UC hunts Stagg typesiEditor's note: In an attempt he said. “We hope to raise fundsto demonstrate how the image of for more scholarships to keep thethe University of Chicago is pro- Stagg tradition at the Universitymoled in the community at large, living and strong in the yearsire print the follounng announce- ahead."vient exactly as submitted to the The scholarships will providefull tuition at the University ofChicago.The University maintains an in¬ter-collegiate schedule in all majorsports except football and oper¬ates one of the most active intra-„ . . 1 c , , mural programs among the na-first Amos Alonzo Stagg Scholar- U(m.s coU(,ges,.... . At the dinner, Alan Simpson,Announcement of the rapure- Dean of ,h Coll of 'Uni.L"?•'fifSL"SSE versity of Chicago, will expiainChicago press by the University'spublic relations department.)The College of the Universityof Chicago will launch a nation¬wide search Wednesday, Novem¬ber 28th, for two “scholar-athletes" qualified to hold the Vol. 71 — No. 37 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Nov. 27, 1962Grievance committee setwill be made at a dinner at whichmore than 100 high school aca¬demic and athletic directors willbe guests. A grievance committee to “If necessary, the committee In a letter to Traister, Warnerthe academic standards expected investigate racial discrimina- wouId Publicize the individual case Wick, dean of students, statedof the Stagg Scholarship winners,and Walter Hass, Athletic Direc¬tor, will outline his expectationsThe scholarship fund was be- of the candidates in athletics,gun last spring to honor “The James M. Sheldon, Jr., Assist-Grand Old Man" of Chicago ath- ant to the President of the Uni-let ics on his 100th birthday which versity of Chicago, who coordin-was celebrated last August. Amos ated the fund-raising effort, will j.* „ j.v r t*. * -i so that the community might be- that the University would “beu ^^lverS1^ neigh- come fui]y aware of who is prac- glad to cooperate with your griev-boiiiood has been formed by ticing racial discrimination and ance committee because the Uni-the UC chapter of the Congress where it is taking place. Furtherof Racial Equality (CORE). The action might then be taken byUniversity has agreed to cooperate the CORE chapter as a whole,"with the committee. he continued.The committee, which will beAlonzo Stagg, Jr., Homewood, explain the application procedures wi^act^nrimaHlv ^n^three1 TTiL committee is to let the area com-Uhnois one of Stagg’s sons, is ex- for the scholarships. versity-reLted areas of discrimin- munity k.now that such a com-‘The immediate task of thel>ected to attendUawrence A. Kimpton, formerchancellor of the University ofChicago, is chairman of the StaggScholarship selection committee,lie will preside at the dinner, at6:00 pm, at the Quadrangle Club,57 Street and University Avenue,on campus. (See related story on p. 4)Students protestnew scholarship ation:1) Complaints by students ofracial discrimination in housingowned or managed by the Univer¬sity.2) Complaints by studentsagainst privately owned realtorsand landlords.3) Complaints by non-students mi t tee exists and that it is anx¬ious to investigate all cases ofpossible racial discrimination com¬ing to it, and, if at all possible, versity is always ready to hearand investigate honest complaintsabout its operations, no matterswhat their source . .He noted that the Universitywould neither show preference tothe committee “as being a favoredchannel for complaints,” nor “des¬ignate any particular group oragency as being a favored channelfor complaints,” or “recognize athird party as a negotiating agentStudent Government will spon¬sor a demonstration outside theQuadrangle Club tomorrow at 5Sufficient funds have been P,T,pr0!*S1t “S' inS.,U“liio" ”■ agrinsTtteouniciem iunas nave Deen athletic scholarships at the Uni- «Th«raised to begin our search for two versitv of Chicago" announced • „ aun* to ful,yvonne men who shew thrxse nnnli . announced investigate, those, cases, whereyoung nien’who show those quali Mlke Wollan> SG vice president. there may 5e a(.tlve disc riminationThese scholarships are a dis- jn housing and then ojien up dis¬grace to the University and an in- cussion with those involved insuit to every student who has order to work out by means offinancial need and is unable to fruitful talks the problems in-demonstrate his academic abilities volved,” said Alan Traister, chair-on the athletic field,” said Wollan. man of the committee.ties of athletic ability, academicachievement, leadership, and char¬acter that Stagg demonstratedand imparted to his men,” Kimp¬ton said.“But our task is not yet done,”300 attend Nashville seminarsby Robert McNamaraSome 300 students from 40 ‘sit-tempt to enter and stage ain".TTC( . . . . At the Tic-Toc lunchroom theUk> colleges and universities manager became angry at thegathered in Nashville, Ten- demonstrators and attempted tonessee, this weekend to at- throw watetr on them. Police re- to instigate . . . discussions which for someone with a grievance,might lead to solutions. Further information about the“Only if these talks break down committee can be obtained fromwithout progress would we begin Traister at NO 7-6109, or Bruceother action,” said Traister. “This Stark at the New Dorms. Wick’scommittee is more interested in letter and Traister’s reply will besolutions to individual cases than printed in the Maroon later thisin causing anyone embarrassment, week.Profs discuss religion“I’m all in favor of religion cum beer,” asserted Syl¬van Bromberger, of the department of philosophy at adiscussion on religion held in Shorey House last night.Bromberger stated, however, that the onus is onthose that feel that the universi-sity has some function with re- divinity school> discussed the Lilygard to religious matters to prove ReP°rt to lhe university faculty,it. “The university is asking for This study proposed that the uni-unnecessary trouble if it attempts versity institute courses in speci-to educate about religious mat- refifP°us traditions, since thetend seminars on the methods,philosophy, and problems of themovement to achieve equal rightsfor negroes in the South. During strained him and temporarily leftthe scene. When the manager no¬ticed the lack of police, he beganhosing the demonstrators with athe coference students demon- fire extinguisher When the mobst rated in downtown Nashville,and one student was jailed andbeaten.Among those attending the con¬ference were UC students Danl.yon, Dona Richards, Bruce Rap-paport, and John Williams.The weekend was sponsored bythe Nashville Non-Violent StudentMovement. Students stayed atFisk University in Nashville. Fri¬day and Saturday they attendedlectures and seminars given byStudent Non-Violent CoordinatingCommittee field workers.The seminars covered such top¬ics as “The Necessity of Non-Vio¬lence in the Movement,” “Voter gry white citizens who kicked andRegistration and Federal Laws.” assaulted many of them. Thereoutside, composed of many localNegroes, began chanting, the po¬lice arrested the man.The owners of the CandylandRestaurant attempted to have 25demonstrators there arrested fortrespassing by locking the doorsand dosing while they were stillinside. Police said that the stu¬dents did not ivolate any lawhere, pointing out that it was wellinside business hours when therestaurant was closed aroundthem.At the exclusive Cross Keys res¬taurant and the B&W cafeteriademonstrators were met with an- Baptist Church of Nashville.There they sang, prayed and helda collection tor Talber’s bail.When the 25 dollars was raised, ters.250 students and local sympathiz- Whirl Bromberger felt that emo-ers maiched to the City Jail. tion should bo expressed in aea-The students sang spirituals and demic matters, he also believesfreedom songs until Talbert w’as that emotional involvement oftenreleased 4 hours after he was ar- presents interference in achievingrested. Once released, he claimed a worthwhile solution to somehe was repeatedly beaten by the theological discussions,jailer and 4 patrolmen for “being Gerhardt Meyer, associate pro- institution of courses which deala troublemaker." .His bruised and fessor of economics, did not think with specific religious conti ibu-weak condition supported this emotion would have a detrimental *r'clai,n* effect in any course on religion.At the final meeting Saturday °n the contrary, he feels that “thenight SNCC Chairman Charles passion involved would lead toMcDew exhorted the delegates great discussion Judeo-Christian tradition, is themost influential in Western civili¬zation, the report argued it shouldbe the prime object of study.The report did not call for adepartment of religion or an un¬dergraduate degree.Bromberger argued that thetions to culture would “cut thesubject" of religion unnecessarily.He also thought that religion isnot the most important subjectof inquiry. “Any hour spent onnot to forget what they had seen,“as one can expect you might inthe comfort of the North.” Mc¬Dew also criticized the Americantradition of freedom as “lip serv¬ice." Speaking to the Northernstudents McDew said, “You mustgo back and make the North feelguilty that Father Thomas McDonough of bioloS>'- . Ph/sics- economics,what it is.”(Copyright 1962) Calvert House agreed with Meyerthat religion has a place in theuniversity. McDonough sees reli¬gion as a phenomenon in humansociety which must be examined.“Intelligent man must be intelli¬gent about religion, therefore itthe South today is is a subject of university Inquiry,”he said.Joseph Sit tier, professor in the history is better than any hourspent on religion."McDonough felt that the studyof existing religions might lead toa greater understanding of theconcept of religion in general.“We must grasp the ultimaterationale of religions we know,and then move on to more uni¬versal considerations."and “History of the SouthernNegro.”Shortly after noon. Saturday,3 85 students marched downtownand began an attempt to inte¬grate 7 restaurants in downtownNashville. According to Nashvillepolice, it was the busiest pre-Christmas buying rush in tenyears. The line of students, walk¬ing two-by-two and singing “WeShall Overcome,” marched downChurch Street, where most of thedowntown restaurants are located,and as it passed one of the targetrestaurants would leave a groupof nearly SO who would then at- were no arrests.At the Wilson-Quick Pharmacypolice arrested SNCC worker Rob¬ert Talbert when a white youthbeat him and dragged him to thefloor. Police pulled Talbert andthe boy who attacked him out ofthe store and placed them bothin the back seat of the same squadcar. Once in the car, the boy re¬sumed his attack on the demon¬strator.After the arrest the entiregroup marched back to the First Wheelock to give Moody lecture tonightJohn Hall Wheelock,American poet, critic, andeditor, will give a lecture onmodem poetry, “The TwoKnoledges: An Inquiry into a Cer¬tain Resistance,” and read fromhis own poems at Mandel Hall to¬night.Wheelock will deliver the 223rdNational DefenseStudent LoansStudents who intend toapply for loans for theWinter Quarter under theNational Defense StudentLoan Program may now ob¬tain application forms fromthe Office of the Bursar.Students whose academicbackgrounds and vocation¬al plans entitle them to spe¬cial consideration under theterms of the NDEA shouldsubmit their applications tothe Office of Financial Aidon or before December 3rd. Registration starts todayAdvance registration for the winter quarter, an opportunity forstudents to register early and beat the January rush, will begin thismorning and last until December 14. Dates and procedures forregistration are available for both graduate and undergraduate stu¬dents in the new time schedules.There is one change in the procedure from last year for under¬graduates. Since undergraduates are expected to remain in thesame section during the winter quarter as they did during theautumn quarter, those students who intend to remain in theirsections in general education courses are urged to complete Step 3of registration—collection of class admission tickets and assessmentof fees—during the first week of Advance registration (November 27-December 3). Students in this group who do not complete Step 3may discover that sections in which they wish to continue havebodi closed.Undergraduates who must change sections in one or moregeneral education sequences for next quarter may complete Step 3between December 4 and 14 only. Students in this group may insurereservation of places in the same sections of any general educationsequence by personally requesting the Registrar to hold placesbetween November 27 and December 3. These reservations will beheld until December 14, the close of the advance registration period. William Vaughn Moody lecture at8:30 pm. Admission is withoutticket and without charge.His career in poetry began whilehe was still a student at HarvardUniversity when he and his class¬mate and lifelong friend, VanWick Brooks, joined in publishingtheir volume of Verses by TwoUndergraduates.After graduating from Harvard,Mr. Wheelock went to Europe tocontinue his studies at the Uni¬versities of Gottingen and Berlin.On his return to the United Stateshe began to publish the indepen¬dent volumes that established himamong the notable poets of hisPetition seeks endStudent Government (SG)is sponsoring a petition whichwill be circulated to all womenliving in university residencehalls calling for abolition of“all regulations concerning thetime that wromen may or may notreturn to the dormitories.”It asserts that the practice ofsigning in and out of the resi¬dence halls constitutes “sufficientand appropriate precautions formaintaining the necessary orderand safety.” time. These began with The Hu¬man Fantasy in 1911, and conti¬nued with The Beloved Adventurein 1912, Love and Liberation in1913, Dust and Light in 1919. TheBlack Panther in 1922, and TheBright Doom in 1927.Meanwhile Wheelock joined theNew York publishing house ofCharles Scriber’s Sons, where hepursued a long career as an edi¬tor, director, and officer. He con¬tinued his work in poetry withCollected Poems 1911 - 1936. In1956 he isued Poems Old and New;and in 1962 he published his latestvolume, The Gardener and OtherPoems.to women's hoursAccording to Laurie Gelles,member of SG, the petition willbe submitted to the proper facul¬ty committee if a sufficient major¬ity is obtained. She stated thatSG recognizes the right of theadministration to know wdiere stu«dents are, W'hen they have left,and when they plan to return, butthat it objects to women beingrequired to return to the dormi¬tories at a specified time.The petition will be circulatedthis week and part of next.LINCOLN LABORATORYho* openings for alimited number of en-igineers, physicists and| mathematicians In orig*iinal research andI development activities.Iii*LINCOLN LABORATORYis an electronics researchand development centerestablished by M.l.T. in! 1951.OUR REPRESENTATIVEWILL BE ON CAMPUSDECEMBER 3rd* CONTACT YOURPLACEMENT OFFICE NOW, Be»«orch ond DevelopmentLINCOLN LABORATORYMottochvielH Institute of Technology•OX 21 • LEXINGTON 79MASSACHUSETTSwummuammNo justification seen for regulating women’s hoursThe only rules a University is most students do not spend theJustified in imposing upon its stu- evening walking the streets, we aredents are those which serve aneducational purpose. The prac¬tice of enforcing curfews for un¬dergraduate women who are under21 in no way furthers the educa¬tional aims of this university.Curfews that in no way relate togtudents’ academic capabilities orprogress, which are the properconcerns of a University, shouldtherefore -be abandoned.If curfews are appliedstudents, the Universitymaintain that they are part of theUC educational experience. Thecurfews, however, do not; ratherto allmight not sure there is much more valuein telling them to take the fiveminute trip back to their dormi¬tory befoi-e midnight than after.Further, the thoroughness of thehousing staff in its warnings towomen students can be expectedto cause women to adapt their be¬havior to the urban environmentof the University. If not, the Chi¬cago police as well as 37 campuspolice officers and two dogs areever on the alert.Curfews do not in any sensemean that the University is forc¬ing its women to spend more timeor even in their ownthey simply mean thatthey arbitrarily concern a smallgegment of the student body, and asleep,cannot in any way be justified as rooms;educational. We must, therefore, women must spend a major por-examine the other reasons put tion of their time in their ownforth for regulating women’s dormitories, away from all men.hours. "Morality” must be encouraged.These reasons are primarily 1) Certain women have been overt-A desire on the part of the Uni- ly grateful to the University forversity to protect its women from assisting them in their strugglethe dangers of overexposure tothe University neighborhoodand/or men. 2) A desire on thepart of the University to protectthe image of undergraduate lifehere from characterizations oframpant anarchy and promiscuity.3) A belief that the system usedto regulate women’s hours is also to maintain their purity, and thecurfew, they say, provides a goodexcuse for ending a date. However,must the function of a Universitybe extended to include interven¬tion for those women who cannotget rid of their own dates withoutusing the crutch of hours?While the University is helpingbeneficial in locating women stu- all these women in their personaldents in case of emergency.Women must be protected fromthe dangers lurking throughoutthe University community, we aretold. There are rapists and pursesnatchers everywhere, particularlyafter midnight. Every autumn,entering women are warned about“the neighborhood” by the housingstaff. The message is quite clear:avoid dark streets and don’t go outalone at night. Curfews, however,are unnecessary precautions, asthey do not guarantee that stu¬dents will be off the streets at"dangerous” hours. And, since battles, it can also reassure anx¬ious parents that it is taking stepsto guarantee that their childrenare safe and sound. After all,what need is there to allow stu¬dents who have come to the Uni¬versity to learn how to think in¬ dependently to act independentlytoo?Finally, the concept of curfewhas been confused with the con¬cept of the signout.The purpose of a signout, ac¬cording to the housing staff, is tofacilitate the location of a studentin case of emergency.Many students would not ob¬ject to stating their destination,before leaving their dorms at nightprovided they were not required toreturn by a particular hour. Atthis point, many students do notsign out because they do not wantto be held to prior committmentson their time of return.Their attitude obviously de¬feats the purpose of signing out.Although students can never belocated by day, we would be wil¬ling to contribute to the housingstaff’s peace of mind at night byurging the continuation of the re¬quirements of signing out of theresidence hall when leaving andsigning in when returning, as ad¬vocated in a petition that is cur¬rently being circulated in the dor¬mitories.If the University does not seefit to modify the regulations onhours, we w’ould. in all fairness tothe students affected, urge thatthese regulations be carried outto their logical conclusions andthat the University enforce nightlybedchecks, provide a chaperone foreach couple and a bodyguard foreach student or group of studentsgoing out at night, and initiate anafter dark curfew for men, apart¬ment dwellers, and students over21. CLASSIFIED ADSFOR RENT, ETC.Shoreland apts. 5135 S. Kenwood offers1 to 3 Vk nn. efficiency units, attrac¬tively appointed, month to month occu¬pancy. $30 and up. Elevator, fireproofbuilding, manager on premises. Wanted: furn. house or apt. 2 or 3bedrooms, for Dec. Mrs. O’Farrell,375 days, 239-2596 eves.314 rms, modern kitchen & bath. 1stfir., $85 mo. 6732 S. Chappel. FA 4-6419 MISCELLANEOUSShare a cab to O’Hare Field, Dee. 12th-16th. Call DO 3-3475 this evening.3 rra, apt. 6767 Jeffrey. HY 3-5303after 5. I.AS VEGAS, PHOENIX, SEATTLE.Drive 1963 cars — leave anytime — gasallowance —• liberal time. 5506 S. LakePark. PL 2-3020.FOR SALE1961 Triumph stat. wagon, low mileage,exc. cond. foreign stud, needs money,must sell. $850 or best offer. BU 8-0056 CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP. (PL2-8377).Gray 1962 volkswagon, sun top, Por¬sche discs, trip meter. Cost new $1908,selling price, $1550. Call Ext. 6050. Protest athletic scholarships. Join thedemonstration at the Quad Club tomor¬row, 6 pm.1958 Morris Minor conv. exc. runningshape. Best offer accepted. BU 8-3183.WANTEDWanted: experienced, capable youngsecretary for permanent position inbrand new Hyde Park office. IBM exec,typewriter & other deluxe facilities. Ex¬cellent salary and hours. DO 3-4300,ext. 410. Leave name and number. MODEL CAMERALeica, Bolex, Nikon,Ilasselblad Dealer1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTa.*..;..;.GENUINEHARRIS TWEED MEN SSPORTCOATS*33-50including postageand dutyWrite by AirL. M. Aaronson131 Victoria RoadWallasey, CheshireENGLAND DRIVINGSCHOOL12 HOUR COURSE$4j .95METROPOLITANDRIVING SCHOOL7 8 5.- 0 772SUCCESSFULSTUDENTS THE BELL TELEPHONESALUTE: ED BODDY COMPANIES v. rEd Boddy (B.S., 1960) is a Traffic Supervisor for IllinoisBell in Chicago. Ed directs 36 private switchboard con¬sultants who serve the 5,000 switchboard customers inChicago’s industrial South Side.Ed came to Illinois Bell two years ago, entered themanagement training program, and earned a promotion to Traffic Assistant in Chicago's Irving Office. He stepped upto his present job last spring.Ed Boddy and other young men like him in Bell Tele¬phone Companies throughout the country help bring thefinest communications service to the homes and businessesof a growing America.BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESk WWX^/ww.*,m$MMTURKISH & DOMESTICBLENDCIGARETTESHave a real cigarette-have a CAMELThe best tobacco makes the best smoke!@ 1962 R, J. B«ynoiO» Tobactu Company, Wlmton-Salem, N. C. The amazingHONDA ‘'50’’ ischanging peo¬ple’s transportation habits all over theworld. This year alone more than onemillion smart men and women will buyHondas for work, school, recreation!• Cruises at a whisper-quiet 40 m.p.h.• Gets up to 225 m.p.g. (no gas-oilmixture needed) • Powerful 50 cc OHV4-stroke engine • 3-speed transmis¬sion. automatic clutch • Push-buttonelectric starter available • 4 models,including the great HONDA TRAIL "50''for hunting, fishing, camping.Mark TOO j- plus destinationonlyTfcT'O and set-upchargeSOUTH SIDE CYCLE10534 TORRENCE AVE.SA 1-9129READMORE,RETAINMAD 17 ^earn t° rea<* 3lVlURC.,to 10 times fast-A17T er — with under-VJJLil standing and en-DI7TTI7D joymentim-DLll£iI\ possible inAD A AEC convention-ImAUEiiJ al readingmethods. This new wayto read will help you do bet¬ter on exams, cut your hoursof study to give you moretime for extracurricularactivities. Taught with per¬sonal attention by skilledteachers. Evening classes be¬gin January 17, 1963. Seea demonstration of this revo¬lutionary reading method onThursday, November 29 atThe Hyde Park YMCA,1400 E. 53rd Street in theSchloerd Room - 7 :30 P.M.Call for FREE brochure-EVELYN WOODReading Dynamics Instituteof Chicago. Inc.180 West Adams St., Suite 300Chicago 6, IllinoisSTate 2-7014CEntral 6-8600Audiences rewarded at playsThis Thanksgiving weekendUniversity Theatre introduced twoone-act plays to the stage of Man-del Hall: Robert Strang’s “NightFlight,” directed by Robert Bene-detti, and John Mortimer’s “I> Spy,” directed by James O’Reilly.Hyde Park’s meagre Holiday audi¬ences were rewarded, by somecharming performances from UT’stalented and personable youngactors.The casts of both shows wereled by guest artist Val Bettin, anactor blessed with a nimble tongueand possessed by the techniqueof the Old School. His consider¬able comic ability was a necessaryasset to “I Spy,” a five-characterplaylet of no particular signifi¬cance. Here he played a private-eye, Frute( fruitlessly searchingfor “indiscretion” in the very dulllife of a wife, in order to satisfyher foppish husband’s mania forcuckoldry.Bettin’s role wras by far thelargest in the play and he handledit with professional aplomb. JoeFord has a more subtle instinctfor comedy, which made his per¬formance as the petulant husbandunique and truly funny.Cynthia Kamaris played thewife with w’armth and grace, andDon Swanton played a crookedlawyer with appropriate self-righteousness. Felicity O’Mearagot the maximum mileage out ofa role that was by far the small¬est in the play — S syllables, 3laughs. However, the acting ingeneral was rendered less effectiveby a pokey pace.“Night Flight” is an adaptationfrom a novel of Antoine de St.Exupery by Robert Strang, UT'splaywright-in-residence. It has acompelling story line though the attempt at character study andphilosophy get in each other’s way.The moral emerges abruptly inone line, something like: Perhapswe deceive ourselves to givemeaning to our acts when we in¬sist on the primacy of duty.. Bothplot and moral seem very Thir-tiesy.The plot is about the humansacrifices made to the establish¬ment of the first trans-continentalair-mail route, and Bettin playedthe man who felt duty bound toorder the sacrifices. If the ideabehind hiring a professional actoris, as I have heard, that we shouldserve as an inspiration for the stu¬dent actors, Mr. Bettin’s perfor¬mance in “I Spy” is creditable,but his performance in “NightFlight” is an example of the worstsort. Luckily for future audiences,his very stagy, artificial sincerityseems not to have infested thenine students in the cast.Graduate student Jerry Mast,who is in fact an old pro him¬self, gave the best performanceof the show as an ordinary clerk,setting a good example of naturalstraight-forward acting. The wivesof the doomed airmen were play¬ed by Marcia Finkel and SusanPollack with painfully realistictenderness. In fact, all the youngpeople in the cast portrayed theirroles with an emotional honesty,w'hich must be the result of de¬voted work and good direction.The biggest problem of thisdouble bill is that it wasn’t a veryambitious project in the firstplace. Neither the plays nor themanner of production were in¬spired. The plays themselves aretypical -of better-class TV. “NightMight” is tightly-written, tensely dramatic and naively philosophic¬al. “I Spy” is a charming littlecomedy, clean enough for teen¬agers and simple-minded enoughfor the kiddies.The tech, excepted for elaboratelighting, was minimal. Both playswere staged with all-purpose sets,with various settings in differentareas and light changes indicatingscene shifts. The same scenery re¬arranged for “I Spy” looked as ifthe UT office furniture had beendumped there so the floors couldbe waxed upstairs. A nice littlecomedy gets lost without a comedyset. The costumes for both playswere blacks, whites and no-colors,Mr. Bettin’s jolly red beard beingthe brightest object on the stage.This stark and essentially non¬theatrical design might have beenvery effective had the plays them¬selves been less innocent of con¬tent. And for that matter eventhese plays might have been suc¬cessful in a little theatre, if ourUniversity had a little theatre.Carol HorningCalendar of eventsLecture, Humanities 201, "The Pre¬sent State of Poetry,” Henry Rafro, Edi¬tor, Poetry, Rosenwald 2, 10:30 am.Lutheran Sext, Bond Chapel. 11:30 am.Seminar, "Pathways in ProtestantThought, Chapel House. 4:30 pm.Folk Dancing, International House,7 pm, 50c.Poetry Reading, South Asian Lan¬guages Program, Social Science 105,7 :30 pm.Meeting, Russian Choir, Ida Noyes,8 pm.223rd William Vaughn Moody Lecture,"The Two Knowledges,” John HallWheelock, American poet, critic, andauthor, Mandel Hall, 8:3 0 pm.Meeting, ENT Journal Club, NorthBasement, 29, 8 pm.Meeting, History Majors, Ida Noyes,8 :30 pm.Zoller Dental Seminar, "Full MouthRehabilitation,” Dr. Richard Davido,Michael Reese Hospital, Billings Hospi¬tal S-255, 4:30 pm. First of the RockefellerChapel Concerts reviewedA favorite dispute among musiclovers is whether it is better tolisten to music on records or atConcerts. Evidence supporting thelatter thesis was amply providedon Sunday afternoon at the firstconcert of the Rockefeller ChapelConcert Series.From a technical point of view,there are several recordings ofBach’s Mass In B Minor which areprobably superior to the perfor¬mance given by the RockefellerChapel Choir and members of theChicago Symphony Orchestra un¬der the direction of Richard Viks-trom. Some of the solos werepoorly executed; the bass line wasoften muffled, thus diminishing theimpact of Bach’s counterpoint;and, as is to be expected in anylive performance of a work of thislength and complexity, there wereoccasionally wrong notes and pas¬sages in which the entire ensemblewras not quite together.Interpretativeiy, there was littleto argue with. Vikstrom conduct¬ed soberly, avoiding pedantry andacademicism as w'ell as spectacu-larism. One could not ask for amore somberly powerful Kyrie ora more joyous rendition of theCum sancto spiritu.If this performance had beentransferred to tape, it would havehave made a very good, althoughnot the most outstanding, record¬ing.Yet listening to Vikstrom’s per¬formance at the Chapel was amusical experience of a higherorder than is available in thehome. There were none of the an¬noyances and distractions W’hich lurk around the home listener. In¬stead, the listener w-as entirelyabsorbed into the music.The surroundings (the satelyarchitecture of the Chapel and thestained glass windows which grad¬ually changed color as the sunslowly set) augmented, ratherthan diminished, the integrationof audience and music.This was just about the bestway to spend Sunday afternoon. Itlooks like the best uray to spendthe afternoon of December 9 willbe to hear the same group per¬form the oft-butehered Messiahof Handel. It will provide not onlywhat should be an unusual musi¬cal experience, but also an excel¬lent opportunity to procrastinatestudying for exams for a fewmore hours.Those who have fallen behindin their procrastination might beinterested in some of the otherconcerts before exams. Includedare concerts by the UniversitySymphony in Mandel Hall on De¬cember 1 and by soprano RegineCrespin in Studebaker Hall thenext evening; and the recitals byRudolf Serkin in Orchestra Hallon December 2, and by SylviaStanlman in the Law Schoolauditorium on December 7.Pete RabinowitzThe New Look in Low-Cost,High-Fun Transportation!Oct. 27, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON •(uhiircCaU'iitlarCabaretThe Fickle Pickle, 1137 North State,Current show hold over until Decem¬ber 2: folk singrcrs Georne McKelvy,Joel Cory, and Terry Callier. EarlyBird Show policy, 8 pm, throushoutthe week. Weekend shows also at 9:15,10:30, 12:15, and 1:80. Closed Mon¬days. Call WH 4-1837 for info andreservations.DanceIsraeli dancing, tonight, 8-10 pm,Hillel, 6715 Woodlawn.Folk dancing, tonight, 8-10 pm. Inter¬national House assembly hall, 50c.Folk dancing, Sunday, Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E. 59, 8 pm.Discussions-ReadingsTuesday Night Reading Hour, a read¬ing of a modern play (Synge's "RidersTo The Sea”), with discussion led byprominent Chicago scholars and direc¬tors, Reynolds Club, 5709 South Uni¬versity Avenue, 7:30 pm, 25c.ExhibitsTreasures of Versailles, 184 paintings,sculpture, furnishings, and works of arton loan from the French government,at the Art Institute, Michigan andAdams, through December 2.Art objects from Near Eastern Coun¬tries to the fifth century BC. at theOriental Institute, 1155 E. 58, Tuesday-Sunday, 10-5, free.Exhibition honoring 100th anniversaryof Julius Rosenwald, UC trustee: Let¬ters, documents, etc., sponsored by UClibrary. Department of Special Collec¬tions. On display in central corridor ofHarper Memorial Library and SpecialCollections Reading Room (6th floorwest Tower), Monday - Friday, 9-5, Sat¬urday, 9-1,Art of Benin, five cent uric* of artfrom the historic African kingdom opensFriday, The S29 pieces — includingportrait heads, weapons, ceremonialboxes, ornaments, household furnish¬ings, etc. — represent the largest exhi¬bition of Benin art ever assembled inthe US. Chicago Natural History Mu¬seum, Lake Shore drive at Rooseveltroad, Sunday - Saturday, 9-5, 50e.FilmsWhen Worlds Collide, Friday, 8 and10 pm, B-J courts, 50e.The Crucible, by Jean-Paul Sartre,from Arthur Miller’s play, stars SimoneSignoret and Yves Montand. Sponsoredby F1VS, next Monday, 7:15 and 9:30pm. Soe. Sci. 122, 50c.Peddlin's In Society, (Italian) Tnt.House, next Monday, 8 pm, 50c.Walt* of the Toreadors, with PeterSellers, and I Am a Camera at the HydePark through Thursday. Starting Friday,Jeanne Mereau in Jules and Jim and To¬morrow Is My Turn, Venice Film Festi¬val prizewinner.The Three Faces of Eve, Saturday, 8and 10 pm, Sunday 2 pm. HendersonHouse Lounge (Pierce Tower), 50e.MusicMusic at Hillel, the hi-fi systemavailable for use Monday through Fri¬day, 9:30-5.Lyric Opera: Orfeo Ed Euridic*(Gluck), Wednesday and Friday.Chicago Symphony program, Thurs¬day, 8:30 pm and Friday. 2 pm: Rebel'sSuite from the Ballet, “The Elements”;Debussy’s ‘‘Games’’: Faure's Requiem.Director: Hans Rosband.Soto Ensemble of the CollegiumMuslcum. directed by Howard Brown,presents Music at 16th Century Courts,Bond Chapel, 58 and Greenwood, 8 pm,free.The University Symphony Orchestrapresents Stravinsky, Arrangement ofThe Star Spangled Banner: Stravinsky,Circus Polka: Nutcracker Suite: Schu¬bert. Symphony No. 6 in C Major, Man-del Hail, 57th and University, Sat., 8:30pm., free.Fall Folk Festival at NorthwesternUniversity Cahn Auditorium featuresJosh White and Hollis Rinehart, thisFriday, 8 pm. Tickets $2 at door.TheatreThe Importance of Being Earnest, per¬formed by students of InternationalHouse, Friday, Saturday, Sunday eve¬nings, 8:15 pm.. Int. house, tickets . $1.Hal Holbrook in Mark Twain Tonightat the Cinestage, 180 N, Dearborn, Fri¬day and Saturday eve, 8:30 pm, andSaturday and Sunday matinees at 2pm and 3 pm. respectively.Shakespeare's Comody of Errors, atthe Goodman Theatre, Art Institute, di¬rected by Melvin Bernhardt. Perform¬ances every night except Monday, No¬vember 30 — December 18. Weekdaycurtain 7:30 pm. Friday and Saturday,8:30 pm. Tickets S2.50 and $3, phoneCE 6-7080. ext. 303.Foo Shing Theatre, 50 Chinese chil¬dren in an evening Acrobatic ChineseTheatre, tinder the auspices of the Re¬public of China. Opera House. Sunday,2:30 pm. Tickets $2.50 - $5.50.(Deadline for the culture calendar isMonday, 3 pm, preceding the week’slisting of events).Photographic OttersUntil Christmas\ fully automatic 3!>inm. Camerawith case ami flash attachment.— $39.00 —See the Sawyer Projector withremote control anil six free trays.Let us show you the Pentax singleJens reflex camera in combinationwith the Futuramic II electronicflash unit.There is still time to order coloror Hack and white Christmas cardsWe have 8 nun. automatic filmprojectors, 2x2 slide projectorsand Wollensak Tape Recordersavailable for weekend or Holidayrentals.The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. $2,000 investment is stolenCOLLEGE STATION, Tex. — ing. He put his name on the con-Tom Chandler is a very unhappy tract at 3 o’clock in the morning.”man. His most promising recruit The Orioles gave Johnson ahas been whisked away from “modest” bonus of $25,000. John-under his nose by the Baltimore son’s acceptance was “a disastrousOrioles Baseball team. blow to our ball club,” statedChandler is baseball coach at Chandler.Texas A&M. His department hadspent $2000 on a baseball scholar¬ship for David Johnson, a sopho¬more at A&M, when Johnson leftschool to sign a contract withthe Orioles. Said Chandler, “Theleast the Baltimore organizationcould do would be to reimburseA&M college for that amount.”Orioles President Lee MacPhail,in Baltimore, denied that hisscouts had pressured Johnson intosigning. According to Chandler,however, “There is no doubt thatJohnson was pressured into sign- Johnson hit .309 in 25 gamesand was voted Sophomore of theYear in the Southwest Conferencelast spring. Although it was hisfirst year of varsity competition,he received the team’s “Most Val¬uable Player” award.Chandler blamed his loss on theOrioles’ scouts. “Most of the prer-fessional scouts encourage theplayers to remain in college,” hesaid, “but there are some who con¬tinually never (sic) let the playersalone.”MITZIE'SFLOWER SHOPS1225 E. 63rd St.HY 3-53531340 E. 55th St.Ml 3-4020 3 PIZZAS FOR PRICE OF 2Free UC DeliveryTERRY'S PIZZAMl 3-40451518 E. 63rd StreetDR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristtN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESW STUDENT DISCOUNTFOUR PERFORMANCES ONLYFRIDAY, NOV. 30, SATURDAY, DEC. 1, SUNDAY, DEC. 24 ■■ '■i brings backAmerica's Greatest HumoristFriday, Nov. at 8:30 p.m.Saturday Dec. 1 at 2 and 8:30Sunday, Dec. 2 at 3 p.m.Eves. $4.50, $3.50; Matinees $3.80Special Student Discount: $4.50 Tickets for $3.50Use This Ad and I.D. Card: $3.80 Tickets for $2.80ON STAGEAT THECINESTAGE180 N. DEARBORN TYPEWRITER OFFER UNTIL CHRISTMASYour choice of cither a Typewriter Table, an Eastman Kodak camerakit or a handsome Pen Set with each new portable typewriter purchasedalong with one free type change and a one year guarantee.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUERANDELL - HARPER SQUAREBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALONOPEN EVENINGS5700 HARPER AVE. FA 4-2007MRS. BILLIE TREGANZA, PROP.SUPER SMOOTHSHAVENew "wetter-th an-water*action melts beard's tough,ness—In seconds. Remarkable new “wetter-than-water”action gives Old Spice Super Smooth Shave its scientificapproximation to the feather-touch feel and the efficiency ofbarber shop shaves. Melts your beard’s toughness like hottoweh and massage—in seconds.Shaves that are so comfortable you barely feel theblade. A unique combination of anti-evaporation agentsmakes Super Smooth Shave stay moist and firm. Nore-lathering, no dry spots. Richer and creamier...gives youthe most satisfying shave...fastest, cleanest—and mostcomfortable. Regular or mentholated, 1.00,SHU lto imCHKHKcMH* OO 04J4WWH5HWHKK4 0 ao O 0 QXHrt v V V v * * ******* » » WtlVNrwVttOOWhenever you leave town, carry money onlyyou can spend: Bank of America TravelersCheques. Loss-proof, theft-proof, cashed only byyour signature. Sold, at leading banks everywhere.BANK AMtHICA . NATIONAL TPUBT AND 6AV.NOS ASSOCIATION • MCM9CR fCOFflAL Of^OSIT INSUKANCC COSMSATIOMa^^<5HCKH>^CH^^o^6^a^OHMH>^(H>^>o^^rt^aa^>aacro<H^^CHC^<HCHOlaa<H><HCH>aaaaa4>aaaa^cK^<H^^waaaaaaoa^OHCH5HCHOHaaCH>^CH5HO^fiHO^flHOHO^oil4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 27t 1962