University of Chicago, Friday, Apr. 4, 1958 «^g^> 31photo by MalonoMembers of WUCB student radio broadcasting station,try out their new, guaranteed sound-proof headquarters inMitchell tower. Left to right, Fred Masterson, station man¬ager; John Scuerman, announcing and recording director,and Alan Luhring, program director.WUCB begins broadcasting from these studios next week.They will share facilities with the department of radio andtelevision which uses them only a few hours weekly. Merle C. Coulter dies;was noted UC botanistMerle C. Coulter, professor of botany and associate dean of the biological sciences divisiondied March 1 in Billings hospital.Son of the late John M. Coulter, a distinguished botanist who joined the faculty in 1896,Merle C. Coulter was born in Lake Forest, Ilinois, June 13, 1894. He took his BS degreefrom the University in 1914 and his PhD in plant genetics, 1919. Appointed instructor inbotany at Chicago in 1921, he became professor in 1931.Coulter’s research was inSG and 19 activitiesto circulate petitionCommunity relations committee of Student Governmentwill circulate a petition for the next two weeks on the issueof segregated housing available to UC students.to Chancellor Lawrence A.Rogers,at UC's eral course, of the same title. Inplant genetics, and he pub- couab0ration with his father helished “The Story of the Plant also wrote "Where Evolution andKingdom,” and “Outline of Gene- Religion Meet.”He continued in this interest inThe resolution is addressedKimpton and reads as follows:“We, the undersignedstudents of the University ofChicago do hereby requestand petition that steps betaken to establish a student- housing file listing all suchand only such housing as isavailable to all students re¬gardless of race, creed, orcolor; and furthermore, thatany official housing file con¬taining discriminatory listingsbe abolished.” tics,” as well as the chapter onplant life in the book, “The Na¬ture of the World and Man,”which was the basic text of theUniversity of Chicago’s first gen¬ eral courses in the biological sci¬ences.His participation in the teach¬ing and curriculum of the biologi¬cal sciences led to educationaladministration positions in thecollege teaching of science, andwhen the general education pro- University, though until 1957 hegram of the College was being taught a graduate course in bot-developed he was the chairmanand principal organizer of the gen-Aherne to judgeBeaux Arts ballAnne Rogers and Brian Aherne, stars of “My Fair Lady” will be judges at this year’s BeauxArts Ball.The ball which is the highlight of Festival of the Arts week will be held in Ida Noyes hallThe petition has been endorsed on April 26, 1958, Saturday evening from 10 pm to 2 am,Jjy ™ student organizations. SG, Other judges will be Michael “dinendentStSfs league ' The Hall, guest artist at the Good- But costumes in any motif will be couple and may be purchased atman theatre (my fair lady’s the Reynolds Cub desk and Idacouncil, Inter-club council, Inter- “dorm council, NAACP, Universitytheater, Chinese Students club,Folklore society, Recorder society,Calvert club, Pre med club, Poli¬tics club, UC Young Democrats,Young Socialist league, Studentforum for Socialist education, andUC Students for Circles Pineshave approved the document. husband) and four members ofthe My Fair Lady cast. They are;Erich Brotherson, Hugh Demp¬ster, Reed Shelton and CharlesVictor.The ball will have a “theatre”theme this year, according toMike Kindred and Charles O’Con¬nell, co-chairmen of the dance. any. He served as dean of the Col¬lege in 1930 and 1931 and as advi¬ser to pre-medical students in theCollege, 1925 to 1958, and chair¬man of the College biological sci¬ences staff, 1931 to 1948, when hewas appointed associate dean ofthe biological sciences division incharge of non clinical depart¬ments.In 1945 he taught at the Army’sUniversity Study center, at Shriv-enham, England. He also servedon the committee of ten, of theAssociation of American MedicalColleges, which conducted a three-year survey of pre-professionalPrizes will be presented to the Noyes desk. tracing of medical students inmost original, most humorous and Faculty and administration the United States,most handsome costumes among members may obtain tickets for Coulter is survived by his wife,the ball at the above mentionedlocations or from Charles O’Con¬nell, director of admissions, exten¬sion 3211.both ladies and gentlemen and tothe most original couple.A grand prize will be presentedto the largest group present at theball showing the “most ingenuityin costuming.”Tickets for the dance are $4 per the former Prudence Wood, ofOak Park, Ill., two children, Pru¬dence Coulter Richardson, wife ofLane Emory and his orchestra a Professor ot architecture, andand Ed Drum and his combo will J°hn M- Coulter; eight grandchfl-provide music. dren, a brother, and two sisters.Bowen delivers Moody lectureby Claire BirenbaumBefore a full house in Man-del hall Tuesday evening,Elizabeth Bowen delivered thefifth of the current WilliamVaughn Moody lecture series.Standing on her reputation as astoryteller and literary critic, MissBowen spoke on “the Strength ofthe Story.”Unable to foresee a time, how¬ever scientific, when man will becontented by plain fact, no matterhow miraculous, or direct state¬ment, no matter what the sourceof authority, the author insistedthere is an “errant part of us al¬ways crying for the wliyso, what-nexts, whatthens, which can onlybe found in the story.“We have an insatiable desirefor stories, a desire that is impor¬tant because of the needs a storyfulfills, the needs basic to a richerlife,” she stated.“First is the need to be trans¬ported, to be carried across thefactual bindings of experience,which by crowding becomes soclose as to be unintelligible.” MissBowen added, “We must extendour experience, sensations, self¬judgmentThere is also “the need to mar¬vel, to be surprised by the unex¬pected adornment of what weimagined we might know, to gaspat the illumination and elevationof familiar things,” she said.“Satisfaction of the need to re¬ spond carries within a richer, ful¬ler life; how do we know what weare until we know what we feel,what we are capable of feeling?”the authoress queried. “A routineexistence may not evoke all of ourresponses; there comes the desireto have something dropped intothe uncalculated depths of re¬sponse, something that is beyondourselves, beyond itself, enoughto awaken us,” she remarked.Miss Bowen noted that the re¬vival of the heroic prototype isthe result of the need for myth.“We love to return through thestory to reactions other than ours.We need to enter another world,part our own, part strange. Butthis other world will lose its holdon us if it is utterly fabricated,utterly foreign; yet it is moreclose, more affecting than thedaily sleep-inducing world of half¬vision we inhabit.”“What makes the story a story;what does it have to do to be astory?” Miss Bowen asked. In agrave tone she answered herself:it must move forward, it musthave the power to go from pointto point. “It is impossible for astory to stand still; a static storyis a contradiction in terms.”The story must confer impor¬tance on its contents, accordingto the authoress. Subject, theme,scene, characters; these are spot¬lit, floodlit by the action. The tel¬ler of the story directs attention to these, specially the characters,who are rationalized and pre¬sented by the author, who intendsthem as important.“These things do not have tobe untrue; material may comefrom history, biography, poten¬tial existence, or experience.” It istrue, however, “that in order tobecome not merely history, thestory must be clothed in the illu¬sion we call art. If it is to retainour interest, it must be truth plusart.”If a story be contrived, as mostare, she added, “it must be so toldas to appear to have the convinc¬ingness of truth. The good story,then, may be true, presented toentice with the charm of untruth;or, it may be untrue, but with thesobriety, convincingness of truth.“At least one foot of the storymust be firmly planted on theground.” The greater the imagina¬tive magnitude involved, thecloser the story should be to con¬crete reality when reality enters—the number of postal offices orrailway stations cannot be too farremoved from the actual situation.“When we deal with fact or fancy,we cannot impair the one-half ofthe tale by stumbling or weaknesson the other half.”Presentation, as for the stageor radio, is what goes to make astory. Not trickery, but timing,lighting, suggestion of accent,concentration of emotion and in-terest—here is found the power of a story, Miss Bowen empha¬sized.The readers react by concen¬trating on what the author hasbrought forward, made clear. Yetthe story is not totally under thecontrol of the author; it is con¬tributed to, filled in by readersthrough t h ei x reactions, theirimageries. “No book comes intofull existence until it has beenread,” Miss Bowen asserted. “Tobe full and real, a story must bethe composite of two imaginations—that of the writer and that ofthe reader.”The storyteller only executespowers of association, and visual¬ization; “good ltierature is de¬termined by us, by our equipment — personality, temperament, ex¬perience—which is highly individ¬ual.” This equipment is used incollaboration, in varying degrees,with any author; it is so great apart of the reality of any storythat it would be untrue to say thatthe story is entity the work ofan author, she stated.Why is there this cooperationbetween reader and writer, whydoesn’t this strange variable bondbreak down more often? Oftenthis cooperation may be entirelyagainst our grain, but we still can¬not put the book down. The rea¬son for the strength of this spell,she answered, is what the storyfirst puts out to entrap us—sus¬pense.File by Monday for SC;hold election April 17-18Deadline for filing as a candidate in the Student Govern¬ment-National student association is Monday, Gary Stoll,chairman of the SG election and rules committee, announced.Any student registered on the quadrangles is eligible if hehas a 2.0 (C) average or bet-ter and will be in residence night in Ida Noyes.next year. Forty-eight students will beFurther information may be ob* elected to the government andtained at student activities office, ten (five national delegates andIda Noyes hall, or at Student Rep- five regional delegates) to theresentative party (SRP) and In- NSA convention, which this yeardependent Student league (ISD will be at Ohio Wesleyan univer-caucuses to be held this Sunday sity. The election is April 1748. I:J Ifi: f gsM il (Photo and Article by Ed Szkirpan)This isALLISON DUNHAM, professor of law. Professor Dunhamteaches courses in property and trust. He is known in pro¬fessional circles for his work in laws concerning real estateproperty, community conservation and slum clearance.He is a member of the American society of planning offi¬cials (city planning) and on the advisory committee ofACTION (American committee to improve our Neighbor¬hoods). He was also on the first board of governors of theChicago South East commission and is now on the board ofthe Metropolitan housing and planning council of Chicago.Dunham has done work in legislation related to housingincluding the Quick taking emminent domain law, and theChicago housing code passed in 1955. He has written, “Mod¬ern real estate translations,” and is co-author with PhillipB. Kurland of, “Mr. Justice,” a series of articles about theSupreme Court.Dunham received his AB from Yankton College in 1936and his LLB from Columbia in 1939. Till 1941 he was a lawclerk to Justice Stone of the United States Supreme Court.During World War II he was naval attache at the US em¬bassy at Nicaragua till 1944, after which he worked with theJoint chiefs of staff of US armed forces. He has been a mem¬ber of the UC law school faculty since 1951.In 1941 Dunham married Anne Toll, whom he met whileworking in Washington. The Dunhams with their three chil¬dren (all lab schoolers) Allan 14, Stephen 12, and Andrew 10,live in Hyde Park. For recreation they like it country styleand enjoy such activities as horseback riding and square danc¬ing.The family went to New Zealand in 1953 where professorDunham instructed about American methods erf teaching lawat the University of New Zealand under a Fulbright exchange.Dunham’s future work will be in laws related to urban re¬development.FOR BOYS & GIRLS, TREY & WOMENWITH “PROBLEM” SKINS!ELIMINATEPIMPLESWITHIN 30 DAYSOUR YOUR MONEY BACK!The oil - NEW,amazing "CAM¬PUS'' Facial-Treatment Kit of¬fers IMMEDIATE relief from theembarrassment and discomfort ofunsightly acne, pimples, blem¬ishes and other skin disorders!What's more, we'll PROVE thatthe "CAMPUS" Kit will claer upthat "problem" skin ... or showDEFINITE IMPROVEMENT with¬in 30 days ... or YOUR MONEYBACK! Fair enough? The "CAMPUS" Kit consists of6 different effectively-medicatedcomponent parts: Face Soap,Blemish Cream, Facial - Pack,"Coverall" Blemish - Stick, FaceLotion and Vitamin A, 25,000USY Unitd. 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A clearer, healthier,smoother, glowing complexion . . . and withsuch a wonderful, new feeling of perfectgrooming!Over a month's supply, postage-paid direct-tc-you for only . . .Fill Out the Order Form Below and Mail To-Day!INTERNATIONAL STANDARD LABORATORIES, INC.700 Prudential Building, Houston 25, Texas.Enclosed is $4.95 (Check, Money-Order, Cash) forCAMPUS KIT.NAME t Print)ADDRESS:CITY ; ZONE STATE. $25,000 GRANTNSA receives lmoney for'V.responsibility studyUnited States National Student association has received a $25,000 grant from the Fundfor the Advancement of Education for a year-long program to develop student responsibilityin relation to the basic problems facing American higher education. ^Fifteen colleges were chosen as pilot campuses in the project which will seek to focusstudent attention on faculty shortages, the effectiveness of college teaching, and the needfor more counselling for both high school and college students.USNSA president RayFarabee, stated that this was out the idea of "expanding stu- The fifteen colleges and univerone of the most significant dent influence on the campus. sities chosen to conduct pilot pro]•projects ever to be undertaken bythe ten-year-old student organiza¬tion."Demands on our system ofhigher education are so great,"Farabee said, "that they cannotbe met by present methods andfacilities."Increasing the student’s re¬sponsibility for his own educationis a relatively revolutionary meth¬od of solving these problems. Stu¬dents, along with faculty and ad¬ministration, must now assume amore active role in the formula¬tion of educational policy, notonly for the sake of their owndevelopment as responsible mem¬bers of the college or universitybut also because of their immedi¬ate stake in the effectiveness oftheir own education.”Terming the project "the mostimportant educational programUSNSA has ever undertaken,"Harold Taylor, president of SarahLawrence College stated that This program to help meet the ect under this program are: Amor,demands for improvement and ex- ican International college, Spring,pansion of the nation’s system of field, Mass.; Buffalo State Teach-higher education was developed ers college, Buffalo, N. Y.; Cor-on the basis of recommendation nell university, Ithica, N. Y ; Demade in the Second Report to the P a u w university, Greenoastio,President, prepared by the Presi- Ind.; Ferris institute, Big Rapids,dent’s Committee on Education Mich.; Mt. Holyoke college, SouthBeyond the High School which Hadley, Mass.; St. Mary’s college,recently completed an intensive Winona, Minn.; Trinity college,study of Arrierica’s educational Hartford, Conn.; University ofneeds and problems in this area. Minnesota, Duluth, Minn.; Uni-Commenting on the student pro- versity of Notre Dame, Southgram, President Dwight D. Eisen- Bend, Ind; University of Oklaho-hower stated “I was glad to learn ma, Norman, Okla.; University ofof the National Student associa¬tion's proposal for developing inthe student community a betterknowledge of the issues confront¬ing higher education."It is very Satisfying to me,”Eisenhower said, "to see the re¬sponsible and mature reaction ofyour organization to these prob¬lems. The fact that your programprovides opportunity for enlist¬ing the fresh thinking and vig¬orous dedication of a million Southern California, Los Angeles,Calif.; University of Washington,within five to ten years there young people in our colleges andwould be a substantial change in universities makes this one of theAmerican higher education if stu- most promising efforts in thisdents were successful in carrying area.’UHomo sapiens studiednext G. O. Fizzide year“The Year of Man”, twelve months in which assortedanimals will study homo sapiens, a period that will fol¬low the current G. O. Fizzickle Year, is being proposed,considered and viewed with suspicion and/or delight bythe best animal brains in the land of Pogo.A spokesman for the group, a possum by trade, saidtoday: “We are not so much interested in outer spaceas in inner space. We feel that we animals have neglectedwhat is under our noses, namely man, in order to studywhat is essentially over our heads.”The Year of Man should present animals everywherewith an opportunity to measure man, to weigh him, toexplore his depths, to scale his heights. Pogo says, “Theinnermost reaches of inner space have never actuallybeen examined. It may be that we will find man is lack¬ing in comic rays Albert, the alligator, has perfected amachine, a sort of steam abacus, for counting comic raysand for measuring their effect upon man’s theoreticalbrain.”One large, more or less fat animal, Walt Kelly, knownto millions as the oldest boy cartoonist in the game, willserve as consultant to the group, inasmuch as his experi¬ence with humans covers nearly a half century. “I havehad many experiences with humans,” said Kelly. “Thosewho do riot believe in humans are in error. I know theyexist, science to the contrary.” Seattle, Wash.; and Wayne Stateuniversity, Detroit, Mich.These fifteen campuses willhold workshops during the nexttwo months to evaluate the needsand potential of their own collegesor universities. Faculty and ad¬ministration will participate inthese workshops along with thestudents. Fifty to seventy fiveother colleges and universitieswill participate in the programthrough their local USNSA re¬gional organizations. All 3 5 SUSNSA member campuses willreceive assistance in developingprograms in this area so that, byJanuary 1959, it is expected thatpermanent programs will havebeen planned or already under¬taken on approximately 400 col¬lege campuses to widen the scopeand depth of student responsibil¬ity in educational planning andprocesses.3 UC scientistsgain fellowshipsThree UC scientists havebeen selected as National sci¬ence foundation faculty fel¬lows for the 1958-59 academicyear, one being selected fromamong 155 applicants for seniorpostdoctoral fellowships and twofrom 440 applicants for the sci¬ence faculty fellowships.Irving E. Segal, professor ofmathematics, received the seniorpostdoctoral fellowship, to studyat the University of CopenhagenHoward Stein, assistant professorof natural science in the College,received a science faculty fellow¬ship, and will study mathematicsat the University of MichiganHarold J. F. Gall, associate pro¬fessor of natural sciences in dieCollege, will study zoology (beUniversity of Oxford.ALEXANDERS RESTAURANT H1137 East 63rd St.Special Sunday Dinner Menu IncludesROAST PRIME RIB of NATIVE BEEF, Au Jus *4*1.75including choice of: Soups, salads9potatoes9 vegetables9 beverages9 dessertsSunday Dinner Prices Range from *1” to *27SOpen 24 hrs. MU 4-5735 Seven days each week V‘:2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 4, 1958——————UC Vice-president \Twelve UC students winWalter Bartky dies I Woodrow Wilson awardsWalter Bartky, vice-president in charge of special scientificprojects, and professor of mathematics, died March 19 inBillings hospital.Bartky, 56, was an applied mathematician who held facultyappointments in astronomy, Twelve UC students graduating this June have been awarded Woodrow Wilson fellowshipsfor 1958-59. The fellowships, which are intended to encourage scholars to enter a career ofcollege or university teaching, normally provide tuition and an additional $1,400.The students are: Anthony Amberg, English; Edmund Becker, biochemistry; John Brent-linger, philosophy; John Brewer, sociology; Alphonse Buccino, mathematics; Frank Chilton,statistics and mathematics be- 1901, he took his BS degree in physics; Elizabeth Ginsberg, English; Raymond Kingsley, philosophy; Nancy Kotler, English;tore he became a full-time Univer- 1923 and his PhD in 1926 from the Judith Podore, history; Phil-sity administrator. University. He was first appointed ippe Radley, Russian studies; this and the next four years. A Candidates from the UC andDuring and since World War II to the faculty in 1926, becoming a and Susan Tax, anthropology, grant of approximately $25 mil-Canada are eligible and may behe had close association with the professor in 1942. He was dean of -------armed forces, as a scientific ad- students in the division of thevisor and the director of Univer- physical sciences, 1940 44; associ-sity research and evaluation proj- ate dean of the division, 1942-45,ects conducted for the services, and dean from 1945 until his ap-especially the air force. Through pointment as vice president, inthis work he was widely known June, 1955among staff officers and defenseofficials. Bartky recently was ac¬tive in the planning and develop¬ment of the University’s new com¬puter center.Born in Chicago, September 21, He is survived by his wife, theformer Elizabeth Robertson ofGlasgow, Scotland; two sons, twograndchildren, a sister and abrother. The awards are based on nomi¬nation by faculty and administra¬tive offiicals, a review by regionalcommittees and then by a nationalcommittee. UC is represented re¬gionally (Illinois and Indiana) byDonald Meiklejohn, associate professor of philosophy in the Col¬lege.Woodrow Wilson program hasbeen expanded from the 300awards last year to over 1,000 for lion by the Ford foundation made in the natural sciences, social sdpexpansion possible. ences and humanities. /Swedenborg Foundationto hold two essay contestsSwedenborg foundation will sponsor an essay contest on“Swedenborg’s contribution to science and religion,” WilliamN. Weaver, assistant dean of federated theological facultyannounced recently.20 books onand religion.Miller descries educationalunbalance at convocationProgress in the academic disciplines that teach responsibility, judgment, and ethics shouldnot be neglected in the rush to train scientists, Dr. J. Roscoe Miller said Friday, March 21. for nevv -title, students may Twentv TTCVr*:Dr. Miller, president of Northwestern university, spoke at the 277th University convo- write 0n either topic and essays namod ^tiuWThe contest, open to all stu¬dents, offers a $300 first prize,$200 second and $100 third prizes.Deadline for entries is April 15.“Swedenborg and the Christianhope of immortality” was the nampH Uyoriginal topic, but, according toWeaver the International Geo¬physical year provided incentivefor the new title. Students may science, philosophy,Student aidesL. A. Kimptoncation in Rockefeller Memorial chapel. At this convocation, Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimp¬ton conferred degrees on 175 recipients, bringing the total for the year to 375.“A disproportionate emphasis by the public or the government on any one area of educa-the name of nationaltion insecurity can result only in theweakening of the total educa¬tional structure,” Dr. Miller said.‘ Only a truly balanced liberalsystem of education can preparemen for the responsibilities ofdemocratic leadership, producethe leaders and managers essen¬tial in a free society, and main¬tain that relationship between in¬tellect and conscience that keeps men free.“Religion, literature, the clas¬sics, and the arts have an indis¬pensable place in all our educationbecause they are our main sourceof knowledge of what is foremostin human character and conduct,”he said.Dr. Miller discussed the exam¬ination of the country’s educa¬tional system aroused by the Rus-Publish Leonard Whiteshistory opus posthumouslyLeonard D. White, late Ernest DeWitt Burton distinguishedservice professor of public administration and chairman ofthe political science, had his major work “The RepublicanEra: 1869-1901” published posthumously last week by theMacmillan company.Member of the faculty since1920, White is the author of threeother works: “The Jaeksonians,1X29-1861,” “The Jeffersonians,<4 801-1929” and “The Federalists,1789-1801.”For “The Federalists,” the firstvolume of White’s series tracingthe evolution of our system ofgovernment, he received theWoodrow Wilson award fromPrinceton university. For “TheJaeksonians,” published in 1954,he received a Bancroft prize,awarded annually by Columbiauniversity “for distinguished writ¬ing in American history.”The posthumous book coverst lie years of the administrationsfrom Grant to McKinley.During his lifetime, White wasthe author of 17 books and specialUCers chosen toPhi Beta KappaTwo UC students have beenelected to Phi Beta Kappa,national honorary scholasticsociety.They are: Frank Chilton, Jr., ofArlington, Virginia, who received3 bachelor’s degree, and GeorgeYien Chi Chao, Tai Chung, For¬mosa, a master’s degree recipient.They received degrees' at the277 th Convocation, the second ofthe University’s academic year. studies in public administrationand government. He was active oncommissions during the Rooseveltadministration and also held exec¬utive positions, including vicepresident of the Institut Interna¬tional des Sciences, and presidentof the Political Science associationand of the American Society for sian launching of an earth satel¬lite. He said that resorting tocrash methods in an effort to cre¬ate scientists overnight is not thelong range answer.“A crash program can createan atomic bomb but not an atomicscientist,” he said. “The effectivelong-range answer is constantstudy and improvement of educa¬tion at all levels.”There are two problems whichmust be met immediately if theUnited States is to have sufficientscientists for the future, Dr. Mil¬ler said.“First, it is necessary thatyoung people having talent andinterest in higher education aregiven a chance and motivated todevelop that talent, since manystudents capable of doing collegework do not enroll in college,” hesaid.The second problem is the se¬rious shortage of high school sci¬ence and mathematics teachers.He urged the graduates to remem¬ber that such things as improvedteacher salaries, adequate class¬room and .laboratory facilities,and a status of dignity and se¬curity for the teacher are the con¬cern of everyone in a community. will be considered together. Dead¬line for the second topic is June 1.All essays must be between2,000 and 3,000 words. They shouldbe submtited at the FTF dean’soffice, Swift hall 101.Judges are Dean Walter Har-relson, divinity school; professorJaraslav Pelikan, FTF, andWeaver.Swedenborg foundation is anon-profit organization that pub¬lishes and distributes the writingsof Emanuel Swedenborg, an 18th-century Swedish scientist andtheologian. He wrote more than have beenAides byChancellor Lawrence A. Kimp¬ton.They are Joseph M. Baron, Ed¬mund F. Parker, Philip E. Bern-zott, Frederic W. Betz. John A*Brentlinger, Dorothea Cay ton*Lynn Chadwell, William H. Gar¬nett, Jr., Elizabeth Ginsberg andWilliam R. Harmon.Also Carol A. Hopkins, Leon R.Kass, Carolyn A. Kiblinger, Adri¬enne R. Kinkaid, David R. Leo-netti, Sarah F. Moore, Nancy A.Moulton, Arthur T. Pedersen, He¬lene S. Rudoff and Gwendolyn C.M. Weber.Hold White memorialMemorial services for Leonard D. White will be held inRockefeller memorial chapel Friday at 4 pm. White, politicalscientist who held the Ernest DeWitt Burton distinguishedservice professorship at the University at the time of his re¬tirement in June 1956, died Hold services Mondayin Harvey's memoryMemorial services for the late Dr. Basil C. H. Harvey,emeritus professor of anatomy and former dean of medicalstudents, wiil be held Monday, at 4 pm, in Bond chapel.Dr. Harvey, who died February 15, had been a member ofthe faculty since 1901 when hebecame assistant in anatomyat the University and its thenmedical school, Rush medicalcollege.Speakers at the service will beDr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, dean ofthe division of the biological sci¬ences, Dr. Peter P. H. De Bruyn,professor of anatomy, and Dr.Percival Bailey, professor of neu¬rology and neurological surgery,University of Illinois. The Rev.Granger Westberg, associate pro¬fessor in the biological sciencesdivision and federated theologicalfaculties, will give the invocation.February 23.Speakers at the service will be&Ae1171 EAST 55th STREET Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton;T. V. Smith, of Syracuse univer¬sity, former UC professor of phi¬losophy, who will speak forWhite’s colleagues on the Chi¬cago faculty; John Gaus, Harvarduniversity, speaking on White’splace in the field of public ad¬ministration; Robert E. Merriam,deputy director of the US Bureauof the Budget, representingWhite’s former students, and Pro¬fessor Herman Finer, for the de¬partment of political science. 5 pizzas forprice of 4NIGKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063 WOODLAWNBOWLINGLANES6225 Cottage Grove16 NEW ALLEYSSpecial Afternoon Ratesto College Students —35c per lineFA 4-3373for informationChuck Hull, mgr.Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristEyes ExaminedGlasses FittedContact LensesVisual Training1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372 CLASS ROOM IVYIVY CHINO PANTS $2.95All Wool Ivy Flannels $7.95Crew Neck Sweaters ^, $5.95Ivy Shirts $2.95 & $3.95D & C Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-2728“In the Neighborhood for 40 Years**Hours: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 a.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdayApr. 4, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3-I >•Opinion of other papersOxford university paper says cfucc^of I laroonnuclear crusaders misguidedOxford university Cherwell, the crusaders is either wise THE CRUSADERS have,February 15: As was to be ex- or right. we think, the wrong end of thepected, the nuclear crusaders Nuclear disarmament by stick. If there is any way outhave risen in protest. We are itself, without a political set- °f the present internationalcynical, they cry; we are un- tlement, would be a poor guar- impasse, it is surely throughthirking; we are fallacious, antee against a nuclear war. political settlement — the Ra-and we ought to be rolling up Any general war would be- Pa^i plan, some other form ofour sleeves to help them get come a nuclear war as soon disengagement, or some such,rid of the H-bomb instead of as the powers involved could What any first step must of-snarling from the side lines, reassemble their atomic stock- ^er * is equal advantage, or™ rn«ArRirir piles and felt it necessary to equal sacrifice for both sides., . . . w use them. Now, of course, any These are the objectionscrusaders o v po . e } war would immediate- and the counter-claims thatdoubt that there is the slight- fc _ , _ the —est chance of anything being ^ become a nuclear war, a dit is surely unwise to com- lssneri every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andIntermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago MaroonIda Noves hall, 1212 East 59th street, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-oWextensions 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionsby mail, J3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday. Deadlinefor all material 3 pm, Wednesday.Editor-in-chiefGary MokotoffManaging editor Associate editorRobert J. Halosz Rochelle M. DubnowNews editorMory Finkle Gadfly editorRichard Brooks Culture editorNeol JohnstonSports editorRichard Cousens CartoonistsLiza FlanneryDick MontgomeryAlon Petlin Copy editorDonna Davisaccomplished by their cam¬paign, nor do we accept their P]ete]y W** the deterrentview that nuclear disarma- va*ue °f ^is fact,ment is either a valid objective Nuclear disarmament by it-in itself or a proper step in se^ would also leave the Rus-easing international tension. sians with their considerablesuperiority in conventionalforces. They have approxi-Few people need to be toldthat atomic warfare is a hor¬rible business, or even that afull-scale war might well jeop¬ardize the future of the hu¬man race. This does not meanthat the policy proposed byfree deliveryOMAR’S PIZZA1 145 E. 55thIIY 3-5150 UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorup-to-the-minute IVY LEAGUE stylingat a fabulous down-to-earth price!fa mousIVY LEAGUER SHIRTS$095with the new, gently rolled button-down collarfeaturing the center back pleat and button-in-back collar. The choice of discerning men . . .these truly fine shirts tailored for us by UON OFTROY with deft custom touches usually foundonly in shirts costing many dollars more. Hand¬some combed Oxford, in whites, yarn-dyed pastelsand popular stripings.D & C Clothes Shop744 E. ©3rd St* MI 3-2728‘•In the \eiyhhorhood for 40 Yearn*9Hours: 9 o.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 o.m. - 9 p.m., Saturday crusaders must meet ifthey seriously hope to con¬vince anyone. Mass meetingswith impassioned preaching tothe converted and horrificfilms won’t do. Photographic stoff: Robert Malone, Dove Coffey, Ed Dephoure.Editorial stoff: Claire Birnbaum, Ina Brody, Tom Coblk, Jane Forer, LonceHaddix, John Herzog, Irene Kenneth, Ruth Losemore, Gene Moss, NoncyPenkava, Dick Purtill, Uldis Roze, Corol Silver, Elizabeth Stroup, EdSzkirpan.Business ManagerLawrence D. KesslerAdvertising monogerGordon Briggs Office monogerArt Taitel Circulation monogerJoan Helmkenmately 250 divisions in thefield; NATO hopes somedayto have twelve. This is whatmakes nuclear disarmamentcompletely unacceptable tothe West as an isolated firststep in relaxing tension. Letters to TTS■it?'..'‘V is v"V-JCriticize SC inefficiencycaused by party conflictsAs we see it, Student Goverment’s functions fall roughly into two classifications: contin¬uing and special. During this rump session, most of the continuing activities were allowedto continue, but the special functions were neglected. In some cases however, even the con¬tinuing activities had to face opposition from the majority party.The Constitutional and Student Code revisions struggled against an uninformed assemblyfor two months before they were passed. During most of the meetings for the greater partof the session politicking re- ..studen, leaders., (rom thcir ,«*.placed legislation. els uniess this campus demon-.The apathy which resulted strafes that it is genuinely inter¬in several meetings being can- ested in the proceedings and theceled for lack of a auorum is due legislation of the Governmentprimarily to the politicking which which, whether most studentstook place during the campaigns:this year again the parties ran thepopular, not the interested peo¬ple in their ranks. This resultedin a government composed of un¬interested and, what is worse, in¬ept assemblymen. An example ofthe havoc created is the poorfunctioning of most of the govern¬ment’s committees.With the exception of the stu¬dent faculty relations committee,chaired by ISL, and the electionsand rules committee, chaired bvan independent, the committeesfailed to perform their jobs ade¬quately. The brunt of the fault forthis poor performance lies withthe committee chairmen, these in¬ept and uninterested assembly¬men.We rather doubt that the par¬ties themselves will remove the realize it or not, is important totheir interests as students at thisUniversity.Apathy notwithstanding, therewas surely no excuse for the ma¬jority party, holding thirty seats,not being able to rouse the neces¬sary twenty-four members forquorum. Nor was there any ex¬cuse for ISL, in the role of minor¬ity party, to obstruct or attemptto obstruct legislation simply be¬cause it was initiated by SRP.Apparently even in a coalitiongovernment, both parties willwork only for their own narrowinterests. Now it is true that ifit weren’t for the party interests,no legislation would be proposed,but there is surely no reason toobstruct the other party’s legisla¬tion simply because it was notproposed by them and not you.Harper Wines & Liquors1114-16 E. 55th St.Easter Wine SpecialsGreat Western Sauternes 98c1938 Vintage Pouillv-Fuisse 2.981946 Vintage Chablis 2.491953 Vintage Pommard 2.19Fine Douro Port 1.79Imported Rhine Wnies 1.29ICE)II BEER — FREE DELIVERYFA 4-1233, 7699, 1318 armed with a knowledge of pro¬cedures and issues not possessedby many party members some ofwhom did not even know the ba¬sics of Robert’s Rules of Order.Consequently, we were able, asindependents, to work effectivelyin committee and on the floor.Neither of us will run for gov¬ernment again, but only becausewe feel that we cannot again de¬vote the time and energy to it thatwe did these last two quarters. Weare convinced that SG has a func¬tion to perform on this campus.We are confident that it can per¬form this function well.Sometimes, like this year, itfails to demonstrate all its pos¬sibilities, such less exploit them,but only for the reasons statedabove, and these only the partiesthemselves can remedy. If ISLand SRP intend to remain politi¬cally significant and active oncampus, then they would do wellto admit and work to eliminatethese faults.Jerry Kauv&rGary SiollCHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 4, 1958 One of the major difficultieswith the parties this year, as inyears past, was their failure toconsolidate their positions, oreven discuss fully the various is¬sues (especially constitutional) intheir caucuses.Inept assemblymen, Internallyweak party organization, andlack of party leadership combinedthis year with the result that per¬sonality clashes and useless floorfights needlessly disrupted andprolonged many meetings.The role of independents in theGovernment was difficult to playbut valuable to this year’s assem¬bly. We were able, by initiatinglegislation and several times byanalyzing issues clearly both onthe floor and in the party cau¬cuses, to demonstrate the validityand justness of our views so thatthey were acted upon favorablyby the assembly.Several times we failed in thiseffort, overwhelmed by the sheerweight of obstinate numbers, butin many instances (FrankfurtExchange, for example), we suc¬ceeded. We came to our termsGADFLY/ % ffifeBL' xIf I may use such a ludicrous figure of speech, (I).am sort of a gadfly . . . attached to the state, and allday long and in all places am always fastening uponyou, arousing and persuading and reproaching you/*— Plato's APOLOGYFellowships ironic April foolON APRIL 1, most sane people’s thoughtsturn to love and green grass and a minorprank or two. But at American universities debate between intelligent students and asecure faculty is seriously diminished. Infor¬mal meetings between student and faculty Gadfly PolicyGadfly is an attempt on the part of the Maroon to pro¬vide provocative ideas to the campus at large. The columnis meant to be written by students and faculty memberswho wish to have their ideas expressed in the Maroon, andis not a Maroon staff editorial column. Articles will beprinted unsigned, and the author's name will be held inthe strictest confidence by the Gadfly editor.The opinions expressed in the column Gadfly do notnecessarily represent the editorial policy of the Maroon,or its staff.Readers are invited to express their views on Gadflyaritcles in the "Letters to Gadfly."Send aritcles or letters to Gadfly, Maroon office, IdaNoyes hall.around the country, (and UC is no exception),insane hopes and fears of many students fixnot upon a lovely damsel, but upon the al¬mighty scholarship and fellowship. It is uponthe recipients of these fellowships that a ma¬jor prank is being played.The insane hopes and fears of the studentawaiting fellowship 1*0511115 are partly justi¬fied. The scholarship and fellowship has be¬come for many a sine qua non for seriousacademic study in a day of rising tuitions andliving costs.And this necessary assistance to the stu¬dent is granted by a bureaucracy shroudedin secrecy. The student knows little aboutthe chances of his application, (except byshrewd interpretation of faculty smiles), heknows less about the particular standardsemployed in evaluating his application; hedoes not know how important the judgmentsof his ability are by the faculty, the Dean,and the departmental secretary. Since thestudent’s most frequent contact is with thefaculty, he attributes to this faculty thepower to make and break him on the "fel¬lowship rack”.THUS, a curious reversal in the student’spower has resulted in the past centuries. Nolonger does the student evaluate the itinerantlecturer and pay him accordingly. Today aletter fed and too secure professor evaluatesthe student and pays him accordingly.Since it is the "bright” students who arerewarded with fellowships, (any student canfake necessary evidence of need for financialaid), it is the relationship between the brightstudent and the professor which has changed.THE PROMISING student of today findshimself in the position of having to please histeachers or at least thinking he has to pleasethem. As a result, argument, doubts, and take on connotations of currying favor rath¬er than common interest in intellectual prob¬lems.The devices of degrees and degree exam¬inations, required courses and faculty tenuresare ways of insuring faculty security fromstudent judgment. The only possibility forthe student expressing preference betweenmembers of the faculty is the limited extentto which he may substitute one course foranother. Degrees and degree requirementlimit this privilege.The other alternative for the student isto leave the university entirely, or becomea part time scholar forsaking degrees andrequired courses for at least the subjectivefeeling of scholastic freedom. However, pro¬fessors justifiably reserve their time, atten¬tions, and support to those under the bondageof a degree program and a fellowship.MOREOVER, the lot of the private scholaris indeed sad these days because of the controlwhich universities have over academic com¬munication and the lack of any communityof private scholars.One cannot avoid the conclusion that theintentional or accidental change in studentpower in relation to the faculty has firmlyestablished the principle that it is not thestudents who judge the faculty at any levelof the educational system but the reverse.The granting of fellowships most effectivelyembodies this principle. And those who hopeand fear for the sake of fellowships uncriti¬cally accept this assumption.THUS, the awarding of a fellowship onApril 1st may turn out to be an ironic andharmful April Fool’s joke, if it is not criticallyaccepted or refused by a recipient who hasthe knowledge of the price he pays for the"award”.Great buy!the trim-fittingARROW GlenIt’s the shirt with the stand¬out choice in collars — theregular, button-down,or per¬manent stay Arrow Glen.Exclusive Mitoga® tailoringcarries through the trim, tap¬ered look from collar to waistto cuff. * Sanforized broad¬cloth or oxford in stripes,\ checks, solids. $4.00 up.duett, Peabody & Co., Inc.ARROW-—first in fashions On Campus withMkjcfihukan{By the Author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys! "and,“Barefoot Boy with Cheek”)A FRAT TO REMEMBEREvery year, as we all know, the Benevolent and ProtectiveOrder of Collegiate Fraternities awards a highly coveted prizeto the fraternity house which, in its judgment, has done themost to promote and enhance the fraternity way of life. Theprize this year-eight hundred pounds of putty—goes to theAlpha Hernia chapter of the South Dakota College of Dentistryand Renaissance Art.The award this year is exceptionally richly deserved, for theAlpha Hernia house is the very model of all a fraternity shouldbe. It is, first of all, a most attractive house physically. Theoutside walls are tastefully covered with sequins. Running alongthe upper story is a widow's walk, with a widow stationed everythree feet. Moored to the chimneypot is the Graf Zeppelin.Indoors the house gives an impression of simple, casual charm.The chapter room is furnished in homey maple and chintz,with a dash of verve provided by a carp pool three hundredfeet in diameter. A waterspout rises from the center of the poolwith the housemother bouncing on the top.Members’ rooms are gracious and airy and are provided w ithbeds which fold into the wrall and are never seen again. Eachroom also has a desk, a comfortable chair, a good reading lamp,and a catapult for skeet-shooting. Kidney-shaped desks areavailable for kidney-shaped members.Perhaps the most fetching feature of the house are the packsof Marlboros stacked in heaps wherever one goes. If one wishesto enjoy a fine filtered cigarette in any room of the house, allone need do is reach out one’s hand in any direction and pickup a Marlboro. Then one rubs two pledges together, lights one’sMarlboro, and puffs with sweet content the tastiest smoke themind of man has yet devised.The decor, the grace, the Marlboros, all combine to makeAlpha Hernia a real gasser of a fraternity. But a fraternity ismore than things; it is also people. And it is in the jieople depart¬ment that Alpha Hernia really shines.Alpha Hernia has among its members the biggest BMOCson the entire campus of the South Dakota College of Dentistryand Renaissance Art. There is, for instance, William Make¬peace Sigafoos, charcoal and bun chairman of the annual StampClub outing. Then there is Dun Rovin, winner of last year’sAll-South Dakota State Monoply Championship, 133 PoundClass. Then there is Rock Schwartz, who can sleep standing up.Then there is Tremblant Placebo, who can crack pecans in hisarmpits. Then there is Ralph Tungsten, who went bald at eight.But why go on? One can see what a splendid bunch of chapsthere is in Alpha Hernia, and when one sees them at the housein the cool of the evening, all busy with their tasks—somepicking locks, some playing Jaeks-or-Better, some clippingPlayboy—one’s heart fills up and one’s eyes grow misty, andone cannot but give three cheers and a tiger for Alpha Hernia,fraternity of the yearlAnd, if you don't mind, a routing huzzah for Marlboro,cigarette of the year, whose makers take pleasure in pick-ing up the tab for this column.Apt. 4, 1958 •CHICAGO M A R O 0 N • 5CLASSIFIEDS Hauser bEames lower birth rateUniversity rote 30c per line. Others 60c per line.Phone Ml 3-0800. Ext. 3265ServicesOffset reproduction, mimeographing,photo copying, executive IBM typing.Save by typing up your own stencil oroffset master. Free pick-up and delivery.Mayda. HY 3-4541.Knssian expertly taught. Elementary orconversational. MI 3-5266.Expert income tax service. 1348 E. 55th.Private rm., bath, near UC in exchangefor simple service. DR 3-0111.Help wantedSecretarial position at Hlllel founda¬tion available after June. For interview,call PL 2-1127.For rentEight luxurious spacious rooms, all car¬peted. Three tile baths-shower stalls.Numerous closets and cabinets. Tilecabinet kitchen. All and more of theamenities and comforts of a home builtto your own specifications. Side drivegarage. You must see to appreciate.Nominal rental only $175 per month.Box 36, Maroon.Male grad student would like to shareapt. on E. Hyde Park blvd., near IC withsame. Completely furnished; very rea¬sonable. HY 3-4716 after 5.Apartment. Six large rooms. Refrig.,stove. Owner will decorate. 6828 S. Cor¬nell. BU 8-2622.Spacious man's room with maid service,I blk. from campus. BU 8-7257.Ride wantedTo. N.Y.C. Frl. or Sat. Phone LarryMirel: DO 3-7244. For sale1955 2-dr. Chevrolet sedan. $640. CallT. Barham, BU 8-9436.World's sportiest transportation. VESPAand LAMBRETTA. Trade-in on cars ac¬cepted. Bill Libby. BO 8-5570.Dining room set for sale; buffet break-front, table, six chairs. Good condition.Call CA 7-4595 after 6 p.m.To sell or give away: four kittens. Con¬tact house mgr. Phi Delta Theta.PersonalResponsible student's wife (registerednurse), will care for child or childrenIn own home. MI 3-5797.PROTEST H-bomb tests; Join the Amer¬ican Friends Service committee's posterwalk! Contact Ken Calkins, MU 4-9035.Dear Don, Happy Anniversary!All my love forever Pin.For your Sunday dinner outing, Alex¬ander’s rest. 1137 E. 63rd.Lost: One Sigma pin. Finder please con¬tact Judy Aronson, Gates hall.Dear Griszche: Here's to traumaless to¬morrows.MotherDear Hermit: When the closing curtainof the Blackfriar’s Show comes down,April 19, the curtain goes up at thePhi Delt house for the midwest premiereof "New Frogs for ’58.”MoleDear Mole; I don’t want to miss that.It's part of their annual (now ALLCAMPUS) Silly Strut. 5737 WoodlawnAve., April 19, right after the Black¬friar’s Show.HermitDear secret pal, Easter’s coming . . .1318. on current business recessionCollapse of the “baby boom” by the summer or fall of this year is a possibility becausethe post-war rate of marriages has been punctured by the current business recession, Phil¬ip M. Hauser said recently.A decrease in the birth rate would be the first major downturn since 1934, Hauser said.Professor of sociology and director of the UC population research and training center, he isa former acting director of the US bureau of the census.“The 1957 rate of 8.9 mar¬riages per 1000 persons wasthe lowest recorded in theUnited States since 1933, when itwas 8.7,” HauSer said in a paneldiscussion on ‘‘Business decisionsand people” at the sixth annualmanagement conference, spon¬sored by the school of businessand its executive program club, atthe Conrad Hilton hotel."Decline in the 1957 marriagerate was especially sharp duringDecember, when it dropped to 8.4per 1000 population, or 10 per centbelow December of 1956. The Na¬tional Office of Vital Statisticsestimates 1957 marriages as 1,-516,000, which is 3 per cent belowthe 1956 figure of 1,569,000."This decline in the marriagerate is almost certain to be fol¬lowed by a break in the birth rate,which may become evident by thesummer and more likely by thefall of this year.”During the post-war boom inmarriages and babies, the birthrate has been around a level of 25 per thousand. The rate of 25.3in 1957 made that the sixth suc¬cessive year in which a rate of 25or more was recorded, Hausernoted.The figures, Hauser said, are“crude” rates and in part thedownturn is caused by the rela¬tively small number of individualsnow of marriageable age becauseof the low birth rate of the de¬pression.But Hauser said he anticipateda decline in the birth rate becausepast studies have demonstratedthat both the marriage rate andthe birth rate drop during a busi¬ness slump."By 1975 the population willhave increased from about the present 373 million to a lowerlimit of 207 million and an upperlimit of 228 million, according toprojections of the US bureau ofthe census. We therefore will beadding between 34 and 55 millionpersons.“Such a large increase in a spanof 17 years will require continuedexpansion of facilities for iheproduction of goods and services.Even though a slowing in outlaysfor business plant and equipmenthas been an important factor inthe present recession, Americanbusiness and industry by nomeans have expanded sufficientlyas yet to meet the demand of thecountry’s rapidly expanding con¬sumer market.”Give deferment examSelective service college qualifications test will be givenMay 1, Lt. Colonel F. B. Woodworth, acting Illinois directorfor Selective Service, announced recently.This will be the only test offered for the 1957-58 school year.Applications must be post-You'll be siftin' on top of the world when you change to ISMOnly L*M gives youthis filter fact—the patent numberon every pack....d moreeHcdive fHter Best tastin’ smoke youll ever find!On today’s L*M. Put yourself behind the pleasure end of an L&M. Get the flavor, thefull rich taste of the Southland’s finest cigarette tobaccos. The patentedMiracle Tip is pure white inside, pure white outside, as a filtershould be for cleaner, better smoking. <e>isss ligqxtt a myers tobacco co.Light into that Live Modern flavor marked not later than mid¬night, next Friday.Application cards and instruc¬tions may be obtained from anySelective Service local board. Theoffice closest to campus is at 1519W. 63rd street.Scores made on the test areused by local boards in consider¬ing requests for deferment fromservice to continue studies. A stu¬dent’s standing in class is alsoconsidered.“Many men are able to completeundergraduate study before reach¬ing an age when induction can beexpected and do not need to seeka deferment,” Colonel Woodworthsaid. Draft calls are for men, 22and older.PETERSON MOVINGSpecial Offer25c discount on any pizzaMon., Tues., Wed., Thurs., OnlyFree delivery toUC StudentsTerry’s Pizza1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045PARTMiss Marlow* and ttia woman Inyour li(* beseech you to Keep instep with fashionl City Club makesIt eesy with a flreet hew selectionM*rj»n Mstiewe, shoes for dress, play and everylovely star ' bay I See for yoursalf—todayl*t radio and6 •CHICAGO MAROON « Apr. 4, 1958History of Blackfriars givenby Fred SchmidtOnce upon a time in a land of stars and stripes, there existed a dty on the shores of amighty lake. In the city was a miserable swamp. In this swamp was a young, flourishing Uni¬versity. And in this University were some young students and some young professors andold professors who felt young in spirit and, of course, some young professors who felt old inspirits.Oh, it was a jolly bunch of academicians that paddled their gondolas to and from class eachmorning debating whether —Ellastcin would discover rela- passed right by them, upsetting tunately for BF, we all know thetivitv in 1936- while their fish- *he!r small pleasure craft with the final decision.11y y, , . .. . backwash. It remains unknown to tiOWPVPr ion*?Inc lines trailed leisurely through this da whether Prof C H Vin- ^ ? Y ^ ’ 7he aca:1 *, , . inisL aay wnerner t*roi.y. tt. vin- demic alchemist” was given, andthft bulrushes. cent would have added to his won- in 1904 the first official Black-But all was not well with some derfully begun sentence had he friars shoW( »The passing of PhaUof the more extra-curricular type [I0* been forced to swim for his Kahn” was produced. Everymen. True Hyde Park’s high’s llfe> “ut this writers consolation, spring from then until 1943, ex-football team had been whipped at *east’ is that some things areagain, which was pretty good for known or>ly to God.a" five-year-old university. True, In any case, the idea for the BFalso, were the persistent rumors of the UC was bom that immortalthat several poli sci students were day in 1898 on, in, and under theplanning a student government in Midway moat. Today, if one gazes ing makeup.cept for 1918, a Blackfriar showwas given in Mandel hall. At first,campus parodies were given, withlong-suffering mothers and bestgirls making costumes and apply-hopes of seeing political partiesrise to sponsor varied and chal¬lenging cultural events on cam¬pus.But even all this did not singof a complete and well-roundedextra-curricular program for sucha school as this. closely at the street of low groundrunning between 59th and 60thstreets, where innocent childrenskate in the winter and inno . . .and students relax in the spring,oblivious of the historic groundbeneath their uncut toe-nails, onemight still find an old fishinghook or, if very lucky, a rustyoarlock, resting peacefully in thathistory-soaked sod. The slip, ofcourse, is gone.Colorful as this history is, how¬ever, scenes closer and even morerelevant command our attention.The first Blackfriars show,“The deceitful dean” (originallycalled "the deceitful Coast Guardcutter” but changed by W. R. In the 1920’s, the jazz agecaught on,, with full-scale multi¬thousand dollar production, di¬rected, choreographed and con¬ducted by professionals. Towardthe end of the 1930’s, the all-maleBF joined with Mirror, the all¬woman musical group, but, be¬cause of World War II, 1942 sawthe last BF show of the old era.It was a bright, resplendent era.It was an organization which at¬tracted students like William V.Morgenstern, now director of pub¬lic relations for UC; Daniel CattonRich, director of the Art Institute;Harold Swift; Arthur Bovee;Earle Ludgin; Howard Willett;Nels Fuqua; Frank Breckenridge;Morton Howard '19 asIrmcngard in the 1916 pro¬duction of Blackfriars, titled"A Rhenish Romance." football alumni. His name wasAmos Alonzo Stagg. The programone day, as professor djroctor didn’t believe it. Thedrama critics from the newspa¬pers didn’t believe it. They calledup a sports editor. “Oh, sure,” said sjon could not have been made. Inthe sports editor, “he was the hero the spring of 1956, the new BF’sof the Hyde Park high game.” gave the floor show for the BeauxThe program director put Amos arts ball and announced that aAlonzo Stagg in the program. A Sh0w would be given the follow-drama critic, in his review of the ing spring. The show was given;show, suggested Stagg retire to “Gamma Delta Iota,” and it hadfootball. Stagg, however, thoughthe might enjoy being a Black¬friar.Then one day William Rainey an audience. The Maroon called it,“a college show plain and sim¬ple.”But the Blackfriars were notsaid William Rainey, flicking the mum budget and with maximumtassel on his mortarboard, “Amos, enthusiasm and cooperation. Withif you return to football, we will one show successfully produced,Then,C. H. Vincent’s humanities classwas killing time fishing for At¬lantic bullheads in the Midwaymoat while waiting to see a boatleave the Ellis avenue dock forSevastopol (this, of course, is pre¬posterous, for even then the CoastGuard prohibited Atlantic bull¬heads from inland waters), FrankR. Adams, later the first abbotof the renowned Blackfriars, said,‘ I think we should start an or¬ganization called the Blackfriars?! ,!he. University of Chicago. -jjarper dropped into the BF mon- particularly disgruntled. The or-[albert Blakey^ later a co-fo astery where he found Amos and ganization was back. An originalo' the renownedIBP. who was call- ' counling the take. "Amos, BF show was produced on a mini-mg stroke, said, “I think the & -Blackfriars should give one orig¬inal all-male musical comedyevery year.” Walter L. Gregory,later a co-founder of the renownedBlackfriars, busy netting a 32-pound Atlantic bullhead, foundonly the time to say, “I thinkthat’s fine,” before he spied aCoast Guard cutter tearing up theslip.(From this purely nautical termmany humorous allusions havebeen made, but the reader mustrealize that for a Coast Guard( utter such an art is no smalltrick.)Prof. Vincent, later president ofthe University of Minnesota, said,"I think.” That settled it. The stu¬dents were inspired to greatheights. Their immediate objec¬tive was to right their boat andhail it out, for the cutter had build you a whole new stadium.Amos set down the $102.12 he wascounting and pondered this his¬toric proposition. Frank Adams,fearing the worst, seized on this the Blackfriars turned to planningthe 1957-58 show.That was Last April. This April,the 18 and 19 to be exact, the prod¬uct of a hundred students andmoment to exclaim, “Amos, if you counless others will be presented,stay with BF you’ll have a singing The name of that product isrole in next year’s show.” Unfor- “Alpha Centauri.”ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books —- Bought and SoldImported Greeting Cards —- Children's BooksReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 35th St. HY 3-9651wherethere’s life...there’sBudweiser.KilNG Of BEERSANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. . ST. LOUIS • NEWARK . LOS ANGELESHarper, for the Coast Guard has Amos Alonzo Stagg (!); and manya fuel-oil contract with J. D. Rock¬efeller) was given in Mandel hallMarch 10, 1898. A young footballman, the hero of the Hyde Parkhigh game, was asked to be in theshow. This would attract the pro- ing BF, in the winter of 1955 aother men, each of whom havesince made their individual andindelible marks in their chosenfields.After several attempts at reviv-group of College men decided thata reorganization including the fe¬male students on campus mightgive the group added strength andattraction. A more successful deci- Above, the front cover from the program of the 1909 Black-friar's show.Blackfriars will present its second annual musical comedyproduction since its reactivation, "Alpha Centauri" April 18and 19 at 8:30 in Mandel hall. Tickets are $2.40, $1.90 and$1.40 for non-students and $1.90, $1.40 and 90 cents forstudents. They are available at the Reynolds club desk, Wood-worth's, Ida Noyes desk and the University Bookstore.anhilarious,,exciting,intimate,psychological gamefor adults onlyH<*ii(1 can be fun! New mMdot game is just what the doctor 01 tieredlor cra/y, mixed up parties' Choose up sides and let the slips failwhere they may Live a little tot only $3 fJ8 At,most stores on andoff the campus, 01 order direct we pay postage.tOAtll. GAMES • Of.PT C v 4344 37th SI. - L. I.C..NEW- YORKMeteorologists announceadvances in rainmakingMeteorologists of the Universities of Chicago and Arizona, in a joint report issued lastweek announced that they have perfected the first scientific method of evaluating rainfallfrom artificially seeded summer clouds.Co-authors of the report are Louis J. Battan, meteorology research associate in Chicago’scloud physics laboratory, and A. Richard Kassander, Jr., director of Arizona’s institute ofatmospheric physics.They said their method is cal weather bureau charts showed tals can form drops large enoughsuperior to previous efforts conditions favorable to producing to become rain is still unpioven.because of its firm statistical ra*n — either naturally or other- jn last summer’s tests, 16 pairswise—that afternoon, an envelope 0f days were accomplished. Rainwas opened. gauges placed five miles apartThe seeding consisted of silver over the 600 square mile test areaiodide dispensed from an airplane yielded a mean 14 per cent moreflying a crosswind course for rainfall on seeded days than onbasis, the heart of which is ran¬dom selection.In experiments last July andAugust in the area of the SantaTucson3 Arizona1"t heyhStudied three to four hours- Because in- non-seeded days. The most rain-groups’of various sized clouds, dividual clouds remained over the fall for any one day was 1.68rathpr than as in other efforts mountains for an average of 25 inches, which occurred on a seed-only large, puffy clouds most like- ^in”tes- as many as a hundred ed day. Of the nine days whichi.. x 5a j_ clouds were seeded in one after- saw more than an inch of rain,noon.The seeding plane flew at that SG flight availableOne-way tickets will be available for the first timeon the Student Government flight to Europe, accordingto Jack Nitsch, flight leader.UC students, faculty, employees and their familiesmay now reserve seats for either the New York to Lon¬don or the Paris to New York flights. The cooperativecharge for a one-way seat will be $165.Reservations, passport and hostel information areavailable at the SG office, Ida Noyes hall, daily from 11am to 12:30 noon, extension 3274.Nitsch stated that persons interested in the flightshould inform Student Government immediately in orderto guarantee him a seat on the flight.ly to produce rain.Some cloud groups were seeded eight were seeded days.and others were not, as deter- altitude where Vhe air temoera- 3 n. ^ ’ "^le *nmined bv a schedule of Dairs of f * WP*o * n u * seven of the 16 Pairs of days-mined by a schedule or pairs or ture was 19o F usually about rain fell on the seeded davdays prepared by William H. 18 000 feet There cloud moisture £ ” " iven iL mnJ! rainKruskal and K. Alexander Brown- was ^low the freezing point but /\,an°thf,T sc e p * . m. r raTlee associate nrofessors of statis- v .!£ m’ 1 fell on the non seeded days. No|£ Tt UC P °f StatlS stil liquid m the form of super- rain fell on the remaining twoucs ai uc. cooled water droplets. Laboratory -rs Qf daysThe schedule, placed in sealed experiments show that the micro- p yenvelopes, contained random com- scope silver iodide crystals (each While these data suggest thatbinations of dual instructions, about a thousandth of a milli- seeding produced slightly moresuch as “seed today, do not seed meter cube) are similar in actiontomorrow,” “do not seed today, to ice particles in natural rain for-seed tomorrow,” etc. If, on the mation, picking up moisture fromfirst day pair morning, tempera- a cloud’s water droplets. How- nary to provide any conclusions,ture-altitude-humidity data on lo- ever, whether silver iodide crys- the report said.rain than would have naturallyfallen, they are far too prelimi- WUCB plans two programsWUCB is planning two new programs in conjunction withits first week of broadcasting from new studios in Mitchelltower. The first of these recorded programs will be a six-weekseries of lectures delivered by David Riesman on the “Ameri¬can future.” —This series was first heard problems currently faced by theearlier this year in Mandel hall University.sponsored by the division of social The first program will consistsciences and the College. The first a,n ™tcr\ iew with Cyril Houle,, . professor of education and spokes,show will be heard at 7 pm next , *T. H man *or the counc“ of the facultynursaay. senate. The topic will concern howIn the second new scries of pro- changes in the curriculum comegrams, WUCB is recording a se- about at the University. Futureries of discussions and interviewswith members of the faculty andadministration; the programs willattempt to explore some of theSMOKE RINGS come in all shapes and sizes. Like 4-sidedsmoke rings for squares. Sturdy smoke rings for windydays. Even invisible smoke rings for people who aren’tostentatious. As any competent smoke ringer (VaporShaper in Sticklese!) will tell you, the best way to startone is to light up a Lucky. It’s best mostly because aLucky tastes best. A Lucky gives you naturally light,wonderfully good-tasting tobacco, toasted to taste evenbetter. Why settle for less? You’ll say a light smoke’s theright smoke for you!DON’T JUST STAND THERE ...STICKLE! MAKE $25Sticklers at* uimple riddles with two-word rhyminganswers. Both words must have the same number ofsyllables. (No drawings, please!)We’ll shell out $25 for all we use—and for hundreds that never seeprint. So send stacks of ’em withyour name, address, college andclass to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box67A, Mount Vernon, New York.WHAT 1$ A POLICE CHIEF? RICHARD TEN6STEDY, Tribal LibtlFLORIDA STATI.WHAT IS A RACCOON COAT?iynne sack. Flapper WrapperNEtRASKA WESLEYAN WHAT'S A CATTLE RUSTLER?JANET VANADA.*. OF HAWAII Beef ThiefROYRURY.NISSISSIFFI STATE Top Cop WHAT IS IT WHEN ROPSTERS. SWAP SHOES?nary sfees. Suede Trade•OWLINS 6REEN WHAT IS A 9-HOUR EXAM?rosert stettsn. Mind GrindLEHICHLIGHT UP A Uqht SMOKE -LIGHT UP A LUCKY It. r.j Product of ssJnvu&an Jv^Keco-^nyxcin^. •• <J<j$xzco- is our middle name8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 4, 1958 guests will include such people asGeorge Playe of the committee onfinancial aid, John P. Netherlon,dean of students, and ChancellorLawrance A. Kimpton.This program begins Sunday,April 13, at 7 pm, and will con¬tinue at this same time for thenext several months.The ColletteLAUNDERETTE1449 Eat? 57Hi St.MU 4-9236Jimmy ’sSINCE 1940^Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the week•EILEEN FARELLEight Operatic AriasAngel 35589*3.19from \,all >0cornersof theworldStudents, facultyand administratorseeme to the William Slcsne House,long famous for its comfortable, in*expensive accommodations and itswide spread program of services.Enjoy dean rooms, coffee shop,tailor, TV room, sports, forumssnd tours. Alt age groups accom¬modated.RATES: $2.20 single;$3-$3.4Q double.Membership included.Write for Folder C.WILLIAM SLOANEHOUSE Y.M.C.A.356 West 34th St (nr Ninth Ave.)New York, N. Y. Phone: Oxford 5-5133(One Block From Penn Station)Hither & YonEditors quit upon 'interference'Four editors of the Kingsman,the Brooklyn college studentnewspaper, resigned recently inprotest against "interference” bythe college administration.Their action followed the resig¬nation of four faculty membersof the supervisory faculty-studentcommittee on publications. Thefaculty group said it had outlivedits usefulness.Harry D. Gideonse, Brooklyncollege president, then establisheda new faculty group of six to de¬vise a formula for operating stu¬dent publications.The regular edition of the week¬ly publication appeared on March21. The issue contained statementsof resignation from the editor-in-chief, Paul Ringe, and from asso¬ciate editor Gerald Perkus, SerenaTuran Scheer and Herbert Schlag-man.Ringe stated that “the editorialboard of the Kingsman includesamong its concepts of a newspa¬per the right to meet and discussand then accept the responsibili¬ties for any editorial they mightwish to publish without outsideinterference.”The paper recently was criti¬cized by the college administra¬tion for its opposition to a regula¬tion prohibiting physical educa¬tion majors from participating inintramural sports.The student editors maintainedthat the paper should have theright to publish whatever materialthe editorial board consideredworthy.College officials contended,however, that since the newspaperwas supported by a fee collectedfrom all students, the paper mustfollow a multiple-editorial policy.This means that if an editorial isdeclared controversial by the fac¬ulty adviser, the paper must pub¬lish both pro and con views.The day-session campus news¬paper has long been a point ofcontent" i between students andadminis- ion. Last spring threeKingsman editors were suspend¬ed from their posts for failure tocomply with regulations directingpre-publication consultation withthe adviser.In 1950 the college revoked thecharter of the 13-year-old studentnewspaper Vanguard on chargesthat the paper had violated thenew multiple-editorial rule. Ten sour grapes(Helsinki university) Hey! Youwith the twin toes both fore andaft! It’s for your benefit I’m issu¬ing these commandments.If it so happens that you’dhanker to affix your John Han¬cock to this document, then I’mprepared to announce that thereare two Finnish proverbs I can’tstomach. One is false and theother is ambiguous.One speaks of a club just as ifclubbing were a good and properpastime. That’s what club-swing¬ers think. Of course, any old doghit by a club will give a yelp. Theother is about sour grapes. Theydon’t taste sweet.First Commandment• Thou shalt be a big-timeoperator!Know, therefore, thyself. Realize your own importance; knowthat you’re a born leader.Second Commandment• Thou shalt not take the nameof any rival big shot in vain.It would give him free pub¬licity.Third Commandment• Thou shalt not do tomorrowwhat thou promiseth today.You must devote tomorrow tomaking new promises.Fourth Commandment• Thou shalt flatter thy mas¬ter and thy mistress, so that you,too, shalt be flattered on this mor¬tal earth.Lay it on thick. They won’tmind. After all, they’re just likeyou.Fifth Commandment• Thou shalt not tire.Never weary of proclaimingyour fame, no matter how tiredyour listeners get of hearingabout it.Sixth Commandment• Thou shalt be friendly.Friends are worth their weightin gold. It is even possible to getmoney out of some friends. Andit’s worth your paying money forthe friendship of others.Seventh Commandment• Thou shalt not speak badthings about thy neighbor.What’s the point of speakingthe truth? The truth will come outanyhow. If you have to open yourmouth say you heard it fromsomebody else.UC physicist promulgatesearthquake hypothesisDiscovery that the earth often begins to tremble in a char¬acteristic way about 24 hours before large earthquakes hasput a UC physicist on the track of a possible new quake-pre¬diction technique.Cecil Nanney, a post-doc¬toral student in the physicsdepartment, had his theory, as yetunproved, published in the cur¬rent issue of the British sciencejournal, "Nature.”Nanney is interested in possiblerelationship between earth¬quakes and the earth tremorsknown to seismologists as micro¬seisms.These are attributed to a va¬riety of causes, including "tides” below the crust of the earth, re¬flection of the pounding of seawaves on beaches and cliffs, col¬lisions between storm waves andperhaps reflected pressure of theatmosphere on earth and sea.The tremors travel through theearth at a velocity of one mile asecond. By comparing strength ofmicroseisms recorded simultane¬ously in different places, physi¬cists have had some success inpredicting storms.Special GREASE $075and WASH JL• Simonize• Mechanic• Rood Service• Across fromCo-opSuper ServiceDealer In Sinclair Products5556 HARPER PL 2-9654 be responsible for low gradesmade by some college students.Of 31 cases of "mono” studiedduring one term, 17 patients hadlower grades after their illnessthan before, and five withdrew.An approximate 85 cases were re¬corded by MSU’s hospital lastyear.At the University of Michigana total 110 cases of "mono” haveoccurred this year. According totheir health service only two stu¬dents suffering from the diseasehave dropped out of school, amuch lower percentage than atMSU. (Michigan Daily)Bomb dropped(University of Michigan) TedBomb emerged from the StudentGovernment council election as awrite-in candidate with approxi¬mately 50 votes.Bomb was unavailable for com¬ment, but his supporters, the"Bomb-Boosters,” reportedly spent$30 for his campaign. Seven fra¬ternities and three sororities hadindicated support for the part-setter, part-pointer dog. (Michi¬gan Daily)Eighth Commandment• Thou shalt know people.Get to know famous peopleabove all. But don’t let them getto know you too well. You shouldhave two aims: One—to makeeverybody know who you are.Two—to prevent everybody fromknowing what you are.Ninth Commandment• Thou shalt be smart.The token of your I is yourbrow. So be a high brow.Tenth Commandment• Thou shalt not inform thy¬self.Do not clutter your mind withinformation. Ignore the publicaffairs at home and abroad, up infrozen Lapland and down in con¬crete-paved Helsinki. For the factis that knowing what goes onwould be bound to slow your climbup the social ladder.(Ylioppilaslehti — Finnish Stu¬dent News)Lysistrata loses(Oxford university) Attemptsby a group of women undergrad¬uates to force male undergrad¬uates into a campaign for nucleardisarmament by a "kiss strike”foundered completely, althoughthe organizing girls of St. Hilada’scollege sent letter to about 1,000Present remarks,film about Russiain Int house hallColor films of Russia, in¬cluding the recent MoscowYouth festival, will be shownin International house assemblyhall, Wednesday at 8 pm. Admis¬sion is 50 cents.Mr. and Mrs. Elmer McLain,who took the pictures, will give acommentary during the showing. coeds at the university, and to thewomen of Cambridge universityas well.Janet Dawson, 19, one of thestrike organizers, announced that"our noble experiment has failed.Our friends are too frivolous.They like men more than theyfear the H-bomb.” (Student Mir¬ror-International News Service.)Snow bogs down press(Temple university) Due tocomplications caused by heavysnowfall in the eastern US twoweeks ago, this university’s stu¬dent newspaper came out withonly a multi-lithed front page. Inaddition, the Friday, March 21,issue was not delivered to campusuntil the following Monday.'Mono1 couses low grades?(Michigan state university) Aresearch team here reported thisweek that disease, infectious mon¬onucleosis, not lack of study, mayMusical societypresents concertUniversity musical societywill present its first concert ofthe spring quarter Sunday,April 13 at 8:15 pm in the Inter¬national house home room. Thereis no admission charge.The program will include songsand duets by Purcell, songs withviola by Brahms, a Brahms clari¬net trio, Hindemith piano sonata—four hands, and two preludes forpiano by William Mathieu.After disbanding last year forlack of a concert hall on campus,the society was revived this sea¬son by the offer of a private homefor its concerts. Attendance atthese concerts made a larger hallnecessary; hence the move to In¬ternational house. Discuss medicaleducation on TVEducating the doctors of thefuture will be discussed byfour medical instructors onUC’s "All things considered,”Thursday, April 10, over Chan¬nel 11.The telecast, "Status of medicaleducation,” will be at 9:30 pm.Moderator for the discussionwill be Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall,dean of the division of the biolog¬ical sciences. Dr. Coggeshall ischairman of the National commit¬tee for medical education week, tobe observed later this month.He will be joined by Dr. Gran¬ville A. Bennett, dean of the col¬lege of medicine at University ofIllinois; Dr. James Oberlander,medical director of the Mid-Amer¬ica area for Prudential Insurance.It’s hello weekInterfraternity council issponsoring a “Say hello toeveryone” campaign fromMarch 31 through April 13. In aneffort to promote contact betweendifferent people who ordinarily donot seem to have much in com¬mon, the council is asking every¬one to put forth a special show offriendliness and interest in otherpeople, especially strangers, dur¬ing this time.This campaign is part of a se¬ries of public service activitiessponsored by the council. Aspokesman said that part of thegoal of the "say hello” campaignis to enlighten the campus as awhole to the fact that fraternitiesat UC are very different from thefrequently unfavorable character¬ization which is given them.10% Discount to UC Students ond PersonnelAll Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW MET PRICES8-LBS. WASHED & FLUFF DRIED ... 59*10-LBS. FLAT WORK T’DRESS SHIRTS . . . . ,.22*QUALITY DRY CLEANING — RAPID SERVICE — REASONABLE PRICESFREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERYPhone PLaza 2-0097UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1024 E. 55th St.Apr. 4, 1958 e CHICAGO MAROON e 9UC, Frankfurt to continueexchange of 5 scientistsUC and the University of Frankfurt, Germany this spring are continuing through an ex¬change of five scientists a joint international program now ten years old. Two of the Chi¬cago faculty and three from Frankfurt are participating in the current exchange.Robert il Miller, UC associate professor of geology, will organize a European marinegeology symposium and lecture on the application of statistical probabilites in studying ocean sedimentation patterns.Club to sponsorlecture series on'Art and religion'Channing-Murray club willpresent three lectures on “Artand Religion” on this Tuesdayand the next two Tuesdays. Theseries will be in Breasted hall at8:30 pm.The first lecture, “Changingtraditions in religious art," willbe given by Harold Haydon. asso¬ciate professor of art in the Col¬lege.On April 15, Max Janowski, di¬rector of music at KAM templeand liturgical composer, will dis¬cuss “Religious aspects of music.”The concluding lecture, “Poetryand religion,” will be given onApril 22 by Knox C. Hill, associ¬ate professor of humanities. Col¬lege. Everett C. Hughes, profes¬sor of sociology, leaves in Mayfor his second exchange visitto study the relation of occupa¬tions to German social structures.He was a member of the firstChicago group that went abroadin April, 1958.The three scientists from Jo¬hann Wolfgang Goethe universityat Frankfurt-on-Main will spendthe spring quarter at Chicago.Reinhold Baer, professor ofmathematics, a member of thefaculty of the University of Illi¬nois from 1938 until his retire¬ment in 1956, arrived from Frank¬furt this month to lecture and par¬ticipate in seminars on algebraicgroup theory and the foundationsof geometry.Dr. Peter Holtz, a professor ofpharmacology and toxicology anddirector of Frankfurt’s pharma¬cology and physiological chemis¬try institute, whose field is the effect of drugs on the centralnervous system, will study redio-isotope and other analytic meth¬ods at UCs department of phar¬macology.Hermann Hartmann, professorand director of Frankfurt’s insti¬tute of physical chemistry andformer dean of physical sciencesthere, a specialist in molecularspectroscopy (the study of com¬plex chemical molecules by meansof characteristic light patterns),will participate in seminars con¬ducted by the departments ofphysics and chemistry.The Frankfurt program, admin¬istered by a faculty committee of12 headed by Chauncey D. Harris,professor of geography and deanof the social science division, wasinaugurated in 1946 as a means ofcontributing to the rehabilitationof German universities afterWorld War II. The program nowis one of cooperation for the fur¬thering of knowledge. Fund for Adult Educationawards eight fellowshipsEight of the 40 recipients awarded fellowships by the Fundfor Adult Education for study during 1958-59 will study atthis university.Two recipients are from the Chicago area: William L.Stevens, assistant to the deanof University College, who willstudy philosophy, and WilliamHawkins, Harvey, Illinois, presi¬dent of Local 1545, U. S. Steel¬workers of America AFL-CIO,whose study area is labor educa¬tion.Other recipients and their fieldsof study are: Dewey S. Lantrip,state 4-H club agent, Arkansasagricultural extension service,Little Rock, Arkansas, adult edu¬cation; Earl F. Hargett, directorof the University of Georgia cen¬ter, Albany, Georgia, adult edu¬cation, and Lawrence A. Allen, in¬structor in library science, East¬ern Illinois university, Charleston,Illinois, adult education.Also, Thomas L. Riley, associ¬ate agricultural extension agentand instructor of horticulture,Covington, Kentucky, adult educa¬tion, and Mrs. Betty J. Vaughn,volunteer educator, Board of Co¬operative Education Services,South Glens Falls, New York, li-brarianship study.' Hold Rockefellerservice for EasterClimaxing Holy Week at UCwill be the Easter service at 11am in Rockefeller Memorialchapel.The Rev. John B. Thompson,Chapel dean, will deliver the ser¬mon, “Christ without Armor.’’The University choir, under thedirection of Richard Vikstrom,will sing two motets: “VictimaePaschali” by Eyrd and “Lobet denHerrn alle Heiden” by J. S. Bach.Heinrich Fleischer will be the or-ganist.Preceding the service will be aswing peal on the 72 bell chapelcarillon.On Good Friday, the Rev. W.Barnett Blakemore, dean of theDisciples divinity house and mem¬ber of the University’s federatedtheological faculty, will conductthe Passion service at noon inPRIZE CONTESTSponsored by the SWEDENBORQ FOUNDATION Inc.SI East 42nd St., Neiv York 17, N. Y.OPEN TO ALLUniversity of Chicago StudentsFor Best Essays on(Choice of Either Topic)“SWEDENBORG’S CONTRIBUTION TORELIGION AND SCIENCE”orFIRST PRIZE • ••••••“SWEDENBORG and THE CHRISTIANHOPE OF IMMORTALITY”*300°°SECOND PRIZE .... $20000THIRD PRIZE *1OO00Length, 2000 to 3000 WordsApplication Must be in by April 15, 1958Essays Due June 1, 1958Qet Application Blank and Full Details FromOFFICE OF THE DEANFEDERATED THEOLOGICAL FACULTYSwift Hall 101University of Chicago Chicago 37, Illinois Rockefeller chapel.Israeli studentcommits suicideAn Israeli student whoplanned to begin his studies atthe University this quarter,hanged himself March 21 in hisroom at International house.Amos Shosham, 26, a native ofJerusalem, planned to study inter¬national relations. His body wasfound by an Int house maid.CALLNIGKYSFOR PIZZANO 7-9063BORDON E[Movers and Light HaulingLU 2-4660WILBUfc JUST WOKE UP TOTHE PACT THAT H6*$ IN CLASS!- KEEP ALERT FOR ABETTER POINT AVERAGE!Don’t let that "dr<W$y feeltng” cramp your style in class... 0t when you’re “hittingthe books”. Take a NoDozAwakened In S few rnihute^you’ll be your normal bes$...wide awake ,,. alert! Voutride awake . ,. alert!doctor will tel! you-s-NoDozAwakenerS are safe as coffee.Keep a pack handy!15 TABLETS, 35c35 tablet! Ito handy tin Jm NOQOZ4 W a K [ N E RS t10 • CHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 4, 1958Coming events on quadrangles HFriday 4 AprilTelevision series: Science 68,Channel 1, 7 am. “Fusion andfission." Louis A Turner, direc¬tor of physics division, Argonnenational laboratory.Jan workshop jam session,guests, Reynolds club, 3:30 pm.Block fund lecture: “Psychoso¬matic research,” Dr. Franz Al¬exander, director, phychlatricand physochosomatic researchinstitute of Mt. Sinai hospital,Los Angeles, 4:30 pm, BillingsP-117.Socialist youth committee of Chi¬cago meeting on the Taft-Hart-ley “conspiracy” case, EricReinthaler speaker, 8:30 pm,Ida Noyes. Open business meet¬ing at 7:30.Saturday 5 AprilEnglish class for foreigners. Inter¬mediate, 10 am, Internationalhouse.Lecture series: “The Messianicidea in the light of recent re¬search,” Swift common room,10 am, 2 pm and 7:30 pm. F. F.Bruce, chairman, department ofBiblical history and literature,University of Sheffield, Eng¬land.Radio broadcast: “Impetus,”WBBM-CBS, 7:45 pm, JohnO'Dowd, dean of students, Uni¬versity College and guest ex¬perts discussing the most influ¬ential books of our time.Radio broadcast: University Courttheater adaptation of “Dr.Faustus” by Christopher Mar¬lowe, WBBM-CBS, 8:05 pm(final of a three-part series).Radio broadcast: “The SacredNote,” WBBM-CBS, 10:15 pm. Aprogram of choral music by theUC Choir, Richard Vikstrom di¬rector; Heinrich Fleischer, or¬ganist.Sunday 6 AprilRecord concert, 10 am, Interna¬tional house home room.Easter bell music: Carillon recit¬als, Rockefeller chapel, 11 amend 12:15 pm, Charles S. Rhyne,student carilloneur; 4:30 pm,James R. Lawson, chapel caril¬loneur. Chime concerts. Mitchelltower, 10 am and 12:15 pm,James P. Bulluck, studentc himer.English class for foreigners, inter¬mediate, 2 pm, Internationalhouse.UC symphony orchestra rehears¬al, 7 pm, Mandel hall.Social dancing: instruction 7 pm,dancing, 8 pm, Internationalhouse, 50 cents to non-residents.ISL slating and platform caucus,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.SRP slating and platform caucus,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Monday 7 AprilTelevision series: Science 58,Channel 7, 7 am. "Experimentalmethods of nuclear physics.”Samuel K. Allison, professor ofphysics, dept of physics and En¬rico Fermi institute for nuclearstudies.Art exhibition: Chinese art andculture shown in rubbings,sponsored by Renaissance so¬ciety, Goodspeed 108, 9 am 5 pmthrough Thursday.Memorial service for Dr. BasilC. H. Harvey, professor emer¬itus of anatomy, 4 pm, Bondchapel.Maroon staff meeting, 3:30 pm,there will be a staff meetingTAI-2AM-Y6.NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63 rd St. BU 8-9018 eome Reisman lectures or noReisman lectures.Botany club, Botany 106, 4:30 pm,“Cytological aspects of plant tu¬mor growth.” Ellen M. Rasch,research associate in zoology.Lecture series: “Urban renewal,zoning, and real estate values.”Sponsored by University Col¬lege, 19 S. LaSalle, 6:30 pm,“Implications of urban renew¬al,” Phil Doyle, executive di¬rector of Chicago Land Clear¬ance commission, admissioncharge.English class for foreigners, ad¬vanced 7 pm, Internationalhouse.Motion picture: “Angelika,” Ger¬man, 7:30 pm, Internationalhouse.Tuesday 8 AprilTelevision series: “Science 58,”Channel 7, 7 am, “Nuclear struc¬ture,” Allison.Faculty art exhibit opening byJoshua Taylor, assistant pro¬fessor of art, 4 pm, Hillel foun¬dation, 5715 Woodlawn, recep¬tion for artists will follow.Colloquium: Institute for thestudy of metals, Research insti¬tutes 211, 4:15 pm, “Thermody¬namics of refractory materialsof mass speetrometric meth¬ods,” Mark G. Inghram, profes¬sor of physics.Senior mathematics club, Eekhart206, 4:30 pm, “Properties ofsome second-order cohomologyoperations,” Jose Adem, profes¬sor of mathematics, Universityof Mexico.Chicago seminar: American Me¬teorological society, Eekhart133, 7:30 pm. “Flood rains in theBocono basin, Venezuela.” Hor¬ace Byers, professor and chair¬man, department of meteorol¬ogy, and Herbert Riehl, profes¬sor of meteorology.Faculty wives newcomers meet¬ing, 8 pm, home of Mrs. JohnL. Kirkpatrick, 5805 Blackstone,husbands invited, topic: “Thefaculty wife: the psychopath¬ology of her everyday life.”Channing-Murray lecture series:“Art and religion,” sponsoredby Channing club, Breasted hall,8:30 pm. “Changing traditionsin religious art,” Harold Hay-don, associate professor of art.Wednesday 9 AprilTelevision series: “Science 58,”Channel 7, 7 am, “High-energymachines,” Roger Hildebrand,associate professor of physics,department of physics and Fer¬mi institute.School of business seminar, Cobb101, 3:30 pm, “Study of gradu¬ate education,” Bernard Berel-son, professor of behavioralsciences, school of business andsocial sciences division.Statistics seminar, Eekhart 207,4:15 pm, “On the distribution ofthe latent roots of a symmetricmatrix, with some applica¬tions,” H. R. van der Vaart, vis¬iting associate professor of sta¬tistics.Carillon recital, Rockefeller chap¬el, 4:30 pm, Lawson.Organ recital, Rockefeller chapel,4:30 pm, Heinrich Fleischer,University organist.Episcopal evensong, 5:05 pm,Bond chapel.Lecture series: “Special problemsin acquisition and organization of library materials,” sponsoredby University College, 19 S. LaSalle, 6:30 pm, "What the jobberand the dealer expect of the li¬brarian,” David Busse, A. C.McClurg company; RichardBarnes, bookseller; John M. Da¬vidson, assistant director ofpreparations, University library,moderator. Admission charge.Glee club rehearsal, 7 pm, IdaNoyes.Lecture series: "Anthropology inthe modern world,” sponsoredby University College, SocialSciences 122, 8 pm. “Conceptsof cultural anthropology,” SolTax, professor and chairman ofdepartment of anthropology.Admission charge.Advanced English class for for¬eigners, 7 pm, Internationalhouse.Country dancers, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Films and travelogue throughUSSR by Hazel and Elmer Mc¬Clain, color, 8 pm, Internationalhouse assembly hall, 50 cents.Lecture series: “The Chinese uni¬verse,” sponsored by UniversityCollege, 19 S. LaSalle, 8:15 pm,“The Chinese language,” Herr-lee G. Creel, professor andchairman, department of Ori¬ental languages and literatures.Admission charge.W9YWQ technical meeting, 9:15pm, Reynolds 301.New dorm coffee hour, 9 pm,weekly.Thursday 10 AprilTelevision series: "Science 58,”Channel 7, 7 am. “The atomicpile,” Herbert L. Anderson, pro¬fessor of physics, departmentof physics and Fermi institute.Episcopal Communion service,11:30 am, Bond chapel.Varsity basketball game, Staggfield, 3 pm, UC vs. ChicagoTeachers college.Lecture series: "Great Dutchpaintings,” sponsored by Uni¬versity College, Art institute, 7pm, "The 'Little Masters’ andthe Landscapists.” GeorgeBuehr, artist and associate lec¬turer, Art institute. Admissioncharge.Lecture series: "Mass persuasionand individual freedom,” spon¬sored by University College, 19S. LaSalle, 8 pm. "The Madisonavenue approach to politics,”Reuel Denney, professor of so-Quakers protestnuclear programAmerican Friends Servicecommittees, assisted by theQuaker Student fellowship,has organized two poster walkstomorrow to protest the thermo¬nuclear tests to be held soon bythe United States in the Pacific.The demonstration is protestingthe impending tests and urgingserious attempts to reach anagreement on disarmament.One group of demonstratorswill leave the Friends offices at50 E. Madison avenue at noon towalk through the Loop for aboutan hour. A second group will goout to the northwest side.Over ninety individuals are al¬ready registered for this demon¬stration. Those interested maycontact Ken Calkins at Quakerhouse today. cial science in the College. Ad¬mission charge.Lecture series: "Ritual patternsof Western Christendom,” spon¬sored by University College, 64E. Lake, room 1503, 8 pm, Mar¬tin Graebner, Lutheran pastorat UC. Admission charge.Meeting of International houseboard of directors, 8 pm, roomB, International house.Television series: "All things con¬sidered,” Channel 11, 9:30 pm,"The status of medical educa¬tion,” Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, Green hall coffee hour, 9-11, spe¬cial guest: Aurora Roxas, Phil¬ippine graduate student of hu¬manities.Friday 11 April*Green hall coffee hour. 9-11. Spe¬cial guest: Aurora Roxas, Fili¬pino graduate student in theHumanities.1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300 oCafe EnricoITALIAN RESTAURANT & PIZZERIAFeaturing — Hors d'oeuvre TableSmall Large Small Lorge <12" 14" 12" 14" <Cheese .1.15 1.55 Combination . .1.75 2.25 <<Sausage .1.45 1.95 Mushroom ... 1.60 2.10 <*Anchovy .... .1.45 1.95 Shrimp 1.75 2.25 <iPepper & Onion 1.20 1.80 Bacon & Onion 1.60 2.10 (iFree Delivery on All Pizza to UC Students < >< > De Sales house5735 Universitydean of biological sciences divi- Friday of the Lord’s Passion: Roman• , .. .. . Catholic Liturgical and Tre Ore Servsion and dignitaries from other lce. noon-3 pm.medical colleges and associa¬tions. Holy Saturday; Easter Vigil service,10:30 pm.Official bulletinDeadlinesDean of students. CollegeApplication for spring convocationbachelor’s degree, April 15. Petition fordegree in absentia submitted to deanof students In the College, May 16.Application for twelfth-grade certifi¬cates, May 29.Registration for compre¬hensive examinations in Spring quar¬ter, office of test administration,May 29.Application for room in residence hallfor summer quarter, $10 deposit,May 29.Appulication for room in residence hallfor academic year 1958-59, $25 deposit.May 8. Forms and information avail¬able from house heads and housingoffice. Administration 103 after thisThursday.Advance registration for summer andnext academic year should be madewith adviser. Administration 201. Con¬firmation of advance registration bya $20 registration deposit to the Bur¬sar by July 15.Students planning to receive bachelor’sdegrees this quarter and who planadmission to a division or profes¬sional school of tlie University shouldfile their applications this quarter.Forms available at College advisersoffice except law school where theycan be obtained from the office ofthe dean, first floor Law building.Students who expect to complete gen¬eral-studies component o# bachelor’sprogram for AB with professional op¬tion in the spring quarter, and planto enter the graduate library school,law school or business school in thesummer or the autumn should filetheir applications immediately.Selective Service testDeadline for application is next Fridav.Students can get all material at localboard, 1519 W. 63rd street.ScholarshipsStudents now in the College may applyfor tuitlonal scholarships for next fall.Deadline is May 1. Easter Sunday, masses at 8;30, 10, 11 am.Thorndike Hilton chapelLutheran Holy Communion; today, 5:10pm.Rockefeller memorial chapelGood Friday Passion service; today,noon-1 pm; the Rev. W. BarnettBlakemore. dean of the Disciples di¬vinity house, preacher.Holy Saturday; choral vespers, 7 pm;sponsored by Lutheran student parish.Easter sunrise service on the steps ofRockefeller chapel; 6 am; Easterbreakfast at Chapel house, 7 am;sponsored by Interchurch.Easter Sunday worship, 11 am; DeanJohn B. Thompson, preacher; broad¬cast over WGN radio, 1-2 pm.Bond chapelEaster Sunday Episcopal services; Eu¬charist, 8:30 am. Easter Sunday, Holy Communion, 10 am.Hillel foundation5715 WoodlawnPassover service, today. 5::30 pm.Passover seder, tonight, 6:15 pm.Passover service, next Friday, 5:30 pm.Passover Oneg Shabbat, next Friday,8.30 pm, “The Four Sons.” by MikeBraude, a reading by members ofUniversity theatre.Passover luncheons will be served dur¬ing the week of Passover by reserva¬tion.Girls' swimmingmarathon to startGirls' interdormitory swimmingmarathon will begin Monday, theWomen’s Athletic association hasannounced. tvThe pool in Ida Noyes hall willbe open for the marathon at 4:30pm Monday, Tuesday and Thurs¬day, and at 7:30 pm on Wednes¬day and Friday.Softball and tennis varsity prac¬tice will be at 3:30 on Monday andWednesday.Fleischer beginsseries of recitalsthis WednesdayHeinrich Fleischer, Univer¬sity organist, will begin aseries of weekly organ recitalsthis Wednesday at 5 pm in Rocke¬feller memorial chapel. Admissionis without charge.The program, which follows theweekly carillon recital at 4:30 pm,will include works of Johann Se¬bastian Bach.1 BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY!| SUMMER SCHOOL || 1958 Session| June 23 - August 1* Coeducational* For Graduate and qualifiedUndergraduate students* Credit transferableInstitutes iniANTHROPOLOGY - ARCHAEOLOGYBIOLOGY - FRENCH CIVILIZATIONMUSIC - PSYCHOLOGY* Special Colloquia, Lecturesand ConcertsFor further information clip and mail to:Brandeis Summer SchoolKalman- C-6 Waltham, MassachusettsNameSchool AddressT•? Home Address . . .X 1•j* Graduate UndergraduateApr. 4, 1958 • C H I C A GO MAROON • 11Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen 11 on. - Sal. — 9 a.m. -II p.m. Nicky’s PizzaatCampus Hangout PAINT & HARDWARE CO.Hyde Pork's Most CompletePaint and Hardware Store1154-58 E. 55th St. UC Discount : HY 3-3840What does this fruit have to do with this cigarette filter?THE VICEROY FILTER IS MADEFROM A PURE, NATURALMATERIAL FOUND IN ALL FRUITand it gives you Maximum Filtrationfor the Smoothest Smoke!• -From the same soft, pure material found in the rich pulp ofnature s healthful fruits, modern filter scientists have created thegreatest cigarette filter ever designed ... the Viceroy filter. For theViceroy filter gives you the maximum filtration for the smoothestsmoke of any cigarette. More taste, too ... the pure, natural tasteof rich, mellow tobaccos. Yes, Viceroy gives you more of what youchange to a filter for!Viceroy New crush, proofflip-open box orfamous familiar pack.PURE, NATURAL FILTER...PURE, NATURAL TASTEL# ilVil. ftrowa A W4I44«m«o* TetoAooo Corp,12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 4, 1958Hutchins warns Americans Faculty exchange movedagainst apathy to freedom,0 Universi,y Press site** " Faculty exchange has been moved from the basement ofModern industrial society in America is prducing men “who are not free in any real sense the Administration building to make room for the tabulatingand who may not even want to be free,” Robert M. Hutchins, president of the Fund for the department of the comptroller’s office.Republic, said recently in an address to the Cleveland city club. The transfer of thp exchange to Ilniversitv Pre^s hnildinp'“We may say that the aim of industrialization is to get rid of men altogether, except as took pffppf Marrh 18 University Press buildingconsumers, and to make them interchangeable parts of the industrial machine,” he stated. lOOK eriecT luarcn ie-♦‘Tkmc man mnct thrAiiaVi AAnfnrmifxT Ka rvmnU -n ? j .v ’ « ? ! RpforP thp AHmini*Lexington holds exhibitionThus man must, through conformity, bi as much like every other inTerchangeable^art Before th^ Administration floor of the building and is notas possible.” — building was completed in the late exPec*ed to hinder efficient com-Hutchins commented that nothingism “can rise to the sur- 1940’s, faculty exchange was situ- mumcations between the depart-the American is seldom much face at any time in response to ated in the press building, though ments of that office, an officeinterested in freedom and justice H lflPBBBj|^H^^^^^B any crisis,” Hutchins concluded, in a different location from its spokesman said,for other people, including other H igp; * “The disease cannot be cured by new 0ffices. All mail addressed to 5801 EllisAmericans. He is concerned only dealing only with the symptoms. ’ . . . . , will be rerouted to the new ad-with those aspects of freedom and The human intelligence that pro- oving e ta u a ing epar - tjress> 979 g 58th. Box holdersjustice which will affect and bene- ^B duced the hydrogen bomb should ment to the vacant ‘‘Room 1” will may retain individual boxes at thefit his own interests. ^B wFl $:|l ^^^B be equal to the task of saving us end the space shortage in the new location, but it may be neces-"We have developed to a fine 'ref- from it.” comptroller’s office on the fourth sary to change the box numbers,point in recent years the art ofruination by due process of law,”he said. “Many teachers are notteaching today because they re¬fused to answer questions put tothem by a board of education.”They were dropped not becausethere was anything wrong withtheir teaching or proved wrongwith their politics, “but becausethey were ‘insubordinate.’ Theprocess was due; the ruinationwas complete.”“Even when the law is clear,”he pointed out, “the issues may re¬main. The example before oureyes Is civil rights in the South.The question is not what the lawis, but how to get it obeyed.”“At the same time that the stateextends its power on some fronts,it seems to be withering away onothers,” Hutchins added.“The doubts and hesitations ofgovernment that have followed the decision of the Supreme Courton segregation in the schools maybe attributed in part at least tothe unreasoning notion that thestate should wither away as fastas possible. In the case of insti¬tutions chartered by the govern¬ment, it is sometimes difficult totell who is controlling whom.”This country's latent know-Eight-lecture seriesexaminesadvertisingUCs downtown center is sponsoring eight Thursday eve¬ning lectures, on the topic of “Mass persuasion and individualfreedom.”The series will examine critically the notion that we can_ “sell” ideas, policies, or the40 UC students American way of life. It is• ■ concerned with the nature and ef-receive awards feetiveness of new communication by Jane ForerEighteen oils and fifteen prints by Max Kahn are being exhibited in Lexington art gallerythrough April 25.According to Freeman Schoolcraft, director of Lexington studio and gallery, Kahn hasan individual approach to his paintings. He had painted color over color, creating strangeand interesting textures.“At first glance you feel that the paintings don’t have a great amount of color,” saysSchoolcraft, “but after you ex-amine them you find they are In a woodcut called “Singing exhibit is one of the most impor-broken down into multiple Bird*” the knots and grains of the tant this year,variations of color. This effect wood are visible on the print it- In Lexington studio are ex-would be extremely difficult to self- hibited the fruits of the newly-achieve by painting one color be- Kahn uses greyish or grave col- organized class in painting. Theside another." A bold contrast of ors in many of his paintings and students, instructed by School-color is characteristic of both his Prints. Especially in his picturing craft, began with opaque waterprints an<l paintings. of interiors, “this creates a feel- colors and are now working inThe artist’s range of subject is inS of sei'enity which gives you a transparent water colors and oils,considerable but often repeats nostalgia for Old Town, where the Still open to new members, theitself; in the Lexington exhibit artist lives>” Schoolcraft says. class meets Wednesday after-A flavor of Mexico, where Kahnspent some time, exhibits itselfForty graduate students inscience have been awardedNational Science foundationfellowships for the next academicyear. Thirty-six of the fellowshipswere given to students who havenot taken their PhD degrees, andfour went to post doctoral stu¬dents.Awarded to gifted students toencourage their continuation ofadvanced training in science, thefellowships range in amount from51,600 in the first year to $2,000for the final year of predoctoralstudy. Post-doctoral fellowshipstipends are $3,800.Of the awards to the UC stu¬dents, ten were in physics, onebeing at the post-doctoral level;eight were in chemistry, and ninein mathematics, including onepostdoctoral award. Two studentsin each of the fields of biochem¬istry, biophysics, boology, and an¬thropology received fellowships.Two postdoctoral awards weremade in medical sciences. One pre¬doctoral fellowship was awardedin each of the areas of general bi-ology, psychology, and botany. techniques.The series began last night witha talk by Pierre Martineaux, di¬rector of research and marketingof the Chicago Tribune, entitled“The hard sell and the soft sell.”Next Thursday Reuel Denney, UCprofessor in the social sciences(College) will speak on "The Mad¬ison avenue approach to politics.”Single admission to these lec¬ture is $2.25. The lectures willbegin at 8 pm at the downtowncenter, 19 S. LaSalle street. the subject of a reclining childrepeats itself three times, while alithograph and an oil are shown,both entitled “The Fountain” andshowing the same scene. The lat¬ter was a first prize winner in anexhibit at Marshall Field’s recent¬ly. “Dark Angel,” another litho¬graph, pictures a tomb with asculptured angel, a scene whichalso appears in one of the oilsexhibited.One painting entitled “CatWalk” has the simple subject ofa cat, a fence, and a clothesline,tn this oil the artist has concen¬trated more on composition andintricate patterns than on subjectmatter. He does the same in “No¬vember Still Life,” which appearsto be a very simple painting un¬less “you can divorce yourselffrom the subject long enough toanalyze it and find that it is pro¬foundly well composed,” observesSchoolcraft. noons from 1:30 to 4:30.Sculptures in bronze, stone, andin some of his scenes, including a wood by Simon Gordon will beMexican “Girl With Orange.” shown in the gallery from April“I frankly feel that the whole 20 through May 16 in conjunctioncampus should look at this man’s with thework,” declares Schoolcraft. The week. Festival of the ArtsRepresentative If you want to know whetheryour life insurance program isadequate for the job it must dofor you ... Just ask.There's no charge or obligation.Ralph J. Wood Jr. '481 N. LaSalle St. Chicago 2, III.FR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAPBE-INVENTOBY SALEStarts Friday, April 4th at 9 A.M.Big bargains! Mark downs from stock!Most titles at half price. Only one or two of a title.Come early for best selectionUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave. *'C©KC" »• A TBACC-HAftM. ©OAVAIQMT TNC COCA-COLAKnow the answer?What’s an eight-letter word whichreminds you of good taste, sparkle, lift?The answer’s easy—Coca-Cola ofcourse; No puzzle about why it’s sopopular ... no other sparkling drinkgives you so much good taste, somuch satisfaction. Yes, when you’relooking for refreshment,the answer’s always Coke! SIGN OF GOOD TASTEBottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cala Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.Apr. 4, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13• a ‘ •* «:• <: •’ \ v ;• .-A " • •Call Ritchard's performance U-College sponsorshigh spot of planet satire course *n 1°^ songswc University College will sponsor a six-week course in Amerby Neal JohnstonVisit to a Small Planet is a rather hackneyed and dull comedy which comes vibrantly alivethe moment Cyril Ritchard enters the stage.When Ritchard is around, speaking or merely mugging, the play is fascinating, engrossing,and tremendously funny, when he is off stage, the play might as well not be.The comedy, written by Gore Vidal, is an adaptation of his original television script. Ithas been padded considerably in its transfer to the stage.The plot concerns a visitorfrom outer-space whose hobby ing one’s periods a little, one the type that should be put in Ameri¬can folk songs beginning Wednesday evening at 6:15 pm atthe downtown center, 19 S. LaSalle. Tuition for the courseis $15. “Bernie Asbell, Chicago writ- ballad. the blues, spiritual and, , i, . . ,u_ gospel songs, work songs ander and folk singer, will be the mountain music. Records and dis-lecturer. Asbell was formerly cussions of the works of Mahaliamanaging editor of Chicago maga* Jackson, Bessie Smith, Joshis the Civil War. However, in¬stead of arriving in the middle ofthe battle of Bullrun, his spaceship lands in the middle of a rosegarden in 1958. Kreton, the visi¬tor, is determined, though, to dothe best he can in his situation,and sets about to start a thirdworld war.The play concerns with his ef¬fect upon the world, and moreparticularly, the Pentagon andthe family in whose rose gardenhe lands. In this latter respect,Vidal’s comedy is somewhat remi¬niscent cf a play by Kaufman andHart, except Xreton does not eat.This plot leaves ample room forsocial satire as well as comedy,and indeed Vidal takes some ad¬vantage of possibility.Ritchard takes full advantageof every possibility. His perform¬ance is stylistically perfect. Mix- might say that Ritchard repre¬sents a new renaissance of the re¬storation.But if Ritchard comes straightout of Congreve, the rest of thecast comes right out of DonaldDuck comic books. The worst per¬formance is that of John Alex¬ander who plays an easily-befud¬dled stock general in charge oflaundry. Alexander hasn’t chang¬ed a bit in any capacity since hewas last seen in Chicago playinga stock colonel in “Teahouse ofthe August Moon,” and his colonelwas none too good. quotes. The two lovers have someembarrassingly bad lines. Dianavan der Vlis is a talented youngactress who is trying to look likeMarilyn Monroe and to sound likeKathryn Hepburn trying to soundlike a Mary Martin who soundslike Peter Pan. She succeeds inthis much too often.Sibyl Bowan gives an excellentperformance as a scatterbrainedhousewife, provided you can stom¬ach any more scattered-brainedhousewives.In fact, Ritchard’s most ade¬quate supporting player is Grena- zine and is now music and televi¬sion editor for Billboard. He haspublished articles on Americanmusic and popular culture inHarper’s magazine, The Reporter,and Coronet.The course examines the formand significance of various folksong types including the narrative White, Blind Willie Johnson, RoyAcuff, Lionel Hampton, Pete See-ger and others, will be part of theprogram.Included in the course is a studyof the relationships between folksongs and popular music; for ex¬ample, between rock and roll andgospel singing. *Only in a splendid drunk scene dier Saadi, a Siamese cat, withdoes Alexander really come up tohis cliche-ridden part. He has onetremendous line to the effect thatnothing is so serious to an army’smorale as a major war, which hedelivers admirably.The “romantic interest” is ofitJockey brand underwearmade me a brighter star!"“ ‘You can’t play Cyrano if you wear baggy underwear!’ thedrama coach told me. That was the day I bought my first pairof Jockey briefs. Quel fit! Quel comfort! I looked better and,amazingly, even my superb acting improved. Jockey briefs hadmade a dramatic change in my career!“Now I get all the starring roles, thanks to comfortableJockey brand underwear. And I wouldn’t think of accepting asubstitute. You see, only genuine Jockey brand briefs are tai¬lored from 13 separate, Individually shaped pieces. That is thereason they give you such a smooth, comfortable fit!”Jockey briefs are the mostcopied underwear in theworld. Be sure you getgenuine Jockey brand—they're tailored to fit.Jockey” briefBHANO mmad* only byf f Coop*r'», Incorporated / Konooht, Wloconoln14 • CHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 4, 1958 whom he has a delightful conver¬sation on the virtues of mice.Ritchard serves the play in adual capacity, both as its star andas its director. He is not as suc¬cessful in this latter capacity. Hemust assume some responsibilityfor the general slowness of action.The technical aspects of theshow are excellent. The rathercomplex lighting and sound effects called for by the script arewell handled. UT gives productionfor FOTA weekUniversity theater will present its final production of theyear April 22-27. Tickets are on sale at the Reynolds club desk.The play, being presented as a contribution to FOTA, isJean Cocteau’s modern tragedy — “Intimate Relations” (LesParents Terribles”). Thissomewhat bizarre drama be¬longs to that class of French lit¬erature unofficially known as“sick.”Cocteau’s play has already earn¬ed a wide reputation, having beenincluded in Eric Bentley’s anthol- been twice transformed info mo¬tion pictures.“Intimate Relations” will be di¬rected by Richard d’Anjou andstaged by Farrand Ennis. Per¬formances wil be given in thethird floor Reynolds club theater.International House MoviesMonday evenings, 7:30 p.m. — Assembly HollMonday, April 7 — 5Qc — Angelika (Ger)ogy of modern drama and having Tickets are $1 and $1.25.Although University theaterwill give no more performancesuntil this summer, it will produceone more play. Marvin Phillips, di¬rector of the theater has an¬nounced that arrangements havebeen completed for production ofSamuel Beckett’s “End Game."The show will feature the samecast which is now performing offBroadway in the Cherry Lanetheater. This play will be pre¬sented four times in late May inMandel hall.*.urope-n^qu hsvc ^ ff-1That’s why American Express Student Tours are expertlyplanned to include a full measure of individual leisure—ample free time to discover your Europe—as well asthe most comprehensive sight-seeing program availableanywhere! Visit England, Scotland, Ireland, Holland,Belgium, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, TheRivieras and France—accompanied by distinguishedtour leaders—enjoy superb American Express servicethroughout.10 Special Tours ... 48 to 63 days . . . via famous ships:United States, Liberte, Nieuw Amsterdam, Atlantic,Italia, New York. $1,198 up.Other tours available . . . from 35 days . . . $769 up.You can alwaysTRAVEL NOW—PAY LATERwhiten you go American Express!For complete information, see yourCampus Representative,local Travel Agent or. American Express\ Travel Service,member: Institute ofInternational Education and Councilon Student Travel. . or simply mail the handy coupon.American Express Travel Service65 Broadway, New York 6, N. Y. e/o Travel Sales DivisionYes! Please do send me complete informationabout 1958 Student Tours of Europe!NameAddressCity C-13Zone, State.PROTECT YOUR TRAVEL FUNDS WITH AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES - SPENDABLE EVERYWHERE FREE DELIVERY- NICKYS' PIZZERIANO 7-9063MeetPan)at a 60th birthday trib¬ute to this great artistand his work for Ameri¬can - Soviet cultural ex¬change and the right totravel. Mr. Robeson willspeak.Wednesday, April 98 p.m.32 W. Randolph St.Hall C-2Admission 90*Am*p.: Chicago Council otAmerican - SovietFriendshipCulture VultureAs Is well known by everyone who waited to get tickets, UT's production of "Galileo" was a sellout. Inasmuch as this Culture Vulture wasappearing in this show, let me assure you that it's a comforting sight to look out into an auditorium and see nothing but people.But aside from noticing a multitude of people, which ticket sales alone Vere enough to reveal, this avis noticed that most of the facesbelonging to people were rather old. Ticket sales won't reveal this, because UT like any other campus organization sells tickets to whomeverwill buy them. If off campus adults get there first, they get the tickets.It's a bad but undeniable fact that not enough students attend student productions; and too often when they do decide to go to something,either the show has closed, or the remaining performances are sold out. MORAL: Go buy a couple tickets to something good, and waste notime about it.Side addendum: there is a strong possibility that "Galileo" will be repeated at the end of this quarter, immediately after comps. If so, it willbe re-staged as an outdoor production in Hutchinson court.On campusThe only notice the Culture Vul¬ture has received about on cam¬pus events this week is that therewill be no Burton-Judson movie.This single bit of informationturned out in the end to be inac¬curate. Instead of the scheduled“On the Waterfront” B-J will bescreening “The Brave Bulls.” Ifyou have some campus event,send some information about itto the Maroon office.Concerts and recitalsNothing of note has been noteduntil next Friday, when Paul Ro¬beson will present the first of histwo concerts. Tickets are on saleat the Reynolds club desk for$2.50, $1.75 and $1.25.LecturesWednesday evening ProfessorSol Tax, chairman of the depart¬ment of anthropology, will pre¬sent the first of six public lec¬tures, “Concepts of cultural an¬thropology, society and the indi¬vidual: how the anthropologiststudies a human group.” The lec¬ture is free, and will be givenfrom 8 to 9 pm in SocSci 122.Thursday, Peter Fitzpatrick ofthe Chicago Bar will speak on“Chief Justice Edward DouglassWhite.” This will be in Breastedlecture hall at 8:30.TheatreRadio station WBBM is airingthe final part of a recording madeof UTs Court theatre production of Marlowe’s play "Dr. Faustus.”You can hear this at 8:05 pm, to¬morrow.Coming up soon: Blackfriar’smusical production, and Univer¬sity theatre’s “Intimate Rela¬tions.”Motion picturesB-J shows “The, Brave Bulls”tonight and “The Detective” or“Father Brown” with Alec Guin¬ness next Friday. Monday nightat 7:30 pm, Int. house presents aGerman film Angelika. Admissionis 50 cents.Off campusTheatreTwo professional shows arenow running. “My Fair Lady” isstill the one to see if you’ve seenneither. Still, Cyril Ritchard’s per¬formance in “Visit to a SmallPlanet” is well worth a trip down¬town. Goodman theatre’s striking¬ly original production of Tennes¬see Williams’ “Camino Real” willclose Sunday. If you’re at all in¬terested in expressionist theatre,try to see this before it closes.Concerts and RecitalsThe Chicago Symphony willpresent Verdi’s “Requiem” withLeonie Rysanek, Regina Resnik,Eugene Conley and Giorgio ToZzithis afternoon and again nextTuesday at 2 pm. Next Thursdayand Friday Fritz Reiner will con¬duct Vronsky and Babin in Mo¬zart’s Concerto for Two Pianos in E flat, Beethoven’s fourth sym¬phony and two works by Albeniz.The most interesting concertcoming up is next Friday whenOdetta and Tom Leher will appeartogether in Orchestra hall. Ticketsranging from 75 cents to $4 arenow on sale.Sunday the Chicago Chamberorchestra will present Haydn’sprelude to “The Seven LastWords,” Bach’s Suite in D, No. 3,and Arcady Dubensky’s “Andantefor Strings.” This free concert willbe at 3:30 pm in Fullerton hall.Art exhibitsThe Art institute is running nomajor exhibitions at the moment,but several very interestingsmaller ones. Among these showsare prints by Renoir and a surveyof the woodcut, the latter closingthis Sunday. Also, displayed area unique collection of some 100works by Umberto Boceioni (oneof the fathers of futurism), and alarge collection of primitiveOceanic sculpture.The John A. Colby galleries at149 N. Wabash are showing screenand scroll paintings by Japanesemasters.Motion picturesThe Hyde Park theatre isscreening the Chicago premier ofAlec Guinness’ new film, “All atSea.” This is coupled with "TheSweet Smell of Success” withTony Curtis and Burt Lancaster plus a new Mr. Magoo cartoon.In our more northward art the¬atres: at the Surf is the awardwinning Italian film “Nights ofCabiria” with Giulietta Masina ofAlbert named toProfessor A. Adrian Alberthas been named chairman ofthe department of mathemat¬ics effective July 1, succeedingProfessor Saunders MacLane,who has served two terms in thatoffice.Albert, an authority on modernhigher algebra, has been a mem¬ber of the faculty since 1931. Heis chairman of the mathematicssection of the National AcademyWidiger getsDanforth grantUC student Normand JohnWidiger was recently an¬nounced as the recipient of aDanforth campus Christian work¬er grant for 1958-59.These awards, made by the Dan¬forth foundation, of St. Louis, al¬low an academic year of graduatestudy in any university or semi¬nary for college chaplains, denom¬inational student workers, “Y”secretaries. Widiger was recentlyLutheran university pastor at theUniversity of Alabama. La Strada fame. At the Esquire isthe American film “Escapade inJapan.” The World Playhouse isrunning a Greek film, “A Girl inBlack,” English subtitles.mathematics postof Sciences and will be a delegateof both the Academy and theAmerican Mathematical societyto the quadrennial InternationalCongress of Mathematicians inEdinburgh, Scotland, this August.He also is a member of the steer¬ing group of the assistant secre¬tary of defense's general sciencepanel.UT arrow dunked‘‘Someone stole our arrow,”cried Dick D’Anjou of theUniversity theatre staff. Thesign, which has hung for manymonths in the Mandel hall corri¬dor pointing toward the Reynoldsclub, was last seen floating inBotany pond.D’Anjou said that the culpritswere unknown, but suspicionleaned toward a certain musicalcomedy group who may havethought that the arrow shouldhave pointed toward Mandel hall,site of their coming out-of-this-world production.“An obvious case of profes¬sional jealousy,” remarked D’An¬jou. “They are just don’t like thenoteriety of University theatre.”Camino Real' really unusualWhatever preconceptionsone has about Tennessee Wil¬liams will be exploded by‘‘Camino Real” now playing atGoodman theater. It’s like nothingelse he’s written—or apt to again.The timeless location of this RoyalRoad is somewhere on the otherside of the Rio Grande in a singleset by Jim Maronek that has mag¬nificence and tremendous versa¬tility, for it must encompass apoor village square, swank hotelterrace, balconies, airport, operat¬ing room, blasted heath, bordelloand what not. And without Na-selius’s expert lighting and tech¬nical director Lorenzo Gentile’senergies even the mobile set couldnot have withstood the strain.In and out of this Mexican sceneendlessly pours a pageant of char¬acters from Don Quixote, SanchoPanza, Casanova, Camille, LordByron, to a host of contempora¬ries: a baron, loan shark, fugitive,business man, gypsies, waiters,police, a Golden Gloves boy, andstreet cleaners who periodicallytote off many of the aforesaid(deceased) in a garbage cart.This is apparently TennesseeWilliams’ “Human Comedy.” Andsince few of the lives of the char¬acters are related, only thumbnailsketches may suggest the gist ofthis plotless masque.EUROPEIwmm 1*JI — 70 Day*Wail m aka wuol, plot Nortk AMca, Vwoa.•w*la, Eaat Garmon?, Cucketlovakia, tortm,Oaamork, and Inland. A low-pried, dMIaraatkind of trip far tka young In iplrlt wfco don'tvaat la ka hardad around. Writa to:■»IOK SUMMER TOURSMS Saguoia (Bax C). Poiadapo, Cottf24-HourKoAtchrome colorMmprocessingModel Camera Shop1342 E. 55tl» HY 3-9259 “What does it all mean?” Iheard many in the foyer ask, aqusetion which I believe is elo¬quent of the play’s inadequacy.The title and narrator seem tobe obvious: we all pass by—on theroyal road to death. Not a pro¬foundly new idea—but it musthave elements of profundity, tostand up.Charles McCraw in the playbillsays, “Changing the pronuncia¬tion of ‘Real’ from Spanish toEnglish ... suggests a psycholog¬ical road—the path to the innerreality of existence. ... A worldof luxury, poverty, cruelty, cor¬ruption and indifference ... fromwhich they are trying to escape.. . . What is free can survive onlyby great courage....” _The more pertinent dramaticquestion is: What kind of livesand deaths has Tennessee Wil¬liams selected from the greatpanorama of history and his con¬temporary world to make hispoints? Don Quixote is only thesuperficial symbol of adventure,despite some tempting lines (rau¬cously shouted by Jon Shank)about blue standing for purity.Casanova is only a becloaked old¬ster thrown out by his mistressand hotel, and unlike any conceptof the villain he sentimentallyhangs on to the degenrated imageof the original Dame Aux Came-Captures yourpersonalityas well asyour personphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. lias. Kilroy as the almost hero ofthe play raises serious questions.But I feel that despite the au¬thor’s earnest efforts to relievethe play with the symbol of theyouthful American with the gold¬en gloves and golden heart, theresult is confusing. He was un¬selfish and pure of heart—so whydid he have to die? Only LordByron almost comes off with no¬bility and tragedy. As for theothers carried off by the garbagemen—in proportion as each view¬er can answer why they had to diewill the play seem more than anambitious spectacle.To this writer Tennessee Wil¬liams is an uncanny showmanwho lives in a world of smallpeople, mainly caricatures, torn out of social and human context.This is no inconsiderable accom¬plishment and one which certain¬ly makes “Camino Real” a tre¬mendously excellent first choicefor Dr. Reich’s scheduled “Cycleof contemporary American plays.”Judging from the other playsavailable, this production will behard to beat.Top professional honors go toCharles Grunwell for lending acertain dignity to the decrepitCasanova, to Dorothy Conrad fora hearty piece of digestible com¬edy, and above all to the graciousand fine voiced Beverly Youngerwho had more of the original Camille’s integrity than Williamsconceived. Frank Roach as Kilroyhad the most gruelling job in theplay, and despite Williams’ andhis limitations manages to strikecredibility in our hearts, andhopes for his professional future.Thom Koutsoukos as Byron againsustains something of the heroictradition of acting. Others in theschool need a great deal of hisvoice training. Martin Streicheras the Narrator Gutman and Di¬rector Charles McGraw did a tre-.mendous job holding and keepingthis mammoth production to¬gether.Sidney BlackstonePOISON IVY (leaguer)ON THEPEARLY GATESTOM LEHRERbag 2 game wardens, 7 huntersand a pure bred guernsey cow .as part of his relentless assaulton his own mad music *hearODETTAsing in the great and graciousmanner that has endearedher Ip tCivet s 6f folk musiceverywhere.presented by albert b. grossman$4.00, $3.50, $3.00, $2.50, $1.75753 n. dearborn, Chicago 10devon music shop, 2746 w. devon;the disc, 1367 e. 57th street. ptofie M0-7-9O7» lake paidq 53 tu) streetALL AT SEAAlec won the Academy Award last week. This film is thenewest Guinness — first run from the premiere — butmade in the old Guinness way.— AND —SWEET SMELL OF SUCCESSTime: "Scriptwriters Clifford Odets and Ernest Lehmango fishing with a fine line of gab in the moral sewer —the pipeline of a well-known gossip columnist — thatruns under Broadway .. . One of the year's 9 best Ameri¬can films." Burt Lancaster and a Tony Curtis who canreally act. Shot by James Wong Howe, jazz backgroundscore by Chico Hamilton's group, who also appear inthe film.plus the latest from U.P.A.MR. MAGOO'S MOOSEHOUNDFriday fir Saturday: Sweet Smell of Success, 6:00, 9:15;All at Sea,< 7:50, 11:05Sunday: Sweet Smell of Success, 2:00, 5:25, 8:45; Allat Sea, 4:00, 7:15, 10:35mm mmm m m mmm *Apr. 4, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15Field House to be sceneof national judo tourneyThe art of judo, distinguished from the practice of mayhem only by a restraining■gentleman’s agreement,” will be displayed in its highest form next Saturday and Sundaykt the National AAU championships in the Field House.Derived as a sport that emphasizes skill and even intuition from the more deadly jujitsu,Judo is as national a sport in Japan as basketball in the United States and has a rapidlygrowing number of participants in the US. Several hundred Chicagoans engage in the sportcompetitively.Approximately 150 Of the must defeat the winners in the under stringent rules. Even inCountry’s best practioners, other weight divisions. Judo, choke holds, applied withmostly holders of various ratings Jujitsu originated as a means of the collar of the garment, areIn the “black belt," the most warfare in Feudal Japan, and legal. The collar cuts off the cir-skilled class, are entered in the was a tricky and crippling form of culation through the carotid ar-championship tournament on the combat in which the primary pur- teries, insuring unconsciousnessMidway. pose was to break the opponent’s in a few seconds, but not havingAbout half of the entrants are neck or back. the drastic effects of a prize ringof Japanese origin; The air force, In 1882, the late Dr. Jigoro knockout. Though a judo con-which teaches Judo as part of its Kano, a professor of political sci* testant so defeated revives quick-athletic program, will have some ence, who also was skilled in Ju- ly, the rule of discretion is totop contenders. Some of the con- jitsu, refined it by a series of signify concession of the matchtestants are coming from Hawaii, reforms that emphasized the most once the hold is applied,and Sumijuki Kotani, the head of efficient use of strength and elim- Another of the rougher andthe foreign section of the Kodo- inated the unsportsmanlike ele- legitimate maneuvers is applica-kan, the judo academy and gov- ments. tion of an arm lock. Once applied,erning body, will be present to To this new sport he gave the that hold is decisive, and againpass on recommendations for ad- name of Judo, and provided a mot* the match is conceded. The armvance in ratings of the contest* to. Half of this translates as, “to lock is difficult to obtain amongants. utilize opportunity to the utmost the black belt judo players, forThe Japanese rule unchallenged advantage”; the other half, “to one of the elementary rules of thein the lower weight classes, but elevate yourself and others by co- sport is to work with the elbowsbecause of greater weight and operating with one another.” “Co- close to the sides of the body,physical strength, Americans operation” means to act like a Matches are limited to sevenoften win in the heavyweight and sportsman. minutes, but an extra session oflight heavyweight classes. George Judo contestants wear a heavy three minutes is provided in theHarris of the air force won last canvas garment, with collar and discretion of the judges. If noyear’s heavyweight title. Jack lapels, and full sleeves, which are falls result, the judges give a de-Schaff, of Gary, Indiana, former grasped in the maneuvers to get cision. Decisions are rare, accord-Washington Redskins center, an the opponent off balance. ing to Dr. Harper, for falls gen¬outstanding heavyweight, will be A match is won by scoring a erally are scored even with twoa competitor in the Midway cham- clean fall that puts the opponent seasoned and skilled practitionerspionship. down on the mat, on his back, meeting each other.Vince Tamura of Chicago, an- with some force. The contestantother entrant, won the light who does the throwing, however,heavyweight championship in is required to “cooperate" by1956 and was second last year, using his back to give the van-Chicagoan John Osako, heavy- quished a fair chance to hit with-weight who won the grand cham- out injury,pionship in 1956, also is compet- Where there is not a clean fall,Ing. For this title, the champion mat wrestling is permitted, again JMartin is athlete of weekHosea L. Martin of the varsity track team was the finalwinter quarter athlete of the week, the athletic departmentannounced.Martin has been a consistent winner in the 60-yard dashand 440-yard run throughout ’the indoor track season, thestaff said. In addition he has runon the mile relay team.On March 7, against the schools Against North Central college,Martin ran the same race in :06.3,breaking a meet record which hadstood for 20 years.In making the award, the ath*of the Midwest conference, he letic department stated, “In addi-won the 60-yard dash in :06.2 sec- tion to his personal athletic ac-onds, setting a new meet record complishments, he has been aand equaling the UC varsity in- most reliable and enthusiasticdoor track record. team member.”Dr. N. J. De FrancoDr. N. R. NelsonOPTOMETRISTS1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352 Term InsuranceLife InsuranceConnecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co.Joseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. EverettRA 6-1060 MI 3-5986Salem A new idea in smoking...refreshes your taste• menthol fresh• rich tobacco taste• most modern filter les vourSmoking was never like this before! Salem refreshes your taste just as a gloriousSpring morning refreshes you. To rich tobacco taste, Salem adds a surprise softnessthat gives smoking new ease and comfort. Yes, through Salem’s pure-white, modernfilter flows the freshest taste in cigarettes. Smoke refreshed ... smoke Salem!Take a Puff... It's Springtime16 • CHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 4, 1958