Vol. 75-No. 38 Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary YearThe University of Chicago February 14, 1967MIDWEEKEDITIONBemesderfer Reviews ConferenceLAC in RetrospectIt was a “good conference,’’ according to Assistant Dean ofthe College Karl Bemesderfer.“We learned some things we might do again if there’s anoth¬er Liberal Arts Conference (LAC) next year, and some thingsnot to do."Bemesderfer said too many ofthe events were scheduled at 9 a mand were not as well attended asthose scheduled for later in theday. “Students get tired of gettingup at the crack of dawn, we foundout.”HE ALSO SAID the Conferencewas scheduled too late in the quar¬ter. A second LAC hadn’t been de¬cided on until late in the fall quar¬ter. and time had to be allowed toarrange for rooms and halls for theevents.“But on the whole, the eventswere very provocative and interest¬ing." he commented. “Of the |events I attended, most were wellattended—of course, there were afew disappointments.”Bemesderfer estimated an audi¬ence of about 800 students at themost popular events, with a core ofabout 300 “actively interested inthe Conference as a whole.”ONE THING that must be done ifthere is a conference next year, hesaid, is to find a theme “snappierthan this year’s.” He called it a“cumulative difficulty” to come upeach year with themes interestingenough to attract students.Although most students are surethe tradition will continue, Bemes¬derfer called the possibility of aConference next year purely specu¬lative. He said Dean of the College Karl Bemesderferf' - ' s-.-* WUpg SB &Wayne C. Booth would sample stu¬dent opinion on this year’s LACthrough questionnaires and inter¬views, and then present his find¬ings to the College Council. New ApartmentsTo Be Ready byStart of AutumnGround has been broken for thenew undergraduate apartments at57th St. and Dorchester Ave., andthe units should be ready for occu¬pancy by Autumn quarter, accord¬ing to Winston Kennedy, managerof the community and real estateoffice.The building, consisting of twentyfour six room apartments, willprobably be made available to up-perclass undergraduate. Each unithas three bedrooms, is unfurnished,and will rent for $65 per month perstudent.Unlike the apartments UC nowoperates for undergraduates, theDorchester apartments will be intwelve-month operation and willnot be part of the dorm system.“We’re trying to give studentswhat they want,” said Kennedy.“We’ve attempted to match whatused to be available in the commu¬nity but no longer is — that is, un¬furnished apartments that the stu¬dents can do anything they wantwith.The University is spending ap¬proximately $750,000 to constructthe apartments, according to Ken¬nedy.Kahn Predicts RadicalChanges by Year 2000In the year 2000, there will emerge a post-industrial societyradically different from today, according to Herman Kahn,noted strategist of the thermonuclear age and director of theHudson Institute.Fiske Committee ToHold Open SessionThe Fiske Committee hasscheduled an open discussionon the University’s policy con¬cerning ranking and selectiveservice for Saturday, February 18,at 9:30 am in Mandel Hall.The session, called at the requestof the Committee of the Council ofthe Faculty Senate, will be open toall faculty members and students.Those wishing to present briefprepared statements at the sessionare asked to notify Donald Fiske(Green Hall) in writing by Thurs¬day, February 16, indicating theview they wish to present. An opendiscussion will follow the presenta¬tion of statements.Copies of the Fiske report areavailable at the Student Govern¬ment offices in Ida Noyes Hall, theReynolds Club Desk, Pierce Tower,Burton-Judson Courts and Wood¬ward Court.The Fiske report contains thefindings of a survey the committeeconducted last November to deter¬mine the attitudes of UC male un¬dergraduates toward ranking andthe draft. It concluded that a slightmajority want class rankingdiscontinued in the future, but didnot make specific policy recom¬mendations. Kahn spoke at a Friday night lec¬ture in Breasted Hall.A post-industrial society wouldoccur in America if the per capitagross national product continued torise as it has been, said Kahn. Bythe year 2000, it should increasefrom $3,625 to somewhere between$6,300 and $10,000.A person living in this post¬industrial society could split hiswaking hours evenly between hisvocation and his avocation and stillhave 20% of his time left just forrelaxing, claimed Kahn.Kahn listed 100 very probabletechnical innovations that should bedeveloped by the year 2000. Amongthe 100 he included:• More reliable and longer rangeweather forcasting.• Relatively effective appetiteand weight control.• Human hibernation.• New and possibly pervasivetechniques for surveillance, moni¬toring, and control of individualsand organizations.• New kinds of very cheap con¬venient, and reliable birth controltechniques.• Nonharmful methods of overin¬dulging.• Individual flying platforms.• Programmed dreams.In a list of twenty-five less likely but important possibilities Kahn in¬cluded true artificial intelligence,conversion of mammals to fluidbreathers, and chemical and bio¬logical control of character.Kahn assumed that no major po¬litical crises would occur in thenext 33 years that would reversethe type of future that he foresees.Kahn said that he thinks that thecurrent nation-state system wouldconfine until the year 2000. U.S.wealth, Soviet revionism, andChinese chauvinism, however,could all lose their charisma andall three could turn inward, accord¬ing to Kahn.In the next 33 years Japan willprobably search for a new prestige,said Kahn. The underdevelopedworld will vary in its reactions andnew ideologies and mass move¬ments will develop.Kahn sees the emergence of a“learning society” by the year2000. New educational programsand techniques will be developed,and the post-industrial societieswill tend to be more humanisticrather than work- and achieve¬ment-oriented, said Kahn. Kahn,however, complained of a possibledanger in this humanism. Accord¬ing to Kahn, it could come veryclose to being irrationalism and in¬dulgence rather than humanism, ifsociety comes to feel that it canafford slackness and deviation. Blackstone RangersOpening Restaurantby David E. GumpertThe mighty Blackstone Rangers have decided that the wayto Chicago’s heart is through its stomach.A new eatery, to be known as “The People’s Corner Restau¬rant,” and to be owned, staffed, and operated by Woodlawn’sfinest, is scheduled to open with¬in sixty days at an as yet indefin¬ite location. The venture is beingbacked financially by six SouthSide businessmen, according to LeoHolt, independent candidate foralderman in the 6th ward and oneof the backers of the project."THE SOCIAL implications ofthis kind of thing are profound andfar-reaching,” observed Holt. “Ev¬erybody talks about the Rangersbut nobody does anything about it.This could be the beginning of awhole new era of youth activities.”The idea of a restaurant ownedand operated by the Rangers wasfirst conceived by the gang’s lead- jers last summer, according to Rev. jJohn Fry of the First Presbyterian iChurch at 64th and Kimbark. The 1Rangers have been using the!church as a headquarters for thelast year. The gang drew up plansfor opening a restaurant and pre¬sented it to the Office of EconomicOpportunity (OEO) which, said Fry,took no action on it.About three weeks ago. Holt met;with Ranger representatives and,!after examining their proposal, de¬cided he would try to help thegroup. He gathered together fiveother businessmen who agreed toput up the approximately $6500 itwill take to start the venture.Among the backers are A.C. Sim¬mons and Stanley McGee, both ac¬countants. Holt refused to identifythe other three businessmen.HOLT AND FRY both empha¬sized that the businessmen are sim¬ply providing the initial investmentand that they will be paid backfrom the restaurant’s first profits.Thereafter they will serve as advi¬sors and will help with accountingprocedures mostly.“It will be a regular restaurantthat makes money,” said Fry. “Itwill have good food and goodservice.”Among the locations being con¬sidered for the People’s Corner area vacant store that was formerly ahamburger stand at 64th St. andStony Island, the area on 67th St.between Stony Island and Dorches¬ter, and Marquette Rd. near theIllinois Central Railroad tracks.HOLT NOTED, “The next thingwould be to involve the Disciplesin such a project.” The Discipleshave been the Rangers’ arch ene¬my for several years, and over ahundred shootings in Woodlawn last year were attributed to conflictsbetween the two groups.According to Chuck LaPaglia, aFirst Presbyterian Church streetworker, the Rangers have “gottenlarger if anything” since last sum¬mer. At that time it was estimatedthat the Rangers had well overthree hundred active members.LaPaglia expressed hope that therestaurant will lead the Rangersinto other businesses and perhapseventually into their own co¬operative housing and job trainingprograms.The Blackstone Rangers, who uptill now have made a name forthemselves because of their vio¬lence, are planning to go intothe restaurant business.m- • *.•• £».. >•Talcott Parsons SetTo Lecture TonightTalcott Parsons, a noted sociolo¬gist and professor of social rela¬tions at Harvard University is thenext scheduled speaker in the SG75th Anniversary Speakers Pro¬gram.Parsons, who will speak tomor¬row at 8 pm, has announced thathis topic will be “Max Weber andSocial Science: Four Decades Af¬ter.”Admission for the speech, to beheld in Mandel Hall, will be 75cents for UC students.UC Film Society Launches New MovieMagazine for “Intelligent Criticism"Doc Films, the UC filmsociety, has launched a newmagazine of film criticism.Called FOCUS!, its purpose is“to help remedy the lack of intelli¬gent film criticism in America,”say its editors.FOCUS! went on sale last Tues¬day in selected bookstores acrossthe U.S. and Great Britain. Local¬ly, it is available from the UC Bookstore, from the Book Center inHarper Court, and from DocFilms. The monthly costs 25 cents.The first issue, which receivedattention in the Chicago Sun-Timesand other papers, includes a majorarticle on the films of HowardHawks by British critic RobinWood and an interview with ArchOboler, the independent Americanfilmmaker who introduced 3-D andSpacevision in movies.Three English Profs AgreeLiberal Persuasian a Neglected Artby Helen Schary all and be all, not necessarily a. caHed our age one of “nonrsleazy affair”, but merely a tool communication, because our socie-Three English professors, in-1 for discovery. ty has few premises that all of usFarrell called the neglect of the share.” Factions do not intermm-ler.ching of rhetoric disasterous. He | gle, and even if they do speak,said the effects of this neglect are | there is not a real articulation ofnot limited to academia, and he feelings, he said.eluding Dean of the Collegeeluding Dean oi the Collevvliberal persuasion has becomea neglected art at a panel discus¬sion considering the importanceand teachability of rhetoric. Fri¬day.The other panelists were Assist¬ant Professor of English, William Students in the College are eligi-Farrell, and Stanley Fisher, an inf- ble to win $500 in an essay competi-structor in the humanities. tion sponsored by the social sci-BOOTH SAID THAT in the last ences collegiate division. Division50 years the art of rhetoric has Master Donald N. Levine an-been dying out. He recognized rhe- I nounced that the competition istoric as an art which, when used j open to all undergraduates whoeffectively, can “help us to work submit an essay “on topics signifi-together intellectually and make us J cantly related to political institu-know when to be persuaded and lions.''when not to be. The modern meth-, Each essay must be nominatedLevine Announces Two UndergraduateEssay Contests in the Social Sciencesods of persuasion have shifted fromrational proofs to a greater reli¬ance on.;, emotional-. techniques,Booth said. ’ He called this fortu¬nate, asserting that people commu¬nicate better through mutual feel¬ing than through rational lines" ■' ’ ■" ' ' ' by a faculty member and be sub¬mitted in triplicate; Closing date for entries is May 1. The essayswill be judged by John D. May,WoM Heydebrand, and KennethPrewitt, all faculty members in thedivision.f Another contest, the Munro Bern-hard Social Invention Essay, offersan award of $150 for the best essaywhich ‘‘formulates and espouses anoriginal proposal in the field of so¬cial institutions.” Further informa¬tion may be obtained from the sec¬retary of Che division in Gates-Blake 428, ext. 2772. Tuesday, February 14SWIMMING MEET. Bartlett Gymna¬sium. 3:30 pm. U. of I; Circle Campus.EXHIBIT: Constructions, Paintings andDrawings by George Ortman, Renais¬sance Society, 1010 E, 59th St.MOVIE: Ninotchka, DocumentaryFilms, 7:15 and 9:15, Social Science 122.EXHIBIT: “Israel Today” and OtherPaintings by Bacia Gordon. Hillel Foun-SEMINAR: “Cell Division and Polysac¬charide Synthesis in Embryonic Chlon-drolytes”, Mark A. Nameroff, Dept, ofAnatomy. 4:30 pm. Anatomy Building,room 101.Wednesday, February 15Painting- by Bncia Gordon Hillel Foun¬dation.MOVIE: Mamie. Documentary Films;7:15 and 9:15, Social Science 122-TRACK MEET: Field House. 4 pm.Fresh-Soph Jr. Colleges Relays.EXHIBIT: Constructions, Paintings andDrawings by George Ortman, Renais¬sance Society. Final Day.EXHIBIT: "Israel Today,” Hillel Foun¬dation. Calendar of Events.I.ECTl’RE: “Educators and S.MWorkers: Sibling Rivalry in the InnerCity,” David P. Street, Assistant <p,(1fessor. Dept, of SPeiology. SSA buildup4:30 pm.LECTURE: “Responses. Direction'*Instigations: Student Papers m igress” Social Science MO. 8 pm.MEETING: W* Won’t Go. £, n,meeting, Ida Neyes Theatre, 8 pm ->Thursday, February 16 .FOLK CONCERT: Tom Paxton, Matid. 1Hall. 8 pm. $$$*EXHIBIT: "Israel Today,” Hillel: F>.nnelation. -LECTURE: “Trends in Medical Education: Challenge and Responsibility.” DiRobert Ebert, Dean, Harvard MedicalSchool. Billings P117, * pm.LECTURE: “Byzantium and the Artebefore Muhammad”, Irfan Shabd; prig,fessor eT Arabic at Georgetown UnivClassics 18. 4:3ft.MOVIE: The Keystone Cepe. “Haroldand the Purple Crayon," B-J CinemaJudson Dining Reem, 9 pm. AdmissionFree.- ResponsibilityFisher felt that each person hassi; the responsibility; to speak.. outwhen he opposes what another has;.j said. This verbal contest, he said,can open the minds of both andperhaps lead to an illumination ofthe issue. Such clarificationthrough discussion, he called, thepurpose of rhetoric - not an “end■ K.’kiiktm-; ^"AW A Valentine forBrendan Behansongs by himself, readingfrom his work by RichardEno, remarks and un-expur-gated anecdotes by his friendand fellow Dobliner, Dr. DoryChilderz. Tonite at 9 o'clockat the Other Side, 1603 E.53rd St. Coffees, teas, orcocoa - ;; ft GREATS » JALSO, BENCHLEY; CHAPLIN, FIELDS SHORTSFEB 18 ‘THE BODY SNATCHER" Lugosi, Karloff. FieldsMAR. .4 GOLD DIGGERS OF 1933" Keeler, Powell, Blondell.Chaplin,' , - ,MAR 18 "ROARING 20'S" Bogart, Cagney. ChaplinwmAPRIL 1 "FLYING DOWN TO RIO" Astaire, Rogers. ChaplinAPRIL 15 "SO THIS IS NEW YORK" Morgan, Valloe. BenchleyAPRIL 29 "MASK OF DIMITRIOS" Lorre, Greenstreet. BenchleySeries $5, Single $1. Church of Redeemer, 1420 E. 56th St.Tickets at Art Directions, Harper Court'. : .' ;r:;; 54TH ST-BLACKSTONE BLOCK GROUPU. of (. JAZZ BANDCHAIRS OPENRehearsals Every Thursday7:30 REYNOLD'S CLUBNew Books on Aspects of Economics*PUBLIC AND PRIVATE ENTERPRISIby JohnfjewkesVI' - ||§§t*$2.25THE INVISIBLE RELIGIONby Thomas Luckm;43|; ' I . . ■ .Graduating?- .' . - . : ' V'to your appoint-ment for your CAP & GOWN Uni¬versity Yearbook photograph. If youdon't have one, come to Ida Noyes-3rd floor. 9:30-4:30, Feb. 1517, orooCSf ^ JS * \ Recent Arrivals at theSTUDENT COOPlBookstoreLa Nouvelle Revue Francaise1926-1928- Joyce, Gkle, Malraux iLuther's Werke -1905 ed. 10 vol. ....... .$15.00Goethe's Werke -1908 ed. 10 vol. . . 8.50Andrea Mantegna - P. Kristeller . 18.00Issues & Problems in Social Psych. . iBergen Vi priceReynold's Club Basement 10-5-- The University of Chicago1966 ORATORIO FESTIVAL 1967,, . ,..o • ,. 5 \ .»* »*1- .. .1... : ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL, ,, „ 59th Street and Woodlawn Avenue,(Rescheduled from January 29)-DAY AFTERNOON 3:30’ .1 . .. ■- - ~ ~ • - v .-:: ■ " ' ■. . ■ . ■ ■ ■ ' FEBRUARY 19,1* ■i- ; x* «,RICHARD YIKSTROMDirector of Chapel Music- . - ,THE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIR'-5'...... n1th 58 members of theCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRANeva Pilgrim, Soprano frA! ' it, ctl.' .... •. -.... ■:>t V ' , ^-* ■ Walter Carringer, TenorTickets: $ 1 - . f«’’’ UC Fac/Staff $3.00, Students $2.50>Charlotte Brent, Mezzo-SopranoHenri Noel, BaritoneReserved $4.50, General Admission $3.50On Sale At: University of Chicago Bookstore;\A h Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn„ J,.-. A Cooley's Candles, 5210 Harper Courtv,-- Woodworth's Bookstore, 1311 E. 57th Street■ rC H I C A G O M A R O O N -mm.;. February 14, 1967 —-C : . ',, . ^Ticket Central, 212 N. Michigan Avenue■ •Handel's SOLOMON originally scheduled for February 19' will be presented^ on April 23h t * -A /C'- :V ' ■ ■: :. i|i ■ : ■■■■ ;; ' IM PFRFFRibicoff ProposalCollege Tax Credit Bill ReintroducedWASHINGTON (CPS)—A bill to provide income tax creditof up to $325 for college students and their parents was re¬introduced in the Senate last Friday by Sen. Abraham RibicoffiD-Conn.).The proposal, co sponsored by 46senators, is opposed by severalmajor education associations, ineluding the National Associationof State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges and the Associationof State Colleges and Universities.RIBICOFF'S BILL uould allow a7,'. per cent income tax credit onihe first $200 of tuition, fees, books,and supplies. This means that ifone paid $200 tuition, $150 could bededucted from the individual’s netincome tax bill. The next $300would be lessened bv a 25 per centcredit, allowing another $75 in de¬ ductions from the tax due, while a10 per cent credit, or up to $100,would be provided on the following$1,000.The Connecticut senator’s propos¬al this year is slightly changedfrom those he has introduced inprevious sessions of Congress. Forthe first time, it gives coverage tostudents in accredited post¬secondary business, trade, techni¬cal and other vocational schools.Though Ribicoff claims overtwo-thirds of the benefits under hisbill would go to families earningless than $10,000 a year, opponents of the proposal note that familieswith several children, earning $5,-000 would not gain from the billsince they pay no income tax.Thus, such opponents as the Na¬tional Association of State Universi¬ties and Land-Grant Colleges sug¬gest, those who need it most willgain the least from Ribicoff’s bill.These opponents also claim thatthe tax benefits would be eliminat¬ed by increased tuition costs.ADDITIONALLY, opponents ofRibicoff’s proposal charge, the taxcredit could be used as a way ofbypassing the Constitutional provi¬sions against use of public fundsfor discriminatory purposes.Among the co-sponsors of the billis Illinois Senator Charles H. Per¬cy. Bell Examines RoleOf Grad AssistantVisiting Professor of Soci¬ology Daniel Bell and fivegraduate teaching assistantsdiscussed the role of thegraduate assistant in college teach¬ing at a panel discussion on“Teaching Undergraduates as aPart of Graduate Education,” Sat¬urday.According to Bell, “the explosionof higher education” has made itnecessary that more and morecourses be taught, not by the“great men”, but by graduate stu¬dents. He cited two examples ofdifferent approaches to the use ofteaching assistants. These were:• Berkeley, where the graduate students are almost entirely respon¬sible for the course, and• Harvard, where the professorstill organizes and directs thecourse so that in reality the gradu¬ate assistant is little more than anextension of him.The assistants all agreed thatteaching was distracting from theirown studies but considered it “thebest part of general education.”According to one assistant, theyfound a deeper and more im¬mediate understanding of thematerial was required to carry onthe dialectical process of learning.The assistants felt, it was theteacher’s “moral obligation” topass on this urgency to the student.3®—THE WASHINGTON DAILY NEWS. THURSDAY, MARCH 25. 1965Tips on Tables»y DON HEARNO Nf question.Why fo- heaven s sake, hasrUI.uriean Hunter enhanced OurTown More now"'She is currently making herloea! nitery debut at TommyGwallnevs Blues Alley inGeorgetow nI'm happy it finally cameabout.Miss Hunter is a jazz singerwho improves tne current sceneenormouslyThis opinion mus* be sharedShe's been performing to SROaudiences sirce Monday — heropening night.For some years — more thana decade when I stop to thinkabout it — I had been hearingenthusiastic comments abouther rather wondrousaccomplishments, and I wasaware that her numerousrecordings had won her atremendous following, but . Isomehow had never caught herin person.AFTER DARK As a resui* I was totai’vt unprepared for fbe impressivecouple of hours I spent ir re-presence th? other evening.She 's a shape v rros*attrae'ive woman with a mob eface raoant smi'e ard re-spend.d voice effo-*ess\p 'dued is capab e of a-avou«-hiog var etv of shadingsWhat« rro-e her singingo • per (o r m ; n g — i s n ♦punctuated w.th finger snappingsc corrrro- among fema’e jazzsinger*.Miss Hunter has an honest-to-goodness voce. Vo imitationshere.Ir add:t o- and this .s wra.perhaps makes her someonespcc'a. she ach eves completeidentifcm'or w.th he- mater a.He.- ’.ovily voce evpresses theconten* of each sorg a mostmngi< a'/ .The entre thing Is eve- totimpressive when ore stops tcronside tha* the mater a. use'fis far from unusual. Almost athe evening star\A,ash.pgton D CThurscav ttarcF 25 '965A Great Voice| In the Night— By JOHN SEGRAVESIf your brand of entertainment leans toward the jazz singerand you haven't been in Blues Alley since one Lur.ean Hunterbegan singing there Monday night it’s your own fault.And you’re the poorer for it. To Tommy Gwaltney tne spa sowner-proprietor and band leader, may I say thanks for bringingto town a woman who must be classified as one of the finestvocalists ever to grace the she rdfU *ith the bestDistrict of Columbia or any of her c;ass as her bookingsother place.Miss Hunter is billed as a jazzsinger, which to many peopleconjures up the thought of a galdisregarding any thought for theoriginal melody, hurrying upand down the scale and slurringthe lyrics in favor of producingher own special effects.• * * *Not Lurlean. Although sheleaves the melody behind hereand there in certain numbersfor a few bars, basically shesings everything straight in acalm, clear and consistentlywarm manner.The Chicago-based songbirdand mother of two also singsonly the better tunes, and if heropening night was any indica¬tion of her acceptance byWashington audiences. BluesAlley should be overflowingshortly through tne years nave reflected— only the best afcer-daricspots. Bring her back Mr.Gwaltnev. Please the ni.mDe* S I r<?dO ne* tMcou c -e df si-.fc<o hn s'd-aa-d'-StiP pi mare- now ‘amd aas < f Me me s.mo e l *e“Da"* Of W.Ce d 0 R-ive*.Tne j-dev I*. * ’a-m \nDo Mimething To * V*4 «t-rt * *I'Tf’O. Swe; mav -*• «■enobauv ng c eafu-e ngc. <*au,r >ach fo eac'*Believe me kv co* cairnand collected these n'ghts atBlues AlievTraniiv -o Tomm. wa.tre»a c re,v-cojrcl s»a: po >i •»•. * rope '* continue*I ur ea- k eked * o'fdbso ute v smashing •> \ e.And — where are \Ot go a %tonight'’AppearingatWash PromSaturdayEveningw!tnLarry NovakTrio-vot treLONDON HOUSE* 100 tickets stillavailable — Buynow at Reynold sClub, Student Activities Office ordorms. r./srsc?YOU AREOUR SECRET WEAPONit s really no secret: an organization is onlyas good as the people in it—and their ideas.As a company fast approaching $1 billion inannua, sales Philco knows the power of ideas.And we make it our business to create the kindof atmosphere that most helps to generateIdeas.We are a major subsidiary of Ford Motor Com¬pany, involved in everything from manufac¬ture to technical services, from outer spacewalking to under water talking, from anti¬weapons systems to color television. If you’dlike to join us in an exceptionally fast-paced,rewarding career position we d iike to talk toyou. We will be visiting your campus on (IN¬SERT DATE'. Contact your (?) PlacementOff.ce. Stop bv and talk to us about your fu¬ture or write to College Relations, Philco Cor¬poration C & Tioga Sts., Phila., Pa. 19134.PHILCO WILL BE HERE ON FEB. 17thCareer opportunities available on the East Coast, dieMidwest, the Southwest, the West Coast, and throughoutthe world.Divisions: Aeronutronic • Appliance • Communication* fcElectronics • Consumer Electronics • International •Lansdale • Microelectronics • Sales & Distribution •TechRep • Western Development Laboratoriesr,PHILCO(COPPOfl ATI o NVs as c or •m/ia»* fOUK BftOtTJHIlt EUMYtt H/fFebruary 14, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROONCT IN ORIGINALGrading GradesMidterm exams are no sooner overcome than term papersrise up to confront students in many classes, with final examsstill lurking in the near distance. Even many students who maycatch a spark of interest in some aspect of a subject around themiddle of the quarter soon realize they will have to let thespark die—there is too much other material to plow throughfor the exam.This is the situation in which many students find themselves,due to the pressures for “making good grades.” Even typicallyintellectually curious UC students often devote inordinateamounts of time to what they consider tedious subjects for fearof having a low grade on their record. How much they gainfrom such courses is often an entirely different question fromw hat final grade they receive.STUDENTS and faculty at many other institutions have res¬ponded to this problem with a variety of schemes to alleviateit. One of the most promising is the option of taking a coursefor the grade of “pass” or “fail.” Princeton and Brown havealready found that students are ready to take advantage ofsuch an option by electing courses in many fields such as artand literature.This sort of option has a place in the College here. Why notallow and encourage a physics student to elect a course inphilosophy? Why should a student whose main interest is polit¬ical science avoid a course in Romantic poetry (or vica versa)because his scholarship might be endangered if he made a lowgrade?Offering students such an option would be a logical exten¬sion of the principles of general education, by encouragingevery student to pursue interests in several fields. If a studentis allowed to “try out” a major field by taking a pass-failcourse in it before pursuing it further, the many tudents whoare completely undecided about a major—or are interested inseveral at the same time—would not be penalized for “guess¬ing wrong” the first time. This sort of option would be espe¬cially welcomed at UC because of the remarkable high amountof switching between fields which occurs here.IT MIGHT also seem attractive to put general educationcourses on the pass-fail system, perhaps for all students. Itwould certainly relieve the frustration that often arises fromputting long hours into studies for a general education courseand invariably coming up with low marks. Cal Tech has usedpass-fail for its set of required freshman courses to reduceanxiety, with considerable success.Whether this is really advisable for UC’s general educationprogram is open to question, however. Presumably, a studentmay often put in the requisite amount of work only because hewill be graded, so maybe a grade is necessary. So the theorygoes. The secret, of course, would be to insure that the coursesare really worth working on, and designed to meet the needs ofstudents with a variety of backgrounds.WHETHER or not general education courses are included inthe innovation, we propose that students have the option totake some courses on the pass-fail system.We hope students and faculty with opinions on the gradingsystem will make them known to the committee currently stud¬ying it. It is headed by David Williams, professor of English,Gates-Blake 224.Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief . .David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. Richter| News Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanKenneth SimonsonAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzJoan PhillipsFeature Editor ... Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor Edward Chikofsky|f Editor Emeritus Daniel HertzbergEditorial Staff—Slade Lander, Ellis Levin, Richard Rabens,Joe Lubenow.The Chicago Maroon, founded 1S92. issued every Tuesday and Fridaythroughout the University of Chicago school year, except during thetenth week of the academic quarter and during examination periods,and weekly for eight weeks during the summer, by students at theUniversity of Chicago Located in rooms 303 , 304, 305 Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637, Distributed without chargeon campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood. Subscriptions by mail$6 per year. Charter member. United States Student Press Assn.Publishers of the Collegiale Press Service.S. '"':;:':; -' .cV-.'i.-s/■ . ' ..-..v .CHICAGO MAROON • February 14, 1967 David l.Pass-Fail Is Far from NewThe present, 1967-model gradingcommittee will probably take duenote of the past. It should bepointed out, however, that thesort of pass-fail system currentlybeing adopted by several collegesand universities does not impose“Ps” and “Fs” on all students forall courses. Rather, most schoolsoffer students the opportunity totake some courses—usually limit¬ed to one each term—on the “P”or “F” basis.This has been found to fulfullwhat is usually its stated purpose,to encourage students to electcourses in fields in which they areinterested but would otherwisehesitate to enter, for fear of lowgrades.Princeton and Brown have bothused this optional “P-F” systemfor two semesters, and both havereported that students are usingtheir option in substantial mem¬bers to take courses in manyfields, especially art.The committee at Chicagoshould seriously consider such anoptional system. It is clearly acompromise between the ideal si¬tuation of no grades— but carefulwritten evaluations of a student’swork—and the requirements ofoutside agencies, such as gradu¬ate schools w'hich want a simple,neat indication of a student’s rela¬tive achievement.It may be a compromise, but itseems to have considerable merit.In the current discussion overpossible changes in the gradingsystem, it may be interesting tonote that UC tried to put into ef¬fect a sort of “pass-fail” systemin the early days of the HutchinsCollege—and failed.Only a few old-timers stillvaguely remember the periodfrom 1933 to 1934 when coursegrades in every d i v i s i o n—graduate and undergraduate—wrere only “S” for satsifactory,“U” for unsatisfactory, and “R” for “registered.” David Williams,Professor of English and chair¬man of a committee currentlyinvestigating the grading system,says he started to dig aroundin minutes of the “General Ad¬ministrative Board” (governingboard of deans) when his wiferecalled receiving the new marksin her last year in the College.The revision in courses gradeswas evidently part of the generalshake-up and spirit of experimen¬tation connected with the NewPlan College, which had just beenapproved in 1931, two years be¬fore the grading change took ef¬fectChanges in the grading systemwere evidently tied to the changein the examining system. Com¬prehensive exams were given atthe end of each year-long generaleducation course, and were theonly thing that determined a stu¬dent’s final grade for the course.However, advisory “coursegrades”were also given at the endof each quarter, by the instructorof each section.Evidently, both comp gradesand course grades were put onthe “S-U-R” system, but beforethis was decided there seemed tobe a lively argument over wheth¬er the comp grades should be onthe old “A-B-C-D-F” scale.In any case, those who designedthe experiment definitely wantedcourse grades on the “S-U-R”system, since they wanted to tonedown the emphasis on formalcourse and credit requirements,and stress “the comprehensivegrasp of the student’s field ofstudy.”Even while the new grade sys¬tem was in effect, there was evi¬dently a great deal of confusionover what each grade was sup¬posed to mean. Eventually, it wasexplained that “S” was to be giv¬en when “the quantity and qualityof work a student does in a courseare satisfactory to the instruc¬ tor,” and “U” was given “as pos-itive evidence of work not donesatisfactorily.”The grade “R,” which has re¬mained a convenient device to thepresent, was “the mark given astudent when the instructor hasinsufficient evidence regardingthe quantity and quality of hiswork to justify either an S or U.”No stigma was (or, supposedly,is) attached to an “R”.Dissatisfaction with the newsystem arose early. Some pointedout that “S” covered everythingfrom what had been called “Lowpass” or poor work, to superiorwork. One faculty member quer¬ied, “I wonder whether the Uni¬versity of Chicago can afford tohave the education world, parentsand students, understand that its‘passing’ level or the level for “sa¬tisfactory’ work is to be about51% from now on, as one of theliberalizing features of the ‘newplan’.”In the end, the noble experiment perished, not due so muchto inherent defects of the idea,but to “practical difficulties.”A committee which had beenappointed to look into the matterreported that most schools towhich Chicago College graduateswould transfer (after receiving atwo or three-year general education, what most other schools considered a half-Bachelor’s degree)required certain minimum coursegrades, in the old-style notation.The perils of being too strangewere clearly in mind. “The regis¬trar finds in the majority of in¬stances that it is not possible un¬der our present system of recordsto obtain from instructors the in¬formation that is frequently need¬ed by students,” the committee’sreport states. “As the number oftranscripts issued annually isabout 10,000, this problem seemscertain to assume such propor¬tions as to effect attendance atthe University of Chicago.”Jeffrey KutaToo Few Challenged at LACLike last year, most faculty,guest participants, and studentswho attended events in the Liber¬al Arts Conference (LAC) havecalled the Conference a success.From one point of view, theirstatement is practically unquali¬fied: the “Challenge of NewKnowledge” was faced squarelyand, if not met, at least made lessformidable. From Robert F.Streeter’s opening remarksthrough the last bar played at theContemporary Music Society’sjazz finale, LAC was typified byexcellent opportunities for realiz¬ing one’s perspective on knowl¬edge, and perhaps changing itthrough new acquisitions ofknowledge.But from another point of view,the Conference was a failure. Itfailed because of what it wasn’t,or what it might have been—notonly opportunities, but actualities. Sure Feynman, Bell, and Watsonwere great, for those who went.And Beadle and the panel that fol¬lowed him, and Herman Kahn.And the student-faculty dinners indorms and in apartments, whatthere were of them.IT FAILED because the chair¬man of Bio 112 asked his classhow many of them went to seeWatson, and nobody raised hishand. He hesitated, then askedhow many saw Beadle—same re¬sponse. Bio 112 is a course on ge¬netics.It failed because of the emptyrooms in the dorms and apart¬ments. Some students simplycouldn’t make it to any Confer¬ence events, because they werescattered throughout thecountry—a trip home to NewYork, a short vacation in Aspen,or just a visit to some relatives inthe Midwest. IT FAILED because, if youlooked close enough, you couldsee pretty much the same facesyou did last year. There wereenough of these faces so that at¬tendance was generally notpoor—just enough. But you'dthink you'd see one group of facesat the events on humanities, an¬other group at the physical sci¬ence sessions, and so on. Notso—there was the same hard coremost of the time.One can’t say exactly why theConference was a failure from thesecond point of view. Maybe therewasn’t enough publicity. Maybetoo many people had to catch upon course work or just seek a to¬tally different atmosphere to es¬cape the academic pressure. Ormaybe alumnus-commedian Shel¬ley Berman is right when he talksabout pseudo-intellectualism atthe University of Chicago.Letters to the EditorWM"Misleading Impression"TO THE EDITOR:Concerning your article abouthow the new social rules atUniversity House were preservedthrough the intercession of theInter-House Council, I was ex¬tremely interested in the inter¬pretation of the situation attrib¬uted to me. I was directly quotedby your reporter as making twoludicrous statements about thesituation. I did not make either of the statements.In addition, while misquotingme your reporter ignored a state¬ment which we had submitted toyou which we felt explained thefeelings of the Executive Commit¬tee of the IHC. The gist of thestatement was that we felt thatDean Wick’s decision not to sus¬pend the new rules was “laud¬able,” to use the term of thestatement. The decision was laud¬able because it was the right deci¬sion; we knew it to be wrong to punish an entire House for the ac¬tion of one of its members, andWick came to agree with us. I amnot defending the fact that we hadto convince him. I am merelypointing out that your article gavean extremely misleading impres¬sion of the thought of the officersof the Inter-House Council.PAUL BURSTEINPRESIDENT, INTER-HOUSECOUNCIL(Continued on Page Six)Results of Draft Meeting Discussed by Student Faculty Panelby Michael Kraus*Three UC professors andone very ardent student con¬sidered the implications of mil¬itary service in a democraticsociety, in a panel discussion, Fri¬day.The panel, which was held in theLaw School auditorium, as part ofthe Liberal Arts Conference pro¬gram, focussed its discussion onthe views that came out of last De¬cember’s draft conference. Sol Tax,professor of anthropology, MorrisJanowitz, professor of sociology,and David Bakan, professor of psy¬chology, were joined by MarcBrennan, a student in the new Col¬legiate Division, who asserted thatthe professors’ descriptions of theproceedings should be taken with a• huge grain of salt”.ACCORDING TO Janowitz, thedraft conference was pursuing twogoals at once. The first was purelyeducational: revealing and compil¬ing data on the way the SelectiveService operates at present, andpossible alternative methods ofmaintaining a military force. Jan¬owitz said the conference was suc¬cessful in this.Intellectual SynthesisAt the same time me conferencesought an intellectual synthesis, aresolution of the disputes over poli¬cy. Here, Janowitz declared, theyfailed, partly due to “much aca¬demic politicking”.Attempts to eliminate the draftsystem have a twenty year history,Janowitz pointed out, and in 1964President Johnson instructed De¬fense Secretary McNamara to in¬vestigate means of replacing it.Were it not for incerased escalationof the war in Vietnam, he went on,abolition of the present systemwould be much nearer.According to Janowitz, four prin¬ciple points of view were represent¬ed at the conference:• that the present draft systemis basically sound and requiresonly minor organizational revi¬sions;• that compulsory military ser¬vice should be replaced by a pro¬fessional standing army;• that all eligible men shouldparticipate in a lottery to establish draft priority;• that a system of national ser¬vice in both military and non¬military endeavors should becreated.Participants in the draft confer¬ence, Janowitz said, were guidedby the idea that U.S. militaryneeds in the next few years wouldrange between 2% and 3'/2 millionmen and that not all registrantswill serve. The task, then, was todetermine who will serve and how,he added.IT WAS ALSO assumed that“wherever possible freedom ofchoice should be maximized”. The draft conference, in Janowitz’sview, broke down in debate overthe fundamental conflict between“individual choice and collectiveresponsibility”.The student panelist was unim¬pressed by the draft conference.Breman challenged the sincerity ofmany of the conference’s partici¬pants, declaring that professorshave had the most reactionary re¬sponse to student activism and thatteachers have a vested interest ingetting students out of their hairand into the ranks. He charged thatinsufficient hearing was given tothose who wanted to discuss con¬ scientious objection on political,rather than religious grounds, andon grounds of objection to the Viet¬nam war rather than to war in gen¬eral.David Bakan, speaking on theconnection between U.S. foreignpolicy and the draft, said that whilethe conference assumed the two is¬sues were separable, he was heart¬ened that they were related in dis¬cussion. He stated, that if U.S. mil¬itary needs were one million menfor a peacetime army, volunteerswould be sufficient. If a wartimearmy of ten million were required,there is no question that all eligi-bles would serve. But in U.S. police actions, limited warfare in limitedareas of the world, about three mil¬lion men are required and there isthe need to create a reasonablesystem for selection.Foreign PolicyJanowitz said that although theywere not debating foreign policy atthe conference, “most of the partic¬ipants were pretty critical” of pre¬sent policy, a fact which was re¬flected in their ideas on the draft.For example, they undertook dis¬cussion of requirements for con¬scientious objectors, showing thatthey saw a legitimate conflict be¬tween individual and social needs.The Blown Mind: Alfred Hitchcock’s MARNIETh* Hitchcock masterpiece starring Sean Connery and Tippi Hedren. At Doc Films Wednesday, February 15. 7:15 and 9:15. Soc Sci 122, 59th and University. Stillonly 60 cents. Come blow your mind.Mitchell/JarmanBENEFIT CONCERTFEB. 17, 19677:30, Reynolds ClubAdmission 50cTONIGHT AT 8:30EXIT AND EXILEWRITTEN AND DIRECTEDBY RICHARD VERTEL►#######IONESCOThree One-ActsDIRECTED BY ANDY KAPLANFEBRUARY 17-18, 24-25REYNOLDS CLUB THEATREGeneral Admission $1.25Students and Faculty $ .75Tickets on sale at the Door A secret handshake won’t help youmake VP at General Electric.Something that will help move yourcareer along at a healthy clip is astrong, steady hand when responsi¬bility and important duties arethrust upon you. Plus a firm grip onyour special field of interest,whether it’s marketing, finance ornuclear physics.And it won’t hurt a bit if you also want to strengthen your grip on thesubject that interests you. GeneralElectric runs one of the world’slargest “graduate schools,’’ withcourses in everything from adver¬tising to microelectronics. You canstay on top of developments ir. yourfield by periodically going to schoolat G.E. . . . and learning from G-EJbogress A Ovr Most Important T^xxtuct “professors,” selected from thecountry’s top ranks of engineering,marketingand manufacturingexperts.If you want to work and studyand get ahead in this kind of com¬pany, this company wants you.Come to General Electric, wherethe young men are important menGENERAL© ELECTRICFebruary 14. 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5£ ■ .:$*•<> :■ {V S."? :3 ^ *? >; !$£•&; < x >^«mh» =»*- v mmm . ■? ieLetters to the Editor of the Maroon(Continued from Page Four)Gadfly ReplyTO THE EDITOR:Mr. Paul Bursteiu’s Gadfly arti¬cle last Friday vindicated the IHCand explained its work andachievements. I would like to dis¬agree. however, with two points.First, a quibble: the referenceto Stokely Carmichael as a “so¬cial scientist.” He isn’t one; hisgenerally correct statementsabout US. politics and socialstructure, stemming largely fromex perience and observation,“don’t represent the distilled so¬cial scientific genius of the ages”(quote from Maroon editorial.Jan. 13). But did Carmichael everclaim to be a scientist? The edito¬rialist’s sarcasm is at least accu¬rate.Second, on “molding a betterand more comfortable housingsystem.” trying to “make allhouses ‘good’ houses.” I suggestthat the residents of any housemight have unique standards ofgoodness and comfort, and wantto choose corresponding normsfor themselves; and that if anon-resident feels that the choiceaffects him, the questions “inwhat way?”, “how much?”, and“how directly?” might be theonly ones relevant to decide howmuch the feeling should count inan eventual compromise. E.g., ifWarner points out that all-nightopen house hours will lose usmoney, we’ll probably want to re¬duce them.I don’t live in a dormitory, andknow few people who do; thehours issue doesn’t affect me verydirectly. But I like new terminolo¬gy to imply what it means, and“house autonomy” seems tomean something like ‘guidedself-determination.’BARTON JONESCareersm •Recruiting representatives of the fol¬lowing organizations will visit the Officeof Career Counseling and Placementduring the week of February 13. Inter¬view appointments for 1967 graduatesmay be arranged through Mr. L. S.Calvin. Room 200, Reynolds Club. Ex¬tension 3284.Tuesday, February 14Radio Corporation of America: majorU.S. cities: Marketing and systems pro¬gramming positions in electronic dataprocessing.Standard Oil Company (Ohio); Cleve¬land, Ohio—all degree levels in chemis¬try (analytical, organic, physical)Bankers Life & Casualty Co.: Chica¬go, Illinois—S.B. in Mathematics or sta¬tistics for actuarial trainee positions.Will interview students completing theirsecond or third years in these depart¬ments for summer actuarial program.Wednesday, February 15U. S. Department of Housing and Ur¬ban Development: Chicago. Ill. Posi¬tions as program representatives, plan¬ners, loan assistants, economists, mar¬ket analysts, management specialists,etc. Some preference given to studentsin Social Sciences and Law.U. S. Army Tank—Automotive Cen¬ter: Warren, Mich. (Detroit Suburb)Positions in computer programming,quality control, personnel, procurement,and management science. Passing ofthe Federal Service Entrance Examina¬tion is required for all positions.Mutual of Omaha: Omaha, NebraskaManagement trainees, claims, editorial,programming, and group insurancetrainees.Thursday, February 16U. S. Air Force Logistics Command:Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (Day-ton) Ohio.—Personnel management,management analysis, contract assist¬ants, data processing. Transportationassistants and budget analysts.Friday, February 17Metropolitan Life InsuranceCompany: New York, N Y. and in fieldoffices throughout the U. S. ■ actuarial,sales, programming, economic analysis,management consulting, and instruc¬tors.U. S. Defense Supply Agency: Chica¬go and Rockford, Ill. Milwaukee. Wise ;Indianapolis. South Bend, and FortWayne, Ind - contract administration,industrial specialists, data processing,and personnel administration.Swift & Company Research and Devel¬opment Center: Oak Brook. Illinois(Chicago suburb) - Chemists at all de¬gree levels (analytical, organic, physi¬cal); programming: S B. and S M instatistics; men for personnel. LSD ClarificationTO THE EDITOR:The article appearing in lastFriday's edition of the Maroonconcerning alledged investigationsby the Food and Drug Adminis¬tration into the use of halucinato-ry drugs on campus understanda¬bly may have caused some anxie¬ty among both students who haveId Japanese Film Festival* PresentsL "1 K1 R U"KUROSAWA - Director/6s. Sat., Feb. 18 7:15 and 9:30S0C. SCI. 122 75calready been interviewed and stu¬dents who might be consideringvolunteering for interviews con¬cerning my present study of theattitudes and motivations of stu¬dents who take LSD.I am not now. nor have I everbeen, nor do I intend to be anagent for either the Food andDrug Administration, or the Uni¬versity of Chicago administration. My study is a legitimate one at¬tempting tc determine the role ofsocial as opposed to internal influ¬ences in a student’s use of LSD.The results of the study will besubmitted in a paper for a psy¬chology course, and incorporatedinto a series of articles for theMaroon. The University administrationis aware of the study and completely respects its ethics. I havenot been approached by anyone ina position of legal authority.If any students have question-concerning the study please feelfree to call me at 324 3034.SLADE LANDERBOOK SALESTUDENT COOP BOOKSTORE25c—HARDBOUND FICTION-25c10c—PAPER BACK-TOcOverstocked Gen. Ed. Titles10c—PAPERBACKS—10cMan-on-the-spot®.. .with the world’s largest bank.From London to Los Angeles, Bank of America’smen-on-the-spot are on the move—providingbanking services to every type of business andindustry. Today’s banker is well-paid and well-trained. He knows his business, and he knowsthe business he serves.As Bank of America expands, both at homeand abroad, there’s a continuing need for career-A Bank of America Recruitment officer will be at your Placement office soon.minded young men with ambition and executivepotential to help in the development of new mar¬kets and new banking services.If you’re interested in getting ahead, there’sa bright future for you—at Bank of America.BANK OF AMERICANATIONAL TRUST AND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION • MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INtMtANCC6 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 14, 1967Theatre ReviewPaxton Concert Set forThursday Night at MandelTom Paxton, the folk singer andsongwriter, will perform hereThursday, February 16, as part ofStudent Government’s Folk ConcertSenes, at 8 pm in Mandel Hall.Some of the most popular swigswritten by Paxton are “Last ThingOn My Mind,” ‘‘What Did You1 ram in School Today?” andCan’t Help But Wonder Where I’mBound.”Tickets for the concert are $2.50for reserved main floor seats; $2 forunreserved seats in the balcony,and are available at the SG office.UNIVERSITY THEATRETRYOUTS Tom Paxton "Tonight" Evening of Bad NewsAn evening of bad newsawaits the playgoer who catch¬es Noel Coward’s Tonight at8:30, an offering from the Nat¬ional Repertory Theatre series atthe Studebaker. For the most part,the choice of material performed ispoor and the performances and di¬rection only adequate.Tonight at 8:30 consists of threeshort plays that are too long. Thefirst, Ways and Means, was ashock to me, since I had thoughtthat Coward’s comedies were wittyand charming. This one was nei¬ther. In an unbelievably woodenmanner, the play concerns the Cart¬wrights (Joan Bassie and LouisTurenne), a rich society couple who suddenly find themselves pen¬niless, owing gambling debts, andabout to be evicted from their host¬ess’s villa. Even good perform¬ances could not have saved thisone.The evening’s second offeringwas Still Lif«, directed by Jack Sy-dow. This is a sentimental piece,showing the blossoming of an ex¬tra-marital affair between two mid¬dle-aged people. The action takesplace in a railroad station coffee-shop on what seems to be an inter¬minable series of Thursday-afternoon trysts. Again, little couldhave been done with this soggyconcoction. The two lovers areplayed by Priscilla Morrill andDenholm Elliott. Jeanne Hepple and G. Wood do a good job as thecoffeeshop manager and station-master. Will Steven Armstrong’sset is better than Still Life de¬serves.Fumed Oak„ the third play, is ex¬cellent in both writing and perfor¬mance, and it seemed even bettercompared with the rest of the eve¬ning. In this domestic farce, Cow¬ard draws some sharp- caricaturesof the domineering wife, trampledhusband, whining mother-in-lawand teenage daughter. The acting,by Sloane Shelton, Patrieia Guinan,Joan Force and Geoff' Garland, anddirection by G. Wood, were excep¬tional. But even this could notmake up for the preceding portionof the program.Greta Garbo in NINOTCHKAErnst lubitsch's great comedy. At Doc Films tonight. 7:15 end 9:15. Soc Sci 122, 59th and University. Stilt only 40 cents.Any gome It moro fun with ice-cold Colce on hand. Coca-Cola has the taste younever get tired of... always refreshing. That’s why things go better with Coke...offer Coke«• • after Coke*ooiiteo uiioer the authority of The Coca-Cola Company by Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago.February 14, 1967IROSE BIMLERIs Not A Miss U.C. Finalist,! but she will be at the WASH PROM, and so will LurleanHunter. LESSING’S"Minna Von Barnhelm"Translated by Kenneth NorthcottDirected by Andrew HarrisTUES., WED., THUDS.FEB. 14, 15, 167 PM REYNOLDS CLUBMl 1-31131424 S. Klmbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospitalHUB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroM. O.HondaTriumphCveipleH Repel*And ServiceOat Al Popular ImportMidway 1-4501605? So fpHsne f$rn*ra Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9239NSA Discounts715 NORTH MICHIGAN AVE.CHICAGOFor Illinois deliveryplease add 4% sales taxmClassified AdsPERSONALSThe First Commercial of the Citizen’sForum for the unconditional cessationof bombing in Viet Nam will be Broad¬cast on WNUS radio. 1390 kcs., between3-7 am, Tues., Feb. 14. If you are inter¬ested in future commercials of this typecall Citizen’s Forum, 955-4724 Will trade two railroads and Park Placefor Atlantic and Ventnor. (I have Mar-vin Gardins, and like yellow.) (signed)Atlantic City Resident.Wanted: in the immediate future, oneget out of jail free card.Only four more days until the WashProm!Elliott embellishes a bit!To share: onerhythmically. heart: palpitates P CBuy your Wash Prom ticket when youvote for Miss U.C.Lecture on February 20: Elie Wieselspeaking at Bernard Horwich Center.Student tickets at $1.50. Those seekingtransportation contact Hillel House. End admission Charges!! The FREEB-J cinema. 2/16. 9 pm. Judson Diningroom. See the Keaton Cops!LOST: plain gold ring inscribed “Ashnazg durbatuluk” (it's for real) Greatsentimental value: corresponding re¬ward for return. Call 667-4280,Chas. I’m in Buffalo. Angie.Steve. We love you. The Girls.TRYOUTS for Lessing's Minna VonBarnhelm, translated by Kenneth North-cott. Tues., Wed., Thurs.. Feb. 14, 15,16. Reynolds Club Theatre 7 pm.TRYING TO LOCATE: Counselor at U.of Chicago from Nebraska and universi¬ty of same. Met at Omaha Airport De¬cember 29th. Where she was returningto Chicago after holidays in Lincoln.Please contact Dick Mueller. Studio No.6 Aquila Court. Omaha. Nebr.THE NOBLEMEN join ALPHA DELTfor a wild Greek bash, Friday, at 8:30.Help stamp out cream cheese.A three-chambered heart is better thannone at all. NON-PARANOID HEADS: donate yourtrips to humanity through anonymousand confidential interview with psychol¬ogy student studying the use of LSD oncampus. Call Slade Lander, 5447 Wood-lawn, 324-3034.KAMELOT restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for UC students!ART EXHIBIT: ISREAL TODAY ANDOTHER PAINTINGS. A collection ofoils and watercolors by BACIA GOR¬DON. Most items for sale. Now throughFebruary 28. Hillel House. 5715 Wood-lawn.Bet your Valentine would love to go tothe Washington Promenade!Twiddle-dee and twiddle-dum are trod-ding too heavily for Mushroom Lady-beware you two! Awesome results areimminent!V\'A.v0te.v~ ^0 5c* 15$ oj CI\Lco-J o Love has got to bubble up spontaneous¬ly. So bubble. Happy Valentine’s Day.Pooh: why should I be civil to them orto you? In this Palace of Lies a truth ortwo will not hurt you. Your friends arethe dullest dogs I know. They are notbeautiful: they are only decoratedThey are not clean: they are onlyshaved and starched. They are not dig¬nified: they are only fashionablydressed They are not educated: theyare only college passmen. They are notreligious: they are only pewrenters.They are not moral: they are only con¬ventional. They are not virtuous: Theyare only cowardly. They are not evenvicious: they are only “frail.” They arenot artistic: they are only lascivious.They are not prosperous: they are onlyrich. They are not loyal: they are onlyservile; not dutiful, only sheepish: notpublic spirited, only patriotic; not cou¬rageous, only quarrelsome: not deter¬mined, only obstinate: not masterful,only domineering; not self-controlled,only obtuse: not self-respectful, onlyvain: not kind, only sentimental; notsocial, only gregarious: not considerate,only polite; not intelligent, only opinion¬ated: not progressive, only factious; notimaginative, only superstitious; notjust, only vindictive; not generous, onlypropitatory, not disciplined, only cowed:and not truthful at all; liars every oneof them, to the very backbone of theirsouls.FOR SALESONY 104 tape recorder, hardly used.$100 new; yours for $25 . 288-4887.JOBS OFFEREDSecretary wanted-full or part time fordoctor’s office. Call 723-1009 or 465-2518evenings.Girl student interested in babvsitting 2aft/wk. Call 548-7002 good pay.Be my Valentine, Tom Paxton, A DPart-time, $2/hr., 10 hrs/wk. max. ParkShore Cleaners. FA 4-7579.TO RENTRm. Sc brd. spring quarter for mother’shelper. 363-1199.Medical student needs rmmte. male, orfemale, on Ellis near 53rd. Marty, 324-0289. aft. 6 pm. or wkends.Sublet: Spring term, 1 bdrm., furn., 55Cornell, 288-1076 eves.Student-share huge 7 rm. apt. in HvdePark: own rm. $50/mo., 643-3603 Should you drink beerstraight from the bottle?If you’re on a fishing trip orsomething, carrying along aglass is pretty clumsy. Butwhen it’s convenient, we thinkit’s a shame not to use one.Keeping Budweiser inside the bottle orcan is missing half the fun.Those tiny bubbles getting organizedat the top of your glass have a lot to dowith taste and aroma. Most beers havecarbonation pumped in mechanically.Not Budweiser. We go to a barrel oftrouble and expense to let Budweisercreate its own bubbles with the naturalcarbonation of Beechwood Ageing. Soyou really can’t blame us for wantingyou to get it at its best, can you?Just for fun, pour your next four orfive bottles of Bud® into a glass. If youdon’t agree that the extra taste, clarityand aroma make a big difference, goback to the bottle.We won’t say another word.Budweiser.KING OF BEERS • ANHEUSER BUSCH. INC. • ST LOUISNEWARK . LOS ANGELES • TAMPA . HOUSTONTALCOTTPARSONSOF HARVARD UNIVERSITYMAX WEBER AND SOCIAL SCIENCE:FOUR DECADES AFTER"8 PM TuesdayFeb. 14,1967TICKETS AVAILABLEIN THE SG OFFICEAND AT THE DOOR TONIGHTAdmission $2.00U.C. Students 75*MANDEL HALLTHE STUDENT GOVERNMENT75th ANNIVERSARYSPEAKERS PROGRAMB • CHICAGO MAROON • February 14, 1967