Vol. 65, No. 35 University of Chicago, Friday, April 26,Robie committeetries to preserveby Dave ZackBall tomorrow eyeby Rochelle DubnowUC lived up to its rep¬utation of uniquenessWednesday when a "23skidoo-ing” roarin’ 20’s flap¬per, ' a female gaucho (withjmistache and sideburns), aregal sultan, a satin and jewel-bedecked marharaja, an oo-la laingcancan girl, a well-padded zootsuiter (equipped with a 3 footkeychain), a mandarin and a twolegged leopard appeared on cam¬pus.Many a head was turned inamazement and amusement asthe unusual and colorful assort¬ment braved the inclement weath¬ er and stares and paraded aboutcampus thrusting Beaux Arts ballflyers into the hands of passers-by.Tickets for the ball that ourcostumed counterparts so con¬spicuously and effectively publi¬cized may still be obtained at theReynolds club desk, the Informa¬tion desk of the Administrationbuilding, Ida Noyes desk, theUMOC booth in Mandel corridorand in International house.Beaux Arts will be held tomor¬row evening from 10 pm to 1 amthroughout the entire first floorof Ida Noyes hall. The ball willfeature an orchestra in the Clois¬ter club and the Rudy Voit comboin the library.Judges for the ball are, Maria Tallchief, prima ballerina of theNew York City ballet company;Senator Paul Douglas, and Mrs. J.Harris Ward, wife of one of UC’strustees.Chairman of this year’s BeauxArts ball is Edna Arrington.Members include: Dave Leonetti,ticket sales chairman; ButchKline, in charge of prizes andBob Strader, decorations chair¬man.Advisors for Beaux Arts areChristine McGuire, UC examinerand advisor and Molly Lunsford,wife of Linn house head.Of course, no committee listingcould be complete without “Wal¬ter,” Ida Noyes guard, unofficialadvisor to every Ida dance com¬mittee. photos by DubnowRosemary Galli, (whose attractive other half may beviewed below left), is shown above trying to convincesuave, cigarette-smoking Paul Hoffman to come to theBeaux Arts ball.Hoffman who attempted to pass through Mandel corri¬dor “incognito” could not escape the flapper’s persuasivesales talk. He doesn’t seem too unhappy, does he?About fifty attended the first open meeting of StudentsCommittee to Save Robie house Tuesday in Lexington halLWhile the newly formed committee was drafting a resolu¬tion expressing the beliefshould be held morally re¬sponsible if the controversialFrank Lloyd Wright house shouldbe demolished, Student Govern¬ment meeting in Law Northpassed one supporting the com¬mittee and directing the chair¬man of SG’s community relationscommittee to send a letter to Ar¬thur C. McGiffert, jr„ presidentof Chicago Theological Seminary“protesting the demolition of Ro¬bie house.”The committee decided to workwith the Chicago Citizens’ Com¬mittee and other groups strivingto preserve the residence whichFrank Lloyd Wright designed in1908, and to do what they can asstudents to find alternatives tothe Robie house site which theseminary might construct their the University of Chicagodormitory for married studentson, and influence the seminary toconsider alternatives.Alternatives to using the Robiehouse site suggested at the meet¬ing included building the housingfor married students on two sepa¬rate lots instead of constructingone four story building, asplanned, on the Robie house lotand the one next to it. It wasbrought up that the seminary isone of the biggest landowners inthe Hyde Park neighborhood, and,while it might have difficultyfinding a site as big as the onethey presently plan to build on,they could probably without trou¬ble find two sites within a shortdistance of campus, each moresee “Robie,” page !•Above are shoftu the “gorgeous gams” of the girls who courage¬ously adorned themselves in rented splendor, braved the stares ofpassers-by and the inclement weather to publicize the third annualBeaux Arts ball. The ball, sponsored by Student Union is being planned in conjunctionwith the Festival of the Arts, and will be held tomorrow evening throughout the firstfloor of Ida Noyes hall.Student, faculty committee holds meeting;hopes to establish closer communicationby Norman LewakAn attempt to createbetter student, faculty re¬lations was initiatedWednesday afternoon aseight students and five fac¬ulty personnel met as an in¬formal committee to talkabout curriculum problems.The group hopes to meet week¬ly until comp time and then con¬tinue next fall.Committee set upThe student faculty advisorycommittee (as it is called) wassot up on the initiative of StudentGovernment at its April 2 meet¬ing. It was called jointly by DeanRobert M. Strozier and SG -presi¬dent Don Miller who served asco-chairmen. Present for the fac¬ulty were John O. Hutchens, bio¬logical sciences, Earl A. Long,Physical sciences, William M. Me-^oill, history and College, andAlan Simpson, history,*. Students present were Lynn Chadwell, Bill Harmon, ElizaHouston, Leon Kass, NormLewak, Linda Rosenberg, andSarah Silverman.Discussed philosophyAfter deciding that its majorfunction was to try to clear upany misunderstanding that exist¬ed between students and the fac¬ulty, the committee spent mostof the rest of the meeting discus¬sing educational philosophy. Stro¬zier said that the faculty has hada long tradition of maintainingits autonomy in curriculum mat¬ters. However, he felt that thenewly formed committee on un¬dergraduate education, would behappy to listen to suggestionsfrom this group. Simpson andLong are members of the councilof the faculty senate.Miller opened the discussion bynoting that the committee couldstart by talking about educationalphilosophy or could immediatelygo to particular problems. McNeill echoed the sentiments of his col¬leagues when he said that, “Wecould talk for months about aphilosophy and still get nowhere.”The students, however, repeat¬edly asked for some basis for jointprograms. Strozier explained tothe faculty members that thereis a feeling among the studentsthat there was a definite programbefore the change, which is lack¬ing now. McNeill cautioned thestudents that asking for a pieceof paper stating an educationalphilosophy is not enough. “Real¬ity is not in a piece of paper,” hesaid, “it’s all a matter of person¬alities.”Talk on joint degreesNo real conclusion was reachedon the matter of a philosophy,however, as the subject switchedslightly to a discussion of thejoint programs. The students,especially Miss Rosenberg andMiss Silverman, continued to askfor some basis, philosophical orotherwise, for the “slicing off” of the terminal College courses. “Isthe third course in a sequencetaken off just because it’s numberthree,” asked Miss Rosenberg.“Why not take off one or two,instead.”Strozier answered that the Col¬lege faculty was working on justsuch a problem. It was suggestedthat perhaps the answer lay inconsolidating some of the Collegecourses.Give “practical” reasonsThe answers, however, took theform of practical reasons which,for the most part, were the moti¬vations for the change in the firstplace.McNeill tried to sum it up bysaying, “The feeling in the divi¬sions was that the people came tothem without enough of the pre¬requisites.” He said that he wasdistressed with the change whenhe first learned of it. However, hecame to realize that the changeswere needed. He continued, “Inmy own case (history), I saw that the students weren’t gettingenough language. After you’re 18or 20, it’s a little late to startlearning a language.”Defects followSome of the other defects point¬ed out by the faculty members,especially Hutchens and Long,were:• The unacceptability of the“two-year degree” (“have to livewith the outside world’’).• Parents didn’t want to sendtheir children to a school whereit took five years to get a “legi¬timate” degree (the divisional de¬grees). They couldn’t afford it.• The need, especially in thesciences, to start the specializedtraining as soon as possible be¬cause of prerequisites.As to the question of a justifi¬cation of the “slicing off” of Col¬lege courses, Hutchens repliedthat any education is just a sam¬pling of subjects. “No one canhope to be totally educated,” hesaid.V.2 • CHICAGO MAROON * April 26, 1957Vote today for ugliest man!!Class gift plannedby 1957 graduatesA once popular tradition will be revivedthis June, if the “Class of 1957” has its way.For the first time since 1936, a class giftwill be given by the graduating class, accord¬ing to Lu Stryer, a member of the ad hoccommittee to provide the gift.Wednesday letters will be sent to all candidatesfor bachelors degrees this June asking for con¬tributions to the class of 1957 gift committee.The money will be used to provide a prize fora member of the College faculty chosen by votesof those who contribute to the gift fund. Thisaward will be given at an appropriate time duringthe week leading up to convocation, according toStyer. $400 is the goal for the prize.Contributions can be left at the Reynolds clubdesk.UCer named for prizeGail M. Dack, director of the Food Re¬search Institute and UC professor of bac¬teriology, has won the 1957 Pasteur Award.The award is presented annually by the So¬ciety of Illinois Bacteriologists, Inc., to an out¬standing bacteriologist in the mid-west.Dack was honored for his outstanding contribu¬tions to food microbiology, especially in regardsto the etiology of bacterial food poisonings.Dack will receive the 10th Pasteur Awardon May 11 at a banquet in the Edgewater BeachHotel, after which he will deliver the PasteurAward Lecture before members and guests of thesociety.Judge throws out suitCourt appeal on the part of opponents of the SouthwestHyde Park plan- to build apartments for UC married studentsmet with failure last week. Circuit court Judge Daniel Rob¬erts threw out the suit filed by 20 property owners on thetechnicality that it had not been filed within the legal time limit.The plan which the residents protested involves the acquisitionand clearance of an area extending from Cottage Grove to Ellis andfollowing a zig-zag line south from 55th to 58th street. After theacquisition area is cleared, five five-story buildings will be erectedto house approximately 300 married students.Under the stipulations of the Neighborhood Redevelopment act,from which the proposal derives its justification, the commissionwill remain in authority to supervise the fulfillment of the plan. Itis their obligation to assure just compensation and adequate reloca¬tion to owners and residents of an acquisition area. Today, by 2 pm, is the last time to vote in the Alpha PhiOmega sponsored “Ugliest Man on Campus” contest beingheld in Mandel corridor. . .Balloting was heavy yesterday and Wednesday with ArtTaitel and Ronald J. Grossman (Grossbug) as the two top contenders.They are sponsored by Zeta Beta Tau and Phi Sigma Delta respec¬tively.A successful boycott of Ray Caparros by the Green house girls haskept him far behind the other entries. There are a total of nine entriesin the UMOC contest. Persons who haven’t voted or persons who wishto vote twice can deposit their spare change in the bottles set up atthe UMOC booth.All profits from the contest will be split between World UniversityService and the SG-sponsored Frankfurt student exchange.BE PREPARED FOR SUMMER DRIVINGSUMMER SPECIALTUNE UP $6.50• Washing• Lubrication• Road ServiceSPECIAL ! !Simoniz 12 50HARPER SUPER SERVICEDealer in Sinclair Products5556 Harper Ave. PL 2-9654 photo by MokotoffAnn Michaels, Northwestern sophomore whowill “be awarded” to the Ugliest Man on campusis shown above looking on at the activity inMandel corridor. She was on campus as theguest of APO on Wednesday.Rosemary Galli (right) awaits a victim forone of her Beaux Arts ball flyers.Two UCers electedto Science academyTwo UC scientists were notified of theirelection Wednesday to the National Acad¬emy of Sciences, the highest ranking scien¬tific body in the United States. This brings theChicago faculty total in the organization to 32.Newly elected members are Heinrich Kluver,professor of experimental psychology in the divi¬sion of the biological sciences, and Cyril S. Smith,professor of metallurgy and director of the Uni¬versity’s institute of metals.Members of the National academy are electedon the basis of their outstanding scientific researchand scholarship. The body limits its membershipto 600. Darrow centennialat Hotel ShermanNext Wednesday will mark the 100thanniversary of the birth of one of America’sgreatest trial lawyers, Clarence Darrow. Ip,connection with this event, the Adult Eclu-cation Council of Greater Chicago is holding aDarrow Centenial celebration, much like the Ber¬nard Shaw celebration they held last year.A morning symposium at the Hotel Shermanon the subject “Freedom under the law” willinclude Norman Thomas, many-times Socialistcandidate for President. Symposium tickets are $2.A dinner in the Grand Ballroom will featurean address by Joseph N. Welch, army counsel inthe Army-McCarthy hearings. Following thespeech will be a one-hour play by* Francis Gough¬ian of WGN, called “Darrow for the Defense.”Melvyn Douglas will perform the great jury pleasof Darrow.Tickets for the evening show are $12.50. Ticketsfor either the morning or evening events can beobtained by calling HA 7-2670.UC grad fails in crimeDavid J. Stevenson, 25, a graduate of theUniversity of Chicago was arrested whiletrying to open a safe of an insurance com¬pany.Felony court judge George B. Weiss put theformer market analyst on probation after hearingthat the burglary attempt was Stevenson’s firsttry at crime and that he is working part limewhile studying for a master's degree.When arrested, Stevenson was dressed in an Ivyleague suit and a tweed topcoat. He was equippedwith an elaborate electronic gadget designed tolet him listen to the tumblers fall in place as hetwisted the safe’s dial.Kimpton's father diesCarl Edward Kimpton, father of Chancel¬lor Lawrence A. Kimpton, died last Friday inKansas City, Missouri.Kimpton, 82, was a resident of KansasCity, and had practiced law there for more thanfifty years before retiring in 1949.Surviving is the widow, Elizabeth. Kimpton'sfirst wife, Lynn (mother of the Chancellor) diedin 1929.The Chancellor and his wife flew to Kansas Cityfor funeral services and burial on Monday.Because of the death of his father, the Charnel-lor was forced to cancel all of his social engage¬ments this week and will not be able to attendany Festival of the Arts functions.SU plans senior promSparked by the idea of Interelub council andInterfraternity council, Student Union is sponsor¬ing a “senior prom.” The dance is being plannedfor June 7 and will take place in the patio andgarden of Ida Noyes hall.Chairmen are Gregg Hodgson, Herb Gorr andBarbara Quinn. Bids will be $2 per couple.the folklore society presentsHOOTEHAHHY!TONICHTneville BLACKjim CLARKSONcharity BURNSpete STONEjohn SONQUISTdoug MAURER george tr gerry ARMSTRONGmoe Hirschjohn KETTERSONbob & georgie MARCHbernie ASBELL. . . and othersplus Peggy SeegerInternational House • Admission 75c(members 50c)-r—\ everybody who’s anybody is comingto• Festival of the Arts •and• Beaux Arts Ball •Going up!Dorm exteriorwork to beginGirls will be able to move into one section of their newdorms at the beginning of the fall quarter. Work on theDudley field buildings is on schedule, despite weather delays,according to Edward Stuk, architect’s superintendent,has beenConcrete has been pouredfor the top floor, (the fourthfloor) of the west wing, the partscheduled for completion nextfall. Concrete work is completeup to the third floor of the rest ofthe dorm. The roof will be pourednext week, and work on the ex¬terior masonry of the west wingwill begin soon, Harold Berquist,the contractor’s project engineer,stated.Berquist said that recent heavyrains have delayed constructionseveral days.Construction of the Woodlawnwing of the building is beingrushed ahead of the rest of thework, so that it can be completedon schedule. Many students havealready reserved rooms for nextfall. These include current resi¬dents of Foster and Kelly halls,which will be converted to men’shouses next year.The first wing will house 180 ofthe 542 students for whom the en¬tire building is planned. The restof the living quarters are sched¬uled for completion by the begin ning of winter. Plans are now be¬ing finished for the central build¬ing,' which will include dininghalls and offices. The Universityhopes this building will, be com¬pleted by the fall of 1958. Untilthat time, dorm residents will eatat Ida Noyes.The schedule for constructionof the dorm was delayed severalmonths last year by what Chancel¬lor Lawrence A. Kimpton called“unbelievable bureaucratic redtape,” in the Federal financing ofthe dorms. The 3.2 million dollarbuilding had to be financed witha government loan since notenough unrestricted funds wereavailable to the University for theproject.Rates in the new dormitory willbe $285, per quarter for a singleroom and $275 per quarter for adouble room.Quarterly rates for accommo¬dations in the old dormitories are$277.50 for single rooms and $267for doubles. BP®*:-!##photo by GrossmanC-group, no man’s land since law students moved en masse from Beecher to Mead,will once again be inhabited by males. Kelly and Foster halls will be converted to men’sresidences next year. 180 girls will move into the new girls’ dorms (shown above), onewing of which will be completed by fall. Th e rest of the living quarters will be completedby the beginning of winter. Offices and dining halls are scheduled for completion by thefall of 1958.SC proposes new health planby Norman LewakFour bills dealing with stu¬dent health, CTA discounts,Ihe parking problem, andcrime in the neighborhoodwore passed by Student Govern¬ment in its Tuesday night meet-ing.The student health bill involvedstarting the machinery moving onchanging the coverage given tostudents on health matters fromstudent health to a group insur¬ance plan. The University wouldpurchase the insurance for thestudents with the money now usedfor student health service.The major advantage seen inthis new plan was more completecoverage for the student: hewould be covered 365 days of theyear whether he was registeredfor the summer quarter or not;he could apply the policy to anydoctor, anywhere, at any time.Student health would continueto serve the students who did nothave their own private physician.They would in this instancecharge the insurance company asany other doctor would.The bill passed was to send aletter outlining such a plan tothe dean of students. Don Miller,SG president, said that he had anappointment with Dr. HenriettaHerbolshimer, director of stu¬dent health, to discuss the plan.No one spoke against the bill.It passed unanimously. Another letter to Dean Strozierpassed unanimously was one deal¬ing with the parking situation oncampus. It asked that no-parkingareas be more clearly delineatedand said that pasting stickers onthe windows of offending carsserved no useful purpose exceptto obstruct the driver’s vision.Don MillerAsking that the number of re-tricted places for parking be keptat a minimum, the letter askedthat such places should be mark¬ ed with “standard, easily visiblesigns.” At present these no-park¬ing places are, for the most part,indicated by colored curbs. OneSG member mentioned that al¬though the flagpole is paintedonce a year, he had never seen thecurbs painted at all.CTA discounts wantedThe bill on Chicago Transitauthority discounts was one to in¬struct UC’s NSA delegation towork with other Chicago schoolsto try to persuade CTA to givecollege students discounts similarto those available to high schoolstudents.Since attempts to get such dis¬counts for UC students had failedin the past, it was felt that if allthe Chicago colleges approachedCTA. results might be forthcom¬ing. The Illinois-Wisconsin region¬al framework (of NSA) was seenas the best means for getting to¬gether with the other Chicagoschools.Dangers of the neighborhoodBecause of the recent assaultson UC students, a bill instructingthe community relations commit¬tee to “investigate the existenceand enforcement of laws regard¬ing delinquents, especially juve¬niles” was passed.In regard to a possible means ofbetter police protection, a bill wasintroduced requesting that trainedpolice dogs be used to aid the lawenforcement personnel. It was pointed out that police dogs wereused effectively as an aid to offi¬cers. The advantages pointed outwere the dogs greater range ofeffectiveness (they could scoutout empty buildings faster andflush out people hiding in theMidway easier than a policeman)and the probability that potentialhoodlums would not risk actingin a neighborhood patrolled bydogs.Due to the feeling of somemembers of the Government thatthe dogs might be dangerous toinnocent bystanders, the bill was referred back to committee toinvestigate these dangers.Students to teachAnother bill referred back tocommittee for further study wasone that would suggest to theproper authorities that graduatestudents are a good source ofsubstitute teachers for the publicschools. It was felt that not onlywould the public schools profitfrom having such a large pool ofteachers to call on, but, perhapsmore important, this would givethe graduate student a welcomesource of income.10% Discount to UC Students and PersonnelAll Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW NET PRICES8-LBS. WASHED & FLUFF DRIED10-LBS. FLAT WORK 59'$122DRESS SHIRTS 22QUALITY DRY CLEANING — RAPID SERVICE — REASONABLE PRICESFREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERYPhone PLaza 2-909?UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1024 E. 55th St. 9Ae PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433TERRY’S PIZZA"The World’s Best”SPECIAL OFFERWITH THIS COUPON25c Discount on any Pizzaeaten here ... or deliveredSmall 1.00Medium 1.45 Large 1.95Giant 2.95FREE DELIVERY FORU. OF C. STUDENTS1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045|IUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllJPolished Cotton orBaby Cord| Suits 14.95 1| Pants 4.95 1| Our Prices Can't Be Beat . . . It's Smart To Buy For Less §| D & C Clothes Shop| 744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728T: “fit the Neighborhood for 40 Years**| Hours: 9 «.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 o.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdayMiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIUIIIIIIII4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 26, W57editorialActivities short of personnel;caused by new joint degrees?As a lack of a calendar in this issueindicates, we are short of personnel.The increased number of pages printedthis year is a reason for this shortage.But more important, we see thisshortage as an ominous sign for stu¬dent activities on this campus. This isbecause we are not alone in our lackof manpower. The fraternities hadtheir smallest pledge group in a num¬ber of years. The political parties, Capand Gown, Student Union — all wereundermanned.And yet, the "new" student is thenormal rah-rahish type, is he not?Wasn't activities night during Orienta¬tion week a huge success? What hap¬pened?In the "old" days, those who tookpart in the extra-curriculum were main¬ly College students. They had as muchstudying to do as the "new" joint-program students. But they didn't haveOpinion of other papers to adhere to any rigid studying sched¬ules. There was no homework; theydidn't have to take quarterly gradesseriously; they had time to participatein student activities.Now, as more and more emphasis isput on the divisional, short term(cram) type studying, the student hasless and less time for the extra-curricu¬lum.Where will this trend take us? Thatquestion is rhetorical. We should in¬stead ask: When will this trend stop?How can it be stopped? We don't know.All we can do is to point out the prob¬lem as we see it. We have to leave itto those responsible for this problem(the Administration), who after all areolder and wiser than us, to find thesolution.We hope that they find it in a hurry;we might run out of people who arewilling to flunk for the Maroon.Editor favors UC student’sconcept of college educationUC students came in for some favorable comparison with students atSouthern University, Baton Rouge, recently. A reprint of the article titled"What are we here for?" written by Grady Poulard, editor of the studentnewspaper follows.". . . I heard of aKorean vet (on campus)who remarked "I'm nothere to get my BS, I’m hereto get my GI.’ A beautifulcoed exclaimed, ‘Gee, I’ll beglad when Southern gets a gradschool.” She was asked by afriend “Why? Do you want toattend it to get your MA?” Re¬plied the coed, “No, to get myM-A-N.”“Well, it is nice to receive theGI bill and to start thinking interms of what you want in a hus¬band or a wife, but more impor¬tant, I think, should be our questfor knowledge.Attends NSA Congress“I attended the National Stu¬dent congress this summer at the about the mind of Shakespeareor the origin of mankind, or theimportance of good human rela¬tions in times like these. Thosestudents actually delighted them¬selves through such a pastime.Compares studentsImmediately I began to com¬pare the students of the Univer¬sity of Chicago with the studentsof Southern. I realize that theUniversity of Chicago goes out ofits way to seek from the best stu¬dents in the world and that it hasone of the most outstanding fac¬ulties of the world; that it hasfinance and reputation galore andthat it is almost an ideal educa¬tional enterprise*. I realize thatmost of its students have differ¬ent backgrounds and that theylive in environments which areconducive to high culture, evenmaking possible for them a fullUniversity of Chicago and it was and interesting life.very gratifying to see college stu¬dents at the age of 15 and 16 read¬ing philosophical and historicalnovels as a pastime; or to sit inon a conversation under a tree Consequently, I made my com¬parison, not on the basis of whichare the best students, but whichstudents strive hardest to becomethe best possible individuals thatthey can be. There is no excuse~Y\\11 laroon for any Southern student not be¬ing able to talk about Plato’sSymposium, or to criticize Keats’“Ode to a Grecian Urn,” or to en¬joy reading Aida or The Barberof Seville. Our library just likethe one at the University of Chi¬cago has all of this literature.There is no excuse because it isall here for us if we want it.“We must launch out”“We can never measure up towhat God intended us to be if weare going to confine our intel¬lectual pursuits to the mere read¬ing of our textbooks and the do¬ing of our home work. We aregoing to have to launch out in thedeep waters of wisdom and fishfor those things that are beauti¬ful and lofty and true, and eter¬nal; we are going to have to seekafter th^t quality of mind thatmakes us hunger for knowledge,understanding mental integrityand intellectual curiosity; we aregoing to have to weld ourselvesto those things of the spirit, thoseintangibles—those little things inlife that cost so little but meanso much. We must awake fromthe deadening sleep of “that willdo” and accept thte intellectualchallenge that the world has pre¬sented us.”Issued 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, S3 peryear. Business office hours: 2 pm to 5 pm, Monday through Friday.Editor-in-chief Ronald J. GrossmanBusiness manager Gary MokotoffAdvertising manager Lawrence D. KesslerNews editors Rochelle Dubnow, Bob HalaszCulture editor Dave ZackLecture editor. Harold BernhardtCopy editor Betsy Kjrt|eyProduction manoger KwonSports editor George KarcazesEditorial assistant Bob Brown?u "T°9er Art Taitelo ographers Niles Bernick, Roland Finstoncartoonists Kent Flannery, Dick Montgomery, Gwen WeberEditorial stofU Richard Dow, Zelda Eisen, Sheila Fields, Mary Finkle,Ehyiiis Henry, Oliver Lee, Marge Russell, Sue Shapiro, Sharon Schultz page sixfor Gadfly And then I started writing editorial comments . . .editorial commentSG short of people;solution proposedSG, after commendably passing four bills that weredefinitely in the student's interests (see page 3),organized into a committee of the whole Tuesdaynight to discuss what was wrong with itself. Discus¬sion centered around many particular problems withmany members contributing focets of the main prob¬lem. Yet as I see it, none of them hit the problem.The problem, in my opinion, is one of personnel. SG, likemost other campus organizations (see editorial above), hasa serious personnel problem. There just don’t seem to be enoughpeople around to do the work. The solution seems to be simple: getthe people.Getting the right people is of prime importance. In “the good olddays,” I hear (I wasn’t here then), there were enough peopie in theparties so that the work was accomplished. Now, this seems to beno longer true. Since there are not enough party members available,“outsiders” have to be brought in. However, the parties in recruitingshould learn from the lesson that ISL received within the last month.ISL has, in the past year, made the mistake of bringing in andrunning people who were “sure winners” (of the popularity plusvariety). The “sure winners” won and, then, unfortunately, theyserved little if at all. Yet, the fault of their not serving was not theirs;it someone has to be blamed, that someone is that much malignedstrawman called the "party hack” of ISL.THE “POLITICIANS” who ran these popularity people should havetold them first what they were getting into. The “politicians” shouldhave realized that these people were popular because they wereactive in other organizations that would demand their time (unlikethe “good old days” when one became popular through the partiesand SG).So these people that were elected without knowing what they weregetting into, slowly but surely dropped out of active participation.Some of them, however, did try to serve and became alarmed whenthey saw that the party (and, therefore, the Government) was being“run” by the “party hacks” that were left. Instead of trying to gathertheir forces and take over the party (they were still greatly in themajority), they decided to leave “the whole rotten mess.” And soIA was born.No matter what their names are, I am convinced that under ourform of Government, there will once again be two parties withinthe next year. These parties will be faced with the recruiting prob¬lem. I hope that they will learn from the mistake outlined above.FIRST AND FOREMOST, you have to “break in” the potential can¬didates into politics a considerable period of time before they are run.Let them learn what it’s all about; then, run them. It cannot be donein the reverse order.Second, although it is expedient to run “sure winners” becausethey will “pull the slate in,” don’t run too many of them. They willprobably be tied up with their other activities and will not have the1time to devote to SG. Ideally, you should not run them at all. Realis¬tically, I ask you not to run too many of them.AND FINALLY, you will find it much easier to recruit if you re¬frain from an excess of electioneering. I know that the pretty girlwho “helps” the voter vote does get you many straight ballots. Butconsider if the straight ballots are really worth while if in the processof getting them you convince the students that what you’re reallyconcerned with is winning rather than “good government.”I’m convinced that the students are in favor of student self-govern¬ment. You have to persuade the student that you really and trulyare more interested in serving than in winning, if you are^lo gethis help and interest. And, afler all, the students are your one andonly source of personnel.Norm LewafcLetter policyThe Ma roon 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.April 26, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5The 'grand old man' writes(Editor’s note: below is a reprint of Stagg’s letterto Harper.)•... in reading the Maroonof April 12,1957,1 came uponyour interesting article onpage 12 regarding the 10:05 pmringing of the Alice FreemanFalmer bells.Your article states that, ‘The10:05 pm ringing stems from arequest (accompanied by a $100check) from Coach Stagg to Har¬per. because he wanted such aringing to act as a curfew for hisathletes.”I am sending you a copy of myletter published in the UniversityRecord, just as I wrote it on No¬vember 30, 1904. You will observethat the amount of the check was$1000 instead of $100 as appearsin your article in the Maroon.I thought you would be inter¬ested in seeing a copy of the orig¬inal letter.Amos Alonzo Stagg Chicago, November 30, 1904My dear President Harper:It is with the greatest pleasureand satisfaction that I herewithsend you a check for $1000 as agift to the University. It was justa year ago during my sickness,you will remember, that thethought of making this gift cameto me. I was greatly depressedand worried by the spirit shownby our team in the ThanksgivingDay contest, and in casting aboutfor possible helpful things, mymind went back to my own col¬lege days at Yale. The sweetchimes of Battell Chapel had al¬ways been an inspiration to me.and I recalled the many, manytimes during the period of mytraining that that cheery, hope¬ful ten o’clock chime had led meto fall asleep with a quiet deter¬ mination for a greater devotionto duty and to my ideals.The thought came to me andfilled me with the deepest satis¬faction, “Why not have a good¬night chime for our own athletes?to let its sweet cadence have alast word with them before theyfall asleep; to speak to them oflove and loyalty and sacrifice fortheir University and of hope andinspiration and endeavor for themorrow.”Whenever, therefore, the AliceFreeman Palmer chimes are in¬stalled, it would be my wish tohave a special cadence rung forour athletes who are in training— perhaps five to ten minutesafter the regular chimes at teno’clock.Sincerely,Amos Alonzo StaggHits editorial on 'cowardice'One of the more stupid andirresponsible and possiblylibelous pronouncements Iever read appeared in a Marooneditorial Friday, April 19. Maybeyou saw it. It said that UC menshould stand up and fight whenassaulted by criminals.First, the matter of stupidity.According to this editorial, UCmen are cowards. I am quite un¬able to see what evidence led tothis conclusion. But in any event,I would have you consider wheth¬er it is not true that an action isproperly called courageous onlywhen it is brought to bear on asituation where there is somechance of success. Otherwise, itis sheer recklessness. I submitthat it would be foolhardy—andprobably often suicidal—for UCmen or any other law-abidingmen to attempt, driven by somepuerile desire to demonstrate vi¬rility, to overwhelm armed gang¬sters who outnumber him fouror more to one.Really, do you see how Mr. Lee or Mr. Manoloff could have fend¬ed off (a) six hoodlums equippedwith knives or (b) four who sur¬prised their victim and pinned hisarms behind him? Perhaps, Gad¬fly, you would help me arrangean experiment to see how the edi¬torial writer would fare undersimilar conditions.This brings us to why the edi¬torial’s advice is irresponsible.It is irresponsible because, asindicated above, it would if fol¬lowed lead to far worse than lac¬erations and broken teeth. Mr.Lee, for instance, might well havebeen killed if he had stayed toprove that he is quite a toughguy.The Maroon editorial was re¬markably akin to the kind of dareone juvenile delinquent makes toanother. You will recall that thesetwisted adolescents sometimesurge one another to put theirlives in jeopardy; anyone whoholds back is branded “chicken.”And then, the editorial may even be libelous. It is certainly in¬sulting.For the editorial — taken to¬gether with the same issue’s oth¬er items on the crime episodes—in effect labels as cowards Mr.Lee, Mr. Manoloff, the men ofDelta Upsilon, and indeed anyoneelse who has been attacked andbeaten in this neighborhood anddid not become a dead hero. Don’tyou think the Maroon owes thosetwo men and DU an apology?One last point which will carryus back to the initial charge ofstupidity.Who in heaven’s names careswhether “the area police havelittle respect for our bravery”?It is doubtless important for civicconfidence that the area policeshow their bravery to us (andbear in mind that we have giventhem guns to help this along).But what possible reason wouldUC men have for proving theirmettle to the police force?Name withheldCriticizes Morgenthau's Hillel lectureProfessor Hans J. Morgen-thau’s lecture at the Hillelfoundation last Wednesday,(page 11) contains some misin¬terpretation of political reality aswell as some internal inconsis¬tencies, which I would like topoint out in the brief space avail¬able.Morgenthau’s low opinion ofAfrican-Asian bloc conceals fromhim the fact that, although itsthirty odd nations may not havea community of interest ("havethere ever been two nations whichdid?), they do have their individ¬ual, but similar, economic, politi¬cal, and ideological goals whichby and large lead them to adoptsimilar positions on major for¬eign policy issues. Their positionon various problems connectedwith Communist "China, for ex¬ample, has been much more co¬herent and unified than Anglo-American policy on those prob¬lems. I am no admirer of the poli¬tics of the African-Asian bloc, butthis does not lead me to agreewith Morgenthau that such a bloc“does not exist.” It must be un¬derstood, as a matter of course,that not every nation which hap¬pens to be located in Asia or Af¬rica belongs to that bloc.When Morgenthau says thatforce applied against the Arabswill be more respected by theArabs than our present policy ofpersuasion, he is of course notthinking of respect for its ownsake, but respect which induces adesire to co-operate with us. Hisformula is thus: force leads torespect, which leads to co-opera¬tion.In the very same lecture. Mor¬genthau emphasized that w'ith theentry of Russia into Middle East politics, it is no longer possiblefor the Western powers to im¬pose a solution of the Arab-Israeliconflict, because that side whichwould suffer most from such asolution would be pushed into thearms of Russia. The applicationof force, in this case, would leadto defection to our enemy’s camp.The two arguments are mutuallyincompatible.Morgenthau said that our woo¬ing of King Saud will antagonizethose both in Saudi Arabia andin the rest of the Arab world whoare opposed to King Saud’s re¬gime because it is “pre historic,”or, in more conventional terms,reactionary. He said that thisplays into the hands of the Soviet Union, presumably by driving themore progressive elements in theArab world closer towards theSoviet Union. This, of course, is aconcession to the theory that ide¬ology plays an important role ininternational politics, a theorywhich Morgenthau usually at¬tacks with some vigor.His present concern with notantagonizing the Arab world onideological grounds is hard toreconcile with his complete indif¬ference to the inevitable antagon¬ism which the African-Asian blocwould feel in case US policy inthe Middle East were conductedon the amoral and illegal basiswhich Morgenthau advocates.Oliver LeeComplains of carillonsI would like to protestabout the irritating clamourissuing twice daily from thebell-tower over the Reynolds club.The painful attempts at musicclanged by the carilloneurs dis¬turbs the peace of the neighbor¬hood quite impossibly and theirnoise prevents any attempt atconcentration in the buildings ofthe immediately vicinity. I realizethat my complaint will expose meto the charge of philistinism butI feel that it will be worth it ifthis awful invasion of privacy canbe curbed.The other music groups on cam¬pus show a respect for the opin¬ion of their fellow students byrestricting their performancesand practices to locations of someprivacy, where they will not dis¬ turb the work of others. The car¬illoneurs clang their tuneless andagonizing displays right acrossthe campus, and at a time whenthe maximum number of studentsare inevitably exposed to them.This lunch-time, foi; instance,their jerky pealing of a tunewhich resembled “Dixie” invadedevery office and library on thenorthern end of the campus. Itseffect was about as pleasing asthat of a little boy learning toplay the flute or banging awayon tin cans in the next room. Andthis on the pretense of Art! Real¬ly, it would be better to ihstallloudspeakers and pipe-in the re¬hearsals of the Lab school’s or¬chestra than to subject ourselvesto this unmelodious and dailyirritation.A Sore Musical Ear On Compos withMaxShnJman(Author of “Barefoot Boy With Cheek ,** etc.)VIDEOT’S DELIGHTThe academic world has made its first tentative stepsinto television. A few lectures, a few seminars, but mayI respectfully suggest that the academic world has notyet learned the full potential of television?Why don’t the colleges use television’s vast capacityto dramatize, to amuse, to unshackle the imagination?Like, for example, this:Announcer: Howdy, folks. Well, it’s time again forthat lovable, laughable pair, Emmett Twonkey Magruder,Ph.D., and Felicia May Crimscott, M.A., in that rollick¬ing, roistering fun show, American History 101.... Andhere they are, the team that took the “hiss” out of“history”—Emmett Twonkey Magruder and Felicia MayCrimscott!Dr. Magruder: Howdy, folks. A funny thing hap¬pened to me on the way to my doctorate. A mendicantapproached me and said, “Excuse me, sir, will you giveme 25 cents for a sandwich*?” I replied, “Perhaps I will,my good man. Let me see the sandwich.”•Miss Crimscott: Oh, how droll, Dr. Magruder! How 1piquant! How je ne sais quoi!... But enough of badi¬nage. Let us get on with our rollicking, roistering funshow, American History 101.Dr. Magruder: Today we will dramatize the taut andtingling^story of John Smith and Pocahontas. I will playCaptain Smith and Miss Crimscott will play Pocahontas.Announcer: But first a message from our sponsor.... Folks, have you tried a Philip Morris lately ? Have youtreated yourself to that good natural tobacco — zestfulyet mild, hearty yet gentle, rich yet dulcet? Hmmm?Have you? ... If not, light a Philip Morris soon. Lighteither end.... And now to our grim and gripping story.Picture, if you will, a still summer night. An Indianmaid stands by a moonlit brook. Suddenly she hears afootstep behind her. She turns.f.Miss Crimscott: Oh! John Smith! You-um startle-urn me-um!Dr. Magruder: Hello, Pocahontas. What are youdoing down by the brook?Miss Crimscott: Just washing out a few scalps. Butwhat-um you-um want-um?Dr. Magruder: I came to see the Chief.Miss Crimscott: You-um can’t-um. Chief is leavingfor Chicagd.Dr. Magruder: On what track?Announcer: And speaking of tracks, stay on theright track with Philip Morris — the track that headsstraight for smoking pleasure, for fun, for frolic, forsweet content. ... And now back to those two cool cats,Emmett Twonkey Magruder and Felicia May Crimscott.Dr. m'agruder: Well, folks, that’s all for today. Seeyou next wqpk, same time, same station. «Miss Crimscott: Stay tuned now for “William CullenBryant: Girl Intern.”Announcer: And remember, folks, each end of PhilipMorris is ignitable. It’s just good, rich, natural tobacco,any way you light it!©Max Shulman, 1957Any way you light it, it's great. Any way you like it — longsize or regular — we've got it. Natural Philip Morris! Madeby the people who bring you this column.LIARN WHILEASLEEP! At last science hasfound a way for youto learn languages,vocabulary, facts,figures, memorize les-sons—all while yousleep. For the realfacts about this revolutionary university-tested method, send $2.00 for54 page fact-filled, illustrated instruction booklet: “Sleep-Learning —Its Theory, Application & Technique”. Tells how to make device fromradios, phonos, recorders etc. Where to buy assembled units and pre¬recorded lessons and self-help psychological courses... pi us hundredsof time-saving hints. Satisfaction is guaranteed. Sleep LearningResearch Association, P. O. Box 610-CP Omaha, Nebraska.liadflv|Jr ... h/"’—“^f, yThe,law' • - ' *>$5|bve acresnot miss it (except, perhaps, for thoseihust^nyj)®ti;iDedEie|afteristriped^tie^|:^^^»^P^i®Tv6bUesi:isideIoOTSj^^^pl:;@ll|Sje^evidencejtnat^imt)Epfess.ion,al;bret hreri? hay^ef tjV:stOf '%c'ours®8pIi 1 Gadfly policypegffljii^!l»disoppe^;Outi mA | Gadfly is an attempt on the part of the Maroon, tolpro^\>ide provocative ideas to the campus at large. Students an>tfaculty‘are earnestly invited to contribute to this colurmlf The author's name will be held in strictest confidence by-..the editor.1Opinions stated in Gadfly do not necessarily represent,the editorial policy of the Maroon, or its staff.> ^ Readers arey invited to express their views, on Gadfly!r’.article^in the ^Letters, to GadflyJ4columnSend articles, to;Gadfly., Maroon/office, Ida Noyes ’b‘T'^1law students. .Why?,; lEaisli m£*-^5^p,.HElANSWERlbis*''indeedjfsim-^f;,’ 1p e- .the,law, school? h.is h\ed in (c^clock library . mhmI vpintu.iL and * intellectualapparently need . ■ library isolation on this" campus. Indeedhwu s than th. .because law is a ]oa lo us‘mistress^ fOT>th<the> .talk ?»a> s>.._f, a I. .ce.por ''C b“t,'ll,i?Jla^^t1< r • 'v /.».>, ' on .soit m.idea-isolation ^by^ret- lightingianCl^rise^illta_Isg;o^^^rfg||4i^tpytHe;|demandslof|i)repaj;\ H>Vhy?fis| it^hatl^uc^aVdjsfmf^’ing dor’ t li’e.i nf profession^)sfi,n<y&fuished ' 'lot* of• youngrfm|n*can£"more^than atweak rationalizaUjor‘‘.’{move .with;, so . litt|e.Vadtnention^^(althoughtrnade|by those |wK<$|a£<, .Why it. is that the dutiu e le.uh i(s masters .of ralionalizatiori)lyi|iM« of our country can depart from^js easily refuted*by a visit ti&tniBar midsts^with little mtcn »t,’^ i w l hi i\ any evening. ‘ * <>a'«)!« pe..pl( w m v K ~rf ‘ y*fiISIwhat, is.the; CAUSE \oi|||j?ni|isp|a|ioni|then? oA^partial ans^ei^mayifberitfue to the administeri!jgap4.betw<fen^iKe1|j^^S(C1hcK),li Yankees' lineup. pgpIThe.gap* cannot%bei, dug^to The"Subjectmatter^although only/the#■economics ^.department/has /been r'ablej toTbreakthrough- into . the;'lawfschoo Tho connection be-;'tween I.iw;;aiid t he7s>, r i a I s e i c- n Ces #|pmkfepphjgand>psychqlogy mustf||J|^MifenSt^Afe^lavC>'stu4fden'tsjikt^leasptoft-heir professors^da\y.yMsS,Jreject|4 hese ^connect roiJsJ|ica'ffibe'ftheirfsenseTbftthelpres'tigeMi ngfelite^te^^BM SMM * Wf* v*Ntagfes|^aysharpMsclentlst^. and y.philosQphiel^S;.tneiSharrr3nidncapablebbf4emulating^I^^l'’ rior^lack>f,i't:)Kin^tf^^gi^.^^,^^cesiliileads^td»personalityfc^iIxompetitwe^pc^gwhich^maysbe^cKaraft^^^*f^^P^|^p;a^pxe<ju t,i\'e ^vs%spec.uIati^Q. * > ajne versus reficetiv-e.of •.nt ‘ iniycl' ie-pivti\efi- This is ^npt^OTdispara ^that„good UC language—pra« ti.vilv. il< l s^differenc< f sus thcoictu al * The pn■rT'Q>r, j *■ "b 1 ’ "n',; ' ^wmpu,!, mw ,t the lawyer is not &e|Mjtiv< hand it -ument for social select from - . social s. lcnted .w< r only by himself:.-,.iticdmeslflSj.and yence student means, reasoning and ./a field both are interested in. The the very nature of his legalt^'ia?iyisimjMlSviisfudfintMinquiriMleading >td apportion—^ bthergisi^^ofithei difference of: cat ion! i ^ 1 M # if WwM^ei^la^ ^urChowev^errsmall-of.the truth and spirit stems from the .fact that^ wyers are jprpbawJ^RMid;anrout^der|tr^n^e^rgument;is:;t^tatiyptand^law^tudents share and participate, |gese ^ifferehce^ between M^process ;in a ^elves and theTest ofis rruith of a < han< e as Argument for tne law .student us w a> w hi, h . ne unfoi tunate m,< .al .... n(,rhans (Hov M isll ,,PH- ilova .^’Florit■«0ml^3|4226>|len»M DiscouwtSiveryfeSefy ic«^Blegal and scholarly\mindingly Too greattever to • ' < Scom,.:Hob|enann^Ktonighj^HouseK * ,.A:30 p.niX'W%twysy.:--T<kW H AT__ISi AJ, lEAKY, fBN*is^WMATUS-.A.-tAUATivt fARM »OY.. f ; . protect yourLj^when-iau move.tr.,.~f.——_x^, , ' ’ 'ThW'«AI»ICmtL‘I»JOF HIAMllMAT S AM IMPROVED HANDCUFF; WHATbOiHOILkCOYtEfiS^ffl'ROVIOENCEfcOLLECeii Ft CHIC AGO,!H AT«IS|X‘|BAKER!Sdy;AGON ||SftiSBSffiBSiie^thilMffableigentvbecbmes'l l^|JI|3pinyist'‘wpor|^^*<? 8 ia: a|>>afe and clean iiila itUhitcih^©Sanitized van?®Sanitizedd|:Mtbe;^exclusive’..hygieni^!pr&‘l®aess>wh'ich';;iiiKibits:'the;deyel^pppniierrt|pfbacteriav'-mll dey^limpid andiodbrs that-could;^Aah.armful, ^especially*,-;io'%up^ph.olsteredt. pieces, ^^r'ugsiifebedfjpding,;;draperies, and' clothingi;Nexttime,insist upon€»Sani-ffitized.aservice'^IS* Gall i A 'uthbrize'd^Agert^^m^UNITED, VAN* LINla.sTNC.liPETERSONSMOVING & STORAGE CO.55Hi fir Ellis Avenue JBUtt^rfield 8-6711CMKBR#rriillibr|buclcs;SAN^IOSE^m^mrnmfistuacm>KmouoHtmm• start stickling i;:5^^|MAKE |25 ;lw.- lrpay, $Z(ii<m’iverrSu. kkr~wJ,iSprint'-- and foribundredsimowlttil^[C neverjget; used!. So. start Stickling—-glisthey’re bo easy you can think of dozens;S in seconds!.Stickler8 are simple riddles^/.with two 'word rhyming answers. Bothiif words must have the same number of :?• syUable8.' (Don’t; do drawings.) Send//•’em-: all with your name, address,• > college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, 'Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N, Y. .ss.:. -■%&:<waatmApril 26, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Kuiper describes death of sunby Harold BernhardtOutlining his task in thefourth of The creation of theuniverse lecture-series, spon¬sored by University College,prof. Gerard Kuiper, of the UCAstronomy department at YerkesObservatory and editor of “TheSolar System,” said: “A theory ofplanetary origin, in particular ofour own plantetary system, mustaccount for quite a number ofwell known facts and it is becauseof this that a choice of theory isvery much restricted.”Mentioning as examples ofsuch facts that the mass of eachplanet is known “to about 4 deci-v mai places” and their orbitsaround the sun to about 7 or 8, hestaled that their angular tilt fromthe invariable plane that remains' constant in space for each planet“through the ages” is also pre¬cisely known.The earth’s tilt of 23Vx° was' acquired ahd not inherited, Dr.Kuiper explained. “The moon andthe earth together form a doubleplanet. At present the moon isstill receding from us.” Ahead for the earth, he said, is a timewhen a day will become about 53of our present days long and themoon will take 53 days to goaround the earth, at which time“both bodies will point the samefaces to each other.”Moon moves slowlyHowever, Dr. Kuiper declared,it has taken some four billionyears for the moon to move out toits present position and for it tomove 40 per cent further will takemany tens of millions of years,by which time something muchmore drastic will happen.“Our sun is quite an elderlystar and has gotten about 20 percent brighter and is getting big-gers and redder all the time asit goes in the direction of becom¬ing a giant star. Being approxi¬mately 6 billion years old,” hesaid, “the sun has two or threebillion years longer to go—I’msure that the human race won’tlast that long. In fact, it will hevery lucky to last five more years,or even two.”“Two or three billion yearsfrom now the oceans will begin to boil and the whole atmospherewill steam. Since the water vaporwon’t escape from the earth wewill have an enormous steam-covered planet at 700° C. for an-other1)illion years. After a whilethe earth will begin to frepze andby that time the sun becomes adwarf star and nears its extinc¬tion the earth will be covered withice and that will be the end ofthat.” He remarked that therethus wasn’t much future ahead,“even if we don’t kill ourselveswith nuclear weapons before¬hand."On the basis of data showingthat the last melting of the earthtook place some 414 billion yearsago and that it has solidified eversince, it is possible to compute abillion or so years as the periodof time required for the earth toheat up to that previous point.Such calculations on pre-geo¬logic time bring the age of theearth and the other planets intomutual compatibility with suchfindings as that the oldest starsin the galaxy are 6 to 7 billionyears old. “The planets wereformed as a by-product when the sun was formed, a lucky thingfor us,” Dr. Kuiper commented.Continuing his account, he ar¬gued that there must be someproperty of original inter stellarmatter that causes stellar con¬traction. “This agent is the inter¬nal small amounts of motionwhich occurred in the stellarclouds that contracted.” Magnifiedtremendously these initial mo¬tions would lead to the formationof binary and other type stars atpoints of greater density.Formation a randomSince star formation is essen¬tially a random process occurringon a vast cosmic scale, it becomespossible to estimate planetary dis¬tribution in space, one in ten starsin the neighborhood of our sunhaving planets. Furthermore,since stars in our own galaxyalone number 4 times 10 to the11th power, the number of plane¬tary systems in the Milky Wayis somewhere between the 10thand 1th powers of ten.“The planets were born beforethe sun got hot,” Dr. Kuiper as¬serted. When proto-earth was seg¬regated out of the nebular hydro¬ genous cloud surrounding thesun, it was between 400-500 timesas massive as now, some 99 percent of it being hydrogen then.The sun’s ‘light switch turningon’ almost wiped out the planets,burning up 99.8 per cent of theearth's mass but leaving ‘the silli-cates and the metals which thesolar radiation couldn’t destroy.”Asserting that it was thus thatthe enormous gaseous proto¬planets were whittled down totheir present size, Dr. Kuipercited a number of observationsabout Jupiter and its satelliteswhich independently point toJupiter’s having been 20 timeslarger in mass at an earlier time.Clarifying further, Dr. Kuipersaid: .“What we are trying to dois extrapolate the laws of naturebackward in time. However, Sincethings do change, one can’t be en¬tirely sure that there weren’tother earlier cosmological thingsthen and different principles gov¬erning them, although I have seennothing to make me believe thatthe laws of physics were any dif¬ferent 5 billion years ago thanthey are now.”Civiltells liberties is basic issue: O'of his contempt, conviction, Connor;reversalby Harold BernhardtHarvey O’Connor, who saidno! to Joseph McCarthy atthe height of the Wisconsinsenators power in 1953, andmade it stick through the USCourt of Appeals, spoke under theauspices of the League for CivilLiberties at Soc Sci 201 last weekin connection with AcademicFreedom week.O’Connor, national chairman ofthe Emergency Civil Libertiescommittee and author of suchbooks as Mellon’s Millions andthe recent Empire of Oil, is a for¬mer editor and publicity directorof the Oil Workers Internationalunion. AFL-CIO, 1945-1948, ofwhich he remains a member.“You may remember that sev¬eral weeks ago some studentsdared to ask an actual Commu¬nist to speak here,” he recalled.“Somehow the whole incidentcame off—UC still stands, no onewas corrupted. I think that ispart of what academic freedommeans.”Issue not acute“Here at UC,” he declared,“academic freedom as an issuemay not be too acute but as aprinciple it’s something UC stu¬dents should always worry about.It’s other schools I’m concernedabout,” he went on, “where noissue of freedom is made becauseno one is exercising any of them.”“But it’s civil liberties that are our basic issue—these others wehave a fighting chanoe with aslong as we can speak, write, anddo some things about them. With¬out freedom,” O’Connor said,“nothing is possible and every¬thing else becomes a mockery.”Cites first amendmentCiting the First Amendment tothe US Constitution, “Congressshall make no law respecting anestablishment of religion, or pro¬hibiting the free exercise thereof;or abridging the freedom ofspeech, or of the press; or theright of the people peaceably toassemble, and to petition the Gov¬ernment for a redress of griev¬ances,” O’Connor described hisown recent case. “Books chosenby the American Library associa¬tion and not by the State Depart¬ment were being sent overseas.One day I’m sitting on my frontporch in Rhode Island, and a callcomes through from a guy namedRoy Cohn telling me I was goingto be subpoenaed to come toWashington and appear beforethe McCarthy committee to an¬swer questions.“That was a curious thing, was¬n’t it,” O’Connor mused. “I meanI’m about to be hauled down toWashington and have my nameand reputation smeared just be¬cause by some inadvertence theAmerican Library association hadchosen my books among many,many others to be sent overseas.“McCarthy said that since mybooks were bought by taxpayers’money, he would find out if I hadbeen a member of the CommunistSTERN’S CAMPUS DRUGS«lst & ELLIS FA 4-4800For your dining pleasure ——Gastronomic Genius, Benny Cruse,chef De Cuisine, serving:Vi - lb. Tender Strip Steak, incl. grilled onions, salad bowl,]french fries, roll & butteror T-bone Steak 25TV and Radio -1401 East 55th Street 30 years inHyde ParkSales & ServiceHYde Park 3-3000Specialists in Servicing Hi-Fi & FMReconditioned FM Sets Available10% discount on repairs brought in with this coupon«MMMn«MMHMMaaaaBBaaiiaaBaBaaBIIaBaBBaa conspiracy when I wrote them. Because if you are being grilled and violence should be in the psy-‘My politics are my business, not in an investigation of your opin- ehiatric ward, not in the peniten-yours,’ I told him. I was indicted ions, politics, associations and you tiary.for contempt, tried, found guilty, answer one question, then you “The curious thing,” he pointedgiven a year in the penitentiary, waive your right to remain silent 0ut, “is that in no Smith act trialThen the judge suspended it and on an^- other question. has any of these guys ever beenpeople came around congratulat- They’re after freedom convicted or even accused of actu-ing me on my great victory. “What these investigators are ally trying to overthrow the gov-“We appealed and on appeal I really after is all of us,” O’Connor ernment or advocating it. Con-won and I’m a free man today. It said. “They are after freedom it- spiracy is the key word; they areonly cost me $10,000. Equal jus- self.” He noted that resolutions being sent to jail for allegedlytice under law if you’ve got ten drawn up by the US Chamber of conspiring to advocate the over¬thousand dollars,” O’Connor ex- Commerce in 1933-35 called for throw of the government at someplained. “If you’re a poor man practically every repressive law future time.and can’t hire a lawyer you take against civil liberties that have «in a horrible exhibition of athe Fifth Amendment.” been passed in the last 17 years: Congressional committee haulingTells of cases the Smith act, the Internal Secu- people up for questioning here inCiting a recent deportation case rity act, the Walter-McCarran Im- Chicago recently,” O’Connor said,involving a man born in Yugo- migration act, and the Commu- “editors of foreign languageslavia, O’Connor said that when nis* Control act. newspapers were asked aboutthe man was asked if he read the Expressing himself on the their politics, even though theChicago Tribune, he pleaded the Smith act in particular, O’Connor First Amendment specifically for-Fifth Amendment. “Why not an- said: “Anybody who advocates bids Congress to pass any laws onswer a simple question like that? overthrowing the US by force freedom of the press.Buy YourWholesale - S AV i 50%Diamond Rings For Half Retail Price“All Diamonds Fully Insured”“Written Life-Time Quarantee”“No Loss TradeTn Quarantee”“Three Ways to Buy Wholesale”Lay-Away — Cash — Charge Accounts AvailableWrite today for Diamond Catalogue and Buyer's CardLn CAUU x Diamond Importers. If. jUnPl <X LU. Wholesalers5 SOUTH WABASH . ROOM 804 59 E. MADISON DE 2-4113Free Parking — 219 S. WabashOpen Mon. Nites TUI 9 PM — Thurs. Till 8 PM — Sat. Till 5 PMI \Goodhue built magngoing steadyGoing steady is a kind of together-ness that belongs to ourgeneration, say some sociologists, because we all need some se¬curity in a turbulent world.Going steady takes a more mature outlook than flitting fromflower to flower. It takes co-operation. And co-operation, be¬lieve us, is a fine thing in our personal lives or in a business.This co-operative has been going steady with University peopleand other Hyde Parkers for 24 years, learning their likes thor¬oughly so we can please them completely.CO-OP SUPER MARTMore Than a Store5535 S. Harper Plenty of Free Parking-by Bob HalaszPresident Ernest DewittBurton had served onlytwo years before his un¬timely death in 1925, butduring that period of time hisambitious efforts resulted in anew period of building thatcontinued from 1925 until themiddle ’30s.In a booklet entitled “The Uni-COM" M * MLatSTCXCO TRAOt MARI. COPVRlOMT \9%1 THE COCA-COLA COMPANY.versify of Chicago in 1940,” Bur¬ton launched a fund drive callingfor $17.5 million in one year, and$60.9 million by 1940. He listedfifteen new buildings to be con¬structed, most of which have beencompleted. Among other things,Burton wanted to see a newgroup of College buildings, in¬cluding men’s and women’s un¬dergraduate dorms, built on thesouth side of the midway to “seg¬regate” them from tire graduateschools.During the years 1925-29, theuniversity had three presidents:Burton; Max Mason, a professorof mathematical physics at theUniversity of Wisconsin, w h oserved for a brief interlude ofthree years; and Robert M.When you’re old enough to go to college,you’re old enough to go out with girls. Whenyou’re old enough to go out with girls, who needscollege? Oh well, there’s always Coke.bottled under authority of The Coca-Colo Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc. Hutchins, who became presidentin December, 1929, at the age of30, after being dean of the lawschool at Yale. Hutehins, ofcourse, was destined to stay fortwenty-one years, and in thattime to leave his mark on the UCprofoundly.Burton never lived to see theerection of the Rockefeller chapel,a project that really went back to1910, when John D. Rockefellerleft a million and a half dollarsto the University for the construc¬tion of a university chapel thatwould dominate the campus.Goodhue made plansWorld War I interrupted pre¬liminary plans, but in 1918 thewell known architect BertramGrosvenor Goodhue was asked toprepare plans and designs for theproposed chapel. Goodhue hadacquired a reputation by planningmany notable edifices, includingthe Nebraska state capitol, andthe Riverside church in NewYork City.Goodhue never lived to see his,own work either, for he died in1924, a year before ground wasfirst broken. Rockefeller chapel is built outof the same Bedford stone asmost of the other buildings, andits style is Gothic, but it has noold world model. The solid stonemasonry is made of 72,000 piecesof stone, and the total weight ofthe wall, roof, and tower, is 32.000tons, although the building haspractically none of the supportsusually accompanying such astructure. The foundation goes80 feet into bed rock.The tower soars 207 feet high,and is unusual in that it was locat¬ed adjoining the chapel itself. Inthe belfry is one of the two larg¬est carillons in the world. Thecarillon was dedicated by John D.Rockefeller. Jr., to his mother,Laura Spelman Rockefeller.Chapel has sculpturesRockefeller chapel is also un¬usual in its large amount of sculp¬ture, including twenty-four free¬standing figures and fifty-threedemifigures. They are generally archaic in style and symbolic Incharacter, but the figures ,ar? -often neither Biblical nor ancienl,some being modern or even c<«r-temporary.Another feature of Rockef-gchapel which adds to its impyl^sive appearance is the sniaUamount of bays. The chapel ha Ionly five bays, less than almostany structure of comparablelength and breadth.The normal seating capacity ct .Rockefeller is 1,789. Its dedicj •tion in 1928, at which John E.Rockefeller, Jr., spoke, was thefirst of a large group of Uni^i vsity gatherings that have beenheld there, including services,convocations, and choral concert^.The chapel was, fundamcnt^llj|, .a suitable place to hold religiousservices, one that the Universityhad always lacked. ProfessofEdgar Goodspeed said of the pro- .ceding chapel, Mandel hall, "Anifis a li|-we may now admit that it(Left) An early proposal for the University chapel. This building, ‘designed by Henry Ives Cobb, the University’s first architect, waspart of the “master plan” which Ives drew up in 1893 for futurestruction on the campus. This chapel was to be located opposite? *the present administration building, where the varsity tennis courts'are now.(Below) A plan for the chapel drawn up by Its arehiteet, BertramGoodhue. The drawing, submitted in 1923, indicates a number pffeatures which did not actually materialize such as the long cloisterin the foreground which connects with a new house proposed forthe president. Note tiiat the tower is on the wrong side of the build¬ing in this sketch. Other plans for this cha|>el "group” includedtwo connected buildings housing, of all things, a YMCA and Y\V( A! i '(Editor's note: This arti¬cle is the fifth in a series onthe history of the buildingsand grounds of the Univer¬sity.)It’s a puzzlement:ificent chapel for UClie disturbing to go to church^Sunday morning in a hall inwhich one has witnessed a roar*ing farce the night before and ahilarious pep-session the night.before that." It is true that Man¬gel is architecturally a theaterand lacks the religious atmos¬phere deemed necessary.- The chapel has served manytimes as a magnificent place towelcome visitors. Presidents Wil¬liam McKinley and Theodore.Roosevelt had been honored atKent theater; Marshall Foch atMandel, hall, and the Prince ofWales in Hutchinson commons—> now the University had an as¬sembly hall to stun the mostblase.With the searchlights illuminat-ilng Rockefeller at night, it nowpresents a view truly dominatingthe one hundred-odd buildings ofthe campus.Medical group builtBurton also faced up to anotherUC problem which had been•swept under the rug—establishinga medical school on campus. Chi-Upjrago was “big league" in every-f "Tilling else, and so this declarationof intention surprised no one.What must have surprisedmost people was the scale onwhich Burton proposed to buildthe new medical school. It was tostretch from Ellis, past Ingleside,to Drexel avenue, running from58th to 59th streets. It was to bebuilt in a complex group of smallquadrangles, as the main quad¬rangles are. Although the medicalgroup has not followed the plancompletely, it is quite similar.The medical school was to havethree purposes — practice, teach¬ing, and research. With this inmind, the group was built andconstructed to house the variousdepartments — hospital, outpati¬ent division, classrooms, labora¬tories, department of medicine of¬fices, surgery, pathology, physi¬ology, physiological chemistry,obstetrics, gynecology, psychi¬atry, and others. The departmentswere to be housed so that themedical group would representan integrated whole.The University took over the photos by Grossman-Mokotoff(Right) The mechanism which governs the automaticringing of the Rockefeller chimes. This device, constructedin England, controls the ringing of the I8V2 ton "GreatBourdon" bell which rings the hours, and the smaller bellswhich play the chimes from Wagner's "Parsifal" every quar¬ter-hour.(Above) Behind the chancel in the chapel are affixed threeplaques with names and dates of birth and death of the threedeceased presidents of the University and their wives. Behindthese plaques lie the ashes of the presidents and their wives.The Latin inscription below the Harper plaque reads "Hieiacent praesidium suorumque cineres."facilities and faculty of RushMedical college, and induced Chi¬cago Lying-In hospital to moveinto new quarters to be built onthe west side of the medicalgroup. Lying-In in a way markedthe completion of a cycle—a per¬son can now spend his entire lifeon campus.By 1930 many buildings of themedical group had been complet¬ed, financed by subscription andlarge gifts from private donors inthe past. Among the * buildingswere Albert Merritt Billings hos¬pital, M a x Epstein pharmacy,Bobs Roberts Memorial hospitaltfor children under 15), theNancy Adele McElwee Memorialhospital, and (he Gertrude DunnHicks Memorial hospital.The University had done itagain — a medical center hadmushroomed and was already ac¬ quiring an outstanding reputa¬tion.Soc Sci gets buildingThrough the years the socialsciences had advanced to a rec¬ognized status of prominence, andit was only fitting that theyshould have a building of theirown. At President Hutchins’ firstconference with newspapermen,he mentioned that among otherthings, UC was doing more sig¬nificant work in social sciencesthan any other university in thecountry. In December, 1929, theSocial Sciences Research buildingwas dedicated, the same monthHutchins was inaugurated asPresident. It was built betweenHarper library and Foster hall, ata cost of $650,000.The building became the firston any American campus devotedexclusively to resarch in the so¬cial sciences. It was designed to serve as a center where people inthe various disciplines could worktogether.The social sciences held a tenthanniversary in 1939, but theyreally pulled out the stops in No¬vember, 1955, to celebrate thetwenty-fifth anniversary of thebuilding. In addition to many UCluminaries, Arnold Toynbee, Wal¬ter Lippmann, and Taleott Par¬sons lectured there.Joseph Bond chapel was builtin back of Swift, and connected toit by a cloister. Its status wasdescribed at its dedication by Pro¬fessor Harold R. Willoughby asa divinity chapel—an “appropri¬ate setting for regular services ofworship for a group of graduatestudents who share common re¬ligious ideas and purposes.” How¬ever, it is open to all and is avail¬able as a place for meditation andprayer to all students. Bond has been used in other ways— JamesMichener was married in Bondnot too long ago.A bronze plaque in the narthexstates simply: “Erected in Mem¬ory of Joseph Bond for the Wor¬ship of God and the Service ofMan, 1926.” The inscription wascomposed by Mrs. Bond herself.As the visitor enters the chapel,a plaque on his left proclaims;“You are the Sons of the LivingGod!” As he comes out again aplaque on his left reads: “PetfeeBe With You.”Many more buildings were com¬pleted ifl the next few years —.among them Wieboldt, OrientalInstitute, International house,and Burton-Judson — before theDepression, World War II, andthe policies of President Hutchinscombined to relegate new con¬struction to a secondary role inthe life of the University.(Below) The master plan for the hospital and medicalgroup drawn up by the architects, Coolidge and Hodgdon,in 1925.Unlike other such "master plans," this one was followedvery closely. Long-range construction plans for the hospitalindicate that this plan may be completed some day. Note Ellisavenue on the right, and the location of the present Adminis¬tration building (upper right).Hmbersitp of ChicagoJflrbical JSuilbing mb hospital |<SC't>fd>Sje anfe j^gSart,^rebttHt5 PXV i £ < V»„x -y\$ m SI 8 Cm 5* ipV m-* 4. ‘/jll■w.10 e CHICAGO MAROON • April 26, 1957Preserve Robie . . .(from page 1)than half the size of the presentsite.Contacted by telephone duringthe meeting, President McGiffertexpressed an interest in the com¬mittee’s work, and offered thehope that constructing the dormson three lots directly north ofRobie house on Woodlawn mightbe feasible, if both Zeta Beta Tauand Phi Delta Theta fraternitiesrelinquish their dwellings. Nego¬tiations are under way with ZBTalready, said McGiffert, but noarrangement to trade with PhiDelt can be considered until theZBT deal goes through. He of-feerd no hope that CTS wouldconsider an alternative to thepresent plans, which are alreadybeing put into working drawings at the architectural office of Hola-bird, Root and Burgee.Plans for a speech on campusby Frank Lloyd Wright as a cul¬mination of the public opinionand financial campaigns consid¬ered necessary to save the archi¬tectural landmark were also dis¬cussed. No reply had been re¬ceived yesterday to an invitationsent to Mr. Wright at his Arizonaresidence, although a telephonecall with an assistant offered thecommittee the assurance that Mr.Wright plans to cooperate in ev¬ery way with those trying to savehis important work.That the Chicago commissionon architectural landmarks re¬cently declared the Robie housethe first such landmark indicatedto the committee that cooperationis not lacking in some quarters.Another meeting of the com¬mittee will be held in Ida Noyeseast lounge at 7:30 pm Tuesday. Chief teller«rhonored forlong serviceMrs. Antoinette MacCord,retiring chief student feesteller, will be honored at an“all campus open house” in theBursar’s office Tuesday from 3to 5 pm.Mrs. MacCord, known to manyas “Miss Bennett,” has been withthe University since 1916.She began her career with theUniversity’s “Cashier’s office,”(better known today as the Bur¬sar’s office), which was then lo¬cated in the UC press building.Albert Cotton, UC Bursar, whobegan working in the Bursar’s of¬fice in 1924, said of Mrs. Mac¬Cord: “She has been a very loyalmember of our staff as long as Ihave been here.” Blake, noted churchman,to speak on east crisisUSED BOOKSStock of over 5000.200 new titles displayed every week.£c/uteetnaHH&THE RED DOOR BOOK SHOP1328 EAST 57th STREETNOrmal 7-6111 Chicago 37, III. The ColletteLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236Jimmy’sSINCE 1940 Dr, Eugene Carson Blake,president of the NationalCouncil of Churches, willspeak Thursday at 8 pm in Breast¬ed hall. Dr. Blake, who was leaderof the Protestant delegation tothe Soviet Union a year ago, willdiscuss ‘The stake and strategyof the churches in the east-weststruggle.”Besides leading the delegationto Russia, Dr. Blake has attendedinternational religious meetingsin Switzerland, Amsterdam, Swe¬den, Hungary, Czechoslovakia,Japan, and the recent assemblyof the World Council of Churchesin the United States.Following the Hungarian crisisof last November D. Blakeserved in behalf of the WorldCouncil of Churches in negotiat¬ing with the Hungarian govern¬ment on issues affecting the lifeof Protestant churches in thatcountry.In a communique issued lastJune when the Russian delega¬tion completed the final half ofthe two-way exchange of churchleaders, Dr. Blake said, “In thefirst centuries, when relation¬ships between people were asconfused as they are today, it wassaid that the Christian held theworld together. God grant thatwe may play that role again!”The National Council presidentis also stated clerk of the generalPFOR YOUR INFORMATION► bail-point inks► odor control► biological grade chemicals Eugene Blakeassembly of the Presbyterianchurch, USA, the highest execu¬tive position of that denomina¬tion.Dr. Blake’s talk is sponsoredby the Porter foundation, theCongregational Christian, andEvangelical and Reformed stu¬dent fellowship.Laud O'HaraCongressman Barratt O’Hara(Democrat, Illinois), was honoredlast night at a diamond jubileedinner celebrating 45 years ofpublic service.Former lieutenant governor ofIllinois, O’Hara is currently serv¬ing his fourth term as representa¬tive from the second congression¬al district, which includes theUniversity. He was recently ap¬pointed to the House Foreign Af¬fairs committee.Heading the list of speakerswho paid tribute to O’Hara at theMorrison hotel dinner was Sena¬tor Paul Douglas of Illinois.Chairman of the affair was stateSenator Marshall Korshaw.Ball-point inksIf you drew a continuous, un¬broken line with a ball-point penuntil its ink supply was exhausted,the line would be two to threemiles long. Enough to write 50,000to 70,000 words, compared withthe 2,500 to 4,000 words you getfrom the same amount of fountainpen ink.Because you would be exhaustedlong before your ink supply, a me¬chanical scriber—which producesthose mysterious zig-zag linesabove—is used to test hundreds ofbail-point ink formulations.The amazing number of wordscoming from a bail-point pen hasenabled bail-points to roll pastboth fountain pens and mechanicalpencils to become the most com¬monly used writing instrumentstoday.This would not be so if the ball¬point pen remained unchanged,still staining, skipping, smearing,drying up. A better mechanicaltool was needed to start with.Once accomplished, the ink be¬came the most important element,and synthetic organic chemiststurned to the key element—thecolorant—which is half of the en¬tire ink formulation." Early bail-point inks were made with the same dyes used for yearsin fluid inks. But ball-points havedifferent ink requirements: goodflow properties, lubricity, solubil¬ity, storage stability and—mostimportant — an exceptionallyhigh concentration of dye. Tinc¬torial value must be twenty timesthat of a fluid ink.From research has come a specialline of National dyes, tailor-madefor ball-point inks. Research onboth pen and ink has enabled thebail-point to supplant in 15 yearsthe pointed pen, in use for 13 cen¬turies.Odor controlOdor control presents an ingen¬ious twist on the old question ofwhether there is any sound whena tree falls in a deserted forest.We have always had odor-caus¬ing sites. But today, with industryexpanding and our suburban com¬munities moving further into thecountry, these odors become a seri¬ous problem. Some sources of thisproblem are sewage plants, land¬fill garbage, drainage ditches,storm sewers and market areastreets.Solvay Ozene (emulsifiable or¬thodichlorobenzene) is becomingNational, Solvay, Ozkne and Baku ft Adamson.VT.-.V.V.V. v VV widely used in industrial odorjLontrol situations, for dripping in¬to sewage or spraying on garbageand other odor sources.Ozene works on odors theseways: its own odor serves as amasking agent; it slows down theproduction of bacteria which causesulfide odors; it prevents thegrowth of fungi which speed thedecomposition of waste materials.A dark-colored liquid, Ozenemixes readily with water and canbe substantially diluted for eco¬nomical use.Biological grade chemicalsPreparing balanced salt solutionsfor the growth of cultures is typi¬cal of the stringent needs of 4>io-chemists for extremely high-puritychemicals, products which havebeen purified even beyond the uni¬versally recognized AmericanChemical Society quality stand¬ards for analytical reagents.Three such “reagent plus” com¬pounds have been added to Baker& Adamson’s line of 1,000 labora¬tory reagents. These initial chem¬icals—-sodium bicarbonate, sodiumchloride and potassium chloride—show very minute trace impurities,materially lower than in similarchemicals produced to A. C. S.specifications.They are the first in a proposedline of biological grade chemicalsmade especially for such import¬ant scientific applications.Creative ResearchThese examples of product de¬velopment work are illustrativeof some of Allied Chemical'sresearch activities and oppor¬tunities. Allied divisions offerrewarding careers in many dif¬ferent areas of chemical researchand development.V.W ,?! New York 6, N. Y, The quick!'brown fox"!Smart college women know thatGibbs thorough secretarial train¬ing is the quickest route to busi¬ness success.Special Course tor College Women. WriteCollege Dean for GIBBS GIRLS AT WORK.BOSTON If : : : n M.rlb«w<*h SLPROVIDENCE « .... 155 AhmII SI.NEW YORK 17. . : : . t»RarkMONTCLAIR. NJ. J U PI*n¥Hith SL. .V, Wash ’N Wear CordsDacron & Cotton$3250Extra longs, 34 to 44608 n. michigan avenueWhitehall 3-2410■•■MiY.Vr ’ihViriWiYi iWJ*- — —wIApril 26, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Morgenthau views Middle East1 >*l by Oliver LeePlaying the Arab na¬tions and Israel againsteach other was a feasiblepolicy for the UnitedStates in recent years, butwith the entry of Soviet Rus¬sia into Middle East politicsthis can no longer be done, saidHans J. Morgenthau in a lecturelast Wednesday, sponsored by theHillel foundation and entitled,‘The United States, the UnitedNations, and the Middle East.”Hillel house was filled to capacity.Morgenthau, professor of poli¬tical science, is director of the UCCenter for the study of Americanforeign policy, and the author ofPolitics Among* Nations, In De¬fense of the National Interest,Scientific Man versus Power Poli¬tics, and other books. The centerhas recently received a researchgrant of over $140,000 from theCarnegie corporation.A vacillating policy of makingsmall concessions to one side orthe other has become bankrupt,said Morgenthau. With Russia onthe scene, the United States canno longer just "muddle through”in the Middle East as we had donefor years and the British beforeus for decades.Tells commitmentsActually, said Morgenthau, theUnited States is no longer as un¬committed as it was before theBritish, French, and Israeli inva¬sion of Egypt last November. TheUnited States has committed it¬ self to a change in the status quoin the gulf of Aqaba and the Gazastrip. But, Morgenthau warned,such commitments cannot be car¬ried out through a policy whichrenounces beforehand the use orthreat of force as a means ofexerting pressure, which is whatSecretary of States John FosterDulles has done.Asks cautionThere was a possibility of set¬tling the Arab-Israeli conflict be¬tween 1948 and 1956 by havingthe Western powers impose asolution on both sides, Morgen¬thau held. He stated that, gener¬ally, a conflict can be solved byeither having both sides agree toa compromise, or by forcibly im¬posing a compromise to whicheither one side or both sides donot agree.An agreed compromise was notpossible in the Middle East be¬cause the Arab countries insistedon the extermination of Israel, towhich Israel obviously could notagree. The tri partite declaration(Anglo-French-American) of 1950to uphold the status quo onIsrael’s borders was the begin¬ning of a policy of imposing asolution, said Morgenthau, but itwas never implemented.Now it is too late. With the ap¬pearance of the Soviet Union inthe arena, a solution imposed bythe West would be followed bythe opposition of either the Arabsor the Israelis—supported by theSoviet Union — depending onwhich side would feel itself more threatened by the Western policy,Morgenthau said.Condemns wooingThe German-born foreign policyexpert said he was convinced thatAmerica’s effort to woo SaudiArabia cannot succeed. Such apolicy plays into the hands ofthe Soviet Union, he held, becauseit makes us "appear as the mainsupport of a kind of pre historicregime (to use the word ‘feudal’would be a slander on feudalism).This antagonizes all these whoare opposed to the regime notonly in Saudi Arabia but in theArab world at large.”United States policy assumesthat the closeness of any coun¬try to the Soviet Union dependson the degree of kindness we door do not show to that country,Morgenthau said. He reportedthat certain of our representativesin the Middle East have actuallyused such terms as, "We mustmake ourselves loved.” But, hesaid, in foreign policy it has beenan age-old experience that thereare just two ways in which youcan get your way with anothernation: by promises or by threats.Asking nations to be as kind to usas we are to them is futile.Advocates pressure"If we would tell the King ofSaudi Arabia that under such andsuch conditions we would buy hisoil, but otherwise not, he wouldhave no choice but to meet theseconditions,” Morgenthau suggest¬ed. He held that Western Europecould do without Saudi ArabianFestival of arts calendarFriday, April 26Brass choir and Madrigal singers, Mitchell towerspring ceremony, noon.Chicago style debate: "Resolved: that modern artis conspicuous presumption,” 12:30 pm, Reynoldsclub lounge.Toctry reading contest, Florence James Adamscontest, 3 pm, Joseph Bond chapel.IJazz Hot, the Jazz club, 3:30, Hutchinson court.Tw ilight 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 27€oncours d’EIegance 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, Rey¬nolds club theater.Beaux Arts Masquerade ball, 10 pm, Ida Noyes.Sunday, April 28University religious service, Rev. Paul Macy,11 am, Rockefeller chapel.International exhibition, 3:30-7:30, Int house.Festival of nations, includes recital 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 from 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, Hillel, 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 hall. oil by increasing its reliance onoil from Iran, Iraq, and Kuwaitand on stepped-up production inVenezuela and the United States,whereas Saudi Arabia cannot dowithout its West European cus¬tomers.The same attitude, said Mor¬genthau, should be taken towardsPresident Nasser of Egypt. If wewere to take a strong standagainst him, we might get a stiffreaction in the beginning, but inthe long-run he would have tocome to terms. For, Morgenthaupointed out, all Arab leaders arethe exponents of certain privi¬leged social groups who wouldhave the most to lose in the eventof a Communist takeover in theircountry.Steadfast opposition from aunited Arab world would not oc¬cur, said Morgenthau, becauseNasser is a great threat to thedomestic political status quo ofthe other Arab leaders, althoughat present they dare not opposehim because they would then ap¬pear as traitors to Arab national¬ism.Belittles Afro-AsiansWhat the African-Asian blocwould think about a United Statespolicy of force is not important.Morgenthau thought, because"there is no such thing as anAfrican-Asian bloc. This was dem¬onstrated at the Bandung confer¬ence in 1955, where the 29 nationscould not agree on anything ex¬cept opposition to coloniasm,which no longer exists. They haveno community of interest.”Many African - Asian nations,Morgenthau continued, are somany zeros in terms of power."Add them all up and you stillget zero.” He said that most ofthem, in fact, are not politicallyand economically viable and area standing invitation to a newcolonialism. 'The notion that theAfrican-Asian bloc is an impor¬tant power factory is entirely mis¬taken. Their power means a greatdeal in the United Nations head*quarters in New York but verylittle in the real world.”As for American public opinion,Morgenthau held that the UnitedStates government could, if itwanted to, "come out with anykind of forceful and and it wouldget the support of the people. Wemust not assume that the Amer¬ican people are as cowardly asour policy makers.”Suggests negotiationCan we prevent the Middle Eastfrom becoming another theaterof the cold war in which theUnited States and Russia, in their struggle for strategic advantages,might set off a world war? "Ifind it significant,” said Morgen¬thau, "that when Russia’s foreignminister Shepilov was urged lastfall by all Arab leaders to commithimself to the destruction ofIsrael, he replied that Russia’sinterest in the Middle East wasmainly in opposing Western im¬perialism.”Morgenthau pointed out thatRussia has no vital interests inthe Middle East and never has had—except in the Dardanelles andnorthern Iran. He said that herHans Morgenthaurecent activities there were a re¬action to the Bagdad pact, andsuggested that the West mightinduce her to withdraw from Mid¬dle East politics by dissolving theBagdad pact./ "It is not impos¬sible” that such an attempt mightsucceed, though it is highly im¬probable that it will ever be made,he speculated.Deprecates UNAt the end of his lecture, Mor¬genthau briefly disposed of theUnited Nations. This organization,he said, plays an unfortunate,weak, and inffective role in theMiddle East. Like all internationalorganizations, it can only supportthe status quo, and the UnitedNations emergency force in theGaza strip "is completely at themercy of Egypt, serving the pur¬poses of Egypt.”The United Nations cannot car¬ry out a policy of its own becauseit does not have any power, Mor¬genthau said. The United Statescan carry out its policy throughthe UN by bolstering the latterwith United States power, butwith the admission of sometwenty new states (mostly Afri¬can-Asian) it is doubtful whetherUnited States policy will be ac¬cepted by the UN at all.When asked whether extinctionof the state of Israel might notsolve the Middle East problem,Morgenthau replied that he wouldnot like to see a couple of millionpeople wiped out.Portrait StylistBlack and White andDirect ColorPhotographyBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor HootenannytonightInt. House8:30 p.m.IN THE SPRING ESPECIALLYbeautiful campus picture possibilities blossom forth in hundreds of spots.And do you realize that picture toking need not necessarily be an expen¬sive hobby? It con be, sure, but you would be surprised at the percentageof films we develop for amateurs who use inexpensive cameras withamazingly satisfactory results. Ask Rudy Gerson to tell you how it s done.UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE ^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiitiiiiiiiitiiniiiiitiiiiiiiifiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiii^| International House Movies || Assembly Hall, 8 p.m. |= Monday, April 29 — 45c — Meet John Doe (American) E^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiDiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiDiiiiii?.FIRST THINGS FIRST!To lay a strong foundation for your family’s financialfuture, you should make life insurance a first invest- •ment. Life insurance provides immediate protection foryour family and, if you survive, an added income foryour retirement years. It also provides you with adefinite program for systematic saving.«Let me show you how the Sun Life ofCanada can benefit you and your family.You will be under no obligation and youwill see what we mean when we say —‘First Things First FRalph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LA SALLE STREETCHICAGO 2, ILLINOISRepre**nt.tir* FR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA ■ ICulture VultureAlthough no longer a super-vulture, there's no reason why the Maroon’s culture chronicler should stop “singing cuccu.” The headline• -A A. J A-1 ! 1. A oa Kmah <rlif «rn **i ml roo ntinnc flin fircf Koincr fllA Vlll tllTP IIAf ATllv CtVIOrCL PUPPU huf hv aVirlntiAArecord more lewd than loud, but grand. Those better read than listened might have recognized the hand of Ezra Pound somewhere behind theFOTA issue headline. No matter why he sang cuccu, however, the super-vulture’s served his purpose.Last chanceRico LeBrun’s “Crucifixion,”which has been covering much ofa wall in the east wing of Rocke¬feller chapel for the past year,will be taken down Monday. Thetryptic, which Lebrun worked onfor two years will be moved toSyracuse university. Some fortyuniversities offered to house thegigantic painting (it’s about 16feet high and more than 20 feetacross), and for reasons unknown,the New York school’s offer washeeded by the Michael Slade foun¬dation, which recently presentedthe work. What remains of FOTAwill be the last chance for peoplein this part of the country to seethe rich modern work. Lebrunthrough various symbols has in apicture containing Christ on thecross, Roman soldiers, and a cockcrowing, gone beyond depictingmerely the resurrection of Jesus,in what was hailed as a monu¬mental work of art when it wasfirst displayed several years ago.So, have your urge to demonstratefor the time when the destruc¬tion of the Robie house seemsright around the corner, and takeadvantage of a final opportunityto see the great modern paintingon UC’s campus.Going, going?It's highly possible that theRobie house, long studied in per¬son by College Humanities 1classes and in books by studentsof art and architecture in schoolsthrouoghout the world, will be apile of bricks and glass on a citydump before long.Strenuous efforts are beingmade to persuade the ChicagoTheological'seminary that theirdormitory for married studentsdoesn't have to be four storiesDUNCANStationers & Printers• Office Supplies• Artists' Materials# Mechanical Drawing Equip.1221 East 55th StreetHY 3-4111 MU 4-9024Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E 55th StreetiYde Park 3-8372 high and built partly on the lotnow occupied by Wright’s archi¬tectural masterpiece. “Architec¬tural masterpiece” may seemoverused in connection with thepresent furor, but there aren’t alot of other things you can callWright’s 1908 prairie masterpiece.At any rate, the powers that bein the autonomous CTS, which, bythe way, is said to be the thirdlargest landowner in the UCneighborhood, for some reasonhaven’t been able to considerbuilding, say, two smaller dormi¬tories and leaving the Robie housewhere it is.President McGiffert of the sem¬inary has announced plans tostart construction of the dorms inSeptember, leaving the possibilitythat demolition will proceed asearly as June. So, in case theworst occurs, spend some of yourFOTA time seeing the Robiehouse. It’s solidly on the cornerof 58th and Woodlawn, and no onewill pronounce you a blasphemerfor walking by.FOTAWhy go away from the quad¬rangles when you can enjoy cul¬tural events of all sorts right oncampus?A complete Vultural guide toFOTA may be found on page 11and information about variousevents is listed elsewhere in theMaroon. For a complete guide toFOTA consult last Tuesday’s sup¬plement.Today12 noon: Mitchell tower willloom above participants in a trad¬itional spring ceremony. Two stu¬dent chimers will participate inthe hour long event. The brasschoir, consisting of fifteen horn-blowers, will play “Sinfonia,” byBanchieri, “Intrada No. 2,” byMelchior Frank, ‘Tower Sonata,”by Johann Pezel and a marchfrom Handel’s “Occasional Over¬ture.” The Madrigal singers willburst ofrth with Hymnus Eucha-ristus, two English madrigals,Hortons “Weep No More, SadMountains,” and the Alma Mater.7 pm: Twilight concert by Con¬cert band and Glee club will takeplace in Hutchinson court. Theband will perform Eric Coates“London Suite,” “Original Suite,”by Gordon Jacob, Howard Han¬son’s “Chorale and Allelulia” and“Zueignung” by Richard Strauss.Glee club will sing “Soon — Ah Will Be Done,” “Rock a Ma Soul,Balm in Gilead,” "Winterset,” byWilliam Deihl, “In Winter,” byPaul Hindemith, ‘The Old Man,”by Franz Joseph Haydn, “John,Come Kiss Me Now,” “SimpleGift,” arranged by Aaron Cop¬land, “Allelulia,” by RandallThompson and “Go Lovely Rose.”Band and Glee club will joinforces to sing a medley fromOklahoma. Also on the programwill be a new French film, WhiteaMne.8:30 pm: Leonie Adams, distin¬guished American poet, will pre¬sent the final William VaughnMoody lecture of this year in Man-del hall. As a sidelight, an exhibi¬tion of manuscripts of MissAdams’ poems will be on displayin Harper W61 throughout FOTA.Admission to the Mandel halllecture is free. Miss Adams willspeak on “Harmonics and theImage,” illlustrating her lectureMosques for boll from her own even dreamed of the ideawith readingspoems.A lecturer in the school of gen¬eral studies at Columbia, she hasbeen hailed as “a poet of excep¬tional originality and vision” sinceher first volume of poetry ThoseNot Elect, appeared acentury ago.Tomorrow7:30 pm: Apollonian society willpresent a brief concert in Rey¬nolds club south lounge. The pro¬gram will include three lesserknown English madrigals andthree songs by Paul Hindemith ontexts by Rainer Maria Rilke. The12 member group will performfor about an hour, and there’s noadmission charge.SundayFOTA’s focus will switch to In¬ternational house for the festival’slast day.The Festival of Nations was anannual event before anyone had . . °f aUmversity-wide Festival of Arts.Since FOTA’s beginning threeyears ago, the Festival of Nationshas been an important facet of theall-campus cultural hoopla.Festival of Nations will culmi-quarter nate in a program of dances,songs and skits, which starts at8 pm in Assembly hall. Admissionto the program is pegged at 50cents. YHyde Pork theatreAll of the more important Acad¬emy award motion pictures havebeen shown at one time or an¬other during the year at the HydePark theatre, therefore some ofthe award winning films will notbe shown at the theatre. ;sAll but one of the films to beshown (an Alfred Hitchcockmovie) are screen adaptations ofBroadway plays and offer literate,adult scripts.Consider costumesby Dave ZackAttention, other-directed ones! Worried about raising the ire of your fellow studentsby engaging in competition with ’em? Why not enter the Beaux Arts ball costume con¬test tomorrow night? If you play it cool, you can satisfy those urges to outdo everybodyelse without endangering your social standing because nobody will know who you are.Anonymous competitors would do best, first of all, to wear costumes. People have talkedfor years about going as Adam and Eve, but a bonafide prime pair just wouldn’t complywith the rules. A stag girlauthentically attired as LadyGodiva might not win anyprizes either, but her new foundpopularity would pay off if shedecided to run for SG next fall.And anyway, some mystery is im¬portant in every getup.If you’re a member of a nor¬mally jovial couple, persuadeyour date to borrow a black um¬brella; then you can both assumesad expressions and go as oldguard ISLers. Normally lugubri¬ous pairs might consider attend¬ing the ball as Sweetness andLight, or April Showers. If youand your date complement oneanother, don’t hesitate to assumethe roles of Beauty and the Beast,or a Cloud with a Silver Lining.These ideas, although some¬what beyond the Martian (take abath in green dye) or patrician-ghost (both require sheets) stage, don’t require too much imagina¬tion to be successful. Old Beaux-Arts goers might find more chal¬lenge in impersonating the Egoand the Id, Sex and Tempera¬ment, or Montezuema’s Eagle andSnake. Real pros might care totake on the guise of Lemuel Guilivar and a Lilliputian.If you want to merge with yourdate, wear a jungle costume fortwo. Watch out for med studentsproposing as evening as Siamesetwins, girls.Any masochist matched with adate of sadistic leaning, mightplan to go as a city street withan air hammer. More simplicitybut equal meaning is attached toan icepick and frozen hunk. Socialreformers take note: hammersand sickles are out of style, Ikebuttons more subtle.If doubling with your roomEllen Coughlin Beauty Salon510.* Lake Park Axe. Ml 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.m. - 11 p.m.Lake Park at 53rdNO 7-9071 hyde park theatre student rate50call performancesACADEMY AWARD FESTIVAL WEEKFri.-Sat.-Sun.April 26-27-28IhJ^RID BERGMANANASTASIA"■\— -and —#/KING & I"YUL BRYNNER Monday - TuesdayApril 29-30ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S"MAN WHO KNEWTOO MUCH"—— and —' SOLID GOLDCADILLAC'JUDY HOLIDAY-PAUL DOUGLAS Wednesday - ThursdayMay 1-2THE ORIGINAL PRIZE-WINNINGBROADWAY CAST!"BAD SEED"— and —"BUS STOP"MARILYN MONROEDON MURRAYThe Dazzling Return of INGRID BERGMAN . . .The Stunning Dual Debut of YUL BRYNNER . .ANATOLE LITVAK Direction . . . RODGES & HAMMERSTEIN MusicALFRED hITCHCOCK'S uncanny knack for coming up withthe unusual in settings, story, stars . . . and SUSPENSE!JUDY HOLIDAY giving Big Business . . . the BUSINESS!The BAD SEED" providing dubious biology needn't interferewith a play being breathtaking, gorgeous theatre!M-M-M-MARILYN MONROE & DON M-M-M-MURRAY! youARE ELIGIBLESend Today ,for FREE■ - v 7 )Professional and a^3^Businessman'sWholesale DiamondBrochure. Write Jackson'sDiamond/Brokers, Dept. I,644 Broadway, Gary, Ind. mate puts you in a morbid framjof mind, arrange for the happygroup to go as the Four Hor.«e-men of the Apocalypse. More inkeeping with the prevailing mood-at such affairs would be an alni-ous enactment of the ideal collegecomp report. This foursome car¬rying digging implements wouldplease the gaming spirit in Jhecrowd. And speaking of spirits,there’s no end of ideas for anyone of a mind that learn to alco¬hol or spooks.If you feel at home in Ian**crowds, see if you can find tenfriends who’ll join you as a foot-*ball team. And if you’re reallygregarious and competition mintbe won, talk everyone you knowinto talking everyone 1he\ k’'V.vinto talking everyone . . m'Vgoing as a circus side show <>i isymphony orchestra.At 8:30 Saturday night tell youras =he umuld for li T-30:30 class on Monday, do ,wise, and you’ll win the award’!originality.HootenannytonightInt. House8:30 p.m.^ItllKllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimiltllllltlltlltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfflllllllllllllHIIIIIIKIIl^d1 COMO’S Cafe Enrico\j RESTAURANT & PIZZERIA fFA 4-5525 - HY 3-5300 f| 1411 E. 531- Small Large£ 12" 14"| Cheese ..1.15 1.55| Sausage ...... 1.45 1.95| Anchovy ...... 1.45 1.95= Pepper & Onion 1.30 1.801 Bacon & Onion .1.60 2.10 Small12"Combination . . 1.75Chicken Liver . . 1.60Mushroom .... 1.60Shrimp 1.75Pepperoni .... 1.60free Delivery on All Pizza to l/C Students5illilllllllillll!lllllilllllllllllllllllllllll||||||||||||||lilllll|||||tl||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||lllllllllllllltlllll||||llllliitl^. 1 . 7PTApril 16, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13UT puts new play across;drama "worth attempting"Little theaters often over-protect new folkloristic plays written in verse. They employblue gels to hide the enactment from view and mercifully deliver the lines into closets, caul¬drons and cisterns. University Theater Director Marv Phillips and his company, breakingwith this tradition, create the unusual situation in which a play can be judged by theaudience because the audience has been able to grasp it. The script, distinguished by a for-word-moving flow of diction at once clear, vernacular, archaic and poetic, proves to havebeen worth attempting. The„ '• result, far from being the all¬photo by Bernick too-common spectacle of a ve-16th century Danish townspeople are confronted by thevillage hag in University theatre production of JamesHatch’s “Easter Song.”Heading the cast are Steve Brown, Valerie* Weil, Carol’ Turning, and Ralph. The hag is Carol Horning.trad-avean-yde1 ofnoti he“ocks of'ate, hide and a company remainingunintroduced to each other, pro¬vides a real test of both writerand producers.On a set sensitive to the needsOld head reviews 'Review:'1 *it's uneven but still unique both of players and audience we dramatic invention, its scenes areare introduced to a hero in cleri- not nearly as crafty,cal collar whose lust, pride and The self-searching clergymanguilt bear marks of a power with a youthful weakness for for-struggle with a cleric father who nication has never been an easywas an “old man of the tribe.” If part, and Steve Brown is to behis father had not sent him away admired for his tussle with it.»from a promiscuous young thing He provides the coherent centralboth were said to have bedded illumination that, as so often,with, though on different occa- throws surrounding parts intosions, things would be different more chiaroscuro than his own.now. The hero would not have The chief beneficiary is the rolebeen drawn back to the village bythe anxiety that one of the youngIhing’s kids is his. He would notfind himself pitted .against the“heresy” 'of villagers who want of the young thing become vil¬lage bag.As the millionth collegiate act¬ress shaped inevitably for thispart, Valerie Weil not only makesfresh charms seem appropriatelyshopworn but concludes by pro¬jecting not a stereotype nor abust-line but a person. Carol Turn-?nts“on-odykediplyramppy>r.«e-e in100(1-ibvi-legecar-ouldtherits,anyjlco-argetonfoot-‘allymistnow.nAwinfooi ayour■ herI i If1 1 / With the first number of its eleventh year of “continuous” publication the Chicago survNM Htuah™11^ b> Pagan'Review remains a very handsome publication with an enviable and unique reputation. As Finally, when the ritual| the only quality magazine of the little-mag circuit which has both the blessing (and the cei’emony is transformed to er-s stylized Bodil makes you for-■ “ of a m?jor U"ivuersi‘y- and an autonomous student staff, CR might be expected to <wh* X”bufhTs pta- EfJoTonhe plavwrtehfas"!^publish material worth heated discussion. ' live daughter by the now-blowsy as well as on that otVheIt has drawn editorial and critical sniping in the pages of the London Observor, Times y°ung thing) he would not hide clergyman as family servant. LikeLiterary Supplement, Life, —— > —— the child, and thus make himself the assorted shovel-carrying'vifiirdav Review' and eke concocted of alternating parts of and Lorca’s “The-Unfaithful ^nd her mother the ogical candi- bumpkins, the witch (Carol Horn-y. » a1™ else_ pu]p detective dialogue and pur- Wife,” might well have been ac- « f.es f?r llv<r;bunal: Thl® 18 JJ ing) and Councilman Aksel Lindwhere; the Spring 19o7 issue p]e description. Some aphorisms companied by the originals for Ra,nmak^r» with settings by 16th (Ralph Estes) are quite success¬es an uneven selection of just from Sens Plastique by Malcolm comparison, and as a courtesy to f•' ful in burying the sinners withoutlvw matpHal that has de Chazal fill two pages. the translator. acter, by lb,seib and , ua ,n.l.\pe of material tnat nas e b 1 courtesy of Fraziers Golden Reuel DenneyIhemade the Review unique.A solid-looking woodcut the translator. byof Frazier’s GoldenBough, all done in ritual tragicmode. As a hook-up with an olderAmerican taste for historicaldrama in verse (Boker) it com¬pares not unfavorably with theway in which Williams’ OrpheusDescending hooks up with ourContributions interesting Tells best poemsby The contributions of Mann, Ol- The two best original poemsV o Virkau printed on turquoise and Toman are interesting ai e by Isabella Gardner and Rob-gtoek, is framed by the “names” but they are surpassed in this ert S. Sward. Sward’s clever and(Thomas Mann, Donald Hall, issue by one of the finest short reminiscent “Uncle Dog; The PoetFiler Olson and John Logan) stories CR has ever had an oppor- at 9” remembers when: “1 did nothonefullv SDotted on the cover to tumty to print, and I say this hav- want to be old Mr / Garbage man,attract bookstore nurchasers The ing read the issues of 10 previous but uncle dog / Who rode sitting older American taste for symMann piece is a ‘‘literary scoop” years. More remarkably, “An In- beside him.” Gardner’s “Saloon bolic melodrama (Boucicault). Astrrmciaiori hi; Maraarpt Ar^nt \itatlon to Sleep is the first story Suite in three sections openspublished by Irving Rosenthal, a with a fine tune that is the accor-former student here. It is a story dion, but degenerates in the har-of characterization written in a monica section and becomes destyle resembling some of John batable in the final section, theCheever’s New Yorker stories, zither, where we are advised thatbut possibly superior to them, “the ‘Third Man Theme’ shouldtranslated by Margaret Arent.College instructor, from a speechdelivered by Mann in 1955 to com¬memorate the 150th “death day”of Friedrich Schiller. A skilledeulogy in thje grandiose manner,it emphasizes the poet’s industry. poetry, its lines are better; as MODEL CAMERAHyJe Pork's most completephoto and hobby, shop2-day color developingNSA Discount1342 E. 55ih HY 3-0259chiefly because of Rosenthal’shis relationship to Goethe, and , „ ,, ^his role as a symbol of a broader command of the first-person nar-humanism; this latter Mann calls native technique. His story w>dupon Germany to recognize as be anthologized (unless fools or come to mind while reading thesection.”Lachlan MacDonald PAINT & HARDWARE CO.Wallpaper - Tools - Houseware - Plumbing1154-58 E. 55th St. HY 3-3840UC Discountmore than feeble aestheticism, asrequiring a more universal em¬phasis than the early 19th Cen¬tury nationalistic enthusiasmwhich marked the observance ofthe poet’s 100th birthday.Reviews “reviews” mediocreThe reviews in the Review are anthologists’ clan politics preventit) and readers will ask about hisfuture work as they have aboutanother former student publishedin the Review, Walter Ballenger.Both men have talent and abilitythat will open their routes to thecloistered pages of the more “re¬spectable” quarterlies. It is fortu-hardly up to the’standards of the nate that such former studentsheld, being mostly mediocre re- send material to the Review; asports on mediocre books, while an outlet for campus writers theihe brief notices are somewhat magazine has never been able toasinine. A bright spot is former find students willing to meet thestudent Robert Baker’s brief and criterion that they must writeprovocative appraisal of Saul Bel- better than they first thoughtlow as “perhaps the major talent possible, but it has printed theof the past decade.” UC English work of many former students,professor Elder Olson makes a visiting lecturers, and facultyvaliant attempt — possibly one members,should say charming attempt — Art imperfectly doneArtwork for this issue, in addi¬tion to the cover, consists of fourplates, of which the most out¬standing is a lithograph by CosmoCampoli, though it is apparently9 io measure Marianne Moore’ssubtlety and her readers’ difficul-lics on a scale of intellect, in-■'iflht, and economy. He declaresthat she is not an obscure poet,claiming that as “purely the ar- , „ ,Jist” she is concerned with saying imperfectly reproduced.“what she has to say as quickly In runner-up position after theCJ and effectively as possible.” What Mann piece there is an irreverenthis review suggests — indeed, bit called “Positive Thinking onTakes quite evident—is that Miss Pennsylvania Avenue” whichMoore is saying what she has to spoofs Ike’s bedtime prayers assay to a devoted scholar and, seen by Norman Vincent Peale. Itlacking identification with any was contributed by Philip Roth,Poetry “movement,” to very few English instructor in the College,0,hers- The 18 pages of poetry are anC* Fiction translated uneven selection opening withI The fiction section continues two light (or merely lightweight)I ‘he stories and sketches translat- P°em* by Donald Hall, the firstI ed from the German of Walter of whlch 1S execrable, possible be-I Fenian; pieces which first began cause the line is so ill-suited toto appear in the recent autumn the mood of the verse- Similarlyissue, they are a mixture of Kaf- there is a possibility that Johnha’s mad world and Tucholsky’s Logan’s 170-line “Achilles and the•‘'afire. A commonplace and weak ‘s unintentionally bur-‘“uy by Frank London Brown ‘esquing itself,jads to create the moody ending There are two competent poems,he author seems to have intend- by George Lee and Leonard Na-I'h Jay Pell’s “The Faded Fox” than and an incomjetent one by|~f;sed on the old situation of the Victor Contoski, plus two'excel-I. ’> who has no identity, is addi- lent translations by Peter Miller.I Anally burdened with a style The latter, Appollinaire’s “Annie” are you concerned about these questions:1) Do students have a right to a clear statement of universityeducational policy?2) Can Illinois NSA operate a national booking agency forspeakers on academic freedom?3*) Can Student Government set up a cultural program, suchas folksingers concert tours, for all Chicago area schools?4) How should SRP set up on educational program on inte¬gration, the hydrogen bomb, other national and interna¬tional problems?SRP asks the oid of all students of whatever party, or no party,interested in helping us. Come with your suggestions ond hearour program.7:30 PM, SUNDAY — IDA NOYES HALL14 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 16. 1957CLASSIFIEDS Gives policy, — task of NAACPUniversity rote 30c per line. Others 60c per line.Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265 by Frederick JamesVice-president, UC chapterNAACPServicesCARMENS USED FURNITURE store.MovLng and light hauling. 1211 Bast 63rdstreet. MU 4-8843, MU 4-9003.Light moving and hauling. Reasonablerates. FA 4-2889, FA 4-1706.Kadlac's Auto service has moved to 76336. Jeffery blvd. RE 1-4333. MALE OR FEMALEHours of your choice, Including Satur¬days or evenings. Interesting interviewwork with families. Training given.High salary or commission. Write giv¬ing your age. phone number, and yourclassification in school to:Personnel DirectorEducational Service Co.Box 7538Chicago. Ill.Babysitter, hours: 3-6. 4 days per2 children. $10 per wk. and 6HY 3-7749.Life insurance tailor-made for the stu¬dent family. Low premium, adaptable,flexible. Call Alfred S. Nathan, Equita¬ble Life. FR 2-0400. week.6uppec.PersonalsFor SalePiano—Everett spinet, cost $850. will sellfor $500. Excellent tone, ebony finish.Call HY 3-7297, evenings. University Theatre’s production - ofEaster Song Is scheduled for only threemore nights, April 26-28. Tickets avail¬able at Reynolds Club desk.Bicycle, $1, see Favian Nechelee, MWF,2:30, outside Cobb 101. The actives of Phi Sigma Delta herebyformally challenge the actives of DeltaUpsllon to a tug of war across BotanyPond on May 1—if they dare!Royal portable deluxe typewriter. Likenew. $50. RO 4-3442. Q.: Pooped! You write. — Vulturina.MODERN BUILDING1 & 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTSBeautiful lawns — balconies — radiantheat — electric kitchens — laundry —parking. Managed by residentsAffiliated with Hyde Park Co-opDorchester near 54th StreetHY 3-1865 add to personalThe spring dance of the law studentsassociation will be held Friday, May 10at 7901 Stony Island Avenue Hall. 9 pm-2 am. $2.50 per couple. Everyone wel¬come.Help Wanted Say there, Phi SlgsWe don’t mind your digs.And when you have time,to pull, not to rhyme.We'd be honored to tug,to retain our brown Jug.The pledges of ZBTSecretary—Full-time position In doctor'soffice in Billings. Must be good typist.Shorthand desirable. Apply:Personnel Office956 e. 58th st. For RentWanted—house or apt. to sublet toUniversity instructor, wife, infant. June10 to Sept. 14. Write S. Fenves, 702 W.Washington, Urbana. Illinois; or callcollected URbana 7-3627. Two furnished 2-room apartments. Con¬venient to campus, Int house, IC. PhoneBU 3-9424. Greenfield.Apt. to sublease, approx. June 1-Oct. 1.5450 Wood!awn. 5 large rooms. Com¬pletely furnished, newly decorated. Mrs.Howell, ext. 3585 or 2412. The National Associationfor the Advancement of Col¬ored People is an Americanorganization. Its philosophy,its program and its goals derivefrom the nation’s hallowed demo¬cratic traditions.From the beginning, the taskof the NAACP has been to wipeout racial discrimination and seg¬regation. It has worked alwaysin a legal manner, through thecourts and according to federaland state laws and the UnitedStates Constitution. It has alsosought the enactment of new civilrights laws and the developmentof a favorable climate of opinion.The association, as the recordplainly shows, has won many bat¬tles in the long struggle for firstclass citizenship for Negro Amer¬icans.In reednt years some peoplehave sought to smeaf the NAACPby falsely linking it with the Com¬munist party.The best answers to thesecharges are: (1) the NAACP hasnever been listed as subversiveby any federal agency or offi¬cial and (2) from the resolutions of the 1956 NAACP convention,“The Association will employevery reasonable measure in keep¬ing with democratic organization¬al principles to prevent the en¬dorsers, the supporters and de¬fenders of the Communist con¬spiracy from joining or partici¬pating in any way in the workof the NAACP.”The purposes of the NAACPare outlined as follows:• To educate America to accordfull rights and opportunities toNegroes.• To fight injustice in courtswhen based on race prejudice. • To pass protective legislationin state and nation and defeatdiscriminatory bills.• To secure the vote for Ne¬groes and teach its proper use.• To stimulate the cultural lifeof Negroes.• To stop lynching.A meeting will be held duringthe membership campaign whichstarts today for those studentswho would like to learn moreabout the projects and the objeetives of the NAACP. This meeting will be held at the Ida Noyeshall east lounge, 7:30 pm, Thurs¬day.May 1 fellowship deadlineMay 1 is the deadline for entries in the Lafayette fellow¬ship competition. The contest, sponsored in conjunction withthe bicentennial of the famed French fighter of the Ameri¬can Revolution, Lafayette, is open to “senior undergradu-ates.”Entries, in the form of es- Prizes for the best eight essayssays on “Lafayette and the Amer- are six-week trips to France andican Revolution” must be submit- a stipend of 50,000 francs. Win-ted to Gladys Finn, secretary of ners will participate in the Lafay-the faculties, administration building by Wednesday.Entries must be six to eightpages long, double spaced, and(of course) in French. Judges forUC entries will be Louis Gott-schalk, professor of history, andPierre Vigneron, chairman of thedepartment of Romance lan¬guages. ette celebration ceremonies.The next 100 best entries willreceive medals.The following is an excerptfrom the text of the official con¬test announcement:“La seule epreuve inscrite auprogramme du concours est lapresentation d’une etude stir lesujet suivant: “La Fayette et larevolution Americaine.”“Ce travail qui ne doit pas corn-porter plus de six a huit pagesdactylographies, avcc double in-terlingne, devra etre redige onfrancais par le candidat lui-meme.“Sont admis a concourir loscitoyens americains des deu-sexes inscrits en 4e annee (sen¬ior) dans les colleges et univer-sites des Etats-Unis, a 1’exceptionseulement de ceux qui ont dejafait un sejour de plus de 3 moisen France ou qui ont appris lefrancais dans un pays europeande langue francaise.“. . . Le concours est ouvertjusqu-au ler mai 1957, dernierdelai.”SHORTHANDIN 0 WEEKSukMnOup™Us moSpeedwiztinP•«* 120 WORDS fSR MINUTI fi,VJFamous ABC system. Now tought leover 400 cities. New day Cr Eveningclasses start each Monday. Attendfirst class as GUEST. Special SummerClasses for College Students. ALSOthorough, Intensive SPEEDTYPINGcourse. Use coupon to send for 16-page brochure.SPEEDWRITING SCHOOL !137 S. Wabash Financial 6-5471l Speedwriting School| 37 S. Wobosh Ave., Chicago 3, HI.Please send me without obligationyour 16-page brochure on Speea-wrltlng.Name.PhoneApril 26, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 1?NSA important internationallyby Allen JangerThe importance of thet'nited States National Stu¬dent association's efforts inthe international field may beevaluated in three different ways.From the humanitarian point ofview, there are students who need♦he help of American students ifthey are to be able to study.From the utilitarian point ofview, there are students and stu¬dent associations in other coun¬tries who can help us and withwhom we can co-operate to themutual benefit of all concerned.And for a person who wants toknow where his self-interest lies,the international student move¬ment becomes one of the mostimportant arenas within whichthe struggle between Communistideology and free institutions takeplace.Without the first two approach¬es, an American student “foreignpolicy” would not be worth theeffort. Without responding to theCommunist threat in the studentarea, there would soon be nopolicy at all.Relative to the rest of the world,the students of the United Statesare among the largest, richest,most internally uninfluential andexternally influential of all stu¬dent bodies in the world. With700,000 members, the NationalStudent Association is the largestnational union of students outsideof the “Iron Curtain.”Study conditions excellentAmerican students, too, areblessed with excellent study con¬ditions. In Peron’s Argentina aformer lab assistant who hadnever graduated from college oc¬cupied a chair of chemistry while the politically unreliable were dis¬posed of. In present-day Para¬guay, Nicaragua and the Domi¬nican Republic the educationalsystem is disintegrating under thecombined weight of governmentinterference and even lack ofbooks which which to study. Inpost-revolutionary Hungary, evenmore than before, only the poli¬tically reliable and the sons ofthe politically reliable are permit¬ted to go to universities.To the person of humanitarianoutlook, the American student,because he is so fortunate, has theresponsibility of helping, in so faras he can, those members of theworld intellectual community whoare less fortunate.For the Hungarian student es¬caping from Communist academicrepression, the American studenthas provided $90,000 in WbrldUniversity Service (WUS) fundsalone, not to speak of over 300scholarships.Aid vs. “apartheid”In the fight against university“apartheid,” in South Africa, NSAhas cooperated with the studentsof the National Union of SouthAfrican students. American stu¬dent cannot march with the stu¬dents of NUSAS in their silentprotest marches, but they canmake the sensitive South Africangovernment know how they feel.In Latin America, NSA actionhas freed at least one studentleader, Silvio Mayorga in Nica¬ragua, from imprisonment.With the Foreign Student Lead¬ership project, NSA brings stu¬dents from all over the world tospend one year studying theAmerican extra - curriculum andleadership techniques at US col¬leges and universities. NSA hopesto inaugurate soon, a “reverseForeign Student Leadership proj¬ect” that will send US studentsabroad for similar study.In terms of concrete “utilitari-Deferment time nearStudents 18 or over who are seeking student defermentfor the academic year 1957-58 must so notify the Registrarby May 9. The Registrar will send the student’s local boardthe SSS Form 109. an” cooperation, NSA has devel¬oped low-cost tours through itsEducational Travel Inc., whichwould have been impossible ifrelationships with other nationalunions of students had not ex¬isted. This year’s tours into Po'-"land would not have been possiblewithout the ISC annual travel con¬ference. Tours to Chile cheaper inprice than round-trip air travelalone, would not have been pos¬sible without close cooperationbetween the Chilean national un-Allen Janger is a formereditor of the Maroon (1954-55), and is now overseaspublications director forNSA.ion of students (ICEA) andUSNSA.In Europe, where the necessityof foreign travel, has made theso-called “welfare” approach tointernational student cooperationa fine art, matters of studenthealth, housing, and equivalenceof degrees are constant sources ofinternational student conferences.Exchanges of information are an¬other major source of concretereturn.Policy: anti-communismMilton Katz, director of inter¬national studies at Harvard uni¬versity, once commented thatNSA should by all means have itsits positive international program.But if it did not also have a nega¬tive, anti-communist policy, hewould not give the organizationfive years of life.Selective Service regis¬trants should file an SSS In¬formation card (the present cardsbecome obsolete) and requestform 109 between the hours of10 am and 3:30 pm. Only studentswhose academic year ends in Juneare required to do so.The following is the schedulefor registrants:April 29—Students with last namesstarting with A, B or CApril 30-—D, E, P, or OMay 1—H, I, or JMay 2—K or LMay 3—M or NMay 6—O, P, Q, or RMay 7—SMay 8—T. V, V, W, X. Y or ZMay 9—Students who could not (forgood reason) come earlier. A special Selective Service Col¬lege Qualification Test will begiven Thursday, May 16, for stu¬dents who were unable to take theregularly scheduled tests lastNovember 15 and April 18, it wasannounced by Illinois selectiveservice.Applications for the May 16 testmay be obtained at any SelectiveService local board must be post¬marked not later than midnight,May 6.To be eligible to take the test astudent must be satisfactorilypursuing a full-time college courseand must not previously havetaken the test.ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Bcoks — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651 The alternatives of not pursu¬ing an anti-communist policy, in¬filtration or destruction, had beencanvassed by NSA many years be¬fore Dr. Katz ever set them down.In the immediate post-war years,the uncompromising communistline taken by the InternationalUnion of Students taught NSAthat good-will was not enough,that when one of the partiesHALSTID OU7DOORCHILDREN FREE-Phone WA. 8-7979ESSANESS WONDERFULFAMILY THEATREEvery night is likevacation timeFRIDAY NIGHTCOLLEGE NITEFINE MOVIES"BEST EATS"1957 “WHIRLWIND”Student Tour of EuropeExcitement . . . Fun . . . Adventurefor college men and women from 18-301FRANCE GERMANY AUSTRIAITALY FRENCH RIVIERA ALPSSailing July 6 — Return August 28VIAS.S. NEPTUNIA *All tours include passage, meals, guidedtrips, lectures, entertainment.53jam-packed days$780For complete, descriptive Itineraryfill out coupon and send to —U. S. NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOC.EDUCATIONAL TRAVEL, INC.*701 SEVENTH AVENUE, NEW YORK 36, M.Y.•A non-profit corporation serving U.S. stu¬dents from coast-to-coast. with whom one is supposedly co¬operating has something otherthan mutual understanding as hisprimary objective, one must havea program with which to meethim.The result has been a nine-yearstruggle between the IUS andthe national unions of studentsof the West, during which a newmedium of international coopera¬tion, the International StudentConference, has emerged andprospered. The International Stu¬dent Conference (ISC) founded asa primarily non-political body, hasgrown from a mere handful ofwestern European NUS’s to 56at the last conference in Ceylonin 1956, the largest meeting ofrepresentative national unions ofstudents ever.The ISC is not an organizationin the usual sense of the word.It is not a continuing organiza¬tion and reconstitutes itself eachyear. Also, its Coordinating Secre¬tariat (COSEC) is allowed no dis¬cretionary power in carrying outISC mandates; they can do onlywhat the previous ISC has toldthem to do and no more.The ISC has seen at least oneprofound change in its characterin the years since its founding,and there it at least a good chancethat another is in the making.Afro-Asian riseThe most profound change isthe rise to prominence of theAfrican and Asian NUSs. So largeare their numbers today that,with the support of only a fewothers, they can assure passageof any resolution they desire. Theresult has been the entry of poli¬tical questions into ISC debates.The ancient restriction to prob¬lems affecting “students as stu¬ dents” still remains somewhat inforce, however.The second change, is still onlyin the possibility stage. The yearssince the first ISC have been de¬clining ones for the IUS. But nomatter how unrepresentative itbecame, it was always assumedthat it was representative of theindoctrinated students of the“iron curtain” countries. The ex¬ample of Hungary has thrownthis supposition into doubt prob¬ably for all time.As a result the student organi¬zations behind the “Iron Curtain,”really only student sections oflarger youth organizations, forthe most part, seem to be begin¬ning to organize themselves intoproper student organizations.And, even more important, theymay be beginning to leave theIUS standing as a tattered facadewhile they go off to InternationalStudent Conferences. The PolishNational Union of Students, forexample, is rumored to be anx¬ious to come to the next ISC.LAK nominatedto Edison boardof directors postChancellor Lawrence A. Kimp*ton and Trustee J. Harris Wardhave been nominated to the boardof directors of CommonwealthEdison company.Ward, vice president of theutility, was appointed a trustee ofthe University in October, 1956.He has been with the companysince 1938.Edison stockholders will VQteon the nominees at their annualmeeting May 21.-45*.wOur *346" Sport Jacketsmade on our exclusive modelsOur good-looking "346” lightweight tweedsport jackets are made on our own modelsand reflect our reputation for sportwear thatis individual and distinctive in appearance,yet always in good taste. The many good-looking patterns include diagonals, verticalsand herringbones in our own exclusive colorcombinations. $65ESTABLISHED 1818(3&fe©THIN _Bjttns fUmisliingisiflats ^<fhoes74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILLNEW YORK • BOSTON • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCO\c • CHICAGO MAROON • April Z6, 1V^7Jacobs runs excellent 100/ ^enn'$' anYone • ■ ?Varsity trounces WilsonA1 Jacobs, Chicago’s star sprinter, came within one tenth of a second of tying the world’srecord in the 100-yard dash, when he won his qualifying heat at the Ohio Relays in :09.4last Saturday.Wednesday, the varsity easily beat Wilson JC.Jacobs teamed up with Jim Caffey of UC’s Track- club, to take first and second in thefinals. His winning time in the finals was :09.6.,Ted Wheeler, UCTC’sOlympian, took two firsts;winning the mile in 4:16.5 andthe 1000 yard run in 2:13.8. Wheel¬er and Willie Atterberry. a fresh¬man running unattached fromMichigan State, were the meet’sonly double winners.Atterberry, who won both the300 and 600 yard dashes, set anew world record in the 600, cov¬ering the distance in 1:08.5. Chi¬cago runners who collowed Atter¬berry to the line in the 600 wereBud Perschke, Harry Price andGeorge Karcazes. Jim Caffeytook third in the 300 with a :31.3.Karcazes followed with a :32.7.Bob Appleman battled his wayto a second place tie in the polevault with a 13' 6" effort, whileJoel McNulty placed third in the120 yard high hurdles.Bob Kelly and Ray Menzie inthe l!4 mile, Dan Trifone in thehigh jump and high hurdles, andCarl Nuss in the discus, roundedout the remainder of the Chicagoentries in the meet.Kelly showed the strain of theall-night drive to Columbus, as hewas upset in the 1*2 mile. He con¬sidered his time of 7:00.8 very dis¬appointing.While the above contingent ofVarsity and Track club men werein Ohio, two Track club men per¬formed at the Kansas Relays atLawrence, Kansas.Floyd Smith wTon the high jumpat Kansas with an excellent jumpof 6' 9". Teammate La FayetteSmith (alias Hal Higdon) tookthird in the 3000 meter steeplechase.The Varsity trounced WilsonJC in a “B” meet by the score of107-14 last Wednesday on Staggfield.Chicago won fourteen of thefifteen events, and swept the highand low hurdles, as well as thebroad jump and two mile.Chicago winners were: DanTrifone (3), Arno Han el, IvanCarlson, Pete McKeon, BrooksJohnson, Arne Richards, A1 Ja-eobs, Dave Houk, Dave Northrop,and Dave Abelson. Sports briefsBaseballers splitThe Maroon baseballers split a pair of games — losing to Knoxdown at Galesburg, 12 3; coming back to defeat Chicago Teach¬ers, 10-8.The Knox game was close for six innings, until three Maroonerrors allowed the home team to score five runs. Webster got twohits for Chicago, one being a triple, while Markin made two sparklingcatches in the outfield.Chicago came back strong in the Chicago Teachers game, playedon Stagg field last Saturday. The team got twelve hits, breaking upa 7-7 tie in the ninth with three runs. Markin again starred, drivingin two key runs in the ninth.The The Maroons had two converted pitchers playing—FrankFarriss took over first base and Lennie Springer caught, both ofthem handling their new positions well. Lodgson pitched his firstgame, going all the way to win it.Tomorrow Chicago takes on Valparaiso in a double-header on thelatter’s grounds.Golfers suffer defeatUC golfers were dealt their second defeat of five matches thisseason at the hands of the University of Illinois (Chicago) by a9!/2-81/2 score.Rex Stygens registered a 78 for medalist honors and defeatedhis opponent 2-1 while team mate Bob Zirkel fired a 79 to win hismatch by the same score. Other Chicago men and their match scoreswere: Wendell Marumoto, 1-2; Bernie Hansan, 1-2; Dave Mertz,2!/2-1/2; Don Lusk, 0-3.In a previous match Chicago won both ends of a double duel,beating Illinois Institute of Technology lOVs-IVs and trouncingLoyola 15-3. In this match on Chicago’s home course, the Longwoodcountry club, Bob Zirkel was low man with an 82, while Don Luskswept past both his opponents, 3-0.Today the varsity meets Beloit at Longwood in the first half of ahome and home match.>; Lifetime Disability Insurance* Retirement InsuranceorPhone or Write» Joseph H. Aaron, #27 !►135 S. LaSalle St. i BORDONE i> <! Movers and Light Hauling <► VI 6-9832 <EUROPE20 Countries, 70 DaysIncludes North Africa, BerlinEurope for Collegians255 SequoiaPasadena, California(or ,«> CREWCUT Ikru-kut LANOLINAT PRUO STORES ft BARBER SHOPSTheDisc1367 E. 57th St.•RECORDOF THE WEEKBob GibsonI Cocne for to SingRiverside 12-8063.99 Regal Presents the “Natural Look”In Ivy AuthenticsSpring Features:100% Worsted Suits $59.50Shetland Sport Coats $45Polished Cotton Suits . .$29.50• Arrow Shirts• Dobbs Hats• Cooper UnderwearAsh about our “lJ.C.A.”(University Charge Account)Open til 9 pm, Thurs, Fri, SatJoe Richards' STORE816 E. 63rd St. • DO 3-6074 “Just off Campus'7 by Dick CousensThe UC netmen won a hard-fought match against Bradleya week ago Thursday 5-4. For the Maroons, Howland playedexceptional tennis in winning a very tough match withTucker of Bradley. Strominger and Ileavey also played well.This was the best team Bradley has fielded in the past few years.However, by forfeiting two matches they would have lost anyway,Bradley acted in poor taste. This was an attempt on their par,to take credit away from Chicago’s victory.Chicago’s "B” team was also busy in a meet with Wilson jr.college last Wednesday. Although the Maroons won handily, tin;experience the boys received was the important thing, this bcin*the main reason the “B” team matches are scheduled. They enablethe boys who don’t play regularly to develop their talents, therebybuilding a reserve team which can be called upon to fill in at anygiven time.Men in the knowknow tru© from falseift& Men who earn their waythrough college earn the mostmoney afterward£] TRUB QJ FALSBFahe. Statistics prove that men whoearn nothing In college are morelikely to enter the better-pay occu¬pations.Proportionately, there aremore small-town men atcollege than city men|~1 TRUB Q FALSETrue. Although only 24% o( ourpopulation grew up in towns of25,000 or under, this group produce*44% of all college men.Coopers, maker of Jockeybrand underwear, try to makeyou forget their products ^Q] TRUB Q FALStTrue. Jockey brand undergarmen 1are famous for comfort. This trim fitwith no bind or chafe literally makesyou forget you have them on...they’re designed to make you com¬fortably forget them.Men on the gogo for Jockey underwear8RAN 0 mmad* only by