East tries peers for dorm damageby Sandra SciacchitanoA five-hour trial followed bya four-hour deliberation—thefirst time students havejudged students on a dormitoryquestion, took place in East houseTuesday night.The court, consisting of a five-man tribunal headed by MichaelYVolfson, was set up under thehouse constitution last quarter totry people accused of damagingproperty for which the housewould be billed or for misusinghouse property. It was an attemptby the members of the house “todeal with these problems them¬selves rather than to turn the mat¬ter over to house staff." The pow¬ers of the tribunal were limited toassessment of damages and making of recommendations to thehouse head, John Hammitt.The case is also being reviewedby James Newan, director ofhousing. On trial for damage done lastquarter to a study-room, assessedat $63 and consisting of deface¬ment of walls and ceiling, wereRobin Freeman, Russell Witney,and Scott Van Leuven, all enter¬ing a plea of not guilty.Members of the tribunal areRobert Levine, Ronald Patterson,Lincoln Ramerez, and Jim Pear.Leonard Friedman, assisted byWilliam Wright, was attorney forthe prosecution; defense attorneywas Robert Imhoff.The tribunal, in a unanimous de¬cision, dismissed charges againstWitney and Van Leuver for lackof evidence; Freeman was foundguilty of defacing four walls. Itwas recommended that he befined $37 for damages, be put onprobation for one year, and be ex¬pelled from the dormitory. Thetribunal expressed “extremedoubts about Freeman’s innocenceas to the ceiling." Freeman made the followingstatement concerning the trial: “Iconsider myself completely inno¬cent of the charges of indictmentand I think the verdict was unfairbecause I am innocent, and be¬cause there was prejudgment“I opposed the whole idea of atribunal from the beginning. I feelit is wrong in a dormitory situa¬tion to take certain individualsand put them above the rest. It isunsafe to have them (the tribu¬nal) in the house since there ismuch resentment against them.I do not think the tribunal willlast."Witney and Van Leuven are ofthe opinion that the tribunal, inoperating as ‘^investigating body,grand jury, judge, and interpreterof rules under which it operated"was “obviously a biased court."Both attacked the procedure fol¬lowed by the tribunal as definitelyfavoring the prosecution in sev¬eral instances.ChicagoYol. 67, No. 17 University of Chicago, Friday, January 16, 1959 31 Wolfson said: “I hardly think itmy position to make any com¬ments concerning the verdict un¬til such time as our final formalreport appears. Obviously, we con¬sider it just and our actions just.“The idea of a tribunal, no mat¬ter how well organized, is an un¬pleasant one. When a student isput in a position where he mustjudge another, there are bound tobe difficulties and unpleasantries.Despite this, I think it far prefer¬able that insofar as possible, stu¬dent problems be handled by thestudents, and further that the stu¬dents within a student communityassume some degree of responsi¬bility for their behavior.“The tribunal, even with itspresent laws, is a forward step.The members of the tribunal mayin fact feel that there is definiteneed for improvement in the or¬ganization of the house judicialsystem, but we are firmly con¬vinced that our actions in this andother cases have been both honor¬able and just. I think that our re¬port will make this quite clear."Richard Miller, main witnessfor the prosecution, testified thaton Sunday, December 14, he wentinto a study room in the basementof East house and found Freemanalone there. He noticed Witneyand Van Leuven in the adjoiningroom. He noticed, also, damage tothe study room.He claimed that he was told byFreeman how he had done thedamage and that Freeman pro¬ceeded to demonstrate how thedamage was done by throwing a(see “East,” page 2)UT's 8:30' series begins Fridayby Ozzie ConklinUniversity Theatre’s forth¬coming spectacular, Tonightat 8:30, to open one week fromtoday, will present an interestingcombination of important ele¬ments in today’s theatre.While research soars to thelofty tunes of experimental bio¬logy, experimental chemistry, ex¬perimental fire-building, andabove all, experimental basket-weaving, some sort of universalis-tic research is needed. UT, in To¬night at 8:30, at least manages toinclude all sorts of experimenta¬tion, involving versions of all theworthy researches mentionedabove as well as some down-to-stage experimental drama.The first week’s program, withperformances on January 23, 24,and 25, will include four one-actplays: The Piano Tuner, La Follia,Living Hours and Aria da Capo.The second weekend, January 30 and 31 and February 1, will in¬clude a new musical by Don Mc-Clintock and Ionesco’s The BaldSoprano.The Piano Tuner is an involvedcomedy revolving around themanager of an ever-so-sensitiveWagnerian soprano. Said man¬ager fiddles with pianos in hisspare time and is managed skill¬fully by his wife whenever shenotices his spare time twirlingtoo near the vicinity of her sparetime.La Follia, set in Hyde Park inall its Universitous, tavernous,and apartmental glory, is ahumorous drama portraying thedevelopment of a girl through thevarious men in and out of herlife. The five men associated withthe girl are all played by the sameactor, relating through this tech¬nique to the girl herself and thevarious facets of her character.An original play by Omar Shapli, a former UC student, the play isinteresting, to say the least.Living Hours, the third play ofthe first week’s program, is apoetic drama involving three char¬acters; a gardener, a middle-agedman, and a poet. This is in someways the most serious play of thegroup; it involves a discussion ofa value scale of life, various as¬pects of which are symbolized bythe characters within the drama.Aria da Capo, Edna St. VincentMillay’s tragi-comedy on society,is an old one-act stand-by. Theplay is divided into two sections;the old Columbine-Pierrot thememodernized serves as a back¬ground for a tragedy involvingtwo warring shepherds. The playthroughout reminds the audiencethat it is merely a play; a majesticstage-manager directs its develop¬ment. It is at the same timedivorced from reality and univer¬salized through its use of verse and various elements within itsown structure and symbolism.The Bald Soprano, the first halfof the second week’s production,is a frankly farcical satire of any¬thing and everything withinstandard bourgeois society. Astripping maid who drinks brandyand milk, a fire-chief with a de¬cided liking for bad Aesop and aharassed prop-crew are amor tslesser features. The cast wih~ in¬clude Beta Theta Pi’s paranoiaccatInter Allia, a one-act musical byDon McClintock (the author ofBlackfriar’s forthcoming produc¬tion, Towers A-blush) will com¬plete the program. The musicalsatirizes art and artlessness inmany of their present unfortu¬nately prominent aspects. Theproduction will be directed byMike Hall with the help of Mari¬anne Erman, the composer of theshow’s music. (photos by Figilo)Ever been to a UC basketballgame or swimming meet . . •or didn't you know UC hadbasketball games or swimmingmeets? For your informationthe Maroon refers you to itssports page and sports calen¬dar (page 8) and asks you tolook for our special sports fea¬ture in three weeks which willpoint out to those who do notalready know — that UC pro¬duces many a fine athlete inaddition to many a fine scholar.LAK: "tolerate odd-ball"• c" jp ■*.? . ■ ’ • / *> *Speaking at a banquet given in Los Angeles by the Stanford university board of trustees,Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton stated yesterday that the universities should tolerate theodd-ball.He went on, “I do not mean that we have to cherish the odd-ball, simply because he isthis way, but I come very close to recommending this.“A university that has no oddities is not a great university, and occasionally it shoulddiscipline itself in freedom by embracing and supporting a weird one just for his weirdness.”For his “distinctive contri-butions to higher education inthe United States” Kimptonwas designated an honorary fel¬low of Stanford.A 1931 graduate of Stanford,Kimpton served as dean of stu¬dents and professor of philosophythere from 1947 to 1950.Speaking on the subject of “What Makes a UniversityGreat,” Kimpton declared a greatuniversity:(1) Attracts and hold holdgreat men as teachers and su¬perior students as scholars.(2) v Possesses adequate physi¬cal facilities for research andteaching.(S) Receives stimulation fromits urban environment (4) Has intangible qualitieswhich “ultimately make the dif¬ference ... a spirit, a mood, anatmosphere that somehow tran¬scend men and money and ma¬terials."These qualities include, Kimp¬ton declared, a sense of freedom,an air of excitement about theuniversity’s role and mission, anda sense of direction. Rush continuesThe fraternity rushing season continues this week. Forinformation on eligibility see page 3. The smoker sched¬ule appears below:Friday, January 16 ^ Phi Gamma DeltaPhi Kappa PsiMonday, January 19 ..Zeta Beta TauPsi UpsilonTuesday, January 20 Phi Delta ThetaKappa Alpha PsiWednesday, January 21 Phi Sigma DeltaPhi Gamma DeltaThursday, January 22 Phi Kappa PsiBeta Theta PiFriday, January 23 Delta UpsilonAlpha Delta PhiEach smoker is held at the fraternity house, between7:30 and 10 pm.Student Union starts quest for Miss UCIngersoll new trusteeRobert S. Ingersoll, president and chief executive officerof the Borg-Warner corporation, was recently elected a trusteeof the University, Glen A. Lloyd, chairman of the board, an¬nounced.The election took place at a meeting of the university'sboard of trustees.Ingersoll became president of Borg-Warner corporation in1956 and added the responsibilities of chief executive officerof the firm in 1958. Previously, he had served in executivepositions in various divisions and subsidiaries of the corpora¬tion. He became administrative vice-president of Borg-Warnerm 1953.Ingersoll was born January 28, 1914, at Galesburg, Illinois.He holds a bachelor of science degree from Yale university.In addition to being a director of Borg-Warner corporation,Ingersoll is a director of the Container Corporation of America,the First National bank of Chicago and the American Manage¬ment association.West will have partyAn all-campus ice skatingparty will be held Wednesdayby West house in place of itsregular coffee hour.Skating at the rink under theNorth stands will be from 8 to10 pm. Hot spiced cider and cookies will be served to theskaters in the West house loungefrom 10 to 12. Company, conver¬sation, and refresliments will befree.The rental charge for skates atthe rink is 75 cents. Regular rinkrules will be observed. Student Union has an¬nounced the opening of the1959 Mbs University of Chi¬cago contest. The winner willbe crowned at the 56th annualWashington promenade spon¬sored by SU on February 21.AN student organizations maysubmit a candidate.The deadline for submissionof the name of Miss UC candi¬dates is noon, Thursday, Janu¬ary 29. Each candidate's name,and that of the sponsoringgroup, should be given toNancy Cox, H07 New dormi¬tory (ext. 1047) or BU 8-6610).Judging for the eight final¬ists will take place at a tea tobe held on Wednesday, Febru¬ary 4 at 3 pm in Ida Noyes"hall. Afternoon dress is rec¬ommended. School gets new nameThe official name of the business school has been changedto the Graduate School of Business. The UC Board of Trus¬tees unanimously voted for the change on Thursday, Jan¬uary 8, acting upon the recommendation of the School andthe Chancellor.The School which confers only the degrees of the masterof business administration and doctor of philosophy acceptedthe last candidates for the bachelors' degree in 1942, andconferred the last bachelors' degree in 1950.When the business school was first approved by the Senateof the University in 1894, the name was to be the School ofCommerce and I ndustry. When the School opened in 1898it was under the name of the College of Commerce and Politics.In 1900 the name became the College of Commerce and Ad¬ministration and in 1932 the School of Business.I-C boll, Jon. 24Inter-club ball, marking theheight of the women’s clubs’social schedule and the end ofpledging, will be held January 24at 9 pm in the Palmer house.Highlighting the ball will be thecoronation of Inter-club king byMrs. John P. Netherton. He willbe chosen from the clubs’ candi¬dates at a tea, Wednesday, in the east lounge of Ida Noyes.Candidates are: Delta Sigma,Hugo Swann; Esoteric, BruceBowman; Mortarboard, ArthurFayer; Quadrangler, Donald Bro-der; Sigma, Dennis Hamby;Wyvern, William Routt.Mrs. Marjorie Ravitts, Mrs.James Newman, and Mrs. JamesDalton will judge the nominees.Festival organizingAn information commmittee in connection with theAmerican Youth Festival organization (AYFO) has beenchartered on campus.Its purpose, according to the organization’s president,Barbara Bradford, is to publicize the youth festival,to be held in Vienna July 26-August 4, and to answerquestions concerning the festival. International Union ofStudents (IUS) is sponsoring the festival, which is one©f a series of such events, the last one having been heldin Moscow in the summer of 1957.AYFO has stated that it recognizes the communistdomination of the IUS, and the use of the festival as apropaganda tool. It plans to attempt to counteract thisleftist propaganda through well-planned American cul¬tural participation and by encouraging well-informed,sincerely interested students to attend. The AYFO statedthat in the past, the American delegation has been under¬mined by heavy leftist participation.The AYFO has already arranged for plane and boattransportation for the American delegation. The cost,Including round-trip passage and all expenses while inVienna is 8445. Interested students may contact MissBarbara Bradford in West house 1316 for informationor for application to attend. Exhibit at LexArchitectural designs by the firm Holabird and Rootwill be exhibited through February 6 in Lexington halLThe exhibit, open from 9 am to 5 pm, Monday throughFriday, and from 9 to 4:30 Saturday, is designed to showhow the firm deals with the problems of building.According to Freeman Schoolcraft, director of Lexing¬ton studio, the exhibit should be of interest both to com¬munity residents and to Humanities 1 students nowstudying architecture.Included is a section on the proposed Francis Parkerschool, Chicago, with a three-dimensional scale model,plans, and elevations.The main part of the school is circular, enclosing anoutdoor court which will be the center of year roundactivities. This feature Schoolcraft commented, is “com¬pletely functional and demonstrates the flexibility thatis part of the plan.”Also shown are drawings of the proposed Glen Ellynschool, Glen Ellyn, Illinois; of the Chicago Housingauthority public housing projects at 35th and Statestreets, and of several hotels and restaurants.Different techniques of rendering, including white andblack ink on colored board, pencil drawings, and nega¬tive prints are used in the exhibit. O-board, SG planOrientation board and Student Government arc pre¬senting a lecture-discussion by Robert Braidwood, pro¬fessor of old world pre history, on the research he isconducting, and on his interests in the field, Wednesday,4 pm, in Social Sciences 122.This is the first in a series of presentations by facultymembers who will be speaking on how they becameinvolved in their particular research problems.Other faculty members participating in the seriesare John A. Simpson, professor of physics; Joshua Tay¬lor, associate professor of art and of College humanities;Benson Ginsburg, associate dean of natural sciences,and Leopold Haimson, assistant professor of history.‘To improve student faculty relations," Orientationboard is sponsoring a series of teas featuring representa¬tives from the College faculty.The teas, from 3 to 4:30 pm, will be held Tuesdays inSwift commons and Thursdays in Classics 21.“The idea of the series is to enable undergraduatestudents to meet the faculty,” an Orientation boardspokesman said.Each tea will feature members of one course staff,she added.The series will continue throughout the quarter.Airs moral, legal views of death penaltyby Linda Morrison“Is capital punishment everJustifiable” was the topic of alecture given by Wilbur G.Katz, professor in the law school.He stated his object as “relatingtheology and law.”“The religious and legal con¬cepts of responsibility are peren¬nially controversial,” said Katz.UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor He went on to give the two majorpositions on the issue of capitalpunishment.“A theory held by many peopleis that since man is created inthe image of God, it is wrongfor him to be killed." Katz, how¬ever, held that this was too simple.He maintained that it held an im¬portant aspect of the truth — lifeand freedom are sacred.The other position taken wasthat capital punishment is justi¬fied because it is the expressionof the community against thecriminal act, and is an appropriatevindication of the moral standardof the broken law.A major concern, Katz pointedoutr is that a penalty is retribu¬tive, and that the law should notonly protect society, but treat thecriminal. Therefore a seriouscrime should not necessarily meana serious penalty, especially incases involving execution, where,Katz noted, mistakes are irrevoc¬able.It's fine for the boys in tke lobs to rue around in circles, bet otThe Shoretand we quit doing that years ogo. No experiment herefor good food end drink elegantly served. Outstanding facilities farparties, conferences, conventions, etc. Quality opartment and hotelaccommodations. Attention to detail makes rise difference. All serv¬ices, food ond rooms sensibly scaled.Visit our Cottage Bar, Coffee Shop or Wedgewood Room.THE SH0RELAND HOTEL5454 South Shore Drive PLaxa 2-1000 These two positions tend to con¬flict, he said, because the rehabili¬tation of a criminal calls for cir¬cumstances very hard to achievein a penal institution.“One tries to bring about self-criticism, something not likely tohappen except in an atmosphereof voluntary acceptance — thecriminal needs freedom to gainexperience and learn how he iswrong.”The law uses the threat of capi¬tal punishment and penal servi¬tude as a deterrent. Can correc¬tive measures be harshly deter¬rent and also include a spiritualrehabilitation?These questions must be con¬sidered, stated Katz, in the lightof improving criminal law. Tohave an integrated strategy isimportant.“Can capital punishment beweighed in a manner involvingthe idea of real repenrtence by theculprit?” asked Katz.There have been many cases ofrepentence and conversion under“the shadow of the gallows.” Isit rational to think about it — totry and bring about this changein thought in^the criminal foronly a few hours? “No,” Katzstated, “this must be rejected.”Does the Christian ethic demand^l^Jear C on-la,cl oCtniti•byDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. abolition of capital punishment?An emphatic yes was the answerto this question. Katz also believedthat human liberty is of primaryimportance.A careful statistical study ofstates and countries with andwithout capital punishment hasshown that it does not establisha major deterrent force.People educated to the problemEast has(from page 1)piece of plywood at tike ceiling anddenting it, and by writing on thewall with a piece of broken tile.Another witness, Sheldon Glas-ser, testified that he noticed dam¬age to the room the Wednesdaybefore December 14. Freemanasked him, Glasser said, not to“say anything about the mess inthe room.”Freeman’s own testimony ranas follows; “Saturday after din¬ner, Scott and I studied in thestudy room until about 12:30.There was no damage to the room.Sunday afternoon Scott and Iwent down to the study room andfound it locked. We went upstairsto have it opened and the matroncame down wilh us. She openedthe door, saw the damage, andcommented that she would haveto tell somebody about 'that mess.’ of capital punishment and deten¬tion deny any deterrent force andurge its bad effects on the prisoninmates. Chaplains regard theexistence of capital punishment asa handicap to therapeutic and re¬habilitative work.Katz has been a professor inthe law school since 1930. His lee-,ture was sponsored by the Meth¬odist Graduate fellowship.We went into the hi-fi room nextdoor and Russ came in. I took myradio and went into the damagedroom to listen to it, and stayeduntil about 12.“I like to kid around a lot, andI saw Erick Miller, so I called himin and told him that I had had alittle fun in the room. I took apiece of tile and went over thewriting with it. I believe Millerwas sincere in his testimony. I ad¬mit tossing the plywood up tothe ceiling. Miller was only mis¬led."The defense called several char¬acter witnesses. Bill Zimmermantold of Freeman’s carrying “jokespretty far.” Elizabeth Kambouriantestified to Freeman’s sincerity.She said he was “never harmfulto people or property.”For further information see“Letters to the editor," Page 5.STERN'S CAMPUS DRUGS61st b EllisWHEN DECIDING ON THE SUNDAY EVENING MEAL ...Baked BamStejra*s Special SteakGrilled Onions Salad BowlFrench Fries Roll & Butter Sweets VegetablesSalods Home made hot rollsCoffee Dessertfl.45trial..HY 3-83722 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 16, 1959SG has meeting...Student Government considered a report from a committee establishedat its last meeting investigating the Chicago Review situation at this week’smeeting held on January 13 in Law north.This meeting, attended by Kostya Nessen, the Russian exchange student on cam¬pus, was largely devoted to hearing the progress report of this committee. At theconclusion of its report, the committee said that the complete document would beprinted and distributed to campus within a week.The government also heard a report from the president, Joel Rosenthal, on the pos¬sibilities of a cheaper flight to Europe than the one which is presently being sched¬uled. With the 80 passengers now contemplated, the new service would cost about$279 per person, a saving of over $45 on the round trip flight leaving early in June.It was announced that if 100 persons could be found for the flight, the expenseswould be reduced even further.Furthermore the expenses of the air trip from Chicago to New York, where theflight leaves, under this service, would be about $45.00. The government appointeda committee to make all the final arrangements on the best flight to Europe. Rush explained...Fraternities on campus are conducting their rushing programs duringthis week and next to recruit new members into their organizations.In order to be eligible to join a fraternity, a student must maintain ascholastic average of 1.75 or better, be at least seventeen years of age when theypledge, and have enrolled in the University, or another university, for at least onequarter. At the end of the rushing period, all the pledge cards are sent to the regis¬trar and are checked to see if they meet the above requirements. If a student doesnot have the required grade average at the end of the autumn quarter, he is placedon probation by the fraternity and if his winter grades are satisfactory (independentof the autumn grades), he is then admitted.During the pledge period, the prospective members are usually given some formof “constructive” work, sometimes in the form of a specific project; hazing is athing of the past.The initiations are held sometime in May. Fraternity fees vary, but on the wholethey are slightly higher than those at the dormitories.Although no one really expects to see the return of freshman “beanies" in the UCcampus, fraternities at Chicago are not too different Hazing died too long ago torank even as a sad memory, and men no longer care to die for “dear old Zeta.” Theydon't even offer. However, fraternal spirit is present and is combined with interestand concern- on the part of fraternity men for academic and other university affairs.Hence UC chapters have led those on other campuses in academic standing with¬out consciously attempting to do so.Sol Tax tours RussiaSol Tax is touring Russiaand Asia to interest scientistsin a new international journalBirds will holdmeeting on Tues.;invite all campusPhoenix will hold an openmeeting Tuesday at 7 pm inthe Cap & Gown office, IdaNoyes, announced Selma Meyer,publisher of the magazine.Students interested in workingof the editorial, cartooning, orbusiness staffs will have an oppor¬tunity to meet the present staffmembers, Miss Meyer stated.Kahn and Chapinwill discuss art atIda Noyes hallA panel discussion featuringFrancis Chapin and Max Kahn,whose works are presently beingdisplayed at the Shapiro exhibit,will be held on January 20 at 8:00at Ida Noyes hall. The discussionis entitled, "The Artist and HisWork.” called Current Anthropology.Tax, a professor of anthropo¬logy, is the first editor of CurrentAnthropology, A World Journalof the Sciences of Man.Purpose of the journal is to"extend and facilitate intercom¬munication among students of>man wherever in the world theyare working,” Tax said.He has scheduled stops at Paris,Moscow, Delhi, Calcutta, Bang¬kok, Manila, Hong Kong, Tokyo,and Honolulu and will return onJanuary 28.This is Tax’s third trip on be¬half of the journal. In 1957, hevisited campuses in the US andlast summer he toured Europe.PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO."Hyde Park's Most Complete Paint & Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th at.1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoFeaturing — Complete Wine List andHors d'oeuvre .TableCheese Small12"Combination Small12".2.00Sausage ..1.50 Mushroom .1.75Anchovy ......... ..1.50 Shrimp .2.00Pepper & Onion . . . ..1.35 Bacon & Onion .1.75Free Delivery on AU Plxxm te VC StuOent* Our advice on your mov¬ing or storage problem isentirely free and withoutobligation. But it is amaz¬ing how often we find youhave need of our services.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711SKI BEGINNERS'FUN BARGAINWilmot (PA hours) ...$1.501 Vz hour lesson 3.00Regular total ........ 4.50Our club 2.50YOU SAVE $2.00Tows $1.50 day plusWed. $1.00 night .$2.50i Entry plus I Vzan<* hour lesson. . .2.50Sat. Ski 9 am to 11pm . .ONLY $5.00Beginners wear jeans.Rent skis, boots, poles $5Reservations:Dave Jaecks, 21 Snell hallrob n. howell, ’25, HY 2-3535UC ski Instructor, ’55- ’5#Family ski tutoring $30 a dayG. Washington, famous father, says:"Makes your hair look real George!"I Just a little biTof Wildroof Jand...WOW INEW! JUST PUBLISHED! TIMELY!Newman: EUROPEAN TRAVEL CUIDE, 1959-60 Edition $4.95Fully revised, here is the 7th edition of a leading travel guide to Europe.Joyce Cary: THE CAPTIVE AND THE FREE $5.00The last novel Mr. Cary wrote before his death in 1957. Preface by the distinguished critic,David Cecil.Marcel Ayme: ACROSS PARIS, and Other Stories $3.50Fantasy, wit, irony, knowledge, these will be found everywhere in the stones of this newbook by "one of the best French writers alive."Constance Wagner: ASK MY BROTHER $4.50Examines the irresponsibilities that motivated a group of people in the Civil War.Thomas Griffith: THE WAIST-HICH CULTURE ...$4.00Partly autobiographical and written by a world-roving journalist "about being an Americanin these times."UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue SEMI-ANNUALClearance Sole25 per cent discount cskirts, blouses, dressesend co-ords. cjCuciile d1507 east 53rd st.mi 3-9898The Documentary Film Group Winter ScheduleJan ]6—THE WALLS OF MALAPAGA 1949Directed by Rene Clement; screenplay by Cesare Zavat-tini; with Jeon Gabin & Isa Miranda. French.Jan 23—THE LOVERS OF VERONA 1948Directed by Andre Coyatt* (We Are All Murderers);screenplay by Jacques Prevert (Children oF Paradise);with Anouk Aimee, Pierre Brasseur, Martine Carol.French.Jan 30—THE WHITE SHEIK(To be shown in Judd 126)Directed by Federico Fellini (La Strado). Italian.Feb 6—BLIND HUSBANDS 1919Directed by, written by and starring Erich von Stro¬heim. American.Feb 13—PIT OF LONELINESS (Olivia) 1950Directed by Jacqueline Audry; screenplay by Colette;with Edwige Feuillere, Simone Simon. French.Feb 20—THE LAST LAUGH 1924Directed by F. W. Murnou; scenario by Carl Mayer;with Emil Jannings. German.Feb 27—JOYLESS STREET 1925Directed by G. W. Pabst; with Jaro Furth, Greta Gar¬bo. German.45c for single admission$1.50 for series ticket and admission to any 5Social Science 1227:15 9:15Jan. 16, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3'' '■ 4J ’fm'i94m*: V; ' tMiff¥ the Chicago maroonfounded — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the tTnlverslty of Chicago school year and Intermittently during the summer quarter,by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800,extentlons, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus. Subscriptions by mall, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5,Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material, 4 pm, Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material,3 pm Wednesday before publication.All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the Individual opinions of the authors.Maroon against oathLast August the United States government officially realized that national defense andnational education are inextricably linked, one with the other. This was the primary moti¬vation of a recent public law which establishes a rather large student loan fund. It is abouttime congress officially acknowledged this fact; it was circulating around the campus even beforeHutchins was.Moreover, in a burst of dispassion, the government proclaimed itself in firm opposition to any attemptat federal control over the schools and students utilizing this loan fund. Our first reaction to all of thisis “fine, if true.’' But is it true? After closer examination we feel that the bill is simply a wolf in sheep¬skin’s clothing.The essence of the bill is simply that very low-interest scholarships plus rather lucrative fellowshipswill be offered to students with a superior academic background who have an interest in teaching inelementary or secondary schools. Special consideration will be given students interested in the sciences,engineering or a modern foreign language. To qualify for such a loan or award, however, the studentmust first sign a loyalty oath.Here we begin to object and begin to wonder just what congress thinks it means by "federal control.”In the first place, our national defense demands more than scientists, engineers and modern foreignlinguists, We are going to need our sociologists, anthropologists, economists, and yes, our Englishmajors and art majors and music majors. This need is going to be real, and it is unrealistic not toacknowledge it. This battle should have been won long ago.Second, and more important, we object to the inclusion of a loyalty oath. This is certainly an inva¬sion of the college, an invasion of the student and an invasion of the sort Congress solemnly declareditself unwilling to entertain.While almost the entire, if not the total number of students otherwise eligible for these stipendscould take this oath without perjury, a large percentage would be reluctant to sign, and a significantproportion would refuse. The rationale behind all this is too well known on campus to belabor thepoint further.That the government recognizes the necessity of education is fine; that it has undertaken to ameli¬orate the present condition is admirable; but that the method it has selected to undertake this projectis satisfactory—this we must deny. Rather it seems a repetition of that famous dance step: one stepforward, two steps back.‘Bad Faith’ in SG...BAD FAITH was, I believe, exercised by many members of the Student RepresentativeParty at the Student Government meeting last Tuesday. A bi-partisan group, at the sugges¬tion of ISL and SRP had prepared a bill on the establishment of a committee to re-evaluateand suggest possible means of reorganization of student government to make it a more effectiveorganization. Such an effort, made in good faith, involved a considerable effort on the part of thoseconcerned. The Government meeting was held in part without a quorum and when the bill was broughtto the floor, a member of SRP, acting in his own words "independently called the quorum, upon thefailure of which the government was forced to adjourn without considering this essential piece oflegislation. Not only did the SRP member call the quorum, but also many members of that partywithdrew from the meeting room so that there could be no quorum. Had these members been presentthere could have been a quorum and the meeting could have continued.It might be remarked that the SRP caucus held last Sunday had considered this legislation and hadvoted against it It was in bad faith that they didn’t stay to attack it, but departed from the meetingrather than express their views. One SRP member commented: "The proposed legislation to re-evaluateStudent Government is not a matter for consideration by the government.” If it is not a matter forconsideration by the government, who is to do so? The fact that the last several meetings have beenheld without quorums indicates that there is something wrong with the Student Government as itpresently exists.LAST SPRING, 49 individuals pledged to the campus that they would represent them in StudentGovernment. What has happened to the sincerity of these people? It must be doubted when only 21of them show up at the meeting. It was part of the purpose of the bill to set up a committee to studygovernment to discover the cause of the failure to produce a quorum. Is SRP even afraid to considera re-evaluation?Perhaps their reason to refuse a re-evaluation w >uld cause a major loss of SRP strength on campus.The majority of the students in the University are graduate students. SRP generally draws its strengthfrom this graduate vote. Yet in a division like the Physical Sciences, the representatives are elected by30 out of many hundreds of students.ISL holds a minority of the seats in the government yet a majority of the Colleges seats, and therepresentatives in the College are elected by a far grater share of the students. Who suffers in thepresent construction of the government? The College students? ISL. As a co-sponsor of a bill set upin part to re-evaluate the representation of the Gavemment, I would like to protest in the name ofhundreds of undergraduates whose political voice is being stifled on campus by a Student Governmentwhich minimizes the most active group of students in favor of one that actually cares little about stu¬dent government. Yet representatives who hardly represent the division they claim to can successfullycripple any means by which government can be re-evaluated and re-organized so that the Collegestudents can have a voice on campus, and so that Student Government might become an effectiveorganization which it can’t be when these representatives hold the balance of power.NO POLITICAL party has a right to destroy legislation which attempts to provide a voice for anImportant and interested segment of the Campus. Not even SRP!This letter has been written in my capacity as an individual who was disgusted with the conductdisplayed in this week’s Student Government meeting and not as a representative of the IndependentStudents League.Bert Cohier Rally Round On Flag, Boyd "and,oot Boy with Cheat.")IS STUDYING NECESSARY?(Once there were three roommates and their names were WalterPellucid, Casimir Fing, and LeRoy Holocaust and they were alltaking English lit. They were all happy, friendly, outgoingtypes and they all smoked Philip Morris Cigarettes as youwould expect from such a gregarious trio, for Philip Morris .isthe very essence of sociability, the very spirit of amity, the verysoul of concord, with its tobacco so mild and true, its packs sosoft and flip-top, its length so regular or long rise. You willfind when you smoke Philip Morris that the birds sing for youand no man’s hand is raised against you.Each night after dinner Walter and Casimir and LeRoy wentto their room and studied English lit. For three hours they satin sombre silence and pored over their books and then, squintyand spent, they toppled onto their pallets and sobbed them¬selves to sleep.This joyless situation obtained all through September andOctober. Then one November night they were all simultane¬ously struck by a marvelous idea. "We are all studying the samething,” they cried. "Why, then, should each of us study forthree hours? Why not each study for one hour? It is true wewill only learn onc-third as much that way, but it does notmatter because there are three of us and next January beforethe exams, we can get together and pool our knowledge 1”Oh, what rapture then fell on Walter and Casimir and LeRoy 1They flung their beanies into the air and danced a schottischeand lit thirty or forty Philip Morrises and ran out to pursuethe pleasure which had 60 long, so bitterly, been missing fromtheir lives.Alas, they found instead a series of grisly misfortunes. Walter,alas, went searching for love and was soon going steady with acoed named Invicta Breadstuff, a handsome lass, but, alas,hopelessly addicted to bowling. Each night she bowled fivehundred lines, some nights a thousand. Poor Walter’s thumbwas a shambles and his purse was empty, but Invicta just kepton bowling and in the end, alas, she left Walter for a pin-setter,which was a terrible thing to do to Walter, especially in thiscase, because the pin-setter was automatic.Walter, of course, was far too distraught to study his Englishlit, but he took some comfort from the fact that his room¬mates were studying and they would help him before the exams.But Walter, alas, was wrong. His roommates, Casimir andLeRoy, were nature lovers and they used their free time to gofor long tramps in the woods. One November night, alas,they were treed by two bears, Casimir by a brown bear andLeRoy by a Kodiak, and they were kept in the trees until mid-January when winter set in and the brown bear and the Kodiakwent away to hibernate.So when the three roommates met before exams to pooltheir knowledge, they found they had none to pooll Well sir,they had a good long laugh about that and then rushed to thekitchen and stuck their heads in the oven. It was, however, anelectric oven and the effects wrere, on the whole, beneficial. Thewax in their ears got melted and they acquired a healthy tanand today they are married to a lovely young heiress namedGanglia Bran and live in the Canal Zone, where there are manynice boats to wave at. ■. © \m m** sbuim»oAnd here's a leave at you filter smokers. Have you triedMarlboro—same fine flavor, new improved filter and bettermakin's—made by the makers of Philip Morris, sponsorsof this column?CLARENCE NARROW FOR THE DEFENSEAN RBOkNNABIC .CHARGEHAS BEEN l-EVELEDAGAINST GRADUATE.EAUJSTUDENTS HERE AT VC f AjT, kJE'RE FALSEL*/ ACCUSED Of0EIN6 MEN APART.,,GMHEVEN ft LRN62AGC All-OUR OuiN * ...-AND VlC 101)5W CHARAC¬TERIZED p|S RCID-T0N6UtJ>CHILD CHARlts LAUGHTONS } [NOT TRUE! NiTTRtfE!LAW STUDENTS ARE JUSTUKE EMERSbOW EL'at —-<oe veARH we lust, u)£NECK Ik) parked CARS icoll BUT tdfc law STUDENTS AREN'TTRUCULENT ABOUT THIS ?R©fclENKWE REALIZE OUR BURDEN TOFRATERNIZE WITH ANP EDUCRI&l1H£ REST of THE UNIVERSITY!<4 >• "CK14C* G Qj MAROON ‘ • ‘ Jan. 16, 1959 OUjPCgnUNfPS AND AS A SVTM80L OF OCR GOODINTENT I HOLD HIGH THIS REAVTORCH - ft BURNING COPV OfcMcCALl’S, THE mAGAZlNt OfTOGETHERNESS? ♦— ' — -**■I mmLetter policyTli« Maroon publishes letters to the editor on subjectsof interest to the student body. No unsigned letters willbe printed under any circumstances, however, the writer'sname will be withheld, or noma de plume used, on request.Letters should he typewritten, double-spaced, using60-character space margins. Mease type on one side ofthe paper only. Loiters oner 250 words are subject toediting. Charge Freeman trial biasIssued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andIntermittently during the summer quarter, hy the publisher, the Chicago Maroon,Ida Noyes hall, 1212 East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800,extensions 3265 and 3266. IMstributes! without charge on campns. subscriptionsby mail, $3 per year. Office hours: I to 5 pm, Monday through Friday.Editor-in-chiefRochelle M. DubnowManaging editor Associate editor Business managerDonna Davis Neal Johnston Lawrence D. KesslerAdvertising manager Gordon L. BriggsNewt editor Lance HaddixSports editor Dan CosgroveCalendar editor Marge SchworzLecture editor. Rosemary GalliProfiles... Robert Lavine, John MillsArtists Ron Burton, Rick Ellis, R. David SilverCirculation manager. . Joan HelmkinPhoto co-ordinator .Les KiteAssistant culture editor Ozzie ConklinEditor emeritus Gory MokotoffPhotographic stoff Jerome Buchmon, Korl Figlio,Morris Newmon, John McMohon, Tom FentonEditorial stoff: Horold Bernhardt, Joel Ashenfarb, Tom Cablk, Shelley Stolo-vvich, Robert Lavine, John Mills, Ozzie Conklin, Peter Jacobsen, LindaMorrison, Marge Schworz, Bob Brown, Don Tonjes, Al Podell, Bob Cohler During the autumn quarter1968, a constitution waspassed in East house authoriz¬ing the creation of a tribunal. Thistribunal was given the power todemand remuneration from houseresidents for damage to houseproperty. The members of t h ehouse were hardly unanimously infavor of the constitution creatingthis judicial body, since it waspassed by only five votes (70 to65). However, it was hoped thatonce in existence, the tribunalwould be fair and unbiased in anydecision it would take.We are of the opinion that suchwas not the case in the trial ofRobin Freeman, for the followingreasons: the tribunal memberswere living in the same housewith Freeman for three monthsand were able to form opinions ofhim prior to the trial; the prosecu¬tor was the roommate of one ofthe members of the tribunal.Late in the autumn quarter, thetribunal called Freeman and us infor an investigation. By conduc¬ting such an investigation, thejudging body was in fact, puttingitself in the position of prosecutor.On Tuesday night, January 13,we were witness to a completeWo If son defends tribunalI was informed by Mr. Witney that a letter wTitten by Mr. Witney and Mr. Van Leuvenconcerning the action and behavior of the East house tribunal was to appear and that theTribunal might reply if it desired. With the permission of Mr. Witney we were allowed toread his letter.In our statement at the conclusion of Tuesday’s proceedings we said that, until such time as wepresented our complete, final, formal report (“at the earliest possible time") we could not discussthis matter with anyone. This puts us in the unpleasant situation of having to stand by and allow a seriesof accusations to be made to which we cannot, in all good faith, reply; a condition, incidentally, knownto the letter writers.We had hoped that such opinions would be withheld until such a time as our final report could bemade public and we could defend ourselves. Such is not to be the case but I feel that some statementof my feelings, however brief, might not be inappropriate.Those comments concerning the justice of our decisions, recommendations and procedure must, ofcourse, go unanswered until our report appears. We are confident, however, that our report will makecompletely dear tlie justice of our actions.The personal comments by the two gentlemen are both unfair and untrue. A member of the tribunalsigned the petition in question; several members of the tribunal (myself included) voted against the con¬stitution because they thought it deserved further thought. Yet this is the group that Mr. Witney andMr. Van Leuven think is “out to get” Mr/Freeman because it is so antagonistic to his ideas.There were tapes made of the entire proceedings which should convince those in doubt that everyeffort was made to oenduet the proceedings in an honorable and just manner.We hope, then, that people will reserve their judgments of our behavior and the justice of our actionsuntil such time as we can reply to the gross charges lodged against us.Michael G. WolfsonChief Justice of Tribunal miscarriage of justice by an ob¬viously biased court. The jury inthe case had also been the inves¬tigating body, the grand jury, thejudge, and the interpreter of therules under which it operated.When Freeman and we enteredthe courtroom, the three of usexpected to be charged accordingto the original indictment (Le. forwriting on the wadis of a room inthe basement of East house). How¬ever, we were confronted with anew indictment adding damage tothe ceiling of the room to the orig¬inal charge: the copies of the firstindictment were destroyed orwithheld.During the course of the pro¬ceedings the following events oc¬curred:(1) The attorney for the de¬fense was treated with a greatdeal of antagonism by the mem¬bers of the tribunal while theprosecutor was treated for themost part in an almost deferentialmanner.(2) The tribunal assumed therole of prosecutor by continuallyasking leading questions of andmaking snide remarks to the wit¬nesses for the defense.(3) The prosecutor was allowedon at least one occasion to rule in¬directly on an objection.(4) The case of the prosecutionwas based on the testimony of asingle witness, the testimony ofwhom was refuted by two otherwitnesses.(5) A letter from the househead of East house was acceptedas more reliable than eye-witnessaccounts of the events it de¬scribed, and at the same time thehousehead refused to testify onthe grounds that too much weightwould be given to his testimony.(6) Testimony was broughtagainst only one of the defend¬ants.(7) During the cross-examina¬tions, material obtained from thedefendants in private investiga¬tion was used against them with¬out revealing the source.(8) The house head and one ofhis assistants were present in the room where the tribunal was de¬liberating for part of the delibera¬tion.(§) The staff ejected from thecourtroom with considerable showof resentment three house resi¬dents who demonstrated againstunfair rulings of the tribunal.(18) The tribunal allowed theprosecutor to present his summa¬tion after that of the defense at¬torney, even though the prosecu¬tor presented its case first.(11) One of the tribunal mem¬bers of the tribunal was not aresident of East house eventhough the East House Constitu¬tion states that "The tribunal shallconsist of five members residingin East house.’*(12) The evidence against thedefense was insufficient for con¬viction, since it definitely left areasonable doubt of guilt.The following circumstancesclearly indicate the bias of the tri¬bunal members:(1) The convicted defendant,Robin Freeman, had played a ma¬jor part in circulating a petitionto abolish existing house govern¬ment, a petition which was vi¬olently opposed by the membersof tribunal.(2) Before the trial, -anothermember of the tribunal, LincolnRamirez, was reported to havesaid, concerning the trial, “I’m outfor a conviction.”It should be evident from theconduct of this trial that the tri¬bunal is an autocratic body harm¬ful to the interests of the residentsof East house. This body is nowin a position to make it extremelyunsafe for anyone meeting withtheir displeasure. Their arroganceand irresponsibility in recognizingand interpreting their functionand their almost unchecked pow¬ers even when acting in non-offi¬cial capacities are a flagrant viola¬tion of human rights and adminis¬trative responsibility.Scott Van LeuvenRussell WitneyThe National Defense Education act of 1958 and the loyalty oathCongress passed H.R. 13247, the National Defense Edu¬cation act of 1958, on August 23, 1953. It was signed by thePresident on September 2, 1958 as Public Law 85-864.General Provisions: Congress found that the national se¬curity demands more education for talented students, and thatstudents of ability may be denied this education without finan¬cial assistance. The federal government will supply this assist¬ance but will continue to have no control over education inthe United States.Student Loan Provisions: $47 million is appropriated forfiscal 1959 (and greater amounts for the three succeedingfiscal years) to establish funds for making low interest loans(3 per cent) to students in institutions of higher education.The total is to be allotted among the states in accordance withthe ratio of full-time students in that state to full-time stu¬dents in the nation. Each college may establish and administera loan fund. Special consideration is given to students with asuperior academic background who desire to teach in elemen¬tary or secondary schools, or who have special capacity andpreparation in science, mathematics, engineering or a modernforeign language. Students may borrow up to $1000 in ^nyfiscal year, and may not hold loans exceeding $5000. I hestudent must be in need of money and enrolled at the institu¬tion. The loan is to be repaid over a ten year period beginning} year aftc * the borrower leaves college, and up to 50 percent of the loan need not be repaid in some cases for thosestudents teaching in public elementary or secondary schools.National Defense Fellowships: 1000 fellowships for fiscal1959 and 1500 fellowships for each succeeding year for stu¬dents in graduate schools. The stipends amount to approxi¬mately $2000 per year and the colleges are also awarded up to $2500 per student per academic year to lessen the burdenof extra costs the fellowship students necessitate for the uni¬versities.Aids to States: Financial assistance is given to states ona dollar-for-dollar matching basis for loans to nonprofit ele¬mentary and secondary schools, and for establishing a programof identifying outstanding students and encouraging them toattend college. Funds are also provided for improving publicschool services in science, mathematics, and modern lan¬guages; for research in developing the use of new media ofcommunication in education; for the establishment of a Sci¬ence Information service; for promoting foreign languageinstitutes.Loyalty Oath: Title X—Miscellaneous Provisions, Admin¬istration, Section 1001 (f), in its entirety reads: "No part ofany funds appropriated or otherwise made available for ex¬penditure under authority of this Act shall be used to makepayments or loans to any individual unless such individual(1) has executed and filed with the Commissioner an affi¬davit that he does not believe in, and is not a member of anddoes not support any organization that believes in or teaches,the overthrow of the United States Government by force orviolence or by any illegal or unconstitutional methods, and(2) has taken and subscribed to an oafh or affirmation in thefollowing form: 'I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I willbear true faith and allegiance to the United States of Americaand will support and defend the Constitution and laws of theUnited States against all its enemies, foreign and domestic.'The provisions of section 1001 of title 18, United^States Code,shall be applicable with respect to such affidavits."(This fact sheet was prepared by Charles A. Miller, Swarth-more College, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, December 3, 1958.) TA1-SAM-Y6.NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 19:36 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 Ease 63rd St. BU 8-9018Co*erEUROPELEASE a NEW CarPURCHASE a NEW Car*Rent a Late Model CarVOLKSWAGENSIMCA RENAULTHILLMAN PORSCHEMERCEDES>*with Repurchase Plan available... or bring it home with you.The pleasant, economical way totravel in Europe. We make all ar¬rangements for the Plan you prefer.Write for full detailsUNIVERSITY TRAVEl/COHen vorH S,q Com bridge*. Mas*.Jan. 16, 1959 <.*• ) C H;« C,A6 <*.» M A:R/OQ N ♦ 5rr-' Coming events on quadrangles -t1Friday, 16 JanuaryReligious service, Federated Theologicalfacility, Bond chapel, 11:30 am.Lecture series: "History and the king¬dom of God,” Mandel Hall, 11:30 am,Paul Tillich.Chest conference, Argonne conferenceroom 1-105, 5 pm.Clinicopathologic conference, BillingsP-117, 5 pm.Lecture series: "Pharmacology and phy¬siology series,” University College, 64E. Lake street. 6 pm. "Morphine andderivatives,” Lloyd J. Roth, associateprofessor and chairman, departmentcf pharmacology.Lutheran student group meeting andcost dinner, 6 pm; discussion, 7:15pm. "Our common body,” ReverendHenry Duwe, Grace church, Evans¬ton, speaker. Chapel house, 5810Woodlawn.Record dance, 7 to 11 pm. Internationalhouse, room CDE. Admission 50 cents.Lecture series: “The still point: lecture-demonstration series on the dance,”64 E. Lake street, 8:15 pm. "The Clas¬sical dance,” Ann Barzel, dance anddrama critic, the Chicago American.Fireside conversation: a faculty-paneldiscussion, "What should be the roleof religion in the university?” 8:30pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue, sponsoredby Hlllel foundation. Participants:Rev. Frederick Carney, chaplain,Methodist foundation; Louis Gott-schalk, professor of history; FrankKnight, Morton Hull distinguishedservice professor emeritus, social sci¬ences and philosophy; WilliamO’Meara, professor of philosophy;Rabbi Maurice Peraksy, director, Hil-lel foundation. Sabbath service, 7:45pm.Informal "drop-in” party, sponsored byChanning - Murray liberal religiousgroup, home of- Louis Van Dyke, 5703Kenwood avenue, 9 pm. No charge,refreshments served.Saturday, 17 JanuaryAudiology conference, Billings S-154,8 a.m. "Diseases of the nervous sys¬tem, Billings M-137, 9 am.English class, 10 to 12 noon, Interna¬tional house room B.Pediatrics clinical conference, BillingsM-137, 10:30 pm.University concert band rehearsal, 1:15pm. Mandel hall.Tea for International house studentsonly, 8 to 11:30 pm, home room.Radio program: "The Sacred note,”WBBM, 10:15 pm. A program of choralmusic by the University of Chicagochoir, Richard Vikstrom, director;Heinrich Fleischer, organist.Philippine students dance for Interna¬ tional house residents only, assemblyhall.Sunday, 18 JanuaryRoman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10 and11 am. DeSales house, 5735 Universityavenue. Sponsored by Calvert club.Art exhibit, 3 pm, 5715 Woodlawn ave¬nue, sponsored by Hillel foundation.Paintings of Israel and other watercolors, oils and drawings by BaclaGordon. The exhibit will be openedby Alan Fern, instructor in the hu¬manities and the fine arts. A cellorecital of works by Bach, Beethovenand Milhaur will precede the open¬ing of the exhibit. Connie McElroy,cello, and Peggy Smith, piano.Folk dancing, beginners and advanced,7:30 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue, spon¬sored by Hillel foundation.Chamber music workshop, sponsored bymusical society, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyeslibrary.Lecture-discussion: "Justice: the rangeof the idea,” 8 pm, 5715 Woodlawnavenue, sponsored by Hillel founda¬tion. Speaker, Laurence Berns, lec¬turer in the liberal arts, Universitycollege.John de Zauche, Rochelle Dubnow fanclub meeting, 2 pm, new dorm, room1106.Monday, 19 JanuaryClass in elementary Hebrew, 4 pm. 5715Woodlawn avenue, sponsored by Hil¬lel foundation, no admission charge.Folk dance group, 4:30 pm, 5715 Wood¬lawn avenue, sponsored by Hillelfoundation.English class, 6:30 pm, Internationalhouse, room B.Movies, International house east lounge,7 and 9 pm. “Little Fugitive," (USA).Maroon staff meeting, weekly, 3:30, IdaNoyes hall, third floor.Tuesday, 20 JanuaryHillel coffee hour, book review, "Onlyin America,” by Harry Golden, will bediscussed by Meyer Isenberg. asso¬ciate professor in humanities. 5715Woodlawn avenue, 3:30 pm.Record concert, 8:30 pm, Internationalhouse home room.Folk dancing, 8 pm, International houseassembly room.Lecture series: "Shrines and oracles ofclassical Greece,” 64 E. Lake street,8 pm. "A pilgrimage to Rhamnus.”Maurice B. Cramer, professor ofhumanities.Lecture series: "The individual's experi¬ence in psychotherapy,” 64 E. Lakestreet, 8 pm. "The world of the pa¬tient and the world of the therapist.”Ralph W. Heine, associate professor,department of psychiatry. Wednesday, 21 JanuaryClass in elementary Yiddish, 3:30 pm,5715 Woodlawn avenue, sponsored byHillel foundation.Lecture-discussion: "The consequencesof racial discrimination in the USA,”4 pm, Classics 16, sponsored byNAACP. Speaker George Rawlck.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel.Organ recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller chapel,Heinrich Fleischer.Lecture series: “The foreign policy ofRussia,” 64 E. Lake street, 6:15 pm.‘Tsarist foreign policy,” Ladis K. D.Kristof, Lecturer. University college.English class, 6:30 pm, Internationalhouse, room B.University glee club rehearsal, 7 pm,Ida Noyes theater.Movie - lecture - discussion: "Southern’Immigrant’: what he finds here afterhe has been here some time.” 8 pm.social sciences 122. Speaker from theUrban League, sponsored by SRP.Lecture series: "Psychotherapy and per¬sonality change,” 64 E. Lake street,8 pm. "Psychotherapy and self-actualization.” John N. Butler, asso¬ciate professor, department of psy¬chology and committee on humandevelopment.Coffee hour, 9 to 11 pm. West housebasement. Dancing, food.Thursday, 22 JanuaryInter-varsity Christian fellowship, non-denominational Bible study, 12:30pm, Ida Noyes east lounge.Lecture: "Syntheses of the elements instars,” 2:30 pm, Eckhart 133. Dr. G. R.Burbidge, Yerkes Observatory.Flying Maroons flying club meeting,7:30 pm. Ida Noyes third floor.Lecture series: "Children's readingproblems,” 64 E. Lake street, 8:15 pm.Helen Mansfield Robinson, associateprofessor, department of education;former director of the reading clinic.Seminar: Religion and the legal profes¬sion, 8 pm, B-J lounge. Speaker:Lester Britton.Record concert, 8:30 pm, Internationalhouse home room.Friday, 23 JanuaryInter-varsity Christian fellowship, 12:30pm, Ida Noyes east lounge, non-denominational Bible study.Lecture series: "Pharmacology and Phy¬siology series. 64 E. Lake street. 6 pm."Pharmacology of drug addiction.”John Doull, assistant professor, de¬partment of pharmacology and assist¬ant director of USAF radiation lab¬oratory.Record dance, 7 to 11 pm, Internationalhouse, room CDE. January has been set- as the starting date for UC's newDiagnostic Center building, (shown above) in an artist'sconception. The two-story modern structure will be locatedacross Drexel avenue near 59th street and will link ChicagoLying-in hospital (left) to the west wing of Billings hospital(right). The center will serve as the entry point for all pa¬tients to the hospital and will contain laboratories and equip¬ment for routine disease detection techniques. Architects ofthe building are Schmidt, Garden and Erikson.CLASSIFIEDSForZl-i rm. furnished apt.. 53rd & Kimbark.$82 00 Call Mrs. Hufford, FI 6-8300,9:30-5:30.2 Vi ROOMSCheerful, newly decorated, attractivelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator bldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man. Maid and linen service available.Reasonable monthly rate.VERSAILLES APARTMENTS5234 Dorchester FA 4-0200 rentSkylite studio rm. for girl. DO 3-2320.Spacious rm. in elegant residence nearlake & IC. Available for students orbusiness girls. MU 4-7844.Two sleeping rooms—men only. Cleanand very quiet. $5 and $8 per week.MU 4-8493.Male student needed for apt. near cam¬pus. Private room. $35 per mo, inc. util.& kit. priv. MU 4-8440.For saleivliy the smart switch is tothe 59 ChevroletROOMIER BODY BY FISHER:features wider seats and moreluggage space. MAGIC-MIRRORFINISH: keeps its shine withoutwaxing for up to three years.NEW BIGGER BRAKES: bettercooled with deeper drums, up to66% longer life. OVERHEADCURVED WINDSHIELD andbigger windows—all of SafetyPlate Glass. SLIMLINE DESIGN:fresh, fine and fashionable with a practical slant. HI-THRIFT 6:up to 10% more miles per gallon.VIM-PACKED V8s: eight tochoose from, with compressionratios ranging up to 11.25 to 1.FULL COIL SUSPENSION:further refined for a smoother,steadier ride on any kind of road.One short drive and you’ll knowthe smart switch is to Chevy.Come in and be our guest for apleasure test first chance you get. NOW-PROMPT DELIVERY!Stepped-up shipments haveassured you a wide choice ofmodels and colors. We can prom¬ise prompt delivery—and it’s anideal time to buy! New Eng. bikes, discounts. MI 3-9048.Help wanted2 men, 15 to 25 hrs. weekly. Also open¬ing for relief cashier-candy attendant.Apply In person, Frl., Sat., Sun. eves.HYDE PARK THEATRE.Babysitter who also does housework,for Saturdays. Thllenlus, 5330 Black-stone. PL 2-5487.Student wanted for part-time incometax work. Simple returns. Phone Cas-ner, CEdarcrest 3-4053, STewart 3-6681.WantedUsed man's bicycle. MU 4-3846.Ride to Albany, N. Y. area around Jan.Will share expenses. HY 3-6765, after6 pm.ServicesSEWING — Alterations, hems, curtains,Cali MU 4-3941.now-see the wider selection of models at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's!m6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 16, 1959The 6-passenger Nomad and the Impala 1^-Door Sport Sedan. Typing, crisp .and accurate. HY 3-0178.Audio Consultants still in business.New Year's resolution: to stay in busi¬ness. High-fidelity equipment at stu¬dent-sized prices, free advice, informa¬tion available, c/o Jean Kwon, Midway3-6912 evenings.PersonalTo the people who attended GasllteGaieties—thank you for making it sucha fine success. Phi Sigma Delta.WORKSHOP IN CREATIVE WRITINGPLaza 2-8377Those interested in the formation of astudent organization fer research intothe occult sciences, contact Routt, 532B-J, preferably after midnight.Small Cheese .... 95cSmall Sausage . .$1.15NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063Have a WORLD of FUNlTravel with tITAUnbelievable Low CostEurope■jf,. fro*» $645Orient,43-65 ovtt $990Many loan includa<«//•$• credif. ^i Also low-coit trips$169 up. South America $699 up.Hawaii Study Tour $549 up «***Around tho World $179#Ask Your Trovtl Aflont A•s <„ $12 U. WtWHi **■INC. 4. MA 10'-■ .. . . quc plus de deux millions de certi-Ucats de groupe et de polices Sun Lifesont actucllement en vigueur dans quel-que 25 pays du monde ?En qualile de repritentantSun Life de votre ?ocalite,puis-je corn itre utile ?RALPH J. WOOD JR. '48SUN LIFE OF CANADA1 N. La Salle Street Chicago 2, IllinoisFR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855U COMPAQNIE D'ASSURANCE-VIE SUN LIFE DU CANADARepresentative "I don't mind yourrunning out of gas—but Camels!”R. J. ReyrxrtdtTob. Co., Wlniton-Silew, 3f. <5.\ ’ ‘ . - ' ' • ’TEducation here 'best obtainable': BenneyWhen I first walked intoMark Benney’s office on thethird floor of the ramshacklebuilding called 5757 Drexel,he announced to me that hewas out of matches, andwished to know whether I hadany or not.Wl>en I replied that I didnot, he hesitated only a mo¬ment, and then went immedi¬ately over to an open cupboardat the far side of the room.From here he produced an oldand battered hotplate, whichhe proceeded to plug into awall outlet. While he was wait¬ing for this to warm up, weintroduced ourselves.When the hotplate hadreached red heat, he bent overand lit his cigarette from it, un¬plugged it, and placed it on hisdesk for future use. It was at thispoint that I asked him to tell mesomething about his life.“I started out,” he began slowly,‘‘as sort of a free lance novelwriter. After a while, my novelsgot so sociological that only soci¬ologists would read them.“I was disqualified for the draftwhen the war came, and so wentinto the English Civil service,where I was considered sort of anipso facto sociologist.“After the war I became ascriptwriter. Scriptwriting was alot of fun, and I worked withsome damn good people on somedamn good movies. It has alwaysbeen my favorite trade.”Benney continued, still slowlyand laconically, and related howlie became the research director ofthe London School of Economics(associated with the University ofLondon) after the war, and thencame here in 1952. With a notice¬able quickening of interest, hebegan to describe the researchproject on which he is currentlyworking:"For three years now DaveReisman and I have had a projectgoing on the sociology of inter¬viewing. This is a form of com¬munication, between strangers,which has become very popularin the last 50 years. It has lotsof sociological significance aboveand beyond the transfer cf Infor¬mation involved. An example ofthis significance might be foundin the question: ‘Does interview¬ing tend to alleviate class con¬flicts?’“For example, an interviewer ofone social class goes and inter¬views people of all social classes,and this may encourage other peo¬ple to be less conscious of classdifferences.“It may even, for all we know,have important political conse¬quences.“Imagine a society where yourmother takes you for a pre-natalinterview, then a post-natal inter¬ view, another interview when youenter kindergarten, and so on atall other important steps in life,until, presumably, you have a postmortem interview. The interviewbecomes the symbol of your ad¬mission from one division of lifeinto another.“Fashions which arise in inter¬viewing technique (such as ‘depth’interviews) may indicate what as¬pects of the individual are beingconsidered by the society in thatera. If a person, in the course ofmany interviews in his lifetime,is never asked about a certainfacet of himself, he may come toconsider it relatively unimportant;and, on the other hand, if askedfrequently about another aspect,he may come to consider it vrt’yimportant.At this point Benney paused toexplain that another objective ofhis study was to discover how thepersonality and background of theinterviewer might obtrude itselfupon the data.“One thing we have noticed,” hewent on, “is that interviewershave a great reluctance to inter¬view people much above or belowthemselves in the social scale. Theinterviewers, perhaps, are ‘going-out to find themselves.’“The resultant effect may be tomake us all want to be muchmore like these middle aged ladies(whose desires and tastes are re¬flected in the results of their inter¬views) than we would normallywant to be.“As of now, therefore, we don’tknow to what degree our reflect¬ing mirror is also a distorting mir¬ror.”Here Benney halted his discus¬sion of his current research proj¬ect, and so I asked him about hisimpression of the attitudes andgeneral character of the UC stu¬dents. Benny’s ideas were inter¬esting particularly in the light ofthe fact that he was born, raisedand educated in England.“I have always enjoyed teach¬ing very much, and have enjoyedit here more than in England. Ilike especially the informal rela¬tion between the students and theteachers.“As far as the student body isconcerned, I have had one im¬pression which began when I firstcame here in 1952 and has per¬sisted since. In 1952 it seemed tome that the classes made a repu¬tation for themselves, and a goodone at that. Now it appears thatthe students are trying to live upto this previous reputation ratherthan trying to set a new one them¬selves.24-HourKodachrome colorfilmprocessingModel Camera Shop1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Universal Army StoreHeadquarters for sport and work wearHooded parka jackets — hooded sweatshirts — Ivy league corduroytrousers — wash tr wear Ivy league trousers — luggage & trunks1144 East 55th st. DO 3-9572reduction with this coupon..—_____— “I get the feeling that the stu¬dents coming here now are awedby the intcllectualisrn and bolie-mianism of their predecessors.This prevents students from re¬sponding straightforwardly andnaively to the material in theircourses. Seme of the bright kidsare making C’s because they lookat their work and say: ‘Look atthe kids who went here before me.I can’t possibly do better thanthat.’“However, the undergraduategeneral education here is prob¬ ably the best obtainable in theworld, even considering the tre¬mendous disadvantages of yourhigh school education.”Benney went to to illustratewhat he thought were the faultsof the Amexican public schools.“The fundamental mistake,” hebegan unhesitatingly, "is that theAmerican high schools hold itaxiomatic that everybody needsand desires an education to theage of 16 or 17. Many peoplewould be much more happy learn¬ing informally or on the job.“High schools and universities tfare too large if their goal is theproduction of scholars. What istaught in a university may not bethe most important item in a cul¬ture or our society, but at leastthe scholar’s environment oughtto be kept ‘pure.’ /j“If you put under the same sys¬tem and treat with the same rulesthose who will be the intellectualelite, and those who will be the‘drayhorses’ (that’s not condemn¬ing the importance of drayhorses)’you will get unsatisfactory eliteand dissatisfied drayhorses.” /John MillsGAUFI.Y“if I may use such a ludicrous figure of speech, (I)am sort of a gadfly . . . attached to the state, and oilday long and in all places am always fastening uponyou, arousing and persuading and reproaching you."— Plato's APOLOGYIf you were a reporter from Time magazine, or Charles Munch, or Bernard Jacobs, and youwanted to speak with Grosvenor Cooper, or Leonard Meyer, or Easley Blackwood, you wouldhave to visit the music department on campus. j iThe department is housed in the music building at 58th and Woodlawn. This humble,worn-looking, 75-year-old home is set among such architectural show pieces and Robie house,the new dormitory, Rockefeller chapel and the Chicago theological seminary buildings.No ageless quality surroundsits peeling gingerbread. No member). The only other fur- Were you a wealthy alum-New York firm has offered to niture is an ashtray, three nus faced with income taxmake its headquarters in the folding chairs and a home- problems, I would ask you tomusical building. Its facsimile made lamp whose base is an consider the music departmentis never found in the pages of old whiskey decanter. as a worthy object of your at-the alumni magazine. The phonograph records are tention. You might think of itWere you a student in the stored in the former but still this way: cyclotrons come,department, you would be recognizable pantry, next to and betatrons go, but Stein-spending considerable time the “silent” phonograph which way goes on forever,within this ancient home. Your transforms Beethoven’s fifthclasses would meet in the for- into a lively jig plucked on themer living room which seems upper strings of an ill-tunedto have been painted recently banjo.by students or faculty, but Were you a student fromdefinitely not by professional any other department on cam-decorators. Soundproofing pus, y0u would be struck bycovers half the ceiling, but the spirit of friendly helpful-*only half due to lack of funds, ness found in music studentsHeavy grills cover the win- and faculty members whodows so that no harm may struggle together againstcome to the new Steinway, the these odds,first new piano in many, many Icarusyears.A phonograph built by afaculty member himself isavailable for classroom use.The student listening room ison the third floor to the backin the former maid’s quarters.The phonograph there is fine(built by the same faculty The Qreen Door Book Shop1451 EAST 57TH STREETHY 3-5829 Chicago 37, IIIQuality paperbacks — Fine children's booksSpecial orders filled promptlyNOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and Waffles 1342Open from Down to Down east 53 st.SAVIEX-VOUS Many a girl would ratherwalk home than do withoutCamels. For the 10thstraight year, this cigaretteoutsells every other—everyfilter, every king-size, everyregular. The Camel blendof costly tobaccos has neverbeen equalled for rich flavorand easygoing mildness.The best tobacco makes thebest smoke.Don't give in tofads and fcncy stuff . . ,Have a realcigarette -have a CAMEL \ r/Sports calendarJANUARY sports newsMaroons down NU, SIU17t - i1920212223 Track; Chicagoland Open, fieldhouse, 2 pm and 7:30 pm.Basketball; Knox versus Varsity, Knox college.Wrestling; Lake Forest, Bartlett, 2 pm.Swimming; Washington university, Bartlett, 2 pm.Gymnastics; Ohio State at Columbus.Basketball; "B" versus Fifth Army, fieldhouse, 7:30 pm.IMBK; 7-10 pm, Bartlett.IMBK;7-10 pm, fieldhouse and Bartlett.IMBK; 7-10 pm, Bartlett.Basketball; B versus Wilson Junior college, fieldhouse, victim of the Maroons when the7;30 pm. 400-yard relay team of BuddyIMBK; 7-10 pm, Bartlett.Swimming; Wisconsin, Bartlett, 7:30 pm. as four swim records fallpled last Friday and Saturdayas the varsity squad upsetNorthwestern 44-42 and lost toSouthern Illinois 41-45.Northwestern became the thirdDr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRIST1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352The CiMegeLAUNDERETTE FREE DELIVERYat NICK YS1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 PIZZERIANO 7-9063 Four swimming records top- style. Harmon and Kurt Ormond touched out in the 400 yard freeplaced two and three in the 300- style in a race that broke theyard breast stroke. standing record by 4.7 second*With the Maroons losing 37-42, The next race saw Harmon beingthe 400-yard relay team splashed bested in the 200-yard breastits way to a half-length first place, stroke by the Greyhounds’ Ger-winning the meet 44-42. man import, tying the nationalThe next afternoon the varsity record-met defeat at the hands of the Even though the 400 yard relaySouthern Illinois Greyhounds. team of Currie, Lisco, Schutt, andThe Greyhounds took the 400- Harmon won handily, Chicagoyard medley relay to begin the lost 41-45.meet. The Maroons retaliatedwhen Paul Schutt took the 200-yard free style in 2:16.6.Co-captain Tom Lisco broke an¬other record in an event in whichhe hasn’t been beaten in threeyears, the 60-yard free style.Kuypers placed first in the divingevent, and Roger Harmon fol¬lowed with a win in the 200-yardbutterfly.Lisco come back in the 100-yardfree style, not only winning therace but setting a new record inthe event with a :52.7. This time,however, Frank MeGraw backedLisco up with a third.With the meet tied at 26-26,Ken Currie took third in the 200- second half and out-dribbled andyard backstroke, and Schutt was ou* maneuvered Copeland to re¬turn to the Maroons a suddenlyWeiss; Tom Lisco, Paul Schutt,and Roger Harmon pulled themeet out of the fire by winningthe last event in 3:50.4.Northwestern won the firstevent, the 400-yard medley relay,in 4:37.5, giving the Wildcats a7-0 lead. Paul Schutt blazed a2:16.4 in the 200 yard free styleto score five points for the Ma¬roons. Co-captain Lisco placedfirst in the 60-yard free style andfreshman Joe Kuypers tookfirst in diving, with teammate A1Gaines taking third. H a r m o nplaced second in the 200-yard but¬terfly and Lisco came back to winthe 100-yard free style.At this point Chicago trailed25-27. Kent Currie then placed sec¬ond in the 200-yard backstroke,while Schutt took his second firstof the day in the 400-yard free Cogers win twoLast Saturday saw the Ma¬roon basketball team defeat amuch touted Grinnell squad,48-44. Stars for Chicago wereGary Person who scored 15 pointsand snagged IS rebounds; MitchWatkins managed to sink fifteen 1points; and Clarence Woodsscored eleven points.The score ran nip and tuok.ending the first half 21 up; theMaroons up to this point had been"clutched” by the dribbling ofGrinnell guard Copeland. Maroonguard Steve Ullman came inJ Ual# AM J /I M» V\V»1 rtrl A n JolhtTHlNKUSHPUT IN A GOOD WORD AND MAKE *25We’re paying $25 each for the hundreds of Think-lish words judged best! Thinklish is easy: it’s newwords from two words—like those on this page.English7IMS6CT-C0UNTER English: FAKE FROGSend yours to Lucky Strike, Box 67Ar MountVernon, New York. Enclose your name, address,college or university, and class.English: VALISE FOR A TRUMPETJACK Of rMMCliC© Thinklish. TOOTCASEn*«r Mavwsmni. is. or *. camuna J9Y« IASCH. STATS..English: MAN WHO STEALS FROMTHE RICH AND GIVES TO THE POOR EnglUli: “M“““Thinklish translation: Tosmuggle loot, this fellow dons hisplunder wear. For street fighting, hewears a rumblesuit. He totes hisburglar tools in thuggage. The onlyhonest thing about him is the Luckiesin his pocket. (Like law-abiding folk,he enjoys the honest taste of finetobacco!) In the old days, he’d becalled a robbin’ hood. Today, thischurlish but altruistic chap is a(good + hoodlum) goodlum! Think1'’*’- --r —RlkVfH **English: REFORM SCHOOL CLASSThinklish t BRATTALION: — : • 'PHYLLIS D0WIN*. V. Of WASH1HST0H© a. r. c*.J Get the genuine articleGet the honest tasteof a LUCKY STRIKEfroduef of fjv&tccer&nyxa*^ — fjo&uoeo is our middle name/ lost confidence. In the last min¬utes of the games the Maroonsdropped behind and then in onelast fling overtook Grinnell 48-44.On Tuesday night, the Maroonstraveled to Lisle to play St. Pro¬copius. Once again Gary Pearsonsnapped 15 rebounds and sank 2.1points in the 57-47 win for Chi¬cago. Steve Ullman started thisgame and showed more of thefine playing evident in the Grin¬nell game. Ullman plopped in 15points and grabbed four reboundswhile doing his usual faking anddribbling. Mitch Watkins had anoff night, scoring only six pointsbut freshman Gary Tegtmeiershowed improvement in scoringseven points.As the Maroons meet Knox onSaturday the team will be thirdnationally, defensively, for smallcolleges and will have a goodchance to pull into second plane.Grapplers win close matchCoach Dale Bjorklund andteam returned from Beloitsuccessfully in a wrestlingmeet that saw the Maroons down10-2, but pulling through to a 20-12 victory.Mitsura Yamada lost to Muno^of Beloit in the 123-lb. class in an8-2 decision; the Maroons gaveBeloit five points in the 130 lb.class due to Ron Chutter’s illness.Ton^ Kocalis tied Kumasaka ofBeloit in the 137-lb. weight tomake the score 10-2 in favor ofBeloit.Mike Schilder pinned Wright in1:50 with a figure four and a halfnelson to give the Maroons theirfirst pin and five more points.Pete Swan followed, pinning Kirt-ley in 2:15 with a crotch half-nel¬son, again giving Chicago fivepoints. Maroon Warren Pollansdecisioned Klima 7-0 in the 167-lb.class and Warren Ruby tied Stetson 1-1 in the 177-lb. class. BobSonnenberg decisioned Rasmus¬sen 4-1, giving the Maroons theirlast three points and the 20-12win.This Saturday the Maroons willmeet Lake Forest in Bartlett gym¬nasium. "Since Beloit tied LakeForest in a pre-Christmas meet,the contest will be very evenlymatched and should be an excellent spectator meet,” Coach B.jorklund said.8 •. X<! —a, n 114 P AG Q, M A ROQN • 16, 1959 WAA playsWAA interclub basketball willbegin Tuesday. All games will beplayed at 4:30 pm. Individual clubschedules will be posted.On January 22, interdormitoryteams will open their season.Games will be played at 4:30 and7 pm. Schedules will be postedby floor or dorm athletic repre¬sentatives.Dan CosgroreCulture VultureThe field of fine arts is wide enough for furrows, or, to plow more directly into my metaphor, there is simply too much toite about. Only Claudia Cassidy and I know full well the problems involved in attempting to be literate and learned aboutall the aspects of cultural endeavor. If perhaps Claudia tries harder than I, it is only because she isn't working for a living.One of these aesthetic arts which has been generally neglected in this column is that of "conversation." This is not neces¬sarily because I am incapable of conversation or because there is no such thing as good conversation circling the air aboutcampus, rather, it is because there is so much conversation that little comes to our most immediate attention.However, this is that annual period when the most extended demonstration of controlled "conversation" imaginable de¬scends upon the campus.This is the season of rush smokers when hundreds of just recently shaven young men approach with fresh vigor such ques¬tions as "What is your name? What field are you in?" and sometimes, "What does your father do?"As a display of technique, this type of function is without competition. If you don't believe it go and see it, besides littleelse is happening this week.On compusTheotreDespite all indications to thecontrary in recent weeks, Univer¬sity Theatre is a serious dramaticgroup presenting serious dramaticworks of considerable quality andin admirable quantity.f Tonight at 8:30 is an annualaffair where notable, recent, in¬genious and original one-act scriptsare given a show-case. One actersare a difficult thing to manage.They take almost as much timeto work into shape as does a fulllength show. The current 8:30 se¬ries Is taxing the entire resourcesof our drama group. On the otherhand, there is sometimes a diffi¬culty in selling them. Audiencesfeel they’re not getting theirmoney’s worth with anythingother than a full length produc¬tion.In this case, what with the num¬ber and length of the shows, thepaying audience will get a fullhalf hour over standard playingtime. The non-paying audience, ofcourse, never gets its money’sworth.The first week-end, January 22-24, will contain four plays: LivingHours directed by Gerry Mast;La Follia, an original play byOmar Shapli receiving its worldpremiere under the directorshipof William Moody; The PianoTuna’, an English premiere of aFrench farce just translated byUC faculty member, Daniel Ger-ould, and Aria da Capo, a gloomyRussian version of those famousclassic-French comedia d’ell artecharacters, Abbot and Costello.This program will run threetimes. Tickets are $1 and are onsale at the Reynolds club box of¬fice. Curtain time should be self-evident.The second weekend, January30, 31 and February 1 will consistof two works. Inter Allia, a mu¬sical review by Don McClintockand Mary Ann Erman, containingsuch show stoppers as a finaleand final curtain, and The BaldSoprano, also known as La Canta-trice Chause to next to nobody inthis country. This latter work isby Eugene Ionesco, one of thoserare authors to whom one-half theworld is not reading because ev¬eryone has already read him andto whom the other half is notreading because it never heard ofhim. And while my numerical di¬vision is not exact, he is neverthe¬less avante-guarde and tremend¬ously funny.Enough meandering. Tickets toboth shows are still around, but going fast. Waste no time. Walkimmediately out of the C shopto the nearest Reynolds club deskand buy a couple of seats.Things are looking brighter forthe Blackfriars than they werelast week. The show is almostcompletely cast and rehearsalsshould soon start. However, thereIs still some difference of opinionover the question of what showthey are doing. The controllingmajority at the moment is all forFlowered Mesh by Don McClin¬tock. This is the charming storyof a three-time loser in a women’sprison whose only desire left inlife is to grow a flower garden.Finally after years of trying andat great expense she manages toraise a morning glory amid thebars of her window.The only difficulty met thus faris that the book calls for only onecharacter and the group hadhoped to have a chorus. How¬ever. . , .Conceits and recitalsMusic is a delightful art. Askanybody in the department. Don’tbother asking what’s going on oncampus.Ait exhibitionsThe first real, all out art showof the quarter will open Sunday.In the language of the arts, itwill be a one-man show by a prom¬ising young woman, Bacia Gor¬don. Preceding the 3 pm openingat Hillel house will be a ’cello re¬cital presented by Connie McEl-roy, former pupil of Janos Starkerand also an introduction to boththe artist and her work deliveredby Alan Fern of the humanitiesdepartment. Miss Gordon will beat the Sunday showing.In addition we have the quasi¬exhibition, the student loan showpresented by Joseph Shapiro. Thisdisplay is located in Ida Noyes onthe way to the Maroon office, andshould be seen by everyone. Someof the paintings are very good,in other cases I can readily seewhy. Shapiro is willing to lendthem to students. But there are anumber of excellent examples ofcontemporary work. Register, ifyou haven’t already.RadioFloating gently over the stillcampus air are the faint echoesof WUCB. A new program, fea¬turing humanities I music, willreceive its premiere Tuesday eve¬ning at 8 pm. This weekly offer¬ ing will repeat all the worksplayed at the regular listeninghours.Incidentally, an unidentifiedsource recently attributed a state¬ment to Fred Masterson WCUBstation director to the effect thatJerry Buckman and Jerry Cookehave just been made program di¬rector and engineering director,respectively.Motion picturesBurton-Judson court and the In¬ternational house present irreg¬ular motion pictures with somedegree of uniformity. House at¬tendance must be good, becausewe’ve been hearing naught. -But, all is not lost. Two greatand moving classic movies wjjl bepresented tomorrow night in Judd126. The pictures, of course, areThe Sbn of the Sheik with Ru¬dolph Valentino and The Ameri¬cano with Douglas Fairbanks.These two art films, which comeequipped with sub titles, insteadof the more commercial dubbing,will start at 8 pm and admissionis 50c. Proceeds go to World Uni¬versity service.Off campusTheatreThe year 1958 came, went somedistance and is now long gone,not so with My Fair Lady. Thisshow, which occupies a positionsomewhere between death andtaxes has shocked us all by an¬nouncing its approaching demise.Is nothing sacred? Auntie Maine is closing tomor¬row at the Erlanger. Two for theSeesaw is sliding on through fora couple weeks. The Young andthe Fair is opening tonight at theGoodman and other shows arerapidly approaching.Goodman theatre is continuingits “Four Craftsmen of the The¬atre” lecture series. John Gas-sener will present the second inthis series this evening at 6:30.Two weeks from tonight ElmerRice, Pulitzer prize winning play¬wright will conclude the lectureseries. All of these are presentedon the Goodman stage and arefree.Concerts and recitalsToday Fernando Previtali willconduct the Chicago symphony inpeilormances of the Italian inAlgiers overture, Mendelssohn’sThird symphony, Dussoni’s Turan-dot suite, numbers one, two, sev¬en, and eight, Ravel's MotherGoose suite and Verdi’s SicilianVespers overture.Contributing these multi partprograms, Previtali will conductSammartini’s Third symphony,Brahm’s Fourth, Casella’s suitefrom La Giara, Martucci’s Nottur-no and Verdi’s overture to La For-za del Destino, next Thursday andFriday. And I assure you, youcan’t follow the game without aprogram.LecturesAllen Ginsberg and GregoryCorso will finally get around todoing some serious reading. This is not a value judgment, butrather a way of stating that therewill be a poetry reading discussionseminar sponsored by the Shawsociety on January 28. The lec¬ture-reading, which will be a bene¬fit for the new little magazinebeing undertaken by the deposedChicago Review editors, will cost$1 for students.Motion picturesThe Hyde Park is not only sigreat movie house, it’s probablyalso unique. It not only showsmore good movies than any otherhouse in the city, it is also one ofthe few places in the world wherea bad movie is as much fun towatch as most good ones.However, this week does notpresent any opportunity for veri¬fying my assertion. These arenothing but undeniably “good”shows — Rice and Alexander Nev¬sky. I suggest attendance.And don’t forget My Uncle withJacques Tati at the Surf, whichwill soon be as much an all-timegreat as the earlier M. Hulot’sHoliday.TERRY’S PIZZAFree 11C Deliverysmall 1.00 large 1.95medium 1.45 x-large 2.95giant — 3.95chicken — shrimp — sondwiches1518 e. 63rd MI 3-404525c discount on all pizzas, Mon, Tu, Wed, Thurs, only,with this coupon Cuptures yourpersonalityas well asyour personphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St.ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRCanvas lleece-linedCampus Shoes(women's only, in white)Reg. $6.95SALE $3.75EQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'NARROW HEELSHeels changed — Any style —Any colorBackstraps Removed and Springa-lators inserted — Shoes stretched—- Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber Products 'FAirfaz 4-96221749 East 55H» St. Get WILDR00TCREAM-OIL Charlie!Hbuen of Troy, N.Y. says: “There’s nogreece, just natural good grooming!”*Just a little bitat Wildrootand...WOWI • Big car bills stealing• your room rent? See the Compact ;’59 Rambler;Save more than ever jon first cost, gas, upkeep •You’ve seen the others grow in size and price—now see how much more you can save withRambler. Hundreds on first cost. New gas econ¬omy. Top resale. Easiest parking. PersonalizedComfort: sectional sofa front seats glide backand forth individually. Go Rambler 6 or V-8. RAMBLER AMERICAN STATION WAGONSav* $500 on First Cost$500 less than other leadinglow-priced wagons. Based ona comparison of publishedmanufacturer suggested prices.Jr—^Full 5 passenger room.•SEE YOUR RAMBLER DEALER TODAY AND SAVE*Jan. 16, 1959 # . C H l C A 6 O MAROON • 9■'^7 H** c3l*i!m?0SINCE NESttEMTO eeu£SI~HC IACK5 MOTiwflTfOH!mmm munu%remfliE &«-•jwteNSMipBE QUITE .demrabue!9*0 MAKEPEU6KTFUt-BRlKfc RIVERS,TftfFV TOUERS.Hud pizza 'EMEUS! Ithev m a consihnf sourceOF CKUCMTENMENI «W> INTEL-BKSSUSleSSSi^K tS&flsjttAg?*6^^fan_ET?gv)B ,. ... ^ > . ' ' r, - ... ...'59-60 awards announcAwards and fellowships in nuclear science, fashion and creative writing have been an¬nounced by the American Nuclear society, the Tobe-Cobum school for fashion careers, andthe Baptist Student, a collegiate magazine published by the Baptist Sunday School board.The nuclear society recently established the Mark Mills award to be made annually to agraduate student on the basis of a submitted technical paper or monograph.Hie award, according to the society, will consist of a special certificate and an expense-paid trip to the American p a s ^ j 0 n fellowship secretary, sion and the fellowship may beNuclear society annual nieet- Tobe-Cobum school for fashion secured by writing to: Melvinmg where the recipient Will careerS( 851 Madison avenue, New Brodshaug, dean, Boston univer-York 21, New York. Registration sity school of public relations andpresent his paper.Nominations for the award are closes~January 29*to be made by a faculty member. y mNominating forms, and copies ofSOME OF MV M6VT MEMORYEXPERIENCES HAVE BEEN WITH Ft*sStWNG AT THE SOME BOhlk nPSftWUM A tUTE fTRURM 6*L NAMEDMARIE VMEAHI NOMA. SHE TAUGHTMt BUI KNOW ABOUT ETRUSCANART OBJECTS ! ’ NO, BUT SHE rum> toNCKED BACHOH AN OCARINA! "W THAT WHENSbUftE SITWNr Mim> THE HOUSEON A SOMBER SUNJAV AFIERMOOAi?ANYHOW UJMV DOTHEV H*N6 TOshoot toot? communications, 6 4 0 Common¬wealth avenue, Boston 15, Massa-All Baptist undergraduate and chusetts.Mademoiselle magazine is nowaccepting entries from undergrad-sponsored by the Baptist Student, uate women for its annual Collegeand short stories, and poems and Fiction contestThe two winners of the contestthe paper by the student, not to graduate students are eligible toexceed 3000 words, should reach enter the Student Writers' contest,the secretary of the society beforeMay 1.The contributor should supply devotionals. Awards in the articleten copies of his paper to O. J. ancj short story category will be will receive $500 each for the se-DuTemple, executive sec*‘®“Jry'’ $50, $30, $20 and five two-year sub- rial rights to their stories andAmerican Nuclear society, 86 East sorptions to the magazine. Poetry publication in Mademoiselle. TheRandolph street, Chicago 1. and devotional awards will be runners-up will receive honorablemention in Mademoiselle and theright to buy their work at regularEntries should be made to the rates will be reserved by themagazine. The winners will be an¬nounced In the August 1959 issue.Any woman undergraduate un¬der 25 years old who is regularlyBoston university's school of enrolled in a degree-granting col-graduating before August 31 are public relations and communica- lege is eligible. Stories that haveContest categories are articles tions will offer teaching fellow- appeared in undergraduate publi-and devotional awards will be$25, $15, $10 and five two-year sub¬scriptions.Four fashion fellowships will beawarded this year among seniorcollege women by the Tobe-Co- Baptist Student Writers’ contest,bum school for fashion careers. 127 Ninth avenue, N., Nashville 3,Each fellowship will cover full Tennessee,tuition of $1350 for a one yearcourse at the school. All women mJateligible to apply. ships and news bureau assistant- cations are acceptable if they haveFashion fellowship registration ships during 1959-60,blanks may be obtained from thevocational office or from the The five teaching fellowships not been published elsewhere.Contestants may submit moreResearchers sought now will provide $1200 plus tuition for than one entry, but stories must rgraduate study in broadcasting, be original and fictitious andMore than 200 of the col¬lege seniors and recent gradu¬ates in the country will besought for federal scientific re¬search positions through an in¬tensive, nation-wide search, theJack to speakfor defense fundSouth Africa Defense Fundcommittee will sponsor a lec¬ture by the Reverend HomerJack, pastor of the First UnitarianChurch in Evanston, at 8 pm Tues¬day in Social Sciences 122. Civil Service commission an¬nounced.The persons sought must have“imagination, resourcefulness, anda high potential for research workin engineering or the physical sci¬ences,” stated the commission.The persons selected will beworking with some of the nation’soutstanding scientists and will begiven opportunity for furthertraining to help them along thecareer ladder. Only research posi¬tions will be filled through thisexamination.The laboratories are offeringcareer research positions in thefields of engineering, chemistry,electronics, mathematics, metal¬lurgy, and physics. Mechanics of the search is anation-wide, written civil serviceexamination which will be givenin February at more than 1,000examination points across the na¬tion. Qualified applicants may filefor the examination from thismonth through March 3.‘The college seniors or gradu¬ates who make the grade will bepaid a starting salary of $5,430 ayear and can set their careersights on the highest-level re¬search positions in the federalgovernment, if they can measureup to the challenges of the re¬search work and grow profes¬sionally in their positions,” thecommission said.Complete information and ap¬plication forms are available inthe office of vocational guidanceand placement in the Reynoldsclub. journalism, motionpublic relations.Anyone holding a bachelor’s de¬gree may apply for a fellowship atthe same time he applies for ad¬mission to the school. A catalogpictures or should run from approximately2,500 to 5,000 words.All entries for the contest mustbe submitted by March 1, 1959 toCollege Fiction contest, Mademoi¬selle, 575 Madison avenue, Newand application form for admis- York 22.Crerar revises hoursJohn Crerar library, which specializes in scientific, techno¬logical and medical reference volumes has restored Mondayevening and Saturday hours of service during 1959.The action was taken upon the library’s receipt of a $10,000 grantfrom the Robert H. McCormick Charitable trust for the express pur¬pose of restoring these service hours.The library made a recent "reader use survey,” said Henkle, whichrevealed that students account for 23 per cent of the total reader useof the library. Of this 23 per cent, some 5 per cent were high schoolstudents, the rest college students.The new service hours are: 9:30 am to 9 pm, Monday, and 9:30 amto 5:30 pm, Tuesday through Saturday. These service hours had beencurtailed last May for financial reasons.Meet JerryMeet Jerry (Almost every-dulges his fancy in roulette andlalf/t pahl/,1 53 M st/ieetphmt N07 9O7iStudent admission rate 50cupon presentation of ID\\ RICE itTWO Imports from Hie EASTJapan's LatestMasterworkA poignant, earthy story ... set against a background of modemJapan slowly emerging from ancient feudalism ... A sensitive, beau¬tifully photographed color motion picture . . . Much is made of kissingand love-making. It has been only in recent years that restraint inthese areas of human behavoir has been relaxed by Japan's motionpicture makers.Rice: fri & Sot, 7:30 and 11:00; sun, 3:30, 7:05 and 10:35; week¬days, 6:35 and 10:05.— and —Russia's GreatestMasterwork 4 ‘Alexander Nevsky”SERGI EISENSTEIN'SWith the brilliant original PROKOFIEV score"A majestic and vivid and really magnificent portrait of medievalism. . . Prokofiev has written an intriguing musical accompaninrfent whichis as adroit a combination of medieval and modern accents as the filmitself”—New Yorker.Nevsky: fri Sr Sat, 6:00 and 9:30; sun, 2:00, 5:30 and 9:00; week¬days, at 8:30 only.Starts Friday, Jan 23"Truth about women" with Laurence Harvey"Member of the wedding" with Ethel WatersFriday, Jan 30"Razzia" starring Jean Gabin"Mr. Hulet's Holiday" starring Jacques TatiFriday, Feb. 6"Man in the Raincoat" — Fernandel"Beggar's Opera" — Laurence OlivierFriday, Feb. 13G. B. Shaw's "Doctor's Dilemma"Coming soon: Pother Panchali, Inspector Maigret, Tennessee WilliamsFestival, Don Giovanni, New Faces, Viva Zapata, Tosco.10 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 16, 1959 torFUNandGOOD FELLOWSHIPSQUARE DANCEat thePOINT55th st. at Lake MichiganEVERY FRIDAY 8 JO PM one knows Jerry, I guess, butfor those who don’t ... wepoint out that he’s ... ) — an oc¬casional student, a devout hedo¬nist. The playboy kind, Jerry hasbeen endowed with a virtually un¬limited checking account Hischecks have turned up from allthe world’s exotic playgrounds,and been honoured by the mostincorruptibly upright financial in¬stitutions, as the Bank of London,Jimmy’s, the Campus Superette,etc.One of his favorite pastimes isa night of sin, a leisurely roundof the most promising casinosand nightclubs In town. He in¬ poker, carelessly winning or los¬ing a fortune, while he looks overthe newest group of cigarettegirls.- B-J CINEMAis presenting“Lust for Life”in colorstarring Kirk Douglas, Anthony QuinnFri., Jan. 16 8 & 10:15 pmJudson dining hallSpecial admission price 50c As Jerry is currently in theStates and expected in Chicagoaround the end of the month, ANight of Sin is being presentedby Student Union in his honour.Watch for his distinctive trade¬mark on all forthcoming publicityabout this eventChicago’* Mod UnusualMotion Picture TheatreAgain remind* all College Student* of theSpecial Student Rates always in effect at DEARBORNAT DIVISIONPhone DE 74761EVERY DAY OF THE WEEKINCL FRI. & SAT. EVENINGS 75 SOCIAL,# STUDENTHATS HOW-JUST SHOW CASHIER YOUR I.D. CARD Mr. Hulot ReturnsJacques Tati'MY UNCLE" CLARK Thnlrtdark £r madisonopoa 7 a.m.late show 4 a.m.college student priceJUG at all rimesJust present jour student identi¬fication card at the boxoffiee.Sunday Film Guild ProgramsJan 18 "Damn Yankees""The Goddess"Jan 25 "Knock On Wood1*'.Ve're Not Married"rBowen explains Humby Merlin Bowenchairman, humanities 3 staffI The casual observer on campus, noting the extent to which humanities 3 is populated by;+*e older and more thoughtful of our undergraduates, may easily take the course to be agood deal older than in fact it is. Actually, the maturity of its students, staff, and (in someinstances) readings notwithstanding, humanities 3 is little more than half the age of most ofthose now taking it and is by several years the youngest of the three courses comprising whatwe still like to consider the humanities sequence" in the College.The present humanities 3 ——made its first appearance under mark that could not be passed in read with any exactness and sen-nom-de-plume of "writing English. sitivity without analyzing andl<1(d criticism” in the academic noting the relation of parts toveer 194 M8, as an experimental HUMANITIES S NEEDS to be whole, one cannot analyze (ex¬section of an older course also reviewed, not merely in connec- cept in the most mechanical way)(and confusingly) known as hu- tion with the standard of English without making judgments ofinanities 3. In essence, the expert- composition which it has seized value. The distinction between thement was an attempt to combine end carried (upon occasion) to courses, therefore, is largely athe formulation of critical judg- new heights, but as a part of the matter of emphasis. Humanitiesirients of literary works (the busi- College humanities sequence. The 3 assumes acquaintance with a va-of the old humanities 3) with nature of that sequence and the riety of works of art and assumesthe discipline of formal writing place of humanities 3 in It is de- some analytical skill (although inthitherto carried on at. the ad- scribed briefly and clearly on the performance of its own task itvaneed level in a course called pages 105-106 of The Idea and both widens that acquaintance MERLIN BOWEN is a through and through product of theUniversity' of Chicago. From his first degree, the antediluvian,or old old old BA in 1936, through the MA and finally PhD,Bowen has seldom been far from the University.In 1950 he accepted the rather difficult and demandingchallenge of setting up the equivalent of Humanities one, twoand three at Shimer College. After five years there on loan,Bowen returned to the Midway and the Hum II and III staffs.Last year he was made staff chairman of the course.Bowen has taught, at either Shimer or Chicago, all threehumanities courses and English. In addition he teaches occa¬sionally in the English department, specializing in 19th centuryAmerican literature. Bowen is married and has two childrenattending the lab school.rmmmmmmmmbinEnglish 3). Practice of General Education and sharpens that analytical skill)(University of Chicago Press, and directs its attention to theThe article that appears onthis page is the eleventh in a“year-long series outlining thetheories, principles and aimsof each of the courses in theCollege. In future issues eachof the departments and divi¬sions of the University will bexami ned.The combination of the twotasks in one course was promptedby the feeling that critical judg¬ment, on the one hand, is not com¬plete without the order, explicit¬ness, and careful qualification ofritten expression, and that writ¬ing, on the other hand, is likely tobe better done when the learner ispresented with particular prob¬lems that seem to him intrin¬sically important and complex.The experiment was judged suc¬cessfully by a review committeeof the College faculty, and by ac¬tion of the faculty the new course,humanities 3, was instituted in thefall of 1948 as a regular part oft h e general education programleading to the bachelor's degree.By legislation of the faculty, theold course English 3 was droppedand the new course (taught bymembers of the English and hu¬manities staffs in approximatelyiequal proportions”) was directedto prepare a yearly "comprehen¬sive examination which shall testwith equal emphasis the compe¬tence in writing and the compe¬tence in criticism of students whohave successfully file] completeda course in writing and criticismgiving equal emphasis to bothdisciplines.”In October of that year classesmet, the production line began tomove, and the flow of bi-weeklycritical essays has continued vir¬tually uninterrupted to the pres¬ent day. The happy marriage ofthe two courses and the two aimsis signalized still by the agree 1950):The humanities sequence con¬sists of three courses, each ex¬tending through one academicyear. The courses contributeprogressively to the followingobjectives: (I) increasing theexperience of students with thegreat products of the arts bythe examination of a consider¬able body of the best works inthe fields of literature, the vis¬ual arts, and music; (2) train¬ing students in the exercise ofanalytieal methods appropriatela humanistic ends; and (S)training students in the use ofthe arts of criticism, which willf bie them to recognise someof the differences In valuesascribed to works and the kindsof interpretations of the artswhich lead to the assertion ofthese values and, ia the Kgtit ofthis recognition, to make re-,sponsible and sensitive criti- making of considered criticaljudgments and their expositionand defense in writing.The foundation of apprecia¬tion is extensive familiaritywith sad interest ia a great va¬riety of works of art Each ofthe courses contributes to theenlarging of the experience withgreat literary works, and eachcontributes, though in differentways, to the development ofanalytical ski Us. The enlargingof experience with music andthe visual arts, as well as thedevelopment of the simplestanalytieal skills, is reserved pri¬marily for humanities I, and theliterary experience of the stu¬dents in that course is relativelymore extensive than in the oth¬ers. The development of sys¬tematic methods of analysis ofdifferent literary forms is theprincipal task of humanities 2,while the study of the arts ofcriticism is undertaken in hu¬manities 3. THE READING materials ofthe course are basically of twokinds: theoretical and imaginativewritings. The first group includessuch works as Aristotle’s Poetics,Plato's Phaedrus, Croce’s Asthetic,and a variety of shorter essays.The second group is made up ofplays, novels, short stories, andpoems, all for the most part orig¬inally written in English. It is im¬portant to realize that the imag¬inative works are not chosen aslaboratory specimens for dissec¬tion under the critical scalpelsplaced in the students’ hands bythe critics studied in the course.Certain poetic works and certaincritical works (e.g., the Poeticsand Othello) may be juxtaposedbecause they have been foundmutually illuminative; but it isjust as possible that a givenimaginative work may be includedbecause it presents peculiar diffi¬culties when viewed in a givenperspectve.In all cases, and despite the va¬riety of their own critical commit¬ments, the staff stress the in¬tegrity of the individual work ofart and simply attempt to ac¬quaint the student with a numberof useful ways of evaluating hisown aesthetic experiences. Thereis no official critical theory, noparty line. But if the course con¬demns dogmatism, it is equallyopposed to the flabby sort of rela¬tivism which proceeds from noprinciples and puts all judgmenton the boggy ground of mere un¬examined likes and dislikes. It isthe intention of the course thatstuonts should know not only course “seeks to cultivate sensi¬tive, informed, and responsiblejudgment about works of art; andIt encourages that judgment la itsmost complete and definitive form—that is to say, in the writtenstatement.”In addition to the regular hu¬manities 3 (the "parent course” ofwhich we have thus far largelybeen speaking), there are open tostudents several humanities 3 va¬riants. The music variant and theart variant are in the autumnquarter identical with the parentcourse (indeed, they have then noseparate identity) but in the fol¬lowing two quarters they exam¬ine, in the place of the literaryworks read in the parent course, anumber of musical compositionsor paintings, etc., together withcritical essays explicitly directedto these disciplines.Foreign language variants(French and German are current¬ly being offered) differ chieflyfrom the parent course in thechoice of readings in tho~~ lan¬guages rather than ir» English.The overwhelming majority ofhumanities 3 students, it shouldbe added, are enrolled in the reg¬ular sections of the parent course.ment of the staff that no essay, of the three courses does some- at ***** **roa<**n the whai.sights, may receive a passing ends of the others: one cannot University Announcements, theEllen Coughlin Beauty Salon wkat they like, but why they likeThe sequence, thei, has a com- ^ in cases to change ormon body of objectives and eachhowever brilliant its critical in- thing toward realizing the specific 1* official words of the IN ALL CASES, the sectionsmeet three times a week, have noregular common lecture, and re¬quire the writing of five essays inthe autumn and in the winterquarters. In the spring quarter, inplace of the regular essays, stu¬dents write a single long essay ona topic chosen from a list present¬ed by the staff at the end of thewinter quarter. The grade for theyear is composed in equal propor¬tions of the grade earned on thisessay, the grade earned on a two-hour essay written under exam¬ination conditions, and the stu¬dent’s score on a final objectiveexamination. Since 1964, humanities 3 has notbeen a generally required com¬ponent of the programs of moststudents in the College. It hasbeen replaced in these programsby various divisional sequencesdirected to the student's voca¬tional preparation. A few degreeprograms (principally in the divi¬sion of the humanities) requirethe course; a few others offer achoice between it and other third-year courses. Aside from the stu¬dents enrolled in these programs,humanities 3 students are "volun¬teers” who have chosen the courseas an elective. It is hearteningthat there is still a considerablenumber of them—enough to keepeleven sections operating. Thisrepresents a decline from earlieryears when the course was re¬quired, but not nearly so sharpa drop as might have been ex¬pected.What the forthcoming changesin the College will mean for thecourse is not yet clear. But clearlythe course will go on in someform or forms. Staff discussionsare already in progress with re¬gard to possible reformulation ofthe course in three-quarter, two-quarter, and even one-quarterform, to be offered as electives.Simple segmentation will not, ofcourse, solve the problem: eachcourse or sequence must have itsown rationale and be meaningfuland useful in itself and in the con¬text of the learning experiencesavailable to students in the pro¬gram of the new College. But inone form and another, humanities3 will continue. It has proved it¬self over more than a decade oftrial to be ar. exciting and illumin¬ating experience for both studentsand staff. This being so, and theUniversity being what it is, wecan be sure that it will survivein its essentials as a part of thenew College.S19S Lake Park Ave.SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Men. • Smt. — 9 m.m, - 11 p.m,Ml 3-2GG0 Bicycles, Psfli, Accessoriesspecial student offerICE CYCLE SHOP1(21 «. 55th it. PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433Get Them Hat atNICKYSPIZZERIA1215 E. 55th Auto InsuranceHeme Owners Inti.rcc-c"Pftene or writeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml ?-5986 The Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekMAHLERSymphony no. 2Hermann ScherchenWEST. 2229*4.58 ☆ WRIGHTSHIRTS LAUNDRY15,centswith Hydro bundle COMPLETELAUNDRY AND DRY☆ CLEANING SERVICE1315 EAST 57TH STREETMl 3-2073Jan. 16, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 1! I$$$§( • .amum(above) Rushee Jim Pear and active Dave Egler gazefondly on a "paddle" during last week's round of fraternityrushing smokers, (right) John Deitman gazes fondly on oneof his fraternities' hostesses Alice Schaeffer at the samerushing function. Smokers continue all this week; a schedulelisting all fraternity smokers appears on page one of thisissue, (photos by McMahon)(right) UC meets and beats Grinnell at last week's basket¬ball game. For details of this and other sports events of the.rweek see "Cosgrove's" sports news column, page 8 of thisissue, (photo by Figlio)(below) Gail Paradise and Jim Pear enjoy the solitude ofthe Campus hangout, which will continue dispensing ham¬burgers, hot dogs, cokes, security, warmth, happiness andjoy throughout this quarter; same time, same location, same £prices, same management — Andy Moore and StudentUnion, (photo by McMahon)weeks activitiebasketball12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 16, 1959«Ak-" 1 * ASi - i-i* V , *.v -ymmm