Gov't holds first meetingThe possibility of UC withdrawing from the National Stu¬dents’ association, a committee to investigate bookstore prac¬tices, and a committe to promote better laiason between thestudents and the Student Health service were the main topicsof the first Student Governmentmeeting of the school year whichwas held last Tuesday evening.Bill Hawkins, a undergraduatemember of the Government, sup¬ported by the independent LawSchool representatives, read aresolution calling for a studentreferendum on the question ofcontinued UC participation inNSA. This national student groupis composed of almost 400 mem¬ber schools and has been the sub¬ject of recent controversy atmany of them after the with¬drawal of Harvard and Californiaat Berkley last year. The Govern¬ment moved to postpone the reso¬lution for a student referendumon this matter until the nextmeeting.A committee was established toinvestigate the bookstore and re¬port to the Government at a fu¬ture meeting. A committee hasbeen set up with Dr. Marshall and Dr. Cassidy representing Studenthealth to explain the purposes ofthe health service to the campus,included in this presentation willbe articles in the Maroon andopen meetings between membersof the Government committee andStudent Health doctors.In other action of the evening,in a tie vote broken by PresidentByers, the Government voted tosend a letter to the striking non-professional workers at the Chi¬cago Home for Incurables, indi¬cating Government’s endorsementof their position. This union hasbeen striking for nearly a monthin an attempt to seek recognitionto organize at the Home.The Government also discussedthe faculty-fellow system as it ispracticed in the dormitories andsuggested that the Student Fac¬ulty Relations committee write adents, explaining the Govern- Pictured at right is StudentGovernment president Mau¬reen Buyers and Jean Dames,opening SG's first meetingof the year.m Mment’s plan of a reorganized fac¬ulty-fellow system based on smallinterest groups within the dormi¬tories. The Government does nothave voice in house affairs but ismerely acting in an advisory ca¬pacity.Jim Thomason, acting chair¬man of Elections and Rules com¬mittee announced that there aresix vacant assembly seats andtwo vacant seats on the govern¬ment’s executive council which ismade up of the four officers andthe committee chairmen. He alsoannounced that all six studentseats on the Student-Faculty-Administration court were vacant,Interested students who havebeen in attendance at the Univer¬sity for at least one quarter mayfile for these seats at the StudentGovernment office in Ida Noyeshall.Do Ybu Think for Yburse/f?(BLAST OFF ON THESE QUESTIONS AND SEE IF YOU GO INTO ORBIT*)If you saw a fully clothedman about to jump into ariver, would you (A) as¬sume the fellow was actingand look fora movie camera?(B) dismiss the whole thingas a piece of personal ex¬hibitionism? (C) rush tostop him?AD B □ C □ women who think for themselves usuallysmoke Viceroy. They know only Viceroyhas a thinking man’s filter—the most ad¬vanced filter design of them all. And onlyViceroy has a smoking man’s taste.*If you have checked (C) in three out of fourquestions . . . you think for yourself /✓ Do you believe that “astitch in time saves nine”is (A) an argument for day¬light saving? (B) a timelyblow against planned obso¬lescence? (C) a way of say¬ing that when you use fore¬sight you get along better?*□ BQ CDIn choosing a filter ciga¬rette, would you pick onethat (A) says it has a newfilter? (B) merely says ittastes good? (€) does thebest filtering job for the'finest taste?A □ B □ C □When you think for yourself . . . youdepend on judgment, not chance, in yourchoice of cigarettes. That is why men andThe Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows—ONLY VICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN’S FILTER... A SMOKING MAN’S TASTE!01B59, Brown <& Williamson ToPacco Corp.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 23, 1959 J. Maritain lecturesby Kitty Scoville‘‘Philosophy unifies, not by reason of the object . . . butby reason of the universal subjct which is humanity.” JacquesMaritain, the widely known and most influential Catholicphilosophr of the twentieth cntury, spoke these words Tues¬day evening. It was the last oftwo lectures given before theCommittee on Social Thoughtseminar and was open to all stu¬dents of the university. Maritain,who has been described as an“existentialist theologian,” spokeboth Monday and Tuesday on thesubject, “Auguste Comte: posi¬tivism and human knowledge.”The second lecture focused onpresent-day thought, as influencedby Comte’s theory of positivism.Maritain explained that “Comteis, if not the author, the prophetof a revolution in ideas,” as sig¬nificant as the Marxist revolutionin politics. According to Maritain,Comte prophesized our modern“anti - substantial, anti-wisdomstate of mind.” We are progres¬sing towards a cleavage of hu¬manity into two sub-species: homosapiens and homo positivitus. Thehomo positivitus includes an im¬portant number of today’s scien¬tists, a large amount of the pub¬lic, and a certain type of philos¬opher.The scientists who numberamong the neo-positivists believe,like Comte, that knowledge onlyof phenomena exists. Maritaintivity,” or a contradiction incalls this an “aboslution of rela-terms. These scientists, in denyingAristotle’s concept of contempla¬tive knowledge, betray philosophyas well as science. They are “merelivestock turning out inventions.”Maritain offers as an alternative,the “philosophic scientist” who isno atheist but has “a profoundspiritual life and lofty metaphysi¬cal aspirations.”Maritain next referred to the“general masses” who are char¬acterized by lack of interest intheir cultural environment andfaith only in technological andscientific knowledge. The lecturercondemned this belief as “strictlyincomptable to the exercize of in¬telligence” and as offering “aweakening climate” to religiousfaith. They are atheists in reason,if not in religion. The war against the intellect,begun by Comte, is being carriedon today by the neo-positivists inphilosophy. They are no longercapable of dealing with poeticaland philosophical questions. Man-tain concluded his discussion ofhomo positivitus by saying, "wesee science in the hands of ihostate threatening individual crea¬tivity.”Maritain then proceeded to ex¬plain the fallacies in a "philos¬ophy of anti-philosophy,” such asComte devised. Whereas Comteconcentrated entirely on the phen¬omenal approach to knowledge,there are other equally as validapproaches, such as the ontologi¬cal. The French theologian main¬tains that “truth is known, notthrough its measurable qualities,but through contemplation.”“There is a reality independent ofour perception and our mind, butit can be known by our mind.”Maritain stated that “Being iswhat is worth knowing, not phe¬nomena.” The only satisfactionfor scientists is to believe thatknowledge can be attained notat the level of science but be¬yond, at the level of philosophyand metaphysics.For the past 11 years, Maritainhas been living in Princeton, NewJersey, and is now retired fromregular teaching. He is the aulhorof True Humanism, Reflectionson America, and Existence andthe Existed in which he presentsThomism as the “only authenticexistentialism.” He is 77 yearsold, and the grandson of JulesFavre, past President of (lieFrench Republic. Maritain is cur¬rently at work on a moral philos¬ophy. In commenting on Mari-tain’s lecture at the university,John Nef, Chairman of the Com¬mittee on Social Thought, re¬marked: “There are two kinds ofpeople in the world: those whoshould never have been born andthose who ought never to die. Mr.Maritain is in the later category.”Editors in chiefLance Haddix . Neal JohnstonManaging EditorOzzie ConklinBusiness manager Advertising managerW. Gordon Bauer James Shardine30% OFF On QualityDRY CLEANINCAH work done by o regular Chicago Wholesaler whose plont servesother retail stores in eddition to his own outlets. You get this servicebecause of our non-profit policy end low overhead.Trousers 50cJackets 50cSuits 95cTopcoats 1.00Overcoats 1.10 ShirtsDressesSuits (2 piece).Light Coat ....Heavy Coat ...New! 20% Off on AU LmundryUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT SERVICE CENTERReynolds Club BasementHours: 11:30 - 1:3C — 3:30 - 5:30 . .50c..95c. .95c..95c.1.10XBLetter to editor Analyzes Soviet tourReader disturbed over frat storyDear sirs- ed to demonstrate your impartial- A University biologist has learned to conform, without ap is more evident than in the Uk-The untruths and half-truths ity. But the extremely spiteful at- summarized his impressions of pearing *0 ^ 0[h^Ufhp ^if^ihe Russians must kmcerning fraternity life in Wade titude and inaccurate representa- Russian iife and scientific ^erage Russfan considers him- sidered in terms of their histmyrious college newspaper such as thetic to t J, ;' Chairman of the Department of afraid to talk to Americans; on ated by direct comparison withthis. Your explanatory editorial to piovide 1 p y, physiology made the trip with the contrary, they eagerly ply Western standards. The structurestated that the Thompson article avoid angeling t e an 1- la ern y jour 0fher American endocrino- Americans with c uestions: of Soviet education with its cm-did not represent accurately the £r°uP- , logists under the auspices of the “Doesn't the American find the phasis upon dogma and narrowfraternity system at the Umver- It should be realized that tnere ug PubHc Health service. Ingle buildings and the parks very specialization in a program of as-sity. It does, however, represent is much more to lmpartia repor - balances outstanding Russian beautiful?” “What kind of houses signed projects for young re-the viewpoint of the large group ^ than maintmmng a balance ol gains in public welfare against or automobiles can the average searchers has not fostered cre-some deep-rooted failures in the American purchase?” Probably, ativity and originality in plan-. development of Russia’s creative their interest in American pros- ning research which character-l>oug as i mr potential. perity is in expectation of their izes scientists trained in the bestFirstly, Ingle professed sur- own coming era of abundance. US and European Universities,prise at the extent of new hous- Behind this apparent glow of There are certain dogmasing in Soviet cities, especially health and optimism, Dr. Ingle which rule all basic research fromMoscow. Also the well-swept notes some possible implications physiology to psychology andis open, with a student body of “The new buildings have had streets populated by well nour- 0f their very high school con- psychiatry. These preconceptions,360 (maximum capacity of the little effect on applications for ad- ished people belied the stereotype sumption: drabness, crowded con- many inherited from followers ofbuilding is 4501. mission. Since 1950 we have had of earlier times. Everywhere ditions and pressures to conform the great physiologist, Pavlov, be-in a recent interview, Dean Lu- a steady rise in applications and were bands of Russian children, must add up to personal frustra- termine the kind of problems andcas squelched as improbable the the Qual'ty of the classes. Our en- belonging to youth organizations, tion. In numerous instances, he the techniques chosen. The spir itrumor that Burton-Judson court terinS class this year, 141 in num- marching to some new activity, found a striking change from of bold innovation which charac-would become exclusively law her, is even better than last year's One cannot help but sense the glum sobriety to high-spirited terized Pavlov himself has been, , , „., , , excellent class” cheerful obedience and pride in . , stifled bv an unwdse reverenceschool dorm. “At present we have excenem ciass. _ . • humor and fellowship after a few . y . vn. reveierRc. ^ Need for a new addition to the achievement of self and State . . . ,, . which issues in imitation,only 90 dorm students and they schoo, da(es baok 1905 whe.n shared by these youngsters who drinks. Tins ts espenally true in ^ o[ , Moccupy all of Linn House, one there was talk of a new library are organized from the cradle on. Georgia w here some substandard mechanistic approach to mind,floor of Matthews, and other wing. “A law library doubles in Everywhere people have nutrition, poor dress, and housing basing the model of braintheof “anti-frat” men on campus, prejudiced writing.Your editorial claimed that the in- Sincerely,elusion of this article wras intend-Law building has 360 studentsThe new UC law school building places around the campus.. v;-*- •v.--..y.vNevertoo strong. Nevfirtoo weak.JL JL JL M I ■ l I I] I II B. FAMOUS CIGARETTES'» | * ^ ^ \ • s :£&&&• 'f j .. * •* >’ < 'v • .» • % £ v ■S'Sy. ••.V .vYou can light either end!Get satisfying f!avor...so friendly to your taste!See how Pall Mall’s famous length of fine, rich¬tasting tobacco travels and gentles the smoke-makes it mild—but does not filter outthat satisfying flavor! ac¬tivity upon the simple reflexphenomenon. The control of in¬ternal organs and of biochemicaladjustments is considered to heexplicable as a complex of ic-flexes which can be modified bvthe experimenter. Reactions todrugs and other biologically na¬tive substances can be modifiedby the conditions of reflexes inihe animal. Usually the dog isemployed for Pavlovian type ex¬perimentation.However, monkeys and otherprimates have been used to ex¬plore the origin of diseases simi¬lar to those afflicting man. Atthe monkey colony in Sukhum ithas been claimed that hyperten¬sion and other cardiovascular dis¬eases can be produced in baboonsand monkeys hy emotional frus¬tration. This can be done by iso¬lating the “king” baboon from his“harem” and allowing him towatch his male successor takepossession of the female con¬tingent. Dr. Ingle expresseddoubt that these experimentswere adequately controlled bytesting the spontaneous rate ofsuch diseases in baboons. This hesays, is typical of a great deal ofRussian medical research whichhas resulted in startling claimswithout adequate controls, anduse of statistical tests of signifi¬cance. In the Soviet world of bio¬logy and medicine attitudes andtechniques are as badly tailoredas the ill-fitting laboratory uni¬forms and as outdated as muchpre-war style equipment fre¬quently in use.For all this disappointmentwith Soviet progress in biologyand medicine, Dr. Ingle takesseriously the Russian boast thatthey will catch up to us in thisfield as in some others of strate¬gic importance. There are signsof liberalization in education andin choosing projects for youngerpeople. And there is a genuineRussian interest in exchange ofyoung investigators betweenAmerican and Russian labora¬tories. Although the Soviets maynot ship out their students withmarked individualist tendencieswe can expect good results ofsuch interchange. In the sciences,Colors Motched - Vamps LoweredPlatforms Removed - Toes Cut OutARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIR1749 E. 55thFAirfax 4-9622One of Hyde Park's FinestProfessional Dyeing and Refinishingof Shoes and HandbagsEquipped to RepairIndies' IVnrroiv HeelsHeels Changed - Any StyleAny Color - Backstraps Removedond Springalators InsertedShoes Stretched - Zippers RepairedOrthopedic WorkComing events on quadranglesFricay, 23 OcioberLathcran'^vlatins, with sermon. 11:30 am,Bond chapel.Lutheran stident group supper and lec¬ture, 6 pm. Chapel house, 5810 Wood-lawn avenue. Mr. Joseph Sitter, pro¬fessor of theology in the FederatedTheological faculty will speak on,•The Christian in the university.”Christian Science organization lecture,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes library. Ella M.Hay, member of the board of lecture¬ship of the First Church of Christ,Scientist. Boston, will speak on,"Christian Science : Satisfactionthrough the use of divine power.”Hillel foundation Sabbath service, 7:45pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue.■illel foundation fireside conversation,8:30 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue. Mon¬ford Harris, associate professor at theCollege of Jewish Studies, Chicago,will speak on, ‘ The Jewish image ofGod."University concert, 8:30 pm, Mandelhall. Masterplayers of Lugano cham¬ber orchestra playing works by Han¬del, Haydn, Stamitz, Genzner, andMozart.Saturday, 24 OctoberWUCB-Radio Midway, 2 pm, Mitchell tower studios. General station meet¬ing.Hillel foundation Simchat Torah serv¬ices and celebration, 7:30 pm, 5715Woodlawn avenue.Sunday, 25 OctoberRadio broadcast: ‘‘F'aith of our fathers,”7:05 am, WGN.Roman Catholic masses. 8:30. 10. 11 am,DeSales house, 5735 University avenue.Episcopal Communion service, 8:30 am,Bond chapel.Episcopal Church council Holy Com¬munion, 9:30 am, Bond chapel.Lutheran Communion service, 10 am,Hilton chapel.University religious service, 11 am.Rockefeller chapel. The ReverendMartin Luther King. Minister, DexterAvenue Baptist church, Montgomery,Alabama.Student Representative party meeting,3 pm, Ida Noyes East lounge. Meet¬ing of students in support of hospitalstrike at Chicago Home for the in¬curables.Hillel and Methodist foundation tea,4 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue. Tea inhonor of Reverend Martin LutherKing, Southern integration leader. Episcopal Church council supper anddiscussion, 5:30 pm, Brent house.Reverend William D. Faughnanspeaking on “Man’s unity under God,through communication.”Carillon concert, 5:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel. James R. Lawson, chapel caril-lonneur.Channing-Murray club, 7 pm, 5638Woodlawn avenue. Dr. Vernon Nash,•writer and lecturer, will discuss “Cur¬rent prospects for a governed world.”Bridge club, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Duplicate bridge will be played.Student Representative Party caucus,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes library.Radio broadcast: “The sacred note,”8:15 pm, WBBM. A program of choralmusic by the UC choir, Richard Vlk-strom. director; Heinrich Fleischer,organist.Monday, 26 OctoberArt exhibition: Mosaic, “The law,” 9am-5 pm, Monday-Friday; 1-5 pm,Saturday, Goodspeed 108, Harold Hay-don’s mosaic for Temple JBeth-El,Gary, Indiana, and a review of his¬toric masterpieces in color plates.Art exhibition, 10 am-5 pm, Monday-Friday, University of Chicago Press,DUAL FILTERDOES IT!dualfilterHERE’S HOW THE DUAL FILTER DOES IT:1. It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL...defi¬nitely proved to make the smoke of a cigarette mild and smooth ...2. with an efficient pure white outer filter. Together they bring you thereal thing in mildness and fine tobacco taste!8 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 23, 1959 5750 Ellis avenue. Oil and watercolorsby Babette Kornbluth.Hillel foundation seminar, 4 pm, 5715Woodlawn avenue. Movements andideas in Judaism,” led by Rabbi Mau¬rice Pekarsky.Botany club, 4:30 pm. Botany 106.“Carotenoid synthesis in chlorella,”H. Claes, research associate, Fels Fund,and Professor, Max Plank instituteof Biology. Tubingen. Germany.Hillel foundation. 7:30 pm, 5715 Wood¬lawn avenue. Folk singing led by Rab¬bi Henry Skirball.Motion picture: "Paris incident,” 8 pm.International house.Hillel foundation. 8:30 pm, 5715 Wood-lawn avenue. An evening of interna¬tional folk dancing in honor of UNday.Tuesday, 27 OctoberMatins with sermons according to Lu¬theran Use. 11:30 am, Bond chapel.Hillel foundation, 4 pm, 5715 Woodlawnnvenue. Class in intermediate Hebrew.Hillel foundation. 4 pm, 5715 Woodlawnavenue. Class in elementary Yiddish.Institute for the study of metals col¬loquium, 4:15 pm. Research institutes211. "Experiments on the opticalproperties of metals and alloys,” JohnRayne of the Westinghouse researchlaboratories.Garg-Griffen club. 4:30, Bartlett gym¬nasium. Organized practices of allprospective cheerleaders.Hillel foundation. 7:30 pm, 5715 Wood¬lawn avenue. Seminar, “Great textsin Judaism” (English), led by RabbiHenry Skirball.Department of Humanities sketch class.7:30 pm, Lexington studio. Live model;students please bring own drawingmaterials. Instruction will be given.Charge, 50 cents.Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30pm, Ida No.ves library. Non-dcnoml-natlonal Bible study meeting.Baptist student union social, 7:30 pm,Ida Noyes, third floor. All interestedstudents are cordially invited.Lutheran Theological fellowship, 8 pm.Swift commons. Mr. J. Pellkan, Pro¬fessor of historical theology in theFederated Theological faculty, andFather John Quinlan. Professor inthe department of religion at NotreDame university will discuss “Scrip¬ture and tradition in the light of theProtestant-Roman dialogue.”Glee club rehearsal, 8 pm, Ida NoyesEast lounge. All singers welcome.Television series: "All things consid¬ered.” 9:30 pm, WTTW (channel 11).Discussion, “Too big a harvest.”Wednesday, 28 OctoberDivinity school religious service, 11:30am, Bond chapel.Hillel foundation seminar, 4 pm, 5715Woodlawn avenue. “Great texts inJudaism.” (Hebrew)', led by RabbiMaurice Pekarsky.Hillel foundation. 4 pm, 5715 Wood¬lawn avenue. Elementary class inHebrew.Department of Art and RenaissanceSociety lecture, 4:30 pm. Goodspeedhall. "Mosaic: A history of the me¬dium,” Bertha H. Wiles, assistantprofessor, department of Art.Relm lectures: “Philosophy of economicpolicy,” 4:30 pm. Social Science 102.“Elements of the problem,” FrankH. Knight. Morton D. Hull distin¬guished service professor emeritus ofSocial Science.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel. James R. Lawson, chapel caril-lonneur.Episcopal Church council Evensong,5:05 pm, Bond chapel.Politics club meeting, 7:30 pm, SocialScience 201. Konstantlne Kangles,Chicago representative of Fidel Cas¬tro’s 26th of July movement, willspeak on, “Cuba: the program andproblems of the revolutionary govern¬ment.”University symphony orchestra rehear¬sal, 8 pm. Ida Noyes theater. All in¬strumentalists welcome.Country dancers. 8 pm, Ida Noyes hall.All dances taught. Thursday, 29 OctoberEpiscopal Communion service, 11 30 urnBond chapel.Committee on South Asian Studieslecture. 4 pm. Law South. The Honor!able Jaipal Singh, member of theIndian Parliament for the Constitu¬ency of Bihar and leader of the TribaiJharkhand party speaking on “Therole of tribes in modernizing India ”Zoology club. 4:30 pm, Zoology 14 Don-old F Poulson, profesor of zoologyat Yale university, speaking on, “Thegenetic analysis of developmentGarg Griffen club, 4:30 pm. Bartlettgymnasium third floor. Cheerleadertryouts.Hyde Park co-op semi-annual meetingand supper, 6:30 pm. Hyde ParkYMCA. 53rd street and Dorchester ave¬nue. Buffet dinner followed bv busi¬ness meeting at 7:45 pm. Tickets si 4'*each.Department of Humanities, 7:30 pmLexington studio. Instruction in woodcut, etching and other graphic artsLecture series: “Selecting your commonstocks." 7:30 pm, 64 East Lake street“Chemical Industry,” Paul H Cohenpartner, Stein. Roe. fc Farnh&m.Economics seminar, 7:45 pm, Law South"The cost of capital, the loan mar¬ket,” Franco Modigliani, professor ofeconomics. Carnegie institute of tech¬nology.Student forum onen meeting. 8 pm. So¬cial Science 122.Episcopal church coupril choir prac¬tice, 8 pm. Bond chapel.Television series, "New prospectlves10 pm. WTTW (channel 11). "Aboutimmunity.” William Burrows profes¬sor. department of microbiologyFriday, 30 OctoberThe Eucharist according to the Lu¬theran Use. 11:30 am. Bond chape)Dedication of the A. G. Bush library ofmanagement, organization, and indus¬trial relations. 2 pm. Industrial Rela¬tions center, 1225 E. 60th street.Political Science association open hourseminar. 3:30 pm. Social Science 302George Llska speaking on "Researchin international politics.”Polities club seminar. 4 pm. Social Sci¬ence 122. Claude Bourdet. editor ofFrance - Observateur and leadingspokesman of the Union de la GaucheSoclaliste. will speak on: “The com¬ing crisis In French politics."Statistics seminar, 4:15 pm, Eckhart 207"The statistical theory of selection.'Robert N. Curnow, ARC unit of sta¬tistics. Aberdeen.Hillel foundation Sabbath service, 7:45pm. 5715 Woodlawn avenue.Hillel foundation fireside conversation8:30 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue“What is Torah?” Rabbi Moshe LitoffTorah Synagogue, Chicago.King to speakMartin Luther King — in-tegrationist, pacifist, and Bap¬tist minister from Montgom¬ery, Alabama — will leadworship at Rockefeller chapel andvisit Hillel foundation for tea anddiscussion Sunday.“Remember who you are” willbe King's topic at the 11 amchapel service, with Dr. HeinrichFleisher, UC organist, plating theconsole.King will answer students'questions and discuss issues atthe Hillel tea,' given in his honorby the Methodist and Hillel foundations. at 4 pm Sunday. The tc;iis open to anyone.gJhiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiitititiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiHiiiiiiu;j TOTAL m Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood §UNUSUAL FOOD (DELIGHTFULATMOSPHERE |POPULARPRICESTni!iiimiittiii!iitiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitii)iiitt)l|||||||||||||||||f||||||||||||||||||||||||||)iini^5309 KIMBARKPhotographic FinishingA Complete Custom Service• Fine Grain Developing• Enlarging • Copying• 35mm Specialists• Black and White Roll Films Received Before 5 PMWill Be Ready by 2 PM the Following Day• Kodachrome, Ektachrome and Kodacolor Processed byEastman Kodak• All Black fir White Finishing Processed at This AddressACADEMY PRINTSStudent DiscountMU 4-5454aa.,aa..a.a.a,a.a.• Maroon classifieds •For rent Help wanted ServicesSleeping room with kitchen privilegesfor serious, quiet male Grad student.BU 8-5229.2 large furnished rooms with privatebaths. Ideal for students or professionalpersons. Call Mrs. Browning, OA 4-3T84,after 4 pm.Basement rm. with priv. bath and en¬trance, near campus. DO 3-3710.Enjoy gracious living. Sunny, airy, spa¬cious apt. 3*i large, high ceilingrooms, huge modern kitchen, luxuriousbath. Newly and comfortably furnished.Ideal transportation. Gas & electricityincluded. Must be seen to be appre¬ciated. Call Mrs. Browning, OA 4-3184,after 4 pm.l-V/i-Z-2 rm. furnished apts. Reason¬able. Near University of Chicago, 6107Dorchester. PL 2-9641. Part time man to lead boys’ gym andswim classes, Wed. 10:30 am to 2:30 pm.Call Mr. E. J. Rohmann at FA 4-5300,Hyde Park YMCA, 1400 E. 53rd St. PIANO LESSONS? Experienced maleteacher available. University area. Mas¬ter of Music degree. Excellent refer¬ences. Children a specialty. Ph PL2-2787.Sewing, alterations, hems. MU 4-3941.PersonalsMale group leaders for teenage groupmeeting Sun. afternoons. Also, male forscience groups weekday afternoons.Good pay. YMJC Youth Center. RE1-0444.Baby-sitter wanted 11:30-5:30, 5 days aweek. Ideal for student wife. $1 an hour. Sue: It's been a great 15 (and 10 too)All right to bring your own child. FA months! Hasn’t it? Jordan.4-2164.Is she going to the Psi Upsilon AnnualHard Times Party Saturday night?For saleElect, stove, washer and dryer, buggy.Excellent condition. NO 7-8387.Student totes her newly acquired painting at Ida Noyes,scene of last Tuesday's Shapiro drawing.Establish new memorial fundto honor memory of Dr. TaylorA memorial fund has been set up to honor the memory ofthe late Dr. Ruth E. Taylor who watched over the health ofUC students for 30 years.Dr. Taylor, a well-known physician in Chicago, died ofleukemia in General hospital inBuffalo, New York, July 18, 1959at the age of 63. She was buriedin Emerson, Iowa, her birthplace.A memorial service at 11:00 amSunday, November 1st at Rocke¬feller chapel in memory of Uni-versity faculty who died in thepreceding year will include a trib-uie to Dr. Taylor.Her friends have organized amemorial fund. Contributions inher name should be sent to theI niversity of Chicago to be usedby the Division of Hematology.Mrs. Ruth MeCarn, assistant deanof students and director of voca¬tional guidance and placement, isin charge of the campus commit¬tee for the memorial.Dr. Taylor received her BS de¬gree from Parsons coHege, Fair- field, Iowa in 1918 and her MDfrom Rush Medical college in1923. She was an intern in Pres¬byterian hospital 1923-24, and aResident in the Durand Conta¬gious hospital 1925-27.She spent some time at theLondon School of Tropical Med¬icine.She served as Clinical AssistantProfessor of Medicine and Phy¬sician in the Student Health serv¬ice from 1929 until she took aleave of absence in 1956. Sheserved as Director of the StudentHealth Service in 1945-46.At the invitation of Robert M.Strozier, president of FloridaState university in Tallahassee,she set up the Student Healthservice at that university in1957-58.We believe that to be <helpful we must be both *sincere and ready to serve. \May we be helpful to <► you? Our business is mov- <ing and storage.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 E. 55th St.BU 8-6711 ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli . beef,mostaccioli sausage Gr meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa10% Discount to UC Students and PersonnelAll Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW NET PRICES8-LBS WASHED & FLUFF DRIED ... 59’10-LBS. FLAT WORK *1"DRESS SHIRTS - 22'Quality Dry Cleaning, rapid service, reasonable pricesFree Pick-up and Delivery (Min. of $1.76)* Phone Plaza 2-9097UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1024 E. 55th St. Wanted3 female graduate students with 2 well-behaved cats seek furn. or unfurn. apt.Will move in any time .between now &Jan. 1. Write J. Eckerly, Blake Hall.Secy, quiet, neat, wants rm. in privatehm. as widow/teacher, might sh, 57th-Blackstone area. Miss McVey weekend,nltes. DO 3-4100. Creative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.Ophelia:Hamlet. Doubt truth to be a liar?Little Girl: Je fals mes apologies. OldMan.Lost & foundShapiro drawingattracts over 200Kahn’s “Esperanza,” mostwanted picture in the Shapiroexhibit this quarter, went firstat the “Art to live with” draw¬ing in Ida Noyes lounge Tuesdaynight. The James R. Shapiro col¬lection has been available for stu¬dent rental for four consecutivequarters, with drawings forchoice held at the beginning ofeach quarter.James R. Newman, Dean of Stu¬dent housing, picked registrationblanks from a copper pot whileJim Dalton of Student housingand volunteers Mary Jeske, KarenKirk, Carol Simpson, Gail Bur¬gess, and Nathalie Ostroot did pa¬per work for the approximately200 students present."I believe that this is now apermanent part of UC life,” notedNewman. Undergraduate studentrental started in the fall quarter,1958. The pictures will probablybe available to graduate studentswinter quarter, as Shapiro hopesto enlarge the collection for thispurpose.The remaining pictures are ondisplay in student activities officeand may be rented by undergrad¬uates who did not attend Tues¬day’s drawing. Lost: Grey sport jacket in library orIda Noyes. Had Russian vocabulary cardsin pocket. Call R. Dearborn, Foster. Carlos: 2 plus 2 equals 4, who’s behindthat door? Oak.Forty per cent of all jelly-fish are left-handed.They ran out of ten-foot syllabi. Junior.NOBBY HBUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Down to Down 1342east 53 st.1 BETA SMOKER i♦ iTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 29—7:30 PMBeta Theta Pi5737 University AvenueAOFFERS CAREER in research and— ' ■— ♦ development ofOPPORTUNITIES space vehiclesActive participation in Space Research and Technology, SpaceVehicle design and development • Opportunity to expand yourknowledge • Individual responsibility • Full utilization of yourcapabilities and association with top-ranking scientists in your fieldRepresentatives of the team that put America's firstSpace Probe beyond the Moon will be here for interviewsNOVEMBER 2ndinterested in talking with... 'PHYSICISTS • CHEMISTS * MATHEMATICIANS • ELECTRONIC,AERONAUTICAL, MECHANICAL AND STRUCTURAL ENGINEERSJOB OPENINGS NOW IN THESE FIELDSOPTICS • INFRA RED TECHNIQUES • SOLID STATE AND NUCLEARPHYSICS • PHYSICAL AND ORGANIC CHEMISTRY • SPACE VEHICLEGUIDANCE • SPACE COMMUNICATIONS • INSTRUMENTATION•COMPUTERS • TELEMETERING • MICROWAVE TECHNOLOGYENGINEERING MECHANICS • AERODYNAMICS AND STRUCTURESVJ CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGYJET PROPULSION LABORATORYA Research Facility operated f.of N A §.APASADENA • CALIFORNIA u, .J..*- .... • October 23, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9SchwartzSSA research workDv. Edward E. Schwartz, recently recruited from NewYork University’s Graduate school of public administrationin social service, brings a wealth of experience to the SocialService administration’s (SSA) new George Herbert Jonesendowed professorship. *“Hue I hope to develop a pro- and juvenile delinquency havegram of research into the ad- been targets for a few ofministration of social and welfare Schwartz’ research projects,agencies.” says Schwartz, “per- Other projects have been con-haps parallel to the school’s pres- cerned with such problems asent research bureau on case work child neglect, family life, pro¬theory. Teaching in administra- grams to increase the welfare oftion Ip my present preoccupation, the child population, the costs of“How can a social agency be child placing, and the size andeffective in ascertaining the needs incidence of common social prob-of a community, mobilizing re- lems.sources, and meeting those needs? “Research is not a basic meth-Administrative research must an- od but a generalized method ap-swer these questions by deter- plicable to all processes.”mining the priority of needs and Schwartz stated. “It is the round-evaluating the results of different ing out — the developing of amethods.” . richer range of approaches toSchwartz’s interest in social meet various needs."work dates back to his student Cook county Bureau of publicdays at UC, where he came to welfare, Illinois emergency reliefstudy economics under Harrie commission, WPA, the Bureau ofMillis. “Living in the US settle- public assistance, the US ehil-ment during the depression dren’s bureau and NYU listaroused my interest in problems Schwartz as a past employee—of unemployment and methods of statistician, administrator, re¬relief and assistance for the un- search worker, or teacher,employed.” continued Schwartz. Schwartz holds a BA in eco-Efforts and ability of trade nomics from Wharton school ofunions to assist their unemployed finance and commerce, MA frommembers, employability of per- the University of Pittsburg, andsons ©n relief, child life, infant- has completed PhD work withmaternal mortality, child labor SSA. CBS man at Inf house“The future foreign policy (ofthe United States) will be de¬cided in the heat of the politicalcampaign of next year,” a CBSnews analyst told a large audienceWednesday night at InternationalHouse.Emphasizing the necessity ofstudying politicians to understandAmerican foreign policy, FrankReynolds said there are no “quickand easv” to the prob¬ lems of international relations.“We need to come alive. I ampersuaded that we are doingthat,” Reynolds asserted.Tracing the postwar evolutionof American foreign policy, theCBS newsman said the promisesmade by both candidates in the1944 campaign that the “Americanboys would be brought home” in¬dicated a “tremendous naivete” bythe campaigners.New 1960 KM brings you taste... more taste...More taste by far...yet low in tar!New, free-flowing Miracle Tipunlocks natural tobacco flavor!That’s why L*M can blend fine tobaccosnot to suit a filter... but to suit your taste! 1 Frees up flavorChecks tars withoutOnly the 1960 L*Mother filters squeeze in!choking taste! ■ Gives you the full, exciting flavorof the world’s finest, naturally mild tobaccos! Isolationism versus interna¬tionalism — a political debate notnew in the annals of Americanhistory — was once again re en¬acted. Not until the Berlin airliftand the Korean War, Reynoldsstated, did Americans wake up tothe threat of naked aggression.The speaker recalled the “dra¬matic appeal” of President Eisen¬hower to travel to Korea if electedin 1952. Eisenhower, Reynoldssaid, “went over and took a lookat it, and then came home and set¬tled it on terms which were unac¬ceptable to the other politicalparty.”Citing the efforts of the lateSecretary of State Dulles to con¬struct a framework of defense al¬liances, the CBS newscaster saidwe “haven’t followed through be¬cause we couldn’t. The doctrineof massive retaliation arousedconcern within the United States,as well as the rest of the world.”In answer to a question concern¬ing the difference in emphasis, ifany, between Dulles and Herter,Reynolds replied that Secretaryof State Herter “entered officewith something less than the en¬thusiastic approval of the Presi¬dent.” Dulles, often criticized forhis failure to delegate responsibility among subordinates, also "ranthe President,” the newsman01966 Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.More taste by far...yet low in tar...And they said “It couldn't be done1”PILTBRSUGCETT 6 MYERS TOBACCO CO stated.“I can’t honestly say that I seea shift in emphasis,” Reynoldsadded.Gifts for All OccasionsKOGA GIFT SHOPQuality and ServiceMm Our MottoImported and Domestic Dry GoodsChinaware - Jewelry - KimonosSandals - Greeting Cards!Hi*a Kofjn 1203 F. 55 Si.Ml 4.6856 C hicago 15, 111.a SwinglineStapler nobigger than apack of gum!(Including1000 staples)SWINGLINE “TOT”Millions now in use. Uncondi*tionally guaranteed. Makes bookcovers, fastens papers, arts andcrafts, mends, tacks, etc. Avail¬able at your college bookstore.SWINGtINE“Cub" S to pier $1.27INC.ION0 '$tAN0 CITY. N6W.VOAK, M.JI*Art theatre? Hyde Park!The Hyde Park Theatre calls Itself an art theatre, and is said by many to be the onlyChicago theatre playing many “first-rate old art films.” What is an art film? ArthurSchoenstadt, president of H. Schoenstadt & Sons, Inc., which operates this theatre answeredthe question. He compared the art film to classics in literature and music and painting,saving it “encompasses branches of anything artistic,” importance being placed “not onlypn subject matter, but on technique.”"Undoubtedly the Hyde Park ——** it has developed could nothave become the type of theatreH is but for the University andthe surrounding' community,’*maid Mi** Rose Dunn, manag¬ing director of the theatre."There’s the old joke,” said Misspunn. "that the difference be¬tween an or dinary film and an artfilm is that art films bill directorsrwer actors. But we have definedthe ai t theatre beyond the stand¬ard function of showing importfilms. We show current populara’id off heal films and do a lot ofdigging for good old films.”Who decides what is an art filmand what is not? Said Schoen-mtadt. ‘"Plie responsibility lies withwhomever shows the film, but thefmal criterion is the clientele.”"We feel,” said Miss Dunn, “thatwe can understand the tastes ofthe area. When the audience dis¬agrees I listen to their tastes.”Schoenstadt told how the HydePark was established as an arttheatre. “It was built by somefly by night people who createdcompetition where it was notneeded. iTlie Pieadilly and Harp-rr theatres were already in ex-istenee in the area.) We boughtthe theatre about 30 years ago anda Per a failure showing ordinaryfilms, we tried art pictures whichhad originated in New York. AtP is time, there were onlv foreignfilms. And the Hyde Park becamea success.”"We've just come out of a realscarce year,” explained MissDunn, “fewer good films havebeen produced while people havebecome more selective in whatthey were willing to see. Butwhenever the Hyde Park hastrouble getting good new films,we go back to old ones. We ares' II looking for the answer towhy some quality films don’t sell,but we are never ashamed of pic-tm-cs that don’t do business.” ers, and the whole development ofindependent film - producers re¬sulting in Goddess, Cat on a HotTin Roof, and Anatomy of a Mur¬der.. There also was a dearth oftop-notch art films.“Another thing which hashurt the theatre is Brigitte Bar-dot” she went on, “except forDove is My Profession whichhas a good storyline. There hasbeen the over-empliasis on sex,ami the playing of Bardot filmseverywhere stole the lusterfrom foreign films.”Miss Dunn estimates that halfto two-thirds of her audience ismade up of “university-involvedpeople.” “The one stable elementin the changing Hyde Park com¬munity” said Schoenstadt.Schonstadt spoke of the art-the¬atre audience, calling it “broad¬minded, intelligent and cultured.”“A fascinating thing about art-John Coltrane, tenor sax;Ira Sullivan, trumpet; WilburWare, bass; Phil Thomas,drums; Jody Christian, piano— this is the line-up of modernjazz musicians who, on Saturday,October 31, will open the series ofthree modern jazz concerts at theMandel hall.Coltrane, whose music has beendescribed as “sheets of sound,*has six LPs to his credit, includ¬ing his “Blue Train.”-Ira Sullivan,a Chicago native, is nationallyknown both through his record¬ings and jazz club dates. Therhythm section consists of WilburWare, Phil Thomas and JodyChristian. Ware has used his basson his own LPs and has accom¬panied most of the modern jazz theatre goers,” said Miss Dunn,“is the small hard core of de¬voted goers who ran out of Hol¬lywood movies and end up under¬standing and sympathetic towardsforeign films. The audience at theHyde Park is warmly and activelya part of the performance andreceptive to it.“There is one area the art the¬atre has missed, she admitted,“and that is the way films are dis¬cussed and presented. They aresold badly because there is a self-consciousness about having aproduct of limited appeal.”The Hyde Park plans more“special events” such as thefirst “Magoo oar toon concert”presented several years ago andthis year’s “well - received”poetry reading.“It’s future depends much onthe growth of the community, andit looks good.”figures of stature.The October 31 concert will befollowed by two others, November21 and December 5, both Satur¬days. Sax players Johnny Griffinand Sonny Rollins will be broughtto Chicago — Griffin to head upthe same group as heard the firstnight and Rollins, the young“hard-blower,” will close the se¬ries with a quartet.The Student Representativeparty is sponsoring the concerts.Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRISTEyes exomined Glasses fitted1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352Jazz invades MandelDoes the Hyde Park recognizeHollywood films as art? “Holly¬wood gives itself away” MissDunn answered. “It always refersto itself as ‘the industry’ not as‘artists’. Art theatres have hadthe biggest percentage of growthuntil early last Fall when theytook a heating as a result of thematurity of Hollywood film-mak-Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372Have a WORLD of FUN!Travel with fITAUnbelievable low CostEurope60 0«y* „X, from $675_ . Orients&Tu* 143-45 o.,. ,»S~1 *'•« $998Mony louts inductcollege <red<t27th Year Also low-cost trips to Mex$169 up. South America $699 iHawaii Study Tour $598 up aAround the World $1898 I. Ash Your Trovel Age1 H HP JHk 137 SoI ■ ■ (hitogo 4, HAWORLD TRAVEL/ Super Sub!Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company byIt’s been said that the atomic submarine“Nautilus” stays submerged so long that itonly surfaces to let the crew re-enlist.Perhaps for this reason, the Navy has takenvaluable space aboard the “Nautilus” for theonly soft-drink vending machine in the entiresubmarine fleet.Naturally (or you wouldn’t hear about itfrom us) it's a Coca-Cola machine. And notunexpectedly, re-enlistments are quiterespectable.Rugged lot, those submariners. Greatdrink, Coke! SIGN OF GOOD TASTEThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc. Rose Dunn, manager of the Hyde Park Theatre poses infront of a bas relief which decorates the Hyde Park's lobbyMiss Dunn says of her theatre, "It's future depends muchon the growth of the community, and it looks good.”• • •••MUSIC HAS CHARMS”The 17th Century playwright, William Congreve,was the first to set down this classic metaphorconcerning the powers of sound and rhythm.You’ll find the whole quote in “The MourningBride”, Act I, Sc. 1:"Music hath charms to soothe the savage breast,To soften rocks, or bend a knotted oak.""RHYME OR REASON”Edmund Spenser, 16th Century poet, expected apension. He didn't get it. So he wrote this rhymes"I was promised on a time/To have reasonfor my rhyme,-/From that time unto this season,/I received nor rhyme nor reason.”* * *Jockey Underwear• RandOf all the kinds of underwear, only Jockey brand is espe¬cially tailored to feel better because it fits better. Thissuperior comfort is assured by exclusive construction fea¬tures that no other underwear has duplicated. Tb enjoyreal comfort, insist on Jockey brief—the world's first andfinest, look for Jockey at your campus store.October 23, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Thither and yon...An informal political survey of neighboring campus editorials reports 15 college editorsdecrying communistic infiltration of sweet campus minds, and 10 editorials protesting theloyalty oath required to get a government loan . . . obviously a trend. But towards what?The Trinity College Tripod reports; “It is the belief of the Tripod that fraternities . . .have failed to keep pace with the increasing academic standards and atmosphere of the col¬lege community ... if the fraternities insist on living in the past where the social yard¬stick was the per capita consump- ~tion of bathtub gin, then, they can- Senate ... we recommend the pro-not survive the growth of the in- posed type of representation.”tellectual atmosphere of the col- Tenipal University News quoteslege.” Dick Matta, president of the Uni-Remarkably in context com- versity of Miami chapter of Sigmamerits the Wesleyan Argus, “Re- Phi Epsilon who says “The ES-cently we have seen an astonish- SENCE of fraternity life is non-ing and healthy expansion of the democratic. It’s not a question ofnon-fraternity population . . . raciaI or religious prejudice, it’s. _ . H . , simply the right of the fraternitythere is being considered a plan tQ choose their own members . . .to grant them proportionate rep- evenresentation in the College Body resolution mentions that the resolution he(Dick Matta) refers to is a pro¬posal to remove the ethnic bar¬riers that exclude non-white andnon-Christians from the frater¬nity. He does commend Mr. Mattafor being honest enough to saywhat he really thinks.Hypocrisy is the homage vicepays to virtue, and much moreof it is needed.Moving from the real to theif other^chapters [ati*y V?e temporal, back again to the Wesition.” Editor Bill Conhn ,eyftP Arff|IS ,Lovely ladies>Vi Interclub Rush PartiesFirst parties open to all interested girlsWyvern —“Dragonwyck”—Ida Noyes library—Thursday. October 22,7:30-9:30 pmSigma —“Going places and meeting people”—Alpha Delta Phi-5747 S. University—Sunday, October 25 —6:30-9:30 pmDelta Sigma —“Smoker”—Alpha Delta Phi—5747 S. University—Monday,October 26 — 8-10 pmQuadrangler —“Cabaret”- Psi Upsilon- 5639 S. University—Wednesday,October 27—7-9 pmMortarboard —“Luau Phi Delta Theta- 5625 University—Wednesday,October 28—7-9 pmEsoteric —“Casino D’ Esoteric—Phi Gamma Delta—5615 University—Thursday, October 29-7:30-9:30 pmTHREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree l.C. DeliveryTerry 9 s ~11518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045 brawny men, a movie film crew,and other Madison Avenue inhab¬itants visited the campus in earlySeptember to immortalize Wes¬leyan in Arrow Shirt commercials. .. fullback ,*.... was pic¬tured rifling a football as one ofthe debonair nattily-attired malemodels.” Personally the black eyepatch type has always seemedmuch more “in group.”The UMW Post says. “Collegestudents are very susceptible tosubversive activities.” ... or atleast according to the gov¬ernment. “They are more suscept¬ible, it appears, than farmers, oilmen, shipbuilders, . . . Yugoslavia.India, Indonesia, or Italy ... allof which receive federal govern¬ment subsidation or aid.“Yet college students must signan oath reaffirming their allegi¬ance to the United States. . . . Allstudents (to get a governmentloan) must ink the dotted line inreiterated support of “our demo¬cratic ideals.” . . . Why? Onlybecause Representative M u n d tthought it would be undemocraticto give money away without sign¬ing an oath.”Mortgage InsuranceEducational InsuranceConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986KQDL KROSSWORD No. 4ACROSS1. Flat-top hill5. Cowpoke’scolleague9. Of Oxford10. Cooler, butnot the clink11. Dissolveher defenses12. homo13. It lookslike H15. Actress Hagen16. Target forFrench blade18. Downs inEngland20. This one you’vegotta dig23. With thelip curled24. Mr. Yale25. And so forth26. What gagmenparadoxicallytry to produce29. When yourthroat tells youit’s time fora , comeup to Kool!S3. This is the wayto go, formally34. Ill-advisedpre-datevegetable35. Half ersatz36. Catskillwithout a cat40. Make like thenew Marilyn41. You are (French)4.3. Steady number44. Strugglememento45. French novelist46. It’s after Sept.47. Colleen-land48. Country-styleSlaughter 22.27.30.38. Kind of VegasOne for the potDOWNA refreshingwith Kools!Prep with a repIt’s a comfortIt does thecrawlSweetie’slast nameBlameHead man atsome collegesDescribingcertain boatsKool kindof magicWhat Grampa hadto do to proposeA nutA type ofroomThere’s one forevery herDryHe started“The Tatler”Buy your Koolsby thethe occasionOne of theVitamin B’sVehicle forjuveniledrag raceThe main courseEpitome ofcleanness,smoothness insmokingDurante chant:“. dtnea,doo”Answer to“Shall we?"Little sisterOcean 1 2 39111316 1^|2026 27 283335 ■41 n4548 JWhen vtour throat tellsyou its time for a changeyou needa real change...YOU NEED THEJAeAoQ J/tcwtG°-= KQDLu r MILO MENTHOLKING-SIZE(JigarelleA• less. Brown A Williamson Tobacco torp. "'•*—•• 912 • CHICACO MAROON • October 23, 1959 Library extendshours, limitsDoors of all libraries oncampus except the Orientalinstitute library swing open at8:30 am now, reports StanleyE. Gwynn, Assistant director forreaders’ services. Night hours inthe Social science reading room-third floor Harper—extend until11 pm.“Starting this fall quarter, wehave been able to liberalize libraryhours somewhat,” continuedGwynn. “This partially restores acut made in 1952 when fundswere curtailed considerably.”Supper - hour service, recentlynon-existent in Harper circulationand reserve, has been added tothe schedule. The rare book room,modern poetry, and special collec¬tions all located in Harper W61—will open at 9 a.m. as in pre¬vious years.“We expect to keep one depart¬ment open some hours on Sunday,probably beginning with the win¬ter quarter, and we also hope toadd some evening hours in a fewdepart mental libraries,” com-mented Gwynn on prospects forthe coming year. New hours wentinto effect at the beginning ofthis quarter. Wq ansi aaciseh nnsBGas sanaHHnffis amafflEUIDH SBDHOSSHOsealilBESEBBSSU3MSNV K30HSeries opensThb Masterplayers of Luganoa group of twenty string andwind players, will be featured thisweek for the first of a series ofmonthly university concerts. Theconcert will take place on Friday,October 23, at 8:30 p.m. Studenttickets will cost $1.00. Other tick¬ets will cost $2.00.The Masterplayers of Lugano,emphasize established composersof the past, although several con¬temporary works, considered tobe of unusual interest, are alsoincluded in their repertoire. Theyhave been in existence as a groupsince 1954, when they joined to¬gether in Lugano, capital of theItalian-speaking Swiss canton ofTicino.Featured as soloists will beJulian von Karolyi, pianist, andDenes Zsigmondy, violinist. Directing the group will bo RichardSchumacher, said to be a “dynam¬ic young man in his thirties.”Workshop continuesThis year’s student workshop is being continued into theAutumn quarter for the purpose of discussing student or¬ganizations as they relate to the student and the Universityadministration,Composed of the heads of the major student organizationson campus, the workshop met with Chancellor Kimpton, DeanNetherton, and Dean Simpson >during orientation week, confer- dent government; John Schuer-ring with the Administration and man station manager of WUCB;themselves about the role of Stu- Jim Best> a5bott of Black friars;dent activities on campus and Neal Johnston and Lance Haddix.what each organization could do cditors of the Maroon; Carleent°ri-?lprOVe ltSG/‘ T Schmidt, president of Interclub;Those present were: John Muel- Fred gchmidt, of Owl and Serler, editor of Cap and Gown, Basil penj- Frances Moore, of NU PiDemeur, president of IF council; Si . Mike Edidini head of OHarvey Flaumenhoft, of Iron board; Norma Schmidt, presidentMask; Nancy Cox, president of of the Women’s Athletic associa-student union; Gene de Sombre,of Maroon Key; Elizabeth Trun- tion; Alice Schaeffer, chairman ofinger, head of student forum; FOTA; and Ozzie Conklin, presi-Maureen Byers, president of Stu- dent of University Theatre.Universal Army StoreHeadquarter* for sport and work wearFlop pocket wash & wear ivy league trousers — Wash & wear dressshirts — camping equip. — Complete line of keds footwear — trenchcoats — luggage and trunks.1144 East 55th st. DO 3-9572I 0 % reduction with this coupon ..GLADIS restaurant1527 E. 55th DO 3-9788We Specialize in Well-Balanced Meals atPopular Prices, and Midnite SnacksOPEN ALL NIGHT — ORDERS TO GOforeign car hospital l climeSA 1-3161dealers in:castrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli &michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespecialists in: speed tuningcustom engine installationsclutchgear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachworkbob lester MG psychiatrist7215 exchange ave.Chicago 90,'IllinoisAthletic results recordedUniversity of Chicago cross¬country team edged the Crusaders0f Valparaiso University 27-28. atWashington Park on Wednesday,October 14 th.Preston Grant held the winningtime of the 4-mile event at 21:54.8.pj„o team scoring was contrib¬uted by Bud Perschke, DaveHonk, Pat Palmer, Tom ClarkeaIU! Dennis Rusche.Maroons lose to Wabash,Wheaton and LoyolaA quadrangular cross-countrymeet was held in WashingtonPark between Wabash College,Wheaton College, Loyola Univer¬sity and the University of ChicagoSaturday, October 17. The over¬all winner was Wabash, followedby Wheaton, Loyola and Chicago.This contest was recorded as atriple dual meeting with the fol¬lowing results: Chicago 47, Wa¬bash 16; Chicago 45, Wheaton 17;Chicago 33. Loyola 24.Coach Hay don comments,“While we absorbed 3 losses, wewere the gainers in terms of ex¬perience and conditioning. Wa¬bash has the best team in the his¬tory of the school fthe first fourmen can run the mile under 4:201.At any rate, we proved that wewere not afraid to lose to any¬body. We’ll get them next year.”Haydon's Ponies outrunWilson 18-43Maroon "B” cross-country teamstampeded Wilson Junior College18-43 in Washington Park onTuesday, October 20.The winner of the 3 mile eventwas Walter “Bud” Perschke, lead¬ing Maroon half-miler in 16:44.The Maroon scoring was complet¬ed by Pat Palmer, Dennis Rusche,Tom Clarke, John Musgrave andTom Bartha, who placed 2nd, 4th,5th, 6th, and 7th, respectively.The University of ChicagoTrack club defeated the Univer¬sity of Kansas 21-36 at Washing¬ton Park on Friday, October 18,ending the Jayhawks’ string at21 straight undefeated dual cross¬country meets.Phil Coleman, the celebrated“policeman,” won the 4 mile eventin 19:42.4, followed closely by GarWilliams, who finished in 19:43.Dick Pond finished 5th in 20:08,with Art Omohundro on his heelsin 20:09. Dan Ryan completed thescoring for the Track club by fin¬ishing 7th. Hal Higdon didn’tscore, but displaced the 4th and5th Kansas harriers. The Jayhawks captured 3rd, The social dance group which4th, 8th, 10th and 11th places. met last year is in the process ofCoach Haydon comments, “Kan- being reactivated. Contact Misssas never had a chance. We had Ballwebber in the Women's Phys-six men in the first eight at the ical Education office, Ida Noyesfirst mile and it stayed that way hall, for further information,throughout except that Higdongot outkieked at the finish. Fineraces by Coleman and Williams.Very good races by Pond andOmohundro. Ryan was fightinga stitch for the last part of therace, yet ran his best 4-mile time.Higdon can do better, but has runtoo many long races in recentdays.”IntramuralsLast Monday kicked off theintramural touch football sea¬son in which 37 teams areentered in four leagues:house, fraternity, divisional, and“B” league. These teams will playa total of 106 games in the four-week period during which thecontests are scheduled. All gamesare played at 4 pm, Mondaythrough Friday and are open toall spectators.The fall tennis tourney for sin¬gles and doubles also began Mon¬day with over 100 participantsscheduled to play.Today and tomorrow the handi¬cap golf tournament will beplayed at Jackson park. Thirty-one individuals are entered. Theawards for the tourney will bebased on the Calloway Handicapsystem.Women's SporthHaving been disturbed onlyslightly by the cold weather, wom¬en’s athletics are off to a goodstart with the varsity hockey andvolleyball teams practicing everyMonday and Wednesday after¬noon. The interdorm circuit com¬pletes its first activity today, thetennis tournament, on the Kim-bark courts. At last report, FourthWest was in the lead, apparentlytrying to retain the trophy theyhold for the various sports compe¬titions of last year.Next on the agenda is the inter¬dormitory swimming marathonwhich will begin this coming Mon¬day, the 26th. Ida Noyes pool willbe open Mondays, Tuesdays andThursdays from 4:30 to 6 pm, forthe next three weeks for partici¬pants. Plans are under discussionalso for water ballet and varsityswimming teams if enough inter¬est is shown. MoUyjjjLEU.WILL TO 'TO Power!Pfcwtt wit fuwnvs1HT6 THLIVMCH ftHEftb<f bumsbouitmowm TwGOtHG- 30 WRITE MYeovKRtssfvwiwteMMlblNG FEOtRAL.AiJ>. IF MOV WftW 30 FIRST NONE JO ST t>0 AS ORE OFfrW ftCQ0ft»W3ftNCES, tMtlTHE CRMTHlOUPEfc, OiJ).Seno run heldSeventy Chicago partisans wit¬nessed an afternoon of athleticcompetition at Stagg field, Sun¬day afternoon, which they are notlikely to forget readily. CoachAlvar Hermanson’s varsity soccerteam battled to a 3-3 tie with de¬fending big ten champion, Purduewhile the Sons of Seno re-enactedthe fourth annual Frank Senomemorial run during half time.Last year Purdue trampled Chi¬cago 10 1.The potent Boilermakers scoredtheir first goal with only 30 sec¬onds gone in the initial period,but the Maroons evened the scoreon Jeff Woods’ goal after 10 min¬utes of play. Wally Kaszuba fol¬lowed with another Chicago goalshortly before half time, and thehosts enjoyed a 2-1 lead at inter¬mission while Frank Seno ran 103yards for a touchdown.Purdue opened the second halfscoring with a tally after only aminute and a half had elapsed,but once again Kaszuba zeroed into give Chicago a 3-2 bulge. Withfour minutes remaining in thegame, Purdue tied the score, forc¬ing the action into overtime.Neither team could score in thetwo five-minute overtime periods,and the match was declared • adraw. Roman Wiszczuk drew thenod from the game officials asthe outstanding Chicago player ofthe contest, with Kaszuba andgoalie Neeman Taylor placing 2-3in the balloting.The team travels to St. LouisUniversity tomorrow, and hopesare high for a possible win. IF ftWYOMfc GOT (8 FRONT OF CARL,Ht'p SUt ft H.K£ Of WUSMUIONOOWft JHfcHl BACK IT UftS,Kl0,ft3 ItftST WHILE «3 LASTEb-FOft HE WAS fiMRUY WOSfcD BY APLUCKY LftSS KfttAEO SftRflH 3HV5TRAijjho otoNto mm with ft eftoowitFROM FIGHT PUKES WtK-Stern's Campus Drugs61st & EllisBest Fond ... Visit Our YewLowest PrieesSteak SandwichSandwich College BoomBeef Tenderloin SteokwithFrench Fries, Lettuce & Tomatoes85c Stern's Special SteakWith Grilled Onions, Large SaladBowl, French Fries, Roll & Butter$1.00PROGRESSIVE PAINT Cr HARDWARE CO."Hyde Pork's Most Complete Paint & Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 1 154-58 E. 55th st.Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 I.nke Park Ave. MI 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 u.m. -II p.m.1411 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 TableSmoll Small12" 12"Cheese .1.30 Combination .2.25Sausage .1.65 Mushroom .2.00Anchovy .1.65 Shrimp .2.25Pepper fir Onion . . . .1.50 Bacon fir Onion . . . .2.00Free Delivery on .411 Pizza to UC StudentsAttention Chow Hounds!Special every Tuesday night — all the fried chickenyou can eat . . . $1.95 STRAW VOTE. Poll the gang...you’ll see. On the campus, too,where there’s life... there’sBucbveiser®KING OF BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK ’ LOS ANGELES * MIAMI • TAMPAOctober 23, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13£//ie im PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4431 FOR INFORMATION ABOUTA VARIABLE ANNUITYSEER. J. WOOD CO., Inc.2011 E. 75thFA 4-6800 TANENBAUM PHARMACY1142 E. 55th 9500 CornellBU 8-1142 Ml 1-5100Fra« DeliveryStudent Discount on AUYour Drug Need*Vervegoes to collVERVE is a thirteen-letter word ...EN-T-E-R-TA-I-NMENT... for Verve records actually give you complete recorded entertainment,presenting the nation's leading performers at their swinging best!Here are just a few of the best setters from Verve’s list of more than 500 albums.MG V-4032 *MG VS-6072ELLA FITZGERALD SINGS SWEETSONGS FOR SWINGERS • Orche*-ira Conducted by Frank DeVol — MG V-211? *MG VS 6040OSCAR PETERSON PLAYS MY EANtLADY MG V.15003NfSIDE SHELLEY BERMAN. MG V 4011-2 *MG VS 6040 2PORGY ANO BESS • Ella F.tzgaialdand Loud Aimrfrong • OrchettraConducted By Rusted Garcia —-MG V 8283 'MG VS 4002ANITA O DAY SINGS THE WIN-NERS • Orchestra Conducted byMorty PoichMG V-8313 'MG VS 6047HAVE TRUMPET. WILL EXCITEDIZZY GILLESPIE MGV-8317 'MG VS-6055BACK TO BACK • DUKE ELLING¬TON AND JOHNNY HOOGE*PLAY THE BLUESMGV-8307 'MG VS-603TSEVEN PIECES • The Giuffre 3 MG V-15006A WAY OF LIFE • MORT SAHLMG V-8241HALL OF FAME • Count Basle MG V 8316 * MG VS 4054LAUGHIN' TO KEEP FROM CRY-IN' • Lester Young • Roy Eldridge• and Harry EdisonMG V-B300HEY! HERE'S GENE KRUPA • TheGene Krupa Quartet Other excitingVerve albums...MG V-8244 ‘MG VS 6001GETZ MEETS MULLIGAN IN HI FIMG V 0244THE GERRY MULLIGAN - PAULDESMONO QUARTETMG V-B240JAZZ GIANTS 'M • Stan Getz •Gerry Mulligan * Horry Edison •Lours Bellton • Oscar Peterson •Herb Ellis • Ray BrawnMG V-15004MORT SAHL 1440 er LOOK FOR¬WARD IN ANGER.MG V-8262SONNY SIDE UP • Dizzy Gillespie• Sonny Stitt • Sonny RollinsMG V-B28BONE O'CLOCK JUMP • Wo Fitz-gerald • Count Bosia • Joe WilliamsMG V-8268THE OSCAR PETERSON TRIO ATTHE CONCERTGEPOUWMG V-4O0I-2ELLA FITZGERALD SINGS THECOLE PORTER SONG BOOKMGV-8271 ‘MGVS-WlfTHE BIG SOUNO • Johnny Hodgesand the Etlmgton MenMG V-8IOO-3THE CHARLIE PAPKE* STORYMG V 8323THE GREATEST PIANO Of THEMALL • TATUMMG V-8247THE MAGIC FLUTE OF HERBIEMANN • Evolution of Man(n)... and many,many others/MGV-4007 ♦MGVS-4001DANCE ATOP NOB HILL • ErnieHeckscher and His Orchestra atthe FairmontMGV-I0I7 *MG VS-6061KID ORY PLAYS W. C. HANDY• Sterea MG V-8329ALL OR NOTHING AT ALL •BILLIE HOLIDAY FREE ! -COLLEGE OFFERSpecial Verve Jazz Album(12" Long Playing Hi-Fi Record)Here is your introduction to an array of talent that represents a veritable"who’s who" in the world of jazz.Supply is limited so act now! Fill out the coupon below and mail together with$1.00 (to cover handling and mailing costs). Offer ends November 15th, 1959.i Y*Y; ••J!L M< ORV.’ i. Wv M ■Jj>« tSuS Ka< :y,- •' 'MG V-8319 •MG VS 6057JUNIOR ‘ Junior Manca andSwinging Piano 'Wut1 RECORDSj 451 North Canon Drivej Beverly Hills, Calif.j Enclosed is $1.00 to cover handling and mailing costs. Please send the Free Verve Specialj Jazz Album.I| Name- .Ii Address .{| City _ StateIII— □ Also include the new Verve full colorcatalog of MONAURAL and STEREOPHONIC album*14 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 23, 1959Culture VultureHere are more truly infor¬mative movie blurbs to delightthe souls of collectors. Thisone comes from an old Inter¬national Huose movies poster:"An extremely touching storyin the neo-realist style, mod¬eled effectively on De Sica'sShoe Shine." But this next onetakes the prise for includingjust about every adjective everused in any movie summary:"A simple vignette of child¬hood experience and a won¬derful voyage of exploration asthe camera captures the won¬der, excitement, the humorand pathos of a small boy's ad¬ventures." All of this is veryinteresting and exciting, but ittells no more about the culturein this burg than it does aboutthe motion pictures it is sup¬posed to describe.On compusTheatreUniversity Theatre is still look¬ing for a coffin for Pepel, the Un¬billed Russian. All UT’s usualsources, ranging from the Com¬pass to Maxwell street have beencanvassed to no avail. Pepel stilllies in state in Reynolds Clubtheatre on two blocks of ice. Thecause for which he died will bepresented in Mandel Hall Novem¬ber 6, 7, 8, 14, and 15.Motion picturesThis Monday, Internationalhouse will present a Paris Inci¬dent about a lost telegram in thestreets of Montmartre. Unfortu¬nately, the blurb for this film isnot only comprehensible, but com¬prehensive, and doesn’t rate thehonor of print. Int House moviesare still and ever in the Eastlounge, Monday evenings at 7 and9 pm. •Doc Films, in a burst of confi¬dential intimacy, has coyly whis¬pered that this week’s movie is“the first significant attempt atthe expression of the creativemind in the medium of cinema¬tography.” Be that as it may, TheCabinet of Dr. Caligarf is the sec¬ond of a series of German filmsthat purports to follow the devel¬opment of German thought fromthe end of the First world warto the end of the second. ThisFriday only, Doe Films will be inJudd 126. Showings are at 7:15and 9:15. The next Doc film willhe The Love of Jeanne Ney, andlakes the series from 1919 to 1927,and from post-war dreariness tolate 1920’s “social decadence.”MusicThe University Concerts serieswill open tonight with a perform¬ance by the Masterplayers ofLugano, directed by RichardSchumacher. The ensemble of 20string and wind players will pre¬sent Handel’s concerto, Alexand¬er’s Feast, Haydn’s piano concertoin D major, Stamitz’ Quartet forOrchestra, Genzmer’s Concerto daCamera for violin and orchestra,and Mozart’s Symphony in A ma¬jor. University Concerts, the old¬est continuing series of chambermusic in Chicago, will sponsorfive more concerts this season.I he next, November 13, featuresthe Alfred Deller Trio. Student tickets may be purchased at thedoor for $1.00.Sunday, at 4:30, pianist JosephLockett will give a recital at In¬ternational House. The programwill include works by Beethoven,Liszt, and Chopin.The Rockefeller Chapel Concertseries has published its list ofperformances for this year. Thefirst program, November 15, willfeature George London of theMetropolitan Opera company in aBrahms festival. Student seasontickets are available for $5.00 atthe Lyon-Healy and RockefellerChapel office.Art exhibitionsThe work of twelve Japanesewomen artists is on display at theLittle Gallery, 1328 E. 57th street.The works exhibited are based onthe elements, wind, fire, water,and consists largely of woodblockprints, and can be seen duringNovember, 1-5:30 Monday throughSaturday, vThe South Side Creative Writ¬ers’ Workshop has announcedthat it holds meetings Tuesdaynights at 5744 S. Harper. This isa group of “non-beatnik” writerswhich is being taught the tech¬niques of the novel, short stories,poetry, play-writing, and exposi¬tion by Marjorie Peters andPterre Long. For more informa¬tion, call Doug White, 827 Salis¬bury.Off compusTheatreMirabile visu, mirabile auditu,mirabile dietu. In other words,West Side Story is great. Myworthy mentor and patron, theeditor dragged me away fromwriting my weekly tirade and car¬ried me off to see it. This wasmy second time, and his third,and the show still hasn’t lost itsappeal.Goodman Theatre will presentthe Merchant of Venice October30 through November 15. The pro¬duction will feature Morris Car-novsky, the Stratford, Connecti¬cut, American Shakespeare Fes¬tival’s Shyloek.The Shaw Society is giving areading of Within the Gates bySean O’casey Sunday, October 25in the Bernard Shaw Room of theHotel Sherman at 7:30. Individualstudent admisison is fifty cents; student membership dues andreading series subscription, whichincludes nine performances and anewsletter or two, is $5.00. Laterproductions are Mrs. Warren’sProfession, by G. B. Shaw, TheEducation of Hyman Kaplan, andThe Doctor and the Devils, byDylan Thomas.MusicYehudi and Hephzibah Menu¬hin, the famous violin and pianoteam will give a recital this Sun¬day afternoon at 3:30 in Orchestrahall. In conjunction with this per¬formance, the Fine Arts programof the Downtown College invitesail faculty and students who haveobtained tickets from the officeof Mr. Harry Zelzer (not the boxoffice) to a reception to meet theMenuhins. The reception will beheld Sunday afternoon at 6:30 atthe Bismarck Hotel. Write orphone Mr. Harry Zelzer, 20 N.Wacker Drive, suite 288, Chicago6. The telephone number is Frank¬lin 2-0566.Lyric Opera’s performance thisSaturday is Carmen with eJanMadeira and Guiseppi di Stefano.Nobody needs to know any moreabout Carmen, but a few wordson Simon Boccanegra, Thursday’sopera, might be useful. The onlyproblem is that the Lyric itselfdoesn’t seem too clear about theplot. They say, “There is simplyno way of escaping the fact: Boc¬ canegra has one of the most dis¬jointed plots in all operatic litera¬ture. Its story has little merit, itscharacters move and act withoutadequate motivation, events hap¬pen without adequate explana¬tion, disaster piles on unhappi¬ness piles on grief without ade¬quate purpose.” But the Lyric isdoing a more than adequate pro¬duction with Tito Gobbi, RichardTucker, and piles of other well-qualified singers.Today’s and Tuesday’s Sym-phony concerts, conducted byFritz Reiner includes works byStravinsky, Respighi, and Rich¬ard Strauss. Thursday and Fridaythe 29 and 30 of October, Mr.Reiner and his orchestra will per¬form Brahms’ Academic FestivalOverture and concerto for violinand cello, and Richard Strauss’Thus Spake Zarathustra. Theresems to be a Brahms’ Festivalthis year, or at least, everyone isperforming his works: the Chi¬cago Symphony Orchestra, theRockefeller Concert series, and allsorts of odd chamber music peo¬ple. This must be looked into.Motion PicturesStarting tonight, the SurfTheatre will show the new Frenchmystery thriller, Back to the Wall.This seems to be another of thosemovies in which the wife deceivesthe husband, the husband deceivesthe husband, and everything is allwrapped up with a bizarre de¬nouement.And for anybody who missed itwhen it first came around, MobyDick will be at the Clark theatreWednesday the 28 of October. Thefilm is, of course, a movie versionof Herman Melville’s novel. ItSour mash in hi-fiFolowing in the tradition of“My Fair Lady," “Music Man"and “West Side Story" Black-friars are releasing their highfidelity recording of the 1959 show“Sour Mash.”This record reproduces such fa¬vorites as “I’ll Tell You WhatYou Can Do With the Army,”“Sunshine, Moonshine, and You,” and “They Ain’t Never Seen Noth¬ing Like Us.”The records are available nowfor $3.50 and may be purchasedat 5625 University avenue fromeither Jim Best or Mike Hrinda.Records from the past two shows,“Gamma Delta Iota” and “AlphoCentauri” are also available andthe set of three records may bepurchased for $6.00. Swedish singersstart 46th seasonThe Swedish Choral club isstarting its 46th season. Themembership is not composedentirely of people of Swedishdescent but embraces other na¬tionalities. .The Swedish Choral club haspresented choral works of notedmasters, many of which werePremier performances. Two per¬formances of Handel’s “Messiah”will be given this season. Sincethis year marks a Mendelssohnanniversary, his “Elijah” will bepresented at the spring concert.These concerts are given in Or¬chestra hall and are accompaniedby the Chicago Symphony orches¬tra.The Swedish Choral club re¬hearses each Tuesday evening inthe music room at 410 S. Mich¬igan avenue. An invitation is ex¬tended to both men and women tojoin this group, which is underthe leadership of Dr. Harry T.Carlson. stars Gregory Peck and OrsonWelles, and the photography issimply magnificent.ArtThe Art Institute’s latest ex¬hibit is Two Centuries of Ameri¬can art. Approximately 350 paint¬ings and pieces of sculpture dat¬ing from 1750 to 1950 will be onview in Gunsaulus hall. The dis¬play ranges from pictures byJohn Singleton Copely, GilbertStuart, John Singer Sargent,James Whistler, and Grant Woodto sculpture by Gaston Lachaise,of Hum 1 fame.17 years agoJust seventeen years ago today,the residents of Hitchcock andSnell were reassured that “ru¬mors of the past few weeks thatarmy officials have inspectedHitchcock and Snell Halls withintentions of taking them overare purely fictitious.”_ The same week, it was an¬nounced that “President Hutchinswill open the intensive RussianWar Relief Campaign . . . devoted1o reaching the quota of $2,000 formedical supplies to be sent toRussia.”The aimed forces declared theywould lake over Mandel hall formeteorology classes. And the“Our Mutual Friend” columnseemed unusually happy. “Ourmutual friend Col. Robert R. Mc¬Cormick is made especially mo¬rose by the mere idea of thedefeat of his personally chosencandidate for the title of Senatorfrom the sovereign state of theChicago Tribune.”This self-same Col. McCormickonce cut a star out of the Amer¬ican flag flying on top of TribuneTower to represent the secessionof Maine, the one year it votedDemocratic.Blackfriars was shelved for thewar’s duration but despite thepresence of the Navy in Bartlettgym, ice-skating was allowed tobe continued.Jerome G. Kerwin, in a seriesof lectures -given to the CalvertClub, prophesied that “In thepost war world Russia will not beas difficult as people think. Shehas given up her ideas of inter¬nationalism. Her communism hasbeen more affected than effectivein other nations. It has been sub¬jected to ridicule through t h edemonstrative action of local com¬munist parties ... before the war.Russia feared the capitalist worldand felt its hostility. But whenit is all over with, Russia will askfor only one thing — security, aguarantee that their governmentwill not be corrupted. Undoubted¬ly she will demand the Polishborder.”CINEMATHEATRE/ %Chicago at MichiganStudent Rate.75upon presentation of currentI.D. cardEvery Day Except Sat. SEVERN DARDENhas returned to ChicagoGate of Horn753 N. Dearborn St.Shows from 8:30 pm on jfk ii.it ^.i4 S3 y-o >-9Ql1the de park theatre Student rate (Stupon presentation of ID cardClark theatre dork & madisonopen 7:30 o.m.Into show 4 o.m.fr. 2-2845E*/tC at all times» V special student pricejust present your i.d. cord to the coshier at the boxoffice"every tridey is ladies' day — women admitted far 25c"fri. 30th“farewell to arms”“girl in blackstockings”Sat. 31st“ai capone”“buehanan”Sun. Nov. 1st“the five pennies”“how to murder arich uncle”fri. 23rd“brigadoon”“lullaby of broad way”sat. 24th“deep in my heart”sen. 25th“student prince”“so this is parts”“rose marie” fri. nor. 6“a time to love and atime to die”“hot blood”sat. nov. 7“this earth is mine”“the angry hills”sun. nov. 8“room at the top”“love is my profession” Now PlayingD. H. Lawrence'scelebrated shocker“Lady Chatterley’s Lover”starring Danielle Darrieux and Leo Gennand introducing Erno Crisa"The Lawrence philosophy that sex is a strong element in love is un¬mistakably the film's point. This accounts for o nervous shock audiencesmay have in watching it, so inured have they become to double-talkin the movies."— Washington Post b Times HeroldandA long awaited re-showing ofIngmar Bergman's "TORMENT"First Film Triumph Starring Mai ZetterlingGrond Prix Du Cinema — Cannes, 1946Coming soon: "8th Day of the Week," "The House I Live In,” AlecGuinness' "Scapegoat," "He Who Must Die," "Modern Times," "Ana¬tomy of a Murder", and "Some Like It Hot."October 23, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15A rite that liquidates wrongsfl> featureAndeker Beer oh tapSome twisfs are foundNOW MORE THAN EVER>oiem * amazing newHIGH POROSITY paper'air-*of»en*' everyInvisible porous openingsblend just the right amount of air witheach puff to give you a softer, fresher,even more flavorful smoke. Salem refreshes your tasteAn important break-through in Salem'sresearch laboratories brings you thisspecial new High Porosity paper whichbreathes new freshness into the flavor.Each puff on a Salem draws just enough fresh air in through the. paper to make thesmoke taste even softer, fresher, moreflavorful. If you’ve enjoyed Salem’s spring¬time freshness before, you’ll be even morepleased now. Smoke refreshed, smoke Salem!• menthol fresh • rich tobacco taste • modern filter, tooCreated by R. J. Reynold! Tobacco Companyby David IngleIn considering the vast array of subjects to be discussed during the forthcoming Dar¬win Centennial program the average biologist is due for another jolt to his complacency. Anintellectually near-sighted creature already struggling for survival against the encroach¬ments of aggressive biochemists, he cannot but passively appreciate the fact that evencentral biological laws of evolution have been adopted by the students of culture and society.Darwinian formulations are utilized to explain cultural and biological advances of theprimitive ape neurotic enough to "roots or bashing the skulls of tivities of the group. The key toaggressive lions. Although prob- the new phenomenology associ-ably at first a scavenger our fore- ated with this language must havedescend from his arboreal para¬dise and embark upon new andnotorious achievements.Physically man represents afew new anatomical twists and agenerous addition of cortical jelly.It is the mutual interrelationshipsbetween these “minor alterations” bearer must have developed ataste for meat and some reason¬able skill in the do-it-yourself ap¬proach to carnivorous enjoyment.When ape-men became weapon- been the kind of awareness ofself-and-world which growsthrough the exercises of manipu¬late g and constructing tools.Soon our forebearers could nomakers and meat - eaters several lonf?er climb, bite and feed like—bipedal locomotion, hands made ttiirrgs happened in consequence, apes. They became dependentfor dexterous grasping, less prominent jaws and teeth, a larynxspecialized for resonant vocaliza¬tion — and the swelled corticalareas of the brain which mustunderlie the psychosocial develop¬ment of man.In a paper prepared for theDarwin Centennial Professors ofthe University of California. S. L.Washburn and F. Clark Howell ofUC have attempted to read be¬tween the lines of man’s fossilrecord. Their joint effort, entitled.“Human Evolution and Culture,”presents the important thesis thatapes did not develop a large brainas a prerequisite to discoveringwhat culture is all about. It wasquite the reverse: the rudimen¬tary beginnings of ape culturegave these creatures new criteriaof survival and lead them to thenevolve physical and mental ca¬pacities to realize and improveupon their cultural advantagesover their predecessors.When our unknown ancestor Washburn and Howel presume.The canine teeth and later the mo¬lars receded in size, freed fromdefense duties and the constantwear and tear of a more primitivediet. Most important, the manipu¬lative abilities of the hand to¬gether with coordination of handand eye became great adaptiveadvantages. The result of this newemphasis on hands and thumbswas — neurologically speaking —reflected in expansion of the mo¬tor areas of the cerebral cortexconcerned with these units. Thisis strikingly evident to the brainphysiologist who has mapped theareas of the human cortex. upon their physical skills andmodes of symbollic representa¬tion, making these traits morepotent values in their struggle forsurvival.The only known ape-man repre¬senting the early tool-makingstage is a fellow named “Australo¬pithecus" who adventured inSouth Africa at least a half-mil¬lion years ago. For a personalizedaccount of this mannish ape, seethis week’s issue of that journalof popular anthropology, Life.Washburn and Howell drop thehint that these anatomical and cul¬tural bases of evolutionary adap¬tation in man and his ancestorsstated. Ape-men presumably be¬come the first creatures to cen¬tralize their food-getting activitiesand then divide up the fare in aconscientious manner. All this im¬plies a refinement in communica¬tion: development of syntacticaltook life on a down-to-earth basis, language denoting the varied ac- ward dadism.he found that his bipedal gait lefthis arms free for play and explor¬ation. Old bones and sticks weresurprisingly useful for digging<Bicycles, Parts, Accessories <special student offer <ACE CYCLE SHOP i1621 e. 55th st.1 < ACASA Book Store• Scholarly Used Books Bought and Sold• Imported Greeting Cards, Children's Books, GiftsReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 55th IIY 3-9651 Close your eyes and you’re in the midst of Monte Carlo was theprevailing motif of Student Union’s annual “Night of Sin,” held atIda Noyes last Saturday evening.Friars stewBlackfriars, after a two-hour debate and fourteen ballots,have at last selected a script for their 1960 show.Meeting last night in closed session the six members of theexecutive board, after due consideration, selected a scriptwritten by the triumvirate of Sid- ~~ney Girowitz. Fred Schmidt and ‘ts cas* characters include aShah and his harem of beautifulMike Hall, entitledthe Fair.” ‘So Long atThe importance of social co- have important consequences inoperation in a weapon - making the development of human beha-predatory society cannot be over- vior. One may legitimately ask women, a rag-taggle squad ofIrish policemen, a boarding houseThe story deals with the prob- full of eccentrics, the boardinglems of a stereopticon salesman house keeper’s daughter and theat the Columbian exposition and inevitable stereopticon salesman.whether the passage from thehappy, herbivorous ape to ourmanifestly carnivorous and ag¬gressive species has outstandingimplications for the psychologistwho speaks of destructive in¬stincts or primitive impulses to- Students interested in vol¬unteering to work on theDarwin Centennial committeeshould attend a meeting onMonday, October 26 in Ida Noyes hall at 3 pm. Thosewho cannot attend this meet¬ing should leave their namein box 1106 at the New dor¬mitory.U • CHICAGO MAROON • October 23, 1959