Former de■ f i an Robert Strozierdies or he. art attack at BillingsRobert M. Strozier diedWednesday morning in Bill¬ings hospital. Strozier wasdean of students at. Chicagofrom 1946 till 1957. Since then hej,as been president of Floridastate university at Tallahassee.Strozier suffered a heart attackwhile visiting friends in the HydePark community and was takento the hospital a few hours beforehis death. He had returned to Chi-cago on April 18 for a brief visit.He had come to Chicago at theinvitation of C. Phillip Miller,president of the Wayfarers club.Strozier was a member of thisclub when he was in the city, andhad not severed connections whileat Florida. Strozier addressed thei lub Tuesday evening.Following the meeting,Strozier, Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton (also a member of theclub* and Miller returned to theMiller residence where they metMrs. Kimpton and Mrs. Miller.Near midnight, after the Kimp-tons left, Strozier complained ofindigestion. At 5 am that morninghe awoke the Millers, saying hewas seriously ill. He was drivento Billings where Dr. Wright Ad¬ams, chairman of the departmentof medicine, served as his doctor.He died at 8 am,Strozier first became associatedwith Chicago in May, 1945, as as¬sociate director of Internationalhouse. He was a professor ofFrench in the romance languagedepartment. In 1946 he succeededChancellor Kimpton in the post ofdeaii of students, which he heldfor eleven years, a record longevi¬ty at Chicago.Strozier regarded his term asdean as a rewarding experience.W hen he left for Florida he said:“In these ten years I have hadj<»y, fruNtration, pleasure and heartache. I have sat In the Cap¬itol at Springfield and heardvitriol about our University, fol¬lowed by a brilliant defense byMr. Hutchins. I have seen stu¬dents publically protesting aca¬demic changes, but there has beenno panly raid.“I have withstood a torrent ofabuse for removing an editor ofthe Maroon, and read a telegramfrom the Russian student unionaddressed to Mr. Hutchins statingthat seven million students pro¬tested Dean Strozier’s dismissinga student for breaking our rules.All this suggested that I was aneo-fascist, while Fulton LewisJr. suggested in a column that Iwas a great patriot.“Fortunately for the Universityand for me, I am neither far rightnor far left, and I hope and trustnot all things to all men.”**. . . Actually I get scant sym¬pathy from anybody at the Uni¬versity,” he continued. “My faseremains round and florid; I amobviously well fed and I havemissed only two days from my of¬fice on account of illness in elevenyears.“It is altogether too evidentthat I did, do, and will enjoybeing dean of students.”During Strozier’s eleven yearterm as dean many extracurricu¬lar activities were given extendedautonomy. When he left theschool a Maroon editorial read:“Under his policy of student,rather than administrative initia¬tive in the extra-curricular pro¬gram, student activities weregiven freedom to flourish andgrow.”Strozier received his PhD fromthe University of Chicago; he la¬ter became the 122nd UC gradu¬ate to become a university presi¬dent. Before coming to the Univer¬sity of Chicago Strozier was asso¬ciate dean of students, associateprofessor of romance languagesand director of the Army Special¬ized Trailing Program unit atthe Univesity of Georgia. He alsoserved as dean of men and profes¬sor of French at West GeorgiaCollege and as professor of ro¬mance languages at Georgia StateCollege for Men.Strozier was consultant to theState Department on the educa¬tional exchange of students, in-eluding the Fulbright program;a member of the board of Inter¬national house at Chicago andpresident of the Internationalhouse association; board memberof the Masaryk Institute; chair¬man of the fellowship committeeof the Lafayette foundation (aprivate organization whichawards fellowships to French stu¬dents for study in the US) andmember of the executive commit¬tee of the National Association ofDeans and Advisors of Men.(Continued on pog« 8)Blackfriars, Festivalof Arts open today“We’re going to have a reallyhopping albeit controversial showready for the public this week¬end,” commented a cast memberas he watched a rehearsal of“Silver Bells and Cockle Shells,”the Blackfriars’ play which showswhat happens when the residentsof hell join a motion picture com¬pany,Jan Bowen, a she devil who haddreaded to leave hell forever, getsa role in the movie Sleeping Beau¬ty and immediately falls in lovewith Terry, the leading male star.Complications develop as JAnfinds out that Jerry is secretlyengaged to Sandy, also a star inthe pieture. Carl, a personalfriend of Jan’s has also followedher from hell.Jan decides to make the best of the situation and enlists the aidof Carl and three other witcheswho are working as publicity menin the studio to help her win Ter¬ry. Of course the ending is a sur¬prise, and of course it’s happy.Lonnie Bovar plays the role ofJan, Mike Hrinda is Carl, GeneKadish is Putnam, a breezy as¬sistant director, while Jerry Mastis Terry, Cindy Whitsell is Sandy,and Buddy Weiss is Watto, theharassed director of SleepingBeauty. A chorus, director JohnCallahan, and a tech crew of 15students take an active part inthe production.Tickets for “Silver Bells andCockle Shells” may be purchasedat the box office in Mandel hallcorridor? Ticket price ranges from$l-$2.50.photo by BergerLonnie Bovar and Jerry Mast in costume for final dressrehearsal. The late Robert M. Strozier, former dean of students.Voi: 69, No. 33 University of Chicago, April 22, 1960150 students from Illinois,Wisconsin here for NSAThe Illinois-Wisconsin Spring NSA regional will be held this vveenkend on the UC campus.Representatives from NSA member colleges and other interested colleges will meet to¬gether for discussion and district legislation. It is the hope of the convention to pass reso¬lutions that will result in definite action on the individual campuses. Unity will be sought onsome matters to be discussed by —-———• — ^ .the NSA National convention. for student action, and are stu- dent’s participation in policy for-“The aims of the regional, said ^enfs. responsible enough to take mation; and how does a student’sGail Paradise, UC NSA co-ordina* in community decisions, are role in policy formation changetor, is to make NSA a more dyna- amon£ ‘he topics to be discussed, when he is in a state supportedmic force on local campuses. One Aims of education. Topics to be school ?of the main weaknesses of the discussed are; What are the func- The eight legislative workshopsIllinois-Wisconsin region has been *ions of general education in the will meet later Saturday after-its inability to implement effec- exten.4 should n°°.n- Each workshop will discusstive programming on campus. We 2 J J 22? experience as their topic and write resolutionshope to implement programs con- what extend SSSu °neLtC t' aCtl0n’ Jhese resolutions willcerning the Southern sit-ins, dis- be presented to and voted upon bycrimination in universities’ noli- P******"011 f°r a career; and who the entire convention at the fobde“pulsoryUROTC * .‘Lf” ,hc aims °f {owing plenary session. The eightdemic freedom re: Koch case, Students role in oniiocr* »vn.r ativ<: workshops are. Mili-Lehieh universitv Brooklyn col- , ™,e in co?,e^e P°hcy tarY service obligations; LoyaltyLtVres tWs Th°e° regional Sf*1 ^hts^islatioa"provides some pian of action forthe national convention and can four years; how much is a student plan"; The theory of In loo.help get more effective program- entitled ,0 know abou( his scho()I and Pre£,om of theSimng and action in the interna. what should be (hc f oI • and radiotional, and national as well as the 6 F a u lrtUIU*local scene.”The convention will open withan informal reception in IdaNoyes lounge, Friday at 6 pm.The first plenary session will beheld on Friday night. MaureenByers, president of UC’s SG willdeliver the welcoming address.The keynote address will be givenby Isabel Marcus, Internationalaffairs vice-president of USNSA.This meeting will be held' in Eck-hardt hall, room 133.Twelve workshops have beenplanned and will meet on Satur¬day. The four non - legislativeworkshops will meet with panel¬ists and then have a general dis¬cussion of their topic. The follow¬ing arc the non legislative work¬shops.The international student poli¬tical movemertt. Discussion willinclude the history and structureof the movement, the history andstructure of similar organizationsfor educators, the political forceof the student movement, and theproper aims of the movement.The role of the student in hiscommunity. The responsibility ofthe student to his community,what is the most effective means Comedy of errorsmarks FOTA storyWhen somebody wants to doa history of something, if hehas no original source mate¬rial available, he naturallyturns to other histories of thesame thing. This usually works.However, occasionally one findsthat his material is inaccurate.Sometimes this revelation comesin time to correct an error, andsometimes not. Unfortunately, therevelation did not come in time locorrect an error in Tuesday’sMaroon.The specific case in point is ;hehistory of the Festival of the Artson page one. In the third columnof the article, a paragraph ap¬peared saying that, after the in¬stitution of a student-faculty base¬ball game, Gerhard Meyer re¬signed from the original FOTAcommittee. This statement wasfound in the special Festival issueof last year.However, the reporter who did the research neglected to readthe May 1, 1959 Maroon, in whicha letter from Meyer appeared.The letter read, in part, “Whilethere were, quite naturally, somedisagreements over proceduresand scope of the festival, neitherI nor anyone else ever resignedfrom that committee. In fact, Iurged the inclusion of all sportsof an artistic nature (gymnastics,fencing, track competition, aero-theatre, etc.). On the other hand,the student-faculty baseball game(which had been played long be¬fore 1955) was never proposed, ortreated, as a part of the firstfestival.”'"his points up the fallability ofconsulting other treatises beforewriting one’s own. The Maroonextends its sincere apologies toGerhard Meyer for using him toprove thav lightning does striketwice. !»i- *Is )if&Latin American economics are diversifiedBy Simon Rottenbergdepartment of economicsThe Latin American econo¬mies are often thought to bemonocultural; that is to say,they are thought to be coun¬tries a large part of whose re¬sources is devoted to the pro¬duction of a single product. In thelay perception, Brazil is associat¬ed with coffee, Venezuela withoil, Bolivia with tin, Chile withcopper, Ecuador with bananasand cacao, and Argentina andUruguay with beef.This perception is a gross exag¬geration. Each of these productsis, of course, important in the re¬spective countries and the pricesof these products in internationalmarkets significantly affect thelevels of prosperity of the coun¬tries. But, in every case, the pro¬portion of the national outputthat is attributable to the “mono-cultural” product is very muchsmaller than most people believeit to be.The Latin American economiesare really quite substantially di¬versified. Despite the importanceof beef in Argentina, Argentineagriculture, produces only lessthan one-fifth of the national in¬come; despite the importance ofcopper in Chile, mining producesonly onc-twentieth of its nationalincome.Exports more visibleIt is because export commodi¬ties are more visible than thosethat are internally traded and be¬cause a change in export prices isfelt more immediately thanchanges in internal prices thatthe illusion has gone abroad thatthe Latin American countries areone-product countries. Exportsare entered in the customs housesand, therefore, are known aboutexplicitly. Internally-traded com¬modities and services are passedfrom hand to hand in a very largenumber of small, silent transac¬tions so naturally that they areeasily lost from sight.Indeed, the Latin Americancountries, themselves, have be¬come blinded by the illusion.Whether mistaken or not, theytend to believe that they rely tooheavily on certain single productsand they have, therefore, set inmotion, in a number of countries,policies to diversify the economy.These diversification policiesreflect partly the desire to spreadrisks in international trade. Theyreflect partly, also, the convictionthat the conquest of poverty re¬quires that the economies indus¬trialize, or that resources bemoved out of other sectors andinto the manufacturing sector, sothat a higher proportion of totalemployment occur in manufactur¬ing than now and a higher pro¬portion of capital investment beNew Court Favorite I put into manufacturing than now.A compilation of policies havebeen adopted to force diversifica¬tion. In general they involve im¬plicit or explicit taxation of theimportant export commoditiesand implicit or explicit subsidiesto sectors producing other com¬modities.Forced diversification tends tocheck the advantages which theLatin American countries haveover other countries in the pro¬duction of the relevant major ex¬port commodities. It tends, there¬fore, to diminish income and pro¬mote poverty, rather than theiropposites. Policies in Calm thatcompel resources to abandon thesugar industry and move to theproduction of other things forwhich Cuba is disadvantaged,relative to other countries, meanthat resources are transferredfrom more productive to less pro¬ductive uses and affect the in¬come, output and welfare of theCuban people adversely.A number of Latin Americancountries have recently urgedthat the prices of primary prod¬ucts be stabilized and the UnitedStates government has tended tomove towards a favorable posi¬tion on this question.The prices of primary productsdo, of course, fluctuate more thanthe prices of the products of sec¬ondary industries. And the ex¬ports —- though not the output —of the Latin American countriesare heavily concentrated in pri¬mary products.Expenditures fluctuateIn the absence of a stabilizationscheme one of two things hap¬pens. Either individual producersof primary products and govern¬ments acquiring foreign exchangefrom their export insure them¬selves against price fluctuations,or they do not.If they do, they make some esti¬mate of the long-run price trend,perhaps as simply as by extrapo¬lating past experience, and savefrom bonanza infomes whenprices are high, so that they mayspend in excess of current incomewhen prices are low.If they do not, their expendi¬tures fluctuate, with fluctuatingincomes, or, alternatively, theyspend in excess of income whenprices are low, incurring debtswhich are repaid when prices riseagain.Now, fluctuating prices are in¬ trinsically no worse than stableprices. What makes them difficultis that they cannot easily be fore¬seen. If they were known in ad¬vance, people could make the ap¬propriate adjustments and com¬plaints about fluctuation wouldbe muted. But producers and gov¬ernments in Latin America liavenot adjusted and they have be¬haved, in high price periods, asthough they expected that highprices would persist.But the real intention of theprice stabilization schemes is notto dampen price fluctuations, butrather to enforce prices which, onthe average over time, will behigher than they otherwise wouldbe.Restricted output poorA policy to restrict output, inorder to keep prices high, can beeffective only if there are no goodsubstitutes for the product of themembers of the cartel. If thereare good substitutes, the usersof the product can escape, eitherto non-cartel members who pro¬duce the same product or to othersimilar products.If, for example, the Latin Amer¬ican producers of coffee establisha quota system for exports sqthat the price of coffee rises inthe consuming markets, twothings happen. First, coffee roast¬ers may put a higher proportionof African coffee in their blends,and, secondly, housewives pia yturn to substitute beverages.Indeed, previous attempts byBrazil to force the price of coffeeupwards by destroying part ofher accumulated stocks or byother techniques have had l*»tJiof these effects.Latin American coffee now rep¬resents a substantially smallerproportion of total world exportsof coffee than it did several dec¬ades ago; African plantings ofcoffee trees have increased great¬ly. Eighty per cent of the increasein the world’s output of coffee be¬tween the mid 1930s and the mid-1950s is accounted for by in¬creased output in Africa.'The monopoly practices in theLatin American coffee countriesdo not explain the whole of therise of Africa as a coffee pro¬ducer, but surely they providedsome incentives.The lesson to be learned fromthese experiences Is that monopo¬ly is sometimes illusory. Thosethat Have monopoly power can gain, at the expense of the restof the community, by exercisingthat power. Bnt, if you do nothave monopoly power, then mo¬nopoly practices can only do youharm.Two facets of United Statespolicy have been live subject ofbitter complaint in Latin Amer¬ica. One has to do with the dispo¬sal of surplus agricultural com¬modities and the other with thedistribution of American foreignaid in the world.The United States governmenthas, for some years, administereda policy of price supports for va¬rious agricultural products. Thegovernment has stood ready inthe market to buy these productsat previously specified priceswhich are sufficiently attractivefor farmers to raise larger quan¬tities of these commodities thanthe market is willing to take atthe supported price.Thus surpluses came into exist¬ence and were put into storage.The government then had an in¬centive to dispose of these storedcommodities somehow. Storagecosts are not negligible; in somecases there is substantial spoilageof stored goods; and the accumu¬lated stores hang over the marketand threaten to break prices inthe future.Under the disposal policy of thegovernment, the American sur¬plus stored commodities are soldto foreign governments, with pay¬ment made in local currenciesand with the proviso that most ofthe payments bo lent by the Unit¬ed States to the paying countryor jointly-approved developmentprojects.It is a policy of simulated“dumping” that adversely affectsforeign producers of the relevantcommodity. Ecuadorean rice pro¬ducers, for example, found some of their hemisphiric markets gonebecause surplus Arkansas, Louisi¬ana and California rice soldcheaply in those maikets underthe disposal scheme.Another complaint of the l^itinAmericans has been over Amer¬ican policies of foreign aid.The quantity of United Statesforeign aid to Latin America hasbeen small, in proportion to popu¬lation, by* comparison to thatmade available to other parts ofthe world and there has beencomplaint about what they regardto be disproportionate inattention.Of $53 billions in United Statesgrants in-aid to all countries inthe post war period, only $835 mil¬lion — or 1.5 per cent — weremade to the Latin American ic-publics.Foreign aid deviousOne sometimes hears it said. inthe Latin American countries,that the United States is beingdevious when it enacts foreignaid programs — that a transferpayment to another country mere¬ly provides markets for Americangoods and that the United Statesis, therefore, advantaged by it.This notion has no merit at all.It is equivalent to the propositionthat, if John Doe is engaged inselling shoes, he is advantaged bygiving Richard Roe twenty dol¬lars on condition that he spend allof them buying shoes from Dor.The best that can be said for theidea is that foreign aid is a dev icefor taxing the whole communityin the United States in order toadvantage thbse whose skills andcapital are specialized to the in¬dustries whose products accountfor a large part of Latin Amer¬ican imports from the UnitedStates. But, if this is its nature,the argument must be that Amer¬ican policy is simple-minded andnot that it Is cunning.Trujillo resigns frompost in DominicaGeneralissimo Rafael Leon¬idas Trujillo Molina, ruller ofthe Dominican Republic forthe last thirty years, has an¬nounced that he is resigning ashead of the Dominican party, theonly political party of the coun¬try. Trujillo said he wanted oppo-House silent on NDEAThe House of Representatives shows little disposition for action in the near future on therepeal of the section of the National defense education act requiring applicants to sign anaffidavit disclaming belief in or support of subversive organizations. According to informedsources, key House legislators are wary of the political implications of the repeal in an elec¬tion year, and considerable sentiment exists for postponing consideration of the issue untilnext year.• Ploys llkm gut• Stays livelier• Lasts longer• Gauge controllede Moisture ImmuneALWAYS SPECIFYQUALITY STRINGSApproximate Stringing CostVANTAGE Tennis $fiPRO-FECTED Tennl* $7Balm in*on $6MULTI-PLY Tonal* *SBadminton $4At tonnit shops andsporting goods stores. The same reports were opti¬mistic on chances for passage bythe Senate of a bill introduced bySenator Kennedy which would re¬peal the disclaimer section. A ma¬jority of senators are reportedto be favorable to the legislationand active support for it existsthere.The chairman of the HouseCommittee on Labor and Edu¬cation, Re Elliott, has intimatedthat he will have hearings on theKennedy bill when it pases theARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Hfetay<UHI Hefinishinu *fShoes and HandbagsG Colors inotched G Tecs cut outG Vamp* lowered G Platform*removedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'NARROW HEELSHoots thonged — Any style —Any colorBnckstrops Removed and Springe-lators inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsF Air fox 4-96221749 East 55th St. Senate. Elliott, however, is re¬ported to be unfavorably disposedtoward the legislation.Administration officials almostunanimously, have supported theKennedy bill and called for therepeal of the objectionable sectionof the NDEA. President Eisen¬hower, Vice President Nixon, Sec¬retary of Health, Education, andWelfare Fleming, and key offi¬cials of various departments andbureaus have all taken such po¬sitions on the issue. It is gen¬erally realized, however, that inview of the lack of popular sup¬port in an election year the repealis not a high priority item.Several reasons have been given for the lack of congression¬al interest in repeal. In the firstplace, the distinction between theoath of allegiance and the affi¬davit of disclaimer is not wellunderstood, particularly in theHouse. The oath of allegiance inthe NDEA, commonly known asthe “loyalty oath,” is not coveredin the Kennedy bill and has notbeen the main target of collegi¬ate protests. Secondly, congress¬men are not familiar with the ex¬tent of sentiment for repeal. Thefact that 54 colleges from alj sec¬tions of the country liave droppedthe program, and that even moreoppose the affidavit is generallyunknown.Hare You Discovered Eurico tor lameh?Chuck Wagon BuffetMONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY• soup & salad a chickeng lasagne e saladsALL YOU DESIRE —$1.25Cafe Enrico & Qallery1411 E. 53p«I FA 4-5525 MY 3.SSOO sit ion parties to be formed and“no one wants to form new par¬ties while 1 remain in the Domini¬can party.”Senator George Smathers < D„Fla.) reported that Trujillo hadpromised elections for his coun¬try to be supeivised by the Or¬ganization of American States orsome similar internationalagency. He added that the dicta¬tor had “agreed the Generalis¬simo’s brother holds the office ofPresident.”Meanwhile, reports were circu¬lated in Washington to substan¬tiate the charge that a Trujillohenchman had ordered the mur¬der of a Dominican Charge ri'Af-faires in Costa Rica. The victim.Alfredo Fernandez Simo, hadbeen suspected of anti-Trujilloactivities.Three hundred Greek, Yugo¬slav, and Spanish nationals whoclaim to have been tricked intojoining the Dominican foreign le¬gion have not been able to leavethe country. According to letterssmuggled out to the US, thosewho chose to return to Europehave been imprisoned under in¬humane conditions. They wereoriginally recruited for an inva¬sion of Cuba which never tookplace. A New York Times re¬porter fled the country after be¬ing arrested on the charge ofdefaming the ex-commandant ofthe prison holding the foreignnationals.All embassies in Ciudad Trujil¬lo, the capital of the DominicanRepublic, have been put undersurveillance to prevent opponentsof Trujillo from gaining asylumin them. The action was promptedby the escape of seventeen per¬sons, including several students,to the Brazilian embassy on February 24.Bicycle*, Poet*, Accesoorio*special student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1*21 . 55tb «*.CTS withdrawal rumoredbut denied by presidentJ A report that the ChicagoTheological seminary (CTS)is considering withdrawingfrom the Federated Theologi¬cal Faculty (FTF) has been de¬ni,.,! by Howard Schomer, presi¬dent of CTS, but affirmed byother university sources.One high University official re¬ports that CTS is unhappy aboutthe current nature of the Bach¬elor of Divinity degree and withthe current methods of appoint¬ing and promoting faculty. FTFofficials explained that CTS hasbeen conferring on these pointswith representatives from theUniversity and the FTF for sev¬eral months.President Schomer emphasizedthat CTS does not wish to with¬draw from FTF. Speaking for theadministration and board of direc¬tors of the school, Schomer re¬ported that “the seminary plansto continue its full support of theD.B program of FTF and in¬crease its participation."FTF was formed in 1943 whenfour institutions — the Divinityschool of the University, the Disci¬ples Divinity house, Meadville the¬ological school, anu CTS — com¬bined their faculty's in order tostrengthen the cauoes of theolog¬ical education and training forChristian service, Schomer ex¬plained.Provision for withdrawal fromthis experimental Federation wasmade in the Articles of Agree¬ment, Article XVI: “Any schoolmay withdraw from this agree-ment on three years’ notice, andin less time by common agree¬ment of the federated schools."“It is evident that CTS shouldnot consent to the withdrawal ofany of its partners with less no¬tice than the stipulated threeyears,” Schomer said, “if suchwithdrawal would necessitate ba¬sic readjustments of the Semina¬ry's work.“This delay is provided in theArticles to provide an orderlytransition to other forms of co¬operation, should such ever bethought admissible." He pointed to the Federation’sresponsibility to students enrolledin a degree program of the Fed¬erated Theological Faculty, andto those who are now enrollingfor the autumn quarter. “No re¬vision of the Federation arrange¬ments,” he added, “could overlookthe student’s right to complete hiscourse of study as described inthe vcatalogue at the time of hisenrollment."The CjflS president stated thatthe Seminary's officers have in¬dicated, in recent conferences,their full support of the academicprog; am of the FTF and proposedthe enlargement of the Semina¬ry's own program. Such an add;tional program would be a' com¬plement to and not a substitutefor the participation of CTS inthe Federation.Schomer explained that CTS be¬lieves in the stated objectives ofFTF, and is working to preserveit by strengthening its federalcharacter. The federation is a“working agreement," not an in¬corporated body. Its purpose is tocoordinate the teaching and aca¬demic procedure of the memberinstitutions.An informed University sourcebelieves that the caues of CTS’sdissatisfaction with the degreeprogram is the predominencegiven to academic courses, at theexpense of courses providingtraining for the work of the min¬istry.All degrees coming from any ofthe four theological schools areactually granted by the Univer¬sity, and the University, in cooper¬ation with FTF, creates the cur¬riculum requirements. CTS couldadd courses but could not substi¬tute them for required FTFcourses.The problem of faculty appoint¬ment is similar. All FTF facultymembers hold University appoint¬ments and those who have rankhave university tenure. For thisreason, all appointments and pro¬motions are made by the Univer¬sity. More exactly, the appoint¬ments are approved by ChancellorKimpton. As a result, the presi¬dents of the four federated the¬ological schools, unlike most pres¬idents of other such schools, are not able to make any appoint¬ments on their own.Our source conjectured thatSchomer would like more free¬dom in terms of faculty appoint¬ments.All of the FTF faculty contact¬ed were most hopeful that CTSwould not withdraw from the fed¬eration.“Were the seminary to with¬draw,” Chancelolr Kimpton ex¬plained, “I doubt very much if thetermination of affiliation wouldbe complete.”“Arrangements would certain¬ly be made for allowing CTS stu¬dents to use the facilities of theUniversity, and FTF courseswould be available at so muchper student.“I doubt very much that theschool would give a doctor’s de¬gree on its own, in any case.Frankly, I hope that it is nevernecessary to worry about theseproblems."Schomer insisted again that theentire consideration was moot.“CTS has long been committed tocooperation in theological stud¬ies," he said. “We are convincedthat the federation of Theologicalschools at the university of Chi¬cago is a useful vehicle for suchcooperation under the Articles ofAgreement. We are dedicated toproviding the advantages of Uni¬versity-centered and church-re¬lated education througli this partnership.” Before the war, the CTS tower was illuminated from with¬in; recently the lights at the top were again connected.Preregister for next failPre-registration for the fallquarter will be held from May 2until May 27. A listing of all un¬dergraduate courses with timeand place specified will be avail¬able at this time. All studentsmust see their advisors duringthis period according to the fol¬lowing schedule:A-H May 2-6I-M May 9-14N-R May 16-20S-Z May 23-27In the past, great turmoilsusually arose at the beginningof the school year. With the newsystem, only the packet of cardsasking current information willneed to be filled out in the fall. Students will now be able to ar¬range their whole program inadvance and will get precisely theschedule they want. Dean Playecalled this new system a “greatadvance in the procedures of pre¬registration.” He is most appre¬ciative of the cooperation receivedfrom all the staffs in listing theirofferings.The pre-registration system willalso benefit entering students.They will not be rushed in theirregistration and will be handledindividually.Students planning to registerfor the summer quarter must alsosee their advisors during thisperiod.Cates-Blake will be officesThe proposed conversion ofGates-Blake dormitory intocollege offices has been ap¬proved, announced collegeDean Alan Simpson. The Uni¬versity Board of Trustees al¬lotted $357,000 for the conversion.Work on the buildings will startin June to be finished before thefall quarter begins.Converted, Gates-Blake willhouse the dean of the college;the dean of undergraduate stu¬dents; the College examiner;their associates and staffs; and alarge number of faculty mem-| Paepcke, UC trustee, dies |Walter P. Paepcke, trustee of the University of Chicago and chairman of the Containercorporation of America, died on April 13 in Billings hospital. . . ,Paepcke, who was 63, was instrumental in converting Aspen, Colorado from a mining ghosttown into a center of cultural activity and winter sports. He pioneered in the development of,and to a large extent financed theAspen Institute, which was dedi- effort to develop the nation’s cul- literary, and other cultural eventsfated to the improvement of in- tural potential. e addition to heading the con-ternational relations. His activi- Paepcke felt that these business corporation and holding histies and those of his company in men “should do so in a way to p^ckethe Aspen venture won for make culture commercially sue- position as uu trustee, raepcventure won rui. Aencn had served as director of the En-1 aepeke a number of awards for cessful. He felt that the Aspen . .. Britannica Encvclo-his contributions to American center had originally impressed ^iaBritamdcaflSk the USarchitectural and art design. him as a place whose cultural pos- 0 "a * and ’the FundW -n^r »JL {„ sibilities could be developed on Gypsum company, and the * unaChicago He i^the enn of q Per a sound economic case because *?r Advancement of Educa-mantlSZ of its opportunities for recrea- tion.Hewas also a trustee of thewealthv Irfthe lnmher tnriustrv Hon an<* aPP®al to the tourist institute of Chicago,wealthy in the lumber industry. . . ** Paepcke is survived by his wifeHe attended the University x ® e* . , r.School for Bovs and the Latin PaePcke credited former Chan-School for Boys in Chicago anS £Uor Robert Hutchins with thethen entered Yale university, and ldea of th.e fe^tl'al; he*dgraduated in 1917. While at Yale, £fPen 1949 to celebrate thePaepcke was elected to Phi Beta 200th anniversary of the birth ofKappa. He enlisted in the navy Gofe*e' He “^that this festivalduring World War 1, and later set the precedent for the musical,j>vas commissioned an ensign,His expressed philosophy ofhfe, which he applied to theAspen project, was that too littleattention was directed to ethicalspiritual things. He said that busi¬ness men tended to overspecializeand should devote more time and bers. “With this,” said WarnerWick, associate dean of the Col¬lege, “the College will begin tobe an identifiable entity.”Wick stated that the Gates-Blake conversion had been discus¬sed for some 20 years, but no¬thing could be done until thisyear, when the new women’s dor¬mitory alleviated the problem ofstudent housing, and the conver-siqn plans went ahead.Conversion of Gates-Blakewill prompt movement of theCollege staff and faculty. Some33 of the 50 faculty membersusing office space in Cobb hallwill move to Gates-Blake. Wicknoted that this will eliminatethe present multiple occupancyof these offices. One half of thefaculty members assignedrooms In Lexington hall willalso be shifted. From the Ad¬ministration building will comethe dean of undergraduate stu¬dents, the College examiner andthe College advisors.Twenty faculty members fromthe divisions, who are closely re¬lated to the College and its staff,will make the move along withsome 12 faculty members pre¬sently occupying offices in the prefabricated buildings behindthe University Press building.Presiding over this staff will bethe dean of the College, his asso¬ciates and heads for the four divi¬sions'of the College faculty.Plans call for inside renovationof the 2 dorms; the outsides willremain untouched. Major struc¬tural changes will include con¬struction of a fireproof stairwellin Gates and another connectingBlake with Cobb hall. Thoughsome walls will be knocked out;others will remain to act as parwtitions for the smaller faculty of¬fices. The buildings will get somefresh paint and better lighting;about 70 per cent of the plumbingwill be removed.All offices and conferencerooms will face a central corri¬dor running the length of the 2buildings; this plan will be fol¬lowed on all floors. The variousdeans of the College will occupythe ground floor, and the Collegeexaminer’s office will occupy thesecond .floor of Blake; individualfaculty offices will line the sec¬ond and upper floors of Gates.College staff offices Will be onthe third and fourth floors ofBlake.and three daughters. HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize InRound-O-Beef and Waffles 1342Open from Dawn to Dawn easf 53 st.iVotc OpenKronthal's Delicatessen1 700 E. 87th Street SA 1-4632Formerly on 53rd and Dorchester.Finest in imported and domesticmeats, sausages, cheese, and cannedgoods. GRAND OPENING — May 1st.PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO."Hyde Park's Most Complete Paint & Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountH* 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55 th tt. NEW SPRING BOOKS BY U. OF C. FACULTY MEMBERSAMERICA AND THE IMAGE OF EUROPE, by Daniel J. Boorstin $1.35An original Meridian paper-back. Mr. Boorsttin's aim is to define authentic patterns ofAmerican thought.THE CONSTITUTION OF LIBERTY, by F. A. Hayek $7.50A timely, vigorous re-statement of what we blieve and what we want to preserve among theideals of civilization. IINTELLIGENCE AND DEMOCRATIC ACTION, by Frank H. Knight $3.75Mr. nKight "examines what may properly be called the most fundamental issues facingthe free society."GOLK, by RICHARD G. STERN 3.95A "necessary" novel. Intelligent and knowing, GOLK means force, symbol, excitement,humor, a creative figure and a very human human being.University of Chicago Bookstore58TH AND ELLIS jApril 22, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3the Chicago maroon Letters to the editors:founded —- 1892 Offers ideology as toolIssued every Friday throughout the University ol Chicago school year and Intermittently during the summer quarter To ^he editor;by students of the University of Chicago. Inquiries should be sent to the Chlcr.go Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E. 59tn8treet. Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus.Subscriptions by mall, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5, Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material, s pm,Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 pm Wednesday before publication. .All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the individual opinions of the authors.WUCB-FM—value or danger?It is our opinion that WUCB, the student radiostation, should be allowed to go FM and that asan FM station it be allowed to operate with asmuch autonomity as possible. This of coursemeans almost total autonomy. The ten watt sta¬tion that WUCB would like to become would beof great service to the comunity, not merely theuniversity community but to Hyde Park and en¬virons. But, unless the University allows the sta¬tion its freedom, an FM transmitter would be agreat disservice to the ideas of freedom and re¬sponsibility which Chicago is supposed to uphold.The entire problem stems from the fact thatthe UC administration, especially dean of studentsJohn P. Netherton, can imagine great damagecoming from a student run open air station. Theyare, of course, quite correct. Great damage couldbe done to the school. WUCB-FM could inflictmany more unconfortable moments upon Chicagothan, say, the Maroon or the Chicago Review couldhope to.But all this is mere hypothesis. There is noreason to assume that the students controllingthe policies of the station would be irresponsible.To prevent them from even attempting to demon¬strate their responsibility, to show their ability to run a sound station, is to deny the freedomof all students to learn through experience.We might add that Dean Nctherton’s constantlyexpressed desire to keep the station “within theUniversity family” distresses us deeply. The Uni¬versity of Chicago is not an island, it is not iso¬lated from its comunity, its city, the world or itstime. There is no good reason, whatsoever, whyit should be kept ‘within the family’ when partof the function of any university is to bring itsknowledge, wisdom, discoveries and facilities tothe attention of the community, city, world.Also it is interesting to note that the “commu¬nity of scholars” has now become the “universityfamily” with its pater familias none other than thedean of students.To argue, as the dean did, that one can’t waittill the “horse is stolen before locking the bamdoor,” is to deny all new invention, all studentinitiative, all student responsibility.If, in order to go FM, WUCB must submit toa professional station manager, responsible to thedean of students, there is no reason why a similarprofessional should not be found for the M&roon,for the Chicago Review, or for any student groupwhich could conceivably embarrass the Univer¬sity.NSA conference convenes;cooperation is importantThe semi-annual conference ofthe Illinois-Wisconsin region ofthe United States National Stu¬dent association (USNSA) willconvene on the University of Chi¬cago campus this afternoon.USNSA has not had an easytime at UC this year. There wasobjection from many members ofStudent Government to our con¬tinued membership in the organ¬ization, and a campus-wide refer¬endum was called to test studentsupport of our association with it.The result of the referendum wasoverwhelmingly in favor of NSA,and we are still members.It is perfectly fitting that thisconvention be held at UC. Muchof the opposition to it on thiscampus has been based on igno¬rance, and perhaps seeing its op¬eration first hand will convincepeople of NSA’s value. All work¬shops of the convention are open,and it is certainly advisable thatanybody who has doubts aboutwhat the organization is all aboutcome to one of them.However, the proof of NSA’s importance is not up to the stu¬dent alone. NSA must show thatit can do something, and this canbe done only by its worthwhileactions. There are many thingsthat need doing which directly af¬fect students in this region.One of the issues that directlyaffects UC students will come upin the workshop on “Freedom ofthe college press and radio.” Therecent dispute concerningWUCB’s plans to go FM is cer¬tain to be brought up during thissession, and it would be wise forthe group to take a definite standon the situation.Another issue on which NSAmight act is the Reuss bill, whichcalls for the establishment of acommittee to study the possibilityof a Point Four Youth core forcollege graduates. Such a corewould replace the draft for thosequalified. As this bill directly af¬fects the future of the collegestudent, it is important that theopinion of college students beheard. If the bill receives no sup¬ port from the group most inter¬ested in its approval, it is almostcertainly doomed to failure. AsNSA is largely an organ of stu¬dent opinion, it is altogether nec¬essary that they take a strongposition in support of the Reussbill.A situation which bears an ex¬tremely important, although per¬haps less tangible relation to thestudent is the firing of Universityof Illinois Professor Leo F. Kochfor writing a letter airing hisviews on pre-marital sex. Al¬though we have no direct interestin the firing, we do have one inacademic freedom. It is onlythrough NSA that, the collectiveprotest of students can be voiced.The acceptance of NSA on thiscampus is a two way street. Weurge all those who have doubtsabout the association to attend oneor more of the workshops beforeforming any definite opinions,and we urge the association itselfto convince the skeptics of itsvalue by its actions./A suspension of justice?There are certain flaws existing in the currentdisciplinary procedures, and they are flaws whichcan and should be corrected immediately. It isnot too difficult to envision cases in which theUniversity, in order to protect itself, might care¬lessly sacrifice the full rights of the student. Wethink such a case occured two weeks ago.Now, the administration of the school is in com¬plete command. It is at once judge and jury, andnothing can be done about it. But just becauseit is in such a position, great care must be takenthat the university does not use its powers at theexpense of the full due process which every stu¬dent should receive.The present disciplinary system is this: in mostcases an accused student appears before a fiveman disciplinary committee consisting of the deanof students in the college and four faculty mem¬bers. This group makes an advisory judgment tothe Dean of students, who, almost invariably fol¬lows the recommendations of the committee. Theonly appeal, one almost never taken, is to theChancellor.Two weeks ago a student was separated fromthe University. He was charged with a mostserious offense; if the accusation were correct andbecame known to the public, the University’sname would be somewhat besmirched.Instead of appearing before the disciplinary com¬mittee, he was summoned before dean of under¬graduate students, George Playe. Playe informedhim of the charge, and told him what the natureand specifics of the accusations were. The student was given the opportunity to deny them, but hewas not told who made the accusations, he wasnot allowed to summon witnesses of his own, hewas not allowed to appear before the disciplinarycommittee, and he was told that his only appealwas to Dean Netherton. Playe was acting underNetherton’s authorization.Cases where an accused student would not wantto appear before the committee can be imagined;we are not arguing that all cases should auto¬matically appear before that body. But we doassert that every student who wishes to take acase to that group should be allowed to do so.Severance from a University is indisputably aserious punishment; great precautions should betaken no injustice is performed on the part ofthose judging the case.We stipulate that a dean, committed to protect¬ing the good name of his university, will occa¬sionally have a somewhat prejudicial view towardsa case.And because expulsion or separation is a seriouspunishment, any student facing such a decisionshould have the full rights of any person facinga serious charge. His rights of due process shouldnot be abrogated, he should be allowed to answerhis accusers directly, his guilt should not be as¬sumed before judgment.It is difficult to see consistency of action whenthe University strongly advocates principles ofcivil rights, due process and supremecy of lawon the national and local level, yet abrogatesthese self same concepts on its own campus. There exists a world move¬ment — Communism. But isthere a single counter move¬ment of equal proportions? IsChristianity or Democracy ananswer to Communism? How canpeoples of varying degrees of lit¬eracy, of different religious be¬liefs, or unequal economic back¬grounds, of different politicalopinions, and of different racialand social distinctions find pro¬tection against the single philos¬ophy of Communism? Radio Mos¬cow itself has spoken of the ex¬istence of such a unifying princi¬ple in January of 1953. “Moral Re-Armament is a global ideologywith bridgeheads in every nationin its final phase of total expan¬sion throughout the world. It hasthe power to capture radical revo¬lutionary minds. It is contaminat¬ing the minds of the masses. Itsubstitutes for the inevitable classwar, the eternal struggle betweengood and evil.”In this age the Communists ob¬viously do not want war if theycan reach their never changinggoal of world revolution by usingideological weapons under thepropaganda of coexistence. Whatis the Communist strategy? Thenew party line for the UnitedStates was laid down in Moscowin January 1959 during the 21stCongress of the Soviet Commu¬nist Party. The Washington Staffof the Scripps-Howard Newspa¬pers reported on August 19, 1959that the two American represen¬tatives who attended broughtback this directive: ‘Tone down‘militant action’; get back into the‘mainstream’ of American life"and that the details now quicklybeing planned—call for: 1. Infil¬tration of the labor movement,particularly steel, auto and trans¬portation unions. 2. Formation ofa communist youth movement, todevelop replacements for agingCommunist leaders. 3. Gettingmore Negro members; stressingintegration troubles. 4. PuttingCommunists info neighborhoodassociations (Parent-Teachers As¬sociation, etc.).Ravines, the founder of theCommunist party in Peru, toldthe Moral Re-Armament assem¬bly at Mackinac in July of 1959that “Khrushchev and Mao Tse-tung met in Peking in 1958 andarchitected the next phase to de¬stroy the United States by captur¬ing Latin America. He laid stresson the role to be played by thechurches and said: “The work ofinfiltration goes on much moretenaciously than open party work— Communism never shows Itsown face. This is being donethrough the universities of North,South and Central America andparticularly through the churchesof the United States to which Rus¬sia attaches great importance.”Ravines had gone through theprocess of disillusion about Com¬munism, just to become a bitteranti-Communist. What is of sig¬ nificance, he says, is when Mhafilled the idealogical vacuum inhis life, he became an object ofruthless Communist attacks. Nowhe believes that there would bemillions like him who wouldleave the Communist Party ifthey knew there was somethin"big enough to fill the vacuum. **It seems there is a need for asuperior ideology that is simpleand concise enough that both il-literate and educated may acti¬vate their lives by its practice.Mirdka, speaker from the Rajas',ton State Assembly, India, said atMackinac in 1955 “India is neu¬tralist because she does not wanteither the materialism of Russiaand China or the materialism ofAmerica. Here at Mackinac I s^othe choice is not between oneform of materialism and another.We have another choice—to builda world based on absolute moralstandards of honesty, purily, un¬selfishness, and love. This is ihogreat message I take back withme.”A Finnish Communist paper inMarch of 1956 is reported in “Ide¬ology and Coexistence” to havegiven a warning “that Moral Re-Armament is no bourgeois move-ment but an ideology with itsroots well grounded in laborwhose impact should not be un¬derrated.” It described the philos¬ophy of MRA as “simple andstraightforward,” said that it de¬manded change from employer aswell as employee, that it “spoketo big masses with a punch andfollowed up its Ideological spade¬work with ’reckless’ infiltrationand penetrating attack.”The Tass News Agency in Mos-cow on December 9, ’59 attackedthe MRA handbook “Ideology andCo-existence” stating that it de¬scribes MRA as a force thatunites politicians, industrialists,generals and business men. andit continues to “In spite of thefact that MRA has no by-laws ormembership it controls a stronglydeveloped network with units inevery capitalist country.”In recent months there havebeen 100 attacks over the Mos¬cow, Tashkent, and Peiping ra¬dios noting that the handbook “isputting an end to the ideolomralsoftening up of the free world.”A beginning has been made,however, by the tremendous dis¬tribution of the pamphlet “Ideol¬ogy and Co-Existence.” Distribu¬tion has been made in 24 Ian-guages to 75 million homes inBritain. France. Switzerland. Ger¬many. Italy, the Scandinaviancountries, Australia, Canada, andin the key areas of South Amer¬ica. Africa, and Asia.“Ideology and Co-existence”pamphlet will be made availablefor you at the information deskin the Administration building.Can this ideology be the powerthat the free world needs? It maywell be the potential tool, but itmust be put to work.Signed not by KhrushchevEditors-in-chiefLance Haddix Neal JohnstonBusiness Manager Advertising ManagerWilliam G. Bauer Warren B. BernhardtNews editor Jim ThomasonFeature editor Jay GreenbergProduction editor Dorothy DorfWorld News editor. ...» Alan DowtyPhotography coordinator Alan BergerCulture editor Bob RieserSports editor Chuck BernsteinRewrite editor Avima RuderEditorial staff: Elaine Adler, Donna Berg, Maureen Byers, Bill Cep« <Hiram Caton, Bert CoHler, Dobby Dinitz, Jacqueline Friedman, Caryl Gcicr,MeryE Goldman, John Juskevice, Clair Morgan, Marjorie Mundt, Tony Qua9-liano, Roxanne Russ, Danny Schubert. Maggie Stinson, Harold >Gene Vinogradoff, Faye Wells, Amei Wallach. ..Photographers Gerry Elman, Ginny Hill .Sidney Sealine, Nothon owiCartoonist Arnold PerryCirculation manager Nathan 5w»»rBusiness staff Joan Helmken, Pot Mos/i Letters to the editoribw- • ( ndvertisemen t)Your editorSupports Ryan on sit-ins looks atSirs:The letter In the Maroon of7 April from Charles W. Ryanrepresents a point of view onthe sit-ins which has too seldombeen heard from. Mr. Ryan Is un¬doubtedly corretft in sympathiz-ing with the desire of Negroes tosecure justice, and he sees a pointwhich a good many UC studentsmiss entirely when he speaks ofthe ineffectiveness and unfairnessof picketing Northern members ofthe chains which discriminate inthe South.But even Mr. Ryan’s letterseems to be somewhat misleadingwhen lie says that the Negro sit-ters-in are attempting to obtainrights “that are unquestionablydue them.’' There will be littleargument, on this campus or inmost other parts of the country,that the Negroes presently dis¬criminated against are morallyentitled to be served in the samefashion as whites; but legallythey do not have this right andnever have had it. A man, unlessforbidden by the state and exceptunder certain extraordinary cir¬cumstances, may follow any ra¬cially discriminatory policy helikes when he operates a restSu-rant, as far as the law is con¬cerned. There exists no rationalbasis for refusing to allow Ne¬groes to sit alongside whites atlunch counters; but we cannotlegislate rationality, on the parteither of restaurant proprietorsor of the general public.And, whether or not a DeepSouthern Woolworth managerwere inclined toward bigotry, thepressure of public opinion wouldforce him to be a little discrimi¬nating in his operations. A dime-store manager In Montgomerywho dared place Negroes at thesame part of the lunch counteras whites would meet with con¬ siderably more opposition fromthe white citizens than that unfor¬tunate University of Illinois pro¬fessor found in the persons ofthe (married) University Dads.This is true all over the trueSouth; In fact, I would be sur¬prised to find meek acceptance ofthis kind of integration in myown area, the cotton-growing re¬gion of Missouri, a border state.This is why it is unfair topicket Northern variety storeswith Southern affiliates. TheNorthern managers have littleenough power over their South¬ern colleagues, and they have ab¬ solutely no control over the massof segregation-minded Southern¬ers. Picketing is a way to let offsteam, but it serves no useful pur¬pose — in contrast to the loss dra¬matic procedures of collectingmoney for effective but fair ef¬forts by Southern Negroes to im¬prove their lot. There are othermeans than picketing for educat¬ing the public, among them beingpress publicity and letters, al¬though I doubt that many peoplehave never heard stories of theway Negroes are treated downSouth.William KelleyCounters Ryan’s viewsDear Sir:With reference to Ryan’s letterabout the picketing of Woolworthstores in the North, I should liketo present an alternate view thatcounters Ryan’s objection on theground of injustice.Apparently, Ryan supports theNegro students’ non-violent ef¬forts to achieve lunch counter in¬tegration, but he is convinced thatthe national management of theWoolworth Company is powerlessto enforce Integration in itsSouthern branches. If this is true,I agree that picketing of theNorthern stores is unjust, andthe desire to express support ofthe Negro students is not in itselfsufficient reason to picket thestores. However, I am not at allconvinced that his assumption iscorrect; hence, my alternate pro¬posal:The University students shouldinform the Woolworth Company(and Kress, et al) that picketingof the Northern branches will continue until an order is issued tothe managers of the Southernstores, demanding integration. The issuance of the integration or¬der will be the end for whichpressure is brought to bear, andnot actual integration, since thelatter result might be impossibleto achieve, as Mr. Ryan believes.The picketing students shouldmake the decision beforehand toend the picketing upon prooffrom the Woolworth Companythat the integration order hasbeen issued, whether or not it issuccessful. Naturally, the Wool-worth Company will not be ad¬vised of this decision, since itmight affect the order.If the above proposal is imple¬mented, neither side of the argu¬ment need be concerned about thefact that its position is based onlyon opinion. If Ryan and the Wool-worth Company are right, issu¬ance of the integration order willdemonstrate this fact. If, how¬ever, they arc wrong, the oppor¬tunity to lend moral support tothe cause of the Negro studentswill not have been lost becauseof idle conjecture about injustice.John F. CrimniingsGraduate School of BusinessPotentialities of non-violentaction not yet fully exploredEditor;I address myself both to thewell-intentioned opponents of theSit-In Movement and to its sup¬porters. I am greatly concernedwith the role of northern collegepeople, such as the readers of theMaroon, in the areas of social con¬flict.Practice of non-violent directaction comes from the Montgom¬ery Bus Protest of 1956, fromCORE (Committee on Racialfv Equality) activities since 1943,and from the many actions andcampaigns of M. Gandhi. Thesedeveloped theory from Tolstoi,Thoreau, and Garrison. But thesetwo groups, CORE and MIA(Montgomery ImprovementAssn.) have not continued toQ explore direct action potentiali-f ties very much — instead bothwere concentrating on the less di¬rect area of Negro registrationand voting in the South. Whilethe new sit-in movement has re¬vived direct action, present tech¬niques and practices have only-bpgun to scratch the surface ofGandhian methods. Yet the ten¬sion in many parts of our societyis rapidly rising to crises levels.We have an urgent need for lead¬ership and example beyond whatwe have known or had in the past.Religious and especially demo¬cratic ideals in America, probably(Stronger in our schools than any¬where here, demand alleviation ofthe Negro’s plight. So does oursense of fair play. The wide¬spread action and consequent suf¬fering and sacrifices of southernstudents, largely in conservativeschools, challenges college peopleeverywhere to bring theories and ideas out of books and into thearena of social conflict, wherethey can be examined, tested, ex¬panded, re-evaluated, and clarifiedfor the benefit of all parties tothe conflict.Resources abound at our uni¬versities. Accumulated knowledgefrom the specialized fields of psy-chology, sociology, anthropology,philosophy, history, and the fieldof education itself — this knowl¬edge should be applied to the so¬cial structures and intergroupconflicts of today. Let the special¬ists from our campuses and pro¬gressive organizations give oftheir understanding to help lightthe way for students and workingpeople who are motivated andready to act now. To cure thevirulent social pathology ofracism.I suggest the setting up of aWORKSHOP here for studentsand interested community people.I hope the experts will volunteertheir services and resources. Lec¬tures, discussions, and literaturewould be a part of it; but impor¬tant also would be the use ofsocio-drama and action projects,so that experience-learning andpractice of skills will result. Even our police are to get training inhuman relations — surely we cansee the value of actionists know¬ing how to deal with a bigot; orhow to project good will into ahostile situation; or how to re¬place irrational attitudes with en¬lightened self-interest. Hot weath¬er brings us in Chicago what issometimes called “riot season.”The students’ challenge comesto us too on the closer level ofpersonal responsibility, that ofone human being for another.Does not their struggle againstinjustice and indignity evoke aresponsiveness on our part togive of ourselves, our most imag¬inative and constructive efforts,even as our well-being also de¬pends upon a just and honorablesocial order?Joan Hamilton Life magazine's advertisingcampaign in the college pressseems to have little effect upontheir circulation. According totheir cover, they were selling6,700,000 copies when the adseries began; they are selling6,700,000 now.The Maroon's campaignagainst popular romance inLife seems to have had a simi¬lar effect. Last week we waxedbitter about the cover story: ayoung heiress and Roumaniancount (a man whose name Icannot spell). This week's cov¬er? Well* it shows about twodozen bright young peoplestanding on top of a rockyledge clearly labeled; lover'sleap.The site of this "leap" wemight add is none other thanRock City, Tennessee, thatfamous natural wonder adver¬tised so eloquently on everybarn roof between here andNashville.This week's lead story con¬cerns the census, currentlyunderway. The story beginswith a panoramic view of themain office of the census sup¬ply and processing departmentin Jeffersonville, Indiana. Ahuge room, littered with mapsand people. Unfortunately,however interesting the census,there is nothing very worldshaking about it.As a matter of fact, it seemsthat nothing very world shak¬ing happened last week. Therewas a kidnapping in Paris(pages 8 to 39), a ball gamein San Francisco (pages 40 to41), a portrait shot of a groupof volunteer firemen most ofwhom are lawyers, doctors andassorted other chiefs.There is a rather long storyon the new Broadway hit TheBest Man and on its author,Gore Vidal. Vidal's play con¬cerns political machinations ata Democratic convention. Theauthor himself is currentlycampaigning as a Democraticcandidate for Congress.Six underwater shots takenat the national AAU swim meetheld recently at Yale consti¬tute this week's sports cover¬age. The major difficulty withtaking shots under water isthat you can't see anything.The biggest single sectionin the issue, fifteen pageslong, concerns the South.Viewed from a more pleasantApril 22, 1960 • C H L C LIFEangle than the part of thecountry has been receivinglately, Life promotes an areawhich it calls a "hospitableLand for a Tour in Spring¬time." In all the thirty photo¬graphs (four color photographsat that) there is not a riotingstudent to be found. Any¬where.The two real successes ofthis issue are a moody study ofCarnegie hall, the famous audi¬torium building which may ormay not be torn down. Lifehere views some of the famousinhabitants of the building, andsome of the lesser known suchas Lylah Tiffany, an 80-year-old musician who lives in astudio in the building and earnsher living by begging and play¬ing an accordion on the stepsof the building.The second notable article,one well worth reading is astudy of the change in politicsin the United States. Writtenby Leonard Hall, Republicanparty national chairman from1953 to 1957, the article is anattempt to analyze in extreme¬ly lay terms certain recentpolitical phenomena.Hall ascribes much of thechange in political tactics tothe advent of television, theuse of airplanes, the gradualdisappearance of the "profes¬sional" politician."In my 32 years in politics,"Hall writes, "I have seen manysweeping changes come about— the disappearance of theboss, the entry of the presiden¬tial candidates into the livingroom, the emergence of theaverage man as a financialangel, and many others. But ofall the changes I have seen,none has meant more to mepersonally than what has hap¬pened to my own party. WhenI first set foot inside a club¬house door, the Republicanswere the majority party. Nowthe Democrats hold that fa¬vored position. So, of course,there is one more great changethat I want to see in my life¬time, and that is a resurgenceof the Republican party."AGO MAROON • 5G A D F LYEpistle to the Academicians"The final test... is battle insome form . . . It is one thing toutter a happy phrase from a pro¬tected cloister; another to thinkunder fire — to think for actionupon which great interests de¬pend.”—Felix FrankfurterIt is perhaps to the irony pre¬sented by the present-day juxta¬position of this two-decade olddeclaration and its utterer thatthis communication is ultimatelyaddressed.For one of the unnoticed (per¬haps because so characteristic)facts about the NAACP-Politicsclub meeting at which BernardLee and Martense Watts, the "sit-in” leaders from Alabama StateCollege, spoke so eloquently, wasthe apparent absence (except forHermit Eby) of UC faculty mem¬bers from the audience. the student who finds himselfgroping for personal and politicalvalues in a society which does notoffer recognizable guideposts.Yet we. are left with the factthat not even intellectual curios¬ity could drag thew faculty outfrom behind its veil of committeereports, research findings, andIBM machines to witness an im¬portant historical moment. Theyfailed to heed the advice of Ran¬dolph Bourne that, "the appear¬ance of dramatic imagination inany form in this country is some¬thing to make us all drop ourwork and run and see.”What conclusion is the UC stu¬dent to draw from his supposedintellectual betters’ failure to at¬tend an event which seemed tothe student to be part of a his¬torical happening of great mag¬nitude. Is it that he has beentricked; that there is somethingof which he should know butdoesn’t; that these are thingswhich only students engage inand that will be discarded uponthe acquisition of a more "maturejudgment?” Or mightn’t the re¬sponse be as follows, “If mylearned professors did not cometo applaud the efforts of theseboys, then are Watts and Leeworthy of my admiration?” Whilenone of these conclusions are just¬ified, they may easily occur to It would be unjustified to ex¬plain this absence as an isolatedincident for it seems inextricablylinked to the abdication of politi¬cal responsibility by the academiccommunity during the Post Mc¬Carthy era. Whether because offear, doubt, the guilt of an earlierinnocence, the seductiveness offoundation grants, or the glamourof elitest ideology, the academi¬cian has become resolved to servein society as a "hired man,” as aproject bureaucrat, as a neutraltechnician, and has reconciledhimself to the status quo as wellas his place in it. He has recoiledfrom the once fervently held no¬tion that "ideas are weapons” tothe complacent, "ideas—well, areideas.” He has departed from thetradition of Dewey, Bourne, andParrington with its capacity towill an image of a fine, free, ar¬ticulate cultural order in Amer¬ica. While the task of willingsuch an image has undoubtedlybecome more difficult, the sheer confusion and valuelessness inwhich the society finds itselfmake the t ask all the moreurgent.There can be little doubt, forinstance, that the self-removal ofthe intellectual-academic from thecommitted task of re-evaluatingour social and cultural ills, fromdiagnosing the growing socialsickness that pervades our socie¬ty, and from attempting to re¬articulate and consummate thehighest aspirations of human ex¬istence, has filtered down to hisstudents. It is not implausible tosuggest that to some considerablemeasure the silent generation hasfailed to raise its voice as a re¬sult of the reticence of its intel¬lectual fathers who have turnedtheir backs.firspaghettiravioliITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAlL sandwiches:beef,mostaccioli sausage Gr meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th *t. In an article on a similar themein the Spring issue of Dissent("The University: Everybody’sGold Mine”), Barbara Solomonhas commented that, ‘Today’sstudent is proclaimed a failurebefore he starts. In the name ofnecessary research, scores ofstudies such as the Unsilent Gen¬eration by Otto Butz have beenmade. The thoughts, ideals andprivate lives of the students havebeen picked at and probed into byteachers, behavioral scientists andcritics. Now the popular mediapeople have also joined in. Gen¬erally, the conclusions of thesestudies show the young to be arather dismal apathetic lot. Ob¬viously the mass magazines andTV have a stake in the studentbecause their business is to ex¬plore whatever topics are cur¬rently in vogue. But as for themore serious studies, why arethey made? What use do theyserve? Why all this attention tothe adolescent’s views on society ?Why all the negative conclusions?So far as I can see, it is a caseof hoping the blind will lead theblind. The educators and intellec¬tuals have lost their way, theyare no longer sure of their ownethical values. In the Greek sense,they have ceased to be teachers.Instead they have turned on theirstudents.” cisely the above described genreby a UC faculty member is de¬serving of comment. The commu¬nication was Hans Morganthau's"Epistle to the Columbians” (NewRepublic—December 21, 1959). Inhis "Epistle” he condemns severalColumbia University students forhaving written anonymous let¬ters to the New York Times Mag¬azine urging the reinstatement ofCharles Van Doren. ProfessorMorganthau insists that the atti¬tude of these students indicatesthat they "have lost vital contactwith the transcendence of the mo¬ral law.” First one feels boundto ask the epistler whether it ispossible that the .faculty at Co¬lumbia as well as Mr. Van Dorenmight not be responsible for thiscondition; and secondly why wasit only when student action irkedhim did the good Professor de¬cide to communicate? Obviously,had the "Columbians” never liftedtheir quills, their silence wouldnot have been nearly as disturb¬ing as their effort, although mis¬placed, to reinstate their teacher.The social scientists have dugfor themselves a peculiar niche inthe academic trench. In their ef:fort to ape the method and ra¬tionality of the physical sciences,they have no doubt become morerespectable and rewarded in theestablished division of academiclabor, but it has also imposedupon them a dreadful silenceabout the real problems of hu¬man existence, its sufferings andevils, its justified but betrayedhopes and promises. Rather thanface this task, they seem contentto build faultless structures with- ogetic when they wander afield.Such an approach has developed %its own ethos which demands anabsence of passion and a steriledetachment from matters of \ italconcern.In the recent National DefenseEducation Act controversy (stillunresolved), the response of theacademicians was subdued, for- ,mal, thr-ough "channels,” andequivocal. Passion was a qualitythat could be indulged in only byundergraduates and even thenstudents were advised not to ex¬ude too much of it. (No mass let¬ter writing, please-fOne is in fact tempted to com¬pare Lee and Watts willingnessto give up all in their strugglefor freedom, to Chancellor Kimp-ton’s feeble, "Off the record, Idon’t like the oath either, but wewould lose if we tried to take ,both at once.” As if there were aloss of dignity in losing! And itis precisely this absence of whatDavid Reisman once called the"nerve of failure” which has in¬fected our teachers and ourselveswith a paralysis of action.If the recent student sympathy ,demonstrations in the North are fan indication of a possible stu¬dent reawakening in Americathen its search for leadership, aswell as education by example,may be undertaken, not withinthe professorial ranks, but atSouthern Woolworth counters, as . ^well as among ourselves, wherethe flame of passion and commit¬ment may still be kindled. If thisturns out to be the case it will beregrettable for we desperatelywant to have our teachers within a narrow domain and arc apol- us.For whom the bell...A recent communication of pre-Men who face wind and weather'choose the protection of...meAFTER SHAVELOTIONSkin protection, that is. Old Spice refreshes and stimulates, guards against the loss of vitalskin moisture. Feels great, too. Brisk, bracing, with that tangy Old Spice scent. It does seemto attract female admirers, l)ut what red-bloodedman needs protection agains\girls? 1.00 plus tax S 1*4 U L T O N Don’t Ask for Whom theBell Tolls, It. Tolls for TheeWith all the regrets neces¬sity allows, I feel I owe anapology for my carelessness onEaster Sunday. While trying toput some stones into orbit nearRockefeller Memorial Chapel, oneof the rocks chanced to land ontop of the 207 foot tower and thebells sounded. Confusion as to thesignificance of the bells ringing atthat particular moment was ob¬vious as several spectatorskneeled; others looked at theirwatches; and still others insistedthe stone had hit one of the bells.A few of the more skeptical on¬lookers merely said that the rockhad cleared the entire tower andhad nothing at all to do with theringing bells. I was panic stricken at what fhad done to the tower. I alsofeared judgment by the authori¬ties, but cooler heads assured methat this was a matter to be de¬cided on a higher scale. I mustalso confess that a small child didafford me a peculiar kind ofpleasure when he congratulatedme and remarked that it was ahell of a good throw anylway.Fortunately, no one was in the \chapel at the time; and no serv¬ices were disrupted. However, Ido think that I have a duty tosociety; and since men are bynature quick to judge others andeasy to punish them, I am willingto pay for my negligence by thenegligence of my judges.Ben M! «u«Goviee PHOTOGRAPHFRS1171 EAST 55Hi STREET MIDWAY 3-4433CHICAGO MAR <XO N • Ap»-I 21, 1960 30% OFF On QualityDRY CLEANINGAll work done by a regular Chicago Wholesaler whose plant servesother retail stores in addition to his own outlets. You get this servicebecause of our non-profit policy and low overhead.Trousers 50cJackets .50cSuits 95cTopcoats 1.00Overcoats 1.10 Shirts 50cDresses 05cSuits (2 piece) . . .95cLight Coat 95cH«avv Coat ....1.10IVctrf 20% Off on All Laundryuniversity of ChicagoSTUDEHT SERVICE CEHTERReynolds Club BasementHeurs: 11:90 - 1:00 — 3:30- 5:00Kim resigns WUCB postJohn Kim has announced his resignation as program director of WUCB, the Chicago stu¬dent radio station. The resignation is immediately effective. Kim, recently elected to bothstudent government and NSA, has been program director of the closed circuit station forover a year.In his letter of resignation, Kim listed four reasons for this decision. He cited the lengthof his term of office, saying “this is long enough for any one person." He claimed that JohnSchuerman, station manager, • — —someone3 orf the prTturtion "stTff ^ a"d the ad' J*0"' Sp°hke *° the censorship ques-! th« i<vh as woll as y 1)031 d- tlon m hls letter accepting Kim’swh°I have , advLs°ry. board Kim re‘ resignation. “Let me say that I<H HHchod what T had set as ^efed to cons>sts of Donald share your reservations aboutacoomplis: Mieklejohn, of the college faculty, our current negotiations with themv maintask, i.e., the reor c n a James Newman, director of stu- University. However I feel that,ion of the programmmg depart- dent activities. vVilliam McNeill, the benefits to the station and toEl? and continuity of pro! ^ MeyT^ ^ U"y’ °fa "gramming- the music department, and Alex ager staMon’ makes contmuousBut the reason given most Sutherland of the radio office, negations necessary.”weight among station members, »ptie advisory board was-adoptedaccording to Steve Goldman of by the WUCB staff as a stjpula.the station, was Kims forth ex- tion on the part of the Dean’splanation, a criticism of recent office before the station was al-actlons on the part of tne dean iOWed to apply for an FM license,of students office concerning The advisory board has no leg-VVUCB’s attempts to become an isiative power oi; authority,open (tiannel FM station.Permission has been granted by Censorship nere, benignthe Federal Communications com- Ron Shelton, SG treasurer, Maureen Byers, president, BertCohier, vice-president, John Kim, CORSO chairman, andEd Riddick, CRC chairman (right to left) discuss the fillingof vacancies in the regional NSA delegation in Tuesday's SGexecutive council meeting. The meeting was the last beforethe new council takes office.Exec fills NSA vacanciesThe Executive council of tion of a similar bookstore at in the Graduate Library schoolStudent Government met last Reed college, where he did his will be broken, and the executiveTuesday night for the purpose undergraduate work. council for 1960-61 will be elected,of filling the remaining va- Community Relations commit- T^e Assembly will also elect the“Furthermore.” Kim continued, cancjes on the regional NS \ tee chairman Ed Riddick reported voting members of the Electionmission to the University to con- “I feel very strongly that we delation In its °other busi- that a housing file survey of the & Rules and CORSO committeesstruct an FM transmitter. Such a should cease to try to meet the ness the council appointed a di- faculty is in preparation and will and consider proposed amend-construction permit is tanta- Dean's (Net her ton • requirements. rectc>r m char„e of \he co-opera- ** ready for distribution early ments to the Student Code andmount to a license to broadcast. In fact J feel that we should not tive> bookstore nroiect and hVard next week. The Assembly main- the By-Laws of the government1, , tive bookstore project, and heard next weeK. The AssemblyHowever construction has been go on FM unless we have some the re t of the community Re- tains that the file. operated byhalted by a discussion as to who assurance that no attempt at cen- lations commjttee the student housing office, is dis- ^0^should control the policies of the sorship will be made by the ad- ' criminatory. Riddick and his com- GUUT -station. WUCB wants, even as an ministration at any time. Censor- NSA delegates set T»rtfno will AAtAemvmA fVi^FM station, to retain its autonom- ship is never benignthat FCC regula- mittee will determine the opinionThe Election & Rules commit- of the faculty regarding the mat-ity. arguing that kT'c; reguia- “Even the possibility of its ap- tee declared the results of the ter and will ask for support oftions are- enough; John Nether- plication adversely affects the ex- NSA recount to be final. Under the proposal to remove all dis-ton. dean of students, insists that ercise of freedom of expression, an amendment previously passed Criminatory listings. In the eventthe University, being responsible Moreover the person who would by the Assembly, this means that that such listings cannot be re-for the station, must maintain undertake the job of censor is the regional delegates to NSA are moved, the committee is consider-not likely to have broadminded Maureen Byers, Gail Paradise, ing the possibility of establishingviews. Gentle people are seldom Jim Thomason, Len Friedman, a student government file whichfound working as hangmen. and Bob Brown, who were elected will list only housing which im- '67.ultimate control of the station.Rejection 'inconsistent'The rejection of the plan you ‘I do not believe ” he continued. 1351 week by the campus, and poses no racial or religious limi-oltered last week to the Dean of would be doin" our dutv to Neal Johnston, who was ap- tations on occupants.Students—a plan which provided *e w°uld ** doin2 our duty lo pointed bv the executive council .for a technical consultant to the 0d"se v^’ our succKes,°rs> or ^"tsiast rneeting A^mi to ^ e*~ ******station, a part time adviser to the ^ !lL.5?U£? JLL! the same legislation, the regional The next meeting of the Stustation, <power over programming — a « . . .plan which I thought was incon- “^guards against censorsh.psistent with the maintenance ofrw>iiithe station as a student activity th^ oi ^nsorship^is^uiv Vivian Scottrand^Linda^Perlstebi!— filled me with astonishment. Ifeel that this action has changedpan ume aoviser io me ° . , the same legislation, the regional ine nexi meeung or rne ciund faculty censorship FM whtout ldCfuale alternates are apoinled b? the Government Assembly willaccepting FM without adequate ^ ^ be held on Tuesday, April 26. At. .. . M ,. , Schubert, John Schuerman, Dave ***** t‘me* assembly willAccording to dean Netherton, Nelson John Hodgess Roper, take office, the tie for the seatreal. “The situation is simple, if delegation of twelve willthe distinction rather subtle,” he .the question facing the station eJPjai,“d- ‘ W* cannot cens®r a sity at the Ulinois-Wisconsinfrom “How can we meet the student run FM station simply ional to ^. O ... VaaAan 1 an/A f Iwk nor tA KA aoperation of a co-operative book¬store. Case, who is completing hisfirst year at Chicago, was activein the establishment and opera-dean’s requirements for FM with- because there is not going to be £amt>us weekend-,U, sacrificing too much student * »«*»«>» run FM station. council ap.conlrol ot the station- ' lo "Why >A radio siation can be a dan- ,nled j Cast newlyolect^lshould w* even consKlcr going gerous thing, capable of hurting representative, to«h59 the I^-an has shown the umverstty greatly. I. as dean ,!ate wilh appropriat«. Uni.lhal this could be done only if of students, must protect the urn- v^sity administrators tor the de-we accept censorship?" versi y. Some professional must be term,^lic,n o[ ,he struc,ure andKim argues: “The very idea directly responsible to my office,that the University of Chicago The arguments advanced bywould seek to impose censorship Netherton explaining this posi¬tion its students sickens me. tion were printed in last weeksWhen I hear the idea approved Maroon.by men in the Administration and The dean continued, saying:faculty whom I admire, I am re- ‘The people running the stationduced to shocked silence and are amatures, admittedly ama-have a grave temptation to break tures in the good sense, but neverthat silence by delivering impas- theless amateurs. Running a sta¬tioned speeches on the nature of tion for a ^ number of hours,freedom, John Stuart Mill, and , r .. . . .the Iraditions ot the University <lay of ,he year 15 a )obOf Chicago. requiring some degree of profes-This of course makes me worth- sional management.”less as a partner for you in nego- Schuerman, manager of the sta- 1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — MY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & QalleryII 12'CHeese .1.30 Combs teal son 2.25Sausage . .1.65 Mushroom 2.00Anchovy .1.65 Shrimp 2.25Pepper b Onion. ... .1.50 Bacon b On ion 2.00Free Hrlirrrg OH All Rht zm to I’C Si adonisAttention Chow Hounds! xSpecial every Tuesday night — all the fried chickenyou can eat . . . $1.95Universal Army StareHeadqumrterr for sport and work wearFlop pocket woih tr weor ivy league trousers — Wash tr weer rfreseshifts — camping equip. — Complete line ot k«d* feetweer — trenchcoots — luggage end trunks.1144 East 55th s*. 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Archer, ChicagoHarding Pharmacy, 3i932 W. Fullerton Ave., ChicagoKsiazek Drugs, 1900 E. 87th St., ChicagoMulay Pharmacy, 3400 W. 70th St., ChicagoRosen Pharmacy, 2958 W. Devon Ave., ChicagoScott Pharmacy, 2549 W. Devon Ave., ChicagoPavlicek Drugs, 5539 W. Cermak Rd., CiceroRotUe Pharmacy, 1900 S. Cicero Ave., CiceroJablonski Pharmacy, 6501 Pershing Rd., StickneyBnffi w Cblt-ngo Ave.. Chicago" The best tobacco makes the best smoke!R. J. Reynolds Tobsoee Co., Wlnstoa-Sslen. N.April 22, 1960■—Strozier's death shocks administrationUniversity of Chicago, speaking so well, has shocked this campus. He made Ida Noyes coeduca-on behalf of Chancellor Lawrence He was at the height of his ca- tional. He stimulated the revivalof Blackfriars. He believed in theMaroon and encouraged whatinfluence of his achievements at was good in it, even in the post-the University of Chicago will war era when campus newspa-long be felt. pers ^ad many special problems.Dean of students John P. "He qUjckjy saw that studentsNetherton, upon hearing of Stro- . . ...zicr’s death, kaid, "He recognized must havc a represel.tat.ve coun-a need for the activity which an^ assisted in the foundinghas become University Theatre; of SG, (1 he first constitution washe brought George Blair here appropriate to the time; I amfrom Georgia, later backed Marv embarrassed for us all that thePhillips, and in effect created UT. spirit has of late years been vio-He saw what was best in the lated to some extent by our fail-FOTA idea and brought it to life, urc to change the letter.) He lems of the foreign students whorepresents some twenty per centof our graduate student body. Hewas himself a great counselorand teacher both for students andfor his staff. He personally helpedthousands of individual opportu¬nities. This barely begins to saywhat he accomplished in Chicagobut now let me mention two oft-campus matters.“Immediately- after the war hesaw the need for such a studentopportunity as is now provided bythe National Student association,lie sponsored the organizationalmeeting of NSA here eleven yearsago, was a constant source ofadvice and help to the nationalorganization, and then also spon¬sored the tenth regular nationalmeeting here in 1956.“He understood that the stu¬dent’s educational needs outsidethe classrooms are greatly simi¬lar on hundreds of American cam¬puses, and that students stand tobenefit from systematic exchangeof ideas among college and uni¬versity officers with responsibil¬ity in this area: he was thereforea leader (national president in1954-55) in the National associa¬tion of student personnel admin¬istrators. His first year after go¬ing to Florida State as president,he came back and spoke to theNASPA convention of that year.‘Those are some specifics; if fmay now add one generalization,I should like to say this. Mr. Stro-zier’s accomplishment as dean ofstudents was that he taught hisstudents, his colleagues, and thecountry what will be a lastinglesson on freedom and respon¬sibility in the service of learning.”He aiso servea as presiaem ox . ... . . . , ,, . . ... ..„ . A. Kimpton, who was out of the reer in an instituticthe University of Chicago Settle- city, said; playing an imporment, and of the Chicago Musical ‘The sudden death of President shaping the nation’sCollege, and president of the Na- Strozier, whom we knew and likedtional Association of PersonnelAdministration.His widow is the former Mar- j . ■ nr aHgaret Burnett, of Denver, whotook her AB degree at the Univer-sity of Colorado and her AM de- fgglgree at the University of Chicago. IhS WEmSffijt ISThe Stroziers have three chil-dron: Robert, 19, who graduated ; ' Win June, 1957, from the Universityof Chicago high school; Charles, Jgg15, and Ann, 12.Strozier was born Julv 20. 190G. \' JfHfjlJ. J. Daniel, Chairman of the fkBoard of Control, Institutions of • wb.Higher Learning for tlie state of WmFlorida, accompanied Strozier to l||Chit ago lie informed Gov. LeRoy MCollins, of Florida, of Stroziei'sdeath."Mr. Strozier’s death is both adeep personal loss to me and asignificant one to higher educa- |tion in the state of Florida,” said rDaniel.Dr. R. W. Harrison, vice presi-dent and dean of faculties at the *■"He was at the Height of his career in an institution thatwas playing an important role in shaping the nation's future.The influence of his achievements at the University of Chi~cago will long be felt/' said UC vice president R. W. Harri-. - son of Robert M. Strozier.jThree-month course leads to acommission as a Second Lieuten*ant. If you arc graduating this June,you may be eligible for admission tQthe new Air Force Officer TrainingSchool. Successful completion of thethree-month course wins you a com¬mission, and a head-start on a bright,rewarding future in the AerospaceAge. -‘ The School is open to men andwomen college graduates with cer¬tain technological and administrativeskills. If you are selected for theSchool, you will receive Staff Ser¬geant pay while a trainee. Gradu¬ated officers may later apply for ad¬vanced training and graduate studyat government expense. Male offi¬cers may also apply for flight train¬ing: as pilots or navigators.For the career-minded young offi¬cer, the Air Force way of life can bestimulating, exciting and full ofmeaning. He will be serving himself,bis family and his nation. This is theAerospace Age. It is a time when acareer in Air Force blue has so muchto offer the young man or womanwho qualifies.The Air Force is seeking only a’select group of college graduates foradmission into Officer TrainingSchool. However, we’d be happy toSend detailed information to anysenior who is interested. Just writ?;Officer Training School Informa¬tion, Dept. SCL04, Box 7608,Washington 4, D.C.There's a place for tomorrow'sleaders on the - •Aerospace Team, | | DUAL FILTER1. It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL’...definitely proved to make the smoke of a cigarette mild and smooth...2. with a pure white outer filter. Together they bring you the best ofthe best tobaccos—the mildness and taste that pay off in pleasure!HERE’S HOWTHE DUAL FILTERDOES IT:NEWDUALAir ForceFILTERANNOUNCINGAIR FORCETRAININGSCHOOLFOR COLLEGEGRADUATES for flavoras no sing]THE TAREYTON RINGMARKS THE REAL THING!photo by BergerCounters count, checkers check, and candidates worry asthe tallying of votes goes on at last week's Student Gov¬ernment election counting.Bar center additionnow being builtAn addition to the Ameri¬can Bar Center, the nationalheadquarters for the Ameri¬can Bar Association is now be¬ing constructed at 1155 E.60th St. When the center wasbuilt six years ago, the American elation Journal, and the AmericanLaw Student Association.The ABA is a national organi¬zation whose members total about40% of all lawyers and those inthe legal profession. It helps toset up the standards and ethicsof the legal profession. Explain court decisionby Dorothy DorfThe question of whether theStudent-faculty court was em¬powered to make advisory de¬cisions was raised by thecourt’s refusal last week to de¬liver a declaratory judgment on,"Is the choice between immediateand deferred rush in the Frater¬nity system a matter wholly in¬ternal to the Fraternity systemand thus not University-wide inimportance and automaticallywithin the jurisdiction of theelected representatives of the en¬tire student body?”Under the provisions of the Stu¬dent Government constitution thecourt is empowered "To issue de¬claratory judgments regardingthe interpretation of the Consti¬tution, Bill of Rights, or studentcode upon petition of the Assem¬bly.”A declaratory judgment is nor¬mally made when a bill which hasbeen passed by the assembly isbrought before the court by op¬ponents of the bill who point to aspecific passage in the Constitu¬tion and argue that this bill isunconstitutional because of saidpassage. It is then the duty of thecourt to interpret the passage anddecide whether the aim of thecontested bill falls within its pro¬visions. If the Assembly passes abill and then brings the bill, un-eontested, before the court, thistoo is a declaratory judgment. Ifthe court were to bring a pro¬posed bill up before the court ask¬ing whether the court consideredthis bill constitutional (the billnot yet having passed the assem¬bly, as occurred in this case) andthe court issued a statement con¬cerning it, then the court wouldbe acting as a council of law andissuing an advisory opinion. Theopinion would not be binding either to the court (were it toreconsider the bill after it hadpassed the Assembly) or to theAssembly in adding amendmentsto said bill before voting uponit. This opinion, too, could not beused as a precedent.The court pointed out that thegovernment request came underthe classification of "advisoryopinion,” and hence The specifiedsection of the constitution givingthe court the power of “declarato¬ry judgment” did not-apply.Friedman, a second year stu¬dent In the College, argued thatthe framers of the article con¬cerning the Student-faculty courthad not been familiar with thetechnical term "declaratory judg¬ment” and had meant instead "ad¬visory opinion.”SFA did not wish to interpretthe powers of the court under thispassage of the constitution whileconsidering the deferred rush pro¬posal. Thus it rejected the Stu¬dent-government petition on thegrounds that a decision made bythe court could be used politicallyin the consideration of the bill asit was still on the floor of theAssembly, and that presentingthe -court with a bill which hadnot yet been passed, which mightnot be passed, and which couldchange radically before beingpassed was a waste of the court’stime.According to Leon Kass, one ofthe court judges, "The Studentassembly had petitioned- the Courtto give a declaratory judgment asto whether or not a proposedamendment to the Student Codethat would impose a mandatorydeferred rush on the fraternitysystem is within the constitution¬ al power of the Assembly. It wasargued that the Court’s power torender declaratory judgments oninterpretations of the Constitu¬tion should be interpreted broadlyso that "declaratory judgment”would include advisory opinionsof the type here requested by theAssembly. Without deciding onthis question of interpretation,the Court feels that even if itcould give advisory opinions, in¬sufficient grounds exist in thiscase to warrant the granting ofsuch an opinion. Counsel for theAssembly argued that the requested advisory opinion mightprevent the legislators of the as¬sembly from acting unconstitu¬tionally and would save time forthe Assembly. If the Court wereto accept this reasoning, it wouldbe forced to accept petitions foradvisory judgments on the consti¬tutionality of any and all legisla¬tion proposed by the Assembly.The Court therefore refused toaccept jurisdiction in this casewithout hearing arguments onthe merits.”F. Jay Pepper, court Judge,added that "The governmentcounsel argued that the Constitu¬tion provision was not specifical¬ly what the writers of the Constitut ion intended — that advisoryopinion, rather than declaratoryjudgment, was actually intended.The Court found the provision notinternally inoensistent, that there¬fore there was no evidence thatthe Constitution meant other thanwhat it said. Such a ruling, SGcounsel conceded during the hear¬ing, would destroy the govern¬ment cast.Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.Bar Association had a member¬ship of 40,000; today it has almost100,000 members. The addition isbeing built because of lack ofspace in the existing facilities.The four story addition willcost approximately $800,000 andwill be completed in April, 1961.Architects are Ilolabird and Root.The American Bar Center, alsohouses the American JudicatureSociety, the American Bar Asso-Eye Examination-- Fashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E._55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372FOR THEIndependentTraveler...Here is an opportunity to Join a uniqueorganization made up of people inter¬ested in unrefgimented European travel.Members have a source of travel informa¬tion and referrals with no commissionsInvolved; bases of operation in New Yorkend Europe as well as a meeting placelor members to socialize and have fun;shopping tips and discounts, lists of Eng¬lish speaking doctors and dentists; lowcost travel, insurance, hotels and foodsources; social activities, and many otherservices. If you are planning to travel toEurope... send for full information onthe benefits of membership to...Overseas £2*Guest Clubxs?509FIFTH AVE, H.Y. 17/OX 7-9197 See The Dinah Shore Chevy Show in color Sundays, NBC-TV—the Pal Boone Chevy Showroom weekly, ABC-TVCORVAIRIY CHEVROLETDRIVE IT!GETOURDEAL!!!! A pair of Corvairs recently recorded 27.03 and 26.21 miles per gallon in the2,061.4-mile Mobilgas Economy Run. That’s certified proof that Corvair skimpson gas costs. It saves other ways, too. Corvair is the only U. S. compact carthat never needs antifreeze or costly radiator repairs. Come in and drive thecompact car that outdoes them all.Things Corvair gives you that America’s other compact cars can’tPractically Hat floor ... real foot room forthe man in the middle. Fold-down rear•eat gives 17.6 cu. ft. of extra storage space.Four-wheel Independent suspension fora smoother, flatter ride.Rear-engine traction ... that comes withthe engine's weight bearing down on therear wheels.You probably realize already that the mile¬age figures Corvairs recorded in the Mobil¬ gas Ruiware higher than the average driverran expect. But because the cars met everykind of driving condition—rugged mountaingrades, long country straightaways, congest¬ed city traffic—those mileage figures proveCorvair’s inherentability to save. Oper-ating costs take anose dive the dayyou take delivery ofa Corvair. M economical lioiupwuuwnSee your local authorized Chevrolet dealer for fast delivery, favorable deals1 • Coming events on quadrangles •Friday, 22 AprilThe Eucharist according to the L«-theran use, 11:30 ana. Bond chapel.Jazz club. 2:30 pm, Ida Noyes library.Come to listen or to play.Lecture i Midwest Society of electronmieroscoplsts and committee on bio¬physics), 4 pm. Mandel hall. “Tech¬nical problems in connection with thestudy of the ultrastructure of skeletalmuscle fibers," Fritiof S. Sjostrand.professor of zoology. University ofCalifornia at Los Angeles, and profes¬sor of histology. Karolinska Institute,Stockholm, Sweden.Maroon staff meeting, 4 pm. Ida Noyeshall, east lounge. All Maroon staffmembers and anyone interested inJoining the staff are invited to attend.Lecture series. “Works of the mind"• University College), 8 pm. 64 EastLake street. “Hobbes's Leviathan."Thomas McDonald, lecturer in theliberal arts, University College.Saturday, 23 AprilRecorder society. 1 pm. Ida Noyes hall.Radio series, “The sacred note.” WBBM.11 pm A program of choral music bythe University choir. Richard Vlk-strom. director of chapel music, con¬ducting.Sunday, 24 AprilRadio series, “Faith of our fathers,”WGN. 8:30 am. The Reverend Tom F.Driver, assistant professor of Chris¬tian theology, Union Theologicalseminary.Roman Catholic masses. 3:30. 10, and11 am. De Sales house. 5735 Universityavenue. Episcopal Communion service, 9:30 am.Bond Chapel.Lutheran Communion service, 10 am,Hilton chapel.University Religious service, 11 am.Rockefeller memorial chapel. TheReverend Roger E. Ortmayer, profes¬sor of Christianity and the arts, Per¬kins School of theology, SouthernMethodist university.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm. Rockefellermemorial chapel. James R. Lawson,chapel carillonneur.Lecture (De Rales house),. 4:30 pm. 5735University avenue. * “The Phenome¬non of Man' by Teilhard de Chardin:a review," The Reverend John Dunne,CSC.Disciples Student fellowship, 7 pm. 5655University avenue. Motion picture in¬terview of Louis Flnkelstein.Channing - Murray student discussiongroup. 7 pm. Fenn house, 5638 Wood-lawn avenue. “Why do we kill people?The Chessman case.” J. Cavileer.Bridge club. 7 30 pm. Ida Noyes hall.Duplicate bridge will be played.Poetry reading (The Metre Readers—a Society of rhapsodistsl, 8 pm. IdaNoyes hall. Bring your own material.Monday, 25 AprilLaboratory School Scholarship sale.8 am to 5 pm, Sunny gym, 5823 Ken¬wood avenue.Botany club, 4:30 pm. Botany 106. LouisBlock Fund lecture: “Floral histogene¬sis,” Colin Barnard, principal researchofficer, section of genetics, cytology,and structural botany. Commonwealthand Scientific and Industrial Researchorganization. Canberra. Australia.Seminar (department of economics). 7:45 pm, Business east 106 “Designof socially optimal decisions,” HenriTheil, director. Econometrics Insti¬tute, Netherlands School of economics,and visiting professor, Harvard uni¬versity.Motion picture, 8 pm. Internationalhouse assembly hall. “The Last Hur¬rah" (USA).Tuesday, 26 AprilLaboratory School Scholarship sale, 3am to 12 noon, Sunny gym, 5823 Ken¬wood avenue.The Eucharist according to the la¬th era n use, 11:30 am. Bond chapel.Varsity tennis match, 2 pm. Varsitycourts. UC versus Illinois Institute oftechnology.Colloquium (Institute for the study ofmetals). 4:15 pm, Research institutes411. “Rotational motion of the sub-lattice magnetizations of an antifer-romagnet in high field,” T. Nagamiya,professor, department of physics,Osaka university, Japan.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship. 7:30pm. Ida Noyes hall, room 213. “Doeslife have meaning?” II, James F. Ny-gulst, regional secretary. IVCF. In¬formal coffee hour following.Television series, “All things consid¬ered,” WTTW (Channel 111. 9:30 pm.“Is mental health worth $150 mil¬lion?"Wednesday, 27 AprilReligious service (Divinity school), 11:30am. Bond chapel. The Reverend RayJones. Bryn Mawr Community church.Lecture (Graduate School of business),1:30 pm. Breasted hall. “Marketing acompletely new product.” Clifford C.Do hbu Think for Yburself?(DIG THIS QUIZ AND SEE IF YOU STRIKE PAY DIRT*)“You can’t teach an old doe npw tricks” means(A) better teach him old ones; (B) it’s hard to eetmental agility out of a rheumatic mind; (C) let’sface it—Pop likes to do the Charleston. A□B□CDWhen your roommateborrows your clotheswithout asking, do you(A) charge him rent? (B)get a roommate whaisn’t your size? (C) hideyour best dothes?AD BD CDWhen a girl you’re withputs on lipstick in public^do you (A) tell her tostop? (B) refuse to beannoyed? (C) wonder ifthe stuff’s kissproof?AD B□ C □If you were advising afriend on how to pick afilter cigarette, would yousay, (A) “Pick the onewith the strongest taste.”(B) “Get the facts, pal —then judge for yourself.”(C) “Pick the one thatclaims the most.”AD BD CD men and women who think for them¬selves usually smoke Viceroy. They’vestudied the published filter facts; theyknow only Viceroy has a thinking man’sfilter. And Viceroy has rich, full tobaccoflavor—a smoking man’s taste. Changeto Viceroy today!*ff you checked (B) on three out of four ofthese questions—you think for yourself!It’s a wise smoker who depends on hisown judgment, not opinions of others,in his choice of cigarettes. That is whyThe Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows—ONLY VICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN’S FILTER-A SMOKING MAN’S TASTE!£1040. Hrawa* Williamson Tobacco Carp. Mendler. vice-president, Sunbetmcorporation.Meeting of the Federated Theologicalfaculty, 3 pm, Swift hall commons.Varsity track meet. 4:15 pm. Stagg field.UC versus University of Illinois.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellermemorial chapel. James R. Lawson,chapel carillonneur.Hillel Folk Dance group. 7 30 pm, 5715Wood lawn avenue.Lecture (American Humanist associa¬tion). 8 pm, Fenn house, 5638 Wood-lawn avenue. “Sins you’ve never heardof.” Dr. Sunder Joshi. minister, Uni¬tarian church of Hinsdale.Thursday, 28 AprilCarillon concert, 12 am. Rockefellermemorial chapel. A special concert Inobservance of International Carillonday. James R. Lawson, chapel caril¬lonneur.Varsity baseball game, 3:30 pm. Staggfield. UC versus Illinois Institute oftechnology. Varsity tennis match, 3:30 pm Varsitycourts. UC versus Lake Forest collegeMicrobiology elnb, 4 pm. Ricketts north1. “Studies on the Biosynthesis ofProdigtosin." D. M Shrlmpton. JohnM. Coulter Fellow, department ofbotany. ,Zoology club, 4:30 pm. Zoology 14 “Hy¬potheses as to mechanism of embry¬onic induction.** Clifford Grobstetnprofessor of zoology, Stanford univer¬sity.Lecture (department of medicine). 5 pmBillings hospital, conference roomM-137. “Left ventricular catheteriza¬tion and coronary angiography.” DrDavid Littman, chief. Cardiology serv¬ice West Roxbury Veterans Adminis¬tration hospital, and clinical associatein medicine. Harvard Medical schoolLecture series. “The medieval origins ofthe Hovel,” 8 pm. Social science 122“The shaping spirit.” Eugene Vina-ver. professor of French language andliterature. University of ManchesterEngland.Classified ads •For sale Help wontedCompletely modern, year-round, 1 bdrm.house. 1 block from Indiana DunesState Park. IT x 20 attached rm forstudio workshop ot conversion Into fam¬ily room or 2 more bedrms On 2 lots,one saleable. Furnace, water supply athot water, all automatic. 45 minutesfrom UC campus via tollroad or SouthShore Railroad. Refrig., deep freeze,stove. TV. air conditioner, etc.. Included.Immediate nossesalon. $3,300 Call WH4-2779 or Chesterton, Indiana, WA9-1937. aFor rentNew. fully furnished, air-conditioned,efficiency apartment. June 28 to Aug.27. 21“ TV, radio. FM. elec kitchen, tilebathroom. 1 or 2 persons. $110 monthly.Evenings or weekends, PL 2-4456.7 rm., 2nd fir. apt. at 57th and Dor¬chester. from May 15 or after until Sept.30 Fully furnished, cool back porch.*135 a month. Leaving library of Rncy.Britanniea and Great Books. Call HY3-4367. Secretary - assistant during preparationof report on birds of Angola. Must typebe good at detail; have sufficient back¬ground to prepare indexes and bibliog¬raphies and to use library card file-be nimble enough to ilimb ladders andmake frequent trips to library Willin--neas to do all jobs a prime requisiteFull time work. Write or call M Trav-lor. Chicago Natural History MuseumChicago 5. WA 2-941$.Hyde Park Theatre, Ass’t. Mgr.. 21 orover, five evenings plus Sunday after¬noon weekly plus six nat’l. holidays.Must be available during summer nuar-ter ti for at least one year total. Workweek mar be 3$ to 40 hr* , or more ifdesired. No previous experience neces¬sary. The rate not great, but the workIs creative A challenging managerialtraining A experience. Some study ttm»on job. Apply in person at the theatreF’ri , Sat. or Sun. evenings.Job. Sunday AM: Must be aggressivesales-minded. and free between noonand 2 pm to talk before large grouos.*25 per month plus bonuses. Call Pat,WH 3-4580.Nice 3'i room apt., elevator build., con¬venient near campus. IC. Co-op Avail¬able May 1st. Call Arlen, days. MI 2-2664;evenings. PL 2-4280. WontedServicesSewing, alterations, hems. DO 3-1556.Typing. NO 7-7799. Driver with car (not older than 1957)to drive from 2150 Lincoln Park west toClassics building. 101$ E. 59th St.. Mon¬day. Wednesday, and Friday, leave 9 or9:30 am. return early afternoon or bvarrangement. Pay. $5 for each roundtrip. Call DI 8-6800 in the evening after5:30 pm, ask for apartment 901, Mrs.R. Palyl.Crew-cnt. Ivy league or plain trim.Frank the Barber. Room 631, Hyde ParkNational Bank Bldg. PersonalDo you waste half of your time peckingaway at a typewriter? Well, don’t. Letme do your typing for you. I'm accu¬rate, speedy, reasonable—and. 1 canspell! I’ll type anything: from book-manuscript to- thesis to three-page es¬say. Call me at NO 7-8966. Creative Writing Workshop. PL 2-3377.Gee professor—not an exam on Wednes¬day! There's a Oates Coffee Hour Tues¬day night. 9:30-11:30.Letter for Geri Chealev left bylit the Soc. dept., SS-318. s intakeMrc r.iu. W J ~ Booboor Don't bungle. The Big Bear.Mrs. Cutler-Kapiau. dress alterations, . .fitting* by appointment. Specialty, Double Joy: Next Urn no sling and noskirts made to order. PL 2-0566. cast. Idiot.SERVICE CALL $3.95 PLUS PARTS90-DAY GUARANTEE ON ALL PARTSSun Radio & TelevisionwWII I1UUIU U IwlUVIOlUIISales «Kt ServiceDAYS - NITESSUNDAYS - HOLIDAYSBA 1-3331 1831 E. 79th STREETBA 1-2415 Chicago 49, 111.10% discount upon presentation of I.D. CordTHREE PIZZA’S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree F.C. Del ire rtfPonder advisory changesThe Committee on Advising in the College is presently considering difficulties inherentin the current advisory system and possible alterations in it, according to George Playe,Dean of students in the College. The major problem of the present system is that a studentmay have too many different advisors in the course of his career in the college. He statedthat, “The basic problems as affecting students are difficulties in making appointments,difficulties when changing fields and problems of communication and of disseminatingcorrect information.” «ahmit ihe rre #asic^d visor, he said that “every effort marks by saying that he has not.. -rncd *. * c^hies they find in should made to keep the situa- beeen an advisor this year andan an<l whcther tion pur ely scholastic. Although has no experience as an advisorf cf.zM.ia ela*lons to a stu' a student’s feelings will always under the new curriculum. He. , - somewhat per- over, an advisor should stay said that, “Being an advisorRawick hlstrurTor^i^Ih Ge°r-g1 clear o£ getting too involved in means different things to differ-'.a a • mith?. social personal situations because he is ent people. A major problem ofsciences and advisor in the cc 1ot trained to handle such prob. any advising system is findinglems. Both student and advisor an adequate definition of whatshould mutually understand that advising is. To some, it is onlyr-n advisor cannot act as counse- bookkeeping and to others it in-loi or therapist.” volves only academic considera-_ tuiuucu ueiore mis mum nur * auneil Rinn, Instructor in the tions.” Other difficulties, accord-la ^ F I ■ - int0 effoct fiic nthpr cn oaoctinn social sciences and advisor in the inS t0 Mr- Goldberg, are gettingJimmy buys OUt partner for improving the system called college stated that she herself is PJjggto ^otreiTrZron ft**8" " r for private offices for advisors very Pleased Wllh the advisor representation fromHe hoped that theS buildingplarfs system;. She remarked that ”! the different areas in the college,for Gates-Blake would make this am a first year advisor and the He added that, ‘The job (ad-possible. Mr. Rawick added that, system is working quite well as vising) has not always been recog-This cut really doesn't belong with the story below be¬cause it's a picture of Freddy's, not Jimmy's. If you want tosee a photo of Jimmy's, turn to page 14. photo by Swlft lege favors greater conti’, ty be¬tween student and adivsov fr >r'1year to year. He remark, d, however, that there are "tremendousadministrative hurdles to heclimbed” before this could be putinto effect. His other suggestionJames Wilson, better known as“Jimmy” to his clientele is nowsole owner of the Woodlawn Tap.On the afternoon of March 29,Jimmy concluded the purchase ofhis partner Mike Filz’s interestthus ending a long and success¬ful association. Mike, who will besixty-five this summer, has de¬cided to retire to his suburbanhome and devote himself to hisgarden.Jimmy thus marked the attain¬ment of a goal upon which he hadset his sights twenty years agomonth. In 1940, at the age of 28,Jimmy came to Hyde Park as abartender at the old tJniversitytavern. “I didn’t drink, didn’tknow scotch from bourbon, andhad never drawn a glass of beerin my life,” said Jimmy.In 1948, through their mutualinterest in bowling, he met andbecame a close friend of MikeFilz, and when Mike had an op¬portunity in 1951, to purchase the Woodlawn Tap, he invited Jimmyto become his partner. The juke¬box was the first to go and wasdeplaced by a moderately highfidelity FM system. Another dis¬tinctive addition was made whenJim dug into his pocket to pur¬chase a complete encyclopedia.Numerous volumes were donatedby the customers to swell the col¬lection to its present size. In 1959,a chess club was formed, andJimmy printed and distributedthe membership cards. The club isquite active, with tournaments,matches with other Chicago clubs,and exhibitions scheduled regu¬larly. Center of chess activity isthe University room In the rearwhich is reserved primarily forthe UC clientele. ‘the system would work much ^a^ as ^ am concerned. It is in- mzed as an important part ofbetter and with less ruffled feel- evitabIe<’? she continued, “that an one’s academic career. This mayings if students kept appoint- advising relationship is not pure- be especially true when the jobments or called to cancel them ^y scholastic. An advisor must must compete with research forinstead of keeping advisors hang- be somewhat personal but should the faculty members time. Theing around and waiting for stay away from Psychoanalysis.” advisor system is only as goodthem.” Homer Goldberg, Assistant pro- as the people in it. They must beConcerning the role of an ad- fessor of English, prefaced his re-Doc Films hold tryouts willing to spend time learningabout the curriculum and mat¬ters outside their own field. Anadvisor must also be an adminis¬trator and be able to juggleschedules and regulations.”When asked about an advisor’srole, Mr. Goldberg said that, “Ad¬vising requires some of the sameskills involved in parenthood. An"After all,” Jimmy remarked,"I’ve outlasted two chancellors!”His guest book boasts the namesof Dylan Thomas, James T. Far¬rell, and many other notables. Tryouts for the spring produc- —with the emphasis on techni-tion of Documentary films will be cians with some experience,held today at 2 pm in the library “i have been asked over andof Ida Noyes. “We have a scenario over if involvement with this runder serious consideration,” an- project might be frowned on by advisor must be sympathetic butnounced William Routt, produc- the Administration. I wish to say must also be able to get toughtion supervisor, “but we re still that I have tried to work with when necessary. He should notopen to good, filmable ideas. Tech- the Student Activities office on try to be an amateur psychiatristnicisians; camera men and so so, anything that comes close to the but he must realize that a stu-actors (mainly male) and just borderline of disapproved actions, dent’s academic acareer is not iso-plaln workers, are what we need So far things seem pretty clear, Iated from other parts of hisRaise. money for sit-insAn intensive money-raisingcampaign for the support of thestudent sit-in movement in theSouth is being held this week inInternational house. On Wednes¬day and Thursday fact sheets de¬scribing the history of the move¬ment were circulated to all resi¬dents of the ho u s e. The factsheets included the resolution tosupport the movement and funddrive that was passed last week inthe International house council.Tables will be placed in the In¬ternational house halls during thedinner hour Sunday, Monday,Tuesday and Wednesday, so thatvisitors as well as residents willbe contacted. At the same time,collections will be carried on with¬in the house by floor representa¬tives. who attended the Politics club-NAACP meeting at which twoNegro students spoke on the re¬sistance movement In the South.Thinking that a fund raising cam¬paign could best be carried outin the residence unit, they wrotea resolution and presented it tothe House council. Both the Coun¬cil and the Administration ap¬proved the plan, and the commit¬tee organized the drive. If you are going to move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trou¬blesome problem.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 E. 55th St.BU 8-6711 and they have no gripes. life.”GLADIS restaurant1527 E. 55th DO 3-9788We Specialize in Well-Balanced Meals atPopular Prices, and Midnite SnacksOPEN ALL NIGHT — ORDERS TO GOThe movement is the idea oftwo International house residents LTJ □ all the Free Press books□ G THE GREEN1450 East 57th DOOR BOOKSHOPHY 3-5829Lil Li Chicago's most complete stockof quality paper backsBUD and TRAVIS ARE BACk!DEL CLOSE Iis back:LYNN GOLD is backed byFRANK HAMILTONthe gate of horn753 N. DEARBORN SU 7-2833Admission — $1.00 Saturdays — $2.00 Degustibus •e- ■ {iifM f! IIIH1IIiron est disputahdum”—andrqult^literally, there's no question about it-*When it comes to taste, Coca-Cola winehands down. In Latin, Greek or Sanskrit,“Have a Coke" means the same thing—It's an invitation to the most refreshingpause of your life. Shall we?Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.April 22, 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON •y \_Cap & Gown out in MayThe 1960 Cap and Gown, distin¬guished by the University sealon its cover, will be published thisquarter. Staff members are work¬ing overtime to deliver the year¬book to its readers by late May-early June.The yearbook will actually re¬view two years of university his¬tory, as last year’s Cap and Gownnever went to the printer. Somecopy and photographs salvagedfrom the defunct edition will beincluded in the present one.“For the most part, we are go¬ing to continue the tone of the1958 book; informal and candid,” said John Mueller, yearbook edi¬tor. The 1960 edition, as in the1958 edition, will omit formaldormitory and student organiza¬tion pictures. The reason remainsthe same; “You couldn’t get thedormitory and organization mem¬bers together.” Yet, unlike the1958 edition, the 1960 edition willcontain pictures of women’s clubsand fraternities.The Cap and Gown will printthe results of a student opinionsurvey. According to Mueller, re¬sponse from the 1 undergraduatein 4 who received a survey ques¬tionnaire, was good. The surveyOnCaaqns withMk State)(Author of “I Was a Teen-age Dwarf"The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.)A GUIDE FOR THE LOVELESSGentlemen, take warning. June is almost upon us—June, themonth of brides. Have you got yours yet? If not, don't de¬spair. You don’t have to be rich or handsome to get a girl. Allyou have to be is kind, considerate, thoughtful, and obliging-in short, a gentleman.For example, don’t ever call a girl for a date at the last min¬ute. Always give her plenty of advance notice—like threemonths for a coke date, six months for a movie, a year for aprom, two years for a public execution. This shows the girl thatshe is not your second or third choice and also gives her ampletime to select her costume.And when you ask for a date, do it with a bit of Old Worldgallantry. A poem, for instance, is always sure to please ayoung lady, like this.. 1 think you're cute,Daphne La France.I’ll put on a suit,And take you to a dance.Tn the unlikely event that you don't know any girls namedDaphne La France, try this:I think you’re cute,Winifred Jopp.I’ll put on a suit,And take you to a hop.In the extremely unlikely event that you don’t know a Wini¬fred Jopp either, try this:I think you're cute,Isabel Prall.I’ll put on a suit,And take you to a ball.you. (jof YoiittYffy1-If there is no Isabel Prall, Winifred Jopp, or Daphne I aFrance on your campus, it is quite obvious why you've hadtrouble finding dates all year; you’ve enrolled in an all-maleschool, you old silly!Next let us take up the question of etiquette once you areout on a date with Isabel, Winifred, or Daphne. The first thingyou do, naturally, is to offer the young lady a Marlboro. Besure, however, to offer her an entire Marlboro—not just aMarlboro butt. Marlboro butts are good of course, but wholeMarlboros are better. You get an extra inch or two of fineHavorful tobacco—and I mean flavorful. Do you think flavorwsnt out when filters came in? Well, you’ve got a happy sur¬prise coming when you light a Marlboro. This one really de¬livers the goods on flavor, and when you hand Isabel, Winifred,or Daphne a whole, complete, brand-new Marlboro, she willknow how highly you regard and respect her, and she will growmisty and weak with gratitude, which is very important whenyoq take her out to dinner, because the only kind of coed acollege man can afford to feed is a weak and misty coed. Lateststatistics show that a coed in a normal condition eats one anda half times her own weight every twelve hours.At the end of your date with Isabel, Winifred, or Daphne,make certain to get her home by curfew time. That is gentle¬manly. Do not leave her at a bus stop. That is rude. Deliverher right to her door and, if possible, stop the car when you aredropping her off.The next day send a little thank-you note. A poem is best.Like this;For a wonderful evening, many thanks,Isabel, Winifred, or Daphne.I’ll take you out for some more merry pranksNext Saturday if you’ll haph me. © i#«o m«« sbnimn** * *tVe can t give you rhyme but we'll give you good reason whyyou'll enjoy Marlboro and Marlboro's unaltered companioncigarette, Philip Morris. One word says it alt: flavor»CHICAGO M AROOH • April 22, 1960 touched upon many topics; stu¬dents were asked about their po¬litical alignments, conservative orliberal; about their views on the“new” college; and about theirreligious beliefs, before and afterentering UC. Questions concern¬ing changes in the comprehensivesystem, the discussion method ofteaching and the return of inter¬collegiate football, were also in¬cluded. “The results,” said Muel-ler, “are very interesting and, inmany cases, quite provocative.- 'Ugliest Man on Campus'voting to be held MondayUC students will have a chance next Monday to cast avote in a hard-fought election—that for the title of “UgliestMan on Campus,” annually sponsored by the campus chapterof Alpha Phi Omega, the service fraternity. Polling placesfor the election will be stationed Monday in Cobb Hall andMandel corridor from 8:15 am to 3:45 pm, in the New dormi¬tories from 5 to 7 pm, and in ——Burton-Judson courts from 5:30 and dropping money into the botto 7 pm. tie marked for the one they con-Students will vote by examin- sider the most fitting heir toing the pictures of the candidates UMOCs tradition. The winner ofFine Arts presentssurvey of art,“The Idiot Box” will be the title of aand television presented by the FineWednesday evening.The survey will be conducted as part of the Fine Arts pro¬gram’s open house which includes survey of art, film,Arts program nextan exhibition of Roberto An¬tonio Matta’s paintings and draw¬ings and a showing of severalfilms by John Read, BBC filmproducer who will also take partin the panel discussion.Other members of the panelsurvey are: Paul Molloy, tele¬vision critic for the Sun Timeswho has just won the 1960 Head¬liner award which cites him as“the nation’s outstanding critic intelevision, radio, and theatre;”Fay Pearce, painter, sculptor, andteacher in fine arts who scriptedand researched the BBC tele¬vision, “Special inquiry into thearts in Britain” with Peter Us¬tinov as narrator; Len Schlosser,CBS television producer, nowhead of public ajfairs broadcast¬ing; Alec Sutherland. UC’s di¬rector of the Center for continu¬ing education as well as the Uni¬versity’s director of educationalbroadcasting in the office of radioand television (Sutherland hasalso been with the BBC); andRobin Pearce, who will act as moderator on the panel, is direc¬tor of the Fine Arts program andhas been with BBC as televisionfilm producer, later working forthe CBC in that same capacity.The Joseph Shapiros have do¬nated the examples of artistMatta’s work from their collec¬tion.The discussion, ‘Television —The Idiot Box,” will begin at 8:50pm next Wednesday at the Down¬town center. 64 East Lake street,second floor. the election will be the candidatewhose bottle contains the mostmoney, so supporters are encouraged to vote for their candidateas much and as many times astheir pocketbooks can stand. Thethree appropriately ugly candidates had the following statementsto make on their campaigns. FromF. Jay Pepper of Phi Delta Thetafraternity: “I’ll try to live downto the standard of ugliness set bymy predecessor, Peter Langrock.”From Joe Wolf of Psi Upsilonfraternity: “I am confident ofelection because it is the unani¬mous opinion of every man,woman, child, and beast I meetthat nothing can be uglier thanI am.” From Ansel Edidin of PhiSigma Delta: “How can a mud¬dled student body elect anyonebut me?”The winper will be announcedat the Beaux Arts ball.MODEL CAMERAWholesaleCatalogue Prices anCameras, Projectors, Recorders1342 E. 55rti HY 3-9259TAhSAM-YfcNCHINiSI . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising m( 4YIOYISF, 4MBAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 f>.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 Eaet 63rd St. SU 8-901S I Present job opportunities1 and vocational interviewsOn Thursday, April 28, a representative of the Bankers Life| and Casualty Company, 4444 W. Lawrence avenue, Chicago,| will interview students in Mathematics and Statistics for full-| time summer positions and for permanent positions in the% Casualty Actuarial department.| In order to qualify for as ummer position, a student must| either be receiving the Bachelor’s degree in June of this yearI (planning to return for graduate work in the fall) or ‘>e a candi-| date for the Bachelor’s degree in June 1961. Consideration for| permanent positions will be given to both SB and SM candi-4 dates. The interviews will be held at the Office of Vocational1 Guidance and Placement, room 200, Reynolds club. Interview| appointments may be arranged through Mr. Calvin.The Cook County Department of Public Aid has announced| an examination for Caseworker I and II positions to be held| on June 11, 1960. Students who will receive Bachelor’s degrees| at the end of the current quarter are eligible for Caseworker II positions. The closing date for filing applications is May 13,I 1960.| Announcements for Examination 1952, giving information as| to the duties of these positions and the application procedure,| are available for review in Mrs. McCarn’s reception office,| room 202, Reynolds club.| April 28—9:30-12 am: Mr. R. Larson, Harvard School of Busi-4 ness, will interview for a woman assistant in his course “Writ-| ten Analysis of Cases.” Bachelor’s degree — any field — re-| quired. Duties include attending class with first-year graduate4 students, participating in case discussion with faculty and staff,| reading, commenting on, and grading the written analysis ofI students.I April 29—Morning and afternoon: Hallmark Greeting CardsI company will interview young women artists for positions withI thei Art department in Kansas City.Phone Miss Dolores Novosel, extension 3288, for interview4 appointments. *8VacationMARKET RESEARCHAND >SALES POSITIONSLeading Chicago manu¬facturer is seeking 25attractive Junior or Seniorwomen to do a combina¬tion of survey and sales work this summer. Girlsselected must enjoy working with people, have a carat their disposal and live in towns with a populationof 20,000 or more.Write, giving age, home and school address, alongwith phone numbers, also enclose a recent snapshot.Compensation-salary plus. Interviews will be heldin Chicago.Chicago Maroon Box No. 1001212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRISTEye* examined Glasses fitted1138 I. 63 HY 3-5352Cheerful, newly decorated, attrac¬tively furnished apartment. Safe,fireproof deluxe elevator building.Doorman. Night watchman. Maidand linen service available. Rea¬sonable monthly rates from $87.50,|bI After racking up five runsI and seven hits in the firstinning, Wisconsin at Milwau¬kee paraded to a 25 to 1 winover Chicago at Stagg Field.Starting hurler Nemon Taylorwas tagged for seven runs andeleven hits before leaving in thesecond stanza. Steve Potemkinlook over and worked threeframes, allowing eight markersand nine safeties. Turning in ayeoman performance, rookie BillComerford gave up seven runs ononly two hits in the fifth andsixth frames, while Howie Fieldshurled the seventh. Harvey Kellerwent the distance for Wisconsin.He fanned eleven and passed four.Shabby fielding caused the Ma¬roons’ downfall as they commit¬ted eleven miscues. Six occurredin the fifth, when the Cardinalsscored five times without the aidof a hit.Chicago’s pair of hits alsodidn’t figure in the scoring. In thefourth, Dick Thompson and Dan >*Base bailers lose to Wisconsin■,-. NBox scoreI'WM ChicagoHoward Fields at bat photo by Swiftloped two homers, two doubles,<;by walked, and Doug McBroom an<* a !single in six trips.El_loaded the bases when Kellerbooted his grounder. After JackMerskin struck out, Jerry Lerner,pinch-hitting for Roy Kulcsar,drew the pass which pus hedThompson home.Wisconsin battered the Ma¬roons 14 to 2 at Stagg field.After a shaky first inning, inwhich the Badgers amassed sixruns on four hits and four walks,Chicago, with veteran NemonTaylor on the mound, shook offthe opening day jitters andplayed good ball.Kyle Anderson’s charges dentedRichards, a fast-balling southpaw,for two runs in the eighth inning,when Bill Bauer doubled with one Chicago invades IndianaChicago invades the state of In¬diana for two baseball battles to¬morrow. Nemon Taylor will be onthe mound against Wabash at 10am in Crawfordsville. After thegame, the Maroons will take athirty-mile bus ride to Greencas- The next match will be withLewis College April 22 at Long-wood.Track squad swamps DePaulOn Thursday, the University ofChicago Maroon Track squadswamped crosstown rival DePaulUniversity 103-23 in a dual meetat Staff field. Taking all first,tie, where either Steve Potemkin exception of the 880 yardor Dick Thompson will face De-Pa uw.Netmen win fifth straightCoach Bill Moyle’s netmen wontheir fifth straight meet with anoverwhelming 7 to 1 victory overIIT Wednesday.Number one man Jerry Cookehad a rough time gaining hisfourth win, taking both sets 7-5,7-5. Lenny Friedman and Karlout. Mike Gessel singled Bauer Fenger gained easy 6-0, 6-3 tri-across, advanced to second on thethrow to the plate, moved to thirdon a passed ball, and scored whenDick Thompson grounded out.Gessel, a rookie, was Chicago’soffensive leader and was followedby Captain Bauer, "the old pro,”who enjoyed his usual fine dayat the plate and In the field. An¬derson is enthusiastic about hisyoung and inexperienced ballclub, and praised gritty catcherDan Eby, right-fielder Bill Com-erford, and Thompson for theirdefensive work.With five major league scoutseyeing him from the side lines,Dale Hackbart, all-Big Ten quar¬terback, performed brilliantly.The husky Badger slugger wal¬ umphs, and Bernie Hoffman tooktwo sets 6-1, 6-1. Max Liberieswas extended, but took a 12-10,2-6, 6-2 decision, and Jim Zagelwon 61, 6-1. Larry Weiss pickedup his fifth win, 7 5, 6-4. DickThomason suffered Chicago’sonly loss.In doubles competition, Fengerand Weiss triumphed 6-3, 6-2,6-3, and the agel-Hoffman duooutplayed IIT 6-1, 6-1.Golf team wins againThe UC golf team swept totheir second straight victory ofthe season turning back NorthCentral 17 to 1, April 12. Teammembers and their scores: Kries-man 3, Paulsell 3, Silver 3, Coast-on 3, Halliday 3, and Liebman 2. and mile runs, the Chicago cin-dermen showed great superiorityin all events. The tracksters wereled by Senior letterman MitchWatkins, who scored 26 pointsdespite an injured leg.An impressive performance wasturned in by Sophomore PeterJoseph who managed a 23.0 clock¬ing in the 220 yard dash. His timewas the best posted in the 220this year. Joseph also ran on themile relay team. A double winnerfor Chicago was Freshman TerryWhite. White posted marks of10.3 in the 100, and 21'4* in thebroad jump.However, the day, as. have mostin previous meets, belonged toWatkins. The 6'4" all-around per¬former from Chicago U high, tookfour firsts and two seconds. Time-wise, he was not exceptional,probably becaues he was not hardpressed. His best event was the220 yard low hurdles where heposted an even 25.0 seconds. Inaddition, he led the field in the120 high hurdles (15.8), the shot <38'9*)f and the discus (114T0").A leg injury partway through themeet hampered his style in thejavelin and the broad jump; hegained six points there, however,with two seconds. Watkins, astandout basketball performerduring the winter months, hasrounded into shape quickly, muchto the pleasure of Coach Ted Hay-don. AB R H AB R HGentler,ss 3 4 2 Levy,2b 2 0 1Kettelh’hn.ss 0 0 0 Hirsch,2b 2 0 0Nauman.cf 5 3 3 Bauer,If 4 0 0Basco.cf 0 0 0 Gessel,ss 4 0 0Migarst.,3 4 2 2 Thmpsn.cf 1 1 0Longo,3b 0 10 Eby,c 2 0 0Juergens.lb 5 2 2 McBroom,Millar,lb 1 1 0 3b-lb 3 0 1Baas.rf 4 4 2 Merklns.rf 3 0 0Lekan.rf 1 1 0 Fields,p 0 0 0Honeck.lf 3 3 2 Kulcsar,lb 1 0 0Coehler.lf 1 0 1 Lerman 0 0 0Herbst,2b 3 1 0 Mlchas,3b 0 0 0Stan ton,c 6 3 3 Willet,3b 1 0 0Keller,p 5 0 2 Taylor,p 0 0 0Potemkin,p 1 0 0Olson 1 0 0Com'rf’rd p 0 0 0Chess 1 0 026 1 241 25 19 R H ETTWM 252 3—25 19 5Chicago .... 100 4-1 2 11Wisconsin ChicagoABR II AB R HMueller,cf 5 0 0 Levy ,2b 3 0 1Marik,2b 6 2 2 Hirsch,2b 0 0 0Hackbart,If 6 3 5 Bauer,If 4 1 2Van Erden,» 5 2 1 Gessel ,ss 4 1 2Stlners,3b 5 1 0 Th’mps’n.cf 3 0 0Bukken.rf 6 11 McBroom,Burks, lb 3 4 2 lb-3b 4 0 0Williams,c 5 12 Mich as,3b 0 0 0Richards,p 5 0 2 Eby,c 3 0 0C’mrford.rf 3 0 1Olson.rf 1 0 0Taylor.p 3 0 0Merskin 1 6 0Eckerly.2b 1 0 0Kulcsar, lb 2 0 046 14 15 32 2 6Wisconsin 601Chicago 000 R M104 110—14 15000 030—2 6UC wins first dual matchby Max LiberiesIn their first dual match of the season, the UC tennis teamshut out Elmhurst college by a very decisive 9 to 0 score.According to Coach B. Moyle, the match played last weekin the fieldhouse was “a fine conditioner for singles play anddoubles teamwork.”Leading the Maroon's attack at petition was Jem Agal with athe number one position was first crushing 6 2> 61 win over Ho Hanyear student Jerry Cooke, whooutlasted G. Tormohlen 6-4, 2-6,6-3. Lennie Friedman outsteadiedhis opponent A. Hansen at thenumber two slot 6-4, 1-6, 6-3. Atthe number three position LarryWeiss had little trouble in defeat¬ing R. Luziettc 6-1, 6-4. Max Lib¬eries in fourth position smashedC. Mittler 6-2, 6-1. Chicago’s fifthman Bernie Hoffman edged out T.Fssebagger 3-6, 8-6, 6-4.Finishing out the singles com- Soo. UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingFour harbors workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorEUROPE 1960If you are planning a trip to Europein 1960, you may wish to check onthe following:1. Lowest air fares by scheduled air¬line, e.g. round - trip for one allyear New York - Glasgow, $372.Round trip for dependent east-bound before May 15 and afterAugust 15, |251.!• Free advise about European hotelsand transportation.1. Purchase or rental of any makeEuropean car, also in connectionwith student flights.1. Choice of two all-expense escortedtours, 46 and 4S days, with depart¬ure by ship on June 16 and by airon July 2.For full information, call or writeMr. Arne Brekke, 6609 S. WoodlawnAve., Chicago 37, Ill. Butterfield8-6437. Campos agent for IcelandicAirlines. Five years of experience inEuropean travel. f#rti|ti csr tespftai & efime3-3113fcdsrsia:castrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli &michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespttiaRsts io: speed tuningcustom engine installationsclutch .gear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachworkM Inter MG psychiatrist2306 e. 71st st.Chicago, Illinois ESTERBROOK-pickingup new users every dayBEARS or People—Esterbrook lias a pen point tosuit every writing personality! They range all theway from one fine enough to write the Gettysburgaddress on the head of an instructor to one broadenough to write on the side of a barn.The Esterbrook Classic fountain pen starts writ¬ing instantly—the minute it touches the paper.Feels so ‘right’ in the hand... and looks good, too!Choice of six colors.Durable? This pen is so durable that it'll lastlong enough to hand down to your children ... ifthat’s your idea of fun.&Ate/u6toofi $mA•T. If. The K*t#rbrook Tea Co. THE CLASSICFOUNTAIN PEN*2.95Other EsterbrookBens slightly higherTHERE’S A POINT CHOICE OF 32-ONE IS CUSTOM-FITTED FOR VOUIjfaJjttiOMoody lecture# # Documentary FilmsRansom traces inspiration sets spring programto Browning and Donneby Anthony Quagliano “Blood of a Poet”, an experimental film by former Frenchentrant terrible Jean Cocteau, is the first movie on the Docfilms schedule for the spring quarter and will be shown to-night in Judd 126 at 7:15 and 9:00 pm.This film marked Cocteau’s —John Crowe Ransom, poet and literary critic, was the speaker in the William Vaughn fhroug^thTmoUon^krnre^Ac6 pres^mtion^f^he Zu^LFrh'1Moody lecture presented last Monday in Mandel hall. Witl? an easy Southern charm, he cording to Alice Schaeffer, “It is J.ornrv1v oholIt i R„«»nn ' lhlsan almost purely surrealist film;‘a realist document composed ofunreal happenings.’” The filmhas four sections: The Wounded comedy about a Russian womanin the armed forces will be shownon Friday, April 29.On May 6, Doc films will pro*read from his works and offered commentary on modern poetry.He traces his own inspiration first to Browning, who was “a muscular and able poet,but not a melodist or a musician’’; 'then to Hardy and John Donne, considered this very unlikely, not- poets may prefer a work with “““’ t"'"*sent an evening of experimentalwhere he acquired his inclination Waite theMM £“«o Elizabethan phrasing. “My and the ‘“™g. Eliot uses feeling tones or the Snowballs. and (h«, Profnna. Domcpoems were originally considered 1 » as emotion tones as precepts in his tion of the Host. “Blood of a "In the Spirit of M,” a film byvery cold and intellectual, he re- ^ crjtic” structuring. Meter is technically Poet” will be shown together with Fritz Lang, director of “M,” andcalled, “but now it seems just the * .. , important, but it is merely one “The Pleasure Garden,” another “Secret Beyond the Door," a psvopposite.” He explained that aside fL„oJL ,ei,n^ \r n;o aspect of structure. Elements of experimental film, by James chological mystery, will be thefrom the intellectual aspects of penoa,poetry, there is also a “miracu- P o e 11ious element.” In this sense, opaque. He replied, “PerhapsDuring the question and answer important, u is merely one 'me measure oaroen, - anoiner na me ajoot, ariod, Ransom was asked it his a^' ot. s»™c‘u.re- Elements of experimental Him, by James chological mystery will beetry was ever deliberately ’?? o the poet's choice, Broughton last presentation of the-quiHo r«r,uort complete the texture of a poem.” “Nmotchka,” starring Greta on May 13. quarterpoetry is very close to religion. there is a linguistic difficulty inCommenting on a recent article some P0*™; ™««pval poems for6 example, but I find a great satis¬faction in a clean and clear poemand I try to remove any passagethat does not yield to the goodby Karl Shapiro denouncing T. SEliot’s methods of criticism. Ran¬som said “It is true that Mr. Eliotoriginated a new kind of poetry *. , t- reader s intelligence. A poem mayin our language, partly with Ezra . , , ,.6 . , . . . i, . . . r * . "i , , take two readings, at least, but IPound, his friend, instructor and . .. ° „ ’ T., T i*. , never want it to be opaque. Imvery atehtive to such criticism.”Another questioner asked Ran-metrical structure isficulty with the Wasteland due tomy tame systematic backgroundin poetry. I looked for a lot of som H metrical structure Is alogical structure and metrical Pa1^ °Itexture of a poem. Heform. Hence, I was helf-hearted in answered that logical, meaning-my enthusiasm for Eliot. How ful structure is not enough; metercould I justify the Wasteland,with its extremely scatteredspeakers appearing not in con¬text, but in mood? But it occurred and rhythm provide for full ap¬preciation. “As a sound structure,composed of syllables, vowels andconsonants, the work achieves ato me that Eliot said this poem fuller body. For example, Wil-had a musical structure. No critic Ham Carlos Williams has often Two UC students ponder over a chess game in Jimmy's, which will be left unharmedby wreckers preparing for the Hyde Park redevelopment.said he doesn’t know' anything•about the meters of English. Buthe knows he needs a setting, aformal music in which to set hisideas. It is similar to the work ofa sphere of criticism by which his an abstract painter who discovers merit plan will not mean thatown works were judged. Ransom a new rhythm in his forms. Some all the local taverns will beshut down. This informationhas done justice to this musicalstructure, in particular to its sim¬ilarity to Beethoven’s quartets.”Shapiro’s most caustic accusa¬tion was that Eliot has developed Redevelopers spare barsThe Hyde Park redevelop-Ellen Coughlin Beauty SalonSltS Lake Park Ave. Ml 3*20MSPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Men, - Set, — 9 n.m, - 11 p.m. University patrons, Is to be de- out his partner of many years andmolished in the redevelopment, is now sole owner and managerThe other two taverns have both of the institution. He reports thatsigned extended leases which, the name will remain as formerlywas learned this week by a~ visit while not insuring the continu- — Wood lawn tap.to the three best known local es* ance °f the establishments if the While customers were quietlytablishments, Freddy’s Compass, property is bought from the local enjoying games of chess in Jim-the University tavern and Jim- proprietors’ landlords,^ does mean rny’s, and a group of bettermy’s Woodlawn tap.three pubs often frequented byKQDL (CROSSWORDYCROSS 45. What reject»4suitors(2 words]1. Wt«t bypuaumobile?8. Blovs someKool smoke13. Pop tine outof Tcbukovaky(2 wore, \)14. Ease15. Famoussaxophonist.Bud16. Pine away, formore thana year?17. Slightlyabsent18. No specificwine in astorm (2 words)20. Poet Eliot21. Opposite ofinning?24. Good fora blast25. Famedcartoonist26. Gsl for“Pillow Talk'*27. Come up to theMenthol Magicof __28. A kindof dance29. He wrote“No man is anisland ...”30. Short road31. Pad is the hipword for it32. Star of “TakeMe Along’’35. Earned runaverage (abbr.)38. It’s flying,in France40. A Kool smoker? 37. For the potGreat! (2 words) 38. Friend of42. Kools are famed the Frenchfor Menthol _ 39. Short43. Nice try variation44. South Bcnde.-; 41, It's for kicksDOWN1. Snoring arena2. Stop or wher*to park3. Thar’a gotdin 'em4. Bullfight, rah-rah5. Ripe nam«for a dame6. Shakespeareanactor7. Reject8. Wonderfuli difference inKool (2 words i9. On thequi vive10. No gadgetfor sharpies?11. N. C. heel12. Kind of tax19. Trot orwhat trots22. Gassy light23. It's a bitof a blow24. Floridasouvenir26. The firstthing you said?'27. Kape28. Bardot-like29. Signify31. Phony placeS2. Leslie Caron33. Girl’s name34. Go away, cat!35. Jane Austennovel86. Absorbed 1 2 3 4 5 6 7131617 18 that both Jimmy’s and UT will be known faculty members were~ n ~ around for at least three more huddled in a secretive discussionOnly the Compass, ot these years. group reminiscent ot old collegeAccording to the manager of days at UT, patrons were up inthe Compass, this pub is to be arms at the Compass over itstom down in a few weeks. Freddy forthcoming demise,claimed no knowledge of the One patron of the Compass,building that is to replace the George Mather, a local artist whoCompass although rumors are had just completed a new muralcirculating to the effect that there for the rear Compass wall, waswill be a fire station on that loca- most distressed by the fact thattion. his work would not be preservedBoth the other managers report for posterity. He said, “Popularthey have recently signed new demand forced Webb and Knappleases. In fact, Jimmy has bought 1° preserve Robie House (a localFrank Lloyd Wright house acrossthe street from the New women’s114ARE VOU KODL |ENOUGH TOKRACK THIS?* 20 21 No. 1210 11 1222 232330flflllDT2~ 33 34 H925 36 3738 39 1 .0 4142 4144 4’When your throat tellsyou its time -for a changeyou needa real change...MHOMtNTHO^YOU NEED THEOf KODL ALSOAVAILABLE'WITHOUTFILTER. mOimo, iroan i Williamson tobacco corn. CIOARBTTC5■'**' •• «•*'•’*»». . *' /•:••• THEFARSIGHTEDMANknows that nothing canbetter guarantee a securefuture for himself and hisfamily than a life insuranceprogram made up of SunLife of Canada's policiesfitted to his individualneeds,R«* iwiiMIbeRalph J. Wood Jr, ’481 N. La So I laFR 2-2390 Chicago, IN.FA 4-6800I represent the Sun Life As¬surance Company of Canada,one of the great life insurancecompanies of the world. Mayl discuss some of our mo¬dern plans with you? Thereis no obligation, of course,,SUN UFE OF CANADA dorm) but the atmosphere forwhich and by which I producedthis masterpiece is to perish.” Heuttered harsh words against thoseresponsible for such destruction.Other patrons, including Pete Me-Keon, a graduate student in thehumanities, sadly shook theirheads at the thought of the de¬struction.Although the Compass willsoon be destroyed and its man¬ager, Freddy, gone from theneighborhood, UT and Jimmy’swill continue to enjoy the bene¬fits (as well as do their patrons)of being part of the Universitycommunity.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57tH St.MU 4-92363, 11 dN VV 3 W 3 19I3IHI1Ww msBOdsqs mail HQC10SBBB0asm amsmmaa mnmEEBE1 OQ0asoQ SSQleiN i i ni a 0N a V 3 AA V i 1 VjS i d V M ^SIHA >OVNMOA.HOOOH1I-RDM AOAE3BHQBHEmraraHERBSl l * r u i e x a a ii i > aCulture VultureIt has long been the custom among we vultures to write long Introductions In which we evolve our most profound theoriesof aesthetics, but, I have decided to breakwith tradition, to make a new start. No longer shall I indulge in such poppycock;my introduction shall be short! To the point! After all, as was once said by some great vulture lost in antiquity "Levity isthe soul or wit. or words to that effect. I shall not ramble o«, wasting words merely to fill space, no indeed, not I! For thosethat do are the lowest of the low, the vilest of the vile, the scum of the earth! And I proclaim .. . aw, what the H;Ott CampusTheoterO.K. you guys and gals outthere in newspaper land, youri-ookin’ friend, Swivelhips Vultureis gonna give you the low downon what’s happening in this hereberg . . . you know man, like . . .culture.Enrico Moliere’s The Misan¬thrope has come and gone. Longlive UTs next production — TheTravel Doctor and Neville Black’sdance demonstration, both sched¬uled for next week. The TravelIWw-tor, by Dan Gerould. it seems,has been also called Voyage etAmour; don’t let this scare you,they are really one in the same.The story of Voyage or Doctoror whatever you want to call itconcerns, and here I kid thee not,a screwy mixed-up girl who goesto a travel agent, thinking thatshe is a psychiatrist, and then pro-<>oeds to tell him all the detailsabout her love life, whereupon he. . . Should be interesting.Neville Black’s demonstrationof the modern dance will, I amsorry to say. not be quite so Hades ... I begin.was so moved by its emotional cony seat for only $1.50. There run right now, you will be able toImpact, that I am certainly look- now, isn’t that simple! Seriously, get a special student ticket toing forward to seeing the film, it is a good show, starring Cor- the gallery for $1.00 instead ofShowings are at 8 and 10 pm in nelia Otis Skinner, Cyril Richard, the usual $2.00. Fritz Reiner willJudson commons; admission is Leo G. Carroll, and Conrad Nagel, conduct.forty cents. Performances begin Monday eve- Tomorrow1, Walter Hendel willThis Monday International ning, April 25, and will continue conduct the Chicago Symphony inhouse will be showing The Last for five more weeks. Handel’s Royal Firework Music,Hurrah; based on Edwin O’Conr Furthermore, don’t forget Bruch’s violin concerto numbernor's novel, the film traces the Sweet Bird of Youth. Tennessee one, Della Joio's Variations Chau-career of Mayor Frank Skeffing- Williams’ play will be at the chonne and Finale, and Ravel’ston, long-time political boss of a Blackstone Theater for only one second suite from Daphlnis andbig Eastern city. Starring Spen- week more. So skeddadle down to Chloe. Sounds like a fascinatingcer Tracey, Jeffery Hunter, Di- the box office at 60 E. Balbo and program. Performance begins atane Foster, and Basil Rathbone, buy your special student discount 8:30 pm.the story is reputed to have its tickets for $1.50 instead of the The Fine Arts Program of thefactual basis in the life of Bos- usual $2.50. Hurry! Hurry! and Downtown College, in associationton s former mayor, James Cur- etc. with the Allied Arts corporation,ley. As the New York Herald uu • has announced a special discountTribune said — the film has “a to faculty and students for a con-storm of salty, irreverant, gusty This afternoon the Chicago cert of the New York Pro Musioadialogue and one flavorsome char- Symphony Orchestra will per- this Sunday afternoon, April 25.acter after another”; and it form the German Requiem by J.should provide a good view of an Brahms. This six-section work,. . . alas . . . bygone era of dirty completed by Brahms in 1866, iscity politics. Showing is at 8:66 based upon passages from thein the International house assem- Bible, instead of the traditionalbly hall; admission, fifty cents. Roman Catholic service. Reasonsare that the usual Requiem MassThoRenaissanco society has an- his $£ance will be this afternoon at 2:00pm at Orchestra hall; and if youLAKEtherisque. Mr. Black and his group Rabinowitz, w ho was sitting on jngs throughout the rest of this this year by the University Chnfrwho center most of their activities my chest). This is your only month. The show will be open IL « , U ly, Ch° ^around little old Chicago Is con- chance to see the play-tonight Monday through Friday, 10-5 pm iTeSrTr t W°hsidered to be one of the foremost and tomorrow in Mandel hall at and Saturdays 1-5 at Goodspeed tho^ who hSird R Themodern dance troupes in the coun- 8:30 pm Tickets priced at $1.00 hall; in conjunction with the Fes- ance wi„ ^ (his afiw.nnA^t o-™try. They will perform dances to and $1.50 are presently on sale tival of the Arts, the gallery willthe works of such composers as at the Mandel Corridor box office. ^ op^n this Sunday, April 24,Bach, Rameau, Stan Kenton, and This is really a very fine show, from 1-5 pm. Exhibited will bemany others. Unfortunately’, the featuring, I understand, a short works by Matisse, Picasso, Renoir,^roup has teen forced to drop ■ f*lna sequence, photographed by and other gentlemen of like fame.Mozart’s Requiem Mass from Harvey Brundage, and a re- Admisison is . . . Free,iheir repertoire — it seems that enactment, of the entire Second In association with FOTA therecertain parties felt that thev w’ere World War as the finale. will be four special art exhibitsdancing the Gloria a bit too MovitS around campus this wekend. Alewdly. Tonight Documentary Films Js student art and sculpture exhibitMarvin Phillips, director of the presenting Jean Cocteau’s Blood in the lobby of the new Women’sUniversity Theatre, has sched- 0f a poet and James Broughton’s Dormitory, a faculty art exhibiteled four performances of this Pleasure Garden. Blood was Coc- in Ida Noyes lounge, and adouble bill for next Wednesday teau’s first venture into surreal- student - faculty photograph ex-ihrough Saturday, April 27 30. ist!c films which culminated in Libit in the Reynolds club northTickets priced at $1.00 for stu- such masterpieces as Les Enfants lounge; all exhibits will opend^nts and faculty and $1.50 for Terribles and Les Parents Ter- Sunday, April 24 at 2 pm. Againall otherwise are now on sale at ribles. Pleasure Garden, on the admisison is free,the Reynolds club desk. Curtain other hand, Is whimsical fairy tale Off Cnmnu^rises at 8:30 in the Reynolds club set by San Francisco poet James Wtheatre, on the third floor of Roy- Broughton in the garden of the Tneotcrnolds club. famous old Crystal Palace. Beat- Big doings downtown. The EduLet me also remind you that niks and fairy tales . . . Quite a cator's Theater committee, in conthe original New York production combination. Showings . are at junction with the Ehrlanger Theaof John Dos Passos and Paul 7:15 and 9:15 in Judd 126; admis- ter is offering special student disShyre’s USA will be brought to sion is 50 cents a head. Babes in count tickets which make it posMandel hall for six performances, arms admitted free. sible to see Samuel Taylor’s TheMay 18-22. By the time the play B. J. Cinema has scheduled Pleasure of His Company for areaches here, it will have had a Arthur Miller’s Death of a Sales- reduced rate; according to thissuccessful run of 250 perform- man to be shown tonight. Star- plan, all ya gotta do is dis—nowances in New York to whence it ring Frederick March, Mildred listen—go up to the student ae-vvill return after its Chicago en- Dunnock, and Kevin McCarthy, tivities office, second floor of Idagagoment. Tickets for all per- the film is based on Miller’s fa- Noyes and voice your request forformances, priced at $1.50 and mous play of the same title. The discount coupon; take the coupon$2.50 each with special student story concerns a salesman, down to the box office of theand faculty rates, will be on sale haunted by the dream of being a Ehrlanger Theater, 127 Northat the Reynolds club desk as of “big man” and nearly insane with Clark and show them your IDMay 2. the conviction that he is a com- card; then those amiable fellowsAnd now . . The Blackfriars. plete faiIure- 1 read the Play and wil1 g‘ve >7°u a $3-00 s*500™1 bal'Now that the liurlybury Is done,the battle has been lost or won,and so forth, the time has comefor me to make a confession—The name of the show is not Git-tie’s Aunt or Hang Down yourHead Tom Gittle, but is just plainold Silver Bells and Cookie Shells.There, that’s off my chest (I was /7f>ARK AT S>RD : NO 7-907 1C*-yde park theatreFire fir Theft InsuranceMalpractice InsuranceConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986 Clark theatreat all timesspecial student price. cJork & mot'SOiopen 7130 e.m.late show 4 o.w.at 3,1 times *■ ‘special student price,lust present your i d. card to the ca\hiOr of the bo»o(fice"every tridoy it ladies' day — women oilmilled for JVfri. 22nd“the vintage**"helen morganstory”fri. 29th“volcano”“decameron nites" sat. 23rd“a summer place*1“the 3rd voice”sat. 30th“the f.b.i. story”“battle of thecoral sea” sun. 24th“the last 10 days”(of Adolf Hitler)"the goddess”snn. may 1st“the bed”“seventh sea”open daily till 1open weekends till 21369 East 57th Street DOCUMENTARY FILMS PRESENTS:JEAN COCTEAU'S"BLOOD OF A POET"andJAMES BROUGHTON'S"THE PLEASURE GARDEN"Friday, April 22nd Judd 1267:15 & 9:15 P.M. Admission $0.50 Now Ploying — Held Over! Four Doys Only!Two extraordinary films by Ingmar Bergmanmi/esof*SUMMER ^NIGHT^lPf—Starts Tuesday April 26thMTERNAIIONAL AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING ARTISTRYlUren’tllfe ^IMetfulWhiplashesThe Screen!1-Mirror "BrilliantImaginative’ ★***—N.Y. Times -NewsBased on the Hugo Hartune Novel"Wir Wunderkinder""A post-War, German apologia—a witty, satiric, rue¬ful dual-drama bristling with sharp social commentary—written around two youths who grew up in Germany-in¬transition, 1913 through 1955. With barbs and jibes atHitler and the Nazis who followed him, with scorn, con¬tempt, and pity for the German who kept silent or scur¬ried for cover during those Nazi-contaminated years,the film is a solidly constructed, elaborately produced,frequently humorous combination of documentary, fan¬tasy and solid drama."—Jesse Zunser, Cuein His Academy AwardNominee RolePAUL MUNIThe Last Manwith Luther Adler - David WayneClaudia McNeil - Betsy PalmerOne of those virtuoso performances that won PaulMuni Academy Award honors in the past . . . and thatshould have won him this year's, we think.April 22, 1960 • CHICACO MAROON • 15Ballet guild at UC FridayThe Ballet guild of Chicago will be here next Friday night to present an evening of classi¬cal ballet and modern dance.Their program, to be presented in Mandel hall, will be accompanied by Neal Kayan con¬ducting the Chicago Opera ballet orchestra. William Drendel, a student of architecture atthe Art institute will do the staging.“The Guild,” according to Ann Barzel, Chicago dance critic, “is an organization that en¬courages Chicago dancers, chore- ;ographers, composers, and contest conducted by the Society rapher will dance the role herself. Founder's birthdaySikhs honor birthdayof Bhebensinghdesigners to create and experi¬ment. Most of the dancers areprofessionals from ballet compa¬nies, television, night clubs andfrom the teaching field.” In case you have ever won¬dered who the handsomebearded men wearing turbansto classes represent, they aremembers of a small, but prom¬inent religious society on cam-of Arts and Letters. .Orrin Kayan, brother of the conNeal Kayan, composer of the ductor Neal Kayan, and himself known as Sikhism (pro¬score for "Theme,” has conducted a principal dancer with Lyric will nounce(j seekism).the orchestra for the Chicago ** the wealthy protector. Joan F th#» ciikhs in i<*.ODera ballet on its last two coast- Lorin, another member of the Last * ‘ ^ S’ in. ce*e"upera pallet on its last two coast dances the nart of brat,on of the birthday of oneto-coast tours. He has conducted 1 P of the founders of their religion,Five choreographers and some in over 150 cities. The orchestra Ine nancee.40 dancers participate in the per- that will play in Mandel hall is The ballet begins at 8 pm, tick ^avo a *ecture and film-showing was founded, the Moslems andformance. made up of the same musicians ets are $1 and may be purchased Swift hall. The principal speak- the Hindus were battling for ro.The program opens with "I.es that went on tour with the Opera at Kroch’s and Brentano’s book er was Margaret Allen, former bgious suprentecy in India. ThoDemoiselles” choreographed by ballet. Kayan not only composed store, 29 S. Wabash avenue, or at editor of the Sikh Review, athe door. India studying the religious his-tory of that country.The Sikh religion, as it isknown today, was founded in1699 by Ghuru Bhebensingh, whoaccording to Miss Allen “was ableto sit down and write the mostbeautiful praises of God—what¬ever you might call him” and“could criticize his opponentswho would love him all the morefor it." At the time the religionEric Braun to Ravel’s “Vaises No- the score, he did his own orches-bles at Sentimentales.” It is an trating and copying out of parts,essay in classic ballet, combining The young composer became in-the essence of the danse d’ecole x Texan who spent six years ininto variations styled to the tal¬ents of five soloists. Choreograph¬er Braun has been with the Ballettheatre ever since he played in“Fancy Free” later to appear in terested in ballet music as an ac¬companist for Ballet guild. Hehas composed three ballet scoresfor the organization.Etta Buro, choreographer of“L'Arlesienne” is a graduate ofthe title role of “Tyl Eulenspie- UC. Before joining with Ruthgel.” He has studied with Broni- Page’s Chicago Opera ballet, Missslava Nijinska. Buro had taught high school sci-Alvin David appears next in the enoe- As a member of the Pageprogram with his performance of company. Miss Buro was a so*“Soliloquy for a Dancer.” “David, idst and ballet mistress. “L’Ar-once of the Jose Limon company, leslenne” is Miss Buro’s third bai¬rn uses on a dancer’s feelings to- 1** *or Ballet guild. She also chor-ward his art, in dance terms eographed an abstract ballet,culled from Nijinsky’s diary,” “Caprices’’^ a^i d “Snow Queen,said Miss Barzel ’ ‘ '\Kenneth Johnson, first dancerof Lyric opera and the ChicagoOpera ballet, dances the part ofthe composer in Charles Bock- based on the fairy tale.“L’Arlesienne” is based on aplay by Alphonse Daudet. Theballet is based on a young peas¬ant’s love for the mistress of aman’s “Theme.” Jane Bookman, wealthy merchant. His encounters The Festival of Nations to be held at International housewho has been guest soloist with with L’Arlesienne are only casual fhis Sunday, April 24, will consist of five main events. In theLyric and other ballet produc¬tions dances the role of the Sikhs felt that ritual of the Hin¬dus was so strong that the trueidea of spiritual beauty in re¬ligions had been lost. The Mos¬lems, on the other hand, woretrying to bring glory to their re.ligion through force. The Sikhreligion was formed on the prin¬ciple that “only by uniting allcasted can you realize the'swoet-ness' of religion.” This idea wascompletely unique in its day.There are 2000 Sikhs in theUnited States today. Their maingoal is “to excite interest andunderstanding of the Sikh culture.” These modest and warmpeople have been widely mis¬understood, mainly because oftheir strange appearance.They stresed “the goal of Sikh¬ism is not to convert people. Thiswould be a direct contradiction ofSikh ethics.” Sikhs are extremelyconcerned with the world situa¬tion at present, and Teel “we areinevitably headed for a globalrevolution. The only solution toTheme. Orrin Kayan, Ellen Gim-pel, and William Moloney all list¬ed as principals in the ChicagoOpera ballet dance in ‘Theme.”Robert Bresgal, who plays therole of a crooner has been in anumber of musicals and hasdanced in night club and televi¬sion acts. Suzanne Testo is one but upon meeting her. he finds afternoon from 3 to 6 there will be an exhibition'of'nafionai ™imra'|CgJound0on wWch'ail’menher most arden in his dreams. djSp|ays featuring art objects and handicraft of various coun- can come together” This thevMVTnttie'vTSer^ and *rie«- Ah° in ,he aft™ »hcre b* representative film, say. can be foLd in the sfkh cui-in his home Even “after marrvim? 1 5 nations, a food bazaar with national dishes of eleven ture. which'recognizes all conanother the imace of L’Arlesi and an African celebration of Togoland's independ* <^pts of God, for they beilevc thatenne eomes botwefn Mm and Ms «"«• At ei9ht is the evenim, variety show with 14 different the definition.of Cod is an indi-wife and he fellows it to his nations presenting music, songs, folk dances, and a skit. For VKlual matter,death. the first time in the history of the Festival of Nations the The activities of the Sikhs onMiss Buro originally made the American Indians will be presented. (F. J. Pepper is chairman. heldP in temple^on 60throle of L’Arlesienne for Dolores for the American Indians.) In the variety show there will be street, and socials, at which auof the participants who was re- Lipinski, soloist of Lyric opera, tribal dances of Chippewaw, Oneida, and Winnebago tribes, thentic Indian refreshments arecently declared “most talented However, Miss Lipinski has other The show's emcees will be Shirin Shukla of India and Pauldance student in Chicago” in a commitments and the choreog- Wheeler of England. served. Their goal is to build alibrary on campus.The CHICAGO MAROON & UNIVERSITY THEATRE presentJOHN DOS PASSOS’ BRILLIANT'Atkinson, NY TimesORIGINAL NEW YORK PRODUCTION AN EXCELLENT REVUE"Malcolm, The New YorkerAfter over 250 performances "U.S.A."is taking a leave of absence from theMartinique Theatre, New York, for thisexclusive engagement.A NEW DRAMATIC REVUE Adapted from the novel by John Des Passes and Paul ShyreDirected by Paul ShyreMANDEL HALL-MAY 18 through 22 onlyTickets at $2.50 & $3.00 (Stud.-Fac.—$1.50) forMay 18, 8:30 PM Tickets at $3.00 C r $3,May 19, 8:30 PM (Stud.-Fac.- -$2.00)May 21, 6:30 PM May 20, 8:30 PMMay 21, 9:40 PMMay Zl, 8:30 PM Student-Faculty tickets on sale atReynolds Club Desk or MandelHall Box-Office.MUST BE PURCHASED IN PERSONAVAILABLE ONLY UNTIL MAY 17th16 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 22, 1960