PERMIT HOIMRS ONLYlymszKi0** *******1 at mm ipmtm mwtxvt orChicago*wWKw^» V.;'f •»'HOURSmommy rmu fKtsuKtH«8U»*YS-I/l/l cfuccvao11 laroonVol. 66, No. 6 University of Chicago, Friday, Oct. 11, 1957 31Student Health preparedfor Asian Flu on campus“The threat of Asian flu should cause no anxiety among the student body,” director ofstudent health Dr. Henrietta Horbolsheimer said. “There is no reason why the campus pop¬ulation should be affected to any greater extent than the general population.”According to student health there are no laboratory proved cases of Asian flu at thepresent time.The clinical cases of flu recently reported are now being analyzed in the laboratory fordetermination of whether thevirus is of the Asian variety.Two weeks are necessary forlaboratory analysis.Prevent fluThe only method of combatingthe flu is prevention since thereis no effective treatment once itis acquired. Student health hasset up an inoculation clinic to beheld today from 2:00 pm to 5:00pm. Dr. Herbolsheimer statedthat if necessary the staff willstay overtime inoculating all eli¬gible students. Due to the easewith which an epidemic mightsweep through a residence halland the lack of home care facili¬ties in dormitory quarters,coupled with the shortage of vac¬cine, only dormitory residentswill be inoculating at this time.Students must obtain an admit¬tance form from their dormitoryhouse head before they report to cope with a flu epidemic since 20to 50 per cent of a communitymay be affected and a hospitalnormally handles less than 1 percent at any one time. Overcrowd¬ing a hospital in times of such anepidemic only results in poortreatment and danger of cross¬infection. For this reason uncom¬plicated cases of flu could bemare effectively cared for athome.If an epidemic breaks out flucases will be cared for by a uniquevisiting nurse program. Publichealth nurses of the Chicago visit¬ing nurses association, dispatchedthrough student health will attendflu cases of off-campus students.To have a visiting nurse at home,students would first be examinedat Student health and if uncom¬plicated flu is diagnosed the stu¬dent will be sent home and as¬signed a nurse. Mrs. Jane McCon¬nell will be in charge of nursingon campus cases. return for confirmatory diagno¬sis two weeks after the originaldiagnosis. This is a necessary pre¬caution in case of a second epi¬demic and all students are askedto cooperate.Eat and sleepDr. Herbolsheimer commentedthat the cases reported through¬out the world are considered mild.There is a high fever, though, asin the regular flu. Other symp¬toms include a general fatiguedfeeling accompanied by aches inthe back and neck. The “wonderdrugs” have no effect on the fluand are only used in case of com¬plications.It was stressed by Dr. Herbol¬sheimer that the important thingin preventing the disease is notto get run down. To keep theirresistance up, students should gettheir proper food and rest. photo by Davis(above) “Fearless Fos-dick,” favorite UC campuscop is determinedly carry¬ing out his new duties asticket writer. Until this yearhe busied himself with di¬recting traffic around theone way circle and keepingthe peace on the quadran¬gles.Several signs, one ofwhich is pictured at theright, have been placed atstrategic points aroundcampus to inform drivers ofthe new regulations.Frank Lloyd Wright houseby Phillip Epstein“At least nobody is sleeping in the park,” was Mrs. RuthO. McCarn’s comment on the happy ending of the recenthectic rush for student housing. Mrs. McCarn, assistant deanof students and director of the student housing program, hasbeen working overtime to find housing near the campus forthe flood of new students who have poured into the University;in the past few weeks.The unusual difficulties were created by the demolition ofthe prefabs south of the Midway, a greater number of out-of-town students, and increased enrollment. Married couples withchildren were hardest hit by the shortage.The dean attributed her success in dealing with these diffi¬culties to letters sent to students in mid-August explainingthe problem and requesting those who could to live at homeand also to the help of various groups. Among these groupswere the Hyde Park-Kenwood community conference tenantreferral office, a student wives committee, and a UC lawcommittee.Some students are still waiting for dormitory contract can¬cellations, the dean explained, but the opening of the middlesection of the new women’s dormitory is expected to furtherrelieve this problem.end on happy notestudent health. As soon as enoughvaccine is available a clinic willbet set up for the entire studentbody. It requires one week for thevaccine to take effect and there¬fore immunization should not beput off.Fee chargedThose students who have cardi¬ac or respiratory disorders areconsidered as special risks andshould report to student healthfor inoculation.Students will be charged a nom¬inal fee to cover the cost of thevaccine.No hospital can successfully Makes two visitsThe nurse will make two visitsto the patient if necessary andreport the progress of the caseto the hospital. Transportationwill be provided for those stu¬dents requiring hospitalization.Other alternative proposals forcoping with a possible flu epi¬demic include setting up studentwards in the hospital or infirm¬aries in fraternity houses. Stu¬dent health would meet the extraexpense of home treatment pro¬grams.The dean of students office hasarranged for special diets to beset up on the dorms.Flu cases will be requested to(below) Three anonymous young inhabitants of EeroSaarinen’s dream dorm (presently known only as. “thenew dorm”) decorate it sexterior with a sign, obviouslyintended as a hint for fraternities to begin their traditionalserenading beneath dorm windows.However, the UC administration sang a different tuneand politely ordered the young ladies to remove theirartistic endeavor; an order with which they sadly complied.photo by Bernick still to be razed for dormNo change has been made, either concerning plans to tear down Robie house or plans tosave it, said A. C. McGiffert, president of CTS.The edifice, located on the northeast corner of 58th and Woodlawn, opposite the newwomen’s dorms, was built by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1908. Last February, the architecturalRecord called it one of the two most important American residences built in the last halfcentury. ——Soon afterwards, it was an- it was “as good as it ever was.” CTS is fiscally independent andnounced that CTS, which al- He offered to remodel it at a rela- the UC has no veto power,ready owns the property, would tively low cost. McGiffert and CTS have nottear it down and build a new A plan was proposed whereby been without defenders. A Ma-dormitory on the location. Accord- ZBT and Phi Delta Theta, frater- roon Gadfly last year pointed outing to CTS, Robie house was nities adjoining each other, would the essential need for marriedinadequate for such demands, and exchange their lots for the Por- CTS student housing, which isto renovate it would entail a cost house and the Robie house, now unavailable.respectively. This plan appears to Robie house emerged oncebe totally unacceptable to CTS, more in print last month, whenbecause of the greater value of The Nation printed an article crit-the two lots they now own. icizing UC and CTS, written byThe University has disavowed David Ray, editor of the Chicagoall responsibility, announcing that Review.of approximately $100,000.Crying “barbarism,” UC art stu¬dents and faculty members, plusothers from as far away as Eu¬rope, have opposed the promiseddemise of Robie house. FrankLloyd Wright came to campusover the spring interim, swunghis cane at the building, and said UC s housing woesMelania Sokol to editSRP at NSAUC Alum magazineMelania “Mel” Sokol is the new editor of the University ofChicago Magazine, Howard W. Mort, executive secretary ofthe alumni foundation has announced.Miss Sokol replaces Felicia Anthenelli who resigned and iscurrently on the west coast. 'A UC alumna, Miss Sokol Sokol. “Invariably I get a letterbegan her journalistic career in addressed ‘Mr. Mel Sokol, and I3943 as a reporter with the Chi- find myself invited to a stag partycago Journal of Commerce, a fi- (the host realized his error innancial magazine which later time and had her entertained atmerged with the Wall Street a local country club) and once aJournal. hotel accomodation was mixed upMiss Sokol received her nick- (quickly settled by some ehival-name while working for the Chi- rous newsman who gave up hiscago Journal. “It was my first single and roomed with the Suit-bylined story, which was consid- Times reporter with whom Missered a rare privilege on the pa- Sokol was supposed to ‘double ).per. The story was printed w’fh addition to her work as amy new pseudonym and the edi- financial reporter Miss Sokol wastor told me later that he did not f°r a year associate editor ofprint my full name because he Tide, an advertising magazine,was afraid no one would believe wrote an aviation column for thethat a woman knew so much Phoenix (Arizona) Gazette andabout finance. for three years edited the month-Newspaper conventions occa- ly publication of the Phoenixsionally present a problem to Miss chamber of commerce.j HARPER WINES & LIQUORS• 1114- 16 E. 55th St.. . . featuring Domcxtir and ImportedWine* at Ixncest I*rice*o Imported SpecialsBcaujolais $1.49Chateauneu F-du-Pape . . . :::■/! 1.79Chianti . Qt. .98Vin Rose . . . Vs 1.191953 French Sautemes . . ... ys 1.791953 French Graves ...Vs 1.39Creek Retsina Qt. 1.37Hakutsuru Saki . . . Vs 2.49Spanish Sherry . . . Vs 1.49Portuguese Domain Wine . . . . Vs .98German Rhine Wines .... . . . Vs 1.29Chilian Burgundy . . . Vs .98Taylor New York State Wines . ...Vs $1.59Almaden Chablais or Claret . . . Vs 1.15Marca Petri Pastoso Full Gallon 2.25 UC'er Rosenberg electededucation vice-presidentby Carl Worthmandelegate to the NSA congressLinda Rosenberg, 3rd year UC student, was elected vice-president in charge of educa¬tional affairs for the tenth Regional Students’ association convention, held at the Univer¬sity of Michigan in August.Twenty delegates from SRP, which swept the NSA elections last spring, attended thetional affairs for the tenth Regional NSA convention, held at the University of Michiganin August.Miss Rosenberg plans to —have a series of workshops, lo include those issues that effect One of the conference’s high-inviting a number of educators the student as a citizen in society, lights was in connection with do-to attend. They will discuss cor- The UC delegation, acting on segregation. Three liberal south-tain problems as they exist and that premise, prepared a 25-page ern students spoke before the as-try to set up a permanent struc- report on the effects of fall-out sembly, after which a resolutionture under which they might act and radiation hazards. The NSA was passed, asking, in effect, thatupon future ideas. decided it was within its realm to the process of integration takeBecause the body of students distribute information about these place as slowly and with as muchrepresented a complete spectrum world wide topics, but not to take deliberation as nossible.of political opinion, the basic pol- a definite stand on the issue. 41 to Moscowicy decisions on most important The argument waged over the In the matter of foreign cxissues represented some form of issue of academic freedom had change, the congress admonishedcompromise arrived at by coali- two aspects: a debate on the ques- ihe 41 students who went to Mos-tions which switched continually Ron of defining “academic free- cow and Rod China this summer,with 1 lie issue being debated. dom”; and an attempt to convert A resolution was passed, sayingPolicies clash the organization’s policy into that although the action was conThe greatest policy clash—one some positive action. sistent with NSA’s basic policy onthat was debated for ten days— On the basis of its platform, UC the value of foreign exchange,concerned the proper definition of delegation introduced the idea of they should not have violated thea student's role as a member of a regional speakers’ bureau and state department ruling.NSA. In the past ten years the a regional cultural exchange bu- On the regional level, one ofassociation’s policy has been to reau. This plan was adopted by the most important projects beingtackle only those questions that the Illinois-Wiseonsin region and worked on is a race relations con-effect “the student’s role as a stu- will possibly be established this ferenec involving schools in ihodent.” A number of people, includ- winter. Illinois-Wiseonsin district,ing the UC delegation, preferredPick new radio headAlex; Sutherland, program director of the British broadcast¬ing corporation’s (BBC) North American bureau, has beennamed UC director of educational broadcasting. The radiooffice is in charge of educational services of the University.Sutherland succeeds Ed¬ward W. Rosc-nheim, Jr., asso¬ciate professor of Humanities inthe College, who resigned to de-Fiill Line of Imported anti DomesticLiquors atid Beersj Free Delivery FA 4-1233, 1318, 7699♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ The TX •Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the week•Beethoven’s NinthBruno WalterOne 12-inch record$2.49 M. Schlamme tocome for concertgoingGoing steady is a kind of together-ness that belongs to ourgeneration say some sociologists, because we all need some se¬curity in a turbulent world.Going steady takes a more mature outlook than flitting fromflower to flower. It takes co-operation. And co-operation, be¬lieve us, is a fine thing in our personal lives or in a business.This co-operative has been going steady with University peopleand other Hyde Parkers for 24 years, learning their likes thor¬oughly so we can please them completely.CO-OP SUPER MARTMore Than a Store5535 S. Harper Plenty of Free Parking vole full time lo his teaching rosponsibilities.A native of Glasgow, Scotland.Sutherland has been with BBCsince 1938. During the World WarII he .served as BBC war cor¬respondent attached to the U.SArmy and afterwards was direc¬tor of the British forces networkin Germany.In 1947 he was named seniortelevision administrator for BBC,and the following year became$|K chief program planner of British“ ':'3 television.In his most recent assignmentas North American program di¬rector, Sutherland was in chargeof radio and television programsexchange between England andAmerica.Martha Sehlanime will appearat Mandel hall on Oct. 23, 1957,3:30 pm, at a concert sponsoredby World University Service. Get health exam‘Student health requests(hat all fall quarter en¬trants report for theirhealth examination. Thelast day for the screeningIs October 22.Students reporting afterthat dab* will be requiredto pay a three dollar latefee.Employment Opportunities...LIBBEY- OWENS - FORDGLASS COMPANYCampus Interviews on November 13Real opportunities for graduates in mathe¬matics and physics interested in careeremployment with a progressive company.608 Madison Ave. Toledo 3, Ohio2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 11, 1957Mead takes post at Ho more yending machinesTYPEWRITERS sold — rented — repairedPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARY1311 EAST 57th STREET2 IIIOf kN EAST or MANHEE HALESTORE HOURS: DAILY 8 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. . . . EVENINCS-Monday, Wednesday, Friday to 9:00 PM.Meadville tomorrow at Ida's Cloister clubpresident Sidney E. Mead of the Meadville theologicalschool will be formally inaugurated at ceremonies in Rocke- The dmster club jn Tda Noyes hall has become the regular eating place for residents offeller chapel tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 pm. The public is C-group and the new women’s dormitories this year. Formerly a dining room for com¬muters and meal-missers, the Cloister club is now pushing out these patronizers of the foodvending machines in favor of the more predictable mob of mostly girls which hikes to IdaNoyes three times daily.The vending machine days are definitely over, says Miss Evelyn KemmerJe, dietician atthe “Cloisters.” During the 'first days of orientation week vitts, assistant director of student meal during the week, visitorsthe cafeteria staff and the activities, says, “It is impossible must purchase a meal ticket fromvending machines were allowed to operate a private dining room thc name checker at the begin-to operate simultaneously during an^ vending machine situatedmeals. But due to the bottle-neck closely together, so we are having ning 01 ine line*caused by the m3.ch.in6S in thc to eliminate the vending m3* Tickets cire good only for thcfood lines and to some instances chines. We are in the process of specific meal for which they werewhere students who had not paid negotiation to see if we can have purchased. A breakfast ticket hasfor cafeteria meals wore getting a few machines placed elsewhere a standing price of 75 cents,into the food lines on the pretext *n the building.’’ Student activi- Lunch tickets cost one dollar,of going to the vending machines, ties arranged to have the .vending Supper visitors on any otherthe machines were disconnected, machines installed originally. night than Saturday will payThis, plus the extra cleaning the The Cloister club policy with $1.75 for a meal ticket. Ticketskitchen staff had to do, is making regard to visitors to the cafeteria may also be purchased in advanceof Meadville it necessary for the machines to "" ~invited.Speakers will include theReverend Jerald C. Brauer,dean of the Federated theologicalfaculty of the University, the Rev¬erend Frederick M. Eliot, presi¬dent. American Unitarian associa¬tion. and other leading Unitarians.Meadville, according to Mead,has for its 113 years striven notto circumscribe the thinking ofministerial students by narrowcreeds, but has encouraged themto inquire freely.Mead, who holds a doctoratefrom the University, has been amember of the FI F since it was ing as presidentformed in 1943, and lias been act- since October 195G.Sidney E. Meadbe taken out. Mrs. Marjorie Ra-Maroon joins news pool;exchanges with 9 papersA “Big Ten news service” of which the Maroon will be a member has been establishedfor the exchange of news, information and feature stories among the midwest schools.The news service will fill the need felt for some time among some midwest college papersfor increased communication, both for news of immediate importance and for backgroundinformation.The idea, which materialized at the Big Ten editors’ conference at the University ofWisconsin this summer, has will remain flexible enough to from either Miss Kennerle or Mrs.allow anyone to eat there at any Mary Wallace the other Cloistertime. club dietician.The cafeteria will be open to the Exchange dinners with otherpublic for Saturday supper on an dining rooms on the campus musta la carte basis. For any other be planned a few days in advance.the clearing house for the newsservice.The type stories that will bethis servicemany advantages over the oldsystem of exchange papers.Tliose advantages lie mostly in circulated throughthe speed with which news can be aresent to the member schools, and «in the fact that only the impor- all campuses; such as the expul-tant articles are sent. With the sion by national Sigma Kappa ofexchange paper system news had two chapters which had pledgedto be culled from many papers, Negroes, or academic freedomand with considerable delay. a n d university-legislature rela-The Michigan Daily is acting as tions. • Those affecting freedom ofthe college press: there were in¬cidents this year at Iowa, Kansas,and Stanford seriously affectingThose with repercussions on the status of free college jour¬nalism.• Major local events.• Feature stories on commonproblems.• Common journalistic prob¬lems, a “shop talk.” It’s Smart To Buy For LessIvy All Wool Flannel Pants $ 7.95Ivy Corduroy Pants 4.95Ivy Shirts 2.95Imported Lambs Wool Crew Necks. . . . 5.95Ivy Corduroy Sport Coats 13.00Our Prices Can't Be Beat . . . It's Smart To Buy For LessD & C Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd SI. MI 3-2728“l»» the Neighborhood tor 10 Years'*Hours: 9 o.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 a.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdayWOODWORTH’SROOKSTORENEW TEXT BOOKS USEDCLASS ROOM SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS - NOTE BOOKS - STATIONERY - LAUNDRY CASESBRIEF CASES - SPORTING GOODSmeditorial~Y\\ c^ca^°I i laroonEditor-in-chiefGary MokotoffManaging editorRobert J. Halasz Associate editorRochelle M. DubnowGadfly editorRoger A. BernhartPhoto editorNiles Bernick News editorMary FinkleCalendar editorJeanne Herrick Copy editorJean KwonCartoonsDick Montgomery Letters toAttacks NAACP letterNegro plight not UCs faultNo, the unusually large number of policemen in the UCarea last week were not around to enforce integration oncampus. This University has no such problem.We share the common plight of many urban educationalinstitutions: a high crime rate. Founded in 1892, when theHyde Park area was the residence of such midwest million¬aire families as the Swifts and the Armours, the vicinity hasdeteriorated into partial slums.~ To avoid any trouble, the best thing to do is keep off thestreets at night. But if you refuse to give up your eveningconstitutional, walk on well-lit streets or better yet, walk ina group. It’s safer.Issued every Friday throughout the school year and intermittently daring thesummer quarter, by the .publisher, the Chicago Maroon, 1212 East 59 Street, Chi¬cago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial office, Midway 3-MOO, 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.Contributors: Cloire Bimbaum, Ina Brody, Joy Burbach, Leslie Cooper, DonnaDavis, Phil Epstein, Jane Forer, Liza Flannery, John Herzog, John Lamb,Ruth Loosemore, G. Moss, Nancy Penkava, Dick Purtill, Brenda Spatt, CarlWerthmanBusiness ManagerLawrence D. KesslerAdvertising managerPhyllis Ritzenberg Office managerArt Taitel The campus chapter of NAACPis clearly as completely halluci¬nated regarding the University’sproper concerns and functions asis its parent organization. It hasbeen far more thoroughly affect¬ed by the fluent propaganda bul¬letins of its parent organizationthan by the rigorous training incompetent thinking that the Uni¬versity generally provides.One wonders how the authorsof the letter on the University andsegregation got past the admis¬sions office and how they man¬aged to remain, wherever theyare, after that achievement.The letter essentially and pa¬thetically assumes that the Uni¬versity has a prime responsibilityto increase the number of Ne¬groes in and around the Univer¬sity whatever the cost of so heroican attainment may be to its exist¬ence and basic functions. It fur¬ther assumes that the Universityis obligated to use its limited re¬sources to achieve for the massesof Negroes what they have failedin a century to attain by theirown efforts, i.e. a successful tran¬sition to the middle class.Having made these assumptionsthe writers accuse the Universityof failing to achieve these goalsand demand a public explanationfrom the University for the fail¬ure. Letters to the Maroon havenow reached a grievous high insad logic. This writer who is nowin the process of founding an as¬sociation for the advancement of the University cheerfully sug¬gests:• That the University’s legiti¬mate functions do not include de¬velopment of an integrated com¬munity in\the area in which itexists. It needs but to assume forits students, faculty, staff andemployees a safe, secure, com¬fortable community in which tolive, study and work.• That the University has nodemonstrable responsibility to in¬crease the proportion of Negroesamong its students, faculty andstaff members. It need but exer¬cise its utmost efforts to assurean adequate supply of personnelof the highest available ability,training and competence.• That the NAACP is hammer¬ing on the doors of the Universityto do for the masses of Negroeswhat the Negro has failed to doin the past century—make a suc¬cessful transition to the middleclass. And this is a transition thatscores of immigrant groups havebrilliantly made in mere decadesbefore our very eyes.• That the lower class Negro inand adjacent to Hyde Park hasbeen a prime cause in the de¬terioration of the community inthe past decade and a seriousthreat to the University by thehazards in reduced security andincreased social deterioration hehas brought with him.It would be well for the Negroleaders and the NAACP amongthem to use a respectable portionof their limited energies and re¬sources to assist the Negro tomake the necessary, expectedgrowth that is the price of extra-legal equality.To repeatedly play the franticrole of "J’accuse” and finger pointing is a tiring and unbecom¬ing spectacle. Let the Universitybe! Join the SEEC and make HydePark safe for the middle classes!Any hue of the spectrum!M.B.(Editor’s note: In addition tothe above charges, the letter writ-ten by NAACP In last week’sissue had errors of fact; specifi¬cally regarding admission’s officepolicy.The University does not requirea photograph with each applica¬tion. Undergraduate applicationsdo not even have a place to affixa picture. Graduate applicationsstate “an accepted applicant willbe asked to submit a photographfor identification purposes. Thismay be sent at once If you wish."Many applicants do not send in aphoto with their applications, re¬gardless of their race.Once an undergraduate is ad¬mitted to the University, he issent a supplementary sheet to fillout. At this point he must .send ina photograph. Graduate studentssimilarly must send In a photoafter they have been admitted.)Ode to NAACPLet's heil the NAACP!They'll make race color out¬rank ability! -Let the chancellor, deans, andbursarSearch their geneological treeTo find African ancestralrightsTo remain at old UC!J.M.D.Present college D Fa product of uncertaintyTHE COLLEGE of the University ofChicago was, in the days of Robert M.Hutchins, something really unique: anacademic institution designed by a singlemind for a single purpose, unified,autonomous, and complete. Whatever itsfaults, it was, at leakt, the expression ofserious thought about what a collegeshould be, an attempt to turn a coherentideal into actuality.What was this ideal? And how doesIt compare with the policies governingthe current attempts to college reform?The Old-New College was intended asa community of undergraduates whichwould develop the intellects of its mem¬bers. It was not supposed to operate onthe graduate level, or provide the ma¬ture mind with assistance in independentinvestigation.THE WHOLE POINT of the collegewas that it offered the intellect oppor¬tunities to mature; therefore it took itsstudents very young. It was, in fact, whata secondary school should be, and neverhas been. The early entrant program wastherefore an integral part of the system,and, had it been practical to do so, itwould have been best to accept studentsat this level only. in ideas; in truth, it dealt in those essen¬tial ideas which are the real subject mat¬ter of every intellectual study: the good,the true, and the beautiful. The designersof the college approached their task withan intellectual prejudice with a long andhonorable history: that the intellect isone, and that the best training for onekind of intellectual endeavor is trainingfor all; that each branch of study shouldbe intelligible to those whose talents maylie in quite a different direction.ANY ALTERATION which destroyedthe unity and uniformity of the collegeprogram threatened its most importantpurpose; the complete development ofthe intellect.Lastly, the college made clear what itintended to do, and how it intended todo it. It even invented a course, OMP, toexpress the college idea, and draw to¬gether the threads of the whole fouryears. Hutchins always made his ideasplain, both the ideal he hoped to realize,and the reasons for which he was forced,as he often was, to compromise withactuality. It was his honesty and claritywhich made him necessary even to hisenemies. isfies no one. University policy is devotedto the externals of education, and notto its reality.The divisions want immediate con¬trol of the undergraduates, so that theycan be set to learning the skills of theirtrade, without ever considering its mean¬ing. The administration is dedicated tothe reconstruction" of the Universityneighborhood, careless of the Universityit neighbors.They devote themselves to collectingmoney, without a thought as to what themoney is to be spent on, and why. Build¬ings rise, standards fall. The college isto develop the well-rounded personality;that is to say, the uninteresting and un¬interested middle-class man. Hutchinssought to lead his society, as far as itwould support him; now we franticallyscramble for support, while offeringnothing to be supported. Our adjustmentof product to demand would disgracea commercial television network.THE PRESENT CONCEPT IS, if wecan make the University a paying propo¬sition, we will have a successful educa¬tional institution.Nowhere is the contrast between thepresent and the past more evident thanin the realm of truth. Where Hutchinsoffended some by speaking out boldly,now we dismay all by continuous double-talk and hedging. The administrationhas one line for the students, anotherfor the faculty, and a third for thealumni.The administration fires teachers for opposing their views and then proteststhat their hearts are broken by the factthat there simply are not enough con¬tracts to go around. They are full ofpraise for the wonders of an inter-racialcommunity, and systematically work toget the Negroes out of Hyde Park.The scalpers will be shouting aroundStagg field before they admit that theyare committed to a policy of commercial¬ized athletics; the Maroon will be an allsocial-news journal before they admitthe anti-intellectual policy of the admis¬sions office. They have a passion forhalf-measures; de-emphasis is substi¬tuted for abolition, and adjustment forreform.For the truth is that they are very sen¬sitive persons; they hope that by beingall things to all men they will offendno one. Perhaps they lack courage; per¬haps they are too kind-hearted to riskill-feeling; more likely they themselvesare unsure of their own policies, uncer¬tain where they are leading the Univer¬sity.PERHAPS MY REMARKS are unjust,perhaps I have misjudged our presentleaders. If so, and I heartily hope it is so,let them speak out, let them describe thekind of college they hope to produce andthe way they hope to get there. And letus have no more cliches, no more catch¬words and no more double-talk. Theundergraduate schools of America mustproduce the leaders of the future, andonly leadership can create leadership,only clarity of plan can produce excel¬lence of resultSecondly, since the college was in¬tended to develop the intellect, it taughtonly philosophy: the philosophy of sci¬ence, of mathematics, of the social sci¬ences and the humanities. College stu¬dents were not supposed to learn, but toacquire the mature capacity of learning.The college did not deal in facts, but BUT THE COLLEGE TODAY is aproduct of hesitation, confusion, andcompromise; the principles governingits continuing revision have nothing todo with education. The current adminis¬tration is weak, and the various factionshave been left to fight it out among them¬selves and produce a solution which sat¬4 • CHICAGO MAROOH • Oct. 11, 1957I.yilcrs to GadflyAsks for apologyWc address the readers rather than the author of Gadfly because w* have long felt thathe really couldn’t be the kind of individual who would respond to any *ort of analysis ofhis published views.His approach to the subject matter of his column, which appears weekly in the Maroon,is old stuff. He is, professionally, a nasty guy. Nasty guys make interesting reading. Thereare a dozen syndicated columnists who make use of the same psychology in order to sellnewspapers to unhappy people Gadfly policyGadfly is an attempt on the part of Maroon to provideprovocative ideas to the campus at large. Students andfaculty are earnestly invited to contribute to this column.Articles will be printed unsigned, and the author's namewill be held in strictest confidence by the editor.The Gadfly does not necessarily represent the editorialpolicy of the Maroon, or its staff.Readers are invited to express their views on Gadflyarticles in the "Letters to Gadfly" column.Send articles to Gadfly, Maroon office, Ida Noyes hall.who don’t dare to yell back atthe boss.No one really accepts the dis¬torted picture of life which is pre¬sented by one who gripes for aliving, but it is sometimes com¬forting to listen to someone elsesay disparaging things about thesources of our daily fears. The pit-fall of taking refuge under thewing of someone who slandersthose things which arc not wellknown to us, and which are there¬fore a little frightening, is thatwc then may cease to inquire asto the cause of our trepidation,and may never become unafraid.Being afraid is no fun.When we old students came totlie University, we were youngand scared, and the word intel¬lectual seemed to*«pply to a myth¬ical kind of upperclassman witha head as big as a beer barrel. Wehad a notion that we would sortof coexist with these mental hor¬rors for a few years, and if welasted long enough without beingfound out, collect our degrees andsneak off. The thought that wemight bo intellectuals nevercrossed our minds, so over¬whelmed were we by the usualpropaganda.No one was able to convince us,though some must have tried, thatan intellectual is simply one whohas acquired the habit of think¬ing about things big and little. Wehad then not the least idea thatthe intellectual process is the sim¬ple act of wondering. We were not then aware that what is per¬haps the purest intellectual workis that displayed by a child whois asking, “Why?”Webster (Noah) doesn’t specifythe subject about which an intel¬lectual must think in order toqualify as one. or the kind of lifehe must lead, or how he mustlook. He probably looks like you.Just as intellectualism is anattitude, so is non-intellectualism.The position taken by Gadfly isnot the only non-intellectual one,but it is among the most disgust¬ing of them. Well, a little of ourrevulsion seems to have slippedinto the text. So be it.It is, after all, a sickening andsaddening thing to see this par¬ticular kind of misrepresentationappear before the students, newand old, in a University publica¬tion. The picture presented in thearticle under discussion was morethan just erroneous. It was, andwas intended to be, such a grossdistortion that to attack it on thebasis of its assertions would befolly. There is no reasonable an¬swer to an inferential accusationwhen damnation is in the accus¬er’s tone rather than his words orreasoning.The author had nothing to sayabout Intellectualism. lie merelywanted to be sneering and snideand knowing, and he wanted anaudience. His motive was not toinform or discuss. He wanted towrinkle his nose and smear some¬thing . . . anything. We don’twas nolonger the time of Aristotle;it was the dawn of the day of thetwo new Schwartzes, Alaric andPertinax Schwartz.The Aristotles were not mili¬tant: they didn’t have to be. Theintellectual empire of Hutchinshad established a sort of PaxRomana. . . . But the empirefaded, little by little, and tlie bar¬barians came down. AristotleSchwartz left the College andPertinax took his place, lookingbackward to the tarnished gloriesand trying to raise an army some¬where. Alas, the legions werebrought to strength by recruitingbarbarians. Barbarians with somecontact with civilization, but onlyenough to acquire its vices: super¬stition replacing philosophy, dog-nudism replacing logic. Finally,Pertinax was murdered by hisown palace guard, who then pro¬ceeded to put the empire up forauction. It has been purchased....• . . Small wonder then, thatPertinax, with all his faults andlimitations, looked back with re-8>et to that vanished Reign ofSaturn. But you, too, “Franc- Ti- Galileo Schwartz?lvur”; Alaric Schwartz, look backul>on the ruins of the Forum and(lie Agora. Surrounded by thetumbled marble of the hilltopl ines, the cypress’d heights about Eugene Rivard de la Glanderie(dit DuFresne de la Ciseray)Ph.B. (Coll.) Dec. 1946S.M. (Chem.) June 1967National Science FoundationFellow, 1957-58 know why he chose intellectual¬ism, but we regard the choice asan unfortunate one.To ask the new students to heedhis irresponsible onslaught was acruel thing, for by the request heinvited them to share with him atreacherous and cringing attitude.He asked them to fear and dis¬trust a word, and by the sametoken to restrain themselves fromunderstanding and finding pleas¬ure in its meaning.The article, in our eyes, was adisservice to the University com¬munity, and to its newest mem¬bers in particular.We should be happy to receivesuitable apology from those mem¬bers of the Maroon staff respon¬sible for its publication. We wouldbe overjoyed to note the emerg¬ence of an editorial policy which,in the future, would prevent sim¬ilar material from sneaking pastthe copyrcadcrs.Denis FranklinIrwin KostalSays Aristotlewere not militant“Franc-Tireur,” your mistakes follow from your beingan old fogy too. The trouble is you are not old enough a fogyto know the history of the Schwartz family of which youlikewise are a member. When did you enter, in the first quar¬ter of 1950? Thatyou dark in the Twilight of theGods, you regret and envy thatGreater Greece your hordes havelooted, and which will yet surviveyou. It is plain with every wordyou write that envy is your mo¬tive, that it is despair that excitesyour spleen.Aristotle is gone, or has re¬turned to work for a higher de¬gree, but Pertinax is dead. Poorfellow, there is no use now instabbing lxis corpse, the blood nolonger flows. And stabbing himwill not make you any less a bar¬barian, Alaric Schwartz.For the Renaissance is coming.Alaric! You will be, and you knowthat you’ll be (for that is implicitin your little contribution to thebody of scientific literature), for¬gotten in a few years, as dead anissue as Joe McCarthy. Did yougo down on Saturday, Alaric, andlook at the new crowd, your audi¬ence? Did you see them, bright¬eyed and bushy-tailed, absorbingeverything within range of theirnew telescopes? Do you think asI do, Alaric, that this might be Aristotle Schwartz Aristotle historyexplained by GM"Aristotle Schwartz" was born in the pages of the Maroon's1955 gag issue whose headline read "Last Queer Kid LeavesCampus."According to the issue Aristotle "was escorted by threecampus policemen ... to the corner of 57th and Woodlawnand pointed northwest. He was given a CTA token and a warn¬ing never to return to campus again."The issue added that "his formal expulsion was delayeduntil this week because, since he lived off-campus, registeredfor "R's," and never attended classes, he could not be found,Since then, the idea of Aristotle Schwartz has come to rep¬resent a particular type of UC intellectual; namely, one whois so steeped in attempting to find the Truth, that he is obliviousof his surroundings.As Aristotle is a stereotype, it is doubtful that such a personreally exists on campus. Instead our campus hero is a combina¬tion of all the social traits found in UCers which are noncon¬formist.Gary MokotoffFranc-Tireur explains selfsays Joe College not idealI do not wish at this time to attack my attackers.I am more irritated by those who came up to me after thepublication of the article and congratulated me for "blastingthose queer intellectuals.” Because I mocked AristotleSchwartz, Joe College sudden¬ly thought that I had comeinto his camp.Silly people. Do you think thatbecause I find fault with some ofthe habits of the intellectual Imust now join your childishranks? I never meant to justifyyour inane way of life.Aristotle had many bad habits.But this does not make him worsethan the new Joe College whocomes here to set up cheerleadingclasses, pound big drums, makeout with new girls, and playbridge every night.When girls, with their boy¬friends’ fraternity pins displayed prominently on their snug cash-mere sweaters, tell me how de¬lighted they are with the articleI am frightened. Let them go backto their fraternity houses —underthe circumstance I would stickwith Aristotle Schwartz.Aristotle’s flaw was that hetook too seriously the externaltrappings of intellectualism andliberalism. To redeem himself heneed not fly to the camp of theanti-intellectuals and anti-liberals.He need only start thinking onhis own.Franc-TireurThought Gadfly spoke of him,re-read and saw differencesIt was quite a scare I got, the first time I read Franc-Tireur’s witty and biting indict¬ment of Aristotle Schwartz. It took only a little cerebration on the part of my highly ab¬stract intellect to realize that Aristotle Schwartz was not a real person, but rather a clever,satirical concealment of a type of person who has degraded the University we all love tothe status of an eggheaded, scholarly institution these many years. And I was almost cer¬tain that Franc-Tireur was referring to me.On a little reflection, how- ~ —(more letters on page 6) ever, it was evident that Iescaped the gdilt appertainingto such an appellation; albeit by avery narrow margin. For I cameto the University not in nineteenforty-something, but in the fall of1950, and it was after throe, ratherthan two, years of high school.Moreover, although it is true thatI am only a dissertation’s distanceaway from my PhD, I was ableto sneak into the Registrar’s of¬fice one dark night about a yearago and expunge the incriminat¬ing C’s from my transcript. Sincethen, fortunately, I have not tak¬en many courses, since I spendmost of my time wallowing ingrease and dirt in my sloppyclothes (I impress my arty friendsby dabbling in experimentalphysics).Although I hold to the damningdoctrine (much against my betternature, of course) that Hutchinswas an inspiring educator (andmy acquaintance with him, al¬though slight, perhaps qualifiesme to make statements in the matter) my odd-ball religious be¬liefs do not permit me to thinkthat he himself was divinely in¬spired. In my less prejudiced mo¬ments, I have even caught myselfexpressing doubt as to the wis¬dom of some parts of his policies.I can also state with relief thatI do not play the guitar (my fin¬gers are too tender) and that Ihave never been especially fondof folk songs. I do admit, how¬ever, to conducting a group offellow-intellectuals in the singingof esoteric Elizabethan and mod¬ern madrigals, and I have beenknown tc listen to and enjoy theworks of Bach.I was not at all fazed by Franc-Tireur’s reference to fraternities.It is true that for a long time Iheld out, preferring the squalorof Burton-Judson to the squalorof a frat house, but in a momentof weakness I was rushed by andsuccumbed to Phi Beta Kappa.On the other hand, I pleadguilty to never having played foot¬ball. Perhaps Franc-Tireur will be mollified when he learns that Iwas obliged to play soccer forsome time in the physical “edu¬cation” class which was requiredof entering students even in thequeer days gone by. In any case,I sympathize fully with his desireto play a game requiring moremuscle than most, if less brainsthan some. I wonder, though, ifon the day of a football gameFranc-Tireur is more likely to befound with the minority on thefield or with the less healthy ma¬jority in the stands.There will be peace in my heartas I walk barefooted across thecarpet on the dining room floorto my sparse kitchen for a bed¬time snack tonight. I will lookreassuredly at the wooden book¬case in the living room and saygoodnight to my three roommatesbefore slipping off to sleep withonly a slight regret for the lackof French Impressionist prints onthe walls. For I know, and theworld knows, that I am not anAristotle Schwartz.VVijsgeerOct. 11, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Gadfly letters continuedSay ... did you hear«..We have a baby brother now. He was bom just this monthand his name is She "Staff Credit Union," of the Universityof Chicago. He's not very big yet, but he'll grow . • . justlike us. He's not old enough to take students but youshould see him eat Faculty. You can't tee him now. Hesleeps most of the day — only open an hour or two, butcome on over and meet the rest of the family.HYDE PARK CO-OPFederal Credit Union5535 S. Harper DO 3 -1113On Campos withMax Shuman(Author of “Barefoot Boy With Cheek,” etc.)FOOTBALL THROUGH THE AGESThe football frenzy is upon us. But let us in the midstof this pandemonium call time. Let us pause for a momentof tranquil reflection. What is this great American gamecalled football? What is its history? Its origins?id at moment of fawn 'll itellecftOttFirst of all, to call football an American game is some¬what misleading. True, the game is now played almostexclusively in America, but it comes to us from a landfar away and a civilization long dead.Football was first played in ancient Rome. Introducedby Julius Caesar, it became one of the most popularRoman sports by the time of Nero’s reign. The eminenthistorian, Sigafoos, reports a crowd of MMCLDDXVIIIpeople at the Colosseum one Saturday afternoon to seethe Christians play the Lions.w ith the decline of the Roman empire, football fellInto disuse. The barbaric Huns and Visigoths preferredcanasta. Not until the fifteenth century A. D. did foot¬ball emerge from its twilight and rise to its rightful placein the firmament of European sports.Which brings us to September 29, 1442, a date dear tothe hearts of all football fans. It was on this date, accord¬ing to the eminent historian Sigafoos, that a sixteen-year-old lad named Christopher Columbus tried out for thefootball team at Genoa Tech. He failed to make the teambecause he was too light. (He weighed at the time onlytwelve pounds.)And why, you ask, is this date—September 29, 1442—bo dear to the hearts of all football fans? Because youngColumbus was so heartbroken at not making the teamthat he ran away to sea. And if that hadn’t happened,he never would have discovered America. And if Columbushadn’t discovered America, the world would never havediscovered tobacco. And if the world hadn’t discoveredtobacco, football fans never would have discoveredMarlboro—which, as every fan knows, is the perfect com¬panion to football. And why shouldn’t it be? Look whatMarlboro’s got... Filter ... Flavor ... Flip-top Box ...You can’t buy a better smoke. You can’t smoke a betterbuy.The end of football in Europe came with the notorious"Black Sox Scandal” of 1587, in which Ed Machiavelli,one of the Pisa mob, paid off the University of HeidelbergBabres to throw the championship game to the ChartresA. and M. Gophers. It was a mortal blow to football onthe continent.But the game took hold in the American colonies andthrived as it had never thrived before. Which brings usto another date that remains evergreen in the hearts offootball lovers: December 16, 1773.On that date a British packet loaded with tea sailedinto Boston harbor. The colonies had long been smartingunder the English king’s tax on tea. "Taxation withoutrepresentation,” they called it, and feelings ran high.When on December 16, 1773, the British ship dockedat Boston, a semi-pro football team called the NonpareilTigers, coached by Samuel (Swifty) Adams, was scrim¬maging near the harbor. "Come, lads,” cried Swifty, see¬ing the ship. "Let’s dump the tea in the ocean!”With many a laugh and cheer the Nonpareil Tigersfollowed Swifty aboard and proceeded to dump thecargo overboard in a wild, disorganized and abandonedmanner. "Here now!” called Swifty sharply. "That’s noway to dump tea overboard. Let’s get into some kindof formation.”And that, fans, is how the tea formation was born.© Max Shulman, 1967Double your pleasure at next Saturday's game by takingalong plenty of Marlboros, whose makers bring you thiscolumn throughout the school year.* •, CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 11, 1957 Claims Aristole not anodd, freakish hangoverFranc-Tireur has proven himself an astute observer of the surface foibles of AristotleSchwartz, but clearly he does not know Aristotle very well, for it is plain that he considersAristotle Schwartz an oddity, a freakish hangover from a self-deluded, incomprehensiblepast. It is hoped that this column may impart some idea of just what Aristotle Schwartz wasand is striving to become.In the late forties, the U of C was terribly exciting to an entering student. The campustempo was set by the World “ — —War II veterans, and there It is perfectly true that Aris- the world of Aristotle Schwartz,was a universal conviction totle Schwartz was not usually an COuples frequently share bed andthat in a world which had just outstanding student, in terms of board without benefit of clemerged from a frightful blood- grades. In part, this may be at- .bath only to casually contemplate tributed to the fact that he differs ,n olationships that range froma repeat performance of stupend- from his fellow-men not in intelli- permanent, altar - bound “lightous proportions, it was manda- gence so much as in attitude. Fur- housekeeping’’ to furtive one-tory that a young person strive thermore, he usually considered nighf-stands. And it is true lhatto become something other than a good bull-session (preferably . , { nni .what his elders had been. Just atter 2 a m.) far superior in cdu- actual Promiscuity while not bywhat this something would be was cational value to a good class, and anY means condoned, is not suf-unclear (and could be anything was skeptical of the assertion that ficient grounds for expulsionfrom an avant-garde painter to the College reading list was the from what passes for “polite”a Communist), but it was con- sine qua non of a libcial educa- society in the Schwartz-wo rid Tintsidered patently obvious that the tion. Accordingly, Aristotle . . *older generation had bungled, Schwartz learned spottily and . ^ #and their example was dismissed, spasmodically. In the absence of and similar reprehensible prac-albeit cavalierly. grades as a trustworthy index of tices are no way to earn the. . . Above all, he was expected intellectual achievement, glibness friendship of Aristotle Schwartzto have his own idea of what he was taken as good a guide as any, Just once indiscreetly boast ofwanted out of an education. Blind and as a result Mr. Schwartz*fre- “connuests ” and vonadherence to Hutchins' education- quontly displayed a cocky obnoxi- ,i d vourse,f 1M.r ' !al philosophy was not for Aris- ous. know-it-all attitude. But gen- ,he Sd.waT,^z eventotle Schwartz. Though he un- crally, his fellow Schwartzes were ,h „ his |j, l{riend dotjs liveequivocally and vociferously rele- eager and quite able to take him ^bere jOQgated all other universities to the down a peg, so he eventuallycategory of “Super-kindergar- either became livable with or lefttens,” the only Hutchins state- Chicago.ment that met with anything like Aristotle Schwartz’s morals areuniversal approval was the one frequently called into question, 'w-ast in his rniddliTtwen.to the effect that Chicago was and the shopworn bogey of “free [e *“• • - not a good university, simply love" has been dragged into the lialvll„ ^ lliethe best there is.” game by Franc-Tireur. True, in ... Yes, Aristotle Schwartz liveson in his dingy apartment, callingit home. (Surely, having enteredhere in the late forties and nowfy/ie ejdlium PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433* 1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico111 (formerly Como's) •111 Featuring Our Hors d'oeuvres Table111 Complete Italian-American Restaurant11 Free Delivery to U.C. Students11 ON ALL PIZZA11 SMALL11 CHEESE . .1.1511 SAUSAGE . .1.4511 ANCHOVY . .1.4511 PEPPER and ONION. . . . . .1.3011 SHRIMP .. .1.70111 COMBINATION . . .1.75111 SPECIAL!111 Vi Fried Chicken 1.25111 Limited1111 INTRODUCTORY OFFERwith this coupon9 CC OFF ONALL PIZZA hardly be expected to send hisunderwear back to Emporia, Kan.,for mama to launder.) And (lieU of C being what it is, despiteKimplon, football, new degreeprograms, and all, there will bemany Aristotle Schwartzesaround for many years to come.Though it is no longer his univer¬sity, he still believes it to be “. . .not a good university, simply (liebest there is.”Democritus SchwartzCampus Superette1323 E. 57th Ml 3-7919BAKERY ADELICATESSENFree DeliveryLike to rough it on a weekend?HILDACRESFOX RIVER RESORTis the place for ALL singles andcouples who love the country.Open year-round.Write Bill Hardin107 W Van Bnren (5).CRACKS IN YOUR WALL?NO PICTURE WINDOW?Our Portfolio Print Sale* Solves Your Problem!TREMENDOUS VALUES $1.00 to $3.98Beoutiful Wotercolors, French Impressionists, Oriental Prints. Landscapes to Decorote Your HoornHere are some of the values —At $1.00: Hokusai; Oriental Landscapes; Itolian Scenes; Early American Colleges; Greek Pottery PrintsAt $1.98. Romantic Jopan; Degos Ballet Scenes; Gosser Harbor ScenesAt $2.98: Von Gogh Masterpieces; Six Medieval Illuminations; Lautrec Posters; Japanese FiguresAND MANY, MANY OTHERS!UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avc.If the bug bites ...Today is the day for dormitory residents to be inoculatedagainst the Asian flu at Student health. Those students whoreceived shots during orientation week should also appeartoday for their second shot. Student health is well preparedfor a possible epidemic with the inoculation, home nursing,and emergency ward programs.Cooperating with Student health are the Dean of stu¬dents office and the Chicago visiting nurses association.New lab for ManiacNicholas C. Metropolis, newly-appointed director of theUniversity’s computer laboratory and professor in both thedepartment of physics and the Enrico Fermi institute fornuclear studies, has designed an advanced high-speed digitalcomputer (electronic brain)for scientific research. plex instrument is now beingMANIAC III, as it is called, blueprinted. It will be located on(Mathematical Analyzer, Numeri- Ave. between 56th and 57thstreets.< a I Iniegiator and Computet » has wj|j require approximatelytwo predecessors, both at the Los two years to construct MANIACAlamos, New Mexico, scientific tTTlaboratories, w h e r e Metropolis The new brain is capable of add-supervised their development and ing, subtracting, multiplying ordividing large numbers directlyin thousands of a second.construction.A building to house the com-WOODLAWN BAPTIST CHURCH6207 South University Ml 3-0123Rev. H*uk;>tan E. Price, PastorSunday: Worship services 11:00 - 7:00 p.m.Baptist Youth Fellowship 6:00 p.m.Older Youth Fellowship 8:00 p.m.Wednesday evening Prayer and Bible Study 7:30 p.m.Wide open opportunity for university students to serve. For further in¬formation, call the churoh office, MI 3-0123.An International and Interracial ChurchSRP presentsPete Seeger• Sunday, October 13, 8:30Sun. reserve seats sold out.• Monday, October 14, 8:30Sorry, Saturday performance sold out☆MANDEL HALL57th fir Universityheneral Admission, $1 Reserved Seals SI.50Different Converts Each Evening☆Due to Large Demand:Pete Seeger will give an additional conceit onMonday, October 14, 8:30 p.m. Graduate school admission testinformation available to studentsThe Educational testing service lias announced three tests for undergraduates anticipat¬ing entering a graduate school next year. These tests include the Law school admissionstest, the Admission test for graduate business study, and the Graduate record examina¬tions.Information and application blanks may be obtained by writing to the Educational Test¬ing Service, 20 Nassau street, Princeton, New Jersey. A completed application for any testmust reach the ETS at leasttwo weeks before the date of isfaction of admission require- and Jan. 18, April 26, and July 12if«i admini«trntirkn ^inppmanv ments at UC and other graduate in 1958. This test is designed totsadmmistiation. Since many schools that prescribed it. The partially fulfill admission require-exam is not designed to test spe- ments of the various graduategraduate schools select their en¬tering classes in the spring pre¬ceding their entrance, and can¬didates for admission into classesfor next year are advised by ETSto take the exams for the schoolof their choice as early as pos¬sible.The Law School AdmissionsTest will be administered at UCand more than one hundred othercenters throughout the countryon the mornings of Nov. 9 andnext year on Feb. 15, April 19, andAug. 2. The UC Law school re¬quires this test for entrance ofall those who have not previosulyattended a law school.The exam features objectivequestions measuring verbal apti¬tudes and reasoning ability ratherthan acquired information.The Admission test for gradu¬ate business study will be admin¬istered on Nov. 2, Feb. 6, April 19,and July 26. Last year many stu¬dents took this test in partial sat- eific knowledge in specialized aca¬demic subjects, and normal un¬dergraduate training should pro¬vide sufficient general knowledgeto answer the questionsThe Graduate record examina¬tions will be administered at na- schools that prescribe it. TheGRE tests including a test of gen¬eral scholastic ability and ad¬vance level tests of achievementin sixteen different fields. Accord¬ing to the ETS candidates arepermitted to take the aptitude testtionwide centers on Nov. 16, 1957 and/or one of the advanced tests.For your pleasure, for your enjoyment . . .Reynolds Club Billiard RoomSnooker - Billiards -Open 9 a.m. - JO p.m. Pooltoadies in riled5 pizzas forprice of 4NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063 STERN’S CAI61st lBest Food . . . Visit Our New CHollywood Salad Bowl /IPUS DRUGSr Ellisallege Room . . . Lowest PricesStern's Special SteakFresh Garden Greens, Tomato,Hard Cooked Egg, Julienne Stripsof Ham, Chicken, Cheese . . $1.00 withGrilled Onions, Large Salad Bowl,French Fries, Roll & Butter. $1.00(Advertisement) (Advertisement)Red Door Still StandsAssaults include mechanized unitsAttack enters ninth day1328 East 57th Street, October 9th.Walter Roemer Schneemann, in charge ofdefense, reports only negligible losses asthe offensive against the Red Door enters itsninth day. After the first week of attacks byinfantry and sappers with small arms, mechan¬ized forces appeared on the battlefield earlyMonday morning. At this writing, the Red Dooris still intact.The weary defenders were expected to holdout indefinitely. Food supplies are adequate andan ample supply of books is on hand. Moraleis high, and there is no present plan to call forreinforcements.Several times during the battle, LifschultzFast Freight and the United States Post Officesucceeded in getting large quantities of booksthrough the enemy lines. Schneemann reportsthat more supplies are expected shortly fromGlasgow, Edinburgh, London, Paris, Madridand Leipzig.“Our right flank is gone,” Schneemann ob¬served with courageous realism. “We never hada left flank, and there Is a dangerous bulge inour middle. However, surrender is out ofthe question as long as supplies continue toreach us.”Oct. 11, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Hither & YonStudents, strippers surreys, suitsEarly fall has come to thecampuses of America, andcollege newspapers are full ofnews on football, registration,Asiatic flu, and Little Rock.Here are some tidbits fromour university brethren:Uncultured VirginiansUniversity of Virginia — UC isnot the only abode for eulturalvultures threatened with the lossof campus concert music. Theirstudent newspaper reports thatthe Tuesday evening concert se¬ries. which yearly presents someof the nation's top chamber mu¬sic artists, is selling almost notickets to students, in spite of thefact they are selling tickets foreight concerts at $4.50. Last yearstudents accounted for about 50tickets a concert. Even jazz isattracting little interest. (TheCavalier Daily) Burlesque goes to collegeJohns Hopkins university de¬voted it’s big weekly feature onthe editorial page to TempestStorm, well-noted burlesquequeen from coast to coast.Tempest, by dint of hard work,determination, and a 40-23-34 fig¬ure, has risen far and she says:"Burlesque has been very kindto me.”The stripper with the orange-red hair also advises young girlsinterested in entering burlesque:"It takes a lot of ambition andhard work, but it is good trainingfor the legitimate theater.”Just what this has to do withJohns Hopkins we never did findout, but we read it (and examinedthe photo) carefully. (The News¬letter)To ROTC or not to ROTCDartmouth College — Nothingseems to interest Dartmouth stu¬dents so much at present as theEllen Coughlin Beauty Salon310.» Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — O a.tn. -II p.tn. controversy over ROTC at thisIvy league school. The Dartmouthhas been carrying many letterson the question of whether ROTCbelongs in a liberal arts college.With the danger of the draft wan¬ing, ROTC enrollment, which isvoluntary at Dartmouth, is slip¬ping. The number of students en¬rolling in ROTC have dropped 45per cent since last year.Finally, the Dartmouth joinedin with an editorial. Noting thatin these times all citizens mustmake sacrifices, the Dartmouthwent on to say liberal arts wasthe best way to train “officers andgentlemen.”What'll vou have?Illinois Institute of Technologyis running a "popularity contest”concerning which of four pro¬posed buildings is most needed oncampus. While the school admin¬istration has made no commit¬ments, the Tech News hopes thatthe survey will be taken into con¬sideration. The four buildings are:a gymnasium, a liberal studiesbuilding, a library, or a StudentUnion.We predict plenty of stuffedballot boxes by the assorted ath¬letes, liberal arts majors, serious students, and "student leaders”on campus.It couldn't happenot ChicagoUniversity of Connecticut—Thelatest to come from this campusis the news that "all pharmacystudents must wear a dress shirt,tie, sports jacket or professionalcoat, and must be clean shavenand well groomed for all classes.”The dean commented that “thecasual ‘Joe College’ dress is justWhat Is UNITARIANISM?If you don't know, you should!It could be the religion YOU have sought, but thoughtnever could exist.ATTEND ORIENTATION MEETINGSWilliam Wallace Fenn House — 5638 S. Woodlawn Ave.Thurs. Oct. 17 — Do Unitarians Believe in Anything?Thurs. Oct. 24 — Unitarian EvolutionThurs. Oct. 31 — Unitarianism: a Social ForceThurs. Nov. 7 — Can Any Two Unitarians Agree?Coffee ot 7:30 p.m. — Discussion of 8:00 p.m.ALL ARE WELCOME — Your friends and ideas ore invited too!Sponsored by: The Channing-Murroy Club ondFirst Unitarian Church—Leslie T. Pennington, minister Albert GreenhutYard GoodsKnitting YarnDressmaking Supplies1021 Vi E. 55th St. Ml 3-14127" From HawaiiBeachcomber's Treasure ChestSouth Seas DecorationsCurios and NoveltiesLounging Wear, Muu Muus,Aloha ShirtsHawaiian Prints Made in the IslandsHamman’s of HonoluluFA 4-6451 a habit that the students acquireWe are interested in cultivatingthe proper habits which ihe stu.dent will continue to practiceafter he graduates.”The Daily Campus column"The Inquiring Photographer" inldieated most students approvedof the ruling.'Heaven Forbid!'Harvard university added thelast word on the above questionwhen they printed an editorialentitled "On Dress” which closesas follows:"It is to be hoped that no Har¬vard man would ever be guilty ofthe enormity of a wearing any-thing but a silk hat with a blackcoat or anything but a black coatwith a silk hat: or appearing inpublic' without a cane or a Lon¬don umbrella . . .”It came from the Crimson ofSeptember 30, 1875. (HarvardCrimson)Alumni electM Y/ 'Willett headHoward L. Willett, Jr., has beenelected chairman of the alumnifoundation, fund-raising organiza¬tion of the alumni association,Chancellor Lawrence A. Kiniptonannounced Wednesday. Willett, a1930 graduate of the University,is president of the Willett com-pany, trucking firm with head¬quarters in Chicago.He succeeds Howard E. Green,‘25, under whose leadership alum¬ni support of the University lastyear rose to $539,000. In that cam¬paign Willett served as Chicagoarea chairman.Harvard —1875The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236WINSTON! TASTES GOOD. UK6 A CIGARETTE SHOULD/WINSTONAMERICA'S *BEST-SELLING.BEST-TASTINGFILTER rCIGARETTE/ )DRILL?.A drama ofcrimepunishment, lDRILL'•Hitman• . J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO C0-. WINSTON-SALEM. N.C.SUPER.-WIWSTOMPRODUCTIONS PRESENTS SOUP”B • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 11, 1957Sugars are causeof rare diseaseA UC medical scientist this week reported a link betweentwo complex sugars made in certain tissues and a rare diseasethat twists children’s bodies into grotesque shapes and short¬ens their lives.In a talk following his ac- Hurler’s syndrome show, tor thecoptance of the E. Mead John- first time, the effect of heredityson award of the American aced- on the production of these sug-cniy of pediatrics at the Palmer ars- The disease, unknown in ani-house, Dr. Albert Dorfman said mals, is transmitted by an un-the same two sugars were found known gene,in urine samples of 15 patients Other research, said Dorfman,with Hurler’s syndrome. has shown the role of polysac-The sugars are polysaccharides, t'harides in the healing of woundseight of which are produced by an<l the spread of infection. Dia-the connective tissues, the binding t>*>tic animals, whose connectiveand packing of the body, and not tissues produce less of these sub¬normal^ excreted. stances than healthy animals, re-Dorfman, professor of pediat- Pa‘r wounds and fight infectionries at UC and director of La- very poorly. Insulin injections re-Rabida sanitarium, said studies of lieve this condition.Concert band rehearsesTuesday night; open to allThe University of Chicago concert band will have its firstweekly rehearsal for this season on Tuesday, October 15, at7:30 pm in Mandel hall. Anyone who has experience in playinga band instrument, whether he owns one or not, is invitedto attend. There are openingsin all sections. Williams, Aaron Copland, and Ser-The band’s professional con- gei Prokofieff; transcriptions ofductor, Louis Lason, joined the orchestral works by such corn-group two years ago. Since then posers as Strauss and Bach; andthe band has shown a steady traditional marches by Sousa andgrowth and last year had over others.fifty members. This year the band plans to ex-At its two concerts last year pand its program to three con-original works for band were certs, including its annual twi-featured, by such composers as light concert during the FestivalGustav Holst, Ralph Vaughan of the arts. Roman marble sculpture exhibiton display at Oriental instituteRoman marble sculptures, discovered in Libya by an expedition of the Oriental institute,are being exhibited at the institute on public display.The sculptures include a larger than life-sized male statue of the Vatican Sophocles type,a life-sized draped female statue which is thought to represent the Goddess Kore-Perse-phone, and a number of smaller pieces. Among these are a head of Hermes in the adaptedGreek archaic style, a small philosopher’s head, and the torso of a sheep.There also are two pieces *from Lebanon, one a marble the seventh century to 1913, when a large public building, “Hall offunerary statue of a boy and a a smah Italian colony was estab- the Banoueteers,” and made ansmall Aphrodite-Cupid ensemble kshed. The current population, extensive topographic reconstruc*from a tomb. entirely Arabic, numbers about tion of the city.The sculptures, ranging from 25Q- In tho expedition this year werethe first to the late second or i #Tolmeita was chosen by the Mrs. Kraeling, G. H. R. Wright,early third century, A.D., were Oriental institute as the site for as architect; Dr. and Mrs. Charlesthree years of excavation, begin- Nims of the institute’s Luxorning in the season of 1955-56. In (Egypt) staff, and Miss Joan Far-that season, Kraeling uncovered well of Chicago.excavated at Tolmeita in Cyre-naica under the direction of Dr.Carl H. Kraeling, director of theinstitute. The larger pieces camefrom the foyer and social hall ofa public bath and the smallerfrom a Roman villa of the latefirst century.Modern Tolmeita was the northAfrican colony of Ptolemais,founded by the Creek kings ofEgypt in the third century, B.C.,as a seaside base for trade withthe productive Jebel Akhdar areaand Libya and with the trans-Saharan interior of Africa.The ancient city was about amile square, with a gridiron ofstreets. It had several theaters,public buildings, fine villas of theGreek and Roman periods andseveral Byzantine forts. The sitewas virtually uninhabited from W A N T E PPHOTOGRAPHS OFSTUDENT ACTIVITIESFor University PublicationsPhono T. >1. Switz, ext. 3039ONLY AT THE RED DOOR1323 East 57th StrootFitzgerahl: The Qreat Qatsby65c(Elsewhere: $1.25) Get Them Hot atNICKYSPIZZERIA1235 E. 55thJimmy'sSINCE 1940 Documentary Film Group presentsEXPERIMENTAL FILMS4 consecutive Fridays, beginning Oct. 18First Programme:"The Petrified Dog", "Mechanics of Love","Life and Death of a Hollywood Extra","World of Paul Delraux", "Disorder"Admission to Scries of 4 Programs — $1.75Social Sciences 122, — 7:15 «& 9:15 p.m.Most Fascinating ShopYou Ever VisitedDpn't miss our collection for sale ofNATIVE MASKS WOOD CARVINGSCYPRESS LAMPS CERAMIC FIGURINESAnd Auction 'Buys' that fit your needsExample: Typewriters, $25; Automatic Cwffccninkers,St; Pop-up Toasters, Mi; Winchester 73,worth $100 at $-15; $10 Sporlshirts at $2, ele.Open Noon to 9 p.m.Exotics Trading Post1115 E. 55th St.Scottish checks $6.95GANT OF NEW HAVENSubdued miniature checks, woven in Britain of long-stapleSudanese brushed cotton, in our button-down shirt.jSt&Cfltfe fey608 N. Michigan WHitehall 3-241C Buy Your DiamondsWholesale - S AV E 50%Diamond Rings For Half Retail Price“All Diamonds Fully Insured”“Written Life-Time (guarantee”“No Loss Trade-In (guaranteea yyThree Ways to Buy WholesaleLay-Away — Cash — Charge Accounts AvailableWrite today for Diamond Catalogue and Buyer's CardL. R. SOHN &. CO. "BBT5 SOUTH WABASH ROOM 804 59 E. MADISON DE 2-4113Free Parking — 219 S. WabashOpen Mon. Nites Till 9 PM - Thurs. Till 8 PM — Sat. Till 5 PMOct. 11, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9jiI, i jvSI; 4 if Iit *1 I Coming events on quadranglesFriday 11 OctoberWrCB radio station, AM. 640 kc, stu¬dent station, rebroa-deasting WPMT,PM, 98.7 kc, classical music, also folkevery Saturday, rebroadcast 4-6 pm,music on Midnight Special, 10 pmTues; Mon-Prt, 6 30 am-1 am: Sat.Sun, 9-1 am. Hearable In Int lrou&e,B-J, C group.Law school conference. “Fiduciary re¬sponsibility in labor relations," publicInvited to all sessions. Breasted hall.Oriental Institute, 9:45 am, 11 "Fidu¬ciary standards and tlve bargainingand grievance process," U of Virginialaw prof Charles O. Gregory. Com¬mentators: Hon. Abner J. Mikva, Illi¬nois General Assembly, IndependentVoters of Illinois, and George B.Christensen of 'Winston, Strawn,Smith. Patterson Co.. Chicago; 21‘'Individual enforcement of collectivebargaining agreements.” Harvard lawprof Archibald Cox. Commentators:Wm. Price of Vedd-er, Price, Kaufmanand Kammholz Co., Chicago, andgeneral counsel. United Auto Workers,AFL-CIO, Detroit. Harold Cranfield.Law conference. "Statutory and fidu¬ciary standards and the administra¬tion cf property, "USA attorney. NewYork southern district. Paul W. Wil¬liams: commentator, USA attorney,Illinois northern district, Robert Tie-ken. Public welcome. 12:45 pm. LawLibrary. (If luncheon desired duringmeeting secure tickets and pay fromlaw school office.)Law conference, "Right to work lawsand responsible unionism,” New YorkU law prof Sylvester Petro. commenta¬tors: Mozart G. Ratner of Jacobs andRatner Co, Chicago; Owen Fair-weather of Seyfarth. Shaw, Fair-weather and Geraldson Co., Chicago.‘‘Denial and withdrawal of unionmembership and due process,” JosephL. Rauh. Jr. of Ranh and Levy Co.,Washington. DC. Commentators: Les¬ter Asher cf Asher. Gubbins and Se-gall Co., Chicago; William P. Treacy©f Stevenson, Conaghan. Velde andHackbert Co., Chicago. Public invited,3 pm. Breasted hall. Law conference reception, all invited.5:30 pm, Quadrangle faculty privateclub.Law' conference. "Internal self regula¬tion,” AFL-CIO assoc general coun¬sel Tom Harris: "A legislative pro¬gram," Gerard D. Reilly of Reilly,Wells and Rhodes Co.. WashingtonDC. UC law prof Soia Mentschikoffpresiding. Public welcome. 6:30 pm.Quad club. (If dinner desired duringmeeting secure tickets, pay at lawschool office.) Last of conference.Statistics seminar, “Validity of tests ofsignificance for composite li y p o -theses.” Cambridge U, England, Ron¬ald A. Fisher, 4 pm, Eckhart 133.Tryouts for University Theatre's pro-d u c t i o n of “The Dark Is LightEnough,” 7-10 pm, Reynolds clubtheatre.Lutheran student club lecture, “Achurchman's viewpoint of the Lu¬theran world assembly,” new sys¬tematic theology FTF prof JosephSittler, 7 pm. Chapel house, 5810Woodlawn. (cost supper, 6 pm, Chapelhouse)International student open house, guitarnight, folk singing, free refreshments.Northwestern "Y” Young mens, wom¬ens Christian association, 7:30 pm.Chapel house at Sheridan and Chi¬cago ave, Evanston, Ill.Chicago Lyric Opera, “Otelio” by Verdi,opening night, operas through Wed..20; Nov. only, on Frl. Sat, Mon, Wedeves, open night $3-20; rest of time,$2-8. Call opera house about usher¬ing, men; candy selling, women, forseeing opera free (and other playslater, arrive 6:30 pm). 8 pm. Operahouse. 20 N Waeker.International relations club, 7:30 pm.Int house.Chancellor's Reception, ballroom danc¬ing following, all students, new under¬graduates’ parents invited, free punch.Yearly. 8:30 pm-midnight. Ida Noyes,University concerts, Paul Draper dancer,the creative stylist of dance, 1st of 10in series, thru 7 March, subscriptionfor series cf 10 concerts. $10; singleadmission $1.50, no student prices.8:30 pm. Mandel.Hillel, Sukkot O n e g Shabbat, folksinger Naomi Bernards, folk dancing, free, 8:30 pm. Hillel house. 5715 Wood-lawn. (Sabbath service, 7:45 pmweekly)Saturday 12 OctoberUT choral workshop, choral singing.University theater, 9:45 am, Reynoldsclub theater.UT play tryouts, for Christopher Fry's"The dark is light enough,” lastchance for Fri 22 Nov-Sun 1 Dec pro¬duction, 1-4 pm, Reynolds club thea¬ter.UT dance workshop, dance class, firstmeeting, registration, 2 pm. Reynoldsclub theater.SRP children's concert, Pete Seeger,folk songs especially for children. Stu¬dent Representative Party. Adultsmust be accompanied by children, 75cents, 2:30 pm. Mandel hall.TV broadcast. "The uneasy consumers,”hot rodders and Detroit automobiles.UC profs Reuel Denney and J JSchwab, 2nd of 6 Compete Spectator,3:30-4 pm, WBBM-TV.SRP Folk concert. Pete Seeger. folksinger. 1st c-f 3 adults concerts. Stu¬dent Representative Party, resawed$1.50, general adm $1, 8:30 pm. Men -del hall.Party, "1948 party." all welcome, re¬freshments. singing, dancing, adm25 cents. Politics club, starting 8:30pm. Come any time, 5615 Woodlawn.Sunday 13 OctoberUniversity religious service, the Rev.Daniel Jenkins. King’s W igh houchurch. London. England, 11 am.Rockefeller chapel.Roman Catholic masses. 8:30. !0. 11 am.DeSales house, 5735 University.Episcopal communion service. 8.30 am.Bond chapel.Lutheran communion service, 10 am,Hilton chapel."I'd Like to lie," TV program. "I'd liketo be a psychiatrist.” host, Henrygams of College, student Paul Arkemaof Morgan Park high school. Dr. C.Night Aldrich, chairman and profes¬sor of dept cf psychiatry, guest, 2 pm,channel 2.Carillon recital. James R. Lawson, caril-loneur, 4:30 pm. Rockefeller chapel. Pete Seeger concert, SRP. 8:30 pm,Mandel hall.Calvert club lecture and open house."The Industry-Council idea,” Ed M ar-ciniak. editor of Work. 4:30 pm, De-Sales house, 5735 S. University.Hillel foundation snack supper, enter¬tainment following, by reservation.5715 Woodlawn ave.. 65 cents.Social dancing, 7-8 pm instruction, $-11dancing. Int house.Friends open house, refreshments, fel¬lowship, all welcome, 7-9:30 pm.Quaker house, 5615 Woodlawn.Baptist student fellowship discussion"Students and churches," Dr. Rol-land Schloerb, pastor HP Baptistchurch, weekly, 7 pm, HP Baptistchurch, 5600 Woodlawn, (supper 6 pm,50 cents).Glee club rehearsal. 7 pm. Ida Noyes.ISI. caucus, 7:33 pm, Ida Noyes library.Porter fellowship open meeting. "TheHuman Image In Rscent Films,” Na¬than A. Scott, Jr., of FTF, 6 pm sup¬per (60 cents), 7 pm worship, 7:30program.Methodist student fellowship, Paul Ar¬thur Scbikpp, vice president cf AmorPhilosophic association, 8 pm. Chapelhouse.Monday 14 OctoberStaff meeting, Chicago Maroon, 3:30.Maroon office, third fleer. Ida Noyes.Varsity hockey and volleyball, WAA,begins. 3:30. Ida Noyes.lii hetr.sal, orchestra com >la~ Musicalis.7:30. Reynolds club north lounge, firstmeeting cf year.International Relations club, 7:20. Inter¬nationa’. House.Graduate Library school club. 7:30. IdaNcycs hall.NAACP. Willoughby Abner. Chicagochairman cf NAACP, 8 pin. Ida Novcshall.History Club, 8 pm. Ida Noyes hall.Anthropolgy club. 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Film, Brig.adoon, weekly. 50 cents. 8 pm.International House.World Politics discussion, 3 pm. SinaiTemple. 5350 S. Shore Drive, seriesadmission, $12.Pete Seeger concert, 8:70. Mandel hall,admission SI and SI.50, folk songs.Feelin’ blue? Need money, too?Students, we’ve got news for you!\l//back!WHAT IS A NASTY ROBOT?Bill McCormackFordham STEEL HEEL WHAT IS THE EARTH?R0UN0 GR0UN0David WelshM.I.T. Send yours in andmake25MOST POPULAR GAME that ever went to col¬lege—that’s Sticklers! Just write a simple riddleand a two-word rhyming answer. For example:What’s a big cat shot full of holes? (Answer:peppered leopard.) Both words must have thesame number of syllables—bleak freak, fluenttruant, vinery finery. Send Sticklers, with yourname, address, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mt, Vernon, N. Y. Don’t dodrawings! We’ll pay $25 for every Stickler weuse in our ads—and for hundreds that never seeprint. While you’re Stickling, light up a lightsmoke—light up a Lucky. You’ll say it’s thebest-tasting cigarette you ever smoked!LIGHT UP A light SMOKE—LIGHT UP A LUCKY!• CHICAGO MAROON • © a. T. Co. Product of t/& J&neA azevn <Jv$xjce&'£(>rryux>ny — c/o&wxq- is our middle tUtfWOct. 11, 1957 Tuesday 15 OctoberStudent Zionist Orgcnization, membersof STiO who recently returned fromIsrael wi’l show movies and tell oftrip. Everyone welcome; 7:30 pm. mi¬le! Hcus\ 5717 Woodlawn avenueHillel coffee hour lecture, "Life in Chi¬cago.” Prof M'rt'n Diamond dteuts-sk>n of article by Isaac RcsenfeMwhi-h popeared in June 1957 "Com¬mentary” magazine, 3:30 pm, H'llelhour?.Varsity soccer, UC vs. Navy pier earn-'discrimination v«. female participa¬tion, afternoon. St.xgg field.Water safety instruction, 10-weekcourse. Senior l ife Saving above 10y i-s, Wotcr Safety Instructor above18 years. 25 cents students. 50 centsot,h-rs. Phone ex 1030. 6:30-9:30 pmlit Noyes.IT rac-’n workshop, radio casting or-• ml’'tl-n meeting, 7 pm. Reynoldsclub theater.Government, first meeting ofycr. all students should come to'v>t:-h cud a-k questions at end, every©ti'-r wee’: (fortnightly), 7:30 nniT mv N-th.IV'i <» niub. "Intellectual in Poland andin US. co’lr'c Soc scl lecturer AliciaIv/.'.nska, in English. Begins fall pro¬gram. all weleoTe. 7:~0 tun. Ida NovcsCtmeert band reh-arsal, full ensemble.7:30 pm, Mends!.Society for rocket research, film andnrc,rrrss rr-ert. interested non-mem¬bers invited. 7:43 pm. E'khart 202.Y/cc?nesdav 16 OctoberParapsychology society, 7:30 pm. Rey¬nolds club fishbowl.Sv’" )osiun»; Labor, Liberals, and Poli¬tics. e pcake-s Nickolas Me las. formerchairman of Young Democrats, LouisSilverman, chairman of 5tii Ward IVI.Gcor e Rnwlck, fellow of the SocialSciences research council and editor ofAnvil, 8 pm. Classics 10, student ad¬mission. 25 Cents.Science Fiction lecture, "Words of Pow¬er," George Price, explanation cf sci¬ence fiction words and cliches, 8 pm,Ida Noyes.Thursday 17 OctoberStudent Union meetings, work on fol¬lowing evening's dance, all welcome tohelp, 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes.Friday 18 OctoberStudent Union dance, free, all welcome.8:30 to 11 pm, Ida Noyes Cloister club.Londoner speaksSunday at chapelProfessor Daniel Jenkins ofLondon, England, who com¬mutes to UC each autumn quar¬ter to teach, will be the guestpreacher at Rockefeller this Sun¬day.Born in Wales, Jenkins receivedhis higher education at Oxfordand Edinburgh. He is pastor ofthe King’s Weigh House churchin London but each year spendsthe autumn quarter as a memberof the Federated theological fac¬ulty. His book “The Strangenessof the Church” was a recent selec¬tion of the Religious book club inthis country; its announcementcalled Jenkins the best known ofthe younger Congregationalistministers in England.Have a mm of mtTravel with IITAUnbelievable low CostEurope°*r* *»•« $585Orient<43-65 b*y. „x. fmm $990Many tours ineluaecollege credit.A'JS low'to,,L *fiP» *o Mexico*149 up. South America $699 up,Hawaii Study Tour $498 up andAround tho World SI398 up.A»k Your Travel Agent332 S. MichiganAve., Chicago 4,'«• HA 7-2557YOURPARTfor dressfor playfor every day!$9.95 to $19.95CIXY CLUBSHOES FOR FVfEfSJSunspots affect MrkosIAstronomers at the Yerkes observatory of UC are obtaining measurements of the inten¬sity of sunspots, now at the maximum of their eleven-year cycle, from the rapidlv disappear¬ing comet Mrkos.Blasts of radiation from the sunspots, which have caused the recent brilliant displays ofaurora borealis, create irregular patches of light in the streaming 31/2-million mile longtail of the comet.Giving the appearance of — —smoko, the light patches are °* sunsP°ts. Comparison of ments are made to glow by anyrrinu/inff ionized eases nro- succ®®sive photographs of the tail cause, such as heat, or as in theplotting lomzea gases piO provide an indication of the in- case of Mrkos, by radiation, theyduced by bombardment of elec- tensity of the radiation. give off characteristic bands c:irons and protons, and some al- The observations are part of color which can be identified bypha (helium) particles hurled out the world-wide study of radiation the spectroscope.from the sun and outer space be- As occasionally happens, theing made for the International gravitational influe]Cartland namedas Comptrollerat University gravitational influence of planetsand stars affected by the icymass, and what become Mrkoswas pulled into the inner partsfrom the sun and outer space be¬ing made for the Internationalgeophysical year. The comet,named for the Czechoslovakianastronomer, Antonin Mrkos, whodiscovered it August 2, has now of the planetary system, to themoved to the southern sky and neighborhood of the earth,can be observed only with large Once Mrkos was set in its orbit,telescopes such as the 24-inch re- it remained a mass until it cameflector at Yerkes observatory. close to the sun. Then the ioniza-Because it has a parabolic tion began “melting” it away,controller of A. B. Dick company, ™urso itnwcr will be seen again Eventually, it the comet comes, . . . TT_ V . after its 40,000 mile an hour speed close to the sun often enough,hnc Wn annmnted TTP onmntrnl. carrics jt bacR 5n(o Quter spacp there wiU be Qnly smaU resi(fu^Mrkos, Kuiper explained, was of stellar grit remaining. The oneformed about six billion years passage close to the sun has notago by the condensation of ahuge, diffused, and supersatu¬rated “cloud” in intergalacticspace. It grew much as do snow¬flakes in the earth’s atmosphere.Donald L. Cartland, assistanthas been appointed UC comptrolJer, Clen A. Lloyd, chairman ofthe board of trustees announcedWednesday.Cartland, 43, succeeds John I.Kirkpatrick, wno became viceChancellor in charge of adminis- been sufficient to reduce Mrkosto this celestial dust.(ration last month. The comptrol- Each flake picked up and frozeto it, at intergalactic -tempera¬tures of about ten degrees aboveabsolute zero, moisture and sub¬stances such as ammonia presentin the cloud.This content is revealed byspectroscopic study. When ele-ler is an appointed officer of theboard of trustees.A graduate of Northwestern(’40), Cartland has served aspresident (1956-57) of the Chi¬cago chapter of the National so¬ciety for business budgeting. MODEL CAMERAAuthorized LeicaDealerTVS A Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 CLASSIFIEDSUniversity rote 30c per line. Others 60c per line.Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265Help wantedPart time work—male: 15-20 hours aweek, evenings and Saturday. $1.50-$2per hr. average earnings. Car necessary.Phone PL 2-6050, 4-6 pm.Baby sitter, for 3 hours, 2 days a week.University ave. and 54th pi. NO 7-1692.Loop bookstore—close to IC. Salesmen,weekend and after classes to 11 pm, 20hours weekly. Permanent, good salary.Call between 2 and 6 pm. DE 2-7185.Typing at home wanted. Andre Morri¬son, IN 8-3626.ServicesWant a piano teacher? I have a masterof music degree and will teach you.Phone PL 2-2787.Russian tutoring by Harvard instructor.7537 S. Yates. ES 5-1170. Maria Azaroff.Carmen’s movers. Moving and lighthauling. Furniture bought and sold.1211 E. 63rd. MU 4-9003.For rentRoom — suitable for 1 or 2, adjoiningbath, twin beds, 2 closets. E£ 5-6679. 5525 S. UniversityFurnished sleeping rooms. Also com¬pletely furnished 2 rrn. and 5 rm. apart¬ments. Can be seen now. Mrs. Parks.PersonalChris: Houseliead Is furious about ashstains on rug. You can return withcigars only if you bring along one ofPeterson’s large ash trays. Get It at1225 E. 55th st., Phoenix.Screen surrealism: Petrified Dog, Dis¬order, Mechanics of Love, etc. Doc Film,Oct. 18, Soc Scl 122, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.Wanted—Riders from the north sideMornings. D. Slier, ext. 3588 afternoons.RO 1-2176 evenings.Folk musicians: There wild be NO Wing-Ding tonight due to conflict with chan¬cellor's reception.Mathematicians: Have us build you eHeath kit analogue computer in add-on.pay-as-you-go sections. And while youlet the machine do the work, listento soothing music on a student-pricedhi-fi system from Audio Consultants,c/o Jean Kwon, 5810 Harper.Q: Sorry no write, but no time! Settingbear traps for writers, etc. and baitingwith essence de cafe. Will send you pa¬per when I get paid. Jungle Julie.■ " 1 1PAINT & HARDWARE CO.Wallpaper - Houseware - PlumbingComplete Line of Rental Tools1154-58 E. 55th St. UC HY 3-3840 ’n* CINEMA THEATER/ Chicago Ave. at Michigan| STUDENT RATES 60cEvery day except Saturdayupon presentation of ID cardiXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX<<C0rva>«HT (987 TnC CQCA-COXA COMPANfeTraveler’s AidAt last count, Coca-Cola was delighting palates A Campus-to-Career Case HistoryBill Tyer discusses features of a training program for operators with Miss Edith Sanders.“There's always something different”“In my job, there’s always somethingdifferent coming along—a new problem,a new challenge. When I got out of col¬lege I wanted to make sure I didn’t settledown to a job of boredom. There’s neverbeen a chance of that at Bell.”That’s Charles W. (Bill) Tyer talking.Bill graduated from Texas Christian Uni¬versity in 1953 with a B.S. in Commerce.He went right to work w ith SouthwesternBell in Fort Worth.How did lie make his choice? Here’swhat he says: “From what I’d seen it wasan interesting business with tremendousroom for expansion. And a big featurewith me was the opportunity to choosemy location. I wanted to work in theFort Worth area. “I came in under the Staff AssistantProgram for college graduates. I spentseveral weeks in each of the company’sfive departments. Then I went hack forsix months of intensive training in ourTraffic Department.“After training, I was promoted. Oneof my first jobs was setting up and super¬vising a customer service improvementprogram.“In January, 1956, I was again pro¬moted. My present job is assistant to theDistrict Traffic Superintendent. My re¬sponsibilities include instruction of PBXoperators, employee and public relations,and scheduling operators to handle callsto and from 185,000 telephones.“No—there’s no chance for boredom!”in more than 100 countries around the world. Thisnews may not rock you right now. But if youever get thirsty in Mozambique, you mayappreciate the change from goat’s milk.VRoltled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicogo, Inc. Bill Tyer is typical of the many young men who arefinding their careers in the Bell System. Other inter¬esting careers exist in the Bell Telephone Companies,Bell Telephone Laboratories, Western Electric andSandia Corporation. Your placement officer has moreinformation about these companies* BELLTELEPHONESYSTEML\ /JOct.11.1957 • CHICAGO MAROON •. UFANCY THAT! Budweiser lists its ingredientsright on the label. Do you know ofany other beer that does?$2,525 downto qualified veterans$122.40 per mo. ind.of principal, interest,and property taxOther modelsavailable from*21,525 with|i *1,525 dn. to vetsI ■.. J. E.MERRION'SMARYNOOK8623 S. AvalonBA 1-29734*A%6 ROOMS2 Ceramic Baths'Ceramic KitchenFull Dining Room3 BedroomsLarge Living RoomBasementCAS HEAT$22,525KING OF BEERS • ANHEU§ER-BUSCH, INC. • SJ. IOUIS * NEWARK • IOS ANGLESThe mostsensationalTri-levelin ChicagoMarjnookC. I. LOANS Doc Film group slatesexperimental filmDocumentary film group has announced its main offeringfor the autumn quarter; a four week series “The Experi¬mental Film” which begins next Friday evening. The pro¬grams will be screened in Social Sciences 122, at 7:15 andagain at 9:15. Tickets to thefour programs cost $1.75 and James Broughton. Broughton,will be available at the door. No w^° *s known f°r such comedies UTs tryouts todayat Reynolds clubTryouts for Christopher Fry's The Dark is Light Enoughwill be at 7 pm today and at 1 pm Saturday in the Reynoldsclub, according to University theatre director Richard d’Anjou.The play will be UTs second this season. The first, GarciaLorca’s Yerma is in rehearsal. ~ “ “ “Plans for tryouts andsingle admissions will be sold. as "Loony Tom," “The HappyLover” and “The Pleasure Gar-The series will contain some den," here presents four varia-twenty unusual motion picture tions in the quest of love.shorts—movies which are seldomshown in commercial theaters, Future programs will include“The Demon in Art,” based oneither because of their subject the paintings of Bosch and Breug-matter or their sophistication. hel; “Bullfight,” a modern danceThe first program will contain film integrating actual bullfightsix works, of a general surreal- scenes; John Hustin’s “Battle ofistic nature: “The World of Paul San Pietro,” a work frowned onDelvaux"; “The Mechanics of by the Army because of its grimLove”; “The Petrified Dog,” made realism; "St. Louis Blues,” anby the American film poet, Sid- early sound film featuring Bessieney Peterson; “Life and Death of Smith; and “The Inauguration ofa Hollywood Extra,” an early the Pleasure Dome,” a color filmAmerican satire; “Disorder,” a in the traditions of decadent art.French film portraying the exis- Doc film is a student organiza-tentialist and bohemian wild life tion that presents "off-beat andalong the left bank; and, “Four aesthetically significant” motionin the Afternoon,” directed by pictures. D’Anjou said that he isanxious to read as many studentsas possible for the 13 parts avail¬able. Rehearsals and final read¬ings will begin next week.UTs workshops also will openthis weekend with the newly or¬ganized choral workshop at 9:45am, Saturday, and the danceworkshop at 2 pm the same day._ Also slated are: first crew callfor lighting and other technicalwork at 1:30 pm, Sunday, October12; costume committee meetingat 7:30 pm, Monday, October 13;and first radio workshop at 7pm. Tuesday, October 14.Membership in all groups,d’Anjou said, is free and only at¬tendance is required. Previous ex¬perience is helpful, but unneces-,sary. work¬shops were completed Tuesdayevening at the theatre's “party-meeting-show-shindig.”Tryouts beganthe PHOENIX and the MUSEThe Culture Vulture, long a well-known fixture in this spot, has succumbedto long-repressed urges, winging his way into the primal murk where lurk hisprey. His egress has created a tradition to be maintained. Though the name ofthe column has been changed, it is hoped that in the present diversity suchuniformity may be maintained as to preserve a sort of continuity. Therewith ...Events on compus • • • un'tes Widely diverse ele- to make up a theatrical produc- culture, as well as being influ-ments. Tandem a second produc- tion. enced by the arts of the far east,tion begins the first stages of its University Concertdevelopment. Christopher Fry’s Paul Draper, who combines tap- • • • OnO GirThe Dark Is Light Enough” be- dancing with ballet and the music Opening its regular winter sea-gins casting Friday evening at of composers such as Bach, Han- son, the Chicago Symphony or-seven. University Theatre still del, and DeBussy, will appear in chestra under the baton of Fritz„ . . . . , needs many new people with the tonight’s University concert. Nep- Reiner is playing a program of.really not so plain) acting, the various kinds ot talent which go hew ol choreographer Ruth Drop- Bach, Debussy, and Sibelius,_ er, who appeared here during the Thursday, October 17, at 8:15 pmEducation department hastwo new training programsUniversity TheatreProgress in the preparation of“Yerma,* Garcia Lorca’s taut,lyrical tragedy, is being made innumerous directions. Includingsinging, dancing, and just plain1956 Festival of the Arts, Draper and Friday at 2:00 pm.uses tap dancing technique in per- Looking ahead, the perspicaci-formances to classical music. ous aesthete finds his attentionRenaissance Society aroused by the approaching con-Starting Sunday and continuing cert of the Chicago Chamber or-through November 9, the Renais- chestra. Conducted by Dieter Ko-T'urrk nan? iTr'* nrwrrrvimo dncimvij a, . _ sance society will exhibit the ber, the orchestra will present anTwo new UC programs designed to meet the growing need palming, the tate Cady wells, evening of Vivaldi, Albinoni, vonfor administrators with training m adult education were an- famed New Mexico artist. His Koek, and Brunetti on Novembernounced Wednesday by Francis S. Chase, chairman of the work reflects the Indian and Span- 19 in Fullerton Hall. More aboutdepartment of education. — ish-Colonial elements of Mexican this later.One program is directed and the principles of education,toward preparing students as ^ wfll* in these new programs, If you are looking for entertain*ment of a spectator sort and theSeries has not yet made youscreen-sick, consider themovie. In the neighborhood theHyde Park Theatre is offering“Mademoiselle Striptease” and“The Colbitz Story.” The Down¬town Clark Theatre, 11 NorthClark, has announced a new spe¬cial $.50 admission price for stu¬dents. Tonight’s bill is “The Lav¬ender Hill Mob” and “Let’s Do ItAgain.” The Clark changes itdouble feature program daily.The first show begins at 8 am,and the last at 4 am (after seeingthe last show you have just timeenough to rush home, have break¬fast and be back in time for thenext day’s show).administrators of adult educationprograms in universities and col¬leges. The other will train schooladministrators for the operationof adult education programs inpublic schools.Under both programs studentsmay work toward the doctorateor master’s degree, or may pursueindependent study unrelated todegree requirements.“The millions of adults partici¬pating in the increasing numberof educational programs is lead¬ing to separate administrativeunits for this growing area ofeducation,” Mr. Chase said."Up to the present, the train¬ing for such administrators hasbeen the same as that for the edu¬cators in general. To the elementsof knowledge of- a special field put emphasis on the special ele¬ments involved in adult educa¬tion*Education for allNick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Are.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery ServiceSMMMmMMmSTERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best”FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSmall 1.00 Large 1.05Medium .! 145 Giant 2.05We also carry a full line of Italian foods1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGWINTEB SPECIALTUNE UP *6 SOup• Anti* Freezee Snow Tires• Rood ServiceSPECIAL!! C 95Heavy Duty Battery ■Harper Super ServiceDealer in Sinclair Products5556 HARPER PL 2-9654 presenting Brooks Brothers newly expandedUNIVERSITY SHOPfor college and prep school stylesBecause of the ever-increasing demand from under->graduates for our fine clothes, we have enlarged ourdepartment for older boys wearing sizes 35 to 42, Hereyou will find a comprehensive selection of suits, top-coats, sportwear and evening wear...and fine furnish¬ings, too... all reflecting our distinctive; sty ling and.quality... all as moderately priced as we can make them.We invite undergraduates to come in and enjoy theexpanded facilities of our JJniversity Shop^Fall cata^Joguc sent upon request.._ Suitsy $60 to $75 • Tweed Topcoats, $72Sport Jacketsy $45. * Worsted Flannel Trousers2 $18.50ISTAMISHS) 1i1Sliens furnishings. Hats echoes74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL.NEW YORK • CHICAGO • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCOOct. 11. 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13Unitarian religion underdiscussion at Fenn house“Do Unitarians Believe in Anything?’' is the question tofoe discussed in the first of a series of weekly discussions onUnitarian views of religious questions. The series opens inWilliam Wallace Fenn house, 5638 Woodlawn avenue, at 7:30pm this Thursday.Channing-Murray club, an will be: “Unitarian Evolution” onorganization of the University October 24; “Unitarianism: a So-young people, fa co-sponsoring w FOTcen on October 31; andthe meetings, together with First , ^ .Untarian church. “Can Any Two UnitariansSpeakers for the series will in- Agree?” on November 7. In theelude Leslie T. Pennington, the concluding meeting on Novemberminister of the First Untarian 7, a panel of five lay members ofchurch, and Mr. and Mrs. Ran- First Unitarian church will ex-dall S. Hilton. Hilton is the Dean change ideas about their own in-of the Abraham Lincoln centre, a dividual religious views, demon-community center located at 700 strating something of the diver-East Oakwood boulevard, sity and unity of beliefs held bySubsequent discussion topics particular Unitarians.C >\ Students Laundry Special \'i 3 lbs. Laundry — Washed m9/ and Dried M M—p Shirts finished to order 13c ea. additionalKWIK-WAYLAUNDRY & CLEANERS1214 E. 61st Street(Between Woodlawn & Kimbark on 51st)p Starting|| Friday, October 1 1I Adults onlytlnelm.de paAkJttotte-ph«*NO-7-907.4tiU&it na.u 50 alLIn America they're still trying it out, but inFrance it has already replaced night baseball.BRIGITTEBAUDOTas the delightfulFrenchpiece deresistance, acombination ofFrancois SaganandCypsy Rose Leein a comic holidayfor C-strings.Co-starringDANIEL CELIN and DARRY COWLmudJOHN MILLSERIC PORTMAN • IAN CARMICHAELin "The Colditz Story //A Irue suspense story of a daring escope from Colditz- Castle, Germany'sfamed escape-proof prisoner-of-war fortress.Starting Friday, October 18At last! By demand!''Gate of Hell" and "Beat the Devil"| And coming soon after —If "Red Balloon", "The Lo*t Continent", "Third Key", "We Are All•j> Murderers", Marlene Dietrich, Vittorio DeSica "Monte Carlo Story",David Niven "Love Lottery," "Morcelino," "Light Across the Street,""Popo, Mama, Moid and I", "Loser Tokes AH" with Robert Morley,Glynis Johns, Rossano Brazzi — ond if you want it shown (let usH know), "Birth of a Notion" (Also let us know if you don't)iik mmmmmmm i -14 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 11,1957 Folk-singer Seeger givesextra show on campusUnprecedented sales of tickets have caused the Studentrepresentative party, sponsors of the forthcoming Pete Seegerconcert, to schedule an additional performance at 8:30 Mon¬day night.Tomorrow night’s perform¬ance is entirely sold out, andthe seats for Sunday night ore al¬most gone. Seats are still avail¬able for the children’s concert to¬morrow at 2:30, which is co-spon¬sored by the Co-op school. Ticketsfor this special presentation are75 cents.Prices for the evening concertsare $1 for unreserved seats and$1.50 for reserved seats. Ticketsare available at the Reynolds clubinformation desk and from SRPrepresentatives in the dorms.One of America’s most popularfolk singers, Seeger recently toldof plans to establish a folk musicmagazine and to do further re¬search into American folklore.Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton called the Proctorand Gamble grants of $20,000to each of 10 leading universi¬ties “a bold step toward a highlydesirable kind of corporate sup¬port of higher education.”UC is one of those named in an^ NICKYSPIZZERIANO 7-»06:t “The folk song revival,” said thesinger, “is the healthiest thingthat has happened to Americanmusic in a long time. It will havean effect on American composers,and maybe one day we will endthe tyranny of the hit parade;also, in time it should affect everyfield of American life. When peo¬ple start being creative in onefield, they will be creative in an¬other.”Sell-out performances at theUniversity of Illinois and at theUniversity of Minnesota this weekhave caused cancellation of an ap¬pearance at the Folklore societywingding tonight in Mandel, how¬ever.announcement of the program re¬cently by Proctor and Gamble.“By allocating large funds to alimited number of leading univer¬sities,” he said, “the Proctor andGamble program provides enoughfor each significantly to supporteducation and basic research.”RELIANCE CAMERA &PHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63rd St.BU 8-6040 Pete SeegerAppoint Albertto science panelA. Adrian Albert, professorof mathematics at UC, hasbeen appointed to the steeringgroup of the general science panelof the assistant secretary of de¬fense.Albert’s appointment to thefive-man group is for one year.Function of the group is to for¬mulate policies for the largerpanel, which advises the secre¬tary as to allocations for sciontific research.Albert has been on the panelsince 1953 and from 1948 to 1951was a member of the mathe¬matics advisory' committee of theOffice of Naval Research.Chancellor Kimpton cites grantSTEVEN'S LUNCH1306 E. 3.»lliSoda Fountain Home-Cooked MealsClosed Sundays and HolidaysFREE DELIVERYGreat catch ... University Glen Shirtin exclusive new Arrow Cambridge ClothYour favorite button-down, the Arrow Glen,is now styled in traditional collegiate fashion.It’s offered in feather-soft Arrow Cam¬bridge Cloth—a new partner in popularityto the classic Oxford. Collar buttons down,front and center back. Full length box-pleat in back. In solids, checks and pencil-stripes.“Sanforized” labeled. From $5.00. Tie$2.50.ARROW—Shirts and Ties9Bernie MunkCridsters' crucialin intercollegiate year'games Then .. .UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor Go VESPA, the transportation that makes sense! Foraetting 2 roars:! town, to school and shopping there isno more ideal modern way than VESPA — QUICKER,EASIER, CHEAPER and MORE FUN too. Over 100 milesper gallon? i.e. under 50c per week — parks at doorof destination — 90 day unconditional guarantee.tuft. tYour campus agent will enjoy giving you o free demonsfration.Coil Bill Libby at BO 8-5570 today. LOOK FOR THIS BLUE LABEL# United States RubberitocMcrELkce center, new hm ;c. a. v.With an air of anxious excitement, fifty aspiring athletes heard Walter Hass officiallyopen the 1957 Chicago football class. Although the season is well under wav elsewhereacross the country, the Maroons hope to don their equipment and do battle during theremaining part of the season.Hass told the class that he ex¬acted Chicago to scrimmagetwice with a possibility of a thirdouting if time permits. Last yearIhe Maroon and White made itsfirst appearance on Stagg fieldsince that dreary day in Decem¬ber of 1939 when Chicago playedits last intercollegiate game.North Park and North Centralcollege will again provide thecompetition and the feeling isthal this is the crucial year.With two years of experiencebehind them, the Maroons willbe out to “wave the flag for oldChicago,” and bring the pigskinback to Stagg field.The first official workout willbegin Monday on North field.Coach Hass and his assistants areall old hands at the game. Hassreceived his “baptism under fire”at Minnesota, and more recentlycoached at Carleton college. KyleAnderson, former Maroon star,Dale Bjorkland who was Hass’assistant at Carleton, and BobKrcidler who performed his ex¬ploits at Penn State will assistHass in shaping this year’s squad.The class will use the “T” asIhe basis of their offensive ma¬chine, with a possibility of a few"split t” maneuvers. Some of thereturning veterans expected togive t he Maroons experience areJohn Jruicek, “Tank” Cousens,Mike Kindred, Max Clay, BruceGriffin, and Phil Epstein.The first game is scheduledagainst Noth Central on Novem¬ber 4. Although the Maroons willdefinitely play North Park, thedate has not boon set. There isalso a possibility of another gamefollowing these two. but no oppo¬nent has been officially named.Hass, who makes no pretenseabout his desire for a return offootball to the Midway, told thesquad that he believes Chicagocould return to intercollegiatecompetition without the sport be¬coming a “monster.” Last year,ho said, there were twenty-sevenoffers for games, from which Chi¬cago could pick a wide varietyof opponents. Last year’s squad was plaguedwith problems, most of which cen¬tered around not being able toget the same fellows out to prac¬tice each night. However, 1his ap¬pears to have solved itself, atleast judging by the attitude ofthe first day’s hopefuls.With rumors of rallies andafter game dances, it appears thata large number of students willwage the issue of football on theMidway once again, but the effortseems to be concentrated on the fifty gridders awaiting the first“Hup . . . one, two, three . .This quintet might very wellhe singing “You gotta havelieart” as they laee up for thefirst Maroon football classpractice. Pictured below in va¬rying stages of dress and un¬dress are: (foreground) BernieMunk, Dave Morris, Ed Karsh;and (baek) Phil Epstein andBol» Wilson.and nowPolaroid photo by Model Camera and Bernick&martback to schoolSoccer squad opens seasonTomorrow is game time for the UC soccer squad, as theymeet Lake Forest academy on their opponents’ home ground.Coach Alvar Hermanson has three major “C” hooters backfrom a squad which failed to win any of last year’s five Mid¬west conference games.Ron Sutton and Charles Knight, forwards, and WalterDamm, fullback, will form the nucleus of a large and enthusi¬astic team. Although the hooters are somewhat inexperienced,Hermanson says “we will do a little better than last year.”The Midwest conference consists of Chicago, Navy Pier(UIC), Wheaton, Earlham, Indiana and Purdue.The schedule of home games is given below. All games willbe held on Stagg field.October 15—Navy Pier, 3:45October 23—Lake Forest, 3:30November 3—Purdue, 1:30Take vacation funUThis is the season for droopy hair¬do's, so let us pick you up withlovely Re-stylings and Permanents.Mildred’s Coiffure Shop6009 Blackstone MU 4-3390Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372 to school viaVESPA*389'Easy Term* AvailableFermi Institute going strongby Bob Coale"A unique partnership between government, industry, and a great university” is what theEnrico Fermi institute for nuclear studies has often been called.The idea of this center for basic research on atomic and nuclear phenomena was conceivedIn the closing days of the second world war and is the result of a desire to keep togetherat least part of the brilliant team of scientists who worked with the late Enrico Fermi onthe atomic bomb project under the West stands of Stagg field. One intention was to encour¬age chemists, physicists, andbiologists to cross “Dartv atomic energy commission, the port indicates that the somewhatlinnc” nnH oYnlr»ro thr> finldc a*r t°rce> anc* the office of naval vague promise of these scientificlinos and to explore the fields rosearch ' Governmcnt and busi- programs has produced concretethat lie between these artificial noss dQ not, however, assign re- results of value to industry,divisions of what is ultimately search projects to the institute Students benefitone science. staff. On the contrary, the gov- Graduate students in the phys-The institute is now largely ernment agencies are invited to -caI sciences aiso benefit from thefinanced by funds from govern- pJJKJs already under Presence of the Fermi institute.ment and industrv Government GCtS % P1^0*55 alreiad-v dn er Apparatus available for their re-ment and industry;.Government way in basic research and can inc]udes the 100 millioncontracts come through the then support any which are of volt betatron, for producing highStaffers wantedby Cap & GownAny UC student inter¬ested in becoming a Capand Cown staff membershould see Jean Kwon, edi¬tor of the yearbook.The Cap and Cown officeis located on the third floorof Ida Noyes hall. interest to them.Receive preview energy gamma rays, a two mil¬lion volt Van de Graaff generator,T , , . . , a Kevatron, and the 450 millionbasteUS„«f“,VdevelopmVem a volt synchrocyclotron tor the pro-nasic scientmc development ai Hlirtinn nf Rllph Sllh.atnmie nar-sponsor’s meetings, which con¬sist of two days of lectures oncurrent problems. Participatingcorporations thereby get first duction of such sub atomic par¬ticles as pi and mu mesons.Proton studiedCurrently most attention isKuiper named head,Yerkes observatoryGerard P. Kuiper, professor of astronomy and an authorityon the solar system, has been named the new chairman ofthe department of astronomy by Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton.He succeeds Bengt G. Ph.D. (1933) degrees'from theStromgren, • Sewell L. Avery University of Leyden. First ap-distinguished service professor of pointed by the University of Chi-astronomy, who has been chair- cago as assistant professor inman of the department since Jan- 1936, he became full professor inuary, 1951. Stromgren has accept- 1943, and during 1947-49 was di¬ed an appointment to the Institute rector of the Yerkes and McDon-for advanced studies located at aid observatories.Princeton, New Jersey.Kuiper also will be director ofthe University’s Yerkes observa- the editor of a four-volume worktory at Williams Bay, Wisconsin,and the McDonald observatory atFt. Davis, Texas, which the Uni¬versity operates under a jointagreement with the Universityof Texas.Born in Holland in 1905, Kuiperreceived both his B.S. (1927) and crack at possibilities for indus- focused on work with the protontrial development, permission to beam, which is tapped from theuse the institute’s ideas royalty- huge synchrocyclotron and direct-free. They can also obtain advice ed to a room recently built underon their own research projects Ellis avenue. This recently com-from some of the nation’s top pleted proton room is consideredscientific minds. Continuing sup- the finest installation of its typein the world, at least so far asis known.The director of the institute, Dr.Samuel K. Allison, is concernedover the fact that not enoughyouths in the US are choosing sci¬ence as their life work. He is alsoconcerned about the rate of Rus¬sian scientific progress, which thescientist has been conscious of forsome time, and which was so dra¬matically shown in the recentSoviet satellite achievement.In an attempt to stimulate in¬terest in a scientific career, theinstitute sponsors an open houseeach autumn for high school stu¬dents of the Chicago area. Thisyear the open house will be heldon Saturday, November 23. Grouptours are also often given onThursday afternoons, and al¬though the group must consist ofat least twenty persons, individ¬uals can sometimes join sched¬uled groups. Further informationmay be obtained at room 143 ofthe research institute by any stu¬dents wishing to join a tour.In addition to being the authorof many scientific papers, he isentitled “The solar system,” andeditor-in-chief of a nine-volumework “Compendium of astron¬omy, stars and stellar systems.”rrivure ana Cium LciiOns InFolk SongInstrumental Techniquesgiven byFrank HamiltonCall FA 4-5828; Mortgage Insurance; Emergency Insurance| Phone or Write\ Joseph H. Aaron, '27 <M 35 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060<ILsaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaJWHAT IS YOUREYE Q?• Liberal discount tostudents and faculty• Eyes examined andglasses fitted• Broken lenses duplicatedand rapid frame repair• Contact lenses fittedDr. N. J. De FrancoDr. N. R. NelsonOPTOMETRISTS1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352Established or er 2.» years HEY, PAISANIWe've gol 'em good, we deliver 'em hotPizza pie for your bull-session or get-togetherPhonesMU 4-1014MU 4-1015MU 4-9022 Give us a **ingand We'll Deliver!5 p.m. to 3 a.m.7 days a weekITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA1427 East 67th Street This photo, taken from overhead, shows part ofthe 170 inch synchrocyclotron, housed in the northwing of the Enrico Fermi Institute. Taken duringthe final stages of installation in 1951, the pictureshows the radio-frequency unit and the vacuumpumps. The man on the right is perched on the topcoil of the giant magnet.The cyclotron cost $2,200,000 and is one of thelargest atom smashing devices in the world.SCHNEEMANN’SRed Door Book Shop1328 East 57th StreetChicago’s second mostdistinguished book shopWhether you want a Tajik grammar in Tajikor the latest best-seller, we have it or canprocure it with a minimum of delay.Don't let the size foo! you. Our economy ofspace means economy of overhead. We canfrequently save you 10% and more on yourbook purchases. A wide choice of fine booksin most languages and in most fields of in¬terest is maintained.Open 8 to 8 daily and 3 to 9 on SundayPlease note that we are closed Wednesdays16 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 11, 1957