doctor, mar¬ry the bestest girl, and be just thebestest little man in the wholeworld. And she accomplishes thiswithout simpering. Suggestions ofsexual dissatisfaction are subtlyconveyed, and the general impres¬sion of Miss Younger's perfor¬mance is one of restraint and un¬derstatement.The evening’s ball of fire, howev¬er, is Dolores Sutton as the hysteri¬cally repressed Alma. This is aperformance which one can onlyglimpse at first seeing; yet everynuance of Alma’s personality isclearly and precisely impressed;laughter that is a sob, hands thatpursue each other in endless pat¬terns, exaggerated gestures, ner¬vous, violent movements. All thecharacter is there all the time.Miss Sutton’s domination of the stage is complete; she is absolutemonarch. And, as in all great per¬formances, the portrayal inhabits amiddle ground, suggesting, withoutever straining to exhibit, extremesof passion beyond what is actuallyseen.THE WEAKEST POINT in theplay is the scene of the gatheringof local eccentrics at the home ofAlma’s father, the Rev. Winemill¬er. The characters are less eccen¬tric than brute-stupid, and the han¬dling of the scene by the director,Bella Itkin and four Goodman stu¬dents is unimaginative, all theyoung people emerging as hayseedhicks or Alfred E. Newmans. Andwhile I’m at it, I might suggestthat Howard Witt find some way toportray the Rev. Winemiller lessploddingly.But, take it for all in all, I sin¬cerely hope that we shall see thelike of this production again.Richard David Eno Theatre ReviewModern Women SpoofedIn Production at HarperBeverly Younger, currently co-starring in The Eccentr/ci-ties of a Nightingale at the Goodman Theatre, is repeatingher magnificent one-woman program, Women of the GreatSociety Monday, January 23, 8:30 pm at the Harper. MissYounger completely commands the ‘stage and captivates the audiencefor all of her two-hour perfor¬mance, using only a package ofcigarettes, a chair and table, andseveral changes of costume.Miss Younger’s women displayvarying degrees of discontent:from the humorously neurotic non-Sectarian Jewish mother in “ODanny Boy” to the longing spinsterin ‘‘South America is Far Away;”from the sophisticated, almostCalendar of Events... Sun Life Insurance Is a sure wayto financial Independence for youand your family.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne Ncrth LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2 2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY Si• - - Friday, January 20ART EXHIBIT: now through Jan. 31.Memorial exhibition of photography byProf. Hyman G. Landau, recently de¬ceased faculty member, Dept, of Math.Biology. Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn.FOLKLORE SOCIETY: 8-11 pm. Wing-ding, Cloister Club, INH, Refreshments.No admission charge.FILM SERIES: ‘‘The Bandits of Orgo-solo'', by Vittorio De Seta, plus selectedshorts featuring Laurel & Hardy. 7:30pm. School of the Art Institute, enterthrough Goodman Theatre, Studentswith ID: 75c, adults: $1.25.KOINONIA: 6 pm. at Chapel House. Anight on the town.LECTURE: Abbott 101, 2:30 pm. “Gali¬leo," Mr. McMullin.FENCING MEET: George Williams,7:00 pm. Frosh vs. University of IllinoisChicago Circle Campus.FILM: God Lives! (Documentary FilmGroup), Social Science 122, 7:15 and9:15 pm. Diary of a Country Priest,Robert Bresson.TRACK MEET: Field House, 7:30 pm.DePaul and McMaster Universities.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: Euridice,Peri: Ida Noyes Theater, 8:30 pm. How¬ard M. Brown, director.Saturday, January 21MOVIE: Yiddish Film Festival: 7:30pm. “Green Fields,” Hillel House, Ad¬mission 50c.MEETING: SDS Steering Committee,C-S'hop, 11:00 am.FENCING MEET: George Williams,10:00 am. Open Meet. TOUR: Guided Walking Tour of theQuadrangles. Leaves Ida Noyes Hall at10:00. No reservation necessary.MEET: Thirteenth Annual ChdcagolandOpen TRACK MEET, Field House, 1:00am.MEET: Gymnastics, Bartlett Gymna¬sium, 2:00 pm. West Virginia Universityand Wheaton College.MOTION PICTURE: Japanese FilmFestival (Japan Culture Society), SocialScience 122, 7:15 and 9:30 pm. Ugetsu,Mizoguchi.MOVIE: Yiddish Film Festival (HillelFoundation), 5715 Woodlawn Av., 7:30pm.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: Euridice,Peri; Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.Sunday, January 22SERVICE: Rockefeller Memorial Chap¬el, 11 am. Preacher: Dean E. SpencerParsons. Dean of the Chapel: “God andthe Problem of Goodness”.CONCERT: Andrew Hill with RichardDavis, Sam Rivers and Teddy Robin¬son. Law School Auditorium. 8:00 pm.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: Euridice,Peri: Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.MEETING: for demonstration partici¬pating, 7:30 pm. INH.Monday, January 23WORKSHOP: UC Workshop in Nonvio¬lence will sponsor a series in role-playing. 4 pm. Mondays. INH. Led byCarl Zietlow of the American FriendsService Committee.DEMONSTRATION: Continental Bank.213 S. LaSalle St., 12:30 pm.KATHMANN AND GOLDEN PRESENTA SPECTACLEBENEATH THE DAN RYAN EXPRESSWAYAt Cermak Rd. and Emerald St.MONDAY, JANUARY 23rd AT 10:00 P.M.MUSTANGS - TEMPESTS - FORDS - PONTIACSRENT-A-CARBY•AjL6'Yolkswagens $3.95 for 12 Hrs.Plus 6* per Mi.Includes Gas and InsuranceRent A Volkswagon For That Special Date Tonite.Cheaper Than A Honda And A Heck Of A LotMore Comfortable.LOCATED AT:HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd Ml 3-1715 New Books In Philosophy Just ReceivedTalmon: The Universal $6.50Gilson: Forms and Substances in the Arts $4.95Malcolm: Knowledge and Certainty $6.95GENERAL BOOK DEPT.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.CUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHINGCALL MRS. BLIXT AT 782-21 ISFOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, III. 60002 self-mocking English teacherturned prostitute in “Just Lucky IGuess” to the wealthy, empty wivesin “Easy Street” and “The Deathof Helen Grable.”Miss Younger has written themonologues deftly, and she per¬forms them with sensitivity. Shecan be pathetic or comical, pitifulor obnoxious. No matter whichcharacter she portrays, she is al¬ways moving.—MRUNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorweekends through February 5thJAMES BALDWIN'SBLUES FORMR. CHARLIEHULL HOUSE PARKWAY500 East 67th StreetReservations: 324-3880RENT A TRUCK00JL Per HourDO-IT-YOURSELFTill < K RENTALSO 8-98008150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hour t •MEET YOURPERFECTDATE!You too can be amongst thethousands of satisfied adults.Let Dateline Electronics com¬puters programmed for womenages 18 to 45 and men 18 to55. Take the guess work out ofdating.Continuous matching with anew expanded program with en¬rollment fees reduced to $3.00for adults ages 18 to 27, and$5.00 for adults over 27.For quick results send for your question¬naire today. No obligation. Strictly con¬fidential.NameAddressCityDATELINE ELECTRONICRESEARCH INC. CMP. O. Box 369, Chicago, III.60645For Add. Info Call 271-3133January 20, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 1315th Century OperaBawdy Greek ComedyUniversity Theatre plans asits second production of theseason Aristophanes’ Lysist-rata, the ribald classic of loveand war. “All’s fair. . .” and Aris¬tophanes leaves no pompous politi¬cian unkicked, no conniving mili¬tarist untripped, no luscious maid¬en unravished (better late thannever).The performances taking place inMandel Hall on February 3. 4, and5 at 8:30 pm are of a new. bold,frank translation written in 1959 byDonald Sutherland of the Universi¬ty of Colorado. According to JamesO'Reilly, director of the play, thisis the first time it has been pre¬sented on stage.O'REILLY VIEWS the play,Which concerns a sex-strike byGrecian women against the men inTHE OTHER SIDE1603 E. 53rdFriday - Janet Douglas, CarolynRodgers - Poetry & SongRalph Bailey - GuitarSaturday - Dave Goldberger - GuitarLocal Poets ReadRandom PoetrySunday - 2 pm - Other PlayersRead Checkov'sThe Cherry Orchard protest of the Trojan War, as im¬mensely topical. According toO’Reilly, “We’re playing it bright,bawdy, and enjoying it as much aswe can.”Virgil Burnett of the Art Depart¬ment has designed the sets andposters in keeping with the spiritwild musical revue.Ticket prices are as follows: Fri¬day, $2: Saturday, $2.50; and Sun¬day, $1.75 (all with a student-faculty discount of $.50)., Rhythm 'n Blues Groupsi At Folk Festival HereTwo of “the finest Rhythm andBlues groups in the country” willbe featured in the Seventh AnnualUniversity of Chicago Folk Festi¬val, January 27-29. 1967, the UCFolklore Society announced.Buddy Guy and his band will ap-j pear in the Friday evening concertonly, while Magic Sam and Shakey• Jake will appear with their band onj Sunday evening. Tickets for theFestival, which will also includeI ten other groups of performers of! traditional music, are currently onsale in the Mandel Hall Box Office.Information about the Festival mayI be obtained from the Folklore So¬ciety, MI 3-0800, ext. 3567.Jimmy’sand the University RoomIttMVfD EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFUty-FWtfc wid Woodtava Arm.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 D0 3.6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty DiscountAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cerds Euridice Premieres TomorrowCan the Ida Noyes theatrerecapture the atmosphere ofI5th century Florence? You'llhave a chance to find out to¬night at the American premiere ofJacopo Peri’s opera Euridice.Howard M. Brown will direct theUC Collegium Musicum in six per¬ formances of the opera, which hehas reconstructed following earlyseventeenth century principles. Theinstrumentation will be similar tothat used by Peri, and sets, de¬signed by Virgil Burnett, have beenpatterned after Renaissance mod¬els. It will be as authentic as schol¬arship and hard work can make it.I Or HOOK SALKl1*?! ARY DUPLICATES AND DISCARDSJANUARY 18-25STUDENT CO-OPREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENTWeekdays 10 am-5 pm Sat. 12 noon-4 pmJESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER SO TEAMWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 I. 53rdPEOPLE WHO KNOW CALL ONCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANINGAll Pressing Done on PremisesSilks Hand FinishedExpert Alterations and Repairs1363 E. 53rd St. PL 2-966210% STUDENT DISCOUNT Euridice is a setting of the Orph¬eus legend, supplied with a happyending by the librettist. Peri’smusic represents an attempt toreflect and enhance the poetry ofthe text, and it led to an entirelynew way of thinking about dramat¬ic music: Euridice is consideredthe earliest extant opera.Tickets for all performances (onthe 20th, 21st, 22nd, 26th, 27th and28th) can be obtained from the Collegium, 5802 Woodlawn, or byphone at ext. 3886. Tickets are $3($1.50 to students); copies of thelibretto are 50c, and can be put-chased with the tickets. All perforniances will be at 8:30 pm in tinthird floor theatre in Ida NoyesHall.Because of a shortage oftickets for the January 24concert by the Contempor¬ary Chamber Players, therewill be an open rehearsalfor students only next Mon¬day, from 9:30 am to noon,in Mandel Hall.UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK**m strong bonk"NEW CAR LOANSas low asPf hundred1354 BAST 55th STRUTMil 4-1200mmmbm P.D.LC$450Do you know...How to get a scholarship...where to getan educational loan...the tuition costsin other colleges...the capital of theMalagasy Republic.. .the differencebetween Taoism and Confucianism...what the moon looks like...who won theNational League Batting title in 1956?SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT //PHILLIPS JEWELRY COMPANY"50% OFF ON ALL DIAMOND//ENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS67 E. Madison Room 1101 DE 2-6508Campus Representative: E. GLASGOW - Ext. 3265 or 324-9020CHICAGO MAROON • January 20, 1967 Whether you’re writing a term paper, trying topreserve your bankroll or playing trivia, you'llfind all the answers in the New Revised 1967Reader’s Digest Almanac and Yearbook. Here are1024 pages, 300 new photographs, the mainevents of the year in every field and 1,000,000facts—indexed for quick and easy reference.Pick up a copy at your college bookstore orwherever magazines and books are sold.Only $1.75, now on sale./•mil .nm,.THE PUB '■{ GOLD CITY INNIN THE COMPLETELY REMODELEDNew Shoreland Hotel j; "A Gold Mine of Good Feed''1 55th & South Shore Drive 10% Student DiscountThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde Park HYDE PAM'S BESTTHE PUB SPECIAL: |: CANTONESE FOODTHE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWN -$1.00 ! 5228 HARPERMichelob and Budweiser on Tap! HY 3-2559Piano Selections Friday & Saturday evenings lEaf More For Less)Try Our Convenient Take-Out OrdersP # 9T/ie til pictureof the year!'CHALLENGES US AS WE ARE RARELYCHALLENGED IN MOVIES...HAS APOWERFUL EMOTIONAL IMPACT. ONELEAVES THE THEATRE AWED.'L_"VIVID AND IMAGINATIVE.,. HIGHLYORIGINAL AND THOUGHT-PROVOKING!'—Arthur Knight, Saturday ReviewJulie iChristie!her first role sinceher Academy A wardfor “Darling” OskarWernerwinner of theNew York Critics* *Best Actor Award t'Fahrenheit451”TECHNICOLOR* /from the iforitt-famed novel bifRay Bradbury$t>f*ipVyDy tarimtVflfrtUv Patted D|fFRANCOIS TRUFFAUTw JMH0U6 RiCHAPD- RAY BRADBURY• LEWS M ALIWFrancois Truffaut/N CNTERFRiSt VWEYARO FILM PRODUCTION • A UNIVERSAL RELEASEj#W* • ' ’ ' ■ *ncxt WEDNESDAYUNITED ARTISTSBotabon & Kotx • Randolph at Oanrhorn WEEKEND GUIDEALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes.TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yaki,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST & HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 e.m.LI 8-7585 idLit£ Japanese Film FestivalPresentsUGETSUMIZOGUCHI - DirectorSat., Jan. 21SOC. SCI. 122 7:15 & 9:3075«(OPEN DAWN TO OAWN)Hobby House Restaurant1342 E. 53rd ST.BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER"The Best of All Foods"JEFFREY THEATRE1952 E. 71st HY 3-3334January 25-26Royal BalletWITHMargot Fonteyn and Rudolf NureyevINProkofiev's BailedRomeo and Juliet3 Performances 2 pm. - 5 pm. - 8 pm.STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKET $1.25 (ALL PERFORMANCES) REGULAR $2.00No Reserved Seats. Tickets Now on Sale at the Box Officeujvi ti> MiVtl i* «:*.• ■ \—Classified AdvertisementsPERSONALSDiscount "rata for all U.C. students forSat. afternoon Folk Festival Concert!Flatt & Scruggs, Skip James.See! Hear! Magic Sam and ShakeyJake plug in and turn on. Sun. nightJan 29 only! U.C. Folk Festival. Tick¬ets now on sale.7th Annual U. of C. Folk Festival. Jan.27-29. Avoid the last minute crush-tickets now on sale at Maude! Hail BoxOffice. Buddy Guy on Fri.. Flatt &Scruggs on Sat., Seven acts on Sun.Women or Men- State your preferenceat D. U. typical party. Jan. 27.Don’t miss the 10c Bk. Sale at the Stu¬dent Co-op, Reynolds Club, Jan. 18 thruJan. 25.Farttime job listings-Student Co-opRides and Riders listings-Student Co-op.Coming soon! the greatest social eventof the year! An affair to remember.NEW YORK to LONDON via TWA.Round trip fare $255. Leaves Sept- 1and returns Sept. 27 (tentative) call363-6451.LSD-a psychology student is studyingthe use of LSD on campus. He wouldlike to interview students who have hadexperience with the drug. All interviewswill be confidential and anonymous:they will be arranged at the conven¬ience of the interviewee. Call SladeLander, 324-3034.Female roommate wanted to sharelarge warm friendly apt. Own room$60/mo. Ideal location in Hyde Park.Call evenings, 643-7362.2 girls seek 3rd rm-mate for apt. 54th &Univ. $45/mo., call BU 8-2832. Marleneor Lynda.ALPHA D £ LT-R U S H SMOKER-MONDAYWill swap return half of 67B flight (par-is-new york, Aug. 30) for 67C returnhalf (London-Chicago, Aug 15) phoneextension 2820 Or 2776Fem. rm-mate wanted. Private bed¬room & bathroom. $48.75/MO. CALL684-8328.Today' is the last day to sign the letterurging the retention of Jesse Lemish.Go to the lobby of Soc. Sci. today be¬tween 9:30 a.m, and 3:30 p,m.Edna St. Vincent Millay once said,"There was never a train to anywhere Iwouldn't take.” If you feel like MissMillay, join the Society of the IronHorse. Today, 3:30, Ida Noyes. The Society of ALPHA DELTA PHT-Rush Smoker-Monday-5747 S. UniversityFerroequinology! Today', 3:30, IdaNoyesInterested in ghe great American insti¬tution of railroading? We've got justthe thing for you-Society of the IronHorse. Come see. today. 3:30 Ida Noyes.Koinonia: Meet at Chapel House at 6pm tonight, for a night on the townNext week we visit the Taize com¬munity.YIDDISH FILM FESTIVAL-Saturdaynight-7.30 p.m. GREEN FIELDS. HillelHouse Admission 50c.ART EXHIBIT: now thru Jan 31st Me¬morial exhibition of photography byProf. Hyman G. Landau, recently de¬ceased faculty member, dept, of mathe¬matical biology. Hillel House, 5715Woodlawn.The Literary Society of ALPH DELTAPHI is having a RUSH SMOKER MON¬DAY 7:30*10 P-M. at the chapter house,5747 S. University.JOBS OFFEREDInteresting eampus job. Secretarialskills required. Full time. S'ome travel643 3022Part-time Job for someone who has aknowledge of taperecorders. Hours flex¬ible-evenings preferred. 684-0051.Genr'l. office help. Fem. Some typing.Neat & efficient. Call Kathy. 363-4100.Night desk clerk, 3 nights a week, 12:00to 8:00 a.m,; switchboard & light ac¬counting. Work can be done in 3 hrs.Rest of time can be used for studying.No experience needed. Apply only if in¬terested in staying at least one year.Quadrangle Club: see Mr. FulopBartender, over 21 neat appearance,4:30 pm-8:30 pm., good pay plus meal.Apply only- if interested in staying atleast one y'ear. Quadrangle Club: SeeMr. Fulop.Reliable student to exchange largeroom, bath, and board for babysittingages 2-6 8 and light housework whenable. For interview call 548-7602. Tired of that dull routine?The UC Student Government needs anew secretary for its ever-expandingbureaucracy; variety of assignments,most of them involving public contact;starting salary $2.00 hr. + lot^ds offringe benefits including paid wk. vaca¬tion. 40 Hr. week (afternoons) or fulltime. Contact Mrs. Yara Tarsy,Ml 3 0800, ext. 3273.FOR SALESelling to bare walls, ail antiques 50%off, old prints & posters, tons of hardcover books, 50c at 2915 W. CermakRd., Open 11-7 pm. inch Sun.Weimaraner pups. $25-$50 374-8426.Grundig majestic console: FM-AM-SWBands; record changer. In excellentcondition. $75. 324-5751.Ultra-mod cor brick split-level, cent, aircond, auto gas heat, 8 rms. 2»i col certile bths. tile cab kit. blt-in oven,dshvvasher. garb disp, refridg, beaubrkfast rm, large wd panel den, tocists, carpet wsher & dryer, priced tosell. & many extras, $6,800 down.SO 8-8782.Metal Skis—-Rosskopf—Kofix bottom,195 cm $45 Call 363-2743.1963 VW Black Sun Roof Radio HeaterExcellent mechanical condition 684-JS44.TO RENT2*2 rooms furnished for students. Rea¬sonable, FA 4-5538.DOG FOUNDBlack standard size "undipped” poodlehit by car on 53rd st. at 8:00 pm on the17th Being eared for.by finder. Will theowner please call 363-1328,_______GRADUATE STUDYASSIST ANTSHIPSGRADUATE STUDY IN MATERIALSSCIENCE: Graduate research assistant-ships available for physicists, chemists, engineers in outstanding researchgroup. Stipend-18640/12 months (halftime) plus dependency allowances andremission of all tuition and fees. Postdoctoral positions, fellowships (NDEA,Industrial), and traineeships (NSF,NASA) also available For informationand applications, write to: ProfessorRustum Hoy, Director Materials Re¬search Laboratory The PennsylvaniaState University, University Park, Pa.16802CorrectionDue to a printing error in theWinter Time Schedules, Philosophy321 ("Positivism and Nihilism fromKant to Kahn") was accidentallylisted as Philosophy 311. To receivea grade for this course, any studentcurrently registered for Philosophy311 most fill out a tan change ofprogram form (available from hisdepartment), dropping Philosophy311 and adding Philosophy 321. Aft¬er receiving his advisor's consentand departmental approval, theform should then be submitted tothe Registrar's office. In addition,each student should file a petitionrequesting exemption from the fivedollar late registration fee, avail¬able in Gates-Blake 122, Studentsnot in the department of Philos©’phy must have this form signedboth by the chairman of the phi¬losophy department and the chair¬man of their own department, ex¬cept for students in the MAT pro¬gram, No program changes can beaccepted after Thursday, January19. UC Math StudentsWin National PrizeThe University of Chicagohas copped third place in anationwide mathematics con¬test, Math Department Chair¬man Irving Raplansky has re¬vealed.A three-man team of undergradu¬ates earned thirty dollars each inthe twenty-eighth annual WilliamLowell Putnam contest, sponsoredby the American Mathematics As¬sociation. James Coulthaid, LouisCrane, and Dennis Hejhal repre¬sented the college at the six-hourexam session last November.Harvard University took firstplace in the competition, whileMassachusetts Institute of Technol¬ogy finished second. About seventy-five schools took part in the test,which was based on standard un¬dergraduate mathematics.Coulthaid won an honorable mention citation in the individuals contest. The Putnam competition wasopen to any undergraduate, although only three could officiallyrepresent the school. Five studentsentered the contest this year.CorrectionContrary to reports in last week’sMaroon, the lead guitarist in theAmerican Dream Blues Band isAndy Polon. Hie band performs onSaturday nights at the Reynold-Club.DIARY OF A COUNTRY PRIESToresson s masterpiece at Doc Films tonight, soc. Set m, suit & University, 7:15 & 9: is. still only M cents,7™ ANNUALUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGORUGGGRAMSKTILBALLC 00KC0UNTGIN GCO NVEBityra m mM&SHAK YJA KEDHANDLE rst APLSCY pla NDRUNB ANDGE0RGLESI NT YV0NT IGNEMAGILLESS£NEEARMSTR0W DDYAMECAL SINGNED&LVfLOSTICSAARDCINGERAUSCAJNGC HARi.® !oT£BUDDYGUYLLARDCHAGS&THEFOMCQIONmmJEBG CHARLESSNDLERTHEGGYMOUNT00KESTEVL0STEAUSCAERTRACITH EEGESTAPLEAINB0ISMC0U NTYIL&CJ5UNSKIPJA l LL? A.J0SHC0USWALTERMESE RED&L0NNSSINGERSAGICSAM&V0CA0RNAYRAMBANDHWARCHANINJATHEBARLS IEY0UNGS KIP JAMLESTERFL ATT EARSHAKYJAK EGE 0RGLSIN GI NGBALL KE NNs8^ rm iJion ||AAKEHAR0LD ELSCEPECO NVET HGmmEm„ TLET0J ESU SDIRUGGRAENTOLDYPLNMIGICSAM&SCHRIEVENING CONCERTS:JANUARY 27, 28, 29ALL SEATS RESERVED: $3,00, $2.50, $2.00AFTERNOON CONCERT;JANUARY 28. 3:00 P.M.ALL SEATS RESERVED: $1 50, U C Students - $1.00 TICKETS NOW ON SALE; MANDEl HAU BOX OFFICEGOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE16 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 20, 1967