The Chicago Marooritr\ yjSUV HRS IT/CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1968 \c>'\ .■ FoundedIn 1892VOL. 76, NO. 29 12 PAGESCONFERENCE HEREAnti-War Students Call StrikeThe Maroon—DAVID TRAVISAGAINST RACISM: Members of this conference panel are (I. to r.)Ken Bailey, Gwen Patton, Linda Morse, and Bettina Aptheker.YR's 'Nominate'Nixon and BrookeBy DANIEL HERTZBERG | r ®Associate EditorDelegates from 22 Midwest col¬lege Young Republican clubs nomi¬nated Richard Nixon as the Repub¬lican party’s presidential candidateand Massachusetts Senator EdwardBrooke as his running mate at amock national political conventionheld on campus Friday and Satur¬day.The YRs also approved a con¬vention platform that urged:• Abolition of the draft;• Legalization of marijuana;• Abolition of the House Un-American Activities Committee;• Replacement of current wel¬fare programs with a guaranteedminimum income;• Repeal of all minimum wagelaws; and• State subsidies for students inprivate schools.Nixon won the presidential nomi¬nation on the second ballot, whenhe soundly defeated New YorkGovernor Nelson Rockefeller by avote of 937 to 347.Close RaceThis overwhelming victory con¬trasted with the first ballot, whenNixon, with 266 votes, was closelytrailed by Rockefeller (251) andIllinois Senator Everett Dirksen(239). Further behind were Cali¬fornia Governor Ronald Reagan(126) and Barry Goldwater (102).Brooke was nominated by a near-unanimous vote on the first ballotin the vice presidential contest. Hewas praised as a supporter both ofthe Vietnam War and of the con¬cept of a volunteer army.A quite strong showing on thefirst ballot in the presidential vot¬ing was made by a dark horsecandidate, Paul Snowden RussellDistinguished Service Professor of See editorial on Page 6.iBMBSBKiWIKi £ W&j economics Milton Friedman, aleading conservative economist. Hegarnered 88 votes.Symbolic CandidateFriedman’s name was entered inthe running by former StudentGovernment President Tom Heagy,; '68, who declared, “My candidateis- a symbol of the intellectualmovement in this country whichseeks to re-establish freedom.”Heagy proposed a Friedmancampaign slogan: “In your headyou know he’s right.”However, prior to the second bal¬lot, Chicago delegate David Fried¬man brought a message from hisfather releasing his first-ballot sup¬porters to vote for any one of threecandidates: Nixon, Reagan, orGoldwater.Michigan Governor George Rom-Turn to Page 4power is the only alternative todisaster in this country,” declaredEbony magazine Editor LeroneBennett, speaking at a conferenceheld here Friday and Saturday todiscuss the topic “The Church Con¬fronts Black Power.”The conference, sponsored bythe Episcopal Society for Cultural,and Racial Unity (ESCRU), washeld in the Center for ContinuingEducation. It also includedspeeches by Richard Flacks, anassistant professor of sociologyhere, and by Nathan Wright, an By HARVEY WASSERMANA conference involving over 900campus activists from nearly ev¬ery state in the Union and LatinAmerica Friday called for aworld-wide student strike “againstthe war in Vietnam and racism.”The black caucus of the con¬ference called a strike against“imperialism, racism, and thedraft.”The conference was called bythe Student Mobilization Commit¬tee (SMC), a New York-basedgroup which took part in the plan¬ning of large-scale demonstrationsin New York and California lastApril 15 and at the Pentagon lastOctober 21.The strike will be held on Fri¬day, April 26 in the midst of tendays of concentrated anti-war ac¬tivity from April 20-30, a periodexpected to coincide with the “tendays to shake the empire” pro¬gram asked by a national meetingof Students for a Democratic Soci¬ety late last December.The conference opened Satur¬day morning at Rockefeller Chap¬el the Students for a DmeocraticSociety national office with speech¬es by movement lawyer Arthur Ki-noy and Carl Davidson of nationalSDS. Kinoy, who is defending Stu¬dent Non-Violent Coordinating Com¬mittee leader H. Rap Brownagainst government prosecution,warned against “allowing thegovernment to put us on the defen¬sive.”‘They’re Scared’He said administration “did notwant to prosecute Spock and theothers, but they had to. Our tac¬tics of meeting repression head onare hurting them, and they’rescared, badly scared.”Kinoy quoted a James Restoneditorial of last year to the effectthat if thousands of young men fol¬lowed the example of MuhammedAli in resisting conscription, “thegovernment simply would notEpiscopal priest and author of“Black Power and Urban Unrest,”who followed Bennett in the Fri¬day night session.Charles Hamilton, co-author withStokely Carmichael of the bookBlack Power and chairman ofRoosevelt University’s PoliticalScience Department, delivered a“teach-in” Saturday morning,which was followed by a panel dis¬cussion.Power was a main theme of Ben¬nett’s adress. “The race problemin America is a problem ofpower,” he said. “All historyteaches us that truth alone is pow¬erless against power, but truthTurn to Page 11CCE MEETINGBlack Power Trends ExaminedBy TIMOTHY S. KELLEYStaff Writer“I’m deeply convinced that black See editorial on Page 6.know what to do.”For this reason, Kinoy said, “thegovernment is furiously repressingany liberties it can get its handson. They are breaking into officesand establishing all the witch-huntlaws they can. We are meetingthem with fear as they hope butwith increased legal and organiza¬tional activity.”Davidson told the audience thatthe recent Peublo incident repre¬sented “the most significant esca¬lation of the Asian war yet under¬taken by the Johnson administra¬tion.” Davidson outlined “provoca¬tive incidents” staged by the U.S.government around Korea overthe past few years and he said the U. S. has been pressing Japan forsupport, activities which havebeen met by an expansion of Ja¬pan’s military draft.Second FrontDavidson said a second front inKorea would allow Japaneseforces to work in Korea, and thus“release large numbers of SouthKorean troops for Vietnam.”Davidson also pointed to the needfor an excuse to call up the airreserves.Further, he said, “with the coun¬try in the middle of a militarymobilization, LBJ’s presidentialnomination this August is secured.The net result of these factorspoints to one conclusion: LBJ ispulling off the greatest and mostTurn to Page 11Parsons Calls forDraff ResistanceBy MICHAEL SEIDMANExecutive EditorE. Spensor Parsons, dean ofRockefeller Chapel, has called ondraft-eligible men to refuse serv¬ice in Vietnam.In a strongly worded sermon de¬livered at the Chapel on Sunday,Parsons called on young men “toso examine the moral implicationsof this war that they will bemoved to declare their con-sciencious objections and refuse tobe drafted.”By making the statement, Par¬sons became the first high Univer¬sity official publicly urge re¬sistance to the Selective ServiceSystem. His statement comes twoweeks after the indictment of theReverend William Sloane Coffin,Chaplin of Yale, for urging resist-'The MaroonCharles Hamilton ance to the draft.Parsons’ sermon, entitled “Viet¬nam: a Crisis of Conscience,” con¬demned both the war in Vietnamand the way in which men areselected to fight in it. “I am not aclassical pacifist” he stated, “inthat I do not regard the useof physical force (including policeand military force) under all cir¬cumstances as immoral.”He went on, however, to list fivereasons why he views the war asindenfensible:• The sources of the war “areessentially the consequences ofyears of Western imperialism”;• The war is rooted primarilyin the nationalistic aspirations ofthe Vietnamese”;• The government of Vietnamis “ a military dictatorship”;• Our refusal to allow Vietnamelections in 1956 “seriously com¬promised out public commitmentto the self determination of na¬tions”; and• Bombings of civilian popula¬tions “makes the war morally, po¬litically, and militarily indefen¬sible.”‘An Immoral Victory’“Of the nine senior correspon¬dents with whom Senator Percyconferred in private while (in Viet¬nam), seven told him they be¬lieved it was impossible to win thewar,” Parsons asserted. “Some ofus would add the clear addendum,even if we could win this war, itwould be an immoral victory.”In addition, Parsons sharply cri¬ticized President Johnson andGeneral Hershey for using thedraft to punish dissenters. “This isa notorious breach of constitution¬al protection and the Presidentknows it,” Parsons stated.“For most of us it takes a par-Turn to Page 11? H ' |8 *% | -»f ♦ JibExpert Sees Intellectual Leadership of the HippiesThe hippie movement may pro¬vide the intellectual leadership o fAmerican society in the future, anationally known sociologist saidSunday night.Irving L. Horowitz, WashingtonUniversity sociologist and authorof “The Rise and Fall of ProjectCamelot,” made the assertion on“The University of Chicago RoundTable,” a public television discus¬sion series broadcast on WTTW/Channel 11 in Chicago.Horowitz said the hippies offer a“rejoinder to violence” now pre¬valent in the United States.“It isn’t a negative phenoeme-non,” Horowitz said. “It isn’t a de¬mand for nonviolent behavior. It’srather an assertion of the right of survival in a world of violence.If apolitical behavior or non-politi¬cal behavior reduces the amountof violence, then the whole of thehippie movement will perform avery important intellectual serv¬ice.”Horowitz was joined in the dis¬cussion of “Violence and the Intel¬lectual” by Richard Flacks, assis¬tant professor of sociology and di¬rector of the Youth and SocialChange Project, and Milton J. Ro¬senberg, professor of psychology,both at Chicago.Flacks stressed that “What’smissing in American life is a seri¬ous adult movement that’s aim¬ing to change the structure of soci¬ety.” Citing the Vietnam war, urbanrioting, and dissent movements,Flacks said, “One of the greatproblems has been that we haveallowed students to define the poli¬tical action. We have not had asituation where the adult intellec¬tuals have attempted to assertthemselves in a serious politicall way.”Flacks blamed the “malaise ofthe younger generation” on adultintellectuals, saying, “There is noj adult leadership expressing the*values that youth wants to see ex¬pressed in a serious political waythat reaches for power.”He said that most intellectualsi would like to preserve universitiesas enclaves of stability withina violent society, but termed thisBotany, Zoology Departments Now Are BiologyThe Departments of Botany andZoology have been combined intothe Department of Biology. Thenew department will create a moreunified approach to teaching andresearch in these areas of science..The change was announced byDr. Leon 0. Jacobson, dean of theDivision of the Biological Sciences.The reorganization is effectiveimmediately.Commenting on the reorganiza¬tion, Dr. Jacobson said that “bio¬logical scientists have been mov¬ing in a multidisciplinary directionfor some time. Research in boththe plant and animal kingdoms isno longer viewed as being two sep¬arate fields of study, for this ob¬scures the underlying similarity ofall living organisms. “This merger will provide an in¬creased concentration of both re¬search and teaching talent. Whileboth departments have had great!strength as separate units, this;concentration on one interdiscipli¬nary structure will provide a uni¬fied approach to what is essential¬ly one field, biology.”Baker AppointedServing as interim departmentchairman will be Wiiliam K. Ba¬ker, a geneticist and professor ofzoology at Chicago.The Botany Department has beenheaded by Charles E. Olmsted, pro¬fessor of botany and editor of Bo¬tanical Gazette. The chairman ofthe zoology department has beenH. Burr Steinbach, professor of zo¬ology and director of the Marine Biological Laboratory at WoodsHole, Massachusetts.The combination of departmentswill give both professors moretime to devote to teaching and re¬search, said Dr. Jacobson.The department’s size is expect¬ed to increase somewhat, althoughdefinite plans have not been made.At present, the department occu¬pies four buildings in addition togreenhouses and special controlledenvironmental facilities.Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. “self-delusion” because “on thewhole, the institutions are becom¬ing committed more and more tothe service of empire building andmilitaristic designs.”Problems for Intellectuals“The United States is in one wayor another trying to develop an in¬ternational stance in which w econtrol what amounts to an em¬pire,” he said. “The problem forintellectuals generally in the coun¬try is how they define their rela¬tionship to that.”Rosenberg disagreed on thequestion of intellectual impotencein the face of these issues. He saidthat in regard to Vietnam, intel¬lectuals “played a very decisiverole, if only that they did the jobof an intellectual. . .providing in¬tellectual analysis.”“The University of ChicagoRound Table” is produced for pub¬lic television by WTTW in coopera¬tion with the University. The mod¬erator is Kenneth J. Northcott,professor of older German litera¬ture and dean of students in thedivision of the Humanities at theUniversity. Louis Abraham of theWTTW staff is producer-directorof the series. “Round Table” broadcasts thisyear have focused on a variety oftopics.SOC SCIAn ad hoc committee to re¬vise the Social Sciences cur¬riculum has been organizedby Judy Goldstein, '70.Students interested in join¬ing it should contact eitherMiss Goldstein at 34 Snell,or John Moscow, '69, at Ext.3260. Meetings will be heldlater this quarter.SKI ASPEN$175. 00Leave Chi. March 16, 4:30Arrive hark in Ch . March 24.Includes all train, bus, deluxequad room priv. bat h (no dormson this trip), all tow tickets, out-door pool, taxes, sk iinn vail andAspen.Northwestern U. Ski GroupCall Dick 764-6764 or 767-3765HUTCHINSONCOMMONSCOFFEE SHOPDinner Special Daily$.95 - $1.30from5:00 P.M. to 6:30 P.M.Osborne BrothersEIGHTH ANNUALUniversity of ChicagoFOLK FESTIVALBukka WhiteFebruary 2,3 and 4Tickets: Mandel Hall Box Officeor call Ml 3-0800 Ext. 3567The New Lost City RamblersKilby and Jim Snow Clark KessingerGeorge ArmstrongEdna and China PoplinJoseph Spence2 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 30, 1968Chicago Professor Sees Uneasy Johnson WinBy JOHN MOSCOWNews EditorPresident Johnson will win re-election this fall, Political ScienceProfessor John Dickson Maypredicted Sunday night. May wasspeaking before a Social SciencesCollegiate Division dinner audi¬ence of about 60.George Wallace, former govern¬or of Alabama, will play the mostimportant role in the election, ac¬cording to May.The importance of the Wallacevote, he stressed, was not in theSouthern states with their smallnumber of electoral votes, but inthe larger Northern states such as I New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois,and California, where, he said,seven per cent of the vote couldswing the election in those statesaway from Johnson.May indicated that there wereseveral reasons to suspect a John¬son victory. He cited polls showingJohnson’s popularity was on theupswing. He stressed the importance of the Democratic Party’srole as the majority party of thenation. He said that the continua¬tion of the longest period of pros¬perity in the nation’s history wouldaid Johnson.According to May there arethree principal factors to be con¬ sidered in the election: it will beone of the most vicious campaignsin recent memory; it will bemarked by an alliance of the leftand the right; and it will bemarked by Johnson’s victory overa poor Republican candidate, hesaid.‘Students Are the Extremists’“This campaign will be remem¬bered by historians as notable forvilification and violence,” saidMay. We are proving today, hecontinued, that “the extremists ofAmerican political life are notwhere we used to think they were.The extremists are the college stu¬dents and professors.”INEQUALITY DISCUSSIONIs School Spending Unconstitutional?By DAVID L. AIKENLiterary EditorThe disparity in expenditure forpublic schools between inner citiesand affluent suburbs may be foundunconstitutional.This possibility was raised in aconference yesterday, sponsoredby the University’s Center forPolicy Study, which broughttogether 25 scholars from severalfields to discuss “the quality of in¬equality.”Much of the discussion focusedaround the conclusions in a disser¬tation by Arthur E. Wise for theDepartment of Education, suggest¬ing that the doctrine of equal pro¬tection of the laws could be ap¬plied to the unequal support ofpublic schools.They also noted a recent speechby Provost and President-electEdward H. Levi, who noted:“The expenditure per high school pupil in a suburb to thenorth of Chicago is $1,283; in asuburb to the south of the city itis $723. . . . Major differencesoccur between the suburbs and ad¬jacent cities, and within cities.The students are compelled by lawto go to school. It is state actionwhich brings them there. It isstate action also which has madethe school districts.”Opportunity for EducationCiting the 1954 Supreme Courtdecision which emphasized the im¬portance of an opportunity for edu¬cation, Levi asked, “Is there anyreason to believe that the opportu¬nity for required education isreally equal when there are theseextraordinary differences ...?”Answers to the problem provedelusive, however.In a press conference following yesterday’s conference, Rep. T.Ludlow Ashley (D-Ohio) noted,“We’re talking about the disparityin quality, though we may not betalking about money.”Joseph J. Schwab, professor ofeducation at Chicago, agreed, re¬marking that one solution mightbe to correct the imbalance inquality by spending more in poorneighborhoods than in affluentsuburbs on public schools.Phillip B. Kurland, Chicago pro¬fessor of law, noted that any at¬tempt to prescribe a single tech¬nique for solving the problemswould be bound to fail. Anydecision by the Supreme Courtwhich directed immediate equal¬ization of expenditures would, “ifit came sooner rather than later,”cause more problems than itsolved, he remarked. There is a prospect of violence,May asserted, due to the great vili¬fication of the campaign, such asstigmatizing American society as“a garrison state, a czarist state,a cesspool,” or similar things. Thistactic is used, he explained, tojustify acts of violence. To the ex¬tremists nothing in such a societyis immoral except possibly quietacceptance of the state, he said.Thurmond and WallaceAn “unholy” alliance exists thisyear between opponents of LyndonJohnson, said May. In the past, hepointed out, such alliances haveexisted between the Czarists andthe Bolsheviks in pre-war Russia,the Communists and the Nazis inWiemar Germany, or betweenStrom Thurmond and Henry AgardWallace in the 1948 Presidentialelection here.This year, May continued, “therewill be an alliance between the lily whites, the burning blacks and thepinks to defeat LBJ.” Wallacestands to gain the most from thealliance, he said, but there areonly three realistic kinds ofchoices Nixon or Reagan, Rocke¬feller or Percy, or most likely,Johnson.According to him, the GOP lacksthe will to win. It would rathernominate a candidate close to theirideological persuasion than onewho would be a better bet to winthe election.May considered the possible Re¬publican challengers, discountingall of the frontrunners. The idealGOP nominee, he asserted, wouldbe a man such as Governor Chaf¬fee of Rhode Island or perhapssomeone less well known thanhim.He stressed the fact that in thiselection lack of a national reputa¬tion would be an asset for aRepublican candidate.THE OFFICE OF STUDENT HOUSINGis now accepting applications for positions on its staff in theUniversity Houses for the 1968-69 academic year. Positionsinclude Resident Headships and Assistant Headships. Ap¬pointments are open to students working for advanced degreesin the University or to members of its faculties. Undergradu¬ates, twenty years of age or older, will be considered forAssistantships. Persons interested in applying for staff posi¬tions may obtain further information in the Housing Office,Administration 201.Yale Law WeighsGrading AbolitionStudents and faculty in the YaleLaw School are considering a pro¬posal that would abolish grades forsome courses and reduce the cur¬rent A-F system to a fair-passable-competent-excellent system inothers.The proposal, recommended in areport by a special faculty gradingcommittee, would eliminate rank¬ing.The report stated, “We feel thatwe should demarcate clearly stu¬dent work which is exceptionallygood, which is quite mediocre, andwork which is patently unsatis¬factory, but that further discrimina¬tions are too often spurious.”GRADINGThe College Council isscheduled to meet today at3:40 p.m. in Swift Com¬mons to decide a new grad¬ing policy for the College.The meeting is closed ex-cept to a handful of studentrepresentatives and a Ma¬roon reporter.You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today. MATHEMATICIANS:What Do You Know Aboutnsa?The National Security Agency is a scien¬tific and technological community uniquein the United States, perhaps in the world.NSA is the Agency responsible for de¬veloping "secure” communications sys¬tems and EDP devices to transmit andreceive vital information.YOU AND NSAAs a mathematician at NSA, you willdefine, formulate and solve communlca-tions-related problems, many of majornational significance. Statistical mathe¬matics, matrix algebra, finite fields,probability, combinatorial analysis, pro¬gramming and symbolic logic are but afew of the tools applied by Agencymathematicians. They enjoy the full sup¬port of NSA’8 completely equipped com¬puter laboratory where many of thembecome involved in both the hardwareand software of advanced computingsystems. Theoretical research is also aprimary concern at NSA, owing to thefact that the present state of knowledgein certain fields of mathematics is notsufficiently advanced to satisfy NSA re¬quirements. IMAGINATION...A REAL REQUIREMENTMathematical problems at NSA will sel¬dom be formulated and handed to you,the mathematician, for solution. Instead,you will help define the problem by ob¬serving its origin and characteristicsand the trends of data associated withit. You will then determine whether theproblem and data are susceptible tomathematical treatment and, if so, how.As you grow in your appreciation of thisapproach to mathematical problems, andthe relationship of your discipline tonon-mathematical subject matter, bothyour personal satisfaction and yourvalue to NSA will increase, as will yourresponsibility.CONTINUING YOUR EDUCATION?NSA’s graduate study program may per¬mit you to pursue two semesters of full¬time graduate study at full salary. Nearlyall academic costs are borne by NSA,whose proximity to seven universities isan additional asset. SALARIES AND BENEFITSStarting salaries, depending on educa¬tion and experience, range from $7,729to $12,873, and increases follow as youassume additional responsibility. Poli¬cies relating to vacations, insurance andretirement are liberal, and you enjoy theadvantages of Federal employment with¬out the necessity of Civil Service certi¬fication.Another benefit is the NSA location, be¬tween Washington and Baltimore, whichpermits your choice of city, suburban orcountry living and allows easy accessto the Chesapeake Bay, ocean beachesand other summer and winter recreationareas.CAMPUS INTERVIEW DATES:February 8 and 9Check with the Placement Office now toarrange an interview with NSA repre¬sentatives on campus. The PlacementOffice also has further information aboutNSA, or you may write: Chief, CollegeRelations Branch, National SecurityAgency, Ft. George G. Meade, Md. 20755.An equal opportunity employer, M&F.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 5. Doty Ave.646-4411 national security agency... where imagination is the essential qualificationJanuary 30, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3• ■ ’ • • • . i » . . • ;iti1 Young Republicans Pass a Civil Liberties PlatformContinued from Page 1ney, the only major announced Re¬publican candidate for the presi¬dential nomination, received only34 votes on the first ballot and noneon the second.Among the other candidates get¬ting first-ballot votes were FloridaGovernor Claude Kirk (62), OregonSenator Mark Hatfield (21), andShirley Temple Black (1).Draft Violates RightsThe platform approved by theconvention denounced the draft asa violation of individual freedom.“Governmental coercion is un¬justified, no matter how desirableits aims, if those aims can beachieved without it,” the platformdeclared. “We are currently staf¬fing our armed forces partly bysuch coercion.“The Selective Service System isan institution more appropriate toa Red Chinese commune than toa free society. Common sense tellsus, and reputable economists con¬firm, that our armed forces can befully manned by volunteers, at anadditional budgetary cost negligi¬ble in terms of our total defenseexpenditures.”The plank on marijuana, whilenot mentioning the drug by name,urged an end to all restrictionsagainst “the sale to or use byadults of any non-addictive drugwhose possibilities for social harmdo not exceed those of alcohol.”This statement was construed bysome delegates to apply to otherdrugs like LSD.‘Dubious Methods’The statement on HUAC de¬nounced the committee, assertingthat it “has, over two decades,cost millions to support and pro¬duced virtually no legislative re¬sults.“Using dubious methods of inves¬tigation, it has frequently suggested★ ★★★★★★★FROM PEKING AND HANOIr/AO TSE TUNG'S "Quotations"and "On Peoples War.” bothfamous little red books $1.00HO CHI-MINH'S "Prison Diary" .75PEKING REVIEW,52 weeks, air 4.00VIETNAM COURIER, 26 weeks 5 00VIETNAM (lllustr.), 12 months 5.00send payment with order toCHINA BOOKS & PERIODICALS *U.S. Gov't. Licensed ImporterA Distributor ^2T29-24th St. San Francisco 94! 10(In California, ^add 5% sales tax on books)FREE CATALOGUE ON REQUEST ** * 4 * * * *. "CM”★V*i*1*1*1SERVICEto your satisfactionQUALITY WORKon allforeign and sports carsby trained mechanicsBody work ir paintingTOWINGFree Estimates on ALL Work326-2550ESLY IMPORTS, INC2235 S. MICHIGANAuthorizedPeugeot DealerService hours: Daily 8-7Sat. 9-510% Student Discounton Repair Order Parts.Convenient to all majorexpressways. Lake Shore•Drive; 1C. and “El" guilt by tenuous association. Notbeing a court of justice, it is em¬powered to badger and harass inno¬cent men with impunity.”Current minimum wage lawswere denounced in the platform onthe grounds that they “deny em¬ployment to many Americans.These citizens have, by these laws,been priced out of the job marketand thus forced to subsist on gov¬ernment welfare.”The foreign policy plank of theplatform was generally hawkish. On Vietnam, it urged the UnitedStates to guarantee the indepen¬dence of South Vietnam and SouthKorea and to block the harbor ofHaiphong. The government wasasked, however, to avoid the bomb¬ing of civilian areas in North Viet¬nam.Vietnam Criticism FailsDelegates rejected a paragraphwhich suggested that in the futurethe United States avoid “whereverpossible, commitments that arelikely to end, like our commitment in Vietnam, in long, expensivewars, fought over countries of littlestrategic or economic value to us.”They also defeated amendmentsthat asked U.S. diplomatic recog¬nition of Communist China, nonin¬terference in the internal politicsof any nation, and neutralizationof a unified Germany.The convention approved anamendment on urban affairs urg¬ing business involvement in fight¬ing poverty, and one on racialharmony asking efforts to promote integration in residential neighbor¬hoods and schools.At the same time there was aplatform plank supporting in¬creased efforts to control crime andrioting.Other planks in the YR platformincluded the creation of a singletax rate, coupled with an increasedpersonal exemption to protect low-income taxpayers; an end to farmsubsidies; a free market value forgold; and an end to all censorshiplaws.BANDERSNATCHW. C. FIELDS - Tues. & Wed.TIGER WOMAN - Thurs.PAUL KAPLAN - Fri.Pssst.Wanna buy a revealing glimpseof student life in Europe for a buck? ALLAT11 P.MListen. It’s called Let*s Go—The Student Guide to Europe,written by Harvard students. And it’s full of the real stuff.Like how to pour Spanish cider by holding the jug over yourshoulder and the glass behind your back. And the most successful(fully researched) ways to hitchhike in Germany. Spain. Everywhere.And, of course, places to eat and sleep that only a student could love.Take a peek for yourself. Send one little buck with coupon below.Offer good while stocks last.Oh. By the way. If you dodecide to get a student’s-eye-view of Europe, you’ll fly thereon a U.S. airline, right? Somake it TWA. The airline thatknows Europe like a book.Need further info on travelin U. S. or to Europe? Checkyour travel agent, or yournearest TWA office! TWA, Dept. 208, RO. Box 25, Grand Central Station, N. Y. 10017Here’s my check to TWA for $1.00. Quick. Send me myLet’s Go—The Student Guide to Europe in a plain brown wrapper.NameAddress -City State Zip CodeMy travel agent IsupupandawayLa mum mm mm mm mm mm mmmm *mmm mmmm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm MM•Service mark owned exclusively by Trans World Airlines, Inc.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 30, 1968MAROON SPORTSMaroons Upset by Oberlin 63-59; Second Loss for DribblersBy JERRY LAPIDUSEditorial AssistantToday there is little joy aroundCoach Stampf’s office at BartlettGym.Stampf’s Maroons, the best Uni¬versity sports squad so far thisyear, lost its second game of theyear (and its bid to win nine ina row) last Saturday at Oberlin.The home Yeomen played a fine,well-balanced game and were ableto run up a large first-half leadover Chicago; although theMaroons finally caught fire in thesecond half, they were unable toclose the entire gap and finallysuffered a 63-59 upset.Dennis Waldon, top scorer onthe 1966-67 Chicago five, playedone of his best games this yearagainst Oberlin as he scored 18points and led both teams witheleven rebounds.SwimmingChicago’s swim squad split dualmeets against Rockford and Whea¬ton Colleges in competition atRockford on January 25. The fin-men defeated Rockford 53-47 bysweeping the two of the last threeevents but dropped a 57-46 decisionto Wheaton as they were forced tocompete without the services ofstar diver Dave Barnes.Steve Larrick paced the squadby taking victories in the 100- and200-yard freestyle races and the200-yard breast-stroke competition.Mike Koch-weser won both the1000- and 500-yard freestyle events,while Dave Rider, Chuck Calef,Mark Tundall, and Carl Johnsonteamed up to win the 400-yardmeet-opening medley relay.Against Wheaton Koch-weserstarred, scoring victories in thetwo distance freestyle events andin the 200-yard butterfly. Larrickwon the 100- and 200-yard freestyleevents, while the team of Tindall,Johnson, Calef, and Steve Brodywon the 400-yard freestyle relay.WrestlingThe University grapplers scoreda tight 19-16 victory over ConcordiaCollege Saturday by taking thefinal event of the meet. Chicagotook their second dual competitionof the year despite forfeiting toConcordia in the 152- and 160-lb.classes.Scoring individual wins for theMaroons were Frank Wrobel on apin in the 130-lb. class, Steve Biggson a 10-1 decision in the 137-lb.event, Ted Petersen on a pin inthe 167-lb. class, George Lane ina 4-0 decision over his 177-lb. op¬ponent, and finally Jim Capser in! the crucial concluding heavyweightdivision in a 12-4 decision. GymnasticsAlan Mangurten and GordonGroebe scored individual eventvictories in the gymnastics team’s87.55-74.50 loss to Whitewater StateCollege in a Saturday meet.Mangurten won the parallel barcompetition and took fourth inthree other events, while Groebetook the side horse, finished secondin the still rings, and third in theparallel bars.TrackThree-time Bond Medal-winnerJohn Beal paced the varsity trackteam in a surprisingly close battlewith Northwestern University athome Saturday. Although Big-Ten Northwestern won the meet 92-58,the Maroons took seconds in tenevents, thirds in 13 of 15, andscored several personal highs.Beal took one of the two Chicagovictories by taking the long jumpand picked up four seconds to total17 points; Ted Terpstra took the other University win by in the 880-yard run. Pat Murray, Jeff Melby,and John McLess all s« ored careerhighs as they finished second inthe mile, two-mile, and 400-yarddash respectively. Ken Thomastook a second and three thirds inanother fine effort.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERDO 3-7644PRESCRIPTIONS FIUED 1510 E. 55th St.EYE EXAMINATIONSNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES DO 3-6866CONTACT LENSESFencingThe Maroon fencing squad scoredits first victory of the year Satur-! day by defeating Oakland Collegein a triple dual meet at WayneState University. Chicago’s cava¬liers defeated Oakland 17-10 whilelosing 17-10 to Wayne State and22-5 to Cleveland State College.RIGHTS RECEPTIONSpock Calls for Peace OrganizingBy PAULA SZEWCZYKEditorial AssistantSpeaking before 200 people at abenefit reception of the MedicalCommittee for Human Rights atMarina Towers on Saturday, Dr.Benjamin Spock, famed baby doc¬tor and an active member of RE¬SIST, called for more organizedactionment. within the peace move-!Spock described the peacemovement as “hesitant and vacil¬lating” and warned that the con¬tinuing “fraticidal strife” amongthe various New Left organizationswill eventually make the move¬ment ineffective. He proposed athree-point program of action:• Making the opinion of theAmerican people known throughletters to congressmen and sena¬tors and referendums;• The use and manipulation ofcertain political action; and• The education of the peopleconcerning the Vietnam war.Spock also urged the peacemovement to support Eugene Mc¬Carthy as a Presidential candi¬date. “It is not proper,” he stated,“for us to go on criticizing Mc¬Carthy. We have got to use Mc¬Carthy and back McCarthy forwhat he is. The general principle is to do something in an election.Our job is not to complain but towork hard.”Nuclear AnnihilationSpock went on to denounce theJohnson administration as bring¬ing the United States “closer tonuclear annihilation.”“Our administration has beencaught lying time and timeagain,” he charged. “The govern-m e n t is determined to havepermanent control of North Viet¬nam. Yet after eight years of warand three years of escalation thiscountry is still three-fourths con¬trolled by the North Vietnamese.The only solution Johnson can findis further escalation.”Commenting on draft resistance,Spock warned that its consequenceis a high price to pay for an indi¬vidual. However, he predicted that“if hundreds of thousands ofyoung people refuse to fight thewar, this might be effective inending the war.”SAMUEL A. BELL'BOY SHELL FROM BILL"since in*PICKUP * DELIVERY SERVICE52 £ Lake Park493-5200r PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 NOTICE!The Reynolds Club Bar¬bershop will be closedSaturdays beginning Feb.I, to conform with newregulations of the FairLabor Standards Act. Hrs.Mon.-Fri. will remain 8;J9a.m. to 5 p.m.Carl Alkire• * Manager At The Idea Bank,almost a thirdof our VPsare under 40.We've got 31 Vice Presidents.Nine are under forty. And five ofthose nine are 3j5 or younger.You see, we value ideas aboveeverything else.And to us a good idea is a goodidea whether it comes from a man60—or a man your age.Youthful thinking is one reasonwe’re the fifth largest bank inIllinois.It's helped us grow. From $17million in 1933 (we're young inthat sense, too, that’s the year wewere founded,) to over $800 mil¬ lion today.And we’ve just begun. Becausewe think young. Courageously.Creatively.So if a banking career, in Chi¬cago, where the action is, excitesyou. If you want opportunity butdemand challenge, too. We maybe the organization for you.And you may be the kind offuture leader we are seeking.How about planning now tomeet our representative on yourcampus February 8?It could be a good idea.American National Bankand Trust Company of Chicago • LaSalle at Washington 60690Phone (312) 621 5000M FDIC«I968. ANBJanuary 30, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONJOHN MOSCOW“I:]e Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerLiterary Editor David L. AikenAssociate Editors David E. Gumpert ||Daniel HertzbergEditor Emeritus David A. Satter ||Student StrikeOne of the more interesting confrontations at theweekend conference of the Student Mobilization Commit¬tee, aside from the ludicrous questioning of the blackcaucus by a Chicago’s American reporter, was the dis¬agreement between University of Chicago Students fora Democratic Society members and others about the valueof a one-day student strike against the war in Vietnam.Although this University is considered by many tobe one of the nation’s great radical campuses, experiencehas proven in several instances that the number of stu¬dents here who are willing to advance their political idealsthrough radical action is not overwhelmingly large. Andeven though a vast majority of Chicago students dis¬approve of U.S. involvement in Vietnam, relatively feware convinced of University complicity, albeit sometimesunconscious, with the military-industrial complex. MostChicago students, it seems, would think a boycott ofclasses as a protest against Vietnam a highly impracticaland out-of-place action.Thus it was that less than a sixth of the undergradu¬ate student body kept the vigil in the AdministrationBuilding two years ago, in protest against what will prob¬ably remain one of the most blatant instances of the useof the University by the military. Thus there was a strongreaction on the part of most students against the possibi¬lity of a disruptive demonstration against Dow Chemicallast year.The argument that the University by refusing to makemoral decisions except in cases where its own existenceis threatened acts as a staunch protector of the status quo,is well taken. But until it is made more convincingly be¬fore the larger non-activist audience, tactics like the stu¬dent strike will not achieve broad-based support.ParadoxThe Young Republicans are at once one of the bright¬est hopes and most dismal failures of the American poli¬tical scene. They presented both images at their mockpolitical convention here over the weekend in coming upwith a challenging platform and a dreary set of nominees.There is a split in the national GOP that is reflectedin the YR’s, between the civil libertarians subscribing tothe political and economic views of Chicago economistMilton Friedman and the less imaginative supporters of“me-tooism” in the Republican ranks. The latter havedominated the scene both locally and nationally for yearsand have stifled all realistic debate on where the UnitedStates should be headed and how it should get there.By supporting Richard M. Nixon, best known for1 hisattacks on the Democrats as “traitors” or “pinks” in theearly 1950’s, they have chosen the course of the NewDeal in supporting larger government, but have rejectedthe New Deal notion that such power should be used tocorrect inequities. It would have been far better had theysupported Milton Friedman himself.Only by such a course could a realistic challenge tothe Democrats be mounted. There hasn’t been an ideolo¬gical battle in this country since the 1930’s, and in viewof the massive discontent in the country today it is hightime that such a debate recommenced.Managing Editor Roger BlackExecutive Editor Michael SeidmanNews Editor John MoscowPhotooraDhic Editor David Travis University Drug Prospect:Student Use IncreasingUniversity administrators areworried about the drug situationhere. Frankly, they do not knowwhat they can do to stop drug use,but they are not happy about theprospect of increasing student in¬volvement with drugs, leading toa large-scale police raid such asrecently occured on the StonyBrook campus of the New YorkState University.Many students have been advis¬ing the administrators to relaxand to let the situation ride. Whilethis is not objected to by some ofthe administrators involved, theyall want to keep the lid on druguse, especially in the dormitories.Until last year or the year be¬fore, they explain, students inter¬ested in using drugs kept the Uni¬versity uninvolved by smoking ordropping acid off campus. Thisenabled students to use the drugsand the University to keep policeoff its grounds at the same time.RECENTLY, HOWEVER, asdrug use spread to the nation’ssecondary schools, students begancoming to Chicago as drug usersrather than acquiring the taste fordrugs here. Since the rules requir¬ing residence for first-year stu¬dents haven’t been relaxed to get users out of the dorms, the Uni¬versity has been stuck with alarge and growing number of stu¬dents who insist upon the right touse illicit drugs in the Collegehouses.No one in the administration iseager to force students to stop us¬ing drugs, but they are even lesswilling to allow students to use thedormitories as a refuge from thepolice. Even if they were so in¬clined, however, the experience ofStony Brook has made it clearthat police will raid university dor¬mitories if they are too wide open.IT IS IN THIS context that thecase of three students in RickertHouse must be understood. Thestudents were caught by theirresident head in a room wheremarijuana had just been smoked.They will be appearing before theDiscipline Committee in the nearfuture. In the opinion of many hous¬ing heads in the University, theircrime—if indeed they committedany—was in not being more dis¬crete. It is a fault which theyshare with many other students inthe housing system. The easiestway to avoid trouble with the Uni¬versity, and for the University,over drugs is to make sure no one else is disturbed by illicit activi¬ties.No one needs to be told what todo, but recently students seem tobe forgetting that their activitiesare highly illegal, carrying ex¬tremely severe legal penalties.They should not forget that fact.NOR SHOULD THEY be deludedinto feeling, simply because the at¬mosphere both in the Universityand in the nation generally ismore tolerant of drug use, that useof marijuana, acid, speed, orwhatever will be legalized in thenear future. The United States isbound by treaty to ban all narco¬tic drugs, including marijuana byname (if not by scientific proof of“narcoticness”). Treaties in thiscountry have the force of lawand, when in disagreement with theConstitution, supercede that a swell.Since it is unlikely that theUnited States will abrogate thetreaty and since, on the otherhand, it is almost impossible toseriously contemplate a dying outof the current interest in drugs, itbehooves both the students andthe administration to do as muchas possible to avoid friction.Letters to the EditorsUnWashed PromI feel obliged to try and clearup some of the misconceptionsthat must have been formed asa result of reading your other¬wise well-meaning article in lastFriday’s Maroon concerningWash Prom.It referred to the Prom as hav¬ing gone semi-floral. This is onlysemi-correct: although it is truethat we have tried to broadenour base of support by incorpor¬ating more current themes intothe Prom, we have not excludedany of the traditional aspects,such as the orchestral sounds inthe Cloister Club, the buffet din¬ner, or the coronation of MissUniversity of Chicago.It has not been the custom inthe past, nor will be this year, toturn away guests at the door forimproper dress. However, be¬cause of the apparent confusionas to what is acceptable, I shouldlike to describe what has beenso, before. Most men comedressed in suits, or sport jackets(except Walter and his cortege,who are in traditional 18th-centurygarb). The women usually varyfrom floor length elegant formals,to Sunday-type dresses. Flowersare optional.This year we expect a large,heterogenous attendance compris¬ing elements of all student class¬ifications, faculty and adminis¬trative personnel. ^KEN LEVIN, ’68ChairmanWash Prom Committee$2.00 RewardThe “Drug Statement” by ourlearned deans, Wayne Booth andCharles O’Connell, if not an occa¬sion of cosmic laughter, is at least worthy of a few derisivechuckles. If their four argumentsagainst the use of mind-expandingdrugs are the cumulative effectof “the state of mind of the seri¬ous scholar,” one can hardly helppondering what we are gettingfor our $2100 tuition.Of course, we do not wish ourrooms or ourselves bugged bythe devices of narcotic agents orthe Dean of Students Office. MayI suggest an unhistorical solutionheavily on the consciousness ofour well-meaning deans. I shalloffer a $2 reward to any personvho has The Maroon print a photo¬graph of any undercover agent orinformer or other persons of badmorals and poor upbringing atlarge on the University campus.This is a student problem andI hope other students will comeforward and help weed out theseundesirables.I am a law student at Chicagobut prefer my name withheld forobvious reasons. The offer is gooduntil revoked or I am busted.NAME WITHHELDBY REQUESTMobilizationWe, the undersigned, have con¬stituted ourselves an ad hoc com¬mittee to gather and preservethe experiences of those men andwomen peace demonstrators whowere involved in confrontationswith the law during the week ofOctober 15th in Oakland, inMadison, in Washington, inBrooklyn, or wherever.Already, several excellent ac¬counts of these nationwide con¬frontations have appeared in col¬lege newspapers throughout thecountry. No doubt, among thethousands of people “who werethere,” many returned with pho¬tographs, films and tapes-or know others who did. All suchmaterial, published and unpub¬lished is of immense value andit is a matter of urgency thatthese documents be collectedwhile they are available.If there is sufficient responseto our appeal, we shall make theinformation available in someappropriate form as swiftly aspossible.NAOM CHOMSKYProfessor of LinguisticsMITMONROE ENGLELecturer in EnglishHarvardHAROLD TOVISHArtistAd Hoc Committeeof Confrontation164 Rawson RoadBrookline, Mass. 02146CondolencesI wish to thank the manyfriends and professors who sentcards and letters of condolenceafter the death of my daughterBobette on January 1, 1968, enroute to the University of Chicago.MRS. EDNA C. HANKELLetters to the editors must besigned, although names may bewitheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.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 tenlh week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, 111. 60437. 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 Press Service.6 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 30, 1968GADFLYA Plea for a Reconsideration on FootballBy JERRY LIPSCHIn a recent editorial condemn¬ing the military display whichlaunched the “Super Bowl”game, Commonweal (a lay Catho¬lic left-wing magazine) made agood point about the value ofsports.“The point to be borne in mindabout sports,” it began, “is thatthey mean something so long asthey have no significance. Thatit is now possible to run the mileunder four minutes, to swim 200meters under two minutes, toscore 100 points in a basketballgame, and so on, are facts ut¬terly without redeeming humanimportance. Therein, though,lies the charm of sports. Wheneverything else is laden downwith implications, seriousness,depths and heights, it is good forpeople to have useless diversions,capable of arousing great inter¬est and great passion, but carry¬ing no metaphysical baggage atall.”Some confirmation for this viewmay lie in the fact that, like mu¬sic and art, the appeal of spec¬tator sports seems to cut acrossmany cultural boundaries, bothwithin and outside this country.And, despite the fact that thestereotyped “jock” is clearly notin vogue among Chicago’s post-Freudian, neo-Marxist existential¬ist rational-mystics, persons ofsuch “persuasion” (the author in¬cluded) comprise a good part ofthe crowd at the Field Housethese days.PERHAPS, THEN, this is asign that the anti-athletic crusad¬ers who (with the help of thedearly beloved, often invoked,though long since practically ig¬nored R.M. Hutchins) separatedfootball from the Body and Spir¬it of the Academy and also thelatter-day defenders of the faith,have all graduated or been trans¬formed into zombies by the longhours of their contemplative life.Happily I have found most stu¬dents don’t seem to care one wayor another about the varsity stat¬us of football. Once in a while,however, one comes across whatis variously and erroneouslycalled the “old” or the “typical”Chicago student who will makesome half-hearted argumentsagainst reinstating football whicheventually boil down to the factthat the football ban has someirrational “symbolic value.”For those who are unfamiliarwith Chicago’s particular brandof inauthenticity in this area, itshould be pointed out that Chica¬ go does not have a football team.We have a “football class” (usu¬ally referred to with a wink ofthe eye) which — if I have theparaterminology right — plays“scrimmages” instead of gameswith other “classes” or eventeams (!) from other schools.SINCE, by an act of the trust¬ees and the faculty, football is notrecognized as a varsity sport be¬side the others, its participantsalone may not receive varsityletters, the traditional award inthis sort of thing. They mustsettle for little more than a sin¬cere pat on the back and an en¬thusiastic “Good show!” Theproblem is not that players willparticipate only to receive let¬ters or even that all of the euphe¬misms significantly affect actualplay.But taken together, the singlingout of football, the phoney termi¬nology, and, above all, the stere¬otypical thinking that surroundsthe issue become a source of hu¬miliation, of alienation from thestudent body as a whole, and ofhostility toward what may, withconsiderable justification, be re¬garded as hypocritically illiberalattitudes on the part of manymembers of the University com¬munity.Most opponents of recognitionfor football come, generally, notfrom the politically active left oncampus, but from another group,usually unheard from, which,though vaguely alienated fromeverything, see some solution inregarding the university as some¬thing of a Church — the last bas¬tion of purity, truth, intelligenceand sanity. (In contrast, the Lefthas long since abandoned itsearlier idyllic notions of the uni¬versity, preferring to see it as aprivileged association of self-emasculating eunuchs, consoledby gold, which is, in trade, eager¬ly supplied by the military-indus¬trial complex.BUT ONE fellow leftist didoffer the argument that the Uni¬versity’s PR men would exploitvarsity football in their long-evi¬denced effort to give the Univer¬sity a more “normal” image.This, it seems to me, is givingour Public Relations Office a lit¬tle too much credit. I’ve beenreading University press releasesfor several years, and, despitethe effort to fill what must be ahuge quota with crap like“MORE UC ENTRANTSPLAYED HIGH SCHOOLSPORTS THAN EVER BE¬FORE!” we still get outside pub¬licity for a Dow demonstrationbut little or none for a “grudge” basketball match against LakeForest.So long as any student can play— which is the policy of the var¬sity program — and so long asthe number of A.A. Stagg scholar¬ships doesn’t rise to Gargantuanproportions, varsity footballshouldn’t distrub anybody. I cer¬tainly don’t care if some old fud¬dy-duddy gives more money be¬cause the alumni magazinemakes Chicago sports look likeanother wonderful part of theGreat University marching ontoward the Big Picture, the NewFrontier, or whatever else “for¬ward looking” institutions aresupposed to be marching on to,these days. The point is, thateven without varsity football asa topic, the PR men have beendoing pretty well depicting theUniversity as something evenClark Kerr would have night¬mares about. Despite the initial“newsworthiness” of reinstate¬ment, varsity football would pro¬vide no serious new weapon.YET, FOR some students, theban on football, the great Amer¬ican Joe College sport, is thesymbol of our holding the sacredline against all the impuritieswhich threaten Chicago’s serious¬ness, individuality, and courageto stand up for what is right.That this institution has lost(if it ever had) the last qualityis evident enough, as is the factthat its individuality will prob¬ably always depend on the natureof the educational experience asdetermined by the pseudo-author-itive predilections and prejudicesof its faculty!The seriousness of the studentbodv ^ perhaps a more realisticconcern. Serious concern aboutoneself and the world is an at¬tribute which I think, is prettywell assured in part by the aca¬demic standards of the collegeand, above all, by the STUDENTBODY itself, which manages todo SOMETHING every once ina while which ruins several yearsof image building: things like sit-ins and smoke-ins and “Days ofInquiry,” spattered with the re¬CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas wtiat you need from >» $10 Used 9X12Rug, Jo a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants & Mill Returns at fractionof the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount wnti this Ad.FREE DELIVERYUniversity Theatre PresentsTHE CHANGELINGA JACOBEAN DRAMA BY MIDDLETON AND ROWLEYStarringJOAN MANKIN WILLIAM REDDY DONALD SHOJAIDirected by Mark RosinFri., Sat., Sun., (Feb. 2, 3, 4) at 8:30 P.M. Reynolds Club TheatreTickets at Reynolds Club Desk and at the DoorFaculty and Student Discount freshing unintellectuality of pro¬found Proletarian insight.For those crass violations of theivory tower manage to leak outto students all over the countrywho are attracted by the factthat here is an institution where(at least) the students cannotseparate “the life of the mind”from the existential and animalangst and joys of life itself.I think it is about time thatthe rather curious restriction onfootball be dropped — if not inthe name of football, then in thename of civil liberty; if not inthe name of principle, in thename of amusement; and if notin the name of fun, then in thename of the glorious insignifi¬cance of the whole affair — whichis, as I said, the charm ofsports, anyway.(Editor’s note: Mr. Lipsch,’68, vice-president of Student Government, is planning tosubmit to the SG Assembly aresolution calling for the reinstitution of football as a varsitysport at Chicago.)foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!^ r foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange“I don't have,two years'experience.I have one year twiceVSome people get experiencein a job.Other people get older.There’s a big difference. Andit all depends on where youwork, and with whom youwork. You can start someplace that has all the propersystems engineering creden¬tials — significant contracts,modern physical plant, andthe usual fringe benefits —and find yourself a couple ofyears later, just a couple ofyears behind.Or, you can come to a placelike MITRE and get experi¬ence. And grow. We have thecredentials, of course. (Wehappen to think they’re thebest.) But we have somethingmore. An attitude. We wantyou to get the best systemsexperience in the business.We want to share what weknow with you, want you toabsorb it as fast as you can.The quicker you grasp things,the quicker things get done. The more experience you get,the faster you grow.And that’s to our mutualbenefit.Here’s the kind of experienceyou getMITRE is pioneering in thedesign and engineering ofcomplex information, sensor,command, control and com¬munications systems for theUnited States Government.Our assignments includeprominent military electronicsystems, as well as civiliansystems for future nationalair traffic control and highspeed ground transportation.We’d like you to know moreabout MITREAbout what we do, how wethink, and what it might belike to work with us. If you’dlike to know more about us,and have a degree (preferablyadvanced) in electronics,mathematics or physics, we’dlike to talk with you.INTERVIEWS WILL BE CONDUCTEDON CAMPUS, February 6SIGN UP NOW AT THE PLACEMENT OFFICE.Or write for more information: Mr. L.J. Glinos, CollegeRelations Coordinator, The MITRE Corporation, Box 208Bedford, Massachusetts. CN2r MITRErywi.iriM.iAn Equal Opportunity Employer (Male A Female)Formed in 1958 . . ■ pioneer in the design and development of command andcontrol systems . . . MITRE serves as technical advisor and systems engineerfor the Electronic Systems Division of the Air Force Systems Command andprovides technical assistance to the Federal Aviation Administration, the De¬partment oj Defense, the Department of Transportation and the National Aero¬nautics and Space Administration.January 30, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7Calendar of Events of InterestPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must type information onCalendar forms available at The Maroon Of¬fice, Ida Noyes 303. Forms must then be sentor brought to the Office at least two daysbefore date of publication.Tuesday, January 30LECTURE: (Pathology), "Biochemical As¬pects of Tumor Antigens," Dr. Robert W.Wissler. Billings P-117, 3 p.m.MEETING: (University Faculty and Board),College Council. Swift Common Room, 3:40p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (Mathematics) "Groups ofAutomorphism of Operator Algebras,"Richard Kadison. Eckhart 206, 4:30 p.m.FILM: (Doc Films), "1,000 Eyes of Dr.Mabuse," Fritz Lang. Soc. Sci. 122, 7:15,9:15 p.m.SEMINAR: (Hillel Foundation), "After theSix Day War," Rabbi David Polish, BethEmet Synagogue, Evanston. Hillel House,5715 Woodlawn 7:45 p.m.LECTURE: (William Vaugn Moody), "WaltWhitman: The Man and the Myth," JorgeBorges, Argentinian Novelist and Critic.Breasted Hall, 8:00 p.m.FOLK DANCING AND SQUARE DANCING:Assembly Hall, International House, 1414E. 59th Street, 8:00 p.m.DISCUSSION: (Alice's Restaurant), "Alter¬natives to the Draft" Staughton Lynd,JIM LANGDONASSOCIATES presentsTHIS SATURDAY AT 8:30stevethallenSHOWSTEVE ALLEN -JAYNE MEADOWSSPECIAL GUEST STARMEL T0RME$6.50, $5.50, $4.50, $3.50AUDIT0RIUMTH EATERFRIDAY, FEB. 92 Performancesat 6:30 & 9:30 P.M.THELOVIN’ SPOONFULand THEFIFTH DIMENSION$6 00,$5 00,$4 00 &$3.00OPERA HOUSEOrder by mail. Send check ormoney order to Jim LangdonAssociates, suite 3100, 75 °E.Wacker Drive, Chicago, 60601Tickets available at TicketCentral, 212 N, Michigan Are.& all Montgomery Ward andCranford stores. For informa¬tion dial tickets Jerome Skolnick. Ida Noyes Library, 8:15p.m.SECOND CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT CON¬VENTION: (Politics for Peace), PlanningMeeting. 2446 E. 75th Street, 8:30 p.m.EXHIBIT: (Hillel Foundation), Sholom Alei-chem Lithographs, Anatoli Kaplan, fromthe Jewish Museum in New York. HillelHouse, 5715 Woodlawn, through February20.Wednesday, January 31FILM: (Sights and Sounds of India), "For¬tress and Temple Cities: Bijapur, Belur,Madurai," Rosenwald 2, 12:30 p.m.STAFF CONFERENCE IV: CORONARYARTERY DISEASE: (Department of Medi¬cine),CONFERENCE: (Department of Medicine),"Lipoprotein Abnormalities in CoronaryHeart Disease," Dr. Donald S. Fredrick¬son, director National Heart Institute,"Angiocardiographic Diagnosis and Surgi¬cal Therapy of Coronary Heart Disease,"Dr. F. Mason Sones, Jr. Billings P-117,12:30 p.m. LECTURE: (Business School), Kenneth N.Davis, Jr., Vice-President, IBM Corpora¬tion, Armonk, New York. Business East,103, 1:00 p.m.LECTURE: (Biochemistry), "On the Mechan¬ism of Recombination during Transforma¬tion in Haemophilus influenzae," Sol H.Goodgal, University of Pennsylvania. Ab¬bott 101, 4 p.m.SEMINAR: (Spanish Department), "El Ale-ph y Otros Textos," in Spanish, Jorge LuisBorges Soc. Sci. 122, 5 p.m.FILM: (Doc Films), "It Happened OneNight," Grank Kapra, with Clark Gableand Claudette Colbert. Soc Sci. 122, 7:15,9:15. p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances from the Bri¬tish Isles and Scandinavia, Ida Noyes Hall,Dance Room, 8 p.m.Thursday, February 1LECTURE: .(Pathology), "Cellular Responseto Tumor Virus," Dr. Werner Kirsten.Billings P-117, 3 p.m.REHEARSAL: (UC Concert Band), LabSchool, Beltield Hall 244, 5 p.m. VARSITY TRACK: Wheaton and Wayne State,Field House, 7 p.m.NATURE OF SYMBOLIZATION LECTURE:(New Collegiate Division), "Frames ofReference, Concepts and Objectivity,"Richard McKeon, Charles F. Grey Distin¬guished Service Professor, Philosophy andClassical Language. Ida Noyes Library,7:30 p.m.FILM: (Burton-Judson Free Cinema), "TheGreat Adventure," Judson Dining Room,8:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Chicago Academy of Sciences),"Mass Spectroscopy," Francis Throw. 2001North Clark Street, 7:30 p.m.EXHIBITION: Photography by John Demov.Midway Studios, 6016 Ingleside Ave., dally9-5, Sat. and Sun. 12-5, through February 4,ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: (Hillel Founda¬tion), Teaching and requests. Hillel House,5715 Woodlawn, 7:30-10:30 p.m.Recruiting VisitsRepresentatives from the following will be visiting the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement in Room 200 of the ReynoldsClub. For appointments, call Ext. 3282.January 30 — UARCO, Inc., Chicago andWatseka; Cleveland; Oakland; Riverside-Paris, Texas; Deep River, Conn. GeneralBusiness or Sales Training Programs formale graduates.January 31—Bureau of Indian Affairs, U SDepartment of the Interior, Interviewingfor teaching couples (elementary) for Alas¬ka; elementary teachers in Arizona, NewMexico, Montana, North Dakota, and SouthDakota; guidance counselors in Arizona,New Mexico, North Dakota, and SouthDakota; Naval Ordnance Station. ForestPark; positions in personnel, industrialrelations, purchasing, and programming;United Aircraft Research Lab, East Hart¬ford; chemists, mathematics, physics, andstatistics at all degree levels.February 1 — Federal City College, Wash¬ington, D.C., is the first public city col¬lege in Washington and has openings inall liberal arts fields.Frank Capra's IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHTClark Gable and Claudette Colbert trek through Depression America in THE comedy of the 30’s. Wed. Soc Sci 122. 7:15 and 9:15. 759 Doc Films.How would you like to jumpinto your career with both feet... and be on therun from the beginning?Western Electric has a unique pro¬gram of individual development forthose interested in a managementcareer—a high-risk, high-rewardprogram that offers you one of themost dramatic opportunities inbusiness. You are put in a man¬agement position immediately —required to handle high-level trans¬actions all by yourself. If you doyour job well, you'll have begun amanagerial career in the growingcommunications industry. If thedemands of the job prove toostringent (and they will for some),then both of us will benefit bylearning this before a significant investment in time has been made.Whatever your background —engineering, science, business, lib¬eral arts—there may be a placefor you in the College GraduateProgram at Western Electric. Yourcollege record must indicate ahigh level of scholastic achieve¬ment and the ability and initiativefor effective leadership—and youmust be interested in a manage¬ment career.If you feel you qualify, be sureto arrange for a personal inter¬view when the Bell System recruit¬ ing team visits your campus onFebruary 7. And before that, getyour copy of the Western ElectricHigh Risk, High Reward bookletfrom your Placement Officer. Orwrite: College Relations Staff Man¬ager, Western Electric Company,Room 2508, 222 Broadway, N°wYork, New York 10038. An equalopportunity employer.Western ElectricMANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEMTHE CHICAGO MAROON January 30, 1968Draftee Selection, Deferments Remain UndecidedBy RICHARD ANTHONYCollegiate Press ServiceWASHINGTON-Last fall, edu¬cation officials were saying thatchaos would result if PresidentJohnson didn’t act to clear up theuncertainties in the draft situationby the first of this year.The first has come and gone, theWhite House is still silent on thedraft, and graduate schools and po¬tential grad students are seeingthe first signs of the chaos that waspredicted.There are two major questionsthat still must be decided regard¬ing the draft: the first is, how arethe actual draftees to be selectedfrom the pool of draft-eligible men;the second is, what academicfields, if any, are to be designatedas providing draft deferments forthose doing graduate work in them.(Under the terms of the 1967 draftlaw, the National Security Councilactually has the power to decidethe second question. The Councilincludes high officials such as theVice President and the Secretaryof State, as well as the President.In fact, though, the President willundoubtedly make the final deci¬sion on both questions concerningthe draft, if any decisions aremade.)Graduate school deans have beenpredicting that their incomingclasses next fall would be made upprimarily of veterans and women,since they assumed most gradu¬ating male seniors would bedrafted. This prediction may turnout to be true, but at this pointthere’s no way of knowing, becausethe President hasn’t yet said whohe’s going to draft.Nominating ConventionThe Voters Committee to Change,an ad hoc committee working withPolitics for Peace in promotingpeace candidates in the 2nd Con¬gressional District, has called aconvention Saturday for the pur¬pose of nominating delegates to thenational political conventions.The convention will be held inthe Chicago Vocational High Schoolauditorium, 2100 E. 87th St., start¬ing at 9 a.m.Over 1,000 signatures appear inan open letter the group has circu¬lated to advertise the convention.The ad appears in today’s Maroon.CtF examinationsFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptomatrUt53 Kimbark Plaza•200 East 53rd StraatHYde Park 3-8372MOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOBBY STORE OfTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. SS HY 3-Y25SStudent DiscountsSKITELEMARKTRANSPORTATIONTOWS MEALSLESSONSLODGINGINSURANCEENTERTAINMENTU. OF C. SKI CLUB721*3603FEBRUARY 2, 3, 4 Therefore, graduate schools whichare beginning to make decisionson applicants can’t tell whether ornot the students they accept thisspring will be coming in the fall.A similar problem exists for stu¬dents. College seniors and first-yeargrad students can’t plan for futurestudy until the government’s draftpolicies are cleared up.At this point any speculationabout what the White House willdo must be very tentative, becausethere really is no way of knowing.Education officials with close con¬tacts in government predicted ac¬tion by the President before Christ¬mas, and nothing came of it. Thereare, however, a few observationsthat can be made.It appears that the President (or,in this case, the President and oth¬er members of the National Securi¬ ty Council) will not grant defer¬ments to all grad students in thenatural sciences, math and engin¬eering.A special government committeeset up to study the deferment ques¬tion last year recommended defer¬ments of this kind. Although theWhite House has not said anythingpublicly about a decision, educationofficials have been told privatelythat the President has rejected thecommittee’s recommendations.Whether he and the Council willdesignate certain narrowly definedfields as draft-deferrable is at thispoint unknown.White House Will ActOn the question of how drafteeswill be chosen, there is only onething that can be said with a rela¬tive degree of certainty at thispoint—the White House will do something. If it doesn’t, and if Con-1gress also fails to act, then the tra¬ditional Selective Service method Iof drafting the oldest eligible malesfirst will be followed, meaning thatthe Army will be full of collegegraduates.To make sure that there is somediversity in the ages of thedraftees, the President will have totake action. What he will do, andwhen, however, is not clear at thispoint.John Morse, an official of theAmerican Council on Education(ACE), believes the President willset up seven age groups, one foreach year from 19 to 25, and thenorder draft boards to choose a cer¬tain percentage of each group forservice. Presumably about a thirdof draft-eligible college men wouldbe taken under such a system, since draft needs for the comingyear are anticipated at about athird of the total draft-eligible pool.Whether Morse’s prediction isborne out or not, it is safe to saythat not all draft-eligible collegegraduates will be drafted. Unfortu¬nately there is no way of predictingwhich of them will be taken. Priori¬ty may be given to those withbirthdays early in the year, assome have suggested, but thenagain it may not.Morse and other education offi¬cials in Washington are now con¬centrating their efforts on gettingCongress to clear up the draft situ¬ation. Although there is not muchan individual student can do to getaction from the White House, stu¬dents can assist in pushing for Con¬gressional action by writing to Sen¬ators and Representatives.Fritz Lang lOOO EYES OF DR. MABUSEA power-mad psychoanalyst who stands far above the law. Tonight. Soc Sci 122. 7:15 and 9:15. 759. Doc Films.Depends on the giant. Actually, some giants are just regularkinds of guys. Except bigger.And that can be an advantage.How? Well, for one thing, you've got more going foryou. Take Ford Motor Company. A giant in an excitingand vital business. Thinking giant thoughts. About theprofit opportunities in Mustang. Cougar. A city car forthe future.Come to work for this giant and you’ll begin to thinklike one.Because you're dealing with bigger problems, theconsequences, of course, will be greater. Your responsibilitiesheavier. That means your experience must be better—morecomplete. And so, you'll-get the kind of opportunities only agiant can give.Giants just naturally seem to attract top professionals.Men that you'll be working with, and for. Financial manage'ment pros working hard to accelerate your advancement. Because there’s more to do, you'll learn more. In moreareas. You may handle as many as three different assignmentsin your first two years.You'll develop a talent for making hardmosed, imagina-tive decisions. And you’ll know how these decisions affectthe guts of the operation. At the grass roots. Because you'llhave been there.If you'd like to be a giant yourself, and you've gotbetter ideas in financial management, see the man from Fordwhen he visits your campus. Or send your resume to FordMotor Companyj College Recruiting Department.You and Ford can grow bigger together.THE AMERICAN ROAD, DEARBORN, MICHIGANAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.What’s it liketo manage moneyfor a giant?1 think I'd manage quite well.January 30, 1968i) I THE CHICAGO MAROON\:Paid Advertisement Paid AdvertisementWould Yot Vote for LBJ Agate ? Say NO Now iAn Open Letter to Second Congressional District VotersIn November 1964 an overwhelming majority of voters in our Districtsupported President Johnson We did so for two reasons: I Hepromised that We ore not about to send Americon boys nine orten thousond miles away from home to do what Asian boys oughtto be doing for themselves." Akron. Ohio. Oct 21. 1964 2 Hepromised that his Administration would deal with the long neglectedproblems of our cities ond work to eliminate poverty from Amenco.PRESIDENT JOHNSON HAS MORE THAN FAIEED TO KEEP HISCAMPAIGN PLEDGESOver 15.000 Americans and countless Vietnamese hove been killedm Viet Nom And as Senator George McGovern has said: "We seembent on saving the Vietnamese people, even if we have to kill themand demolish their country to do so "WHILE WE SPEND >322.000 TO KILL EACH VIETNAMESE.>53 IS SPENT IN THE WAR ON POVERTY FOR EACH PERSONCLASSIFIED AS POOR RATS MULTIPLY IN OUR EVER INCREASING SLUMSPUBLIC EDUCATION FURTHER DETERIORATESTHE ECONOMIC GAP BETWEEN BUCK AND WHITE GETSLARGERURBAN TRANSPORTATION PROBLEMS WORSENWE ALL FACE SLOW SUFFOCATION FROM AIR AND WATERPOLLUTIONWe the undersigned residents of the Second Congressional Districtrefuse to commit the CRIME OF SILENCE OR INACTION. We declorefrom this day on our energies and our votes will go to those candi¬dates who will oppose both the war in Vietnam ond the foreignpolicy which mokes it possible, and who will work to turn our nation'sattention to urgent domestic tosks.For these reasons we call for a convention of oil fellow residents ofthe 2nd Congressional District who share our sense of urgency. Atthis convention we hope to nominate delegates to the notional poli¬tical conventions who will support the nomination of genuine peoce candidates for the presidency ond oppose the renomination ofLyndon Boines Johnson. We shall support a candidate for Congressond possibly for other offices.Every day a new incident of violence in the streets or a neighbor'sson's death in the war brings home the awful truth:OUR GOVERNMENTS POLICIES ARE MAKING THINGS WORSENOT BETTEROUR FUTURE AND OUR CHILDREN'S FUTURE DEPENDS ONWHAT WE DO THIS YEARWE URGE ALL LIKEMINDED FELLOW RESIDENTS OF THE 2ndCONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT TO PARTICIPATE IN THE FEBRUARY3 CONVENTION TO BE HELD IN THE AUDITORIUM OF CHICAGOVOCATIONAL SCHOOL. 2100 E 87th St . Starting at 9 A MTwo delegates to the Democratic and Republican conventions arechosen from eoch congressional district in the June primaries.Dvnald AMAllow AbramsonEugene AchterRuth AdornsClifford Ad elm onNancy AdalmonRichard P AlborosNorman 1. AlhadoffRoborta Loo AJhirofrank AltonPhilip M AUonOonnit AltmanAlan Amo«Jo Andonon, Jr.Uoyd B. AndorBonBruce Andie hGeorge T. AngwinMrs G. f. AngwinMarvin A p or onLorraino Appel bournFran ArbottorMrs. Hilda ArmmJamos ArnoldHarvoy ArnoldRon AronicaAndrow J. AronsonSimon AronsonBarboro J. AsnorThoodoro AsnorDomol AuorbochJohn M. BadortschorGonovtovo BaohrRufus BaohrJan BakorJock BorboroJoan Bar on holt iR Michool BarnottDavid R Bar offDavid Baron#Cora G. BarronEdyth I. BarryMary BarthelemySandra Loo BortkyRita BascanNoot Wm Bask orS BatomanRoborta BauorJonnifor BaumgartnerRonald Bayerfrank BoolSusan BoatHenry Bool#Susan BooleRichard W. BoatsJoot BockCurtis Bock manPhyllis Botsomoior0 R BoldinJoyco B#nn«;;Samuel i. kenne lEdward BorckmanBruco BorgPamela BorgStuart BormanDoborah J. BernsteinJoel BersteinVictor J. BernsteinSydney Bild, M 0.Ira S BlottJudith BlankThomos BlauCarolyn BlockRichard BlockRobert BlockHarold C. BloomLawrence S BloomFredrick BlumMrs Frederick BlumMr ond Mrs. Ross BooneWayne C BoothR. BorovoiRoger BoshesMargot BotsfordCarol BowmanPolly BeyapanHarry L. BoyteJeon K BradburyJosh BrandRudy Joan BratmanStanley BratmanJoseph BraunJoyce BraunDaniel BrennerHoda BrtgmonBoa BrodskyMox BrodskyMr and Mrs. Edward BrodyJan BreehL;dword E. A. BrombergAmy BromsenBennett BrownBernard O BrownChorfette BrownCliff BrownDavid C. BrownAnn BrowningDon BrowningPreston A. BrowningJudith BrewnstoneCarole BurroughsStephen BurstemAgnes BesheilEllen BettenweiserRebecca BymeAdelaide B CadteJoan L CallahanMr ond Mrs. Leon CarnovskyOar N CarsonPaul L. CarsonBruco CarterChristine CossetConstance CassidyAdnenne CenturyLillian CenturyBan ChaboyProf Vore C ChappellDorothy ChmSaMy ChasneffBert ChetrenAlan Chdlbo ChwrgmNick GamJudy OerkMarilyn Kay ClarkeUU CloseNicholas H OuhnRobert C- Coburnbene CechErik CochraneDaniel CohenFred CohenMdton CohenFrederick F CohnMdton Colo David CollierG V ConleeSteve K. CookSydney CookLeroy F. CooleyHelene CourtoisBarbara E. CourtsBarbara C. CramEllen CrainRobert W CrawfordSusan J. CrawfordWylie CrawfordSteven CrockettWilliam Harold CullJohn CullenEileen CumberlandMr. and Mrs. David CammingAlice J. DanLawrence DavieLorry DavisNathan DavisDorothy A. DayBill DeHartEric DeibergMrs Voile Do NoveuCharles DerberCarl BosonsKenneth DessairFrancis J. Do TomaClifford M DotsThomas DichterBill DockerJamos A. DonaldsonRobert J. DonovanRobert DesorR. DretsinJulius DrummondAllen R DubetskyAda L. Dubov AJill DulischSharon DunkleDavid L. DunlapMichael DunlapSonia EckorMarilyn EdmundsCarol L. EdwardsDole EkkelmonDavid EisenbudEarl ElliottGabriel End#Joseph E. EngelThomas EngelPhillip Epstein, M.D.Wolfgang EpsteinJams ErskineRichard G. ErskineDawn EsserMr. and Mrs. Milton EstesMr. c-nd Mrs. Robert W EstinHormone E. EvansJames J. Ewing )Richard FabyRobert FactorMichael A. FoirmanCamille V. FaneMary FaneUgo FanoMaurice ForgesPaula ForleyMartha L. FoulhaberProf. R. W. FaulhaberNino FeldmanBetty FerberAsher FerenMarjorie FerenGreg FergusonDaniel FifeMai me S. FinebergThomas A. FinebergKay FingertRichard A. FiremanHannah FrischPeter FisherDaniel FieldDale FitschenMarilyn FitschenArthur FinkelsteinMary Lou FinleyMichael FischerLisa FittkoRaymond 0 Fog el senMr. and Mrs. John FoleyJames FordRichard W FordEloise B. PoxAnn B. FredencksenRose FreedAnne FreedmanRichard FreerSeymour FriedMrs. Stanton A. Fnedbergdone Food landBon FrtedlanderDello B. FrtedlanderEva FrtedlonderRuth FrtedlanderBurt FriedmanJo FnedmanFoul FriedrichHannah FrischAbby FuchsKrm E GabbardCarol Gaet|onsL. Patrick GagePaul A. Gangs#)Jeffrey GarlandTheodore GarnerMr and Mrs William T GarnerPomelo GartshoreTom GauseMarjorie GelbPhilip GeiberMartin GottenMark GonnisCharles J GerutLondon GdkeyRev. C Raymond GilliesMarvin A. GinsbergJoan GladstoneLoon GlassRichard GleicherMr and Mrs. J.Stove GoldbergMichael I. Goldberg orSamuel Goldman0. M. GoldschmidtCharles OoldsmidPaula OoldsmidSusan J. GoldsmithGary R. Golds tomMr and Mrs Loon Genferd Robert GordonWalter GorskiCarl GottliebPaul M. GottliebRichard GottliebNancy GrobiMJohn K. GroffMargot GrayRockwell GraySusan GroonbaumBarbara GreenbergDavid GreenbergLinda GreenePeter GreenfieldRobert L. Grioss, JrWilliam F. Griffith, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Marty GrosiMr. and Mrs. S. R. GuardR.S. GushurstThomas GushurstRichard HackLorry Hog onKaron G. HagenWilliam W. HagenMary Hog onMargaret Ann HalosBret HalpornMrs. Charles HamityWilliam HammettCraig B. HammondJohn F. Hammond, Jr.Frank HandolmanLeonard HandolsmanJeffrey D. HankinAdrienne HarborEarle HardieMarcia HardieTom HarrisJamos G. HartAlice HartsoughStephen R. HarwoodMr. and Mrs. Robert J. HavighurstDorothy M. HayesRuth HazxardMr. ond Mrs. Seymour HelfgottJohn A. HelgolandMary HelgolandSara HollerNina HolsteinRachel S. HolsteinZona HopporlyRalph M. Horgort, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Steven HeusenBarbara Lee HeynsAlice HigmanMeivyn A. HillAlfred HiltebeiteiWendy HiltebeiteiSuzanne HimmelbauerWilliam G. HimmelbauAlan HindsLois HindsArlene HirschSaro HisleysArthur HochbergHoward HochmanMarshall G. S. HodgsonLynda HoffmonIvo J. Hoggatt, Jr.Charles HollandenMonica HollsteinJohn B. HonckBarbara HorbergRichard P HorowitzPeggy An. Huff inHarvey Huntley, Jr.Elizobeth HurtigRoger HutchinsonSharon lllowayRachel JocobsLynn JaffeeDavid C. JocobsonPat JomosRichard JonneyRaphael JohlerDoWitt JohnAnita JohnsonM. C. JohnsonTheodore JohnsonElla May JonesDr. and Mrs. Richard JonesThomas D. JonesJim JorwithMyron JoshuaRichard L. KabeibergMr. and Mrs. Robert L. KahnAnn KalnitzMartha KantorcyppleAndrow S. KaplanLeonard HaplanM. Stephen KoptanMartin L. KarolPenny KashRobert KasowskiAlison P. KaufmanRobin KaufmanMark KazanoltCynthis KegelElisabeth KeitKathleen KellyMichael KemperLydia KeninCarolyn G. KillianDavid A. Kmdig Mary N. KmdigArthur M KmgdonUndo B. KmgdonDavid KlahrSheila R. KlatzkyStanley KloinstoinZina KleinstomAlfred 0. Klinger M.D Julia MoyerAnn MoyorsonBill MillerC. Grant MillerFerdrika V MillerIrwin MiNorMr. and Mrs. Arnold KlugmanNorton KnopsSueMichool KemWynne KerrGoorgo K etcherNoil G KoHerPeter M. KronyPaul H. KrateskaRabbi Aden KrauseDavid KrauseJanet KravetzKen KriehMichael KrinskyRobert KrhroskoyAlma M. RubyJura S. KulmatkkosCarol KusnierekDavis LobbyBruce LolerIda B. LetterMark C. LarsonTom LamJoan LangKenneth C. LarkienDeday LoRaneJoyce C. LashofRichard K. LashofSereno LaskinVicki LossarHelen Y. LatimorePatrick D LauryMr. and Mrs. Michael LavJane LawrenceRick LawrenceMargaret B. I earnerJohn E. LearyRabbi ond Mrs. Dome! LetterSamuel Lein hard;Ralph R. LeMantinMr. and Mrs Hans LennebergJarett LepnerSusan LeppertL. D. LesermanSandra LessendenEdword LetchingerDoborah LeVernE. Phillip LoVornDan LevineDon Lev meHarry D. LevineJulia LevineRobert A. Lev meIryin LevinsteinMananno LevitskyDonald H. LevyEvelyn A. Lower!Jonathan D. LewisJamos M. Lind holmSara LindholmJan bnfieidDerek LintonMichael LinskiLester K littleSusan B. LittleNorman LittleBruce LivingstoneRobert Eric LoebJoyce LeposBenjamin D. LornisbyEdward LewinskyGrotol LewinskyJoan LuockeRichard LuockeGerald LugothyWilliam LycanRichard LyonsSalvatore MaddiLem MagazinerCarol Ann MahaffeyLarry MahoffeyLeslie MatitandBernard MakowskiGloria MakowskiRichard MandelGlenn K. MonacherMarshall MorcevitzDorothy MarcusDiana MardorMe Kim MarriottLaura A. Morse ha IIAlberta Marsh oilJamos E. MarshallMario MartinRev. David R. MasonMargaret MasonAlma no MasoudProf. Martm B. MathewsAlma MathewLoner# MatzMr. and Mrs. Frank MalcolmJoseph MaxwellBruce R. MayoRobert MeagherAnno C MeierFred MolokorM C MertzGerhard E. O Moyer Richard MilsteinElizabeth MitchellS.J.Bill MorrisUndo MermenNancy S. MooreRev. Jomos P. MortonStephen MostMrs. Patricia C. MoyerFitzhugh MuttonMarian H. Mu mooJamos MyersAnn MyorsenJoanne MyorsenChristopher McCandlessMargaret M. McAuliffeSusan McCluggageGeorge Me ElroyJane McflroyAlice McGeeEmma McGihrayAlphonse McKameySusan McKameyNancy H McMdlmRichard S McMdlmJohn A. McWott, Jr.Candace NaimRobert H. NoeMary R. NeodlomanJoan P. NeilenemeiNoubergG NoubergMorris W. NeedlmanJohn C. NelsonDavid G NelsonMarian H. NeudolRichard Neume*erStuart A. NewmanGrog NigosianJoseph R. NoelDouglas R. NorollDaniel P. NormanAnn NorthropBeth NevickDavid NofenDennis O'BrienWilliam W O GradyEleanor OliverLon OliverWilliam OlmstedKaron OppenheimKarol L. OppenhetmerGeriad M. OppenhetmerMichael OppenhetmerMary OwensMitchell T. OxohRoborta PollackManuel PorraNancy PorraSammy# ParsonsLorraine PassevoyMitchell PassevoyRobert D. PassevoyBeatrice PearsonJamos A. PokkanStove PerkinsAlan PerlmanDaniel H. PettmonJamos 0 PetersonDrew PfeifferEdward A. PhillipsJ. C. PhillipoKim PhillipsMelba PhillipsPaul PhillipsSusan R. PhillipsMr. and Mrs. L. PhilpottElias PichonyKathleen PiperJoel PechHalloch W. PollardDale PontiusMarjorie PontiusCloy no PopePrudence PosnerMrs. Susan PowerDevora PrtmockMaxwell PnmackJudith Ft PrinceMary Lee PrudonMarguerite PuchGeorge C. RabensPaul RobinowAl RobyPat RobyCharles RonkmUndo H. RankinJohn W. RappWill lord RavidMr. and Mrs Robert D RayJock RoodRadenna Rem goldJudith ResellLaura N. RicoJohn L. RichardsR. Peter Richards Dale RichardsonLinda RichterWilliam RittonborgPaul C RobertsG. M. RobinsonJanice RobinsonLisa RocheWattot RogersLois RomeroCarole RommJohn RoesLarry RosenPeter RosenMr. and Mrs. Milton RosenbergBeverly M. ResenstemDavid D. ResenstemCharlotte RosonstockthBarbara RosonwemMr. and Mrs. Danferth Rossitton RossEugenio RossThomas J. R os sonHoward J. RetblottMrs. Lester RothK. I. RothmanArthur RothschildAUon J. RubinRichard RubinGary W. RubloffDan RussJohn $. RyanKenneth 0. RyanMaureen S RyanRichard A. SachaFreda SahudRobert SaiasmMike SalesSteven J. SamuelsRobert and Judith Sandlin#Joe A. SophDavid SatterJack SawyerCyril Sax on bergJuno SchampJudy C. SchavreonWalter R. Schoollory SchiefelboschElizabeth SchmittJohn J. SchmittBarry SchneiderOerothy SchneiderBeatrice K. SchneidermanRev. Richard A. ScheenherrPaul SchollmeierBecky SchroodorWalter L. SchubertBeniamin SchultzJoseph SchurmorAngela SchwartzCossi SchwartzGary SchwartzRobert SchwartzMr. ond Mrs. Lawrence SchwartzSusan SchwartzMary Lots SeifertMary Lou SelbyDaniel ServiceWilliam Jeffrey SettlesJulius J. ShanesDudley Shaper#Michael C ShapmBarry ShapiroGloria C. SharesRev. Robert U SharkeyDebby SharpGilliam ShawNeroh ShaykmRuth SheldonMark L. SherkowMr. and Mrs. Michool E Sherlocklaurel ShermanThomas H. SherrardKay ShibleyWhitney ShinerEric ShtebTerry ShtebAd ole Shew k orLeonard ShoyleMr. and Mrs. Milton Shufroteeva ShulbuffRevo ShulruffStan SieferJohn SiefertLarry M SdlNoil SilinsMr and Mrs. David J SimkmCatherine W SimonsonDr David SimonsonByron H SistlerDaniel SittortProf. Joseph SittlorJohn SkodgoNRalph SkinnerKnstm SkotheimBonni L. SmithBrooks SmithHilda SmithKathleen SmithLorry SmithLoretta SmithMartha K. SmithJudy SmithPeter SmithMr and Mrs Robert Lee Smith Antony P. SpencerAsher SeieffRuth SeieffMr. and Mrs. Ben|omm SolomonSteven SolomonRobert SouthardMrs. Joan SpencerJoan L StaplesLoo StovmsB. J. StemhoffMeivyn SterlingJudith SternNancy StettenJohn C StevensDm ah StevensonDiane StewartCynthia StoneMichael StoneLarry StoutMrs Dorothy StrangAndrow J. StreetMarc erne StreetMark SulkesElizabeth SwansonJoel SwartzMark SwirskyAubrey SykesMrs Joseph SseghyJule Ann TadevicChristine TonzBruce K TaylorMr and Mrs Gerald TemaneiJanet TenneyBaron TonnyMar. K TotroaultMrs Richard ThamMr. and Mrs Nelson ThayerPaul ThomasIda L ThompsonPhyllis M ThompsonKathloon TobiasJohn A. TobyHugh K. TohwsihCarolyn TolyRobert Aden TreerJohn TnnklJudy TroupLoo TurnerJohn TullyBriggs L. TwymanEleanor VaughonJohn M VaughanC. B. VenningDavid VigodaDon VtttarefODonald VirgilWilliam VitulloJohn VogelToby VelkmanLea S Von SohrJon VeerheesMr and Mrs William H WoldmonJamos WattorMake WalshMrs George WallerRobert WaltersBonnie WaltzkinHoward WaltzkinOtto WanderWalter H WangermThomas R. B. WordellWalter WarshawskyJoel WeberWilliam WeberJohn WeeksDerien WeinbergRichard Wember9John WernerHarold WomstemGeorge J WeirCnodi WorseNatalie WeissCharlotte WerssbergJohn Wei woodKay G WertzSteven WestonJoan WetzelLeonard WhartonR Allen WhiteLa Virdio WhitfieldHo word WhiteheadJoan C WiklerEugene WtidmanDouglas I. WillShirley J WilliamsMr. and Mrs Hugh R WilsonIda WilsonMarcia WilsonMary WinsgordenRuth WintersM S WiseAhce M WolfeJoseph R. Wolf sonTom WoadsDavid WorstonIsaac WrightVictoria WormanJ P WyattLorry YoungRichard A. Youngivid M Zosmoruzanno ZosmorLoo A. GoodmanMr Ml Mn OmU A OerA—Mm 1. (Mm If You Are Looking for an AlternativeCOME TO THE 2ndCONGRESSIONALDISTRICT CONVENTIONat Chicago Vocational High Schoolauditorium, 2100 E. 87th StreetSat., Feb. 3rd — Starts at 9 A.M.(use the coupon at right to register by mail)For additional information phone 374-6557 Qip and mail to: Volart Commit*•• toChange2446 Eait 75th StreetChicago, Illinois 60649I plan to attend the convention. Enclosed isSI .00 for registration.I have enclosed a contribution of %toward the expenses of the convention andactions to follow from it.I wish to be kept informed. IName.Address.City/Zip Phone.10 THE CHICAGO MAROONV'H’Ul *5 ?j-r January 30, 1968W- , iH tHbtttoHArnold AbramsNaomi AbramsSam AckermanH. Lenox S. AndersonPhoebe AndersonMrs. C. F. AndesBernard AronsonMillie BakanSue BasilyRuth BerinsDonna BemickyLorraine BessemerSusan BirndorfFlorine BoardmanHeather BoothPaul BoothC. A. BrooksJohn BryantSonya BumsRuth CharlesMr. & Mrs. Joseph Noel CriscuolaMarie DeSantisMary DesorbesDavid DodgeEva EhrheinJohn EmmonsHenry EtzkowitzBetty FabyMary FathmanCatherine FrenicksSeymour GlagovKristin GlaserDavid GolberMarvin GreenbaumBernard GulkerJohn HanNancy HanBarbara HeartbergJohn E. HeilmanGertrude S. HodgsonMaurice HorwitzLester C. HuntMrs. Ruth HydeMrs. Milton HymanCarol IronsCharles S. IsaacsJoshua JaffeNancy JasperEric Kast, M.D.Gerald KatzAntoine KaufmanMichael C. KaufmanKaren KayeH. Geoffrey KensethDoris KirschnerTobey KlassKay LandauRobert O. LaneDavid LeonardLeslie LeonardLawrence LesofA. W LewisJoan LewisRobert LiftonDavid LindenfeldJane LilienfeldWarren LinkJerald B. LipschHarry Lopas, M.DJoseph G. LoundyEarl LudmanThomas MandelPet?gy Ann MarchMrs. Frederick MarcsonGershon MayerShelley McEwanEva MendelsonCharles MetalitzElizabeth MoorheadMadeleine MorrisRichard A. MorrisonJeffrey L. MorseStephen MorseThomas E. MortonJudi MunakerCharles McArthurHenry OahlJudith M. OmsteinJudith PearlmanMichael PearlmanJohn PierceVincent PollardNed PowellLee Ann PutnamPat Novick RabyCharlotte ReiterDavid ReiterRoberta RettigPaul Roc keyLewis RohlicekThelma RollinsRobert RossJohn RuvaldsEdward SchneidmanDavid SchonegoldThomas SchroderRobert C. ScottLauren Shape reMiriam ShawMrs. Harriet ShermanJoel ShufroJessica SiegelJack SigginsDavid G. SingerMarion SirefmanDorothy M. SondinRosie StanleyThomas P. SteinerMichael SteinmanFoster StockwellCarl W. StrulyRoger SzuchJudith TearlmanCarol TeitelbaumFrancis N. ThomasAnn ThompsonJessica TovrovRobert VaccaMarcia VespaOtto WeilE. John WelchBernard WexlerSheila WexlerFremont WilliamsLynne WoodsRaymond YoungBeth ZemelmanMrs. J. R. Ziskind Hobson: A Student Strike 'Will IsolateContinued from Page 1significant escalation of the Viet¬nam war to date, and utterlyobscuring that move in the eyes ofthe American people.”Discussion groups through therest of the day led into a plenaryon Sunday, in which some opposi¬tion arose to the idea of a strike.Opposition centered largely aroundcharges that the SMC was a“manipulative, elitist organizationwithout a broad-based constituen¬cy,” and that similarly the call fora national strike was a bad tacticbecause it did not stem from nordid it contribute to building thegrass roots anti-war movement.Danger of IsolationChris Hobson of Chicago’s Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society that“a strike will isolate rather thanbuild the anti-war movement inthat staying out of school for aday ‘against the war’ is far re¬moved from the everyday livesand decisions of the average stu¬dent.“We should concentrate on localissues showing how they are tiedinto the war and the society welive in, and in this way build theconsciousness of the movement.We don’t need elite-sponsored gim¬micks that can so easily fail.”An alternative motion not to callthe strike and to dissolve the SMCwas roundly defeated.Renaldo Moute, a Latin Ameri¬can student, said the studentsmust strike “to demonstrate tothe peoples of Latin America, Asia and Africa that there are those inAmerica who still have aconscience, and who oppose theimperialist and rascist policies en¬ forced by the U. S. government allover the world.”The conference suggested thatlocal organizers should build much of the ten-day activities around lo¬cal issues, but that the 26th shouldbe primarily a strike against thewar.Hamilton's Four Types of ActivistsContinued from Page 1fused with power is more power¬ful than power alone.”The AntecedentsBennett traced the historicalantecedents of black power inAmerica, concluding that, whileFrederick Douglass and W. E. B.Dubois had helped to establish the“black man’s right to lead his ownfight,” Booker T. Washington’stheory of the gradual self-elevation of the Negro represented “in truththe antithesis of black power.”He also criticized the moderateapproach of the National Associa¬tion for the Advancement of Color¬ed People, formed in 1910.Flacks, who spoke on the socio¬logical effect of black power inatone sympathetic to the movement,was pessimistic about the futureof American society as a whole.He commented that it is eveident'Days of Decision at Hand‘Continued from Page 1ticular situation to help us crystal-ize what we have been anxiousabout for months and even years,”Parsons said. “One of the earliestvoices I heard calling the mem¬bers of this University to examinetheir consciences with a view totheir taking courageous steps tohalt the escalation of the war inVietnam was that of RichardFlacks.“The second occasion was whenthe son of a friend of mine lost hislife in Vietnam for a cause neither I nor any one else could justify,”he continued.Parsons also cited the activitiesof the Reverend Coffin as influenc¬ing him to speak out.“The days of decision are athand,” he stated. “It may be laterthan we think. The words of Jesusin the Gospel of John constitutethe warning of the hour. As hesaw the clouds on the horizon ofhis ministry he said, ‘I must workthe works of him that sent me,while it is day;' the night comethwhen no man shall work.’ ” to blacks that “another generationis now being sacrificed to a racisteducational system.”Flacks called for “a reorganiza¬tion of our national priorities” andadvocated getting out of “the situ¬ation we’re in in Asia. I hesitateto say Vietnam — now.”Hamilton’s address Saturdaymorning centered around a distinc¬tion he made among four types ofindividuals concerned with themovement for racial equality andimproved conditions for Negroes:The “political bargainer,” whobelieves he can work effectivelywithin the political system; the“moral crusader” (for exampleDr. Martin Luther King), who be¬lieves that civil rights alone areinsufficient and finds himselfcaught in a dilemma between mor-alism and political realism; the“alienated liberal,” who feelsthat the society and its institutionsmust be changed to produce mean¬ingful progress in race relations;and the “alienated radical,” whoshares this view and believes fur¬ther that society must be changedby revolutionary methods if nec¬essary.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 35characters and spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon BusinessOffice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIED ADSFOR TUESDAY MUST BE IN BY FRI¬DAY. ALL CLASSIFIED ADS FOR FRI¬DAY MUST BE IN BY WEDNESDAY.NO EXCEPTIONS.for FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3226.WORKWANTED—PART OR FULL-TIME INCOMETAXMAN — Simple returns, will train, Cas-ner. ST 3-6681.SEWING DONE: Some Custom Stuff. Reas¬onable. Call 288-7475.EXPERIENCED TEMPORARY SECRETAR¬IES, TYPISTS, or other office skills. Workdays, weeks, or months in a variety of in¬teresting offices in the Hyde Park Area.Earn top hourly rates. STIVERS LIFE-SAVERS, INC. Garden Level Concourse,Evergreen Plaza. 233-2530. 7 So. Dearborn,Chicago, 332-5210.GRAFFITITODAY IS THE FIRST DAY OF THE RESTOF YOUR LIFE.Lord God of Hosts, Be with us yet. Lest weForget, Lest we Forget.FOR SALESAILBOAT — 18 foot Sloop. Dacron Sails, 4yrs. Trailer. ALL EXTRAS. $1500. 478-1863.JAGUAR XK-150, 1959, White. Excellent Cond.Best offer. Call Mike at CA 7-3203.CAFE EUROPA — 1440 E. 57th Street. Call363-4732 after 6 P. M.BOGEN 35 WATT MONO AMP. Knight FMTuner, both for $45.00. Perfect Condition.521-0460 or 256-4785.DEPENDABLE COLD WEATHER STARTER.Adorable '56 Chevy needs home. Comes com¬plete down to her snowtires. Call Gene (684-1138) or Rich (643-4937).ALPHA ROMEO, 1962, Excellent Cond. twotops. Best Offer. Call Mike Orloff at CA 7-3203.INDULGENCES.WANTEDAPARTMENT: 2 bedrooms, unfurnished,Location not Important.Call FA 4-8200 (Room 871)Between 5 and 7 P.M.LOVE. HATE.APARTMENTS TO SHARESHARE large, 4 room, furnished apt. OwnBedroom. 51st and Harper. Avail. Feb. 1thru April 1, Call Richard, 493-5750. HOUSE FOR SALELeaving UniversityMust sell deluxe 14 year old 2 story, all¬brick home, 3 spacious bedrooms, liv., din.,oak panel den, Mod oak-cab kitchen, refrig.,stv., dishwasher, garbage disposal, washer-dryer, complete air cond., w/w carpeting,drapes, fin. basement. Large fenced yard andpatio. Lovely area in S.S. Near 80th 8< Phil¬lips. Conv. transpt. to U. C. Upper 20's. Call731-5131. Get your U.C. Basketball Cards-Three cards and french fry: 5c.Max. order, 5 pkgs. Order now.-X 3563 Lou or Mark.Whatsit liketo workfor a giant?Depends on the giant. If thegiant happens to be Ford MotorCompany, it can be a distinctadvantage. See your placementdirector and make an appoint'ment to see the man from Fordwhen he is here on:February 7I d like a big job pleasePERSONALS"How much pride do you have" —The woodsman asked the tree"None" — the tree repliedAnd the woodsman felled him with one stroke PROCRASTINATION IS A CRIME,SO ASK ME TO THE PROM ON TIME. JOYFUL NOISESCONTEMPORARY MUSIC SOCIETY returnsto Ida Noyes. Tonight 8 P.M. The MauriceMcIntyre Quartet. Music for Love.TRAVELTHE SECOND SEX — you read the book,now see the movie: "Tiger Woman" (at theBandersnatch)."The psychedelic elbow has something uphis sleeve."EXHIBIT: SHOLOM ALEICHEM LITHO¬GRAPHS by ANATOLI KAPLAN. From theJewish Museum, New York City. At Hilleluntil February 20th.TRIPAdvantages of traveling alone at group rates.82 days in London, Paris, Copenhagen, Len¬ingrad, Moscow, Kiev, Odessa, Istanbul,Athens, Rome, Madrid — for $1375. Nogroup activities there. Call X. 2545 or DO 3-3548.CHECK, MATE 10To wantme to care aboutyoumust care about,yourselfIsTo care about,yourselfIs,To care about,me.— the gypsy wondererRUSSIAN taught by highly experienced na¬tive teacher. Rapid method. Trial lesson—no charge. Call CE 6-1423 from 9 a.m. to5 p.m.Meet the minimal mind —at the Bandersnatch.SPRING VACATIONSpring Vacation — Freeport, Bahamas,March 16-23, 7 nights, 8 days. Jet Air Trans.Transfers, Hotel, and extras. $189.00. SKOKIEVACATIONS. CALL 677-0570.Take a prayer break —at the Bandersnatch.A perfect night for Pleasure-Seekers!February 17.The People's Land and Freedom Party willhold sessions on Sunday afternoons. Call 493-9340.AFTER THE SIX DAY WARRABBI DAVID POLISH, Beth Emet Syna¬gogue, Evanston, will be at the third andfinal conversation. Hillel House, 5715 Wood-lawn, TUESDAY, JANUARY 30th, 7:45 p.m.Guava nectar and COMPOZ does it.Guys visiting Disneyland or traveling thruOrange County — for fun and games, writeJACK POB 462, Anaheim, California.HEAR THE JOHN KLEMMER QUARTET,Wednesday nights only, 9:30 P.M. — 1:30A.M., at the NEW BAROQUE, 1510 E. 53rd.Must be over 21. EXHIBIT: "Old Testament and Post-Biblical' !fe." At Hillel until January 30. All printssale..ention Witches, Warlocks, Satanists, andFollowers of the Olde Religion. Please con¬tact R and R Reports, P.O. Box 96, High¬land Patk, Illinois 60035. Marco Polo Handles Your Travel. BU 6-5944.FREEAnne Sucksdorf's "THE GREAT ADVEN¬TURE" 2/1 at 8:30, judson dining room.FREE!TUTOR WANTEDTo teach Italian two evenings a week. CallMrs. E. Snyder. 561-4540 or RA 8-5132.APARTMENTS FOR RENTLrge., new, dec, 4’/2 room, 2 bdrm., 4 largeclosets, woodbuming fireplace, barett-diner,cabinets, all rooms front. No animals. Ac¬cepted by applications and security. $165/month. Suitable for three men. MU 4-8222.LARGE, CLEAN 3'/2 rooms, 2 large closets,large bedroom, living room w. dinette, kit¬chen w. porch. $145/month. Suitable for 2or 3 men. MU 4-8222.ONE room apt. to sublet, call 288-2065 nights.TO SUBLET: 2'/j rooms, 53rd Street, $85,493-6831. Call anytime.ROOM FOR RENTBig, nice furnished room. Kitchen priveleges,good location on Harper, Call HY 3-7443.FOR FEMALE — large room $10/week, semi¬private bath. Near Campus. DO 3-2521.WANTED—BONNIE AND CLYDEISTUDENTS!Why steal itWhen you can buy itAt the swap shop?GIRL: Eat your own cooking at our expense.TERMS. Call Terry; 684-8018 after 6 P.M.THICH NHAT HANHBuddhist Monk, Author of "A Buddhist Pro¬posal for Peace" and "Vietnam: Lotus ina Sea of Fire" will speak in the Audito¬rium at the Lutheran School of Theologyat 3:00 P.M., Sunday, February 4.CONFIDENTIAL developing of exposed photorolls, also reprints from your negs. Anysubiect OK, B & W only. ALLEN, P.O. Box6023, San Francisco, Calif. 94101.YOGAYogi Sri Nerode conducts individual YOGAINSTRUCTION in Hyde Park in bodily re¬laxation and tranquility, Classical Breathingand Higher Meditation. Anyone Interestedmay call DO-3-0155. WASH PROMFEB. 17, IH8January 30, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 11MATHEMATICS BOOKSThe following Mathematics titles are a representative selectionfrom The University of Chicago Bookstore’s Mathematics Section:PURE MATHEMATICSAdams - Stable Homotopy TheoryAlbert - Modern Higher AlgebraArtin - Geometric AlgebraAtiyah - K-TheoryBourbaki - Elements of MathematicalTopology Part I Sc II (English')Bourbaki - Assorted volumes of his complete works.Burck - A Survey of Binary SystemsCairns - TopologyCaratheodory - Calculus of Variations 8c PartialDifferential Equations of the FirstOrder Vol. I and Vol. IICassels - Introduction to Theory of NumbersClifford - Algebraic Theory of Semi-GroupsGelboum - Counterexamples in AnalysisGunning - Lectures on Rieman SurfacesHall - Combinatorial TheoryHolmos - Introduction to Hilbert SpaceHolmos - Hilbert Space Problem BookHolmos - Measure TheoryHardy - A Mathematicians ApologyHelgason - Differential Geometry Sc Symmetrical SpacesHerstein - Topics in AlgebraHu - Homology TheoryJacobson - Lie Algebras Jacobson - Structure of RingsJacobson - Lectures in Abstract Algebra Vols. I, II Sc IIIKaplansky - Infinite Abelian GroupsLang - Abelian VarietiesLang - Algebraic NumbersLang - Rapport Sur la cohomologic des GroupesLebesque - Measure Sc the IntegralMacLane - AlgebraMitchell - Theory of CategoriesMumford - Lectures on Curves on an Algebraic SurfaceNarasinhon - Introduction to Theory of Analytic SpacesNiven - Diophantine ApproximationsO’Mera - Introduction to Quadrater FormsPontryagin - Topological Groups (2nd. edition in English)Rotman - Group TheorySaaty - Lectures on Mathematics Vols. I, II, Sc IIISah - Abstract AlgebraSiegel - Gesammelte AbhandlungenSerre - Cohomologie GaloisienneSerre - Lie Algebras Sc Lie GroupsShenkman - Group TheorySpecht - GruppentheorieVander Waerden - AlgebraVander Waerden - Siebte Auflage (1966)Weiss - Algebraic Number TheoryMATHEMATICAL LOGICAHD FOUHDATIOHSFeys - Model LogicsGodel - Consistency of Continuum HypothesisHeyting - IntiutionismK1 eene - Mathematical Logic Kleene - Introduction to MetamathematicsPeter - Recursive FunctionsRobinson - Introduction to Metamathematics of AlgebraStupecki - Elements of Mathematical Logic and Set TheoryAlso available are titles in the categories of Applied Mathematics, Computerand Information Science, Probability and Statistics, Elementary, Recreationaland Historical Mathematics and Dictionarie and Tables.Mathematics SectionGeneral Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.THE CHICAGO MAROON January 30, 1968