wrrmrRunning for Miss Universityof Chicago are (left to right)Lois Adelman, Yoki deBruyn,Dotty Cayton, Jane Bradka, Pa-ftricia Dick, Susan Cook, andEsther McCandiess.photo by Ftnstonphoto by FinstoaJudging for the Miss U of C finalists were (left to right) Mrs.Mary Alice Ross Newman, Mrs. Robert Strozier, and Mrs. LawrenceKimpton.Miss UC finalistschosen for PromSeven finalists in the Washington Promenade Miss Univer¬sity of Chicago contest were chosen Tuesday by judges Mrs.Lawrence A. Kimpton, Mrs. Mary Alice Newman, and Mrs.Robert M. Strozier. VoU 65, No. 25 University* of Chicago, Friday, February 15, 1957One of the seven will bechosen Miss University of Chi¬cago by all campus voting to takeplace Tuesday and Wednesday.Ballot boxes will be placed in Bur¬ton Judson, Mandel hall corridor,Cobb hall and in Billings hospital.The finalists are: Lois Adel¬man, candidate of Matthewshouse; Jane Bradka, Kelly hall;Dorothea Cayton, Phi Kappa Psi;Susan Cook, first year medicalschool; Yolanda (Yoki) deBruyaQuadranglers; Patricia Dick, Eso¬teric; and Esther McCandiess, PhiDelta Theta.The Prom, which will featurethe orchestra of Jim Kleeman,will be held on the entire firstfloor of Ida Noyes hall February23 from 9:30 to 1:30.Bids for the prom are $4 percouple and may be purchased atBJ. Reynolds club, and throughall fraternities and girls clubs.After the dance an all campusIntel fraternity council sponsoredopen house will be held at the PhiKappa Psi house. Candidates for Miss Universityof Chicago were: Gloria Agosto,Student Forum; Laura Aho, In-terelub council; Louise Arnold,Phi Alpha Delta; Yvonne Camp¬bell, Phi Sigma Delta; EileenChappelow, Gates; Lynn Chad-well, O board; Nancy Diehl, BetaTheta Pi; Judy Cohen, MortarBoard; Helen Duganits, AlphaDelta Phi; Sylvia Hedley, YoungRepublicans; Judy Johnson.Green hall; Ruth Johnson, Psi Up-silon; Jinx Kennick, Dodd house;Carolyn Kiblinger, Delta Upsilon;Marjorie Korshak, Zeta Beta Tau;Sonja Lay, Blackfriars; CarolMcVicker, Concert band; MargotMilner, Wyvern; Molly Mosely,Beecher hall; Nancy Moulton,Glee club; Marlene Nelson, WAA;Sylvia Pandolfi, SRP; OrianaParker, Porphyrogentti; NancyPlattner, Foster hall; SandraPlatz, Hitchcock hall; BarbaraQuinn. Delta Sigma; Odessa Rags-dell, NAACP; Alice Slezak, WUS;Florence Spector, Sigma; MaryStoner. Appolonian society; Mar¬cia Wolf, Pre-med club. Confusion rampantover Tuesday issueby Ronald J. GrossmanSEIZE MAROON ‘GAG’ ISSUE! screamed the biggest, blackest headlines ever.Did you “bite”?Hundreds of UCers did. Confusion was ram pant and feelings ran high on campus Tuesdayas the Maroon published its annual gag issue — with a new twist.The gag issue, a “special”Polio shots availableDr. Henrietta Herbolsheimer, director of Student Health,announced that polio shots may still be obtained at Billings.The dates of the polio clinics are March 6 and April 3, from9 to 12.'Dr. Herbolsheimer stressed the fact that Student Health will runpolio clinics as long as there is a demand. Student Health does ask,though, that those desiring polio shots call Billings at extension 2656tt make* appointments. “Clinics will be set up accordingly to meettfudent demands,” said Dr. Herbolsheimer.Mal-ried students may also bring their spouses and children forinoculations.Three polio shots are advisable. Students who have had one or twoshots elsewhere may obtain the remainder of their inoculations atStudent Health.There will be a $1 charge for each shot.Dean Strozier upholds IFcouncil on Phi Cam finegag issue, aMaroon edition giving all de¬tails of “the seizure of the Ma¬roon’s gag issue” claiming thatcampus police had seized a gagissue scheduled to appear Mon¬day, February 11, was the majortopic of conversation at UC Tues¬day.Was there really a Monday gagissue? Was today’s issue a gag?Did the administration really seizethe gag issue?Teasers promising a “hot” gagissue for Monday had appearedin two Maroon issues previous tothe supposed publishing date. Thenatural reaction of most UCersto the fact that no issue appearedon that day gave no credit fororiginality to the Maroon’s dia¬bolical staff. All over campus onMonday could be heard: “Somegag—no gag issue.” But the gagwasn’t as simple as that.Tuesday morning—in the midstof a Chicago snow storm, a Uni¬versity of Chicago storm brokeloose. Everyone on campus racedto read the Maroon’s special edi¬tion telling of the “seizure ofMonday’s gag issue.” Accordingto Maroon staff members whowere “in” on the joke, only a verysmall part of the campus figuredout on their own that Tuesday’sissue was actually the annual gagissue.Only the careful reader or theDean of Students Robert M.Strozier has upheld the right ofthe Inter-Fraternity council infining Phi Gamma Delta frater¬nity on January 17 for illegalrushing practices in early pledg¬ing of four men.^ The dean’s letter addressed to1 hi Gam president Dave Leonetti■ ame just before the grace periodfor payment of the $200 fine wasnp Phi Gam had appealed theirfine to the dean on the groundsthat “they had done nothing in vi¬olation of rushing rules.”Hie letter stated that Strozier''’as not condemning Phi Gam inhis upholding of the council ac-tion since “I believe you havebeen truthful in saying that you' 1 not think you were doingvtiong.”,. °f fast night, it appeared;, phi Gam had an outside' nance to get off with a smalleru,e than originally imposed. In his letter, the dean stated: “thesize of the fine is something thatI do not feel qualified to judge.”Strozier stated that he had dis¬cussed the matter with I-F presi¬dent Herb Gorr and had askedGorr and other members of thecouncil to “reconsider the amountof money involved.”By late yesterday afternoon,Gorr had not received the letterfrom the dean officially uphold¬ing the action of the council.Gorr stated that the councilwould probably not discuss theStrozier letter or take further ac¬tion until a copy of the letter hadbeen received.(The I-F council has power tosuspend rushing, pledging, andinitiating activities of all fraterni¬ties, as well as to de-recognize any fining the fraternity, Phi Gamhad stated in the January 18 Ma¬roon: “We felt that the pledgingof these men was legal. There areno rushing rules covering oursupposed violation. This demon¬strates the need that has alwaysexisted for explicit written rush¬ing rules.”Strozier made reference to thispoint by stating: “I hope that theone good thing which will .resultfrom the entire affair is more ex¬plicit regulations so that the mar¬gin for error of misinterpreta¬tions will not result from looseand undefined rules governingrushing and pledging.” Strozierclosed his precedent-setting (forthe I-F council) letter with an ad¬monition to the council: “Thespirit of UC is. against regulations sharp-eyed newspaper fan couldspot the secret in the, very fineprint above the Maroon’s mast¬head ( list of staff members) onpage 3. The mast read as usualexcept for the addition of the keyphrase: “. . . the Chicago Maroontakes pleasure in announcing thatyou are reading its annual gagissue. No issue appeared yester¬day, no papers were confiscated,and this issue hasn’t one word oftruth in it (except for the ads).”Despite this statement of fact,by late morning most of the stu¬dents and faculty on campus hadfallen for the gag.Campus reactsCampus reaction to Tuesday’sissue would fill many pages. Someof the choicer bits:“Fearless Fosdick,” the genialcampus policeman who spends agood portion of each school daydirecting campus traffic aroundthe “circle” in the main quad¬rangle was the victim of manyvicious comments from earlyreaders of the issue who believedthat campus police had confiscat¬ed Maroons.“Gestapo!” yelled one UCerfrom a passing car. Fosdick, stillgenial but slightly puzzled wasgiven another shocker: “Youguys'll finally get the slap in the?V$%&\$ you deserve fromthis!”No longer as genial and ex¬tremely puzzled, Fosdick finallylocated the source of his treat¬ment: the gag issue “chargingGestapo-like tactics” on the partof the campus police in its leadstory.And a postcard lying on the edi¬tor’s desk Wednesday am statedinn Two college newspapers onthe Maroon exchange list havealready made long distancecalls to find out why the Mon¬day issue was seized.Fred Powiedge of the DailyTarheel (University of NorthCarolina) called Wednesdaynight to confirm seizure of theMaroon. They already had thestory set up in type telling ofthe UC administration aetion.After being told that it was agag, he was a bit flustered.Doug Elridge of the Colum¬bia university Spectator calledyesterday afternoon. They hadprinted the story as their frontpage lead story without con¬firmation. In an attempt to getthe Maroon’s phone numberfor a followup story, their edi¬tor read the masthead — anddiscovered the gag. Afterspeaking to Ron Grossman,Maroon editor, Elridge re¬marked, “I ought to be mad atyou, but I congratulate you in¬stead. You sure had us fooled.”simply “As regards your gag is¬sue: BAH! (signed) John Alex.”Dean Robert M. Strozier wasthe brunt of most of the reactionfrom the faculty and administra¬tion. Attending his regular Tues¬day morning administration meet¬ing, the dean was unaware of theissue. Meanwhile, members ofUC’s administration and press re¬lations office had been contactedby all four of Chicago’s dailynewspapers and the city newsbureau. As Strozier put it, “mysee ‘Gag,’ page 5I TJIX‘ Jllfraternities which act contrary toVexcept as they are necessary forrulings and regulations passed by smooth operation. It is evidentthe council.) that more rules are necessary atFollowing the council action in the present time.” t I“Take your hands off that paper, you — you storm trooper.V2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 15, 1957 ft mCarnegie corporation gives SC approves COmiWSSIOn$142,500 grant to center plan for by-law changesThe Carnegie corporation of New York has given a grantof $142,500 to UC’s center for the study of American foreignpolicy, it was announced Monday.Under the leadership of Hans J. Morgenthau, the center,with the aid of a previous Carnegie grant, has developed animportant program of research in American foreign policy. Threemajor books and many articles have been produced—publicationswhich received very favorable notice both in the United States andEurope.The new Carnegie grant will be used over a five-year period tocontinue this program.The grant was one of seven awarded by Carnegie Monday in theinternational field. In all, the philanthropic foundation awarded overa million dollars. Curiously enough, one of the grants was for a studyof the numerous overseas activities of American universities, to beconducted by Michigan State university.Psychotic children topicof Bettelheim talk tonighfrDr. Bruno Bettelheim, principal of the Sonia ShankmanOrthogenic school, will address a group of students with“clinical” interests today in the Reynolds club north loungeat 8 pm. Dr. Bettelheim will talk on ‘‘The treatment of psychoticchildren at the Orthogenic school.”This newly formed group is an interdepartmental organization ofstudents from the departments of psychology, education, and humandevelopment, which takes a specific interest in clinical areas andproblems. It closely parallels an interdepartmental faculty committeewhich was set up to clarify the role of the University in the trainingof clinicians. by Norman LewakAn amended set of by-laws, the first of five documents to be considered for change, werepassed by Student Government Tuesday night.The consideration of other parts of the report of the commission on SG (student bill ofrights, statute of powers, student code, and constitution) will be continued at the next SGmeeting, Tuesday, Law north, 7:30.Only two major changes were made in the by-laws: the existing committees were snlit upinto legislative “committees” *———~ tt ^ .. .ISL-phy sci) resentatives of all the major stu¬dent organizations.and administrative “depart¬ments,” and a new method ofbill presentation (providing forthe posting of bills so that mem¬bers may read them before ameeting). There were other mi¬nor, clarifying changes.The seven committees and theirgeneral fields as envisioned bythe commission are (with chair¬men):• Election and rules—SG in rela¬tion to itself (Penny Rich, ISL-coll)• Committee on recognized stu¬dent organizations—SG in re¬lation to organized studentsSylvia Thompson, ISL-soc)• Campus action—SG in relationto individual students (HerbZipperian, ISL-coll)• NSA-student rights—SG in re¬lation to issues that extend be¬yond the campus (DebbieMines, ISL-coll) *• Student-faculty relations — SGin relation to faculty and ad¬ministration (Dave Freifelder, • Community relations — SG inrelation to the community(Nan Malken, ISL-SSA)• Committe at large—SG in relation to t he minority party(Timothy Essien, SRP-soc)The executive departments willbe public relations, student publi¬cations, (publications run by SG,mainly the student directory), stu¬dent services, student travel, in¬ternational student exchange andorientation, activities coordina¬tion, and finance. Directors andmembers of the department mayor may not be members of theassembly. New departments willbe. created and existing ones dis¬banded according to need.Also passed was a bill broughtup by the activities coordinationcommittee providing for an advi¬sory council for the president ofSG. This would be a body to fa¬cilitate communication betweenSG and student organizations.The makeup of the council wouldbe flexible and would include rep-. irO*YOU’RE STRANDED high on a peak in the Andes. Wind’srising. Thermometer’s dropping. And the next llama forLima leaves in 7 days. You reach for a Lucky... try everypocket... but you’re fresh out. Brother, you’re in for aBleak Week! No cigarette anywhere can match the tasteof a Lucky. A Lucky is all cigarette . . . nothing but fine,mild, good-tasting tobacco that’s TOASTED to tasteeven better. Try one right now. You’ll say it’s thebest-tasting cigarette you ever smoked! WHAT IS A PUGNACIOUSFORTUNETEUER?MARTIN KATZ.C.C.N. V Ftitle MysticWHAT IS A COLLEGEFACULTY ROOM?DON'T JUST STAND THERE STICKLE! MAKE *25 A. JC ROME EDISON.OBERLIN Mentor CenterSticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming_ answers. Both words must have the same number ofsyllables. (No drawings, please!) We’ll shell out $25 for all we use—and for hundreds that never see print. So send stacks of ’emwith your name, address, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky,Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y.Luckies Taste Better“IT'S TOASTED” TO TASTE BETTER . . . CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER! WHAT IS A SHORT ARGUMENTIDANIEL CONSTANT.SANTA MONICA CITY COLL. Brief BeefWHAT IS A CONCEITED BOXER?A* L. UNDERBRINK. SmUg Pug• OF CHICAGO WHAT IS A TOUGH GUY SBREAKFAST?JOSEPH DIANOND. Yegg'8 EggSMAYNE UNIVERSITY WHAT IS A SODA FOUNTAIN?Paul lion. Calorie GalleryU OF SOUTHERN CAI WHAT IS FAKE FEROCITY?Virginia houssman. Stage RageMICHIGAN STATE• A. T.C*. PRODUCT OF AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTE* Harper givesLincolniana,slavery dataA copy of the EmancipationProclamation, one of 45 signedby President Lincoln to be soldfor charity, is on display in Har¬per library, in honor of Lincoln'sbirthday.“The amazing thing about theseunusual documents is that theydidn’t sell well at all,” said RobertRosenthal, head of the library’sdepartment of special collections.“They were to be sold for thebenefit of the sanitary commitsion, an organization like our RedCross, at the commission’s fair.”Included in the objects of slav¬ery and abolition on display in thelibrary are broadsides and adver¬tisements offering substantial re¬wards for runaway slaves, billsof sale for slaves, and householdaccount books listing slaves alongwith the owner’s possessions offurniture, silverware, and potsand pans.The literature of abolition isalso part of the exhibit. On dis¬play are early editions of UncleToni’s Cabin, and The Journal, anautobiography of John Woolman,a Quaker who refused to eat su¬gar because it was made byslaves.CHICAGO'S NEWESTAND MOST DISTINCTIVEshop for menTWEED SUITSfor the tweedyImported Bailantyne, Shet lands,IFonegals, and Princeton weavesIMPORTED*59”608 n. michigan aveniKWhitehall 3-2410—rawMi II IiiiniiiimFeb. 15, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3America: business civilization1 American civilization is abusiness civilization. Its ori¬gins and early experienceshaped it that way, its growthstrengthened this position, and re¬cent history has confirmed it,Thomas C. Cochran, University ofPennsylvania historian, said Mon¬day.“Twentieth century social sci¬entists agree that American cul¬ture is essentially in tune withbusiness culture. The broad val¬ues of business ideology and ofthe American cultural heritageare not the values of one class,but the values of all,” Cochrandeclared in a discussion of “A cul¬tural approach to history.”With this lecture Cochran open¬ed a series of six lectures on“Business in American culture”sponsored by the Charles R. Wal¬green foundation. The remaininglectures, open to the public with¬out charge, will be given today,Monday, Tuesday and next Fri¬day at 4:30 in soc sci 122.Tracing the history of Ameri¬can commercial enterprise frommedieval England to the Revolu¬tionary war, Cochran pointed outthat the discovery and settlementof America were by-products ofthe rise of a new' merchant-capi¬talist society in Europe.“The character of the United States today is Inextricably tiedup with a part of the new mana¬gerial society, based on mass pro¬duction, that has flourished mostin America.”Cites rise of capitalismAnswering the questions, “howdid we get this way, and how didAmerica come to differ fromWestern Europe?” Cochran citedthe sixteenth century rise of capi¬talism in sharp contrast to me¬dieval traditions.“In sixteenth century Englandthe prevailing economic doctrineswere those oi the medieval church— that a ‘free market,’ a pricefluctuating with supply and de¬mand, and the collection of inter¬est from savings were wrong. AsEurope changed from a farm to abusiness community, rival faithsrose and nations came to needusury for their financial exist¬ence. The position of the churchin business affairs was weakenedconsiderably,” Cochran stated.“Calvinism, a strong rival tothe Anglican church, had W'ithinit the essentials of a vigorous in¬dividualistic capitalism. In forg¬ing ahead in the business world,the Calvinist, with God’s help,was demonstrating the high prob¬ability of salvation. This was thebest divine philosophy individual¬istic business has ever found.”The New World was settled bypeople of this frame of mind who hoped to make money exploitingher resources, Cochran indicated.“While the colonies in Massa¬chusetts represented religioussects seeking to better their eco¬nomic and social environment,the company which started thecolony at Jamestown, Virginia,was organized as strictly a busi¬ness venture.”Describing attitudes in theearly colonies, Cochran said thatin their pragmatic atmosphere,useful learning brought one socialprominence. Through useful skillsone became a successful business¬man, and a member of high so¬ciety.“Colonial landlords as a groupwere lacking in the essentials ofan aristocratic system. Althoughstatus ascribed to birth wras stillthe more desirable, status achiev¬ed through the efforts of the in¬dividual entitled him to respectfrom the most high places.”Judge by different standardsBy the standards of a later dayUnited States, Cochran said, thefirst decades of North Americancolonialism were not especiallycolored by business influence.However, compared to WesternEurope, or the rest of the world,seventeenth century Americanculture wTas distinguished by theimportance and prestige of busi¬ness and business men.“Philadelphia of 1700, the best colonial haven of the entrepre¬neur, was far removed in atmos¬phere and incentive from Chicagoof 1850. But compared with Lon¬don or Paris of 1700, colonialPhiladelphia was far along theroad to the Chicago business cli¬mate.”Cochran continued on Tuesdaytelling of the role of the colonialbusiness man. Business men ofthe Revolutionary period contrib¬uted largely to the formation of astrong central government in the United States, he said.“The American Revolution cre¬ated a national business commu¬nity united by common interestin the public debt and nationalland policies, served by a nationalbank, and increasingly related byintermarriage,” Cochran said.“By the time the Treaty of Pariswas signed in 1783 the businessgroup was ready to press for astronger central government inorder to aid the further expansionof enterprise.”City council commitee approveHyde Park redevelopment planThe Hyde Park redevelop¬ment plan of the New Yorkfirm of Webb & Knapp, inc.,moved one step closer to officialapproval Friday.By a vote of 8 to 1, the CityPlanning and Housing commit¬tee decided, in executive session,that the Webb & Knapp plan bidwas the best of five presented.The proposal, previously ap¬proved by the Land Clearancecommission, will go before theCity Council at its next meetingMarch 14.The Webb & Knapp firm hasthe backing of William Zecken-dorf, a top real estate tycoon. Itsplan would clear and rebuild 57acres of slums along 55th street,and in the vicinity of 54th andDorchester.According to the plan, 55thstreet would be divided with tw'oeight-story 525 unit apartmentbuildings to be built between thetwo created lanes. The presentstreet between Kenwood andHarper would become a greenoval-shaped mall. The plan also provides for 217 row houses, eightsingle-family homes, and a shop¬ping center.John D. Cordwell, an architectemployed by the committee calledthe mall “an interesting and in¬genious solution” of a difficultproblem, and the Hyde Park-Ken-wood Community Conference en¬dorsed it. But there was also bit¬ter opposition to the plan, particu¬larly from the backers of HerbertS. Greenwald, a rival bidder.The Webb & Knapp plan wascalled a “monstrosity” and ahodgepodge.” It was charged thatthe rents (estimated at an aver¬age of $40 a room) would be too high, that the buildings wouldnot be high enough, and that theplan as a whole was a drop in thebucket. Leon Despres, aldermanfrom the 5th ward, called Green-wald’s plan “a bold and imagina¬tive conception.”Phil A Doyle, executive directorof the commission, reported thatif the plan is approved soon, con¬struction could begin late thissummer and be completed inabout tw'o and a half years.The commission now owns allthe land except one parcel, andabout half of it is now cleared ofthe old and deteriorating build¬ings that formerly occupied it.Small Cheese .... 95cSmall Sausage . .$1.15NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE:THE SCIENCE OFDEMONSTRABLE GOODA lecture by James Watt, C.S.TUESDAY, FEB. 19, 8 P.M.IDA NOYES HALL Justice Clark tojudge moot courtSupreme Court Associate Justice Tom C. Clark will be thehead judge at the final round of the Law school’s Hintonmoot court competition, Tuesday, 8 pm, Law school.Also judging will be John Biggs, Jr., chief judge of the UScourt of appeals (third cir¬cuit) and Sterry R. Water¬man, associate judge of the USCourt of Appeals (second circuit).In a moot court, law studentsargue actual cases in competition.This competition has been goingfor two years. Competing for the$200 prize will be two teams com¬posed of UC law students: Rich¬ard Berryman, Frederick Yonk-man, Alan Swan, and John Rad-cliffe versus Harry Holmes, Gil¬bert Ginsburg, David Rockne, andMarshall Hartman.They will debate the case ofCranor vs. Gonzales, 226 F (2nd)83. Anyone may attend.1 Burton-Judson Awake II Why are You OYER-PAYING for j| Laundry and Dry Cleaning Services? || COMPARE—Our Low Prices [H WITH THOSE YOU ARE NOW PAYING |e| Phone us for FREE PICKUP and DELIVERY || RAPID, QUALITY SERVICE-SATISFACTION GUARANTEED |J University Quick Laundry [H 1376 E. 55th St. PL 2-9097 j|illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Justice Tom C. Clark MODEL CAMERAHyde Park's most completephoto and hobby shopExport modelsNSA Discount1343 F. 55th IIY 3-9359SONGS OF THE POGOThe musical debut ofAmerica’s foremost possum*1. Big Record. A new 12-inch, 33% IjtPM record contains,for the first time, 18 songs of the Pogo. The words are byWalt Kelly, most of the music by Norman Monath. Thesongs vary in mood from the rousing Go Go Pogo to thehaunting Whence that Wince and the world-weary Par-snoops. Originally scored for lute, harp, comb-with-tissue-paper and nightingale, they are here presented in brilliantorchestral arrangements. The vocal parts are performed byan almost uncompromising (they did let Kelly sing threeof the songs) group of Pogo Singers. The words are austerelyprinted, for serious students who wish to employ a libretto,in a leaflet enclosed with the record. Ask your book or recorddealer for the 12-inch Songs of the Pogo. $4.95.2. Big Little Record. For cautious people who prefer to buy onemovement of a symphony at a time, for people in small rooms, andfor small people with little carrying capacity, we have made a SongsOF THE POGO sampler (78 or 45 RPM) containing 3 of the songsfrom the big record. It costs 49<. People who buy this record and likeit are eligible to buy the big record too.3. Big Book. Here done up in a beautifully shiny hard bind¬ing are the words and music to ell the Songs of the Pogo —30 of them, suitable for as many occasions: birthdays, med¬ical check-ups, elevator rides, valentines, songs-to-cram-for*midyears-by, etc. With drawings in color as well asauthentic sauce material by Walt Kelly. Ask for the Songsof the Pogo song book. $3.95.Oa solo at yoar book or rocord store. Simon end Schuster—<4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 15, 1957Editor's column (Gag has serious meaning:no censorship in ‘Maroon’Humor is an elusive thing. Pies-in-the-face,off-color material, satire, the absurd, all arehumorous in the right situation. Perhaps themost humorous outcome of the Maroon gagconcerning administration seizure of an off¬color issue is that so many fell for it.Despite a statement (well-hidden, to besure) revealing that Tuesday’s Maroon wasthe gag issue, a large number of UC studentsand faculty were “taken in.” Although fewpeople will admit that they were fooled, eventhe most hard-bitten UC skeptic had his mo¬ments of belief in the information printed inthe gag issue.Fall for the gag, or not — many receivedmuch pleasure and had hearty laughs afterdiscovery of the “secret” of Tuesday’s issue.At some campuses, such a joke would notbe funny. Sad to say, the right of the collegepress to print what it feels should be printedis not as well established and protected atmany schools as is that right on this campus.There, material may actually be read by amember of the faculty or administration be¬fore it is printed. At some schools, such anissue might indeed be seized.At UC, the limit of administration actionfollowing publication of “questionable” ma¬ terial is that the dean of students, after read¬ing the Maroon, gives the editor his views onthe advisability of having printed such mate¬rial. Such criticism — given in private con¬ference— after publication and distributionof the newspapers is not censorship but “fa¬therly advice,” which many times a collegepaper needs.Never are threats made or pressurebrought to bear to prevent the publication ofwriting on certain subjects or to shape thecontents of future issues.This does not mean that the faculty nevermakes suggestions before material is printed.Often the Maroon, of its own volition, takesmaterial to faculty members for constructivecriticism before publication. Sometimes, theMaroon fails to ask for help or advice whenit probably should. But never is the Maroonrequired to show material to anyone in ad¬vance of publication.That is why at UC the seizure of a jokeissue is only the topic of a joke issue — nevera reality.In case any one is wondering — Dean Stro-zier as well as many campus policemen andmost of the administration immensely en¬joyed Tuesday’s gag issue.Ronald J. GrossmanSees antifootballism as harmfulIn a letter to the editor(February 8), Messrs. Lau¬rence R. Veysey and TedNorris again voiced the party lineof a group particular to the Uni¬versity of Chicago. Essentiallywhat they would have us do isto jump from the frying pan intothe fire—from the big ten spiritto militant individualism—f r o mone false standard to another, forwhat is militant individualism,Messrs. Veysey and Norris, if itisn’t just conformity to a new setof standards?These standards condone doingwhat everyone else will not do.In other words, if the conformistswear pants, the militant noncon¬formists will go around withoutthem, just to prove that theyaren’t conformists, and yet theyare conforming to a new and lesssincere set of rules. Their actionsaren’t based upon their personaltastes but rather on the fact thatthey must appear to be differentfor difference’s sake.Messrs. Veysey and Norris,your brand of spirit has left thisuniversity an “I don’t really caremuch about anything or anybody,Dahhling” place, for it has cre¬ated a vacuum as great as orMaroon humorsection requestedI read in your recent articleon the Cap and Gown thatthere was a humor magazineon campus at one time. I wouldlike to know what the studentopinion would be on devoting asection of the Maroon to campushumor. I think that you shouldundertake this project if you findenough students willing to sup¬port it with humorous incidentsand stories.. . . there is no humor publica¬tion on campus, outside of youryearly gag issue. . . . this woulddo a small but significant part tosolve the problem of campusunity. Even the most divergent in¬dividualist likes to be amused.Humor is a common interest, evenmore than football would be.. . . the great individualism ofthe UC would yield a variety andoriginality of humor that couldnot be matched by any of the“follow the leader” schools.... I hope your readers willshow a favorable reaction.Omar D. Draper . greater than anything that the so-called “Saturday afternoon emo¬tionalism” could have created.Are you really so presumptiousas to believe that you “have seenthe folly as folly and are awarethat we are unique”?No, the answer to the “spirit”problem at the UC does not lie in your brand of nonconformity,nor does it lie in the footballspirit. The goal is in between thefalse standards of either extreme.This goal should be one in whoseattainment the administrationwould have an interest, but thatdoes not seem to be the case.I>arry RossnerLetter policyThe Maroon publishes letters to the editor on subjectsof interest to the student body. Such letters are sub¬ject to editing if longer than 250 words. No unsignedletters will be printed under any circumstances. However,the writer's name will be withheld, or noms de plumeused, on request.~i/\/V cfucacp11 laroonIssued every Friday throughout the school year and intermittently during thesummer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, which wishes that youwould stop reading the masthead because this issue is for real. We enjoyed laugh¬ing along with all the good sports among the students, faculty and administrationwho fell for the “seizure” gag issue. The Maroon will continue publishing at1212 East 59 street. Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial office, Midway3-0800, ext. 3266; Business and advetrising office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3265.Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Business office hours: 2 pm to 5 pm, Mondaythrough Friday.Eiditor-in-chief Ronald J. GrossmanManaging editor Norman LewakBusiness manager Gary MokotoffAdvertising manager Lawrence D. KesslerNews editors Rochelle Dubnow, Bob HalaszCulture editor Dave ZackLecture editor Harold BernhardtCopy editors Kathy Aller, Betsy KirtleyProduction monoger Jean KwonSports Editor George KarcazesEditorial assistant Bob BrownCalendar editor . . .Jeanne HerrickOffice monoger Art TaitelPhotographers Roland Finston, Bob WilsonCartoonists Kent Flannery, Dick Montgomery, Gwen WeberEditorial stoff Zelda Eisen, Mary Finkle, Oliver Lee, Sue Needleman,Marge Russell, Dave Schlessinger, Sue Shapiro, Phyllis Henry__Flowers for Wash PromfromMitzie’s Flower ShopTwo convenient stores% 1301 E. 35th St.* Mil 3-4030 1225 E. 03rd St. %HY 3-5353t ini ,i- iu^v ii « .s£ You're never behind the 8 ball atReynolds Club Billiard RoomSnooker - Billiards - PoolOpen 9 a.m. -10 p.m. Ladies invitedBASKETBALL CHAMPION, SAYS:’VICEROY HASTHE SMOOTHESTTASTE OF ALL!'SMOOTH! From the finest tobacco grown, Viceroy selects onlythe Smooth Flavor Leaf... Deep-Cured golden brown for extra smoothness /\ ' r V":-"v' 1SUPER SMOOTH! Only Viceroy smooths each pufTthrough 20,000 filters made from pure cellulose —soft, snow-white, natural!Many 'gagged' • • •from page 1phone almost rang off the desk."The dailies were quick to “bite"that the confiscation was real, buteven quicker to check with UCauthorities who assured them(albeit with some doubts in theirown minds) that it wasn’t. TheChicago American, first on thestreet with the news of the gagthat wasn’t a gag, gave the storyfront page position!“Today is not April Fool’s day,and that’s the reason for the con¬fusion on the UC campus. .. . Stu¬dent readers .. . wondered wheth¬er a scheduled ‘protest meeting’at Mandel hall was just a gag too,or whether some proof of the con¬fiscation would be produced."Under the headline “Studentsseized with laughter” the ChicagoDaily News stated: “The UC stu¬dent newspaper gave a new twistto its annual ‘gag issue’ Tuesday. . . the edition itself was in factthe gag, said University spokes¬men.”The Chicago Sun-Times, head¬lining “Gag almost backfires”printed: “Aroused by a specialedition claiming the Universityhad confiscated the Maroon’s reg¬ular Monday issue, students wereplanning an anticensorship rally.Then they read the small print atthe bottom of page 3. It was alla joke.”The Daily Northwestern fellhook, line and sinker and wroteon the front page of their paper,SEE MOSCOWTHE FESTIVALThe VI World Festival of Youthand Students will be held in Mos¬cow July 28 — August II, 1957,with a stupendous program. YOUshould be there.For details, contact:CHICAGO COUNCIL OFAMERICAN-SOVIETFRIENDSHIP189 W. Madison AN 3-1877in '57Round Trip viaSteamship $OAAFREQUENT SAILINGS vVV «RTourist Round Trip Air$46080 in seasontower rales for groups on chartersand for 17-day excursionsChoice of Over 100STUDENT TOURSTRAVEL STUDY TOURSUniversity Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines, hasrendered efficient travel serviceon a business basis since 1925...imtsmm ,See your local travel agent forfolders and details or write *»•UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mass. “A special gag issue of the Uni¬versity of Chicago Maroon hasbeen confiscated by Universitypolice, the paper reported yester¬day.“The administration seized thepaper following charges that theissue was ‘slanderous.’ A rallywhich the editors slated yesterdayafternoon was stopped by theUniversity.“A special issue was printedTuesday by the Maroon editor ex¬plaining the issue. So far no ac¬tion has been taken against theeditor who could not be reachedfor comments.”As a matter of fact, over 150students showed up at Mandelhall for the scheduled “mass ral¬ly,” Eager to learn of the contentsof the “allegedly lewd and slan¬derous gag issue,” students milledaround the entrance to the hallwaiting for something to happen.Attempting to enter Mandel hall,students were turned away by thejanitor who stated, “You can't usethis hall.”This caused quite a reaction.One brave soul advanced to thedoor and savagely ripped down aposter which proclaimed, “Massrally cancelled by the administra¬tion.” He was heard mumbling ashe stalked away, “We’ll hold therally off campus.”Another defender of the faithoffered to start a “fund” to enablethe Maroon to print off-campus.The student claimed that he hadbeen on campus when the Ma¬roon was actually suspended bythe administration (in 1951).“They can’t pull the same tacticsagain,” he yelled. “We’ll printwithout their money!” Feb. 15# 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Gag issue had many cluesthat contents was spoofby Gary MokotoffCopy for Tuesday’s Maroon gag issue, while superficially straight matter, actually con¬tained hints that the entire issue was a hoax.The masthead on page three stated that “you are reading its annual gag issue. No issueappeared yesterday, no papers were confiscated, and this issue hasn’t a word of truth init (except for the ads)’’.The gag issue staff had hoped that almost no one would read the mast, but some UC stu¬dents who suspected that theissue was a phony read theissue so carefully that theyspotted the notice in the mast¬head.Probably the easiest way to de¬termine the validity of the seizurewas to call up either Dean of Stu¬dents Robert M. Strozier or GuyF. Lyman, head of the campuspolice. To the Maroon's knowl¬edge no one tried to call Lyman,but Dean Strozier’s office wasflooded with calls. However, thegag issue staff realized that Stro¬zier would not be available forcomment because he is in a “notto he disturbed meeting” from.9:30 to 12:30 every Tuesday morn¬ing.Few people realized that the is¬sue lacked names. The only peo¬ple quoted were the gag issue au¬thors and Dean Strozier. All otherpersons “requested that theirnames not be used.”Peter Vandervoort. a student inthe physical sciences came .upwith a clue the staff did not evenrealize. The volume number andissue number was in direct se¬quence with last Friday’s Maroon.If there had really been an issueMonday, the Tuesday issue wouldhave been two numbers past lastFriday’s issue. Instead it was one.= Monday evenings, 7:00 & 9:00 p.m.Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-20G0SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Itlon. - Sat. — .9 a.nt. - 11 p.m.StudentsStudent 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 Street24 HOURDEVELOPING SERVICEBRING YOUR FILM IN TODAY ANDGET YOUR PICTURES BACK TOMORROWAT THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue specifically requests their help insome matter.A union regulation was evenviolated in the issue. One of theunions that is involved in printingthe Maroon requires that stereo¬types never leave the shop Thisis to prevent the printing of theissue at a non-union press. Prob¬ably the only way of getting thestereos is by subpoena action.Some students said that theyrealized that it was a gag becausewe could have never published theissue in such short notice, or beable to get the engravings in time.This, however, is not true. TheMaroon has occasionally used theengraving department of the Sun-Times when an emergency arose.Our printer could handle a fourpage issue in about four hours.Other hints were too technicalfor most readers to discover.For example, Don Miller, SGpresident, who is the roommateof Maroon managing editor NormLewak, knew the name of the3Iaroon’s printer. A quick call toour printer confirmed that theonly two issues in the past wreekwere “put to bed” — on Thursdaynight and Monday night Hast Fri¬day’s issue and the Tuesday gagissue).The Maroon’s legal status atthe present time is that it is partof the University. How could theUniversity of Chicago (the Ma¬roon) bring legal action againstthe University of Chicago (theUC administration). Besides thecampus police know that theyhave no right to operate off cam¬pus and surely wouldn’t attemptto enforce their rights away fromthe University.The issue stated that the ad¬ministration knew the contents ofthe issue beforehand. The admin¬istration never knows the con¬tents of the Maroon until the is¬sue is printed, unless the Maroon|llllllllll!llllllltlllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllll1llllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllSI GINGISS BROS. OFFERS A Iat FREE DELIVERYNTICKYSPIZZERIANO 7-9063g.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^ - =International House Movies = iEast Lounge = = Washington Prom Special30% Discount on All Tux RentalsMonday, February 18—45c — Julius Caesar (.American)iiiiimiiiiiimmimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiimiMiiiiiiiiimiimmmiimmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiimiiijimiiiiii? = Fittings on campus — Reynolds Club == Mon., Feb. 18 and Thurs., Feb. 21 — 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. =5.= For additional information, contact= Alan Bernick, Hitchcock 67 =/Rock and Roll* is Passefor faculty members. If assistant professors are still indulging (in aStutz Bearcat, for instance) they should immediately put in their orderfor a new model. Auto financing is simple and costs less at theHyde Park Co-op Federal Credit Union5535 S. HARPER DO 3-1113^Jostling in old carsby Chester FieldHE-MAN DREWRich man of the campus was Danny DrewBecause of his wonderful chest tattoo—A beautiful lady exquisitely etched—When he flexed his muscles she got up and stretchedHis buddies all gave him their hard-earned doughFor the pleasure of watchinghis pectoral show.MORALt Accept no substitute for realenjoyment* Take your pleasure BIG.Smoke Chesterfield and smoke for real.Made better by ACCU-RAY, it’s theSmoothest tasting smoke today.Smoko for root • •. smoko Chesterfield850 for every philosophical verse accepted forpublication. Chesterfield, P.O. Box 21, Wew York 40, N.T.O Licott A M,an Tobaceo Ob.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 15, 1957Prayer Day Sunday Economist Brady1 9 9 assigned to chairThe Universal Day of Prayer for Students, which is observed annually in student Chris¬tian movements over the world, will be marked by two events on the University of Chicagocampus Sunday.Preacher in the morning service at Rockefeller Memorial chapel will be the Reverend Jo¬seph Sittler, Jr., professor of theology in the Chicago Lutheran seminary, Maywood, Illinois.Professor Sittler is a visiting professor in the Federated Theological faculty this quarter,will be entitled Mrs. Dorothy S. Brady, who developed the cost-of-livingindex for the federal government, has been appointed pro¬fessor of economics at UC.At the University, Mrs. Brady will head a research groupstudying the economics of con-His sermonPrayer, and the Freedom ofGod.’'In a special observance of theoccasion, portions of the servicewill be read by chaplains of dif¬ferent religious groups on thecampus and student leaders fromthese groups will take part in theprocession.The second event during theday will be an Interchurch supperat 6:00 pm in the Swift hall com¬mon room. This !s also an annualpart of the day’s observance, spon¬sored cooperatively by the Prot¬estant student organizations in the University. Actively partici¬pating in plans for the programare students from the Baptist,Disciples, Canterbury club (Epis¬copal), Lutheran, Methodist, Por¬ter foundation, and Quakergroups, as well as from the theo¬logical schools on campus. Theprogram is open to the Universitycommunity.A faculty panel will discuss“Prayer,” the subject of Profes¬sor Sittler’s sermon in the morn¬ing. Participants will be KermitEby, professor of social sciences,Ruth O. McCarn, assistant deanof students, J. Coert Rylaarsdam,professor in the Federated Theo-A CASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 55th St. BY 3-9651|iiiii!iiitiiiiiiiitiiimiiiiii!iiiitiiititiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiitiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiim|Are your formal garments |ready for the Wash Prom? |If not, there is still time. Call |MAX BROOKCleaners & Launderers ;1013-17 E. 61 MI 3-7447 |Trucks on Campus Daily |ItlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllililltllllllllllllllllllllllllltlltlllllllllllllR[ou utrope-You have to 11 fThat’s why American Express Student Tours are expertlyplanned to include a full measure of individual leisure—ample free time to discover your Europe—as well as themost comprehensive sight-seeing program available any¬where! Visit England, Scotland, Denmark, Norway,Sweden, Holland, Belgium, Germany, Austria, Switzer¬land, Italy and France—accompanied by distinguishedtour leaders—enjoy superb American Express servicethroughout.11 Special Tours ... 53 to 63 days .. . via famous ships:lie de France, United States, ybert6, Saturnia,Guilio Cesare, Flandre. $1,448 upAlso Regular Tours ... 42 days ... $i,301 upYou can alwaysTRAVEL NOW—PAY LATERwhen you go American Express.For complete information, see yourCampus Representative,local Travel Agent orAmerican ExpressV Travel Service, l£^\\I' member: Institute of vInternational Education and Councilon Student Travel. . or simply mail the handy coupon.American Express Travel Service65 Broadway, New York 6, N. Y. e/o Travel Salet DirUtonYes! Please do send me complete informationabout 1957 Student Tours to Europe!Name C-13Address.City .Zone..... .StatefKOTECT YOUR TRAVEL rUNOS WITH AMERICA!* EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES-SPENDABLE EVERYWHERE logical faculty, Theodore M.Switz, director of industry rela¬tions, ami Dean John B. Thomp¬son of Rockefeller chapel, whowill moderate the panel. Theseand other faculty members willlead small discussion groupswhich will follow the panel.The World’s Student Christianfederation which annually spon¬sors the Universal Day of Prayerfor students units student Chris¬tian movements in 57 countriesof the world.Chicago Maroonsumption. Financed througha grant from the Rockefellerfoundation, the group will studytrends in and factors determiningconsumption levels, and the dis¬tribution of income in the UnitedStates and in other countries.Mrs. Brady is on leave from herpost in the department of laboras technical consultant to thecommission of labor statistics onthe cost of living. In that positionshe developed and maintained thecost-of-living index, which affectsthe wages of the many workerswho have cost-of-living agree¬ ments with their employers.She also has served the govern¬ment as chief of the division ofprices and cost of living, as spe¬cial consultant on problems aris¬ing from wartime and postwarchanges in the cost of living, andas senior statistician in the bu¬reau of human nutrition andhome economics.A graduate of Reed college,Portland, Oregon, Mrs. Brady re¬ceived her MA from Cornell uni¬versity and her PhD from theUniversity of California, Berke¬ley.CLASSIFIED ADSStudent rate 5c per wordFor saleBrand new set of encyclopedia. Best of¬fer. 1955 Motorola radio and misc. fur¬niture. RA 3-3816.No sags: Student discounts on Garard,Wharfedale, Harmon-Kardon, RadioCraftsmen, Leak, Presto, etc., still avail¬able from Audio Consultants, c/o JeanKwon, Poster 16.Donation. Early American maple sofabed. Storage compartment. Slipcover.FA 4-5619.Used electric bowling machine, TwinUnited Shuffle Alley model, requiresadjusting. Price $1, BA 1-6837..475 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.Help wanted Others 10c per word Phone: Ml 3-0800 Ext 3265Student for part time work with SouthSide community newspaper in advertis¬ing. Hours to suit. Attractive earnings.AB 4-4488. After 7 pm, AB 4-6040.Part time stenographer; work eveningsbetween 6:30 and 9:00. Contact W. De-wan Dean, Hotel Sherry, FA 4-1000. Wanted — German languge record set.Schwarte. DO 3-9511.ServicesNews editor wanted for South Sidenewspaper. Call AB 4-4488. After 7 pm,AB 4-6040.Someone needed to take phone mes¬sages at a downtown hotel, Feb. 16-19.Hours 9-6, $50. Kohlberg, ext 1583.Dictaphone typist position available.Location, Midway, $275 per month. 35hour week. For information call Mrs.Abram. HY 3-0533.Students, part time income tax work.Simple returns—will train. CE 3-4053,Mr. Casner. Cook available. Elderly spinster Forsmall family, Hyde Park. Stay. WriteMaroon, box 101.Student with converted ambulance willdo light moving and hauling. BU 8-5535or RA 6-4145.Mathematics. Tutoring and Instructionin the standard courses for individualor group. Soglin and Associates. 28 e.Jackson. WE 9-2127. -.CARMENS USED KURNITl’HE store.Moving and light hauling. 1365 e. 55th.MU 4-9003, MU 4-8843.Wanted For rentRESEARCH 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. WHite-hall 4-2350.EUROPE20 Countries, 70 DaysSummer '57—$1325, all expensesEurope for Collegians255 SequoiaPasadena, California Quiet intellectual-type roommate toshare four-room apartment adjacentto campus. NO 7-4655.Typing at home wanted. Andre Morri¬son, IN 8-3626.Will buy old and recent quarterly orcomprehensive examinations In SocialSciences II, Humanities II and NaturalSciences I. Good prices, DA 8-6059,Evanston.A girl who has an apartment and wouldlike a roommate or a girl who wouldlike to help hunt for an apartmentto share. BU 8-64X2.Wanted—Male help (2) part-time; oneapproximately 15 hours, one approxi¬mately 30 hours weekly. General staffduties. Hyde Park Theatre, 5310 S .LakePark. Apply In person any evening attheatre. Room and board in exchange for babysitting. Female student. Spltzer. ES5-1751.North—lovely 3(4 rms., $110. Sun room,fireplace, all - electric kitchen, nearshopping transportation. 4416 n. Malden,SU 4-6962.PersonalTwo girls want rides to Boston or (NewYork), MarOh 14th or 15th. ContactJacobson or Kalmann, Ext. 1040.Wanted: the guy who wrote that poem,"One supreme sacrifice Is enough”James.Lost: Gold ID bracelet In dr near B-J:Schaeffer sliver and maroon pen andpencil set near Cobb hall. Finder pleasereturn to Greg Cooper, Coulter 550, MI3-6000. Reward.liceHAIR GROOMTONIC UNBREAKABLEPLASTIC!Grooms your hair while it treats yourscalp. Controls loose dandruff. LOOplu» loxSHULTON New York • TorontoFeb. 15, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Travel QDroaaForeign fellowship deadlines approachtuition fees waived.The fellowships are open tomen and women, preferably un¬der 28 years of age. Other quali- offer fellowships to Americangraduate students.Six fellowships for advancedstudy or research in any field areoffered by the Italian governmentthrough their cultural relationsfications are the same as for office of the ministry of foreignstudy in Switzerland. Some knowl- affairs.Opportunties for graduate study for American students in Switzerland, the Netherlands,Germany, Cuba, and Italy have been accounced by the Institute for International Education.Application for the year 1957 - 58 should b e made by March 1, except for the Cuban andItalian fellowship competitions, for which the deadline is April 1.Applications should be addressed to the Institute at 116 south Michigan avenue, Chicago 3.Most of these fellowships do not include travel stipends. Application may be made, how¬ever, for Fulbright travelgrants to cover these expenses, es for the academic year, withSwiss grantsApplication for graduate studyin Switzerland is open to menand women, preferably under 35years, who have not yet studiedabroad. Other qualifications are:bachelor’s degree at time of de¬parture, good academic recordand capacity for independentstudy, good moral character, per¬sonality, and adaptability, andgood health, as well as goodknowledge of French or German.Dutch fellowshipsThree fellowships for graduatestudy in the Netherlands areavailable. Each award carries astipend of 2,500 guilders in cashto cover room and board expens-See Francevia exchangeBusiness and economicschool students interested in asummer exchange program inFrance may apply to Dean ofStudents Robert M. Strozier be¬fore March 1.The American applicant for theexchange is responsible for find¬ing summer employment in in¬dustry for the French member ofthe exchange. The French appli¬cant will fulfill the same require¬ments. Flying Tiger tickets availableReservations and membership applications for the SG“Flying Tiger" flight to Europe are now available in theSG office, Ida Noyes, 10:30 to 12:30, Monday throughFriday and 4:30 to 6 pm on Fridays.Reservations should be accompanied by a $50 down paymentand must be made before March 1. The pro rata charter shareis $330 for the round trip.Students, facility and administration personnel are eligibleto be passengers. Children under two will be admitted free.The flight will leave New York June 18 for Amsterdam. It willreturn by September 10.This year’s trip will be made in a Super G Constellation seat¬ing 114 passengers, 46 more than last year.edge of the Dutch language Isdesirable but is not a prerequisitefor the award.German awardsCompetition is open for over 60awards for study in Germany. Ofthese, 50 are offered by the Fed¬eral Republic of Germany “ingratitude for the help of theAmerican government and peoplein the post war reconstruction of Each grant includes a stipendof 600,000 lire and free tuitionfrom the host institution. Mini¬mum period of study is sixmonths, which may be extendedso long as the student has suffi¬cient funds.Four tuition and maintenancefellowships offered by three Itali¬an universities, plus an additionalgrant of 10,000 lire monthly fromthe government, are also avail¬able. Qualifications for theseawards are similar to those listed Take a tour — any tour...This summer the traveler can take advantage of any of22 summer vacation tours in North and Central America,Europe and Japan, ranging in length from four weeks tothree months. Transportation costs range from $135 to $1,325.One of the all-summer trips — "Germany.” The other awards are above, plus good knowledge ofSome knowledge of the Frenchlanguage is advisable.The exchange program Is spon¬sored by the International Associ¬ation of Business and EconomicStudents, whose representativeon campus, Gerald Lehideux, iscurrently attending UC’s businessschool. sponsored by German universitiesand societies.The competitions In most casesare open to both men and womenbetween the ages of 20 and 35,but because of the housing short¬age, no dependents will be al¬lowed to accompany successfulcandidates. Besides a good com¬mand of the German language,the requirements are similar tothose outlined above.Cuban studiesThe Father Felix Varela fellow¬ship for study at the Universityof Havana, Cuba, is available.The award covers tuitions andmost maintenance expenses, butdoes not include travel and inci¬dental expenses.Preference will be given to stu¬dents under 30 years of age notprimarily interested in research.A knowledge of Spanish is re¬quired. The other qualificationsare similar to those.listed above.Italian researchThe Italian government andfour Italian academic institutions the Italian language. Two are lim¬ited to men only.Candidates for the governmentawards must have a master’s de¬gree or its equivalent in advancedwork, and must present a detailedoutline of advanced study or re¬search. to central Europe is an eleven-week bicycle jaunt costing $785.A number of four-week trips arebeing offered for those who wishto travel in a group. One such tripis to the British Isles, costing$625, including round-trip trans¬portation.In addition to the six bicycletrips in the Americas, AYH issponsoring a four-week camping and station wagon trip. The tripwill cover the Pennsylvania Dutchcountry, the Great Smoky Mourntains, and a short stay in thenation’s capital.For further information, theChicago branch of the AYH canbe reached at WAbash 2 6667.American Youth Hostels, inc., 54west 8th street, New York 11, maybe contacted for the 1957 travelfolder.RELIANCE CAMERA &PHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63rd St.BU 8-6040 The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 NORTH AMERICAN HAS BUILT MORE AIRPLANES THAN ANY OTHER COMPANY IN THE VJO R L D^lllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllltillilililllllllllllllllllllillllllllll'llliyi[ COMO’S Cafe Enrico \S RESTAURANT & PIZZERIA1411 E. 53 FA 4-5525 - HY 3 -5300Small Large 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 2.10£ree Delivery on All Pizza to VC Students |^fiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimitiifwiiiiFBE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGWINTER SPECIALTUNE UP $5.50 •>.Anti-Freeze• Snow Tires• Road ServiceSPECIAL ! !Heavy Duty Battery s14”HARPER SUPER SERVICEDealer in Sinclair Products5556 Harper Ave. FL 2-9654 T-2* Worthy successor to the world famous AT-6r-M The Sabre Jet that turned the tide in the Korean WarP-10# America's first operational supersonic fighter t-4S America’s first four engine jet bomberP-MD America’s first all-weather, one-man interceptor?Engineers, scientists, physicists, mathematicians...LIKE TO HELP WITH THE NEXT ONE?The North American airplanes of thefuture will come from the creative poten¬tial of today’s young men. Possibly you—or members of your graduating class-will help to engineer them. One thing iscertain. They will have to be the best tomerit the space reserved alongside thefamous North American planes picturedin this ad.Designing the best airplanes to meet thedemands of the future is the challengingwork North American offers to graduate engineers and to specialists In other sci¬ences. If you want to work on advancedprojects right from the start... enjoy rec¬ognition and personal rewards...liveand work in Southern California... thenjoin North American’s outstanding engi¬neering team.See your Placement Officer today toarrange for an appointment with NorthAmerican Engineering representatives...they will be on campus on;If you are not available at this time, please write:Dept. Col, Engineering Personnel Office,North American Av iation, Inc., Los Angeles 45, CaliforniaNORTH AMERICAN AVIATION, INC.-A8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Teh. 15, 1957 ■Coming events on quadranglesFriday 15 FebruaryKumboldt lecture, “Der und 3ie ” profGeorge Metcalf, 3:30 pm. Welboldt408.Charles R. Walgreen lecture series.‘Shaping the American way," profThomas C. Cochran. Pennsylvania U.3rd of series, “Business in Americanculture,” 4:30 pm. Soc Sci 122.Math bio lecture, ‘‘Role of a contour¬perceiving mechanism in visual acu¬ity.” Peter H. Greene, research asst,comm, on math-bio. chief Justice SG-SFA court, 4:30 pm. 5741 Dresel.Wing Ding, folic music, all welcome.Folklore society, 7 pm. Ida Noye3.Doc film: Trouble in paradise, admis¬sion series ticket only. $1 50 at door,7:15 and 9:15 pm. Soc sci 122 (after1st showing discussion by GL3 DeanLester Asheim).Valentines party, Lutheran students.7:15 pm. chapel house (supper. 50cents, 6:15)Lecture. “Treatment of psychotic chil¬dren at orthogenic school.” principaland prof Bruno Bettelhelm. Clinicalstudy group, all welcome who dare tocome. 8 pm, Reynolds olub northlounge.Intervarsity Christian fellowship. “Thesermon on the mount: its relation tous.” Stacey Woods. 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Dance, “Dawn Beat” pre-history, freerefreshments, quarterly, all welcome,8:30 pm -1 am, Int house assemblyhall. $1 per person. Saturday 16 FebruaryExhibit, Emancipation proclamation,one of 45 Lincoln Signed, is for sale,proceeds to charity, also runawayslave announcements, Harper Library,ends today.Symposium, Committee on human de¬velopment, 6 papers, annually, 9:30am, Int house assembly room.Lecture, “Children’s problems and cul¬tural patterns,” Dr Lois Murphy,Menninger foundation, principalspeaker, soc prof Helen Koch, educprof Allison Daus, 2 pm, Int house.Law wives, 7 pm, Ida Noyes.Radio broadcast. “Sacred Note,” week¬ly, 10:15 pm. WBBM.Art exhibit, “Contemporary Americanw&tercolors,” Renaissance society,M-F, 9-5 pm: Sat. 1-5 pm, through15 March, Goodspeed.Sunday 17 FebruaryUniversal day of prayer-mediation.Old newspapers and magazines, pickedup on curb, tie separately and secure¬ly, 3rd Sunday every month, all day,phone HT Neighborhood club.Episcopal communion service, 8:30 am,Bond chapel, breakfast for 35 centsfollowing.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30. 10. 11 am,DeSales house.Lutheran communion service, 10 am,Hilton chapel.Radio broadcast, “Music makes sense,”why and how people react to music,prof Leonard B Meyer, author Emo¬tion and meaning in music, prof Jeanne Bamberger. New World, week¬ly, 10:35 am, WMAQ.University Christian religious service,“Prayer and the freedom of mind,”prof. Joseph sutler Jr, Cgo Lutheransem, 11 am. Rockefeller chapel.O-board, 3 pm, Ida Noyes.Filin, Salt of the Earth, American So¬cialist forum, 3:30 pm, Buddhistchurch, 5487 Dorchester, 60 cents.Carillon concert, memorial to ErnestParsons, carillionneur of St Peterschurch, Morristown, NJ, 2 originalHymn tunes, 3:30 pm, Rockefeller.Calvert lecture, “Acheson and the con¬gress,” Wm. Perlmutter, 4:30 pm, De-Sales house, 5735 Unlv,Interchurch supper, all Christian Pro¬testant student groups, “Prayer,”faculty discussion led by Dean JohnB Thompson, 6 pm, Swift commons,75 cents.Canterbury supper, Anglo-catholic stu¬dents, weekly, 6 pm, Brent house, 5540Woodlawn, 50 cents.Student Representative party, caucus,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Independent Student League, caucus,discussion of SG constitutionalchanges, spring election proposal, ex¬tensions of powers, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyeseast lounge.Discussion, “How things REALLY are,racially speaking, in Chicago.” Educcommt, 8 pm, Int house home room.Channing club. “Introduction to gen¬eral semantics.” E. Rochetto, secyISGS, 8 pm. 1st Unitarian church,57th and Woodlawn. Monday 18 FebruaryNegro History Week, last day.Settlement league, "Changing role ofsettlement houses, Leah Taylor, exUC commons head, 2:15 pm, IdaNoyes.Walgreen lectures, “Age of acquisition,”prof Cochran, 4:30 pm, Soc sci 122.Film, Julius Caesar (American), 7 and9 pm. Int house, 45 cents.Alpha Phi Omega, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Urban renewal plan, preliminary proj¬ect report, 8 pm, Osteopathic hospital.Concert, “Sonatas of Twentieth CenturyMasters,” Joseph Szigeti, violin; CarloBussotti, 1st of 3 concerts, Frommmusic foundation. Williams. Hinde¬mith, Stravlntky, Bloch, $1 at musicdept, 58th and Woodlawn, 8 pm,Goodman theater.Brotherhood week, for peace and free¬dom, live It, through 24 Feb.Tuesday 19 FebruaryCouncil of University Senate, 3:40 pm,Law south.Maroon staff, 3:30 pm, Ida Noyes,weekly.Pre med club. “Psychiatry and modernmedicine,” Dr Agnew, weekly, 3:30pm, Abbott 133.Discussion and tea. Dating and sociallife, Dean McCarn, Granger Westberg,Mary Alice Newman, all complainersabout campus men-women relationswelcome, 4 pm, Ida Noyes. TV broadcast, "Contemporarv violinmusic,” discussion of organization ofLeon Klrchner’s “Duo for violin and.piona,” Abram Loft of Fine are quar¬tet. prof Jeanne Banberger, 6:30 pmchannel 11.Madrigal singers, 7 pm, weekly. iq4Noyes.Student Government meeting, 7:30 pm,Law north.diristian science lecture, “CS, the sci¬ence of Demonstrable good,” JamesWatt, lecture board, First church ofChrist, sclenttist, Boston, 8 pm. IdaHpyes.Doc film: Rules of the Game. JeanRenoir. 40 cents at door, 7:15 and9:15 pm, Soc sci 122.Concert band full ensemble rehearsal,weekly, 7:30 pm, Mandel.Rocket research society, “AstrochemU-try,” 7:30 pm, Eckhart 203.FTF wives, “The heritage and politics.”prof Kermit Eby, 8 pm. Woodlawnhouse, 58th and Woodlawn.Canterbury lecture, Rev Rowinsky ofthe Polish Catholic church. 8 pm,Brent house, 5540 Woodlawn.Coffee hour, 10-12 pm, Gates halllounge.Wednesday 20 FebruaryFTF worship, William B Blakemore.prof practical theol and dean Disciplesdivinity house, 11:30 am. Bond chap¬el.Walgreen lecture, “The old order andthe new,” prof Cochran, 4:30 pm, Socsci 122.Geography lecture, “Current researchprogram of the Illinois state watersurvey,” Wm C Ackermann, chiefISWS div. 4:30 pm, Rosenwald 41.Evensong, Angelican, 5:05 pm, weeklyBond chapel.Glee club rehearsal, winter quarterwork on Randall Thompson's “Alle¬luia” and Negro spirituals, weekly,7 pm. Ida Noyes.NAACP, make plans for guest speaker,7:30 pm. Ida Noyeo.Orchestra Comediae musicalis rehears¬al, weekly. 7:30 pm. Mandel.Socialist club lecture, “Why be a social¬ist?” Peter Meyer, Socialist Party —.Country dancers, rvibber soled shoes,new members wanted, 8 pm, IdaNoyes.Thursday 21 FebruaryEpiscopal holy communion, 7:30 am,Bond chapel.Chime concert, 102 birthday of Alice FPalmer (1855-1902) bells a memorial,annually, chlmer Eric Unander, 12:15noon, Mitchell tower.Lecture, “How to gamble If you must.”statistics prof Leonard J. Savage, 4pm. Eckhart 207.Zoology club, “Natural selection theoryof antibody formation,” med profDavid W Talmage, 4:30 pm, Zoo 14.Communication club lecture, “Role ofdesign In organizational communica¬tion.” Illustrated, Gene Dekovlc-Smlth design organization, weekly,7:30 pm, Soc sci 108.FTF lecture, “Contributions of Ven-danta - Hinduism to the west,” Swa-ml Akhilananda, Vendanta society,Boston, psychiatric and religiouscounselor at MIT, History of relig¬ions club, all Invited, 8 pm, Swiftcommons.YSL discussion, “Algeria, French policypro and con,” Gerald Lehldeux andYSL speaker, 2nd and 4th Thurs. ofmonth, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Coffee hour, weekly, 9-11 pm. Greenhall.TV broadcast, “Rags to riches,” devel¬opment of Horatio Alger philo In 1800seffect of contemporary traditions. RRichard Wohl, Everybodys America,9:30 pm, channel 11, weekly.Friday 22 FebruaryWalgreen lectures, “Managerial societyand the welfare state,” prof Cochran,4:30 pm, Soc sci 122.Doc film: Scarlet street, series ticketonly, $1.50 at door, last of series, 7:15and 9:15 pm, Soc sci 122.Bahai world faith discussion, all wel¬come, 8 pm. Ida Noyes.University concert, “Claremont stringquartet” Marc Gottlieb, VladimirWeisman violin, William Schoen vio¬la, Irving Klein collo, 8:30 pm. Man-del hall, $1.50.Saturday 23 FebruarySocial dance, “Washington Promenade”formal dresses, dark suits or tux, an¬nually, Student union, 9-12 pm, IdaNoyes, $4 couple.local or long-dis-lane* moving, call.Clings to theroad like atstripe of paint JThe ’57 Chevy can give lessonson taking curves and holding theroad to just about any car going.Few cars at any price are sobeautifully balanced and sosmooth, sure and solid in action.A car has to have a special kind ofbuild and balance to keep curvesunder control. And nobody outdoesChevrolet in that department! It“comers’' with all the solid assur¬ance of an honest-to-goodness sportscar. Chevy doesn’t throw its weightaround on turns because it carriesits pounds in the right places.And if the road should turn up¬ward, Chevy can take care of thatnicely, too—with up to 245 h.p.*Come on in and take a turn at thewheel of a new Chevrolet.1 USA'57 CHEVROLET*270-h.p. high-performance V8engine also available at extra coslSweet, smooth and sassy—that's Chevrolet all over. Above, you re looking at the Bel Air Sport Coup®. jOnly franchised Chevrolet dealers 7 CHEVROLET /j display this famous trademarkSee Your Authorized Chevrolet Dealeri_ PETERSONMOVING & STORAGE CO.55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterfield 8-6711Feb. 15, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9Sharp talks on civil libertiesby Harold Bernhardt“What must be asked incivil liberties cases is that thestate go to sufficient troubleto be sure it is not doing harm toits citizens and is acting in a fairway,” Malcolm Sharp, UC profes¬sor of law, asserted at Ida Noyesrecently before a standing roomonly audience of over 100.The first of four key cases dis¬cussed by Professor Sharp wasthat of a UC law student graduatewho has been prevented to thisday from passing the Illinois Bar.“YVhen he appeared for examina¬tion as to his moral fitness to bea member of the Bar, he said thathe didn’t think a Communist wasipso facto disqualified to practicelaw, since our founding fathersbelieved in revolution, and so on.“They asked him — as much areactionary on economic mattersas I am — if he were a Commu¬nist and he said he didn’t thinkthat was a good question. Theyasked him if he subscribed to theDaily Worker and he said no, butthen recovered, and had it strick¬en from the record. He wouldn’tsay', on principle, whether he readthe Tribune, either.”Sharp pointed out that thisyoung man had had an editor, aCongressman, and a banker fromdown-state attest to his moralcharacter, but had been turneddown by the state Supreme Courtand refused review by the na¬tional Supreme Court. -Guild “subversive”The listing of the National Law¬yers’ guild, of which he is presi¬dent, by the attorney-general assubversive was next mentionedby Sharp. “Having called us sub¬versive to start with, he prob¬ably would find us subversive inJimmy’sSINCE 1940 hearings on the subject. We’vebeen in court ever since protest¬ing the serious constitutional is¬sues involved.”“But the Rosenberg - SobellCase,” he emphasized, “is themost critical of all the cold warcases. It came after the firstSmith Act cases, after the Hisscase, and before the collapse ofthe Fort Monmouth spy scarecase, an attempt being made toconnect this last to it.”“The case against the Rosen-bergs, charged with conspiracy tocommit atomic espionage,” he con¬tinued, “boils down to believingtheir words or those of DavidGreenglass and his wife. Thestory itself begins with the con¬fession of Fuchs, an atomic physi¬cist attached to the British, overhere on war work, who in 1950said that he had picked up se¬crets when here which he passedto the Russians.”Sharp pointed out that therewere puzzles about his confession,which were increased when Goldwas next arrested. “Among otherthings that weren’t true, Goldconfessed to having invented acomplete family and a love af¬fair,.” David and Ruth Greenglasswere then implicated by Gold;they next proceeded to implicatethe Rosenbergs.“No ‘corpus delicti’”“This, perhaps the greatest ofour recent civil liberties cases,was a conspiracy case built on accomplice testimony, with no‘corpus delicti.’ A case rushedthrough at the last in a way thatno tax or ordinary murder casecould have been,” Sharp stated.“On the basis of new evidencethat Morton Sobell was kidnappedby the instigation and cooperationof the FBI,” he continued, “thusprejudicing his case by increasinga presumption of guilt againsthim, an effort is underway now tore-open his case.”“Why wasn’t the new evidenceconsidered by a jury, before theRosenbergs were executed? Whywasn’t the record considered bythe Supreme Court? Suppose thecase is as troublesome as I’ve sug¬gested — then the Rosenbergswere not proven guilty ‘beyond areasonable doubt,’ ” Sharp de¬clared.“My own working hypothesis isthat Fuchs and Gold and Green¬glass were up to something, butthat the Rosenbergs’ connectionto them, if any, was never estab¬lished, nor was Sobell’s connec¬tion to the Rosenbergs. I am per¬sonally convinced of their inno¬cence,” Sharp re emphasized.“The case was connected withan upsurge of emotions and cruel¬ty stemming from the Koreanwar — it was a political case, likethat of Titus Oates, the witchcraftcases, Sacco and Vanzetti, theHiss case, all arousing peculiaremotions.”CALLNICKYSFOR PIZZANO 7-9063 Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery Service"SALT OF THE EARTH"at Buddhist Church Sunday, February 175487 Dorchester 3:30 p.m.Students 60cAuspices: American Sociolistoffersrewardingcareer opportunitiestoSeniors and Graduate StudentsWhat you should knowaboutInternational Business MachinesCorporationA world-recognized leader and pioneerin the fastest-growing and perhaps theone “unlimited” field in electronics to¬day: digital computer development,manufacture and sales. Builder of theworld’s largest computer.IBM leadership is based on a 42-year record of steady achievement andgrowth, with sales doubling on an aver¬age of every five years in the past 25.Selves all industry, plus governmentand education.IBM’s excellent salary and employeebenefit program is instrumental inachieving an employee turnover* of lessthan one-sixth the national average.Advancement is based solely on in¬dividual merit. Rapid growth createspositions of responsibility.IBM Laboratories and manufactur¬ing facilities are located in: Pough¬keepsie, Endicott, Owego, and King¬ston, N. Y., San Jose, California,Lexington, Ky., and Rochester, Minn.Sales and service offices in 190 prin¬cipal cities throughout the U. S. CAMPUSINTERVIEWSFEBRUARY 21. 1957If your degree or major is: . Sign interview schedule forLiberal Arts • BusinessAccounting • EngineeringMathematics SalesPhysics • MathematicsEngineering . . Applied SciencePhysics • MechanicalElectrical EngineeringPhysics EngineeringResearch andDevelopmentCONTACT YOUR COLLEGE PLACEMENT OFFICEFOR APPOINTMENT, TODAY!If you cannot attend interviews,write for more information to:R. W. Hubner, Director of Recruitment,IBM Corp., 590 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N. Y.IBM INTERNATIONALBUSINESS MACHINESc6rporation Concluding, Sharp declared:“Civil libertarians should promoteattention in capital cases, espe¬cially where political passion andaccomplice testimony are in¬volved. The charge in such casesspills over on the defendants,which, though it doesn’t followlegally is an easy step to followpsychologically. Read a transcriptof the case yourself.” Professor Sharp, introduced byChairman stan Guterman of theLeague for Civil Liberties as“very outspoken on civil libertiesmatters, active in the defense ofthe Rosenbergs and Sobell duringits appeal stages, and president ofthe National Lawyers’ guild,wrote a book on the Rosenbergcase in 1956 called Was JusticeDone?Faculty panel givestwo talks on datingTuesday, in Ida Noyes library, the office of the dean of stu¬dents presented the first in a series of three meetings forstudents on the general subject of dating and social life, onthe UC campus. ~———, ~ TT . —~—7. cm , chaplain of the University clinics;Chairman of Tuesday s an(j Granger E. Westberg, associ¬ating “for women only” ate professor of religion andmeeting "ror women only" ate professorwas Mrs. Ruth O. McCarn, assist health,ant dean of students. Resourcepersons who joined the studentsin their discussion were: AllenAustill, director of student hous¬ing; Mrs. Miriam Elson of Stu¬dent health; Dr. John P. Ham, The second meeting “for menonly” was held in Ida Noyes li¬brary on February 14. Allen Aus¬tin presided over the meeting.Both men and women are in¬vited to attend the last of the se-associate professor of the depart- ries of meetings to be held onment of psychiatry; Mrs. Mary A.Newman, director of student ac¬tivities; Mrs. Marjorie Ravitts,assistant to director of studentactivities; Carl Wennerstrom, February 19 in the Ida library at4 pm. Following this meeting re¬freshments will be served bymembers of the Interdormitorycouncil.J>ATA PROCESSING ♦ ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS • TIME EQUIPMENT • MILITARY PRODUCTS HERE IS THE THIRD TIE-BREAKER INOLD GOLD'SPUZZLESTIE-BREAKING PUZZLE NO. 3CLUE: This West Coast state university,chartered in 1868, has campuses at variouslocations throughout the state. Degrees inoceanography are among those conferredby this institution.CLUE: Named for its founder, who alsofounded the Western Union TelegraphCompany, this eastern university has manyschools, among which is one for hoteladministration.ANSWER 1.ANSWER 2_NameAddress_CityCollege _ .State _Note: Above puzzle requires 2 answers,Hold answers for mailing instructionsAll participants who completedthe initial set of twenty-fourpuzzles correctly are requiredto solve a series of eight tie¬breakers, in order to competefor the prizes in the tie.Remember—first prize is atour for two around the worldand there are 85 othervaluable prizes.NO OTHER CIGARETTECAN MATCH THE TASTEOF TODAY’SOLD GOLDSRegulars—Kings—or Filters,today’s Old Golds taste terrific ...thanks to an exclusive blend of the finestnature-ripened tobaccos ... so rich ...so light... so golden bright!10 » CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 15, 1957n'Disc1367 E. 57th St.•RECORDOF THE WEEKKirsten Flagstad"Wagner Recital"London LL 1533 3.19ARE ELIGIBLEYOUSend Todayfor FREE C rVwss=*=*!*^Professional and ^ -v? *Businessman'sWholesale Diamond-Brochure. Write Jackson'sDiamond Brokers, Dept.'I644 Broadway, Gary, Ind.Bond chapel concert Competitions offer cashinspires Gothic ShowSunday evening medievalists filled Bond chapel to hear theCollegium Musicum and the chapel choir, under the directionof Richard Vikstrom perform Renaissance and Baroque music.Highlighting the interesting program was a seldom-per¬formed sonata for flute and cembalo obbligato in E flat majorby J. S. Bach. Although hisdescendants wrote profuselyfor the flute, Johann Sebastianwrote only three flute sonatas.Even then such works, writtenfor drawing room performance,have little opportunity of reach¬ing the ears of interested laymen.The little, dimly-lit Gothicchapel provided this opportunity.James Mack on the flute exploredcomprehensively the lyrical pos¬sibilities of the poignant sicilianomovement. He was accompaniedon the cemablo by Edward Mon-dello.Mondello was able to showhis understanding of Bach as wellas his own considerable talent onthe oi'gan in the performance ofthree chorale preludes at theopening of the concert.A scholarly touch was the per¬formance of a Vittoria motet, O Magnum Mysterium, followed bythe mass of the same name, inthe sanctus of which suggestionsof the motet appear.Although the mass was farmore elaborate it retained an ele¬ment of simplicity and directnesswhich is not often found in six¬teenth century masses. Maintain¬ing distinctness between lines ofpolyphony, despite frequent cross¬ing of the voices, the choir did notcommunicate any excess of mys¬tery.Vikstrom closed the concertwith the exuberant Shuetz Can-tante Domino, which he had per¬formed earlier in the evening. Itwas a valuable encore; it is thekind of music that at first hearingentices but that grows more beau¬tiful with familiai ity.Rolf Sansbury Competition is open for prizes in three contests offered by the English department. TheAcademy of American Poets prize, the Florence Jane Adams Poetry reading contest, andthe John Billing Fiske prizes in poetry all offer cash awards to students. The David BlairMcLaughlin prize offered by the office of the dean of students, also consists of a cash wardThe Academy of American Poets prize of $ 100 will be awarded annually for the next threeyears to an undergraduate submitting the best poem or group of poems during the year Irwas made possible by a be- 1—quest of the late Mrs. Mary The John Billings Fiske Prizes college work following gradua.Cummings Eudy. in Poetry, of $100, $50 and $25 are tion from high school and stu-First, second and third prizes offered annually for an original dents in the College who enteredof $75, $50 and $25, respectively, poem or cycle of poems. No com- the University prior to gradu*.will be awarded in the annual petitor may offer more than one tion from high school. Honors andFlorence James Adams Poetry contribution, but this may be a preceptorial essays will be con-Reading Contest, the preliminar- cycle, including several related sidered for this award. The es-ies of which will be held in Bond poems. There is no limitation as says, in typewritten form, shouldchapel at 3 pm on April 19. Finals to length, subject or form. • be turned in to the office of thewill be held at the same time and Only unpublished poems may dean of students, Administrationplace on April 26. Mrs. Judith S. be submitted in the contest, and building, room 3. not later thanBond, curator of the Harriet Mon- the University reserves the right May 6.roe Modern Poetry collection, of first publication of the winning • * *may be consulted between 9:30 contribution. Contributions shouldand 10:30 am on Mondays, reach the English office, Wieboldt _ Deadline for the 1957 CharlesWednesdays and Fridays in the 205, not later than May 1. T. Sergei $1,000 price competitionModern Poetry library, Harper The David Blair McLaughlin for original unpublished full-W62. Prize for the Writing of Prose, a length plays is March 1, MarvinThis contest is open to all stu- sum of $100 for the 1957 spring Phillips, director of Universitydents in the University from the quarter, will be awarded for the Theatre, announced last week,ages of 17 to 26, who have com- best critical essay on some sub- The biennial Sedgel prize con-pleted at least two quarters of ject relating to the humanities or test, which is administered by UC,residence and are registered for the social sciences. Competition is was established in memory oftwo or more courses in the pres- restricted to students who have Charles M. Sergei, Chicago civicent quarter. completed less than two years of leader and dramatic publisher,by his wife.UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE1144 E. 55th DO 3-9572SALE NOW IN PROGRESS10% Discount on Ali MerchandiseWith This Coupon Only 3/ie photographers1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433 5 pizzas forprice of 4NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063FILTER • FLAVOR • FLIP-TOP BOX Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372Portrait StylistBlack and White andDirect ColorPhotographyBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th Streetwith a MarlboroYouget a lotto likeFeb. 15, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • ITCulture VultureAt the beginning of this academic year the MAROON spawned a Culture Vulture, who’s occupied himself withconveying to readers news of symphony and drama, oper a and art, folk music and jazz, plus lunar eclipses. It isn’tgenerally known, but last Monday’s issue was confiscated only because the Vulture divulged news of student dis¬counts at South State burlesque joints. The news itself didn’t shock anyone* nor did the review of a choice littleact, but the pictures? Wow!Anyone who’ll swear on a stack of College syllabi that he believes the above remarks are the truth, the wholetruth and nothing but is entitled to free copies of the next 17 gag issues.'Neath Gothic greyHyde Park theaterHyde Park theater takes overthe neighborhood entertainmentspotlight this week. Fifty centsand an ID card will enable anystudent to view Rififi (means“trouble”), a French crime filmlabelled “Adults Only,” whichcontains a half hour silent se¬quence offering a lesson in rob¬bery technique. Lust for Life,story of Van Gogh with scriptby Norman Corwin, is also beingshown until next Friday.DocFiltnNext Tuesday Jean Renoir’sRules of the Game will be shown'in soc 122. Admission is 40 centsas usual, and the film will beshown at 7:15 and 9:15.Carillons . . .The Rockefeller carillons willpeal at 4:30 pm this Sunday inmemory of Ernest Parsons, latecarilloneur of a New Jerseychurch, who composed two hymntunes that will be on the program.Next Thursday at 12:15 theMitchell tower chimes will com¬memorate the birth of Alice Free¬man Palmer, who passed away in1902.University concertNext Friday the Trio de Bol¬zano will play works by Schu¬mann, Castelnuovo-Tedesco, andBeethoven. Admission, $1.50; thecurtain rises at 8:30.World withoutFromm foundationA cycle of 11 twentieth centurycompositions for violin, per¬formed by Joseph Szigeti accom¬panied by Carlo Bussoti, willbegin Monday at 8:30. Monday’sprogram, the first of three spon¬sored by the Fromm music foun¬dation, will include VaughanWilliams’ Sonata in A minor,Hindemith’s Sonata in E, Stravin¬sky’s Duo Concertante, and Ern¬est Bloch’s first sonata. Twoother concerts in Szigeti’s cyclewill be next Monday and Tuesday.The violinist intends to present amusical history of the growth ofthe violin sonata during thetwentieth century by means ofhis cycle, which he has performedin Europe and on the East andWest coasts.At last word, both the StudentService center and the music de¬partment had run out of studenttickets to Monday’s performance.A few student tickets, which sellBORDONEI Movers and Light HaulingVI 6-9832 at two-fifths of the general ad¬mission price of $2.50, may be leftfor next wek’s concerts. No stu¬dent tickets are on sale at Good¬man theater, where the threeconcerts will be given.Next Monday, February 25, Szi¬geti and Bussotti will performsonatas by Ferruccio Busoni,Claude Debussy, and Bela Bar-tok. Tuesday evening they willplay Arthur Honneger’s firstsonata. Serge Prokofieff’s sonatafor violin solo, Charles Ives’fourth sonata, “Children’s Day atthe Camp Meeting” and MauriceRavel’s sonata for violin andpiano.Exhibition MomentumTomorrow at 8:30 pm “sculptors’night,” the first of four discus¬sions by artists about their work,will take place in the College ofJewish studies, 72 east 11th street.Tonight’s discussion, originallyscheduled at the John Marshalllaw school auditorium, is open toUC students at the special priceof $1, and will be participated inby Harry Bertoia, Joseph Gotoand Richard Hunt, Chicago sculp¬tors, and Hugh Townely of theBeloit college faculty. Regularadmission is $2.50, with studentadmission to the other threeevents of the spring series beingpegged at $1.75.March 2, Reuel Denney of UCwill discuss poetry with Paul Car-roll and Isabella Gardener. March16 will be musicians’ night, withWillis Charkovsky, composer andLeland Smith of UC participating.March 30 will be “painters’ night.”All events in Exhibition Mo¬mentum’s series except tonight’swill take place at the Marshalllaw school auditorium, located inthe Loop at 315 south Plymouthcourt.Studebaker theater , . , .Chicago’s living repertoire thea¬ter closes its first series this Sun-Have a WORLD of FUN!Travel with f ITAUnbelievable Low CostEurope60 Ooyt JZZ" from $525Orientfr™ $998 *Many tours in’eludoco 11 eg* credit.Also low-cost trips to Mexico$169 up. South America $699 up,Hawaii Study Tours $528 up andAround the World $1398 up. day at 7 with the last perform¬ance of Much Ado About Nothing,reputed to be far and away thetheater’s best offering to date.Tuesday night the first majorAmerican production of ArthurMiller’s View from the Bridge willbeing a three week run and, it’shoped, start Studebaker’s secondseries off with an appropriatebang.The play, written by a well-known American movie actress’smost intellectual husband, wasfirst produced in New York twoyears ago. Miller expanded hisdrama for its London run, andthe unabridged "Bridge” will bepresented in Chicago. A cohortof the Culture Vulture is sure tobe in attendance opening nigth,and with his review should comesome news of student discountrates, if such there be.Chicago symphonyFritz Reiner assumed com¬mand of the podium at Orchestrahall again this wek, and memoriesof renowned substitutes such asBruno Walter and Thomas Beech-am fade for the symphony’s audi¬ence while for the orchestra, asone musician put it, “The honey¬moon is over.”Today at 2 pm Reiner will putthe orchestra through the pacesof Beethoven’s Egmont overture,Berlioz’ Fantastic symphony andHindemith’s Mathias the Painter.Next Tuesday at 2 pm 12-year-old Barbara Sonies will play thefirst movement of Mozart’s thirdviolin concerto at a children’sconcert which will also includeVilla-Lobos’ “Little Train to Cai-para.” Thursday, February 21, at8:15 and next Friday at 2 pmEugene Istomin will be piano soloist in Mozart’s ninth concerto.Reiner will direct a symphonicoverture to an unwritten comedy“Laughter . . . yet Love” by Dr.Rudolph Ganz, in honor of thecomposer-pianist’s eightieth birth¬day. The famed Swiss teacher ofpiano, who first played with theChicago symphony in 1903, wassoloist with the Chicago chamberorchestra last Sunday in a per¬formance of Hayden’s first pianoconcerto. Bartok’s Divertimentofor strings and Weber’s Invita¬tion to the Dance ararnged byBerlioz are also on the program.Word is that Bruno Walter willbreak precedent by becoming thefirst guest conductor to open theseason of an orchestra with a per¬manent musical director when hedirects the Chicago symphony ina performance of Beethoven’sNinth on October 10 of this year.Also engaged as guest conduc¬tor for the orchestra’s 67th seasonis Leopold Stowkowski in his firstappearance with the Chicago sym¬phony.RadioListen to Radio station WMAQthis Sunday morning at 10:35 fora discussion of Leonard B. Mey¬er’s new book, Emotion andMeaning in Music. Meyer, asso¬ciate professor of music at UC,will discuss his theory of theemotional impact of music withJeanne Bamberger, humanitiesinstructor in the College.PORTRAITSby professional artistFaculty student ratesEDGAR BERNSTEIN5843 Cottage Grove PL 2-4899exhibition MOMENTUMbegins a series of discussionsArtist's and Their WorkSaturday, Feb. 16 at 8:30—SCULPTORS' NIGHTHarry Bertoia Richard HuntJoseph Goto Hugh Townley72 E. 11th Street College of Jewish StudiesSPECIAL PRICE TO UC STUDENTSThree other events:March 2—POETS' NIGHT—Paul Carroll, Reuel Denney, IsabellaGo rdnerMarch 16—MUSICIAN'S NIGHT—Willis Charkovsky, Leland SmithMarch 30—PAINTERS' NIGHTJohn 'Marshall Law School 315 S. Plymouth CourtStudents $1.75 — Regular .$2.50tITA Ask Your Travel Agt.332 S. MichiganChicago 4, HA 7-2557WHY NOT STUDY IN MEXICO?MEXICO CITY COLLEGEApproved for VeteransSpring and Summer Quarter — 1957International Faculty — Year-round Ideal ClimateB.A., B.F.A., M.A., M.F.A.: PROGRAM OFENGINEERING STUDIESSPRING QUARTER—March 25-June 6; SUMMERQUARTER—June 11 -Aug. 23SPECIAL SUMMER SESSIONS—June 11 -July 16;July 18-Aug. 23WORKSHOPSLatin American Culture — July 1 - Aug. 9Association of International Relations Clubs — July 1 - Aug. 9(For more information, write Professor Ronald Hilton, Director,Hispanic American Studies, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif.)Write: Dean of Admissions, Mexico City CollegeKm 16, Carretero Mexico-Toluca, Mexico 10, D. F. £ct's Xftlhthings OvaMoney doesn't go a long wayin these days. That’s what afriend said to me the other day.My reply was that it all de¬pended on how he spent it, andI told him that I could put himin the w?v of securing a size¬able estate, say $10,000, for adown payment of a few dollars.What is more, even if he wereto die anytime soon after thefirst down payment, the whole•state of $10,000 would belong fto his family without the spend¬ing of another penny.And, let me tell you, manylarge estates of several thou¬sand dollars have come to therescue of Sun Life beneficiariesfollowing a first and only pay¬ment of a few dollars by ahusband and father who reali¬zed the uncertainty of thefuture but knew how to makethe best use of savings.Let’s talk things over—today!Ralph J. Wood, Jr., ’48University Insurance CounselingSince 1950SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADARepresentative 1 N. LaSalleFR 2-2390 Chicago 2, IllinoisRE 1-0855 hyde parktheatrelake park af 53 No 7-9071STUDENT RATE 50cALL PERFORMANCESStarring Friday, Feb. 15Adults Only“C# to See ‘Rififi9 ...Perhaps the keenest crimefilm that ever came fromFranee . . . compares morethan favorably with thememorable film ‘The As¬phalt Jungle9 ... it makesthe hairs on the back ofthe neck rise!”—— Bosley Crowther,New York TimesA Superior Movie ... sobrilliant that movie fans willbe talking about it for sometime!"— Herald-Tribune★ ... The suspenseis almost unbearable!"— Doily NewsAn Expert Demonstrationon how to get the maximumin drama and suspense . . .Never relaxing excitement,a classic exercise in keep¬ing nerves stretched tautthrough ingenuity, imagina¬tion!"— World-TelegramEvery Overtone the Under¬world Affords . . . 'Rififi'comes up with a hot singerto equal the Marilyn Mon¬roe effect, and just in caseshe isn't sufficient, there'sanother bounder miss whobathes her gangster boyfriend and tussles with himamong the suds!"— New York PostSets a New High in Sus¬pense! ... A piece of film¬making that'll have you hold¬ing your breath when youarei/t chewing your finger¬nails."— Journal-American44 ‘Rififi’ containsa JO minute stretch ofwordless movie - makingthat is one of the most en¬grossing sequences sincethe invention of motionpictures.”— Time Magazine1\ rrRIFIFIDirected by JULES DASSIN— plusLUST FORLIFE''TIME MAGAZINE: Perhops thefinest film biography of an artistever made in Hollywood; almost ahundred of Van Gogh's paintingsare shown in full, fulminating col¬or on the screen!NEW YORKER: As good a colorfilm as we're likely to see for sometime to come. It deals with Vin¬cent van Gogh, well played by KirkDouglos, and the times of theDutch Master and his colleagues,among them Seurat, Pisarro, andPaul Gauguin. The last is splendidly depicted by Anthony Quinn.SAT. REVIEW OF LIT.: “Lust forLife," in short, is a fitting filmtribute to a great artist. It hosbeen carefully researched, pains¬takingly planned, and beautifullyphotographed against the veryscenes where Van Gogh lived andpainted. It has avoided sensation¬alism, even when treating the de¬tails of o life that had more thanits share of sensational incidentNorman Corwin's eloquent scriptis based, it would seem, moreclosely on Von Gogh's letters to hisbrother Theo than on the Stonenovel. The result is a curious, ex¬citing sense of self-revelation asthe ortist probes the depths of hissoul with an ever greater frenzy tounderstand the forces that drivehim first to a form of ChristianCommunism, then to art, and fi¬nally to madness and suicide.Im -,*? fljI :1rv 12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 15, 195? 1Hoopsters edge Aurora,drop nexf to ElmhurstUC’s basketball team played two excellent games last weekwinning one and losing the other. They beat Aurora by ascore of 92-85 and lost to Elmhurst 55-47.The hoopsters game against Aurora was highlighted bysuperior teamwork as well as Runners trample visitors,Tritone wins three eventsthe exceptional shooting ofteam captain Billy Lester. Lesteragain took high point honors bydrilling in 40 points for the Ma¬roons. The game was played atAurora, on a smaller than regula¬tion court.Due to the limited size of thecourt, Maroon star Gary Pearsonran into a wall and was injured.As a result of this injury,Pearson was unable to play in the Maroon’s game against Elmhurstlast Tuesday night.The loss of Pearson, combinedwith Elmhurst’s advantage inheight, accounted for Elmhurst’svictory. The score of this game,incidentally, is the lowest scoreElmhurst has been held to all sea¬son.The hoopsters next game is to¬morrow, when they journey upto the court of Navy Pier Illini. Dan Trifone led UC’s Varsity track team to a decisive victory over Wayne State Univer¬sity last Saturday in the Fieldhouse, by a score of 62-42.Trifone won high scoring honors by capturing first places in both the high and low hur¬dles and also the high jump, r—~—~~rt 7~7T7—Z—, . . by Jim Caffey and A1 Jacobs.Other first place winners Floyd Smjth of the track clubfor Chicago were: Chuck .won the high jump while Dan Tankers splashRhyne, in the mile; A1 Jacobs,. Trifone, of the Varsity, tied forin the 60 yard dash; Bill Weaver, fourth.in the broad jump; Bud Perschke, The track club’s only other bluein the 880; and Dave Northrop, ribbon winner was Bob Apple-who tied for first in the pole man, who took the pole vault withvault. a 13' effort.A1 Jacobs set a new record inwinning the 60 yard dash in :06.3,while Hosea Martin took secondand Brooks Johnson took third.The Maroon trackmen alsoswept the high jump with Trifonetaking first and Pete McKeon andBaseball Coach Kyle Anderson yesterday announced the Bob Mason tying for second. Chuck Rhyne took second in After a rest of almost twoweeks, the swim team will returnto competition in Bartlett poolthis afternoon at,4:30 with a meetagainst Bradley College. Thismeet should provide a breatherfor the team, which has beenMake baseball slate the 600 yard run and Holey Gay swimming Big Ten teams in thewas second in the low hurdles. last *ew meets. After this meet.Bob Kelly finished second while the swimmers will oppose Wright‘bright” for ateam’s schedule, stating that prospects looksuccessful season this year.The team has been working out regularly in the afternoonsIn the Fieldhouse, and mem¬bers of the squad are lookingforward to a great season,Fencers loseMaroon fencers dropped twolast Saturday when they met bothMichigan State and Illinois in adouble dual at Bartlett Gym.Chicago lost to Michigan State’sBig Ten title bound Spartans by a*core of 16-11. Mike Fain madethe best showing for Chicago,winning all three of his foil boutsagainst Michigan State’s fencers,with Bob Venegas winning two inthat weapon.Tony Kasanof and Ken Nordineach won a bout in epee andChick Ahlgren and Herb Zipper-ian each won two bouts in theaabre.Against the Illini, Chicago lostby a score of 17-10. In the foilbouts Fain took two bouts for theMaroons’ only points in that The schedule as tentatively setup is:Saturday, April 6—Knox (2) at Knox.Tuesday, AprU 23—Illinois Tech atStagg FieldSaturday, AprU 27—Valparaiso (2) atValparaisoWednesday, May 1—Illinois Tech atStagg Field.Saturday, May 4—Beloit (2) at Beloit.Thursday, May 9—Navy Pier Illini—Stagg FieldSaturday, May 11—Beloit—Stagg FieldTuesday, May 14—Navy Pier Illini—Stagg Field.Coach Anderson also announcedthat Wayne State will be sched¬uled for either April 20 or May 18.This game will be played at De¬troit. The squad will also partici¬pate in several tournaments latethis Spring. Other point scorers for Chicagowere: Art Omohundro, who tooksecond in the mile; Phil Goldstein,third in the shot put; McKeon,third in the 440; Don Richards,second in the high hurdles andthird in the low hurdles; Johnson,third in the broad jump; DaveHouk, second in the two-mile;and Ivan Carlson, second in the880.UC's track club was representedby approximately fifteen men inthe Michigan AAU Relays, lastFriday in Ann Arbor.The highlight of the eveningwas the clean sweep of the dashby UCTC men. Ira Murchison,Olympic medal winner and mem¬ber of the club, won the 65-yarddash in world record equalingtime and he was followed closely Hal Higdon took fourth in thetwo-mile.The mile relay team of HoseaMartin, Bud Perschke, BrooksJohnson, and Chuck Rhyne, tookthird. Junior College, followed bySouthern Illinois.On March 2 and 3, the Maroonswill finish up the season by com¬peting in the Chicago Intercol¬legiate championships, here atBartlett pool.Tuxedos for Wash Promcomplete with accessoriesSPECIAL RENTAL PRICEFOR STUDENTS — $8.50MURPHY DRESS SUIT CO.6 E. Randolph DE 2-2575"SALT OF THE EARTH"at Buddhist Church Sunday, February 175487 Dorchester 3:30 p.m.Students 60cAuspices: American Socialist"jerome Gross. Bill McGinnis Ulf A Ml I II A T A ||and Nordin a in yU MW ■■ I M ■ II |Uepee while Ahlgren and Zipperian ^each won two bouts in the sabre. *AUTO INSURANCETERM INSURANCEPhone or Write> Joseph H. Aaron, '27 j>135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060; PROMENADEonly all campus formal danceGet Them Hot atNICKYSPIZZERIA1235 E. 55th will be held on the entire first floor ofIda Noyes hallSaturday, February 23, 1957 -9:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Bids $4.00The '57 Casual Look-Arrow StyleThis Arrow Squire sports a pattern with decidedfreshness. Black on white available in three differentsized plaids. New medium-spread collar has button-down front plus button at back. Exact sleeve length.(This same shirt is also available in White Tartan•—six new miniature plaids.) Arrow Squire,‘‘Sanforized” gingham, $5.95.HANDKERCHIEFS • UNDERWEAR Next time one of her dates bring up the Schleswig*Holstein question, she’ll really be ready for him.Ready for that test tomorrow, too ... if that bottle ofCoke keeps her as alert tonight as it does other peopleARROW-•' CASUAL WEAR The Coca-Cola Bottling Companyof Chicogo, Inc.SIGN OF GOOD TASTE