by Rochelle DubnowA bird, a bug, and a Baptist were among the colorful assortment that walked off withthe prizes at the third annual Beaux Arts masquerade ball held last Saturday evening inimaginatively decorated Ida Noyes hall.Judges, Senator Paul Douglas, Mrs. J. Harris Ward and a very well disguised Dean JohnP. Netherton made their r .. . T“r- — : t. , v „ rhoices as the rleverlv cns by smooth-tongued Don McClin- Other winners were Anna andt , _ ., . . . ,, TT .. . photo by Mokotoff c loices as tne cleverly cos tock and procee(jed up to the a verv authentic Kim? of SiamArt Taitel, winner of the Ugliest Man on Campus con- turned assemblage grand bandstand to accent their awards. 3 y aui ennc K 01 biam’marched” twice around the Clois- A culture vulture blaek beak and a beautiful w h 11 e veiIed‘er club. booked Da v “za “ won me Sal°me “"*«* a P1""" wlthWinners of the prizes (a fruit prize, a camera, for the most orig- delectable John the Baptist s headbowl, 4 dishes, a basket of fruit, inal man’s costume. “Junior on it.gift certificate) were announced Grossbug,” latest progeny of “Mr. Art Taitel, Zeta Beta Tau’s can-and Mrs. Ron J. Grossbug” ac- _„ . , , . „ .. ., t, . didate for the Ugliest Man oncompamed his * mother Rochelle _ ....Dubnow to the bandstand to ac- Campus was awarded his “prizecept the prize for the most orig- of Northwestern sophonfore Anninal woman’s costume. Two blue Michaels at the ball. Taitel statedand silver Venusians, Mike Ross- that he was going to save hisman and Cynthia Faissler were award of a date with Miss Mi-chosen as the most handsomely chaels until “after comps.” “Al-costumed couple of the evening. ways save the nicest things forIbn Saud and his masked, but last,” he confessed.test, seems thrilled as he acepts his prizes, an appropriatelyengraved scroll, a tiny silver UMOC pin, and a date withNorthwestern sophomore, Ann Michaels. The contest col¬lected a total of $106.63 to be divided between WUS andthe Frankfurt exchange.Tribune surveys universitiesUC ranked fourthby Ronald Grossman Vol. 65, No. 36 University of Chicago, Friday, May- 3, 1957 c*£g||as»3lSenator Douglas judgesat annual Beaux Arts ballThe University of Chicago ranks fourth among the nation’s great universities, accord¬ing to a survey by the Chicago Tribune.In a series of weekly articles the author, Chesly Manly, attempts to rate “America’sleading educational institutions in the order of their eminence.”The Tribune s comparisons and decline and is rising in the courses, developed during theare based on consultations esteem of scholars and scientists Hutchins regime, are necessarilywith 33 leading educators in throughout the country,” begins shall o w ; such vast areas ofthe US. Among them were UC’s the article.Chancellor Lawrence A Kimpton, r e c o u n 11 n g the difficultiesvice-president R. Wendell Ham- chancellor Kimpton faced uponson, Dean William E. Scott, pro- taking office in 1951, the articlefessor Napier Wilt (humanities), sayS t^at there was much to beGilbert F. White (geography de- cbeerful about in Kimpton’s lastpartment), Friedrich A. vonIlayek (committee on socialthought), and Dr. Lowell T. Cog-geshall, dean of the biological sci¬ences division.Of the men consulted, no otheruniversity had as many repre report.“Kimpton’s confident view ofthe future seems justified by theuniversity’s prestige among offi¬cials and scholars of other institu¬tions. The faculty dean of one ofsenta ives as UC (seven). Four thf, wor!^. neatest universitiessaid ... ‘Chicago is the only placeeducators from Michigan werequestioned, while Harvard wasrepresented by only three.UC is mentioned in the firstarticle on Harvard, which ap- ... „ ... ^ . fo,reared April 21, in a number of fxc‘“"F’ that appeals t0that gives us trouble. It is alwaystrying to raid our faculty andsometimes it is successful. Thereis something about it, somethinggeneral comparisons (see table).The second article (April 28) gavespecific information on three uni teachers.’Although lauding many of UC’sdepartments, divisions, and com*versifies: UC, Yale and California mittees, the article has less praiseat Berkeley. - for the College.“The University of Chicago Referring to the Collegehas survived a period of crisis courses, it states: “These general see “Tribune,” page 2 well-exposed harem were selectedas the best costumed (?) groupat the ball.Quite a sensation was causedby the “Maroon coeds of the year”who captured the prize for themost humorous costumes of theevening. Faculty at Beaux Arts wereDean and Mrs. Robert Strozier;Mr. and Mrs. James Newman;Mr. and Mrs. James Allen Austil;Dean and Mrs. John P. Nether¬ton; Mr. and Mrs. Charles O’Con¬nell, and Mr. and Mrs. WendallHarrison.See hope for Robiein zoning regulationA new note of hope was injected into the ranks fightingto preserve Robie house as the possibility presented itselfthat the Chicago theological seminary may be legally pre¬vented from erecting dormitories for married students on thesite of Frank Lloyd Wright’s“prairie masterpiece.”If the present city zoning ordi¬nance, which allows an apartmentbuilding of the sort CTS wants toerect within 130 feet north onWoodlawn from the corner Robiebouse now stands on, is changed,plans for razing Robie would beat least temporarily thwarted.William MacDonald, executivechairman of the Chicago commit¬tee to Preserve the Robie house,presented a letter to the clerk ofa city hearing on the proposedchanges in Chicago zoning laws,'•’he letter asked that the presentzoning .laws be changed in consid¬eration of the Chicago Commis¬sion for the Preservation of Arch¬itectural Landmarks’ recent nam-*n£ of the Robie house as hal¬lowed ground.The letter was placed on file,but couldn’t be read on the floorbecause the specific area involved hadn’t been discussed at the lastmeeting of the City Council. Mac¬Donald said that Alderman LeonDesPres has been requested tobring the matter up at the nextcouncil meeting.Members of UC’s_StudentCommittee to Save Robie Househave asked residents of the areainvolved to ask that the entireblock on Woodlawn between 58thand 57th streets be rezoned in aresidential category. The studentcommittee will hold a work meet¬ing tomorrow at 5 pm on thethird floor of Ida Noyes. It plansto add the pleas of students tothe considerable volume of mailthat has been sent out by theChicago Citizens’ Committee toarchitects, residents of Wrightdesigned houses, and others inter¬ested in preserving the interna¬tionally acclaimed architecturalmasterpiece located near UC’scampus. photo by MokotoffThese two eerily blue Venusians, Michael Rossman and Cynthia Faissler, were deemedthe handsomest couple at the Beaux Arts ball Saturday night.As the above picture shows, the couple appeared with bodies painted blue, wearingblue-gray satin robes.■P . 1 ■' I "■CHICACO MAROON • May 3. 1957Tribune rates UC fourth(from page 1)knowledge could not be exploredin depth in so little time.”Comparing the College with un¬dergraduate programs at Easternschools, the Tribune says, ‘‘Offi¬cials at Chicago believe their gen¬eral studies program requiresgreater ‘exploration in depth’than Harvard’s. That may be so,but ‘normally’ a student at Chi¬cago is required to complete only15 one-year courses for the bacca-.laureate degree if lie majors inone of the university’s divisions,or 13 courses, a year of tutorialwork and a bachelor's essay inthe College if he elects that pro¬gram. Harvard requires 16 one-year courses, Princeton 18, andYale 20, and all three require sub¬stantial independent work out¬side of classes.DUNCANStationers & Printers• Office Supplies• Artists' Materials• Mechanical Drawing Equip.1221 East 55th StreetHY 3-4111 MU 4-9024 The ten best universities:1. Harvard2. Yale3. California (Berkeley)4. UC5. Columbia6. Princeton7. Michigan8. Cornell9. Wisconsin10. StanfordThe ten best law schools:1. Harvard2. UC3. Yale4. Columbia5. Michigan6. California7. Wisconsin8. New York University0. Illinois10. NorthwesternThe l»est medical schools (notrated):Harvard, UC, Columbia, JohnsHopkins, Yale, Pennsylvania, Cor¬nell, Washington University (St.Louis), RochesterNumber of distinguished de¬partments (out of a possible 28):1. California—242. UC—223. 4. Harvard, Yale- 21 each5. Columbia—166. Princeton—137. Michigan— 128. Wisconsin—11UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE1144 E. 55th DO 3-9572SALE IVOW W PROGRESSIO% Discount on All MerchandiseWith This Coupon OnlyONLY 10cThe New Statesman and NationatcIcluteemann'iTHE RED DOOR BOOK SHOP1328 EAST 57th STREETNOrmal 7-6111 Chicago 37, ill.NICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55th NO 7-90635 lor 4 OFFER!on group orders of pizza — get 5 for the price of 4!Free delivery to I/, of C. studentsTable Service Delivery Service11 A M. to 2 A.M. 11 A. M. to 2 A.M.Open till 3 A.M. on Friday and SaturdayClosed MondaysHYDE PARKSELF-SERVICELAUNDRYChicago’s FirstSelf-Service Laundry912 East 55th StreetOp<kn Sundays—10 am to 3 pmThis coupon worth 35c or more . . .Free dry or 25% discount on shag rugswashed/ dried, or dyed.9x12 and 12x15 RugsOur Specialty 9. Cornell—1010. Stanford—9Number of men in the NationalAcademy of Science:States the Tribune: ‘‘Next towinning a Nobel prize, election tothe National Academy of Sciencesis the highest honor available toa scientist in this country.”1. Harvard 562. California 493. Columbia- -324. UC—315. Yale—266. Cal Tech - 257. Wisconsin—228. MIT-219. Illinois—1610. Stanford—151956-1957 Fellows of (lie Na¬tional Science Foundation:1. Harvard—1622. MIT—1083. California—974. UC—965. Princeton —716. Cal Tech 6o7. 8. Yale, Columbia 64 each9. Cornell—59Winners of national merit schol¬arship:1. Harvard—572. MIT 393. Cal Tech—204. Cornell—195. 6. Princeton. Yale— 16 each7, 8. Rice, Swarthmore—15each9, 10. Stanford. Radcliff 14each11. UC—11 CLASSIFIEDS!University rote 30c per line. Others 60c per line.Phone Ml 3-0800, Eat. 3265 - , RStudents working in Chicago Medi,-,)services Center this summer: Modem room■ with kitchen faculties. $20 per month.CARMEN’S USED FURNITURE store. F'ik-J1*10 8,16 s- Ashland. SgMoving and light hauling. 1211 East63rd street. MU 4-8843, MU 4-9003.Light moving and hauling. Reasonablerates. FA 4-2889, FA 4-1708. Personals“ ; : 7 : r “ T~ Please “clue me”—what IsRadlac s Auto service has moved to Art7633 S. Jeffery Blvd. RE 1-4333. a "blrd-For saleMODERN BUILDING,1*2 BEDROOM APARTMENTSBeautiful lawns — balconies — radi¬ant heat — electric kitchens — laun¬dry — parking.Managed, by residentsAffiliated with Hyde Park CoopDorchester near 54th st. HY 3-1855Rummage Sale—starting Mon., May 6through Sat., May 11 at 14.11 E. 55th.Open 9 am. Futmittire, clothing, kitch¬en utensils, etc. Given by BuildingService Post No. 987, American Legionand Auxiliary.Piano—F.verett spinet, cost $850, willsell for $500. Excellent tone, ebony fin¬ish. Call HY 3-7297, evenings.New Ilarmon - Kardon T - 10 AM - FMtuners now in stock. Student discount.Audio Consultants, c/o Jean Kwon,Foster. Trade one blue sport Jacket for onebaseball mitt. SP 3-8069.Big Bertha-Come back! Larry. Bobbvand the bug like you—now all wc haveto do is convince the students!Q.: Chloe. where you was? It’s springin beautiful Chicago. Editors sprout¬ing in full force. Daphnis.Drive new OldsmobUes and Thunder-birds to Seattle and Los Angeles Takefamily or friends. Gas allowance. Smalldeposit required. 5506 S. Lake ParkPL 2-3020. ’Phi Sig: Although we believe in turn-ing the other cheek—especially sinceour backs are towards you—we acceptyour challenge. Our seconds will meetto determine date and time.Delta UpsilonN. D.: Gooey things arc, too, ugly. e.D.New High Fidelity loudspeakers. Vi offnet. Racor 12” and 16", 20-20,000 CPS.Phone ext. 1072. Room 74. WantedFor rentSuniiner rooms for rent—June 10 toSeptember 28. Furnished. Kitchen privi¬leges. $80. PL 2-9477—ask for “HouseManager.”Summer rooms, highly desirable loca¬tion. With recreational facilities. Mod¬erate cost, meals available. Alpha DeltaPhi: Burke. Reid. PL 2-9718. Renting Hertz truck for move fromPittsburgh to UC in June. Looking forsomeone to rent truck for return tripto Pittsburgh. Write M. Laufe, 212Burrows St., Pittsburgh 13, Pa.Men needed for ramp counseling posi¬tions. June 14 through July 31. Marriedcouples through Aug. 31. MilwaukeeCommunity Chest Agency Camp. 2020 E.North Avenue. Milwaukee, Wisconsin.Captures your• personalityas well asyour personphotoqrapherBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. Two furnished 2 - room apartments.Convenient to campus, Iut House, IC.Phone BU 8-9424. Greenfield.Want to sublet newly furnished. 3-roomapartment, June 5-Sept. 28. E. Lawson,PL 2-0509.Comfortable newly decorated roomswith private tub and shower. Dallymaid service. Reasonable rates. Alltransportation, 2 blocks from 1C. Uni¬versity Hotel. 5519 Blackstone, DO 3-4100.Will exchange lovely room, bath, TV,etc., for baby sitting. Good family, nicehome, DR 3-4684. Female.Apartment to share: student tstudentsiwanted to share furnished apartmentfor summer quarters. $33 per month.MI 3-0044. Help wantedMALE OR FEMALEHours of your choice. Including Satur¬days or evenings. Interesting Interviewwork with families. Training given.High salary or commission. Write givingyour age, phone number and your clas¬sification in school to:Personnel DirectorEducational Service Co.Box 7538Chicago, Ill.Lost^tiiiiiitiiHmuiiiiitntiiniiiiiiniiiuttiimmiiHtmiiumiimminiimimmimiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimimiiiiiiimiii!;— pVVVVVV»*VV*V»TTfVTTVVInternational House Moviese Assembly Hall, R p.m.E Monday, May 6 — 45c — Ivanhoc (American-Technicolor)^iitimiiiiisiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiii^ BORDONE§ I Mover* and Light Hauling !VI 6-9832ir- 5a.whose business is it?The chain store belongs to a big corporation. You might, if youcould afford to, own a share; your certainly wouldn't rub should¬ers with the President or tell the Board how to run the business.A cooperative belongs to its members in a real sense. vEach mem¬ber gets one vote, no matter how many shares he is rich enoughto hold. The men and women on the Board are your neighbors.The meetings are close to home. You're invited . . . almostbegged ... to take part in running the business. It's fun, a val¬uable experience and pretty enlightening for every one of us.CO-OP SUPER MARTMore Than a Store5535 S. Harper Plenty of Free Parking■> Student, wife waivts computing work.Call DO 3-2634.Plii Delta Theta pin, white gold andgrey. Contact Dick Montgomery or SamFish. Chapter House. 5737 Wood lawn —BU 8-9856.College man victimof newest beatingSteve Bills, student in the College from Cincinnati, Ohio,js the latest victim of the flurry of muggings and beatingsplaguing the campus in recent weeks.Bills was accosted by a group of 6 or 7 teenagers near♦he tennis courts at 60th and ~~r~ . , — —™.e 11 nrri c,]n wnst watch from being stolenJvimbark about 11 JPfJJ kun When he felt it loosening on hisday. According to Bills, thegroup stopped him, one of themasking for money. When Bills re¬plied that he had none, a tallhoodlum swung at him, hittinghim in the jaw.“I backed up against a fenceand began wrestling with the bigguy,” stated Bills. “But, I realizedthat the battle was lost when If,*lt blows from the other kids on wrist: “I felt it coming off, soI threw it over a near-by fence.”He later retrieved the watch.Bills then walked to a post-office on 60th street to report themugging. Police rode him aroundin a cruiser to try to find andidentify the group—with no suc¬cess.Bills was treated at Billingshospital and released the same Frankfurt university, and hassince been teaching and writ¬ing in Jerusalem.Buber began by sketching, withnumerous repetitions, the pre-Soeratic Greek philosopher Her¬aclitus’ idea that reality can onlybe perceived by waking man, andonly through his relationshipwith His fellow men.“The waking have one cosmosin common,” Buber reported Her¬aclitus as saying, and “It is a cos¬mos only in that we experienceit together.” Other nuggets ofwisdom revealed to the audienceof 2,000 included: “The commonCampus bus service along 57th and 59th streets will be ex- enables man to grasp the fullpa tided starting Monday, May 13, it was announced Tuesday mutuality of man”; “Men con-in Weston L. Krogman, University business manager. tribute to the cosmic process withWhen the bus service was instituted last February 4, it a11 that lh<?y are: a11 individuals May 3, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Philosopher Buber speaksto Rockefeller audienceby Oliver LeeDrawing a crowd considerably larger than that which heard Arnold Toynbee in Mandelhall over a year ago, Martin Buber, professor of social philosophy at Hebrew universityin Jerusalem, spoke for 90 minutes on the contrasting philosophies of Heraclitus and Lao-Tse last week in Rockefeller chapel.The 79-year-old Jewish mystic and Zionist is author of I and Thou, Between Man andMan, and numerous other works in German and English. Until 1937 he was professor ofthe history of religions atmy back which felt like sacks of evening. He suffered lacerationscement. I started to yell, then, of his ear, a temporary disloca-and the whole crew ran off." tion of the jaw and numerousBills related how he saved his bruises and scratches on his back.Campus bus to beginrunning continuouslywas to serve from 7:30 to 10am, and from 3:30 till 11:30pin. Now the bus will runcontinuously from 7:30 am toJO: 15 pm.According to Krogman, the ad¬ditional service is in response tonumerous requests that it runthroughout the day. Many stu¬dents and employees travel to andfrom the Illinois Central and theInternational house.The bus proceeds west fromStony Island to Cottage Grovealong 59th. and east from Ellis tothe IC station on 57th street. Un-Announcementsto be availableConvocation announce¬ments will be available at acost of five cents each for thespring convocation if the demandis great enough, it was announcedMonday.Students interested are asked torequest announcements at theinformation desk in the Admin¬istration building. der normal conditions a completecircuit takes about fifteen min¬utes.Because of legal restrictions,tickets must be purchased oncampus, in order to board the bus.t$/te 'ji/Sx///// PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433esaifWholesale - SAVE 50%Buy Your DiamondsDiamond Rings For Half Retail Price“All Diamonds Fully Insured”“Written Life-Time Quarantee )>“No Loss Trade-In Quarantee”“Three Ways to Buy Wholesale’Loy-Away — Cosh — Charge Accounts AvailableWrite today for Diamond Catalogue and Buyer's CardL.R.SOHN&CO Diamond ImportersWholesalers5 SOUTH WABASH ROOM 804 59 E. MADISON DE 2-4113Free Parking — 219 S. WabashOpen Mon. Niter Till 9 PM — TTiurs. Till 8 PM — Sat. Till 5 PM Martin photo by BernitkBuberworkers and co-workersthe world happenings”; and “Thatdream condition in which each isto himself alone must not pene¬trate into man’s role as man.”In contrast, the contemporane-Coggeshall to speakat pre-med meetingDr. Lowell Coggeshall, dean of the biological sciences, willbe the speaker at the quarter’s last meeting of the Pre-medclub. The meeting will be held in Abbott 133, Wednesday at3:30 pm.Coggeshall will discuss his position as medical advisor to the sec¬retary of health, education and welfare and will describe medicalconditions which he observed during his recent trip to Hungary withVice-President Richard Nixon. ous Chinese philosophy of Tao¬ism stressed the unconditionalunity of the opposites of yin andyang, of feminine and masculine,darkness and light, the active andpassive, and even being and non-being, said Buber.The fact that Taoism puts nopriority on a waking existencewas illustrated by Chuang-Tse, adisciple of Lao-Tse, when hedreamed most vividly of being abutterfly and later asked himself freedom of dream is praised, forit carries a divine power of trans¬formation. But the sovereignspirit ascends even beyond that,giving up the last tie with theworld and entering into dream¬less, desireless, shapeless deepsleep.”“Enclosed and hidden in thisstate, man is beyond desire andfree of anxiety, to all of which heis still subject in the dream world.He is united with Being. Heis entered into his own self; hesees, hears, and feels no evil.”Buber pointed out that this phil¬osophy stresses individualism tothe greatest extent, as againstcollectivism.At this point Buber began asynthesis of the two opposite phil¬osophies, a synthesis whichseemed closer to the views ofHeraclitus than to those of Lao-Tse. Witness statements such as,“The genuine being has an essen¬tial relationship between personand person,” and “It is only as‘we’ that man has constructed aworld out of his experience.”It may be of interest to notethat Buber is a strong supporterof the collective farms of Israel,“whether he was a man dreaming which he has described as “smallhe was a butterfly or a butterfly voluntary groups of men who notdreaming he was a man,” con- merely share the means of pro-tinued Buber. duction, or the forces of labor, butBut the ancient Chinese, and who, as human beings, enter aalso the Hindus, went still further direct relationship with one an-in deprecating the waking state, other, and live a life of genuineBuber stated “The sovereign fraternity.”Harper Wines & Liquors1114- 16 E. 55th St.Featuring on outstanding selection ofImported & Domestic Wines . . ,ImportedChilean Burgundy . . Vfi $ -98Italian Onrieto . .. . •/f, 1.20Spanish Sherry . .. . 1 -49Japanese Saki 2.49 moderately pricedSTOP INAND SEEOUR MANYFINE VALUESFREE DELIVERY FA 4-1233, 1318, 7699Delta UpsilonpresentsRose DanceSfu Clayton and his bandAll-campus open houseSaturday, May 4 — 9 p.m.5714 WOODLAWN^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiHiniiiiiiiimiiiiiiiitiiuiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir^Polished Cotton orBaby Cord| Suits 14.95 || Pants 4.95 || Our Prices Can't Be Beat . . . It's Smart To Buy For Less j| D & C Clothes Shop (1 744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2726 || “In the Neighborhood for 4b Years** §| Hours: 9 o.m. - 8 p.m.. Moo. - Fri. — 9 o.m. - 9 p.m., Saturday |s a6HIHNNWUIIUHIIIIH)IHIIUHMiniHiUIHHIH»MilllHiUIUil«nHttlNIIUt»UIIUtlUtlUIUUllUIUIUIIUUIttl«IIMMlg4 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 3, 1957editorialsUC educational policy sought,found in means, not extremesThere is at present a concern by thestudents over the seeming lack of an edu¬cational philosophy in relation to the under¬graduate curriculum.The problem may be described in this way. Un¬der the old plan, the student felt a certain security.This security stemmed from the fact that the stu¬dent was presented with an integrated program ofsurvey courses which professed to give him a well-rounded general education. (Whether or not hewas completely educated after he finished the 14comps, we shall not debate here. We shall simplysay that we don't see how anyone can call himselfcompletely educated.)At the present, the student is faced with a scat¬tering of College and divisional courses. The divi¬sional curriculum makes sense. Each course con¬tributes its share of the facts. Strict divisionaldegree requirements assure the student that thereis some ordering in his specialized learning.VET, SUCH AN ORDERING seems lacking inhis College courses. The integrated program ofcomps is cut off at the top, at the very coursesthat are supposed to give the integration. Andthere is no orderly “slicing off." Depending onthe advisor, the student and innumerable otherfactors, any course from OMP on down might bethe one eliminated.The jnly order is seen in the fact of a maximumamount of comps allowed by each division.The student sees this disorder in the Collegepart of his curriculum and this gives rise to aquestion of educational philosophy.ALTHOUGH ANY OF THE PROBLEMS seen inthe joint College-divisional programs can be an¬ swered on a practical level, there is always asense of values (an educational philosophy) in¬volved. No matter what the problem is, it usuallyappears to some people to be reducible to a choicebetween the College and the divisions, betweengeneral and specialized education, between “con¬cepts” and “facts.”Unfortunately, the situation is not all black orwhite. There are very obvious faults (“practical,”perhaps but still fauits) in the old College. Theredo seem to be very good reasons for keeping asmuch of the College system as is practically pos¬sible instead of switching to the “normal” curricu¬lum of specialized courses plus general education“electives” as seen in most other schools.THE EDUCATIONAL PHILOSOPHY now inforce, is a philosophy of the mean (golden orother). This philosophy is truly a hard one to statepositively. To the proponents of both extremes, itseems to be negative and unfavorable. Yet, it seemsto be, to us, the only course to take.There is now an executive committee of theCouncil of the Faculty Senate which is investigat¬ing the problems caused by the joint programs.Let us hope that the spirit of compromise underwhich the joint programs operate will prevailamong the members of the committee. Let us hopethat the problems of the curriculum arc approach¬ed and solved in this manner.Only if the members can submerge any personaland/or professional prejudices that might exist(i.e. the College members should recognize theneed for specialized studies, the divisional mem¬bers should see the value of general studies), canwe continue as a great university in our under¬graduate as well as our graduate curriculum.Gift from ’57 graduates good idea;should not lead to class distinctionA recently formed ad hoc committee proposes to revive a long dead UC tradition, thegiving of a class gift by those graduating this June. The spirit of this committee is thatthis tradition will return anyway (as UC continues on its trend toward “normalcy”) andso they would like to put it to a good use.Their idea of a cash prize to a faculty member not on tenure (instructors and assistantprofessors) is a very good one. Their gift, instead of a statue or a stone, is a worthwhileto institute. We highlyoneendorse it.Yet we have our reserva¬tions over the idea of a “class”gift. Does this imply a “class” sys- eourses as “freshman” English to be such a tradition again, thatand “normal” events as a “senior”prom. Perhaps we are react ion¬ary, but we like the system wherea person is identified with whotern? We understand that the de- he is rather than whether he is avelopment office and the alumni freshman or a senior,association would look with favorupon this further step toward“normalcy.” the prize suggested by the com¬mittee is the best possible gift.Yet, the establishment of a“graduate’s gift of )957” by thestudent should not become theforerunner of class distinctionHowever we agree with the within the College,committee that perhaps the“class” gift tradition will return.A four year undergraduate And we d0 agree that if there isbody with freshmen, sophomores,juniors, and seniors would be just& step toward such “normal”Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenboumoptometristll 32 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372H ALSTED OUT°OORCHILDREN FREE-Phone WA. 8-7979Essaness WonderfulFamily TheaterEvery Night is LikeVocation TimeFriday NightisCollege NiteFine Mot i«*s“Best Eats” you'll feel Safermoving in avanA clean move iithe safest movefor your preci¬ous belongings...and thecleanest moveis a ©Sanitizedmove. An extraservice ... noextra tost. ***•PETERSONMOVING & STORAGE CO.55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterfield 8 6711Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5103 Lake Hark Ave. All 3-2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Most. - Sat. — 0 o.m. - II p.m. tacon*JwJJtiopBritishTOWN COATPlaid ond Chollis TieLining, olso Block withStripe Lining, Knee Length$29.95608 n. michigonWhere College Mon Is King THE THUNDERING MARCHOF FROGRESSToday, as everyone knows, is the forty-sixth anni¬versary of the founding of Gransmire College for Womenwhich, as everyone knows, was the first ProgressiveEducation college in the United States.Well do I recollect the tizzy in the academic worldwhen Gransmire first opened its portals! What a buzzthere was, what a brouhaha in faculty common rooms,what a rattling of teacups, when Dr. Agnes Thudd Siga-foos, first president of Gransmire, lifted her shaggy headand announced defiantly, “This here is no stuffy, old-fashioned college. This here, by gum, is ProgressiveEducation. We will teach the student, not the course.There will be no marks, no exams, no requirements. Wewill break the iron mold of orthodoxy, hey.”^ell sir, forward-looking maidens all over the countrycast off their fetters and came rushing to New Hampshireto enroll at Gransmire. Here they found freedom. Theybroadened their vistas. They lengthened their horizons.They unstopped their bottled personalities. They roamedthe campus in togas, leading ocelots on leashes.And, of course, they smoked Philip Morris. (1 say“of course.” Why do I say “of course”? I say “of course”because it is a matter of course that anyone in searchof freedom should naturally turn to Philip Morris, forPhilip Morris is a natural smoke, with no filter to getin the wTay of its true tobacco taste.)But all was not Philip Morris and ocelots. There waswork and study too — not in the ordinary sense, for therewere no formal classes. Instead there was a broadapproach to enlarging each girl’s potentials.TjKe the course celled dasiclflotor MiltsTake, for example, the course called B.M.S. (BasicMotor Skills). B.M.S. was divided into L.D. (LyingDown), S.U. (Standing Up) and W. (Walking). Oncethe student had mastered L.D. and S.U., she was taughtto W. — but not just to W. any old way! No, sir! Shewas taught to W. with poise, dignity, bearing! To incul¬cate a sense of balance in the girl, she began her exercisesby walking with a suitcase in each hand. (One girl, MaryEllen Dorgenicht, got so good at it that today she is bellcaptain at the Dinkler-Plaza Hotel in Atlanta, Georgia.)When the girls had walking under their belts, theywere allowed to dance. Again no formality was imposed.They were simply told to fling themselves about in anyway their impulses dictated, and believe you me, it wasquite an impressive sight to see them go bounding intothe woods with their togas flying. (Several later joinedthe U. S. Forestry Service.)There was also a lot of finger painting and gourdrattling and sculpture with coat hangers and all like that,and soon the fresh wind of Progressivism came whistlingout of Gransmire to blow the ancient dust of pedantryoff curricula everywhere, and today, thanks to the pio¬neers at Gransmire, we are all free, every man-jack of us.If you are ever in New Hampshire, be sure to visitthe Gransmire campus. It is now a tannery.©Max Shulman, 1057And be sure to light « Philip Morris when you visit Gransmire,or any where else for that matter, because Philip Morris isalways a naturally perfect companion and brings you thiscolumn each week and is ignitable at either end.A CASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 55th St. Ill 3-0651PAINT & HARDWARE CO.Wallpaper - Tools - Houseware - Plumbing1154-58 E. 55th St.UC Discount HY 3-3840•jSF / * t*May 3, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Editor-in-chief Ronald J. GrossmanBusiness manager Gary MokotoffManaging editor Robert HalaszAdvertising manager Lawrence D. KesslerExecutive news editor. Rochelle DubnowCulture editor. Dave ZackLecture editor. Harold BernhardtCopy editor Betsy KirtleyProduction manager Jean KwonSports editor George KarcazesEditorial assistant Bob BrownOffice manager Art TaitelPhotographers Niles Bernick, Roland FinstonCartoonists Kent Flannery, Dick Montgomery, Gwen WeberEditorial staff Zelda Eisen, Sheila Fields, Mary Finkle,Oliver Lee, Marge Russell, Sharon Schultz30 years IhHyde ParkTV and Radio — Sales A Service1 *61 Fast 55th Street HYde Park 3-3000Specialists in Servicing Hi-Fi £r FMReconditioned FM Sets Available10% discount on repairs brought in with this couponIssued every Friday throughout the school year and intermittently during thesummer quarter, by tlie publisher, the Chicago Maroon, 1212 East 59 Street, Chi-cago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3266; Businessand advertising office, Midway 3-0800, ext, 3265. Subscriptions by mail, $3 peryear. Business office hours: 2 pm to 5 pm. Monday through Friday,$/meAFTER SHAVELOTION Refreshing antiseptic action healsrazor nicks, helps keep your skinin top condition. 1.00 plus taxSHULTON New York • TorontoLaw students swat flyEditors agree—almostYour observations in 65 servatism, practicality and con-Chicago Macoon No. 35, page cern for the grubby details of the6 (Gadfly — April 26, 1957), work-a-day world,concerning the Law School and In fact. we are pleased at yourits student body demonstrate delight, in our moving, almost asclear and critical insight. You much as we take joy in the movehave emphatically underscoredthe differences between buddinglawyers and campus scholarsgenerally.However, lest your readersgain an erroneous impression, itwould not seem amiss to notethat we are proud of our isola¬tion, rhetoric, competition, con- itself. And we sincerely hope, invievtk of your grand principles,that the emulation we read be¬tween your lines does not in truthexist. But never fear, for we our¬selves were once undergraduatesand can well understand yourfeelings.Editors of the Law Review Morgenthau defends selfagainst Lee leffer-atfatkIn the Maroon of April, 1957, Mr. Oliver Lee published a fairly accurate report ofthe lecture I gave recently at the Hillel foundation. He then proceeds in a letter to youto take issue with me for opinions I expressed neither at that lecture nor anywhere else.I have never advocated “force applied against the Arabs.” What I have said is thatforeign policy has two instru-Lady Chatterly's 'Gadfly'The gadfly is a little bug. Socratic in inception,A cattle-biting tiny thug, subtle in iLs deception.Win, lose or draw its claim to fame is not “Chesterfield” letter,No rule of thumb for the game of games, the world’s the worsenot better?Perhaps “the” truth in the midst of mists will be found by someinventor.But the gadfly’s job is to exist as the bestest argumentor.So across the green away we go, kept by the law, prosaic. '■Cows biting cattle, stubbing a toe, with the truth in mosaic.Divorced from the school we may be, but from her there is noturning.A jealous mistress indeed is she, but the Lady’s Not For Burning.Frederick Yonknuui ments at its disposal: thepromise of benefits and thethreat of disadvantages. To useonly the former and to forswearthe use of the latter is tanta¬mount to destroying your ownbargaining position. This is trueof our relations with the Arabnations as it is of the relationswhich have ever existed betweenany two nations.Mr. Lee states that I have made“a concession to the theory thatideology plays an important rolein international politics, a theorywhich Morgenthau usually at¬tacks with some vigor.” I wonder Nations,contents of In Defense of the Na¬tional Interest, he will find thatthe title of chapter 7 reads, TheFailure of Judgment in Asia, andunder number 2, The Struggle forAsia as a Struggle for the Mindsof Men. It is furthermore no se¬cret that I have consistently crit¬icized our Asian and African pol¬icy for its tendency to emphasizemilitary measures for the solu¬ tion of problems which are essen¬tially moral and psychological.The demagoguery of calling myposition “amoral and illegal” onlyserves to underline the irre¬sponsible ignorance of Mr. Lee’scriticism. . . .Hans J. Morgenthau(Editor’s note: Oliver Lee is astudent of International relationsin the division of social sciences.).Students object to flagAtwhat evidence Mr. Lee has forthis assertion. If he takes a lookat the Index of Politics AmongNations, he will find there a con¬siderable number of entries show¬ing the emphasis I have put onthe role of ideology -in interna¬tional politics ... in the table of the recent Festival ofthere appeared aSoviet Ukrainian flag on aposter advertising the event. Atthis same Festival there was anexhibit of Ukrainian folk art.We students on campus ofUkrainian descent who took partin this Festival wish to publicly Ukrainian people, and not thepresent Ukrainian state, whichis under Communist rule.As political refugees who fledour homeland to escape Sovietcontrol, we and many otherUkrainians who attended the Fes¬tival of Nations were deeply hurtby the error. Surely it cannot bePolish studentwants pen-palA Polish student has written tothe Maroon requesting corre¬spondence with a female student.The boy is an economics stu¬dent graduating this year.Address letters to:John GradWarszawa-Praga ,ul. Zaokopowa 6ni47, II p.Polska (Poland) Attacks Blackfriar review point out the error of the Festi- expected that we should want toThe reviews carried in theMaroon are often stupendousexamples of the power of neg¬ative thinking. It’s always saferto pan something since it makesit so much more difficult for any¬one to call your views superficial.The critic should criticize withstandards appropriate to the time ents of this unkind treatment atthe hands of Gerard David Ives(!), deserved a better fate.We can't really point to theeffort, the hard work and plan¬ning on the part of a few people(not a cast of hundreds likeNorthwestern, or scores of stal¬wart men in tuxedos) in an ef¬fort to justify the end results, but val of Nations committee in us¬ing that particular flag. It repre¬sents a government which we donot recognize. We representedthe cultural heritage of the appear under the Soviet-Russian-imposed flag of the Communiststate.Lidia A. KryshtalElena Lukuszis stuffy and most unconstruc-tive.The Blackfriars, latest recipi-Letter policyThe Maroon publishes letters to the editor on subjectsof interest to the student body. Such letters are sub¬ject to editing if longer than 250 words. No unsignedletters will be printed under any circumstances. However,the writer's name will be withheld, or noms de plumeused, on request. and place. To pretend to higher We should realize that resourcesfor the show’ were limited andadmirable use was made of thoseavailable.On the whole, Gamma DeltaIota was a good student produc¬tion enjoyable and worth seeing.The Blackfriars have made a defi¬nite contribution to the Univer¬sity,The Maroon has often said ifyou don’t like the paper join itand change it. The same could besaid for Blackfriars — I suggestthat Mr. Ives try something con¬structive for a change.William Stevenson Bacon TERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best’’SPECIAL OFFERWITH THIS COUPON25c Discount on any Pizzaeaten here ... or deliveredSmall 1.00Medium 1.45 Large 1.95Giant 2.95FREE OELIVERY FORU. OF C. STUDENTS1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-40456 • CHICAGO M A ROOM • May 3, 1957Coming events on quadranglesFriday, 4May 3National AAU Gymnastics Champion¬ships, Field house, 5550 Universityavenue, 1;30 pm and 7:30 pm, 75c-90c.Milo P. Jewett prize for Bible readingpreliminary tryouts, 3 pm. Bondchapel, 1025 East 58th street, free.Le Cercle Francais, M. Alphonse V.Roche of Northwestern universityspeaking on “Dixieland en France,”4 pm, Ida Noyes, east lounge.“The Inquiring Mind” lecture seriessponsored by the Western division ofthe American philosophical associa¬tion, second lecture: “Facts,” GeorgeBoas, department of philosophy,Johns Hopkins university, 4:30 pm,assembly hall, International house,1414 east 59th street, free.“The Creation of Life and the Uni¬verse” lecture series, Carl Sagan, de¬partment of astronomy, the Univer¬sity of Chicago, sponsored by Uni¬versity College, sixth lecture: “TheCreation of Life,” 8 pm, Mandel hall,1131 east 57th street. 75c-$l.English class, beginning and Inter¬mediate, 4:30-6:30 pm, Internationalhouse.“Christ frees and unites,” discussion ledby Dean Brauer of FTS, sponsored bythe Lutheran Students at Chapelhouse, supper at 6 pm.Hillel, Sabbath service, 5715 S. Wood-lawn, 7:45.Square Dance and Wing-Ding, spon¬sored by the Folklore society, 8:30,Ida Noyes hall, John Sonqulst, caller.15c members, 30c non-members. Freerefreshments.Saturday, May 4English class, beginning, Intermediate,10-12 am, International House. GeorgeBoas, department of philosophy,Johns Hopkins university. “The In¬quiring Mind,” lecture series spon¬sored by the western division of theAmerican philosophical association,final lecture: “Conclusion,” 11 am,Assembly hall, International house.Free.University of Chicago Track club vs.Iowa, 1:30 pm, Stagg field. Free.National AAU Gymnastics champion¬ships, 1:30 pm and 7:30 pm, Fieldhouse, $1.80.Bach Singers rehearsal, 1:30 and 4:30,Chapel house, 5810 Woodlawn.Madrigal Singers, 3 pm, Ida Noyes hall,Sunday, May 5Communion service at 8:30 am, Bondchapel, followed by breakfast (35c),Swift common.Roman Catholic masses at 8:30, 10 and11 am at DeSales. Lutheran com¬ munion service, 10 am at Hiltonchapel.New World, University of Chicago radioprogram, NBC s weekend show, Moni¬tor, moderator Edward W. Rosenheim,Jr„ associate professor of humanitiesin the College, 10:35 am. WMAQ, dis¬cussion on “Cutting the Budget,”will include Robert Eisner, profes¬sor of economics. Northwestern uni¬versity; Milton Friedman, professorof economics and John Nuveen,trustee.English class, 2-4 pan, InternationalI-C Mothers’ tea and I-C sing spon¬sored by the Inter-Cluto council. 3:30-7:30, Ida Noyes, singing and refresh¬ments.Glee Club rehearsal, 4:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Carillon Concert by James R. Lawson,carilloneur, 4:30 pm. Rockefellerchapel.“Psychoanalytic Conception of Man,”the third in the discussion series en¬titled, "What is Man?” will be ledby Carl Wennerstrom, FTF professorand Billing’s hospital chaplain. Dis¬cipline Student Fellowship, sponsor¬ing organization. Members of theBaptist Student group will be theguests for the evening. Luncheon,6:30, discussion, 7.Lecture: Harold Fey, editor of theChristian Century, “Koinonia Farmversus Georgia Prejudice,” sponsoredby the Quaker Student Fellowship atQuaker house, 5815 Woodlawn, 8 pm.Monday, May 6Advance registration with Jewish voca¬tional service for summer jobs at Hil¬lel house, 5715 S. Woodlawn. Repre¬sentatives of the JVC will be availableto discuss summer job opportunitiesand to register Interested students.3:30-5.Derek J. Price, Christ’s College, Cam¬bridge, lecture sponsored by the divi¬sion of physical sciences and the de¬partments of history and English atUC. “Chaucer as an Astronomer: ANew Manuscript Text,” 4:30 pm.Room 122, Social Science, free.Tuesday, May 7Varsity tennis match, UC vs. U of Illi¬nois, 1:30 pm, Varsity courts, 58thand University, free.English class, advanced, 7-9, Interna¬tional house.Concert band, full ensemble rehearsal,7 pm, Mandel hall.Madrigal Singers, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyeshall.Life Drawing Class, Lexington 210 at7:30 pm, materials supplied, 50c mod¬eling fee.Record concert coffee hour, 10-12 pm, International house.South Park Improvement Association,“Impact of Projects ‘A’ and ‘B’ onHyde Park.” Annual reports of theofficers and superintendent withquestions and discussion. James Hib-ben, project manager of Webb &Knapp, which submitted the devel¬opment plan will discuss these andother questions of Interest to theproperty owners of the Association.Guests are welcome. 8:30 pm, Quad¬rangle club.Wednesday, May 8Ida Noyes Intervarsity Christian Fel¬lowship, luncheon-discussion, 12:30.“Conflict of Ideas in Modern JewishThought” conducted by Rabbi Mau¬rice Petarsky at 330 pan, HlUel house.Pre-Med club, Dr. Lowell Coggeshall,dean of the biological sciences, 3:30,Abbott 133.Lecture: J. Price, Christ’s College, Cam¬bridge, "Critical Points in the Evolu¬tion of Science” lectures sponsoredby the division of physical sciencesand the UC’s departments of historyand English, “The Beginning and Endof the Industrial Evolution,” 4:30pm, Room 133, Eckhart hall, free.“The English language and the tradi¬tion of poetry” lecture series spon¬sored by the department of English,second lecture, 4:30 pm, Social Sci¬ence. Free. __Carillon concert, by James R. Lawsonat 4:30 pm. In Rockefeller.Canterbury evensong at Bond Chapel,5:05.Social dance class, 8-9 pm. Interna¬tional house, room CDE, 50c males,females free.Country dancers, Ida Noyes hall, 8 pm.Science Fiction club, 8 pm, Ida Noyeshall.Thursday, May 9Chicago Review Staff meeting, 4:30,Reynolds Club, room 304.Varsity baseball game, University ofChicago vs. University of Illinois(Pier). 3:30 pm, Stagg Field, 5640University, free.Coffee hour. 9-11 pm, Green hall.Record concert coffee hour. 10-12 pm,International house.Lecture: “The English language and thetradition of poetry,” conducted byC. L. Wrenn. “The Anglo-Saxon cul¬tural background, with special ref¬erence to poetic significance of theSutton Hoo archaeological treasures.”4:30 pm, Social Science, free.Coffee hour, 10-12 pm, Gates halllounge.Chapel meeting, Christian Science Or¬ganization, Thorndike Hilton Chapel,715-8 pm. Newsbits — -Deadline for strawberrycandidates this MondayPhi Sigma Delta fraternity will hold its 31st annual Straw¬berry Festival on June 8, immediately following the annualInter-fraternity sing.The open house, one of the featured events of alumni weekendprovides music, dancing and free strawberries and ice cream.Newest feature of the festival is the selection of a “Miss Straw¬berry Festival of 1957.” Any campus organization or dormitoryhouse may enter a candidate in the contest by calling Isaac Wright orJoe Whittington at PLaza 2-9477. Candidates need not be UC students.All entries must be in by Monday.Tiger flight has openingsDue to several cancellations, the SG flight to Europe forthis summer (New York to Amsterdam, June 15, Amsterdamto New York, September 16), now has three round-tripopenings and three one-way westbound openings.The fee is $320, round trip. Anyone interested in reserving theseseats should contact either Jacques Dulin or Bill Rogers immediatelyin the Student Government office in Ida Noyes.interdub^sing SundaySunday afternoon, in Ida Noyes hall, the annual InteivluhSing will take place. Participating in the event will be: DeltaSigma, Esoteric, Mortar Board, Quadranglers, Sigma, andWyvern. The sing is being held in conjunction with a Mother’sDay tea for club membersand their mothers.immediately after the tea, at5 pm, the entire campus is invitedto the Ida Noyes lobby to witnessthe performance. Two cups willbe given in connection with thesing. One will be presented to theclub with the greatest percentageof members participating, andthe other award will be based onvocal quality. In addition to the sing awards,an athletic trophy for basketballwill be presented to Quadrangloi s.Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery ServiceOnce upon a time (which is the way most stories begin—and who’sto argue with success?) there was an argument about some do-it-yourselfvenison ... and a nice nobleman became a good Hood.Trading charcoal gray for Lincoln Green wasn’t easy—Robin had agood thing working for him before he started tramping the woods.But, with a philosophical sigh, he gathered a crew called the MerryMen, and began “exacting tribute” from tyrannical King John. Actually,he was stealing the old boy blind ... but King John was pretty muchof a crumb, and most of the loot went to the poor, so nobody reallycared. Besides—the Sheriff of Nottingham couldn’t catch Robi^’Well, one day, when things were kind of slow, in pranced Maid Marian—alongside of whom Cleopatra would have looked like a Poland China.Cream of Nowhere,The rest of the story is history—the Merry Men always servedBudweiser with their meals, and what girl could resist hospitality likethat? Marian became Mrs. Hood ... and Robin? He hung up his bowand arrows and is now the Budweiser salesman for Sherwood andpoints north. (Sometimes, he points south.)moral: Venison or hamburgers ... spark up your next meaiwith the merry taste of the King of Beers!Budweiser*KING OF BEERSANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELESMay 3, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7B-J: $3 million dormB J was the result of PresidentBurton’s plan to relocate and iso¬late the entire College facilities(Below) Architect's mod¬el of Burton-Judson courts.Except for minor changes,this is the way B-J looks to¬ on the south side of the Midway.An undergraduate women’s dorm¬itory was to be built nearby onlya year later, when for a combina¬tion of reasons we can only guessat, the project was abandoned.Certainly the fact that a newwomen’s dorm is only now beingbuilt, points to the slowdown inthe University’s building drive inthe early thirties.Opened in the fall of 1931, thebuilding of Burton-Judson calledfor three million dollars, 40 percent of it being put up by JuliusRosenwald, a long-time trusteewho also contributed to Rosen-walu hall. The enclosed nature ofthe courts, plus the consistentlyGothic architecture, has given B-Ja monastic appearance in the eyesof some observers.The houses in B-J have beenarranged differently at differenttimes. At first the older studentsoccupied the Judson side and thenewer ones the Burton side.An accessory to B-J which nev¬er came to fruition was a minia¬ture golf course, but practicallyeverything else was provided forthe students: study rooms, asmall library, a softball field, ten¬nis courts, ping-pong and pool ta¬bles in the basement. The 350 un¬dergraduate men who moved intoB-J made it the largest dormitoryon campus. Now, B-J has 440 andis filled to absolute maximum ca¬pacity.I Late twenties and early thirtiesmark great UC building periodSixth in a series of articles on the history and buildings of the University.by Bob Halasz“When in doubt, lay a cornerstone” was a phrase invented by the University Record, acampus publication which proved, in this instance, very accurate. Buildings shot up regu¬larly in the late twenties and early thirties, and one could often see more workmen thanstudents milling around the quadrangles.Wieboldt hall, dedicated in — ;—:1928 marked the completion director of Inland Steel, hall, inside the Oriental Institute,of the south end of the quad- "bom a bust was placed in be^ b“ name- . „ _n the hall. At its opening in December,rangles. It was connected on.. . tt , ,, Jones was a modern laboratory, 1931, Breasted described the In-the east by Harper, and on the one having the latest chemical statute’s work as “finding thewest an arch was built separating equjpment for j,ts time. The build- storY of the rise of man.” SinceClassics and Wieboldt, m order to jng was connected in three places the Institute’s opening, its mu-prowde students with a chance to to adjo5ning Kent. Some of the seum has been widely visited,exit from the quadrangles, a de- veterans could remember the first Many archaeological “finds” havelaboratory, an old tenement on been exhibited there.55th and University, a far cry 'The Education department re¬ceived another building in 1932,tail which was overlooked in themaster plan.The building was financed with t ’"'f gw-J^mw-ehVMt>°ldt At the cornerstone laying, the its biggest, from a million and afoundation. William Wieboldt was Universjty SUCcumbed to a habit half dollar gift from the Generala typical early Ch'5ago merchant popu]ar jn thos<? timeS( and had Education board in New York.- he came from Germany as an a bQX contaiT1jng the Chicago The building was called by theimmigrant youth and made his newspapers Q\ the dav before prosaic name of Graduate Fxiucan a nra m tmr (September 11, 1928) placed in tion building until 1948 when itfortune, a la Horatio Alger.The building is off;ciallv calledthe Wieboldt hall for ModernLanguages, and houses the Ger- the cornerstone.Mathematics, the “queen of themanic and Romance languages sciences,(excluding Latin). A large base¬ment was designed in order toprovide the already over-congest was named Judd hall in honor ofa dean of the education depart-reeeived its due with ‘ mer,f-International houseFar from the hub of the cam-the construction of Eekhart hall,completed in 1929. Originatingfrom a gift by Rernard Eekhart, Pus, an enormous dormitory wasod Harper library with room for the building indicated once more built in the early ’30s, practicallystacks. _ the size and prestige of the sci- the only one of its kind. It wasOn the fourth floor there is a cnees on campus. .the International house, the'third“Chaucer room,” as well as a Because the Blackfriars and in the world, its two predecessorsGoethe collection, the latter being other student performing groups being in New York and Paris,also provided by Wieboldt. Im- insisted on having a “stage door” The building stemmed from abedded in the wall of the archway into Mandel, Eekhart was built grant of the Rockefeller Founda-outside is a stone from the old not quite adjoining Mandel hall. tion. In donating the grant, JohnUniversity of Chicago. It is said The University’s excellent Ori- D. Rockefeller, Jr., the Founda-that the stone provides good luck ental Museum, and its noteworthy tion’s president, explained: “Myif one raps it on the way to work in archaeology finally earn- special interest in making thiscomps. ed it a building of its own in 1931. gift is the education in interna-Another familiar quadrangles Chicago’s work in the field of tional friendship and understand¬building was completed in 1929. ancient history in the near east ing of the students of the worldwhen Jones research laboratory was due primarily to Professor who are^ studying in Chicago orwas opened. The building was James Henry Breasted, who re- vicinity.”The International house, builton 59th and Dorchester, close tothe IC tracks, was never intendedto serve foreign students at UCalone. It accommodates studentsin all Chicago area institutions ofhigher learning, and not exclu¬sively foreign students. A consid- (Above) A very young and handsome President RobertM. Hutchins watches while Dr. James Breasted opens thegate to the "treasures of the Orient" at the dedication ofBreasted hall (the Oriental Institute) in 1931.named after George Herbert ceived world wide fame. Breasted(Below) A proposed plan for Jones laboratory. The lablooks much like this today, connected with Kent on the rightand filling in the last of the "main quadrangle" on the left.Note the Harper-like tower in the sketch which nevermaterialized. erable number of American stu¬dents live there also.The building was designed toaccommodate 524 students, ap¬proximately two-thirds men andone-third women. A cafeteria, adiscussion room, tennis courts, aping-pong room, a library, and asmall theater and assembly hallwere also included.As an experiment in interna¬tional living, the aim of Interna¬tional house was not “a leaveningprocess” but a display for the di¬versity of cultures. Its residentsoften hold dances, have a regularshowing of movies, and in thepast have printed a magazine inconnection with other Interna¬tional houses, called the Interna¬tional House Quarterly. (One ofits contributing editors was Rob¬ert Strozier.)World War II had quite a dis¬ruptive effect on Internationalhouse. It became a barracks for200 air cadets, and the womenstudents were moved to find placefor the cadets. The dining facil¬ities were turned over to the mili¬ tary visitors, also. Many foreignstudents were unable to getmoney from home during thewar, and so the Internationalhouse awarded scholarships andloans.International house was not theonly building to be built far fromthe quadrangles. The Universitystretched into another directionwith the building of a new men’sdormitory, the Burton - Judsoncourts, on the south side of theMidway, (see below.)Next week: atoms and V/W IITwo more buildings of this pe¬riod deserve passing attention:Whitman laboratory, a red brickbuilding, was constructed in 1926for experimental zoology, on 58thand Ingleside, and a big green¬house was built on 56th and Ingle¬side for the botanists.World War II not only meantsoldiers and sailors on campus-^it also meant new buildings andprojects for the war effort in re¬search, and a new type of contrib¬utor—Uncle Sam.Sports column —Big week aheadfor campus tansThis weekend will be a busy one for sports enthusiasts onthe UC campus. Friday afternoon and evening and tomorrowafternoon and evening the National AAU gymnastics cham¬pionships will be held in the Fieldhouse. Tomorrow afternoonwill also find the UC Track club opposing the University of Iowaon Stagg field in what promises to be one of the best track meets tobe held here this year.AAU gymnasts hereGymnastics coach Bob Kriedler, who has been handling the prep¬arations for the gymnastics meet, says that he expects this year’snational meet to be the biggest and best meet to be held in the Chi¬cago area. Advance ticket sales indicate a crowd of at least 2,000persons for each session.The entry list is much bigger than Kriedler had anticipated with104 men and 33 women entered so far. All the top staras in the gymnasties world are going to compete in this meet, which is a culmina¬tion to the gymnastics activities of the year.Iowa, UCTC to meetWhen the UC Track club meets the University of Iowa, sparks andcinders w*il fly. One of the featured events of the afternoon will bepitting of two former Olympians, Ted Wheeler of the Track clubami Deacon Jones of Iowa in the half mile. Another feature eventwill be the 100 yard dash, in which A1 Jacobs and Jim Caffey will con¬tinue their rivalry. Both are in excellent condition and either onecould tie the world record mark of :9.3 seconds.Floyd Smith. UC Track club member who won the Kansas Relayswith a*jump of 6'9", will be competing against an excellent field. Inthe mile Phil Coleman, a former Olympian and big gun for the Trackclub, won’t have much competition unless Wheeler doubles in thehalf and the mile. All in all it should prove to be a very excitingmeet with the promise of a number of records to be broken or tied.Netmen to play hereIn addition these major sporting events this weekend, next Tues¬day the Maroon netmen will meet the University of Illinois (Chie^o)in what is unofficially a playoff for the Chicago Area championship.The match will be held on the Varsity Courts starting at 1:30 p.m.Coach Moyle said that the match should be fairly even and couldgo either way.George KarcazesDick CousensVOUS EPARGNEZAVEC METHODEet, en meme temps, vous prote-gez votre famille lorsque vousdevenez un assure de laRALPH J. WOOD JR., '48I N. Le Salle Street Chicago 2, IllinoisRepresentative / « , . / ’..vBig gymnastic meet here4'Thirteen Olympic gymnasts — nine of them from the 1956 USO team — will vie forawards in the 1957 National AAU gymnastics championships for men and women. Themeet will be held at the Fieldhouse, today a nd tomorrow’. The prelims will be held todaythe finals tomorrow. Starting time for both days (two sessions each day) is 1:30 ami7:30 pm.In addition to the nine UStheir talents; Ernestine Rus¬sell, w’ho will compete unat¬tached, and Ed Gagnier, 1957Big Ten all-around co-champ, rep¬resenting the University of Mich¬igan.Raphael Leeuona. member ofthe 1956 Cuban Olympic team,will wear the colors of the FloridaSlate gymnastic team, and AttilaTakach, Hungarian nationalchampion 1945-56 who did not re¬turn to his homeland after the1956 Olympics, will compete forthe Los Angeles Turners.Members of the ’56 women’s USOlympic squad who will performin this meet are: Sandra Ruddick,NAAU all-around champ in ’56;Chicagoan Joyce Raeek, and Mu¬riel Davis. 1956 NAAU free cal¬isthenics co-champions. Ruddickand Davis will compete for theAthenaeum Turners of Indian¬apolis: Miss Racek for the Mid¬west Gymnastics association.Members of the 1956 US men'sOlympic team who will be going Olympians, tw o members of Canada’s ’56 squad will display“all out” for honors in the meet, Joe Kotys, who was a member ofwhich is the culmination of the the 1948 Olympic team and Dongymnastics’ year are: John Beck- Holder of Florida State,ner, also a member of the ’52 US Beckner will compete for theOlympic team and the '56 Pan Las Angeles Turners, CrossfeldAmerican team; Abie Crossfeld, for the University of Illinois, VegaNAAU ’56 high-bar champ: Ar- for Penn State, Miles and Holdermando Vega, NCAA 1957 all- for Florida State Gympana andaround champ; Jack Miles, 1956 Kotys for Cleveland Swiss TurnNAAU flying rings champ; and, ers.UC golfers lose matchon rain-soaked greenMaroon golfers, shooting on a rain-soaked home course,dropped both ends of a double dual match with Valparaisoand Wayne State. Bob Zirkel and Wendell Marumoto pacedthe mud-splattered Chicago crew with 83’s w hile Dave Mertzand Bernard Hansan shot 87 —— —-■ : —‘, 00 The red-hot Wayne team com-and 88, respectively. Rex Sty- pietely swamped Chicago, 12-0.zens, second man for Chicago, Three of the Wayne team cardednegotiated the 18 mud holes in 77’s while the fourth managed89 strokes. an 80.Runners win fwice in mudUC’s varsity cindermen sloshed their way through twrorather wet track meets last week-end and came out on thewinning side both times.Against Kalamazoo Col¬lege, on Friday, the Maroonsscored 64 to their opponents’26 when the meet had to be calledbecause of the driving rain.The next day found the MightyMaroons running in the mud ofAlbion College. Chicago won thismeet by the score of 76-55.The UC winners in the Kalama¬zoo meet were the following:Dick Cousens, shot put; Art Omo-hundro, mile; A1 Jacobs, 100-yarddash; Dan Trifone, high hurdles and high jump; Bill Weaver,broad jump; Bud Perschke, 880-yard run; Dave Northrop, polevault; Jerryson Abeles, javelin.In the Albion meet, these varsi¬ty men won; Jacobs 100 and 220yard dashes; Trifone, high hur¬dles, low hurdles, and high jump;Perschke, 880 yard run; BrooksJohnson, broad jump; Northrop,pole vault; Cousens. shot put;and a mile relay composed ofPerschke, Hosea Martin, PeteMcKeon, and Johnson. The Valparaiso portion of thematch was a much evener affairbut Chicago was again defeated,this time by a 9-6 tally. Hansanaccounted for 2Yz points, Maru¬moto scored 2, and Mertz 1 !{■.Marumoto shot a low 75 toaccount for one point. A 77 byMertz added one-half point, asdid Hansan’s 80. Zirkel’s 81 andStyzen’s 80 failed to score againsttough opponents. Don Lusk was *also whitewashed in his match.The number one Beloit man shota 70 and their last man fired 81.Tomorrow the golf terwi willtravel to Kalamazoo for anotherdouble dual match, this one in¬volving Western Michigan and arematch with Wayne.The golfers now have threewins in their eight matches thisyear.FR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAI.. wMf CREWCUT 1kruhutTHE HAIRSTANDING UFFOR A SHARPERLOOKING CREWCUT.In The Green-White Container| ALSO SOLD IN JARSAT DRUG STORES A BARKER SHOPS UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies’ haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor YOU ^ARE ELIGIBLESend Today »for FREE ( ^~Professional and ^ fBusinessman'sWholesale DiamondBrochure. Write Jackson'sDiamond Brokers, Dept. I644 Broadway, Gary, Ind.Keep your eyeon White TartanHere’s a fresh new idea for spring incasual wear. It’s White Tartan, arich-looking miniature plaid-on-whitepattern; expertly tailored like all ArrowIshirts. Famous Arrow University designfeatures collar that buttons down infront and center back ... plus actionbox pleat. Cool-looking White Tartan,“Sanforized-labelled” gingham, $5.95.ARROWCASUAL WEAR IT’S FOR REAL! by Chester FieldON CLOSE EXAMINATIONOf all the different sorts of guysThere are only two that I despise:The first I really would like to slamIs the one who copies from my exam.The other one’s the dirty skunkWho covers his and lets me flunk!MORAL: You’ll pass the pleasure test with ChesterfieldKing. Yes, if you want your pleasuregumma cum laude. smoke Chesterfield,King! BIG length, BIG flavor, thesmoothest tasting smoke todaybecause it’s packedmore smoothly by ACCU*RAY.ChciNHMd King gives you more•f what you’re smoking for!*$60 goes to Louie V. Welch.Aepee, Iowa, for hit Cheater Field poem.Iowa State College,Iowa, for hi* CSeeter$60 for eeery philosophical oeree accepted for puhli-eatioa. Ch weerfi,id. ffjQ.Box $1, NewYark 46,N,y.euaatnwMiMOLlay' of)outh<*foldegaIdorandnrn- inrso,aisoteedertz ’com-12-0.rdedaged1 thetf fairated,msandarn-i', .75 toU byt, asL andgainst; waslatch,i shoted 81.l williotherno in-and athree■s this Adams discusses functionof poetic music, meaningFriday evening, some seven or eight hundred of the festive, curious, or just idle, mighthave found seats (had they dropped by Mandel hall) to hear some excellent readings byLeonie Adams, surely one of the American poets best qualified to preface a reading withremarks on the integral functioning of music and meaning in poetry.Those who braved the mild spring night to attend were complimented, but for the mostpart bewildered, by an uncompromisingly serious, condensed and elliptical lecture, studdedwith aphorisms and selectionsof poetry from T. S. Eliot,Paul Valery, Wallace Stevens,Marianne Moore and others.To Miss Adams, the lyric poem the poet there is no substitute for for "figure of speech”) is also in-an "ear” in which the two ele- volved, in a counterpoint andments can be sensed and worked harmonics of the mind ’ a "mat-„.fV, ... . ,, ter of meetings and partingsfth , ™ an.“a"a^is the "seizure of the moment.. . them.” The music of pootry is >esp°nse.some manifold of experience too much more than the “thin oral Tlie central vitalizing conceptcomplex to be articulated” but music” describable in terms of °^.a lecture winch (perhaps forgiven "imaginal reality” by the stress, pitch, duration, etc.; for al- very reason) was organizedpoet. She discussed ideas of the though these units are actually depth and by suggestion, rath-relationship of the music of "indeterminate” (as opposed to er **ian as a formal argument,poetry to its semantic element, those of music), there Is a “sen- seemed to be that of the idealand raised the question "How be- serially real” rhythm and music Ppet at work, in fullest possibleIwoen the two is the poet to ren- in poetry. "Image” (used in the simultaneous control of all ele-dor experience and its insights?” sense of "perception presented” ments of his experience and hisHer answer seemed to be that for and not as a fashionable synonym ar*» making a structure of wordswhose tight organization of soundand sense has a close analogy tojb ■ _ 0 music — a music in the totalmmm m m hv "space of resonances involved inMwara art prizesm But if the pace of Miss Adamsleaps from assumption to assump¬tion was exhausting, her inter¬polated readings, particularly ofMarianne Moore, were master¬pieces of clear, precise and vi¬vacious rendering of complexpoetic music.Having stated a high ideal forthe qualities of mind and heartof the poet, Miss Adams was inthe rare position of having illus¬trations at hand in her own work.She read first a group of earlypoems, including “The River inthe Meadow’s,” “Lullabye,” and‘The Horn,” quite well; but witha few exceptions like "GoodbyeThose Children,” she seemed tolose concentration and metricprecision towards the end of aperhaps over-long reading.George StarbuckPrizes for the FOTA student art exhibit were awardedlast Thursday by Stewart McHenry, chairman of the show.The winners were chosen by Simon Gordon and JohnWalley, local artists, on the basis of artistic merit andoriginality. t /C.K* entitled "Westside,” while EdgarPirst prize in Oils ($4o) Berstein received honorablewent to James Melchert for his mention for his "Study in Red,”".Self-portrait,” which was done a casejn an(j water study of ain a gesso technique with an un- jjgurederpainting. Honorable mention jn (].raVving, Lois Mandel waswent to Eugene Newmann for his 3^,3^^] fjrst prjze ($45) for her"Portrait of Margaret” which was pjcture, "April.” "April” was con-described as a type of impression- s jeered "a particularly delicateistic work with emphasis on color, sketch” by an art instructor. Hon-Burton Blistein took first m orabie mention in this class wassculpture ($43) for his "Standing awarded to Theresa Morrison forFigure,” a wire and lacquered her "Crossroads,” an “interestingplaster statuette, described by one preometrical pattern, with greatart student as being like a well Charm.”fed Giacommetti.” “Natalie by of ^e approximately 150 paint-David Ableson won honorable ingS; drawings and sculpture thatmention in the category. were entered last wTeek for theThe $35 first prize in water col- pOTA exhibit, over 85 were onor went to William Rogers for exhibit in Ida Noyes hall Thurs-the black, white and yellow wash (jay through Saturday.TEMPLE ISAIAH ISRAELCHORAL SOCIETYAHDREW FOLDI,conductorpresentsTHE CREATIONby Joseph HoydnAnita Braude, SopranoKay Charles Graves, BaritonePhilip Sportalari, TenorAndrew Faldi, BassRobert Lodine, pianoSunday, May 5, 1957PROMPTLY at 8:15 pmTemple Isaiah IsraelII09 E. llyde Park Blvd.Adm: $1.50, students $1 The Disc1367 E. 57th St.•RECORDOF THE WEEKBrubeck fir Desmondof-Wilshire - EbellFantasy 3249 3.99 BLACKSTONETheatre, Chicago 5(Bolbo — West of Michigan)2 WeeksMay 6-18MAURICEEVANS,.BERNARD SHAW’S COMEDYThe APPlE CARTCo-StarringSIGNE HASSOSpecial StudentTicket $1.15Mon.-Tues.-Wed.-Thurs. Eves. &Wed. & Sat. Mats.THE ATOMIC FUTUREATOMS FOR THE WORLD, by Laura Fermi $3.75Based on a deep belief in peace, full of the warmth of the human relationships, this bookgives on intimate and informative account of the Internotionol Conference on the Peace¬ful Uses of Atomic Energv, Geneva, 1955.the prospects of nuclear power andTECHNOLOGY, by Gerald Wendy $6.00A vital report on the peacetime atomic industries, written for businessmen, bankers,educators ond social planners.ATOMIC ENERGY FOR YOUR BUSINESS, by Kramish and Zuckert . $3.95Subtitled "Today's Key ta Tomorrow's Profits,"this book discusses what atomic energycan do for the businessman today, and the future promise it holds.PEACETIME USES OF ATOMIC ENERGY, by Martin Mann $4.50All of the recent odvonces and the future hopes of atomic energy ore described in thetext ond in more than one-hundred photographs and drawings.UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE (above) Steve Brown as the village cleric remonstrateswith the love of his youth, Valerie Weil, as pagan CarolHorning and her troll-mad niece Susan Brinkley look on.(below) Four somewhat ale-sodden village elders con¬front the cleric in a tense scene from James Hatch’s versedrama, “Easter Song,” produced by University Theatreduring FOTA. photos by HashpiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiMiiimiiimniiimiiimtmmmiiimntMminiiniiiiimiiimiiimimiiniimiiiiiiimig(COMO’S Cafe Enrico|RESTAURANT & PIZZERIA |o = 1411 E. 53 FA 4-5525 - HY 3 -5300Small Lorge Smoll Large12” 14" 12" 14"Cheese .1.15 1.55 Combination 1.75 2.25Sausage .1.45 1.95 Chicken Liver . 1.60 2.10Anchovy .1.45 1.95 Mushroom . .. . 1.60 2.10Pepper & Onion 1.30 1.80 Shrimp ....... 2.25Bacon & Onion .1.60 2.10 Pepperoni . .. . 1.60 2.10£ree Delivery on All Pizza to lC Studentsiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiuiiiiiiiuiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmmiinnlhyde park theatreLake Park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student Rote 50c oil performancesStarting Friday, May 3The Dazzling Broadway Stage Hit!The Rainmaker"N. RICHARD mNASH'S"... a story obouf droughts that happen to people . . . one of themost warmly appealing romantic comedies of the season!''— TIME MAGAZINE— CO-STARRING —Katharine Hepburn and Burt Lancasterin fine, vivid performances. Hers won her the Academy Award nom¬ination. His is engaging and believoble in the insinuating role ofSTARBUCK, the roinmaking rogue."A warm and delightful movie'' — LIFE MAG."Substantial stuff . . . whether you're otter o teor or a titter youought to get it here." — NEW YORKER"Worm ond Funny! FOUR* STARS!" — CHICAGO SUN-TIMES—— ond —"Young Wives' Tale4 * 4 • 4 t 4 4 * P A COMEDY . . . DOMESTIC GENRE . . . ENGLISH ORIGINpresenting the other HEPBURN (AUDREY) with NIGELPATRICK, JOAN GREENWOOD, DEREK FARRi i-i v * * » r . * r fj.ij I*HO • CHICAGO MAROO H • May 3, 1957Musicians battle gobblersat FOTA spring ceremonyr A contest between large-mouthed luncheaters and various other esoteric music groupsDnded in a half-hearted stalemate last Friday, as the northeast quadrangle played host tobell ringers, madrigal singers, a brass choir, and some 200 music lovers of questionableauthenticity.The hour-long battle began with a chime concert emanating from Mitchell tower. Rob¬ert Vogler, student chimer, overpowered the then-sparse crowd with highly creditableperformances of six pieces,including as highlights “Sum¬mer Is Icumin In” and “The.Vicar of Bray."The bell prelude was followedImmediately by four works forbrass choir, performed by a fif¬teen man group under the abledirection of bandmaster Louis La-son. The compositions — Ban-chieri’s “Sinfonia,” Frank’s “In-trada No. 2,” Pezel’s “Tower Son¬ata,” and a march from Handel'sFUN!10YJ LITTLEjSTS WHENCROUP ECONOMY FARESare the money-saving answer ifyou re returning to summerschool. Team up with two ormore friends bound for yourhome town. Travel together bothways. On trips of 100 miles ormore, you’ll each save 25% of theregular round-trip coach fare.*Or better still . . . COACHPARTY FARES! Round up 25or more to travel long-distancetogether on the same homewardtrain. Then return singly or to¬gether for summer school orfall semester and you each save28% of tire regular round-trip fare.IT S FUN, TOO!It’s all pleasure ... by train. Notraffic delays. Walk around andtalk to the gang. Refreshments ordelicious meals en route. Plusthe comfort and dependability allsmart travelers insist upon.jJsExctpt for local travel betmon New York-Washington and point seat! of Lancaster, Pa.Sea your travel or Ncket agent NOWIAtk about t Hate Mg money-taving plant.EASTERNRAILROADS “Occasional Overture" — wereplayed with great verve, and asmuch warmth and feeling as fif¬teen brasses permit.At this point the gatheringcrowd was busy with its collectivelunch, and sat almost passivelyunder the pleasing dissonances ofthe UC brass choir. Thus, the firsttwo rounds went to the cause ofMusic.But the audience claimed themajor victory as the followinggroup, the Madrigal singers, triedfive futile times to penetrate themounting roar from Spring-catal¬yzed mouths.Undeterred by director Mat¬thew Zuckerbraun’s amazinglyvigorous and enthusiastically in¬ effectual armwaving, their poly¬phonic strains fluttered valiantlyand, rarely, successfully over thecrowd.The outnumbered songsters be¬gan with a competent renditionof the traditional “Hymnus Euch-aristus," and scored their mostnotable triumphs with the nexttwo English madrigals, “Since IFirst Saw Your Face" and “ComeLet’s Be Merry.”After the Madrigal singers hadfiled beaten off the rooftop, stu¬dent chimer William Pohl beatthe audience into momentary sub¬mission with a brief postlude onthe Mitchell bells.Michael RossmanThe CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 Rain dampens concert;performance is spottyForced indoors from rain-soaked Hutchinson court, theConcert band and Glee club performed before a sparse audi¬ence in Mandel hall Friday evening. As a result, the concertwent off with the spirits of both performers and audiencedampened. it was perf0rm€<j WLth finesseThere seemed to be no con- and good musicianship,sistency in the quality of per- Glee Club came to its forte informance, but both groups made two traditional spirituals, “Soonvaliant efforts in the face of ad- -Ah Will Be Done" and “Rock-averse conditions and put forth My Soul.” Even the “rocking”a concert which was promising chorus did not seem to detractof better things to come. from the latter’s flavor. On the• One of the adversities facing whole, the group shows carefulthe Glee club was Mandel hall leadership and preparation,itself, which is altogether too William H. Deihl, director oflarge for a twenty-six voice a Glee club, composed “Winterset,"cappella chorus. Another was the which was sung at the concert,apparent lack of a suitable device It was so brief as to leave thefor giving the singers their start- listener “in mid-air.” This char-ing pitches. Consequently, even acteristie, combined with the com-the best numbers, such as Thomp- position’s inharmonic melody, vir-son’s “Alleluia,” were marred by tually obliterated the enjoymentfaulty intonation. of the audience.The band seemed to be plagued Spontaneous and enthusiasticby a barrage of poorly arranged applause complemented the finalnumbers. It was not gratifying to number, selections from “Okla*hear the familiar melody of “My homa,” which was a combined ef-Ilero” contrived in jazz tempo, fort of the two participating or-nor did it enhance the quality of ganizations. However, the qualitythe My Fair Lady score to have of “June Is Busting Out All Over”“On the Street Where You Live”played by an oboe.On the other hand, “OriginalSuite for Band” by Jacobs, as the one felt a rather pertinent needwas not on par with the re¬mainder of the medley. Here, aselsewhere in the performance,title suggests, was very welladapted to just such a group, and for additional male voices in theGlee club. Mary Finklo\l//WHAT'S AN INSCRIPTION IN A CAV£«KATHLEEN POTTS, GrOttO MottOCORNELL WHAT IS SKILLFUL LARCENY?mavis bolstao. Deft TheftCHICO STATI CDLLEGI WHAT IS A STUROY BOAT?martha notes. Staunch LaunchVASSARSTAND THERE . . . STICKLE! MAKE $25 WHAT IS A MIDGET PLAYBOY?cdwaro gooowin. Short SportWEST VIRGINIA U.Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word|TMr rhyming answers. Both words must havethe same number of syllables. (No draw¬ings, please!) We’ll shell out $25 for all we use—and forhundreds that never see print. So send stacks of ’emwith your name, address, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y. MILLIONAIRES: do your friendsyawn at yachts? Do they thinkdiamonds are dreary? Here’s a pres¬ent that would make even a bankerhanker: introduce him to Luckies!While you’re at it, be a sport: givehim a whole Startin* Carton! ALucky is all cigarette . . . nothingbut fine tobacco—mild, good-tast¬ing tobacco that’s TOASTED totaste even better. Invest in a car¬ton yourself. You’ll say Luckiesare the best-tasting cigarette youever smoked!Luckies Taste Better“IT’S TOASTED" TO TASTE BETTER . .'I CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!WHAT 1$ A DISH NOISE ? WHAT ARE HAY AND OATS?STANLEY PETERS.V. OP SANTA CUR* Mule Fuel WHAT'S A WORKER IN ACANDLE FACTORY IJL ■ rj, ■ idfTiPAUL HILLER.«. OP PL0RI0* WHAT IS A SMAU Pin?WILKES COLLC6SEat. Co. Product of is our middle namwiMay 3, 1957 ♦ CHICAGO MAROON • 11Culture VultureIts Springtime and a vulture turns to thoughts of comps. (Comps, for the international audience, are the reason for annualsoul-searching to students m UC's College.) From vulture, suggestions of what to do when not studying are also forthcoming.You smoke refreshedAnew idea in smoking...all-new SalemCreated by It. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co>r,t>auy.On campus . . .Folklore societyF'rinstance, you could go to thecombination square dance-wing-ding being offered tonight in IdaNoyes by UC’s largest studentorganization, the Folklore so¬ciety. The normally noisy festivi¬ties will start at 8:30, and theconfusion will be accentuated bythe presence of John Sonquist,square dance caller par excel¬lence. Due to this added attrac¬tion (and free eats), admissionwill set non-members back 30cents, members 15 cents.Tonight at 8:30January's standing - room - onlyseries of UT student productionsevidently inspired a spring stu¬dent theater weekend. May 10, 11 and 12, the Reynolds clubgarret will be the scene of fiveshort plays. Planned are Strind¬berg’s remarkable monologue"The Stronger”; “27 Wagons Fullof Cotton,” early and rugged Ten¬nessee Williams work; ‘The Lit¬tle Prince,” a presentationthrough reading, dance and mu¬sic of the charming tale of a lit¬tle golden-headed prince; ‘TheClever People,” original one-acterby UTer John Meyer; and a shortplay based on an old Norse leg¬end, "The Gallows Man” by Ru-nar Schildt. UT’s small theaterwas filled to overflowing for eachof the nine winter "Tonight at8:30” presentations and, to sayno more, tickets are available nowin UT's Reynolds club office andJohn Jacob Niles, dean of American folksingers, caressesone of three instruments he will bring to Momentum spon¬sored concert in Mandeb at the downstairs Reynolds clubdesk.Organ recitalNext Tuesday Marilyn Masonwill present a program on theRockefeller organ which will in¬clude classical and modern organnumbers, with one group by con¬temporary American composers.Tickets for the concert, beginningat 8 pm, may be obtained at theUniversity bookstore.Dot-FilmAdditional diversion Tuesdaynight for the harried student willbe provided by a special eveningof experimental films, including"The Pleasure Garden,” present¬ed by DocFilm. Two showings—at 7:15 and 9:15—will be held;admission is at-the-gate in SoeSci 122, for 40 centsNiles concertNext Saturday, May 11V Man-del hall will vibrate to the singingof John Jacob Niles, specialist inAmerican folk songs. Tickets forthe Exhibition Momentum-spon¬sored affair may be obtained atthe Reynolds club desk in ad¬vance for $1 and at the door .for$1.50—but if the response ap¬proaches that of the Gibson-Odetta triumph, you’d bettershell out beforehand. For catsReynolds club south lounge willbe the scene of another jam ses¬sion this afternoon, startingaround 3 pm. The session willfeature Charles Stepney and hiscombo, who ai'e currently fea¬tured at the Pershing Lounge onCottage Grove. Admission to thejazz club sponsored event is free.Off campus . .The CreationWalk a mile to see a presenta¬tion of Haydn’s The Creation un¬der the sponsorship of the Tem¬ple Isaiah Israel choral societythis coming Sunday. The per¬formance, which should be some¬what more than merely compe¬tent, will feature the conductingof Andrew Foldi, Lyric operabasso, and the solo performanceof Foldi, Anita Braude, PhilipSportolari, Kay Charles Graves,and Robert Lodine. Admission tothe program which begins at 8:15pm sharp in the Temple audito¬rium at 1100 E. Hyde Park, is$1.50, with student rate of $1.Y’all come, and bring ID cards.The theaterLovers of the theater will gettheir fill with the baker’s dozenor so plays currently runningaround town. Commercial high¬lights seem to be the TennesseeWilliams epic Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, playing nightly except Sun¬day at the Erlanger, and BernardShaw’s The Apple Cart, whichstarts a two-week Blackstoneshowing Monday.BalletOn the more formal side ofthings, the New York City Balletconcludes its Chicago stay thisweek with performances ofTchaikovsky’s "Nutcracker” to¬night, tomorrow, Sunday, andnext weekend. The company’sregular repertoire will be per¬formed May 7-10. Word has itthat they are outstanding; youshould attend, if just to watchMaria Tallchief.Studebaker theatreA drama llama from UC ven¬tured an opening night predic¬tion that Flow-ering Peach, whichmay be Chicago’s promising rep¬ertory theater’s next to last offer¬ing, would improve with age. It’shad its chance to do so, and whatseemed to be a superbly directedif unfinished production a fewweeks ago may have blossomedout for the final two weeks of itsrun. Clifford Odet’s story ofNoah, replete with mixture ofbiblical and Bronxish idioms, willrun till May 1G at the Michiganavenue playhouse. Student dis¬counts are available with ticketsat the student service center.FIRE & THEFT INSURANCELIFE INSURANCEPhone or Write► Joseph H. Aaron, '27 !► 135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060JMODEL CAMERAHyde Park's most completephoto and hobby shopExport modelsNSA Discount1312 E. 55th IIY 5-0259 STERN’S CAMPUS DRUGSGist A ELLIS FA 1-1 nooFor your tiininy pleasure —Gastronomic Genius, Benny Cruse,chef De Cuisine, serving:’2-lb. Tender Strip Steak, incl. grilled onions, solod bowl,french fries, roll Cr butteror T-bone Steak• menthol fresh• rich tobacco taste• most modern filter Tliink of a Spring breeze blowing over fresh, green grass and you’ll have agood idea how refreshing all-new Salem Cigarettes taste. The freshest tastein cigarettes flows through Salem’s pure white filter. Rich tobacco taste withnew surprise softness...menthol-fresh comfort. Try Salem—you’ll love ’em.Salem refreshes your taste12 • CHICAGO MARO ON • May 3, 1957 cIngenuity reigns at Beaux ArtsssMi(Above) The blushing entourage of a well-known visitorto our shores hides behind Ibn Saud. The Jordanian poten¬tate and his harem were acclaimed “most handsome group’*by illustrious Judges (below, right) Paul Douglas, portray¬ing the Senator from Illinois, Mrs. J. Harris Ward, of un¬defined regality, and Merlin, in another existence, DeanJohn P. Netherton.(above) photo by Bernlck“Care for a stroll on the beach?” is UC veep R. WendallHarrison’s question of the minute to Mrs. Harrison.photos by MoKotoffThe Blue Dean(Left) Gerry Levy andMarcia Yagoda portrayTime and Tide “waiting forno man.”, (Right) The kingand queen of hearts, RogerBernhardt and Linda Ros¬enberg smile for the birdieat Beaux Arts ball.(Left) Butch Kline seems to be dubious as to thestatus of his own head as he is confronted by the fateof John the Baptist.(Right) Mr. Ronald J. Grossbug displays Mrs. Gross-bug’s prize for the most original woman’s costume, whileshe displays their offspring 'Junior” Grossbug.* : i*|l||||||pL v*. Mf' " ftji 1 i' 1