rersity of Chicago, Friday, April 12, 1957Blaekfriars backtoday at Mandelm m m m m mSC approves constitution;students to choose todayphotos by FinstonBlackfriar’s “leading man,”Hal Levy seems to have in¬curred the wrath of his leadinglady, Mrs. Carol Klein (above,left) . . . but as the plot thick¬ens, in true Hollywood fashion,there is. a “happy ending” (il¬lustrated above).Blackfriar’s production,“Gamma Delta Iota,” concernsa fraternity, a woman’s cluband their campaign to raisemoney. The fraternity andLevy want to sponsor a foot¬ball game. Mrs. Klein seemsto dislike football, as ex¬emplified in the above leftpicture, and feels there aremore intellectual ways to raisemoney. In the picture above itseems that Levy has found asolution to their problem . • .agreed?Riven, and the method of electingthe NSA delegates. However, inthe spirit of accord that prevailedthroughout the evening, agree¬ment was quickly reached onthese points.The number of members of theAssembly was stabilized at 50;the Court was given the power torule on the case of an individualversus an organization; there willho an NSA election as well as aspring SG election. (The time ofthe NSA election will be decidedm the by-laws; it was felt that it^vimld either be in the winter orm the spring.)Fraternities exemptKarlin stressed that the docu- Voting continues today to select the 20 UC representatives to the US National Stu¬dents association.Due to the ineligibility of the independent candidate, Willard Ayres, there are 80 stu¬dents (four slates) running for the seats. The changes in the parties’ slates from thatwere^e!SsIitafMdbayythe1>S" service fraternity, volunteered members, and interested observ.bility ol the various candidates, and served as non-partial poll er^ w.ll ^ather^ mor(?er erS" votes. “The public is invited (freeISL on the ballots was decided The usual election week cam- 0j charge),” said Penny Rich, Eby the election and rules com- paigning was seen even though an(j r chairman.-mittee by lottery Wednesday af- there were two new partiesternoon. E and R members and (VICE, true to its work did notdeputies and poll watchers from campaign except to put up post-, , * „ ers). Leaflets were strewn all overthe four parties as well as the c0bb; the girls came to B-J forcandidates added to the conges- their campaign night supper,tion around the ballot boxes yes- Tonight, the candidates, elec-terday. APO, the new campus tion and rules officials, party Today’s ballot box schedule isas follows:n9.30-6, MandelIV9:30-11, Eckardt9:30-5. CobbIII9:30-11:30, Law12:00- 2.00, Billings 11:30- 1, Green2:30- 5:00, Judd 1:30- 3. CTS3:30- 6, Snell-Hitchcockby Norman LewakThe campus is now in the process of voting on the combined and amended Constitutionand Statute of Powers. (Also on referendum is the amended Student Bill of Rights.)Student Government passed the combined documents Tuesday night. The mechanical,regulatory portions of the statute will be merged into the Student Code.There was little debate and much compromise on the various parts of the documents.Rick Karlin (UT-phy sci), ex-ISL majority leader, accepted the various “friendly” amend¬ments offered by SRP. OttoFeinstein (SRP-soc), SarahSilverman (SRP-soc) andTimothy Essien (SRP-soc) of¬fered the amendments. Karlin, ment specifically exempted secret the present Statute that “the pow-and fraternal organizations fromthe new jurisdiction of the Court. er of recognition shall not alteror affect the customary, defined“In no event,” he said, “can the relationships between fraternitiesBruce Larkin telegraphs ad¬vice to NSA voters. See page 4. Court hear a case except in refer¬ence to a specific constitution ordocument of the organization in andcil. the Inter-Fraternity coun-A friendly amendment consid-each time, received a nod of ap¬proval from Richard Johnson societies.”(ISLcol), the new ISL majorityleader.SRP offered mild dissension onthree points: the number of mem¬bers the Assembly should have,the powers the Court should be question. The Court, under the ered most important by somenew Constitution, cannot under members was the retention of theany circumstances subpoena the recall provision. This was readilyconstitutions or charters or like accepted. The percentage of stu-documents of fraternal or secret dents needed on a, recall, inita-tive, or like petition was com-Karlin also noted that the new prised at six per cent (betweendocument retained the clause of four and eight per cent).Four tickets face votersby Dave ZackMandel hall may wellbe filled tonight as thecurtain rises on the firstBlaekfriars show since 1942.The new production, Gam¬ma Delta Iota, is set in a rah-rah University of Chicago, whereOmicron Alpha Phi fraternity ar¬ranges a football game with No¬tre Dame as a money-raisingstunt, and Gamma Delta Iota, ananti-fraternity women’s club,plans to raise cash by a “best pro¬fessor contest.”Careful readers can detect thebeginnings of a conflict, which isresolved when the “OAFs” andthe GDI girls resolve their dif¬ferences of opinion in a cloud ofharmony.Blaekfriars had in the pastexclusively male casts, but the£irls in GDI women’s club areas female as one could ask, andthe chorus line contains shapelylegs as well as high notes.Reason for the expectations of a full house arises from the in¬terest of alumni in a traditionthat existed when they were inschool. The difference betweennew and old Blaekfriars maybring some alumni to the per¬formances to compare this showwith those given in the dayswhen the Abbot of Blaekfriarswas better known than the Chan¬cellor.Mike Hall, production managerof the original comedy writtenby four Blaekfriars members, di¬rected similar college musicals atMIT. Leads are taken by Mrs.Carol Klein and Harold Levy. Atthe request of Doug Maurer, com¬poser and arranger of the musicfor the show, the orchestra hasbeen augmented by four profes¬sional men for performances to¬night and tomorrow, because oflack of violinists.See bottom of page (right)for explanation of picturesshowing scenes from theshow.Ouch! uoirl£===3C==32 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 12, 1957NewsbitsI> UC art exhibit opens Festival of ArtsStudents interested in entering their works in the all-studentart festival that opens the 1957 Festival of the Arts may bringtheir paintings to the Student Activities office in Ida Noyeshall, Monday through Saturday, April 15 to April 20, between 8:30am and 5 pm.All students registered in any part of the University (on campusor downtown) are invited to display their work in the showing. Anystudent many compete for the awards provided he is registered ina degree program at the University.Paintings in oil and water color, drawings, sculpture, and printswill be accepted.All works submitted should be ready for display. Oils should beframed, watercolors, drawings and prints should be matted orframed.Works should be picked up the week following the festival.For additional information call the art department, Goodspeedhall, MI 3-0800, extension 1217.NAACP to discuss housing issueUC’s chapter of the National Association for the Advance¬ment of Colored People wjll present Attorney Michael Hagi-wara speaking on “The southwest acquisition” at 8 pm, April18 in the East lounge at Ida Noyes.Hagiwara is counsel for the South West Hyde Park neighborhoodassociation, a group of property owners in the four block area fromEllis to Cottage Grove, 55th to 56th street, who have filed suit toprevent the University of Chicago from acquiring this area to erecttwo apartments for married student housing.The University has been requested to furnish a spokesman for itspoint of view on this question, and correspondence relating to thiswill be read at the meeting.TERRY’S PIZZA"The World’s Best”SPECIAL OFFERWITH THIS COUPON25c Discount on any Pizzaeaten here ... or deliveredSmall 1.00Medium 1.45 Large 1.95Giant 2.95FREE DELIVERY FORU. OF C. STUDENTS1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045GRAND OPENING SALENEW—Harper Liquor Store1114-16 E. 55th StreetImported Chiantiquarts $ .98Vi gallon 1.95full gallon 3.89German Rhine Wines $ 1.29 VsFrench Dry Wines, Red Or White . .-. .98 VsPierre Cartier Or Fils,Barsac, Graves, Sauternes 1.39 VsImported1953 Vintage Beaujolais 1.49 VsPedro Martinez Sherry 1.49 VsPortuguese Ruby Wine 98 VsOld Crow Bourbon Vs $3.98Old Forester Decanter(Bottled in Bond) Vs 4.98Imported Stuarts Scotch Vs 3.98i Booths High Or Dry GinFleischmanns Gin full qts. 3.98| Karlof Vodka Vs 2.98Full line of Imported andDomestic Beers & BeveragesFREE DELIVERYFAirfax 4-1233, 4-1318, 4-7699 Kathleen Coburn, professor of English at Victoria college,University of Toronto, will be at UC on Wednesday to delivera lecture entitled, “Coleridge: an interpretation of 1957." Thelecture will be presented at 4:30 pm in Social Sciences, 122, accordingto Robert Bald, UC professor of English.Professor Bald stated that Miss Cobum spent a quarter of a cen¬tury editing sixty notebooks left by the great British literary figure.Each volume contains two books, Coleridge’s notes and Miss Coburn’sinterpretation and explanation of them.Miss Coburn is here under the auspices of an exchange lectureshipestablished between UC and the University of Toronto. Donald Bondgave UC’s 1957 lecture last month in Toronto.%"College news conference nHillel has exhibitThe sculpture shown aboveis entitled “Jew with Torch,”and will appear in the Hillel artexhibit The exhibitors are Mau¬rice and Louise Dunn Yochim,whose paintings and sculptureshave been exhibited at the Art In¬stitute, the Milwaukee Art Insti¬tute, and the Library of Congress.The Hillel show held in connec¬tion with the Festival of the Arts,will have its opening reception onSunday, April 21 from 3 to 5 andall are invited to attend. It willcontinue until May 15, from 10till 4 on Mondays and Fridays. Bruce Larkin, UC graduate student and vice-president ofthe United States National Student association interviewedMarion B. Folsom, secretary of health, education and wel¬fare on “College news confer-newsence’’ over ABC network televi¬sion at 3 pm Sunday.Larkin, f o r m e r president ofUC’s Student Union, was one offour college panelists interview¬ing Folsom.The secretary of health, educa¬tion and welfare was asked aboutthe administration’s Federal aidto education program and Ful-bright’s plan on second deduc¬tions for college students. Re¬garding the latter question Fol¬som stated, “Additional deduc¬tions are bad tax policy.” Lob sen z electedpresident ofl-F councilRALPH BUCHSBAUMAnimals without Backbones2 vols 95c, eachSc/uteemannkTHE RED DOOR BOOK SHOP1328 EAST 57th STREETNOrmol 7-6111 Chicogo 37, III. proval.Jimmy IsSINCE 1940fun Is where you find itAs for us, we find it in being a port of this stimulating com¬munity. That's why the Hyde Pork Co-op, a grocery super-mart(and more) is co-sponsooring a series of fun nights with theNeighborhood Club.It's easy to like people, but it takes effort to do something aboutit. The Hyde Park Neighborhood Club mokes a full-time occu¬pation of bringing neighbors together. It's a pleasure to be portof the plan and enjoy the parties.CO-OP SUPER MARTMore Than a Store5535 S. Harper Plenty of Free ParkingColeridge expert to speakBruce Larkin interviews onAllan C. Lobsenz, of Zeta BoraTau, has been elected president ofthe Inter-Fraternity council. Lob¬senz is the third ZBT I-F presi-dent in the last five years. He hasserved as adviser to the pledgecouncil, as chairman of the I Fsing, and rushing chairman of I F.J>on Richards of Kappa AlphaPsi was elected secretary, and Jo¬seph de Pierre of Alpha Delta Phiwas elected treasurer.Committee chairmen had notbeen appointed by press time.They are appointed by the IFpresident subject to council ap-..v - vs.- afL- (UCers 'nyet' zealouslyas Russia at Mock UN April 12, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Forum returns, losesto Harvard debatersStudent Forum, away most of the past quarter, returned> by Roger Bernhardt - to campus this past weekend to host Harvard universityNine UC students traveled to the University of Wisconsin to represent the USSR at the ‘Friday night. Also, 19 high schools, were on hand for the11th annual mock UN conference last week. The conference turned out to be quite stimu- LTC Chicago area extempore speech contest on thelating according to the participants, with many schools presenting not only the political, following day.but the emotional attitudes of the countries they were representing. The UC’ers found The Harvard debate, held in the home room of Interna-themselves in the spotlight immediately, not only because they were representing Russia tional house> saw Harvardbut because they came from the fearsome Un iversity of Chicago.Those who went were some- — narrowly defeat Chicago on campus.” The first UC Chicagothe national collegiate debate area extempore speech contesttopic, ‘‘Resolved: that the United for high school students attract-what nonplussed on arrival, rity Council (where they knew along with Quentin Ludgin who States should discontinue direct ed 19 schools. The contest is thenot only because they were would ^ vetoed) rather than acted as co-ordinator for the aid to foreign coun- first in a planned series of eventsn<>t totally Dreoared but because brou2ht to the commission floor group and ran around telling tneS' designed to extend the Forum’sS;roa:ydPthePaa^c,baUta„“ <^re wouM be passed, De- everybody How ,o vote. ,a^W^mit tee set-up quite different from sPl e e oecunty Council veto The session closed on a some- vard debater, was also a part of Paul Black, a junior fromwhat they had expected. Conse- and rL,hnS that the AEC should what jocular note when on the the centennial celebration of the Thornton fractional high school,nnontlv manv la«it mimitA narlpvs not deal with the resolution, the ]asj vote taken- Bulgaria (who Harvard club in Chicago Mr. and walked off with top honors andquenti> many xasi-minure parleys ^ nevertheless went ahead and had temporarily abstained during Mrs. William C. Boyden, as well a tuition scholarship. The contest,were held where the delegates the first roll call) changed its as a number of their friends and held in Ida Noyes hall was, ac-were assigned and had to learn violated all parliamentary rules vote to a yes, despite Russia’s no fellow' Harvard club members cording, to Forum Director Donrather quickly what Soviet policy Passir}2 the resolution. It vote. The Bulgarians proclaimed a were on hand to watch the Har- McClintock, “an excellent suc-manv sfei?rie<* °hvious there that the student revolution in their coun- vard team of John Ferren and cess that promises to be one ofua. on many obscure issues, chairman and the western powers try and freed themselves from the Richard Murray defeat the Chi the finest such contests in theLuckily the chairman of the were in collusion. Soviet yoke. The last words heard cago team of Mike Ban and Ar- state in a few short years.”group, Warren Gunderson, was Subcommission defeated at the conference were the Rus- thur Fine.s fwell informed on this topic and The social and economic sub- s*an warnings to Bulgaria that On Saturday the Forum openedwas able to teach most of his co- commission defeated, despite vali- Soviet troops would soon march a new phase in its attempt “toant opposition by USSR delegate on them. revitalize speech activities onGordon Schmierer, a bill forcinghurts the proper policies.UC succeeds diplomatically the US to give all its money to theThe session was composed of UN for dispersal rather than dis-meetings of six major commis- tribute it itself. The ad hoc poli-sions and a general assembly. All commission, with Herb Pot-m all the Soviets (i.e. the UC dele- for RUssja( considered a bill allow-gation), came out rather well, ing India to be the fifth perma-diplomatically; that is, although nent security council member. De- _ _they lost on most votes they were sPite Russia’s vote for this bill it Beaux Arts ball to be held on April 27 throughout the entireable on numerous occasions lo voted down by the imperial!*, first floor of Ida Noyes hall.maneuver the western powers “C wes'err Other judges for BeauxLudgin co-ordinator Douglas to attend FOTA,will be Beaux Arts judgeSenator Paul Douglas will be one of the judges at theinto positions of considerable em- Arts ball include Mrs. J. Har-At the Security council sessions, ris Ward, wife of one of UC’s may come between the hours of2:30 and 5 pm Monday throughFriday to tiie Ida Noyes Thea¬ter for information.Bids for the dance may be pur¬chased for $3 per couple at the Inhat lassment. The Human Rights the USSR was particularly promi- trustees chairman of the worn-delegation, headed by Linda nent and truly represented their an’s board of the Lyric OperaRosenberg and Diane Cole was country with constant “nyets” theater, member of the board at formation desk of the Ad build-able to get England to vote and obstructionist tactics. Despite the Art Institute and of the Chi- ing, Ida Noyes desk. International, TTC . these the council presented to the cago educational television associ- house, Reynolds club desk, andgainst t e Ub in sending a com- General Assembly bills on Hun- ation. Two members of the New from Dave Leonetti, chairman ofniittee to investigate discrimina- gary (condemning Russia —* it York City ballet company will ticket sales.(ion in Africa and thb United voted no), Suez (the only time also act as judges at the dance.States — a resolution which was Russia voted with the US and the Students interested in work-passed, much to the chagrin of of *h« council)’.. ’ 41 , (no), and disarmament (USSRthe US. Also they managed to not oniy voted no but condemned Senator Paul H. Douglasword a resolution on Algeria so the AEC for talking about suchthat the US had to vote against topics). Warren Gunderson repre-all twenty-two Afro-Asian nations. sented Russia at the sessions\ Mines opens skiesAt the Atomic Energy commis¬sion, the USSR, represented byDebbie Mines, was able to get an“open skies” resolution proposedby Canada referred to the Secu- ing on decorations for the bailare asked to contact Miss Chris¬tine McGuire at MI-3-0800, ex¬tension 3171 or in the Adminis¬tration building, room 303, of¬fice of the examiner. Also, theyThe CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 3Ae ift/ium photographers1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 BE PREPARED FOR SUMMER DRIVINGSUMMER SPECIALTUNE UP $6.50 «.• Washing• Lubrication• Road ServiceSPECIAL ! !Simoniz 12 50HARPER SUPER SERVICEDealer in Sinclair Products5556 Harper Ave. PL 2-9654 |lll!lillillllillltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllltllllll!lllllllltllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllilllltlllllllllllll!illll^I COMO’S Cafe EnricolRESTAURANT & PIZZERIA i1411 E. 53 FA 4-5525 - HY 3 -5300Small Large Small Large12” 14” 12" 14"Cheese .1.15 1.55 Combination 1.75 2.25Sausage 1.45 1.95 Chicken Liver . . 1.60 2.10Anchovy .1.45 1.95 Mushroom . . . . 1.60 2.10Pepper & Onion 1.30 1.80 Shrimp 2.25Bacon & Onion .1.60 2.10 Pepperoni . . . . 1.60 2.10C-GROUP, AWAKEPATRONIZE YOUR I.D. 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It's Smart To Buy For LessS v ~ID & G Clothes Shop1 744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-2726“In the Neighborhood for 40 I 'ears'*= Hours: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m., Mon, - Fri. —- 9 a.m. - 9 p.m., Saturdayj§aUllllllllllllllllllllllimillillllillllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllillllltlllllllllillltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllillllh:rf, .14 • C H 1 C A GO MAROON • April lz, i.4* —- -,--- ~ ™~3~Letters to the editor .Objects to faculty's "help nAs one cf the script writersof Gamma Delta Iota, thisyear’s Blackfriars production,I have been personally in¬volved in the controversy overcontain sections of the show thatere supposedly in “bad taste,” orpoor in quality. It seems to methat the student body shouldknow why I voiced such a vigor¬ous objection to faculty and ad¬ministration “help” in the show.Due to some ill-advice by somemembers of the administration,Chancellor Kimpton intervenedin the show, and a professionaldirector was assigned to “help”out. One of the members of theadministration went through thescript making "suggestions” andactually rewrote a scene himself.This seems to me to be againstthe spirit of this university, andof Blackfriars.Student shows and student tra¬ditions have as their basis the stu¬dents themselves. A college stu¬dent should be able to run anorganization with the aid of otherstudents, without the forced as¬sistance of faculty members. It istrue that some things can best bedone by the school and its faculty,but this help should be asked for,not volunteered. In this university, if somethinghas violated the rules of goodtaste, it is the job of the facultyadvisor to point it out. This wasnot done in the present situation,and tacit approval was given tothe show. Many faculty membersthink the show was satisfactorybefore the administration tam¬pered with it. Administration in¬tervention in this case, was un¬ called for, no matter how goodthe suggestions were. A bad stu¬dent show is better, in my opin¬ion, than a perfect faculty show,-both for the students and theschool itself.Blackfriars may be a big suc¬cess this year, but it is no longerwhat it originally was—an entire¬ly student-run production.Philip M. ColemanFormerly o4 BlackfriarsArgentinan wants pen-palThe United States Informa- deno, a student studying to be ation service requests a pen-palfor a young man in Argentina.According to Andrew Moore ofthe UC admissions office, theUSIS in Sao Paulo would like acorrespondent for Hector Escu- chemical technician.Address letters to:Hector EscuderoRemedios de Escalada 130Saenz Pena FGSMPCIA de Buenas Aires,ArgentinaLarkin urges NSA supportURGE UC ACTIVE ENTHUSIASTIC ENERGETIC IN¬TEREST SUPPORT USNSA AND USNSA OPPORTUNI¬TIES ON CAMPUS AND ELECTION THAT POLITICALGROUPING BEST FULFILLING THESE GOALS YOURJUDGMENT.BRUCE D. LARKINInternational AffairsVice-president USNSAYOUR BOOKSTORE IS PREPARED TO HELP YOUWITH All YOUR TYPEWRITER PROBLEMSPURCHASESwith reasonable monthly payments — No interestType Changes - Repairs - Overhaulsby expert mechanics — all work guaranteedRentalsFirst class machines at reasonable ratesUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.Buy Your DiamondsWholesale - SAVE 50%Diamond Rings For Half Retail Price“All Diamonds Fully Insured”ii Written Life-Time Quarantee )>“No Loss Trade-In Quarantee“Three Ways to Buy Wholesale yyLoy-Awoy — Cash — Charge Accounts AvailableWrite today (or Diamond Catalogue and Buyer's CardDiamond ImportersWholesalers5 SOUTH WABASH ROOM 804 59 E. MADISON DE 2-4113Free Parking — 219 S. WabashOpen Mon. Nites Till 9 PM — Thurs. Till 8 PM — Sat. Till 5 PML. R. SOHN & CO Miller opens mail wellbut what else? — WriterHow clever of the Maroon to take the words right out ofmy mouth! The words I refer to are those printed over thenames Richard Johnson and Don Miller in last Friday’sissue. I am somewhat flat- TTT ITT; ; r *! j .. .. , . . you noticed Mr. Miller s honestytered (in a limited sort Of and integrity, but you should alsoway) that ISL has such a Ilk- have mentioned his industry,ing for my thoughts and words. Throughout the year he hasFor example, they recently posted opened and read the SG mail, talk-a piece entitled “Whether You ed innumerable persons out ofLike It or Not.” This was stolen resigning even though they madefrom something entitled “Watch it clear that they could not do.Your Tongue” which I wrote for any further work or attend meet-last year’s NSA campaign. ings, and sat with honor and in*However, neither Mr. Miller nor tegrity as moderator in the As-Mr. Johnson is currently employ- sembly, barren of thought, idea,ing me as a ghost writer. The or encouragement, but alwaysabilities of Messrs. Hoffman, ready to fight for the principlesJohnson, and Miller to plagiarize contained in Robert’s Rules of(sic) are sufficiently developed Order (Revised),so that they need no help from Miller’s daily tussle to open thethe Maroon. mail and suppress incoming resig-I will appreciate it if in the nations has-left him with no timefuture you do not take further to talk to his Assembly membersliberties with the names you at- concerning anything resembling atach to my words, and I believe a positive program. This rathercorrection is somewhat in order, than the fact that Mr. Miller isI must also take issue with your lily-white best explains why theeditorial • analysis concerning the SG Assembly now resembles thecurrent situation in the Student French General Assembly.Government assembly. I am glad Richard A. KarlinDismayed by split in ISL... I have spent the lastfive days attempting to dis¬cover the cause of the split inISL. . . .... On the one hand, we havea new group called IA. . . . Allyear long they had a great dealof power in ISL, yet a small frac¬tion of this group claims that itleft because ISL went along adifferent path than they desired.What this really means is thatthey had not the energy or theability to bring their obvious pow¬er to bear.... I cannot see how the stu¬dent body can support such agroup, especially a group run¬ning together on no platform buttwenty different platforms. . . . On the other hand we haveSRP. I have opposed this groupunder its various names formany years. Despite a currentfacade of respectability (an avoid¬ance of all controversial issues)I do not see that they havechanged.They continue to be unrealisticin their approach to student prob¬lems. Witness their recent pro¬posal to decentralize the func¬tions of NSA. . . .What dismays me is that SRPmay win because of this split inISL. I can only urge the studentswho continue to oppose SRP andwho want true representation atthe NSA Congress to vote forISL. Jerome A. GrossEllen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen flon. - Sat. — 9 a.m. - 11 p.m.STUDENTS LAUNDRY SPECIAL8 lbs. Laundry — Washedand Dried ^ *.Shirts finished to order 13c ea. additionalK WIK-WAYLAUNDRY & CLEANERS; 1214 E. 61st St.(Between Woodlown & Kimbork on 51st)Students>■ ■ n ■btuoent wivesJOBS • JOBS • J OBSIf you can type and are able to work 20 hours or moreper week, Monday through Fridays, between 8:30 and 5,please visit the personnel office.Ingleside Hall956 East 58th Street• • - 'More letters to the editoris dead: why not bury it?The real reason they are beingso unreasonably and viciously4Last Friday night some was because SG’s president, Don-members of what is left of aid Miller, had refused to admitthe Independents Students that the‘holders of these positions cruel to old friends who in theleague met to expel some of Its had resigned. past have rendered many valu-members. With no one carrying on the able services to ISL is that theyWhat was the crime of these functions of these ‘offices, the hope by this means to lure theexpelled members? Simply this: group found it necessary to find disidents back into the party inout who had resigned and fill the order to save ISL.empty positions. What they won’t admit is thatThe questions remains of how ISL has been dead for over a yearIn the Student Assembly, thesemembers nominated and saw theelection of certain ISL membersto positions on the Student Gov- these positions were filled, since and a half. Most of its membersernment executive council.The complaint lodged againstthe expelled persons was thatthey did not get caucus approvalbefore filling the executive posi¬tions. No mention was made ofthe fact that caucus approval isnot necessary. Nor did they men¬tion t hat the reason the expelledpersons resorted to this tactic the group that was accused ofdoing the vicious plotting certain¬ly did not consist of a majority ofthe Assembly. The answer is thatmany persons — including thepresident — were confused andvoted to fill the vacancies. Theexpellers therefore are blamingthe expellees for the result oftheir own confusion.No reds here. TribThere are two counts whichI would like to express myopinions on: first, that theAmerican Legion has gravely in¬sulted the intelligence of everyUC student in relation to the So-cialists-Communist meeting heldon our campus (Maroon, April 5),and secondly, that the ChicagoTribune is running a series ofarticles about supposed commu¬nist activities at UC which thusfar seemed to be aimed at giv¬ing UC a “black eye.”“Let’s not kid ourselves,” peo¬ple say. “We know that there arecommunists at UC.” Perhapsthere are. However, I, like manyother students (like 99% per centof us), have never met a commu¬nist on the quadrangle. . . .In an open letter circulated oncampus by the American Legionin order to warn us of the im¬minent dangers of the proposedSocialists - Communist meeting,this said organization generouslyoffered to help the students toform an “antteubversive club”with implied power to exposewith the sureness of “McCarthystyle tactics,” subversive ele¬ments at UC. In essence, theAmerican Legion has volunteeredto infiltrate the free air of thiscampus, and perhaps even organ¬ize a “burning of the books”party.In view of this, UC’s studentbody cannot help but feel a littleangry about the actions of theAmerican Legion and the Tri¬bune. I think, however, that theycan be assured of the fact that“commie” is just as dirty a wordSpecial Coursefor College Women]Thorough technical trainingwith concurrent program ofbusiness orientation. Resi¬dences in New York and Bos¬ton. Wrift College Dean forGibbs Girls at Work.katharine.boston is, : :: n «PROVIDENCE S An»ll ».NEW YORK 17 1 l i •..?*>MONTCLAIR. NJ. 1 : » Plymow* ».TheDisc1367 E. 57th St.•RECORDOF THE WEEKThe Weavers atCarnegie HallPete Seeger, Ronnie GilbertLee Hays, Fred HellermanVanguard 9010 3.99 here as at any other Americanuniversity. . . .In all fairness to the AmericanLegion—to its members who de¬fended our country through twoWorld Wars, it should be pointedout that the fault with their or¬ganization is in the “drummierboy tactics” of its leaders.And now for my own safety Tmust declare that I am not inaccord with the doctrines of theCommunist or Socialist politicalparties (attention “Joe”). But, letfreedom ring.Ray Caparros do not know what ISL stands forexcept that it is in some way op¬posed to SRP.Recent caucuses have beensparsely attended. For the lastthree years, except around elec¬tion time, ISL has had troublegetting fifteen people together(a quorum) in order to hold cau-suses. Neither political party hasmade a single important contri¬bution to campus political life orto student government in threeyears.What we see now is a lot ofpeople fighting over what is lttlemore than three initials. I havea fond attachment to those threeinitials, but since they no longerstand for anything significant Iwould rather see them buriedthan continue as a mockery efwhat they once meant.For this reason I am formallyand officially resigning from whatis left of the Indepenedent Stu¬dent league. I hope those remain¬ing members will give it a decentburial.Howard TurnerISL Vice-president, 1954-55*i/y\ chiccicjo11 laroonEditor-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 BrownOffice manager Art TaitelPhotographers Niles Bernick, Roland FinstonCartoonists Kent Flannery, Dick Montgomery, Gwen WeberEditorial staff Richard Daw, Zelda Eisen, Sheila Fields, Mary Finkle,Phyllis Henry, Oliver Lee, Marge Russell, Sue Shapiro, Sharon SchultzNICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55th NO 7-90635 for 4 011145!on group orders of pizza — get 5 for the price of 4!Free delivery to F. of C. studentsTable Service Delivery Service1 1 A.M. to.2 A.M. 11 A. M. to 2 A.M.Open till 3 A.M. on Friday and SaturdayClosed MondaysStudy in EuropeECONOMICAL ACADEMIC YEAREnroll In a full program of English taughtcourses at the University of Vienna. Live ina Viennese home. Learn to speak Germanfluently. Participate in three separate studytours through eight countries. Integrate studyand travel for a grass roots grasp of content*porary European problems. This two-semesterprogram lasts 10 months. Round trip oceantransportation is covered in the all inclusivefee of $1780.For information and application forms,fill out this coupon and mail to:THE INSTITUTE OF EUROPEAN^ STUDIES"A non-profit corporation”35 East Wacker Dr., Chicago 1, III.oddresscity stato HOW MUCH IS THAT DOGFISHI]N THE WINDOW?Dear Mom and Dad (writes Zelda May Nirdlinger, soph).You have been asking me to account for all the moneyI spend. There follows a day by day summary of recentexpenditures. Don’t forget, you asked for it.MONDAY:$2.78 — telegram to the Secretary of the Army, offeringto go instead of Elvis.$0.26 — pack of Philip Morris, my favorite, and yours,if you know a good thing when you taste one!$0.50 — sorority fine for oversleeping and missing myfirst hour class twelve days in a row.1 bmMdtwsfer 7?.me</l&/pk$2.95 — I bought a rooster named Ralph to wake me inthe morning. (Can’t sleep with an alarm clockticking all night.)TUESDAY:$0.50 — sorority fine for not cleaning my plate at dinner.(I just couldn’t! Dinner was Ralph.)$0.50 — sorority fine for dating undesirable boy. (Rod-erigo is not undesirable! Some people say he is“fast” and a “devil” but I say he is just insecure.Why else would he go steady with eight girls?)$0.26 — pack of Philip Morris. What joy! What zest!WEDNESDAY:$557.38 — a motorcycle for Roderigo. (He is giving up allhis other girls for me, but they are so widelyscattered that he needs a fast conveyance to goaround and tell them all goodbye.)$0.26 — pack of Philip Morris. (Have you tried themyet? If not, you’ve got a big treat coming. Lightone soon. Light either end.)THURSDAY:$0.50 — sorority fine for staying too long in the shower.(Gee whiz, a girl gets mighty dirty polishing amotorcycle!)$0.52 — two packs of Philip Morris — one for Roderigo.{Dear Roderigo!)FRIDAY:$0.26 — pack of Philip Morris — a happy smoke for ahappy day. Yesterday Roderigo broke with thelast of his girls, and today he is mine, all mine!$8.57 — new dogfish for zoology. (I was dissecting adogfish in zoology when I happened to look out thewindow and see Roderigo riding by with MaryAnn Beasley on his buddy seat. I got so upset Ithrew the dogfish at them.)SATURDAY:$2.59 — a carton of Philip Morris, one pack for me, therest for Roderigo. (I was foolish to be angry aboutMary Ann. Roderigo explained that she meantnothing to him—just helping him with English lit.Similarly, Grace Krovney is helping him withSpanish, Betsy Pike with econ, Mazda Notkin withpsych, Lola Tweet with phys ed, etc. The least hecan do is give them all Philip Morrises.)Well, mom and dad, you can see how expensive college is.Send money.... Love and kisses, Zelda May. ©Max Shulman. 1957The price may vary from place to place, but Philip Morriscontinues to be a natural smoke that daunts no purse, howeversmall. It is made in regular and long size by the sponsors ofthis column, and is ignitable at either end.facts about this revolutionary university-tested method, send $2.00 for54 page fact-filled, illustrated instruction booklet: “Sleep-Learning—Its Theory, Application & Technique”. Tells how to make device fromradios, phonos, recorders etc. Where to buy assembled units and pre¬recorded lessons and self-help psychological courses...plus hundredsof time saving hints. Satisfaction is guaranteed. Sleep-LearningResearch Association, P. O. Box 610-CP Omaha, Nebraska.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Aprill 2, 1957Coming events on quadranglesFriday, April 12Conference Student Forum sponsored,with guests from other colleges. IdaNoyes hall, 8:30 am-5 pm.Le Cercle Francais, Danse et Musique,Rochelle Katzan et Jon Soule, 4 pm,Ida Noyes library.Lecture, "The paramagnetism of livingmatter from the viewpoint of infor¬mation theory”; Maximo Valentlnuzzl,4:30 pm. 5747 Drexel ave.Lecture: "Studies in chemical embry¬ology,” Dr. Heinz Herrman, depart¬ment of pediatrics, U of Coloradomedical center. Zoology club, 4:30 pm.Zoology 14.English class, beginning and Intermedi¬ate, Int. house, 4:30-6:30 pm.Vesper Service: Thorndike Hilton chapel,7 pm, sponsored by Lutheran stu¬dents.Supper and talk: Chapel house. Lu¬theran students, supper at 6 pm (50cents), talk, "World Lutheranism” byPastor Teske at 7:30 pm.NS A elections, 8 am-5 pm, counting7:30 pm at Ida Noyes. Come and bringyour friends: radio broadcast of re¬sults, 7:30 pm, WUCB.Lecture, “The Impact of Existentialismon French letters,” Reverend FatherMartin Jarrett-Kerr, 7:30 pm, Swiftcommon room."Semantics and Contemporary Life.” aseries of lectures on "Advertising asa Creator of Symbolic Meanings” byPierre Martlneau, director of researchand marketing, Chicago Tribune. 7:45pm, 19 s. LaSalle st.Science lecture: "The evolution of thestars,” Bengt Stromgren, Sewell L.Avery distinguished service professorand chairman of the department ofastronomy and director of the Yerkesand McDonald observatories. One ofa series on “The creation of life andthe universe,” Mandel, 8 pm."Spring Benefit for Room ScholarshipFund,” "Gilbert and Sullivan filmbiography and the Hyde Park h. s. aeappella choir. Proceeds wiir go forscholarships at Int. house. Int. house.8 pm, 50 cent donation.Rlackfriars: "Gamma Delta Iota,” 8:30pm, Mandel hall. $1, $1.25, $1.50.Hillel Fireside: "Freud's view of Moses,”a discussion by Professor Joseph Schwab, natural sciences, UC College,8:30 pm. Sabbath service at 7:45 pm.Saturday, April 13Student Forum, the end of a three-dayconference of debates with otherschools, 8:30 am-12 noon. Ida Noyeshall.Outdoor painting and drawing class;anyone interested sign up with Free¬man Schoolcraft at Lexington hail.Supplies are free, 9 am at Lexington.English class; beginning, Intermediate.10-12 am, Int house.Radio Broadcast; choral music by theUC choir on "The Sacred Note,”WBBM-CBS, 10:15 am.“New World,” the UC radio show: "Theart of helping people,” Edward W.Rosenheim Jr., moderator. 10:35 am,WMAQ.Bach Singers: rehearsal, 1:30 pm atChapel house, 5810 Woodlawn ave.Madrigal Singers; 3 pm at Ida Noyeshall, rehearsal. 5615 S. Woodlawn.Lecture and discussion, "Pain and suf¬fering—for me?” Dr. Theodore Switz.Brent house, 7:30 pm.Lecture: “The evolution of human na¬ture," Dr. W. C. Halstead, experiment¬al psychologist at Billings hospital.Charming club, 1174 e. 57th st.. 8 pm.Supper: Brent house, 5540 Woodlawnave, at 6 pm, sponsored by Canter¬bury assn. Donation 50 cents.Coffee hour and record concert, 10-12pm at Int. house. Same Tuesdays andThursdays.Monday, April 15Camera club meeting, plans for exhibit,in Eckhart 202 at 7:30 pm.Film: Mr. Roberts, at Int. house assem¬bly hall, 8 pm (45 cents).Meeting of Alpha Phi Omega with theadoption of by-laws and committeereports taking precedence, at 8 pm,in Ida Noyes.Sunday, April 14 Tuesday, April 16Communion Service: Bond chapel, spon¬sored by the Canterbury club; break¬fast at Swift commons (35 cents),following.Roman Catholic Masses, 8:30. 10, 11 amat DeSales house. The blessing andprofession of the palms. 8:30 am.Lutheran communion service, 10 am atHilton chapel.English class, 2-4 pm, for advancedstudents. Int house.Carillon concert, arrangement of elevenchorales on St. Matthew Passion.St. Matthew Passion by Bach with theUC choir and members of the Chi¬cago Symphony orchestra. 3 pm atRockefeller Memorial chapel, ticketsfor $l-$2.Lecture: “The scope of organized Catho¬lic action,” Reverend F. R. Woofel,Calvert club, 4:30 pm, 5735 Universityave.Glee Club; rehearsal at Ida Noyes, 4:30pm.Discussion: “Which way peace,” Porterfellowship, 5810 Woodlawn ave, 6 pm.Quaker Student Fellowship; supper at6 pm (35 cents and discussion at 7pm); “Further plans to support Koin-onia community in its stand on inter¬racial brotherhood.” Qviaker house. Lecture series, “How decisions are madein foreign politics,” Count de Bour-bon-Busset in Social Sciences 122 at4:30 pm.Canterbury lecture. “Pain and suffering—for me?” Second of a five-part se¬ries “The Christian encounter." Sup¬per at 6 pm at Brent house. 5540Woodlawn (50 cents).Seder: Student-faculty seder at Hillel,6 pm, $2 for members, $2.50 for oth¬ers. Reservations necessary.Concert band rehearsal, full ensemble at7 pm in Mandel hall.English class, advanced students. 7-9pm at Int. house, also held on Thurs¬days.Business meeting of the Rocket societyand lecture on "New engineering ma¬terials.” also election of officers andshowing of films. 7:30 pm in Eckhart202.Life drawing class, in Lexington 210 at7:30 pm. materials supplied. 50 centsmodeling fee.Madrigal Singers rehearsal, 7:30 pm inIda Noyes Hall.Introducing the Polish club, everyonewelcome to its first meeting in IdaNoyes hall at 7:30 pm for a discussionof no—■•ose and plans. Lecture: "The Hlttites and Lviwians; theearliest known Indo-European cul¬tures (with reference to recent Britishexcavations ir. Western Turkey)”—R. A. Crossland, lecturer in ancienthistory at King’s College, universityof Durham. Social Sbiences 122 at8 pm.Lecture series, “The nature of man andsin,” this one on "The structure ofthe Christian faith.” Woodlawn house,58th and Woodlawn, 8 pm, $1 for theseries.Coffee hour at Gates Hall from 10-12,all invited.Premed club film: "seizure, diagnosis,therapy of epileptic,” Abbott 133, 3:30pm.Wednesday, April 17Intervarsity Christian fellowship lunch¬eon discussion, 12:30 noon, Ida Noyeshall.Hillel discussion, “Conflict of idea* inmodern Jewish thought,” Rabbi Mau¬rice Pekarsky, 3:30 pm, Hillel house,5715 Woodlawn ave.Hillel lecture, "The US. UN and theMiddle East.” Hans Morgenthau. pro¬fessor, department of political science.3:30 pm, Hillel house.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel, James R. Lawson, earilloneur.Canterbury evensong, Bond chapel, 5:05pm.Roman Catholic lenten services. De-Sales house. 5735 University ave., 7:30pm.Jazz concert, George Shearing and sex¬tet, sponsored bv the Jazz club andWUS, Mandel hall, 8 pm, free.Science fiction club, 8 pm. Ida Noyes.Country dancers, 8 pmy Ida Noyes.Social dance class, Int. house, 50 centsmales, free females. 8-9 pm.Int. house slide show, “a new look at thenorthwest,” 8 pm, homeroom, Int.house.Prc-'-ed club meeting, laboratory, "mic¬roscopy,” west stands, 4:30 pm.Thursday, April 18Breasted lecture, "The excavations un¬der st. Peter’s.” 8:30 pm. Breasted hall,John B. 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Seesimple rules in box below . . . and send inyour entry TODAY! ^ Student Zionist organization, all interested in going to Israel either summerstudy group or year’s study abro idare Invited to dfctend, guest speakerStan Greenberg, Hillel house, 4 30 nm’Chicago Review staff meeting, Reynoldsclub, room 304, 4:30 pm.TV show “History around us,” Channel11, 7-7:30 pm.Comm uniration club, lecture, “Problemsof face-to-face communication,” Har¬old J. Leavitt, professor, school ofbusiness, 7:30-9 pm. Soc Sci 106Graduate library school club, “Crisis inmass literacy.” Prof Reuel Denney8 pm, library, Ida Noyes.League for Civil liberties discussion“Academic freedom and academic re-sponsbllity, Harvey O’Conner, nationalchairman of emergency civil libertiescommittee, 8 pm, Soc sci 201.Green hall coffee hour. 9-11 pmUC TV program, “All things conud-ered,” 9:30 pm, channel 11.Four servicesfor Holy Weekat RockefellerSpecial Holy Week serviceshave been announced by Rev¬erend John B. Thompson,dean of Rockefeller chapel. Thefour services, featuring sermonsby Dean Thompson, will be heldApril 15 through 19 at 7:30 pm.Topic of the sermons will be in¬terpretations of the word koin-onia; ‘‘Christ and community” onApril 15, ‘‘The fellowship of suf¬fering” on April 16, “The com¬munion of joy” on April 17, and"The sharing of bread and wine”on Maundy Thursday, a day < [holy communion.The community Good Fridayservice will be hold at 12 noon onApril 19, sponsored by the Chapeland the council of churches inHyde Park, Kenwood, and Woodlawn.The Reverend Theodore A. G;!],Jr., managing editor of *he t'hris-tian Century, will preach on (hesubject ‘‘The greatest treason” atthe Chapel services on Palm Sun¬day, April 14.LOAN INSURANCEPENSION INSURANCEPhone or WriteJoseph H. Aaron, '27 !► 13 5 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060!Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery ServiceMODEL CAMERAHyde Pork's most completephoto and hobby shopExport modelsNSA Discount1312 E. 55th IIY 3-9259H ALSTED OUTD°°RCHILDREN .FREE- Phono WA. 8-7979Said a popular B.M.O.C.:“The New Crush-proof Boxis for me!It closes so tight,Keeps my L&M’s right, KappcSaid a Plinamed Jack.“I go for the L&M Pack!It’s so handy to tote,In my shirt or my coat,EASY CONTEST RULESFIRST PRIZETrip around theworld in 79 daysNEXT 50PRIZESPolaroid “Highlander” -Land cameras(Contest void wherever illegal)01957, Liggett A Myers Tobacco1.2.3. Finish the limerick about whicheverL&M pack suits you best.Send your last line with the wrapperor box from the L&M pack you prefer(a facsimile will do). . . along with yourname and address, to L&M, P. O. Box1635, New York 46, N. Y.Contest restricted to college students.Entries must be postmarked no laterthan midnight, April 30, 1957.Entries will be judged on literary ex¬pression, originality, sincerity and apt¬ness of thought. Decision of our judgesis final. Winners will be notified by mail.Co ESSANESS WONDERFULFAMILY THEATREEvery night is likevacation timeFRIDAY NIGHTisCOLLEGE NITEFINE MOVIES"BEST EATS"L Get Full, Exciting FlavorPlus the Pure White Miracle TipModern mlmBMiveAmerica’s fastest-growing cigarette YOU *ARE ELIGIBLESend Today * •for FREE XProfessional and ^ *Businessman'sWholesale DiamondBrochure. Write Jackson sDiamond Brokers, Dept. I644 Broadway, Gary,*lnd.April 12, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7io MaroonPhysicist Gamow explains Chica9'theories of universe origin .^l®®!!!!,®,?®Servicesby Harold BernhardtPresenting the second lecture in the “Life and the universe” series Friday night at Man-del hall, George Gamow, professor of theoretical physics at the University of Colorado andauthor of such popular books as The Birth and Death of the Sun, introduced a capacity au- french—ir Interested, choose fromdience to some of the intricacies of non-Euclidean geometry. -conjjrsmw to prep** ,ou tor top,"In plane geometry the angles of a triangel equal 180 degrees; in other geometries they _,:“ac"u’8: ,n r^ular H 3- an<1don't " f^nirtmir ctoITn lUnetent^ thin di ffnnnnnn hi, nt.Mn» n l.l« „1_1 3 1 xl Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265Wanted— UC PhD hood and Doctoralgown for 6 ft., 180 lb. man. KE 8-3491.For rentGamow stated. He illustrated this difference by showing on a blackboard how the —accelerated work for ma and PhD vJmefntrtoScamDU8°int^ouseieictsPhone. , , ' - x ? 1 - - readlnar exams BU 8-9424. Greenfield.sum of the angles of a triangledrawn on the surface of a Correction of Hubble’s work dense state five billion years agosphere would!*Targer than l<,ad to increasing the estimated and has been expanding everjSO degrees, while those drawn distance of the Andromeda galaxyon a concave or “saddle” surface and the age of the earth by twowould come to less than 180 de- and one-half times, this lastgrees. bringing astronomical observa- U1U11UU^Although it is possible to de- tion into agreement with geologi- for Mandel, and to a more limitedtermine the shape of space by caj estimates of the earth’s age, extent, for Kent. Lectures to-measuring the angles formed by continued. “Instead of being night, April 26, and May 24, will rife insurance with a “blueprint forihrec lights.in_ different nebulae, ,„o billion years old the universe, be at Kent, those on April 19, “mSUEthis is a very difficult procedure, than, was formed from a very May 3, 10, and 17 at Mandel.he asserted. “In the case of three Due to unexpectedly large in¬terest, some of the lectures havebeen moved from Kent to Mandel.Single admissions are available reading exams—oral work with young children.NATIVE TEACHER—Call NO 7-6162Light moving and hauling. Reasonablerates. PA 4-2889, PA 4-1706.Hear the world on short waves. Halli-crafter 540A receiver, top condition,guaranteed. Only $65. Call FA 4-9556.CARMENS USED FURNITURE store.Moving and light hauling. 1211 East63rd street. MU 4-8843, MU 4-9003. Two-room apartment, $70 per month.5532 Cornell Avenue.l'i-Room furnished apt. for house¬keeping, reasonable rent. Close to cam¬pus. FA 4-5538.For saleflexible. Call Alfred S. Nathan. FR 2-0400.dimensional space in which weare imbedded and can not get outof. we have to use a ‘ruse’ to seehow things are’.’“Since galaxies are located uni¬formly throughout space, one canconceive the following plan,”Gamow said. “You count the num¬ber of galaxies around us within100.(100,000 light years, then with¬in 200 million, 300 million, and soon. The number of galaxies shouldincrease as the cube of their dis¬tance according to Euclidean geo Wright offers to save Robieby designing CTS building Garrard 98 and 121 and a Heathkit pre¬amp In stock, raring to go. Student dis¬count from Audio Consultant, c/o JeanKwon, Foster 16.Geman tutoring. Dr. Fenge, SO 8-0810.PersonalsFrank Lloyd Wright has madeanother attempt to save the Robiehouse, the house he designed on58th and Wood lawn fifty-oneyears ago.In a phone call to Dr. Arthur C.metry, and if this is not true our McGiffert, Jr., the president ofthe Chicago Theological Semi¬space is not flat,”Positive curvature would indi¬cate spherical or convex spaceand a finite universe; negativecurvature, concave, “saddle sur¬face” space and an infinite uni¬verse. Only 25 years ago, he point¬ed out, Hubble at Mt. Wilson ob¬servatory actually counted andfound that the number of galaxiesincreases less than it shouldlaiclideanly, thus indicating afinite universe.But Hubble made a mistake inassuming that galactic brightnessremains invariant in time, Gamowdeclared, “too risky an assump¬tion, for old stars are dying andnew ones coming into view.” Inaddition.to this, color effects fromstars are of the type that onewould expect in an infinite ex¬panding universe, wherein redlight rays arc “stretched” as thestar moves away from the ob¬server. proposal would need considera¬tion by the seminary’s board,which will probably meet nextweek.Wright visited the Robie houselast month, saying then that itcould be remodeled satisfactorilyfor a relatively low cost. In hisphone call to McGiffert, Wrightnary, owners of the Robie house, offered to submit a plan withinWright offered to design without 30 days, meeting all the semina-charge another building for the ry’s requirements, one that willCTS. The Robie house is current- have “the admiration of thely being used as a CTS dormi- world.” He suggested that thetory. seminary not divide their estab-McGiffert said that Wright’s lishment by crossing Woodlawn. General services and information—Boyd.Rich, Bromberg, Karlin, Green. DO3-1285.Mr. Zoologically and BotanicallyTroubled. After only one hour In ourhouse, your plant has become potted.You dig us? We Dug U. Greenthumb.KB: What about buying a “chair" forthe gods? Art.Q: Come back. The Maroon needs youto put out a FOTA supplement withbells on. Yeah, man, crazy!Wanted—reliable, responsible personfor important evecutive staff positionon the Chicago Maroon. No experiencenecessary. Must know typing. Call Man¬aging editor, Maroon, ext. 3265. GOOD VALUES FOR SALENear University of Chicago53rd and GreenwoodLarge house, big rooms, priced low totmodernization.Co-op near 56th and Kimbark7 rooms, 3 baths, deluxe elevator build¬ing.50th and Kimbark8 rooms, 3 baths, remodeled, modernizedhouse in top condition.49th and KimbarkLarge mansion-type executive home inperfect condition. Rent from coachhouse covers taxes and heating. Goodfinancing.C. W. HOFF & CO., INC.Mrs. Nierman, Weekdays HY 3-2215Sunday and evenings ES 5-1223Royal KMM Standard Typewriter. Goodcondition. Make offer. MI 3-3546.’53 Packard Clipper, 4-dr., P. brake*,overdrive, 1 owner. Call FA 4-8200, Rm.867. after 7 pm.Lost$500 reward. Boxer, male. Born 8,53.Fawn, white front chest. Name “Ike.”Rabies tag No. 160799. Lost Hyde Parkvicinity, May 13, 1956. Absolutely noquestions asked. Call BE 5-8492, between9 and 10 p.m.DUNCANStationers Cr Printers• Office Supplies• Artists' Materials• Mechanical Drawing Equip.1221 East 55th StreetHY 3-4111 MU 4-9024SHORTHANDIN A WEEKS120 WORDS PER MINUTI <&Famous ABC system. Now taught irover 400 cities New day & Eveningclasses start each Monday. Attendfirst class as GUEST. Special SummerClasses for College Students. ALSOthorough, intensive SPEEDTYPINGcourse Use coupon to send for 16-page brochure.SPEEDWRITING SCHOOL37 S. Wabash Financial 6-5471■ Speedwriting School! 37 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago 3. Ill:1 Please send me without obligation( tour 16-page brochure on Bpeed-, writing.j Na«ne_2 Add res a.I -Jity—I phone_ Zone. Who rates what for performanceand smoother riding in the low-priced three? Chevrolet has laidthe answer and the proof onthe line!First, Chevrolet won the AutoDecathlon over every car in itsfield, and over the higher pricedcars that were tested, too. Thisrugged ten-way test (right, below)showed Chevrolet was the champin handling ease, braking, acceler¬ation, passing ability, smooth¬ ness of ride and other drivingqualities you want in a car.Then, Chevy won the PureOil Performance Trophy atDaytona (left, below) as “bestperforming U. S. automobile.”It’s quite a feeling to knowthat you are driving a car thatperforms so well, responds sobeautifully and is so finely built.You feel proud, of course. Butyou also enjoy a surer, smoother,steadier way of going, a keen cat-quick response of power, andthe easiest handling you’ve everexperienced behind a wheel. Justtry this Chevrolet (V8 or Six)and see! I14aChevy showed it's still the champ...at Daytona ...and in the Decathlon!B*Coine in now—get a winning deal on the champion!ENTER CHEVROLET'S $275,000 “LUCKY TRAVELER” CONTEST!Only franchised Chevrolet dealers display this famous trademarkSee Your Authorized Chevrolet Dealer8 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 12, 1957'Easter Song' profits, losesby Shakespeare-like usageby Palmer W. PinneyEaster Song, a play in two acts to be produced by University Theatre during the Fes¬tival of the Arts, will hold special interest for those tired of realistic contemporary Amer¬ican plays about contemporary Americans, and for those curious to see the work of a manwho has a master’s degree in play-writing.The play is the work of James Hatch, 28-year-old graduate student at Iowa State. Itcame to the attention of UT director Marvin Phillips, who was searching for an originalplay to produce during FOTA, Claude Monet exhibitcalled a "revelationthrough the biennial Charles mark of the sixteenth century,E. Sergei drama competition.When Easter Song was disquali¬fied from this year’s competitionbecause it had been produced, atIowa State, Phillips chose to pro¬duce it for a second time.Easter Song will interest thosesated by Lillian Heilman, Tennes¬see Williams, Arthur Miller, Wil¬liam Inge, etc., primarily becausek employs language that mosttheatergoers associate withShakepeare. Blank verse is aug¬mented by involved metaphors,word play, and even couplets atthe end of the scenes. This, besidethe place of the action in Den-UC student hurtLewis R. Robison, UC sociologyStudent, was seriously injured ina fall from a fourth floor windowof International house at 3:30pm, Monday.Robison, a 29-year-old studentfrom Arrlington, California, suf¬fered a fractured skull and brok¬en arms. According to his phy- distinguishes Easter Song frommost American plays written inthe past ten years.The language will also prove anannoyance, because it often has ahollow, self - consciously Shake¬spearean sound. When the hero’swife, Kie, says, “Nothing is noth¬ing and begets nothing,” the audi¬ence is as likely to consider theplaywright’s knowledge of KingLear as the fact that Kie wondersabout he relation between herhusband, Soren, and Davida, thewhore in Niborg village. Or whenSoren asks his servant woman,Bodil, whether he or his fathersired Davida’s child, she answersby echoing his questions, another writing. Hatch has chosen a plotwhich depends upon the sort ofmyth which critics such as Ken¬neth Burke look for in poeticworks. This is the myth of thescapegoat, the individual symbol¬ically loaded with a community’sguilt and killed to destroy theguilt.In the case of Easter Song, thescapegoat proves to be Soren, whois the town cleric, and Davida.Both are buried alive at the cli¬max of the play. In addition tosuggesting Christ’s crucifixion,the deaths serve to bring rain inthe fashion of homeopathic magicwhich James Frazer defines inThe Golden Bough. The life-givingrain comes through the burial of //“Paintings by "Claude Monet,” an exhibition at the ArtInstitute this month, is one of those singular occasions whichimmediately provokes the spectator into asking why it hasnever been thought of before. For the first exhibit of theArt Institute’s entire collection of 30 canvases by the impres¬sionist master does not seem merely a good idea, but arevelation. Except for hisearliest period, all the com¬plex stages of Monet’s careerare represented and offer an un¬matched view of the evolution ofhis creative personality.Work is “genial”If the well known and much ap¬preciated pre-impressionist works, separate images began to dissolvein his work. The difference be¬tween the famous “Old St. LazareStation,” 1877, and the Haystackseries of 1891, or the two Vetheuilpaintings, reveals Monet’s willing,ness to sacrifice not only the ob¬served identities of things, but re¬familiar Shakespearean device h'hmg things. As Sara says, ‘The “The Beach at Saint Adress” and session into depth as well. The“Argenteuil-sur-Seine” provide a “Vetheuil” paintings, for instance,genial encounter for the eyes, the resemble marvelous iridescentnewly acquired very late “Irises tapestries. They have a polv-by the Pond” spectacularly cap- , _ , ... Jtures them. Between theSe chrome splondor’ hke lhe scenesachievements, the former withtheir broadly felt surfaces andhigh - keyed palettes, the latter day than it does to the desire ofwith its pulverized color and hec¬tic animation, lies a constantly of London, which bears less rele¬vance to an individual time ofwhich Soren objects to in Bodil as“This stupid parrot’s echo.”Comparison with Shakespeare,although invited by Hatch’s choiceof language, is of course unfair.The central fault of Easter Songhas nothing to do with the lan¬guage which separates it frommost other contemporary Ameri- life we bury must be strong andnew like the corn god is himself.”The fault of Hatch's choice,which seems to be a result of hisliterary knowledge, is that sucha myth has no inherent morality,and that he has not injectedenough into it. SdTen’s desire toknow if he is guilty is causeless self-transforming vision.Has looseness of touchSuch a painting from the 1880’sas “Cliff Walk, Retreat” has alooseness of touch and the casual- the artist to attain a transparent,yet ambiguous resonance of color.How fully abstract Monet’s im¬petus was, even if perhaps, un¬consciously abstract, can be seen,of course, in the “Irises by theRosaenhairBRob!fonh0fsPi,oM the “ Pbut is probably related °™.?baracter. Ascritical list and is recovering. to its author’s degree in play-*2y _ •//' 30 years inIT&Vltt & . . . Hyde ParkTV and Radio — Sales & Service1 IB I East 55th Street Hide Park 3-<3000Specialists in Servicing Hi-Fi & FMReconditioned FM Sets Available10% discount on repairs brought in with this coupon a consequence the play is tempo¬rarily exciting, but not a sourceof continuing thoughtful emotion.To Sara’s questions, “Is there nota memory of these rites? Do younot hear your father’s chant, sincethe world began, singing thissame glad and somber song?”the answer is, day after readingthe play, no! ness of composition which are Pond.” Not a perfect work—thefully impressionist. Compared to foliage is rather inconsistent init, a work ten years earlier, “The the context of the overall treat-Artist’s Garden at Argenteuil” is ment—it nevertheless distills amore tectonic, more densely maximum vibration of hue.Full of surprisesDespite such unfortunate fea-really intimate color nuancing oI “ ,‘.h/ yery,,iTappropria!ethe later canvas dirty gllt frames and the completeme later canvas. lack f documentation on the newMonet so minutely followed exhibition, so full ofthrough the logical consequences happy surpriscs and old favorites,of the Impressionist subdivision . „ „ .. ’e i . ,, , , . is a sparkling and memorableof colors that light and shadow eventbecame less specific and tangible,massed, and more uniform in tex¬ture. But though it has the sameatmospheric delicacy, it lacks theMax KozloffPAINT & HARDWARE CO.Wallpaper - Tools - Houseware - Plumbing1154-58 E. 55th St. HY 3-3840UC Discount <<<iMovers and Light Hauling <<,<<BORDONEVI 6-9832AS NAVIGATOR OR PILOTGET ONTHE TEAMTHAT DEFENDSAMERICAGraduate—Then Fly The flying U. S. Air Force is a team of men who command the aircraft and menwho plan the attack. These are the pilots and navigators, both equally important tothe defense of America. *You, as a young man of intelligence and sound physical health, may join thisselect group in the world’s most exciting and rewarding adventure. Your trainingwill stand you in good stead, whatever your future plans may be — and you’ll beearning over $6,000 a year 18 months after training.*If you are between 19 and 26% years of age, investigate your opportunities as anAviation Cadet in the U. S. Air Force. Priority consideration is now being given tocollege graduates. For details, write: Aviation Cadet Information, P. O. Box 7608,Washington 4, D. O. *Based on pay of married 1st Lieutenant onflight status with 2 years' service or more...U. S. AIR FORCE AVIATION CADET PROGRAMBest buy!—best try theFLORSHEIMLotop*Once they're on, you’llagree—here's today’s numberone style with finer fit and feel.•None genuine without this trademarkGEORGESMENS SHOP“Smart Attire lor Men**1035 E. 55th Cor. Greenwood hyde park theatrelake pork at 53rd NO 7-9071Student Rate 50c all performancesStarting Friday. April 12lose FerrerDEAN JAGGER, KEENAN WYNN, ED. WYNNthe GREAT MAN" SUPER SMOOTH! Only Viceroy smooths each puffthrough 20,000 filters made from pure cellulose-soft, snow-white, natural!"A Corrosive, Cynical Comment on TV-Rcdio-Row. The GREAT MANpounces quickly on its subject motter and from first image to last,never lets go. Directed with vigor and played with bounce. Well worthseeing! — TIME MAGAZINE"It will remind you or CitizenKone. A smoshingly brutal andobsorbing expose . . . may turnup in the year-end poll of bests."—Brosley Crowther, N Y. TIMES "The story of o stinker with noscruples . . . o stinging portroitof network operations and of themen who wield the power in theelectronic world."—VARIETYIn a single scene lasting just 6 minutes ond 7 seconds, ED WYNN,the man whom the world calls the Perfect Fool, ploys o poignent dra¬matic role thot moy well win him on Academy Award next year . . .that has already brought him unanimous acclaim from the critics:"Most appealing is ED WYNN who ploys his role with skill and charm!"(NEW YORKER) "... winningly played by ED WYNN" (TIME)"... Notable performances by Dean Jogger, Keenan Wynn ond EDWYNN, who is oddly touching." (SAT. REVIEW of LIT.) "ED WYNNneed never play the button again, so good he is os the pious ownerof a small New England radio station who gave the Greet Mon hisstort." (VARIETY)— ond —“THE BARRETTS of WIMPOLE ST.”"A Sumptuous, literote theatre piece with JOHN GIELGUD and JEN¬NIFER JONES os the Barretts, ond BILL (Wee Geordie) TRAVERSos Robert Browning. Handsomely photographed in its European localein Cinemascope.The film's special distinction is in John Gielgud's icy portrait of theproud, domineering, hypocritical Edward Barrett, the father. He createsmenace with the flick of on eye, o curl of the lips, reveals depths ofshocking sensuality in a single kiss!"—SAT. REVIEW of LITERATURE PANCHO GONZALES’ ADVICECl9^7. Brown & Williamson Tobacco CoTp.Well, I’ve got to drag this and cut out; keepcool, cat. . . . Hey, Aristot, what’s the fire water?. . . Hemlock!! . . . You’re not going to drink that,are you? Don’t man, it’s slurpy, but it makes youstiff in the morning. Oh come-on, dad, things can’tbe that bad! . . . Hold it, pops! . . . DON’T!!Hip cats dig Pelvisby Howard Smith and Dwight Hoxie. . . and when Elvis walked on stage, it was piercing, man, piercing. No foolin’, every¬one was all shook up, and when he started singing, man ... they were beyond help; strictlyfrom hunger! That gold suit of his . . . cool man, cool. But all those birdy chicks . . . crazy!Jumping up and down, holding their temples, screaming, biting their nails . . . real wild.What do you mean it sounds “orgiastic,” man? You just don’t dig the subtleties. Andwhat’s this gravel about “The Pelvis”? Come on, dad, get off my toe. Those views areoff-beat, cat; do you dig me, or shall I culti¬vate it for you?In the first place, man, when you’ve gotthe beat, his singing is too much, i.e., it’s the most!Once you’re with it, it’s wild; “It’s not vulgah,” assome newspapers make him drawl (clue if fromme, dad, he has just the slightest accent). Besides,grab this, if he hints more directly of sex thangroaners before him, is that really bad? Creeps,man, even you dig being an individual! PeopleIhink and dig sex anyhow, or aren’t you a “Freud¬ian”? (Hmm, or aren’t you human?)Also, cat, how about this music being "unre¬fined”; is that what you call it? Man, you’re bug¬ging me again. His type of jive ish’t heavy, man,but it’s got movements, plenty of movements. Ordo all “respectable” movements have to be fromBach? Say dad, what do you mean by this “freeexpression in a free society” song you’ve beensinging? Does it means that if some cats dig thisbrand of jive, you’ll allow them?And dig this, man, how can you call him a'hick truck driver"? You’ve never met the guy,and you’re the one that doesn’t make hasty opin¬ions! Can’t cool-cats have sideburns? (Or are theyreally worse than those common “intellectual’sbeards” around here?)He’s not droolin with schoolin, but he’s not afour-corner man, either. Besides being very polite,the cat’s got a real cool head .on his shoulders,man; cool. His voice is soft, man, and his handsare clean! (Of course, he’s not so busy at becom¬ing an intellectual that he can’t keep well-groomedand hygenic!)And before I lift my carpet, swallow this: if heever went to college, he’d like to go to “Ole Miss”and play left-end on their football team! Yeah,man. I thought that’d zonk ya. I suppose I should¬n't have said that, but you think he’s greeby any¬how. ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Bcoks — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651/^h/icAoTENNISCHAM PION,SAYS :Editor's note: The above arti¬cle was written by two culture-minded UC males. It is hopedthat similar treatises on thisnew art form will appear soonIn these pages. Ech!Portrait StylistBlack and White andDirect ColorPhotographyBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. Elvis at press conferencephoto by Hoxte^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiii^International HoH.se Movies || Assembly Hall, 8 p.m. |= Mondoy, April 15 — 45c — Mr. Roberts (American) EE^IllllllllllltlllllllilllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllillilllllltllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllUlU9Des choses qui arrivent.. .L’an dernier, la Sun Life a paye 121 reclama¬tions au deces en vertu de polices en vigueurdepuis moins d’un an — cependant, chacun desdetenteurs de polices decedes remplissaient lesconditions de sante requises de la Compagnie.Cela peut vous arriver; protegez les votres parl'assurance-vie.Representative RALPH J. WOOD, JR., 481 N. LaSalle Chicago 2, IllinoisFR 2-2390 RE 1-0855 ’VICEROY HASTHE SMOOTHESTTASTE OF All!'SMOOTH! From the finest tobacco grown, Viceroy selects onlythe Smooth Flavor Leaf,;, Deep-Cured golden brown for extra smoothness t10 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 12, 1957Culture VultureFOTA time is almost here.Singing groups are rehearsing,painters are finishing up theirentries for the all student exhibi¬tion, and UTers are polishing offa production. The rumor is pass¬ing around that all but one couplewill go to the Beaux Arts ball as a circus sideshow, and that pair,attired as UC students, will winthe grand prize for originality.Sports car fans are polishingtheir cars for Concours d’Ele-gance, jazzmen are waiting forword on Le Jazz Hot, folk singin’people are makin’ ready for ahootenanny, and the Culture Vul¬ture is going mad.See everything at the Festivalof the Arts.Non-FOTAhappeningsGeorge Shearing UT TryoutsOpen tryouts for a spring To¬night at 8:30 presentation havebeen announced. All students reg¬istered in the University are in¬vited to read tomorrow at noonor Monday at 7 pm in the Rey¬nolds club theatre for parts inone of five short-plays that willbe presented May 10, 11 and 12.Productions will be directed andproduced by students, as was thecase in the extremely successfulregular series which took placein January. St. Matthew PassionRockefeller choir, directed byRichard Vikstrom and assisted bymembers of the Chicago sym¬phony will perform the tradition¬al Palm Sunday offering at 3 pmthis Sunday. General admissionis $2, and students tickets areavailable today only at Reynoldsclub desk for half price.Jazz concertWednesday at 8 pm GeorgeShearing, internationally knownjazz pianist, will appear with hisquintet in Mandel. Shearing issaid to be “one of the most ar¬ticulate exponents of the cooljazz of the modern post-bebopschool” according to a jazz fan,who adds that the rhythms ofmodern jazz are still African, butthe harmonies show the influenceof Bartok and Schoenberg. So ifyou can afford $2 if you’re not astudent, a dollar and a half if youare, go to hear an exceptionallypopular jazz musician. The Shear¬ing concert is being sponsored atUC by the Jazz club and WorldUniversity Service. If you can’tget there, read about it in the Maroon next Friday.BlackfriarsIf you read Culture Vulture be¬fore you read page 1, grand. In.this case, turn to page 1 and en¬joy the story of the revival of agreat UC tradition, the Black¬friars show. And if you want tosee the show, it’s on tonight andtomorrow in Mandel, through thedoor with the green neon sign.Folk singin’Saturday, April 20, in MandelMartha Schlamme sings underSRP auspices. Regular folk songprices, and regular folk songpacked house probably.Art exhibitThe Rennaissance society gal¬leries in Goodspeed hall for therest of the month will containpaintings, drawings, sculpture,prints and pottery by EdmundGiesbert, James Gilbert, RolandGinzel, Harold Haydon, FreemanSchoolcraft and William Tallonof the art departmentOff Campus . . .Season endsToday is your last chance tohear a Chicago symphony concert“What's it like to he inBUSINESS ADMINISTRATIONAT IBM?”Two years ago, Robert Everett asked himself this question. Today, atAdministrative Assistant to the Divisional Controller, Bob reviews hisexperience at IBM and gives some pointers that may be helpful to you intaking the first, most important step in your business career."What’s it like to work for a big, ex¬panding company like IBM? Whatwoul4 I be asked to do? Would I getahead fast?” These were some of thequestions that filled Bob Everett’smind as he faced up to the big prob¬lem, “How can I put my M.B.A.training to the best possible use?”Bob came directly to IBM fromCornell in July, 1955, with an M.B.A.in finance. He was immediately as¬signed, with twenty-nine otherM.B.A.’s, to a Business Adminis¬tration training program. This sixmonths’ program comprised generalorientation in the entire IBM organi¬zation, a six weeks’ field trip to the Filtering out the “hot" projectsPromoted the same yearBy December of the same year, Bobwas promoted to his present job —Administrative Assistant to the Con¬troller of the Data Processing Divi¬sion. “The first function of anAdministrative Assistant,” says Bob,“is to filter out the ‘hot’ projectsfrom those that can be handled later.You follow through on projects as¬signed by the controller and keep Why Bob picked IBMBob made a careful study of existingopportunities before selecting IBMfor his career. He had a dozen campusinterviews; took nine company tours.IBM’s M.B.A. program interestedhim—because, as he says, ‘‘It gaveme a chance to review the entirecompany before starting an actualline assignment.” He was intriguedby the increasing use of data process¬ing equipment in finance and he knewthat IBM was a leader in this field.Salary-wise, he found IBM betterthan many, but it was companygrowth potential that motivated hischoice. ‘‘Opportunity certainly existsDeveloping a new *y*temSyracuse branch office and severalmonths at the Poughkeepsie manu¬facturing facilities. There he gained afunctional knowledge of IBM ma¬chines, particularly the 70Q series ofgiant electronic computers.His training completed by January,1956, Bob was assigned to the MethodsDepartment as a Methods Analyst atIBM World Headquarters in NewYork City. Here, with the cooperationof operating department personnel, heworked on the development of systemsand procedures for the various Divi¬sion areas. In addition to normalmethods techniques used in develop¬ing systems and procedures, he studiedthese projects in terms of possiblemachine application for either IBMhigh-speed giant computers or con¬ventional accounting equipment. Oneproject was the study of the MachineOrdering procedure with the objectiveof simplifying and mechanizing it andat the same time improving the sourceinformation to provide for a morecomplete analysis of sales and pro¬duction backlog. “Opportunity certainly exist* at IBM"at IBM,” he says. ‘‘Growth factorsKeeping the boss postedhim posted on their progress.” Bob’snew position affords a pleasant diver¬sification of work: charting divisionalresponsibilities of the controller’s func¬tion ... plans for decentralization ...costs of regionalization ... summariz¬ing key financial and statistical infor¬mation for presentation to top man¬agement.Bob points out that there are manyareas in Business Administration atIBM for men with an M.B.A. or aB.S. in accounting: corporate, gen¬eral, and factory accounting; internalaudit; methods; payroll and taxes.Administrative and managementpositions constantly open up at WorldHeadquarters, IBM’s 188 branchoffices, many plants and laboratories. alone will account for many new exec¬utive positions. A second factor is th«trend toward decentralization, whichalso creates new jobs. These factors,plus IBM’s ‘promote-from-within*policy, add up to real opportunity.”IBM hopes that this message will help togive you some idea of what it’s like to bein Business Administration at IBM.There are equal opportunities for E.E.’s,M.E.’s, physicists, mathematicians andLiberal Arts majors in IBM’s many divi¬sions-Research, Product Development,Manufacturing Engineering, Sales andSales Assistance. Why not drop in anddiscuss IBM with your Placement Direc¬tor? He can supply our latest brochureand tell you when IBM will next inter¬view on your campus. Meanwhile, ourManager of College Relations, Mr. P. H.Bradley, will be happy to answer your q uop¬tions. Write him at IBM, Room 10001.590 Madison Ave., New York 22, ft. ^IBM INTERNATIONALBUSINESS MACHINESCORPORATIONDATA PROCESSING ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS TIME EQUIPMENT MILITARY PRODUCTS this spring. Even if you’ve missedthe rest this year, you’ll haveheard a good sample of sym¬phony music if you go today.Resident director Fritz Reinerwill end his season with the Chi¬cago symphony’s first perform¬ance of a work by Riegger, DanceUT director Marv Phillips relaxesRhythms; Stravinsky’s Petrouch-ka suite, and Brahms’ First Sym¬phony. Concert 6tarts at 2 pm,and students can gain admit¬tance to the gallery for 65 centsup to the last minute.Studebaker theaterMolnar’s “The Guardsman” con¬tinues to run at Chicago’s reper-tiore theater venture. Studenttickets are obtainable for someperformances at UC’s Universitytheatre office. Coming soon: Clif¬ford Odets’ Flowering Peach.Friunpkin GalleryWorks of the German expres¬sionist Emil Nolde are on viewduring April at the near northgallery, located at 152 east Su¬perior.Thirty canvasses by ClaudeMonet (1840-1926) have beenbrought together for the firsttime and hung in two newly ren¬ovated galleries. All of them be¬long to the Institute’s collectionof Monets, which is one of thethree greatest in the world. Many,purchased in recent years havebeen hidden away until this show.UC med studentdiscovered deadKenneth Rutman, a seniorUC medical student was founddead in his room Wednesday.Rutman, 26, held a bachelor'sdegree from Rutgers university,was in the upper third of hisclass and was to have receivedhis medical degree in June.Reportedly, a letter from Rut-man’s fiance, Miss Annette Sei-vice, ,was found nearby. She hadwritten from Florida, telling himthat her parents were opposed totheir marriage on religiousgrounds.'ImaginftIMOVING DAY Wnothing to do/'\It's all PRf-PLANNIDOur experts “blueprint" every de¬tail in advance-—fake all the workand worry off your hand*. Andwe move you in a ©Sanitized.Van! No extra eo*t.PETERSONMOVING & STORAGE CO.55th b Ellis AvenueButterfield 8 6711iimnApril 12,1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Sports columnAthletes on roadUC’s baseball squad began “shaping up” this week bybattling Chicago Teacher’s college to a draw in the ninthinning when the game was called. The boys certainly seemedto have been taking to heart the lesson they were taught*a few weeksago at the hands of Illinois Normal.Trackmen busyTrackmen are in for a bit of road work in the next few weeks. Theywill be out of town for the next three week-ends (this should leavethem with a few free week-ends in May, when their minds will turnto studying!). Tomorrow the varsity will journey to Peoria to com¬pete in the Bradley relays, the next Saturday will find several ofthe varsity men joining the track club on a trip to Columbus forthe Ohio relays, and the following week-end will find the varsity inKalamazoo* Michigan on Friday, and Albion on Saturday.Golfers splitChicago’s golfers lost to Wabash 11%-6V4 and beat Indiana StatelH4-3% to come out in the middle of a triangular match held atCrawfordsville on April 2. Low man for Chicago was Bob Zirkle,who shot an 81# Other members of the varsity are Wendell Maru-moto, Rex Styzens, David Mertz, Bernard Hanson, and Don Lusk.The next match will be tomorrow, a triangular with Illinois Techand Loyola at Longwood country club.Intramurals hereSeveral intramural tournaments are on schedule for the springquarter. Entries are now being taken for tennis single and doubles,golf, and horseshoe pitching. Persons wishing to enter these tourna¬ments may do so by signing the entry lists on the bulletin board inBartlett gym.Team competition for organizations in softball, tennis, and horse¬shoes will get under way April 22. Entry blanks for these sportsmay be obtained from the Intramural office in Bartlett.Fraternities and college houses . . . take note!- George KarcazesUC netmen shut outUC’s netmen last Saturday lost all nine matches to NotreDame, one of the toughest teams in the country. This wasChicago’s toughest match of the year and also their firstreal test of strength this sea-UCer winsBell grantRobert E. Baron, a student inthe physical sciences, has wonone of the twenty university grad¬uate fellowships given by BellTelephone laboratories.Each fellowship carries a grantof $2000 to the fellow and an ad¬ditional $2000 to cover tuition,fees, and other costs to the insti¬tution where he elects to study.Baron is a member .of Phi BetaRegal Presents the “Natural Look”In Ivy AuthenticsSpring Features:100% Worsted Suits. ;. .$59.50Shetland Sport Coats $45Polished Cotton Suits .. $29.50• Arrow Shirts• Dobbs Hats• Cooper UnderwearAsIc about our “U.C.A.99(University Charge Account)Open til 9 pm, Thurs, Fri, SatJoe Richards' STORE Varsity edges track dub;Tritone, Weaver scoreUC’s varsity trackmen edged out a victory against the UC track club last Saturday, inthe season’s first outdoor track meet held on Stagg field. The score was varsity: 67, trackclub: 64.High scoring honors were shared by Dan Trifone and Bill Weaver, both of the varsity,who scofed 12 points each.son.A number of the boysplayed good tennis, Kunzie andi lowland in particular. Althoughthey lost every match, CoachMoyle said that the team pickedup a lot of valuable experience.This Notre Dame team was sogood that the two Davis Cup play¬ers from Mexico played in fifthand eighth position. Notre Dame’snumber one man was Brown, whois former freshmen National In¬tercollegiate champ. This year heholds a victory over Barry Mc¬Kay of Michigan who in 1956 wasa Davis Cup team member andalso Big Ten champion. Brown isslated for the Davis Cup team Kappa and the American Physicalthis year. Society. Shot Put: (1) Terry Ellis(UCTC); (2) Roger For¬syth (UCTC); (3) Paul Hoff¬man (UCTC). Distance: 45'Mile Run: (1) Bob Kelly (UCTC);(2) Ivan Carlson (Var); (3)Ned Price (Var); Time: 4:34.8440 yard run: (1) Harry Price(UCTC); (2) Ho sea Martin(Var); (3) Lorenzo' Martin(UCTC); Time: :52.5100 yd. run: (1) A1 Jacobs (Var);(2) Brooks Johnson (Var); (3)Tom Haire UCTC) Time 10 6120 yd. High Hurdles: (1) DanTrifone (Var); (2) Don Rich¬ards (Var); (3) Earl Allen(UCTC) Time: 17.0880 yd. run: (1) Hal Higdon(UTC); (2) Bud Perschkc(Var); (3) Bob Kelly (UCTC)Time: 2:02.1220 yd. dash: (1) Jim Caffey(UCTC); (2) Brooks Johnson(Var); (3) A1 Jacobs (Var)Time: 24.6High Jump: (1) Bill Weaver (2& 3) Dan Trifone, Roscoe Ma¬jor (tie) Height: 5' 10"VA Mile run: (1) Arne Richards(Var); (2) Ray Menzie (UC¬TC); (3) Dave Houk (Var)Time: 7:29.5Broad Jump: (1) Paul Hoffman(UCTC); (2) Bill Weaver(Var); (3) George White (UC¬TC) Distance: 21' 7%"220 yd Low Hurdles: (1) Dan Tri¬fone (Var); (2) Don Richards(Var); (3) George Karcazes(Var) Time: 27.2Pole Vault: (1) Dave Northrop(Var); (2) Bill Weaver (Var);(3) Jim Sheber UCTC) Height:10'Discus: (1) Terry Ellis (UCTC); (2) Carl Nuss (UCTC); (3)Roger Forsyth (UCTC) Dis¬tance: 127' 1"Javelin: (1) Thomas Bartha (UC¬TC); (2) Jerry Abeles (Var); (3) Bill Weaver Distance: 140*6"Mile Relay: (1) UCTC (White,Martin, Price, Lockerbie) (2),Varsity.Hold AAU gymnasticsat Bartlett tomorrow eveThe central AAU gymnastics championships will be heldin Bartlett gym tomorrow at 7 pm.The top gymnasts in the state will be competing for themany individual championships. Included in the entries will be AbbieGrossfield, 1956 Olympian and National champion in the horizontalbar. Other performers include Don Tonry, and Glenn Wilson. Gross-field, Devis, and Tonry are University of Illinois students, Wilsonhails from Western Illinois university. UC will be represented in themeet by Matt Brislawn and John Bowman. Brislawn is entered inthe all-around competition and Bowman in horizontal high bar. Bow¬man is former Junior National Champ and rated as one of the topten performers in the country in his specialty, the high bar.The University of Illinois (Chicago), the Midwest Gym association,Western Illinois State, and several other teams will be shooting forthe team championship.AT DRUG STORES A BARBER SHOPS.. .ITT.fa (W■ » ,Last season shitis back-biggerthanever!816 E. 63rd St. • DO 3-6074 “lu*t otf Camptu” This Arrow University oxford shirtwas such a smash hit last season,you asked for an encore. And forgood reason! The collar is button*down—both front and centerback. Full length box pleat in back.Pencil-line stripes on white back¬grounds—plus white and five solidcolors. Arrow University, $5.00 up.Shantung stripe ties, $2.50*ARROW—first in fashionSHim • ms- ■?2 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 12, 1957Tower group was good buyThird of a series of articles on UC's post history. Reference mote-rial and photographs are being provided through the courtesy ofRobert Rosenthol, head of the University's department of special col¬lections.by Bob HalaszThe tower group, consisting of Mitchell tower, Hutchinson commons, Mandel hall, theReynolds club, and the C-shop, turned out to be one of the UC’s best building buys.. Anattractive set of buildings; it was built relatively cheaply (about $450,000), and has sincebeen an extremely busy part of the quadrangles.Of course, the group was part of Henry Iv es Cobb’s plan for an enclosed quadrangle, butits present form had not originally been determined as such, and it was not until 1895, thatthe group, consisting of the n}{icentiy iarge hall, Hutchinson paign, and the building was com-northeast corner of the quad- was fjrst conceived as a commons pleted in October, 1903.rangles, came into consideia- dining hall, but it became highly Blaine was sufficient for the de-tivn. versatile, and has been used for partment, but it also had to houseAs usual, in response to Harp- alumni banquets, convocation din- the kindergarten, elementaryer’s pleas, Rockefeller qffered te ners, and Wash Prom. There is school, and University high, thenduplicate all gifts up to two mil- an air of old English dignity known as the South Side academy,lion dollars, to whip up another about the place which makes one Once again, the University raisedbuilding drive. Actually, only a careful not to slurp one’s soup. money and built Belfield hall nearpart of the money ever went into On the walls are large portraits of Blaine, named for Harry H. Bel-the construction of the tower philanthropists, former presi- fjeid, fjrst dean of tTie academy,group, since a public subscription dents, and distinguished men who plAntv ^durational histnrvfund received generous contribu- have been associated with the has taJn place in these buiidingstions. University as trustees or faculty. for ^be education world lookedAmong the larger gifts were From the gift of Mrs. Charles toward Chicago for innovations,those from five of the midwest s l, Hutchinson, the C-shop was Many trustees, alumni and facultymost prominent businessmen or created, or as it was then called, 0f uc received their school at thetheir widows: Leon Mandel, Mrs. ^be Commons cafe. Practically University’s private schools. AtCharles L. Hutchinson, John J. everybody here has at one time present, the University is consid-Mitchell, Harold T. McCormick, qj. another walked in, and some- ering a program to remodel BlaineAnd Mrs. Joseph Reynolds. times walked out again, finding and Belfield, and is thinking ofThe tower group was designed the place jammed to the rafters, launching a campaign fund forby Charles T. Coolidge in the fa¬miliar Bedford stone, and withEnglish colleges as models. TheCornerstone was laid for thesebuildings in June, 1901, the Uni¬versity’s decennial celebration.John D. Rockefeller attended andIt was noticed that “he seemedto observe every incident andlisten to every address with un-ila gging attention.” in-Next week: unusual ...formation concerning two ofUC's most used buildings:Harper library and Ida Noyeshall. Vc°9brT„ew 9ym 1935: lightning hits MitchImmense relief must have beenthe feeling Harper experiencedwhen he found he had a donorMandel built for a new men’s gymnasium in1900. Harper wanted to get ridof the sprawling temporary gym-The Reynolds club was built by nasium—although it was destineda gift from Mrs. Joseph Reynolds, to stay for years more, and soin memory of her late husband. Mr. A. C. Bartlett’s gift removedThe money was to go for a private one more headache.Mmdcl hall was originally men’s club on camPus> and ior Bartlett, a trustee of the Uni-meant to be used mainly as the years *ha ^nol?ts,.clu,1; was ex: versify, intended the building asUniversity chaDel It’s new organ actly that' wben lt: finally opened a memorial to his young son,was a Toy toThold S5! l9* “c «as Frank Dickinson Bar,le,t’ recent'could feel that one of the Univer. Men llke Silas Cobb, Charles ]y deceased.X’sbSngobjectfves had been Hitchock and Thomas Goodspeed Bartlett is certainly differentfulfilled. But the needs of 1903 Patromzed the club, which was from the sleek physical plantswere modest compared to those run by an elected council of club found many big Universities,of 1925, and by that time Mandel ^embers- It: voted members in, and its stained glass mural incould only seat one-third of the bad lts own smokers, theater per- front gives it quite an aestheticstudents, making a new chapel formances, dances, and billiard appe£d for a gymnasium. Thenecessary. exhibitions, and hired its own murai shows the crowning ofFrom the beginning, however, UnrvStV^ontSr*^ WUh°Ut Ivanhoe by Rowena after his tri-until the present day, Mandel has umphs in the tournament at Ash-been a home for meetings of more For vana“f ,reas?nf. tb<: .club by de la Zouche, and was donatedsecular nature. Concerts, lectures, "fas compelled to ask the Univer- by j. q. Hibbard. It contains overpep rallies, plays, convocations, ?.lty to take !*. °VfiT 1924i a+nd pieces of glass. Inside theconventions, and assemblies are was opened by the dean of stu- building is a frieze, showing aamong the various activities Man- de”t.s to *.U ™.en on. canJP«s* Wlth‘ scene of medieval sport.out fee. Finally social affairs such The gym 0n the second flooras Saturday afternoon football has heen used for Wash Prom,dances were held, women finally registration, a Northern Baptistbeing admitted to Reynolds club’s convention in 1910, and duringhallowed halls, although not World War II it was jammed withabove the first floor. triple-deck bunks for the Navy.“The point at which women End of an erflAmid the bustle and life of aUniversity’s first dean of women. break‘ down ” ’chuckled ^Howard growing University, Harper quiet-In April, 193o, lightning struck Mort, one-time director of the club ly announced one day in 1904 to athe tower and sei iously damaged a^d now executive secretary of group of friends that his doctorsit. much to the surprise of a group the UC alumni associSon told him he was soon to die of. internal cancer. Nevertheless, heEducation group stayed at his desk, running theThe education department of University and also writing sev-By means of a method known UC became prominent in the very eral books on theology. Thus tt^eas “clocking,” the bells are rung early years with the coming of University was to pass handsMondays through Fridays, at John Dewey as head of the depart- smoothly, following Harper’snoon. 6 pm, and 10:05 pm. The ment. Ellis hall was insufficient death in January, 1906, at the10:05 pm ringing stems from a for the needs of the department, age of fifty,request (accompanied by a $100 and so a money raising fund was Harper’s second man, Harrycheck) from Coach Stagg to Har- started for*a new building. The Judson, became acting-Presidentper, because he wanted such a University moved far from the and then President of the Univer-ringing to act as a curfew for his quadrangles to build on a site sity. But with Harper’s death, theathletes. made available by Mrs. J. Young University began a period of con-Hutchinson court was modeled Scammon. A generous gift from solidation, and only one building,after the dining room of Christ Mrs. Emmons Blaine provided the enormous Harper libraryChurch college, Oxford. A mag- momentum to a successful cam- was built in the next nine years. (Above) In March of 1935 lightning struck Mitchell tower, doingextensive damage to one of the turreta at the top.According to the account given by Howard Mort, then editor ofthe alumni office’s Tower Topics, and now executive secretary ofthe alumni association: “. , . The lightning came as a climax to adinner party being sponsored by Tower Topics . . . (we do not)claim any credit for the lightning act as a publicity stunt, althoughit certainly brought down the house!”del has housed.Mitchell ringsMitchell tower was modeledafter the Magdalen tower of Ox¬ford, and like the latter, it hasten hells. The bells are named were aii0W€(j jn Was the point atafter Alice Freeman Palmer, the wbjcb the ciUb, as such, began toI fnti mrc irire fircr noon r\f tirAmon . . ... _ _of guests attending a Universitydinner party in Hutchinson com¬mons.(served as the men's gymna¬sium since cars like the oneon the left were new modelsinstead of museum pieces.(Below) The TowerGroup shown circa 1910..Note Eckhart hall missingon the left. The picture istaken from the present siteof the Quadrangle club.