All-campus egg rollheld by Int. HouseAlmost anything can be the theme of a UC party. NextFriday afternoon will see an all-campus egg roll and end ofthe six day race, followed Friday evening by a commemora¬tion of the 93rd anniversary of the battle of Green hill.Admission is free to the all-Offer $200campus open house Fridayafternoon in Ida Noyes hall,where the Commuter’s associa¬tion promises that those attend¬ing will include absentees, con¬victs. electricity, banana, conceal¬ment of birth and death, and along list of other dubious entities.Improvised opera by Don Levineis promised for the 3 to 6 p.m.egg roll.International house councilclaims to be pursuing its policyof bringing foreign students intobetter acquaintance with Ameri¬can history and culture, in spon¬soring t lie dance in honor of theGreen hill battle.“It may be taken for grantedthat all Americans are aware thaton April 6, 1863, General R. B.Mitehel of the Union forces, with360 cavalry, made a descent fromNashville on Green Hill, Tennes¬see. and broke up a Rebel campthere, killing five and taking 15prisoners, with all the arms,horses and equipments (1863plural» in the camp.”Jean Whitenack, the officialhistorian called in for consulta¬tion in the matter noted. “It ispossible, however,” she added,“that some of the foreign stu¬dents may not be well acquaintedwith this historic event.” Vol. 64, No. 37 University of Chicago, Friday, March 30, 1956 31as prize forlegal essaysPrizes for legal essays on animportant aspect of peace anddisarmament are being of¬fered to law students by the Insti¬tute for International Order.“Arms inspection and Americanlaw” is the subject on which com¬peting essays are to be written.A first prize of $200 and a secondprize of 100 will be awarded tothe two best papers written byUC law students. Winning papersfrom all 10 participating schoolswill then be submitted to a panelof judges for national awards of$500 and $300, respectively, forthe first and second winners.The closing date of the compe¬tition is August 31, 1956, andprize-winning papers from eachschool are to be submitted to theInstitute for International Orderby October 15. Complete rules forcompetition may be obtained atthe office of the dean of the lawschool. Soc Sci holdoutsjoin BA brigadeRequirements for a joint BA degree in the college and the Social Science division will gointo effect June 1. Students now in the University may complete the BA with concentrationin the Social Sciences according to the existing plan, or they may transfer to the new pro¬gram. Changes were announced by Dean Robert Streeter.Required courses under the new plan are divided into three parts: college; electives, either*in the college or in any division; and specialized courses within one or more departmentsor committees in the social take two out of three yearlong For the time being studentssciences division. This modi- history courses. One of these, a who have passed the Soc Sci 1fies existing degree arrange- ™ew course first to be offered in comprehensive examination willments, under w'hich students con- September, will deal with non- have met the American Civil |a-... ... . , Western civilizations. The stu- tion requirement,centratmg m the social sciences <jent has his choice in this coursecomplete up to twelve college of studying either India, China,comprehensive examination re- or Islam. A second choice for aquirements, and then add one history course is the already ex¬year of divisional courses in or- isting college course of the his-der to qualify for a BA degree in tory of civilization. The third al-the college. ternative will be another newStudents will be required to course on the history of Ameri¬can civilization, which is expectedto be similar to soc sci 1 on amore advanced level. Basic requirements for the newfour year degree include nine *ol-Social security specialist Indians getappointed to SS A deanship $17,500 giftAlton A. Linford, professor of social service administration, has been appointed dean ofthe school of social service administration. Linford’s appointment was announced March 15by Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton and is effective on October 1.He succeeds Helen R. Wright, Samuel Deutsch professor of social service administrationand dean of the school since 1942. Dean Wright retires September 30.A specialist in the problems of the administration of public welfare and social security,Linford came to the UC fac¬ulty in 1945 as an assistantprofessor. He became an asso¬ciate profesor in 1945 and profes¬sor in 1952.Linford received his BA degreefrom the University of Wyoming;his MA and PhD degrees fromUC. He was on the faculty of theSimmons college school socialwork in Boston from 1939 to 1945.He has been on the civil serviceexamining board in seven states, has also served as chairman ofthe Cook county welfare servicecommittee and as field supervisorof the Wyoming state departmentof public welfare. He is presentlychairman of the commission onaccreditation of the council onsocial work education, which ac¬credits graduate schools of socialwork in the United States andCanada, and a member of theboard of directors of the Nation¬al Association of Social Workers. Committee pollstudents viewsFifteen hundred polls blankshave been circulated amongthe student body by theMaroon academic freedomcommittee this week. The re¬sults of the sampling of stu¬dent opinion on academic free¬dom will be printed in theMaroon academic freedomweek supplement on April 13.Students have been re¬quested by the supplementcommittee to return all pollsto the Maroon office or theReynolds club desk by nextWednesday. A $17,500 grant from theGardner Cowles foundationwill be used to aid the educa¬tion of the Mesquaki Indians ofTama, Iowa, Sol Tax, chairmanof the UC anthropology depart¬ment, announced today.These funds will be employedin a ten-year program adminis¬tered by the University of Chi¬cago. The program was startedlast year with the enrollment ofthe Mesquaki Indians in Iowacolleges.Tax, who heads the committeein charge, said that it is hopedthat the Indians educated underthe program will contribute tothe greater competence of the In¬dian community in its internalaffairs and in its relations withthe white society.Other members of the commit¬tee are: Dr. Alton K. Fisher,chairman of the department oforal pathology; R. J. Ruppe, as¬sistant professor of anthropol¬ogy; and Ben Jones, superintend¬ent of schools, Tama, Iowa. BothFisher and Ruppe are with theState University of Iowa. Dean Robert Streeterlege comprehensives, which willbe the equivalent of 2 and 1/3years; six one-quarter courses inany division, three of which willbe chosen by student and the re§twith the approval of his advisor;and a maximum of nine one-quar¬ter courses in the department inwhich the student intends to re¬ceive his degree.The number of required courseswithin the region of specializationwill differ in each department.Students may substitute collegefor divisional courses as electiveswith the permission of their ad¬visors.As is the case with other jointdegree programs, this curriculumis designed specifically for high-school graduates.'Students whoentered the University prior tohigh-school graduation may haveadditional college requirements tosatisfy, depending on' their place¬ment record.Ban discriminationin Chicago hospitalsHospitals in Chicago are now forbidden to practice racial Dic'nj rp I J fj & ITl If' | V GSCj O IT! *discrimination in admission of patients and provision of medi- ■ • Cm IO w vJ v* VJ w /AAUP censures other schoolspatients and provisioncal care.The Chicago city council, after a delay of two years, finallypassed the Harvey-Campbell CP and both parties of Studentordinance, thereby requiring Government.equal treatment in hospital poli¬cies irrespective of race, creed,color, national origin, or ancestry. Fifth ward Alderman Leon De-pres commented that "the ordi¬nance now lays down the ruleAn amendment which was sup- which every hospital must obey.ported by the Chicago hospitalcouncil was adopted, and providesthat a resident physician of a hos¬pital may decide whether admis- None can say: ‘We do not dareintegrate—it would be stickingour necks out.’ With the passageof the ordinance, the hospitalssion of the patient is a medical are all in the same position. Allnecessity.A number of UC organizationshad supported the ordinance in must obey the law equally.”Dr. Franklin C. McLean, UCprofessor emeritus of physiology,the past months. A UC commit- stated that “the passage of thistee to end discrimination in Chi- ordinance marks an importantcago hospitals was formed last forward step in the provision ofNovember. This committee gath- adequate hospital services for theered 1,250 student signatures to Negro. It is to be hoped that thisa petition which was then deliv- will be followed by voluntaryered to Mayor Daley by a UC del- measures on the part of the hos-egation. Other student organiza- pitals, increasing the representa¬tions supporting the ordinance tion of Negro physicians on theirwere the UC chapter fo the NAA- attending staffs.” The University of Chicago was one of six uni¬versities and colleges cited by the Association ofAmerican University Professors (AAUP) for up¬holding the principles of academic freedom duringthe widespread government and Congressionalinvestigations of alleged disloyalty in recent years.Other schools receiving praise by the AAUPwere Cornell, Johns Hopkins, Harvard, Massachu¬setts Institute of Technology, and Sarah LawrenceCollege.The AAUP, .an organization of 38,000, also re¬leased a report through a special academic free¬dom committee noting the political rights ol fac¬ulty members. In addition, five schools were con¬demned for dismissing faculty members in co.inec-tion with Congressional investigations.The use of the Fifth Amendment was held bythe AAUP to not be enough by itself to justifydismissal.Communist party membership was also called aninsufficient basis for dismissal, if such member¬ship did not result in poor or biased teaching.The names of specific individuals were not given. However, the Chicago Sun-Times attributedthe UC citation to the case of Val R. Lorwin, assist¬ant professor of industrial relations. Lorwin wasretained on the faculty while clearing himself ofperjury charges resulting from his denial of com¬munist activities before a State Department Loy¬alty board. Lorwin, who had once been denouncedby Senator McCarthy was completely cleared in1954 of ever having communist affiliations.In June, 1953, an investigation of 16 UC facultyand other university personnel, by the Senate sub-committe on Internal Security, resulted in no im¬mediate dismissals, although most witnesses whoappeared in public hearings were “uncoopera¬tive” and a number claimed the Fifth amendment.All witnesses denied engaging in “subversive”activity.The schools which wrere censured for abridge¬ments of academic freedom are: University ofCalifornia, Ohio State University, Rutgers Uni¬versity, Temple University, and Jefferson MedicalCollege of Philadelphia.THE CHICAGO MAROONRage 2 March 30, 1955Coming events on quadranglesFriday, March 30Good Friday service. Rev. Ru¬dolph Jonson. Augustana Lu¬theran church, preaching, 12noon, Rockefeller chapel.Calvert club: Tre Ore, 12 noon-3 p.m.; Solemn liturgical serv¬ice, 3 p.m., 5735 University.Beaux arts ball committee meet¬ing, 3:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.CAP ANI) GOWN staff meeting,3:30 p.m., C&G office — IdaNoyes.Academic freedom week commit¬tee meeting, 4 p.m., Ida Noyes.Lutheran holy communion, 4:30 p.m., Hilton chapel.Hillel Sabbath service, 7:45 p.m.,and fireside at 8:30, with Prof.Quincy Wright speaking on“Israel and the Middle East,”5715 Woodlawn.Sermon, “Montgomery, Alabama:is it the prelude to a new Exo¬dus?” by Rabbi Weinstein atSabbath service, 8:15 p.m.,KAM temple, 9:30 E. 50th, pub¬lic invited.Episcopal Lenten devotions, 9:30p.m., 5540 Woodlawn.Saturday, March 31Masaryk club exhibit, 12 noon- 5 p.m., Ida Noyes.Bach singers rehearsal, 2 p.m.,Ida Noyes.Madrigal singers rehearsal, 3p.m., Ida Noyes hall.Korean students dinner and or¬ganizations meeting, 6 p.m., IdaNoyes.Lutheran choral vespers, 7 p.m.,Rockefeller chapel.Episcopal Lenten devotions, 9:30p.m., 5540 Woodlawn.Roman Catholic Easter vigil serv¬ice, 10:30 p.m., 5735 University. Sunday, April 1Easter Sunday.Sunrise service, sermon "The vic¬tory is won” by Rev. Wm. W.Lovell, 6 a m., Rockefellerchapel lawn, followed by break¬fast at Chapel house.Episcopal communion service,8:30 p.m. Bond chapel.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10,11 a.m., 5735 University.Lutheran Communion service, 10a.m., Hilton chapel.International house coffee hour,Hither and YonAsk censure of schoolsA special committee of theAmerican association of univer¬sity professors recommended lastweek that five college and uni¬versity administrators be cen¬sured for firing or suspendingfaculty members in civil rightscontroversies.The cases hinged primarily onrefusal to sign loyalty oaths anduse of the Fifth Amendment be¬fore congressional committees in¬vestigating alleged Communistconnections.The schools recommended forcensure are: California, Ohiostate, Rutgers, Temple, and Jef¬ferson medical school.The committee held that "in¬vocation of the Fifth amendmentby a faculty member . . . cannotbe in itself a sufficient ground forremoving him. . . . His profes¬sional fitness to continue in hisposition, considered in the light Stimulate USSR exchangeof other relevant factors ... isthe only question that should beconsidered when a teacher is chal¬lenged.”The committee also proposedcommendation for administra¬tions of six other schools for sup¬porting faculty members whenthey were under accusation.I can makea new manout 0/ YOU...Give me your skinny, pepless,run-down body. Let me put it inon After Six tux. Right away,you’ll begin to feel different,look different, LIVE a little!Before I discovered After SixFormal Wear, I was a spindlyweakling. Fellows threw me outthe window when parties gotdull. Girls snickered at me be¬hind my back. I was a realnothin'.Then, I bought an After Six tux.Almost immediately, my scrawnychest, my pipe-stem legs andarms began to ripple with new¬found strength and energy. Myconfidence, my joi de vivre hadreturned. At proms and dances,girls elbowed each other togain my favor. I owe it all tothe flattering fit of my AfterSix Dinner Jacket. Don’t let lifepass you by. Enjoy new-foundZip and go... in an After Six. The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57Ht St.MU 4-9236 The increase of travel betweenthe United States and the SovietUnion and the National Studentsassociation’s stand favoring East-West exchange have stimulatedexchange projects on many col¬lege campuses.At Cornell, in January, the Stu¬dent council unanimously votedto consider forms of exchange ofmaterials and students. Work isgoing ahead already on a pen palexchange with a Soviet univer¬sity.Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology has a foreign stu¬dent summer project and is in¬viting three Soviet students tojoin the 1956 program.Hunter College in New York isworking to exchange texts, term papers and other materials be¬tween its anthropology club anda similar group in the USSR.New York City College’s paperhas run an editorial suggestingthat any Soviet student wantingto visit the US be invited to theircampus. The student councilthere passed unanimously a res¬olution to have an exchange.Six Cambridge undergraduatesare planning to study at MoscowUniversity this summer. In re¬turn six Russian students willspend part of next autumn termat Cambridge. ‘The object of thescheme,” its organizer said, "isto get under the skin of the Rus¬sian students and share their uni¬versity life.” 10 a.m.-noon.Clinics religious service, 10 a.m,Billings 0-4.University religious service, Ha.m., Rockefeller chapel, Rev.Wallace W. Robbins preachingon "Appear with Him in glory.”Masaryk club, exhibit 3, 311 p ni,Ida Noyes hall.Modern dance club class in tech¬nique, 3:15 p.m., Ida Noyes.Young Socialist league, 4 p.m., IdaNoyes hall.Carillon recital, 4:30 p.m., Rocke¬feller chapel.MAROON staff meeting, 5 p.m,Maroon office — Ida Noyes.Staff members are remindedthat written reports of require-ments completed must be sub¬mitted.Chinese students dance, 7 p.m,Ida Noyes hall.SRP caucus, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyeseast lounge, important.('banning club meeting, asst,prof. Calvin Stillman speakingon the South African situation,8 p.m., 1174 E. 57th.Monday, April 2Sociology seminar, ‘The role ofresearch in community welfareproblems,” by Dean Helen R.Wright of SSA, 4 p.m., SocialSciences 302.Lecture, “Neolithic forest clear¬ance and land use in Denmark,”by Johannes Iversen, Danishgeological survey, 4:30 p.m., So¬cial Science 122.PROGRESS REPORTfrontSCHNEEMANN’SThe Red Door Book Shop is now in its second decade of service to book buyers. Increasingvolume of sales indicates we have made some progress in our efforts to build a completebook service. We plan to continue and to expand our unique services. Every purchase youmake here helps us increase the efficiency of the following features:1. Stocking the best books that ore published throughout the world regardless of languageor point of origin.2. Maintaining Chicago's quickest special order service. About half our special orders arefilled within 48 hours. (We are now working on a plan to procure oil American bookswithin 5 days).3. Advising the thrjfty on the cheapest way to buy books. This project has led us to the in¬itiation of a Book Club, a service to buy British books.at British prices and the accordingof discounts wherever possible.4. Operating a free book search service for the hard-to-get book and for a cheaper usedcopy of that too expensive item on your list.An example of how your support helps us give you better service is the fine response to ourefforts to supply the SUNDAY NEW YORK TIMES on Sunday. We are now able to supplythis edition at 6 p.m. every Sunday evening. So many hundreds of members of the com¬munity hove started availing themselves of this service that continued support will enableus to supply the Sunday Times by 3 p.m. Sunday. Continued and increasing purchasing ofthe SUNDAY TIMES at our shop will make possible this earlier service within a matterof weeks.For All Your BooksSCHNEEMANN’S1328 East 57th StreetNOrmal 7-6111March 30, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3UC Student killedin automobile crashJerald S. Jordan, a third year undergraduate, died as aresult of injuries received in an automobile accident on March19. Jordan, en route to his home in Baker, Oregon, from Chi¬cago was within a few hundred miles of his home when in¬volved in the accident.Jordan and three other UC students were driving northfrom San Francisco, California, where they had visitedfriends, when the accident occurred.A student active in campus organizations and athletics, Jor¬dan w as a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and livedin the fraternity house.FOR DISCOUNTSAVE THIS TICKETATHyde Park Self-Service Laundry912 East 55th StreetLAUNDRY — 2-HOUR SERVICERUCS — WASHED, FLUFFED Cr DYED —9 x 12, 12 x 12 — 4-HOUR SERVICESHIRTS — 2-DAY SERVICEThis coupon good forfree dry or discounton rugsShaving at its best! Old Spice Smooth Shave in the pres*1surized container... gives a rich, velvety lather. ri remainsfirm and moist throughout your shave. And a unique, lubri¬cating formula soothes your skin. For top performance andspeed—make your next shave Old Spice Smooth Shave.SHULTON New York • Toronto UC students representIndia in “little U.N.99By Quentin Ludgin“Mr. Chairman, I move to table the motion.” No, this is not a quote from the SG butrather one of the constantly heard refrains of the Little United Nations sessions at Wiscon¬sin University over the interim. Three councils, two commissions, and a general assembly,acting like a mock U.N. session, tried to settle as many of the world’s problems as it couldin its three-day existence (March 23-25). This was the 10th annual such conference andwas attended by 20 schools representing 65 nations.Representing India, U. of C.team with Dotty Hess, Quen¬tin Ludgin, Bob Stein, LowellPickett, and led by Joe Engel.Rather than attend various re¬ceptions for delegations, all 65“nations” represented by 20schools at the Little UN werebusy caucusing to gather voteblocs for the wants of the particu¬lar country.The Indian delegation assumedits role as leader of the neutralbloc by issuing a mimeographedstatement of neutral principlesand policies. Pictured here ore: He**, Engel, Pickett and Stem.When Nationalist China’s namewas called on the roll call in Sun¬day’s General Assembly numer¬ous objections were heard. Whenorder was restored the Indiandelegation rose to challenge thecredentials of Nationalist China.On a roll call vote the credentialsof Nationalist China were ap¬proved by two votes.First resolution on the assem¬bly’s agenda, o n e on Germany,came from the Security council.After a .stormy session duringSaturday’s meeting of the Secur¬ity council, a resolution was final¬ly adopted calling for the unifica¬tion of Germany and free elec¬tions for that country..Proposals for an army for theunified Germany would first haveto be approved by the Disarma¬ment council. While the head ofthe Russian delegation, JohnHearder of the Wisconsin Uni¬versity, made an impassionedstatement about world peace, theRussian delegation broke into ap¬plause and released two whitedoves.The resolution was finally ap¬proved by a sizable majority.During lunch on Sunday, theArab nations were looking forsupport for a resolution whichwas to censure Israel for startingthe war in 1947. Secondly theresolution dealt with the refugeeproblem. It stated that Israel wasto award compensation to allArab refugees who did not wantto return to Israel. Those whowished to could resettle in Israel.Jerusalem was to become an in¬ternational city. There was a rider accompanying the resolu¬tion which called for the UN toloan 800 million dollars to Egyptfor the building of the Aswandam project. The resolutions wereoriginally compromises betweenthe Arab League and Israel, butamendments so altered them thatthe league in the final Assemblyvote opposed them. When theyfinally passed, and there was butone minute left in both the as¬sembly and the conference, theYemenese delegate, as a joke,staged a protest walkout.The Indian delegation was veryactive in the Human Rights com¬mission. Of the five resolutionspassed in the commission, Indiapresented two and revised a third.The delegation was also instru¬mental in gaining passage of afourth.One resolution was a commend¬ation of . the Negroes in Mont¬gomery, Alabama, for acting inaccordance with the principles ofthe UN charter and practicingpassive resistance. These non-vio¬lent means, it was explained, werein line with Gandhi’s principle ofnon-violence.The other resolution presentedwas a condemnation of the Apar¬theid policies of the Union ofSouth Africa. The resolutions de¬plored and condemned the pastpractices, but urged that improve¬ment should be made.The commission accepted anIndian substitute amendment to a motion to investigate slawery in non-self-governing territo¬ries. The Russian amendment,which it replaced had providedfor a stacked commission thatwould not investigate fully. TheIndian proposal provided that theUN Secretariat (The UN’s own,impartial, body of experts) wouldset up a “working definition” ofslavery and constitute a sub-com¬mission to investigate the prob¬lems of slavery, as provided 4orin the main motion.India also helped in the passageof a resolution providing for freeelections to be held on Cyprus.The fifth proposal was an Arab-Israeli one for resettlement ofrefugees and building of dams todivert the Jordan river for irriga¬tion.The delegation also presented adetailed, four-stage plan for worlddisarmament in the Disarmamentcommission. There would be greatreductions, then atomic weaponabandonment, then final reduc¬tions to extremely low (interna¬tionally agreed on) levels.India (U. of C.) was also repre¬sented on the Trusteeship counciland the Economic and Socialcouncil.As the last act of the confer¬ence, India, Indonesia, and theUkrainian S.S.R. urged a motionof commendation of the chair¬man, the Conference committee,and Wisconsin U. It passed unan¬imously.SG plans exhibit of UC lifeAUTO INSURANCE 1RETIREMENT INSURANCE ;Phone or Write *.Joseph H. Aaron, '27 ;'135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060JJimmy 9sSINCE 1940 for U of Moscow exchange;UC’s Folklore Society has promised a folksong tape as itscontribution to the Student Government cultural exchangewith the University of Moscow. The exhibit, compiled by SG,will be made up of organizational displays and individual pho-tographs based on university wiI1 £ conduc-,ed toVeieiT^oSlife on and Off the campus, graphs for the exhibit. Each pic*All students organizations are ture must deal with student lifeasked to submit unified displays on or off the campus and mustwhich will portray their group’s be accompanied by a 25-cent entryactivities and interests. fee. Entries may be submitted un-A photography contest, for til May 4, either at the Studentwhich prizes of twenty-five, ten, Government office, at Ida Noyesand five dollars will be awarded, Hall, or at the Reynolds club desk.NEW BOOKS IN VARIOUS FIELDSTHE LOYAL AND THE DISLOYAL, by Grodgins $3.75The methods and insights of Social Science brought to grips with a crucialnational problem.I AM A MATHEMATICIAN, by Norbert Wiener $5.00An account of the mature years of one of America's greatest mathematicians,from his earliest major achievements to the development of cybernetics.RED, BLACK, BLOND, AND OLIVE, by Wilson $7.00Observations of four varied cultures: the Zuni Indians, Haiti, Soviet Russia,and the new State of Israel.THE CASE FOR MODERN MAN, by Fronkel $3.50The way to meet the crises of the mdoern world, Mr. Frankel demonstrates,is to restore confidence in our ability to make a better future. xUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis AvenuePage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 30, 1956No 'crime' in SECCIn your interesting (March9) account of the relations ofthe University to the com¬munity there Is a statement that sug¬gests the need to do our recent historybefore too many false impressions,small or large, become part of the rec¬ord. What has happened here is re¬markable and worth recording. So manypeople and organizations have been In¬volved—each seeing or being anotherpart of the elephant—that such a his¬tory will be difficult, controversial,and worth a doctoral dissertation.The Maroon’s good account cays theSECC was first named the SoutheastCrime commission, "created when thecity was shocked by the attempted rapeof a University employee’s wife.’’ Thetruth is that the then "crime wave’’was always incidental to the many whohad been working for several years toredevelop a neighborhood that was be¬ginning to deteriorate. Incidents ofcrime aroused the public interest andmade possible the mass meetings out ofwhich SECC developed; but the organi¬zation developed independently of thecrime wave. Indeed, we were reluctantto use the crime scare in our publicitybecause a major problem was to buildconfidence in this community as a goodplace to live.But crime there was, and It was used.(The particular incident referred to oc¬curred after the first mass meeting wasall prepared, but It surely contributedto the crowds that assembled.) Quitepossibly most persons at the timethought of the proposed new organiza¬tion as one to fight crime, and thephrase “crime commission” was doubt¬less on many lips. But I am very surethat the letters SECC never stood foranything except South East Chicagocommission.Any history of recent events shouldbegin at least with the now moribundHyde Park Community council, and tellthe story of the remarkable develop¬ment of the Hyde Park-Kenwood Com¬munity conference. The council, as anorganization of organizations (not in¬dividuals), was unable to deal withserious controversial Issues in a chang¬ing neighborhood. The conference wasorganized to do just that, and it soonbecame the largest and most activeorganization In this area. It joined thecouncil, along with 30 or 40 other groups—PTAs, churches, business groups, etc.,and George' Williams college and theUniversity of Chicago. It was the job ofthe council to coordinate the efforts ofall community groups. ‘It was at a regular meeting of thecouncil that note was taken of increas¬ed crime, and the decision made toorganize a mass meeting. The commit¬tee preparing the mass meeting wasjoined by citizens not previously activein the council, but all agreed that whilelaw enforcement was an important andgenuine issue—as well as rallying point—the problems of the community laydeeper. Somewhere along the line, itwas decided that out of the mass meet¬ing should come a powerful new organi¬zation which would have full partici¬pation by the University and whichwould work with the HPKCC for lawenforcement and to plan and developa good (interracial) community.This decision crystallized 24 hoursbefore the mass meeting when the com¬mittee accepted a draft of a resolutionto establish the SECC. The document,to be presented for approval to themass meeting, named Chancellor' Kimp-ton a member of a five-person groupto organize the SECC. It fell to my lotto prepare this document, and by thataccident it was I who originally namedthe SECC. I can therefore testify; Thephrase South East Chicago seemed tocover the geography best. Commissiondid not duplicate either council or con¬ference. The term "crime” as deliber¬ately omitted as giving a negative em¬phasis. But no word like "planning,”•’redevelopment” or the like could besubstituted because this communitywas not yet widely committed to thoseends. (It seems incredible that onlyfour years ago in Hyde Park planningwas a bad word!) So, unwilling to usethe acceptable bogey word “crime,” andunable to use any other, the obviousdevice was to use none.The committee accepted the name. Itmay well be that any of us would in¬dependently have come to the same one,for the same reasons. In any case, theSouth East Chicago commission was al¬ways that, and never a Crime commis¬sion, though law enforcement has al¬ways been part of its program. Thepoint is not the name; but the recordshould show that community leadershiphere never assumed that our socialproblems could be solved on the levelof combatting a crime wave. If we suc¬ceed, it will be because the commu¬nity was early enough mobilized to at¬ tack the difficult and controversialproblems. At least that is a hypothesisfor the historian to work on!Incidentally—this not to report morehistory but to answer in advance aquestion that may occur to Maroonreaders—the Chancellor the next morn¬ing agreed to permit his name to be in¬cluded in the resolution to be pre¬sented that evening. Although priordecisions must have been made withinthe administration, this was the onethat—to the great credit of Mr. Klmp-ton—effectively committed the Univer¬sity to a new, positive policy.Finally, another footnote; The HydePark Community council is in a deepfreeze because two complementary andcooperating community-wide organiza¬tions (HPKCC and SECC) are enough.It will defrost in a very short timewhen there Is a Job to do.Sol TaxChairman, Anthropologydepartment Volunteers for ClubMany thanks for publishingthe excellent stories on theHyde Park Neighborhood cluband its community In your March 19issue.We are most gratified In the widen¬ing Interest by students In the welfareof the community In which we share aresponsibility as shown by the responseto these articles. Several capable volun¬teer leaders have come forward. Theirservices will be well received by ourmembership and will be most rewardingto themselves I am certain.We shall look forward to further co¬operation in service to our community.John H. RameyDirector ofNeighborhood clubMAROON: party lineYour front page article inthe March 9 issue concerningthe civic banquet given by themayor and chancellor implies an un¬known reason why "student leaderssuch as the co-editors of the MaroonPeterson Moving& Storage Co.55th &. Ellis AvenueStorage facilities for a trunk orcarload of household effectsPocking — ShippingLocal or long distance movingBUtterfield 8-6711There’s No Sale LikeWholesaleDear Student:Chances are, you love Cash-mere Sweaters by Hinda andother famous brands.. . . Here's how you can save33 1/3% to 50%All Sizes — Colors — StylesBy Buying at Wholesale PricesCome toSamuel Murrow &Company(In the heart of theWholesale Market)Dally 9 to 5:30 Saturdays 9 to 3:30318 W. Adorns St. Suite 401 were not issued invitations.”You have only to read your firstparagraph to se who were invited—“civic leaders, city officials, and friendsof the University.” The Maroon aertain-ly gives no indication that its staff be¬longs in any of these categories, cer¬tainly not friends of the University. Asa regular reader of your paper fornearly two years I have found consist¬ently destructive, carping criticism; ifthere is anything right, anything fine,anything deserving loyalty, about theUniversity you seem unable to find it.RELIANCE CAMERA A Free Spring Check-IpPHOTO SUPPLIES for your Camera at1517 East 63rd St. MODEL CAMERA SHOPBU 8-6040 1329 E. 55th St. IIY 3-»25»COMO PIZZERIA1530 E. 55 FA 4-5535* Free Delivery to U.C. Students1 ON ALL PIZZASMALLCHEESE . .1.15SAUSAGE . .1.45ANCHOVY . .1.45PEPPER and ONION . .1.30SHRIMP . .1.70COMBINATION . .1.75SPECIAL!Vi Fried Chicken . . . . jPotatoes and Bread 1.00DUE TO REDEVELOPMENTOF HYDE PARKBuilding Coming Down in Near Future(Established 1or 18 years)MUST SELL OUT!!As you know, we've always carried one of thelargest selections of imported wines and importedbeers in Hyde Park.A large selection of French wines, 1.15- 1.50,values up to 3.00. German imported Rhine winesat 1.50, values up to 3.00.Old Quaker 7-year-old straight bourbon at a lowof 3.65 a fifth.Hyde Park Liquors1.405 E. 55th PL 2-8830WE DELIVER ~V\\ cfuccwp11 laroonIssued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and Intermittent)*during the summer quarter, on a non-profit basis by the publisher, the rhi< ac»Maroon, at 1212 East 59th Street. Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial office.Midway 3-0800, ext. 1003 and 3266; Business and advertising office, Midway 3-ntmo’ext. 3265. Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Business office hours: 2 n m ’5 p.m., Monday through Saturday.Co-editors-in-chiefJoy S. Burbach Palmer W. PinneyIf you are friends of anyone except theNegro and extreme left-wingers yourpaper fails to give evidence of it. Idon’t know whether you are commu¬nists or Just dupes who fall for theirline. Many of your news articles arenot objective but are given a slant inthat direction. Your publication wouldrate better as a propaganda sheet thanas a college newspaper.If everything is so wrong at theUniversity of Chicago, why don’t youtransfer to some university that youcan be loyal to, or isn’t there any such?I am writing this as an “outsider”who never attended the University ofChicago, but who has considerable re¬spect for its contribution to higherlearning, little respect for its noisyearly-adolescent-minded critics, wlioare so fearful of a little restriction thatthey thrash out blindly in all directions.E. N. Littleton Managing editor Business managerDiane Pollock Gary MokotoffAdvertising manager Lawrence KesslerCopy editor Norman LewakNews editors Robert Bergman, Jim Birmingham, Ronald GrossmanJohn Hertzog, Fred KarstCultural editor FodoreSports editor Robert HalaszNews feature editor TaxProduction manager Robert Quinn (Friday); Jean Kwon (Tuesday)Photo editor John BystrynCalendar editor Earl Herric kHither and Yon editor Miriam GarfinOffice manager Adrienne KinkaldBilling secretary • Lynford RussellStaff: Ed Berckman, William Brandon, Jack Burbach. Joyce Ellin, Saralee Feld¬man, Oliver Lee Quentin Ludgin, Robert MacDonald, Robert Moody, RichardWard, Marina Wirzup.Photographers: Joan Krueger. Edward Wise.Business staff: Gerson Greenberg, Art Teltel.Sl/ e tM/vun< f PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433hyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student rate 50c all performancesStarting Easter Sunday, April 1ACADEMY AWARD Exclusive First Outlying ShowingWINNERbestf,lmi,sn SAMURAI""One of the 10 BEST TO SEE" — NewsweekA dazzling, fascinating, beautifully tinted (Eastman Color) treat forWestern eyes ... an Intriguing Story of touching love and impassionedlust ... a work of Exotic, Fantastic Beauty.— and —ALEC GUINNESS as DISRAELI, IRENE DUNNE asQUEEN VICTORIAAndrew **ray „ "The MUDLARKDirected by JEAN NEGULESCO . . . Based on the Best-Selling NovelComing NextJulie Harris in III f* ftChristopher Isherwood's I am a camera— and —"HUNTERS OF THE DEEP"Fascinating Underseas DocumentaryComing Soon"RIVIERA" with Mortine Carol and "DOCTOR AT SEA"USED TEXT BOOKSATSavings up to 50%New books at a Savings.We invite you and yourfriends to come in andlook thru our open stacks,covering all fields.Catalog sent on request. We buy books in all fields,sets, reference and gen¬eral education titles. De¬partment duplicates havea good market. Bringthem in to our store.Used, new or stamped.Cash for Books Year ’RoundWilcox & Follett Co., Retail1255 So. Wabash Ave. HA 7-2614-5March 30, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Church integration going slowlyby Ed BerckmanIn 1948 the Supreme Court declared restrictive covenants on racial grounds illegal, and Negroes who had been living east ofCottage Grove began to move into Woodlawn, Hyde Park and Kenwood. Since then, Christian churches in these areas have increas¬ingly been faced with a situation for which racial integration was one answer.Interviews with clergymen of 10 Protestant and Catholic churches at various stages of integration have shown some of the com¬plexities and difficulties of this problem — and of the solution which itself may have its problems.Few conclusions can be drawn, but it is apparent that 1. the situation is not so much of a problem for Hyde Park as for the areanorth and south; 2. Roman Landlord)* exploit were willing to pay high rents. AsCatholic churches receive Ne- Something of a general pattern they moved in and schools tookgroes more readily than Prot- Gf this situation can perhaps be- on more of an inter racial char-estant ones. In the Church of the outlined. When Negroes moved acter, many white families joinedHoly Cross on 65th street, all into formerly white areas, many the "flight to the suburbs" or towhite in 1948, 1600 of its 2000 looked for places to go to church, other areas of the city,members are Negroes. Some, especially those with high- Church must chooseFor some churches, stated Dr. ^.r incomes, were no longer satis- protestant churches began toJitsuo Morikawa, pastor of the .by old Southern-type reaiize that they were faced withFirst Baptist church of Chicago, religion and did not keep going the alternatives to sell theirthe problem is now that of being oack to the established Negro buildings; merge with otheran inter racial church in a segre- churches in the area to the west, churches; stay and stay white; orgated Negro community—wheth- Many of these just quit going to admit Negroes (although thiser it is to be regarded as a doomed to church, and some gradually situation is not quite true yet forarea. (His church at 50th and entered Roman Catholic church- Hyde Park churches).Ellis admitted its first Negro es. Few tried to attend Protestant Fa„h nf almrnativp* ha«!members in 1949.) churches - there was never any ^ The best example ofThe experience of St. James attempt by Negroes to “take a union was that of the whiteMethodist church at 46th street over —though two churches in (Caucasian) Kenwood Evangeli-has been that since integration Kenwood accepted colored mem- cai church with the Japanese-white attendance has increased, bers *n the early years. But slow- American Ellis Community Cen-pastor E. Jerry Walker reported, ty Protestant Sunday schools ter church, whose membership isBut the problem for most church- took in Negro children ar\d some now about 1/4 Negro, in 1950. Thees in Hyde Park and especially adults attended church services. Ellis group had been formed inWoodlawn is more the original Meanwhile, with rent controls 1947 by those who had come toone caused by the immigration off, landlords were exploiting the Chicago after a wartime hitch inof Negroes. new situation where Negroes relocation camps.A Campus-to-Career Case History IWinfield Giguere, here tuning the coils of an IF strip on an experimentalFM receiver that uses the new high-frequency transistor.“Our business is new ideas, new developments”Winfield J. Giguere, or Giggs as he isknown, graduated in 1954 from the Uni¬versity of New Hampshire with a B.S.in Electrical Engineering. Shortly aftergraduation he joined Bell Telephone Lab¬oratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey.“Experience has come my way in ahurry,” says Giggs. “I’ve worked oncarrier system amplifiers, speech trans¬mission problems, and experimentaltypes of coaxial cable. The Labs are al¬ways pushing ahead, trying new ideas,exploring new developments.“For example, right now I’m workingwith ‘the transistor that smashed a fre¬ quency barrier.’ This new transistor hasa cut-off frequency of at least 500 me andcan be used to amplify 2500 separatetelephone conversations simultaneously.It will make possible broadband, high-frequency'amplification in many fieldsusing subminiature components.“There are thousands of other fascinat¬ing projects underway at the Bell Labs.You see, at the Labs our business is newideas, new developments, and that’s onereason why I like working here. It’s ex¬citing. If there are better ways to commu¬nicate, you can bet the Labs are lookingfor them.”Winfield Giguere is typical of the many young menwho are finding careers in Bell Telephone Labo¬ratories. Many other career opportunities exist inthe Bell Telephone Companies, Western Electricand Sandia Corporation. Your placement officerhas more information about these companies.A Actually this was not a merger, first mixed class. At the Romanbut a sharing of facilities with Church of St. Thomas the Apostlecongregations worshipping to- only three per cent of the mem-gether and ministers alternating bers are Negro but there is ain the preaching. Today most of large enrollment of colored chil-the white (and wealthier) Ken- dren in the parochial school,wood congregation are gone and Integration hinderedthe Ellis group continues, with a Factors which have prevmtedgrowing percentage of Negroes. or hindered in,egrati0„ includeIn Woodlawn two church build- cultural differences as well asings were sold to Negro Pente- what is probably racial prejudicecostal groups. Other white behind a "cultural difference"churches have received offers. argument. There is the questionFaith qualifies of whether Negroes will feel atThe issue of stay or leave has borne in w h i t» churches, andusually been tied to the one of in- some ministers of integratedtegration. In some cases minis- churches admit this problem hasters have used an educational not been solved yet. Sometimes,program to present what they Pastor Herhold stated, whiteconsidered to be the Christian at- members in integrated churchestitude on race relations. This ap- are discriminated against by theirproach was used by Dr. Harold L. white friends.Bowman at the First Presbyte- After Negroes are admitted,rian church on 64th street, so that most churches try to find respon-the transition would be a natural sibilites for them in religious edu-one. cation or choir work.In other churches an open-door Less evangelismpolicy toward Negroes — which Those joining Catholic churchessome felt should be implicit usually come from Protestantrather than explicit — was not backgrounds, while a few Negroadopted until new — usually Catholics have become Protes-young—pastors were called, most tants. Father Anthony Vader, ofof whom came with the under- Holy Cross, felt that "there is astanding of working toward inte- whole swing away from the evan-gration. In some Chicago church- gelistic religion."es splits have taken place; in this Qne min5ster mentioned an all¬area the usual pattern is that a wbite Chicago church where thefew members may leave oi else pastor decided to adopt a Negro-stay and sulk. Japanese girl into his family. TheThe only qualification for mem- congregation petitioned churchbership in churches such as Bap- authorities to have the pastor re-tist and Lutheran is faith in Jesus moved.Christ as Saviour, so that an when the girl arrived, sheopen, inclusive policy presumably proved to be likable and was ac¬ts implied. But membership in a cep(ed by othor children andProtestant church, Dr. Morikawa eventually by the congregation.pointed out, is almost like a fam¬ily relationship. That the church,however, is not a club which candiscriminate, was a policy empha¬sized by Robert Herhold, ministerof the Woodlawn Immanuel Lu¬theran church.Give PercentagesIn every church, of course,there was a decisive point of noreturn—sometimes in the action Six or seven of the families leftbut the pastor and his familystayed.The futureThe future of the churchesseems to depend on the future ofthe community, though initiativecan presumably change predeter¬mined trends. The Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Conferencehas attempted to encourage plan-of official boards of trustees or ning by community groups forstewards, sometimes in a congre- current and coming changes, andgation’s standing up to accept churches have given some co-unanimously a class of new mem- operation.bers—but apparently integration The challenge for the future,proceeded more smoothly where jn both church and community,the issue did not become a sub- appears to be to create conditionsject of debate. jn which both whites and NegroesToday there are churches can live and feel at home,where Negroes account for 80 per "People who have accumulatedcent of Sunday School attendance prejudices for many years do notbut none are members. In Hyde lose them overnight,” Pastor Her-Park some churches announce hold said. Nor are they, he be-that they are willing to accept lieves, "argued or preached outNegroes but none, or very few, of their prejudices. Love and pa-have applied. Two weeks ago a tience are the only acceptablechurch in Woodlawn admitted its human aids.”HEY, PAESANIWe've got 'em good, we deliver 'em hotPizza pie for your bull-session or get-togetherPhonesMU 4-10144-10154-9022 Give us a Ringand We'll Deliver!5 p.m. to 3 a.m.7 days a weekITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA1427 East 67th St.,v * * »v» i$y .*« «Y*v*ytYtrfY»y«V».•MkPage C THE CHICAGO MAROON March 30, 1956NSA petitionsavailablePetitions for the candidacyfor National Students associa¬tion delegation are now in thestudent activities office. Thesepetitions must be filed in theStudent Government officewith the E & R chairman nolater than 4 p.m., April 10.Need college gradsas business heads Yearbook openssubscription driveCap and Gown, UC’s yearbook, launches its sale drive dur.ing the week of April 1 through 7. Building its theme aroundthe $32 million campaign of the University development officegovernor of Puerto Rico and and the Wyde Park re devel°Pment program, Cap and Gown is offer.Rexford G. Tugwell, former now on the UC political science inS a chance to save money on the purchase of one of the yearbooks.Subscriptions will bo sold on the basis of $2 down and two months'to pay—easy credit for those who feel the pinch in their pocket booksThe final $2.50 will be paid on delivery of the 1956 yearbook sometimein May, thus saving 50 cents over the regular price of $5.Pi Gamma Mu tohold conferencePi Gamma Mu, national social science organization, willsponsor, on April 13 and 14f a conference on the future ofsocial scientists. The conference is to be held in Terre Haute,Indiana.A need of college graduates isthe main seed in today’s businessin America, stated an article inthe March 27, 1956, issue of For¬tune magazine. By the early1960’s there will bo a need forpersons to finance, administer,manage, distribute and sell busi¬ness. Students more interested inthe fields of research, develop¬ment and manufacturing, and injobs where there are great tech¬nological advances, not in jobsin smaller companies or in tex¬tiles, railroads or private electricpower.The large companies have littlecoordination in recruiting poli¬cies for securing college studentsand the type of man and womanwanted for a job. Managementhas not learned and so must learna lot to develop the best mana¬gerial talent and the ways ofkeeping it. Fortune suggestedthat industries concentrate onfinding bright individuals withfresh ideas who could hold start¬ing jobs at supervisory levels andwith the potential capacity to fillmiddle and top managementposts.Business recruiting methodsare leading to a frustrating man¬power dilemma by searching fora graduate who combines per¬sonal initiative with ability to isadept to a group. This typepreferred by some companies tothe “top person in the class” type.Another frustrating recruitingmethod used by business is asearch for the “well rounded spe¬cialist,” the type a “college can’tturn out in four years.”Even the educational upgradingof a million persons will not satis¬fy the demand a quarter centuryhence, for college graduat' inbusiness in America. faculty, will deliver a short ad¬dress on Saturday morning, April14. Charles S. Hyneman of theNorthwestern Political sciencefaculty will open the Friday eve¬ning session with a discussion of“the essential elements in thepreparation of social scientists.”Other social scientists partici¬pating in the conference will in¬clude Emanuel T. Weller, headof the economics department of Cap and Gown will sponsor a German band wandering aroundcampus on April 5 and 6— advertising the outdoor booths where sub-scriptions will be sold.Subscriptions can also bo purchased in the Reynolds club from10 a.m. to 4 p.m.* in Cobb hall from 10 to 2:30; and in BJ from b .ioto 7. Subscriptions will also be available in the C-Group.According to Mary Joan Speigel, Editor-in-ehief of the yearbook:Purdue University; Samuel E. “While prices ate going down, the value of the book is going up 1Braden, assistant dean of the col¬lege of liberal arts and professorof economics at Indiana Univer¬sity, and Roll in B. Posey, formerdean of the University college' ofNorthwestern and former mem¬ber of municipal research agen¬cies in Philadelphia and Cincin¬nati. 1956 Cap and Gown will be bigger and better than ever.”i! A Sale is a Sale... is a Sale“Enjoy Our Fine Continental Cuisine inRelaxed Air Conditioned Atmosphere"CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Daily (except Mondays) from 4:30 - 10:00Sundays — 12 Noon - 10 P.M.1508 E. 57th Street Phone PLaza 2-9355 You need a new sofa (or refrigerator, or hearing aid, etc.) and aloop store makes o special, special purchase on this item which willsave you a small fortune if you buy now. But you don't hove readycash. Buying on time is often more expensive, interest-wise thanborrowing from your local credit union. Come in today and join the:Hyde Park Co-op Federal Credit Union5535 S. Harper Ave.rryrrxyx'r Tfyv ttt wyrw! BORDONE i► \* Movers and Light Hauling <VI 6-9832Books Bought• Any Subject• Any Language• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Park 3-03211204 E. 55th St. LUCKY DR00DLES! PURR-FECTLY HILARIOUS!WHAT’S THIS? For solution see paragraph below,DARK NIGHT,WELL-LIT TUNNELRobert SweydV. of San Franciscotoastsio teste .better:HAPPY THE DAY . . .Days of retirement can be fullof pleasant activities . . . Golf,Fishing, Travelling. No morealarm-clocks — just the pleasantprospect of years of leisurestretching ahead. A pleasantprospect indeed if you haveplanned for adequate retirementincome. Start planning yourhappy retirement today.SUN LIFE ASSURANCECOMPANY OF CANADARalph J.Wood, Jr.,‘481 N. LaSalleChicago 2,IllinoisFR 2-2390RE 1-0855 CIGARETTES YOU’RE ON THE RIGHT TRACK when you light up a Lucky,because Luckies taste better. Only fine tobacco—naturallygood-tasting tobacco that’s TOASTED to taste better—cangive you taste like this. All of which goes to explain theDroodle above; Light-up time in caboose, as seen by haltedmotorist. Switch to Luckies yourself. You’ll say they’re thebest-tasting cigarette you ever smoked.DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price >oA 0 c> o°o ) Of°o< O tr\ 0WATCH BAND ONFRECKLED WRISTDavid HuntN.Y.U.iCOLLEGE SMOKERS PREFER LUCKIES!• Luckies lead all other brands, regular or kingsize, among 36,075 college students questionedcoast to coast. The number-one reason: Luckiestaste better. HOOFPRINTS OFROCKING HORSECharles ThorntonNorthwestern State (La.)LUCKIES TASTE BETTER - Charter, Fresher, Smoother!$u, J^nMXvtanOA.T.Ca. PRODUCT OF AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURES OF CIGARETTESMarch 30, 1956 THE CHICACO MAROON Page 7s ' 1t 'Teacher workshops, conferences [Do~ you know them?will bloom during summerCurrent developments in modern physics will be reviewed for teachers of science thissummer in one of many UC workshops, conferences, and special programs.Workshops will be offered on such varied subjects as preaching (August 6-17), the prob¬lems of teaching poetry, fiction, drama; intellectual works in secondary schools * (June 25-July 27), and family life education (July 9-27). Altogether 23 workshops, conferences andprograms will be offered.Other workshops to be of¬fered this summer are in: theRorschach test (July 9-13 andJuly 2G - 20); therapeutic ap¬proaches to working with individ¬uals and groups (June 25-July 6);reading (July 2-27); languagearts in the elementary school(July 30 August 17); and library materials for children (August 9-11). The social service adminis¬tration will hold three workshops,July 9-20, August 6-17, and Au¬gust 20 24.Tell conferencesThe conferences are: 19th an¬nual reading conference, June 26-29; 20th annual guidance and per¬sonnel conference, June 28-29;the Prime Ministerof Japanreads The Reader’s Digest"In this age of stresses, the work of The Reader's Digest, ofwhich I am an avid reader, is of great significance. TheDigest publishes the stime articles simultaneously in allparts of the civilized world, and, by so doing, it deepensthe mutual feelings of concern and good will among differentpeoples. / earnestly wish for its further development inthi^difficult world." Ichiro Hatoyama, Prime Minister of JapanIn April Reader’sDigest don’t miss:CONDENSATION FROM $3.50 BOOK: “DELIVER USFROM EVIL.” Fleeing the Reds, the Vietnamesecame: old women with collarbones shattered byrifle butts, children with sticks driven into theirears. Courageous exploits of a young Navy doc¬tor who won the love and admiration of people whoexpected only death at the hands of an American.WHAT ABOUT THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS? How the dis¬covery of these now-famous documents (fragmentsof the earliest-known version of the Bible) tlirowsnew light on the origins of Christianity.AN EASTER SERMON. Here, in a condensation fromPeter Marshall’s sermon “Because He Rose,” isEaster’s stirring message of hope, as interpretedby the beloved chaplain.APPROVED KILLING IN MISSISSIPPI. A Negro boy,Emmett Till, was abducted by two white men andshot—yet the jury found them not guilty. Factsthe jury never heard in the" Wolf-W histle Murder.Get April Reader’s Digestat your newsstand today—0»(y 25#40 articles of lasting interest, including the best from leadingmagazines and current books, condensed to save your time. conference on problems of theprineipalship, July 9-11; and the21st annual conference of thegraduate library school, June13-15.Other special programs of thesummer quarter are: an intensivecourse in elementary Russian,covering in one quarter the workof two; and a special program inmathematical analysis, featuringJ. E. Littlewood of Cambridgeuniversity, England.Plan specialtiesA special seminar on the effectsof social change in education(June 25-27), a special course inhistorical interpretation designedfor teachers in secondary schools(June 25-July 27), and two inten¬sive courses in adult education(June 25-July 13 and July 16-August 3) are planned.Also on the education depart¬ment schedule are a school andcollege program for teachers(June 25-July 27) and a coursein student personnel service ininstitutions of higher learning(June 25-July 27). If you are one of the people in these pictures, you forgot to fillout an identification card for Cap and Gown graduate photo cap¬tions. Ths means that your picture will not appear in the 1956yearbook.If you are an acquaintance of one or both of these people, or ifyou are one of them yourself, you may assure the photo(s) appear¬ance by coming to the Cap and Gown office, third floor, Ida Noyes,and identifying them, or by phoning in their names, MI 3-0800,ext. 3273.Candidates debateCandidates to the general assembly from the 23rd districtwill speak and answer questions at an open meeting to be heldWednesday, April 4, at 8 p.m. in Mandel hall.Sanford A. Bank, Edward S. Garrity, Nathan J. Kinally andAbner J. Mikva will represent the Democrats; Noble W. Lee,Charles W. McIntyre and Richard L. Samuels, the Republi¬cans.NICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063Barbecue Ribs - Chicken - Ravioli - SpaghettiFree delivery to F. of C. studentsOn any orderTable Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M.Open tW 3 A.M. on Friday and SaturdayDelivery Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M.DESIGNEDFORSCORING!These 1956 Registered Spaldingtop-flites® are the sweetest-playing clubs in the book. Plentyof golfers are lowering theirhandicaps with them.The secret? They’reSYNCiiRO-DYNED® Clubs — scientificallyand exactly coordinated to suingand feel alike.What’s more, these beautieswill stay handsome and new look¬ing. The irons feature a new andexclusive tough alloy steel withhigh-polish finish that will lastand last.P. S. The new Spalding par-FLITES,® also fine-quality clubs,are offered at a popular price.The irons also feature Spalding’snew tough alloy steel heads withhigh-polish finish. Like the TOP-flites, they’re sold through GolfProfessionals only.Spaldingsets the pace in sports The meeting is co-sponsoredby Student Government andthe League of Women Voters ofChicago.Co-operating sectarian organi¬zations are: Church of the Re¬deemer, First Baptist church ofChicago, Hyde Park Baptistchurch, First Presbyterianchurch, Temple Isaiah Israel, andUnited Church of Hyde Park.Representing sectarian organi¬zations* will be: Hyde Park busi¬ness and professional association,Hyde Park co-operative society,United Woodlawn conference andWoodlawn center YWCA of Chi-Parlent in B-JThe French table will bemeeting in Judson dining roomthis quarter, at 12:30, Mondaythrough Friday. Last quarter thetable was in Kelly dining room,but due to the request of com¬muters it will return to B-J whereit was last year.Portrait StylistBlack and White andv Direct ColorPhotographyBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St.TheDisc1367 E. 57th St.•Recordof the weekBARTOKConcerto for OrchestraFritz Reinerand theChicago SymphonyLM 1955 3.ISAvailable MondayPage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 30, 1956University Theatre elects, Festival of the Arts program setDivide governing dutiesUniversity Theatre has set up a new governing body. Arecent meeting of University Theatre members set up as acontrolling body a board of directors to be elected twiceyearly. Those elected to the new board for the period endingin November of this year are William Tsokos, Alex Hassilev,Carol Horning, Isaac Wright, and John Meyer.The new board will divideits duties into five categories: BlOCfl exhibitacting, direction, technical di¬rection, special events, secretarialduties, and promotion direction.The board will be concernedchiefly with policy decisions anddoes not extend its duties to workon any specific productions.UT is also considering plansfor bringing in a professional di¬rector for its workshops in theautumn quarter. at Good speedOver forty paintings by con¬temporary American artist AlbertBloch are now being exhibited bythe University of Chicago Renais¬sance society in Goodspeed hall.The exhibition, arranged by Dr.Edward A. Maser, Director of theUniversity of Kansas Museum ofArt, will be here through March7. Some of the paintings in theexhibition are on sale. Give programFinal decisions have beenmade on the official programof Festival of the Arts. The Festi¬val begins Wednesday evening,April 25, and continues throughSunday, April 29. The festival,the second, of an annual serieswill feature the first performanceof an original ballet by RuthPage, special performances ofplays, concerts, and the secondBeaux Arts masked ball.As in last year’s festival, stu¬dent art exhibits will be heldthroughout the period. UniversityTheater will give performances ofStrindberg’s “Ghost Sonata” tfachnight in the Reynolds club thea¬ter. Novelist Eudora Welty willgive the William Vaughn Moodylecture. “Place in Fiction,” thesecond day of the program.Musical Society performers play wellThe University of Chicago Musical society presented its final concert of the winter quar¬ter on Sunday, March 4, in Ida Noyes’ library. Works performed were Stravinsky’s “Three Wednesday, April 252:30 p.m.—Opening of the Festival, Ida i 8:30 p.m.—Ruth Page, Mandel Hall ThaNoyes Hall. Student art exhibition, I ballet-play "Suzanna and the Bar-reception, awards. Festival dancers ac-I ber.”companied by Rockefeller Carillon. 8:30 p.m.—“Ghost Sonata" by Strtnd.I berg, Reynolds Club theater.Thursday, April 2612:00 a.m.—Mitchell Tower spring cere¬mony, Hutchinson Court. Brass choirand Festival glee club.2:30 p.m.—Baseball game. Burton-Jud-son field. Students vs. Faculty.3:30 p.m.—Artists at Work, MidwayStudios and Lexington Studios. MarllEhrman, weaving; Roland Glnzel, printmaking; Edmund Gelsbertpainting; Freeman Schoolcraft, sculo-’ture; Charles Smith, prlntmaklng8:30 p.m.—Eudora Welty, Mandel HallWm. Vaughn Moody lecturer on“Place In Fiction.”8:30 p.m —“Ghost Sonata" by Strind¬berg, Reynolds Club Theater.Friday, April 272:30 p.m.—Jazz In Mandel Hall. ‘TheJazz Club.3:30 p.m.—Florence James Adams Poet¬ry reading contest, Bond Chapel.4:30 p.m.—Madrigal Singers, Hutchin¬son Court.7:00 p.m.—Twilight band concert,Hutchinson Court.7:00 & 9:00 p.m.—“Miss Julie,” adaptedfrom Strindberg's play, SS-122. Chicago mentary Film Society.8:30 p.m —22nd Wing Ding. Ida NoveaHall. Folklore Society.•8:30 p.m.—Andrew Foldl, bass, andRobert Lodlne, piano. Mandel HallUniversity Concert Series.*8:30 p.m.—“Ghost Sonata” by Strind¬berg, Reynolds Club Hreaier.Saturday, April 2811:00 a m.—An aquatic exhibition, Bart¬lett gym pool.12:00 M. to 4:00—Concours d'Elegance.the Circle. Automotive design.1:00 p.m.—Varsity baseball, Stagg Field.Maroons vs, Knox College.1:30 p.m.—Varsity tennis. Varsity courtsat 58th and University. Maroons vs.Elmhurst College.*3:00 p.m.—“Miss Julie” adapted from Strindberg's play. SS-122. Swedishfilm. Documentary Film.6:00 to 10:00 pm.—Buffet and partyQuadrangle Club. Alumni and Fac¬ulty.*7:30 p.m.—Choral recital, Ida NoyesHall. Apollonian Society.8:30 p.m.—“Ghost Sonata” by Strind¬berg, Reynolds Club theater.10:00 p.m.—Beaux Arts Ball, Hutchin¬son Commons. Masquerade.Sunday, April 2911:00 a m—University Religious Service,Rockefeller Chapel. John F. Hayward,assistant professor of Religion andArt.2:30 p.m.—Carillon recital. RockefellerChapel, James Lawson, music ofMozart.*3:00 p.m.—Mozart’s “Requiem" and“Vesperae Solemnes,” RockefellerChapel. Chapel choir and members ofChicago Symphony Orchestra. 3:00 to 7:30 p.m.—An International ex-hibition. International House.8:00 p.m.—Festival of Nations, Interna,tional House. Songs and dances fromaround the world.8:30 p.m.—Musical Society, Ida Noyc*Hall. Recital of works composed bymembers of the Society.♦8:30 p.m.—“Ghost Sonata" by Strind¬berg, Reynolds Club Theater.Shakespeare songs,” Leo Treitler’s “Piano sonata,” Beethoven’s An die Fernie Geliebte, «wuei-ManufcrtpLor Eudora weity and other southern writer*,and, after intermission, Mayne Miller’s “Violin sonata.” G^Ipe^eHTu-^nates^ceas^ctetUy.pturcs‘The Stravinsky songs, repeated from the last Musical Society concert, were beautifully idanNoyS°naCi?-sufd^nt&&^tub‘performed by Patricia Peterson, soprano; James Mack, flute; Albert Dragstedt, clarinet; KlSSa inSitut^way 8tudl°*' Blalne Hftll~8tudent An-and Robert Bloch, viola. LeoTreitler’s sonata is a big pow¬erful work with an intenseslow movement. It was played byMayne Miller with a superb graspof its difficulties and with thor¬ough understanding. The' Bee¬thoven song-cycle was tastefullysung by Cyril Brosnan, tenor;Katja Andy was the sympatheticaccompanist. Mayne Miller’s “Vio¬lin sonata” seemed very interest¬ing, if over-long; the last move¬ment, especially, was quite ver¬bose. Nevertheless, it is a well-written and genuinely musicalwork. The performers were thecomposer and Robert Bloch, vio¬lin.The next Musical Society con¬cert will be a recital by JeanneBamberger to be held in Mandelhall, April 20. Mrs. Bambergerwill play sonatas by Haydn andSchubert; in addition, she willgive the Chicago premiere of Le-land Smith’s “Piano sonata.”Tickets for this concert are $1for the general public, 75 centsfor students.Richard SwiftCANOE TRIPSSeek solitude and adventure in theQuetico - Superior wilderness. Canoe,complete camping equipment and ex¬cellent food sunpiies only $5.50 per per¬son per day. Grumman aluminum ca¬noes. For colored booklet and map,write to:BILL ROM, Mgr.CANOE COUNTRY OUTFITTERSBOX 717 C, ELY, MINNESOTA«m •120 WORDS P£R MINUTEFamous ABC system. Now taught inover 400 cities. New day Gr Eveningclasses start each Monday. Attendfirst class as GUEST. Special SummerClasses tor College Students ALSOthorough, intensive SPEEDTYPINGcourse Use coupon to send for 16-page brochure.SPEEDWRITING SCHOOL37 S. Wabash Financial 6-5471I Speedwriting School• 37 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago 3, l!l. i! Please send me without obligation 1Z your 16-page brochure on Speed-J writing.a Name■ OHy.■ „ HE’S BURNING THE MIDNIGHT OIL TOOExam coming up? Then if you haven’t iced that “A” al¬ready, maybe you'll be gulping black coffee and burningthe midnight oil. But consider the modern roadbuildertHe works on around the clock, completing as much inone night shift as he did working two 8-hour days in 1940.What’s his secret?Machines are the roadbuilder's special magic. Machinesthat never tire. Machines that do twice the work of 1)years ago.And Timken* tapered roller bearings have made thesemachines practical. Despite heavy loads and rugged go¬ing, Timken bearings avoid breakdowns, keep wheelsand shafts turning smoothly. Without them, a bulldozer isrobbed of its muscle, a power shovel’s teeth lose theirbite, a scraper grinds to a halt. Helping machines more mountains is just one exampleof how the Timken Company works hand-in-hand withall industry to keep America on the go—by pioneeringImprovements in machines and machinery, increasingspeed and precision, decreasing wear and maintenance.The pioneering spirit has helped make us the world’slargest manufacturer of tapered roller bearings and remov¬able rock bits, and a leading producer of fine alloy steeLBecause the best place to keep going— and keep go¬ing up—is with a company that's on the go, you may beinterested in what lies ahead at the Timken Companyfor promising college graduates. For details, write forour booklet “This IsTimken”. The TimkenRoller Bearing Com¬pany, Canton 6, Ohio.Timken bearings keep America on the GO...and you keep going-up when you go with the TIMKEN companyMarch 30, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page yGroup invites art work for exhibit Chamber music groupplays at Unitarian ChurchPaintings, sculptures, prints and all work in other fine art media are eligible for Exhibi¬tion Momentum, which will run from May 23 to June 20. The exhibition is organized andsponsored by Chicago’s younger artists. Students and others interested in exhibiting theirwork should submit it next week, between April 1 and April 6 at 72 E. 11th St., the Boardof Jewish Education Building. Members of the Momentum group will be there to receivework from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. on these dates.Momentum 1956 will be on 1948 when it originated. In 1948 an art work was not to be de-a larger scale tnan in tne past, when the Art Institute banned termined by the degree of train-In 1948, the show was mitl- student work as being non-pro- ing of the artist, but by the valid¬ated by a group of art students, fessional, students of the Art In- ity of the work itself; that theand covered only the Chicago and stitute and the Institute of Design jurors working with the coopera-vicinity area. This year it will in- formed Exhibition Momentum as tive jury system are forced toelude an'eight state area (Minne- a protest to sponsor a show open compromise to such an extentsota, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, to all. At the time the students that many selections do not repre- A return engagement of the Chicago Symphony Chamberensemble has been scheduled for Friday, April 6, at the FirstUnitarian church. Two horns have been added to the en¬semble, which was well received by a capacity audience at itsoriginal performance here a year ago.Two seldom-heard compositions for strings and horns willhighlight the concert: Beetho-Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Mis¬souri). It is expected that 200pieces will make up the final cooperative method in which the over a series of" exhibitions andshow. were concerned also with the sent any one of them. The inde-jurying policy of the Institute, a pendent juror system developedPAA birA rvi nth nrl I m v ■ tV\ inh t h n a ~ — _ C i Al J ven’s Sextet for String Quin¬tet and Two Horns, Opus 81b,and Mozart’s Divertimento in Dfor String Quartet and TwoHorns, Kochel 334.^ On Canons(Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek,” etc.)three jurors worked as a teamThe exhibition is organized by Momentum's position on these time was intended to remedy thjsart students now, as it was in policies was: that the validity of situation. Each juror will select anumber of pieces (determined byspace considerations), independ¬ently, without contact with anyother juror. The pieces selectedwill carry an indication of theirselections.This year’s jury will be com¬posed of a painter, a critic, anda former gallery owner—all ofNew York city. Robert Gold-water is a critic and art historian,who has written extensively onthe subject of priimtive art andwho now teaches at Queens Col¬lege in New York. Jack Twarkov,a young painter who paints withthe abstract expressionists ofNew York, will serve as the sec¬ond member and Charles Eagan,who has shown many of theyounger American painters in hisgalleries will serve as the third.The jurors will meet the eighth,ninth and tenth of April. To jurythe work which will be comingfrom the entire area for the nextweek.Entry blanks, containing allconditions and directions for theentry of work, can be obtainedfrom Mr. Schoolcraft at Lexing¬ton Hall on campus, or at theAllan Frumkin Gallery, 152 E.Superior St. ond horn, Wayne Barrington.This will be a benefit perform¬ance for the Unitarian Servicecommittee.The concert is sponsored by theFirst Unitarian church and theADVENTURES IN SOCIAL SCIENCE: NO. 3Today, ranging again into the fascinating world of socialscience, let us take up the subject of anthropology — the studyof man and his origins.The origin of man was indeed a vexing question until theFrenchman, Jean-Louis Sigafoos, discovered the skull and shin¬bone of Pithecanthropus Erectus in Java in 1891. (What Siga¬foos was doing in Java is, incidentally, quite an odd little story.Sigafoos was a Parisian born and bred. By day one could alwaysfind him at a boulevard cafe, sipping Biere de Racine and oglingthe girls; each night he went to a fashionable casino where hegambled heavily at roulette and jacks; in between times heworked on his stamp collection.. tye thirty o{ma am fa Ougim. . *(Well sir, one summer Sigafoos lost his entire fortune gam¬bling at the casino, and he was seriously contemplating suicidewhen a ray of hope appeared in an unexpected quarter. It seemsthat Sigafoos, through the international stamp collectors jour¬nal, had long been in correspondence with a girl in Java, amission-educated savage named Lotus Petal McGinnis, herselfan enthusiastic stamp collector. The nature of their correspond¬ence, though friendly, had been entirely philatelic. Now, sud¬denly, a new.kind of letter came from Lotus Petal. She declaredthat although she had never laid eyes on Sigafoos, she lovedhim and wanted to marry him. She said she was eighteen yearsold, beautiful, and her father, the richest man in his tribe, wouldgive half his fortune to the husband of her choice. Sigafoos,in his reduced circumstances, had no alternative; he sold hislast few belongings and booked passage for Java.(The first sight of his prospective bride failed to delightSigafoos. She was, as she said, beautiful — but only by localstandards. Sigafoos had serious doubts that her bright redpointed teeth and the chicken bones hanging from her ear lobeswould be considered chic along the Champs Elysees.(But sobering as was the sight of Lotus Petal, Sigafoos hadan even greater disappointment coming when he met her father.The old gentleman was, as Lotus Petal had represented, therichest man in his tribe, but, unfortunately, the medium of ex¬change in his tribe was prune pits.(Sigafoos took one look at the mound of prune pits whichwas his dowry, gnashed his teeth, and stomped off into thejungle, swearing vilely and kicking at sticks and stones andwhatever else lay in his path. Stomping thus, swearing thus,kicking thus, Sigafoos kicked over a heap of old bones which —what do you know!—turned out to be the skull and shin ofPithecanthropus Erectus.)But I digress... From the brutish Pithecanthropus, manevolved slowly upward, growing more intelligent and resource¬ful. By the Middle Paleolithic period man had invented theleash, which was a remarkable technical achievement, butfrankly not terribly useful until the Mesolithic period when maninvented the dog.In the Neolithic period came far and aw7ay the most importantdevelopment in the history of mankind — the discovery of agri¬culture. Why is this so important, you ask? Because, goodfriends, without agriculture there would be no tobacco, andwithout tobacco there would be no Philip Morris, and withoutPhilip Morris you would be without the gentlest, mildest, sun¬niest, pleasantest, happiest smoke that money can buy, and Iwould be without a. job.That’s why. ©m»i siiuimm. 195#To their Neolithic ancestors, the makers of Philip Morris extenda grateful salute. And so will you when you try today s new gentlePhilip Morris in today's new pack of red, white and gold. used by Momentum at the present victor ^ssista"t concert- Channing club. Tickets are $2 andmaster of the Chicago Symphony 6 t vOrchestra will play first violin. are on sa^e at Woodworth s book-Others, all principals with the store, the Disc, Kim Pharmacysymphony orchestra, are: second and by mail from the church of*violin, Nathan Snider; viola, Rolf fice RegUlar tickets at $2.20 andPersinger; cello, David Greenbaum; double bass, James Vrehl;first horn, Alan Fuchs; and sec-Compass wants,will pay fororiginal storiesThe Compass cabaret theatrehas announced that it will pay$10 for stories which are suitablefor performance. Stories, accord¬ing to Compass, “may be seriousor comic but must have actionand excitement or suspense.” Thestories may be mailed to Com¬pass, 5475 S. Lake Park Ave.This weekend, through Sunday,April 1, Compass’ program willfeature a scenario called The RealYou, and an improvisation en¬titled The Living Lifetime Living.On Tuesday, April 3, Americanballads and Brazilian folk songswill be performed by Bernie Asbeland Valucha Buffington. student tickets especially pricedat $1 are available from Chan¬ning club members and at theReynolds club ticket office.Show Czech artAn exhibit of the works ofCzechoslovak artists and scien¬tists of non-Communist nationswill be held at Ida Noyes hallfrom March 31 to April 2. Itwill be open to the public from3 p.m. to 11 p.m. on Saturdayand Sunday and from 10 a.m.to 6 p.m. on Monday. Therewill be free admission and re¬freshments. The exhibit is or¬ganized by Masaryk club ofthe University of Chicago.Hugo Haas’ movie, ThyNeighbors Wife, portrayinglife in the Moravian country¬side, and a short feature, Win¬ter in Czechoslovakia, will beshown on Saturday, March 31,at 7:30 p.m. in Internationalhouse.Chapel concerts worthwhileThe most interesting concerts on the campus, not excluding the Mandel hall series, arethose given the second Sunday of every month in Bond chapel, under the sponsorship of thedivinity school. These concerts are performed under the direction of Richard Vikstrom bythe Bond chapel choir, a small group of from 12 to 16 voices, and the Collegium Musicum.The concerts are free, and although many of the musicians are professionals, they receiveno pay for their performances, so that the concerts really represent the best kind of ama¬teur music. Since the concertsare frequently given after Performance- This piece and the in the Monteverdi massonly one rehearsal, the per- Sixth Brandenburg concerto,” Besides its musical advantages,performed with the original in- the chapel also provides a perfectstrumentation, including two visual setting. The concerts areviole da gamba, have been the given at three in the afternoon,outstanding instrumental works so that the richly colored stainedglass windows are illuminated.The musicians sit in the chancelformances are not always flaw¬less, but the general standard isso high thatsany criticism on thispoint would be mere quibbling. , .The programs present music of 0 *ie year>the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, The two duets, like others out of sight in the back of thewith special emphasis on choral which Patricia Peterson and church, and thus provide no dis-works with instrumental accom- Charlotte Vikstrom have done tractions. The total effect is onepaniment. The last concert, on this year, were especially attrac- Gf overwhelming sensuousSunday, March 11, was typical: tive; the excellent acoustics of the beauty7.it consisted of four motets- by the chapel, with its rich cathedral After this description it maySpanish composer Victoria,' two echoes, permit the voices to blend Seem odd to report that the con-duets for sopranos and continuo and complement one another in certs are very poorly attendedby Heinrich Schutz, a Telemann a manner exactly appropriate to T]ie chapel seats only 250 yet issonata for viola da gamba and the style of the music. The acous- seldom more than half full. Tick-hardsichord, and a mkss for four tics also allow a great range in ets must be obtained in advancevoices by Monteverdi. The Tele- the use of dynamics: the softest jn room 101, Swift hall but thismann sonata was played by Jul- pianissimo can be distinctly may be done by mail as well as inius Klein and Newman Powell, heard, while a very few voices person, and the concerts are cer-both professors of music at Val- can overwhelm with their volume tainly worth this small amount ofparaiso, with the figured bass if it so desired. Both of these trouble. The University commu-realized by Mr. Powell for this -effects were used especially well njty js’ very fortunate to havesuch an excellent ensemble; very^IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIItlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimiltlllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll^ few campuses have such groups,| and many Collegia do not per¬il form publicly. The next concert is| April 8; certainly the group de-| serves more appreciation than= they have been given.E Hollis Rinehart8 CHICAGO SYMPHONY I| CHAMBER ENSEMBLE |= Featuring principal artists of §| the Chicago Symphony Orchestra =| BEETHOVEN: ' J= Sextet for String Quintet ond Two Horns, Opus 81b =| MOZART: |= Divertimento in D for String Quintet ond Two Homs, Koechel 334 =S A Benefit Concert for the Unitarian Service Committee =1 Sponsored by the Channing Club |E Tickets 2.00 Friday, April 6 8:15 p.m. |E Students 1.00 First Unitorion Church == On Sale at Reynolds Club Woodlawn at 57th e5 NOTE: The public is cordially invited to on Organ Recital by William ||= Slater on Easter Sunday afternoon, April 1 at 3:30. Mr. =S Slater, a former pupil of Frederick Morriotti, will present works == of Luebeck, Bach, Franck and Vierne. y= Admission without charge. =^llllllllllllllllllililllMlllllllllUllll||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||lllli^ Choice Seats for:Pete SeegerandThe WeaversFolk Song RecitalFriday Evening, Moy 12Orchestra HallMstislav RostropovichTop Soviet CellistMonday Evening, Moy 7Orchestra HallCall Mr. Wollins AN 3-1877Page 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 30, 1956CLASSIFIEDS Institute of International Education listsavailable opportunities for foreign studyStudent- rate 5c per word. Others 10c per word. Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265For rent For rentThree-room furnished apartment, threeblocks from Commons. All facilities fur¬nished. HY 3-8460, Monday.Large, airy, though unfurnished apart¬ment. to sublet May 1. to share imme¬diately. For two or three. 1211 HydePark Blvd., FA 4-6260.Wanted Male student wanted to share room. $7per week. FR 2-6677.Two large single rooms, very reasonable.PL 2-1366.lt£-Room kitchenette apartment. Newlydecorated. Refrigerator. Close to cam¬pus. FA 4-5538. 6107 Dorchester.Want to use piano for practice evenings.Will pay. Call PL 2-4452.Part time female receptionists in out¬patient department of University Hos¬pital. Four hours a day, morning orafternoon shift. Light typing. See Mrs.Paulson. Personnel office, 956 E. 58thSt.Hyde Park Theatre—female help. Candycounter attendant. Part time evenings.Apply in person. Wanted14-Year-old French boy wants UC cor¬respondent (male or female), to getpractice in English. Write: GerardZatara, Pensionnat. "La Haute Futaie,"5bis place, Jean Mermoz, Montfermeil(S. & O.) France. 15-year-old Frenchboy also wishes correspondent of sameage. Write Christian Point, 50 ave desChlrefeuilles, Montfermeil (S. & O.)France. Several opportunities for study abroad are available through application to the Institute ofInternational Education, 116 S. Michigan avenue, and several other organizations.Foreign summer schools open to American students are listed in Summer Study Abroad1956, a pamphlet available at the.Abroad, 525 George Street, NewHaven, Connecticut.Information regarding study at12 Spanish universities is avail,able from the Spanish state tour¬ist department, 247 Park Avenue,New York 17, N. Y.offices of the Institute of Interna¬tional Education. The bookletlists 180 summer courses at edu¬cational institutions in 22 coun¬tries. It tells where to apply andgives information on languagerequirements, admissions pro¬cedures, credits, living arrange¬ments and costs, transportation,passports and visas, and scholar¬ships.An exchange of American andPersonalsBunny: Have tickets to see Tallchlefopening night, April 3. Prices outrag¬eous, so we have second balcony. Whatare you doing for your birthday? B’rer.Petitions are now available to personswishing to seeek election to the USNSAdelegation. Petitions may be obtainedfrom the SG office in Ida Noyes hall.Brucie: Will you be too good for us dur¬ing Congress elections?Croeolator: See you later. Toad.ServicesMathematics. Instruction and applica¬tions for individual or group. Loop orSouth Side. Special arrangements forgroup formed by yourself. Soglin &association. 28 East Jackson. WE 9-2127. SHIRTS 11C EachBeautifully Washed and Ironedwhen included with ourWASH and DRY service8 IBs. — 89cKWIK-WAYCASH AND CARRY LAUNDRY“Doing Student Laundry for 4S Years'91214 E. 61st Street Between Woodlawn and Kimbark foreign engineering students toreceive on the job training in in¬dustry, is being coordinated bythe Institute of International Ed¬ucation for the American Societyfor Engineering Education.Group studies in the Philip¬pines, Japan, Germany, Denmark,Jamaica, Colorado, San Franciscoand Russia arc sponsored by theLisle Fellowship, Inc., 204 SouthState Street, Ann Arbor, Michi¬gan.Summer study in Germany atthe Free University of West Ber¬lin is offered by Classrooms FREE RESEARCH AIDIf you are doing research on theSoviet Union (or are just inter¬ested), use the help available at theoffices and library of the ChicagoCouncil of American-Soviet Friend¬ship, Suite 403, 189 W. Madison AN3-1877, AN 3-1878. Open 9-5, Monday-Saturday.^JIIIIIIIillllltilliHIHIHIIIIIlllllllllllllllHlltlllllllllllllHIHilllilllllllHIHtlllllllllllllllllltlllllllHtHlllllllllllllllliiiiiiiieB International House Movies IMonday, April 2 — 45c — Red Shoes (English)Assembly Hall, 8 p.m.31 Thursday, April 5 — 35c — Captain Horatio Hornblower |(American) Room CDE, 7 and 9 p.m.iiiiiniiiiiiinniiitiiiiiHHiiiitiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiitiimtiiiwiiiitntiiHtitHiniitimHimHimiiiFrench instruction by competent nativetutor. Please call Miss Alexandre, HY3-8531 before noon.French tutoring, coaching and transla¬tions. Native teacher. Reasonable. NO7-2722For saleSleeping couch, rugs, slide projector,chairs and desk. Call evenings. DO3-4742Automatic washing machine, chairs,cabinets, bed, lamp, table, dishes andpots, drapes, rug. MI 3-1443.LostBiue overcoat, ‘‘Alligator’’ label, ex¬changed at Purim carnival. Please callRichard Ablin to exchange. MI 3-0913,mornings.STUDENTWIVESWORK ON CAMPUSThe Personnel Office has awide variety of full-timeclerical and technical posi¬tions that are open. We aresure there is one that willh interest you.WE NEEDSecretariesStenographersTypistsBookkeepersClerksClinical TechniciansResearch Technicians(including)Medical ChemistsHematologistsHistologistsBacteriologistsBENEFITS INCLUDE3 weeks' paid vacation2 weeks' sick leaveTuition remissionLibrary and recreationalprivilegesapply NOWPersonnel Office956 E. 58th St. You would hardly think that there was any connection betweenthe translucent building panels and the hard-working tires ofan earth mover—but there is."Allite” panels, a product of our Barrett Division, are madeof polyester resins. The tough rubber tires, like the ones onyour car, require for their processing chemicals containinganiline—one of the products of our National Aniline Division.Both aniline and polyester resins require benzol, an Alliedbasic chemical, in their manufacture.Allied’s chemicals in some way enter into nearly every manu¬factured product in America’s homes, farms and factories.In all, Allied has seven producing Divisions—and the list ofits 3,000 products i3 still growing. Seen or unseen, they’remaking life easier, more pleasant, more modem.RUGGED RUBBER FOR LONGER LIFEAkinHERE'S HOW THEY’REALLIEDDIVISIONS: Barrett General Chemical I Apied !Mutual Chemical National Aniline Nitrogen Semet-SolvaySolvay Process • International I C hemicalAllied to serve you better V«l MOADWAY, NEW YO*K 6. N. Y. The Annual Reportgivet a comprehen¬sive account of theCompany's progressIn 1955. We’ll be gladto tend a copy on request.March 30, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page ftRunners do well during interim; 66 receive awardsVarsity wins all three meets Sixty-six athletes on seven University teams won awards in sportsending during the winter quarter, the athletic office announced. Thefollowing is a list of awards and winners:Varsity and Track club runners spent a busy and successful interim competing in variousmeets. The varsity won three meets, while Track club athletes performed in the importantmidwest indoor meets. In the climax of the indoor season here, the Chicago Daily News re¬lays, held Saturday, March 24, John Barnes, running for the UC Track club, edged JoeGaffney of Philadelphia in the 600 yard run, reversing an earlier loss to Gaffney. AnotherTrack club member, Floyd Smith, high-jumped six feet six inches to tie for first place withErnie Shelton of Los Angeles.In the featured Bankersmile, Phil Coleman of theTrack club ran a close second toTed Wheeler of Iowa, who fin¬ished in the fast time of 4:07.5. Avarsity Maroon runner, ChuckRhyne, finished fourth in the 600yard run. Barnes, Ryne, Smith,and Coleman, also placed in theMilwaukee Journal relays, heldMarch 10, but none of them wonthat time.UCTC WinsThe UCTC easily won the Cen¬tral AAU title in a meet held hereMarch 17, racking up 140 pointsto runner-up Wheaton’s 54. Smith,Dick Cousens, Walt Deike, TerryEllis, and Dale Foster were win¬ners for the UCTC. Other athletesto place were Dick Parkman, Jim sythe, Barnes, Rhyne, and BobKemp.Maroons winThe varsity competed and un¬officially won the Midwest con¬ference meet held here March 9.The University of Chicago is nota member of the Midwest confer¬ence and therefore was compet¬ing unofficially. Joe Howard, DanTrifone, Paul Baptist, Mitch Wat¬kins, and Frank Loomos were in¬dividual winners and a host ofothers also placed. The MarooAshad 86 points to Cornell college’s56.Friday, March 16, Bradley Uni¬versity journeyed to the Fieldhouse and was defeated by Chi¬cago, 73%-30%.Wednesday evening, Chicago the Field house, by a score of 55-38%-29%. Mitch Watkins wontwo firsts, tied for another firstplace, and also took a second.Hosea Martin, Art Omohundro,and Chuck Rhyne also took firstswhile Dan Trifone tied for a firstplace. Paul Baptist, Kim Valen¬tine, and Dewey Jones also scoredpoints. In the relay races, Chi¬cago took a first and two seconds.WAA launchesspring programThe women’s division of thephysical education departmentwill hold regular classes in ninesports and hold recreational op¬portunities in four more. Regulardefeated Northern Illinois and classes, for which registration isCaffey, Bob Kelly, Roger For- Milwaukee State Teachers over at required, will be in bowling, golf,modern and social dancing, soft-bail, swimming, and tennis. Themodern and social dancing classesare open to men as well aswomen. There is no fee for regis¬tration in these classes, held inIda Noyes.The department will held rec¬reational activities in bowling,roller skating, golf, and swim¬ming. All are open to both menand women.The Women’s Athletic Associa¬tion will sponsor tournaments insoftball, tennis, bowling andswimming, for women.Further information can be ob¬tained in Ida Noyes lounge.TERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Bes€'FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95Wo sIm carry a full line of Italian toads Major "C" AwardsBasketball—* Donald Greer, George Mason, William Lester, RichardRowland, David Smith, Mitchell WatkinsWrestling—David Abelson, *Edward SorensonFencing—* Andrew Ahlgren, Michael Fain, *Jerome Gross, JayLevine, Herbert ZipperianGymnastics—John Bowman, *Eeiehi Fukushima, *William Lei/htSwimming—Douglas Maurer, *Richard Rouse, *John Stanek*First Major “C” AwardsOld English "C"Basketball—Francis Goroszko, Jerrold Rittman, Jerome Rodnitzky,Marion ScottWrestling—Jerry Mehrens, John Pearse, John Schafer, Charles Sex¬ton, Robert SonneburgGymnastics—Ermit L. FinchSwimming—Thomas Barry, Ronald Crutchfield, Robert Giedt, DanielJohnson, Michael Mandell, John McEnery, Larry Nauman, Rob¬ert Payne, David TruittFencing—Davis Bobrow, Anton Kasanof, Jerrold ZisookSmall Old English "C"Basketball—Leonard Frankenstein, Gymnastics, Mark SchuhWrestling—George BaumruckerFencing—Paul Lindauer, Carl-Heinz Michelis, Powhatan Woolridge1956 Numerals—Fencing—Guy McDonaldGymnastics—John Ketterson, Daniel RussWrestling—Michael Schilder, Arthur SollittMajor "U"JV Basketball—John DaveyMinor "U"JV Basketball—Stanford Goldblatt, Leon Kass, Richard L. Krainea,Robert Stagman, Barnett Weiss, Louis ZandJV Gymnastics—Joel Mintz, David SwanShield—JV Basketball—Stewart Gordon, William Hauser, FsankRandazzo, David Sensibar, Jerry WoolpyFencers compete in NCAAThree University of Chicago members of the fencing teamcompeted in the NCAA national intercollegiate fencing tour¬nament. Chicago finished 25th of 39 teams, with the Univer¬sity of Illinois, who Chicago had previously been defeated by.The three fencers compiled :—in the epees.The tournament, held at theUnited States Naval Academv inAnnapolis, Maryland, saw ^y55bouts held and lasted almost twofull days.a 40-64 record between them.Jay Levine had an 11-24 record infoils. In saber, the fencing team’sstrongest division, Chick Ahlgrencompiled a 16-19 record. MichaelFain finished with a 13-20 recordQkbe, doe*-fio'o 'Uott, iXT- n^ou feel so new and fresh andgood — all over —when you pause forCoca-Cola. It’s sparkling with quickRefreshment . .. and it's so pure andwholesome — naturally friendlyto your figure. Let it do things —good things —for you.lOmiD UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA COtA COMPANY BYThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.i. • registered trade mark. C THE COCA-COLA COMPANY Friday, May 18 Orchestra HallPete Seeger and The WeaversCircle Pines Center has a choice block of ticketsNow available at H.D. Co-Op, 5537 S. Harper| Mexican Restaurant |J 1437 E! 63rd • j| We Specialize in Mexican Food ffj Mole Poblano 1.25 || Combinacion 1.00 || Tacos De Polio 1.00 || Tacos De Picadillo .85 || Enchiladas .75 | Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park. 3-8372Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery ServiceCheck this new collar style— the ARROW GlenHere’s a broadcloth shirt with featuresthat please the college man with an eyefor style. The collar, (button-down, ofcourse), is a shorter, neater-looking model.The fine broadcloth cools you throughoutthe warm days ahead. The trim checksare available in 7 color combinations, in¬cluding blue, tan and grey. $5.00.And, an Arrow repp alwayssets off an Arrow shirt justright. Tie, $2.50.-ARROW-—first in fashionSHIRTS • TRIS • SLACKSPage 12 March 30, 1956It pays to add Gisecretarial training to your colaccomplishments it you are ambilto get and hold one of those b<positions in business.Special Course for College WordenWrite College Dean forGIBBS GIRLS AT WORKKATHARINEGIBBSSECRETARIALBoiton 16. 21 Marlborough St. Now York 17. 2)0 Park tPronOenco 6.1SS <km.ll St. Montclair, N.J , S3 PlyfiMEaster is Eliot's 'Cocktail Party' Speaks of changing worldToday’s college graduate faces a world so rapidly changingthat it is difficult for him to judge the kind of education usefulto prepare for life even in the next generation, stated QuincyWright, professor of political science, in his address to the winterconvocation.At the convocation 145 degrees were awarded, mostly at the grarln.ate and professional level. Seven students recently elected to Phi BetaKappa were honored. They are: Roger A. H. Bernhardt, ManfredPyka, Joanna Sher, Vera Turton, Naomi Birnbaum, Jack Meilandand Jackie Reid.TV topic topic of lecture by Roberts“Lip service Christianity:an Easter discussion” will bethe topic of the University ofChicago’s New World radio pro¬gram at 10:35 a.m. Sunday overNBC’s network show Monitor.Participants in the discussionon American church-going habitswill be Jerald C. Brauer, dean,Federated Theological faculty,and W. Barnett Blakemore. Jr.,associate professor of the Feder¬ated Theological faculty, anddean. Disciples Divinity house.Edward W. Rosenheim. Jr., assist¬ant professor of humanities in thecollege, will be moderator.Wax to singproper andimproper songsMrs. Rosalie Wax will givea folk concert on Friday,April 6, at 8 p.m. in BreastedHall of the Oriental institute.Mrs. Wax, well known to collegestudents as examiner and teacherin the social sciences 2 course,will sing folk songs “both properand improper.” She has alwaysbeen a willing performer on thiscampus, having taken part in var¬ious faculty show's and performedat the request of many studentorganizations.Members of the Women’s Ath¬letic association, the sponsoringorganization, are selling tickets at50 cents each. Tickets also canbe obtained at the Reynolds clubdesk and at the door.The Women’s Athletic assoeiation, w'hich sponsors varsity andintramural sports for women, isstepping outside of its traditionalrole to sponsor Mrs. Wax in orderto raise money. In the past, WAAhas been using funds which wereearned by selling hot dogs at foot¬ball games in the pre-war days.Gradually the treasury has beendepleted until now WAA finds itnecessary to raise money for fu¬ture projects. A lecture on T. S. Eliot’s The Cocktail Party by FederatedTheological faculty member Preston Roberts, Sunday night,will be the first in a series of eight programs on “Reconcilia¬tion in contemporary life.”inThe meeting, sponsored bythe Methodist student fellow¬ship will begin at 7 p.m. at Chapelhouse. vIn The Cocktail Party Eliotdeals with the estrangement of anaverage cocktail-drinking English-man from his W'ife and with theproblem of vocation in life.These programs follow’ theseries on “Alienation in contem¬porary life” presented last quar¬ter and are meant to answ’er thatproblem by various themes of thereconciliation of men to men andof men to God as found in theol¬ogy and literature. There willagain be discussions on alternateSundays after each speaker.Other approaches on the themeof reconciliation to be presentedwill be those of the apostle Paulof Tarsus, contemporary theo¬logian Paul Tillich; andmissionary-doctor-scholar, AlbertSchweitzer.Joseph Haroutunian, professorof theology at McCormick semi¬nary. will speak on Paul’s Letter to the Romans. Tillich’s TheShaking of the Foundations, willbe the topic of Schubert Ogden,appointee to the faculty of South¬ern Methodist university.Unitarian minister Leslie T.Pennington will talk on Schweit¬zer’s Out of My Life and Thought.A fellowship supper at 6 willprecede the program each Sun¬day evening. Meiland,“Never was it more difficult to look ahead and say, with any do-gree of certainty, what the situation will be in the next decade or gen-cration,” Wright continued. “We live in a world in which distancesare diminishing, in which the rate of change is accelerating, in whichthe destruction of war is increasing, in which nations are moredetermined to be themselves, in which single decisions can have con-sequences of universal importance.”Loaders who push intelligently into the future are safer than thosepushed into it by instinct and opinions, Wright told the graduates.One attitude that may serve as a guide is that neither knowledgenor wisdom is static, and a liberalism that is willing to explore newA nrgl A 1C attitudes’ new values, and new opinions is not merely a wise policyas la g-FCTl is lv»l bUt a necessity in an age of rapid change, Wright suggested.deadline for SACseats at-largeThe petition deadline for at-large seats on the Social Ac¬tivities Council for next yeariff Wednesday, April 4.Petitions requiring 150 studentsignatures may be secured in thestudent activities office, IdaNoyes hall.The purpose of SAC is to inte¬grate the social calendar and reg¬ister dates for campus events. JimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiimiiiiiimnChock Those Features 1= V PROMPT SERVICE == V DEPENDABILITY =| V ECONOMY |E ... and then remember . . .E — The Students Favorite —| University Quick Laundry != 1376 East 55th Street =| PLaza 2-9097 jjaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiifiimih1. SUPERIOR TASTESo good to your taste because of L&M’ssuperior tobaccos. Richer, tastier—espe¬cially selected for filter smoking. For theflavor you want, here’s the filter you need.RELAX WITHCVtttrr it Mvtts Toiacco Ca 2. SUPERIOR FILTERSo quick on the draw! Yes, the flavorcomes clean—through L&M’s all whileMiracle Tip. Pure white inside, purewhite outside for cleaner,better smoking.mnirBIG RED LETTER DAY!^ILTIRSUGGETT l MYERS TOBACCO CO3:30 TO 6 P.M. DAILY820 On YourRadio DialUNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorV