Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary Year WEEKENDEDITIONVol. 75-No. 39 The University of Chicago February 17, 1967Council Rank Vote Near;Policy Decision Is Likelyby Michael SeidmanThe culmination of the long promised University “recon¬sideration” of its Selective Service policy will probably comenext week.On Tuesday the Council of the University Faculty Senatewill meet to discuss the issue ofclass rank and cooperation with theselective service.While George J. Stigler, profes¬sor of economics and spokesmanfor the council, would not rule outthe possibility of the Council fur¬ther delaying its final decision atthe meeting, he indicated thatthere were strong arguments formaking the decision nest week. Thedecision on ranking was initiallyscheduled to be made in the Au¬tumn quarter."IT'S OBVIOUS that everyone’sdesire to make a decision earlywould argue for getting a decisionout now,” Stigler stated. He alsoindicated, however, that there wasa possibility that the Council woulddecide to refer the matter to theCollege, in which case there wouldbe a further delay. ‘‘I myself don’thave any strong feelings on thesubject,” Stigler said.In an earlier meeting betweenStigler and Jeff Blum, a leader ofStudents Against the Rank (SAR),Blum had requested that the deci¬sion be refered to the college, thatthe Council meeting be open, andthat a spokesman for SAR be al¬lowed to address the meeting.These requests will be discussed ata Committee of the Council meet¬ing a few hours before the Councilitself meets, and will be voted onby the Council if they are placed onthe agenda. Council will be voting on three re¬solutions placed on the agendaunanimously last month:1. To continue the present policyof the University;2. To abolish the ranking of malestudents, but maintain the presentsystem in other respects;3. To provide a ranking systemwhich does not involve competitionof contemporary students. One ex¬ample would be to make availableto the student his grade point aver-(Continued on Page Seven) Leaders MeetingOn NS As Futureby David L. AikenWhat is the future of the National Student Association?That was the topic of debate in meetings of the association’s leaders in Washington yester¬day, as well as discussions among concerned sstudents across the country, in the wake of dis¬closures that NSA has for 14 years been receiving money for some activities indirectly fromthe U.S. Central Intelligence Agen-From SG to NSAGroves in the SpotlightW. Eugene Groves, yester¬day the New York Times’“man in the news,” has beenin the news for quite awhile.Before stepping into—or beingcaught by—the spotlight of nationalconcern in the biggest crisis theNational Student Association (NSA)has ever faced, Groves was alwaysat the focal point of some studentissue.IN HIGHSCHOOL, hewas valedic¬torian of hisclass andpresident ofof the studentthe organiza¬tion there.A t UC,which he en¬ter e d underthe SmallSchools Talent Search program,Groves was president of StudentGovernment as a member of GNO¬SIS and a member of the forensicsGrovesCauses for DelayAccording to Stigler, the delay in jreaching a decision resulted fromthe late filing of the Fiske Commit-tee report on ranking. The Fiske ;Committee is a student-faculty pan-1el which issued its report lastmonth.A further delay was caused by aCouncil rule which requires a onemonth interval between the time amatter is put on the Council agen¬da and the time a vote is taken.Stigler refused to comment onwhat specific action he thought theCouncil would take. ‘‘Whatever thedecision is, I’m sure it will be thewisest that could have been takenunder the circumstances,” he stat¬ed.Blum, however indicated that heconsidered it unlikely that the Uni¬versity will change its policy. I as¬sume the Council will vote to rank,he stated. ‘‘It is my feeling that thefaculty around here are in favor ofranking.“This is based on last yearsmeetings and on the inability of theCouncil to see what reconsiderationmeans in any realistic sense,” hecontinued. “It’s clear that thosewho have to be ranked would haveto take a major part in such a re¬consideration process.”Council Resolutions Had No Knowledge,Say Officials Hereby Daniel Hertzberg and Joan PhillipsWhile a great deal about the extent of the Central Intelli¬gence Agency’s involvement with the National Student As¬sociation remains unclear or unknown, a broad outline of itis discernable after talks with former NSA national leadersnow on the UC campus.These students have served onNSA’s National Supervisory BoardNSB chairman; John Gwiun, a for-of the association except for theweek and a half when its annualcongress is in session; and NSA’sInternational Advisory Board(IAB), which sets general policyfor the association’s internationaldealings.They are Pete Wales, last year’snsb chairman; John Gwinn, a for¬mer NSB member; and DannyBoggs, a former NSB member cur¬rently on the IAB.APPARENTLY, while a numberof NSA leaders suspected thatsome of the group’s funds mightcome from the US government,only a few were actually told of theCIA’s involvement, and no one elsereally thought that any NSA lead¬ers would cooperate v ilh any cov¬ert government funding.This belief in NSA’s freedomfrom the government was rein¬forced by heated affirmations ofWhen it meets on Tuesday, the t h e association’s independence News Analysismade repeatedly at national con¬gresses by top NSA leaders, someof whom undoubtedly knew of theCIA link.(Continued on Page Twelve)Kahn Will LectureAt Mandel, SundayHerman Kahn, director ofthe Hudson Institute and au¬thor of Oil Thermo nuclearWar, will speak at Mandel Hallthis Sunday at 8 pm as part of theStudent Government and 75th An¬niversary Committee speakers pro¬gram.This will be Kahn’s second ap¬pearance on campus within twoweeks. He spoke on “The Year2000” during the College’s LiberalArts Conference.Admission will be 75 cents forI students and $2 for others. society and the track team. He wasgraduated in 1965 with a B.S. inphysics.He spent the following year study¬ing economics and politics at Ox¬ford as a Rhodes scholar, whilelooking forward to a career in col¬lege teaching. Groves left Oxfordafter one year, however, and madehis way back to student life inthe U.S.Election to PresidencyHis election to the presidency ofNSA came at the organization’s19th annual congress, held last Au¬gust at the University of Illinois inChampaign-Urbana. He defeatedDanny J. Boggs, a student at theLaw School here, for the office.(Although according to the Timesarticle he is considered by hismother back home in Indiana a Re¬publican, Groves was the choice ofthe liberal faction at the congress.)SG Officers ExpressGeneral IndignationLeaders of the UC StudentGovernment expressed indig¬nation yesterday after learningdetails of the National StudentAssociation’s dealing with the CIA.While SG President Tom Heagysaid he had known for a while thatthe CIA was channeling money intoNSA, the full details of the relationdid not come out until this week.Jerry Hyman, a former SGvice-president with long experiencein NSA affairs, also reacted sharp¬ly to the details.HYMAN POINTED out that UCdelegations to NSA congresses havefor many years led attempts to re¬form the association and its domi¬nation by officers—-what is calledthe “NSA Establishment.”There was general agreementthat no immediate effort would bemade to disaffiliate from NSA, al¬though Ed Birnbaum, NSA co¬ordinator, questioned the value orremaining in the association. TheNSA committee of SG will meetnext Tuesday to discuss any state¬ments or action in the affair.Many SG leaders recalled thatthe organizational meeting atwhich NSA was formed was held atUC in 1947. UU has had a close,active involvement with NSA sincethat time, including the present,when a former UC SG President isserving as President of NSA. cy.The disclosures were made Mon¬day, in advance announcements ofan article in the forthcomingMarch issue of Ramparts maga¬zine. The charges in the article,written by a former NSA employee,were confirmed in part by presentNSA officials and the State Depart¬ment.W. EUGENE GROVES, presidentof NSA, confirmed Monday nightthat the association had receivedCIA funds in the past, but has end¬ed its relations with the intelligenceagency since last autumn, whenGroves was elected to his presentpost.Groves was president of StudentGovernment at UC in 1964-65.The National Supervisory Boardof the association, which is the offi¬cial representative policy-makingbody while the annual congress ofall member schools is not in ses¬sion, was meeting in a Washingtonhotel, the International Inn, yester¬day.Bernie Grofman, last year’s UCSG president and a member of theNSA supervisory board, was at themeeting, which began Wednesdayand was still in session late Thurs¬day. A full, detailed report of theNSA connections with the CIA, andits present status, was promised.No offical statements were beingmade during yesterday’s meetingHowever, Sam Brown, an NSBmember, was quoted as saying theNSB had already “voted unani¬mously to cut all ties with theCIA.”NSA LivesObservers at UC who have beenin close contact with NSA affairsconsidered it highly unlikely thatthe association will disband. Theassociation’s headquarters in Wash¬ington may have to be changed,since, it has been revealed, thebuilding is provided rent-free indi¬rectly by the CIA.Funds for the building have beenchanneled through the Independ¬ence Foundation of Boston, one offive private foundations which havereportedly distributed money fromthe CIA to NSA.Other than support for the Wash¬ington building, it appears that CIAfunds were used only for NSA’s in¬ternational activities. It is estimat¬ed that CIA funds accounted for ap¬proximately one fourth of NSA’sexpenditures from 1952 until lastyear.According to the statements ofGroves and other association offi¬cials, the main purpose of usingCIA funds was to support delegatesto international meetings of nation¬al unions of students.THE PRIMARY internationalgroup to which NSA wanted to senddelegates was the InternationalStudent Congress (ISC), formed in1950 by free-world national unionsof students to counteract the influ¬ence of a Soviet-supported organi*(Continued on Page Five)Storm Tomorrow's Wash Prom Will FeatureDinner, Entertainment, Other GoodiesUnusual approaches to grad¬ing are creating a storm atYale and the University ofIowa.Professor Robert Cook stirred updissatisfaction at Yale when he is¬sued grades of “satisfactory” to allof his sociology seminar students.EARLY LAST SEMESTER Cookasked his class to vote whetherthey should be graded. The stu¬dents voted against it, but the uni¬versity registrar told Cook that anumerical grade had to be reportedat the end of the year. Howevergrades of “satisfactory” or “unsa¬tisfactory” were acceptable forfirst semester marks. Following this news, the classvoted to award themelves allgrades of 100. But then the YaleDaily News stirred up the contro¬versy by remarking that the stu¬dents were “sabotaging both theYale College average and the in¬tegrity of their own stand.”Cook then conferred with CollegeDean Georges May to discuss theentire grading system. May recom¬mended that he bring the matterup with the Course of Study com¬mittee, which is responsible for thegrading system.Cook said he would propose theelimination of grades in certain in¬troductory courses and “the optionof taking a certain number ofcourse on a pass or fail basis.”i REVIEWA publisher's surveyof what's new in the wayof unrequired readingThe building of a new hydroelectric power station inSiberia may not seem like the most promising subjectmatter for a 150-page epic poem. And it would bedifficult to imagine one of our own poets — perhapsAllen Ginsberg? — singing an unsatirical paean ofpraise to the Hoover Dam.But the poet in this case is very serious. He is alsoone of the most exciting in the world, one who usesthe power station as a framework on which to hang hisunique view of existence. Yevgeny Yevtushenko is thepoet; the poem is Bratsk Station, and it is, in the wordsof Vogue Magazine, the 33-year-old Russian’s “newestand perhaps his greatest.”Some of you may already be familiar With a bit ofBratsk Station, for on his recent tour of Americancolleges, Yevtushenko read parts of it to enthusiasticaudiences. Now the whole epic cycle of 35 poems, alongwith 26 other new poems (on such diverse subjects asseals, jukeboxes, and the death of Edith Piaf) are col¬lected in a new Doubleday Anchor Original paperback.In the introduction to Bratsk Station and Other NewPoems, translated by Tina Tupikina-Glaessner, Geof¬frey Dutton, and Igor Mezhakoff-Koriakin ($1.25),Rosh Ireland calls Bratsk “a second autobiography.Besides Yevtushenko’s view of history, it contains . . .the coalescing of a coherent view of his errors in thepast and determination for the future . . . and a vastamount of evidence on his view of himself and his owngeneration.”Mr. Ireland sees Yevtushenko “as a poet whose value,like his inquiry, extends beyond the boundaries of theSoviet Union, and whose work is properly the concernof all to whom poetry is important.” Yevtushenko him¬self, in setting himself the monumental task of thisdistinctly Russian, yet universal poem, writes in aprologue,V the poet is his'century’s image,and the visionary symbol of the future.Without shyness, the poet summing upthe total, all that has happened before him ...Can I do this?On the evidence, the answer is yes.Another author who set himself a monumental taskand succeeded is John Barth. Six years ago, when theauthor of the bestselling Giles Goat-Boy wrote TheSot-Weed Factor, critic Leslie Fiedler said it was“closer to the great American novel than any other bookof the past decades.” Now John Barth has revised TheSot-Weed Factor, as he puts it “to make this longnarrative a quantum swifter and more graceful,” with¬out in any way changing the plot or the characters. Itwas 806 pages; it’s now 768. The Sot-Weed Factor:revised edition, $7.50.The two books reviewed above are published by the sponsorsof this column. Doubleday Anchor Boohs, X77rPark Avenue,New York City, and Doubleday & Company, Inc., Garden City,New York. You’ll find them both at one of the best equippedbooksellers in the country — your own college store. ^ No Marks from MarxistDonald Barnett, an assistant prd-fesor of anthropology, has starteda stir at Iowa by refusing to turn inany grades at all. Barnett said hewas withholding grades becausethey might be used as a basis fordrafting some of his students.Barnett, who says he is a Marx¬ist, is now teaching three classeswithout pay. A university rule or¬ders a teacher’s salary to be cut offif he hands in no marks.THE SITUATION appears tohave reached a stalemate as Bar¬nett says, “I’m waiting for the uni¬versity to make its decision and tosee w’hat it does.” On the otherside, “the university administratorshave no further action planned,”said the dean of Barnett’s college. The 75th anniversary, or 72nd an¬nual Wash Prom, depending onyour numbering system, will beheld to honor George Washington,born on February 11th or 22nd, onFebruary 18th.The formal affair will include acatered buffet dinner, the Ross An¬derson Orchestra, the Larry NovakTrio, and Lurlean Hunter. The din¬ner will be held in the Cloister Clubballroom between 8:30 and 1:00pm. Admission will be $6.00 percouple.THE HIGH POINT of the eveningwill undoubtedly be the crowning ofMiss University of Chicago.Student interest in the WashProm has been running very high. A typical student reaction whenquestioned about the Wash Promwas, “I guess it’s the only formalaffair of the year.”w*'v<:;CareersRecruiting representatives of the fol-lowing organizations will visit the Officeof Career Counseling and Placementduring the week oi February 20 Interview appointments for 1967 graduatesmay be arranged through Mr. L SCalvin, Room 200, Reynolds Club, Ex¬tension 3884.Monday, February 20Marshall Field & Company: Chicago.Illinois. Development Program leadingtoward supervisory and managerial po¬sitions.Texas Instruments: Dallas, Texas Alldegree levels in Chemistry (Analytical,organic, physical) mathematics, phys¬ics, and statistics.Tuesday, February 21Illinois BeU Telephone Company: Chi¬cago, Illinois Women graduates in alldisciplines for a variety of training pro-grams.Illinois institute at Technology Research Institute: Chicago, Illinois. AllLevels in Chemistry (ail specialties),mathematics, physics (all specialties)and statistics. Schedule permitting willinterview graduate students in these de¬partments for summer work.Wednesday, February 22Asiatic Petroleum Company (RoyalI Dutch/Shell). Will interview nationals ofj virtually aU European countries whoI are candidates for the S.M., Ph D ordoing post doctoral work in Chemistry,I mathematics, physics, geophysical sci-■ ence. or statistics.Thursday, February 23J C. Penny Company: New York,N.Y. Men and women for trainee posi| tions in buying, finance, or program-! ming'systems.General Foods Corporation: Chicago,Illinois; Tarrytown, N.Y.: Battle Creek,Mich ; Hoboken, N J. S B. and S.MChemists (analytical, organic, bio ) forlaboratory; graduates of all depart¬ments for sales.Friday, February 24Aetna Insurance Company: Hartford,Oonn. Sales, data processing, actuarial,underwriting, systems analysis, andwork measurement analysis.Hunt-Wesson Foods: Chicago, I» andthroughout the US. Men for aales.... Un jour, votre famine aura besolnd’argent lorsqu’elle n'aura plus votrasalaire, ou bien vous aura; voua-mtmabesoln d’un revenu pour votra retraite.L’assurance Sun Ufa peut vous pro¬curer let deux.En tent que representsnt local de la SueLHe, puls-je vous visiter i we moment devotra chotx?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,other* by appt.•UN UPI DU CANADA, COMPACNII D’A88URANCI-VIIUNI COMPA6NIK MUTUILLIThe University of Chicago1966 ORATORIO FESTIVAL 1967ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Woodlawn Avenue(Rescheduled from January 29)SUNDAY AFTERNOON 3:30 FEBRUARY 19VERDI’SREQUIEM MASSRICHARD VIKSTROMDirector of Chapel MusicTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRwith 58 members of theCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRASOLOISTSNeva Pilgrim, Soprano Charlotte Brent, Mezzo-SopranoWalter Carringer, Tenor Henri Noel, BaritoneReserved $4.50, General Admission $3.50UC Fac/Staff $3.00, Students $2«50University of Chicago BookstoreChapel House, 5810 WoodlawnCooley's Candles, 5210 Harper CourtWoodworth's Bookstore, 1311 E. 57th StreetTicket Central, 212 N. Michigan AvenueHandel's SOLOMON originally scheduled for February 19will be presented on April 23Tickets:On Sale At:2 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 17, 1967Parsons’ No Regrets about Worl^,Homage to Mentor Weber Administration Worried By Drug Use;May Publish Pamphlet Discussing IssueHarvard sociologist TalcottParsons paid homage Tuesdayto his intellectual mentor, MaxWeber.“I do not for a moment regret”spending approximately forty yearsin translating, defending, and ex¬panding Weber’s works, Parsonstold a large audience in MandelHall, in a talk sponsored by StudentGovernment.Although Weber had been deadfor five years by the time Parsonsfirst read his works in 1920. hiscontributions have influenced Par¬sons’ work ever since."WEBER IS the most importantsingle figure in founding the mod¬ern era” in the study of social or¬ganization. Parsons said. ‘‘His onlyclose competitor is Emile Durk-heim,” French philosopher andsociologist. Parsons remarked.Much of Weber’s importance arises from his contributions to thephilosophy and method of socialsciences, Parsons commented.These included:Value-free Science• His insistence that science, in¬cluding social science, has valuesof its own. Social scientists mustnot permit political or other com¬mitments to interfere in theirscholarly activities.• Weber’s emphasis on the impor¬tance of developing generalized an¬alytical theory for the social sci¬ences. He insisted that society andculture can be analyzed into com¬ponent parts, in opposition to thefollowers of Kant, who viewed cul¬ture as a unified whole.• His interest in finding the “in¬tended meaning” an actor on thestage of society gives to his ac¬tions, whether or not this is con¬scious. This is the principle of "v«r-stehen," which can be translatedTemporary Campus Bus Route ScheduleUntil all of the regular bus routes and schedules can bemet, the following are temporary routes and schedulesfor the North-South, East-West Broadview, and SouthShore-South Campus Buses, which are effective Wed.Feb. 15.An announcement will be made when the regular busroutes and schedules can be maintained.We regret the inconvenience and appreciate your indul¬gence during this period.Office of the Business ManagerCampus Operations("N") NORTH SOUTHStarts 48th & Woodlawn; South on Woodlawn to East BoundMidway; stopping at all intersections when flagged.—E on Midwayto Dorchester; N on Dorchester to 59th; W on 59th to Woodlawn;N on Woodlawn to 49th; W on 49th to Greenwood; N on Green¬wood to 48th; E on 48th to Woodlawn.SCHEDULE: A M. Starts 48th & Woodlawn7:307:358 008 058 308359 009 05 Ends at 59th &Kimbark P.M. Starts at 59th & Kimbark12 Noon 3:2512:30 3:301:00 4:001:30 4:301:35 (Tues. only) 5:002:00 5:302:40 6:002:45 6:30 Ends atMidway &Dorchester("E") EAST-WEST-BROADVIEWStarts 59th & Stony; West on 59th to Cottage Grove; stopping atall intersections when flagged.—N on Cottage to 57th St; East on57th St. to Stony; N on Stony to 56th; W on 56th to Lake Park;N on Lake Park to 55th; East on 55th to Hyde Park Blvd; N onHyde Park Blvd to 51st; W on 51st to Lake Park; S on Lake Parkto 53rd; E on 53rd to Hycle Park Blvd; S on Hyde Park Blvd. to57th Drive; 57th Drive to Stony; Stony to 59th.SCHEDULE: A M Starts at 59th A Stony P.M.7:15 9 00 12:30 4:307:30 9:30 1:00 4:45 ,7 45 10 00 1:30 5:008 00 10 30 2:00 5:158:15 11 00 2:30 5:308:30 11:30 3:00 5:458:45 12 00 3:30 6:004 00 6:15 Trip ends4:15 at Broadviewabout 6:40("S") SOUTH SHORE-SOUTH CAMPUSStarts at 67th & Jeffrey; South to 76th; stopping at all intersec¬tions when flagged.—East on 76th to Yates; North on Yates to 71stSt; West on 71st to Jeffrey; N on Jeffrey to 67th; West on 67thto Stony Island; N on Stony through the park to 59th & Stony.West on 59th to Ellis (P.M. Start) South on Ellis to E. bound Mid¬way; E on Midway to Stony Island, through Park to 67th & Jeffrey.SCHEDULE: A M Starts at 67th A Stony7:007:308:008:309:009:30 Ends at 59th A Ellisabout 10:15 A M. P.M. Starts at 59th A Stony2:30 5:303:30 6:30 ends at4:00 67th A4:30 Stony at5:00 about 7:15 P.M. as “understanding” or “interpreta¬tion.”WEBER CONSCIOUSLY soughtto “overthrow” Marxian thought,Parsons remarked. The most im¬portant difference between Weber’soutlook and the method of Marx¬ians is the Marxian “historicism,”Parsons said.Marx and his followers dividedWestern history into segments ac¬cording to the supposedly dominatemode of economic production, andviewed each era as only a transi¬tional period before the next. We¬ber, on the other hand, investigatedthe inter-relations between econom¬ic production, social values andnorms, and other factors for a widerange of eras and areas. He thenattempted to devise theories whichwould be applicable to all timesand places—his “generalized analy¬sis.”Law the KeyAside from his important influ¬ence on philosophy and method,Weber also made valuable contri¬butions to our substantive knowl¬edge of societies, Parsons pointedout.The key to his work lies in hisstudy of the sociology of lew, Par¬sons said, partially because Weberwas trained in jurisprudence. Hisinterest in values, norms, and theiracceptance by members of a soci¬ety through legitimation, led himfurther into such areas as the so¬ciology of religion, and its connec¬tions with modes of economic pro¬duction. by Slade Lander(Editor’s note: The following is thefirst in a series of articles dealing withLSD use on the UC campus.)At least three UC adminis¬trators contacted by the Ma¬roon this week view studentuse of drugs like LSD withconcern. Dean of Students WarnerA. Wick emphasized, however, thatthe University does not plantagents to obtain information on stu¬dent drug use.The main responsibility of theUniversity, according to Wick, is toprovide the student body with infor¬mation about the effects and dan¬gers of drugs. Wick referred to apamphlet published by ColumbiaUniversity presenting medical andlegal facts concerning commonlyused drugs. He said the administra¬tion here is considering publishinga similar pamphlet.WICK ADDED, however, whenthe use of drugs becomes a com¬munity problem, the Universitydoes take action. “We are con¬cerned about pushers and when wehave evidence of pot parties we tryto follow it up,” he said.Although UC administrators feelthat dealings with drugs become adisciplinary matter only when thestudent’s actions become a commu¬nity problem, they believe that astudent’s use of drugs is indicativeof individual problems whichshould be dealt with by counseling."Serious Thing"“We look upon using LSD as avery serious thing,” said James UC4U Ul 51U-JERICHO SPECIALThe walls are coming down!Blow your paycheck and ourtrumpet. dents. “I think the most seriousconsequences are what would hap¬pen emotionally or psychological¬ly.”No administration official said hecould estimate the extent of druguse on campus. Wick said that hedidn’t have any notion and addedthat it is impossible for the admin¬istration to obtain information fromeither the Student Health Clinic orthe Student Mental Health Clinicconcerning students—much lesstheir problems with drugs.Wick noted that the first case ofa student being admitted to theBillings emergency room becauseof the bad effects of LSD occuredin the fall of 1965. “But. he added, Idon’t know who the student wasand I couldn’t find out if I wantedto.”THE ADMINISTRATORS gener¬ally felt there were two reasons forstudent use of LSD. The first, theysaid, is curiosity or a desire fornew experience and the second isan emotional problem or an inabili¬ty to find meaning in more conven-tial life experiences.James Vice, dean of first-yearstudents, discussed the second rea¬son with this reporter. He main¬tained that students unable to ob¬tain meaning from the variety ofexperience in the University com¬munity turn to some extreme formof experience—such as takingLSD—-to form an order and mean¬ing in their lives.Thus, Vice reasoned, the stu¬dent’s use of LSD must not beviewed as an isolated incident, butrather «s one instance of the stu¬dent’s quest for meaning in life.Group To End Slumsill Work in LawndaleThe Lawndale Union To End( Slums, an affiliate of the Chicago: Freedom Movement, is interestedin recruiting UC students to workin the Lawndale area.Expansion* sale items:List NOWLOUNGE (HAIRVarious Colors 74.00 3995DINING (HAIRSUpholstered Seat & Back 48.00 2400SWEATERS100% Virgin WoolPullovers 32.00 255o(ardigans 39.00 OOCOPHILCO TRANSISTOR RADIOS 13.95 1 1 45Fully Guaranteed 1 ■* acquiring 800 square feet next door.Scandinavian Imports53rd & Lake Park Blvd. NO 7-4040Hours: Weekdays & Saturday 11-9, Sun. 12-6 The Union has until recently con¬centrated its efforts in the organi¬zation of tenant unions. The Unionnow hopes to reach larger numbersin the community through the orga¬nization of buying clubs, andthrough the organization of thoseaffected by urban renewal andthose on welfare.Those students who can volunteera few afternoons a week or whocan be called on for special helpshould call Jeff Hantover at 493-3284.MEET YOURPERFECTDATE!You too can be amongst thethousands of satisfied adults.Let Dateline Electronics com¬puters programmed for womenages 18 to 45 and men 18 to55. Take the guess work out ofdating.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.NameAddressCityDATELINE ELECTRONICRESEARCH INC. CMf. O. Box 369, Chicago, III.60645For Add. Info Call 271-3133February 17, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Continued expansionof our military and commercial businessprovides openingsfor virtually every technical talent.As you contemplate one of the most important decisionsof your life, we suggest you consider career oppor¬tunities at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft. Like most everyoneelse, we offer all of the usual “fringe’' benefits, in¬cluding our Corporation-financed Graduate EducationProgram. But, far more important to you and your fu¬ture, Is the wide-open opportunity for professionalgrowth with a company that enjoys an enviable recordof stability In the dynamic atmosphere of aerospacetechnology.And make no mistake about It . . . you’ll get a solidfeeling of satisfaction from your contribution to ournation’s economic growth and to its national defenseas well.Your degree can be a B.S., M.S. or Ph.D. In: MECHAN¬ICAL, AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL, CIVIL (structuresOriented), ELECTRICAL, MARINE, and METALLURGI¬CAL ENGINEERING • ENGINEERING MECHANICS,APPLIED MATHEMATICS, CERAMICS, PHYSICS andENGINEERING PHYSICS. Take a look at the above chart; then a good long look etPratt & Whitney Aircraft—where technical careera offerexciting growth, continuing challenge, and laatlng ate-’billty—where englneera and scientists are recognized aathe major reason for the Company** continued aucceas.'PRATT JL WHITNEY AIRCRAFT TECHNICAL POPULATION VS YEARSPROJECTED GROWTHRECORD OF STABILITY(No dip in technical populationfor the last quartetof a century) uFor further Information concerning a career with Pratt& Whitney Aircraft, consult your college placementofficer—or write Mr. William L. Stoner, EngineeringDepartment,‘Pratt & Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford,Connecticut 06108. SPECIALISTS IN POWER . . . POWER FOR PROPULSION-*POWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS. CURRENT UTILIZATIONSINCLUDE MILITARY AND COMMERCIAL AIRCRAFT, MISSILES,SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.Pratt & Whitney AircraftCONNECTICUT OPERATIONS EAST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT uDIVISION OP UNITED A IP c RAPT CONES„ aa Jbl ImM CMAOrftnrtlftM laidlMiill. t 'tfSfsM*V-,4 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 17, 1967 We Won't Go GroupAnnounces It WillPublish NewsletterWe Won’t Go is starting a news¬letter to raise money and .spreadthe gospel of draft resistance. Themove was announced at a meetingheld Wednesday.The first issue of the newsletter,which will be distributed sometimein March, will include articles onthe origin of the group, Americantactics in Vietnam, and prospectsfor evading the draft by moving toCanada.Members of the UC-based grouphave signed a petition declaringtheir refusal to serve in the Ameri¬can armed forces in Vietnam.Close to a hundred draft age menfrom UC and the Chicago areahave signed the petition, and thereare plans for speakers and newspa¬per ads to attract more signers.Other projects informally agreedon at the meeting were:• Compiling essays from applica¬tions for Conscientious Objectorstatus.• Contacting and offering assis¬tance to draft resisters whosenames are (theoretically, at least)available to the public.• Requesting funds from the Cen¬tral Intelligence Agency after theexample of the National StudentAssociation.Members of We Won’t Go will bein the Thompson House lounge inPierce Tower next Wednesdaynight at 8 p.m.Calendar of EventsFriday, February 17FENCING MEET: George Williams, 7pm Frosh vs. Culver Academy.MOVIE: The Fugitive. DocumentaryFilms. Social Sciences 122 7:15 and9:15 pm. 60 cents.DISCOTHEQUE: Reynolds Club Dis¬cotheque.” Hitchcock Hall. 8 HO pm - .2Midnight. Men: 50 cents. Women: 25cents.LECTURE: “Continuity and Change inthe Study of Politics." David Easton.Political Science Association. 3:30 pm,Social Sciences 122.LECTURE: "A New Approach to theUnderstanding of Chemical Carcinoge¬nesis," Dr. Emmanuel Farbeir, Universi¬ty of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.Cancer Coordinator Lecture Series(School of Medicine). Billings P117, 5pm.LECTURE: "History and PoliticalTheory in the Declaration of Independ¬ence,” John H M Laslett. Basic Pro¬gram of Liberal Education for Adults,S3 E. South Water St., 8 pm.LECTURE: "Selective Pacifism. I.SDand Other Foreign Problems of Reli¬gious Freedom,” Marc Galanter. HillelFoundation, 5715 Woodlawn. 8:30 pm.THEATRE: Tonight at 8:30, Exit andExile, and three one-acts by Ionesco.Reynolds Club Theatre 8:30 pm.TRYOUTS: Tryouts for “The Pied Pi¬per," a musical play for children. HydePark Neighborhood Club, 5480 Kenwood.8 pm. Actors, signers, set designers,painters, seamstresses needed.Saturday, February 18FENCING MEET: George Williams. 11am. Indiana University, University trfWisconsin, U S. Air Force Academy.MOVIE: Ikiru, Nihon Bunka Kai. SocialSciences 122, 7:15 and 9:15 pm. COcents.THEATRE: Tonight at 8:30, Exit andExile, and three one-acts by Ionesco.Reynolds Club Theatre 8:30 pm.WASH PROM: 8:30 pm - 1 am. IdaNoyes Hall. $6/couple.Sunday, February 19UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE:Rockefeller Memorial Chapel 11 am.Preacher: The Reverend E. SpencerParsons. Dean of the Chapel. "Prayerand the Human Condition.”FOLK DANCE: UC Folkdancers. IdaNoyes Hail, 7:30 pm. 25 cents. Teach¬ing. 7:30- 9:30 pm. Request session,9:30 - 11 pm.LECTURE: Herman Kahn. StudentGovernment and Whig Society. MandelHall, 8 pm. (75th Anniversary Series )Monday, February 20WORKSHOP: UC Workshop in Nonvio¬lence. Carl Zietlow, of AmericanFriends Service Committee, will leadsessions in role playing, covering situa¬tions such as street attack, arrest,street talking Ida Noyes Hall, 4 pm.MOVIE: The Sword and (he Flute, andTextiles and Ornamental Arts of India.Indian Civilization Staff. 7 pm, Rose>>wald 2. "Sights and Sounds of Indiaseries.Reynolds Club DebateHouse Autonomy Causesby John MoscowStudents and faculty mem¬bers clashed on the problem ofsex and student power, lastMonday night at the ReynoldsClub.The Student Government spon¬sored debate underlined what someconsider the growing split betweenstudents and faculty and amongstudents themselves on the role ofhouse autonomy in determining so¬cial rules.Jerry Lipsch, chairman of the SGCampus Action Committee, openedwith a blast at the present concep¬tion of house autonomy. Speakingfrom a prepared statement, heclaimed that “real house autonomyis incompatible with veto powerfrom a superior source. . . I sug¬gest that Wick’s qualification ofhouse autonomy is really a nega¬tion of it.”Hyde ParkTHEATRE5312 S. Lake Park NO 7-9071praaant*“DoctorZhivago”WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS | He said he could not understand“why this one interest group—theadministration—should have a veto.The myth has been put forwardonce again that the administrationrepresents the interests of the Uni¬versity as a whole.”LIPSCH SAID the administrationdoes not represent the University,and the students should have muchgreater powers in the dormitorysystem than they do at present. Hesuggested that there be completeautonomy, without the present re¬view by the Inter-House Council(IHC) and the office of the Dean ofStudents.Benjamin Frankel. a second-yearstudent in Hitchcock House, voicedcomplaints against IHC PresidentBurstein, the IHC, and Dean ofStudents Warner A. Wick becauseHitchcock’s hours proposal hadbeen rejected by both groups.He reviewed the subsequent ac¬tion taken by Hitchcock, comment¬ing, “We have used all existingchannels and some that didn’t existto get this settled. We have not re¬belled from the University.”Weekends through February 76thJAMES BALDWIN'SBLUES FORMR. CHARLIEHULL HOUSE PARKWAY500 East 67th StraatReservations: 324-36MJimmy’sand the University RoomMMftVIO IXCIVSIV1LY FOR dMfYWHITY flLNNTMTONIGHT AT 8:30UKt,A NEW PLAY WRITTEN AND DIRECTEDby RICHARD VERTElANDTHREE ONE-ACTS BYIONESCOMAID TO MARRY,MOTOR SHOW and LEADERDirected by ANOY KAPLANFEBRUARY 17-18, 24-25REYNOLDS CLUB THEATREGeneral Admission $1.25Students and Faculty $ .75Tickets on Sale at the Door "• ' v i • f;;Panel Split Funding of the NSABy CIA Is BaredMarlene Dixon, a graduate stu¬dent formerly of the University ofCalifornia, viewed the problem asone of student power. “It seemsthat there are two approaches—either the power of suggestion, butnot of law, may be in the hands ofthe students, or else there can benegotiation. But that requires abase of power for the students.”A Learning ProcessShe asserted that there weremany extraneous factors importantin the dispute. “In a conflict of thissort students are engaged in alearning process-learning aboutpower and its uses, et cetera.”Spencer Parsons, Dean of Rocke¬feller Chapel, who had advisedWick on the rules, was more com¬prehensive. “I begin with the as¬sumption of interdependence—whatgoes on in a house affects othersthan the residents of that house.Relative autonomy is all that canbe talked about —there is no suchthing as absolute autonomy, or forthat matter as absolute freedom.”Despite this interdependence ofsocial groups, Parsons stated thatthere are many areas of what usedto be public domain which are nowconsidered private. “Relationshipsbetween consenting adults are nolonger an area of public control.”MARK HALLER, resident headof Henderson House, attackedLipsch’s view that the house sociallife was solely the concern of thehouse by saying that it was theconcern of the entire Universitycommunity. He viewed the problemas one of creating a soicety in thedormitories that would be maxi¬mally conducive to the academicatmosphere necessary.Burstein called the problem notone of freedom but of structure. Hepointed to Henderson and ShoreyHouses two years ago when bothhad little structure with high ratesof flunking out, dropping out, andmoving out of the dorm. (Continued from Page One)zation, the International Union ofStudents (IUS).The Washington Post quoted Rob¬ert Amory Jr., deputy director ofthe CIA during the fifties, as saying,“It would have been nonsense forthere not to be (support to organi¬zations like this). If we hadn’t done1 this, we could have just been runover by the Commie front organiza¬tions.”CIA ContactsAside from support for foreigntravel, the CIA had further contactwith NSA by picking out a few “re¬liable” NSA officials each year andasking them to co-operate with theintelligence agency. Those selectedwere reportedly asked to keep incontact with CIA agents while trav¬elling abroad, and relay informa¬tion to them about meetings withrepresentatives of other nationalunions of students.The CIA was reportedly particu¬larly interested in learning all itcould about officers of nationalunions of students in “ThirdWorld” countries—Africa, Asia,and Latin America—because stu¬dent association officers vefy oftenbecome officials in their govern¬ments.No one has ever in any wayintimated that NSA officials wereever asked to divulge informationabout other students in the U S.Information on the nature of theNSA officials’ relations with theCIA was relayed to the Maroon bya staff member of the U.S. StudentPress Association who has talkedwith Philip Sherburne, last year’sNSA president.In their dealings with the CIA,those NSA officials who were in¬volved were required to sign secu¬rity agreements with the intelli¬gence agency, the Collegiate PressService reported. The agreementJapanese Film FestivalPresentsIKIRUKUROSAWA - DirectorSat., Feb. 18 7:15 and 9:30 specified that no information ob¬tained from the CIA would bemade public.While only a few NSA officersknew about the relationship withthe CIA during most of its length,several who had not known werelet in on the secret last year byMike Wood, the author of the Ram¬parts article. Wood was then work¬ing as a fund-raiser for the associa¬tion. He was dismissed by Grovesand the other officers when theytook office last fall.SINCE THE knowledge of the re¬lationship had spread by the timeGroves and the other present offi¬cers were elected last August, theyreportedly knew about it beforetheir election, and had decided toend it completely.Sherburne, last year’s president,began to obtain funds to enable theassociation to get along withoutCIA support for its internationalactivities. Such efforts had beenmade in the past, but were not suc¬cessful until last year, when sup¬port for other programs was givenby independent foundations andother government agencies, such asthe Office of Economic Opportuni¬ty.When the new officers took overlast fall, they accepted only $25,000from the CIA, to pay for salary andtravel of the present InternationalAffairs Vice President, RichardStearns. This payment ended in De¬cember, and no CIA money hascome in since January of this year.GROVES TOLD the CollegiatePress association of the decision toend the CIA ties:. “It’s an awesome moral choice toface when one is first told all thedetails. If we had immediately re¬vealed the connection, it could haveharmed a hell of a lot of innocentpeople. First we had to get the As¬sociation in a position of independ¬ent financing,” he said.Collegiate Press Service repor¬ters Lawrie Nickerson and SteveBookshester also learned from NSAsources that New York-based Foun¬dation for Youth and Student Af¬fairs (FYSA) was the major sourceof CIA-originated funds.The connection between the CIAand the FYSA was denied by theFYSA’s executive secretary, HarryLunn.FYSA has also given major sup¬port to the International StudentConference (ISC) and the WorldAssembly of Youth (WAY).No public tax records are avail¬able for the FYSA, the CPS articlereported. Internal Revenue Serviceofficials told the news service thatthe FYSA does not file the yearlytax-exemption form usually re¬quired of private foundations.Revenue statutes specify that ifan organization is “supported inwhole or in part by funds from theUnited States government,” or byfunds from “the general public,” itdoes not have to file a yearly form.FYSA executive secretary Lunnsaid the group's major contributorswere its two officers and seven di¬rectors.WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE S COMEDY't K1UCH ADOABOUT NOTHiNgPREMIERE U.S PROOUCTIONrVTtfTS'lOF REVISED TEXT BYROBERT GRAVESCO-STARRINGCARRIE NYE& JAMES RAYwith Vincent ParkOPENS FEB. 17thGOODMAN THEATRE200 S COLUMBUS DRIVE • CE 6-2J27V LUUUM^n umiuntna »nmn* n»wn><*Piraciesi&theTiio®"A MEW VEHSIOM FOS CHILDREN^^ Nightly Except Monday*nnnnnsmnEMEnnnnsMiitGOOD M VI CHILDREN S EHEAIRt PRESENTSFebruary 17, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5NSA and the CIAThe worst crisis in the history of the National Student Asso¬ciation has resulted from the disclosure that the organizationhas accepted millions of dollars in aid, for the last fourteenyears, from the Central Intelligence Agency.As the Maroon went to press last night, there was still thepossibility that NSA might disband entirely, so severe are theimplications of the CIA involvement for NSA’s future effec¬tiveness.THE ARRANGEMENT with the CIA was so secretive thatmany NSA officers found out about it only after taking office.It is almost certain that none of the Association’s rank and filehad any idea of where the funds that accounted for over 25%of NSA's annual budget were coming from.Perhaps most disturbing of all are the charges by a spokes¬man for Ramparts magazine that students sent abroad were, ineffect, agents for the CIA—a charge, incidentally, that Com¬munist countries have been making for years.No other organization in American government is capable ofarousing the hatred, fear, and suspicion in foreign countriesthat the CIA arouses. For the CIA to be secretly paying theexpenses of American student groups at international confer¬ences abroad would be unthinkable if it weren’t true.IT MAY BE THAT the arrangement was really quite inno¬cent, but no one knows for sure and even those who wouldmost like to believe that NSA did nothing wrong cannot easilydispel their doubts.If what the NSA delegations were doing was strictly honora¬ble and if it’s true that it was necessary for the government tofund NSA in order to counter the influence of heavily financeddelegations from Communist countries, then why wasn’t themoney given to NSA by the State Department, or the Depart¬ment of Health, Education and Welfare, and why wasn’t thewhole business public?The CIA is not likely to make an investment in the NSA thatno other government agency was willing to make without somereasons, and the speculation about just what those reasonswere will cripple NSA for years to come.IT’S ALMOST BELABORING the obvious to point out thatnothing an American delegation to an international conferencesays will be talen at face value anymore, not to mention thenew light in which the positions of American delegations since1952 will now be evaluated.On campuses across the country there is already considera¬ble indignation over the role of the NSA leadership in accept¬ing funds for the Association that none of the membershipknew about. At many schools, student governments are de¬manding that their schools disaffiliate from NSA.The controversy is going to get worse before the future ofNSA is clear, but we think that if nothing else results from thiswhole sorry episode, a couple of fundamental questions oughtto be raised. It is important for everyone who condemns NSA’sactions—as indeed they should be condemned—to consider thepressures and problems which non-profit organizations likeNSA must deal with.IT HAS BEEN POINTED out, for example, that had NSAnot accepted money from the CIA, it would have been impossi¬ble for the Association to send delegates to international con¬ferences, and most of us would agree that American studentsshould be represented at these meetings.The decision to accept CIA funds was a catastrophic one butit’s possible to understand why NSA made it. NSA could notexist at all without government and foundation support andthe first NSA officers who consented to the CIA’s offer musthave felt that they were only stretching things a bit by accept¬ing the help of this particular government agency.Universities too are dependent on foundation and corpora¬tion support. It’s not inconceivable, for example, that some ofthe money being raised by the UC fund drive is coming fromunsavory sources.PERHAPS THE BEST suggestion we can give is one that hasbeen given many times before, and that is that complete open¬ness is the best policy. As long as organizations like NSA andUC are dependent on outside support, they are going to bevulnerable to outside pressures. Complete honesty won’tchange this fact, but at least if the public knows who is fundingwho, there will be a basis for judging an organization’s actionsand an insurance against the kind of debacle that is threaten¬ing to destroy NSA.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 17, 1967 David E. GumperfRangers' RestaurantHas Tough Road AheadBlackstone Ranger Cleo Bakeris wrong when he says that peopleat UC, including this writer, arekeeping their fingers crossed andhoping that the Rangers’ proposedrestaurant doesn’t get off theground.If we sometimes seem doubtful,it is just that the plans of justabout everyone who has attempt¬ed to tackle Woodlawn’s gangwoes have been frustrated.TAKE THE Chicago police forexample. Their solution to theproblem of gangs was simply toimprison the gang’s leaders andhope that the members woulddrift apart and the problem goaway. When the police faced op-postion from within Woodlawn,they tried to make deals with theRangers like having the membersturn in their weapons in exchangefor dropping charges against thegang’s leaders. Still the violencecontinued, and before last yearwas over, scores of Woodlawnteenagers had been wounded andseveral kilieu.Government agencies such asthe Chicago Commission on Hu¬man Relations and the UrbanProgress center, on the otherhand, have maintained that thesolution to the Rangers’ problemslies in finding them jobs and inthis way keeping them off thestreets. Part of this solution isthe underlying hope that many ofthe Rangers will lose interest inthe gang, and it will slowly disin¬tegrate. Yet the latest report isthat Ranger membership is stead¬ ily increasing.A THIRD CONCEPT in dealingwith the Rangers is one that hasbeen supported by the First Pres¬byterian Church in Woodlawn.The First Church has actively at¬tempted to maintain the Rangersas a group in the hope that theiranti-social behavior can be redi¬rected into useful channels. Theseuseful channels include job train¬ing programs administrated bythe Rangers themselves, the run¬ning of Rangers as candidates forpolitical office, and now, the open¬ing of Ranger owned and staffedbusinesses.It is the First Church’s ideasthat are most interesting. Thechurch’s approach is a BlackPower approach. It involvesNegroes organizing themselveseconomically and politically with¬in their own community. Yet, it isstill debatable whether the Rang¬ers’ restaurant represents a solu¬tion or even the beginning of asolution to the problem of gangviolence. In this respect it is im¬portant to consider why theBlackstone Rangers came to bewhat they are today.THE RANGERS became whatthey are because of the need ofmany Woodlawn teen-agers to as¬sert their masculinity in the onlyway they know how—through vio¬lence.The proposed restaurant offershope only for the gang’s leaderswho will be involved. After all,too many cooks can spoil the stewand you don’t need 400 Rangers to run a restaurant.The idea of organizing fromwithin offers the ultimate hope tothe Negro slums of Woodlawn andelsew'here, and in this respect therestaurant proposal is to be com¬mended.BUT FOR THE average Black¬stone Ranger a restaurant run byfive of the gang’s leaders andstaffed by ten others is not of mo¬mentous importance.And along with the problem ofwhether the restaurant will helpthe bulk of the Rangers is thequestion of whether trying to redirect a group like the Rangerswhile at the same time encourag¬ing them to remain a gang is BlackPower in its real and most desira¬ble sense. Are these most alienat¬ed of W'oodlawn’s teenagers whohave attracted each other theone’s to implement black power?It’s aimost painfully obviousthat a person doesn’t change froma street brawler and mugger to aresponsible businessman over¬night. The Rangers have to over¬come all the disadvantages ofgrowing up in Woodlawn, and no¬body who is familiar with eitherthe Rangers or Woodlawn be¬lieves that’s going to be easy.Those who see the restaurantidea as an easy solution, then,had better be prepared for thepossiblity of disappointment. Notonly are the Rangers least pre¬pared to pioneer Black Power, butalso the gang as a group, standsto be helped very little by the res¬taurant plan.Letters to the EditorFrom A RangerTO THE EDITOR:I was very upset by the way thearticle on the opening of theBlackstone Rangers’ restaurantwas printed. I think it is a directslur on one of the few ambitiousventures taken this gang. I knowof several other attempts on thepart of the Rangers for somethingthat would add to the community,that have worked very successful¬ly. But, since anything south ofthe Midway is bad, so bad thatMrs. Muriel Beadle advises hergirls to stay on campus and “en¬gage united black and white toovercome the lower class,” I cansee why you take a comical viewof a few poor exploited, over¬publicized, uneducated, very vi¬olent kids.I think the thinking behind thisis, don’t help them in any waypossible, make fun of them, andhope (with fingers crossed) that itnever gets off the ground. Be¬cause you have enough sense toknow when the University startsits financial colonization of Wood¬lawn, the Rangers could be athreat.2But what you don’t realize thatthe “men children” in the prom¬ised land are finding out what ishappening. That there the realmeaning of Blackstone is stone-black, that they are beginning to ||realize that their real enemy is ||not the Eastside Disciples, butreally the Almighty, Most Power¬ful, Mighty, Mighty, All-up-in-hereUniversity of Chicago.CLEO R. BAKERIMPERIAL RANGERONE OFWOODLAWN’S FINEST London Proles!TO THE EDITOR:We are two third-year studentsat UC who are studying at theLondon School of Economics andPolitical Science. In view of thestriking parallel between the cur¬rent political situation here andlast spring’s sit-in by SAR, wethought many UC students wouldbe interested in recent events atthe LSE.The issues have centeredaround the appointment of Dr.Walter Adams as the next direc¬tor of the LSE. Last term, thestudent union voted to oppose theappointment of Dr. Adams, for¬mer principal of the UniversityCollege of Rhodesia, on the grounds that he has cooperatedwith the Smith government incondoning apartheid practices atthe University College.Acting on a Union Mandate, Un¬ion President David Adelsteinstmt a letter to The Times of I-dn-don explaining the students’ posi¬tion. He was summoned beforethe LSE disciplinary board on No¬vember 21 for using the name ofthe College without the permis¬sion of the director. The student’sunion staged a boycott in supportof Adelstein and no action wastaken against him.Last week, the Graduate Stu¬dents’ Association under the aus¬pices of the Council of the Unionscheduled a meeting to discusspossible methods of stopping the(Continued on Page Eight). :’:v; • . 'Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief ..David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. RichterNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanKenneth SimonsonAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzJoan PhillipsFeature Editor Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyEditor Emeritus Daniel HertzbergThe Chicago Maroon, founded 1892, issued every Tuesday and Fridaythroughout the University of Chicago school year, except during thetenth week of the academic quarter and during examination periods,and weekly for eight weeks during the summer, by students at theUniversity of Chicago. Located in rooms 303. 304, 305 Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637, Distributed without chargeon campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood. Subscriptions by mail$6 per year. Charter member. United States Student Press Assn.Publishers of the Collegiate Press Service.Blackfriar AuditionsSet for Next WeekBlackfriars, UC’s musicalcomedy society, has announcedthat this year, instead of pre¬senting an original student-written play, they will revive the1938 Rogers and Hart musical “TheBoys from Syracuse.”Tryouts for the production will beheld in Ida Noyes Hall on Thurs¬day, February 23, from 7 to 9 pmand on Saturday, February 25,from 1:30 to 5:00 pm. The show willbe presented on April 28 - 29 and onMay 5 - 6. Anyone associated with(he undergraduate or graduate de¬partments of the University is in-Tape RecordersWe are franchised dealers for Wollen-sak, Panasonic and Uher-Martel. Threemonths rent will apply toward thepurchase of any machine. Come in andfind out how easy it is to operate atape recorder.PHOTO DEPARTMENTUniversity of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Avenue vited to try out.Michael Merritt, Blackfriars’president, stressed that special cir¬cumstances influenced the decisionto produce “The Boys from Syra¬cuse” this year and that the Black¬friars will continue to produceoriginal student-written works inthe future.“The Boys from Syracuse,” isbased on Shakespeare’s “Comedyof Errors.” It was very successfulon Broadway and is noted for itsscore which includes such songsas: “Falling in Love with Love,”“The Shortest Day of the Year,”and “This Can’t Be Love.” SAR To Rally As Council Meets(Continued from Page One)age and the ranking of his perfor¬mance against the past five yearsof similar students.BLUM REFUSED to comment onwhat action SAR would take if theCouncil voted for the first proposi¬tion. He did state, however, thatthe SAR petition against the rankwhich has been circulating for anumber of months now had aboutone thousand signatures. The num¬ber of signers has remained moreor less constant over the last sever¬al weeks, according to Blum.In addition, Blum stated that SARwould hold a rally on Tuesday out¬side of Business East, where theCouncil will be meeting, to “ex¬press both our continuing opposi¬tion to the formation of a classNational Debate Tournament ScheduledTo Take Place at UC During April rank of undergraduate males, andour dissatisfaction with the waythis decision is being made . . . ”Faculty ObjectionsAlthough Blum would give no in¬dication of student plans if the rankis retained, some faculty memberswho have previously expressed dis¬satisfaction with the rank indicatedthat they might move to preventtheir personal involvement in theranking procedure.“I would hope to find a way notto participate in ranking,” saidRichard Flacks, assistant professorof sociology.Those of us concerned about thisissue could probably find a way ofhandling it.”ALAN GEWIRTH. a professor ofphilosophy and former member ofthe Committee of the Council, alsoindicated that he might refuse to cooperate if the University contin¬ued to rank. “If I were teachingundergraduates, I would certainlyhave to carefully ponder the posi¬tion I would take,” he said.“I hope very much, however thatthe Council will take the right ac¬tion and withdraw from the wholeranking business,” Gewirth stated.Gerwirth was a member of theCommittee of the Council at thetime of last Spring’s anti-rank sit-inat the Administration Building.The 21st annual National DebateTournament will be held here fromSunday, April 16, through Wednes¬day, April 19.Debate teams from 38 collegesand universities will participate.All sessions will take place in ei¬ther the Center for Continuing Edu-THE WAVE OF THE FUTURE?HEAR ROBERT THEOBALDTELL IT LIKE IT IS -"The issues in a Guaranteed Annual Income."FEB. 23, 8 pm. SSA LOUNGE1- 6Oth & EllisJeffery Theatre1952 E. 71st St. HY 3-3333Wednesday & ThursdayMarch 1 & 2THE D'OYLE CARTE OPERA CO.presentsTHE MIKADOThree performances each dateAt 2, 5, & 8 pm.Student discount rate $1.25For All Performances.Tickets at (he Box Office cation, or Ida Noyes Hall. The tour¬nament will be sponsored by theAmerican Forensic Association inconjunction with UC and North¬western University.This will be the first time sinceits inception in 1946 that the tourna¬ment has been held at any placeother than the United States Mili¬tary Academy, West Point, NewYork.It is also the first time the tour¬nament has been sanctioned by theAmerican Forensic Association.NYC — LONDON$255ROUND TRIPLeave Sept. 1—Return Sept. 27A few seats still availableon group flight via TWACALL 363-6451CINEMACHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANCannes Prize Winner In Color"A MAN & A WOMAN”Sun-Times * *American —"For anyone whose ever been in love."Students $1.25 with I.D. card every daybut Saturday.Weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. 8. Sun.open 1:30 Dinner To BenefitViet Victims Set“A penitential meal of reconcili¬ation” to raise funds for the pur¬chase and shipping of medical andother aid to civilian victims in allsections of Vietnam will be held6:30 pm Tuesday at Brent House,5540 S. Woodlawn Ave.According to E. Spencer Parsons,Dean of Rockefeller Chapel andhonorary chairman of the They AreOur Brothers Committee which issponsoring the event, the meal willbe sparse in keeping with the peni¬tential nature of the occasion. Abrief service will follow the dinner.Those who attend will be asked aminimum donation of $1. Reserva¬tions can be made by callingChapel House, extension 3394.TYPEWRITERSOur Typewriter department is equippedto serve you, no matter what type oftypewriter you own. On each rentalmachine, you have the option to buy.Come in and see us.TYPEWRITER DEPARTMENTUniversity of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Avenue Open Fiske MeetingSet for SaturdaySaturday’s open meeting ofthe Fiske Committee may bestudents’ last chance to expresstheir opinions on the issue ofranking before the Council of theFaculty Senate considers the ques¬tion, Tuesday. The open hearing isset for 9:30 am in Mandel Hall.“This is one more opportunity forpeople to express views which willbe heard by the committee and theCouncil,” said Donald W. Fiske,chairman of the committee. “It ispart of the continuing discussion ofthe problem.”According to administrationsources, the monthly meeting ofthe Council of the Faculty Senatewas changed from the 14th to the21st—after the Fiske Committee’sopen hearing, specifically so stu¬dent opinion could be heard.Fiske remarked that, althoughthis was the Committee’s first openhearing, it had asked in Octoberfor any written communicationsfrom students or faculty memberswith ideas about the rank. “Nobodysent any communications,” he said.Concerning Students Against theRank, Fiske added, “We have hadno communication with any peoplecirculating the SAR petition, whichwe have never seen.”SAMUEL A. BELL'BUY SHELL FROM BELL"since miPICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SH0RELAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWNMichelob and Budweiser on Tap!Piano Selections Friday & Saturday eveningsFebruary 17, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROONUnger's Sports Round-upUC Looking Fairly Goodby Syd UngerThe Maroons will take a 7 and 6 record into this Saturday’sgame with MacMurray College. Last Saturday UC lost a toughdecision to Illinois College, 59-58 - the winning basket comingwith six seconds left in the game. Bill (‘Wink’) Pearson playeda tremendous game - scoring 19points. Dennis Waldon got 12 pointsand 9 rebounds.TUESDAY, CHICAGO topped Illi¬nois Institute of Technology 63-60 ina game played at De LaSalle HighSchool. Coach Stampf said that“every starter was playing ex¬tremely well”—he had not plannedto make many substitutions in thisgame, however, two key playerswere injured during the game.With Chicago leading 55-44, Pear¬son crashed into a wall and suf¬fered a head injury. Fred Dietz, theother starting guard, later injuredhis leg. IIT took advantage of theinjuries and cut the Chicago lead toone point. Gary Day and Doug Pe¬terson each made a pair of clutchfrecthrows to give the Maroons thevictory.For UC, Waldon had 18 points,Dietz had 14 and Day had 10. Den¬nis Waldon is the team’s high scor¬er. He has 170 points in 13games—an average of 13 points pergame.• • •Mott Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259NSA Discounts The track team boosted its re¬cord to 3 and 1 during the pastweek. Last Saturday UC defeatedNorth Central College 72-32, takingfirst place in 10 of the 12 events.Marty Cornelius (13 points) andJohn Beal (11 points) were the highscorers for Chicago. Pete Hilde¬brand. Ted Terpstra, Bob LaRoque,John Lehnhardt, Chuck Stanberryand Steve Kojola were among theother team members who contrib¬uted points to the victory—in all 15Chicago players broke into thescoring column.ON TUESDAY UC lost to Northwestern University 47-66. John Beal(19 points) and Pete Hildebrand (5points) led UC in scoring.• • •The wrestling team defeated St.Joseph’s College on Saturday by ascore of 17 to 12. Gene McGrady,Nick Palevsky. Steve Goldberg,Jim Capser and Ted Peterson con¬tributed individual victories to theChicago attack.Coach Jim Bailie’s team, despitenumerous early season injuries,has a 3 and 4 record thus far thisyear. The team’s leading scorer isGuy Twyman, who wrestles in the137 pound weight class. tjgNiriMMWMmfli mmShm - - ^ ^Letters to the EditorimmmmmmmmmmmmimmmmmKmfmmmm(Continued from Page Six)succession of Dr. Adams. An hourbefore the meeting was to takeplace, the president of the Gradu¬ate Students’ Association wascalled to see LSE Director, SirSidney Caine. The Director toldhim that he had decided not toallow the meeting to take placeon school grounds.At 4:00 pm, several hundredstudents, angry at the denial oftheir rights of assembly and freespeech, gathered outside the OldTheatre where the meeting was totake place. Sir Sidney addressedthe students and explained that hehad banned the meeting becauseit was to discuss direct actionagainst his successor. He equateddirect action with violence. Whena student asked, “What about ourrights?” Caine replied, “Youhave no rights.”In the midst of mounting confu¬sion, Adelstein called for order,and a vote was taken on whetherto hold the meeting as scheduledin the Old Theatre or to adjournto the Union building. A substan¬tial majority favored entering theTheatre, despite the fact that theDirector had ordered several por¬ters to block the students’entrance.As the students pushed into thetheatre, a 65 year old porter col¬lapsed of a heart attack. By allaccounts he had not been touched,but when his death was an¬nounced, everyone left in shockedsilence. The original issues of Adams’appointment, student representa¬tion in the decision making pro¬cess and students’ rights of freespeech and assembly, have beenall but lost due to the accidentaldeath of the porter. Many stu¬dents have now condemned theentire demonstration as illegiti¬mate and have called for the res¬ignation of the members of theUnion Council. At the union meet¬ing today, after a heated three-hour debate on whether to retainthe present council, the motionwas tabled. A committee of threefaculty members has been ap¬pointed by the Director to investi¬gate the events of Tuesday andrecommend disciplinary action.The impact of the events atLSE on the student movement inEngland is still undecided. Wide¬spread misunderstanding of thereal situation at the school is ag¬gravated by the school regulationthat any letters to the press mustbe approved by the director.In contrast to the University ofChicago, no one even pretendsthat the London School of Eco¬nomics is a “community of schol¬ars.” No faculty members openlysupport the students or addressUnion meetings.But the general atmosphere fordiscussion of issues and ideas isan improvement over the Univer¬sity of Chicago. This is due large¬ly to the fact that, like mostschools in the U.S. as well asBritain, LSE has a Students’ Un¬ion. The affect of regular meet¬ ings of the entire student body, inwhich everyone can express hisopinion and consider matters ofcommon concern is enormousThe institution of a Students Union, instead of the isolated andineffectual “Student Government”would be a great improvement atUC.POLLY YOUNGNANCY STOKLEYBOB NELSON MOTORSImport ContraAmd t»rvtwPar Al RimIw lnp«aliMMmv I-4IMAOW So (travtMitchell/JarmanBENEFIT CONCERTFEB. 17, 19677:30, Reynolds ClubAdmission 50cPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingmo K. 5M It. NV S-II02EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Parle 3-8372Student and Faculty DiscountIALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes.TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yakl,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.URALS HOUSE OF TIKISI ST A HARPERFood eerved 11 a.m. te 3 e.m.LI 1-7505 •'Coca-Cola" and "Coke" ore reghtered trade-marVi which Identify only Ihe product of The Coca-Cola Company.Oh~oh,bettercheck thepunchbowl.Ice-cold Coca-Cola makes any campus "get-together” a party. Coca-Cola has tho tasto you nevor got lirod of...always refreshing. That’s why things ao better with Coke... after Coke. •. after Coke.Bothed under me authority of The Coca-Cola Company by The Coca Cola Bottling Co. of Chicago* * CHICAGO MAROON • February 17, 1967vrExhibit Competitionlounced by FOTArbara Blair has won the 1967,n competition for the Festivalie Arts (FOTA) symbol, FOTA>unced today. Miss Blair is and year student.)TA also announced that all UCents are eligible to enter theFOTA art exhibits in the fol-ng categories: painting andting, graphics, ceramics, sculp-, jewelry, and photography,rds in these categories will;e from $20 to $50.itries should be taken to Jere-Bangs, 37 Hitchcock Hall, or, in?ase of larger works, to Lexing-Ilall at a date to be announced "- wClassified Adyertisements mmmm % mm huh mm m m mPERSONALSLecture: “Selective Pacifism, LSD andOther Frontier Problems of ReligiousFreedom. Prof. Marc Galanter. DeptSocial Sciences. Friday evening, 8 pm.Hillel House.FRIGID? Could a fur rug solve yourproblem? Everything in fur, hide andgame skins. Coverings for floor, walland bed. Priced to sell. Sticks andStones. Harper Court, 5210 S. Harper,324-7266. Daily: Noon to 8 pm. OpenSunday.R E S. Happy BIRTHDAY*-with love.Reynolds Club Discoteque comes toHitchcock. Tonight: 8:30-12.Koinonia: Dinner at Chapel House, 6p.m., tonight.The NOBLEMEN join ALPHA DELTfor a wild Greek bash, TONIGHT at8:30. 5747 University (males 50c)AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN l ZENITH -- NEW & 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 student* with ID cards .t-‘ ^ i v' ... .* *|& $£§ JRThe American Blues Dream Band in¬volves Hitchcock. Tonight 8:30-12.10% discount for UC Students.SKI TRIPS TO BUFFALO PARK (200Ft. Vertical Drop) One hour from cam¬pus. $10 pays transportation, lift ticket,skis, boots, poles and lessons. Tuesdayand Thursday afternoons. Call Stu at667-5114.ART EXHIBIT: ISRAEL TODAY ANDOTHER PAINTINGS. A collection ofoils and watercolors by BACIA GOR¬DON. Most items for sale. Now throughFebruary 28. Hillel House. 5715 Wood-lawn.JUG BAND WANTED-I'm a woman(Formerly Hoochie Coochie)- Needed:Guitars, Voices, Jug, Harp, Banjo, Fid¬dle etc.—all happy sounds welcome.Call BU 8-6610-Room 1304.Writer’s Workshop. PL 2-8377.Will the girl who saw a man fall Mon¬day 6 February, around 5:30 in front ofHarper Lib. W. Tower please callFA 4-8200, Ext. 478 After 7 p.m.CAPITALISM MUST BE DESTROYED!GRADUATING? Be sure your picturegraces the pages of CAP & GOWN. Sit¬ting is free. Come to Ida Noyes, 3rdfloor. Feb 17, 20-22. 9:30-4:30.Red Squares: Come to the Great AukFolk Dance. Feb. 25, Ida Noyes, 8 pm. Slade, does the FDA pay you directlyor through the Psych Department?—AParanoid Head.Do you miss the Friday night folkdance in Red Square? Don’t miss theGreat Auk Folk Dance, Sat., Feb. 25, 8pm. Ida Noyes Basement.NON-PARANOID HEADS: donate yourLSD trips to humanity through anony¬mous and confidential interview withpsychology student studying the use ofLSD on campus. Call Slade Lander,5447 Woodlawn, 324-3034.Man, Caucasoid, will marry any wo'manof any race (preferably under 40) whois nonreligious and opposed to war andcapitalism. She may have children orbe pregnant. 472-3606.Will trade 2 return tickets for SG flight67C from Paris, Aug. 15, for 67B fromLondon, Aug. 30. 787-5885.MADRIGAL CONCERT by Brent HouseSingers. Feb. 26 8:30. Bond Chapel.FREE.L.C.U.C. Lenten Forum: Tonight at 7:30in Swift. The Rev. William Griffinspeaks on “Being Christ for Others.’*U of C Jazz Band. Chairs Open. Re¬hearsals every Thursday, 7:30 pm. Rey¬nolds Club.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty Discount CONTACT LENSES KAMELOT Restaurant, 2168 E. 71st SI.10% discount for UC Students.Neither. Next question.Love, Slade.TO RENTTo share: grad. bus. stud, needs room¬mate to share 3 rm. apt. Male or Fe¬male. Call 664-7495.Male Rmmate wanted to share 4% Rm.apt. with 3rd year grad. stud, privatebed. rm., very close to campus, 47.5®per mo. 667-3169 After 10 pm.Large Sleeping Room. Quiet. I.C. andcampus bus. $10. per week. SouthShore. ES 5-5864.To Rent: Furn. Eff. Apt.-55th at Lake.$121/mo. 288-2411.FOR SALENear 97th & Luella, 6-rm., 3 bdrm. tri¬level, carpets, drapes, finished base¬ment, tile kitchen, storms and screens.Reduced to sell: $16, 800. 374-3792.'59 Ford. $125. 374-7674 after 6:00 pm.Stereo-tape recorder, amp. & Changeron base-$100-RADIO CRAFTSMEN AM-FM Tuner & Altec Lansing 412-ASPEAKER-$40-Stereo Phonos from $10.ES 5-9532.JOBS OFFEREDFemale Part-time $2/hr. 10 hrs/wkmax. Park Shore Cleaners. FA 4-7579.Secretary wanted-Full or pt. time forDr.’s office. Call 723-1009 or 465-2518,evenings.Girl student interested in babysitting 2aft./wk. Please call 548-7602. Good pay.LOSTMSliderule in brown leather case,found, call Sandrqi Bre.vv.er PL 2-7399.Reward for ret. of male Siamese eatnamed Piggly. Lost since Dec. in vicin.53rd & Blkstn. 667-0188.Lost in the snow: Plain gold ring in¬scribed “Ash nazg durbatuluk” (Yes,this is for real). Great sentimentalvalue; corresponding reward for return.Call 667-4280.9 ft. scarf, Reward offered. 955-4766.SS 396 Sport Coupe SS396And a new Turbo Hydra-Matic transmission for the driving man.If yon get tired of shifting, put it in “D”. NEED A DESK?all sizes . . .Catholic SalvageBureau3514 S. MICHIGAN“What a bunch of pompous, humor¬less, self-righteous bigots, these ideo¬logues! How they must be preeningthemselves on their latest triumph— delying the Dragon Apartheid inhis native lair! Just too bad it 3,800oi their fellow citizens on the carrierFranklin D. Roosevelt—on their wayhome from eight months' grimwork defending the kind oi worldthat permits such ideologues to keep Icomfortably *yakking — were I For a free copy of theamong their ■ current issue of NA-victims.” I TIONAL REVIEW, writ#■ to Dept. CP-9, 150 E.mmmmmmmmm 35 st, n. y. u, n. y.TAhSAM-YfcNCHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSp#cMUiif InCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHES•mm bahtM KM. to ti4f MLORDERS TO TARE OUT111! Em* EM •$. M« 4-1041Even a driving man's man can get tiredof clutching and shifting in a trafficjam. But there are times when you wantto stir your gears by hand. A dilemma!Until now, that is. Now you can orderTurbo Hydra-Matic in the SS 396. It's «MM O# ERCEUIMCCTHE QUICK-SIZE '67 CHEVELLE an automatic transmission you can shift—really shift—for yourself. Feeling lazy?Slip the selector into Drive and relax.Want to play expert? So make beautifulmusic on the gearbox. In the Chevellefor the driving man, it's up to you.-Now at your Chevrolet dealer'sFebruary 17, 1967 • C Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of boots, over¬shoes, insulated ski wear, heededcoals, long undarwear, corduroys,"Levis", etc., etc., etc., otc.Universal Army Store1364 I. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:90 - 1 00Theater ReviewMoliere Absent from NRT's Imaginary InvalidThe Miles Malleson adaptation of Le Malade Imaginaire has all the familiar roles of Mo-liere’s play: the deluded father, the enamoured daughter, the impertinent maid, the raison-neur. The situation, too, is characteristic; a hypochondriac is trying to marry his daughter offto an unappetizing young physician in order to have a doctor right in the family where hewill charge nothing, or at least low¬er his rates. But neither Mr. Malle-son’s adaptation nor the NationalRepertory Company’s production ofit resemble Moliere in style or spir¬it.NEVERTHELESS, THE perfor¬mance at the Studebaker Theaterwas never tedious, and in sceneswhere the humor depended moreon comic commotion than on wit orcharacterization, it was very funny.Occasionally, as in Beline’s firstwaltzing entrance or her lastscreaming exit, such shenanigansbecame excessive. But Thomas Di-aforus’s speeches, Angelica's spon¬taneous duet with Cleante, and thescene between Argan and Louisewere all hilarious. The final scene,when a prancing faculty makes Ar¬gan a doctor in phony Latin, w-asan excellent adaptation of Moliere’sthird interlude. Had the whole pro¬duction been as funny - as thesescenes were, it would have beenvery successful, if not on Moliere’sterms.For the problem was not that Mr.Malleson. Jack Svdovv the director,and the cast chose to produce Mo¬liere’s play in the style of a TVsituation comedy; it was that theyso often replaced what is uniqueand excellent in Moliere with whatwas only middling good for a TVshow. The style of a situation com¬ But it could not convey Moliere’sexaggerated characterization, hiscaricature made three-dimensionaland believable by dialogue whichexactly expresses each type. In¬stead of this, we had characteriza¬tion that was not as strong, dia¬logue not as effective, and neitheras funny, on their own terms, asMoliere’s are on his. Nor could thestyle of a situation comedy carrythe serious undertones of Moliere’sworld, in which human folly canhave grim and unpleasant conse¬quences and men are rarely cured of their foibles by experience.In this world there would be nohappy ending without connivingmaids and last minute quirks ofchance; in situation comedies thehappy endings are natural becuasepeople are basically kind, nice, andlucky. In this production the lack ofseriousness brought lack of focus.In Le Malade Imaginaire everyonerevolves around Argan who, onefeels, may really put Angelique ina convent out of pique. The Arganof The Imaginary Invalid was notcapable of doing that or anything else important, and the productionnever focused on anything.THE ACTING AND staging werein keeping with the situation come¬dy concept of the production: To-inette was countrified and hearty,Argan weak and foolish, and Angel¬ica silly and sweet. The sporadicattempts by some actors at Mo¬liere’s style of exaggeration wereonly confusing. The setting wasEngland of the 1830’s and ’40’s andeveryone looked petit bourgeois.Angelica’s neckline was at herneck and Toinette was dowdy. Onlythe doctor’s fantastic and ridicu¬lous costumes would have suitedthe haute conture in which Mo¬liere’s play should be staged, nomatter what the period. Tbe setwas imaginative and charming witn ns staircase ana its myriadrows of colored bottles, and theblocking used its resources wellBut the audience of a professionalcompany should not be botheredwith sticking doors, yellow tagshanging from chairs, and harpsi¬chords so obviously made of paint¬ed plywood.THE IMAGINARY INVALIDmakes a very pleasant evening.Television situation comedy at itsbest can be as funny as Moliereand there is no reason why the National Repertory Company shouldnot change Le Malade Imaginaireinto whatever it wished. Unless,perhaps, that we can watch similarTV shows every night, while Mo¬liere is unique.Margy Berger^)CLUBa*—as*?** busk'"SO-With this cardthe bookworm turnsinto an adventurer. • ••edy suited the exaggerated, fun¬ny action of the successful scenes.Join TWA*s50/50 Club and gelup to 50% off regularJet Coach Care*It’s easy. If you’re under 22,just fill out an application, buythe $3.00 ID card—and you’re onyour way to any TWA city in theU.S. for half fare. Your 50/50 Clubfare is good most all year*, whenyou fly on a standby basis,’To get your card, call your travelagent, or your nearest TWA office.We’re your kind of airline*NationwideWortdwtd#depend on^ TWA,‘Except; Nov. 29 and 27, Deo. IS thru 24* Jan. &&&THE BEST SOURCE FORArtist's MaterialsAcross 53rd Kimbark PlazaComplete Picture FramingServiceMounting; Matting Non-GlareGlass - School SuppliesBE SURE TO ASK FORWEEKLY SPECIALDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-411110% STUDENT DISCOUNTON $10 OR MORECARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a $10 Used 9X12Rug, fo a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemanants & Mill Returns at a fractionof the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.RENT A TRUCK$^00 Per HourDO-IT-YOURSELFTRUCK RENTALSO 8-98008150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hourKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-685610 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 17, 1967Movie Review‘Blow-Up’ Probes RealityBlow-Up is here. In spite of how good it is it has been toomuch of a commercial success elsewhere for it to have beenkept out of Chicago. So everyone out there in Maroonland canfinally see it—and there is really something for everybody:David Hemmings, Vanessa Red¬grave, Sarah Miles, fashion, in¬trigue, grass, and a scene withHemmings and two nymphets thatactually brings eroticism back tocinematic nudity.Antonioni has said that his pre¬vious films have dealt with the re¬lations of men to other men, butthat Blow-Up is about the relationof man to reality. He wasn’t kid¬ding around: when you get up toleave the theater the ground underyour feet doesn’t feel the way itused to.BRIEFLY, HEMMINGS plays astylish Ixrndon photographer whofollows a couple of lovers into anapparently unpopulated region of apark and snaps a series of appar¬ently innocent pictures of them.The girl (Vanessa Redgrave), how¬ever, reacts with disproportionateviolence when she discovers him,and unsuccessfully attempts tograb or buy the film. When Hera-mings arrives back at his studio,Vanessa runs up to him. He asksher how he managed to find him,but she doesn’t say. (Nobodyanswers anyone’s questionsthroughout the movie). She tries anumber of ploys to get the film andfinally leaves with a fake roll. ThenHemmings goes to work. His suspi¬cions increase as the pictures growmore sinister or enlargement. Afterdozens of blow-ups it becomes ap¬parent that the photographs containthe record of a murder that Hem¬mings “witnessed” without know¬ing it. When he says to SarahMiles, the unhappy wife of thedownstairs artist, “I saw a mankilled today,” and she emergesfrom her self involvement longenough to ask him how it hap¬pened, he replies paradoxically, “Idon’t know, I didn’t see.”- their lives—“it does not exist forthem,” a manner of speaking thatcontains more than a metaphorictruth. So at the end of the film thephotographer can’t help but wonderhimself whether anything really oc¬curred. He didn’t see anything hap¬pen; the body is gone; and finally,his film and enlargements havebeen stolen. We certainly don’tknow, since we have been withHemmings from the start and havereceived no privileged information.And while he is standing and mus- Successfullying, a bunch of white-faced,black-costumed downs come by(an effective touch of CommediadeirArte inherited through Fellini)and begin a tennis match with ima¬ginary ball and rackets that is soreal that we start io hear the soundof the ball. And as the line betweenreality and state of mind furtherblurs we realize that what we havebeen watching all along is the illu¬sion of still another camera and an¬other imagination. While Hem¬mings stands listening to the tennisball that exists at the whim of theclowns, he himself fades and disap¬pears, at the whim of the director.Stuart A. NewmanHow to bea nice guyand anall-aroundgood sport.Drhth CarUberg—the mellow,flavor fuf beerof Copenhagen.IlHM Ip A« •*•***#•. Otamirk • C>r»M«t Agency. If*.. 104 (. 40* $tAN.V. Culture CalendarARTART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO—Ex¬hibition by Edouard Manet: ThruFeb. 19; Adults 91.00; Students with IDcards and Children, 50c Photographs inPala-color by Marie Cosindas; ThruMar. 5. Collection of English and Euro¬pean Enamels of Mrs. Henry Levy;Thru May 1. Daily 10-5, Thu. 10-9:30;Sun., Noon-5. Michigan & Adams.CONCERTSCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA—In their 76th season. Jean Martinon,Music Director and Conductor; IrwinHoffman. Associate Conductor: Margar¬et Hillis. Director, Chicago SymphonyChorus.Thu.-Sat. Concerts: Thu., 8:15: Fri.,2; Sat., 8:30. $2 50 - $650. Fri. galleryseats for students $1.50 (available until1 pm only). Orchestra Hall Box Office:Daily 8:30 - 6; later on concerts nights.Sun. 1-4. Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michi¬gan. HA 7-0362; Sun. & Hoi. after 5:HA 7-0499.ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIR &SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA — RichardVikstrom, cond; soloists, Handel: Solo¬mon. Sun., Feb. 19 at 3:30. Adults $4.509 $3.50; Students $2.50. RockefellerChapel. 59th & Woodlawn. MI 3-0800,ext. 3387.THEATREPHILADELPHIA HERE I COME! ATthe Schubert Theatre, 22 W. MonoreStreet. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO—Tonightat 8:30 "Exit and Exile" written anddirected by Richard Vertel and threeone-acts by Ionesco directed by AndyKaplan. Fri., Sat., Feb 17-18, 24-25 at8:30 pm Genera) admission $1.25 stu¬dents and faculty $ .75. Tickets at thedoor.MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING—American premiere of a revised versionof Shakespeare’s comedy by RobertGraves. Starting Feb. 17. Nightly, 7i30;Fri. & Sat. 8:30. Closed Mon. Nightly,$3 50; Fri. & Sat., $4 00 Goodman Thea¬tre, Monroe & Columbus. CE 6-2337.Harpsichord RecitalPaul Jacobs, official pianist ofthe New York Philharmonic, willgive a harpsichord recital in Man-del Hall on Monday evening, Feb¬ruary 20, at 8;30 pm. The programwill include two sonatas by Haydnand several works oi Bach, includ¬ing the Taccata in F sharp minor.Tickets are $1.50 and $1.00 with a50c discount for students.MUSTANGS - TEMPESTS - FORDS - PONTPACSRENT-A-CAR ,,BYVolkswagens $3.95 for 12 Hrs.Plus 6< per Mi.Includes Gas and InsuranceRen* A Volkswagon For That Special Date Tonite.Cheaper Than A Honda And A Heck Of A LotMore Comfortable.LOCATED AT:HYDE PARK CAR WASH« 1330 E. 53 rd Ml 3-1715Which is real, the mechanicallyrecorded event or the imagined andbelieved notion? We have continualcause to wonder about this through¬out the film as eye and camera areplayed off against one another andnew lies constantly rush in to takethe place of old ones. The photogra¬pher returns to the park without hiscamera and the body is there; hereturns with his camera and it isgone. The eye and the camera cannever agree.NO ONE WHOM Hemmings tellsabout the murder can muster anyconcern about it. It is not part of read the small printGotchal Now for th# mtiugi. Doc Film* hat rescheduled Orton Welles' THE TRIAL for February 22 (Happy Birthday, George) at 6, 8, and 10 pm, and CarlDreyor't DAY OF WRATH for February 24 at 7:15 and 9:15 pm. Soc Sci 122 and the usual AO cents. Now you know.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the belt,and fix the restforeign cor hospitalPIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNT %*' TOAD HALL RENTSSELLS ANDSERVICESTOAD HALL GUARANTEESTOAD HALL ™PLAYS1444 E. 57th ST,BU 8-1.100 High Fidelity ComponentsTypewriters (new and rebuilt)Tape Recorders and TV Sets(Battery and A.C. Operated)Phonographs—AM-FM Radios.its prices for 30 days.a rhinoceros,only little girlsunder 3 may ride it.February 17, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • llBoard Members Discuss NSA's CIA Involvement(Continued from Page One)The NSB was told nothing aboutthe liaison with the CIA. Wales, de¬spite his position as chairman,knew nothing about it prior to theRamparts story, and neither didGwinn and Boggs.All three believe that the NSBwas innocent in the affair, thoughBoggs does feel that the board wasStudy inGuadalajara, MexicoThe Guadalajara Summer School, afully accredited University of Arizonaprogram, conducted in cooperationwith professors from Stanford Uni¬versity, University of California, andGuadalajara, will offer July 3 to Au¬gust 12, art, folklore, geography, his¬tory, language and literature courses.Tuition, board and room is $290.Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P.O. Box7227, Stanford, California 94305. less than candid about NSA fi-i nances.Likewise, the IAB knew nothingof the link. Meeting only once ayear, this board actually dealt lesswith NSA’s international affairsthan did the NSB.THE ONE top NSA leader whomust have known, the informantsagree, was the international affairsvice-president, who along with hisstaff runs NSA’s international pro¬grams.Whether or not each year’s NSApresident knew is hard to deter¬mine. It is also as yet unclearwhether those presidents that didknow were told before they ran foroffice or only after.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060JESSELSON'Sscftvme HYtx park for ovir ro tramWITH TMI VIRY MST AMD FRCSHBTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 K. 5H It is obvious, however, that lastyear's president Philip Sherburnehad knowledge of the NSA’s tie,since he made the first moves tobreak it by trying to diversify theassociation’s source of funds to in¬clude more foundations not linkedto the CIA.CIA's GainExactly what NSA did in returnfor the CIA funds is very unclear.Certainly, the US received the ad¬vantage of an important NSA rolein the pro-Western InternationalStudent Conference (ISC), whichhelped offset the pro-CommunistInternational Union of Students.What is more, since NSA’s inter¬national affairs vice-president nor¬mally was part of the NSA delega¬tion to the ISC, the intelligenceagency presumably always hadsomeone at the conference whoknew of NSA’s reliance on CIAfunds.THE NSA leaders at UC feel thatthe association did not actual con¬UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANKmm CAR LOANSas low as scious intelligence gathering for thegovernment. Wales and Gwinn sur¬mise instead that the CIA probablygot to look at the NSA’s files oninternational affairs.While many of these files wereopen to NSA members, there weresome files dealing with studentleaders from underdeveloped coun¬tries that were kept conifdential.The NSA normally used these dos¬siers to brief NSA delegations tointernational conferences.Wales says that he is “disillu¬sioned” with the NSA leadershipfor its involvement with the CIA.Both he and Gwinn, however, havehigh praise for Sherburne and cur¬rent NSA president W. EugeneGroves for trying to rid the asso¬ciation of the link.“I have great faith,” Wales said,“in the highly principled nature of Gene Groves and Phil Sherburne.”What Next?Boggs thinks that NSA should notnecessarily end its receipt of CIAfunds, but should instead be candidabout the tie and determine NSApolicies without reference to it,leaving it to the intelligence agencyto support NSA or not as it sees fit.GWINN and Wales disagree, stat¬ing that the association must riditself of the support of CIA-linkedfoundations, including NSA’s head¬quarters in a building providedrent-free by one of these founda¬tions.They note, however, that it is un¬likely that NSA will then be able tocontinue funding its internationalactivities, since money for interna¬tional student programs continuesto be scarce from any source butthe government.GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD(OPEN DAWN TO DAWN)Hobby House RestaurantT342 E. 53rd ST.BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER'The Best of All Foods”Some $6/Couple Tickets Will Be AvailableAt the Door forWASH PROM—SAT Feb 18IDA NOYES HALL 8:30-1:00e Dancing to the Ross Anderson Orchestra• Entertainment by Larry Novak Trio —with LURLEAN HUNTERe Buffet Supper:Turkey with Orange Sauce, MeatballsBordelaise, Gelatins & Mousses, Pastries• Crowning of Miss U.C. J W nr1354 IAST 55th STRUTSMI 4-1200 5228 HARPERHY 3-2559I Eat More For Less ITry Our Convenient Take-Out Orders(sh(UUJ f % > f V 1 % V * cYOU CAN SHOPRIGHT AT YOURDOOR STEP FORDistinctiveMEN'S WEARCohn & SternTHE STORE FOR MEN t\3)inCvO12 • CHICAGO MAROON • February T7, T967