ChicagoVoi. 67, No. 32 University of Chicago, May 1f 1959 Law day talk tonightLowell B. Mason, former Federal Trade commission mem¬ber, will give a Law day address on campus this evening.Mason, now a Washington, DC, attorney, will speak on“Clarence Darrow’s Unreported Case,” at 8:15 pm in Breastedhall.The faculty of the Law school is sponsoring the address.Mason will be introduced by Andrew J. Dallstream, Chicagoattorney. The lecture is open to the public without charge.The event is offered as part of the Law school’s participationin today’s national observance of Law Day, May 1, as pro¬claimed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower.Mason, a Northwestern university law school alumnus,formerly served as assistant general corporation counsel forthe city of Chicago. He was a member of the Illinois state' senate from 1922 to 1930.Elect four on faculty to<National science academyNed Rosenheim, professor of humanities in the College,gives his interpretation of the Chicago Review controversyin a Maroon's profile, page 5. Each week the Maroon fea¬tures an interview with outstanding campus personalities inthe editorial page column. < photo by Grant) Four members of the fac¬ulty were elected Wednesdayto the National Academy ofSciences.Appointment to the academyis one of the highest honors thatcan be bestowed upon Americanmen of science. Throughout thenation, only 30 scientists were se¬lected this year. It was understoodthat the University this year re¬ceived the largest number of ap¬pointments to the National Acad¬emy of Sciences of any universityin the nation.The appointments:John A. Simpson, physicist inthe Enrico Fermi institute fornuclear studies, one of two Amer¬icans on the special committee forthe International Geophysicalyear and a pioneer in cosmic rayresearch.Henry Taube, chairman of thedepartment of chemistry, recent¬ly named to head one of the Amer¬ican Chemical society’s largest na¬tional units, the division of inor¬ganic chemistry. He received thefirst American Chemical society award for nuclear applications in.chemistry in 1955 for researchwith radioactive and stable iso¬topes.Gregor Wentzel, a physicist inthe Fermi institute, an interna¬tional authority in theoreticalphysics whose recent investiga¬tions have been in high energyparticle physics and solid statephysics, in particular, problems ofsuper-conductivity in the latterarea.Raymond E. Zirkle, chairman ofthe Committee on Biophysics, whowas principal biologist on the plu¬tonium project of the Manhattan district (atomic bomb project)'during the war years and a presi¬dent of the Radiation Researchsociety.National Academy of Sciencesis a private non-profit corporationcomposed of members chosenfrom among the leading scientistsin the United States. It was in¬corporated under congressionalcharter, approved by PresidentLincoln March, 1863, for the pro¬motion of science and to investi¬gate, examine, experiment and re¬port upon any subject of scienceor the useful arts when requestedby the government.NAACP questions marchUC athletes are honored;varsity teams are praisedThe University administration picked up the tab last Wednesday for a luncheon to honor20 students — all athletes.The luncheon at the Quadrangle club paid tribute to members of varsity teams whichcompleted an unusually successful year.Speakers at the luncheon included vice chancellor John I. Kirkpatrick, dean of studentsP. Netherton, and director of athletics Walter L. Hass.Representing all major var-sity sports in which the Uni¬versity competes, the 20Sabin is namedRickets recipientDh. Albert B. Sabin, devel¬oper of an oral polio vaccinenow undergoing tests, hasbeen named the recipient of the “The University is proud to recog1959 Howard Taylor Ricketts me- nize the achievements,morial award by the University.Dr. Jonas Salk, whose polio vac- athletes wore Maroon blazers at Kirkpatrick added that the suc-the luncheon. cess of individual athletes or of“The basketball team had its varsity squads however “must bebest won-lost record in 38 years; the natural outgrowth of a bal-the swimming team broke every anced intra mural and intercol-UC record as well as most of the legiate program, or they must notUniversity’s pool records; the be at all. The administration willtrack team is undefeated in dual honestly endeavor to make avail-competition, and the wrestling able the support that such a well-team was the best since 1946,” balanced program needs.Kirkpatrick said at the luncheon. “I should like to leave you withone specific space age promise,in the prolonged absence of foot-Kirkpatrick pointed out that in ball, and standing as we are at thethe past year new sweatsuits have threshold of the space age, itcine is now in general use, won been issued to the track team new seems that certain members ofthe award in 1957. gTrJL u n i lo r m the University family would likeDr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, dean jackets to the basketball team, to solve their own space problemsof the division of biological sci- new outfits to the gymnastics by raiding Stagg field.ences, announced the 1959 award team, new uniforms to the base- “Some see it as an ideal site forwould go to Dr. Sabin, professor ball team and even new capes to laboratories and others are hope-the fencing team “In fact,” the ful it can be used for classroomissues space. Still others are anxious toDr alert -c rthuf rtf fhA ^ave use it for additional parkingDr. Sabm also is chief of the proposed that gray flannel suits „ . ,division of infectious diseases at be issued the graduate school of sPace- promise is this: Kirk-the Children’s hospital research business and tweed jackets to stu- Patrick will stand as a bastion ofdents in the humanities. 234 pounds to repulse all such“Just how far does the admin- efforts until the athletic depart-of research pediatrics at the University of Cincinnati college of vice chancellor stated,medicine. (Student Editorial Pressservice)—The Youth Marchfor Integrated schools metwith a vigorous challenge at anAntioch college NAACP meetinglast week as 26 Antiochians pre¬pared for the march to Washing¬ton.Debate and rebuttals flew backand forth after NAACP memberBob Press warned the group that“the time, money and energyspent to send people to Washing¬ton will not accomplish what youwant to do.”“Mass movements such as theYouth march have never forcedan individual to change his mind,”Press charged.“I would rather work throughthe legislators,” he said. He as¬serted that it is the function oflegislative bodies to implementSupreme court decisions callingfor an end to segregation.Press later told the AntiochRecord that he had spoken tomany community members whoagree that the march is an inade¬quate method of bringing aboutintegrated schools. He added thata large number of students whowere enthusiastic about the firstmarch felt the second would notbe effective.Press stated that he would con¬tinue to write to lawmakers ashe has done in the past, urgingthem to fight segregation, andthat he also plans to encourageother students to do the same.* He said that “face-to-face com¬munication between citizen andlegislator” would also be of usein putting an end to segregation.But NAACP member EleanorHolmes offered a rebuttal to thechallenger. The Supreme court de¬cision to end school segregationcame as a result of failure bylegislators to take effective ac¬tion, she said.Student Art Finch pointed out that when many northerners jointhe march it will demonstrate“that the whole North isn’t apa¬thetic.”UC's SC sponsorsfreedom weekAcademic Freedom week,consisting of speakers, discus¬sion and films sponsored byStudent Government and the poli¬tical parties, will be held on cam¬pus beginning this Sunday.Days, topics, speakers, time,place and sponsor of the eventsare listed below.Sunday“Burden of Truth,” film of the prob¬lems that faces Negroes in America, pro¬duced by the United Steelworkers ofAmerica; 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes; preceedingSRP caucus.MondayDiscussion of the loyalty oath ques¬tion by executive secretary of the localchapter of the American Civil Libertiesunion, a local high school principal andCollege dean of students Harold Hay-don; 3 pm, Breasted hall; PSA.“Academic Freedom”; discussion byReuel Denney, College professor of socialsciences. Malcolm Sharp, professor oflaw and Professor Melklejohn; 8 pm,Soc. Scl. 122, SG.T uesday“Current Trends in Civil Liberties”;fifth ward alderman Leon Despres;8 pm, Social Sciences 122; SO.Wednesday“Academic Freedom in the School";Lillian Hersteln, who has been active lathe Teachers’ Union and ACLU; pre¬ceded by a short film ‘‘Freedom toLearn"; 8 pm, Soc Sci 122; SO, SRP andISL.Thursday“Congressional Investigating Commit¬tees;” Kermlt Eby, professor of socialsciences; 8 pm, Soc Scl 122; SO and SRP.SaturdayDiscussion on Civil Liberties by HarryBarnard. Chicago Daily News columnistand frequent contributor to The Nation;preceded by fUm "An Almanac orLiberty,” based on book of same n&maby Justice William O. Douglas; 3 pm,Ida Noyes; SO.SundayDebate of the loyalty oath betweentwo SO law school Independents andtwo members of SRP; ISL mediates;3 pm, Ida Noyes.foundation in Cincinnati.In 1958, the Ricketts award wasgiven to Rene Jules Dubos, path- . . . . .ologist With the Rockefeller In- istration intend to go in support- ment is strong enough to do itstitute for Medical Research. ing the University’s athletic pro- without help.”Dr. Sabin has been invited to »ram*” KirkDatrick asked That* Maroon athletes posted the fol-22- f ‘O. ‘he L Ludge; for buying athlette .owing results during the 1958-59vaMine.’rhe’titfe1ofhL R?cketts equipment, repairing facilities season:lecture, which is to be given in and providing traveling expenses .....the lecture hall of Billings hos* for the varsity has increased 25pital, is " O r a 1 Immunization ^ ^nt iS “ample proof that Uni-Against Poliomyelitis with Live „ .. , WrestlingAttenuated Polioviruses — Devel- versit> recogmzes-the valu. of an |B(Joor trackopmental Problems, Present athletic program as part of its FencingStatus and Future Possibilities.” reason for being.” Gymnastics Won139552I Lost625088 Tied AP quotes KimptonChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton stated in Chattanooga,Tennessee, Monday that the South is farther from integrationthan it was ten years ago.The Associated press report quoted Kimpton as saying thathe thought “the Supreme court decision (1954) has worsenedrace relations in the South. ... I think integration will be along, slow and difficult process, though I feel it will eventuallybe successful.”Kimpton and his wife are vacationing near there.new.sbitsBellow asks for re-evaluation in literatureby Albert N. PodellSaul Bellow pleaded last weekfor his fellow novelists to re-ex¬amine the view that life is “nasty,brutish, dull, and short.”Speaking in Mandell hall underthe sponsorship of the ChicagoReview, Bellow declared that mod¬ern novelists have inherited a pes¬simistic literary tradition fromSuch past greats as Flaubert, Con¬rad, and Joyce. They have ac¬cepted the pessimistic views as'still valid, he went on, and theyhave not troubled to re-evaluateit. He felt that a re-evaluation atthis time was needed and that itwould do much to improve thequality of contemporary writingand to bring a balanced view of modern life into modern litera¬ture.He suggested specifically that“(1) we see for ourselves whatthe human creature contains, (2)that we concern ourselves notwith human existence but withhuman character, and (3) that wesee the light and truth that canbe seen even in our phony andartificial age and become awareof what the living man actuallyis in his life.”In line with this theme, Bellowdiscussed the influence of thewritings of Gustav Flaubert (andespecially of his Madame Bovary)on modern literature, concludingthat “virtually every novelistwriting today, whether good or bad, has to some extent been in¬fluenced by Flaubert and his writ¬ing technique. He created a liter¬ary method which became theprevailing method of westernliterature.”Bellow elaborated on Flaubert’sliterary method, discussing themanner in which he wrote of so¬ciety while physically isolatedfrom it, his technique of forcingthe reader to accommodate him¬self to the writer’s role, the strongmonologue and weak dialoguefound in his novels, his use ofsymbolism, and the lack of con¬tent of his characters.Bellow pondered whether or notthose novelists who had adpotedFlaubert's methods have alsocome to share his attitudes, but he came to no positive conclusion.The lecturer, author of theNational-Book-Award-winning Ad¬ventures of Angie March, and therecently published and controver¬sial Henderson the Rain King,concluded with a few remarkson his critics. Most of their criti¬cism, he declared, were mislead¬ing. “Only a handful of themreally understand my books. Thenewspapers need grist for theirmills, and there is a pressure onthe reviewers to produce hastilyso that they have little time tocontemplate or to sensibly evalu¬ate a work. A good critic,” he con¬cluded, “is worth his weight ingold, and that gold could be re¬moved from Fort Knox torvghtand never missed.”Boorstin guestsDaniel J. Boorstin, professorof American history and authorof the recent prize-winningbook, "The Americans: theColonial Experience," will beguest speaker at KAM Temple,Drexel Boulevard and 50thStreet, at the Sabbath serviceon Friday, May 8, at 8:15 pm.His topic will be: "The questfor national humility."Boorstin's book won twoawards within the same weekin April, when Columbia uni¬versity honored him with a$3,000 Bancroft prize and theFriends of Literature chose thebook for its $500 prize for anoutstanding work in the non¬fiction field. Rosenthal chosenEarl Rosenthal, assistant pro¬fessor of art, has just beenappointed to the advisory coun¬cil of the Renaissance societyof America. Rosenthal will rep¬resent the Newberry libraryconference on renaissancestudies at the next meeting ofthe Renaissance society in NewYork. His election to the posttook place at the meeting ofthe Newberry library confer¬ence, held last Saturday at thelibrary.Rosenthal read a paper atthe meeting entitled "A uniquerevival in ceremonial form: thesanctuary of the cathedral ofGranada." The paper was illus¬trated by slides. Thomas at chapelWinburn T. Thomas will bepreacher this Sunday for Rock¬efeller chapel's 1 1 am services.He will discuss "The Christianresponse to world revolution."Thomas is northeast repre¬sentative for the commissionon ecumenical mission and re¬lations for the United Presby¬terian church. For the pasteight years he has been secre¬tary of the Indonesia Councilof Churches and has spent atotal of 25 years in Asia.He is the author of twobooks: The Church in South¬east Asia, (1956) and TheChristian Beginning in Japan,to be published in Tokyo,Japan, this year. FOTA hosts wivesWives of the trustees of theuniversity and their guests at¬tended the annual trustee'swives luncheon, held in con¬junction with the fifth annualFestival of the Arts, at the newwomen's dormitory last Thurs¬day.The chairman, Mrs. Glen A.Lloyd, and other members ofthe group also viewed the fac¬ulty art exhibit in Ida Noyes,visited the outdoor sculpturedisplay and exhibit of studentart at the new women's dorm,and heard the final rehearsal ofHandel's "Israel in Egypt" per¬formed by the university choirin Rockefeller chapel. Channel 11White appointedPHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433t# A TAAOC-MAAK. «0#Y«i«MT O HI# Tm« COO-MIA «OM»AMV,AbracadabraFoolish boy—the best way to make a bottleof Coke disappear is to drink it! Yes,swallow after swallow, that cold crisp taste isso deeply satisfying.., and the lively liftis so bright and cheerful the whole dayseems happier, just like magic. So opensesame! Just uncap the bottle and getready for The Pause That Refreshes!BE REALLY REFRESHED...HAVE A COKEIBottled under authority of the Coco-Colo Company byThe Coco-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.• CHICAGO MAROON • May 1, 1959 Philip L. White, specialist in American economic develop¬ment, has been appointed assistant professor in the depart¬ment of history. Walter Johnson, professor and chairman ofthe department announced the appointment.White, at present a Fulbright professor at the University of Not¬tingham, England, joins the faculty next Autumn quarter.Born in 1923, in Akron, Ohio, White received his bachelor degreefrom Baldwin-Wallace college, Berea, Ohio, in 1947. He was awardedan MA in 1949 and a PhD in 1954 from Columbia university.He taught at City college of New York, and the University ofTexas before his appointment abroad.White is the author of “The Beekmans of New York in Politicsand Commerce, 1647-1877” and editor of “The Beekman MercantilePapers, 1746-1799,” in three volumes. presents"All Things Considered" re¬turns to television May 12 at9:30 pm over Channel 11,(WTTW).Lee Wilcox, associate direc¬tor of educational broadcastingat the university will be theproducer of the weekly half-hour program. She said it willfeature faculty members anddistinguished guests.Miss Wilcox said the open¬ing program is titled "Emo¬tional Problems of Aging " Itwill be moderated by Dr. CKnight Aldrich, professor andchairman of the department ofpsychiatry.Panelists are Dr. Ewald WBusse, professor and chairmanof the department of psychi¬atry, Duke university school ofmedicine and hospital, and Dr.George V. LeRoy, UC professorin the department of medicineand associate dean of the divi¬sion of biological sciences.In recognition of mentalhealth month, other programsin the May series will investi¬gate research into the physiol¬ogy and meaning of dreams,the psychiatrist of the future,and new mental hospitals.Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.See Us For YourWhite Chino Walkers,Pedal Pushers,and Slim-Jims cjCucilie 31507 east 53rd st.mi 3-9898 Betatron bargainInquiries on the sale of aUniversity atom smasher havebeen made on behalf of twoforeign countries.Clement Mokstad, Univer¬sity official in charge of nego¬tiations for the 100-millionvolt betatron, today said thetwo countries are Venezuelaand Pakistan.Mokstad added that JamesP. Foley of Foley industries inMamaroneck, N.Y., was sched¬uled to fly to Chicago to inspectthe betatron yesterday. Foleysaid he was acting for a clientin Venezuela.A Canadian professor hasinquired in behalf of scientistsin Pakistan, Mokstad reported.He said Professor J. S. Fosterof the radiation laboratory atMcGill university in Montrealtelephoned for information formembers of the faculty at theUniversity of Pakistan at Decca.PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCETYPEWRITERSAt Our CostFIRST COME —FIRST SERVED4University of Chicago Bookstore5802 EtLtS AYBKtMEm—m**, <*m» ton*Draft' forms must be filed Byers elected SC's prexyat ad bldg, before May 15The university must provide ends in August, December orthe local draft boards with a March should not fill out newcollege student certificate not cards at this time. New cards arelater than July 13. The certificate,either SSS form 109 for under¬graduates or SSS form 103 forgraduate students, must be sub¬mitted for each student seekingstudent deferment who is complet- the executive positions and allcommittee chairmanships but one.It was reported at the meetingdents who entered at midyear there are six vacancies inmen b>G because write-in candidates didMaureen Byers was elected president of Student Government at the assembly meetingheld last Tuesday. Miss Byers, a third year student in the College is a member of the Inde¬pendent Student league (ISL).ISL, as majority party, took allnot required at this time of stu-1959.Students should file their infor¬mation forms in the office of theregistrar, administration building,ing an academic year in June and room 103, between the hours ofwho expects to continue a program of study leading to a degree the following schedulein tin' ensuing academic year.Before May 15, 1959, each stu- Students whose lastdent who expects to seek defer- begin with the letter:ment must request the registrarto submit his form to his localboard. At the same time the stu¬dent should notify his local boardthat he intends to continue hisstudies in the university or inanother institution, that he isseeking deferment as a student,and that he has asked the regis¬trar to prepare his form. For thispurpose the student may use theofficial letter which may be ob¬tained from the registrar.Students whose academic year not file the necessary statementsof intent to serve in the Govern¬ment. There are three seats in thesocial sciences division, one ingraduate library school and onein the humanities. There is also action: Robert Gerwin (ISL-Col-10 am and 3:30 pm according to one vacancy in the College be-namesABCD E F GH I JK LM NOPQRST U V W X Y Z . May. May. May. May. MayMay 4567811 cause Miss Byers became presi¬dent.Officers and committee chair¬men for the 1959-60 school yearare:President, Miss Byers; vice-president, Bert Cohler (ISL-Col¬lege); secretary, Jean Dames(‘ISL-College); treasurer, RonShelton (ISL-College); election Membership in SG committeesare open to any student on cam¬pus. The present political structureof SG is ISL, 34 seats; StudentRepresentative party (SRP), eightseats; Law school independents,three seats.. . May 12. .May 13Students who could not pre¬pare and file their forms onthe date schedule .... May 14 Grants available see J. Nethertonby Joel Ashenfarb made for two years in the firstinstance, but may be extendedOpportunities are available for a third year- The scholars aresneiton tiSL-uoiiege); election for f. d : Rritish nniverci- to take a de£ree at their Britishand rules, Jack Eagon (ISL-physi- y UM umversi university. Each Marshall scholarcal sciences); Committee on Rec- ties through Marshall fellow- receives $1,400 a year and ap-ognized S t u d e n t organizations: ships. 12 such scholarships are proved tuition fees. A marriedKen Nordin (ISL-College); Stu- available for students at the m^n s scholarship may be in-^T ^a^lty^el*ti0n^: JUdy F/°St undergraduate level. In addition, creased by $560 a year in certain(ISL-College); A c a d e m l c free- , ... ^ ~ *~~i' —dom: Gail Paradise (ISL-College); there are opportunities for post¬graduate work, which is usuallyindependent work on an approvedtopic under supervision.•¥ y-- •• ■-y::s:- National student association com¬mittee: Don Richards (ISL-Col¬lege); Community relations: PeteJacobson (SRP-College); CampusPlaye tells of scholarships“Over 1000 undergraduate tenuating circumstances, applica-scholarship applications willhave been turned into our of¬fice bv this afternoon,” prophe-sized George Playe, director ofthe office of financial aid, andprofessor of Romance languages.‘‘This number, of course,doesn’t include the scholarship ap¬plications made in conjunctionwith admissions applications byprospective students. This num¬ber is considerable.”Playe continued, explaining thatwhile all applications should bein his hands by today, under ex-Jobs open, repsshould apply nowThose students interested tions will be accepted late. He by the 7th of July this year; lastyear, due to some special prob-asked for all students returning lems the announcement was de-their application forms late to get layed last year until August.in touch with him personally.Playe. who administers the spe¬cial endowment scholarship fundsas well as the regular funds,claimed that while he couldn’t Playe also acted to explode thecampus myth that scholarshipsare cut the longer a student stayson campus. Before awards aremade, the funds are dividedrelease the monetary figure*, our among the various year-groups. Application deadline for theMarshall grant is October 31, butUC students interested in the pro¬gram should see Dean of studentsJohn P. Netherton this quarterfor information.Marshall scholarships at Britishuniversities are offered annuallyby the British government toUnited States students, selectedon a basis of intellect and char¬acters from different regions ofthe United States. Awards are circumstances. Marshall scholarsreceive their transportation to andfrom their university in theUnited Kingdom. Marshall grantsdiffer from Rhodes scholarshipsin that they are open to womenas well as men and are fo ■ study,at no specified British university.Rhodes scholars are required tostudy at Oxford university.scholarship funds are second tonone. »Because of their size, between400 and 600 of the applicants willreceive scholarships. Playe wenton to explain the process bywhich a scholarship is awarded:‘‘All candidates names are listedin order of their grade point aver¬age. We then go down this listand award the funds on the basisof need. If it so happened that allour high-need cases had the high-in applying for college board est grade averages, there wouldsales jobs with Chicago de¬partment stores should apply di¬rectly to their personnel offices,announced Margaret Perry, asso¬ciate director of admissions.College board jobs involve aperiod of sales, fashion, and fabric be a much smaller number ofawards made. But this is not thecase.”Certain additional factors areconsidered, he continued, such asparticipation in extra-curricularactivities or illness during theThe awards will be announcedx year, but the significant criteriontraining. Girls are chosen to rep- ^ one.g de average.resent their universities and ad¬vise on selection of clothing tothose about to enter collegetheir job to give advice onpriate wearing apparelschool, as well as other schoolinformation.Among those stores that hireuniversity girls are MarshallField, Carson, Pirie Scott; MandelBrothers, Chas. A. Stevens, Bon-wit Teller, Saks Fifth Avenue, andthe Fair.Any UC’er interested in a posi¬tion at Fields should call Mr. Rus¬sell in special events. First year students receiveslightly more than one-fourth ofthe total funds, but first year stu¬dents are the largest group oncampus.One of the peculiar difficultieson the office of financial aid liesin the administration of the en¬dowed funds, most of which havespecial stipulations.There is a common story thatmany special funds are going a-hegging in American education.This is not true, Playe asserted.If we can find no one who meetsthe requirements of an award,we can go to court and have thestipulations attached to an awardchanged.Nevertheless, it is often a diffi¬cult problem to find people whomeet the requirements of theawards, which vary in size from$70,000 a year to as little as $14.ARISTOCRATSHOE 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-lotors inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber Product’sFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St.■ge. It is HJItUlilllilllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllttllllllllllllife"“ilROWMl M7.rs;nT.'.TlDELIGHTFUL jATMOSPHERE |POPULAR! txsBsztt* PRICES |IttiiiiHiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiHiimiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiii TEACHERSWANTEDFor part time teaching in JewishReligious schools, two or morehours per week, on Sunday after¬noons and Saturday mornings. Op¬enings in September in schools inall parts of the greater Chicagoarea. Students of the Jewish Faithwho are preparing for teaching inthe public schools are eligible.A representative of the Boardof Jewish Education will inter¬view candidates on Thursday,May ltf, between 12 noon andif pm, at the Hillel Foundation,5715 S. Woodlawn Ave.BOARD OFJEWISHEDUCATION72 E. 11th HA 7-5570,ext. 29ON QUALITYDRY CLEANINGAll work done by a regular Chicagowholesaler whose plant serves otherretail stores in addition to his own out¬lets. You get this service because ofour non-profit policy and low overhead.SuitsJVeie! 20%.50c Skirts .... 50c.50c Dresses ....95c.95c Suits (2-piece) . . ....95c1.00 Light Coat ...95c1.10 Heavy Coat .. .1.10% off on all laundryUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT SERVICE CENTERReynolds Club Basement HOURS11:00-1:004:00-5:00Moit.-Fri. <£ Jules Felfferhow would you like it if youwere a beautiful, glamorous,rich, unfulfilled movie star?JULES FEIFFERauthor of SICK, SICK, SICKexplains it all in his new bookBassionellaand other stories$1.7?, paperbound, jat the college store MtGftAW-HiLI j NEWESTWASH and WEAR SLACKSby DICKIESonly $^95These are Bedford cordsShrunk for permanent fit.They're WASH and WEARfor minimum caretwith the exclusive Dickiesfeature—Easy-Alter Outlets,lets out waist 1 ’/a" withoutsewing.Make a Special Trip...Dickies are Worth MOur Prices Can't Be Beat . . .It’s Smart To Buy For LessD & GCLOTHES SHOP744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728"In the Neighborhoodfor 40 Years”Hours: 9 a.m.-8 p.m., Mon.-Fri.—9 a.m.-9 p.m., SaturdayWatch for opening ofD & C's new store at851 East 63rdMay 1, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3the Chicago maroonfounded — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago 6chool year and intermittently during the summer quarterby the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E 59th Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800extentions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus. Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5.Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material, 4 pm, Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material3 pm Wednesday before publication.All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroofl editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the individual opinions of the authors.Silence on BerlinMay 27 w ill be noted on theUC campus by masses ofpanic-stricken undergrduatespouring over potentially deadlycomprehensives. For many it willbe the beginning of the end oftheir college career.May 27 marks another deadline,another crisis, another beginningof what may be the end of Amer¬ica's European dominances - theend of our super power status.Drawing this picture in finerdetail, one might imagine riflesbeing issued instead of diplomas,undergraduates being armed withbard-lead weapons instead of soft-lead electrographic pencils.However exaggerated this pic¬ ture appears, the issue is realistic.Why, then, have we ignored theBerlin dilemma? Are we, students,to remain faithful to the classicpose: non-involvement in issuesoutside the ivory tower? Thesilence on this campus over theimpending East-West crisis ispuzzling. Where is that discussionwhich precedes intelligent opinionformation? We are all in this —if we don’t vote, still we fight.Eleven million people in Europeand America are wearing theBrandenburg gate pin. Sponsoredby the committee of Germany in¬divisible <T. Huess is one of themembers), “open the gate” istheir slogan. It is a campaign to puzzlingarouse the West Germans and theworld out of complacency.This pin is only a symbol, of thesupport we must give the Ger¬mans. West Berlin must be keptinviolate, reunified Germanymust be kept a possibility for thefuture. If we are forced out ofBerlin by Russia's new power, hermilitary supremacy, we may haveto go it alone in the Westerhhemisphere. We might well play“disengagement” as a trump inthe coming negotiations, to avoidour being dealt it as the joker.This is not a call to arms, nora program for summit diplomacy— but a call for discussion anddebate.Rosemary GalliObjects to NAZI partyIt is the purpose of this letter to acknowledge the deep regret shared by many of the lawstudents of the University with respect to the formation of a “Nazi party” during the re¬cent government election held in the Law school.In the pre-election days the law students responsible for this party circulated mimeo¬graphed “Nazi handbills” bearing large swastikas. On the law dormitory windows in Bur-ton-Judson, swastikas were also placed. To disregard the meaning of such a symbolic campaign on thegrounds of collegiate frolic is difficult in as much as we are here concerned with professional schoolstudents, whose legal badge will shortly become one of community responsibility. Any jest which wasintended is lost in the realization that none of the three formulators (candidates) of this "Nazi party”are of a religious or ethnic background which is impericaly compelled to equate Nazisim with massmurder. Thus, for these three men in particular to now rekindle the nominal spirit of a movement sowicked in intent and motive is especially indicative of a lack of good taste and consideration.Inasmuch as it is my understanding that the Student Government as a body may challenge the rightand competence of an elected candidate to be seated, I now urge the Student Government of this Univer¬sity to seriously consider the campaign declarations promulgated by this “Nazi party.” Upon doing so.it becomes inconceivable to believe that the University will find them compatible with a serious efforttowards responsible student government.While the above may give the impression of my being overly sensitive, it is significant that at thispoint in history the German government is still making reparations to Israel as a result of the politicalsuccess of another, prototypical, Nazi party.Richard H. SiegelLaw School, class of 1960Meyer writes MaroonIn your historical sketch ofthe festival of the arts (Ma¬roon, April 21, 1959) youmention that I resigned from thefirst festival committee in protestagainst the inclusion of a student-faculty baseball game.While there were, quite natur¬ally, some disagreements overRosenheim notes procedures and scope of the festi¬val, neither I nor any one elseever resigned from that commit-te. In fact, I had urged the inclu¬sion of all sports of an artisticcharacter (gymnastics, fencing,track competition, acro-theatre,etc.). On the other hand, thestudent-faculty baseball game(which had been played long be¬fore 1955) was never proposed, ortreated, as part of the first festi¬val. sions. However, if they are men¬tioned at all, the account mightas well be reasonably accurate.I wish this and all future festi¬vals the best of success: a ratherjoyful communal spirit in thepreparation and celebration of thefestival, an ever saner sense ofour “style” combined with open¬ness for promising new venturesand, above all, that it become, inyour own words, an "all campusconcern.”Kadish, belatedlyBelatedly and contritely, Ihave discovered that Mr. GeneKadish is the only principalperformer whom I neglected tomention in my recent account ofthe Blackfriars’ production, “SourMash.” Let me apologize for thisinadvertent omission and add theopinion that, as the senator, Mr.Kadish dealt in an animated andintelligent fashion with a role thatseemed to me somewhat long onlines and short on palpable char¬acterization.Ned Rosenheim In a later paragraph headed“Too much fifth,” the writer ofthe story attributes to me certainopinions about the later develop¬ment and present character of thefestival. To my regret, I find thispassage in part incorrect and, asa whole, very incomplete andtherefore misleading. Not that itmatters greatly whether, and inwhat respects, I privately approveor disapprove.Once the festival tradition wasstartde, it could, and should, standon its own feet. My share in theorigins is, by now, quite unimpor¬tant; so are my hopes and impres-Univorsal Army StoreHeadquarters for sport and work wearFlop packet wosh & wear ivy leogue trousers — Wash & wear dressshirts — camping equip. — Complete line of keds footwear — trenchcoots — luggoge and trunks.1144 East 55th st. DO 3-95721Q reduction with this coupon Gerhardt MeyerEUROPEDublin to the Iron Curtain; Africato Sweden. You’re accompanied —not herded. College age only. Alsoshort trips. $724-$l,390.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255 Sequoia (Box 4) — Pasadena, Cal.MODEL CAMERAAuthorized JLeieaDealerNS;1 Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Publisher's Overstock1400 titlesSUMMIT BOOKS138 So. Wabash On Campus withMax§hu]man(By the A uthor of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!” and,“Barefoot Boy with Cheek")ADVENTURES IN SOCIAL SCIENCE: NO. 3Today, ranging again inlo the fascinating world of social science,let us take up the subject of anthropology —the study of manand his origins.The origin of man was indeed a puzzle until the Frenchman,Jean-Louis Sigafoos, discovered the skull and shinbone ofPithecanthropus Erectus in Java in 1891. What Sigafoos wasdoing in Java is, incidentally, quite an odd little story. Sigafooswas a Parisian born and bred. By day one could always findhim at a sidewalk cafe, sipping barley water and ogling thegirls; each night he went to a fashionable casino where hegambled heavily at roulette and go-fish; in between times heworked on his stamp collection, which was one of the largestin Paris.Well sir, one summer Sigafoos lost his entire fortune gamblingat the casino. He was seriously contemplating suicide when,quite unexpectedly, a letter arrived from one I>otus PetalMcGinnis, a Javanese girl and an avid stamp collector, withwhom Sigafoos had l>een corresponding from time to timethrough the international stamp collectors journal. Until nowthe nature of their corresjxmdence, though friendly, had beenstrictly philatelic, but in this new letter Lotus Petal declaredthat although she had never laid eyes on Sigafoos, she lovedhim and wanted to marry him. She said she was eighteen yearsold, beautiful and docile, and her father, the richest man in thetribe, had agreed to give half his fortune to the husband of herchoice. Sigafoos, penniless and desperate, immediately bookedpassage for Java.The first sight of bis prospective bride failed to delight Siga¬foos. She was, as she said, beautiful—but only by local stand¬ards. Sigafoos had serious doubts that her pointed scarlet teethand the chicken bones hanging from her ears would be con¬sidered chic along the Champs Ely sties.But sobering as was the sight of Lotus Petal, Sigafoos hadan even greater disappointment coming when he met her father.The old gentleman was, as Lotus Petal claimed, the richest manin the tribe, but, unfortunately, the medium of exchange in histribe was prune pits.Sigafoos took one look at the mound of prune pits which washis dowry, gnashed his teeth, and stomped off into the jungle,swearing vilely and kicking at whatever lay in his path. Stomp¬ing thus, swearing thus, kicking thus, Sigafoos kicked over aheap of old bones which —what do you know!—turned out tobe Pithecanthropus Erectus!But I disgress. From the brutish Pithecanthropus, manevolved slowly upward in intellect. By the Middle Paleolithicperiod man had invented the leash, which was a remarkabletechnical achievement, but frankly not particularly useful untilthe Mesolithic period when man invented the'dog.In the Neolithic period came the most important discoveryin the history of man—the discovery of agriculture. Why is thisso important? Because, good friends, without agriculture therewould be no tobacco, and without tobacco there would be noMarlboro, and without Marlboro you would be without thefinest filter cigarette that money can buy, and I would he with¬out a job.That’s why. © 19.59 Mai Hhulman• # »Without tobacco you would also be without Marlboro's sistercigarette, Philip Morris, a non-filter smoke that can’t bebeat. Philip Morris or Marlboro—pick your pleasure.DID YOU KNOW. . . that over two million Sun Lifepolicies and group certificates arepresently in force in some 25 coun¬tries around the world?As the Sun Life represent¬ative in your community,may I be of service ?Ralph J. Wood Jr. '48SUN LIFE OF CANADARepresentative I N. Lobolle St.FR 2-2390 Chicago c, hi.RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADADO 3-9572profileEdward Rosenheim: man of many talentsPUKING HIS first year here, Edward Rosen-fteim found himself the possessor of a major partIn a production of The Country Wife, given by theDramatic association (one of the many predecessors.f jjTi. The Country Wife concerns itself with a manprtio convinces the male half of the play’s populationthat he is a eunuch in order to provide an adequate op¬portunity to prove the opposite to the other half of theplay’s cast.Ultimately, opening night came, and so did Rosen¬heim’s mother, father and sister. At the end of Act I,his sister walked out of the Reynolds club auditorium,flis mother walked out at the end of the second act.e^tcr the third and final act, Rosenheim’s father walkedackstage and suggested rather strongly that he trans¬fer to another school.He didn’t. Instead he went on to earn a BA, an MAand a PhD in the department of English of UC. In addi¬tion. he lias done a number of other things. Rosenheimhas led a most varied existence, having, in his terms “amarvelous time.”WHILE A student at UC Rosenheim was the editorof Pulse magazine, a Maroon staff member, writing aisegular column entitled “Arsenic and Applesauce,” amember of the Dramatic association, a Blackfriar (both' as an actor and author) and a member of Owl andSerpent.After his first degree, he spent much time workingas press relations for a concert management company,putting himself somewhat in the position of that unfor¬tunate New Yorker fellow who “sacrificed his principlesto make money and didn’t make any” and then spenteven more time in the company of the United Statesarmy.After release from the army Rosenheim returned toan academic life, spending one year alone with hismaster’s in the hinterlands of the Gary City college.After that year Rosenheim remained faithful to theUniversity. Serving as course chairman of the humani¬ties three staff from 1951 to 1954.In 1954 he was asked to assume responsibility for Uni¬versity broadcasting, a job he was to hold for threeyears, working in conjunction with all tfie commercialnetworks and the still embryonic Channel 11. Amongothers, Rosenheim produced, moderated or was respon¬sible for such shows as: All Things Considered, NewWorld. Viewpoint, Everybody’s America history of’ popular culture), Convention in Deptii, and Voices ofEurope.DURING THIS period, however, Rosenheim came tothe conclusion that he had to either decide to be a broad¬caster or an academician. “What a person is trained todo and wants to do is probably the most intelligentchoice he can make for a profession. I went back to theacademic fold,” Rosenheim explained. “Many people wake up in the mornings and feel de¬pressed about having to go to work for eight hours inorder to be able to come home to enjoy themselves; butwhat does a professor do? He goes and spends eighthours reading, talking, thinking, working with a groupof bright, alert students, intellectually his peers, whohave come to learn from him. I can’t imagine anythingmore satisfying.“Moreover, educational broadcasting has its draw¬backs. Its quality is often rather discouraging; therearen’t enough good people involved in it. And, we often,well, delude ourselves as to what is educational.“TV is a limited medium for achieving authentic edu¬cation. It’s greatest function is an impetus, an introduc¬tion, or an inducement to arts education. It is an impor¬tant fraction of the total educational process, but thereal work lies in reading, thinking, questioning, answer¬ing and conducting substantial inquiries, not watchinga screen.”Among other activities, Rosenheim is currently carry¬ing a full teaching load, acting as head of the tutorialprogram ,and serving as chairman of grants in aid ofthe National Association of Education radio—(“we giveaway a lot of Mr. Ford’s money,” he explained).Rosenheim is also aVieniber of the advisory commit¬tee of the Chicago Review, which brings up severalquestions.“I thought that the Autumn issue of the review wasn< t only bad literature, I thought it was obscene. Thestudents and the University are engaged in a unilateralagreement. I don’t think the agreement here was ful¬filled.“THE MAGAZINE was obscene because it was badliterature, painful and disgusting. Admittedly, the lan¬guage was no worse than, say, Molly’s monologue inUlysses. But there is an artistry and beauty to Joyce’swork which eliminates the ‘painful’ aspects. Woolsey’sopinion on Ulysses is very succinct on this.“The University does have a moral responsibility forthe environment it provides for its students. I don’t meanthat as an advisor I want be looking over my students'shoulders or helping to solve their problems, we have acenter for that in Billings. But we do have an obligationto fight what I call the 57th street syndrome.“Imagine a 17-year-old student who arrives here. Oneday he’s walking around Hyde Park and discovers 55thstreet. He wanders into Jimmy’s and there, huddled inthe back is Abernathe Pigmy.“Now, Abernathe isn’t a student, never has been astudent, but he has just had two poems published in theBeloit college poetry quarterly review. Our new studentis amazed and immediately curls up at Abernathe’s feet,missing most of his classes for several weeks. After all,who is more in the stream of things, a published poetwith a half-hearted beard or New Rosenheim over teach¬ing Longinus in a dirty room in Cobb. “SO, SOON enough our student is flunking out. ‘Butdon’t worry’ says Abernathe Pigmy, ‘I have a cousinwho can get you a literary job on the shoemakers' month¬ly journal and you’ll still be free to write . . . ’ and theystart to get drunk, our new student doesn’t get soberedfor years and years, if at all, and Abernathe never hasbeen.‘This is a very real thing, I’ve seen this sort of tragedyhappen to too many students. I’ve seen them get caughtup in the 57th street stream, I’ve seen them devotethemselves exclusively to burning issues which reallydon’t burn.“It has improved recently, but there used to be a tre¬mendously prevailing mirthlessness on this campus, alack of joy, a lack of dignity even. I’m opposed to that.That is the sense in which we have a moral obligation tobe concerned with students’ morals.”Rosenheim continued by pointing out that studentsdidn’t seem aware of the “other side of the coin” in theReview business. He posed a question and asked whataction the university should take were the Review topublish some of the more violent anti-semetic outburstsof Ezra Pound. Could the University approve of this, orcould it even give tacit approval by doing nothing?“THESE WRITINGS, the Review material, the Poundcantos ... all of them have a perfect right to be pub¬lished. I had no objections about the publication of BigTable. I would be very much opposed to the Governmentdoing anything to try to stop these works. But I don’twant them published under University sanction.”In a review of Sour Mash which appeared in lastweek’s Maroon Rosenheim wrote: “What has been re¬stored (i.e., Blackfriars) is an undertaking which invitesstudents to work creatively, thoughtfully, and with highspirits on a production designed to bring pleasure totheir students. Such an opportunity is not, I am con¬vinced, irrelevant to the business of becoming educated.”ROSENHEIM believes in enjoying life, and if he hashad a “marvelous time for forty-one years” it is morethan a question of luck—he’s worked at it. He has man¬aged to maintain his “civilian identity” by an activeparticipation in such diverse activities as trout fishing,hunting with bow and arrow, reading an occasional luridpaper-back about the struggles of a sexy Madison ave¬nue advertising executive, acting and writing for Fac¬ulty revels.With the company of his wife, Margaret (a full-fledgedlawyer who teaches law and welfare administration inSSA) and three sons, Rosenheim spends his summer athis 40-acre plot of land in northern Michigan.As his current “major” project, Rosenheim is workingon a literature hand book for humanities one to compli¬ment Learning to Look and Learning to Listen. Tenta¬tive title: Learning to Utter.Neal Johnstonmore letters to editorIndependents overlookedr The fraternity system hasseen a great increase at Chi¬cago in recent years, perhapsbecause many students are dis¬satisfied with the social life of the“independent” student. There is apossible solution to this problem, of the lack of an adequate sociallife for the “independent” student.University organizations dosponsor some social events duringthe year, yet these are usuallypoorly attended and most of thosewho attend are connected with thefraternity-girls’ club system. This. does not mean that the "independ-' ent” students are not interestedin these activities, but only thattheir voice is insufficiently repre¬sented in the student organiza¬tions which plan such activities?A case in point is the StudentUnion which was headed in 1957-^ 58 by the president of one of thelargest fraternities on campus,and whose policies were directedby a board of students whose sym¬pathies were, in the main, invest-* ed in the fraternity -girls' clubsystem. A similar situation waslargely true this year as well.Each year the Student Unionpresents a formal dance, theWashington Promenade. A bidcosts $5. I would like to suggest(hat one of the reasons for con¬tinued lack of attendance at thisdance is because it is foreign to alarge segment of the campus, be¬cause of the cost involved and> because of the formality of thedance. The reply to this criticismis that a formal dance increasesa student's social skills, yet aninformal dance could just as eas¬ily develop such skills and mightbe enjoyable because of the infor¬mality. The only way such a situationcan be rectified is by a greaterparticipation by the “independ¬ent” student in campus activities.Student Union, Student Govern¬ment committees, festival of thearts committee, and numerousother student service groups arebadly in need of manpower.If these groups receive most oftheir support from the fraternity-girls’ club system, it will be thissegment of the campus to whichthese groups cater. This is not toimply that there is conflict be¬ tween the fraternity and inde¬pendent student groups, for someof the fraternities are worriedabout the role of the independentstudent on campus. But these fra¬ternities can’t arrange the stu¬dent’s social life for him. An ac¬tive Student Union and other serv¬ice groups catering to the needsof diverse interests on Campus isnecessary. It is up to the inde¬pendent to plan the kind of a so¬cial life he wants, for no one elsecan plan it for him.Bert Cohler1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & GalleryNEW POLICY• Open 7 nights• Closed tue. and wed. lunch• Featuring Complete wine menuand Hors d'oeuvre TableCheese Small12”. .1.30 Combination .... Small12".. .2.25Sausage ..1.65 Mushroom . . . . . .. .2.00Anchovy . .1.65 Shrimp .. .2.25Pepper & Onion . , Bacon fir Onion . . . .2.00Free Delivery on All Pitta to l/C StudentsTHIS COUPON WORTH $.25On any deliveryOr on any luncheon and/ordinner served 6th Annual fAMERICAN INDIAN EXPOSITIONMay 8, 9, 108th Street Theatre• Intertribal dance program• Gallery show, original paintings byAmerican Indian artists• Indian Arts & Crafts collection, onexhibit ond for saleAdmission: Doors open:Adults $1.50 6 pm, Friday, May 8Children .75 I pm, Sat, May 9 and Sun, May 10Tickets also on sale at Student Activities Office, Reynolds Club, U. of C.,and at American Indian Center, 411 N. LaSalle St., Chicago, Illinois.LOWE’S RECORDSpermanent discount pricesAll 3.98'sAll 4.98'sAll 5.98's only 4.46VERVE SALEbuy one at 3.69receive another for 1.00NEWEST RELEASEPORCY and BESSwithElla Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong2 record set9.96 list . . . 4.69BachB MinorMass BACK IN STOCK9.98 Value 3.981317 E. 55th PL 3-4361OPEN SUNDAYSMay 1, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 151Yerkes is northern most outpostHERE’S WHYTAREYTON’S DUAL FILTER ^FILTERS AS NO SINGLE FILTER CANby Gary MokotoffLocated 76 miles north ofChicago, Yerkes astronomicalobservatory is the northern-Captures yourpersonalityms well asyour personNow with ... CoronaStudio1314 E. 53rd St.MU 4-7424 most outpost of the academicplant of the University.Persons driving to the WilliamsBay, Wisconsin, resort area canidenitfy the observatory by itsconspicuous three domes on topof a two-story office building. In¬side the structure is some of thefinest astronomical equipment inthe world.The largest dome, 90 feet indiameter, contains a 40-inch re¬fracting telescope, the largest ofits kind ever constructed and suc¬cessfully used in astronomy. Builtin the 1890s, it was one of the"most gigantic undertakings of itstime.Tremendous powerLight gathering power of the40-inch objective lens is approx¬imately 35,000 times greater than that of the unaided eye. The high¬est magnifying power theoretical¬ly possible is 4,000 diameters, butin actual practice, atmosphericconditions are never good enoughto allow the use of such highmagnification. Powers exceeding750 diameters are rarely used.The tube of the instrument is63 feet long and weighs six tons,yet the whole instrument, withits 20 tons of moving parts is suf¬ficiently counterweigh ted so itcan ordinarily be moved from theeye-piece end by hand. The dome,which protects the instrumentfrom the weather, is rotated topermit access to any sector of theheavens.In order to position the instru¬ment on a particular star, thefloor is raised or lowered on fourMARKS THE REAL THING!THE TAREYTON RINGjjg — 1. It combines an efficient pure white outerW filter...2. with a unique inner filter of activatedcharcoal ... which has been definitelyproved to make the smoke of a cigarettemilder and smoother.THE REAL THING IN MILDNESS...THE REAL THING IN FINE TOBACCO TASTE!New Dual Filter Tareytons are fast becoming a big smoke on U.S.campusesl Just take a look. You’ll see. And zvhy are they so popular?Just take a puff. You’ll see.NEW DUAL FILTER TdTeytOTlfrodud t>f i/u&cc+itw mddlt name Or © *■*■<* motor-driven cables. Thus an as¬tronomer observing stars near thehorizon raises the floor 23 feetabove the ground. Observing starsnear the zenith requires the floorto be lowered to ground level.The dome is never heated be¬cause it is important to avoid aircurrents through the open shut¬ter. Since the 40-incher is used forobserving the heavens on everyclear night of the year, astron¬omers dress warmly on winternights when the temperaturedrops well below zero.This telescope is used today pri¬marily with a small spectroscopeto determine the temperature ofthe stars and a parallax camerato determine the distances andspatial motions of the neareststars. It is unsurpassed even bythe modern reflectors for this lat¬ter work.The other two domes house a24-inch reflector, now used pri¬marily for determining positionsof comets, and a modern 16-inchreflector used with a photocelland filters to very accurately de¬termine stellar temperatures anddistances.Yerkes observatory was firstput to use in the summer of 1897.It was the idea of George E. Hale,an active Chicago astronomer,who later became Yerkes’ firstdirector, to establish a large ob¬servatory near the city. While UCwas still in the construction stage,Hale approached William RaineyHarper, first president of the Uni¬versity, with a plan for a 40-inchtelescope. Harper suggested lhatHale present the plan to CharlesT. Yerkes.Construction beganThe local millionaire agreed tothe plan and construction of the40-inch lens began immediately.The mechanical parts of the tele¬scope were completed in 1893 andexhibited at the Columbian ex¬position. Construction of the of¬fice building began in 1895. Itwas designed by Henry Ives Cobb,then chief architect of the Uni¬versity. (The gothic pal tern ofthe main quadrangles was Cobb’splan.)The grounds of the observatoryhave often been called the mostbeautiful of any major observa¬tory. In the summer, the acres ofgreen grass, nearby golf courseand Lake Geneva can tempt eventhe most ardent astronomer fromhis office. In the winter, ice-skat¬ing on the lake and skiing are fa¬vorite pastimes.Work no longer doneMuch of the observational workis no longer done at Yerkes but atMcDonald observatory, located 200 miles from El Paso, Texas,operated jointly with the Univer’sity of Texas. Equipment thereincludes an 82-inch reflecting tele¬scope, third largest in the worldnow in operation. The clearer,steadier skies of Texas allowwork to be done which is impos¬sible at Yerkes.Most of the work of the ob¬server is not done at the telescope,but in one’s office at the Wiscon¬sin observatory. It can cynicallybe divided into two parts:• puzzling over one’s own workat the telescope.• puzzling over other people’swork in the subject.Many of the faculty do no ob¬servational work whatsoever.They are concerned with devel¬oping the basic physical theoryto be used in astronomy, or insynthesis of physics, mathemat¬ics, and observations alreadymade.Recent work includesRecent work by the faculty often includes:• Professor and chairman of thedepartment Gerard P. Kuiper’sphotographic atlas of the moonand survey of magnitudes of theasteroids.• Professor William W. Morgan’sdiscovery cf the spiral structureof our own galaxy in recent years.He is now finishing a new systemof classification of extra-galacticnebulae.• Morton D. Hull distinguishedservice professor S. Chandrasek¬har’s theoretical research into tur¬bulence theory, plasma dy¬namics and magneto hydrodynam¬ics. Chandrasekhar also edits theAstrophysical Journal, the re¬search publication of the Amer¬ican Astronomical society.• Professor W. Albert Hiltner’swork in developing the use of thephotocell on telescopes. His recentresults include estimates of themagnetic fields in gaseous nebu¬lae and extra-galactic nebulae. Heis also working on image intensifi¬cation, replacing film at the focusof the telescope by a photocathodeto use the light more efficiently.Faculty lookingOther faculty members arelooking into such topics as theevolution of the stars, origin ofthe elements and nature of theaurorae.There are about a dozen studentsat the observatory, in both astron¬omy and physics. Students wish¬ing to study at Yerkes must haveas a prerequisite at least one yearof graduate work in physics. Allstudents are doctoral candidates.No undergraduate instruction isoffered by the department atYerkes or on campus.The Qreen Door Book ShopHY 3-5829 Chicago 37, III-1450 EAST 57th STREETChicago's Most Complete Stockof Qualify Paper BacksHarper Wines & Liquors1114-16 E. 55th St.FULL LINE OFIMPORTED & DOMESTICWINES-LIQUORSBEERSat low pricesFree Prompt DeliveryTelephone FA 4-1233 - 1318 - 7699Coming events on quadranglesSunday, 3 May [BftfeviEElFriday, 1 MayClass in elementary Hebrew I, 11:30 am,5715 Woodlawn avenue, sponsored byHlllel foundation.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship, 12:30pm, Ida Noyes small lounge. Non-denomlnational Bible study in Ephe-Newborn conference, 1 pm, Dora DeLeehall, Lying-In hospital.French film of one-act play “II fautqu’une porte soit ouverte ou fermee,”by Alfre de Musset. 2:30 pm, Blainehall 214. Rapid dialogue, about 25minutes. #Lecture series: “Biography,” UniversityCollege, 64 East Lake street, 8 pm."Outstanding European biography,”Harry Barnard, columnist, ChicagoDaily News, and noted biographer. %Botany club meeting, 4:30 pm, Botany106. “On botany in Indonesia,” AjghKostermans, professor of botany andhead of botanical department, forestlesearch Institute, University of Indo¬nesia.Sabbath service, Hlllel foundation, 5715Woodlawn avenue, 7:45 pm.Lecture series: "Distinguished lawyers,”(Law school) Breasted hall, 8:15 pm."Clarence Darrow,” Lowell Mason,former law partner of Clarence Dar¬row.University theatre: "Measure for meas¬ure,” by William Shakespeare, 8:30 pm,Reynolds dub theatre.’Folklore society meeting, 8:30 pm. IdaNoyes East lounge. Elections, wing-ding. Admission: members, free;others, 25 cents.Saturday, 2 MayUniversity theatre: "Measure for meas-sure,” by William Shakespeare, 8:30pm, Reynolds club theatre. Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10 and11 am, DeSales house, 5735 Universityavenue. Sponsored by Calvert club.Choral Eucharist (Episcopal), 8:30 am,Bond chapel. «■Rockefeller Memorial chapel service, 11am. Wlnburn T. Thomas, “The Chris¬tian response to world revolution.”*RP open caucus, 7:30 pm, Ida NoyesEast lounge. Discussion of SRP goalsand purpose of Student government.Bridge club, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes lounge.Duplicate bridge will be played.University theatre: “Measure for meas¬ure,” by William Shakespeare, 8:30 pm,Reynolds club theatre.Monday, 4 MayMaroon staff meeting, 3:30, Ida Noveshall.Class In elementary Hebrew II, 4 pm,5715 Woodlawn avenue, sponsored byHlllel foundation.Lecture: “The Baghvad Oita." 4 pm,social sciences 122, Maharajah of My¬sore. Sponsored by the department ofphilosophy and the committee onSouth Asian studies. The public isinvited.Tuesday, 5 MayInter-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing, 12:30 pm, Ida Noyes small lounge.Non-denominatlonal Bible study inI Peter.Lecture series: “Problems of the Presi¬dency,” University College, 7 pm, “ThePresident and the Supreme Court,”C. Herman Pritchett, professor, de¬partment of political science.University Symphony orchestra rehears¬al, 7:30 pm, Mandel hall.CLASSIFIEDSi-or rent Heip wantedSmall room, private bath, close to cam¬pus, Co-op, IC. Kit. priv. avail. Gradmale preferred. Clean. PL 2-1667.Park Shore—1765 E. 55th 8t. Large 3*4rms., elevator bldg. Sublet. MI 3-6632.PLAISANCE ON THE MIDWAY60th & Stoney Island Ave.3'/2 rm. unfurn. apts. Moderately priced.Swltchbd. service avail. Res. mngr. DO3-4300.Baird & Warner, agents, BU 8-18552 Vi ROOMSCheerful, newly decorated, attractivelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator bldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man. Maid and linen service available.Reasonable monthly rate.VKRSAILI,KS APARTMENTS5234 Dorchester FA 4-0200Rooms for rent. $25-$45 per month. Eve¬ning meals. Phi Kappa Psl frat. 5555Woodlawn. PL 2-9704.Man’s room. $8 per week. 56th & Dor¬chester. MU 4-8493.Studio room, private bath in Kenwoodhome, supper. In exchange for baby¬sitting and light chores. WA 4-2550.1643 E. 67th Street2rm. unfurn. apt., $70: 31,* rm bedrm.apt., unfurn.. $80. Bus at door. See Jani¬tor. EA 7-2833. Male students;, 20 to 30 yrs., wanted toparticipate in psychology experiment atMichael Reese Hospital, 1 hr. on eitherMon., Wed., or Frl. mornings. Pays $3.Call DA 6-5700, ext. 287.Secretary needed this Saturday or Sun¬day. Steno and typing. Interesting work.Call A1 Podell, FA 4-8200.Serve iesSEWING — Alterations, hems, curtains.Call MU 4-3941.Home typing—thesis, dissertations, etc.N MacDougall. OA 4-3240.PersonalWORKSHOP IN CREATIVE WRITINGPLaza 2-8377Beta: ’Belatedly, but sincerely, thanx for aswell evening.Delta SigmaLost, K&E slide rule log-log duplexdecltrlg, lost in Kent. Reward. Hamby,PI 2-9718.For saleNew Eng. bikes, discounts. MI 9-9048,Used Vespa scooter, BO 8-5570. Tiddlywinks players wanted, contactMaroo'n editor, Rochelle Dubnow anyafternoon, Monday thru Wednesday atMI 3-0800, ext. 3266 or weekends, BU 8-6610 or come in person Monday thruWednesday to Maroon office, 1212 E.59th street, Ida Noyes hall, third floor.Must be undergrad or grad student orfaculty.Issued 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 Meta DubnowAssociate editor- Neal Johnston Business managerLawrence D. KesslerSPECIALTO U. of C. STUDENTSOrder 2 pizzos (of any kind),and get a third one free!small $1.00medium 1.45l«rj)« 1.95x-lor*e 2.95Brant 3.95 FREEUCDELIVERYTerry 9s Pizza1518 East 63 Ml 3-4045IIM Ml ■*!■■■* Wednesday, 6 MayClass in Yiddish, 11 am, 5715 Woodlawnavenue. Sponsored by Hilltel founda¬tion.Hug Ivri (Hebrew speaking group), Hll¬lel foundation, 12:30 pm.Lecture: (Graduate School of Business),1:30 pm, social sciences 122. “The Rus¬sian steel Industry,” Edward L. Ryer-son, director. Inland Steel company.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, James R. Law.son, Rockefeller chapel.Organ recital, 5 pm, Rockefeller chapel,Heinrich Fleischer.Episcopal Evensong, 5:05 pm, Bondchapel.University Glee club rehearsal, 7 pm,Ida Noyes theatre.Lecture series: “The image of Chicago,”University College, 7:30 pm. “TheImage In literature: from ‘Capitol ofthe Box Arts' to the Algren Age," JackConroy, Chicago novelist and author¬ity on Midwest humor.Lecture series: "Self portrait of theartist In the twentieth century,” Uni¬versity College, 8 pm. "How the twen¬tieth century artist adjusted to thetradition of the seif portrait of thenineteenth century in Its dual natureas personal document and as a pic¬torial work,” Max Kozloff, lecturerin University College.Country dancers, 8 pm, Ida Noyes hallBeginners welcome.West house coffee hour, 9 to 11 pm, firstfloor lounge. Music, food, companion¬ship,Thursday, 7 MayEpiscopal Holy Communion, 11:30 amBond chapel.University Glee club May concert, 12noon, Hutchinson courtLecture series: "Analyzing‘stock markettrends,” University College, 7:30 pm.“Adapting Investment procedure tostock market trends,” William 8. GaryHI, assistant manager, Harris Trustand Savings bank.University theatre: “Measure for meas¬ure,” by William Shakespeare, 8:30pm, Reynolds club theatre. ^eRu»Gtv»^COSSACKS! 'the ogre of aftototAua failure« menacing wvHAPPY UTTtfcltFE! it All startedWMEKJ 1 m offoutlining muBPW.lt 9 ENbOCSlNd-0GY in ORDER TOSTUDY FOR f) TEST INPLAYGROUNDSUPERVISION) X TRtH> TO OUTLINE TOEikOoCRlM0DGV DvAlNG MYASTROLOGY LAB BUT AIL £SUCCEEDED IN DOING WASRIPPING MY S7HR CHARTS Aw«T HEARING PROFESSOR «02M0INOVNCt THAT TOE CtAS£WA5 GOING ON A flELOTWP1 ftlttSEO THEEXCURSION ANDHAD TO MAKEIT UP WHEN Idag supposedTO BE 3>0IN€ A&AFIXATION IHPUBLIC WASH¬ROOMS » NODt HAVE VOLUMES04 REAPING TO DO, STARCHARTS TO MEND/OUTLINES 70 WAITE, ANDTo TOP n Au OfT, I CANTMeet my SYNTOff COMPAYMENTS l BUT X SHOULDN'T BE REALLYDOfcfttEl ABOUT FAILING THoOtRBECAUSE I'M LEARNING TOPUIV THE BONGOS - DHICMDILL BRING 007 THE MiMinVtIN ME, THUS GIVING ME A ^STRONG ANIMAL INSTINCT FORajwnmi. 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For complete Informationwrite Bill Rom, CANOE COUNTRYOUTFITTERS, Box 717 C, Ely, Minn.NO FLAT• : "F1LTERED-OUT"FLAVOR!*• 9 *• See how Pall Mall’s famous length of finetobacco travels and gentles the smokemakes it mild—but does not filter outthat satisfying flavor!NO DRYSMOKED-OUT'TASTE!Outstanding...and they are Mild! here's why smoke 'traveled4' through fine tobacco tastes bestYou get Pall Mall’s Pall Mali’s famous Travels it over,famous length of the length travels and under, around andfinest tobaccos / gentles the smoke j through Pall Mali’smoney can buy. naturally . .. fine tobaccos!6 A. 1. Co. Prodml of i jfmK. uean — k/v&ubbo- is vhi middle nan*Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon51-OS Lake Park 4ve. Ml 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 0 «.»»». - 11 p.m. Maharajah set to lectureGLADtS RESTAURANT$r9 SPECIAL 1527 E. 55th St.$109Try our delicious BROILED CLUB STEAK — with chef's salad,french dressing, french fries, hard roll, bread and butter.TheExclusive CleanersFor Your Out of Season Wear . . . ,BOX STORAGE — protected andinsured against Fire, Theft, andMoths. After storage' everythingis returned freshly Cleaned andPressed. Fill It WithWool garments, dresses,suits, jackets, slacks,skirts, sweaters, robes,ski & snow suits, otherhousehold items.Furs and fur - trimmedclothing excluded.1309 E. 57th St. Ml 3-0602We Operate Our Own Plant Jaya Chamaraja Wadiyar,Maharajah of Mysore, will lec¬ture on the philosophy ofIndia during a three-day visit tothe university beginning Monday.The maharajah is governor ofMysore State under the Indian Re¬public and is a noted philosopherand author.His Highness’ schedule of Uni¬versity events includes:May 5, 4 pm—a public lecturesponsored jointly by the depart¬ment of philosophy and the com¬mittee on South Asia studies, So¬cial Sciences 122, on the “Bhaga-vad Gita,” the most important re¬ligious and philosophical text inIndian literature. The poem, writ¬ten between 200 BC and 200 AD,is said to be divinely inspired.May 5, noon—lunch with thevisiting committee on the humani¬ties of the university at the Tav¬ern club, 333 North Michigan.May 6, 3:30 pm—the maharajahwill address a seminar of the de¬partment of philosophy in Swift204.Under the rule of the YadavaDynasty, Mysore, with an area of73,560 square miles, became known as India’s model state.The maharajah is on a tour ofthe United States and is scheduledto arrive in Chicago tomorrowfrom the annual meeting of thewestern division of the AmericanPhilosophical association at Mad¬ison, Wisconsin. On Sunday His Highness isscheduled to visit Libertyville.Illinois, to lunch with Adlai Stevenson. The maharajah is traveling as a private individual, withhis personal physician, a privatesecretary, and a representative ofthe Indian government.Murphy to talk Sat.Gardner Murphy, psychol¬ogist, will confer this weekendwith members of Parapsy¬chology society and deliver an in¬formal talk on extra sensory per¬ception Saturday morning at 10pm in Ida Noyes.Receiving his AB from Yale in1916, AM from Harvard in 1917,and PhD from Columbia in 1923,and after serving on the facultiesof Harvard and Columbia Murphywas appointed professor andchairman of the department ofpsychology at the College of theCity of New York in 1940. Since1952 he has been director of re¬search at the Menninger founda¬tion.Murphy has served as president of the American Psychological association, the Society for Psy¬chical research, and the AmericanSociety for Psychical research.Presently he is vice president ofthe Parapsychological associationand the American Psychologicalassociation. In 1952 he headed amajor UNESCO study of the so¬cial structure of India initiated atthe request of the Indian government.W. Ogburn dies;ex UC professorWilliam Fielding Ogburn,72, former chairman of thesociology department at UCis dead,The internationally known sociologist died Monday night in ahospital at Tallahassee. Fla., afteran emergency operation.Ogburn, who retired from theuniversity in 1951, was one of thenation’s foremost social statisti¬cians and an authority on thesociological effects of man’s tech¬nical advances. He was on the university staff 25 years.From 1930 to 1933, Ogburn wasdirector of research for PresidentHerbert S. Hoover’s research com¬mittee on social trends. He wasnamed a member of .the consum¬er's advisory board of the Na¬tional Recovery administration in1933 but quit in a squabble overpolicy.A native of Butler, Georgia,Ogburn was the author of nearlya dozen books, including SocialF.ffeets of Aviation, Social Charac¬teristics of Cities, You and Ma¬chines and Technology and tlieChanging Family.At the time he retired from theUC., he was Sewell L. Avery dis¬tinguished service professor ofsociology. He remained to teacha year after relinquishing his department chairmanship.After leaving Chicago, heserved a year as a visiting pro¬fessor at 20 of India’s universitiesunder the Fulbright program.From 1953 until his death, Ogburn was visiting professor ofsociology at Florida State Univer¬sity.Surviving are the widow.Rubyn; a son, William F. Jr., anda brother, Charlton.Services will be held today atRome, Georgia.kodl answer[cl ru A PA i M EM 0 60 R NA G 0D E UE S S amA P xF R E aT A X iE D A MR 0 S E A_C_TCORE Maroons hurdle Central MichiganSwitch -from Mots toSnow Fresh Filter KGDLCampus hangoutis open SundaysAll those Sunday eveningepicureans who have beeneagerly awaiting a new ex¬perience in gracious living will behappy to learn that beginning thisSunday, the Hangout, where theelite meet to eat, will be openevery Sunday from 5:30 to 11:30.Located in picturesque IdaNoyes hall, overlooking the scenicMidway Plaisance, the Hangoutoffers excellent cuisine at reason¬able prices.Psi U's captureyoHeyball champPsi Upsilon continued theirdomination of intramural playby capturing the All-Univer¬sity volleyball cahmpionship lastweek. The Psi U “A” team con¬sisting of Bill Hines, Joe Wolff,Jerry Rodnitzky, Roy Lavik, BillSpady, Carlos Ramelb, and BobGutmann, captured the title afterwinning the fraternity bracket bydefeating their own "B” team inthe finals, after the latter teamhad won the B League title. EastII won the house championship,Chamberlain won divisional hon¬ors, Hitchcock won the consola¬tion bracket, and Phi Gam “C”took the laurels in that class.Play in the third round of thesingles tennis tourney is to becompleted today, with 75 contest¬ants competing for the All-Uni¬versity crown. Round robin soft-ball play began Monday, and thegolf tourney was held at JacksonPark yesterday afternoon at 1:30. by Bill SpadyCoach Ted Haydon’s trackteam paced by “Mr. DoEverything,” Mitch Watkins,stopped highly regarded CentralMichigan 78-53 in a dual meet lastWednesday at Central Michigan.Watkins won the broad jump,high junjp, and discus, placed sec¬ond in the shot put, high hurdles,and javelin, and took third in thelow hurdles as he collected 25points, the exact margin of vic¬tory.His efforts were backed by A1Jacobs, who won the 100 yarddash in 9.5, his best of the year,and hit the tape in 21.0 in the 220.To prove it was no accident, Ja¬cobs won the 100 at the Ohio Re¬lays in 9.6 last Saturday, againstsome of the very best sprint starsin the nation.To open the meet against Cen¬tral Michigan, Gar Williams, theMaroons’ top distance man, wonthe mile in 4:31.7, and Ivan Carl¬son finished third in 4:39.4.George Karcazes ran a 49.5 in the440, but it proved only goodenough for second behind CM’sDave Myers who finished with avery strong 48.6. Watkins earnedhis first of three seconds in theshot with a 38' .2V6" put, whileMike Ilrinda backed his effortwith a 37' 5" put.Jacobs then followed with hiswin in the 100, and Hosea Martinfinished a step behind in 9.7. BudPerschke won the 880 in 1:58.4,and Carlson tallied a fourth placein 2:04 2. Watkins won his secondred ribbon in the 120 high hur¬dles with a 15.25 clocking, andteammate Don Richards placedthird in 15.85.Watkins and Richards pairedfor a first and fourth in the broadjump, Watkins leaping 21' 8/ andRichards 20' 5''. Jacobs and Mar¬tin also paired in the 220 for thefirst two places, Jacobs hitting thewire at 21.0 and Martin finishing.5 of a second behind. Don Faginwon the pole vault, clearing 12' 8".In the two mile, freshman VicNeill nosed out Williams at thetape, both crossing in 10:23.5 forthe first two spots.As the meet neared completion,Watkis got red hot. He won the discus with a toss of 111' 3V2",won the high jump at 5' 11",placed third in the 220 low hurdlesin 25.1 behind Richards’ winningtime of 24.3, and took second toJerry Abeles in the javelin by 5inches. Abeles threw the spear162' 11" for the win, and Watkinsmanaged a 162' 6" heave in hisfinal.event of the meet. The Cen¬tral Michigan mile relay teamclosed the meet with an excellent3:19.5 effort.The Maroons also looked strongat the Ohio Relays against trackpowers from all over the midwest.The highlight of the meet for theChicagoans aside from Jacobs’win in the 100, was the 3:22.7 vic¬tory in the college mile relay. Thequartet was comprised of Martin,Perschke, Carlson, and Karcazes.Both the 440 and 880 relayteams placed well also. The Mar¬tin, Watkins, Karcazes, Jacobsquartet took second in the halfmile relay in 1:29.3 behind Indi¬ana’s winning time of 1:27.1, andclipped off the quarter mile in42.4 to gain third behind Mich¬igan and Indiana. Track clubmembers did well in some of theindividual events also. Dick Pondwon the mile in 4:14.8, and EdHoyle placed fifth in the polevault. Don Failey took fourth inthe hop. step, and lump: andFrank Hedgecock placed secondin the 3000 meter steeplechase.At the nationally renownedDrake Relays held last Saturday,the Chicago 440 relay quartet ofMartin, Watkins, Karcazes, andJacobs took second in the collegequarter mile event in 41.9, andthe same foursome qualified forthe 880 finals also, but a bad passeliminated them from the stand¬ings. Jacobs finished fifth in theopen 100 yard dash, won by TrackClubber Ira Murchison who beatOlympic champ Bobby Morrow inthe process in 9.4 to tie the Drakerecord.The squad is at Grinnell today,but they return home Monday totest Bradley at Stagg Field.Varsity baseballOutstanding pitching byNeeman Taylor, and fine field¬ ing by the entire Maroon teampaid off in an exciting 3-2 winover University of Wisconsin atMilwaukee, at Stagg field, Fri¬day afternoon, April 17.Diamond coach Kyle Andersonpraised the ability of Taylor tosettle down after a shaky firstinning and scatter five hits overthe remaining 8 innings, and the"defensive prowess” of his out¬fielders who saved would-be extrabase hits with fine catches. "Itjust shows what these kids cando when they pull together as ateam the way they did today,”stated Anderson. "It was a greatteam effort.”Taylor, a second year student,became increasingly potent as thegame progressed, and he went thedistance without giving up a walk.Chuck Faidley had three singlesin four trips to the plate to pacethe Maroons’ offense, while JohnLoose managed two singles and awalk in four tries. Bill Bauerdrove in a run in the first inningand another in the fifth on longsacrifice flies, and Dick Thomp¬son lofted a long fly in the sev¬enth to bring home team captainTommy O’Connor with what re¬sulted in the margin of victory.Freshman Rick Williams struckout 14 Illinois Tech batters, andcollected a double and triple toblaze the way to a 14-6 win overthe Techmen last Thursday. TheMaroons split a double-header atWayne, Saturday; winning theopener 5-0 and dropping the night¬cap 3-2 in extra innings.The IIT game found the Ma¬roons collecting 9 hits, topped byJon Nicholson’s grand slam homerun with John Loose, Dick Thomp¬son, and Bill Bauer on base. Wil¬liams’ double came in the fifthwith two on. Loose collected apair of singles and scored twice.Hard throwing Williams gave uponly three earned runs in theseven-inning contest.Taylor scattered 7 hits over asmany innings in the first WayneState contest, while Ira Levysparked the Chicago infield play.Levy handled 7 chances flawlesslyand sparked three Maroon doubleplays. Nicholson continued h i s hitting pace with 2 for 3, knock¬ing in 3 of the five runs. ChuckFaidley added a 2 for 4 perform¬ance to the final statistics of 8hits, while he and Levy eachdrove in a run.In the second game Bob Griffinwent seven innings on the mound,giving up only two runs; but hewas relieved by Williams whostopped a Wayne rally cold. Loosepicked up both Chicago runs, onein the fourth on two errors and asingle, and the other in the sixthon a walk, a sacrifice, a stolenbase, and a squeeze bunt byBauer. The hosts collected 7 hitsin the game and scored the win¬ning run in the eighth on two Ma¬roon errors and a single.Anderson praised his team forhaving “really settled down.”Their regular season’s recordstands at 3-2, and they face Knoxtomorrow at Stagg field in a dou¬ble-header with Taylor and Wil¬liams scheduled to throw.Vorsity tennisChicago’s varsity tennissquad won its fifth match ofthe season tripping WilsonJr. college 7-1 last Friday on acold and windy day. Max Liberiesopened the action with an 8-3 win.Mike Roskin followed with an 81victory and Paul Hoffman tookhis match, 8-1. Mike Nussbaumwon 8-1, and Aurin Primack shutout his opponent 8-0. The doublesteam of Bill Provine and Liberiesstopped the Wilson duo 8-5 toclose the meet.Coach Bill Moyle’s Cinderellasquad upset Bradley 4-2 last Fri¬day at Bradley to increase theirunbeaten string to 6 wins anda single tie for the season. Thefreshman-filled crew faces LakeForest today at the varsity courts;,the Maroons having earned a 55tie with the visitors on April 10.Len Friedman won 4-6, 6-1, 8-6;John Berall gained a 6-3, 2-6, 6-2verdict; Will Provine lost 6-3, 0-6,3-6; and Mike Nussbaum won de¬cisively 7-5, 6-2. The Berall-Fried-man doubles team won 6-0, 6 4 toice the match.Sports calendarMAY2 Baseball, Varsity vs. Knox, double-header, Stagg field,"12:30 pm.4 Track, Varsity vs. Bradley, Stagg field, 3:30 pm.7 Tennis, Varsity vs. Marquette, varsity courts, 1:30 pm.ACASA bookstoreGood Used BooksCarefully selected Imports of cards, giftschildren's booksreliable typewriter service1322 E. 55th St. HI 3-9651Only through your porticipotion will Americon youthbe fully represented among the youth of the world!YOUTH FESTIVALVienna — July 26 to August 4*435 for further information:American Youth Festival Org.Notional Office608 S. 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WalloperWilliams8. If I ac you,will you__?9. Man, thoseKools are I10. Part fromthe backH. They may beloveforOlmedo16. Filter partof a Kool19. The good guy22. Old Boyermovie classic24. What a Singerdoes27. He chaperonedsome wildcouples30. She loves me,she lovesme not31. Kind of math32. Madrid's greatmuseum,eha-cha33. State ofexaggeration36. Hallow37. Sprint starDave39. Number-one boy40. Defense missile41. It's unnotedby 3 monkeys42. Flat rate44. Juicy dope 1 2 3 n12151820 ■2326 i2931 32 3336 37434548 J r 9 10 117ARE YOU KGDLENOUGH TOKRACK THIS?"• As cool and clean aa a hreath of fresh air.o Finest leaf tobacco... mild refreshing menthol —and the world’s most thoroughly tested filter!e With every puff your mouth feels clean,your throat refreshed!OmeHcas Mosf ‘Refreshing Qgaidie.. . ALSO REGULAR SIZE KOOL WITHOUT FILTERIG1959, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.May T/1959 . • ,C H J. C A GO MAROON * 9uamsu/mm ,,.t* , » , >,4!*IIH£ l! 'Measure for Measure': maroon reviewa comedy on sex, society Dancers rated topsI find it useful to deal with Measure for Measure as a comedy, not because this disposesof all difficulties in a difficult play, but because it helps one to see more clearly some ofthe ways in which this is and is not an unusual play.Like so many comedies, its action begins with a set of characters involved in problems ofsex and society and ends when these problems have been worked out, so that multiple mar¬riages are in prospect. What is rather less usual is that three of these four marriages havebeen consummated beforethey have been regularized,and not all the participantsare willing, so that the end is notjoyous, not a celebration in whicheveryone finds the perfect ful¬fillment of what he has so longdesired. Social order has a hardtime catching up with and co¬ercing some unpleasant facts.Vienna, at the beginning of theaction, is a disordered, viciousFleischer to giverecital at chapelA free organ recital byHeinrich Fleischer, Univer¬sity organist, will be presentedat 3 pm Sunday, May 17, at Rocke¬feller memorial chapel.The program will include musicby Purcell, Handel, Lenel, Lang-lais. and Bach.IS COLLEGE FORTHE BIRDS?Absolutely! For smart birds,that is. And in another tenyears even they may havetrouble getting into the coblege of their choice.For in less than ten yearscollege applications are ex¬pected to double. This meansmany able youngsters may beturned down simply for lackof room.To make matters worse, pre¬posterously low salaries aredriving too many gifted teach¬ers into other fields of work.This is a serious situation.Something must be done aboutit before it is too late. Won’tyou help by contributing sothe college of your choice now?The returns will be greaterthan you think.If you want fo know more about whatthe college crisis means to you, writefor a free booklet to: HIGHER EDU¬CATION, Box 36, Times Square Sta¬tion, New York 36, New York. In conjunction with Uni¬versity Theatre's productionof Measure for Measure theMaroon is running a seriesof faculty analyses of theplay. In this issue is an arti¬cle by Stuart Tave, associateprofessor of English and ex-erpts from the introductionto the Pelican edition ofMeasure for Measure by R.C. Bald, professor in theEnglish department.University Theatre's pro¬duction of the play opensthis evening. It will run May1-3 and May 8-10. Ticketsare now on sale at the Reyn¬old's club desk.Selections are Voluntary in CMajor, Verse in the PhrygianMode, and Voluntary in D Minor,for double organ, by Purcell;Prelude and Fugue in A Minor byHandel; three fantasies on pre-Reformation hymns by Lenel;"All Praise to Thee, Eternal God,”“Christ Is Arisen” and ‘‘WeNow Implore God, the HolyGhost”; Langlais’ ‘‘Heroic Song”and ‘‘Song of Peace”; and Preludeand Fugue in B Minor by Bach.Fleischer is a former organistof St. Paul’s university church inLeipzig, where Bach was once or¬ganist. He has been a member ofthe faculty of the Leipzig con¬servatory and was associate pro¬fessor of music at Valparaiso uni¬versity. 1949-53. city. It cannot continue long inthat fashion—its bones are hollowwith French diseases. It needsstrong measures but it cannot becured simply by rigorous justicebecause that will change nothing.Fornicators may be executed andbaudy houses may be pulled downunder Angelo’s rule, but unless hemeans to geld and spay all theyouth he can do nothing; all hecan do is depopulate the city. Hehimself is guilty, as he discoversto his astonishment and revulsion.Usually, in comedies, there is anobstacle of some sort that must beovercome before the happy end¬ing can be gained. Sometimes itis an external force, like an irateparent or other inflexible andsour character who tries to pre¬vent the happiness of others.Sometimes it is an internal force,PACKARDMK-Tt'WttW SMUTS• Tailored To Individu¬al Measurements.• Over 100 Fabrics ForDress. Sport Shirts.• Fit Any Man. Recaro-,less Or Size.• Choice Or Collar.Curr. boot Style.SATisriEO Customers—Coast-To-CoartONLY $3.95Fraternity monograms inGreek lettering availableHY 3-5192for appointment some blindness, deficiency, withinthe characters that can be re¬moved only by bringing them toa point of self discovery. The endcan be attained variously, by atrick, for example, or by somepotent eye-opening experience;and frequently there will be acharacter whose main function itis to control and supervise the suc¬cessful trick or administer theeye-opening potion.In this play Angelo is the ex¬ternal obstacle to the happinessof others who is caught by a trick.But there seems to be an ante¬cedent, internal force, one thatcontrols him and others, the onethat makes Vienna so vicious;and this is the natural guilt ofhuman beings, the thirsty evil ournatures do pursue. Nothing canbe adequate to cope with this buta character of more than ordinaryskill and power prepared to takemore than ordinary measures.This is the hidden Duke, and theeye-opener that he uses, I believe,is death; he brings character aftercharacter to face it, to accept it,to be absolute for death. To beabsolute for death is to be nolonger death’s fool, to be free ofthe illusions, the evils and thefevered vices of life, to have self-knowledge; to the man who or¬ders his existence in the light ofcertainty of death either death orlife is thereby the sweeter.This is not so uncomic as it mayseem. Characters in comedies, inthe lightest and gayest farces, areoften threatened with death be¬fore they are saved. They are fre¬quently made to suffer and madebetter by mortification. In thisplay the threat is literal; it worksrepentance. At that point mercyis possible. At the end of the playthe Duke leads his people throughthe gates into a cleansed city. Itis a sober moment, but it is a pro¬foundly happy ending.Stuart Tave Last Saturday’s campusvisit by the Doris HumphreyDance Theatre group was amemorable one. This event, sched¬uled by the Dance council andexclusive of plans of the FOTAcommittee, could be rated as thetop affair in cultural and artisticachievement of the Festival of theArts. The dance group, composedof students and top professionals,performing before a very largeaudience seemed to have absorbedthe teachings of the late MissHumphrey, adding only a touch oftheir own wherever necessity de¬manded it.This was shown at the deliveryof the lecture, done by Miss De¬borah Jowitt in a scholarly styleand with a dancer of sincerity.The accompanying demonstration,showing Miss Humphrey’s insist¬ence and the shape up of a dancerand putting rt to use by the fol¬lowing of “The Shakers," excerptsof “The Trio” by the group, ahumorous interpretation of a spe¬cial “Fly” by John Wilson andmore excerpts of “Life of the Bee”with the fabulous Joyce Trisler,who drew an immense gasp fromthe spectators with her dramaticand skilled interpretation of a queen bee, a premier performancein choreography set to Bach’sConcerto No. 4 in G major.The workshop atmosphere without the play on costumes andlights afforded this audience oflaymen, ballet devotees, and danceexperts, a rare close look at thetechniques w'hieh was the geniusof Miss Humphrey. This dancetheatre group is determined tocarry on in her name. Our bestwishes go with them.Walter Jeschke••Bosses* Songbook**‘‘Talking Management Blues” and 30other parodies ‘‘to stifle the flamesof discontent.” 36 pp., Illustrated —30c (post, paid)Also, IWW songbook. 35c, 4/$lMETRO BOOKSApt. 21, 5400 Greenwood Ave. Pictured above is a scene from University Theatre's "Meas¬ure for Measure/' a spicy comedy set in a gay Vienneseatmosphere. The production opens tonight and will run dur¬ing this and next weekend.gjimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiimtiiijEE Chicago s Most Unusual= Motion Picture TheatrePhono DE 7-1761 Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRIST1138 E. 63 HY 3*5352 The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236Again reminds all College Students of theSpecial Student Rates always in effect atEVERY DAY OF THE WEEKINCL FRI. & SAT. EVENINGS __ Sf£CIAL7v STUDENTR» RATE NOWJUST SHOW CASHIER YOUR I.D. CARD FERNANDEL |'FORBIDDEN FRUIT " |a French Love-Dramar.lHIIII1HHH<llimill1IIIHIIIIIIIHIHI(1IIHIIINt«immMllimillltlHIHIIIIIIIIMIIIII«IIIHIIIIIIHI|||||||||||||il||||tl||||il|||fPhilip H. RosenbachannouncesINSTRUMENTALA Complete Stock ofMUSIC SCORES VOCALSTUDIES . STANDARD COLLECTIONSSHEET MUSIC MINIATURE SCORESNow available on 2-day service atThe Itook NookI 1)6 E. Sll hi :t-7.»nHyde Park's Only CompleteMusical Manuscript ServiceStandard retail catalogue prices Phone orders accepted 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-ltke atmosphere. Elegant hotel rooms and 2'room 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.“74e *l/&utUUe& ^5234 DORCHESTER FA 4-0200VACUA • VALOR • VANotice — Senior Men Students — U. S. CitizensIf you need money to complete your senior year andsecure your diplomaWrite, 'phone or call for loan application form as wehave such funds available.STEVENS BROS. FOUNDATION INC.610-612 Endicott Bldg. Si. Paul 1, Mina. Phone CApital 2-5184 !• CHICAGO MAROON • May 1, 19594. • N ' - .-Culture VultureOn CampusSince we have left our plainsimple country girls to the USArmy, we can now turn ourattention to University Theater’sMeasure for Measure.Shakespeare’s enigmatic com¬edy will concern the manners andmorals of not-so-simple women,not-so-homey soldiers in a not-so-provineial society. Paul Sillis willbe guest director of the produc¬tion.Measure for Measure opens to¬night at 8:30 in the Reynold’s clubtheater. Performances will beheld at the same time on Saturdayand Sunday, and on May 8-10.Tickets are now being sold at theReynolds club desk: admission is$1.50.Rumor hath it that the monthof May will be ushered in by anOxford-imitated celebration. Al¬though we lack a black-robedchoir eager and able to climb Mit¬chell tower at 4 am in order tofill the air with Latin hymns, wehave added authentic bag pipemusic to our tradition bell con¬cert. We hear that the best placeto listen will be Hutchinson court.The time will be high noon onMay 1.On Thursday, May 21, the 210thWilliam Vaughan Moody lecturewill present Douglas Moore, ina lecture on "The present andfuture of American opera.” Mooreis a prominent American musi¬cian and composer teaching Musicat Columbia university. The lec¬ture will be free to the public andwill take place at Mandel hall.The University Glee club willpresent a concert entitled ‘Bringin the May’ on Thursday, May 7th,in Hutchinson court. The presen¬tation will begin at noon; admis¬sion price, if any, is unknown.The Chicago Review and theDowntown College fund for finearts are sponsoring Stanley Ku-nitz in a reading of his own poetryon Saturday, May 2. The Chicagopoet will supplement his readingswith commentary and discussion.Henry Rage, editor of Poetrymagazine, will introduce Kunitz.The poetry reading will be held,with no admission charge, in So¬cial Sciences 122 at 2:30.The final lecture of the seriesentitled “Self portrait of the artistin the twentieth century” will begiven at the Downtown center, 64E. Lake St. The lecturer will beMax Kozloff, lecturer in the Uni¬versity College. The time will be8 pm; admission is $1.75.Motion PicturesAndalusian Dog (Chien D’Anda-lou) will be shown in Social sci-The Disc1367 E. 57»h St.Recordof the weekBeethovenMass in G. Op. 86Sir Thomas Beecham81168 $3.99 ences 122 tonight. The contents ofthe film are unknown. Let it suf¬fice to mention that Salvador Dalico-produced this classic horrorfilm. Single admission will be$.50. Showings of the film will beat 7:15 and 9:15 pm.The Seventh Seal will enjoy anextended run at the Hyde Park.Forbidden Fruits, starring Fer-nandel, opens tonight at the Surf.Off CampusMusicHandel seems to be the com¬poser of the season. Lyric Operabasso Andrew Foldi will direct theTemple Isaiah Israel Choral so¬ciety in a performance of the ora¬torio Samson by Handel. The per¬formance will commemorate the200th anniversary of the death ofHandel. The text is based on theJohn Milton epic, Samson Ago-nistes. Mr. Foldi is on the staff ofthe UC school of music and alsoa lecturer for our fine arts pro¬gram. The performance will beheld on Friday, May 8th, at 8 pin.Leon Kirkpatrick, pianist, willperform at Fullerton hall at theArt institute. The recital will beon Sunday, May 3, at 5 pm. Or¬chestra hall will be the setting fora Mischa Elman concert, also onSunday. The time will be 3:30.Admission prices range from$1.75-$4.00. Alexander Tcherepnin,composer-pianist, will perform onSaturday at 12:15, at the Chicagopublic library, 78 E. Washington.There is no admission charge.The last program in the Win-notka Concert series will be heldon May 6th at 8:30. Included inthe program will be quartets byHaydn, Beethoven, and Hinde¬mith. The concert will be held atthe Skokie school in Winnetka.Fritz Reiner and the ChicagoSymphony orchestra will con¬clude the current subscription sea¬son with an all-Beethoven pro¬gram consisting of the Coriolanusoverture and the Fourth and FifthSymphonies. The three works,composed in the space of twoyears, are representative of themost typical works of Beethoven’s‘middle period.’ This closing sea¬son marks the orchestra’s sixty-eighth and Reiner’s sixth in Chi¬cago. The final performances willbe held on Friday, May 1.TAh5AM-Y&.MCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018Starts Saturday, Moy 2ndWHAT A SHOW—RUSSIA TODAYmust be seen to be believed . . .N.Y. TIMESRUSSIA TODAYin mogicolorAVONTHEATER3*27 Fullerton HU 6-2110Open 6 pm wkdoysSot. fr Sun 1:30 pm An operatic and a dramatic ver¬sion of the Sophocles tragedyOedipus Rex will be heard overWFMT Sunday, April 19. GeorgeEnesco's opera "Oedipus,” neverbefore heard in the United States,is scheduled Sunday afternoon at2 pm. The W. B. Yeats translationof the play will be broadcast at 8 pm. The premiere broadcast ofthe opera will be performed bydistinguished Romanian artiststape recorded at the 1958 Roma¬nian Enesco festival.TheaterMoliere’s The Imaginary Inva¬lid will open on May 8 at theGoodman theater. The sad state of the practice of medicine in 17thcentury France is the object oiridicule in this ageless social com-edy. Some call it a broad farceswe will hold our opinions until tbtplay is viewed.Garden District, 2 plays by Ten¬nessee Williams, is still holdingits own at the Civic theater.'Measure for Measure'dose to tragedy: BaldMeasure for Measure fallsinto two parts, and the divi¬sion comes in the first sceneof Act III, when the duke stepsforward. Up to this point the ac¬tion and characterization havebeen developed with a full aware¬ness of all the moral and tragicissues implicit in them, so that animpasse has been reached whereit seems that any further changein the situation must inevitablyproduce immediate tragic conse¬quences. At this moment, how¬ever, the duke intervenes and forthe rest of the play he manipu¬lates every phase of the action inorder to bring it to a happy con¬clusion. “Craft against vice I mustapply,” he proclaims, and hismethod is that of the comedy ofintrigue.Shakespeare uses all his art tocover up this sudden change oftechnique, so that in performanceit is barely noticed. He shows asas little as possible of the charac¬ters who have thus far been thecenter of interest. Instead we aredistracted by the lively humor ofthe prison scenes and the imperti¬nences of Lucio, by the glimpse ofMariana’s “moated grange,” byone of the loveliest songs in allShakespeare, and by the sense ofapproaching climax in the duke’sdecision to “return.” Finally thelong last scene is carefully andingeniously organized for themaximum of theatrical effect, andbuilds up step by step to the re¬appearance of Claudio and thefinal forgiveness. All this is inmarked contrast to the weightier,more meditative movement of theearlier part of the play. Moral issues indeed dominatethe play. Its title recalls a part ofthe Sermon on the Mount: “Judgenot that ye be not judged. Forwith what judgment ye judge yeshall be judged; and with whatmeasure ye mete, it shall be meas¬ure to you again.” These wordswere a plea for the mitigation ofthe old Mosaic law, yet in the oneplace in the text of the play wherethe title phrase occurs it is inter¬preted as “an eye for an eye, anda tooth for a tooth.”But in this rigid interpretation,the wider application of Christ'swords was uppermost in Shake¬speare’s mind. Isabella’s plea forClaudio was based on the old anti¬thesis of justice and mercy, andthe conclusion of the play exaltsthe Christian ideal of forgivenessat the expense of justice.Nevertheless, Measure forMeasure is rich in ironies whichcomplicate the dramatic as wellas the verbal texture, and add tothe fascination of the play. It isnot the gay comic irony of AsYou Like It and Twelfth Night,but something far closer to thatof the great tragedies. The sinisterdouble meanings of Angelo’s firstsuggestions to Isabella and herinnocent misrepresentations ofthem are highly ironical, andthere is even a certain grim logic,barely hinted at, in Angelo’s de¬mand that if Isabella would havehim ignore her brother’s offense,she should be prepared to condoneit by committing it herself.The sense of irony in the laterpart of the play is less oppressive,but is still there. Yet the finalimpression left by the play is notone of a clouded or warped atti-yde park theatre"An uncommonand fascinating film . . .A piercing and 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"— The SaturdayReviewHELDOVER! Written and Oirecledby Ingmar BergmanThe Seweafti &ilOlid • • . first showing southTHE FRENCH THEY AREA FUNNY RACEwith Martine Carol, Jack Buchanan, & Noel NoelMade from the witty best-seller Major Thompson note¬books by writer-director Preston Sturges in the same zanyhilarious vein as his memorable "Great McGinty" and the"Miracle of Morgan's Creek.""Fresh, witty ond irreverent , ,"A fresh and hardy laugh"Galvanic and amusing . . ." - ’— Sot. Review of Lit., — Time mag.Crowther, N.Y. TimesThe French TheySeventh Seal Fri-Sat6-9:157:30-10:40 Sun2:30-5:45-94-7:15-10:25 Weekdays8:35 only6:45-10 tude towards life. Even thoughthe duke may allege that he hasseen “corruption boil and bubbletill it o’errun the stew,” the pic¬ture the play presents is far frombeing one of mere corruption anddisorder. Dark and light are con¬stantly set over against one an¬other.Shakespeare’s final judgment inthis play is sane and sure; he maybe aware, sometimes terriblyaware, of human vice and folly,but there is no hint that he de¬spairs of mankind.R. C. BaldArt studentsto exhibit worksNearly 100 works by ArtInstitute students will be ondisplay during the month ofMay at the Chicago Natural His-1ory museum. Clifford C. Gregg,director of the museum, also an¬nounced an extension of visitinghours during the summer months.The museum will be open dailyfrom 9 am to 6 pm.Natural Shoulder,Very LightweightTROPICALSDEANSGATE is the authenticnatural shoulder suit. Andwe show it here in thelightest of Dacron-and-Viscose blends — to giveyou a really cool andcorrect warm-weath¬er suit!45 00JBrittang,ltd.7104 S. JefferyPL 2-4030Open Mon. & Thurs. eves.Free Parking atCyril Court Garage1948 E. 71st PI.May 1, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • II"v» t A111 *ig gets ball's awardby Lance HaddixPhi Sigma Delta was thewinner of the large groupaward at the 1959 Beaux Artsball.The Phi Sigs, dressed as Hia¬watha and the Indians were cladin loincloths with such fitting ap¬pointments as grease paint, feath¬ers, bells, tom-toms, and the like.Alpha Delta Phi bedecked them¬selves to appear as charactersfrom “Wizard of Oz” and for theireffort secured the medium-sizedgroup award.Mike Hrinda, Dave (the bear)De Rosier, and their dates cameas characters from the Jabber-wocky to receive the small group award as Jim Smith won the bestmale award dressed as the TinMan from the “Wizard of Oz”troupe. Natalie Ostrott, ostensiblythe Pussycat from that ever-popu*lar poem, “The Owl and thePussycat,” was considered thebest dressed female of the eve¬ning. Granville Fatz and his datewon the best couple award withtheir costume, “The Hollow Men.”The award made to the Phi Sigswas a 1946 Dodge, while dinners,books of poetry, and waterbugswere awarded to individual win¬ners.For half time entertainment atthe ball, Alec Sutherland servedas me to a show of talent by fac¬ulty and students. Ray Lubwayand Sarah McGee pantomimed thePied Piper and suddenly it wasRuth Netherton dressed in rhine¬stones and singing, “It’s Fun ToBe Corrupted.” Next Bob Ashen-,hurst came on with a dozen fac¬ulty members who formed a bar¬bershop group to sing a contra¬puntal-old-time-favorites series ai’-ranged by Ashenhurst who sangsolos with Lubway. To wind upthe entertainment Alice Schaef¬fer, Gene K a d i s h, and BuddyWeiss recreated their roles inSour Mash.After slaking their throats withsome of APO’s punch, the 120Blackfriars make $$The Blackfriars’ show SourMash has set a record. JimBest, keeper of the jewels forthat organization, announces thatafter an estimated attendance of900-1,000 people, there is a goodchance that $200-$300 was chuckedinto the Blackfriars’ coffers asprofit.“This is inded a record, becausethe largest profit that any musicalreview has shown on campussince 1939 is $11.05.”The Blackfriars will hold ameeting next week to determinethe successors to this year’s offi¬cers who are: John Mueller, ab¬bot; Lynn Valentine, prior: JimBest, keeper of the jewels, andWendy Good, secretary. Also onthe agenda is a discussion of plansfor next year. While the show this year is con¬sidered a comparative success, itis hoped that next year the num¬ber of performances will only befour and be limited to Friday andSaturday nights.UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorJOBS on SHIPSPLAN NOW FOR SUMMEREARN HIGH PAY • TR&EL THE WORLDMen-Women . . . work aboard. Luxury Ocean LinersFreighters, Tankers. An opportunity to »ee the world,travel to many foreign lands while earning high pay.(No experience needed on many jobs.) Work fulltime, season, or on one-trip basis,For Information Write Pept. 21-XUNIVERSAL SNIP INFORMATION1020 Broad Street Newark, N. i.STERN'S CAMPUS DRUGS61st fir Ellis$S25 SOUTHERN FRIED $145JL CHICKEN JLwith all of the trimmings, chef salad, dressing,roll, butter, and beverageSPECIAL — Hot Meat Loaf Sandwich ONLY 65cU • CHICAGO MAROON • May 1, 1959 couples who attended the ball re¬turned to the east hall of theQuadrangle club to continue danc¬ing to Marv Jacobs band.Larry Harris and MarilynDrury provided a tasteful decora¬tion scheme for the ball. High¬lights of the evening were: aGrand March led by Wendy Good,ball chairman, and Mike Kindred,FOTA chairman; F. Scott (JimVice) Fitzgerald's quaffing ofchampagne from the shoe ofZelda (Rona Adler); Alice Schaef¬fer’s exuberant appreciation ofNed Rosenheim’s cello costume.0Kunitz reads hiswork, commentsStanley Kunitz, prize-win¬ning poet, will read and com¬ment on his work tomorrowafternoon at 2:30 in Social Sci¬ences 122. He will be introducedby Henry Rago, editor of Poetrymagazine.Kunitz received the HarrietMonroe award in 1957, and hisrecently published volume ofpoems received acclaim fromMarianne Moore who praised his“poetic eye and trenchant speech”and James Wright who said hispoems are “on the edge of great¬ness.” Hiawatha and friends stomp in from the Big-Sea water tomake the Beaux Arts scene, (photos by McMahon-Figlio)Mortgage InsuranceEducational InsuranceConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986 HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and Waffles 1342Open front Down to Down east 53 st.nmi<Bicycles, Ports, Accessories <special student offer <| ACE CYCLE SHOP1621 e. 55th st. HI-FI & STEREO for the finest elec¬tronic service, bring itto CHELTEN T.V.CORP., 2915 E. 79thSt. or Coll ES 5-3666The new Arrow FREE-WAYputs "action" in a shirt...Here’s a knitted shirt just made foractive sports (and lounging around,as well). The feather-light, mesh-knit fabric is bias-cut for perfectfreedom in any position. The back,cut longer than the front, lets thecollar fit your neck just right. Ina variety of shades to match orcoordinate with your summersportswear. $4.00.-ARROW-first in fashionThe new Arrow FREE-WAY is here!There’s not a man on campus who can’t use oneof these new action-back shirts. For tennis, golfor most any sport, the unique cut of the ArrowFREE-WAY prevents binding or straining —ever. (There’s plenty of style in these shirts, too.)In many smart colors—and we have most of themfor your selection. Arrow FREE-WAY, $4.00.Cabe's Store for MenUniversity's finest stare far menN.W. Corner 55th & Kenwood HY 3-5160ter- —' — ..I.. •'•-i ti..: