The Chicago Mar FoundedIn 1 mVOL. 76, NO. 23 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1968 12 PAGES4 COEDS RAPED \r per LibraryH ArIIniv', 111• 60Crime Wave Draws Police HereBy JOHN MOSCOWNews EditorAdditional men from the ChicagoPolice Department’s Task Forcehave been transfered into HydePark following five rapes and ashooting in the neighborhood dur¬ing the past six weeks. Four Chi¬cago co-eds and an employee werethe victims of the rapes, while 5thWard Alderman Leon Despres wasshot.The rapes occured between No¬vember 18 and December 13. Inall cases women out alone afterdark were accosted by a youngNegro male who threatened themwith a knife. Three of the incidents See editorial on Page 6.' ' "''i' Voccured outdoors, and two cameafter the woman had gone into abuilding. Police are seeking thetwo men pictured on this page.Three of- the rapes occured onthe 5300 block of Greenwood andthe 5400 and 5700 blocks of Kim-bark. According to Merle Albert¬son, a detective coordinating theinvestigation for the police, thereis good reason to believe that thesethree incidents were caused by thesame person. Two of the women,he stated, might have been fol¬lowed home from 53rd and Harper.Vincenf AutonomyGets O'Connell NoBy JOHN SIEFERTStaff WriterDean of Students Charles O'Con--H1 has announced that he has re¬jected open houTs for VincentHouse. The house had backed openhours unanimously. The Inter-House Council had endorsed the re¬quest.Vincent House President StevenCope called O'Connell’s action adeath blow to house. autonomy.“House autonomy doesn’t seem tomean much to our administratorsany more,” Cope said.House members at Vincent wereangered and disappointed thatCollege CouncilMeets To VoteGrade ChangeThe College Council will meeton January 30 for a final vote on,the proposed change in the grad¬ing system at Chicago. The Coun¬cil will be voting on a system pro¬posed by a Subcommittee of theCouncil Committee on Grading lastweek.The current proposal before theCollege Council, altered by variouscommittees it has been putthrough, stands as follows:• First Quartet (“Year in Com¬mon”): A letter grade is requiredfor all courses offered by any Col¬lege student to satisfy the first-quarter requirement;• Second Quartet (requirementswithin each division of coursestaken outside the field of concen¬tration): A letter grade is requiredfor all courses offered by any Col¬lege student to satisfy the second-quartet requirement;• Concentration Requirement:Each collegiate division shall spe-Turn to Page 4 O'Connell had rejected their re¬quest. According to Cope, “Houseautonomy will now be limited tosquabbles over hours within thenarrow limits set by the Office ofthe Dean of Students, while largerissues, such as the selection of res¬ident heads, the question of pari-etals themselves, and the style oflife within the house remain out- >side the sphere of house govern¬ment.”Minority Rights No IssueSince Vincent House is entirelysingles, and since the house votedunanimously for open hours,O’Connell conceded that the ques¬tion of minority rights was not di-;rectly involved.| Instead, he contended in a letterof rejection to Cope that the jUniversity “cannot pretend to theyounger students to say that un¬married men and women can asso¬ciate with one another indis-;criminately without paying signi-ficant social costs.”‘Corporate Satisfaction’O'Connell further contended that“to have women in and out of thehouse all night or spending thenight there is contrary to what weknow of the best interests of theindividuals concerned.. . .” Openhours, O'Connell said, would denystudents “the opportunity to enjoythe corporate satisfaction of houselife.”“If after a year,” O'Connell “astudent finds that he does notshare the satisfactions and purpos¬es of house life, he is free to seekother ‘life styles’ in other set¬tings.”O'Connell told a Maroon report¬er, “I can believe that anyone isseriously inconvenienced by thepresent arrangements at Vincent.”He said that he felt compelled todeny Vincent’s request because hewished to maintain a distinction be-Turn to Page 2 Basement AttackThe rape on November 18 tookplace in the basement of an apart¬ment house, while the other twotook place between buildings onKimbark. The victim of December5, a first-year student, was hos- HAVE YOU SEEN THESE MEN? Police sketches of rapists in Hydepitalized at Billings. Other victims Park neighborhood.were examined there and then; ~released.In the first of those three casesthe rape took place at 5:15 p.m.The second was at 11 p.m. andthe fourth at 10:30 p.m. In thefirst case the victim asked if herattacker wanted money, but thelatter incidents involved robbery.The other two cases seem tohave been committed by a differ¬ent man. One took place on the6100 block of Ellis at 10 p.m.,while the other occurred inside thewaiting room on the Illinois Cen¬tral railroad station at 7 p.m.while the employee was on herway home. As in the previousTurn to Page 3 University Adds Toward$160 Million CampaignIt was a very rewarding Christ¬mas for the University. In thepast month it received as muchas $5.5 million as part of the three-year, $ 160-million Campaign forChicago.The most recent gift, which wasannounced today, was $1.5 millionfrom Albert Pick, Jr. Pick, a Uni-ONE OF 32Softer Named Rhodes ScholarDavid Satter, ’68, has beennamed a 1968 Rhodes Scholar.His $2800 award, which isgranted on the basis of scholar¬ship, extra-curricular achieve¬ment, and sports participation,entitles him to two or three yearsof study at Oxford. He will readfor a degree in politics, philoso¬phy, and economics.Satter, who was Maroon editor-in-chief during the 1966-67 aca¬demic year, survived a grindingseries of interviews and screen¬ings to be named with 31 otherU.S. students as recipients. Student Government here threeyears ago who later became pres¬ident of the National Student As¬sociation. Eastern schools havelong dominated the competition.A graduate of Hyde Park HighSchool, Satter won acclaim for hisarticle on urban problems in TheNew Republic in the summer of1966. He worked last summer asa reporter on The WashingtonPost and is currently workingwith Joseph Alsop on an articleabout Negro education which willappear in The New Yorker laterthis year. j versity trustee, gave the moneyi to help build a theater in honor ofhis wife, Corinne Freda Pick.The $2.5-million- Pick Theaterwill be part of Chicago’s new Cen¬ter for the Arts in the “student vil¬lage,” planned between 55th and56th sts. and Cottage Grove andUniversity Aves. Contributions arebeing sought to make up the dif¬ference between Pick’s gift andthe cost of the theater and an en¬dowed theater program.The theater may have twostages, one for large perform¬ances, the other for small experi¬mental productions.$3 Million from IranThe government of Iran an¬nounced early in Decembera spectacular grant of $3 millionon behalf of its Shah, MohammedRiza Shah Pahlavi. Two-thirds ofthe grant will be used to build thePahlavi Center, which will housethe new Center for Middle EasternStudies, and possibly the AdlaiStevenson Institute for Internation¬al Relations and other Universityprograms.BULLETINAs The Maroon went to presslast night, it was learned that Chi¬cago police had apprehended twomen in connection with the rapes.One of the men is the one sus¬pected of the three rapes while theother is suspected of committingon of the other rapes. This infor¬mation came indirectly from aUniversity official and had notbeen confirmed by police at presstime. WANTED FOR RAPEHe and three other Midwest win¬ners learned of their awards De¬cember 16 at the University ofChicago. Eleven local students hadbeen finalists.The scholarship program was in¬itiated in 1902 by Cecil Rhodes,who set up a trust fund in his will.Earlier American and foreign re¬cipients of the award are nowprominent in many fields.Chicago’s last Rhodes scholarwas Eugene Groves, president of Reached for comment at hisHyde Park apartment, Satter re¬marked, “I really don’t like talk¬ing to The Maroon because youguys usually misquote me.” One million dollars of the grantwill go to the endowment of pro¬fessorships in Persian civilization,Turn to Page 3Satter, known among his friendsfor his extreme modesty, relatedwhat happened after he receivedthe award: “I came home and,to my absolute horror, there wasno one around to tell. I finallywent down to 53rd St. and found| someone on the street corner to! tell about it.”(PERSONALBANKINGAmong the definitions for the word "personal" in Webster’s unabridged tome are-"of or relating to a particular person" and "direct from one person to another."We feel that Mr. Webster’s current day editors might have had University National'sPersonal Banking Department in mind when they set down these definitions.Our Personal Banking Department has no slick formulas that we try to apply to everyone.Insteaa we work with each customer to find the best means of handling his or her financialsituation. We seek the approach that will be of the most benefit to a particular person.And we do it on a direct person to person basis. Our Personal Banking Departmentis staffed with experienced financial counsellors who work individually witheach customer and tailor a program to his or her specific needs.Heading this counselling team is Charlie Morris, vice president and manager of thedepartment. Charlie is a graduate of the School of Banking at the University of Virginiaand has also taken advanced courses at the American Institute of Banking.He has been a banker for more than ten years, seven of them as a bank officer.Before joining University National he was the number two man in the personal bankingdepartment of a financial institution three times our size.Charlie is a lifelong resident of Chicago and has been active in civic, professional, andcharitable organizations. His endeavors range from working for the Crusade of Mercyto serving as an officer of a community business and professional men’s group.Working with Charlie is Jim Johnston, assistant manager, who has been withUniversity National for more than five years and knows the Hyde Park-Kenwood communityintimately through such activities as working for the Hyde Park YMCA.Starting in December our Personal Banking Department will be located in brand newoffices just to the west of our main building. It’s part of our plan of expandingto serve this community better.Charlie, Jim, and the rest of their staff would be happy to have you drop in and discussyour financial needs. They have money available now for auto loans, home improvementloans, vacation loans, and just about any other kind of personal loan you may want.UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615 1TELEPHONE MU 4-1200strength and service 0<33 member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Chicago Clearing House Association Federal Reserve ©8t6W»V jArchives12 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 1, 1967The Chicago Mar FeudedIn 1192VOL. 76, NO. 234 COEDS RAPEDCHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1968—irper Librarys 1 ArjJaXia a—LI n i v-ago, Hi, ( 'Crime Wave Draws Police Here12 PAGESBy JOHN MOSCOWNews EditorAdditional men from the ChicagoPolice Department’s Task Forcehave been transfered into HydePark following five rapes and ashooting in the neighborhood dur¬ing the past six weeks. Four Chi¬cago co-eds and an employee werethe victims of the rapes, while 5thWard Alderman Leon Despres wasshot.The rapes occured between No¬vember 18 and December 13. Inall cases women out alone afterdark were accosted by a youngNegro male who threatened themwith a knife. Three of the incidents . ' „ * i ,, iSee editorial on Page 6.occured outdoors, and two cameafter the woman had gone into abuilding. Police are seeking thetwo men pictured on this page.Three of- the rapes occured onthe 5300 block of Greenwood andthe 5400 and 5700 blocks of Kim-bark. According to Merle Albert¬son, a detective coordinating theinvestigation for the police, thereis good reason to believe that thesethree incidents were caused by thesame person. Two of the women,he stated, might have been fol¬lowed home from 53rd and Harper.Vincent AutonomyGets O'Connell NoBy JOHN SIEFERTStaff WriterDean of Students Charles O'Con-'if*H has announced that he has re¬jected open hou?s for VincentHouse. The house had backed openhours unanimously. The Inter-House Council had endorsed the re¬quest.Vincent House President StevenCope called O'Connell’s action adeath blow to house. autonomy.“House autonomy doesn’t seem tomean much to our administratorsany more,” Cope said.House members at Vincent wereangered and disappointed thatCollege CouncilMeets To VoteGrade ChangeThe College Council will meeton January 30 for a final vote on,the proposed change in the grad¬ing system at Chicago. The Coun¬cil will be voting on a system pro¬posed by a Subcommittee of theCouncil Committee on Grading lastweek.The current proposal before theCollege Council, altered by variouscommittees it has been putthrough, stands as follows:• First Quartet (“Year in Com¬mon”): A letter grade is requiredfor all courses offered by any Col¬lege student to satisfy the first-quarter requirement;• Second Quartet (requirementswithin each division of coursestaken outside the field of concen¬tration): A letter grade is requiredfor all courses offered by any Col¬lege student to satisfy the second-quartet requirement;• Concentration Requirement:Each collegiate division shall spe-Turn to Page 4 O'Connell had rejected their re¬quest. According to Cope, “Houseautonomy will now be limited tosquabbles over hours within thenarrow limits set by the Office ofthe Dean of Students, while largerissues, such as the selection of res¬ident heads, the question of pari-etals themselves, and the style oflife within the house remain out¬side the sphere of house govern¬ment.”Minority Rights No IssueSince Vincent House is entirelysingles, and since the house votedunanimously for open hours,O’Connell conceded that the ques¬tion of minority rights was not di¬rectly involved.| Instead he contended in a letterof rejection to Cope that theUniversity “cannot pretend to theyounger students to say that un¬married men and women can asso¬ciate with one another indis¬criminately without paying signi¬ficant social costs.”‘Corporate Satisfaction’O'Connell further contended that“to have women in and out of thehouse all night or spending thenight there is contrary to what weknow of the best interests of theindividuals concerned....” Openhours, O'Connell said, would denystudents “the opportunity to enjoythe corporate satisfaction of houselife.”“If after a year,” O'Connell “astudent finds that he does notshare the satisfactions and purpos¬es of house life, he is free to seekother ‘life styles’ in other set¬tings.”O'Connell told a Maroon report¬er, “I can believe that anyone isseriously inconvenienced by thepresent arrangements at Vincent.”He said that he felt compelled todeny Vincent’s request because hewished to maintain a distinction be-Turn to Page 2 nin i r-riM WANTED FOR RAPEBULLETINAs The Maroon went to presslast night, it was learned that Chi¬cago police had apprehended twomen in connection with the rapes.One of the men is the one sus¬pected of the three rapes while theother is suspected of committingon of the other rapes. This infor¬mation came indirectly from aUniversity official and had notbeen confirmed by police at presstime.wmmmmmmmmmmMmmmmmmmBasement AttackThe rape on November 18 tookplace in the basement of an apart¬ment house, while the other twotook place between buildings onKimbark. The victim of December5, a first-year student, was hos- HAVE YOU SEEN THESE MEN? Police sketches of rapists in Hydepitalized at Billings. Other victims Park neighborhood,were examined there and then ~released.In the first of those three casesthe rape took place at 5:15 p.m.The second was at 11 p.m. andthe fourth at 10:30 p.m. In thefirst case the victim asked if herattacker wanted money, but theI latter incidents involved robbery.The other two cases seem tohave been committed by a differ-! ent man. One took place on the6100 block of Ellis at 10 p.m.,while the other occurred inside thewaiting room on the Illinois Cen¬tral railroad station at 7 p.m.while the employee was on herway home. As in the previousTurn to Page 3 University Adds Toward$160 Million CampaignIt was a very rewarding Christ¬mas for the University. In thepast month it received as muchas $5.5 million as part of the three-year, $160-million Campaign forChicago.The most recent gift, which wasannounced today, was $1.5 millionfrom Albert Pick, Jr. Pick, a Uni-ONE OF 32Satter Named Rhodes ScholarDavid Satter, ’68, has beennamed a 1968 Rhodes Scholar.His $2800 award, which isgranted on the basis of scholar¬ship, extra-curricular achieve¬ment, and sports participation,entitles him to two or three yearsof study at Oxford. He will readfor a degree in politics, philoso¬phy, and economics.Satter, who was Maroon editor-in-chief during the 1966-67 aca¬demic year, survived a grindingseries of interviews and screen¬ings to be named with 31 otherU.S. students as recipients.He and three other Midwest win¬ners learned of their awards De¬cember 16 at the University ofChicago. Eleven local students hadbeen finalists.The scholarship program was in¬itiated in 1902 by Cecil Rhodes,who set up a trust fund in his will.Earlier American and foreign re¬cipients of the award are nowprominent in many fields.Chicago’s last Rhodes scholarwas Eugene Groves, president of j Student Government here threeyears ago who later became pres¬ident of the National Student As¬sociation. Eastern schools have: long dominated the competition.A graduate of Hyde Park HighSchool, Satter won acclaim for hisarticle on urban problems in TheNew Republic in the summer of1966. He worked last summer asa reporter on The WashingtonPost and is currently workingwith Joseph Alsop on an articleabout Negro education which willappear in The New Yorker laterthis year.Reached for comment at hisHyde Park apartment, Satter re¬marked, “I really don’t like talk¬ing to The Maroon because youguys usually misquote me.”Satter, known among his friendsfor his extreme modesty, relatedwhat happened after he receivedthe award: “I came home and,to my absolute horror, there wasno one around to tell. I finallywent down to 53rd St. and foundsomeone on the street corner totell about it.” versity trustee, gave the moneyto help build a theater in honor ofhis wife, Corinne Freda Pick.The $2.5-miilion Pick Theaterwill be part of Chicago’s new Cen¬ter for the Arts in the “student vil¬lage,” planned between 55th and56th sts. and Cottage Grove andUniversity Aves. Contributions arebeing sought to make up the dif¬ference between Pick’s gift andthe cost of the theater and an en¬dowed theater program.The theater may have twostages, one for large perform¬ances, the other for small experi¬mental productions.$3 Million from IranThe government of Iran an¬nounced early in Decembera spectacular grant of $3 millionon behalf of its Shah, MohammedRiza Shah Pahlavi. Two-thirds ofthe grant will be used to build thePahlavi Center, which will housethe new Center for Middle EasternStudies, and possibly the AdlaiStevenson Institute for Internation¬al Relations and other Universityprograms.One million dollars of the grantwill go to the endowment of pro¬fessorships in Persian civilization,Turn to Page 3LAST FRIDAYThere was no Maroon lastFriday because a change in theUniversity's original calendarcame too late to adjust adver¬tising schedules this quarter.CHARGES DENIEDUniversity Accused of Federal WasteBy JOHN RECHTStaff WriterSenator William Proxmire (D.,Wis.) named the University of Chi¬cago Friday as one of 23 defensecontractors that were “costing thefederal government over the yearsbillions of dollars” through the al¬leged misuse of government-ownedindustrial plant equipment.The list of contractors includedsuch corporations as Sperry Rand,Boeing, Curtiss-Wright, and Kaiser! Aluminum, besides the Universi-| ties of Chicago and Maryland.Senator Proxmire cited as evi-1 dence a report to Congress by theDepartment of Defense dated No¬vember 24, entitled “Report On' Need For Improvements in Con¬trols Over Government-OwnedProperty In Contractors’ Plants.”The General Accounting Office per-Dean of Students Charles 0’-, Connell has announced that eight; of the 22 students who appealedtheir suspensions for their part inlast spring’s sit in at the Admin¬istration building had their sus-; pensions lifted.j At that time 55 students were• suspended by a special disciplin¬ary committee for their part inthe demonstration. Of the 46 un-; dergraduates suspended, 14 ap¬pealed. O’Connell said that twelveappeals were denied and twowere granted.Of the twelve graduate studentswho were suspended, eight ap¬pealed. Six of these eight hadtheir appeals partially or fullygranted, he said.In almost all cases the groundsfor a successful appeal was thefact that a student would forfitoutside financial aid and supportby being suspended. “This punish¬ment was more than what theDisciplinary Committee intended.”Students Rearranged SchedulesO’Connell said that to his know¬ledge none of the suspended stu¬dents have been drafted. He saidthat both he and former dean ofStudents Warner Wick wrote toindividual draft boards when ap¬plicable and explained that thesuspended student had decided tore-arrange their academic pro¬gram to take one quarter off andTheses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.Ml 3-31135424 $. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restSAMUEL A. BEU“BOY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE 1 fUPICKUP ft DELIVERY SERVICE52 ft Lake Park493-5200 The Office of Naval Research pro¬vided the government property re¬viewed at the two universities.Figures published in the reportconcerning the cost of govern-ment-pwned property at the twouniversities show a total of only$4.7 million, of. which $2.4 millionconsists of the synchrocycloctronoperated by the Enrico Fermi In¬stitute.Professor Roger H. Hildebrand,director of the Institute, stated that“accounts are regularly audited.The research performed is in nu¬clear physics and elementary par¬ticle physics, and it is non-classi-fied.” The synchrocyclotron was inuse for three hours for high-energyresearch on the morning of theallegation.study during the coming summerquarter.Contrary to rumor, suspendedstudents have not been barredfrom University employment, O’¬Conner said. He said he notifiedthe employment office that sus¬pended students were eligible foralmost all employment exceptthose positions (such as in theBandersnatch) limited to regis¬tered students.Furthermore, O’Connell saidthat no attempt was made to pushout suspended students from theirpresent jobs.Continued from Page 1tween intervisitation hours and do¬micile arrangements. “I want,”O'Connell said, “to maintain adifferent atmosphere in the dormi¬tories than in the apartments.”‘Slicing the Sausage’At the heart of his position,O'Connell said, was a belief that hecould not abolish parietals in onehouse and not in another with, per¬haps, only 80 percent singles. Re¬ferring to his authority in loco par¬entis, O'Connell said that “the stu- ment, real property and improve¬ments, and minor property, noneof which is involved in the produc¬tion of war materials.Harold E. Bell, comptroller ofthe University, answered SenatorProxmire’s charge Friday, sayingthat “through the years, the Uni¬versity of Chicago has been thecustodian of scientific and otherequipment financed by governmen¬tal funds. We have complied withthe relevant governmental regula¬tions concerning the use, reportingon and disposition of such equip¬ment, regardless of its value...“To the best of our knowledge,no equipment losses or misuseshave taken place ....”Concerning the universities, thereport stated, “Our review of prop¬erty at two universities revealedthat financial controls were notmaintained by the universities andthat at one university this resultedin the loss of monetary and quan¬titative control over at least $52,000in Government IPE (industrialplant equipment).“We also found that periodic in¬ventories were not required by theASPR (Armed Services Procure¬ment Regulation Committee), norwere they taken by the universitieseven though research contractsfrequently are in process for sever¬al years. When inventories weretaken, the procedures employeddid not provide necessary internalcontrol.“Further, we found that ASPRrequirements were not being ad¬hered to with regard to control ofproperty by DIPEC (Defense In¬dustrial Plant Equipment Center).”dents are slicing away the sausageuntil there’s nothing left!”O'Connell expressed a belief thathours at Chicago were already themost liberal in the nation.Residents of Vincent have sched¬uled a house meeting for Tuesdaynight to elect officers and plan anew course of action. Cope saidthat Vincent plans to make an at¬tempt to convince O'Connell notto veto a tentative hours proposalof 9 a.m. to 3 a.m. an extensionof two hours over the present lim¬its, for the Winter Quarter.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, Optomefristin meNEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESLEARN FOUR RELATEDLANGUAGES SIMULTANEOUSLYEnroll in ROMANIC GROUP I Enroll in TEUTONIC GROUP Iand use and compare and use and compareFrench- Bonjour monsieur Danish-God dag min herreSpanish i Como esta usted? German-Wie geht es ihnen?Portugese-Muito bem.obrigado.E o Sr.? Swedish-Mycket bra,tack,Och Ni?Italian-Anch'io grazie. Dutch-lk ook.dank U. Totziehs.Arri vederci.• small classes, two-hour sessions; 13 sessions; once ortwice a week.• new comparative method.Courses specialize in; correct pronunciation, new internationalphonemic alphabet, basic vocabularies of 800-1000 wordsWritten material furnished to students: comparative vocabulary,basic grammatical aids, special texts. Also language tutoringSPECIAL STUDENT RATES: $2.50SPECIAL STUDENT RATES: $2.50 an hour for classesof five or more.GROUP LANGUAGE INSTITUTE - 288-0675THE CHICAGO MAROON January 9,1968The remainder of the govern¬ment-owned equipment is dividedformed the review of property con- primarily into metalworking ma-’ trols at the various institutions, chine tools, electronic test equip-Appeals Succed for 8 of 22O'Connell Rejects Hours Plan O'Connell LetterTo Vincent HouseTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOOffice of the Dean of StudentsDecember 12, 1967Mr. Steven Cope, PresidentVincent HouseBurton Judson CourtsUniversity of ChicagoDear Steve:I was informed by the President of Inter-House Council thispast week that, although too few members of the Council werepresent at its meeting of December 4 to constitute a quorum, theCouncil wished me to consider its earlier “straw vote” concern¬ing the Vincent Hours proposal as representing its official sup¬port. That vote, as I recall, was 9 in favor, 3 opposed, and 2 ab¬stentions.I am writing now, officially but regretfully, to deny VincentHouse’s proposal for “open hours,” that is, twenty-four hours ofIntervisitation each day.TO HAVE WOMEN in and out of the House all night or spending thenight there is contrary, in my considered opinion, both to whatwe know of the best interests of the individuals concerned andof the best interests of the University communally. We can notpretend that College Houses are merely apartment buildings un¬der another name. Neither can we pretend to the younger studentsto say that unmarried men and women can associate with oneanother indiscriminately without paying significant social costs.It is not true in the world outside the University and it would bea grave mistake, I think, if the University — by approving twenty-four hours’ Intervisitation — seemed to be saying that it was truewithin the University.Furthermore, to have completely “open” hours diminishesthe quality of House life insofar as its purpose is to enhance astudent’s total academic life. A College House is not simply anaggregate of individuals who share common facilities; it shouldhave a corporate life beyond the sum total of the individual liveswithin it. And that corporate life should reflect to the highestdegree possible a continuing concern for the residents’ academicobjectives.IF, AFTER A YEAR, a student finds that he does not share the sat¬isfactions and purposes of House life, he is free, a« you know, toseek other “life styles” in other settings. In so doing, he sacrificescertain satisfactions for others that he deems more important.The University does not presume to dictate the “life style” ofstudents living in apartments. But it would be remiss indeed, Ithink, for the University to abdicate its interest in the pattern ofliving that prevails in its Houses and, by blurring the distinctionbetween apartment and House, to deprive some students of theopportunity to enjoy the corporate satisfactions of House lifo.I do not expect to persuade you by any brief statement. Ishould be happy to visit Vincent House again in the Winter Quar¬ter, if I am still welcome, and talk about this and any other mattersthat the men may wish to raise. Let me say again how sincerelyI appreciate the courtesy and restraint with which you have madeyour request. I am sorry that I can not agree to it.Sincerely yoursCharles D. O’ConnellDean of StudentsTT-\\MerV^eP<eseeTs?5'^'C t***d\s°’«£>o'.^5 Ant*03’ oity emP1Him2Police Representatives Are Invited to CampusContinued from page 1cases, the women were first threat¬ened by a knife, then raped.University Reacts• The wave of campus crimescaused an immediate reactionamong both students and adminis¬trators at the University. A pro¬test meeting was quickly called inFlint House and was attended byProvost Levi, Dean of StudentsCharles O’Connell, and others inthe administration, as well as bya small number of students.As one of the rapes took placehalf a block from Woodward Court,the administrators spent much ofthe meeting explaining what thepresent University security system was, how it worked, and how muchit cost.According to one source, the Uni¬versity is guarded by 46 full timecampus police, 50 part-time menfrom the Chicago Police Depart¬ment who work after hours for theUniversity, and 30 to 40 men fur¬nished by the Interstate protectionService. Four sergeants and achief head the force, which oper¬ates seven squad cars.It has been pointed out, however,that nine men are necessary tokeep two men on the streets at alltimes due to vacations, time off,and sickness.Long BeatAccording to one estimate, these policemen (in addition to the regu¬lar Chicago Police Departmentforces) are expected to patrol 120square blocks in Hyde Park-Ken-wood alone; this includes a popu¬lation of approximately 55,000, liv¬ing in some 10 to 20,000 apart¬ments and town houses.The Chicago Police Departmentincludes the area in the PrairieAvenue precinct, which, accordingto The Chicago Daily News, has atotal population of some 235,000people. Assigned to the precinctare some 238 patrolmen, 28 ser¬geants, six lieutenants and threecaptains. The same 9-2 ratio ap¬plies, so that approximately 70 po¬licemen are on the streets in theCobb Art Gallery Is FundedContinued from page 1said William R. Polk, professor ofMiddle Eastern history and direc¬tor of the Center for Middle East¬ern Studies and the Stevenson In¬stitute.It is now planned to build thePahlavi Center on the southwestcorner of 58th St. and WoodlawnAve., just east of the Oriental In¬stitute, and where the old MusicBuilding is now.Jahangir Amuzegar, Iran’s Min¬ister Plenipotentiary for EconomicAffairs, who announced the gift ata banquet December 7 for the Vis¬iting Committee to the Center forMiddle Eastern Studies, said thatthe Shah is confident that theCenter “will enhance public under¬ standing and appreciation of af¬fairs in the Middle East.”Cobb Hall Art GalleryMr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Berg¬man, both Chicago graduates,have given funds to build anart gallery for undergraduate stu¬dents on the fourth and fifth floorsof Cobb Hall. The exact amountof the gift has not yet been an¬nounced.The gallery was designed aspart of the renovation of Cobb, thefirst University building, which isplanned to be the new center ofthe College. As well as exhibitionspace, the gallery will have a stu¬dio for undergraduate art studentsand a studio for the artist-in-res¬idence.Trustee Heads Welfare GroupBy WENDY GLOCKNERStaff WriterBen W. Heineman, a Chicagotrustee, has been appointed chair¬man of the Presidential commit¬tee to revise the country’s wel¬fare program.The 19-man group of which heis the head plans to carry out an18-month investigation coveringall phases of the program. Sever¬al areas are in great need of re¬vision:•The largest branch of the wel¬fare program (which creates thebiggest problem) is the Aid to De¬pendent Children (ADC) orig¬inally, the ADC program wasdesigned to aid widowed moth¬ers but presently, the vast major¬ity of ADC recipients are womendeserted by their husbands. Theease with which a family with amissing father receives welfareencourages men to desert.•Low welfare payments resultSKATE FOR FUN AND HEALTHLAKE MEADOWS ICE SKATINGRINK and SKATING . SCHOOLPUBLIC SESSIONS DAILYClosed MondaysSPECIAL GROUP RATESPr ivate and Class Lessons Avai lable33rd Street and Ellis Ave.PHONE VI 2-7345rL PIZZAPLATTERPizza Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 from such large numbers of wel¬fare recipients. These low pay¬ments may easily result in ahigher crime rate.• Uniform welfare paymentsamong the various states is a ne¬cessity. (Currently, the averagemonthly payment for a person inMississippi is $9.35 a month. InIllinois, it is $41.85.)Welfare SuggestionsVarious suggestions for a newwelfare program have beenmade:•Richard Cloward of Columbiahas proposed a guaranteed an¬nual income which would stabil¬ize the welfare program.•Milton Friedman, Paul Snow¬den distinguished service profes¬sor of economics here, has sug¬gested a negative income tax tobolster the income of those fal¬ling below the stated level.Heineman is presently thechairman of the Chicago-Northwestern Railway Company. The gallery design features alarge vaulted ceiling (the galleryand studio room are two storieshigh with expanses of glass inCobb’s high-pitched Gothic roof tolet in light. A fifth floor balconywill overlook the gallery.Mr. Bergman is vice presidentof Chicago’s new Museum of Con¬temporary Art and is a memberof the Visiting Committee to theUniversity’s Humanities Division.There are reports of a separate$1 million gift to the University’snew Fine Arts Center, but no de¬tails have yet been released.Virus ResearchThe University also received a$158,631 grant from the John A.Hartford Foundation. It will beused to support three years of bio¬chemical study into the process ofvirus infection of bacteria.The grant is for the continuationof research on the lambda virusby Earl A. Evans, Jr., professorand chairman of the Departmentof Biochemistry, and his associ¬ates. The University received aninitial grant of $102,252 from thefoundation for this project in 1964.Last month the Gulf Oil Cor¬poration gave $75,000 to the Uni¬versity toward the construction ofa new physical sciences building.The five-story building will haveclassrooms and research facilitiesfor physics and astronomy. It willbe built beside the Searle Chemi¬cal Laboratory on the site of for¬mer tennis courts.When the rest of the money israised and construction is com¬pleted, the research facilities ofthe astronomy department will bepartially moved from the YerkesObservatory in Wisconsin.The Campaign for Chicago byDecember 31 had raised $112.4million dollars of the $160 millionneeded, Vice President for Devel¬opment Charles Daly announced.RANI£5700 HAR MIL...'jfyeauhj ami @osine1!c dictionPER AVENUE FAirfax 4-2007 ’ \ . 1| '.. • £SKIING at tttfUdl . Always More FunAlways Plenty of Snow!SKIING 7 DAYS fr 7 NITES A WEEK12 RUNS TO 2,100 FEET *\r ALL DAY SKI-BUS PACKAGEfrom CHICAGO EVERY SATURDAY A SUNDAYRound Trip—Tow Ticket—Lesson—Lunch >10”Only 75 Minute* from ChicagoVJ.GR0UP & STUDENT RATES EA 7-1220 JWT. f U4) Lake Geneva, Wis. 414-248- 6553 entire district during any onetime.Another source stated that agroup of high University officialsmet with Police SuperintendentJames B. Conlisk Jr. to requestadditional protection for the HydePark area. According to that per¬son some twelve task force policewere sent in after the rapesstarted; an additional twenty menwere sent after Despres was shot.Despres HitThe shooting of Despres occuredat 11:30 p.m. as he was returninghome from his office at 1623 E.55th St. He had just missed acrosstown .bus, unable to get ataxicab, and was walking homewhen he realized that he was beingtailed by two Negro youths.Following police recommenda¬tions he crossed the street, wasfollowed, and stepped into the mid¬dle of the street. He was then shottwice in the leg, but his cries forhelp drew many people into thestreet. According to Despres, po¬lice were on the scene veryquickly.Part’v as a result of the Despresshooting, Chicago newspapers de¬voted many columns of space tothe crime situation on the SouthSide. Other aldermen joined withDespres in backing a new gun con¬trol law.Crime Rate LowOne University official com¬mented that even with the recentrash of crimes, the Hyde Parkarea has a lower crime rate thanmost areas in the city. He said,however, that the area has a muchlower tolerance for crime thanmost neighborhoods, with even onecrime being too much.He pointed out, however, thatwhile the crimes in Hyde Parkwere committed mostly by Ne¬groes, and while many residentswant “suspicious” characters in¬vestigated, others — including the40 percent Negro population ofHyde Park — resent active policesurveillance of Negroes in thearea.In the wake of the crimes theChicago Police Department said itwould send speakers to campus ifstudent groups request them. Alscrannounced were plans for informa¬ tional meetings at various campusdormitories by the * Tnter-HouseCouncil. The first of these is sched¬uled for tonight at 8 p.m. in Wal¬lace Lounge at Woodward Court.Administrators To AttendOther meetings are planned forThursday in the Eleanor Club andfor the next Monday, January 15,in Pierce Tower. Members of theadministration, including O’Con¬nell, Assistant Dean of the Col¬lege K?.rl Bemesderfer, AssociateDean of Students Mark Haller, Di¬rector of Student Housing EdwardTurkington, and others, will bepresent at each meeting.MorgenthauLeaves ChicagoFor CCNY ChairHans J. Morgenthau, will leavethe University next year.He will fill the Leonard Davisdistinguished professor of politicalscience chair at City College ofNew York effective September 1,1968.At Chicago, Morgenthau is theAlbert A. Michelson distinguishedprofessor of political science andmodern history. He is also directorof the Center for Study of Amer¬ican Foreign and Military policyand a fellow of the Center forPolicy Study.His departure will be a majorsetback for Chicago’s Political Sci¬ence Department.Vietnam DoveRecently Morgenthau has beenmost noted as a vigorous opponentof the Vietnam war. Two years agohe participated in the “NationalTeach-Ins” and has since madenumerous speeches and testifiedbefore the Senate Foreign Rela¬tions Committee.Morgenthau, 63, has taught heresince 1943. He has been a visitingprofessor at Berkeley, Harvard,Columbia, Yale, and Northwestern..Morgenthau’s undergradu¬ate course, Political Science 261,has regularly attracted overflow ofregistered and auditing.Wisconsin is loadedwith downhill runsand uphill lifts,chalet firesides, well-plowedroads, snow-making equipment,and apres-ski parties. No big mountains. Just theworld’s happiest, snowiest, closest-to-home collection ofmoguls, sitzmarks, T-bars, wine skins, and European skiinstructors. Everyt. ling’s priced to bring you back againand again. And Wisconsin’s close enough to make iton a weekend. Every weekend. It doesn’t matter how wellyou ski .. . just how often. This winter, ski Wisconsinfor the fun of it.For the FREE Winter Fun Kit write:Wisconsin Vacation and Travel Service,Room OO, Madison. Wisconsin 53701.January & ,1$68 THE CHICAGO MAflOQNAction on Discipline Problems Still ForthcomingThree months after the Dean ofStudent’s Office announced “im¬minent action” on a number ofcampus disciplinary problems, stu¬dents were still waiting yesterdayfor a promised University state¬ment on drug policy and the forma-Flint Politics BloomsAlan Bloom, fifth-year student inthe College, is back in student pol¬itics after announcing at the begin¬ning of the year that he wouldwithdraw from all extracurricularactivities and “become a student.”Bloom, who Sunday night waselected president of Flint House,has served as a member of Stu¬dent Government for three years.He was a member of the NationalStudent Association committee andwas a member and officer of theInter-House Council.Bloom has run for most of theother offices of Student Govern¬ment. tion of a faculty committee to con¬sider disciplinary matters.Reached at his office, Dean ofStudents Charles O'Connell as¬sumed full responsibility for the de¬lay and asserted that both releaseof the statement and formation ofthe committee would come laterthis month.The statement on campus use ofdrugs, to be cosigned by O'Connelland Dean of the College WayneBooth, has been drafted and is be¬ing circulated among authorities onthe subject for comment, accord¬ing to O'Connell. While both O'Con¬nell and Booth denied that therehad been any disagreement aboutthe substance of the statement,they stated that there had beensome disagreement about what itsfocus should be.While O'Connell and Booth havesupported a statement whichwould emphasize the danger of adrug culture interfering with aca¬ demic life, others have argued forgreater emphasis on the physicalhazard of the drugs themselves.Discipline Review CommitteeO'Connell also revealed that Har¬ry Kalven, professor of law, hadThe Student-Faculty Committeeon Campus Life will consider pro¬posals for a method of electing thepermanent student comhiitteemembers at an open meetingThursday, January 11, at 3:30 p.m.in Breasted Hall.The committee, a result of thePage Committee report, will ad¬vise the Dean of Students on all ar¬eas of campus life, including hous¬ing, dormitories, parietals, and res¬idence requirements. Although thecommittee’s recommendations willnot be binding, they the expectedto be very influential. agreed to chair the review com¬mittee on student discipline whichwas announced early last quarter,and that acceptances from otherfaculty members were now beingreceived. He stated that the problem ofwhether or not to include studentson the committee was being left tothe committee members, and thatit had not yet been resolved.Campus Committee To Meet ThursdayJeff Blum, ‘68, president of Stu¬dent Government (SG), asked thatthe January 11 meeting be open sothat students can voice their opin¬ions on how the student committeemembers should be elected.Dean of Students Charles O'Con¬nell agreed to his request.The student members of thePage committee recommendedthat two undergraduates beelected by the College and threeother students be elected by theentire University. SG has endorsedthis request. SG has also asked that studentsbe permitted to run as members ofa party. O’Connell has said he doesnot favor this proposal, feelingthat partisan politics will turn thecommittee into a “political foot¬ball.” However, the final decisionwill rest will the committee itself.The Dean of Students said thathe is seeking a way to insure thatthe entire University student com¬munity votes in the election. Bal¬lots will probably be mailed to allregistered students to ensure totalparticipation, he said.Honors-Pass-Fail Grades Suggested to CouncilContinued from Page 1cify which of the courses (apartfrom those that are used for thefirst quartet or the second quar¬tet in the concentration require¬ment of each of its degree pro¬grams shall require a letter gradewhile in the others, a P-N will beacceptable.• Free Electives: Each collegiatedivision shall specify how many ofthe free-elective courses in each ofits degree programs shall requirea letter grade while in the others,a P-N will be acceptable.AlternativesThe College Council will vote onthe following alternatives: (1) toaccept the proposal as it stands(2) to change only Part 1 ofthe proposal to allow Liberal Artscourses to be given on a Pass-Failbasis; or (3) to adopt a totallynew recommendation.The new recommendation wouldchange grading in all courses toan honors-pass-fail basis andwould be compulsory. Should thisproposal be voted in, students nowin the College would be given theoption of continuing with the A-Fgrading system or adopting thenew one.The report of the subcommitteeis an altered version of the secondreport of a fact-finding committeeon grades, which was submittedto Dean of the College Wayne C.Booth in May 1967. The six-mancommittee, chaired by Professorof Education and Psychology Da¬vid Williams, had recommendedthat a number of measures involv¬ing pass-no credit grading beimplemented in common year, di-CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone 324-7998OPEN SUNDAYS —DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a Jltt Used 9X12Rug, to a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants & Mill Returns at fractionot the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY visional core, and elective coursesin the College.Present SystemAs the present grading systemstands there is nothing compar¬able to a P-N option. With pass-fail grading, a P is not averagedinto a student’s grade-point aver¬age, but an F is counted as a zeroand figured in the total. An R(registered) is as close as thepresent system comes to an N, butan R must be awarded at the be¬ginning of a course, whereas anN would be available at any timeduring the course.The P-N option is designed to re¬duce competition and anxiety forhigh grade-point averages. Stu¬dents would be more free to takecourses in which they are inter¬ested, but in which they feel theymight not receive high grades.The original proposal recom¬mended that if a student receiveda grade of N there would be norecord of the course having beentaken on the student’s transcript.Reaction MixedReation to both the presentgrading system and the proposedsystem has been mixed. The hon¬ors-pass-fail recommendation hasbeen raised in objection to a no¬credit option.Because the Subcommittee re¬port raised much controversywhen it was considered by the Committee of the Council, the hon¬ors-pass-fail system was broachedto standardize grading. Somemembers of the Committee, how¬ever, felt that the Subcommittee’sproposal was too complicated toput into effect and that a uniformacross-the-board system be a-dopted.The chairman of the Committeeon Undergraduate Academic Af¬fairs, Eld Birnbaum, has circula¬ted a petition asking for an optionof A-F or P-N grading in allcourses with no limit on the num¬ber of P-N grades available. Ac¬cording to Birnbaum, 400 signa¬tures have been gathered so far.IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. He predicts that 90 percent of theCollege would sign the petition “ifonly we could get it to them. Mostpeople who have seen it havesigned it.”Dean of Students Charles O’Con¬nell stated to Student Government(SG) President Jeffrey Blum thathe (O’Connell) thought the petitionwas “irresponsible.” It was O’¬Connell’s opinion that the petitionwould not impress the faculty.Birnbaum replied that “gradingis only a student’s affair becausegrading only serves to indicate topeople outside the University astudent’s value to them. Other¬wise, evaluation of a student’s per¬ formance might be useful to thestudent himself.“The present grading system isinadequate in serving that pur¬pose. A student should alwayshave an evaluation of his perform¬ance from his professor, but afinal record of a student’s perform¬ance should only be put on a finalrecord at his request.”Dean Booth will allow an SGrepresentative to be at the meet¬ing of the Committee of the Coun¬cil on January 19. The representa¬tives will have to receive permis¬sion from that Committee toattend the general Council meet¬ing.Tape Recorder Rental ServiceWollensack - Martel - PanasonicPortables and Office UnitsAll first class like new Equipment• ••Photography DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.SEMINARSWINTER QUARTER 1968PRESENTED BY THE ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN COUNCILopen to all studentsI. ESSAYS IN THEOIOGYAn analysis of recent essays expressing various motifs present incontemporary theology.Leader: E. Spencer Parsons, Dean, Rockefeller ChapelFirst Meeting: Wednesday, January 10 Calvert House4 :30 P. M 5735 S. UniversityII. DEATH AND DESTINY A CRITIQUE OF AMERICAN IDEOtOGYA historical survey of how Americans use presuppositions of death anddestiny to create, maintain and justify their institutions.Leader: Glen W. Davidson, post-doctoral student in American history,faculty member, Colgate UniversityFirst Meeting: Tuesday, January 9 Chapel House4:30 P. M. 5810 S. WoodlawnIII. RELIGION AND JUNGIAN PSYCHOLOGYAn examination of the basic psychological concepts of C. G. Jung and theirrelation to the phenomena of religion, especially Christianity. Reading.Modern Man in Search of a Soul by C. G. Jung.Leader: Wallace B. Clift, Episcopal clergyman, former student,Jungian Institute, Zurich, SwitzerlandFirst Meeting: Wednesday, January 10 Chapel House4:30 P.M. 5810 S. WoodlawnIV DRAFT RESISTANCE. A CASE STUDY IN CIVIL DISOBIDIINCCAn examination of various perspectives on the moral and political impli¬cations of the draft resistance movement in relation to the Vietnam War.Leader: Bernard O. Brown, Minister, tnterchurch Committee forInternational StudentsFirst Meeting: Tuesday, January 9 Calvert House7:30 P.M. 5735 S. University.V TWENTIETH CENTURY AMERICAN CAPITALISMA comparison and analysis ol different theories about the functioning ofthe contemporary American economy.Leaders: Don Villarejo, Paul BoothFirst Meeting: Wednesday, January 10 Chapel House8:00 P.M. 5810 S. WoodlawnEach seminar will meet once a week lor six consecutive weeks.THE CHICAGO MAROON ' 'January 9, 1968« ‘ } * ifiuiif i* « > » * *.Chicago's Goulian in Synthetic Virus TeamAn associate professor of medi¬cine at Chicago, Dr. Mehran Goul¬ian, was part of the Stanford Uni¬versity team that last month an¬nounced the synthesis of an activeDNA virus which amounts to pro¬ducing life in a test tube.Goulian worked for two yearswith Nobel laureate Arthur Kron-berg, executive head of the bio¬chemistry department at Stanford.Goulian joined the Chicago facultyin last September.Drs. Goulian and Kornberg haveBoard of EducationOkays Ghetto PlanThe Chicago Board of Educationhas approved sharing the adminis¬tration of a proposed $1,139,548 ex¬perimental program for Woodlawnschools with the University of Chi¬cago and The Woodlawn Organiza¬tion.The program is partially de¬signed to aid in the training of“teacher cadres” for Woodlawnschools and is being funded by a $3million Ford Foundation grant.The board approved the propos¬al by a seven-to-three vote withPresident Frank M. Whiston andboard members Thomas J. Murray |and Mrs. W. Lydon Wild votingagainst the proposal.No final decision has as yet beenmade on the final allotment of the !funds, but it is expected that localneighborhood groups will workwith the University, TWO, and theschool board to set up a trainingprogram for the cadres ofteachers.The $3 million will probably beused up over a period of at leastthree years. —— synthesized a fully infectious DNAvirus. The test-tube product, whentaken up by its bacterial host, or¬ders the production of exact repli¬cas of itself and the synthesis ofall the components of the completenormal infectious virus.In 1959 Dr. Kornberg won theNobel Prize for converting a mix¬ture of inert chemicals in a testtube into man-made DNA (deoxy¬ribonucleic acid)', the material thatcontrols heredity. This early syn¬thetic DNA possessed the physicaland chemical properties of DNAfound in nature, but it was bio¬logically inactive.Since then several research groups have reported attempts tosynthesize an active form of thesubstance but the results havebeen equivocal. One explanationfor this lack of activity was foundin the enzyme DNA polymerase,which is used to promote forma¬tion of DNA. It contained en¬zymes, called nucleases, whichproduced breaks in the DNA.The smallest traces of theseother enzymes in the DNA poly¬merase destroyed biological activ¬ity. Work by Dr. Kornberg and hisassociates has led to further puri¬fication of polymerase and theelimination of these nucleases. This is an over-simplified ac¬count of the pioneer research thatled to the synthesis of viral DNA.Drs. Goulian and Kornberg pre¬pared a test-tube copy of DNAfrom a fully active DNA virus.Then using a variety of special¬ized laboratory techniques, theyseparated the synthetic materialfrom the original DNA and used the synthetic DNA as a templateor mold for a second round ofreplication.They found it produced a fullysynthetic DNA virus resemblingthe original in .every detail. Theprocess could be repeated manytimes with the new syntehtic ma¬terial, indicating no mistakes weremade in the test-tube synthesis.NEBUCHA-FILMS DEAR MBA:SELECT THE RIGHT MAN TO REPRESENT THEMTO YOU.HE KNOWS A LOT ABOUT HIS COMPANY.HE KNOWS A LOT ABOUT YOUR SCHOOLHE LISTENS IN YOUR TERMS.IF YOU KNOW WHAT YOU WANT TO DO ORARE STILL CHECKING OUT IDEAS OR ARE STILLPUZZLED, HE MIGi4T BE A GOOD MAN TOSEE. WHY NOT? ARRANGE THROUGH YOURPLACEMENT OFFICE TO SEE THE MAN FROMMONSANTO ON JANUARY 16 - 17MonsantoF Jan 5: doc filmsWINTER QUARTER 1968BOGIE TRIPLE FEATURE Mandel HallTHE MALTESE FALCON/John Huston at 6:30THE BIG SLEEP/Howard Hawks at 8:00 -for associate* - THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT/Raoul Walsh at 9:30 membersT Jan 9: M/Fritz Lang 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 75*W Jan 10: COCOANUTS/Joseph Santley 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 75*F Jan 12: A NOUS LA LIBERTE/Rene Clair 7:15 and 9:15 $1.00T Jan 16: THE WOMAN IN THE WINDOW/Fritz Lang 7:15 and 9:15 75*W Jan 17: DESTRY RIDES AGAIN/George Marshall 7:15 and 9:15 75*F Jan 19: BIZARRE BIZARRE/Marcel Came 7:15 and 9:15 75*T Jan 23: YOU ONLY LIVE ONCE/Fritz Lang 7:15 and 9:15 75*W Jan 24: SIX OF A KIND/Leo McCarey 7:15 and 9:15 75*F Jan 26: BLOOD OF A POET/Jean Cocteau. -and ZERO FOR CONDUCT/Jean Vigo 7:15 and 9:15 $1.00T Jan 30: 1000 EYES OF DR.MABUSE/Fritz Lang 7:15 and 9:15 75*W Jan 31: IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT/Frank Capra 7:15 and 9:15 75*F Feb 2: RULES OF THE GAME/Jean Renoir 7:15 and 9:15 $1.00T Feb 6: METROPOLIS/Fritz Lang 7:15 and 9:15 75*W Feb 7: TWENTIETH CENTURY/Howard Hawks 7:15 and 9:15 75*F Feb 9: LE MILLION/Rene Clair 7:15 and 9:15 75*T Feb 13: RANCHO NOTORIOUS/Fritz Lang 7:15 and 9:15 75*W Feb 14: BELLE OF THE NINETIES/Mae West 7:15 and 9:15 75*F Feb 16: L’ATALANTE/Jean Vigo 7:15 and 9:15 75*F Feb 23: HITCHCOCK TRIPLE FEATURE Cobb Hall $1.00 forSPELLBOUND at 6:30THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY at 8:00THE BIRDS at 9:30 all threeExcept when indicated otherwise, all showings are in Soc Sci 122, 59th and University. i.January 9, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5GADFLYThe Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger Black 'Why Are There Grades?’Executive Editor .. ..Michael SeidmanNews Editor John Moscow Photographic Editor Roberto ArrozLiterary Editor David L. AikenAssociate Editors David E. GumpertEdward W. HearneDaniel HertzbergJoan PhillipsEditor Emeritus David A. Satter By ED BIRNBAUM“Why are there grades?” youmay ask.One student, while broodingover his exams, could only con¬clude that they were either willedby God during his seven-dayburst of creativity or were partof a profit-making conspiracy bythe “blue-book” industry.FOR WHO ELSE profits by thesystem which establishes, as themeasure of a complicated proc¬ess of personal development, theachievement of a simple symbolof good performance during acompetitive trial of doubtful val¬idity? This system is not uni¬versally adhered to in the rest ofthe world, by all American col¬leges, or even by all professorshere at Chicago. However, it isimposed upon most students hereand some of the results weremade clear last year in a studyof Chicago students by WilliamG. Spady in a dissertation for ourDepartment of Education.He found that concern overgrades was a major source ofdepression for students of bothsexes and the greatest single fac¬tor inducing men to leave theUniversity. Even though a fellowmight feel that he was makingsatisfactory intellectual develop¬ment, supposedly the primarygoal of study here, practical con¬sideration of grades and depres¬sion would often cause him toleave. These results were sub¬stantiated by a student-facultycommittee on grading.IT MUST BE obvious, however,that grades were not instituted tomake students happy. Rejectingboth the theological and theMarxist analyses mentionedabove, one can find four func¬tions for some sort of evaluationof academic study. One is to pro¬vide a means for graduateschools and potential employersto assess the value to them ofcollege graduates. Another is tocommunicate a student’s prog¬ress to his instructors and othersin the college so that they canbetter understand how to treathim. The student also needs anassessment of his own develop¬ment. And, finally, evaluationcan serve as reward and punish¬ment and hence motivation tostudy.Considerable evidence has beengathered to show that A-F grad¬ing is an inferior means of per¬forming all those functions andthat it might even be a barrierto intellectual development.AN EXAMINATION of studiescorrelating collegiate grading and“adult achievement” in profes¬sional occupations concludes thatthe level of adult achievement isnot predicted by letter-grade per¬formance. There is a high cor¬relation only between grade-at¬tainment in college and gradeattainment in graduate school.Other studies also show a widedisparity among schools in theway they distribute high and lowgrades, making the assessmentof grade-point averages receivedfrom different schools a verytricky business.As a means of communicatingintellectual development to thestudent and to his instructor, A-Fgrading is inadequate and full ofdistortions. To begin with, it canonly measure a specific kind ofperformance, usually on a two-hour exam. It is doubtful thatperformance on any such examcan ever be a good indicator ofintellectual development exceptin certain areas of math and phy¬ sics, where speed and accuracyare important criteria of academ¬ic progress.FURTHERMORE, the only ex¬aminations ever “scientifically”designed to test intellectual de¬velopment in a particular areawere the old comprehensives,now rarely used. In any case,present examinations test, in ad¬dition to learning, endurance,short-term retention of details,health (both physical and men¬tal), sensitivity to the examiner’sviewpoint, all of the above, ornone of the above. Can a singleletter grade, then, really tell verymuch about a student’s achieve¬ment?Even more serious, unless aninstructor knows a student verywell, he cannot know how wella student has progressed but onlyhow he compares with other stu¬dents. Thus, a student who hasactually made considerable prog¬ress during a year might only betold by his instructor that hisexam was worth a C, 23rd in theclass, information which is of noeducational value to him andwhich is only likely to discouragehim.THE MOST controversial as¬pect of grading is its usefulnessas a goad to academic work.There will probably be disagree¬ment among psychologists aboutmotivation during the lifetime ofthis writer. However, we do haveevidence that grading does notprovide sufficient motivation todo useful academic work for allstudents.In one study, Professors Paul¬ine Sears and Ernest Hilgardfound that “low-anxious” stu¬dents did better on a laboratorytask than “high-anxious” stu¬dents and that pressure to com¬plete the task improve perform¬ance for the former, but not forthe latter. This study sheds lightboth on the low reliability ofcompetitive examinations and ontheir limited ability to providemotivation.Kenneth Kenniston’s famousstudy of particularly alienatedHarvard students, “The Uncom¬mitted,” showed that these boysreacted very unfavorably to com¬petition and to coercion. Theyavoided assignments in gradedcourses but labored impressivelyon intellectual projects thatsuited them regardless of grades.Kenniston wrote that, while thesubjects of his study were rare,pure specimens, almost idealtypes, they were more nearlyrepresentative of most studentsat Harvard than were the verycommitted students who playedby the rules with enthusiasm.ALL THIS indicates that lettergrading is of doubtful value;many employers and most gradu¬ate schools, however, will prob¬ably continue to require grade-point averages in applications foremployment or admission. Forthem they serve as simple, super¬ficially unambiguous means ofdistinguishing among their manyapplicants. Would-be reformersat this school thus have littlecontrol over what other institu¬tions choose to do.However, even when recog¬nized as a necessary evil, theproblem can be partially allevi¬ated. Numerous other schools, in¬cluding Princeton, Columbia,Brown, the University of Minne¬sota, Caltech, and others are nowpermitting their students to takea limited number of ungradedcourses.There are few reports on these recent experiments. Caltech hasreported that among first-yearstudents there has been a higherincidence of unpreparedness inclass and some “disorientation”among students used to the stan¬dard means of evaluation, butalso a lower drop-out rate. Atour own school, some professorshave been giving “P’ ”s and F’s”despite their lack of formal rec¬ognition and have expressed sat¬isfaction with the results.PROFESSOR Eugent Gendlin,who has taught such coursesin philosophy and psychology,said that some people did andothers did not make strenuous ef¬forts, but that such work as theydid do was more “real,” moremeaningful, and therefore morevaluable to them than if it hadbeen forced by the threat of alow grade. Mr. Gendlin feels thatin any case a given course isonly successful to some proport¬ion of the class, but that in anungraded class, even those forwhom the course is less success¬ful seem to be launched on pro¬cesses of exploration that arevaluable to them.Peter Rabinowitz, a graduatestudent and formerly an assistantinstructor in liberal arts (whichis graded entirely by P’s andF’s), said that this method “inno way tends to result in slack¬ness. I have not once had kidscome in unprepared for class.”This was despite the fact thatmost students were simultaneous¬ly taking graded coures.PROFESSOR James Redfield,master of the New Collegiate Di¬vision and also an instructor inliberal arts, told of one girl inhis Liberal Arts class who de¬voted herself so enthusiasticallyto that course, that she receivedpoor grades in her other, gradedcourses.and was placed on aca¬demic probation.A PROPOSAL by the gradingcommittee last year would per¬mit students to take a limitednumber of common-year, major,and elective courses for “P-N”(pass-no credit). A petition circu¬lated by Student Government en¬dorsed a more sweeping reformpermitting a student to have P-Nor A-F grades in any course, al¬lowing him to adapt his methodof evaluation to his own mental¬ity and post-graduate ambitions.Adoption of the latter proposalby the college would demonstrateits committment to the highestaim of higher education. The“College Announcements” for1965-66 announced that “The Col¬lege believes that the primarypurpose of education is intellec¬tual; there may be other intrigu¬ing and even useful ends, butthey are secondary.” If this stillbe true in 1968, then the Collegewill allow students to restrictgrading when it does not serveacademic functions and concen¬trate on intellectual development.(Editor’s note: Mr. Bimbaum,’68, is chairman of StudentGovernment’s UndergraduateAcademic Affairs Committee.)The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. 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 30Sof Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59fh St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Pres* Service.' ’»Y V/AY i t *H Culture Editor Edward Chikofsky-M&MM ;':@s?s » ®::™: M ■■s*; ssss;»:?Best InterestsThe self-styled moralists are at it again.“To have women in and out of the House all nightor spending the night there is contrary, in my consideredopinion, both to what we know of the best interests ofthe individuals concerned and of the best interests of theUniversity communally,” Dean of Students Charles O’Con¬nell explains in a letter telling Vincent House PresidentSteven Cope why he has overruled the house’s overwhelm¬ing vote in favor of open intervisitation hours. Mr. O’Con¬nell goes on to imply that the University should not “ab¬dicate its interest” in dictating the “life style” of houseresidents, which he praises as having certain “corporatesatisfactions” that make it an alternative to apartmentlife. Hogwash.“If, after a year, a student finds that he does notshare the satisfactions and purposes of House life, he isfree, as you know, to seek other ‘life styles’ in other set¬tings.”Correct. Two-thirds of Chicago men and about halfof the women live in apartments, including the freshmanclass. Clearly, the majority of Chicago students don’tthink too much of the kind of “life style” Mr. O’Connellvalues so highly. And those who do remain in the dorms—at least in Vincent House—are considerably more tol¬erant of those who don’t care to be restricted to the “cor¬porate life” 24 hours a day. No one voted against un¬restricted hours and only two house members abstained.Mr. O’Connell’s letter seems closer to a shaky per¬sonal rationalization than a logical and convincing moralargument; it seems to be the invocation of an ideal ofhuman excellence that is held by few students in VincentHouse and which is invoked upon others by virtually none.He is right, of course, when he says no one is incon¬venienced by the present arrangements at Vincent (or atother houses). Social rules are and will continue to beviolated right and left until students are fully responsiblefor their initiation as well as their enforcement—in otherwords, until they have the freedom to decide not to makesome of them in the first place.Early last quarter we had certain misgivings afterstrongly attacking Mr. O’Connell on the basis of little andpossibly misleading evidence, and even now we apologizefor that editorial. It should have been saved for today.Crime WaveTwo difficult problems are raised by the outbreak ofstreet crimes in Hyde Park: how can the causes of thecrimes by eliminated, and what immediate protectivemeasures should be used.Living as we do on the border of a turmulous, some¬times violent ghetto, it is not likely that street crimeshere will be completely stopped until more is known aboutthe psychology of the criminals and the psychology of theghetto.If the University wants to live in the midst of a largecity (and we believe it should), it must start working nowto find solutions for the causes of crime, and not standidle while dangerously repressive counter-measures areapplied to crime’s symptoms.6 THE CHICAGO MAROOH V' JanUary 9,1968~ ILetters to the Editors of The MaroonHurtingJohn Moscow’s column “NoDemocratic Beliefs: The NewLeft and SDS” (The Maroon, No¬vember 7) raises the spectre ofpersecution of Big-Endians byLittle-Endians in a future NewLeft society. Possibly just be¬cause it is so ludicrous, so littlea coherent criticism that to sortout and answer Moscow’s pointswould take pages, the columnprompts two SDS members towrite to express a continuing re¬gret.This letter is not a statementof SDS Chapter policy, but apersonal statement — in someways a deeply personal one.Both our parents raised us tobelieve in civil liberties; we haveourselves believed passionatelyin civil liberties since watchingthe Army-McCarthy hearings ontelevision in 1954 (a common fea¬ture of our otherwise dissimilarchildhoods). Last winter when wewere told by faculty membersthat the then Director of Admis¬sions, Charles O’Connell, hadmade written comments in anadmissions case which could onlybe considered expressions of po¬litical bias (the applying student,a movement activist, had saidhis father was fired for politicalreasons during the McCarthy pe¬riod; O’Connell’s comment onthis statement: “You can seewhat kind of a family he comesfrom”) — we really believed thata decent institution would recon¬sider such a man’s qualificationsfor a job involving control overadmissions and student activities.While we did not possess the doc¬ument in question, we felt thatthe community would insist onhaving the facts of the casemade public. We even thoughtit possible — God knows we werenaive — that the Universitywould offer an apology.This was the cry that shookthe Buffalo streets last June.For three days a miniature Helldeveloped in the Negro ghetto.Only after it was over, was thequestion asked: “Why?”Dr. Frank Basag in his newbook, Anatomy of a Riot seeksthe answers. This book laysbare the soul of a city anddocuments the hate and frus¬tration that produces a urbanriot.If this book is not in yourcampus bookstore, you mayobtain it directly from thepublisher. Send $1.95 check ormoney order (no cash please)Slus $.15 handling charges to:Iniversity Press at BuffaloNorton UnionState University of New Yorkat Buffalo3435 Main StreetBuffalo, New York 14214Please allow three weeks fordelivery.I book(s) <a> $1.95handlingTotal Enclosed $ .15j Name| Address. WE WERE astonished when theUniversity refused unconditional¬ly to discuss the case or thedocument in question. When theProvost’s faculty investigatingcommittee, without commentingon the facts in the case, blatant¬ly affirmed the University’s right“to determine how the pursuitof these goals” (the University’s“orientation” and “social mis¬sion”) “is to be perpetuatedthrough the choice of the suc¬ceeding generation of scholars”— we were further astonished,yet glad in a way, for we feltthe Committee had as good asproved our case.What was really astonishing, tous, was that with very few ex¬ceptions neither faculty nor stu¬dents responded at all to the —admittedly incomplete — evi¬dence SDS had published. Ourdemand for publication of thedocument (without names) wasnot taken up. Did people disbe¬lieve the five professors who hadread the document and corrob¬orated our quotations and our in¬terpretation? Did people thinkO’Connell’s comments unexcep¬tionable? Did they just notcare?Of course we wanted to “get”O’Connell; and of course evidenceof his bias did not seem as un¬believable to SDS members as itmight to some. But if the evi¬dence were accurate, did not O’¬Connell deserve to be “gotten”? And if the professors’ testimonywere insufficient evidence, wasnot the logical response to askfor the document?WHAT HURT, what reallyhurt, is that for all our politicaldifferences on other issues, wehad faith that the liberal center,both students and faculty, wouldrespond on an issue of civil liber¬ties — and we saw that we hadbeen wrong.Now we see John Moscow, likeso many others of the liberal cen¬ter, calling SDS undemocratic(Since this letter was written,Prof. Philip Kurland’s remark¬able Gadfly has appeared; for¬tunately there is no need to com¬ment on it here, since the politi¬cal tendency which it representsis neither centrist nor at all lib¬eral); we see an assistant deaneloquent for the civil liberties ofstudents wanting interviews with Dow — but we know that whenone kid’s civil liberties were ac¬tually threatened, were in facttaken away (he was not admit¬ted, Dean Booth later hinted;presumably he is studying atReed or Berkeley, where he hadapplied and where O’Connell hadsaid he should go because “wehave enough kids here who causetrouble”) — then SDS stoodalone.Speaking for ourselves, we arenot at all proud that no one butSDS — no political position butthe Left — spoke for civil liber¬ties last spring.The universality of our person¬al faith in civil liberties is dailybeing undermined by the war inVietnam. America’s imposition ofher will by violence makes ourown very serious deliberationsabout the place of libertarianismin our response seem more andmore like a selfish indulgence.STUDENTSWELCOME BACK 1Please bring to our attention any way wemay serve you during the winter quarter.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.NoDoz.announcesthe...to take when it's midnightand you've still got anotherchapter to go.Midnight. That’s NoDoz’ finest hour.But you should know that NoDoz cando more than help you stay awakewhen you’re cramming.For example, if you’re tired ordrowsy take a couple before the exam to help bring your mind backto its usual keen edge. Or if you’vegot a sleepy-type lecture to look for¬ward to, or the monotony of a longdrive home, take NoDoz along forthe ride. It’ll help you stay alert.Yet it’s non habit-forming. NoDoz. Thescholar’s friend. I1F NoDozFRITZ LANG'SPetw Lorre as the screen's most famous psychopath. The police are helpless, and the Underworld must pursue the child-murdererSocSci 122, tonight at 6, 8, and 10. 754. Doc Films. Despite this, we are struggling tokeep our belief, and its applica¬tion in day-to-day actions, as in¬tact as we can. But the liberalcenter, which lectures unendinglyabout civil liberties, neitherstands firm itself in their defensenor even respects them in prac¬tice. Our continuing sorrow is notthat the Left’s own imperfectperformance should be criticized,but that this should happen whilethose who criticize have them¬selves totally abandoned thefield.CHRISTOPHER Z. HOBSONSTEVE KINDRED♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ UNIVERSITY THEATREREADING GROUPORGANIZATIONALMEETINGWEDNESDAYJANUARY 107:30 P/MIda NoyesI st Floor LoungeEVERYONE WELCOME! ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦Despitefiendish torturedynamic BiC Duowrites first time,every time!bic’s rugged pair ofstick pens wins againin unending waragainst bail-pointskip, clog and smear.Despite horriblepunishment by madscientists, uic stillwrites first time, everytime. And no wonder.bic’s “Dyamite” Ballis the hardest metalmade, encased in asolid brass nose cone.Will not skip, clogor smear no matterwhat devilish abuse f Zis devised for them f 177by sadistic students. 1 \Get the dynamic § ^ 3bic Duo at your § <5fc 1campus store now. . hi!s v .< m[ <£■ |jc I!WATERMAN-BIC PEN CORP.MILFORD. CONN.BtCMediumPoint I9«BiC Fine Point 25CI < tit t i l, S Iff* January 9,1968 ■ . THE CHICAGO MAROON 7Chicago Draft Protesters Add Followers as War ContinuesBy ROB SKEISTOpposition to the war and thedraft is moving an increasingnumber of young men to risk im¬prisonment. This has been madeclear in Chicago by two kinds ofaction in the Chicago area last De¬cember.• December 4 marked the secondday that many draft cards wereturned in to the U.S. Departmentof Justice. Thirty-six draft-agemen in Chicago turned in theirdraft cards at a rally outside theFederal Building in the Loop.• Prosecution and conviction oftwo Chicago Area Draft Resisters(CADRE) leaders later in themonth made clear the risk in¬volved in draft resistance. DennisRiordan, 21, was sentenced tothree years in prison for refusingClaffey Is AppointedMichael E. Claffey has beennamed director of public informa¬tion and assistant to the vice-pres¬ident for development and publicaffairs at the university.Claffey, who has been at theUniversity since 1964, has beeneditor of “Chicago Today” — theUniversity’s award — winning gen¬eral cirvulation quarterly — andhas served as director of develop¬ment publications. Before comingto Chicago, he worked in Londonand elsewhere in Europe with Uni¬ted Press International, and in theUnited States with the AssociatedPress and The New York Journal-American. induction. Jeremy Mott, 22, wassentenced to five years for refus¬ing to complete his civilian serv¬ice work as a recognized conscien¬tious objector.December 4 activities, whichwere part of national End theDraft Week, December 4-11, gotoff to a slow start here, where apoorly-publicized morning rally atIda Noyes Hall drew only abouttwenty-five students. In the after¬noon about 300 people picketed infront of the Federal Buildingdowntown. There were many stu¬dents from Chicago, the Univer¬sity of Illinois, Northwestern, andother schools, as well as about 75adults.Refuses to RegisterMitch Hilton, a 17-year old Chi¬cago freshman, told the rally thatne will refuse to register with theSelective Service. Hilton said hebelieves in society based on lawand order, but stressed that thedraft law “is not as compelling asv..2 dictates of my conscience.” Hesaid he hoped for “that day whena government will declare warand no one will show up to fight.”Hilton introduced Willy Belsner,mother freshman here, who burnednis draft card.The growing role of Negroes inthe anti-war movement was dis¬cussed by Maurice Thomas, anorganizer for both CADRE andUnited for Resistance Now(BURN). “We are tired of this.u\y war. We want to end it. Wewant to withdraw our participa¬KARATEMonday and Wednesday7 P.M. I.N.H.U.C. KARATE CLUBDues: Men $10, Women $5Initiation Fee: Men $10, Women $5January 9,1968 tion from it,” he declared. Thom¬as predicted that by April 2, thenext scheduled day of nationwidedraft resistance, a large numberof blacks in Chicago will be or¬ganized against the draft and thewar.Dr. Colin Williams of the Chica¬go Divinity School announced thatnine divinity students had turnedin their draft cards at a servicein the Grace Episcopal Church, 33W. Jackson. Larry Hill, a ministerat the Porter House and an anti¬war activist, read the names ofthose resisters.Cards Turned InGary Rader and Dennis Riordanthen turned in several draft cardsby proxy. Both Rader and Riordanburned their cards in New Yorklast April 12.Adults are being “educated asto how to stand up for life, for peace, and for decency,” by youngdraft resisters, according to Mas¬sachusetts Institute of TechnologyProfessor Lewis Kant. Kant hasbeen travelling around the coun¬try, urging adults to support theresisters.Finally Gersh Mayer, a Chicagograduate student in history who in1963 enlisted in the Marines, read a statement of opposition to thewar and the draft on behalf of allthose turning in their cards. Hedropped his card into an envelopewith those already turned in, andinvited other young men to do thesame. When a number of youngmen did so, a CADRE spokesman.announced that 36 men had takenpart.UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor BOOKSTOREOPEN EVENINGSThe University of Chicago Bookstore willbe opened until 8:30 P.M. Tuesday andThursday this week only.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Avo.GROW WITH THE SPACE AGE ATJNASA GODDARDSPACEFLIGHTCENTERGREENBELT, MD.ENGINEERS-SCIENTISTS-MATHEMATICIANSA GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER REPRESENTATIVE WILL VISITYOUR CAMPUS TO DISCUSS YOUR CAREER OPPORTUNITIES WITHTHIS GROWING NASA CENTER ON: Wednesday, jan. io, i960MAROON SPORTSRecord-Breaking Dribblers Edge Canadian ChampsBy JERRY LAPIDUSStaff WriterCoach Joe Stampf’s record-set¬ting basketball squad scored astrong 72-65 victory over the Uni¬versity of Windsor, Canadian Na¬tional Collegiate champion, on Jan¬uary 6 in Canada.This marked the fourth victory ina row for the High-flying Maroons— the team’s overall record nowstands at seven victories with butone defeat. In the climax of the1967 portion of the season, the Chi¬cago dribblers grabbed the topspot in the annual Chicago Invita¬tional Christmas Tournament forthe first time in seven years.Playing before a crowd of 4000 atWindsor, the University five op¬ened strong and built up aquick 9-0 lead before the Canadianchamps finally hit the scoreboard.Playing a tight man-to-man de¬fense, the Maroons were able tocontain the fine Windsor squad, ledat the half 39-24 and finished 72-65victors.Topping the University squadwas leading scorer Marty Cambell,averaging nearly 20 points acontest, who picked up 22 points. Dennis Waldon and Randy Talanadded identical double-figuremarks of 16 each, while Gary Dayhit the boards for eight points.Christmas TournamentChicago finished on top of thefour-team holiday tourney by vir¬tue of victories over Knox andGrinnel Colleges December 29 and30.The Maroons surged early in thefirst contest against Knox andpulled into a 35-22 halftime lead.With fine clutch playing, theyhalted a late Knox rally and tooka tiny 67-66 victory.Campbell again lead the Maroonswith 16 markers, and three otherChicago players also scored in dou¬ble figures. “Wink” Pearsonnotched 14 points, while Dayscored 13 and Waldon 10.In the tourney final, Chicagoplayed an even, well-coordinatedgame and never left the outcomein doubt. They, completely out¬played Colorado and finally won 77to 61.Campbell personally dominatedthis contest as he led both teams inOrderly Protest at UnveilingMore than 150 students demon¬strated for peace at the unveilingof Henry Moore’s statue commem¬orating the 25th anniversary of thefirst nuclear chain reaction.Students for Democratic Society,in conjunction with students fromnear-by universities, had planneda massive demonstration in thecase that President Lyndon John¬son attended the ceremony. Johnson, however, informed Chicago hecould not attend.Banners for peace and signs pro¬testing the University’s involve¬ment with the Institute for De¬fense Analysis (IDA) hung fromthe windows of the Enrico FermiInstitute and near-by buildingswhile students silently marched in the street, facing the ceremony.Roger Hildebrand, professor ofphysics and director of the EnricoFermi Institute, praised the de¬monstration as being “non-disrup-tive and appropriate.” He furtherstated that “the spirit of the cere¬mony recognizing the work thatwas being commemorated could beviewed in various lights; one ofthese is a concern for the peace inthe world. Perhaps the demonstra¬tion contributed to this aspect ofthe ceremony.”Herbert Anderson, professor ofphysics and in the Institute, alsopraised the demonstration inspeaking to the guests present atthe ceremony as being a “sign ofthe times.” scoring with 20 points and in re¬bounds with 12. Pearson hit for 14points, and Waldon and Talannotched a dozen each.In pre-tournament play, Chicagoran to an excellent 4-1 record withcrushing victories over Kendall, Al¬ma, Rockford, and Northern Illi¬nois. The team’s only defeat camein a one point hard luck lossto lowly Lake Forest.The Maroons continue their suc¬cessful season tomorrow night asthey help in augurate arch-rivalIllinois Institute of Technology’snew field house. Chicago returnshome on Saturday to face JudsonCollege at 8 p.m.IntramuralsThe completion of the fall tennisand pre-Christmas basketballtournaments marked the finale forAutumn Quarter intramural sportsactivity.Divisional teams scored victor¬ies in both ends of the basketballtourney; the House of Us won thechampionship round while the CTSSaints took the consolation crown.Tom McCroskey of ThompsonSouth defeated Jon Aldfer of Shor-ey North for the individual CollegeHouse tennis title, but Shorey tookthe overall championship. Johnsonof Phi Gamma Delta defeated PsiUpsilon’s Shapiro for the fratcrown, but Psi U still won theover-all fraternity title.The winter season opens with theregular basketball tournament be¬ginning on January 10. Sixty-sixteams in ten leagues will competein this round-robin tourney; theleague champions will meet in all-University playoffs early in Febru¬ary.Other upcoming IM events in¬clude the table tennis tournamentbeginning on January 22, the ri-flery competition beginning on Jan¬uary 16, and the handball tourna¬ment starting on the 22. SwimmingChicago’s swimming squaddropped their third meet of theseason to lawrence University onJanuary 6 at Lawrence. The teamwas able to take only one event oftwelve although in most Universityswimmers finished right on theheels of the Lawrence finmen.Diving ace Dave Barnes scoredthe only victory as he won the dif¬ficult event for the fourth time infive meets. The Maroons took sec¬ond in all but three events, withSteve Larrick taking three secondshimself and Dave Rider, Chuck Ca-lef, Mark Tindall, Carl Johnson,and Mike Kochwesser grabbingtwo each.The University will swim againstthe Great Lakes Naval Station athome on January 19 in the season’snext competition.In pre-Christmas action theswimmers defeated Wright JuniorCollege while dropping close deci¬sions to Wisconsin State and North-GymnasticsThe young Chicago gymnasticsteam went down to defeat in theiropening meet against Wheaton,George Williams College, and theUniversity of Illinois — ChicagoCircle on January 6.Competing for the Universitywere Alan Manguarten, Paul Se¬quin, Gorden Grobe, and DonMars...The squad’s next outing isagainst Illinois State on January 13at home.WrestlingThe Maroon wrestlers picked upthird place in a four teamquadrangular meet held at Carth¬age on January 6. Northern Michi¬gan dominated the tourney withCarthage, Chicago, and MilwaukeeInstitute of Technology bunched far back.University grappers took threeseconds and a lone third place asMichigan won every weight class.Taking runner-up spots were JimCasper in the 191 lb. class, GeorgeLane in the 177 lb. division, andSteve Biggs in the 137 pound eventMiles Washington took third spotin the 160 lb. competition.The squad opened the seasonwith ad ramatic come-from-behindvictory over MIT on December 3.Five Chicago wrestlers scored winsin this competition.AwardsThirty-six Chicago athletes werehonored at the annual AutumnQuarter Sports Awards Ceremonyheld early in December.Highlight of the ceremony wasthe presentation of the soccer MostValuable Player award to backMike Schechtman, ’68, who was al¬so named best defensive player andwas awarded the “Comedy of Er¬rors” Johnson & Johnson award.Mark Manewitz, who set all-timeMaroon records for goals, assists,and shots, was an easy choice forthe best offensive player award?Rich Murray was named team cap¬tain for the 1968 soccer season.Autumn ConvocationChicago awarded one honoraryand 371 academic degrees at its321st Convocation, held at 3 p.m.on December 15 in RockefellerMemorial Chapel.The Convocation address, “Foun¬tainhead of Knowledge,” was de¬livered by Lee A. DuBridge, pres¬ident of Caltech.Benno von Wiese und Kaiserwal-dau, professor of modern Germanlanguage and literature at theUniversity of Bonn, West Ger¬many, received an honorary Doc¬tor of Humane Letter (L.H.D.) de¬gree. Born in 1903, von Weise is aliterary scholar and a prominentinterpreter of the works of Fried¬rich Schiller (1759-1805), Germandramatist and poet.i Maroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50 cents per line, 40 cents perline repeat.For non-University clientele: 75 cents perline, 60 cents per line repeat. Count 35 char¬acters and spaces per line. PARTIESCHEENIX RETURNS. . .with Old Town'sfinest rock band. . .maybe Cracker Jacks too. . .Saturday, January 13. then comes the moment,after the hoursof hate and silence,the blows and bitterness,when she cries in your armsand you know you can love. Need Bread? Distribute Psychedelic posters,etc. Write to The Joyce James Co., Ltd. 34Bay street, San Francisco, Cal. — 94109. ROOMMATES WANTEDSHARE 7 ROOM LUXURY FLAT in SouthShore with 3 other Grad, students. Own Bed¬room. $62.50 per month. Call 363-0718.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with paymentto The Chicago Maroon Business Office,Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 60637.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIED ADS FORTUESDAY MUST BE IN BY FRIDAY. ALLCLASSIFIED ADS FOR FRIDAY MUST BEIN BY WEDNESDAY. NO EXCEPTIONS.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIED ADS FORTUESDAY MUST BE IN BY FRIDAY. ALLCLASSIFIED ADS FOR FRIDAY MUST BEIN BY WEDNESDAY. NO EXCEPTIONS.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3226.FURNITURE WANTEDTwo firm but cheap double beds (mattressand box springs) — Call 324-7431.LINN COUNTY IN CONCERTLINN COUNTY IN CONCERT ON FRIDAY!JANUARY 129-11 P. M.IDA NOYES HALL$1.00LINN COUNTY IN CONCERT ON FRIDAY!SPRING VACATION!SPRING VACATION in FREEPORT, BA¬HAMAS, March 16-23, 7 nights, 8 days. JetAir Trans. Transfers, Hotel, and extras.$189.00. Call Skokie Vacations. 667-0570.FOR SALEGIRLS HYDE FIGURE SKATES, Size 6.Excellent condition, great bargain. Call 493-7669.SITAR— $325.00. Also, BENGAL TIGER SKINRUG—mounted—$1,000.00. Call CE-6-1122.'61 MERCURY 4 door, very good condition.$225.00. Call 493-4956. PERSONALSSEE! HEAR! IN LOCO PARENTIS.STARRING CHARLES O'CONNELL!As the result of a minor error (i.e. the SFexchange before Joe's phone number wasomitted), we have been 'advised' to be coolwith our vulgar, tasteless PERSONALS. Ifyou (student, faculty, B 8. G, or adminis¬tration) would care to express your opinion(vulgar cr otherwise) on the UC 'under¬ground ' Classifieds, PLEASE CHECK AP¬PROPRIATE ANSWER, put in envelope ad¬dressed to Maroon, Room 304, Ida Noyes,and drop in closest Faculty Exchange Box.I do not read Maroon Personals (because)I do read Maroon Personals because (checkany number) ..They are boringThey ere not boringThey are usually funnyThey are vulgar and tastelessThey are (were?) a final outpost forfreedom of the press (you pay, we print)They are groovyThey are super-campI keep waiting for something good.OtherHOWLIN' WOLF IS COMING!For God alone my soul waits in silence:from him comes my salvationDAVID: A hell of a way to avoid the draft.Congratulations! THE MAROON STAFF.FLASH-Jimi Hendrix-end of February, TheFactory, Madison, Wisconsin.If God is dead, why is there still pain andsuffering in the world? R. S. 1; Jan. 26-28;Ml-3-4395.MAROON DESPERATELY NEEDS DELIV¬ERY BOY CA. 1 P. M. on MONDAYS ANDTHURSDAYS. Call MI-3-0800, Ext. 3266. ToHinsdale and back. From Dermassage- "Don't let healthy handsgo to pot."Russian taught by highly experienced nativeteacher. Rapid method. Trial lesson-nocharge. Call CE-6-1423 from 9 am to 5 pm.CHINA and EDNA POPLIN are coming!The world is a vacuum.It sucks.Students interested in a social work careerere urged to contact the Admissions Officeat SSA. There is a new, additional servicein which students at SSA will contact youend give you their impressions of SSA andthe field of social work. To get the scoopcall 4548.Joe (remember girls, Big Joe in thelest Maroon) has charged us with discrimi¬nation against Negroes since we are not sup¬posed to print ads as "direct" (vulgar?) ashis was.Have a quick recovery, Mr. Despres . . . TheUndergraduates of the University.CHEENIX rears her beautiful head again. . . blow your mind and live . . . finest rocksounds east of Clinton .. . Saturday, Jan¬uary 13.500-5,000 MILES OF FREE AIR TRAVELoffered to students willing to act as campusrepresentative for company organizing stu¬dent tours to Europe.Write: Student Wheels Abroad Program555 Madison AvenueNew york, New York-10022HOT LITTLE NUMBER AT 2414 Rickert —Better cool it or you'll find yourself enrolledin a convent—Mom.SRH-Do we have to leave it up all throughJanuary? MSLA view on natural hair — "What's wrongwith these Negroes wearing their hair allkinky? What are they trying to be? Afri¬cans!" — Ebony. Eric Burden and the Animals —"Winds ofChange" - newest album, stereo, playedonce, perfect condition. $2.00. Come to Room304, INH or call Ext. 3266."The psychedelic elbow has something uphis sleeve."The Burmese Harp Ichilcawa.Saturday the 13th. 8:00 P. M. Oriental Insti¬tute. 75 cents.DRAFT COUNSELING SESSIONwith Rabbis Ticktin and LeiferTuesday January 9th 7:30-10:00 P. M.An informal discussion of the religious andJewish dimensions of problems with regardto student deferments, conscientious objec¬tion and draft resistance.HILLEL HOUSE, 575 WOODLAWNTHE OSBORNE BROTHERS ARE COMING!DR. BURKE is lousy in bed.The FAMOUS, THE ONE AND ONLY U. ofC. FOLK FESTIVAL is coming! Tickets nowon sale in Mrndel Hall. Get them while theylast!Hip Fern Needed to care for troubled physi¬cist. Conv. North Side Apartment. 539-0914.Buster Keaton in "The General" plus aLaurel & Hardy. 8:30 Thursday at B. J. Din¬ing Hall. Free.TODD CAPP, WHERE ARE YOU?Like doing good? Come to an IVS paintingparty Sat. Call Tom, Ml 3-6000 Room 824.EARN FREE TICKETS TO THE FOLKFESTIVAL!!! call 667-6551 for informationon ticket-selling and office work.T. C. we forgive everything. Call ext 3265 forFriday publication.Coming Friday: WEEKEND superanalysisof Hyde Park eateries. Pd. Adv. Young working woman Grad. Student hasFURNISHED APARTMENT TO SHARE. Callafter 10 p.m. — 667-0543.ROOMS FOR RENTROOM FOR RENT: Good location near cam¬pus with meals served Monday thru Friday.CHI 684-9608.ROOM—$45 per month, South Shore, nearI.C. Call 731-1327.ROOM AND BOARD EXCHANGESTUDENT WANTED TO LIVE WITH FAM¬ILY. Room and Board Arrangement for somechild c*re. Call Mrs. Peters after 6 p.m. atHY—3-7973.APARTMENTS FOR RENTDINGY BASEMENT APARTMENT FORRENT CHEAP—$40.00-one or more persons,(for $10/week-make it your home awayfrcm the dorm), located in scenic Woodlawn,cell 324-5751.Off-campus HOUSING FOR Six MALE STU-dents. Kitchen Privileges. Available Jan.1968, Call Bu-8-5462 after 5:00 P. M.SOMEONE WANTED to take over ap'rtmenflease. Call 324-8438 after 5:00 P. AA.5 ROOM APARTMENT FOR RENT —3rd floor on 54th Place nr. University. Avail¬able Feb. 1, Call 752-1428.3 ROOM APARTMENT FOR MARRIEDCOUPLE ONLY. NEAR CAMPUS. CALLBU-8-6166.WORKEarn $4.00/hour. GRAD. BUSINESS ORLAW STUDENTS NEEDED FOR TAXWORK during Tax Season. Call Midwest TaxAssociates, 333 N. Michigan, DE-2-6543.. '[January 9, 1^68 ‘ ‘ ' THE CHICAGO MAROON ~9f , f« y V.W **0 t’.f I ' ■ > > * r) /Makeshort workof homeworkOr of any reading you do.Take the famous 8-week Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics course. This quarter,additional Reading Dynamics classes will beheld at the University of Chicago campus.These classes will be offered only toUniversity students, faculty and staff. Andat special on-campus rates.Last quarter 64 U. of C. students took theReading Dynamics course. The averagegraduate more than tripled his reading speed—and enjoyed greater comprehensionand recall.This is the course that was taught tomembers of the late President Kennedy’sCabinet and his Joint Chiefs of Staff. Sincethen, many high ranking officials on CapitolHill have taken it, including McGeorgeBundy and Edward Kennedy.Senator Proxmire stated that the coursewas, “one of the most useful educationalexperiences I’ve ever had. It certainlycompares favorably with the experiences I’vehad at Yale and Harvard.” What students saySophomore Bob Hansen: “Reading Dynamicsraised my reading speed from 368 words aminute to over 1450. I enjoy reading moreand I remember more. Big books don’tscare me like they used to.”Junior John Tabian: “My reading speedwent from 287 words a minute to over 1500words a minute. I think the course isfantastic. I'd recommend it to any collegestudent.”Money-back guaranteeYou must at least triple your present readingefficiency or your tuition will be refunded.(Reading efficiency is based on speed andcomprehension, not just speed alone.)To learn how the course will help you,come to a free, one-hour orientation onTuesday or Wednesday, January 9 and 10.Place: Beecher 102, Department ofPsychology, 5858 University.Time: 7:30 P.M.For more information, call ST 2-9787.The Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics Institute180North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60601THE CHICAGO MAROON January 9, 1968V ICalendar of EventsPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must type information on Cal¬endar forms available at The Maroon Office,Ida Noyes 303. Forms must then be sent orbrought to the Office at least two days be¬fore the date of publication.Monday, January 8ART SHOW: One-man show of "New Paint¬ings by Jeff Donaldson." Lakeside Gal¬lery. 6 p.m. until midnight daily, 10 a.m.until 10 p.m. weekends. Through Febru¬ary 10.Tuesday, January 9OPEN FORUM: Discussion of present secur¬ity system. Woodward Court. Also January11 at Eleanore Club, January 15 at PierceTower.DRAFT COUNSELING SESSION: With Rab¬bis Ticktin and Leifer. 7:30-10:00 p.m. atHillel House, 5715 Woodlawn.Wednesday, January 10IHC, CAMPUS LIFE COMMITTEE: 8:30 PMat Ida Noyes.Thursday, January 11FILM: B-J Free Cinema presents Buster Kea¬ton in "The General" and Laurel & Hardyin "Two Tars." Admission Free. JudsonDining Hall at 8:30.LECTURE: Frederick Crosson, University ofNotre Dame: Phenomenology and Cyber¬netics. 7:30 PM at Ida Noyes Hall.Recruiting VisitsRepresentatives from the following will bevisiting the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club, Room 200:Graduate Schools(For appointments, call Ext. 3282)January 5—Stanford University School of Ed¬ucation, Teacher Education Program.January 12—Case-Western Reserve Univer¬sity Law School.Teaching(For appointments, call Ext. 379)January 10—The School District of Philadel¬ phia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Informa¬tion on positions is not available at thiswriting. Call Ext. 3286 a few days beforerecruiting date for information and ap¬pointments.January 10 and 11—Board of Education, TheMethodist Church. This agency assistsmember institutions of higher learning tofind faculty. Recruiting will be for posi¬tions in the following areas: english, mu¬sic, languages, philosophy, psychology, re¬ligion, science, sociology and business ad¬ministration. Call Ext. 3282 for appoint¬ments.Business, Industry, Government(For appointments, call Ext. 3284)January 9—Argonne National Laboratory, Ar-gonne, Illinois; Idaho Falls, Idaho. Ph. D.chemists (analytical, inorganic, physical);Ph D. physicists (atomic, solid state, par¬ticle); M.S. and Ph. D. mathematicians;and programmers (scientific and systems).January 9—Stauffer Chemical Company, NewYork, California, and Michigan, analytical,inorganic, and organic chemists. ResearchAssignments in above states; salesthroughout the United States.January 10—National Aeronautics and SpaceAdministration—Goddard Space Flight Cen¬ter, Greenbelt, Maryland. Mathematicians end statisticians at all degree levels; M.S.ar.d Ph. D. in physics (solid state).January 11—International Business MachinesCorporation, throughout the United States.All degree levels in Chemistry (Analytical,Physical), Mathematics, Physics (SolidState), and Statistics, students in other dis¬ciplines interested in programming orsales.January 11 — Battelle Memorial Institute,Columbus, Ohio. Ph. D. candidates inChemistry (Organic, Physical); M.S. can¬didates in Mathematics; M.S. and Ph. D.candidates in Physics (All specializations).January 12—Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Illi¬nois. Chemists (all specializations) at alldegree levels for assignment to CentralResearch Laboratories in Chicago. Will in¬terview students in chemistry for summerJanuary 12—Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Illi¬nois. Students in any discipline for editori¬al work. Writing experience desirable.January 12—NALCO Chemical Company, Chi¬cago, Illinois. Chemists (all specializations)at all degree levels for assignment to Cen¬tral Research Laboratories in Chicago. Willinterview students in chemistry for sum¬mer work who will complete a minimumof three years of academic work byJune, 1968. Soc Sci JournalThe student council of the SocialScience Collegiate Division is nowworking on plans for a publicationto be called “Process: Journal ofthe Students of the Collegiate Divi¬sion of the Social Sciences.” Pap¬ers may be submitted by studentsor recommended by faculty.Publication of the first issue isscheduled for the end of the winterquarter. The editorial committeeenvisions the journal as a 60-pagequarterly, photo-duplicated.Additional staff members areneeded. Anyone interested shouldcontact Larry Samuels, MI 3-8416. MURPHIESApplications for MurphyScholarships are now avail¬able in the Scholarship Of¬fice. The deadline is Friday,January 12. Murphy Schol- |arships are awarded for §extra-curricular activities onthe basis of a student's in¬volvement in extra-curricu¬lar activities, academicstanding, and financialneed.TypewritersSale of Name brand typewriters - Portable - Standard -Electric.Repairs done by Factory trained mechanics on typewritersand adding machines. <■Rental by the month on Portable, Standard and Electrictypewriters, and also adding machines and calculators.Typewriter DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave. Jimmy’sand the University RoomSchiltz on topFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE./ WE’REHEADEDUPTHEUPSTAIRCASEGUT ISSUES”“WHERE THE ACTION IS”DRAMATIC A IEV0LUTI0I rFEDERAL SCHOOL REPORT says: The Philadelphia public schools are engaged in “the most dramaticrevolution in a city school system in the post-war period/'Reform in Philadelphia is “more widespread and far-reachingthan in any large school system in the country."DR. MARK R. SHEDD, new Superintendent of Schools, says:“I will continue to support teachers who are able to examine, in amature way, the gut issues of our day—war, sex, race, drugs, poverty.If we divorce school subjects from the guts and hopes of human beings,we can expect students to find them gutless and hopeless."RICHARDSON DILWORTH, President of the Board of Education,says: “The city is where the action is. It’s where the challenge is. It’s wherewe are facing the great moral and social issues of our day. If you want action,come teach in Philadelphia. If you don't, go teach in the suburbs."WE SAY: Come join our school revolution as a teacher. Get in on the action.Teacher salaries are rising rapidly. So is our school system. Come on up the up stair¬case. For further information, see our Representative who will be at Univ. of ChicagoWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1968.SIGN UP AT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR AN INTERVIEW NOW.THE SCHOOL DISTRICT OF PHILADELPHIA, PA. CUT IT OUTNo, really, there is a play every weekend for the next sevenweeks, and if you don’t believe it....JAN. 12 - 13 - 14 8:30 PMOEDIPUS REXPresented by University TheatreDirected by John Bettenbender, St..Joseph’s CollegeFeaturing JAMES O’REILLY in the title role.Reynolds Club Theatre - Tickets $1.50 / students $1.00»***»*»*»**»¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥JAN. 19 - 20- 21 8:30 PMThe Renaissance PlayerspresentMANKIND THE PLAYOF THE SACREMENTin the Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall*++¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥JAN 25 - 26 - 27 8:30 PMSunday 28 at 4:30 PMLord Byron’s play CAINpresented by University Theatre inROCKEFELLER CHAPEL¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥FES. 2 - 3 - 4 8:30 PMTHE CHANGELINGDirected by Mark Rosin for UTReynolds Club Theatre¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥FEB. 9 -10 *11 8:30 PMTHE MAGIC MIME TROUPEdirected ijy pi&.arri TDirected by Richard RubinScenes, Sketches, l,mprovi sations, Etc.from the works of Jules Feiffer, Mark Twain, etc.Reynolds Club Theatre¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥FEB. 16 - 17 * 18 8:30 PMTROJAN WOMENUT’s Major Production of the QuarterDirected by James O’ReillyA newly composed choral accompaniment by Richard Wernickand featuring an actress of national famein the role of HecubaMANDEL HALL»»»»»»*¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥»¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥FEB. 23 - 24 - 25 8:30 PMANTIGONEby AnouilhDirected by Reece PetersonReynolds Club TheatreL..»January 9, 1968 mlmb Chicago Maroon 11For Undergraduate College Only.0co^'"9V'"! ^ ,V&vMt nSC'e('CeCo^e^0'so°-'r!?SS>cXc*c>rw* rt50.f^9"c®teSa<'<s^t>u,9V ea,OPe(&PM^*W9VS^'>00 If your majoris listed here,IBM would liketo talk with youJanuary 11th.Sc'\e°c0S ,ao^,3"'CSign up for an interview at your placement office—even ifyou’re headed for graduate school or military service.Maybe you think you need a technical background to workfor us.Not true.Sure we need engineers and scientists. But we also need§ <- •liberal arts and business majors. We'd like to talk with you evenif you're in something as far afield as Music. Not that we'dhire you to analyze Bach fugues. But we might hire you toanalyze problems as a computer programmer.What you can do at IBMThe point is. our business isn't just selling computers.It's solving problems. So if you have a logical mind, we needyou to help our customers solve problems in such diverse areas as government, business, law. education, medicine, science,the humanities.Whatever your major, you can do a lot of good things atIBM. Change the world (maybe). Continue your education(certainly, through plans such as our Tuition Refund Program).And have a wide choice of places to work (we have over 300locations throughout the United States).What to do nextWe'll be on campus to interview for careers in Marketing,Computer Applications, Programming, Research, Design andDevelopment, Manufacturing, and Finance and Administration.If you can’t make a campus interview, send an outline ofyour interests and educational background to Mr. C. J. Reiger,IBM Corporation, 100 South Wacker Dr.,Chicago, Illinois 60606. We’re an equalopportunity employer.