Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary Year MIDWEEKEDITIONVol. 75-No. 22 me university or inicagoFry Calls RangerRaid "HarassmentYevgeny YevtushenkoYevtushenkoPoetry Reading SetSoviet poet Yevgeny Yevtus¬henko, called by many the mostcontroversial poet of his gen¬eration, is coming to UC.Yevtushenko will be reading hispoetry at Mandel Hall at 8:30 pmon December 6. The reading is partof a six week tour of the UnitedStates arranged for the poet byQueens College in New York.At the reading an English-speaking actor will give a transla¬tion. Free tickets will be distribut¬ed to UC faculty and students be¬ginning Monday, November 21 at(Continued on Page Five) by David E. GumpertBlackstone Ranger plans torun capididates for politicaloffice were the real reason for!a police raid on the First Pres-|byterian Church at 64th and Kim-bark last Thursday night accordingto the church’s head. Rev. JohnFry.Fry contends that the raid was“police harassment” resulting fromRanger plans to play a large part jin Fifth Ward politics in the city jelections of next spring. The ;church has kept its facilities opento the Rangers for the last yearand has provided legal help toRangers it felt unjustly arrested.“Asinine"Captain Walter Maurovich, whois currently heading the GrandCrossing police station which is re¬sponsible for Woodlawn, said in re¬ply to Fry’s charges, “That is themost asinine statement I have everheard.’’ He would not comment anyfurther except to say that there Ihave been at least 25 to 35 shootings in the last couple of months.SOME 25 policemen participated 'in the raid taking six Ranger lead¬ ers to the Grand Crossing station toquestion them about the weapons.One of the leaders was chargedwith disorderly conduct and theothers released.According to Fry, however, thepolice went beyond their legalrights under their search warrant.The 127 Rangers who were meetingat the time were subjected to abu¬sive language and held at gunpointfor over two hours. Fry charged.Some guests of the church werehandcuffed he said.“I really wish there were someway moral pressure could be exert¬ed to get proper law enforcementin Woodlawn.” complained Fry.“The police just acted like twelveyear olds.”(Continued on Page Five) Heagy, Livernash HassleOver SG Flight Programby Seth MasiaIs the Student Government charter flight program being runto make a profit?Are the profits supporting the Other?These were a few of the questions left unresolved in a pro¬longed argument between SG 7president Thomas Heagy and form- J obeys Civil Aviation Board regula-er SG treasurer Steve Livernash ! tions concerning charter flights, allyesterday. The hassle stemmedfrom Livernash’s charges in theMaroon Gadfly article last weekthat the SG flight program wasnetting a profit, which would beagainst Civil Aeronautics Boardregulations.Heagy yesterday said that criti¬cism of the charter flight programper se is unfounded because it is anexceptionally smooth-running, low-priced program. SG scrupulously angles are checked through thelegal office, and the SG books areregularly audited, Heagy said.Livernash charged that manycharter flight practices border onthe illegal. CAB rules require thata chartering organization spendless than $500 on administrativecosts per flight, while SG spendsmuch more than that to hire acharter flight director, he assert¬ed.(Continued on Page Five)Yarmolinsky Speaks at Law SchoolWar Not A Moral IssueAdam Yarmolinsky, a professor of law at Harvard University and a former defense depart¬ment official, said that the bombing of North Vietnam “makes it much more difficult to get tothe bargaining table.’’Speaking at the Law School Friday, Yarmolinsky called the war in Vietnam “not a moral is-but a political issue — one ofThe North Stands of Stagg Field, scheduled for demolition."Sic Transit Gloria Mundi"Stagg Demolition Setby Michael SeidmanLike Lincoln and the Tropical Hut, Stagg Field will soonbelong to the ages.A wrecking crew is scheduled to go to work Wednesday onthe north stands, and within a few months the former citadel ofbig ten football will be a pile of suethe most difficult we have everfaced.” While conceding that thebombings have made the war morecostly for Hanoi, he remained pes¬simistic about the war’s eventualoutcome. “We cannot help thosewho are unwilling or incapable ofhelping themselves,” he said. Yar¬molinsky was a guest of the Centerfor Policy Study.YARMOLINSKY, who has held avariety of positions in the DefenseDepartment, asserted that Ameri¬ca’s military power was enormous.“We spend four times as much asout nearest competitor, the SovietUnion,’’ he said, “and for our dol¬lars, we get good value.”Foreign Policy LimitationsYet despite these vast resources,there are, in Yarmolinsky’s view,certain limitations on our foreignpolicy. These include:• actions which might precipitatenuclear wars, in which there canbe no victor;• actions which might precipitateconventional wars, which are dan- Adam Yarmolinskygerous because theyinto nuclear wars; can escalatevvrubble.“My wife is up in arms about itcoming down,” said Samuel Boyd,construction supervisor for the Uni¬versity who is handling the demoli¬tion. Despite his wife’s protests,Boyd plans to begin the destructionas soon as the physical educationdepartment removes its equipmentfrom under the stands.ALTHOUGH A delay in removingthe equipment may stall demolitionfor a few days, it is obvious thatthe field’s days are numbered,Boyd has strict instructions not to jdamage the track or the interior jgrass, but the entire field will be jdestroyed next year in order tomake room for the new JosephRegenstein Memorial GraduateLibrary.The field, site of some of UC’sgreatest triumphs in inter¬collegiate football, was constructedin 1893 by a group of students un¬ der the direction of Amos AlonzoStagg. Beginning with a capacity of150, it was gradually expanded un¬til in 1926, at the height of UC’sfootball fame, it held 56,000.Since UC withdrew from intercol¬legiate football in 1939, the fieldhas been something of an anach¬ronism. Although it is still used forphysical education classes and forsome intercollegiate sports, itsstands have fallen into almost com¬plete disuse.IN 1957, on Stagg’s 95th birthday,the west stands were demolished,at the time, Stagg remarked “Ihope it will not be many years be¬fore the University will play foot¬ball again.”With the demolition of the northstands, only a retaining wall willremain to surround the field. Boydindicated that the wall would re¬main until demolition of the actualfield begins. Crisis in the City" Reaches CampusWith Two-Day Conference at Ida NoyesA two day conference on the j announcer on WFMT, who will“Crisis in the City” will be held moderate, Al Raby, the convenor ofJ the Coordinating Council of Com-m unity Organizations (CCCO),Fred Hubbard, a YMCA detatchedworker and unsuccessful candidatefor the Democratic nomination forCongress for the first CongressionalDistrict, Florence Scala, the leaderof the opposition to the location ofthe University of Illinois in theHarrison-Halsted area. LouiseDickerson, a resident of the WestSide, and Clark Kissinger of theCommittee for Independent Politi¬cal Action (CIPA). Following thediscussion, the film Goodbye Socra¬tes will be shown.On Saturday there will be paneldiscussions beginning at 9:30 am onthe Chicago school system, urbanrenewal, housing in Chicago, youththe ghetto, and the politics ofhere this weekend.The Conference, which isbeing sponsored by a group of stu¬dents calling themselves the Con¬ference on the City and the Univer¬sity (CCU) will, according to TedKrontiris, CCU coordinator, workto bring about “A greater aware¬ness of the problems of the city,especially Woodlawn.” Krontirissaid he hoped the weekend’s dis¬cussion would interest people indoing research on the city and get-1 ting involved in working out solu¬tions to urban problems.ALL OF THE weekend’s meet-| ings will be held in Ida Noyes Hall, and the program being Friday at1 7:30 pm with a panel discussion en¬titled “Up Against It in Chicago.”Panelists include Studs Terkel, an infighting slums • actions which might precipitate“wars of national liberation.”“The great powers are even lessfree to use force than the smallpowers,” Yarmolinsky asserted.“Thus, our objectives are limitedby necessity.”NEVERTHELESS, it is Yarmo¬linsky’s view that nuclear weaponsdo have some value in achievingforeign policy aims. “As long asnuclear weapons remain in thehands of a few comparatively re¬sponsible nations, they act as a de¬terrent,” he asserted. When askedwhether he thought China was re¬sponsible enough to safely join thenuclear club, he stated that he wassorry “how little we know aboutthe Chinese motivation.”According to Yarmolinsky, one ofthe goals of the Kennedy-Johnsonadministration has been to providea force to deal with more than onecrisis at a time. He warned, howev¬er, that “the United States cannotwalk into a foreign area defeat theforces of darkness, and walk outagain. There is a moral and practi¬cal commitment to remain andpick up the pieces.Attacks on DefenseYarmolinsky asserted that theUnited States’ defense policy is al¬ways under attack. “Those fromthe right demand that we move into stem the rising tide of Commu¬nism while those from the left(Continued on Page Five)The Page Committee onstudent - faculty relationswill hold an open meetingon Thursday at 3:30 pm inReynolds Club South. Thestudents' role in Universitydecision making will bediscussed. Anyone interest¬ed in submitting a writtenproposal should bring it tothe philosophy departmentoffice some time beforethe meetingLandlord-Tenant Relationship Will BeFocus of Conference at the Law SchoolThe relationship between jlandlords and tenants and legal |aspects of that relationship willbe the subjects of a conference'at the Law School Thursday and ^Friday. Particular attention at thestudent-sponsored conference will jbe paid to ways in which relationsbetween landlords and their tenantscan be redefined.The conference, modeled on lastyear’s Conference on ConsumerCredit and the Poor, is expected tobe attended by 250 representativesof all interest groups.Carribean RoomCocktail lounge at theSHERRY HOTELOpening under new management.Alt football games televised "THERE WILL be a confronta¬tion between opposing interests,”said Frank Wood, a member of theconference's student executive,committee. “It will be good for the jdialogue.”'.The conference will consist of (public addresses and workshop dis¬cussion groups.The first public address, entitled“New Approaches to Changing theLandlord-Tenant Relationship” willbe held at 9:30 Thursday. The sec¬ond. “The Allocation of Risks andDuties in the Landlord-Tenant Re¬lationship” will be held at 8 pm,Thursday.TWO WORKSHOPS, one on “Ten¬ant-Initiated Remedies” and the Iother on “Governmental and Insti- |tutional Entry into the Field,” will |be held Thursday afternoon and jFriday morning. Antioch Abolishes Ranking-for SomeYELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio(CPS) — The administrativecouncil of Antioch College, al¬tering a previous stand, thisweek voted overwhelmingly todiscontinue ranking underclassmales for the Selective Service sys¬tem, but to continue compilingclass ranks for fourth and fifthyear students.Each upperclass student will nowbe provided with a statement of hisrank in class leaving with him thechoice of whether to forward it tohis local draft board.This week’s vote was in marked-jcontrast to the Council’s 6 4 deci¬sion Sept. 13 to cease ranking all |students for Selective Service.THAT ACTION, taken by the lastquarter’s council, was contingent:on ratification by the. fall quartercouncil. The present decision is still [ subject to routine examination bythe College’s board of trustees, whomeet this weekend.The administrative council in¬cludes 3 students, 6 faculty mem-1 bers or administrators, and the| president of the College, who ischairman.Antioch college president JamesP. Dixon said he considered thecompromise action “not contradic¬tory” to the previous decisionwhich he termed an “extreme, po¬larized position.”But one faculty member involvedin the earlier decision called thevote a “cop-out,” although he saidit was "the best action possibleconsidering the membership of theCouncil this quarter.”THE COMPROMISE was putforth by Dean of Students J. D.Dawson, who argued that the deci¬sion to deal with local draft boardsis the obligation of the student andnot the college. Dawson said that the college should give students asmany alternatives as possible forgaining a 2-S deferment.Dawson argued that it would notbe fair to rank students durin^(their first three years because ofj unique elements in the Antioch pro¬gram. Freshmen do not receivegrades, within the College’s first-year program, and some ungradedcourses carry over into the secondyear. About half of the College’sthird-year students study abroadand receive academic credit withno grades during this period.Dawson said ranking was mostcritical for seniors. In his formalstatement, he said “if the collegerefuses to rank its senior students,then those with scores of less than80 on the national Selective Serviceexam have no chance for defer¬ment, regardless of their accept¬ance by graduate or professionalschools.”<•’in color.Entertainment nightly.1725 E. 53rd ST. lDr. Edv/crH <rcs~bcrPROFESSOR of ECTANY,will speak in the Hifchock loungetonight at 7:30 on the Genetic Bio¬chemical Approach to Infections Dis¬ease.TAI-SAM-Y&.NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSMchfchi laCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYM A M. to »t45 PMORDERS TO TAKE OUT1111 Im» MM ft. MU 4-1042LEARY ONLSD ON L.P.Dr. Tirr.othy lt»iy, PhD, IHrii outm Hi* Pj/cMcic fr<*« ini ft*five leva's cl ccrjctacscao. PtecnMat Via Cetlene .'cuneeticn, Vw ta-aaarah caritai far iaseciaia aupcV-Utnr LIMfTlO. USI |3 M Pt« MUt( 1*[Tn ffltarprim LUt. ’ Ito. tax 933. Pliixo, static| tort Lea, H. j. C/024tint ma albums of Dr. Italy’s 17. racart an 130| at 33 00 aadi. My enact far % !a analcaat.| Schcot . . ...tl«a ef|| MamaMU a^ City_ The latest thing in student accessories. It comes halfway up to regularJet Coach fare, but it covers you all the way home.To qualify,you mustbe young—under 22. You must be able to fill out a simple form.Then Ifyou have $3, you’re halfway home at half fare. You’re a member ofTWA’s 50/50 Club...eligible for Mini-fare everywhere we go in theU.S. Stop In at your nearest TWA office for a fitting.•Service mark owned exclusively by TV sac World Airllnee, lac.Welcome,to the world of _ _Trans World Airlines*2 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 15, 1966ACLU To Colleges: Resist HUACThe American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) today called on 900 college and universitypresidents across the nation vigorously to resist any future subpoena by the House Committeeon Un-American Activities (HUAC) for the membership lists of campus organizations criticalof US policy in Vietnam.The civil liberties group pleacame in the wake of the HU AC’ssubpoenas of membership lists atthe Universi y of Michigan and atthe University of California atBerkeley last summer which theACLU termed “one of the most ser¬ious breaches of academic freedomof students in recent decades, notexcluding the McCarthy era.”REACHED AT his office. Dean ofStudents Warner A. Wick indicatedthat UC expects little problem withsubpoenas of membership lists, i“Wo just don’t have the records tosubpoena.’’ said W'ick. himself amember of ACLU.Wick indicated that the Universi¬ty requires a recognized studentactivity to submit a list of officersand at least ten members, but thatthis information “is promptlythrown away.”“We do have on record, thenames and addresses of officers,”Wick continued, but this informa¬tion is also published in the StudentDirectory. No one would want tosubpoena it. since all they wouldhave to do is buy a phene book.Threat to FreedomIn a letter to the heads of col- jleges who are members of theAmerican Association of Colleges,the ACLU’s executive director,John de J. Pemberton, Jr., and itsAcademic Freedom Committeechairman. Professor Samuel Hen-del, warned that the HUAC’s sub¬poena action is “a definite threat toacademic freedom,” adding that“it asserts the intimidating powerof an official investigating bodyarmed with compulsory process.”Hie ACLU’s call for opposition tothe Committee’s “violation of theguarantees of the First Amend¬ment” came after the subpoenaswere issued last summer at the twouniversities in connection with theHUAC’s probe of peace groups op¬posing American participation inthe Vietnam war. University ofMichigan authorities delivered listscontaining 65 names drawn fromthree organizations — an affiliateof Students for a Democratic Socie¬ty, a Committee to Aid the Viet¬namese, and a local chapter of theW E B. DuBois Club. ACLU notedthat “these lists were sent withoutfirst advising those named so thatthey at least might have had the71S NORTH MICHIGAN AVH.CHICAGOFor Illinois deliverypl0056 add 4% sales tvx opportunity to seek legally to en¬join the university from com¬plying.”AT THE BERKELEY campus ofthe University of California, thesubpoenaed membership list includ¬ed the signature of at least one stu¬dent who was subpoenaed to ap¬pear at the HUAC’s August hear¬ings. “A student may now justlyinfer that the inclusion of his nameon any such list entails for him therisk of future inquisitions at thehands of the Committee.” the civilliberties group said.THE ACLU letter voiced “dis¬may” that the two universities had“complied without resisting thesubpoenas.”Urging the colleges to “resist, inevery possible legal manner, sub¬poenas seeking membership lists,”the ACLU said there is strong like¬lihood that if universities did con¬test a subpoena in the courts sucha challenge would be upheld.NEED MONEY?MAKE SOME SELLING THE REMARK¬ABLE KAY MAZE. CAU PL 7-6666DAY OR NITE.WOMEN'SCLOTHESDISCOUNTEDSalesmen's sample jackets,slacks, skirts, blouses, overblouses and sweaters.sizes 7-12HRS: SAT. & SUN. UNTIL XMASEVENINGS BY APPOINTMENTM01 SO. CONSTANCE 375-8819 In support of its position theACLU cited several SupremeCourt decisions which uphold theprivacy of organization membershiplists. In a group of cases involvingattempts by state authorities in theSouth to secure NAACP member¬ship lists, the ACLU noted that thehigh court supported the civilrights group’s refusal to complywith a compulsory disclosure whichwould be a “restraint on freedomof association.” It need hardly bepointed out, the ACLU said, thatthe “risks inherent in the disclo¬sure of membership lists of dissi¬dent anti-war groups are of the di¬mensions of those faced by NAACPchapters.”RESERVED SEATS NOW AT BOX-OFFICE OR BY MAIL Applications forSummer InternshipIn Washinoton D.C.W'ant to work for the U.S. gov-■ ernment this summer?Applications for summer intern¬ships in various Washington D.C.agencies are available starting to¬day at the Office of Career Coun¬seling and Placement, ReynoldsClub 202.Students chosen as summer in¬terns will be involved in all aspectsof the agencies to which they willbe assigned. They will also partici¬pate in activities arranged by theUC Washington Alumni Club, in¬cluding meetings with important (Government officials and social jevents."■ - ■ - ITypewriter iYou may wish to order a typewriter ,with your individual specification onkeyboard and type style at noextra charge.Place your special order now for one I! as a Christmas qift - 4 to 6 weeks j| for delivery.The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.PART TIMEWORKEVENINGS OR WEEKENDS$2.2S-$3.85 PER HOUR SALARYWILL TRAINENJOY THEHOLIDAYSVarious positions available for youngpeople willing to help us 3 eveningsa week, 5-t, or possibly on week¬ends. We hope this opportunity willfinancially situate you to enjoy aprosperous and happy holiday sea¬son and at the same time enableus to better service our customers.Call Mrs. Rose782-4362STUDY INSOUTHERN FRANCEA University year in Aix-en-Provence underj the auspices of the University of Aix-Mar- Ij seil!° (founded 1409).EUROPEAN AREA STUDIESFRENCH LANGUAGEAND LITERATUREHONORS PROGRAM(courses in French University exclusively)ART AND ART HISTORYSOCIAL SCIENCESMEDITERRANEAN AREA STUDIESClasses in English and French satisfyingcurriculum and credit requirements of over280 American Colleges and Universities.Students live in French homes. Total costsequivalent to those at private universitiesand colleges in the United States.“SEMESTER PROGRAM IN AVIGNON”“SUMMER PROGRAMIN AIX EN-PROVENCE”Write:INSTITUTE FORAMERICAN UNIVERSITIES(founded 1957)2 bis, rue du Bon PasteurAIX-EN-PROVENCE. FRANCETelephone: France (Code 91) 27.82.39or (Code 91) 27.69.01 Wenn Sie18 JahreOder altersind undeinigermassenmit IhremDeutschzurecht-kommen,dann sendenSie diesenGutscheinein.ErkonnteIhnenVergniigenundvielleichtsogar Nutzenbringen!it i 1:*Lufthansa German Airlines, Dept. UX122410 Park AvenueNew York. N.Y. 10022Bitte senden Sie mir ein Antragsformularund Informationsmateria! uber Arbeits-moglichkeiten furStudenten wahrend derSommerferien 1967 in Deutschland.UNIVEKS1TAT:.LufthansaINovember 15, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Charier Flights and"Other" ProblemsFrankly, we’re confused. The barrage of charges andcountercharges that have engulfed SG, the charter flightprogram, and the Other in the last week would baffle even themost experienced bureaucrat fighter.Because, as all parties in the dispute have pointed out, thefinances of the charter flight program are incredibly complexand because the charges against SG are by no means clearcut,we are in no position to either attack or vindicate SG officials.It hardly needs to be pointed out, however, that these chargesare of the most serious nature, and that SG can ill-afford tolet them go unanswered.SG has for years been suffering from a gradually deepen¬ing crisis in confidence among the student body — a crisiswhich culminated last year in an effort to have it abolished.We opposed the abolition move last year, and we would opposesuch a move again today. But the fact remains that if SGis to avoid total annhilation—something which we think mightwell do irreperable damage to the movement for a studentrole in decision making — it will have to do a better job ofrestoring student faith in its effectiveness — and honesty.It will not be easy for SG to overcome the effects of pastmistakes and incompetence. No matter what SG does now, itcannot remove from the record its Cuba telegram, Vietnamreferendum, mismanaged ticket sales, or fizzled housing pro¬tests. These are past events, and students skeptical about SG’svalue in the first place are not likely to forget them.But if SG can do nothing about its dismal past, at leastit might do something to avoid such fiascos in the future. Itseems to us, for example, that SG has not even begun to givemeaningful and convincing answers to the recent chargesraised against it. It may very well be true, as SG officials claim,that there is nothing at all wrong with the management ofthe charter flight program, with that program’s relationshipto the Other, and with SG finances in general.Our point is that even the smallest doubt about the pro¬priety of these matters tends to reduce SG’s already much dis¬sipated prestige and thus make it a still less effective politicalorganization.For SG’s own good, then, we think there should be aserious attempt made to sort out the web of conflicting claimssurrounding the charter flight program. We realize that SG’sbooks are open and that they underwent auditing as recentlyas last year. Nevertheless, bookkeeping is still another of thosethings that haven’t been among SG’s strong points in pastyears, and an independent, well-publicized effort to clean upthe books — particularly those relating to the charter flights— would go a long way towards relieving apprehension abouthow the program is run.It also seems to us that SG would do well to dispel themystique which has surrounded charter flights. The flightprogram may be complicated, but frankly, we just can’t believethat it is that complicated. There is, for example, no excusefor not taking minutes at charter flight meetings and makingthem available to anyone who is crazy enough to want towade through them. Because no such minutes have been keptin the past, and because there is no feasible means of re¬constructing these meetings, SG should immediately preparea comprehensive report on the charter flights — telling in allits gory detail how the operation works, how it is financed,and under what rules it must operate.Finally, if SG really has no connection with the Other,then, for the sake of regaining student confidence, it shouldmake that fact a good deal more obvious than it is now. Itcould easily do so by forcing the paper to find office spaceoutside the SG office and by making its huge advertisementsin the Other somewhat less blatent.»Unfortunately, even if SG does all these things, it isunlikely that the doubts raised about its operations will beentirely dispelled. SG has a hard-earned reputation for in¬competence — a reputation which will undoubtedly stay withthe organization long after it has ceased to deserve it. Butat least by clearing up some of the confusion, SG will for onceput its critics on the defensive and begin paving the way forsome kind of a comeback. We, as a handful of SG’s consti¬tuents, can expect no less.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 15, 1966 a® • s • m - ' -.. ,, .Letters to the EditorMisled About Other?1TO THE EDITOR:The story in Friday’s Maroonwhich mentioned the alleged con¬nection between SG and the Otherwas somewhat misleading. In thestory Maroon Executive EditorDavid L. Aiken maintains that theresponsibility for starting the Oth¬er rests with Danny Boggs, TomHeagy, myself, and others. Al¬though it is true that Ileagy and Idid help the Other get organized,we were acting as individuals, notas members of SG, and Boggshad absolutely nothing to do withit. In addition, non-SG members,including Joan Phillips, a Maroonassistant to the editor, helpedorganize the Other. Of courseMiss Phillips was acting as an in¬dividual also, not as a member ofthe Maroon. In any case, none ofus are in any way connected withthe Other now, and as far as Iknow, no member of the Otherstaff is a member of SG. In noway is SG responsible for thebirth or the continued existence ofthe Other.As to the Maroon’s statementthat “Grofman did not say howthe Other would pay its bills if itis not successful in attracting ad¬vertising”, I would like to pointout that the Maroon did not askme that question. If they had, Iwould have answered that I didnot have any idea. That is theOther's problem, not mine, andcertainly not SG’s. The only mon¬ey SG has given the Other hasbeen in payment for SG ads, forvalue received. Every SG eventadvertised in the Other has hadan SRO crowd.I would also like to point outthat the Other is only one of sev¬eral campus organizations thatuse SG phones, and that it rarelyuses SG office space except in theevening when SG is not using theoffice. The mailboxes and thedesk that it uses were not beingused by SG, so it was quite rea¬sonable that we should let some¬one put them to use. Other organ¬izations, including STEP andVISA, have been using SG spacefor years. Any organization iswelcome to use the mailboxes aslong as space is available. asserted that I was one of thepeople responsible for starting theOther: I am not now nor have Iever been a member of the Other.DANNY J. BOGGS .VISATO THE EDITOR:Last Saturday I was sitting in awomen’s ward at Chicago StateHospital, making necklaces andtalking with three ladies. When Ilooked up from our activity, I sawthat three other women w'erewatching us intently and somewhatlongingly. Did they want to joinus? Not in response to a directquestion. But I had the feeling thatif only I, or almost anyone, had satnext to them and waited with them,some kind of new relationshipwould have begun with people whohadn't related to anyone in a longtime.I couldn't do it; I was alreadywith three people.And there was no one else thereto do it, for the all too few VISAmembers on the ward were alreadydeeply involved with other people.Something different, somethinghealthy did not break the samenessof life for these women, for therewas no one with whom somethingnew could happen.There are many other people likethese at the hospital.I used to think that it was unfairto urge other students to join ourwork, that the strain involved andtime spent had costs which only theindividual could assess. But lookingaround me last week and looking atwhat I was doing, 1 now feel thatit's just not so much to ask.VISA’S bus to Chicago Stateleaves from New Dorms at 12:30pm Saturdays. Further informationcan be had by calling me,FA 4-4867.I wish students would join us.TOBEY KLASSPRESIDENT, VISASnipe, Not ReviewTO THE EDITOR:The article on Lotte Goslar’s per¬formance at the Harper Theater(Maroon, Friday, November 4)was less a review than a personalsnipe. There was no attempt tounderstand much less to perceive what was meant by a “happyshow.” The real pity lay not inreviewers Kantrov and Star’s ig¬norance as much as in the factthat their foolish and cruel wordsprobably kept many from a thor¬oughly enjoyable evening. Criti¬cism does start in the viewer’ssubjective feelings, but cannotreaders of the Maroon expectsome thoughtful speculation ofthese impressions?JOHN PHILLIPSASSISTANT PROFESSORHUMANITIES (COLLEGE)"All Too Typical”TO THE EDITOR:It was an all too typical moveof the SAR to scornfully declinetheir invitation to the Internation¬al Conference on the draft.Students against the Rank arealso students against the draft,against the w-ar, against the gov¬ernment, against the University,and in support of absolutely noth¬ing.SAR has now rejected every at¬tempt by the University for re¬sponsible action on the questionof the draft as irreconcilable withtheir aims.What are the aims of SAR?Does anyone know?Does the SAR?SAR’s boycotting of the confer¬ence is not only irresponsible, it isstupid.Having been offered the oppor¬tunity to participate in scholarly(perhaps that word scared them)discussion, they decline on the ba¬sis of contrived idealisms, thusdenying themselves the chance toaffect an element whose decisionsmight, in turn, affect actual poli¬cy (the most glaring historical ex¬ample of SAR’s mistake is Rus¬sia’s boycott of the UN in L951).So a detached observer can onlyperceive chaos within the leftistranks and conclude, in the wordsof John F. Kennedy that: ‘Therewill always be dissident voicesbeard in the land, expressing op¬position without alternatives, find¬ing fault but never favor, perceiv¬ing gloom on every side, andseeking influence without respon¬sibility”.WILLIAM YAKES-RENOBERNIE GROFMANNote: It is undoubtedly truethat the SG people who initiatedthe Other did not have any official sanction from the SG assem¬bly, since the assembly was notmeeting over the summer, whenplans for the Other were made.It is, however, only technic allycorrect to say that Grofman, Ilea¬gy, et at (my apologies to Mr.Boggs) were acting only as indi¬viduals. They had no reasons toform the paper other than theirdesire to make sure there was asympathetic organ for SG news.Incidentally, what knowledge /have of the Other comes fromJerry Hyman, former SG vice-president, who asked me in Sep¬tember w hether / would be editorof the new publication. As he ex¬plained it, the motivation forfounding the sheet was a feelingthat the present Maroon editorwould not be as responsive as theywished to SG’s requests for an¬nouncements, stories, etc.It might, by the way, he inter¬esting to count the number of sto¬ries the Other has carried on SGaffairs. Perhaps the low numberis an indication that SG is, in¬deed, allowing the Other editorautonomy, or perhaps it arisesfrom the scarcity of SG newsworth reporting.DAVID L. AIKENBoggs Innocent!TO THE EDITOR:Regarding the story in Friday’sMaroon in which David L. Aiken HI Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief .v ..David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. RichterAssistants to the EditorNews EditorsFeature EditorBook Review Editors . .Music EditorPolitical EditorEditor Emeritus . .Peter RabinowitzJoan PhillipsJeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanMark Rosin... Edward HearneBryan DunlapEdward Chikofsky... .John Bremner.Daniel HertzbergEditorial Staff—Kenneth Simonson, Slade Lander, Ellis Levin,Richard Rabens, Joe Lubenow.News Staff—John Moscow, Harold Sheridan, Angela DeVito,Robert Skeist, Ina Smith, Seth Masia, Vivian Goodman,Cathy Sullivan, Jeffrey Blum, Leanne Star, Maxine Miska,Alfred Marcus, Marge Pearson, I>eslie Recht, Helen Schary,Ann Garfield, John Welch, T. C. Fox, Gloria Weissman.Marlene Proviser, Uene Kantrov, Roger Black, LarryHendel, Anifa Grossman, Larry Struck, Lynn McKeever,Sanford Roekowitz, Peter Stone, Susan Loewy, David Jacob¬son, Sydney Unger, Michael Krauss, David F. Israel.Photographers—Jean Raisler, Bern Myers, Charles Packer, H.David Alley.Staff Artist—Belita I^ewis.The Chicago Maroon, founded 18!>2, issued every Tuesday and Fridaythroughout the University of Chicago et-hool 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. o&th Street, Chicago. Illinois 60637, Distributed without chargeon campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood. Subscriptions by mail*5 per year. Charter member. United States Rtiidtht Press Assn.Publishers of the Collegiate Press Service.Yevtushenko to Give Reading at Mandei Heagy, Livernash Clash on Charters(Continued from Page One) | e*.#M IDJ ' VVI vthe Reynolds Club, with amaximum of two per person.YEVTUSHENKO'S itinerary be¬fore arriving at Chicago includesstops at Queens College, Princeton,the State University of Buffalo, andihe Library of Congress. His laststop is the University of Californiaat Berkeley on December 9.Albert Todd a lecturer in SlavicLanguages at Queens College who isarranging the tour, said that his jvisit was “related more to his roleas a Russian literary figure,” thanto that of a political debater. But!Yevtushenko had achieved a reputa-1tion of being a political writer withthe publication of his poems “BabiYar” and “Stalin’s Heirs.”For six months in 1963 he ap-peared to be persona non grata inRussia after the publication of hisautobiography. His trip to the United States—upon the invitationof sixteen American universitiesand the American LiteraryAssociation—was cancelled, pur¬portedly for reasons of health,LATELY, HOWEVER, he has at¬tracted thousands to his readingswithin the Soviet Union, and hastraveled to Italy, Senegal and Aus¬tralia. Last fall he spent twomonths in the army for what hetermed the experience, and theprevious summer gave poetry read¬ings to raise funds for North Viet¬nam.In 1961 he visited the UnitedStates, accompanied by AndreiVozneshensky, another Soviet poet,and other intellectuals. Out of hisvisit to Harvard and New Yorkcame his poems, “The AmericanNightengale” and “Conversationwith an American Writer.”Fry - Raid Attempt To Discredit Church(Continued from Page One)As a result of the incident saidFry, the First Presbyterian Churchwill file suit against the police forfalse arrest and criminal damageto church property “on behalf of allthe people of Woodlawn.”FRY ALSO agreed with the ideaput forth by some that the raid wasan attempt to discredit the FirstPresbyterian Church in the eyes ofother Presbyterian churches be¬cause of the attention the churchhas been giving the Rangers. “I’mconvinced that they came in a veryprovocative way to create an inci¬dent," he observed.The church’s current troubles ac¬cording to church officials, stem from an agreement made with thepolice last summer. At the end ofJune five Ranger leaders were ar¬rested for illegal possession of fire¬arms and put in jail, as part of thepolice department’s effort to get asmany Ranger leaders into jail aspossible.Church officials, feeling the ar¬rests unjust, persuaded police torelease the Ranger leaders. In turn,the leaders, got the rest of theRangers to turn in a significantnumber of their weapons. Overthe July 4 weekend, these Rangerleaders persuaded members to goalong with the idea, and by thetime the weekend was finished ap¬proximately 100 weapons w'ereturned in.Yarmolinsky Discusses Foreign Policy(Continued from Page One)claim that we have a paranoid fearof social change,” he stated.RATHER THAN completely ad¬vocating either approach, Yarmo¬linsky cited some basic guidelinesfor intervention:• “When it doubt, don't inter¬vene. We are not so superior thatwe won’t make crucial errors in defined violence as a general blood¬bath and force as specific actionblocking objectives;• “Any effort to intervene in aforeign situation must be multilat¬eral;”• “The neighbors of the countryin question must be with us.”Yarmolinsky explained that the.reason we intervene in a foreignsituation “is that we just have anjudgement; 1 aversion to aggression. We want to• “We should be extremely care- make the world safe for diversity,ful to intervene when violence is j We have no motive of aggrandise-involved as opposed to force.” He ment.”CUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHINGCALI MRS. BlIXT AT 785-2118FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, III. 60602"SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT'' (Continued from Page One)Ray Bush, a member of the Uni¬versity’s legal staff, commentedthat CAB regulations actually re¬quire that no more than a certainpercentage of the total cost of aflight be allocated to “administra¬tive costs.”According to Heagy, administra¬tion of the charter flight programis a singularly technical and unin¬teresting business, requiring an im¬mense amount of work. Nobodylikes to do it and the responsibilityfalls on the SG officers and thecharter flight committees, he com¬mented, which keep no minutes be¬cause no one would understandthem.HEAGY DENIED Livernash’s jcharge that SG officers can spendcharter flight profits at will. All iprofits go into the charter flight re- !serve, which has not been touched 1in three years, Heagy said.Livernash said that difficulty in jfinding workers can be traced tothe unwillingness of Heagy and for¬mer SG president Bernie Grofmanto delegate responsibility for an im¬portant source of income. Anyoneformerly involved in charter flightadministration dould understandminutes of committee meetings,Livernash remarked.FINALLY, he charged, lastyear’s SG ran a deficit of $700,which was made up out of the char-XMASNOW!! XMASNOW!!PHILLIPS JEWELRY COMPANY"50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS"67 E. Madison i Room 1101 c' DE 2-6508Campus Representative: E. GLASGOW — Ext. 3265 or 324-9020 Despitefiendish torturedynamic BIC Duowrites first time,every time!bic's rugged pair ofstick pens wins again inunending w ar againstball-point skip, clog andsmear. Despite horriblepunishment by madscientists, bic still writesfirst time, every time.And no wonder, bic's“Dyamite” Ball is thehardest metal made,encased in a solid brassnose cone. Will not skip,clog or smear no matterwhat devilish abuse isdevised for them bysadistic students. Getthe dynamic bic Duo atyour campus store now.WATERMAN IIC PEN COUP.MILFORD. CONN. ters flight reserve. Salaries for several part-time secretaries were tak¬en out of charter flight funds, hesaid.Heagy responded that the $700was made up by the Committee onRecognized Student Organizations(CORSO). There is no real deci¬sion-making required about how tomeet administrative costs, he said,since SG meets costs as they come,taking funds from several pro¬grams. A secretary works on sev¬eral programs and her salarycomes out of several funds, Heagysaid. Nothing comes out of profits,as they go into reserve.What is Reserved?Livernash asserted that nothinggoes directly into reserves. Anysurplus at the end of the year isprofit, and that goes in, Livernashsaid. “Things may look nice andneat at the beginning when the al¬locations are made,” he comment¬ed, “but there is so much unavoid¬able overlap of services and work¬ers that it’s easy to abuse the sys¬tem.”ILivernash also questioned whycharter flights should be a profita¬ble enterprise. “If you ask Heagyor Grofman why, you’ll get some¬thing like ‘so we can run the speak-marked. “But then why charge ad¬mission to the speakers program?They made that into a profit pro¬gram, too. The charter flight pro¬gram was curtailed this year be¬cause of decreasing profits,” Liver¬nash charged.THE PROGRAM was cut downat Christmas, Heagy answered, be¬cause the UC class calendar waschanged after the program wasplanned. Now, he pointed out, it will be possible for students totravel on youth fare stand-by justas conveniently, since classes donot begin until January 3.Livernash responded that the de¬cision to change the calendar wasmade a long time ago “withenough fanfare that SG should haveknown about it.”He also remarked that the ad inthe Other was run before the As¬sembly approved the flight sched¬ule, and it gave false impression ofthe way the flights will be run.Funds for the OtherThe Other is being supported di¬rectly by SG through advertising,Livernash charged. The size of theads SG has taken in the Other is| “unbelievable,” he commented,j saying that all the ad money comes! out of the funds for the programs\ advertised. SG and its organiza¬tions have been the Other's chiefj source of ads, and therefore in-| come, because it has no othermeans of support at the moment,he alleged.Heagy retorted that there is nofinancial relationship between theOther and SG other than a normalnewspaper-advertiser relationship.“We let the Other use our office,but that’s not a financial arrange¬ment. That’s beside the point,”Heagy said.The Assembly does have finalsay over what SG committees de¬cide, and has always approvedsuch decisions, Heagy pointed out.Livernash concluded by charging,“The approval of the Assembly is90% worthless. By the time the .As¬sembly gets a contract Heagy hasalready signed it and SG would In¬cur a penalty by disapproving it,”Livernash asserted.Lowi Discusses Elections with U-Hi'ersby Barbara GoiterU-High CorrespondentProfessor of political scienceTheodore Lowi, told an aud-jience of U-High students thatin his opinion the results ofthe off-year elections don’t have |very much significance.Lowi, speaking at the high schoolFriday afternoon said he was sorrythat Senator Paul Douglas wasn’tre-elected but added that he wasn’ttoo disturbed by the victory ofCharles Percy because he believesthe Republican’s gains are healthyfor the two-party system.Turning to the question of whitebacklash, Lowi stated that “back¬lash” was a term invented by thepress. He said that the only states that clearly have a backlash voteare Alabama. Mississippi, and Flo¬rida.Lowi noted that with the eventualgrowth of the two-party system, nopolitician will be able to take a def¬initely rascist position on issues.He cited the election of liberals inNorth Carolina and other Southernstates as examples.Lowi concluded that the two-party system will continue to bestrong despite the pessimism of thepress.SORRY!Shorey House wishes to apologize forhaving unintentionally taken Doc.Film's name in vain. Shorey was thesole sponsor of the Big Sleep.Chaplin’s SHOULDER ARMS andSam Fuller’s CHINA GATEAt Doc Films. Wednesday, November 14. At Social Sciences 122, 59th andUniversity. 7:00 and 9:30 PM. 40 cents.BIC Medium Point l9tbit' fine Point 25t THE MAROON PRESENTSA WITCHING HOURwith Dame Sybil LeekFREE COOKIES AND COFFEEIDA NOYES LIBRARY3-4 PM, WED., NOV. 16November 15, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Music ReviewNo Uremic MusicologistAs'ofi-n os not. the title “doctor"before the same of a performingmusician designates an anemic ac¬ademic doling out dull diversionsin German provincial towns. Dr.David Gross, however, who gave apiano recital to an SRO audience inthe Law ocnooi Friday, is a realmedical man. and he proved con¬clusively that a musicianly urolo¬gist is far better than a uremicmusicologist.Even were he not an amateur.Gross’ technique would be impres¬sive. His program, although AMAconservative, made technical de¬mands that would exhaust nearlyany pianist. Yet he was always incomplete control, except for a fewof the most trying passages (thefinale to Beethoven’s Opus 101, forexample) where his right handtended to tighten slightly.As with many contemporarypianists, his tempi, usually on thefast side, tended to be fairly rigid.Even where there was open provo¬cation to sentimentalize (such asthe theme and variations of Bee- |thoven’s Opus 109) he maintained asteady pulse. His tone, however, Iwas far from the antisepticism soprevalent today. Even on a medio¬cre piano, he was able to ring out ahealthy sonority, high on protein,low on carbohydrates; never tinkly,but, even in the most complex pas¬sages, never so thick as to obscurethe lines.Although he was at his mostspectacular in his free-wheelingrhapsodic performances of the fiveBrahms pieces which closed hisprogram, the highlight of the eve¬ning was his reading of Bach’s Partita No. 6, an unorthodox ven¬ture calculated to infuriate musicalpurologists. Gross is properlyaware of the futility of performingBach on a piano only to imitate aharpsichord. Thus, while careful toinsure the contrapuntal integrity ofthe work and to emphasize thecomplex rhythmic structures, heexploited his instrument's dynam¬ic potential, and freely added cres-1 cendoes and diminuendos, endingI with a big, extroverted, and highly! dramatic performance of the gigue.Gross may have forgotten that thisis primarily music for thedance—but his interpretation wasconvincing enough to make theaudience forget too.The concert did. of course, servethe didactic function of remindingus that even in the twentieth centu¬ry, ‘‘professional’’ is an economic,and not an artistic, term. But morethan anything. Dr. Gross’ recitalwill be remembered simply as anevening of musicianship of thehighest order.Peter RabinowitzPHOTOGRAPHYPlace your order now for Christmascards in color and Black and White.Check the sales items on our Photocounter at:THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue Movie Review"Professionals" is ProfessionalRichard Brook’s The Professionals, now at the Chicago Thea¬tre. is being touted as a “western of the old school,” with theimplication that this makes it a good film. There is no ques¬tion that it is very aptly titled, for besides being about a gangof professional westerners who goafter and rescue a professionalwife from a professional Mexicanbandit, it is a very professionallymade film. Brooks knows how tocompose in Panavision and color,and he can cut both as far as tim¬ing and image flow are concerned.His direction of his actors is fine,and the cast he has chosen couldnot be more suited to the type offilm he is doing.The fact is that he does not sayanything visually, and when he at¬tempts to say something verballyhe gets into the liberal cliches thatwe have come to expect from themaker of Blackboard Jungle.One of the worst lapses in thefilm occurs when the villain,played by Jack Palance, one of the well-made but empty western is areturn to the “old school.” True,we do not have the psychologizingthat has been named “adult west¬ern” by the TV people. However,we are fed equally vile lines like:“There’s only one revolution—thegood guys against the bad guys.The only problem is: who are thegood guys?”Even so, as far as I was con¬cerned the “old school” westerns Iknow of were full of content.Hawks’ Red River, possibly thebest western I’ve seen, is both asaga of epic proportions and a verysubtle character study. Ford’s SheWore A Yellow Ribbon is so rich inthemes and subthemes that I couldnot begin to discuss it here. Thesebest actors in Hollywood, is talking I are the classic westerns; they haveto the hero in the midst of a gun-1 gloss but there is more than that ifbattle. Palance explains that Pan-j one bothers to look for it.cho Villa’s revolution started out asan idea, became a mistress, andfinally a whore. “We die,” he saysin the end, “because we are com¬mitted.” At last, pop existential¬ism.WHAT BOTHERS ME most| about the reception of The Profes¬sionals is the assumption that this I don’t want to give the impres¬sion that The Professionals is adull evening. It’s not: there aresome fine fights, some fine sceneryand Claudia Cardinale looks asgood as ever (although she is againin a part where she is not permit-i ted to prove that she is a fine acI tress). The rest of the cast is HurtLancaster, Lee Marvin. Jack Halance, Robert Ryan, Ralph Bellamyand Woody Strode. Conrad i[aii’who did great work in Harpe,, jjthe photographer, and Maurice Jar¬re composed the score. Profession¬als all.SOME SUGGESTIONS: Minnel¬li’s Gigi is in its last week at the'■ I,oop a wonderful film that shoulddefinitely be looked .at again if vousaw it long ago. Hitchcock’s own! favorite of his films, and one o( the; best pieces of cinema around.Shadow Of A Doubt, is on campustonight. Screenplay by ThorntonWilder and starring Joseph Cotton.T. C. Fox&P JAPANESE FILM FESTIVALpresentsFIRES ON THE PLAINNOV. 19 7:15 & 9:30SOC. SCI. 122 Last ctiince to get in onthe ground floor —People interested in setting up the IdaNoyes Coffe Shop don't miss meeting,4:00 p.m. Thursday, Student ActivitiesOffice, Ida Noyes Hall. If you can'tmake the meeting, submit your ideasin writing before the meeting — Thurs¬day at 4:00.OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SH0REIAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000ATTENTIONMBA — EVENING STUDENTSTHE CONTINENTAL ILLINOIS NATIONAL BANK HAS A CHALLENGINGOPPORTUNITY IN THE COMPTROLLER'S DEPARTMENT. IF YOU ARE ANEVENING STUDENT WITH A MAJOR AREA OF CONCENTRATION IN:-FINANCE- -ACCOUNTING- -QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS-PLEASE CALL8:30 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. MONDAY - FRIDAY828-2440Keyed-upstudents unwindat Sheraton... Mkand save money (ySat>e with weekend discounts' Send for yourfree Sheraton ID card today! It entitles youto room discounts at nearly all SheratonHotels and Motor Inns. Good over Thanks¬giving and Christmas holidays, summervacation, weekends all year round.SEND FOR YOUR FREE ID CARDlI c/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008| Please rush me a free Sheraton Student ID Card (or a free Fac-J ulty Guest Card). I understand it entitles me to generous dis-l counts all year long at most Sheraton Hotels and Motor lnn3. THEATRE FIRST, INC.PRESENTSEdward Albee'sWHO'S AFRAID OFVIRGINIA WOOLF?November 18, 19, 20, 25, 24, 27, December 2, 3, 4.Friday & Saturdays 8:30 p.m. — Sundays 7:30 p.m.General Admission $1.75 — Students SI.10THE ATHENAEUM THEATRE2936 N. Southport Avenue LA 5-9761NameAddressStudent □ Teacher □ jSheraton Hotels & Motor Inns You're Invited To ACOMPUTERDANCEat which we will attempt tomatch, through the use of acomputer, persons oflike interests and attributes,but opposite (of course) sex.SATURDAY NIGHT8:30 p.m.—1:00 a.m.NOVEMBER 19in the warm and oolorfulGIBRALTAR ROOMon the street level floor of thePRUDENTIAL BUILDING130 East Randolph StreetCASUAL DRESS(e g. sweaters, sport shirts,slacks, etc.Suits & dresses are O.K. too.)FeaturingTHE WILD THINGSwith the latest sounds.Everyone 18 or Over Is InvitedBAR OPENto those 21 and older.STAG or DATESSTAG PREFEftftEO The computer party is a unique •phenomenon that has grown recently rto fad dimensions on university cam- •puses throughout the world.To add interest and amusement to •our November 19 party, everyone wfio *attends will receive a questionnaire and 9an IBM card upon which to record their •answers. These answers will later be Jtranslated into magnetic impulses and •fed via tape into a computer. The *computer will be programmed to select *that person of the opposite sex who to •the greatest extent: *A—possesses the qualities •you admire, and ••B— admire the qualities you •possess. JEveryone will have the opportunity Jto meet the person with whom the •computer nas matched tnem at an *other party in December. #Neither of the parties are intended Jto be blind date parties! You are •certainly invited to both parties whether •or not you wish to participate in our Jlittle "computer game." Even if you •complete the questionnaire, you are *welcome to withdraw at any time. £The program we have planned for •November 19 should keep you enter- •tained and result in a great deal of *fun regardless of whether or not you Jtake part in our computer experiment. ••We encourage you to participate in •this experiment however, because at *the very least Jt will be good for *laughs, and at best it can restilt id ’•some interesting new friends. • The University of Chicago1966 ORATORIO FESTIVAL 1967ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59lh Street and Woodlawn AvenueTwo PerformancesFriday Evening Sunday AfternoonDecember f, 19*4 December II, 19mHANDEL’SMESSIAHRICHARD VIKSTR0MDirector of Chape* MusicTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRwith 27 members of theCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRASoloistsNeva Pilgrim, SopranoCharlotte Brent, Mezzo-SopranoWalter Carringer, TenorHenri Noel, BaritoneTickets: Reserved $4.50, General Admis¬sion $3 50, UC Fac/Staff $3.00, Students$2.50.On Sale At:University of Chicago BookstoreChapel House, 5810 WoodlawnCooley’s Candles, 5210 Harper CourtWoodworm's Bookstore. 1311 E. 57th SiSeries Tickets (S Concerts) still availableat $15.00, $12.00, $10.00, and $7.00For further information callMl 3 0800, Ext. 3387BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroComplete RupufnAnd S«rvic«Par AH Popular Import*Midway 1-45016052 So. Cottage GroveSKIXMAS in COLORADOlift DOfromIf/k/E CHI. DEC. 17th 4:20 PMARRIVE BACK IN CHI. DEC. 24»«Includes all train A bus transportation.All lodging A tow tickets.NORTHWESTERN UNIV. SKI GROUPcall Marge Abrfrti* between6:00 pm & 10:00 pm at 328-22686 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 15, 1966First UC Chamber Concert SetThe UC Chamber Orchestra,under the direction of LeonBotstein, will present its firstconcert of the year Saturday,November 19, at 8:30 pm in Hutch¬inson Commons.Now in its second year, the thirtymember Chamber Orchestra was organized as an outgrowth of theMusical Society by Botstein, afourth year student in the Collegeand its current musical director.FUTURE CONCERTS of theChamber Orchestra include a Mo-! zart Divertimento, Schubert’s Sym-i phony no. 5, an unannouncedconcerto, in February, and a per-i formance of Handel’s Water Music, played at Botany Pond, during theSpring Quarter.Saturday’s concert of Haydn,Kirchner, and Rameau in Hutchin¬son Commons is open to the publicwith no charge.Fiddler On The RoofWed. night, March 15, 1967, Me-Vickers TheaterSpecial Student t Faculty Ratesfor information call SO 8-2191 orRE 1-8043 1Classified Ads "Hostage" Draws on Director's Past"To do The Hostage,” saidUT director Jim O’Reilly, "Ihad to draw heavily upon myown experiences. The castsimply had to be coached in Irishhistory, the IRA, the ‘time of thetroubles,’ serious drinking, whore-1houses, and the truth and beauty of jlife as seen through the bloodshot ■eyes of a minstrel like St. Bren¬dan.”Fortunately, O’Reilly’s cast willbe hardened professionals with Uni¬versity Theatre. Playing the leads- iare four actors familiar to UC audi 1 ences: Patrick O’Gara (Pat), BillReddy (Leslie), Gareth Mann(Teresa), and Julia Fremon (Meg).‘‘Julia Fremon has come full cir¬cle with me,” O’Reilly quipped.“She started out three years agoplaying Kitty Duval, the whore inSaroyan’s The Time of Your Life.Then she reached out into the clas¬sical repertory, playing the titlerole in Sophocles’ Elektra and Son¬ya in Chekhov's Uncle Vanya. Now,as Meg in The Hostage, she hascome back to playing whores.”The Hostage will run in MandelHall this Friday, Saturday, andSunday nights at 8:30.PERSONALSI KCTURE: • Present Status of SovietJewry—and What of the Future?”. Rab-,,, George B. Lieberman, Central Syna¬pse of Nassau County, Long Island.Leader of the Central Conference ofRabbis’ study mission to Russia.7 :ifl PM. Hillel House 5715 Woodlawn.Guarantee handsome price for GaryCollins/Dick Butkus pictures from Stan-(iard Oil contest: write Dick Levine, 4621Cooper. Lincoln. Nebraska.Proof Reading and Re-typing of com¬pleted MA Degree Thesis. Social Sci¬ence background and help in Englishgrammar, spelling, and construction re¬quired. Thesis 75 pages long and paynegotiable. Immediate. Call after 6 PM.784 8632 or 288-0492. ■Sign-up lists are open in the S. G. officein Ida Noyes for dinner Nov 21 withGongressm.an Morris Udnll and Nov. 28with Presidential Ass’t Hervry Hall Wil¬son. Open from 11AM, daily until Fri¬day. ’SKI COLORADOdec 17-24—$119.50 incl. round trip trainto Denver, round trip bus to Vail, lodg¬ing for 5 days & 6 nights—tow ticketsfor 5 days, Call Marge Abrams betw. 6PM 11 PM at 328 2368CHICAGO DAYS is comingKAMKLOT Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for UC studentsWriter’s Workshop PL 2-8377.Take a break—Free coffee and cookies.Tonite 9-11, 5748 Blackstone.Wanted :Two people outside UC housingto assume contract for 3*a room apt. at5400 Greenwood starting January 1 Call684-3991Roommate wanted to share a 5 bed¬room apt. with 3 other girls. One blockfrom the lake ih Hyde Park. 684-7586Evenings.JOBS OFFEREDFolk & Square Dance teacher for chil¬dren, Hyde Pk. Neigh. Club MI 3-4062.Norma Pendleton.Waiters & Waitresses wanted must be21. Full or part time. Apply Smedley’s,5239 S. Harper.Babysitter wanted, exchange room &board 667-6097 eves.if you ever writea book this good...send it to us"metnorobli... storing... vivid. .—New York Timesstunning..'o brilliant maverick..—(LondonJ Sunday Times‘fascinating.., astonishing.. T—(F ranee) L’Humanite"extraordinary... literally staggering•♦.one of the most powerful booksI have ever read...”p-Richard Kluger, Book WeekNOW AT YOUR QC£BOOKSTORE 5| 3v- POCKET BOOKS* division of Simon 6 Schuster, Inc.630 Fifth Avenue. N.Y., N Y. 10020 TO RENT5 large rooms, natural wood burning jfireplace, 2 large bedrooms, 4 clothes |closets, pantry, linen closet. Near shop- |§ing center, “I.C.”, C.T.A. and lake.uitable for business or professionalpeople $175.00 per month MU 4-8222.X Mas sublet—bright, fully furn, newkit, bath, sleeps 3. $55 . 324-7583Comfortable 5 rm. apt. in S. Shore 1blk. from IC $135/mo. Call MI 3-0609 or667-5560.Roommate wanted to share 5 bedroomapt. with 3 other girls. One block fromthe lake in Hyde Park. 684-75 evenings.ROOM, ROOMMATE WANTEDNeed a room-mate? I need a place to Ilive. Vicki. 752-2908.! Studio Space—must be heated-Comm.j Artist—X3753—Barry.DRIVER WANTED ,| Thanksgiving-take trailer: Furniturej books to New York City—Will pay fortrailer plus services.You're under 25but you drivelike an expert.Why should youhave to payextra for yourcar insurance?Sentry says you maynot have to. A simplequestionnaire could saveyou up to $50 or more.Call the Sentry manfor fast facts.JIM CRANE8124 S. Woodlawn Ave.374-0350SENTRY. iTINSURANCE This is Russ Kennedy of Balboa Island, California, on an in-port field trip as a student aboardChapman College’s floating campus.The note he paused to make as fellow students went ahead to inspect Hatshepsut’s Tomb In theValley of the Kings near Luxor, he used to complete an assignment for his Comparative WorldCultures professor.Russ transferred the 12 units earned during the study-travel semester at sea to his record atthe University of California at Irvine where he continues studies toward a teaching career in lifesciences.As you read this, 450 other students have begun the fall semester voyage of discovery withChapman aboard the s.s. RYNDAM, for which Holland-America Line acts as General PassengeiAgents.In February still another 450 will embark from Los Angeles for the spring 1967 semesterthis time bound for the Panama Canal, Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, Nigeria, Senegal, MoroccoSpain. Portugal, The Netherlands, Denmark, Great Britain and New York.For a catalog describing how you can include a semester at sea in your educational plans, fillin the information below and mail.T.mniiiiwwiSSiiwGggS ChapmanCollegeOrange, California UIMName. PrcecM StatnaCoUege/(J olversifyFreshman □Sophomore OJunior □Senior □Graduate □(La*) (First)Address.(Indicate Home or College/University)Telephone.The Ryndam is of West German registry.BRENDAN BEHAN'STHE HOSTAGEDirected by James O'ReillyMANDEL HALL - 8:30 RMNOVEMBER 18-19-20fRIDAY - $2.00SATURDAY - $2.50SUNDAY - $1.75Student-Faculty Discount 5©<TICKETS: REYNOLDS CLUB DESKUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATREINFORMATION: PHONE EXT. 3581November 15, 1966 • CHICAGO MARO ON * 7UC Members of !nt. Voluntary ServiceHe!p Set Up West Side Youth Center Students Will Run New Snack BarStudent (SG)Five UC students spent lastweekend with a dozen Negroteenagers, cleaning up a neigh¬borhood center on the WestSide.Chicago members of the Interna¬tional Volunteer Service (IVS) or¬ganized the washing and paintingwhich helped convert a few roomsof a “big old church” at 40 N. Ash¬land Ave. into “Casa Central” agathering place for neighborhoodkids.ROBERT TREDRAY, a UC Col¬lege student who is chairman of theChicago group and editor of the na¬tional newsletter, was very pleasedwith the results. “The most impor¬tant part of this work project wasthat the kids in the neighborhoodreally became involved, and werevery enthusiastic,” he commented. IVS is the American-Canadian i presidentbranch of Service Civil Internation¬al, (SCI) a world wide servicegroup with the long-term goal ofworld peace. Founded after WorldWar I. this nondenominational, non-sectarian organization broughtFrench and German soldiers to¬gether to rebuild war-torn Frenchtowns. IVS started ten years ago.Bringing people of different back¬grounds together for workcampslasting one-day to two-years. SCI istrying to move the world towardpeace, explained Tredrav.TWO GERMAN students—SeppRajal and Hartmut Wisch—helpedorganize the Casa CentralWorkcamp. They are long-term vol¬unteers stationed in the West Side.Another IVS project will be heldFriday, November 25. Anyone in¬terested should call Robert Tredrayat 955-4736. an-GovernmentTom Heagynounced yesterday that the IdaNoyes snack shop, which isscheduled to open sometime nextquarter, will be student run.According to Heagy, SG is re¬sponsible for setting up an ad hocGraduate Library School Gets $764,000UC’s Graduate Library Schoolhas received three grants total- student group which will make poli-1 guidelines set up by the Universitycy decisions for the snack shop. j These guidelines, which will lieThe student group will make de- mainly financial and legal (involv-cisions about such matters as the ( conformity with local health or-hours during which the snack shop , finances), will probably be set bywill be open, who will be employed, a faculty committee, Heagy saidThere will be a meeting thisThursday in the Student Activitiesoffice, second floor, Ida NoyesHall, at 4 pm, for all students inter¬ested in organizing the snack shopand possible arrangements for acaterer. The student decisions willbe made, however, within certaining $764,600 from the US Of¬fice of Education and the USPublic Health Service’s Library ofMedicine.The largest grant, $538,000 fromthe National Library of Medicine,will be used to support a five-yearprogram in medical librarianship.It will provide tuition plus $2,400 aCALENDAR OF EVENTSTuesday, November 15MOTION PICTURE: “Shadow of aDoubt”. Alfred Hitchcock, Soc Sci 122,7:15 and 9:15 pm.ART EXHIBIT: “The Paintings &Graplins of Medard Klein", LexingtonStudio Gallery, Weekdays 9 am-5 pm,Sat. 10 am-5 pm, Monday, Wednesday,and Thursday evenings 7-10 pm throughDecember 8.PROGRAM: Dr. Oscar Hechter, Insti¬tute for Biomedical Research, AMA,“Reflections on Hormone Action”, Ab¬bott 133, 8 am.LECTURE: Laurence Lockhart, Cam¬bridge University, “The History of Per¬sia from the Mongol Conquest to theFall of the Safavid Empire II”, Rosen-wald 26. 10 am.LECTURE: Dr. Edward Garber, Pro¬fessor of Botany, will speak on “TheGenetic Biochemical Approach to Infec¬tious Disease”, Hitchcock Lounge, 7:30pm.Wednesday, November 16LECTURE: “The Ancient and MedievalBackground of Copernican Astronomy",William D. Stahlman, Professor of His¬ tory of Science, University of Wiscon¬sin, Classics 10. 2:30 pm.MOTION PICTURE: “China Gate”,Samuel Fuller, and “Shoulder Arms”,Charlie Chaplin, Soc Sci 122, 7 and 9:30pm.LECTURE: “Dietrich Bonhoeffer: TheMan, the Work, the Time,” by visitingprofessor Eberhard Bethge. MandelHall 4:30 pm.COFFEE HOUR: At Hitchcock Hall9-11 pm, live band, freeLECTURE: Donald Moore (Bobby Baker & Hoffa trials), “Problems of Defense and Prosecution in CriminalCases". 5th Floor Lounge, Pierce, 7 pmDANCING: English Country Dancers Ida Noyes Dance Room, Refreshments,friendly atmosphere, all dances andbasic steps taught, no charge. 8 pm.FROM THE MIDWAY: WUCB radio.7:30 pm.Thursday, November 17PANEL DISCUSSION: “What Are theGoals of Philosophy", The Other Side,1603 E 53rd St. 8:30 pm.LECTURE: Dr. Hyman Chausow, “Ed¬ucational TV: One Way Monster?”,Judd Hall Commons. 8 pm.LECTURE: Lawrence Z Freedman.Dept. Of Psychiatry, “Special Problemsin the Physiology of Psychopathology: Iand II”, Abbott 133. 8 am year for six to 15 M.A. candidatesand tuition and $6,500 a year fortwo to six postdoctoral fellows.The second grant from the Na¬tional Library of Medicine will pro¬vide $165,000 for a two-year studyof new methods of disseminatingbiomedical literature. The Univer¬sity will provide approximately tenper cent of the total expendituresunder this grant.The students participating in thestudy will design and operate anexperimental information serviceto provide articles from medicaljournals to a cooperating group ofdoctors at UC’s School of Medicine.They will utilize indexes, catalogs,and bibliographies to deliver cur- jrent articles from appropriate spe¬cialities to the participating doc¬tors.The third grant, $61,600 from theU.S. Office of Education, will pro¬vide seven fellowships of $5,000 toPh.D. candidates, $2,200 to threeM.A. candidates, and $20,000 to theGraduate Library School for insti- season.A UC All- American!Hildebrand HonoredUC cross country star Pete Hilde¬brand-after a fine performance atlast Saturday’s National CollegiateAthletic Association (NCAA) Divi¬sional Championship at Wheaton.Illinois—was notified that he hadwon an All America award.The wrestling team will hold itsfirst official practice tomorrowThe team under new head coachJim Baillie hopes to improve onlast year’s 1-7 record.The soccer team will close its1966 season this Saturday with agame against the University of lllinois, at Champaign. The “C" let¬ters that coach Bill Vendl will piesent to some of the members of theteam might well stand for courage;seven of the original eleven start¬ers are injured and will be unableto help coach Vendl’s “most inju¬ry-riddled team ever” finish theAlfred Hitchcock’s SHADOW OF A DOUBTTonight at Doc Films. At Social Science 122, S»th & University. At 7:15 & ♦:!$ PM. 40 cents.A REAL-LIVE WITCH IS HERE!DAME SYBIL LEEK"THE WORLD S MOST FAMOUS WITCH" FROMENGLANDWILL PRESENT A SERIESOF 4 LECTURES ONESP (Extra Sensory Perception) ANDWITCHCRAFT . . .SHORELAND HOTEL5454 S. Lakeshore Drive1. FRIDAY, NOV. 18, at 8 p.m.: "My Personal Experiences With ESP'42. SATURDAY, NOV. 19 at 8 p.m.: “ESP, Astrology & Love"3. SUNDAY, NOV. 20 at 3 p.m.: “ESP and Witchcraft"4. SUNDAY, NOV. 20 at 7 p.m.: "ESP, Clairvoyance & Predictions" Read Dame Sybil's Articles In The ladies'Home Journal And Read Her New Book **ThoJackdaw And The Witch", Published by Pre»>tice-HalL She is also featured in ■ new book"Yankee Ghosts", by Hans Holier, publishedby Bobbs-Merrill. She will soon wake a fewture movie for Hollywood.Student Admission $100 Each Lecture; Non-Students: $200Get Up a Date or Come Stag; You'll have a ball. Dame Sybil is a favorite of College Students Around The World . . . She is a great trance medium who ha*participated in many ESP experiments at Oxford University in England. She has personally met many of the world's most famous ghosts! Tickets ad Hie doof.BRING YOUR OWN BROOMSTICK!8 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 15, 1966