Theatre. Drama & The University Theatre will pre sent its second production of the season next week. "Waiting for Godot" will be pre sented Thursday and Saturday, and a double bill of "Krapp's Last Tape" and "Play," Friday and Saturday afternoon. Heading the cast of "Godot" will be John Chappell and Dr. I Scholars Program Concludes A study course on Negro heri tage Saturday will conclude USC's first Visiting Scholars program. Harrison K. Simms of the Ecu menical Institute, Chicago, will teach the two-lecture course from 2 to 5 p.m. and 6 to 9 p.m. in 4:.oom 207, Russell House. A seminar in urban geography for graduates will be conducted by Simms this afternoon from 3 to 5 p.m. in Room 205, Russell House. Simms, who has directed work study programs for the Episcopal Church in Kenya, Africa, will also lead a discussion tonight at 8 p.m. at the Common Grounds coffee house, 728 Pickens St. He will speak at the Wesley Foundation Sunday at 11:15 a.m. Charles Abrams of New York led three sessions in city planning Thursday in the first part of the Visiting Scholars program. Cafeteria Strive 'T( A joint student-faculty commit tee was appointed years ago to bridge the gap between the exist ing food service on campus and the students. This was the Cafeteria Com iittee. The food service, the students, and the bridge still exist. The bridge cannot function without recognition from the first two. These were points brought out at the first two meetings of the Cafeteria Committee this semes ter. The committee is composed of student members appointed by the president of the student body and faculty members appointed by the president of the University. Also included are representatives from the administration and ARA Slater food service. Complaints, p r o p o s a I s for changes, andl general problems in the area of food service are of ficially handled by the committee. STo function, the committee must know the problems andl com p)laints. According to Dr. Eva O'Shields, chairman of the committee, "If everybody else knows all the com p)lainlts andl we don't, what can we do? No real complaint of great IN Q By LYN QUESTION: Who owns ARA ANSWER: ARA Slater is a p New York Stock Exchang< QUESTION: Where did ARA ANSWER: ARA Slater began University of Pennsylvania took over operation food and then branched out to( QUESTION: How much mon their special services to cl wish to hold banquets in ANSWER: Slater merely me University. Any profit mi QUESTION: Why is Slater at Wake Forest in Winste ANSWER: According to Mr. Dining Services, food is Forest. QUESTION: Does Slater pa: facilities? ANSWER: Yes, Slater doesr QUESTION: If a student o supper and prepare the ft any on-campus facility, o1 Slater cater? ANSWER: Student organizati pus and prepare them if Office of Business Affairs Uiniversity dining areas. Presents >eries Conrad Bishop as Estragon an< Vladimir, two tramps whose an tics and pastimes while "waitinl for Godot" on a country road corn prise most of the play. Robert E. Treacy as Pozzo James Vess as Lucky and Kur Benz as the Boy complete th( cast. Treacy, a graduate student it theatre, will portray the sol character in "Krapp's Last Tape. A 70-year-old man has tape re corded the joys and sorrows of hi entire lifetime. The cast of "Play," the most un usual drama of the series, con sists of John Buffington, Millie Condon and Flo Coker as three nameless characters who are en closed up to the neck in giganti( urns, telling their versions of f love triangle as a spotlight shift! from one to another. All three actors have appeared in leading roles with University Theatre. Scenery and lighting will be de signed by Terry Bennett, USC' new scene designer and technica director. Stage Manager is Ne< Ty!er. Performances are in Draytor Hall on Thursday, Friday an< Saturday, Dec. 7, 8 and 9, at 8:1 p.m. with a matinee on Saturda3 at 2:30 p.m. Reservations may b< made by calling 765-4288 or tic kets may' be p)urchasedl at the Drayton box office or at Russel House. Admission is 50(' for USC stu dents, 750 for other students, $1 for faculty and staff, and $1.5( for the general public. Committe > Bridge stature has been presented to us. Vice president for Business Af fairs Harold Brunton, a commit tee member, commented, "It i: my feeling that for the last three or four year! nobody knev t h e Cafeterii Committee ex isted. Only i few people ar( q in-touch. W< want to encour age people t< use the com mittee." BRUNTON Brunton cite( an example o: how even one suggestton may lea( to change. One student complaine< to the administration because th( prices for menu items served ir "Top of Carolina" were completel: out of the range of students. Be cause of the complaint, a "clip-or special" of $1.95 was added to thi menu to accommodlate students. Brunton also pointed out thai proposals for the Cafeteria Corn mittee last year led to "drawing board plans" to remodel the pres ent Gamecock Room. Plans cal for combining the Gamecock Roorn andI the Confederate Room int< one large room with a "taverr effect" for short orders. Construc. JOHNSON Slater? ublic corporation listed on the Slater get started? operation 45 years ago at the t feeding fraternities. It later service for the whole campus )ther universities. ey does ARA Slater make by ubs, outside groups, etc., who the Russell House? ~nages these services for th( de goes to the University. ood higher in Columbia thart n-Salem? John T. Driscoll, director of io higher here than at Wake rent for use of University ent these facilities. rganization wishes to hold a od Itself, can this be done at r must the organization have ons may have suppers on cam they are clear'ed through th( However, they may not use c First Plat Paul Cox and Steve Strzei first prize in the Student Second prize, $50, went to f< prize went to the Phi Epsik Carolina YA, Chinese Adm The USC chapter of Young Americans for Freedom will pre sent its third "Vital Issues" pro gram, "Should Red China he Ad mitted to the United Nations?' . Tuesday. l At 7:30 p.m. In the Assembly Room of the Russell House, YAF will present two films on Rec e Members The Gap' tion is scheduled for after Christ Snias. These plans were effectec because of the inadequate condi tion of the present Gamecoci Room. During the Cafeteria Commit tee meetings, complaints and pro posals for change are introduce< - by the students and faculty mem b bers to ARA Slater officials Johr 3 Driscoll, Judy Wagstaff, and Ra: Burguillous. Students with complaints car take them to student member: Beverly Green, Marsha Lipscomb Becky Warren, Carol Mullinax I Brent Klinger and Randy Cooper f Faculty members are Dr. Eva i O'Shields, Dr. Evelyn Draper an< 1 Dr. Edward Beardsley. Dean o: Men L. Eugene Cooper and Vice President Harold Brunton are als< members. Dean Of A FBI Arresi Three USC students have beer arrestedl by the FBI for alledgeda stealing a car and transporting i across a state line, according t< Dean of Men L. Eugene Cooper -The students were arrested ii Asheville, N. C., and are being held under $1500 bond. They wil be turnedI over to the state fo: p)rosecution, Cooper said. Three other s t ud en ts wer charged with theft at Belk's De partment store. One forfeited $10( bond while the others were nol p)rosecutedl with the understanding that Belk's would he reimburse< for the items taken. The three They Make Somne ME A I 1.T' Staff Phote by Mike T :e Winners tienski (above) won the $100 Union talent show Nov. 17. Plksinger Pam Steele and third n Pi jug band. 1 To Discuss ission To U.N China and the United Natio The first film features an "O End" TV program including a d cussion of Red China by Da Susskind, Dr. Walter H. Judd medical missionary in China a former Congressman from Mini sota) and Dr. Frank Trager, N York University professor a author of "Why Vietnam?" The second film, "Red Chim Outlaw," relates the story of F C h i n a 's revolutionary activit throughout the world with spec emphasis on her role in the ternational opium trade. USC YAF will have a table up on the ground floor of the R sell House in order to col I Christmas cards and gifts to sent to the servicemen in Vietn. as part of the Columbia R.S.V (Rally Support for Vietnam P sonnel) program. Gift Bazaar The International Gift Baza sponsored by USC YMCA-YWC will be held Friday and Saturd at the Baptist Student Cent 700 Pickens Street. Hours for the bazaar are 2 t< p.m. and 7 to 11 p.m. Friday, a 2 to 11 p.m. Saturday. Profits from the bazaar will to the World University Servi an organization composed of s dlents and p)rofessors in over countries ten Report s Students are up before the dlisciplimn committee for condluct unhecomi a University studlent. In separate cases, three s dlents were reported for showi an obscene film in a residei hall; one student was charged w drunkenness andl fined $10; and studlent chargedl with reckli dIriving was fined $50. BULOVA WATCH FACE AND WORK IN BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION BLD( REWARD Call 252-8461 After 6 Ihing WONDERFUL Out of Just BEING ALIVE! Al'I li IEY Ai IN ICT WOuI!t EROAND COLOR by DELUXE Students m With 5 Cards. . .. IU 'SjOWftM OP ff CALl PnoNI AL 45800 Corresp Viet Pol By DON CAUGHMAN Associate Fditor The policy of trying to reach a solution to a political situation by military means has led the United States to a (lead end in Vietnam, a war correspondent for News week Magazine suggested here Monday night. Edward Klein, now an associate editor in Newsweek's international department who was in Vietnam as recently as June, made the observation in a Student Union sponsored talk in Russell House. He termed the war one for "control of people, not of terri tory. In a recent battle U. S. r troops came out on top of Hill 881 but the Viet Cong came out on top of the people. This is the year kind of victory we can't afford to T lose. We are not winning the h hearts-and-minds battle of the Ao people." fro The only hope for a successful Grat settlement in the war-torn coun- the try, Klein observed, is "recogni- Sher tion by the United States and Rus- Sr 0 sia as well as North and South Vietnam that they must reach a ' compromise settlement-a country H n ruled by all factions." beco He said U. S. policy "has many Tra .( of the earmarks of bankruptcy" corrc n(a and suggested that the U. S. own Inte up to its limitations. "We can't fight a limited guerilla war in support of weak and corrupt gov ernments on the Asian mainland. But Asia is too important to be completely ignored." ,ed Klein said the main goal of the ies United States in Vietnam is con ial tainment of communist China. in- "We must counter the political threat from China with a political ;et response." is- There can be no hope for Rus !ct sian aid in pressing for a peace be settlement "as long as a fellow im communist state is being bombed," .p. the award-winning journalist said. r- "But they have said they would do everything possible to help end - the war if the bombing were stopped." Klein has been a major con tributor (luring the last three ar, A, ay nThe Souper 5 Dress. Now's your chance to get the ry one, the only Souper Dress n.. .a smashing paper put-on that could only come from u-Campbell. ng It's red, white and bright all over ce wvith eye-poppin' Campbell cans commig and going. To get your th Campbell Paper Dress, send $1.00 a and your size (the Souper Dress *ss comes Smnall/5-8, Medium/9-12, or Large/13-16) with your name and _add ress (remember your zip code!) - to Dress Offer, Box 615, Maple P llain, Minn. 55359. Offer expires March 31, 1968. Good only in the SUnited States and Puerto Rico. ICampbell's Souper Dress. On you it'll look M'm! M'm! Good! mfdent icy De2 fo w N hi be pr th ch eli Vi pc -a nSt Klein F' ch for cover stories and articles Newsweek's regular section m, War In Vietnam." th ter earning a master's degree he the Columbia University uate School of Journalism as tir Best Reporter in the class of cu , he received a Robert E. he woopelin. Champert watched ible, and his heart turned h Graffa's beauty was not v-as shorter than the other ietheless ravishing, what es of Lake Louise blue and inches. Champert, smitten, gg'ery to plan the wooing. would give Graffa a pres for hog-flogging, as we all profession. Still, thought there were two things he *n. grade pelts and stitched them and madle for G raffa a of a dirigib)le. "She will a himself and proceeded to ith Personna Super Stain you? If you were looking I jowls as smooth as ivory, okable, cheeks fondlesome, i not use the blade that and slickly, tuglessly and itchlessly ? Would you not, lable both in Injector style se you would. dy in epidermal elegance, tIe pigskin dirigible. But with a bush pilot who spe ;curvy-ridden Eskimo vil kicking his little pigskin who should walk by just tockne, Walter Camp, and down, four discouraged trying to invent football, he right mid of ball. They , badmin ton birds, bowling ed. Now seeing Champert leir faces lit up and as one ['he rest is history.. * c@iw. Max a.:... 'got any about your pre.