o rj2-V'jjo MaroO FoundedIn 1S92VOL. 76, NO. 18 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1967 12 PAGESLABOR ASSEMBLY HERELiberal Leaders Hit Viet WarBy TIMOTHY S. KELLEYStaff WriterDr. Martin Luther King, Sen.Eugene J. McCarthy (D-Minn.),John Kenneth Galbraith, and Nor¬man Thomas attacked the Admin¬istration’s Vietnam war policy be¬fore the National Labor Leader¬ship Assembly for Peace over theweekend at the Center for Contin¬uing Education.The conference, sponsored bythe Trade Union Division of theNational Committee for a Sane See Editorial on Page 6• gj /■ * jg smNuclear Policy (SANE), drew 523delegates representing 60 interna¬tional unions in 38 states. This wasmore than twice the 250 originallyprepared for indicated a largebody of sympathetic sentimentwithin labor.The Assembly did not, however,represent any official labor organ¬ization, and, in opposing the Viet¬nam war expressly deviated fromAnswers to UnrestSought by CenterThe Center for Policy Study yes¬terday launched a two-year pro¬ject aimed at seeking practical so¬lutions to the problems that barsocial and political change withinthe urban environment.Currently underway is a two-dayconference, ending today, devotedto the causes and possible curesfor the urban violence of recentsummers.The project will be guided byCenter’s faculty fellows and willinclude active participation by acore group of young men promin¬ent in both the private and publicsectors of the nation’s life.The first session on “Short Termand Emergency Measures to AvertUrban Violence” will assembleabout twenty-five urban experts inclosed working sessions on theMidway. The meeting will reviewthe history of urban violence in theUnited States and analyze the pre¬sent situation.Participants will discuss suchareas as the psychology of minori¬ty groups, federal measures tocontrol violence, and the presentsituation and what must be insti¬ tuted immediately in such fields aspolice work, race relations, educa¬tion and socialization and employ¬ment.Members of the core groupinclude:• U.S. Representative ThomasLudlow Ashley, Democrat fromWaterville, Ohio, attorney, electedto Congress in 1954 after servingtwo years with Radio Free Europe;• U.S. Representative WilliamEmerson Brock, Republican ofChattanooga, Tennessee, memberof the House Banking and Curren¬cy Committee and regional assist¬ant to the Republican Whip;• U.S. Representative GeorgeHerbert Walker Bush, Republicanfrom Houston, Texas, and a PhiBeta Kappa from Yale, servinghis first term in Congress;• U.S. Representative Ogden R.Reid, Republican from Westchest¬er County, New York, former Pres¬ident and Editor of the New YorkHerald-Tribune, and U.S. Ambas¬sador to Israel from 1959 to 1961;• U.S. Representative Daniel D.Rostenkowski, Democrat, repre-Turn to Page 4 the stated policy of the AFL-CIO.Sen. McCarthy indicated Sundaymorning that, contrary to whatsome had thought, he had not yetmade a decision on whether ornot to oppose President Johnson in1968 Presidential primaries toshow public opposition to currentVietnam war policy and possiblyto make a serious try to defeatJohnson for the nomination.‘Great Reexamination’McCarthy made an address tothe assembly Sunday morning, inwhich he called for “a great re¬examination of policy” and as¬serted that it was time “to ask thepeople to pass judgement” on Viet¬nam, clearly implying that the is¬sue would be raised in 1968 elec¬tions, possibly by him.In a press conference after hisremarks, McCarthy said his deci¬sion on whether or not to enterprimaries would come aroundmid-December.King, famed Nobel Peace Prizewinner and civil rights leader, re¬cently returned from a Birming¬ham jail sentence, made a naddress Saturday afternoon on thesubject of the “Impact of the Waron American Society.”“This conference, a united ex¬pression of varied branches of la¬bor, reaffirms that the trade un¬ion movement is part of forward-looking America,” said King;“that no matter what the formalresolutions of higher bodies maystate, the troubled conscience ofthe working people cannot bestilled.”Quivering AngerKing demanded, “How can theAdministration with quiveringanger denounce the violence ofghetto Negroes when it has givenan example of violence in Asiathat shocks the world?”Speaking to the Assembly Satur¬day morning, Americans for Dem¬ocratic Action President Galbraithattacked the Administration’sVietnam policy and commented on The Maroon—JOE SCHIRMERDEMOCRATIC DISSENT: Sen. Eugene McCarthy (D., Minn.) called fora "great reexamination of (foreign) policy" at the Labor Assembly.the ineffectiveness of the SouthVietnamese army.“You cannot get a mercenaryarmy,” he said, “to fight againstthe national instinct of the coun¬try.” The fact that the Commu¬nists had captured the nationalis¬tic sentiment, he indicated, wasresponsible for the fact that the ef¬ficiency of the South Vietnamesearmy is “well below the Egyptianminimum.”Galbraith remarked, “We mustcontinue relentlessly, indefati-gably, the task of persuasion ...Persuasion is the ultimate sourceof political power.”Out of the VanguardGalbraith was followed by Nor¬man Thomas, the Socialist candi¬date for President in every elec¬tion from 1928 through 1948,Thomas said that labor has notbeen “in the vanguard” recentlyin civil rights and on the issue ofthe Vietnam war, but praised the 1 Assembly for taking steps to cor¬rect this.Thomas took a more extremestand than Galbraith had, al¬though he said he would bepleased if even Galbraith’s planwere accepted, and urged imme¬diate withdrawal after an attemptat negotiations. “I don’t think we’dlose face if we saved our souls,”he said.He made comments on two cur¬rent personalities in the news. OfCommunist China’s leader MaoTse-Tung, he said, “I do not lovewhat Mao does. I admire somethings, but not all.” He called DeanRusk, U.S. Secretary of State,“a good man gone terriblywrong.”Finally, Thomas stronglypraised Vietnam war protestors.He also criticized “a Presidentwho tells Negroes, ‘nothing is doneby violence’, while conscriptingTurn to Page 2200 Students Attend Military Conference HereThe Maroon—RERINFORMAL DIALOGUE: Students assembled for the Conference onthe University and the Military relax between sessions. “Get the universities out of thearms of the military.”That was the cry heard over theweekend at a conference on theuniversity and. the military, heldin Ida Noyes Hall.Among the specific instances ofco-operation between the academ¬ic community and the military es¬tablishment which were con¬demned by speakers at the con¬ference were:• Classified research conductedat universities for agencies con¬nected with the military establish¬ment;• Recruitment on campuses forboth private corporations and gov¬ernment agencies which engageir» activities related to the war,such as Dow Chemical Co. and theCentral Intelligence Agency; • Membership of twelve univer¬sities, including Chicago, in the In¬stitute for Defense Analyses,which provides many basic re¬search studies for governmentagencies, primarily the Depart-f ment of Defense.Connection Is DrawnA more basic, all-encompassingconnection between universitiesand the military establishment, in¬cluding corporate suppliers of warmaterial, was drawn by MartinNicolaus, an instructor of sociolo-ogy at Simon Frazer University,and associate editor of Viet Re¬port.“There is a misconception that auniversity is an educational insti¬tution,” Nicolaus commented. “Weno longer have education; we have a knowledge industry, we have asystem of induction.“What the knowledge industryis doing is training people for in¬dustry. The need of industry is forpeople who have special skills,”Nicolaus remarked.Like the base of an iceberg, hesaid, the university lies at thebase of an industrial-military-uni¬versity complex, providing skills,research, and trained graduatesfor the top of the iceberg.SDS-SponsoredThe three-day conference, at¬tended by about 200 students fromschools across the country, wassponsored by Students for a Demo¬cratic Society, the North Ameri¬can Congress on Latin America,Turn to Page 5Econ, Govt, Rights u %Continued from Page 1them to be violent in a land faraway.”A policy statement issued by theassembly Sunday included the fol¬lowing points:• “Despite the unwavering sup-1port of the Administration’s Viet¬nam policy in the official councils jof labor, this assembly has demon¬strated that there exists at alllevels in our unions the same dis- Jquiet, frustration and oppositionthat characterize the Americanpeople as a whole.• “We in labor feel impelled tospeak out against this war . . .• “Our wage increases are nulli¬fied by skyrocketing living costs.• “To remain silent in this cru¬cial period would constitute a be- jtrayal of the finest traditions ofindependence, forthrightness, andmoral leadership which are theheritage of the American labormovement. ..• “We believe this war is im¬moral.• “We believe our continued in¬volvement in the war is contraryto the best interests of our coun¬try ...• “We therefore urge an imme¬diate and unconditional end to thebombings of North Vietnam — a proper foreign policies on the parof our government.”According to Hartke, “With thprolonged policy of military escalation which does nothing but disrupt and destroy, many of thSouth Vietnamese are asking‘Who needs enemies with friendlike ours?’ ”He also attacked the Administration’s “escalation of explanations.”AFL-CIO HitJohn Kenneth Galbraith Martin Luther King The Maroonagainst poverty, disease, hunger,and bigotry.”‘Slogans’ Refuted heard today in defense of the U.S.position in Vietnam and answeredthe slogan of “self-determination”_ _ , , .. , - | by asking why the United States.. . . . J . J . , O” Saturday, the assembly, had not allowed the 1956 e,ectionsstep that has been advocated by j heard opening remarks by Frank to j. ^ jacescores of the world’s political and Rosenblum, general secretary-| ^spiritual leaders, including UN treasurer of the Amalgamated ‘Down Their Necks’Secretary General U Thant. j Clothing Workers of America, fol-| He blasted away at the Admin-• “We urge further that our gov-j lowed by the address on “Alterna-1 istration’s announced goal to “win nam war. Among those involvedwere Tran Van Dinh, former Sai¬gon charge d’ affaires in Washing¬ton; John Convers, DemocraticRepresentative from Michigan;and Dr. Seymour Melman, profes¬sor of industrial engineering atColumbia.ernment accompany a bombing tives to American Foreign Policy” | the hearts and minds of the peo-halt with a clear and unambiguousstatement of intention to negotiatea settlement of the war with theparties directly involved in theconflict, including the NationalLiberation Front in Southnam . .. Dim View of ProtestsOn Saturday evening, a banquetby Galbraith who, in addition to pie” by sarcastically adding, “and featured TV commentator Davidheading the ADA, is also a former we do that by dropping napalm Schoenbrun; Emil Mazey, secre-ambassador to India and a noted down their necks.” , tary-treasurer of the United AutoHarvard economist. Norman Attacking the slogan “support Workers, (UAW); and SenatorThomas’ remarks concluded the; our boys in Vietnam,” True said: Vance Hartke (D-Ind.). Besides McCarthy, S u n d amorning’s session featured VictoG. Reuther, director of the UAW’International Affairs DepartmeniHe is the brother of UAW pres;dent Walter Reuther, who opposethe Vietnam war in direct oppostion to George Meany, AFL-CKpresident, who supports Johnson’policy.Reuther attacked the AFL-CKfor having a part in the Braziliacoup that ousted President JoaGoulart and for dividing the Uriguayan labour movement.In contrast to the intervention iother nations’ labour affairs whiche criticized, he praised equanon-interventionist internatiomcooperation in labor.Reuther also commented on thwar, saying: “It is obvious thatmilitary solution to the Vietnardilemma is unattainable. If peacis to be achieved, it must bthrough political means, by direcnegotiations between the contencing forces.”Viet-, morning session. j “if you would take a poll of ourIn the afternoon, Retired Rear b jn vietnara rm sure thatAmerican labour must play its Adm. Arnold L. True spoke in op- you would find they would ratherpart in bringing this savage war position to the war on militaryto swift and just conclusion, so ' grounds.that we may devote our wealth He based his speech on refuta-and energies to the struggle tions of the principal “slogans”Profs Protest Hershey Order be supported at home than in Viet¬nam.”Finally, in reply to the sloganof fighting in Vietnam to hold backthe Red Chinese, True remarked:“How does the Vietnam war stq^these billion people from threaten¬ing the security of the U.S. Mazey firmly opposed the Viet¬nam war, but took a dim view ofdemonstrations and other mani¬festations of current protest move¬ments.“I believe,” he said, “that themarch on the Pentagon, the burn¬ing of American flags, the burningof draft cards, the carrying of VietCong flags, sit-ins at draft boards,the demonstrations and disturb-WASHINGTON (CPS) — The rupting army induction centers or „.0 v „ —American Association of Univer- keeping military recruiters from J If we had let the 1956 elections j ?nces at induction centers, playsity Professors has strongly pro-; conducting interviews. I take place ' J ,n,nHo Chi Minh would into the hands of the hawks andtested a directive by SelectiveService Director Lewis B. Hershey I The AAUP said Hershey has setthat persons involved in disruptive forth a standard which would per-antiwar protests should be drafted ■ mit jocai boards to induct personsf*rst-- for exercising their constitutional-AAUP president Clark Byse, aprofessor at Harvard Law School,and Dr. Bertram H. Davis,AAUP’s general secretary,, sent atelegram to Hershey protesting ment must therefore have a chill-the directive as it may affect col-; jng effect upon academic freedomlege and university teachers and and free Speech and assembly asstudents. ; guaranteed by the First Amend-Hershey’s statement regarding merd »>the protestors was made in a let- | — .ter sent to all members of the jSelective Service System. The let¬ter referred to persons who pro- |test the war and the draft by dis- 1 have been the best bulwarkagainst Chinese expansion that wecould have.”Later in the afternoon, the labordelegates divided into six groupsly guaranteed freedoms of speech to attend discussion panels on var-and assembly. “The mere exist- ious aspects related to the Viet-ence of this undefined power touse the draft as a punitive instru-Free DeliveryMon.-Thursto allDormitories andFraternity HousesNicky'sRestaurantw dolivor SAMUEL A. BEU"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE 1*3*PICKUP ft DELIVERY SERVICE52 l lake Park493-5200 What in the World do youwant to see?Ideal Gift for Gifting SeasonPhoto DepartmentThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave. weaken our efforts to change im-TheBigChicagoBands ANDERSON’S BULKOSERVICE STATIONHighest Qualify Gasolineaf Lowest PricesFeaturing theBULKO PANTRYA Complete Grocery StoreOpen 24 Hours57th & Cottage GroveThis Friday and Saturdayevening:DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 I. 55th S».DO 3-7644 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FIUED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES The Burgess GardnerBig BandTwo blocks west ofMcCormick Place311 East 23rd StreetFor Reservations cal225-6171 247. 248. 249. 250...there are 250 breath-fresheninjsprays inWHISPERnew aerosol breath-freshenernow at your drugstoreUSV PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATIO!S00 Second Am*.. Now York. N.Y. 1001Orson Welles’ MR. ARKADINWho (or what) is (or was) Mr. Arkadin? The uncut version—not like on t.v. Tonight in Soc Sci 122 at 7: 15 and 9:15. 754. Doc Films.2 THE CHICAGO 1MAROON November 14, 1967Ten Offer Draft Cards at Rockefeller ServiceBy RON HAMMERLETen students placed a variety ofletters, papers and Selective Serv¬ice cards on the altar of Rockefel¬ler Chapel Sunday during a wor¬ship service led by Yale chaplinWilliam Sloane Coffin, Jr.The action, which was partiallystaged and partially spontaneous,came after Chicago divinity stu¬dent J. Brooks Smith seized the pulpit following Coffin’s call for“men and women of courage” whosee that “not to go against con¬science is neither right nor safe.”Smith told the congregation of athousand that his act of draftresistance was motivated by “con¬cern for this country, compassionfor those suffering on both sides,and objection to the SelectiveService System.” “I find it impossible to speak toothers on this matter if I fail toheed my own conscience,” he con¬tinued.- In explaining the setting of theaction, Smith said that “worshipis an act of witness, and I’m tiredof meaningless sacrifices.”Joined by SevenAfter completing the statement,he moved to place his draft card on the altar table. He was quicklyjoined by seven others, some ofwhom had returned or burneddraft cards preciously.Two others, one later moved totears, joined the group shortlythereafter, making a total of tenbut leaving “evidence” of onlynine persons.Those responding in addition toSmith included Jonathan R. Asher,KRIEGER ON CATACLYSMA New History Inquiry Is Needed'“The world of history is undergod and the intellectual popula¬tion explosion,” announced Leon¬ard Krieger, University professorof history, here in a lecture lastnight in the Law School Audito¬rium. Krieger spoke on “CultureCataclysm, and Contingency.”Addressing the problem of thefunction of history in Western thought, Krieger described achange in the form of the old in¬quiry into the use of history. “Thequestion of history’s usefulnesschanges as the ideas of historychange,” he said.Introducing Krieger as thefourth speaker in the Monday Lec¬ture Series, History Departmenthead William H. McNeil described him as one of the few men to per¬form a “successful marriage ofhistory and philosophy.” Kriegerproved this point in tracing theview of history from Machiavellithrough Hobbs to Jean Paul Sar¬tre.“What we’re seeking here,”Krieger suggested, “is use gearedto the contemporary view of his-CORSO Agr.The Committee On RecognizedStudent Organizations (CORSO)late Thursday night approved aplan whereby $2425 will be paid onsome of The Maroon’s debts toprinters with an additional sum —up to $1500 — made available topay off last year’s debts. ees To Fund iThe Maroon will not have aCORSO account this year, how¬ever, lessening the likelihood ofan allocation next year. Moneywill be sent directly to printers inthe form of checks, thus avoidingthe necessity of giving the Maroonan account. MaroonThe decision by CORSO cli¬maxed a five-month-long strugglefor funds.The breakdown of funds fol¬lows: $1000 to cover the loss onthe Orientation Week edition, $1425 tory.” One of the stated purposesof his essay, was the developmentof a modern approach to history.Krieger described one modernview of history and “anti-use.” Inthis context, each historical eventbecomes too totally singular to beconsidered exemplary.Krieger proposed a formula inapproaching the development ofhistorical theory: “Choose a char¬acteristic of culture, use socialand political cataclysm as indeli¬ble circumstance, and look to thelogical role of contingency for theintellectual effect of the circum¬stance and, thus, for the relationof culture and Cataclysm.” Paul Rupert and Richard Virgil,all of the Divinity School; VernonE. Barnett, of Meadville Theologi¬cal School; and Richard Rohrer,Robert M. Peterson, Daniel T.Fallon and William D. Belzner.Rockefeller Chaplain E. SpencerParsons then quickly moved to ex¬plain to the congregation that“we’re not out to organize it (draftresistance). Some protest oneway, some another. This is a waywhich must be respected.”Truth in DangerCoffin, in his sermon earlier,cautioned against “going for is¬sues by questioning the motive ofthose involved.” To do so, he said,would be to “miss the issue beingraised. If we wait until motivesare pure, we will end up doingnothing.”With historic references to whatCoffin called Martin Luther’s“necessary lack of good taste,” hewarned that “truth is always indanger of being sacrificed on thealtar of good taste and stability.”“We are witnessing today, thespectre of a nation unravelled. Onthe laws and policies of our coun¬try, the conscience of men is beingracked.”“Society today is asking the in¬dividual to adjust to the social or¬der, rather than asking the socialorder to adjust to the individual.”Finer, Haley Will Speak at ChicagoHerman Finer, professor emeri¬tus of political science at the Uni¬versity of Chicago, will speak on“The Future of Israel” tonight at8 p.m. in the East Lounge on thesecond floor of Ida Noyes Hall.The lecture is presented by thenewly formed University chapterof the Student Zionist Organizationas part of their program in¬vestigating the Middle East situa¬tion and exploring the political im¬plications of the state of Israel forAmerican Jews.Dr. Finer was born in Rumania,educated in England, and hasserved on the faculties of the Lon¬don School of Economics, Harvardand Yale. He has been at Chicagosince 1946. Sir William Haley, editor-in-chiefof the Encyclopaedia Britannica,will speak at Chicago tomorrow.Sir William’s talk, entitled “TheIsle Is Full of Noises: Formationof Opinion and Culture in Britain,”will be presented at 8:15 p.m. inBreasted Hall. The lecture is thelast in a series of six scheduled jfor this autumn under the auspicesof the Britannica Lecture Series, jSir William is former chairman 1of Times Newspapers, Ltd., for¬mer editor of The Times of London,and former director of the BritishBroadcasting Corporation. jected loss of about $3000, andfunds up to $1500 to cover lastyear’s loss, as soon as it is deter¬mined exactly what the loss is.This is a minimum of $2425 anda maximum of $3925. Morgan's Certified Super MartOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience^1516 E. 53rd St.“Collegians of America,ARISE!!!CANADIANSTUDENTS!onNOVEMBER 16, AT 5 P.M., AND 8 P.M., IN THECLOISTER CLUB, IDA NOYES HALL“OPERATION RETRIEVAL ftA team of distinguished representatives from the Canadian aca¬demic community, the Public Service Commission of Canada,and the Department of Manpower and Immigration will be visit¬ing the University of Chicago in order to provide you with in¬formation about job opportunities and economic developmentsin Canada.In addition to die afternoon meeting, a session during whichthe students and members of the teams will be able to meet anddiscuss informally, is planned for die evening.If you are unable to attend either of these meetings and wishinformation on Operation Retrieval, you can either contact theOffice of Career Counseling and Placement or write directly to:Operation Retrieval,Department of Manpower and Immigration,Ottawa 2,Ontario,Canada.It/i THE BALANCE OF POWERIS CHANGING . . .THE SHIBBOLETHS OF THE COLDWAR ARE OUTDATED . . .THE EURAMERICAN ALLIANCEIS UNDER FIRE . . .ilBWa multi-national magazine ofEuropean/American affairs chartsthe dynamic movement of the newtechnological societies. Though writtenentirely (and entertainingly) in English,INTERPLAY draws upon the thinkingand experience of seers and punditsfrom both shores of the Atlantic—university dons and deans,international affairs experts,industrialists, government officials,journalists, philosophers, not onlyfrom English-speaking countries butfrom all the countries of the Continent.If you are concerned about thefuture that is going to be theinheritance of those coming after, youwill welcome the intelligent andsprightly thrust into the EurAmericanfuture that INTERPLAY will presentten times a year.To take advantage of the Chartersubscription rate of $6.00(regularly $7.00), please fill outthe attached coupon.INTERPLAY200 West 57th street, New York, N.Y. 10019Please enroll me as a Charter subscriberto INTERPLAY at the special rate ot:T 1 year (10 issues) ......... S 6 00□ 2 years (20 issues) $11.00□ 3 years (30 issues) $15.00 Fly Ozark Youth Fare at 1/3 off!”With an Qzark Youth I.D. Card*, you can turn traveltime into at-home time — fly at V3 off regular fare!For your Youth I.D. Card application form, writeOzark Air Lines, Lambert Field, St. Louis, Mo. 63145.(Travel under ptan not applicable during major holiday periods.)*Card costs $10. You must be under 22 to be eligible.O Payment enclosedNamaAdrlrnsaCity_ □ Please bill me.Slate. .Zip “ZmI go-getters goOZARKLIHtS1B733Y-*r - - - November J4, -1S67- -. THE CHICAGO MAROON 3’iwm MvMshiY MWiViV ov >:<*;> \MAROON SPORTSPhi Gamms, Eagles□ a. I'd lose my individuality.□ b. It’s graduate school for me.□ c. My mother wants me to be a doctor.Can’t argue with c), but before you checka) or b)—pencils up! There have been somechanges. Drastic changes in the businessscene. But changes in the vox populi attituderegarding business ... especially on campus... just haven’t kept pace.Take the belabored point that businessturns you into a jellyfish. The men who runmost of the nation’s successful firms didn’tarrive by nepotism, by trusting an Ouijaboard, or by agreeing with their bosses. Alongthe way, a well-modulated “No” was said.And backed up with the savvy and guts to¬day’s business demands.In short, individuality is highly prized inmuch of the business world-the successfulmuch. Even when the business is big. LikeWestern Electric, the manufacturing and sup¬ply unit of the Bell System.We provide communications equipment for our Bell System teammates, the Bell telephonecompanies. This takes a lot of thought, deci¬sions, strong stands for our convictions, (andsometimes some mistakes ... we’re human,every 160,000 of us).Individuality pays off. Not only in raises,but in personal reward as well. Like an engi¬neer who knew deep down that there was abetter way to make a certain wire connector-and did. Or a WE gal who streamlined time-consuming office procedures, and saved ussome $63,000 a year.Rewards and accolades. For saying “No.”For thinking creatively and individually. Fordoing.Not every hour is Fun Hour, but if you’vegot imagination and individuality-you’ve gotit made. With a business like Western Electric.We’ll even help you answer b) with our Tui¬tion Refund program. Come on in and gofor President!Western ElectricMANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEMScore IM VictoriesPhi Gamma Delta and the Bus¬iness School Eagles scored victor¬ies late yesterday afternoon in thefinals of the intramural touch foot¬ball tournament to secure the un¬dergraduate and divisional titlesrespectively.The Fijis scored a very close 6-6 overtime penetration victoryover house champion Dodd; underthis rule, if the score is tied at theend of regulation play, each teamgets a certain amount of downs totry to move the ball into opposi-t i o n territory. The fraternitychamps won by this method. Scor¬ing for the winners was DennisSprinkle; Theo Kolokotronespicked up the loser’s TD.The Business School squadpicked up a 15-6 win over the run¬ner-up Saints. Taking an early 8-0lead on an interception and scoreby Auerbach and a safety, theEagles withstood the Saint threatuntil the second half, when Hollypulled in a long pass to tightenup the action 8-6. But the Eaglesfinally put the game on Auerbachdown of the day on a short pass.The two victories will play to¬morrow tod etermine the all-Uni-versity champion. The contest willstart at 3:45 at Midway fieldseven.SoccerThe University soccer squad lostits first bid to crack its own winrecord set last week as the teamdropped a difficult 3-0 decision toBall State University on Saturday.This was a strange game — al¬though the Maroons dominated the ;rain soaked field (over an inch ofrain fell during the game itself)during the second half and playedon an equal par with BSU during Jthe rest of the contest, they were unable to post a winning score.Ball State scored its first twogoals late in the first period andwaited until the final quarter toi notch the unbeatable third goal.The Maroon booters finish their1967 season at home tomorrowagainst George Williams College.This is GW’s first year in league |I compeition, and so far the team ji has amassed an impressive 6-1 ;record; among their victories was |: a 4-3 triumph over Aurura, a teamwhich defeated Chicago 2-1. The :1 George Williams game will beplayed at North Field and will be- !| gin at 3 p.m.Turkey TrotThe intramural turkey trot crosscountry race will be held oni Thursday, November 16. Medicalcheckups for participants will be¬gin at 3:30 p.m. with the race it¬self starting as soon as possible.The College house and fraternity: winners of this race will receive,! in addition to IM points, largeturkeys.Cross CountrySelected runners from the varsi- ;ty cross country squad travelledto Wheaton College for the NCAACollege Division Cross CountryChampionships.Overall, the Maroon harriers fin¬ished slightly below the midpointmark in a total field of about 70schools in the competition. PatMurray was the top Chicago run¬ner and finished 204 in the totalfield of 321 runners.Other runners for the Universitywere Ted Terpstra, Mike Rau-worth, Joe Frank, Steve Kurey,and John Fekety.On Saturday the harriers faceAlbion College at home.Policy Center Meets in JanuaryContinued from Page 1senting a district on Chicago’snorthwest side and a member ofthe House Ways and Means Com¬mittee;• U.S. Representative John Var-ick Tunney, Democrat from Riv¬erside, California, former NewYork attorney, and former teacherof business law at the Universityof California at Berkeley;• Lieutenant Govonor RobertH. Finch, Republican, of Califor¬nia;• Adlai E. Stevenson, III, Dem¬ocrat, formerly a State Represen¬tative, and now State Treasurer ofIllinois;• Jack Conway, director, Indus¬trial Union Department of theAmerican Federation of Labor-Con¬gress of Industrial Organizations(AFL-CIO), and an alumnus of theUniversity;• James F. Hoge, Jr., managingeditor of the Chicago Sun Times,and an alumnus of the University.• Walter Pozen, former assist¬ ant to the U.S. Secretary of the In-tterior, head of the Washington,D.C. office of the law firm ofStroock and Lavan of New Yorkand Paris, and an alumnus ofj Chicago;The November session will be| followed in January by one deal-i ing with the city’s economic prob¬lems, with particular focus on therelationship between private andpublic sectors and the compositionof the federal budget.During the first year, other meet¬ings will be devoted to spatial re¬lations within the metropolitanregion and their effect on security,taxes, education and mental healthand the ability of the cities to gov¬ern themselves.The Center was founded in Feb¬ruary, 1966 to conduct examina¬tions of major national issues. Itsinaugural project during 1966-67was an intensive study of China,which dealt with issues rangingfrom the cultural revolution toVietnam.Portable - Standard - ElectricAdding Machines 8c CalculatorsPurchase or RentalRepairs by factory trained mechanicsThe University off Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis4 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 14, 1967cv.. r: rjvr< / I won'tgo into business whenI graduate because:Conference Represents Students NationwideContinued from Page 1and the Radical Education Pro¬gram, a training off-shoot of SDS.Carl Davison, inter-organization¬al secretary of SDS, noted thatthe conference came during a pe¬riod of more and more “confronta¬tions” between radical students oncollege campuses and representa¬tives of the military-industrialcomplex.Beginning in the fall of 1964, Da¬vidson recalled, teach-ins againstthe war in Vietnam brought to¬gether groups of students who“saw the campus as a fertileground for recruiting peopleagainst the war.” New waves of protest, directedagainst university administrationsfor the first time, arose in thespring of 1966. Students at severalinstitutions, including the Chicago,protested what they termed the“complicity” of university admin¬istrations in the war effort,through formation of male classrank for use by the Selective Serv¬ice, or use of campus facilities toadminister the Selective ServiceQualifying Test.After a period of more “passiveprotests” against recruitment byDow and government agency re¬cruiting, Davidson continued, ademonstration at Columbia lastSG Members PlanningStudent Services ReturnIndependents of Student Govern¬ment (SG) met last week in aneffort to plan a program for re¬turning student services to SG, aprominent issue in the recent elec¬tions.The group is definitely not aparty within SG, Bill Phillips, 70,emphasized. The members want tobe as “freethinking as possible,and will remain independents,”united only by a common interestin student services.Their first step will be to re¬activate SG’s loan fund. Depend¬ing upon the assembly, it could befunctioning within three or fourweeks.Other services the group hopesto reinstate are the folk concertand a speaker’s program. The en¬tire program of services is de¬scribed by Phillips as a “tremen¬dous undertaking” which will“work slowly”.“Steps must be taken to preventany financial loss,” declared Phil¬lips. “We hope for results by theend of next quarter. There is lit¬tle you can see now on long rangeplans, but we’re working on themthrough correspondence and talk¬ing with people.“It’s obvious that students wantservices back. We independentswould like to do what we can.”The independents may receiveunexpected assistance from SG, however. Jerry Lipsch, SG vice-president, recently revealed thatnew funds have been found to beavailable for student services.Lipsch said that SG had beentrying to present such a programbut could not afford it.About $1,400 deposited by theBernie Grofman and Tom Heagy,presidents of the two previous SGadministrations, had been discov¬ered by the current administra¬tion a month ago, Lipsch said,but had not immediately beencommitted to a speakers programbecause of the various debts thepast administrations have ac¬quired.“They had funds stashed awayin many little separate accounts,”Lipsch said, “that we either didnot know about or had no ideawere filled with significantamounts of money.” May began a new period of ob¬struction and resistance tactics.“The difference between resist¬ance and protest,” he remarked,“brings up the question of freespeech. When an institution losesits legitimacy (by being involvedin ‘un-democratic’ activity), it nolonger has the right of free speech.It has lost all sanctity .. .VPolitics AttackedJohn McDermott, editor of themagazine Viet Report, secondedthe view of the university as a poli¬tical animal.“The researchers see the univer¬sity as a means for gaining con¬trol over large groups of people,their political party, if you will,”McDermott commented. “Bothmilitary and non-military researchhave the power to coerce the ma¬jority. They call it ‘stabilizing sys¬tems.’ ”The problem of “civil liberties”involved in resistance tactics wasdiscussed by Christopher Hobson,a graduate student of political sci¬ence here.“We recognize civil liberties asa counter-argument we have todeal with,” he noted. “Our re¬sponse is to phrase our problemsin dealing with the civil libertiesquestion. We must make it clearthat the civil liberties question isbullshit and doesn’t impede ourtactics.“Vietnam has undermined theuniversal belief” in the universalvalidity of civil liberties, whichpeople in the New Left historically have believed in, Hobson said.“Why be concerned when Dowand the military aren’t con¬cerned” he asked.Future TacticsSuggestions on future tactics oncollege campuses to protest con¬nections with the military were of¬fered in Saturday’s panel by repre¬sentatives from Stanford, Colum¬bia, Oberlin, Princeton, and theUniversity of Michigan.“Perhaps debate is the most im¬portant preparation for gettingpeople to act,” suggested DavidRansom, English instructor atStanford. Student protestors shouldattempt to draw out the outspokenprofessors who are against thewar, and capitalize on student ali¬enation against the war, he re¬marked.At Oberlin, according to JackAiler, a student there, there hasbeen a clear progression “away| from liberal positions by the col¬lege administration” and toward“more militant demonstrations bythe students.”At Columbia, according to stu¬dent Mike Klare, the problem is that students are duped by the lib¬eral reputation of their school. Byconducting extended research intothe military activities of the uni¬versity and “discrediting the ad¬ministration by direct intellectualconfrontation,” Klare said, stu¬dents could “destroy the bubbleof liberalism.”rCOUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTGREEK SALADS7100 S. Yates Free Parking PIZZAPLATTERPizza Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!1)60 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2804 sMl 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospitoiCORNELL ELECTRONICSERVICEFAST andDEPENDABLESERVICETV • RADIO • TAPE RECORDERPHONOGRAPH • ANY BRANDFOREIGN AND DOMESTICTRANSISTOR OR TUBECOMPONENT STEREO - HI FIPL 2-77301635 E 55th St LIBRARYHELP WANTEDBoth Full and Part-TimePositions Available forStudents and Student WivesTelephone MU-4-4545THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Ave. ROUGE REFLEXCopper-alloy, gold plated. Lastsa life time. Has elegant shape,and is well done. Diamondcut design. Fits anylipstick case. Near¬ly one and half in¬ches long. Three-quarters inches wideMirrors full mouth.Now no frantic huntfor a mirror to seelip make-up. Lovelyfeminine touch ob¬tained by market ana¬lysis and artistic in¬spiration. Attractivelygift packed. Thinkingof Christmas? ThinkRouge Reflex. Price $2.88PPD. Order fromQUALITY GIFT SHOPPF.Box 2973 Grand Central StationNew York 17, New York RANDtLam/ (^/osniehc5700 HARPER AVENUE onFAirfax 4-2007Style Cut—Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8 theClancy Bros,andTommy Makemat the Opera House,Wacker Drive at MadisonSAT. NOV. 18 at 8:30 P. M.TICKETS: $5.00, $4.00, $3.00, $2.50On Sale at BOX OFFICE or TICKET CENTRAL,212 N. Michigan, and all Ward and Crawford Stores.COLUMBIA RECORDS NavalResearchLaboratoryWASHINGTON, D.C.An Equal Opportunity EmployerThe Navy’s Corporate Laboratory—NRL isengaged in research embracing practicallyall branches of physical and engineering sci¬ence and covering the entire range frombasic investigation of fundamental problemsto applied and developmental research.The Laboratory has a continuing need forphysicists, chemists, metallurgists, mathe¬maticians, oceanographers, and engineers(electronic, electrical, mechanical, chemi¬cal and civil). Appointees, who must beU.S. citizens, receive the full benefits ofthe career Civil Service.Candidates for bachelor’s, master’s and doc¬tor’s degrees in any of the above fields areinvited to schedule interviews with the NRLrepresentative who will be in theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOplacement office onNOVEMBER 28. 1967Those who for any reason are unable toschedule interviews may write to The Direc¬tor (Code 1818), Naval Research Labora¬tory, Washington, D. C. 20390.November 14, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5The Chicago MaroonFounded in miJeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger BlackExecutive Editors Michael SeidmanJohn WelchNews Editor John MoscowCulture Editor Edward Chikofsky Photographic Editor Roberto ArrozLiterary Editor David L. AikenAssociate Editors David E. GumpertEdward W. HearneDaniel HertzbergJoan PhillipsEditor Emeritus David A. SatterA PossibilityThe labor conference for peace held on campus thisweekend is one of the most hopeful signs that effectiveopposition will develop within the Democratic Party tothe policies and renomination of Lyndon Baines Johnson.The appearance of Martin Luther King, Victor Reuth-er, and John Galbraith shows just how widespread theopposition is among the groups that normally vote Demo¬cratic: Negroes are disenchanted; labor is irritated withthe President on numerous scores; and the Eastern estab¬lishment, never truly sure of Johnson, has firmly repu¬diated him. Yet they all have been faced with a problem—despite the massive power these groups wield within theDemocratic Party, theymust have a candidate whom theycan run against Mr. Johnson; the old maxim of “Youcan’t beat somebody with nobody” still holds.Now it seems that that somebody may be EugeneMcCarthy. The Senator from Minnesota is not necessarilybest possible candidate, but he is the only one who so farhas shown the courage to do a necessary job. For that hedeserves both aid and encouragement.It is not possible, pragmatically, to say that unlessa man is the best possible candidate for an office he. doesnot warrant support. Elections are always comparativeevents, and this one is no exception.McCarthy will be running up against 'powerful oppo¬sition from some local machines, but in states such asWisconsin where students can perform most of the poli:tical chores, his victory should be possible. Wherever heruns he must be supported, not so much because he isthe best possible man, but because he is the best manrunning.Autonomy'Vincent House’s strong vote in favor of open inter¬visitation hours, coming after what Burton-Judson Coun¬cil President Steven Cope called “long and thoughtfuldiscussion, is about to become a test case for the meaning¬fulness of the phrase “house autonomy.” Vincent resi¬dents would appear to have an airtight case: a strongmajority favoring open hours, a minority opposing themthat wouldn’t be inconvenienced little if any because ofthe predominantly single-room arrangements at B-J, anda lot of tact in their dealings with Dean of StudentsCharles O’Connell and the Inter-House Council.We are suspicious, however, that Mr. O’Connellwould like to see the IHC refuse to approve the proposalso that he can without difficulty veto it, pointing out thatit was, after all, the students who’d decided the matter.We hope the IHC agrees that open hours is truly“the best policy for Vincent House” and duly send offthe proposal to Mr. O’Connell.And we hope Mr. O’Connell sees that the term “houseautonomy” can be meaningful only when “liberal” hoursrules such as Vincent’s are accepted at face value and nottampered with, and that he should not expect the respons¬ible enforcement of rules that are other than what housemembers want them to be. The American DreamDAVID E. GUMPERTChicago Transit Authority:Rise, Riders FallAs FaresWhen the Chicago Transit Au¬thority recently announced an in¬crease in its fares ranging fromfive cents in the city to 15 centsfor trains going to western sub¬urbs, I waited for the cries ofoutrage I was sure would come.Certainly the mayor, the citypress, and the guy on the streetwould all be livid with rage.After all, the whole thing wasoutrageous. That people shouldhave to pay 30 cents (35 centswith a transfer) for transporta¬tion that takes twice as long asgoing by car and where you runa good risk of being mugged atthe same time was inconceivable.Especially when you can getpractically the same thing in SanFrancisco for 15 cents and inNew York and Boston for 20cents.THE FARE increase was an¬nounced nearly a week ago, butthe cries of outrage never came.Instead, Mayor Daley, withcustomary eloquence, mumbledsomething about the situationbeing regrettable. The daily pa¬pers, always looking out for thepublic’s best interests, said ed¬itorially that the CTA’s mountingdebt in violation of a state lawrequiring it to pay for itself withfares made the increase inevita¬ble. And the average Joe, so the newspapers reported, was takingit like a real sport.At a time when politicians anddo-gooders are crying about the“crises in the cities,” the CTAfare increase presented a perfecttarget for a lot of tear jerkingand moralizing. And with goodreason. For the CTA is symbolicof much that is wrong with Chi¬cago.THE SUBWAY and elevatedsystem, especially, is noisy,dirty, outdated, inefficient, andracked by crime. It can be saidwith a good degree of certaintythat the CTA’s inadequacies area significant contributing factorto the exodus of whites from theinner city and the mass conges¬tion of expressways as com¬muters have turned increasinglyto their autos.The statistics leave little doubtthat these trends are a fact. In1946 the average Chicagoan took319 rides by mass transportationwhile in 1956 he took only 163. In1956 an estimated million personsrode the CTA twice each day; to¬day the figure is put at anywherefrom 500,000 to 920,000. And thisin spite of an increasing city andcounty population.THE BASIS of the CTA’s im¬mediate financial problems liein the fact that it has been vir¬ tually unable to get any kind ofsubsidy from the Illinois statelegislature and also that it lacksthe authority to levy taxes. Otherthan being exempted from payingcertain taxes and getting a$7,350,000 biennial subsidy fromthe legislature to offset the effectof lower student fares, it getsnothing. This is what all the criesof portest should have beenabout.In the meantime, CTA Chair-rapid transit receives an approxi¬mately $171,000,000 subsidy, Bos¬ton collects two cents tax fromeach package of cigarets for atransit subsidy fund, and SanFrancisco allocates about $5,000,-000 a year to keep fares down.In the meantime, CTA chair¬man George L. De Ment has al¬ready served notice that faresmay have to be raised again inanother year. No protests greetedthat prediction either.The Chicago MaroonFounded In 1891. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school yearand Intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 40037. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mall $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Pracs Service.6 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 14, 1967NP^M| Letters to the Editors of The MaroonSG and DowIn response to Bill Phillips’contention that SG officers spon¬sored the Dow meeting withoutproper approval according toSG’s regular policy-making pro¬cedures:Unfortunately, our technologyis not yet such that calling anAssembly meeting on the spur ofthe moment is possible. Whendecisions have to be made with¬out time for an Assembly meet¬ing, the Executive Council, elec¬ted by the Assembly for just thispurpose, undertakes interim ac¬tion, subject to censure by theAssembly at its next meeting.This was the case with Dow.At an emergency meeting of theExecutive Council on Wednes¬day, November 1, the Exec, un¬able to agree on the free speechissue involved, decided simply tohold a meeting of students andfaculty interested in doing some¬thing about Dow. Since none ofthe members of the Exec wereopposed to a non-obstructivedemonstration — while somenevertheless favored somethingmore militant — I publicized themeeting and the resulting actionin accord with the feelings ofthe Exec.If Mr. Phillips feels the Execacted wrongly he is entitled tomove censure of the Exec and ofme as its executing officer inthis case. But it is simply incor¬rect to charge that we violated proper SG procedures. Theywere used as they were de¬signed to function, in the interestof a relevant Student Govern¬ment.JERRY LIPSCHSG Vice-PresidentOpen Letter.Dear Jeffrey,You’re a lovely guy and I’ve al¬ways preferred your antics toTom Heagy’s. Perhaps you don’tremember, but in those deardead days beyond recall, when Iused to rest my sitzfleisch in theback row at SG meetings, I evenused to throw my weak and bleat¬ing voice in your support. Therhetoric in your latest Gadfly,however, would disgrace one ofmy Roosevelt University English102 students.You take delight in the red her¬ring. You say that “Dow repre¬sentatives will attempt to avoidany discussion of napalm andtheir role in the war.’’ You usetheir “indifference” as an argu¬ment against letting them recruitemployes here. What would youhave said, though, (had they) in¬tended to set up soap boxes andspeak in favor of napalm?Wouldn’t you be the first to pro-^(Society for the Preservation and^Encouragement of Barber Shop:*::Quarteete Singing in America)MEETINGTuesday evening Nov. 14;|v7:30 to 9:30 p.m. 5544 S. Woodlawr^Students, faculty and staff test against them, picket sign inin hand?YOU SET UP straw men. Youvehemently deny that “academicfreedom” is threatened by yourstand against Dow. Who ever saidthat it was at issue? You ring thechanges on this term in para¬graph after paragraph withoutevincing any awareness of itsmeaning. May not the Universityallow activities which are not pro¬tected by “academic freedom”?Surely it may: otherwise your SGshould shut up shop—and The Ma¬roon as well.You argue consequences withthe naivete of a fanatic. Is Dow’spresence, as you state, “detri¬mental to the purposes of the Uni¬versity”? What purposes will besubverted. I am in the dark; youdo not enlighten me.Look, Jeff, in place of the blath¬er about ‘accademic freedom,”what about the honesty whichshould be an academic’s sacredtrust? Why not admit, why notshout to the world in fact, thatFranklin Food SforeOriental Foods & Gifts1309 E. 53rd StreetPHOTOGRAPHY CLUBMeeting Monday Nov. 20, '67 atWOODLAWN RESIDENCE5544 S. WOODLAWN667-3435Subject: HIGH LIGHT VS. SHADOW(Membership open to faculty,staff, students at U. of C.) Aw.tsd....You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1265$ $. Doty Ave.646-4411 SAT. & SUN. DEC. 2&38:30 PM NIGHTLYOPERA HOUSE$5.50 - $4.50 - $3.50 - $2.50TICKETS ARE ON SALE ATOPERA HOUSE BOXOFFICE. 20 N. WACKERnnFOR MAIL ORPtRSENCLOSE STAMPEDSELF-ADDRESSEOENVELOPEMAHDH L 0EACH IN HIS OWN WAY(Ciascuno a suo modo)Directed by James O’ReillyA CHICAGO PREMIEREpresented byUNIVERSITY THEATREFRI NOV 17 $2SAT NOV 18 $2.50SUN NOV 19 $1.75MANDEL HALL 8:30 PMTICKETS ON SALE AT REYNOLDS CLUB DESK you are interested in makingDow’s presence on campus theoccasion for a large-scale protestagainst America’s conduct of thewar? Let’s not evict Dow. Let’srally within smelling range of theopposition.DAVID RICHTERDepartment of EnglishWho Threatens?When the administration, injudgement assembled, suspends57 students for a peaceful study-in, which did not intend to anddid not in fact obstruct any oper¬ation of this University, they arenot condemned as a threat tofree speech. But when some stu¬dents threaten to shut down re¬cruitment interviews conductedby a company heavily implicatedin war crimes, these same Ad¬ministrators call them anti-demo¬cratic and a threat to freespeech. Who really threatens freespeech? Note that no otherschool has suspended so manyfor so little. Even at Wisconsin where students fought cops, onlythirteen were disciplined. Thisschool is no bastion of liberalism,it is the center of campus repres¬sion.KENNETH KRICH, ’67Letters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewitheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.Solid State IntercomsKeep in touch from roomto room. No wires to con¬nect — just plug into anyAC outlet.See them atPhotographyDepartmentThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis“I don’t havetwo years’experience./ have one year twice’Some people get experiencein a job.Other people get older.There’s a big difference. Andit all depends on where youwork, and with whom youwork. You can start someplace that has all the propersystems engineering creden¬tials — significant contracts,modern physical plant, andthe usual fringe benefits —and find yourself a couple ofyears later, just a couple ofyears behind.Or, you can come to a placelike MITRE and get experi¬ence. And grow. We have thecredentials, of course. (Wehappen to think they’re thebest.) But we have somethingmore. An attitude. We wantyou to get the best systemsexperience in the business.We want to share what weknow with you, want you toabsorb it as fast as you can.The quicker you grasp things,the quicker things get done. The more experience you get,the faster you grow.And that’s to our mutualbenefit.Here’s the kind of experienceyou getMITRE is pioneering in thedesign and engineering ofcomplex information, sensor,command, control and com¬munications systems for theUnited States Government.Our assignments includeprominent military electronicsystems, as well as civiliansystems for future nationalair traffic control and highspeed ground transportation.We’d like you to know moreabout MITREAbout what we do, how wethink, and what it might belike to work with us. If you’dlike to know more about us,and have a degree (preferablyadvanced) in electronics,mathematics or physics, we’dlike to talk with you.INTERVIEWS WILL BE CONDUCTEDON CAMPUS, NOV. 17,SIGN UP NOW AT THE PLACEMENT OFFICE.Or write for more information: Mr. L.J. Glinos, CollegeRelations Coordinator, The MITRE Corporation, Box 208CN2 Bedford, Massachusetts.TNI ■■■■■■■■■■■MITRE13An Equal Opportunity Employer (Male A Female)Formed in 1958 . . . pioneer in the design and development of command andcontrol systems . . . MITRE serves as technical advisor and systems engineerfor the Electronic Systems Division of the Air Force Systems Command andprovides technical assistance to the Federal Aviation Administration, the De¬partment of Defense, the Department of Transportation and the National Aero¬nautics and Space Administration.November 14, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONWASHINGTON (CPS) - An¬other liberal student organizationhas warned college administratorsthat the involvement of local po¬lice on campuses “constitutes adangerous precedent which couldultimately threaten the traditional autonomy of the academic com¬munity.”The new warning came in a res¬olution adopted by the NationalBoard of Campus Americans forDemocratic Action. The NationalStudent Association recently is¬ sued a similar warning.The CADA resolution said “localpolice are seldom noted for theirrestraint,” and it is impossible forliberals “to stand idly by andwatch our fellow students sub¬jected to brutal treatment.”But the CADA Board, composedof 16 elected student representa¬tives, did not side completely withthe demonstrators. The resolutionsaid free speech is being dealt aserious blow by the demonstrators.“The best possible universitypolicy is that of allowing equal ac¬cess to all,” it said.The resolution also said that antiwar sentiments should bechanneled into political activity,“and above all into the attempt toelect to the White House in 1968a candidate pledged to a progres¬sive domestic policy and to peacein Vietnam as part of a liberal* for¬eign policy.”CADA also adopted a resolutionhighly critical of the Johnson Ad¬ministration and applauding therecent statement of Sen. EugeneMcCarthy declaring his willing¬ness to enter primary contests.But the resolution did not go sofar as to endorse McCarthy. “Wecall on other candidates who sup¬ port liberal domestic and foreignpolicies to enter primary contestsin both parties,” it said.In a third resolution, the organ¬ization endorsed “The Joint State¬ment of Rights and Freedoms ofStudents,” which was draftedby five national organizations rep¬resenting students, administrators,and faculty members. The state¬ment, which endorses such rightsas a student role in policy-makingand due process for students indisciplinary cases, has beensteadily gaining support since itwas made public this lastsummer.Sociologists Oppose Vietnam WarA letter signed by 1300 fellowsand active members of the Amer¬ican Sociological Association hasbeen sent to President Johnsonand members of Congress to pro¬test the war in Vietnam and its ef¬fects on American society. The letter urged an immediatehalt to the bombing of North Viet¬nam, vigorous attempts to negot¬iate peace with all parties repre¬sented, and “orderly, phased with¬drawal” of American troops fromVietnam.Maroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50c per line, 40c per line repeat.For non-University clientele: 75c per line,60c per line repeat. Count 35 characters andspaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon Business Of¬fice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.HOURS: Weekdays 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.DEADLINES: Ads must be in by 11 a.m.of the day before publication.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: .PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.RIDES & RIDERSRIDERS to N.Y. leave 11/21 -258-6529.RIDERS WANTED to Kansas City, Topeka,or Manhattan, Kansas, for Thanksgiving Va¬cation. Share expenses of private plane,approx. $30.00 each, round trip. Call Roy,667-5531.New York RIDE WANTED for Thanksgiving.For two People, Call Kathy — 684-4999.WORKDirector of Humanistically Oriented Chil¬dren's Program seeks TEACHERS for Sun¬day mornings, 10:30 to 12:30. Call 922-5561 or643-4753.Part-time jobs available for good TYPISTSand students in the Sciences who can workapprox. 15 hours/week, also some weekendwork available.REWARDFor Lady's Gold Watch, "GOLDIE"-493-2040.ROOM FOR RENTNice reasonable room near campus for rent.Call Ml 3-9257.APARTMENT WANTED4-5 room apartment near campus. FA 4-8200,Ext. 311.APARTMENTS FOR RENTNearby economical 2, 3 rooms. $77.50 8< Up.Free Utilities. Williams. 6043 Woodlawn.MU 4-2300.1-Vi room furnished apt. in South Shore.Air conditioned & carpet. $75.00/month. CallJudy 324-1009.Young working woman grad, student wishedto share 1 bedroom apt. Modern quiet, furn¬ished, spacious. Call 667-0543 after 10 P.M.East H. Pk. HOUSEExecutive Ranch all super size rooms, MasterBedroom, Cabinet, Kitchen, Breakfast Room,Glass enclosed porch, Gas Heat, Carpeting 8,drapes throughout; Stove and Refrigerator,Vic. 90th 8, East End — SA 1-1112.FOR SALE3 piece sectional; corner table for sectional;kitchen table w. 4 chairs, formica top;ping-pong table; dish washer, practicallynew; record cabinet, formica. Herbert Kraus8531 Bennett ES 5-6466.Fender Jazzmaster $175; Electrovoice mike$45; Danelectro Reverb $30. Call 493-3037.BRAND NEW '56 CHEVY. Betsy takes outany car in her class. Prospective ownershould prepare references and call Gene(684-1138), who will haggle from $105.00.PERSONALSTO ALL THOSE WHO WANTED TO PUR¬CHASE A "STIMULANT" (see Classified Adslast Friday) FOR A "LADY FRIEND" —you can find the complete advertisement inthe Magazine Section of the NEW YORKTIMES.HULK thanks all those who faithfully sup¬port Maroon Advertizers . . . now aboutthose who don't.SFA COURT OPENINGS: Two-year and one-year terms. Submit self-nomination in writ¬ing to SG, IDA NOYES, 1212 E. 59th Streetby Wed., Nov. 15, Noon. Further Info:read COURT SECTION OF SG CONSTITU¬TION OR CALL SG, ext. 3274.Nice Trip, P.J. You're a great fellow-traveller.Run Silent, Run Deep.O.K. the Sun!—Steve Ford.Hey, Herbie, check out the famous, giant,electric prune at the Bandersnatch.Dionne Warwick 8. John Barbour will appearat Mister Kelly's on Rush Street.TYPING —Reasonable rates —call before 10PM . . . 731 5980.Take a TRIP with Marco Polo. 288-5944.LOUIE—come back—he's selling your clari¬net.Happy Birthday Archie!SRH is an excellent hostess and a terrificroommate.LEARN TO FLY. First Lesson Free. JimLeyden — 493-0166. Campus Rep. Cessna Aircraft. Student Pkg. Plans, Financing, WOW,WOW, WOW.LINCOLNMERCURYSouth Sidei Newest Dealership!NEW CARS FINE USED CARSComplete Line of *6? Mercurys LEASING AND RENTALSERVICEDaily, Weekly, MonthlyAll Makes and ModelsCometsCougarsThe“New MontegoLincoln ContinentalHOURS: *;» ^il,J ,9-6 Saturday and Sunday8640 South Chicago Avo. IS 5-9800 WRITERS' WORKSHOP. PL 2-8377.Hey—PAM M. — What's Happening?COFFEE AND TALK. Wed., Nov. 15, 8 P.M.Heme of S. Maddi, 5455 Hyde Park Blvd.Sponsored by Psych Club.SFA COURT OPENINGS: Two-year and one-year terms. Submit self-nomination in writ¬ing to SG, IDA NOYES, 1212 E. 59th, byWed., November 15, noon. For FurtherInfo.: Read Court Section of SG Constitutionor call SG, ext. 3274.HEY BANDERSNATCH, whoever heard of agiant electric prune?—Herbie.Hey Herbie —who ever heard of a giantelectric Bandersnatch.For God alone my soul waits in silence:from him comes my salvation.SAM and KIRK MCGEE import their oldtime string band music from the stage ofthe Grand Old Opry to the Cloister Club.Friday at 8:30."A piece of string, a sunset, each acts.'Cage.DADADADADADADADADADA DADADADADATelluriders (TSP, S, TA, etc.) Renew con¬tact with the Assn. Call 363-5780.NICE-LOOKING BOY AUDITING HUM. 106:Who are you and where have you been?lonely New YorkerWant to RENT CAR THKSGG WKEND. $25.00& up, Chicago Area Use. Call Jonathan at752-2433.Writing paper on PRIVACY AND THE UNI¬VERSITY. If you have any areas of inquiryto suggest or incidents to relate, call 324-1056.Letter from an anymous subscriber:After becoming greatly excited by youradvertisement for the "Personal MassageStimulant", I was frustrated to discover noaddress or phone number given. I am anxiousto experience the satisfaction of this sensa¬tional machine. It gratifies one to know thatautomation is penatrating (sic) all phases ofhuman activity and replacing hand labor.I tensely await the arrival of this delightfulpiece of equipment. Your incomplete adver¬tisement fails to bring the desired results. University education lacks love.$70.00 Round Trip—Chicago/O'Hare. Thanks¬giving Holiday FLIGHT. Meal included. CallNancy Hillner Kl 5-3377.BOOK SALEUBRARYDUPLICATESAND DISCARDS10*10{10{10<10<10<10<Fresh Stock Daily€©~®[pWeekdays 10-6Reynolds Club Basement RACISMIf you are bored with these Classifieds,complain to Jeff Kuta.For everyone who missed thePALACE OF PLEASURE —"It was beautiful!!!!!!"What's up, M.S.L.? Or who?CAFE EUROPA is for sale! Located at1440 E. 57th Street. Call LAZIO after 6 P.M.684-9398.Is it true one of our deans is actually JIMBACKUS in disguise?ANYONE interested in the FELDENRAISTECHNIQUE OF EPDANDEDEDEDEDEDBODY CONSCIOUSNESS. CONTACT M. Kim-mey. HY 3-6141.Politics For Peace: Canvassing, 12:45, Sun¬day, Ida Noyes.Fresh Fish At Jesselson's (also fresh shrimp— already cooked!) and Fresh Pizza at thePizza Platter—53rd Street.The Silver Lining in Every Cloud — MaroonAdvertizers in OLD TOWN.FLY-FLY-FLY-FLY-LEARN-LEARN-LEARN-Call Jerry Levy, Campus Representative Ml3-0800, Ext. 3266.1 know he talks like Mr. Magoo, but doeshe actually SOUND like him too?Professor Herman Finer, Prof. Emeritus otthe University of Chicago will speak on "TheFuture of Israel" tonight, November 14, at8:00 P.M. in the East Lounge, Second Floorof Ida Noyes . . . sponsored by the StudentZionist Organization.COUNTRY HUMOR! COUNTRY MUSIC!Both for the price of one! Sam and KirkMcGee —Friday at 8:30 PM. in the CloisterClub.Hey, Anybody, whoever heard of a Herbie’’— Prune.DeVito — I'm neither virgin nor freshman.Ask K.F. for reference. C. Smith. X3562.WITH LOVE AND FLOWERS FROM THETURIN BICYCLE CO-OP — 1952 N. SedgwickStreet. WH 4-8865 ... Old Town's onlycomplete bicycle store.The Gay Head Indians are on the Warpath8, have painted themselves red! Love, David.Love is like an empty glass. RACISM!! is NOT the sub|ect of RobertFlaherty's greatest full length film, "Louisi¬ana Story," on November 6, 8:30, JudsonDining Room. FREE!!!!!!!SITUATION WANTEDAntioch grad seeks work — 493-3758.I'm interested in situation with few hours,high pay, and super-interesting work —Ml3-0800, Ext. 3266.POLITICS FOR PEACEMEETING: reports about Petition Campaignand Possible Congressional Candidates;Thursday, Nov. 16, cars leave for office.Ida Noyes, 7:45 P.M.ACTION ON HOUSINGYou REALLY serious about Housing? Duboismeeting Tuesday at 7:30 in Ida Noyes.8iC Medium Point I9f8iC Fine Point 25*V® rrrmDespitefiendish torturedynamic BiC Duowrites first time,every time!pic’s rugged pair ofstick pens wins againin unending waragainst bail-pointskip, clog and smear.Despite horriblepunishment by madscientists, bic stillwrites first time, everytime. And no wonder.pic’s "Dyamite” Ballis the hardest metalmade, encased in asolid brass nose cone.Will not skip, clogor smear no matterwhat devilish abuseis devised for themby sadistic students.Get the dynamicbic Duo at yourcampus store now.WATERMAN-BIC PEN COUP.MIIFORO. CONN i £8 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 14, 1967TALBOT GUESTA Free Concert by Miss Barbara CookUniversity Theater—ERICFRIDAYJOAN IS DELIAThe reclining girl is Joan Cagen, who will play Delia Morelia, thelead character in Luigi Pirandello's "Each in His Own Way," in theUniversity Theater production playing Friday, Saturday, and Sun¬day in Mandel Hall. James O'Reilly is directing the production, thefirst by the Theater this quarter.French Spoken in Woodward Weekly Anita Sandke, assistant dean ofstudents and director of theEmily Talbot Fund, last weekannounced the successful com¬pletion of negotiations for Bar¬bara Cook, a w a r d-w inningBroadway actress and singer, tobe the Talbot Fund’s guest fromNovember 17 to 22. In additionto meeting with students and at¬tending several classes duringher stay at the University, MissCook will present a free concerton Sunday, November 19, at 8p.m.“We look forward to MissCook’s visit with great anticipa¬tion,” said Mrs. Sandke, “espe¬cially because of her variety ofstage experiences, which rangefrom schmaltzy musical comedyto serious drama to blackborg comedy.”Any French-speaking studentholding a meal contract at anyUniversity cafeteria is eligible toparticipate in the French tablescurrently being held in Woodwardcafeteria.The first dinner in the programwas held last Tuesday night atWoodward. These tables will con¬tinue on a tentative schedule ofonce a week, probably on Tuesdaynights. Miss Cook’s most famous star¬ring roles on Broadway were inLillian Heilman, Richard Wilbur,and Leonard Bernstein’s “Can-dide,” which was directed by Ty¬rone Guthrie; Meredith Willson’sAccording to Edward Turking-ton, director of Student Housing,any cafeteria is eligible to partici¬pate if enough students are willing. LANGUAGE TUTORINGGROUP LANGUAGE INSTITUTE288-0675 “The Music Man”; Bock andHarnick’s “She Loves Me”; andthe American production of JulesFeiffer’s “Little Murders,” whichwas directed by John Dexter.In 1954 Miss Cook received theTheatre World Award for mostpromising actress for her per¬formance in “Plain and Fancy.”She received the Antoinette Per¬ry (“Tony”) Award for her roleas Marian the Librarian in “TheMusic Man.”In 1961 she was given honor¬able mention for best actress by The Saturday Review. Miss Cot swon the Variety Drama CritusPoll for 1963-4 for her work in“She Loves Me,” the recordingof which was awarded TheGrammy Award by the recordindustry.Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. expMANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.For The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityRENT A CARDAILY — WEEKLY — MONTHLYRAMBLERS — VALIANTS — MUSTANGS and DATSUNSAs Low As $4.95 per Day(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE)HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715Bad Breath?No, that’s not why BUCHANAN RIDES ALONE. With Randolph Scott, by Budd Boetticher. Tomorrow night. 75«t. Soc Sci 122 at 7:15 and 9:15.~k-Direct from its Record Breaking Run at AARDVARKTHE PALACf OF PLEASURE1st Prize -VancouverInternationalFilmFestival.The mostTalked-aboutUnderground Filmof the Year.Ionite and Wednesday Only No One Under 18 AdmittedDuring This Engagement.7“ 9 -11 P.M.HARPER THEATER5238 S. Harper V’ aA mAin'tV‘i . 5F>v".November 14, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 9MUSIC REVIEWAngry Young Donovan Mellows over the YearsBy HOWARD FISHMANYou pay your money ($4.50)a id walk past the smiling bounc-e in the tux. Then you board thee evator crammed with teeny-boobers and ride, ride, ride — totl e fourth floor of Chicago’sGrand Ole Opry House. Others,less blessed and holding cheapertickets, continue on their upwardjcurney to what in the days be¬fore civil rights was known asn gger heaven.You find your seat and wait,hoping that the uptight feelingin your gut will somehow goaway when the music starts.You’re a true believer in thecreed of liberation on hearing,but how much turning on does ittake before you can tune in tothe setting of Mrs. O’Leary’sclassiest Cow Palace?All your religious aspirationsby now rest on the slight should-eis of one “gentle man” — thesi nshine superboy from Glasgow known to himself as DonovanLeitch. A spotlight flicks on andout comes Donovan wearing histrusty folk guitar and a Japa¬nese bathrobe. Hippies smile atone of their own.TEENY-BOOBERS strain theirvirgin bods to see if Donovanreally doesn’t shave his legs. Afew aging folkniks sigh wistfullyin memory of the shy little impwith the blue-denim curls whocharmed away their hearts atNewport ’65.But the people who knewwhere Donovan was at knewthat, like the chick in one of hissongs, Donovan had been throughsome weird changes. Gone wasthe 18 year old working-class ma¬gician who would sing to thestreet corners with his friendGypsy Dave. Conspicuously gonetoo was Britain’s angry younganswer to Bob Dylan. No morehard cores or rough edges. Nomore sex-crazed sunshine super¬ man. The Donovan of Saturdaynight was mellow.LIKE THE BEATLES, Dono¬van had quit the messed-up ba¬nana smoking scene, transcendedit into a pure mellow bag ofmany colors. Some people in theaudience felt a special kind ofrelief when they saw that Dono¬van wasn’t tinted yellow by toomuch sun.As might be expected at thisfort of concert, the program al¬ternated between the folksy andunfolksy sides of Donovan; someof the numbers he’d do alone,some with the hlep of his fivepiece jazz ensemble (flute-sax,piano, string bass, drums, andconga). For the second half,these musicians were joined bya string quartet.Unlike the songs of a lot offolk singers turned Super-Stars,Donovan’s unaccompanied bal¬lads weren’t always older ormore obsolete than the jazzier numbers. One of Donovan’s mosturbane jazz songs (“GoodgyeStreet”) was written only a littlebit after “Catch the Wind.”IT WAS GOOD to see that afterthree years in the money game,Donovan’s still romantic in a re¬ligious way, still religious in achild’s way. The name of Dono¬van’s magician remains love,love, love, and he still dwells ina greener country full of coupletsof berries and cherries. But thereis also the new Donovan, tiredand mellow at 21, caught up inthe big city jive, finding God inZen koans set to calypso.His jazz bag is sort of a soft-bop sound of the fifties; nice andintimate over cocktails. (For onemoment my bleary eyes trans¬formed his robe into a straplessevening gown.) It is not greatjazz ; it is not free jazz. But itsmood is appropriate to the gentlerhymes that Donovan the preach¬er uses to chide his suburban congregation — “Yourself youtouch/but not too much/ Youhear it’s degrading.” It swingsinstead of rocks. Not necessarilystoned, but nice.NO ONE DANCED in the bal¬conies. No plugged-in guitars.Jazz liturgy. “Saturday night.Feels like a Sunday.” Rev.Leitch, how about preaching loveand music next time around insomeplace quiet and beautiful(Bond Chapel?) instead of atthe Opera?SPEBSQSAThe Society for the Pre- fvention and Encouragementof the Barber Shop Quar¬tette of America will meettonight at 7:30 p.m. in the 1j| Woodlawn Residence, 5544 §I S. Woodlawn (Phone num¬ber: 667-3436).1. You buy theHi-Fi componentsystem of your choice. 2. Toad Hallbuys half of yournext 100 records.Store Hours:Monday thru Friday — 10 ASaturday — 10 A.M. to 10 P.Sunday — 12 Noon to 6 P.Enjoy the music you love the way it was meant to be enjoyed. First—select your v,ity engineered component system from Toad Hall. Second—let Toad Hall help youbuild that important and impressive record library.At Toad Hall you choose from only the finest Hi-Fi instruments available. In our ele¬gant listening studio you'll find a system to fit every home, to match every budget.And you'll hear components as you would in your very own living room.Once you've selected the system of your choice, you automatically become a mem¬ber in the Toad Hall Record Library.* You'll purchase any records you desire forone year — regardless of label, performer, or price — at 50% off. No exceptions.if the record you want isn't in stock, it will be ordered especially for you.And don't forget about our unique "price policy". We not only guarantee the low¬est possible price in the Chicagoland area, but should anyone offer a subsequentsale price within 30 days following your purchase, we will REFUND the difference INCASH. So for a truly "sound”__investment visit the original Toad Hall.1444 East 57th Street. We'll be looking for you. v ^ ' >> \ ■'14 v’-Jk. 1*4 1. % V-Tel: BA 8-45001515 N. SheridanWilmett1515 N. SheridanWilmetteAL 6-48003MImthe home of audio eleganceOther Toad Hall locations:105 E. Ontario St.Jutt W#*t ol Michigan Ava.‘ Dfc 7^4400ule .vCalendar of Events of InterestPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must type information onCalendar forms available at The MaroonOffice, Ida Noyes 303. Forms must then besent or brought to the office at least twodays before the date of publication.Tuesday, November 14ART EXHIBIT: (Midwest College Art Associ¬ation), opening, Center for Continuing Ed¬ucation, open daily.MEETING: (Interhouse Council), public wel¬come, Ida Noyes, 8 p.m.MEETING: (SPEDSQSA), The Society for thePreservation and Encouragement of Bar¬ber Shop Quartette Singing in America,Woodlawn Residence, 5544 S. Woodlawn,7:30 p.m.MEETING: (W.E.B. Dubois Clubs), Housingand the Draft in Woodlawn, Jean Toum-eau, executive secretary, Foyer, IdaNoyes, 7:30 p.m.INVITATION LECTURE SERIES: (BusinessSchool), Robert S. Ingersoll, Chairman ofthe Board, Borg-Warner Corporation,"Organizing a Diversified Corporation forWorld-Wide Operations," Business East103, 1 p.m.UNIVERSITY FACULTY AND BOARDMEETING: (Council of the UniversitySenate), Business East 106, 3:40 p.m.Wednesday, November 15COLLOQUIM: (The James Franck Institute),Melville S. Green Matopma; Bureau ofStandards, "Generalized Ornstein-ZernikeApproach to Critical Phenomena," Re¬search Institutes 480, 4:15 p.m.SEMINAR: (Ecumenical Christian Council),"The Dynamics of Hope," Chapel House,4:30 p.m.DINNER AND DISCUSSION: James O'Reilleyand Virgil Burnett, Bandersnatch, 5:30p.m.Doc FILM: "Mr. Arkadin" by Orsen Welles,Social Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933I0% Student Discount LECTURE: (Laboratory School Parents' As¬sociation), Ralph Tyler, "Dewey's Impacton Modem Education," Law School Audi¬torium, 8 p.m.LECTURE (Student Zionist Organization),Herman Finer, Professor Emeritus, "TheFuture of Israel," Ida Noyes, EastLounge, Second Floor, 8 p.m.FOLK DANCING AND SQUARE DANCING:Assembly Hall, International House,8-10:30 p.m.COLLOQUIM: (The James Franck Institute),Robert A. Harris, Department of Chem¬istry, University of California, Berkeley,"Sigma-Pi Coupling in Conjugated Molec¬ules,"Research Institutes 480, 1:30 p.m.UNIVERSITY FACULTY AND BOARDMEETING: Divinity School, Swift Com¬mon Room, 3 p.m.LECTURE: (Graduate Training Program:Biochemistry), Herbert Winkler, Depart¬ment of Physiological Chemistry, JohnHopkins University Medical School, Ade¬nine Nucleotide Transport and Bindingin Rat Liver Mitochondria," Abbott 101,4 p.m.KARATE CLUB: Ida Noyes Hall, CloisterClub, 7-10:30 p.m.DOC FILM: "Buchanan Rides Alone," byBudd Boetticher, Social Science 122, 7:15and 9:15 p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances from the Brit¬ish Isles and Scandinavia, Ida NoyesHall, Dance Room, 8-10 p.m.MEETING: (Pre-Med Club), Dr. Mark Re-vith speaking on his experiences as a* surgeon in Russia, Dore de Lee Hall.Billings Hospital, 7 p.m.MEETING: (SG), Unitarian Church, 5540Woodlawn, 7:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Encyclopaedia Britannica In¬corporated), Sir William Haley, Editor-In-Chief of Encyclopaedia Brifannica,"The Isle is Full of Noises: Formationof Opinion and Culture in Britain," LawSchool Auditorium, 8:15 p.m.COFFEE AND TALK: (Psychology Club),Graduate Psych Students to speak, un¬dergraduates and faculty invited, S.Maddi, 5455 Hyde Park Blvd., 8 p.m. LECTURE: (History Club), "Black National¬ism," Gilbert Osofsky, Ida Noyes Thea¬ter, 8 p.m.Thursday, November 16MEETING: (Politics for Peace), Reports^ about petition campaign and possible con¬gressional candidates, cars leave fromfront of Ida Noyes, 7:45 p.m.FILM: (B-J Free Cinema), "LouisianaStory," by Robert Flaherty, Judson din¬ing room, free admission, 8:30 p.m.MEETING: (IHC Committee on Orientation),all freshman welcome, Ida Noyes, 8 p.m.UNIVERSITY FACULTY AND BOARDMEETING: Board of Precollegiate Edu¬cation, Hutchinson Commons, 12 noon.LECTURE: (Social Sciences), Fred Currier,"A Professional Opinion of Public Opin¬ion," Kent 103, 1:30 p.m.SEMINAR: (Ecumenical Christian Council),"The Just War: A Re-examination," Cal¬vert House, 4:30 p.m.ZOOLOGY CLUB: Dr. Giuseppe Millonig,Molecular Embryology Unit, Italian Na¬tional Research Council, University ofPalermo, Palermo, Italy, "MorphologicalChanges of the Nucleolus during Oogene¬sis and Embryogenesis of Sea Urchins,"Zoology 14, 4:30 p.m.COLLOQUIM: (Physics), Ulrich Gerhardt,James Franck Institute, Department ofPhysics, "New Methods in Solid-StateSpectroscopy," Eckhart 133, 4:30 p.m.UNIVERSITY CONCERT BAND REHEAR¬SAL: Open to all stduents, faculty, andemployees, Laboratory School, Belfield244, 5 p.m.Recruiting Visitsappointments, call Ext. 3282.Graduate SchoolsMassachusetts Institute of Technology.Origina 'Waller Gallery CustomPaintings Graphics Galore ! ! FramingOriginals by Miro, Chagall, Kollwitz, Frielander,Saito, Minnami, Amen, Peterdi, and many more.$10 — $150We invite you to browse while ourselection is complete5300 Blackstone AvenueChicago, Illinois 60615Phone DO 3-7446 IndustryNovember 15 — Texaco, Inc., Coast to Coast,chemistry (M.S., Ph. D. — all specializa¬tions); all degree levels in physics (solidstate), mathematics, statistics, geo¬physics ,and programming.November 16 — Canadian Department ofManpower and Immigration, OperationRetrieval, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. In¬formation about job opportunities andeconomic developments in Canada. Ca¬nadian students desired.November 16 and 17 — Los Alamos ScientificLaboratory, Los Alamos, New Mexico. Alldegree levels in chemistry (inorganic,physical), mathematics, and physics(atomic cosmic radiation, solid state,particle). Postdoctoral appointments arealso available. Will interview S.B. andgraduate students in above departmentsfor summer employment.November 17 — Mitre Corporation, Bedford,Massachusetts; Washington, D.C.; At¬lantic City, New Jersey; Houston, Texas;Florida. S. M. and Ph. D. candidates in mathematics, physics, statistics, orcomputer science.GovernmentNovember 15 — Department of the Army,Headquarters, Office of the Chief of Staff,Washington, D.C., Operations Researchpositions available to B.S., M.S., andPh.D. grads in Economics, Mathematicsor Statistics; programmers, psychologists(experimental, physiological, personnelevaluation).MOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOBBY STORE OtTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-925VStudent Discounts1-A STUDENT OFFERGood Monday thru Thursday NOV. 13-16WITHTHIS AD 1-ARegular $1.25CHICKEN DINNER M.00 RIBS N’BIBS5300 DorchesterHY-3-0400MAKE A DATE FOR "68”New CalendarsPeanuts Date Book . $3.00Landscapes from China . $2.75Calendar of Icons . .$2.95Our America . $1.50Hastings House Pictorial CalendarsGeneral Book DepatmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave. . $2.00THE EMILY TALBOT FUNDPresentsA CONCERT GIVEN BY- IBARBARA COOKACTRESS AND SINGERWINNER OF THE TONY’ AWARD,THE THEATRE WORLD AWARD. ANDTHE VARIETY CRITICS POLL.Sunday, November 19, 8:00P.M. Law School Auditorium' November'14,'m? ’ ’ TtfE CHICAGO MAROON 1112 If your majoris listed here,IBM would liketo talk with youNov. 20th or 21stSign up for an interview at your placement office—evenif you’re headed for graduate school or military service.Why is IBM interested in so many different people?The basic reason is growth. Information processing isthe fastest growing, fastest changing major industry in theworld. IBM products are being used to solve problems ingovernment, business, law, education, medicine, science, thehumanities—just about any area you can name. We need peo¬ple with almost every kind of background to help our custom¬ers solve their problems. That’s why we’d like to talk with you.What you can do at IBMWhatever your major, you can do a lot of good things atIBM. Change the world (maybe). Make money (certainly). Continue your education (through any of several plans, in¬cluding a Tuition Refund Program). And have a wide choiceof places to work (we have over 300 locations throughoutthe United States).What to do nextWe’ll be on campus to interview for careers in Market¬ing, Computer Applications, Programming, Research, Designand Development, Manufacturing, and Finance and Admin¬istration. If you can’t make a campus interview, send an out¬line of your interests and educational background to Mr. C.J. Reiger, IBM Corporation, 100 SouthWacker Dr., Chicago, Ill. 60606. We’re anequal opportunity employer. 1CLJLTHE CHICAGO MAROON November 14, 1967. • * * r * * \ r, i ■* , ** % z !'; < •> '• • >