omArts will reignFOTA time's icumen in;super-vulture sings cuccuby David ZackThe quadrangles will be transformed into a culture vulture’s paradise until next Sundayas the long-awaited Festival of the Arts (known familiarly as FOTA) offers every studentthe chance to be a culture vulture (morbid thought) with no worries about transporta¬tion. There’ll be very few worries about admission prices, too, because tickets will be soldto only two out of two dozen festival events. 1957 will be the third year that a spring cul¬tural festival has enthralled the UC campus, and FOTA bids well to become as solidly en¬trenched a tradition as not : 7 : _ rrrr—~ : 777;—7stepping on the gold sea. in Thursdoy, Apr.) 25Mandel corridor. 12:3U pm: Bells will peal mer- FOTA’s student art exhibit, and,Every FOTA event is deserving rily as Rockefeller chapel caril- straight from an artist’s mouth,of a banner headline, but two loneur James R. Lawson plays a potential purchasers are moredozen banner headlines wouldn’t special concert to mark FOTA’s than welcome,leave much room for details. In- official opening. 0.0A ’., , ..stead, the Maroon provides a Vul- 2:30 pm: The highlight of , 3-3f Pm: Midway studios willture’s Datebook for FOTA, telling FOTA for the creative faction on °Pen sn us> or FOTA ob-you where to go and what to look campus will take place in Idafor during the third annual Festi- Noyes cloisters, where an exhibi-val of the Arts. servers who want to watch artistsworking with various media. Thestudios, once used by sculptortion of student art will take place. * ” ’ scurpiorWinners of quadrangles and Lor;ado. Taft, are located acrossDowntown College competition the Plaisance, on the west side ofWednesday, April 24Before FOTA’s official opening, win be announced*" at The*exhibi- Ingle^^’tw® doors from the cor‘Martin Buber, former professor tion, where guests of honor will ner 0 bU 11 street-of social philosophy at Hebrew be trustees’ wives who will have Students and members of theuniversity in Jerusalem, will lunched together preceding the art faculty will be present, andspeak in Mandel hall at 7:30. The show. demonstrations of potting, paint-distinguished Jewish philosopher, Almost a hundred objets d’art in£> sculpting and print-makingwill take place during the after¬noon. Midway studio is used forsaid to have the appearance of a were on display at last year’s stuHebrew prophet of old, is the au- dent exhibition, and a rush of enthor of several books on the rela- tries Saturday may have brought practical courses offered bytion of present-day man to God, this year’s total above the century the art department, although dem¬and has spoken at many major mark. onstrations for College coursesAmerican universities in recent Two Chicago artists, Simon anc* drawing classes takemonths. Gordon and John Walley, have P}ac? *n Lexington hall, on theBuber, who is sponsored by Uni- already determined first prize civilized side of the Midway,versity College, has chosen the winners in the several categories. 8:30 pm: The curtain rises ontopic “Man in Flight.” General ad- Cash prizes of $45 and citations Easter Song, University Theatre'smission is $1, student tickets 50 for second place will be presented FOTA week presentation. Ticketscents. Thursday afternoon, but the ex- can be purchased in advance in the theater office for 75 cents,and cost $1 at the door to the Rey¬nolds club garret theater, whichcan hold slightly over 100. Thisorginal drama by James Hatch isgiven a preview on another page,and will be performed every nightduring FOTA.Friday, April 2612 noon: At Magdalen tower,Oxford university, each May Daymorning, Spring is greeted notby a parade but by an ancientceremony — a black-robed, malechoir sings a Latin hymn to wel¬come Spring.Mitchell tower, rising above thenortheast corner of the quad¬rangles, is modeled after Oxford’sMagdalen tower. FOTA presentsa reenactment of the ancient cere¬mony as• Robert Vogler, studentchimer, will present a bell preludeon the Mitchell tower chimes.Listen closely, folk fans for“Country Gardens,” the “Vicar ofBray,” and “Sumer is Icumin In.”• A fifteen-man brass choir un¬der the direction of UC band¬master Louis Lason plays “Sin-fona” by Banchieri, “Intrada No.2” by Melchior Frank, JohannPezel’s “Tower Sonata,” and amarch from Handel’s “Occasion¬al” overture.• The UC Madrigal singers, un¬ der the intrepid direction of Mat¬thew Zuckerbraun, will sing thetraditional Magdalen tower mu¬sic “Hymnus Eucharistus,” twoEnglish madrigals, “Since I FirstSaw Your Face,” and “Come Let’sBe Merry,” Horton’s “Weep NoMore, Sad Mountains,” and theUC Alma Mater. The ceremonywill end at 1 pm after a postluderung by student chimer WilliamPohl.12:30 pm: “Modern art is con¬spicuous presumption” is the reso¬lution for the Chicago style de¬bate scheduled for Reynolds clubsouth lounge. The new generationof UC students may not evenknow what a Chicago-style debateAlthough new students may de¬vour the tomatoes on sale at thedoor instead of using them fortheir intended purpose, one Chi¬cago-style debate is still betterthan none at all.3:30 pm: Le Jazz Hot, takenfrom the jacket of a record, indi¬cates that improvisational musicform so intriguingly indicated byjazz musician Aaron Meyer some¬where else in this issue. The Jazzclub is sponsoring a jam session,which will take place in the southlounge of the Reynolds club, fea¬turing “a number” of jazzmen,according to the club’s leader, and(Continued on next page)Lithography students at Midway studio reenact the age-old process of print-making. The first step (left) is drawingthe pattern on granite with a lithography crayon. The stone,inked, presses its pattern on paper (below, left), producinga finished print (below, right). This and other processes willbe demonstrated during Midway studios' open house Thurs¬day afternoon. photoe by BernlckA2 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 23, 1957Super-vulture ... Babe for a beast(Continued from page 1)Jast till the cats get hungry.7 pm: Hutchinson court will bethe scene of a twilight concert bythe Concert band and Glee club.This will be the fifth concertgiven by the reorganized windgroup during the two years of itsreincarnation. The band’s pro¬gram will include Eric Coates’“London Suite,” and the “OriginalSuite” by Gordon Jacob.Selections from My Fair Ladywill be played by the band alone,but the Glee club will join it forselections from Oklahoma.Of interest should be HowardHanson’s original band work“Chorale and Allelulia” and “Zue-ignung” by Richard Strauss. Adescription of the glee club’s role•in the concert can be found witha sketch of its progress elsewhere.7 and 9 pm: Documentary Filmgroup's contribution to FOTA willbe an hour length color documen¬tary on Pablo Picasso and hiswork. Friday showings will be inSoc 122, and for those w'ho haveto be told, there’ll be a re-run at3 pm, Saturday, in Eckhart 133.The film begins with a tour ofexhibitions of Picasso’s workwhich took place in Milan andRome. Scenes from the film showPicasso at work in several me¬dia, including charcoal and cera¬mics. The film is directed by Lu¬ciano Emmer, and has an originalflamenco score by Roman Vlad.Also on the program will beWhite Mane, a new French filmabout a boy and a stallion, direct¬ed by Albert Lamorisse. Admis¬sion to all showings will be 50cents.7:30 pm: The Apollonian societywill present a brief concert in thenorth lounge of the Reynoldsclub. The program will includelesser-known English madrigals,and three songs by Paul Hinde¬mith on texts by Rainer MariaRilke.8:30 pm: There’ll be a Hoote¬nanny at Int house, for all youfolks interested in folk music, bymembers of UC’s Folklore society.People who aren’t members of thesociety need 75 cents to get in andhear a whole lot of songs.Bob March knows more aboutHootenannies than even a super¬vulture, so read his story to find out all about a rustic side ofFOTA,Also at 8:30: Leonie Adams, dis¬tinguished American poet, willpresent the final William VaughnMoody lecture of this year (202ndin the series) in Mandel hall. Ad¬mission is free, with the best seatsgoing to the strongestMiss Adams will speak on “Har¬monics and the image,” illustrat¬ing her points with readings fromher own poems.At present a lecturer in theschool of general studies at Co¬lumbia, she has been hailed as “apoet of exceptional originalityand vision” since her first volumeof poetry, Those Not Elect, ap¬peared in 1925.8:30 pm: Easter Song, by JamesHatch, presented by UT in Rey¬nolds club theater, admission 75cents in advance.Saturday, April 2712 m: About 25 out-of-the-ordin-ary automobiles will be displayedin the parking circle within thequadrangles for the ConcoursD’Elegance, an annual festivalfeature. North side sports carfans as well as campus ownerswill exhibit their vehicles.2:30 pm: Shades of festivals ofreally long ago may be in the airas the rough and ready facultynine clash with a group of de¬termined students in Burton-Jud-son field. The game’s baseball,and bets may be made in the B-Joffice.3 pm: Rerun of Picasso andWhite Mane, DocFilm's FOTAfilms, in Eckhart 133.8:30 pm: UT continues its runof Easter Song, astounding orig¬inal drama by Iowan JamesHatch. Pics elsewhere.10 pm: UC students who would¬n’t be seen in any shape at anordinary hop or formal dance willcome in many guises to the FOTAmasquerade Beaux Arts ball.Bids are still available for $3 in Ida Noyes hall which, by the way,will be the scene of the ball. Theball will last till 1 am, and willfeature an orchestra in the Clois¬ter club and a small combo in thelibrary. Plunge deeper into thisMaroon for tips on how to winthe prize for the most originalcostume, and be consoled that aprize will also be awarded forthe funniest one. Judges includeSenator Paul Douglas and Mrs.J. Harris Ward, wife of the trus¬tee, as well as tw7o members ofthe New York city ballet com¬pany.Sunday, April 28The FOTA focus will switch toInternational house for the festi¬val’s last day.The Festival of Nations was anannual event before anyone haddreamed of a University-wide fes¬tival of arts. In fact, an Int housewag has suggested that someolder residents of the campus’smost cosmopolitan dormitoryclaim to remember early versionsof it under blue Mediterranianskies, attended by delegates fromall Greek states and some foreignvisitors.From 3:30 to 7:30 an interna¬tional exhibition of arts andcrafts will be open in the mainlounge. Some sixteen nations willbe represented in the collectionof un-edible cultural manifesta¬tions.For those who view art betterthrough a full stomach, there willbe an exhibition of edibles in thepatio of Int house. Dishes fromChina, Czechoslovakia, Hawaii,India, Pakistan, Panama andThailand will be served at “nom¬inal” prices. Slides and films willbe shown from various countriesduring exhibit hours on the na¬tional floor.Also, somewhere in Int housea 20 pound archeopteryx mobilewill be hovering over festival-goers. It is said to be harmlessunless dropped or in flight.The Festival of Nations willculminate in an evening programof dances, songs and skits, which A date with Ann Mickel, North¬western university sophomore,will be the prize given to UC’s“Ugliest Man on Campus.” Thegrotesque guy will be chosen ina contest sponsored by Alpha PhiOmega, newly organized servicefraternity.Today through Friday studentsmay cast their ballots in theUMOC contest by placing any¬thing from pennies to silver dol¬ lars in bottles located near a vot-ing booth in Mandel corridor. Con¬tributions will go to World Uni¬versity service and the Frankfurtexchange.Miss Mickel will be at the vot¬ing booth tomorrow from 12 noonto 2 pm and will also be presentat the Beaux Arts ball, where theUMOC will receive his prize.Beaux Arts bids are on sale atthe UMOC voting booth.-cy\ ckrcciqoII laroonIssued 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; Businessand advertising office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3265. Subscriptions by mail, $3 peryear. Business office hours: 2 pm to 5 pm, Monday through Friday.Editor-in-chief Ronald J. GrossmanSpecial edition editor David ZackArt work Gwen WeberEditorial staff Jean Kwon, Betsy KirtleyPhotography Niles Bernick, Gary Mokotoff starts at 8 pm in the Assemblyhall. Contributions to the eve¬ning’s entertainment will comefrom Int house residents hailingfrom nations of the British Com¬monwealth, China, Czechoslo¬vakia, Greece, Hawaii, India,Israel, Japan, Pakistan, Thailand,and the Ukraine.Perhaps some of Festival ofNations flavor can be found inthe story, emanating from Inthouse, that Festival chairmanDebbie Freides has been wander-YOU *ARE ELIGIBLESend Today, __ __ it/ *for FREE CProfessional andBusinessman'sWholesale DiamondBrochure. Write Jackson'sDiamond Brokers, Dept. I644 Broadway, Gary, Ind.The CoilegeLAUNDERETTE1449 last 57th St.MU 4-9236 ing around for the past few weekswith the look of a director insearch of four talents, and speak¬ing of silver, there is a flat admis¬sion charge of fifty cents for theevening performance8:30 pm: On campus, “EasterSong,” by James Hatch, will closeits current UC run in the Rey¬nolds club theater.AI1-FOTAIf at some time between Thurs¬day noon and Sunday eveningyou find yourself in a FOTAmood with no place to go, takeheart.Harper exhibitsAn exhibition of Leonie Adams'manuscripts will be on display inHarper W61. Arranged by theHarriet Monroe Modern Poetrycollection, the exhibit is in con¬junction with Miss Adams’ ap¬pearance in Mandel Friday eve¬ning. In the main floor cases willbe a collection of motion picturestills from the library’s collectionof modern drama.Art exhibitsBesides the FOTA student ex¬hibition that will hang in Ida’sCloister club throughout FOTA,there’s a showing of works bymembei's of the UC art faculty inGoodspeed hall. Paintings by Ed¬mund Giesbert, Harold Haydon,and James Gilbert, prints by Rol¬and Ginzel, sculpture and a paint¬ing by Freeman Schoolcraft, andpottery and a torso by WilliamTallon will be on display in theRenaissance society gallery inGoodspeed.Hillel foundation house, 5715Woodlawn avenue, will be thescene of painting and sculptureby Maurice and Louise DunnYochim.Calvert club will present an ex¬hibition by Jean Chariot, fromthe University of Hawaii, andothers in DeSales house, 5735 Uni¬versity avenue.Exhibits may also be seen atthe Oriental Institute, Lexington.studios and Blaine hall.Always thereEven if it were devoid of peo¬ple, UC’s campus would interestmany a culture vulture all yeararound.Take the gargoyles, for in¬stance. Gothic towers may de¬press you, but who can fail„to be interested in the myriads of mon¬keys, serpents, eagles, and phan-tasmagorical creatures juttingfrom every balustrade outsideand perched on much of the wood¬work in places like Ida Noyes? Asyet no Culture Vulture gargoylehas been located, but this doesn'tmean there isn’t one around.Of greater interest to FOTA-goers should be Rico Lebrun'stryptich mural, “Crucifixion,”which may be seen on a wall ofRockefeller chapel. It was pur¬chased amid quite a commotionduring last year’s Festival of theArts, and deserve to be seen bypeople besides those who wanderinto Rockefeller chapel by acci¬dent or design and stumble on thew'ork by pure luck.Robie ho\iseThe George Robie house, de¬signed by Frank Lloyd Wright in1908 and acclaimed by a recentissue of Architectural Record asone of two most noteworthy resi¬dences constructed in the pasthalf-century, is probably the mostnoteworthy artistic landmarkclose to the University.Annual FOTA visitors shouldtake advantage of w'hat may betheir last chance to see the inter¬esting house, because ChicagoTheological seminary, whichowns the land it stands on, hasthreatened to tear it down beforenext September to make room fora dormitory for married students.A meeting of a Students’ Com¬mittee to Save the Robie house,which plans to sponsor Wrighthimself in an appearance on cam¬pus within a month, is scheduledfor tonight at 7:30 pm in Lexing¬ton hall.April 23, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Well, what is jazz?by Aaron MeyerI have been asked to define jazz. This is impossible. I’ll try it anyway.Jazz is music. The best jazz is great music. Great music, more often than not, is greatart. The best jazz, more often than not, is great art. „Great art is produced by great artists. Jazz has its share of great artists.An artist’s primary concern is expression. The jazz artist’s primary concern is expres¬sion. The classical artist achieves a compose r’s intended expression. The jazz artist tries toachieve his own expression,on his own terms.Everything else beingf>qual, the jazz artist achieves hisdesired expression less often thanIhe symphony artist achieves his.This is so because the jazz artistmust be more creative than thesymphony artist. The jazz artistmust make a hundred more deci¬sions a minute as he plays.Jazzman createsThe jazz artist, while he is play¬ing, must create his music andexternalize it practically simulta¬neously; for this reason, the jazzartist, ideally, must reach such alevel of proficiency on and knowl¬edge of his instrument, that it isan extension of his mind andbody.Jazz artists incorporate excite¬ment and emotional fervor intheir playing in the same propor¬tion as other qualities of music, criticisms to the contrary not¬withstanding.Isn’t “cultural freak”The jazz artist is rapidly beingrecognized as such, and is beingemancipated from the role of“cultural-artistic freak,” to whichhe seems to have been relegated.Nevertheless, jazz as it is prac¬ticed by the non-artists—and theyare in the majority—is not an artform, and unfortunately thesepeople are responsible for muchrecorded jazz.The jazz artist does not askthat any standards be changedwhile listening to him, simply be¬cause he is improvising.For him, improvisation is themeans to his expression; it is nothis intention to improvise for thesake of improvisation.The jazz artist asks that hismusic be evaluated on the termsof art, not on any special jazzMarch explains'Hootenanny'by Bob MarchThe origin of the word “Hootenanny” is a baffling mysterythat has long puzzled America’s most noted folklorists.One widely disbelieved theory traces it to the French“Houssinee Annee,” (Beaten Year), which refers to the col¬orful Quebec custom of getting together once a year to beatup the tax collector. Others maintain that it refers to theobscure Music hall star of theNineties, Ann (Hootin’ An¬nie) Pflugg, who endearedherself to American audiences byher portrayal of the role of “Peep-Bo" in the Mikado. (Unfortunate¬ly, she did not equally endear her¬self to her producer, as she wasat the time appearing in a pro¬duction of The Importance of Be¬ing Earnest.)Though taking no position inthis controversy over the originof the word, the Folklore societydefines “Hootenanny” to mean afolk concert featuring nearly allof Chicago’s folk musicians, plusany from out of town that mayhappen to be passing through.To be featured this year are: ca-IT’S FOR REAL! by Chester FieldDIFFERENT TASTES*Sam’s girl is tall and thinMy girl is fat and lowSam’s girl wears silk and satinMy girl wears calicoSam’s girl is fast and speedyMy girl is slow but goodThink I’d swap my girl for Sam’s?You’re dam well right I would!MORALs Whether you swap, switch, or snitch aChesterfield King you’ll discover thebiggest pleasure in smoking today.Majestic length—plus thesmoothest natural tobaccofilter because Chesterfieldsare packed more smoothlyby ACCU • RAY. Try ’em!Chesterfield King gives you moreof what you’re smoking fori*$50 goes to John 'R. Citron, Dartmouth College,for his Chester Field poem.$50 for every philosophical verse accepted for publica¬tion. Chesterfield, P.O. Box 21, New York 46, N Y0 Llxett * Uy*n Tobacco Oo. criteria.All too little of jazz stands upas art.Some does.More will.Choral groups join birdsin festival music-makingby Sheila FieldsAttention, readers!Are you worn to a frazzle? Distraught by the tensions of the academic world? Do yousearch for healthy relaxation? Don’t reach for Milltown — join a choral group.Whether you are simply a music lover or are desirous of an emotional outlet, the Gleeclub, Apollonian society, and Madrigal singers await you. This week, during FOTA, there isample opportunity to hear all three choral groups perform.Glee club oldestThe Glee club, oldest of thethree groups, was organizedin 1950 by Chris Moore,former UC student now attend¬ing the Chicago Theological sem¬inary. Since 1950, its directorshave been Wendell Rider, RobertDressier, Peter Gram Swing, andDenis Cowan.According to William Deihl,present director, the Glee club’scontribution to FOTA will be aconcert to be given Friday.lypsonian Neville Black, bagpiperGeorge Armstrong, guitaristsBernie Asbel, Moe Hirsch, JimClarkson, Gerry Armstrong, andJohn Ketterson, singers CharityBurns and George March, banjo-ists Fleming Brown and BobMarch, square dance caller andguitarist John Sonquist, bassplayer Doug Maurer, with guitar¬ist Pete Stone as master of cere¬monies.Several other performers maybe added to the program beforeFriday night, when the Hoote¬nanny will be presented in the In¬ternational house theatre at 8:30pm. Admission is 75 cents, with a50 cent admission fee for Folk¬lore society members. he hn&kes fh*birds nag....Selections to be sung include:“Soon-Ah Will be Done,” “ThereIs a Balm in Gilead,” “Rock-a MySoul” (Negro spirituals); “Win-terset” by Deihl; “In Winter” byPaul Hindemith; “The Old Man”by Franz Joseph Haydn; “John,Come Kiss Me Now,” a folk song;“Simple Gifts,” arranged byAaron Copland; “Alleluia” byRandall Thompson; “Go Lovely Rose”; and a medley from Okla¬homa.After the FOTA concert theGlee club will begin to work onThe Peaceable Kingdom, by Ran¬dall Thompson.Aside from their own vocalactivities, the group is planningto sponsor the glee club from theUniversity of Munster, Germany,in a concert next October.ApoIIonians busyApollo is well-known as theGreek god of music and poetry,but his true claim to fame is asthe namesake of UC’s Apolloniansociety. (Although the first re¬corded singing society in Londonalso bore this name, the UC’ershave given it new dimensions.)The group was begun test fallunder the leadership of LarryLerner, and was composed of peo¬ple who could sight-read musicand were interested in Elizabeth¬an and Renaissance music. Theirpurpose was not the giving of con¬certs, but rather the explorationand singing of the musical litera¬ture of the sixteenth and seven¬teenth centuries for their ownpleasure.But fame, however repugnantit may be to its recipients, wasnot destined to circumvent theApoIIonians. Last spring they per¬formed at FOTA and, on severaloccasions, on an educational radiostation. Gradually their activitiesexpanded into a bi-weekly pro¬Handy Pocket Guide gram over WUCB last fall.At this year’s festival the so¬ciety, currently under the direc¬tion of Hollis Rinehart, will pi’e-sent a program which they havenot previously sung publicly. Theconcert, to be given Saturday eve¬ning in the Reynolds club, will in¬clude: English madrigals, a groupof madrigals by Luca da Maren-zio, a Paul Hindemith madrigal,and some rounds.Madrigalers «eek obscureThe third and most recently or¬ganized choral group is known asthe Madrigal singers. Refugeesfrom a disbanded glee club, to¬gether with newcomers, formedthe nucleus of the group. The abil¬ity to sight-sing and an interestin sixteenth-century music arethe only prerequisites for mem¬bership.The singers meet once or twicea week and sing contrapuntalcompositions ranging from threeto six parts. According to Mat¬thew Zuckerbraun, creator anddirector, the group primarilysings the obscure a cappella musicof the sixteenth, seventeenth, andeighteenth centuries (i.e. motets,madrigals, and chorales).Friday at noon, in Mitchell tow¬er overlooking Hutchinson court,the singers will participate in theOxford-like May Day celebration,singing a selection from HyinnusEucharisticus, madrigals byMorely, Wilbye, and Purcell, andmotets by Schuzz.VULTURALGUIDEWednesday, April 24Lecture: “Man in flight,” Martin Buber, sponsoredby University College, 7:30, Mandel hall.Thursday, April 25Festival opens, carillon concert, James R. Lawson,chapel carilloneur, 12:30 pm, Rockefeller chapel.Student art exhibition, reception and awarding ofprizes, 2:30, Ida Noyes.Midway studio open house, students demonstratetechniques of weaving, printmaking and sculp¬ture, 3:30.Play: Easter Song, by James Hatch, 8:30 pm,Reynolds club theater.Friday, April 26Brass choir and Madrigal singers, Mitchell towerspring ceremony, noon.Chicago style debate: “Resolved: that modern artis conspicuous presumption,” 12:30 pm, Reynoldsclub lounge.Poetry reading contest, Florence James Adamscontest, 3 pm, Joseph Bond chapel.Le Jazz Hot, the Jazz club, 3:30, Hutchinson court.Twilight concert, University concert band and gleeclub, 7 pm, Hutchinson court.Docfilm: Picasso, new documentary film in color,and White Mane, a film poem, 7 and 9 pm, socsci 122.Hootenanny, Folklore society, 8:30 pm, Int houseassembly room.Moody Lecture, “Harmonics and the image,” LeonieAdams, American poet, 8:30 pm, Mandel hall.Play: Easter Song, by James Hatch, 8:30 pm, Rey¬nolds club, theater. Saturday, April 27Concours d’Elegance in automotive design, noon,the circle.Baseball game, faculty vs. students, 2:30, BJ field.Docfilm: Picasso and White Mane, 3 pm, Rosen-wald 2.Apollonian society choral recital, 7:30 pm, Rey¬nolds club.Play: Easter Song, by James Hatch, 8:30 pm,Reynolds club theater.Beaux Arts Masquerade ball, 10 pm, Ida Noyes.Sunday, April 28Unversity religious service, Rev. Paul Macy, 11 am,Rockefeller chapel.International exhibition, 3:30-7:30, Int house.Festival of nations, includes l’ecital of songs anddances from around the world, 8 pm, Int house.Play: Easter Song, 8:30 pm, Reynolds club theater.Throughout FOTAManuscripts of Leonie Adams in Harriet MonroeModern Poetry collection, Harper W61.Motion picture stills fi'om the collection on Ameri¬can drama, main corridor, Harper library.Mural painting, “The Crucifixion," by Rico Lebrun,Rockefeller chapel.Art faculty exhibit, Renaissance society, Good-speed 108.Maurice and Louise Yochim, Ilillel, 5715 Wood-lawn.Jean Chariot and others, Calvert club, DeSaleshouse, 5735 Woodlawn.Exhibitions in Oriental Institute, Ida Noyes, Lex¬ington hall studio, Midway studios, Blaine hail.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 23, 1957UT presents 'Easter Song'as Festival contributionuceAFTER SHAVELOTION Refreshing antiseptic action heabrazor nicks, helps keep your skinin top condition, 1.00 pimmSHULTON New York • TorontoUniversity Theatre’s contribution to FOTA will mark a new departure for the campusdramatic group, as it stages Easter Song, by Iowan James Hatch, each night of UC’s springcultural festival.Easter Song was chosen for production by UT director Marvin Phillips out of numerousscripts submitted to the Sergei playwrighting contest, which offers a $1,000 prize for thebest original play submitted every two years. The drama was not eligible for the prize, sinceit has been given a studio pro¬duction at the University ofIowa, where Hatch is present¬ly a candidate for a PhD in play-writing.Phillips, however, along withOther readers for the Sergei con¬test, considered the new wrork out¬standing, and decided to stage itin the belief that university thea¬ters should encourage new play- w'rights as well as perform theworks of “accepted” ones.Easter Song deals with paganviolence and individual responsi¬bility in sixteenth century Den¬mark. It is the story of a villagecleric who alone opposes thepagan rite of burying a living“corn child” to produce rain. Ac¬cording to Phillips, the play¬wright has written a sensitive,honest study of how and why peo-Chicago-style debatequestions modern art“Resolved: that modern art is conspicuous presumption”will be the topic of a Chicago-style debate Friday at 12:30 pmin the Reynolds club south lounge.The debate, sponsored by Student Forum in conjunctionwith FOTA, will be the last in“Chicago - style” on campusthis year.The team of Joel Rosenthal andDon McClintock will attempt toprove the inherent and conspicu¬ous presumption of modern art,while modernity in art, and per¬haps innumerable other things,will be defended by the negationof Jay Schwartz and Marcus Ras¬kin.Chicago-style debate Is charac¬terized by Forum director Mc¬Clintock as “the illogical discus¬ sion of an irrelevant topic by in¬competents, but a lot of fun ifyou are willing to forego the prin¬ciple of ‘every day in every waybecoming better and better."*Regular Chicago-style rules willbe in effect at the debate, and ofcourse the audience is encour¬aged to express its approval ordisapproval of the speakers inany way and at any time in thedebate.Free coffee will be served, andadmission is without charge.•pnayteMiveWallpaper - Tools1154-58 E. 55th St.UC DiscountPAINT & HARDWARE CO.Houseware PlumbingHY 3-3840TERRY’S PIZZA"The World’s Best”SPECIAL OFFERWITH THIS COUPON25c Discount on any Pizzaeaten here ... or deliveredSmall 1.00Medium 1.45 Large 1.95Giant 2.95FREE DELIVERY FORU. OF C. STUDENTS1518 E„ 63rd pie act and think under emotionalstress.Easter Song is written in blankverse, representative, though byno means imitative, of Shake¬speare. Its style as well as itstheme is unusual for a play writ¬ten during the twentieth century,but to many readers it representsan extremely new use of whatmay seem at first to be old tech¬niques.The curtain will rise on EasterSong for five nights, April 24-28in UTs Reynolds club garret thea¬ter. Prices are 75 cents in advanceand $1 at the door. photoe by BernlckLeft: Soren, the village cleric, and his former love,Davida, played by Steve Brown and Valerie Weil, arepushed by the villagers toward their inevitable doom atthe climax of “Easter Song,” as the village hag looks onin the background. Bight: Carol Horning glowers in herrole as Sara Brute, a follower of the old ways that demanddeath for rain.§|iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiitiiiiiiiiii(itm«iiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiii(iiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiifrniiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiicf COMO’S Cafe EnricoIRESTAURANT & PIZZERIAMODEL CAMERAHyde Park's most completephoto and hobby shop2-day color developingNSA Discount1312 E. 55th HY 3-9259 1411 E. 53 FA 4-5525 -HY 3-5300Small Large Small Large12" 14" 12" 14"Cheese .1.15 1.55 Combination . . 1.75 2.25Sausage 1.95 Chicken Liver . . 1.60 2.10Anchovy 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 StudentsiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiMI 3-4045