VOL. 76, NO. 32 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1968 12 PAGES, 2 SECTIONSThe Maroon — DAVID TRAVISTHE CAST: Chicago students Michael Doliner and Paul Antze talkabout their skits after campus police forbade yesterday's perform¬ance.It's 'Street TheaterAt HutchBy MICHAEL SEIDMANExecutive EditorA new unofficial student organi¬zation producing what it calls“street theater” has been formedon campus.The organization, consisting ofviiout leu s ^Jcnts, has already puton two “performances” in Hutchin¬son Commons and was planninganother one for yesterday untilcampus security agents told themthat they could not use the Hutch¬inson balcony without advancedpermission.The previous performances,which consisted of elaborate andcarefully played out hoaxes, haveexcited wide attention and criti-1cism. On February 1, according toeye witnesses, an adult with an ex¬pensive looking camera began tak¬ing pictures of Students during thelunch hour.Students were upset by thephotographer’s activity and noti¬fied Dean of the College WayneBooth, who was eating in Hutchin¬son at the time. Booth said that heapproached the man, and askedhim what he was doing. The manreplied that he was a private pho¬tographer.The ArrestThe second incident occured onTuesday when two burly men grab- Commonsbed a student eating in the Com¬mons, frisked him, and took himoutside where they loaded him intoa car and drove off.Both performances were playedbefore a large number of studentseating at the Commons and set offnumerous rumors about police infiltration of the campus.Before the second performance,1 however, Michael Doliner, a leaderj of the group and a graduate stu¬dent on the Committee on SocialThought, called Booth to informhim that the previous incident hadbeen a hoax and that the bogus“arrest” was about to take place.Paul Antze, also a graduate stu¬dent in Social Thought and anothermember of the group, stated that;the hoaxes had been played out inorder to attract student attention, j“The basic idea is to increase; student awareness of problems in¬volved in the draft,” he stated.“In particular we want students torealize that everyone is vulnerableand that’s what the skit wasmeant to dramatize.”Doliner also said that the groupwould try to put on another per¬formance in Hutchinson Commonsin the next few days and that theyhad plans for future performancesin the Loop and the Hyde ParkCo-op. IDA CommitteeMay Ask Pull-OutBy JOHN MOSCOWNews EditorThe Committee of the Council ofthe University Senate has receivedthe report of the Goldsmith commit¬tee investigating the University’srelationship with the Institute forDefense Analyses (IDA), and ex¬amining the possibility of Chicago’swithdrawal from the Institute.The report will be submitted tothe Council of the Senate this Tues¬day but will probably not be votedon then, according to Chauncy Har¬ris, professor and chairman of theGeography Department, directorof the Center for International Re¬lations, and member of the Com¬mittee of the Council. (Othersources confirmed that the Coun¬cil would wait at least a month tomake its decision on the report.)Campus-Wide VoteWill Decide QueenSix finalists have been an¬nounced for the title of Miss Uni¬versity of Chicago.They and their sponsoring organi¬zations are: Doreatha Freasier, 71,Rickert House; Sharon Harper, 71,Upper Wallace; Jeanette La Velle,70, Quadranglers and Psi Upsilon;Erika Vietorisz, 70, ChamberlainHouse; Lynn Junker, ’69, the Wo¬mens Athletic Association; andSusannah Rohrlick, ’68, Snell Hall.Balloting will take place fromFebruary 12 to 14 in several cam¬pus locations. The new queen willbe crowned in a midnight cere¬mony at the Washington Prome¬nade, February 17 in Ida NoyesHall.Tickets to this year’s Prom,which will feature Ross Anderson’sten-piece orchestra and Otis Rush’sChicago Blues Band, still may bepurchased for $5.50 per couple atthe Bookstore, the Reynolds ClubDesk, the Student Activities Office,or at the polling places. Neither the text of the Goldsmithcommittee report nor the recom¬mendation of the Committee of theCouncil are available. It wasi learned from reliable sources, how-'ever, that the text of the reportwill be issued shortly after thej Council discusses the matter. ItI was also learned that there is a; strong likelihood that the Univer-| sity will withdraw from IDA.SDS Data UsedAccording to Dean of Studentsj Charles O’Connell, who also actsI as secretary to the University Sen¬ate, the committee met with repre-! sentatives of the Students for aDemocratic Society (SDS) beforemaking its decision. SDS had ac-! cumulated a large file of dataabout IDS before the Goldsmithcommittee was appointed, and hadoffered to share it with the com¬mittee.Students will not be permittedinto the meeting of the Council,j however, although both SDS andThe Maroon had requested thej right to send representatives toI the meeting.O’Connell denied the SDS requeston the grounds that SDS had al¬ready made its point of view knownand that there was thus little to begained from having SDS membersin the room.No official action has been takenon The Maroon’s request sinceSpokesman for the Council GeorgeJ. Stigler is out of town. The Mar¬oon, however, was strongly advisedby Doris Olsen, secretary to Presi¬dent Beadle, that it would not beallowed to send a reporter althoughshe did not talk to Beadle himselfabout the matter.The committee, chaired by Ju¬lian R. Goldsmith, chairman ofthe Geophysical Sciences Depart¬ment, was appointed by PresidentBeadle in late October to investi¬gate the University’s ties with IDA,a research institution devoted al¬most exclusively to work for the See Editorial on Page 4Department of Defense, and spon¬sored by twelve universitiesthroughout the nation.These include Chicago, MIT, Cal¬ifornia Institute of Technology,Case Institute of Technology, Stan¬ford, Tulane, Princeton, Columbia,Penn State, and the state univer¬sities of Illinois, Michigan, andCalifornia.Speech CancelledA speech by the Universityrepresentative to the Institute,Dean of the Physical Sciences Div¬ision A. Adrian Albert, which wasscheduled for Wednesday night inHenderson House, was cancelled byAlbert after mistaken rumors ofan S D S-planned demonstrationthere had reached him.Albert denied that the demonstra¬tion was what caused the cancel¬lation, and a source close to himconfirmed that it was the sched¬uled presence of students from out¬side Henderson which had causedAlbert’s decision.A. Adrian AlbertRhodes Awards: Continuing Entanglement in IvyBy RICHARD ANTHONYCollegiate Press ServiceWASHINGTON - Last Decem¬ber, when the names of the win¬ners of the 1967-68 Rhodes Scholar¬ship competition were announced,it turned out that half the 32 re¬cipients came from four schools —Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth, andPrinceton.These Ivy League schools madea much stronger showing than theyhad the year before, but a study ofthe history of the Scholarshipsshows that the year before was anexception — Ivy schools, particu¬larly Harvard, Yale, and Prince¬ ton, have dominated the program \since its inception in 1903, withWest Point and Dartmouth Collegea distant fourth and fifth. Thequestion is, why?The regular awarding of RhodesScholarships began in 1904, withmoney going to students in Amer¬ica and in the British colonies tostudy for two years at Oxford Col¬lege in England. The U. S. is allot¬ted 32 of the awards. The countryhas been divided into eight dis¬tricts for the purpose of makingthe awards, with four recipientsbeing chosen from each district.An applicant can use either thelocation of his home or that of his See Editorial on Page 4college in deciding which districthe will apply from.Establishment TicketThe Scholarships, which financetwo years of study at Oxford Col¬lege in England for each of the re¬cipients, are the most prestigiousby far of the awards available tocollege graduates in this country.A Rhodes is widely regarded asa ticket into the Establishment,and a survey of Rhodes winners inhigh position tends to support thisreputation.Among the Rhodesmen U gov¬ ernment now are Dean Rusk andNicholas Katzenbach, State De¬partment; Byron White and JohnHarlan, Supreme Court; Sen. J.William Fulbright, and Reps. CarlAlbert and John Brademus.In spite of the fact that thereare several well-known RhodesScholars in public life, however,an informal study made last yearby a recent Scholar indicated thatmost Rhodesmen — his estimatewas 70 per cent — are in aca¬demic life. This circumstance,which runs contrary to Cecil| Rhodes’ original hope that thescholar would “esteem the per-i formance of public duties as his highest aim,” may well be relatedto the fact that so many of theScholars come from Ivy Leagueschools.The head of the Rhodes Trust inthis country is Courtney Smith,who is also the president ofSwarthmore College, a small liber¬al arts school near Philadelphia.In 1960 Smith wrote an article forthe American Oxonian, a bimonth¬ly magazine for American RhodesScholars, in which he gave fivereasons for the dominance of cer¬tain Ivy League schools.A ‘Strong Tradition’The reasons Smith offered were:Turn to Page 2Will Ivy Dominance of Rhodes Program Continue?Continued from Page 1• These schools are of highquality;• They attract the best studentsfrom all over the country, whichmeans Ivy League candidates of¬ten can go back to win Scholar¬ships from districts outside of theEast;• They have close student-fac¬ulty relations, which means thatRhodes applicants are given aidand encouragement, and also thatdetailed, informative letters ofrecommendation are written aboutthem;• These schools rely to a largeextent on seminars and tutorials,which give students more “abilityto talk and to handle ideas” thanthey would get from large lecturecourses; and• The schools have a “strongtradition” of encouraging Rhodesapplications.Whether or not Smith’s reasonsfor the Ivy dominance of theRhodes’ program are valid, it isclear that the state colleges anduniversities have been at the op¬posite end of the Rhodes’ spectrumfrom the Ivy League schools. Al¬though more than 60% of all col¬lege students now graduate fromstate-supported institutions, theirshare of the Rhodes’ Scholarshipshas been and still is minimal.Earnest Griffith, former dean ofAmerican University’s School ofInternational Service in Washing¬ton, and a Rhodes Scholar himself,estimated in 1960 that a Rhodes’applicant from an Ivy LeagueSchool or one of the service acade¬mies had a 1 in 250 chance of win¬ning an award. A candidate froma state university had 1 chance in48,000.It is also safe to assume thatRhodes Scholars will continue tofavor academic careers, becausethe candidates are being selectedby men who have generally showna preference for academic careersin the past.Reaction against HarvardThe Rhodes’ system, however,does have a tendency to reform it¬self to some extent, if only tem¬porarily. After Harvard studentswon 10 of the Rhodes’ awards in1965, the selection committees ap¬parently reacted to the criticismof Harvard’s success by cuttingback on Ivy League awards the next year. The Ivy League and themilitary academies won a total of! nine Scholarships in 1966.Yet this past year suggests thatreaction won’t result in permanentredistribution of the awards. If thestate universities are going to wina greater share of the Scholar-! ships, more effort on their partmight help. At Harvard, accordingi to the head of the program there,each of the 10 undergraduatehouses have a Rhodes representa¬tive, which obviously helps theuniversity as a whole get theScholarships.In the long run, though, it’s dif¬ficult to see how the Rhodes Schol¬arships can be distributed morewidely unless the selection methodis reformed. A recommendation toselection committee members tolook for people who really appearto have potential for political lead¬ership would probably help, but arequirement that a certain num¬ber of schools in each district berepresented seems to be the only sure way of guaranteeing a widerdistribution of the scholarships.Whether or not the bad showingmade by the state universities isa result of deficiencies in theRhodes programvit doesn’t appearthat the program is likely to berevised. Griffith, who once pro¬posed that three of the four win¬ners from each district be selectedfrom schools in that district, saysj his idea has no chance of suc¬ceeding.The selection system tends toperpetuate itself, because allmembers of the district selectioncommittees are Rhodes Scholarsexcept the chairman. It would besurprising if the committees didnot lean to applicants who werewell-spoken and poised, as thecommittee members themselvespresumably are. Since Ivy Leagueapplicants, for reasons alreadynoted, tend to possess these qual¬ities, they consistently make thebest impression on the selectioncommittees. The MaroonTWO CHICAGO RHODES: Former Student Government PresidentEugene Groves, '65 (left), and Maroon Editor Emeritus David A.Satter, '68.SKIING attfhfUai. . 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February 12 at 6:30 P.M.Elizabeth (jorden ^Jdair aJ^edi^nerdcomplete beauty, care1620 East 53rd Street BU 8-2900-01-02.OR DO YOURESIST?Find out what’s happeningwhile you still have a choice.The GUARDIAN* covers thedraft scene, the student revolt,plus vital world and nationalnews you can't get anywhereelse.STUDENT SPECIAL: $2.00 for 6 month sub / $1.00 for 10 week trial subEnclosed $ NameAddress.•GUARDIAN 1Largest independent ^ity State Zipradical newspaper SchoolMail to: GUARDIAN 197 E. 4th St. N.Y.C. 10009in America. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATRE PRESENTSThe Undeniable Miscellanyof Humor & Poetrysketches performed kr poetry read = directed '>/ Richard Rubindames Joycew B YeatsWallaceStevensW H AudenJamesThurber£ 8 WhiteWilliam CarloslWiliamsPlatoRupert Brooke Jules FeifferSyl v>a PlathKenneth Koch.££ CummingsMark Twain(1601)and,.,many moreSurprises...all inone (wow!)evening.Feb 9-/0'//= Reynolds Club Thedter-57tb at University - Tickets or safe atReynolds C lob Desk ■=■ $ ISO* Student- Faculty Discount $.SOm Mh5'0800sX358lTHE CHICAGO MAROON February 9, 1968 sir S f 1 rHughes Appointed Oriental Institute DirectorGeorge R. Hughes, professor ofEgyptology, has been appointeddirector of Chicago’s Oriental Insti¬tute, a prominent research andteaching facility in the field ofNear Eastern Studies.MAROON SPORTS The appointment, effective July1, 1968, is for a three-year term,President Beadle said.Hughes, 61, served as directorof the Institute’s Epigraphic Sur¬vey at Luxor, Egypt, from 1949 to 1964 and was acting field directorof excavations in the Sudan during1961-62.He will replace Robert McC.Adams, director of the Institutesince 1962, who has resigned to de-Swimmers Score Double VictoryChicago’s varsity swim teamevened its season record at 6 and6 by scoring dynamic victoriesover IIT and the College of DuPage in a triple-dual meet on Wed¬nesday.In the IIT contest, the team per¬formed the almost unprecedentedfeat of taking first in all elevenevents. The team also grabbed sec¬ond or third in every event andoverwhelmed IIT, 76-15.A total of four University swim¬mers took triple victories againstthe Tech-Hawks, while two finmenfinished with a pair each. Against DuPage the Universityswimmers felt slight pressure fromthe opposition, but swam very welland finished a 61-32 victory. Fivemen scored double victories, as theteam as a whole won six of elevenevents.IM BasketballA strong Vincent House team de¬feated Salisbury 47-26 to take theCollege house title in the IM basket¬ball tournament on Wednesday.Playing for the victors were Ver¬non Visick, Dave Nuffer, John Ry¬an, Jim Rottsolk, Irl Extein, Freddents and faculty with petitions ofsupport and compliance for draftresisters.The program is primarily fo¬cused on graduating students andfirst-year graduate students sincethe committee feels certain thatdeferments for graduate studentswill not be guaranteed.Spring Resistance Aims at GradsThe Special Vietnam Convocation those who will resist the draft.Committee, an outgrowth of the Members intend to canvass stu-draft counseling “Alice’s Restaur¬ant,” Tuesday planned a specialspring anti-draft, anti-war programdirected towards graduating stu¬dents and first-year graduate stu¬dents. Similar programs are ex¬pected at about 50 other campusesthroughout the nation.David Vigoda, ’68, a coordinator,said that the committee hopes to J“demonstrate how many graduat- jing students will resist the draft”with a special graduating cere¬mony relevant to draft resistance.E. Spencer Parsons, chaplainof Rockefeller Chapel, granted thecommittee permission to use theChapel for a special spring convo¬cation against the draft. Plans forthe convocation will be formalizedat a meeting on Wednesday.The committee also plans a long¬term fund for financial aid for Cogelow, Jim Wasserman, andCharles Fasano.In other basketball action, thePhi Gamma Delta squad defeatedits own “B” team 32-31, the Eaglesdefeated the Saints 37-33, and theNooners overcame SSA 58-35.HomecomingTomorrow is official Homecom¬ing Day in the University sportsworld, and celebrations will includeboth social and athletic events.The social end of the reunion,which is sponsored by the under¬graduate Order of the “C,” will be¬gin with a reception and dinnerfor alumni and present athletes atIda Noyes Hall in the evening.Athletic competition is high¬lighted by the basketball gameagainst MacMurray College at 8p.m. in the Field House. vote more time to teaching andcontinuing field research in Iraq —a survey of the relationship ofwatercourses to the distribution ofancient cities.Long ExperienceBeadle said he was confidentthat the new director, “with hislong experience in both teachingand field research, will carry for¬ward the work Bob Adams has soably led in expanding explorationsinto the nature and course of hu¬man civilization.”Hughes is currently working on a.translation of Oriental Institutepayyri. In 1965 he completed atranslation of a Coptic prayer bookrelating to a presumed conversa¬tion between Jesus and Peter onthe Mount of Olives after the re¬surrection and before the ascension,believed to date from the 10th or11th Centuries.An ordained Presbyterian minis¬ter Hughes joined the staff of the Oriental Institute in 1934 and hasbeen associated with it ever since,except for a four-year period (1942-46) when he served on the GeneralStaff of the War Department’sSignal Intelligence Service in Wash¬ington.He holds a B.A. degree from theUniversity of Nebraska (1929), aB.D. from the McCormick Theolo¬gical Seminary (1932), and a Ph.D.from Chicago (1939).PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933feN/TQ. antiquesyvk? giftsATTENTION SENIORS!Become a MONTESSORI TEACHER!(demand is twice the supply)NEXT TRAINING PROGRAM:JUNE 24 — AUGUST » in CHICAGO(Leads to Nationally RecognizedAMS CertificateWrite: CHICAGO MIDWESTMONTESSORI TEACHER TRAINING1010 W. Chicago AvenueChicago. Illinois 60622 LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full time and part timepositions available for stu¬dents and student wives.Telephone MU 4 4545CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue Flowers and Candy for your i’alcntme. hut nothing s-penal orunusual to put them in? Find the perfei t container or gift in ourselection of antique pressed glass and hand-painted < Innahowls, baskets, vases, and plates.This week, we are also featuring these new and rare items nowon display in our Collector's Showcase• striking blown glass cruets• a cohalt blue Mary Gregory Hose Howl(z>ery old and authentic)• signed hand-painted glass pitchersAnd don’t miss our new shijvient of furniture, including our“Furniture-Huy-of-the-W eek”--a small Victorian dresser withhand carved fruit pulls!Now open daily 3 P.M. to 9 P.M. (closed Monday) and from Noonto 6 P.M. on Saturday and Sunday.162 I EAST HYDE PARK BLVD. 684-3030SAMUEL A. 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AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN ft ZENITH--NEW ft USED-Sales and service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes - Batteries10% diitounl to ttud«nt» with ID cardt$89.95Model Twenty-OneTurn it on and this incrediole little radioproduces an amount and quality of sound out of allproportion to its size anctprice.The fact is, the Twenty-One is a completeFM receiving system. It isn’t stereo. And it doesn’tplay records. It’s just the best FM radio you everheard.the fret shopHARPER COURT5210 So. HARPER NO 7-1060 NEWMOODSComo solocl from ournew rolled ion of moodsotting incense andincense burners. Manyexciting fragrances.Aromatic, long-lastingand cffluvicnl.Imported from Africa,Mexico and India.Ineense from.99Burners front$2.49A new international arts and crafts centerJEWELRY • H ANDICR AFTS • SCI'LITE REHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324-7266Convenient hours: Noon to 8 p.m. daily; Noon to 5 p.m. SundayFebruary 9, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3H! The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business Manager17 RhodesPeople at the Dean of Undergraduate StudentsOffice, when we asked how many Chicago students havewon Rhodes Scholarships in the College’s history, werefrankly befuddled.“Rhodes Scholars? Well, there was one this year ofcourse, and then one about three years ago.” Lookingthrough the files, the secretary managed to tell us that,according to a Maroon article, the last Rhodes Scholarfrom Chicago previous to 1963 was in 1956.According to the Public Relations Office, 17 Chicagostudents have received the prestigious award since itsestablishment in 1904. Another college received almostas many in one year.Last year two Chicago students applied; the numberrarely exceeds three or four. And of those who apply,only about half are recommended to the Rhodes com¬mittee by Chicago through the College’s own five-manscreening committee.“We just don’t push students to apply the way someother schools do,” says Michael Isenberg, acting dean ofundergraduate students, whose office handles the Rhodesapplications, Although advisors inform qualified studentsabout the Rhodes program, few apply after they find outhow “traumatic” the selection process is.If more Chicago students applied, would they re¬ceive more awards? “Probably yes,” Isenberg maintains,implying that the Ivy League has no magical hold on theRhodes committee, despite the fact that the committeeis made up of Rhodes alumni, who in turn are dispropor¬tionately Eastern-schooled.This may very well be true, since the College is oneof the top per capita producers of other fellowship win¬ners in the nation. But so long as sports achievementremains one of the three major criteria on which this so-called academic award is based, and so long as Chicagosports suffer the ideological wound inflicted in the forties,the College will continue to count its Rhodes awards bythe number of years separating each winner rather thanby the number of its winners each year.Exit TimeThe Council of the University Senate meets Tuesdayto discuss a report of the Goldsmith committee which re¬portedly recommends that the University of Chicago pullout of the Institute for Defense Analyses.IDA, a front group for the Pentagon, conducts re¬search useful to the military establishment and some non¬military government agencies and has developed, forinstance, devices to detect people in the dark (i.e., VietCong) and techniques for controlling ghetto riots athome. Its researchers are “borrowed” from co-operatinginstitutions for periods of a year or more.IDA’s purpose is to serve as a procurer of researchtalent for the defenders of the status quo at home andabroad. While the universities which send delegates toIDA’s board of directors, including Chicago, gain guiltyconsciences and a favorable nod from the Federal Govern¬ment, IDA gains a pseudo-academic cover of respectability.It is high time that this University end its associationwith this research arm of the military. Below the BeltLetters to the EditorsWeaving BeadsIt pleases me to know that theChicago faculty is so concernedabout its students and their wel¬fare that it should so immenslyreduce the grading pressures. Iam truly looking forward to tak¬ing my elective for a pass or ano-pass sometime in a year ortwo. It stirs my heart to knowthat while I’m struggling throughBio 150 during my fourth year Iwill have the chance to decideone year in advance to take In¬dian Bead Weaving 206 on a P-Nbasis. It also makes my heart gopitter-patter to know that when Ihave made this monumental de¬cision I will only have to• See my advisor and ask himhow the hell this grading thingworfcs;• See my departmental dean andask his kind magnanimous per¬son,most holy and reverend, if hewould be so kind as to let me takeIndian Bead Weaving 206 for apass-no pass;• Ask the Indian Bead Depart¬ment chairman if he would letme take the course on a P-N bas¬is so I won’t have to compete withthe professional weavers;• Ask Mr. Xquee, the learnedprofessor of Indian Bead Weaving206, if he thinks it would be pos¬sible, seeing as how I’m a goodboy and will work to the best ofmy ability, if I could take thecourse for a P or N;• Talk to Mr. Booth or Mr.Bemesderfer to ascertain if In¬dian Bead Weaving 206 forms an‘exception’ to College rules, andif so, whether I could take it fora P or N;• See dear Mrs. Sullivan, our be¬loved registrar, and notify her(a year in advance) that I amjolly well GOING to take IndianBead Weaving on a P-N basis;and finally,• Ask E. Spenser Parsons to pray with me that all the sectionsof Indian Bead Weaving won’t beclosed in Winter Quarter 1970.Yes, it stirs my heart to knowthat the faculty and adminis¬tration are so concerned with ourwelfare that they are willing togo to such trouble to insure ourhealth and success.I only hope that SOMEDAY,SOMEwhere, ONE student mightget to say ONE word to ONEperson in power about the royal-pain-in-the-(censored) caused bythe antics of the “enlightened”despots in our community.ROBERT FORMAN. ’69Class StrifeThe actual war situation as itexists today and all of previoushistory show that prayers anddemonstrations can NOT end war.Wars have economic causesand must be attacked economic¬ally as the economic causes mustbe removed.The private property and classruled society that produces thecause of war must be ended andbe replaced, as the Socialist La¬bor Party teaches, by the social¬ist society that gives everyone astake in peace.The great need of the hour isfor the acceptance of socialism asthe solution to war and the otherevil products of class society.NATHAN PRESSMANEllenville, N.Y.Self ServiceI strongly agree with last Fri¬day’s editorial, “Nothing toDo?”If, during SG’s Great Hiberna¬tion, Jeff Blum needed ideas onwhat to do, he should have con¬sulted his own party platform.Last April the Student PoliticalAction Committee was just brim¬ming with all the great things itwould accomplish if elected. Here are just a few:• Support of the principle ofhouse autonomy,• Abolition of dorm residencyrequirements,• Establishment of a studentactivities union,• Organization of a campuslabor union,• Attempts to assist in plan¬ning a new bookstore and libraryfacilities,• Investigation of rising tui¬tion, room, and board costs, andfund-raising drive for “social ac¬tion project.”It would be all right if SPAChad tried to do all this and failed.The fact is, it just never tried atall.And what has SPAC done thisyear? First of all, it has turnedthe SG office into a central print¬ing and distribution point for theliterature of whatever organiza¬tions they choose. SPAC itselfhas admitted “no especial loyal¬ty” to SG, but only to SPAC’sgoal of a “viable student move¬ment.” They promised to be agovernment of the people, butthey have served only them¬selves.BILL PHILLIPS, *70Letters to the editors must besigned, although names may bewithheld 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 tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of *U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Press Service.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 9, 1968February 9, 1968 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of Culture, Satire, and Dissent Section TwoChicago and IDAStephen RothkrugIN 1960, the University of Chicago joinedthe Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA),which had been established in 1956, to ful¬fill certain research needs of the DefenseDepartment. Precisely what prompted theUniversity to join is not known, but itseems fair to assume that Chicago under¬stood the nature of IDA before becominga member.Since the University’s affiliation began,IDA has grown and diversified, but itsessential function has not changed. It wasthen, and remains now (in the words ofone of its annual reports), a “scientificservant to the government,” a “servant”which has always done almost all its workfor the Defense Department.The changes in IDA in the last elevenyears largely reflect the changes in thiscountry’s military requirements. Whenfirst formed the Institute concerned itselfwith the non-ideological weapons of thecold war. IDA now does civilian supportwork for the Pentagon’s Project Agile,described by Missiles and Rockets maga¬zine as “the real think factory in the useof advanced technology for counterinsur¬gency conflicts. ...” This article (in theissue of March 29, 1965) goes on tosay that most of Agile’s current work in¬volves finding solutions to combat prob¬lems the United States faces in its“attempt to defend the independence ofSouth Vietnam against the North Viet¬namese.” Agile also is planning for futurecounterinsurgency operations.Riot ControlAnother new area of IDA’s work is dom¬estic riot control; studies have been madein this area for both the Army andthe President’s Commission on Law En¬forcement.In addition, IDA has recently completeda study on the “next generation” ofICBM’s, missiles which will be better ableto penetrate Russian defenses.Some idea of IDA’s integral role inAmerica’s military structure can begained from Business Week’s statement(in its July 13, 1963 issue) that “IDA re¬ports have figured in most major Penta¬gon decisions on selection of weapons andstrategy—including controversial rulingson the RS-70, Skybolt, and Nike-Zeus.” In¬deed, the Institute often works hand-in-hand with the Defense Department, as inthe case of the IDA’s Weapons SystemsEvaluation Division (WSED) and De¬fense’s Weapons Systems EvaluationGroup (WSEG). WSED does studies on therequest of WSEG with constant crossrfeedoccurring between the two throughout thestudies. According to Missiles and Rockets(March 30, 1964), one of the chief rewardsof this close co-operation is that projectreports are quickly transmitted to the up¬per levels of the defense establishment.Essential to PentagonIDA appears to be necessary to the Pen¬tagon for two main reasons. First, as anon-profit corporation working on contractfor the Defense Department, its recruit¬ment of scientists isn’t hampered by theCivil Service maximum on salaries. Sec¬ond, it loans the prestige of the memberuniversities to the work being done. (MIT,Columbia, Princeton, Stanford, and CalTech are among the other eleven consti¬tuting members.) In The Maroon of No¬vember 11, 1967, A. Adrian Albert, the uni¬ versity’s legate to IDA is reported as say¬ing that Chicago does little more than lendits prestige to the Institute, and that IDAwould have serious problems recruitingpersonnel if the member universities wereto withdraw. The University’s member¬ship does not necessarily mean that it hascontracts with IDA or that any of its pro¬fessors does work for it.At the same time, it is important tonote, university participation in the Insti¬tute does not mean university control. IDAis using precise terminology when it de¬scribes itself as the “servant” of the gov¬ernment. It does what it is asked to do,and almost all the asking is done by theDefense Department. Chicago’s affiliationwith the Institute must be viewed as anindirect, but nonetheless genuine, institu¬tional tie with the Penagon. The tie mustalso be viewed as an endorsement of thepolitics implicit in IDA’s work.Chicago and the WarA reading of its annual reports makesclear IDA’s partisan stand in the coldwar, and the fact that some of its workrelates directly to the war in Vietnammakes it a partisan in that war too. Thus,Chicago’s decision to affiliate with the In¬stitute meant approval of America’s coldwar policies. Its continued affiliationmeans approval of the Vietnam war.The men directing the University of Chi¬cago (now and at the time its affiliationwith IDA began) no doubt wish and de¬serve to be considered purposeful menwho make decisions after due deliberationand for clear reasons. They would resentbeing accused of hasty judgements, care¬lessly made. It is assumed that the decision to enterIDA was made after due deliberation andfor clear reasons by men aware of the im¬plications of membership. They must havebeen, and must be aware that a major im¬plication of entering the Institute was anendorsement of America’s cold war poli¬cies. Witness these two remarks taken re¬spectively from IDA’s 1957 and 1958 annu¬al reports:The era of war-in-peace in whichvast shifts in the power framework,aggravated by implacable Communistambition of world domination, havebrought us military responsibilities farbeyond the direct defense of our ownterritory. We are now denied our tra¬ditional peacetime luxury of relaxingour military efforts, of leaving themilitary capitalization of new technol¬ogy to accident or the slow processesof time.We hope to continue to serve as areminder of an old truth, of whichIDA is but a new manifestation, thatgreat universities have always dealtably with the great issues of theirtimes.These remarks give an indication ofIDA’s self-conception, a self-conceptionarticulated before Chicago chose to join.In other words, IDA was already defined,its function in this society determined,and its politics chosen when the Univer¬sity joined the cold war bandwagon, de¬liberately tied itself institutionally toAmerica’s “defense” establishment.There reems to be two main possible re¬wards that Chicago receives from thisassociation. The first is a sense of com¬ mitment to the “national defense.” For“national defense”, along with that othereuphemism “protecting democracy” readcounter-revolution in Vietnam, Bay ofPigs invasion of Cuba, the crushing of amoderate revolt in the Dominican Repub¬lic, intervention in the abortive Congoleserevolution, and support of endless dicta¬tors in Latin America, Asia, and else¬where. The second possibility that sug¬gests itself is that in return for its mem¬bership Chicago gains a priority ratingwhen federal money is to be doled out.Chicago’s belonging to IDA is only onemore indication of the growing subserv¬ience of contemporary universities to thenation’s state and corporate structures,upon which the universities depend for animportant part of their funding. Much sig¬nificant defense work is done on contractto universities, and universities also pro¬vide people with the specialized skills re¬quired by the government and corpora¬tions. These skills are indeed neutral, buthardly the society employing them is not.To ignore the question of this society’s na¬ture, or to obscure it with references toits “freedom” and “democracy” is tanta¬mount to accepting its particular non-neu¬trality, i.e., the corporate structure itself,racism, the Vietnam war, etc.A Neutral UniversityObviously, the university should with¬draw from IDA, and withdraw now. How¬ever, it would be a mistake to assumethat withdrawal would make Chicago aneutral university. This is true despite thefact that it is relatively “clean” in rela¬tion to military contracts, and despite thefact that it does not train “technocrats”after the manner of large state schools.For Chicago operates within the limitsprescribed by the external society. Thiswas made explicit in the report (datedApril 11, 1967) of a committee formedafter SDS charged the then director ofadmissions, Charles O’Connell, with poli¬tical discrimination against an applicant.The report read in part:Within the framework of the lawand in cognizance of the general val¬ue consensus prevailing in our society,it is the right of the University facul¬ty and administrative officers to de¬termine what shall be the orientation,social mission, intellectual culture,curriculum, and educational goals ofthis University. It is the right and du¬ty of these authorities to attempt todefine an academic environment mostconducive to the achievement of theirgoals. The right to self determinationas a community of scholars and schol¬arship is a fundamental aspect of aca¬demic freedom.This university has a “social mission”conceived within the law and general val¬ue system of this non-neutral society.It is not implied here that the impend¬ing decision about whether to remain inIDA is of no meaning. To continue parti¬cipation would be a re-affirmation of sup¬port for the war in Vietnam and other IDAwork. Withdrawal would end Chica¬go’s most direct connection with the warand the Pentagon.Mr. Rothkrug, an active member ofStudents for a Democratic Society, isa second-year student majoring in his¬tory.CULTUREVULTUREHERE CULTURE VULTURE has been sit¬ting these past few months, boosting thewonderful world of the arts in this greathinterland intellectual palace of ours andwhat happens but Dov Dublin comes inwith the news that there will be no festivalof the Arts here this year.What, no FOTA? But, why???” weshouted.“Apathy,” Dublin said.So there you are. Once more studentapathy deals the death blow to a morals¬uplifting, mind-improving, expanding insti¬tution for which the money has alreadybeen appropriated.TheaterTo take us out of our mourning forFOTA, the University Theater is present¬ing a revue this weekend entitled, TheUndeniable Miscellany of Humor andPoetry in the Reynold’s Club Theater.The program will consist of a series ofsketches and poetry readings, among them•James Thurber’s If Grant Had Been Drink¬ ing at Appomattox; E. B. White’s Hour ofLetdown; Mark Twain’s 1601; plus numer¬ous sketches based on * Jules iP'eiffer’scartoons.Few people like to listen to a complexpoem they’ve never heard before. There¬fore, most of the poetry read will be rath¬er familiar.The selections will include: “Lay YourSleeping Head My Love” by W. H. Anden,“Peter Quince at the Clavier” by WallaceStevens, and “Crazy Jane Talks with theArchbishop” by William Butler Yeats.Other poets represented will be: E. E.Cummings, Randall Jarrell, Karl Shapiro,and Kenneth Koch.Tickets are on sale at the Reynold’s ClubDesk. The price is $1.00 for students andfaculty, and $1.50 for all others, tonightand Friday and Saturday nights.George Bernard Shaw’s earliest master¬piece, Arms and the Man, opens this week¬end for a nine-week run as the third offer¬ing of The Saint Paul’s Players, HydePark’s newest community theater. KennethNorthcott, professor of older Germaniclanguages, directs the production.Arms and the Man satirizes Romanti¬cism : The Romantic Ideals of Honor, Cour¬age, Patriotism, Love, and Nobility areset in nineteenth century Bulgaria, im¬mediately after the Serbo-Bulgarian War.(The war lasted three days; the Bulgar¬ ians won when the Serbs forgot to bringammunition.) A Swiss mercenary spendsa night hiding in the bedroom of the fian¬cee of the Bulgarian hero. The ensuingcomplications turn Bulgarian society andRomantic Idealism upside-down.His cast includes Thomas Busch (Serg¬ius), J. Roger Dodds (Bluntschli), AnnetteFern (Catherine), Donald Swanton, (Pet-koff), and Jerrold Ziemon (Nicola), allstudents or staff members at the univer¬sity. Mimi Daley (Louka), and BarbaraNelson (Raina) are new to Hyde Parktheater.The theater is located in the basemefttof St. Paul’s Church at 50th and Dorchest¬er. Arms and the Man plays on Fridaysand Saturdays at 8:30 and Sundays at 7:30,‘until April 2. Student tickets cost $1.75.MusicThree major campus concerts highlightthe music picture for the next three days.This evening, the Contemporary Music So¬ciety will present Bridge I, a concert bythe Jarman Company. This noted Chicagojazz group will perform at 8 p.m. in IdaNoyes Hall. Admission will be $1.00 at thedoor.The Chamber Music Series will featureviolinist Charles Castleman in concerttomorrow at Mandel Hall at 8:30. Amongthe works featured will be Brahms’ Sona¬ta in G Major, Beethoven’s Sonata in F(“Spring”), Bartok’s Roumanian Dances; and Sarasate’s Fantasy on Themes FromCarmen.Chicago’s Collegium Musicum Choruswill present to first concert tomorrownight at the Lexington Hall Studio at 8:30p.m. The new group will be assisted bythe University Chamber Orchestra andwill present a program of music by Schu¬bert, Hindemith, and Buxthude.FilmsOn campus this Friday Doc Films isshowing Rene Clair’s Le Million. NihonBunka Kai will show Woman In the DunesSaturday night. Tuesday Fritz Lang’s Ger¬man western with Marlene Dietrich, Ron-cho Notorius will be screened. Each shotlooks like an El Greco in this strangestLang masterpiece. Wednesday is Belle ofthe 90’s Mae West rides again. (All in Soc.iSci. 126.)ArtThis month there will be a Found Ob¬ject Fest, the first show in new Cobb Gal¬lery. “Undergraduates will be urged toseek out natural or manufactured objects,which, by their placement within an artgallery, will take on a particularly poig¬nant, satirical, acid, tragicomical, lyrical,or, basically, a new and unexpected mean¬ing,” art coordinator David Katsive says.Found objects appeared first in collegesbefore World War One and they frequentlywere the carrying medium for Dada artistaround Marcel Duchamp.INTERNATIONAL HOUSEGIFT SHOP1414 E. 59th StreetGIFTS FROMAROUND THE WORLD!Tobacco s-Candies-StationeryNe w spa pers-Magazines-CosmeticsOpen Monday-Friday 10:15 AM-514 5 h'MSaturday and Sunday Noon-5:45~PMOPENING FEBRUARY 16## | Shakespeare's |OTHELLOstarring JAMES EARL JONESand LEN CARI0UDirected by Charles McGawNightly except Mon. thru March 13Mats. 2:00 p.m. Thurs. Feb. 22 & 29GOODMAN THEATRE-CE 6-2337CHICAGO TICKIT CiNTRAL • 212 N MICHIGAN AVIforeign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!** r foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange324-33135*Tk.EAKxpensivetmosphereone to theMEDICI14501.57th SI13 OZ. NEW YORK CUTSIRLOIN STEAK &potatoe salad $3.85 Ifwe werehappywith the worldthe way it is,we wouldn’tneed you.Kids choke on polluted air. Streets are jammed bycars with no place to go. Italy’s priceless ait andlibraries are ravaged by floods. This is the way theworld is, but it’s not the way it has to be. Air pollu¬tion can be prevented. Better transportation canbe devised. Something can even be done about theweather. Many people at General Electric arealready working on these problems, but we needmore. We need help from young engineers and scientists; and we need help from business andliberal arts graduates who understand people andtheir problems. If you want to help solve importantproblems, we’d like to talk to you. We’ll be visitingcampus soon. Drop by the placement office andarrange for an interview.GENERAL^ ELECTRICAn equal opportunity employer90 oj goaimoiq ii2 WEEKEND MAGAZINE February 9, 1968w.Banish Plump Jaek3and Banish All the World ”AUDACIOUS, pretentious, and portentious,Orson Welles has commanded a place inthe cinema since Citizen Kane that no oneelse has filled. Generally known as a tech-THE UNIVERSITY THEATER productionof “The Changeling,” a Jacobean play byMiddleton and Rowley, was an excellentpiece of theater, and director Mark Rosinis to be commended for presenting a cohe¬sive, entertaining show to his sellout audi¬ences. He had plenty of obstacles. Theplay itself was rather hard to follow, hav¬ing two story lines (one taking place in acastle and the other in a madhouse) whichconverged only once before the end of theslay. Mr. Rosin was also obviously hinderedUniversity Theater presentsTHE CHANGELINGBeatric-Joanna Joan MankinAlcimero William ReddyDe Flores Donald ShojaiWith Michael Kraus, Joel Shapiro, Peter Rat-ner, Gerald Fisher, T. C. Fox, JonathanLubran, Ala Rudnick, Lonnie McAllister,Caroline Stoloff, Susie Joseph, and RobertGreene.Directed by Mark Rosinby a sloppy technical crew, whose faultylighting, offstage noises, and general care¬lessness threatened the success of the pro¬duction. There was also some intricatechoreography involved, especially in thequickly-paced madhouse scenes, but theseproblems were overcome with skill unusu¬al in a student director.The best part of the production was theacting. The actors were experienced, self-assured, and innovative. The star of theshow was undoubtedly Joan Mankin, asBeatrice-Joanna. Her deliberate, dominat-MANKYNDE IS FACED with a choice.He may follow the teaching of Mercy andcome to God, or he may be misled by My-scheff, New-Gyse, Now-a-days, Nought,and the devil Titivillus. He first decidesto choose the latter, but after ill deeds andfalse visions, he falls. Only by the Mercyof God is he raised at the end. Promisingto do good works he is again permittedthe possibility of heaven.Mankind (the spelling changes evenwithin the program) is a novel attempt atThe Renaissance Players presentMANKINDMercy Al’n NelsonMyscheff Bill HayashiNew-gyse J. Roger DoddsNow-a-days Tom BuschNought Michael ReddyMankynde Bill ReddyTitivillus Howard M. ZiffDirected by Annette FernProduced by Alan NelsonTHE CROXTON PLAY OF THESACRAMENTAristorius, Christianus mercator Robert SwanJonathus, Judeus primus Donald Sw.ntonWith Thomas Busch, Richard Whiete, DovDublin, Ezra Goldstein, Michael Sorkin, Ste¬phen Goodman, and Paul StraleyProduced and directed by Pauf D'AndreaWith members of the Collegium Musicuma sermon. The medieval morality playbegins and ends with a priest’s sermon,the central portion is a visual and excit¬ing enactment of his lesson.However (William Empton were youalive even then?) ambiguity, like an in¬visible devil, creeps into this, most simpl¬istic of plays. For Mercy is dull and bor¬ing, while Mankynde is but an emptysheet. It is in Myscheff and his threebawdy companions that we delight. It isTitivillus the hairy devil whom we ap¬plaud. Our reason would go with thepreacher Mercy, but are hearts are else¬where.After the intermission we return to findThe Croxton Play of the Sacrament. Herewe find what promises to be fine spect- nical genius he is actually one of the onlygreat tragedians of this century. Ratherthan starting on a brilliant level and thendeclining, as some would claim, Wellesing style occasionally tended towards theover-theatrical, but on the whole she spar¬kled, especially in her scenes with DonaldShojai, as her repugnant suitor, DeFlores.Mr. Shojai’s excellent underplaying com¬plemented Miss Mankin, and their scenestogether were some of the finest in theplay.Gerald Fisher (as Lollio) and Nick Mal-liarakis (as Antonio) were fine. Specialmention must be made of T.C. Fox, whowas refreshingly hilarious as Fransiscus,the mad poet.The madhouse scenes were generally bet¬ter than the castle scenes, but the high-point of the play came at the convergenceof the two story lines, at the beginning ofAct II. With touches of Marat/Sade, themadmen in this scene burlesque themurder of Beatrice-Joanna’s fiance’ andher ensuing betrayal of Deflores and mar¬riage to Alsemero (William Reddy). Fromtheir part of the stage, the real characterslook on as for a moment their lives aremocked in their faces. This scene was al¬most professional in its execution.Although the production could have useda lot of polish and certainly some techni¬cal advice, the potential — of actors, dir¬ector, and, incidentally, costumers (hatsoff to Lonnie McAllister & Co.) — wasthere. Hopefully the good work will contin¬ue. JEANNE WIKLERacle. The Jews, who first murderedChrist, will prove that his body is not inthe holy wafer. They conspire to buy itfrom a Christian merchant who drugs hispriest and steals it from the church. TheJews cut the wafer and it bleeds. Theynail it to a tree and the Jew’s hand willnot leave the wafer, rather it leaves hisarm. Terrified, with pincers they throwhand and wafer into a sealed oven whichexplodes with blood and from whichJhesus rises. Now this is strong stuff.But once more scholarship, like the Chi¬cago phoenix, rises in fire and sets theplay into a museum. For some unknownreason Paul D’Andrea had his playersspeak the speeches as they are spelled.(“Godes” is pronounced like the femaleof the species.) This slows down both thespeech of the actor’s and the understand¬ing of the audience. The spectacle is alsodiminished. The wafer did not visiblybleed. The oven only trickled blood, andJhesus in the person of Thomas Busch,quietly, if untcuously, rose. Only the Jew’shand, in all its gory, was left visible stick¬ing on the tree.It is rare to see these plays. A reviewershould not try to dissuade their furtherperformance. The Renaissance Playersare relatively new and we honestly hopefor their continued life. It is only the fam¬ous Chicago style of scholarship we de¬plore.There was evident talent displayed inthe performance of the plays. The poten¬tial is far above what UT has led us toexpect. One can only hope for a dark bril¬liant angle to burst upon the scene, usingscholarship merely to forward a theatri¬cal sense, which, in its fire, shall bringlife to the stages of this grey university.C. RAYMOND PAUL has proved that tragedy can be fitted intoevery and any form. Kane was, of course,the tragedy of power. The MagnificentAmbersons was the reverse: it wasWelles’ statement on salvation. But theloss -of power which permitted this salva¬tion was the tragedy of an entire class. InTouch of Evil Welles took a melodramaand made a nearly perfect classical tra¬gedy. Quinlinn, Welles’ police boss, neverloses his stature, knows his fault, and diestrying to protect what has let him live.Throughout his career Welles hasalways produced Shakespeare. Not merelythe Shakespeare of the texts, but a Shake¬speare that would emerge as essentiallyOrson Welles. Before films there was thefamous modern dress production of JuliusCeasar. Then there was Macbeth andOthello, attempts at creating the atmos¬phere of the peculiar type of tragedy andentertainment that is Shakespeare.The film is filled with Wellesian situa¬tions and characters. At the beginning weare given the struggle for power betweenHenry IV and the Percys. The Percyswant Edmund Mortimer pardoned. Henryrealizes that Mortimer is a threat to histhrone, so he refuses. His throne is a phys¬ical object that refuses to let people ap¬proach him. Power has left him out of hu¬manity. For the rest of the film we shallsee the trappings of power forcing peopleout of humanity as well.The young man who grows into this de¬humanizing and corrupt power has beena constant Welles theme. Beginning inAmbersons (here George Minifer is borninto the power and loses it thus purifyinghimself) it continued through The LadyFrom Shanghai and Mr. Arkadin (whereVan Straaten begins and ends corrupt).In Falstaff we have both Hotspur and Hal.In their characters lies one of the mostinteresting relationships of the movie.Hotspur is introduced after the initialconfrontation between his family and theking. He is loud and energetic, but the en¬ergy goes nowhere. Welles deliberatelycuts and shoots so that any sense of placeor perspective we might have is de¬stroyed. It is only a sense of constant anduseless motion that is evoked.This sequence is followed by onein which Prince Hal is first shown. Halenters from screen left. He is in a positionexactly opposite of that which Hotspurwas in when we left him. The cutting andshooting of this sequence is otherwise thesame as the last. Hotspur and Hal emergeas different sides of the same person.The difference lies, of course, in OrsonWelles and in the character he plays.Poins and Hal enter picking Falstaff’spocket and follow by planning the farceat Gadshill. Thus they begin by humili¬ating and continue to do so throughout.Falstaff, on the other hand, is goingto Gadshill because he needs the money(the pocket-picking has established that)and shows a true and honest love for Hal.Falstaff is an old man and in Hal’s youthand energy he sees a further lease on life.But Hal is tied to the same system ofchivalry that Hotspur is. Where Hotspurhas a wife who can laugh at the absurdi¬ty of his “honor” and not be offendedwhen he rides off without her, Halhas Falstaff who shall be betrayed whenHal comes to power. This impending be¬trayal is conveyed several times in thefilm, most forcibly in a series of very longtakes placed right outside the inn. Fromthere the castle of Henry can be seen, andit is just before Hal leaves for this castlethat he tells Falstaff that he shall reform,take his place as king, and refuse the hu¬manity of Falstaff. The same setting re¬occurs twice again in the film. The lasttime it is there to show us Falstaff’s cof¬fin, which turns off the route away fromthe castle. Even in death, Falstaff is de¬fiant of this evil. "The fact that the black images so oftenFebruary 9, associated with Welles are not as evidentin this film does not mean that Welles’tactile world is missing. The world of Fal¬staff is not that of Kane or indeed of Mac¬beth. It is more a world of browns andthis imagery is evoked even thoughthe film is in “black and white.”Welles and Shallow discuss the “chimesat midnight” (the original title of thefilm) in a huge deserted barn. MistressQuickley’s “inn” is in fact a whorehouseof which Doll Tearsheet is merely one ofmany members. (The difference here isthat Jeanne Moreau’s Doll, much likeMarlene Dietrich’s Tanya in Touch ofEvil, is able to truly love Falstaff. Thetwo are also alike in that both Quinlinnand Falstaff turn to their prostitute beforetheir downfall. In each case the love theyoffer is not enough. Quinlinn is lured out¬side by his deputy to his doom. Hal andPoins come in and take Doll away fromFalstaff.) Most physical of all are the bat¬tle scenes which begin abstractly and endin the most revolting and excruciating de¬tail.Here again Falstaff tries to maintain ahuman answer. For once Welles appearssmaller than evryone else on the screenand always on the outskirts. He hasalready (in the draft sequence) demon¬strated that he knows how stupid chivalryis and at once refuses to be part ofthe sutpidity while reaping what benefitshe can. Thus he will not take part in theDattle, but will claim Hotspur for his own.It is this teaching that he most wantedHal to have. If Hal had truly loved himhe could not be angry at Falstaff for doingwhat he did. Welles does not have Halgive Falstaff Hotspur in a moment ofChristian magnamity. Rather he has Halturn on Falstaff and wordlessly rejecthim. Hal has chosen chivalry and thus re¬jected humanity.Falstaff realizes this choice although hetries not to believe it. There is the secondtavern sequence which ends in the disas¬ter of Hal taking Doll and leaving Falstaffthe lonely outsider. There is finally theclimatic scene where Hal is crowned. Ashe is about to mount the throne, the sym¬bol which physically prevented his fatherfrom being approached (even by his ownson), Falstaff bursts in. “I do not knowthis old man” says Hal without so muchas turning to look at Falstaff. Falstaff hasalready transversed an indeterminabledistance to reach Hal. But Hal is alreadyHenry V and has already rejected lifefor the chivalry and power of his fatherana of the Percys. He shall declare a stu¬pid war against France. He shall refusefriendship to Falstaff.In talking of Arkadin, Welles has said“the point of the story is to show that aman who declares himself in the face ofthe world, I am as I am, take it or leaveit, that this man has a sort of tragic dig¬nity.” It is this that is the tragic dignityof Falstaff. When he tells the story ofGadshill, exagerating wildly, when hepleads for “poor Jack Falstaff” to Hal’sHenry, he is not lying. He is telling hisstory to those whom he knows know thetruth. I am a myth maker, he says. Takeme as I am. I exaggerate myself grotes¬quely. This is part of what makes me hu¬man. He falls. He is doomed to failure.He is an overly human man in a de¬humanizing world. He is Falstaff. He isOrson Welles.Falstaff is not the jolly fat knight. Heis the tragic figure of the man who refusesto deny life, to deny the greatnessand dignity of himself, no matter what hisostensible actions.T. C. FOXUnhappy postscript: Since opening lastweekend, Falstaff and the theater atwhich it was playing have both closed. Acombination of not enough advertising, theChicago non-transit system, and ultra-highrent (mainly the latter) seem to beat fault. The Town-Underground had beenshowing some of the most beautiful filmsin this city. We mourn its loss.: :1968 WEEKEND MAGAZINE 3THEATERChangeling: CohesiveMankind: Entertainingp,cco^'0<3ncesc^vV'o°scTcG°^Urt\'\CS•St^-sr-Sss*c;>,wW”sgftP>ai^ ,^'"cS^oO^00 3-yra’^ If your majoris listed here,IBM would liketo talk with youFebruary 19th.Sign up for an interview at your placement office—even ifyou’re headed for graduate school or military service.Maybe you think you need a technical background to workfor us.Not true.Sure we need engineers and scientists. But we also needliberal arts and business majors. We’d like to talk with you evenif you're in something as far afield as Music. Not that we’dhire you to analyze Bach fugues. But we might hire you toanalyze problems as a computer programmer.What you can do at IBMThe point is, our business isn't just selling computers.It's solving problems. So if you have a logical mind, we needyou to help our customers solve problems in such diverse areas as government, business, law. education, medicine, science,the humanities.Whatever your major, you can do a lot of good things atIBM. Change the world (maybe). Continue your education(certainly, through plans such as our Tuition Refund Program).And have a wide choice of places to work (we have over 300locations throughout the United States).What lo do nextWe'll be on campus to interview for careers in Marketing,Computer Applications, Programming, Research, Design andDevelopment, Manufacturing, and Finance and Administration.If you can't make a campus interview, send an outlineof your interests and educational background toMr. I. C. Pfeiffer, IBM Corporation, 100 SouthWacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60606.We’re an equal opportunity employer.% >WEEKEND MAGAZINE February 9, 1968Calendar of Events of Interest ~1Persons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must type information on Cal¬endar forms available at The Maroon Office.Ida Noyes 303. Forms must then be sent orbrought to the Office at least two days be¬fore the date of publication.Friday, February 9VARSITY TRACK: North Central College andBradley University Field House, 7 p.m.CANCER CONFERENCE- "Carcinoma of theBreast," Dr. Rene Menguy. Billings P-117, 5 p.m.FILM: "Le Million," by Rene Clair. Soc Sci122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m., $.75.MEETING: (Intervarsity Christian Fellow¬ship), "Plans for the Uprising." IdaNoyes, 7:30 p.m.CONFERENCE: Progressive Labor PartyMidwest Student Conference, taped reportof a P L.P. traveler to China. 1900 N.Sedgewick, Registration fee $2.00 (forthree days). 7:30 p.m.CONCERT: Contemporary Music Society,"Bridge I." The Jarmon Company. IdaNoyes, 8 p.m., $1.PIZIA PARTY: Informal Bio-Student-FacultyPizza Party sponsored by UndergraduateBiology Committee. 5642 Kimbark, 8 p.m.STUDY EVENING: Hillel Fiundation, Songof the Sea, Exodus 15," Rabbis Max D.Ticktin and Daniel I. Leifer. 5715 Wood-lawn, 8:30 p.m.THEATER: "The Undeniable Miscellany,sketches of Humor, Poetry Mime andSketches from Mark Twain, Feiffer,Thurber, e.e. cummings, W.H.O Auden.Reynolds Club Theatre, 8:30 p.m., $1.CONCERT: Chamber Music Series. CharlesCastleman, violin. Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m.EXHIBIT: Hillel, "Photos of Jerusalem —August, 1967" by Robert Gordon. 5715Woodlawn.Saturday, February 10CONFERENCE: Progressive Labor PartyMidwest Student conference. Bill Sachs,Earl Silber, discussion in morning.Afternoon workshops see Friday for placeetc. _ .VARSITY FENCING: Notre Dame andDetroit, Boucher Hall, 10 a.m.CHANGE-RINGING: Mitchell Tower, 12:00noon. ..VARSITY TRACK: UCTC Open, Field House,1 p.m.TAl-SAWABNCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESCLOSED MONDAYOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders To Take Out131S EAST 43rd ST. MU 4-1042STUDENT CO OPnew arrivalsphilosophypsychologyphysicshrs. 9-6 weekdays12-6 SaturdaysReynolds ClubBasementSERVICEto your satisfactionQUALITY UOUKon allforeign and sports carsby trained mechanic.Body work & paintingTO'VINC,Free Estimates on ALL Work326-2550IESLY IMPORTS, INC2235 S. MICHIGANAuthorizedPeugeot DealerService hours: Daily 8-7Sat. 9-510% Student Discounton Repair Order Parts.Convenient to all majorexpressways, Lake ShoreDrive, 1C, and “El”. VARSITY WRESTLING: St. Joseph's, Bart¬lett Gym, 1:30 p.m.VARSITY GYMNASTICS: Eastern IllinoisUniversity, Bartlett Gym, 2 p.m.THEATER: "The Undeniable Miscellany."See Friday listing.FILM: "Woman in the Dunes," presented bythe Japanese Film Society. BreastedHall, 8 p.m., $.75.CONCERT: The Collegium Musicum with theUniversity Chamber Orchestra. Works bySchubert, Hindemith and Buxtehude.Lexington Hall Studio, 8:30 p.m.Sunday, February 11UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: "ThePeople of Hope," The Reverend E. Spen¬cer Parsons. Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 11 a.m.LECTURE: "The Night Pastor Program,"Father Robert Owen. Near North Uni¬tarian Fellowship, 1718 N. Northpark,11:00 a.m.UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor SEMINAR: "Emigration to Israel," spon¬sored by Student Zionist Organization. IdaNoyes Hall, all day.CONFERENCE: Progressive Labor PartyMidwest Student conference, workshopevaluation, conference evaluation, seeFriday for listing.AFRO-AMERICAN HISTORY CELEBRA¬TION: Dr. Doxey Wilkerson, Carl Braden,Margaret Burroughs. Music and drama.Pershing Ballroom, 64th and CottageGrove, 3 p.m., $1.50.Recruiting VisitsRepresentatives from the following will bevisiting the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club, Room 200:MEETING: Sunday Night at Chapel House."Secular Transcendence," Rev. JohnArthur, Chaplain. Lutheran School ofTheology, Chapel House. Supper 5:30p.m.. Discussion 6:30 p.m.WOOL SHIRTSCPO Plaid Jac shirtsall reduced to $6.88Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1.00IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY. NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.DANCE. DO YOUR THING TO THE GROOVIEST BANDS IN AMERICA9 Rip out this ad now and bring it to ”m Cheetah this weekend for a■ SPEC! UNIV. of CHICAGO :; STUDENT DISC0UNT-I3.00 :■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■TICKETS: $4.00 AT THE DOOR, $3.50 IN ADVANCE AT ALL WAR0 ANDCRAWF0R0 STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL, 212 NORTH MICHIGANGROUP SALES: Call Mr. Fox at L0 1 -8558 to throw a party at Cheetah for 50 to 2000WIDB OPKN FRIDAY, SATURDAY. SUNDAY AT S P.M. MEETING: SDS Factory Committee whichseveral steel workers will attend. IdaNoyes, 7:30 p.m.PANEL DISCUSSION: "Hermeneutocs amdEthics in Current New Testament Study,"Profs. Freeman Sleeper, Chicago Theolo¬gical Seminary; David Granskou, Luth¬eran School of Theology, Robert M. Grantand Norman Perrin, Divinity School.Swift Hall Commons, 7:30 p.m.THEATRE: "The Undeniable Miscellany."See Friday listing.Graduate School(Call Ext. 3283 for appointments.)February 14 — Reed College, Portland,Oregon. Representative will talk to pro¬spective candidates for M.A.T. programs.Teaching(Call Ext. 3279 for appointments.)February 9 — Farmington Public Schools, Farmington. Connecticut. No informationavailable at this writing. Call Ext. 3279for specific needs and appointments afew days before recruiting late.February 9 — Peoria Public Schools, Peoria,Illinois. No information available at thiswriting. Call this office a few days be¬fore recruiting date for specific needsand appointments.February 12 — West Hartford Public Schools,West Hartford, Connecticul. No informa¬tion available at this writing. Call Ext.3279 for specific needs and appointmentsa few days before recruiting date.Business, Industry, Government(Call Ext. 3284 for appointments.)February 8 and 9 — National Security Agen¬cy, Washington, D.C. Interviewing mathe¬maticians and statisticians at all degreelevels as well as students in other depart¬ments who passed the Professional Quali¬fications Test.HYDE PARK THEATR53rd and Lake Park EHELD OVER STARTING FRIDAY, FEB. 9thWINNER OF 6 ACADEMYAWARDS INCLUDINGBEST PICTUREOF THE YEARICOLUMBIA PICTURES presentsFRED ZINNEMANN'SFILM OFA MANFOR ALLSEASONSALSO:FROM THE AUTHOR OFJROOM AT THE TOP'...—Laurence HarveyHonor BlackmanThat 'Pussy Galore* Girl!'Life At The Top'SPECIAL KIDDIES’ SHOWSAT.—SUH. AFTERNOON ONLY ALL SEATS 50Ciyi Jean Simmonsm Michael CraigSadi with Long John Silver andJim Hawkins for buried treasureCHILDHOOD PRODUCTIONSLONG JOHN SILVERRETURNS TOTREASURE ISLAND' fOUMMlTLOW JOHNSILVCRbased on Robert Louis Stevenson^.TREASURE ISLAND’maScop£February 9, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON ClICIA-Faculty Links Revealed at U. of MichiganSpecial to The MaroonCentral Intelligence Agents haveinfiltrated the Institute for SocialReasearch (ISR) at the Universityof Michigan, The Michigan Dailyrevealed yesterday and today.The investigation, published inThe Daily, shows:• There have been at least sixcontacts between CIA agents andthe ISR in recent years. Severalresulted in “some interchange ofinformation.”• CIA activity in the ISR is becom¬ing a significant problem, and theInstitute’s executive committee isconsidering placing restrictions oncontacts between ISR personneland the CIA.• Four Michigan professors metwith six CIA agents in 1966 to dis¬cuss the possibility of using univer¬sity faculty members and facili¬ties to train CIA agents.Kaminsky AppointedStuart M. Kaminsky, 33, has beennamed associate director of publicrelations for biological sciences atChicago.Kaminsky was formerly editorof the University of Michigan NewsService. He holds a B.S. in journa¬lism and M.A. in English from theUniversity of Illinois. CIA activity in the ISR has beendocumented by The Daily’s investi¬gation. One high ISR official hasadmitted that several contactswere productive for the CIA butsays the significance of the infor¬mation provided was minimal.Many of the contacts were notconsummated — that is, they in¬volved personnel who rebuffed theCIA or refused to meet with CIAagents, explained Professor Ar¬nold Tannedaum, of Michigan’s de¬ partment of psychology, and whois program director of the ISR’sSurvey Research Center.Four CategoriesAll these contacts were initiateddirectly by agents of the CIA. Ac¬cording to Tannedaum, informationrequested from ISR personnel fallsinto four categories:• Obtaining information from re¬searchers concerning their obser¬vations abroad.• Obtaining information about for¬SKATE FOR FUN AND HEALTHLAKE MEADOWS ICE SKATINGRINK and SKATING SCHOOLPUBLIC SESSIONS DAILYClosed MondaysSPECIAL GROUP RATESPrivate and Class Lessons Avai laible33rd Street and Ellis Ave.PHONE VI 2-7345 eign visitors to the ISR.• Eliciting co-operation to observeand report in the future about aparticular foreign visitor.• Obtaining information aboutformer ISR employees.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 You won't Have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 5. Doty Ave.646-441 ISend The Maroon HomePIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!(460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 A YEAR AT TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY1968-1969An accredited program open to qualified American stu¬dents interested in exploring the various aspects of lifein Israel while earning academic credit.Programs For: JUNIOR YEAR -:- FRESHMAN YEARScholarships AvailableFor Further Information Contact:The Secretary for Academic AffairsThe American Friends of the Tel Aviv University, Inc.41 East 42d StreetNew York, N.Y. 10017 MU 7-5651 For The Convenience And Needs fOf The University |RENT A CARDAILY — WEEKLY — MONTHLY \RAMBLERS — VALIANTS — MUSTANGS and DATSIPJSAs Low As $4.95 per Day(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE)HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715WOMAN IN THE DUNESSaturday, February 10 at 7:00 and 9:30. Breasted Hall, Oriental Institute, 58th & UniversityJESSELSON’SSSHVIN4 HYD8 PARK FOR QVMI U VIARSWITH THI V«UY RUT AMD F MS HISTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870 PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1140 E. 58r4College Relations Directorc/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008Please send me a free Sheraton Student I.D. Card:Name:.Address:.We’re holdingthe cards.Get one. Rooms are now up to 20% off with aSheraton Student I.D. How much depends onwhere and whefi you stay.And the Student I.D. card is free to begin w;th.Send in the coupon. It’s a good deal. And at agood place.Sheraton Hotels & Motor Inns155 Hotels and Motor Inns in major cities. * The Trojan Women|jy EuripidesDirected byUniversity TheatreMl 3-0800 X 3851Friday $2 00 SaurdaytZSO Mandel Hall 57th at Universitylebruary 16,17,18 8:30pmSunday$l75 Scudcni Faculty Ducounr $.90THE CHICAGO MAROON February 9, 1968Maroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50 cents per line, 40 cents perline repeat.For non-Unlversity clientele: 75 cents perline, 60 cents per line repeat. Count 35characters and spaces per line.TO PLACE AO: 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. 3266.MUSICDo you play bongos, conga, or other per¬cussion? Would you like to jam? Call Sandyat MU 4-1309.NEEDEDBASS PLAYER (with bass). Call M. Barth-elemy at 493-2107. Ethnic.LOVELOVELOVELOVELOVELOVELOVELY ROOMMATE WANTEDFEMALE TO SHARE Hyde Pk. Apartmentwith one other — Spring Quarter. 2 bdrms.Good. cond. Call BU 8-2333, evenings.FEMALE GRAD STUDENT to share 2 bdrm.apt. $50.00. 493-7397.THINGS ARE WARMER SOUTH OF THEMIDWAY — GET YOUR OWN ROOM FORonly $40/month. MALE or FEMALE, butnot both. 6020 Woodlawn. Apt. Number 1.PERSONALSWhen will people stop sending shitty, inaneclassified ads?Chicago's answer to the University of Wis¬consin's Anti-Military Ball: The First AnnualUnwashed Prom!Will success spoil SRH?(Maybe not, but the hours are wearing).These personals are too personal —Who the hell is SRH?ZETA: Brigid's Eve.If ye be that whyche ye say, contactCyfoeth: 234-5560 on 2/9/68, 7 to 10 P.M.From Natural History, August, 1921Photographing an unperturbed blue-face booby (Sula dactyalatra)at close range.WORKBE ASSISTANT MANAGER OR DOORMANfor Hyde Park Theatre. Apply any evening.STUDENTS! — EARN EXTRA MONEY —Part-time. Apply Monday, 10-12 A.M. toGreat Lakes Photographers, 180 North WackerDrive. Phone 346-1670 or 256-1629. ATT: KASPER OF THE LAW SCHOOL! —Das Erotische wird aus unserer Ausgabeausgelassen.WAITER OR WAITRESS WANTED.* Part-time: 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. for 3 days/week.Exc. income. Exp. preferred. Apply at Gor¬don's, 1321 E. 57th Street, or call 752-9251.TYPING DONEWILL TYPE THESES, MANUSCRIPTS, ETC.Call Mrs. Lyons, NO 7-4700, Ext. 8204.TYPIST WITH ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER.Standard page rates — flexible. MSS. Pre¬ferred. 90 words/minute. 2321 Rickert, BU 8-6610. THE JARMAN COMPANYBRIDGE IFebruary 9, 8:00 P.M.Ida Noyes HallFeel FreeComing: THE Un Wash — ed Prom!OK — I'm ready—SLF.EXHIBIT: SHOLOM ALEICHEM LITHO¬GRAPHS by ANATOLI KAPLAN. From theJewish Museum, New York City. At HillelUntil February 20th.SEWING DONE: some custom stuff.REASONABLE. Call 288-7475.SPERRY ANDHUTCHINSON2GfifL HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO SQUIRE GREENS!!!Shy, Oriental Male Seeks Girl Friend.288-2595Appropriate dress for this year's Un — WashProm will be dinner jacket, formal whiteturtleneck sweater, and beads.If you enjoyed the FOLK FESTIVAL, whynot enjoy SON HOUSE, SKIP JAMES, BUK-KA WHITE and BIG JOE WILLIAMS onRecord. Look for "Living Legends" at theFRET SHOP, 5210 S. Harper. Join the local think tank —SWAP needs you.PJ. Do not play with matches or VWs.Love, your friendly astrologer.Everyone has friends.The dinner alone is worth the cost of theticket — WASH PROMJAPANESE FILM GROUP presents:WOMAN IN THE DUNESSaturday, February 10, 7:00 & 9:30;Breasted Hall, Oriental Institute (58thUniversity).IS THE STATE OF YOUR MIND A SERIOUSSCHOLAR? INHALE HOT GUAVA AND LAYHIM TO REST!Oh I'm glad to be the way I anWho cares if I look funny.No matter what the others say.I'm glad that I'm Bugs Bunny.We're glad to see the meeting of the Coun¬cil of the University Senate is closed —-just like the Page Committee Recommended.WHEN WILL CHUCK O'CONNELL ISSUEHIS LONG — AWAITED GUAVA STATE¬MENT?NOF — Baroque Compass Players andMUSIC IN MILIEUConnie Erikson: Songs for GuitarHARPER THEATER COFFEE HOUSE5238 S. HARPER, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY.9 P.M. to 1:30 A.M.Ski Buffs do it!English feather;For men who want to be where theaction is. Very schussy. Very mas¬culine. ALL-PURPOSE LOTION.$2.50, $4.00, $6.50. From the com¬plete array of ENGLISH LEATHERmen’s toiletries.S PRODUCT Of MEM COMPANY, INC.. NORTHVAU, N. ) 07647 SOFT CORE"And Don Pedro overhearing,with loud laughter gave the order:'Fetch a sheep and give it to him!He has jested gallantly!' "It's O.K. — he's eating the sheep.HOMECOMINGHOMECOMING DANCESaturday, February 10, Ida Noyes Hall —after MAROON BASKETBALL GAME.FOR SALECO-OP APARTMENT ... 6 ROOM EFFI¬CIENCY WITH REAL FIREPLACE. ONSOUTH SHORE DRIVE. Seen by appoint¬ment, Call SA-1-8816 A.M.CAFE EUROPA FOR SALE.1440 E. 57th Street.Call 363-4732 after 6 P.M.CORVAIR '65 MONZA,Buckets, $950 or less.Call 677-7496. 4-door, 4 speed. Advantages of traveling alone at grouprates. 82 days in London, Paris, Copenhagen,Leningrad. Moscow, Kiev, Odessa, Istanbul,Athens, Rome, Madrid for $1375. No groupactivities there. Call 2545 or DO 3-3548.FLORIDA EVERGLADES BOAT TRIP.Spring Interim. March 16-23, Call HickoryX 2381 or 324-1499.TOUR EUROPE . .. 36-53 Days ... $1395—1995. All Costs Included. Call Vivian at667-3531.Marco Polo Handles Your Travel. BU 8-5944.COMING EVENT"ISRAEL AND YOU" U.C.S.Z.O. Seminarconcerning opportunities for Work, Study,Scientific Research, Travel, and Settlementin ISRAEL. Sunday Feb. 11, 1:00 P.M. —4 P.M. HILLEL HOUSE. 5715 S. Woodlawn.HELP DISPLACED PERSONSCANVASSERS NEEDED for Woodlawn Com¬mittee on Relocation Rights to help Victimsof Urban Renewal. Meet at Law SchoolLounge, Saturday, 10:30 A.M. or call 684-6883.Look for me under the table.Granny Tubbs dines nightly at the Bander-snatch.SONG OF THE SEA, EXODUS 15 — ASTUDY EVENING with Rabbis Max D. Tick-tin and Daniel I. Leifer. Hillel House, Friday,Feb. 9th, 8:30 P.M.Just because you have a name like a rug,it doesn't mean you have to face life lyingdown. Get better. Please?PORTER SEXTON: the address is StanleyJ. Feinberg, 7123 N. E. Sandy, Portland,Oregon. Get some glasses.Promise her anything, but give her theWASH — PROM, that is.Eat it.TONIGHT INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FEL¬LOWSHIP MEETS AT 7:30 IN IDA NOYESTO DISCUSS: "RELEASING THE LIGHT."APARTMENTS TO RENT2Vj room South Shore Apt. 7502 Kingston.Just decorated. Near I. C. and Lake. SafeArea. Parking Lot. Studio Bed. Built-inDrawers. Charming. $80 a month. Sublet.721-2397 evenings.3’/2 large rooms, spacious closets, near 55thand Cornell, Avail. March 1. $125/month.Sublease with option to lease. Call 684-3271,6-11 P.M.l’/a ROOM FURNISHED APT. in SouthShore. $77.50/month. Call Judy at MU 4-5600,Ext. 230, Days.2 BDRM. APT. TO SUBLET; 324-8872 before8 P.M.SUBLEASE March 1, MODERN 2 BDRM. 2BATH APT. 2 blocks from Lake, air cond.,dish washer. FA 4-3400, Ext. 106, days, 288-7543, evenings.GREAT COAT6022 lies desolate — where are you now?Warm Sandals. Ich finde es auch ohne das recht lesenswert.M. L. Wie geht's? MSL.It DOESN'T Stand For: Love, Inter-varsityChristian Fellowship, a Fraternity, Festivalof the Arts, or Sex. It's WASH PROM, ofcourse! TIRED OF PSYCHEDELIC POSTERS???Replace them with Antique Pictures andPhotographs from HYDE 'N SEEC, 1621 E.Hyde Park Blvd. While you're there, checkout the new HALL OF MIRRORS, The BrassChinese Dragon Incense Burner and Brasson Mahogony Cigarette Box.PHOTOGRAPHERS: Fantastic response topleas for photographs of campus buildings,signs, sidewalks, gargoyles etc. was hearten¬ing. But we can still use every photographwe can get.Are you coming washed to the WashingtonPromenade?VEAL MEAL — ITALIAN STYLEBANDERSNATCH SPECIAL FRIDAY NIGHTDINNER - 99c.Nothing yet for your Valentine?FLASH - JUST ARRIVED AT Hyde N Seec—1621 E. Hyde Park Blvd.—Kerosene lamps—made of metal and glass, plus pictures andframes from 50c to $20!!! And a few rockers.LIVE AT THE BANDERSNATCH:Commemorative reenactment of "Nude Des¬cending a Staircase."—applications accepted.LIVE AT THE AAAROON BUSINESS OF¬FICE: Commemorative reenactment ofA $200 scholarship is being offered to students enrolled ineither graduate or undergraduate library education programat (name of school) by the Illinois Student Librarians Asso¬ciation. This group, composed of junior and senior highschool library assistants, is interested in assisting wormystudents to prepare for careers in librarianship. If you are ajunior, a senior, or a graduate student in good standing andhave an average of at least B for two years, do apply forthis aid. Further information can be obtained from the de¬partment of library science on this campus, or for full de¬tails and application blanks write to Lois Mills, Chairman,ISLA Scholarship committee, 422 E. Franklin, Macomb,Illinois 61455. Deadline for completed applications: March15, 1968. LEARN ABOUT OPPORTUNITIES FOR WORK, STUDY,SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH, TRAVEL, AND PERMANENTSETTLEMENT IN ISRAEL.COME TO"ISRAEL AND YOU"A seminar being sponsored by U. of C. Student Zionist Organi¬zation on Sunday, February II, from 1:00 P.M. to 4:00 P M.AT HILLELH0USE 5715 S. WoodlawnNOTE: After the seminar, personal counselling will be avail¬able for those with definite plans for travel and settle¬ment in Israel.Cohn 8t Stemufarott Sc damansShopFOR THE SPORTING LIFECompletely Wash ’n wear 65% Dacron- 35% cottonjacket by London Fog. Convertible collar, doubleyoke lining Natural, Navy, Skipper blue, tan, can¬ary in regular & long sizes 36 to 46. $19IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKFebruary 9, 1968-LvL , i •« . THE CHICAGO MAROON\SAVINGSCERTIFICATESUniversity National Bank offers you-• Savings Certificates paying the highest rateof interest permitted by law5% per year on certificates of $5,000 or more• Savings Certificates backed by bank safetymember: Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationChicago Clearing House AssociationFederal Reserve System• Savings Certificates tailored to fit your needsavailable for 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 or 12 month periodsFor maximum income with maximum safety and maximumadaptability to your personal needs invest in fluctuation free UniversityNational Bank Savings Certificates.Just ask any of our officers. They’ll be happy to handle thedetails for you.UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615 d\ /TELEPHONE MU 4-1200 1 ID)Jo)strength and service(33 member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation / Chicago Clearing House Association / Federal Reserve System8 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 9, 1968