Enrollment up againEntering class hits seven year highUndergraduate total nears 2100as approximately 750-800 enterEstimates of the number ofentering undergraduatesranged as high as 800 withMcCrea Hazlett, director ofadmissions, giving a “realistic esti¬mate" of 750. Either figure, how¬ever. shows the largest under¬graduate entering class since 1948.However, this year’s figure isdeceptively high when comparedwith the entering classes of 1942-1953, since in those years enteringstudents with two years of collegewere considered to be graduatestudents. Comparative figures forrecent years show about 640 stu¬dents entered the college last falland about 400 entered in 1954.i Total enrollment 2,100Total college enrollment is ex¬pected by David Madsen, assistantto t lie registrar, to reach about2.100 this fall, as compared with1,760 last year, and 2,134 in 1950.Record year for students in thecollege was 1946 when 3,400 stu¬dents were enrolled. Since thatyear, enrollment declined steadilyunder the “Hutchins plan AB” Compiled by staff membersuntil 1954 when the “New AB"was adopted. Last year’s increasewas notably transfer students.The first time in several yearssuch students were not forced totake extra work beyond fouryears of college by the placementsystem. This year’s increase, how¬ever, is mainly composed of highschool graduates. The number ofstudents entering before finishinghigh school has decreased to thepoint of insignificance.Most states representedAbout 5/8th of the enteringclass this year are high schoolgraduates or early entrants, whiletransfer students account for theremaining 3/8ths. Forty-seven ofthe forty-eight states are repre¬sented in the class, but the regis¬trar’s office did not have avail¬able the name of the omitted state.Four US possessions or territo¬ries, and 21 foreign countries arealso reported to be represented.Figures*' for the total enroll¬ment can only be guessed at, as graduate enrollment has notopened except for students in resi¬dence during the summer. How¬ever, indications are that about4,500 graduate students will reg¬ister on the quadrangles for anapproximate total enrollment of5,600. This could mean the largestquadrangles enrollment since1951, when 6,008 students w'ereenrolled. In this 24-page issue:Enrollment up ............ IDearu shift 1Housing acute 1Ward returns 2Carlson dies 2New phys ed requirements 3Activities night tonight... 3Summer news review 4Editorial page, THE GADFLY 6Special 1956 Orientation supplement 9 through 24VoJ. 65. No. 6 University of Chicago, Friday, September 28, 1956 31Set up newby Ronald Grossman post,In a major shift of Administration organization, John P. Netherton has been appointed toa newly created position of associate dean of students.The appointment of Netherton, presently dean of students in the college, led to a series ofpromotions and appointments of other administration officials to different posts.McCrea Hazlett. now director of admissions, will fill Netherton’s position of dean of stu¬dents in the college.Registrar William E. Scottbecomes the new director ofadmissions, while David L.Madsen, present assistant to theregistrar, takes Scott’s place asregistrar.Another new position, directorof enrollment, will be filled byCharles D. O’Connell, now an ad¬missions counselor.Netherton’s new position willgive him the responsibility of re¬cruitment of new students, ad¬mission. representation of theUniversity throughout the UnitedStates, and co-ordination of thedean of student’s office with the campaign and developmentoffices.Both Scott, who recently suf¬fered a heart attack while on atrip to India, and O’Connell willwork as assistants to Dean Neth¬erton in his new office.Dean of students. Robert M.Strozier, in revealing these newappointments, stated, “The posi¬tion of associate dean will be avery mobile one. Dean Nethertonwill probably travel extensively,meeting people, and generally act¬ing as a liaison man for the deanof student's office.” According to Strozier, thegrowth of administrative work inconnection with admissions, re¬cruitment, campaign, develop¬ment, and alumni relations hasnecessitated this new position andthe subsequent shifts of person¬nel.Netherton, who has served asdean of students in the collegesince 1955, is also an assistantprofessor of Spanish in the col¬lege.Hazlett, who has in the pastserved as an assistant dean ofstudents in the college, is also anDorms full, situationby Jean KvvonA large increase in the en¬rollment of entering under¬graduates, as well as anexpected increase in the grad¬uate roster, has prompted severalUniversity attempts to alleviatethe resulting acute housing situa¬tion, according to Robert M. Stro¬zier, dean of Students.In the housing system, womenhave displaced the law studentsin Beecher house after three'years of male occupancy. A totalof 248 women will live in theC group this year. Dean Strozierreported that as early as Septem¬ber 1 applicants were being turn¬ed down because of the lack ofavailable facilities.At the beginning of the sum¬mer, Strozier continued, when itbecame plain that existing facili¬ties would be crowded, plans werehiade to make room for olderwomen students by no longerhousing student nurses in Gates*Blake.} Double up dormsAfter the situation becamemore pressing the dormitorieswere “doubled up regretfully," he[•aid. Rooms in Gates-Blake, for in¬stance, which had formerlyhoused two women, were turnedinto quadruples by the additionof double-deck bunks. No memberof the staff was available for com¬ment on the effect of addingabout 60 users to the already over¬taxed house kitchen.At the beginning of orientationweek it was rumored that a largenumber of women students—esti¬mates revolved about 50 — hadbeen accepted but only givenroom for one week; after whichthey were advised to find theirown lodging.The opening of one wing of thenew women’s domitory next Octo¬ber is expected to provide roomfor 170 more.Few university listingsThe number of listings forrooms for women in the Univer¬sity housing bureau Wednesdaymorning was 48; apartments toshare 12; and furnished apart¬ments 19. Prices in this sampleranged from a low of $5 per weekfor a small sleeping room to $240a month for a 6-room furnishedapartment. Burton-Judson court, originallyconstructed to house 350 men, hadbeen expanded to handle 444 dur¬ing recent years, and in additionthis year guest rooms and asso¬ciate rooms have been turnedover for regular use, accordingto Alan Austill, director of stu¬dent housing.When the Maroon wen]; ro pressWednesday, at least eight menwere not assured of a place tolive, although Austill anticipatedsufficient cancellations of dormi¬tory reservations to make up thedifference.He commented upon the “for¬tunate" fact that with the in¬crease in enrollment there is alsoan increase in the number of stu¬dents living at home and outsidethe housing system.Mead house will be used tohouse the law students oustedfrom Beecher.Single rooms for men listed atthe housing bureau numbered 29at this writing, with prices aver¬aging $9-$12 weekly, dependingupon landlord services.Together with the filling of shift deans'acute9available space in all women’sdormitories, Residence Halls andCommons has instituted a reduc¬tion in maid service, whereby resi¬dents must change their own bedlinen and “are expected to keeptheir rooms neat and clean.”Dorm rates IncreasedIn addition to the announced$2.50 quarterly increase in roomfees in the women’s dorms, therehas been an unannounced $5 in¬crease in board rates, resultingin a total increase of $7.50 perquarter.Lylas Kay, director of RH&C,blamed rising costs, including therecent University-wide 6-cent-an-hour increase, for the decrease inservice and price rise.The employees formerly usedin the room cleaning jobs havebeen let go, Miss Kay said, butshe had no idea of the number ofpersons involved.Increasing numbers of marriedstudents—who cannot usually behoused in dormitories—promptedthe administration to purchaseseveral apartment buildings,among them the quadruple ar-See ‘Housing,* page 5 David L. MadsenLeft, new director of admis¬sions William E. Scott; right,Charles O’Connell, new directorof enrollment.McCrea HazlettJohn P. Nethertonassistant professor of English inthe college.Madsen entered the registrar’soffice in 1955, following his grad¬uation from UC.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON September 28, 195®Anton J. Carlson dead at 81;was famous UC physiologistby Oliver LeeMemorial sendees for Anton J. Carlson, world famous UC biological scientist, who diedSeptember 2, will be held on November 3 in the auditorium of Billings hospital.Carlson was born in Sweden in 1875, and came to the United States at the age of 16.He spent 10 years of work andstudy at Augustana college,intending to become a minis¬ter, but after a brief ministryin Montana decided to enterStanford university to studyphysiology.He took his PhD degreethere in 1902, and came to UCin 1904, becoming professor ofphysiology in 1909, chairman ofthe department, in 1916, andFrank P. Hixon distinguishedservice professor in 1929. He re¬tired in 1939. after 35 years onthe faculty, but thereafter con¬tinued to be as active, inquisitive,and crusading as before his for¬mal retirement.Practically every scientifichonor has been conferred on him,including the presidency of theAmerican association for the ad¬vancement of science, member¬ship in the national academy ofscience, and scores of offices,chairmanships, scrolls, testimoni¬als. and honorary degrees.To many student generationsat UC he was known as “Ajax,”a nickname variously ascribed tohis initials by some and explainedsee ‘Carlson,’ page 5Anton J. Carlson1875 - 1956itatottsHACKING COATSlosh pockets, sidevents, plaid linedcollar $30*5and lapel W 7SLACKSAll wool worstedflannels.aatbentic $ I IfScolors. 1CAPSImportedShetland SCtlTweeds **08 n. ntiebigan avenueWhitehall 3-2410Student SpecialsAlarm Clocks. .2.98 upAsh Trays 15 upDinnerware — Open Stock10% DiscountFor Students OnlyLm rife Selection ofWASTE BASKETS39‘ to »1 39BAR GLASSESHeavy Bottom — Clear10e *> 20*CONNORHARDWARE1304 L 55thMU 4-1100 Former College deanreturns from IndiaAfter a 20 months’ stay in India, F. Champion Ward, formerdean of the college, returns to UC this fall as professor ofhumanities and examiner in the college.Ward will give a lecture Wednesday at a UC alumni lunch¬eon at the Art Institute on —“Private foundations and in- His successor as dean of the col-dependent Asia,” in which he ]e&e was Robert E. Streeter, asso.will report on his experiences as ciate professor of English, whoeducational representative in In- has kept that office since then,dia for the division of overseas Ward, at the time of his resig-activities of the Ford foundation, nation, told the Maroon that heWard had originally submitted had been offered the Ford foun-his resignation as dean of the dation position a year earlier, butcollege in May, 1953, after the had felt he should delay his resig.council of the faculty senate voted nation until the new undergradeto substitute four-year bachelor’s a*e programs had been acteddegrees for the “old” college BA. uP°n-But Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton did not accept the resig¬nation, stating that “the dignityand continued development of theprogram of general education inthe college” could “best be pre¬served under the leadership ofMr. Ward.”By December, 1953, Ward wasfeeling enthusiastic about the newcollege program, stating that itoffers the student “a carteblanche to roam freely throughthe University in pursuit of hisintellectual interests.”A few days later, however,Ward again submitted his resig¬nation in order to accept his Fordfoundation appointment in India. F. Champion WardHAPPY-JOE-LUCKY presents STICKLERS!STUCK FOR MONEY? DO ASTICKLERS ARE TICKLERS and a mighty soft way to make money!Just write down a simple riddle and a two-word rhyming answer. Forexample: What’s a ball player who gets a raise? (Answer: richerpitcher.) Note: both words must have the same number of syllables—bleak freak, jolly dolly, vinery finery. Send your Sticklers, withyour name, address, college, and class, to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Don’t do drawings! We’ll pay $25 for everyStickler we use in our advertising—and for hundreds that never seeprint. And remember—you’re bound to Stickle better when you’reenjoying a Lucky, because Luckies taste better. Luckies’ mild, good¬tasting tobacco is TOASTED to taste even better. Fact is, you’ll sayLuckies are the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked! SEND IT IN ANDMAKE"IT'STOASTEDto tastebetter! Luckies Taste BetterCLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER I9KJ, C.. FIODUCT OF I ^^^,1,1,^, AMSRICA‘1 LLADIMD HiEVFACTVHE MT C'lGABETTMSeptember 28, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page IOrientation weekhighlightsby Bou Stryermember of Orientation BoardFrom the time the firsttrunk was unloaded andhauled last Sunday to the fifthfloor of a B-J dorm, orienta¬tion week has been characterizedby continual activity. Picnics,tours, speeches, conferences, andthe inevitable bull sessions thatdrag on to the early morninghours have been keeping busyboth old and entering students.A buffet and informal receptionfollowed unpacking last Sunday.Deans and faculty members wereon hand at Ida Noyes hall togreet the new arrivals.On Monday morning, the enter¬ing students heard addresses ofwelcome. A significant differencefrom former years was that themeeting was the shortest ever —less than thirty minutes. Tours ofthe campus followed, and tradi¬tion was maintained when FredSolomon, oldest living member ofOrientation Board, once againbrought his tour-group late toRockefeller chapel.Tuesday was picnic night.Blessed with good weather, thepicnic was a pleasant mixer for alarge group—about 500. Chancel¬lor Kimpton spoke a few words,explaining that one reason for hisappearance was that he wishedto reassure the entering elass ofthe existence of the chancellor.He pointed out that the Chan¬cellor is of necessity h busy man,but expressed his desire to havemore contact with the studentbody in the years to come than inthe past. Kimpton stated that theentering class could get the“world's finest education” at this reviewedinstitution if they work for it, andadded, “In fact, you’d better!”Following the picnic there waitan open house in Ida Noyes withsocial dancing, roller skating, andgroup singing. Barrett Denton,representing Student Union, an¬nounced the SU “Shindig” to beheld this Saturday. He emphasizedthat the “Shindig” would be a“real” mixer and that it wouldhave a Western theme.With the week well under way,the entering class was getting tofeel at home. Their enthusiasmand vigor (despite the “brainwash¬ing placement tests”) were evi¬dent.Orientation week had its sadderaspects also. The gaiety of place¬ment tests cannot carry over toeverything. One new studentpleaded with his house head forpermission to keep a Scotch ter¬rier in his room. He explainedthat the dog was witty, urbane,and housebroken.The resident head remained un¬impressed.The student pleaded further,mentioning that the terrier washis family dog and close friend.The resident head was forcedto refuse the request, but sympa¬thetically suggested that the stu¬dent purchase a copy of Thurber.Days later it was discovered thatthe student really did not own awire-haired terrier but was mere¬ly thinking of purchasing one.Jan Hubka, chairman of Orien¬tation Board, stated that she felteverything was running verysmoothly. Jan was particularlypleased that the entering students,in the process of being oriented,are already thinking of aiding infuture Orientation weeks. Orien¬tation Board will have a booth atactivities night and applicationsand information will be issued inlate November. |High school grads now musf\ •fulfill phys ed requirementsUndergraduate students entering the University as high school graduates are now requiredto meet certain minimum standards in physical education, or must take courses to makq upthe deficiency.According to the official college orientation program calendar, high school graduates mustqualify, on the basis of general motor skills tests, in water safety and in two other activities.These activities may be selected from badminton, golf, handball, squash, and tennis.Walter Hass, newly-ap¬pointed director of physicaleducation, stated that mem¬bership on a varsity team willsatisfy one of the two require-m e n t s (in addition to watersafety).John P. Netherton, dean of stu¬ M. Strozier stated that this ac¬tion had nothing whatsoever todo with the statement by Presi¬dent Dwight D. Eisenhower earlythis summer expressing concernover the physical fitness of Amer¬ican youth.Dean Strozier stated that the students who could most benefitfrom the physical education pK>-gram of the University, in thepast did not take advantage ofit. “Fulfilling the requirementsshould be fun,” said Strozier. “Ac¬tivities may be selected fromcommonly played sports.”dents in the college, stated thatcourses taken to satisfy theserequirements will be enteredupon student transcripts bycourse name, rather than as “phy¬sical education.”In the past, high school gradu¬ates entering the University werenot required to register for ac¬tivities for which they did notqualify on the basis of the motorskills tests. The motor skills testsare given to all undergraduatesentering the University as earlyentrants, high school graduates,or transfer students with lessthan two years of previous collegework.Early entrants are required totake four hours of physical edu¬cation per week during their firstyear of residence, regardless ofresults of the motor skills tests,stated Ilass.Action on requiring high schoolgraduates to meet minimumstandards originated in the deanof students’ office. When ques¬tioned, Dean of Students Robert Activities on displayin Ida Noyes tonightRepresentatives of nearly 60 campus organizations willsprout from the crannies of Ida Noyes tonight for the 1956Student Government presentation of activities night. Thenight will begin at 7:30. —Exhibits will include peri¬odical showings of films bythe Astronomical society andDocumentary Film group, and in¬formal performances by the mem¬bers of the Jazz club and Folkloresociety.Major attraction of the evening,according to co-chairmen SarahSilverman and Sylvia Pandolfi, isexpected to be the all-student vari¬ety show, to be presented in theIda Noyes gymnasium beginningat 9:30. »Two Platonic educational de¬vices — music and gymnastics —will be presented by the Jazz club,Folklore society, and the UC Mu¬sical society, with a performance by exponents of the art of judo.University Theatre is to contrib¬ute a short student-written dia¬logue, Student Forum a four-wayconversation on the subject ofElvis Presley, current juke-boxidol.(A note on Chieago-style de¬bate: patterned after the Englishfashion, the form allows the audi¬ence to interfere and interposecomments, objection^ andsquashy projectiles if so desired.)Master of ceremonies for theevening program will be Fred Sol¬omon, oldest living member ofOrientation Board.Refreshments are to be servedby Student Union.-,.mHHi WOODWORTH’SBOOKSTORENEW TEXT BOOKS USEDCLASS ROOM SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS - NOTE BOOKS - STATIONERY - LAUNDRY GASESBRIEF GASES - SPORTING GOODSTYPEWRITERS sold — rented — repairedIIP%K¥ POSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARY1311 EAST 57th STREET2 BLOCKS EAST OF MANOEL HALL• LSTORE HOURS: DAILY 8 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. . . . EVENINGS—Monday, Wednesday, Friday to 9:00 P.M. INIIiSummer news reviewswapabout $70. Only 12 per cent of purposes for out-of-town students, fun by Bruno Bettelheim, and th«the four square blork area will be Chicago students who take the counseling center,1IJV „ covered by the. five five story UC scholarship test willnol haxc it was announced in Augusting position, and Larkin has taken apartment buikiings. The other to take the boards. that Wallace W. Robbins !v;><l re.up residence in Cambridge, Mas- 88 per cent will be devoted to play- The UC Track club will hav e a signed as president of Mr.,,:-,„saehusetts, until next summer’s grounds, -open areas, and off street participant in the 1956 Olympics Theological school and wouldcongress. parking. this fall. Phil Coleman ran a rce- succeeded by Sydney E. Mead, fLarkin, former SU president, The building plans of UC are ord-breaking 9:00.3 in winning the professor on the Federated Th.-othree-time SG representative and just part of a grand scale rede- 3.000meter steeplechase at the logical faculties. Robbins left todean’s award w inner, is now at- velopment of Hyde Park wlvieh Olympic trials in Los Angeles on become pastor of the Unc..? ,,,rtending the International Student swung into full scale this sum- June 30. lie beat out Horace Ash- rhurch of Worchester,-'-the u.iwfCongress in Ceylon as one of the mer. Going out-of-business signs enfelder, the 1932.Olympic w inner largest Unitarian churTlv.five representatives from the sprang up along o.lth street, es- in this event. Coleman’s time was The newly reformed StudentUnited States. peeially at the east end of the the fastest run in this country.' rnjon showed some acf.vt’. sThe UC delegation had earlier street. By June 29, 37 of the 191 Chicago, this summer, was hard summer. They held two majorsolved a succession problem. Jan condemns! buddings had been hit by a polio outbreak. An all dances <a Dean's dance tnterms of tb.e exchange. Stnee^our porter’s ISRP) absence had left torn down. By the end of tho out drive was put on to give Ralk the quarter and a NS A C u,c/ the delegation without another summer, many more had gone, vaccinations to all children (under end-it), a s e r i e s. of informalSRPcr to succeed her as a dele- The “A” project, centered at 5nth 21). Sound trucks roamed the dances, and a steak frv on thegate since ISL had taken the and Lake Park, will be developed streets announcing the free shots. Fourth of July,other 19 seats in the election, into family residences, three to Even student health chipped in Student Government was besetCalling it a compromise, ISL five apartment houses, and a as it started in August to offer by a personnel problem Aetin"filled the delegate sea t, while shopping center. The “B” project free vaccinations to those stu- President Philip Hoffman and themaking SRPcr Mary Ann Chaoa- is centered around 54th and Dor- dents under 21 and charged $1.25 OVer present Miss Ciia--ai,-awrestos a second alternate (bottom chesteiy for those over 21. " were the only active memln rsten) with a provision that she University Theatre for the sec- Money granted seen in Ida vhis summer. Most ofshould have a voice in comm is- ond summer put on its outdoor Money continued to make new s. the work had to do with the Rus-sion if she desired. Court Theatre performances in uc pot the first installment sian exchange, which fell through.Dudley goes Hutehinscm court. TVy opened ($280,000) of the $16 million Block Major and minor surgery wasAs the empty space behind Ida Wlth tJie Shakespearean comedy. orant early in June, In the same performed on Universitybbuilrl-Noyes testifies, Dudley field is no Twelfth Night. Then they showed month, the Carnegie corporation ings throughout the quarter. Themore. The ground-breaking oe- Lunpidcs’ Trojan Women. This gave $75,000 for the development remodeling of Kent was started,eurred on June 11 with Edward L. Hreck tragedy was performed of thp cop^e history of non- The different look of the C s|,(ipRyorson turning the first spade with the Greeks as a modern westerncivilization courses. F<> id was accomplished this summer,of earth. Ryorson had just been mechanized army, t ovirt I heat re foundation got into the act by an- Work was also done in the Rev.succeeded as chairman of the closest the season with Anatole _ MgiSboard of trustees by Glen A. France’s farce, Man Who MarriedLloyd. The new girls* dorms a Dumb Wfffe.which will be built on the site Exam out $will cost an estimated $3.2 million Under a banner headline, theand will house 542 women. One Maroon disclosed in its July 20wing of the dorms should be fin- issue that UC would discontinueished by September. 1957* use of its entrance exams start-Two weeks later, UC announced ing fall, 1957. Instead, entrantsby Norm Lewak NSA. Larkin :Summer quarter, 1956, was another ucer.one filled with so much newsthat the Maroon had to pub¬lish five instead of the sched¬uled four issues. To thosereaders who were on vacation, theMaroon is offering this review ofthe summer’s events.The on-again, off-again Russianexchange was finally called offby radio Moscow. On June 22,Yuri Gouk, cultural attache ofthe Soviet embassy, and DeanRobert Strozier agreed on thestudents would have had to haw-been in Moscow by September,there was an immediate rush toscreen and choose applicants,However, it seems that timewas too short as a letter datedAugust 3 was sent by Mary AnnChaearestos', chairman of theNSA committee of Student Gov¬ernment, to Moscow university,calling off the exchange for thisyear. It said, in part, “At thislate date ... it is impossible tocomplete all arrangements.” Itexpressed the hope that the 1957-58 exchange would go through.The radio Moscow broadcast oc¬curred on August 7 and statedthat the exchange was off becausethe Soviet students would have tobe finger-printed. This despite thefact that Gouk had told Strozierthat he (Gouk) felt that finger¬printing would be no problem.The state department could havewaived the fingerprinting re¬quirement of the MeCa rre n -Walter act by classifying the So¬viets’ visit as “official business.”v NSA meetsThe Democratic convention wasnot the only political shindig inthe city this summer. UC was thehost to the ninth National Stu¬dent congress of the US NationalStudent association, August 21-31. About 9(»0 delegates, alter?nates, and observers were housedand fed by' the University. The ❖ International House MoviesMipday eveaia£«, 8:00 l*.M. -—Assembly NatlMonday, Oct. 1 —J5c — Lavra (American)dorms wT-re crammed and the $Commons was closed to UCers, ♦{•yet everyone seemed happy. £The delegates considered and ypassed many, many resolutions X.which had survived the four com- ❖missions and 32 subcommissions, XThe only severe floor fight devel- *oped on whether the desegrega- %tlon resolution should contain a *passage asking the Senate to elim- *inate the filibuster. After hours |ftf parliamentary maneuvering,the passage was taken out. Themajor argument against it was £that it would weaken the resolu- Ttion just as the desegregation ^rider had weakened the school |bill in the last Congress. ' fLarkins elected xThe highlight for the UC dele- Jgal ion wTas the election of its Xchairman, Bruce Larkin, to serve ^as international affairs vice-presi- !dent, the third highest post in Bobbie’s House6324 S. Woodlawn NO 7-91!(Ffiicrly Collier's House)Dinners served from 11 a.m. fro 9:30FEATURINGAPPETIZER SMORGASBORDClosed o«i TuesdayMOVING OCT. 15to 1342 E. 55th St.LARGE REDUCTIONS ^5 y o/ Pretty smooth andV/ pretty gay, you're ,\r EH/gure Plrfect the JWispese way! M^ So o o-iofi rut pi «io$»ic hmki# Kgwllti Helanca nylon. Satin ekttlic (font JVand bock panels and nen-ride cuffs assure MFItrial Rne» and Weavenly comfort. JgjraS-M-l • White <snd colors * aa _ _rooty or Girdle “ 5 InL Yo OSadvertisedin Seventeen• DISAPPEARING HANDLECASES• ZIPPER NOTE BOOKS• LAUNDRY GASES• PACKING TRUNKSft LOCKER TRUNKSNSA DiscountMitzie’sFLOWER SHOPFlowers forall occasions Others $4.98 to $19.98• Plus F.E.T. ,&■>Mention This Ad For . • .Free Initials on Any Purchase' * ’ - '• ’and 1 tNSA Discount- Mail Orders Promptly Filledr MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY* MARCT'S OF HYDL PARK■ 1368 E. 53rd St., ChicoSo 15, III.■ J, fj, * *■ > ,, „! PANTY......GIRDLE ..COLOR, 1st choice 2nd.S-5 NAME .......................1 ADDRESSJ INinois residents, piease odd 3% soles tax. Save C.O.D. chargesi by enclosing check or M.O.TWO CONVENIENTSTORES1301 E. 55th St.Ml 3-4020 AUTHORIZED SAMSONITE Cr SKYWAYSALES & REPAIR SERVICEb" ... v * "■ ,S- '— WE REPAIR —mm ■ - 3^4 ... ,v ,.vjcptcwbw 28# 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Carlson from page 3by others as a reflection of his Carlson otherwise had been sym-Homeric proportions as a fighter, pathetic and gentle. He quietlyFor years he insisted on hold- thrust money on needy studentsjnrr a required pre-medical course and he had unflagging warmthat 7 and even at that hour for humanity in the mass. Par-his showmanship and intensity ticularly after his work with Her-as a teacher stirred interest in his bert Hoover, in feeding the starv- 'Moby Dick or some minnows?'Dean Streeter fishes up answerby Oliver Lee“Moby Dick and some minnows” was the subject of thesometimes sleepy students. The ing children of Europe, following ess delivered last night by Robert E. Streeter, dean of. h ..i. u:s classroom dem his service in the first world war the College, at a meeting at Mandel hall for entering under¬stones about his classroom dem- ^ lieutenant.colonel in the sani. graduates.onstrations, his eartny remarks tary corps be bad been qUjCk jn The marine images in the title were chosen to represent twoand criticisms, are innumerable response to suffering of any kind, opposite theories of liberal education, neither of which, saidand legendary. He was unusually As an investigator, Carlson had Streeter, is being followed atsuccessful in training men who made many important contribu- UC. treme forms of the two theories,today occupy important positions t>or>s of his own. He was bestan,I have won distinction in bio- known as a gastro intestinal phys-lologist, particularly for his worklogical research. on bunger He demonstrated thatHe was ruthless in warring on there is independence between The “Moby Dick” theory Streeter went on to state that the |lays its emphasis on the inculca- UC curriculum seeks to occupy ation of one or another sweeping middle ground between them, intheory or fixed doctrine which isthought to contain a great manyqu.ickerj, and almost as vehement hunger and appetite, hunger re- universal significances and pro-,n attacking scientific error. His suiting from periodic contractions vides a pat answer for all prob-two questions, “Vat iss the effi- of the stomach and appetite fromdonee?” and “Vat are your con- stimulation.trols?” were raised time and He pioneered in the field ofagain in classroom, laboratory, endocrinology, and is also knownand august scentific assemblages, for his studies of nerve impulses. lems. the belief that there is an educa¬tionally significant tension be¬tween the two.Streeter then went on to de¬scribe the approach with whichusually to the chagrin of the in¬dividual challenged.Long used as an expert by thegovernment in prosecutions ofpure food and drugs violations, The “minnow” theory, Streeter UC applies its theory of liberalsaid, errs in the opposite direction education. He thought it entirelyby stressing the accumulation of understandable and proper thatdiscreet and unrelated particles of educational institutions be judgedknowledge. It denies the existence “according to their ability to pro-interested himself m the problem 0j any bjerarcby or relationship duce people able to deal resolute-of alcoholism, which he held to Qrnrm„ tl,oco r.aric anH accPrtc ly and intelligently with the Robert E. StreeterFollowing his retirement, hebe a disease which should be ofconcern to medical and biologicalCarlson was the ruin and despair research. He also worked exten-of unwary lawyers for the de- sively on the problems of agingfonse. Misled by his guileless ap- and retirement, emphasizing thepearance and language, they reck- distinction between chronologicaliessly cross-examined until Carl- and biological age. among these parts, and assertsthat organization and pattern areimpossible.Allowing that the above are ex-Housing acuteson sprung the trap with a devas¬tating answer.Implacable as he was towardwillful error and lack of morality, Carlson married Esther Shea-TERRY’S PIZZA from page 1gren in 1905. He is survived bv . . , .... future.her and by three children and six ran" n f ~"grandchildren. ings between University andWoodlawn avenues from 5416-5429.Present tenants have been ad¬vised that they may have an ex- crucial problems of their day.”Nevertheless, Streeter said, “bya curious irony, it seems to betrue that the very best education—although rooted in the hope ofa better future—proceeds withouttoo much self-consciousness aboutits role in preparing for thea 99The World’s BestFREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE ...1.95MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95We ein carry a full line of Italian foods1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045h®M^^ra^irr^^r^ir7Svir/svni|vir/»ir«vi[5iviR« Supreme Court¬is New Worldtopic SundayThe Supreme Court will be thetopic of the University of Chi¬cago’s New World radio programat 10:35 a.m. Sunday on NBC’snetwork show Monitor.Participants on “The SupremeThe best approach for the stu- Court Opens a New Term” willdent, said Streeter, is to become include Brainerd Currie, profes*engrossed with the challenging sor of law, and Philip B. Kurland,job which is immediately at hand, associate professor of law, bothto have a lively, almost spontane- of the UC law school. Among oth-ous interest in acquiring knowl- er aspects of the Court they will.... . . edge, ard to avoid an overriding deal with its positions as to thetension of their presen eases abs0rption with the immediate legal definition of states’ rights.April 30, but not la er, i y pract|cai consequences of what is Maurice F. X. Donohue, dean ofwish. One couple reported that being studied. University College, will be mpd-Indeed, Streeter pointed out,this often turns out to be a verythe University agent visitingthem suggested they not moveto another place in the Hyde Park erator.because “he was afraid he Practical approach to education Chief visitswould have to call on us again.”Waiting lists for married stu¬dents contain in excess of 200names, stated Dean Strozier.Meanwhile the demolition of anumber of buildings deemed un- ]jeve, what particular turning ofsuitable increase the demand for ^be road you should take.For, he stated, “the essence of Nana Boa Amponsem III, para¬living space as former tenants ofthese places sought other shelter.Accommodations in Internation¬al house were reported to befilled, with large waiting lists.GUYS...HAVE YOU SEEN THEJmjfotnupFEATURED BYPLAYBOYGET AN EYEFUL ATD & G CLOTHES SHOP744 E. 63rd Street Ml 3-2728Ask For A Free Playboy Magazine the future is that it is largely un- mount chief and president of thepredictable.” Hence no one in a Denkyira states of the Africancollege can “spell out for you, to Gold Coast, was the guest of Solthe last little detail, what you Tax, chairman of the UC depart-should know, what you should be- men of anthropology in late Au¬gust.The chief, who is 26 years old,has currently been studying localgovernment and community activ¬ities in the United States.He is a member of the royalhouse of the D e n y i r a States,which traces its ancestry back 32What teachers at UC do aim todo, Streeter stated, is “to help youstrengthen those qualities of in¬tellect and spirit which, whateverthe circumstances, will assist youin reaching sound decisions,"andin acting with wisdom, with reso- generations, and he now ruleslution, and with compassion.” over about 30 thousand subjects.SCHNEEMANN’S MEDICALBOOK SERVICE✓Any current text supplied within 24 hoursRED DOORROOK SHOP1328 East 57th Street Chicago 37, III.Everything InART SUPPLIESFor EverybodyArtists, "pro" and student, _make us headquarters forall supplies.Complete Stocks ofWater Colors, Pastels Papers — BoardsShiva Oils, Caseins Canvas, StretchersAll MediumsDUNCAN STATIONERS1313 EAST 55TH HY 3-4111(Next to the Post Office)Largest Selection in Hyde ParkNSA DiscountsTHE CHICAGO MAROON September 28. 1958Page 6EditorialHow long, O Maroon, how long?It’s too bad there is noschool of journalism on cam¬pus. For if there were, the stu¬dent body could rest contentthat it would have a complete andaccurate account of all the hap¬penings around here at their fin¬gertips each week. No journalism. school to call on for talent andtime make things pretty ruggedfor jours truly and the Maroonstaff. Because all of us try to takecourses in our spare time, wehave onlj’ the barest minimum ofenergy left to get the news andprint it. We've gone back to one Issueper week because of the terriblemortality rate of last year’s staff¬ers. One issue every Friday oughtto take care of all needs if we canget the news. Mainly it dependson two things: whether we getenough newswTriters, and whetherthe groups that make news onthis campus let us know of theirdoings and undoings.We enjoy what we’re doing hereat the Maroon, no kidding — welove it. But we’d love it all themore if we had more help and bet¬ter information. The tragedy ofour plight is that not only weA new feature-GADFLYOpen season on entrantsThere are two ways one can obtain information about theUniversity of Chicago: examine the University’s many bro¬chures, or ask friends what they know about this place.Differences between these two accounts will be terrifying.The many strange tales that suffer from our problems. Thewhole campus suffers because itdoesn't get the news it needs.A campus newspaper is a bene¬fit to all; a few shouldn’t be madeto do all the work of providingthis privilege to the many. Cam¬pus organizations can do us a tre¬mendous service b>’ giving us theinformation they want promul¬gated in clear, concise form. Andpeople on the campus with an in¬terest in journalism and a fewhours a week to spare can help useven more by joining the staff.Working on the Maroon is a lotof fun, and not nearly as bad asI pretend it is. If you are inter¬ested, why not come around andvisit us — tonight at activitiesnight, or at the first Maroon staffmeeting, Tuesday afternoon at2:30 on the third floor of IdaNoyes. If a lot of you show up,maybe we'll even order out forpizza!Ron Grossmanabound concerning this schoolstand in sharp opposition to UC’sown account of itself.I suppose every school comes infor its share of fabulous rumors,but we at UC seem to provideespecially fertile material for thebackyard story tellers. I haveheard from “authoritativesources” that UC has a one-yearBA program (which we neverhad), that people finishing ele¬mentary school can enter directlyinto our graduate schools (which,thank heaven, they cannot), thatno other school will accept ourcredits ( which has never been thecase), that everyone at Chicagois financed by the Ford founda¬tion or the Fund for the Republic(happy thought!), and that UC isthe last stronghold for atheists,Thomists. communists, socialists,materialists, idealists, radicals,homosexuals, Dadaists, Aristote¬lians, anti-Aristotelians, and theremains of the French existen¬tialists.But there are two fables aboutUC that seem to possess auniquely amazing vitality. One isquite flattering, and the otherquite exasperating; neither one isquite true.On the one hand I am informedthat Chicago accepts only the topone per cent of the nation’s brains,that everyone here is a genius ofthe first magnitude; and on theother hand people tell me thateveryone at Chicago is queer, thatthis is the permanent homeland ofthe left-bank Bohemians, free lov¬ers, and wife-traders.As holds true for any rumors intheir finished form, these are farfrom accurate; but, just as forother rumors there is a kernel oftruth underlying them. Thesestories are engendered by thepeculiar nature of the Universitycommunity, which differs frommost campus communities in thatit has not'the monolithic, ivy-league, rah-rah, football-type at¬mosphere that characterizes them.We are an unique communitybecause we are so motley.Few campuses can equal thevast variety of peoples who flour¬ish here. Side by side exist theprecocious intellectuals who neverdate and the free-thinkers whosehomes are the neighborhood pubs.In contrast to the stock collegeman of other campuses, there isno typical UCer. The only com¬mon denominator is uncommon-ness.This is a key factor In UC’sgreatness because this wonderfulheterogeneity of types and theirceaseless intellectual intercourse Letter to the editorMaroon createsno controversyThe Maroon may winawards each year for its jour¬nalism, but, frankly, it leavesme unimpressed. Week after weekI rummage through monotonousaccounts of lectures already de¬livered, changes already made,events already completed, andnews already dead. It is not thatthese things have already hap¬pened which bothers me, it is theterrific objectivity which per¬vades these articles.I find nothing in the Maroonbut dull facts. Nothing to exciteinterest, inspire comment, or pro¬voke controversy ever appears.The Maroon is the only communi¬cation that truly reaches the entirecampus, yet it fails to take ad¬vantage of this wonderful oppor¬tunity. Rather than take the ini¬tiative and spearhead new ideassuch a selection so and concepts (as Southern Collegemeans, on one side, newspapers often do) it contentsitself with the merely routinebusiness of disseminating the in¬formation that almost everyoneknows already.The Maroon could become themost dynamic and popular insti¬tution on campus. But to becomeso it must change its present pol¬icy of neutralism and indecisive¬ness. The change would be arough one, but I dafesay it wouldbe worth it.R. B.(Editor’s note: If reader R.B.will examine the columns immedi¬ately to the left of his letter, hemay find the Maroon attemptingto “spearhead new ideas and con¬cepts,” as suggested. Hopefully,THE GADFLY will buzz more andmore about readers’ heads as theyear progresses.)have contributed immensely tomaking our campus the ideologi¬cal and intellectual focal pointthat it is. But it is also a source ofcritical danger to the entering stu¬dent.The new student not only be¬comes a part of the Universitywhen he comes here, but he alsobecomes a member of our uniquecommunity. H i s matriculationinto the University proper is asmooth and formal affair which ishandled admirably by the Uni¬versity administrators. But' hisintegration into the campus atlarge is an informal and haphaz¬ard affair over which no one su¬pervises. Which part of the com¬munity he will join then becomesan especially important decision.How does the vast array of lifehere makecritical? Itthat one has an unexcelled free¬dom to choose tlje group offriends who come closest to satis¬fying his private desires and in¬terests. But it means, on the otherside, that one can assimilate intoa group whose mores and appe¬tites are not his own. It meansone can belong to a group whichwill mold him to alien standards.Sometimes this is well and good;many are matured and benefitedby their circle of associates. Butothertimes the group only dis¬torts the personality and forcesone to conform to false gods.Entrants—there are all kindsof groups on campus, good andbad. Beware flying to the first onethat offers itself to you. Respon¬sible and intelligent selection isnot so hard and is the first thingyou can do to become a real UCer.(Gadfly Is a new experiment on the part of the Maroon. Stu¬dents and faculty are invited to contribute provocative and criti¬cal essays concerning campus life. Articles must be no longerthan 750 words and must be consistent with the intellectual stand¬ards of the University. Send contributions to: Gadfly, Maroonoffice, Ida Noyes hall. Readers are invited to express their viewson Gadfly articles in the “Letters to the Editor” section ofthe paper.)~Y\\ c^cc\3°11 laroonIssued every Friday throughout the school year and intermittently during thesummer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, at 1212 East 59th Street,Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3266; Busi¬ness and advertising office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3265. Subscriptions by mail, $3per year. Business office hours: 2 p.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Saturday.Editor-in-chief Ronald J. GrossmanAssociate editor r Jean KwonBusiness manager Cary MokotoffAdvertising manager Lawrence D. KesslerSTAFF FOR THIS ISSUERoger Bernhardt, William Brandon, Bob Bergman, Earl Herrick, Rick Karlin,Adrienne Kinkaid, Oliver Lee, Donald Miller, Chuck Mittman, Lew Strycr,Howard Turner, Arthur Taitel, David Zack, Shirley Zak. Maroon letter policyThe MAROON publishes letters to the editor on sub¬jects of interest to the student body. Such letters are sub¬ject to editing if longer than 250 words. No unsignedletters will be accepted. However, the writer's name willbe withheld, or noms de plume used, on request.On Campus KithMax QhuJman(Author of “Barefoot Boy with Check," tie.)ANOTHER YEAR, ANOTHER DOLLARToday I begin the third year of writing this col¬umn for Philip Morris Cigarettes, and I am merry inmy heart.I am merry for several reasons. First, because'I ambeing paid.Not, let me hasten to state, that an emolument wasnecessary. “Sirs,” I said a few days ago to the makersof Philip Morris, who underneath their dickeys are asfriendly as pups and twice as cute, “Sirs,” I said to thiswinsome assemblage, “there is no need to pay me forwriting this column. If I can introduce America’s collegemen and women to Philip Morris’s natural tobacco good¬ness, if I can inaugurate them into the vast sodality ofPhilip Morris smokers and thus enhance their happiness,heighten their zest, upgrade their gusto, magnify theircheer, broaden their bliss, augment their glee, and in¬crease their PQ—”“PQ?” said the makers, looking at me askance.“Pleasure Quotient,” I explained.“Ah!” said the makers, nodding their sweet, shaggyheads.“If,” I continued, “I can do these splendid things forthe college population of America, there is no need formoney, because I am more than amply repaid.”We wept then. I am not ashamed to say it. WEWEPT! I wish the wiseacres who say big business iscold and heartless could have been there that day. I wishthey could have witnessed the deep, croaking sobs thatracked the gathering, the great, shimmering tears thatsplashed on the boardroom table. We wept, every man-jack of us. The makers wept. The secretaries wept. Iwept. My agent, Clyde Greedy, wept. We wept all.“No, no!” cried one of the makers, whose name isGood Sam. “We insist on paying you.”“Oh, all right,” I said.Then we laughed. The gloom passed like a summershower. We all laughed and chose up sides and playedstoop-tag and had steaming mugs of cocoa and lit plump,firm, white cigarettes, brimming full of natural tobaccogoodness. I mean Philip Morris, of corris!Refreshed and exalted, we returned to the busi¬ness at hand. “Now then,” said one of the makers, whosename is Merry Andrew, “what will you write about inyour column this year?”“About students and teachers,” I said. “About classesand cutting. About eds and coeds. About Greeks andindependents. About the important issues that occupythe supple young minds of college America.”“Like what?” asked one of the makers, whose nameis Tol’able David.“Like how to finance a full social life without a re¬volver,” I replied. “Like how to wear Bermuda shortsthough your knees look like brain-coral. Like how todouble-date in an MG.”“And will you,” asked one of the makers, whose nameis Peter-Sit-by-the-Fire, “from time to time say a pleas¬ant word about Philip Morris Cigarettes, which are nowavailable in two sizes — Regular in the familiar Snap-Open Pack, and Long Size in the new Crushproof Box?”“Crazy kid!” I chuckled, pushing my fist gentlyagainst his jaw. “You know I will.”And we all shook hands — silently, firmly, manlily —and I left, dabbing at my eyes with my agent, and hurried •to the nearest typewriter.©Max Shulman, 195ftThe makers of Philip Morris take pleasure in bringing youthis uncensored, freewheeling column each week during theschool year — and also in bringing you today’s new PhilipMorris, packed with natural tobacco goodness, lip end to tip end.THE CHICAGO MAROONjeptember 28, 1956 Page 7Activities office interview Medical school getsThey score in sports... I’m on my way to Northwest¬ern. Chicago-style is too muchfor me.for all entering students $5oo,ooo Ford grant, - The UC medical school was lars is to be held as invested eAt a meeting for all enter¬ing students Wednesday after¬noon, Maty Alice Newman,director of student activities, gavean explanation of the student ac¬tivities program at UC and of thefunctions of the student activitiesoffice.Mrs. Newman revealed she willask each entering student to comefor a personal interview in orderto find out the extent and natureof his or her interest in extracur¬ricular activities and suggest ap¬propriate ones to the student.Mrs. Newman pointed out thather office is a branch of the of¬fice of the dean of students, hav¬ing the responsibility to supportand assist the many student or¬ganizations in carrying out their versity regulations as they affectprograms, and 10 interpret Uni- student organizations. The UC medical school wasone of 44 privately operatedmedical schools in the countryto receive cash grants totalingover $21 million from the Fordfoundation. This money is thefirst installment of funds appro¬priated last December by theFoundation to “strengthen theteaching programs of privatemedical schools.”The grant of a half million dol-Mary Alice Newman (left),director of student activities,GABES STORE FOR MENN.W. Corner 55th fir Kenwood HY 3-5160SUITS —COATSCAMPUS WEARACCESSORIESNationally Advertised BrandsThey’re smart on campus confers with Dean Robert M.Strozier and Phyllis Berger,just prior to Mrs. Newman’sappointment to director. Mrs.Berger’s job of secretary to thethe director is now filled byMrs. Ina Sandalow, followingMrs. Berger’s retirement.Life saving at IdaAgain this fall the Chicagochapter of the American RedCross is offering a senior life sav¬ing and an instructor’s course inIda Noyes pool. The first of tensessions is October 9 from 6:30 to9:30 p.m. No advance registrationis necessary. Student fee is 25cents per session. You ain’t nothin’ but a hounddog. - lars is to be held as invested en¬dowments for at least ten years.After that period each school isfree to use the principal as well asthe income from the money.Student forumdebates Elvis,'dog', invective“Elvis Presley’s recordingof ‘Hound Dog’ marks ahealthy return to the use ofpublic invective in the UnitedStates” will be the major conten¬tion of Mark Benney and ReuelDenney, members of the Collegefaculty, at a debate in Ida Noyeshall at 9 p.m. tonight, activitiesnight.Opposing Benney and Denneywill be Forum director Don Me-Clintock and Earl Medlinsky, not¬ed B-J raconteur.When reached for commentconcerning what Elvis Presleyhad to do with activities night Mc-Clintock said, “We thought sucha debate would be in keeping withthe new University policy of seek¬ing to enroll ‘normal’ students.”The debate will be held as anaudience - participation “Chicago-style” contest.They rate on a date......they’re great!United States RubberRockefeller Center, New York 20, N. Y, PETERSONMOVING & STORAGE CO.55th fir Ellis Avenue BUtterfield 8-6711AGENTFOR SERVING united states, iCANADA, ALASKA,HAWAII & PUERTO RICO j BOOK OF THE WEEK"National Economy in the USSR"First statistical yearbook since1939. 262 pp. — $2.50Chicago Council of American-Soviet Friendship189 W. Madison AN 3-1877. vt-. t#ONLY AT SCHNEEMANN’Swill you find these and certain other fine paper-backs:BUCHSBAUM: Animals Without Backbones.2 rolsTHE THURBER CARNIVALWILSON, Angus: Hemlock and After . .HUXLEY: Mortal CoilsT. S. ELIOT: Selected Prose \J. C. FLUGEL:.Man, Morals and SocietyORWELL: 1984D. H. LAWRENCE: Selected Letters . . .White PeacockComing Soon: Fitzgerald: Great GatsbyJames Joyce: Dubliners .Lewis: Screwtape Letters 95c each.... 65c... 65c... 65c... 65c... 95c... 75c....75c... 85c65c65c50cRED DOOR BOOK SHOP1328 East 57th StreetPage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON September 28, 1956OLLETT’S BOOKSTORE, INCFormerly Wilcox & Follett Co. Retail Store1255 South Wabash AvenueNOW ATWabash AveIN THE LOOPBOOKSUp to 75% SAVINGS EVERYBOOK ATFOLLETT'SCOME ONE COME ALLTELL Your Teachers, FriendsEverybody To Come to 324WE WILL PAY ONE-HALF (or the LATEST EDITION OF ADOPTED BOOKSNOW IN THE LOOP!,, INC.324 South Wabash AvenueJust South of Jackson Blvd. ITHE CHICAGO MAROON Page 921# 1956Welcome, entrants!Maroon orientation issuedescribes UC activitiesVol. 65, No. 6 University of Chicago, Friday, September 28, 1956 31 Index to supplementOn this page, and on the following 15 pages, theMaroon presents its special t956 Orientation week supple¬ment.This issue marks a milestone in Maroon history: thefirst 24-page newspaper in the Maroon's 65-year exist¬ence. With this extra-large edition, we hope to answerquestions of new and old UC students both entertaininglyand informatively.pageStudent organizations 10Culture at UC II, 12Churches welcome students 14Religious organizations 15Fraternities - 17Student government, politics 18Aerial view of campus 19Sports preview 21, 22Coming events on quadrangles 24I am pleased to have this opportunity to extend greetings to the faculty and student bodyof the University of Chicago in this first Fall issue of the Chicago Maroon.On behalf of all of the people of Chicago, I extend a warm welcome, especially to themany students who have come to the Midway from various sections of our country, andfrom foreign lands.Since 1892, when the University’s doors were opened under the brilliant leadership of itsorganizer and first President,the inspired Dr. William Rain¬ey Harper, the institution hasmade innumerable and invaluablecontributions to community pro¬gress and to the enhancement ofChicago’s enviable position as acultural and intellectual center inthe nation and in the world. Inmany ways, the University hasbeen the embodiment and thesymbol of Chicago’s vibrant civicspirit, the spirit expressed in themotto, “I Will.”The story of the University isone that is recorded in terms of great names, great accomplish¬ments, and great progress —growth and development that haskept pace with the amazing ex¬pansion of the city itself.The opening of the school yearis properly a time for looking to the future and, judging by thepast, it is unquestionable that theUniversity, its faculty and its stu¬dent body, will continue to havea major part in shaping the des¬tinies of Chicago in the years t«come.Richard J. DaleyRobert M. Strozier Kimpton:My greeting to the new andreturning students on thequadrangles this autumn,though coming in this some¬what remote form, are cordial andsincere. Most of my time in edu¬cation has been spent in directassociation with students, andthat relationship was so pleasantthat the pressures of administra¬tion will never crowd out my con¬cern and interest for the welfareof students.You come at a time when theUniversity is moving ahead withconfidence. The campaign forfunds, in which the trustees, thefaculty, the alumni, and the ad¬ministration have been so com¬pletely immersed in the past year,has produced some 20 millions ofdollars. There have been otherlarge additions to our own re¬sources. We must push this effortto a conclusion, but what we havealready achieved has resulted inbetter salaries for the faculty,more funds to help students, andnew facilities that will be avail¬able to most of you before youcomplete your studies. The under¬graduate programs, which reflectthe University’s continuing desireto provide a sound and substantialeducation, are; firmly organized,and we are confident you will findthem challenging and stimulating.You are here because you havedemonstrated your competence tobenefit from membership in agreat university with a traditionof excellence. I wish you a pleas¬ant and a profitable year.Strozier:The fall is my favorite sea¬son of the year. It provides methe opportunity to renewfriendships with students asthe return refreshed from vaca¬tion. It also provides the oppor¬tunity to meet many young mena^l women as they begin a newand important phase of their lives.I hope that all of the new stu- Lawrence A. Kimptondents will come to appreciate andlove the University as they be¬come involved in the exciting andstimulating affairs of this institu¬tionThe staff of the office I repre¬sent hopes to help you make yourcollege career happy, productive,and satisfactory.Robert M. Stno«ter Robert li« StroslsrDean of StudentsMayor, chancellor, dean give greetingDaley:IPage 10 THI CHICAGO MAROON September 28, 195$Social dancing is featureof Student Union programStudent union, in its various forms, is an institution on several thousand college and univer-forensic society, as are formal debate, discussion, radio and sity campuses. It may consist of a large building oflering hotel-like rooms; and^acting as thecenter of student activities, or it can be a small student organization operating a moderateStudent Forum features-Chicago-style debates“Resolved: that Groucho has done more good for mankindthan Karl.” This and other topics of equal pith and moment areas much the province of the Student Forum, the university’sspeech contests.The inauguration two year’sago of audience participationChicago-style debate has broad¬ened the speech program at Chi¬cago considerably, and the Forumnow offers humorous on-campusdebating as well as a crowdedtournament schedule.Last year in the area of debatealone, Forum members partici¬pated in 133 Intercollegiate andIntramural debates. Included inthis number were 7 major debatetournaments, three Intersectionalmeets and two International de¬bates—Cambridge University andUniversity of Montreal.Informally, Forum speakers en¬tertained 800 alumni in MandelHall, and 1,900 in the ChicagoOpera House on behalf of theUniversity’s fund raising cam¬paign, and student audiencesgathered in the Reynolds Clublounge every Thursday to heartopics debated that ranged from''Resolved: the South shall riseagain,” to "Resolved: a Chicagoeducation prepares you for a job¬less future.” Donald McClintock and JoelRosenthal fight a verbal battleon the stage of the Opera houseas they gave UC alumni a sam¬ple of "Chicago-style debate.” program.The UC Student Union is a hybrid. It is composed entirely of students and is directed by itsmembership. It plans to operate a program of events, and cooperates with the Student Ac-^fV*r!ieS TvT^°e t!?e °Pera^®n C-dances are informal and fea- the most active Student UnionsOf Ida Noyes hall, where its ture a band refreshments, and in the country.Offices are located, but it has (When possible) entertainment. in 3955 the organization col-no Union building in the larger The first on Saturday, October lapsed from the accumulatedSe£te‘ ott . , , , . 2°. is a free sampler. problems of several years com-events "of asocial 'cultural or Washington Promenade is the bined with an. extreme lack ofrecreational naTure The membS annual formal prom’ Thcre’ on leadcrshiP- Arthur Kiendl, thenshin nlans the program and com- February 23> Miss University of director of student activities, sug.mm«fare torPmed ™car?y o?t CHlcg. will be crowned. ges.ed replacing it wi«r the Socialeach event. Beaux Arts ball, which is to be Activities council, which, duringThursday evenings at 7:30 the run by SU as part of the spring pr”d.uced aembership committees meet in Festival of the Arts program, is m°n‘hly calctndar„of even.,s ,spon‘a costume ball in medieval set* sorod by other organizations,ting However, Student GovernmentAnother phase of the program failed to pass a bill giving SACis the special events. On national more power,election night SU will sponsor a Sensing "an acute lack of socialmembershipthe Noyes east lounge. The firstmeeting of the year next Thurs¬day will deal with the programfor the coming year.The SU program has enormousThis year,. the tournament and. operated radio broadcast hours of programing daily.schedule includes to finest de¬bate events in the Midwest. Pur¬due, the Notre Dame two-man, variation. Social dances, however, television party for anxious poli- activities directed at the entireform the core of the program! ticos. Tournaments, hi-fi record campus,” a re-organization corn-concerts, talks, and occasional mittee, chaired by John Lyon, ar-plays and concerts will round out ranged a reincarnation. The com-the program for this year. mittee elected Sylvia Boyd presi-Some events are offered free dent and Buford (Judge) Knowlesof charge, but for most there will secretary-treasurer,be admission charges. A C-danee When questioned on the pres¬will cost 75 cents a person. This ent state of SU, Miss Boyd replied,year the Union is offering a six- “I am pleased with our scheduleadmission C-dance ticket for $3. of major events and am lookingA set of tickets for all major forward to seeing the member-eve n t s, admitting one couple, ship expand and complete the pro¬costs $9.50. The budget will be gram. Our structure and operat-balanced by University allotment, ing setup are much improved.The Student Union, formed in The greatest need at present is toWUCB starts its eleventh year;schedule programs for fallWUCB, the student owned worked to put on the air 14*4station, welcomes new and re- Highlights of the year are onturning students With a full the spot campus election cover-schedule of program service. En- age, and the annual WUCB mara-... ,ww«ithe West Point Regional, and the tering its eleventh year of broad- thon, this year raising funds for 39471 was actually initiated by a enlarge the membership. We hopePitssburgh Cross - Examination casting service to the campus, sta- WQ1M University Service. Other dean students took it from to have a sizeable group of newtournaments are just a few. tion manager Don Miller reports features on WUCB are its record-Again this year Forum hosts avisiting English team, the Messrs.Morgan and Davies from the Uni¬versity of Bristol and UniversityCollege of North Wales, respec¬tively.In the spring Chicago will playhost to the Big Ten debate con- plans for expansion both in pro¬gramming and equipment.Broadcasting on a restrictedrange basis, WUCB boasts one ofthe few high-fidelity transmittersystems in the world. From itsstudios in the "lower lobby” ofBurton-Judson come daily studentgress, as well as the top high produced, directed, and announcedschool speakers in the entire Chi- programs, mainly of the good mu-cago area. And, as in the past, sic, campus news, and literaryStudent Forum will continue to variety. Last year a series ofentertain university groups as readings and concerts from thewell as civic and religious groups Humanities reading lists were°T- highly successful in aiding theMembership in the Forum isopen to all, regardless of experience or area of particular inter¬est. The director of the Forum isDonald McClintock. The office,in Reynolds club 201, is open any —afternoon between 1 and 4. EE ed operas, Broadway show andpopular music and jazz programs.WUCB operates on a frequencyof 640 on the AM dial. Broadcast¬ing live programs from theirstudios 35 hours a week, WUCBalso rebroadcasts W E F M andWFMT, popular Chicago FM sta¬tions, bringing music to campuslisteners during most of the dayand late evening.Presently broadcasting in Bur¬ton-Judson and Internationalhouse, WUCB also expects to haveits transmitter in the C-Group re¬built and operating within thestudents. Half a hundred students next couple of weeks. there and turned it into one of students at our first meeting.”Representative WORRIED ABOUT THE FUTURE?Life assurance will guarantee you a retirementincome which you cannot outlive, and alsoprovide for your dependents if you die at anearly age.Don’t just worry about your family’s future oryour own. See me about it today.RALPH J. WOOD, JR., '481 N. LaSalle Chicago 2, IllinoisFR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADANick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave. •Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery ServiceBETZ JEWELRYHyde Park's Finest Jeweler*Expert Jewelryand Watch RepairingOMEGA - HAMILTON - LONGINEAND OTHER BRAND NAMEWATCHES ’KSA Discount to Students1523 E. 53rd PL 2-3038MALATTBARBER SHOPacross from B-Jserving UCcommunity since 1921WEEKDAYS9 o.m. - 7 p.m.SATURDAY9 o.m. - 6 p.m.WEDNESDAYclosed oil doyT011 E, 61st Street | NEW TEXT BOOKS USEDNote BooksPencilsPaperPoliticalPhilosophyPsychologyReligion STUDENT SUPPLIES Fountain PensBrief CasesFiling EquipmentGENERAL BOOKS MagazinesNewspapersSubscriptionsArt PrintsNewReconditioned TYPEWRITERS RentedRepairedGreeting CardsInfants’ WearWomen’s Wear GIFTS and NOVELTIES CosmeticsSocial StationeryCostume JewelrySandwichesSoft DrinksHot CoffeeCamerasAccessories SNACK BAR CigarettesTobaccoPipesPHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES Fast and ExpertDeveloping ServiceVentilatedSound-proofListening Booths PHONOGRAPH RECORDS 33-1/3 SpeedLong PlayAll LabelsU of C BOOKSTORE5802 ELL|S AVENUE11,1 11ff ■ • ' . " ^ ' ' " -September 28, 1956 Page 11UT is leading dramatic workshopLeading the city's amateurdramatic organizations in ac¬tivity sincq-its organization adecade ag<? University Thea¬tre will open its fall program withBernard Shaw’s The Simpletonof the Unexpected Isles.Also being planned are a seriesof television programs and aschedule of experimental andoriginal plays to be producedearly next year, according to Mar¬vin Phillips, director.The Court Theatre, UT’s sum¬mer counterpart, played to oversix thousand patrons during itsrun last quarter. Plays presentedin an outdoor setting includedShakepeare’s Twelfth Night, Euri¬pides’ Trojan Women, and TheMan Who Married a Dumb Wife,by Anatole France.Productions during the pastwinter season included plays byArthur Miller, Machiavelli,Strindberg, and Thomas.Director Phillips emphasizedthat UT plays are cast openly andthat membership in the Theatreis open to students interested inall phases of dramatic produc¬tion.First group meeting of the yearis scheduled for activities nightat 7:30 in the Reynolds clubtheater, third floor.Repertory groups arriveThe arrival of two repertorycompanies on the local scene mayserve to alleviate the pains ofChicago theater lovers who forthe past quarter century havehad to exist upon only an occa¬sional traveling company and pro¬ductions of three-year-old Broad¬way hits.The Hyde Park Actors work¬shop, whose membership includesseveral former UC students, wasformed recently for the purposeof “developing an actors’ train¬ing school . . . (to discover) thelaws of ensemble acting whichproduced such remarkable dramafor the Moscow Art theater un¬der Stanislavski.”The workshop’s first studio pro¬duction, opening tonight, consistsof three one-act plays. The showwill run Friday, Saturday, andSunday evenings at 8:45; studentadmission is one dollar.The workshop is located at 1506Hyde Park boulevard; telephone An outdoor shot of the Court Theatre showing the climax of “The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife.”Kenwood 8 1504.The plays are; My Valise, adramatic monologue by CharlesBennett, Hello Out There, by Wil¬liam Saroyan, and The Tenor, asatirical comedy by the Germanplaywright-actor Frank Wede¬kind.Among the members of thecast, Alex Horn, Eugene Kramer,and Sally Morris are UC alumni.Studebaker series startedThe newly-formed Studebakertheatre company has announcedits first five-play series will beginWayne Caudill seen rehears¬ing his own play, “By Hook andby Crook.”Glamour Gams,Shirt and Shortsby HaymakerSEEN IN VOGUE MAGAZINEThe look of the season ... forcampus... for TV... for aftersports... everyone wants thenew Glamoiir Gams. OfHelanca nylon, leotard-like,the Gams pull over feet andup to elasticized waist. They comein color to match Haymaker’sfamous pima cotton shirtwith % sleeves, slit pocket.Bermuda shorts are tailoredin wool flannel.Cf{{Upncxrf&FASHION October 2 with Sir Cedric Hard- The Reclining Figure at the Good- L. Sullivan, at the Selwyn (180wicke’s production of Androcles man theatre (associated with the North Dearborn). Informationand the Lion, by Bernard Shaw. Art Institute; Monroe and Colum- from those theaters whose num-Student discounts of 20 per bus, Central 6-2337); and Witness bers are not listed may be otfc-cent are available from the Stu- for the Prosecution, with Francis tained by calling Central 6-8240.dent Service center in the Rey¬nolds club basement. Ticketsmust be ordered four days in ad¬vance.The company, first professionalrepretory company in many yearsto schedule a full season in Chi¬cago, has two five-play subscrip¬tion series in production. Gueststars already signed incude Er-.nest Truex, Agnes Moorehead,Geraldine Page, and EugenieLeontovich.The remainder of the presentseries includes O’Neill’s DesireUnder the Elms, Turgenev’s AMonth in the Country, Gide’s TheImmoralist, and Much Ado AboutNothing.Tickets and subscriptions maybe obtained at the theater, 418South Michigan avenue; informa¬tion by calling Wabash 2-1732.Advance subscriptions alreadysold are reported to be in excessof 12 thousand.Compass points northThe Compass, a floating profes¬sional company whose specialtyis off-the-cuff improvisation, iscurrently appearing—on abidingwith alcoholic beverages—at theOffbeat room, 6344 North Broad¬way, 9-2 nightly except Mondayand Tuesday.Current major scenario is an¬nounced to be Orwell’s 1984. Thisperformance is usually followedby shorter presentations, old andnew, by members of the group,which formerly played in theUniversity neighborhood.List Chicago TheatreAmong other professional pre¬sentations currently playing onChicago’s boards are Danny Kayeat the Shubert (22 West Monroe);The Boy Friend at the Blackstone(60 East Balbo); The Great Se¬bastians, with Alfred Lunt andLynn Fontanne, opening October22 at the Great Northern (26 WestJackson); A Hatful of Rain, star¬ring Vivian Blaine, at the Harris(170 North Dearborn); No Timefor Sergeants at the Erlanger(127 North Clark, State 2-2459); Eleven Court Theatre actors arguing the case of “The Man WhoMarried a Dumb Wife.”Stephen Spender speaksin Mandel hall next monthChicago Review, the Uni¬versity of Chicago’s quarterlyliterary magazine, will presentStephen Spender, British poet,critic and editor, in Mandel Hallat 830 p.m., on Wednesday, Octo¬ber 31.Spender, who is co-editor ofthe English monthly, “En¬counter,” is not only the authorof several books, including “Col¬lected Poems,” “Learning Laugh¬ter,” “The Edge of Being,” “Re¬turning to Vienna,” “EuropeanCOMO PIZZERIA1520 E. 55 FA 4-5525Free Delivery to U.C. StudentsON ALL PIZZASMALLCHEESE 1.15SAUSAGE 1.45ANCHOVY 1.45PEPPER and ONION 1.30SHRIMP 1.70COMBINATION . .1.75SPECIAL!Vi Fried Chicken 1.00Potatoes and BreadLimitedINTRODUCTORY OFFERwith this couponMr OFF ONALL PIZZA Witness,” but also a critic andeditor of sympathies so broad andactive that he may be consideredone of the leading promoters ofthe life of letters in the English-speaking world. His role in mod¬ern literary affairs is immenseand well-known.Spender will read from hismany famous poems, explainingthe occasions on which they werewritten, and will answer ques¬tions from the audience.Admission is $1, and studentswill receive a special rate of 75cents. In addition, two hundredreserved seats wiH be availableat the rate of $2.00. Tickets maybe ordered by mail from the Chi¬cago Review, Reynolds Club.GRAB YOUR RACCOONSKIN COAT ANDHURRY! TO SEE—"A Gay, Witty, Jazzy Spoof!"Eves., 8:30 P.M.IKEmmmEVESSAT.$3.85,S4.25,FRi—:SAT2.50. Box Office Open10 A.M. to 9 P.M.(Exc. Sun.) 8:30. SUN. 7 P.M.MAT. 2:30. Mail Orders Now.3.30, 2.75, 2.20. SAT. MAT.3.75, 3.50, 3.00. 2.20. SUN thru$4.95, 4.40, 3.85, 3.30, 2.75, 2.20.EVE., $5.50, 4.50, 4.00, 3.50, 3.00,FREE PARKING FORSTUTZ BEARCATSL, . . SO E. Balbo bet.DillPMMA luioh tr«KPage 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON September 28, 1956Chicago scene alive Two magazines_ . . seek originalwith musical activity college verse Comment in second yearlooks to future with hopeMusical activity for thosestudents who enjoy it is to befound in abundance on boththe UC and the Chicago scene.Both participation and spectatorenjoyment may be sought suc¬cessfully on campus. Members ofUC’s small but active music de¬partment form the nucleus formany of these groups, which alsowelcome amateur musicians ofall kinds and bents.Chicago, with its own sym¬phony orchestra and opera com¬pany, as well as an infinite num¬ber of concert series, does not lagbehind the pace set by UC’s stu¬dents in the field of music.The department of music hasannounced a program of individ¬ual and group instruction in voice,conducting, and individual instru¬ments. to be offered in connectionwith University College. Regis¬tration for instruction is open toall upon consent of the instruc¬tors.These lessons will consist of afifty-minute lesson per week, withthe time to be arranged at the be¬ginning of the quarter. Furtherinformation may be obtained from Fritz Reiner, conductor ofthe Chicago Symphony or¬chestra.Rhodes, Vogueapplications open the music building at 5802 SouthWoodlawn avenue.A group of students who like toperform chamber music, the UCMusical society, will present aprogram of violin and piano mu¬sic, played by Robert Bloch andRobert Howatt, October 9 at In¬ternational house. All college students, teach¬ers and libraries are invited tosubmit original verse to beconsidered for possible publi¬cation in the Annual Anthologyof College Poetry and the AnnualAnthology of Poetry of Teach¬ers and Librarians, respectively.Deadline for the former is No-vember 5, for the latter, Janu¬ary 1.As many manuscripts may besubmitted by each person as isdesired. They must be typed orwritten in ink on one side of asheets, each mss. bearing the au¬thor’s name, name of the collegeand college address. There are nolimits as to theme, form or style.In the student contributions,shorter efforts are preferred inorder to give as many studentsas possible an opportunity forrecognition.The address for both anthol¬ogies is National poetry associa¬tion, 3210 Selby Avenue, Los An¬geles 34, California. by Lou LipsitzLet's say that Comment- is a living being. I Would say thenthat it was hungry. Its muscles are taut and ready. There aremany meanings to grasp in this world.Last year, Comment lost its fat. It lost the cheribum visage ofchildhood and the heavy load of young misapprehensions. Lastyear was Comment's first year. The publication was created tomake for more contact between students—for a widening ofthe range of student interest and knowledge—it is a publica¬tion for criticism, evaluation and, importantly, for creativewriting of all sorts.We tried things last year. Some worked, some didn 't. Wewere bruised and praised and we persisted. In all, Commenthas made a beginning. We have begun to give the students agreater awareness of their situation and the situation of othersas best we can. We talked about education and dorm life, aboutliterature and dating, about getting lost and about The Catcherin the Rye. About, in short, what struck the Comment staffand its contributors as worth saying.The muscles indeed are tauht and ready. Thick with wealthare the currents of the fall. When we inhale it will be a com¬mon breath taken by many people. We hope you will be oneof them.Elections to Rhodes scholar¬ships will be held in all statesin December. Scholars - electwill enter Oxford university inOctober, 1957.To be eligible a candidate mustbe a male citizen of the UnitedStates, unmarried, and be be¬tween ages 19 and 25. By thetime of application he must beat least a junior. Some definitequality of distinction, whether inIntellect or character, is the mostimportant requirement for aRhodes scholarship.Students interested should seeChauney D. Harris, dean of thesocial sciences, or Louise Cook,in Room 112, Social science re¬search building. Applications aredue in the office by October 29. MODERNCHAIRSTABLES FIBRE RUGSLAMPSHERMANS 2310 E. 71st"Big enough to serve you . . .Small enough to want to"Student DiscountsFaculty - Personnel★ ★ ★Girls in their last year incollege who haye no objectionto a career in writing, publish¬ing, advertising, merchandising,or decorating, have until October15 to enter Vogue’s 22nd Prix aeParis contest.First prize in the contest is$1,000 cash or two weeks’ vaca¬tion in Paris with all expensespaid. The top twelve contestants,it is reported, will receive seriousconsideration for jobs on Vogueand associated publications.The task is to write a 1,500-word thesis on one of the topicsIn the issue of February, 1957.Application blanks are availableupon request from the Prix deParis director, Vogue, 420 Lexing¬ton Avenue, New York 17, N. Y. For DiscountSave This TicketATHyde Park Self-Service Laundry912 East 55th StreetQUALITY CLEANING2 DAY SHIRT SERVICE2-HOUR LAUNDRY SERVICE4-HOUR SERVICE ON RUGS,SPREADS, SLIPCOVERS ANDDRAPES WEIGHING UP TO 40 POUNDSWASHED, DRIED AND DYED35 OFF This coupon good forfree dry (35c) or dis¬count on rugs. READ THE SUNDAY NEW YORK TIMESON SUNDAYOn sale from 3 P.M. to 10 P.M.EVERY SUNDAY :RED DOOR BOOK SHOP1328 East 57th StreetNOrmal 7-6111(No need to reserve a copy at the Red Door.As Chicago's leading outlet we receive enoughto satisfy all Sunday demands.) ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦Announcing...ACTIVI1 ePIESNIGHDANCING TFRI, SEPT. 28VARIETY SHOW IDA NOYESADMISSION FREE 7:30 P.M.Sponsored BySTUDENT GOVERNMENT HEY, PAISANEBEN TORNATOPizza Pie for your bull session or get-together.We've got 'em good. We deliver 'em hot.PhonesMU 4-1014MU 4-1015MU 4-9022 FREEDELIVERY5 p.m. to 3 a.m7 days o weekWATCH FOR OUR AD NEXT WEEKBIC SPECIALCOMING UP!Italian FiestaPIZZERIA1427 East 67th StreetSeptember 28, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROONMany organizationsavailable to student Page ISby Adrienne Kinkaid It’s really quite simple. Just getParticipation in student ac- a petition from the student activ-livilies may be motivated bymany things: a desire to servea campus need, a desire to fol¬low up a special interest, or that World University Serviceholds fund campaignneed to belong.” Most of stu¬dent organizations at UC will ities office, find ten registeredstudents to sign it, get a facultysponsor (lurk in the bushes out¬side the Quad club and snare thefirst likely looking prospect.)Then locate a place to meet (any- by Dotty Hess have included a dance, carnival.iTT u tt • ~ . . radio marathon, tag day, andWorld University Service is chapel collection. /an international organizationwhich co-ordinates the efforts Last year, under the chairman¬ship of Ron Grossman, the WUS Dotty Hess packed the books andthe Kroger chain store companyshipped them as a service forWUS to the warehouse in St.loudly and steadfastly deny they thing from dorm lounges to Man- enterprise toward the greaterAronni7atmno Kiit en. fipl hA1 ] HpnPllHiO nn Q17P and li i : c ;flnH mntrihntinnc nf innnmorahio committee raised over $1,700. Dur- Louis f°r Shipment overseas to. 0 l! ons of in.numeiaJ5le ing the summer the committee re- the University of Indonesia,students and teachers in a united ^ . ,,are ‘social” organizations, but so¬cial relations are a necessary con¬sequence of the manner in whichgroups are organized and con¬ducted.Activities night may present a del hall, depending on size andfinancial status).Student organizations are askedto register with the activities of¬fice, which supports and aids theUC activities program, maintainsrather bewildering array of activ- a calendar of social events, andities to the neophyte. It offersboth quantity and quality, al¬though the quality cannot be eas¬ily detected amid the welter of stu¬dent publications, political parties,madrigal singers, skin divers,square dancers, ad infinitum.If one should feel none of theregularly operating activities sat- manages Ida Noyes and Reynoldsclub. Mary Alice Newman is di¬rector of student activities.Members of the activities staffare Alan Austin, housing director,and Marjorie Ravitts, C-Grouphouse head.This supplement contains abrief account of some student or-isfy his particular needs, and if ganizations, their purposes andhe is unusually ambitious and not activities, some of which will be well-being of university communities everywhere.The common objectives of allWUS projects and activities are:to help meet the basic needs ofuniversities and their members;to promote the mutual sharing ofknowledge and experience in seek¬ing solutions to practical univer¬sity problems; and to foster thedevelopment of international un¬derstanding and cooperation be¬tween university communities ofall nations.In carrying out its part of theWUS program, the campus com mained active Professor LeonardWhite of the political science de¬partment, who retired last spring,donated over one hundred of hisbooks on economics and politics.Committee members JohnAvery, Ennis Rosamond, and This year the committee plansto hold its drive in November.The first WUS committee meet¬ing will be at 12:20 on Wednesday,October 30, in the Judson diningroom.bit house offers Neighborhoodmany programs c u, nee s„milllc volunteersto entire campusr The Hyde Park Neighbor-While most of the facilities of hood club has announced thatprogram' ,ne campus com- th m , and women.s dorms i s ; t ( volunteers# , on are restricted to wPh0 J interested servingreadily discouraged, a new group on display tonight at activities ely of other fund-raising activ* ase hy residents ant associa es, club leaders for social groups andcan easily be organized. night. ities. In the past these activities InternaL°nal house, home of .)00 interest groups in crafts, cooking,' graduate students, offers many photography, dramatics, wood-services and programs for the shop, and newspaper work,entire campus. The C]ub has specialized inThe house serves both as a meeting the social group workresident home for 250 foreign needs of grammar school andand 250 American students, and teen-age youngsters in Hyde Park,as a center for international ac- Opportunities exist for volunteerstivities. Students are invited to to work in afternoon groups withattend the variety of such activi- children from 4 to 14 years oldties which are carried on through- and in the evening with personsout the year which include regu- over 14.Individuals interested in volun¬teering for such work may con¬tact Program Director BernardGoodstein at the club, 5180 S.Kenwood Ave.Variety of UCsporting clubsoffer activitiesMany clubs on campus supple¬ment the range of activities of asporting nature. In various statesof activity last year were clubsfor sailing, skin diving, rifling,chess, judo, badminton, andcricket.The Outing club makes tripsduring the Christmas and Easterinterims.The University of ChicagoTrack club is intended for thosegraduate students who have usedup their intercollegiate eligibility,but still want to run. The UCTCcarries a regular schedule forboth cross-country and track.We Have An Agreement With the Bookstore —They Don't Service Cars and We Don't Sell BooksB & B AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC SERVICEComplete Auto Service6315 University Ave. - ■>. HY 3-2208NS A Discount Compuj^Represeyorive: Above —Student activities? lar folk dancing, social dancing,American and foreign moviesevery Monday evening, lectures,concerts, and receptions.In addition, 1he Internationalhouse barber shop, beauty shop,dry cleaning establishment, andcafeteria are open to all studentand others connected with theUniversity..9 cl©DoDf course. Mostryone does—often,xrause a few momentser ice-cold Coca-Colarefresh you so.s sparkling with natural goodness, pure andslesome—and naturally friendly to your figure.’eel like having a Coke?. -npomro whom avwoon or the coca-coia company nTIm Coca-Cola BoHIm* Company a# Chic090, Inc.O 1W6. YHE COCA-COIA COMPANY0* li 0 mlCinJ tittJc war*. • J V*•••• *&•; ■/.mdotn»oP1450 E. 57 th FREE RESEARCH AIDIt you are doing researen on IheSoviet Union (or are just inter¬ested), use the help available at theoffices and library of the ChicagoCouncil of American-Soviet Friend¬ship, Suite 403, 189 W. Madison. AN3-1877, AN 3-1878. Open 9-5, Monday-Saturday.A comprehensive shop• stainless steelchina, glass• casual clothes and accessoriesfor men and women.ties, blouses, shirts, scarvesskirts, sport coatsunusual things to wear.• gourmet cornerspices, leas• decorative accessoriesjewelry, ceramics, enamelsfine imports• useful gifts for the kitchen• greeting cardsincludingCATO CARDS.'. ' Attractive Girlsfor part timeconvention work—eveningsApply after 1 p.m.6 East MonroeRoom 1304THEPIZZAKIDThe finest in pizzmSPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - RIBSITALIAN BEEF & SAUSAGESANDWICHESWE DELIVER• ’Closed Tues.1125 E. 63 DO 3-9777Page 14 THE CHICAGO MAROON September 2S# 1956Entering nnd Former StudentsHouses of Worship Welcome VouROMAN CATHOLICSAINT THOMAS THE APOSTLE5472 South Kimbark Avenue FA 4-2626Father Edward S. KrakowskiSunday Masses—6, 7, 8, $, 10:15, 11:15 am.,12:15 p.m.Weekday Masses—6:30, 7, 7:30, 8 ajn.Masses on Holy Days—6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 a.m.,12 noonConfessions—Saturdays and Thursday before firstFridays and evening of Holy Days of Obliga¬tion: 4-6 p.m. and 7:30-9 p.m.Young Peoples Club meets monthly on Sundaysafter communion for worship and social hour.FA 4-2626.JEWISHCONGREGATION RODFEI ZEDEK(Jewish Conservative)5200 Hyde Park BoulevardRalph Simon, RabbiMaurice Goldberg, CantorLate Friday evening services 8:30 p.m.Sabbath morning services 9:00 a.m.For information regarding cultural and social ac¬tivities for college age students call PL 2-2244.K.A.M. TEMPLE(Reform)930 East 50th Street KE 8-3300Jacob Weinstein, RabbiMilton Matz, assistant RabbiFriday evening services 8:15 p.m.TEMPLE ISAIAH ISRAEL(Reform)1100 Hyde Park Boulevard WA 4-1234Morton M. Berman, D.D., RabbiFriday evening services 8:15 p.m.Saturday evening services 11:00 a.m.All students are cordially invited to join in ourworship services.CHICAGO SINAI CONGREGATION(Reform)5350 South Shore Drive BU 8-1600Dr. Louis L. Mann, RabbiS. A. Singer, Assistant RabbiFriday Vesper services 5:30 - 6 p.m.Sunday morning services 11 :00 a.m.All students are welcome. Complete program ofcultural and'social activities. Sinai Temple Forumpresents world renowned personalities.BUDDHISTCHICAGO BUDDHIST CHURCH5487 Dorchester Avenue PL 2-0966Reverend Gyomay M. Kubose, MinisterSunday service 11 :00 a.m.Sunday school .,10:00a.m.*Discussion group, beginner .. 7:30 p.m. Thursdayadvanced .. 8:30p.m. Thursday PROTESTANTSAINT PAUL'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH4945 Dorchester Avenue OA 4-3185IReverend William D. McLean, Jr., rectorReverend Ivan E. Smith, curateSunday services:8:00a.m.—Holy Communion (chapel)9:00 a.m.—Family Eucharist, followed bybreakfast in the parish house11:00 a.m.—Holy Communion (first Sundays)and sermonWeek-day services:7:00 a.m.—Holy Communion (Tuesday, Thurs¬day and Friday)10:30 a.m—Holy Communion (Wednesday andSaturday)5:30 p m.—Evening prayerCHURCH OF THE REDEEMER.(Episcopal)1420 East 56th Street (at Blackstone Avenue)Reverend F. W. Lickfield, rectorSunday services 8 - 9 - 11 a.m.Breakfast after the 9:00 a.m. service for 35 cents.Daily Weekday services, 7 a.m. and 5:30 p.m.The Rector is available by appointment for consul¬tation or instruction.FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHKimbark Avenue at 64th Street DG 3-0505Harold Leonard Bowman, D.D., ministerEdward W. Warner, assistant ministerSunday morning service 11 :00 a.m.FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF CHICAGO9:30 East 50th Street KE 6-3430Dr. Jitsuo Morikawa, pastorSunday:Church school 9:45 a.m.Worship 11 :00 a.m.Wednesday:Potluck supper 6:30 p.m.Devotional 7:15 p.m.WOODLAWN BAPTIST CHURCH6207 South University Ml 3-0123Rev. Hampton E. Price, pastorSunday worship services ..11 a.m. and 7 p.m.Baptist Youth Fellowship meets at 6 p.m. Sundays.The church youth program includes sports andathletic activities. For further information, call thechurch office, Ml 3-0123.TEMPLE OF BROTHERLY LOVECOMMUNITY CHURCH6250 Cottage Grove NO 7-4991Rev. Alvin J. HalthonSunday:Church school 9:00 a.m.Morning worship 11 .00 a.m.Thursday:Prayer service 7:00 p.m.Circle and workshop 8:00 p.m.Choir rehearsals and workshop .. 8:15 p.m. WOODLAWN SIXTH UNITEDPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH1210 E. 62nd 9t. DO 3-7483Dr. A. L. Reynolds, Jr., MinisterSunday service 11 :00 a.m.Sunday school 9:45 a.m.Mid-week prayer meeting, Wed.. . 7:30 p.m.Young adult forum, second and fourth Sundaynights, 7:30, offers an opportunity for Universitystudents to serve.AUGUSTANA LUTHERAN CHURCH54th Street and Kimbark Ave. HY 3-1412"The Lutheran Church in Hyde Pork" *W. Douglas Larson, pastorSunday Church School and BibleClasses 9:30a.m.Sunday morning worship services. . 10:45 a.m.Choir rehearsals at 8 p.m. Thursdays57th STREET MEETINGRELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS5615 Woodlawn AvenueSecretary, Mary Cadbury — BU 8-3066Worship 11 :00 a m. SundayOpen house Sunday evenings at 7:30 p.m. startingOctober 7.THE UNITED CHURCH OF HYDE PARK(Congregational and Presbyterian)Blackstone Avenue at 53rd St. DO 3-1620Dr. Mitchell T. Ancker, ministerSunday morning service 11 :00 a.mSunday morning Breakfast Club . . 9:30 a.m.(young adults group)Church school, Sunday 11 :00 a.m.Infant's and pre-school, Sunday. . 1 1 :00 a.m.UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THEDISCIPLES OF CHRIST5655 University Avenue DO 3-8142Reverend David M. Bryan, ministerCommunion service 10:30 a.m. SundayWorship service 11:00 a.m. SundayChurch school 11 :00 a.m. SundayDisciples student fellowship.... 7:00 p.m. SundayTHE KENWOOD NEW CHURCH(Swedenborgian)5710 Woodlawn Avenue . DO 3-7141Reverend Immanuel Tafel, pastorChapel service held each Sunday at 11 a.m. at theSwedenborg Philosophical Center, 5710 WoodlawnAvenue.ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL(Non-Denominational)59th and WoodlawnJohn B. Thomson, Dean of the ChapelEwell J. Reagin, Assistant to the DeanWorship service 11 :00 a.m. SundayThere are three houses on the quadrangles designedto meet the religious needs of all faiths:Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn, sponsored by theUniversity and cooperating Protestant groups.Hillel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn, serving Jewishstudents.Calvert Club, 5735 University, an organization ofRoman Catholic students.September 28, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 1&Rockefeller chapel fulfillsdream of its donor. John Dby Don MillerBy day and night, Rocke¬feller memorial chapel is afulfillment of the dream ofJohn D. Rockefeller, Sr.: “Asilic spirit of religion should pene¬trate and control the Universityof Chicago, so that building thatrepresents religion ought to bethe central and dominant featureof the University group.”Rockefeller provided the fund,Si.8 million, that made the gothicstructure possible.Designed by architect BertramGoodhue, the huge scale of thebays, the stately proportions of1 he nave and tower all go to makeihe building structurally distin¬guished.Some of the special attractionsof the solid masonry chapel areits fine statuary, especially excel¬lent along the gable on the southfront of the building, and its 207foot tower, in which is hung theworld's second largest carillon.Jnside the chapel, which seats up to 2,300 people, are outstand¬ing examples of woodcarving inthe south balcony rail and in thechancel screen, and mosaic workon the 6 foot transverse ribs ofthe vaulted ceiling. Here are sub¬jects of nature worked out in thecolored glazed tile. •At the end of the chancel a hugecarved stone reredos rises 35 feet.Below it is the communion table,behind which and in the northwall are niches to receive theashes of deceased presidents ofthe University of Chicago, andtheir wives.The chapel has two organswhich can be played as one in¬strument. The main console in thechancel has four manuals and 103stops. The second, in the southbalcony, has two manuals and 23stops. These instruments are reg¬ularly played by Dr. HeinrichFleischer for the religious serv¬ices, and several recitals are ar¬ranged each quarter bringing tocampus famous organists fromall over the world. The University choir, under thedirection of Richard E. Vikstrom,weekly sings the chapel musicand presents several concerts dur¬ing the school year.Members of the Chicago Sym¬phony orchestra with the Univer¬sity choir of 53 voices will presentHandel’s Messiah on December 9of this year.Religious services are held eachSunday the University is in ses¬sion at 11 a.m. The sermons areby Dean John B. Thompson of thechapel and by other outstandingpreachers of the world.Dean Thompson has been thedean of the chapel since 1948,when he was called from his pas¬torate at First Presbyterianchurch of Norman, Oklahoma. Agraduate fellow from the Uni¬versity of Edinburgh, Scotland,Dean Thompson has served invarious teaching capacities in thiscountry and served as chaplain ofScotland’s model prison, Edin¬burgh. Rockefeller chapelList religion on quadranglesThe Hillel Foundation, Jew¬ish Student center on campus,seeks to bring students towardglad identification with Jewishreligion and culture, and aimsto establish an all inclusive Jew¬ish community framework forstudents of varying interests,opinions and beliefs.With the opening- of the Au¬tumn Quarter, Hillel again re¬sumes activities for Jewish stu¬dents on the campus. Followingclose upon the heels of orienta¬tion fob new students, the Foun¬dation will, among other activi¬ties, present a series of five musicprograms sponsored by Hillel andthe Department of Music at theUniversity. The theme of theseries will be “Religious spiritand musical style: a study ofmusical settings of Old Testamenttexts.”Participating in the series willbe well known members of theUniversity faculty as well as out¬standing artists in the commu¬nity, including Grosvenor Cooper,Heinrich Fleischer, Andrew Foldi,John Hayward, Leonard Meyer,Rabbi Maurice Pekarsky, PatPeterson, L e 1 a n d Smith, DeanJohn B. Thompson, CharlotteVikstrom, Coert Rylaarsdam, andRichard Vikstrom.In addition, the Foundation willoffer a seminar on “The conflictof ideas in modern Jewishthought,” to be led by RabbiPekarsky; a public lecture byauthor Will Herberg on “Social¬ism, Zionism, and the MessianicPassion” (November 13th); in¬formal courses in elementary andadvanced Hebrew, Yiddish, andTalmud; Interest groups, includ¬ing folk dancing, Hebrew speak¬ing group, and a study group inSabbath and holiday chants.A high point in the week'sactivities is the Friday Fireside,when, in the pleasant Sabbath at¬mosphere, against the back- ground of synagogue and folkmusic, students and facultygather to discuss subjects of vitalinterest. Preceding the firesideis the Sabbath service held week¬ly in the Hillel synagogue.The Hillel staff consists of Rab¬bi Maurice B. Pekarsky, director;Oscar Kenig, associate director;and Rhoda Stockwell, secretary.The staff, together with studentleaders share in the planning andpresentation of the diversifiedHillel program. The Foundationis open to all students and facultyon campus.Calvert- clubThe Catholic student center atthe University is the Calvert clubat 5735 University Avenue.The club is named after CecilCalvert (Lord Baltimore), Catho¬lic founder of the Colony of Mary¬land, and one of the first to in¬troduce religious tolerance in theColonies. The religious programincludes Mass on Sundays at 8:30,30:00 and 11:00, and on week-daysat 7:00 and 7:45, in the Club’sown chapel.The club owns a country placefor week-end retreats and confer¬ences. Calvert club provides a se¬ries of special conferences for col¬lege students on Friday after¬noons and a general lecture se¬ries, among which this quarterwill be a discussion of AmericanCatholics and the intellectual lifeby members of the faculty of theUniversity and a lecture by theCambridge scholar, E. I. Watkin,on “Christianity in the PlatonicTradition.”The Calvert Club has a libraryand recreation rooms at the stu¬dents’ disposal.Canterbury associationThe Canterbury association isan organization of Episcopal stu¬dents at UC with headquarters atBrent house, 5540 S. Woodlawnavpnue.Holy Community is celebratedis§ STUDENTS LAUNDRY SPECIAL97 every Sunday morning at 8:30 inBond chapel, beginning October7. That evening there will be aninformal supper at Brent houseat 6, followed by a reception.Tuesday, October 9, will markthe beginning of a new series oflectures entitled “Religion And. . The first one will be “Relig¬ion and the University,” by Rev.William H. Baar, Episcopal chap¬lain at UC.LutheranThe Lutheran church at UCmaintains a united religious andsocial program under the direc¬tion of a full-time university pas¬tor and a graduate assistant pas¬tor.Major weekly events are theFriday evenifig supper meetingsat Chapel house and the 10 a.m.Sunday morning celebrations ofHoly Communion at Hilton chap¬el, 58th street off University ave¬nue.All students may take part inseminar and social action groups,individual reading courses inChristian thought, and pastoralcare and counseling. These serv¬ices are offered throughout theyear at the Lutheran office inChapel house, 5810 Woodlawnavenue.Porter foundationThe Porter Foundation is a uni¬versity Christian fellowship com¬posed of students of the Reformedtradition — Congregational, Pres¬byterian and Evangelical and Re¬formed.Porter Fellowship, the Sundaynight group for undergraduates,includes Methodists among its ac¬tive constituents as well as all oth¬ers who wish to participate. Por¬ter Foundation also provides aCommuters luncheon group forundergraduates.Rev. William N. Lovell is Pas¬tor and Director and Mrs. ShirleyH. Crockett is the Program As¬sistant.The first meeting of Porter Fel¬lowship will be on Sunday, Oct. 7,in the Swift Hall Common Room.Supper will be served (50 cents!at 6:00 p.m. Mrs. Victor C. Oben- haus of the Church Federation ofGreater Chicago will speak on“The University and the HydePark area.”Baptist’The Baptist student fellowship,for undergraduate students, meetstwice on each Sunday of theschool year. .The breakfast clubmeets at 9:45 a.m. for light break¬fast, study, and informal discus¬sion. The study during the au¬tumn quarter will be based on“Primer for Protestants ” byJames H. Nichols.The snack club meets at 6 p.m.for supper, talks by people fromthe religious and educational in¬stitutions in the area, discussion,recreation, etc. During the monthof October, there will be severalspeakers to talk on the topic “TheChristian and Politics.”All the regular meetings ofBSF are held at the Hyde ParkBaptist church, 5600 Woodlawnavenue.The graduate Baptist studentgroup meets on Sunday eveningsat 4901 Ellis avenue, where up to20 Baptist men reside. Here thegroup has Sunday suppers anddiscussions. Bells, bells ...During the Autumn quarter,the chapel carillon is playedeach Wednesday and Sundayat 4:30 p.m. by James R. Law-son, chapel carillonneur. TheMitchell tower chime is playedeach day for fifteen minutes at12:15 noon, 6 p.m., and 10:05p.m. by members of the Socl-etas Campanariorum (Societyof bell-ringers),A special gala “birthday con¬cert” will be run on October7th, the birthday of ChancellorKimpton.Charming clubChanning Club, a college-agegroup affiliated with the FirstUnitarian Church, meets everySunday evening at 8:00 in theChurch parlor. According to pres¬ident Dotty Hess the group’s firstmeeting on September 30th willbe an open house and discussiondevoted to “Who Is a Unitarian?”and related topics.The group also plans a fallseries on “Modei’n Thought”which will start October 7th. Thetopics in consecutive weeks willbe the philosophies of Dewey,Whitehead, Sartre, Modern Thom-ism, and Wyman.Rockefeller will offerspecial service for allRockefeller memorial chap¬el will offer religious serviceswelcoming entering and re¬turning students to the campus.Chapel service will begin at 11a.m., preceded by a short carillonrecital by James R. Lawson, andthe “swinging peal” on the fivemonsters of the carillon’s 72 bells.The Reverend John B. Thomp¬son, dean of the chapel, will givethe sermon, entitled “Gx*eat IsTruth.”The service will be conductedby the Reverend Ewell J. Reagin,assistant to the dean, and musicby the University choir. The pro-| 8 lbs. Laundry — Washedand DriedShirts finished to order 13c ea. additionalKWIK-WAYLAUNDRY A CLEANERS1214 E. 61st St.(SatWflM Woodlawn b Kimbork on 61.1 1321 E. 31th St.—PL 2-92311411 E. 33rd St.—HY 3-3300Serving University PersonnelFor Years cessional will include a numberof the chaplains, student coun¬selors, and student officers of thenine Protestant student organiza¬tions active on this campus.Other events offered by thechapel during Sunday include acarillon recital at 4:30 by Caril-loneur Lawson, followed by anorgan recital at 5 by HeinrichFleischer, the chapel organist. Ad¬mission is without ticket and with¬out charge.At 6 p.m. new students will bethe guests of the chapel at sup¬per in Hutchinson commons, ad¬mission by ticket. Following thesupper will be open house socialmeetings sponsored by the cam¬pus religious groups at their stu¬dent centers.UNIVERSITYRARRER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorPage 16I I VVjTHE CHICAGO MAROON Sftimbm 26,J. Garrott Allen wins awardfor infectious hepatitis research LCL discusses libertiesResearch demonstratingthat infectious hepatitis (jaun¬dice) can not be transmittedby liquid blood plasma whichis stored at warm room tempera¬tures for six months or longer haswon the John Elliott award of theAmerican Association of BloodBanks for Dr. J. Garrott Allen,professor of surgery.Dr. Allen’s studies, beguntwelve years ago, have shownthat the virus of infectious hepa¬titis is killed by plasma storageat temperatures in the range ofabout 90 degrees, Fahrenheit.He has used such plasma onmore than 1,500 patients withouthepatitis developing, and otherclinicians in increasing numbersalso have had similar satisfactoryexperience.Until Dr. Allen’s work, plasmawas generally stored either driedThe CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236There’s No Sale LikeWholesaleDeor Student:Chances are, you love Cash-mere Sweaters by Hinda andother famous brands.. . . Here's how you can save33 1/3% to 50%All Sizes — Colors — StylesBy Buying at Wholesale PricesCome toSantual Murrow &Company(In the heart of theWholesale Market)Daily 9 to 5:30 Saturdays 9 to 3:30318 W. Adams St. Suite 401STUDENTWIVESWORK ON CAMPUSThe Personnel Office has awide variety of full-timeclerical and technical posi¬tions that are open. We aresure there is one that willinterest you.WE NEEDSecretariesStenographersTypistsBookkeepersClerksClinical TechniciansResearch Technicians(including)Medical ChemistsHematologistsHistologistsBacteriologistsBENEFITS INCLUDE3 weeks' paid vacation2 weeks' sick leave -Tuition remissionLibrary and recreationalprivilegesapply NOWPersonnel Office956 E. 58th St. or under refrigeration, in the be¬lief that otherwise it would de¬teriorate. The hepatitis virus re¬mained active under these condi¬tions, with 10 to 25 per cent ofpatients transfused with the plas¬ma developing hepatitis. Thethreat of hepatitis had caused theabandonment of plasma transfu¬sions. Because of the simplicityof the method, Dr. Allen’s resultswere slow of acceptance until rel¬atively recently.The citation of the award is:“For original observations andclinical investigation which haveestablished the safety of plasmastored at room temperatures inso¬ far as the virus of serum hepa¬titis is concerned, thereby stimu¬lating a revival of interest in theuse of plasma as the preferredblood substitute and returningplasma to its appropriate place inhemotherapy.”Last year, the PhiladelphiaAcademy of Surgery gave Dr.Allen its Samuel D. Gross award,conferred once in every five years.The meeting of the American As¬sociation of Blood Banks is beingheld currently in Boston in con¬nection with the InternationalCongress on Blood Transfusions,at which 68 nations are repre¬sented. The League for Civil Liberties,the campus organization devotedto the defense of libertarian vatues, is interested in all aspects offreedom. It takes a stand and actsin cases involving civil liberties.The league provides a forumfor the discussion of liberty in itsvarious phases, social, political,economic, etc. It propagandizes itsposition on civil liberties in theUniversity community and en¬gages in action for the defense ofcivil liberties where desirable.A nonpartisan organization,LCL seeks to recruit into itsmembership people of diverse in¬terests, beliefs, and backgrounds. However it welcomes only thesupport of those whose devotionto freedom is not qualified byadherence to totalitarian ideol¬ogiesAmong notable activities pre¬sented by LCL in the past aca¬demic year were the following:Shirley Lens, a Chicago publicschool teacher whose pay is beingwithheld because of her refusalto sign a loyalty oath, spoke onher legal battle against theBroyles Acts; Prof. G HermanPritchett discussed new develop¬ments in the Supreme Court sinceEarl Warren became Chief Jus¬tice; Prof. Paul Sweezey andJames Sullivan debated whetheror not the Soviet Union is evolv¬ing toward a free society.Old Gold’s Exciting New Gamefor College Students OnlyHow would you like to spend next summer on a 40-day tour of the world? All expenses paid! VisitEngland, France, Italy, Greece, India, Siam, HongKong, Japan ... the far-away places you’ve dreamedof seeing!\ P|t|«A All-expense, 40-day four of the world for* « * ■ 1 1two, OR $5,000.00 m cash2nd Prize 10-day all-expense paid trip to Paris3rd-6th Prizes ££L<£,“P*“* paid ’rip’ YOU’LL GO FOROLD GOLDSCither REGULAR, KING SIZE «rThe GREAT NEW FILTERS.Old Golds taste terrific! The reason:Old Golds give you the best tobaccos.Nature-ripened tobaccos . ..SO RICH, SO LIGHT,SO GOLDENBRIGHT!7th-16tb Prizes RCA Hi-Fi sets—MARK IV17th-36th Prizes wardrobe certificates50 Additional Prizes $25 BrooksBrothers wardrobe certificatesBeginning this week and continuing throughout the Fallsemester, this paper will publish three puzzles a week, con¬taining the letters which make up the names of Americancolleges and universities. The letters are scrambled and must /be re-arranged to form the names of the schools. Clues with /;each puzzle will help you identify the correct answer.It’s fun • • • it’s easy ... start now!Copyright 1956, Harry H. HollisterRules and First Three Puzzles Appear on Next PageSeptember 28, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 17Did you know?You may consult the time schedule file cabinet at theUniversity information desk in the administration build¬ing lobby. It is kept completely up-to-date with all re¬ported changes in the Time Schedules. For quick refer¬ence, course entries are arranged alphabetically by de¬partment or field.After registration for the autumn quarter is completed,you may find the addresses and telephone numbers ofstudents at the University in the student address file atthe University information desk. About a month later,the same information will be published by the studentgovernment in the form of the Student Directory. Fraternities few, but activeby Alan CharlensAlthough no one really ex¬pects to see the return offreshman “beanies” on the UCcampus, fraternities at Chicagoare not too different.Hazing died too long ago torank as even a sad memory, andmen no longer die for "dear oldZeta.” However, fraternal spiritis present and is combined withdeep interest and concern on thepart of fraternity men for aca¬ demic and other university af¬fairs.Hence UC chapters have ledthose on other campuses in aca¬demic standing without conscious¬ly attempting to do it.Sportswise, there is intra-fra¬ternity competition, and, manyfraternity members are letter-men. When a football class wasintroduced, the percentage of fra¬ternity men out for the class wasfar greater than the overall per-Here’s How to PlayOLD GOLD'S GREAT NEW GAMEA total of 24 puzzles will appear before the Christmasholiday. Get started now in Old Gold's exciting newgame for college students only.. Here are the Official Tangle SchoolsRules! SAVE THEM!1. FRIZES (o) P. Lorillard Company, the makers ofOI.D GOLD CIGARETTES, will award a total of 86prizes, valued at more than $15,000—to college studentsIn the United States in accordance with the followingOfficial Rules. (See complete list of prizes.) (b) Thisgame will consist of twenty-four (24) monogrammedpuzzle drawings to be published in this and othercollege newspapers; three puzzles each week for eightWeeks, and a series of tie-breaking puzzles, if needed,as outlined in rule 2. (c) Contestants must arrange thescrambled letters from each of the 24 monogrammeddrawings so that they correctly spell the name of acertain American college or university. In the scrambleddrawings there are no superfluous letters, no distortionol letters, and no letters are left out to confuse or mis¬lead entrants. A clue will be furniahed with each draw¬ing to help identify the correct answer to the puzzle.2. (a) The person complying with all the rules of thegame and solving the highest number of puzzlescorrectly will be declared the winner of the first prize,a 40-day tour of the world for two persons—the winnerand another person of his choosing or, at the option ofthe winner, the first prize shall consist of $5,000 to bepaid to the winner. The person complying with all therules of the game and solving the second highest numberof puzzles correctly will be declared the winner of thesecond prize. In like manner, the winners of the remain¬ing 84 prizes will be determined, (b) In case more thanone person solves correctly the same number of puzzles,the prize tied for, and as many subsequent prizes asthere are persons tied, will be reserved and those so lyingwill be required to solve a set of tie-breaking puzzles, todetermine the order in which the reserved prizes will beawarded. Each of the tie-breaking puzzles will be com¬prised of scrambled letters forming the names of eitherone, two or three American colleges or universities. Clueswith each puzzle drawing will indicate whether thepuzzle contains one, two or three schools to be iden¬tified. If, after solutions have been submitted to thissecond set of puzzles, a tie or tit* still remain, those tiedwill be required to solve another tie-breaking puzzle. Ac¬companying this tie-breaker will be an official list ofAmerican colleges and universities. From these, contest¬ants will make up a list of schools and colieges in accord¬ance with instructions to be given at that time. Thecontestant earning the highest score in so doing will beawarded the highest of the prizes tied for. The nexthighest prize will be awarded the contestant earning thesecond highest score and so on down through the re¬served prizes that have been tied for. These tie-breakingpuzzles, if necessary, will be mailed to each contestant. P. Lorillard Company reserves the right (only In J.heevent of further tie or lit*) to require contestants tosolve as many tie-breaking puzzles under supervision,and without assistance, as are necessary to determinea single winner for each prize.3. NOTE (a) When entrants have completed solutionsto the complete set of 24 initial puzzles, which arc to bepublished three per week in this paper, the solutionsare to be printed or typewritten by the entrant in theanswer space provided on the puzzle (or a reasonablefacsimile). The complete set of 24 puzzles must be* answered, neatly trimmed and enclosed in an envelope,flat and not rolled and addressed to:—Tangle Schools,P. O. Bo* 26A, Mount Vernon It), N. Y., and mailedbearing a postmark not liter than December 1!), 1956.Decorated, pasted or embellished puzzles are not per¬mitted. Each set of 24 puzzles must J>e accompanied bya wrapper from any type OLD GOLD CIGARETTEpackage— (REGULA R, KING-SIZE OR FILTERKINGS) or a reasonable facsimile thereof, (b) More de¬tailed instructions on the mailing of completed sets ofpuzzles will be published later. No Solutions are to beBent in separately. Save the puzzles and your solutionsso that they may be submitted as a complete set at theend of the game. Entrants are not limited as to the num¬ber of complete sets of Solutions. However, each set mustbe submitted individually, and only one prize will beawarded to any one entrant, (c) After the deadline formailing solutions, the correct answers to all 24 puzzleswill be published in a single issue of this paper. Eachcontestant must keep an accurate record of all solutionsand check his answers with the published correct answers.4. WHO MAY ENTER: (a) This game is open to all bonafide college students in the United States: that is,persons who, at the time of entering, are duly registeredin an accredited college or university within thecontinental boundaries of the United States, except thatthe game is not open to students w hose immediate fami¬lies are employed by P. Lorillard Company or its adver¬tising agencies. Contest is subject to all State andFederal regulations, (b) Contestants may, if theyprefer, make copies of the puzzles by hand. Copies ofthe puzzles and of OLD GOLD package wrappersreproduced by a multiple process such as carbon p..peror mimeograph are not acceptable. Entrants who wantback puzzles and copy of Official Rules may obtain themby addressing their request to Tangle Schools BackPuzzles, P. O. Box 9/Grand Central Annex, New York17, N. Y., enclosing 5< in payment for each puzzledesired and/or rules, together with a STAMPED SELF-ADDRESSED envelope, (e) Prior to receivinga prize each winner may be required to sign an affi¬davit certifying that he or she is eligible to compete iaaccordance with rule 4-a; that he or she has not bought,sold or exchanged the puzzle solutions and is nfttacting for, either by proxy or in collaboration with, anyperson who is not qualified to participate under the rules.5. METHOD OF JUDGING: Decision of the judges iafinal and contestants so agree upon entering the game.Solutions to the puzzles will be judged on correctness,including the spelling of the names. All entries becomethe property of P. Lorillard Company. None wifi bereturned. P. Lorillard Company cannot be responsiblefor any solutions unduly delayed or lost in the mails;this also applies to mail from the P. Lorillard Companyto any contestant. On entering the game, each con¬testant accepts the foregoing rules as binding. P.Lorillard Company reserves the right to disqualify anyentrants not conforming. Evidence indicating collusionby or ineligibility of contestants will automaticallydisqualify such contestants. P. Lorillard Companyreserves the right to correct any typographical errors orother errors which may appear in any published matterin connection with this game. P. Lorillard Co., insofar, as publication of puzzles is concerned, is responsibleonly for submitting material for publication to news¬papers involved.Copyright 1956, Harry H. HollisterSAMPLE PUZZLEIPsSAMPLECLUE: The third oldest institution ofhigher education in the United States, thisuniversity was chartered in 1701, andlater named for a native of Boston. WalterCamp was a great football coach here.ANSWER: YALESave this alphabet. Letters shown in all puzzleswill have the same characteristics. Notice theM’s have straight sides; the W’s are.slanted.Note the difference between the N’s and the Z’s.ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZSTART NOW! Start smoking those great Old Gold cigarettes... start playing the greatnew game,“Tangle Schools"! Win a free tour of the world for two!PUZZLE NO. iCLUE: Situated in an attractive NewEngland town, this college for womenopened in 1875. A training school forwomen naval officers was held here duringWorld War II. PUZZLE NO. 2CLUE: This university is located in theMidwest, and is known for its largeengineering schools. It was first opened tostudents in 1874.ANSWER.Name --Address—City ■College— .SUite. PUZZLE NO. 3CLUE: Founded in 1834, this universityacquired its present name 50 years later—in 1884. Originally a medical college, itissued the first degree in medicine con¬ferred in the Southwest.ANSWER.NameAddressCityCollege— .State centage of fraternity men oncampus.Fraternity room and board ex¬penses are approximately equalto university housing. Initiationfees range from $40 to $100, androoms from $75 to $100 per quar¬ter.It has been said that fraternitymen have a tendency toward"aloofness." But many fraternitymembers are campus leaders, tak¬ing active and leading parts in allstudent activities. This tendencyin the past several years has beencalled an indication of a trendtoward campus "universalism" onthe part of the fraternity man.Interfraternitycouncil tiesjoint functionsThe co-ordinating unit of allthe fraternities on campus isthe Inter-fraternity council,at present under the gavel of BetaTheta Pi's Herb Gorr.It is through I-F council thatall inter-fraternity functions areorganized and arranged.The IFC is run on a simple rep¬resentative system, each frate^nity sending one delegate to thecouncil. Out of these, each yegr,the president and other offic-c.rsare chosen.Two major events are spon¬sored each year by the council, aformal and a sing.The IF ball is the first formaldance of the season, and each fra¬ternity sponsors a young lady,one of whom is voted queen ofI-F ball.The I-F sing is held in Hutchin¬son court as a part of the annualalumni week festivities. Twoawards are given at the sing—onefor the fraternity with the great¬est number of alumni in attend¬ance (quantity cup) and one forthe house doing the best job ofsinging (quality cup).BORDONEMovers and Light Hauling <VI 6-9832A ROSTELEVISION & RADIOSales and Service1451 E. 57 NO 7-4253ukM/20 utfrm-ee120 WORDS PER MINUTE (£,1Famous ABC system. Now taught Inover 400 cities. New day & Eveningclasses start each Monday. Attendfirst class as GUEST. Soeciol SummerClasses for College Students. ALSOthorough, intensive SPEEDTYPINGcourse. Use coupon to send for 16-page brochure.SPEEDWRITING SCHOOL37 S. Wabash Financial 6-5471Speedwriting School ‘37 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago 3, III. ■Please send me without obligation ■your 16-page brochure on Speed- ■writing. ■Name.Address.CityPhone Zone.Page IS THE CHICAGO MAROON September 28, 1956SC offers variety of services ...Founded in 1947, Student Government is the elective body representing students of theUniversity. In addition to serving as spokesman of student opinion, SG offers a wide varietyof services to the campus centered in the student-operated Student Service center.SG provides a number of money-saving services to the students including a book ex¬change, a ticket agency, a loan service and the student publicity service. These servicesare operated through the service center, located in the basement of the Reynolds club.°^ces lC .re" elected in the autumn. Each divi- ity party; in the NSA election lastmode ed and enlarged dunng gjon Q| University elects one spring SRP won one seat.August f i om blueprints draft- representative for every 100 stu- The Independent Student leagueed last spring after the then exist- (jents enrolled. was the first campus politicalunsuitable'eS ^ ^ n ^^ At the **rst meet‘ng of the as- party, organized shortly after theIn addition to this program of sembly officers and committee inauguration of the governmentservices. SG also operates a stu- chairmen are chosen usually from itself in 1947.dent exchange program with members of the majority political ISL believes “that Student Gov-Frankfurt university in Ger- party to comprise the executive ernment should concern itself pri-many; manages a low-cost char- council,ter flight to Europe for students; Much of the work of Student marily with problems that affectstudents as students” and hasruns activities night during orien- Government, however, is per-tation week; conducts bus tours formed in the eleven standing therefore concentrated upon es-of Ohicago for entering students, committees, in which membership tablishing and running sei vicesand publishes the student direc- js open to all students. for students,tor.v. There are, at present, two stu- *n past years, when ISL wasHowever, for the first time the dent political parties on campus, majority party in SG, it in-service center was not kept open each competing to elect its slate augurated the Student Serviceduring the summer, the railroad Df candidates."3 The Independent center, the railroad discount plan,discount service was not put into students league, first of the par- the Frankfurt foreign exchange,operation during Christmas vaca- ties, was founded in 1948, while activities night, the former stu-tion, and the student activities the Student Representative party, dent activities handbook, the stat-handbook was discontinued and which currently holds the major- ute powers and Student Bill ofturned over to the administration, jty in the assembly, was formed Rights, and the SG orientationNegotiations for a Russian stu- in 1952. tours,dent exchange were held up by The Student Representative *n *ast year’s fall election ISLthe U.S. State department and party holds ’’that campus politics won 24 seats and took 19 of thethe USSR. should be a means of reaching 20 NSA places in the election thisAnother regular feature of the goals, rather than the goals them- spring.Government’s activities is Aca- selves, and that the student shoulddemic Freedom week, held in the be concerned with problems thatspring quarter. During this time extend beyond the physical realmSG invites speakers and spon- of the campus as well as the im¬mediate problems of the campus.“To accomplish these ends, SRPruns campaigns, regularly spon¬sors speakers, and presents a var- ’. . . and tfien I ran for SG.PROQRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE1154-58 E. 55th St. NSA Discount HY 3-3840sors panel discussions and ex¬hibits to focus campus intereston this topic.The Government, through powers enumerated in its statute of ie<3 program of activities to thepowers, passes regulations for campus. Educational (planned-and gives recognition to student program) caucuses are among theorganizations. party’s activities.Delegates to the student assem- “In the last SG election SRPbly, legislative wing of SG, are won 26 seats and was the major-{REYNOLDS CLUB!( BARBER SHOP (| Hours: 8 - 5, Monday - Friday • 8-1, Saturday §Shoe Shine Service6 Registered BarbersOnly Barber Shop on CampusBasement, Reynolds Club“ iifiuHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiifiiiiititiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitmiiiiiiiiiiiMiifiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiittiiiii^Win aFREE TRIPto theROSE BOWL GAME !in the Wesboro Shoe Wardrobe Contest!Price:2 tickets to the 1957 Rose Bowl game2 free United Airlines round trip tickets to California$500 expense money3-suit Worsted-Tex wardrobe3-pair Wesboro Shoe wardrobe Portraits of the student1by an artistoCouiSe djarh'erphotographer1457-9 E. 57th St. BU 8-0876Call Today for an AppointmentPrizes:3-suit Worsted-Texwardrobe3-pair Wesboro Shoewardrobe Prices:$25 U. S.Savings BondWESBORO SHOES—STYLED 'AND' PRICED FOR THE COLLEGE IVAN.World’s easiest contest—nothing to buy, guess or soivelJust fill out entry blank and mail to:Dept. C, Peters Shoe Company, Box 1M7, Chicago, III.YOUR WESBOROBONUS PRIZE* extra if you win First Priis and yournwnua rniM. Wesboro Dealer’s signaturs appears here.WosSore Signature.WUSJ* Bund at many •ntrlua m you wish I •->open. August 1(, clotss Ostobur IS, IMS £ TEXT AND REFERENCEBOOKSUSED NEWSAVE 30% to 70%Come to FAULKNER'S for your required texts as well as for thereference boks you need for all of your college courses. Youare welcome to choose among the thousands of books on allsubjects.We pay cash or accept in trade the books which no longer havevalue to you.aa A er 3 65 E. LAKE ST.CHICAGO 1, ILLSeptember 28, 1956Aerial view of campusThe UNIVERSITY OF CHICACO PRESS announcesSIX NEW PHOENIX TITLESTHE GHETTO. By Louis WirthThis classic sociological study, traces back to the medieval ghetto the Jew¬ish immigrant colonies disappearing from our modern cities. 1*7 $1-25PHILOSOPHERS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES: FROM THALES TO PLATOEdited by T. V. SmithSelected writings of the major pre-Socratic Greek philosophers and exten¬sive selections from Plato, with brilliantly written Introductions by Pro¬fessor Smith. Pi $1.5*PHILOSOPHERS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES: FROM THALES TO PLATOEdited by T. V. SmithA second volume of selections. In which the great philosophers — fromAristotle through the major thinkers of the Roman world—pass before us.PS 11.54THE PROFESSIONAL THIEF. By a professional thiefEdited and annotated by Edwin H. SutherlandA revelation of a way of life In which a man's success In thievery gives himnot only his livelihood but his social standing and self-respect. Pit $1.25THE CULTURE OF ANCIENT EGYPT. By John A. Wilson.A foremost Egyptologist here tells the fascinating story of the intellectual,political, and religious growth of the fabled people of the Nile. Pll $1.54THE LITERATURE OF ANCIENT GREECEBy Gilbert Murray, with a new PrefaceMemorable for the freshness and beauty of Its prose, this volume by oneof the truly great classical scholars of our times remains impressive In Itsscope and authority. P12 $1.75at your bookstoreThe University of Chicago Press5750 Ellis Ave. Chicago 37, III.WELCOMEStudents — FacultyWe've been serving the University of Chicagofor many years and will continue to do so.BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGHeadquarters for Winter Needs• ANTI-FREEZE• SNOW TIRES• ROAD SERVICEWINTER TUNE-UPSPECIAL *5.50 “PHeavy Duty Battery $14.95Harper ServiceDealer in Sinclair Products5556 HARPER # PL 2-9654Across from H. P. Co-op This view, taken facing: northeast, shows most of the campus’hundred-odd buildings, which stand on about as many acres. Thearea shown is bounded by the Midway, Maryland avenue, 56thstreet, and Wood lawn avenue. Seen in the left hand corners are(lower) Lying-in Hospital, (upper) the Research Institutes building,the Accelerator building, and Stagg Field.Rockefeller Chapel tower rises in the upper right hand corner*and a representative piece of the Midway fills the lower right side.Billings (the building with two towers) is shown in the center,surrounded by its fellow hospitals. Above Billings is the Adminis¬tration building and above it, in a row, are the science buildings,(left to right) Jones, Kent, Ryerson, arid Eckhart.ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books ■— Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651The T\ •Disc 1367 E. 57th St.OPEN TEES. TILL 10SATURDAY TILL 5DISCOUNTS on all RECORDSFolk Music — Jazz — Classical — All Labelselistening boothsSPECIAL SALE on CHRISTMAS CARDS20% off on all imprint orders till Oct. 15NICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55th StreetNO 7-9063Free delivery to 17. of C. studentsOn any orderQuick Courteous Service — 6 Days a WeekClosed MondaysTable Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M. Delivery Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M. Stanford awardsfellowships tofive UC facultyFive University of Chicagofaculty members are among49 scholars and scientistsawarded fellowships at theCenter for advanced study in thebehavioral sciences at Stanford,California, announced by RalphW. Tyler, director of the Center,recently.Recipients of the fellowshipshave been granted leaves of ab¬sences by their home institutionsto spend the coming year at theCenter on individual research andthe exploration of new methodsfor the improvement of behavior¬al research training.*UC fellows are Charles Morrie,lecturer in philosophy; A. K. Rom¬ney, assistant professor of anthro¬pology; Theodore W. Schultz,chairman of economics andCharles L. Hutchinson Distin¬guished Service professor of eco¬nomics; W. Allen Wallis, profes¬sor of business and economics andprofessor and chairman .of thecommittee on statistics; and Sher¬wood L. Washburn, professor ofanthropology.The Center was established in1954 under a Ford foundationgrant to enable scholars to spenda year in the study of human be¬havior free from the administra¬tive duties accompanying normalresidence in colleges or univer¬sities. Mr. Tyler, on leave of ab¬sence as professor of education atthe University of Chicago, hasserved as president and directorof the Center since its founding.RELIANCE CAMERA APHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63rd S».BU 8-6040Open till 3 A.M. on Friday and Saturday Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372Because cellulose is a soft,snow-white material.. •the same pure, natural substance /found in many of the goodfoods you eat every day.Only the exclusive Viceroy tip contains20,000 tiny filters made from pure cellulose—soft, snow-white, natural—twice as many filtersas the other two largest-selling filter brands.That’s why Viceroy gives you...*•/ *The Smoothest Taste in Smoking!Smoke Smoother Viceroyfilter ^7ipCIGARETTESking-size I/September 1M, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 21Sports previewUC grid future indefinite—againARROWCASUAL WEAR Oxford cloth shirt (in white and five mutedcolors, including new “linen”), $5.00; samemodel in authentic tartan stripes, $5.95;checks and stripes in cotton-rayon, $7.95. IT’S FOR REAL! by Chester Field“To catch a man,” said Violette“The wisest gals play hard to get!”To seem remote and quite aloofShe sat six years upon the roof.4“It doesn’t seem to work,” she sajdAnd so she clobbered them instead.She shrugged, “I do the best I canUnconscious or not, a man is a man!"morals Faint pleasure ain’t pleasure!In smoking too, take your pleasure BIG.Smoke for real... smoke Chesterfield.Packed more smoothly by Accv-Royit’s the smoothest tasting smoke today.UC teams plan full yearwith Big Ten activity seenby Bob fialaszSoccer and cross-countrywill open another sports yearon the University of Chicagocampus very soon. As in thepast, it promises to be a year offar-flung athletic activity, seek¬ing to draw in as many studentsas possible.Besides soccer and crosscoun¬try, the intercollegiate programconsists of baseball, basketball,fencing, golf, gymnastics, swim¬ming, tennis, track and field, andwrestling. Competition in thesesports is open to all high-schoolgraduates, except in gymnasticsand fencing. In these two sportsthe UC teams play in Big 10leagues, and therefore must com¬ply with Big 10 regulations, whichinclude a rule barring freshmanfrom intercollegiate competition.In addition there will be a classin football.For early entrants, there areJV teams in baseball, basketball,gymnastics, soccer, tennis, andtrack and field.The list of intramural sports isnumerous and the schedulestretches from October to May,including badminton, golf, hand¬ball, horseshoe pitching, squashracquets, swimming, table tennis,tennis, track and field, softball,touch football, and basketball. In addition, both the men’s andthe women’s departments ofphysical education will offerclasses of instruction throughoutthe year.During the winter, the Univer¬sity operates an open-air ice rinkunder the North stands of Staggfield, free of charge to students,faculty; and their wives and chil¬dren.And the facilities of the physi¬cal education department, includ¬ing a baseball diamond, an out¬door and indoor track, twobasketball floors, numerous ten¬nis courts, a golf green, and thespace in Bartlett gym, plus thenecessary equipment, can be re¬served by calling the athleticoffice in Bartlett gym. Pro-football alumni optimisticin spite of faculty decisionSportseventsSaturday, September 29: Var¬sity cross-country team atWestern Illinois, Macomb,Ill.Saturday, October 6: Varsitysoccer team at Lake For¬est, 10:30 a.m.Cross-country at Wabash col¬lege, Crawfordsville, Ill.Sf/te tstumm PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433 by Bob HalaszTo have football, or not tohave football — this is thequestion which keeps hauntingthe athletic scene, if not theentire campus. Football maybe dead here, but it certainly re¬fuses to fade away.The history of football at theUniversity of Chicago dates backto the days when Amos AlonzoStagg’s boys, led by such All-Americans as Walter Eckersalland Jay Berwanger were the ter¬ror of the Western conference(now known as the Big Ten). Ade-emphasis of athletics on theUC campus finally resulted infootball being dropped in 1939.After the war, intramural tacklefootball was also dropped.•Efforts to reinstate the sportresulted in the formation of afootball class, practicing on Northfield under the eye of Kyle An¬derson. Many believed this wasbut a prelude to the official re¬sumption of football at the Uni¬versity. But in January, the fac¬ulty senate rejected the proposalof a committee of six that foot¬ball once again become a part ofthe intercollegiate athletic pro¬gram.Did this extinguish the hopesof those who wanted football?Far from it. Chancellor Kimpton,speaking to the Order of the C Picture of things to come? Two members of last year’s footballclass studying.The B.M.O.C. is here!Big model on campus, that is. It’s the newArrow University shirt. .. all-around choiceof smart college men, from button-downcollar in front—to center button and fullbox pleat in back. And these men are reallytraveling in style with their Arrow ties . . .in the season’s highest rated patterns. on May 31 said: "I make no bonesabout the fact that I differ withthe decision.” But he seemed tobe telling the pro-football alumnito go slow, that resistance to foot¬ball was a tough nut to crack,that an atmosphere favorable tofootball would have to be cultivat¬ed, and that this might take sometime.One sign th£t the advocates offootball mean business is the fact that another football class will beheld this autumn. A group ofabout thirty students regularlyparticipated in this class last year.While short on experience, theyhad plenty of enthusiasm andwound up the class with a scrim¬mage against North Park in earlyNovember. Regulation equipmentwill again be qsed, and Kyi/* An¬derson invites any and f^l tocome out.FREE .... Billiards & Pool .... FREEThis coupon entitles new students to1 hour FREE Billiards or Pool(Value SO.iSS)REYNOLDS CLUB-2nd FloorSeptember 28 thru October 5Page 22 THE CHICAGO MAROON September 28, 1956Coach line-up looks bright 56 sees active WAAfor 1956- 57 sports yearAn able coaching staff willmanage the UC athletic pro¬gram. Here is a list of thecoaches who will direct theMaroon’s athletic fortunes thisyear:Kyle Anderson, a veteran onthe UC athletic scene, will onceagain coach the football class andthe baseball team. Coach Ander¬son was a backfield man backwhen the University fielded ateam.Nelson Norgren, another long¬time veteran here, will coach thebasketball team for the 34th year. Last year’s squad finished with a.500 record.Guiding the University’s, thejunior-varsity’s and the trackclub’s cross-country and trackteams will be Edward "Ted” Hay-don. All of his squads compiledwinning records, and have hadthe winning habit for quite sometime.Bill Moyle, the smiling Irish¬man, is mentor of both the var¬sity and JV tennis teams, andalso the swimming squad. Hehandles all roles well, althoughsometimes he has to be watchingthe swimmers in the pool and theHass new ball carrierby Bob HalaszFor the first time since1933, a new man will directathletics at the University ofChicago. T. Nelson Metcalf,the athletic director, during 23years, saw a de-emphasis of ath¬letics through most of his tenure.His successor, Walter Hass, willrun athletics here in an era whichwill see, Chancellor Kimpton pre¬dicted last May, "a resurgence ofinterest on this campus of sports.”The new athletic director heldthe same spot at Carleton college,a small co-educational institutionin Minnesota. He is 45, a graduateof the University of Minnesotawhere he competed* in footballand track. Hass also coached theCarleton football and tracksquads. He was recommended toChancellor Kimpton by Robert M.Strozier, dean of students and di¬rector of student activities, underwhose jurisdiction the entirephysical education program falls.While he naturally would liketo see football on the campus,Hass has stated that the restora¬tion of football is up to the Uni¬versity officials. He does not planto coach any teams at present.He describes the athletic programat Carleton as being one of largeparticipation, with ‘‘studies com¬ing first.” Hass faces much the same prob¬lems that Metcalf had to face,principal of which is as Kimptonsays, to increase interest in sports.An endeavor to do so may verywell be the chief characteristic ofHass’ tenure at the UC as athleticdirector. netmen on the court at the sametime. Last year’s tennis teamdropped only one match.Joe Stampf coaches both the JVbaseball and basketball squads.Both teams finished on the sun¬ny side of .500 last year. Stampfwas one of the UC’s most out¬standing basketball players.Alvar Hermanson leads a fenc¬ing team that has to be toughbecause it faces tough competi¬tion. Last year’s team scored acouple of upsets.Kooman Boycheff is bothcoach of the golf team and direc¬tor of the UC’s far-flung intra¬mural system.Dale Bjorklund is one of twonewcomers appointed by athleticdirector Hass. Bjorklund was anassistant coach under Hass atCarleton college, and will coachthe wrestling team this year.Robert D. Kreidler, a PennState graduate, will serve ascoach of the gymnastics'team. Hewas part-time coach of the squadhere last year. Opportunity for participation in women’s athletics duringthe autumn quarter will be centered around five sports, an!nounced Tiny Larsen, Women’s Athletic association president'recently. • —= —Varsity hockey, volleyball, the WAA organization and itsand bowling teams will be awards system and tours of theformed for interschool competi- Ida Noyes facilities were present,tion, and inter-dormitory rivalry e<^> together with refreshments, toin volleyball, tennis, and swim- new students Wednesday after-ming are planned. noon by the WAA board.All women students are eligible current officers of the or-to participate in all phases of the Kamzation are: Marlene Nelson,sports program and to become vlcePresident» Frances Moore,members of the association. secretary; Carol Coggeshall,o , , . , treasurer; Judy Bowly and ClareSeveral offices on the WAA ad- Smith, social co-chairmen; andvisory board composed of man- Pat Lucas and Julie Chamberlinagers of different sports remain publicity co-chairmen.to be filled. These are the posi- Members of the advisory boardtions of basketball, softball, and are; Judy stcvens, basketball;badminton managers. Appliea- Theresa Riley, bowling; Mary Loutions are being accepted for these wickersheim. hockey; Yolandapositions. deBruyn, swimming; Joan Krue-Descriptions of the physical ger, tennis; and Phyllis Gestrin.education program for women, of volleyball.S'.'' ~ s mm mmLifetime Disability InsuranceRetirement InsurancePhone or WrireJoseph H. Aaron, '27135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060CT row CREWCUTaU OiufiMoi 1hruhut•ua LANOLIN• NOT GREASY• NO STAIN• NO SOtkeeps the hair ’'STANDING UP"for a Sharper Looking CRIWCUT- KEEPS STUBBORN HAIR IN PLACECOSMETIC -“SmartAttire for\Men yyfeaturingNationallyAdvertisedBrandsGEORGESMl •X* *VIIOI»1035 E. 55th St.Cor. Greenwood Serving Woodlawn and ChicagoUniversity 28 YearsSTERNS CAMPUS DRUGS« (Formerly Reader's)61st tr Ellis (1001 E. 61st)Visit Our College RoomSPECIAL DAILY and SUNDAYOne-halt pound Tender Srrip Steak, Grilled OnionsFrench Fries & Salad 00 The Max Brook Go.Fine Dry Cleaning and Laundry *camp ms institution since 1917We offer a complete alteration and repair serviceAlso 5-hour servicepickups daily on campus1013-15-17 East 61st St. Midway 3-7447' * *f'• *JVlore chickensin front of Chevrolcls across the roadthan any other car /Well, sure. There are more Chevies on the road. More people buy ’em year after year. And this year, Chevrolet'sthe most popular car again-by a margin of more than 150,000 so far. .. . Must be the best one to buy, for sure!' |: %■ '%‘‘fSpSlr Two million more people own Chevrolet$Only franchised Chevrolet dealers display this famous trademark y CHEVROLET/jSee Your Authorized Chevrolet Dealer*}September 28, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 23Mothers'Aid launches drive CLASSIFIED ADS“flip million ^^^B ^BMothers’ Aid, “the milliondollar fairy godmother” ofLying-in Hospital of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, will launchjts 53rd year of support of thehospital with a luncheon and fash¬ion show, Wednesday, October 10,at the Sheraton-Blackstone hotel.The event will observe the fifthanniversary of Mothers’ Aidbranch gift shop, 657 Vernon ave¬nue, Glencoe, one of the severalsuccessful enterprises by whichthe organization, which now num¬bers 1750 members, raises funds for support of research in obstet¬rics and gynecology. All contribu¬tions to Lying-in result from itsenterprises, with no campaigns orappeals to the public for funds.As a prelude to next year,which will be directed towardmeeting the current pledge of$300,000 to provide Lying-in witha modern new research labora¬tory, Mrs. Robert Belmont, of theWindermere East Hotel, presidentof Mothers’ Aid, will report on theprogress being made in remodel¬ing the Mothers’ Aid pavilion intothe new research center. Student rate 5c per wordHelp WantedPert time niele end femele:Completely flexible hours doing inter¬view sales work for large publisher ofeducational materials. We prefer peoplewho can be relaxed and at ease whentalking to families. Average earnings—$2.50 per hour. Direct sales experiencehelpful, but not. essential. Apply Mon¬day and Wednesday, 9 to 1, 25 E. Jack-son, suite 1316.Wanted—male and female help, parttime. Approximately 20-30 hours week¬ly. General staff duties. Immediate andcontinuous employment. Hyde ParkTheatre, 5310 S. Lake Park. Apply Inperson any evening at theatre.Hyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-0971Student rate 50c all performances uponpresenting I.D. cards at box officeWelcomeWe wish you o rewording, stimuloting school term. To the new studentswe should like to point out that we work to moke our film programsimportant collateral "culture" to your acodemic work ... os well asfirst rate movie entertainment. Thank you for your appreciative andloyal patronage. „Sincerely,ROSE DUNN, Managing DirectorStart in# Friday, Sept. 28A TOP FLIGHT REVIVAL SHOWINGthe great EESLtE HOWARDthe iavomparable INGRID BERGMAN"INTERMEZZO"— and —JEAN RENOIR’S MASTERPIECE. I ■ For those of you whoI " * hove osked for some¬thing new and differ¬ent . . . for oil of youwho enjoy only the finest in motion picture entertainment.t and a new MR. MAGOO cartoon!COMING SOON: "The Lost 10 Days," "Lady Killers," StanleyKubrick's ‘The Killing," 'The Bad Seed." "Rififi," "House of Ricordi,""Pygmalion," "Secrets of the Reef"“The RIVER For saleComplete household furnishings. Alsobaby furnishings. Reasonably priced.Phone KE 6-5886.Rpndix electric Ironer. $75. Good con¬dition. Call evenings. PA 4-3290. Others 10c per wordLeaving city. Sacrifice contents of 10-room house—living room and bedroomfurniture, pair of Dunbar love seats,lamps, chest of drawers. ABC automaticwashing machine, Magnavox TV. Kitch¬en utilities, eg., toaster, knife sharpener,cabinet. WA 4-1105.98 Oldsmobile Convertible, 1949. Newleather seats, top, painting, tires, auto¬matic transmission, battery, and brakes.Looks and runs perfectly. By originalowner, to private party. Call Dr. Fred¬ericks, Mon.-Fri., 9-5, FR 2-0657 or eve¬nings and weekends. PL 2-4280.New hi-fi Thoren’s turntable, diam.needle, $65. Green bookcase 23x73" high,$2; 2 brown mahogany chairs, $2 ea.HY 3-8701.New Leitr.-Wetzler monocular micro¬scope. Still crated. Oculars: 6X. 10X;Objectives: 10X, 40X, 100X; Oil im¬mersion lens. Condensor and case.Phone Hinsdale 1506. Phone: Ml 3-0800 Eat. 3265PersonalStudent organizations eager to meetnew students. Activities night and galareview. Ida Noyes, Friday, Sept. 28, 7:30to ?Watch for Charlie Chaplin at activitiesnight Ida Noyes, 2nd floor, ping pongroom.For rentliiiiiiiHiuiiiimiiiitiiuitiiimiiiuimiiiiiitiiiiimmmiiitiiiiiimmiiMiuumiiuuimimtmiitiiutHimHmummit^| Text Books \| At Schneemann’s (| Because of efficient operation and extensive experience, 1| we are frequently able to supply texts and other books || at less than list price. ’ 1| Many of the texts you need are in stock. Others are 1§s available within a few days 'of your order. Out of town || special orders require more time, and should be given || to us promptly to reduce delay. |I RED DOOR BOOK SHOP |1328 East 57Hi Street1 NOrmal 7-6111 |PiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiniT? Room and board for University student(female) in return for baby sitting.GR 6-4273.Free private room. bath, meals for gfJTin exchange for baby sitting (4 nights),light duties. University family In E. 50's.BO 8-2562.Room and board, private room andbath in exchange for sitting 3 nightsa week, dinner di6hes. House privileges.WA 3-3243.1, It*, 2 rm. furnished apt. for house¬keeping. Reasonable rent. Close to cam¬pus. FA 4-5538.Room for a couple or single person.Kitchen privileges. 2452 E. 78th. ES5-4987.2-Roora kitchenette and bath in pri¬vate home. RA 3-9215, mornings.*ServicesCarmen's Used Furniture Store. Movingand light hauling. 1365 E. 55th. MU4-9093. MU 4-8843.Painless tutoring in Russian by HarvardRussian instructor. Call ES 5-1170.ACECYCLE SHOPYour BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we sellRepairs fir Parts all make^819 E. 55 Ml 3-26729 A.M. - 6 P.M.THE MAROON NEEDSReportersCopy* ReadersProof Readers Ad SalesmenOffice ManagerPhotographers Sports WritersFeature WritersReviewersJoin Our Team XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXBecome an active member ofUC’s Greatest NewspaperTheChicago MaroonXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX*Sign up at Activities . NightCome to The Maroon Office;Third Floor Ida Noyes HallPage 24 THE CHICAGO MAROON September 2«, 1955Coming events on quadranglesFriday, September 28Humanities placement exams forCollege entrants, 9 a.m.-12 noon.Group advisory conferences forCollege entrants, 1:30-3 and3:15-5 p.m.Activities night, opportunity forentering students to get infor¬mation about and sign up forstudent organizations. 7:30 p.m.,Ida Noyes hall.Saturday, September 29Dance and party for entering students, 8-11 p.m.. Ida Noyes hallRegistration for the autumn quarter. 8:30 a.m.-12:00 and 1:305:00 p.m. For all students except entering undergraduates. Open house by religious groups,8:30-10 p.m., Protestant groupsat Chapel house, 5810 Wood-lawn, Jewish at Hillel founda¬tion. 5715 Woodlawn, RomanCatholic at DeSales house. 5735University.Monday, October 1B-J council movie: Arsenic andOld Lace, 7 and 9:30 p.m., Jud-son lounge.International house movie: Laura(American!, 8 p.m., assemblyhall, 35 cents.Registration for the autumn quar¬ter, Bartlett gymnasium, 8:30a.m.-12:00 and 1:30-5:00 p.m.For all students except enteringundergraduates^Sunday, September 30 Tuesday, October 2Trip to Brookfield Zoo, meet inInt house lobby to leave at 9:30a.m., 50 cents for picnic lunchplus carefare, call MaxineSimmons, KE 6-3647 by Friday.University religious service, DeanJohn B. Thompson preaching,11 a.m., Rockefeller chapel.Carillon recital, first of the quar¬ter, 4:30 p.m., James R. Law-son, chapel carilloneur, Rocke¬feller.Lutheran communion service, Hil¬ton chapel, 10:00 a.m.Organ concert, 5 p.m., HeinrichFleischer, chapel organist,Rockefeller.Supper for enteringsponsored by Chapel house, fol¬lowed by panel discussion onstudent religious groups. 6 p.m.,Hutchinson commons. Classes in the divisions and pro¬fessional schools scheduled forTuesday meet for the first time.Other classes meet according totheir regular schedules.for entering stu-a.m.-l p.m., 1:30-5Registrationdents, 9:30p.m.Tours of Chicago, leave 9:30 a.m.. and 1:30 p.m., 50 cents, ticketsat Student Government office.Debate, "Resolved: That educa¬tion is not worth the registra-’tion,” presented by StudentForum in Chicago-English style,7:30 p.m., Social Sciences 122. Panel discussion for new foreignstudents, Internationa] house,3:00 p.m. Administrative offi¬cers and students will discussimmigration problems, aca¬demic programs, social cus¬toms, and activities on the quad¬rangles.Colloquium: Institute for thestudy of metals, research insti¬tutes 211, 4:15 p.m. "The mo¬mentum of a sound wave.” Pro¬fessor G. Leibfried, Institute fortheological physics. Universityof Gottingen.First Maroon staff meeting ofyear, 2:30, Maroon editorial of¬fice, 3rd floor Ida Noyes. Allentering or returning studentsinterested in working on "UC’sGreatest Newspaper” are in¬vited to attend.Folk dancing, Internationa] house,8:00 p.m. (Every Tuesdaythroughout the quarter.)Wednesday, October 3Chicago Review staff meeting,4:30.Tours of Chicago, 9:30 a.m. and1:30 p.m., 50 cents, SG.Art club tea. nesday throughoutter.) the quar-Thursday, October 4Classes meet in the College.Student Union open meeting, 7:30p.m., Ida Noyes.Lecture (Ben May laboratory forcancer research), pathology 117,5:00 p.m. “Blood and urine mu-coprotins in disease.” N. F.Maclagan, professor of chemi¬cal pathology, WestminsterMedical school, University ofLondon.Fifth annual midwest solid stateconference, Eckhart 133, 9:30a.m.-5:30 p.m. (Registration:Eckhart 209, 8:30 a.m.) Infor¬ mation may be obtained fromProf. M. H. Cohen, Institute forthe study of metals.Saturday, October 6Chancellor's reception, for enter,ing and returning students. 8:30p.m., with dancing followinguntil midnight, Ida Noyes.Calendar deadlineDeadline for Inclusion of Items inthe calendar of coming events Is l-*noon on Wednesday for the FridayIssue. Items may be left at theMAROON office, sent by fac. exor regular mall, or telephoned to3265 or 3266. Organizations whichhave published a schedule of theiractlvltles are Invited to send a con,to the MAROON. Items listed foeregular repeated Inclusion must berenewed each quarter.Country dancers, 8 p.m.,Noyes cloister club. Idastudents, Lecture, "Stephen Strong Greg¬ory,” by Tappan Gregory, edi¬tor, ABA Journal, sponsored byLaw school. 8:30 p.m., Breastedhall, Oriental institute. Registration for entering under¬graduates, Bartlett gymnasium,8:30 a.m.-12:00 and 1:30-5:00p.m:Carillon recital, Rockefellerchapel, 4:30 p.m. James R. Law-son, carilloneur. Jimmy's Place is operated primarily as a con¬vivial meeting place for students and friendsof the University of Chicago. The generalair of friendliness and informality make Jim¬my's first choice for those seeking relaxationor camaraderie in the most auspicious sur¬roundings. A hearty welcome to all.JIMMY’S55th and WoodlawnChicago, Illinois NO 7-9584Social dancing,house, 8:00 p.m: International(Every Wed-SPECIAL TO U. C. STUDENTS10* DISCOUNTON ALL SERVICEComplete Versatile Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServiceFREE PICKUP and DELIVERYLAUNDROMAT SERVICEALL ITEMS CAREFULLY WASHED AND 1FLUFF DRIED. STUDENTS PREFER THISRAPID, CONVENIENT/ECONOMICAL WAYTO CLEANLINESS. WE TAKE CARE OF ITFROM START TO FINISH AT NO EXTRACHARGE!TRY IT! YOU WILL LIKE IT!8 Lbs. Wearing ApparelWashed, Dried & Serviced65*Call PL 2-9097 for Free Pickup & De¬livery on All Bundles, Amounting to$1.70 or More. FINISHINS SERVICE(1) FLATWORK— SHEETS, PILLOW CASES,HANDKERCHIEFS, OTHER FLAT PIECESWASHED & IRONED. BATH TOWELS &WEARING APPAREL WASHED & FLUFFDRIED. ALL ITEMS FOLDED & WRAP¬PED.Flatwork, 10 Lbs. — $1.35Add'l. Lbs. at 13c Ea.(2) SHIRTS — BEAUTIFULLY WASHED firIRONED. STARCH IF DESIRED. PROMPTSERVICE.Dress ShirtsSport Shirts 23c. Ea.35c Ea.(3)HAND IRONING — TROUSERS, SKIRTS,DRESSES, OTHER ITEMS, WASHED &BEAUTIFULLY IRONED. DRY CLEANING SERVICEQuality Dry Cleaningand PressingMen’s & Ladies’ Suits $115TROUSERS 65*SKIRTS 65*JACKETS 75*Large Shag RugsOur SpecialtyUNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1376 E. 55th STREET PLaza 2-9097