Monk to read poetry Four distinguished serviceprofessorships announcedB r ot h e r Antoninus, theDominican monk of the SanFrancisco poets, will be read¬ing his poetry in Chicago thisweekend. He will be making twoappearances, one tonight at 8:30at the Francis Parker school, 330West Webster, and one on Sundaynight at 8:30 in Ida Noyes hall,under the sponsorship of the Ma¬roon and the Calvert club.Antoninus is a tertiary laybrother of the Dominican orderand lives in a monastery near SanFrancisco. He has been, at va¬rious times in his career, a profes¬sional poet, a farmer, a printer,conscientious’ objector, publisher,and husband.He has eight books of poetry tobis credit and has appeared insome of the nation’s better literaryquarterlies—including the Chica¬go Review.The Nation has called him “oneof the finest religious poets of thiscentury” and critic Kenneth Rex-rot h has declared that “Antoninusis the only poet of the San Fran-gisco Renaissance whose works will live and endure."Antoninus has often been called“the beat monk,” but he stronglydenies that he is beat. He writesthat “actually the beats repudiatemy solution of Catholicism. But Iam pleased to write and to appearwith them because they are hon¬est and they are outcasts.”Tickets are $1.50 general and$1 for students and will be avail¬able at the door. Four UC faculty members have been appointed to distinguished service professorships.Chosen for the service posts were Samuel K. Allison, pioneer atomic physicist, named FrankP. Hixon Distinguished Service Professor of Physics; Louis Gottschalk, award-winning his¬torian. Gustavus F. and Ann M. Swift Distinguished Service professor of History.Leo Strauss, political philosopher, Robert M. Hutchins Distinguished Service professor of Political Sci¬ence; George Williamson, authority on English prose and poetry, Martin A. Ryerson Distinguished Serv¬ice professor of Literature.These will join nine other holders of the professorships among the faculty of more than 800 full-tim*members.The Swift professorship was established through a bequest from the late Charles H. Swift for a per¬manent memorial honoring his father and mother. An anonymous donor set up the chair honoringHutchins.The Hixon professorship perpetuates the memory of a Wisconsin lumber magnate noted for his philan¬thropies. Ryerson was an early Chicago banker and president of the board of trustees of the universityin its formative years.For ‘profiles’ on each recipient of the service posts, see pages 10 and 11.(left) Brother Antoninus ispictured reading from his po¬etry. He will be sponsored oncampus by the Maroon andthe Calved<l(9ith||n8:B0 u Choir to sing HandelVol. 67, No. 31 University of Chicago, April 24, 1959 31Beta and Phi Cam collectFOTA skit night awardsby Arnold CraneThe Phi Gams are now the proud owners of an autographed portrait of William RaineyHarper (alias Aristotle Schwartz), the quality award of Tuesday night’s skit competition, anew and successful innovation to this year’s Festival of the Arts.The quantity prize, a one-year pass to see Mary Frances Kincaid, w'as captured by theBetas for their uninhibited teenage antics. Additional participants in the competition werethe third floor of West house, Phi Sigma Delta, and Foster hall.The curtain rose with the tions o{ tbe audience were ful- Hutchins inquisitors, both amazedBeta s taKe-Orr on teen-age |me(j WRh their production of at the conformity, and intimacy oftelevision: The Youth-wants- “Hamletsky, prince of 57 street.” the surroundings, but still con-to-know-Bandstand, MCed by the The famecj intellectual generation vince that the US spirit lies be-congenial and fun-loving Dickey cf Hutchins’ day viewed with as- neath “that big table outSplendid and featuring the top tonishment the new “rah rah” younder.”name recording stars, “the Zip- student which is supposedly des- The final skit was Dresented hv■nm' T h a otic* eomera t ton^ of tined l° dominate the University. Foster hall for their production ofinto a chaotic conglomeration of The whole production was set in .<the battle of the faculties,” a liverock a rollers who, along with the motif Gf the Shakespearean novei composed of individuals rep-the musidans got‘carried away tragedy, Hamlet, and concluded resenting varied mental and phys-vvith the beat, resulting in the with the Bohemian entourage ical powers, each insistent on hishepsters having to be dragged off migrating to Northwestern. Dwn virtues. A jester representing. ... Far removed from the Shake- footnotes was on hand to clarifyThe second of the five p - sperean overtones of the preced- matters and lend humor to thet.ons was the third floor West sku was ,hc phi Gams, „La productlonhouse girls’ interpretation of the c‘ Meouw,.. a trip t0 Fijiland,current Hyde Park redevelopment h everyone Iooks ,he same,program. Enthusiastic redevelop. ac(s the and has a baH Theers were contrasted with down- „ traval j^ms in the C-shoptrodden Hyde Park residents who ( h£ el^?) where the fljis aremusically lamented “what amt discussi the latest addltionswe got? we ain’t got houses. .u.m „ * w u.„twc Handel’s oratorio, “Israel inEgypt.” will be presented Sundayat 3 pm in Rockefeller chapel byle combined efforts of the Uni-psity ohoir and an ensemblethe Chicago symphony un-the direction of Richard Vik-fom.'A work seldom attempted, be¬cause of the vocal dexterity de¬manded by tlje score and becauseof the great length of the work,“Israel in Egypt” received its Chi¬cago premiere seven years agowhen the UC choir first per¬formed it.The score, which, with one briefexception, will be performed un¬cut, is among the most graphicmusic Handel ever composed, ac¬cording to Chariot Vickstrom, oneof the soloists. Handel leads hisorchestra, double chorus and solo¬ists through a recounting of theexodus from Egypt with musicalrecreations of the plagues, thepassage through the Red sea andthe ultimate escape.The choir, which is presentinga season of six full length pro¬grams, has been rehearsing this oratorio for over a month. A workwith few solos, “Israel in Egypt”calls for many highly demandingvocal ensembles, duets, trios andso forth.Tickets, which are $2.50 for gen¬eral admission and $2 for student*and faculty members, are on sal*at the Chapel office.Tomorrow lastBlackfriar showA final performance of theBlackfriar’s 1959 production,“Sour Mash,” will be pre¬sented tomorrow afternoon at $pm in Mandel hall. Ticket priceshave not been raised for this spe¬cial ‘revival.’ However, the old$1. $1.50 and $2 price schedule hasbeen modified to this extent: stu¬dent buying tickets to Beaux Artsball will be given a $.50 reductionon each ‘Sour Mash' ticket theybuy (limit of two). A review of‘Sour Mash’ by Edward Rosen¬heim, professor in the departmentof English, appears on page fourof this Maroon.(below right) James W. Vice, Jr., the brains behind oneand star of two skits in the FOTA competition, belts out oneof the grossly Noel Coward overtoned songs in the Phi Gamskit. The histrionic endeavors were judged by Marv Phillips,Ned Rosenheim and Alec Sutherland.got? we ain’t gotIt seems inconceivable that the their Brooks’ brothers wardrobe„ , .. ... . and setting the pace for campusevening should pass without some behavior Its climax arrives at agroup doing a satire on the Hutch- . ... . ,ins-Kimpton eras and Phi Sigma cocktail party later on in the dayDelta saw to it that the expecta- which is attended by two pro- 'US international positionhas faltered’: MorgenthauTestifying before the Senate east, for instance.” tary support of nations such asforeign relations committee, “Consistently,” we have “left Thailand, Pakistan, and Spain,on Wednesday April 15 Hans the initiative to the Soviet bloc Politically it has meant a declineJ. Morgenthau professor’in the an<? |jmited ourselves to reacting of American influence in thesedepartment of political science, to j,*’ . . . ...... countries.charged that in the last ten years Cnticizmg our lack of policy to Morgenthau, who is director ofThe Lilly Endowment, In- insights into the significance of ^be international position of the mee^ *t. Morgenthau found that the center of study of Americancorporated! Indianapolis, In- our religious heritage and study us has faltered. we are ‘ mvi^ng a repetition of foreign military policy, has beenj* » . j TTri mrtr? aaa of jfc relevance both to our cul- _ _ _ , . , tnG lsist Formosa crisis,diana, has granted UC $27,300 °*r“lnd ,0V?he in“vidual° Harri. Morgenthau is one of the firstLilly gives UC $27,300He also emphasized the doubt-jot a study on the best way to enables us to find t0 ap?ear b.as b5en ?alled fulness of the benefits of our mili- Princeton,teach religion to college students. v‘alues which can a senes of "education hearings,- on leave of absence to the insti¬tute of advanced studies, atnew committeechairman, Senator Fulbright of FOTA ball tomorrowwax, arc The seventh judge for to- .Tickets for the ball, which willes considering the staff of ^the colleee^and two* win an opportunity to‘check’what the row’s Beau Arts ball will be be held tomorrow evening at 9:30in undergraduate ^ members 0f the Federated s tate department tells them pete Langrock, winner of in the Quadrangle club, are onwith information obtained inde- APO’s Ueliest man on carnous sale all day today at the ticketAccording to this philanthropic re£lected in tHe coursc work ot jKgun }>Jfoundation, the study “can be « students” chan man, Sen®highly significant, not only for A gcommittee of five faculty Arkansas- The purpose of thefurther development of religious m_mb will be set UD to mako hearings as reported by the Dailyprograms at UC, but also for Thre^ wUl S from the NeW8’ was to “give the senatorsother universities —oUonin„ tne siuay. iniee win oe irom ine 0rm/vrtnnitv to ‘oher-k’ what therole of religioneducation.” theological faculty. *" with infoV,mation obtained inde- APO’s Ugliest man on campus sale all day today at the ticket“The curriculum of the college According to present plans, Pendently.” competition, and the only candi- booth in Mandel corridor and to-of UC at present incorporates this Committee will be charged To “prevent a change in the date entered. morrow only, in the lounge at th#many aspects of religious thought with making a detailed and sub- territorial status quo” has been The UMOC’s vote will be valid new dorm lounge,and writing Into a number of stantial report describing and our objective since the end of only in case there is a tie amongst The tickets will be priced atcourses,” said R. Wendell Har- evaluating alternative approaches \y0rld war II Morgenthau ex- the other six judges, who are: $3.50 and will enable the pur-Nson, vice president and dean of to the teaching of religion in a nl . - T. ttJ „ . „th. rpflical Mr- and Mrs. Henry Rago, Dean, chaser to receive a $.50 discountdie faculties of UC. liberal arts college. They will be p 1" and Mrs. Jeff Metcalf of the busl- per ticket on tomorrow’s matinea“The grant makes possible a asked to outline a recommended to recognize that not every status ness school, and Dean and Mrs. performance of Blackfriars* “Soucthorough going search for new program. quo is defensible — the Middle Gerald C. Brauer of the FTR. Mash” (limit—2 tickets*.!**-H! pMI ,InSi Wilber Katz will discuss Youth Marchers returnreligion, law at Brent th**ir\Mnchinninn §rSnWilber G. Katz, James Parker Hall professor m the UC Law T m C# aft f ft C t a WW & 111 f t t 11 t a I gjWilber G. Katz, James Parker Hall professor in the UC Lawtichool will address a meeting of students and faculty this Sun¬day night on the topic “Law 497—New Testament 459: ‘Right¬eousness and Justice’: an Educational Experiment.”The title of this talk refers to the fact that the University Law•rhool and Divinity school are co-operating in exploring the field ofReligion and Law. Beginning with the spring quarter, Katz was•elected to teach a course for which a student might get law credit©r credit in New Testament study. This is the first time such a coursehas been given in the history of the university.The meeting will be sponsored by the Episcopal church council oncampus and will be held at Brent house beginning with a buffet sup¬per at 5:90 pm. by Linda MorrisonA student delegation from the Youth March for Integrated schools received assuranceSaturday that President Eisenhower shares their desire for speedy integration.“The President is just as anxious as you are to see an America where discrimination doesnot exist... we have a long way to travel, but in the past six yean; we have also come along way. . . . We will never be satisfied until the last vestige of discrimination has disap¬peared,” said Gerald Morgan, deputy assistant to the President.Twenty-six thousand young ~ —people marched in Washing- the Mall to the Sylvan Theatre by rying banners and placards urg-ton, DC, from 7th street on the Washington Monument, car- inE speedy integration in (he na¬tion’s schools.ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage &Free Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st. & meatball J0<ii<<.aaaaaaaaaaaaaa! 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U through Roll Moll's fine toboccos!Outstanding and they are Mad!Product of S& J&ruvue&n —So&uato- ft our middle name2 • C H I C A G O MAROON • April 24, 1959 Norman Hill of Chicago, YouthCoordinator for the Chicago area,presented petitions bearing over400,000 signatures to Congress¬man Charles O. Diggs (D-Mich).‘‘The Youth of America, northand south, Negro and white,worked diligently to secure over400,000 signatures. In this petitioncampaign, calling for a more ef¬fective legislative and executiveprogram for integrated schools, I,Norman Hill, am happy lo behere and announce and presentthese petitions on this momentousoccasion,” Hill stated.Speaking to the assemblagewere: A. Philip Randolph, Presi¬dent of the Brotherhood of Rail¬way and sleeping car porters; theRev. Martin Luther King; CharlesS. Zimmerman, AFL-CIO CivilRights Committee head; Roy Wil¬kins, Executive Secretary for theNational Association for the Ad¬vancement of Colored People?Tom Mboya, head of the KenyaFederation of Labor; Bayard Rus-tin, Coordiator of the YouthMarch, and Harry Belafonte.Specifics presented to the Presi¬dent were: that the Douglas(D-Ill.) Bill be supported; thateffective action be taken in theAsbury Howard case; that theWhite House consider a confer¬ence of youth and youth leaders?and that the executive offer amdre effective leadership in theproblem.Citations were presented totMrs. Daisy Bates, the Rev. Gard¬ner Taylor, Rabbi Frank, theNAACP, Jackie Robinson, andothers.In cooperation with thedean of students in thecollege, the registrar hasestablished a deadline forwithdrawal without penaltyfrom general studies cours¬es. The deadline establishedfor the spring quarter isMay 22.If a student finds it nec¬essary to withdraw beforethis date, this may be doneby securing his adviser'sapproval and bringing hiswithdrawal cards to the reg¬istrar's office prior to thedeadline.After the deadline, with¬drawal requires the approvalof the dean or assistant deanof students in the college.No withdrawals from gen¬eral studies courses will bepermitted after the close ofthe quarter.The Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekHANDELJUDAS MACCABAEUSWestminster 3310$11.47 5Mrs. Fermi recalls 1st 'atoms for peace'by Albert M. PodeBEnrico Fermi was one ofthe principal architects of theatomic age. At a lecture this& week, his wife, Mrs. Laura Fermi,discussed the conference whosepurpose it was to insure that thatatomic age would be a peacefulowe.Mrs. Fermi, staying at UC thisweek as a guest of FOTA andthe Emily Talbott Fund, drewwidely for her material from hersecond book. Atoms for the World,the volume she wrote as the offi¬cial US historian to the Interna¬tional Conference for the PeacefulUses of Atomic energy held inGeneva in 1955.* At (he conference, the lecturerconfided, she realized for the firsttime just how cumulative and ad¬ditive science is. “In the arts andliterture," she observed, “one mayl>e influenced by other artists tosome degree - but m science allmust build upon the work of/ others. Unlike literature and art,in science you must learn whatothers have done before you canbegin anything. Each man con¬tributes a little bit upon whichothers build. The atomic bombitself was not just the work of afew men in the stands at StaggField, but had to be built on thework of the Curies, of Rutherford,and of Bohr. This was all clearlybrought home to me at the con¬ference.”The year 1953, she continued,was a had political year. The Rus¬sians and the Americans couldReverend Sittlerto preach SundayThe Reverend Joseph Sitt¬ler will preach the sermon atthis Sunday’s services at 11am in Rockefeller chapel. The titleof his sermon has not been announeed.Sutler was on the federated the¬ological faculty and was chapelpreacher here in 1957. He is chair¬man of the North American eom-f mission on worship of the Worldcouncil of churches.He has an AB and LLD fromWittenberg college; BD, Hammadivinity school; DD, Wagner col¬lege; and has done graduate studyat UC. Oberlin college, WesternReserve, and the University ofHeidelberg.Sillier is the author of “TheDoctrine of the Word,” 1948, and"Structure of Christian Ethics,”1958. In 1951 he was president ofthe American Theological society. barely get together; disarmamentnegotiations were at a standstill.It was in this charged atmospherethat President Eisenhower launch¬ed his Atoms for Peace program.“At that time,” she went on,“few of us realized that therewere peaceful uses for atomic en¬ergy. We were worried becausethere was no way to denatureuranium (as one can denaturealcohol) to make it unfit for war¬time purposes. Uranium is alwaysthe same and can be used eitherfor good or for evil. And even thenwe were not sure that there weregood peacetime uses for atomicenergy.”Argonne sendsstaffers to JapanProgress in the develop¬ment of techniques for han¬dling radio-active material incomplete safety will be demon¬strated to a Far Eastern audience.Two staff members of ArgonneNational laboratory’s remote con¬trol engineering division willleave for Tokyo, in mid-April toset up and maintain an exhibitat the International Trade fairto be held May 5-22 in Tokyo.R. H. Maschhoff and J. F. Lind-berg will be the laboratory’s rep¬resentatives in Tokyo. They willbe in charge of an exhibit whichdemonstrates how nuclear scien¬tists are protected from radiationwhen they work with highlyradioactive materials.The exhibit will consist of ashielded room, called a “cave,”and a pair of devices which per¬mit remote handling of radioac¬tive material. These devices areknown as master-slave servo-manipulators.History prof getsBancroft awardDaniel J. Boorstin, professor ofAmerican history at UC, has beennamed the recipient of this year’sBancroft prize. The prize isawarded annually for the bestbook on American history andwas given to Boorstin for TheAmericans: The Colonial Experi¬ence, the first volume in his pro¬jected three volume study ofAmerican culture.Boorstin is the first UC pro¬fessor in recent times to receivethe $3,000 award, the highestavailable to a member of theAmerican historical profession. Itis also reputedly the first Ban¬croft award for his publishers,Random House. The conference itself went weH,the lecturer noted, and much wasaccomplished. The politicians, sheadded, either stayed away or didnot interfere. There were nosquabbles about the seating of thevarious delegations.“Most of the Russians,” she con¬tinued “were polite and pleasant.They had disappeared from theinternational scientific confer¬ences in the early ’30’s and few ofus knew any of them. But theywere more or less allowed freelyto mix with us. and we did get toknow them and to establish somelasting acquaintances.”In the United States, she ob¬served, we had assumed that theRussians would be a good distancebehind us in the field of atomicenergy but we soon learned thatthis was not the case. "We learnedthat much work which had beendone by us in secrecy had alsobeen done by the Russians. Butour scientists were not disap¬pointed to learn this and wereglad to have a way of checkingtheir experiments.”Mrs. Fermi admitted that theAmerican delegations was quitesurprised to learn that the Rus¬sians were as advanced as theywere in many fields, although shefelt that the Russians were some¬what cruder in their approach.They used more men, moremoney, and more materials tobuild the machines they need fortheir experiments — but they didbuild the machines and they didperform the experiments, she ad¬ded. “Their approach to sciencelacked sophistication. They went Mrs. Laura Fermi, (second from left) is pictured aboveat a reception in B-J.at science with much more bruteforce than we did,” she concluded.Mrs. Fermi concluded her lec¬ture with a discussion of the plancurrently being sponsored by MITto improve the teaching of physicsin the high schools.“The present text books,” shecomplained “teach physics as if itwas old history. They are clut¬tered with disconnected facts andwith technical applications suchas refrigerators and steam shov¬els.“An entirely new approach isneeded. Physics must be taught asa living science. The new textbooks must show the studentswhat still remains to be done inphysics and what areas are stillRetirement InsuranceAnnuitiesConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986 24-HourKodachrome colorfilmprocessingModel Camera Shop1342 E. 55tf» HY 3-9259Bicycles, Ports, Accessoriesspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1621 e. 55th st. The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 Ea«t 57Hi St.MU 4-9236HI-FI & STEREO for the finest elec¬tronic service, bring itto * CHELTEN T.V,CORP., 2915 E. 79thSt. or Coil ES 5-3666STERN'S CAMPUS DRUGS61st fr EllisROAST $|45TURKEYdressing, chef salad,bread, butter, and beverage$T25ala carte dinner Motice — Senior Men Students — U. S. 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They must teach them tothink.”Mrs. Fermi cited the reluctanceof publishers and school boardsto adopt the new approach, butoptimistically hoped for its even¬tual implementation.You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711NEWESTWASH and WEAR SLACKSby DICKIESonly $£95These are Bedford cordsShrunk for permanent fit.They're WASH and WEARfor minimum care/with the exclusive Dickiesfeature—Easy-Alter Outlets.Lets out waist 1 Vi" withoutsewing.Moke a Special Trip...Dickies ore Worth hiOur Prices Can't Be Beat . . .It’s Smart To Buy For LessD & CCLOTHES SHOP744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728“In the Neighborhoodfor 40 Years"Hours: 9 a.m.-8 p.m., Mon.-Fri.—9 a.ra.-9 p.m., SaturdayApril 24, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3the Chicago maroonfounded — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University 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 3-0800extentlons, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus. Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5Monday 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. On Canons MthMwSfrolman(By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys! ”and"Barefoot Boy with Cheek'*)THE MANY LOVESOF THORWALD DOCKSTADERRosenheim on “Sour Mash”Sour Mash, the current edi¬tion of Blackfriars, is an essen¬tially successful combinationof talent and judgment — the lat¬ter ingredient being happilybrought into play at preciselythose points where the formerfalls short. Don MeClintock, whowrote Sour Mash, and RobertAshenhurst, who directed it, havea gift — lamentably rare in ama¬teur theatrical circles — of know¬ing what not to attempt, and theresult is that this year’s Black-friars? steps triumphantly aroundpitfalls into which many anotherMandel hall enterprise has igno-ininiously flopped.Take, for instance, the matterof plot. Over the years, the home-spun musicals at Mandel haveproved overwhelmingly that ama¬teur writers of musicals, studentand faculty alike, are thrown bythe job of devising stories whichwill mesh, in even a minimally re¬spectable fashion, with whateverseparate numbers are at hand.The best of their efforts havebeen fragile affairs from whichgobbets of music, dancing, andrepartee have been suspended likeHalloween apples on a string. Themore painful specimens — andthey are many — have providedlittle save tedious stretches ofearnest dialogue, sourly sand¬wiched between moments of mer¬riment which owe them nothing.MeClintock, however, has sur¬vived the nasty problem of plot¬ting largely by avoiding it. If Iunderstand his “story” correctly(and I am sure he will not begreatly disturbed if I have not), acommunity of Southern rustics isvisited by an investigating sena¬tor, somewhat inexplicably accom¬panied by a detachment of sol¬diers.It appears (in fact, it is statedin at least six of the twelve songswhich the show contains) thatneither the bucolic nor the Wash¬ington contingent is happy withits lot, social, economic, or amor¬ous, and each is, indeed, enviousof the other. This dissatisfactionis relieved, within the play's clos¬ing minutes, by a wholesale swapbetween appropriate malcontents,conducted in cheerful defiance ofthe law's of the Land, the Church,and poetic probability.It will be readily apparent thatMeClintock does not want us totake his play very seriously. Thisis a laudable position, and SourMash wins points by the absenceof villains, intense young lovers,songs about being NEAR YOU,and dances portraying STRUG¬GLE and FLIGHT. It is clear,from the outset, that the zanyworld of “Sour Mash” has theemotional and intellectual depthof one of the more relaxed comicstrips.I note with similar approbationthe author’s decision to employhis considerable wit on such non-localized phenomena as the na¬tional administration, the Army,and the universal habits of theyoung.I do not recall a single gagbrought off at the expense ofthe Chancellor, Buildings andGrounds, Julian Levi, or the Nat¬ural sciences sequence, and Mc-Clintoek’s restraint in this matterassuredly sets some sort of rec¬ord. To exploit the willingness ofa University audience to growhysterical at the mere mention ofthe name “Hutchins” has neverseemed to me a major dramaticachievement. To produce — as, atleast on Saturday night, McClin-tock did — repeated and heartylaughter from the situation on thestage itself ks to move up the spec¬trum which leads from the ama¬teur to the professional writer. Assorted Blackfriars perform for Governor William Strat¬ton on the opening day of FOTA. (photo by Grant)Once again, in its decisions con¬cerning “spectacle,” the staff ofSour Mash showed admirablejudgment. The single dance rou¬tine was a modest, unclutteredperformance. The same may besaid of the single set, in which anouthouse of noble proportionsdominated the scene but not, Iam happy to report, the dialogue.The costuming, strongly sugges¬tive of a limited exchequer at thedisposal of the Wardrobe depart¬ment, was at the least adequateand had, in some instances, a kindof daft aptness.In effect, the unassuming qual¬ity of book and production gavethe cast an opportunity for theuninhibited, unharried display oftheir various capabilities. Thesewere considerable and, as is al¬ways the case, I am sure eachmember of Saturday night’s en¬thusiastic audience had his ownfavorite performances. My ownincluded Barnett Weiss who, asCy, was not only a fine, ganglingspecimen of mooncalf but sangin a sure and polished way; AliceShaeffer, whose work struck meas that of a budding professionalyet who appeared to be havingthe time of her life; Neal John¬ston who, as the Colonel displayeda singular, rubber-faced m i ni i cvirtuosity; Carol Horning, pro¬viding, in the role of Persephone,a fine, wild exhibition of thosegifts which have long since madeof her a Mandel hall Kit Cornell;Abbie Sheldon who, although lessgenerously provided with linesthan the rest, contrived to east anauthentic “Yokum” colorationupon the proceedings, and LarrySpalding, whose portrayal of theSergeant was carried off withsufficient vigor to elevate the rolesomewhat above those of his fel¬low soldiers.What few cavils I have arechiefly in the nature of notesthat a director might jot down forthe purpose of improving futureperformances. Lack of projection,that old bugbear of the amateur,was evident in several roles and Icould not help wishing that John Dietmann, who, in appearanceand bearing was every inch therustic sage he was intended toportray, had received a little moreinstruction in the delivery of hismany lines.There were moments, too, inwhich — perhaps because of anoverload of dialogue — the pacesagged perceptibly, and therewere the almost inevitable spotsin which the non-speaking occu¬pants of the stage just stoodaround. I have seen Mandel halllighting perform far greater just¬ice than was done to Sour Mash.And if I were directing a futureperformance of the work, I woulddo something — or rather causesomething to be done — to theladies’ legs; in the absence ofstockings or make-up they pre¬sented, despite agreeable con¬tours, a peculiarly unseductivepallor.The music for Sour Mash, con¬trived by Elmer Maas, is not ofthe toe-tapping, head-wagging va¬riety that one can readily carrywith him after a single hearing.This points, I am sure, to a de¬parture from banality, and it islikely that in the Blackfriars mu¬sic, performed with impeccablesobriety by an ensemble whichwas long on flutes, bassoons, andFrench horns, a serious listenerwould have found much to ad¬mire. I myself found it easy totake.As one who, many years ago,joined in the Blackfriars’ springrites, I eannot refrain from aword of enthusiastic praise forthe revival of the institution. De¬spite powerful traditionalist in¬stincts, I am delighted by the addi¬tion of ladies to the cast. Thespectacle of hairy-shanked half¬backs, grotesquely cavorting in(see “Rosenheim,” page 5)Small Cheese .... 95cSmall Sausage . $1.15NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-90G3ONE WEEK LEFTDrop your empty Marlboro, Parliament andPhilip Morris packs atStern Drugs — Stineway Drugsby 6:00 ptw SaturdayWIN TWO TICKETS to “WI/SIC MAN”m<I olbcm of the show When Thorwald Dockstader—sophomore, epicure, and sports¬man-first took up smoking, he did not simply choose the firstbrand of cigarettes that came to hand. He did what any sopho¬more, epicure, and sportsman would do: he sampled severalbrands and then picked the mildest, tastiest, pleasingest of all— Philip Morris, of corris!Similarly, when Thorwald took up girls, he did not simplyselect the first one who came along. He sampled. First he tookout an English literature major named Elizabeth Barrett Grislit,a wisp of a girl with luminous eyes and a soul that shimmeredwith a pale, unearthly beauty. Trippingly, trippingly, shewalked w ith Thorwald upon the beach and sat with him behinda windward dune and listened to a sea shell and sighed sweetlyand took out a little gold pencil and a little morocco notebookand wrote a little poem;I tin'll lie upon the shore,I will be a dreamer./ will feel the sea once morePounding on my femur.Thorwald’s second date was with a physical education majornamed Peaches Glendower, a broth of a girl with a ready smileand a size 18 neck. She took Thorwald down to the cinder trackwhere they jogged around 50 times to open the pores. Then theyplayed four games of squash, six sets of tennis, 36 holes of golf,nine innings of one old cat, six elmkkers of lacrosse, and a mileand a quarter of leap frog. Then they went ten rounds with eight-ounce gloves and then they had heaping bowls of bran and wheyand exchanged a manly handshake and went home to theirrespective whirlpool baths. <'lilinkm-stick f/UL\?MoRRti "he $3utThorwald’s final date was with a golden-haired, creamy-browed, green-eyed, red-lipped, full-calved girl named TotsiSigafoos. Totsi was not majoring in anything. As she often said,“Gee whillikers, what’s college for anyhow—to fill your headfull of icky old facts, or to discover the shining essence that isYOU?”Totsi started the evening with Thorwald at a luxuriousrestaurant where she consumed her own weight in Cornish rock.hen. From there they went to a de luxe movie palace whereTotsi had popcorn with butter. Then she had a bag of chocolatecovered raisins—also with butter. Then they went to a cos tiyballroom and cha-eha’d till dawn, tipping the band every eightbars. Then they went to a Chinese restaurant where Totsi, un¬able to decipher the large and baffling menu, found a simpleway out of her dilemma: she ordered one of everything. ThenThorwald took her to the women’s dorm, boosted her in (howindow, and went downtown to wait for the employment officeto open.While waiting, Thorwald thought over all of his girls andcame to a sensible decision. “I think,” he said to himself, “that1 will stick with Philip Morris. I am not rich enough for girls.”Anybody is rich enough for Philip Morris—and for PhilipMorris’s brother cigarette, filter-tip Marlboro, the cigarettewith better “makin’s”, The flavor’s fine, the filter filters,the price is right.PAY FOR YOUR LIFEINSURANCE THE EASY WAYYOU CAN ARRANGE TO RAVE THE PREMIUMS ON YOUR OWN LIFE INSURANCE(AND THAT OF MEMBERS OF YOUR FAMILY, If YOU ARE PAYING THEPREMIUMS) PAID AUTOMATICALLY FROM YOUR BANK ACCOUNT EVERYMONTH WITH THE NEW SUN LIFE AUTOMATIC MONTHLY PAYMENT PLAN.This is it flnte soring, money saving feotvra.-MrRalph J. Wood if. '48SUN LIFE OF CANADACkicoqn 2, NL*€ 1-08551 M. LaSalle S*.FR 2-2390SUN LIFE OF CANADA4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 24, 1959■ofs<ortWoa.‘WV«es 3 i 1 s s N vls X 0 H X N a AAl3 S 0 d N V a TjN 3 s a A 0 iE 3 a 3 D D0 0 O a d V 1 0[N \g\ 1 0 « 2 E Lilt| [g 0 X 1 m □n \a a|d|N n.eS«HX >OVMNCVL HOOOHB->odx no>\ *rvn. NS V□□□□1 1B9 V -La djM O N S!■!« NJ.Id d V 9m U3M5NVT0DHRosenheim says:(Continued from page 4)ballet skirts, has, no doubt, itsown appeal. I confess, however,that I regard it as an inferior sortof treat and frankly record myown pleasure in the covey of deco¬rative gals who adorn the currentproduction. Nor can I lament thedisappearance of the elaborate,pseudo - monastic administrativestructure which, in years past,dominated the dramatic produc¬tion and converted the entire en¬terprise into an arena for frater¬nity political maneuvering.What has been restored — andappears to be flourishing — is anundertaking which invites stu¬dents to work creatively, thought¬fully, and with high spirits on aproduction designed to bringpleasure to their fellow students.Such an opportunity is not, I amconvinced, irrelevant to the busi¬ness of becoming educated.Ned Rosenheim more maroon reviewsKozloff reviews Arthur OkamuraONE IS a little non-plussedas to what can, or should besaid first about Arthur Oka-mura’s paintings (exhibited atFeingarten galleries, 58 E. WaltonPlace till May 1). They call for anaffection and sympathy which,while immediate, is difficult to ex¬plain. Nor does knowledge ofwhere he possibly can be "fitted”alongside Kenzo Okada, FrancisBacon occasionally, Oriental cal¬ligraphy, or the current stream ofstylistic “Nipponism” in this coun¬try, in any sense clarify the ap¬peal his works have.A canvas such as "Returningsin a Cold Spring,” for example,may look, initially, like an abstrac¬tion. But this impression, while itlasts, is erroneous. Neither sym¬bolic nor figurative, the paintingnevertheless contains virtual pres¬ences within the frame: traces orsecretions of plant and organiclife, erasures and shadows due tosome shift in a natural force.The acuteness of Okamura liespartly in the fact that his strokes,while perfectly apparent asstrokes, seem, at the same time,testaments of an outside agency,not of the artist, planned by him,and yet accidental, random. What his picture provokes, de¬spite this, is a contemplativesearch for the quality by virtue ofwhich he succeeds in convincingus that the pictorial relationshipsare right rather than arbitrary.Therein, probably, resides thesource of movement in the can¬vas: not the activity of abstractforms (though these, derived fromcircles, lozenges and ribbons, areshapes obvious enough), but ofinterior forces.IT SEEMS no pccident that con¬sistently, from work to work,images are veiled from us, someleading a kind of subliminal ex¬istence, or that, as if to emphasizethe enigmatic flux at work behindhis paintings, Okamura will en¬title them ("Of a Bird Becoming,”"Moon Mergings,” "The Begin-ings”) with language that turnson verb forms.This suggestiveness of the ar¬tist’s content is all the more re¬markable when considering thelimitations of his means. Yellow¬ish, brownish, or pinkish grey,lemon yellow, black, creams andbuffs, a very discreet green-blue,these are almost his entire palette.With such a few colors, however,Ordet: too artily humanOKI)ET (“the Word") ap¬pearing for the first time inChicago at the indispensableHyde Park theater, is based onthe play by the Dane Kaj Munk.Danish Carl Dreyer, best knownfor his Joan of Arc (1928) andDays of Wrath (1943) not onlyproduced but also scripted thefilm. It should be seen by anyonewho relishes slow-paced relentlessperfectionism in pictorial compo¬sition on the screen.Inger (Birgitte Federspiel), thewife of a Jutland farmer, is anx¬ious that her third child be theson they have long waited for.The boy is bom dead; she re¬lapses into unconsciousness; andshortly after the departure of thedoctor, her husband and her fa¬ther-in-law (Henrik Mallberg)judge her to be dead also. Afterthe issuance of the death certifi¬cate and at the moment of thefastening of the lid, Inger’s off¬beat brother-in-law implores Godto return her to the living. Shestirs, ooens her eyes, survives.ALMOST ALL of the film, pho¬tographed against the naturalbackground of outdoor Jutlandand the geometrical walls, win¬dows and doors of the farmstead,is concerned with the events lead¬ing up to this manifestation. Eachcharacter is directed to move sosanctimoniously slow that heseems to have difficulty in main¬taining his balance: Inger’s bi¬zarre brother-in-law who early inthe film identifies himself withthe Saviour; her staunch and dis¬believing mate; her youngestbrother-in-law, who wishes tomarry a girl from an evangelisticsect; and her patriarchal father-in-law, storming through hisbeard, in the name of the con¬servative church, against thegirl’s tailor father. Vermeer-like groups of faces were explored inan illumination that spills overthe profile-edge to create an am¬bience of light and air. Rem¬brandt-like evocations occur whensome emotionally charged mo¬ment is heightened by the play oflight and shade. Often enoughthese half-stills make the charac¬ters seem busier trying to movefrom one tableaux to the next,without ever breaking composi¬tional pattern, than in the pas¬sions, hopes and beliefs that drivethem on.Perhaps all this is held togeth¬er, in terms both of plot andtheme, by the question directedto the mourners by the off-beatbrother-in-law. He appears at thecoffin without his Christ-likegarb, in a crew-neck sweater, act¬ing no crazier than anyone whohas delved as deeply as he hasinto Kierkegaard. It is in thismore conventional condition, ascompared with the messianicphase of previous days, that heasks the mourners why they trusttheir faith so little? Even he him¬self is forced into actually askingfor the return of his sister-in-lawInger partly because, in his pre¬vious state of religious exalta¬tion, he has promised her returnto her eight-year-old daughter.How little people are able to askof the gods they believe in seemsto be one of the major concernsof the film.IT IS not clear that dramatizingan event that might be a miraclebut which from various evidencesfrom medical practice carefullyplanted in the film isn’t necessar¬ily a miracle, is a fruitful way ofstating the dilemma of a faiththat begrudges itself. Dreyer hasmixed the ritualistic genre of themiracle play with the naturalisticgenre of the play of religious con-Issuctl every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andintermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon,Ida Noyes hall, 1212 East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-0800,extensions 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionsby mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday.Editor-in-chiefRochelle Meto Dubnow version-experience and, in thisparticular mixture, both genressuffer. Lavish praise of the film,as in Time, which called it anallegory of “a child’s faith,” seemsto me to pay tribute to the re¬ligious-article trade rather thanto the religious drama. The keyepisode may indeed be the miraclethe little girl is sure it is; the film,alas, is all too artily human.Reuel Denney glazed, pulverized, far more areinsinuated.He will modulate much for thesake of a color harmony—and hemust be considered a very happycolorist—but the chromatic ex¬pression evolves very quickly intoa spatial one.The "Reflections of a Garden”creates an ambient, but physicaldepth.SPATIAL perfections are In¬flected into the surface, so thatthe experience of an open, illimit¬able atmosphere possesses everyarea. Furthermore, the areas have each their individual textures —-tactile units like tissues, water;sponges, pebbles, flakes, fluff,and feathers.Okamura is clearly a virtuoso oftexture, and yet his painting con¬tains all this "feel” of objectswithout their substance, all thisrichness of surface with mutedschemes of color. His art is, ifthis be conceivable, opulent under¬statement. More than this itwould be ungrateful and imper-;ceptive to ask.Max KozloffKQDL (CROSSWORD No. 24ACROSS1. Can youstand it?5.1 Remember9.Concerning acrazy mixed-uprein10. Start to erase11. What Kools arethat the othersaren’t13. You’re labelto be caught14. Part ofa chain15. Anagramof hot sap(non-Koolsmoker)17. These arethe thingsyou want20. Repent25. Moat commonkind of bills26. You’ll get acharge outof this27. Pork pals28. Canine cuddlers29. Fell, foractress Audrey?31, They’resuited toequine champs33. Roger’s partner34. Knowledgeablefellow37. Why Keats wasin debt?38. This goesthere andthat goes here40. Mai de41. Kind of steady42. What toswitch toKools from43. Kind of relief44. An insectrelative?45. French islands DOWN1. The pgycholo-gist’s end2. Girl foundin Manhattan3. Larynx dweller?4. This isn’t many6. Anagram oftired me6. Spheres ofaction7. They save face8. A tree12. He dealsin dahliasand scents15. Items forkey people16. Bazaar or Ferry17. Make aknight of18. Compass point19. Quarrelerswho spill blood?21. Mrs. A. Lincoln,nee22. Too confused,this Indian23. Egg’s last name24. Short foran ensign26. The gal andguy youleft behind28. Oscar withbarbs30. Movie actressMarta31. They can beaerosol or atomic32. Well, it’sa thought34. The mostrefreshingexperiencein smoking35. Villa d’36. For cool ;snioke Kools38. Airlines39. Philosophy'sbeginning i 2 3 f.,.9 •11 1 J13_ ■31 32374043Associate editorNeal Johnston Business managerLawrence D. Kessler ★ ★ ★• As cool and clean as a breath of fresh air.!• Finest leaf tobacco... mild refreshing menthol —and the worlds most thoroughly tested filter •• With every puff your mouth feels clean,your throat refreshed!Omericas Mosh l&fkshing Qgaref/er. . ALSO REGULAR SIZE KOOL WITHOUT FILTER I• 1959. Brown ft Williamson Tobacco Corn. W QitfaretteA-.i f;/v»ai ill• III 11Mm* IpfilliiiiiiIsnfil'nllill Ifp hppBli* in $When things get too close for comfort*your best friends won’t tell you...but your opponents will!• Old Spice Stick Deodoront brings you safe,sure, all-day protection.• Better than roll-ons that skip.• Better than sprays that drip.® Better than wrestling with creams that wcw plastic r*a<pare greasy and messy. pSmetFOR INSTANT USE1.00 »•••«»(jfiice STICK DEODORANT 76 AMCujZ- < from our University ShopDISTINCTIVE SPORTWEAR FORLATE SPRING AND SUMMERNavy or Tan Heather Orion*-and- Wool Blazers, $40Dacron*-and-Cot/on Check Odd Jackets, $32.50Odd Jackets of Hand- Woven India Madras inUnusual Foulard or Paisley Patterns, $37.SOTrtypical Worsted Odd Trousers, $19.50Washable Odd Trousers, $9 and $ 12.50Colorful Polo and Sport Shirtsf $4 to $9Bermuda Length Shorts, $7.50 to $ 11.50•DuPont’* tbtnmtamwnomwMens furnishings, 53ats echoes74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL.NEW YORK • CHICAGO • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCO<■?*** -Oj00rxzjtorct^Br<Lee^(Zjeerx±jeorszjB0r<(.Do You Think for Yourself ? (a TAKE THIS FAST QUIZAND FIND OUT! *1. Which would you consider more essentialto a happy marriage: (A) the mates’ Asimilarity in ages and backgrounds, or(B) their intelligence and adaptability?2. Which of these two famous men wouldyou most prefer to be like: (A) KingMidas, or (B) Ludwig van Beethoven?,3. If neither party’s candidate in anelection was satisfactory to you,would you (A) not vote, or (B) votefor the “lesser of two evils”?If your performance in a group effort'was being unjustly criticized, wouldyou (A) settle the score directly withyour critic, or (B) ignore it and letthe group decide its merits? aaa 6. Do you believe that the meeting withyour future mate is primarily a matter Aof (A) geography, or (B) fate?,6. If you were to come unexpectedly intoa sizable sum of money, would you (A)bank or invest it and spend only theincome, or (B) take a year off totravel around the world?7. Do you think the saying “It neverrains, but it pours” is (A) generallyuntrue, or (B) invariably true?Would you rather invest money in;(A) great art, or (B) diamonds? □aa9. Are you influenced more in yourchoice of filter cigarette by «(A) your own taste and judgment,or (B) friendly advice?mm Next time you light up, take a moment tothink about what you really want in yourfilter cigarette. Most men and women whothink for themselves choose VICEROY ...for the very sound reason that it’s the onecigarette with a thinking man’s filter and asmoking man’s taste.*7/ you checked (B) on three out of the firstfour questions, and (A) on four out of thelast five, you really think for yourself!• 1039, Drown A Williamson Tobacco Corp.The Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows— Familiarpack orcrush-proofbox.ONLY VICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN'SFILTER... A SMOKING MAN’S TASTE IComing events on quadranglesFriday, 24 AprilClass in elementary Hebrew I, 11:30 am,5715 Woodlawn avenue, sponsored byHlUel foundation.In ter-varsity Christian fellowship meet*ing, 12:30 pm, Ida Noyes small lounge.Non - denominational Bible study inEphesians.Florence Jane Adams poetry - readingcontest, finals, Bond chapel, 3 pm.Political Science association depart¬mental seminar,'3:30 pm, Social sci¬ences 302. George Fischer, professor ofRussian history, Brandels University. Title to be announced.Lecture series: “Biography," UniversityCollege, 64 East Lake street, 8 pm.“Outstanding American biography,”Harry Barnard, columnist, ChicagoDaily News, and noted biographer.Benefit concert, Chicago Symphony or¬chestra ensemble, First UnitarianChurch, 1174 East 57th street, 8:15 pm.Presented by the First UnitarianChurch and the Channlng - Murrayclub in cooperation with FOTA. Ad¬mission $1 student; $2 general; can beobtained at Reynolds club and thechurch office. Lecture: Speaker, Saul Bellow, author of“The adventures of Augle March” and“Henderson the rain king.” Mandelball, 8:15 pm.Concert: Compositions by Marshall Bla-losky (University College), Fullertonhall, Art Institute, 8:30 pm. Performedby members of the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra and the NBC Studio Orches¬tra.Poetry reading: Dominican Monk of SanFrancisco poets, Brother Antoninus,reading his poems, 8:30 pm, FrancisParker school, 330 West Webster.Sponsored by Big Table. Admission atdoor; $1 students; $1.50 general.For rentFor saleARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeingand Refinishing ofShoes and Handbags• Colors matched • Toes cut out• Vamps lowered • PlatformsremovedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'NARROW HEELSHeels changed — Any style —Any colorBackstraps Removed and Springa-lators inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'SullivansRubber Product’sFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St. ClassifiedsSublease, avail. May 1: Unfurn. apt., 5large rms. plus 2 end. porches, 2nd fl.,rent $115. One month’s rent free If yousign a year lease. 6815 East End Ave.,FA 4-2689, L. Russell.3 rooms, stove, refrigerator. 3rd floorrear. $75 a month. BA 1-2647.Small room, private bath, close to cam¬pus, Co-op, IC. Kit. prlv. avail. Gradmale preferred. Clean. PL 2-1667.Avail. May 1: Lrg. 2 rm. furn. apt., sepa¬rate kit. Ac rear entr., back porch; 3rdfl. Bldg, near Unlv.; occupied mostlyby grad students, perfect for studentsat $60 per mo. MU 4-5654 or see mngr.,6042 Ingleside.Kooms for rent, $25-645 per month. Eve¬ning meals. Phi Kappa Psl fiat., 5555Woodlawn, PL 2-9704.2'/2 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 4-0200Km. in stud. apt. $35 mo. lncl. kit. facll.<fc util. MU 4-8440. ServicesEfficient, experienced typist. Call DR3-2654 after 5 p.m.Electric typing. NO 7-4439 after 5 pm.SEWING — Alterations, hems, curtains.Call MU 4-3941.Home typing—thesis, dissertations, etc.N. MacDougall, OA 4-3240.PersonalRemember, you read it inthe Maroon.SATURDAY JOBS(male or female)Earnings up to $30 IF YOUare free to work on Sat.enjoy speaking to peoplecan follow simple Instruct.Transportation from UC & completetraining furnished. Apply Fri. after¬noon or Sat., 9 am-12 noon, suite 210,Prudential building, or call RA 6-0980. Two female first-year students seekingroommates (1 or 2) for next fall. Furn.or unfurn. apt. Contact 1311 New Dorm,BU 8-6610.Cafe Pietro, Hyde Park’s only Cafe Ex-presso, opens May 1. 1369 East 57thStreet.Phikeias,Get the keg ready. We’ll see you Sun¬day.Phi DeltsWORKSHOP IN CREATIVE WRITING* PLaza 2-8377If you won’t be reading TIME nextweek, be sure to come yourself. BrotherAntoninus, Dominican monk of the SanFrancisco poets, reading his poems andthose of the Beat Generation poets. To¬night, Francis Parker School, 330 WestWebster. Sunday night, Ida Noyes Hall.General $1.50, students $1,Standard fluid process duplicator, tablemodel. In good condition. Price $20. In¬quire at 956 E. 58th Street, 2nd floor.New Eng. bikes, discounts. MI 3-9048.Custom made sofa. Havre brown, likenew. Call MU 4-2608.Black Nikon SP 35MM F1.8 Nlkkor lens.Lens shade & cap. Schwalberg strap. 20"cable release. Excellent, $295. SA 2-2334.Help wantedAfternoon cashier work available. Hours:1-6 pm. Mon. thru Fri. Prefer marriedgrad, student. Should be available forat least one year. Summer work manda¬tory. WOODLAWN CURRENCY EX¬CHANGE. 1173 E. 55th St. J' lA/ear C ontacf <JCenie5byDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372 Get Them Hot atNICKYSPIZZERIA1235 E. 55thCaptures yourpersonalityas well asyour personNow with . . . CoronaStudio1314 E. 53rd St.MU 4-7424PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCETYPEWRITERSAt Our CostFIRST COME —FIRST SERVEDUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE Saturday, 25 AprilSports-car rallye (Wright Foreign andSports Car club). Quadrangles circle,11 am.“Blackfriars" all - student production,“Sour Mash,” Mandel hall, 3 pm.Lecture-demonstration: the Doris Hum¬phrey Dance Theatre group, Ida Noyeshall, 4 pm.Reception with Blackfriars cast for stu¬dents, faculty, and FOTA guests.South lounge, Reynolds club, 4:30 pm.Beau-Arts Ball, Quadrangle club, 1155East 57th street, 9:30 pm.Sunday, 26 AprilPoetry reading: Dominican Monk of SanFrancisco poets, Brother Antoninus,reading his poems, 8:30 pm, Ida Noyeshall. Sponsored by the Maroon andCalvert club. Admission at door: $1students: $1.50 general.Radio program: “Faith of our fathers,"WGN, 7:30 am. “A phase of the wor¬ship and the arts." Siegfried Rein¬hardt, department of art, Washing¬ton University, St. Louis, and theUniversity Choir.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10 and 11am, DeSales house, 5735 Universityavenue. Sponsored by Calvert club.Rockefeller Memorial chapel service, 11am. The Reverend Joseph Sittler, pro¬fessor of theology, Federated Theologi¬cal faculty.Carillon concert, Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 2:30 pm. Special program ofHandel music, James R. Lawson.“Israel in Egypt,” by Handel, Rockefel¬ler chapel, 3 pm. The University choirand members of the Chicago Sym¬phony Orchestra; Richard Vikstrom,conductor: Heinrich Fleischer, organ¬ist.Bridge club meeting, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyeslounge, duplicate bridge will beplayed.Festival of Nations, International house,8 pm. A revue of songs, dances, plays,and skits from around the world.Radio program: “The Sacred Note,”WBBM, 8:15 pm (note new time). Aprogram of choral music by the Uni¬versity choir, Richard Vikstrom, direc¬tor; Heinrich Fleischer, organist.Monday, 27 AprilClass in Elementary Hebrew II, 4 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue, sponsored bfHillel foundation.Folk dance group, 4:30 pm, 5715 Wood*lawn avenue, Hillel foundation.Tuesday, 28 AprilInter-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing, 12:30 pm, Ida Noyes small lounge,Non-denomlnational Bible study inI Peter.Lecture series: “Problems of the Presi¬dency,” University College, 7 pm.“Presidential leadership and the pro¬gram of economic and military assist¬ance,” George Llska, assistant profes¬sor, department of political science.Television program: “Children growing,”WTTW, 9:30 pm. “Handicaps,” MarisPiers, child care program, Institute forPsychoanalysis, Chicago, and Lee Wil¬cox, associate director of educationalbroadcasting.Wednesday, 29 AprilClass in Yiddish, 11 am, 5715 Woodlawnavenue, sponsored by Hillel founda¬tion.Hug Ivri (Hebrew speaking group). 12:30pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue, Hillelfoundation.Lecture: “Close binary stars,” 3:30 pm,Eckhart 133. Dr. Kevin Prednergast,last In the series of lectures by theYerkes observatory faculty.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel. James R. Lawson.Organ recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller chapel,Heinrich Fleischer.University Glee club rehearsal. 7 pm,Ida Noyes theatre.Lecture series: “The image of Chicago,”University College, 7:30 pm. “Thesearch for an image,” Hugh Duncan,Chicago social historian.Country dancers, 8 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Beginners welcome.Lecture: “Britain, India, and the UnitedStates,” social science 122, 8 pm. Pro¬fessor K. A. Nilakanta Sastri, directorof Institute of traditional cultures inMadras. India, and visiting professor-of Indian history at the University,Lecture co-sponsored by the depart¬ment of history and the ParaknathDas. The public Is invited.West house coffee hour, 9 to 11 pm. firstfloor lounge. Music, food, companion¬ship,INSTITUTE FOR SYSTEM RESEARCHMuseum of Science and IndustryEMPLOYMENT INTERVIEWSinterested in Air Force ResearchOffice of Vocotionol Thursday afternoonGuidance and Placement April 30, 1959Phone Mr. Calvin Reynolds Clubext. 3284 for appointment 5706 UniversitySEMINAR: "System Engineering at W.A.D.C."Speaker: Paul W. Nosker Friday, May 1, 10 amSystem Dynamic Branch Conference room — 318Aeronautical Research Lab Ask ot MuseumWright Air Development Center Information desk U.S. KEDSfor perfect footwork and comfortProfessionally designed by and for top-flight tennisplayers. Featuring a flexible arch for comfort; anabrasion-resistant sole that stands up to any playingsurface; laces to the toe to insure perfect fit, completesupport Fully cushioned, heel to toe. About $8.50tLOOK FOR THE KEDS LABELUAc S-Aoe etf CAa+Hjb&rrU-United States RubberRockefeller Center, New York 20, N. Y.April 24, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • ?..... '-ja 1 y«— . — . 'GLAMS RESTAURANT$|0V SPECIAL J527 E. 55th St.$*109Try our delicious BROILED CLUB STEAK — with chef's salad,french dressing, french fries, hard roll, bread and butter. EUROPEDublin to the Iron Curtain; Africato Sweden. You’re accompanied —not herded. College age only. Alsoshort trips. $724-51,390.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255 Sequoia (Box 4) — Pasadena, Cal. Universal Army StoreHeadquarters far sport and work wearFlap pocket wash & wear ivy league trousers — Wash & wear dressshirts — camping equip. — Complete line of keds footwear — trenchcoats — luggage and trunks.1144 East 55th st. * DO 3-95720 % reduction with this coupon2 GRAND PRIZES 25 SECOND PRIZESRambler “American "/Big-car roominess. ..small-car economy. . .tops in performance! COIIJMKIA Sll HI0PH0NICHI M SMSRig Strrpo' styledengineered tor the mostexacting taste100 THIRD PRIZES:LIGHT UP AND LIVE IT UP I 3 great cigarettes offer you 627 chances to win!So pick your pack—save the six wrappers—and get going! It's crossword puzzle fun and realsmoking pleasure all the way!ENTER OFTEN —HAVE FUN —AND WIN! But think carefully! This puzzle is not as easy as it looks. Atfirst the DOWN and ACROSS clues may appear simple. There may appear to be more than one “right”answer. For example, the clue might read: “Many a coed will be given her best date’s P--N.” Either “I’*(PIN) or “E” (PEN) would seem to fit. But only one answer is apt and logical as decided by the judging staff,and therefore correct. Read the rules carefully. ENTER AS OFTEN AS YOU WISH. Good luck! 1M1KS0N I MANSIS I OKRADIOSPacket! with |ioweip!.*ys 1500 tn\ on i setof hatteiies500 FOURTH PRIZES:Cartons of America's finest cigarettesRULES—PLEASE READ CAREFULLY1. The College Puzzle Contest is open to collegestudents and college faculty members except em¬ployees and their immediate families of Liggett& Myers and its advertising agencies.2. Fill in all missing letters ... print clearly. Useof obsolete, archaic, variant or foreign wordsprohibited. After you have completed the puzzle,send it along with six empty package wrappersof the same brand from L&M, Chesterfield orOasis cigarettes (or one reasonable hand-drawnfacsimile of a complete package wrapper of anyone of the three brands) to: Liggett & Myers,P. O. Box 271, New York 46, N. Y. Enter asoften as you wish, but be sure to enclose sixpackage wrappers (or a facsimile) with eachentry. Illegible entries will not be considered.3. Entries must be postmarked by midnight,Friday, May 29,1959 and received by midnight,Friday, June 5, 1959.4. Entries will be judged by the Bruce-RichardsCorporation, an independent judging organiza¬tion, on the basis of logic and aptness of thoughtof solutions. In the event of ties, contestants willbe required to complete in 25 words or less thefollowing statement: “My favorite cigarette is(Chesterfield) (L&M) or (Oasis) because ”.Entries will be judged on originality, aptness ofthought and interest by the Bruce-RichardsCorporation. Duplicate prizes will be awardedin event of final ties. Illegible entries will not beconsidered. By entering all entrants agree thatthe decision of the judges shall be final andbinding.5. Solutions must be the original work of thecontestants submitting them. All entries becomethe property of Liggett & Myers and none willbe returned.€. Winners will be notified by mail as soon aspossible after completion of the contest.7. This contest is subject to all Federal, Stateand local laws and regulations. I HURRY! ENTER NOW! CONTEST CLOSES MAT 29,1959I CLUES ACROSS:1. These may indicate that a nation is prepared to wage war in the air.16. Some college students.10. When at Light up an Oasis.11. Sinking ship deserter.112. Plural pronoun.13. One expects •.... discussions in a sociology class.116. A student’s careless might annoy a short-story instructor.17. Initials of Uruguay and Denmark.18. Germanium (Chcm.)119. Nova Scotia (Abbr.)21. It probably would count when you pick a horse to bet on.22. Sometimes a girl on a date must into her pocketbook to help1 pay the tab.| 23. The muscle-builder’s may fascinate a poorly developed man.124. Chemical Engineer (Abbr.)26. Campers will probably be by a forest fire.129. When starting a trip, tourists usually look forward to the first31. At home. v32. Literate in Arts (Abbr.)133. Familiar for faculty member.35. Associate in Arts (Abbr.)36. One could appear quite harmless at times.137. Reverse the first part of “L&M”.38. What will soon appear in a bombed-out city.I CLUES DOWN:1. The beginning and end of pleasure.12. A rural : can be inviting to a vacationist.3. Second and third letters of OASIS.. 4. When one is packed, it could be exasperating to rememberI a few articles that should be included.I 5. It would pay to be careful when glass is16. Grounds to relax on with a mild CHESTERFIELD.7. Author Ambler.18. District Attorney (Abbr.) „9. A from Paris should please the average woman.12. An inveterate traveler will about distant lands.114 are hard to study.15. Stone. Bronze and Iron20. How Mexicans say, “Yes”.123. AH L&M cigarettes are “ high” in smoking pleasure.25. May be a decisive factor in winning a horse race.127. Initials of Oglethorpe, Iona, Rutgers and Emerson.28. United Nations Organization (Abbr.)30. Golf mound.1,32. Colloquial for place where the finest tobaccos are tested for L&M,33. Poet Laureate (Abbr.), 34. Filter ends,f 35. What Abner might be called.I 36. Bachelor of Education degree. o TPRINT CLEARLY! ENTER AS OFTEN AS YOU WISHMail to Liggett & Myers. P. 0. Box 271, New York 46, New York. Besure to attach six empty package wrappers of the same brand (orfacsimile) from Chesterfield, L&M, or Oasis cigarettes.Name.Address.College.This entry must be postmarked before midnight. May 29,1959, andreceived at P. 0. Box 271, New York 46, New York, by midnight,June 5,1959.OLtieett & Myen 7«baeee Ce.COLLEGE PUZZLE CONTESTFOR STUDENTS AND FACULTY MEMBERSCulture VultureOn CampusTheatreNext Friday, a lone and lonelyremnant of the university’s non¬festival arts, together with awhole host of artistic off shootswill appear when University The¬atre's production of Shakespeare’sMeasure for Measure opens. Theplay, one of Shakespeare’s froth¬iest and most controversial com¬edies, will be directed by guestdirector Paul Sills, formerly ofthe Studebaker, the Compassplayers, Playwrights, etc. Measure for Measure will runMay 1-3 and May 8-10. All per¬formances will be held in theReynold’s club theatre at 8:30 pm.Tickets will soon be sold at theReynold’s club desk.Tomorrow at 8 the Blackfriarswill mash sweetly through thelast performance of their 1959production, Sour Mash. There willbe a reception after the perform¬ance in the South Reynold's clublounge.Live LiteratureThis evening at 8:15 Saul Bel¬low will speak in Mandel on some anonymous topic. Mr. Bellow is,of course, a novelist, and the au¬thor of two books whose titles canbe found on any university calen¬dar. He is in addition a modernnovelist, an American novelistand a midwestern novelist. I amfurther told he is a good novelist.With this we shall temporarilyforget him.At 3 this afternoon the finalsof the FOTA-affiliated poetry con¬test will be held in Bond Chapel.In case you haven’t seen the in¬side of Bond with its carefulGothicism, and Beatitude-New UT play eludes finalword, demands thoughtby Mark AshinLike Shakespeare’s greater plays, Measure for Measure eludes interpretation. For half itslength, it seems to have the shape of a “problem play.” Though not strictly Elizabethan,if this term describes a play which attempts to provide a dramatically acceptable solutionto some social or moral problem, then it can be applied to the entire drama.Measure for Measure is a play which puts the inhabitants of a state, ruler and ruled alike,to the test of justice and mercy. The problem can be phrased as a question: What degreeof interplay between the need t—~— r~rr ~—~—r—r—77—; :for law and imncrative of tort Justlce’ but he proceeds to her brother s weakness m prefer-lor .,aw IT ai mate a mockery of justice by mis- ring her dishonor to his death. Bycnarity is pioper in a J-nris- using his power to violate the law the end of the play, her experi-lian state. How can social order he was SUpposed to enforce. Hav- ences as an agent of the Duke’s ining failed the test, he is trapped bringing Angelo to justice haveby the Duke into a situation which given her a greater awareness of bedecked radiators, this should bean excellent occasion on which todo so. Enough.Motion PicturesLes Enfants du Paradis will beshown by Documentary films thisevening at 7:15 and 9:15. The filmtakes place in 19th century Parisamong the clowns, beggars, mur¬derers, and/or noblemen whoflock in and out of the pantomimetheatre. Movie and audience mayflock at will in and out of SocialScience 122.Off CampusMusicThis afternoon the ChicagoSymphony will present Handel’sJudas Maccabaeus, with the Chi¬cago Symphony choir and theFirst Unitarian church kinder-choir. Around Christmas fifteenHandel’s Messiahs were sung.Now two Handels in a week. Was there only one religious, vocalcomposer without a copyright?The Chicago Chamber orchestrawill present a concert Sunday at4 in Fullerton hall, the Art insti¬tute. The program will include apiano concerto by Shostakovich,with Jack Hensen, pianist, andFrank Koderabok, trumpet, anda premiere of Bye’s NetherlandsSuite, performed in honor of theDutch engravings exhibit current¬ly showing at the institute.TheatreTennessee William’s GardenDistrict is currently playing atthe Civic Theatre. The productionincludes two short plays, set inthe luxury area in New Orleans.Something Unspoken, the first ofthe two, concerns the relationshipof two women, employer and em¬ployee. Suddenly U a s t Summerconcerns topics unknown.PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO."Hyde Park's Most Complete Point & Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 ' 1154-58 E. 55th et.be reconciled with human imper¬fection?Accepting this as Ta hyP^the®is leads to public exposure and pri- human motives. She is able to re-about the meaning, I would sum¬marize the plot as follows: TheBecause "Measure forMeasure," to be producedby University Theatre nextweek, is a complex play,permitting many interpreta¬tions, the Maroon has askedseveral members of the Uni¬versity English departmentto describe their own inter¬pretations of it.In this issue, Mark Ashin,associate professor of Eng¬lish in the college, has writ¬ten a brief analysis of theplay. Ashin is currentlyteaching a divisional coursein Shakespeare.University Theatre's pro¬duction of Measure forMeasure will run May 1-3and May 8-10. Tickets willsoon be on sale at the Reyn¬old's club desk. All per¬formances will be at 8:30pm in the Reynold's clubtheatre. vate recognition of his true na- spond to an appeal to her clem-ture. ency and thus passes the test toHowever, instead of the punish- which she has been subjected byment he deserves, his life is the Duke. The comedy can endspared. Because he is sincerely in reconciliation and forgivenessrepentant, because his evil inten- when the Duke, now educated totions have been frustrated by the his responsibilities as a ruler,Duke, and because Isabella, his in- gives everybody their "propertended victim, pleads for his sal- ^ues •*vation, mercy can intervene to *triumph over the demands of astrict justice.Yet it is not only Angelo withhis false virtue who is beingtested. Isabella, though she provesher virtue to be true, appears toounbending when she condemns HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and Waffles 1342Open from Down to Down east 53 st.3fie ' PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433Duke of Vienna, through exces¬sive leniency (or a slack and inad¬vertent mercy) has allowed hiscity to slack into corruption. Topurify it, he delegates power to aman of reputed virtue who is thusput to the test of rule. Disregard¬ing his commission to rule fairlybut with mercy, Angelo immedi¬ately goes to the opposite extremefrom his lord by enforcing the fullletter of the law. At first his harshadministration seems only to dis- SPLURGE! Next timereally go all out...have a steak with yourBlldtveisen Sure!...where there’s life, there’s Bud®Millions of times a yeardrivers and students keepawake with safe NoDozLet NoDoz®alert youthrough college, tooNoDoz keeps you alert with caf¬feine—the same pleasant stim¬ulant you enjoy in coffee. Fast¬er, handier, more reliable: non¬habit-forming NoDoz delivers anaccurate amount of dependablestimulation to keep your mindand body alert during study andexams until you can rest or sleep.P. S.: When you need NoDoz,it'll probably be late. Play safe.Keep a supply handy.J. CABSAR, Italian politician, nyn "Allthe bpy» in Rome mm Wildroot onthe If dome! How about you V’a at Whdroot•ml-. WOWt The sate stay awake tablet-• available everywhere , RIM Of BURS • AMHEUSfR • MSCH, INC. • ST. LW1S ♦ NCWANK ► 10$ ANCCIES • WAW • TANPIApril 24, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9= diinng-'f "f5 WoftwPichiM) HitetoeAtfstn remind all College Student* of lf><Special Student Rates always in effect at 1 profilesPhons DC 7-1741 Williamson: English professorEVfKY DAY OF THE WEEKINCL PW. & SAT. EVENINGS . SKOAL7S* sruofNTI <1 (ATI NOWMST SHOW CASHICk YOtJR U>. CAM FERNANDELFORBIDDEN FRUIT*a French Love-DromaDOCUMENTARY FILM' SOCIETYpresents"Children of Paradise"Directed by Marcel Came . . . with Jean-Louis Barraultpromptly at 7:15 fr 9:15 Judd 126single admission, 50<preferential seatinp far series ticket halders When asked for an inter¬view for a Maroon profile,professor George Williamsonof the English department an¬nounced that he’d be quitehappy to give an interview butfeared that he didn’t havemuch of a profile to writeabout. This is not quite thecase.His early books, “The Tal¬ent of T. S. Eliot” (1929) and “TheDonne Tradition” (1930) were pi*,oneer studies that had tremen¬dous influence not only uponscholarship but the taste of awhole generation; he is a widelyrespected expert on 17th centuryliterature and author of “TheSenecan Amble.” a study of proseThe Qreen Door Book ShopHV 3-5829 Chicago 37, IH.1450 EAST 57th STREETChicago's Moat Complete Stoekof Quality Paper Backs CLARK Theatredark fir madisonopen 7 o.m.late show 4 o.m.P A college stwdeet priceJ UC at all timesjust present your student identi¬fication card at the boxoffice.Sunday Film Guild ProgramsApril 26—“The Inn of the SixthHappiness’“White Wilderness-May J —“The Kobe”"Cheaper by th-Dozen”Different double feature daily development in the period.He is the editor of Mod eraPhilology, one of the most re¬spected publications in the field,and he is now the Martin A. Ryer-son Distinguished Serviee profes¬sor of Literature.After receiving a BA from Stan¬ford and an MA from Harvard,Williamson returned to Stanfordfor his PhD, writing for his thesisthe work which became “TheDonne Tradition.." Williamsonpersonally felt, and holds that the1920s as a whole felt a specialkinship with 17th century writers,and especially for Donne. R wasTHiNKUSH this “kinship” which promptedhim to select this period as hisfield of special interest.This concept of “kinship" is amimportant aspect of Williamson’scritical system. “We can neverhave a scientific objectivity aboutcriticism. Even if such an objectivity were possible it would bedangerous. Critical values change.“But there is a consistency tothe value of criticism itself. Thatis, the value derived from the flkimination and interpretation ofhuman experience.‘That way that people havefelt, the way the a people feels isultimately and most definitely described by the poets, ft is thepoets then who best illuminateand best interpret life."Williamson is pleased at hav¬ing been awarded the Ryersonchair, but expects it to influencehis plans only slightly. He has amagazine to edit, new books towrite (currently planned: a crit¬icism of 17th century poetry anda collection of his scattered es¬says) and his courses to teach.English: HILLTOP HASH HOUSEtranslation; This diner isperched on a mountain peak, whichRthjS makes it a crestaurant! The view is tops>Vj An —but from there on, things go downhill.| A typical meal includes a puny melonj (scantaloupe) and your choice of sand-wmmmmmmrnm wiches (shamburgers or rankfurters). It’sv all served up, naturally, on 50-yr.-oldJL, dishes ^crockery). Best course to take:/jp light up a Lucky . . . enjoy the honest. • [ taste of fine tobacco. There’s no tip—s - at the end!feathereo musical group aversion to cookinoThinklish: PANIMOSITYBOBBLEEnglish: HAG’S TIMEPIECEchomp*014 jmarvaro nThinklish: WITCHWATCHThinklish: STORKESTRAALLAN BISHOP. NORTHWESTERN U. NACPHERSON,HOW TO MAKE *25ljv;,rs3i»;-Take a word—amplifier, for example. With it, you can make a wetmicrophone (damplifier), a torch singer’s mike (vamplifier), a boxing-ringloudspeaker (champlifier) or a P.A. system in an army post (camplifier).That’s Thinklish—and it’s that easy! We’re paying $25 for the Thinklishwords judged best—your check is itching to go! Send your words to LuckyStrike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, New York. Enclose your name, address,college or university and class.msGet the genuine articlethe honest tasteof a LUCKY STRIKE how would ^ like it if youwere a beautiful, glamorous,rich, unfulfilled movie star?JULES FEIFFERauthor of SICK, SICK, SICKexplains it all in his new bookPassionellaand other stories$1.75, paperbound,at the college store McGRA w-hiliM DAY EUROPEANIRAVEL STUDY TOURINCLUDBtAirline Transportation30 Days in Pari*40 Hour Course In Culture ofEurope Today At PrivateAccredited University30 Day Tout, * DifferenlItineraries, Including USSROrganiaed WeekendsFARIS-FRANCE-iUROPE ASSOCIATIONFOR TRAVEL AND STUDY10 Cost 4»th Street, Nsw York 17, N Y.Mhss send im put Iras II paptorture.Add nil..,City... ..lists..<9 a. r. o*.10 • C HICAGO MAROON Product of c/& jtfmtu'eran (Jv^ciceo-^onyictr^ — (Jc&ueeo- is our middle name• April 24, 1959 tARIS-FRANCE-EUROFI ASSOCIATIONFOR TRAVEL AND STUDYID tat 4?tb New York 1 lt N> Y.Dr. Allison, atomic physicistSamuel K. Allison, pioneeratomic physicist, is one of fourfaculty members appointed todistinguished service profes¬sorships. He will be the FrankP. Hixon Distinguished Serv¬ice professor of Physics.Allison, a member of the phys¬ics faculty for nearly 30 years,played a key role both in theachievement of the first control¬led nuclear chain reaction in thedevelopment of the atomic bomb.After World war II he partici¬pated in organizing what is nowthe Enrico Fermi institute fornuclear research and served asits director from 1946 until 1958.He is now devoting his time tostudies of low energy particles.Allison is conducting research with the kevatron, a low energyatom smasher he designed, in thefield of nuclear transformation ofsuch light elements as deuterium,lithium, beryllium, and boron.Allison entered UC as a fresh¬man in 1917 and received his PhDin 1923. After receiving researchfellowships at Harvard and theCarnegie institute, he taught forfour years at the University ofCalifornia before returning tojoin the UC faculty in 1930.Before World war II Allison al¬ready had begun the first experi¬ments on nuclear fission (at UC).He was present at mankind’s firstsustained and controlled chain re¬action on December 2, 1942, inwest stands.In January, 1942, he was placedin charge of physics research andmade director of the chemistry division of the war-time metallur¬gical laboratory. He was ap¬pointed full director of the ML in1943.In 1944, he was transferred toLos Alamos where he served aschairman of the scheduling com¬mittee of the project that led tothe explosion of the first atomicbomb at Alamagordo,' New Mex¬ico, in 1945.The following year he wasawarded the army’s medal ofmerit and a presidential citationfor his work on the atomic projectand was elected to the NationalAcademy of Sciences.His book, "X-Rays in theory andexperiment,” written with A. H.Compton in 1934, is still consid¬ered an outstanding work in thefield by many scientists.Asked for a statement on theproblems that atomic energyposed on a political level, he ad¬mitted the probability of settingup detection stations throughoutboth Russia and the US, but re¬marked, "How well are the peo¬ple of any town, Bloomington,Illinois, for example, going to likea Russian inspection team havingfree passage to a station in theirtown any time they wish?”Hesitating to make any predic¬tions as to what the science ofatomic energy will create in thefuture, Allison commented thatperhaps the spectacular pheno¬mena in nuclear science have al¬ready happened."Predictions are always beingdisproved. Michaelson made a pre¬diction last century that every¬thing had ben done in science thatwas to be done. Next thing youknew, X - rays were discovered,then the mystery of atomic energyunfolded. Future displays? We’llwait and see.”Leo Strauss, political scientist Louis GottschakGottschalk, historianAs a student Gottschalk attended Cornell where he amasseda rather remarkable record, receiving a BA in 1919, an MA in1920, and a PhD in history in 1921. (It takes the average UChistory major 11 years after graduation to earn a doctorate.)From Cornell, he went to theUniversity of Illinois, where hetaught for two years, from thereto the University of Louisvillewhere he taught for four years,until a disagreement with thepresident over the relative meritsof libraries and football playersoperated for the immediate bene¬fit of tfc.Why did Gottschalk become anhistorian? "My reasons havechanged. I’m interested in humanbeings, how they originate, howtheir institutions grow; I’vegrown less interested in historyfor its own sake. You might sayI’ve changed from a pure to a did¬actic historian."This sort of history necessar ilyinvolves subjective or imaginativeaspects, at least in regard to anhistorian’s preferences and em¬phasis. Were this not so, there’d be as little disagreement amonghistorians as there is amongphysicists. It doesn’t bother methat I can’t be definite on a non-definitive question."History is a story of man’s ex¬perience. Any field of knowledgecan be approached historically;what ever can possibly shed lighton the experience of any man isan intrinsic part of history. Thatas pect which interests me mostis the history of the accumulationof knowledge.”A former editor of the Journalof Modern History and the authorof six books on Lafayette, Gott¬schalk is the co-author of “Europeand the Modern World,” author-editor of volume IV of UNESCO’s"History of the Scientific and Cul¬tural Development of Mankind,”and working on a three-volumestudy of the role of Lafayette inthe French revolution.Leo Strauss is the author of“The Political Philosophy ofHobbes” (1936), "On Tyran¬ny” (1950), “Persecution andthe Art of Writing” (1952),“Natural Right and History”(1953), “Thoughts on Machi-avelli,” and the forthcoming"What is Political Philosophy andother essays?”Translations of “Natural Right and History” have been made intoFrench, German, and Italian.Born in Hesse, Germany, Straussreceived his PhD at Hamburg uni¬versity in 1921. From 1925 to 1932,he was research assistant at theAcademy of Jewish research inBerlin, and from 1932 to 1934 aRockefeller fellow in the socialsciences in France and England.He came to this country in 1938and was naturalized in 1944. Strauss was professor of Poli¬tical Science and Philosophy onthe graduate faculty of the NewSchool for Social Research, NewYork city, before he joined theUC faculty as professor of Poli¬tical Philosophy in 1949.He has been visiting professorof philosophy and political sci¬ence at the University of Cali¬fornia and at Hebrew university,Jerusalem, as well as lecturer innumerous colleges and universi¬ties in the US.Strauss is currently supervisingthe English translation of “Maim-onides’ Guide for the Perplexed,”a work written in Arabic by a 13thcentury scholar, and preparing aseries of studies on the origins ofpolitical science.He is a member of the editorialboard of the American PoliticalScience Review.When asked to comment on therole that specific philosophershave played in political history,Strauss observed that many timesa popular philosopher was giventoo much credit in the influenc¬ing of history: for instance,Nietzsche hardly affected Hitler’sthoughts on the seizure of land. SOUR MASHCommand PerformanceMandel HallApril 25 3:00 pmTickets: $1, $1.50, $2"ANEXTRAORDINARY FILM...AN EXPERIENCE! "ANUNCOMMON ANDFASCINATING FILM...The picture is hypnotic and some portionswill nail the spectator to his seat.”— N. Y. Times"A Drama of Astonishing Purity . . .A tribute to Dreyer's genius and taste.”— N. Y. Herald-Tribune"A Masterpiece ... an intense, impas¬sioned psychological study. Spellbinding!”— Daily News"It'S Magic! Everything one could ex¬pect from the genius who made 'Day ofWrath/ ” — N. Y. Post"THEWORDCARLDREYER'S A piercing ond powerful contempla¬tion of the passage of man upon thisearth. Essentially intellectual, yetemotionally stimulating, too. . . magnificently madeand acted!"Crowther, N. Y. Times"IMAGINATIVE"— The New Yorker"BEAUTIFUL"— Tne SaturdayReviewWritttn and Directedby Ingmar BergmanOHDET Fri-Sat8:30 onlySEVENTH SEAL 6:15, 10:40 Sun Weekdays3:45, 8:151:30, 6, 10:30 6, 10:30 THE TIME-HONOREDGenerations of our Britishcousins have enjoyed a friend¬ly feeling for this most sport¬ing of gentlemen’s jackets.Unchanged in fashion, it isrendered up-to-date by our in»terpretation in a modem fab¬ric of minimum weight, andby the brilliance of our choicem metal buttons.‘37’°JSrittanjj,Ltd.7104 S. JefferyPL 2-4030Open Mon. Cr Thurs. eves.Free Parking atCyril Court Garage1948 E. 71st PI.April 24, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Theodore Schultz for seesa new era in agricultureBUT WHY IT ttRttlGTHAT'S SO ME, IHtSTER?vtTtheoSirSTOf THE WEAR THHTTHE eOHEfeMNPERSUASION \SmSUBVERTED ! BUT VJHRT ABOUTVMlTER-VooCAN'T tdEAftSANDIES IN THEWINTER,CAN YOU?"hwomjT^CAUCUS 5T6KSMANAGE 101«VE THE CUT with SPRINGthe INSURMOUNTABLE'AU.OF OUR BEARDSBEGIN TO MOLT! A UC economist said April15 that a new era is dawningfor agriculture throughout theworld.Theodore W. Schultz, chairmanof the department of economics,said the reason lies with the im¬proved quality of what is beingdone down on the farm.The basic shift in the forces atwork in agriculture is makingwhat people know a more impor¬tant factor than the land theyfarm, he said.Schultz gave his analysis to theInternational Agricultural con¬vention he is attending in Jeru¬salem, Israel. His address wasmade available in Chicago by theUC office of agricultural econom¬ics research.Behind the trend in agricultureto produce more and bettor prod¬ucts with fewer people, less landand comparatively smaller invest¬ments, Schultz said, is the greatstep-up in the “quality of input”on farm work.“Agriculture is no longer a mill-Chrisfian ScienceMonitorVi Price, to students, faculty, andcollege libraries.6 mo*. — $4.50—one yr. $9.001 <48 E. 57th St.Chicago 37, III. Spanish PaperbacksSUMMIT BOOKS138 So. Wabash Calvert ClubMIXERdancing - refreshmentsFri., April 21, 8:30 pmDe Sales House, 5735 UniversityRudy’sAuthorizedU of C Class RingsSales OMEGA ServiceIndividuallydesigned, handmadejewelry(Discount to students*1523 East 53rd st.NOrmal 7-2666 ACASA BOOKSTOREGood Used BooksCarefully selected Imports of cards, giftschildren's booksreliable typewriter service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651PACKARDMADE-TO-MEASURE SHIRTS> Tailored To Individu¬al measurements.Over 100 Farrics ForDress. Sport Shirts.* Fit Any Man. Recaro-less or Size.I Choice Or Collar.*Cuff. Boot Style.Satisfied Customers—Coast-To-CoastONLY $3.95Fraternity monograms inGreek lettering availableHY 3-5192for appointment stone that economic progressmust carry as a burden,” Schultzsaid. “Instead it becomes one ofthe sections that can contributemuch to economic growth.”Schultz, who holds the CharlesL. Hutchinson Distinguished Serv¬ice professorship, said the way toavoid “economic puzzles and para¬doxes” in agricultural policy is torecognize what he called “The quality of resources hypothesis."This theory, he said, “specifiesthat these particular opportunities in agriculture are a consequence of significant improvements in the quality of resourcesused in agriculture and that therate of return on the expendituresthat are made to obtain this quality has been high.Fellowship availableTwo hundred fellowshipsfor graduate study in 15 for¬eign countries will be offeredby foreign governments and uni¬versities .through the Institute ofInternational education for theacademic year 1960-61.The Institute announced todaythat applications for the fellow-shops will be available on May 1and will be accepted until Novem¬ber 1, 1959.The scholarships cover tuitionand varying amounts of mainte¬nance in universities in Austria,Denmark, France, Germany. Iran,Israel, Italy, the Netherlands,Sweden, Switzerland, Canada,Brazil, and Mexico. Students ap¬plying for Italian universityawards or Austrian, Danish,French, German or NetherlandsGovernment awards may applyfor a Fulbright travel agent to supplement their scholarships.Two additional awards, offered byan American foundation, are forany country in the Far East,South or Southeast Asia andAfrica.General eligibility requirementsare United States citizenship, aBachelor’s degree or its equiva¬lent before departure, languageability sufficient to carry on theproposed study, and good health.A good academic record and demonstrated capacity for independent study are also necesary.For further information andapplication forms, prospectiveapplicants should write to theInformation and Counseling divi¬sion, Institute of Internationaleducation, 1 East 67th Street, NewYork 21, New York, or to any ofthe Institute’s regional offices.CANOE TRIPSPersonal service for wilderness canoetrips Into the Quetico-Superlor wil¬derness. Camping equipment, Grum¬man aluminum canoes and choicefood supplies only $6.00 per personper day. For complete Informationwrite Bill Rom. CANOE COUNTRYOUTFITTERS, Box 717 C, Ely. Minn. Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRISTlilt E. 63 HY 3-5352★ THE OLD TOWN SCHOOL OF FOLK MUSIC ★America's first permanent school devoted to the study of "folk” songand instrument, announces an intensive 4 week, daytime, summercourse. July 6th thru July 30Hi. For details — write ta333 W. North Awe., ('kicatfo 10. III.Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. .HI 3-2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.m. - II p.m.For real, down-to-earthsmoking enjoyment, there’snothing else like Camel. Noother cigarette brings youthe rich flavor and easy¬going mildness of Camel’scostly blend. More peoplesmoke Camels than anyother cigarette of any kind.Today as always, the besttobacco makes the bestsmoke.Rise above fadsand fancy stuff . . •Have a realcigarette-have a CAMEL“Only time he comes downis when he wants a Camel!”R. J. ReynoldsTob. Co.,Winston-Salem, N C. WERT • VALUE • VALORIn any language there's value In living at the Versailles. Cheer¬ful surroundings, for refined people who appreciate a quiet,restful, home-lllce atmosphere. Elegant hotel rooms and 2*iroom apartments tastefully decorated, furnished or un-furnlshed;at attractive rates. Parcel receiving. Doorman. Night Watchman;maid and linen service If desired. Rentals as low as $65 per month. IllC *74e ‘V&ueulleA- ^”5234 DORCHESTER FA 4-0200 ^VACLIA • VALOR • VA1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 —HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & GalleryNEW POLICY• Open 7 nights• Closed tue. and wed. lunch• Featuring — Complete wine menu' • ■ and Hors d'oeuvre TableCheese Smell12"...1.30 Combination ..... Small12"..2.25Sausage .. .1.65 Mushroom ..2.00Anchovy .. .1.65 Shrimp ..2.25Pepper & Onion . .. .1.50 Bacon fir Onion . . . .2.00Free Delivery on All Pizza to VC StudentsTHIS COUPON WORTH $.25On any deliveryOr on any luncheon and/ordinner served12 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 24, 1959