Chicago Maroon WEEKENDEDITIONVal. 75-No. 27 -WhU, a AT"1 US- -POST AGS| £aidI CHICAGO, ILL.| Permit Mo. 6444 l 5th Anniversary YearUniversity of Chicago Friday, January 6, 1967SWAP Probably Not Affecteds in Appropriations by OECHurt Local Poverty ProjectsCuts in appropriations for the war on poverty have had a severe effect on many programsfor the poor in Chicago, including the UC-based tutoring project, SWAP.The effect on programs in the Hyde Park-Woodlawn area has been mixed, but mostorganizations report that reductions in their programs will be necessary.SWAP will receive only 20 per i ;— — ——— ——-—cent of its previous allocation from i The Woodlawn Organization did investigating alternative methodsthe Chicago Commission on Urban not receive funds to renew a tutor- of funding programs. On possibilityOpportunity (CCUO) the local 'n§ program it sponsored this year, is through the Office of Educationms**SOON TO BE ONLY A MEMORY: Stagg Field in the process ofbeing destroyed to make way for the new Regenstein Library.. imIWM1 rJWNifjinIP.'VUfflft WKmfmm&SB&i|Council Approves PlansFor New Student RoleIn Policy Deliberations agency of the Office of Economic i The program involved 25 tutors and of the Department of Health, Edu-Opportunity. Also. SWAP received an e(?ual number of tutees. It re-I cation, and Welfare. Some funds4n npr npnt nf fhp fimHs i,t rP^pivpH ceived a $22,000 appropriation last! are also available under the Ele-in the past ftvmthe Labor depart- ye«- . mentarj- and Secondary Educationment. This amounts to a drop According to CCUO, 15 programs Act.which leaves its present allocation *lave ^een eliminated completely; TOM ISGAR, a staff member ofat approximately $25 000 compared from the year’s allocations. Other the Tutorial Assistance Centerto a $75,000 allocation last year programs have been cut by as (TAC) in Washington, reported thatTHESE FUNDS were used for much as two-thirds. All such pro- j Chicago and Los Angeles were thepersonnel, equipment, paying fees grams were financed through Com-1 only two major cities in which tuto-and tests for tutees. and special munity Action Program funds. Oth- rial programs are being hurt espeprograms.The organization is hoping tohave most of its funds restored byprivate foundations. Saturday,SWAP and nine other neighborhoodorganizations will meet with repre¬sentatives of several foundations todiscuss allocation of funds.SWAP’s tutoring project, thelargest part of its operation, willnot be affected, since all of its tu- er OEO projects, such as Operation cially, although cuts have also tak-Head Start and the Job Corps, have en place in Boston and Baltimoreby Michael Seidman I ed all the time,” said Dr. H. Stan-The Council of the Univer-j I *>rs are vrfunteerssitv Senate has passed a reso¬lution giving students a formalrole in Committee of the Coun¬cil discussions. The Council is thegoverning body of the University.The resolution, passed at a Coun¬cil meeting on December 13, es¬tablishes a procedure whereby stu¬dents may submit written state¬ments to the Committee of theCouncil, the seven-man standingcommittee which conducts much ofthe Council’s business. Student the Council.Formal Communications‘‘There have been meetings be¬fore between students and mem¬bers of the Committee of the Coun¬cil,” Bennet continued, “but, to myknowledge, formal lines of commu¬nication have never really been es¬tablished. The events of last springclearly indicated that a need forsuch communication existed.”The Committee of the Councilwas accused by a number of stu-statements should be addressed in dent leaders during last spring’scare of the Secretary of the Facul¬ties, the Administration Building,and may be sent via the FacultyExchange.ACCORDING TO the resolution,Committee of the Council membersmay meet with appropriate studentrepresentatives upon receivingsuch a message and may carry thediscussions to the full Councilshould they so decide.The resolution emphasizes thatthe new procedure is to be usedonly for discussion of academicmatters involving the entire Uni¬versity, and that it “will be usefulonly if it does not interfere with thenumerous channels of discussionnow available.”Committee of the Council mem¬bers were quick to point out thatthe resolution makes no real depar¬ture from previous Council policy.“It is hard to say how much theresolution is creating somethingnew ar. 1 how much it is calling at¬tention to something that has exist-International House hasreminded foreign visitorsthat aliens in the U.S.must report their addressduring January. The ad¬dress report cards may besecured from the Interna¬tional House adviser to for¬eign visitors, or at anypost office. The cards mustbe handed in at a postoffice.■ : : ismmm ■ ; a®; anti-rank sit-in of being unrespon¬sive to student demands, and stu¬dents contacted after the Council’sannouncement remained uncon¬vinced that a significant changehad occurred.“I THINK this step in no wayrepresents an adequate response tothe just demands of students whoparticipated in the sit-in for a role(Continued on Page Seven) In Hyde Park, Kenwood, Wood-lawn, and South Shore, however,the Hyde Park-Kenwood Communi¬ty Council sponsored a programproviding jobs for indigent studentsso that they could remain in schoolwhile earning money. The programwas funded only through December31st, but has been extended untilFebruary 28th. Currently the orga¬nization is applying for renewal ofthe program by the Labor Depart¬ment.Staff LostA project in North Kenwood toprovide a variety of neighborhoodservices has lost all of its part-timestaff. The program was directed bythe Chicago Federation of Settle¬ments and sponsored by the HydePark Neighborhood Club. Twenty-six settlement houses across thecity sponsoring similar programsalso suffered cutbacks. However, atutoring project of the Club was nothurt by the reduction in aid. not been affected.The Chicago Commission on Hu¬man Relations, which is responsi¬ble for tutoring projects throughoutthe city, reports that many tutoringprograms cannot be renewed withpresent fund sources. However,most of these projects have re¬ceived allocations through Febru¬ary 28th.A special mayoral committee is projects.The Center offers advice, mate¬rials, and other assistance to tuto¬rial projects which request it, espe¬cially programs operated by col¬lege students. TAC is operated bythe National Student Association,under contract with the Office ofEconomic Opportunity.According to Isgar, the regional(Continued on Page Two)Booth Stresses Reason,Not Rhyme, in RhetoricThe lack of reason in today’s rhetoric, is frightening, con¬tends Dean of the College Wayne Booth, particularly in thespeeches and writings defending political positions. He ex¬plained his fears in the Student Government sponsoredlecture, “Now Don’t Try to Reasonwith Me . . . Rhetoric Today: Left,Right and Center,” in Mandel Halllast night.BOOTH acknowledged certain ob¬stacles to reason. “Man was tradi¬tionally known as the rational ani¬mal; in that view reason wasSpecial Vietnam ReportSaigon Has Relaxed Lookby Howard MoffettThe Collegiate Press ServiceSAIGON (CPS) — Saigon is probably the world’s most relaxed center of intrigue, violenceand war. It doesn’t seem like a city under siege.Sloe-eyed will-o’-the-wisp girls dressed in soft slit ao dai’s and spiked heels walk narrowboulevards overhung with green elms or tropical palms.In the market old men squat onthe curb over a game of Chinesechess. Their women are nearby,chewing betel nut, grinning andspitting the juice through red-stained teeth.AT THE CERCLE Sptfrtif Viet¬namese and European girls loungein bikinis beside the pool, whilewealthy white-clad warriors shoottennis balls at each other on beau¬tifully groomed courts.In low-slung French colonial of¬fice buildings, civil servants whohave kept papers moving for ninegovernments in three years go onstamping and filing, conversing in French on difficult bureaucraticquestions, and drinking tea.The university opens a monthlate, and even then no one seems toknow the exact date until one dayclasses break out.City Shuts DownYoung women and middle-agedmen wear silk or cotton pajamasmuch of the day. It does save time,because from 12 to 3 in the after¬noon the city shuts down and peo¬ple sleep.Newcomers are often baffled bythe casual air that hangs overmuch of Saigon. “I thought there was a war going on here,” onefive-day veteran said recently.Saigon is hot and muggy. It isalso a place where war is no longeran emergency condition but thenormal state of things. A certainpercentage of the population hasbeen engaged in killing as a profes¬sion for many years, and the tend¬ency has been to turn it into anine-to-five job. A nine-to-five jobloses its excitement after a while. man’s very essence,” he asserted.“But it takes no great learning toremind us that much that we thinkof as distinctively human—love,poetry, martyrdom—-can present it¬self in forms that seem to violatereason—or perhaps to transcendit.”We cannot even use reason toprove that the reasoning process it¬self is valid, Booth admitted. Yethe said he still has faith in man’sreasoning and is distressed by ananti-rational trend in some of to¬day’s prominent intellectuals.Marshall McLuhan, professorat the University of Toronto,who has recently drawn public at¬tention to his views on the relationof communication methods to oursociety, came under Booth’s criti¬cism. McLuhan has put forth newconcepts, Booth claimed, withoutfeeling obliged to support themwith facts.TODAY'S magazines are filledwith “anti-essays”, Booth claimed,referring to such varied periodicalsas Playboy, The New Republic,Time, and Fact. Booth sees TimeMagazine as the most flagrant ex¬ample of anti-reasoning, usingquotes from articles to show howthe editors mixed facts and opin¬ions. He quoted Ralph Ingersoll,former publisher of Time: “Theway to tell a successful lie is toThough it doesn’t move very fast,Saigon is one of the world’s busiest ■ include enough truth in it to makeand most crowded urban areas, j it believable—and Time is the most(Continued on Page Three) i successful liar of our time.”Basketball Season Starts^Coco-Colo" and "Colt" or* r*gW*r*d trad*-marli which id*i»H#y only lit product of TV* Coca-Cola Co*pl*y.Oh-oh,bettercheck thepunchbowl.Rockefeller Scion To Wed Sharon Percy;Hitching To Occur at John D/s Chapel?The story is going around j Chapel was closed during eveninghours with the explanation thatthat Rockefeller Chapel willprobably be the site for theMarch 1967 marriage of JohnD. Rockefeller IV, great-grandsonof the University’s founder, toSharon Percy, daughter of Sena¬tor-elect Charles Percy, a memberof UC’s Board of Trustees.The Chapel currently plays hostto numerous cultural events, non-denom inational religiousservices, and, according to Dean E.Spencer Parsons, about a dozenweddings per year.Old-timers at Chicago will re¬member the days when the Chapelused to be the scene of less formalevents. During Robert MaynardHutchins’ term as Chancellor, the “more souls had been conceivedthan saved there.”According to a persistent legend,it was in Rockefeller Chapel thatSevern Darden, who has sincegained notoriety as a leading mem¬ber of the Second City troupe, out¬faced the campus cops.It seems that Darden was seren¬ading his girl at the organ, whenone of the UC police came in toinvestigate the noise. A chase outof the Keystone Kops followed.Eventually Darden, out of breath,threw himself down where the altershould he, shouting: “Sanctuary,sanctuary!” The cop sheepishlywalked away.—DHRCalendar of EventsFriday, December 2ATHLETIC EVENT: Varsity swimmingmeet, Bartlett Gymnasium. 3:30 pm. BTeam vs. Wilson Junior College.CONCERT: Collegium Musicum, con¬cert of English music. Bond Chapel,8:30 pmFILM: "Potemkin,” Sergei Eisenstein.Mandel Hall, 7:30 and 9:30.COLLOQUIUM: "Language and Mean¬ing in Measuring Social Organization”,by Aaron V. Cicourel. Professor of So¬ciology, University of California at San¬ta Barbara Discussants: James Davis,UC Dept of Sociology, Philip Abrams,Dept, of Sociology, U of C. Soc. Sci. 122,8:00 pm.LECTURE: "The Biblical Basis forJewish-Christian Dialogue,” by RabbiManfred Vogel, Dept, of Religion,Northwestern University, with a re¬sponse by Professor J. Coert Rylaars-dam. Divinity School. Swift Commons, 8pm. no adm. chge. public.LECTURE: "The Military, the Jew andthe State of Israel,” Colonel Bar-on,Chief Education Officer of the IsraeliArmy. 8:30 pm. Hillel House, 5715 S.Woodlawn.DANCE: Shorey House Grand Premiereof “Oedipus and the Mothers”,, PierceTower Cafeteria, 8:30 pm.SERVICES: Yavneh in Hillel. HillelBasement, 4 pm, 5715 S. Woodlawn.DINNER: Adat Sfhalom Shabbat Meals,3rd Floor, Ida Noyes, 5:30.KOINONIA: Dinner (75c), The Rev.Walter Stuhr discusses the churches’ in¬volvement in the West Side Organiza¬tion.TRAVELOGUE: on Switzerland. Stu¬dents 50c. othes $1 8:15, L ternationalHouse. 1414 E. 59th.Saturday, December 3ATHLETIC EVENT: Varsity swimmingmeet. Oak Park High School, Prelimi¬naries 9 am. Finals 8 pm. MidwestOpen Meet.ATHLETIC EVENT: Varsity Basketballgame, Field House, 8 pm. Lake ForestCollege.CONCERT: University Symphony Or¬chestra, Mahler, Haydn, Wernick, Stra¬vinsky, 8:30 pm., Mandel Hall.DINNER: Circle Pines Annual Pot luckdinner, 5-12, Folksinging. Folkdancing,led by Frank & Roxy Alberg, experi¬mental films. Poetry reading. Familiesand students welcomed, Hyde ParkNeighborhood Club, 5480 S. Kenwood.COFFEE HOUR: Open discussion onthe problems of social research, withAaron Cicourel and David Street, UCDept, of Sociology, 10:30 am, SwiftCommons.COLLOQUIUM: "The Changing Face ofSociology,” 1:30 pm, Raymond Mack,Chairman, Dept, of Sociology, North¬western University. Discussants: Don¬ald Levine, UC Dept, of Sociology, Na¬than Keyfitz. Chairman, UC Dept, ofSociology. Swift Commons.DISCUSSION: "A PhenomenologicalApproach to Sociological Research,”3:30 pm. Gendlin, Psychology-Chicago;Cicourel,-Santa Barbara; Rothman, So-ciology-Chicago; Rosenberg, Psycholo-gy-Chicago. Swift Commons.LECTURE: Erika Himmler, MidwestSecretary of the American Nazi Party,will speak on “Ship the Negroes Backto Africa!”SERVICES: Yavneh in Hillel, HillelBasement. 9:15, Followed by Kiddush.LUNCH: Adat Shalom Shabbat Meals,3rd floor, Ida Noyes, Noon, Prof. MarcGalanter. Guest.SERVICES: Yavneh in Hillel, HillelBasement, 4 pm, followed by SholoshSeudos.Sunday, December 4CONCERT: Contemporary ChamberPlayers of the University of Chicago,Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm., Kirchner, Wer¬nick. Lombardo, Martirano, Babbitt.SERVICE: Rockefeller Memorial Chap¬el. 11 am, Preacher The Reverend B.Davis Napier. Dean of the Chapel. Stan¬ford University, Palo Alto, California."On Frustration and Mystery.”Monday, December 5LECTURE: "Medieval Science,” JohnMurdoch, Professor of History of sci¬ence, Harvard University, Classics 10,2:30 pm.LECTURE: David Crook, Chinese Resi¬dent for past 20 years, sponsored bySDS 8 pm, Mandel Hall.Tuesday, December 6MEETING: 8:15 pm. Ida Noyes EastLounge, Friends of the Freedom Move¬ment will be participating in voter reg¬istration drives and other civil rightsactivities in the Southern states duringwinter vacation—for those interested.CONCERT: 8 pm. Bond Chapel, Renais¬ sance Christmas Music, by EpiscopalStudent Choir.COURSE: Charles F. Code, M.D., MayoFoundation, “The Role of Research inthe Development of a Scholar,” 8 am.Abbott 133.LECTURE: “Chicago Public Schools:Problems and Perspectives,” Dr. JamesF. Redmond, General Superintendent ofSchools. Judd 126. 8 pm.SEMINAR: “Evolution of the TetrapodCirculatory System,” Dr. Ronald Law-son, Visiting Assistant Professor inAnatomy and Biology. UC, Anatomy104. Coffee at 3:30, Room 105, 4 pm.SEMINAR: “Classification and Chemi¬cal Pathology of the Amaurotic IdiocyGroup,” Dr. G. W. F. Edgar, visitingprofessor of Anatomy and of Pediatrics,UC. 1 pm, Billings Hospital. M 137.Tuesday, December 27THEATER: “Happy Ending” and "Dayof Absence,” Harper Theater. 8:30weekdays. 7 and 10 Sat. 2:30 and 7:30Sundays. 50% student discount. Stampf Feels Team Mature, Versatileby Syd Unger“This year’s team is a moremature and a more versatileone,” commented UC’s headbasketball coach Joe Stampf inan interview with the Maroon onMonday.The maturity of the basketballteam will have twofold significanceaccording to Stampf. It will givethem “a greater degree of organi¬zation” thus enabling them to ad¬just more rapidly to changes in theoffensive and defensive patterns oftheir opponents. Moreover, it willenable the Marooners to fast breakmore than they have in previousyears. “The team that makes f,ew-er turnovers almost always wins.”said Stampf, “Loss of the ball with¬out a shot is very costly.” Stampffeels that this year’s team will becapable of not losing the ball whenit fast breaks.THE TENTATIVE STARTINGteam has no freshmen on it. MartyCampbell (6’5” third year student)will be the starting center. He ledthe team in field goal percentagewith a 65ro mark. Gary Day (6’4” -third year student) and DennisWalden (6*3” - second year stu¬dent) will be the starting Fowards,and “Wink” Pearson (5’8” * thirdyear student) and Dennis Zilavy(6’2” - fourth year student) or FredDietz (6’2” - second year student)will be the Guards. Doug Peterson(6’3") and Ken Hoganson (6’5”) -both seniors—would have beenstarters on the tentative rosterbut both are hampered by injuries. Cone Appoints Womer to Alumni FundJohn R. Womer, vice-presidentand director of the Great LakesMortgage Corporation, has beenappointed chairman of the Univer¬sity’s Alumni Fund. The appoint¬ment was announced by FairfaxCone, Chairman of the Board ofTrustees.Womer was graduated from theUniversity in 1935. While a student,he served as president of Psi Upsi-lon and the Inter-Fraternity Coun¬cil. and was a member of the Skulland Crescent, Iron Mask, and Owland Serpent Societies. He letteredin football for three years. Re is a past president of the Chi¬cago Mortgage Bankers Associationand a former secretary-treasurerof the Illinois Mortgage BankersAssociation, and currently servesas vice-president of the Metropoli¬tan Housing and Planning Council.' The Alumni Fund was initiated in1942 and that year collected $51,131.This year the total is nearly $400,-000. Alumni donors have increasedfrom 4.970 to 8,700.The 1967 Alumni Fund drive waslaunched on November 22. TTie soli¬citation effort will reach more than300 communities and 1,500 alumnivolunteers across the nation.Ice-cold Coca-Cola makes any campus "get-together** a party. Coca-Cola has tha taste you never got tirod of.always refreshing* That’s why things go better with Cokp. *; after Coke ♦.. after Cake*.wn4*r Hi* at/Miofftf of ft* Com-CoU Company kpu CHICAGO MAROON • December 2, 1966Chicago Maroon WEEKENDEDITIONVal. 75-No. 27 5th Anniversary YearUniversity of Chicago Friday, January 6, 1967Chicago, ill.permit Ho. 6444 SWAP Probably Not AffectedSOON TO BE ONLY A MEMORY: Stagg Field in the process ofbeing destroyed to make way for the new Regenstein Library.Council Approves PlansFor New Student RoleIn Policy Deliberationsby Michael Seidman I ed all the time,”'said Dr. H. Stan-The Council of the Univer-. ‘Z Bonnc^ a ?r°fess°r of biologyand member of the Committee ofsity Senate has passed a reso- the Council.lution giving students a formalrole in Committee of the Coun¬cil discussions. The Council is thegoverning body of the University.The resolution, passed at a Coun¬cil meeting on December 13, es¬tablishes a procedure whereby stu¬dents may submit written state¬ments to the Committee of theCouncil, the seven-man standingcommittee which conducts much ofthe Council’s business. Studentstatements should be addressed incare of the Secretary of the Facul¬ties, the Administration Building,and may be sent via the FacultyExchange.ACCORDING TO the resolution,Committee of the Council membersmay meet with appropriate studentrepresentatives upon receivingsuch a message and may carry thediscussions to the full Councilshould they so decide.The resolution emphasizes thatthe new procedure is to be usedonly for discussion of academicmatters involving the entire Uni¬versity, and that it “will be usefulonly if it does not interfere with thenumerous channels of discussionnow available.”Committee of the Council mem¬bers were quick to point out thatthe resolution makes no real depar¬ture from previous Council policy.“It is hard to say how much theresolution is creating somethingnew ar 1 how much it is calling at¬tention to something that has exist-International House hasreminded foreign visitorsthat aliens in the U.S.must report their addressduring January. The ad¬dress report cards may besecured from the Interna¬tional House adviser to for¬eign visitors, or at anypost office. The cards mustbe handed in at a postoffice. Formal Communications“There have been meetings be¬fore between students and mem¬bers of the Committee of the Coun¬cil,” Bennet continued, “but, to myknowledge, formal lines of commu¬nication have never really been es¬tablished. The events of last springclearly indicated that a need forsuch communication existed.”The Committee of the Councilwas accused by a number of stu¬dent leaders during last spring’santi-rank sit-in of being unrespon¬sive to student demands, and stu¬dents contacted after the Council’sannouncement remained uncon¬vinced that a significant changehad occurred.“I THINK this step in no wayrepresents an adequate response tothe just demands of students whoparticipated in the sit-in for a role(Continued on Page Seven) ls in Appropriations by OECHurt Local Poverty ProjectsCuts in appropriations for the war on poverty have had a severe effect on many programsfor the poor in Chicago, including the UC-based tutoring project, SWAP.The effect on programs in the Hyde Park-Woodlawn area has been mixed, but mostorganizations report that reductions in their programs will be necessary.SWAP will receive only 20 per i —;— ; 7————— —cent of its previous allocation from ! Woodlawn Organization did investigating alternative methodsthe Chicago Commission on Urban not receive funds to renew a tutor- of funding programs. On possibilityOpportunity (CCUO) the local *nS program it sponsored this year, is through the Office of Educationagencv of the Office of Economic The ProSram involved 25 tutors and of the Department of Health, Edu-Opportunity. Also SWAP received an eQual number of tutees. It re- cation, and Welfare. Some funds4n npr pphi nf ihp funHc it rprpivpH ceived a $22,000 appropriation last are also available under the Ele-in !he past Irnra the Labor DepaS ^ar. . ! -entary and Secondary Educationment. This amounts to a drop: According to CCUO, 15 programs Act.which leaves its present allocation i have been eliminated completely TOM ISGAR, a staff member ofat approximately $25 000 compared ^rom the year’s allocations. Other the Tutorial Assistance Centerto a $75,000 allocation last year. programs have been cut by as (TAC) in Washington, reported thatTHESE FUNDS were used for much as two-thirds. All such pro- Chicago and Los Angeles were thepersonnel, equipment, paying fees grams were financed through Com- only two major cities in which tuto-unH trstc fnr filters’ and sneeial [ munity Action Program funds. Oth- rial programs are being hurt espe-programs. P ; er OEO projects, such as Operation daily, although cuts have also tak-The organization is hoping to Head Start and the Job Corps, have J en place in Boston and Baltimorehave most of its funds restored byprivate foundations. Saturday,SWAP and nine other neighborhoodorganizations will meet with repre¬sentatives of several foundations todiscuss allocation of funds.SWAP’s tutoring project, thelargest part of its operation, willnot be affected, since all of its tu¬tors are volunteers.In Hyde Park, Kenwood, Wood-lawn, and South Shore, however,the Hyde Park-Kenwood Communi¬ty Council sponsored a programproviding jobs for indigent studentsso that they could remain in schoolwhile earning money. The programwas funded only through December31st, but has been extended untilFebruary 28th. Currently the orga¬nization is applying for renewal ofthe program by the Labor Depart¬ment.Staff LostA project in North Kenwood toprovide a variety of neighborhoodservices has lost all of its part-timestaff. The program was directed bythe Chicago Federation of Settle¬ments and sponsored by the HydePark Neighborhood Club. Twenty-six settlement houses across thecity sponsoring similar programsalso suffered cutbacks. However, atutoring project of the Club was nothurt by the reduction in aid. not been affected. i projects.The Chicago Commission on Hu- The Center offers advice, mate-man Relations, which is responsi- rials, and other assistance to tuto-ble for tutoring projects throughout rial projects which request it, espe-the city, reports that many tutoring daily programs operated by col-programs cannot be renewed with lege students. TAC is operated bypresent fund sources. However, the National Student Association,most of these projects have re- i under contract with the Office ofceived allocations through Febru-; Economic Opportunity,ary 28fch. | According to Isgar, the regionalA special mayoral committee is (Continued on Page Two)Booth Stresses Reason,Not Rhyme, in RhetoricThe lack of reason in today’s rhetoric, is frightening, con¬tends Dean of the College Wayne Booth, particularly in thespeeches and writings defending political positions. He ex¬plained his fears in the Student Government sponsoredlecture, “Now. Don’t Try to Reasonwith Me . . . Rhetoric Today: Left,Right and Center,” in Mandel Halllast night.BOOTH acknowledged certain ob¬stacles to reason. “Man was tradi¬tionally known as the rational ani¬mal; in that view reason wasSpecial Vietnam ReportSaigon Has Relaxed Lookby Howard MoffettThe Collegiate Press ServiceSAIGON (CPS) — Saigon is probably the world’s most relaxed center of intrigue, violenceand war. It doesn’t seem like a city under siege.Sloe-eyed will-o’-the-wisp girls dressed in soft slit ao dai’s and spiked heels walk narrowboulevards overhung with green elms or tropical palms.In the market old men squat onthe curb over a game of Chinesechess. Their women are nearby,chewing betel nut, grinning andspitting the juice through red-stained teeth.AT THE CERCLE Sportif Viet¬namese and European girls loungein bikinis beside the pool, whilewealthy white-clad warriors shoottennis balls at each other on beau¬tifully groomed courts.In low-slung French colonial of¬fice buildings, civil servants whohave kept papers moving for ninegovernments in three years go onstamping and filing, conversing in French on difficult bureaucraticquestions, and drinking tea.The university opens a monthlate, and even then no one seems toknow the exact date until one dayclasses break out.City Shuts DownYoung women and middle-agedmen wear silk or cotton pajamasmuch of the day. It does save time,because from 12 to 3 in the after¬noon the city shuts down and peo¬ple sleep.Newcomers are often baffled bythe casual air that hangs overmuch of Saigon. “I thought there was a war going on here,” onefive-day veteran said recently.Saigon is hot and muggy, ft isalso a place where war is no longeran emergency condition but thenormal state of things. A certainpercentage of the population has man’s very essence,” he asserted.“But it takes no great learning toremind us that much that we thinkof as distinctively human—love,poetry, martyrdom—can present it¬self in forms that seem to violatereason—or perhaps to transcendit.”We cannot even use reason toprove that the reasoning process it¬self is valid, Booth admitted. Yethe said he still has faith in man’sreasoning and is distressed by ananti-rational trend in some of to¬day’s prominent intellectuals.Marshall McLuhan, professorat the University of Toronto,who has recently drawn public at¬tention to his views on the relationof communication methods to oursociety, came under Booth’s criti¬cism. McLuhan has put forth newconcepts, Booth claimed, withoutfeeling obliged to support themwith facts.TODAY'S magazines are filledwith “anti-essays”, Booth claimed,referring to such varied periodicalsas Playboy, The New Republic,Time, and Fact. Booth sees TimeMagazine as the most flagrant ex¬ample of anti-reasoning, usingbeen engaged in killing as a profes¬sion for many years, and the tend- quotes from articles to show hower.cy has been to turn it into a j the editors mixed facts and opin-nine-to-five job. A nine-to-five jobloses its excitement after a while.Though it doesn’t move very fast,Saigon is one of the world's busiestand most crowded urban areas.(Continued on Page Three) ions. He quoted Ralph Ingersoll,former publisher of Time: “Theway to tell a successful lie is toinclude enough truth in it to makeit believable—and Time is the mostsuccessful liar of our time.”UC Will Benefit fromNew Proton Acceleratorby Seth MasiaThe huge proton acceleratorbeing built by the Atomic En-^ergy Commission (AEC) atWeston “will definitely affectthe University,” according to De-partment of Physics chairman M. jG. Inghram."AFTER the Weston instrument;starts running, we can expect agreat deal of interaction betweenUC people and the installation,”Inghram said. “About one third ofthe University’s physics faculty-including the Fermi Institute—areinvolved in high energy physicsand they will have access to theaccelerator.”Inghram indicated that it is notyet certain how the Weston instal¬lation will be administered, butthat it will probably be run by anation-wide association of universi¬ties, along the lines of the ArgonneNational Laboratory administra¬tion.“The official connection betweenArgonne and the new Weston accel¬erator is through the AEC; UC isconnected with each through theAssociated Midwest Universities,which administers Argonne, and the as yet unformed Weston organi¬zation,” Inghram noted.THE WESTON site was chosenby the AEC over five other sitesproposed. The following pointswere in Weston’s favor and in¬fluenced the decision.• Suitability of land, availabilityof electricity and water, and con¬struction cost estimates.• Convenience to transportation.• Proximity to Argone, UC, IIT,and Northwestern.• Proximity to Chicago industryand suburban facilities.• Equal opportunity and nondis¬crimination guarantees from localorganizations, businesses and com¬munities.“The Weston site would not havebeen chosen had it not been active¬ly supported by the local universi¬ties and research facilities,” Ingh¬ram said. Profs View Manchester ControversyKennedy Image DamagedThe recent controversy over publication of William Manchester’s book on the events sur¬rounding President Kennedy’s death “has definitely tarnished the Kennedy image some¬what,” said William H. McNeil, chairman of the UC Department of History.“Mrs. Kennedy made herself look like a foolish woman,” McNeil commented.The controversy boiled for a few ——-—-——7—...... „ “—: —dence, except as illustration,” he i felt that Manchester had erred inweeks last month, as the late Pres¬ident’s wife, Mrs. Jacqueline Ken¬nedy, at one point brought suitagainst Look magazine and HarperSi Row publishers to delete some commented.THOUGH THEY found the mate¬rial to be insignificant historicallythey defended, in general, Mrs.sections from Manchester’s book Kennedy’s right to have the sec-which she felt were too personal. tions deleted. “Though this not a, , , , clear case, she had a right to doMOST OF the material deleted what sh€ did of the effectfrom the final version, m fteopin-: that u would have on her childrenprivacy,” commentedion of several UC historians askedfor their comments, probably havelittle historical interest.“This was usually boudoir mate¬rial and will be of little historicaluse,” said Associate Professor ofHistory Peter Stearns. RichardStorr, Associate Professor of Histo¬ry, agreed. “These passages will |have little use as historical evi- j and herStorr. accepting the contract to write thebe ok. “No writer should tie himselftc restrictions like Manchesterdid,” 6tated historian John HopeFranklin. "He signed away hisfreedom by permitting Mrs. Ken¬nedy to review the manuscriptbefore publication.”STORR, HOWEVER, disagreedwith Franklin on this point. “ItBecause of the restrictions that might be that Manchester felt thatMrs. Kennedy had placed on Man¬chester such as textual review be¬fore publication, several professors this would be the only way hecould obtain certain resource ma¬terials,” he stated.Poverty Program Cuts Mean Setting ofPriorities, Searching Out AlternativesGraduate students in res¬idence in the Divisionsand students transferringfrom the College to theDivisions: Applications forfellowships and scholar¬ships are due January 15.Application forms are avail¬able in the Office of Ad¬missions and Aid. (Continued from Page One)directors of the Chicago and LosAngles regions have objections to; supporting educational programsthrough OEO money. Isgar saidthat the Chicago region is now at-, tempting to work out programs toassist the Chicago public schoolsystem with funds allocated underthe Elementary and Secondary Ed-i ucation Act, which is administeredby the U.S. Office of Education.Low Priority for EducationThe Community Action Program(CAP) of OEO issued a memo toregional officers about a monthago, Isgar said, which listed thepriorities for local programs to be .funded at the local level. In thismemo, education programs were! given low priority.Later, however, a second memowas issued, exempting tutorial pro-\ grams from the general low priori- ij ty. Most recently, to complete theconfusion, a subordinate officer inCAP issued a third memo, putting j, tutorial programs back in a lowpriority category.| AT THE MOMENT, said Isgar,[ anyone who cares strongly is able; to decide whether or not tutorialst will be funded. At the moment, Chi-[ cago regional director Ted Jones: seems to be successful in keepingI them unfunded, Isgar said. "THE ETHICAL ISSUES OF WE WON'T GO': HUMANISMAND THE SELECTIVE OBJECTOR TO MILITARYSERVICE"Speakers: Jeffrey Segall, Student at Roosevelt University,recently sentenced to four years in prison for refusingmilitary service.George Pontikas, Attorney for Mr. Segall, Memberof the Board of American Civil Liberties Union.Sunday, January 8, 1967 at 10:45 AM atHyde Park Neighborhood Club5480 So Kenwood AvenueA Community Forum Program sponsored by the PublicAffairs Committee of the Chicago Ethical Society at itsregular Sunday Meeting. The public is invited.STUDENT GOVERNMENT PRESENTSTHE MIDWEST'S OLDEST AMATEUROPERA GROUP - THE AMERICANOPERA COMPANYinVERDI’SLA TRAVIATASATURDAY, JANUARY 14MANDEL HALL, 8:15 P.TICKETS: $4 and $3 - $1 Discounts toStudents. Tickets on Sale TODAY inStudent Government Office, Ida Noyes,(x3274) from 1-5 pm, Monday - Friday.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 6, 1967250 Plan April ProtestStudents "Mobilize” for ArmyOf Opposition to Viet Viarby David A. SatterOver 250 students from all over the country met at UClast week and decided to support a nationwide “mobiliza¬tion" of opposition to the war in Vietnam, planned for theweek of April 8-15.The mobilization will consist ofanti-war activity on individualcampuses and in communitiesacross the country and will be cli¬maxed with massive demonstra¬tions in New York and San Fran¬cisco, April 15. The week’s protestis being called a mobilization be¬cause the organizers hope to in¬volve many different groups—including labor, religious, and civil I r "a V' * * * *’ .wnot ^ri- .ts groups-in the week's activi- ^tended a seperat* studentv8 5 1 | action. She argued that universitiesties< I play a special role in making the 1CONTROVERSY AT last week’s war in Vietnam possible. She point¬meeting, which called itself the ; ed to the defense research conduct-!“Student Strike Conference,” cen- ed by university professors and thetercd around the question of wheth- involvement of universities with theer a seperate student action—like a 1 draft as examples of the ways instrike—would factionalize the! which universities were ‘‘rotten to;anti war movement. I the core.” “We’ve got to get down*Steve Kindred, representing thenational leadership of the Studentsfor a Democratic Society (SDS)argued that separate student ac¬tion in the spring in opposition tothe Vietnam war would workagainst the development of a broadbased anti-war movement.Student ActionBettina A p t h e k e r, who also into the bowels of the universitiesand clean them out,” she said.The meeting never formally tookup the question of a student strikebecause of the widespread senti¬ment that a national studentstrike would have little chance ofsuccess.The conference did, however,propose the holding of strikes atfive selected campuses as part ofthe anti-war activity planned forthe week preceding the demonstra¬tions on April 15th.THE CONFERENCE decided af¬ter marathon sessions on Thursday,December 29 and Friday, Decem¬ber 30 to organize separate stu¬dent mobilization as part of thespring protest in an attempt to“reach the nation’s college stu¬dents.” The conference also decid¬ed to concentrate their efforts on1.) bringing the troops home, 2.)opposition to the draft, and 3.) end¬ing university complicity in thewar effort. China Expert Young ToSpeak at UC Law SchoolOn China NegotiationsSaigon Faces an American Invasion(Continued from Page One)There are two and a half millionpeople living here now, one-sixth ofthe population of South Vietnam.The city was built for about halfthat number: it has doubled in thelast five years.SAIGON WAKES early. Curfewends at 4 am and the ten greatmarkets of the capital open forbusiness. A stream of peasantsbrings chickens, pigs, rice, vegeta¬bles and fruit into town. By noonall the food has been bought, thecentral market is deserted, andrats the size of kittens scuttle alongthe cement gutters gnawing onvegetable husks and other refuse.By seven in the morning mainarteries are choked with batteredlittle blue-and-yellow Renault taxis,pedicabs, motorpedicabs, bicycles,three-wheeled motor buses, regularbuses, motor scooters, jeeps,trucks, American sedans, horse-drawn carts, motorcycles andswarms of pedestrians.The stalls of the “common man’sPX” ha-ve been set up downtown.Army ponchos are spread on side¬walks and vendors hawk every¬thing from French toothpaste toAmerican whiskey and C-rations.Mothers nurse their babies as theysit cross-legged in the sun, teen¬agers hold out sunglasses or ciga¬rette lighters, tiny little girls grabyour hand and stuff a bag of pea¬nuts into it, and everybody asks,“You buy? Cheap, cheap.”BuildingEverywhere people arebuilding—hotels, apartments, of¬fices, private homes. Saigon’s firstdepartment store is going up on TuDo Street. Off a back alley near asewer-canal, truckloads of rubblefill in a plot of swamp, and twoweeks later workers are finishingthe second story of a new house.Bricks are thrown up one by one toa middle man who stacks themwhile a third lays them in withcheap mortar.In the harbor, port congestionties up tons of imports for months,while a few hundred yards awayprices soar as speculators hoardthe goods that do get through, le¬gally or not.American GI’s in olive drabfatigues hang from telephone poles,trying to bolster the city’s saggingand overworked telephone systems.SAIGON IS A jaded city. Thereare no innocents here, not even lit¬tle kids. Everything happens in thestreets, and a ten-year-old Viet¬namese girl is likely to know moreabout the way adults behave in thedark or under stress than a 20- year-old American college boy.Layers of dust give busy streetsthe same dull yellow look as thestucco walls around French villasand office buildings.For lack of private toilet facili¬ties, many urinate or defecatealleys and streets. A year ago pilesof garbage lay rotting on Saigon’smain boulevards, and even now insome places the trucks can’t cart itaway fast enough.On Tu Do (Freedom) Street, oncea fashionable office and shoppingdistrict, scores of bars now cater toAmerican GI’s. The dull, inevitablepump of Nancy Sinatra or the Bea¬tles lasts from three in the after¬noon to eleven at night, when mli-tary police move through to hustlelingerers home before curfew.Bar GirlsInside, a young air cavalrymandown from An Khe tells a sad-looking girl the same war story hetold another girl last night, andwishes he were telling it to thegirl back home. For her part, thebar girl tells him in broken Englishabout her divided family — maybethe same story she told last night,maybe not — and wonders if hewill take her home. She made moremoney last week than her fatherdid last year. Prices are highernow though.Outside, teen-age boys peddlepornography and young men withmotor scooters and old men withpedicabs offer a ride home, and a“nice young girl — cheap.”Students dodging the draft buyforged credentials, and moneychangers — who often turn out tobe sleight of hand artists or secretpolice agents — promise double theofficial rate for greenbacks.THE REFUGEES and the poorlive in their alleys on the perimeterof the middle-class city. Thesethoroughfares, some of them all ofthree feet wide, wind in intermin¬able mazes wherever there isground to build a house.Despite the weariness, the close¬ness and the heat, Saigon’s culturehas a spontaneity that twenty yearsof war has not stamped out.Delta hospitality is famousthroughout Southeast Asia; anyguest is given the best in the house.Night life is tinny, but those whofrequent the city’s clubs give it apulsing rhythm of its own. Any sol¬dier lives close to the surface, andthe Vietnamese infantryman tendsto be more fatalistic than most. Aterrorist grenade or a drunken offi¬cer’s pistol shot could end it anytime. Private dance parties requirea permit, but many young hostsand hostesses bake their chances and often wind up with the policeas uninvited guests.French influence is still evidenteverywhere. Those city boys whohave managed to avoid the draftoften affect French styles in dress,in haircuts, and speech.(Continued on Page Six) “Negotiations with the Chi¬nese Communists” will be thesubject of a lecture today byKenneth T. Young, the formerU.S. Ambassador to Thailand andone of the few Americans whohas had experience negotiatingwith the Red Chinese.A guest of the University of Chi¬cago Center for Policy Study,Young will speak at 4:30 pm at theWeymouth Kirkland Courtroom ofthe Law School.IN THE PAST 30 years Youngfrequently has had direct contactwith the Communist Chinese. For awhile he was a student at LingnanUniversity in China. After WorldWar II he served the Defense De¬partment as an expert on the FarEast and later directed State De¬partment offices on East Asian af¬fairs.Twice Young has served on theUnited States delegation to the UNGeneral Assembly, and from 1961to 1963 he was US Ambassador toThailand and a representative onthe SEATO council.YOUNG WAS present at the Jap¬anese peace conference after WorldWar II and served as a representa¬tive to the talks which resulted in acease-fire for the Korean conflict in Kenneth T. Young1954. In 1954 he attended the Gene¬va conference on Korea and Indo¬china.Young’s writings include TheSoutheast Asia Crisis (1966) andUnited States Negotiations withCommunist China, 1954-1966, whichwill soon be published. He is theeditor of Essays on Vietnam (AsiaSociety Journal, April 1966) andco-editor with Gilbert White, pro¬fessor of geography at UC, of TheProspects for Southeast Asia.fabrics&yarnsall 20% off or morew fabuar^ 5225 7,ar/K>r’ “ U?* 5. 363-2249A1. all wool plaid, orange, pink, and tan,was$8.48. .. sale price $5.982. cotton knit herringbone, black and white, was $2.98... sale price $1.983. matte jersey, unbonded for draping, rust, red, green, and black, was $1.98, saleprice ; $1.294. bonded wop| plaid, orange, gold, and pink, was $1 2.98, sale price .$8.9845. bonded cottop knit, grey and avocado.argyle, was $3.98, sale price $1.98 ^A:A■4■«January 6, 1967 CHICAGO MAROONNew OrganizationFund Drive Cruises OnEnergy output will intensifyin the University’s “Campaignfor Chicago,” as regional or¬ganizations of volunteers in Chi¬cago and 35 other metropolitanareas comb the country for furthercontributions toward the $160 mil¬lion three-year fund drive."LAST YEAR we concentratedon major gifts. Now, we are mov¬ing into phase two of the drivewhere volunteers will solicit cor- tv. After these possible donors arereached, the campaign will furtherexpand to contact the generalpublic, according to Kennedy, whois also a trustee of the University.MORE THAN 65 Chicago areabusiness and civic leaders com¬prise the Chicago regional volun-teer organization which is subdivid¬ed into three main committees:corporate, individuals and parents. Segal Will PresentViews on the DraftJeffrey Segal, a Roosevelt Uni¬versity student who is appealing afour-year sentence for failing to re¬port for induction, will present hisviews on the draft this Sunday.Segal will speak at the adultmeeting of the Chicago Ethical So-j ciety at 10:45 am, in the Hyde Park iNeighborhood Club. Also on the •program will be George Portikas.,a lawyer and board member of theAmerican Civil Liberties Union. ISubject of the program is “TheEthics of ‘We Want Gold’: Human¬ism and the Selective Objector.”porations, alumni, patents of stu¬dents and individuals,” said DavidM. Kennedy, Chairman of theBoard of the Continental IllinoisNational Bank and Trust Companyand Chairman of the Chicago Re- ;gion Campaign Organization.Since its announcement in Octo¬ber, 1965. the Campaign for Chica- !go has received $71.5 million ingifts, nearly one-half of the goal :hoped to be reached by the end of |1968.In 1967, the campaign will con- |centrate on individuals with some jpersonal contact with the Universi- jDoc Films Blows MindWith Three Film SeriesDoc Films will once again show'three film series this quarter. The |Tuesday night series will be devot¬ed to American Comedy, featuringmovies with W. C. Fields, Buster ,Keaton, and The Marx Brothers, jThe Blown Mind, Wednesday’s se¬ries, will present films by Josef von !Sternberg, Orson Welles, andAlfred Hitchcock, among others. IFilms about religion will be shown jin Friday’s series, God Lives!, 1which includes films by Robert.Bresson, Carl Dreyer, Cecil B. De-Mille, and Federico Fellini, and be¬gins tonight with The Beatles inHelp! at the Law School Audito- |riurn. Associate Memberships, goodat all series showings, are again \available at five dollars. College Editors To Institute SeminarsCriticing American Higher Education“The real scandal of highereducation today is the studentsitting in a classroom and star¬ing vacantly out the window.” ■This charge was made by one ofthe participants in a weekend semi-jnar held last year for college news-1paper editors. It presents a chal¬lenge to college newspapers to cov-1er their biggest story — the quality |of education on their own campus.!IN AN attempt to raise questionsof educational reform w’ithin thecollege press, the United StatesStudent Press Association (USSPA)initiated a series of seminars forcollege editors last fall under agrant from Carnegie Corporation ofNew York.The educational foundation lastweek announced a renewal of $70,-,000 for continuation of the projectover the next two years.“These seminars have alreadyestablished educational issues asan ongoing concern for many col- jlege papers,” said Robert A. Gross, \USSPA General Secretary and1965-66 news editor of the DailyJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 Pennsylvanian at the University of| Pennsylvania.DURING THE next two yearsUSSPA will run seven weekend andtwo summer seminars for a total of250 college editors. The weekendsessions, held in different areas ofthe country, bring together stu- jdents, educators, and professionaljournalists to explore the issues!and the role of the press.The education seminars grew outof the original aims of the five-year-old USSPA: to improve the!quality of student journalism andto promote the development of afree, responsible student press. A ,membership organization of 275;college newspapers, the Associationalso publishes the Collegiate PressService, a cooperative news servicecovering student and educationnews.“IT is rather fascinating, isn’t it?to consider the pathology of a mindbent absolutely on making a point.Mr. Robert Welch asks you tobelieve only one thing: that Mr.Eisenhower it a Communist. Thatdone, all the evidence cooperates, thepieces fit together. The assassinationgang are no different. Only believethat Warren, President Johnson, theDallas police dept, and the Beatles arein cahoots, andthe rest falls in- I For ■ fro eopy of thoto line like West Itufftnl itwi of NA-Point cadets." I TIONAl REV,EW- writ*■ to Oopt. CP-7, 150 E.■■■■Mdi 35 St„ N. Y. 14. N. Y.THE MINNS LECTURESUnder the Auspicies ofThe Trustees of the Minns Lectureship(King's Chapel and First Unitarian Church in Boston)BYTHE REVEREND JOHN W. CYRUSMinister, The First Unitarian ChurchMilwaukee, Wisconsinon the general subjectTHE LIBERAL MINISTERYThe Ministers Self-Examinationall lectures will be given in Hull Chapel of First Unitarian Church,57th and Woodlawn (chapel entrance 1174 E. 57th)at 8:00 p.m.I. The Search for ClarifyWednesday, January 11II. The Search for CommilmenfWednesday, January 18III. The Hazards of an Ego-Centric CallingThursday, January 19OPEN TO THE PUBLIC AIL ARE CORDIALLY INVITED Morgenthau AdmitsOffer of Dean PostHans J. Morgenthau, UC dis¬tinguished service Professor ofPolitical Science and ModernHistory, is among those beingconsidered for appointment as deanof the American University Schoolof International Service.According to Morgenthau, a ma¬jor critic of United States govern¬mental policies in Vietnam, the sit¬uation has changed little since areport that appeared in the Wash¬ington Post on December 18, 1966—in which he confirmed thatseveral “informal soundings” hadbeen made, but that no concreteoffers have been presented by AU.“I have said that I would look atthe matter. However, there is noth¬ing firm at this point,” Morgenthausaid at that time.The school has lacked a deansince August when Dean Charles O. Lerche died. Serving as actingdean since that time has been FJackson Pitotrow while a facultycommittee conducts a search for apermanent replacement for Lerche.Morgenthau also serves as direc¬tor of the Center for the Study ofAmerican Foreign Policy in addi¬tion to his professorship at UC.In as good a spotas you are today ?Well-informed ?Up on things?Intimatelyacquainted with thestate of the art in your fieldof study? wherewilljou be•Vwirsfromnow?Or will you (through no faultof your own) be dangerouslyclose to the brink ofobsolescence?Could happen. Often does.Which is one good reason toconsider a career at MITRE.MITRE is pioneering in thedesign and engineering ofcomplex information, sensor,command, control and com¬munications systems for theUnited States Government.Our assignments include suchprominent electronic systemsas the NORAD CombatOperations Center, the Back¬up Interceptor CommandSystem for SAGE, and theNational Military CommandSystem (NMCS).These projects represent themost important systemschallenges of our time, andrequire the most advancedthinking on a broad range ofscientific problems and thetechnologies needed tosolve them.As a member of the MITREteam, you’ll be working in anatmosphere of scientificinquiry, alongside colleaguesof outstanding reputation,with the opportunity to make an original contribu¬tion to your area ofinterest. In anenvironment likethis, there’s notelling how faryou can go. But this much iscertain. You’ll not be over¬looked, and you can’t beovertaken.Salary? Benefits? They'recompetitive, of course. More¬over, we have an excellentEducational Assistance andStaff Scholar Program.(Many MITRE employeespresently attend nearbyeducational institutions includ¬ing Harvard, Boston University,Boston College, Brandeis.Northeastern, MIT, and Tufts.)Depending on your interests,qualifications and currentopenings, you may start in oneof the following, or other,departments:System Planning andEngineeringAir and MissileDefense SystemsSystem DesignSystems AnalysisAir Traffic SystemsTactical SystemsStrategic SystemsRange InstrumentationInformation SciencesComputer 4 DisplayTechnologyCommunicationsElectronic WarfareRadar Designand TechnologyInformation ProcessingSurveillance andWarning SystemsApplied MathematicsTechnical representa¬tives of The MITRECorporation will beconducting interviewson campus January 9, MITREC O R P O RATIONAn Equal Opportunity Employer (MAT)1967If you have a MS, or Ph D. in Electrical Engineering, Physics, or Mathematics and want?r,l„n,,0frna,i°n regarding opportunities at MITRE, call collect, James L. Glmos (617)Z71-2078 or write in confidence to College Relations Coordinator, The MITRE Corporation,Box CN10, Bedford, Massachusetts. J4 • CHICAGO MAROON • 'January 6, 1967IFOR U.S.ARNEAREST RECRUITING STATIONIf you’re about to graduate, and you’re eligiblefor the service, there are some companies aroundthat will take a dim view about hiring you.It doesn’t pay, they say.We don’t feel that way at Mobil.If we want you, and you want us, we’ll hire youright now.When you get out of school, you can go to work.When you have to leave for the service, we’ll giveyou a leave of absence.And when you get out, you can come back to us. Right now, we need all kinds of good people:engineers, geologists, geophysicists, accountants,financial analysts, sales representatives, chemists,programmers and systems analysts. And a lot ofother people we don’t have space to list.We’ll be coming to your campus soon* If you’dlike to talk things over with us, we’d like to meetyou and discuss both of our futures.The way we look at it, anyone worth hiring in thefirst place is worth waiting for. ^ j| ^ ■ |•February 27 is the date. Your placement or guidance counselor can tell you ttie time and place. • ■wdioiiew.January 6, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Special Correspondent's ReportSaigon: Relaxed Center of Violence and Intrigue(Continued from Page Four)announced, and Vietnamese playsdraw large audiences.Buddhist activity has waned con¬siderably since Prime MinisterKv’s successful crackdown on theStruggle Movement in Hue lastspring. Still, the pagodas are filledwith saffron-clad monks trying topatch up or widen further the riftin the Buddhist Unified Church.Buddhist and Confucian funeralsperiodically fill the streets withcolor.The newspapers are still subjectto government censorship, but po¬litical discussions in restaurantsand cafes are often heated andfree. Unlike the last days underDiem, students now do not hesitateto criticize the regime, and chargesof corruption and/or incompetenceare regularly if quietly flung atsome of the Directory’s leadinggenerals.BUT POLITICAL discussions,even those involving the new Con¬stituent Assembly, inevitablysmack of resignation. South VietNam is at war against itself, Sai¬gon is under siege, and even themost hopeful know that as long asthis goes on, and maybe longer, 1 the generals will wield effectivepower.More than anything, Saigon is atentative, uncertain city, a city onthe defensive against force —against the military, against theAmericans, and against the VietCong. If there is a universal moodhere, it is the urge to protect andcling to what little culture and hap¬piness and peace can be salvagedfrom the war, from well-meaningbut rough and free-spending Ameri-| can troops, and from infiltratingterrorists.The faces of the people tell younothing. Little children are oftenquick to smile and say, “Hell,O.K.” Older people seldom eithersmile or scowl and teen-agers and! young adults sometimes seem asimpassive or inscrutable as theirparents.A visitor would guess that, ex¬cept for those who are making a liv¬ing off them, Vietnamese in Saigondo not particularly care for Ameri¬cans but are waiting to see if theyare going to win. One senses thatj this is still an open question, and| that no one is in a hurry to predictthe answer.STUDENTS WELCOME BACK!Please bring to our attention any way that we may serveyou during the winter quarter.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH --NEW A USED-Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V/s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to ttwdonH with ID oardo"TO MY CAMPUS CLIENTS:You have recently been offered an opportunity to change thedistribution of your contributions to the TIAA/CREF PensionPlan. The net effect is to allow you to put more money intovariable dollars; namely, 75% as opposed to the maximum be¬fore of 50%.As a general rule, if you have sax o<r more years before retire*ment we would highly recommend you take the maximumamount in the CREF account. Historically, about 85% of all ofour economy has been on the inflationary side and about15% on the deflationary side. If this trend continues (andthere is reasonable evidence that it will) in the long run, youwill do substantially better in CREF than you will in TIAA.We make this recommendation in order that you may get themost out of your personal estate. If you wish to examine othermethods to add to or supplement your estate, please feel freeto call on us for the best in Estate Planning.Ralph i. Wood, Jr., C.L.U.Insurance since 1950Sun Life Assurance Companyof CanadaOne North LaSalle StreetChicago, Illinois 60602FRanklin 2-2390 t 798-0470." No city can completely normalizewar. Tempers grow short, psycho¬logical tensions mount, and there isno place to go. A quiet drive in thecountry would be impossible evenif you had a car.You notice that the American of¬ficial getting out of his sedan withgold bag in hand, goes into a hotelwhose entrance is sand-bagged andguarded by a GI, like any other ofthe scores of American militarybillets in Saigon.You notice the barbed wire sur¬rounding the headquarters of theMilitary Directory at Gia Long Pal¬ace and the Prime Minister’s of¬fice on Thong Nhut.You read every once in a while ofa taxi driver wounded by a GI sen¬try, alert for terrorists, who shottoo quickly when the taxi brokedown in front of his billet.YOU NOTICE AN American cardisappearing into the big USAIDNo. 1 compound on Le Van DuyetStreet. A Vietnamese guard hasjust walked around it with whatWOULD PREMIER*'&cetd*icUU&("Summer and Smoke")by TENNESSEE WILLIAMSstarringDOLORES SUTTON - LEE RICHARDSONwith BEVERLY YOUNGEROpens Jan. 13 looks like a snow shovel. On closerexamination, it is a mirror, usedto check for mines which might beattached to the underside of thecar.Between 12 and 4 in the morning,the streets are quiet except for anoccasional convoy rumblingthrough the city on its way to abattlefield.Night in Saigon belongs to the po-! lice. During curfew, they movethrough each of the city’s lien gia's! (neighborhoods of ten to fifteenfamilies presided over by a headman responsible to the offi-1 cials),and make spot checks at dif¬ferent homes, called “family rollcalls,” to discover infiltrators.On the outskirts of the city, or-1ange flares drift slowly down over jCINEMACHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANCannes Prize Winner In Color"A MAN & A WOMAN"Daily News —"Director should be saluted."Students $1.25 with I.D. card every daybut Saturday.Weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. & Sun.open 1:30 forest and paddy as armed helicop¬ters hover over firefights betweeninfiltrating guerrillas and govern¬ment troops defending the capital ssecurity belt. Jets roar past over¬head.And in the distance, there is thedull boom of mortars lobbing shellsinto supposed Viet Cong positionsbeyond the city’s defense perime¬ter.It is at night that the war closesin on Saigon.Friday and Saturday, Jan. 6-7Monday through Friday,Jan. 9-13FEMALE SUBJECTSNEEDEDby Hyde Park MarketResearch GroupAges 17’/2 to 31 Vi$2 per hour for spare timeparticipation hours arranged tofit your schedule. For furtherinformation call 684-2438Allied Research Council5464 So. Shore Drive20 films:$5A Doc Films Associate membership will cost you five dollars. With ityou’ll be able to see all nineteen of our regularly scheduled movies. Andtwo private showings, one of which feature a documentary on the warin Vietnam. You get to use our library. You get guaranteed seating atevery showing. And you save money, even if you come to only nineof our showings.Our schedule for the quarter is below. When you realize that a DocFilms Associate Membership is Chicago’s biggest movie bargain,give us a call. The number is MI 3-0800, extension 2898.Tuesdays: AMERICAN COMEDY, January 10: W.C. Fields in MILLION DOLLAR LEGS/Eddie ClineJanuary 17: SULLIVAN’S TRAVELS/Preston SturgesJanuary 24: The Marx Brothers in HORSEFEATHERS/Norman McLeodJanuary 31: THE PHILADELPHIA STORY/George CukorFebruary 7: THE NAVIGATOR/Buster KeatonFebruary 14: Greta Garbo in NINOTCHKA/Ernst LubitschWednesdays: THE BLOWN MIND: Strange Views of RealityJanuary 11: FREAKS/Tod BrowningJanuary 18: THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER/Jean EpsteinJanuary 25: VAMPYR/Carl DreyerFebruary 1: THE TRIAL/Orson WellesFebruary 8: THE DEVIL IS A WOMAN/Josef von SternbergFebruary 15: MARNIE/Alfred HitchcockFridays: GOD LIVES!January 6: The Beatles in HELP!/Richard LesterShowings at 6:30, 8:30, and 10:30 in the Law SchoolAuditorium. 75cJanuary 13: TARTUFFE/F. W. MurnauJanuary 20: DIARY OF A COUNTRY PRIEST/Robert BressonJanuary 27: DAY OF WRATH/Carl DreyerFebruary 3: SIGN OF THE CROSS/Cecil B. DeMilleFebruary 10: IL BIDONE/Federico FelliniFebruary 27: THE FUGITIVE/John FordExcept where otherwise noted, all showings are in Social Sciences 122,59th and University. Admission is 60cAND!The Chicago premiere of Jean-Luc Godard’s BANDE A PARTFebruary 11, 1967Watch for details. doc films6 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 6, 1967Lab School Gets U.S. Education GrantTo Test New Social Studies ProgramDevelopment and testing of a so- formal social sciences disciplines,the curriculum materials are in- Council Votes Student Rolecial studies curriculum for the firsttwo years of secondary school willbe carried out at the University’sLaboratory Schools with the aid ofa grant from the US Office of Edu¬cation.The $30,175 grant will enable Edgar Bernstein, social studies teach¬er and associate director of fresh¬man projects at the LaboratorySchools, to evaluate the curriculumwhich he originated.The curriculum is designed to de¬velop an understanding of the com¬plex and varying relationships ofman to his environment by takingthe student through a series ofstages in the development of civili¬zation.Because the student in early highschool has no acquaintance withThree major U.S. corpora¬tions and corporation founda¬tions have made unrestrictedgifts totaling $250,000 to theUniversity.The Chicago and North WesternRailway Company has donated$75,000, the Esso Education Foun¬dation has donated $75,000, and theSanta Fe Foundation, Inc. has do¬nated $100,000.In acknowledging the donationsPresident George W. Beadle said,“These impressive gifts from theprivate sector of our economy oncemore reaffirm the commitmentthat the leadership of the Americanbusiness community has developedin the support of private higher ed¬ucation.“The University faces unprece¬dented demands in the next decadein providing — in quality as well asin quantity — the intellectual in¬struction, educational innovation. tended to lead him into discoveryof principles associated with thedisciplines.ContemporaryPlayersThe Contemporary ChamberPlayers will present a recital byCharles Van Tassel, baritone, as¬sisted by James Kidd, piano, inworks by Schoenberg, Ives,Brahms, Babbitt, Lombardo, andothers.The recital, scheduled for thisevening, January 6, at 9:30 pm inMandel Hall is open to the publicwithout charge.and research that is both scholarlyand geared to the needs of society.Our campaign for tfie University'sfuture has set a high goal, but oneRonald Twomey has been namedassistant director of personnel forthe University and personnel offi¬cer for the University’s Hospitalsand Climes.The University’s medical centeris composed of 11 hospitals and 38specialty clinics. They are servedby more than 1,500 employees, notincluding the medical staff.Twomey is a member of the (Continued from Page One)in University decision making,”said Jeff Blum, a student in thecollege and a member of the Fiskecommittee on student-faculty rela¬tions.“I think it represents a useful de¬vice because it is a formal channelof communications between stu¬dents and a governing body of theUniversity,” Blum continued. How¬ever, I don’t think it represents asignificant advance because itsscope is too narrow and any matterof serious concern to the Universitywill always find its way to theCouncil. If similar channels of com¬munication could be opened be¬tween students and trustees andstudents and all other governingbodies in the University—the Col¬lege Council, the divisions, etc.—which must be met if Chicago is toprovide the leadership in the aca¬demic community that it must of¬fer.”American Hospital Association Per¬sonnel Directors Committee on Ed¬ucation, and has been an instructorat several AHA personnel insti¬tutes.This year, Twomey was selectedby the AHA as one of twelve na¬tional nominees for membership onthe board of directors of the Ameri¬can Society for Hospital PersonnelDirectors. then this device could becomemore significant. However, it wouldstill not represent any serious ad¬vance towards student decisionmaking.”''Ab|ecf Appeals'*An SDS leader who declined to beidentified was even more forcefulin his denunciation of the newmove. “This isn’t relevent to ourconcerns,” he stated. “We’re inter¬ested in a real role for students indecision making, not in a proce¬dure for abject appeals.”Other students, however, weremore inclined to credit the CouncilThe Henry Schultz rotatingresearch professorship in thesocial sciences has been esta¬blished at the University.The first recipient will be LloydA. Fallers, professor of anthropolo¬gy, who will hold the professorshipfor the 1967-68 academic year.The professorship will allow therecipient to devote his time for afull academic year to research ofhis own choice. The professorshiphas been financed for a limited pe¬riod of time and additional fundswill be sought to make it perma¬nent.Henry Schultz was a member ofthe University faculty from 1926until his death in an automobile ac¬cident in 1938 at the age of 41. Hewas acting chairman of the Depart¬ment of Economics in 1934 and act¬ing dean of the Division of the So¬cial Sciences in 1937.His last book, The Theory andMeasurement of Demand (1938), isconsidered one of the classic worksin economics.Fallers joined the University fac¬ulty in 1952, but left the followingyear to teach at Princeton Univer- I with making a significant advance.“This step opens up a channel ofI communications that did not existbefore,” said Michael Klowden,President of the Inter-House Coun¬cil."IT'S a new way, and I think avery effective way, of getting stu¬dent views across.” he continued.“The Council’s plan is a good com¬promise between opening up chan¬nels of communication and stilllimiting them so that they don’t getswamped by people with gripes.] The new move may not be theanswer, but its a good first step.”si'ty. From 1954 to 1957, he was as¬sociated with the East African In¬stitute of Social Research as a fel¬low and later as its Director. From1957 to 1960, he taught at the Uni¬versity of California at Berkeley,after which he returned here.Fallers has specialized in -com¬parative studies of the process ofmodernization, comparative reli¬gion, and East African and Turkishaffairs.He is the author of Bantu Bur¬eaucracy (1956) and editor andco-author of The King's Men (1964).TAl-SAM-\&Ntl AM es Ml PMORDM W VMO OVTISIS IhIIMBl pm 4-I0B2HELP!The Beetles' second movie. At Doc Films tonight. Lew School Auditorium, 40th end Greenwood. 6:30, 8:30, end 10:30 pm. 75 cents.UC To Receive Unrestricted GrantsTwomey New Clinic Personnel Director Fallers Gets Research ProfessorshipPIZZA, PIZZA, PIZZA, PIZZANicky's Pizza And Restaurant"ROYAL PIZZA BY NICKY THE UNCROWNED PIZZA KING"Fast Delivery Hot from the Oven 1208 EAST 53RD STREET^WWWWJWUWViW^VWVWWJVJVVAneVW.WUVVVW-WUWJWeWSA.ftiWWArJWUWAJSNICKY'S TAKE-OUT MENUAssortments Small Medium UrgeCHEESE 140 2.20 3.20SAUSAGE 1.65 2.50 i 3.50ANCHOVIE 1.65 2.50 3.50ONION . .. 1.50 2.30 3.30PEPPER 1.65 2.50 3.50MUSHROOM 1.65 2.50 350BACON 1.75 2.60 3.60HAM 1.75 2.60 3.60CHICKEN LIVERS 1.75 2.60 3.60PEPPERONI 1.85 2.85 3.85SHRIMP 2.00 3.00 4.00GROUND BEEF 1.65 2.50 3.50COMBINATION 2.50 3.75 ■ 5.00EXTRAS ADDED 35 .50 .75RIPE OLIVES EXTRA 35 .50 .75ONIONS EXTRA 15 .25 .35We Put Cheese on All Our PizzasWe serve Royal Crown Cola, Diet-Rite Cola and Nehi flavors.January 6, 1967 ® CHICAGO MAROON• {*• „ -i !•More Trivia...The resolution passed last month by the Council of the Uni¬versity Senate providing for written suggestions from studentsLo the Committee of the Council is interesting.It is not interesting because it represents anything new orgenerous. Rather it is interesting because it gives some clue tothe illusions which many faculty members share about themood of students at this university.Apparently those who voted for the resolution must havebeen motivated by some vague feeling that students were dis¬contented. They must have reasoned that if students are givena chance to write out and turn in their complaints, it will bepossible for faculty members to consider them. But the resolu¬tion also indicates that those who voted for it have no realconcept of what many students are asking for.Student participation means more than sending in writtensuggestions. It means have a voice in university decision¬making that counts and cannot be ignored.The Council’s resolution reminds us a little of the timidspeaker who will consent to answer questions from the floor aslong as they’re written out beforehand and he is able to discardthe tricky ones without risking a confrontation with an audi¬ence member.The Council’s resolution is an unimportant matter. The out¬dated attitude of the faculty that it represents is considerablymore important. At a faculty-run institution like the Universityof Chicago it is vital that faculty members know and under¬stand what is going on. 'This resolution indicates that those who voted for it do notreally know what is going on. Perhaps that in itself is a power¬ful argument on behalf of student participation....Fewer BooksThe beginning of the quarter is always a good time to consid¬er the state of the Bookstore. Most people, as a matter ofnecessity, are buying their textbooks there this week and ahealthy proportion of them are being impressed with thestore’s built-in inadequacies.The Bookstore does a reasonable job of supplying generaleducation textbooks, but the skimpy selection of course relatedbooks that are necessary for upper-level undergraduate andgraduate courses force many to make a trip downtown, if theywant to do their course reading.Putting books in a bookstore seems like such an obviousthing. Especially at the University of Chicago. There is reallyno reason why a first rank university should be saddled with atenth rank bookstore.It’s true that the Bookstore makes an enormous profit everyyear, but we wonder if a bookstore that really carried an exten¬sive selection of books couldn’t do even better in a universitycommunity such as this one. It’s an idea that merits considera¬tion from the people who stock the Bookstore.Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief David A. Satter |Business Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. Richter §1Assistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzJoan PhillipsNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanFeature Editor Mark Rosin §|Book Review Editors Edward Hearne 1Bryan Dunlap •.*Music Editor Edward Chikofsky ifEditor Emeritus ....'. ...Daniel Hertzberg |fEditorial Staff—Kenneth Simonson, Slade Lander, Ellis Levin, fRichard Rabens, Joe Lubenow.News Staff—John Moscow, Harold Sheridan, Angela DeVito,Robert Skeist, Ina Smith, Seth Masia, Vivian Goodman, CathySullivan, Jeffrey Blum, Leanne Star, Maxine iMiska, Alfred §|Marcus, Marge Pearson, Leslie Reeht, Helen Schary, Ann ||Garfield, John Welch, T. C. Fox, Gloria Weissman, Marlene ||Proviser, Uene Kantrov, Roger Black, Larry Hendel, Anita IfGrossman, Larry Struck, Lynn McKeever, Sanford Rockowitz, ||Peter Stone, Susan Loewy, David Jacobson, Sydney Unger, ||Michael Krauss, David F. Israel. David E. GumpertLeft Wingers, Warning:Fly Right or Ship OutLast week the UC campus wasthe site of a meeting to plan anational student strike, but some¬how the subject never came up.Instead of a strike, the 250 confer¬ence participants decided onmore traditional methods of pro¬testing—rallies, sit-ins, picketing,and boycotts—for the April 15 na¬tional “mobilization” against thewar in Vietnam.A FORMAL VOTE on the ques¬tion of a student strike was nevertaken, but no one at the confer¬ence seemed to think that a mas¬sive country-wide boycott ofclasses would have much chanceof success. They reasoned, quitesensibly, that a strike would al¬most certainly be a dismal failurefor lack of student support. Theparticipants in the conference de¬serve to be commended for theirinsight in recognizing that theanti-Vietnam war movement aspresently expressed by most ofthe new left does not commandanywhere near the dedicated sup¬port necessary for a successfulstudent strike. The conferencemight have been wise to go onestep further and consider why thepeace movement lacks such sup¬port.In my view, the more militantwing of the peace movementmight be in a far better positionto mobilize dramatic opposition tothe war in Vietnam—opposition that might take the form of a stu¬dent strike—if it recognized someof the new realities of the Ameri¬can position in Vietnam. Instead,the students at the conferencespent their time listening to ha¬rangues against the war and uni¬versity cooperation in the war ef¬fort as they considered the mostefficient ways of mobilizing inApril.ANOTHER WAY of expressingthe problem is to say that theanti-war movement has in largepart lost touch with “the main¬stream” of anti-war thinking.Many of the groups opposing thewar, as indicated by the speechesand position papers of the confer¬ence, are saying the same thingsnow that they have been sayingfor the last two years, eventhough circumstances havechanged dramatically. Two yearsago they advocated immediatewithdrawal from Vietnam on thegrounds that the United Stateswas fighting a barbaric and mor¬ally indefensible war. They weresaying the same things last week.But last week and today the Unit¬ed States is too deeply involved inVietnam to withdraw unilaterally.This is a reality that the anti warmovement must recognize.After accepting at long last thatPresident Johnson is determinedto stay in Vietnam, the anti-wargroups might seriously consider rallying to the support of such na¬tionally prominent doves as Wal¬ter Lippmann, Senators Morse,Gruening, and Fulbright, and oth¬ers. Even these vociferous oppo¬nents of President Johnson’s poli¬cy realize that a horrible amountof chaos and bloodshed would re¬sult if we withdrew now, not tomention the political and psycho¬logical side effects of such amove. Instead of advocating com¬plete American withdrawal, thepeace movement could urgeimmediate cessation of the bomb¬ing of North Vietnam, directly ap¬proaching the Viet Cong for possi¬ble talks, and withdrawing Ameri¬can troops to their present strong¬holds in the hope that the war willgradually taper off.A NATIONAL student strikecould be a powerful weapon to beused to appeal to the doubts andapprehensions many Americanshave about this role in Vietnam.But first the anti-war movementmust modify its stand, so that itis in a position to appeal to awider segment of the population.In any case, the anti-war groupshad better come up with some¬thing better than the same hack¬neyed phrases when they havetheir demonstrations in New Yorkand San Francisco April 15 if theyare going to prevent themselvesfrom falling into complete obli¬vion and having no ultimate effectthe course of the war.David L AikenSWAP, TWO Screwed byLeaders of "Other War'The Student Woodlawn AreaProject (SWAP) and The Wood-lawn Organization (TWO) areamong the front-line battlers inthe war on poverty which haverecently been screwed by the lo¬cal commanders of that “otherwar.”Along with a general cut backin support for the Office of Eco¬nomic Opportunity, the last Con¬gress ordered that money be allo¬cated to certain programs thatare politically popular, such asHead Start. This is the pre-schoolprogram that is supposed to beaimed primarily at children ofpoor families. Actually, however,more and more middle-class fam¬ilies are taking advantage of the“opportunity” provided by OEOfor their own darlings.Meanwhile, the programs underthe Community Action Programwere slashed. Some of the politi¬cal motivation behind this isclear. CAP programs are often abit too effective in helping devel¬op independent bases of politicalaction and power, which local pol¬iticians may have difficulty incontrolling. A prime example ofthis is TWO, which has, to say theleast, not been among the strongsupporters of Mayor Daley, nor ofhis Chicago Commission on UrbanOpportunity, the local communityaction agency which administers the eyes of the machine whichhas great influence in the bureau¬cracy of CCUO.It is true that CCUO grants to anumber of other tutoring projectswere slashed at the same time asthose to SWAP and TWO. In thesecases, it was presumably not aneffort to cut down potential politi¬cal threats. Most of these othertutoring projects are not “politi¬cized” as is SWAP.It is more likely that the deci¬sion to make the general reduc¬tions primarily in tutoring pro¬grams arises from a failure onthe part of CCUO—or, perhaps,of officials in the Community Ac¬tion Program generally—to rec¬ognize the value of the innovativecontributions that such indepen¬dently-run tutoring programs canmake.It is not a fault of those in OEOty for change in the educationaland political status quo. In aword, they have “rocked theboat.” This is a cardinal sin inprograms in Chicago.Another example of independentcriticism has been SWAP. Whileconcentrating most of their activi¬ty on individual help for highschool students who have beencaught in inadequate, mostly Ne¬gro inner-city schools, SWAP hasalso attempted to help its tuteesand their parents see the necessi- who are primarily responsible foroverseeing grants to tutorials.This reporter worked last sum¬mer for the Education division ofCAP in Washington, and can re¬port that the so-called ‘bureau¬crats” in OEO include many ofthe most dedicated, able personsin government service in anyagency. We do not doubt thatmany conscientious officials aretrying, against great difficulties,to be effective in CCUO.Nevertheless, the decision ofCCUO to cut tutorial programs’support, which is not being donein many other cities, does indi¬cate that the arguments put forthby those in OEO who care abouttutorials have somehow not fil¬tered down to Chicago. One canonly speculate on why Chicagochose to be backward in thisarea. We can only assume that itwas a local decision, with clearpolitical overtones. While Con¬gress is, of course, the real cul¬prit in shackling the war on lov¬erly with reductions and restric¬tions, the programs in which Chi¬cago chose to make the neces¬sary cuts indicates that somebodyup there is more interested inkeeping the boat from beingrocked than in helping communitygroups find new, imaginativeways of meeting the educationalproblems of inner-city youth.8 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 6, 1967\No Consensus at Draft MeetingDraft Alternatives Discussedby David L. AikenCan a twentieth-century radical be confortable by the side of a nineteenth-centuryliberal?That was a question going through many minds at UC’s conference on the draft, held atthe Center for Continuing Education December 4-7.Voluntarism seemed to emergeas a roosting place for a wholeaviary of doves, hawks, and evensome eagles. No official reportof any “consensus” was made forthe 3V2 day conference, however,and the birds of many featherswho seemed to flock together tosome extent have not formed anyunified flying squadron. They’restill flying in their own directions.THE CHICAGO conference is due this month, Patterson saidthe report was not yet written atthe time of the conference and thecommission’s collective mind wasstill “wide open to suggestions.”“We are seven-eighths of the waydown the road, but the last eighthis still the most important,” Patter¬son said.Reports on CommissionPatterson held to this line despitepublished news stories that thebrought together about no ex-, M.man commission, chaired by for-perts” on issues related to the; mer Assislant Au Generaldraft, including two U.S. senators, Burk Marshall has alr'ady e(fec.three congressmen, several repre- tive, rcjec(cd ^veral alter,nativessentatives of the military a flock (o ent , and wil,of professors, and a stable cent,n- , likeI ’ose ont soraegent of students who had presum-! modiflcations 0„ it.ably shown some familiarity with I since ,he commissjon-s proposal.the issues.Before the University-sponsoredconference began, however, agroup of over 200 “draft registers”met in another campus building ablock away. They heard StanghtonLynd of Yale, James Bevel ofSNCC, and two former studentswho had been tried for refusing toreport for induction—David Mitch¬ell of New York and Jeffrey Segalof Chicago.Small groups of pickets also ap¬peared briefly in front of the build¬ing where the University’s confer¬ence was being held.UC sponsored the session, with whatever it turns out to be, mustbe acted upon by Congress, there isstill no certainty that some alterna¬tive might not be adopted, howev¬er. Rep. Mendel Rivers, the daybefore the Chicago conferenceclosed, announced he had appointedhis own study committee on thesubject, which will presumably actquite independently of the Marshallcommission. Chairman of the spe¬cial Rivers-sponsored committee isGeneral Mark Clark.Main AlternativesThe two main alternatives for the1 present system were “nationalservice”—defined in differentthe aid of a $25,000 grant from the ways_and a pureiy voluntaryFord Foundation. Participants | arrr)yAmong the important modifica¬tions of the existing general struc¬ture were changes in defermentpolicies—either broaderwere invited by a planning commit¬tee composed mostly of UC profes¬sors.Students Participated or moreThe 29 students who participated limited; extensions of the groundswere nominated bv their school, or ; f°r conscientious objection;recommended by their student gov- changes in the duration of liabilityernment or newspaper. One stu-1 f°r service; the lottery; and uni¬dent, Mrs. Judy Barrett Litoff, of| versal military service.Emory University, was seated as a | ADVOCATES OF some of thefull panelist, along with the “ex- more limited modifications of theperts,” on the basis of research she Present system met considerabledid on the history of the draft. 1 agreement.ONE OF the most attentive par- Sludent d,ef'™enls' tor sample,ticipants was Brad Patterson, exec- c*™ ” Lor hstr“ng questioning,utive director of the National Com- Joh," d<J- Puinberton, executive d,-niission on Selective Service, which ; “^"wan^Totom and possible8 changes’siirc? tt know what possible rallona,e therewas ppoi“y P SenTjoh ‘ «« for « d^ermentf Harryenn last Anrit ! Marmion, staff associate for theI , American Council on Education,I gave it a try, citing the social bene¬fits of highiy educated skilled per¬sons, whose productiveness wouldbe disrupted at a crucial stage bythe draft.The inequity of student defer-weight with many participants,ment seemed to hold greaterhowever. Richard Flacks, AssistantProfessor of Sociology at UC point¬ed out that many members of Stu¬dents for a Democratic Societyhave taken a stand against the 2-Sdeferment, even though they wouldpresumably be in the greatest dan¬ger of being drafted if 2-S were ac¬tually abolished.Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of boots, over¬shoes, insulated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear, corduroys,"levis", etc., etc., etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9 30-100 THE BASIS for deferring somestudents and drafting others alsomet vociferous criticism. Most ef¬fective was the comment of Wil¬liam R. Keast, president of WayneState University, who argued thatthe presently used system of basingstudent deferments on class rank iswholly unsound because of itsconsequences for education.Wayne State is one of the fewinstitutions which have stopped thepractice of calculating class ranksamong males, as requested by theSelective Service system.“No student at Wayne State hasmet reprisals as a result of our pol¬icy against ranking,” Keast report¬ed.Booth Blasts RanksKeast’s criticism of the effects ofranking pn colleges and studentswas seconded by Wayne C. Booth,dean of the College, who pointedout that the grades on which ranksare based are themselves unreli¬able and inappropriate for use bydraft boards.The seeming tendency towardsome sort of voluntary principlecame from three basically differentdirections.First, there were those whosemain concern seemed to be individ¬ual choice. Those who wished toserve in the military could do so,and presumably would do so if in¬centives such as decent pay wereoffered. Those who objected to mil¬itary service would have no com¬pulsion to choose it or alternativeservice.This group featured several menwho spoke in favor of broadeningthe range of grounds on which mencould apply for conscientious objec¬tor status. Among them was Fred¬erick Siegler, UC Assistant Profes¬sor of Philosophy.OTHERS, such as Flacks, felt avoluntary force would probablymean a smaller army. This, hefelt, would be helpful by limitingthe president in the amount offorce he can commit to battle with¬out Congressional consent.Voluntarism also found a sympa¬thetic chord in the hearts of someof those who believed in nationalservice as a means of giving youtha choice of military or non-militaryservice.The prime exponent of a purelyvolunteer army, Milton Friedman,based his argument on both liberta¬rian grounds and economic efficien¬cy.(Continued on Page Eleven) Lynd, Flacks Speak at“We Won’t Go” Parley“This conference is aboutthose who would not and thosewho will not go,” said TomGushurst in his address to afilled Judd Hall at the opening ses¬sion of the “We Won't Go” Confer¬ence, Sunday, December 4. the one-to-one method of the draft.Jeff Segal, a former Rooseveltuniversity student sentenced to fouryears in prison for violating thedraft law, warned those present notto be frightened by the threat ofimprisonment. In talking about ma¬jor social change, one must beThe conference, organized by 32; ready to take the consequences toUC students who have publiclystated they will not serve in Viet¬nam, was held the day of the open¬ing session of the University’s In¬ternational Conference on theDraft.The organizers were assisted bya $450 grant from the Fellowship ofReconciliation.Two afternoon sessions featuringnine speakers followed by eveningworkshops and a general discussionperiod covered a variety of views1on the draft and draft resistance.In opening remarks, Gushurststated that the purpose of the con¬ference was to tackle the issues ofthe draft, not on a scholarly levelas it would be handled “across themidway,” but as it faced those whowere most affected by it. He askedthe audience to listen to the speak¬ers with open minds, with the as¬sumption that those who do notwish to go to war are justified intheir stand. one’s self and to others.In the face of his own conviction,Segal said, “I think I will go intojail and come out more earnestthan ever to fight the revolution wehave to fight.’ ’“The same people who beat theNegro people when they try to ex¬ercise their constitutional rightsare trying to draft them,” accord¬ing to John Otis Sumrall, CORE or¬ganizer from Mississippi. Sumrallfeels that the first job of the UnitedStates should be to establish free¬dom and equality at home.“The mass murder of peopledoes not solve human problems,”said James Bevel of the SouthernChristian Leadership Conference.Bevel feels that the real revolutionwhich should be taking place is notthe conflict of ideologies, but thatof the people against the military.Bevel went on to say that theway to end the war is not to consid-American cases to the French re¬sistance during the Algerian crisis. er the question of how to become aStaughton Lynd, a professor at conscientious objector, but “howe *.nive^ty’ traced the history cjoes a cjviijan organize and attackof draft resistance from its start in L concept of militarism and put it18th century England, through out of 5usiness?»David Mitchell has been an ac-_ , , i tive resistor of the draft since 1960.Lynd concluded that m the lan- ^as repeatedly refused to com-guage of the Declaration of Inde-1 p]y with the draft in any way> in.pendence, men have the right an<i ‘ cluding making application for anduty to say “we won t go. | exemption.If Vietnam and the cold war con- Mitchell sees American interven-tinue, Richard Flacks assistant tion a]1 over the wor]d as a crimi_professor of sociology at UC, sees nal and immoral ^icy, and claimsthe United states moving inescapa- Lhat the United States is just asbly toward the “garrison state. ’ n now as Germany was inThe Garrison State is the title of a ° ,paper by Harold Laswell which World War II. Mitchell stated thatproposes a country in which the en- r*e belleve<l that each and everytire social and economic system is j person is responsible for the ac-geared to a central goal—the win- tions of his country. We are allning of international military victo- murderers if murders occur andries. we do not act.”Another student spokesman,! The last speaker in the afternoonDavid Alley, expressed his view of sessions was Arlo Tatum of thethe draft in terms of an ever tight-! Central Committee for Conscien-ening vice, which deals with men tious Objectors. Commenting on theindividually, either pressing him change in attitude of “C.O.’s,” Ta-into service or classifying him and turn remarked that at one timeleaving him virtually frozen in his! men would not participate in thecategory. j violence of war because of their re-Alley stated that a new force ligion. Now those who are becom-committed to the double pronged; ing C.O.’s have first look at theattack of “non-exclusion and uni- cruelty and violence of the conflictfied direct-action resistance” must I and have refused to fight becausebe developed in order to supersede of its immorality.With 90 Million OthersUC Shares Timely AwardCUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHINGCALL MRS. BLIXT AT 782-2118FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES. INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle S». Chicago, HI. 60602 by David H. RichterWhat do you say when some¬body ups and tells you thatyou’ve just made Time Maga¬zine’s Man of the Year?“What are you, some kind ofnut?”THIS, at least, was the re¬sponse of one unidentifiableyouth from Thompson House.At the Pierce Tower snackbar, Mike Siemon, a fourth-yearmath major, asked, “Whosecopy of Time is that?”John Welch, a first-year stu¬dent, wanted to know, “Is thisa cash award?”No, it isn’t a cash award, andeven if it were, it couldn’t beworth much once you shared itwith the 90 million others whowon it. For this year Timeawarded its coveted (?) titlecollectively to Americans underthe age of 25.THE CLAIMS to fame of lastyear’s winner, General William Westmoreland, are well known,but UC students found it dif¬ficult to say why they thoughtthey deserved comparable rec¬ognition.Second-year history major SueGrosser’s opinion was that sheearned her share of the honorsby “shoveling more horse ma¬nure than anybody else here.”Paul Levin, a third-year student,claimed the title for “studiouslyavoiding Time Magazine.”That’s how they saw it—buthow did Time view the honoredmultitude? Ecstatically, to saythe least. “With his skeptical yethumanistic outlook, his disdainfor fanaticism and his scorn forthe spurious, the Man of theYear suggests that he will infusethe future with a new sense ofmorality, a transcendent andcontemporary ethic that couldinfinitely enrich the ‘emptysociety,’ ”—thus Time's crooningeditorialists. FEW UCers were as boldabout their virtues. One excep¬tion was Alan Bloom, a fourth-year student in biology. Bloomthought he deserved the award“for bringing to this campus—to American campuses in gen¬eral—the concept of beingagainst the establishment. Yousee, there’s a problem of con¬formity in American universi¬ties. Tonight I am one of themost unpopular people on thiscampus, because I have realizedthat the establishments—left,right, and middle—are wrong.They don’t use their minds andI, modestly speaking, am one ofthe only people around whouses his mind.”More typical, however, was theresponse of a younger bio-scistudent who, when asked whyhe deserved to be Man of theYear, replied: “I’ve got longhair.”January 6, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9/; V./.WW x-x<s>: .5 rLetters to the Editor♦ # . C ' ' "* • 5 vV'. ' " 'VViet Orphans FundTO THE EDITOR:In South Vietnam today there areapproximately four million home¬less victims of war (nobody knowsthe exact number 1. the majority ofthem refugees from villages de¬stroyed by American air attacks.According to a recent series of arti¬cles by Marth Gellhorn in the Man¬chester Guardian Weekly, an ap¬palling number of these victims arechildren, the orphans of war. TheSouth Vietnamese Ministry of So¬cial Welfare estimates that twothousand more such orphans are cre¬ated every month. “There are tenchildren’s orphanages in Saigonalone,” Miss Gelhorn writes, ‘‘andorphanages throughout the country,and no reason to think that eachdoes not receive its terrible quotaof the newborn and starving.” Nei¬ther the South Vietnamese govern¬ment nor our own is doing verymuch to help.The Vietnam Orphans Fund wasestablished as the result of a letterpublished in the Guardian (Septem¬ber 30. 1966) by professors at fourBritish universities—London, Sus¬ sex, Glasgow and Southampton.They declared that, rightly orwrongly, ‘‘none of us can escape ameasure of responsibility for whatis happening in Vietnam. We be¬lieve that the time has come to ex¬press our distress in a practicalway by the establishment of an Or¬phans Fund for the whole of Viet¬nam-north as well as south, forsuffering is disdainful of frontiersand ideologies. Such a Fund wouldhave the objective of givingimmediate aid to orphanages andsimilar institutions.”Even those of us who do notregularly contribute to charitieswould, I think, have to look veryhard to find an object more worthyof our generosity. Our responsibili¬ty to do what we can for the home¬less orphans of Vietnam is clearand obvious; contributing to theVietnam Orphans Fund is the mosteffective way I know of helpingthem directly.The fund is completely nonpoliti¬cal in nature and purpose. It can, Ihope, offer a common ground forconcern and effort between thosewho support the war and those whooppose it. The homeless children ofHuggins To Give First Cancer LectureDr Charles B. Huggins, whoshared the 1966 Nobel Prize inphysiology and medicine, will de¬liver the frist in a weekly series oflectures to be given at UC by 10of the nation’s leading cancer re¬searchers. beginning today.Dr. Huggins is the William B.Ogden Distinguished Service Pro¬fessor and director of the Ben MayLaboratory for Cancer Research atthe University.*nie weekly lecture series is de¬signed to inform medical practi¬tioners, students, and teachers inthe Chicago area about the mostrecent developments in cancer re¬search. The lectures will be givenShapiro CollectionSet For DistributionOn Friday, January 13, UC artlovers will once again have achance to borrow a fine piece fromthe Shapiro “Art to Live With” col¬lection.Prints by Braque, Chagall,Rouault, Kahn, Golub, Miro, Matta,and others wiLl be available to stu¬dents, faculty, and employees at3:30 pm in Ida Noyes Hall. Thistime the paintings are on loan fortwo quarters.Numbered registration cards forthe loan will be distributed at 8 amthat morning. The collection goeson exhibit in Ida Noyes Monday,January 9.Ag usual, validated ID cardsshould be presented, with a fee of$1.50. on successive Fridays at 5 pm inroom P-117 of Billings Hospital.The lecture series is part of theUniversity’s Cancer Training Pro¬gram. which is supported by agrant from the United StatesPublic Health Service. Vietnam are neither enemy norally; they are simply children, andthey need help, now.Appeals for contributions havebeen circulated on many campusesby local faculty members and stu¬dents, and the V.O.F, hopes thatthis evidence of concern willspread. Contributions from onecampus should be sent in one lumpsum, to Professor L. Brent, c/oLloyds Bank, High Street, South¬ampton England. Individual con¬tributions or requests for furtherinformation should be sent to me.All contributions will be receipted.Thank you for your cooperation.CHRISTOPHER CLAUSENASSISTANT PROFESSOR,ENGLISHCONCORD COLLEGEATHENS, WEST VIRGINIALemisch RetentionTO THE EDITOR:Wre regret to announce that as¬sistant professor L. Jesse Lem¬isch has not been reappointed. Wefeel that many students will agreewith us that Mr. Lemisch hasbeen a stimulating and valuableasset to the University’s faculty.An open letter, urging the reten¬tion of Mr. Lemisch has been pre¬pared. Those wishing to considersigning such a letter will find cop¬ies of it available between 12 and1 pm in the corridor of MandelHall and in the lobby of the SocialScience building.STUDENT COMMITTEEFOR LEMISCH Social ChicagoMod Maroon WeddingSocial event of the holidayseason in the San FranciscoBay area was the gala weddingof the former Miss PenelopeForan, of Point Richmond, Califor¬nia, to Boruch Edward Glasgow, ofPortland, Oregon.Glasgow is business manager ofthe Chicago Maroon. The bride isserving as his assistant in the busi¬ness office.Marriage ceremonies were heldat the bride’s home overlooking allthree bridges across San Franciscobay. The bride reported she waslooking at the bridges all throughthe ceremony.The groom was attired in a modsuit of dark gray material withblue pin stripes, complete withwide, double-breasted styling, slitpants, and a wide, black silk tie.The costume was completed with apair of boots.The bride’s costume featured anorange dress with Mexican-styleembroidery on the bodice. Greenshoes and three gardenias in herhair added a festive totich to theproceedings.HIT OF the ceremony was thebride’s family cat. Tan Foran, whomarched to the front of the roomjust behind the bride, much to theamusement of the thirty assembledJ members of the two families.The couple honeymooned for onenight in the Fairmont Hotel, atopKnob Hill, after taking in a “top¬less show” in San Francisco. They will continue to live in HydePark while Glasgow attends UCBusiness School.—DLAChapel Official Choice forRockefelier-Percy UnionIt’s definite. UC will be thesite of the wedding of SharonPercy, daughter of the senator-elect, and John D. RockefellerThe ceremony is planned for Saturday, April 1, in the RockefellerMemorial Chapel at 4 pm, to beimmediately followed by a privatereception in Ida Noyes Hall, thePercy family announced.The couple has something of astake in the University. Senatorelect Charles Percy is both an! alumnus and a trustee of UC.I Rockefeller’s great grandfatherwas the University’s founder andmade possible the construction ofRockefeller Chapel in 1928. (Hisgrandfather, John D. RockefellerII, gave the Chapel its 72-bell carillion).The decision to hold the ceremonyat the Rockefeller Chapel .wasmade after the couple visited theUniversity Quadrangles in Decernber to attend services and hear aperformance of Handel’s Messiahin the Chapel.Rockefeller was recently electedto the West Virginia House of Delegates.beatlesIn HELP! by Richard Latter. At Doc Films tonight. Law School Auditorium, 60th and Graanwood. 6:30, 6:30, and 10:30. 7S cants.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED EYE EXAMINATIONSNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudant and Faculty Discount CONTACT LENSESJOBS AVAILABLE FOR STUDENTSpart-time or full-timebusboysdishwasherswaitressesCall BU 8-7402, 9 am. to 5 pm. except Sundays.MORTON'S RESTAURANT5600 South Shore DriveALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes. vTIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yaki,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.URALS HOUSE OF TIKI51 ST A HARPERFood sorvod 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.LI 8-7585 GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food”10% Student Discountf;HYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Cat More For Less!Try Our Convenient Take-Out Orders £3<25m© YOU CAN SHOPRIGHT AT YOURDOOR STEP FORDistinctiveMEN’S WEAROvD• CHICAGO MAROON • January 6, 19*7vs*Margaret Mead Recommends Coed DraftSen. Teddy Sticks to Vietnam Roulette(Continued from Page Nine)need for training large numbers ofnew conscriptees with high turn¬over. This expense could be cutwith a standing, professional army,he argued.Among the 60 endorsers of an in¬formal sign-up sheet supporting theprinciple of voluntarism were Rep.Robert Kastenmeier, (Dem-Wisc),and Rep. Donald Rumsfeld (Rep-Ill).Mead on ServiceStaunch in her support of a sys¬tem of national service for all youthwas Margaret Mead, anthropologistof South Seas fame.She proposed that both youngmen and women around age 18 begiven the opportunity to serve inmilitary or non-military branchesof service. High school or othercounsellors would help each youngperson choose his or her branch.Brandishing a seven-foot longwalking staff, she specified thatwomen must be included in this na¬tional service scheme if it was tobe acceptable, but should not bearweapons. “Women fight too fierce¬ly when defending their homesand children,” she warned, whilemen can “set up rules and abide bythem.”MRS. MEAD said Friedman’sscheme does not take into accountthe “responsibility to the communi¬ty” of every person.Kennedy on LotterySenator Edward Kennedy of Mas-sachussetts, who had sent a mes¬sage to the conference proposing alottery system, arrived the nightbefore the conference closed, but did not push his proposal veryhard.Speaking at a press conference,and later at a public session heldafter the regular conference hadadjourned, Kennedy argued thatsome lottery system would be “themost predictable and equitablesystem.” He noted that Congresshas taken little action and had littlediscussion on the draft question onthe whole until this year.Defender of SS SystemSticking up for the present sys¬tem was Col. Dee Ingold, specialassistant to Selective Service direc¬tor Gen. Lewis Hershey.“The present system is the onlyone which could possibly fulfull allthe needs of the armed forces inthis country,” he asserted. Thegreat number of draft-age menmeans that under normal circum¬stances—even the present—only alimited proportion of those of eligi¬ble age will actually serve. “Some¬body has to decide” who will serve,he pointed out.HE WAS backed by Col. SamuelHays, director of the Office of Mili¬tary Psychology and Leadership atWest Point. Hays noted that even ifstudent deferments were ended intheory, “we wouldn't be able to usemost of the students—they’d be de- jferred in practice anyway.”The military men at the confer¬ence, especially Harold Wool, di¬rector of procurement policy in thePentagon, were sharply skepticalthat any system proposed as an al¬ternative to the present one coulddo the job of providing sufficientmanpower for the armed forces. Theatre ReviewBlack Comedies at the HarperThe two one-act plays by Douglas Turner Ward, now running at the Harper Theatre arewhat one calls “promising.” They promise, in fact, a good deal more than they deliver.Happy Ending and Day of Absence show Ward to be an extremely talented fellow, capa¬ble at this point in his career of writing funny, convincing dialogue which holds one’s in¬terest (apart from a few longeurs)Calendar of EventsFriday, January 6MOVIE: HELP! Law School Audito¬rium. 6:30. 8:30, 10:30; Doc Films.VOLLEYBALL: Ida Noyes Hall. 7:30pm Men and Women welcome.TRAVELOGUE: •‘Colombia. Venezuela”International House. 1414 E. 59th. Stu¬dents 50c, others 51. 8:15 pm.KOINONIA: 5:45 pm at Chapel House.Dinner (75c) Ken Christiansen discuss¬ing Malcolm X.SCULPTURE SHOW: The opening ofthe Miriam Brofsky sculpture show inLexington Studio-Gallery will be Friday,January 6 from 5:30 to 7:30. All stu¬dents, faculty, and staff are cordiallyinvited.SERVICES: Yavneh in Hillel. HillelBasement. 5715 S. Woodlawn. 4 pm.DINNER: Adat Shalom Shabbat Meals,3rd Floor, Ida Noyes, 5:45.MEETING: SDS. Information meetingon South Africa, 3:30 Reynolds Club.CONTEMPORARY CHAMBERPLAYERS: Ralph Shapey, conductor,Mandel Hall. 3 pm. Sponsored by SGSpeakers Program.LECTURE: “Negotiating with the Com- Imunist Chinese,” lecture by Kenneth T.Young, Pres, of the Asia Society andformer U.S. Ambassador to Thailand.Law School Courtroom, 4:30 pm.Saturday, January 7REYNOLDS CLUB DISCOTHEQUE—Mixed Media, films, psychedelic lights,incense; Live blues band—The HoochieCoochie Men; 8:30-12, Reynolds Club.SAIt EXEC. MEETING: 1 pm atC Shop.SERVICES: Yavneh in Hillel, HillelBasement, 9:15, Followed by Kiddush.LUNCH: Adat Shalom Shabbat Meals,3rd Floor, Ida Noyes, 12:30.DISCUSSION: Rabbi Moshe Adle<r,“Secular Education and Samson Raphael Hirsch”, Yavneh in Hillel, 5715 S.Woodlawn, 3 pm.SERVICES: Yavneh in HiUel, HillelBasement, 4, Followed by Shalosh Seudos.POGO A-GO-GO: 8:30 pm Pierce Tower, Music by the Noblemen. Sunday, January 8UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES:Rockefeller Memorial Chapel 11 am.Preacher: Rabbi Richard L. Ruben-stein, Director of Hillel Foundation andMerrill Lecturer in the Humanities,Univ. of Pittsburgh.MEETING: Chess Club, to plan matchwith Illinois Teachers College and intra¬murals chess tournament.Monday, January 9LECTURE: Martin Luther King, Man-del Hall, 8 pm, Adm. $2 50 reg. and $1.Student. for the better part of two hoursAnd this is no smallachievement—Edward Albee’s firsttwo playlets demonstrated littlemore. He is capable, moreover, offorming initial situations whichlend themselves admirably to dra¬matic treatment.Let me show you what I mean.Happy Ending begins with twoHarlem matrons sitting around atable in tears. Their nephew comesin and asks why. They tell him be¬tween sobs that their employers,Mr. and Mrs. Harrison, are goingto get a divorce. Why are theycrying about that, he wants toknow. What, after all, do they owethe Harrisons? Haven’t they anypride?EVENTUALLY IT comes outthat the domestics have been tak¬ing the Harrisons for all they wereworth, and that the household willquickly be back on the Spam-and-beans diet unless the couple isreconciled. All three now bemoantheir sad lot until the inevitablephone call arrives with the mes¬sage that the Harrisons have madeup their differences.The problem is that the play isbuilt around one joke (racial prideversus cupidity) and that the jokeis repeated much too often. Andone finally feels that one’s laughterhas been in a response to a situa¬tion more controversial, but artisti¬cally no better than that in TV“family comedy.”Ward, at this stage of his career,is a better writer than a dramatist.His lines, as I said, keep the audi¬ence in stitches for most of the eve¬ning. And yet his theatrical tech¬nique is, to put it mildly, childish.BOTH THE PLAYS depend for!|their conclusion upon a deus ex |machina. Neither the telephone call |of the Harrisons nor (in Day of IAbsence) the return of the absent I“nigras” is effected by what goes on on-stage. Bothhappen, for noparticular—but chiefly because just for the yoks, but also for someWard has as yet developed no bet-events simply | Apart from their present defects,reason in ' the plays are well worth seeing, notter way of ending a play. If wedrop the artificial openings anddenouements, we can see thatWard’s talent lies solely in the de¬velopment of situation.And while his ability to create acharacter is above reproach, Wardis as arbitrary in disposing them asin disposing his plot. Happy End¬ing, for example, has two aunts andtwo nephews, even though the sit¬uation calls for no more than oneof each. The function of the super¬numeraries is contrast, but surelya gifted man like Ward could havethought up something better. really fine acting. There were someindividual performances deservingof particular praise, particularlyHelen Martin (as Ellie) and Wil¬liam Jay (as Junie) in Happy End¬ing and Douglas Turner (Ward’sstage name) as the Mayor in Dayof Absence.WHAT WAS most impressive,however, was the high nervouspitch of the cast as a whole, theirtiming, their synchronization, theirability to take direction. The resultof these was more satisfying thancould have been possible with amore polished, more temperamen¬tal cast.David H. RichterLOOKING FOR SELF-FULFILLMENT?SHERUT LA'AM — ISRAELMAY BE YOUR ANSWERTo: Sherut La'am (Service to the People)515 Park AvenueNew York, N. Y. 10022I am a graduate—undergraduate (underline one) between 19-30and would like you to send me, without obligation, FREE informa¬tion telling how I can serve a full year in Israel for only $670which includes round trip fare. (A limited number of long-termloans are available). I understand a knowledge of Hebrew isnot a prerequisite.WANTEDSTRING BASS PLAYERSThe University Orchestra has openings In all string sections,especially Bass and Violin. If Interested contact John SoJIe,667-2414, or leave message at Music Department, X3885.THE SECULAR CITY:A JEWISH VIEWRABBI RICHARD L. RUBENSTEINHillel Director and Prof. Frenchliterature, University of PittsburghJanuary 6 8:30 p.m.HILLEL HOUSE5715 Wopdlawn Ave. MUSTANGS - TEMPESTS • FORDS • PONTIACSRENT-A-CARBYVolks wagens $3.95 for 12 Hrs.Plus 61 per Mi.Includes Gas and InsuranceRent A Velkswagon For That Special Date Tonite.Cheaper Than A Honda And A Heck Of A LotMore Comfortable.LOCATED AT:HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 I. 53rd Ml 3-1715 NAME (PLEASE PRINT)MAJOR FIELD OF STUDY COLLEGE OR UNIV.STREET ADDRESS PHONE (OPTIONAL)CITY— . STATE— _ _ ZIPDegree Candidates insMBA degree (Tech, or Non-Tech. Undergrad,degree)Meet the Manfrom MonsantoJanuary 10 & 11, 1967up for mt Interview at jtrnr placement office* \This jeer Monsanto will hare many openingsfor graduates at all degree levels. Fine position*«re open all over the country with America's3rd largest chemical company. And Wre —growing. Sales have quadrupled in the fawt 10years ... in everything from plastkisem tofarm chemicals; from nuclear sources andchemical fibers to electronic instruments. Meetthe Man from Monsanto—hs has th# facts ^| fins fafwmYaw--.An Equal Opportunity EmployerJanuary 6, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROO N •Redmond Stresses More Academic Pye Cites Emotionalism vs. RitualDecentralization of Chicago's Schools Conflict Marks China's PoliticsJames E. Redmond, generalsuperintendent of Chicago pub¬lic schools, paid a visit to UCDecember 8, and came awaywith academia on his side. Hespoke in Judd Hall at the invita¬tion of the Department of Educa¬tion.In outlining the problems andprospects of the Chicago schoolsafter his first two months as super¬intendent, Redmond stressed theneed for freedom of each teacherand principal to experiment, andfor co-operation between universityeducators and the school system.EDUCATORS TOO often arelooked upon as “intruders” whenthey try to work with the schoolsystem, Redmond said. Chicagoschools, he said, offer educatorsthe opportunity to “take their right¬ful place” in assisting the schools. |“It is time to theorize and philos¬ophize but also to test and evalu¬ate,” Redmond- urged. “The Chica¬go public schools are the laborato-1ries where the truths of our profes-;sion will be proved.” Redmond stressed that neither henor anyone else has a “blue print”for solutions to all the problemsfacing the schools. Primary respon¬sibility must rest with principalsand teachers for innovations, hesaid, noting that in the past theyhave often had to develop newmaterials “surreptitiously,” sincethe central administration attempt¬ed to enforce “guidelines” for allcurricula.THE 27 district superintendentsshould also play a strong role in,forming policy and try innovationson the local level, Redmond said.“We have to turn into a decen¬tralized school system despite the |deeply ingrained tradition of turn¬ing to the central office.”In dealing with teachers’ unions, |Redmond promised to avoid follow¬ing the “father knows best” atti-1tude toward teachers. Much of thetension that arises in many sys-;terns in dealing with teachersarises for lack of sensitivity on the 1part of officers in the administra-!tion, Redmond noted.Classified Adsr> * *•’PERSONALSDance to the “Knights of Soul” Fridaynight at Burton-Judson,LECTURE: THE SECULAR CITY: AJEWISH VIEW. Rabbi Richard L. Ru- Ibenstein, Hillel Director and Prof.French Literature, Univ. of Pittsburgh. >Tonight at 8:30. Hillel House, 5715 S.Woodlawn,HELP! Tonight. j# I of II at B J. Tonight. |Need place to live til May 1—Helen jT52-8735 Iv name & no. if not there.Hillel classes and seminars resume—Open to new and continuing students. iCheck at Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn,PL 2-1127, for details.Girl grad student looking for apt. orapt. to share. Contact S h e r r y— jSherry—FA 4-5160—around 6 P.M^F. roommate wtd. for furnished, $40mo. apt. 61st & Dorchester. Phone:FA 4-5160—around 6 PM.KOINONIA: Tonight" 5:45 at ChapelHouse. Dinner (75c). Ken Christiansendiscusses Malcolm X. jUniversity women interested in playingintramural basketball, please contact jyour floor representative or Lynn Jun- |ker Rm. 1407x Woodward Ct. |Restore youthful vigor: Play volleyball.Men & women wanted. Tues. 8 pmHyde Park Neighborhood Club. Fri. 7:30Ida Noyes.January 13 at 8 pm. WALTER jSCHNEIR Author of Invitation to andInquest expose on Rosenberg frame up.302 S. Canal, donation: $1.00.2 students need roommate for 6 roomapt. 403-5917 anytime.Pogo A-go-go Saturday Jan. 7, 8:30Pierce Tower. Music by the Nobelmen.LCUC CONFERENCE. "When is a ,Man?" Dr. Albert Wolfson. Prof, of Bio. |at Northwestern and Dr. J. Coert Ry- Ilaarsdam. Prof of Biblical Theology at jUC. Folksong leader, John Ylvisaker. jJanuary 20-22. George Williams Camp.$11/single person. $12/married person.Scholarship aid available. Registrationat Lutheran office, Chapel House.KAMELOT Restaurant. 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for UC students.To see the doncaster collection of cus- jtom made suits and dresses, call 324-8907. )DerWelt ist alles was der Fall istJOBS OFFEREDHigh Fidelity Salesman to train as Iass’t. store manager. If you are the Iright person you will become a storeSAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"since imPICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 . •• ■ ... ':.....v......... > ..imanager in a growing corporation SeeFrank at Toad Hall, 1444 E. 57th Street.BU 8-4500.Fac family will exch large room w/private bath for assistance w/2 little girls.Call Virgel Burnett at ext. 2762 or aft. 6 ,at 373-7865. jTired of that dull routine?The UC Student Government needs anew secretary for its ever expandingbureaucracy: variety of assignments Jmost of them involving public contact; jstarting salary $2 00/hr., + loads offringe benefits including paid 3 wk. va- jcation. 20 hr./wk. (afternoons) or full!time. Contact Mrs. Yara Tarsy jMI 3-0800, ext. 3273.FOR SALEFurniture—Real Cheap —M u s t sell, |going overseas. 667-1466.1949 Harley-Davidson 750 c.c. New jrings, valves, tires—transmission disas¬sembled. A really sweet machine.$250—324-5751 evenings.Japanese TV, 11” screen UHF-VHF per¬fect condition, $45 . 463-3585.G.E. 14” portable TV, perfect condition,$35, 463-3585.Guitar for sale. $22. 288-7193TO RENT6900 SOUTH CRANDON Ave. DeluxeHighrise 1 bdrm. apts. from $120; par- jquet floor, see Mrs. Haley receiving !rm. or security guard. MU 4-7964.Fern. grad. stud, or wrkg. grl. wantedto share apt. Own rm. $58.50. Call 752- I7669.Faculty member would like to leasefurnished summer home or cottage, jnear water, within 3-4 hours drive ofChicago, for summer 1967. Please call jMarc Galanter, Exgt. 2779 or MI 3-1997. j4j,2 large rooms furnishedapartment - Newly decorated. 2 master jbedrooms - natural wood burning fire¬place. Suitable for 3 professional orbusiness men. Near 55th St. and Cor- Inell. $180 per month. MU 4-8222.WANTEDStudent with car to deliver plastic furn.cover. Choose your own hours; car Ineeded; good pay. Call WA 2-7733.Psrmsnsnt WivingHair CuttingandTintingrm i. im a mr i-tm The internal politics of Com¬munist China is marked bya long-term conflict between“patterns of ritual and emo¬tion,” according to MIT professor Jof political science Lucian W. Pye, ja specialist in comparative Asianpolitics.This basic dissonance in Chinese jpolitical behavior has been mani¬fested in Communist China in thecontinuing conflict between the“Red” activist and the technical“expert” and in the furor over thenature of the educational system.Pye said in a talk at the LawSchool December 5 sponsored bythe University's Center for PolicyStudies.But he predicted that, despite thedifficulty inherent in reconcilingthese two patterns, there will be inthe future an accommodating trendtoward an equilibrium betweenemotionalism and ritual that willtake into account more of tradition¬al Chinese behavior, even though the regime will deny that this has1 occurred.EMOTIONALISM is a standard1 theme of modern Chinese politics,Pye noted. “In China, the politicalactivist is expected to hate.”This pattern of political behavioris accentuated by the feeling of theChinese that they have been mis¬treated in modern times. “TheChinese not only sense their humili¬ation,” Pye stated; “they are will¬ing to articulate it.”Traditional Chinese culture, withits emphasis on ceremony and itsclose link between government andthe family, has in the past had theeffect of repressing aggressive feel¬ings and channelizing this re¬pressed aggression, Pye said.But the breakdown of this tradi¬tional culture, and with it a declinein the traditional belief in the needto handle tensions by ritual, has al¬lowed the Chinese to express ac¬tively their political emotions.HOWEVER, just as the failure ofChina’s Great Leap Forward pro¬ duced economic accommodation.Pye declared, so the traditional rit¬ual pattern of Chinese politics willreach an accommodation with political emotionalism.Pye said that in light of this accommodation United States policymakers should view CommunistChina in terms of “fitting China into the post-Vietnam War balance ofpower in Asia.”Hillel GuestYavneh in Hillel at UC will havethe first guest of its Shabbat program for this quarter, Ra^biMoshe Adler. He will speak Satur¬day afternoon at 3 on the educa¬tional philosophy of Samson Ra¬phael Hirsch with regard to seculareducation. Rabbi Adler is currentlyworking in administrative educa¬tion at Loyola University. The pro¬gram will be held at the HillelFoundation, 5715 S. Woodlawn andis open to the public.-RIGHT ON CAMPUS-FOR YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS LARGE OR SMALL-AIR, STEAMSHIP, TOURS, RAIL-MIDWAY TRAVEL SERVICELOBBY "Ad" BUILDINGTEL Ml 3-0800-EXT. 2301, 2302, 2303NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICES EXCEPTNOMINAL FEE FOR RAIL TICKETSTOAD HALL SELLSAMPEX TAPE RECORDERS AND DECKS . . .TWO OF WHICH ARE ON SALE!AMPEX Model 850 3-speed quarter-track deck.WAS $249.95 Is $1999SAMPEX Model 1150 3-speed quarter-track deck.WAS $379.95 Is *29995This machine reverses on playback, and can beset to repeat tapes-either pre-recorded or yourown recordings.Jimmy*sand the University RoomMSCRVIO EXCLUSIVELY PO« UNIVERSITY CLfCWTBUPMty-PMtli mU Wee*lava Ave. All Ampex tape recorders and decks have a fullone-year parts and labor warranty.Th is sale is for a limited time only. Any ordersplaced during the sale will be honored at thesale price.12 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 6, 19671967 ForecastBoom To Be Lowered on US EconomyThree economists, two ofthem UC professors, are inagreement that the unprece¬dented six-year business boomis skidding to a halt, and the 1967Gross National Product will showeither a slight decline or only mod¬est gains from 1966.The three experts—two profes¬sors and a banker—presented theirforecasts last month in the PalmerHouse. When they addressed some1.400 businessmen at the annualbusiness Forecast Luncheon, spon¬sored by the University’s GraduateSchool of Business and ExecutiveProgram Club.JAMES H. LOR IE, professor ofbusiness administration here, madethe most pessimistic forecast of thethree. Although he predicted aslight decline in economic activity,Lorie said that with prices contin¬uing to rise, the Gross NationalProduct, measured in dollars, would increase. He cited a 1967 fig¬ure of $755 billion, as comparedwith $739 billion last year.Lorie forecast a recession “de¬spite the fact that the Federal gov¬ernment has the power and knowl¬edge to prevent it.”The problem, he said, was notgovernment “malevolence” butother conflicting goals of govern¬ment policy — such as the reduc¬tion of the U.S. balance-I of-payments deficit. The gravity ofour balance-of-payments problem,he said, could prevent “thoseprompt and vigorous monetary andfiscal policies which will be neededto avoid a recession.”Irving Schweiger, professor ofmarketing here said he expectedthe current economic boom to endin 1967, not with a crash but awhimper — “with a materially-reduced rate of growth and aneconomy dangerously sensitive toan unexpected truce in Viet NamSoc Sci Colloquium on Vietnam IssuesTo Provide New "Community Focus //The Division of the SocialSciences is sponsoring a Uni-versity-w i d e colloquium on,“The Vietnam P r o b 1 e m,”January 27 and 28, in the LawSchool Auditorium.THIS COLLOQUIUM will be thefirst of the Beardsley Ruml Collo-quia Scries, named after an ex¬dean of the social science division, jThis series will organize one collo¬quium each quarter on an impor- jtant public issue, and will be open !to UC students and faculty only. jThe purpose of the series, ac¬cording to Dr. Milton J. Rosenberg,!professor of psychology, “is to ar- jrange a University-wide discussion jand examination of contemporary jproblems for the illumination of |key issues.” Dr. Rosenberg is a jmember of the student-faculty com¬mittee organizing the series, and,chairman of the sub-committee ar- jranging the colloquium on Viet- jnam. “Large universities tend to be¬come very impersonal,” he said.“The feeling of a community focusthat one gets in a small college ismissing at UC, and an aim ofthese discussions is to rectify this.”ROSENBERG ADDED that theseries was also a partial answer tostudent camplaints that the Univer¬sity has not used its resourcesenough in the ream of contempo¬rary political problems.The Vietnam colloquium will be atwo day series of discussions onvarious aspects of the Vietnamwar. The topics will be, “WhatShould We Do Now?”, “DomesticConsequences of the VietnamWar,” and “Ethical Implicationsfor Individuals and Institutions.” should it come in the early monthsof 1967.”Unlike Lorie, Schweiger did notanticipate a downturn in actual out¬put in 1967 “unless a quick trucecatches governmental agencies offbalance.”Schweiger forecast a 1967 GrossNational Product of $778 billion,with a little more than half the in¬crease over 1966 resulting fromprice rises.BERYL W. SPRINKEL, VicePresident of Harris Trust and Sav¬ings Bank, forecast a Gross Nation¬al Product of $777 billion, with atleast half the rise representing in¬flation. He did not rule out the pos¬sibility of a recession, but saw Fed¬eral, state and local spending con¬tinuing to support economic activi¬ty. The consumer appears to be de¬veloping restraint “after the long¬est and largest buying spree in U.S.history,” Sprinkel said.Sprinkel blamed tight money ona series of governmental and Fed¬eral Reserve Board actions whichinitially eased money but whichhad the long-term effect of drivingup interest rates in response to in¬flationary expectations and boom¬ing demands for credit. Maroons Return Almost C.iipty-handedFrom Yuletide Basketball TournamentsIntramural Office Sets1967 Sports ScheduleThe Intramural Office at BartlettGymnasium has released their win¬ter quarter schedule. For addition¬al information, students should callext. 4693.Basketball Dec. 8 Jan. 9Table Tennis Jan. 10 Jan. 16Handball (Handicap) Jan. 10 Jan. 16Riflery Jan. 10 Jan. 25, 26Indoor Track Meet Feb. 7. Feb. 9Free Throw Contest Feb. 7 Feb. 20, 21. 22Badminton Feb. 7 Feb. 23Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-V259NSA Discounts UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFlOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor IYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StrootHYde Part 3-8372StMtUnt Faculty Pitceunt by Syd UngerPeople who believe in SantaClaus say the only brings giftsto those who have been good.So it was in the Colorado In¬vitational Tournament—UC cameout almost empty-handed. The Ma¬roons lost their opening game toColorado College 58-50 because ofan abundance of penalties. Colora¬do made 22 out of 37 foul attemptswhile UC made 8 out of only 12attempts, proving that it pays to benice.It was debatable whether it was I“dirty play” on the part of UC that jgave Colorado its gift or whether jthe officials played the part of San- jta Claus. At one point Coach Ange-1lus expressed his disgust with theofficiating so vehemently that hewas rewarded with his first techni¬cal foul in four years—a strangegift for the yuletide season.THE GAME was actually closerthan the final score indicates—thescore being tied several times. Sta¬tistically, UC made 21 shots fromthe field while Colorado made only18. Campbell with 16 points andWalden with 14 points led the UCcagers.In its second game of the Tourna¬ment UC showed why it was num¬ ber one in defense in the NCAACollege Division last year. The op¬ponent was Grinnel College—ateam that had been averaging 80points a game. The final score wasUC 52, Grinnell 42. Campbellscored 12 points, Walden scored 9points and Gary Day made 9 re¬bounds.On December 10, in a game atMt. Pleasant, Iowa, UC lost toIowa Wesleyan College 64 62. Againit was penalties that hurt the Ma¬roons. IWC made 20 of 36 foul at¬tempts—UC made only 4 out of 13.UC also shot below par from thefield, making 29 field goals out of81 attempts. This was the secondconsecutive year in which UC haslost to Iowa Wesleyan by 2 points.ON DECEMBER 17 the Maroonscelebrated the end of Finals Weekwith a 53-50 victory over OberiinCollege. Unlike the December 10showing, UC made 13 out of 14 at¬tempts from the charity line—itisn’t hard to guess what type ofshot the players worked on whilenot studying for finals.Saturday night UC meets IllinoisInstitute of Technology at theFieldhouse in a game which wasinadvertently left off some of theprinted schedules that are on cam¬pus. The Maroons’ record is now 3and 2 this season.PIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNT BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroCiwpWH lUpahiAnd ServicePar AE Popular importsMidway 1*45016052 So Cottaoe GroveTHE BEST SOURCE FORArtist's MaterialsComplete Picture FramingServiceMounting; Matting Non-GlareGlass - School SuppliesBE SURE TO ASK FORWEEKLY SPECIALDUNCANS1305 E. 53rd HY 3-411110% STUDENT DISCOUNTON $10 OR MORE{OPEN DAWN TO DAWN)lloliliy House Restaurant1342 E. 53rd ST.BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER"The Best of All Foods"JESSELSOrSSERVING HYDI PARK POR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THi VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 i. 53rd THE JAPAN CULTURE SOCIETYOF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOannouncesJAPANESE FILM FESTIVALWINTER QUARTER SCHEDULE:UGETSU Jan. 21MizoguchiTHE MISTRESS Feb. 4ToyodaIKIRU Feb. 18KurosawaWOMEN OF THE NIGHT Feb. 25MizoguchiFollowing Quarter:YOJIMBO, THE HUMAN CONDITION& OTHERS7:15 and 9:30 Social Sciences 122Winter Series Membership—$2.00Single Membership—$.75Tickets at the doorJanuary 6, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13Pop Bi-Sci LecturesOffered This WinterThe Biology Collegiate Divi¬sion has announced a series of“popular lectures” on recentdevelopments and thinking inselected areas of biology.Gerson M. Rosenthal, AssociateProfessor of Biology, who organ¬ized the series, said the topics andlecturers “will seek to convey someof the excitement” of the new de¬velopments. They are “directed to¬ward a general undergraduateaudience and is quite independentof all College courses.”This quarter’s series of five lec¬tures follows a similar series lastwinter, featuring such speakers asUC President George W. Beadle,Nobel prize-winning geneticist, andBenson Ginsburg, professor of Biol¬ogy. Last year’s series met “quitegood response,” Rosenthal said,from both undergraduates andgraduates, plus some faculty mem¬bers and high school teachers.Schedule for this quarter’s seriesfollows.Tuesday, January 10—‘‘The Milieufor Cell Function,” by AlbertDorfman, Professor of Biochem¬istry and Pediatrics, and Direc¬tor of La Rabida-UC Institute.January 24—‘ How to Breed Com¬puters,” by Richard C. Lewontin,Professor of Zoology and Associ¬ate Dean of the graduate Biologi¬cal Sciences Division.February 7—“Rhythms in Man andMolds.” by Alfred S. Sussman,Professor of Botany at Universityof Michigan.February 21—“Biological Studieson Gravitational Compensation,”by Solon Gordon, Senior Biologistat Argonne National Laboratory.March 7—“The Hard Life of theChloroplast,” by Lawrence Bogo¬rad, Professor of Botany. New UC Sculpture Reflects Artists’ Images of ManDehumanized Sex. . .A sculptor whose work reflects humorous and bitter socialcomment on America will exhibit 16 recently-completed piecesof sculpture today through Friday, February 3, 1967.Miriam Brofskv, an established artist and a Master ofI Fine Arts candidate at the Univer-j sity, will show her bronze and po-! lyester resin sculptures at the Lex-i ington Galleries.The exhibition. “Miriam Brof-sky-Sculpture,” will open with apublic reception from 5:30 to 7:30pm today at the galleries."IN MY LATEST works, Mrs.Brofsky explained. “I have at¬tempted to show what has hap¬pened to Americans as a result ofbad values. Individual human con¬cerns have been lost in the pursuitof the dollar. People have becomeobjects and no longer remain hu¬man beings.”Her inspiration often comes frompeople she talks to or from every¬day scenes which impress her. The; down trodden waitress depicted atLunch Counter is one such exam¬ple.Or, Mrs. Brofsky may commentin her scultpure on cliches and slo-| gans she hears. One piece, entitledWhat's Good for General Motors,I satirizes the slogan with its use ofI flashing brake lights to depict partof a female figure.“Both works reveal what hap¬pens to the individual as he be-j comes exploited and dehuman-! ized,” she said.I Another of her sculptures, RedLight District, is in the vogue ofj erotic art.“Sex has become dehumanized,de-eroticized by mechanization ofI our present society,” Mrs. BrofskyI said. “My work reflects this| theme.”Mrs. Brofsky was born in Canadain 1929. She grew up in Brooklyn,: New York, and graduated from Brooklyn College in 1951. iShe also studied at the ArtStudents League in New York,and in Paris with Ossip Zadkine.She has exhibited in Paris (Expo¬sition des Jeunes Sculpteures) andat the Art Institute of Chicago. Shehas held one-man shows at theBridge Gallery, New York (1964,1966), John L. Hunt Gallery, Chica¬go (1965), and Kendall College(1966).Gallery hours are Mondaythrough Thursday, 9 am -5 pm and7-10 pm; Friday, 9 am -5 pm;and Saturday; 10 am - 5 pm.Careers . . .or "Love and Hope"A bronze sculpture entitled Love and Hope will be unveiledtoday at 5 pm at the new Silvain and Arma Wyler Children’sHospital here.The eight-foot-high sculpture was created by the prize¬winning Italian sculptor, VirginioFerrari.Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pick, Jr.commissioned Ferrari to create thesculpture for presentation to theUniversity. Pick is president of thePick Hotel Corporation, a Universi¬ty trustee, and chairman of theboard of trustees of LaRabidaJackson Park Sanitarium.FERRARI, A sculptor with per¬manent exhibits at art museums inItaly and the United States, wasasked by the Picks to visit the Wy¬ler Children’s Hospital in 1965. Fer-,rari examined the then incompletej structure, and talked with physi-;cians, architects, and administra-| tors.“I learned of the hopes anddreams that this building symbol¬ized for both the men of medicineand for the parents and children' who would be entering through itsi doors to seek help,” Ferrari said.1| He envisioned “medicine as anew mother for the sick child, pro-!tecting him and helping him to re¬cover from his pains.”He then returned to Verona.1! Italy, his home, w here he worked toI transform his vision into a work ofart. The completed sculpture nowstands on a travertine marble base!in the West Lobby of the Wyler jChildren’s Hospital.Four primary features act indi- jj vidually and together to createLove and Hope—two children, a; spiral, a symbolic lap, and asweeping wing.Abstract Yet ComprehensibleHarold Haydon, associate profes-1sor of art at the University and,director of the Lorado Taft MidwayStudios, said: comprehensible to the children andparents visiting the WylerChildren’s Hospital.”Love and HopeFERRARI IS presently sculptorin residence at the Lorado TaftMidway Studios. He will remain atthe University through the 1966 1967academic year and has already re¬ceived an invitation to extend hisstay for a second year. He arrivedhere with his wife, Marisa, and hissmall son, Alberto, in October.1966.In May, the Renaissance Societyof the University will give Ferrarihis first one-man show in ChicagoYou won't have to put yourmoving or storogo problemoff untti tomorrow if youeoM m today.Recruiting representatives of the fol¬lowing organizations will visit the Officeof Career Counseling and Placementduring the week of January 9. Interviewappointments for 1966-67 graduates maybe arranged through Mr. L.S. Calvin,Room 200, Reynolds Club, ext. 3284.Monday, January 9Mitre Corporation: Bedford, Mass.—S.M. and Ph.D. candidates in mathe¬matics, statistics, and physics (solidstate, elementary particle). Schedulepermitting will interview graduate stu¬dents in these departments for summeremployment.Tuesday, January 10Argonne National Laboratory: Argonne,Ill. and Idaho Falls, Idaho—S.B. in bio¬logical sciences; S.B. and' Ph.D. inChemistry (except organic): all degreelevels in mathematics; S.B. and Ph.D.in physics.Wednesday, January 11Central Intelligence Agency: Washing¬ton, D.C.—prospective graduates in • • • ' ' •, ': ... - ' «***£/', - •' imost disciplines. Preference is given to ,advanced degree candidates.Institute for Defense Analysis; Arling-]ton, Va.—all degree levels in mathemat¬ics and statistics. Schedule permittingwill interview graduate students inthese departments for summer employ¬ment.Thursday, January 12United Air Lines:Elk Grove Township,Ill. and nationwide—positions availableto both men and women in program-Koga Gift ShopDistinctly* Gift Items From ThoOrient and Around Tho World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856PEOPLE WHO KNOW CALL ONCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANINGAll Pressing Done on PremisesSilks Hand FinishedExpert Alterations and Repairs1343 E. 53rd St. PL 2-964210% STUDENT DISCOUNTNEW BOOKS BY CAMPUS AUTHORSManagerial Fewer and Soviet PoliticsBy Jeremy R. Azrael $4.95Gnosticism and Early ChristianityBy Robert M. Grant $7.00Tha Secularization of Modern CulturesBy Bernard E. Meland $4 75GENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENTThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue wming, finance, market research, person¬nel, and mathematics.Cook County Department of Public Aid:Chicago, Ill.—graduates in any disci¬pline who are interested in social work. “Beginning with a purely ab¬stract and poetic idea of rising andexpanding forms supported by acurved and sheltering plane, Virgi¬nio Ferrari has developed the fig¬ures and symbols necessary tomake his bronze sculpture readily 1 PfTKRSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.IX45S S. D*y Am.•44-4411BOOMSTATIONERYGREETING (ARDS•k-k-k-k-k-kTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student Discount OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SH0RELAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000THE PUB1 IN THE jNew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWN -$1.00Michelob and Budweiser on Tap!Piano Selections Friday & Saturday evenings14 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 6, 1967SG Program To Include CarmichaelThis quarter’s Student Gov¬ernment (SG) speakers pro¬gram will include such con¬troversial speakers as StokelyCarmichael, chairman of the Stu- jdent Non-violent Coordinating Com- |mittee; Alan Ginsberg; avantgarde poet; and Paul Krasner, edi¬tor of the Realist.The speakers program is part of Ithe University’s seventy-fifth anni-;versary observance. The programis financed with SG funds and pro¬ceeds from the speeches.TWO OTHER programs will bestarted by SG this quarter: an openforum program and an entertain¬ment series.The forum program will consist'of faculty discussion on the topicsof faculty tenure, student housing,University finances, and the Uni-MEET YOURPERFECTDATE!You too can be amongst thethousands of satisfied adults.Let Dateline Electronics com- jputers programmed for womenages 13 to 45 and men 18 to55. Take the guess work out of !dating.Continuous matching with anew expanded program with en¬rollment fees reduced to $3 00for adults ages 18 to 27, and$5.00 for adults over 27.Tor quick results send for your question¬naire today. No obligation. Strictly con¬fidential. versify and the community. Thefirst forum of the series, however,will be a student debate betweenDaniel Boggs and a representativeof Students Against the Rank onthe issue of ranking. The forumswill be held in Reynolds ClubLounge with no admission charge.The entertainment series, entitled“On Campus Tonight” will rangefrom a performance of Verdi’s op¬era, La Traviata, to a lecture byStan Lee, editor of Marvel Comics.CARMICHAEL will speak onJanuary 12, Ginsberg on February23, and Krassner on March 12. Aillectures will be held at 8 pm inMandel Hall.Complete schedules are availableat the SG office.'•>. *mm :\VISA will make its firstvisit of the quarter to Chi¬cago State Hospital thisSaturday. The bus willleave at 12:30 pm from j|New Dorms. Newcomers |should meet in the NewDorms Central Unit.1 $m ■" ■ ••• • ••UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANKstraufNEW CAR LOANSas low asName .AddressCity ..DATELINE ELECTRONICRESEARCH INC. CMP. O. Box 369, Chicago, III60645For Add. Info Call 271-3133 lJf4 BAST 55th STRUTMO 4-1200■—bar 9J>XC.ONE DAY ONLY!Saturday, January 7 at 7:30 & 10:30IN PERSONDR. TIMOTHY LEARYIn a Psychedelic Celebration entitledTHE DEATH OF THE MINDRe-enactment of the world's great religious myths using psychedelicmethods: sensory meditation, symbol-overload, media-mix, molecularand cellular phrasing pantomime, dance, sound-light and lecture-sermon-gospel.PSYCHEDELIC ART BY JACKIE CASSEN J. RUDI STERNFOR JPIRITUALPRICES: $4.50. $4.00. $3.50, $3.00Tickets available at:STUDENT GOVERNMENT OFFICEor mail order toARIE CROWN THEATRE BOX OFFICEMcCORMJCK PLACEDue to the unprecedented demand for tickets fo this celebration weurge you to buy your tickets immediately.ARIE CROWN THEATREMC CORMICK PLACE0'SCCVlRYSPONSORED §Y I (AGUE Last year, thousandsof lawyers, bankers,accountants, engineers,doctors and businessmenwent back to college.And not just for thefootball games.We’d like to clear up what appears to be amisunderstanding. It is somewhat popularon campus to decry a business career onthe grounds that you stop learning onceyou start working for Cliche Nuts & Bolts.That idea is groundless.We can’t speak for Cliche, but we canfor ourselves—Western Electric, the man¬ufacturing and supply unit of the Bell Sys¬tem. 6 out of 10 college graduates who havejoined us over the past 10 years, for exam¬ple, have continued their higher education.How’re these for openers:W.E.’s Tuition Refund Plan lets em¬ployees pursue degrees while work¬ing for us. Over 6 thousand have at¬tended schools in 41 states underthis plan. We refund more than $1million in tuition costs to employeesa year.To name another program: advancedengineering study, under the direc¬tion of Lehigh University, is con¬ducted at our Engineering Research Center in Princeton, N. J. Selectedemployees are sent there from allover the country for a year’s concen¬trated study leading to a master’sdegree.You get the idea. We’re for more learn¬ing in our business. After all, WesternElectric doesn’t make buggy whips. Wemake advanced communications equip¬ment. And the Bell telephone network willneed even more sophisticated devices bythe time your fifth reunion roIJs around.The state of the art, never static, is wherethe action is.At Western Electric, what’s happeningis the excitement and satisfaction of con¬tinued doing and learning. If this happensto appeal to you, no matter what degreeyou’re aiming for, check us out. And graba piece of the action.Western ElectricMANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BEtL SYSTEMJanuary 6, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15The Student Government Folk ConcertSeries presents:Phil OchsMar. 30Mandel Hall, 8 pm57th & UniversityMAIN FLOOR SEATS RESERVED.BALCONY GENERAL ADMISSIONSeries prices are in effect starting Monday, untilJan. 23. No single tickets sold until Jan. 23.Tickets are on sale in the Student GovernmentOffice, (Ida Noyes Hall, x3274) from 1 pm - 5 pmdaily, Starting Monday.Students!Buy a Series Ticket — 3 Concerts, reserved seats, at lessthan $2 each! The best deal on the face of the planet!TICKET PRICESJUDY COLLINS Main Floor$3 - $2.25* Balcony$2.50-$1.75*TOM PAXTON 2.50- 1.75* 2.00- 1.25*PHIL OCHS 3.00- 2.25* 2.50- 1.75*Total PurchasedSeparately 8.50- 6.25* 7.00- 4.75*SPECIAL SERIESPRICE 7.25- 5.25* 6.00- 4.00**Student price16 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 6, 1967