P»r. * Dec. RoomSpecial issue TuesdayTwo special editions are being planned by the MA¬ROON in connection with the third annual Festival ofthe Arts.The first issue, which will appear next Tuesday, willcontain the FOTA calendar and advance notices con¬cerning specific events during the four-day spring cele¬bration.The second special issue, covering events during theweekend, is slated for Tuesday, April 30. *vV/\ chlcaao11 laroonVol. 65, No. 33 University of Chicago, Friday, April 19, 1957 3iStudent Representative partyNSA slate makes clean sweepby Norman LewakThe Student Representative party won all 20 seats in last week’s National Student as¬sociation election to score the second clean sweep of an election in the history of UC stu¬dent politics. The first sweep was made in 1951 by ISL.The referenda, which replaced the old Bill of Rights and Constitution with amendedversions, passed by an overwhelming vote of approximately 1000 to 100.SRP took 40 per cent of the vote. The Independent Student league had 22 per cent,while the Independents asso-ciation got 21 per cent. The SRP would take it. Obviously Two SG electionsOther 17 per cent went to the there is a need for an instrument Because of tne switch of the SGVindictive Independents for Con- of expounding the principles laid election to the spring under thedown by ISL. new Constitution, there will beI think that both IA and ISL two SG elections next year. Thewere identified with ISL’s mode Government elected in the fallof operation (long term accom- whl serve only until a new Gov-plishment through a concrete pro- eminent is elected next spring,gram). It’s hoped that those peo- The newly elected regional dele-pie interested in theapproach held gation (the “top ten’’ are regionalby those in ISL can get together, delegates) will represent UC inI hope that we don’t split our efforts this fall.’'certed Effort.1405 ballots were cast accordingto Penny Rich, E and R chairman.This is approximately 38 per centof the student body.(For individual totals, seepage 3.)For editorial commentsee page 4Joel Rosenthal of SRP (electedas a national delegate) had this the regional conferences to beheld this spring. The nationaldelegates (“top five”) and alter¬nates ("second five”) will attendthe tenth annual NSA congressThe big question in most peopie’s minds after the election was to say about the election, “SRP .on on * .. n • •* *what would happen to the split would like to thank the campus ?°atJ^e Yni^erS^,y ofopposition faced by SRP. “Butch** for having some hand in the elec- Michigan. According to Jim FlynnKline of IA and Don Miller of ISL tion results. That the split among °*SRP (a national alternate),were asked what they thought of our opposition enabled us to SJFthe results of the election and the sweep the election, and that we a^fn£,entne 20 man delcgationfuture of their respective parties, were the only party running on aKline said, ‘The clean sweep genuine platform, reinforces ourcame as a great surprise. We lost opinion that SRP voters knowfighting for what we felt and still what they want, while the othersfeel is right. I think IA shall con- are united only in negativism,tinue as a political group on cam- Now the spotlight is upon us, andpus. I hope we will run a com- we feel that the campus is justi-plete slate in the fall SG election.” fied in expecting progress and re-Miller said, ‘The results were suits. We accept this challenge,not unexpected. With various and in turn ask the campus togroups competing for the old ISL pay as much attention to our re¬majority, it could be forecast that ports as they did last week.” photo by BernltkCandidates, party members and just plain people look on as anSRPer and ISLer count the ballots.Hoods attack two students;police increase protectionHazing of Robieset for this fallby Dave Zack - by Ronald GrossmanTwo UC students were robbed and beaten by gangs of local hoodlums as crime made itsspring resurgence near the University last week.Nick Manoloff, student in the College, was attacked Friday evening by four thugs as hewas crossing the Midway on his way to Burton-Judson. Thursday night another UC’er,Conrad Lee, student in FTS from Formosa, was robbed and knifed about 9 pm by six teen¬agers near 54th and Ellis. The hoodlums, three boys and three girls, slashed Lee on thethroat, back and hands. —; -y- „ ————~; 777—:—: ;Pnlicp nrntpMinn in + b o Lee stated that one of the girls Then I suspected foul play, so Iaroa «rao j ran UP to him an<* asked him di- said to the kids ‘I don’t even have?! l^,^inled^tely.StG?P!d rations to Drexel avenue. “Sus- fifty cents.’”pecting that I might be attacked, Lee then accounted the actualup following the two incidents” According to Guy R. Lyman of Psuppestwi Vh^lsk nAiphhnrs ^ “/Z!* a<JCUUIllc^ l,"?The Robie house controversy, ignited by a March 1 article the campus police, this protec- and Walked away” he said attack: The boy grabbed for my*» ‘h* Maroon, — burning strong thisweek. The threat- 52£J ‘ ' ' “ened demolition of the 1908 Frank Lloyd Wright-designed squad cars equipped with radios,residence loomed closer as Arthur C. McGiffert, Chicago a .Park district policeman on aTheological, Seminary presi- Jackson and Washington parks indent, announced in a letter to the Commission, announcing that the general vicinity of the Mid-Daniel Catton Rich, chairman of demolition would take place next way six men from the 6th districtthe newlv formed Chicago com- SePten\ber so the dormitories can (Hyde Park) police station, ase newly formed Chicago com ^ ready for occupancy by Sep- well as the regular campusmission for the preservation of tember, 1958. guards with “beats” in the im-architectural landmarks that raz- He suggested that the Robie mediate quadrangles area.house be moved to another site, According to Hyde Park police,and offered to donate it to the all six hoodlums involved in theCommission if they would haul attack on Lee were caught aboutit away to “a place where it will an hour later when two of themnot be smothered by adjacent, attempted to snatch a purse from Lee stated that the entire gangcaught up to him at about 53rdand Ellis. “Three of them passed.. , me up, two stayed behind, and the^three-wheeler” cruismg between other one-* boy—came up to myside and walked along with me. neck, I pushed him away, and fellto the ground. Then I discoveredmy fingers were bleeding. I rolledfrom the sidewalk to the street,got up and started running. Theysee “Students attacked,” page 2ing would take place next Sep¬tember unless the structure ismoved from its present site.On April 11 President McGif¬fert addressed his letter to Rich, tall, overarched buildings.” Infor-who had been elected chairman of see “Robie,” page 2 a woman.For editorial, see page 4. Easter services to betelecast for first timeFor the first time since its dedication in 1928, the Univer-versity of Chicago’s Rockefeller Memorial chapel will be thescene of a televised Easter Sunday service.WGN-TV (channel 9) will originate a one-hour, live telecastLee was released from Billings ^he Chapel On Easter Sun-hospital Tuesday after a four-day day morning, from 11 to 12. broadcastedstay. According to Lee, his in- Services will be conducted by radioover WGNfrom 4 to 5 pm Sunday.juries consisted of multiple lacer- Fuioli T RAafr;„ acc;ct The special Easter offerings atations around the throat, a cut Reverei^ Ewe11 J- R®agm- assif * Rockefeller’s services will be giv-requiring three stitches on one ant to Dean of the Chapel, John en to World University servicefinger, and a deep, extensive B. Thompson. The Easter sermon (WUS).wound on the back. * will be delivered by Dean Thomp- 0niLEa^tei! eve’ Saturday at 7Speaking in a slight Chinese son and SDeciai Easter music will pm’ the Lutheran Student parishaccent Lee cave this account of SOn anrJPif C1*i ttfr m^sic 1 will perform the ancient ritual ofaccent, u* g<ive mis account ui presented by the University choir tVia ..the attack: “I was returning from under the direction of Richard th BlessmS of the Paschal can-a meeting of the Baptist Student vHcSrnm Richard d]e The service which will be per.Fellowship at 4901 South Ellis * . . formed at Rockefeller chapel in-about 9 Thursday evening. As I ™he choir will sing compositions eludes the ceremonial blessing ofwalked south on Ellis a group of hy Brahms and Byrd. Dr. Heinrich the candle, chanted prayers andkids approached me—three girls Fischer will be the organist. lessons, and a renewal of baptis-and three boys.” The Easter services will be re- mal vow.Robie house HARPER TOWER COLLAPSES see page 9• # •/Many groups protest razing of Robie ..NEWFLIP-TOP BOX8turdy to keepcigarettes fromcrushing.No tobacco inyour pocket.Up to date. Here’s old-fashioned flavor in the new way to smoke. Man-sizetaste of honest tobacco comes full through. Smooth-drawing filterfeels right in your mouth. Works fine but doesn’t get in the way. ModernFlip-Top Box keeps every cigarette firm and fresh until you smoke it.POPULARFILTER. PRICE (MADE IN RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, PROM A NEW MARLBORO RECIPE)(from page 1)ination obtained from a buildingmover by a member of the All-Chicago committee for the pres¬ervation of Robie house revealedthat it would cost $85,000 to movethe building across the street.,rLast week, two universitiesout of the city offered to helpsave the widely acclaimed archi¬tectural landmark.The appearance of the firstfiroon article revealing detailsc: CTS’s plans for destruction of.he Robie house and erection ofdormitories for married studentswas followed the same day by aseminary press release admittingthe contents of the article. Astatement by Ludwig Bachofer,chairman of UC’s art department,condemning CTS’s plans as “in¬excusable vandalism” was fol¬lowed by the formation of anumber of Chicago citizens’ com¬mittees and the circulation of afew petitions on campus by stu¬dents in the art department andCTS.Exchange offeredThe first concrete proposal topreserve the Robie house at itspresent location (58th and Wood-lawn) came when Phi Delta Thetafraternity offered to exchange itshouse, located two lots north ofthe Robie House on Woodlawn,for the Wright-designed building.CTS had planned to erect the dor¬ mitories on the Robie house lotand the one next to it, which theyalready own. The two lots wouldnot have been large enough tohold both the dorms and offstreetparking lots, claimed CTS.The men of Zeta Beta Tau fra¬ to work for the preservation ofRobie house combined to form anternity, whose house is adjacentto Phi Delt’s, offered to trade itfor Porter house, now owned byCTS.Porter house, located at 56thand * Woodlawn, is considerablylarger than the ZBT house, andCTS purportedly asked that thefraternity add a substantialamount of green folding stuff toits own house in trade for thebuilding. The amount (rumoredto be as much as $20,000) wasmore than ZBT wanted to spend,and any hope of a fraternity tradeseems stymied.Until ZBT works out an ar¬rangement to trade its house forPorter house, Phi Delta Theta canhave no hope of moving intoRobie house. all Chicago committee, headed byseveral prominent citizens. With¬in the past week the ChicagoCommission on ArchitecturalLandmarks, which was inspiredby Alderman Leon DesPres, metfor the first time and consideredproposals to send a committee toChancellor Kimpton in an effortto influence the University to at¬tempt to influence CTS.Efforts fruitless of the Robie house, claiming thatthey had “invited 45 universitiesin the East to join in the w^Jer-taking by organizing fund raisingactivities.” The letter added thatinformation on the Robie housecould be obtained from the chair¬man of UC’s art department.An organization of Universityof Chicago students who plan towork for the preservation of thearchitectural monument located _ was lurmoaWednesday evening. Harold ]Tay.don, humanities instructor in ’theCollege, is faculty adviser. Thegroup’s iirst meeting will be heldin Lexington hall this Tuesdayevening. According to a spokes¬man for the Student Committeeto Save the Robie house, effortsare under way to bring Mr.Wlight to speak on campus assoon as feasible.If the fraternity were to occupyRobie house, it would do so withWright’s promise to design a newresidence for the fraternity with¬in a few years, in which caseRobie house might be purchasedby the newly organized FrankLloyd Wright foundation and pre¬served as a monument or mu¬seum.The various committees formed The University can wield nodirect influence, since all fourFederated Theological seminarieshave full control over their prop¬erty.Other efforts to save the Robiehouse have been fruitless so far.Wright, himself offered to designa dormitory on CTS’s present site.This offer was rejected as beingimpractical by the seminary. Pass¬ing through Chicago on the wayto Iraq, the great architect saidthat he planned to “keep in touch”and visit Chicago on his returnto the United States within a fewweeks.Students of the school of archi¬tecture and design at Yale uni¬versity addressed an appeal to theMaroon to help publicize theircampaign to save Robie houseon April 10. In a form letter, thestudents announced a campaignto raise funds for the preservation Students attacked(from page 1)chased ir?e for some distance, butI ran into a drugstore and phonedthe police. The druggist helpedme to the Osteopathic Hospital.From there I was taken to Bil¬lings.”According to Lee, the policebrought two girls to his hospitalroom where he identified them ashis assailants.“I don’t hate these boys andgirls,” said Lee. “They come frompoor homes and have poor educa¬tion. They are not to blame.”The Maroon asked officer Mar¬tin Proff (captain’s man) of thesixth district police what wouldhappen to these teenagers if Leerefused to press charges on them.“It will hurt our case not tohave a witness for the prosecu¬tion,” stated Proff. “A judge will not usually pass judgment on tbetestimony of a police officer.” 1 Ieadded that the biggest problem incases of robbery and mugging islack of cooperation of the victims.“However,” continued Proff, “Leecould be subpoenaed to testify incourt and would be in contemptof court if he didn’t show up.”One of the hoodlums, accordingto Officer Proff is an adult (i.e.,over 18) and will be held in Coun¬ty Jail. The others have boundover to juvenile officers from thesixth district.Marlboro The officer also reported thatthere is no evidence that dope isinvolved, but that the kids prob¬ably just wanted money. “Wehave definitely established thatone of the girls wielded the knifeand stabbed Lee,” stated Proff.Manoloff was returning from a57th street record shop at 8:90Friday evening. As he startedacross the walk which runs fromHarper library to Greenwoodstreet, in the depressed part ofthe Midway, four boys approachedhim stopped and asked, “Why doyou have your hand in your pock¬et? Do you have a gun?”Thugs take wallet watchManoloff stated that he pulledhis hand out of his pocket saving,"No, I don’t have a gun.” Thenthe thugs attacked him.While two held him, one beganbeating him about the face andthe fourth pulled off his wrist-watch, removed his wallet andtook the records Manoloff hadjust purchased.“They took my things and weregone before I knew what washappening to me,” said Manoloff.The thugs then ran off in thedirection of of Harper libraryleaving Manoloff to make his wayto the B J office to report theattack.Manoloff suffered a slight frac¬ture of his nose, two brokenteeth, and multiple lacerations,contusions and abrasions.Manoloff’s wallet was foundlater, minus money and some pa¬pers, on the lawn at 1220 East58th Street—the home of A. C.McGiffert, president of the Chi¬cago Theological seminary.By press time, both Hyde Parkand Campus police had nothing Ito report on the identity of theassailants. »for only $695.97 completeyou con ottend the 6thWorldYouth FestivalMoscowJuly 28th toAugust II, 1957for further information:US Youth Festival CommitteeBox 5793, Main Post OfficeChicago, Illinois ESsex 5-1447YOU *ARE ELIGIBLEjSt: *> *Send Today *forFREE , tProfessional and ^ ^Businessman'sWholesale DiamondBrochure. Write Jackson'sDiamond Brokers, Dept. IKimpton guest at annualC-group sponsored dinner• "N ,Chancellor and Mrs. Lawrence A. Kimpton were the guests of honor at a “Chancellor’sdinner” sponsored by the Inter-dormitory council of C-group last Monday evening.After the sparsely attended dinner (it coincided with the first day of Passover), Kimp¬ton began a brief, apparently extemporaneous, but carefully worded statement concerningthe official position of the University regarding the College.Situated in the center of the Foster-Kelly lounge, surrounded by C-group girls, theChancellor made the observa¬tion: “It is often said that theChancellor has to talk out ofboth sides of his mouth.” Thatevening the supposition seemedtrue. faculty member for every 15 stu¬dents, a new business school cen- never really emphasized the pro¬gram.” He went on to explain thatter, law school, and more student now the UC laboratory school of-housing,In answer to the question, fers the last two years of highschool and this further eliminatesthe necessity of the early entrantprogram on this campus, but heKimpton stated that by 1967 the “Why is the early entrant pro-liniversity hoped to have an un- gram being de-emphasized?"riorgraduate enrollment of 5.000 Kimpton stated “We always had stated that UC does and shall con¬st udents, an enlarged faculty, one fewer students at that level and tinue to admit students on theearly entrant level.Kimpton discussed the forma¬tion of a “student-faculty commit¬tee.”' Faculty on this committeewould take the time to explainUniversity policies and measuresto a “responsible” student group,said Kimpton.Kimpton choosesundergrad groupThe “executive committee on undergraduate education”created by the Council of the Faculty Senate last quarterto attempt to solve problems caused by present joint degreeprograms held its first meeting this week.The members of the com-mittee appointed by Chancel- joint programs. It was given thelor Lawrence A. Kimpton are: authority to carry out whateverWilliam Bradbury (College); Eu- course it deemed necessary to irongene Northrop (College); Gerson out the difficulties of the jointRosenthal (College); Charles degrees.Wegener (College); Joseph Ceit-haml (biological s c i e n c e s ) ;George Metcalf (humanities);Norman Nachtrieb (physical sci- These problems, according toStrozier, are mainly administra¬tive headaches which the Councilcouldn’t handle because of its size.enees); Herman Pritchett (social pje ^e confusion in the ad-seiences); and Corwin Edwards WFMH formsUC chapterOrganization of a UC chapterof the World Federation for Men¬tal Health will be discussed to¬morrow night at 7:30 at 4737South K i m b a r k avenue. Thegroup, sponsored by WillardAyres, a student in the College,is intended to discover the rea¬son for student interest inWFMH.Transportation will be avail-visory system and degrees (such r(business school). Chancellor as the joint degree in the physical able to Ayres’ home from theKimpton will^serve^on the commit- sciences that take more than four Reynolds club north lounge atyears to complete). 7:30.tee as chairman. He also appointed Henry Sams (director, sum¬mer quarter) as staff assistant.The committee will hold week¬ly meetings. According to DeanRobert M. Strozier, the first fewmeetings will be concerned withorienting the members of the com¬mittee to the problem. ‘They areright now reading the catalogs,”commented Dean Strozier. He didnot expect anything to “break”from the committee until nextyear.According to Strozier, the com¬mittee was given no directions bythe Council. Its function is tosolve the problems caused by the The Sunday New York Timeson SundayEVERY SUNDAY FROM 3 P.M. TO 10 P.M.Bciuteemann'iTHE RED DOOR BOOK SHOP1328 EAST 57th STREETNOrmal 7-6111 Chicago 37, III.every day a home-comingA famous New Orleans store once hired a New York expert toimprove its clerks' efficiency. The efficiency rose. And the cus¬tomers stayed home. They just plain didn't like the rush-actthey were given by harried clerks who were efficiently omittingall pleasant greetings.We're not againt efficiency — we thrive on it. But at the Co-opefficiency is laced with real friendliness. The staff has time fora smile and a helpful deed. The customers set their own pace,hurrying or taking time to visit friends and neighbors, as theyplease. You're at home!vCO-OP SUPER MARTMore Than a Store5535 S. Harper Plenty of Free Parking April 19, 1957ElectionNationalDelegatesJoyce Everett (SRP)—534Joel Rosenthal (SRP)—534Sarah Silverman (SRP)—534Phil Hoffman (SRP)—528Timothy Essien (SRP)—501Don Miller (ISL)—446Rosemary Galli (ISL)—320Eliza Houston (IA)—318Lynn Chad well (IA)—292Butch Kline (IA)—281Bill Harmon (ISL)—275Judy Bowly (IA)—270Dick Johnson (ISL)—254John Lamb (ISL)—245Kent Flannery (VICE)—241Jim Nodland (IA)—236Herman Chew (VICE)—226John Morgan (VICE)—213Norm Whaland (VICE)—184Jim Thomason (VICE)—178RegionalJudy Tushnet (SRP)—506Tyra Korling (SRP)—496Harvey Cholden (SRP)—494Merna Kart (SRP)—486Ken Case (SRP)—484Carlie Burrows (SRP)—480Ann Bancroft (SRP)—477Carl Worthman (SRP)—470Bob Lerner (SRP)—465Mary Cahn (SRP)—452Carol Coggeshall (IA)—315Barbara McKenna (ISL)—305Debbie Mines (IA)—304Esther McCandles (IA)—289Dave Leonetti (IA)—282John DeZauche (ISL)—280Diane Cobb (ISL)—278John Endres (ISL)—277Bob Dalton (IA)—274Phil Kaufman (IA)—271 resultsNationalAlternatesLois Adelman (SRP)—552Linda Rosenberg (SRP)—553Jim Flynn (SRP)—510Karl Finger (SRP)—491Eve Leoff (SRP)—453Debbie Goleman (IA)—339Dave Freifelder (ISL)—301Barrett Denton (ISL)—291Diana Standahl (ISL)—287Judy Bishop (ISL)—278Pete Langrock (ISL)—278Brooks Johnson (IA)—265M. J. Slabodnick (IA)—248Ed Becker (VICE)—239Edna Arrington (IA)—234Jim Camp (IA)—228Gage Parkinson (VICE)—212Jarid Simons (VICE)—204Maurice Smith (VICE)—196John Young (VICE)—192AlternatesClarence Woods (ISL)—259RonTerchek (ISL)—251Mike Ban (VICE)—248Jacques Dulin (IA)—248Joel Eigen (VICE)—245Frances Moore (ISL)—215Robert Lawlar (ISL)—240Mike Kindred (IA)—237Louise Arnold (IA)—236Alan Boughner (VICE)—235J. P. Hakemian (VICE)—235Ray Inman (ISL)—227G. B. Kauvar (VICE)—224Bill Gernon (VICE)—223Warren Bernhart (IA)—221Phil Loe (VICE)—212Rich Meyersburg (VICE)—209Leighton Slattery (VICE)—204Terry Smith (ISL)—203Dan Wile (VICE)—1869Ae photographers1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433New Harper Wines & Liquors1114-16 E. 55th St.SPECIALSImported Rose' Wines$1.89$1.49$1.49$1.49Rose' d'Anjou YuLa Vie en Rose' YsGrande Rose' YgRose' De Zupa \LDubonnetAperitif reg. $1.9598c% Imported Beer• Belgium • England• Canada • Germany• Denmark • JapanFREE DELIVERYFA 4-1233, 1318, 7699New York StateChampagne Yg $1.98Full Line of Imported and Domestic Wine in OurSELF-SERVICE WINE DEPARTMENTiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifBCotton or.Baby CordSuits , 14.95 jPants 4.95 |Jackets 4.95 |Our Prices Can't Be Beat . . . It's Smart To Buy For Less |D & C Clothes Shop I744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728 |“I»» the Neighborhood tor 40 Year*”Hours: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 a.m. - 9 p.m., Saturday |^ifiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1^EditorialAntidote to crime:caution and gutsIn addition to blossoms on trees,spring seems to herald the returnof crime to campus. Hoodlums andthugs—as well as the birds—comeback to the community with thewarm weather. So far, two assaultshave already occurred on UC stu¬dents in the last week. These at¬tacks go far beyond the usual scopeof simple robberies—one victim washospitalized with serious injuries,while the other was severely beaten.THE BLAME CANNOT be placedupon the area police. They do allthat it is possible towards patrollingthe area and protecting its resi¬dents. Total coverage would requirea force as large as University pop¬ulation. If students want to avoidbeing subject to these attacks, theywill have to take precautionarymeasures on their own.On page 7, there is a list of policerecommendations for the securityof people using the neighborhood atnight. We heartily endorse thesesuggestions. A great amount of thishuman destruction can be eliminat¬ed if people follow those few rules.THE UNIVERSITY is doing allit can towards wiping out the viru¬lent elements of the area. But acompletely safe neighbhorhood is along ways off. Until then, the re¬sponsibility is up to us to protectourselves. Guns and knives have been outlawed by the city, but thereare less drastic measures of self-defense.One reason why these hoodlumscontinue so boldy is the cowardlyname UC students have made forthemselves in their responses tothese attacks. A few years ago agroup of toughs numbering lessthan half of the male attendanceat the Delta Upsilon Rose Dancewere able to completely disrupt thedance because of the passive atti¬tude of our men.SIMILAR OCCURRENCES havehappened at many other fraternityhouses in the past. If UCers decidedto “fight back” occasionally, wemight be able to frighten some ofthese people off.We have a terrible reputation forbeing cowardly—and justifiably so.Not only the hoodlums, but alsothe area police have little respectfor our bravery. It’s about time thestudents around here decided toshow that they themselves are will¬ing to fight to save this neighbor¬hood.THIS IS A NASTY SITUATION.To improve it, we can’t expect thepolice and the South East ChicagoCommission to do everything. Agreat deal of the responsibility lieswith us—and it’s time to stop shirk¬ing that responsibility.Editorial commentVICE and referandalarge vote significantHardly an election goes by inwhich some political analyst or otherdoesn’t try to analyze it. So I’ll trytoo.The obvious results can be put quitesimply: a well-organized, tightly-unifiedslate of SRP candidates easily swept all20 seats against a split opposition. TheSRP vote for the most part was of thestraight ballot variety, which can easilybe seen by the small difference betweentheir highest and lowest vote totals.Adding the ISL and IA votes togetherto show that “if not for the split, wewould have won,” might make someISLers feel better, but it doesn’t min¬imize the joy of the victors. All in all,the 40 per cent vote of SRP and the 43per cent vote of the old ISL coalitionshowed no significant difference fromthe past.TWO SIGNIFICANT results were,however, seen in the election: the highpercentage given to the referenda andihe huge vote piled up by VICE.It had been an old political axiom oncampus that the UC student would, byhabit, vote “no” on any referendum. Thisaxiom does not seem to have much basisin fact any more after the overwhelmingten to one approval given the referendalast week. The large yes vote showedwhat can be accomplished when all thepolitical parties support a project.It is perhaps paradoxical that an elec¬tion which saw a great interest on thepart of the voters (over 1,000 voted“yes”) on the structure of the Govern¬ment, should also see a 17 per cent votefor a party whose platform called forno government.THIS SEEMING INCONSISTENCYcan only be resolved in one way as faras this observer is concerned. Althoughthe apathetic voter who supported theVICE slate may be quite vocally opposedto student politics and student politic¬ians, he is still inwardly in favor of “stu¬dent government,” with all the good con¬notations that term implies. The VICEvoter is opposed to the parties when they politic, but is for them when theygovern.Perhaps this is too broad a generaliza¬tion to make from such scanty data. Butit is encouraging. If true, it shows thatthe apathetic voter does realize the im-.portance of “student government.” Herealizes that such an organization ofstudents is necessary for such mundaneoperations as student services and suchlofty aspirations as good student-neigh¬borhood-general public and student-fac¬ulty-administration relations.Thus, the huge VICE vote was nota protest against government on thestudent level, but instead it was a pro¬test against politics on the studentlevel.But can we have government withoutpolitics? Unfortunately, it seems thatsome politics will always sneak in. Thethree parties in this election recognizedand followed what probably is the basicprinciple of political science, “you haveto win in order to serve,” Unfortunately,this principle is true.YET, IN TRYING to win, the threeparties (in this election as in those ofthe past) went to the extremes of elec¬tioneering. The pretty girl at the pollswho “helps” the voter mark his ballotmay get herself and her party elected,but she doesn’t increase the confidenceof the voter as to the governing poten¬tial of herself or her party. On the con¬trary, it is just such a voter who willvote “apathy” in the next election notbecause he doesn’t see the value of “stu¬dent government,” but because he failsto see how any of the “politicians” run¬ning for office will be able to make useof this potential called “student govern¬ment.”What we need, therefore, is less “poli¬ticians,” less “beauty queens,” less “dar¬lings of the C-group,” and more of thegood old-fashioned type of candidateswho just want to see good government.Do such people exist? We can only hopethat they do.Norman Lewak"managing editor "Say buddy, gotta match?"EditorialCombine NSA, SG elections;one election more favorableOne of the provisions of the newlyamended Constitution is that “anall-canipus election for NSA dele¬gates shall be held ...” The Con¬stitution leaves the decision on the de¬tails of the election to the SG by laws.(The old Constitution did not even men¬tion NSA.)We should like to propose that theNSA elections be held at the same timeas the SG election and that only the dele¬gates (the “top ten”) be elected.Since it is generally conceded thatelections in the fall are undesirable,there are only two possible times for anNSA election: in the winter or in thespring. The latter would of necessitymean holding the two elections at thesame time.BESIDES THE unfavorable weatherof the winter, the argument on winterversus spring really rests on one versustwo elections.One election seems to us to be entirelymore advantageous. On£ of our reasonsfor supporting spring SG elections wasthat, assuming there would then onlybe one election, the "amount of politick¬ing would be cut in half. The voter, weare sure, would be quite happy to see such a limitation on electioneering.It is argued that the issues are differ¬ent in NSA and SG elections. We failedto note any issues in the last election.IT IS ARGUED that the ballot wouldbe too long and confusing. This is whereour second proposal comes in. The re¬gional alternate (“bottom ten”) categoryis at present nothing more than a train¬ing ground for potential candidates forthe fall SG election.Since the delegates can give their vot¬ing card to whichever alternate theychoose, why bother electing the alter¬nates? The delegates of one party do notgive their vote to the alternates of theother party anyway. Instead of electingregional alternates, perhaps the dele¬gates could bring their own alternatesalong. (The Constitution does not men¬tion the election of alternates.) Since theSG election would be at the same time,the category would not even be usefulas a training ground for candidates.WE FAIL TO SEE why there shouldbe two elections except perhaps to givethe party that lost one election a chanceto win the next one. This does not seemlike a valid reason. And perhaps if thetwo elections are held at the same time,the usual low percentages of voters willbecome a thing of the past.Letters to the editorWarns against attackersThe attack and beating of a University student on the crosswalk eastof Burton-Judson courts Friday was only one of a number of such incidentsrecurring over the period of the last six years. Several have occurred onthe unlighted crosswalk at ni$ht, but others have been located at placesnear a thoroughfare or in a dimly lit neighborhood spot.The University has been awareof the problem for some time, butthe attacks continue to occur inspite of efforts to patrol the area, tolight the streets, and to establish a busservice.A number of students on this campushave experienced or have nearly experi¬enced such attacks. In order to helpothers avoid the potentially dangeroussituations this information should bemade known. If you have any knowledge of a spe¬cific incident, please see a representativeof your dormitory, a member of StudentGovernment, or write to the Dean ofStudent’s office or the campus police.This is a problem that involves us asstudents and as members of this com¬munity. It is a problem we can do some¬thing about. We can help the Universityand ourselves meet the problem by ouractive interest and information. jPeter Guy ChadwickGadfly buzzes lessThe Maroon's once regular feature,Gadfly, is again absent from these pagesdue to lack of contributions.Gadfly's original intent, to print pro¬vocative articles from students and fac¬ulty members is still the policy of theMaroon.Send contributions to Gadfly, Maroonoffice, Ida Noyes hall.:.editor's columnSpring returns to UC INjgffliil!:;:Crime reared its ugly headaround the University againlast week as two UC studentswere severely beaten androbbed (see page 1). With Springweather approaching, some se¬rious thought ought to be givento this situation by every UC’er.It is greatly disturbing to haveto worry about one’s safety whenventuring out at night. However,in light of the recent crimes,walking alone at night—especial¬ly in dark areas—warrants con¬siderable caution.Elsewhere in the paper (page7) suggestions are offered for in¬creasing the safety factor atnight. These -cannot be empha-sized too strongly:If you must go out at night,don’t walk alone!If you must walk alone,stay out of dark areas, suchas the Midway “depressions."If you must walk in darkareas . . . well, guns are ille¬gal . . . and UC’ers haveproven to be notoriously poordefenders of themselves. Per¬haps a prayer book is the an¬swer.Seriously, the easiest way toavoid these incidents is to pro¬ceed w'ith great caution.iAll's fair in love, war . . .It isn’t often that I’m given tohanding out kudos to Maroonstaffers publicly. However, thejob done by Norman Lewak, theMaroon’s managing editor, in sin¬gle-handedly producing the spe¬cial Tuesday edition for the NSA elections last week is worthy ofnote.Chasing student politicians forstatements, platforms and slatesright down to the Sunday nightpress deadline, Norm put togeth¬er a well-written, unified four-page election supplement. Just asthe next two Maroon specialTuesday editions (for FOTA onApril 23 and 30) will keep read¬ers well-informed on FOTA hap¬penings, the NSA edition con¬tained much information for in¬telligent voting in the elections.In fact, considering the amountof work and research he put intothe special issue, Norm musthave been the best-informed voteron campus.How did Norm vote? Oh. hewas so well informed he didn'tvote at all!No, it's not anothergaq issue!That rather startling headlineon page one reporting the col¬lapse of Harper west tower ispart of the fourth in the Maroon’sfeature series on the history andbuildings of the University(pages 8, 9TTThis week’s install¬ment contains the fascinatingstory of the actual wreck of thetower in 1911 as constructionneared completion.Attention, UMOC'sIf the campus takes on a slightNorthwestern flavor next week—blame the APO’s and UMOC.Alpha Phi Omega, the campusservice fraternity is sponsoringan “Ugliest Man on Campus’’ con¬test to raise funds for World Uni¬ versity Service and Student Gov¬ernment’s Frankfurt Exchange.You can vote for your favoriteUMOC at the booth located inMande! corridor next Tuesdaythrough Friday by depositingmoney in the candidate’s bottle.The guy that brings in the mostmoney is declared the winner.UMOC 1957 will be announcedat the Beaux Arts ball next Satur¬day night. He will be presentedwith an official UMOC pin and acertificate to prove his victory.The APO’ers are currently ne¬gotiating with the Panhelleniccouncil up at Northwestern to getUMOC a date with a “genuineNorthwestern girl."Say, maybe even this “ugly lit¬tle rascal” will enter! April 19, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5~yy\ ditccujo11 moonIssued every Friday throughout the school year and intermittently during thesummer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, 1212 East 59 Street, Chi¬cago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3266; BusineMand advertising office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3265. Subscriptions by mail, $3 peryear. Business office hours: 2 pm to 5 pm, Monday through Friday.Editor-in-chief ..Ronald J. Grossman"Managing editor Norman LewakBusiness manager Gary MokotoffAdvertising manager Lawrence D. KesslerNews editors Rochelle Dubnow, Bob HalaszCulture editor Dgve 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 Schultz— Ron Grossman Letter policyThe Maroon publishes letters to the editor on subjectsof interest to the student body. Such letters are sub¬ject to editing if longer than 250 words. No unsignedletters will be printed under any circumstances. However,the writer's name will be withheld, or noms de plumeused, on request.Earn Big MoneyThis Summer /Why settle for a job that earns onlypennies per sale, or low-pay, straight-wage work? If you want to earnreally BIG money this summer, here’syour chance to make $1,000 - $2,000-$3,000 in easy commissions. 'WHEN: Start part-time right now. Continue full-time orpart-time during summer vacation.WHERE: Chicago and SuburbsWHAT: You’ll be selling Everspray, the original Under¬ground Lawn Sprinkler System — a permanent,prestige installation that lets the homeownerwater his lawn simply by turning on a faucet.You’ll really be selling rest, relaxation and ego-builder, as well as a more beautiful lawn. Everyhomeowner a prospect. "HOW: You’ll be trained and then supervised under ex¬perienced, expert direction. All selling tools andmaterials will be furnished to you.First applicants will have their pick of Chicagoland neighbor,hoods. So get fell details NOW before your preferred com¬munity it spoken for. Write or phone:EVERHOT PRODUCTS CO.2001-09 W. , CARROLL AVE e CHICAGO 12, ILLINOISMOnroe 6-4600 Buy Your DiamondsWholesale -SAVE 50%Diamond Rings For Half Retail Price“All Diamonds Fully Insured”“Written Lifetime (guarantee”“No Loss TradeTn (guarantee”“Three Ways to Buy Wholesale”Lay-Awoy — Cash — Charge Accounts AvailableWrite today for Diamond Catalogue and Buyer's CardDiamond ImportersWholesalers ’5 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&COthe folklore society presents:WALTER LOWENFUS ’noted American Poetspeaking on“The influence of folkmusic on American poetrya lecture withRecorded and Live MusicSoc. Sci. 122, 3:30 p.m.Wednesday, April 24b 1Admission Free HOOTENANNY!an evening of folk musicblues — ballads — calypsohoe-downs — bagpipe musicfeaturing:nevilte BLACK * george & gerry ARMSTRONGjim CLARKSON moe Hirscbcharity BURNS ioha KETTERSONpete STONE lob Cr geargie MARCHjohn SONQUIST bemie ASBELLdoug MAURER . . . and othersFriday, April 26 - 8:30 p.m.International House - Admission 75c(members 50c) WingandSquare Dancewith caller JOHN SONQUISTFriday, May 3-8 p.m.Ida Noyes Hallmembers 1 5c others 35calso;practice session for folk singersconducted by MOE IURSCHSaturday, April 20 — 2 P.ll.Ida ISloyes Hail Admission Free6 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 19, 1957 7'Chicago-style' too muchfor Columbia debaters Chicago MaroonCLASSIFIEDSby Don McClintockStudent Forum played host to 80 students and 20 faculty members from all the Big TenUniversities this past weekend, as the Western Conference Debate league (all Big Ten,plus Chicago) convened at Ida Noyes hall for its fourth annual Congress.Proceedings got under way “not with a bang but a whimper” on Thursday evening whenthe Chicago team Of Ja.y secon(j committee session, an able Hitchcock, director of forensics University rate 30c per line. Others 60c per line.Phone Ml 3-0800. Ext. 3265Year's extensiongiven to pre-fabsUC received another year’sgrace for the University’s ownedSwartz and A r 1 e n e Fisher assjst from advisors to the Con- at the University of Iowa and oneproved much more adept at gress who included Donald Mei- of the founding fathers of theChicago-style debate than the klejohn, senior advisor and a WCDL, as “the finest event ofvisiting*Columbia university team member of the College social sci- this type that I have attended,f Brad Davis and George Atkin- ence staff; and Maynard Krueger, and I’ve been to a lot of them.’’son. On the topic, “Resolved, that chairman of Social Science, Col-civilization in the United States lege.has not yet crossed the Allegheny ^ banquet in Hutchinson com-Mountains, the negation of mons followed Friday’s all-daySwartz and Fisher proved bevond sessiori) and on Saturday morninga reasonable doubt that, indeed, individual committees submit-h had. ted their reports to a plenary sesFollowing the debate, delegates sion assembled in Ida Noyes thea- prefabs when the City Councilto the Congress got right to work tre. At the presentation Krueger passed unanimously an ordinancewith committee deliberations on offered, after each presentation, to extend the time-limit on thethe general subject, “What should a summary of the strengths and destruction of the pre fabs untilbe United States policy toward weaknesses of each report. June 30, 1958.Communist satellite countries in The Congress closed with a par- Originally 489 dwelling unitsEurope.” This general topic was liamentary debate on the topic, were built in 1946, because of thebroken down into four major “Resolved, that the United States great veteran student housingareas: US policy in terms of eco- should work increasingly toward problem. The pre fabs were in vio-nomic aid; military aid; propa- the liberation of the satellite coun- lation of the city zoning laws andganda; and immigration. tries in Europe.” The resolution, approval has had to be extendedThe eight committees, two in although quite adequately pre- by the Council periodically,each of the above areas, worked sented, was overwhelmingly de- Eighty-eight units have alreadyseriously and at length on Thurs- feated by the approximately 130 been demolished on the site of theday evening and all day Friday in people present. new women’s dorms in back ofan attempt to fashion a coherent The congress, which will not Ida Noyes. One hundred and twoforeign policy for the US in terms return to the UC campus until units, the current Greenwoodof the satellites. They had, at the 1967, was characterized by Orville units will come down this summer. Services WantedKadlac's Auto Service has moved to 7633S. Jeffery Blvd., RE 1-4333. Wanted—male roommates. T rooms 3bathrooms. 5511 Cornell. Call RudermanNO 7-6568, late evenings.FRENCH — If interested, choose from—conversation; to prepare you for tripsabroad—coaching: in regular H.S. and college For Saleprograms—accelerated work for MA and PhDreading exams—oral work with young children.Native Teacher—call NO 7-6162 Furniture for sale. Liv. rm„ dining rmtwo bedroom sets. Carpets, lamps,“dish¬es, etc. Make offer. Must vacate Mav l7451 Kingston, RE 4-8095.Light moving and hauling. Reasonablerates. FA 4-2889 ,FA 4-1706. For sale, used clothes and furnitureCall for appointment. MI 3-3925.CARMEN'S USED FURNITURE store.Moving and light hauling. 1211 East63rd Street. MU 4-8843, MU 4-9003. 1953 Studebaker Landcruiser V-8 en¬gine. 4-door sedan body. Good tires, newbattery, brakes rellned, valves groundexcellent operating condition. Call Rrj1-2093.Life Insurance with benefits duringyour lifetime and family protection incase of death. Call Alfred S. Nathan,Equitable Life. FR 2-0400. Must sell at once—kitchen table andchairs, single bed, chest of drawers anddesk. Call ES 5-8930.French tutoring. Paris educated, MA,U of C, FA 4-3367. 1949 Morris Oxford. Recently overhauledMI 3-7965.Needed: AM-FM tuner in good conditionfor under $40. Now available: Audaxkit arms, cartridges: University speak¬ers, Harmon-Kardon equipment. AudioConsultants, c/o Jean Kwon, Foster 16. For RentHelp Wanted Two furnished 2-room apartments. Con¬venient to campus. Int house, IC. PhoneBU 8-9424. Greenfield.Counselors for brother-sister ramp inSouthwest Michigan. Openings for mar¬ried couples. Good salary. Interestingwork. Write Camp Conestoga, 621County Line road. Highland Park, Ill. l'.£ room furnished apartment for house¬keeping. Reasonable rent. Close tocampus. FA 4-5538.PersonalSomeone to drive station wagon toWashington, DC. All expenses plus $30.PL 2-2565. To the pledges of ZBTVVe understand you got dugAnd now have lost your jugSo now why don’t we tugat Botany Pond ‘April 26 3 pmyou lugs and usPSD pledgestames Hatch's original verse dramafaster Song opens Wednesday, April 24.'or a five-night run in the Reynolds’lub theatre. 8:30 each night. Ticketstill available for 75c at the Reynoldslub desk.Need a male graduate student as a thirdoomtnate In clean furnished 8-roomipt. Many conveniences. Rent, utilitiesibout $55 each. MU 4-5153.IC: We re finally legal. DS.LAB STUDENTS (and most folks with aflair for the scientific) know that oneLucky is an Ample Sample—conclusiveevidence that Luckies are the finestsmoking anywhere! Check this your¬self. Try a couple—or a carton. You’llfind that every Lucky tastes as goodas the first one. You see, every Luckyis made of fine tobacco . . . mild, good¬tasting tobacco that’s TOASTED totaste even better. Light up a Luckyright now. You’ll agree Luckies are thebest-tasting cigarette you ever smoked!DON’T JUST STAND THERE . . .STICKLE! MAKE *25 Anyone having information concerningdamage done by a blue car to gray 1957Old&moblle, parked on the east side ofEllis near 59th, Tues., am, kindly con¬tact Plzak, ext 1098.Art—Prices: $10, $3, and $25 for bird-dozers. Ken.Wanted—Several “no detour" signs foeuse until May 29th—see me.Q,: I put the elephant together. Onlytook three hours. A child with an IQof 90 could do it. Margaret Mead.E.D.—You promised to take care ofyourself.—N.D.Start saving your time. SRP caucus,April 28. Ida, 8 pm. All welcome.Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyminganswers. Both words must have the same number ofsyllables. (No drawings, please!) We’ll shell out $25for all we use—and for hundreds that never see print.So send stacks of ’em with yourname, address, college and classto Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A,Mount Vernon, N. Y.WHAT'S A BEAUTY. PARLOR OPERATOR TJAMES NOBLIN. JB.MISSISSIPPI STATE Curl Girl WHAT IS A MARRIAGE PROPOSAL THitch PitchNEUMAN MOENSMOLINE COMMUNITY COLLEGE WHAT IS A SMART SHE-GOATImarcia williams Canny NannyWESTERN KENTUCKYSTATE COLLEGELUCKIES TASTE BETTER“IT’S TOASTED" TO TASTE BETTER ... CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER Ijtfmvuean•A T.Co. pboduct or AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER Of CIGAMBTTKS REC0NNAISSEZ-V0USCET HOMME?Ralph J. Wood, Jr. '48FR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855II est un membre actif devotre arrondissement et ilrepresente la .Compagnied’assurance-vie Sun Life tluCanada. Seconde par cet or-ganisme international —unedes grandes compagniesd’assurance-vie du monde —il est en mesure de vous gui-der en tout ce qui concernel’assurance-vie. Il est unhomme precieux a connaitre.Peut-il vous rendre visite aumoment que vous choisirez?SUN LIFEASSURANCE COMPANYOF CANADAChicago. IM.1 N. LaSalleApril 19, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7APO looks forprofits to WUS uglyexchangeman; Round Table on WTTWby Gary Mokotoff Under the title “All Things Considered,” the famous “Uni¬versity of Chicago Round Table,” national network radioshow for 26 years, will be revived as a TV program on Chan¬nel 11. The program made its debut yesterday at 9:30 pm.As did the Round Table, itdiscuss “The Presidential Succes- sor in the College, will, as usual,sion.” Among the UC faculty moderate.A date with a genuine Northwestern girl will be the reward to the winner of the Alpha wjn provide authoritative dis- members participating will bePhi Omega-sponsored Ugliest Man on Campus contest scheduled for next week. cussions on a wide range of sub- Brainard Currie, professor of law.The UMOC contest is. the first attempt by the recently reactivated UC chapter of the jects by experts from both within and Donald Meiklejohn, associatenational service fraternity to “raise money for a worthwhile cause.” All profits from the and without the University. professor in the College. Edwardcontest will be divided between the campus drive for World University service and the Next Thursday, a panel will Rosenheim Jr., associate profes-SG-sponsored Franfort student exchange. "Rick Prairie, UC chapter ffreat—the more ridiculous thepresident, said: The mam betterpurpose of the UMOC contest jn keeping with the spirit ofis to raise money for these two umOC contest, photos of can-worthwhile causes, and second- dilates seen at the voting bootharily to have fun. APO hopes that will be taken from the student’sthe contest degenerates into a pop- card.ularity contest with some frater- The winner will be announcednity rivalry, so that the contest at the Beaux Arts ball next Sat-brings in a considerable amount ur(jay night. He will be presentedof money.” with the official UMOC pin plusEntry blanks for the contest a certificate to acknowledge hisare available at the student ac- victory. The two runner-ups willtivities office and from APO mem- ajso receive certificates,bers. Entries must be left at the For further information University is well guardedbut 'caution' is watchwordby Bob HalaszA few rules of caution will stand the students of the university in good stead, accord-stud ent"activities* office" no*later cerning^he^onte^t0 contact GaTy ing to W; R’ Zellner> superintendent of buildings and grounds of the University.Comment-than 4:45 pm, Monday, or the en- Mokotoff at the Maroon office or jng on crime and beatings in the neighborhood Zellner advised:tries may be brought directly to MI 3-8235. . • It is best to go in pairs in 7 7 7—————the special APO meeting for The record for the greatest the neighborhood after dark, three shifts. There is a night new mercury vapor lamps, butUMOC this Monday between 7 and amount of money collected for a especially girls. watchman in B-J, and one outside the University neighborhood as a9 pm in the Maroon office, Ida worthwhile organization by an • Suspicious people or gangs the women’s dormitories. Alarms wj10je not The citv intends toNoyes hall. Each entry must be APO-sponsored UMOC contest is should be reported to the campus are l°cated on the C-group and . ,, .' . .. . .accompanied by $1. From these at the University of California at police. Gates-Blake fire escapes, but un- correct the situation m the future,entries, finalists will be chosen. Berkeley, where the event is one • The average student tends to fortunately they are often set off but several neighborhoods havePersons may vote as many Gf the biggest attractions of the be unaware of his surroundings— by squirrels or birds. priority over the fifth ward, intimes as they wish for their favor- year. Last year, the APO chapter keep alert. According to Zellner, the cam- which the University is located,ite candidate by placing pennies, there collected $6,686.97 as the re- • Keep possessions locked up, Pus PoIice have verT g°od liaison Sometimes students are an-nickels, dimes, etc., in the bottles suit 0f one contest! The money lock bike to a University rack. with the city police. Each sergeant noyed at parking restrictions, orprovided at the UMOC voting was split between various chari- • Don’t leave anything visible witb^the Hyde Park and being asked to show their idenbooth located in Mandel hall corri- table organizations. in your car. Ninety per cent of TTr“J’ 1 1 ***-—*. ’dor next Tuesday through Friday. Any relation between APO and the thefts are due to carelessness.The candidate receiving the most the ex-Brownies-service-women’s“votes” (money) is declared thewinner.Prairie added that he hopes thefinalists will pitch in and try toprove to the campus that they aredefinitely the “ugliest” men oncampus so that the students willcontribute money to WUS and theFrankfurt exchange.The official rules concerningcandidates and their campaignmanagers as set by the Electionand Rules (E & R) committee ofAPO are as follows.There are absolutely no re¬strictions on the competitorsoutside of the law, Universityregulations, and reasonablygood taste. You may do any¬thing to attract attention andmoney within those boundsand heaven help your self-re¬spect. Parades, public speeches,costumes, posters (approved),and anything else that will helpraise money for WUS and theFrankfort exchange are all club “Gamma Delta Iota” ofBlackfriars fame is purely coin¬cidental. Campus police can arrestThe campus police have specialpolice permits from the police de¬partment of the city of Chicago.They are deputized and have thepower of arrest within an area ofjurisdiction stretching from 55thto 63rd street and from CottageGrove to Dorchester, in somecases Stony Island.The campus police were formedlong ago; budgets for its mainte¬nance date at least back to 1922.At one time they rode around onbicycles. Now, two police cars areperpetually prowling around theneighborhood. If a call comes in,it is relay by radio to one or bothof the cars, which can proceed tothe source in a matter of minutes.Forty men guard campusA total of forty policemen orguards watch the campus on anaround-the-clock basis, consisting Woodlawn branches if anyone tification cards, but Zellnerdangerous is on the loose in the stressed the fact that the campusneighborhood. police are here as friends of theArea poorly lit students, and want to co-operateWoodlawn avenue is well lit by with them.UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE1144 E. 55th DOSALE NOW IN PROGRESS10% Discount on All merchandiseWith This Coupon Only 3-9572Retreat for intellectual sharksReynolds Club Billiard RoomSnooker - Billiards - PoolFree on March 15 & 16Open 9 a.m. - 10 p.m. 12 Tablesstolen from FOTAThe Fiji entry in UMOC|llii!illltllllllllllllllllllllltlllllll!IIIIIIIIIIHIIIIII||||||||||||lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimilllllllllll!lllillllllllgI COMO’S Cafe EnricolRESTAURANT & PIZZERIA 11411 E. 53 FA 4-5525 - HY 3 -5300Small Large Small Large12” 14” 12” 14"Cheese .1.15 1.55 Combination . . 1.75 2.25Sausage .1.45 1.95 Chicken Liver . . 1.60 2.10Anchovy ..... .1.45 1.95 Mushroom ... . 1.60 2.10Pepper & Onion 1.30 1.80 Shrimp ....... 1.75 2.25Bacon & Onion .1.60 2.10 Pepperoni .... 1.60 2.10free Delivery on All Pizza to VC Students eiiiiiiiiiiuHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiHiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiii Study 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 o grass roots grasp of contem¬porary Europe problems. This two-semesterprogram lasts 10 months. Round trip oceantransportation is covered in the all ••’elusivefee 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.address0Iff Citjy ^ mm mm mm mm 5i°lL mm mm mm mm mmJ 00Ll-fr nW ••auom •4S mss *3 frOEL(ajO}S fiuoi-dfltll .»«(?)3UVM0UVH H0NN03inasenoaq pun uf amoa—- os 6afns j© puttf s**fj aanq acn sanali anoj Kaaaa aauQ‘Suidji M9U pasoipjnd X||Dpddsjo spajpunij 'spuo puo sppo jo aouojoap ’%09 °* 01 i° SDNIAVSX4pi|qnd poo6 s,|i 3SnVD39S9UI| M9U ppo jsniu 9M. 3SnVD33asjpuDipJOiu tjsaij joj uiooj jo sjoj paou sm 3SHVD3961 Hidy BuijjejsI31VS V 9NIAVH 3UV 3Mpuo9NIAV1S SI 3UVMQUVH U0NN03B3JB )U3UldO|3A8pay 3I]1 Uj p3A|0AUJION S| 3UVMQUVH H0NN03‘""fifBmjfs si if 4. foB mo ifWINSTON is in a class by itself for flavor;It’s fun to share a good thing! That’s why yousee so many Winstons being passed around thesedays. Try ’em. You’ll like their rich, full flavor,too. And you’ll like the way the Winston filter, snowy-white and pure, lets that rich flavor comethrough. Smoke America’s best-selling, best¬tasting filter cigarette! Find out for yourself:Winston tastes good —like a cigarette should!Smoke WINSTON...enjoy the snow-white filter in the cork-smooth tip!f- J- REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., WINSTON-SALOf, 0. tk1906-25: UC buildsby Bob HalaszWith the death of Wil¬liam Rainey Harper andthe succession of HarryPratt Judson to the Presi¬dency, the University sloweddown its building programand paused to collect its col¬lective breath. The fifteenyear of expansion had meant thecreation of large deficits, andJudson set to work consolidatingthe university and straighteningout its finances.John D. Rockefeller continuedto supply necessary funds until1910, when in a letter to the trus¬tees he announced that he wasmaking a final gift of ten milliondollars, distributed over ten years,to the University. One and a halfmillion was to go for the erectionof a University chapel, to domin¬ate the campus, and so that the other buildings would seem to'‘catch inspiration from thechapel.”In his letter, Rockefeller stated:“It is far better that the Univer¬sity be supported and enlargedby the gifts of many than bythose of a single donor.” Yet ina period of twenty years, Rocke¬feller had contributed almostthirty-five million dollars inmoney and land. He refused anyofficial recognition except thetitle, “Founder of the University,”which had been conveyed uponhim by the trustees. Later, ofcourse, the chapel he dreamed ofwas to bear his name.Almost immediately afterHarper’s death in 1906, plans gotunder way for a huge memoriallibrary to be named after the latepresident. The university had agreat library before it had a greatlibrary building, and Harper wasalways concerned lest the inade¬quate temporary library catch fire.The campaign received impetusthe next year when Rockefelleroffered to give three dollars forevery dollar raised by the Univer¬sity, up to $600,000. This wasmore difficult than it seemed atfirst, because the library was tobe a big and therefore expensivebuilding, and furthermore be¬cause the panic of 1907 had tem¬porarily retarded the generosityof prospective donors.Finally ground was broken in1910, and the cornerstone laid byMrs. Harper. Harper was plannedas the center building of the southcentral quadrangle, then incom¬plete with only Haskell and Lawstanding.Even once construction started,troubles did not end, for the build¬ing was damaged during construc¬tion when the roof crashed downon the still-incompleted floorsunderneath.The building was finally dedi¬ cated in June, 1912, almost a yearafter the scheduled dedicationwith both Judson, and the direc¬tor of the library, Ernest Burton,who was later to become presi¬dent, making speeches. Costingwell over a million dollars, thebuilding — built in the familiarEnglish Gothic style—was bothbeautiful and roomy. It was sevenstories high, 262 feet wide by 81feet long. The two towers reachedup 135 feet in height, making itthe tallest building on campus.The library now holds over twomillion volumes. Inside the en¬trance of the west tower is abronze tablet in memory of Harp¬er, and over the north centralentrance is a similar one.UC’s many sports fans wereconsiderably cheered when theUniversity made known its inten¬tion to build a concrete stand onMarshall field and build a wall ila-, <around it. The wooden stands lo¬cated along Ellis avenue were farfrom adequate, and the ngrandstand was first occupied mNovember, 1912, although it wasonly partly completed. The Ma-loon football team celebrateddefeating Minnesota.In an official ceremony in tft?fall of 1913, the field was namedafter Amos Alonzo Stagg, t|«“grand old man,” and the standbecame known as the WestStands. The stand itself was builtas a building on the west si<k.and seated 8,000. Underneath thestands was space for “a secondcommodious gymnasium.” TheNorth Stands were not built untilj3926.Ida Noyes hall, home of manystudent activities and of women’sphysical education classes, cameinto being by moans of a gift ofLaVerne Noyes, who donated a(Extreme left) This picture, taken in May of 1910,shows the beginnings of construction of Harper library.On the right can be seen the law school and Haskell, bothminus the bridges which now connect them to Harper. Inthe far background notice Coodspeed hall (minus Classics)and beyond, the ground where Billings hospital now stands.(Below) Here is Harper library as it looked shortly be¬fore the collapse of the tower. Note the east tower almostentirely completed, and the derrick on top of the west tow¬er. This derrick contributed to the downfall of the tower. U<*fJiakl <^MdsApril 19, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9ut Harper tower<rp sum for a buildinc to he ™large sum for a building to benamed after his late wife, IdaElizabeth Noyes. It was built ina mingling of period styles, re¬sembling an English manor houseof rather large proportions. Thegilding cost $500,000 and turnedout to be a real boon for the girls^>n campus who were in need of acenter for physical, social, andj^creational activities.Ida dedicated in styleThe dedication of Ida Noyes atthe quarter-centennial of the uni¬versity in June, 1916, was reallysomething to see. Miss LucineFinch, a student in the Univer-iJ sity, had produced a sort of char-■^•ifdes game in the form of an alle¬gory, requiring 250 girls. Theaffair, held in the court in backof the C-Group, was watched byfcur thousand people who sat intemporarily erected grandstands.Here, roughly, is the plot ofthe wordless allegory: (1) In4omes Youth: (2) She comes toAlma Mater, seated on her GothicThrone: (3) Youth wants a test^f her strength, so Alma Matersummons her ideals as a chal¬lenge to Youth’s spirit: (4) As|L the product of this appears in suc¬cession the Olympic Games, Ro¬mance of Literature, Spirit ofWorship, Lamp of Knowledge,and finally, the Gift of Service. Afrieze of this remarkable show ison the walls of the Ida Noyestheater.At the same time of the quar¬ter-centennial show, RosenwaldItnd Classics were being dedicated.The bulk of the money needed toerect a building for the geologyand geography departments wasreceived by the university from atrustee, Julius Rosenwald, afterwhom the building was named.Another Kelly hallMrs. Elizabeth Kelly, who hadcontributed to the building of thegirls’ dorms, left $150,000 in herwill for the construction of abuilding in memory of her hus-J^frand. Hiram Kelly. The ClassicsIbuilding was erected, housingthose departments for which itwas named. A plaque in the build¬ing states the name of the build¬ing and underneath it says, “Hi¬ram Kelly memorial.”Swift hall must have been aSource of embarrassment to theUniversity fathers. $100,000 wasdonated for the construction of atheology building by an anon¬ymous donor in 1915, and thetrustees were anxious to breakj ground for such a building, sincethe new Chicago'Theological sem-; {inary was badly in need of space.CTS had been keeping temporaryheadquarters in Haskell Orientalmuseum, a situation whichpleased nobody.’' * However, after the cornerstonewas laid at the quarter-centennial,with proper ceremony, it was dis- LIBRARY WALL FALLS;DEATH CLOSE TO MENMemorial to William BaincyHarper at U. of C. Damagedby Collapse of Tower.DAMAGE MAY BE $50,000Thirty Workers in Danger WhenSteel, Stone and Debris «Crash Down.Above is a reproductionof the Headlines from theChicago Record-Herald'sstory of the wreck of Har¬per tower.covered that the University lackedthe funds necessary to erect thebuilding. And so the $100,000 wasre invested, and it was not until1925 that the University gotaround to completing the build¬ing. The stonecutter chiseled thename “Swift” over the doorway,and it was then revealed that theanonymous gift had come fromMrs. Ann Higgins Swift.The last building constructedduring this period was the ivy-covered Quadrangle club, com¬pleted in 1922-23.At first, the faculty held theirsocial activities at the Del Pradohotel, where several of themlived, hut in 1896 a clubhouse wasbuilt for them at the present siteof the Oriental Institute. Unfortu¬nately, the building was almostdestroyed by fire less than a yearlater. A new structure was builtsoon after, but it was moved in¬tact to the west side of the cam¬pus and is now known as Ingle-side hall, following the construc¬tion of the present quadrangledub. The club contains livingrooms, committee rooms, a read¬ing room, a billiard room, a din¬ing hall, and tennis courts.1923 also marked the retire¬ment of President Judson, andthe following year Ernest DeWittBurton was chosen to be presi¬dent. Burton was to pursue an ag¬gressive policy, and it was duringhis administration that many im¬portant buildings were planned,feller chapel.most notably the famed Rocke-(Below) Scenes from fhe "Masque of Youth" given atthe dedication of Ida Noyes hall in 1916. The white-costumedpeople — running, jumping, and flying — are mostly pre-Ford foundation UC students. A complete account of themasque in paintings can be seen on the walls of the "littletheatre" on the third floor of Ida Noyes. Tribune tells tower tumbleReprinted from the Chicago TRIBUNE, Thursday, March.30, 1911Confidentially,Mr. Hutchinson:With just one sound ofwarning — a long drawn out,ripping “Cra-a-ack!” — sevenfloors of the almost completedwest tower of the new HarperMemorial building at the Univer¬sity of Chicago yesterday after¬noon suddenly reeled from theirposition and, telescoping eachother, plunged 113 feet in thebasement.There were between 25 and 30carpenters and laborers in thetower when it suddenly collapsed.By some miracle of fleetness offoot only one of them was hurt...Last night the interior of thetower was a heaped up, tangledmass of twisted steel, splinteredbeams, and shattered masonry.There were hundreds of tons of it.It will take weeks to clear awaythe debris . . .“Look at those beams,” a car¬penter, pointing at the pile ofplanks, tile, twisted steel, rein¬ forcement rods, and broken con¬crete, said. “They are sticking upthere like toothpicks in a potato."The beams are of concrete, acouple of feet thick, and weighingtons.. . . The tower was 113 feethigh at the time of the accident.A crane was being put in place inorder to hoist the Gothic spires,which would bring the height to138 feet. The steel arm of thecrane now is neatly balanced onthe west wall.Except for a ragged V-shapednotch forty feet deep and fifty orsixty feet wide in the south sideof the tower the walls still stand.The west wall has a jagged holewhere stood the delicate stonetracery of a Gothic window , . .(The library) . . . stands facingMidway Plaisance between Ellisand Lexington (now University)avenues. In a report dated April 3, 1911,and marked “Confidential,” a Mr.Hickman of the UC “Office of theCounsel and the Business Man¬ager” reported the details of thecollapse to Charles L. Hutchin¬son, chairman of the committeeof buildings and grounds:*. . . the sixth floor was calledon to sustain the weight of thederrick, the roof and the seventhfloor ... a load out of all propor¬tion to that which it was esti¬mated to carry, and while it wasstill too green to have anythinglike its full supporting strength.“When, at 2 o’clock, the finalcatastrophe took place, the floorsfell one at a time, each succeed¬ing floor holding the load momen¬tarily and then letting go, like asuccession of explosions, as heardfrom a distance.Coming events on quadranglesFriday, April 19 Sunday, April 21 Religious leaders Buber,Blake to speak at UCweekly, 7:30 pm, Lexington 210, 50cmodel fee.Lecture series: New Directions in Psy¬chotherapy: ‘‘Bioanalyttc therapy: cur¬rent developments,” lecture series atdowntown College, 19 s. LaSalle. JulesH. Masserman. MD, prof, of neurologyand psychiatry at Northwestern,speaker. Admission $3.Coffee hour, 10-12 pm, weekly, Oateshall lounge.Wednesday, April 24Intervarsity Christian fellowship, lunch¬eon-discussion, 12:30, Ida Noyes.Hillel discussion, “Conflict of ideas Inmodern Jewish thought" 3:30 pm,Rabbi Maurice Pekarsky.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm. Rockefellerchapel, James R. Lawson, carllloneur.Canterbury evensong, 5:05, Bond chapel.Science fiction club, 8 pm. Ida Noyes.Country dancers, 8 pm Ida Noyes hall.Social Dance class 8-9 p.m, Int. house,room CDE, males 50c, females free.Play, Easter Song, presented by Univer¬sity Theatre, 8:30 pm, Reynolds Clubtheatre, admission $1.Monday, April 22New Testament Club, "Jottings from theEssene Scriptorium.” Swift Commons,8 pm. Lecture, Dr. Strugnall.Film, Kiss me Kate, Int. house assemblyhall, 45 cents, 8 pm. Carillon concert, special to open FOTA,12 noon, Rockefeller, sponsored bySocletas Campanariorum, admissionfree. . •• >■Chicago Review staff meeting, 4:30 pm,Reynolds club, room 304.Production 5118, film dealing with prob¬lems of interpersonal communication,Norman H. Martin, assistant professorof human development, commentator,soc. sci. 122, 7:30 pm-9 pm.“Experiment in Urban Renewal,” speak¬er Phil Doyle, executive director ofChicago Land Clearance Commission.Reports by Walker Sandback, gen¬eral manager, and Howard Vogel, pres¬ident, followed by discussion and vot-lngf, 7:30, Oriental Institute.Coffee Hour, 9-11 pm, Green hall lounge. Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Are.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery Service The College ®LAUNDERETTE -1449 East 57th St.fiMU 4-9236"‘What’s it like to beA SYSTEMS ANALYST AT IBM?Two years ago, college senior Thomas Wheeler asked himself this ques¬tion. Today, a Systems Analyst in IBM’s? Data Processing Division, Tomreviews his experience and gives some pointers that may be helpful toyou in taking the first, most important step in your business career.Stationers & Printers• Office Supplies• Artists' Materials• Mechanical Drawii“What I probably like most aboutthis, job," says Tom, “is that you’renever tied down to one desk and thesame routine. There’s always a newproblem ... a new approach needed... new people to meet and work with.’ ’But first, what does a SystemsAnalyst do? “Briefly, we study a cus¬tomer’s present system—payroll, in¬ventory control, billing or whatever—and convert it to a mechanized sys¬tem using either conventional IBMbusiness machines or IBM’s high¬speed electronic computers."Tom works out of the IBM Balti¬more Office with some of America’s fined by Tom as “converting the flowof instructions and information intothe most efficient operation for anIBM magnetic drum computer. Bell-wood,” Tom points out, “is the In¬ventory Control Center for all Why Tom chose IBMHow does a senior like Tom, who wasiJ- interviewed by at least twenty com¬panies while in college, select his'' future employer? “In my case,” Tomlys, “the choice was easy. IBM■ offered the best opportunities. I knewIBM sales were about doubling everyfive years—and when I consideredT ’ the tremendous growth potential ofthe electronic computer field—I hadno trouble making up my mind.“Besides, I was impressed by thecaliber of IBM personnel. They hada broader outlook and an approach to ., '/ ;" ng Equip.1221 East 55th StreetHY 3-4111 MU 4-9024ESSANESS WONDERFULFAMILY THEATREEvery night is likesfigf vacation time *COLLEGE NITEFINE MOVIES“BEST EATS"At the control panel of IBM'i 650business which I can best describeas professional.“My future? It looks good—verygood. I’ve-already received two gen¬erous raises in less than two years,and at the rate IBM and the elec¬tronic computer field are expanding,my future is both assured — andrewarding!”o o •IBM hopes this message will help to giveyou some idea of what it’s like to be aSystems Analyst in the Data ProcessingDivision. There are equal opportunities; 5 for E.E.’s, I.E.’s, M.E.’s, physicists, math-[i]- ematieians, Liberal Arts majors, and^ .Business Administration graduates in"H IBM’s many divisions—Research, Prod-uct Development, Manufacturing En-gineering, Sales and Sales Assistance.HI Why not drop in and discuss IBM withyour Placement Director? He can supplyour brochure and tell you when LBM will, next interview on your campus. Mean¬while, our Manager of College Relations,. P. H. Bradley, will be happy to answeryour questions. Just write him at IBM,Room 11904 590 Madison Ave., NewYork 22, N. Y. CALLPETERSONMOVING & STORAGE CO55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterfield 8-6711;!AQEHTDATA PROCESSING Jimmy’sSINCE 1940HALSTED OU,DOORCHILDREN FREE Phone WA. 8-7979by Harold BernhardtDr. W. E. B. DuBois, vener¬able historian and a founderof the NAACP and the Pan-African congress, spoke oncampus last week in the first oft w o SRP-sponsored meetingsmarking Academicweek.“I am going to talk to you aboutrace integration in the South”Dr. DuBois began. “It was theconclusion of Hebrew philosophythat whatsoever a man soweth soshall be reap—the assumption be¬ing that the sower and the reaperwill be the same person. Thatw ould be justice.”lie cited the fact that 15 millionAfricans were brought into theI S as slaves between 1500 and1700, being imported as late as1850. “The future of their de¬scendants must be solved," he as¬serted. “Part of the immense billdue was presented to the South in1954 by the Supreme Court in itsdecision that no public schoolsystem in the US could constitu¬tionally separate its pupils ac-ording to race.” —White supremacy dyingThe domination of the whiteraces over the darker races isending all over the world, DuBoiscontinued, citing Nixon’s recenttrip to Africa. “Last month wesent the Vice-President to greetthe new nation of Ghana whosecolored king was once forced tokneel and kiss the feet of Englishrulers.”The Supreme Court’s decisionagainst segregation in public edu¬cation “a tardy recognition of the 14th Amendment,” came partlyout of the realization that the UScould no longer, as a civilizednation, afford to lag behind therest of the world, he observed.“Poor whites in the South butimitated their superiors and car-day that slavery was not wrong,that the Civil War was not foughtover slavery, and that Negroes areso inherently inferior to Whitesthat it is degrading to do anythingwith them on an equal basis.”Separation will continueWhat is going to be the reactionof Southern white children com¬ing out of such an ideological set¬ting when they meet Negro stu¬dents at school? “Most of themare going to recoil” and if theirbehavior is reinforced by parentsand public opinion, they will “obeythe letter but systematically dis¬obey the spirit of integrated pub¬lic education."“The South will enforce racialseparation for many years de¬spite the law,” he stated. “Casteand class education will continue. The rich will go to private schoolsto escape Negroes, as in the Norththe rich do to escape Jews andforeign-born. All of this will lowerthe nation further.” *The blame for racism in the USdoes not rest exclusively on theSouth, DuBois pointed out. “Afteremancipation the nation willinglyallowed the establishment of col¬or caste and the suppression ofracial democracy in the South."Among other results, he said, “theworld everywhere and continuallyinterrupts our loud talk aboutdemocracy with ‘what about yourtreatment of your Negro citi¬zens?’ Abolishing slavery wesupplanted it with color castepponage.”“We spend more money pre¬paring for war than any other na¬tion in the world ever dreamed ofspending,” he asserted. ‘The ma¬jority of the world believe we arehypocrites and that the one thingwe want is to get rich.“Where everywhere in theworld Communism is being recog¬nized as a great social challenge,here in the US we are hystericalabout it and will not even allow itto be discussed seriously.” Main taining that the mark of slavery isdiscernable on all these develop¬ments, DuBois declared thatthings have gotten to a pointwhere advocacy of peace may bepunished as a crime."But our thought control iscostly,” DuBois added. “I referto the increase of business cheat¬ing, defalcation, and swindling. Irefer to the rising rate of suicideand insanity and crimes of forceand violence.”Must pay debtThe situation Americans are intoday, he said in conclusion, islargely an outgrowth of Negroslavery and color caste. “Whatyou have practiced against Ne¬groes you .are now ready to prac¬tice against the world in WorldWar III. Yet the debt we owe mustbe paid, for whatsoever a mansoweth, so must his children andhis children’s children reap.”The first question asked DuBoiswas: how far will the federalgovernment go in bringing aboutschool integration in the South?to which he replied: “Just as far as people like you say it should.The federal government is goingto do just as little as you do.”Asked about Negro voting pref¬erence, Dr. DuBois commented:“When I was a young man everycolored person voted Republicanas a matter of religion. I am hop¬ing that in the future Negroes'wlil carefully play Democrats andRepublicans against the other.What we need of course is a thirdparty in the US, and that’s whatwe haven’t got."Persons who arrived early atJudd 126. where the meeting washeld, were turned away for a timeby misinformed statements frommembers of the Education depart¬ment that no such meeting wasscheduled there. However, al¬though Academic Freedom an¬nouncement posters had been re¬moved from various bulletinboards on campus for several daysbeforehand, a telephoned “bombscare” at 2:30 pm that led to theentire building’s being emptiedand fruitlessly searched was ap¬parently unrelated to the meeting.GABE S STORE FOR MENN.W. Corner 55th fir Kenwood HY 3-5160For your selection —Entire new stock of Spring andSummer Clothing and FurnishingsAll nationally advertised merchandiseUniversity's finest store for men NICKY'SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55th NO 7-90635 for 4 OFFER!on group orders of pizza — get 5 for the price of*4!Free delivery to F. of C. studentsTable Service Delivery Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M. 11 A. M. to 2 A.M.Open till 3 A.M. on Friday ond SaturdayClosed Mondaysried out the dirty work for them,”Freedom DuBois declared. “The best peo¬ple in the South were responsibleand it is maintained even to this(OR)K/o\x can -find most anything’ i-P you know where to look A long time ago there was a grade A explorer named V. N.Balboa. Like a pogo stick with a hot foot, he hopped fromplace to place, discovering this and that.One day, paging through an old copy of the National Geo¬graphic, he became intrigued with the idea of discovering thePacific Ocean. He set sail for Laguna Beach and landed oneflight in Panama (his navigator was left-handed and a littleheavy on the stick).Next morning our hero found himself out at the inn . . . andout plenty. He was in a heavy-stakes poker game. Employ¬ing an old gambling custom often used but seldom effective,-tTMr. B. got up and walked around his chair. On the thirdtime around, Bal espied in the distance a strange wet undulat¬ing object. He climbed atop his chair (it was a high chair)and lo, below him was the Pacific Ocean. “Man, that ain’t.dew,” he cried aloud, “that is an ocean of much magnitude!”... and instantly spread the news of this discovery to theworld via the AP, UP and INS. (The rest is history.)Now, it’s beyond us just why Balboa should receive suchacclaim for discovering the Pacific Ocean, which every Indianin the vicinity worth his scalp-lock knew was there all thetime. We only relate this story in a sneaky effort to getaround to a moral...MORAL: When you discover Budweiser,you'll discover that Budueiseris to beer as the Pacific is to oceans . . . the most!Budweiser* ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELESKING OF BEERS12 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 19,1957The University of ChicagoUNIVERSITY COLLEGEhas the honor to presentdistinguished Jewish Philosopherauthor of “I and Thou", "Between Man and Man", "Eclipse of God", and otherworks; former professor of social philosophy, Hebrew University, Jerusalem.MAN IN FLIGHTthe psychological plight of HumanityWednesday, April 247:30 p.m. Leon Mandel Hall57 St. and University AveGeneral admission, $1 — Students, 50cTickets available at Reynolds Club orDowntown Center, 19 South LaSalle.A contribution to the Festival of the Art*UC’s Brislawn placedeighth in the men’s all-aroundand was the only contestant en¬tered in every event. GymnasticsCoach Bob Kreidler is currently-occupying himself with unload¬ing trucks in front of the Field-house . . . this is in connectionwith hosting the National AAUGymnastics championships, whichare to be held in the Fieldhouse•n May 3 and 4. After rolling over IIT and Loy¬ola last week in a practice meet,the golfers will come up againstthe University of Illinois (NavyPier). All of the golfers’ matchesare held at a considerable distancefrom campus; however, all would-be fans can address their lettersof encouragement and well-wishesto the Physical Education depart¬ment at Bartlett gym.Regal Presents the “Natural Look”In Ivy Authentics IM Director Kooman Boycheffhas announced that the Phys Eddepartment again will sponsor aclass in the various forms of flycasting. Classes will be held at theJackson Park Casting club pier atthe Jackson Park lagoon. Bill Gillformer American casting champion, will be on hand to demonstrate latest techniques and equipment, as well as instruct the classThe first class witt be held Tuesday, April 30, at 6:30 pm. Thatevening the session will be de¬voted to bait casting.Interested persons may registerwith IM Director Boycheff at theBartlett gym office, or by callingextension 1093.George KarcazesSpring Features:100% Worsted Suits $59.50Shetland Sport Coats $45Polished Cotton Suits . . $29.50• Arrow Shirfs• Dobbs Hats• Cooper UnderwearAsh about our “U.C.A(Vniversity Charge Account)Open til 9 pm, Thurs, Fri, SatJoe Richards' STORE816 E. 63rd St. • DO 3-6074 -Just oft Camptu*’ A1 Jacobs, Maroons’ stellar sprinter, was awarded the "Outstanding Athlete of theMeet” Trophy, last Saturday at the second annual Bradley relays.He was awarded this trophy as a result of winning the 100 yard dash and running theanchor leg on two winning relay teams.a^t Seventeen members re]ay Abeles, Don Richards, Dick hurdles; and Dick Cousens placedof the Varsity track squad Meyerburg, Karcazes) fifth; and fifth in the discus,made the trip to Peoria and a ShUttle hurdle relay (Richards, A1 Tomorrow several members ofgood team performance was turn- Qajnes j)an Trifone) fifth. the UC Track club as well as Var-ed in. The best performance was jn the individual events Jacobs’ sity men will participate in themade in the sprints, where Chi- winn.jng time in the 100 was :09.9; Ohio Relays at Columbus, Ohio,places in q>rifone for second in the high and the Kansas Relays at Law-the 100-yard dash and won both jump ancj placed third in the high rence, Kansas,sprint relays.A1 Jacobs, Hosea Martin, andBrooks Johnson placed one-two-three in the dash and were joinedby George Karcazes in winningthe 440 and 880 yard relays.Other Maroon relay teamsplaced as follows: sprint medley(Ivan Carlson, Jerry Abeles, GaryPearson, Bud Perschke) fourth;two-mile relay (Carlson, Abeles,Ned Price, Perschke) fifth; mileEllen Coughlin Beauty SalonSI05 Lake Park Ave.SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.m.-ll p.m,'B' netmen win easilyUC’s tennis team bat led down their opponents last Tuesdayin a "B” team meet held on the indoor courts in the Field-house.The meet was against Wright Junior college and servedas a good conditioning meet —r —r 77and afforded the opportunity ex^a p.a/odTn ordlrlofor several freshmen to play. give ex|ra experie„ce and eondi-tioning to the players. Althoughthis meet was treated as a “prac¬tice” session, Wright fielded oneof the best, teams they have hadfor a number of years.’Norm Strominger, fighting fora position on the first team, wassingled out for praise by CoachMoyle for his fine playing.Ml >3-2060Sports columnSports humming all overphoto by BerniclcBaseball opened on Stagg field Saturday, as Chicago’s “B” teamwas trounced by the visiting Calumet Center of Purdue University,19-5. Nobody threw out the first ball, and only five spectators wereon hand, which was just as well.The first-string tied Chicago Teachers, 6-6, in a game played onthe opponent’s grounds last Tuesday. The game was called onaccount of darkness. Karohl and Allen led the Maroon attack withthree hits and three RBI’s each.Jacobs gets 'outstanding' trophyThe Central AAU Gymnastics championships were held in Bartlett Gymnasium lastSaturday. Illinois walked of with top honors as Olympian Abe Grossfield captured the all-around title. Olympian Joyce Racek, of Lincoln-Turners-Chicago, took the women’s all-around.• a » HWIIMI TMM HM, unnal l«l IM MC MU COMMOt.SociologySpin a platter... have some chatter...and sip that real great taste of Coke.Sure, you can have a party withoutCoca-Cola—but who wants to!Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.April 19, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13Blackfriars show could be betterA green neon sign sus¬pended over the great goldenseal embedded in the floor ofMandel corridor gave finalnotice that “Blackfriars” wereback to about a thousand present<md past citizens of the Universitycommunity who showed up atUC’s biggest theater on two dayslast weekend.Show is mixturePeople came expecting a musi¬cal show written and staged bystudents. Whether or not this iswhat they saw, Gamma Delta Iotawas an interesting mixiure. Audi¬ences surprisingly small for sucha much-touted event showed ap¬proximately equal appreciationfor parts of the show that werelousy, and parts that showedpromise of better things from thegroup in the future.Blackfriars’ offering was a col¬lege show, plain and simple. Set ina University of Chicago which ispictured to have undergone quitea change in character in fiveyears, it depends for plot on a contest between a fraternity that’s“better than Beta” and “richerthan ZBT” and a girls club madeup of Bermuda-clad coeds whohave renounced men in the nameof individuality. Both organiza¬tions want to raise money; thetrat’s plan is to sponsor a footballgame with Notre Dame, while thegirls sell ballots so that studentscan register their choice for “bestprofessor.” Romantic interest isprovided by a straight affair be¬tween the leaders of the two or¬ganizations and a comic one be¬tween appealing types who aren’tquite student leaders.The plot isn’t the show’s strongpoint. In fact, the script, despiteconsiderable work reflected by acomparison of names on the pro¬gram with authors publicized lastFall, gains what merit it may havefrom the fact that there’s some¬thing personal in it for everybody.If you were familiar with frater¬nity life, you probably had grandassociations with all the referenc¬es to that at UC. If you were afootball fan in the good old days,Poet to give lectureLeonie Adams, American poet, will give the 202nd lecturein the William Vaughn Moody series at Mandel hall, 8:30 pm,Friday, April 26. Admission is without ticket and withoutcharge.The lecture is part of theFestival of the Arts whichwill be held April 25 through 28. Miss Adams’ poetry has beenwidely published. She is the au¬thor of the books of verse, ThoseSpeaking on “Harmonics and Fleet, High Falcon, Lyrics ofthe image,” Miss Adams also will Francois Villon, and collectedread from her own poemsOne of the finest poets to re- Poenis.At present a member of theceive a Guggenheim Fellowship, faculty of Columbia university,she also has been granted a $1000 she has taught poetry at Newaward from the National Insti- York university, Bennington col-lute of Arts and Letters as well lege, the New Jersey College foras membership in the Institute; Women, and at the Bread Loafthe Harriet Monroe award in Writer’s conference. She hasPoetry from UC; the Shelley served as curator of poetry at theMemorial award, and the Bol- Library of Congress, and as alingen prize in poetry from Yale Fulbright lecturer on Americanuniversity. literature in Europe.Your own "Loading Lady" says:DRESS YOUR PARTand start withCITY CLUBSHOES FOR fVlEISJFor Play... M2427...black or natural leatherFor Dress...M2702...leather and shantung For Every Day . M2288... black or brown calfJARMA LEWIS, featured in MGM'S ‘'Reintree County.”Filmed In MGM Camera OS and color.Peters, Division of International Shoo Co., St. Louis 3, Mo.LEARN WHILEASLEEP! At last science hasfound a way for youto learn language*,vocabulary, facts,figures, memorize les¬sons—all while yousleep. For the realfact* about this revolutionary university-tested method, send $2.00 for64 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 hundredscf time-saving hints. Satisfaction is guaranteed. Sleep-LearningResearch Association, P. O. Box 610-CP Omaha, Nebraska. there was a line' or two in thescript for you. The show’s “Presi¬dent Plimpton” may have beennothing but a nervous milk drink¬er, but the name was close enoughso people who didn’t identify any¬one else could imagine that acertain University chancellor wasbeing spoofed in grand style. Peo¬ple in the College in recent yearswere treated to a sewing classconducted by a Mrs. Yaks, but ifthe burlesque was supposed to befunny, it missed.When the University of Chicagofootball team was described tohave defeated the fighting Irish(by a voice familiar to local radiofans yet) their method (a teammember directed UC’s band in theNotre Dame victory march, caus¬ing all Irish players to face to theEast in reverence) may have de¬noted some of that old UC spirit,but one had to look hard for it.No wigglesFor the most part members ofthe cast seemed free of stagefright, but there was a lot to bedesired in direction. The chorusstuck to their formations as ifthey were waiting for the whitesof the enerriy’s eyes and when theassembled members of GammaDelta Iota sang their theme song,they swayed as if trying to afflictmal de mer on the people in Man-del hall. If they couldn’t movearound, at least they could havewiggled.Music is excellentThe music, composed and direc¬ted by Douglas Maurer, providedwhat high points there were in adismal show. It was good musicalcomedy music and to say thatthere were times when you could swear you’d heard a strain beforebut knew darned well the scorewas original is by no means tocondemn it. Maurer handled theblues sung by that sewing class,the Gilbert and Sullivan typesongs that the groups might havehandled very well and even pro¬jected above the orchestra witha bit of practice, and the modernBroadway musical sort of num¬bers with equal and commendablefacility. If the direction, scriptand overall acting had come closeto the musical arrangements, thenew Blackfriars show could prob¬ably come out ahead in competi¬tion with.any in the past.One wondered why Blackfriarsfelt constrained to stick so closeto what they imagine a college-type show should be. The moststartling effect in Gamma DeltaIota was a flashing of lights,more or less in keeping with theorchestra’s tempo, which tookplace during the overture. Look¬ing back on the show, one hadthe feeling that he had been ex¬periencing the somewhat garbled,,,TV and Radio -144(1 East 55th Street prelude of an impressively coivventional honeymoon.The most noteworthy originalwork was done in one major bal¬let scene, but Pam Marvel andKen Nash didn’t fit into the pat¬tern of the show. This is not tocondemn them, and by itself couldnot have condemned the show.Can improveBlackfriars didn’t this year, andprobably could not come close tothe musical extravaganzas put onat educational centers such asNorthwestern university where acast of hundreds each year bidsto contribute at least one principleto Broadway, or Purdue, wherescores of stalwart men ca¬vorted in turquoise tuxedos lastspring. But with the resources andbacking they have, and with theamount of interest focussed onthem as the revival of an old cam¬pus tradition, it seems that theymight be able to produce an im¬provement over this year’s not byany means memorable return tothe campus scene.Gerard David Ives30 years i»tHyde ParkSales &. ServiceHi de Park 3-3000Specialists in Servicing Hi-Fi & FMReconditioned FM Sets Available10% discount on repairs brought in with this couponOF THE LITERARY ARTCRAFT AND CHARACTER IN MODERN FICTION by Morton D. Zabel $4.75Eighteen incisive essays examining the direction of modern fiction and itsproblems.MASS CULTURE by Rosenberg and White $6.50The first comprehensive collection of writings on the popular arts.POETS IN A LANDSCAPE by Gilbert Highet $6.50Seven Latin poets against the background of imperial Rome and the coun¬tryside of Italy today, by the distinguished Latin scholar.AMERICAN WRITING TODAY by Allan Angoff, ed $4.50Now in permanent form, this material was originally published as a specialsection of the London Times Literary Supplement.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.ucePRE-ELECTRICSHAVE LOTION to get a bettor shave!Quicker . . . closer . . . smoother . , .no matter what machine you use. 1.00Slot KwSHULTON New York • Toronto14 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 19, 1957ft ;s'* }, >,ft. '_ t'*Since the Chicago symphony season is all over, Culture Vulture should commemorate the arrival of Spring by taking to chick¬watching. That sport, which UT director Marv Phillips predicts will bring a resurgence of interest in student activities this year as in ;the past, can be mixed with concert-going, night spot hoppings attending of plays and even studying.Affairs on campus . . >f ft * -' ’* i ' FOTA * the bells in Christiandom flv to Indian dance program opens Tuesday. Read Rich’s re- rector of music will dim i t; ,.. *' Rome on Maundy ‘Thursday, and. Sunday. April'28, Breasted hall, view next Friday for a UCer’s singers and join the Temple qua§.’far from shying away,from tradi- will be the scene of a lecture- view on the advisability of buying tet as bass soloist. He is a lecturerperformance of the classical dance half price tickets available in UT’s in humanities at University Gol¬an American R e y no 1 d s club office. If the lege and sang with the Lyncdancer who recently spent a year theater going urge strikes you be opera last fall.. , - . ‘ documentary»filnWto-#befcshown studyingrin Madras, will begin her fore then (pleasant thought?) be Spanish shows ftoftef-student^a number of excel- during FOTAft has a Flamenco explanation and performances of - forewa^. t h a t two hundred A pan-American film festivallent opportunities for chick watch- muftc score by Romanvlad. the eastern ritual dances at S pm. watts of amplication will *end out will take place at Thorno h;U|inc Keen your eves open while Martha Set,lamnie sings Off COmpilS . . . blue light ning cVasing^cro^t he "'Vyou'ie \ ievving the student ait ex- Tomorrow, night smiling ftKP Hvdc Park theater set Lake Shore drivenext.weekendf, , ...... pn ers will sponsor the multilingual . Hyd( 1 ark th< at. r I< nday two-Spamsh films and ah 1 " " 1 aUu - 1 ' 1 '. foik singer. Miss Sehlamme, who The Lonely Night,--showing at Oedipus Rex '.-Mexican newsreel-will be showny tered in competitions open to UC, amongtotherftalbumsfthas'recorded UC’s best neighborhood theater, ft;, Thefirst of Sophocles’ Theban starting at 7:45 pm; Saturdaystudents and students at the -FolkSongs of Many Lands,” will has been hailed as a serious, adult dramas is given a colorful treat- three Mexican films will appearpuwninwn': college Immediately' be-in her progr-am at Salt) in-Man- work that tells the- truth about ment in the Stratford Shakespear- after 5:15.following ,i vouft-.m indulge in <Wh»!l. psycholherapy without resorting ian players film treatment of the Art Institute* trimmings. With back- ancient story, going into, its third■ most delightful moments of the' ftsport concurrently with anjopen,house at Midway studios, locatedat 60th street and Ingleside, Pul¬chritudinous student artists willft- pot, paint’ lithograph and sculptfor all 'to see. Unique opportuni- Thirty canvases by'.'Claudeties for experienced chick-watch¬ers a re available at Beaux Artsball Saturday night at least fromthe view point of the variety '«chiekst attire. See next Tuesday’s- special Maroon for news of FOTA>ft V sans ehickwatching hints, ;Folklore society lecture : -Next, Wednesday. at 3:30 noted‘ merican poet Walter Lowenfelswill speak on “The influence offolk music on American poetry.”The lecture in Soc 122 is spomsored by; the Folklore society, andwill be illustrated by recorded andlive presentations of. folk music.Admission is free.x “ 1 , * - ground melodies provided by the wek at the World Playhouse, 410 Monet first French imnrpssinnMtNew Music string quartet, it was South Michigan.. ~ are hanging on the second flomproduced with the cooperation of Haydn’s “Creation” of the Michigan avenue gallontlie MentalftHea 11h Fi 1 m boaQn May 5, Haydn’s oratorio.„w,,.. . . , . Many of them have never been onStudebaker theater The Creation, will be put on at display in Chicago before. In iMolnar’s The Uiiardstnan closes Temple Isaiah Israel, 1100 East photography departmen t tFreedom id asm is basteBUSS: . ... .by Oliver Lee* v s ^ §0% -Wx - f vv J -v , \Disagreement over v\lietlier academic freedom in this country is declining was explicitby Oliver. Lee <; J - - - ■0Skiamong,the...three panel members last Thursday on “Academic freedom in a free univer-sity. The panel, sponsored by SRP, consisted of Donald Meiklejohn, associate professorof philosophy in the.;.College; Robert Pickus, instructor in the social sciences in the College;and William Davidon, of theArgonne National laboratory. t’C Chan vllor RobertM. Hutch- retorted that thisr . ' Davidon^ a n d " Pickusargued Vns) and 0,h<?r groups prove that.r attitude was “totally lrresponsi-.. -- ;nuiui- MeiklejohnMnrthn Srhlri’mme?^ f Davidon-and Picku ’Whither away? More ,olu sinein. »«•«»••• Hlm.e ... mainKUh »e»W»ie free hie " lie *,M a., College a.Ioff on Mav 11 EnhiMtkm Momen "•<* '-V -Ming leur *-» »•' »'”»« ""h u^er he ,s frequently quest.nne.1: -anythingshould i ;ii vou naven i sworn on on. ;vi,n n r,.\inuimm lvioim-n- - ., .. . .. - ... • . ___ «- , > . . .ngTcfor lent, someih.ng t urn w ill 'bring t he venerable dean areas of spcdfic abuses practiced ,he at,a<’k* uI>(,n l( 1 whldl >>> ^BI aK^ts about particulartv missing from your life of American folk sin^m’s. John by.'-the -government • with regard fhekus, replied tliat these groups students, and that his responsibil-11 vim I'd ii<p<)'ti. hoi n nr f.n T laoh-g \ lies I a Ma nt lid a s a comn- 1,1 .•..iami.'i.. ii,„ i.„ hei.n.™ “do a pood job but thov all ODer- itv to hnth thp (.nvpmmpnt and I o^iiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitHiiiiiiiiiHiiiHiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiimiiKr. Meiklejohn, on the other hand,felt that the activities of the Fund• for the Republic (under former . bly ■.need not be appliedi by Ber-Mago, inthat theConstitutional guarantees of free- which De Votodom of speech, press, and assem- ,FBI had no business whatsoever'.•snooping into the private affairscitizens, and he hence-“The World’s Best”SPECIAL1 ,:$;T SH !OFFER ■Book StoremScholarly Used Books—> Bought and Sold-Imported Greeting Card. of citizens; and thatforth would refuse to give any information to FBI agents with re-gard to loyalty questions aboutpeople he knew.WITH THIS COUPON. . . 1.00 Lorge .. . . ..... 1.95125c Discount on any Pizzaeaten here . . . or delivered ■I. ■ ft5 mf ^ vr«| Small .1 Medium ......1.45| FREE DELIVERY FOR '■ U. OF C STUDENTS .i ISIS E. «»rd MI 3-4045 !| / , , | 1322 E. 55th St.Reliable Typewriter Service* BV 3-9651Giant . . ... 2.95‘ * - ■*' *~'X" ; y ,* STUDENTS LAUNDRY SPECIAL8 lbs. Laundry — Washedand Dried .ft . . . ......Shirts finished to orderJlSc ea. UP 5ft- Meiklejohn thought that stu¬dents at UC have more of the sub¬stance of academic freedom thanthose at most other colleges ariduniversities, but feel themselvesless free. He concluded by sajingthat the important business ofstudents is to study, implyingthat, short of some gross curtailment of academic freedom oncampus, there is no need for themto be concerned. < * ‘additional>1hyde park theatrelakc park at 53rd 7-9071life Student Rate 50c all performances ; 1.IRVINGJACOBY's. ' ■' The LONELY NIGHTTr'E MOST AUTHENTIC, IMPORTANT PORTRAYALOF PSYCHOTHERAPY YET FILMED! t§|»» with MARIANSELDES - \A I■BOSLEY CROWTHER, NEW YORK TIMESa ft ' f • f o', r ■- ' ■ .ftOLINE by MARIAN SELDE-S, daughter of w;riter-directqr GILBERTSELDES, young actress from the New Yorlftstage, currently being fea¬tured in ''ONDINE''. ft Pianist-Composer, MEL POWELL and theL 1 . • . It • . . ■ I , , „, , b'rtetfcontribdte an effecti, n i i ground."■ ft'' , ’ i V * Jr ’T v >Oh, Men! Oh, Women!<< i »»)! ft. EDWARD CHODOROV'sBroadway Stage Hit ft ?MORE PSYCHIATRY . . . COUCH VARIETY . . . THIS TIME PLAYEDFOR LAUGHS by a pleasant cast headed by DAVID NIVEN andintroducing a wonderful new clown, TONY RANDALL . . . “who; ■*> a hilarious footnote to an era in which thelounge lizard has. been replaced by the couch cowboy!” • v— TIME MAGAZINE KWIKftWAYStet |H'imiLAUNDRY & CLEANERS1214 E. 61st St.(Between Woodlawn & Kimbark MODEL CAMERA ;ft Hyde Park's most complete;51st) ft y - , ft; ' ft- photo and hobby shop2-doy color developingNSA Discount1342 E. Ilth HY 3-92159FABULOUS SUMMER TOURSto&fMim' ‘'MEN & WOMEN(f 8-30 years of age) AFRICA .i THE ORIENTAT AMAZING adventure .... study .... funEUROPE .... $780-1140■fd ’70 exciting daysincluding special . VOLKSWAGEN toursand informal “HOBO” tours by . bus$1100$1800$ 650SOUTH AMERICA * V .* Tr- ^'Special Interest -ToursEnglish Lit • ScUlpture & Painting '•%Q|IhPCT DRTCC1 . Music Festivals • Economics & PoliticsPvl/i7C I KM I Lv All tours include passage^ meals, ^UTdedtrips, lectures, entertainment- . For free iffneraYy ahd sailing dales, fill oilt< oupon and mail to—/; U. S. NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOC.EDUCATIONAL TRAVEL, INC.*5 70, SEVEIJTH AVERUEt NEW YORK 36, N. V.*A non-prouYi*corfcCTaIlon serving U.S &tudents from coast-to-cnasfr^. >, Shearing may be popular,but he tan play good jazz April 19, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • ISMocPonald asks critic:Why criticize externals?A day after reading Easter blank verse. Great writers of the past^ . ,. ? , . merged the devices of poetry and dramaWednesday’s George Shearing concert on campus (sponsored by WUS and the Jazz University TheatrTfor the FestL m ththJTSire6S* a£a hi£fiyduty has Placed in order some remarks about Shearing’s talent and his position in the val of the Arts, Palmer w. Pinney ’S5i?mldi^reh“rihven^18y f?omWorld of Jazz. Most jazz musicians “put him down” with remarks like “Shearing? Yeah, (April 12). Unfortunately, his evalua- Easter Song. He has not only been cathe people's choice” with a m(elltaa| sixteenth.note trlp.sneer on the people s. Yet I d let jaz2 figure AIso re(reshlng islike to discuss some things h,js use 0f pUre triads in the midstwhich have been rather over etc.looked in this man’s work.Shearing’s interpretation of"Funny Valentine” inspires sometalk about counterpoint as usedin jazz. The discriminating lis¬tener should never let himself befooled by the word “fugue.” Afugue is a highly complex anddeadly serious form of composi- of extended (i.e. more dissonant)jazz chordal progressions. How¬ever, Shearing has a somewhatnaive tendency to play a gooddeal of bombastic or saccharine“Romantic” music, employingmany uselessly frilly and heavypassages.I might add that among his tion of the play is somewhat at themercy of Mr. Plnney’s preoccupationwith matters external to the play it-The “commercial” acnoot nf thic As manager of the current biennialine commercial aspecr 01 tms Charles E. Sergei competition I had op-group is horrid. There was the portunlty to read Easter Song nearlytwo months ago and my considered pable of thinking that he might do sucha play but he has, to use another lan¬guage, Jolly well carried It off.To dispute Mr. Pinney further, thewonder is not that the language of theplay is so very different from the stand¬ard fare of the tom-shirt school, orusual, uncalled for, lengthy drum judgment is that the play is somewhat that the setting is quite remote in time,Ki-,-—but that Hatch has so early in his ca¬reer surpassed the cloying trivia of theManhattan living-rooms of repressedIncest, which his contemporaries findso singularly fascinating.Previous production at Iowa Statedisqualified Easter Song from further, _ . beyond Mr. Pinney’s immediate criticalSolo. (The drummer, Percy Brice, grasp. Consequently his pre-perform-, . , , , . , . ance review may be a disservice totried SO hard m one number that theater-goers who might thus be de-he broke his drumstick.) There Prive? of one of the most refreshing,, , ,, . , American plays written by the newwas the huge smattering of mon- authors of our generation,otonous Latin rhythms repletewith a jungle drummer, direct,tion and it is safe to say that in other virtues, Shearing also playsits true or even recognizable formit is well beyond the scope of im¬promptu improvisation. I woulddare say, moreover, that thereare really very few performingjazz musicians who could evencomprehend its complexities,much less perform them.Nevertheless, this overused very good, very swinging jazzlines when he gets a chance. Itwould be nice to keep these driv¬ing solos in mind when criticiz¬ing his objectionable commercialaspects.The first things that strike thelistener about the group as awhole is that they have fantastic we must assume, from the jungle.There was that horrible insist¬ence on the second and fourthbeats of the bar which is sup¬posed to make those who don’tfall asleep clap their hands. Gen¬erally, though, because of themultifarious good points, it waspossible to tolerate these badones. The preoccupation with things exter- consideration by the Sergei Judgingnal ranges from a twioe-mentioned tt was fortunately avail¬able to UT director Marvin Phillips aamaster’s degree in play-writing held byauthor James Hatch, to dragging in astatement about the sort of mythsought in poetic works by critics such asKenneth Burke.Why not add that various readers ofthe play have Interpreted Soren asChrist, Hamlet and Oedipus Rex?As for the playwright, no need topause at the mention of the MA whenit might be thre times noted that heis working on a PhD in (zounds!) play-writing. Clearly it is of interest to learnword to most listeners means any technique and that every note iskind of moving “classical” back- in place. There is a great varietyground which sounds contrapunc- of depth and color in the grouptal. Many of these neo-egghead which is achieved mainly throughworks are in truth canonic, and unique combinations of instru-sometimes are carried off fairly ments; bass and guitar in thirdswell. (e. g. Brubeek and Desmond with a four-tone voiced vibe mel- of these external matters but theyshould not keep in intelligent personShearing himself is a soft-spok- an understanding of the playen, happy-looking chap who un- There is no purpose to be served byderstands other personalities and repeating here the plot outlined lastnarwtipc thorn well Wic inlcoc are week wlth 801116 accuracy by Mr. Pinney.parodies tnem wen. rllS JOKes are However, the story is not precisely thatarticulate and represent the most of a scapegoat but of a man who recog-(sic) nroKlomc of the nizes a responsibility to accept the original material for a royalty produc¬tion. It is a memorable play deservingof a thoughtful review based on care¬ful reading, or better, on an adequateproduction. Either would demonstratethat there is no such clear-cut themeas Mr. Pinney assumes.The perinent critical observation isthat the play does not have a thematicline simply evident at first reading.It does have a concluding scene whichprovides for three equally interestingthematic lines: the struggle of Chris¬tianity and paganism, the expiation ofthe guilts of adultery and illegitimacy,or the resolution of Soren’s persons!struggle. The rains that fall may be theresult of the success of the pagan sacri-on a good night or a rare studiosession). Shearing also misusesthese words; yet I must add inboth fairness and admiration thatwhatever these things that heplays are called, the final soundis often quite delightful, missingthe mark, but grabbing the con¬cept.Shearing shows a wonderful6onse of drama and development.He played six choruses of “Green-sleeves” each more exciting andingenious than the next. He start¬ed with a single-tone melodic line,adding next another line of imita¬tive counterpoint, next somesparse and highly probablechords; the next chorus wasstrictly chordal and in the fol¬lowing one he switched to major,making a wide and varied use ofextended jazz harmonies. The lastchorus or two was variations on atheme in the “classical” sense,employing all the tricks (butwell) of The Pocket Guide to Bee¬thoven.Shearing also uses embellish¬ments rather well, often havinghis men play the older style"mordent” rather than the more ody; harmonica and vibes inthirds playing complex melodies;octave bass comping for solos, flee, or they may have been purchasedby Soren's recognition of his responsi¬bility and his acceptance of the scape¬goat role.ru-nfVmnrl fcS/.’l nrnhlpmo nf the mze5 a responsiomty to accept me Suggestions that the language Willproiouna. isic; proDiems oi xne scapegoat role. It is a theme developed annoy are prejudicial to the actors injazz musician. One is led to won- within a larger framework of counter- Easter Song, Mr. Pinney included. To- n:„v.4. annroniaHeo Reformation religious confusions in six- find fault in Hatch’s choice of myth istier, alter a mgni oi appieciauve teenth century Denmark but it is not an to do him a disservice: he has notchuckling, Whether Shearing IS archaic theme. It is a modern one thatnot perhaps as valuable an enter- dTmatilts wtth wS^tch7 $11tamer as he IS a musician. be immediately and unfairly compared.to-u The comparison is Invited chiefly by•—-Bill MatnieU the fact that Easter Song is written in chosen a single myth but several, andfrom these he has fashioned his ownin Easter Song. If the production canmeasure up to what Hatch has writtenit will be a high point of campuatheatre. Lachlan MacDonaldIf <<<<BORDONEI Movers and Light Hauling <VI 6-9832We'll have thebeer or winethere before thepizza arrives . . .FA 4-7699Free DeliveryHarperLiquorsTheDisc1367 E. 57th St.•RECORDOF THE WEEKMozart*Concertos17 & 25Serkin - SzellML 5169 2.99 otest leading the executive liftYOUR SMARTEST IEA Y Co—CUT.V« too*- !“,t:WACfo*„, of tm w —^ ,ii0'— **£££?«-*responsibly " odministrat.ve assign,ey ro*«f *• y°“ wish. -■>»frothf.sf 90-“". °l’d' dul h0„„. Yoon find «^.„taWkC-foll soclol 111. yo„, fellow off*.". «""•n.'Td.;:.7d ....ho.»aWng your big 30- VM ahs&S& ♦.,, nr. inf.r.s'.d. W*C —■*, f V0U perfectly byrsz ss? ^ ”"i0'whether or not yo ,HE adjutant generalWashington 20,Attni AGSN-ljSN-l careerrn^ttr-wl^A-CnsR.. ill■ii’ IStromgren speakson evolution of starsby Harold Bernhardt m w w v ■■ -■ ■Prof. Bengt Stromgren, chairman of the UC Department The third annual Festival of the Arts will open Thursday, April 25, when wives of Uni-of Astronomy and Director of the Yerkes and McDonald Versity trustees lunch at Ida Noyes hall. They will visit the exhibit of student art,*andObservatories, launched the third in the creation of the uni- wjn watch the awarding of prizes for the best works in the showing. [ *,t>;m-verse lecture series, sponsored by discussing the energy radi-^ Students who wish to enter their works in the all-student art exhibit may do so byation of the sun. “The sun, ,, bringing their paintings to the Student Activities office in Ida Noyes hall before 5 pmemits 100 billion kilowatts off; "At the bottom of the sun’s today. ^ -n — ——energy per second and has b^n atmosphere, he amplified, we„••/.•. students registered in Also on Friday, a noon reenact- hall. The ball will begin at 10 omradiating at this rate for at least can no longer rely on obserya- , f , TJniversitv ment of the annual Magdalen and last until 1 am, will featurefour billion years. . .S * tions. The conditions to which * 1 „1 1 ' ^wntown) Tower May day ceremony at Ox- an orchestra in the Cloister‘cliib“We will base our whole dis- matter is subjected are such that . «/r.rir in tim ford university will be staged by and the Rudy Voit combo in thecussion on the validity of the law matters become much simpler may^ displa> their work in thethe Madrigal singers a n d t h e library.of the conservation of energyif than on - Au'works submitted must be brass choir of the University con- Bids for the dance mav bo i„the sun loses energy to the.-sur-.--_- Differential temperatures and * au works submitted must be . , . Hutchinson court; t»in*H fnr ayou resterilestudents get polioat Student HealthThinking about what to wearto Beaux Arts ball ? Above area few suggestions. Recognizeany of your friends?Wallpaper - Tools - Houseware1154-58 E. 55th St.UC Discount Plumbing . jHY 3-3840We corry o com-plcte line of winesliquors and importsMortgage InsuranceEmergency InsurancePhone or WriteJoseph H. 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HendricJuon, Florida Statem UnwereUy, for hit Chatter Field poem.$60 for every philotophicai verm accepted for puhtl>cation. Chesterfield, P.O. Box 21, New York 40, N. Y.e UnM * u>an TokMM O*. J .KINO(IGAf^ETTES1 photographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St, IT’S FOR REAL