~Y\\ c^cc'^°11 laroonVol. 65# No. 28 University of Chicago, Friday, March 8, 1957EndSecret report tells CpnatpCollege changes <nc In this 20-page issue...pageAlumni weekend 3Editorials 4, 5McKeon, Despres talk ; 7SG report 11Culture 15, 16, 17Sports 1 8, 19Picture page 20system?to considerby Ronald J. GrossmanTuesday's meeting of the Council of the UniversitySenate may spell the end of the College in its presentform if the predictions of a member of a special com¬mittee of the Council come true.In a confidential mim-eographed report datedJanuary 1 1, 1957, and re¬cently revealed to the Maroon,the committee member (a fullprofessor in a department ofthe University) outlined the prob¬lems still facing the college asseen by him. He also gives some Seded the old College BA whichpossible solutions.The solutions sound the deathknell of the college. The report begins w i t h thestatement: “I (meaning the com¬mittee member) have had a talkwith the Chancellor; what followsare as much his ideas as mine.”What follows is an outline ofthe College’s problems as relatedto the present numerous “joinKBA” degrees which have super-was based on comprehensive ex¬amination courses only. Studentsmay now choose joint degrees re-Concerning the curriculum, or- quiring varying amounts of Col- lege faculty.control board planby Norman Lewak \A proposal that would "put an end to the academic autonomy of the Col¬lege" will be discussed Tuesday at the regular meeting of the Council of theFaculty Senate according to a member of the College faculty.The faculty member forecast that this proposal would be passed Tuesday.He SOW this as another rjcuium leading to that degree the divisions and schools. TheStep in the dissolution of (which includes the College cur- Committee of the Council has sixthe College and its re- ricldum) as a “matter involving divisional to oneXollege member.more than one academic body.” The “spokesman” (head) of thepiacemenr Dy an unaer- The Senate is composed of all Committee is Cyril O. Houle, pro.graduate faculty. He Cited faculty members in the University fessor in the department of edit-the recent appointment of 4G who have tenure. It meets once a cation. The members pf the Coun-divisional people to the Col- year (in the fall) to hear the cil and the Committee are listedChancellor’s state of the Univer- in the back of the University di-lege comprehensive and depart- The proposed plan would ere- sdy speech and elect the Council rectory.mental courses. ate a board that would have con- of the Faculty Senate. . committee*According to the report: trol over “undergraduate” educa- Council rules Senate .. ,• The separation of College and tion. The board-would have equal The Council is the ruling body According to Dean Robert M.divisional (ie departmental) fac- College and divisional members, °f die Senate. It has 51 members b Iozier' tne Council may envulties is bad. In addition, the di- and would be presided over by elected at large from the Senate. P°wer a committee, chosen by thevided programs required for the Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton. There is no system of proportion- Chancellor, to investigate a spe-present joint degrees are based Its decisions will be final, appeal- ality in its makeup. The Chancel- cific issue. An example of this ison old existing college and depart- able only to the Council. The in- lor presides over its monthly the recent committee that investsmental courses. “There is no true dividual faculties would have no meetings. gated the return of football, whichmarriage here.” voice in the matter The administrative arm of the VVdS rejected by the Council.• Because of these divided pro- The board would decide curricu- Council is the c”m™ttee of th* a committee, Strozier r*.grams, proper prerequisites for lar matters of noliev in the Col Counci1 composed of seven mem- ported, has been investigating theto do. ‘This is especially true of departmental requirements are le„e and the “undergraduate” bers elected from the Council. It new joint degrees and the proh-the humanities and social sciences not being met according to the portions of the divisions*^It would screens legislation for the Coun- lems involved in the new pro¬report * ^ganized today essentially as Rob¬ert M. Hutchins originally revisedand organized it during his 20-year stay here, the report statesvehemently: “The College mustabandon the sacred number offourteen comprehensive?*.” It con¬tinues that the college might findthat fewer than fourteen wouldsuffice; the present coursesmight be regrouped, reorganizedor entirely new courses construct¬ed to do what the College existssequences. This could mean onlyabout two years of the student’stime spent on College require¬ments.”Scrap placements“If these changes are made, both the required number of Col-asks the report, “wouldn’t it be and departmental courses.possible to scrap all placementexams and hold all entering stu¬dents once admitted to the sameseries of courses of general education?”tained.)Then in what appears to be thecrucial axe-blow for the College,the report states:“Acceleration would cease.Waiving courses on some pre¬text or another would cease.This would lead to much great¬er simplicity without sacrific¬ing any principle of real Im¬portance.” ^ . . thus have jurisdiction over what• The joint BA degrees require would be ,J ht in the Collegetoo much time to attain. In some courses, ht)W the grade would beeases, more than four years are romnilpd fwhPthe7 n narter lie*needed for the student to fulfill ^fd ^ountK w Ii eTh e r Zrtshould be compulsory class at¬tendance, etc.Some College faculty mem¬bers fear that the divisionalI>eople will try to make the Col¬lege just a training ground forthe divisions. cil. grams. The joint programs wereThe Council has eleven mem- passed by the College, the respeo*bers from the College and 40 from tive divisions, and the Council.• The joint degrees require du¬plicate advisors—one for the Col¬lege and one for the department.The student does not know which(Original emphasis re- one *° turn to-• The announcements describingthe College and the joint degrees Under the present setup, eachare written in a confusing and academic body (the College, a di-misleading manner. vision, a school) has control overThe report waxes bitter over own curriculum. However, thethe last problem, stating that the Faculty Senate has jurisdictionannouncements are poorly writ- over matters relating to moreten: than one academic body. Because“The stranger reading the de- of the joint College-divisional de¬scription of the courses will come grees, College members fear thatsee ‘College/ page 2 the Senate will consider the cur-McGifferf confirms Robie vLU^1rumors which he deniedby Dave ZackThe Maroon’s unveiling of plans for the destruction of Robie house received official con¬firmation while the paper it was printed on still was wet last Friday morning. A. C. Mc-Giffert, jr., president of CTS, which plans to demolish the outstanding example of FrankLloyd Wright’s early period, mailed a press release which confirmed the rumors which hehad himself denied before the Maroon rolled off the presses.In the release, factors which McGiffert considers “compelling”, such as “structural de¬terioration” of the fifty yearold building and the “need ofmarried seminary students forbetter'housing” are brought forthto justify the demolition of thehouse which CTS recognizes as“an example of Frank LloydWright’s early work,” but shrugsoff as one of “many examples ofthe work of this architect.”The release emphasizes that (heSeminary has intended to use theproperty at 58th and Woodlawnwhere the Robie house is locatedfor expansion since its purchasein 1926, and offers the consolation that the new dormitory, to be de¬signed by Holabird & Root & Bur¬gee, will be “an outstandingexample of a contemporary build¬ing.”The Robie house is one ofeleven residences built by thegreat and venerable Americanarchitect in the city of Chicago.Six of the eleven were constructedbefore 19(K., and belong to a differ¬ent architectural era, accordingto the Art Institute’s Burnhamlibrary of architecture in a bookpublished in 1954. Of the remaining five, one, builtin 1909, is now a restaurant, onebuilt in 1915 is altered, two builtin 1908 are altered or in bad con¬dition The last house in thegroup, according to the Burnhamlibrary, is in a class by itself. Itis the only Wright house in Chi¬cago of his famous “prairie”houses that is in good condition.Last month’s architectural rec¬ord rated Robie house at the headof a list of the seven most impor¬tant residences constructed dur-see ‘Robie/ page 2 The College — with strings attachedMaroon to publish threespecial issues in springThis is the last issue of the Maroon for the winterquarter. The next issue will be published on March 29.To keep apace with the Spring quarter activities, the Maroonwill publish three special Tuesday issues.The first (April 9) will cover the campus NSA elections. Ahistory of NSA (this year is the tenth anniversary of the UnitedStates National Students Association), a history of Past NSAelections and any important issues that the two political partieswill dream up over the interim, will be included in the issue.The last two special issues (April 23 and April 30) will coverthe third annual Festival of the Arts (Fota). Highlights ofFota are the Beaux Arts masquerade ball, University Theatre’sFOTA production and an outdoor art exhibit.On or about May 31, the Maroon will publish its annual re¬view of the year supplement. It is hoped that this issue will beat least 32 pages long, thereby giving Maroon readers a com¬plete summary of this year’s activities.mmmmmMmmmsmmmiimmmmMimmmmmwMmmimmMmamBmi 1* 2 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 8, 19S7NewsbitsWinter convocationone of smallestNext Friday afternoon in Rockefeller chapel,200 students will receive degrees. Dr. Paul C.Hodges, chairman of the radiology department,will speak on “Your University and mine.”Although a variety of degrees will be conferred,Harold Anderson, marshal of the University, calledthis convocation one of the smallest in UC history.Morgenthau, Mowat speakat Roosevelt U lecture seriesTwo UC professors are participating in a con¬temporary history lecture series at Roosevelt uni¬versity on Wednesday evenings, at 430 South Mich¬igan Ave.The lectures begin promptly at 8. AdmissionIs 50 cents a lecture for students.Last week Charles Mowat, history professor,addressed the group. March 20, Dr. Hans J. Mor-ganthau, director of the center for the study ofAmerican foreign policy, will speak on “Amer¬ican foreign policy after Suez.”A former professor of political science at UC,Dr. Helmut Hirsch, will speak the following Wed¬nesday, March 27. I Famed pathologist dies JDr. George Gomori, 52, UC professor and inter¬nationally known pathological research scientist,died last Thursday in Palo Alto, California.He joined UC in 1938, coming from Budapest,Hungary. Among his achievements was the dis¬covery of an easy method to isolate cells for micro¬scopic study.In 1955, Dr. Gomori received the Ward BurdickAward for outstanding research in clinical path¬ology.Dr. Gomori had been on a leave of absence fromthe University. He is survived by his widow, Mar¬garet.Discuss psych literature;WUCB ends for quarterPsychiatry and the community will be discussedover the UC-produced “New World” portion ofMonitor, NBC’s week-end network service, Sundayat 10:35 am.A panel of psychiatrists will tell some of theeffects popular psychiatric writings has on theattitudes of the public.* * *WUCB, the student radio voice of the Universityof Chicago, will terminate winter quarter broad¬casts Sunday, March 10, and resume them Mon¬day, March 25. However, the station will continueto rebroadcast WFMT programs during the inter¬im. (WFMT is Chicago’s Fine Art FM station.) No more College?(from page 1)away from the experience baffledand indignant. After readingpages of the murkiest prose hewill find he has no clear idea ofwhat each course is about or whatit is trying to do.”Offering solutions to these“pressing” needs, the report sug¬gests that reform in both thecurriculum and the faculty of theCollege are needed. It sug¬gests that all members of theCollege faculty should ultimatelyalso hold appointments in the de¬partments and do some of theirteaching in the departments. Thereport admits that this wouldhave to be a gradual process butthat all new College appointeesshould immediately be given de¬partmental posts also.In other suggestions for solu¬ tions to the alleged problems, thereport states:• a single advisor for the studentin the joint programs is needed.• rewriting t h e announcements“avoiding philosophical justifica¬tions and boasting about our ownexcellence.”• possible reform in the College’sown BA. “The College's own BAmay prove unnecessary.”The report concludes with sug¬gestions that two committees beformed: one to revise and exam¬ine the College curriculum andont to review the departmentalrequirements for the joint BA de¬grees.Showing a flair for the dra¬matic, the author of the reportends: “Without such Draconianmeasures I doubt whether anyreal progress can be made.”causes stir .(from page 1)ing the past fifteen years, whileWright himself showed the em¬phasis which he places on thehouse himself by including it asone of two illustrations of hisearly style in a pamphlet distrib¬uted at the time of his visit toWhat’s it like to beAN IBM SALESMAN?Selling to management is perhaps the best training for management, andit’s the reason Gene McGrew joined IBM. Today, he possesses athorough practical Business Administration education, responsibility, anexcellent income—all at age 27. Read about an unusual career.You’re Gene McGrew,,»high schoolfootballer and class officer. You won ascholarship and went through Prince-,ton in the top third of your class .. •managed varsity track... commandedan artillery battery in Korea ...“When you put a lot of preparation in¬to your career,” Gene McGrew feels,'“you should expect a lot of opportunityin return.”Meets IBM representativeOut of the Army in 1953, Gene metan IBM representative. It soundedlike opportunity. A few interviewslater, Gene was sure. Although saleswas only one of the many jobs he felthe could handle, this kind of selling—(IBM machines are as much an ideaas a product)—promised to occupyevery talent he possessed. Besides,he's learned that “no other form oftraining produces so many top busi¬ness managers■1717 1 Makes first saleGene’s first sale, to a bank, requiredthorough study; consultations; a writ¬ten recommendation. The climaxcame, Gene remembers, when hesubmitted his analysis to the vicepresident and received that gentle¬man’s signature, ,IAi34 Gen* outline! programming fe»fThen began a 13 months’ trainingprogram marked by merit salary in¬creases. First—3 months’ schoolingand observing operations in Pitts¬burgh (Gene’s hometown). Next—2onths’ studying the applications ofM’s electronic data processing ma¬chines in business, science, govern¬ment, and defense. Followed by 7months’ practical training in the field,with customer contact. Followed byIBM’s famous course in selling meth¬ods. Finally, assignment to a salesterritory near Pittsburgh, responsiblefor about 14 companies and their ex¬ecutives who used IBM equipment,and a dozen or so more who were,logical prospects for it.. / Discutsing customers installationGene’s latest sale was to a largeindustrial corporation. He’s now pre¬paring this customer for the installa¬tion of an IBM electronic systemdesigned to simplify financial pro¬cedure; inventory and other systemsproblems. At 2 7, Gene finds himself topman on an important account. He’seducator, salesman, administrator.How would Gene define selling?“We feel the best way to sell is to beable to consult. The best way to con¬sult is to know something of valueyour customer doesn’t. IBM’s 'some¬thing of value’ is profit throughautomation.” *Gene’s thoughts on competition:“The entire Office Machine Industryfeels the lead pencil is the biggestcompetitor. You’ve no idea how manytime-consuming clerical jobs can bemechanized, thus freeing people forimportant, creative jobs. IBM’s suc¬cess in the field is due to service,knowledge, ‘know-how’.”Does Gone find his youtha handicap?“It’s what you know—not how oldyou are—that counts. I deal withexecutives twice my age on a basis of equality, because they respect mytraining and my business judgment.”Future wide open“I’m getting married soon, and I wasamazed to realize how much securityIBM’s growth (sales have doubled onthe average every five years since1930) and benefits represent. But Ithink my real security lies in thechance to use my own ability fullyand freely. There are nearly 200Branch Managerships, 15 DistrictManagerships and executive positionsin 5 other divisions ahead of me. IBMis introducing new machines, systemsand concepts so fast that, every Mon¬day, we have a 'new idea’ meetingjust to keep up.”IBM hopes this message will giveyou some idea of what it’s like to be asalesman at IBM. There are equalopportunities for E.E.’s, I.E.’s,M.E.’s, physicists, mathematicians,and Liberal Arts majors in IBM’smany divisions—Research, ProductDevelopment, Manufacturing En-*w - V.,. •/. ftwm;?ajj)£oiaioItPi JiffsMlJBttnri mInHHn* J3P®*' ML^ Chocking out row clionf* lyiltMgineering, Sales and Technical Serv4ice. Why not drop in and discuss IBM.with your Placement Director? H«can supply our brochure and tell youwhen IBM will interview on yourcampus. Meanwhile, our Manager ofCollege Relations, Mr. P. H. Bradley,*will be happy to answer your ques-’tions. Write him at IBM, Room590 Madison Ave., New York 22, N. Y«JIBM IHTEINATIONALBUSINESS MACHINESCORPORATIONpATA PROCESSING ELECTRIC Typewriter* .TIMS EQUIPMENT MILITANT PRODUCTS Chicago last fall.A Commission for the preserva¬tion of Chicago ArchitecturalLandmarks, which was introducedby Alderman Leon M. Despresand approved by the city councilwould be able to consider prob¬lems such as that facing the Robiehouse, but Mayor Richard J.Daley has as yet not appointedmembers to it. Already attempt¬ing to find a solution to the prob¬lem of finding an alternative tothe destruction of the famousHyde Park residence is a com¬mittee consisting of prominentChicago architects, artists, andeducators, who met at the homeof sculptor Milton Horn last nightBowly homefeeling fine ifJudy Bowly, second yearcollege student critically in¬jured by a fire last Novemberhas been released from Billingshospital after four months there.During an interview, Judy stat¬ed that she wished to thank allher friends and classmates fortheir many kindnesses to her dur¬ing her stay in the hospital. Sheespecially thanked the manyUC’ers who donated blood. Judyrelated that she returns to Bill¬ings now, only for therapy andthat she "feels fine.”HERE IS A MANYOU SHOULD KNOWRalph J. Wood, Jr. '48FR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855Member of a profession dedi¬cated to the promotion ofgood citizenship, this man isan independent businessmanengaged in a constructive en¬terprise in your community.Trained and experienced in aservice that has brought mil¬lions help and comfort whenmost needed, he is backed bythe resources of one of NorthAmerica’s leading life insur¬ance companies — the Sun Lifeof Canada. He is thoroughlyqualified to give you expert ad¬vice on the life insurance andannuity program most suitablefor your individual needs.SUN LIFEASSURANCE COMPANYOF CANADA1 K LaSoile Chicago. W.March 8, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Quarterly exam scheduleThe College office has announced the following schedule of quar¬terly exams in college courses:Tuesday, March 12Physics B, durjng lecture hour—11:30 in Eekhart 133History B, during lecture hour—1:30 in Kent 106German IB, during regular class hours (half)Natural Sciences 1, during lecture hour, 2:30 in Kent 106 (half)Wednesday, March 13German IB, during regular class hours (half)Latin & Greek, during regular class hoursMath B, 3:30-5:30 in Mandel hallHumanities 3, during regular class hoursMath 150A, 3:30-5:30 in Kent 102Math 150B, 3:30-5:30 in Eekhart 133 and Rosenwald 2Social Sciences 2, lecture hour, 2:30 in Kent 106Thursday, March 14Humanities 2, during lecture hour—10:30 in Mandel hallSocial Sciences 3, during lecture hour—11:30 in Mandel hallSocial Sciences 1, during lecture hour, 1:30-2:30Natural Sciences 2, during lecture hour—3:30-4:20Natural Sciences 3 physical, class sessions ThursdayO.M.P., 4:30-6:00 in Mandel hallFriday, March 15Natural Sciences 1. regular sessions (half)Natural Sciences 3, biological, Cobb 103 at 9 or Cobb 308 at 10:30 Weekend plans changed;hold two convocationsThree major changes in plans for the June convocation weekend have been announcedby the alumni office and Dean of Students Robert M. Strozier.Alumni weekend, as originally scheduled, fell on the Memorial day weekend, so the eventshave been moved forward a week and will run concurrently with the convocation events.Interfraternity sing will now take place Saturday, June 8.The College convocation, normally held on the Friday afternoon of convocation week,has been moved to Saturdaymorning.. Graduate degreeswill be awarded at the usualFriday morning ceremony.A gala graduation ball is beingplanned under the auspices of theactivities office, and will probablybe co-sponsored by Student Union,interfraternity council and Inter¬club council, according to MaryAlice Newman, director of studentactivities. Tentative calendar for thealumni-convocation weekend is asfollows:Wednesday, June 5—Owl and Serpentconvention.Thursday. June 6—Order of the “C”gahie and dinner. WAA awards dinner.Friday, June 7—Class reunions.Graduate convocationFaculty RevelsGraduation ball Saturday, June 8—Alumni day breakfastCollege convocationEmeritus club luncheonAlumni citation lunch¬eonAlumni assemblyInterfraternity sing andpresentation ofAlumni-Dean's awardmedalsPhi Sigma Delta Straw¬berry festivalStudents jam Billings"Zeckendorf plan" beforecity council on ThursdayOn Thursday, the “Zeckendorf plan” for Hyde Park redevelopment will go before thecity council for final approval. It has been sponsored by the Southeast Chicago commission(of which Chancellor Kimpton is president) and approved by the Chicago Land Clearingcommission.The plan, to be financed mainly by private capital, will cost $15 million, and will call forthe razing and redevelopmentcovering 47 acres.Over 90 per cent of the landhas already been acquired bythe land clearance commission,and one-third of the area has beendemolished. On the demolishedland, the constructors plan tobuild some 700 units, apartmentsand single family houses, and aThe CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 of two spots in Hyde Park, kishopping center, as well as aninn and a theater.It can reasonably be said thatthis plan, extensive as it is, willbe just a start in the eventualslum clearance of the entire HydePark-Kenwood area. The federalgovernment has approved prelim¬inary plans for conservation andrenewal of the entire Hyde Park-Kenwood neighborhood, coveringno less than 900 acres, stretchingfrom 47th to 59th street, LakeMichigan to Cottage Grove ave¬nue.Under the 1954 Urban Renewalact, the government would fi- lown as projects “A” and “B,”nance two-thirds of the net costof the project. It is indicated thatthe government is reserving acapital grant of $25.8 million forsuch a purpose.Meanwhile the University isalso planning several construc¬tion projects including the al¬ready started new’ girls’ norms,the new law school where theGreenwood project is now, agroup of University-owned apart¬ments for married students to belocated north of North field, andeventually a new men’s under¬graduate dormitory, planned forsomewhere around the presentsite of Stagg field. to get vaccinationWith no publicity beyond a small story in last week’s Ma¬roon, over 700 students jammed student health at Billingshospital Wednesday, to get polio innoculations.According to Dr. Henrietta Herbolshimer, director of stu¬dent health, “we usually judgethe number of turnouts byrecording the number of phonecalls and then doubling it. Thecrowd took us by surprise.”Many students were turnedaway while student health search¬ed for additional vaccine, havingused all the available vaccine fromthe pharmaceutical, pediatric, andemergency supplies of Billingshospital.Just ten minutes after the clinicopened, student health officialshad decided that the vaccine instock would not be sufficient tomeet the demand. Billings rushedvaccine from the pharmaceuticalwarehouse to replenish the vac¬cine used up by student healthand enabled more shots to begiven Wednesday afternoon.Only two more clinics had beenscheduled for the remainder ofthe school year; the first Wednes¬days of April and June. However, Dr. Herbolshimer hasannounced that another clinicwill be set up next week if thereare sufficient requests from stu¬dents. Interested students shouldcall ext. 2656 before Wednesdayof next wreek.In order to avoid running outof the perishable vaccine at theApril and June clinics, studenthealth requests students return¬ing for second shots or appearingfor the first to call a few daysin advance.There is a $1 charge per shot,regardless of a person’s age, tocover the cost of the vaccine.Married students may bringtheir spouses and children for in¬noculations.Three polio shots are advisable.Students who have had one ottwo shots elsewhere may obtainthe remainder of their innocula¬tions at student health.(Photo on page 20)You smoke refreshedA new idea in smoking...all-new Salem8 menthol fresh Take a puff—it’s Springtime! Light up a filter-tip Salem and find a smokethat refreshes your taste the way Springtime does you. It’s a new idea in smok-• rich tobacco taste ing—menthol-fresh comfort...rich tobacco taste...pure, white modern filter!They’re all in Salem to refresh your taste. Ask for Salem—you’ll love ’em!Salem refreshes your taste• most modern filter* "a -4 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 8, 1957 1 1 1 1EditorialStudents show spirit, thencrawl back undergroundIf you had been driving down Woodlawnavenue near 57th street last Thursday eve¬ning, a stranger to UC, you would have beensurprised to find the road blocked by a groupof students holding torches and, (get this!)yelling “pep” chants.If you knew anything about Hutchins, andthe de-emphasis on sports and “rah-rah”stuff at Chicago, you would have been sur¬prised. You would have drawn the conclusionthat a new type of student was now attend¬ing UC in the “Kimpton era.”And yet, such a speculation would bewrong. If ever a case can be made for thestatement, “history repeats itself,” this wasit, because almost four years to the day, aneven bigger crowd went through the samemotions and watched an earlier Maroonbasketball team defeat an earlier Navy Pierteam, thereby ending a losing streak of 45straight games.What we would like to know is not whythere aren’t more pep rallies, or why there are pep rallies at all, but why the studentsfluctuate so wildly from apathy to frenziedexcitement.It would probably be far more appreciatedby the athletic teams if interested studentswould come out and watch them play moreoften, even if in smaller numbers, than if theyhold a big rally and stay away for the nexttwo years or so. Such a situation would alsoconvince skeptics that a student rally can be agenuine indication of student spirit, and notjust a result of smart promotion tactics.Maybe it’s because the students can be ledby a bunch of pied pipers with torches. Ormaybe it’s because nobody has enoughnerve to cheer our athletic teams on unlesshe has a lot of other people cheering withhim. But in either case there is a surprisinglack of the “individualism” that students atthe UC are so quick to espouse, and a sur¬prising amount of “mass conformity.” Wesuggest there is something unhealthy aboutthe manic-depressive cycle which the stu¬dents seem to have fallen into. Inconsistent pattern?GadflyRobie house: pro and conRobie true American beauty Euthanasia for Wright houseIt's warm enough to walk slowly around campus in late winterand early spring. And the leaves, rightly enough, have not ar¬rived. So now is the time when the campus buildings can be seenin all their hideous glory. Now is the time when the student mustgird his aesthetic sensibilities againstpigeon whitewashed arches and mis¬shapen gargoyles. And yet, ironic-cally enough, now is the time whenaesthetic sensibilities must speak theirloudest and longest in behalf of the pres¬ervation of the Robie house.There is no hope for those, (and thereare many) who have absorbed slowly theconcept of beauty offered by Mandel hallor the administration building. Pity onthose who make the scholarly mistakeof confusing weight and size with beauty.I am writing for you who can see theclear lines etched in one house sitting atthe edge of the ugly piles of Gothicstone. I am writing for you who canwince at fire escapes on Gothic walls,exit signs in chapel doors, anomometerson gray turrets. I am writing to you whoknow the beauty of the Robie house.Perhaps the crux of the situation isthat the Robie house is American beauty.Americans have never believed them¬selves able to create beautiful things;they must import them from the con¬tinent. And so they must destroy theAmerican beauty. The Robie house does not exist in avacuum; it sits in the middle of millionsof other structures — houses, halls,churches, and factories. And its can¬tilevered beauty does not stand for mere¬ly a momentary appreciative glance,then to be forgotten. It is a standard Initself, seldom approached or surpassedby the other structures which sit at itsside. Its three story charm, (not needinga lawn or landscaping to hide its non¬existent flaws) mocks our present andfuture, cramped, unbalanced, evergrow¬ing, never-learning city. Its clean linescut through our easy satisfaction of sec¬ond best building whether erected by ourUniversity or anyone else. It sings gracein the midst of a graceless city.So friends, sing a lament with me, forthe impending tragedy of the Robiehouse. Be sad at the destruction of exist¬ing beauty, and sigh at the ignorancewhich it involves. And crying is left forthose who will someday realize that theyhave destroyed one of the few remain¬ing standards which man can carry awayto judge the overwhelming ugliness ofmost American buildings. Brok Before the time of Emily Dickinson, the one Americon poetmost concerned with mortality and decay was Oliver WendellHolmes. Most of his least neglected poems are rhetorically intri¬cate lamentations of the fact that things change and go away:“The Last Leaf” and “The Wonder-GADFLY POLICYGadfly is an attempt on the part of Maroon to provide provocative ideas to the campusot large. Students and faculty are earnestly invited to contribute to this column. Theouthor's name will be held in strictest confidence by the editor.Opinions stated in Gadfly do not necessarily represent the editorial policy of theMaroon, or ifs staff.Readers are invited to express their views on Gadfly articles in the “Letters to Gadfly"column. Send articles to Gadfly, Maroon office, Ida Noyes hall. ful ‘One-Hoss Shay’ ” are bothconcerned with remnants of theeighteenth century which had somehowsurvived into Victorian times.The anachronism and the inexorablefates of these objects are demonstrablyevil and pitiable things. And when somehardheaded, narrowminded, wheat ies-eatin’, gogettin’ Americano businessmencame up with the sacrilegious idea ofgetting mercifully rid of the remains ofthe poor old rotten hulk of the frigateConstitution, Holmes sprung immediate¬ly into action and produced a piece ofpolemic irony which resulted in a re¬grettable change of plans and the re¬construction of the ironsided fossil.SIMPLE IS THE CHANGE IN objectfrom a fossil called ‘Old Ironsides” to afossil called “The Robie house.” Therenow sits the Robie house, half a centuryold, decayed and in the way. We have nosentimental poets to snort, “Ay! Tearher tattered cornice down!” All we have,unfortunately, is the cultured ululationof several art students and highbrows,whose rhetoric, for better or worse, willnot have great effect on what happens.Several sources of varying fashionabil-ity may be here invoked to remind usthat a house is not a home, the produc¬tion of which necessitates a heap o’ livin’.Furthermore, a house happens to be amachine for living in. The Robie houseno longer qualifies properly as a “home”(being a dormitory) or as a “machine”(being worn out).Neither a proper home nor an efficient machine, the Robie house remains onlyof aesthetic value and of historical sig¬nificance as a monument to the MasterBuilder, Frank Lloyd Wright. Take itas a work of art: its becoming a dormi¬tory was an indignity; its being crowdedby other structures architecturally in¬ferior to it is an indignity; its being awk¬wardly sketched and incompletely appre¬ciated by undergraduates (it’s Art, ofcourse, because we do it in Humanities)is an indignity; its being allowed to growold and gracelessly decrepit is an in¬dignity.OUR BENEVOLENCE MUST subor¬dinate our musty, museumesque cultur¬edness, and the sole benevolent solutionis euthanasia. Nothing functionally andstructurally organic can be recreated orreconstructed, without a functional andartistic loss being irrecoverably incurred.A work of art is a whole thing, and atits best can be only an approximateimage of an unsullied idea and at itsworst can be a cancerous, repulsiveobject.It is best for all parties that the Robiehouse be destroyed now, lest there be¬comes too ineradicably fixed in ourminds the pathetic picture of a beautifulmasterpiece defaced by age, studied bydabblers, defended by art students, andcrowded by jerrybuildings.The time, moreover, is not too fardistant when admirers of F. L. Wrightcan stand on the Midway, look straightup, and wax ecstatic over the lower sec¬tions of the Mile High Tap Root IllinoisBuilding. EeroLetter to Qadfiy: Professor swats Fly for teachers blastLast week you drew a most un¬flattering portrait of the Univer¬sity professor. I must admit thatit closely resembled some of myformer teachers, and quite a fewof my present colleagues — atleast at first glance.Upon closer inspection your pic¬ture lacks perspective. It illus¬trates surface phenomena butdoes not describe the dynamics ofthe process — as we professorswould say when we try to soundlearned. That’s why your conclu¬sion — that professors deservetheir low pay and low prestigebecause they are lazy or incom¬petent—is all wet.University professors, as yourecognize, are expected to per¬form two distinct functions: to teach, and to do scholarly re¬search. Their popularity with stu¬dents is based on their teachingskills. On their performance asscholars rests their popularitywith the University administra¬tion, their academic reputation,their professional advancement—and the size of their paycheck.Professors who today begrudgethe time needed to prepare lec¬tures and to counsel studentsprobably did not begin their ca¬reer with this unseemly attitude.Most of us entered the teachingprofession because we enjoyedteaching and working with youngpeople. Being generally smart fel¬lows—dull perhaps, but not dumb—we soon discovered the awfultruth: teaching does not pay. The best teachers often turn and to retain scholars who haveout to be the lowest paid, and thepoorest teachers not infrequentlydraw the highest salanes. When aprofessor is being considered fora promotion, a raise, or an ap¬pointment in a reputable Univer¬sity, no one seems to know orcare about his abilities as a teach¬er. In fact, the more renownedthe University, the less it caresabout teaching skills. The crucialquestion always is, “What haveyou published?” published and who are likely topublish more — hoping all thewhile that the scholars will alsobe good teachers.Professors who neglect theirteaching, their office hours, theirappointments are not necessarilyloafing on the job. At least at thisUniversity such behavior is usual¬ly due to “publication-obsession,”a neurosis common among profes¬sors who have revolted against thelow pay and low prestige they al-From the University’s point of ly deserve. The better the Univer-view this makes sense. A univer¬sity’s reputation, and its contribu¬tion to society, depend largely onthe scholarly productivity of itsfaculty. It must seek to attract sity which employs them, thestronger are the environmentalpressures which induce publica¬tion-obsession. Once acquired theneurosis tends to become chronic. It is, unfortunately, not fatal.Obviously universities m u s tcontinue to encourage — and topay for—scholarship. Until theyare willing to pay also for goodteaching, there is little hope forimprovement in the quality ofgraduate instruction.An un-obsessed teacher oilhis way out to a softer jobP.S. Sure, some good scholarsare also good teachers. But onlythe exceptional professor can bea good teacher and a good re¬searcher at the same time with¬out working an 80-hour week.(Editor’s note: The author ofthis letter, whose name has beenwithheld on request, is a UC fac¬ulty member.)/March 8, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5he editorCJA helps non-Jews A. Schwartz hits football* T ocf TUnw/lotr T tho ohant r\f thacft Qr»xrfV\lane ca roAantlv inifioT can fiirAThere was a letter written by Brijen K. Gupta, (Maroon,Feb. 22) stating that (1) “terrorism” is too strong a word todescribe the treatment of the Egyptian government towardsEgyptian Jews (the word appeared in the context of an ap¬peal for funds to aid those —persons forced to flee Egypt, ficial governmental policy ofHungary and other countries “forceful expulsion” and actionsbecause of religious and political of “some misguided soldiers.”persecution), (2> Israel has mis* However, it is the writer’s lasttreated the Arabs in the Gaza charge which hurts me far morestrip, and (3) the Combined Jew- than did his first two. The Corn¬ish appeal—Hillel Welfare fund bined Jewish Appeal, in additionseems to lack “humanity” as to maintaining specifically Jewishfunds are raised only for Jews. agencies, supports hospitals, clin-The writer of the letter contro- ics, a children's aid bureau andverted the first statement him- other service agencies whichself by admitting that Egyptian serve persons of all faiths andJews have been victims of dis- races.crimination and that they have For example, of the 100,000 hos-beon subject to forceful expul- pital patients and 22,000 clinic pa-sion. In addition to this, the tients served by Michael Reese,Egyptian government has taken Mount Sinai and Winfield hospi-numerous Jewish hostages and tals, over 50% are non-Jewish.has been carrying on the ill-famed Furthermore, the Combined Jew-Fcdayeen attacks against Israel, ish Appeal is concerned with re-However, I have no quarrel with settling 100,000 persons who haveMr. Gupta if he wishes to replace been expelled from their coun-tho word “terrorism” with “force- tries or who have fled the oppres-ful expulsion.” . sion of their homelands. ThatAs to his second point, where most of these persons are Jewshe mentions that women and chil- does not at all make them anydren were the victims of “some less human,misguided Israeli soldiers,” I Bob Genvinmust say that there seems to bea great difference between an of- campaignReview' is given praiseT read . . . that the ChicagoReview is in danger of beingdiscontinued. . . . UC stands andalways has stood for critical, in¬telligent and independent judg¬ment in matters concerning boththe arts and the sciences. To hearthe news that one of the few re¬maining American publications ofnew writing, and independent, in¬ telligent criticism (Viz, the ar¬ticles on Samuel Beckett and Nel¬son Algren in the last issue of theChicago Review) is to be junked,is most depressing.If the Chicago Review is drop¬ped, Aristotle Schwartz has notonly left UC, the memory of himis also gone.Martin Griffin Last Thursday evening Iwas most rudely disturbed bya great deal of noxious fumesemanating from, what ap¬peared to be an ordinary bonfireburning in the middle of campus.However, upon inspection it wasimmediately apparent that therewas some sociological significanceattached to the fire.Obviously, a sort of pubertyrite was in the process. A wild,fanatically incensed throng wasperforming a mystic snake-danceto the crude beat of beeping auto¬mobile horns. The rite culminatedin some manner of minor orgyin front of Chancellor Kimpton’shouse with wailings and incanta¬tions, no doubt supplicating oneof the lesser, self-appointeddeities.“We want football" was clearlyWhat Gadflywas that, Ed?I am really pleased to see Gad¬fly assert that this place needsa return to a more normal typeof student. Two quarters aroundthis place had just about con¬vinced me of evolution!Edward A. JohnsonP.S. Keep up your fine workand don’t let that big, naughtydean push Ron Grossman around.Editor’s note: (CENSORED BYDEAN.) the chant of these Scythians.As previously stated, the riteappeared to be an initiation intopuberty. A more lucid and com¬plete observation is that it was aninitiation into puberty — fromadulthood backward.May I predict the eventual con¬sequence and logical (though irra¬tional) conclusion to this sequence so recently initiated. I see fivethousand children, rather infants,assuming the fetal position fondlynursing on a football.As I remember, we wentthrough this once before. An¬other Robert M. Hutchins willagain be needed to wean you fromyour infantile habits.Aristotle SchwartsGuterman charges Maroon suppressesNeither of the letters in theMaroon (March 1) attackingme for criticisms of the edi¬tor's policy on controversialmaterial speaks to the issues. In¬stead, they both confuse the is¬sues by imputing absurd and para¬noid views to mo and insinuatingthat discreditable motives haveunderlain my actions. What thenare the issues?... is it not likely that thevague criterion of “bad taste,”which Grossman claims to use inselecting controversial material,will often servo as a cover foreliminating criticisms which chal¬lenge basic interests of the admin¬istration? (Can anyone seriouslythink that the printing of BlairEwing’s letter is consistent withan impartial application of thiscriterion?) . . .Grossman categorically refused to print a second letter of mineembodying the preceding ... Isit ethical to attempt to suppressdiscussion of matters in which thecampus has an important stake?More specifically, is it right for aperson to attempt to suppresssuch discussion when he himselfis a party to the controversy?No one claims that the Maroonhas given up all freedom of thepress. But in view of the facts,who can deny that all is not asit should be?Ewing’s letter greatly distortedwhat I had written in a Gadflyarticles on the dangers of “admin¬istration referrals” to the psychia¬tric clinic at student health. Theanalysis I presented in this articlerepresents more than a year’sthinking and research on theproblems created hy the mentalhygiene professions.efucaao11 laroonIssued every Friday throughout the school year and intermittently during thesuminer quarter, by publisher, the Chicago Maroon, 1212 east 59 street, Chi¬cago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3266: Businessand advertising office, Midway 3-0800. ext. 3265. Subscriptions by mail, $3 peryear. Business office hours: 2 pm to 5 pm. Monday through Friday.Editor-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 editor Betsy KirtleyProduction manager Jean KwonSports editor George KarcazesEditorial assistant Bob BrownCalendar editor Jeanne HerrickOffice manager Art TaitelPhotographers .....Niles Bernick, Roland Finston, Bob WilsonCartoonists Kent Flannery, Dick Montgomery, Gwen WeberEditorial staff Sheila Fields, Mary Finkle, Oliver Lee, MargeRussell, Dave S^hJ finger* Sfjgron Sqbultz , In my article, I made twopoints. (1) Fourteen per cent ofthe clinic’s patients during a one-month period were “administra¬tion referrals.” It seems that anumber of tthese have been pres¬sured into entering therapy,though outright coercion is prob¬ably rarely used in comparisonwith subtler techniques. (Sincethe article was written, severalcases of actual coercion havecome to my attention.) (2) “Ad¬ministration referrals," by theirvery nature, entail the violationof student privacy. One of thefunctions of the secret dossiersystem—with the information itcontains on the personality and,to some extent, on the personal af¬fairs of each student—is to enablethe administration to determinewho should be induced to entertherapy.This use of pressure and viola¬tion of privacy are wrong, forboth make a mockery of the in¬dividual’s right to autonomy inhis personal life. And the pre¬sumption that administrators whodo these things generally act insincerity and with the best ofintentions—a presumption I havenever disputed—in no way lessenstheir evil.The only time (except perhapsin the case of children) that forc¬ing a person to undergo therapyis justified is when a court of lawcommits him to a mental institu¬tion. This position has its diffi¬culties, to be sure. But to holdotherwise, it seems to me, is toentrust our most precious posses¬sion — our personal freedom — tothe pleasure of every bureaucratwho has imbibed some notionsabout, what is “maladjusted” and“unhealthy” and who has enoughpower to force us to do his will.This assault on privacy, how¬ever innocuous it may appear, Isa far more formidable threat toour liberal, democratic heritagethan anything the political ex¬tremists are able to do to us., ,. S. Guterman On Campos withMajcQhuJman(Author of "Barefoot Boy TVitX Cheek" etc.)NOW YOU CAN BE YOUNGERTHAN SHE IS lIt’s a scientific fact that girls reach emotional ma¬turity earlier than boys. For this reason freshman girlsdecline to make romantic alliances with freshman boys.Thus, the freshman boys are left dateless, and many’sthe night the entire freshman dorm sobs itself to sleep.An equally damp situation exists among upper-classgirls. With upperclassmen being snapped up by freshmangirls, the poor upper-class girls are reduced to dreary,manless evenings of Scrabble and home permanents.There is a solution for this morbid situation — a verysimple solution. Why don’t the two great have-not groupsfind solace with one another?True, there is something of an age differential, butthat need not matter. Take the case of Albert PaysonSigafoos and Eustacia Vye.Albert Payson, a freshman in sand and gravel atVanderbilt University, was walking across campus oneday, weeping softly in his loneliness. Blinded by tears,he stumbled upon the supine form of Eustacia Vye, asenior in wicker and raffia, who was collapsed in awretched heap on the turf.Me (gidteid rnJdffd fay time ose-oe^*'“Why don’t you watch where you’re going, yousquirt?” said Eustacia peevishly.“I’m sorry, lady,” said Albert Payson and started tomove on. But suddenly he stopped, struck by an inspira¬tion. “Lady,” he said, “you’re miserable because you can’tget a date. So am I. So why don’t we date each other?”“Surely you jest!” cried Eustacia, looking with scornupon his youthful head and body.“Oh, I know I’m younger than you are,” said AlbertPayson, ‘‘but that doesn’t mean we can’t find many splen¬did things to do together.”“Like what?” asked Eustacia.“Well,” said Albert Payson, “we could get a third andplay some one-o-cat.”“Bah!” said Eustacia, grinding her teeth.“All right then,” said Albert Payson, “we could godown to the pond and skip some stones and maybe catcha few frogs.”“Ugh!” said Eustacia, shuddering her entire length.“How about some run-sheep-run?” he suggested.“You are callow, green, and immature,” said Eustacia,“and I will thank you to absent yourself at once!”Sighing, Albert Payson lit a cigarette and startedaway.“Stay!” cried Eustacia.- “Was that,” she asked, “a Philip Morris you just lit?”“What else?” said Albert Payson.“Then you are not immature!” she cried, claspinghim to her clavicle. “For to smoke Philip Morris is thevery essence of wisdom, incontrovertible proof that youknow rich, natural pleasure from pale, poor substitutes!Albert Payson, I am yours!”And today they are married and run one of the biggestwicker and raffia establishments in Blue Earth, Minnesota.©Max Shulman, 1957Freshman, sophomore, junior, senior — rich man, poor man,beggar man, thief—you'll enjoy natural Philip Morris, longsize and regular, made*by the sponsors of this column.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 8, 1957of degrees, 3 pm, Rockefeller chapel.English class, beginning and Intermedi¬ate for foreign born learning English,weekly, one of 3 different sete of class¬es for this level, 4:30-6:30 pm, Inthouse, free. Other classes on Sat at10 am. or Sun at 2 pm.Saturday 16 March.Momentum 57, "Musicians night,” Le-land Smith. Willis Charkovsty, 3rd of"Artists and their works” series, 8:30pm. Marshall Law school. 315 S Ply¬mouth court, between State and Dear¬born, $1.75.Sunday 17 MarchPick-up of old newspapers and maga¬zines. tied separately and securely,from curb, all day, every 3rd Sundayof month, phone Hyde Park Neighbor¬hood club for pickup.Record concert, coffee hour, weekly,10-12 am, Int house.English class, beginning, intermediatefor foreign born learning English,weekly, one of 3 different sets of class¬es of this level. 2-4 pm. Int house,free, other classes on Friday at 4:30pm, or Saturday at 10 am.Wednesday 20 MarchLecture. "The unfinished business ofAmerican foreign policy,” internation¬al relations prof Hans Morgenthau,5th of series, 8 pm, Roosevelt u, 430 sMichigan. 50 cents.Episcopal evensong and preaching,weekly during Lent, Canterbury club,8 pm. Church of Redeemer, 56th andBlackstone.Thursday 21 MarchCharming club lectures, "Unltarlanlsmand the basic concepts of faith,” 3rdof series, 8 pm, Fenn house (coffee,7:30 pm). Monday 25 March ®Spring Quarter 1957 begins; cmeet.Tuesday 26 MarchStudent Government meeting. 7 so ■ '•-*Law North. *1111Illustrated lecture. “The Etruscansartists.” Otto J. Brendel. a-1, Indiana u. Archaeological InstitutfffPpAmerica sponsor, 8:30 pm, BreasT#'$hall, free. .$$‘iWednesday 27 MarchOrchestra Comediae-musicalis, r«h' 1sal, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Socialist Forum, symposium, a"Socialist groups, everyone invltiupm. Mandel hall.Episcopal evensong and preach'weekly during Lent, Canterbury M8 pm. Redeemer Church.Lecture. "The Saar: a lesson for .many's reunification?” Helmut, Hhist prof Roosevelt u. 8 pm. B-oosu. 430 S Mich. 50 cents, last ofPoet lecture series, Reuel Denney a’MSElder Olson, refreshments, l,is*Chicago Review series, 8:30 pm hNoyes library, 75 c< nts single. (r , •Thursday 28 March VChanning club lectures. “Partlrlp.i1 I’In whole-creating power,” 4th of 1tarlan concepts lectures, 8 pm ;Fi-iiffl|house, (coffee 7:30 pm)CT play. “Antigone,’ by Jean 4noi,also Frl, Sat, and Sun, 8:30 pm M.del hall, 75 cents and $1.50.Friday 29 MarchConcert. Chicago symphony ensip'mBgfeClianning club, 8 pm. First Unitschurch. 57th Woodlawn, contributin'UT production. "Antigone.'’ .Anouilh, 8:30 pm, Mandel hacents and $1.50.Convocation Sunday, Dean John W«rln#»«rlnv 13 MnrrhThompson. 11 am, Rockefeller chapel ▼▼ COnesaay I J IViarcn(children can be left at Chapel house Intervarsity Christian fellowship, lunch-at 10:45 am) eon-discussion, weekly, 12:30 noon,English class, beginning, intermediate Ida Noyes,for foreigners learning English, 2-4 Carillon concerts, weekly. James R Law-pm, Int house. son, carilloneur, 4:30 pm. RockefellerO board, 3 pm. Ida Noyes. chapel, also Sunday.Research institute seminar, 3 pm. Ida Canterbury evensong, for whole campus,Noyes. weekly. 5:05 pm. Bond chapel.Carillon concert. James R Lawson, caril- Science fiction club, 8 pm. Ida Noyes,loneur, weekly, 4:30 pm Rockefeller Episcopal evensong and preaching,chapel. weekly during Lent, 8 pm, Church ofGlee club. 4:30 pm. Ida Noyes. Redeemer.BJ film: My darling Clementine, 7 and Lecture. "How enduring was the New9:30 pm, Judson lounge. 25 cents. Deal?” hist prof. Frank Friedel, Har-ISL caucus, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes east vard and Oxford. FDR biographer, 3rdlounge. ..-v of 5 in "Today's world in the light ofPorter foundation, spring party, 8 pm, yesterday” series. 3 pm. Roosevelt u,5756 Kimbark. 430 S Michigan. 50 cents, series $4.Bond chapel concert, by Bond chapel Country dancers, new members wel-cholr and Collegium musicum, music come, rubber soled shoes, weekly, 8by Bach. Marcello. Vittorla, admis- pm. Ida Noyes.sion free, by ticket from Swift 101, Social dance class, weekly. 8-9 pm. Int8:30 pm, Bond chapel. house, room CDE, 50 cents male, freeMondoV 1 1 March Illustrated lerture. "Excavations at Har-’ran. 1950-56.'’ David S Rice. LondonFilm: Camille, American, weekly, 7 and school of oriental studies. 8:30 pm.9 pm, Int house, 45 cents. Breasted hall, Oriental institute, free.New Testament club lecture, “Near east- . , , ,ern religious symbolism and the Old IhUTSuOy I 41 MarchTestament. Mircea Eiiade, 8 pm, Holy Communion, Canterbury club.Swift commons. weekly. 7:30 am. Bond chapel,f • | a ii « USA government jobs. USA Civil serviceI uesdoy I L. /Vicrcn commission representative will discuss... . ..... • ... .. . Job opportunities with USA govern-History oL Western civilization quarter- ment bureaucracy. 3:30 pin. Cobb hall.mMK weekly, 7 pm. Ida 585. 'SS8?STw1c.,0rwSS?n?.IS pm. Idapm .Int house, also Thursday. Young' Socialist League. 8 pm IdaLife drawing class, materials supplied. Noves 6 1 ’Tenfs1 mode3l°feem- L<'Xin°t°n 21°' 50 Channi'ng club lecture. "UnltarlanlsmF°hk sdam'lemb v ehaliy,508'entsPm- lQt nes oMtZl “reUgtouk" o,?«tlinT’'Reoorfconcern* weekly0 8-10 pm Int ?cop“’e ho',se' 5638 Woodlawn,wcek!y-6ates 8*10 pm-Intnail ioun0e. Coffee hour, all welcome week'.v 9.it CCNY newspaper foldsTERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best’’SPECIAL OFFER City College of New York: The The reason given for the miEditorial board of the uptown day pension of publication was lack jsession newspaper of CCNY, Ob- staff members. The staff li* Jserration Post, decided last week dwindled from 40 members to liftto suspend publication? of the 10 members of the editorial boaiiInewspaper on the eve of its tenth plus eight staff members. ’ifianniversary. In a letter to the Maroon, M a iY -Vrice J. Weiss, editor of Main'Events, CCNY’s uptown even'll/ \jsession student newspaper, st.i'i'j ,-jthat “the eight ‘staff’ monhbeg.wanted to continue nubiish,but the editors did not.” *§In last Monday’s issue of Main jEvents, announcement of a tern'flrarv merger with Obsertatio’i tPost was made. The newly ele.'ff «ed Editorial Board of OP staj|'“Observation Post will puhn'Y,iagain to continue the two new/4*1paper system which all possiip Iareas of the College seem to w;h(',.Jpreserved.” JMain Events announced tnat’JJiwould carry the;'seml-retired Ol'..*flag under its own “until MainEvents is directed to return i’;Yj £Observation IN>st nameplate.WITH THIS COUPON25c Discount on any Pizzaeaten here ... or delivered....... 1.00 Large...... 1.45 Giant .FREE DELIVERY FORU. OF C. STUDENTS r^/ie \yiliuin PHOTOGRAPHERSSmall .Medium 1171 EAST 55»h STREET MIDWAY 3-4433Relax be faro I he **big push.411 3-1015Snooker - Billiards -Free on March 15 & 16Open ?> a.in. - JO p.iti. Ladies invitedCO-OP IS FOREVERYONECO-OP PRINCIPLES1. OPEN MEMBERSHIP —— The Co-op is open to all, regardless of race,creed, or color.2. DEMOCRATIC CONTROL — One vote per member, regardless of numberof shares of stock.3. PATRONAGE REFUNDS — Competitive prices with profits returned tomembers in proportion to their purchases.4. FAIR RETURN ON CAPITAL — Up to 5% is paid. the ': Co-op.- * i „ js - j -5. CASH TRADE AND HONESTY — No credit to customers, and fairweights and measures are given.6. NEUTRALITY IN POLITICS AND RELICIONin its action and education.7. PROMOTION OF EDUCATION — Membership participation encouragedfinancial statements published. on investment inCo-op is non-partisanBottled under outhority of The Coca-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Companyof Chicago, Inc. 5535 SOUTH HARPER Plenty of tree parkingMarch S, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7McKeon, Despres guests of L C Lby Harold BernhardtAn “accidental” politician,Alderman Leon Despres ofChicago’s fifth ward, and a“successful” philosopher,Richard McKeon, UC Distin¬guished Service Professor of phil¬osophy and Greek, teamed upTuesday night at Reynolds clubunder the sponsorship of theLeague for Civil Liberties to pre¬sent a many-leveled analysis ofcurrent censorship pressures af¬fecting the right of Americans toread.Alderman Despres discussed insome detail his recent efforts toprevent an "atrocious” censorshipordinance from passing in theChicago city council. "One daylast year I was astonished to haveMayor Daley come down to ourjudiciary committee meeting andlaunch an atrocious thing, a pro¬posed censorship ordinance withdetailed definitions of obscenityand horror to be applied to booksand magazines."Questions mayor"I cross-examined the Mayorvery quietly,” said Despres, "be¬cause you don't want to antagon¬ize the mayor, and went aftereveryone who was in favor ofthe ordinance . . . with energy.Fortunately the Daily News andSun-Times came out on the rightside against it, but at any momentthe ordinance could have beenpassed without much difficulty.There weren’t more than three or•four aldermen who opposed it,altogether.”Very powerful forces, Despresfurther pointed out. were deter¬mined to push it. "So T thoughtif we could invent an innocuousrepetition of the Illinois obscen¬ity statute, it would be a face¬saving device.” Some monthslater such an ordinance waspassed, providing that it is ob¬scene to sell to a person under 17years of age—what is obscene to sell to a person under 17, as perIllinois law.The American Civil LibertiesUnion and some others attackedthis version of the censorsnip or¬dinance, too, as an infringementof the freedom to read; and thealderman said that he will intro¬duce a repealer of it on March 14in the light of a recent US Su¬preme Court decision sfrikingdown a Michigan obscenity lawas unconstitutional.Vetos language"A lower court judge in theMichigan case decided that objec¬tionable language'in ‘The DevilRides Outside” was not necessaryfor the development of the story,Despres continued. However, Jus¬tice Frankfurter, in the SupremeCourt decision, declared that sucha law reduced the reading level ofthe adult population of Michiganto that of teen-agers and below,“surely (being) to burn the housedown to roast the pig.”To illustrate the workings ofthe censorial mind, Despres citedan "incident” that occurred dur¬ing the Council hearings on theoriginal obscenity and horror or¬dinance. Despres first showed apicture of a girl pushing an olderwoman into a fire, in order toobtain the reaction of proponentsof the ordinance.Upon being told by a proponentthat such a picture should be ban¬ned all right, he then pointed outthat it was a fairy tale picture ofGretel pushing the witch into thefire. Subsequently, a woman ap¬ peared at the hearings and stat¬ed: "I would just like to correctAlderman Despres—that picturewas of a girl pushing a witch intothe fire who ate children.”McKeon said he would discusscensorship in concrete terms "byreviewing some of the work thatthe committee I served on lastyear undertook with regard tothe entire question of freedom toread in its legal, sociological andphilosophical aspects.”Other members of the commit¬tee. commissioned by the Nation¬al Book council, included WalterGelhorn. lawyer, and Robert Mer¬ton, sociologist; and the commit¬tee’s report, running over 120pages, should be available in pub¬lished form later this. March.Pointing out that 47 of thestates have obscenity laws. Mc¬Keon suggested that the next stepshort of the utopian one of get¬ting rid of such laws entirely,would be to make them as clearas possible. As an extreme ex¬ample, he cited a Louisiana cen¬sorship law that, among otherthings, bans “the recounting ofany relations between the sexes.”Censorship importantCensorship by the postal andcustoms departments of the fed¬eral government is also an im¬portant factor as is the federalbook buying program for mili¬tary posts and overseas purposes,which last year amounted to over$100,000,000. “The manner inwhich books are selected on sucha scale influences the way books are published,” he said, “and thisin turn influences what you andI read.”The committee found, surpris¬ingly, that there just isn’t muchinformation available about theeffect of reading upon anything."We asked psychologists andtesters who are among the bestin the field: ‘Is there anything inthe existing literature on whatthe effect is upon behavior ofsomething labelled sexually ob¬scene?’ ‘No, it’s much too com¬plicated,” was the answer we got,though there was some informa¬tion on the effects of violence.”Books bannedAnother large question areaconcerns the economics of read¬ing, McKeon asserred. “How doesthe better reading win out, if itdoes, in the market-place over theworse?” lie cited as another sug¬gestive finding the fact that ex¬pensive. hard-covered books wereavailable where the same, paper-bound book, at 25 cents, wasbanned as obscene.It is to the good when a censor¬ship ordinance is opposed as herein Chicago, by happy accident orrational decision. "But what hap¬pens when the pressures for cen¬ sorship move unperceived?” Me-Keon asked.McKeon reconstructed the waysome pressures towards censor¬ship might operate: people feelabhorrence about a book; “thenthey connect their feeling of ab¬horrence with a problem in theworld of today such as juveniledelinquency;” they then bring insome fallacious "philosophicalargument” such as corruption ofthe young, undermining of thevalues of the land. etc.—as a linkbetween their feeling and the ex¬ternal condition; finally, theypush for censorship legislationand practices.Thus the censorial approach iseither by a direct banning ordi¬nance, or if not. by a self-regulat¬ing code, or failing this, by boy¬cott and direct action: “We’il haveour mothers go to the cornerbook- and drugstores and say ‘ifyou don’t post a decent literaturesign and quit carrying unap¬proved books, we’ll not buy thingsfrom you.’Concluding, McKeon empha¬sized: “If there’s anything we’regoing to do to affect our destiniesand save ourselves, it will comefrom our ideas, having and ex¬ploring them freely.INTERNATIONAL HOUSE MOVIES |§e Monday, March 11—45c — Camille (American)East Lounge, 7 & 9 pm. =Monday, March 18 — no movieMonday, March 25 — Ninotchka (American)Assembly Hall, 8 pm. =^iiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiii TOURIST CLASS TO EUROPESpace still availableJUNE 19, JULY 5, JULY 19, AUG. 13M/V FAIRSEASails from Quebec lo GREENOCK, ScotlandJon» 19, July S and regularly thereafterS/S CASTEL FELICE Ruth thipt air-eunditiunedSEE YOURTRAVEL AGENTor write:Sails from N V. to BREMERHAVEN via Plymouth and Lc HavreJuly 19, Aug. 13 anil regularly thereafterOVERSEAS CHARTER A SHIPPING CO., INC.250 West 57th Street. New York 19 • lUdson 6-2505General Passenger Agents for U.S.A., Canada and MexicoSITMAR LINEFREE!14" CE PORTABLEGiven away Friday, May 10th by the55th & Drexel Shopping CenterGET YOUR CHANCES AT THE FOLLOWINGSTORES WITH EACH PURCHASEDiscounts to Students and FacultyAs Shown BelowGREYHOUND TELEVISION935 E. 55th MU 4-556710% DiKMttt on Sorry tee fir Merchandraa PAUL’S HARDWARE APAINT STORE906 E. 55th Ml 3-9754Everything for the home10% Discount on all Merchandise HYDE PARK SELF-SERVICELAUNDRY912 E. 55th MU 4-951910% Discount on oil Laundry -Cleaning - Shirts -9x!2 RugsSTANDARDLUBRICATION SERVICE55th fir Drexel10% Discount on Greosing RUDY’S SUPREMECR0CERY STORE900 E. 55th CORTILET’S DRUG STORE901 E. 55th Ml 3-141010% Discount on Prescriptionst • CHICAGO MAR OON • March 8, 1957UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis AvenueOpportunity days for booklovers! Shelf and stockroom clear¬ance of desirable books and prints . . . special purchases ofpublishers’ overstock . . . fine imports, standard referenceworks and classics included! Read down the list and seeexactly how much you save on each purchase, see how manymore books you can add to your library—at a tiny fractionof the usual cost. Our supplies are limited—we urge you tocome or order by mail without delay.1. S. J. PEREI.MAN'S HOME COMPANION. 34satires by the great humorist.Pub. at $3.30 Sale $12. Henri Pirennr’s HISTORY OF EUROPE, Fromthe Invasions to the XVI Century. The monu¬mental work that altered the traditional his¬torical outlooks. Pub. at $7.30 .Sale $3.983. NOBLE SAVAGE: THE LIFE OF PAUL GAU¬GUIN, by L. & E. Hanson. The romantic, tragicatory of one of the most vital and importantfigures in modern art. Reproductions of his fa¬mous paintings. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.984. 1929—WHAT A YEAR! By J. A. Morris. Pano¬rama of the year of Boom and Crash. 75 photos.Pub. at $3.95! Sale $15. THE MAKING OF FRANCE—Winner of theGrand Prix d'Histoire of the French Academy.By M. Martin. A sweeping historical study fromRoman Gattl to modern times.Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1«. INTERNATIONAL CHEF, by John Dingle.Colorful, inside story of the art of cooking aspracticed in famous hotels In Paris, N. Y., Lon¬don, Monte Carlo. Pub. at $3.95 Sale $17. Public Speaking—MR. CHAIRMAN, LADIESAND GENTLEMEN, by Norman Thomas. Goodadvice on how to say things clearly and force¬fully. Pub. at $2.75 Sale $1f. HOGARTH'S PROGRESS, by Peter Quennell.A definitive biography of the great portraitist,traveler and bon vivant. 23 superb plates.Pub. at $6.50 Sale $2.989. AN ANTHOLOGY OF MUSICAL CRITICISM.Musical taste and judgment from Monteverdi toStravinsky—over 350 selections.Pub. at $3.35 Sale $110. Rebecca West's A TRAIN OF POWDER. Sixbrilliant reports on the Nuremberg trials, trialsfor a lynching, a torso murder, etc.Pub at $3.75 Sale $111. Gen. Mark W. Clark—FROM THE DANUBETO THE YALU. A ten-year running battle withCommunists and Washington Bureaucrats. Mapsand photos. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9812. A Powerful Document—FACE OF A VIC¬TIM, by E. Lermolo. Remarkable picture of theSoviet ruling clique by an inmate of Stalin’sprisons. Pub. at $3.75 Sale $113. Adventures in Research—THE MOTION OFTHE HEART, by B. Cabot. Dramatic, non-tech-nical account of heart research in action. Avis-pices Amer. Heart Assn. Pub. at $2.00... .Sale $114. TENNYSON’S POEMS, 1830-1870. Intro, byT. H. Warren. Complete collection of 40 years ofthe work of the great Victorian Poet-Laureate.882 pp., 91 illus. Pub. at $2.00 Sale $115. The Living Thoughts of DESCARTES, intro,by Paul Valery. His most important writings onmathematics, philosophy, science, music, etc.Pub. at $2.50 Sale $116 THE LESSONS OF HISTORY, by Wm. Smyth.These brilliant writings have been compared toto best of Spengler and Toynbee.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.9817. CHINESE THEATRE—With 44 Large ColorPlates. A brilliant history of this ancient andeternally fascinating art form, its plays, thea¬tres, actors, colorful costumes, etc. Full colorplates. 9V2 * 10’,2", imported. Special $4.9818. Harold Laski—FAITH, REASON AND CIVIL¬IZATION. An historical study that compares theWestern approach to progress with that of SovietRussia. Pub. at $2.50 Sale $119. THE MARQUIS DE S A D E — SELECTEDWRITINGS, trans. by L. de Saiqt-Yves. Extractsfrom such notorious works as Justine, Juliette,Phllosphie dans la Boudoir, Journees de Sodome,others. Pub. at $6.75 Sale $2.9820. MODERN JEWISH MEALS, by M. G. Beilin.The best of Jewish cookery for American kitch¬ens — hundreds of recipes and menus, fromblintzes to brisket of beef. Pub. at $2.00. .Sale $121. DICTIONARY OF WORD ORIGINS. By T.Shipley. Thousands of words in the Englishlanguage, with their history, background, andfactual meaning. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.9822. THE HISTORY OF WITCHCRAFT ANDDEMONOLOGY, by Montague Summers. A clas¬sic work. Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.9823. The Classic Study—JESUS, by C. Guigenbert.A great historical biography dealing with themost controversial aspects of his life and teach¬ings. Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.9824. THE WORLD AND MAN: A Guide to ModernKnowledge, by H. E. L. Mellersh. Fascinating,comprehensive survey of man’s accomplish¬ments— chapters on evolution, history, psy¬chology, the arts, etc. Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.9825. UNIONS AND CAPITALISM, by C. E. Lind-bloom. Provocative study of labor unions andtheir relation to private enterprise, inflation,Industrial democracy, etc. Pub. at $3.75...Sale $126. NEW LETTERS OF BROWNING, ed. by W C.DeVane & K. L. Knickerbocker. Nearly 400 pre¬viously unpublished letters revealing his pri¬vate views on poetry, theatre, art, etc.Pub. at $6.00 gale $1.98 27. Father of Chemistry—LIFE AND WORKS OFROBERT BOYLE, by L. T. More. Definitive studyof the great 17th century scientist who broughtabout the final overthrow of medieval alchemy.Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.9828. THE Plin.OSOPHY OF SANTAYANA—Selec¬tions From All the Works of George Santayana.Ed. & intro, by Irwin Edman. 904 pp. of bril¬liant philosophy, poetry, social history, critic¬ism, autobiography and fiction.Pub. at $6.50 Sale $2.9829. IMPRESSIONISTS AND SYMBOLISTS, byL. Venturi. Illustrated with 217 reproductions ofgreat paintings by ten masters from Manet toToulouse-Lautrec. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.9830: FREUD: DICTIONARY OF PSYCHO¬ANALYSES. Complete glossary compiled fromFreud’* writings. Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.9831. DICTIONARY OF AMERICAN MAXIMS, ed.by D. Kin. A unique, 597-pp. collection of wis¬dom and wit expressed by Ben Franklin, Wash¬ington, Whitman, Mark Twain, etc.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $2.9832. ELECTRONICS, by A. W Keen. An Intro¬duction to all aspects of electronics. Profuselyillustrated. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.9833. Great Paintings by OLD MASTERS INAMERICA, by J. D. Morse. Unique guide topaintings by Vermeer, Rembrandt, El Greco, etc.—notes on each work; 40 plates.Pub. at $1.95 Sale $134. EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS OF LIVING:Avoiding the Neurotic Pattern, by Drs. O. S.English & G. H. J. Pearson. Dynamic, stage-by-stage study of personality formation.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9835. People A Places in ONE MAN’S INDIA, byA. Stratton. Vivid descriptions of modern India.32 photos. Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.9836. PYGMIES AND DREAM GIANTS, by K.Stewart. A valuable search for laws of psycho¬therapy among primitive peoples In the wilds ofthe Philippines. Margaret Mead.Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.9837. TALKING TO ANIMALS, by B. Woodhouse.How to convey thoughts, wishes and commandsto dogs, cats, etc. Photos. Pub. at $3.50.Sale $1.4938. WESTERN CIVILIZATION: THEIR HISTORYAND CULTURE, by E- M. Burns. 882 pp„ 205Illus. From Egyptian dynasties to today — asweeping, comprehensive work Including thenewest historical scholarship.Pub. at $6.95 Sale $2.98 57. SKIING. EAST AND WEST, by H. Fisher.Superb pictorial treasury, depicting all thethrills and excitement of our national wintersport. 125 photos. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.4958. PEPTIC ULCER—Pain Patterns, Diagnosisand Medical Treatment, by Smith & Rivers. Aguide to accurate diagnosis and successful man¬agement of peptic ulcer. 576 pp., 210 illus.Pub. at $12.50 . : Sale $2.9859. PENICILLIN THERAPY: Including Strepto¬mycin, Tyrothricin and other Antibiotic Ther¬apy. By J. A. Kolmer, M.D. Ulus.Pub. at $7.50 . Sale $160. DICTIONARY OF EUROPEAN HISTORY,comp, by Wm. S. Roeder. Cbnctse. reliable In¬formation from 500 A.D. to the present.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.9861. FORMULARY AND THERAPEUTIC GUIDE.by the N. Y. Hospital. For all doctors, nurses,pharmacists, students — hundreds of formulasalphabetically listed with data on use, dose, etc.Pub. at $1.00 Sale $162. William Dean HOWELLS AND THE AGE OFREALISM, by E. Carter. Fresh appraisal of oneof the major writers and editors, of his time.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9863. THE “BRIDE'S” COOKBOOK, by Poppy Can¬non. Hundreds of delicious, simple recipes.Pub. at $4.95 Sale $1.4964. THE GOLDEN HORIZON, by Cyril Connolly.Selected prose and poetry from England's fore¬most magazine: Auden, Orwell, etc.Pub at $6.00 Sale $2.9865. Founder of Existentialism—SORF.N KIERKE¬GAARD, by J. Hohlenberg. Definitive work onthe great Danish philosopher. Illus. ,Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.9866. PASCAL’S PENSEES, trans. by H. F. Stewart.One of the 100 greatest books of all time.Pub at $5.00 Sale $2.9867. Rand McNally WORLD GUIDE. For everyhome and office—725 pp., authoritative encyclo¬pedia on every country in the world. 325 photosand endpaper maps in color.Pub. at $6.95 Limited Quantity. Sale $2.9868. MOZART: Genius of Harmony, by A. M.Llngg. His intimate, moving story. Biographicalchronology, glossary, complete listing of worksand recordings. Ulus. Pub. at $3.00 Sale $169. THIS IS MY BEST HUMOR, ed. by WhitBurnett. A giant-sized anthology in which 80of the world’s best living humorists presenttheir own favorite work. 552 pages.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.9870. THE ANALYSIS OF AN OBSESSION, byR. W. Pickford. A remarkably vivid and detailedaccount of the patient’s psychoanalysis.Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1.9871. American Documents—THE FAITH OF OURFATHERS. 124 Inspiring writings, resolutionsand petitions expressing the Ideals of the Amer¬ican ‘‘common man” from 1790 to I860.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9872. THE MIGR ATION OF SYMBOLS, by CountG. d’Alvlella. 161 unusual Illustrations—whatsymbols are, what specific symbols mean, howthey developed, changed, etc.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.9873. City Folklore—SIDEWALKS OF AMERICA,ed. by B. A. Botkin. 605 pp. Treasury of legends,stories, songs and customs, from N. Y. to L. A.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $2.9874. The Life A- Art of ALBRECHT DUREIU-166Plates,by I.Fenyo.Magnificent study of the great16th century German painter and engraver. Il¬lustrations of his paintings, woodcuts, engrav¬ings, drawings, watercolors. 71'2'/x9,Y'l Imp.Special $3.9875. The American Theatre—TOWN HALL TO¬NIGHT!—100 Illustrations, by H. R. Hoyt. Earlybarnstromers, managers and "stars” from MarkTwain to Buffalo Bill—filled with rare Illus-.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $2.9876. Glory of the Ancient World—THE ALEX¬ANDRIAN LIBRARY, by E. A. Parsons. The riseand fall of the most amazing library In history.Illus. Pub. at $7.50 Sale $3.9877. MUSIC A RECORDINGS, by Fred Grunfleld.Authoritative guide to classical and jazz LP's,with a review of the best performances of 1955.Photos. Pub. at $4.95 Sale $178. CHURCHILL: Ifis Life in Photographs, ed.by Randolph Churchill & H. Garnsheim. Nearly400 superb Illustrations, with many rare, hither¬to unpublished Items. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9879. ABE LINCOLN: An Anthology. Sandburg,Whitman, Churchill and over 60 others. Ulus.Pub. at $3.50 Sale $1.49DECORATIVE COLOR PRINTS:39. BALLET DANCERS. Captivating pastelsof ballerinas backstage. 12"xl4'\Pub. at $2.50 Set of 4 now $140. ORIENTAL LANDSCAPES. Hauntingmoods and scenery, painted with rare deli¬cacy. 8"xl2". Pub. at $3.00 Set of 4 now $141. MOTHER GOOSE NURSERY PRINTS.Merry and bright—perfect for baby’s room.Il"xl4" Set of 10 only $142. PARIS STREET SCENES. Cafes, kiosks,strollers, etc. — a colorful group. 10"xl4".Pub. at $3.00 Set of 6 now $143. CLASSIC CARS. A portfolio of nostalgicauto memories for decorators and collectors:six handsome and authentic paintings, richlyproduced in full color, of the “wonders onwheels” of a wonderful era. 10"xl2".Pub. at $5.00 Set of 6 now $1.9844. ROMANTIC JAPAN. A rare blend of ex¬quisite Oriental lines and brilliant colors,capturing the ever beguiling face of Japanthrough the seasons. 13"xll".Pub. at $3.00... Set of 4 now $1.9845. FREDERIC REMINGTONS “BUCK¬SKINS.” Vivid paintings by the greatestartist of the Old West — Indians In warpaint, army scouts, etc. — superb for fram¬ing. 13"xl7". Pub. at $7.50..Set of 8 now $2.98 46. PICTURESQUE MEXICO. Sundrenchedscenes, peasants in colorful garb. etc. 17"xl4".Pub. at $6.00 Set of 4 now $2.9847. AMERICAN CLIPPER SHIPS. Magnifi¬cent paintings of famous 19th century craft,by John O'Hara Cosgrave II. 18"xl4".Pub. at $6.00 Set of 4 now $1.9848. GRANDMA MOSES — FOUR SEASONS.Four of Grandma Moses’ finest and mostdelightful paintings of the American scene—reproduced with exceptional fidelity ofcolor and with all the charm, freshness andvitality of the originals. 17"xl4".Limited quantity now $2.9849. UTRILLO'S MONTMARTE SCENES. Fullof sunlit warmth and beauty—great favor¬ites with interior decorators. 17"xl4".Pub. at $12.00 Set of 4 now $2.9850. VIEWS OF ROME, by PIRANESI. Beau¬tiful engravings of St. Peter’s, Arches, Colon-nadis, Fountains, etc., by the 18th centurymaster. Extremely decorative, superb lotframing. 14"xl9".Pub. at $4.00 Set of 6 now $1.9851. WATERFOWL SPORTING PRINTS. Sixsuperlative paintings of mallards, canvas-backs, geese in flight, etc. Muted colors andrealistic detail make these outstanding.I7"xl3Va". Pub. at $5.00 Set of 6 now $2.9852. DISEASES OF THE TROPICS, by G. C Shat-tuck, M.D. 803 pp., 405 illus. A concise but com¬prehensive account of tropical diseases.Pub. at $12.00 Sale $1.9853. ILLUSTRATIVE ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY,by J. Bursteln & N. Bloom, M.D. Authoritativetext, with 559 Ulus. Pub. at $7.50 Sale $154. ATLAS OF GENITO-URINARY SURGERY,by P. ft. Roen, M.D. Detailed survey; 162 Illus.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $2.9855. Collected Conversations of Lord Byron—IIIS VERY SELF AND VOICE, ed. by E J. Lovell.676 pages of conversation form an incomparablybrilliant biography of the great poet, revealinghis confidences, ideas and feelings on all topics.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $2.9856. AMISHLAND, drawings by Kishl & ChristianNewswanger, text by O. Newswanger. 60 draw¬ings of extraordinary simplicity and power cap¬ture the rare quality of this colorful and uniquepeople. Pub. at $5.00 v.,v3ale $2.98 80. Psychoanalytical Studies: MEN AND THEIRMOTIVES, by J. C. Flugel. “Psychology of BirthControl,” “Sexual and Social Sentiments,”“Problems of Jealousy,” other Important essays.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9881. THE LANGUAGE OF HANDWRITING andHow to Read It, by O. N. Myer. A practical,easy-to-use guide. Wide variety of 350 actualhandwriting samples. Special $1.9882. THE ART OF ASIA—91 Plates. From pre¬historic Hittlte sculpture to India’s contempo¬rary paintings. Ulus. By H. Rublssov.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.9883. GREAT ADVENTURES IN MEDICINE. 874pages of writing on the great men and eventsin the history of medicine, from Hippocrates tothe present. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.9884. AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY. From the Idea*of Ben Franklin and Thomas Paine to the con¬tributions of Dewpy and Santayana. Ed. byJR. B. Winn. Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.98 *5. TIBETAN MARCHES, by A. Mlgot. Fascinating. informative picture of the Tibetans an,]their way of life. Photos. Pub. at $5.00. .Sale $1.9886. AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF WILHELM STEKEIAn Intimate history of psychoanalysis revealedthrough the life of one of its great pioneersPub. at $4.00 sale $I.»887. Charles Darwin's EXPRESSION OF T1ipEMOTIONS IN MAN AND ANIMALS. Classicwork on “talking without words.” 78 illusPub. at $6.00 Sale $?.9888. THE STORY OF AMERICAN FURNITURE—148 Plates and Drawings, by T. H. OrmnbceComplete guide-book for collectors.Pub at $3.95 gale $19889. THE STORY OF THE POLITICAL PHILOS.OPHERS. By George Catlin. Comprehensive See¬page history of political thought from Plato'stime to the present Special $2.9890. GREAT ADVENTURES AND EXPLOR4-TIONS. 778 pages of eye - witness accounts ofhistory’s most famous voyages of discovery, fromPytheas to Peary. Ed., with notes, by V. Stefans-son. 18 maps. Pub. at $6.00 sale $2.9891. THE EVOLUTION OF LOVE, by Donald Dav522 frank pages on the art of love as practicedfrom biblical times to the present.Pub. at $5.95 sale $1.9*92. REALITY AND DREAM—Psychotherapy of aPlains Indian, by G. Devereaux. A major con¬tribution to the study of the American Indiancultural pattern. Verbatim account of 30 inter¬views, tests, etc. Pub. at $7.50 Sale $1.9893. THE GEOGRAPHY OF HUNGER, by J deCastro. Cogent, searching analysis of the effectsof mass starvation on two-thirds of the world'spopulation. Pub. at $5.00 sale $1 4991.Irving"Langmuir — PHENOMENA, ATOMSAND MOLECULES A collection of the Nobel’prize winner's technical and non-techniealwritings, including important papers on chemis-Jstry and physics. Pub. at $10.00 Sn# $3 9895. GREAT ENGLISH SHORT NOVELS, ed. InCyril Connolly. 11 masterpieces of the genre bySamuel Johnson, Eliot. Conrad, Woolf. Huxlevetc. 880 pp. Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.9896. GREAT FRENCH SHORT NOVELS, ed. bvF. W. Dupee. Nine classics, Including the finestexamples of the art of Balzac, Flaubert, Zolaetc. 717 pp. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.9897. GREAT RUSSIAN SHORT NOVELS, ed. andwith notes by P. Rahv. 8 brilliant novels byGogol, Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, Turgenev, Bunin774 pp. Pub. at $5.00 sale $2 9898. DIRECTING THE PLAY—A Source Book ofStagecraft. A unique, complete work—brilliantchapters by 23 “great*Including Shaw. JoshLogan. Ella Kazan, et al. 31 illus.Orig. pub. at *4.00 Sale $2.4999. HIDDEN THREADS OF HISTORY — Wilsonthrough FDR, by L. B. Wehle. How chance,gamble, blunder and bluff helped decide someof our pivotal issues. Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1.98100. LANGUAGE IN SOCIETY, by M. M. Lewi*.How language affects thought, feeling and ac¬tion in Individuals and in groups.Pub. at $3.75 Sale 1149101. MODERN ITALIAN SHORT STORIES. 34outstanding works by Moravia, Sllone, Berto.others. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.49102. TWENTIETH CENTURY MENTAL HY¬GIENE, ed. by M. Shore. 18 noted authoritieson psychosomatic medicine, sex variants, theRorschach method, etc. III116.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.9*103. HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHICAL SYSTEMS,ed. by V. Fem. Informative and stimulatingsummaries of all the major philosophies andschools of thought, classic and modern, by 41eminent authorities. Nearly 650 pages.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.98104. The Philosophy of HENRY JAMES, SR. Thedefinitive work on the brilliant father of Wm.and Henry James. Ulus, by H. Young.Pub. at $4.50 sale $1.9*105. P. W. Rridgeman's REFLECTIONS OF APHA’SICIST. The Nobel prize winner's collectednon-technical writings. 32 brilliant essays. 573pp. Pub. at $6.00 sale $2.98106. Shakespeare — The ANNOTATOR, by AKeen & R. Lubbock. The fascinating story ofShakespeare's early life and schooling.Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1107. THE BORZOI TURGENEV. 801 pages incompletely new and modern translations. Fourcomplete novels, including "Fathers and Sons”and "Smoke,” plus selected stories.Pub. at $4.95 Sale *2.95108. GIOTTO FRESCOES — 20 Large Tipped-inPlates. 17 in Full Color. Text by W. Ueberwasser.10"xl4” color reproductions. An authoritativediscussion of each masterpiece and new Insightsinto Giotto’s life and Influence.Pub. at $4.50 Sale *2.98109. THE SECRET DIARIES OF HAROLD L.1CKES. The complete three-volume set—2,192pages of fascinating reading! Pub. at $18.00.Very Special—the 3 vols. now •. ..$4.98110. THE NOTEBOOKS OF LEONARDO DAVINCI. The definitive one-volume edition, editedby Edward MacCurdy, including Leonardo’s fa¬mous writings on art, invention, science, phil-esphy, etc. Iilus., 1,206 pages. ’Pub. at $10.00 Sale $4.88111. THE RIDDLE OF CANCER, by C. Oberling,M.D. An important study of the new advancesof cancer research in the fields of heredity, hor¬mones, nutrition, viruses, etc.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.98112. NEW GOUl.I) MEDICAL DICTIONARY.Over 1,300 pages, 252 illustrations, 129 In color,lists, tables, thumb-index—a comprehensive, up-to-date dictionary of terms used in medicine,nursing, dentistry, pharmacy, etc.—by 80 ex¬perts. Pub. at $11.50 Sale $5.88113.EXPERIMENTAL SURGERY — IncludingSurgical Physiology, by J. Markowitz. Completetext, with sections of special interest to veteri¬narians. 546 pp., 330 illus.Pub. at $7.00 Sale $2.98114. PREOPERATIVE AND POSTOPERATIVECARE, by W. J. Tourish, M.D. & F. E. B. Wag¬ner, M.D. Handy reference for the student andprofessional. 338 pp., 87 Ulus.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.98115. ESSENTIALS OF PHARMACOLOGY, by F.Oldham. General principles plus complete dataon drugs of current importance; structuralformulas, official preparations, etc.Pub. at $5.00 r. .Sale $1 98116.The Practice of PHYSICAL MEDICINE, byH. Wolf. Complete, practical guide for eachpathological condition—according to individualreactions. 53 illus. Pub. at $5.00 Sale *198117. A Review of RECENT ADVANCES IN X-RAYANALYSIS, by W. L. Bragg, and IMPACT OfRADIOACTIVITY ON INORGANIC CHEMISTRY.By H. J. Emeleus. Two important lectures onrelated subjects. Ulus. Pub. at $2.75..Sale $1-98118. DICTIONARY OF WORLD LITERATURE.ed. by Joseph T. Shipley. Literary schools,movements, techniques, forma, and terms thor¬oughly defined by a team of 260 leading schol¬ars and critics. 453 large, double-column PP-Pub. at $7.50 Sale *3 98119. DICTIONARY OF NEW WORDS, by M-Reifer; intro, by Partridge. From underworldlingo to technical terms—thousands of impor¬tant new words clearly explained.Pqb, at $6.00 ........Sale $2.98March 8, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 91893: World's Columbian expositionUC neighborhood exhibit sceneby Bob Ilalasz"The man, woman or child who has seen the entire World’s Columbian exposition, ex¬amined all its wonderful exhibits, and seen the interior of all the villages of the no lesswonderful Midway Plaisance, is indeed a wonder — and is yet to be found.” This was saidof the University neighborhood in 1893, when the gaudy, imposing, and altogether fantasticcarnival called the World’s Fair pitched camp here.The Columbian exposition was planned in the 1880’s to commemorate the 400th anni¬versary of Columbus’ discov- ——was by steamboat along LakeMichigan. The steamboats carriedthree million people during thefair, w'ithout a single collision oraccident. On one single day, Octo¬ber 9, 716,8S1 people came to seethe “eighth wonder of the world,”the fair was called.UC by the “wheel”From the giant ferris wheelery of America. At first built dozens of buildings. The FineWashington, DC was favored Arts building now exists as theas a possible site, but the en- Museum of Science and Industry,thusiasm of the new, bustling But by far the most fantastic edi-city Of Chticago, plus plenty fice of al! was the Manufacturersof ready money, won the exposi- an<^ Liberal Arts building,lion for Chicago. Built at a cost of $1,500,000 pre-Chicago selected the areas of inflation dollars, it was the larg- asJackson park, the Midway, and *st building ever constructed un-VVashington park, consisting of ^er one ro°* at tbe time. It was1.037 acres, for the fair, located at three times larger than St. Pete’s one could see the newly-bom, stillwhat was then the outskirts of ^ome’ and four times largertown, just outside the recently- than the Roman Colosseum. Itannexed village of Hyde Park. modest, University of Chicago.President Harper received morewas theoretically possible to mo- than one letter address to “Chi-bilize the standing army of Russiaunder its roof. If each person wasgiven six square feet of space, thebuilding could seat 300,000 people.Babel on the Midway eago University: near the ferriswheel.” Indeed, the fair madeHarper and John D. Rockefellerlook like pikers.Finally though, the show’ camePerhaps even more fantastic to a close. Indians, Javanese, Ja-were the exhibits submitted from panese, Turks, Egyptians, Cey-foreign lands. The midway echoed lonians, Arabians, Austrians, Ger-with the babel of over a hundredtongues, as nearly every civilizedor uncivilized land on earth sentdisplays of their countryman in mans, Samoans, Syrians, Nubians,Senghalese, Sudanese, Esquimaux,Zulus, Chinese, Hungarians,Danes, Swedes, Moors, French-Vienna Conservatory of Music)playing the “Blue Danube.”During the tenure of the Expo-grounds alone, or rather to sub- sition, from May to October 30,Agricultural buildingThe city spent $4 million on the their native habitats. Sandwiched men, Jews, Australian aborigines,in between Lapplandcrs and Fiji Roumanians, Tartars, Russians,islanders, one could look in on Poles, Burmese, Fijis, Algerians,“Old Vienna” with the Royal Aus- Persians, Swiss, Dahomeyans,trian band (all graduates of the Kanakas, Irish. Caucasians, Mo¬hammedan priests, and manyothers, packed up and left Chi¬cago behind them.For more than a year, the ruinsmerge the grounds. Workers con- 1893- milli°"s came to see what stayed behind, looking like thestructed a canal to connect the wras really “the greatest show onearth.” The IC railroad had re¬ leftovers of some huge orgy.Then, finally, they too were gone.lagoons of Jackson park with cently been extended from down- As one observer put it: “a short High above the world so high, like a ferris wheel in thesky. Not only “like a ferris wheel”; it is a ferris wheel, fromthe 1893 Columbian exposition.Lake Michigan, in order to give town to Hyde Park, but a muchthe Fair a Venice-like background.As matter of fact, gondolas wereactually supplied, and Venetiangondoliers imported from Italyfor the occasion.A fleet of famous architectswere then brought in, lured by theslogan: “Bring all your dreams ofa city beautiful.” The architects more picturesque way to travel six months of fairyland in all itssplendor—and it has gone.”SOPHOMORESYOUR JUNIOR YEARIN NEW YORK?• See your dean or writeJ for brochure to:Dean F.H.McCIoskeyJunior Year ProgramWashington SquareCollegeNew York UniversityNew York 3. N.Y. “rtyavitl'dTV and Radio1 Mil East 55th Street Sales & ServiceHYde Park 3-3000 UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE1144 E. 55th DO 3-9572SATE NOW IN PROGRESS10% Discount on /III MerchandiseWith This Coupon OnlySpecialists in servicingHi-Fi, FM and Foreign sets30 Years in Hyde Park10% discount on repairs with this couponyiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiig| COMO’S Cafe Enrico IRESTAURANT & PIZZERIA= 1411 E. 53 FA 4-5525 -HY 3-5300 |Small Large =12" 14" 1Combination ..1.75 2.25 sChicken Liver . .1.60 2.10 f§Mushroom .. . .1.60 2.10 1Shrimp 1.75 2.25 %Pepperoni ....1.60 2.10 sfree Delivery on All Pizza to VC Studentsiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiui^Small Large| 12" 14"| Cheese 1.15 1.55| Sausage 1.45 1.95| Anchovy 1.45 1.95| Pepper & Onion 1.30 1.80I Bacon & Onion .1.60 2.1010% Discount to UC Students and PersonnelAll Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW NET PRICES8-LBS. WASHED & RUFF DRIED10-LBS. FLAT WORKDRESS SHIRTS • 59*• $l22Ea 22cQUALITY DRY CLEANING — RAPID SERVICE — REASONABLE PRICESFREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERYPhone PLaza 2-9097UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1376 E. 55th Street PROBLEM:How to get homefor Vacation?SOLUTION:Fly United Air Lineslow-cost Air Coach!Servo valuable vacation timeand money on thrifty, dependableUnited Air Lines Air Coach. Faresare low. And seats are placed just2-abreast for roomy, stretch-outcomfort. Convenient schedules.Call or visit your nearest Unitedoffice or authorized travel agenttoday.B10 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 8, 1957 rChicago MaroonCLASSIFIED ADSStudent rote 5c per word Others 10c per word Phone: Ml 3-0800 Ext. 3265WontedRESEARCH SPECIALIST. Our LibraryResearch Department is planning a ma¬jor expansion program. We need sev¬eral additional persons to handle sub-■criber inquiries. A college degree plusexcellent typing will qualify you forthis challenging and Instructive work.Work in Harper Library. ENCYCLO¬PAEDIA BRITANNICA. 425 N. Michigan.WHitehall 4-2350.Dictaphone typist position available,AQ75 per month. Secretarial position,f300. Location, Midway. 35-hour week.For information call Mrs. Abram. HY3-0533.RECEPTIONIST—MAIL CLERK. Youngwoman needed to work in a small medi¬cal research unit in Billings hospital.Must be able to type. 25 hours or moreper week. Mondays through Fridays,♦lavs only. Personnel Office, Ingleside.Hall, 956 E. 58th Street.Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 A bookkeeper — full charge, pleasantworking conditions, excellent opportun¬ity for a student’s wife. 5 days, 40 hr.week. Salary $80. Phone BU 8-6711 toarrange for interview.Part time income tax work. Simple re¬turns. Will train. Call CE 3-4053. Eve¬nings, TR 4-1777.Will buy old and recent quarterly orcomprehensive examinations in SocialSciences II, Humanities II and NaturalSciences I. Good prices. DA 8-6059,Evanston.Wanted: Viceroy campus representative(male) 30 to 35 hours a month, $40.Second year student. Interviews 10 to1 o’clock in Reynolds Club fishbowl.Friday, March 8.For salePiano, small, upright. Excellent condi¬tion. Must sell, reasonable. PL 2-1986.USED FURNITURE—Desks $3 00 up:lamps $1.00 up; chairs. $2.00 up; endtables, $1.00 up; dressers, bookcases,couches, etc., at very low prices. M & FFurniture Co. 6140 Cottage Grove. Opendaily, 9 to 6 pm.Hollywood bed. single; davenport;chairs; drapes: rugs, 15x12; cedar chest;Hotpoint refrigerator - freezer: lamps.Must be sold by March 15. No reasonableoffer refused. MI 3-8484 after 6 pm.1949 Ford, 4-door. Good condition. Bestoffer. Call AN 3-6384 days, Mr. Robinson.ServicesCARMEN’S USED FURNITURE store.Moving and light hauling. 1365 E. 55th.MU 4-9003. MU 4-8843. Student with converted ambulance willdo light moving and hauling. BU 8-5535or RA 6-4145.Russian tutoring by Harvard instruc¬tor. 7537 S. Yates, Maria Azaroff. ES5-1170.PersonalStudents interested in 25% discount onround trip tralnfare to New York, con¬tact Fox, Ext. 1040. between 6 and 7 pm.K.: Congratulations! Have a good year.A Friend?E. D.: Beautiful homecoming Boy. Lovedthe Jungle. Love you. N.D.Quinny: Forbear Ivy league and rose-coolred. Write. The sweatshirt crowdawaits. Don, et al.For rentFree room in exchange for baby sitting.One child. MI 3-9889.Room for rent near campus. Quiet sur¬roundings, $7 per week. PL 2-2465, eve¬nings.Riders wantedPittsburgh round trip. Leave March 16,return March 24. DO 3-0838FoundWatches, diamond rings, scarves, gloves,sweaters, sets of keys, books, all lostsomewhere on the UC campus. All sortsof things. Can claim by identifying theseitems at the UC Lost <fc Found. Informa¬tion desk. Administration building. Retell history ofUSSR exchangeby Norm LewakRadio Moscow’s broadcast of last week has brought backto mind the topic of Russian exchange. What ever did hap,pen to that thing?In November and December of 1955, the NSA committeeof Student Government wroteletters to the State depart¬ment and the Soviet embassy re¬questing their approval and co¬operation for an exchange pro¬gram. The committee under thechairmanship of Mary Ann Cha-carestos (SRP-soc) discussed andmade plans in the hope that theexchange would go through.In April, 1956, Radio Moscowbroadcast the acceptance of theexchange by the president of theUniversity of Moscow.In June, Dean Robert Strozierand Yuri Gouk, cultural attacheof the Soviet embassy, agreed onterms for the exchange. The planswere made and a student-facultycommittee set about the difficulttask of finding two students forthe exchange in a short time.Cancel exchangeIn August the exchange wassuddenly cancelled. The finger¬printing requirement of the Me-Carren - Walter immigration actwas the stumbling block. The State department did not classifythe exchange students’ visit as“official business,” which wouldhave waived the fingerprinting re¬quirement. The exchange was off,but it was only postponed. Al! in¬volved expressed hope that a 1957.58 exchange could be effected.But no initiative for any e\.change has been taken since thattime. The ISL majority in SG hasindicated that until conditions be¬come more favorable (the finger¬printing restriction is lifted andtlfe Russians act peacelike again!,they will not take any initiativein this “hopeless” cause.Paul Breslow, an ex-leader ofSRP, wrote to the Maroon sug¬gesting that “in light of the re¬cent barbarous suppression of thedemocratic aspirations of theHungarian people” the exchangebe cancelled.Dean Strozier has said in a let¬ter to SG President Don Millerthat until the McCarren act ismodified he can take no action\L//idwin jOYCt. jr.. Bargain Jargoncutler u.WHAT IS A NAIl-STREWN CROSSROADS Ican lopei. Punctureryan preparatory coll. JunctureWHAT IS AN AMBULANCE ATTENDANT IIRENE ALLEN.■RADLEY Stretcher Fetcher TRY THIS: put a pack of Luckies on a pedestal—under glass.Observe closely for several days. What happens? Not athing. You’ve just learned the hard way that an unsmokedLucky is simply Waste Taste! Light it, and it’s simplywonderful. You see, a Lucky is made better to taste better.It’s packed end to end with fine tobacco . . .mild, good-tasting tobacco that’s TOASTEDto taste even better. Don’t just wait around—light up a Lucky. You’ll say it’s the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked!DON'T JUST STAND THERE . . .STICKLE!MAKE $25what is an absent.MINDE0 MOTORIST I■AVID CARTON.0 OP ILLINOIS Bumper Thumper Sticklers are simple riddles withtwo-word rhyming answers. Bothwords must have the same numberof syllables. (No drawings, please!)We’ll shell out $25 for all we use—and for hundreds that never seeprint. So send stacks of ’em withyour name, address, college andclass to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y. what is a pint.siieo ghost*rose de wotr. Bantam PhantomTEMPLE UWHAT IS A RADIO THAT RUNS ALL NIGHT*MLEMORY CUNTON.CE0RCIA TECH. Tireless WirelessLuckiesTaste Better what makes sheep run*JAMES TAHANCT.IONA Shear Fear“ITS TOASTED** TO TASTE BETTER . . . CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!ft A. T. Co, PROCVCT OF dnwujwn AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES Now, Radio Moscow has calledfor the exchange again. It isdoubtful that their broadcast willhave any effect on the exchange.Tiger flightstill openReservations for SG’s “FlyingTiger” flight to Europe this sum¬mer are still open, according toWilliam Rogers, flight leaderThe application deadline has beenextended to April 1, Jbut those in¬terested must pay the entire pro¬rata share of $320 by that time,and those who apply first will beassured of seats.Reservations can be made atthe SG office in Ida Noyes be¬tween 10:30-12:30 and 4:306:<>0,Mondays through Fridays, or bycalling extension 3274. If thosehours are not convenient, inter¬ested students can leave theirnames and phone numbersStudents, faculty, and adminis¬tration personnel are eligible tomake the flight, which will leaveNew York June 18 for Amster¬dam. The group will return bySeptember 10.March 8, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Student Government reportsby Don MillerSG presidentThe fields of endeavorof the Student Govern¬ment this year have beenmany and varied. As thepartial listing of committeeand major departmental re¬ports below indicate, our energieshave been expended in almost allfields of student interest.One of the big problems whichfaced this Government's adminis¬tration was a lack of prestige, andIhe presence of apathy on thepart of the student body.Efficiency as extremely diffi¬cult under the Government’s oldsystem of enabling and rules doc¬uments. In the hope of remedyingthis situation, the Student Gov¬ernment commission was set upto scrutinize, liberalize, and re¬vamp the entire student self-gov¬ernment organ. A result of thiscommission was a whole newstructure of the Government, witha better defined Executive coun¬cil and more efficient allocation ofwork responsibility to commit¬tees and newly formed adminis¬trative departments.Also a new method of bill pre¬sentation was inaugurated bywhich Government members ofboth parties can know what willtake place at the Governmentmeetings. This way there is lessof the disorganized appearance ofthe past plenary sessions of theAssembly.Some other products of thecommission’s deliberations are thechange in method of representa¬tion and the stabilization of thesize of the assembly; and the elec¬tion of SG representatives in thespring. This will lead to a moreefficient SG and a better informedelectorate. Since these proposalsappear in the Constitution andStatute of Powers, a campus-wideelection this spring will he neces¬sary on these matters before theymay be implemented.Committee reportsAs well as the less glamorousmaintaining of previously obtain¬ed functions of the Government,SG developed and expanded itsstudent services; went into thealmost virgin territory of curricu¬lum and testing methods evalua¬tion (and shortly, student critic¬ism and sentiment on the old Col¬lege program).The recently changing physicalcomplexion of the communitycaused new interest in the realmof student housing and what pro¬visions were being made for stu¬dents in the redevelopment pro¬gram of the neighborhood. Thus,the Neighborhood commissionwas set up as an executive counPin '57Round Trip viaSteamship $OAAFREQUENT SAILINGS wWV •»Tourist Round Trip Air546080 « seasonlower rotes for groups on chartersend for 17-day excursionsChoice of Over 100STUDENT TOURSTRAVEL STUDY TOURSUniversity Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines, hasrendered efficient travel serviceon o business basis since 1926.See your local travel agent forfolders and details or writeUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq.,.Cambridge, Mass. cil position in the new Govern¬ment. Nan Malkin, SG representa¬tive from social services adminis¬tration, assumed the chairman¬ship of this committee.by Dave Freifelderchairman, SFRCIn an earlier issue of theMaroon, plans for the comingyear of the student-faculty rela¬tions committee were stated asfollows: 1) a study of the com¬prehensive system in the College;2) evaluation of the Collegecourses to be made by the stu¬dent; 3) comparison of the newBA with the Hutchins BA andthe evaluation of the success ofthe former; 4) evaluation of thecurriculum of a divisional depart¬ment. Of these, the first three areproceeding actively.After several weeks of prepara¬tion and conferences with DeanStreeter, the subcommittee forevaluation of the comprehensivesystem headed by Leon Kass com¬pleted a form which was mailedout last week to approximately700 students who have takencomps in the past three years. Thepurpose of the forms was to getthe students’ ideas on the benefitsand failings of the comp systemand possibly to obtain suggestionsas to improvement of the systemor even outlines of new examiningsystems.These forms were to be receivedno later than March 1, but dueto the late date of mailing, thedeadline has been extended to theend of the quarter. Boxes for de¬positing the forms can be foundin the Judson office and in thelobby of the Administration build¬ing. Forms can also be mailed tothe Student Government officevia Faculty Exchange.Early next quarter these formswill be read and the opinions ap¬pearing therein will be compiledand sent to the examiner’s office.Dean of the College RobertStreeter and the examiner's officehave assured SG that the reportw'ill be read with care and inter¬est, and all ideas for new'systemswill be carefully considered. Any¬one who desires one of theseforms and has not received onecan obtain it from the SG office.In late January, the subcommit¬tee for course evaluation headedby Bill Harmon distributed itsforms throughout the housingsystem to all students currentlytaking courses in the College.These forms were specifically con¬cerned with discovering if variousparts of the College program areadequately preparing the studentfor his chosen vocation and whatchanges the student cifn recom¬mend.These forms will ho read earlynext quarters and a report will bo sent to Dean Streeter who hasexpressed an interest in readingsome of the constructive opinionsappearing in the forms. Com¬ments about specific Collegecourses will be distributed in sub¬sidiary reports to the coursechairmen and individual instruc¬tors.The forms for the evaluation ofthe new BA are currently beingprepared by a subcommittee head¬ed by Lew Seiden and should beready for distribution early nextquarter.The divisional curriculum eval¬uation has not yet been under¬taken and will probably be leftfor next year when it is hopedthere will be faculty members onthe committee.The committee has also sug¬gested to the humanities 3 depart¬ment that a special section indrama be set up. All students in¬terested in registering for such avariant should send their namesto the SG office.by Dave Orlinskychairman of former NSA committeeActivity has been outstandingin the student-international realm.SG played host to Istvan Laslo,the Hungarian student patriot,for a speaking engagement oncampus before a large turnout.Following this we sponsored thesuccessful fund raising drive forthe Hungarian refugee students.Besides the fund drive for theHungarian students, the NSAarea of the Government handleda drive to educate the campus tothe goals and principals of thestudent-run Frankfort StudentExchange. This was also an en¬deavor to make the exchangemore directly student-supported.Probably the most pleasant taskof the committee was that of re¬cently playing host to a delegationof Chilean students for somethingmore than a week. During thistime these students saw our cam¬pus, conversed with many of thestudents, and attended classes toget an idea of American studentlife. The four girls and five boyswere leaders from their homeuniversity student bodies.The main function of the Aca¬demic Freedom committee (nowjoined with the NSA committee)is to sponsor and administrate theannual Academic Freedom Week.This year the committee handledthe highly successful Joe Glazerconcert in cooperation with theAmerican Civil Liberties union toraise money for their scheduledweek long spring series of lec¬tures and programs. Planningwork for this event was begun inthe fall quarter, and will continueearly next quarter. Interested stu¬dent organizations are invited toparticipate.SAVEup to 50% onUsed BooksatFOLLETT’S BOOKS, INC.324 S. Wabash HA 7-2614HA 7-2615 by Nan Malkenchairman, communityrelations committeeThe newly-formed CommunityRelations Committee is workingto establish a program which willserve several functions:1. to acquaint the students withand encourage them to take ad¬vantage of community activitiesand services;2. to serve as an agency of thestudents in solving specific issueswhich may arise between studentsand the community and to gaincommunity recognition as the stu¬dents’ voice;3. to represent the studentswhen their interests are affectedby neighborhood development andto speak for the students in suchcases. Participation and repre¬sentation by all groups on campusare sought.The committee has before itsuch problems as: the just relo¬cation of the students from theprefabs; a watchdog functionover building violations affectingstudents; methods of attainingand maintaining a bi-racial com¬munity; and the threatened demo¬lition of the Robie house. Sugges¬tions for further activity are wel¬comed from the campus at large.The chairman may be contactedthrough the SG office.by Herb Zipperianchairman, campus action committeeSG’s main aim is to help satisfythe various needs of students inareas where individual action isinefficient or actually ineffective.Accordingly, the campus action(formerly student needs) commit¬tee is charged with initiating serv¬ices to students as individuals;the committee is quite happy tohave available services in theareas of travel, communication,and the four services located inthe Student Service Center; theticket agency, the dry cleaningservice, the book exchange andthe loan service.For those who travel east onthe New York Central railroad ingroups of 25 or more, we have aspecial interim travel rate whichsaves 25 per cent of normal roundtrip prices; for those who plan atrip to Europe this summer, we have a Student Government char*ter flight. This flight promises tobe an even bigger success thanlast year because of improvedservice. More locally, we conduct¬ed a preliminary investigationinto parking facilities on campuswhich indicates envisioned easingof the parking situation.Although most governmentssuffer from too much communica¬tion from the electorate, we sufferfrom too little. We hope that thesix suggestions boxes, which wereobtained through the Student Ac¬tivities and personnel offices, willhelp solve the problem by givingstudents ready means for bring¬ing undesirable situations to SG’sattention.We have initiated needed im¬provements in all the Student -Service Center’s service. Moremoney for the loan service isavailable and a dry cleaning de¬pository so students can bring ustheir clothing even when the Cen¬ter is not open is being installed.We are working to improve ourticket service by negotiating withLoop agencies such as Allied Artsfor phone and mail arrangements.We are now busy with otherprojects in the area of employ-men t, recreation, and studenthealth. We are investigating thepossibility of easing the lack ofteachers in the Chicago elemen¬tary schools by having studentswith degrees teach part time.Since it is elegantly restful todrink a fast cup of coffee whenlabs seem endless, we are lookinginto placing coffee machines invarious buildings around the Uni¬versity, and are seeking a remedyto ease the crowded coffee shopconditions (perhaps by means ofa short line or a coffee machine).The committee arranged forextended library hours in Harperfor the week preceding quarterliesand two weeks preceding the•comps on a trial basis to seehow many would use them. SinceStudent health is very well mean¬ing but sometimes lacks properinformation about what we needor desire, we are working on aStudent health advisory board,which could represent the stu¬dents to the Health service.-r—>Save at 4%’ j:S . , AYes, ot your credit union. Be prepared to meet emergencies by*•• saving regularly. VFor peoce of mind start saving todoy at thei Hyde Park Co-op Federal Credit Union-j- 5535 S. Horperpaid on savings for last three years DO 3-1113 -j.XWin an Elgin Watch!Firs! 3 Prizes:21 jewelLord ElginDirect Reading watches. 2nd 3 Prizes:Elgin 17 jewelself-winding Lokeshore,waterproof ond shockproof. Next 4 Prizes:17 jewel Stonwood.dependable ondmoscwline.Nothing to buy—just sign your name to enterJust write your name, address, town and state on any sta¬tionery or post card and mail it to Box 826, Wesboro Shoesfor Men, Peters Shoe Co., Chicago 90, Ill.Winners will be drawn by impartial judges and notifiedby mail. Judges decisions are final. Offer null and voidv here prohibited by law. Further rules are available atyour Wesboro Men’s Shoe dealer.Contest opens March 15, 1957—ends April 30, 1957.- m i iminiA complete, 3-pairWESBORO WARDROBEfor only $2995WESBORO WARDROBEFttdri Division, Intornotienol Shot Compony, Si. lovtl 3. Misjowil12 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 8, 1957 •GOLF CHAMPION/SAYS:'VICEROY HASTHE SMOOTHESTTASTE OF ALU*iSMOOTH! From the finest tobacco grown, Viceroy selects onlythe Smooth Flavor Leaf... Deep-Cured golden brown for extra smoothness!SUPER SMOOTH! Only Viceroy smooths each puffthrough 20,000 filters made from pure cellulose—soft, snow-white, natural!CARY MIDDLECOFF’S ADVICEC 19S7. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Cor(i. What a man uses on his faceis importantCHOOSE QUALITYSHAVE WITH Rich, creamy quality forshaving comfort and skinhealth. New formula OldSpice Shaving Creams irgiant tubes«Brushless .60 lather .65Old Spice aerosolSmooth Shave 1.00S H U L T O Nnew rou • to i on toI1fA Campus-to-Career Case HistoryLeader of an explorationOwen Williams leads a team of re¬search and development specialists atBell Telephone Laboratories. His is oneof many teams set up at the Labs to ex¬plore the frontiers of electronics and com¬munications. In the picture above, Owen(right) discusses modulation problemsin electron tubes with Robert Leopold,M.S., Electrical Engineering, Universityof Michigan, 1949.Owen himself is thirty-one, and aB.E.E. from Rensselaer Polytechnic In¬stitute, class of ’49. He joined the Labsupon graduation, and was assigned tocommunications development training —the equivalent of a two-year postgraduatecourse in communications. Mixed withhis classes were various assignments in the Cliem Lab, the switching and wavefilter departments, and work on transmis¬sion systems and coaxial cables.In 1954 Owen was promoted to super¬visor. He works with two electrical en¬gineers, both systems analysts, and fourtechnical assistants. Their current job isexploratory development of submarinecable systems, looking towards great newtransoceanic communications links.Owen is one of many engineers andscientists in the Bell System whose prin¬cipal responsibilities include those ofleadership. The work of improving tele¬phone service in the Bell System isguided, and decisions are made, by menwho understand the problems involvedat first hand.\L Many young men like Owen Williams are findinginteresting and rewarding careers in the BellSystem — at Bell Telephone Laboratories, in BellTelephone Companies, Western Electric andSandia Corporation. Your placement officer cangive you more information about career oppor¬tunities in all Bell System companies. BELLTELEPHONESYSTEMMarch 8, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13Faculty cavorts at Revels;Chicago weds the seaby Rochelle DubnowWith a note to the “purists” in the audience urging them“to be neither upset nor self-righteous by their discoveries”as the play proceeded, the Quadrangle club went on to presentthe annual Faculty Revels in Mandel hall last Friday andSaturday evenings.Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton and Dean Robert M. Stroziercavorted “with the best of ’em” in the production of “The Weddingof Chicago and the Sea.” The two-act play by Barney Blakemore,depicted life at UC after the opening of the St. Lawrence seaway.With a cast that resembled a Cecil B. deMille extravaganza andwith songs worthy of any small scale Rodgers and Hammersteinproduction (sample below), the Quad Club provided an extremelyenjoyable evening to capacity audiences. Kimpton and Coggeshalltalk on medical education“A continuing flow of highly trained and imaginative medical scientists is necessary if thecountry is to meets its increasing medical problems, and so the funds to meet this expen¬sive training are essential,” -at(Tune: I Hate Men)Read the Maroon! It comes out every Friday just at noon.The correspondence in this sheet is the oddest form of courting.It constitutes the latest style in amorous cavorting.Chicago’s co-ed sets her cap by blatantly retorting,**I hate men.”1 thought when first we met that you would prove a man ofculture,But after dating you I know you’re just a culture vulture.I’d rather date a hairy ape than join you in youth culture.“I hate men.” Chancellor Kimpton saidthe luncheon meeting.“Our unusual medical schoolat the University of Chicago,built as it is on the principle offull-time service of medical sci¬entists, and tied closely to thework of the basic sciences, fi¬nancially would be awfully closeto impossible to start today,” hetold the group.“As the discussions of this con¬ference indicate, the problemswhich confront medicine andmedical education are compound¬ing.Read the Maroon! It comes out every Friday just at noon.A boy when writing to his lass she puts him in stitchesBecause her close resemblance to those famous Shakespearewitches.Recalls him to his pledge of honor to his motto which is“I hate girls.”The boy continues, “When you speak it sounds just like amagpie.”The girl replies, “You insect, you ain’t nothin but a gadfly.’1 trust that true love finally turns hate into her ally.Read the Maroon!Members of the distinguished cast included, Strozier, as MayorRichard Daley (Mayor Daley was a guest at the performance),Kimpton, Walter Hass, Lee Wilcox, Louis Gottschalk, Leon Carnov-sky, Grosvenor Cooper, John Hutchens, Robert Streeter, WilliamBirenbaum, Mrs. John Netherton, Wendell Harrison and Max Pufzel.see ‘Photos,’ page 20 “We can hope to meet themsuccessfully only if our medicalschools produce a continuing flowin quality and number of highlytrained and imaginative medicalscientists.“This "is costly; no form oftraining is as expensive for theinstitution or the student as medi¬cal education. But I suggest wemay be hopeful about the out¬come when we have such agenciesas the National Fund for Medi¬cal Education running interfer¬ence for us.”Coggeshall speaksGovernment support for medi-Birenbaum leaves U-CollWilliam M. Birenbaum,presently dean of studentsand director of promotion anddevelopment at UniversityCollege extension, has been ap¬pointed assistant vice presidentof Wayne State university in De¬troit.Birenbaum’s appointment wasapproved by the university’sboard of governors on Wednes¬day. He will assume his duties inJuly. Birenbaum was director ofstudent activities at UC before heassumed his present position. be on University developmentwith concentration at present onnational foundations and govern¬mental units. Dr. Birenbaum willalso assist me in the University¬wide self-study now under wayat Wayne State.”Birenbaum received his bache¬lor of arts in sociology at Iow’aState Teachers college, a BA inpolitical science and speech atUC, and a JD at the UC lawschool.Birenbaum is president of theAssociation of Community Coun¬ cils of metropolitan Chicago, andbelongs to many other organiza¬tions concerning housing, rede¬velopment, education, and socialactivities.In 1948, Birenbaum visitedeleven European nations to nego¬tiate agreements for exchange ofstudents and to charter studentships. During the past ten years,in addition to his faculty and administrative assignments here, hehas worked extensively with theFord foundation and Hazen foun¬dation, and with various govern¬mental and educational agencies.He will serve as assistant to Dr.Lloyd Allen Cook, Wayne State’svice president for graduate stud¬ies- and dean of the graduateschool. Cook stated that: “Themain focus of this position willEUROPE20 Countries, 70 DoysSummer '57—$1325, all expensesEurope for Collegians255 SequoiaPasadena, California ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E, 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies4 haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor["The quick!'brown fox'Smart college women know thatGibbs thorough secretarial train¬ing Is the quickest route to busi¬ness success.Special Courts for College Women. WriteCollege Dean tor GIBBS GIRLS AT WORK. in the area of Applications for the most advancedElectronic Digital Computersexcellent positions available for both experienced ond inexperienced inCOMPUTER PROGRAMMINGNUMERICAL ANALYSISTECHNICAL WRITINGDATA PROCESSINGNOSTON IS ; J l « *aiH»roe*t> StPROVIDENCE ( : J . . 155 A<*«eH StNEW YORK 17, : f ! . 230 Park A*e.MONTCLAIR. U. I t » Ptynwrtk St Call Mr. G. S. Parker, HA 7-0944 collector write to: The Service Bureau Corporation33 East Congress ParkwayChicago 5, Illinoist******%7k*****7^VS**%***%****%***%^\*%N*V^%***Vt cal research and education hasincreased greatly since WorldWar II, but cannot be expectedto meet hll the problems of medi¬cal science, Dr. Coggeshall, saidin a panel discussion of “Medicaleducation looks to the future.”Dr. Coggeshall served in 1956as special assistant to the Secre¬tary of Health, Education, andWelfare, as a specialist on medi¬cal affairs."There is no doubt but that ourgovernment has supported medi¬cal education and research to aconsiderable degree since WorldWar II,” he pointed out.“To date the funds have beeneffectively utilized through thewise guidance and counsel of sci¬entists and teachers from theHoward L. Willet to headChicago area fund drive\ The Service Bureau Corporation |£ (subsidiary of IBM) ^/ offers unmatched opportunities in its 2\ CHICAGO DATA PROCESSING CENTER f^ for graduates (Bachelors, Masters or Ph.D.) ^y in ^| MATHEMATICS,ENGINEERING, ORPHYSICAL SCIENCES OUR *346" SUITS AND SPORTWEARstyled for today's undergraduatesand reflecting our quality and tasteSpring vacation is an ideal time to visit the*'346” Department of any of our fine storesand become acquainted with our large Springclothing selection, moderately priced for col¬lege budgets. You will find a wide variety ofgood-looking worsted, gabardine and tropiccal suits, tweed sport jackets, trousers andattractive furnishings...all characteristicallyBrooks Brothers in quality, workmanshipand distinctive styling.Suits, $75 to $95 * Sport Jackets, $60 and $6532 Page Illustrated Catalog Sent Upon RequestKSTABLISHID )«1»7WjrurmsttfngsTliate74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL.NEW YORK • BOSTON • LOS ANGELES • SAN KRANC1SCO *C\Chancellor Lawrence Kimpton and Dr. Lowell Coggeshall, dean of the division of bio¬logical sciences, participated Tuesday in a conference sponsored by the National Fund forMedical Education. The conference was held at the Oriental institute (am) and Interna¬tional house (pm).medical schools and research in¬stitutions of the country. Thesefunds play an important role andwithout them many medicalschools would be in real difficul¬ties today.“However, government fundsare and probably will be restrict¬ed largely to categorical or con¬struction purposes. In order tobring out the quality that is in¬herent in many of our young peo¬ple who come upon the medicalscene, the flexible support whichcorporations give through the Na¬tional Fund for Medical Educa¬tion is of immeasurable value.“Such support permits strength¬ening specific important areaswhich do not necessarily have thegreatest public appeal.”Howard L. Willett, Jr., will be Chicago area chairman ofthe annual fund raising campaign of the Alumni foundation,Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton announced. Willett, a 1930graduate of the University, is president of the Willett company,trucking firm with headquarters in Chicago.Since the largest concentration of the University’s alumni live inthe Chicago metropolitan area, Willett will bear a major responsi¬bility in helping to meet the national goal of 13,000 gifts and $500,000in contributions. The drive begins April 25.A director of the Alumni foundation, Willett is also president ofthe Easter Seal society in the Chicago area and last year was gen¬eral campaign vice-chairman of the Chicago council, Boy Scoutsof America.He is a former president of the National Truck Leasing system andof the Car and Truck Leasing and Renting association, a former vice-president of the Society of Automotive Engineers, and a director ofthe Cartage Exchange of Chicago. During World War II he washead automotive advisor of the 94th Infantry division.He is also a director of the Warren Refining and Chemical Com¬pany, and a trustee of the Larrabee Street trust.Son of Howard L. Willett, Sr., of the UC class of 1906, he is mar¬ried and has one daughter.*mm* I ■■14 • CHICAGO MAROON • March S, 1957THERE ARE MANY CASES INTHE HISTORY OF SCIENCEWHERE A SLIGHT ERROR INCALCULATION LED TO AMAJOR DISCOVERY. THISWAS THE CASE IN THEFAMED “VAN PER SNORTHYPOTHESIS ” $JN i^vandersnortwasRESEARCH ASSISTANT TO PROP.CANDYSTICKHAR OF THEastrophysics department.MERE.VANDERSNdRT/ROM THIS PROBLEMthrough the uni vac.fET£R 0. V4M0MSNORTVJ.C. PEPrtRT/«ENrASTKOVHYSICSI960-I97X <\ l SEE YOU'RE VYeS-|FW£TRYING TO CAL-Vam DEFINECULATE THE [wHAT THEY’RE^yMmoe’,T'pTMAY CAST LIGHTTHE PROBLEM OF WHILE WE’RE WAITING^EXCEllENTFOR THE ANSWER* ^RESULTS,YOU MI6HT LOOK. OVERApETeR/The problem r work-JN1^0ed For)ou this -/5AY5morning.ij&li .THEiR origin.V.IS SOMETHING')W^ONaWRONtr, SIR? (ACCORDING TO'these result^1Saturn’s rings are[wholly composed of,cheese PIZZAi ARE ftp sure these) oh,yesfigures arepn Sir. ifACCURATE ? ^TuNlVAC SAYSThey’Re pizza —THEY’RE Pizza.I’DsSTAKEo! E (3N\ vvelL)Tha.t’S that,\i'm lucky lTHANK GOODNESS'\TH£ TKI6-ANOTHER WEEKANDJune Cy4^'rWE’D HAVE BEEN Vcpc,,LAUGH.N6Srja<.^^^YDAYS PASSED.VANDtRSNORTAnd the ROChEfbHip FADEDOUT OF THE NEWS. THEN *ONE DAY IN 197Z— ■** W H AT’S TH t) SATURN’S Rl NGS,matter /5i(^l tHEV^REELLIOTT?) SMALLERl A HUGEDR. CAN DYSriCh'MAR!COME QUICKLY.* great Scott; v what couldMOORE, YoO'RBj hAVE CAUSEDRight/ its V lT S|f^?wnATCOSMIC CHANGE? WhlUE, l&OyOOOyOOOMiles away...HOW LONG DO YOU THINK’IT’LL SrAY FRESHER-VANDERSNORT7 OH, ROUGHLY A 'tKlLLIOHlYears, i’d say. bltxDonT see how un/vacCOULD HAVE MADE SUCH Amistake. CALLING IT[CHEESE PiZZ.A WHEN itfS,REALLY SAUSAGE ANDANCHOV/Y'JtL YvIfodern!Pick the Pack that Suits You Best!Newest, modem box. Crush-proof.Closes tight! Flavor stays in ... everything else stays out Ever-popular handy L&M packs!America’s fastest-growing King ... largest-selling Regular filter.Smoke modem L*M and always getfull exciting flavor...PLUS THE PURE WHITE MIRACLE TIPYes, you are free to choose . . . only when you smokemodern L&M. And only L&M gives you the flavor . . .the full, exciting flavor that makes L&M . . .01957, Liccrn * Mtkis Tobacco Co. AMERICA’S FASTEST GROWING CIGARETTE Nick Bora — Florist5239 Harper Are.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery ServiceJimmy'sSINCE 1940Have a WORLD of FUN!Travel with fITAUnbelievable Low CostEurope60 Ooy* .*r tram $525Orient65 Ooy* JZL- *r*m $993Many tourc includecollege credit. {Also low cost trips to Moles$149 up. South Amor tea $499 up,Hawoil Study Tours $528 up andAround tho World $1398 up.Ask Your Travel AgL332 S. MichiganChicago 4, HA 7-2557Crammingfor Exams?Fight “Book Fatigue" SafelyYour doctor will tell you—•NoDoz Awakener is safe as anaverage cup of hot, black cof¬fee. Take a NoDoz Awakenerwhen you cram for that exam...or when mid-afternoonbrings on those “3 o’clock cob¬webs.” You’ll find NoDoz givesvou a lift without a letdown...helps you snap back to normaland fight fatigue safely!-JUI lorn* Bconomy sir*15 tobletl—jf f|C (f0, Creek Raw and-35- Dorms) 60 tablets —i monoz fAWAKE NERSSAFE AS COFFEEUT producing 'Antigone'as ITM contributionUC’s contribution to International Theater month, Jean Anouilh’s re-telling of the Greekclassic Antigone, will be presented by University Theatre Thursday through Sunday, March28 - 31. General admission in advance is 75 cents and $1 at the door.Based on the traditional Greek myth, the play is modern in treatment, language, and set¬ting, using a one-man Chorus and calling for modern stylized costumes and settings. Theset, designed by Arnim Seilstadt, will not “represent” anything, although the locale can beconst rued as a room in the March 8, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15royal palace at Thebes.Choice of this play, accord-to UT director Richard D’Anjou,was made because of its theme,that every person has a right andeven a duty to follow his beliefsto the end, even if they mean acondemnation to die — or to live.Theme of the play concerns An-ligone, daughter of Oedipus, andher stubborn rebellion againstCreon, current ruler of Thebes.Antigone insists on giving her||| A clean move isthe safest movefor your preci¬ous belongings...and thecleanest moveis a ®’Sanitizedmove. An extraservice ... noextra cost.PETERSONMoving A, Storage Co.55th fir Ellis AvenueBUtterfield 8-6711SiKVtNO U. S.CANADAALASKAHAWAII AMOrucuto mco dead brother, who has been killedin a civil struggle for power anddisgraced, a ritual burial, an actfor which the death penalty hasbeen prescribed by Creon.Stripped of the religious sig¬nificance the story had in the an¬cient Greek version by Sophocles,the Anouilh play treats the prob¬lem of two opposing philosophiesof life. Creon is practical, full ofcompromise, political necessity,and based on survival, while An¬tigone is idealistic, irrational,based on faith, and principle, andunconcerned with survivalD’Anjou is using the transla¬tion, by Louis Galantier, whichwas used in the original NewYork production, but says he has“cheeked the current scriptagainst the original French andhas made the necessary correc¬tions” to give it its original intent—a somewhat less favorable viewof Creon.In Paris in 1912, during theAntigone and Haoinon, playedby Susan Brinkley and WillardMoody, in a tender moment.Symphony plansnext seasonwith ReinerThe 67th season of the Chi¬cago Symphony orchestra willopen on October 10, withguest-conductor Bruno Walter di¬recting Beethoven’s ninth sym¬phony. Fritz Reiner will conduct22 of the 28 weeks in the season.Two choral works will be per¬formed during the season: Reinerwill conduct Handel’s Messiahand the Verdi Requiem.Two other guest conductors,seven pianists, one piano duo, fourviolinists, one violoncellist, andtwo singers are to be featuredsoloists with the symphony. Fourof the pianists will be makingiheir debuts at these concerts.Performers of renown includeYehudi Menuhin and Zino Fran-ocscatti, violinists; Janos Starker,cellist; and Roberta Peters, so¬prano.Vou'll 4el SAFERmoving in aVan International Theater month isa world-wide movement whosestated purpose is to provide inter¬national understanding throughthe d r a m a . The movement issponsored by the US nationalcommission for UNESCO, t h eAmerican Educational Theaterassociation, and the National The¬ater Arts council, who encouragetheater productions of playswhich demonstrate such univer¬sal themes as human rights, free¬dom of the individual, and moraland spiritual truths shared by allmen, according to D’AnjouAtom historianFermi producesGeneva reportAtoms for the World, byLaura Fermi, widow of thelate Enrico Fermi and authorNazi occupation, the original ver- of the best seller Atoms in thesion of Antigone is said to have Family, will be published by thereceived the approval of the Nazis UC press on March 26.because they saw in it a justifica- As historian for the Atomiction of authoritarian government, Energy commission, Mrs. Fermiand the wide support of the was an official delegate to theFrench people because they saw Geneva conference on the peace-in it a glorification of stubborn ful uses of atomic energy whichand idealistic resistance. took place in August, 1955.TYPEWRITERRepairs — Sales — RentalsWe service manual and electric type¬writers. 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George Crawford, as Creon, points an accusing finger at Anti- „gone, played by Snsan Brinkley, as guard Fred Hirsch stares duti¬fully off into space.E. 55th NO 7-9063Small MediumCHEESE $ .95 $1.40SAUSAGE 1.15 1.65ANCHOVIES 1.15 1.65ONION 1.00 1.50PEPPER 1.15 1.65Other Combinations on RequestFree delivery to V. of C. studentsTable Service Delivery Service1 1 A.M. to 2 A M. 11 A M. to 2 A.M. DUNCAN STATIONERS1313 E. 55th HY 3-4111, MU 4-9024Next door to Post OfficeOFFICE SUPPLIES — GIFT ITEMSARTISTS' MATERIALMECHANICAL DRAWING EQUIPMENTNew and Expanded ArtDepartment Now Openat our new location1221 E. 55thTemporary hours: 9:30- 12, 1 - 5:30Europe--have to LIVE rt \That’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! 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Zone StatePROTECT YOUR TRAVEL FUNDS WITH AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVElEfiS CHEQUES-SPENDABLE EVERYWHERE16 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 8, 1957Culture VultureIs the Culture Vulture better than ever? At any rate, it’s bigger than ever this week, and for the benefit of UC students native to NewYork or visiting the big city for the interim, a big city section has been added. Showing a UC ID card at the Metropolitan opera house willprobably do you no good, but stay in Chicago, where one can get you into the Hyde Park theater for half a dollar, into Orchestra hall’sheaven for a cut rate, into the Art Institute for nothing any time and into any swimming pool on campus if you have a student health ticket.Annual accelerated course inmodern Hebrew for collegestudents and graduating highschool seniors, at beautiful 75acre coed camp in New York’sHudson Valley; complete sportsfacilities. ,7 week session, July-August,$185; including room, board,tuition (some scholarship helpavailable) write: ^ULPAN, Student Zionist Organization342 Madison Avenue, New York 17Hero’s old-fashioned flavor in the new way to smoke.The man-size taste of honest tobacco comes full through. The smooth-drawingfilter feels right in your mouth. Works fine but doesn’t get in the way.The Flip-Top Box keeps every cigarette firm and fresh until you smoke it.IN RICHMOND. VIRGINIA, FROM A NEW MARUORQ REdPR}FLIP-TOP BOXFirm to keepCigarettes fromcrushing.No tobacco inyour pocket.Up to date.POPULARFILTER PRICEOn campusUC ConcertThe last UC concert of this aca¬demic year will be presented inMandel tonight at 8:30. On theStage will be, appropriatelyenough, what many consider thelast word in chamber groups. TheBudapest string quartet willround off a season of chamberconcerts by playing Brahms’Quartet in C minor, Ginastera’sfirst quartet (brought back fromthe players’ recent tour of Mex¬ico and South America) andHaydn quartet in F major. Tick¬ets for the last concert may bepurchased at the music buildingor in Mandel before the curtaingoes up.Bond chapel concertBond chapel choir and the Col¬legium Musicum will join forcesSunday for another concert in thelittle chapel on the quadrangles.The concert begins at 8:30. anddirector Richard Vikstrom willlead both his groups in Baroqueworks such as Bach’s Prelude and Fuge in B minor and Trio sonatain C minor from his “MusicalOffering,” Marcello's Sonata in Fmajor for ’cello and harpsichordand Vittoria’s Missa Quarti Toni(which is not translated “Mass inquarter tones’’). Free tickets maybe obtained at the divinity schooloffice in Swift.Glee ClubA well-balanced group present¬ed an interesting program con¬sisting for the most part of mod¬ern a cappeUa choir music to adisgracefully tiny audience in IdaNoyes lounge Wednesday night.Director William Diehl directedmodern American and Europeanworks, by Randall Thompson andHindemith which ran through IdaNoyes hall reaching at least aninvisible audience at times. Win-terset, the professional director’sown composition, deserves a wid¬er hearing, and it’s the loss ofpeople who missed the reorgan¬ized choral group’s first winterconcert, which can’t be made upuntil Festival of the Arts timerolls around.Hyde Park theaterToday the Cannes grand prixwinning film. Wages of Fear, in French, will be on the same billwith I am a Camera, sophisticatedAmerican comedy. Next Friday,March 15, The French Can-Can,provocatively subtitled “Only theFrench can” and directed by JeanRenoir will be shown concurrent¬ly with Bullfight. Fifty cents plusUC ID card equals student admis¬sion to Hyde Park theater.Downtown Chi . • •Studebaker theaterThe first offering of Studebak¬er s second series, “View from theBridge” closes Sunday at the Stu¬debaker theater to make way forthe opening of LysLstrata onTuesday, but will continue at theHarris theater shortly. Tomorrownight (curtain at 6 pm) is yourlast chance to take advantage ofthe 50 per cent cut that studentsare entitled to at that time andat the regular Thursday showing.Lysistrata, Aristophanes’ classi¬cal spoof, will run until March 31,so if you’re in Chicago let the Illi¬nois Central railroad take you al¬most to the entrance of Stude¬baker theater on Michigan ave¬nue, and enjoy production num¬ber two given by a repertoire theater rapidly coming into itsown.World PlayhouseLocated in the Fine Arts build¬ing fronting on the same lobbyas Studebaker theater, WorldPlayhouse has been featuring LaStrada for some time now, andfrom all indications will be offer¬ing the Italian picture a whilelonger. Your UC ID card mayserve you in good stead any timebut Saturday or Sunday night,but if the Maroon’s hard-boiledadvertising manager could paygood money to see the movie threetimes, it might even be worth therisk to make La Strada the highspot of your week end.The enthusiasm reflected aboveapplies to all items in CultureVulture. Vive l’arte.Exhibition MomentumGroup of Chicago Art Instituteoffshoots will present the third intheir current series of discussionsArtists and their Work on the dayafter the quarter ends, March 16.Featuring the wisdom of threemusicians, two of them, LelandSmith and Loo Treitler from UC,Musicians’ Night will begin at8:30, and can be gotten into byUC students for $1 paid in ad¬Marlboro vance at the Reynolds club deskor at the door.Clark theaterIf you plan to stay in Chicago,make a date during the interimto see an academy award film atfour o’clock in the morning.That’s the time of the Clark’s lastshow each day, and they elaimthat a grand total of 47 academyaward winning films will beshown during the month ofMarch.Chicago symphonyCan you take time off fromwriting that anthropology paperthis afternoon to go downtown toOrchestra hall? If you think youcan, it should be worth your whileto journey there via IC at around2 pm, because Dame Myra Hesswill be soloist in Beethoven’sthird piano cpneerto, while Reinerwill direct the orchestra inVaughan Williams’ Pastoral sym¬phony, as well as Handel’s En¬trance of the Queen of Sheba.Tomorrow night Fritz Reinerwill make a rare appearance at aSaturday night concert to directa program consisting of Mozart’sMagic Flute overture, Haydn’ssymphony number 103, Weber-Berlioz’ Invitation to the pance,Rimsky-Korsakov’s Dance of theTumblers, Tchaikovsky’s MarchMiniature, Ravel’s Pavanne for «Dead Infanta, and Strauss'Waltzes from Der Rosenkavalier.Three concerts are in the offingfor next week. Tuesday afternoonat 2 Reiner will direct Mozart’sMagic Flute overture andVaughan Williams’ Pastoral sym¬phony, as w’ell as another per¬formance by big guns JanosStarker and John W'eicher ofBrahms’ double concerto. Thurs¬day at 8 and Friday afternoon at 2pm the programs will be identi¬cal: Berlioz’ Overture to MuchAdo About Nothing, and Saint(Due to circumstances entire¬ly within our eonlrol, the restof the C u 11 u r e Vulture liasflown to the next nage.)MODEL CAMERAHyde Park's most completephoto and hobby shopExport modelsNSA Discount1312 E. 55th IIY 3-9259Captures yourpersonalityas well asyour personphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St.%LEARN COLLEGE HEBREWAT CAMP THIS SUMMERMarch 8. 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 17Vulture Annex...(from page 16)Saens’ ’cello concert with Starkeras soloist; two nocturnes by De¬bussy and the Alborada del Graz-ioso by Ravel, plus a bit of Delius.Come the break, the programswill continue, and they’ll be atleast as good. Your UC ID cardwill do wonders at any afternoonconcert, and if you want to sitdownstairs with the plutocrats(there’s nothing derogatory aboutcalling someone a plutocrat—theylead a better life than culturevultures any day) (not really)reserve your tickets in advance atyour friendly Reynolds club serv¬ice center.Art InstituteBoth the 62nd American exhibi¬tion and that beautiful collectionof Master prints closed last week.Your ID card will still get youinto the museum on Michiganavenue for less than the cost of atoothpick and besides the Insti¬tute’s own collection there arethirteen temporary exhibits onsundry subjects. Only last montha showing of bird and flowerprints by Japanese woodblock ar¬tists opened in Gallery H-5. A Vulture in theBig CityThere are New Yorkers at theUniversity of Chicago who buy‘The Times” every day to seewhat events of cultural impor¬tance they miss by going toschool out west. Some of themspend so much time feeling sorryfor themselves because they missshows in New York that theydon’t have time to go to those inChicago. The Big City seems tohave hundreds of things playingconcurrently, and if New Yorkersare to be believed, it costs a goodsized fortune to see any one ofthem, which can’t be done becauseyou can never get tickets.The above is sour grapes, be¬cause the Vulture is staying inChicago.New York’s opera season isstill in full swing. At the Metro¬politan opera house is an institu¬tion known as the family circle,which takes the place of heavenin Orchestra hall. Access to thetopmost balcony is via freightelevator, and the people who lie on their backs behind the fewrows of seats at least are out ofdanger of falling the mile or moreto the stage. If you get to NewYork by 9 pm Friday, La Traviatawill be on, Saturday features IITrovatore in the afternoon andDon Carlo at night, while there’llbe a benefit performance of LaBoheme next Sunday at 8 pm.Besides the Met, you can seePaul Muni in “Inherit the Wind,”Eugene O’Neil’s “The IcemanCometh,” “My Fair Lady,” “Vol-pone” or a newly opened presen¬tation by "The Irish Players.” InGreenwich Village (The village ina city of how many million?) youcan see opera for free plus a do¬nation at the Amato opera house,plus sundry off Broadway showsAnd if your tastes run to thehigh class of what Chicago hasthe lowest, go to the ZiegfieldFollies, which stars BeatriceLillie.You can see most of the attrac¬tions listed above if you get to aticket office in time with enough.And if not, there are all sorts ofart museums. And also CentralPark.Letters re RobieIs 1908 plumbing art?Though the article on the pro¬posed Robie house demolition inthe March 1 issue did an admir-Do not ruinUC heritageThere are many who would findthe Robie house a pleasant andmodern building in which to live,as I would, but whether one likes ordislikes the house has or should haveno bearing on the preservation of thestructure. A work of art does not needunanimous approbation to be an aes¬thetic and cultural monument. When,after a short fifty years, the Robiehouse has received world-wide acclaimfrom architects and critics. It Is nothard to Imagine Its Importance In thenext century should It survive.Essentially this is a concern of themind and the spirit, in which membersof a University community should anddo feel responsibility for leaderah lp.But the larger test Is of Chicago, of Itsfeeling for its heritage and Its sense ofhistory. Jn some American cities and Inmany foreign lands citizens would com¬pete for ttie privilege of saving such abuilding, out of love for the buildingand from civic pride.If only money can say the last wordabout whether the Robie house is pre¬served or meets destruction, let us findthose who are on speaking terms withmoney. If wreckers strike down thisbuilding they will destroy something inevery one of us.Harold HaydonAssociate Professorof Art In the College able Job of preserving the Maroon'stradition of righteous Indignation, I feelthat several relevant points were over¬looked. One might suspect that theMaroon would realize that the problemsof expansion and financing that arenow being faced by private institutionsof learning throughout the nation havenot been escaped by CTS. A marriedstudent population that has Increasedfivefold within ten years presents realhousing difficulties.There is certainly little disagreementwith the assertion that It would be bet¬ter if the Robie house did not comedown. Nevertheless financial problemsof the magnitude of those facing CTSdeserve a more sympathetic considera¬tion than the tone of your article ren¬dered them. Perhaps those factionswithin the University that have had thebenefit of CTS’ management of thebuilding for the past thirty years haveTheDisc1367 E. 57th St.•RECORDOF THE WEEKRichard StraussTILL EULENSP1EGELFritz ReinerVienna Philharmonic OrchestraRCA Victor LM2077 3.19YOU *ARE ELIGIBLESend Todayfor FREEProfessional and ^ •see*! *Businessman'sWholesale DiamondBrochure. Write Jackson'sDiamond Brokers, Dept. I644 Broadway, Gary, Ind. hyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student Rate 50c all performancesStarting Friday, March 8 — Adults Only ShowBY BEQUEST! AT LAST!The Original Uncut Version in FrenchH. C. Clouzot's ii\Cannes Grand Prix WAGES OF FEAR”“The lost word in movie suspense."“One of the great shockers of all time."“A powerful drama . . . just about reachesthe extremity in movie suspense."The New Yorker — 'M. Clouzot has built up an intolerablehead of emotional steam. The charge ishigh voltage.""The people are so real you can smelltheir terror."“Intensely exciting as any film I've everseen. It is a breathless thriller.""Powerful enough to make you tremblein your chair. You sit there waiting forthe theatre to explode."— and —JOHN VAN DRUTEN'S SMASH HITAWARD WINNING Sohpisticated ComedyT AM A CAMERA”Life MagazineTime MagazineCue MagazineNationCommonwealNew York TimesStarring JULIEHARRIS in the finest performance of her ca¬reer. She is as frothy and excitingas a fresh bottle of champogne . . .An amoral junior mistress ... anymph in sheep's clothing ... noitem for children!"— TIME MAG."Violently Funny!"—LfFE MAGAZINE"A Delight!"—SAT. REVIEW OF LIT.Starting Friday, March ISThe Great French Director ("The River") JEAN RENOIR'S"THE FRENCH CAN CAN"("Only the French Can")Starring JEAN GABIN and MARIA FELIXFeaturing EDITH PIAF and PATACHOUFrance's brewing of the "Moulin Rouge" Story with plenty of Gallicspiciness . . . absolutely the most fabulous and exciting staging ofthe Can-Can ever in a full twenty-five minute sequence of the mostvigorous, abandoned doncing you've^ever seen!The Art of Bull-Fighting Authentically presented . . . *08^^features the great matadors of our century in actualfilm clips of their greatest performances. lluIlTStarting Friday, March 22"TEAHOUSE OF THE AUGUST MOON"MARLON BRANDO « SAKINI"Current Or Choice" — TIME MAG.—- and —"THE SILENT WORLD"JACQUES YVES-COUSTEAU'S prize winning and award-nomineeunderseas adventure thriller! Authors to teachcreative writingA course intended to encourage original writing by sru-dents, a “unique kind of course in an American university,”according to the course’s director, Richard G. Stern, will beoffered in the spring quarter. Four contemporary authorswill teach the course for two weeks each.Stern, an assistant professor of English, stated that thecourse is a unique opportunity —some responsibility for some action Inthe matter that goes beyond criticism.Acclamation of Frank Lloyd Wrightas an architectural genius does not ne¬gate the fact that his 1908 work is sad¬dled with the difficulties attending 1908wiring, 1908 plumbing, and so forth.Furthermore, It is to be doubted thatCTS. when buying the Robie house In1926 with Intentions of eventually re¬placing it, realized that the work wouldbecome recognized as a classic. Thirtyyears, I would assume, can make a greatdeal of difference in art appreciation.I reiterate my opinion that the Robiehouse should not be destroyed. It Is alsomy opinion that airing of the Issue de¬serves both better taste and better Jour¬nalism than the Maroon has thus faroffered.Donald SevetsonStudent, ChicagoTheological Seminary for prospective writers to getthe ideas of young practicingauthors. He believes the coursewill get away from the sort of"coterie” offered at schools suchas Stanford university, where thestandards in a creative writingcourse are rigid and set by theman teaching the course.The course will be composed ofdiscussion of student manu¬scripts, either stories or poems,which will be mimeographed. Theauthor of the work will lead thediscussion.The course will be held in Cobbfrom 2:30 to 4:30 every Wednes¬day. Stern said the course wouldbe open to all students, with admission being decided by him onthe basis of talent. Stern wantsinterested students to bring theirbest manuscripts to his office onthe fourth floor of Wieboldt. The four authors conductingthe course will be:Saul Bellow, author of The Ad¬ventures of Angie March, andtwo other novels, Dangling Manand The Victim, and of a recentlypublished book of shorter fiction,Seize the Day, is a former UC stu¬dent, and Augie March has a Chi¬cago background. •Another of the writers. JohnBerryman, who has publishedthree volumes of poetry, the lat¬est being nomage to MistressAnne Bradstreet and a biographyof Stephen Crane, is also a prizewinning short story writer.Howard Nemerov is the authorof a recent book of poems. TheSalt Garden. Known as a satiricaland witty writer, he has had twonovels published.Peter Taylor is a widely recog¬nized short story writer, and theauthor of a novel, A Woman ©fMeans.Men in the knowknow true from falseAA It costs more than $5,000 tosend the average studentthrough collegef~) TRUE [[] FALSETrue. Schools and individual in¬stances vary, of course, but thenational average cost is estimatedat nearly S6.000.Most college men belongto fraternitiesO TRUE Q FALSEFalse. Many schools don’t permitfraternities, and at major state uni¬versities, there are always more inde¬pendents than fraternity men. Fra¬ternities are, however, at an all-tiraehigh in membership.Jockey brand is America’sbest known brand ofmen's underwear£] TRUE Q] FALSETrue. Independent surveys provethat Jockey is not only the bestknown underwear in the U.S.A. butalso in 75 other countries aroundthe world. Just shows how muchmen value comfort and fit.Men on the gogo for Jocketi underweara nn/uih ®made only byt 18 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 8, 1957UC swimmers tie in big meetLast Saturday afternoon a strong UC team came from behind to tie Navy Pier for theChicago Intercollegiate Swimming championship, with a score of 62 points.Placing 13 men to Pier’s 16, things looked bad until the final counting of the score.Tom Lisco extended his winning streak in the 60-yard freestyle to 11 straight, winninga close race by the touch of a hand. Lisco also placed third in the 100 freestyle and an¬chored the winning freestyle relay team.%Varsity runners win,then get smearedUC's Varsity track team won one and lost one last week.They buried Elmhurst and Wilson Junior college Wednesdaynight in the Field house, and in turn were “buried” by EasternMichigan, at Ypsilanti, Michigan.The score of the formerDoug Maurer swam threestrong races and tied Lisco ashigh point man for the Ma¬roons, winning second places inthe 100, 200 and 440 yard free¬style races. Ken Currie placedsecond in the 100 and 220 yardback stroke events and swam onthe winning freestyle relay, withLisco, Warren, Morrill and DanJohnson.Dick Rouse placed fourth in the200 yard breast stroke, second inthe individual medley, and swamon the second place medley relaywith Mark Hoffer, Howard Jenk¬ins, and Morrill. Hoffer placedthird in the 100 butterfly andfifth in the 400 freestyle, andJenkins placed fifth in the 100yard backstroke. Dan Siegel tooka fifth in the 200 yard breaststroke, and Maroon diver A1Gains pulled a fourth out of thediving.Six other Chicago teams com¬peted in the meet, held at Bartlettpool. It was the first time inseven years that the Maroonswimming team finished in thetop bracket. *Ably coached by Bill Moyle, theteam compiled a seven won, threelost record for the season. It wasthe last meet for Maroon captainRouse and veterans Jenkins andMorill. The rest of the team islooking forward to a strong 57-58season. meet was: Chicago 86, Wilson29 and Elmhurst 8; and thelatter: Eastern Michigan 76. Chi¬cago 28.Chicago won all of the firstplaces in the Wilson and Elm¬hurst meet as well as many ofthe seconds and thirds. First placewinners were: Dan Trifone, inthe high hurdles and the highjump; Don Richards, low hurdles;Bill Weaver, broad jump; DaveNorthrop, pole vault; Dick Cous-ens, shot put; Hosea Martin. 60-yard dash; George Karcazes, 440-yard run; Art Omohundro, in the880; Dave Houk, in the mile; and,Ned Price, in the two-mile.Jacobs winsOn Saturday, however, it wfasa different story. Chicago wononly two of the twelve events andthey were completely shut out ofone. A1 Jacobs, the Maroon’s stel¬ lar sprinter, ran an excellent :6.2to win the 60-yard dash easily andOmohundro ran away from hiscompetition in the mile.Jones wins fourIn the other events however,Maroon runners had to fight forseconds and thirds. Partially re¬sponsible for this was EasternMichigan’s Hayes Jones. Joneswon four events (high jump,broad jump, high hurdles and lowhurdles) and thus accounted fortwenty of Eastern Michigan’s 76points.The next meet for the trackteam is the Midwest Conferencemeet, which will be held tonightin the Field house. Several mem¬bers of the Varsity squad, as wellas of the track club, will journeyup to Milwaukee tomorrow to par¬ticipate in the Milwaukee Journalgames. Sports Column —-Lester closescollege careerBilly Lester, Maroon cage captain for the past three sea¬sons, wound up his college basketball career last week, withanother fine season behind him.As of the end of last week, Billy had scored 401 of theMaroon’s total 1025 points for the season.Lester has not missed a game since he reported for the squad in1953, and since that time he has played in 67 straight games andwon three major “C” awards.He has broken the school’s individual game scoring record threetimes, and his record now stands at 42 points, which he scored ina game against Aurora this year. His season’s average this year is26 points per game, and that places him as one of the best in theChicago area.The last game of this season saw the Maroons losing to Navy Pierby a score of 65-62, however one of the largest crowds ever to attendanything connected with athletics on this campus for many years,turned out to bid farewell to retiring coach Nels Norgren and cap¬tain Billy Lester.Stampf new coachJoe Stampf has just been named coach of UC’s junior varsity bas¬ketball team. This team will play a regular schedule for the firsttime next season, Stampf announced.This junior varsity squad will be (for a change) what the nameimplies, and will in no way be connected with U-high. “B" teamgames have already been scheduled with Navy Pier and Illinois Techand Coach Stampf hopes to get six or eight games altogether.University high will continue to maintain a separate team in theprivate school league.After running into the stone wall of one Hayes Jones and the restof his butcher friends at Eastern Michigan, the track team will tryto lick its wound and regain its composure at the Midwest Conferencemeet today. The results of the “Race of the Century” which was heldthe other day and was attended by almost as many spectators asordinary dual meets showed who was to represent the UC at theMilwaukee Journal games . . . names are being withheld pendingresults of that meet.Travel in styleThe athletic teams of this great University will be traveling in stylefrom now on ... it is rumored that new station wagons are to beleased on a buy-back option plan, and they will be used on trips intoenemy territory. Assistant Athletic Director Kyle Anderson said thatit might be possible to decorate these wagons ... what about a whitemushroom cloud with maroon lettering: UC Athletic Department. . perhaps. George KarcazesCYRANOANDSYMPATHY(or) Dead DanylHey Once there was a sword with a poet attached named Cyrano (the man, not thesword). Cyrano was equally famous for being handy with the cutlery and havinga real honker of a nose. This proboscis was a real liability ... not only to Cyrano,but to the bumpkins who had the misfortune to make fun of it. They alwayswound up with an extremely low body temperature.In the midst of all this swashbuckling, Cyrano fell for a chick named Roxanne,whose father ran one of the fancier bistros in town. The clinker in the deckwas that Roxanne hankered after another cat... who made the unbelievable(and hitherto fatal) error of telling Cyrano “You, sir, have a rather large nose!”Well, Cyrano couldn’t skewer this chucklehead—Roxanne’s old man would cutoff his Budweiser credit card. So—heeding that old chestnut “If you can’t fight’em ... join ’em,’’ Cyrano djd a ghost-writing job on some love poems—realmushy stuff—enabling Roxanne’s beau to win her. Afterward, mothballing hisking-size steak knife, Cyrano turned liis poetic talents to the best use he couldthink of: writing lyrics for “Where There’s Life.«. There’s Bud.”MORAL: It's not necessary to “nose around” for the best in beer.;. it’s waiting for you at your Budweiser dealer's now.Budweiser. ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELESKING OF BEERSMarch 8,1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 19Stampf to coach Cagers; Girls have fun at playdayis optimistic about futureby Richard DawIf somebody had told Joe Stampf in 1941, when he was driving towards a Big Ten scor¬ing title as a University of Chicago center, that he would one day become the Maroons’head coach, he would have answered:“Bunk.”“I had no idea of becoming a coach,” Stampf explained, “But after I had gone into socialwork and worked with boys’ teams for a while, the offer from UC came and here I am.”Nevertheless, Stampf willsucceed Nels Norgen, the manwho coached him during his High School. Last season he wasnamed assistant to Norgren._ , . , , * Stampf's basketball teams atIJC playing days form 1937 to University High brought the1941. Norgren, basketball coachhere since 1921, reached the re¬tirement age of 65 this year.Stampf says he looks for theUC cagers to hit their highestpeak in years “in about fouryears” as a result of the new aca¬demic organization cutting downon early entrants.“That will give us more ma¬turity. We should begin to defi¬nitely feel this.”But next year, he warned, theMaroons are likely to suffer fromlack of experience.The lone senior on this year’steam — Captain Bill Lester —won’t be back. Lester, high scorerfor the past four years, holds the1JC all-time scoring record.But a schedule change doesgive the Maroons a good chanceto improve on this season’s 6-10mark, Stampf believes.“We’ve added Lake Forest, Car-leton, Lawrence, Grinnell, Knoxand St. Olaf to the schedule Ofcourse we’ll continue to play Illi¬nois Tech and Navy Pier. Thisrevision should make the games alittle better from the fans’ stand¬point.”Stampf has been at UC since1943, when he became basketballand baseball coach at UniversityGive interimsport eventsFriday, March 8—Track MidwestConference meet 6:30 pm Field-house.Wednesday, March 13 — TrackWilson Jr. college 4 pm Field-house.Friday, March 22—Track Mem¬phis State & Bradley, 7:30 pmFieldhouseSaturday, March 23—Track Cen¬tral AAU championships 2 & 7Fieldhouse school Its first Private SchoolLeague title in its history in 1947.His teams also won league cham¬pionships in 1951, 1953 and 1954and captured tourney titles in1948 and 1951.In his playing days, Stampf started as a forward under Nor¬gren and hit his peak in 1941 as acenter when he led the Big Ten inscoring with 166 points despitethe fact the Maroons lost all 12 oftheir conference games.That same year, Stampf—whoalso set a Big Ten record for freethrows with 82 — was named tothe Chicago American all-starteam.Navy Pier men. the occasion in the last few min-Sloppy hall handling and poor utes» both °* them scoring valu-shooting by the Maroons enabled a^le caskets.Navy Pier to jump off to an early The Maroons had defeatedlead, and only good defensive re- Navy Pier in a previous meeting,bounding kept Chicago in the 66-62.game at that point. Navy Pier led (Photos on page 20)Ellen Coughlin Beauty SalonSI05 Lake Park Ave. HI 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. • Sat. — 9 a.m. - 11 p.m.v* ww wwww w mri1Lifetime Disability Insurance4Retirement InsurancePhone or Write> Joseph H. Aaron, '27 <135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060’Brand new-the ArrowWindshield JacketWindproof, water repellent—and good looking. That sArrow’s all-new Windshield jacket styled in tattersallchecks, stripes and solid colors. Bi-Swing actionhack gives freedom of movement. Elastic waist andadjustable cuff and collar tabs for changeable springweather. “Sanforized-labelled” cotton fabric, $ 12.95.s":»- /- >. \ iARROWCASUAL WEARMaroon cagers losedespite rally's cheersA cheering throng of hundreds was unable to root theMaroon basketballers on to victory as they fell before NavyPier at the Field house last Thursday evening, 65-62. Chicagochopped away at an 11-point Pier Illini halftime lead, buttime ran out for the Maroons. 7The big crowd and the pep at halftime»3322-rally were the results of a plan Responding to the exhortationsto honor Nelson Norgren, the re- crowcb the Maroons ralliedtiring coach and Captain Bill cu* ^ea<^ to Rve points onLester, playing his last home separate occasions, as theirfor Chicago. Lester’s deadly shoot- shooting improved markedly. Billing was somewhat off? but he still ^evitt and Gary Pearson, the lat-led Chicago with 17 points, and returning to the lineup aftertook many rebounds from bigger bemg injured previously, rose to Saturday Ida Noyes was the scene of the 22nd annual bas¬ketball play day sponsored by the Women’s Athletic associa¬tion. Two hundred and fifty girls representing 13 Illinoiscolleges participated in the day’s activities.All teams played both a morning and an afternoon game. Thosegirls wishing a rest from the basketball courts were invited to enjoythe many facilities found in Ida Noyes, such as swimming, pingpong and bowling.A chance for conversation came at noon when lunch was servedto all the girls in the Cloister club of Ida Noyes. The meal was pro¬vided by WAA with Mary Robinson food chairman. “The day wassuccessful and a good time was had by all,” said Miss Kloo, WAAadvisor. Much credit went to Judy Stevens, basketball manager,who planned and supervised the day. Judy was assisted by WAAboard members, Tiny Larsen, Frances Moore, Marlene Nelson, CarolCoggeshall, Pat Lucas, and Claire Smith.The results of the games proved slightly disappointing to the UCplayers. Chicago I lost to Northwestern, 35-31, but came back todefeat Eastern Illinois State Teacher’s college in the afternoon, 33-26.The Chicago Greens lost to North Central by a score of 52-41. Munde¬lein defeated the Chicago Fosters, 25-4, and fellow UC’ers, the Chi¬cago Quads, fared no better, losing to Barrett college, 47-34.HERE IS THIS WEEK'S TIE-BREAKER INOLD GOLD’SPUZZLESTIE-BREAKINGPUZZLENO. 7CLUE: This western coeducational state university wasopened in 1892. It pioneered in cooperative student living.CLUE: This coeducational university was founded atMuskogee, Indian Territory in 1894. In 1920 it wasrenamed for a city known as the “oil capital of the world.”CLUE: Founded in 1794 and chartered by the legislatureof the territory South of the Ohio River, this universityacquired its present name in 1879. Its original name wasBlount College.ANSWER 1..ANSWER 2..ANSWER 3..Name.—Address-City—College_ State-HOLD UNTIL YOU HAVE COMPLETED ALL EIGHT TIE-BREAKERSContestants who correctly solved the first 24puzzles in Old Gold’s Tangle Schools contest arenow solving the tie-breakers in order to competefor the first prize of a World Tour for Two andthe other 85 prizes now tied for. Note that theabove puzzle contains the names of three schoolsfor which three separate clues are given.Whether you smoke Regulars,Kings or Filters, Old Gold’sexclusive blend of nature-ripened tobaccos gives you ataste that’s terrific. Trytoday’s Old Golds andyou’ll agree!NO OTHER CIGARETTECAN MATCH THETASTE OF TODAY’SOLD GOLDS Copr. 1957Hairy H.llollietat4CoChicago!!!Coteamgo!!!Fijiswanttight20 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 8, 1957One picture worth a thousandUC cheerleader DaveLeonetti and friend shoutcheers during pre-basket¬ball game festivities lastThursday night. (See pagephoto by Mokotoff“Don’t cry little boy, it’llonly hurt for a minute,”says nurse to one of 700little boys” and girls whowent to Student Health’sWednesday polio clinic, (seepage 1 for story)photo by Finston(Below) CheerleadersDebbie Goleman, Dave Le¬onetti, Butch (All-Ameri¬can boy) Kline, MarjieBrown and Jinx Kennicktake a breather at lastweek’s game.Co Maroons go!!! Co team go!!!Co Maroons Co!!! Co team go!!!photo by BornickCo team go!!! Fight Maroons fight!!! Co Chicago!!! Co Maroons spill gorephotos by Sun TiinM(Above) John Kirkpatrick, Lawrence A.Kimpton, Robert M. Strozier and Ernest Sirlucksearch for Chicago in the Quadrangle Club’sannual production of the Faculty Revels heldlast Friday and Saturday evenings in Mandelhall. Cocktails and dinner for faculty, Quad clubmembers, and guests preceded the presentationof the “Revels.” The play by Barney Biakemore depicted life at the University of Chicago afterthe opening of the St. Lawrence seaway.(Left) Sailors from foreign ports and UCcoeds in the production of “The Wedding ofChicago and the Sea” are portrayed by BillHayes, Beverly Albright, David Madsen an 1Holly Porter. (See page 13 for story.)