'•■r' -• IDean derecognizes Sinfonietta; Dg3I1S SWltCrlmembership below ten: Kiendl John R. Davey and John P. Netherton switch jobs this June 1.Davey, who is now dean of students in the college, will become anassistant dean to Robert Streeter, dean of the college. Netherton,who is at present in the assistant dean’s position, will move intoDavy’s old position.Reason for the switch, according to Robert M. Strozier, dean ofThe Collegiate Sinfonietta has been de-recognized as a student organization.The Sinfonietta, a chamber orchestra of students, faculty members, alumni, and non-UCmusicians, was officially de-recognized by the Student Activities office on the grounds that students, is to put the two men in fields in which each is more inter-it did not have the minimum number of ten students in its membership. It was also stated ested. The assistant dean’s position is concerned with curricular andthat the Sinfonietta was “not in the spirit of a student organization.” testing matters and the dean of students deals with counselling andDieter Kober, former UC student and present conductor of the orchestra, stated that he advisory matters. There is no difference in academic rankhad presented the names of periodically inactive,more than the required ten Also complicating the orches-students to Robert M. Strozier, tra’s standing as a student organ-dean of students. Kober claimed ization are the non-UC status ofthat 50 per cent of the orchestra’s its director and the professionalmembers are students. status of some of its members.Kober admitted that the stu- Kober, no longer a student, is cur-dent composition of the group ren*ly employed by the Chicagofluctuated periodically. Certain Board of Education,parts of the orchestra, such as The Sinfonietta, like the Col-the woodwinds and the choir, are legium Musicum and other cam-not used at all performances, pus musical groups, has frequent-Consequently, members of these ly used professional musicians insections are not required to at- its concerts. When the Sinfonietta University of Chicago, May 13, 1955tend all rehearsals and have been See ‘Sinfonietta/ page 10 31Harrelson is divinity school dean;specializes in biblical languagesWalter J. Harrelson, old testament scholar and archaeologist, has been appointed dean ofthe UC divinity school, announced Chancellor Lawrence A...Kimpton yesterday.Harrelson succeeds William N. Hawley, dean of students of the divinity school, who hasserved as acting dean since the resignation of Bernard M. Loomer in 1953.Currently a member of the faculty of Andover Newton Theological seminary, Boston,Harrelson is an ordained Baptist minister who preaches regularly in Baptist churches in theEast, and is a frequent epn- deRree ln 1949 from Unlon rheo-tributor to Baptist denomina¬tional publications and schol¬arly journals.His fields of scholarship are logical seminary, New York.Awarded . the union travelingfellowship for outstanding schol¬arship, and the fellowship of thebiblical history and old testament American Council of Learned So.languages, including Hebrew’, Ae-cadian, Aramaic and Ugaritic and cieties, Harrelson spent the year1950-51 at the University of Basel,philosophy and archaeology as re- Switzerland sUldying o]d tcsta.lated to religious history.Bom in 1919 on a farm nearWinnabow', North Carolina, Har¬relson attended Mars Hill col¬lege in North Carolina, 1940-41.He received the bachelor of arts ment languages and biblicalphilosophy.He returned to the United Statesin 1951 to join the faculty ofAndover Newton, and received hisdegree in philosophy from the doc,or ot Geology degree fromUniversity of North Carolina in1947, and the bachelor of divinity Union1953. Theological seminary in Honor UC professorsfor superior teachingFour members of the UC faculty have been selected toreceive the Lewellyn John and Harriet Ann Quantrell awardfor execellence in undergraduate teaching.The four are Daniel L. Harris, associate professor of physi¬ology; Gwin J. Kolb, assistant professor of English; John P.Netherton, assist” professor of Spanish, and Charles W.Wegener, assistant professor rf?/ ~ ~~—7r ~ 7"r Kolb is a co-author of the newlyOf hu a ties. published Dr. Johnson’s Diction-Chancellor Lawrence A. *ry.Kimpton and Ernest E. Quantrell, Netherton, who just becamehonorary UC trustee and donor of dean of students in the college, isthe award, will present the awards secretary of the college council onof $1000 each on June 9 at 11 a.m. tutorial studies and has been as-in Kimpton’s office. sistant dean in the college. Neth*Harris has been on the UC fac- erton received his PhD from UC’sulty since June of 1947. He re- romance languages departmentceived his AB degree from the and worked on literary researchUniversity of Minnesota in 1936 in Spain during 1953-54.and his PhD from the University Wegener is the chairman ofof Pennsylvania in 1942. the staff of the organization,Kolb received his bachelor's de- methods, and principles course ingree from Milsaps college, Mis- the college. He received both hississippi, in 1941, his master’s from bachelors degree and his doctorateUC in 1946 with honors, and his from UC and has been on the col-doctorate also from UC in 1949. lege faculty since 1947.Walter J. HarrelsonPartial demolition of building initiateswork on Hyde Park redevelopment planPartial demolition of a building at 5456 Bla ckstone marked the start of Hyde Park’s rede¬velopment program Tuesday.Following a torch light procession to the site of the first demolition, Chancellor Kimpton,Mayor Richard J. Daley and South East Chicago commission director Julian Levi spoke toa crowd of almost 1,000 while searchlights covered the speakers’ platform and the partiallywlooked building. and 54th. The program, consisting Speaking before the Citizens’The redevelopment pro- of new homes and shopping facili- board of the University, Wednes-gram, expected to cost more ties, will be carried out by private day, both Kimpton and Levi em-than 26 million dollars, will developers after the Chicago land phasized that Hyde Park’s pro¬center around Lake Park avenue clearance commission makes the gram pioneers in providing anand 55th, and around Dorchester sites available. answer to the urban decay thatis a problem of every Americancity.They spoke before 200 mem¬bers of the board, composed ofprominent citizens interested inthe University, at the Congresshotel.Chicago’s problem of blight,Kimpton pointed out, is the typi¬cal one of decay of the centralarea outward from its core. Whenthe University opened in 1892,Hyde Park was one of the city’smost desirable residential sec¬tions, but the creeping deterioration spreading from the loop hasthreatened to destroy this attrac¬tiveness, he said.Neighborhood conservation,Levi said, is sound socially andis good business. Assessed valuesin Hyde Park, threatened by de¬terioration, are $225 million, andtheir preservation is assured byan expenditure of relatively smallsums.Tuesday night Levi paid tributephoto by Becker to three Hyde Park and Wood-This building at 55th and Blackstone, which was partially demol- lawn police captains for a de-fehed Tuesday, marks the beginning of the South-East Chicago crease in crime in the last twocommission's Hyde Park redevelopment program. years in their areas. Registration scheduledThe registrar’s office has announced the schedule for advanceregistration for the summer quarter. Students in residence whowish advance registration in summer courses should sign upaccording to the following schedule:May 9-June 3: the collegeMay 31-June 3: humanities, law school, business school, socialservice administration, and graduate library school.May 31-June 1: federated theological schools.June 6-10: medical school, social sciences, physical sciences,and biological sciences.Hours of registration in the deans’ offices, except for the busi¬ness school, are 8:30-11:30 a.m. and 1:30-4 30 p.m. Businessschool hours are 9 a.m. to 12 noon and 1-4 p.m. Registrationhours in the registrar’s office are 8:30-11:45 a.m. and 1-4:45 p.m.Alumni set up centers seeking‘well-adjusted’ UC studentsCenters in the country are now being set up by the alumniassociation to look for “weil-adjusted” students for UC, ac¬cording to Howard Mort, alumni association secretary.“We think we have a strong program, but the general im¬pression across the nation is that we want nothing but quizkids,” Mort said of the plan. -Kiendl seeksfootball infoGathering general informationDon Moyer of the associa¬tion has been responsible forsetting up the alumni studentadvisory committees in the metro¬politan centers. The committeeswill be on the alert for “well-adjusted” students, and will be ^ 7COme., ,, „ . ’ . another job of the student activ-available for interviewing stu- ities office. Arthur Kiendl, direo-dents who make application to tor of student activities, who hasUC. just returned from trips to Carl-“The school isn’t as hard as the ton and St. Olafs colleges, under¬reputation has it . . . Chicago is took the investigation by the orderimpossible only for the student of the dean of students office,who comes here to play football “I was gathering general infer-or because his folks want him to mation pertaining to football asspend a few years on campus, it applies to the total academicaway from home,” Mort added. and extracurricular picture at in-“I think the thing Kimpton stitutions of good scholastic repu-feels is that he doesn’t want stu- tation,” Kiendl said of the invest!-dents who spend 24 hours a day gation.studying,” Mort said. Students This information-gathering ex-should put into practice their pedition took place prior to theknowledge through participation current football petition spon-in the extra-curicular, he com- sored by the UC Students foemented. Football committee.11 TNI CHICAGO MAROON May 6. 1955"I've got VM...andUM's got everything!h> ■Hioronos uur from All the Rest! L&M wins its letters forflavor... Light and Mild. And the pure, white Miracle Tip drawseasy, so you enjoy all the taste. No wonder L&M sales are soaringon campus after campus. It’s America's best filter cigarette.World disarmament Astronomer Chandrasekhar find new radiois goal of Flanders elected to science academy isotope in rainUnder the theme of “The reality of disarmament," Senator , Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, of UC s Yerkes observa-Ralph E. Flanders, Bruno Bettleheim, Maynard Krueger, and to>y. has been elected to membership in the National AcademyArthur H. Rosenfeld addressed a student audience in Mandel of Saences, announced Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimptonhall Saturday. a^* _ for his application of modem“I will call this the ‘Grand Project,’ and its first task to Chandrasekhar, Morton D. physical theories to the study ofundertake is world disarmament,” said Flanders in opening JJuc™1Tstronom^deparhnent the internal structure of the starsand in its Institute for Nuclear and to the universe.his portion of the first annualWorld Affairs conference.Flanders went on to speak ofAmerican responsibility for worldpeace.Flanders outlined three means—moral encirclement, moral pene¬tration, and atomic penalties—forlessening tension between the USand the USSR. He also proposedan informal big-power conferenceas a means for disarmament.Earlier in the day MaynardKrueger, assistant professor inthe social sciences, spoke on “Dis¬armament and our search for agoal.” Security, Krueger felt, isa cause of disarmament, and notthe other way around. A systemof effective international law isneeded to guarantee this security, ing that he had the feeling that a Studies, thus becomes the 21st Born in India, he has been a UCpresently active member of the facuity member since 1937. TheUniversity’s faculty to hold mem¬bership in the Academy, the high¬est American scientific honor.Chandrasekhar is world famous author of three books, he has re¬cently been engaged in the studyof magnetism throughout the uni¬verse.■* He has also received the RoyalFaculty members Astronomical Society medal, con-. /~i 1 ♦ sidered the equivalent of theget (juggenheims Nobel prize in astronomy, whichhas been awarded three times toUC astronomers.Senator Ralph E. Flanders Six UC faculty members havebeen awarded John Simon Gug¬genheim memorial fellowships.Recipients of the award are: COITGCtlOnHerbert L. Anderson, professorof physics; Clyde A. Hutchison, Last week's Maroon, and thatof the week before, carried eon-Following Krueger, Arthur Ro- couple of atomic mutations will Jr., professor of chemistry; Philip tradictohy rates for three shotsenfeld, chairman of the Chicago destroy mankind and create crea- B. Kurland, professor of law; polio vaccination. Rates givenCouncil of the Atomic Scientists,gave a factual analysis of recentarmament developments. He stat¬ed that further development waswasteful since there are alreadyweapons to sufficiently destroymankind.Peace and disarmament areonly possible by transmission ofpower to a higher, more central¬ized. authority was Bruno Bettle-heim’s viewpoint. Bettleheim isdirector of the Orthogenic schoolhere. He reacted to Rosenfeld’sstory of powerful weapons by say-Cap and Qown“three nns circusCap and Gown, UC year¬book scheduled to appear May15, is a “three ring circus”according to sales campaignmanager Michael Stanley.Theme of the “circus” is thechanges wrought by theKimnton administration.This theme runs throughthe book, which will contain ar¬ticles on the administration, hous¬ing and activities, among othersubjects. “The campus has notyet acquired that striped-tie, Ox¬ford grey look of the Ivy league,toward which it is so rapidly mov¬ing.” says the yearbook.Ray Nelson, whose caricatureof the “Inspector General” ap¬peared all around campus to pub¬licize University Theatre’s pro¬duction of the play, w'ill do similarwork for Cap and Gown.Cap and Gown is reviving Echo,the traditional pre-war supple¬ment to the yearbook, this year.The major feature of Echo is theselection of a “Man of the Year,”the student who has contributedmost to student activities the pastterm.Echo's last “Man of the Year”was chosen in 1939, the choice be¬ing William Hardy MacNeill,then Maroon editor and “personalvoice of Hutchins.”1955’s “Man of the Year” willbe revealed when the yearbookarrives. At present the book is onthe press. Pre-publication price is$4, after publication, $4.50.TYPEWRITERSCLEANED ORREPAIREDWritten guaranteeall work for one yearInspector and Estimator on dutyfrom 4 p.m. till 10 p.m.Discount of 15%for all studentsBring your typewriter m forrepair before your final (Kamibegin.BOURGEAUS’1202 E. 55th St.HY 3-7912 tures which may well be an im- Cyril Stanley Smith, professor of each time were incorrect. Theprovement. metallurgy and director of the vaccination is $5 per shot for stu-The conference was sponsored Institute for the Study of Metals; dents, bringing the total cost toby Students for Democratic Ac- Henry Taube, professor of chem- $15. For faculty members andtion and the Student Representa- istry; and Nicholas Nicolaides, re- hospital employees the total costtive party. search associate in medicine. will be $9. A new naturally-occurring ra-dioactive isotope, beryllium seven,has been identified by two UCprofessors. Be-7 promises to I*useful in studying problems asso,ciated with the weather.James R. Arnold, UC assistantprofessor of chemistry, and H. AhSalih, Institute for Nuclear Stuckies. detected the radioisotoperain water collected in Chicagoand in Lafyette, India. This wajdone in a special scintillationcounter developed by Arnold.This is the third naturally-occurring radioisotope discoveredby UC scientists since the end ofWorld War II. Willard F. Libby,now on leave serving on theAtomic Energy commission, di*.covered radioactive carbon 14 andtritium.Although Be-7 is extremely rareit is estimated that each squareinch of the Chicago area is dustedby some four million atoms ofradioactive beryllium a year.The existence of Be-7 was pre¬dicted on the basis of a theoryconcerning the end products ofcosmic ray collisions with theelements in the upper atmos¬phere.CAMPUS “STAND-OUTS BMOCO Ucwn U Mruu Tomcoo Co.Dean derecognizes Sinfonietta; DcdVlS SWltcKmembership below ten: KiendlThe Collegiate Sinfonietta has been de-recognized as a student organization.The Sinfonietta, a chamber orchestra of students, faculty members, alumni, and non-UCmusicians, was officially de-recognized by the Student Activities office on the grounds thatit did not have the minimum number of ten students in its membership. It was also statedthat the Sinfonietta was “not in the spirit of a student organization.”Dieter Kober, former UC student and present conductor of the orchestra, stated that hepresented the names of John R. Davey and John P. Netherton switch jobs this June 1.Davey, who is now dean of students in the college, will become anassistant dean to Robert Streeter, dean of the college. Netherton,who is at present in the assistant dean’s position, will move intoDavy’s old position.Reason for the switch, according to Robert M. Strozier, dean ofstudents, is to put the two men in fields in which each is more inter¬ested. The assistant dean’s position is concerned with curricular andtesting matters and the dean of students deals with counselling andadvisory matters. There is no difference in academic rank.hadmore than the required tenstudents to Robert M. Strozier,dean of students. Kober claimedthat 50 per cent of the orchestra’smembers are students.Kober admitted that the stu¬dent composition of the groupfluctuated periodically. Certainparts of the orchestra, such asthe woodwinds and the choir, arenot used at all performances.Consequently, members of thesesections are not required to at¬tend all rehearsals and have been periodically inactive.Also complicating the orches¬tra’s standing as a student organ¬ization are the non-UC status ofits director and the professionalstatus of some of its members.Kober, no longer a student, is cur¬rently employed by the ChicagoBoard of Education.The Sinfonietta, like the Col¬legium Musicum and other cam¬pus musical groups, has frequent¬ly used professional musicians inits concerts. When the SinfoniettaSee ‘Sinfonietta,’ page 10 UniversityHarrelson is divinity school dean;specializes in biblical languagesWalter J. Harrelson, old testament scholar and archaeologist, has been appointed dean ofthe UC divinity school, announced Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton yesterday.Harrelson succeeds William N. Hawley, dean of students of the divinity school, who hasserved as acting dean since the resignation of Bernard M. Loomer in 1953.Currently a member of the faculty of Andover Newton Theological seminary, Boston,Harrelson is an ordained Baptist minister who preaches regularly in Baptist churches in theEast, and is a frequent con¬tributor to Baptist denomina¬tional publications and schol¬arly journals.His fields of scholarship arebiblical history and old testamentlanguages, including Hebrew, Ac-cadian, Aramaic and Ugaritic andphilosophy and archaeology as re¬lated to religious history.Born in 1919 on a farm nearWinnabow, North Carolina, Har¬relson attended Mars Hill col¬lege in North Carolina, 1940-41.He received the bachelor of artsdegree in philosophy from theUniversity of North Carolina in1947, and the bachelor of divinity degree in 1949 from Union Theo¬logical seminary, New York.Awarded the union travelingfellowship for outstanding schol¬arship, and the fellowship of theAmerican Council of Learned So¬cieties, Harrelson spent the year1950-51 at the University of Basel,Switzerland, studying old testa¬ment languages and biblicalphilosophy.He returned to the United Statesin 1951 to join the faculty ofAndover Newton, and received hisdoctor of theology degree fromUnion Theological seminary in1953. Walter J. HarrelsonPartial demolition of building initiateswork on Hyde Park redevelopment planPartial demolition of a building at 5456 Bla ckstone marked the start of Hyde Park’s rede¬velopment program Tuesday.Following a torch light procession to the site of the first demolition, Chancellor Kimpton,Mayor Richard J. Daley and South East Chicago commission director Julian Levi spoke toa crowd of almost 1,000 while searchlights covered the speakers’ platform and the partiallywrecked building. and 54th. The program, consisting Speaking before the Citizens’The redevelopment pro- of new homes and shopping facili- board of the University, Wednes-gram, expected to cost more ties, will be carried out by private day, both Kimpton and Levi em-than 26 million dollars, willcenter around Lake Park avenueand 55th, and around Dorchesterphoto by BeckerThis building at 55th and Blacks tone, which was partially demol¬ished Tuesday, marks the beginning of the South-East Chicagooommission’g Hyde Park redevelopment program.developers after the Chicago land phasized that Hyde Park’s pro¬clearance commission makes the gram pioneers in providing ansites available. answer to the urban decay thatis a problem of every Americancity.They spoke before 200 mem¬bers of the board, composed ofprominent citizens interested inthe University, at the Congresshotel.Chicago’s problem of blight,Kimpton pointed out, is the typi¬cal one of decay of the centralarea outward from its core. Whenthe University opened in 1892,Hyde Park was one of the city’smost desirable residential sec¬tions, but the creeping deteriora¬tion spreading from the loop hasthreatened to destroy this attrac¬tiveness, he said.Neighborhood conservation,Levi said, is sound socially andis good business. Assessed valuesin Hyde Park, threatened by de¬terioration, are $225 million, andtheir preservation is assured byan expenditure of relatively smallsums.Tuesday night Levi paid tributeto three Hyde Park and Wood-lawn police captains for a de¬crease in crime in the last twoyears in their areas. Honor UC professorsfor superior teachingFour members of the UC faculty have been selected toreceive the Lewellyn John and Harriet Ann Quantrell awardfor execellence in undergraduate teaching.The four are Daniel L. Harris, associate professor of physi¬ology; Gwin J. Kolb, assistantNetherton, assistant ppqfessoiWegener, assistant professorof humanities.Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton and Ernest E. Quantrell,honorary UC trustee and donor ofthe award, will present the awardsof $1000 each on June 9 at 11 a.m.in Kimpton’s office.Harris has been on the UC fac¬ulty since June of 1947. He re¬ceived his AB degree from theUniversity of Minnesota in 1936and his PhD from the Universityof Pennsylvania in 1942.Kolb received his bachelor’s de¬gree from Milsaps college, Mis¬sissippi, in 1941, his master’s fromUC in 1946 with honors, and hisdoctorate also from UC in 1949. professor of English; John P.of Spanish, and Charles W.Kolb is a co-author of the newlypublished Dr. Johnson’s Diction¬ary.Netherton, who just becamedean of students in the college, issecretary of the college council ontutorial studies and has been as¬sistant dean in the college. Neth¬erton received his PhD from UC’sromance languages departmentand worked on literary researchin Spain during 1953-54.Wegener is the chairman ofthe staff of the organization,methods, and principles course inthe college. He received both hisbachelors degree and his doctoratefrom UC and has been on the col¬lege faculty since 1947.Registration scheduledThe registrar’s office has announced the schedule for advanceregistration for the summer quarter. Students in residence whowish advance registration in summer courses should sign upaccording to the following schedule:May 9-June 3: the collegeMay 31-June 3: humanities, law school, business school, socialservice administration, and graduate library school.May 31-June 1: federated theological schools.June 6-10: medical school, social sciences, physical sciences,and biological sciences.Hours of registration in the deans’ offices, except for the busi¬ness school, are 8:30-11:30 a.m. and 1:30-4-30 p.m. Businessschool hours are 9 a.m. to 12 noon and 1-4 p.m. Registrationhours in the registrar’s office are 8:30-11:45 a.m. and 1-4:45 p.m.Alumni set up centers seeking‘well-adjusted’ UC studentsCenters in the country are now being set up by the alumniassociation to look for “well-adjusted” students for UC ac¬cording to Howard Mort, alumni association secretary. ’“We think we have a strong program, but the general im¬pression across the nation is that we want nothing but quizkids,” Mort said of the plan.Don Moyer of the associa¬tion has been responsible forsetting up the alumni studentadvisory committees in the metro¬politan centers. The committeeswill be on the alert for “well-adjusted” students, and will beavailable for interviewing stu¬dents who make application toUC.“The school isn’t as hard as thereputation has it . . . Chicago isimpossible only for the studentwho comes here to play footballor because his folks want him tospend a few years on campus,away from home,” Mort added.“I think the thing Kimptonfeels is that he doesn’t want stu¬dents who spend 24 hours a daystudying,” Mort said. Studentsshould put into practice theirknowledge through participationin the extra-curicular, he com¬mented. Kiendl seeksfootball infoGathering general informationconcerning football, has becomeanother job of the student activ¬ities office. Arthur Kiendl, direc¬tor of student activities, who hasjust returned from trips to Carl-ton and St. Olafs colleges, under¬took the investigation by the orderof the dean of students office.“I was gathering general infor¬mation pertaining to football asit applies to the total academicand extracurricular picture at in¬stitutions of good scholastic repu¬tation,” Kiendl said of the investi¬gation.This information-gathering ex¬pedition took place prior to thecurrent football petition spon¬sored by the UC Students foeFootball committee.. .. - ■ ;V?t'fa<?€ 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 13, 1955NSA selects MetrosFour UC students were electedto regional National Student As¬sociation posts Sunday.Janice Metros was elected Illi¬nois regional chairman; LynnChadwell was elected regional sec¬retary; Sylvia Boyd, regional in¬ternational affairs veep; and JoelRosenthal, regional educationalaffairs veep.Terry Hudson, varsity debaterand student senator at the Univer¬sity of Illinois, was elected regional vice-chairman. All officerswill take office at the close of theNational Student congress.The election took place duringthe spring assembly of the Illi¬nois region of the US NationalStudent association. The assem-'bly attracted forty-five delegatesfrom nine Illinois schools to theUC campus last week-end.Significance of NSA’s interna¬tional program was urged byFrank Fischer, introductory plen¬ary speaker. Mr. Fischer traveledthroughout southeast Asia in 1952for the association and has beenactive with NSA since 1947.Fischer pointed out that stu¬dents in foreign countries arehighly regarded, and presumethat American students are heldin the same esteem. In developingnations which do not have a largeeducated group the influence ofstudents is particularly great.When American students meetW’ith foreign student leaders atinternational gatherings, the for¬eign students anticipate thatQuetico-SuperiorCANOE TRIPSOnly $5.50 per person per day forcomplete camping equipment, Grum¬man aluminum canoes and choicefood supplies. For free informationwrite:CANOE COUNTRY OUTFITTERSBill Rom, Mgr. Box 717C, Ely, Minn. American representatives will beparticularly able and bear greatinfluence, Fischer asserted.In plenary session the regionwent on record in opposition tothe Broyles anti-subversive billsnow in the state legislature.A conference on “civil liberties,academic freedom, and discrimi¬nation” is to be held by the re¬gion during 1955-56. This confer¬ence will bring students from Illi¬nois schools together to discussthese problems with other stu¬dents and persons from the com¬munity concerned with the prob¬lems.A resolution generalized fromthe Kucheman refugee scholar¬ship plan was passed and recom¬mended to the National Studentcongress for its adoption. Con¬sideration of a bill specificallydirected at Russian exchange wascut short by adjournment, butwill be brought up at a regionalcaucus this summer. Corsi, ex-State dept, aide, speakson Korean village benefit programEdward Corsi, former State department official in charge of immigration, will speak oncampus on May 25 in a benefit lecture for the fund for the Korean village of Tap Shim Ni.The lecture will be on the refugee problem in connection with the State department. Thetalk will be given at Mandel hall at 4 p.m. There will be be an admission charge; the exactamount has not yet been de- * ——will be held on May 14 and May 2lat the co-op.termined.The lecture will be sponsored bythe UC Committee for World Gov¬ernment, Atomic Scientists of Chi¬cago, and World Federalists.Give ShowThe UC international relationsclub will sponsor a PlaywrightsTheatre production of SeanO’Casey’s Juno and the Payooekat Mandel hall on Wednesday at8:30 p.m.Tickets are on sale at Interna¬tional house and student exchangeat student rates. Partial proceedswill go to Playwrights, which wasrecently evicted from its head¬quarters.The greater part of the proceeds will go to the Korean villagewhich Hyde Park is “helping tohelp itself.’’ The goal of the cam¬paign is to raise at least $2500.Sell BooksUsed books collected at theHyde Park co-op were sold outlast Saturday in a sale for theKorean village campaign. The salenetted over $150. 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PAUL, MINN. 7:30 10.90*OMAHA, NEB. . 1 10.40 18.7SPITTSBURGH, PA. 10.25 18.45IT. LOUIS, MO. . 4.95 8.9SSOUTH BEND, IND. 2.10 3.80» 30 DAY RETURN LIMIT {ttu. U. S. Ton)Bars* subject to chang* without molicm.JOHN STOCKS TRAVEL BUREAUAdministration Building5601 S. Ellis Ave.| Phone Midway 3-0800GREYH0UN Punch-line to the years hottest power story-Chevrolet ' Turbo -Fire V8”!This is the engine that’s writing awhole new chapter in the book ofautomobile performance records. Thisis the engine that has stock car timersdoing a “double take” at their stop¬watches wherever experts gather tocompare the abilities of the 1955 cars.For example, in the recent N ASC AR *stock car competition at DaytonaBeach, Florida, Chevrolet literally ranaway from every other car in its class—and a raft of others besides. In theone-mile straightaway run for low-priced cars, the first two places—andsix of the first ten—w’e*3* to Chev- rolets. And in acceleration runs from astanding start against all comers,the Motoramic Chevrolet beat all otherlow-priced cars—and every high-pricedcar except one!What’s behind this blazing perform¬ance? A compact honey of a V8 thatonly the world’s leading producer ofvalve-in-head engines can build. Chev¬rolet’s new “Turbo-Fire V8”.It puts a new kind of fun in yourdriving life. You're in charge of 162high-spirited horsepower—or if you'relooking for even more excitement, the new“Super Turbo-Fire V8" (optional at extra cost) puts 180 h.p. under your toe!Pick the one you’d rather have funwith, then come in and get behind thewheel. You’ll see why the MotoramicChevrolet is showing its heels to every¬one else on the road!*Notional Association for Stock Cor Auto Racing*55CHEVROLET /iSee Your Chevrolet DealerJfARLtK^OiDICKby AL CAPP NOT mLVOU-rVfcErr-TWEtr/-COME> YOUR MESSYFEATHERS/.' — SLOPPYBIRDS LIKE. YOU GIVE.ALL OF US A BADNAME If— -DON'T BE A-c^EGp.r-CHEEPSKATE /'-GET WILDROOTCREAM OIL, AMERICA'S FAVORITE!?KEEPS HAlR-rWEer.^-NEATBUT NOT GREASY//-rllVTHE CHICAGO MAROOMMRA welcome told*1 took the responsibility on my own,” Robert Moon of theresearch institute said yesterday about his welcome “on be¬half of the University” to the crowd after Wednesday’s MoralRe-Armament play, The Vanishing Island.Moon, chairman of the ad hoc student-faculty committeefor the lighthouse at the crossroads, sponsor of the plays,Mid that he spoke from hisheart in making the welcome. office did not eive the 8rouP spe-According to the Chancel- cial Permission for oversize pos-lor's secretary, Kimpton had re- ters which were posted unstampedfcrred the question of the wel- on Mandel bulletin boards. Per-come to Dean of Students Robert mission had not been obtainedM Strozier. Strozier was out of from the Maroon for posters(own Thursday and could not be placed on its boards. The bulletinreached for comment. boards are usually left in MandelMoon said yesterday that the corridor for the posting of posterscroup had had only 13 days in approved by the student activitieswhich to complete arrangement office. When told of the lack offor the presentation, and apolo¬gized if any regulations weretransgressed. authorization, Moon offered to re¬move the oversize posters.Robert Demery, treasurer of theThe group paid outside rates for student-faculty committee, saidMandel hall for the performances, **iat Private individuals off cam-according to Arthur Kiendl. direr- Pus supplied funds for the presen-tor of student activities. Kiendl’s Nation.The student activities office saidyesterday that the Student Gov¬ernment committee on recognizedstudent organizations had held upofficial recognition of the light¬house group. According to A1 For¬tier. SG president, CORSO hasnever heard of the group andwished to look into it. Accordingto Fortier, the organization re- New activities council formedto replace Student Union asSAC completes its workThe initials “SAC” came to stand for a new campus organ¬ization as the Student Activities Council ended its work lastTuesday. The council adopted the constitution of a new SocialActivities Council to replace the defunct Student Union. Theadoption was made with only one dissenting vote, that of A1Fortier, Student Government president.Approving the constitution, ;—; :Arthur Kiendl, director of P°wer t° infringe on privatestudent activities, said hethought it looked “like an excel- f «n*xrJ It also has the power to give all-lent start.” He said he was particularly impressed with the provisions for refining the organization as it goes along. campus events.The constitution contains twoprovisions for making the boardCoggeshall talkson world health‘The Foreign Operations admin-istration and world health prob¬lems" will be the subject of a talkMonday by Lowell T. Coggeshall, ceives automatic recognition untildean of (he division of biological refused by CORSO and thereforesciences and director of the Uni *\as the status of a studentversitv clinics. The talk, scheduled °* ganization.for 7 p.m. in medicine 137, is be-iiief sponsored by the Medical Stu¬dents Forum. Moon himself, and not Kiendl oradministration officials, was re¬sponsible for making such ar¬rangements as the telephone ex-C'oggeshall has recently re- tension installed in Reynolds clubturned from Egypt where he made hall. Kiendl granted permissiona study of public health conditions for the hall space to be used, andfur the US State department. He according to the telephone super-is a world renowned authority visor, Moon signed the phone or-on tropical medicine. dor. 1C(. Rev.BurrillLocal bishopinitiates BaarThe Rt. Rev. Gerald F. Burrill,Bishop of Chicago, presided at aservice of recognition for the be¬ginning of the ministry of the'Rev. William H. Baar, new Epis¬copal chaplain at UC on Tuesdayin Bond chapel.Before becoming Episcopalchaplain, Father Baar was direc¬tor of Brent house, a center foroverseas students. He holds aPhD in church history from Yalewhere he was once chaplain.A near capacity crowd of overtwo hundred filled Bon' chapelfor the service of recognition andevening prayer. The music for theservice was provided by the choirof St. Paul’s church. Robert Ray-field was director of music andorganist.British authorlectures on JamesJoan Bennett, visiting lecturerin the department of English, willspeak on “The Art of HenryJames in the Ambassadors” Wed¬nesday, at 4:30 p.m. in Soc. Sci.122. Mrs. Bennett, fellow of Gir-ton college, Cambridge, is one ofEngland’s best known critics andessayists. Her books include FourMetaphysical Poets, George Eliot,Her Mind and Art, and VirginiaWoolf, Her Art as a Novelist. Petitions will be available Mon- directly responsible to the cam-day in the Student Activities of- Pus- petition of 10 per cent office for the six open seats on the the students on the quadrangles13-man board. Petitioners must t*16 board members may be re¬get 150 signatures to qualify for selected. By petition of 20 permembership in the council. The cent of the students, the constitu-other seven members of the board t*on Soes 1° an all-campus refer-will be picked from the faculty, endum.the w'omen’s dorms, the women’s Dean of Students Robert M.clubs, International house, and Strozier noted the “progress withthe fraternities, plus two mem- interest and said he felt it to bebers from the men’s dorms. These healthy.”seven will choose between the pe- Student Government, throughtitioners this year since there is Jan Metros, an SG representativeno old board. on the Student Activities council,The board’s powers, as set by formally protested the fact thatthe new constitution, make it re- SG was not given a representa-sponsible for the all-campus social tive seat on the board of the newprogram. The board does not have organization.Student names stabberTony Lloyd, fraternity member stabbed in the raid on DeltaUpsilon fraternity two weeks ago, has identified a youth ashis assailant.Lloyd, who was hospitalized briefly in Billings after abouttwenty young hoodlums riotedat the DU’s annual Rose . TT Illdance, identified Dru Bey, 18, lilt# llOUSC ilOLCISas the leader of the gang and .If Ithe one who stabbed him in the CfUClVtCYly JOYTYlCllback and pulled off his wrist * ....watch “Tropical Serenade is the„ , , _ ,, . theme and the theme of the In-y, a mem er o ° ternational house formal dancegroup according to Lloyd was 9;30picked up by Lloyd and police in .. Ja 55th street bar last week. He is P m' ° a- • ”being held without bail. Lloyd's J°e Kovats and his orchestra,wrist watch was not recovered. formerly of the Chez Paree willFive other alleged members o! f?r,,he *>neers at this quar-the gang are being held at boys ,ers International house danee.court awaiting continuance oftheir trial. They were all appre¬hended the day after the riot antiidentified by members of the fra¬ternity and some of their guests.Police protection was given theEsquire party, another all-campusopen house held on the followingnight at the Phi Kappa Psi fra¬ternity.According to Lloyd. Bey will becharged with assault and battery,assault with a deadly weapon, andassault with intent to kill. Beylives near Drexel avenue and 55thstreet.1321 E. 57th St.—PL 2-92511411 E. 53 rd St.—HP 3-5300Serving University PersonnelFor Years►►►► READER’S*‘the campus drug stare’*61st fir Ellis Opposite Burton-Judson ii<«4<4444444444444444444444 !44444aaaaaaaaaa^44AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAIVisit our College RoomTRY OURSunday Student SpecialServed from 12 (Nooof to 8:30 P.9t.Sirloin Butt Steak Only00French Fries — Salad BowlRoll and Butter 1 Admission will be $1.50 per personand $3 per couple. Admission priceincludes refreshments.Decorations will fit in with the“tropical” theme of the formal.MSA elects andsets fall prog ramAt the first election of the Mar¬ried Students’ Association (for¬merly the prefab council) heldTuesday in social sciences 122,Sam Venturella was selected president. Veep is Lachlan MacDonaid; secretary, Mrs. Joyce Hile-man; treasurer, Mrs. Mary Davisand the four man executive com¬mittee is Fred Olsen. A1 Buccino,Russ Sandberg, and Goff Barret-Lennard.First on the agenda for nextyear is a big autumn member¬ship drive. This will be followedby the continual perusal of MSApolicy which hopes to briefly, 1)continue to consult with the ad¬ministration on current problemsof economic disadvantage ofmarried students and housing dis¬crimination; 2) find a solution toeliminate housing problems; 3)provide social activities for mar¬ried students; 4) long range plan¬ning for housing for married stu¬dents in the community.Officially recognized as a stu¬dent activity, complete with Constitution, MSA has a long list oiaccomplishments.It has conducted a survey ofmarried students (the results ap¬peared in the Chicago Maroon),sent a delegate to ACCLC, and hassecured an extension on the pre¬fabs to June 1955. (The Pre fabswere scheduled to be torn downJune 1954.)The organization is open to re¬search assistants, junior facultymembers and interns in additionto married students on the cam¬pus. Cost is 50c per family unit.— h9« 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 13, 1955■.i% Issued once weekly by Hie publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publica¬tion offices, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones:Editorial Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1010; Business ond Advertising Offices,Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, ond subscriptions bymoil, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p m., Monday through Fndoy.LETTERS ...of Representatives recently sentto Dr. Frank Buchman, the initi¬ator of MRA. a message in whichthey stated, “You have given auniting idea to the nations whichcan turn the ideological tide in theworld today.”MRA is uniting East and West.The “Bombay Chronicle” said ofthe visit of an MRA task force toAsia two years ago, “Millions inAsia for the first time were madeaware of a positive alternative tocommunism.”Because of the work of MoralRe-Armament in Europe since thewar to unite France and Germany,both Chancellor Adenauer and thethen Foreign Minister RobertSchuman decorated Frank Buch¬man with the civilian honors oftheir respective countries.Elisabeth Bergner, the notedEuropean actress who was one ofthose who had to leave Germanybefore the war for political rea¬sons . . . has given of her timeand talent to help train some ofthe 26 casts around the w’orld nowpresenting these plays.Moral Re-Armament draws thetrue battleline in the world today-—between good and evil—and of¬fers all men everywhere the op¬portunity to build a new world.When Moral Re-Armament is at¬tacked opposition to it has specialsignificance. It is always linkedwith moral defeat and the con¬fusion borne of moral compro¬mise. MRA is attacked by every¬one who is opposed to absolutemoral standards and the guidanceof God. Julia MoonMRA supportedAs a member of the Student-Faculty Committee sponsoringthe MRA plays at the Mandel hallthis week, I would like to takethe opportunity to welcome thetask force of Moral Re-Armamentto the University of Chicago.Moral Re-Armament is f o reveryone everywhere. It is theanswer to every ism: fascism,nazism, communism — even ma¬terialism. It believes in the remak¬ing of the world. It stands for aprogram of change above party,race, class and point of view. . . .MRA takes the needs of nationsand answers them with men. Itworks through a change in humannature. It is based on a realisticappraisal of the world’s problemsand their roots in human self-will.It deals with these roots by theapplication of the four absolutestandards of honesty, purity, un¬selfishness and love, and standsfor the guidance of God in theaffairs of men and nations.MRA has nothing to do withpolitics. Still it has everything todo with politicians. For it standsfor a change for all. The evils ofmaterialism result in poverty,hunger, unemployment, divisionand war. MRA faces squarely theunderlying dishonesty, selfishnessand fear in men and in nations.Political or social solutions thatdo not deal with these root prob¬lems are inadequate.Ninety-three members of bothparties of the Senate and House MRA attackedIt is perhaps surprising thatMoral Re-Armament ... is usingMandel hall for five nights thisweek. . . .Dr. Frank Buchman is thefounder and chieftain of themovement. In 1936. Dr. Buchmansaid, “I thank'heaven for a manlike Adolf Hitler” and stated inthe same speech that he favored“a God-controlled fascist dictator¬ship” (NY World-Telegram, 8/26/36; Time, 9/7/36), declarationsnever repudiated. At inception, asthe quasi-religious, pretentiouslynamed Oxford Group, Buchman-ism was a cult for the bewilderedand decandent rich, known for itshouse parties and prurient groupconfessions (cf. The AmericanMercury, 6/39). It was widely con¬demned by established Christianbodies for its trivial gospel, itsclass exclusiveness, and its irre¬ligiously gross propaganda, SinceOxford university protested theabuse of its name, the movementhas metamorphosed into a power¬fully - and - anonymously - financedWorld Ideology, calling for labor-management conciliation as ascreen for a corporatism like Mus¬solini’s. . . . A. P. Herbert, M.P.for Oxford and a distinguishedhumorist and educator, told theHouse, according to Larry Leseur'L00KIE! FUNNY PICTURES!Horror Issue: Golden College Memories!Plus all the answers to the Finals!in the May SHAFT COLLEGE HUMOR!Get yours today at U of C Bookstore!1 | ar i a' i|: It s reallai *JP Sun llial Tavern1601 E. 55th St.Just east of the I.C.. -iv ,:V::v.Children’s Spring Book FestivalA Great Selection of New and BeautifulChildren’s BooksIncluding the Herald-Tribune Prize Winners!FROG WENT A-COURTIN', by Langstaff $2.50The beloved old story, illustrated byRojankovskyA LITTLE HOUSE OF YOUR OWN, by de Regniers $1.75Playful and imaginative, with a charming pointTHE DUCHESS BAKES A CAKE, by Kahl $2.00The Duchess' cake rose sky-high, with her ontop, and her family had to solve the problem ofgetting her downJUNKET, by White $2.75The story of a responsible farm Airedale whohas to teach his new human family how to livein the country.MEN, MICROSCOPES AND LIVING THINGS,by Shippen $3.00A fascinating history of biology and of famousbiologists, for young peopleUniversity of ChicagoBookstore58th ond Ellis on C.B.S., that “the Buehmanites’methods were fascist-like andtheir evangelists Nazi-like. Mr.Herbert charged that Dr. Buch¬man was no friend of England andthat his record showed a tendencytoward flabbiness and fascism.”(PM, 10/9/41) He also spoke of“the entire dishonesty of thesecanting cheats,” charging use ofthe University’s name for “obtain¬ing money by false pretenses.”(Hansard, Parliamentary Reports,6/13/39) Tom Driberg, anotherM.P., stated in Parliament, “Theleading members of the group, in¬cluding Dr. Buchman, were be¬fore the war associated in a closeand friendly way with the leadersof Nazi Germany.” He quoted Dr.Buchman as saying of Gestapofuehrer Himmler, “You ought toknow Heinrich. He is a great lad.. . .” Despite its moral and devo¬tional disguise, M.R.A.’s programof class collaboration was de¬scribed by the Episcopal weeklyThe Witness as “a trap for labor.”They have been exposed by TheChristian Century, foremost Prot¬estant journal in America. Therecord is clear. From their moun¬tain headquarters and “ideologi¬cal .training center” at Caux,Switzerland, Dr. Buchman and hisfriends are operating “an impor¬tant ally of international reaction”(The Nation 7/31/48).Despite its reek. M R A. tries to blur its link to the vermin, eracb.pot, rightist groups. It is danger,ous precisely because of its rospectability, which lives on im.mense financial resources, con¬fused or reactionary recruits inhigh places or among movie siars,and public permeability to high'pricer! communications methods.Its message is hard to attack t>e.cause hard to define: vaguelypositive thinking that is all thingsto all men. The clear facts aboutM.R.A.—which has no member-ship, organizational structure, norclear doctrine, and which makesno financial declarations— are bigmoney and the character of itshigh-ranking personnel. Typical,as The Nation, (7/31/48) haspointer! out. are Takasumi Mitsuiof Mitsubishi, high Gaullist leaderGen. Pierre de Benouville, and Dienotorious Baron Karwinskv. v hoas State Security Minister, laterMinister of Justice, in AnschlussAustria, murdered the Socialistleaders in 1934.The murky appeal of M R A isthe perennial contentlessne*-^ oftotalitarianism, and its loose endsassume definition. Their trueshape, like that of the Commu¬nist tyrants, is a threat to all of us.Frank L. Coin mlmtj4/iun PHOTOGRAPHERS BORDONE[ Movers and Light HaulingVI 6-9832MIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETALEXANDER SRESTAURANT1137 E. 63 Street MU 4 5735 IMore than just a good place to eatWe cater to parties and banquetsOpen all nightmXWWWNWWWWWWWWNVWWXWXXNWSWWW\ International House MoviesEast Lounge 8:00 p. m.J Monday, May 16—45c—Marrioge of^ Figaro (German)J Thursday, May 19—35c—The Snake Fit> (American)Monday, May 23—45c—Sadko (Russian)Thursday, May 26—35c—Francis (American)Monday, May 30—45c—Titfield Thunderbolt(English)Thursday, June 2—35c—Chaplin Festival B(American) Widely praised . . .THEY THOUGHTTHEY WERE FREEThe Germans: 1933-4 5By Milton MayerHere is the story of Nazi Germonvos it has never been told before —on absorbing account of the driveswhich led ten everyday Germonsinto the Nozi movement.“A fascinating story ond o deeplymoving one. And it is a story thetshould moke people pause ondthink — think not only about theGermons, but also about them¬selves." — Ernest S. Pisko, Chris-tion Science Monitor."A sincere book. While written ino light, conversational style, it isbased on o lot of hard thinking "—Alfred Werner, The New Leader.“A contemporary classic, deserv¬ing the widest possible audience “Sydney J. Horris, Chicago DoilyNews.368 pages $4.75from your bookseller or fro*»The University ofChicago Press5750 Ellis AvenueNO 7-9071Student Rate 50c hyde park theatre lake parkat 53rdSTARTING FRIDAY, MAY 13J. ARTHUR RACK'S presentation ofRENATO CASTELLANTS Venice Film Festival Prizeproduction of U M. SHAKESPEARE'S .“ROMEO and JULIET” LAWRENCE HARVEY as ROMEOSUSAN SHENTALL as JULIETFLORA ROBSON as the NURSEMERVYN JOHNS as FRIAR LAURENCE"335 yeors offer Shakespeare’s death, prise-winning producer RENATO CASTELLANI at lostfound the wit and the way to fulfill Shakespeare's dream 'A kingdom for a stage!' Never hosthe story of the 'star-crossed lovers' of Verono been so splendidly set among the octuolRenaissance remains of Venice, Verono, ond Sicno . . — TIME MAGAZINE."Ravishingly Beautiful"Saturday Review of Literature 'Brilliant, gorgeous and glowing!"— NEW YORK TIMESand —"STRATFORD ADVENTURE" on obsorbing thirty-minute documentary account of how ALECGUINNESS ond the greet English director TYRONE GUTHRlE brought Shakespeare to Strot-ford-on-Avon in Conoda.— ond-and-and-and —MISTER MACOO in“MAGOO’S CHECK-UP” Coming: Alec Guinness in "The Detective'Orson Welles' "Three Cases of Murder'Oscar Homolka as Inspector Hanaud inA. E. W. Mason's "House of the ArrowJulian Duvivier's "Holiday for Henrietta.—May 13/ 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Dorms to print campus paper;group to meet in B*J MondayOn Monday at 3:30 p.m. there will be a formative meetingfor a new campus newspaper in Burton library. Those inter¬ested may contact Don Fisher in room 746 B-J or Lou Lipsitzin room 744.It will originate in the dormitories, and, it is expected, bostaffed by associates as well as campus residents.For several years there ex¬isted a similar type of publica¬tion called College HouseNews, which dealt largely withHie specifics of dormitory life. Itfailed to publish this year due toBETZ JEWELRYUnusual Jewelry Our SpecialtyKxpert Jewelry and Watch RepairN.S.A. Discount to Students1523 E. 53rd PL 2-3038The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 a lack of consistent interest.This new weekly plans to havea different format and more en¬compassing purposes and func¬tions than its predecessor. Ii hopesto give anyone who is interested,the opportunity to use his or hercreativity, according to Lou Lip-sitz.Peterson MovingCr Storage Co.55th & Kills AvenueStorage facilities for a trunk orcarload of household effectsPacking — ShippingLocal or long distance movingRL'Her field 8-11711INTERNATIONAL HOUSEQUARTERLY FORMALtopical Serenade* Friday/ May 20 9:30 a.m. - 1 p.m. ❖Music by Joe Kobatz & his orchestra(formerly Chez Paree) ttAdm. $1.50, couple $3.00 Refreshments fx Inf House hostto 1955 MidwestWUS conferenceThe midwest regional confer¬ence of World University servicewas held last Saturday and Sun¬day at International house, UC’sWUS committee was host to dele¬gates from 17 schools.The conference, a recap of thisyear's WUS fund-raising drive,was moderated by Frank G. Su-lewski, regional secretary ofWUS, assisting as discussionleader.Forty five delegates, all mem¬bers of campus WUS committees,heard talks and discussed prob¬lems encourtered in this year’sWUS drive to raise $450,000 forWorld University Service projectsthroughout the world. The dele¬gates came from colleges in fivestates and represent five coun¬tries besides the United States.Representing UC at the confer¬ence were Chuck Mittman, chair¬man of the drive this year, BohDemery, vice chairman; JohnAvery, treasurer, and RonnieGrossman, publicity chairman.TYPEWRITERSCLEANED ORREPAIREDWrittt*n guarantee onall work for one yearInspector and Estimator on dutyfrom 4 p.m. till 10 p.m.Discount of 15%for all studentsBring your typewriter in forrepair before your final examsbegin.BOURGEAUS’1202 E. 55th St.HY 3-7012 'Most PopularBx’a.nci on Wins national prizewith essay on silverCarol Kasper, student in the biological sciences, has wona contest sponsored by the Reed and Barton manufacturersof sterling silver of Taunton, Mass.Miss Kasper chose her favorite of a number of silver pat¬terns and submitted an essay on the reasons for her choice.The contest was open to college women. Miss Kasper wrotethe essay which was chosenfor the prize out of 5000 en¬tries. Roger Hallowell, presi¬dent of Reed and Barton, present¬ed the award of $500 and a silverbowl to Miss Kasper on campusMonday.Miss Kasper came to UC in 1952after two years of high school inHonolulu, where her father wasstationed in the navy. She receivedher bachelor’s degree last June,has spent the current year in thedivision of biological sciences, andplans to enter the medical schoolof the University of Californianext autumn.ATTENTION:FOREIGN CAR OWNERSWOULD YOU LIKE A EUROPEAN-TRAINEDMECHANIC TO WORK ON YOUR CAR?Any Make of Foreign Car Serviced HereOur Prices Are Low, Our Workmanship Is HighConvenient Budget Terms AvailableSHORE GARAGE2445 E. 75th SO 8-4202 — SO 8-9816; Any Insurance Problems? <► Phone or Write <► Joseph H. Aaron, '27 <►135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060,► Chicago 3, Illinois ‘Iaaxaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa) Phi Sigs holdannual feteOn June 4, Phi Sigma Deltafraternity will hold its 28th an¬nual Strawberry festival, an all-campus open house featuringstrawberries and ice cream as themain refreshments with dancing“under the stars” on the Phi Siglawn.Music will be provided by DickGerwin and his band and “‘carni¬val type” entertainment will bein abundance with Phi Sig mem¬bers running booths, concessionsand surprise attractions, such as a“kissing booth” with campusbelles providing osculation for allwilling males.Fifty cents per person admis¬sion will be charged, with all pro¬ceeds going to ^Ihe University ofChicago Cancer Research associa¬tion.because it'sSomethin? more thanpremium yua/ity... Butfa/ser yuaf/tyfANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC.ST. IOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELESINI and watch tba graot MW TV thaw "DAMON KUNYON THEATRE"—»•* yaar paper far lima and statlaaWherever charcoal fires burn, from V\festernranch to Park Avenue penthouse,Budweiser is there adding the goodtaste and companionshipthat only Budweiser can.Serve Bud at your barbecue. jo milliontimes a dayat home, at workor on the wayThere’s nothing like aPURF ANDWHOLESOME ...Nature’s own flavors.BRIGHT, EVER-FRESHSPARKLE ...distinctive taste.REFRESHESSO QUICKLY...with as few caloriesas half an average,iuicy grapefruit.DRlA ABOTflEO UNOER AUTHORITY O* THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.*Cohr It a ragittorsd trod. mofk. O 1955, THE COCA-COLA COMPANYPage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 13, 1955Calendar of Events • • • Peace group plans conferenceFriday, May 13Walgreen lecture: “Resurgence, 1798-1801,” Professor Smelser, social sci¬ence 122, 4:30 p.m.Physiology seminar: “Some Problems olOld Age,” Dr. Joseph Harold Sheldon,pathology 117, 4 p.m. ,University Theatre production, “TheTrial,” by Kafka, Reynolds club thea¬tre, 8:30 p m., $1 admission.Saturday, May 14UT production, “Tonight at 8:30,” con¬sisting of three one-set plays, Rey¬nolds club theatre, $1 admission, 8:30p.m.Sunday, May 15Episcopal communion service, Bondchapel, 8:30 p.m.Lutheran communion service, Hiltonchapel, 10 a.m.University religious service. ProfessorHartshorne, speaker, Rockefellerchapel. 11 a.m.UT production, “Tonight at 8:30,” threeone-act plays, Reynolds club theatre,8:30 p.m., $1 admission.Movie, “The Razor’s Edge” (American),Judson Lounge, 7 and 9:30 p.m., 25cadmission.SRP caucus, Ida Noyes east lounge,7:30 p.m.Talk, “Religious Experience,” by Sey¬mour Cain, Judson lounge, 1 :j0 p.m.Glee club concert, Rubbra, des Pres andPalestrina compositions, Bond chapel,3 p.m.Humanities 1 Program, WUCB, 640 kc.Poetry assigned for the comprehen¬sive, 3 p.m.Good pasturegetsRicketts prizeErnest W. Goodpasture, profes¬sor of pathology at Vanderbilt uni¬versity and originator of the meth¬od of growing viruses in a fertileegg culture, was awarded UC’sHoward Taylor Ricketts medalMonday.Goodpasture, who pioneeredwork twenty-five years ago onvirus growth paving the way forthe isolation of viruses whichcause diseases such as polip, re¬ceived the medal at the UC medi¬cal center.The Ricketts Medal, honoringthe late UC physician who died oftyphus in May, 1910, is a nationalhonor given by the University inrecognition of outstanding workin medical research.1367 E. 57AllAngelRecordsNow $348In NewSpecial PackageBETTER POINT AVtRACC!Don’t let that "drowsy feel¬ing" cramp your style in class... or when you’re "hittingthe books”. Take a NoDozAwakenei! In a few minutes,you’ll be your normal best...wide awake . . . alert! Youtdoctor will tell you—NoDos^wakeners are safe as coffee.Keep a pack handy!15 TABLETS, 3Sc•Phi-Beta"pack35 tabletsto handy tinMi JP NOQOZa wa KtNERS 1 Glee club supper-meeting, election ofnext year’* steering committee mem¬bers. 6 p.m.Chamber music recital, Ida Noyes li¬brary, 8 p.m.Musical, “The Vanishing Island.” byPeter Howard, Mandel hall, 8:30 p.m.Monday, May 16Movie, “The Marriage of Figaro” (Ger¬man), International house, 8 p.m.,45c admission.Medical students’ forum. Dean L. T.Coggeshall, speaker. Billings M-137,7 p.m.Formative meeting for a dormitorynewspaper, Burton library, 3:30 p.m.Tuesday, May 17Channing lecture: “Identity as Integ¬rity,” Bernard Loomer, speaker.Breasted hall, 8 p.m. Lecture: “The relation of religion to thesocial system,” Raymond Firth, speak¬er. Social science 122, 4:30 p.m.Wednesday, May 18Playwrights Theatre production. “Junoand the Paycock,” by Sean O’Casey,sponsored by the International Rela¬tions club, for the Korean Village,project. Mandel hall. 8:30 p.m.Italian club meeting, comments on “IISignor Bruchino,” by Rossini. Inter¬national house, 7:30 p.m.Thursday, May 19Peace Center meeting, business and dis¬cussion on methods of peace educa¬tion and action in the universitycommunity. Social science 201, 7 p.m.Movie: “The Snakepit” (American), In¬ternational house, 8 p.m., 35c admis¬sion.TERRY’S PIZZAfinest pizzas madeFREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSHALL 1.00MEDIUM 1.45 LARGE 1.05GIANT 2.95 aHe also carry a full line of Italian foods |SPECIAL THIS WEEK — Present this coupon and you 0will receive 35c credit towards any pizz<i eatenat our store.j 1518 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-4045JLHAMILTON THEATRE71 st and PaxtonNow Playing, May 13ROMEO and JULIETWinner of the Parents Magazine Awardfor extraordinary achievementGrand Prize Award of Venice Film FestivalDiscount tickets available at theReynolds Club Desk and theChicago Maroon OfficeAsk lotStyle W-651m sp*c« to your life with a swank variety of mw springand summer skoes to 6t every occasron — everyday,dress-up aed casual.$ attract precious little from your cash reserves! BUYALL THREE STYLES FOR ONLY *23.85*- a price you'dexpect to pay for a single pair! *6.95, *7.95 and *8.95par pair. Ask your dealer for FREE moneyfold IAsk forTHE VERY NEWEST IN YOUNG MEN'S SHOES 1The UC Peace center, a campus group working through the Amer-ican Friends service committee, will meet in social science 201 at 7p.m. Thursday to discuss plans for an inter-school peace conferenceto be held here June 10-12.The meeting is open to any faculty or students interested in helpingto work out final plans for the conference.The business meeting will be followed by discussion of the moth-ods of peace education and action which can be most effective inthe University area.Advertisement — Advertisement — Advertisement — AdvertisementOn Campus withWajtShuJraan(Author of “Barefoot Boy With Cheek," etc.)WHAT EVERY YOUNG COED SHOULD WEARGather round, girls. Snap open a pack of Philip Morris, light up,relax and enjoy that mild fragrant vintage tobacco while Old Dadtells you about the latest campus fashions.The key word this year is casual. Be casual. Be slapdash. Be rakish.Improvise. Invent your own ensembles—like ski pants with a peek-< a-boo blouse, like pajama bottoms with an ermine stole, like a hockysweater with a dirndl.(Dirndl, incidentally, is one of the truly fascinating words in theEnglish language. Etymologists have quarreled over its origin foryears. Some hold with Professor Manley Ek that Dirndl is a corrup¬tion of Dhrdanelle and is so named because it resembles the skirtsworn by the women of that region. This theory is at first glanceplausible, but begins to fall apart when you consider that there areno women in the Dardanelle region because of the loathesome localcustom of female infanticide.)(Another theory is advanced by Dr. Clyde Feh. Dirndl, says he,is a contraction of “dairy in the dell” and refers to the milkmaidishappearance of the skirt. But again close examination causes one toabandon a plausible hypothesis. As every child knows, it is not “dairyin the dell” but “farmer in the dell”, in which case the skirt shouldbe called not dirndl but firndl.(There are some who contend we will never know the true originsof dirndl. To those faint hearted Cassandras I say, remember howeveryone laughed at Edison and Franklin and Fulton and Marconiand Sigafoos. I Sigafoos, in case you have forgotten, invented thenostril, without which breathing, as we know it today, would not bepossible.] The origins of dirndl will be found, say I, and anyonewho believes the contrary is a lily-livered churl and if he’ll stepoutside for a minute, I’ll give him a thrashing he won’t soon forget.)But I digress. We were smoking a Philip Morris and talking aboutthe latest campus styles. Casual, we agree,' is the key word. Butcasual need not mean drab. Liven up your outfits with a touch ofglamor. Even the lowly dungaree and man-shirt combination canbe made exciting if you’ll adorn it with a simple necklace of 120matched diamonds. With Bermuda shorts, wear gold knee-cymbals.Be guided by the famous poet Cosmo Sigafoos (whose brother Sainit was who invented the nostril) who wrote:Sparkle, my beauty,Shimmer and shine,The night is young,The air’s like wine,Cling to a leaf,Hang on a vine,Crawl on your belly,11’8 time to dine.(Mr. Sigafoos, it should be explained, was writing about a glow¬worm. Insects, as everyone knows, are among Mr. Sigafoos’ favoritesubjects for poems. Who can ever forget his immortal Ode to a RollWeevil? Or his Tumbling Along With the Tumbling Tumblebug?Or his Fly Gently, Sweet Aphid? Mr. Sigafoos has been inactivesince the invention of DDT.)But 1 digress. We were smoking a Philip Morris and discussingfashions. Let us turn now to headwear. The motif in hats this yearwill be familiar American scenes. There will be models to fit everyhead — for example, the “Empire State Building” for tall thin heads;the “Jefferson Memorial” for squatty ones; “Niagara Falls” for dryscalps. Feature of the collection is the “Statue of Liberty,” completewith a torch that actually burns. This is very handy for lightingyour Philip Morrises, which is very important because no matterhow good Philip Morrises are, they’re nowhere unless you light them.We come now to the highlight of this year’s fashion parade — a madfad that’s sweeping the chic set at high tone campuses all over thecountry. All the gals who are in the van, in the swim, and in theknow are doing it. Doing what, you ask? Getting tattooed, of course!You just don’t rate these days unless you’ve got at least an anchoron your biceps. If you really want to be the envy of the campus, getyourself a four masted schooner, or a heart with FATHER printedinside of it, or a—I interrupt this column to bring you a special announcement. Arunner has just handed me the following bulletin:“The origin of the word dirndl has at long last been discovered.On June 27, 1846, Dusty Schwartz, the famous scout and Indianfighter, went into the Golden Nugget Saloon in Cheyenne, Wyoming.The Golden Nugget had just imported a new entertainer from theEast. She came out and did her dance in pink tights. Dusty Schwartzhad never seen anything like that in his life, and he was muchimpressed. He watched with keen interest as she did her numbers,and he thought about her all the way home. When he got home, hiswife Feldspar was waiting.to show him a new skirt she had madefor herself. ‘How do you like my new skirt, Dusty?’ said Feldspar.He looked at the large voluminous garment, then thought of thepink tights on the dancing girl. ‘Your skirt is darn dull,* said Dusty.‘Darn dull’ was later shortened to ‘dirndl’ which is how dirndlsgot their name.” ©M„ 8huim.n, rr<This column is brought to you by the makers of PHILIP MORRISwho think you would enjoy their cigarette.May 13# 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pase 7Entrance awards to be madeDean Robert M. Strozier will present awards and scholarshipsto Chicago high school students next Thursday at 2 p.m. inMandel hall.The scholarships are awarded on the basis of competitiveexaminations which the prospective entrants took earlier thisyear.Robert E. Streeter, dean of the college, will speak for the col¬lege. Wendell R. Harrison, UC vice-president, will speak for theUniversity, and Thaddeus Lubera, assistant superintendant ofschools, will respond in behalf of the Chicago public schools.Why do morecollege men andwomen smokeVICEROYSthan any otherfilter cigarette?BECAUSE ONLY VICEROY GIVESYOU A PURE, NON-MINERAL,NON-TOXIC FILTER WITH20,000 FILTER TRAPSIN EVERY FILTER TIP!IYes, only Viceroy has this filter composed of 20,000• tiny filter traps. You cannot obtain the same filteringaction in any other cigarette.2Besides being non-mineral and non-toxic, this cellu-• lose-acetate filter never shreds or crumbles.3The Viceroy filter wasn’t just whipped up and rushed• to market to meet the new and skyrocketing demandfor filtered cigarettes. Viceroy pioneered. Startedresearch more them 20 years ago to create the pureand perfect filter.4Smokers en masse report that filtered Viceroys have9 a finer flavor even than cigarettes without filters.Rich, satisfying, yet pleasantly mild.5Viceroy draws so easily that you wouldn’t know,• without looking, that it even had a filter tip . . . andViceroys cost only a penny or two more than ciga¬rettes without filters!That’s why more college men and women smoke VICEROYSthan any other filter cigarette ... that’s why VICEROY is thelargest-selling filter cigarette in the world!20,000 TINYFILTER TRAPS i..plus Richer, Smoother Flavor Republicans, Federalists clashedon opinion of British and FrenchBitter disputes took place between pro-British and pro-French factions in the United Statesat the time of the French revolution, according to Charles R. Walgreen Foundation lecturerMarshall Smelser, who spoke at UC last week. Smelser is an historian at the University ofNotre Dame. 'Pro-French elements fol¬lowed Thomas Jefferson; pro-British elements took the leadof Hamilton and John Adams. A of John Adams.Much of the excitement wasdeliberately contrived, accordingto Smelser’s analysis.. But he de¬ scribed the United States in 1798as “a scene of fear and hate,warmed by seven or eight yearsof heating.”follower of Jefferson, James Mon¬roe, considered John Jay’s treatysmoothing relations betweenBritain and the ^nited States atreaty of appeasement.French efforts to arouse Amer¬ican sympathies only worked tostrengthen the antagonism, saidSmelser; rough British handlingof American shipping furthercontributed to it.The anti-British faction wentso far, according to Smelser, toemploy deliberate non-Britishspellings of common words. The"our” of "honour” was changedto "or,” and the "k” dropped from"publick.”Republicans sharply criticizedHamilton’s management of gov¬ernment financing and pointed tothe large profits which Britishfirms realized from United Statesgovernment securities. Somecharged that the Federalist pressreceived subsidization from GreatBritain.Smelser asserted that Federal¬ists retaliated by labeling theiropponents as Jacobins, makinga move to associate the Repub¬licans with the extreme left winggroup dominating the most radi¬cal stages of the French revolu¬tion. This attitude affected evenconsideration of the merits of themetric system of measurement,when a Federalist Congress in1795 refused its adoption.Smelser credits some justice toaccusations that the French weretrying to swing the 1796 presiden¬tial election to- Jefferson instead International house life is fun,but not for fish in the fountainFor a fish, life in the International house fountain can befatal.This fact dealt a crushing blow to a “fish-in-the-fountain”crusade initiated recently by Michael Pitman, resident ofInt house.Feeling that fish in the gurgling fountain would brightenthe spring scene of the Inthouse courtyard, Pitmanbrought his crusade to the edi¬tors of the Int house Compass.The editors of the Compass toldPitman that his proposal wouldhave to “go through appropriatechannels.”Pitman took his plan then toA. W. Skardon, activities directorof Int house. Skardon repliedwith the following letter, whichwas then printed in the Compass:“I am writing in regard to yoursuggestion that we have fish inthe fountain. This has been triedseveral times, but the fish havedied quite quickly due to the factthat they are overfed by peopleand also that many of the curioustried to pull them out by theirtails. If you can think of any waythat we can protect the fish fromthe unwanted attentions of hu¬man beings, perhaps this planmight be practical; otherwise I rather doubt whether we couldmake it work.Sincerely,A. W. Skardon, Jr.Activities director.”Don't burn books;SC book servicewill do it for youStudents who don’t wish to burntheir books after comprehensiveexaminations will be able to takethem to the student governmentbook exchange in the Reynoldsclub basement.The exchange will remain openfrom 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. andfrom 3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mon¬day through Friday until the endof the quarter.Students set their own prices,which are automatically dimin¬ished 25 per cent after six months,50 per cent after nine months, and75 per cent after one year, if thebook remains unsold.Morning,^jLMlMl]Q^and EveningFrom May 15th to September 15th oursummer hours will be in effectOpen daily from 9 A.M. to 1 P.M.and from 6 P.M. to MidnightSunday hours remain unchanged:2 P.M. to 10 P.M.SCHNEEMANN’SRED DOOR BOOK SHOP1328 E. 57th StreetNOrmal 7-6111Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 13, 1955i- Review to appear^in sunburstclee c,ub to g,ve conce,tJl Jl . Religious music of the 15th to the 20th century will ring out in BonChicago Review’s summer issue goes on sale Monday. A baroque sunburst against abronze background, done by Roy Foster of the art history department, illustrates the coverof the magazine. . \ r~Featuring many contribu- A new section on science is be- Moran, and Reed Whittemore, alltions from UC students, the ing instituted with the forthcom- newly published writers. Whitte-Ik 2 — .. . . U/% O t oil lrk_ I T”» cf ieciio Hno nf tViP IpadinfT fll’. »_ iReview may be obtained at alt lo¬cal bookstores and newsdealers aswell as from student staff mem¬bers of the magazine.... .. ..A section head from the new‘Review.’Playwrights giyeMandel benefitfor refugeesThe first professional produc¬tion of Sean O’Casey’s Juno andthe Pay cock since 1935 will be per¬formed at Mandel hall Wednesdayby Playwrights Theatre club.This family tragicomedy ofpost-revolutionary Ireland will begiven as a benefit for the CARE-operated adoption of a Koreanrefugee village sponsored by theHyde Park community and theUC international relations club.Tickets for the production areavailable at the Student Ticketagencv and International house. ing issue. One of the leading ar¬ticles in this field was written bystudent Don Chapp and is en¬titled: “Ecology—a science goingto waste.”Van Doren contributesA major prose contribution isan essay on the British writer.Charles Williams, by another stu¬dent. James Redfield. Redfieldtries to show the influence of thislittle-known novelist on contem¬porary writing.Mark Van Doren, poet and edi¬tor. has contributed an unusualshort story. “The Diary,” whichwill probably cause a good deal ofcontroversy as to its merits. Read¬ers of it will have the opportunityof comparing it with the work ofa younger writer. Maurice Baudin,Jr., who has written a satire en¬titled “And Gladly MemphisBound.”Campus names are prominentin the Review’s book review sec¬tion, where many faculty mem¬bers and students have contribut¬ed reviews. Albert M. Hayes is aprofessor in the college, whileJames Finn and Virginia WalcottBeauchamp are both graduate stu¬dents and college instructors. Stu¬dent contributions include RobertRoth's impression of TennesseeWilliams’ short story collection,One Arm, and John Dawkins com¬ments on a comprehensive workabout The Twenties by FrederickJ. Hoffman.Cummings contributesPoets published in this issueinclude three notables: E. E. Cum¬mings (or, more properly, e. e.cummings), Babette Deutseh andAlfred Kreymborg. All have beenwidely publisher and included innumerous anthologies. Cummings’Collected Poems (1923-1954) re¬cently won a special national bookaward. Other poets representedare student Paul Carroll, with “LePoete Allonge”; Lori Petri, Moore more’s humorous poem is titled“Abbreviated Interviews with afew Disgruntled Literary Celeb¬rities.” A fragment of a largerpoem, “Lot in Grief,” serves to in¬troduce the talents of Henry Birn-baum. Religious music of the 15th to the 20th century will ring out in Bondchapel Sunday at 3 p.m. UC’s Glee Club under the direction of PeterGram Swing expects a large turnout at the free affair which willfeature Stabat Mater Dolorosa by Josquin DesPres as its first num¬ber. This 15th century piece is a four-part chorus, eantus firmus to beplayed on the baroque organ.Stepping into the 16th century, the group will then sing GiovanniPierluigi de Palestrina’s Missa Papae Marcelli, which is sung in sixparts, unaccompanied.The 20th century wrill be represented by a piece which was givenits Chicago premiere by the Glee club last April, Edmund Rubbra'sMissa in honorein Saudi Dominici, Op. 66.Trombonist blasts impressivelyA solo trombone in a concert hall is not a usual occurrence, and one might well he per¬plexed as to what standards to apply to Davis Shuman’s recital last Friday. Not only is Shu¬man a concert trombonist, but he even plays a special instrument of his own invention, pre¬senting the startling aspect of a slide set at a rakish angle, which, I am told, makes a greaterreach possible.The event promised lo he sive. it becomes a highly effec¬tive work.Leonid Hambro, t h e‘pianist,functioned excellently as an ac¬companist; however his solosseemed hampered by extremeeducational, however, *and sincethis artist probably plays thetrombone as well as anyone, itproved to be highly interesting.The main trouble was that theprogram contained little trombonemusic, of which, it is true, onew'ould expect to find somethinglike a dearth.A Bach aria on a trombone isactually an interesting idea, andsounded better than one wouldexpect, adding the unexpectedpleasure of hearing Sheppard Len-hoff’s viola playing Bcehoven’sHorn Sonata, which, however,sounds much better on a Frenchhorn. The smaller pieces were nottranscriptions, it is true, but nei¬ther were they of much quality,and the trombone and piano blend¬ed very poorly.Hindemith well playedHindemith’s Sonata for Trom¬bone, although not one of his bestw'orks, gave one the pleasant ex¬perience of observing the instru¬ment’s possibilities after a gooddemonstration of its limitations.Hindemith exploits, instead offighting, the niceties of intona¬tion; fast passages, which are ex¬tremely disagreeable in a lowregister, are always kept fairlyhigh, and with a soloist as fine asShuman, whose tone, techniqueand control are equally impres- Saint-Saens’ “Cavatine,” playedas an encore instead of as sched¬uled, is certainly an extremelyamusing piece, whether or not itwas so intended. . . . But, however as to the other encores, thenervousness, in spite of his con- artists seemed a little more eagersiderable facility and sensitive to play them than the audience tostyle. This was certainly the only hear them, which is always unfor-reason for some mishaps in the tunate.Scarlatti sonatas, and probably Still one must admit that audialso accounted for a rather mech- ence reaction was much more a pa -anical run-through of Mozart’s thetic than the concert deserved.Fantasia in C minor. —Robert BlochTHE COLLEGIATE SINFONIETTAIHelor Kolier, cinuluctorConcert inTHE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGOwithRAY STILL, oboe JACK HANSEN, pianoConcerto Grosso in A Minor, Op. 6, No. 4. .G. F. HandelConcertino in G Major, No. 2 Giovanni PergolesiConcerto in D Minor,for Oboe and Strings Antonio VivaldiCapriol Suite Peter WarlockConcerto in G Major, No. 2for Piano and Orchestra Joseph Haydn4 P.M.—Sunday, May 22, 1955—Fullerton HallAil mission $1.00 Sludenl Admission 5©rStudent Service Center By Mail or PhoneReynolds Club 7647 S. East End Ave.University of Chicago SO 8-2680 and BU 8-3468You finally meet the campusqueen—on graduation day!For more pure pleasure...No other cigarette is so rich-tastingm jjgh jffc. V P'S’ No ot^er kran<* ^as ever been °k*e matct> *be pure pleasure in Camel's exclusive■tin I fid m blend of costly tobaccos — one of the reasons why Camels are America's most popular cigarette!^ U. J. UovnolJ* Toiuoco C«., WlmKxiSaleoo, W. 0.\M»y 13, »«5 TNK CHICAGO MAROON F>9« 9'Children of Hiroshima' getsfirst American showing at UCMIf I were the world’s dictator, I would make this film a compulsory piece of education... for the whole human race”. These were the words with which the Manchester Guard¬ian Weekly described the Japanese film, Children of Hiroshima. icnesiei uuaraT-his film, which tells the story of Hiroshima eight or nine years after the dropping of theA - bomb, will have its firstUT sponsors summer theatrefeaturing works of MoliereUC s Hutchinson court will be the scene this summer for anoutdoor theater featuring the plays of Moliere.Called the University of Chicago Summer Drama festival,American public showings atUC May 31 and June 1, at 7:15and 9:15 p.m. in social science 122.Children of Hiroshima has notbeen shown commercially in theUnited States and Great Britain.British critics went to Paris to re¬view the film. It has, however,been shown at the House of Com¬mons in private.The film is being brought to UC University Theatre. UT is atby the Documentary Film group present extending an open in- musicians. Meyerand the UC Peace center, a cam¬pus group working through theAmerican Friends service com- the outdoor theater season will be under the sponsorship of f*nting work of student au-it-: mi a.. . • r r thrvrc ann mrpcfnrc: Sktnrnav and3 nights of playsleft for weekendThree nights of theatre remain to be given by UT in theReynolds’ club theater this weekend.A stage adaptation of Kafka’sThe Trial will be presented for thelast time in the University Thea¬tre this evening at 8:30. Theadaptation has been made by pro¬fessor Roland Rude of Northwest¬ern university who has broughthis student cast to the UC cam¬pus for the premier production.The UC experimental theatregroup, "Tonight at 8:30," has beenrevived for the purpose of pre-mittee. «*Through the eyes and experi¬ences of a young school-teacher,Children of Hiroshima portrays acily where time can blur the mem¬ory of the A-bomb but not eraseits effects upon the people—thesterile young couple, the blind¬ness of an old man."What the film implies,” theManchester Guardian Weeklystated, “is that there is no joy anymore in a new life, no joy andfaith in reconstruction, no sugges¬tion of ‘let t lie dead bury the dead’- for everybody is partly dead.” Braiterroan,vitation to "actors, technicians, technical director, seeks personsmusicians, writers, translators, interested in learning the techni-and people interested in the thea- cal aspects of theatre. Actors, withter” to participate in the festival.Marvin Phillips, director of thenewly formed summer theater,announced that short interviewsand tryouts will be held for fivedays, May 23-27, in the ReynoldsClub theatre. Because of examina¬tion schedules, the interviews willbe held from 3-5 in the afternoonsor by telephone appointment.Students, faculty and Universityemployees are eligible. The try¬outs will determine a theatre com¬pany from which the individualshows will be cast. Leo Trietler,musical director, is searching for or without experience, are wel¬come to join.Postpone showWays of Love, the film trilogywhich contains the controversial"The Miracle,” will not be shownat UC again until fall.When over a hundred wereturned away from last week’scrowded showing of the film. Doc¬umentary Film group stated thatthe film might be shown againsoon. It was then discovered thatbooking difficulties make immedi¬ate rescheduling impossible.Broonzy outstanding in concertThe largest folk music show of the season took the boards at Mandel hall Saturday eve¬ning before a near capacity crowd. The performers were Gerri Armstrong, guitarist andEnglish balladeer; Fleming Brown, five-string banjoist, mountain style; Ella Jenkins, withAfro-Cuban songs which she accompanied on a conga drum; and, finally, the well known BigBill Broozny and his blues.This motley crowd was su¬perintended by Studs Terkel, whoproduces the WFMT folk musicshow Almanac.If nothing else, the show dem¬onstrated the inadvisability of put¬ting amateurs on the same stagewith professionals. The virtueswhich are enthusiastically re¬ceived when an amateur performsat a party suddenly pale into noth¬ingness when placed beside thereal thing. The amateurs were thefirst three mentioned, and the pro¬fessional was, of course, Big Bill.Miss Armstrong had a wonder¬fully clear sweet voice, but on theguitar she is a complete novice,erring frequently even in the sim¬ple chord sequences that sheplayed.Brown has apparently masteredboth sides of the Seeger instruc¬tion record, but the only discern¬ible quality in his voice was gruff¬ness. The passionate stomping,body wiggling, and eye closingthat accompanied his songs sug¬ gested that a great deal more washappening than appeared to bethe case. The only memorablenumber on his program was ahumorous song called the "Buf¬falo Boy” in which he discardedhis unseemly intensity.Miss Jenkins was a completelycharming person who can reallyplay that drum. Her difficulty,however, was that common to theothers. She simply did not havethe personality, the perfect confi¬dence, that marks a professional. will the sponsors of folk musicrealize this?—Roger Bowen thors and directors. Saturday andSunday evening, this group willproduce three one-act plays —“Chee-Chee,” by Noble prize win¬ner Luigi Pirandello, "BedtimeStory,” by Sean O’Casey, and anoriginal scenario for improvisa¬tion, Enterprise, by UC studentRoger Bowen.Dave Shepherd directs"Chee-Chee,” one of the mostpopular one-act plays by Piran¬dello, will be directed by Hall Tay¬lor. The O'Casey play will be pro¬duced by Andrew Duncan, and"Enterprise” will be directed byDavid Shepherd, the producer ofthe Playwrights’ Theatre club.Tickets are still available forthe performance tonight and forthe UT productions on the follow¬ing two evenings. Seats are $1,both shows for $1.50, all perform¬ances beginning at 8:30 in thethird floor Reynolds club theater.Shepherd’s experiment followsa plan for an improvisationaltheater that he has long hoped tocreate. The function of the authorand the actors in this type of playis changed radically from that ofconventional productions. The act¬ors are provided with the lines ofa simple plot and equipped withcharacters and motivations. From Different ploy, but the someoctors ploying the some type ofroles. . . . Leo Stodolsky (I.) ondNed Goylin <r.) pictured obove inthe recent UT production of Wil¬liam Inge's To Bobolink for HerSpirit ploy similar youthful roles inthis weekend's UT performancesof Roger Bowen's Enterprise.this point on, through pantomimeand through words that theythemselves invent, the story istold and the characters revealedupon the stage.'Vanishing Island' successful musical,reminiscent of old 'miracle' playsThe Vanishing Island, a new play in an old tradition, played to an audience of 850 inMandel hall Wednesday. , 0 A„ This Gilbert-Sullivan-like musical, brought to campus by members of the Moial ReAima-Broonzy, on the other hand, nient movement, is an experience that one rarely gets in these days of plays of psyche, sex,completely at his ease, carried thepersonalities of the others withhim.Terkel’s introductions to thesongs were usually pointless. Heemployed the manner of a nightclub MC without the liberties towhich an MC is entitled. His re¬marks had all the charm, grace,and understanding of a TonyWeitzel column.Broonzy himself is quite capa¬ble of providing an evening’s en¬tertainment by himself. When and sensuality. Conceived inthe tradition of the old miracle The first act ends when Capri¬corn, king of Eiluph’mei, abdi¬cates, cinging about a "new typeof man,” who has the virtues of“honesty, puriVy, unselfishness,and love.”Begin witch-huntIn the second act, an Eiluph’meidelegation arrives at Weiheit’tiu,but the lack of understanding be¬tween the two ideologies is sogreat, that communication is im¬possible.A witch-hunt begins on Eiluph’-plays, it attempts to portray notan insight, but an idea; not acriticism, but a criterion.Its intention is to provide anidea of a better way of life, andits music, lines, and setting areadmirably combined for this pur¬pose.The plot centers around the ac¬tions of the inhabitants of twoallegorical islands, Eiluph’mei(pronounced I Love Me), whichrepresents the indulgent, material,complacent nature of man, andWeiheit’tiu (pronounced We HateYou), which represents the fierce,intense, totalitarian, and hatred-filled side of man. When Odioso,ambassador of Weheit’tiu, de¬mands Eiluph’mei share its wealth will present two other plays mei for the one responsible for thecurse. Ex-king Capricorn blameshis indulgence and complacencyas king. With a beautifully exe¬cuted stage effect, the island dis¬appears into the sea. When theex-king persuades his people thatall will yet be well if they willchange their ways, and adopt thecharacter of his "npto type ofman” the curse is lifted. The Wei-heit’tiuans, as well as the Eiluph’-meiuans agree to Capricorn sSee ‘Vanishing Island,’ page 10MR A to close UC runPreceding the final performance on Sunday evening of themusical drama, The Vanishing Island, Moral Re-Armamentwith his island and the inhabitantsof Eiluph’mei refuse, Odioso putsa vanishing curse on Eiluph’mei.HAIR CONTROL69c a tuba Is your hair ah asset, ordoes it have that greasy,patent-leather look?This product will keep your hairpleasingly neat and attractive.It's not greasy, contains noalcohol, no oils, no coloring.THE HOUSE W MEhU, IMC.\A(«n's Pin. H5 COMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.• Bar-be-cue ribs• Bar-be-cue chickenDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525 by Peter Howard in Mandelhall.The Dictator’s Slippers will begiven tonight at 8:30; We Are To¬morrow will be presented tomor¬row night at 8:30. Admission toboth performances is free; ticketsmay be reserved at the Reynoldsclub desk.The Dictator’s Slipper’s set inthe heart of a totalitarian regimein the office of Ihe Minister of theInterior and the Chief of Police,describes the struggle betweenLouise Barkerphotogropher“who capturesyourpersonalityas well asyour person”1457 E. 57th St.BU 8 0876 forces attempting to assume thepower of a dyiflg dictator.We Are Tomorrow projects theaudience 25 years into the futureas it dramatizes the currents oflife in a modern university andtheir relation to students’ ideologi¬cal struggle. Two college servants,one named Hope and the otherMemory, are continuing links inthis portrayal of two succeedinggenerations of university stu¬dents.These plays, presented by MoralReArmament, are among those ofPeter Howard now being producedaround the world by 26 casts in8 different languages.Following the performanceshere, The Vanishing Island willgo on a tour of the major capital*of Asia and the Middle East.SINCE 1940oP*9« 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON May II, 1*55Classified AdsWantedKudrnts to take Spanish I this summer.Sign up now. Registration starts thisMonday.Will buy used woman’s bicycle or rentlor the summer. DR 3-0961, evenings.Girt to share 6V2 room apt., own room,private bath, kitchen privileges. NearI.C. and lake. $35 a month. Call HY3-6940.Wanted: Ten copies of the Chicago Re¬view. Special Issue on ContemporaryAmerican Culture, 1954. Urgently needed.Will pay 50c a copy. Contact ChicagoReview Office.Clerk-Typist. Experienced girl. Age 19-£6. S-day week. Good salary and insur¬ance plan. BU 8-6668.Resident baby-sitter. Private room andbath. Breakfast In exchange for 3 eve¬nings per week. DO 3-0478 after 6.Driving to New Mexico via Dallas. Texas,•bout June 10. Share expenses. PL 2-1034.Driving to Dallas, San Antonio. Hous¬ton. Leaving June 2. Call Ext. 1281.Secretarial position available. Hlllelfoundation. Full time. For Interview•all PL 2-1127. Mon.-Frl.Wanted, five men, 20-30, car necessary,to earn $36 per week for 18 hours work.Call BA 1-3922 between 5:30 and 7:30.Monday through Friday.Wanted: A ride to Philadelphia aroundJune 18th. Will share expenses. Please©all Green 43.PersonalQuads meeting Sunday at 6 p.m IdaNoyes. Bring fountain pens.“Forgotten Americans,” an account ofthe American Indian. May 18, 8 p.m.Ida Noyes, YSL, 25c admission.What hard-thinking, light-hitting, rightfielder is soon to be released to Uni¬versity High of the PSL? To sunblet 4-room apartment, $80 amonth, 51st and Ellis. Call DR 3-0158.Kitchenette with refrigerator, ideal for1 or 2, clean, convenient. 6055 S. Dor¬chester, MI 3-9372, Nltta.Spacious 6-room furnished apartment.Front balcony and back porch. In frontof Woodlawn hall. Phone PL 3-3720.Evenings.LostGray alligator rain coat with Initials“EM" on inside back lining. Please callEarl Medllnsky. MI 3-6000.Woman’s Wittnauer sports watch.Square gold with black suede band.Lost near 57th between UC and LakePark, Sunday. Libera—Ext. 1028. Reward.Phi Delta Theta pin, near Universityand 55th-58th. Inscribed C. Wright,Wash. Gamma. Call MI 3-0905.For SaleSiamese kittens for sale. $10. TelephoneFA 4-3041.Singer portable machines $25 and up.DO 3-1937.1942 Plymouth. 4-door. $60. PL 2-8933.Car radio, heater, mounted spare, tools.Must be sold this month. Int. house,Room 266.Beds, kitchen table, refrigerator, otheritems. Reasonable. Call Eve Bonne. Ex¬tension 2710, or leave message.Man’s English Raleigh bicycle, In goodcondition, $30. Call NO 7-4580, after6 p.m.ServicesGirl, college graduate, desires part-timework, store or office. MU 4-0262.Intensive Russian course. Late June toearly September. Three 2-hour sessionsper week. 7-9 p.m. First session free.Call DO 3-7641 for Information. 'Vanishing Island'...(from page 8)plan, and the curtain falls on bothpeople determined to unite in anattempt to change their ways andwork together for a better world.The acting in The Vanishing and an extremely competent per¬formance of a type of play which,while not new, has certainly notbeen seen so well done in a longtime.—Robert Adams Moody Hohler speaksFred Hohler, former safety di¬rector of Cincinnati and formerdirector of displaced persons forthe United Nations relief and re¬habilitation association will speakThursday at International houseat 8 p.m.Sinfonietta derecognized ...Island was generally superior, aswas to be expected from the cali¬bre of the actors, many of thembeing professionals that had do¬nated their time. One was particu¬larly impressed by the acting ofthe two principals, Ivan Menziesof the D’Oyly Carte Opera com¬pany, as King Capricorn, and Ice¬land Holland, ex-airplane me¬chanic, who sang the role of Odi-oso with great verve and skill.Songs delightfulThe lighting and staging leftlittle to be desired, and the musicwas excellent, being well-matedwith the lyrics and adequatelyperformed.The plot, to be sure, was rathertrivial, but this was to be expect¬ed, as the portrayal of ideas andideology was all-important andthe action but of secondary in¬terest.The lines were extremely clever,and the gentle sarcasm of someof the songs, which poked fun attraits of all of us, was delightful.The medium of the stage ap¬peared at times almost too trivialfor the scope of the ideas ex¬pressed. By and large, however,The Vanishing Island was a suc¬cessful expression of these ideas, (from page 1)scheduled an off-campus concertat the Art institute for May 22,it was, like other UC groups, ac¬corded a special non-union statusbu the Musician’s union. Notingthe number of professionals to beused in this off-campus presenta¬tion, the University felt that theuse of the University’s namemight jeopardize the non-unionstanding of other campus musicalgroups.“Considering its composition,the Sinfonietta is not in the spiritof a student organization.” statedArthur Kiendi, student activitiesdirector.Two conditions were specifiedby Strozier for the group’s re-in¬statement as a student organiza¬tion: Kober must resign as thegroup’s director, although hemight be permitted to appear oc¬casionally as guest conductor;and the composition of the organ¬ization must be 100 per cent stu¬dents, although non-studentsmight perform occasionally.“Under these conditions,” Ko¬ber stated, “we might be back of¬ ficially on campus, but we couldnever maintain our present levelof quality. . . . Even if the com¬position of the Sinfonietta in thepast has been only 50 per centstudents, the Sinfonietta has giventhese students rare musical oppor¬tunities to play with profes¬sionals.”Under its present status, theSinfonietta is not permitted to useany of the University’s publicityfacilities. Kober said that this is“unfair . . . after the Sinfonietta *service to the campus.”The Sinfonietta was begun in1952 as aq. outgrowth of the UCsymphony orchestra.Turnouts for the free perform¬ances the Sinfonietta has given atUC in the past have been 500 ormore, usually packing the mainfloor of Mandel hall.The Sinfonietta will present itsfifth concert of the season May 22at Fullerton hall of the Art insti¬tute. Featured will be the firstChicago performance of Haydn'ssecond piano concerto and a per¬formance of Vivaldi’s oboe con¬certo in D minor.What famous 3rd basemen eloped to¬day? Baseball’s autographed .“Red" tofirst ten correct answers.Big rally tonight, 8 p.m., on the Midway. Moral Disarmament.For RentRooms for rent for summer. $25 amonth. Phi Gamma Delta, 5615 Uni¬versity.Sublease 5 rooms, fully furnished. FromJune 25-Sept. 10. Close to UC and IC.MI 3-1535.Rooms for rent. $22-$35 per month.6200 Woodlawn. Cooking facilities avail¬able. Call PL 2-9081.Summer cottage, modern, lake front¬age. boating, swimming, fishing. PatHanson MI 3-0800, Ext. 3275.Two blocks from campus. Bedroom-sit¬ting room. Kitchen privileges, veryreasonable. HY 3-8460.Furnished apartment. Sublet 3 monthsor 15 months, beginning June 15. Sixrooms. Near campus. $120. HY 3-3087.Bedroom apt., $69 month. Free gas,light, parking. Mr. Sullivan, 957 E. 54thPI.. DO 3-3090.IDEAS VS.No. 14McCA^THYISMMAO TSE-TUNG'S SELECTEDWORKS, Vol. II. Just oft the press,the second of five volumes A thewritings of the foremost leaderof the Chinese Revolution. (Inti.,$7.50 i.A' arable from Modern Book¬store, 64 W. Randolph, Chicago.Se' J funds to continue andspread these ads to J. Higqins,c/o Modern Bookstore.ah:CYCLE SHOPYour BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we sellRepa;rs Gr Parts all makes819 it. 55 Ml 3-26729 A M. - 6 P.M.I For a JOB with a FUTURERVell-eJurateJ, alert, ambitious girls who sup¬plement their college education with Gibb:;ecretarial training are preferred candidate.,tor responsible joba in every field. Writere Dean for Gibbs Girls at Work.Court, far dlaae WoaMKATHARINE PTpijSfC0fT4RiAL (J 1 D E•ooton 16, 21 St Mow York 17. 230 Pork Am.•awklwc. 6, ISS Arst.lt St Kwitel.tr, It I , 33 Pt»moat*i St. What young people are doing at General ElectricYoung scientistworks on new waysto handle “hot"radioactive fuelWhenever uranium is “burned” in an atomicreactor, certain valuable elements such asplutonium are left behind in the “ash.”These products are highly radioactive, butthey must be recovered because of their greatvalue to the atomic energy program.This is the job of 31-year-old H. WardAlter, Supervisor of the Separations Chem¬istry Unit at the AEC’s Knolls Atomic PowerLaboratory, which General Electric operatesin Schenectady, N. Y.Alter's Work Is Vital, ImportantAlter is doing his job well. He has alreadyreceived the Coffin Aw'ard, General Electric’shighest honor, for developing an apparatusthat makes possible faster, safer, and moreefficient recovery of the valuable elements inthe “ash.”The work done by Alter and his grouphelps lower costs, increase efficiency and ex¬pand our knowledge of the chemical process¬ing of spent radioactive fuels.25,000 College Graduates at General ElectricWhen Alter came to General Electric in1948, he already knew the work he wantedto do. Like each of the 25,000 college-gradu¬ate employees, he was given his chance togrow and realize his full potential. For Gen¬eral Electric has long believed this: Whenfresh young minds are given freedom tomake progress, everybody benefits —theindividual, the company, and the country. H. WARD ALTER joined G.E. in 1948at Knolls Atomic Power Laboratoryafter receiving a B.A. in 1943 andPh.D. in Chemistry in 1948 at U. ofCalifornia. He served with the Man¬hattan Project at Oak Ridge, 1944-46.May 13, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page IITrack team, club split Nine take threeby John SpauldingRepresentatives of the Maroonin track put in a busy schedulelast week, balancing a victoryover Bradley on Wednesdayagainst a loss to powerful Illinoisnn Friday. The Bradley encounterwas in regular varsity competitionwhile the Illinois meet was UCTrack club competition.The Bradley victory was a wellrounded team effort with the op¬position winning only four con¬tests, three of them field events.Chicago was outscored in thefield 30 to 24 with Joe Howard’s47 .3" shot put, Mitch Watkins 21'712" broad jump, and Paul Bap¬tist’s 11' pole vault representingthree victories and the majorshare of points keeping the Ma¬roon in the running. Bradley, how¬ever, matched the Maroon’s threefield victories and also earnedfour second places against twofor Chicago.On the track it was a differentstory as Chicago won every run¬ning event except the 440, whichBradley’s Jim Wallace won in: 19.7. Frank Loomos led the Ma¬roon scorers in winning the 100-yard dash and both hurdle events.Jim Brown won the 220-yardC CelebrationRumors about the nature of theOrder of the C plan to be an¬nounced at the June 2 anniversarybanquet were squelched Wednes¬day as Frank Whiting, presidentof the Order of the C, said that themily announcement to be stressedthere would be the plan to set upa fund to help worthy undergrad¬uate students who need help andare interested in athletics.Howard Mort, secretary of theAlumni association, commentedthat the dinner is expected to bemore important than usual sinceit celebrates the,50th reunion offive championship teams of 1905.Amos Alonzo Stagg has this yearaccepted the invitation to attendthe banquet.The Order of the C, the varsitylettermen’s organization, last yearhad announced the formation of afund, but insufficient funds werereceived this year to put it intoeffect. dash, which was run around oneturn, in :22.7, while in the 880Tinkie Heyns outsprinted CarlRamsay to win by just one tenthof a second in 2:02.3. Art Omo-hundro took charge of the mileand won in 4:34.3 while Jim Flynnmade a 10:24 clocking in the two-mile do for a victory in that event.Chicago ended the day with avictory in the mile relay as theSportsCalendarFriday: Golf, IntercollegiateGolf Championships, Long-wood Course, 3:30Tennis, Western Michigan.Varsity Courts, 1:30Track. Wabash, Stagg Field,1:30Saturday: Baseball, Illinois atNavy Pier, Stagg Field,2:00JV Baseball, Luther South,North Field, 10:00 a.m.This new AIR-FLITE willlast longer than any otherhigh-compression ball ever made!No other high-compression ball can resist scuffing likethe new DURA-THIN* covered AIR-FLITE.® This ex¬clusive Spalding cover adheres to the ball with a newstrength to defy cutting up ... even on high-iron andexplosion shots.It’s a more compact ball, too . . . offers you longerplay and real economy.Play your next round with this great new SpaldingAIR-FLITE. You can expect AND GET new uniformityin distance and accuracy . . . better shot control . . •better golf. quartet of Omohundro, Fishman.Greenlee and Brown turned in a3:26.8 clocking.Down in Champaign on Fridaythe Track club pitted its forcesagainst very considerable opposi¬tion and were beaten by the Ulini81-46. The downstaters’ decisivemargin of victory was in thesprints -and the hurdles, wherethey outscored the Maroon 34-2.Jim Brown, though taking sec¬ond to Illinois’ Fessenden, ran avery nice :49.5 quarter mile. Fes¬senden won in :48 flat and re¬turned later to win the 220 in :21.6.Illinois’ Henry Cryer won the880 in the very good time of 1:52.3with Bill Conrardy and JohnBarnes, both of the Track club,taking second and third withtimes of 1:54.2 and 1:55, respec¬tively.Lawton Lamb and Bob Kellybeat all the Illinois competitors tothe tape in the mile, but the eventwas won by Lowell Zellers (run¬ning unattached) in 4:16. Lamb’stime was 4:19.5 and Kelly’s 4:25.8.In the two mile the Maroon werenot to be denied as Phil Colemanreeled off a fast 9:18.4 to win.In the field events, Chicago’sPhil Swett set the pace in win¬ning the discus with a toss of 137'6" and taking second in the shotbehind Staff of Illinois, who threw47'11". The Maroon also garnered by Smoky GarciaThe Maroons upset the University of Illinois at Navy Pier,9-7, Thursday, May 5, on Stagg field. The Maroons, whohadn’t beaten the pier boys since 1951, finally broke the iceby pounding four pier hurlers for 14 hits including a home runand a double by center fieldhUGil Levine.The pier came up with hits altogether but made 4 costlyerrors.some The Maroons broke away to aheavy hitting themselves, getting 4-0 lead in the 1st inning on hitsfour home runs, two doubles anda triple. The Ulini garnered 10ILL. TECHab r h ab r hVojpich.c 4 1 0 Karohl.ss 4 0 0Clifford,ph 1 0 0 Walker.c 2 2 0Giebelh's’n.ss 5 0 1 Utley ,1b 3 1 1Strom ,p-cf 4 0 0 Levine,cf 3 0 2Soss,ef-lf 3 1 0 Baptist,p 3 0 0Dougherty ,rf 4 1 2 Colbv,3b 4 1 1Gallagher,lb 4 0 2 Binford.rf 3 1 2Kasid,3b 3 0 1 Mazukelli.lf 3 0 0Harper.If 3 0 0 Mann,2b 4 0 0Diamond,p 1 0 0Feiverson,2b 2 0 034 3 7 29 5 6Chicago ... no 001 200—5 > 2Illinois Tech 100 020 000—3 7 2CHICAGONAVY' PIER CHICAGOab r h ab r hEiehstredt.cf 5 1 3 Karohl.ss 4 1 2Weber,3b 4 0 0 Walker.c 4 1 1Keurch.3b 1 1 1 Utley,lb 5 1 2Neubar,rf 5 1 2 Levine,cf 5 2 3Wildner.2b 4 0 0 Baptiste,p 5 1 1Rogers,c,lb,p 3 1 1 Miller,p 0 0 0Lerche.lf 4 0 1 Colby ,3b 3 0 2Green,lb 2 0 1 Binford.rf 3 0 0Payne,2b 2 0 0 Mazukelli.lf 3 2 1Rodriguez,ss 2 0 0 Mann,2b 4 1 2Karamitsos.ss 2 0 0Kendzeuski.p 2 0 0Merdinger.p 1 2 0Noviki.p 2 I 136 : r 10 36 £ 1 14R H ENavv Pier . . 002 no 030—7 1(1 4Chicago .400 112 lOx—9 14 1 by Utley, Levine and Baptist,2 walks, and a Navy pier error.The pier cut the lead in halfin the 3i*d inning when theirright fielder Neubar homeredwith one on.Lefty Paul Baptist coastedalong as Chicago built up a 9-4lead. They scored single runs inthe 4th and 5th, two in the 6th,and one in the 7th inning. Therun in the 5th was a home runby Gil Levine, which offset ahomer by pier catcher Rogers intlie 4th inning.Pitcher Bill Miller and centerfielder Gil Levine combined tolead UC to a 4-2 victory overNorth Central last Saturday onStagg field.Miller, a righthander, camethrough with the best Maroonpitcher performance in years. Heallowed just 4 hits, had a no hittergoing for 7 innings, and .struckout 12. He had the North Centralbatters fishing for his curve ballall day long. Better fielding wouldhave given Miller his no hitter.Photo by BystrynBob Kelly Football controvesial What next?* Trade-marie Spalding sets the pacein sports Student leaders who have criedloud and long about the inabilityof the campus population to be¬come excited about important is¬sues—close inspection often dis¬closes that such issues are moreoften than not campus elections—can find hope in the concernexhibited as a reaction to theMaroon story reporting the re¬turn of football to the campuswhich appeared last week.A member of the Maroon sportsstaff sent on an assignment togather opinions on the return ofthe grid sport found more thanenough people willing and eagerto give their opinions on theissue.The question was: Are you foror against (he return of intercol¬legiate football to the UC cam¬pus?Don Villarejo—college: I amagainst the return of inter-colle¬giate football to UC campus. Thereturn of football would meanthat we would be tearing awayfrom our traditional form of stu¬dent life. There is little sense inbringing a losing team to repre¬sent us. Rather a winning teamwould be in demand which wouldmean that UC would be imitatingother campuses.L. Herzenberg—college: I amnot opposed to football as longas it does not become the primereason for the existence of theUniversity. I feel that if peoplewant to play football, let themplay.Nora Hansen — college: Defi-n i t e 1 y against! The academicstandard would be weakened, be¬cause we could not play against small colleges for long. When big-time football returns . . . we be¬come the best mediocre collegein the country.E. N. Bradford—Reynolds clubbarber: I am very much in favorof the return of football! In my25 years on campus I have seenboth sides and I remember a moreunified and regular student bodywhen football was here.Sheila R. Feiger—college: I amfor football at UC just as I wouldsupport any other sport that thestudents here really wanted; pro¬vided that no more emphasis isplaced on football than has beenplaced on any other intercollegi¬ate athletics here on campus, Iwill continue to support it.John G. Brown, III—college:There exists, it seems, a group of“students” for whom studies arenot adequate incentive to remainin school. Why did they comehere? Such needs are readily sat¬isfied at many institutions callingthemselves universities.There is nothing here to pre¬vent anyone from engaging in allthe sports their muscles can tol¬erate. But seeing the Universitydominated by a bunch of nincom¬poops whose emotional needs re¬quire that they play joe collegefor four years ... is not a pleas¬ant prospect.upin '55Round Trip viaSteamshipFREQUENT SAILINGS AOWTourist Round Trip Air*36510 JL *46080 JL*Choice of Over 100STUDENT CLASS TOORS $C J ATRAVEL STUDY TOURS * wCONDUCTED TOURS upUniversity Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines, hasrendered efficient travel serviceon a business basis since 1926.See your iocol travel *<>'folders details or WMte ;MS.s IUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard 5q.( Cambridge, Moss. Photo by BystrynPaul Baptist (r) warming upfor baseball.Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55tH StreetHYde Park 3-8372 by Sam GreenleeThe only true stereotype is thatthe only true stereotype is thatthere are no true stereotypes. Con¬fusing? Well so is the subject ofthis thing which happens to be anathlete by the name of Paul Bap¬tist.Baptist is anything but thestereotype of the all-around ath¬lete and if one saw the rotundsouthpaw in a crowded room he’dprobably be the last picked as oneof the top athletes on the campusand subject for the sports oddityof the current season.Baptist began his sports year asone of the mainstays of last year’scross country squad, toughest inMaroon history. He climaxed theseason by scoring importantpoints in the surprise of the na¬tional cross country season whenthe UCTC harriers came withinone point of knocking off vauntedNew York A.C. for the nationalcross country championship.The roly-poly runner then be¬gan knocking over opponents inthe distance runs with monoton¬ous regularity during the indoortrack season. The versatile run¬ner couldn’t be satisfied with scor¬ing points in only one event, how¬ever, and could be found reachingfor the sky in the pole vault aftercompleting his distance runningchores.The combination of pole vault- 11ing and distance running wouldbe enough of an incongruity formost but not for Baptist who com¬peted in four different sports inRich Township high; when thebaseball season rolled around hedecided to try his hand at pitchingand is becoming the soulhpawmainstay of the mound corps withthree wins to his credit so far thisseason.A few weeks back the sportsschedule permitted the sportstrick of the year as Baptist scoreda first in the pole vault, a secondin the two mile run in the trackmeet against Albion college, thentrotted to the dressing room andexchanged his track spikes forbaseball cleats to pitch the Ma¬roons to a 4-3 victory over Knoxcollege.If you ever get around to atrack meet or baseball game justpick out the guy who looks lesslike an athlete than anybodyaround and chances are you’llhave Paul Baptist, one of the mostversatile performers in Maroonsports history.CARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1127 E. 55 1412 E. 55MU 4-8980 MU 4-9003Page 1l THE CHICAGO MAROON May 13, 1953 \iv.CMmjoi tor ro»orvaNorta,•off Financial 6-5700)or an avthcrlxod travnl agnnkCap and Gown coming TuesdayCap and Gown will be out by Tuesday, editor-in-chief Paul A. Hoffman announced thisweek. Hoffman said that copies of the book are presently being bound, and that they willbe on campus late Monday or early Tuesday. At that time the post-publication price of $4.50will go into effect. Until thenHoffman reiterated his pro¬posal to the fraternities. Everyhouse that sells 75 per cent ofits membership gets a case ofbeer, those selling 100 per centa pony keg. Those which sellunder 50 per cent, he added, willget a can and 50 straws.“It is obvious to anyone thatmany things at UC are not asthey should be, and the Cap andGown has not hesitated to pointthem out. This is a year bookwith guts,” Hoffman snarled.The book contains over 250pages and is bound in cream andmaroon buckram.CIO man speakson annual wageLeonard Woodcock, one of therising young men in WalterReuther’s Congress of IndustrialOrganizations according to theMay issue of Fortune magazine,will speak Wednesday on the con¬troversial guaranteed annualwage in Haskell hall, room 202,at 8:30 p.m.Sponsored by the Business club,the meeting may be moved to lawsouth if attendance requires alarger room.Woodcock, one of the four vicepresidents of the United AutoWorkers section of the CIO, hasbeen in union work for manyyears. Before holding his presentpost he was regional director ofwestern Michigan. His electioncame at the last union convention.His topic, the guaranteed an¬nual wage, will reach peak im¬portance in late May and earlyJune when present Ford and Gen¬eral Motors contracts expire. Astrike vote of the UAW is beingtaken this week.Woodcock will answer ques¬tions from the floor at the end ofhis talk Wednesday. “He’s a goodspeaker and he’ll hold his own.’stated Business club member JohnMalone. I’ap and Gown sell for $4.'Occupational Life'group series topicThe Society for Social Researchwill hold its annual institute inIda Noyes hall May 20 and 21.The theme of the institute will be“Patterns of occupational life.”Nine sessions will be devoted topapers in this general area.Individual sessions will be heldon: “The flow of influence,” “Per¬sonality and occupations,” “Workand play, “Methodology in smallgroups,” “Approaches to thestudy of social roles,” and othertopics of interest to students inthe social sciences.Sessions will be held from 9 to12:30 in the mornings and from2 to 5 in the afternoons.William H. Whyte, Jr., an edi¬tor of Fortune magazine, will ad¬dress the general session Fridayevening, May 20, at 8:30 in Breas¬ted hall. Whyte will speak on“Research methods and journal¬ism.” The meeting will be chairedby Professor David Riesman.Whyte’s address will be followedwith discussion by Everett C.Hughes, professor of sociology,and William Stephenson, profes¬sor of psychology. White awardedBancroft prizeLeonard D. White, professor ofpublic administration, has beenawarded the 1954 Bancroft prizeof $2000 by Columbia universityfor his book. The Jacksonians.The Jacksonians, published in1954, is the third and concludingvolume of a trilogy tracing theevolution of the American systemof government from 1789 to 1861.White received the Woodrow Wil¬son award of the American Politi¬cal Science association in 1948 forThe Federalists, first volume inthe series. The second volume.The Jeffersonians, was publishedin 1954.White, who is Ernest DeWittBurton distinguished service pro¬fessor, has been on the UC facultysince 1920. He received the War¬ner W. Stockberger award in per¬sonnel administration for 1954,His many governmental postshave included serving as consult¬ant to the United States Civil Serv¬ice commission (1941-49), and asa member of the President’s Com¬mittee on Civil Service Improve¬ment (1939-41). English gerontologist to lectureon problem Carlson considersGerontology — the study of aging — was recently popular¬ized in a large Life magazine article which resulted from athree-day visit with A. J. Carlson, UC professor emeritus ofphysiology and internationally known gerontologist. Geron¬tology will be discussed on campus this afternoon by anotherrenowned gerontologist, Josepat the Royal hospital. Wolver¬hampton, England, who willlecture on “Some problems ofold age” at 4 in pathology 117.Sheldon is president of theInternational Association ofGerontology which met in Londonlast July. Carlson, who attendedthe conference along with ErnestW. Burgess, UC professor emeri¬tus of sociology, and Robert J.B-J elects newcouncil officersNext year’s officers for the Bur¬ton • Judson dormitory councilwere elected one week ago Thurs¬day.Steve Oppenheimer was chosenpresident, Quentin Ludgin, vice-president; Gary Mokotoff, treas¬urer; and Alan Harrod, secretary.These officers are chosen by theB-J council members who are se¬lected in turn by the individualhouses in the dormitory.Council duties include the run¬ning of the B-J snack bar, whichmay become defunct if it contin¬ues to lose money, and the stagingof dormitory social events. i H. Sheldon, senior physicianHavighurst, UC professor of edu¬cation, remarked that “Sheldonwas very effective in organizingthe congress. It was really strik¬ing ... 48 nations were repre¬sented.”At the congress, Carlson deliv¬ered a talk in which he answeredthe question, “Can a continuousadult education on the nature ofman and the universe add morelife to our later years?” by say¬ing: “As I know man and nature,the answer is yes.”In addition to his research onthe relation of diet to aging, Carl¬son has been a major contributorto that aspect of gerontology con¬cerned with the problem of anadult education which will addmore to later years and make thelife which science is making long¬er saner, happier and richer.“Man might Hve a maximumof 100 years” said Carlson, whoseresearch on rats has led him toconclude that "over-eating short¬ens life” and brings on tumorsand cancers. “Longevity has ahereditary basis,” he said, butwith good heredity and a mini¬mum of disease 100 years shouldsoon be possible.1 UNITED1 AIRCOACHI You’re homein hours!You’re moneyahead!United’s low fares, fastflights and frequentschedules help stretchvacation days and dol¬lars. 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