Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary Year MIDWEEKEDITIONVol. 75 No. 20"Baby Skid Row," located between Dorchester and Kenwood, inall its night time glory.Woodlawn Votes TodayOn Closing Liquor Stripby David A. Satter“Baby Skid Row”, a block and a half of 63rd Street contain¬ing eleven taverns and four liquor stores, may be closed downby Woodlawn voters today.Residents of the 23rd Precinct will decide whether to votethemselves dry and close the tav¬erns and liquor stores on the northside of 63rd Street between Ken¬wood and Blackstone Avenues.SUPPORTING prohibition for theprecinct are The Woodlawn Or¬ganization (TWO) and Father Tra¬cy O’Sullivan of St. Cyril’s CatholicChurch. The affected tavern keep¬ers and liquor store owners arebeing represented by the firm ofFinkel and Segal, 11 S. La Salle St."Terrible Effect"Rev. Arthur Brazier, TWO Presi¬dent, told the Maroon that the barson “Baby Skid Row," have a terri¬ble effect on the community. “Theyare a tremendous moral detrimentto the high school students whowalk past them, and women on thestreet are the subject of catcalls.The idea of tavern after tavernmaking a cesspool out of one partof the community is going to stop."Brazier said that he has no objec¬tions to bars in the community buthe said they have to be decently spaced out.Brazier said that TWO has can¬vassed the precinct, “house tohouse and apartment to apart¬ment", and he thinks that prohibi¬tion for “Baby Skid Row” couldpass by as much as 9-1. “If we getan honest count, they’ll (the tavernkeepers) be out of business,” hesaid.ACCORDING TO Brazier, the liq¬uor store owners are making “areal bundle of money,” and havespent thousands of dollars hiringlawyers, and passing out literature.Father O’Sullivan of the St. CyrilChurch said that, “As far as weknow, the storeowners have sentout constant mailings saying that300 jobs would be lost if the pre¬cinct was voted dry and maintain¬ing that 63rd Street would becomea ghost town.”According to Father O’Sullivan,the stores on “Baby Skid Row”gross a couple of million dollars a(Continued on Page Two) The University of Chicago Tuesday, November 8, 1966Vote at Closed MeetingHum Div. Opposes Rankby Michael SeidmanThe Humanities Collegiate Division has gone on record against the male class rank.In a vote taken at a closed meeting Thursday, members of the department called on theUniversity to stop compiling class ranks and to submit in their place a statement explainingthe University’s position to any draft board requesting information.The resolution reads as follows:“Resolved: That the faculty ofthe Humanities Collegiate Divisiongo on record as opposing the Uni¬versity’s furnishing of studentranks for selective service purposesand recommend: 1. that the Univer¬sity not send such rank to selectiveservice boards; and 2. that the Uni¬versity furnish to all students astatement of its intention not tosend such information to selectiveservice boards.”THE RESOLUTION passed by avote of 22 to 16, with one absten¬tion. There are a total of about 145faculty members in the HumanitiesCollegiate Division.The anti-rank vote comes a weekafter the Graduate Humanities Di¬vision rejected a similar resolutionand two weeks after the PhilosophyDepartment passed the first of theanti-rank statements. The voteshave been conducted in response toa memorandum issued early thisfall by President George Beadle,calling on the various departments;to hold special meetings on the is¬sue of class-rank and the draft.Stuart Tave, master of the Hu¬manities Collegiate Division, indi¬cated that the results of the votewould be forwarded to Beadle aswell as to members of the FiskeCommittee on University selectiveservice policy.Beadle To Speak onUC President George Beadlewill be talking about largelythe same problems and accom¬plishments as always when hepresents his annual “State of theUniversity” address later thisweek. But this year he will be ad¬dressing students as well as facultymembers.“We changed our policy becausewe simply couldn’t think of anyreason why it shouldn’t be done,” Stuart TaveIt was learned, however, that asecond resolution was also passedat the meeting, requiring that thefirst resolution be circulated bymail and voted on by the rest ofthe College humanities faculty be¬fore the results were submitted.SiegTer ObjectsShortly after this second resolu¬State of Universitysaid Dean of Students WarnerWick. As a result, students and fac¬ulty members will be in MandelHall when Beadle speaks at 3:30pm this Thursday.The speech, given in part to theFaculty Senate last week, will con¬tain Beadle’s views on where theUniversity is and where it is going.He is expected to cover such cam¬pus issues as housing, the draft,and the University’s attitude to¬wards ranking its male students. tion was passed, Frederick Siegler,associate professor of humanitiesand one of the leading supportersof the initial resolution, introduceda motion urging the HumanitiesGraduate Division to poll its facul¬ty members as well. At this point,according to Siegler, Tave respond¬ed by stating that he would not rulethe motion out of order, but that heconsidered it inappropriate for theHumanities Collegiate Division totell the Humanities Graduate Divi¬sion what to do."SINCE MANY of the people inthe collegiate division are also inthe graduate divison,” Siegler laterremarked, I don’t understand whyit should be inappropriate for thesepeople to urge themselves to pollthe faculty. I don’t see why a simi¬lar concern for justice, equity, andfull representation should not applyin both cases, whether the resolu¬tion passed or not. It is a verystrange phenomenon, indeed.”Reached by telephone after themeeting, Tave refused comment onthe incident.Faculty FearSiegler also remarked that heconsidered the failure of the Col¬legiate Humanities Division to havea secret ballot on the issue unfortu¬nate. “Many untenured facultymembers are afraid to speak outon this issue,” he stated, “and Imight add, there is some reasonfor that fear.Like other faculty opinion sam¬plings on ranking taken in the pastfew weeks, the vote of the Humani¬ties Collegiate Division will be inno way binding on the University.“This was simply a meeting heldat the request of the President, anda report will be made to him,”Tave remarked.OTHER FACULTY memberswho attended indicated that it wasdoubtful that Thursday’s votewould have much effect on Univer¬sity policy. “I don’t think this isgoing to change much ofanything,” said Howard Brofskv,an assistant professor of music whovoted for the resolution.Unity Croup Again Asking for Educational Parkby David L. AikenThe Unity Organization for Hyde Park High School has asked the Chicago school board to re¬open the question of whether an educational park should be built at the present HPHS siteinstead of a new school on the site of the Kenwood elementary school.School superintendent James Redmond, however, does not plan to recommend that thewhole question be re-opened, butonly that the size of the new Ken¬wood High School be reduced from2500 to 1850 to reflect a decrease inthe number of high school studentslisted for the Hyde Park-Woodlawnarea. This plan has the support ofthe Hyde Park-Kenwood Communi¬ty Conference (HPKOC).Board Meets TomorrowThis is the situation today, as theBoard of Education prepares tonieet tomorrow and discuss Red¬mond’s recommendation.About 25 members of the UnityOrganization met with Redmondyesterday. Unity, which representsmany PTAs in Hyde Park andWoodlawn, The Woodlawn Organi¬zation, almost all churches inW o o d 1 a vv n, SWAP, and other groups, asked Redmond to recom¬mend:• “That the Board of Educationdiscuss the education park concept,which it has never done. . ., and• “That it reconsider its plan tobuild a new Kenwood High Schoolat this time and that it plan anEducation Park at the presentHyde Park High School site for allof District 14.”ACCORDING TO Rosalind Dur¬ham, chairman of the Unity Organ¬ization, Redmond replied that theBoard, at its meeting two weeksago, had not asked him to re-openthe entire question of building thenew Kenwood High School. A newbuilding is planned for a site at 50th and Blackstone, next to thepresent Kenwood elementaryschool.Redmond did concede that hisstaff is now working on an over-allplan for building new high schoolsin the city, and that he “would con¬sider” Unity’s proposal, Mrs. Dur¬ham said.HPKCC Meets RedmondMembers of the schools commit¬tee of HPKCC also met with Red¬mond yesterday, to clarify theschool administration’s plans forthe new school. HPKCC spearhead¬ed the fight last year to persuadethe school board to build the newschool.ACCORDING to Norman Brad- burn, chairman of the HPKCCschools committee, and associateprofessor of business, Redmondtold the group that the administra¬tion will propose that enough class¬rooms be built to accomodate 1850students with two stories of classes,but that auxiliary facilities such asthe gym, library, and lunchroom belarge enough to accomodate asmany as 2500 if another floor ofclassrooms should be necessary inthe future.At a meeting last night, theHPKCC executive committee ap¬proved a statement from theschools committee, endorsing thisplan. The statement also urged thatthe board retain the present ele¬mentary school building “to pro¬vide space if needed during the in¬terim period before the addition isbuilt.”Unity Seeks 'Excellence'In their statement to Redmond,distributed to all members of theschool board, the Unity Organiza¬ tion members insisted that, “If ahigh quality school becomes pre¬dominantly Negro, the ensuingdrop in educational excellence isNOT due to the presence of theNegroes, nor to the deterioration ofthe physical plant. It is due to theinability of the school administra¬tors and educators to keep the edu¬cational standards high and to useflexible methods.”AFTER DEMANDING thatschools “play their part in destroy¬ing the myth of inherent Negro in¬feriority,” and questioning the con¬tinued validity of the neighborhoodschool pattern for high schools, thestatement reiterated the case foran “educational park”—or “schoolswithin a school”—for Hyde Parkand Woodlawn students. Such aschool, of high quality, would “at¬tract and retain students from allof District 14,” the statement said.Since there are at present only(Continued on Page Two)No Effect Seen HereLoan Cutbacks May HurtThe budgets of many collegestudents are being disruptedby the federal government’snew loan policy.New England especially issuffering, along with students with$10-15,000 family income. This isthe result of noi only a cutback ingovernment funds, but also in¬creased demands from colleges forthem. The cutback is part of thelong-standing plan of PresidentJohnson to eventually eliminate thesystem.SDS To InitiateAn Anti-War PaperUC Students for a Democratic So¬ciety will launch a new publicationfor anti-war news today with ameeting at 3:30 in Ida Noyes for allinterested in producing it.According to Steve Kindred, anSDS member, "It is hoped that theprogram will involve many campuspeople who are against the war inVietnam, but have not taken partin any on-going protest activity inthe past.”The newsletter, he said, “will‘bounce off’ the mass media, point¬ing out contradictions, adding aradical interpretation to facts inthe press, and reprinting goodanti-war positions from the domes¬tic and foreign press.”Kindred said the publication willbe “straightforward and unbombas-tic” in tone.He hopes a large group of stu¬dents and faculty can be gatheredto survey the press, and submit sto¬ries or facts they feel will be illu¬minating. Editorial and distributioncommittees will be needed.Gang Members’ AngerAccentuated by Decision(Continued from Page One)2500 students at Hyde Park HighSchool, and 325 ninth-graders at thepresent Kenwood building, a newbuilding at Kenwood “cannot bejustified.”Bradburn and Mrs- Durhamagreed that much of the apparentdecrease in number of high schoolstudents from Woodlawn and HydePark stems from unwillingness ofparents to send their children toHyde Park High School while gangfights are common.A study of the “missing stu¬dents” in Woodlawn by the Wood-lawn Youth Commission revealedthat many were still living in theneighborhood, but had given ad¬dresses of relatives in other highschool districts as their home ad¬dresses. Others had actually movedin with relatives, while some wereenrolled in private schools. UC students are not being Incon¬venienced by this problem, re¬vealed Mrs. Shuehter of the loanoffice. “The University sends a re¬quest to the government based onthe previous year's needs. Theyhave compiled with these requestsand the loan office sees no reasonfor this situation not to continue.“The amount available in NDEAloans is always less than the stu¬dent demand,” she continued, “butthey have managed.”For students who cannot get aNDEA Loan, University Tuitionloans are available to needy stu¬dents. They have roughly the samepolicy as the government loans ex¬cept for the teaching cancellationclause. UT loans have equally lowrates, but require complete repay¬ment. The office of financial aidtries to provide NDEA loans forstudents who plan on being teach¬ers.Only very needy students mayqualify for either NDEA or UTloans. Students who do not qualifyfor these are recommended to ap¬ply for GILP (Guaranteed InsuredLoan Program) assistance. IllinoisState is willing to give almost anyamount under $20,000 to college stu¬dents with interest running fromthree to six per cent. New Argonne Contract Signe(JC has signed a new con¬tact governing the operationof the Argonne National Labo¬ratory, according to the AtomicThe new agreement, co-signed bythe Argonne Universities Associa¬tion AUA and the Atomic EnergyCommission, will run until Septem¬ber 30, 1971. The agreement, longsought by other Midwestern univer¬sities, will decentralize control ofthe Argonne Laboratory.Under the terms of the contract,AUA will formulate, approve andreview laboratory programs andpolicies. UC, which has operatedthe laboratory since its establish¬ment in 1946, will be responsiblefor its operation and managementin accordance with policies es¬tablished by AUA.AUA is an association oftwenty-six midwestern universitiesformed last year for the primarypurpose of participating in thiscooperative effort to enhance thelaboratory’s value. With the newtripartite arrangement, these uni¬versities will be able to provide as¬sistance in developing and guidingfuture activities at Argonne Nation¬al Laboratory.The Laboratory is one of theLegal Attempt To Kill Liquor Resolution(Continued from Page One)year. He maintained that the store-owners have already spent $15,-000 on legal fees, in their fight tostay open.Finkel and Segal, attorneys forthe tavern keepers sued to have theresolution taken off the ballot. Theyclaimed that the petition puttingthe prohibition resolution on theballot was illegal. Norman Finkeltold the Maroon that, “We had 136objections to the petitions, the citycertified that there were forger¬ies.” Judge Charles Dougherty,however, ruled on October 24, inCircuit Court that the resolutioncould be put on the ballot.According to Father O’Sullivanpart of the purpose of the resolu¬tion is to convince people that com¬munity power must be recognizedon one issue. “We as a communityshould be allowed to determineMALE STUDENTASSISTANTS NEEDEDCenter For Research libraries, 5721S. Cottage Grove Starting Salary$1.50/hour. Reading knowledge ofFrench or German desired.MU 4-4545 An Open Meetingof theORIENTATION COMMITTEETlwrs., Nov. 10, - 7:30 pmIda Noyes LibraryAll undergraduates, especially first yearstudents are invited to participate in acritique of the past Orientation Boardand begin plan! tor next year. where taverns go.”THE ATTORNEY for the storeowners, however, believes that theowners are being made scapegoats.Finkel said, “These men are smallretailers, they’re not millionaires,they have every penny they own inthese stores. These men would bewiped out completely, with quite afew of them going into bankrupt¬cy.”Finkel said that the cost of mov¬ing and starting over again formost of these men would be ex¬tremely high. He denied Father O’¬Sullivan’s claim that millions ofdollars are made on Baby SkidRow every year. These men earn aliving, even a good living, but howmany people want to go throughwhat they go through. Their in con¬stant danger of being held up, orharassed by the Blackstone Rang¬ers.Men's SweatersClassic V-Neck lambs wool sweatersin navy, powder blue, camel, bottlegreen, burgundy and rye colors.$7.00 each or 2 for $13.00GIFT DEPARTMENTTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.TAKCAW-YMfRfSTAURANTBpacMMnt baCANTOPfESB AMDAMERICA* DISHESmm dailyVI KM to Ml MLORDCM YD TAK1 OUTfill Im* 48*4 BL MU 4-1042 OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SH0RELAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000NEW BOOKS BY CAMPUS AUTHORSContemporary Chinaedited by Ruth Adams $6.95Atonement and Psychotherapyby Don S. Browning $6.00China: The Surprising Countryby Myra Roper . $6.50GENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENTThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. country’s major atomic energy re¬search and development establish¬ments. It represents a Federal cap¬ital investment of about $325,000,000including research and develop¬ment facilities at the National Reactor Testing Station, Idahcurrently has an annual ©pt>budget of about $77,000,000. Thundred staff scientists andneers are among the 5,100 nLaboratory employees.On Campus withMaxSMman(By the author of ”Rally Round the Flag, Boyar’\X "Bobie Gillie” etc.)“M” IS FOR THE MANY THINGSYOU’LL TEACH HERNobody will dispute—surely not I-that raising childrenis a task which requires full time and awesome skills.Nonetheless, a recent nationwide survey has revealed «startling fact: mothers who go back to work after theiichildren are safely through the early years are notablyhappier, better adjusted, and more fulfilled than motherswho simply remain housewives. Moreover—and mark thiswell—the children of such working mothers are themselveshappier, better adjusted, and more fulfilled 1All very well, you say, but what’s it got to do with yon 7Isn’t it obvious? If you are underachieving at college, getyour mother a job.What kind of job? Well sir, your mother is probablybetween 35 and 50 years of age, so certain occupationsmust immediately be ruled out. Logging, for example. Orwhaling. Or carhopping.But don’t despair. There are other kinds of jobs-notmany, to be sure, but some. However, you must not stickMom in just any old job. You must remember that afterthe excitement of raising you, she would be bored to tearsas a file clerk, for instance, or as a dolman. (A dolman, asve all know, is someone who brings handfuls of water totrack layers. With the recent invention of the pail, dolmenare gradually falling into technological unemployment.)But I digress. I was saying, find Mom a job worthy ofher talents, something challenging that uses her vast wis¬dom and experience but, at the same time, is not too hardon her obsolescing tissues. That’s what Walter Slgafoosdid, and the results were brilliantly successful.Walter, a sophomore at the Upper Maryland College ofWickerwork and Belles Lettres, majoring in raffia, ap¬proached the problem scientifically. First he asked himselfwhat his mother did best. Well sir, what she did best wasto keep hollering, “Dress warm, Walter!”At first glance this seemed a skill not widely In demand,but Walter was not discouraged. He sent out hundreds ofInquiries and today, I am pleased to report, his mother ishappily employed as wardrobe mistress for the MontrealCanadiens.Another fortunate venture was that of Frank C. Grans-mire, a junior at the Oregon State Conservatory of Musicand Optometry, majoring in sties. Frank, like Walter, dida survey in depth of his mother’s talents. Chief amongthem, he found, was her ability to make a roast of beeffeed the whole family for three days. So, naturally, Frankgot her a job at the Museum of Natural History.What has one to do with the other, you ask? Isn’t Itobvious ? Anyone who can stretch ribs like that belong* lapaleontology.-—>4 AI cannot conclude this column without saying a fewwords about Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades. Thereason I cannot is that this column is sponsored by themakers of Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades, andthey are inclined to get peckish if I omit to mention theirproduct.Not, mind you, that It is a chore for me to pl«fPersonna. Or, for the matter of that, to shave withPersonna. No air: no chore. Personna takes the pain outof shaving, scraps the scrape, negates the nick, repudiatesthe rasp, peels the pull, boycotts the burn, blackball* thebite, ousts the ouch. Furthermore, Personna endures andabides, gives you luxury shave after luxury shave, dayafter day after day. And further furthermore, Personnais available both in double-edge style and Injector style.And as if all this were not bounty enough, Personna isnow offering you a chance to grab a fistful of $100 bills!Stop at your Personna dealer and get an entry blank forthe new Personna Super Stainless Steel Sweepstakes. Buthurry! Time is limited.• \m. Ht> mvlmrnmThe makere of Personna who bring you this column ailthrough the tchool year also bring you the ultimate inluxury thaving with Personna and Personna’s partnerin shaving comfort—Burma Shave, regular or menthol«2 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 8, 1966■nvaC/te^,<jf/zan dmct/ierb,^veat~^*ectl~<j^r4&n4//m€rfAer\ a/nd\awe awm yt.8akan Claims Book of Job DocumentsTransition from Judaism to Christianityby David JacobsonThe book of Job is reallyabout the transition from Juda¬ism to Christianity, said DavidPakan, professor of psychol-tatk at Hillel Friday who, instead of sacrificing his sonIsaac to God, sacrifices an animal.This, Bakan feels, reflects the He¬brew method of dealing with theproblem of infanticide, which in¬volved killing an animal instead ofthe child.By the time of Job. Bakan contin¬ued, the sacrificial substitute no„i,.ht Speaking on -Suffering and J?"8" MnsUUited an adequateSacrifice The Book of Job," Bakan1 copmg with he prob emi-ied to evaluate the pSyehologieal^in‘dn,amiclde wlth'“ lhe »">'■«>'make-up of the author of the book!of Job.According to Bakan. the book ofJoh shows the connection between Job begins to take a new attitudecontended Bakan, by complainingonly about himself. He does notthe loss of children, physical suffer- have to feel guilty about infantici-dal phantasies, for he is no longerconcerned about being a father, butrather with being a son of God,who is suffering under the hands ofGod.Christianity picked up this atti¬tude. according to Bakan, and putthe emphasis not on Abraham, thefather (as the Old Testamentdoes), but on Jesus, the son. Jesusis not a father guilty of infanitieidalphantasies, but rather a son who iskilled by his father—God.mg. and sacrifice in the biblicalmind.The book of Job is a manifesta¬tion of a latent desire for infanti¬cide in the mind of the author. Ba¬kan explained. Job. he noted, ispictured as having cared littleabout the deaths of his children.Rather. he was only concernedwith his own physical suffering.This hidden desire to kill one’schildren was handled very differ¬ently in the Old and New Testa¬ments, Bakan said. The Old Testa¬ment tells the story of Abraham Chicagc Style DebateHas Sex Replaced Baseball?Torrents of titillating terminology entertained the audience-hecklers at Friday night’s Chicago-style debate, in which, thetopic “Resolved: That baseball is not the national pastime’’ waseffectively laid to rest.UC’s Forensic Society staged theorgy of oratory in the Ida NoyesCloister Club, as a diversion fromthe more serious considerations ofthe annual Midwest debate tourna¬ment.FIRST IN the debating order wasJo (“Topless”) Spregue, an in¬structor at Purdue, who argued (?)that baseball cannot be the nationalpastime because, among otherthings, the real national pastimeshould be one played both indoorsand out, with as few people as pos¬sible—preferably two—and with noexpensive equipment.To the taunt of the opposingteam, “That’s good, because somepeople don’t have much equip¬ment,” came the reply, “Speak foryourself.”The Search for Truth?In an effort to find the true na¬tional pastime, Miss Spregue ruledout such possibilities as religion,because God is dead; drinking, be¬cause it “precludes efficient opera¬tion” although it does allow one to see things in different lights; andeven smoking, since it decreasespersonal contact.Television was considered be¬cause it is turned on by a hugeproportion of the population, MissSpregue said, to which came thecomment about her colleague, “Iwas sure he could turn somethingon.” Football also met her disfa¬vor. There is a penalty for holding,she commented, and the backfieldis not penetrated often enough.RUSHING TO the defense ofbaseball as the national pastimewas Miss Avis (“We try harder”)Vidal, a UC student and veteran ofthe Chicago style debates in thepast.The best point she could raisewas that, in baseball the pitchergets paid by the throw, and “onlyone other profession gets paid onthat basis.” She also noted that thebirth rate is lowest in the monthsof March, April, and May. “If youcount back nine months,” she com¬mented, “you’ll find that in June.the war hero as psychopathIn Don Stofol't HEU. IS FOR HEROES, with Stovo McQwooii, hobby Darin, A Jamas Coburn Plus Carlos ViUrdebo's VIVRE. At Doc Films Wednesday, Novem¬ber *tb. At Social Sciences 112, 59th A University. At 7:15 A 9:15 PM- H cents.We thank you Hyde Parkers, new and old, for yourreception which has been overwhelming.From over 50 tons of new furniture just arrived fromScandinavia the "MORINGEN SPESIAL LUX", convertible sofawith long wearing, stainproof teakwood arms.Scandiinavian mpidistinctive furniture fc gifts53rd St. at Lake ParkCall HO 7-4040Hours: Weekdays & Saturdays 11-9Sundays 12-6 July, and August everybody mustbe at the baseball games.”The Case for S—xSecond in line to speak againstbaseball was Ted (“Old Man”)Jackson, an assistant professor ofsome unspecified subject at Michi¬gan State.His approach to the podium waspunctuated with cries of “Dirty oldman,” and “Get your hands out ofyour pockets!” To this last camethe rejoinder. “It's safer if hekeeps them there.”TO GASPS of shocked disbelieffrom the audience, Jackson an¬nounced he would prove that sex (!)is really the national pastime.Among the advantages this sporthas over football, he mentioned:• There is no vast crowd too boowhen you strike out (“How accus¬tomed are you to striking out?”came a taunt from the audienje).• No practice is required; in¬deed, the first time can be thegreatest.• When you steal a base itdoesn't mean you have to slide intoa bag.• The squeeze play has a greaterchance of success.• Pitching and receiving are ofequal importance. This brought thequery, “Which do you prefer, thecurve or the screwball?”Jackson reached the climax ofhis argument by pointing out thatthe only thing sex and baseballhave in common is that the gameis never over until the last man isout.Mud and Other ThrowingPerhaps the master debater wasWilliam (“No Hit”) Snyder, assist¬ant director of foren-sicks at UC.He admitted that the affirmativeside had indeed proved its case,but claimed that “the integrity ofthe affirmative team is so despica¬ble that they deserve to lose.”He proceeded to discuss the femi¬ninity of both Miss Spregue andMr. Jackson.MISS SPREGUE returned intactfrom Snyder’s attack. She pointedout that many baseball terms canbe applied to the true national pas¬time. claiming that the initialsBOB don’t mean Base on Balls butjust the reverse.I She wound up with a seductiveplea that s—x be recognized as theoldest, most enduring, and mostwidely practiced pastime.715 NORTH MICHIGAN AVE.CHICAGO UC Perfect Place ToDo Research, SaysNew Nobel WinnerThis University is the per¬fect place to do research saysUC’s latest Nobel Prize win¬ner, Robert Mulliken.Speaking from Florida State Uni¬versity at Talahassee where he hasa winter appointment, Mullikentold the Maroon that he seconds theobservation Charles Huggins. UC’sfirst Nobel Prize winner of 1966,that the main reason UC is such agood place to do research is thatthe administration leaves research¬ers alone. “It’s a wonderful placefor research and in addition thereare so many good people.” notedMulliken.MULLIKEN, who teaches atleast one and sometimes twocourses every year, explained hismethod of research: “I believe inkeeping theory and lab work close¬ly associated.” He does both labwork and theoretical computation,although he leaves the heavy com¬putation to his assistants.When asked whether he had giv¬en any thought to turning down theprize, Mulliken said, “I wouldn’thave proposed myself for the prize,but if the people in Sweden thoughtenough of my work to have pro¬posed it I’ll accept it.”November 8, 1966 • CHICAGO MARGON • 3Sl&£All Too TypicalAdministrationBrainstorm Overdue“We changed our policy because we simply couldn’t think ofany reason why it shouldn t be done. the sAR to scornfully decline theirinvitation to the International Con*That’s how Dean of Students Warner Wick explains the re- ference on the draft,versal in University policy which will open President Beadle’s Students against the Rank are“State of the University” address to students as well as faculty agains?'the' war,S agains th t In? go v-members for the first time this year. eminent, against the University,and in support of absolutely noth¬in one sense, this policy change is in itself a reflection on ing.the state of the University. UC is in a state of flux, and the (ej^“ ■Letters to the Editorect, purchase these certificates in you are right; no one in the Book-volume, and distribute them among store would be likely to talk aboutTO THE EDITOR- many, for whatever amount you “next semester” at UC. But do youIt was an all too typical move of would decide upon, giving the pro- think that lessens the responsibility0f the Bookstore for sponsoring thead and selling the games?ceeds to your favorite charity.Please let us hear from you.(You may send cash, check, or mon¬ey order.)“Yours for a Stronger Youth.”J. KELLYM. CROWEKELCRON.S.P.O.changes that are taking place result from some administrative sible action on the question of the ImmOfdl Advertising?re-think, which, although long overdue, is nonetheless con- draft as irreconcilable with theirstructive. draft as irreconcilable withaims.What arc the aims of SAR?Does anyone know?Does the SAR?SAR’s boycotting of the confer-Of course no one could “think of any reason why” PresidentBeadle should not speak to students as well as faculty mem¬bers. The reasons for such an inane restriction simply do not not only irresponsible’ 11 15exist. The only surprising part of Wick’s statement is that it Having been offered the oppor Now, the Bookstore is under theAdministration (or so I suppose: itclearly isn’t the students’ or thefaculty’s!). That means that eitherthe Administrators in charge of theBookstore don’t watch extremelycarefully what goes on across theCORNING, NEW YORK 14830 street from the Ad Building (whichmight be understandable), andsome reprehensible or ignorant orfiA Tinr pniToa• hip lower level employees are ad-1 MfTfi n , * , .. vertising and selling immoral andThe UC Bookstore advertises on s;ck “games ” *r tnA**•7 *he “* “aTe s°rearT «d aj* fmes ,and Mbit tor” toeTeliinfof Those ’game”,world too, and Vietnam, buy this as anyone properly connected withthe Bookstore. You can take yourpagetwogame for your 2S friends! Real¬ism guaranteed to motivate poten* — ... , tceu If choice; I have no way of knowingtook him and his fellow administrators SO long to come to their tunity to participate in scholarly . . sup*r mg“ gra. * which is the case. But in eitherconclusions (perhaps that word scared them) P°jnts for this next semester (sic) case> tbe Administrators responsi-discussion, they decline on the ba- • / ' R a^ These modern games to- bie should remove from the Book-rru _ . v , . . ... j. . .. ... sis of contrived idealisms, thus de- night.” sto re all these games with theirThere seems to be an obsession at this University with secre- nying themselves the chance to af- This is scandalous! The conse- “espionage,” “germ war fa re”cy for secrecy’s sake—an obsession which has gone a long way feet an element whose decisions quences of the ad will be slight, for “beatnik pacifists,” “radioactiveTUDted last v^ar mteht, in turn, affect actual policy h is just an ad, and hardly one to fallout indicator spinner boards,”a. which large number of LC students an<j “ioq plastic pawns and playingtoward creating the student discontent which erupted last year ,, ... ,, , . ,. , , .. . . , . . (the most glaring historical exam-mto a three day sit-in and which even now lies just below the p]e of SAR’s mistake is Russia’sboycott of the UN in 1951).So a detached observer can only- . .. . . , ,. perceive chaos within the leftistmeaningful, it must be followed by further action.surface. Opening President Beadle’s address to students repre¬sents a long stride in the right direction, but if it is to be will- respond. But at the other end pieces.” And in either case, the Ad-of the act from consequencesstands the agent, the person or in¬stitution that sponsored the ad, andI am afraid we must take the ad,insignificant in its effects, as an il- ministrators should move orremove some of their own plasticpawns.Students are often accused ofturning political (business?) issuesinto moral issues, and painting op¬positions in black and white. I havebeen doing just that, and I thinkranks and conclude, in the words ofJohn F. Kennedy that: “There willWe wonder, for example, whether Mr. Page and his col- always be dissident voices heard in luminating expression of its spon-leagues can “think of any reason” why his new committee to the land, expressing opposition sor s character and sense of re-... . , . - y. ... , . . . . , without alternatives, finding fault sponsibility.investigate student-faculty relations should meet m secret. but never favor, perceiving gloom I take it as obvious that a worldAlthough it is true that the Page Committee has held open on every side, and seeking influ-meetings recently, it remains supremely ironic that a body ence without responsibility.” . uuiaiI ana uo no. w,sn, \ , . witiam YAKFS-RENO lages for freedom in Vietnam, and , " , Va ’ "created to alleviate student unrest should help create tension willam yaki;,& kh-nu stud€nts rigbt now at uc are to ^ cut off the good^ oid^ Socraticby insisting on private meetings. |^q ^g^We wonder as well what reason Mr. Beadle managed to to the editor holocaust is a real possibility, that ,ai,?.y' .But fyhapal havethe US is slaughtering whole vil- *'ltingly unfair, and since I do notwant to be unfair, and do not wish..... siuuems r.go. now a. u. are “"J* ,h? ?ood, old So'raUcfeeling the distortion of iheir edu- cloa,n* 1 "’a aakcation by the engagement of the s'ls,° nnest.ons First, to the UCUS in Vietnam and the consequentthink of for keeping last year’s Faculty Senate meeting on the Please do not treat this letter pressures.from the Selective Serv- U„,K .ucn mh.« «..u .uvci-usiuk, . liphtiv »«: wo the writers most lce to §et good grades and stay m B. .V. s “ *uudraft secret at a time when students were clamoring for a role as we tne writers, most h drafted Given them m th,s way? 0r do you nowBookstore and the responsible Ad¬ministrators: How do you justifyselling such games and advertisingin the ranking decision and administrators were desperately ^l^confident, that both you and these facts, how are we to under¬ think you were wrong in doing so?If you think you were wrong, havetrying to prove that students were in fact important to this Uni- i fully realize what this present ^and ®drrti.^ a™| you stopped stocking, selling and“jet age,” has contributed to the ““ *au™es ,“at, ” advertising the games? Second, tothe Maroon: Why do you allowsuch advertising in your paper?And. since you may have a reason(such as allowing all advertising),why didn’t you respond to this adwith an editorial, either on the edi-Ntn/PR i Perhaps you will say that no one torial page fvright nefl 1° theNEVER! at the Bookstore actually wrote the vertisement? You surely know it :sad, that some game manufactur- immora* advertising.versity. a«e> . cuuir‘“uiw lVuc death "war and the distort7on of advertising the games? Second, tomoral decay of increasing numbers , at"’ war> ana ine aistoruon otThat disastrous faculty meeting may indeed be water under °f °ur y<?uth’dife ’him°svies’ televi‘ to3understand6^"unlvors^ty3iBooiothe bridge, but UC’s administration does not seem to have learn- Slindications ^"all3 po^"8'^to a very store that makes ljght of the distor-ed its lesson. We wonder what the “reason” is for the secrecy possible, 20th Century, “Sodom and l'®n of teachmg and learning? Forsurrounding the divisional meetings on the draft going on right Gomorrah.” storeys do1n«, ' * 6 °°now. We wonder why students continue to be excluded from ba^penmust nhver^”1^ th S t0Committee of the Council meetings, from departmental staff what can he done????meetings, and from routine policy discussions among UC’s top To us, just everyday workingpeople, here in Corning, New York,there is only one answer . . .FIGHT . . . FIGHT, and keepFIGHTING, until this evil is de-administrators. er’s employee did the job. Perhaps GARY YOUNGFrankly, we suspect that rational reasons for this secrecysimply do not exist. Our president too has a problem with the stroyed.“credibility gap” and he is not going to solve it until he decides In our small way, we have decid-to make more than a routine annual speech a part of the publicrecord.Brrr! ed to do the following, (which I amsure will be laughed at, and ridi¬culed by many). However, we arededicated and determined, and per¬haps, being Godfearing people thatyou are, as are we, you will helpus.As an incentive to our youth, asIt snowed last week. The temperatures dropped, the skies something to be proud of, and lookdarkened, and suddenly it was winter again. BEFORE MARRIAGE * ctab, TadWinter in Chicago is like winter nowhere else in the world, furnishing, for the small sum ofA fierce wind blows perpetually off the lake, but it never quite and°suitable fo^framSS,’ showingmanages to budge a dense cloud-cover which darkens icy-grey membership in this club, with hisChicago for five months out of every year. Realizing that the or her name, or the name of abattle is lost, the sun retires gracefully and allows the wind to fSa^fnTddmo’n* wi “rfatooremain supreme. It howls in its victory as it takes command, furnishing buttons, and wallet sizeand the temperature, in blind obedience, plummets in tribute, cards.We are parents oufselves, and weA walk down 55th Street to the Quadrangles becomes an in- regret the charge of $i.oo, yet thisvigorating experience. The first blast of cold air knocks the 1S nfcessary.t0 covft the costs ofweariness forcibly from the body, and the tingling sensation we desire nothing for ourselves;lasts until, minutes later, it is replaced by an inevitable icy save the realization that perhapsnumbness. ' our small effort will m some way,help guide our youth on the onlyIt is winter in Chicago, and the ground is frozen solid. The path to happiness and salva-snow falls intermitently, mingling occasionally with sleet and A"'i itStfablive/the^certSifreezing rain. And always the wind—howling fiercely as it cates, we think, are very lovely,cockily manifests its own power and unrelentingly presses its and, ,n addition to greatly aidingvietorv °D* S self iB t?me oi a°d temp-y' tation, you might as a special proj-CHICAGO MAROON • November 8, 1966 Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief ...David A. SatterI Business Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editor David L. AikenAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzDavid H. RichterJoan PhillipsNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanFeature Editor Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyPolitical Editor j0hn BremnerEditor Emeritus Daniel Hertzberg| Editorial Staff—John Beal, Kenneth Simonson, Slade Lander,Ellis Levin, Richard Rabens.News Staff—John Moscow, Elaine Hyams, Harold Sheridan,Angela DeVito, Robert Skeist, Ina Smith, Seth Masda, VivianGoodman, Cathy Sullivan, Jeffrey Blum, Leanne Star,Maxine Miska, Alfred Marcus, Marge Pearson, LeslieRecht, Helen Schary, Ann Garfield, John Welch, T. C. Fox,Gloria Weissman, Marlene Proviser, Ilene Kantrov, JamesI Rubinstein, Roger Black, Larry Hendel, Anita Grossman,Larry Struck, Lynn McKeever, Sanford Rockowitz, PeterI * Stone- Susan Loewy, David Jacobson, Sydney Unger, DavidF. Israel.Photographors—Jean Raisler, Bern Myers, Charles Packer, H.David Alley.Staff Artist—Belita Lewis.^ ' v>?GADFLYWhy SG Charter Right Program Is Abbreviated This YearI am often asked why the SG charter flight program is so abbreviated this Christmas. Theanswer given by SG is that the new discount fares have reduced demand. But these fares,which are not applicable at peak periods and don’t include airport transportation, cannot ac¬count for the startling reduction of seats to New York and the suspension of flights to Bostonand California. The real reason, Ibelieve, is that the disagreementwhich existed last year over thegoals of the program has been re¬solved by my departure from of¬fice: apparently the flights are nowviewed exclusively as a source ofincome, and from this point ofview, SG doesn’t make enoughprofit on these flights to makethem worth the bother.I believe that a profit for SG canbe valuable, but its value must beweighed against that of providingreduced-rate transportation to thegreatest number of students. More¬over, it is high time the mysterywhich shrouds the program be lift¬ed: SG piously declares that char¬ter flights are a non-profit servicebut makes twice as much fromthem as it received from CORSOlast year.This secrecy results partly froma fear that our methods mightprove to be illegal, since the CABrequires that certain charter flightsbe non-profit. In addition, it is goodpolitics for GNOSIS to cultivate animage of altruism, sot greed. More¬over, the few people who controlthe SG administration enjoy a freerein in spending the income so longas the Assembly and student bodydon’t know it exists. Democraticdecisions can even be counter¬manded by one person: the classicexample is the case of an SG presi¬dent who thought the travel allow¬ance for an NSA Congress was in¬adequate (only bus fare had beenappropriated) and arranged for atravel agent to supply a car for twoweeks.Sometimes the manipulation iscomical. We use a non-scheduledairline for charters to NewYork— it’s cheaper than a group flight butthe service leaves something to bedesired. When I discovered that itwould cost only $1 more to charterfrom United Airlines, I proposedswitching. I was then told that thedifference was more than I thoughtbecause our agent for the non-scheduled carrier had agreed togive us half his commission. Later,when I couldn’t find any record ofhis payment, I discovered that hehad disappeared without a trace.All he ever did for us was to helpload baggage on the plane.More often the incidents arepathetic. Last year we planned togive travel books to our interna¬tional passengers. The books ar¬rived in January, but were not dis¬tributed until April when they werenearly useless. Ostensibly, this wasto avoid giving them to passengerswho might later cancel. (Howwould we ever get the booksback?) Later I saw these books forsale in the SG office. I wonder howmany passengers bought them inignorance, and whether this wasanother reason for the delay? Last¬ly, SG gave itself $1 per book asreimbursement for its distribution¬al expense. Yet w'e were too selfishto pay postage to mail the books:instead we mailed out couponswhich could be exchanged in theoffice.It seems that Student Govern¬ment has concentrated so whole¬heartedly on securing the means todo good that it has lost sight of theend. Everybody has his own ideasof what could be done with moremoney, but these ideas differ. Onethe majority wish to finance? Andmust ask the question: what wouldPSYCHEDELECTABLEBand from th* Cheetah comes to the Cloister ClubThe CHEENIX Sat., Nov. 12th8:30 PMI DON’T WANT TO^10 WAR!So for thoee Americans most affected by U.S. policy inVietnam — draft-age men — the NATIONAL GUARD¬IAN devotes a special issue dated Nov. 5 to: facts aboutWashington’s war plans • • •• the cases and experience ofthoee fighting the draft.... a full evaluation of what toexpect if you won’t go to war .... SPECIAL NOV. 5ISSUE FREE, WITH OR WITHOUT $1 ENCLOSUREFOR YOUR 10-WEEK TRIAL SUBSCRIPTION TOTHIS RADICAL NEWSWEEKLY.Mail this coupon today.NATIONAL GUARDIAN • 197 E. 4 St., N.Y. 10009I □ Please send me a 10-week trial subscription and yourj FREE NOV. 5 issue for enclosed $1.| D Pkaan send FREE NOV. 5 sample issue only.I Name School .....^ City Stats Zip I can the public be given the oppor¬tunity to decide, or must a few in¬dividuals decide for them? WhatSG has already done is an indica¬tion of what may occur in the fu¬ture.When the old student-run co¬operative bookstore went bankrupt,SG disclaimed responsibility for itsdebts, though there was a certainoverlap of finances. But the Assem¬bly saw fit to appropriate $2200from flight reserves as a “gift” toinvestors who had lost money.However, payment was limited tostudents at this university (i.e. tothe electorate), and a sizable per¬centage was payable to assemblymembers. A pair of influentialmembers doctored the list to con¬ceal their interest. But since nobodytold me of this, I inadvertantlypaid the person whose name theyhad added.Recent increases in our incomehavef been absorbed in a corres¬ponding increase in office over¬head. The most spectacular risehas been in secretarial salaries.When GNOSIS began it paid per¬haps $2,000 a year for part-timestudent personnel. Now our secre¬taries cost $8000. The amount ofsecretarial help can be determinedby the President alone, since theCUSTOM-MADEFASHIONSby doncasterSpecial showing of Resort A WinterStyles in the North Room of theShoreland Hotel—all day Tuesday &Wednesday from !0:am to 9:pm.NOVEMBER 8 AND 9•&****<I fluThe “ACID SCENE”—where it's happening,and why, in Americancolleges anduniversities!INCLUDING• LSD effect* on creativity,study, work, maturity and sex• Episodes documenting thepsychedelic movement onAmerican campuses• The Psychedelicetessen—eources and supplies cost can be financed by charterflights without having to submit arequest to CORSO. Since officerscan give employees work whichthey would otherwise have to per¬form, it is evident that they have apersonal interest in hiring morehelp; therefore the decision shouldbe made by others.The most recent use of flightfunds is to finance a newspaper,the Other. Since my term as Trea¬surer has expired, I don’t knowwhat precise arrangement has beenmade. But it is clear from lookingat the paper that SG is subsidizingthe venture. Last year we ran classads to announce our services; nowthere are display ads, bigger thantheir content requires. All the adsare in the Other, none in the Ma¬roon. The only other display adswere placed by a travel agencywhich received over $100,000 inbusiness from SG last year, and istherefore susceptible to SG influ¬ence. If the paper continues tooperate at a loss, SG must also be prepared to underwrite the deficit,since it is the only organizationserved by its continuance.These examples point to a needfor reform. The present CharterFlight Committee is composed en¬tirely of insiders, holds closed meet¬ings, and keeps no minutes. Con¬trol should be passed to a standingcommittee which (under our by¬laws) would be required to observedue process. Since the entire uni¬versity community participates inthe flights, it would be appropriateto include outside members asCORSO does. But most of all, anew attitude is needed in StudentGovernment: once SG believes thatstudent services are worthwhile inthemselves, it will not be temptedto manipulate them.Steve Livernash(Editor's Note: Mr. Livernash is astudent in the Graduate School ofof Business and represents that schoolin the Student Government Assembly.He served as SG treasurer last year.)EXCLUSIVE!Free removable carryingcase! Provides hygienic,convenient carefor yourlensesThis one solutiondoes all three!1. WETS. Lensine’s special propertiesassure a smoother, non-irritating lenssurface when inserting your "contacts."lust a drop will do it.2. CLEANS. When used for cleaning,Lensine’s unique formula helps retardbuildup of contaminants and foreigndeposits on lenses.3. SOARS. Lensine is seif-sterilizing andantiseptic. Ideal for wet storage or "soak¬ing” of lenses. Reduces harmful tact anacontamination.CARRYING CASE. Exclusive removablecarrying case free with every bottle ofLensine. The scientific—and convenient—wey te protect your contacts.LENSINE from.The Murine Company, Inc.... cars for 70 yosoe "I MODEL CAMERAon the South SideMost Complete1342 E. 55 HY 3 9259NSA DiscountsCiral'sHouse of TikiOpen Thanksgiving Day,Thursday, November 24. Inaddition to our regular menu,we offer a complete dinnerof Roast Turkey and Dressingor Baked Ham $2.25Ciral's House of Tiki51st and HarperLI 8-7585BOB NELSON MOTORSImport ControM. G.HondaTriumphCnmplats lUpofcoAnd ServiceMLdwny I-49M6052 So Crttaon GrovePhonographyWe are accepting orders forblack and white Christmas Cardsand color Christmas Cards, don'twait.24 hour processing service isalso available.Photo DepartmentThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.November 8, 1966 * CHICAGO MAROON *Called Major Event1Orbs' Opens SoonDan Williams and Dan Wagner ofthe Paul Taylor Dance Company.Paul Taylor’s ‘ Orbs,” called “amajor event for American dance,”by New York Times critic CliveBarnes when it opened in London,will have its American premiere to¬night at 8:30 pm at the HarperTheater. 5238 S. Harper.Taylor is considered one of thebest, most inventive dancers inAmerica, and “Orbs” has been ac¬claimed as his most ambitious andSpecial Opera PerformanceA special performance of Proko-iev’s opera The Flaming Angel byhe Lyric Opera with discountTices for college students, will be;ivea Tuesday, December 6, at 7:00m in the Opera House. Tickets,'riced at $2.50, $2.00, and $1.00,nay be reserved by contacting thelusic Department, 5802 S. Wood-lwn avenue, ext. 3885. successful work.Taylor uses Beethoven’s lastquartets as the basis for ‘’Orbs,”and the evocativeness of this musicis manifested in what Barnes de¬scribed as the “poetic mystery,opaque half-statements and gentlysuggestive images” of the work.Taylor says that “Orbs,” which isan unusually long ballet, representsa passionate search for an intellec¬tual communication through the ex¬pression of visual images.Less epic In its aspirations butequally praised is Taylor’s secondprogram, which opens Wednesdaynight, Nov. 9. at the Harper. It in¬cludes “Aureole,” a modern danceversion of a nineteenth century“white ballet,” “From Sea to Shin¬ing Sea.” a spoof of Americana,and “Scudorama,” a ballet aboutthe souls of Dante’s Hell and acommentary on the aimless actionof much of modern living.Piano RecitalDr. David M. Gross, a resi¬dent in urology at the Uni¬versity Hospitals and Clinics,will present a piano recitalon November 11 at 8:15 pmin the Law School Auditori¬um. Dr, Gross is a profes¬sional concert pianist andhas played chamber musicconcerts with members of theCleveland Symphony Orches¬tra and with the ChicagoChamber Orchestra. Admis¬sion is free.vV::t V*.: David Kaufman, The Pirate ofPenzance.Gilbert and SullivanCompany at MandelThe Gilbert and Sullivan OperaCompany will present The Piratesof Penzance at Mandel Hall Nov, 11and 12 at 8:30 p.m., and 1:30 p.m.on Saturday, Nov. 12. The Piratesof Penzance, which is the sixth an¬nual production by the company, isbeing produced by “Adventures inthe Arts” for the benefit of theUC Laboratory Schools.For ticket information, call PL2-7304 or BO 8-2671. Tickets willalso be available at the door, andw'ill cost $2. and $2.50.TYPEWRITERSCompletely over-hauled officetypewriters available with newmachine guarantees.We are also an authorized deal¬er for Olympia portable, stand¬ard or electric typewriters.Many others available for saleor rental.Typewriter DepartmentThe University of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Ave. The Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Company/presents"THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE"FRIDAYEVENINGNov. 11 SATURDAYMATINEENov. 12 SATURDAYEVENINGNov. 128:30 pmMANDAL HALL THEATRE 1:38 pm 8:30 pm57th STREET AT UNIVERSITY AVENUETICKETSGeneral Admission: Friday and Saturday Evenings $2.00Saturday Matinee $1.50Tickets on saleat U.C. Bookstore& at the door. BO 8-2671Telephone orders: 2-7304Sponsored by Adventures in the Arts of theLaboratory Schools tor ttve scholarship fund.Hughes, one of Southern California’s leadingelectronics firms, is currently selecting candi¬dates for (is Finance and Administrative Devel¬opment-Graduate Program.We would like to discuss the Program with youif you will receive your MBA degree during thenext year and your undergraduate training is inone or more of the following areas;Engineering ' General Business EconomicsBusiness Statistics Accounting FinanceIndustrial RelationsThe Program Is completely oriented and opera¬tional. It has been developed to fill the everIncreasing financial and administrative require¬ments of our company. The two-year Programprovides valuable experience In many areasthrough responsible assignments tailored toIndividual need. .CAMPUS INTERVIEWSNovember IS, 1966by Mr. Carey W. BakerMBA Program AdministratorFor further Information and to arrange a campusInterview appointment, please contact yourPlacement Director or write: Mr. Carey W. Baker,Hughes Aircraft Company, Culver City, Calif. 90?30Creating a new world with electronics[HUGHES]HUGHES AIRCRAFT COMPANYAn equal opportunity omployor. ■' ; '. . , : W-:III ~ min RiRiiiwiiKraMfi'iiiTirrinir-Calendar of EventsTuesday, November 8CONFERENCE: Education for visualliteracy: “The Aesthetically ResponsibleIndividual" through the 10th. Center forContinuing Education. Mandel Hall, andLaw School Auditorium.EXHIBITION: Studio faculty exhibitionNovember 7 through November 23. 1966Max Kahn. Belli Bar. Virginia Ferrari,Cosmo Campoli. Marty]. Ruth Duck¬worth, Hiroaki Marino, Virgil Burnett,Harold Haydon. Paintings. Prints,Drawings. Sculpture. Pottery. 6016 In-gleside Avenue. Daily 9*5. Weekends10-4.SPECIAL TOPICS PROGRAM: '‘Em¬bryonic Differentiation: Heredity andEthology.” A. A. Moscona, 8 am. Ab¬bott 183.MEETING: SOS Chapter DiscussionMeeting; The Draft; Protest or Resis¬tance 7:30, Ida Noyes, Discussion litera¬ture available at Mandel literature ta¬ble 11:30-1:30UC’s cross country team boosted •its record to 7 and 3 last weekendwith a decisive win over the Uni jversitv of Illinois, Chicago Circlecampus.Pete Hildebrand finished first.Hick Skaloud second, Bob La Roquefifth and Ted Terpstra seventh.Steve Kojola. a second year studentupon whom the cross countryteam’s hopes may be based on nextyear, finished fourth.The news from the gridiron wasnot as pleasant. UC’s football teamtook a squad beating from LakeForest, 32-6.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbsrkwe sell the best.and fix the rest Wednesday, November 9DANCING: English Country DancersWednesday eves. 8 pm, INH DanceRoom; refreshments.DISCUSSION: ‘‘American Crimina. Jus.tice," Nbi-val Morris, Director of theCenter for Studies in Criminal JusticeFifth Floor Lounge, Pierce, 55th andUniversity, 7 pm.SPECIAL TOPICS COURSE: “Biolog,cat Significance of Cyclic Nucteodes “Dr Earl Sutherland. Abbott 133. 8 amLECTURE: “Grand Interior Decorationof the Eighteenth Century”, GeoffreyBeard, Manchester College, London,Classics 10. 8 pm.MOTION PICTURE: “Hell IS forHeroes". Don Seigel “Vivre” .CarlosVilardebo, Soc Set 122, 7: is and 9 isp*n.Thursday, November 10SPECIAL TOPICS COURSE: “25 Yearsof Cancer Biochemistry", Van Potter,Abbott Hall. Room 133, 8:06 am.MEETING: SDS Univ. Cohim meetingFriday. 3:30 INHPART TIMEWORKEVENINGS OR WEEKENDS$2.2543.85 PER HOUR SALARTWILL TRAINENJOY THEHOLIDAYSVarious position* available for youngpeopla willing to kelp u* 3 evenings• week. S-S, or possibly on week¬end*. We hope Ibis opportunity wiNfinancially situ at# yew to enjoy aprosperous and happy Holiday sea¬son and at tba sarna time anablaus to batter service our customers.7 1they can’t put you up this Thanksgivingat Maxwell's Plum or Friday’s in the newEast-Sixties scene, or at Arthur orThe Rolling Stone...but there’s a placedown the street that can lTHE WALDORF ASTORIAPark Avenue between 49th and 50th Streets.For Thanksgiving Weekend, the place to be itthe East Side, from 48th to 63rd Streets,and all the disco-stops in between. So why spendhalf your vacation shuttling back and forthacross town? New York's best hoteljust happens to be right next door to practicallyanywhere you want to see or be seen. And thestudent rates are really something$9.00 per person, 2 in a room$ 12.00 per person, 1 in a room$23.00 for 3 persons in a room• CHICAGO MAROON November 8, 1966Theater ReviewLast Stage Plays Have Merit, Despite RedfieldThe first of the two plays isa slight affair by Alfred deMusset, called The !V*r MustBe Open or Shut, newly trans¬lated by Marc Cogan and directedby James Redfield. It is a pleasantlittle insight into the difficulty ofcommunicating sincerely in love,since everything one can say seemsto echo in a thousand previousmonths. A widow of thirty and herlover agonize politely, he over hercynical refusal to take seriouslyanything which has been said be¬fore, she over his incapacity to beoriginal in love and refresh herthirty years. The theme is developedcarefully and delicately, though ina rather contrapuntal manner attimes, obliging one to follow allu¬sive threads of dialogue with greatpatience until they converge. Itwas very difficult to be patient.To succeed, I think the play musthave recognizable historical refer¬ence. Director Redfield has his twoplayers parade back and forth be¬ fore a few white flats which are setup only a few feet from the audi¬ence. There are no costumes, andthe modern dress is ill-chosen. Thelights are too hot, burning awayany blossoming moods. The finaleffect of all this is to isolate theactors in an abstraction wherecomedies of manners can be al¬most as interesting as goldfish.The two players do well enoughunder the circumstances. ArthurMorey is wasted, really. He hasgreat presence, moves with econo¬my, and speaks resourcefully. Theaccent of his speech is not flexibleenough to accommodate a varietyof language textures, and the stiff¬ness of more Cogan’s translationcannot be bent to serve the actor.But that’s not so important. What’sreally important is to get Moreyout of that ascot and raggy jacket,into some more formal clothing,and a little makeup to add someage. Opposite him is Rob Allen,very pleasing to look at, but limit¬ed in her emotional range, partlybecause of the kind of affected stage rhetoric she relies on to over¬come her limitations.Redfield has a second opportuni¬ty to delight and instruct. He wrotethe evening’s second play, thenearly full-length Vlach, which ismy reaction to the play, as well asits title. Damon Porter, a perennialseeker after the Ph.D., feels he isheld prisoner by Vlach, the janitorand landlord to whom Porter owesseveral years’ back rent. The littlefantasy Porter has constructed isreally no more than an excuse forhis own ability to face Life, a met¬aphor for his ivy-colored ship¬wreck on the shores of academe.The play is full of devices thatdon’t work, of shrilly conceived sit¬uations Redfield has not had thepatience to unite in a logicalframework, and of tedious moraliz¬ing which suggests an educatedAnn Landers. It distresses me tohear from a highly cultured intel¬lect so vulgar a line as “Now I canget up in the morning and go towork, just like grown-ups.” Director William Bezdek has awicked eye for casting, and sur¬rounds Tom Jordan (Damon Por¬ter), an unlikely but successfulchoice, with actors naturally suitedto their roles. Carolyn Hanson asPhyllis, Damon’s new-found loveand eventual fiancee is a rathernondescript actress, but her char¬acter emerges gentle and nonde¬script, perhaps a very safe combi¬nation. Eddie Goldberg as Vlach issuitably coarse, but not very excit¬ing, and Cindy Nieman as Phyllis’hippy young cousin is. . . well. . .hippy. Jordan is quite uncanny inportraying a youngish man of ex¬traordinary sensitivity, but other¬wise of merely above average intel¬ligence, a wretchedly difficult thingto bring off. And special mentionmust be made of Mark Benney,playing a British deus ex machina.Benney is a pro. A used-up pro, buta real one. Every second he is onstage is crackling with the quiettension only an actor in perfectcommand of himself and his textcan create. He is perfectly relaxedIthe bum as governorIn Preston Sturg**' THE GREAT McGINTY Plus Buster Keaton's COPS At Doc Flfcns tonight. At Social Sciences 125, 59th and University. At 7:15 A 9:>5 P.M. AO centsTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATRE PRESENTS AStaged Reading of Sartre'sNO EXITFOLLOWED BY DISCUSSION 8:30 F.M.Friday, Nov. 4th and 11th Saturday, Nov. 5th and 12thSunday, Nov. 6thReynolds Club Theatre Tickets $1.50 Stu. $1. and perfectly confident that everyword he speaks will be listened towith both ears. And they are.Richard EnoSTROLLINGPLAYERSneedsACTORS!•comedianscomediennesrecorder playersclowns-foolsfor aGOTHIC GALAAUDITIONSTuesdayNov. 8th8:30 PMReynolds Club TheatreR. JAFFE, Prop.CUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHINGCAU. MRS. BLIXT AT 782-2118FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, lit. 60602MONDAY LECTURESLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM, 8 P.M.NOV. 14 - RENE DUBOSprofessor at Rockefeller UniversityWe're coming soon. For job details and date, consult your Placement Office, now. "Genetics, Environment, & Man's Nature"Free faculty and student tickets at central information desk,Adm. Bldg., or Center for Continuing Education, Rm. 121.Phone 3137 for information.AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER • A PLANS FOR PROGRESS COMPANYNovember 8, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Texas InstrumentsINCORPORATEDTo arrange a campus interview with a TI representative Nov. 16 , contact your placement officer. If interview inconvenientat this time, write Jack Troster, Dept. C-423, Box 5474, Texas Instruments, Dallas, Texas 75222. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER We’re moving ahead fast... so can you!DIGITAL SYSTEMS—TI systems exhibita high level of innovation in optimaing design to meet unique environ*mental and information handlinglems. TI haa solved such prob-ns as: processing and storing infor-■nation collected by a camera photo-graphi ng Mars, handling informationneeded to automate a manufacturingprocess, and testing complex elec¬tronic circuitry. Shown above is ahighly sophisticated digitalcomputerfor airborne applications.METALLURGICAL MATERIALS—TI sci¬entists helped solve the silver short¬age problem by cladding dissimilarmetals together to form a new mate¬rial that has the properties unattain¬able with any single alloy. Coinsstruck front the new material, madewithout silver, are accepted by vend¬ing machines built to accept only thetraditional silver coins.SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIALS—Newsemiconductor materials such mthose developed by TI from galliumarsenide will be used in the manu¬facture of infrared light emitters fortwitching, communications and ter¬rain illumination.MANAGEMENT SCIENCES-TI is cur-rently developing a comprehensive,company-wide business system thatwill meet rapidly growing require¬ments and will take advantage ofalmost explosive new developmentsin information handling technolo¬gies. Business systems at TI startwith the needs of individual man¬agers. For a system to work, diemanagers must know what to expectfrom it and how to use it; and sys¬tems planners must know specificmanagement requirements.So, at TI, opportunities are excel¬lent for graduate studenta trained inmanagement sciences. Creative skills in many advanced technologies have helped Texas Instrumentsdouble in size about every three years for the past two decades. The technolo¬gies illustrated here represent important TI activities ... diverse, yet uniquelycompatible. All have as a common bond a high level of innovation... bycreative people working in a creative environment.TTs growth and diversity offer exceptional opportunities for outstanding col-lege graduates at all degree levels and in many disciplines:r • accounting • mathematics \• ceramics & ceramic engineering • mechanical engineering• chemists & chemical engineering • metallugry A metallurgical• data processing engineering• electrical engineering * oceanography• geophysics A geological engineering • operations research• industrial engineering • patent lawV. • management sciences • physics JSPACE SYSTEMS MICROELECTRONIC RADARSEMICONDUCTOR MATERIALSMANAGEMENT SCIENCES METALLURGICAL MATERIALSSIGNAL PROCESSING SEMICONDUCTOR INTEGRATED CIRCUITS COHERENT OPTICS URGE SCALE INTEGRATION Of SEMI-CONDUCTOR CIRCUITS—With LSI.more than a thousand componentequivalents can bo packed into s•ingle tiny unit lem than two inchessquare. Ultimately, this componentdensity may be increased 10-fold andmore, providing superior electronicfunctions foe many industrial andmilitary applications.COHERENT OPTICS TECHNOLOGT-Iaser display developed by TT solvesdisplay problems created by the rapidgrowth in complexity of commandand control systems, loser displaysoan handle large volumes of data inreal time displays that are bright,wall size, in full color, of high reso¬lution, and highly flexible.RADAR TECHNOLOGY-A completelynew radar concept developed by TIeliminates the need for a high powermicrowave 30urce and for all mov¬ing parts. MERA (microelectronicradar) will operate far more reliablythan the most advanced conventionalradar and will provide new perform¬ance capabilities as well.SPACE SYSTEMS—Involved in initialplanning of the Mariner IV, TI devel¬oped the instrumentation to measurethe magnetic field of Mars—one ofthe major scientific experiments ofthat mission. Now TI has developedthe capability to plan a completeinterplanetary probe.SIGNAL PROCESS! NG-TI, the world’slargest digital processor of seismicinformation, developed advanced sig¬nal processing systems used in detec¬tion of nuclear explosions and earth¬quakes, as well as in the search foroil. Today, TI operates several majorprocessing centers in the US, Canada,England and the Middle East.UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorClassifiedsPERSONALSCo-op Clearance Sale starting Novem.ber 10 the Co-op will sell a select list ofGen. Ed texts at greatly reducedprices, and some will be given away. I{you don't want your books sold at theprices listed on the Co-op BulletinBoard, Please withdraw them now.KAMEbOT Restaurant. 2160 E. 71st. St.I 10% discount for UC students.'< Writer's Workshop PL 2-8377CHICAGO DAYS is coming“DIRTY JUNK!" days Archer See and| judge for yourself at THE LASTj STAGE 1506 E. 51st Street James Red-I field s new play VLACH, plus 2nd adultfeature (French) FRSA 8:30 $2 SU.j 7:30 $1.50 Reservations OA 4-4200Snell s Angels Come Again? We prom-j ise more girls and free coffee. 9 it| Tonight.j Student Co-op has the largest selectionof science fiction, mystery and westernpaperbacks in Hyde Park, at the lowest| prices.Celebrate! The passing of midtermsand elections! At the Snell Coffee HourTonight 9-11.CHICAGO DAYsTs”comingJOBS OFFERED^| Student wanted to help w/sick childrenin their home. 2.3. or 5 week days: hrsI flexible: time off for classes, free lunch& breakfast, and you can get in somestudying on the job. DO 3-8767., FRENCH Sc SPANISH FREE-LANCE| WRITERS. Original stories wanted for! children age 11-16 at $40-$100'selectionWrite for details. Foreign LanguageEditor, SRA, 259 E. Erie. Chicago, Illi¬nois. 69611.Waiters Sc Waitresses wanted must tie21 Full or part time Apply Smedley’s,5239 S'. HarperFOR SALE'64 V.W.—Bahama blue sedan top oond.R & extras new truck clutch—$1000.667-1465Portable typewriter $30.00 or bargain.Call 42 Snell eves.HAND CARVED FIRST QUALITYBl/OCK MEERSCHAUM PTPES DTRECT FROM TURKEY. Fantasticvalue. Call 363-8451TO RENT4 room 2 bedroom Apartment 54th andDorchester avail. Dec 1 Ideal for mar¬ried couple with small child. NO 7-6185S. Shore. 2'2 rms., unfurn., 2 Sc 3rdfloor, near I.C., near lake. SA 1-03155 large rooms, natural wood burningfireplace, 2 large bedrooms, 4 clothesclosets, pantry, linen closet Near shop¬ping centeir, C.T.A and lakeSuitable for business or professionalpeople $175.00 per month. MU 4-8222Room-mate wanted to share 5 bedroomapt. with 3 other girls One block fromlake in Hyde Pk. Call 684-7586 eveningsNearby unfurn apts. 2-3 rms. $77 50 upFree utils. 8143 Woodlawn. Quiet, econForeign student seeks apt for Dec 1st.Tony PL 2-4514. or Francis Ext. 3940Faculty member desires to rent fur¬nished or unfurnished house or apart¬ment (minimum two bedrooms) for period January 1 through June 30. 1967Must be in Hyde Park area. Call Ext3847Studio Space—Must be heated-Comni.Artist-X3753—Barry.LOSTGIACOMETTI lithograph of woman,please call 363-3578 RewardHandsome Rew'ard: Silver cigarettelighter w/initials P.L.F. lost in KentSentimental value. Call Danny. 493-9168Plain gold ring, vie. Orodruin. Greatsentimental value. Contact SauronMOrdor 7-4280RIDE WANTEDRide wanted to St Louis Fri. Nov 1!Call Sue Birndorf, Harper Surf. 343-9777JOBS WANTEDWill do typing—term papers, manu¬scripts, etc Standard rates. X 242»>NEED MONEY?MAKE SOME SELLING THE REMARK¬ABLE PLAY MAZE. CALL PL 2-6666DAY OR NITE.8 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 8, 1966