> by Robert QuinnExchange of students be¬tween UC and Moscow’s Lo-monsov university for thecoming academic year has beencancelled.An official communiqueTuesday from the Moscowradio stated that the exchangeprogram would be postponed be¬cause the Soviet students wouldhave to be fingerprinted beforeentering the United States.The McCarran-Walter immigra¬tion act, under which the two So¬viet students would have beengranted visas to visit the UnitedStates, requires fingerprints of allvisa applicants. The State depart¬ment did not classify the students’visit “official business,” which swap cancelledwould have waived fingerprint re¬quirements.In a letter dated August 3, post¬poning the exchange, from MaryAnn Chacarestos, chairman of theNational Student association com¬mittee of Student Government, toI G Petrovsky, rector of the Mos¬cow university, no mention ismade of fingerprinting. It states,in part:. . It is with deep regret that Imust inform you at this late datethat the Student Government ofthe University of Chicago has foundit impossible to complete all thearrangements necessary for effect¬ing the student exchange for thecoming academic year. The pres¬sure of time has forced us to thisdecision.‘ Despite this unfortunite changeof events, we wish to emphasizestrongly our desire to effect the ex¬change as agreed upon during theacademic year 1957-58. We expectthat the extra year for careful plan¬ ning will allow us enough time tocomplete arrangements for a suc¬cessful exchange tor that year. .The Chicago Tribune statedWednesday that an unnamed“university spokesman said theschool has received no word fromthe Russian authorities, and thatsuch a communication probablywould be made thru (sic) thestate department.”An official University state¬ment dated August 3 and signedby the members of the Joint Stu¬dent Government-Faculty-Admin¬istration committee on SovietExchange did not mention thefingerprinting difficulty. This“Statement of Policy,” corrobo¬rated within 24 hours after theTribune report by Philip Hoff¬man, a member of the committee, states that . . it has been im¬possible to complete all of thearrangements necessary in orderto effect the exchange. . . . Wehave been unable to meet all therequired deadlines.” The contentsof this statement were similar, tothose of a letter sent August 2 bydean of students Robert M. Stro-zier to Yuri Gouk, cultural at¬tache of the Soviet embassy.Gouk, in Washington, stated tothe Maroon late Wednesday thathe had not yet heard the Moscowradio announcement. He acknowl¬edged only Strozier’s August 2letter and stated that he recog¬nized that the exchange was offwith the receipt of the letter which he in turn forwarded to theSoviet Ministry of Education,Gouk said that the current post¬ponement did not in any wayjeopardize future UC - Moscowstudent exchanges.Miss Chacarestos also com¬mented that the current postpone¬ment would not stop plans for a1957-58 exchange.The two UC students who wereto have spent the forthcomingyear in Moscow had not jret beenchosen by the student-facultycommittee.The State department has notyet made any public refusal towaive fingerprint requirementsfor the two students.USNSA holds annual confab at UCUnited States National Stu¬dents' association - (USNSA)will hold its ninth National Mlller,Jeanine Johnson, Eliza Houston, commission sessions will be inter- pants may be able to apply some of policy-making for USNSA.Lubert Stryer, John Lyon, or Don spersed between the subcommis- of these ideas to problems p& In choosing UC for its conven-—all of ISL. (Miller was sion sessions. The purpose of the culiar to their own campus. AfteF Tion site, NSA comes back to theStudrni coneress at UC from moved up from Regional alter- discussion sessions is to foster an the commission and subcommis- scene of its formation. In 1946,Au'iist 21-31 The congress°is nale to fil1 a vacanc>’ created exchange of ideas on various sion sessions are completed, the Chicago students conference au-“ ^ ^ ® h>Uam T?»v»;i 4^. TirnMom C in thp hnno thaf nartir*!. nlonurv coccinnc u/i 11 Ha Ihoir iaK tlinri'/Ad tho fnrmntinn r% f AUSNSA’s highest policy-makingbody.Approximately 900 delegates,alternates, and observers will at¬tend the convention. Each mem¬ber school of NSA (there are 300)sends from one to seven dele- serve NSA in a “civil service” ca¬pacity.)Hold four commissionsClive Gray, former president ofthe UC student government willbe serving as NSA vice presidentgates; there will be about 700 of International affairs—the sec-delegates this year, represent- or>d highest executive position ining 600,000 students. Many the association,student observers from foreign Before the congress begins oncountries will be attending the August 21, NSA committees willconvention, thanks to a $100,000 hold meetings, and the studentFord foundation grant to the NSA body presidents conference willCommittee on Foreign student he held on August 18. On the 21,affairs. All 900 visitors will be the convention gets to work with Il aSdeicoj1 1 cfuccvao11 laroonhoused on campus; B-J, Gates-Blake, Snell-Hitchcock, Interna- meetings of its four commissions Vol. 65, No. 3and 32 subcommissions. The com- University of Chicago, Friday, August 10, 1956 3 Itional House, CTS dormitories, C- missions are student government,Group, and fraternity houses will national affairs, educational af¬fairs, and international affairs.Participants in each commis-be put into use.UC delegates to the Congress,elected last spring, are ISLers sion will be supplied with a setBruce Larkin, Jan Metros (NSA of working papers—a discussionregional chairman), Lynn Chad- guide. They will then attend sub¬well, and Rosemary Galli, and Jan commission sessions on a rotationPorter of SRP. Miss Porter is in basis—enabling each commissionIndia, so her place will be taken participant to sit in on a discus-by one of the national alternates: sion in every subcommission. TwoTonight, tomorrow and Sunday are the last three nights to seeCourt Theatre in action this summer. They are finishing off theseason with Anatole France’s The Man Who Married a DumbW’ife in which (pictured above) Otto Senz plays the Judge and CarolHorning appears as the Dumb Wife. Theology school prexy leavingby Fred KarstWallace W. Robbins, president of Meadville Theological school and Ellery Channing But¬ler professor of preaching and ministry on the Federated Theological faculty will leave theUniversity at the end of the summer quarter to assume the pastorate of the Unitarianchurch of Worcester, Massachusetts.President Robbins came to the University in April 1944, just after the federation agree¬ment between Meadville (Unitarian), the Chicago Theological seminary (Congregational),the Disciples Divinity house ’(Disciples of Christ), and the riculum was established for theUniversity’s divinity school four schools. Robbins served also(Baptist) was signed. Previously as a member of the committee onhe served as minister of the Uni- the revision of the BD require-tarian church of St. Paul, Minne- ments.s°la- Robbins served as associateRobbins will become minister dean of Rockefeller chapel fromof the third largest church of the 1948 until 1953 when his otherUnitarian denomination. The Uni- duties became too heavy to con-tarian church of Worehester has t*nue- He continued his ministrya membership of approximately a*- chapel by frequently assist-1500. ing with services and preaching.In his last weeks at the Univer-A successor as president of gity President Robbins is conduct*Meadville will be named by the jng (with Professor J. Coert Rya-Meadville board of trustees. arsdam of FTF and Professor Jo-During the formative period of seph Sittler of the Chicago Lu-the union of the faculties of the theran Theological seminary) afour schools, Robbins served as two week workshop on preachingchairman of the cabinet of the for a selected group of ProtestantFederated Theological faculty, as ministers. , , . . . . „well as president of Meadville. “I have a great feeling of re- £er® and, in my opinion, is theDuring that time a common cur- luctance in leaving,” Robbins said Dest‘Wallace W. RobbinsTuesday. “This is one of the larg¬est theological faculties in theworld that we have assembledHarper centennial celebratedBell Concerts and exhibitson July 25-6 marked thehundredth anniversary of thebirth of William Rainey Harper,who was known lor his biblicalscholarship, executive skill andability to extract million dollardonations from John D. Rockefel¬ler. James Lawson, UniversityCarillonneur, played a recital onthe 72 bell Rockefeller Chapelcarillon on the evening of July25 and student Thomas Voglercommemorated the birthday witha concert on the Mitchell Towerchimes on the following afternoonAs UC’s first president, Harper started innovations which are ac¬cepted as a matter of course to¬day. UC had the four quartersystem from its inception, withgraduations each quarter to em¬phasize academic instead of classspirit. Majors and minors replacedhaphazard choice of individualsubjects. A university extensionsystem, a university press, co-edu¬cation and women faculty mem¬bers were with UC from the start.In 1910, Rockefeller gave $10,-000,000 to UC and said it would bethe last, bringing the total dona¬tions on that date to $35,000,000.Although most of this sum was donated after his death in 1906,gifts during Harper’s life broughthim fame as a “financial wizard,”his image appearing even in car¬toons which attacked the allegedtrust activities of Rockefeller’sStandard Oil Company.During his life, Harper pub¬lished books on classical lan¬guages, Hebrew and the Bible.During his presidency, he pub¬lished a work on suffering in theBook of Job and he founded andedited The Biblical World and theAmerican Journal of Semitic Lan¬guages and Literature.In 1892, Harper left a teaching post at Yale to become the firstpresident of UC, after Rockefellerpromised $1,000,000 to incorporatethe Baptist Theological seminaryinto the University of Chicago.Joinder of the Baptist school wasnecessary to reconcile Harper’sdesire to continue his teaching ofHebrew at UC with his desire notto compete with the school, atwhich he taught before going toYale.Exhibits in Harper Library andin the archives deal with the lifeof Harper, his teaching, his deal¬ings with Rockefeller and thefounding and innovations of UC. Robbin’s reasons for leaving in¬clude the lightening of his ad¬ministrative tasks as a result ofthe appointment of Brauer as fulltime dean of the federation.“However, I have a continuedinterest in academic matters,”Robbins remarked with a smileon his face. “I have recently beenelected a member of the board oftrustees of the Worcester Poly¬technic institute.”Dean of Rockefeller ChapelJohn B. Thompson made the fol¬lowing statement regarding Rob¬bin’s leaving: “President Robbinshas made a most valuable contri¬bution to the life and work of theUniversity chapel and will begreatly missed in his three rolesof administrator, teacher, and aminister of the chapel.”K'wmmmmmmmmmmmmrmPage 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON August 10, 195$Letters to the Editori—Oops . . .I was deighted to read of PhilColeman’s feat.* I have longmaintained that UC produced su¬per men, not just super minds. I ampleased with this confirmation. Nowthat man has passed the 100 mph markin the twenty-mile run, do you thinkperformances will level off?Let me take this opportunity to voicea small complaint. My favorite depart¬ment of the Maroon, the one feature towhich I can turn with confidence inany issue, expecting delight, amuse¬ment, information—this high point ofevery issue suffers from lack of a defi¬nite format and place in the paper;and I suffer from having to hunt forit—front page, middle pages, back.What makes the search doubly exas¬perating, is that you have not settledon a name for the department. For awhile I got used to “Oops,” but I over¬looked two juicy installments latelybefore 1 found that “Ocms” had beenchanged. "Sorry,” “Correction ” “WeGoofed,” “Mistake in Dates, “MaroonErrs,” how is a man to head his clip¬ping file? address his fan mail? discussthe latest numbers with fellow aficion¬ados? And, worst of all, when 1 findsuch headlines as “Exam Schedule Clar¬ified” or “Late Reports Show One Bil¬ lion Volts, Not Voltometers, In New UCLab,” how am I to know if it's myfavorite column or not?I am sure you will find, if you polledyour readers, that this feature’s largefollowing rates a front-page spot, dis¬tinctive format, and a by-line for yourone infallibly amusing (and infalliblyinfallible) writer.E. S. G.♦The writer refers here to the Maroonstory of July 20 stating that UC track¬man Phil Coleman ran 30,000 (instead of3,000) meters in roughly nine minutes.This would be approximately equivalentto a speed of 121.2 miles per hour.—Ed.Sad, seeks sawbucksFor four years now I have beentaking University cheeks of a lit¬tle over $100 to the bursar’ officeto cash them. In order to accommodatethe people in the Commons and otherUniversity places when I spend money,I ask to have my checks cashed in billsnot larger than ten dollars but receivetwenties anyway. I would be willing toaccept the larger bills if it would makeit easier for the office to carry out itsfunctions. But it irks me considerablyto be told that the only reason my pleais refused is because the office can notmake exceptions to established rules for“just any student who comes along.”Is not the purpose of the bursar’s officeto serve the University community?In spite of the above lines I have no intention of burning the bursar ineffiiy. Although he is a very nice per¬son, he, like so many of our admin¬istrators, ,has found that the mostefficient way to solve annoying prob¬lems that students bring to him is totell them very politely to go away. Ofcourse, the student does go away sinceno one will act on his complaints, andthere is nothing else he can do. How¬ever. to Mr. Cotton’s confessed amaze¬ment, I did not go away, not even afterfour fearsI found that no one could help me.Even the dean of students office, whichis often very helpful to students, waspowerless to act on such a weighty mat¬ter as this. There was one more possi¬bility—to make the matter public.I would like to get ten dollar bills,but even more I would like to see otherstudents freed from such difficulties.Here is a proposal offered with theconfidence that our administrators canformulate even a better one. The Chan¬cellor’s office would appoint a com¬mittee of one or more persons whowould see to it that when dissatisfac¬tions arise some suitable action will betaken by the administrator involved.The committee would report directly tothe Chancellor and would have hisauthority behind it. The purpose ofthis would not be to diminish the pow¬er of the individual administrator, butto make him feel that he will be heldresponsible for all action he takes whichaffects other members of the Univer¬sity community.Edwin NorbeckClassified advertisements Student rate 5c per wordOthers 10c per wordFor SaleSilver miniature Schnauzer. Sired bychampion Benrook Randy, present na¬tional champion. Male. 11 months old.All shots, etc. Inquire BE 8-3888.Formal. Size 16, worn once. Shoes. Size8'iAA. Black suede. Closed toe, 3" slingheel. Worn rarely. Both perfect condi¬tion. Call FA 4-7347 after 7 p.m.ServicesPersonalRELIANCE CAMERA &PHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63rd St.BU 8-6040NSA CongressDelegatesIf you ore interested in studentexchange with the Soviet Unionor traveling to the USSR we cangive you considerable help in work¬ing out your program.Chicago Council ofAmerican-Soviet Friendship189 W. Madison AN 3-1877CASTLES IN THE AIR . . .aren’t subject to foreclosure, bufihouses on the ground may belost through sudden adversity.An inexpensive Sun Life morP-gage policy will free your homefrom any debt remaining atdeath. Protect your loved ones’home . . . call me today.SUN LIFE ASSU R ANCECOMPANY OF CANADARalph J.Wood, Jr.,'481 N. LaSalleChicago 2,IllinoisFR 2-2390RE 1 -0855 All Cap & Gown business conducted atStudent Activities office.Pool tables are once again available foruse in the Reynolds club.Reader wanted for blind student. Forfull information call the Student activi¬ties office, ext. 3272.BirthsFrench tutoring, coaching and transla¬tions. Native teacher. Reasonable. NO7-6162 Sunday, August 5 a four pound oneounce son, Charles Winfield, to Mr. andMrs. Jack L. Burbach at Chicago Lying-In. (Note: Joy, even as editor, neverbefore beat a deadline by two months.)WantedStudent and wife wish furnished apart¬ment between September 1 and 15. CallExt. 3238 daytime, MU 4-2495 evenings.Male Rhodesian student wishes to cor¬respond with UC female student be¬tween 18 and 26, preferably unmarried.He is a government clerk, 25 years old.Wishes to have “a clear picture of col¬lege life in the States and • any othersuch matters in connection with Amer¬ica.” Would like photograph of re¬spondent. Original letter in Maroonbusiness office, Ida Noyes. BOR DO N E| Movers and Light Hauling <VI 6-9832 Life InsurancePhone or Write> Joseph H. Aaron, '27>135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-10601HARPER THEATRE5236 S. Harper NO 7-9070AUGUST 10 - 13ROSANNA PODESTA in"HELEN OF TROY"— ond —"JUBAL"featuring ERNEST BORGNINE and GLENN FORDAUGUST 14 - 16"VOLCANO"starring ANNA MAGNANl ond ROSANNO BRAZZI— and —"SLEEPING TIGER"starring ALEXIS SMITH and ALEXANDER KNOXAUGUST 17-24"CODZILLA — KING OF THE MONSTERS""Makes King Kong look like a midget — N.Y. NEWS— and —"SWAMP WOMEN" in colorMARIE WINDSOR - BEVERLY GARLAND - TOUCH CONNORShyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student rate 50c all performancesSTARTING FRIDAY, AUGUST 10"MADAME BUTTERFLY"The immortal Puccini opera gloriously sung, exquisitely staged ondsensitively performed. A brilliant Itolian-Japanese film artfully toldin English.— and —"THE CLOUDED YELLOW"featuring JEAN SIMMONS with TREVOR HOWARD and KENNETHMORE in a taut English suspense story with a fascinating puzzle anda satisfying solution.STARTING FRIDAY, AUGUST 17AT LONG LAST— One of the greatest motion pictures ever made —"CITIZEN KANE"Starring Writer-Producer-DirectorORSON WELLES— AND —"FOURTEEN HOURS"The top psychological suspense filmStarring PAUL DOUGLAS, RICHARD BASEHART, AGNES MOREHEADond GRACE KELLY ~Y\\ c^ca<3°11 laroonIssued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermittentlyduring the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, at 1212 East59th Street, Chirago 37, Illinois. Telephone: Editorial offices, Midway 3-0800ext. 3266; Business and advertising office, Midway 3-0800. ext. 3265. Subscriptionsby mail, $3 per year. Bm.iness office hours: 2 p.m. to 5 p.m., Monday tlirou-hSaturday.Female students to share an apartment.Call Joanne. NO 7-2381, anytime or KE6-3957 11:30 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Leave mes¬sage.For year beginning September 25 man¬ager of service center and clerk forservice center. Salary $1.10 per hour.Hours to be arranged. Contact MaryAlice Newman, Activities Office or PhilHoffman, SG evenings.Group worker with secretarial skills forHillel foundation at UC. Write Hillel,5715 S. Woodlawn, giving educationalbackground, Interests and skills.Students wanted to read and criticizemanuscripts for Chicago Review. Wewant students to Join the staff andhelp us choose the poems, essays, dra¬mas, etc. that are published in the UCliterary magazine. See David Ray, Re¬view office, 3rd floor Reynolds club.■ ’vyyvvvvvTyvTVvyvTvvyiAuto Term Insurance NICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063Barbecue Ribs - Chicken - Ravioli - SpaghettiFree delivery to U. of C. studentsOn any orderTable Service Delivery Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M. 11 A.M. to 2 A.M.Open tilt 3 A.M. on Friday and SaturdayAir-Conditioned«»<<< * • '-M-' i * *' v '... *• ... •,. *mmw/k•J:' $11! the • rido!t"n°5530 harperOUR BICCEST SALEStarting Wednesday, August 15through Saturday, August 1820% off on purchases of 15 dollars or more of chinaand stainless steel table service. Choose from sixlovely patterns of china, including Arzberg Porcelain,Arabia Clare and Crownband.20-piece starter set of Arzberg porcelain:Regularly 27.80 Sale price 22.2420-piece starter set of Arabia ovenproof Clare:Regularly 16.00 Sale price 12.8020-piece starter set of Crownband hand-paintedFaience:Regularly 34.00 Sale price 27.20Some of these patterns are in stock — others canbe ordered at these prices during our sale.Seven graceful stainless steel patterns including thethree exciting "Variations" . . . new Danish designs.20-piece starter set of "Variations":Regularly 30.00 Sale price 24.0016-piece starter set of Contura:Regularly 8.00 Sale price 6.4020-piece starter set of teak-handled Fjord:Regularly 51.00 Sale price 40.80Reductions on many summer clothing items. Amongthese are Men's Italian fashioned knit shirts andWomen's summer blouses . . . now from 2.35 to 4.85.Men's bathing suits . . . were 5.95 to 6.95 . . .now all 3.85.Selected gift items have been marked down, in somecases below cost, in order to make way for the newpieces arriving every day.Ask About Our Interior Design Service. YouCan Buy Furniture Through the Domino atGreat Savings.We're Open from Noon to 8, Mondaythrough Friday10 to 6‘ on Saturday ■■ .:■ 1* •!Xs* fVs...August 10, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Offer free polio shots Theatreto students under 20 bludgeons farceCourt Theatre’s current offering, Anatole France’s The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife,proved to be quite disappointing. Although it did contain some moments of high humor, inSalk polio vaccine shots may now be obtained by students Senei'al it was overdrawn, obvious, and excessively loud,at student health. The shots will be given every Wednesday The author’s rapier-like gibes at the manners and morals of the bourgeois French societyfrom 9:30 a.m, to 11:30 a.m. at the student health offices in of his time needed deftness and restraint in order to bring out their latent satirical value.Billings S109. - Yet these qualities were almost completely lacking. Rather, the performance was directedThey are available free of No appointment is necessary almost completely at theexcellent work failed to speak her lines with thehas shown his chattering volubility that the role0_ urges that the few very funny scenes, as the one capacity for doing both serious called forwill have to pay $1.25. 1 le state first shot be taken as soon as pos- in which the Doctor is carried in and comic roles. But he played stteve Rrnwn as the nnetnr andfurnishes fiee vaccine only for sible since it is necessary to take in a sedan chair, to a mighty blast this role in a curiously heavy, Thomas Koehrin" as the Aoothc-persons under 20, and the hospital a second shot two weeks after of trumpets. violent style that was not very carv vvore so extremelv exat»?f r.must buy it fiom a commercial the first one. The effectiveness of The male lead, that of the amusing, and in fact a little un¬source for persons 20 or over. the vaccine is on two shots only. Judge, was played by Otto Senz. nerving.Conversely, Wayne Caudill, ascharge to students under 20, an<? a validated ID card is essen- broadly ridiculous values of Senz has done very. ♦ ctud^nfc 90 vpars old nr nvnr tlai* , , the play. This did result in a in the past, and 1:11_ Student health urges that the few very funnv scenes, as the one caDacitv for dninoComing events on quadranglesFriday, August 10Court theatre: The man who married adumb wife, by Anatole France, Hutch¬inson court, 8:30 p.m., $1.Saturday, August 11Court theatre, 8:30 p.m.Jt.idio broadcast, “The sacred note,”with Rockefeller chapel choir, 10:15p.m., WBBM.Sunday, August 12Interchurch breakfast, with Bible dls- TV broadcast on Democratic conven-cusslon, 9 a.m.. Chapel house, 25 cents. tlon, with dean Donohue and prof.Radio broadcast, "Music under the Currie, 6:30 p.m., WTTW.stars,” discussing summer music fes- Carillon recital, 8 p.m.. Rockefeller,tlvals, 10:35 a.m., WMAQ. cratlc national convention, with deanM. F. X. Donohue and prof. BrainerdCurrie, 6:30 p.m., WTTW, channel 11.Tuesday, August 14Intervarsity Christian fellowship, 12:30p.m., Ida Noyes.Pakistan students, 6 p.m., Ida Noyes.TV broadcast on Democratic conven¬tion, with dean Donohue and prof.Currie. 6:30 p.m., WTTW.Wednesday, August 15 tion, with dean Donohue and profCurrie, 6:30 p.m., WTTW.Carillon recital, 8 p.m.. Rockefeller.Musical society concert, contemporary the Lawyer, su f f e r e d from aweakness of delivery and expres¬sion.Carol Horning, as the once- cary, were so extremely exagger¬ated in their characters as to vir¬tually lose contact with reality.Two performances were, how¬ever, quite good. George Craw¬ford, as the Surgeon, played hisrole with a mock-serious pompos¬ity that was genuinely amusing.dumb wife who regains her power And Ralph Estes, as the Beggar-of speech with a vengeance, minstrel who furnished the song-piano, 8?20 ptrmnSSidanNoy^sndS' Wlt* showed the general dramatic narrations between scenes, wascompetence that has character- enjoyable and convincing,ized her work in the past, but Tom SeessUniversity religious service, assoc, prof.J. Coert Rylaarsdam, preaching, 11a m., Rockefeller.Carillon recital, 4:30 p.m., Rockefeller.Indian dinner, Int house room C-D-E,6 p.m.,"$1.25.Court theatre, last performance of theseason, Anatole France’s The man«ho married a dumb wife, Hutchin¬son court, 8:30 p.m., $1.Monday, August* 13 Saturday, August 18Radio broadcast, "The sacred note,”with Rockefeller chapel choir, 10:15p.m., WBBM.Sunday, August 19Interchurch breakfast, with Bible dis¬cussion, 9 a.m., Chapel house, 25cents.University religious service, dean JohnB Thompson, preaching, 11 a.m.,Rockefeller chapel.Carillon recital, 4:30 p.m.. Rockefeller. Fire beats wreckers, getstrUC slums slated for razingThursday, August 16IV broadcast on Democratic conven- Mondoy, August ZUNational Student Association congresstion, with dean Donohue and prof.Currie, 6:30 p.m , WTTW.Country dancers, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes.Friday, August 17Lecture, "The future of preventivemedicine in the United States,” Dr.Wilson G. Smillie, prof, emeritus, Cor¬nell univ., 5 p.m., Billings P-117. Fire Wednesday afternoon helped raze an empty University-_ _ owned tenement just north of 55th street. Two floors of theregistration begins, 9 a.m., ida Noyes? building, at S4&6-88 Greenwood, were gutted by a fire ofthroug°houtwthebecon>g«:ss°nscheduies undetermined origin which started about 5 o’clock.available at registration. The fjre company toTuesday, August* 21 arrive in response to a tele-Intervarsity Christian fellowship, 12:30 phoned alarm found itself OUt-p.m., Ida Noyes.TV broadcast, discussion ol the Demo- TV broadcast on Democratic conven- NSA congress, first plenary session with matched by the blaze, and calledkeynote address, 7:30 p.m., Mandei for help. It eventually gathereda force of four pumper engines,hall.Wednesday, August 22Science fiction club, 7:30 p.m., IdaNoyes. *Carillon recital, 8 p.m., Rockefeller.Thursday, August 23Country dancers, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes.Saturday, August 25SU C-dance in honor of the NSA con¬gress, band and refreshments, 9 p.m.,Ida Noyes. Firemen did not evacuate ad¬joining apartment buildings.The burned building was athree-story apartment building,^OAVUjliOA,... And familiar things are the best. Like Coca-Cola. Fullof fresh, keen sparkle . . . natural quick energy . . . andit’s so pure and wholesome — naturally friendly to yourfigure. Have it whenever you like.BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY Of THE COCA-COtA COMPANYThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Ine.•Colo” h a registered trade-morfc. © »»■ ™E COCA-COLA COMPANY Portrait StylistBlack and White andDirect ColorPhotographyBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. two hook-and-ladder trucks, and a which in recent years had beenrescue squad, which blocked converted into sub-standard apart-Greenwood avenue and adjoining ments. Its owner was under in-55th street. dictment for illegal conversionThe roof and upper two stories several months ago and sold thewere destroyed, while the first building to UC, which announcedfloor was little damaged. Fire was ai1 intention to raze the buildingbelieved to have started in the and convert the space into a paik-roof. inS lot*At the time of the fire, tenantsand furniture had already beenremoved, and a contract forwrecking had been let, althoughwork had not yet begun. A Uni¬versity official at the scene statedthat razing would begin at once.Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372jjjxjn’.Tni nTj nv Jjv riv ^jyrrn NjyrojrcTERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best”FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95He also carry a full line of Italian foods1518 E. 63 rd Ml 3-4045 MODEL CAMERA SHOP1329 E. 55th St. HY 3-9259Ulost Complete Photo Shopon the South Sidei\SA DiscountBOOK OF THE WEEK"THE THAW"by Ilya EhrenbergA frank post-Stalin novelon Soviet life. $3.50Chicago Council of American-Soviet Friendship189 W. Madison AN 3-1877UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorBE PREPARED FOR SUMMER DRIVINGSUMMER SPECIALTUNE UP $4.98Road ServiceMechanic on DutyComplete LubricationSPECIAL ! !Heavy Duty Battery *14 95HARPER SUPER SERVICEDealer in Sinclair Products5556 Harper Ave. PL 2-9654 The T^Y •Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekMOZARTHoffner SerenadeWaldrfce conducting ViennaStote Opera OrchestraVanguard 483 $3.99Page 4 *•THE CHICAGO MAROONUNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5801 Ellis AvenueOpportunity days for booklovers! Shelf and stockroom clear¬ance of desirable books and prints . . . special purchases ofpublishers’ overstock . . . fine imports, standard reference 57. THE FAUVIST PAINTERS, by O. Duthuit.An important text and 16 plates in full color,many black and whites, 12 line drawings—Matisse, Dufy, Braque, et al.Pub. at $6.50 Sale $1.5*5*. POLITICS OF EQUALITY—New Zealand’sAdventures in Democracy, by L. Lipson. Com¬pares the governmental problems and solutionsof New Zealand, England and the U. S.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $159. THEODORE DREISER, by R. Elias. The lifeand work of one of our major novelists. Photos.Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1.4960. A FOREIGN POLICY FOR THE UNITEDSTATES. Fifteen experts discuss the economic,political and strategic problems in our inter¬national relations. Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.9861. THE EVOLUTION OF LOVE, by Donald Day.522 frank pages on the art of love as practicedfrom Biblical times to the present.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $1.9862. UTOPIA LIMITED, by Harold Orlans. Cul¬tural resistance to change, clashes of interestson a British town planning project.Pub. at $4.50 Sale $163. ALPHABETS—An oustanding book in thegraphic arts field—by L. Scarfe. History anduse of the alphabet—with scores of beautifulexamples and cross-section of type faces.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $2.9864. From Descartes to Dewey—EXISTENCE ftINQUIRY. A “history of thought ’—the phil¬osophies of Spinoza, Kant, Hume, Hegel, etc.By O. Lee. Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1.49works and classics included! Read down the list and seeexactly how much you save on each purchase, see how manymore books you can add to your library—at a tiny fractionof the usual cost. Our supplies are limited—we urge you tocome or order by mail without delay. 65. CONCISE USAGE A ABUSAGE— A Diction¬ary-Guide to Good English, by Eric Partridge.Pub. at $3.50 Sale $1.9866. THE HEALING ARTS, by K Walker Newtrends in medicine, surgery, psychiatry, etc.Pub. at $3.15 Sale $167. FLORENTINE DRAWINGS, by A. Chastel.Eighty fine two-tone reproductions of Giotto,Fra Angelico. Da Vinci. Michelangelo, etc.Pub. at $2.50 Sale $1.491. THE IDEA AND PRACTICE OF GENERALEDUCATION. A complete account of Chicago'spioneering experiment in education. Pub. at$3.50 ‘ Sale $12. The Life and Work of MELVILLE, by G.Stone. Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.493. THE VICTORIANS: An Anthology, by G.Grigson. 278 highlights of 19th-century writing—Tennyson, Hardy, Wilde, et al. Pub. at $3.15Sale $14 John Dewey’s PROBLEMS OF MEN. Selectedwritings. Orig. $5.00 Sale $1.495 Slavery and America — THE SUPPRESSIONOF THE AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE: 1638-1870,by W E B. Du Bois. The classic history of theorigins and impact of Negro enslavement inthe U. S. Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1.986 The Wisdom of the East—BUDDHIST TEXTSTHROUGH THE AGES. The most importantprose and verse of Buddhist thought—trans.into modern English from Sanskrit, Tibetan,Japanese, etc. Pub. at $10.00 Sale $2.98I. SHOSTAKOVICH, by I. Martynov. Life andwork of the great modern composer, with acatalog of his compositions. Pub. at $3.75Sale $18. Letters of JOHN STUART MILL & HARRIETTAYLOR, during their friendship and marriage.Clearly reveals Mrs. Taylor’s influence on thephilosopher-economist’s ideas. Illus. By F.Hayek. Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.499. ACADEMIC PROCESSION: An Informal His¬tory of the American College (1636-1953). A live¬ly recounting of the role of the college inAmerican social history. Pub. at $4.00 Sale $110. THE ART OF RENOIR—10 Full Color Prints,with'text. Best-loved work of the Impression¬ist master. Pub. at $2.00 Sale $1II. DICTIONARY OF WORLD LITERATURE,ed. by J. T. Shipley. Literary movements, tech¬niques, and terms defined by 260 scholars. 453large, double-column pp., each entry signed.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $2.8812. THE WELFARE STATE, by J Abels. Retro¬spective analysis of the “harmful’’ effects ofthe New and Fair Deals. Pub. at $3.00...Sale $113. LOST TRAILS, LOST CITIES. Jungle adven¬tures and discoveries of Col. P H Fawcett—recorded just before he vanished in the AmazonBasin. Photos. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9814. DANCERS THROUGH THE AGES—65 Full-Page Plates. Dance-inspired art from the an¬cients to Degas. A beautiful survey. Pub. at$2.00 Sale $115. MUSIC IN THE NATION, by B H. Haggin.The noted critic’s finest commentary over thepast 20 years. Pub at $5.00 Sale $1.4916. A RESTORATION READER. Milton, Pepys,Thomas Browne, Bunyan. Dryden, et al.—136representative selections. Ed. by J. Hanford.Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.9817. 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Robert Graves’ Monumental THE NAZ-ARENE GOSPEL RESTORED. On the dis¬tortions and mistranslations of the FourGospels—reconstructing the true story ofwhat Jesus said and did. 982 pp.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $3.98 68.Peaks & Perils of Tibet—THE MARCHINGWIND, by L. Clark. Hair-raising adventure inthis unforgettable account of the savage Nglo-loks and a "sacred” peak reputedly higher thanEverest. Thirty-one photos. ,Pub at $5.00 Sale $1.9869 DICTIONARY OF AMERICAN PROV¬ERBS. Ed. by David Kin. Preface by MarkVan Doren. More than 5,000 proverbs whichexpress the essence of American wit andwisdom. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.9870. AMERICAN DIPLOMACY IN ACTION, byR. W Van Alstyne. A comprehensive 836-pagehistory of the evolution of our foreign policy.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $171. THE GEOGRAPHY OF HUNGER, by J. deCastro. Cogent, searching analysis of the poli¬tics of hunger—the effects of mass starvationon two-thirds of the world’s population.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.4972. Breaking Through the Ice Barrier — THEWHITE DESERT, by J. Giaever. Thrilling ac¬count of glacial adventure and discovery—bythe leader of the historic International Antarc¬tic Expedition. Photos. Pub at $6.25...Sale $2.9873. A Short History of AMERICAN PAINTING,by J. T. Flexner. A gallery of masterpieces byWhistler, Sargent. Audubon, Homer, Wood. etc.—lively text. 52 illus. Pub at $2.00 Sale $174. MALI.ARME, by Wallace Fowlie, with draw¬ings by Matisse. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.4975. THE ART OF ASIA—91 Plates. Fascinatingsurvey of Oriental art, from prehistoric Hittitesculpture to India’s sophisticated contemporarypainting. By H. Rubissov. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.9876. HOW TO LOOK AT BUILDINGS, by D. Brad-dell. Guide to the appreciation of architecture.Illus. Pub. at $1.90 Sale $1.0077. PERSONALITY in Theory and Practice, byA. A. Roback. Thorough analysis of normal anabnormal with many “case histories." Pub.at $3.75 Sale $1.98DECORATIVE COLOR PRINTS36. 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Ideal for den or office-20 full color plates showing 237 different wetfly. dry fly, nymph and streamer patterns!6"x9" Special—Set of 20 now $146. CHINESE WATERCOLORS. The famousTung Lai-Chen paintings of Oriental fruits,flowers, and birds, reproduced against silk-textured backgrounds. Il"xl5".Pub. at $15.00 Set of b now $2.9847. VICTORIAN HOUSES. Charming paint¬ings of highly individual brownstone andwood frame houses, capturing their color,character and regal beauty with detailedaccuracy and a keen eye for decorative effect.Il"xl8". Pub. at $8.00..,.Set of 4 now $1.9848. MOTHER GOOSE NURSERY PRINTS.Gay and colorful—Old King Cole, Little BoPeep and eight other favorites—the perfectpictures for baby's room. Il"xl4".Set of 10 now $149. TOULOUSE-LAUTREC “MOULINROUGE ” POSTERS. Superb silkscreens.9!;>"xl3". Pub. at $5.00....Set of 6 now $2.9850. PORTRAITS OF ANTIQUE AUTOS. ByC. P. Hornung. Big, richly colored, detailedprints of early autos—Pierce-Arrow, Duryea,etc. 14"xll". Pub. at $10.00 Set of 4 now $1.9821. TWENTY IMPRESSIONIST MASTERPIECESin Color. Color reproductions of Renoir, Monet,Manet. Degas and others. 9' xl2".Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.9822. LAFAYETTE, by David Loth. The truthabout his careers. Pub, at $5.25 Sale $123. PRESENT-DAY PSYCHOLOGY, Edited byA A. Roback. Forty original essays embracingfiractically the whole range of psychology fromts neurological basis to para-psychology. 1.000pages. Pub. at $12.00 Sale $4.88?.l. ANNAPURNA, by M. Herzog. The remarkablestory of the conquest of the world’s most for¬bidding mountain. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $125. The Life and Writings of W. H. HUDSON, byR. Haymaker. First comprehensive, modernstudy of the author of “Green Mansions.”Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9826 NORTH ATLANTIC TRIANGLE The Inter-£lay of Canada, the United States and Greatritain, by J. B. Brebner. History, through WWZI, of the traders, statesmen, etc., who built anew civilization in North America. 39 maps.Pub, At }i.N, ,StU $1,69 51. The Conquest of South America—CONQUIS¬TADOR, by S. Clissold. The life story of Sar-miento — world - sailor, discoverer, conqueror.Illus. Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.4952. SCULPTURE, by A. Auerbach. Prehistoricrock relief to Rodin. Brancusi, et al—with 67superb photos. Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.9853. BOTTOMS UP! By Cornelia Otis Skinner.Gaiety, hilarity, variety — the actress-writer’sParis experiences. Illus. by Aiejaloir.Pub. at $3.09 sale $154. Cecil Beaton—THE GLASS OF FASHION. Alively, kaleidoscope' of fifty years of dress anddecor. Filled with intimate glimpses and charm¬ing drawings of such people as Queen Eliza¬beth, Marilyn Monroe. Picasso and Hemingway.Pub at $7.50 Sale $1.9855. Standards of BIBLIOGRAPHICAL DESCRIP.TION, by C. Buhler, J. McManaway, L. Wroth.Pub. at $3.00 Sale $156. THE STORY OF PLANTS—186 Plates, by J.Ascii. Comprehensive study of the function, im¬portance and “life-story” or flowers, vegetables,trees, grains, etc. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.98 78. THE RAILROADS OF AMERICA, by MerleArmltage. History of 70 U. S. and Canadianroads, over 400 remarkable photos. Orig. $5.00Sale $2.9879. Sid Hoff—OUT OF GAS. A new cartoon riot.Pub. at $2.95 Sale $1.0080. MOZART’S “MARRIAGE OF FIGARO,” byS. Levarie. Analysis of every aspect of the im¬mortal opera. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.4981. VELASQUEZ. 6 large tipped-in, full-colorplates of paintings in the Prado Museum. Intro,by Jose Ortega y Gasset. ll«ixl5,,V'. Pub. at$6.00 Sale $1.9882. HOW PRAYER HELPS ME. 72 FamousAmericans reveal their personal knowledge ofthe power of prayer. Pub. at $2.75... .Sale $1.0083. THE DARING YOUNG MEN, by D. Dlckason.The American Pre - Raphaellte Movement —Joaquim Miller, Sidney Lanier, Vachel Lind¬say, etc. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9884. Dante’s THE DIVINE COMEDY, tr. by L. G.White. Luxury gift edition with 69 full-page8',i"xl0!i" Dore engravings. A magnificent vol¬ume. Pub. at $6.50....................Sale $3.98 August 10, 195*85. A LITTLE TREASURY Of BritishPOETRY—1500 to Today, ed. by OvWniiam.sOver 700 works by 136 poets. 9l\ pp.. 74photos. Pub. at $5.00 sale^$1.9f.86. A LITTLE TREASURY OF AMERICANPOETRY—Colonial Times to Today, ed b»O. Williams. Over 500 works—“The best andmost representative collection of Americanpoems In existence” . . , Thomas Mann. Deluxe edition. 912 pp., 67 photos, gold-stainedtop, etc. Pub. at $5.00 sale $1.9g87.A LITTLE TREASURY OF GREAtPOETRY—Chaucer to Today, ed. by O. Wll- 1liams. Shakespeare, Byron, Poe, Whitman. IYeats, etc. Over 500 works by 223 poets. 816 |pp . 64 photos. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9888 THE ART OP DEGAS—10 Pull Color Print*with text. 10xl2,i", Imported. Pub. at $2.oo;Sale $1.0089. CORO-CORO: The World of the VenezuelanJungle, by Paul Zahl. “An excellent book oftravel and adventure ... a literary feast of thefirst order"—Dr. Wm. Beebe, famed naturalist.41 photos. Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.4990. William Makepeace Thackeray—THE SHOW.MAN OF VANITY FAIR, by L. Stevenson. Mag.nlficent re-creation of the life of the great nov¬elist and his age. illus. with Thackeray’s owncaricatures. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.989t. Paul Gaugin — THE GOLD OF THF.IRBODIES, by Charles Gorham. Tempestuous storvof the great artist. Pub. at $3.50 Sale $1 m92. LINCOLN IN CARICATURE, ed by R. Wil¬son. A unique Lincoln book — 163 full-pagecontemporary cartoons, pro and con, on theman, his Presidency and his administration.Pub. at $6.50 , Sale $19893. The Ordeal of GEORGE MEREDITH, brL. Stevenson. A lively full-length biography ofMeredith and his contemporaries — Carlyle.Swinburne. Hardy, etc. Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.0094. Western Americana—THE TEXAS TRADI¬TION. by R Phares. Hundreds of true storiesand spirited legends of gunflghts, cow-boy cus¬toms. gamblers. Indian fighters, etc. IllustratedPub. at $3.50 Sale $1.4995. TREASURY OF RUSSIAN VERSE, ed. bvA. Yarmollnsky. 294 selections, from Lermontovand Pxtshkin to Yesenin. Mayakovsky and Pas¬ternak—in modern translations. Pub. at $2.95.Sale $1.9898. Science Today—PREVIEW FOR TOMOR¬ROW. by B. Bliven. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1 0097. St.X: METHODS AND MANNERS, by DrL Berg and R Street. Straightforward guide toachieving sex happiness In marriage, coveringall aspects, basic techniques, etc. IllustratedPub. at $3.50 Sale $1.9898. LEGER—Painter of the Machine Age. bvKatharine Kuh. 75 Illustrations in full colorand monochrome The first book-length critics!appraisal In English. Pub. at $5.75 Sale $1.9899 CONFLICT AND LIGHT—Psychological Dis.tiirbance and Readjustment. Essays on sin,RuHt. morality and religion, by 13 noted con¬tributors. Pub. at $2.75 Sale $1.00100 Alfred North Whitehead's ESSAYS IN SCI¬ENCE AND PHILOSOPHY. A cross-section ofhis best writings. Orig. $4.75 Sale $1.98101. Jean-Paul Sartre’s EXISTENTI ALISM. Anoutline of the new philosophy. Pub. at $2.75.Sale $1.00102. DIRECTING THE PLAY—A Source Bookof Stagecraft. A unique, complete work-brilliant chapters by 23 "greats” includingShaw. Josh Logan, Ella Kazan, et al. 31 Illus.Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1.98103 THE ART OF MANET—10 Full-Color Prints.Text by H. Jedding. 10x12',^ imp. Pub. at $2.00.Sale $1.00104 THE WINGED SERPENT: An Anthology ofAmerican Indian Prose and Poetry, ed. by Mar¬got Astrov. Over 100 selections. Pub. at $4.00.Sale $1.49105. TREASURES OF THE GREAT NATIONALGALLERIES—300 Plates, 24 in Full Color. ByH. Tietze. An unforgettable tour of the Louvre,Prado, Metropolitan, National Gallery, others.Pub. at $10.00 . Sale $5.88106 THE WHITE MAN’S DILEMMA, by LordBoyd Orr. A vitally important book on the risingsurge of Asia and Africa. Pub. at $2.50. Sale $1.00107. Clinical Studies in PSYCHOANALYSIS, byD. S. Lorand. 18 true-life stories of neuroses andhow they were analyzed. Pub. at $4.00. .Sale $1.98108. THE HEART OF CHARLES DICKENS. Thenovelist's Intimate correspondence with MissAngela Burdett-Coutts, revealing hidden aspectsof his life and work. Intro, by Edgar Johnson.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.98109. A LIFE OF CHEKHOV, by I. NemirovskvPub. at $3.15 Sale $1.00110. ARCHITECTURE OF THE OLD NORTH¬WEST TERRITORY—249 Plates. Colonial cab¬ins, Federal courthouses, Mormon churches.Gothic mansions, interiors, etc. Llm. ed., 9x11''•By R. Newcomb. Pub. at $10.00 Sale $3.98111. THE CAT in Nature, History and Art. 54full-page plates of Persians. Angoras, Siamese.Intro, by M. Uze. Pub. at $2.00 Sale $1.00112. THOMAS MORE'S EPIGRAMS. First com¬plete edition in modern English, with the orig¬inal Latin. Ed. by L. Bradner Si C. Lynch. Pub.at $7.50 sale $1.49113. Customs and habits in the DAILY LIFE OFEARLY CHRISTIANS, by J. Davies. A wealth ofvivid. Intriguing details of the lives of six ac¬tual “converts” in ancient Rome, Marseilles, etc.Pub. at $3.50 sale $1.98114. TREKKING AMONG MOROCCAN TRIBES,by J. Haldane. Intimate portrait of the dailylives and customs of the Arab tribes at work,play and worship. Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.00115. SPANISH DRAWINGS, by Jose G. Sicre.80 drawings and sketches by Velasquez, El Greco,Goya. etc. Pub. at $2.50 Sale $1.49116. FIFTY YEARS OF ITALIAN CINEMA-425 Illustrations, ed. by H. Weinberg. Anabsolute “must” for all serious students ofthe film—an exciting, thoroughly docu¬mented history of a great cinema tradition.With an Important text and a wealth of finestills. Pub. at $7.50 Sale $4.88117. Mark Twain, Ford, FDR—THE AMERICANSPIRIT IN EUROPE, by H. Kohn. Our social,literary and political influence—1776 to today.Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.00118. Proudhon—THE UN-MAKXIAN SOCIALIST,by H. De Lubac. New insights into the UtopianSocialist’s life and Ideas—excerpts from hiswork. Pub. at $3.50 Sale $1.49119. DICTIONARY OF PASTORAL PSYCHOL¬OGY. Psychological terms and concepts Invalu¬able to the minister or rabbi. Ed, by V. Ferm.Pub. at $6.00 sale $1.98120. A CUP OF SKY. by Donald Culross Peattie.Shooting stars, fireflies, the moon, snow, etc.—scientific knowledge, winged with poetry. Illus.Pub, at $1,08