Vol. 65, No. 15 University of Chicago, Saturday, November 24, 1956photo by Wllson-Mokotoff Laszlo tells UC audiemeof Hungarian situationCalling for aid to the Hungarian “freedom fighters,” Istvan Laszlo, Hungarian studentand refugee from the recent Russian terrorism in Hungary, spoke to a capacity audiencein the assembly hall of International house. - ^Laszlo, a short dark-haired youth of 21, whose real name is being withheld for fear ofretaliation to his family in Hungary, was giv en a standing ovation by the audience. His talkwas prefaced with inffoductory remarks by Dean of Students Robert M. Strozier; HermanFiner, professor of politicalDean Robert M. Strozier shows proficiency in perchingthe crown, right side up, on top of pretty Debby Goldman’shead. Miss Goldman was proclaimed queen of the Inter¬fraternity ball, annual formal dance, held Saturday night. science; and Don Miller, presi¬dent of Student Government.“Although we do not ask theUnited States to send troops in to'Queen' Goldman crownedby Strozier at l-F ball help us, we would appreciate it ifthe US would not threaten to re¬voke the citizenship of Americanswho wish to leave the country tovolunteer to fight in the revolu¬tion,” said the young Hungarian.Citing examples of Hungarianbravery, Laszlo told of “sevenyear old children throwing them¬selves at Russian tanks with bot¬tles of gasoline tied to their wriststo prevent further attacks by thetanks on Hungarian citizens.”“More than once I saw Russian the Hungarian cause brought thisresponse from Laszlo: “Great Bri¬tain and France could not havedone anything worse to Hungarythan to take the action they didin Egypt.” However, on the ques¬tion of the legitimacy of the jointaction in Egypt, Laszlo main¬tained that he could not make ajudgment since his own difficul¬ties in escaping the terror in Hun¬gary had kept him from followingthe situation in Middle East.Laszlo spoke in Hungarianto our dent, who has accompanied theHungarian student during his ap-One hundred and twenty couples saw Miss Deborah Goldman crowned queen at the 32nd tanks flying the white flag of PeVf,rannual Inter-fraternity ball held Saturday evenving at the Del Prado hotel. - truce and the Russian soldiers in WUKe8’ ^ graduate m act stu-Miss Goldman, Zeta Beta Tau’s candidate, received her crown from Dean of StudentsRobert M. Strozier following a procession of all the candidates and their escorts. Each can¬didate was announced with a fanfare and conducted to the stage by her white tie and tail-l>edecked gentleman. Miss Goldman’s escort was Marv Kaplan.I, ChfnCe!l0r, L?''Tenf..^' M. Strozier. wife of UCs dean ofkimpton, the traditional be- s,udents. Marjorie Fulmnur, UCstower of crowns (and kiss- alumna and current fashion coor-os* at UC, was not present be- dmator tor Mandel Brothers de¬cause of other important com- partment store, and Anson Mount,mitments. — UC graduate and director of theThe new queen was selected college bureau of Playboy maga-last Wednesday afternoon at Ida zine.Noyes hall by judges, Mrs. Robert Faculty guests at the ball were:Philip Hauser namednew soc chairmanPhilip M. Hauser, population authority and professor ofsociology, has been named chairman of the UC departmentof sociology.Hail&er also serves as director of UC’s population researchtraining center and of its Chi- ;cago community inventory. ment board, and a member of theHe has been a professor of advisory council of the Humansociology since 1947. !leSOAUrC£S Research instltute °fA former acting director of the the Air Force*United States'ce n s u s bureau, He has served as United StatesHauser was assistant director of representative on the populationthe bureau from 1942 to 1947. He commission of the Economic andhas been an assistant to the Sec- Social council of the United Na-retary of Commerce and director lions.of the office of program planning The holder -of three degreesof the Department of Commerce, from UC, Hauser received hisDuring the war, Hauser was an bachelor’s degree in 1929, his mas-expert consultant to the Secretary ter’s in 1933, and his doctorate inof War, chairman of the man- 1938. He.was first appointed topower panel of the Defense de- the faculty in 1932 as an instruc-payment's research and develop- tor in sociology. Mr. and Mrs. Alan Austil, Deanand Mrs. John P. Netherton, Mr.and Mrs. James Newman andDean and Mrs. Robert M. Strozier.Other candidates and fraterni¬ties sponsoring them were:Madelaine Gregg, Alpha DeltaPhi; Judy Bowly, Beta Theta Pi;Carolyn Kiblinger, Delta Upsilon;Sandra Ford, Kappa Alpha Psi;Judy Bishop, Phi Delta Theta;Mickee McSpadden, Phi GammaDelta; Dorothea Cay ton, Phi Kap¬pa Psi; Barbara Bernell, Phi Sig¬ma Delta, and Joy Bradford, Psi* Tpsilon. the tanks coming oversido claimed I^aszloIn the question period following Pearances a* various colleges andhis talk, Laszlo received questions universities in the Chicago area,from many students who seemedto have a “cross to bear” concern¬ing the interests of particularcountries.One particularly violent soul,began a question: “We have yourblood on our hands, since we haveadvocated an exchange betweenour students and the Russian se¬cret police butchers. And thereare avowed Communists on theUC faculty such as . . At thispoint, Dean Strozier broke in witha firm “No personalities here—we will not take that question!”The questioner flushed and satdown as the audience applaudedthe Dean’s action.A question concerning the ef¬fect of military actions by GreatBritain and France in Egypt on IstvanDeborah photo by WilsonGoldman pnoio oy wusoaLaszlof -*V 'V' JHWax cancels appearanceBecause of family illness, Mrs. Rosalie Wax, associateprofessor of anthropology and noted folksinger, will notappear at next Friday’s Student Union sponsoredC-dance. >Student Union is looking for a replacement.“Greenwich village comes to UC” is the theme of the dance.Bohemian atmosphere will be the general decorations and re¬freshments. Students are urged to dress in a most informalmanner suitable to the theme of the dance.The event is scheduled for Friday, from 9 pm to midnightin the Cloister club of Ida Noyes hall. Tickets are currently onsale from SU representatives in the dormitories and fraternityhouses and cost a paltry 75 cents per person.t * •>" , ■■ v ; /■'■>* $4 -v-T' ' ' - - ■"*Ida marks first anniversaryby Ronald J. GrossmanThis week marks the first anniversaryof “the move to Ida.”On November 18, 1955, eight organ¬izations (student activities office, Ma¬roon, Student Government, Cap and Gown,Interclub council, Interfraternity council, So-rial Activities Council, and Commuters club)moved into new quarters in the “magnificentmausoleum” which up to that time had beenused for women’s physical education andwomen’s social affairs.It was hoped by the student activities of¬fice that the move would not only relievethe crowded conditions of the Reynolds club,but that in time Ida Noyes would take theplace of a student union building on campus.This hope will probably be realized withinthe near future.Although Reynolds club still remains themain lounging area for students, Ida Noyesis the building where most of the meetingson campus are now being held.Reservations for rooms in Ida Noyes havedoubled since the move and now have to be* made in advance, while the "fishbowl” inReynolds club — the favorite place for meet¬ings in years past — has fallen into disuseand is now the domain of Comment.The new women's dormitories being con¬structed on Dudley field will probably com¬plete the process of making Ida Noyes thestudent activities center of campus. When thefirst wing is Completed (supposedly by nextSeptember), the residents will be fed in theIda Cloister club until the dormitory kitchenfacilities are completed. Ida will also be thetemporary recreational center for the girls.This week also marks the final chapter in“Man versus the machines” with the an¬nouncement from student activities office ofthe closing of the Cloister club grill begin¬ning Friday. The reason for the shut-downof the grill, according to Mary Alice New¬man, director of student activities, is thatcompetition from the food-vending machinesin the Cloister is causing the grill to operateat a loss.The saga of the food machines is the storyof a long, hard fight on the part of the stu¬dent activities office, the Maroon, the Chi- of move from Reynoldscago board of health and the harassed stu¬dents who have used the machines.Although machines dispensing everythingfrom soup to nuts were promised soon afterthe move to Ida was accomplished, manymonths passed before the vending machinecompany could supply machines dispensingthese items. The board of health promptlybanned the original sandwich machine forlack of refrigeration, but the vending com¬pany soon came through with proper ma¬chines for cold sandwiches, luke-warm sweetrolls, and hot soup and main dishes.According to Mrs. Newman, the machineshave been grossing approximately $300 to$400 per month, with the student activitiesoffice receiving about five per cent of thisamount as profit.“The move to Ida has certainly been a suc¬cess. Even though the building still retainssome aspects of a mausoleum, we think itsusage has justified the move,” said Mrs. New¬man.And those organizations profiting by morespace, better quarters, and eminently greaterfacilities, will no doubt agree with her.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 24( 1956Offer variety of services Th©r© was an SC meetingIn Reynolds club basementTom Jersild, a student in the humanities and ISL memberof Student Government, has been appointed new manager ofSG’s student service center in Reynolds club basement.Jersild succeeds Thomas Kapantais, fall manager, who will procedure *was"over, the mem^bers showed their parliament¬ary inexperience during most ofthe remainder of the meeting. Aportion of the committee onrecognized student organizations•(CORSO) report offered the sub¬ject for most of the confusion. Atthe previous meeting Otto Fein-There was a Student Government meeting Tuesday night.Nothing much in the way of substantiative legislation occurred, but most of the timewas spent in parliamentary quibbling.The major purpose of the meeting was to fulfill the requirement that there be two nom¬inating meetings before the election meeting for the Student-Faculty-Administration courtThis was the second nominating meeting.Once this straightforwardcontinue as an employee of theservice.The service center, a non-profitinstitution established in 1954, of¬fers a student book exchange andsecond hand book service, a ticketagency, loan service, and drycleaning. Most of these serviceshad been operated separately andunsuccessfully by SG before theconsolidation.The book exchange offers shelfspace to any student wishing tooffer their books for sale, in re¬turn for a small commission. Alimited number of new and usedtextbooks can also he orderedthrough the center.The ticket agency obtainstickets to all downtown produc¬tions through an agent who visitsbox offices Tuesday and Thurs-Looking for Ridersat Christmas time?Try theChicogo MaroonCLASSIFIEDS day of each week, also for a smallcommission. Tickets to campusevents are sold without extracharge.Dry cleaning (but not laundry)is picked up by a wholesale clean¬ing company on Mondays andThursdays, and returned on thefollowing delivery day. There isa student discount.Loans availableLoans up to $10 may be madefor two weeks at a time, at a costof ten cents for that period. Stu¬dents must provide current iden¬tification.Present plans for expansion ofthe services include possible ex¬tension of the cleaning service toinclude laundry, a listing of tutor-al and general service availablein the University area, a cummu-fer file, and a second-hand goodsfile.The student service center isopen from 11:30 to 1:30 and 3:30to 4:30 every weekday during theschool year, and is closed for in¬ventory during interim. stein (SRP-soc) had presented amotion in connection with a Stu¬dent Union poster which he con¬sidered offensive as it “portrayeda stereotype of a minority group.”Poster pandemoniumThe CORSO report was that SGcould do nothing as the posterdid not violate any part of theStudent Code. Feinstein thenmoved that a letter be sent to allstudent organizations suggestingthat posters of this kind not bedistributed by any organization.Upon inquiry by Emil Johnson(ISL-soc), the president, Don Mil¬ler (ISL), ruled that this motionwas new business and would re¬quire a special order of business,which needs a two-thirds vote.Feinstein argued that since hismotion was an amendment to thecommittees motion, it was obvi¬ously not new business. SylviaThompson (ISL-hum), chairman of CORSO, answered that thecommittee had no motion as SGcould not censure an organizationfor posters. Feinstein replied thathis original motion was not tocensure but to recommend thatthe poster was in bad taste.It was then discovered that noone had a copy of the originalmotion. The parliamentary ex¬perts finally decided that if theFeinstein letter was proposed asa substitute to the CORSO report,it would be in order. Feinstein re¬minded the opposition that thiswas exactly how he had original¬ly proposed it.After all this, it was defeatedsince “it implied censure of Stu¬dent Union, even if such censureis not intended.” An amendmentto the report, by Jan Metros(ISL-col), that a letter to the stu¬dent activities office suggestingthey look more closely at materialthey stamp, was finally with¬drawn after criticism was heapedon it from both sides of the aisle.Some ISLers maintained thatwhether the poster was offensiveis simply a matter of taste, whileSRPers objected to the censor¬ship power implied in the motion.The resolution finally passed1957-1958The Ramo-Wooldridge Fellowshipsfor Graduate Study at theCalifornia Institute of Technologyor theMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyLeading toward the Ph. D. or Sc. D. degree as offered by each institutionEmphasis in the study program at the California Institute ofTechnology will be on Systems Engineering, and at the MassachusettsInstitute of Technology on Systems Engineering or Operations Research.The Ramo-Wooldridge Fellowships have been estab¬lished in recognition of the great scarcity of scientistsand engineers who have the very special qualificationsrequired for work in Systems Engineering and Opera¬tions Research, and of the rapidly increasing nationalneed for such individuals. Recipients of these Fellow¬ships will have an opportunity to pursue a broadcourse of graduate study in the fundamental mathe¬matics, physics, and engineering required for careersin these fields, and will also have an opportunity toassociate and work with experienced engineersand scientists.Systems Engineering encompasses difficult advanceddesign problems of the type which involve inter¬actions, compromises, and a high degree of optimiza¬tion between portions of complex complete systems.This includes taking into account the characteristicsof human beings who must operate and otherwiseinteract with the systems.Operations Research involves the application of thescientific method of approach to complex manage¬ment and operational problems. Important in such ap¬plication is the ability to develop mathematical modelsof operational situations and to apply mathematicaltools to the solution of the problems that emerge.The program for each Fellow covers approximatelya twelve-month period, part of which is spent at TheRamo-Wooldridge Corporation, and the remainder atthe California Institute of Technology or the Massa¬chusetts Institute of Technology working toward theDoctor’s degree, or in post-doctoral study. Fellows ingood standing may apply for renewal of the Fellow¬ship for a second year. ELIGIBILITY The general requirements for eligibil¬ity are that the candidate be an American citizen whohas completed one or more years of graduate study inmathematics, engineering or science before July 1957.The Fellowships will also be open to persons who havealready received a Doctor's degree and who wish toundertake an additional year of study focused specifi¬cally on Systems Engineering or Operations Research.awards The awards for each Fellowship grantedwill consist of three portions. The first will be aneducational grant disbursed through the Instituteattended of not less than $2,000, with possible upwardadjustment for candidates with family responsibilities.The second portion will be rhe salary paid to theFellow for summer and part-time work at The Ramo-Wooldridge Corporation. The salary will depend uponhis age and experience and amount of time worked,but will normally be approximately $2,000. The thirdportion will be a grant of $2,100 to the school to covertuition and research expenses.APPLICATION PROCEDUREFor a descriptive booklet and application forms,write to The Ramo-Wooldridge FellowshipCommittee, The Ramo-Wooldridge Corporation,yi30 Arbor Vitae Street, Los Angeles 45. Com¬pleted applications together with reference formsand a transcript of tender gradmate and graduateeourses and grades must be transmitted to theCommittee not later than January 21, 1957.The Ramo-Wooldridge Corporation#»7*0 AMOR VITAE STREET. LOS ANOSLKS AS. CALIFORNIA • LOS ANGELES TELEPHONE: OREGON 8-OSS* was a “sense” amendment pro¬posed by Timothy Essien < SRP-soc) that expressed a hope forgood taste in the posters issuedby student organizations.After a smooth interval of thestudent needs report/* the meet¬ing came to a fitting end on aquorum eall before a roll callvote on the second half of a mo¬tion, that was part of the acade¬mic freedom committee report,was announced. The motion wassimple enough: The committeewould be empowered to sponsora folk singer to raise money forAcademic Freedom week.Johnson jabbersJohnson, the majority leader,thought that a fund raising pro^ject was grand, but didn’t wantthe money to be given to one com¬mittee. lie debated that such alarge sum (a big profit,-was ex-pected as the folk singer isdonating his services to the Amer¬ican Civil Liberties Union, whowould co-sponsor the event)should go to the Government atlarge, instead of being tied up inone committee. Miss Metros add¬ed that they would be committingmoney before they knew what itwould be spent on.Debbie Mines (ISL-col), chair¬man of the committee, made aplea for money so that the com¬mittee would not be short ofmoney for Academic Freedomweek as in the past. She was join¬ed by SRPers, who are alwaysinterested in academic freedom.The motion was voted ad seria¬tim: The first half, to sponsor thesinger, passed; the second halfto give the money to the commit¬tee, was subjected to a roll call—.and the nays clearly had it. How¬ever, Feinstein had voted “pres¬ent” and when he was recognizedto change his vote, he called aquorum.Miller ruled “no quorum” andeveryone went home or Whereverpeople go after the ordeal of anSG meeting.Student Government hasannounced the securing of ad¬ditional funds for the studentloan service.$400 has been added in thehope of having the neededfunds for adequately runningthe service.The loan service is locatedIn the student service centerbasement of the Reynoldsclub.' Imagtrt&lMOVING MY Wnothing to <foftIt'* all PRE-PlANNtDOur «xp«ri» "blueprint" every oe-tait in advance—take all the workorvd worry o# your hand*. Andwe move you in a ^SanitizedVan! No extra cost.PETERSONMOWN* S STORAGE CO.55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterfield 8-6711N«v. 24, 1954 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Transformer dies; life darkRumor has it that the electricity inva few of the campusbuildings took a short coffee break at 1 1 :30 a.m. Wednes¬day. As a result, Harper, Social Sciences, Rosenwald andthe C-group (with the exception of Kelly) were dark forawhile.Apparently the trouble was caused by-4he burning outof a transformer in the Social Sciences vault, a branch ofthe central fuse system. The main vault of the system islocated in the Blackstone plant.Temporary repairs are being made or. the transformeruntil i^ will be possible to transport another from underthe north stands. A transformer weighs about two tons.The last time UC experienced a shock such as this onewas when the Billings hospital transformer burned out in1946.Plan to expandpsychiatric clinicDr. John F. Kramer, chief psychiatrist of UC student healthservice since July 1, has made known his intention of improv¬ing and expanding the services of the present mental hygieneclinic.He explains that previous services were limited to evalua¬tion and referral, due in part to a scarcity of personnel. Atpresent the clinic is being or Foundation grants enableprinting Madison papersPublication of a 22-volume series of the collected papers of James Madison, fourth presi¬dent of the United States, was announced by Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton and Presi¬dent Colgate W. Darden Jr. of the University of Virginia.The undertaking, which will begin in 1960, and will require approximately 12 years tocomplete will close the last remaining gap in th e historical sources of Madison’s contributions.The work was made possible by a grant of $150,000 by the Rockefeller foundation; agrant of $200,000 from the .. . „ .. . ' . .—rrr — . . T—■ ■ ■ —Ford foundation; an appropri- ahsts- the last of whlch mented son died. In 1848, Congress paidthe last of which merited son diedv - „ the Woodrow Wilson award of $25,000 for the remainder of the5,?r*^C the American political science collection, and set up the moneyassociation; “The Jaeksonians” re- in a fund so that Mrs. Madison’sceived the 1955 Columbia univer- son would not gamble the moneysity Bancroft prize. away. In 1935, an important partProfessor Hutchinson, a special- °f the collection was found in theist on American constitutionalhistory, has twice won the UCLlewellyn John and Harriet Man-of the biennium by two universities to raise another $30,000.The editors of the Madisonpapers will be Leonard D. White,Ernest DeWitt Burton Distin¬guished Service professor emeri¬tus; William T. Hutchinson, Pres- trunk of Senator William CabellRives, who had forgotten to re¬turn the letters that he had bor-ganized into an effective unit,comparable to the good psy¬chiatric departments of other uni¬versities and fully able to copewith acute situations apt to arisein the University.It is not yet possible to estimatehow many UC students receivepsychiatric attention, but accord¬ing to the experience of manyfour-year universities, ten to fif¬teen per cent of the students ob¬tain such care.In the period between October 1and November 1 at UC, slightlyunder 50 per cent of the mentalhygiene clinic’s patients volun¬tarily sought care, 14 per centwere administration referrals, andt ho rest were referred by studenthealth.Dr. Kramer attributes the anxi¬eties, study difficulties, and the"lost feeling” of many students tonumerous factors. College age isa settling-down time, a time whenone comes to grips over what hisvalues are to be. Many are awayfrom home for the first time andare being exposed to views vastlydifferent from those to whichthey have been accustomed. Forsome students there is the diffi¬culty of discovering major fieldsof interest uniquely their own,outside the domain of parental de¬sires.Dr. Kramer stresses that if peo¬ple come to the clinic because theywant to, the staff is most likely tosucceed in helping them.Formerly a member of the Yalew University psychiatric depart¬ment, Dr. Kramer is now an asso¬ciate professor of psychiatry atthe UC medical school. sor of American history; and William M. E. Rachal, appointed bythe University of Virginia.Professor White, who retiredlast September, is an authorityon public administration. He isthe author of several studies, in¬cluding “The Jaeksonians,” “TheJeffersonians,” and “The Feder- tinguished teaching.Rachal has been editor for thepast four years of the VirginiaMagazine of History and Biog¬raphy.The Madison papers have hada curious history. The US Con¬gress first bought a small partof the collection soon after Madi-about 675,000. At the presentabout 10 per cent of the peopleare in this older age group.Among the chief problems ofthe older people, little or no in¬come, need for housing and recre¬ational facilities head the list. AsHauser stated, “We have succeed¬ed in adding years to life; now wemust learn to add life to years.”A comparison between the efn-ployed and unemployed of thisolder age group clearly reflectstheir problems. 45 per cent of themales and 10 per cent of the fe¬males are employed or are seek¬ing work. In comparison, 15 percent of the males and 50 per cent* * '•*' 'Jr tori and Sterling^ Morton profes- tester Quantrell award for dis- rowed to write a history of Madi-At present the important small¬er collections are at the Univer¬sity of Virginia, the VirginiaState library, and the New YorkPublic library.R. Draper returnsto Mandel hallRuth Draper, famed dra¬matic actress, will return topresent a series of six charac¬ter sketches in Mandel hallnext Friday night at 8:30.Admission is free and withoutticket.The program will be the200th in the series of WilliamVaughan Moody lectures.Moody was a UC English pro¬fessor, poet and dramatistwho died in 1910.Phi Psi sponsors'Esquire' partyAn Esquire party, sponsored byPhi Kappa Psi fraternity and Eso¬teric women’s club, will be heldat the Phi Psi house Saturday,December 1.This all-campus open house and24th annual Esquire party willfeature a band, dancing, and anEsquire magazine motif.Problems of aged discussedby sociologist Philip HauserIncreasing problems of metropolitan Chicago’s citizens 65 years or older was discussedby Philip M. Hauser, chairman of the UC sociology department at UC.Professor Hauser, former director of the US bureau of the census and presently the direc¬tor of UC’s Chicago community inventory, explained that the growing percentage of people65 years of age or older focuses the attention on their need for assistance.Metropolitan Chicago today has a half million persons 65 years or older, and ten yearsfrom now the number will be of the females have no personal lodger.income. Although the present re- An interesting statistic was pre-tirement pattern accounts for the sented by Hauser concerning thepercentage of the employed, 30 older group’s educational status,per cent of the males and 66 per The average person in the oldercent of those who are working group reached the eighth grade inreceive an income less than $1,000.Nine of every ten older personsin the Chicago area live in a regu¬lar household of some type. Sixmaintain their own households;two live in those of their children,and one lives in the household ofa more distant relative, or is a school, but did not complete anyhigh school work.In comparison with the 45 to 64age -group, the average Chicagoresident had had some high schoolpreparation. In addition, the aver¬age resident aged 25 to 44 hascompleted high school.PH1§ do«*»n°111im*ISpii -pH 1450 E. 57thTHE SEASON IS UPON US...and the smart people are still the ones whobuy their gifts early.Soon the Loop will be strangled by wild¬eyed hordes, surging aimlessly to find thething it was that Aunt Lalique said sheliked on the third or fourth floor — theradio will be mewing those frightful"Mother Kissing Santa Claus" songs, andtempers will be shorter than cash.Come to the Domino now. Get your pret¬ties and your jollies away from the mad¬dening mess. We have as varied and care¬fully chosen a selection of ... as a matterof fact, from the farthest corners of theworld . . . absolutely no effort has beenspared to bring you for the first time underone ... so come already, we got gorgeous. * *:-SEiLJ We Are Sorry..Two weeks ago we advertised that we had a newcheese for cheese connoisseurs. However, it was so pop¬ular, we sold out. This cheese is now back in stock. It is2/4‘year-old Wisconsin CheddarCheese. It has a sharp and tangyflavor that is out of this world.The price of this cheeseshould be 79c per lb., butit is on sale at the Co-opfor only 59c per lb.CO-OP SUPER MART5535 SOUTH HARPER PLENTY OF FREE PARKING4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 24, 1956IN GADFLY Problem: Who’s kidding?1*1' MDevelopment Spirit: its dilemma —The spirit of the Development Office, os was stated in this column last week,is nothing new to the University of Chicago. There ore three problems withwhich this spirit much grapple: (1) money, (2) the neighborhood, and.(3) pub¬lic relations. These problems are neither?new, and as always, the foremost ismoney.In the good old days, allWilliam Rainey Harper hadto do was to put the bite onJohn D. Rockefeller for anothermillion. But today there is no onewilling to play a philanthropistTrilby to Chancellor Kimpton’sSvengali. The great fortunes ofyesteryear have been dissipatedamong numerous heirs and theBureau of Internal Revenue.Those few private fortunes thatremain intact are vaulted in trustfunds, the doors to which arelocked by lawyers, barricaded bywills, and have entrance frustrat¬ed by boards of directors who con¬foundedly place conditions uponthe money’s use.Aside from endowment, thereare four main sources of money:Individuals, alumni, corporationsand foundations. Each of thesemust be convinced to part withpart of the loot. That job of con¬vincing is public relations, theselling of the University.Second is the problem of theneighborhood. It is a problemwhich Harper did not have to faceand which Hutchins, unfortunate¬ly, refused to face. It is a simpletruth, but a great University can¬not prosper in a slum.The University is fighting forsurvival. To survive it mustachieve domination over an entirecommunity, and to achieve thisdomination it is using every trickin the Machiavellian lexicon. It can play the lion and devourwhole blocks of buildings, it canplay the fox and connive hugesums from governmental agen¬cies, and it even knows when toact in bad faith.THE UNIVERSITY RECOG¬NIZES that if it is to be morethan a commuters’ campus, itmust exist in a self-sustainingneighborhood which contains allthe essentials for the everydayexistence of fifteen thousand per¬sons. In short, it must become anintellectual island. To secure thatisland, money is required and theacquisition of that money onceagain is public relations.In future years the spirit of de¬velopment will have only one ma¬jor problem with which to grap¬ple. In time, the serious shortageof money will be cured and theneighborhood problem dimin¬ished. But the vital issue of publicrelations will remain to plaguethe University.For the public relations manmust tread a thin wire. First ofall, he must convince the worldthat the University of Chicago isa wholesome place, that it is notinhabited by pinks, perverts andpsychotics; that it is not a brainfactory; that the campus teemswith healthy, heterosexual stu¬dents who yearn to take full ad¬vantage of the cultural, social andathletic facilities the Universityoffers. Secondly, all of this must besaid and sold without intimatingthat the educational stature of theUniversity has fallen one iotafrom the days of Charles E. Mer-riam, James Weber Linn. AntonJ. Carlson or any others in thegalaxy of household gods; thatthe students and faculty are stilla match for anything the worldhas to offer; that from its re¬search laboratories and lecturehalls will come a cure for all theills of mankind, be they social orphysical.IN THIS TRICKY MATTER ofpublic relations the University isdefinitely on the defensive; itmust overcome the sometimes alltoo well-founded illusions of ageneration. The spirit of develop¬ment is trying to sell educationas if it were a cake of soap or arube of toothpaste and those whoknow better must forgive thespirit for flashing the Pepsodentsmile while the subject is stillonly half-safe.The University of Chicago, sot lie spirit dictates, must overcomethe Hutchins heritage.Not that the University has hadits twenty years of treason, butthat all occasions of time andstatus have conspired against anexpression of its real feelings. TheEisenhower Administration doesnot provide a propitious settingfor the liberal and intellectualpitch, for the social upheaval ofthe 3930’s has become the staid Public Relations man No. 1: Donate your money to osbecause this is the greatest University in the world.P.R. No. 2: And don’t be afraid to send your boy here be¬cause this school is absolutely normal — just like any other.suburbia of the 1950’s and the stu¬dent who once ranted about aid toSpanish Loyalists is now an alum¬nus who votes Republican.But the University cannot af¬ford to throw off its heritage ofgreatness, and thus there is abasic contradiction in Universitypublicity. The University of Chica¬go currently says to the world:“Look, we are a normal universi¬ty, just like any other, and be¬sides, we are still the greatestuniversity in the world!”THE EMPHASIS ON normalcymay be necessary to set the Uni¬versity on its sound financial feetand no wise person will questionthe Kimpton Regime on an eco¬nomic matter. But just as “bal¬ancing the budget” does not makedynamic governmental policy,neither does it make for great¬ ness in a University.Such greatness is the result of.what one professor caljs, “themessianic vision.” However hemay have run the University intothe ground financially, Hutchinsgave the campus this vision. Itwas conti’oversial, of course, butthen messiahs are not always wel¬comed.It was the vision of Hutchinswhich gives the University its cur¬rent claim to greatness. The spiritof development, Kimpton's com¬promise and conciliation, DeanStreeter’s reconciliation of the“Moby Dick” theory of educationto that of the “minnows” — allihese do not constitute a claim togreatness. When that vision willcome, or if it will, is still an openquestion.PertinaxCalls stand on Hungary shamefulI sat, listening to the Hun¬garian refugee’s talk, with asense of complete uselessness.I thought of a whole people losingtheir lives for an ideal while weAmericans sat back and watchedthem. I thought of the last wardsof the Hungarian rebel radio:“W’here is the US?”What makes a people fight foran ideal? And more, what makesus reluctant to fight for the sameideal? Many Americans probablyfeel that the Hungarians werefoolish to lose their lives for acause; we know that causes andideals aren’t concrete thingsabout which to get upset. Onlyyoung and foolish people worryabout them.But once America was a youngand foolish nation. Wo fought forour freedom; we said that life without liberty was not worth liv¬ing. But, of course, it was our ownliberty at stake then, not the lib¬erty of some foreigners across thesea. But we w7ere very youngthen; we even fought for the lib¬erty of the black people — wellknowing that their liberty didn’taffect us directly since we couldnever become black. How ideal¬istic and Utopian we must havebeen then!A new concept lias replaced lib¬erty in our philosophy today; it is“peace.” Peace at any cost, justso we don't have to fight anybodyanymore. Could it be that fighiingno longer means that only our sol¬diers would lose their lives? Nowit means we all may die. Poli¬ticians must reevalute — is free¬dom worth their lives?Peace and prosperity are won¬ derful concepts; they allow us toclose our eyes to the sufferingsof others. They allow us to behard-headed realists who don’tneed to worry about the sillybickerings of other nations. Surewe sympathize with the poorHungarians; we’ll even send themmoney and food (we have lots ofthat to spare); but send our menover to help them? Never! Thatis not. a peaceful position. And weare a peace-loving people.We’re so damn peaceful thatwe’re cowardly; we won’t stop abully from beating up a weaklingbecause it might involve us in afight with him. We’ll reprimandhim with harsh and brave wordsin the UN while ha’s doing it be¬cause e v e r y b o d v knows theywon’t make any difference. If hewon’t listen to our words, then it’snot our fault that lie’s obstinate.Nobody can say we didn’t try.But must we lie so hypocritical?How long can we pretend that wereally acted justly and righteous¬ly in the Hungarian crisis? Whocan believe our noble words whenour inaction show s us to befrightened and hesitant to helpothers in distress? . . .... I have heard so many govern¬ment claims about peace andmoral support that I am sick. Isno one brave enough to give theother side? Is everyone so afraidof a possible atomic war that theyno longer will defend the veryideals that once gave them theirfreedom? Life must he very dearto those people that they can sitso smugly by while others die fora principle.Well, we’re sophisticated a n drich now, and such ideals don’t fitinto the modern scheme of things.But I, for one, wish I was back inthe dark ages in American historywhere men were willing to defendideals with deeds as well as words.Roger Bernhardt-f/y/i cfticaao11 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, S3per year. Business office hours: 2 p.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Saturday.Editor-in-chief Ronald J. GrossmanManaging editor Norman LewakBusiness manager Gary MokotoffExecutive news editor Jeon KwonAdvertising manager Lawrence D. KesslerEditorial assistant Bob BrownNews editors Rochelle Dubnow, Adrienne KinkoidCopy editors Kathy Aller, Betsy KirtteySports Editor George KarcaxesCulture editor Dave ZackPhoto editor Bob WilsonArt editor Kent FlanneryColendar editor Jeanne HerrickOffice manager Art Taitel Criticize stereotype as prejudicialLast week wc saw on campusa poster with a caricature of aChinese laundryman and the cap¬tion, “No Tickee —No C Dance.”This poster was undoubtedlyintended as a clever advertisingtechnique. It drew its inspira¬tion from a familiar source ofhumour, the national stereotype.The logic, or rather illogie behindthe national stereotype is basedon superficially observed traits,glibly generalized and grossly ex-agerated. Once in the mind of thepublic, the stereotype perpetuatesitself and fortifies already exist¬ing prejudices.Although we are confident thatthe issuing organization did notintend the poster to be offensiveto the minority group so charica-tured, it concerns us that studentsat this university are not aware of its obvious connotations.Most of the stereotypes inAmerican culture developed dur¬ing the slave period and periodsof immigration and reflected anti-foreign born feeling. That periodin our history is best but the at¬titudes that grew out of it areail too prevalent and such char-icatures only serve to preservethem.We hope that in the future allcampus organizations will hemore sensitive to the implicationsof their publications, that theywill not only be concerned withthe feelings and reactions of na¬tional groups but that they willconsciously attempt to eradicatevisual and mental stereotypes ofall kinds.SRP representatives to SU(Names withheld)Ray also bemoans sex-situationI am beginning to see whyMacbeth is such a favorite at theUniversity of Chicago. Where elseis it so easy to find three hagsto play the “witches”? If this ap¬pears to be an insult directedagainst the female populationhereabouts, then this letter is asuccess. But more than an insult,it is a statement of plain fact.In the November 2 issue of theMaroon, one of the “gentlemen”on campus wrote you protestingthe asexual policy of the Maroon.In response, you printed a photo¬graph <next to his letter), of oneof the more delectable specimensof the human race, sub-class—“broads”. Now really! I don’tthink it was so funny. I spentmany a restless nights tliinkingof that girl.To continue: I have lived in Chi¬cago all my life and never have Iseen a more motley collection ofgirls as we have here on campus.It isn’t that they’re ugly (it’s thattoo), but that they are complete¬ ly ignorant of something calledpersonality. O.K., so tney don’tuse make-up, but there is no ex¬cuse for combing the hair overthe face! The administrationneedn’t worry about “panty raids”as long as the present situationprevails. We’d probably end upwith an armful of Army surplusunderwear.Last night, I was scared out ofwits when I bumped into a girl'•I'm using that term loosely*,who looked as if she had beenmomentarily caught in the atomicreactor. There she was, her twoeyes staring at me through herhairy face.I suspect that the “desperate*out-of-town residents must knowof some dark secluded spots whereinspiration abounds. But untilthat time, I’ll have to stare atthe remains of my Thanksgivingturkey to once more feel the up¬surging lift of life.Ray CapaiTO*.Nor. 24, 1956 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Coming events on quadranglesSaturday, November 24Chinese student party. 7 pm. Ida Noyes.Camera club, 7:30 pm, Eekhart 203.names club potluck, Ida Noyes.Open dance, “Pan American Night,”dance, movies.dance, movies, floorshow, 8 pm, Int.House, $1.jtadio broadcast, "The Sacred Note."Rockefeller Chapel Choir, 10:15 pm,V/BBM.Sunday, November 25Episcopal communion, 8:30 n.m., Bondchapel (breakfast afterwards. 30 cents*Swift commons).Roman Catholic masses. 8:30. 10, 11 am,DeSales house.Lutheran communion service, 10 am,Hilton chapel.Radio broadcast, “New World,” M. F. X.nonohue, part of Monitor, 10:35 am,WMAQ.Vriversity religious service, Dean JohnBeauchamp Thompson, 11 am, Rocke¬feller chapel. Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel.Quaker fellowship, work in clothingworkroom, 7 pm, Quaker House, 5615Woodlawn (slipper, 6 pm).Movie: Bedlam, 7 and 9:30 pm, BJ, 25cents.Student Representative party caucus,7:30 pm. Ida Noyes.Monday, November 26Maroon staff meeting, 3:30 pm, IdaIda Noyes.Hebrew class, 4:00 pm, Hillel.Botany club, 4:30 pm, Botany.Chicago review staff meeting, 4:30 pm,Reynolds club.Seminar in Hebrew Literature, 4:30 pm,Hillel.Comment staff meeting, 7:00 pm, Rey¬nolds Club.Modern dance class, 7 pm, Ida Noyes.Movie: Caroline C'herie, 7 and 9:30 pm,Int. House. 45 cents.Swimming class, 7 pm, Ida Noyes,women only.Talk of philanthropyA Thanksgiving consideration of American philanthropywill pay tribute to the late Marshall Field in a discussion of“American Ways of Giving,” on UC’s New World broadcast,Sunday at 10:35 a.m. on WMAQ.Participants in the discus- m § * ■ _.Fora foundationstarts publishingscholarly bookssion will be: Helen Ross, ad¬ministrative director, Institute forPsychoanalysis; James Brown,IV, executive director, ChicagoCommunity Trust, and Wayne Me-Millen. professor, social serviceadministration, and author of A five-year, $172,500 pro¬ camera club, 7:30 pm, Eckhart 202.Tryouts for University Theatre produc¬tion, “Tonight at 8:30.”Social dancing class, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Tuesday, November 27Hillel chamber music players, 3:30 pm,Hillel.Pre-med club, election of officers, 4 pm,Anatomy 101.Yiddish class, 4 pm, Hillel.Senior Mathematics club, 4:30 pm, Eck¬hart.Blackfriars, 7 pm. Ida Noyes.Bridge class, 7 pm, Ida Noyes.Concert band re.hearsal, full ensemble,7:30 pm, Mandel.Madrigal singers rehearsal, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes.Tryouts for University Theatre produc¬tion, “Tonight at 8:30,” 7:30 pm, Rey¬nolds club Theatre.Folk dance, 8 pm. Int. House, 50 cents.Lecture, “Art and the Religious Life,”discussion of Brahms, Dr. John. Hay-mand, 8 pm, Meadville TheologicalSchool.Lecture:' “Religion and Scholarship,”Rev. Reginald Fullon, 8 pm, BrentHouse.Near East club lecture, 8 pm, Breasted.Wednesday, November 28Blackfriars, 2:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Lecture, “Idealogical Conflict in ModernJewish Thought,” Rabbi Pekarsky,3:30 pm, Hillel.Episcopal Evensong, 5:05 pm. BondChapel.Glee club rehearsal, 7 pm. Ttosenwald 2.Orchestra Comedia-MusicaUs rehearsal,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Thursday, November 29Annual Hannuka Party, “The Latke vs.the Hamantash,” faculty symposium,8 pm, Hillel.Lecture, “Current Problems in Archae¬ology, James Brown, campus archaeo¬logical society, 8 pm. Ida Noyes.Coffee hour, 9 pm. Green Hall.TV broadcast, "When in Rome ...”Prof. Bernard Lehman, 9:30 pm,WTTW Channel 11.< onumuiity Organization for So- gram to support and stimulateewi Welfare. publication of scholarly books Friday, November 30Individual, corporate and foun- in the humanities is being under-dation giving in America will be taken by the Ford foundation,discussed in an exploration of H. Rowan Gaither, chairman ofsome of the deeper reasons Amer- the foundation board, announcedicans give to charity. How federal that a secondary purpose of theplans such as aid to dependent program is to help relieve schol-children have influenced private ars of the expense of underwrit-giving will also be considered. ing the publication of their ownMaurice F. Donohue, dean of works.University College, will moderatethe discussion.Start driveWednesday marks the begin¬ning of a Student GovernmentInternational Rescue Commit¬tee (IRC) drive.All money collected will besent to IRC and earmarked forHungarian refugee students.SG, working jn conjunctionwith a UC faculty IRC drive,collected $68 Monday eveningat International house whenHungarian student IstvanLaszlo addressed a UC audi¬ence. One of the reasons cited forthe grant was the rapidly risingcosts of printing, paper, and bind¬ing. Psychology club, 2 pm. Ida Noyes.Student union “C” dance, 7 pm, IdaNoyes, entertainment, 75 cents.Young Socialists, 7 pm, Ida Noyes.Appollonians rehearsal, 7:45 pm, IdaNoyes.Campus archaeological society, 8 pm,Ida Noyes.Informal Oneg Shabbat, 8 pm, HillelHouse.Lecture, Ruth Draper doing charactersketches, 8:30 pm, Mandel, free.Blackfriars, 9 pm, Ida Noyes.Business club of Business school, 2:30pm, 2nd floor lounge, Haskell.Saturday, December 1In ter-Varsity Christian Fellowship,8 pm, Ida Noyes.FREE RESEARCH AIDIf you are doing research on theSoviet 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. Hyde Park's mastcomplete camera shopLIONEL & HO TRAINSMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55thFREE DELIVERY^ NECKYSPIZZERIANO 7-9063 ^iiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^International House Movies§ Holiday evenings, 7:00 A 9:00 p.m. — East Lounge |: Monday, November 26 — 45c — Caroline Cherie (French)^lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli?UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGWINTER SPECIALTUNE UP $5.50 up• Anti-Freeze• Snow Tires• Road ServiceSPECIAL ! !Heavy Duty Battery $1495HARPER SUPER SERVICEDealer in Sinclair Products5556 Harper Ave. PL 2-9654NEW CHILDREN’S BOOKS FOR ALL AGESComplete Selection for ChristmasWONDERFUL WORLD OF ARCHAEOLOGY, by Jess up. $2.95Companion to last year's WONDERFUL WORLD OF MATHEMATICSFAIRY TALES FROM MANY LANDS $6.00Beautifully illustrated; old and new talesCHURCHMOUSE STORIES, by Austin $3.50The stories about Peter Churchmouse, Gabriel Churchkitten, Trumpet,and the others — now in one volumeTHE WORLD WE LIVE IN - Special Edition forYoung Readers $4.95Also, the ALL ABOUT books, all the Landmarks, dozens of boxed puzzles and gamesand coloring books.BU YNOW WHILE STOCKS ARE COMPLETEUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue ACASA Book StoreChristmas cards — imported and foreign language —featuring one of the best 5c collections in the city.Also imported — small gifts and children's books1322 E. 35th St. IIV 3-9651Viceroysare SmootherBECAUSE ONLY VICEROYHAS 20,000 FILTERSTwice AsMany FiltersAS THE OTHER TWOLARGEST-SELLING FILTER BRANDS'job&£££- COMPARE!Howmany filters inyourfilter tip? (Remember—the more filters thesmoother the taste!)ViceroyBrand BBrand CfilterC»GA*e,ClNG-Viceroy’s exclusive filter is madefrom pure cellulose’!—soft, snow-white, natural) *£1966, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corpj> *■ 1 i« • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 24, 1956Appoint two new deansChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton announced the appointment of two associate deans inthe UC school of business. The new deans are Robert K. Burns and James H. Lorie.Both men are presently professors in the school of business. They will be associated withW. Allen Wallis who was appointed dean of the school last month. Dean Burns will be incharge of development activities for the school while Dean Lorie will head the academic ad¬ministrative affairs. ,Dr. Burns, a graduate of UC(he holds a doctorate fromUC) is executive director ofthe University’s industrial rela¬tions center as well as a professorpf social sciences. During WorldWar II Dr. Burns served the gov¬ernment as regional director ofthe National War Mediationboard, as chairman of the ChicagoRegional War Labor board, asjrh,urman of the Daily Newspapercommission, and as special assiSt-ind to the Administrator for Vet¬erans Affairs. He is the author of^umerous studies on economics2nd labor relations.Dr. Lorie, who holds bachelor’sand master’s degrees from Cor¬nell and was awarded a doctorateby UC in 1947, is acting dean ofthe school of business while DeanWallis is on leave. He is a special¬ist in marketing and consumer spending and has written widelyabout these fields. He has servedas consultant to the board of gov¬ernors of the Federal Reserve sys¬ tem, and as senior consultant forJoel Dean associates. 'The appointments are effectiveas of November 13. Offer new coursesof the atomic ageCourses in two new technical fields of the atomic age,health physics and radiological physics, will be offered at UCagain this winter. -Increasing use of nuclear materials and radiation sourcesin research, medical science,Chicago postoffer part time officesjobsExcellent full and part-time jobsare being offered to students bypest offices in the Chicago area,through the UC personnel office.Students may pick up job applica¬tions from Miss Wohn, reception¬ist at the personnel office for jobseither at post offices, or cataloguehouses.Part time jobs at the post of¬fices pay $1.65. per hour, with 10mm. m"I* Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood =|UNUSUAL FOOD jDELIGHTFULATMOSPHERE jPOPULAR |PRICESS3 ~ ^ *7 ' per cent extra after 10 pm. Thecatalogue house offers opportuni¬ties for both men and women inclerical work and as typists, re¬spectively. Minimum wages are$1.50 per hour, all day weekdaysand Saturday and Sunday eve¬nings.Applicants may, if they wish,start part-time work now andwork either part or fulltime dur¬ing the Christmas holidays. Op¬portunities are offered to allpeople over 17 years of age. Withthe application an explanatoryfolder will be given out. All stu¬dents should contact Miss Wohnor Mrs. Lieu at Ingleside hall, 956east 56th street. and industry, with accom¬panying hazards, has created theneed for health physicist.These experts, who determinestandards of allowable exposureto radiation and direct protectivemeasures are specialists neededby laboratories and industriesusing radio-active materials aswell as by insurance companies,state governments, and othersconcerned with radiation hazards.Radiological physicists, also inurgent demand, calculate dosagesfrom radiation sources used incancer treatment, and measurethe intensity and type of emis¬sions from radio-active isotopes inresearch projects.The UC courses are both twoyear programs leading to the mas¬ter’s degree. As a pioneer in nu¬clear energy and radioactivity, theUniversity has many facilities fortraining in these areas.. Thecourses take advantage of theUniversity’s institutes for basicresearch as well as the ArgonneCancer research hospital.We Will Teach You How fo DriveQuickway Driving SchoolDUAL CONTROL KE 6-116010% Discount to Students ond UC Personnel , Name Greento head fundHoward E. Green, presidentof the Great Lakes Mortgagecorporation, has been electedchairman of the University ofChicago Alumni foundation.Green is one of seven membersappointed by Chancellor Kimptonto the board of the University ofChicago Alumni foundation. Thefoundation is the fund-raising armof the Alumni association.Last year’s alumni campaignwhich raised $2.4 million (of atotal of $21 million) was led byEarle Ludgin and John McDon¬ough.A 1925 graduate of the Univer¬sity, Green is a former head of theChicago Mortgage Bankers asso¬ciation and of the Winnetka Zon¬ing commission.Other new board members are:Arthur R. Cahill, Thomas H. Coul¬ter, Bud Gorr, Harold W. Lewis,Elwood G. Ratcliff, and HowardL. Willett, Jr.It’s that new V8 in the ‘57 Chevrolet.It s as quiet as a contented cat andas smooth as cream . . . and it’scat-quick in response when you callfor action!No household tabby sitting in a sunnywindow ever purred more softly thanChevy’s new V8 engine. You canscarcely tell when it’s idling. But when you nudge the accelerator,you know it’s there, all right! Its right-now response keeps you out of highwayemergencies. It overpowers steep hillswith such ease they seem like levellandscape.' This new Chevrolet V8 puts up to 245.high-compression horsepower* underyour command! It’s sassy, sure—but astame to your touch as a purring pussy¬cat. Come try the smoothest V8 youever put a toe to. 1 USA'57 CHEVROLET•270-h.p. V8 olso ovailoble otextro cost. Also Ramjet fuelinjection engines with .op to283 h.p.that purr you hear isSweet, smooth and sassy! The Bel Ait Spoo Coupe with Body by Fisher,Only franchised Chetrolet dealers y CHEVROLET A display this famous trademarkSee Your Authorized Chevrolet Dealer CALI.NICKYSFOR PIZZANO 7-9063HT WWW w WW w w w w w w w; LOAN INSURANCE \: PENSION INSURANCE JI Phene er Write ]I Joseph H. Aaron, '27 <>135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060]Jimmy 9sSINCE 1940BORDONEMovers and Light Hauling !VI 6-9832Captures yourpersonalityas well asyour personBU 8-08761457-9 E.'57th St.THEPIZZAKIDThe finest In pizzaSPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - RIBSITALIAN BEEF & SAUSAGESANDWICHESWE DELIVER•Closed Tues.1125 E. 63 DO 3-9777Nov. 24, 1956 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Basie packs Mandel hallas UC jazz lovers listenWilliam Basie (familiarly known as Count) and his orches¬tra filled Mandel hall with an assortment of jazz enthusiastsfrom UC Monday night.Franklyn Broude, the president of the UC Jazz club intro¬duced Basie. The Count start¬ed off with “You For Me” andthen swung into “Satin Socks”.Other numbers on the programwere "The Moon Ain’t Green”,"Yesterday”, and “April in Paris”.Sonny Payne did a six minutedrum solo while the rest of theorchestra took a coffee break.When they returned, Joe New¬man, (trumpet!,, Frank Wesstflute and sax) 'and Eddy Jones(base fiddle) took the lead as thecombo played “Midget”. Wendellrully’s trumpet solo later on,"Coast to Coast” was another out¬standing part of the evening.One of the highlights of the eve¬ning was Joe Williams, who sang“Everyday”, “Smack Dab in theMiddle”, “Teach Me Tonight” and“Roll ’em Pete”, among othersongs. Count BasieCLASSIFIEDSStudent rote 5c per word. Others 10c per word. Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265Ride wanted? Riders wanted for the Christmas vacation? Now is the time to adver¬tise it in the Maroon classifieds. The price is low (trnly 5 cents a word for studentsand faculty) and they get results!Services( armen’s Used Furniture store. Movingand light hauling. 1365 E. 55th. MU 4-9003, MU 4-8843.Mathematics. Tutoring and instructionin the standard course® for individual orgroup. Loop or South side. Special ar¬rangements for group formed by your¬self. Soglin and Associates. 28 E. Jack-son. WE 9-2127.WantedFemale university employee and studentneeds 1*2 or 2',2 room apt. near campus.Will pay reasonable rent. Has excellentreferences. Call MI 3-0800, Ext. 2602days, AT 5-4480, Apt. 429 evenings.For rentTwo furnished two - room - apartments,one with bath. Convenient to campus,lnt house, IC. Phone BU 8-9424. Green¬field. Private room and bath (breakfast) inexchange for baby sitting, light dutiesin Kenwood home. WA 4-2550.PersonalFriendly rational undergraduate animalsinvited to apply to Orientation boardnow. Applications available at Reynoldsclub desk and all present Board mem¬bers, and should be returned fromwhence they came before December 1.Quinn: It's snowing. I want to go home.Aloha and happy TAT's. Lanl.For saleOrder Christmas surprises now. Studentdiscounts on quality high-fidelity com¬ponents from Audio Consultants. SantaClaus, c/o Jean Kwon, Foster 16.Westinghouse refrigerator, 3.1 cubic feetcapacity, seven speeds, perfect workingorder. $45 or best offer. BU 8-1919.New books for sale, reduced rates. Jour¬nal of modern history office, Social Sci¬ences 502.COMO PIZZERIAFree Delivery to V.C. Students on 411 Pizza1520 E. 55 FA 4-5525SMALL SMALLCHEESE 1.15 PEPPER & ONION . 1.30SAUSAGE 1.45 SHRIMP 1.70ANCHOVY 1.45 COMBINATION . .1.75Read the SundayNEW YORK TIMESon Sunday*On sale every Sunday from 3 p.m. to 10 p.m.Daily airmail edition also availablefrom 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. weekdaysWhether you buy the “Times" during the week or onSunday, you help us maintain our Sunday service bypicking it up at the Red Door.SCHNEEMANN’S1328 East 57th StreetChicago 37, III. NO 7-6111 Implications of latke and hamanlashto be discussed at Hanukkah party“The latke vs. the hamantash: the metaphysical, political, historical, anthropological, so¬ciological, etc., implications,” will again be the feature of Hillel foundation’s annual freeHanukkah party, to be held this Thursday at 8 p.m. at the foundation house, 5715 Wood-lawn avenue. - *The symposium, which brings together some of the great UC minds to discuss these twoJewish foods, will include Herman- Finer, professor in the political science department; LouisGottschalk, professor, historydepartment; Gerhard Meyer,associate professor, economics(college); Mark Ashin, assistantprofessor, English (college); andMorris Altman, professor at theCollege of Jewish Studies.The latke, one of the traditionalfoods of Hanukkah, is essentiallya potato pancake. The hamantash,usually eaten on Purim (a fes¬tival celebrated in March), is acomplicated little cake stuffedwith prunes or poppy seeds.Finer stated, “It (the sympos¬ ium) has become the most im¬portant and vivacious tradition oncampus so far as Hillel is con¬cerned. Year after year, we havehad several of the most popularprofessors taking part in debateon the respective merits of thehamantash and the latke, two ofthe most attractive and tastydishes in the Jewish cook book.‘To this debate they bring tobear all their learning, all the ex¬pertness of their respective fieldsof knowledge. There are usually four hours of the heartiest laugh¬ter, responding to the spiciest witon campus. The house iscrammed, and students partici¬pate by asking questions ad¬dressed to the debaters. This isHillel at its most joyous.”Following the discussion, speak¬ers and listeners alike will be pro¬vided with an opportunity to testempirically the efficacy of theirtheories on the subjects of theirconversation. That is, latke andhamantash will be served.I-F council laudsPsi U chapterUC’s Inter-fraternity coun¬cil recently passed a resolu¬tion commending UC’s chapterof Psi Upsilon fraternity forits rushing practices.The resolution, unanimouslypassed by the council, came on theheels of an action by the USNational Student association cen¬suring the depledging of a Chinesestudent by the Psi Upsilon chap¬ter at Northwestern university.The text of the resolution, ac¬cording to Herb Gorr, presidentof I-F council, is: “Inter-frater¬nity council commends Omega(UC) chapter of Psi Upsilon onits non - discriminatory rushing,policies and practices which re¬flect favor on the fraternity sys¬tem at the University of Chicagoas opposed to certain practicesused on other campuses.” Sol Tax, professor of anthropology, is perplexed at Ralph Mar¬cus’ kibitzing at his comments in favor of the latke at last year's“Fatke vs. Hamantash” debate.Tax will be unable to attend this year’s symposium because heis going to Puerto Rico.It is rumoied that he will do extensive research there on theanthropological implications_of the latke and the hamantash andwill give a complete report of his findings at next year’s symposium.MS or PhDPhysicistsChemists- MathematiciansWho have joined the Operations EvaluationGroup of Massachusetts Institute of Technologyhave found that o career in Operations Researchoffers:Challenging ResearchAcademic AtmosphereCompetitive SalariesLiberal Fringe BenefitsPaid Leave For Study or ResearchCampus InterviewsThursday, December 6, 1956Operations Evaluation GroupDivision of Defense LoberotoriesMassachusetts Institute of TechnologySOUTH SHORE DISTRICTNear the I.C, and LakeSEETHESESMART3 and 4BEDROOMSPLIT-LEVELHOMES2 CERAMICTILE BATHSANDTILE KITCHEN18x13DINING ROOMGAS HEAT$21,9001,900$DOWN—TO VETS30-YEAR LOAN4Vz% INTERESTFEATURES:FACE BRICK AND STONEBASEMENT SPACE FORRECREATIONCOPPER AND BIRCHKITCHENOAK FLOORSSIDE DRIVESSUNKEN CARDENJ. E. Merrion’sMarynookIN CHICAGO8571 S. WOODLAWNBA 1-297BES 5-3400 • going homefor Christmas?• ridewanted?• riderswanted?• wantresults?• advertisein the'CLASSIFIEDSSpecial Student RatePUP-TOP BOXFirm to keepcigarettes fromcrushing.No tobacco inyour pocket. Qftl<$pkeHAIR GROOMTONIC IN UNBREAKABLEPLASTIC !Grooms your hair while it treats yourscalp. Controls loose dandruff. 1.00plus lasSHULTON New York • TorontoThis Marlboro is a lot of cigarette. The easy-drawing filter feelsright in your mouth. It works but doesn’t get in the way.You get the man-size flavor of honest tobacco. The Flip-Top Box keepsevery cigarette in good shape and you don’t pay extra for it.{MADE IN RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, PROM A NEW MARLBORO RECIPE}1 . •POPULARPATER PRICEHov. 24, 1956 • C H I C A C 0Many and varied contests openContests and scholarshipsare in the air, and studentswith creative ability can stillcash in on them.First prizes range from$200 in cash to $1,200 inscholarships.MademoiselleDo you have a flair for art? Isdrawing one of your hobbies? Ifso, and you are a woman under26 years old, you are eligible tocompete in Mademoiselle's annualart contest.The contest, which closesMarch 15, 1957, is not a commer¬cial art competition, but a searchfor imaginative, original work inwhatever medium the artistchooses to work. Entrants shouldinterpret the two winning storiesin the 1957 college fiction contestand express their reaction in anovel work of art.One other requirement is thati he contestant submit at leastfive examples of her work, in anymedium — oil, water color, linedrawings, etc.Each of the two winners will re¬ceive $500 for publication of herentries; the closest runners-up re¬ceive honorable mention, andtheir submitted work will be kept<>n file by Mademoiselle for futurecommissions.Judges are Alfred M. Frank¬furter. editor and publisher ofArt News; Dorothy C. Miller, curator of the Museum collectionof the Museum of Modern Arts;and Bradbury Thompson, art di¬rector of Mademoiselle. Furtherdetails may be obtained by writ¬ing: Art Contest, Mademoiselle,575 Madison avenue, New York22, New York.WoolleyFour Harriet Ilale WoolleyScholarships, each carrying a sti¬pend of $1,200, are available tocollege graduates for the studyof art or music in Paris during theacademic year, 1957-58,These grants should be suffi¬cient to cover tuition, room, andboard for the year. Woolley ap¬pointees may apply for Fulbrighttravel grants to cover the cost oftransportation to and from Eu¬rope. Woolley grantees live in theUnited States House (Fondationdes Etats-Unis) of the Paris CiteUniversitaire.To be eligible for a grant, onemust show artistic .or musical ac¬complishment, supported by rec¬ords or photographs; good work¬ing knowledge of French; andgraduation with a high academicstanding.Further information can be ob¬tained in the Maroon office.Gibbs schoolTwo national scholarships forcollege senior girls are offered for1957-58 by the Katherine Gibbsschool. Each scholarship consists offull tuition, $685, for the secre¬tarial training course, plus an ad¬ditional cash award of $500. Thewinner may select any one of thefour Gibbs schools for their train¬ing — Boston, New York, Mont¬clair, or Providence.Each university may recom¬mend two candidates, and eachcandidate must have this officialendorsement.Winners are chosen on the basisof college academic record, per¬sonal and character qualifications,financial need, and potentialitiesfor success in business.Law essayUC law students will have anopportunity this year to competefor prizes of $200 to $1,000 foressays on “disarmament and thelaw.’’ Winner of first prize willbe eligible to compete in the na¬tional competition sponsored by the Institute for International Or¬der, in which winners from nineof the other leading law schoolsof the country will be represented.Rules governing the competi¬tion may be secured from the of¬fice of Edward H. Levi, dean ofthe law school. The essays maydeal with any problem, or seriesof problems, national or interna¬tional, in the field of disarma¬ment.Earl D. Osborn, president ofthe institute, said, in explainingthe contest, “At some time in thefuture the United States and othercountries which are members ofthe United Nations will agree tocontrol of armaments as neces¬sary to the maintenance of peace.When the proper time comes theUnited States must be in a posi¬tion to act decisively. This will re¬quire much preparatory thoughtabout the legal problems in¬volved. The institute is seeking to stim¬ulate oi’iginal thinking on the partof law students, who, in futureyears, may be entrusted with theresponsibilities which the enforce¬ment of peace and disarmamentwill entail.Prix de ParisFour UC students are partici¬pating in the Vogue Prix de Pariscontest. Fourth-year studentsJeanine Johnson, Linda Libera,Barbara McKenna, and Joan Mid-boe are competing for the firstprize of $1,000 in cash and a two-week expense-paid trip to Paris.The top twelve contestants will beawarded jobs on Vogue and asso¬ciated publications.Contestants must submit a 1,500word thesis on one of these sub¬jects: career writing, publishing,advertising, merchandising, ordecorating.Draw 'flag’; win moneyTen dollars is waiting forthe UC student whose designfor a new “logo” for the Chi¬cago Maroon is selected by theMaroon judging staff for use inthe newspaper/The logo, or flag, is the distinc¬tive trademark of a newspaper giving the name of the paper andalways run on the front page.Unlike most metropolitan dailiesand other college newspapers, theMaroon has a “floating" logo, thatis, one which has no specific posi¬tion on the front page.The type of design sought inOffer Oslo coursesThe summer school of the University of Oslo announcesthat American students interested in attending the Oslo ses¬sion should apply soon. The session, which will be held from.Inly 6 to August 16, will be open to all students who havecompleted their freshman *i/y\ cfucaao11 laroon this contest is one which will har¬monize with the “face-lifting”which the Maroon is now under¬going, typographically speaking.“UC’s greatest newspaper" ispresently shifting to a more mod¬ern typographical style in keepingwith its tabloid size, and “hori¬zontal" makeup. The new logoshould be modern, bold, andshould incorporate the seal of theUniversity, if possible.Details of the contest are avail¬able in the Maroon offices in IdaNoyes. Entries must be submittedbefore 6 p.m. Friday, December14.year of college.The summer school courses,which are all in English, will in¬clude “A general survey of Nor¬wegian culture”; “The humanitiesand social studies”; "Educationalsystem in Norway”; graduatecourses in Norwegian education;"Literature a n d Society” and“Physical education in Scandina¬via.”Also to be given, for businessmeh and students of internationaltrade, is "The Industries of Nor¬way,” which includes three weeksin Oslo and three weeks travel inNorway visiting industrial plants.Six semester-hours’ credits mayhe earned in the six weeks’ course.The group will leave New York on the SS Stavangerfjord June 26,1957. For information, cataloguesand preliminary application mate¬rial contact Oslo summer schooladmissions office, c/o St. Olaf col¬lege, Northfield, Minnesota. Shown here in mi natureare the last two flags usedby the Maroon. The “logo”above was instituted No¬vember 8, 1955, replacingthe flag on the right whichhad been used since 1947.Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery ServiceSmall Cheese .... 95cSmalt Sausage . $1.15NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063 WHY GO DOWNTOWN :For Your Ivy League iHaberdashery Cr Clothing ♦WE HAVE THE LATEST AND JWE'RE CLOSE AT HAND ♦TRY US XShort or Tall . . . We Fit All £Student Discount £LEVITT & SON \a shop for the particular titan X1369 East 63rd Street MUseum 4-4466 X♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦C O D. ORDERS ACCEPTEDSPECIAL STOCKING- 0FFEP! University Buying ServiceFurniture - Lamps - TV - RadiosPhonos - Electrical Appliances - Lionelturn ft ^ - Personnel - Student DisvonntsHERMANS* “for over 'lit years'*2310 E. 71st St, Ml 3-6700Free gift catalog will he sent on requestEUROPE20 Countries, 70 Doys, $1305Summer '57—shorter trip optionalEurope for Collegians255 Sequoia, Pasadena, CaliforniaThere's No Sale Like44 holesaleDear 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 ot Wholesale PricesCome toSamuel Murrow &Company(In the heart of theWholesale Market)Daily 9 to 5:30 Saturdays 9 to 3.30318 W. Adams St. Suite 401 that's Right Ladies! With Every iTwo Pair You Get Two Spares.. VvHere’s a rare opportunity to get a real long-lasting supply of fine^nylon hosiery for far less than you ever imagined! A regular $1.25value for only $1.00 —plus a spare. When you buy this package oftwo pairs and two spares, you are actually getting three pairs of finenylon hose.’. Take advantage of tins offer NOW. ^ Clip and mail thecoupon below for fast delivery.*-• JS‘ >,* - * -'JjfejfcfcT- *DENISE HOSIERY/tT BOX 227, READING, PA.Please send me two pairs and two spares of Denise Hosiery.. 1 Tor this 1 am enclosing $2 00/\: Address..t City —State Size LengthBusiness Sheer QDress Sheer Q□ Beige □ TaupeDENISE HOSIERY .:. BOX 227, READING, PA. IT S FOR REAL! by Chester FieldPHILOSOPHY FOR TODAY“You ask me why I smile,” he said,“When H-Bombs hang above my head,My car’s a wreck ... my gal has fledMy money’s gone . .. I’m in the red . .Why do I smile? .. . You ask me why?CHESTERFIELDS! THEY SATISFY!”MORAL: Everything looks bright withyour Chesterfield alight! Cheer upevery smoking moment with morereal flavor, more real enjoyment.Smile, friend . .. with the smoothest-testing smoke today, packed moresmoothly by ACCU* RAY!Like your pleasure hegf.. •Smoko for root •.. smoko Chesterfield 1O AII y«n Totaico CofiMkl ifiMliWINSTON is always good company !■ Here’s a cigarette you and your date canget together on! Winston flavor is rich,full — the way you like it. And the one and only Winston filter does its job so wellthe flavor really comes through! For finerfilter smoking, make a date with Winston!Switch to WINSTON America's best-selling, best-tasting -filter cigarette!✓ vOR... A. SHORT HISTORYOF* THE SHORT BEEROnce upon a time in a far off country called “Ye OldeNewe Yorke,” a traveling Knight riding on a St.Bernard, knocked on a farmer’s door and asked if hecould stay the night. “You’re faded, Mac,’’ said the farmer in his quaintNew England parlance, “I wouldn’t put a Knight outon a Dog like tlris. I’ll even have my daughter rustleus up a pair of small beers.”Now if any reader has the idea that this is going to beone of those funnies about the farmer’s daughter, he’sright. Please read on—and pay attention. We may askquestions later.“Here are the small beers, Papa,” said Tondelayo,stealing a shy glance at the Knight. She wasn’t muchon looks, but on the other hand she had a figure likea million bucks, all wrinkled and green.“A delicious brew,” said our hero, quaffing it in onelong gurgle, “could I encore it... a short small beerperhaps?”The farmer laughed uproariously at the little mot ofhis guest.“A short, small beer,” he cried, “by George, somedayyou’ll be famous for that remark!”“You bore me, Dad,” said the traveler. “The cat Iwant to meet is the local talent that brewed this beer.”“Why, I did,” said Tondelayo, “would you like to seemy brewery?”So she took him out to the brew house, opened herhops chest and out hopped her fairy godmother, whowaggled her wonder stick, turned Tondelayo into the1708 version of Marilyn, and then disappeared in acloud of dust with a hearty “Hi Ho Uranium.” There¬upon the traveling knight revealed himself as reallybeing the president of the Brewmeisters local 805 doinga little incognito market research. He was no cube, sohe put Tondelayo under ball and chain contract, sether up in business, and together they founded one ofthe biggest families and breweries in New England, aswell as that noble institution “the short beer.”moral: The quantity of the beer depends on the size of theglass. The quality depends on the brand... and that's a storythat always ends happily with Budweiser in hand,IAGER BEER ,ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • OT. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELESNor. 24,1956 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11UT directors castingfor 'Tonight at 8:30’Think there’s anything missing froth Culture Vulture? If you’d like a notice of some¬thing as yet overlooked to appear in the Maroon’s culture column, send a notice tothe culture editor by next Monday. University Theatre will hold tryouts for its forthcomingJanuary production of one-acters, originals, and experimentalplays Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of next week at 7:30p.m. in the Reynolds club theater.Called Tonight at 8:30, theseries will be performed for Production work and rehearsalsIf the Culture Vulture resem¬bles an underweight turkey thisweek, this is part of the explana¬tion for his appearance on Satur¬day instead of the day after theone that might have caused thetransformation. He’s still a livingbeing. Near campus . . .Tonight, tomorrow and Monday, theHyde Park theater features John Hus¬ton’s adaptation of Herman Melville’sMoby Dick, starring Gregory Peck andOrson Welles, and To Have and HaveNot, based on Hemingway’s story andstarring Humphrey Bogart. Prom Tues¬day to Thursday there’ll be “ThePrisoner, starring Alec Gutness andCamille, with Greta Garbo.On campus . . .Tonight at 8 pm go to Goodspeed hallfor a pre-holiday party. TTie occasion Isthe opening of the Renaissance society’seleventh annual exhibit of "contempor¬ary art for young collectors.” Wherecould anybody get hold of a Picassothumbprint for between $5 and $60?The Vulture tip Is that there will pro¬bably be either a Picasso poster or anetching, and there may be some signedRoualts on exhibit and for sale. Getthere early to avoid being trampled bythe crowd of students, ‘‘younger facultymembers” and art collectors outsidethe university community expected tothrong to the society’s exhibit openingtonight.Don't forget Blackfrians tryouts thisMonday, Tuesday and Wednesday.They'll be In Ida Noyes starting at 7Monday night, 1 Tuesday afternoon,and 9:30 Wednesday morning. StudentsInterested In any phase of the produc¬tion of an original musical comedy inconjunction with the Festival of theArts next spring will be more than wel¬come.Next Friday, November 30—RuthDraper, famed dramatic actress, willappear at Mandel under the auspice ofthe William Vaughan Moody founda¬tion. Miss Draper’s appearance will bethe 200th sponsored by the foundationsince the series began.Next University concert will be InMandel hall December 7. Joseph Eger,French hornlst and his players (‘cella,piano and violin) will play the Brahmstrio for piano, violin and horn andother pieces from a seldom-performedrepertoire. Students at Aspen In recentsummers may remember Joe Eger asthe skinniest man alive, but reviewersare unanimous In praising him as oneof the finest horn players of our time.As usual, the concert will be at 8:30and single admission costs $1.50. Thefollowing week Fernando Valenti, harp¬sichordist, will offer calm release fromtension to students completing quarter¬lies. Downtown . . .An exhibit of paintings and drawingsby Paul Klee will be shown at the Artsclub, 109 East East Ontario street, toDecember 6. Klee’s show, which Includespaintings that Hum 1 students may notbelieve existed because they have nopeople with big heads drawn with thinlines depicted in them, is grand! TheArts club Is open 9:30 to 5:30 daily.Next exhibit at the club will featuresome extremely abstract paintings by aman hailed in some quarters as theworld’s greatest architect, Le Corbusier.Speaking of architecture, but preced¬ing the man more universally called‘‘world’s greatest,” the Louis Sullivanexhibit at the Art Institute ends De¬cember 2nd. Bring your ID card for freeadmission to the institute.Desire Under the Elms, Eugene O’Neildrama, is still running at the Stude-baker theater. Tickets for various per¬formances range In price from $1.85 to$4 50, with some student discounts. Cur¬tain at 8:30 except Tuesday and Sun¬ day at 7 pm and 3 pm matinees Satur¬day and Sunday.The Chicago Chamber orchestra willplay in the Art Institute tomorrow aft¬ernoon at 3:30 pm. The performancewill be free, and the orchestra will playa Vivaldi concerto for four violins, Gos-sec’s symphony In G, and Bach SuiteNo. 1 1 nits second performance thisfall. The group, directed by Dieter Ko-ber. Is an outgrowth of a former cam¬pus musical organization, the. CollegiateSymphonletta. On December 9, thegroup will have Danish singer AkselShiotz as soloist.Chicago symphony programs this weekreach toward antiquity. There’s no Sat¬urday night concert this week, but nextSaturday Izler Solomon returns to theOrchestra hall podium to direct Haydn’soverture to "The Uninhabited Island”;Schumann’s a minor piano concerto,with Vera Franceshl as soloist; Beetho¬ven’s First symphony, and (for Hum 1students) Brahms’ Variations on atheme by Haydn.This Tuesday at 2 pm Fritz Reinerwill direct and Isaac Stern will beviolin soloist In a program consistingof Weber's "Abu Hassan” overture, theWienawski second concerto for violinand orchestra, and Mozart’s “Posthorn”serenade for strings, wind and tympanl.The concerts next Thursday at 8:15and Friday at 2 pm will be directed byFritz Reiner. Elizabeth Scwarzkopf willbe soloist In arias by Weber and Wolf,while the orchestra will play Mozaft’s“Magic Flute” overture, Schumann’sthird symphony, and Strauss’ “Emper¬or” waltzes. three consecutive weekends Janu- will start this week, althoughary 11-13,18-20 and 25-27. most of the intensive work will beParticipation in Tonight at 8:30 done after the Christmas holi-is open to all students on a com- days.petitive tryout basis, and the en- Singers and dancers will be au-tire production is student-directed, ditioned Wednesday evening andTechnical workers may either are requested to bring some ma-come to the tryouts or contact terial with them, while actors andUT directors Marvin Phillips or actresses interested in the otherRichard d’Anjou at the theatre plays may come either Monday oroffice, Reynolds club 303, exten- Tuesday, with or without pre-sion 1062. pared material.Exhibit opens at Goodspeed hallA pre-holiday party willopen the 11th annual exhibi¬tion by the Renaissance soci-iety of “contemparary art foryoung collectors” in Goodspeedhall this evening at 8.The exhibition, which will beopen from nine to five daily andone to five on Saturdays, will rununtil December 18.Each year the UC Renaissancesociety has offered what it termsthe largest and most varied dis¬ play of contemporary works inpainting, small sculpture, printsand drawings in the Chicago area.Hans Arp, Max Beckman, PabloPicasso, Marx Chagall, Joan Mire,and George Grozs. An added at¬traction will be a group of Eski¬mo wood carvings.Prices range from $5 to $60,with the purpose of the exhibitionbeing to make available thewidest possible selection of ori¬ginal art to people of modestmeans.PLUS QUUNE FORTUNE ...Une rente de la Sun Life est plus precieusequ’une fortune. Une fortune peut etre dilapi-dee ou perdue par suite de placements mala-vises, mais les cheques de rente seront toujoursles memes et vous les recevrez tant que vousvivrez.Preparez-vous une retraite assuree.RALPH J. WOOD, JR., '481 N. LaSalle Chicago 2, IllinoisFR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855RepresentativeSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAThe CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 W 9 cl Qofe,.Get Them Hot atNIGKYSPIZZERIA1235 E. 55th ©toRELIANCE CAMERA APHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63 rd St.BU 8-6040Need a ride homeat Christmas time?Try theChicago MaroonCLASSIFIEDSTheDisc1367 E. 57th St.RECORD OF THEWEEKLeonard Bernstein:"What Is Jazz?"CL 919 $3.19 hyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student rate 50c all performancesStarting Fri., Nov. 23 thru Mon., Nov. 26Four days onlyJOHN HUSTON'S masterly adaptation ofHERMAN uuahi#MELVILLE'S MOBY DICK'GREGORY PECK as CAPTAIN AHAB ... LEO GENN as STARBUCKORSON WELLES as FATHER MAPPLE . . .RICHARD BASEHART as ISHMAEL"Perhaps the Best Picture of the Year!"—Time Mag.— and —A First Reshowing of An All-Time BestHumphrey Bogart in Ernest Hemingway'sTO HAVE AND HAVE NOT"it*Starting Tues., Nov. 27 thru Thurs., Nov. 29Three Days Only!Request Repeat Performance!Alec Guinness os "THE PRISONER"*— and —Greta Garbo as "CAMILLE'’’‘NOW . . . see it agoin or see at last! ... in the context of today'sheadlines . . . the incredible dracatic story of the "Cardinal" behindthe Iron Curtain.Many current favorites in stock. Most others availablein 1 day.Gift wrapping and mailing service at no extra charge.Of course. 'Most everyone does —often. Because a few moments overice-cold Coca-Cola refresh you so.It’s sparkling with natural goodness,pure and wholesome — andnaturally friendly to your figure.Feel like having a Coke?BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA COLA COMPANY BYThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.•Coke” i» a registered trade-mark. © 1«A THE COCA-COLA COMPANY •-^5CHRISTMASSHOPPINGMADE EASY!Chicago's most complete book service is no fartherthan the nearest telephone.Call NOrmal 7-6111. Free delivery.II328 East 57th StreetChicago 37, III.i- : : """ 1i tn 12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 24, 1956Coleman sets a recordin pre-Olympic two-mile Poor support, lack of depthhandicap UC's soccer teamPhil Coleman of the UC Track club ran the fastest two-mileever run by an American, in a pre-Olympic meet in Geelong,Australia, last week. . .His time of 8:47.0 is the eighth best ever recorded and placeshim in serious contention for It is not quite accurate to say that UC’s soccer team has had an altogether unsuccessfulseason. Its five losses in conference play, which left Chicago in the league cellar, are tosome extent offset by four wins and a tie in non-conference matches. None of these wins,however, were achieved over opponents of collegiate caliber.One does not have to look very hard to find good,reasons for this showing. In the firstplace, the academic year at UC begins two or throe weeks later than at the other schoolsin the league. That this was athe 3,000 meter steeplechaseis the Olympics later this month.The 3.000 meter steeplechase isconsidered as roughly equivalentto the two-mile. Although thesteeplechase is shorter, it includes28 evenly spaced three-foot hur¬dles and seven water jumps.The next best American per¬formance was by Horace Ashen-feller, who ran 8:49.0 in theCompton relays in 1955. Ashen-feller’s time is the tenth best re¬corded.Coleman qualified for the USOlympic team on June 30 of this year by winning the 3,000 metersteeplechase in the Olympic try¬out meet in Los Angeles, Cali¬fornio.On that occasion he set anAmerican record in the steeple¬chase by running it in 9:00.3.Coleman is a graduate of South¬ern Illinois university, and isstudying English at the Univer¬sity of Illinois, where he holds anassistanship. He ran for^the FortLeonard Wood track team whilein the armed forces, and has beenaffilated with the UC track clubever since. He is married and livesUrbana.m<Just shows what a good pacer will do for a man.Baseball hopefuls can jointeam Tuesday in BartlettCoach Kyle Anderson announced that a meeting will beheld at 4 p.m. Tuesday, in the trophy room of Bartlett gym¬nasium, for all students interested in the baseball team.The purpose of this meeting is to discuss plans, schedule,and training information. All factor is shown in the steadydecline, as the season Yvoje on,in the goals per game scoredagainst the Maroons.Chicago’s stiff academic re¬quirements, moreover, preventsome members of the squad frompracticing as lohg and as fre¬quently as they would like.These are matters one can donothing about. There are certainshortcomings, however, which arenot in the nature of things, andwhich could conceivably be rem¬edied or alleviated. Most strikingis the complete lack of support•for the soccer team on the part ofthe student body. On the road, theteam frequently plays to largecrowds: five hundred watched atPurdue, two hundred at Wheaton,and four or five hundred last yearat Indiana. By contrast, the aver¬age attendance at Stagg field thisseason hovered around ten. It isidle to pretend that the presenceof a group of enthusiastic rooterswould have catapulted the Ma¬roons into the league champion¬ship, but a few healthy cheers dowonders for team morals, andagainst Wheaton and Indiana theymight have made all the differ¬ence.A more technical point, and onewhich caused some dissent on theteam during the season, was thestyle of defense used by coach Al¬var Hermanson. Briefly, he hasthe fullbacks cover the opposingwing forwards, while the half¬backs cover the opposing insideforwards. This has consistentlyled to the drawing a*vay, towardthe sidelines, of the fullbacks.The half backs are therefore forced to run back constantly toproject the goal, or (as has moreoften been the easel the middle isleft unprotected for the sake ofbeing able to mount a quick scor¬ing threat,.The alternative defense,' whichis used by most teams, has thefullbacks covering the inside for¬wards. This tends to prevent thequick break through the middleon which many goals were scoredagainst the Maroons.In summing up, it should benoted that the team, offensivelyat least, has improved over the1955 squad. It is still sorely lack¬ ing in depth, however, and thismay be accentuated next year, asseveral veterans will not be re¬turning.— Ralph HirschMidwest ConferenceFinal StandingsW L TIllinois (UIC) 4 0 1Purdue 3 0 2Wheaton 2 1 2Earlham 2 2 1Indiana 1 4 0Chicago 0 5 0Harriers end season wellUC’s varsity cross country team wound up their seasonwith an overwhelming victory over Bradley university, lastSaturday at Washington park. The score of the meet wasChicago 19, Bradley 42.This victory climaxed avery successful season for theMaroon harriers in which theywon ten and lost only two tilts.Art Omohundro and ChuckRhyne again took the first twoplaces as they have been doingalmost throughout the season.Other Chicago men who scoredwere: Arne Richards, fourth; Ivan Carlson, fifth; Dave Houk,seventh; Bill Krol, eighth; Martin“Ned” Price, ninth; Hosea Martin,eleventh; and Lew Robertson,twelfth.Next meet for the harriers isthe Central AAU 5,000 meterchampionship, which will be heldtoday at the Waveland park golfcourse.a/te PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55Hi STREET MIDWAY 3-4433students, regardless of year ordivision, who have not alreadyused up their eligibility eitherhere or elsewhere, can competeon the varsity team.A baseball “class” will start onJanuary 14, In the Fieldhouse, forvarsity candidates who wish tobrush up on the fundamentalsof the game or get into shape forthe season.Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372DUNCANSTATIONERY1313 E. 5$ MY 3-4111Ye.vf Deer (• Peii OfficeCOMPLETE LINE OFART and MECHANICALDRAWING MATERIALSPERSONALIZEDXMAS CARDS36-HOUR SERVICEQifts for Allfrom *1 upOpen Wed. fir Fri. Eves.NSA DISCOUNT Why Not Study In Mexico?MEXICO CITY COLLEGEDistinguished Faculty — Ideal ClimateThe only school in continental Latin America offeringthe American B.A. and M.A. degrees.B A. DEGREES— Motors in Anthropology, Applied Arts, ArtHistory, Business Administration (ForeignTrade or Accounting), Creative Writing,Economics, Education, English, HispanicLanguages and Literatures, History, Inter¬national Relations, Journalism, Latin Ameri¬can Studies, Philosophy, Physical Sciences,PsychologyBACHELOR OF FINE ARTSPROGRAM OF ENGINEERING STUDIESM.A. DEGREES—Majors in Anthropology, Business Adminis¬tration, Creative Writing, Economics, His¬panic Languages and Literatures, History,International Relations, Latin AmericanStudiesMASTER OF FINE ARTSApproved for VeteransQUARTERS REGIN:January 3 — March 35 — June 11Write ter Catalog: ^DEAN OF ADMISSIONSMexico City College, Km. 16, Carretero Mexico-TolucoMexico 10, D.F. University of CaliforniaRadiation LaboratoryPLACEMENT INTERVIEWSTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29Electronic Engineers • Mechanical EngineersMetallurgists • PhysicistsChemists and Chemical EngineersMathematiciansContact Vocational Guidance fir Placementtoday for appointmentAt UCRL, there are unique opportunities to workwith some of America’s outstanding leaders in nuclearresearch and to utilize the most expansive facilitiesin this field. Here, new ideas and techniques aretraditional and there is the opportunity to do whathas never been done before.Plan now to meet with UCRL’s representatives.They will give you full details on opportunities inyour field and discuss future openings at the Labora¬tory’s Livermore and Berkeley sites in NorthernCalifornia’s San Francisco Bay Area.Current UCRL projects include iNuclear Weapons, Nuclear Rocket Propulsion,Controlled Thermonuclear Energy, Particle Accelerators,,High-Speed Digital Computers, Critical Assemblyand Reactor Research—\—- L mmsm