Haverford president White resignsto head UC geography departmentby Joy BurbachHaverford college’s president has resigned to become professor of geography at UC. Gilbert F. White, an alumnus of UC,will become chairman of the department of geography, filling the vacancy created when Chauncy Harris became dean ofthe social sciences division.Harris commented, We re delighted to have him here at the University of Chicago. . .. He has a distinguished record atHaverford. It reminds one of the Univeristy of Chicago in the early days when President Harper brought outstanding schol¬ars who had been college presidents to UC.”White noted, in connection with his decision to accept theUC post, “in a time when the pressure of world population Enrollment increaseexpectedThe total registration willprobably exceed the 3.3% in¬crease over last summer quar¬ter, according to William E.Scott, Registrar of the univer¬sity. The total enrollment was2,458 as of the second week ofthe quarter. 2,289 of these stu¬dents are on campus. There are1,911 students in the divisionsand professional schools and378 in the /ollege.upon natural resources is increasing and when the world’sregions are more closelylinked to each other, the geog¬rapher has an important rolein enlarging our understanding ofthe limits and potentialities of re¬sources development.”White distinguished UCerWhile a UC student, White dis¬tinguished himself both academi¬cally and in the extracurricular.He was a Phi Beta Kappa mem¬ber. and a member of the seniormen’s honor society, Owl and Ser¬pent. White was managing editorof Cap and Gown, president of thedrama association and the men'scommission, and a member ofAlpha Delta Phi.White received his BA from UCin 1932, his MA in 1934, and hisPhD in 1942. He was appointed said of White’s administration:Haverford feels keenlyloss of White“Gilbert White will be a hardman to replace. The managersfully recognize the fruitful con¬tributions he has made to the col¬lege’s material, financial, and edu¬cational growth, and above all,to the spiritual qualities of thecommunity. No one has beenmore skillful and diligent in in¬terpreting Haverford to friendsand strangers here and abroad.”White was a member of thecommittee on faculty fellowshipof the Fund for the Advancementof Education from 1950 to 1953.His government positions are nu¬merous and include service University of Chicago, July 15, 1955of 1945, but became Haverfordpresident in 1946.A geographer specializing inland and water conservation.White continued activity in thisfield while president of Haver¬ford. Last April the Associationof American Geographers pre¬sented him with its outstandingachievement award for 1954 forhis “penetrating study of waterresources and water control prob¬lems” and for his “contributionto better understanding of theprinciple underlying the soundevaluation of public policies andprojects for water use and de¬velopment.”UNESCO memberWhite is the United Statesmember of UNESCO advisory $1 million received so farin $32 million fund campaignOver $1 million has been received already in the University’s three-year $32 million drive,announced Board of Trustees Chairman Edward L. Ryerson last Friday. The $1,031,750served with the American Friends sum has been given to UC in addition to the $4 million contributed by the University trusteesto. lh„e._U<T faculty in September geographer dealing with naturalresources for the US governmentfrom 1934-1942. From 1942-46 heService Committee, doing reliefwork in Vichy, France. Whitewas a member of the seven-manSee ‘White,’ page 4 before the announcement of the campaign on June 2.The campaign results are “slower than we would like, but not slower than we anticipatedin June,” said Dean of Students Robert M. Strozier, speaking for himself and for Chancel¬lor Kimpton. Strozier ex¬plained that although thesummer is a poor season forfund campaigns, the campaignplanners felt that strongeralumni-University ties would beformed by a campaign announce¬ment during alumni week.Of the new contributions, ap¬proximately $512,000 have beenprovided by corporations, $138,000by foundations, and the balanceSuggested plans for the activities of the council ranged of $381,807 by individuals, includ-Commuters organize,plan year's activitiesCommuters will gather in Ida Noyes Wednesday at 7:30p.m. to elect officers for a proposed commuter’s council. Allcommuters, whether in residence this summer or not areinvited to the organizational meeting. will be used for new student hous-ing, faculty salaries, and studentaid.Set annual recordIn the regular 1955 alumni fundraising drive, a record total of$465,581 was reached, WilliamSwanberg, executive secretary ofthe alumni foundation, an¬nounced Wednesday. 12,885 alum¬ni contributed towards toppingcommittee on arid zone research from only reserving rooms for the use of commuters and their ing faculty and alumni. The funds a^umnLgave^'Too 68^ JCar’The Alumni foundation will nowand was chairman of the interna- friends, to scheduling regulartional conference on arid lands activities, such as dances andheld by the American Associationfor the Advancement of Sciencelast April.White is president of the Penn¬sylvania foundation for independ¬ent colleges, and vice-chairman ofthe American Friend’s Servicecommittee.In a letter to Haverford alumni,S. Emlen Stokes, chairman of theboard of managers of Haverford,Triple total ofnew Reviewsthis issue coffee hours. “There is no usehaving a room without some ac¬tivity planned,” Irene Sanorajski,one of the group’s organizers,commented, advocating plannedactivities. Reynolds club and IdaNoyes already have rooms opento commuters, she commented.Preliminary meetings of stu¬dents interested in forming thegroup have already led to thescheduling of a dinner for enter¬ing commuters during orientationWednesday’s meeting will be into an independent piece.'Forced Marriage" to open—2nd court theatre productionThe Forced Marriage, UT Court theatre’s second productionopened last night, and runs through Sunday of this week, andThursday through Sunday of next week.The play was originally a comedy-ballet, a comedy com¬bined with a ballet in which the king and court might appear launched" June 2 is for funds ex-as the dancers. The present version is Moliere’s own revision See ‘Campaign,’ page 4of the original comedy-ballet concentrate on the $3 million,pledged as the alumni contribu¬tion to the $32 million campaign.Speaking of the recent $1 mil¬lion gift, Ryerson said that mostof the money contributed has notbeen earmarked for any of thespecial goals of the campaign, thedesignation being left to the judg¬ment of the trustees.Chief purpose of the campaigna formative one for the interimcouncil, to function until fall. Allthose interested in the projectedwork of the council will have achance to express their opinionsat the meeting.forDistribution of the forthcomingspecial summer issue of the Chi¬cago Review may reach 35,000copies, according to Frank Kar-matz, retiring editor of the mag¬azine. Karmatz stated Wednesdaythat the circulation total of theAugust 15 issue would be from16,000 to 35,000 copies, dependingupon “various factors as yet un¬settled.”Karmatz stated that the sum¬mer issue, dealing with changingAmerican culture, owes its pro¬posed increase in circulation ingreat part to the quality and in¬terest of the contributing authors.Among the Review’s contributorsare Russell Kirk, Senator Full-bright, Henry Miller, GeorgeSchuster, and Walt Kelly. Theissue will attempt to portray theentire American cultural scene,from sports to jazz.An added factor in the proposedincrease in circulation is the Re¬view’s use for the first time of anation-wide distributing agencywhich has guaranteed distribu¬tion high above the Review’s cur¬rent circulation rate. Until now,the Review has been publishingabout 10,000 copies of each issue. Maroon maydouble issuesTwice weekly publication ofthe Maroon is a strong prob¬ability for fall, co-editors JoyBurbach and Palmer Pinneyannounced this week.Greater coverage of eventsoccurring between Thursdayand Monday is one of the ex¬pected gains from the change.It is also hoped that the workof more staff members can ap¬pear, improving the Maroonas a student organization, andthat students will be able toparticipate who could not be¬cause of schedule conflicts.Maroon advertising in¬creased substantially this pastyear under business managerWilliam Brandon, making pos¬sible consideration of thechange.Increased enrollment .andbetter training of prospectivestaff members in the fall areexpected to lead to an increasein the effective staff of theMaroon, the editors said. The immediate source forthe play is the ninth chapter ofthe third book of Gargantua andPantagruel. The two scenes withthe philosophers represent Moli¬ere’s attack on the sophistic Aris¬totelian philosophy defended bythe University of Paris. Many ofthe incidents and characters findtheir counterparts in people andevents of Moliere’s own day.The play will feature new andoriginal choreography, done spe¬cifically for the performance, andis incorporated into what mightbe termed a 17th century dreamsequence. Also featured will beoriginal musical compositions byLeo Trietler.The play is presented outdoorsin Hutchinson Court starting at8:30. Music is played from 7:00 onand the audience is invited tocome early. The play runs fromJuly 14-17, and 21-24. Tickets are$1.00 for each performance.The Forced Marriage will bepresented “in-the-round.” Lightswill be beamed from trees sur¬rounding Hutchinson court to thefountain stage in the Court’s cen¬ter. The audience, which is in¬vited to bring blankets and campchairs, will sit on the grassy slopeof the court.After the two week run of TheForced Marriage, Court Theaterwill close its summer season withMoliere’s The Affected YoungLadies which opens July 28.(Review of “The Doctor inSpite of Himself” on page 7.) photo by ZygmundAn old man’s age is measured in UT’s 2nd production, “TheForced Marriage.” Omar Shapli and Ed Simmons perform.Pag© 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON July 15, 1955Chicago Educational TVunderway in September New professors namedin biological sciencesFive University of Chicago biologists and medical scientistsWTTW, the Chicago area’s education television station, will launch test-programming in have been promoted to the rank of full professor. The appoint-September and regular broadcasting late this fall, according to Joan Kohn, public relations SotogkalsdencT' James’ w!°T Calender,presmUy tdirector of the Chicago Educational Television Association (former UC student and editor - .... _ — ^of the 1946 Maroon). Present plans for “Window to the World” call for a 4 p.m. to 10 p.m.Monday through Friday schedule that “will cover the hours we feel a non-commercial stationis most needed.” charge of radiation therapy in the Argonne Cancer Researchhospital; Robert Ebert, in charge of the chest clinic in theUC hospital group; Herlufof the University radio bureau tional Television Association. Alland assistant professor of the correspondence should be ad-a „ ,Dmo . humanities in the College, is pres- dressed to Program Manager - - . —show' to suppiem nt ently working on a humanities James Robertson at the Chicago followers alike are needed to Wendell Harrison, vice presidentThe station is planning anhour of children’s program¬ming, as well as a specialwomen’sadult programming, according toMiss Kohn. Well ov^r half of thestation’s 30 hour week will con¬sist of locally originated pro¬grams. They will be supplement¬ed by kinescopes from the FordFoundation’s Educational Radioand Television Center, and films.Television studios areconstruction at the end of theMidway in the east wing of theMuseum of Science and Industry,with John W. Taylor as stationdirector. Taylor was formerly adeputy director-general of UNES¬CO, and president of the Univer¬sity of Louisville, where he pio¬neered in the development of thefirst television course offered foruniversity credit.In the area of course materials, Need all kindsfor special oneStudent leaders and student Strandskov, associate profes¬sor of zoology, and JulianTobias, associate professor ofphysiology, were announced by R.course which will include music,art and literature.Chicago’s “Window to theWorld” is presently completingits programming plans, havingraised $900,000 to install studiosand support the first year’s broad-* Ter castinS- Tfie Ford Foundationun< Fund for Adult Education con¬tributed $150,000 of this sum. TheChannel 11 station is interestedboth in programming suggestionsand in hearing from anyone inter¬ested in working with the Educa-Rabbi returnsRabbi Maurice Pekarsky re¬turns to his position as directorEdward L.~ Rosenheim, Director of the B’nai B’rith Hillel founda¬tion at the University of Chicagoin September. Rabbi Pekarsky hasbeen on leave of absence duringthe past five years at the Hebrewuniversity in Jerusalem where heestablished a Hillel foundation.Oscar Kenig, acting director inRabbi Pekarsky’s absence, willcontinue as associate director ofthe foundation.Wilt to attendFulbright studyNapier Wilt, dean of the hu¬manities division, will participatein the 1955 Fulbright conferenceon American studies at Oxforduniversity, England, from July 11to August 14. Wilt, a member ofthe University of Chicago facultysince 1924. is an authority onAmerican literature and Amer¬ican drama.American scholars on Fulbrighteducational exchange grants willpresent a series of lectures intheir specialized fields. The themeof the conference is “The UnitedStates and the Atlantic communi¬ty.” Staff members of British uni¬versities and sixth-form Britishhistory teachers are attendingthese meetings. MAKE MONEYPART TIMEBy simply Reading my Pub¬licity Story to people in yourcommunity ... by appoint¬ment. No canvassing.$50 to $90 WEEKLYFor a few hours work daily.Simply help people to receiveour patented product . . .ABSOLUTELY FREEEveryone knows about it . . .everyone needs it . . . yet noone has it.Help us introduce this productin your community.WRITE NOW FOR FULL DETAILS,'GENERAL PRODUCTS4234 North Lincoln Avenw*Chicago 18, IllinoisLEARN ANOTHER LANGUAGEAS YOU DID ENGLISHby LISTENING — Right in the comfort of yourown home you hear native men and womenconversing in their own language about fa¬miliar matters.SPEAK ING — You repeat what you hear —with correct accent — just like a native.LINGUAPHONE and HOLT Language Coursesare immediate, economical, pleasant waysto learn that other language you've alwayswanted to acquire, that you need for yourstudies, that can mean a richer, more en¬joyable life for you.Youi;choice of 32 Languages!University ofChicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE Educational Television Associa¬tion, 38 S. Dearborn St., Chi¬cago 3.Other UC officials have beenactive in the growth of education¬al television in this area. EdwardL. Ryerson, chairman of the UCBoard of Trustees, is the presenthead of the non-profit corporationsponsoring the station. ChancellorKimpton was an early head of the help with the special oiienta- anfj dean 0f faculties,tion issue of the Maroon, to ap- T „ . . . ,pear September 30. ' Lt:Roy' ?ppo‘n,ed ProfessorWork will begin next week, and mf>dieine, has done extensive re¬will continue through the rest of search on the use of radioactivethe quarter. Students interested materials in medical treatmentin securing publicity for their spe¬cial interests, whether organiza¬tions or libraries, will be giventheir opportunity.Also needed are people to sendgroup, and is a current member out mailings, answer the phone,of the Educational AdvisoryBoard. George Probst, formerhead of the University Radio Bu¬reau, was instrumental in testi¬mony before the Federal Commu¬nications Commission which suc¬ceeded in obtaining a non-com¬mercial permit for Channel 11.Reuel Denny of the College So¬cial Sciences department, acted asa fund-raising speaker. amuse those who are writing, andthink of great ideas.Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Ma¬roon office students interestedmay appear in person. Also stu¬dents may phone in at extension1009, write through faculty ex¬change, or leave urgent notes inReynolds club in the Maroon box.Training will be available forall who think they need it. and research. Carpender’s promo¬tion is to professor of radiology;Ebert’s to professor of medicine.Stranskov’s major area of re¬search has been on human hered¬ity; Tobias’ investigations haveconcentrated on the transmissionof nerve impulses.It's alwaysa raceto put out orientation is¬sue. We can use any sortof help, from typing andphoning to writing andphotography.Maroon Ex 1009MALE STUDENTSWILL YOUBE CALLED TOMILITARY SERVICE?If you've had no prior service and are physically fit, thisquestion should be uppermost in your mind. Nobody cangive you a positive answer, but chances are you will prob¬ably be called.That's why you would make a wise decision by joining theU.S. Army Reserves, now, while you are still in school. Byspending only two hours of your spare time a week at areserve meeting, you can accumulate rank os an enlistedman, or through a series of tests, as a commissioned officer*You can enter active duty with your reserve rank. The rankyou'll achieve will be dependent upon your effort and theamount of time you'll have left before graduation.The Reserve Training Center nearest the University Campusis located at 71st & Jeffrey. A ten minute ride with the1C. Drop in any weekday between 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.or call DO 3-3841 for further information.Spare Time Is Your Only InvestmentJuly 15# 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Rage IKimpton praises public school education: ohm'high schools give good college preparation new headf of Lab schoolRobert E. Okm, present prin-“Upon the whole I think our public schools do on excellent job of college preparation,” Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton cipai of the laboratory school oftold over 5,000 educators and their guests at the annual National Education association conference, July 7. Antioch college, has been appoint-Speaking on the topic of what the public expects of its sch ools, Kimpton pointed out that the public has many completely ed principal of UC laboratoryunreasonable expectations. He claimed that the public expects the schools to take over social training handled by other schools,social institutions., examinations and they are wellKimpton claimed he would motivated for college work.”rather address his remarks towhat the public should expect ofthe schools. "There are anguishedcries each year from college presi¬dents that the graduates of ourhigh schools cannot read or spell,know no science or mathematics,and are limited in their knowl- Kimpton claimed that there isa great hulla-balloo that Johnnycan’t read, but that this is nottrue. The child of today reads bet¬ter than his equivalent did a quar¬ter or a half century ago, he said.The travelled and sophisticated, Kimpton placed most of theblame for any inadequacies in thetraining of youth on faculty meth¬ods of teacher training by univer¬sities. "We have no one to blamebut ourselves if the occasionalchild comes to us inadequatelyprepared to do college work.”Kimpton pointed out, however,that the training of today’s youth "Those of unusual gifts must beselected early and allowed to ad¬vance at their own speed, and theselection must take into accountboth social and intellectual ma¬turity. And the youngster who isin the lower group must be guided Ohm will take over his new pos¬ition August 15. At that timeHerbert W. Schooling will replaceHarold B. Dunkel as lab schooldirector.Ohm, who holds a BA and anMA from the University of Wis-said Kimpton, claim that ouredge of America to the fact that youngsters are a year or two be- is pitched at the middle forty perColumbus discovered it on July hind the same age group in Eu- cent of students, in effect ignor-4, 1776.’ Referring to the student ropean schools. Kimpton claimed ing the upper and lower thirtybody of the University of Chicago, that the young person of America per cent. Claiming that human in-Kimpton claimed, "The young has something of greater value telligence is the most importantpeople who come to us from the than the ability to read Latin or natural resource which we pos-public schools in the Midwest, and manipulate the calculus by the sess to assure our future great¬time he finishes the secondary ness, Kimpton asserted that theschool, “and I would not sacrifice future of America depends uponit for anything.” our changing this procedure.Microfilm, math may outdate booksby Jeanne HargittAre books outdated?The recent five-day Graduate library school conference held at UC attempted to answerthis question by discussing the implication of the newer developments in communication onfrom all over the United Statesare surprisingly well prepared.They do well in our placement into a suitable vocation ... so that consin, is doing graduate work inhe will find an appropriate role UC’s education department dur-in life.” * ing the summer.'Course of freedomin hands of teachers'Explaining the “unique obligation” of a teacher of the socialstudies was the topic of the first of a series of lectures byChauncy Harris, dean of the social science division, lastMonday.It is in the social studies that conditions and pressure existwhich most easily undermine free society. In the hands of theteacher lies the future course *of security and freedom. Bas¬ing his arguments on the ex¬periences of several famous sci- •'the future of the book. These new developments range from microfilm and electronic de- enhsts and teachers of the past,vices, to mathematical theories of communicating knowledge, a recent development knownas “cybernetics.” ^The conference was opened professor of social sciences in theby Lester Asheim, dean of the college.Graduate library school. Ex¬plaining the purpose of the con¬ference, he stated that libraries associal institutions must be pre¬pared to adjust to changingme.\ns of communication.Other speakers at the conference were Howard W. Winger,assistant professor of the gradu¬ate library school, who spoke on Book not God-givenIn the opening speech, Asheimstated that for many purposes andaudiences a new kind of book ora new device nothing like thebook at all may come into being.But there is no need to view thisdevelopment with anguish, headded. civilization is based upon theprinted book is to fall into error.”"Some of the greatest items inour own cultural heritage—whichnow equate with the book—werenot intended for book form andwere committed to the page byother hands,” he continued."Had we had wire recording inthe days of the Greeks we mightnot now have to rely on biasedsecondhand reports for our knowl-There is nothing eternal andthe changing role ot the book in God-given about the format and edge of the philosophy of Socrates,the course of civilization, and dimensions of the book as we hap-Harold Fleisher, physicist in the pen now to know it. The book it-research laboratory of Interna- self, particularly the printed bookis something of an innovation.There have been cultures whichwere based on other arts thantional Business Machines, whospoke on the “Mathematicaltheory of communication.” Theconference ended with a speechon the implications for the futureby Reuel N. Denney, associate Asheim also predicted that thebook in its traditional formatprobably will not be completelyabandoned.History shows,” he said, "that Harris said that the main prob¬lem was the difficulty of gettingthe acceptance of new "truths.”fighting the stability of presentdogmas.Innovations difficultWith reference to such booksas The Crime of Galileo by Gior¬gio de Santillana, Harris showedthe difficulty and tribulations thatGalileo had trying to gain supportfor his works. People were notprepared for innovations. Alarmwas born of insecurity and incom¬petence. Also among contempo¬raries, Harris pointed out thatEinstein and Freud are still con¬sidered heretical in the SovietUnion.A tremendous reform of educa¬tion is necessary if we are tohave conscious analysis of the Chauncy Harrisliterature, and on other forms of although one technique may dis- ideals to which we wish to give tees today, cited that in Galileo’scollective memory than the medi¬um of print. Thus to claim thatStudent rate 50c phone: NO 7-9071Lake Park at 53rdHyde Park TheatreStarting Today, Friday, July 1s“-ALEC CUINNESS ... in the finest and funniest vein ofBritish comedy!” — Cue Magazine."TO PARIS WITH LOVE"Alec Guinness chalks up still another delightful character¬ization ... as a frivolous, charming, sophisticated boule-vardier. His co-star, PARIS, is as beautiful and romanticas ever'in technicolor.— and —Winner of THREE international film awardsCannes Festival • Berlin Festival • Cannes Festival—Best documentary —Best documentary —Specialphotography award"GREEN MAGIC" "****"-Sun T,mis'“Thrilling . . . and a work of art." — Daily NewsA sensitive and stunning documentary drama of breathtaking beauty,adventure, and realism. But it is the gripping drama reminiscent of aRobert Flaherty documentary which makes "Green Magic" so mem¬orable ond won it its distinguished and coveted awards.Coming Friday, July 22New York Film Critics Award — Best Foreign Film1955 Acadamy Award — Best Foreign Film and SpecialColor Award1954 Cannes Film Festival—World's Best Film"GATE OF HELL""An absolute 'must' ... A rare experience." — N.Y. Times."Superb! Unsurpassed color . . . Astonishingly beautiful." — Life Mag.— and —J. Arthur Rank's great comedy classic"STAIRWAY TO HEAVEN"with David NivenComing soon: WUTHERINC HEIGHTS . . . MARTY . , .ANIMAL FARM . . . LITTLE KIDNAPPERS . . .ADVENTURES OF SADIE place another in importance, itseldom* replaces it. Story-tellingoratory, ballad singing, even therecitation of poetry continue toexist after 500 years of printing,as does writing by hand, of whichthe devotee of the manuscriptwas afraid would end. In fieldsw'here verification and reflectionare important the book may wellhold its own, but popular enter¬tainment and in the presentationof factual data, other channelsmay be more efficient.”The conference ended on theidea that in the future the peopleand the librarians will see and use“more efficient means of com¬munication.” There may be fewerheavy books to lug around, buthow about heavy machines?Of yourorganizationin orientation obedience, Harris stated.Cites familiar ringHarris cited a familiar ring inGalileo’s case. Material about himhad been put unchecked into hissecurity file and was not broughtup until 17 years later. Harris, as¬serting that the trial was run asit might have been if it were runby certain investigation commit- trial old information was used,information was not checked, mis¬quotations were used, and plantedevidence was produced.Harris further compared thecase with present-day ones, as¬serting that Galileo was at themercy of the court, just as “they”are at the mercy of certain inves¬tigating committees now.issueMAROONEX 1009 Future schools to receivemeager share of income“Public schools which receive about 2.4 per cent of the U.S.gross annual product are unlikely to obtain a greater shareof the total during the next 20 years,” it was pointed out byProcter Thomson, staff associate of the Ford Foundation’sFund for the Achievement of Education in his lecture on “Thenation’s wealth and the school’s share.”This low percentage was explained through showing howthe alternative spending foritems ranging from roads and po-Special CouponThis coupon entitles you to 10%delivery from off on any meal orComo PizzaorComo Annex1516- 1520 E. 55 FA 4-5525NameAddressthis coupon must be signedr«M after August 1, J ?#.».» lice protection to consumer goodssuch as liquor, tobacco, and mov¬ies determines the pattern of dis¬tribution of the national product.“We could have not only moreschools but also more roads anddams, or more medical care, ormore and better housing, if wewere willing to relinquish someof the other elements in our ex¬penditure pattern,” Thomson said.“The limitation on educationalexpenditure, in other words, isthe value of resources in alterna¬tive uses. This is one of the hardfacts of economic life.”Thomson related the estimatesfor 1953 showed that $8.64 billionswere spent for current operationsand capital outlay of the publicschool system. The same year,gross national production was$365 billions, so that school ex¬penditures were 2.4% of the total."Assuming that the gross na¬tional product will double by 1975^the percentage of the total devot¬ed to the public schools will prob¬ably still range from 2.2% to 3%,depending on whether the produc¬tivity of human or capital re¬sources increases.”♦ 'e 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON •My 15, 1955Coming Campus EventsFriday, July 15Lecture series; "Modern India,”Soc. Sci. 122, 4:30 p.m. "Inde¬pendence and After.”Hotion Picture, Treasure of theSierra Madre, (U.S. film) pre¬sented by Documentary Filmgroup, soc. sci. 122, 7:15 and9:15 p.m. Admission 40 cents.Ifixed swimming, 7:30-9 p.m. IdaNoyes pool. Free to studentswith medical rating cards, 10cents to those who have beenstudents for three quarters andUC employees with Ida Noyesactivity card. Suits furnished.Women must bring and wearbathing caps.Court Theatre’s production of Mo-Jiere’s The Forced Marriage,Hutchinson court 8:30 p.m. Ad¬mission $1.Art exhibition by members of theRenaissance society, Goodspeed108, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.Friday Frolic, Internationalhouse, 8 p.m.Saturday, July 16COurt Theatre ((see July 15 entry)Sunday, July 17Radio Broadcast: New World."When teachers go to school.”Edward W. Rosenheim, Jr., as¬sistant professor of humanitiesin the college, narrator; HenryW. Sams, associate professor ofEnglish in the college, and a se¬lection of summer quarter stu¬dents. WMAQ, 10:35 a.m.University Religious service. TheReverend W. B. J. Martin, min¬ister of the Augustine-Bristol,Edinburgh, Scotland, preach¬ing, Rockefeller chapel, 11 a.m.Viennese waltzing, Internationa]house, 8 p.m.Court Theatre (see July 15 entry)Monday. July 18Linguistic Institute luncheon con¬ference, "Philosophical founda¬tion problems in psycholinguis¬tics,” Donald E. Walker, assist¬ant professor of psychology,Rice institute. Ida Noyes sunparlor, 12 noon.Ida Noyes dancing. 8-10 p.m. IdaNoyes patio. Free.Lecture series, "The Social Sci¬ entist Looks at the School"The concept of ‘planning’ as atool in the social studies,” Har¬old M. Mayer, assistant profes¬sor of geography. Rosenwald 2,4 p.m.Linguistic institute lecture series."The Malayo - Polynesian lan¬guages, Yale university. Soc.Sci. 122, 8 p.m.Art exhibition (see July 15 entry)Tuesday, July 19Contract bridge lesson series, con¬ducted by Josephine WaltersSmith, certified contract bridgeteacher. Ida Noyes, 7 p.m.Maroon staff meeting, non-staffmembers welcome. Refresh¬ments. Reynolds club, 201, 8p.m.Organ recital, Heinrich Fleischer,Rockefeller chapel organist. Or¬gan works by Bach, Bruhns,Franck, and Liszt. Rockefellerchapel, 8:30 p.m. Admissionfree.Ait exhibition (see July 15 entry)Lecture, “UNESCO study of meth¬ods of teaching reading: itsbearing on current controver¬sy,” by William S. Gray, direc¬tor of research in reading, UCdepartment of education. Spon¬sored by Phi Delta Kappa andPhi Lambda Theta. Judd 126,8 p.m.Wednesday, July 20Lecture series, "The social scien¬tist looks at the school.” "Textbooks and critical issues,” EarlS. Johnson, professor of socialsciences. Rosenwald 2, 4:30 p.m.Commuter Council organizationalmeeting. Ida Noyes, 7:30 p.m.Officers will be elected. Allcommuters are welcome.Art exhibition (see July 15 entry)Mixed swimming (see July 15entry)Thursday, July 21Carillon recital commemoratingthe 125th anniversary of Bel¬gian independence, by ArthurLynds Bigelow, bell - master,Princeton university. 12 noon.Classified AdsFor Rent For SaleLo#'Iy 8-room furnished apartment nearcai ,pus. University woman will shareWith two other women (July 15-October1). Own room and bath. Kitchen andlaundry facilities. $14 weekly. 5125 Ellis.MU 4-6019 evenings after 6.Six room, completely furnished (exceptlinens) Lake Michigan cottage available1 week, July 16-23. Contract Mrs. Brown,FA 4-9191.You can rent an electric refrigerator.$4.50 and up per month. We also repairrefrigerators. CO. 4-9231. 1941 Pontiac tudor. Beautiful body,mechanically fine. Radio, heater, $149.MI 3-9790.Singer portable sewing, $25 and up.DO 3-1937.“WORTH WHILE INVESTIGATING”Modern DeLuxe 2-flat apartment build¬ing. Close to university, comfortableliving combined with good income.Beautiful large yard and 2-car garage.Mr. Mansfield. RA 6-2327. ’’Motion picture, March of theWooden Soldiers, (U. S. film)Int. house assembly hall, 8 p.m.Admission 45 cents.Art exhibition (see July 15 entry)Court Theatre (see July 15 entry)Friday, July 22Motion picture, My Darling Clem¬entine (U.S.) A Doc Film pre¬sentation, Soc. Sci. 122, 7:15 and9:15 p.m. Admission 40 cents.Friday Frolic, Int. house, 8 p.m.Court Theatre (see Juiy 15 entry)Art exhibition (see July 15 entry)Mixed swimming (see July 15entry)Organizational registrations duein the Student Activities office,Reynolds Club 202. Groupswhich fail to register will notbe accorded recognition as Uni¬versity organizations and maynot use University facilities.Saturday, July 23Concert, piano recital, UC musicalsociety, playing Haydn, Bee¬thoven, Schubert. Ida Noyes li¬brary, 8 p.m. Admission free.Court Theatre (see July 15 entry)Sunday, July 24University religious service. TheReverend John B. Thompson,dean of Rockefeller chapel,preaching. Rockefeller chapel.11 a.m.Court Theatre (see July 15 entry)Monday, July 25Lecture series, “The social scien¬tist looks at the school,” "Worldpopulation trends and their im¬plications for the social sci-*■ ences,” by Philip M. Hauser,professor of sociology. Rosen-wald 2. 4 p.m.Art exhibition (see July 15 entry)Ida Noyes dancing (see July 18entry)Tuesday, July 26Art exhibition (see July 15 entry)Wednesday, July 27Lecture series, "The .Social Scien¬tist Looks at the School,” “Rel¬evance of anthropology for thesocial sciences,” by Alex Wein-grod, graduate social sciencesstudent.Mixed swimming (see July 15entry)Art exhibition (see July 15 entry)Thursday, July 28Film, Merry Wives of Windsor(German) Int. house assemblyhall, 8 p.m. Admission 45 cents.Art exhibition (see July 15 entry)Court Theatre production of Mo-Here’s The Affected Young... Ladies, Hutchinson court 8:30p.m. Admission $1.Foundpi Lambda Theta key on University be¬tween 56th and 57th. Claim at Ext. 3766after noon. Dorin.At Chancellor’s dance. Roll of fruit LifeSavers. Call No. 7-6786.Wanted 3Ae 'jrf/Aiim PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETTeenagers want work in homes, yards,gardens, or repairing. Call NeighborhoodClub work teams, MI 3-4063. Ask forRalph Fertig.PersonalTo R, J, and M. Thanks for posey andapt. Come the revolution when Godrules women tied to sinks will haveanother party, just for you all.Dancing on thepatioIda Noyes everyMondaycomfortableclothes•8 - 10p.m.Free JV«?w? Location1322 E. 55th Street• HY 3-9651Good Books - Good CardsReliable Typewriter ServiceA CASA Book Store1152 E. 55th Introducing a new and exciting formof dramatic entertainmentTHE COMPASSMONDAY NIGHTSfolk singingTUESDAY NIGHTSeverybody netsimprovised Drama NightlyNO COVER, MINIMUM, OR ADMISSIONdrinks served during performancesMU 4-3757 Issued once weekly, except twice monthly during the summer quarter b«the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, at the publication offices, 5706 SouthUniversity ovenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephone Midway 3-0800, ext1009. Distributed free of charge and subscriptions by mail $3 per year.'Business office hours: 2 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.Gilbert White .(from page 1)commission which opened up ci¬vilian relief for Germany in 1946.Geographer born in Chicago •White was born in Chicago in1911. His sister, Julia White, stilllives in Hyde Park. White hasbeen active in the UC alumni as¬sociation, and in 1937 was vice-president of the UC alumni clubin Washington.During White’s administration,Haverford’s endowment increasedfrom $-1,500,000 to more than $10,-000,000. Scholarship funds quad¬rupled; faculty salaries wereCampaign . . .(from page 1)pendible over a ten-year period,money for student housing beingthe main capital amount sought.New foundation grant unusualA grant of $25,000 to the cam¬paign from (he Bell & HowellFoundation lias unusual and de¬sirable aspects, Ryerson said. Thefoundation, set up three yearsago, has confined itself to thefield of youth development, untilit reached (he point where its re¬sources permiMed a program ofaid to education.Of the $25,000 given to UC$2,500 is designated for a researchproject by the Industrial Rela¬tions center on motivations ofbuying and selling. Directing thatthe balance of $22,500 be spentwithin three to four years for tui¬tion scholarships, the terms of thegrant also provide that for eachscholarship the University receivea matching sum in recognition ofthe fact that tuition does not paythe full cost of a student’s edu¬cation. raised, and a building program,now nearing completion, has as¬sured at least one new dormitoryand a field house for the college.White is credited by Stokes ofHaverford with responsibility forthe decision to reduce the studentbody of Haverford to 450 studentsin order to "stay a small liberalarts college with a genuine com-munity of students and teachers.”Stokes praised White’s aecom-plishment “in encouraging Haver,ford faculty members to developconstructive educational ideas andtechniques and for his success insecuring outside financial sup¬port for these experiments.”Haverford is a college of artsand sciences for men, with womenadmitted in the graduate pro¬gram. Located in a suburb of Phi-ladelphia, the school was foundedin 1833, and is the oldest Quakercollege in the United States.Haverford has recently insti-tilted a freshman English tutorialclass, reading and writing onproblems of human values.I BORDONE■ ;> Movers and Light Hauling <VI 6-9832**** GREEDY?We ore too. Greedyfor help on theMaroon orienta¬tion issue.Call Ex 1009PROVENCAL2s 1 RestaurantFraneais1450 E. 57th Streetopen from 11 a.m. to3 p.m.from 5 p.m. to2 a.m.closed TuesdayTERRY’S PIZZAfinest pizzas modeFREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSI SMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95 1I MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95EiWe also carry a lull line of Italian foods1518 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-4045 |July 15, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON fij* fUC sponsors programto bridge education gapThis summer the University of Chicago, in conjunction withthe Chicago public schools, is sponsoring its third school andcollege program at UC. The program is aimed at bridgingthe gap between high school and college, and will run fromJune 27-July 29.Teachers who participate inonstration classes in biologicalscience, social science, andEnglish composition, in whichregular junior and senior studentsfrom Chicago High schools willbe taught by members of the col¬lege faculty. The techniques thathave been developed in regularCollege classes will be followed.Seminars follow classAfter the demonstration classesare completed each day, the teach¬ers will discuss in seminars meth¬ods, learning materials, examina¬tions, high school-college coordi¬nation and other topics develop¬ing out of their observation of theclasses, their reading, and theirgeneral teaching experiences.Once or twice a week the teach¬ers will have an opportunity tohear guest speakers from the Uni¬versity faculty and visiting lec¬turers.Probe discussion methodThe seminar discussions in so¬cial sciences will inquire into thetheoretical and practical problemscentering around the use of thediscussion method and originaldocuments in the teaching of so¬cial science, with particular em- the program will observe dem-phasis on the teaching of history.The demonstration class itselfwill take up several topics inAmerican history, using materialsand methods selected from thoseused in social sciences 1 in thecollege.In the biological sciences theteachers will discuss current prob¬lems in the teaching of biologywith particular emphasis on therelationship between biology inthe high school and in the college,the development of scientific atti¬tudes and appreciation, and thehandling of groups of studentswith special interests and abilitiesin biology. The demonstrationclass will employ the materialsand methods of the natural scien¬ces 2 course in the college.Illustrate English organizationThe demonstration classes inEnglish composition will discussbrief readings and student paperssuitable to illustrate elementaryprinciples of organization in para¬graph and theme. The seminarswill consider the selection of thesereadings, analysis of the readingsfor future classes, and the evalua¬tion of student performance bothin the class and in prepared pa¬pers. Registrations dueNext Friday is the deadlinefor student organizations toregister for the summer quar¬ter. Ten registered studentsand a faculty adviser are nec¬essary for an organization togain recognition. Such recogni¬tion entitles the organizationto the use of rooms and otherUniversity facilities. ,Forms for application areavailable in the Student Activi¬ties office, second floor ofReynolds club, and must be re¬turned there.27 UC studentsmake IllinoisPhi Beta KappaTwenty-seven UC students haverecently been elected to Phi BetaKappa, national honorary societyfor students in the arts and sci¬ences.Those elected to Beta of Illinoischapter of the society were Nor¬man Abrams, Evan Appleman,Bertrand Bauer, Jack Beem, JerryChutkow, Gerald Czamanske, Pa¬tricia Edgeworth, Walter Fried,Donald Ginsberg, David Ginsberg,and Martin Gouterman.Also A v r u m Gratch, DaleGrimes, Francoise Harlepp, Hen¬ry Kallet, Alice Leider, RobertLichtman, Robert Murdock, Wal¬ter Raine, Thomas Reynolds, Wil-la Samors, Joan Schroeter, AlexShane, Douglas Stone, HaroldWard, and Donal Wentzel. Research grant to UCto study multiple sclerosisThe Multiple Sclerosis foundation of America presented$25,000 to the University Clinics Wednesday night forresearch on the causes of this mysterious disease of thenervous system.Lowell T. Coggeshall, deanof the division of biologicalsciences, received the check fromFord foundationoffers funds forstudies abroadFellowships for study and re¬search on Africa, Asia, the NearEast, the Soviet Union or EasternEurope are being offered by theFord foundation for the 1956-57academic year.Deadline for application for thethe fellowships is December 15,1955. The program is open to per¬sons under 40 years of age forgraduate or post-doctoral work inthe social sciences or humanities,and is part of the foundation pro¬gram to increase international un¬derstanding and enable the UnitedStates to better discharge its in¬ternational responsibilities. Studyor research may be undertaken inthe United States or abroad be¬ginning as early as the summer of1956.Details and application formsare obtainable by writing to TheFord foundation, foreign area fel¬lowship programs, 477 MadisonAve., New York 22, New York. Frederick R. Cross, president ofthe foundation. The presentationwas made on the WBBM televi*sion program “In Town Tonight."The funds will be used to sup¬port research by Richard Richteg,professor of neurology, and Eu-gene M. K. Geiling, professor andchairman of the University’s de¬partment of pharmacology.This joint research will beaimed at locating, within thenervous system certain organic ^chemical compounds which havepreviously been injected into theblood stream.For this purpose, drugs andother compounds “tagged” withradioactive chemicals will be used.Some of these drugs are productsof the University’s “atomic farm"where drug plants are grown inatmospheres containing radio-active carbon dioxide.The compounds will be studiedin small laboratory animals. Theywill include several drugs wellknown for their damaging effectson nervous tissues.Business school,political scienceteachers namedAppointment of Corwin D.Edwards as professor of gov¬ernment and Irving SchweigerYou can spot this one by the twin tailpipes. No mat¬ter what you drive, you're going to see twin exhaustChevrolets pulling away—in traffic, on the toughesthills, on the long straightaways.. . . Unless you have a “Super Turbo-Fire V8"* ofyour own. And then you’ll know what it’s like to pilotthe car that sets the pace for everything else—anddoesn’t pause to read the price tags!What makes the Super scat? Chevrolet’s superbvalve-in-head Y8, with the shortest stroke in the in¬ dustry, the most power per pound, and the only 12-voltelectrical system in its field—all this plus a four-barrel carburetor and free-breathing twin exhausts.fWant to sample this silk-lined cyclone? Just giveus a call, any day this week, and we’ll be proud toshow you just how hot a V8 can be.*Optional at extra cost.fStation wagon models have single exhaust pipes.- isa^CHEVROLET /iSee Your Chevrolet Dealer as associate professor of market¬ing of UC’s business school wasannounced this week. Both ap¬pointments are effective Octo¬ber 1.Edwards, well known for hisstudy of the government’s anti-monopoly policies, for the pastyear has been professor of eco¬nomics at the University of Vir¬ginia.Edwards held many jobs withthe US government, includingchief economist for the federaltrade commission, consultant oncartels for the state department,and chairman of the policy boardof the anti-trust division of thedepartment of justice.Schweiger has served as aneconomist with the federal re¬serve system since 1946, directingresearch on problems of con¬sumer economic behavior, buy¬ing and investment plans, majorfinancial expenditures, incomeand net worth, and patterns ofsaving.Is the president in? Weneed to find the officersof all student organiza¬tions for orientation is¬sue information. Wheredoes he live now? Let usknow if you hear.ThanksEx 1009 The5706 University MaroonTheatre •saved;DDT arrives,rain doesn’tOver 1,500 playgoers viewed thetwo week run of The Doctor inSpite of Himself which openedUTs Court theatre summer festi¬val of Moliere.The Doctor in Spite of Himselfran for seven of the scheduledeight performances, being rainedout July 4. Although threatenedby impending thunderstorms andvicious mosquitoes during severalperformances, Court theatre’s di¬rector, Marvin Phillips, estimatedthe attendance at over 1,500 forthe seven performances and de¬scribed the ticket sales as “en¬couraging.”The mosquito problem was de¬feated last weekend with the ar¬rival of DDT. Hutchinson Courtwill be sprayed with 5 gallons ofDDT on each night of the nextproduction. Spiegel electedyearbook editorMary Joan Spiegel, a col¬lege student, has been electededitor-in-chief of the 1956 Cap andGown. Miss Spiegel served as lit¬erary editor of the 1954 Cap andGown, as associate editor of the1955 book.Spiegel succeeds Paul A. Hoff¬man as yearbook editor. Hoffmanpublished what he described as“the most successful book finan¬cially and most controversial inthe three years of Cap and Gown’spost-war revival ” Within days ofpublication, the yearbook wassold-out.In an election by mail. MissSpiegel defeated Ronald Gross-man for the editorship. Ballots byCap and Gown staff memberswere secret. Grossman had con¬ceded his chances were slim fourdays before the vote count.Miss Spiegel is from Hammond.Indiana. She will take office offi¬cially in the fall.Swing, Glee club director,leaves UC for Swarthmore Publication of Whitman bookinspires 'New World' program“The concept of Whitman as the progenitor of. modern American advertising fascinatesme,” commented Fredson Bowers on last Sunday’s Broadcast of “New World,” UC’s newradio program, beamed from Mitchell tower across the nation as part of the NationalBroadcasting company’s “Monitor” series.Discussing Bowers recent ence 4 # _ an expression which popular success have also createdUC press publication, Whit- not been successfully given a decline in Whitman’s popularityman’s Manuscripts, were Bowers, jn whitman’s time. during the last decade,professional lecturer in English, whitman, according to Denny, In Whitman’s time the need forand Ruel Denney. felt tbe importance of feel- a “density of experience,” whichDenny felt that Whitman paint- jng ancj thinking in such a way enriched and unified Americaned in his poems a picture of that his personality reached out culture was successfully satisfiedAmerica which has become a and touched all aspects of the by Whitman’s poetry, Denny felt.society around him. However, since this need has be-Whitman tried to be the “real come lessened in the course of ourAmerican poet,” Bowers summar- cultural history, Whitman hasized. consequently lost the appeal of. . ,, ... Denny stated that these factors being able in his work to solve acome generalized in the writings hi h contributed to Whitman’s current cultural problem,of other people,” Denny said. ^Both Denny and Bow ers agreedWhitman volumereleased by PressFredson Bower’s volume, Whitman’s Manuscripts, was re¬leased by UC press la$t week on the 100 anniversary of thepublication of Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass.Bowers, professorial lecturer in English at UC, has includedin his volume some 82 poems —7~r: : : —in Whitman’s handwriting °j thls *Joem Isf,c ywith Whitman's own written cof. 'rom * f.ew *,n«rections. Bowers has also treated lsr£ ,h a(r ln a. no e °° !n* tun.-* 1856, through a maior writing inof Whitman, the poet and the .q,-,, „ ,^ 1857, and a final addition of somemodel for descriptions of Ameri¬ca in institutional advertising andphotographic picture stories.“His attitudes toward the con¬tinent and the culture have be-Peter Gram Swing ... as he conducted UC’s Glee club last year.Peter Gram Swing, Harvard-trained director of the UC Glee club,will leave the campus for Swarthmore College this fall. DennisCowan, formerly of Kansas and currently a candidate for a Ph.D.,will join the organization as its new leader.Swing, a member of the Humanities I staff, began his musicaltraining as a child, playing in a family trio. He plays severalinstruments.He received further training at Harvard, where he was a mem¬ber of the glee club, conducted a Harvard-Radcliffe chorus, andgraduated with honors in music. His experience also includes studyat the Longy School at Cambridge and research on 16th centurymusic in the Netherlands under the auspices of a Fulbright fel¬lowship.Swing also taught and conducted at Rollins College in Florida,led a madrigal group in the Netherlands, studied choral conductingunder Robert Shaw, and while at UC was choirmaster of the Chi¬cago Theological Seminary group in addition to his duties withthe Glee Club and the humanities staff.61st & Ellis - READER'S - opp®***Your Campus HeadquartersAir Conditioned for Your ComfortDRUGS - TOILETRIES - FOODcoming • coming • comingthe third in a series ofmoliere's plays“the affected young ladies"three weekends — thursday-Sunday,july 28 - august 14>I Get tannedatBERNIE’S SUN DIAL1601 E. 55th St. —Just East of I.C. that Whitman was far from be¬ing a “regional poet.” They feltthat Whitman’s poems satisfieda great need for an expression ofunified typically American experi-Education societyinitiates thirteenThirteen women have been ini¬tiated into Pi Lambda Theta, thewomen’s professional society ineducation.Those received into member¬ship following nomination by fac¬ulty and Lambda chapter mem¬bers were Jeanette Anderson, El¬len Boroughf, Hattie Brown, JoyBurbach, Marion Dixon, N e 11 aFermi, Laurie Gunter, CatherineHam, Mary Johnson, Mussie La-kin, Ellen Morris, Alice Reim-sehissel, and Alice Welch. »Ministers addedto FTS facultyAppointment of two theologicalscholars who are also ordainedministers, to UC’s federated the¬ological faculty was announcedthis week.Markus Barth, son of the Swisstheologian Karl Barth of Baseluniversity has been appointed as¬sociate professor of the New Tes¬tament, and Nathan A. Scott hasbeen appointed assistant profes¬sor in religion and art.Barth, ordained minister of theSwiss Reform church has beenserving as professor of New Tes¬tament at Presbyterian Theolog¬ical seminary, Dubuque, Iowa. Hereceived his theological trainingat the universities of Basel, Ber¬lin. and Edinburg, and was grant¬ed his doctor of theology degreefrom the University of Gottingen.Scott has been associate profes¬sor of humanities at Howard uni¬versity. He is an ordained Congre¬gational minister and has servedas chaplain at Hampton institute.He received his BA from theUniversity of Michigan and hisPhD from Union Theological sem¬inary. man, and has reconstructed thechronology of Whitman’s writingand Whitman’s changing ideasabout his work sections in 1859.Theme of this section is an in¬tense patriotism, and the praiseStudy of the manuscripts from America. In it, Whitman labelsthe Clifton Waller Barrett collec- as a ‘ Child of Democ-tion shows that Whitman’s appar- racy-ently free and formless poetry The analysis of the develop-was actually the result of much rnent of this poem gives scholarscareful revision and rearrange- and critics a new opportunity forment. the evaluation of Whitman as aBowers’ study of the paper conscious artist,used in the manuscripts gives im¬portant clues as to the chronologyof the poems and enables Bowersto reconstruct Whitman’s devel¬opment in particular poems.Bowers’ studies also show thatthe “clusters” in which the poemsappear in the printed text werenot the result of deliberate plan¬ning from the start, as previouslythought.The key poem analyzed byBowers is the first, called “Pre¬monitions” in this edition, andlater better known as “Startingfrom Paumanok.” The develop- ACECYCLE SlIOl*Your BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we sellRepairs fir Parts all makes819 E. 55 MI 3-26729 A.M. - 6 P.M.TnrnuCTi TfLouise Barkerphotographer“who capturesyourpersonalityas well asyour person"1457 E. 57Hi St.BU 8-0876Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 UNIVERSITYBARBER SHBP1453 E. 57th *Fine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircutting ,Floyd C. ArnoldProprietor Not tonightI vant to go to ze Maroonto volunteer to work on zeorientation issue. I'll be inReynolds club 201Ex 1009aiiiiiiMiffliiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHmimHHHiHiuiiiiiiiiimiitiiiiHiiiiiiiNiiiiiHHHiiUHmmiiniiiiHiiiiHimmiBFifty-Seventh at Kenwood §§mm m UNUSUAL FOODDELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICESv.W/.vfr . ...v ... ,. ' •*.*•. / frjftOl X- .vfc&v / . .% .• / . . ..' -X. EuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiwimiiHiiimiiiiiiHimiHiiiHiiiiiiiiimiK TheDisc1367 E. 57Recordof the weekSpanishGypsy Airsplayed byCarlos MontoyaRemington$1.95July 15# 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page THold piano recital in NoyesBamberger to play 3 worksThe University of Chicago Musical society will presentJeanne Shapiro Bamberger in recital in Ida Noyes library,Saturday evening, July 23, at 8.Mrs. Bamberger studied piano with Arthur Schnabel andhas concertized extensively in both the U. S. and in Europe. During1951-2, she visited France and Switzerland, playing contemporaryAmerican music, accompanied by Roger Sessions who lectured on thesituation of the composer in America today.Her program will consist of Haydn’s C Major Sonata (1791), Bee¬thoven’s Bagatelles, Op. 126, and Schubert’s G Major Sonata, Op. 78.Admission to this concert is without charge.Chimes commemorateBelgian independenceOn Tuesday, July 19, from 8 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. there will bea concert by James R. Lawson, University of Chicago carillon-neur. This will precede an organ recital by Heinrich Fleischer,Rockefeller chapel organist.A special bell concert will be held Thursday at noon inhonor of the 125th anniversary of Belgian independence.Arthyr Lynds Bigelow, bell-master of Princeton univer¬sity, will give the concert onthe carillon of Rockefeller chapel.Special guests for the concertwill be the Honorable MauriceIweins d’ Eeckhoutte, the ConsulGeneral of Belgium in Chicago,and members of the Belgian con¬sulate. »Anthem firstThe Belgian national anthem,“La Brabanconne” will be thefirst number played. It has beenspecially arranged for this con¬cert by the Hulp-Beiaardier of theCathedral of St. Rombold in Mech¬elen, Belgium, Gaston Van denBergh. There will also be playedFlemish folk songs and pieces byBelgian carillonneurs includingStaf Nees, Piet Van den Broek,Jef Van Hoof, George Clementand Jef Rottiers. The concert willconclude with “Postludium voorBeiaard” by Jef Denyn, the teach¬er of Mr. Bigelow.It was in Belgium and Hollandthat the art of the carrilon orig¬inated. From these lowlands theart has radiated over the world.Practically every major carillon-neur today, including Big«lowand Lawfson, received his train¬ing at the Beiaardschool (Caril¬lon School) located in Mechelen,Belgium. This school was foundedand is directed by the teacher ofBigelow, Jef Denyn.Students to playAnother special concert will begiven on the Rockefeller bells onWednesday, August 31. Three stu¬ dents of the University of Chivcago’s carillonneur will play,among them Charles Rhyne, stu¬dent carillonneur at Rockefellerchapel.During the summer there willbe concerts by James Lawsoneach Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. andeach Sunday at 4:30 p.m. on theRockefeller bells. Members of theUniversity Society of Bell-Ringerswill play the 10 bell chime inMitchell tower each day at 12:05noon, 6 p.m. and 10:05 p.m.Vogler playsBefore the Moliere plays inHutchinson court each Thursdayand Friday at 8 p.m. will be a con¬cert by Thomas Vogler.On the Mitchell tower chime atnoon Tuesday, July 26 will be aconcert commemorating the birth¬day of the first president of theUniversity of Chicago, WilliamRainey Harper. Court theatre's 1st production good;'Doctor' rouses thought-provoked laughterBallet, an original musical composition, and folk singing were used by the Court theatrelast weekend in their talented production of Moliere’s The Doctor in Spite of Himself. Theirproduction was generally able to arouse thought-provoked laughter, but the actors and di»rector resorted to slapstick devices when other means of arousing humor failed.Slapstick did not dominate the performance, however. It was but a j>art of a high-spiritedgood humor which most of the actors put into their roles and conveyed to the audience.Both the new translationand the production of the Doc¬tor in Spite of Himself werevery imaginative. Moliere’s play,correctly called earthy, often tend¬ed toward the obscene in theCourt theatre’s version of it. Theaudience, however, did not seemto be embarrassed by the moreexplicit comments and gestures,-which were almost an inherentpart of the play’s freshness.The play centers about a wood¬cutter mistaken for a successfuldoctor. Forced to cure a feignedillness, he is able to use commonsense to arrive at a cure. GeorgeWellworth gave to this role muchsound and fury. His voice sound¬ed as if he were engaged in a vio¬lent and exaggerated parody ofthe late Dylan Thomas. His move¬ments were those of an appren¬tice acrobat, and his idiotic grinwas superbly perceptable. It wasalmost impossible to ignore hispresence, and his energentic sim¬plicity undoubtedly contributed tothe dynamic force of the perform¬ance.Patrick Needham made theyoung lover seem like an innocu¬ous piece of wood. His conceptionof the role did not spoil the com¬edy even if it did make his sweet¬heart’s feeling for him seem evenmore of an illusion than herfeigned illness.William Zavis acted the role ofthe heroine’s father and did an in¬teresting interpretation of senil¬ity. Unfortunately senility is nev¬er very interesting, and Zazis’ in¬terpretation made it even less so.All of the actresses did a fine photo by WollQuantities of wine and not-too-subtle persuasive methods applied byLarry Zerkel (left) and Alan Nichols (rigrt) coerced George Wellworth(center) to become "a doctor in spite of himself in last week's Courttheatre Moliere production.job. Natasha Trevelyan was excel¬lent as the nurse. She was able tomake her characterization bothbigger than life, and yet lifelike.Sally Hick’s fine stage appear¬ance allowed her to show the doc¬tor’s wife as a very charmingshi’ew. „ Last, but certainly notleast attractive, was Lucia deAn-drade as the rich man’s daughter,whose voice loss did little to im¬pair her natural acting ability.All of the main character actorswere successful. They never gotin the way of the plot or becamemere time killers. The acting wasnever subtle, but neither was it inaudible, and all earned the rightto be called amusing.The lighting was very superiorIt revealed the full beauty of thecourtyard at night. The costumeswere bright but not offensive, forthey did not conflict with the love¬ly background. It was almost im¬possible to sit on the grass underthe expertly constructed lightingand fail to be pleased. The CourtTheatre people worked very hardto please everyone, and judgingby the audience reaction, they ac¬tually succeeded in that most dif¬ficult of all artistic undertakings.Ken KarlinCompass features improvisational theaterIT’S SO EASY Compass, a new form of en¬tertainment, opened for theUC community last weekend.In an attempt to inject aninformal and personal touch intotheater entertainment, Compass,1152 E. 55th st., will present bothimprovisational theater anddrinks on the same menu.Organized primarily by a groupof young actors and actressesfrom UC and the now homelessPlaywright’s theatre club, Com¬pass will present improvisationaltheater Wednesday through Sun¬day evenings, with folk music con¬certs Monday evenings, openworkshops in improvisationaltheater Tuesday evenings, andspecial events on Sunday after¬noons. All evening shows will becontinuous from 9, afternoonshows from 4.‘Wonderful reception’“The community has given usa wonderful reception,’’ stated Sid'Lazard, a manager of Compass. “We had three capacity houses onSaturday evening, and two onSunday.”Lazard emphasized that theCompass is designed to maketheater going easy and to extendits appeal to everybody. The in¬formal bar-room atmosphere hasbeen calculated to extend the ap¬peal of Compass’ entertainmentto the man in the streets, he said.He felt that the uniqueness ofCompass lay in its informalityand spontaneity. Lazard even hes¬itated to use the word “theater”in reference to Compass.Gives flexibility, Compass has been designed togive its presentations maximumflexibility. Compass occupies twostore fronts on 55th with a doorbroken between them. The stagein the east room, is equipped onlywith four large, brightly coloredmovable panels.The flexibility of its presenta¬tions is reminiscent of the old-style improvisational theater of the 16th century Italian Corn-media Dell’Arte. Compass’ per¬formers do not use a script intheir presentation of plays. Allthe actors are given is a story andsome characterizations. They areexpected to improvise their owndialogue. Although each scenariowill be given five times and onlychanged weekly, each presenta¬tion will be, in a sense, a differ¬ent play because it will have dif¬ferent dialogue.Audience volunteersThe audience are expected tosupply their own scenario and vol¬unteer their own acting talents inthe Tuesday night open work¬shops. For instance, Tuesdaynight, Compass’ emcee, RogerEowen, a UC student, asked theaudience to shout some wordswhich might suggest an idea for a play. With words like ‘handker¬chief,” and “milkshake,” and vol¬unteer "actors” from the audi¬ence, a play was made. “Createdout of thin air” was Lazard’s de¬scription of the play.Lazard credited the idea for thecreation of Compass to DaveShepherd, a professional director,who has directed both Universitytheatre and Playwright’s theatreshows. “The Minister’s Daugh¬ter,” a scenario by Shepard willbe acted out beginning Wednes¬day. The run of “The Game,” ascenario by Paul Sills closes Sun¬day night. Sunday afternoonBowen will conduct a debate onthe problems of Nationalist China.Living Newspaper, a dramatiz¬ation of current news events isalso scheduled to be a nightlyevent at Compass.120 WORDS PER MINUTEFamous ABC system. Now taught inover 400 cities. New day & Eveningclasses start each Monday. Attendfirst class as GUEST. Special SummerClasses for College Students. ALSOthorough, intensive SPEEDTYPINGcourse. Use coupon to send for 16-page brochure.SPEEDWRITING SCHOOL37 S. Wabash Financial 6-5471r 1Speedwriting School '37 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago 3, III. |Please send me without obligation ■your 16-page brochure on Speed- |writing. jName |Address-CityPhone Zone- WOODLAWN - 55th GARAGEFORMERLYUNIVERSITY GARAGEUNDER NEW MANAGEMENTEXPERT AUTOMOBILE REPAIR SERVICEAutomobile StoragePure Oil Gas - GreasingWashing - SimonizingTire Repair - Road ServiceTime Payments1169 E. 55th St. MUseum 4-1818 Renaissance society showsmembers' work in gallerythrough August 31The Renaissance society galleries are featuring throughAugust 31 an exhibit of art works by member artists. Theartists, who have qualified to enter the exhibit by previouslyhaving their works appear in two major gallery exhibitions,are mostly local Chicagoans, —although there is no residence is one of the finest available ofrequirement. the better local artists. The gal-The exhibit has been lauded by leries, located in Goodspeed hall,the Sun-Times for its lack of vi- are under the direction of Mrs.olent modernism, producing in- Frances Biesal, but in the summerstead a somewhat soothing effect, are cared for by the art depart-Generally speaking, the exhibit ment of the University.“Enjoy Our Fine Continental Cuisine <nRelaxed Air Conditioned Atmosphere”CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Doily (except Mondays) from 4:30 - 10:00Sundays ——12 Noon • 10 P.M.1508 E. 57th Street Phone PLnzn 2-9355ft' THE CHICAGO MAROON July 15, 1955 VNSA delegate at conference,Gray reports from England Wrestlers needcoachiwho will get job?by Clive GrayThe fifth International Student Conference, attended by the leaders of 52 national unionsof students including the US National Student Association, has this year presented a familiardichotomy between two basic positions on the role of student organizations in bettering theconditions of student life.On the one hand, the representatives of most of the countries of Europe press for Inter¬national consultations on minor practical improvements in the stable cultural and economic Who will coach wrestling next year?Wrestler-coach A1 Bates, who stepped into the gap createdwhen Robert Antonacci left UC for another coaching positiontwo years ago, has completed his Masters program and willnot return to school next fall.Uves of their constituents. . t of more open discussion this here, however, believe the chang-TVimr or*n infnvoctnH in imnt J _ _ .. . .... ttto i. iThey are inteiested in joint vpar, man during the previous ed attitude of the IUS toward the. . year than during tne previousseminars, low - price travel conferences. However, this fact Conference it formally denouncedprograms, entertaining student as a meeting of splinter elementspublications, and the like. is duo solely to its appreciation ofOn the other hand, these dele- the Conference's success in draw-gates are politically outnumbered i"g representatives from the un-by their counterparts from under- derdeveloped areas which thedeveloped areas in South Amor- Communists themselves hoped toica, Africa, and Asia. Most of IkmHB solicit.these are vitally concerned with |ImmhS&| In all probability, therefore, abasic political ajul economic prob- resolution urging national stu-lems in their countries which Hllla|| ^ dent organizations which still be-threaten their minimum enjoy- long to IUS to attend the 1956ment of the privileges of higher liL * * JH|| International Student Conferenceeducation. Their idea of the reso- HJH ? is all that will result.lutions the Conference should One possible wrestling coach,Don Donderi, tries to pin an¬other, Kent Flannery, Since director of athletics T.Nelson Metcalf is not likely tolet the sport drop, the question is,who will he appoint as new coach ?Metcalf is now on vacation andcannot be reached for comment,but he has only two possibilities:a professional coach, or anotherwrestler-coach like Bates.At the time Bates stepped inthe athletic department did notwant to cripple its budget for aman who would only coach wres-tling. (Most UC coaches handletwo or three sports since the sports are seasonal.)The same situation exists now, and so some one of the currentwrestlers, perhaps Don Donderi or Kent Flannery, may be coachingnext winter.Clive Gray, one of four NSAdelegates to the fifth annual In¬ternational Student Conference,has been student governmentpresident and political sciencestudent at UC. Trackmen busy:place Iwelve inpass thus differ from that of theEuropeans.The Europeans feel rather un¬easy committing their national or¬ganizations to vigorous declara¬tions of support for the studentsdeprived of academic freedom bythe Peron government in Argen¬tina, for equal access to educationIn South Africa, and for basic lib¬erties in East Germany. However,all the delegates are becomingmore and more used to having the has little to do with the more re- . „ , Wor. , ,. ~ .Conference treat of these broader laxed world situation; father the of Wednesday, July 6. Secondproblems, and little talk is heard Communist IUS (through the one °* the meets designed to provideof one or the other side walking 0f jts three observers whom the summer competition for Chicagoout. British government permitted to track and field men will be heldIUS discussedThe relation of the Conference mally approaching the Confer-with the International Union of ence for a joint meeting.Students will probably be the sub- All but a few of the delegates set new AAU record,1st 'All Comers' meetFirst UC Track club AllComers meet ever held wasrun off on Stagg field the eve- Play ball onStagg field Four UC Track club mem¬bers set a new National AAUrecord in the mile and %‘‘medley relay championship ofAmerica" held, in Buffalo twoweeks ago Sunday. Two of therunners who helped set the newRorschach workshopstudies inkblots hereinkblot.” Scoring of the test is in :50.1. innovation similar to tennis coach and be Placed third.based on a statistical determina- °ther UCTC winners were Dick Bill Moyle’s fall program in that Even though the new mile andtion of norms. Mr. Carter ex- Richardson (6' 2%" in the high sport. Results of the summer pro- I* Jflay T^°rd cl!P0P^ th« 0,dplained that this is to eliminate lump) and Frank Loomos (:24.7 ^ AAU mark by about 20 seconds, itthe subjectivity of the scorer. in the 220 yard low hurdles). Dan gram may show next spring on js not a new American record forMr. Carter emphasized that the Trifone placed third in the high Stagg. the distance.Rorschach test does not give a jump, and Stap]ey second in thecomplete diagnosis, but is only hurdles. ^lllllll!!>l!!lllllllllllllltllltlllllllllllllllllllllliltiiiiiii||||||||iiiiiii|ifHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii|iit|||||iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii£‘‘a psychological tool," an aid in Keypoint in Wednesday’s two- = ,understanding an individual. “It mile steeplechase will be the wa- 1 ©us© Moviesis about the best tool for objective terjump on the south straight- = Assembly hall Every Thnrs. evening at 8 p.m. |=testing," Carter continued. “If away. Few runners have gone § Thursday, July 21— 35c—March of the Wooden Soldiers (American) §you’re careful, you get good re- over the jump the necessary eight =suits.” times without getting their feet = Thursday, July 28—45c—Merry Wires of Windsor (German) §5The workshop ends next week. wet. * TiililiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiilllliInkblot identified by a Ma¬roon staffer as a Rorschachworkshop member looking in amirror.schools of Rorschach inter¬pretation, differentiated from theothers by its method of scoringthe test.The test itself involves having asubject make a quick identifica¬tion of an inkblot with any ordi¬nary object which comes to hismind. As Mr. Carroll Carter, oneof the 25, stated, “It is a projec-RELIANCE CAMERA APHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63rd St.BU 8-6040 - the f orced marriage • mohere"a seventeenth century shotgun wedding"• friday - Sunday, July 15-17• thursday - Sunday, July 21 - 248:30 each evening in the outdoor court theatre57th and university$1 general admission — bring blankets or sit onthe grassEducational Insurance jPhone or Write <\ Joseph H. Aaron, '27 <**''■ • RA 6-1060,►135 S. LaSalle St.► Chicago 3, Illinois CARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1365 E. 55th MU 4-9003 The CollegeLAUNDERETTE BETZ JEWELRY1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 Unusual Jewelry Our SpecialtyExpert Jewelry and Watch RepairN.S.A. Discount to Student*1523 E. 53rd PL 2-3038 Jimmy5sSINCE 1940Monday, Wednesday, and Fri-next Wednesday on Stagg at 6 day evenings this summer at record of 7 minutes, 21.1 seconds,p.m. about 6 p.m. a group of past and Brown and Ken Stapley, areUncommon events like the two- present UC baseball players has uc students,mile steeplechase scheduled for heen going out on Stagg field to Stapley led off the relay withthe coming meet marked the first piay a variety of neighborhood a quarter mile. Brown’sone. In the three mile run three sandlot teams. :22.3 time for 220 yards followed,Track club members, Bob Kelly, Through July 29 UC players and Bi*l Conrardy’s half mile inLawton Lamb, and Art Omohun- ii^e jQhn Mann, John Franken- 4:56-3 put Phil Coleman, the an-dro got the first three places. fe]d Gil Levine and Dave Utley chor man- nearly even with Burrhit an even pace to win in wiMbe joln,ng other uc summer Grim ot the Ballimore OlympicApproximately 25 psychologists and psychological workers W basebell players on- Stagg. Teams club and Gordon McKenzie of thehave spent the past week studying inkblots under Samuel J. ig^ed^n^two-thrS^in the°mi]le opposing the UCers includes the New York Pioneer club- ColemanBeck, lecturer in the department of psychology, in a Ror- and the quarter mile runs. In the Sun Dodgers, an Ace Cycle shop outran them both with a sPar>schach workshop. mile it was Bill Conrardy, John team, and the JC Colts from the kling 4:13 2 mile-In the past week, the 25 have been concerned with the basic Barnes and . “Tinkie Heynes. Junior Conservation clubs. Lawton Lamb, the other trackprocesses of the famous test. Next week they will advance to the quarter Ken Stapley, Ted K^le Anderson, baseball coach with Len Truex and Selwyn Jones /specific case histories. Dr. „. . . nr. „tc Fishman, and Steve Little were during the regular season, is di- at scratch in the handicap mile, fBeck heads one of several his subjwtive attitudes into the the winning trio, Stapley winning recting UC play in an off-season But both outran his 4:16.2 time,