$32,700,000 UC campaign goalMaintaining greatness of the Universityaim of intensive UC fund driveThe University has entered an intensive fund drive to raise $32,700,000 over the nextthree years. Its purpose, according to the university, is no less than to maintain UC as agreat world university. Without the fund drive, said George Watkins, vice-president incharge of development, “we could have coasted and no one would have known for manyyears. But we would no longer have been a world university ... we could not have replacedfaculty members.”The campaign goal is esti¬mated by the board of trus¬tees, who will run the overallcampaign, to be the minimumadded funds over current incomeneeded to “insure continuance ofthe high standards establishedand maintained here” during thenext ten years. Under presentplans all the money is needed andwould be spent during the nextten years; none is for increasedcash endowment.Previous to the announcementof the campaign yesterday, theboard of trustees had raised over$4,000,000 among its own mem¬bers, a trustee’s gift,'according toWatkins, “unrivaled in the historyof education.”Funds will be primarily soughtfrom corporations, individualsand foundations, with alumni andfaculty aiding in the campaign ef¬fort.Funds have been divided amongthree general areas: (1> strength¬ening of teaching and research ($19,979,0001, (2) student hous- of operations and launch a majoring ($4,200,0001, (3) financial aid fund-raising campaign,to students ($2,000,0001. (For J Administrative, and academic. . , , . deans were called together to esti-complete breakdown see page mate their needs for the next ten2.)Of highest priority in the Uni¬versity’s projected plans are fac¬ulty salary increases and appoint¬ments and new women's dorms.The only other building at presentanticipated to result from thecampaign are men’s dormitoryhousing and a new law schoolbuilding. The priority listings,however, are not final, and as foradditional projects not includedin the campaign, Wililam B. Har-rel, vice-president in charge ofbusiness operations, said, “Ifsomeone offers to build us a libra¬ry we won’t refuse."Planning for the present funddrive began in 1951 with the ac¬cession of Chancellor Kimpton tothe Chancellor’s office. Since thisuniversity started, Watkins ex¬plained, the pendulum of. presi¬dents has swung between inspirededucators and sound businessmen.“This administration has tried tograb the pendulum and bring itto a stop. In the last four yearswe have tried to put a sound foun¬dation under the University inthe form of better public rela¬tions, especially with our ownalumni, a neighborhood redevel-Seven hundred and sixty- opment program and reorganizednine students will receive de- curriculum. years, assuming an increased en¬rollment to 10,000 students. Theirtotal estimated needs came to$147,000,000.The steering committee of theboard of trustees met with ad¬ministration officials and conclud¬ed that a fund drive to fill themost critical gaps should be im¬mediately undertaken. Watkinscommented that the steering com¬mittee fulfilled their task and didnot merely choose those projectsfor which it was easy to raisefunds. They emerged with the$32,700,000 figure. The entrance to proposed women's dorm to be builtbehind Ida Noyes. . I$183,000 in research grantsawarded to UC scientists769 to receivedegrees June 10;Kimpton to speak May dedicatelab to FermiThe US house of repre¬sentatives is considering abill to change the name ofArgonne National laboratoryto the Fnrico Fermi Nationallal»oratory.The bill, introduced by Rep.Sidney Yates, Illinois Demo¬crat, would honor the late UCatomic scientist who built thefirst atomic reactor and set offthe first atomic chain reaction.Argonne lab is located 20miles beyond the southern out¬skirts of Chicago. Research grants totaling $183,142 have been awarded UCscientists by the National Institutes of Health, Dr. Lowell T.Coggeshall, dean of the division of biological sciences, an¬nounced recently. *The grants from the Insti- ment, growth processes in bac-tutes will support nine differ- teria- plant chemistry, and theent projects, ranging from the behavior of one-celled animals,study of the role of hormones in Among the scientists receivingcancer to staff problems in chil- the'grants are Dr. Eugene M. K.dren’s institutions. Geiling, professor and chairmanLargest of the grants, for $75,- of the department of pharma-000, was awarded to Coggeshall cology, Dr. Frank W. Newell, as-for the study of drugs for the sociate professor of surgery, Kaotreatment of leukemia. Second Liang Chow, assistant professorlargest grant of $30,000, was of physiology, Aaron Novick, as-awarded to Dwight J. Ingle, pro- sistant professor of biophysics,fessor of physiology, for the study Lawrence Bogolrad, assistant pro¬of the role of hormones in can- fessor of botany, Bruno Bettel-cer and in diseases caused by heim professor of education andstress. director of the Sonia ShankmanOther grants were awarded for Orthogenic school, and Beatricestudies of brain function, eye dis- T. Gelber, National Institutes ofease, “tagged” drugs for experi- Health postdoctoral fellow inmental purposes in cancer treat- physiology.grees at the spring convocationnext Friday.Two hundred and sixty-nine ABdegrees and masters degrees willbe presented at 10 a.m. in Rocke¬feller chapel. Professional degreesand 54 PhD’s will be presented at3 the same afternoon, also in thechapel. Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton will address both groupsof graduates.Two ceremonies; rather thanone, are held in spring becauseof the great demand for tickets. Kimpton, Stagg addressOrder of C about football“I do not want to play in the ‘big ten,’ ” stated Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton at the52nd annual banquet of the Order of the C in Hutchinson Commons last night.Kimpton listed the arguments both for and against football. Arguing on the against siderrrMniinJe8ou^presen?'level Kimpton said, “If we bribe a boy to bring him here, and I close one eye to admit him, or— even two eyes to let him stay He's our kind, he's our style, he’swe cease to be the University nur tvnft..of Chicago.”“It became apparent by the mid¬dle of last year that we weregoing to balance the budget andthat within a short time it wouldagain go out of balance,” Watkinsexplained. “We could chooseamong three alternatives. Wecolud cut down our operations andbalance the budget by default; wecould continue our present levelof operations and get out of bal¬ance when it became necessary to“I can only tell you,” he con¬cluded, “that our decision (aboutfootball) will be dictated by whatwe believe to be best for the Uni¬versity of which we are all apart. I will even add that I hopeit will be a decision with whichthe ‘old man’ will agree our type.’Prefacing his remarks Kimptonsaid, “after my statement of lastyear . . . I’ve written my speechtonight.”Amos Alonzq Stagg. “grand oldman of Chicago athletics,” cli¬maxed the banquet. “I rejoice inyour progress,” he said. “I amUniversity of Chicago, June 3, 1955 '■-'-’‘CSSwfctt 3 1Former UC publications editorshold first annual reunion tonightFormer editors of UC publications will hold their first annual reunion tonight as part ofthe 1955 alumni reunion.More than 5,000 alumni are expected on campus before the alumni reunion ends.Coach Amos Alonzo Stagg, former Chicago football coach, will be guest of honor andSpeaker at the student awards her of the 1905 class will speak The alumni medal, highest hon-at the luncheon, when members or conferred by the alumni asso-of the class will be nresented ciation- wiU be presented to Dr.of tne class win be presented Evartsh A Graham( a noted st.dinner tomorrow. StaggShared honors yesterday at the*Drder of the C” dinner withmembers of the 1905 winningsports teams, on the occasion oftheir fiftieth anniversary.To give development plansMembers of the class of 1905will be honored tomorrow at anEmeritus club kmcheon. AlbertW. Sherer, a trustee and a mem- with 50-year medallionsAt an All-Alumni assembly to¬morrow, Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton, and Edward L. Ryerson,chairman of the board of trustees,will outline to the alumni theUniversity’s development cam¬paign and future Universityplans. Louis surgeon, and alumni cita¬tions for good citizenship and pub¬lic service will be awarded to42 alumni.Review revelsThe reunion program was offi¬cially initiated Wednesday withSee ‘Reunion,’ page 15 Frank S. Whiting, president of proud whenever I hear anythingthe Order, introduced the Chan- good of you, and I am proud ofcellor with, “Fellows, we’ve got y°u now • • • I loved you, and Ia man we can work with now. See ‘Kimpton and Stagg,’ page 15SAC names boardIn a quick-moving session last Wednesday, the six-memberSocial Activities council doubled its membership. The sixnew members were named from among 14 petitioners.All six of the new members are undergraduates. They areAllan Bird, Paul Glatzer, Dotty Hess, Joan Raphael, Marie Schroevand Gary Stoll. IThey were chosen, without interviews or questioning, by the fastmoving group temporarily headed by Chuck Nfittman (IF) and eom>sisting of Sheila Feiger (Interclub), Margaret Beaudet (Inter-DormJi,Andy Plumis (Int. House), Barney Berlin (Hifchcoek Snett), andQuentin Ludgin (B-J). ( tNone of the petitioners were present when the group met to dothe selecting, nor were they asked their views on the goals of thecouncil.Members stated this form of selection was a result of a lack oftime caused by the approach of the end of the school year.Others who submitted petitions were Jack Burbach. RosemaryGalli, Earl Herrick, Ruth Kopel, Jean Kwon, Milicent Rupp, JajrSchlossberg, and Ann Schmidt.There will be an open meeting of the group Monday at 1:30 hithe Reynolds club "fishbowL”f«9« 2 TNI CHICAGO MAROON 4ui»« 3, 1955UC opens fund driveThe Campaign ProgramStrengthening teaching and research1. Faculty salary increases andappointments $8,639,0002. Teaclier-1 raining program $1,000,0003. Books $1,100,0004. I.aw school program and facilities $3,500,000Student1. .Married students housing $1,200,000 5. Additional teaching space $1,100,0006. Unrestricted funds $4,640,000(to keep the budget in balance*while meeting existing commit¬ments and initiating new edu- .cational programs.)Housing2. Undergraduate housing , $6,600,000$2,000,000Financial aid to studentsWhere's the money going? Panoramic view of the proposed girls' dorms facing 58th street betweenWoodlawn and Kimbark.TeachingFaced with a 40 per cent in¬crease in the enrollment of thecollege last fall and an anticipatedincrease in the enrollment of theentire University over the nextten-year period, coupled with asubstantial decline in the real in¬come from the University’s en¬dowment. the University has re¬quested $11,839,000 for facultysalaries, appointments, libraries,gnd the renovation of classroomspace in its development drive.The tuition which the studentspay does not meet the expensesthe University incurs in educatinghim, in the form of salaries, class¬room space, research grants andthe appointment of new teachers.The University is finding diffi¬culty in procuring the services ofnew instructors and in replacingthose lost through death or retire¬ment. Recent surveys reveal thatthe University’s salary scale isnot sufficiently high to attractnew personnel.In comparisons made recentlyWith five private schools and six state supported universities, UC’sscale of salaries fell below themedian for the other schools.In the next ten years 120 ofthe University's 450 associate andfull professors will become eli¬gible for retirement. Such menas Richard P. McKeon, humani¬ties, Harold C. Urey, chemistry,and Karl Llewellyn, law, are onthis list.It has been estimated that theaverage college instructor re¬ceives little more income than theaverage weekly earnings of fac¬tory workers. An individual witha PhD degree can command al¬most twice the salary from indus¬try as is offered by the divisionof physical sciences.The division of physical sci¬ences needs at least 19 new in¬structors and assistant piofessorsto carry out its present programsof teaching and research.The division of social sciencesin the school year 1953-54 carriedan instructional deficit of over$175,000.$836,000 a year for the nextten years have been requested tomeet these needs.Development: erect dorms,housing for married studentsEleven hundred places might be created in men’s andwomen’s dorms called for by the new development program.Married students’ housing will be augmented by a plannedtotal of 700 units.New women’s dormitories, at a projected cost of $3 million,are to be erected behind Ida Noyes hall. The barracks whichnow house married studentswill be torn down to make wayfor construction of the wom¬en’s housing, if present plansare carried out. Three to fivehundred womeh would be ac¬commodated in ihe new dorms.Present housing inadequateUniversity facilities currentlyprovide space for 502 women stu¬dents. Two hundred of thesespaces are al International house;about fifty are occupied by stu¬dent nurses who live at Gates hall.All women’s dorms- Foster, Kel¬ly, Green, Gates and Blake—werebuilt before 1900. Beecher, once awomen’s house, was taken in 1952by the law school for use as amen’s dormitory.Present women's housing hasbeen characterized as “hopelesslyinadequate in every respect inspace above the first floor” by aUniversity administrator.May replace B JPlans also call for a possiblereplacement of Burton-Judson bya different undergraduate men’sdormitory. Burton-Judson may bereleased to students in the pro¬fessional schools to be used in thesame manner that Beecher hall isnow used.The new men’s undergraduateresidence halls, housing 500 menand costing an estimated $3.6 mil¬lion, would be located somewherenear Stagg field and Bartlett gym¬nasium.A one-year reprieve granted thepre fabs by Chicago is recognizedby the administration as only a temporary solution to the prob¬lem of married student’s housing.The plywood prefabs are nownine years old.Developments such as Black-stone hall, an apartment residencefor married students, will providefurther apartment accommoda¬tions. Estimated cost for marriedstudent housing is $4.2 million;700 units being provided.While Burton-Judson is recog¬nized as adequate men’s housing,women’s housing has received agreat deal of criticism. Recrea¬tional space is limited; there isonly one practice room providedfor those who play musical instru¬ments. Closet space is character¬ized as inadequate.Most rooms ‘doubles*Original plans had called for ahalf of new women's rooms beingsingle. Latest plans, however, de¬vote only about a fifth of therooms to single occupancy. Andwhile it had been hoped that eat¬ing units might be small—per¬haps 70 women to a dining-room- the current trend is to recognizethat as an impossibility.Location of the new women’sdorms behind Ida Noyes hallwould place them near the recre¬ational and dining facilities of IdaNoyes itself. Ida Noyes’ diningfacilities have gone unused forfour years, and the building itselfis, at present, thought too farfrom current living quarters tobe a real recreational and socialcenter. The University proposes to ex¬pand its program of teacher training in the department of educa¬tion. and plans to establish fellow¬ships for teachers and school ad¬ministrators. To accomplish thisobjective the University needs anestimated $iuu.u00 a year for thenext ten years.Only two per cent of the totalUniversity budget is spent onbooks, periodicals, and bindingsfor Harper library. This, accord¬ing to a recent survey, is belowthe median spent by 90 otherAmerican universities. The Uni¬versity of California at Los An¬geles, for example, spends up to13 per eent of its total budget onits library; Princeton and Yaleeach spend nearly six per cent.An estimated $110,000 a yearabove the present budget has beenrequested for this.The University plans to con¬tinue the remodeling and reno¬vating of classroom space in Cobbhall that wras begun earlier thisyear. Very tentative plans callfor the remodeling of Blake andGates halls into office space, andinto a new home for the schoolof social service administrationnow located in Cobb. This reno¬vating program will cost the Uni¬versity an estimated $550,000.$550,000 a year has been re¬quested to enable the Universityto rent additional classroom spacefor its downtown centers. Law buildingThe law school’s share in UCredevelopment amounts to $3,500,-000.This sum is needed for the pro¬posed construction of a newbuilding for the law school, to belocated between BJ and the Amer¬ican Bar association center.The new building would replaceor add to the present law schoolwhich had its cornerstone laid in1903 by President TheodoreRoosevelt. This building has onlythree classrooms and one seminarroom*( which doubles as a studentlounge).Lack of an adequate physicalplant cuts into the programs ofmany activities connected withthe law school. No conferencelooms exist for the tutorial pro¬gram, no office space is availablefor the moot court program, andno space is available to the lawstudent association or for ad¬vanced" graduate legal students.In addition, no room exists foradditions to the law library. Atpresent, the encroachment ofHarper and law book stacks hadreduced seating capacity in thereading room to 180. The currentenrollment in the school is 280.These limited accommodationshave forced the law school tolimit its enrollment to the lowestof the ten ma jor schools for legaltraining in tills country. Student aidFirst large scholarship fund inthe University’s history has beenproposed as part of the fund cam¬paign drive. $2 million has beenrequested to attract superior stu¬dents who are attracted elsewhereby lower tuition or higher scholar¬ships. $200,000 is needed merely tomaintain the present level of aidto students for the next ten years.According to a survey made bythe US office of education. Chi¬cago ranks extremely low in aidgiven to students for an institu¬tion-of its caliber; average perstudent receiving aid was foundto be $419 at Chicago, $505 alYale, and $719 at Harvard.Last year 135 students whoqualified for scholarships werenot provided for because of lackof funds. These students, andthose who turned dow’n Chicagoaid in favor of higher grants fromother schools, are those to whomthe fund is directed.In 1953-54, $40,000 from endow¬ment income and $301,000 fromreserve funds was awarded inscholarships. Greater operatingcosts and less purchasing powerfrom invested funds have driventhe need for endowment fundsand outright gifts up; the pro¬posed scholarship fund providesa solution to the increased need.Who raises theDevelopmentChief administartive cog in theUniversity’s fund-raising is theoffice of development. The cam¬paign itself will be run by thecampaign committee of the boardof trustees, led by Edward L.Ryerson, chairman of the board.But the job of planning and re¬search that proceeded the cam¬paign and of coordination thatwill go on during it will be the jobof the development office.The office is headed by GeorgeWatkins, vice-president in chargeof development. It was not bornnor will it die w'ith the campaign.George H. Watkins, vice-presi¬dent of the University in chargeof development. “Development is a polite word forfund-raising;” Watkins explained.“We coordinate public relationsand fund-raising.” Responsible toWatkins are the office of publicrelations and the alumni associa¬tion, for example.Inside the office itself responsi¬bility is divided along the lines ofthe various divisions and schools,with individuals in charge of de¬velopment for certain divisions.These account executives, asthey might be called in an adver¬tising agency, work directly withthe appropriate deans.The office itself had its first,rather informal existence duringthe first fund raising drive thirtyyears ago. It was not firmly estab-Jished, according to Watkins, un¬til just previous to the "Centen¬nial” fund-raising campaign, in1940.During the years immediatelyfollowing the war, the officeraised contributions from $1,500,-000 per year to roughly $4,000,000in 1951. Under Watkins the officeshas raised the figure to about$6,000,000 per year.Alum pledgeThe alumni’s quota in the Uni¬versity’s fund drive will amountto $3,000,000 to be pledged overone year’s time. Hitherto alumnicontributions of the Alumni foun¬dation drive have never beforeexceeded $500,000 in any one year.Leading the greatly intensifiedalumni campaign will be two vet- money?eran fund-raisers instead of theusual one. The two co-chairmenare John McDonough, this year sfoundation chairman, and trusteeEarle Ludgin, who, as foundationchairman for three previousyears, established a new UC rec¬ord for alumni contributions andnumber of contributors.During the alumni campaignperiod, the alumni foundation’sannual drive will be suspended.The 440 committee chairmen whow’ork for the foundation appealwill be asked to transfer to themajor campaign July 1. Addi¬tional volunteers will also be re¬cruited for the campaign period.Close liaison is envisioned be¬tween the co-chairmen and the lo¬cal committeemen in all parts ofthe country. Campaign materials,including pamphlets and leaflets,will be madq available.Contributions by the Alumnifoundation will be sought in lumpsums or in the form of three-yearpledges. The foundation will re¬sume its appeal in 1956-57, butthose paying off pledges to themajor campaign will not be solic¬ited again until they have com¬pleted their payments.FacultyThe Chancellor’s faculty cam¬paign committee will representthe faculty within the 1955 capitalfunds campaign. The committeewill serve as liaison between theSee ‘Faculty,** peg* **June 3# 1W5 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page INew yearbook controversial,some object, some praise itby Diana FjisFoinMarching circus figures, plump little cartoon elephants, and a racy red auto urged peo¬ple to ‘ Buy Cap and Gown,” and they did. The 1955 yearbook was “sold out” last Friday.( ap and Gown was a sales success, but there has been much disagreement over the con¬tent and quality of the book. :°no .student said. than to exercise censorship overIn the Mar™,* article in Cap student publications.”and Gown, the criticism was Snmo enripnt,! Bigger and better Maroonsannounce new co-editorsA favorable critique wassent to Paul Hoffman, editor-in chief. from Chancellor Law- Some students have praised therenceletter, Kimpton in a personal 9” *,ie *mature Page book, calling it: attractive, clever,sloppy writing results from mud- *. ah.sloppy writing results from mud- unusual, artistic, intelligent* Oth’“I have just read through the od ,lllnklnK- The Feature Edi- ers have described it: crude, slan-Cap and Gown for 1955. This is !°r: wJlen not reading Karl Marx derous, unrepresentative, biased,and Margaret Sanger, devoted inaccurate,whole pages to Soviet films play- Hoffman says of the chargesing at a West Side movie house, against the book (and himself)the most informed and thoughtfulstatement I have seen on the Uni¬versity of Chicago today. Thethings you say are true and the ,!0 ot(her elements of peoples “I hke it; notoriety is my normal-questions you raise«are legitimate T,W° Marrto*‘ feature cy. Some of the post-publicationand penetrating. I’m only sorry ed,jors. Protested these remarks comment is merely the last gaspabout the printing errors'. I con- and*sked for a retraction “Stroz- in the struggle for survival.” Theicr (dean of students) and kiendl criticism, he explained, “comes(director of student activities) from prejudiced people; the truthgratulate you and your staff onthe best job done around here fora long time. Very sincerely yours,(signed) Lawrence A. Kimpton.”“The book is grossly inaccurate was in order,” one of the editorssaid.and journalistically atrocious,” u.uhhtp-j>itur«wro,e a “;uei:* which Editor Hoffman would notagreed that a letter of retraction always hurts.“There are many things in thebook that perhaps may not beletter, substantiated; there are manythings in the book with which I42 alumni willreceive awards;Graham honored accept; Hoffman wrote another, don’t agree; but there’s nothingwith which the feature editor in it I would reject,” Hoffmanwould not'agree. The feature edi- further stated,tor consulted with Harry Kalven, He replied to the charges thatassistant professor in the 1 a w the Gap and Gown was unrepre¬school. and Mrs. Mary Alice New- sentative and not comprehensiveman. assistant director of student enough: “If you want a completeactivities, and it was decided that representation of the UniversityKalven write a letter of retraction over a year you’d need a 5,000-page yearbook.”When asked if it was true thatwhen the book came out he wentForty-two UC alumni willbe honored for good citizen- to include both feature editorsship and distinguished public serv- mentioned. This then, if signed byice ai ilie annual alumni assembly Hoffman, will lx* notarized; atomorrow evening in Mandel hall, copy will go to each of the feature home and r e t u rn e d wearingThe alumni medal, highest editors; one will be put in their smoked glasses, Hoffman an-award of the UC alumni associa- permanent University files; and swered: “I went home, as I dotion, will be presented to Evarts another. In the student activities many times during the year (espe-A Graham of Florissant, Mo., in- office records. cially when I have comps); andternationally known St. Louis Strozier said Tuesday, “There after comps, returned; and I at-surgeon, who is Bixby professor are often, in all student publica- ways wear smoked glasses in theemeritus of surgery at Washing- tions, lapses of good taste and summer (and sometimes in theton university. Graham received good judgement; but I believe so winter when there’s heavyhis MD from UC’s Rush medical firmly in the right of students to snow)."college in 1907. express themselves freely and When asked if any attemptsForty-one other alumni will re- without censorship that I believe had been made on his life, Hoff-oeive citations for public service it is better to take the conse- man replied, “Three.” He refusedto their cities, states, nation. quences of such a policy rather to elaborate. photo by GrossmanJoy S. Burbach and Palmer W. Pinney jNewly elected Chicago Maroon co-editors Joy S. Burbach’and Palmer W. Pinney, announced their program for nextyear’s Maroon. More comprehensive news coverage, more edi¬torials, more interpretative news articles, and more pages arepart of their plans. A new fall ——r -staff training program de- Mrs candidate for aSigned especially for those with- MA |n ,he educalion depar,ment,out experience on college publica- has ^ on h M»roon‘for threelions is another of their primary years Durin(, ,he Jag, year shegof, _ , , , was managing editor, supplement,**”• Burbf'h aniPin"7 *erc editor, and executive news editor,elected co-editors May 13, by atwo-thirds vote of the Maroonstaff. They take office in the sum¬mer quarter.jGary Mokotoff has been ap-NO 7-9071Student Rate 50c hyde park theatre lake parkat 53rdNOW PLAYING — TNRU JUNE 9JEAN-PAUL SARTRE calmly, and with almost surgical precision, exposesthe anatomy of Communism today. Sharp, perceptive, ironic and witty . . .SARTRE can dissect an idea, reduce it to its essentials ... in a manner strik¬ingly reminiscent of SHAW. SPLENDID PERFORMANCES BY BRASSEUR,GELIN, AND CLAUDE NOLLIER. —Knight, Saturday ReviewJEAN PAUL SARTRE'SComplete, Unabridged• PIERRE BRASSEURFamous French Stor of“CHILDREN OF PARADISE”• DANIEL GELINFeatured in “LA RONDE"• C LAUDE NOLLIERStar of the Academy Award film“JUSTICE IS DONE” “DIRTY HANDS”Based on his celebrated play "LES MAINS SALES""DIRTY HANDS" in book form has been publishedin many languages and has been presented as a playin various countries.In Paris as Les Mains Sales • In London as Crime PassionelteIn New York as Red Gloves“INTELLIGENTLY handled in writing, direction, andperformance. MARTINE CAROL'S physical charmsand energetic capers ere in keeping with the sprightlyfast-paced style of this little (40 minute) farce. TheFRENCH MEN make their point in RACY ANDEXPLICIT STYLEr —N.Y. TIMES. “BRILLIANT! Its flashes of insight into the differ¬ence between men of action and intellectuals aresearmgly brilliant . . .“— GUERNSEY, N.Y. Herold Trib.“MORE EXCITEMENT in the movie version than thestage play. SARTRE has concocted a fancy intellec¬tual exercise."— CROWTHER, N.Y. TimesAND—THE RACY, WACKY LysistrCttCt EPISODE FROM “DAUGHTERS OF DESTINY" STARRINGTHE DELECTABLE, VOLCANIC MARTINE CAROLCOMING NEXT —JUNE 10thGRAHAM GREENE'S brilliantly philosophical novelwhich has been made into a uniquely probing motionpicture . . . rated current and choice by TIME Magazine.“HEART of the MATTER”TREVOR HOWARD — MARIA SCHELLTREVOR HOWARD and MARIA SCHELL are superb asthe lovers.”—TIME Magazine. “THE GREEN SCARF”MICHAEL REDGRAVE — ANN TODDKIERON MOORE —LEO GKNNA first-rate psychological mystery story with MICHAELREDGRAVE giving a virtuoso performance as a crochetyold trial lawyer, KIERON MOORE brilliantly portrayingthe role of a deaf-mute and LEO GKNN and ANN TODDplaying lu their usual expert style.June 17 —GARBO! "CAMILLE"June 24 —"DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE"July l — "MARTY"(it not now. at soon ns we ean get it!)July 8 —"TO PARIS WITH LOVE" —ALEC GUINNESSA PERSONAL WORDHove a happy summer! Spend some of it with us! (This year our air-conditioning will befar sure, far real!) And if you would like to spend a part of your summer WORKING withus, see our ad in the Help Wanted Column. Cordially yours, Rose Dunn, Managing Director Mrs. Burbach served this year asa Maroon representative to theStudent Activities council.Both received the honor of be*...... _ . ing appointed student aides bypomted business manager; Rob- chancellor Kimpton last year,ert Quinn, managing editor, and -Lois Gardner, executive news edi¬tor, for the coming year, they an¬nounced.“Spike” Pinney has been sportswriter, sporLs editor, and newseditor of the Mamoon. A sportsfeature of his which apeared inthe Maroon was later published,in longer form, in the University Herbolsheimer isnew director ofUCstudent hea IrhDr. Henrietta Herbolsheim-of Chicago magazine. In his four er, associate professor in theyears at UC. Pinney wm on the medical school, will become di-steering committee of NAACP . .... .and the varsity soccer and track rector °* student health July 1.teams. He is a MA candidate in She replaces Dr. Dudley B. Reed,who has resigned to go into pri»vate practice.Dr. HerboLsheimer took hermaster of public health at JohnsHopkins in 148 after receiving herMD in 1948 and her BS from theUniversity of Chicago.Dr. Herbolsheimer joined themedical school faculty in 1951,Prior to 1951 she had been medica*tion administrative assistant tothe director of the Illinois statehealth department. She did thedraft for the Illinois civil defenseplan for medical care and specialweapons defense.TYPEWRITERSCLEANED ORREPAIREDWritten guarantee onail work for one yearInspector and Estimator on dutyfrom 4 p.m. tlU 1* p.m.Discount of 15%for all studentsHave your typewriter repairedwhile on vacation with freestorage.BOURGEAUS’1202 E. 55th St.HY 3-7912 ' p'rrrvvvvvvvTTvv rrvtVrn; BORDON E►’Movers and Light Hauling,VI 6-9832Have You Visited the NewCAMPUS SUPERETTE1323 E. 57th Street •rDelicatessen - — Grocery — BakeryPHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETCome to theYoung Socialist League summer campwhere? Genoa City, Wire,when? Sept. 6-11, 195Sgood discussion — top-notch faculty,plenty of recreation — swimming,baseball, folk dancing, good food, ate.far more information write:114 W. 14th St., New York City, orMeier, 5426 Maryland, Chicogo ISPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON June 3, 1955Area high school students CalendarSaturday, June 4receive UC scholarshipsOne-hundred fifty-four students from 39 Chicago publichigh schools received scholarship awards at a ceremony inMandel hall two weeks ago. The awards ranged from $50 rec¬ognition awards to grants of $990 for students with excep¬tional need. In each case the size of the award has been de¬termined by the need of its recipient.This autumn’s entering classwill include 125 Chicago areaaward winners who will havecompleted high school, accordingto estimates of William Scott, as¬sistant dean of students. Of the110 Chicago-area awards made totwelfth graders in 1954, 90 wereaccepted.Scott further estimated that 80 area entrants were two to the topscience graduates at midyear andin June of Morgan Park HighSchool. These have been providedby A. Royal Gay, an alumnus ofthe University who will retire thisyear from a teaching position atMorgan Park.Assurances of a chance to workfor the University have been giv-scholarship students from outside en a number 0f entrants whosethe Chicago area will enter thecollege this autumn, and thatabout 20 scholarships will be giv¬en to early entrants. The decreasein scholarships given to early en¬trants was attributed to the endof Ford foundation scholarshipsfor entering students. Those whohave already entered under theFord program will be eligible to scholarship awards fell short oftheir stated needs. A number ofjobs in the commons, libraries,etc., requiring 10-12 hours work aweek, will be set aside for thefall. Those W'ho accept the offerswill be asked to continue theirwork throughout the year. Chest conferences, division of bio¬logical sciences. Argonne con¬ference rooms 1-105, 8 a.m.Monday, June 6Film: "You Can’t Beat an HonestMan* (American), Internation¬al house, 8 p.m. Admission 35c.Tuesday, June 7Y oung Socialist league discussion,Ida Noyes, 8 p.m. First of week¬ly discussions through summeron various topics of interestSaturday, June 11Interschool peace conference,sponsored by UC Peace Center.Social science building, 9 a m.,Saturday through Sunday.JO BANKSCreative Photography Monument honors CzechA huge monument of a legendary Czech knight at the east endof the midway was dedicated last Sunday as 2000 persons attendeddedicatory services to the memory of Thomas G. Masaryk, firstpresident of Czechoslovakia.The bronze and marble memo¬rial, a familiar sight to UC stu¬dents as it stands across from In¬ al two periods in his career.The dedication was attended bySenator Roman Hruska of Ne¬braska, Senator Everett Dirksen1420 E. 55* Sr.apply for renewals.Four new scholarships are be¬ing made available to enteringstudents. Two of these are pro¬vided by General Motors, whichwill grant scholarships of up to$2000 to each of two entering stu¬dents. The scholarship sum willbe determined by need, and thescholarships will be renewablefor three additional years. ProctorA Gamble is offering two scholar¬ships to entering students whichwill pay tuition and one hundreddollars a year to each recipient.All four scholarships are admin¬istered by the University, and willbe granted by the scholarshipcommittee in the course of itsregular deliberations regardingscholarship applicants.Among awards given ChicagoBETZ JEWELRYUnusual Jewelry Our SpecialtyExpert Jewelry and Watch RepairN.S.A. Discount to Students1523 E. 53rd PL 2-3038CARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1365 E. 55th MU 4-9003The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236ACECl, LE SHOPYour BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we sellRepairs & Parts all makes819 E. 55 MI 3-26729 A M. - 6 P.M.<—t* <•Relax in THE DENES |Special June Ratesfor GroupsApartments andHotel RoomsWILSON’SHOLIDAYRETREATPORTER BEACHChesterton, Ind.For Reservations CallMU 4-0433or CHesterton 9268vv v Sr v -J- v %• <• v v S-H1 <• v •> i MAX BROOKCLEANERSTAILORSLAUNDERERSQuality anti SerrIre M»wr 1917OUR TRUCKS ON CAMPUS DAILYFOR PROMPT SERVICE — Phone Ml 3-74471013-15 E. 61st St. Opposite B - J• FREE HEATED .GARAGE PARKING(tha only bank on tha south side offering this aarrioa)• AUTO DRIVE-IN WINDOW FORIMMEDIATE SERVICE». . and the kind of courtesy you should expect as a depositor.SOUTH'! SIDE BANK &TRUST CO."SmellLAMBt I eaoegA to appreciate you—mm|» te accommodate yoa.‘COTTAGE GROVE ave AV 47th ST*60W4G VtoMt WRf•PtlAC* Right ober e*° co0che» •• ** .r.conditioned >y. • *.. a Roomy °ir c° ,Q room onopl|fcCE>* with lots of *P / mi0mmer vocoti^«o ST** °s®** tol *ap* of IT ***0to°*'he;c?-><>Oandt 00a0*-PAr/c * *°re by t,,. u»oitfr f r*0uloryou eo . *°">e or ny^ . '-'MYeastern MlfiOAW_1. tcrnational house on the Midway, of Illinois, Mayor Daley, memberswas erected in 1949 as a tribute to of Masaryk’s family, and prom-Masaryk, a UC faculty member inent Czech Chicagoans.^mMiirtmmmiiiiimiiiiiiiitniiiiiiiiimtiiiiiiiimiHwmuinuiwHtMtMHHiiiiuiuuiiiiNiiiittiHiiuimMmmNiiii^International Rome MoviesI Vaaa|« Men. A Thurs. Ewe*. at 7:88 dfc 9:06 P.M.si Final Movie£= Monday, June 6—45c—You Can't Cheat an Honest Man (American)t foid&tt ^edtauMuttd1321 E. 31tb Si —PL 2-92311911 E. 33rd St.—HY 3-3300Serving University PersonnelFor YearsYour Car Washed 62 TimesJUNE, JULY & AUCUST ... 14 WEEKSSAT., SUN. & HOLIDAYS NOT INCLUDfDFORONLY *10°°WHITEWALL TIRES 25c EXTRAG & H SERVICE CO.Operating Jewel Service b Perfect Cor Wo»h56TH fr COTTAGE GROVEjo million times a dayat home, at work or on the way1. Bright, bracing taste...Ott-fuih and sparkling.1. A welcome bita quick energy .*•brings youbeds refreshed.•OTtitc ami Aumoem of ate tots cou commni nrThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.^CeM” Is a registered fede-morlt. O 1938. THI COCA-COLA COMPANYman— /3, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON r>9« 5/C/jO popTv;1^ * a<Sg/Phi Sig singsStrawberries, ice cream-yumlAs the prisoner said to his cellmate, “Next time they serveas strawberries, I’m breaking out.”For those who want to “break out” after comps and thehectic school year, Phi Sigr.a Delta Fraternity is offering its28th annual Strawberry festival at 5625 Woodlawn Satur¬day night after the Inter-fraternity sing.The festival, an open house featuring “tons of entertain¬ment,” free strawberries and ice cream, is traditionally thelast all-campus social affair.Dancing “under the stars” to!teZ! Kimpton to discuss Chicago'sgames galore will be the featuredentertainmentFifty cents per person admis¬sion will be charged with all pro¬ceeds going to the UC cancer re¬search association.Members of . Sigma woman'sclub will work intimately withPhi Sigs in running booths amiconcessions such as a "celery eat¬ing contest” and a bingo gamein the basement. Jay Levine,chairman of the event, promises"loads of fun and racy goings onfor everyone.”Phi Sigs in charge of variousevents at the festival are CharlesMittnick, Stanislavski Friedman,Widget Birdheart and Ron Grab-bish Moonpig Newman will han¬dle the girls at his blather-boothaccording to a Phi Sig spokesman. Frats sing tomorrow;celebrities to attendTen fraternities will “gladly sing the praise of their aim*mater” in Hutchinson court at 8:45 p.m. tomorrow night a*the 45th annual Inter-fraternity sing gets underway.Competing for the quality cup and the quantity cup, eachof eight fraternities will mus- : 77 : 77—“ter as many of their alumni as ”ns , ro?,f °v7 the c'Nki . . . Vr , shop overlooking Hutchinsonrole on UC radio programsChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton participates in two Universityradio programs in the next three weeks, discussing the roles of uni¬versities in general and the University of Chicago in particular. Sun¬day on the Round Table, devoted to "the idea of a University”; andJune 19 at 10:35 p.m. on New World, investigating “the responsibilityof greatness.”New World is the University's successor to Round Table, the lastbroadcast of which is Sunday, June 12.Sunday’s Round Table discussion will center around the uniquecontribution that a private university makes to the nation’s educa¬tional strength. UC itself will be chosen as a case study of both theserious financial problems confronting all private institutions ofhigher education in the country, and the tremendous contributionsto research they make.Charles Percy, trustee and president-director of Bell and Howellcompany, John Wilson, of the Oriental institute, and Kimpton areparticipating.The New World program of June 19, part of NBC’s monitor series,features representatives of the various areas of the University dis¬cussing in separate talks the responsibility of a particular divisionto the entire school. possible and march into the courtsinging previously picked songs.Two of the houses. Phi GammaDelta and Psi Upsilon, retired thequality and quantity cup, respec¬tively, last year, making them in¬eligible for competition at thissing.5,000 alumni are expected to at¬tend the sing, according to How¬ard Mort, alumni secretary. Theevent comes at the height of theannual alumni reunion.As part of the evening’s pro¬gram, the Inter-fraternity scholar¬ship awards and student achieve¬ment medals will be presented.The medals, given to the fifteenstudents selected by the dean’scommittee as having contributedmost to the extra-curriculum, willbe presented by Thomas R. Mul*roy, president of the Alumni asso¬ciation.Other awards to be presentedare the “C” men’s blankets andthe Varsity cup, both by theathletic office.Chancellor and Mrs. LawrenceA. Kimpton and members of UC’sboard of trustees will view theSUMMERWORKCOLLEGESTUDENTSEARN $1000 Five UC law students named toOrder of Coif, law honor societyFive University of Chicago law tional honor society founded toschool students have been elected encourage scholarship and to ad-to the Order of the Coif. vance the ethical standards of theThe new members are Charles , ,T. Beeching. Jr., Roger C. Cram- leKaI Profession. Its members areton, Robert VV. Hamilton. Ira elected each spring from the high-'vipnis, and Harold A. Ward III. est ten per cent in scholarship ofThe Order of the Coif is a na- the graduating class.3 TERRY’S PIZZAI§ finest pizzas made g3 TREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTS 1a SMALL 1.00 LARGE I.OS !THIS SUMMER | MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 3.95 !We «!*• rsrrg n full line af llalimn foodsLARGE NATIONAL FIRM WILL HIRE ANDTRAIN SEVERAL EXTRA SHARP YOUNGMEN FOR INTERESTING SUMMER PUBLIC 1 SPECIAL THIS WEEK — Present this coupon and you j1 will receive 35c credit towards any piui oatena at our store. !| 1518 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-4045 jCONTACT WORK.YOU MUST BE NEAT APPEARING ANDENJOY MEETING PEOPLE. SOME TRAVEL¬ING In resort area of Indiana andILLINOIS REQUIRED, CAR FURNISHEDSALARY AND BONUSES WILL NET YOUOVER $100 A WEEK PLUS EXPENSES. WON¬DERFUL BUSINESS EXPERIENCE FOR THEFUTURE. WRITE OR WIRE IMMEDIATELY. The IdealGraduation Gifti$ aPortable TypewriterPERSONNEL MANAGER402 MAJESTIC BUILDING22 WEST MONROE STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOISTeachers Acceptable for Summer Work Prices *40°° and Upall machines fully guaranteed forgenerous periodsask for demonstration without obligationat theUniversity of ChicagoBookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE court. Also present will be AmosAlonzo Stagg.Starting off the program, fiftygirls of Inter-club will piesenta chorus of songs led by Quad-rangier Mary Joan Spiegel.Judges of the event will bemembers of the music depart¬ment, led by Grosvenor Cooper*head of the department. }Three studentswin politicalessay prizesPaul A. Cohen, Sarah Silver*man, and Davis Bobrow have re¬ceived first ($150), second ($75),and third ($25) prizes, respective¬ly, in the political institutionsessay contest, announced DeanRobert M. Strozier Wednesday.All three winners are under¬graduates. Cohen’s winning essaywas entitled "United States’ Tem¬porary Visa Policy: Its Effects onthe Foreign Scientist and onAmerican National Interest.” MissSilverman’s essay was entitled“Responsibility in Criminal Law,”and Bobrow wrote on "Desegre¬gation and Integration in the Pub*lie Schools.”Schooling newhead of schoolAppointment of a new direc*tor of the University’s LaboratorySchools was announced last week.Herbert W. Schooling will replaceHarold B. Dunkel as director onAugust 15.Dunkel will continue to serveas adviser to the LaboratorySchools; he is particularly con¬cerned with development of aprogram for teaching modern lan¬guages in elementary schools.Dunkel had earlier asked that hebe replaced as laboratory schooldirector in order to give moretime to his field of educationalphilosophy.Schooling, who holds a doctor¬ate from the University of Mis¬souri, is now superintendent ofschools in North Kansas City, Mo.lie also holds the post of presi¬dent of the Missouri Associationof School Administrators.Chancellor Kimpton announcedthat he also plans to appoint aprincipal to aid Schooling in ad¬ministration of elementary andsecondai'y divisions of the labora¬tory schools.RELIANCE CAMERA &PHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63 rd St.BU 8-6040Peterson Moving& Storage Co.55th A Ellis AvenueStorage facilittai for a trunk orcarload of household effectsPacking — ShippingLocal or long distance movingBlitter field 8-6711I GEORGE ERHARDTand SONS, Inc./ PaintingWood FinishingDecoratinginishing3123 Lake StreetPhone KEdxie 3-3186inr cniCAfiO MAROON .\June 3, 19556Editoriol Editorial \SAC rushes in new members;choices ill consideredAbout 20 hours went into the writing of theconstitution of the newly organized Social Activ¬ities council.About two hours w’ent into the picking of the*ix petition members w'ho are to play a large partIt the carrying out of this constitution.The meetings of the SAC committee writing theconstitution were all open, no final vote was evertaken at the meeting at which a major suggestionwas brought up. and the opinions of the campuswere constantly sought.The fourteen petitioners to SAC were not per¬mitted to speak for themselves, nor were they evenpermitted to submit statements in writing aboutthemselves. Their names were presented and votedupon at the same meeting, with no time allowedfor those who must make the decision to make anyinquiries into the qualifications of these individ¬uals. It is impossible to say whether the decisionsmade by the six were wise — whether another sixwould have done a better job is and will remainan unanswerable question.That the choices were made without due con¬sideration, and without sufficient consideration of“dark horse” petitioners is clear. One of the rea¬sons for the petitioners is to allow those not eligibleotherwise to be seated. Only two of the six werenot otherwise eligible. Of the six petitioners chosensix are undergraduates. Of the six chosen, six areunmarried, although consideration had been givento including a seat especially for a married student.Apparently, the only excuse for the scanty con¬sideration w’as lack of time. Even under the pres¬sure of the end of the school year, it seems thatconsideration of a board to function for a full yeardeserved more than two short hours.Letters . ..C&G . . .Who's to blame?Freedom is an important thingto this campus, or judging fromthe number of students uniting todefend academic freedom it w’ouldseem to be. There are also free¬doms. which may not seem spe¬cifically of an academic nature,but which may have been forgot¬ten. Along with such freedoms asan uncencored press comes privi¬lege and responsibility.There have been a great num¬ber of complaints about the irre¬sponsible writing which appearedin this year’s t ap and Gown. Thewriting is said to misrepresentour school, to libel individual stu¬dents. and to contain many in¬stances of poor taste.If this is true, no number ofretractions, explanatory letters,or accusations will undo com¬pletely the harm already done toour self-respect.If we wish to have an accuratepicture of our campus presentedin an intelligent w'ay we mustdo it ourselves.Have we allowed one irrespon¬sible student or small group ofstudents to obtain the power toprint a year book falsely repre¬senting ourselves? Are we poten¬tially those "adult” citizens whowill walk with their heads in theclouds until they find themselvesin the hands of a dictator?To place the blame for Cap andGown on the lack of censorshipby faculty advisors, on the admin¬istration. or on the personality ofan individual student means thatwe relinquish the privileges ofour freedom.If the publications of this schoolare to reflect accurately the opin¬ions of our student body, theymust be subject to only the cen¬sorship of the students them¬selves. If a good yearbook is im¬portant to us, we must insure arepresentative staff of maturestudents to publish it If this year¬book is a mistake, let’s learn fromexperience. We have the freedomand the responsibility to see thatthe mistake does not happenagain.Berenice FisherC&G . . .In bad tasteAn advertisement for the re¬cent issue of the yearbook wasleft in my mailbox recommendingthis publication, because of itslack of "an exaggerated sense ofdiscretion.” Glancing over afriend’s copy confirmed this state¬ment. In addition to a recurrenttheme of distortions, innuendoesand lies there is an obvious over¬abundance of abysmal crudity.The article concerning EnricoFermi marks the nadir of taste.Its so-called human-interest stylecan only be matched by the tripe-purveying of the foremost expo¬nents of yellow journalism.It is a present shame, and ina commemorative publication acontinuing disgrace, that the CapA Gown substituted for respecta lone of completely unbecoming,boorish familiarity.Davis Bobrow C&G . . .Editor ottockedI am taking the liberty of usingyour columns to express my com¬ments on another campus publi¬cation which (fortunately for itseditors) offers no means of criti¬cism between its own gaudily-embossed covers.For the enlightenment of thatvast majority of the campus com¬munity who will probably neverset eyes on this worthy contribu¬tion to the immortal literature ofthe western world, I refer to the1955 Gap & Gown. The editor ofthis volume (who apparently sitshome nights reading the Marquisdu Sade and Mad Gomics), seeksto propound the thesis that hismomentary whims and fads arethe only thing worth taking seri¬ously on the campus he writes of.Among many things worth re¬membering on this campus, I donot number Mr. Paul Hoffman.This is particularly true at fourdollars a copy, when the pointedcomments of this walking phono¬graph are distressingly available,free of charge, to any individualunfortunate enough to be seen byhim when an exit is not near athand.Robert H. MarchWriter"right"There has been much conster¬nation lately over proposals tobring back football, to promotea sense of belonging, and in gen¬eral, to mess up the university.There have also been counter¬proposals. Each side has its rea¬sons and its objects. Let us rea¬son them out together. Thosewho are petitioning for footballare blockheads! They would takean axe to the foundations of aprogram which has guided theUniversity for two decades.This in itself is not bad; butin its place they propose a sys¬tem infinitely worse. Those whoare asking for "assemblies” andconfederations and clubs are as¬serting that the student muststudy socially to study at all. Thisentire side is dissatisifed with theUniversity and w7ant it changed.That is their prerogative. Theiractions are aimed at leveling to amediocre norm: their ideal. Theiractions are based on the idea thattruth is revealed, ami educationrounded off, only by (social) in¬tercourse.They are wrong; dead wrong!And if they were right, w'hyshould we need an administratorand a social leader to drive us ina flock to what is reai?No! Let us raise a standardagainst this new order of things.Football and Saturday crowds,standards of taste and criteria ofbehavior, schools eclipsed by fra¬ternities and conduct dominatedby canons, these are all socialpressures. Social pressure is al¬ways tyranny. Let us declare our¬selves for those things in the oldwhich are good and true (work¬ing those changes which are forthe better) and against those newthings which are silly, stupid andpernicious. Call this what youwill! It is right!E. M. Wise Wants new partyStudent politics at this campushas gone to pot. ISL has becomea Leviathan like machine whoseonly real political principle is toperpetuate itself in power. SRPhas dwindled to an ingrown bandof diehards who in their increas¬ing desperation to win is becom¬ing less and less distinguishablefrom ISL. Both parties spend fan¬tastic amounts of energy on proj¬ects out of all proportion to theirvalue just so they can say theyfufilled their platform; both part¬ies have now pushed to their limitjust about every project theycould dream up that could con¬ceivably win a few votes. As pres¬ently constituted, student politicsis about at the end of the line.And it has been years sinceeither party took a clear standon the one issue UC students arereally concerned over: collegechanges and the "trend.” This is¬sue cuts right across party linesas presently drawn.So the time has come for a newcampus party a party dedicatedto the defense and promotion ofthe idea of liberal education atUC—a Liberal Education Party.The program of such a partywould be twofold: (1) To cometo an understanding as to whatkind of education and campus lifewe as students want, and to at-,tempt to convince the administra¬tion and campus community toadopt our views, with the ultimategoal of persuading the Universityto accept the student body(through SG) into full partner¬ship in determination of the edu¬cational program and governingof the campus;And (2) insofar as we are un¬successful in so doing, to supple¬ment the established program bypresenting educational eventsourselves—for example, speakers,forums, discussions, panels, films,exhibits, use of publications, per¬haps one-day or two-day confer¬ences in the moral-social-politicalfield (as proposed by ProfessorKrueger as an alternative to un¬dergrad assemblies).Also, if it is considered neces¬sary, this party could set up pub¬licity channels for the purpose ofencouraging the lype of studentswe want to come to this campus.Such a party is what the cam¬pus needs to make student gov¬ernment and student polities morethan the dialectical sport it hasbeen for some time; to make SGand its organs a vehicle for unitedaction in matters over which allstudents-are concerned; to enablethe student body contribute max¬imally in making this the Univer¬sity we want it to becomfc.AnonymousTonight ot 8:30sterling performanceI wish to congratulate the mem¬bers of the cast of UniversityTheatre for their excellent and hi¬larious presentation of "Tonightat 8:30.” Their sterling perform¬ances, a mixture of stage andlife roles provided a delightfulevening of entertainment and re¬inforced for a growing preju¬dice that UC students are amongthe must talented and resource¬ful group of young people to befound on any American campus.Marvin H. Sussman Yearbook is monomaniacal;gives a distorted picture“One thine;, however, is certain,” says the 1955 version ofCap and Gown “the University of Chicago still holds firstclaim to the title of ‘The Westernmost outpost of Europeanculture.’ ”If the University, as pictured in Cap and Gown, is indeedthe Westernmost outpost of European culture, then the bar¬barians are upon us.Clad exclusively in Bermuda shorts and oxford grey, theyhave descended upon Chicago bringing their own peculiarkind of culture with them. They cultivate all the arts: theyendlessly sing fraternity and football songs around a barrelof beer; they interminably dance the Charleston; they oftenwhistle or giggle at statues of nudes.Fortunately, the University is not as it is pictured in Capand Gown. The barbarians are not yet upon us, despite thepicture presented in the yearbook. The reason for the picturepresented in the yearbook lies in the organization of thisyear’s Cap and Gown staff.In its article on the Maroon, the yearbook makes a remark¬able comparison: “A newspaper — like a symphony orchestra— is, by its nature, tyrannical.” Carrying the comparison onestep farther: Cap and Gown — like the music of a single pic¬colo player — was, by its nature, monomaniacal.It was the product of one person with one set of ideas. Hisideas were his owm and his ideas were the yearbook.Cap and Gown says of SRP in last fall’s election: “The samesordid left-wing Bohemian types w’ere trotted-out, went downthis time to defeat while a clean-out slate of ISL candidateseased to victory.” Its editor is a member of ISL.Cap and Gown says of the Maroon: “Only on the SportsPage w’as any of the fire of the previous year retained.” Theyearbook editor was Maroon sports editor during the previ¬ous year.Cap and Gowm devotes more copy to an Ad-hoc committeeto throw a goodbye party for Edward W. Maupin than it doesto the Chicago Review. The yearbook c’ditor was chairmanof the committee.Cap and Gown, in short, was one jxrson’s picture of what,the University ought to be. Cap and Gown itself ought tohave been a ft ill record of what t he University really is: {>er-haps, indeed, the Westernmost outpost of European culture.ReferendumsuggestedIt must bo clear that the returnof football to the University willcost a budget-minded administra¬tion many thousands of dollarsthat might otherwise be spent forimprovement of a much harassedacademic program. If this conten¬tion is correct, it would seem thatthe decision in this case was mo¬tivated primarily by a desire tomeet an overwhelming studentdemand for bringing back footballto the campus. But should 300signatures be indicative of thedesire of the student body as awhole? Let me therefore suggesta general referendum on the ques¬tion of football conducted by Stu¬ dent Government to guide theadministration in its policies.Such a referendum might lakeaccount of three possible posi¬tions: (1) in favor of football atUC; «2> opposed to football; and(3) indifferent to the issue. Maywe hope that the level of intelli¬gence at UC is’ somewhat higherthan that displayed in the idioticstatement signed by the U of CStudents for Football. It wouldlie quite disastrous to the "com¬munity of scholars" which hasbeen the proud achievement ofthe University if this statementwere taken as representative ofthe kind of “well balanced” think¬ing that seems to be in store forus.John FriedmannIssued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, ot the publica¬tion offices, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones:Editoriol Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1010; Business and Advertising Offices,Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, ond subscriptions bymail, $3 per yc-ar. Business Office hours: J to 5 p m., Monday through Fridoy.Allen R. ionger editor-in-chiefJoy S. Burbach managing editorWilliam M. Brandon.... business managerExecutive news editor.News editorsNews feoture editorCultural editorSports editorAdvertising monogcr.Photo editor . . . ,Production inonagerAssistant production monogcrCopy editorPersonnel monogerCalendar editor. Bob QuinnSue Tox, Spike Pinney, Diana EpsteinLois GordnerJoel PichenySom GreenleeGary Mokotoff.Ronold GrossmanPrentiss Choote. Duchess LoughronLinda LiberaJock Burbach. , , , Rosemary GolllEditoriol staff Joe Abatie, Ellen Abernetby,Joan Behrenson, Jim Birmingham, Sam Blazer, Robert Bloch, AliceBloom, Roger Bowen, Dave Bobrow, Alan Cborlens, Steve Cohen,Charles Cooper, Mitri Dozoretz, Borboro Fischman, Don Fisher, KentHonnery, Smokey Gorcia, Poul Hoffman, Bill Kaplan, Ken Karlin,Fred Karst, Bruce Larkin, Gene Rocblin, Korl Rodmon, David Schle*-singer, Frank Temenyi, Richord Word.Photographers Charles Becher, George ZygmundBusiness stoff: city advertising monogcr, Robert Lofts; business secretory#Don Miller; subscription monoger, Norman Lewok; accountont-in-chorge, Fom Kapantais; politico! advertising monoger, Fred Freed#delivery monoger, Harold Baron; loop delivery manager, Julius Kor-pen, soles monoger, Ronald De Frolus.June i. 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON \ Page 7Wins Mademoiselle editorshipA UC student has been se¬lected by judges of Madcniois-gelle magazine's college board con¬test to serve as a guest editor ofthe August issue of Mademoiselle.Helen Wollack, who served as oneof the magazine’s many CollegeBoard contributors during the past academic year, will workthroughout June at the Mademoi¬selle, Wollack will be writing forthe college and career departmentof the magazine. Her award in¬cludes round-trip plane fare toNew York and salary during themonth of June.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!13.4.5. Yes, only Viceroy has this filter composed of 20,000• tiny filter traps. You cannot obtain the same filteringaction in any other cigarette.Besides being non-mineral and non-toxic, this cellu-• lose-acetate filter never shreds or crumbles.The Viceroy filter wasn’t just whipped up and rushedto market to meet the new and skyrocketing demandfor filtered cigarettes. Viceroy pioneered. Startedresearch more than 20 years ago to create the pureand perfect filter.Smokers en masse report that filtered Viceroys havea finer flavor even than cigarettes without filters.Rich, satisfying, yet pleasantly mild.Viceroy 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 s,.plus Richer, Smoother Flavor Carl Rogersawarded medalCarl R. Rogers, UC pro¬fessor of psychology and ex¬ecutive secretary of the Coun¬seling center, was awarded theNicholas Murray Butler Medal insilver by Columbia universityWednesday.The aw'ard, made at Columbia’scommencement exercises in NewYork, went to Rogers for hisbook, Psychotherapy and Person¬ality Changes, published in 1954.The book, a study of patients atUC’s Counseling center who un¬derwent client-centered therapy, amethod of psychotherapy devel¬oped by Rogers and the staff ofthe center, provides the firstevidence through controlled ex¬periment of personality changesin the patients as a result of thei*treatment.The citation pointed ou the de¬velopment, in the book, “of aphilosophy and a method of psy¬chotherapy especially consonantwith the democratic doctrine ofrespect for every individual per¬sonality.’’Fulbright grantto UC professorCharles Loch Mowat, asso¬ciate professor of English, hasbeen awarded a Fulbright edu¬cational grant to lecture in cul¬tural history at the UniversityCollege of Swansea, at the Uni¬versity of Wales, Swansea, Wales,for the academic year 1955-56.Mowat will collaborate in theteaching of two courses in worldand English history, and also willdo research on the relationshipbetween public and private char¬ity in Chicago in September, 1956. Students honor SkardonUC foreign students from over 60 countries gatheredat International house Wednesday evening to honorAlvin Skardon, retiring adviser to foreign students.Representatives of groups of foreign students from all overthe world expressed their thanks to Skardon for his “under¬standing and friendliness in helping them to solve the problemsthat faced them and in helping them to adjust.”The foreign students presented Skardon with three singleand seven albums of long playing records.Skardon’s retirement will become effective June 30. He willwrite his doctoral dissertation during the next year.Piece of Egyptian tombdisplayed in UC museumA rare 5000-year-old decorated panel from an ancient Egyp¬tian tomb, picturing the tomb’s occupant and his family invivid colors, has been put on display in the Oriental institutemuseum.. one of the founders of modernThe panel, pieced together archaeology. Petrie sent this panelfrom over 400 fragments at from the tomb wall to the Uni-the institute, came from the tombof Nefermat at Abydos, Egypt.The panel is of limestone, 10 feethigh and three feet wide, weigh¬ing about 3000 pounds. It showsNefermat, a high official in an- versity, probably in return forcontributions to his work.The fragments, varying inthickness from one inch to 12 or13 inches, had to be assembledlike a jigsaw puzzle and joinedcient Egypt’s 4th dynasty, about together with metal dowels and3000 BC, his wife, and sons, invivid red, green and brown colors.In the inscription on the panel,Nefermat boasts that he inventedthe rare type of decorative color¬ing used on the panel. Unlikemost ancient Egyptian tomb pan¬els, which are either carved inrelief or incised into the stone,the colored figures and inscrip¬tion on the Nefermat panel aresunk into the surface of the stoneand filled with the color.The tomb of Nefermat was firstdiscovered and explored in the1890’s by Sir Flinders Petrie,famed British archaeologist, and> . -v. , , i, "Cap & GownonlySpecial ^50Graduates! Now is the time for you to have yourgraduation photo taken byoCouise djarher1457 E. 57 St. BU 8-0876air conditioned studioWEBB-LINNPRINTING CO.t}Catalogs, Publications, Advertising LiteraturePrinters of the _University of Chicago MagazineL. S. BERLIN, B.A. '09A. i. FALICH, M.B.A. '51511 SOUTH SANGAMONMOnroe 6-2900 cement. Missing pieces were re¬placed with modern restorationsto fill out the full panel, as itwas when it adorned Nefermat’stomb.Three studentsget awards fordivisional workAward of University prizesfor proficiency in educationand physiology to three stu¬dents have been announced byRobert M. Strozier, dean of stu¬dents.Richard D. Bock, research asso¬ciate in psychology, received the$300 Susan Colver-Rosenbergerprize in education for his thesis“A mathematical formulation offield psychology.” Medical stu¬dents William Dement and MyranTracht shared the 1955 HarryGinsberg memorial prize in physi¬ology.Bock, now a research associate,received his PhD from UC in 1952.Both Dement and Tracht. jointwinners of the Ginsberg prize,will receive their MD degrees inJune. Dement and Tracht will con¬tinue their work at UC towardPhDs in physiology.MIRA-MARHOTEL350 Rooms — BathCoffee Shop, Valet, etc.Lovely Accommodationsfrom $4 to $66220 Woodlawn Avenue"Just throe blochs frontcampuK"PLaxa 2-1100HAROLD BISHOP, ManagerTheDisc1367 E. 57RecordVof the weekRemington12" Ips now98*1Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON J«»«e X 1955 IGREETINGS TO GRADUATESNICKY'S PIZZA1235 E. 55th St.CONNORHARDWARE1304 E. 55th St.MODELCAMERA SHOP1329 E. 55th St.^ N.S.A. DiscountsBRESLAUERSREADY-TO-WEAR1312-1314 E. 55th St.CONTINENTALGOURMETRESTAURANT1508 E. 57th St.JIMMY'S J. H. FINNIGANDRUGGIST1201 E. 55 St.Corner Woodlown Ave.Phone Mldwoy 3-0708UNIVERSITYQUICK LAUNDRY1376 E. 55th St.P^ 2-9097UNIVERSITYSHOE SHOP1349 E. 55th St.Chicogo, III.Speciol Hond-Mode SondoU J. H. WATSONJEWELERS1200 E. 55th St.CAMPUSSUPERETTE1327 E. 57th St.LEIGH'S GROCERY& MARKET1327 E. 57th St.HY 3-9100THE WORKBENCH1223 E. 55th St.LE PROVENCAL1450 E. 57th St. PROGRESSIVEPAINT ANDHARDWARE CO.1158 E. 55HY 3-3840N.S.A. DiscountHYDE PARKLIQUORS1405 E. 55th St.Free DeliveryCARMEN'SMOVERSUSED FURNITURE STORE1365 E. 55th St.MU 4-8843 ond MU 4-9003 WINTER'S, INC.1334 E. 55th St.N.W. Corner of 55th ondKenwoodU. C. CLEANERS1456 E. 57th St.A. T. ANDERSONHARDWARE1444-46 E. 55th St.Points - Wollpoper - OilsARNY J. LINDGRENDoing Business osHARRY S. BROWNPAINTSHYdc Pork 3-0122Midway 3-01711307 East 55th StreetChicogo 15, IllinoisU. T.Best Wishes, Class of '55☆TheGalleryNOWArtMaterialsOil Colors, BrushesCanvas Board, Etc.☆PRINTSPICTURE FRAMINGRESTORING Congratulations1955Graduates“DRESS WELLAND SUCCEED”geoiigesMENS SHOP. 1035 E. 55th St.Cor. Greenwood ‘its time he talked things overwith a Sun Life mani"... time to have a Sun Life man safeguard the littlelady with a Sun Life of Canada life insurance policy.The Sun Life man in your community isRALPH J. HOOD, Jr., *48l NORTH LA SALLE STREET, CHICAGO 2, ILLINOISFR 2-2390 • GA 2-5273 Just published . . .PsychotherapeuticInterventionin SchizophreniaBy Lewis B. Hill, M.D.Viewing schizophrenia os "a woyof life," Dr. Hill discusses the at¬tributes ond motives necessary ino person who hopes to work suc¬cessfully with schizophrenic pa¬tients, defines schizophrenia os heuses the term, ond presents onoccount of o person undergoing onacute schizophrenic catastrophe.The personality of the pre-schizo¬phrenic, the process of personalitydevelopment, ond the role of themother in formation of schizo¬phrenic psychoses ore oil exominedwith great clarity ond insight.“There is no better introductionto the everyday work of the en¬lightened psychiatrist." -— Ives B.Hendrick, M.D , President, Ameri¬can Psychoanalytic Association(1953-55).223 pages $5.00At your bookstore *or fromThe Universityof Chicago Press5750 Ellis Avenue- ' m — m. * §J«"e 3,1955 the CHICAGO MAROONUyer'i3entv>+',es: ted artist co// • national praac0>^w; 2,n fe* ^ -"iiccon’rne*bofr“8mi"“Vofe9^2^~*»■«« V-4 -'°'’ • "uc > * ‘ ■ & > „r :;;;:r**- "'-^ration ^CUiv*. JUrl • ***%-* * * cause$rt«-rtv.»» , ... ywtawww v.. .^taistn , •*.« .«. . t - Unorlnth ^ IPr**. _Review of the yearUC in retrospect: 1954-55 • • • •ISLSRP tries for more than SG;emphasizes ed ucation ices. While ISL referred to com¬mittee the question of a food plan,and failed to take any action be¬fore the end of the year, SRP an¬nounced February 11 in the Ma¬roon a plan for . . a restaurantdiscount program whereby a stu-This was the year of ISL in student politics; only five ISL nominated candidates lost in dent purchasing a ticket is en-campus elections, and the vote of 56-32 for rule six, strongly supported by ISL showed that tilled to redueed prices on allthe All-Campus Civil Liberties committee was ISL dominated also. ’ purchases at the restaurant.”ISL kept many of its campaign promises this year, keeping up the program of student when the plan was put into ef'services and enlarging upon it, while lobbying for measures in Springfield under the ISL fect’ at the besinning of springpledge to work for legislation affecting students as students. SRP, however, did not die ^rter as campaigning for theconcentrating on a program of — — National Student association elec¬tions began in earnest, the ISLStrozier in ridding the housing committee chairman accused SRPfile of discriminatory listings, but of ‘‘throwing together a plan tosucceeded in getting only a prom- release immediately prior to ourise of a mild letter recommending release date,” but SRP merely. . . 0 landlords follow the Univer- mentioned the February announc-picked wno were to write the SAC sity’s nondiscriminatory practice, mnt and asked why the announce-consti ution than the count of Ken Marshall, SG’s representa- ment of the “Kucheman plan”culture and education, includ¬ing a large number of lectures.ISL in controlISL seemed concerned this yearwith gaining control of studentorganizations. Sometimes the rea¬sons were obvious —as representa¬tives were being picked for ACC-LC ISLers could be heard plot¬ting, ‘‘Now if we have the YoungRepublican’s meeting at 2:30 canwe all made it to the Robin Hoodmeeting in time to vote?” Othertimes the reasons were less obvi¬ous. but the push for control wasjust as sure. When petitions were votes which were in question.ISL bucks FortierNo sooner had the group of “re¬sponsible student leaders” beenparty members began. This time,however, A1 Fortier, ISL presi¬dent of SG, was fooled. ISL re¬fused to go along with the For¬tier plan to incorporate SU in stu¬dent government. Fortier neverpresented the plan before SAC,but George Stone, president ofInter-fraternity council and anISL member of SG, presented an tive to the South East Chicagocommission, who submitted thecommittee report to SG, did re¬port that the administration hasremoved cards from the file incases of “overt discrimination.”ISL however, was not alonethis year in starting student serv- was made just before NSA elec¬tions.While SRP was being teased forsecuring a student service, ISLwas taunted for sponsoring a folksinger. How'ever, ISL’s reason forthe event differed characteristic¬ally from SRP’s reasons. Lennap.u! circulation /or Social Ac , , identica, one. Qn, stonel.viues council seats, more than a and For(ier were convinoed, how.ever, and by the time the finalvofe came on a constitution whichsmall proportion of the petitionswere ISL party members. A1though never having taken a par- did nQt lovide SG with any voicety stand on parties, ISL seemedconvinced that only ISLers couldbo trusted in positions of power.This fear of power gettingaway from ISL and SG (whichthis year were almost synony¬mous i showed itself in the suddenconcern over director of studentactivities Arthur Keindl’s plan forthe Student Activities council.After an SG committee went tosee Keindl, SG secured two seatson the council, but SG members in the new organization, only For¬tier failed to support it.ISL’s reign in Student Govern¬ment was again concerned pri¬marily with student services.New services were added to the“wire cage,” much touted in thefall elections, the loan funds w'ereincreased, and the student publi¬city service was started.Fathered by Clive Gray, wholobbied in the halls outside SGwere absent from more than one meetings for money needed toof the planning sessions. It was buy equipment, the publicity serv-the principle and not the two ice printed SRP’s campaign but¬tons in the spring election. Oneduplicating job. for StudentForum, produced handbills whichviolated the student code — noidentification of the organization— but the ISL committee on rec¬ognized student organizationsgenerously overlooked the error.Student Government this yeartook the tack of trying to workwith rather than against DeanSC in 1954-55Record of lJ).'vl-.r>.'> StudentGovernment:Publicity service begunKucheman refugee aid plan be¬gunAll Campus Civil Liberties com¬mittee reactivatedLobbied for Fair EducationalPractices commission billUniversity housing file and stu¬dent eating problems thoroughlyinvest iva tedFrankfort exchange plan sup¬portedDivisional Orientation commis¬sion initiatedNSA’s request to state depart¬ment for information on Chinesestudents’ detainment initiatedAfter-hours library box addedto Harper on SG’s requestActive assistance given to theFestival of the ArtsOriginal SAC plan protestedOrientation activities carried onEducational Survey commissionreactivatedLoan funds increasedTutorial, commuter, and second¬hand goods files added to StudentService centerActivity development fund be¬gunSoviet editors’ admission re¬quested of state departmentPrivate polling places providedHandling charge reduced onsome Stud e n t Service centerbooksAcademic Freedom Week pro¬gram givenDelegates sent to Little UnitedNations and MIT conference ondiscriminationActivities handbook and studentdirectory published “If we schedule the Young Republicans club meeting for 2:30,can we make it to Robin Hood in time to vote?” Jones, chairman of SRP’s culturalcommittee stated, “SRP’s show',ing of the film (Salt of the Earth)was one of our attempts to pre«sent to the campus important cul¬tural achievements. ...” ISL’s-fund raising committee franklystated that folk singer RichardDyer Bennet was intended to raisemoney.ISL caucuses this year fre¬quently became deliberative as¬semblies, as the various SG com¬mittee chairmen tried to convincetheir party to back their motions.Gaining the support of the cau¬cus, however, did not guaranteepassage of the bill in SG. Therestill remained the job of plottingto w'in the votes of the ISL gov¬ernment members who failed toattend caucuses.On many occasions, ISL failedto reach agreement with itself incaucus, and the split appeared onthe government floor, with party“leaders” oiT both sides of thequestion. Once the ISL majorityleader moved that the report ofan ISL committee not be adopted.No real party split appearedimminent, however, since the par¬ty often functioned almost as aleague of independent students—the lines of demarcation differedwith each separate question.While ISL tried to convince it¬self, SRP tried to , w’in an ISLdominated campus by “educating”it. SRP’s concern with culture andeducation was evidenced recentlyw'ith the distribution of leafletsat the Moral Rearmament plays.The handbills consisted of quotesabout MRA from books, whichSRP intended to work against theorganization, although at leastone reader of the handbill asked,“Are they for or against MRA?”SRP failed in an attempt tohave student government sponsora forum of the Chinese studentquestion—ISL neatly referred thematter to NSA since, “More infor¬mation was needed, sponsoringa forum implies a stand, and aMandel hall group couldn't takeeffective action.” SRP leaderscalled the whole thing “A facadefor ISL’s unwillingness to takeany positive action on the issue.”But when the Young Friends didSee ‘ISL,’ page HEnrollment rises under new AB;exams and courses make changesAbout 120 more students entered UC at the freshman level than in the last academicyear, bringing this year’s total to 505 entrants.Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton attributed the increase in enrollment in part to the newBA plan, which made it easier for a student to specialize from the beginning of his collegecareer. Speaking under Maroon sponsorship in Mandel hall this February, Kimpton said,“Under our new arrangement we are once again attracting such students who have a clear-bent.”ly developed specialLater, he spoke of “this newattractiveness to a wider vari¬ety of superior students.”The new BA plans, how'ever, the old AB into oblivion. This pos¬sibility, although seldom realized. In March, while the exact rec¬ommendations of the subeommit-or even attempted, was to many te of the council of the facultya symbol of the freedom accordedUC students to study and learnhad another effect on the college. an(j think as they liked. However,The system of quarterly examinations given centrally according to and tjie quarterly grades remaina published schedule was dis- ed oniy advisoryrupted by the large number of col¬lege students taking divisionalcourses, and in the winter quarterthe giving of quarterly examina senate were still “secret,” many-persons predicted that the recom¬mendations would affect compscomp schedules were published, so much as to necessitate the es¬tablishment of attendance rulesand accrediting of quarterly ex¬ams. When the vote was taken,however, it was with the under¬standing that the recommenda¬tion would have no effect on theExam system debatedTesting procedures in the col¬lege came in for more discussiontions was turned over to individ- as the changes in the University comp system unless the collegeual instructors. Since no schedule examiners oftice were passed, al- ch0se to effect changesof examinations was available ex- lowing the college to change itscept by contacting individual in- testing system if it wished. Thestructors or by going to class, the college is now free to test as ittraditional UC possibility of get- sees fit, while formerly, the Uni¬ting an A for the quarter without versity examiners office was re- only a few weeks before its an-attending a single class followed sponsible. nouncement. Language 1 wasLang I goneThe college made one changethis year, denied as a possibility dropped. Early in March DeanRobert Streeter acknowledgedthat the course had long been asubject of controversy, but saidthat no action concerning achange w’as anticipated. His offi¬cial statement, how’ever, was “Nocomment.” As soon as the lan¬guage 1 comp had been given,however, the news was released,late enough so that studentswould not be deterred from tak¬ing the test.While talk of college changesand requirement of class attend¬ance was going on, others beganto worry about those who prefer¬red to skip class, and either dotheir reading on their own, or failto do it all. Ken Lew'alski, headof Coulter, suggested that suchthings as the questions of classcutting and failure to turn in as¬signments might be topics forproposed undergraduate assem¬blies. Attendance at the assem¬blies will be optional, however4according to current plans.Page 10 TNE CHICAGO MAROON *•«« 3, 1955Review of the yearToynbee, Fermi, Levi ~ evennames make campus news Schwartz—in 1954*55Hurricanes tornadoes, and wars make the headlines of did Douglas’ representatives real- M. Loomer in 1953.world newspapers, but at universities, to use a cliche which ly say that "campaigning on the Chancey Harris took over thepossesses a substantial amount of truth, it’s names that make Univennty of Chicago is the kissnews.Jerald C. Brauer, 33-year-old Lutheran minister, recentlybecame the first permanent dean of UC’s federated theologicalfaculty, the largest faculty of Enrico Fermi, after winning a$25,000 special award from theAtomic Energy commission in deanship of the social sciences di¬vision, replacing Morton Grodzinswho became adviser to the Chan¬cellor on special projects.Julian Huxley, author and sci-its type in the country.John R. Davey, dean of stu¬dents in the college, and John P.Netherton, assistant dean of thecollege, decided that they would to put the two men in fields inwhich each was more interested.Paul H. Douglas, former UCfaculty member, and his cam¬paign associates, threw UC politi-Dome Edith Sitwell exchange jobs June 1. Reason for cal circles and the Maroon into athe switch, according to dean of quandry during Douglas’ fall sen-students Robert M. Strozier, was atorial campaign. The question:Research at University covers all areas:cancer, dentistry, Johnson dictionary“Outstanding in coverage of academic life and research” was the remark which the Asso¬ciated College Press made in awarding the Maroon an All-American rating this year.One of the reasons for this coverage lies in the University w'hich the Maroon serves; fewif any, college papers have such an abundance of material to work with,j The following is a recapitulation of the Maroon’s coverage of research this year.< One of the first pieces of research which the Maroon reported this year dealt with cancerof the pancreas. Dr. Paul Har- ~per, a UC surgeon, claimed Kolb, assistant professor of Eng-success with a new type treat- ^.combined *heir '»'«><« »^, scholarly study of the famousment. Apparent proof of his tech- Johnson dictionary.nique came in the^form of com- New isotope identifiedmunication to the Maroon that its Two uc professors, James R.coverage of the story reached and Arnold, assistant professor ofhelp save the life of a pancreas chemistry, and H. Al-Salih, Insti- November, died a few weeks later, entist, speaking before the Inter-Activities in the nuclear institute national house meeting of thecame to a virtual standstill dur- American Humanist associationing the physicist’s memorial serv- in November, told audience ofice. "humanist evolution,” an ideologyHerman Finer, political science which submits the world and itsprofessor, opened a series of problems to natural .explanationcredit-giving courses on “Govern- alone.ments and human nature” on tele- John Jeuck left his post as deanvision early this year, was smiled of the business school to becomeupon for his TV work by Timemagazine.Ralph Flanders, Vermont sena¬tor. visited campus for the recentWorld Dis armament conference,received several hundred bars ofsoap labeled "Don’t WhitewashJoe/Vote Censure” from UC stu¬dents urging passage of his Sen¬ate resolution to censure Mc¬Carthy.Walter J. Harrelson. old testa¬ment scholar and archaeologist,was appointed dean of the UC di¬vinity school early in May, suc¬ceeding acting dean William N.Hawley who served as acting deansince the resignation of Bernardcancer victim.Ice age coming’ Not quite as cheerful was thereport of Cesare Emiliani. re¬search associate in the Institutefor Nuclear Studies.Emiliani explained that the pat- tute for Nuclear Studies, succeed¬ed in identifying a new naturally-occuring radioactive isotope, ber¬yllium seven.This w’as the third such radio¬isotope discovered by UC scien¬tists since the end of World WarII. The other two were uncoveredby Willard F. Libby, now on leaveto the UC community.The Mind . . .philosophically ondpsychologically"The most shocking thing thatcould happen would be for all philtern of past variation in the tern- serving with the Atomic Energyperature of the earth indicates commission,that a new ice age may appearwithin the next 10.000 years.Upsetting conventional ideas onthe structure of the brain, Wil¬liam B. Neff, professor of psy¬chology, and Irving T. Diamond,assistant professor of natural sci¬ences in the college, reported thatwhile removal of the part of thebrain associated with hearingmade it impossible to recognizesimple tunes, they could still re¬spond to single tones.At approximately t h e sametime, Eckhard H. Hess, associateprofessor of psychology, declaredthat chicks develop the ability tosee with both eyes at once, with¬out requiring a learning period,and when reared in darkness theypossess binocular vision upon be¬ing exposed to light., Virus separation investigatedSeparation of viruses, bacteriaand similar compounds was speed¬ed up thanks to a new methoddeveloped by Alexander Kolin, as¬sociate professor of physics in thecollege and division of biologicalsciences.Dentistry was the next field tobreak into news, with the an¬nouncement that additional proofthat tooth decay is a bacterial dis¬ease was discovered by a team ofscientists from UC and NotreDame.Dr. Frank J. Orland, director ofUC’s Walter G. Zoller memorialdental clinic, presented the evi¬dence to the Chicago Dental so¬ciety.Research conducted by Nathan¬iel Kleitman, UC professor ofpysiology. and William Demenl,medical student, led them to be¬lieve that chances are that yousleep deeper during the first fewhours after you retire than dur¬ing the rest of the night.The English department re¬ceived recognition when James H.Sledd, associate professor of Eng¬lish and linguistics, and Gwin J. The new ice age is heralded on the University campus.Ideas presented in lecturesmade UC a sounding boardA university serves as a sounding-board for ideas . . . both on a theoretical and a practicallevel. During this past year artists, theologians, scientists, politicians, scholars from all partsof the University and the world have presented their ideas to the University community fromthe Breasted, Mandel, and social science 122 lecture podiums.At the year’s end a slight refresher course on the lectures the Maroon has covered mightprove valuable. Here, then, is a review of ideas ... on the mind, the world today, the artsreligion, and history . . . and —— — —2 !the people who brought them The wor|d situotion in the laws passed by Congress‘There is an element of mad- an(* 'n actions of the execu-ness in our security policies. A ^ve branch of government. Nomadness of consistency.” . . . •SU(‘l1 consistency of philosophyHans J. Morgenthau, UC political ^as Prevailed in recent years.”science professor. • • • Clarence B. Randall, former"... it is possible to co ordinate chaiiman of the US commissionthe work of archaeologists, an- of foreik'n economic policy,osophers to agree.” . . . Mortimer thropologists, those who studyAdler, Great Books founder. prehistory and all the other Art"The history of philosophy is present-day specialists . . . world “To appreciate Shakespeare asto a philosopher as lab is to a unity will be the Western gift to it was originally pxesented, wescientist.” . . . Richard P. McKeon, the human race.” . . . Arnold J. must imagine what poetry is likechairman of UC committee on Toynbee, British historian. to people who don’t read . . Theanalysis of ideas and study of "Our alliance with C’hiang Kai- lyric quality of Shakespeare’smethods. Shek for the defense of Formosa poetry was communicated to early"Most young mental patients is neither economically nor mor- audiences uncluttered by any sub¬today suffer from anxieties over ally justified.” . . . Edgar Snow, conscious references to writtenwhat to be in future life or what associate editor of the Saturday words.” . . . Robert Speaight,to believe in.” ... Robert J. Havig- Evening Post. British author, actor, and pro¬hurst, professor of education. Moral encirclement, moral ducer.The innocent often create evil penetration, and atomic penalties "Music is utterly useless” . . .by their innocence. . . . David can lessen tension between the in the material sense, that is. . . .Daiches, former UC professor of US and the USSR and hasten Ralph Vaughn Williams, BritishEnglish. world disarmament. . . . Senator composer."Intolerance has always been Kalph E. Flanders. "There is a danger in the con-an instinctive human condition American foreign policy is the temporary artist’s losing the hu-. on the leadership level, those victim of both over-confidence and man relationship which the exist-who agree intellectually but dis- °ver-suspicion on the part of the entlalist considers of foremostagree practically, should be pre- American people.” .. Max Beloff, importance.” . . . Pierre Delattre,vented from being leaders.” . . . Professor of history at Oxford. Chapel house program asst.Jacque Maritain, French philos- "The scientific knowledge nec-opher. essary to adequate military Religion"The concept of freedom is vital strength is being seriously cur- "Established religions are los-to psychoanalysis. The relations tailed by too much public interfer- jng their hold on the people be-of the unconscious and conscious encf into problems of security and cause they are mutually exclu-tlefine for the individual the pos- espionage.” . . . Harold C. Urey, sive, each one claiming possessionsibility of freedom or subjuga- uc physicist. cf absolute truth and because thetion.” . . . Hedda Bogar, UC lec- "To achieve a sound policy re- ideas they contain no longer fitturer in the psychology depart- quires first a basic philosophy the facts.” . . . Julian Huxley,ment- that finds continuous expression author and scientist. professor of business administra¬tion at Harvard. After being onthe UC faculty since 1946, Jeuckleft for Harvard "to have in¬creased time for research andteaching on marketing problems.Arthur Kiendl served a less-than a-year- term as director ofstudent activities, announced inthe Spring quarter that he wasleaving that post for Dartmouthuniversity.Julian Levy saw his dream, theHyde park re-development proj¬est, take a giant step toward com¬ing true last month when thefirst building scheduled for de¬molition in the neighborhoop im¬provement plan was torn downwith a great fanfare. Levy andthe South East Chicago commis¬sion gained nation-wide publicityin Ijfe magazine. Alderman Wil¬liam Harvey was not so kind tothe SECC in December: "theSECC is a stooge for the Univer¬sity of Chicago under the mostvicious snob I have ever met,”Harvey told the city council.Aristotle Schwartz, a Maroonfiction, was ostracized from UCin March. His non-voluntary de¬parture marked the expulsion ofthe last queer kid from UC bythe administration. Since then,Schwartz has become a by-word.Dame Edith Sitwell, heavilyjeweled and robed English poet¬ess, read 15 of her poems to a cap¬tivated UC audience in March,commented "my brothers and Ihave always professed that Amer¬ican audiences are the most won¬derful audiences in the world...”Paul Tillich, famed Protestanttheologian, visited UC to conducta seminar for the divinity schooland to deliver a massive series oflectures on "Existence and theChrist.”Arnold J. Toynbee, British his¬torian, discussed "World uniiyand world history” to an audiencewhich filled every available inchof space in Mandel hall in No¬vember.Sewell Wright, UC zoologistnoted for his treatments of ihestatistical consequences of Mon-delism in relation to evolution,left UC after 28 years to do re¬search and writing at the Univer¬sity of Wisconsin."Last queer kid, AristotleSchwartz, left campus in theApril Fool’s day edition of theMaroon.JiNie 3, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page nReview of the yearFraternities dominate social scene;Student union dissolves in FebruaryChancellor Kimpton in the May 7, 1954, issue of the Maroon “criticized the tendency ofUC fraternities to be warm and friendly inside the chapter house while being cold to therest of the campus.” Apparently, the fraternities accepted Kimpton’s challenge, for thisyear saw a wealth of fraternity events, mainly of the all-campus variety.The year’s social calendar did not begin that way, however.Student Union, as in past yparty, Wash Prom were theheadliners of the fall quarter.Almost all early SU eventswere successful attendance-wise,if not financially. The success wasnot long-lived. Not much of thequarter had passed before a "C”dance was cancelled; others weremarked by low attendance, littlesupport.SU made its final effort in arousing Wash Prom campaign.Baloons, dummies, and tuxedoscovered the campus advertisingthe prom. Objecting to the use ofBartlett Gymnasium again, theprom this year was held in theswank Knickerbocker hotel.About 200 couples watched Mar¬garet Anderson receive the titleof Miss UC of 1955 from Chancel¬lor Kimpton.It was barely a month after theWash Prom that SU was dis¬solved and replaced with a newboard, the St udent ActivitiesCouncil. Then, the fraternitiestook over the social scene.Fraternity events started offwith a bang. The first formaldance of the year, the Inter-frater- ;, was master of the socialnity ball, was a notable success.The IF bah received lots ofpublicity, lots of attendance. Oneof the largest crowds in years atany IF ball saw Diane Sillscrowned queen of the dance,again by Chancellor Kimpton. Re¬ceiving an unprecedented amountof publicity, the dance was cov¬ered by the Sun-Times tabloid-fashion on its front page. The pic¬ture accompanying the story: theChancellor bussing Miss Sills!Other fraternity events sparkedthe social scene throughout theyear. Phi Sigma Delta presenteda different type of op<jn house intheir “Gaslight Gaities” featuringgay nineties entertainment, cos¬tumes, melodrama. Phi Kappa Psiand Phi Gamma Delta revived anold tradition by dunking eachother in Botany pond by means ofa sport called "tug-of-war.”“Old-time” traditional fraterni¬ty parties and open houses alsoreceived much notoriety. Psi Up-silon’s hard times party broughtthe campus out in force in jeansand sweatshirts. Delta Upsilon’s situation: “C” dances, wassailRose dance brought not only thecampus out in force, but HydePark hoodlums, to boot. The Rosedance was by far the most publi¬cized fraternity social event inmany years. The accounts of the“riot” which ensued when a gangof toughs descended upon the DUhouse during the dance appearedin the press of not only the US,but England as well. Even Timeand Newsweek carried accountsof the “attack.”Increased rushing and member¬ship in almost all of the fraterni¬ties also pointed out the increas¬ing activity and popularity of theorganizations. Zeta Beta Tau actu¬ally succeeded in collecting apledge class larger in numberthan the actives.In contrast to the success offraternity events, the usuallywell-organized and well-attend¬ed B-J and Inter-dorm dancesand parties made poor show¬ings. B-J, I-D plans to sponsora “House of fun” dance as acontinuation of the traditionalSU-sponsored “Night of sin”Interest groups have normal yr.;seething mass with ups, downs flopped. Chairman of the pro¬posed event blamed studentapathy for the cancellation. At¬tendance was limited to dormresidents only, and even these,if the number of fraternitypledges from the dorms Is In¬dicative, showed that their in¬terest was elsewhere.International house, perhapsthe only “unchangeable” dormi¬tory on campus as far as perso¬nality of its residents is con¬cerned, had its usual, successfulyear of social events. The fallquarter saw a Dew’ali festival atInt. house, with the India associ¬ation celebrating the opening ofthe new year on the Indian calen¬dar.Its quarterly formals, “Univer¬sity of Utopia,” “NorthernLights,” and “Tropical Serenade”were well received and attendedby Int. house residents and therest of the campus as well.Women’s clubs conducted awell-rounded year of activitiesbeginning with rushing in thefall quarter. Quadranglers heldby far the most “talked about”event with their pajama partyin November at the Phi Gamhouse.Inter-club council sponsored itsannual winter formal, the Inter¬club ball, which saw Mrs. RobertStrozier crown Ashton Krug asking of the ball.Joining forces with the PhiSigs, the Sigmas planned a marchto 5856 University Avenue to sere¬nade Chancellor and Mrs. Kimp¬ton at their home.Although, as has been statedtime and again in the past, sociallife at the UC consists mainly ofsmaller fraternity and dorm par¬ties, and just simple gatheringsof friends to partake of the “mer¬ry can,” this year’s events showa trend towards larger events,more of them by fraternities. Itis still felt that no one group —regardless of membership andpopularity — exercises any “con¬trol” over the social sphere ofactivities. But this year saw onegroup, the fraternities, come outof their shells and dominate theStudent organizations grew and declined, were born and died, in no predictable fashionduring the past year.In All-Campus Civil Liberties committee, composed of representatives of nearly all ac- ISLtive campus organizations, Independent Students league maintained a 15 to 20-vote marginover Student Representative party. Yet ISL had a 10-vote edge to start with (ten seats to.one in SG and three seats to two for the party organizations themselves).Fraternities were prominent incampus affairs this year, cominginto positions of leadership inmany organizations they havetraditionally boycotted and draw¬ing larger crowds for their socialevents than they used to.One fraternity, however, KappaAlpha Phi, was derecognized thisyear for having only nine mem¬bers. It will probably be re-recog¬nized as soon as its pledges be¬come members. All the fraterni¬ties had a large number of pledgesthis year.On the other hand, otherpolitical organizations also flour¬ished. NAACP expanded from atiny, inactive core to an activeand influential campus organiza¬tion. Students for Democratic Ac¬tion was formed last Septemberand quickly became a big andpowerful group. Young Socialistleague, formed last spring, blazedin glory for a while with a seriesof speakers and programs that drew large crowds, before settlingdown to become a predominantlysocial organization.Robin Hood’s Merrie Men, how¬ever, an anti-mccarthyist organi¬zation formed last spring, died inall but name with the McCarthycensure. Socialist club, successorto the old Politics club, startedstrong this year and abruptlystopped meeting. Social Demo¬cratic forum also began last fallbut attracted only a handful ofmembers.Cultural organizations cameand went. Acrotheatre, the bigacrobatics-dance-vaudeville organ¬ization, folded, and the ModernDancers came into being, creatinga sensation at its first public per¬formance in the Festival of theArts. This filled a role left vacantby the death of Knights of theBallet last year.Glee club rose in membershipand attendance at its Christmas concert, dwindling since then.University Theatre, too, rose toa peak in size and financial suc¬cess. Student Forum rocketed togreat prominence with its popularEnglish-style debates.* Folklore society became, threemonths after its formation lastyear, the campus’ largest organi¬zation with 110 members. Sincethen it has stabilized at around80 members. It has been joinedin its field by a new square-dancegroup, Circles and Squares, whichhas had trouble getting rollingsmoothly.Inferences made from the dis¬solution of Student Union andsubsequent developments thatconcluded that campus interest inall-campus social affairs has drop¬ped off was contradicted by thewidespread concern that has sur¬rounded the establishment of SU’ssuccessor organization, Social Ac¬tivities council. (from page 9)sponsor such a forum, SRP mem¬bers were occupied in their owncaucus, suggesting that the poli¬ticking might have come fromboth sides.Student Government made oneshort-lived attempt at keeping thecampus informed—one issue ofan SG newsletter w>as published.At one point in the governmentyear, the ISL chairman of the SGpublicity committee moved aboli¬tion of his own committee, butthe move failed, and he remainedresponsible.The routine duties of SG werecarried on as usual—the new stu¬dent directory even omitted thename of the chairman of the com¬mittee responsible for it.SG branched out further in ori¬entation this year, supplementingthe work of a supposedly SRP-dominated O-board by giving anumber of activities nights fornew students, and organizing adivisional orientation commissionwhich has already begun plansfor next fall. Bus tours of the city,and guided walk s around thecampus following a tour in an oldhandbook, rounded out SG’s ori¬entation activities. Hutchins' erasocial scene. Those who predicteda more normal, i.e., rah-rah, stu¬dent body probably have theirpredictions justified. The type ofstudent expected with the changein the curriculum was expected tobe more fraternity-oriented; mostof the successful campus socialevents were also fraternity-ori¬ented.The one event of the yearwhich seemed to tie the entirecampus together, regardless ofgroup interest, was the muchpublicized Festival of the Arte.Seemingly, the festival sproutedon the campus overnight. Strange,nude, blue women appeared inHutchinson court. Streamers be¬decked the endless array of lamp,posts around the quadrangles.There seemed to be something todo or watch for everyone duringthe week of the festival.Crowning event of the festival,and perhaps the year was theBeaux Arts masquerade ball heldin Hutchinson commons. Thestately hall overlooked by por¬traits of notables of UC’s pastwas the scene of a dance attendedby 500 costumed students, faculty,and most of all, members of thedevelopment office.Students, both spectatoring anddancing at the ball, gaped in won¬der at “mad hatter,” ChancellorKimpton, “Peter Cottontail” VeepWendell Harrison, and assortedother dignitaries bedecked in out¬landish uniforms.The festival was pronounceda great success; as with anysuccessful event, plans weremade to hold it annually. Onlythe students who wrote "Artego home” on the blackened-limestone sides of various build¬ings on campus seemed toobject to the idea.In the past, at the UC, socialorganization found it necessary toenter into grueling competitionwith each other to secure neces¬sary attendance. Of the two solu¬tions to the problems of extremecompetition, altering the programof the organizations or changingthe character of the student body,the latter seems to have been theroad taken by the campus in1954-55. A more permanent en¬vironment favorable to a socialprogram has been forged with theadvent of the crop of students un¬der the new curriculum. Theconsensus of opinion, both amongthose who desired this changeand those who are repulsed by it,is that the student body has takenan attitude much more friendly tosocial activities and reflects to agreater degree than before a wayof thinking found at the more“traditional” type of undergradu¬ate school.Review of the yearTrack runs igest among major athletics;football question quiet, other teams play fully. .v Yol k Athletic club. "i* \ avenue li"m Singr>.tI '■ :un rises Bruce Colbv Om.N C/.oi ted. and in spite ot In-Chicago’s two other major John Godfrev. Alex Shanemorkip.; i-ounter-petitions < ports baseball improven! while Stone and Tom Wilson \bn big i nue king-of-tlie mourn.tin bask.tbali declined. Fo 1 lou i ng fi aternity brotheis. All btand - ate post ofti e last year's 8-8 record, the cagers played their final season o/they? brought <wicrete re -bur. ped to a G-13 mark. Se\ ci a 1 b>i VC Tltes ended unit asuit-. front pa -e publicity. in pood plavei- dropped off the team oid and third place betiiiuc • ■ r' • ' ■/ ' - • ' / /:/ : I /. = * < t - I . • •, . : ■ • : ; ■ 'Ml', ■’/ • ' a 1 ■ : ' l;Art ur players dropped their’ last l> disappearance of football. ' ., - .. -A, ■ i . ' • g . ' • / I :) 1 1 ’ i- Billy Lester ' 1 inter quariei 1 lerh Ta\ I; \- • ■ ; ‘^ ' 1 ' ' ' ■ • / . / C'; • ■’ • n* ^ -■ "' .• ■ • n '.ns jteahasjtff/JisSp<:’ b otne I 1 1 • lc: text fa 1,-thegt le will p ’obab ; r 3 >7 points.^ Over 19 games, h« at - .5 1 won-lost mat k, he scothe an i^s'ue on campus throughout’eragO'd better than 18 points per 20 points in several met;r v-S;‘ce-yc :?.v.. • /' :: ime - ■ n, • t. .\ ... yips track strength. one. Once again thisyearsportsf thal Chi > ^hil nipt lit aim t eflDaniel LI H *n: Y^ Lthe-strong es l. And sp rinterdi u 1 *ai n post jcU i 412-. ret to i d. C ap* Teambalance accountedcUer F k I oomos remai iea b y tirif Davepl tlejcat< h< r Walt iwimmini ^teaih’^success*i r' ' i\ #st bf ma y V ker; Brut eG • bj indst Jilil e w on J 5 lo I \r finis! - Iand hold men.„This year-as last vine provided-the.veteran nucleus their^own Chicago intercohe won the William-A." Bond med lesponsible for the improved tecal foi points scored In batl K)8 1 he v y #I / 11 | / i/ij | i ^kon tin T: ^.fela^tbamJ'Daf&Ti ^fonp.. ♦/ \ v* t r ai 1not high jumping and btoad minor" sports.^Only once defeated: I'# Ms LJL I L L]£C. ... ■.Fou t distance runners — all seven-man team records, and four .hioke ten minutes for the twb' perfect scores of 15 (low-’score Changes in orientati-"W iIt I>eik< te.led the j - ,., H ,, a, , unusualm: : -:■■■;: ■. ml mis im-. ^,■,u i.j,' 11 ' “ nf mivi.nl r-11 im tei.l cor •• 15:21 < m l ! uu m i i c <l ‘^ "mile. At • re 1,11 1 lM>,iaent bliittt'nisd i i■ Exdi] ■’ i Dt v e ™ 1 u Rcwuiamenl a..V dli tv e\pin ; it sea- : r''1 l‘es||\al ot I... ^pn^oe'^ri)Wpi 1» i id# end;5ih. > ’ 1 1 MRt : . Forsyth hai lied sh •' 111 ic si irter distance duringtl r ' case" wivelinf t ents, Howard track season. Two nileps.i^Jim : . . ■s< (t ■■■. ...a . i i : • • ■ %"11 bbi ( nicago%e?siP b'M ~7' . p< •: -5At j Dm • mnrho ,m I 1 hn . ! i! ''Tin' I'C Track Club, composed ers half - milers • Chuek Rhyne. . .issues than before. Thereof .1 ie ,vat{ and ,C tiicago area Sam Greenle > Tink e” H< yns, more v> orics- by lot al^cei i (r i o/ various icht k>1 j tin I I owt : 11 -T- I on i m 11 < ■ iy i ot' irian; and^et i rdlef Da s1 'u!,,|l,s s:t i Bob Kellj J hi : ; ondition rt ini in ©oui agi ng for ( renB e Bill < rardy and several ross country. w• not bt ng pro|hoi lined tl •' (l Psl U>.ptays socccr quantitj and is lacking inBp4- mi m s in track f Fr'd Will Chit .ten's o il\ c1.-: • • ■ 1,; ;;;a ' 1 v;Do: i La r) con ipeted : in Track club- sot icer,4uvt iuT^remai ki tfte^foi ‘ "'ii s itudent pu blit at ion is 1 o ir ? ■ ■ pie n ; $ I n^ heNa I h but ri itsrecord of,th< '": ' helping u I I; ;10;PO(|; mete ,ci nine major, lettei winnei tall came thei to d tt el a|... hampion hip dd rom the same fraternity house -(throflgh worl >hoj 7^ 'K^rtvevents seened more product ions than last The three, folk" concerts th isyear with a wide diversity in its y e a r, ‘ though rnot outstanding^repertoire.:/ (Giraudoux’ The Kn- were unique-'and rarest events, ifichanted, a group of short scenesg the fall - Pete Seeger, Big Billand one acts, Ibsen's The Wild Broonzy and : S 6 n n y Terry apDuck, Gogol’s Inspector C.eneral, ■ pea red:-/ These three did not pc||and another group of three one- form* well, together “misjudgingacts, including one pi igm.il'i: It the mood and desires of the audiseemed, tliough. that the quality. ence.” 1 Iowcver;. “this co n cer tand expiossiveness ot the pei again: showed that the UC comf()i:ni;nic(‘sl; suffered - I i "ru a ‘cmn mmdiy provides“a fertile field forparative neglect of the theatre folk coticmts ofathis type.” This' workshops instituted last >ear. spiing Richard Dyer-Bennef, Eli/*:The p i a \ s were usually p.-i abethari balladeer, appeared, and.formed as if they wcie not studied more recently Studs Terkel wit!iii the light--of a gi\,cir)inferpreta- Jenkinsg Broonzy, Flemingi luii and oft(‘ii tho aciors seemed Blow n and Gen i Armstrong ju c •unlamiliaiwith the essence of the sented ,1 he program, “I Come lplay, so thal tlH'y wei'e nof-alwiiys hr Sing ’able to communicate with each ollhe first annual Festival of ti cother and to prev(>nt a dc\oiopiiig Arts, early this1 spring, waggrow mg ■ aimmimii at ion to,: the V'eekr-nd ..parked with com i’i \ ■■audience ()ften the a< tots seemed films, pla>s, and exhibits. On tl cconcci ii('d w ith the . meiiK and v. holc the performance- u .• .qualitK's ot then' ow ticharacici s w«»i t liw luie. though it is lb Inat the expense of the contact and' hoped that next year they will be■ contrast h< t w eon > bai actet s and. hettiu cordinated. even if fewother elements m the plav so nee- Music outstandinge -.ii \ foi its cohesiveness A sug- Frequent concerts'.'.by stud,gestion might be- to give the the-.organizations- were perhaps, 11al re member- mute opportunity 01 o s t significant p a r t . of\ tinfor ihfbi rnal st udy of the play to^^ year’s musical activity on campus ibe jicrfornTed and (if tfie. fiinet ion-,, I he/UC, M u s i c a l.-society, in hing:of particular characters and frequent programs at Ida Noyeselements in it in light of the pur- performed not only little-heardpose and content, the continuity works such as Stravinsky’s Sepand desired effect of the play. - tet, songs by Sc hoenberg and. n ... . ~ , Britten and Bartok’s Bulgaria^Do,- Dim shows Corky Dances and the Sonata for. SoloThe Documentary film group Violin, but also works by student-showed a number of extraordk an(j faculty,nary films this year, but unfor- The recently derecognized Coltunately without increasing uni- legiate Sinfonietta also presentedversity response very much. Per- several concerts of mostly b;.haps the highpoirit vyas^the show; v roque music,, including some .first/ing of the Maxim Gorky auto- performances in Chicago. A finbiography trilogy. Tjie.se films," cessful concert was also presentedshown for,, the first time; in Chiv this spring by the Collegium Mbscago, are “simple, always, positive sicum,; and the UC Choir ga\ <and soundly sentimental . . in among others, notable performtheir portrayal of the develop- ances of Handel’s “Messiah’’ a•ment of a great literary figure. Bach’s “St. Matthew Passion.”-.Other., unusual ■ showings, w-er.e Memorable events of the Um'Makarenkos Road to Life and versity concert series were,-th'\.Spanish EaHJi featuring Hem ing- concerts of the New Music qua iLillian Heilman tet,/the Budapest quartet and 'and Virgil Thomson. University Chamber Music play-• Among single events a high-, ers,.all of whom featured unusuapoint was SRP’s showing of the works, and the performance ofmining film Salt of the Karth in Haydn’s “Seven Last Words <»'social science 122 to five capacity Christ” by the Alexander Si hmncrowds with large turnaways. der quartet.Upper left: Pete Seeger. Low¬er left and right : Mahalia Jackson and S. 1. Hawakawa.ir S, 1955 CHICAGO MAROONuc student to give address at Try accused youths Mondaynational Red Cross conventionA UC student will address 6000 delegates at the annualNational Red Cross convention June 13 in Atlantic City. JackBeem, a law student who formerly was active in StudentForum, will speak on “The role of the college student in RedCross activities." —Beem was chairman of the Beem was active in Red CrossUC Red Cross unit for two years, W0llc *n school as well as in, college. He served on the execu-and for the last two years has . , , ,, _ . „ ,tive board of the Junior Redbeen active in Red Cross work Cross city-wide council for twowith the college activities coun- years, and in his last year in highcil made up of representative of school served as president of theten colleges in the Chicago chap- chapter council.ter- Beem won a city-wide AmericanLegion oratorical contest while astudent in high school. Besides hisStudent Forum w'ork while anundergraduate, Beem has been amember of the Moot court team atlaw school. Beem also is one ofthe editors of law Review7. Five youths, accused of raiding a dance given by the Delta Upsilon fraternity, are to bebrought to trial this Monday, according to Tony Lloyd, a member of the fraternity.Drew Gilmore Bey, accused of being another member of the attacking party, was indict¬ed by a grand jury May 25 and is scheduled to go to trial at an undetermined date sometimebefore the end of the summer.On the night of the Rose dance, an annual affair given by the fraternity, nine youths, sev¬eral of whom were drunk andSUMMER ROOMSLorge, completely furnished roomswith linens — $70 for the entiresummer quorter. Kitchen privileges.Close to campus. Phi Sigma Del¬ta Fraternity House. 5625 .Wood-lawn Avenue. Call PL 2-9477.the E G G H E A D and the OTHERSa television fableby DONLEY FEDDERSENis about a mythical creaturecalled a "Professor”.5 all angry at being refused ad¬mittance to the dance, injuredseveral DU members with a vari¬ety of weapons including a knifeand the rim of a bicycle wheel.Furb Simons, Gary Stoll, ShawnDevilen, Jim Dunhim, Jim Rob¬erts, and Lloyd are the DU mem¬bers bringing charges against theaccused youths.Since three of the hoodlumswere minors, one was given twoyears probation by the juvenilecourt while the other two wereput on one year probation in arecent court decision.Of the five to be tried this Mon¬day, charges have been broughtagainst four of them by frater¬nity members. Lloyd, w'ho wasmost seriously injured by the at¬tacking hoods, has signed com¬plaints against all four. The policehave brought charges against thefifth defendant.The youngsters have beencharged with vandalism and as¬ sault and battery. Lloyd said thatit will be a bench trial.Lloyd, who was stabbed in the left side of his back, has accusedDrew7 Gilmore Bey, 18, of the at*tack.Lab school teachers honored forlong terms of educational serviceThree teachers who have served a total of 101 years in theLaboratory school were honored recently as they prepareto finish their final year in the school.Bertha Parker, science teacher who has been on the facultysince 1916; Laura Oftedal, intermediate grade teacher, andAda R. Polkinghorne, primary grade, both of whom joinedthe school in 1924, were guestsof the Parents’ association ata reception May 18.Present in the audience honor¬ing the teachers were parentswho were taught by them andwhose children in turn were stu¬dents of the three.A pioneer in the teaching ofscience at the elementary schoolv y I Seme credi^ous people still believe in "Professors"Some people will believe in anything )This Professor, Ovicaput by name,is alarmed about Television,t Professors" alarm easily, according to leaend.lAnd especially aboutils influence on the "Others.”I Others" mlluence easily, according to Professors.1a tribe of mythical creatureswho live in another part of the Forest.TL-TlLi i i_rHe remains aloof in his Tower.iThtee bedroom ranch style with ivory tiled both tuntil Television is about to corrupt his only sonThen he sallies forth to do battlewith his trusty sword, Reason,Which, as it turns out, has two edges.INeither edge is sharp enough fo cut much ice. Actually,the Author is somewhat scatterbrained, and is often mak¬ing laces at the bystanders when he should be reportingthe Battle )The Professor's delightful liitle boyJ plays an important part in this story “Enjoy Our Fine Continental Cuigine inKeiaxed Air Conditioned Atmosphere”CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Doily (except Mondays) from 4:30 - 10:00Doily (exceptSundays —150ft E. 57th Street Mondays) from 4:3012 Noon - 10 P.M.Phene Pl.n/a 2-93551 SAMUEL A. BELL1 “Buy Shell From BellSo do the gay pictures,drawn by the Author, himselfThe fable ends with a Moral.tThis Moral has very little to do with the story That sthe best kind Jat £f\e-University of ChicagoBookstore 58th ond lilbs Attention GraduatesTHE ILLINOIS STATEEMPLOYMENT SERVICEhas openings in the administrative,technical and managerial fields.Apply in person to the:PROFESSIONAL SALES AND CLERICAL OFFICE73 W. Washington St.Chicago, Illinois— \© Chnrye to Worker or Employer — level, Miss Parker is the authorof 84 textbooks on scientific sub¬jects which have sold over 17 mil¬lion copies and have been trans¬lated into practically every lan¬guage in the world for foreignschool use.Miss Oftedal, who taught inrural schools and spent severalyears teaching the blind beforecoming to the Laboratory Schools,likewise is widely know7n amongteachers and educators. She spe¬cialized in the popularization ofnutrition studies, and is the co¬author of a children’s dictionary.She also introduced “picture Writ¬ing,” a sort of comic strip methodby which young children not yetfacile in writing could expresstheir ideas.Methods of teaching arithmeticand handwriting have been of spe¬cial interest to Miss Polkinghorne,who also has been active in theAssociation for Childhood Educa¬tion, International, for manyyears. Both she and Miss Oftedalhave been noted for the flexibilityand inventiveness of their teach¬ing procedures and ideas.IT’S SO EASYyy—— iritirkiiirkirtttrktrkiiirtiiiiiit —H Loke Pork Ave. at 47th St. ||EE KEnwood 8-3150 Chicago 15, III. EEminim mu mi I u/kM/20ufrm,9'uJl^irvo,OO120 WORDS MR MINUTE (£,(Famous ABC system. Now taught inover 400 cities. New doy & Eveningclosses stort eoch Monday. Attendfirst closs os GUEST. Special SummerClosses for College Students. ALSOthorough, intensive SPEEDTYPINGcourse. Use coupon to send for 16-poge brochure.SPEEDWRITING SCHOOL37 S. Wobosh Financial 6-5471I Speedwriting School. 37 S. Wobosh Ave., Chicago 3, III. || Please send me without obligation >j your 16-page brochure on Speed- II writing.City. Zone.flicPizzaKi«lFeaturingThe Finest inItalian and AmericanFoodPizza Our SpecialtyW> DeliverDO 3-97771125 E. 63 rd St.THE CHICAGO MAROON June 3, 1955Page 14-♦Classified AdsHomes For CatsThomas Cat, age eleven years, wishesrent-free summer home in Universitycommunity, with family having house,yard, no other cats, no children undersis Dog OK. Well bred, traveled. Friendwill pay for food. Cat, PL 2-9718. Leavemessage.For RentRoom furnished as study with privatetiled bathroom, screened porch, privateresidence. $30 per month. Garage avail¬able. Greenwood and 54th. FA 4-0741.Choice rooms available for SummerQuarter. $26-$30 per month. Psi UpsilonHouse. 5639 University Avenue. BU-8-9870. Kitchen privileges.July 1 to October 1. 5130 S. Greenwood,8 rooms, 2 bathrooms. Sun parlor, piano,completely furnished. $100 per month.Call PL 2-0972.Sun parlor kitchenette, gas range, re¬frigerator. $15. 1-room kitchenette, $8.6051 Kimbark, SA 1-8041 or DO 3-9511,afternoons.Bedroom apartment. $69 month. Freegas, light, parking. Mr. Sullivan, 957 E.54th Place. DO 3-3090.Rooms for rent for summer. $25 amonth. Phi Gamma Delta, 5615 Univer¬sity.Six-room apartment, near University.Aune 15 to August 1. Washer, dryer. Hi-Fi. television. Reasonable. DO 3-4098.Rooms for rent. -22-$35 per month. 6200Woodlawn. Cooking facilities available.Call PL 2-9081.Modern bedroom apartment, overlook¬ing Lake Michigan in Porter Beach, In¬diana. 43 miles from Chicago. For sum¬mer season. Call Mr. Jez, JU 8-3500,Ext 233.Allergic to strawberries?? Fine!! Come•dance and suffer at Phi Sig’s AnnualStrawberry Festival, Saturday nightafter IF sing. Free strawberries and icecream—games—fun—prizes!!! Admission50 cents. Proceeds to Cancer. Phi SigmaDelta House. 5625 Woodlawn.Three 2-room apartments. Rooms $7per week. Cooking. Near Campus. BU8-9324 Greenfield. •Six-room furnished apartment. Sum¬mer only or 15 months beginning June.Block from campus. HY 3-3087. Sublease 5 rooms, fully furnished. FromJune 25-September 10. Close to UC andIC. MI 3-1535.Lake Michigan cottage, modern, privatebeach, woods. Fireplace, piano, screenporch. FA 4-9191.Large, furnished rooms available for thesummer quarter. $70. Linens and kitch¬en privileges. Close to campus. Call PL2-9477 or see at 5625 Woodlawn same.St£ Rooms, airy and light, summer sub¬let, completely furnished facilities. $90month. 5519 S. Kenwood. FA 4-0373.Riders WantedRider wanted to Los Angeles on or aboutJuly 15 to share expenses. Call PE 6-2631.Miami Beach. Leaving June 17. Can taketwo passengers. Nominal charge. MI3-5336. Evenings and weekends.Help WantedSummer counselors. We are now inter¬viewing men and women, 21 or olderfor positions with our summer daycamp groups. Applicants must drive welland enjoy working with children. BU8-7900. The Play Clubs of Chicago.Help wanted, Hyde Park Theatre, imme¬diately. Two men for floor duty as ush¬ers, doormen, etc. One full-time ap¬proximately 35 hours, one part-time ap¬proximately 20 hours. Evening work.Apply in person evenings at theater,this evening if possible.COLLEGIANFive ambitious students wanted by na¬tional firm to work 30 to 40 hours week¬ly. Earn $65 to $90. Car necessary. Forinterview call WEbster 9-6359.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.Male counselor, Northern Wisconsin, co¬educational camp. Minimum age, 19.General camping and sports knowledgedesirable. Indian Waters. Call BU 8-7900.Opportunity: Full or part time saleswork with ALCOA. Commission plusbonus. Call DO 3-0838.Bus Boy, 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., noSundays. Also short order waitress.Reader’s Campus Drug Store, 61st andEllis, opposite B-J,COLLEGE GRADUATESiYou will like our management training program. Goodstarting salary. Generous increases. All modern em¬ployee benefits including group insurance, hospitaliza¬tion, retirement, bonus, and employee stock ownershipplan. Our training program leads to a non-selling, sal¬aried, executive position in 24 months. Men selectedwill be college graduates, 22 to 28 years old havinggood health, excellent appearance, and the ability towork with and supervise people.Apply in PersonHOUSEHOLD FINANCE~G>y2^yuitccft919 NORTH MICHIGAN AVENUECHICAGOFor Discount£ave This TicketatJs Park Self-Service Laundry912 East 55th StreetQUALITY CLEANINC2 DAY SHIRT SERVICE2-KOUR LAUNDRY SERVICE4-HOUR SERVICE ON RUGS,SPREADS, SLIPCOVERS ANDDRAPES WEIGHING UP TO 40 POUNDSWASHED AND DRIED -33‘/s% SPRING 33V»%discount SPECIAL discountOn all throw rugs (with regular wash and dry)33 1/3% Discount Apartments To ShareLovely eight-room furnished apartmentnear campus. University woman willshare with two other women. June 15to September 15. Own room and bath.Kitchen and laundry facilities. $14weekly. 5125 Ellis MU 4-6019. Eveningsafter six.For summer, five cool rooms. Plano,yard. Reasonable, flexible, 1 or 2 fe¬males. MU 4-2116. Evenings.Ride WantedTo N. Y. or points East, before June 15.Share driving and expenses. Call collect.Kankakee 3-7025, Kankakee, Mich.Ride to Philadelphia around June 17.Will share expenses. Leave message for43 Green.To D. C. or points east. June 13 to 17.Share expenses. Write: Maggie Nash.1310 Third St. South, Wisconsin Rapids,Wls.Ride wanted to New York City. June6-7. Share driving and expenses. PaulGlatzer. BU 8-9870.To New York or Philadelphia. Will shareexpenses and driving. Bob Perlongo,FA 4-6138 or KE 9-9165.Wanted: Ride to New York about June12. Share driving and expenses. CallRalph. ESsex 5-7287.Ride wanted to Boston after June 10:will share driving and expenses. Her¬rick, BU 8-9019.Ride wanted to New York City, some¬time between June 18 and 21. Shareexpenses. Call Joel Picheny, DR 3-5098.LostReward for return of key chain withidentification tag engraved H. T. Noquestions asked. Return to Internation¬al House information desk.Kelly H. S. 1954 Class Ring. Call BillKrol, PL 2-9874.Gold ring with Chinese style "G." Heir¬loom, reward. FA 4-3850. Dave.You are in a 50% incometax bracket (or higher) —consider the actual profityou can make by disposingof your marginal real estateat a paper loss.WHSTELYESTATESCORP.134 N. La Salle StreetChicago, IllinoisSTate 2-2468PURCHASERS OFUNUSUAL SITUATIONSIN REAL ESTATE PersonalRegister now for YSL camp. Sept. 6-11.Write Meier, 5426 Maryland for moreInformation. See ad.For SaleHi-Fi set. Custom built components.Duplication cost about $550 at currentprices. Grudging sacrifice at $280 Alsoassorted furniture, fabulously cheap.PL 2-3720, evenings. Exchange ApartmentsWould exchange 6-room well furnishedflat, Los Angeles, convenient to UCLAcampus for similar arrangement nearUC campus. UCLA apartment Includescar if desired. Call apt. 1268, HA 7-3800ServicesCustom tape or disc recording made ofyour wedding, lecture, etc. Informationand price. Phone DO 3-0838.120 bass Ancona accordion. Flashy with¬out being cheap. Call after 6 p.m. DO-3-3266.Singer portable sewing machines. $25and up. DO 3-1937.Lady’s Pullman case and footloekerGood condition, reasonable price. PhoneWH 4-5142, extension 311.1941 Ruick Special sedan. Reliable andwell maintained vehicle. $75. HY 3-3087.Save $75 on new GE automatic washingmachine delivered direct from factorywith one-vear guarantee. Mansolff, 1231E. 58th. BU 8-5525.Used furniture. Davenport, chairs,dresser, dining set. bed frame, shelves,and others. Reasonable. Call MI 9-9620. Yon can rent an electric refrigerator$4 50 and up, per month. We also repairrefrigerators. CO 4-9231.Will type preliminary dissertationdrafts. Evenings through summer quar¬ter. PL 2-9371. Leave message for Iva.Apartments WantedHlllel secretary looking for apartmentto share. Call PL 2-1127, Monday-Friday.—* ——-Biologist with family returning July15 for five weeks of research desires tosub-let apartment, pre-fab. Two pre¬school children. Write Curtts Smith.1704 Thayer Avenue, Los Angeles 24.California.Quiet refrigerator, $15. Two huge book¬cases, $10 each. Kitchen shelves. $4Sofa, $3. Armchair, $3 Oak bureau. $2.Long wall table with 4 stools. $10. Man¬solff, 1231 E. 58th. BU 8-5525.UndervRiod standard typewriter, seg¬ment shift pica. Perfect condition Sac¬rifice, $75 Marvin Friedman, MI 3-6000.Dodge 1951, 4-door sedan. Radio, heater.Top shape. Bargain price. Mr. Mueller.Int. house 256. Jimmy’s• rSINCE 1940f. A. a a a n ii ^ ^ a a a n ^ ^ ta n a n jJkAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAWorldly Gifts for the GraduateFOR WOMENFine grain whiteleather wallets ...6.50almost limitless spaceEnamel on coppercompacts 4.95beautiful new designsMatching cigarettecase 5.95Sterling silverearrings from . . . .5.00individual designsFOR MENHip flask encasedin lealher 6 95holds a half pint of thebestIndividually hand-woven wool ties . 3.95never two alikeStud box of cnglishleather 5.00files cuff-links, collarbars. etc.the♦J> 5530 harperFOR EITHER ONELeather passport case 7.50helps avoid entrance and exit problems< rw^www ww-wv yyr tt ww'wAnnual Clearance SaleMiscellaneous Old Books19' each 2 for 35'6 for *100CLARK CLARKBooksellers to the University of ChicagoCommunity since 19241204 E. 55th St., Chicago 15HY 3-0321Houri: 10 A.M. - 9 P.M. Closed Sundays)mm* 3, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Rag# 15Kimpton and(from page 1))ove you still and always will."Whiting reed congratulatoryletters from President Eisenhow¬er ("I hope you live to be one-hundred”); William Stratton, gov¬ernor oi Illinois; Frank Lane,general manager of the White;Sox; Tug Wilson, commissioneruf the "big ten”; Whitney Gris-walk, president of Yale; andothers.Stagg explained why he hadn’ttaken another post at UC afterhis automatic retirement at 70.Qurtiro-SiipertorCANttK TRIPSOnly $5.50 per person per day forsomplete camping equipment, Grum¬man aluminum canoes and choice;ood supplies. For free Informationwrite:CANOE COUNTRY OUTFITTERSBUI Rom. Mgr. Box 7I7C, Ely, Minn. Stagg..."When Bob Hutchins talked withme eight times, inviting me tostay on ... I would not. I wishthe daily contact with young menthat comes through coaching.”June 1 through 5 has been pro¬claimed Amos Alonzo Stagg daysby Richard J. Daley, mayor ofChicago.Special awards were presentedto Frank Loomos and Allan Batesby athletic director T. Nelson Met¬calf. Frank Loomos received theBond medal for his track work.Bates was awarded the AmosAlonzo Stagg medal for hiswrestling activities.Four championship teams cele¬brated their 50th reunion at thebanquet. In 1905, Chicago foot¬ball, outdoor track, tennis, andcross-country teams won westernconference titles in their respec¬tive sports.HERE IT IS, GOLFERS!The New HEAD-ON Single Shaft Club SetT»k# the work out of your i>lay—why curry m heavy golf hag?HEAD-ON Golf Ret* eliminate weight of superftuou* shaft*.4'tubb*a<b eaaely interchanged while judging distance of neat•hot. Makes a perfect set for all age* II KAD-ON elulm areof proper weight, correctly balanced, nubstantinlly constructedmimI are guaranteed against, defect*. The club heads are at-hMihed to the sha** —ith s left-hand thread —counterclockwtie.assuring of a firm hitting surface.Send a stamped aclf-addree*c<i en¬velope for complete details on thenew and ideal ‘2let Century' golfHEAD-ON single shaft Golf Club Co.219 W. Chicago Ave., Chicago, 111.Summer Employmentwith Field Enterprises, Inc., for stu¬dents in Chicago area. No part-timework. For information come toRoom A, Int. HouseSat., June 4, 9-12 noonRoom C, Int. HouseMon., June 6, 2-6 p.m.THE HOUSB W MEKL, INC#HIS ^rit Reunion(from page 1)the school of business’ annual din¬ner. Five hundred graduates ofthe business school attended thedinner with Philip L. Graham, atrustee of UC.The 1955 Faculty Revels show,"You You in TeaChancellor Kimpton Medical Students forumdiscusses world healthby Fred SolomonThe control of malaria was discussed on May 17 by Lowellfeaturing T. Coggeshall, dean of the biological sciences, on the Medicalnance nor Kimpton driving a students’ forum program on "world health problems and thepeated for the alumni Tuesday. Foreign Operations administration.'*Campus tours to give alumni Coggeshall discussed many of the non-medical hindrancesa chance to see the newer Univer- to world-wide control of diseases like malaria, yellow fever,s ^ni beliconducte(J * cholera and trichinosis. Hethis morning. Open house at , . .Chancellor and Mrs. Kimpton’s (tiflYt flY'typ commented On the typicalhome and departmental teas this Jr * .4*c' Egyptian farm worker’s "in-afternoon will give alumni a f TY‘1 I 1*chance to meet more old friends JOT LJluiC TCCtdltXQand faculty. * °Willard F. Libby, AEC commis- Patrick F. Elliott and John D. credibly bad” living conditionsand extreme poverty. He alsonoted that religious baths in thesioner and Dr. George V. LeRoy, Fitzgerald. Jr., both UC theology f?lle cannot be stopped and areassociate dean of biological sci- students, won the Milo P. Jewett the causes dlsea?f‘ Byences, will speak tonight in Man- bible reading prizes at UC. Jeralddel hall on the dangers and prom- c- Brauer, dean of the Federated People ve ever beenises of atomic enerev. Theological Faculty announced. healthy, they don t realize thatises of atomic energy.The Medical School Annual Elliott won first prize of $150dinner, and the 56th annual Phi and Fit2gerald the second prizeBeta Kappa dinner Thursday of $75. Winners were selectedwill conclude the alumni reunion from fourteen contestants by aprogram. panel of faculty judges.THE♦ CAMPUS DRUG STOREREADERS61st and EllisOpposite Burton-JudsonWELCOMES THE ALUMNI AND INVITES YOU TOSPEND A MOMENT TO REMINISCE IN OURCOLLEGE ROOMPROVENCALjCJ2li"dr>ZVR RestaurantFraneais1450 E. 57th Street5 p m. - 2 a.m.cafe espresso from9 p.m.C)om4 Wednesday* they’re in need of medical rare.Coggeshall pointed out that forseveral years malaria cases havebeen unknown in the UnitedStates because the incidence wasreduced to below four per centof the population, which causesmalaria to disappear entirely.By training native physicians,technicians, and sanitation engi¬neers the FOA has been able toreduce the incidence of malaria inIran and Venezuela from 90 percent to 10 per cent in a few years.In addition to aiding the Amer¬ican position in the cold war. Cog¬geshall feels that the medical di¬vision of FOA is itself a "good”project. He noted that four bil¬lion dollars of the FOA budget isfor military aid and only 36 mil¬lion for medical aid, and while"admittedly prejudiced” he hopedthat the medical appropriationwould be substantially increased.Coggeshall, who spends fivemonths out-of each year in Egyptsupervising medical research andtraining, has served for five yearsas chairman of the medical ad¬visory committee of the FOA andis chairman of the committee onmedical research of the US De¬fense department.Coggeshall’s talk was the finalprogram of the year for the Medi¬cal Students’ forum.A CASA Book Store]%ewc Location1322 E. 35th StreetBooks - Cards - Rental TypewritersHI 3-9651 1355 E. 55th St, ; Educational Insurance <| Phone or Write \Joseph H. Aaron, '27 \’135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-l060<I' Chicago 3, Illinois ]^jiiritiiwiinnniiiiMimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiuiumiiiuiimiimiiiiimiiimiiiiiitiHmiiiiiimitiimttiuuitimmgFifty-Seventh at Kenwood |mm m UNUSUAL FOOD | /DELIGHTFUL | 1ATMOSPHERE I t KXXXXSXXXSXXXX,X\XXX\yPhone OAkland 4-0690 -4-0691 - 4-0692The Old ReliableHYDE PARKAWNING CO.INC.Awnings and Conopies forAll Purposes= 4508 Cottoge Grove Avenue 5POPULAR 1 AmwvixmmwwxvtkPRIDESaliiiimnmiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiimiiitHttmmmnmtiimmmmtmmiimtimmiHiiiimmiNitmmmtminiimiiiiiTUNIVERSITY NATIONALBANK*A Strong Bank'1354 East 55th Street MUseum 4-1200Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372RICHARDH. WEST CO.COMMERCIAL PAINTINGand DECORATINC1331 W. Jackson Blvd.Telephone MOnroe 6-3192P*9« 1« THE CHICAGO MAROON i«M« 3, 1955Cast takes ‘Juno’ too lightly Musicians on seriesFour string nuartets will hiehlicht next vear’s TTniwo.v,Playwrights Theatre club presented, during May, Sean O’Casey’s play of the Irish workingclass, Juno and the Paycock. The play concerns the attitudes of the members of a workingclass family toward work, God, the revolution, and each other, and shows these attitudes asboth created and exemplified bye series of comic and tragic plot developments. The father,choosing drunkenness in favor of work, finds himself an heir, the daughter is seduced andabandoned by a snobbish school teacher who has perpetrated what turns out to be thephony inheritace deal; leav-'ing the family heavily in debt,the weak, wounded son iskilled by the revolutionists for be¬traying them, and the family re¬mains broken and shamed.Underneath all this stands thesolid rock of a mother whoguides, leads and supports herfamily. She is strong and force¬ful, but weary, anxious andaged. Captain Boyle, the Pay-cock, is irresponsible and drunk¬en. He is boastful and ignorant,claims credit for the doings ofothers, and always feels painsin his legs when work Is men¬tioned. The son is weak andcomplaining, and the daughtertorn by what O'Casey describesas “two forces": “one, throughthe circumstances of her life,pulling her back; the other,through the influence of booksshe has read, pushing her for¬ward.” At the end, she and themother, Juno, begin life anewwhile Boyle wallows in hisdrunkenness.The main characters were ex¬pertly and cleverly portrayed. Theessential qualities of both Junoand Boyle, especially, wereOpenexhibit“Le Provencal,” a newly openedFrench restaurant at 1450 East57th street, announced an exhibitof oil paintings by Philippe Clavier from June 2 to 30. This is thefirst in a series of exhibits ofworks by young artists to be spon¬sored in the coming months by“Le Provencal.” The restaurant isopen daily, except Wednesdays,from 5 p.m. to 2 a.m.JUNE 1 THRU JUNE 12SAUTER-FINEGANBANDJUNE 15 THRU JUNE 26SARAH VAUGHHJUNE 29 THRU JULT 10LIONEL HAMPTONPROM SPECIAL(oftar Midnight*Food, Soft Drink, Entertainment,Admission and Tax. All for $3.00Per Person.The Blue NoteSUNDAY’S fS'-M 1SIMONSSHOES1458 E. 55th St.Special Purchase Sale!MEN'S COOL SUMMERSHOESandCASUALS$795We Give Discountson Regular PricedMerchandiseOpen Monday andThursday KrminftTill 9 brought out. But while O’Caseyis trying to depict both the posi¬tive, progressive and the retard¬ing, backward elements in theIrish working class, the castseemed more concerned with por¬traying the comic, endearing, ap¬pealing and clever aspects of thecharacters.The tone of the piny m Piny-Award Zabel$1,000 creativewriting prizeMorton D. Zabel, UC professorof English, received a $1000 awardat the annual meeting of theAmerican academy and NationalInstitute of Arts and Letters inNew York May 25.The award was given for hiswork in creative and critical writ¬ing. Zabel, formerly editor ofPoetry: A Magazine of Verse, haspublished critical studies of Hen¬ry James, 'Shakespeare, andAmerican literary history crit¬icism. wrights presents it is light andcomical, and when the serious,tragic developments are intro¬duced they often seem out ofplace. When, for instance, theweeping, bitter, darkly cladMrs. Tancred enters the laugh¬ing, singing party atmosphereof the Boyle home, I don't thinkthat O'Casey intended this as acomplete contrast in mood, anincongruous and awkward oneas Playwrights performs it, butas a revelation of sombre anddestructive elements wlileh ex¬ist in the Boyle home. Similarly,the last act brought with it therealisation that Juno and thePaycock is a serious, purpose¬ful play, energetic, colorful andfunny in an important way.But as Playwrights performedit the last act and particularlythe ending seemed inconsistentwith the rest of the play in itsseriousness, and left one won¬dering what was the messageof the play, wliat was its rea¬son for ending thus.—Joel Pieheny Four string quartets will highlight next year’s Universityconcert series.Opening the autumn quarter series Novemlier 4 will be anall-Beethoven program by the Vegh quartet. Fernando Valentiwill give a harpsichord recital —7 — —November 18. The New Music m *n Totenbe^g 3 M*y U hySubscription rates for the entireseason are $10; individual ticketsat $1.50 will go on sale October 1,quartet ends the autumn quarterseries with a concert December 2,including works by Jerome Rosenand Ilhan Usmanbas.A Mozart birthday program isscheduled for January 27, withmembers of the Chicago sympho¬ny orchestra, conducted by GeorgeSchick. This will feature the Pi¬ano Quartet in G Minor and theQuintet in E Flat for Winds andPiano, with Schick as pianist, andthe Divertimento in D Major forStrings and Horns, K. 334.This will be followed by an ap¬pearance of the Trio di BolzanoFebruary 10. with works hyBrahms, Ravel and Mozart. TheBudapest quartet, newly rejoinedby Alexander Schneider owing tothe illness of Jac Gorodetzkv, willplay quartets by the same threecomposers February 24. The Par-renin quartet, featuring quartetsof Schubert. Roussel and Mozart,will close the winter seriesMarch 9.The spring quarter series In¬cludes Ania Dorfman in a pianorecital April 13; Andrew Foldi,bass, in a concert of Purcell, Dow-land, Mozart. Schubert, Moussorg-sky, Bartok and Bloch April 27; Annual art faircomes to 57thThe annual fifty seventhstreet art fair will be held thusSaturday and Sunday betweenKenwood and Kimbark. Forsale will be paintings, ceramic's,and sculpture by Chicagoartists.No. 15IDEAS VS.McCARTHYISMGOODBYE, MR. WAR . . . Tmpcaca coftfi of many lands sungby Wes* Coast folk singer ErnieLiabarman. Hi-fi and really topnatch singing.Available from Mrs. T. Willner,949 S. Schumacher-Dr., Los An¬geles 48, Cal., far $4.35 postpaid.Soon at Modern Bookstore, 64 WRandolph, for $4.00; how aboutUC bookstore?James ParsonsllofstraU.C.L.A.octopus Ann nattywith swotoniHJohn M. Crowley•Uniserrity of IdahoTOP HONORS for enjoyment go to Lucky Strike. That’s whyit’s easy to understand the Droodle above, titled; Bird’s-eyeview of seniors taking Lucky break at commencement. When¬ever it’s light-up time, you’ll get a higher degree of pleasurefrom Luckies. That’s because Luckies taste better. They tastebel ter, first of all, because Lucky Strike means fine tobacco.Then that tobacco is toasted to taste better. “It's Toastedthe famous Lucky Strike process—tones up Luckies’ good¬tasting tobacco to make it taste even better. Commence toenjoy better taste yourself—light up a Lucky Strike! •mi un of am Ami(■V HUNGRY ART STUOtNT)Freeman F. DesmondSi. John's U. Wayne WilkinsSouthern State CollegeCOLLEGE SMOKERS 1PREFER UICKIiS!Luckies lead allother brands incolleges—and bya wide margin —according to anexhaustive, coast-to-coast collegesurvey. The No.1 reason: Luckiestaste better.DROODIJES, Copyright 1953by Huger Price"Bettea to&te Luckies...UICKIIS TASTE BETTERCLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!©V T. Co. PRODUCT OF J^rtwiizct n AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OT CIGARETTE*Zri June 3, 1955 THi CHICAGO MAROON Page 17Cap & Gown unbalanced, inconsistent UT to present Molierein spite of some superficial virtuesWith a few of the virtues and all of the vices of a rejected copy of Time magazine, the1955 Cap & Gown is a superficially slick publication.Its reasonable visual appeal and pseudo-vital assortment of “lively” cliches, however, ill-conceal the book’s unbalance, bias, inconsistency and misrepresentation.The level of the book’s photography is generally good although it has not completely over¬come yearbooks’ perennial photograph bugaboos of action shots looking blurred and posedshots looking stilted. Photo- —— ——graphs of faculty membershave generally succeeded inrapturing the subjects’ personali¬ties.A vivid job of engraving and aconservative, but dynamic, pagecomposition of writing and pic¬tures provides the book with amodicum of visual verve.The most talked-nbout aspect ofthe new Cap & Gown however,has been in the book’s writtencommentaries about the Univer¬sity. Before the book’s publieation,the editor announced that the newCap A Gown would be "a year¬book with guts.” IIow true.Decides a prioriIn a shockingly ill-formulatedIntroduction Cap A Gown tries toanswer the question—“is the Uni¬versity of Chicago going ‘rahrah?’” After deckling that ‘‘theargument cannot be settled bydiscussion,” the book proceeds todecide it by selectivity of factsand a liberal helping of innuendo.Making an a priori derision thatUC HAS gone ‘rah rah’ and thatthe fraternity-set are the har¬bingers of a ‘‘new look” at UC,the introduction proceeds to giveonly those interpretations of SGelections, the Festival of the Arts,and the collapse of Student Union,which will prove its point. 14 no¬where considers the decliningmembership of a vast number ofstudent activities — it in no wayattempts to present more thanone aspect of the “trend.”The photographs in the Intro¬duction are of people wearingBermuda shorts, dancing, hang¬ing streamers, feeding squirrels,eating hot-dogs, and kicking foot¬balls. Even the caption under apair of chess-players describeschess playing as antithetical tosomething.Written to prove i>ointThe introduction has been de¬signed not to present an accurate,comprehensive picture, but toprove a rather specious point.The Cap & Gown editors wereapparently so enthralled by theirfirst glimpse of an exposed kneeunder a pair of Bermuda shortsthat they have been unable to lookat anything fairly since.The remainder of Cap & Gownreveals a similar unbalance ofcoverage. A committee formed to give one party was given a full-page spread; Married Studentsassociation, the Dames club, orany activities among prefabdwellers were completely neglect¬ed. A group which serenaded thechancellor one night are given atwo page spread; the Chicago Re¬view is given two misinformedparagraphs, a poor photographand a caption implying that theeditor is a meanie and a snob. De¬partmental clubs, acadepiie clubs,and language groups are forgot¬ten. A half-sentence is given tothe art exhibit of Festival of theArts; the festival’s Beaux Artsball is given a page and a quarter.International house with its mul¬titude of students and kaleido¬scope of activities is dismissed bya few generalities and a paucityof photographs.Undergraduate onlyThe new Cap & Gown is obvi¬ously an undergraduate publica¬tion; the activities of the olderand more mature segments of thecampus population do not seem tointerest it.The treatment given the aca¬demic-intellectual side of UC islittle more than a series of select¬ed news-bits and “items.” Onlythe descriptions of the humanitiesdivision and business school tendto give the reader the impressionthat any coherent activity hastaken place on the UC faculties.Discoveries made and ideas dis¬cussed at UC during the past year are given minimal treatment,while the political activites ofpolitieans with frail Universityconnections is given extensivecoverage (Cap & Gown’s editor isan ardent Democrat).The appearance at UC and theideas of such notables as JulianHuxley, Jacques Maritain, andRalph Vaughn Williams has beenforgotten.The editor’s own description ofthe book as one with “guts” isindicative of the level of taste ex¬hibited in the new Cap & Gown.The book’s comments about thelast months of the late EnricoFermi’s life and Fermi's speechmannerisms are a poor tribute toa great man. In other exhibitionsof poor taste are such commentsas: “A revolving door was estab¬lished for the various Deans toenter, depart,” “The Feature Edi¬tor, when not reading Karl Marxand Margaret Sanger . . .” “. . .who won her office by default inSeptember when the duly electedPresident flunked out of school.”The pall of bias which hangsover the new Cap & Gown cannoteven begin to be described here.It can best be realized only by thecountless numbers who have seenthemselves attacked or slightedby the yearbook, who know thebeliefs of the editors . . . and canrealize how the book has becomethe editor’s tool rather than theirpublication.R. Quinn “Go on, whack your wife as much as you please; I’ll helpyou if you like.”With such auspicious lines as these the University plans toinaugurate its first annual summer drama festival. On a roundwooden stage built around the of Doctor will be given on July 4,Preparations for The Doctor inSpite of Himself are already un¬der way. In a new translationmade especially for the Court The¬atre by Richard d’Anjou, the pro¬duction will emphasize all the mu¬sical pnd choreographic aspectsinherent in the play but frequent-ly skipped in recent perform¬ances. A musical score is beingcomposed by Leo Treitler.“The remarkable thing," com¬mented Marvin Phillips, directorof the festival, “is that indoorsor out, Moliere is so rarely per¬formed these days. The humor ofhis plays is universal and time¬less. While he ridiculed contem¬porary institutions, his satire wasnever so dependent on its objectaS*to make his plays seem dated,or over-involved in niceties thathave lost their meaning.”Hutchinson court fountain theUniversity of Chicago Court The¬atre, as the venture is to becalled, will begin its existencewith an outdoor season of Moli¬ere, running from Thursdaysthrough Sundays at 8:30 and last¬ing from July 1 to August 14.Audiences will be invited tobring shawls, mats, old coats,newspapers—or simply to sit onthe grass. Tickets, at $1 for singleadmissions and $2.50 for seasontickets, will be available shortlyin Reynolds chib.The Moliere plays to be present¬ed, ranging from the familiar tothe comparatively little known,are The Doctor in Spite of Him¬self, The Forced Marriage, andThe Affected Young Ladies. Doc¬tor opens on July 14 through 24.and Ladies from July 28 to Au¬gust 14. A special performanceCourt Theatre actors in a scene from one of this summer'sMoliere productions.One act plays good, marred by actingTlie University Theatre sponsored group tonight at 830, presented four one-act plays at Reynolds club theatre May 14 and15. Most successful was “Enterprise,” by Roger Bowen, which met with enthusiastic applause by the small,^but apprecia¬tive audience. The play, described by its author as a “scenario designed to be improvised upon by the actors,” was largelysuccessful because of the natural and realistic acting on part of the principals, four teen-age boys, who, in their attempt torecoup their losses in 3 des.1 to get 3. b<irgciin on 3 tr3de-in for their old C3r, find themselves rewsrded by the Junior Achieve*mont fnr thair pntprnrisp in earning monev. The cstching humor of the piece was not due to any subtitles ofment association for their enterprise in earning money. The catchingplot, but rather to a well bal¬anced characterization of theteen-age boy on the part of theprincipals.However, the encore to “En¬terprise,” a play called “Exam”— also by Bowen — which at¬tempted to depict three collegegirls preparing for exams, suf¬fered greatly from a combina¬tion of overacting, too muchMORE CASHFOR BOOKS ill-planned improvisation and ageneral overdrawing of the situ¬ation to the point of ridiculous¬ness.Both “Chee-Chee,” by LuigiPirandello, and "Bedtime Story,”by Sean O’Casey, suffered from alack of smoothness in the acting,and the actors’ interest in makingthemselves evident rather than ininterpreting their roles. “Chee-Chee,” which was concerned withthe attempts of an Italian play¬boy to regain some promissorynotes from a sophisticated floosiefrTTTyT-rrTTTTTTTTVfAND Nick Bova — Florist J5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226STUDENT DISCOUNTDELIVERY SERVICE <<<<< 1 through the intervention of a con¬servative, pompous and bumblingbusinessman for whom he hadbeen able to do a favor, was themore successful of the two. De¬spite some overacting by all theperformers, the girl Nada’s un¬convincing accent and loss ofstage prasenee on two or three oc¬casions in laughing at her ownpart, an amusing performance re¬sulted owing to the clever writingin the play.The O’Casey play is poten-tially a very amusing farce con¬cerning the plight of a youngIrish clerk who, having broughta girl (o his apartment, becomestormented with guilt and rackedwith fear on how to get rid ofher. The girl makes off with18 pounds of his money and sev¬eral of Ids possessions, and heFOLLETT1255 So. Wabash Special CouponThis coupon entitles you to<lelivery from 10% off on any meal orComo PizzaorComo Annex1516 - 1520 E. 55 FA 4-5525NameAddressthis coupon must be signedvoid after August I, 19.15 anyis thought by his friend andlandlady to have gone insane.The play suffered from a veryunconvincing Irish accent onthe part of all those who at¬tempted it at all, and from anapparent contest on the part ofthe two leading characters, theyoung clerk and his girl, as to- who could attract the most at¬tention from the audience. Itwas close all the way, but theyoung lady, having less timein which to make her bid, madeup for it in vigor and carriedthe laurels away. The acting ofthe landlady and the friend wasconsiderably more competentand less affected.The plays themselves were well-chosen, however, and presenteda potentially worthwhile program.One could only wish that themembers of UT had shown asmuch attention to their actingas they did to their audience.—Robert MoodyParker-HotsmanCo.Realtorsannouncing removal to ournew and modern quarters1461 E. 57th St.HYde Park 3-2525'75 Years to Hyde Park*Pago 18 THE CHICAGO MAROON !•*« 8, 1955Maroons hit by exams; lose fiveCrippled by absentee exam-takers during the college comprehensives the University ofChicago baseballers lost five consecutive games to end the 1955 season.Playing without two of their regulars, the Maroons were buried by the St. Joseph PumasJO t and 15-1 at St. Joseph. Weak Chicago defensive play plus a 13-hit attack in the first game and a16-hit barrage in the second game by St. Joseph accounted for the losses.Provided with good pitching by Bill Horney in the opener and Bob Wasni in the nightcap, St. Josephthehad no trouble overcomingChicago nine. Wasni also provid¬ed offensive fireworks, hitting athree run homer in the first in¬ning of the first game and garner¬ing two hits in the second contest.Sy Hersh in right and JeffMarks at short both played wellin their first showing as regulars.Mario Baur pitched creditably in-the second game, being hurt byfour errors.Gil Levine was the most produc¬tive hitter for Chicago with twohits in the first game. Marks,Hersh and captain Chuck Utleygot one hit each in both games.Dick Novicki of Navy Pierpitched a no-hit, no-run ball gameto lead the Pier Illini to an 8-0victory against the Maroons lastSaturday. The big right-handercombined a blazing fastball withpin point control to turn the trick.The Pier pitcher faced only 30batters, struck out seven andwalked four.The Pier came through withfour of the seven hits extra baseblows, catcher Don Wilder hittinga two-run homer for the UIC inthe eighth inning.Bill Miller again came throughrUNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingTwo barbers workingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorB-Z AUTOMOTIVEComplete Front Syctem Check on4Estimate: $1.50 (Applied to Re¬pair Sill). Quality Body and Fen¬der Work at Reasonable Rates:Free Estimate. Lubrication andRoad Service. Automatic Trans¬missions Adjusted-Repaired.MOTOR TUNE-UP SPECIALAir Filter end Plugs Cleaned •Test Volume and Pressure in FuelPump • Test Coil • Set Timingand Carburetor • CompressionCheck • Points and CondenserInstalled • 6 Cylinders $5.50,Mast 8's $6.50 Plus Parts.Mo tor and dutchOverhaulingBrakes Adjusted andRelitzcJOO 3-0100 • 5547 Harper Are.Crammjngfor Exams?Fight “Book Fatigue” SafelyYour doctor will tell you—**NoDoz Awakener is safe as anaverage cup of hot, black cof*fee. Take a NoDoz Awakenerwhen you cram for that exam...or when mid-afternoonbring# on those u3 o’clock cob*web.*.” You’ll find NoDoz givesrou a lift without a letdown...help} you snap back to normaland tight fatigue safely I[»-*■—-35* Q|<Dorm*) 60 loblrti— with a good pitching performance the defensive department,which again suffered from poor Navy Pier emerged championsfielding support. Kent Karohl and of the Chicago college baseballJohn Mann, however, sparkled in tournament by slaughtering Illi-fcaa*,>>::***^ nois Tech 22-1 to cinch the title inthe final game on Stagg field.The Illini scored 13 runs in thesecond inning and then coasted tovictory behind the one-hit pitch¬ing of Bill Novicki. The Illini thuschalked up their third consecutivechampionship in the tournament.The Chicago squad had beeneliminated in the first round by a3-2 loss to Chicago Teachers col¬lege.Coach Anderson and CaplainUtley..;..;..;..;..j. a. a .k s. .j. Coulter thirdThe Coulter A. C. relay teamof Athan Theoharis, Ray Hard-wall. Pete McKeon and VicCarlson garnered a third placein the sprint medley relayevent in the UCTC Relays. Faculty . . .(from page 2)faculty and the administration onthe one hand, and the trustees onthe other.Headed by John A. Wilson, An¬drew M a e L e i s h distinguishedservice professor of Egyptologyat the Oriental Institute, the com¬mittee has held 28 meetings, in¬forming various segments of thefaculty of campaign plans andasking for their criticism andtheir services."Generally we will fill a publicrelations role.” said Wilson. “TheUniversity is not as well knownin our own home community as itshould be, and we feel that thefaculty can help make it betterknown.”Serving on the committee withWilson are: Grosvenor W. Cooper,associate professor of humanitiesand chairman of the departmentof music; Cyril O. Houle, profes¬sor of education; Walter John¬ son, professor of history andchairman of the history depart,ment; Andrew W. Lawson, pro.fessor of physics and chairman 0fthe physics department; Frank C,McLean, professor emeritus, phy.siology.Subcommittees have been setup on relations with industry;relations with foundations; rHa*tions with the faculty itself u<jsolicit the faculty directly forcontributions); and relations withdepartmental alumni. "Some¬times a graduate won’t rememberthe year he earned his degree.’*explained Wilson, "but he usuallyfeels an attachment to the depart¬ment in which he did his work.”Source of the faculty .commit-tee was the faculty themselves;the committee was not .set up bythe administration.A speakers bureau has alsobeen set up by the committee. Ex-perts in every field will be avail*able to local organizations.Send Flowers to GraduatesMitzie’s Flower Shopat two convenient stores *1225 F. 63rd St. 1301 F. 55th St.UV 3*5353 Ml 3-402010% and 20% student discount jlHIKMtflMllinilMffNIIMtfHUMNtMmiMIIIMmitnMHHMIBBMHMNtfHIIHIIMItHHIMnMfimtlNMUIItllMltUliI ALEXANDERSRESTAURANTj 1137 E. 63 Street MU 4 5735More than just a good place to eatt 1 We cater to parties and banquetsOpen mil night$ '4iinii*HiiiHiH(iiiiMiiUMmM<inimiiiiiiiiiiiHtiiiiiniiiiMiHinii«minHM«M*HimHHtHiiHnHitMMMfTv v ^ v <• *J» -S ^ -J- v v vv -I- v -I- -H- v -t* 4*0 4* v 4- • vtm m 1liiiaafavored by undergraduates...BROOKS BROTHERS EXCLUSIVELIGHTWEIGHT SUMMER SUITSCasual and good-looking, our cool, com¬fortable suits and Odd Jackets are mostpopular with college men. 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Y.BOSTON • CHICAGO • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCOSAFI AS COFFEf CASHforTEXTBOOKS Faulknerswill payCASHFOR EVERYBOOK THATHAS ACURRENTMARKETVALUEANYWHEREIN THEWORLDUp to 50%of the Sole PricePaid for Current Titles!10%OX When you SELL® your TEXTBOOKSB 0 N U S to FAULKHER'SAmount10 % Bonus.Total Present this od to our bookbuyerafter he has appraised your booksand he will odd 10% to his offer.-Do not keep your textbooks untilthey ore replaced by NEW TITLES.or by NEWER EDITIONS.Bonus will be paid only upon presenta--tion of this card at the time of sale.FAULKNER’SEDUCATIONAL BOOKS65 Eost Lake StreetChicago 1, Ilf.WE’RE NUTSNO SQUIRRELS ALLOWEDHAPPY SING TO YOU-ALL3. 1955 Pay* 99with a third in the 880.The Michigan meet was a littlebarren of Track club victories, thetypical fate of all Michigan op¬ponents. In the field events theMaroon was overwhelmed, squeez¬ing out only two third places infive events (due. partly to the ab¬sence of certain key personnel).Lawton Lamb was the first offour victories with a nice 4:17.3mile followed by Jim Brown’svery respectable second in the440. Frank Loomos and Dan Tri-fone finished 1-2 in the 120-yardhighs and Bill Conrardy took the880 in 1:53.5. Bob Kelly won the2-mile in 9:36 and beat a toughman in Ron Wallingford of Mich¬igan. The rest of the meet was acase of Wolverines devouring ev¬erything in sight.With Fort Leonard Wood lastSaturday, the Maroon encoun¬tered too much power in the fieldevents and in the Army’s speed¬sters Wheeler and Stevens, butChicago won everything else insight to take the meet by 21points. Wheeler won the mile in4.24.4 and the 880 in 1:52.2 whileStevens won the 120-yard highhurdles in :14.6. Maroon stand¬outs were Jim Brown’s :21.9 inthe 220 and a 3:23.2 mile relayeffort for a win and the end of abusy week in track./lAW& WlZ Cj&ttuLq CWUmL COMpuA !WINSTON tastes good¬like a cigarette should!JV’s cop PSLThe University of Chicago Junior Varsity track team, un¬derdogs for the first time in years, surprised a favored Wheat¬on academy* squad to garner their 17th consecutive privateschool league outdoor championship. The junior Maroon trackstersbounced back from an 81-38 defeat at the hands of a strong Thorntontownship squad the week before to take the PSL title, scoring 59points to runner-up Wheaton’s 50. -—————:—— ~— ~~Top scorer was Jerry Jordan dead heat in the 880 yard event be.with 13, followed by Pete McKeon *ween Chicago team-mates Bobwith 10; Bob Wiseneck, 7(4; Da- Wiseneck and Ivan Carlson, bothmen Cunningham, 7; George Kar- ^eing timed in 2:09.5.cazes 7; Ivan Carlson 5(4. Tug- "It was a team victory,” saidwell, Keller, Nauman and Har- Coach Ted Haydon. “The boys en-mon divided the remaining points Joyed springing an upset and Iamong them. think it was a fitting climax to aHighlight of the meet was the good season. We run for fun, youknow.”Huggins honoredfor work relatinghormones, cancerA pioneer in the study ofthe relationships between hor¬mones and cancer, Dr. CharlesB. Huggins, director of UC’s BenMay clinic for cancer research,has been honored by the Ameri¬can Association of Genito-UrinarySurgeons.The Association presented Hug¬gins its Benjamin Stockwell Bar¬ringer gold medal and award atDel Monte, Calif., last week.Huggins was instrumental indeveloping surgical approachesfor the removal of the organs pro¬ducing male sex hormones to curbprostate cancer. He has also de¬veloped techniques for the re¬moval of the adrenal glandswhich have been used in the treat¬ment of advanced cases of breastcancer. Top tennis tourneyThe varsity tennis ended an upand down season by bowing to apowerful Notre Dame squad 9-0,reminiscent of identical early sea¬son scores that the squad turnedup against opponents.The team bounced back fromthe dual meet defeat at the handsof the Fighting Irish to come outon top in the first annual Chi¬cago intercollegiate tennis tour¬nament, compiling a 24-point to¬tal. Second place went to the PierIllini, followed by the Illinois Pro¬fessional Schools, Illinois Tech,and Roosevelt university.Award StourzhInstitute prizeGerald Stourzh, reseach associ¬ate in the UC center for the Studyof American Foreign Policy, hasbeen awarded the prize of the In¬stitute of Early American Historyand Culture for the best book onearly American history publishedin 1954.The award, given by the Collegeof William and Mary, amounts to$500. Stourzh’s prize-winningbook, Benjamin Franklin andAmerican Foreign Policy, waspublished by the UC press lastyear as one of a series of publica¬tions sponsored by the Center forthe Study of American ForeignPolicy.■ College smokers are welcoming Winston Along with finer flavor, Winston alsolike a long-lost friend! They found flavor brings you a finer filter. The exclusivein a filter cigarette — full, rich, tobacco Winston filter works so effectively, yetflavor— when Winston came along! lets the flavor come right through to you.WINSTON tluL ea&tf-dnm/Mq ckfOAetttlMaroon thinclads finished up a busy eight-day stretch last Saturday, including three dualnieets and the 21st annual Elmhurst invitational meet.On Friday the 13th Wabash became the first Chicago victim, bowing to the Universitybv 81-50. The next day, at Elmhurst, the University entrants dethroned Michigan Normal in bestingmore than 15 other teams and compiling a total of 35(4 points, 7 more than runner-up Beloit. The fol¬lowing Thursday was the occasion of a Track club loss in Ann Arbor to Michigan, Big Ten indoorchampions. But last Saturday theUniversity team bounced back tohand Fort Leonard Wood a 75-54pasting.Chicago subdued Wabash withthe aid of Joe Howard’s 48' 3(4"toss for the shot put victory, JimBrown’s double victory in the 440-and 220-yard dashes, and FrankLoomos’ double victory in the100-yard dash and 220-yard lowhurdles. Brown’s 440 time was afast :49 flat, his finest perform¬ance to date. Art Omohundro ap¬proached his best effort in win¬ning the mile in 4:29.7 while TedFishman and Dan Trifone alsoemerged victorious in their re¬spective events of 880-yard runand 120-yard high hurdles.The field events all went to theMaroon with victories by Watkinsand Trifone in the high jump,Watkins again in the broad jump,Forsyth in the discus and Shader-owsky in the javelin.In the Elmhurst meet the Ma¬roon earned victory on thestrength of wins in the 440, 220hurdles, and 120-yard high hur¬dles; plus seconds in shot,high hurdles, and 220-yard dash.One third, two fourths and twofifths rounded out the Maroon Jim Brownscoring.Jim Brown won his specialty inthe 440, beating Jim Egan ofLoyola. Brown was clocked in:49.2 and came back to cop secondin the 220. Dan Trifone and FrankLoomos were 1-2 in the 120-yardhigh hurdles with Loomos repeat¬ing with a win in the lows. Cap¬tain Joe Howard garnered a sec¬ond in the shot and Sam Greenleewas next high Maroon point man"WINSTON brings flavor back to filter smoking!ATTENTIONFOREIGN CAR OWNERSWould you like a European Trained Specialist to takecare of your car? Our mechanic knows all makes. Weservice your car right at reasonable prices. We guar¬antee satisfaction!Come in and let's get acquaintedConvenient Budget Terms AvailableSHORE GARAGESO 8-4202 2445 E. 75th St.SO 8-9816Page 20 *■«« 3, 1955THE CHICAGO MAROONB-J war sees dunks,flooding, 3-story fallA Burton-Judson resident who fell three and a half storiesafter a daring climb up a drainpipe recently touched off anevening of interdormitory “warfare” in B-J. In the course ofthe “-war” an assistant house-head was thrown into Botanypond, and floors and rooms were flooded.Joe Zerbolio, a resident of Mathews house, attempted toclimb up to the fourth floorof Mathews by a drainpipe,missed his hand-hold on a win¬dow ledge, and fell three and ahalf stories to the ground, suf¬fering two broken bones in hishand.Later in the evening, a crowdgathered in the courts, cheeringZerbolio until he made a personal7 UCers receiveliterature prizes appearance. Choosing this as anauspicious moment for a littlehorseplay, the men of Lynn andCoulter houses started throwingwater down on the crowd in thecourt, and at each other.Attempting to break up the wa¬ter fight, assistant-house head ofLynn, Don Fisher was seized bythe mob, carried ceremoniouslyacross the Midway, and dumpedbodily into Botany pond. Severalof his assailants suffered a dunk¬ing in the process.The men of Mathews house la¬ter raided the fifth floor of Coul¬ter, plugged up all the drains inthe washroom, and turned on allthe showers and faucets, floodingalmost the whole fifth floor.Mathews house men also raideda three-room suite on the firstfloor of Lynn and flooded it. Alumni'deans awards made;ceremony to honor 15 studentsFifteen UC students who have been outstanding in extra-curricular activity will receivethe Alumni-Deans award tomorrow night for their contributions to the University.The students will be presented to the alumni and student body at the annual inter-frater¬nity sing in Hutchinson court. Certificates will be awarded them in recognition of theiractivities.Joy S. Burbach, co-editor-elect of the Maroon, will be honored for her newspaper work,and for carrying out the “roleof the modem, elated wom. peace center meeting hereThe winners of two creativewriting awards and the GoetheGerman language awardswere announced by Robert M.Strozier, dean of students, onWednesday.The Olga and Paul Menn foun¬dation prize went to Lachlan Mac¬Donald, student in social sciences. Ct^J-7 'Ifor his story Evwhak. Honorable vJICLICvJ LdWmention went to Charles Roman-elH, student in humanities, forhis story Not for a Congressman’sSon.There were three John BillingsFiske poetry prizes awarded. Firstprize of $I(X) went to Paul B.Newman, student in Humanities,for “Wally Mohottala”; secondprize ($50) went to Emmon Bachof the humanities division, for his“Three Easter Poems”; and thirdprize $(25) was awai’ded to Rob¬ert Macdonald, student in humani¬ties, for “Chuckie and the PineTree.”Joseph M. Baron and David P.Currie, both of the college, re¬ceived $50 Goeth prizes for excel¬lence in the study of the Germanlanguage and literature in the col¬lege. Review' editor;assistants namedThe UC Law Review haselected Preble Stolz, a secondyear law' student, as editor-in-chief for next year.Stolz, a graduate of Reed col¬lege, won the Joseph Henry Beale,Jr., prize for outstanding work inthe law school’s tutorial programlast year. «Selected to serve with Stolz asmanaging editors were law stu¬dents Harry T. Allan, G. AdrianKuyper, and Robert C, Poole.Associate editors are law stu¬dents Mrs. Ingrid I. Beall, andSolomon Gutstein. Zave H. Gussinwas named press editor. Donald A. Fisher will be giventhe award for his work as coun¬selor and leader in the dormi¬tories, Albert M. Fortier for hisStudent Government presidency,and Dorothy J. Hess for her presi¬dency of the Women’s Athleticassociation.Yearbook brings awardFor his production of a “year¬book worthy of professionalnote,” Paul A. Hoffman will begiven the award. Ruth Kopel willbe honored for Inter-club counciland Student Advisory board lead¬ership.Two athletes, William A. Les¬ter and Franklin W. Loomos, willreceive the certificates and medal¬lions in recognition of their skill.Lester set a new UC scoring rec¬ord in basketball and Loomos wasthe star hurdler and point win¬ner on the track squad.Phi Beta Kappa honoredBruce A. Mahon’s Phi BetaKappa and social fraternity mem¬bership won him the award. Ger¬trude Martin will be honored forher participation in the women’sathletic- program, Janice Y. Met¬ros for her membership in theNational Student association, andDuvvuri V. Romana for his lead¬ership in International house.The remaining three awardswill go to James Rosenblum,Orientation board president;George B. Stone, fraternity andInter-fraternity council president;and Andrew L. Thomas, IronMask member and dormitoryleader. The UC Peace center, a newly formed student organizationworking through the American Friends Service committee,will hold a two-day inter-school conference on campusJune 11-12.The conference, designed to organize student and faculty activitiesto find effective means of working for and obtaining world peace,is open to all interested students and faculty members.The conference will include discussions of basic research done inthis field, methods of education, and proposals for direct action. Dis-cusison in small group workshops, led by workers in the AmericanFriends Service committee and social and political leaders of theChicago area, will be supplemented by meetings of the whole group.Free housing for out of town participants, and meals at an averagecost of 50 cents will be provided.JUVENILE golfers have a perfectset with HEAD-ON clubs. Only needto exchange shaft for a longer on*as they grow instature.HEAD-ON Golf Club Co219 W. Chicago AveChicago, IllinoisCHICAGO ALUMNIY mr hosts at Reunion events areThe Student Alumni Committee andThe Student Orientation BoardThey hope you are enjoying your return to campusWHY NOT ENJOY CAMPUS LIFE THE YEAR ROUND? LET US BRING IT TO YOU.Special Campus Life Offer No. 1The Chicago MaroonWeekly, October through June $3.00IThe University of Chicago MagazineWeekly, October through June $4.00 I '1 SPECIAL COUPONII To the Alumni Association:Enclosed please find $ for the special offer. checked below:Combined offer to you Q The Maroon and Magazine— 1 Year $5.00(Include* membership in Alumni Association)THEUNIVERSITYOFCHICAGOALUMNIASSOCIATION Special Campus Life Offer No. 2If you are a dues-paying or lifemember of the Alumni Association Q The Chicago Maroon — 1 Year $1.00Special Campus Life Offer No. 3For students being graduated next week C] The Maroon and Magazine — 1 Year $2.00Name.Address.Mail or bring to Alumni House, 5733 University Ave.,Chicago 37