Chicago Maroon MIDWEEKEDITION75th Anniversary YearThe University of Chicago February 28, 1967Faculty and SAR Quiet —Rank Decision May Stickby David A. SatterDespite the fulminations of the Maroon and Student Government, it appears that last| week's decision on ranking by the Council of the University Senate will stand as is.Dean of Students Warner A. Wick said that he didn’t see any chance of the Council decid¬ing on any additional steps like the abolition of male-female class ranking. “I haven’t heardany noise about that at all,” hesaid. “On the whole I think the fac¬ulty’s quite satisfied with mattersas they are.”another administrationofficial said that he was almostIN ALL HIS GLORY: Poet Alan Ginsberg speaking at Mandel Hall sure that the Council would take noThursday evening. See an editorial on Ginsberg on page four and further action on the rank question,a review of his reading on page seven. I at least until recommendationswere made by President Johnson’si commission on the draft.Kalven CommentsHarry Kalven, a professor of lawand member of the Council of theUniversity Senate, said that as faras he could tell there was no mo¬mentum for further moves, butadded that, “Time sometimesseems to make these questions lookdifferent. They (the Council mem¬bers) haven’t gritted their teethand said that this is it for now andforever.”NSA President Attacks Choice of PanelSelected to Investigate CIA FinancingWASHINGTON, (CPS)—Thepresident of the National Stu¬dent Association (NSA) Fridaycritized a White House inquiryinto Central Intelligence Agency(CIA) financing of private organi¬zations.W. Eugene Groves told a pressconference here that he did not seehow the panel, appointed by Presi¬dent Johnson, could be critical ofthe CIA since it includes intelli¬gence agency director RichardHelms.OTHER MEMBERS of the fact¬finding board are Undersecretaryof State Nicholas Katzenbach andJohn Gardner, Secretary of Health,Education & Welfare.Groves said that he found pastcontacts between NSA and the CIAcompletely unjustified. The NSApresident specifically referred tothe passing of information betweenmembers of the student group’s In¬ternational Commission and CIAagents in previous years.lie repeated an earlier call for aCongressional investigation of theuse of private organizations for thepurposes of American foreign poli¬cy. ' rSaid the NSA official, “The reve¬lations of the past week haveshocked the world, to the extent ofjeopardizing much of the produc¬tive work undertaken to build inter¬national understanding and of un¬dermining the trust placed inAmericans working overseas.”HE SAID the use by the CIA ofcovert means in domestic groups tobuild democratic institutions “re¬flects a monumental contradictionin the construction of American so¬ciety.”Groves said that “while the Na¬tional Student Association has beenand remains anti-Communist, theworld now knows that the UnitedStates has employed many of thesame secretive techniques to fightrepresentatives of a closed societythat those societies use them¬selves.”He said a thorough examinationof the institutions of American so¬ciety, “to develop new ways ofbuilding free and democratic insti¬tutions which can stand on theirown in maintaining the confidence° People in this country andabroad is necessary.EDWARD SCHWARTZ, NSA’sl!tional affairs vice-president,c mmented, “Those who think that NSA will roll over and play dead asa result of last week’s disclosuresare plainly misguided.”He said no schools had disaffiliat¬ed from the student group sinceRamparts magazine disclosedNSA’s links to the CIA, and notedthat Michigan State University,Lewis College (Ix>ckport, Ill.), andthe University of Denver hadjoined the organization during thepast two weeks. Warner A. Wickapprove the Council’s decision toEven Students Against the Rank abolish the male class rank and(SAR) appear to be at least partial- Saturday night the group held aly satisfied with matters as they victory party,stand. After a marathon meeting Jerry Lipsch, a member of thelast Wednesday night, SAR voted to ! SAR executive committee, saidVietnam ReportChaplains See War as Moralby Howard MoffettSAIGON (CPS)—One of Yale’s great courses is Edmund Morgan’s review of American co¬lonial history. Beginning with the Puritan fathers, Professor Morgan teaches that our historyhas been deeply influenced by the early Americans’ view of themselves as a morally pure andrighteous people—by contrast with the decadent, corrupt sons of Europe.I didn’t really appreciate what he [ ——was saying until I had been in Viet¬nam for several months. What fi¬nally brought the idea home — andleft me depressed and scared —was a series of interviews witharmy and airforce chaplains.There are over 430 Americanchaplains in Vietnam — some 320Protestants, more than 100 RomanCatholics, and three Jews. All arevolunteers.I INTERVIEWED thirteen. Al¬most to a man, their conscienceswere aggressively clear about themoral rationale for the U. S. mili¬tary commitment.Glowing TermsThat might be expected of chap¬lains. But what surprised and de¬pressed me wrere the glowing termsthey used to describe what is basi¬cally an agonizing, dirty businessof making many people suffer inorder to prove a political point. Intheir view of the world, Americansare still the standard bearers ofmorality in the battle against evil.Cotton Mather would have recog¬nized his descendants instantly.On the basis of these chaplains’interviews, a disinterested observerwould have to characterize theAmerican approach to war as (a)saintly and (b) child-like. Considerthe following four assumptions:(1) We are here to save the Viet¬namese people from the evils ofCommunism. This theme wassounded by at least ten of the thir¬teen chaplains. The followingquotes are representative, and inmy opinion the complete contexts \ would not change their import:“The Viet Cong are misguidedzealots who have been given thewrong information all their lives.What would you believe if you hadbeen taught all your life that Amer¬icans are the aggressors?” —Chaplain Ross C. Wright, Conserva¬tive Baptist from Los Angeles.“How can you call this war im¬moral? You can’t say life is moreimportant than personal freedoms,honor, integrity, and the dignity ofhuman beings. The basic moral is¬sue is: are these things worth de¬fending?” —Father Thomas D.McGrath (known to a less bellicosecolleague as ‘Quick Draw’), RomanCatholic from Worcester, Mass.. “I see China as an emotionallydistrubed society.” —this fromChaplain Jack Keene, United Pres¬byterian, who believes the U. S.has an obligation bo protect SouthVietnam from foreign domination."I'M NOT so concerned about thedemocratic process, but I think theclergy should be on the side ofright. Maybe the majority of Viet¬namese people do support the VietCong, but if so they do it out ofignorance and fear. . . Its’ like ourAmerican race riots. The police atWatts weren’t very popular, butthey were right.” —Orville McCor¬mack, Assemblies of God, Oklaho¬ma City.McCormack continues, “It seemsto me these (civilian clergy pro¬testing the war) would ratherswitch than fight. This is anathemato the church because we have al¬ ways been known for fightingevil . . .”McCormack, an air force chap¬lain, says some of the men whocome back from bombing missionsbreak down and cry over mistakesthey have made in hitting thewrong village or striking innocentcivilians. He concludes, “But tocompare these accidents withcold-blooded Viet Cong atrocities isto compare a man who has had acar accident with a killer who goesdowntown and machine guns twen¬ty people . . . GI Joe is a healer,not a killer. We’re not here to killpeople but to keep them from beingkilled, not to conquer but to free,not to take but to give our lives inorder that they might have. . .‘Greater love hath no man this,that a man lay down his life for hisfriend.’”Christian HistoryChaplain Charlie Mills, a VirginiaBaptist, is a little more succinct:“The VC are intimidating thesepeople and Christianity historicallyhas fought to aid the oppressed.”LEST THE lighthearted laugh tooloud, it should be said that there issome ground for the attitudes ofmost of these men, some truth inwhat they say. But when all is saidand done, in many parts of this icountry saving the Vietnamesefrom the evils of Communism boilsdown to saving them from them¬selves — whether or not they areCommunists.The Viet Cong may be zealots, !(Continued on Page Five) I that he didn’t think anybody wassatisfied with the Council’s decisionbut, “We (SAR) may feel thatthere’s nothing we can do and weought to attack related issues.”SAR HAS CALLED a meeting forthis Thursday night at 7:30 pm inIda Noyes Hall to consider policyand the question of SAR’s future.The meeting was called because ofthe “massive uncertainty concern¬ing the goals and aims of the Stu¬dents Against the Rank.” Accord¬ing to an SAR spokesman, “it wasconsidered necessary that an artic¬ulate formulation of policy be de¬cided on before Spring Quarter.”Lipsch said the consensus of SARisn’t clear but insisted that it wouldbe premature to conclude that SARis giving up the Rank issue. “Theonly reason it (the rank issue)would be dropped would be if theSelective Service refused to acceptthe new male-female rank,” hesaid.The proposed agenda for SAR’sThursday meeting includes discus¬sion of the new ranking and thepossibility that SAR should activelyoppose any rank used by the Selec¬tive Service. Other questions to betaken up will probably include con¬sideration of what SAR should orshould not do to protest the war inVietnam, and discussion of educa¬tional reform and university demo¬cratization.SG Takes StandOne of the few organizationalprotests against the Council deci¬sion on ranking has come from SG.Pink mimeographed copies of anSG resolution blasting the Council’sdecision were distributed Mondayall over campus. The resolution,which was passed at SG’s Thurs¬day meeting said that the Council’sdecision “serves no useful pur¬pose” and rather than appeasingboth the opponents and the support¬ers of ranking, the decision hasalienated both.SG PRESIDENT Tom Heagysaid that SG has no further plansbeyond communicating their reso¬lution to the appropriate people,however.Bandersnatch OpenFor Trial PeriodThe Bandersnatch draws nigh.According to Dave Kohl, chair¬man of the student committee incharge of the new Ida Noyes snackshop, the Bandersnatch will openfor a limited amount of business allthis week, although its officialopening date isn’t until Saturday.“We want to give the staff somepractice before we begin to workon a regular basis,” he said. “Ijust hope not too many people flockin immediately, because we won’tbe prepared for them.”Until Saturday, the Bandersnatchwill be open from 6 pm until 1 am.Festivities marking Saturday’sopening will feature the AmericanDream Blues Band and folksingingfrom 6 pm until 3 am.New Anti-Viet CroupHere Takes To RadioA new and different group oppos¬ing the Vietnam War has sprung uphere.The organization, called the Citi¬zens’ Forum, does not believe inany of the established means ofcommunication with the public,such as picketing, demonstrating,and leafleting.Freedom MovementPlans Work ProjectThe Chicago Freedom Movementis planning a Spring Work Projectfor college students and profession¬al organizers to compile informa¬tion about the poverty areas in Chi¬cago.The information gathered will beused to help Negro, Spanish, andpoor white communities in the cityto increase their political and eco¬nomic power. According to a state¬ment released by the organization,the Project is part of a new cam¬paign to build a political and eco¬nomic dimension of the movementas well as a moral one.Students and faculty interested inparticipating in the Project, to runfrom March 18 through April 3,may register at the Student Activi¬ties Office in Ida Noyes Hall. It prefers to present its views bybroadcasting one-minute spot an¬nouncements over major radio sta¬tions.The group, started by sax stu¬dents in the College but now en¬compassing over 40 students andfew faculty members, is notagainst picketing and demonstrat¬ing, but views them as, accordingto a statement by its executivecommittee, “actions which are nec¬essary, but which are often ineffec¬tive and even self-defeating.”The statement says that thegroup has no desire to competewith other existing protest groupsbut it, “recognizes the need forconciliatory and constructive ac¬tion.”So far the group has had twoone-minute announcements broad¬cast over radio station WNUS. It isplanning more as soon as the neces¬sary funds become available. Rapport with RapoportBoard OK’s Michigan Daily EditorsANN ARBOR, Mich. —TheUniversity of Michigan’s Boardin Control of Student Puplica-tions has averted a walkout bythe staff members of the Universi¬ty’s newspaper, the Michigan Dai¬ly, by accepting the appointment ofRoger Rapoport as new Daily edi¬tor.Recommendations by the out¬going Daily editors that Rapoportbe appointed editor for 1967-68 hadearlier been defeated by the publi¬cations board. Rapoport has creat¬ed a great deal of controversy inthe past year with his reporting ofconflicts of interesting cases in¬volving the university’s regents.THE BOARD, which reversed itsdecision after an eight-hour debate,had received scores of complaintsat Rapoport’s rejection from Michi¬gan students and faculty. TheBoard also received over 35 tele¬grams from Michigan state legisla¬ tors protesting Rapoport’s rejec-,tion.The staff of the Daily had threat¬ened to quit if the Board stood byits refusal to approve Rapoport.The appointment today removedthe prospect of a walkout and otherstudent protests.Rapoport said that he would ad¬vocate a complete severance of tiesbetween the Daily and the universi¬ty. He noted that the HarvardCrimson and the Columbia Specta¬tor both operated independently oftheir schools."WITH THE kind of stuff we’rerunning,” he continued, “it’s im¬possible to operate without runninginto the administration and the re¬gents, and it’s impossible to do anindependent job without runninginto this kind of pressure.”Khruschev, Not Stalin, Responsible forRussia's Cold War Policies-MorgenthauCareers Khrushchev revived the worldwide goals of Communism that hadbeen set up by Lenin and Trotsky,Morgenthau stated. “It was he, not jStalin, who said, ‘We will buryyou.’ It was he, not Stalin, who in-_ . . _ , „ , sisted on the world-wide triumph ofSpeaking before the History Club, | Conimunism. It was he who em-Morgenthau attacked what heProfessor of PoliticalScience Hans J. Morgenthaudeclared last week that it wasKhrushchev, not Stalin, whomade the Cold War what it is.r>FEBRUARY 28Chubb & Son: Chicago, Illinois and NewYork, N. Y. Men and women graduatesof any department for underwriting po¬sitions.MARCH 1North American Aviation and Divisions:various California locations. Ph.D.Chemists (all specializations); S.M. andPh.D. statisticians; all degree levels inphysics; scientific programming. Atom¬ic Energy Commission, Washington,D.C., masters and Ph.D.’s in Econom¬ics, Political Science, Int. Relation andHistory.MARCH 2John Hancock Mutual Life InsuranceCompany: Boston, Mass. Actuarial,management, sales management, andmarketing management programs.Federal Water Pollution Control Admin¬istration: Chicago, Ill. and throughoutU.S. All degree levels in biology chem¬istry (analytical, inorganic, organic),geophysical sciences (hydrology), mi¬crobiology, programming, and zoology.MARCH 3U.S. Bureau of the Budget: WashingtonD C. Graduate students only in econom¬ics, business, history, law, political sci¬ence, and public administration.Weyerhaeuser Company: nationwide.Positions in sales or production. called “the demion interpretationof Stalin as the fanatical executorof the testament of Lenin and Trot¬sky.” Stalin, he said, was Czaristrather than Leninist in his ap¬proach to foreign policy as he wasinclined to use diplomacy ratherthan force.Morgenthau criticized what hecalled the “folklorist schools ofthought” which blame the ColdWar either on the Russians for fail¬ing to carry through the Yaltaagreements, or on the U.S. for fail¬ing to see what Russia was afterWorld War II."STALIN," he explained, “wasbound to regard the Western insist¬ence on democratic governments inthese (Eastern European) coun¬tries, as antagonistic to what hethought were legitimate Russianclaims.” And Stalin himself admit¬ted that “a freely elected govern¬ment in any of these countrieswould be anti-Soviet.” barked on the Cuban venture. Sta¬lin never would have included Cubain the Russian sphere.”According to Morgenthau,Khrushchev extended the Cold Warby using foreign aid and trade,atomic threats, subversion, andRussia’s technological successes.“It wras only in 1962, in conse¬quence of the Cuban missile crisis,that Khrushchev learned where tostop.”Morgenthau stated that sinceKrushchev’s time the old bi polarsystem has begun to break up. j“The Iron Curtain has dissolved,”)he claimed. “Former pawns have *begun to move.”Pointing out the increasing inde- ipendence of Soviet satelites, he not-1ed that “Rumania has had the;nerve to establish relations withthat ‘racist, revisionist beast,’ WestGermany. I’m quoting, not stat¬ing,” he quickly added. “Perhapsthe Maroon will have a big head¬line.”Help keepAvis batteries fromgoing dead this weekend*Avis doesn’t give specialson weekdays because we don’thave to.We hardly have enough carsto handle all the businessmenMonday through Friday.But weekends are a different story.You can get a Plymouth for the rate of *20plus Mileage from Noon Fri. to Mon. Noon.We don’t make much on a deal like this.But it’s better than having our cars sit aroundcollecting dust.Wr'M «ult Hworth ysur whileAVISRENTACARfor More Information•ltd Reservations.CONVENIENT LOCATION—1616 E. 53rd STCall 712-01W 1. Your hot dog’*getting cold.I’m wot hungry.3. Tell me.It’ll he years andyears before the kidi6 self-supporting. The Board also accepted the entire proposed slate of Daily editorsfor the coming year and the pro¬posed set of guidelines for futureDaily operations. These include aninternal critique sheet, usage of theAmerican Society of NewspaperEditors’ code of ethics, critiques ofthe Daily by aB outside journalist,and the creation of an open forumon the editorial page for membersof the university community to sub¬mit articles and opinions.These proposals were not, howev¬er, presented as a precondition toacceptance of the new editorialslate, and could he defeated at ameeting of the entire Daily staffnext week.2. For a man who’s justannounced that he amihis wife are expectingtheir first, you're bow*too cheerfull had a disturbingthought.^774. It’s not unusual forfathers to provitle lortheir children untilthey’re through school.That’s just it—Jane ami 1 love kids.Wv want 5 or 6.5. Wonderful.But what if I should die,Crish the thought,fore they earntheir PhD’s? 6. If you plan with LivingInsurance from Equitable,you ears be suae there ! bemoney to take eare of yourkids am) help diem templet*their education. On theether hand, it you make itto retirement, you ran usethe cash values in yourpolicy for some swinging■unset years.I’d hhe the mustard,relish, pkkies andketchup.For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equable.For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, mwrite: Patrick Scollard, Manpower Development Division.TH« EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United StatesH*mc Otter: 1285 Ave. of the Americas, New Yetfc, BY J0019An lyuol Opportunity Employer, M/F ©EqniteW* M*72 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 28, 1967Kerner Names DalyTo ETV CommitteeCharles U. Daly, vice-presidentfor public affairs, has been appoint¬ed by Gov. Kerner to a new Tele¬communications Committee whichwill study the potential use of edu¬cational television in the state.Sources in Springfield say theCommittee may be considering astatewide ETV system such as thatin New York.Peter G. Peterson, a Universitytrustee and president of Bell andHowell Corp., was also named tothe 16 man committee.Other members include IrvingHarris, president of StandardShares, Inc. and former chairmanof the board of Science ResearchApplications for financialaid for next year will beavailable in the Office of |College Aid tomorrow. The |deadline for all applications ||is April 1. All students who *presently hold a College ischolarship must apply for Ifrenewal. Students who do not 8I hold scholarships but think Ithey qualify on the basis ofneed and their academic |record are encouraged to i|j apply.i mmmmimkmimiri" m tr«“; Associates, chairman; Newton Min-ow, Chicago attorney and formerchairman of the Federal Communi¬cations Commission, general coun¬sel; Ray Page, state superintend¬ent of instruction; James Red¬mond, superintendent of Chicagoschools; and Sterling Quinlan, pres¬ident and general manager of FieldCommunications Corp.Six Profs to AttendS.F. China MeetingSix UC professors who participat¬ed in the University’s China Con¬ference January 31 to February 6will attend a day long seminar onChina in San Francisco March 18.The six are: Hans Morgenthau,professor of political science andhistory; Ping-ti Ho, a James West-fall Thompson professor of history;Tang Tsou, professor of politicalscience; Albert W’alstetter, profes¬sor of political science; Norton S.Ginsburg, professor of geography;and Robert Demberger, assistantprofessor of economics.Among the subjects to be dis¬cussed at the seminar, are “China’sInternal Crisis,” “The Great Cul¬tural Revolution,” and “AmericanPolicy toward China.” Call for Broader CO BasisThe SANE View: Reform the DraftJeffery Theatre1952 E. 71st St. HY 3-3333Wednesday & ThursdayMarch 1 & 2The D'Oyly Carte Opera Co.presentsTHE MIKADOThree performances each dateAt 2, 5, & 8 pm.Student discount rate $1.25For All Performances.Tickets at the Box Office by Michael Krauss“The way in which the draftlaw is administered is as badas the way in which it is writ¬ten,” asserted George Pon-tikes, a lawyer and a member ofthe American Civil Liberties Union,in a forum on “The Draft, Viet¬nam, and You” at Breasted HallSunday night.Sponsored by the Hyde Park-Kenwood chapter of the Commit¬tee for a SANE Nuclear Policy, jthe forum brought together speak¬ers associated with legal and reli¬gious problems of the draft anddraft resistance. The group wasunanimous in its opposition to thepresent draft system and stressedthe need for positive action, espe¬cially since the draft law will comeunder Congressional review when itexpires the end of June.PONTIKES OFFERED a briefhistory of conscientious objection.There was no opportunity for con¬scientious objectors, he said, untilthe Draft Act of 1940, which con¬tained the provision that no personmust serve who “by reason of reli¬gious training and belief, is op¬posed to war in any form.” To clar¬ify the law, he noted. Congressadded a provision in 1948 whichstated that “religious training andbelief” means a belief in God.Pontikes added that in 1965 thecase of Daniel Seeger set a prece¬dent for the granting of CO statusto those with a belief in “enduringfundamental virtues” in addition tothose professing a belief in a Su¬preme Being. The “God” clausewas not abolished, he pointed out,but merely interpreted more liber¬ally. Pontikes complained that thestatute is still very ambiguous.Today the law does not shelterthe person who objects to a specificwar, he asserted. He added that itwas unlikely that Congress would readily enlarge the opportunitiesfor CO’s on those grounds.Pontikes reminded the audiencethat even now the conscientious ob¬jector is deferred only by“Congressional grace” and doesnot have constitutional rights. Henoted, however, that constitutionalprotection could be won by courtprecedent.LAWYERS ARE still searching,said Pontikes, for a practicingCatholic who will claim his CO onthe grounds that the war in Viet-1nam is not a “just war”.Rabbi Daniel Leiffer of the Hillel;Foundation welcomed the recent;liberalization of the grounds forconscientious objection. He statedthat presently most applicants jclaim belief in religious force rath¬er than the traditional concept of atranscendental being. Today’s con¬scientious objectors are finally tak¬ing religious principles seriously,he said. He regretted that theiracts of conscience generate angerinstead of respect.Rabbi Leiffer described howAmerican religious orders, suffer¬ing from loss of interest and devo¬tion, must begin to address them¬selves to matters of secular con¬cern. The church must insist, hemaintained, that the state is not theultimate object of our allegiance.“Our religious values and obliga¬tions,” he affirmed, “must comebefore the state.”The United States is nobody’ssavior, Leiffer insisted. Religionmust oppose the idea of manifestdestiny.DAVID BAKAN, UC professor ofpsychology, described last Decem¬ber’s Conference on the Draft,which was convened by the Univer¬sity in response to student pressureagainst the rank and cooperationwith the Selective Service.In his opinion the most signifi¬cant idea to come out of the draftconference was that of a profes¬COOP ARRIVALSSchopenhauer- WORLD OF WILL AND IDEAS 3 vols $9.50LETTERS OF JAMES JOYCE 3 vols V2 priceC0LECCI0N AUSTRAL ... 300 titlesBorbaki-ELEMENTS DE MATHEMATIQUE ... 3 vols.NOW PATINO UP TO 40% FOR GEN ED TEXTSREYNOLD'S CLUB BASEMENT 10-5 Daily sional army. Originally put forwardby Milton Friedman, professor ofeconomics, the idea involves rais¬ing the pay for soldiers to a livingwage to encourage enlistments formilitary careers. For a force ofi three million men the cost wouldbe six to eight billion dollars peryear. This is not so much, Bakanpointed out, when compared tototal United States expenditures forfor the war in Vietnam.Bakan speculated that it was notlikely that protest against the draftlaw would prevent Congress fromrenewing it. but he said they mightrenew it for a shorter term, andbegin to seek alternatives.BRENT KRAMER, a student anda member of the “We Won’t Go”group, and Paul Lauter, also a stu¬dent and Peace Education Secre¬tary of the American Friends Ser¬vice Committee, spoke of ways tofight the draft. The principle func¬tion of We Won’t Go, Kramer ex¬plained, is to encourage people torefuse to serve in Vietnam and tomake people understand that it istheir duty to refuse to fight.Kramer asserted that We Won'tGo is not now trying to change thedraft. Instead it is trying to con¬vince young men of the legitimacyof refusing to cooperate. The ideal,he said, is that “defiance to theimmoral state is the path to moral¬izing the state.”Lauter pointed out that asidefrom keeping the ranks filled, Se¬lective Service serves to coercepeople into the various occupationsthe government considers impor¬tant, by threat of conscription.He maintained that the majorpurpose served by protest againstthe draft is the focusing of atten¬tion on the war and on the funda¬mental organization of Americansociety.NYC — LONDON$255ROUND TRIPLeave Sept. 1—Return Sept. 27A few seats still availableon group flight via TWACALL 363-6451POETRYDiane de PrimaMUSICJoseph Jarman QuartetTues., Feb. 28, 2:30IDA NOYESADMISSION 50cBRUNOBETTELHEIM8 PMMARCH 2NDMANDEL HALLADMISSION FREE his topic:“A Psychologist’sView of theAffluent Society”STUDENT GOVERNMENT 75th ANNIVERSARY SPEAKERS PROGRAMFebruary 28, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Classifieds£PERSONALS"Rides'and riders. Student Coop.“Whoso pulleth oute this swerd of thisstone and anvyld is rightwyse kyngeborne of all Brytagne.’’—Any takers?XUDITH ROSENFELDInstruction in knitting. Exclusive salonclientele. Your own yarn, or will order.Hand knits remodeled, finished,blocked. Guaranteed fit. Reasonableprices. By appt. NO 7-4699.ART EXHIBIT: ISRAEL TODAY ANDOTHER PAINTINGS. A collection ofoils and watercolors by BACIA GOR¬DON. Most items for sale. Now thruFeb. 28. Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn.Writer’s Workshop. PL 2-8377.KAMELOT Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount ior UC students.WANTED: Stones of good throwingsize. Contact Lutheran office.What size martyr’s crown would Carlwear?_______LOST: lge. earring-brass w/blk. balls inwalk between Cobb & Ad. Bldg. MI3-4035.LOST: white, female Terrier withbrown head-answers to Harry. Reward,call 363-2347 after 6 pm.Poetry: Dianne de Prim a; Music: Jo¬seph Jarman Quartet. Tuesday, Feb. 28,2:30, Ida Noyes Hall. Admission: $.50.N.Y.C.?-share round-trip jet excursionfare-from NYC only. MI 3-3603.Partime jobs. Student Coop.JOBS OFFEREDMBA’SInternational Milling Company, manu¬facturers of Robin Hood Flour, Interna¬tional Bakery Proved Flour & Mix andSupersweet Feeds will visit the U. ofChicago on March 1 to discuss manage¬ment possibilities in the area of sys¬tems, operations research, market re¬search, data process, financial report¬ing. Contact the graduate school place¬ment office to set appointment forWednesday, March 1. Our representa¬tives will welcome the opportunity topresent the IMCO story. 1“An Equal Opportunity Employer ” FOR SALE766^hevellel auto., rad., 6 cyl., low mil.VI 7-7100. Miss Wegg. Excellent condi¬tion.’60 Ford Falcon. Price: $90.00. Call324-2264, after 6 pm, wkends andwknights.TO RENTFern. rmmt. wanted to share largewarm friendly apt. Own rm. $60/mo.Ideal loc. in Hy. Pk. Call eves. 643-7372.Male rmmte. to share furnished apt.54th and Woodlawn. 684-8515.Medical student needs rmmte, male orfemale, on Ellis near 53rd. Marty,324-0289. after 6 pm. or wkends.31-> room apt. in Hyde Park from Apriluntil mid-June. Furnished or unfur¬nished. Convenient to city bus, campusbus, and IC service. Rent about $110,but will haggle. 684-8621 after 6.Male student share huge 7 rm. apt. inHyde Park; own rm. $50/mo., MI3-3603.First FI. 6 rms. 3 bdrms. 2 tile bths,tile ktchn. $165. SO 8-5437.Fern, wants apt. to shr. spr. & sum.qtrs. 363-9293, Paula, Lv. message.JOBS OFFEREDWork own hrs. H P. ofs.-secy. between9-5 pm. Keep files! Refs. req. write MLStauffer, 1030 E. 50, 60615.New magazine, unborn, needs typist.Percent? Drake Pub. 684-5291.Office secretary for small educationalinstitution, university affiliated. Goodbenefits. For appointment call: HydePark 3-7531.The next Maroon will bethe last issue of winterquarter. Normal advertisingdeadlines will apply. Thefirst issue of next quarterwill be on March 28.'SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT'PHILLIPS JEWELRY COMPANY"50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS'67 E. Madison Room 1101 DE 2-6508Campus Representative: E. GIASG0W—Ext. 3265 or 324-9020Did you like beerthe first time you tasted it?iA lot of people say no. Theysay beer is one of those goodthings you cultivate a taste for... like olives, or scotch, orkumquats.Maybe. But we think it makes adifference which brand of beer we’retalking about.We think Budweiser is an exceptionto this “y°u’ve gotta get used to it”rule. It’s so smooth. (You see, no otherbeer is Beechwood Aged; it’s a costlyway to brew beer, and it takes moretime. But it works.)So whether you’re one of the fewwho has never tried beer, or a beerdrinker who suddenly feels the urge tofind out why so many people enjoyBudweiser, we think you 11 like it.From the very first taste.BudweiserKING OF BIERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUISNEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON Chaplains Take Unrealistic War View(Continued from Page One)(2) We should be given credit forour good intentions, for sincerelywanting to help the Vietnamesepeople. Most American officials inVietnam like to talk about howAmerica is helping the Vietnamese.The chaplains were no exception;they referred most frequently tothe military’s civic action pro¬grams.It is true, there are a staggeringnumber of hopelessly altruisticAmericans running around Viet¬nam. By old colonial standards,they are shedding much blood andmany tears with little to show for itin the wTav of dollar profits. GI’sbuild orphanages, support poorfamilies, put hundreds of kidsthrough school, hand out chocolatebars the length and breadth of VietNam, and often make considerablepersonal sacrifices in the process.(3) The Viet Cong should not usesneaky tricks to kill American sol¬diers. The thought caricaturedhere runs just below the surface ofmany American conversations. Theimplication is that war ought to beplayed by the rules, as defined inthe U. S. Code of Chivalry.Chaplain Wright, with quiet in¬dignation, told of a Vietcong minethat had inflicted five casualties ona 1st Air Cavalry Division unit theweek before. A whole platoon hadwalked over the mine withouttouching it off, but somehow one ofthe last men unwittingly detonatedit. The chaplain told the story as ifthe Vietcong had deliberately lulledthe Americans into a false sense ofsecurity and then attacked frombehind.VC AtrocitiesHe also showed me — in themidst of an explanation of how peo¬ple at home have a distorted view because the press never tells aboutVietcong atrocities — a UPI storyof a Vietcong atrocity. A youngAmerican captain had been killedtrying to clean out an enemy cavein the Central Highlands. A NorthVietnamese soldier had come out ofthe cave, pushing a woman andchild in front of him. Not wantingto hit the human shields, the Amer¬ican lowered his gun, whereuponthe North Vietnamese shot himpoint blank in the head.It was a dirty thing to do, and Ilike it no better than the youngAmerican’s mother would. But tosuggest that it wasn’t fair, and thatthe North Vietnamese soldier wasan evil ogre because he took unfairadvantage, is to make war into achild’s game. (Tit for tat: withinminutes the cave had been blownwith explosives and one GI estimat¬ed over 100 Viet Cong and North 1Vietnamese were buried alive in¬side.)(4) The Vietnamese should bemore responsive to our benevolentbut firm approach to pacification. Idepart from the chaplains’ script atthis point to discuss the Americanway of pacification, which refers toj making hostile peasants friendly.The Marines have been pacifyingvillages in I Corps (Central Viet¬nam) for a year and a half now,and their example has been fol¬lowed by many other American un¬its engaged in civic action pro¬grams. The basic formula is tomove into a village, maintain orderby intensive patrolling and huntdown any stray guerillas with theleft hand, while setting up medicalaid programs, building darfis andspillways, and giving out candy. |soap and toothpaste with the right.Often the GI’s make friends,1 especially among the kids. But ob-i servers who live in I Corps say theOFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SH0RELAND HOTELA55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000 hard facts are that most of thesevillages are less pacified than whenthe leathernecks landed.Bullets to BadThere are many reasons for this,but one may be that the double of¬fer of bullets to bad Vietnameseand candy to good ones suggestssomething of the father trying todiscipline his child: “Now Nguyen,he a good Vietnamese and don’tthrow a temper tantrum againstyour government. If you be good,Uncle Sam will give you chocolatebars and merthiolate for your cuts.But if you be bad, we’ll have to cutyou down.” To those Vietnamesewho are weary of being treated aschildren by great white fathers,this approach misses the heart ofthe problem by about 180 degrees.The lessons we learn from theAmerican experience in Vietnamwill be largely conditioned by ourview of ourselves. If the foregoingis at all to the point, it suggeststhere are a lot of psychologicalcobwebs that will have to becleared away first.SOME MAY OBJECT that thechaplains’ views are not represent¬ative. Chaplains, after all, would bebound to come up with moral rea¬sons for a war. But the protests ofmany civilian clergy suggest thatthe issue is not so simple. (Indeed,they raise the interesting questionof how a single church inspired byone Lord can produce such different answers to such fundamentalproblems.)Furthermore, the language of thechaplains is the language of many— not all, but many — Americanofficers and enlisted men who haveserved in Vietnam (Would you be¬lieve the language of Dean Rusk?)These are the men who will goback and tell their children andtheir Lions Clubs what is was real¬ly like in Vietnam.If, for historical, political anddiplomatic reasons, we must fightthis war — and sometimes I thinkwe must — then let us do it. Butlet’s not do it in the arrogance ofpurity. Let’s not put on the wholearmor of God in order to fightCommunist Satans. Let’s not go towar as little children. And for thelove of God, let us not treat NguyenCharlie as a child.Notice About Winter TextbooksOn Wednesday March 1st, it will be necessary forthe Textbooks Department of the Bookstore tobegin removing Winter Quarter textbooks fromits sales-floor shelves, in order to provide spacefor incoming Spring Quarter books. BeforeMarch 1st please try to purchase any WinterQuarter texts which you may still require.Textbook DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue4 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 28, 1967Mediocre TalentAt the recent conference of college editors in Washington,the Reverend Jesse Jackson, head of the Chicago FreedomMovement’s “Operation Breadbasket,’' said that, “When a Ne-oj-o goes out and pees in the street, people say he’s a bum, butwhen a white guy pees in the street, everybody says he’s anartist.”ALLEN GINSBERG, who recited some of his works here lastThursday night, strikes us as the kind of guy who would pee inthe street. This is not to say that he isn’t an artist but it doesn’tmean that he’s not a bum either.Far be it for us to try to dictate to anybody what does andwhat does not constitute art. We realize that to adequatelyiepict life, an artist must include what is sometimes offensive,not only in things sexual, but also in his treatment of all as¬pects of life and the way people treat each other.Yet, all this taken for granted, we still think that a poet or aw riter must realize, if he wants to be effective, that there ismore to life than just what’s offensive. Ginsberg’s torrent ofnaughty words is startling at first, then puzzling, and afterabout ten minutes, profoundly boring.GINSBERG LOOKS the part of the poet—he has to be oneof the mangiest looking characters ever to grace the MandelHall lectern—but there’s something missing. Maybe it’s theemotion and power, the overwhelming sincerity that YevgenyYevtushenko demonstrated when he captivated an audiencethat didn’t understand a word he said. Maybe it’s the poignan¬cy of sentiment that gave beauty to Robert Frost’s poems evenas he shakily recited them at President Kennedy’s innaugural.Whatever it is, Ginsberg didn’t have it, and we get the feelingthat hiding behind that shaggy beard and those dirty words is avery medicore talent indeed.Hail Bander!Word that the Bandersnatch inexorably draws nigh is"reeted with considerable applause in this corner. In the inter¬est of keeping this friendly, we won’t go into the years ofneglecting the need for adequate campus facilities.THE IMPORTANT THING now is to eschew incriminationsand press for a concrete program designed to turn the Univer¬sity of Chicago into a pleasant place to go to school. It can bedone, and we think it can be cone for relatively little money,considering the importance of an adequate campus life to theUniversity's students.All of the Maroon’s suggestions from earlier in the year havebeen adopted in one form or another. It is time now to select astudent group with binding decision-making power to draw upa comprehensive campus plan.Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanKenneth SimonsonExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. RichterFeature Editor Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBrvan DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzJoan PhillipsEditor Emeritus Daniel HertzbergNews Staff—John Moscow, Harold Sheridan, Robert Skeist,Ina Smith, Seth Masia, Vivian Goodman, Leanne Star,Maxine Miska, Alfred Marcus, Helen Schary, John Welch,T. C. Fox, Gloria Weissman, Ilene Kantrov, Roger Black,Tarry Hendel, Anita Grossman, Lynn McKeever, PeterStone, David Jacobson, Sydney Unger, Michael Krauss,Mary Anton, Michael Haig, Jessica Siegel, Chelsea Baylor,Barbara Goiter, Harold Kletnick, David F. Isreal.Culture Staff—Richard David Eno, T. C. Fox.Photographers—David Meserve, Barry Salins.Staff Artists—Belita Lewis, Arlo Larson.The Chicago Maroon, founded 1892, 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 chargenn campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood. Subscriptions by maild year- Charter member. United States Student Press Assn.Publishers of the Collegiate Press Service. Daniel HerfzbergProfs Exhibit CourageIn Council Ranking VoteIn congratulating the membersof Students Against the Rank onthe successful conclusion of theirlong battle, we must not forgetthose who really achieved thisvictory—the professors of theCouncil of the Faculty Senate.For it is these men who haverecognized the real danger ofFederal encroachment on educa¬tion at the University of Chicagoand, by their votes against themale rank, have made the sacri¬fices necessary to safeguard theUniversity community againstthis threat. In doing so, they havedemonstrated a special kind ofacademic courage of which wecan all be proud.OF COURSE, THE members ofthe Council have chosen to main¬tain their traditional silence aboutthe enormous quantity of govern¬ment funds UC receives eachyear, funds from which many ofthem obtain the buildings inwhich they work, the equipment they use in their scholarly re¬search, and the salaries on whichthey live. But rightly so, for theyhave demonstrated the acumen todelve below this surface issue anddiscover the true, insidious threatto the independence of the Univer¬sity of Chicago—the formation ofa male class rank. The rank, theyhave perceptively discerned,poses the theoretical possibility ofopening the door to Federal influ¬ence in the educational process atthe University.Recognizing this danger, theprofessors have thrown them¬selves into the fight. True, none ofthem made the personal sacrificeinvolved in a refusal to gradetheir students, a decision that afew misguided scholars in theUnited States have made at therisk of losing their jobs. But theCouncil members have correctlyascertained that this tactic mightfail, for they can not be sure thatmany of their colleagues will make such a personal sacrificefor their just cause.Instead, they have made a sac¬rifice that will assure victory, be¬cause it is a sacrifice that theycan guarantee with their power inthe Council. They have sacrificedtheir students.THUS THESE SCHOLARS willbe able to sit back comfortably intheir offices for the next four offive years, morally secure in theknowledge that they have giventheir all for the defense of UC,while successive male undergrad¬uate classes at the University aresteadily decimated by the- Selec¬tive Service system. By about1973, at the normal pace ofchange in American education,enough pressure will have builtup in the US for a change in thedraft system. The professors willhave carried the good fightthrough to victory—with a realdisplay of academic courage.Truly, these are brave1 men.Letters to the EditorExcellent EditorialTO THE EDITOR:Your editorial “GradingGrades” in the issue of February14, 1967 is excellent.Because it appears that a gen¬eral or liberal education is desira¬ble for everyone regardless of lat¬er concentration, it should be keptin mind that it is strictly for en¬richment and the pursuit of itshould not be allowed to interferewith the main objective of a stu¬dent at college.A chemistry or physics major,a social scientist, a medic or law¬yer should not suffer because ofhis allergy to art, music or litera¬ture.Many otherwise satisfactoryscholastic records are ruined by -grades in enrichment courses.The importance of this rather fre¬quent experience cannot be over¬stated. Students who expect to goto graduate school, law school ormedical school must compete ona grade average basis. While wemay pride ourselves in believingthat grades at Chicago meanmore than grades in otherschools, just try it on some lawschool or medical school. That iswhy so many students switchcourses and some students go toother schools where they are ableto get an “A” average in place ofa “C” average.One famous Billings surgeon toldme that he never found that hisShakespeare helped him in the op¬erating room. And when I havean operation, I prefer a surgeonwho knows his way around mybody, than one who “digs” ab¬stract art.A. PARENTStill Hope for NSATO THE EDITOR:I agree completely with MarcBrenman’s letter (Maroon, Febru¬ary 24) in which he showed dis¬gust at the actions of past NSAofficers who maintained a covertrelationship with the CIA unbe-knowance to their constituents.This relationship should neverhave come into being. However, Idisagree that this relationshipwhich has now been severed, sotains NSA beyond all hope of re¬demption. The officers of NSA for the pasttwo years, long before the Ram¬parts article or any fear of publicexposure, have been cutting theties which bound the Associationto the CIA, despite the fact thatthis jeopardized the existence ofthe Association. While I agreethat NSA-CIA involvement had tobecome public, it is too easy toforget that those with the knowl¬edge to make this link public hadhanging over them the threat of20-year imprisonment for violat¬ing national security. It is all tooeasy to forget that not all ofNSA’s programs were tainted. Itwould be a shame if NSA, thefirst national organization to sup¬port the sit-in’s, which called fora nuclear test ban treaty long be¬fore it was fashionable, which hasfought for academic freedom andcivil liberties for years, were tobe destroyed because of the se¬cret actions of a handful of itspast officers.It would be a shame indeedwere an organization which haspublicly acknowledged and public¬ly disavowed its CIA links, to per¬ish for want of support on thepart of those who should now behelping it to build anew and freefrom taint.BERN1E GROFMANLife in the DormsTO THE EDITOR:Marion Talbot, an early Dean ofWomen at The University of Chi¬cago. once said that the soul prin¬ciple of dormitory houses was“the coordination of individualliberty and organic union.” Iheartily suggest that severalmembers of both the Administra¬tion and the student body committhis phrase to memory.ALAN BLOOMRespect the FlagTO THE EDITOR:We, as University of Chicagostudents, are deeply disturbed atthe lack of due respect shown tothe flag of the United States onour campus, particularily at itsdaily raising and lowering. In or¬der to pay the flag the proper res¬pect we are asking for the cooper¬ ation of all University of Chicagostudents and faculty members.There are certain marks of res¬pect that should be paid to theflag. The following are two whichwill concern the students and fac¬ulty members who are in the vi¬cinity of the main flag pole at7:30 am or at 5:00 pm: When theflag is being raised or lowered,all present should face it, stand atattention and place their handover their heart; all men shouldremove their hats, holding themover their hearts with their righthands; all military persons in uni¬form should render the militarysalute. All cars in the vicinity ofthe main flag pole should stopand remain stopped until the cer¬emony is complete. *Complete lists of the respectdue the flag will be posted in eachdorm, all main buildings and fra¬ternity houses. Once again wewould appreciate your coopera¬tion in this effort.DAVID E. LINDSEYTHOMAS D. SIMPSONClosing Knowledge GapTO THE EDITOR:We believe that theknowledge-gap of the Americanpeople must be closed if Americais to have a sane foreign policy.We aim to bridge this gap, andthereby to forge a more effectiverole for the public in the formula¬tion of foreign policy, by workingdirectly in the community. We in¬tend to talk to people in theirhomes and to give them literatureabout Vietnam and related prob¬lems.In doing so, we hope to encour¬age people to organize communitygroups concerned with foreignpolicy issues, and to urge votersto express their foreign policyviews politically. We will focus onone community and expand asmore students join us.We need people to write litera¬ture, to lead workshops, and - be¬ginning next quarter - to canvassin the community. For more in¬formation call:STEVE LUSTIG 288 3629MARK SWlRSKY 324-3034RUTH WINTER BU 8 6610 3312AMANDA PETERS BU 8-66103312ELISE FRANK BU 8 6610 3312February 28, T 967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5* 176.IF YOU'RE FEELINGNERVOUS.JUST REMEMBERFIVE GENERATIONSOF SUCCESSFULSUITORS HAVEGIVEN DIAMONDSFROMTiffany&Co.715 NORTH MICHIGAN AVE.CHICAGOFor Illinois deliveryplease add 4% sales lax Continued expansionof our military and commercial businessprovides openingsfor virtually every technical talentAs you contemplate one of the most important decisionsof your life, we suggest you consider career oppor¬tunities at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft. Like most everyoneelse, we offer aii of the usual '‘fringe" benefits, in¬cluding our Corporation-financed Graduate EducationProgram. But, far more important to you and your fu¬ture, is the wide-open opportunity for professionalgrowth with a company that enjoys an enviable recordof stability In the dynamic atmosphere of aerospacetechnology.And make no mistake about it . . . you'll get a solidfeeling of satisfaction from your contribution to ournation's economic growth and to its national defenseas well.Your degree can be a B.S., M.S. or Ph.D. In: MECHAN¬ICAL, AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL, CIVIL (structuresoriented), ELECTRICAL, MARINE, and METALLURGI¬CAL ENGINEERING o ENGINEERING MECHANICS,APPLIED MATHEMATICS, CERAMICS, PHYSICS endENGINEERING PHYSICS.For further information concerning a career with Pratt& Whitney Aircraft, consult your college placementofficer—or write Mr. William L. Stoner, EngineeringDepartment, Pratt &, Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford,Connecticut 0$AQ8* Take a look at the above chart; than a good long took atPratt ts Whitney Aircraft—where technical careers offerexciting growth, continuing challenge, and lasting sta-‘billty—where engineers and scientists are recognized atthe major reason for the Company’s continued success.SPECIALISTS IN POWER . . . POWER FOR PROPULSION-POWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS. CURRENT UTILIZATIONSINCLUDE MILITARY AND COMMERCIAL AIRCRAFT, MISSILE*SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATION*Pratt & Whitney AircraftCONNECTICUT OPERATIONS CAST HARTFORD. CONNECTICUTFLORIDA OPERATIONS WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA As SsmI OseertwMy ImsNys#?CHICAGO MAROON • February 28, 1967BOS NELSON MOTORSImport ControAuslla M. Q.Mselsy HondaN-ni' JF TriumphComplete Repel—And SendeePer AH Popular ImperSeMidway I-4S0160*9 So GrnvoMl 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospitolADD TO YOUR PAD!CATHOLICSALVAGE BUREAU3514 S. MICHIGAN10 E. 41 sf ST.=—KHPoetry ReviewCalendarTuesday, Feb. 28LECTURE: “The Fiction of ThomasHardy." Dr. J. Hillis Miller, Professorof English, Johns Hopkins UniversitySwift Commons, The Divinity School. 8pm.EXHIBIT: "Israel Today and OtherPaintings’* by Bacia Gordon. HillelHouse, Ends today.EXHIBIT: “Nine Pictorial Painters,”Lexington Studio Gallery, throughMarch 10.EXHIBIT: “M.F.A. Student Exhibi¬tion” by George Turner, Midway Stu¬dios’ Court Gallery, through March 4.CONCERT: Contemporary ChamberPlayers String Quartet. Nemiroff.Blackwood, and Webern. Mandel Hall,8:30 pm.LECTURE: “Tissue Injury of the Ar-thus-Type”. Mr. Osier, Department ofMicrobiology, Rickets North 1, 8:30 am.FOLK DANCING: International HouseAssembly Hall. 8 pm.Wednesday, March 1I.ECTURE: “Isolation of the Lac Re¬pressor.” Waltert Gilbert, Department of Events- '■>- •;.•••*•••• . - : 'of Biology, Harvard University. Abbott101, 4 pm.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins,University Carilloneur. Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel, 5 pm.FOLK DANCING: English CountryDancers. Ida Noyes Hall, 8 pm.LECTURE: “Law and...” by MaxRheinstein, Max Pam Professor, LawSchool. Social Science 302, 8 pm,Thursday, March 2LECTURE: “A Psychologist’s View ofthe Affluent Society”, Bruno Bettel-heim, Mandel Hall 8 pm.FOLK DANCING: Israeli dancing, HS-lel House; lessons 7:30, general dancing9 pm.LECTURE: "Specificity in EnzymaticOxidation-Reduction Mechanism s,”Howard Ringold, Worcester Foundationfor Experimental Biology. Abbott 101 4pm.LECTURE: “The Evolution of Tropi¬cal Salamanders," David B. Wake, As¬sistant Professor. Department of Anato¬my and College Biology.LECTURE: "Contemporary IndianArt,” Ingrid Aall. Slides. FosterLounge. 4 pm. iGinsberg:Are there glimpses of uni¬versal truth in fragments suchas, “W. C. Fields, who provedthat every man is a naturalbullshit artist. . .”? li this is uni¬versal, then it must logically applyto its author, Alan Ginsberg.The well-known poet and free¬thinker, appearing in Mandel Halllast Thursday night in a StudentGovernment- sponsored lecture, be¬gan his program with Hindu chant¬ing. Ginsberg took his lyrics from aZen text, "The Highest PerfectWisdom,” and accompanied him¬self by beating together two metaldiscs, which unluckily broke mid¬way through the performance.GINSBERG DEVOTED THE restof the evening to reading sections Poetry orof a long, unfinished poem aboutAmerica. His settings varied fromLos Angeles to "Kansas-Center ofAmerica,” and his subject matterranged from Hell’s Angels to sex¬ual speculation about governmentofficials. Dispersed amidst the por¬nography were a few recurring: themes about the self: "lam that Ii am,” and "Come, sweet, lonelyspirit, back to your body.”The bearded poet discussed LSDin connection with this self-discovery. He said that after re¬nouncing the drug, he could returnto its use now "without worryingabout whether Jehovah was going toeome and get me.”Working on PoemGinsberg, still in the process ofcreating his poem on America, con- Bull?eluded the program by playing asection about Chicago that he hadcomposed on the tape recorder.Audience reaction ranged fromecstatic to bored. Some of thepoems were overly long; in others,it became trying to weed out thesincere sentiments from the super¬fluity and the "bullshit.” Gins¬berg’s tragic flaw may be his deaf¬ness to Keats’ advice: “Poetryshould surprise by a fine excess,and not by singularity. . .”GINSBERG'S APPEARANCE atUC was the third in his three partswing through Midwestern cam¬puses. He recited last Wednesdayafternoon at the Circle Campus ofthe University of Illinois, and thatnight he was scheduled to read atMarquette University in Milwau¬kee.At Marquette, however, there ispre-censorship and Ginsberg wasforced to read at the University ofWisconsin’s Milwaukee campus. 150protest marchers walked the 5miles from Marquette to hear him.Leanne StarTOM JONESlaw school auditorium, 6, 8:30, 11 pm. march 3 admission 75c — $1.25. sponsored by shorey house.ijiiwjPAjjUUw,.in every branch of businessLast year, he was still in college. Now he's on hisway as a Management Trainee with the world’slargest bank in California.Bank of America is not only statewide—it’sworldwide, too. So there’s a continuing need forcareer minded young men with ambition andexecutive potential to help in the development ofnew markets and new banking services both inCalifornia and throughout the world.No matter what your major field of study,there is an opportunity for you at Bank ofAmerica. Special opportunities are available forMBA graduates and others with advanceddegrees. If international relations or inter¬national finance is your specialty, we have a place for you in International Banking. If you’vestudied business administration, you’ll be inter¬ested in Loan Administration. And our Com¬puter Operations offers a challenge to anymathematician. All training is accomplished pri¬marily through project assignments.As the world’s largest bank, we serve everyaspect of business and industry in the largest andfastest growing state. And we have a place foryou.For more information write to College Rela¬tions Officer, Bank of America, One South VanNess Avenue, San Francisco, California 94102.BANK OF AMERICANATION A L Tit NTT AND 9AVINCS ASSOCIATION • MCMBCA IIHMk OfACSIT tNSUNANCS COAACAATIOAAN EQUAL. OFFCRUtNITV (MPLOYEIIA Bank of America Recruitment officer will be at your Placement office soon. Most Completeon th" South Side1342 E. 55 HY 3 9259NSA Discount*l Despitefiendish torturedynamic BIC Duowrites first time,every Ume!bic’s rugged pair ofstick pens wins againin unending waragainst bail-pointskip, clog and smear.Despite horriblepunishment by madscientists, bic stillwrites first time, everytime. And no wonder.bic’s “Dyamite” Ballis the hardest metalmade, encased in asolid brass nose cone.Will not skip, clogor smear no matterwhat devilish abuseis devised for themby sadistic students.Get the dynamicbic Duo at yourcampus store now.WATIHMAN-BICP{»C8IPMilfOftD. CBM#.BiC Medium Point teeBiCflne Point SO*February 28, 1967 CHICAGO MAROON • 7Chicago PremiereExclusive Engagement //BANNED IN BONDFORBIDDEN IN ROCKEFELLERladies and gentlemen, the fugsThose irrepressible fugs and their songs of blaspheme: "Slum Goddess". "How Sweet IRoamed From Field to Field (words William Blake)". "Nada". "Supergirl". "I Couldn't GetHigh". Many More by New York City's own, who have played 8 months straight in theVillage.The fugs is coming. Saturday night April 8. Tickets go on sale Wednesday, March 1, at Reynolds Club Desk or Maroon office. $4.50 — $3.50 —$2.50. Sponsored by Chicago Maroon and Enterprise Productions. Address mail orders to FUGS CONCERT, Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59th St., Chgo60637.