Vol. 65, No.SCof facultyhw ?• . ]QKV artiversity of Chicago, Friday, February 1957cts additionadministration Justice Burton hereto lecture TuesdayThe Honorable Harold H. Burton, associate justice of theSupreme Court of the United States, will give a lecture oncampus Tuesday.The lecture, titled “The independence and continuity of theSupreme Court of the United States,” is sponsored by the Lawschool. It will be at 8:30 pm in Breasted hall of the Orientalinstitute.Justice Burton’s lecture climaxes a two-day visit to theLaw school. During his visit, he will meet with students andfaculty members, and will sit in on classes in criminal andconstitutional law.A member of the Supreme Court since 1945, Justice Burtonis a former mayor of Cleveland. He also served as US senatorfrom Ohio.The lecture is open to the public without charge.WUCB marathonby Norman LewakProposed addition of administration and faculty members to Student Government to forma “University Government” was rejected last night at a meeting of the commission on SG. •The commission, however, decided to investigate further some of the other provisions of on airwavesthe proposal, reported in last week s Maroon: adding representatives of the living groupsand perhaps other student organizations to the Government; gaining jurisdiction over thecalendaring of social events; having a voice in the formulation of disciplinary statutes; de¬ciding on the budgets of stu¬dent organizations; extendingjurisdiction of the court to allstudent organizations.Sylvia Thompson, commissionChairman said, however, that thiswas a straw vote and nothing isfinal until the report is written.The report is due at the next SGmeeting.• The pros and cons of the pro¬posal had been outlined fully dur¬ing the open hearing of the com¬mission on Tuesday. Since onlypeople connected (directly or in¬directly) with the commissioncame to the rpeeting, the hearingbecame an informal commissionmeeting.Don Miller, SG president, andSylvia Thompson, chairman ofthe commission, outlined the prosand cons of the proposal. It waspointed out that the other partsof the proposal were not neces¬sarily contingent on the additionof faculty and administrationmembers to the Government. Thedisciplinary statutes for examplecould become analagous to theStudent Code, whose provisionsare adopted jointly by the admin¬istration and SG. For this reason,the pros and cons discussed werethose relating to addition of fac¬ ulty and administration repre¬sentatives.Arguments in fovar of this partof the proposal included:• Increased communication withthe faculty and administration.• Increased prestige of the Gov¬ernment.• Increased decorum of the plen¬ary sessions.• Increased contacts, thus aiding,for example, the obtaining ofwell known speakers for SGfunctions.Arguments against included:• Potential loss of autonomy asthe student representativeswould tend to be swayed (and,thus “controlled”) by the fac¬ulty and administration mem¬bers.• Probable lack of interest onthe part of the faculty.An ex-Government member, EliStein (ISLl, presented what hefell would be the position of SGmembers of the past. He said hewas opposed to the proposed ad¬dition of faculty and administra¬tion as it w’ould destroy what hefelt were the two basic principlesof SG: student self-governmentand the party system.He emphasized that he did notdistrust the administration, butChoose l-C kingPictured above are NormPhelps and John DeZauche,two of the six good-looking,poised, charming young men whoassembled in Ida Noyes libraryWednesday afternoon. One of thesix was unanimously judged kingof Interclub Ball by R. WendellHarrison, UC vice-president, Mrs.McCrea Hazlett, and Mrs. JohnNethcrton.Who the sovereign is nobodyelse will know until Mrs. RobertM. Strozier crowns His Majestyat the gala formal dance tomor-1** - I: .. ' M ii * . was for self-government for itsown sake. The party system, hecontinued, is needed if SG is toaccomplish anything. Only by theunity offered by the party organ¬ization could such past programsas the Michigan pirn been ac¬complished. Starting at 8 tonight, WUCB’s sixth annual marathon wiil go onthe air, in an effort to raise $500 for the Frankfurt student exchange,as well as to drive participants to exhaustion.Lasting for 24 hours, the event will kick off a week long fund rais¬ing drive by Student Government to aid in the financing of theexchange.The marathon will be held in Burton lounge, In the Burton-Judsoncourts. Everybody has been invited to come and try to outlast thestaff members.Pledges may be phoned in at any time during the marathoncalling B-J and asking for WUCB. byNorgren to beat Alumni Day honoredluncheonIn honor of Nelson Norgrer, outsanding veteran athlete and coach on the campus for somany years, tomorrow’s Alumni Day will also be designated Norgren Day.A luncheon will be held in the Quadrangle Club tomorrow noon, where about 200 of hisfriends and teammates will discuss times gone by. ThenthecrewwilltrekouttoFieldhou.sewhere the Varsity basketball squad will take on the alumni in their annual game. No ad¬mission will be charged.Norgren, who will be retir¬ing this year after coachingthe basketball team since1921, was one of the greatest ath¬letes in Maroon history. He wasone of only two men to win 12Major C letters in three years ofcompetition, doing the trick infootball, baseball, track, and bas¬ketball.Norgren captained and playedright halfback on the Chicagofootball team of 1913, which wentundefeated and untied. Norgrenmade Fielding Yost’s All-Ameri¬can team of that year.The Cap and Gown of 1914 hadthis to say about him: “In the vic¬tory of the team no one stood outas prominently or deserves morecredit than Captain Nelson Nor¬gren. He was not only the bestpunter and most consistentground-gainer in the conference,but he w’as also the leader of hismen, giving them at all times anideal of pluck and grit. His workreceived universal recognition.”In 1922, the Cap and Gown de¬ scribed Norgren: “As an athleteMr. Norgren was in his day whatis called in literary circles theberries. He was one of the placid,not the excitable variety of sports¬man. He never lost his head, nev¬er lost his temper, never lost hisnerve. Nobody could annoy himand nobody could shake him off.”After his graduation, Norgrencoached at the University ofUtah; during World War I hejoined the air force when it wasstill in its infancy. After the warhe returned to Chicago as one ofAmos Alonzo Stagg’s assistants.Stagg coached all the athleticteams at the time, if one canimagine it, but in 1921 the GrandOld Man unbent and Norgren be¬came coach of the basketballteam. He has coached the squadever since, except for time off inthe air force again during WorldWar II.You have to go back to the 1923-24 season to find a Maroon cham¬pionship in basketball, but Nor¬gren won the respect of opposing Nelson Norgrencoaches for getting what he couldout of Chicago’s material. Chica¬go stayed in the Western confer¬ence till 1946, although they wereconsistently outclassed from thethirties on. This season figures toend no better than usual, butwhen Norgren departs he willhave the good wishes and affec¬tion of all who have known him.row night.The candidates and the wom¬en’s clubs they represent were:John Deauche III, Wyvern; JohnJuricek, Delta Sigma: Bill Mur¬ray, Sigma; Norman Phelps, Mor¬tar-board; Dave Zimberoff, Eso¬teric; and Dick Zimmerman,Quadranglers.The affair will take place atthe Del Prado Hotel from 9:30 to12:30. Ralph Berger’s band willprovide the music. Part of theproceeds are going to the DaveProchaska memorial loan fund.Gag issue conning!It’s coming!It’s almost here!!The annual gag issue of “UC’s greatest newspaper” — theChicago Maroon — will hit the stands on Monday, February 11.Chock full of fun and frolic to appeal to the most broad¬minded students, the annual humor issue will be a special Mon¬day supplement for the campus’ reading pleasure.According to a Maroon editor: “We’re really going to pullthe plugs out on this one and show what college humor cando at its best and more virile. We think the campus has grownup in the last few years to the point where ‘full-blooded’ humorcan be accepted as such.” 110 mid-year entrants due todayApproximately 110 mid¬year entrants are expected toarrive on campus today andimmediately begin their weeklong process of indoctrination,courtesy of Orientation board.At an “attendance required”meeting on Saturday morning, tobe presided over by Janice HubkaHenson, chairman of O-board, theentering students will be official¬ly introduced to the University.Addresses of welcome will bepresented by Dean of StudentsRobert M. Strozier, Dean of theCollege Robert Streeter, and Deanof Students in the College Mc¬Crea Hazlett. To make the newstudents feel really at home, thedelight of Orientation week, place¬ment tests, will be explained byKnox Hill, acting College exam¬iner.Tours of the campus led by O-board members will follow Satur¬day morning’s meeting.Thursday evening, at StudentGovernment’s semi-annual activi- by Rochelle Dubnowties night in Ida Noyes hall, newstudents will have the opportun¬ity to meet the leaders of studentorganizations and to join thoseactivities in which they are par¬ticularly interested.One of the major attractions ofactivities night is expected to bethe all-student variety showto be presented at 9 pm in the IdaNoyes gymnasium.University Theatre will presentexcerpts from Pheasant UnderGlass, by John Meyer. The enter¬ing students will be introduced toChicago style debate by StudentForum. Fashioned after the Eng¬lish style, Chicago-style debate al¬lows the audience to interfere andinterpose comments, objectionsand squashy projectiles, if so de¬sired.The Folklore society, Jazz cluband Country dancers will per¬form, also.New students will meet Assist¬ant Dean of students Ruth O.McCarn and Director of student housing Allen Austill at a meet¬ing next Friday, after which thestudents will assemble in smallgroups for advisory conferences.Each discussion will be led by afaculty advisor and a member ofO-board.And on Monday, February 11,just what everyone’s been waitingfor . . . first meetings of midyearclasses in the college.Take pics nowPhotos, graduate and under-grad, are to be taken for Capand Gown, UC yearbook, bythe Louise Barker studios, 1457East 57th street, now throughTuesday. Twelve wallet • sizephotos, plus one for the year¬book, are available for the sit¬ting fee of $3.50. Appointmentsmay be made by calling thestudio, BU 8 0876.IHHIf '* ||§ i \ * •’ii I 3 te M »' fey; »f0 i t-v !*•?*,,* ?If 8 pm, Quaker discussibnpStey.e C.xiy. seciejary ;il.a,w lerture, <v‘;The •Plftfcp^deiioe ; and ;)‘n."'•>/ Ami rji-.ni section'. AKSC. 7 80 pm. eontmirtv of tl.t »u,.iime com t of 1id . Bob hpme;-6f' pr<>f,Gi!!>('rt W;!vi.tatiOIi .. * I'-Sf . i ,0 lOnV roin t'-a>. or; i ' “ ' “it 'Gate' bark isupper 6 'pin; <Ju.ik’v . o', . Id . H It.n'.or.. 8 ;3i) pin. -Breasted lval^gg^30 pm,; 5615 Woodlawn) ’ ; ‘ Canterbury l o rturr; ' V/„.U ,„r. "... .»t - Canterbury weekly, supper, 6 pm, 5540 church ,in rapidly, expanding':c6tomuife|f#wi ekly, Woodlawn; 50 ooim.s: t ! , iViuos. ' Roy ; Ralph Deppen, ; canon; r<’, Student Representative parly, caucus. •. ,mlsstoner. Chicago dicx-ese. 8:30 pm;7:30 pm, Ida Noyes. - Brent house, 5510 Woodlawn.Musical society, 8 pm, Ida Noyes. rSi^S; Monday 4 February Wednesday 6 February6 / ._ - f FTF worship, Philip A Anderson. CTS 's» Bus service, -7 .30 - 10 »lm, 3.30-11 .3v pm., jon,: Xf • ttuHnnlc 11 -7 A afrt 'Rrtfi/i . • • '. Bond M-F. begins 59th Stony Island-Cot- J dean .of students, IJ 30 am. Bond.ids, 35 • tage Grovfe, returns >57111/ Cottage;Stony, 15 minutes, tickets only, 5 wr. luncheon-discussion, w eekly, Ida;10 *m, cents, monthly pass $2 any number Noyes. ,, .... V, „ . ritiesg available Int house, Reynolds SG (light to Europe; meeting, «Q1- inter-Neglect or reading. club. estc-d, 5 pm, Ida Noyes SG office. V "rrZirMi ' raP V Colony .club, i :3<Fpm; Ida Noyejfc; . f; Orchestra Comediae-Musicalis reheai-sal,'English prof Rob- Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity - 30 weekly, Mandel. ' ^ . f vi-JU.JO 8 pm, Ida Novos. .;t-: •• * . .Film: Executive Suite, 7 and 9 pm, Int Archaeology club, 1st and 3rd weeks ofrvice) house' 45 cents , • •» « month. 8 pm, Ida Noyes. , .visit- _ nouse, » cents. ^ - * League for^Civil Liberties, -‘.‘Some caseslock- TnaerfAu C Fskrimru that have Interested me, with partlcu-I USSOOy J reoruory lar reference .'to,,- Rosenberg■-.jfktbell.;i pm, Charles Winfield Biirbacli; 6; months . case.” prof ! Malcolm P Sharp, 8 pm,old, 1.58 amy l *«? -* s Ida'.Noyes east‘lounge; ., * , ; , %i. . Maroon staff, 3:30 pm. Ida Noyes. ' Lecture, "Dead, sea scroll research andrkerk TV; broadcast, •‘■Words , and 'Music.'*- - discoveries In Jordan in 1956,”: Ulus- - - -pper, -musical expression of ;1 d c a s and ' trated, OT - prof Frank M Cross "Jr , ; V niversit;awn." moods. Schubert. Debussy. I-mbrie; V McCormick: Theolpg Sem, 8:30 pm,ailty, 1, college .hum Instructor Jeanne,-Bam- vi Breasted'hall; ’ ' * . , «justice H.ir- f oninmni. ations discussion, • H -■.yeasted hall. -of segregation by-southern pr»-s- $S&?e«T-Work of’the.** sl4>r»ntzen^PhD thesis,-’prof Jan ■ #' 1 '''^oiman^Natlonalsv’oplnlonlSresearchS^'m t€r’ *u welcorrL«- 7 30 pm Soe fLjrStudent. Government Activities \i hr:JMlda Noyes. !f*| -ETK discussion; “The, mission' to ihfflP8 pm,;, home,-of Dr Oleenhoiis! ^oS. -Woodlawn1., “ " 4 ^ V S,TV program;;;?iWal1rsystray8 an d?ii;.t>ni^a',v rnyfflns;;’ '.•humanitarianhomeless chKdren In cities InWthsS-' -1800 s, and Charles Lorlng Brace■«',founder NY 'children’s aid Societ'v-’l^?saprof ; R''“Richard -Wohl, Everybodv-iw -,p-America, ®:30,:i>m,.channel-■'llFndoy. ’8 rebrua ry ** |-O-lmard ,tea.; 4-,pm, Ida Noyes 'iP «>Doe Film: Sunrise, series ticket yon;.50,12nd Off*'* In serles,#i: 15 :an’8?»'4i.©j#';1;cctureV\-/Science;:flc'tlon.:-as-:a6claK'e'ri#f^M;: ''hsmvSyfRpbertKyAyjHe lrilelilj ywrllr r i. i;DooriInto;Surhmer;i'SF'''serle6; 7'30 iVih^@LaSalle^ | ’rs a, con?"t* TrI° D1 CamerS Ji;I^avid;.G!ax.er; .clarinet,? Aurora''< ellO;;Joel:Rosen ptano:- Weber (; i, ,| -y; •lhtp-.-.Concertantev Beethoven ! ] nr ' » fltvt, Bj^hms.’Trio’iA^mlnor. D bnsi'c'S#f*^V^r%«Jv<>nata3yCeno,'^ah8r^;BrajdJ6;. 8 3»^pto#’IvlurKeran lecture, “Far; Eastern back-;. >unaay i ? reDruary. - gr'ound pf.-the o7d .testament,’.’ Klaue combined Jewish appeal - d Hptl1 ®: a-,e T , - dept: of Egyptology, ,7 pm;..: fare .fund ‘campalgii, todayCnapel houee, .supper 8 )5 pm, 50 Sunday 11 February.* „ , . „ . „ Anglican mass, weekfy 8 30 aiV, Doe film: Foohsii wives. Erich.von Stro- Ch ap e 1, (breakfast afterwv ' helm, EJuropean director of Hollywood cents) ' : s... - vfilms. 1st of senes of 4 films, admis- Lutheran Communion, weekly,; • sion series ticket only, 81 50 for series Hilton chapel■ ' at door. 7 15 and 9 15 pm. Soc Scl 122.', Radio broadcast, ”r ’’ 'j .Wl'CB Marathon, participants welcome. ' GLS dean Lester Ashelm,benefit Frankfurt exchange, .8 pm- Cy LeCn Carnovsky ' “pm. S.it , BJ .oniv-'e. - ert E Streeter, "New World,: Varsity basketball. VC vs Illinois u pro- am. WMAQSt uden t Governm*'nt c>Hight, aia-Sriged in cortjoj|with Flying Tiger-Pan Amoh:can airlines, will* leave June;l8from New York to.. Amsfoul.int^returning September 10 1»\ - treverse, route, - according to I ;:Rogers an<l .l.n-ijm s 1 >flight leaders. ",Students, faculty, and a.I no(ration; personnel aie eligm'e vbe .passengers. Children u n d eT^p,two, will be admitted f m> 1-pio rata charter share i.- « i,/round^ ti ipr^A .re'servaf ion pay,r3g\nient,fof $.10'must be made* bvillMan h 1. ' .. ... _ 1 -' ■ ’ I-. ' '' 52iff,a Super < 1 eonv(cj|.itu«n ■ < ,fi■%inp'lH passehRers. p ” \ ’* ILft- >.v, - ■*to discuss Have a WORLD of FUflMwith IITAvUnbelievable Low Cos#^^^■B^Eurone;KM| 60 Cc Mm $52S IOrient \3,43-65 o»y« ,.y, Mm $99fl?lyour juture atBoeingYou'llJeel SAFER ,- mov/inq in aVan j|/ Iwhere you can rise to the topvancement. The company’s steady, rapid growth assuresplenty of opportunities to move ahead. At Boeing, engi¬neers hold positions; right to the top.Another advantage: Boeing assignments are interesting.‘ You'll work on such famous projects as the 707, America’s;first jet transport; the intercontinental B-52, the nation’sprincipal long-range jet bomber; the supersonic BOM ARCguided missile, and top-secret programs that probe beyondthe frontiers of -the known. At Boeing, you’ll1 be m ayoung, expanding? industry, one with its major growth'; still^;Sd;whethi^pu|plall|p|&e^j|iAf(Ji^0n|||MTiicai*elc^trica), aeronautical or industrial-^engiho;rmg'^physicsioTmathematics (or related fields), .drop in for a person-to-vperson.discussio'ir^about'your'future «aV,Boeing. ^Right^how ydu’re^in^the process of making one pf themost important decisions of your life.Your decision is important to us, too, because we areinterested in engineers and scientists who? want ‘to getahead. We’re coming to the campus to give you the factsyou need to judge whether Boeing can help you reach thegoal you have in mind. ’That Boeing'is.an ‘‘engineers* and scientists’.company’*Is' important to your- success. At Bocing, you’d ;work:Ayith; and- for^engineers-and scientists—men^who; talkyour language, understand and appreciate;your work.^*'; vBoeing encourages graduate study, reimbursing fulliiuition and fees, plus ati additional amount for incidentais.?|Every six- months,, each Boeing engineer is given a meritffeview—a personal opportunity; for* recognition and ad-: PETERSON I'I«i\ in« «V Storage rnJS\ 55th tr Ellis Avenue . |1BUtferfield 8-6711 &SUV1NO U. S.CANADAALASKAHAWAII ANDryiRTQ KKOAGENTFOR 0nh*4AIRPLANE COMPANYSeattle, Wothmgton Wichita, Kan«o« Melbourne,’ Florid) ^ ^ ■ w A cl«an move ittk«-.'.safest movefor yovr preci¬ous belonging*... a n d t he^ cleanest moveIs a ®$ani»iiedmove. An extraservice . .•. noit m tmZm: extra eost. . . :'5‘'Feb. 1, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3CJAwmpaignbefflnsPerfect crime possible?Yes, says law professorA UC law professor has admitted the existence of “the perfect crime.”Professor Francis Allen, specialist in criminal law, made this statement, in effect, whenconfronted with the case of Willie Bridges, age 65. Bridges, charged with driving whiledrunk, leaving the scene of an accident, and driving without a license, is scheduled to ap¬pear in traffic court today. But there’s one problem.Bridges is deaf and illiterate.He is unable tophoto by GarnerTlio annual Combined Jewish Appeal — Hillel Welfare fund cam¬paign liegins Monday and will run until February 11,Funds from the drive go to supixirt agencies such as home for theajusl at 61st and Drexel, Michael Reese and Mount Sinai hospitalsand ( ARK.According: to Gerwin, contributions are urgently needed at thepresent time for relief and aid to refugees from Soviet and Egyptianterrorism in Hungary and the Middle East.iJtst year over $'*500 was raised in the UC drive.Professor Beale diesJohn Mann Beale, professoremeritus of botany, died re¬cently at the age of 68. Beforebecoming an associate professorat UC in 1929, he had been on thestaff of Mississippi Agriculturaland Mechanical college, now Mis¬sissippi State college. lie becamea full professor at UC in 1931,and served as chairman of thebotany department from 19-19 to1953. lie became professor emer¬itus upon his retirement in 1953.From 1953 to the time of hisdeath, Beale worked as a geneti¬cist with the agricultural researchservice of the US Department ofAgriculture. He was also associ¬ated with the Encyclopaedia Bri-tannica.lie is survived by his wife, An¬ na, and a son (Dr.) John, Jr. Hisson is a graduate of the UC med¬ical school, and Is now on thefaculty of the Cornell Medicalcollege. communi¬cate in any way with authori¬ties who admit that Bridgescannot be prosecuted unless hecan be told of the charges againsthim. Dean Harold G. Havighurstof the Northwestern universitylaw school said, “In all my ex¬perience I have never encounteredanything like this.”Professor Allen explained thecomplexities of this particularcase in terms of a principle of lawknown as “present insanity." Ac¬cording to Allen, the mental con¬dition of a person at the time oftheir trial is taken into considera¬tion by the court. “This case,"said Allen, “is similar in that con¬stitutional law states that if adefendant is unable to understandthe proceeding of his trial or isunable to assist in his own de¬fense, then special considerationis usually given him.Allen then pondered the ques¬tion as to whether the “presentinsanity” principle could be ap¬plied to physical incapacity or dis¬ ability. “This is a much more dif¬ficult problem than ‘mental in¬sanity’ since the state cannot com¬mit a man for physical disability.Of course, if a man is brought to trial in a case of this sort and hisphysical incapacity used as de¬fense evidence, then a hearingwould probably be held to provethis disability," stated Allen.Queen needed for promPreliminary judging for Miss University of Chicago willtake place in the library of Ida Noyes on the afternoon ofTuesday, February 12.The judges for the event are Mrs. Lawrence A. Kimpton,and Irv Kupcinet, Sun-Times columnist. The third judge, proposedby Wash Prom committee, Tony Weitzel. Daily News columnist, hasnot been available for comment upon his invitation.The deadline for submitting the names of queen candidates is Fri¬day, February 8.Committee members, Greg Hodgson, Chuck Mattson, Bruce Brom¬berg, Nora Hanson and Sylvia Hedley have not as yet reached adecision as to where the Prom will be held. Said Hodgson, “the com¬mittee is vacilating between two locations, Hutchinson Commons orthe first floor of Ida Noyes."In either event, the dance will be held on February 23 and JimKleiman’s orchestra will play between the hours of 9:30 and 1:30 fordancing. Bids are $-1 per couple and will be placed on sale earlyin February.Get checkupThe student health officehas announced that all stu¬dents who received postcardsasking them to report for anannual health checkup Mon¬day, January 28, have anotherchance to get their checkupnext Monday or Tuesday, fromthe hours of 8:30 to 12:00. Thiswill be the last chance forthose students this year. Tickets now on saleTickets are now on sale for the new bus service which be¬gins Monday. The bus which will serve University studentsand employees, will run west dow;n 59th to Cottage Grove,down Cottage Grove to 57th, 57th to Stony Island, and StonyIsland back to 59th.Three UC mademoisellescompete for editorshipUC will be represented this year on Mademoiselle magazinesnational college board by Deirdre S. Collins, Judy Mellow' Got-terer, and Oriana Parker.They are among the 650 students who competed with appli¬cants from colleges all overthe country to win places onthe Mademoiselle board. •As college board members, theywill represent UC and report toMademoiselle on “UC college lifeand the college scene.” Each girlWill complete two assignmentsthat will help her explore her in¬terests and abilities in writing,editing, fashion, advertising, orart, in competition for the twentyguest editorships to be awardedby the magazine at the end ofMay.The guest editors will bebrought to New York for fourweeks next June to help write,edit and illustrate Mademoiselle’s1957 August College issue. Their transportation will be paid to andfrom New York and they will re¬ceive a regular salary for theirwork. The bus will operate from7:30 to 10 am from 3:30 to. 11:30pm, Monday through Friday. Un¬til a larger vehicle is warrantedby use. the “bus” will be a stationwagon.All tickets must be bought inadvance. The bus driver will notbe permitted to accept cash orsell tickets. One ride tickets willcost five cents each, while a passgood for an unlimited amount ofrides per month will cost $2. Tick¬ets are on sale at the bookstore,bursar’s office, Internationalhouse, Reynolds club desk, andBillings cashier’s office. Student,employee, or faculty ID cardsmust be presented w'hen purchas¬ing tickets.Route givenBeginning at Stony Island and59th street the bus will proceedwest on 59th street to CottageGrove, stopping at Harper (theIC station), Dorchester (Interna¬ tional house), Kimbark, Univer¬sity, Ellis, Drexel, and CottageGrove avenues. The bus will thenturn north to 57th street and pro¬ceed east to Stony Island, stop¬ping at Ellis, University, Wood-lawn, and Dorchester avenues andthe 57th street IC station. It willthen turn south on Stony Islandavenue returning to the startingpoint.It is expected that the bus willcomplete this circuit approximate¬ly every 15 minutes under normalconditions. Norton Clappis new trusteeNorton Clapp, of Seattle,Washington, has been electedto the UC board of trustees.Clapp, the fourteenth alumnimember of the active board, tooka PhB from the UC in 1928 and aJD degree from the UC law schoolin 1929. He also received an ABdegree from Occidental college.Clapp practiced law in Tacomafrom 1929 to 1942, and after serv¬ing as a lieutenant-commander,USNR, from 1942-46, confined hisactivities following the war tobusiness affairs. He is vice-presi¬dent, director, and a member ofthe executive committee of Wey¬erhaeuser Timber company;chairman of the Metropolitanbuilding corporation of Seattle.Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery Service ( Advertisement)Credit Union Declares5% Refund to Borrowers4% Interest Rate for Share AccountsA 5% patronage refund on interest paid by borrowers in1956 was approved by the Hyde Park Co-op Federal CreditUnion board of directors, Phil Sidler, general manager, saidtoday.A 4% interest rate on savings was approved by the creditunion membership at the annual meeting held January 24th.This is the third consecutive year that 4% has been paid oninvestment.Free insurance benefits in the form of loan guarantees forborrowers and life benefits for savers are available at . . .Hyde Park Co-op Federal Credit Union5535 S. Harper DO 3-1113 ^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^1ulernational noii.se Movies| Monday evenings, 7:00 & 9:00 p.iu. — East l ounge |Monday, February 4 — 45c — Executive Suite (Americon)1gjiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimNiiiimNiiiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiitiiiiiiiii£1 CANT BE BEAT? t1 6.95 CORDUROY PANTS now 4.99 || 3.95 IVY LEAGUE SHIRTS now 2 for 5.00 || 14.95 ALL WOOL FLANNELS(Ivy or Regular) now 7.99 =| 17.95 WORSTED FLANNELS(Ivy or Regular) now 9.95 || 24.95 CORDUROY SPORTCOATS. . now 17.95 j1 Our Prices Can't Be Beat . . . It's Smart To Buy For Less |jID & G Clothes Shop I| 744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-2728 §(iln the Neighborhood for 40 Years*9= Hours: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri, — 9 a.m. - 9 p.m., Saturday =iiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiitiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiu?SEE MOSCOWTHE FESTIVALThe VI World Festival of Youthand Students will be held in Mos¬cow July 28 — August 11, 1957,with a stupendous program. YOUshould be there.For details, contact:CHICAGO COUNCIL OFAMERICAN-SOVIETFRIENDSHIP189 W. Madison AN 3-1877 bob gibson and odetta 'mandel halltomorrow night8:30 p.m., Feb. 2tickets $1, $1.50the folklore society4 • CNICACO MAROON • F«k. 1, 1957■ ■ ■■■■■■■ ■■ ■■■ ■ '■■ ■ —GADFLYNebulous rules: childishness!One of the University of Chicago's claims to fame is that the rules for stu¬dents are less numerous and oppressive than at most comparable institutions —if any institution can be considered comparable. Women come and go at hourswhen many schools have "lights out/' students cut class at their own risk butwithout specific rules, organ¬izations form and dissolvewith the least of red tape.However, a lack of rules is notan end in itself. Rather the rulesmust be definite even if lenientin content. And certainly forany penalties to be imposedon a rule breaker the ruies mustbe firm and clear, not nebulous,and certainly not non-existent. Anabsence of any rules at all does,of course, not permit, just as itdoes not prohibit, but it seems tome that if an act is not importantenough to be defined clearly as a wrong act with a rule stated as tothe consequences, then if the actis committed it is not importantenough to have a large penaltyinvolved.The Inter-fraternity council fitsthis scheme of a lack of rules,perfectly. In a recent action, oneof its members, Phi Gamma Del¬ta, was fined for rushing andpledging an undeterminedamount of Freshman students be¬fore the beginning of the officialrushing period. Phi Gam’s argu¬ment in defense of their actionwas simple: no explicit rushing rules exist governing when a mancan be officially rushed andpledged.This argument, although basedon a statement of fact, in no waycondones Phi Gam’s action. Rath¬er, it points up the crying needof the I-F council for a re-evalu¬ation and possible re-organizationof itself to preven further occur¬ences of this sort. A shameful situ¬ation exists when an organizationwhich represents only ten frater¬nities cannot govern its own af¬fairs to prevent violations stem¬ming from nebulous rules.LetterslUctiifeeflBclitor•• *. ' X.' s . V. " v •'» "■ S % VPuerto Rican vice-rector writes I COMO’S Cafe Enrico IRESTAURANT & PIZZERIAMil E. 53 FA 4-5525 - HY 3 -5300Small Lorge Small Large12" 14" 12" 14"Cheese .1.15 1.55 Combination 1.75 2.25Sausage .1.45 1.95 Chicken Liver . . 1.60 2.10Anchovy 1.45 1.95 Mushroom . . . . 1.60 2.10Pepper & Onion 1.30 1.80 Shrimp 1.75 2.25Bacon & Onion .1.60 2.10 Pepperoni . . . . 1.60 2.10s'ree Delivery on All Pizza to VC StudentsHiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiTHE DRESS PARADEWhat will the American college student wear thisspring? Gather round, you rascals, and light a goodPhilip Morris Cigarette, and puff that rich, natural to¬bacco, and possess your souls in sweet content, and listen.As we know, college fashions have always been casual.This spring, however, they have become makeshift.The object is to look madly improvised, gaily spur-of-the-moment ! For example, girls, try a peasant skirt witha dinner jacket. Or matador pants with a bridal veil. OrBermuda shorts with bronze breastplates. Be rakish!Be impromptu! Be devil-take-the-hindmost!(Editor’s note: The follow¬ing letter, from the “Univer-sidad Catolica de Puerto Rico”— the Catholic University ofPuerto Rico — was received fol¬lowing correspondence with Rev.Illich, the vice-rector. Rev. Illichhad written requesting copies ofthe Maroon containing the Gadflyseries on the UC developmentoffice. In complying with this re¬quest, the editor asked Rev. Illichwhy he was interested in our de¬velopment office. This answerwas received:)... If you think that the devel¬opment office of Chicago Univer¬sity is the unique feature, I wouldinvite you for a trip to the Carib¬bean — the weather is now betterhere than at any other time of theyear — and show you our devel¬opment office. We have learned alot from George Watkins (UCvice-president in charge of de¬velopment). ... On the otherhand, we think Chicago Univer¬sity cannot equal us.Eight years ago we were a canefield, today we have four and ahalf thousand students. We aredefinitely a phenomenon of trop¬ical growth. We recruit our facul¬ty from institutions of higherlearning in the United States. Theonly private college, to my knowl¬edge, which to the degree towhich we do it assumes respon¬sibility for a whole area; namely,south of Puerto Rico and . .. havea total annual budget of slightlyless than half a million dollars.You can understand that underthese circumstances a develop¬ment office is, perhaps, the mostcentral place at the University.i [WWWWTTTTy'TBORDONE[ Movers and Light Hauling 2VI 6-9832lAAAAAAjiYOU: ARE ELIGIBLESend Todayfor FREEProfessionalBusinessman'sWholesale DiamondBrochure. Write Jackson'sDiamond Brokers, Dept..I644 Broadway, Gary, Ind.'S’v ,*«*’** *.c Y—5and v t J Our development office is not somuch concerned with what trou¬bles you. Namely, the raising ofmoney as with institutional selfevaluation, economy measures,enticing of volunteers to come tothis tropical paradise and plan¬ning for the future.You can understand that there¬ fore we consider the troubleswhich seem to plague your devel¬opment office seem curious to usand I wanted to inform our facul¬ty about the seemingly strangedifficulties you encounter in Chi¬cago. . . .Rev. Ivan I). IllichVice-RectorDean appreciates humorMr. Raymond J. CaparrosChicago, IllinoisDear Ray:I was highly amused by your letter and the accompanying picturesin today’s (January 25) Maroon. Sometimes we are all so concernedwith issues that things become a little grim. Your light touch hasrelieved a period which has been particularly depressing.Robert M. StrozierDean of Students(Editor’s note: Permission was granted by both the writer andthe receiver of the above letter for its publication. It is hoped thatthe printing of this private communication will clear up certain ques¬tions concerning a contribution to last week’s “Letters to the editor”column.)^■wwwwwypwwwwwwwrrvwwwww', ’; Lifetime Disability Insurance 2; Retirement Insurance 22 Phone or Write 22 Joseph H. Aaron, '27 22135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-106<>2fet’sthing* OvaIf'* fanny how a lot of peopletake a chance when they builda home. They go to all kinds oftrouble with the plans. Theywant everything including astreamlined kitchen, the lastword in bathrooms, picturewindows, and a landscapedgarden. The money arrange¬ments are perfect. In ten, fif¬teen or twenty years, the homewill be really theirs. Just regu¬lar payments, somewhat likerent, only better, because theyget something more for theirmoney than just the privilegeof living in a house. Jimmy’sSINCE 1940But what is this chance theytake? It’s this: If death comesto the money-earner, the homemay no longer be a place ofrefuge for the family, but asource of debt aud despair.And yet; by a perfectly sim¬ple Sun Life Mortgage Protec¬tion plan—only a slight additionto the monthly cost of payingfor the house—the total balanceof the mortgage would be wipedout in the event of death. Here’smy advice, Mr. Homeowner:“Don’t take a chance.”Let’s talk things over—today IRalph J. Wood, Jr., '43Vniversity insurance CounselingSince 1950SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA1 N. LaSalle Chicago 2, IllinoisRepresemtmtiro FR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855> And, men, you be the same. Try an opera cape withsweat pants. Or a letter-sweater with kilts. Or a strait-jacket with hip boots. Be bold! Be daring! Be a touristattraction!But all is not innovation in college fashions thisspring. In fact, one of the highlights of the season turnstime backward in its flight. I refer to the comeback ofthe powdered wig.This charming accoutrement, too long neglected, hasalready caught on with style-conscious students aii overthe country. On hundreds of campuses rock-and-roll isgiving way to the minuet, and patriotic undergraduatesare dumping British tea into the nearest harbor. This, ofcourse, does not sit well with old King George. For thatmatter, a lot of our own people are steamed up too, andthere has even been some talk of revolution. But Ihardly think it will come to that. I mean, how can webreak with the mother country when we are dependenton her for so many things — linsey-woolsey, minie balls,taper snuffers, and all like that? She, on the other hand,relies on us for turkeys, Philip Morris, Cinemascope, andother valuable exports. So I say, if Molly Pitcher andthose other Bryn Mawr hotheads will calm down, we mayyet find an amicable solution for our differences. Butlet not our British cousins mistake this willingness tonegotiate for weakness. If fight we must, then fight wewill! Paul Revere is saddled up, the rude bridge archesthe flood, and the ROTC is ready!But I digress. We were smoking a Philip MorrisCigarette —O, dailin’ cigarette! 0, happy smoke! 0,firm! 0, fresh! O, fragrant! O, long-size! 0, regular!0, get some! — and talking of new spring fashions, letus turn now to the season’s most striking new feature:pneumatic underdrawers. These inflatable rubber gar¬ments make every chair an easy chair. Think how wel¬come they will be when you sit through a long lecture!They are not, however, without certain dangers. Lastweek, for example, Rimbaud Sigafoos, a University ofPittsburgh sophomore, fell out of an 18th story windowin the Tower of Learning. Thanks to his pneumaticunderdrawers, he suffered no injury when he struck thesidewalk, but the poor fellow is still bouncing and it isfeared that he will starve to death.©Max Shulman, 1957Fashions come, fushions go, hut year after year the PhilipMorris Company, sponsors of this column, bring you thetastiest, pleasingest cigarette your money can buy — PhilipMorris, of corris!Chicago MaroonCLASSIFIED ADSStudent rate 5c per word Others 10c per word Phone: Ml 3-0800 Ext. 3265For sale475 uncalled suits, topcoats, tuxedoes,$17.50 up—famous brands—sizes 35 to50—open dally 9 am to 7 pm. AbbottClothing company, 4086 N Broadway,Corner Belle Plalne.Complete set of “Great Books of theWestern World”—54 volumes. Has neverbeen U6ed. Owner will sell below cost.SH 3-3422, Mon or Wed eves, all daySunday.1951 Studebaker Commander V-8. Auto-trans, radio, heater, excellent condition.7 tires—2 snow and 2 brand new. $350.Ask for John, Ext 3559, or OAkland4-2670.’52 Plymouth. RH, excellent mechanicalcondition, body good. $250. MI 3-0044.Yule log, 40 inches long, 2 foot diameter.Best offer, 810 B-J.Philco radio and record player combina¬tion. Floor model. Good working order.$10. MI 3-9330.Co-op. 7-room, 3-bath deluxe elevatorbuilding. UC district. Also: Row house,6 bedroom, 3-bath, near 56th and Black-stone. Call Mrs. Nierman. weekdays,C. W. Hoff and Co., Inc. HY 3-2215.For rent1*4, 2 room furnished apartments. Rea¬sonable. Close to campus. FA 4-5538.Female student nas campus 2-bedroomapt to share. Furnished. Reasonable.Gunderson 4-1987 (Berwyn), after 5.Desirous to share apt with female stu¬dent or employee. "Jo,” ext 1500 days;KE 8-6158 eves.Apartment to sublet. Six-month lease.1359 E 53rd. First, rear. $75 a month.Occupany in a week. 2% room first floor apartment. $75 amonth. 5400 S Greenwood, see Janitor.MI 3-4207.2*& room apartment unfurnished, forrent. Clean building, well-managed.Available March 1st. $70. Call FA 4-9483week nights, evenings between 10-11pm; weekends, any time. BU 8-1855,9 am-5 pm.First floor room, private family, Ridge¬wood ct., $8. FA 4-7646.2 room' bedroom apt., completely fur¬nished. Living room with pullmankitchen. Linen, utilities furnished. Closeto IC and CTA transportation. $60 permonth. Also one-room kitchenette, maidservice. $40 per month. OA 4-1848.ServicesCook available. Elderly spinster. Forsmall family, Hyde Park. Stay. WriteMaroon, Box 101.Carmen's Used Furniture store. Movingand light hauling. 1365 E 55th. MU4-9003, MU 4-8843.Student with converted ambulance willdo light moving and hauling. BU 8-5535or RA 6-4145.Tutoring in Russian, elementary andconversation. Native instructor. Veryreasonable. FA 4-8575.Audio Consultants still has the sameold discounts on hi-fi equipment, c/oJean Kwon, Foster 16.Mathematics. Tutoring and instructionin the standard courses for individualor group. Loop or south side. Specialarrangement for group formed by your¬self. Soglin and Associates. 28 E Jack-son. WE 9-2127.Portraits by professional artist. DuringFebruary only $35. Children’s portraitsa specialty. Call Ed Bernstein. PL 2-4899. Help wantedFull time secretarial position availableat Hiliel foundation (Jewish StudentCenter). Call PL 2-1127, for Interview.Subsidiary of Cory corporation needscollege students. Four hours an eve¬ning, $50 a week. EAstgate 7-6688.Two or three to help rewrite, edit andcondense biographies, symposia, etc.“Who’s Who in Music,” GRaceland7-9474.RESEARCH SPECIALIST. Our libraryresearch department is planning a ma¬jor expansion program. We need severaladditional persons to handle subscriberinquiries. A college degree plus excel¬lent typing will qualify you for thischallenging and instructive work. Workin Harper library. EncyclopaediaBritannica, 425 N. Michigan. WHitehall4-2350.PersonalELVIS PRESI.EY will not appear at thefolk music concert starring Bob Gibsonand Odetta, tomorrow (Saturday) nightat Mandel.The only National student socialistmagazine in the US is ANVIL, on saleat the UC Bookstore.I am looking for a sponsor for a Koreanstudent. Can you help me? Phone PL2-8740.Ken, my date cannot find a swimmingsuit; should she bring her own pj’s?Art.Moody: A bizarre environment is con¬ducive to creative thinking. Bring backmy cookie-tin. Willard.Darling: Come back! The baby has beenadopted. Meet me at the Band concertin Mandel tonight. C. B. Feb. I, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Gadfly policyGadfly is an attempt on the part of Maroon to provideprovocative ideas to the campus at large. Students andfaculty are earnestly invited to contribute to this column.The author's name will be held in strictest confidence bythe editor.Opinions stated in Gadfly do not necessarily representthe editorial policy of the Maroon, or its staff.Readers are invited to express their views on Gadflyarticles in the “Letters to Gadfly" column.Send articles to Gadfly, Maroon office, Ida Noyes hall.Issued 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. GrossmanManaging editor. .Business manager.Advertising managerNews editors .Culture editorLecture editorCopy editorsProduction managerSports Editor .... Norman LewakGary MokotoffLawrence D. KesslerRochelle Dubnow, Bob HalaszDave ZackHarold Bernhardt...Kathy Alter, Betsy KirtleyJean KwonGeorge KarcozesEllen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. MI 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.m.^ll p.m. vGABE S STORE FOR MENN.W. Corner 55th & Kenwood <i<<HY 3-5160 I<444Biggest Savings of tfie Season on All Men's Furnishings 4I nirerxity's finest store for menSEMI-ANNUAL SALEIn person at University College — hearROBERT A. HEINLEINspeak on'THE SCIENCE FICTION NOVELAS A FORM OF SOCIAL CRITICISM"Friday, Fob. 8 at 7:30 p.m. Admission $2UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, 19 So. LaSalle StreetJ There Is A Place In This Picture For Youl ji OPPORTUNITIES[ for Students with Bachelor Degrees in! ★CHEMICAL ENGINEERINGj ★CHEMISTRY| ★MECHANICAL ENGINEERINGf This is a chance to get a head start in your professional| career with General Chemical Division, Allied Chemical &, Dye Corporation. Company representatives will be on the*campus for interviews February 8., Contact Placement Office Today Tor an Interview,I Appointment and Detcrlptive literature| GENERAL CHEMICAL DIVISIONI ALLIED CHEMICAL «. DYE CORPORATION[ 40 letter Street, New York 4, N. Y.L-— — . _ — TYPEWRITERSFULL YEAR GUARANTEEOn Both New or Reconditioned MachinesSpecial Type Installations — Language, Chemistry, MathRENTALS — ALL FIRST CLASS MACHINESRepairs — Chemical Washing — Complete OverhaulBy Highly Skilled, Conscientious MechanicsUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEREDEEM YOUR SWIFT COUPONS HEREYOU'LL FIND COUPONS IN SWIFT'S2 PAGE COLOR ADS INBIBJanuary 28RfflRl LOOKFebruary 5 JournalFebruaryTHIS IS NOT A COUPON-DO NOT CLIP!Bring your coupons toCO-OP SUPER MART5535 SOUTH HARPERPlenty of Free ParkingJCHICAGO MAROON • Feb. I, 1957Pleasant Pheasant' captivatescrowds at slickest UT musicalUniversity Theatre is to be congratulated for venturing such a risky form as a musicalreview and congratulated again for having brought it off. Pheasant Under Glass, JohnMeyer’s divertissement in sixteen acts, got off to a brassy, leggy start, if either qualitycan be imagined in the Reynolds club theatre, and maintained itself through most of theevening on the same brightphoto by FinstonITT actors cavort through “Chevvgum Smith” episode in“Pheasant Under Glass.” lights level.Indeed, the irony of suchimprobable sights and soundsemanating from “these hallowedhalls” was an element perhapsnot planned, but to say that itwas effective would be puttingit mildly.The direction for last weekend’sshow was by William Zavis, and musical arrangements were han¬dled by Bill Mathieu, who alsocontributed to the score.A revue written, directed, andperformed entirely by and mostlyfor college students leads one toexpect certain things, with orwithout misgivings. The basic for¬mat was there, just as in anyBroadway production of the samegenre.Next Saturday, February 9JOE CLAZER SINGS SONGSOF FREEDOMGuitarist — Composer — Singer of Folk and Labor SongsGENERAL ADMISSION $1.00 RESERVED $1.50 MANDEL HALL 8:30Tickets at SG and Reynold's Club HoskSponsored by: American Civil Liberties Union & Student GovernmentI iI 1I I wGraduates in \ EngineeringPhysicsMathematics finterested9in.MissileSystemsresearchand development vJ/iCd. }The technology of guided missiles is literally a new domain. No fieldof engineering or science offers greater scope for creative achievement.Research and development atLockheed Missile SystemsDivision cover virtually everyfield of engineering and sciencoand have created new positions forgraduates possessing outstandingability in the following fields:ElectronicsResearch and development asapplied to missile systems andassociated equipment.ComputersFor solution of complex problemsand missile guidance.Systems EngineeringResearch and development inmissile systems. Antenna DesignRelated to missile guidance.CommunicationsIn the broad area of informationtransmission.Electromechanical DesignAs applied to missile systemsand related equipment.InstrumentationAssociated with aerodynamics,physics and electronics.PhysicsTheoretical and experimentalaero-physics, upper atmosphereresearch, optics, nuclearphysics and spectroscopy. StructuresStructural design and analysis ofmissile systems.ThermodynamicsAerodynamic heating andheat-transfer problems.AerodynamicsConcerning performance ofmissile systems.DynamicsAs related to missile bodyflight problems.Operations ResearchApplied to tacticalweapons operations. | iAdvanced Study ProgramGraduates in Physics, Electrical, Aeronauticaland Mechanical Engineering are invited to contacttheir Placement Officer regarding the AdvancedStudy Program which enables students to obtaintheir M.S. Degree while employed in theirchosen field.The complexity of missile systems researchand development has created a number ofpositions for those completing their M.S. andPh.D. degrees. The positions carry Immediateresponsibility commensurate with the advancedacademic training and experience required. Representatives of the Research and Engineeringstaff will be on campusThursday, February 7You are invited to consult your Placement Officerfor an appointment.MISSILE SYSTEMS DIVISIONresearch and engineering staffLockheed Aircraft CorporationVAN NUY8 •‘PALO ALTO • SUNNYVALECALIFORNIA Indeed, this reviewer could notavoid thinking of an earlier, morefamous model, against which, itis fair to say. the present endeav¬our stands up entirely well; wehaven’t the right to complainabout the absence of benefits be¬stowed by angels in blue sergesuits or vamps in slinky pajamas.But here lies one of the disap¬pointments: the Broadway revuehas come to be quite a stagnantthing, worn slick with use, all theannual claims of freshness not¬withstanding.It has become from beginningto end a cliche, to the point whereeven an imported satire strikes usas being no exaggeration at all.Its standardization reaches fromthe set types of numbers expectedto the chord progressions of thetunes.Such an unchanging thingstrikes us as a poor choice ofmodel for a production on a col¬lege campus, where no claims canbe made for the need to satisfy ajaded audience, where no for*tunes are risked at the box office,where deviation can at the veryleast slip by unnoticed.Meyer oecassionally showed aninterest in breaking the pattern,particularly in the number en¬titled “The Amoral Outlook ofChewgum Smith.” in which anextremely good idea was underde¬veloped. Bits of ingenuity wereseen also in the “Santa Claus’*number and in the “Finale,”which left a good portion of theaudience singing its motto whilefiling down the stairway.Indisputable evidence for any¬one who didn’t know that thiswas a college show, was the self-conscious profusion of invectivethroughout the dialogue. Furtherevidence is the large number offamily scenes in which the chil¬dren come out winners.A good part of the success ofthe show is owing to its rapid andcontinuous pace, foc-W'hich creditis due not only to Zavis’ direc¬tion and Mathieu’s tenacity inkeeping together the band againstall odds, but to the entire castand technical crew.Pheasant Under Glass was asgood a revue as we’ve seen, butwTe see no reason why it couldnot have been better. It is to behoped that further essays intothis band of entertainment willbe made by University Theatre.Leo TreitlerValentine Special1 —8x10— $6.956 proofsphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th StreetFeb. 1, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7The Vulture will be scanning new fields Friday night as he perches atop the Mandel bal¬cony to listen to UC’s reorganized Concert Band perform. Keeping track of openings in choirs,art exhibitions, folk concerts and downtown events still keeps the bird busy too. UT to hold tryouts for 'Antigone'Open Tryouts to fill five male and three female parts forUniversity Theatre’s next production have been announced byUT director Marvin Phillips. Readings will be before Richardd’Anjou, who will direct Jean Anouilh’s "Antigone,” a Frenchadaption of Sophocles’ tragedy written during World War II.Applicants should appear at University Theatre at 7:30 nextWednesday, Thursday or Friday, or next Saturday, February9, at 2 pm. The performances will be in Mandel the weekendof March 28. Fredric Hirsch will also be present to auditionactors for UT’s new Radio theater.UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE1144 E. 55th DO 3-9572SALE NOW IN PROGRESS10% iHseount on All MerchandiseWith This Coupon OnlyTERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best’’SPECIAL OFFERWITH THIS COUPON25c Discount on ony Pizzaeaten here ... or deliveredSmall 1.00Medium 1.45 Large 1.95Giant 2.95FREE DELIVERY FORU. OF C. STUDENTS1518 E. 68rd MI 3-4045FORhyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student Rate 50c all performancesADULTS ONLYStarting Friday, Feb. 1ELIA KAZAN'S production of TENNESSEE WILLIAMS'"BABY DOLL''starringKARL MALDEN ELI WALLACH & CARROLL BAKERas the Husband as the Stranger as "Baby Doll"On campus . . .Concert BandTonight’s the night that LouisLason will direct his very own40-piece band in its first concertof the year. Mandel hall should echo tothe strains of band transcriptions ofRossini and Bach orchestral composi¬tions as well as pieces written originallyfor band: Gustave Holst’s second suitefor military band. Prokofieffs March(Opus 29). Robert Russell Bennett’ssuite of old American dances, and con¬cert marches by Edwin Franko Goldmanand others. If yon want to hear whatthe regenesls of the band (that maysoon march down the fighting Maroons’Held) sounds like, the concert's at 8:30tonight and free.Folklore society concertBob Gibson and Odetta, both knownto Gate of Horn patrons, will be spon¬sored by UC’s usually creative ratherthan capitalistic Folklore society tomor¬row night in Mandel. Both Odetta,whose rich folk contralto can belt outsome beautiful blues, and Bob, a fo’.k-eily sophisticated banlo-toter. have LP'sout, with Bob's "Offbeat Folk Songs”reputed to be a present top-selling folkdisc in Chicago. Pay your $1 generaladmission or $1.50 reserved seat pricein time to sit down before 8:30.More folkNext Saturday. February 9. Joe Glaser,educational director of those UnitedRubber workers, AFL-CIO, will singsome ”3ongs of Freedom” In Mandel,usual time and admission cost. Glazerand his guitar have been featured onfour Folkways records, Including "Bal¬lads for Sectarians,” songs of the leftwing political movements of the thir¬ties. Sponsored Jointly by the AmericanCivil Liberties union and SG on campus.Glazer’s program will lean toward songsof labor movements near and far. Aider-man Leon Depres will act as master ofceremonies at the concert.University ConcertNext Friday, the Trio Da Camera,consisting of clarinet, ’cello and piano,will perform in Mandel. They’ll playBeethoven’s Trio, opus 11, Weber’sGrand Duo Concertante for clarinet andpiano, Debussy’s Sonata for ’cello andpiano and Brahm’s Trio, opus 114 Onlythree more University Concerts thisacademic year!Hillel chamber groupJoe Baron, director of Hillel founda¬tion’s chamber nnislc movement, an¬nounces a concert that will display thefinished work of two trios, a stringRELIANCE CAMERA APHOTO SUPPLIES1517 lost 63 rd St.BU 8-6040/UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorEye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenboumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-83721367 E. 57th St.RECORDOF THE WEEKCLUCK"Orpheus and Eurydice"(Original French version)Epic SC60192 Records—$7.98 quartet, and a wind group. The groupswill perform varied works, almost Incommemoration of the Hebrew musicmonth, at 8 pm Tuesday, February 12,at 5715 Woodlawn. Go, and start yourown chamber group If you can, salth yeVulture.New DocFilm seriesFilms made by European directors InHollywood will be featured In a newseries of four showings on consecutiveFridays In Soc Scl 122 starting tonight.Admission only by series ticket, whichwill be available at the door for $1.50.Tonight’s film (and the others) willbs shown at 7:15 and 9:15. FoolishWives, directed by Erich von Stroheim,will open the series. During February,F. W. Murnau’s Sunrise, Ernst Lu-bitsch’s Tronble in Paradise and FritzLang's Scarlet Street will be shown.Goodspeed showCondition of Modern Man, Renais¬sance society’s January exhibit, closestomorrow. Go today or tomorrow after¬noon if you’ve missed the show—it hastwo unrepresentative Klees and a mon¬strous and fiery “Last Judgment” byAbraham Rattner taking up the entireeast wall of the inner chamber of Good-speed gallery.Off campus . • .Fromm FoundationOn February 18, 25 and 26, violinistJoseph Szigetl and pianist Carlo Busottiwill play sonatas by twentieth-centurycomposers whose work was looked ask¬ance at when It was written but whosenames are as well known as the soapproducts at your corner store today.Paul Fromm, president of the founda¬tion, Is Interested in getting a studentaudience for the presentation of musicwhich Is now accepted but was origin¬ally listened to with the same skepticalear that people lend to modern Ameri¬can music, the foundation's cause.Tickets are on sale In the UC musicbuilding and Goodman theater, $2.50general admission and $1 for students.Chicago symphonyReserved seats are available for allChicago Symphony concerts In theReynolds club basement service center.Afternoon student price for the galleryIs still 65 cents, and Saturday eveningconcert goers may gain admission toheaven for a dime more. ID card or not. Today at 2 pm Sir Thomas Beechamwill lead the orchestra through Haydn's97th symphony, his own arrangementof a suite from Handel’s Great Elope¬ment, Brahms' third symphony, andBerlioz’ Trojan march.This evening the Chicago civic orches¬tra, training ground for future pro¬fessionals, will present a concert inOrchestra hall under the direction ofJohn Welcher. Darice Richman will besoloist In Grelg’s piano concerto, andthe orchestra will play Tschaikovsky'ssecond symphony and Enesco’s Rou¬manian Rhapsody No. 1.Next Thursday at 8:15 and Friday at 2Beecham will direct Mozart’s 39th sym¬phony, Schubert’s sixth, and Dvorak’ssymphonic poem, “The Golden Spin¬ning Wheel.Downtown at a glance . ..Studebaker theater is still presentingMuch Ado About Nothing every nightexcept Monday. See Marv Phillips atUniversity Theatre for 50 per cent stu¬dent discount reported to apply to allperformances. Subscriptions to Stude-baker’s second series, starting February19, are now available at Reynolds club.Old Vic company of London will pre¬sent a liberal does of Shakespeare Feb¬ruary 12 through 24, at the Shuberttheater.A showing of 14th through 18th cen¬tury prints opened last Wednesday atthe Art Institute, which is open freeto students bearing ID cards.The George F. Harding museum, thatmedieval eastle located at 4853 LakePark, is showing paintings made duringrecent European trips by Dr. Jack P.Cowen, as well as Its regular collectionof armor, weapons, Americana, andearly keyboard Instruments.The Clark theater, 11 N. Clark, hasproclaimed February Robert Benchleymonth, and will be showing a Bench-ley short with other rather decent filmseach Sunday. This Sunday see Lust forLife with Benchley’s How to Sleep asfrosting. Clark theater Is open almost24 hours every day, and admits anyonefor 60 cents.If nightclubing Intrigues you, theOscar Peterson trio is playing Jazz atthe Blue Note, $2.50 minimum, untilFebruary 6, when Short Rogers and hisWest coast combo take over."The film, I maintain, is athought-provoking work of filmort, brilliantly enacted.”— Sam Lesner,Chicago Daily News"The most neglected facet ofTennessee Williams' talent is thewild humor that he can get intohis studies of Southern deca¬dence. In Baby Doll his drolleryis fully exploited, which adds upto some hilarious French-stylefarce."— John McCarten, New Yorker "The screen ploy, on 'original'written by Tennessee Williams(although based on 2 of hisearlier short plays), centers ol-most entirely on bizarre sexualconflicts. At times, it is riotouslyfunny ... os in the hide-and-seek scene through the emptyhouse with light bulbs swingingwildly and sudden appearancesend disappearances reminiscentof o Mock Sennett Keystone copcomedy. Mush of the cinematiceffectiveness of Baby Doll is dueto Kazan's direction, technicallyhis most skillful film to date."—Arthur Knight, Sat. Rev. of Lt.A CASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter Service1323 E. 551h St. HY 3-8651BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGWINTEB SPECIALTUNE UP $5.50 <*>• Anti-Freeze• Snow Tires• Road ServiceSPECIAL ! !Heavy Duty Battery *14 95HARPER SUPER SERVICEDealer in Sinclair Products5556 Harper Ave. PL 2-9654StudentsStudent wivesJOBS • JOBS - JOBSIf you can type and are able to work 20 hours or moreper week, Monday through Fridays, between 8:30 and 5,please visit the personnel office.Ingleside Hall956 East 58th Street "In condeming it, the Roman Catholic Legion of Decency declared:'It dwells almost without variation or relief upon carnal suggestiveness.'The statement is true enough but there is room for doubt that thecarnality of the picture makes it unfit to be seen. The film was clearlyintended — both in the writing and the directing to arouse disgust;not disgust with the film itself, but with Ihe kind of people and theway of life it describes. To the extent that it succeeds, "Boby Doll”is an almost puritanically moral work of art.”. .—Time Magazinet • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 1, 1957Papers raise ruckus as'U of C benches Banks'by George KarcazesUC’s baseball team made tabloid headlines last week with their opening game scheduledto be played nearly three months from now.Because of the absence of baseball news around this time of the year it seems as thoughanything can make the headlines. This certainly seems to have been the case with the head¬line: “U. of C benches Banks”, which appeared last week in one of the Chicago dailies.A little background will help clarify the situation: UC’s varsity baseball squad is current¬ly holding spring training into the warmth of the fieldhouseto practice their swing. The ten¬nis courts in the fieldhouse haveo+tnnri Because of the crowded condi- for the news starved dailies. Onetne r leianouse ana tne atiena- tjon 0f fieldhouse, baseball writer pondered, “Could it be thatance has been larger than at coach Kyle Anderson asked that the boys were paying too muchany recent year. In addition to number of professional ball attention to the pros and notthe baseball team, a large number players, who were extended the enough to their coach?’’of winter golfers have retreated COurtesy of using our facilities, Max Clay, a veteran of the var-be limited to three or four per sity squad, was asked to commentday- * on this statement: “Ridiculous!. , ., , , „... One day last week, however, We never talked with the pros;H! °^Z1{1 -!™ more than twelve players showed they kept pretty much to them-up and coach Anderson informed selves except for one occasionthem that they could work out when photographers appearedfor a couple of days, but that and requested that several mem-after three days no outsiders bers of our team pose for pub-would be allowed in the field- licity pictures with Banks. In fact,house because there wasn’t that was the only time I sawenough room. Banks until he was asked toOn the specified day, only Ernie leave.”Banks, star short stop of the Chi- Lennie Springer, star MaroonVarsity team getting into shapefor their spring conquests, andwith a great number of studentsand University personnel prepar¬ing for an all-University round-robin tournament which is beingheld this week.In addition to all of this activ¬ity, close to one hundred trackmen, from U-high, the varsity andthe Track club, work out in the ca£° Cubs, showed up (probably pitcher, joined in with: “I can tfiAldhnucA a liitlr- later in the because he was not present when understand it. ... I just can’t un-ifternoom the announcement was made) and derstand it, that’s all . . ." Si* he was asked to leave. Hersh’s sentiments were found toThe result was a bigThe CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 ‘scoop” be much the same.MODEL CAMERAHyde Park's most completephoto and hobby shopExport modelsNSA Discount1312 E. 53th BY 3-9239 Earn $50 weekly for 20 hours work. Scheduleto fit academic program. Day time only.We have need of several neat appearing men who canfurnish their own transportation for contact work.No selling. Just an ideal job for a college student ages21 to 26.Apply in person for personal interviewJO-WAR COMPANY11121 South HalstedDUNCANSTATIONERS &PRINTERS1313 E. 55thBY 3-4111(Sext Door to Post Office)OFFICE SUPPLIESARTISTS' MATERIALMECHANICALDRAWINGEQUIPMENTIVSA DiscountWATCH FOR OPENINGOF OUR NEWSELF-SERVICE STORE1221 E. 55th * NICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063.» for 4 Olll ll!on group orders of pizzaget 5 for the price of 4!Free delivery to t\ of C. studentsTable Service Delivery Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M. 11 A.M. to 2 A.M.Open till 3 A.3f. on Friday and SaturdayClosed Mondays1 IT S FOR REAL! by Chester Field 1jtacottswor»*«d ikmMta »Ths troussrt*16*!,** that fit’*401 N. Michigan Ava. THOUGHTIf a centaur marrieda mermaid fair,What kind of childrenwould she bear?Would they have hideor would they have scales?Would they have hoovesor long fishy tails?Would they eat seaweedor would they eat hay?It’s one of theproblems of the day.MORALt When heavy thinking getsyou down, relax and take yourpleasure BIG with a Chesterfield!Packed more smoothly byAccu • Ray, it’s the smoothesttasting smoke today.Smoke for root. •. smoko Chesterfield!$60 for ftmy philosophical verst accepted for publi-~ erfield, P.C “cation. Chesterfield, P.O. Box SI, New York 46, N.Y.O Lite Ml A Urm Mho* Ob. Trackmen set recordUC’s varsity 2y2 mile distance medley relay team set a newvarsity record by clipping four seconds of the old record, inthe 2nd annual UCTC invitational relays at the fieldhouselast Saturday.Athletes representing North¬western, Loyola, Western Illi¬nois, Marquette, Wheaton,Northern Illinois, the UCTC andthe varsity competed in five re¬lays and eight individual events.The varsity distance medley teamof Bud Perschke, who ran the880; Pete McKeon, who ran the440; Art Omohundro, who ran% mile; and Charlie Rhyne, whoanchored with a mile, set a newvarsity record of 10:27.2, better¬ing a record made in 1929 by Ma¬roon stars Gist, Schmitz, Wil¬liams, and Letts.pilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllI PART TIME JOB I A1 Jacobs of the varsity wonthe 60 yard dash in :06.3, andDan Trifone, who seemed to havefinally located his Post Toasties,tied for first in the high jump.The varsity sprint medley teamof Ivan Carlson, Jerry Abeles,Don Richards, and Spike Pinneyplaced second. The two mile relayteam of Bud Perschke, Ivan Carl¬ton, Art Omohundro, and ChuckRhyne placed third. And, the milerelay team of Jerry Abeles, RichMeyersberg, Brooks Johnson andGeorge Karcazes placed third. photo by BemiekArt Omohundro passes thebaton to Chuck Rhyne on thelast leg of the %Vi mile medleyrelay.9/ie rjdwutn PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433(ftYOUROPPORTUNITYnresearch and developmentof missile systemsat(J)California Institute of TechnologyJET PROPULSION LABORATORYPasadena, CaliforniaActive participation in the quest for scientific truths •Definite job security • Opportunity to expand yourown knowledge • Full utilization of your capacities •Association with top men in your particular field •Openings now in these fieldsAPPLIED PHYSICS ’ MATHEMATICS * CHEMISTRYAERONAUTICAL, MECHANICAL, ELECTRONIC, ANDCHEMICAL ENGINEERING ,t^.Telemetering • Reactor Physics » Instrumentation • FluidMechanics • Heat Transfer • Computer Equipment • InertialGuidance • Systems Analysis • Polymer ChemistryON CAMPUS INTERVIEWSFEBRUARY 4Register at Placement Office- mam