s April 17» 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Maroons win home opener Runners lose, 73-58to Central MichiganAfter jumping out to an early 4-0 lead, Chicago’s baseball squad hung on to win, 4-3,on Stagg field’s friendly confines Friday afternoon. Dale Gustafson went all the way torack up the Maroons first victory of the year. They had previously lost to Knox oy the Chicago won every running event except two, but Centralsame score. Michigan’s all-over team depth and strength in the fieldThe Maroons lost no time scoring, as they got to Chicago’s Teachers college’s pitche*r events was too much for the Maroons, as they lost theirin the very first inning without even getting a hit John Frankenfeld led off with a second outdoor meet in two tries, 73-58. Chicago had pre¬grounder that went throughthe opposing second base¬man’s legs for an error.Frankenfeld went all the way tothird on a sacrifice bunt by BruceColby, when the pitcher held theball too long. Kent Karohl sentFrankenfeld in with a fly to cen¬ter field. This was indicative ofthe hustling that Chicago showedon the basepaths.Chicago scored* again in thesecond when George Gray’walk¬ed, stole second, and scored on asingle by Dave Currie.In the fourth inning, Chicagoblasted two more runs across asGene Crain doubled and moved tothird on Art Antonick’s single.Crain scored on an infield out byGray, and Antonick went all theway to third on the play. Anto¬nick then scored on an error byChicago Teachers. The next in¬ning, the opponents put theirright fielder in to pitch, and heblanked the Maroons the rest ofthe way, using a good fast balland change of pace.After four scoreless innings,Chicago Teachers scored on awalk and a long double by Greco,the opponent’s catcher. In thelater innings, Gustafson beganto lose his control, and in theeighth inning, a triple by the op¬ponents brought two men on baseacross. However Gustafson putout the fire and put Teacher’sdown scoreless in the ninth.A peculiar feature of the game viously beaten Central Michi¬gan during the indoor season.Martin wins twophoto by BernhardtCatcher and umpire watch as John Frankenfeld hits one outagainst Chicago Teachers. Maroons won, 4-3. The meet, held in Michigan Sat¬urday, saw Chicago win seven ofthe thirteen events, even in los¬ing the meet. Chicago’s only dou¬ble winner was Hosea Martin,who flashed across first in boththe 100 and 220 yard dashes. Mar¬tin’s times were ten seconds flatand 22.2 seconds.Other winners in the runningevents for Chicago were Art Omo-hundro in the mile, Paul Baptistin the two mile, Tinkie Heyns inthe 880, and Mitch Watkins in thelow hurdles. Bill Gram finishedsecond in the 440, while Dan Tri-fone took a second and a third inthe hurdles.The Maroons split the high andbroad jumps, Willie Adkins ofCentral Michigan winning the lat¬ ter while Dewey Jones of Chicagowon the former. Watkins was sec¬ond in the broad jump whilefone tied for second in the h^ijump.Walz wins threeIn the field events Chicago wasoutclassed. Jarv Walz of CentralMichigan wTon first places in thediscus,‘shot put, and javelin. Chi¬cago’s top man, Dick Cousens,won a second and third in theshot put and discus, while LarryShaderowsky and Jerry Czaman-ske took second and third in thejavelin. In the pole vault, the Ma¬roons were completely blanked.Jim Padoli, who won manyevents in last year’s meet for Cen¬tral Michigan, was unable to com¬pete due to an injury.Chicago will meet Kalamazoocollege Wednesday afternoon outat Stagg field, in hope of return¬ing to winning ways.Golfers losewas that the Maroons batted first,since this was actually ChicagoTeachers’ home game. Dave Cur¬rie had gone four-for-four in thisgame and the one against Knoxbefore he grounded out in thesixth inning.With one victory under theirbelts, Chicago will be looking tomake it two against North Cen¬tral here today. Game time willbe 3:30.The inning by inning score ofFriday’s game:Chicago 110 200 000—4Chicago Tchrs. . 000 010 020—3 Tennis squad wins twiceRebounding after a close loss to Great Lakes, the tennis squadtrounced two teams Thursday. One squad played Wilson junior col¬lege on the varsity courts, while another Chicago team went to Wash¬ington park to play a park team there. Chicago won the Wilsonmatches, 9-0, and the Washington park ones, 4-2.The matches were peculiar in that none of them went to three sets.Against Wilson, the winners were Bob Hartfield, Walter Neville,David Penn, Morton Levy, Gerald Caditz, and Gene Herman. Thedouble teams of Neville-Caditz, Levy-Penn, and Hartfield-Herbanwere also victorious.A1 Cooper, Charles Horwitz, Ray Kunze, and Herb West wonsingles matches against Washington Park for Chicago’s four vic¬tories. In a triangular golf match withDeKalb and St. Ambrose collegesin DeKalb, Illinois, Chicago cameoff third best, losing to St. Am¬brose 14%-3%, and being smearedby DeKalb, 17%-%. DeKalb de¬feated St. Ambrose, 16%-1%.Bob Sommerville was low manfor Chicago, while Bob Kettelsonwas low for the winning DeKalbsquad. The golfers will play De-Pauw and Valparaiso in anothertriangular match next Saturdayat LaPorte, Indiana.Bob Phillipson was elected cap¬tain of this year’s golf team lastweek, it was announced.LiLlAv Scte/PLAN NOW FOR ANIMPORTANT EXECUTIVECAREER AS AN OFFICER INTHE WOMEN’S ARMY CORPSYou can be the “Girl Most Likely to Succeed’’—by applying nowfor an officer’s commission in the Women’s Army Corps. You’llstep right from college into an important career on the executiveside of the desk—the side that means good pay, interesting work,stimulating experiences.As a commissioned officer in the U. S. Army, excellent pay,rank and prestige will be yours. You’ll have a position of vitalresponsibility—working side by side with male officers in im¬portant staff and administrative assignments.Here are some of the outstanding fields in which you may train:Personnel and Administration Public InformationIntelligence Information and EducationComptroller Legal and LegislativeCivil Affairs and Military GovernmentAnd that’s not all! You’ll enjoy many personal benefits—thechance for exciting foreign travel, a 30-day paid vacation everyyear, an officer’s busy social life. If you’re a college senior, be the“Girl Most Likely to Succeed.”For information about your executive career, flit in and mail this coupon today.THE ADJUTANT GENERAL, Department of the ArmyWashington 25, D. C. Attn: AGSN-LPlease send me further information on mv career as anofficer in the Women's Army Corps.Name.AddressCUy Zone Statel er University Major Dale ef Or adBOUND OUT OF ORDERPage 8 91THE CHICAGO MAROON April 17, 1956Int housesponsorsexotic danceContinuing its policy of ac¬quainting foreign studentswith American traditions andculture, International house coun¬cil is sponsoring a “Night inNekoosa” dance Sunday evening.April 22, in the assembly hall.Following the pattern set by the“Night in Monte Carlo” and “Eve¬ning in Asia” dances of previousquarters, this dance will providethe exotic atmosphere of Ne¬koosa. USA. Everyone is encour¬aged to wear suitable native cos¬tumes.Those who managed to un¬scramble the last Internationalhouse dance from competing eggrolls found a live band on handfor their 35 cents per person. Ac¬cording to Arthur Ghent, presi¬dent of International house, “Itis questionable if a better bargainexists on campus. Certainly nocomparable bargains are avail¬able in the metropolis of Ne¬koosa” (population 2.212kWCN beginsnew series American churches should he waryof shallow revival, says Wm. Millerby F.d BercknumDespite, or because of thedangers of the current, com¬pulsive, “deeply felt” butvague national religiosity thatlacks a “transcendent cuttingedge,” there are encouragingsigns in the self-criticism nowcoming from the Americanchurches themselves: wariness ofa shallow revival and warningsagainst cults of self-assurance.This was a conclusion stated inthe three talks given last week byWilliam Lee Miller, of The Re¬porter magazine, on “The currententhusiasm for religion in Amer¬ica,” sponsored by the Porterfoundation.Miller spoke of the dangers ofa “bandwagon, self-help religion,”the causes which may have led toit, and the possibilities — bothhopeful and discouraging—whichcan come out of this revival. Hedistinguished between the popu¬lar, institutional and intellectualaspects of it.Everybody for itPopular religion—and to someextent, institutional—has come tobe for many. Miller said, primar¬ily an answer to the problems ofcommunism, juvenile delinquency and peace of mind. It is recom¬mended by everybody includingthe President, and there are nomore Clarence Darrows to showup, from the outside, the phoni¬ness in religion.There are dangers to the free¬dom of non-believers and unaffili¬ated believers in overt compul¬sion, as in public schools, butmore in the covert pressures ofan atmosphere that exudes spirit¬uality and urges acceptance of“the dogma of belief in the good¬ness of all men everywhere.”There is an assumption that anyfaith will do as long as you haveone.Such religion, Miller said, lacksany idea of a transcendent claimwhich calls into contradiction thestandards and practices of theculture. In fact, religion is oftenused as a defensive justificationof the purposes and goals of theself or culture.Graham at PrincetonMiller, who has taught at Yaleand Smith, described Billy Gra¬ham’s recent visit at Princeton asan example of “dynamic simplic¬ity becoming sophisticated.” Theold Fundamentalist content isgone and in its place a “modern, palatable, inoffensive mass evan¬gelism.”“His sermon could have beengiven by a liberal Protestant—theanswer is love. There was no in¬sistence on a particular formulafor salvation. He wanted to be in¬clusive and ecumenical.” Millerreported that Graham “charmed”his Princeton audience.Causes of the revival were out¬lined as 1. the threats of worldpolitics; 2. the fact that idealisticAmericans are now confrontedwith problems which they cannotimmediately solve; 3. the drive to¬ward belonging, conformity andsocial identification.Opiate or cutting edgeThese have created possibilitieswhich religion meets in variousways. In the first instance reli¬gion may serve as a justificationof ourselves against communism,or it may “destroy our illusions ofomnipotence and supply anawareness that our action mustbe checked against its own self¬destructive tendencies, withoutgiving up action.”In reaction to new complex andunending responsibilities, religionmay provide an escape, or it mayinspire “a compassion that triesto think and feel its way in the pluralism of the world.”To the drive toward belongingreligion may offer closed comma!nities centered on themselves orBiblically oriented with its centerbeyond itself, it may point outthe incompleteness and insecurityof all human life.Theology a fad?Miller felt that the split be.tween leaders of intellectual andof popular life is reflected also inthe religious scene. The religionof the practical, externalizedAmerican people has an anti-theo¬logical element. So there is a widedivision between the theologicaland popular revivals.Nevertheless, there are alsodangers on the intellectual side,where theology may become afad, “just fascinating.” Or thetypical second generation may re¬peat the words without recaptur¬ing the experience. There mayalso be emphasis on what can beshared rather than what divides.Miller expressed hope thatsomething new and genuine maybe generated out of this situa¬tion. “When we fail in using re¬ligion to satisfy our own desires,these desires may be fulfilled insome other way on the level ofdivine intention.”The first of a series of pan¬el discussions focussed onChicago’s progress and prob¬lems, sponsored by the ChicagoTribune, will be broadcast on ra¬dio station WGN at 2 p.m. today.Titled “Chicago Horizons,” theprograms will present a verbalexchange of ideas between lead¬ing Chicago experts and authori¬ties from business and govern¬ment. The purpose of the series isto develop constructive and prac¬tical courses of action that willhelp speed progress and solveproblems of Mid-America's great¬est city.Among the panel membersspeaking on the program will bePhilip M. Hauser, professor ofsociology at UC.Books Bought• Any Subject *• Any Language• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Pork 3-03211204 E. 55th St.EUROPEBOUND?Now for the first time! A pocket-sized manual, packed full withup-to-the-minute details, on howyou can get more out of your tripto Europe for less. Within its cov¬ers, you will find scores of traveltips that will benefit the experi¬enced as well as the inexperiencedtraveler. Its many topics include:1—Useful phrases in 6languages.2—European classes andlectures — FREE!3—Steak dinners — 50c4—Clean, respectable accom¬modations, as low as 12ca night.5—Social Activities—How andwhere to meet the peopleof Europe.6—Plane flights costing lessthan 3rd class rail to thesame destination.SEND $1 TO:EuropeFor the PennywiseBox No. 14Madison Square StationNew York 10, N.Y. WOULD YOU THINK OF GOING HOME BY FREIGHT?IT might be fun at that—if the railroads would allow it.Because now the railroads are making the same bigimprovement in freight trains that made crack stream¬liners practical. They’re equipping freight cars, likepassenger cars, with Timken® tapered roller bearings.Timken bearings permit sustained high speeds, makeon-time schedules possible. One reason: they end thehot box problem—No. 1 cause of freight train delay.“Roller Freight”—freight cars mounted on rollerbearings—is the next big step in railroading. It’s a stepthe Timken Company is pioneering to speed the na¬tion’s freight and save railroads an estimated $190million yearly in operating costs. And a step that’salready under way as more and more railroads aremaking the big switch to "Roller Freight”."Roller Treight” is the latest example of how theTimken Company works hand-in-hand with all indus¬try to keen America on the go-by pioneering improve¬ ments in machines and machinery to increase speedand precision, decrease wear and maintenance. We’rethe world’s largest manufacturer of tapered rollerbearings and removable rock bits and a leading pro¬ducer of fine alloy steeLBecause the best place to keep going—up—is with acompany that’s on the^o, you may be interested in whatlies ahead for college graduates at the Timken Company.For details, write for our booklet "This Is Timken”.The Timken Roller Bearing Company, Canton 6, Ohio.TIMKENTVtADK-MAKK RU. IA (. PAT. OFF*TAPERED MUCH BEARINGSTimken® bearings keep America on the £Q.;. anilysii keep going up when you go with the Timken CompanyBOUND OUT OF ORDER j 1Festival approaches■ ™ *ee pages 5-8FI igiit sti II open [ jiwpisHlsSliSSfFifteen UC students and faculty have a chance to sign for the Stu¬dent government co-operative charter flight to Europe as 50 havealready done so. “The first 65 people to pay the deposit will be the65 who fly,” said Holly O’Connor, flight leader. The deadline for mak¬ing the $50 deposit is May 8.The flight leaves New York June 19 for London and Amsterdam;It returns September 9. Each passenger’s share of expenses in thisco operative venture is $310 for the round trip. Vol. 64, No. 46 University of Chicago, Tuesday, April 24, 1956NSA election swept by ISLby Ronald GrossmanThe Independent Students league won a sweeping victory in the National Student asso¬ciation elections held last Thursday and Friday.ISL captured 19 of the 20 elected offices, losing only one national delegate positionto SRP.Bruce Larkin, Jan Metros, Lynn Chadwell, and Rosemary Galli were elected from ISLas national delegates. Sole SRP victor was top vote-getter Jan Porter.The two bills which wereon referendum were defeated placed, SRP made arrangements respecting politician would com-by approximately identical for a fifth ballot box to be cir- mit himself so early.”votes, about 850 to 450. One bill culated in Eckhart, FTS, and Law As election results becameproposed the institution of a stu- buildings. known, other comments fromdent activities fee; the other con- Although some ISL members leaders of both parties were:cerned the placement of posters objected that ballot box place- phil Hoffman, (SRP-col.): “Ifor social events. ment was still not entirely satis- am very disappointed in the re-The poster bill, if passed, would factory, and indicated that the suits, but very encouraged by thehave given Social Activities coun- placement might affect the ISL enormous vote. I believe this vin-cil the power to deny campus vote, results of the election prov- dicates the new election law andposters to the second of two ed otherwise. Approximately 1,800 refutes charges of unfair ballotgroups applying to have an all- UC students—over 30 per cent— box placing. (The new electioncampus social event under very voted in the NSA elections. law virtually eliminated cam-restricted conditions. ISL members expressed their paigning on election day by speci-The student activities fee would enthusiasm over the election re- fying that politicking is limited tohave assessed each student $1 per suits, stating that they felt the 125 feet from the ballot boxes.)quarter to be polled in a student returns indicated the reaction of j0el Rosenthal, (SRP-hum):activities fund, which would have the campus to a year of SRP Gov- may not be winning, but thebeen administered by a special ernment control. high vote shows that seeking outstudent - faculty - administration Early comments were: Bruce ballot boxes is better thancommittee. Larkin (ISL-Soc): “It is possible thrusting them in the voters’Following ISL charges that bal- that Jan Porter and nineteen faces.”lot boxes were improperly ISL’ers will be elected. No self- Counting of ballots on Fridaynight went very smoothly, accord¬ing to Bob Stein, chairman of theelection and rules committee.Only marring episodes were “ob-structionistic tactics by support¬ers of write-in candidate DavidRenguette” and the loss of a yel¬low purse by Mary Ann Chaca-restos. Sorting the ballots from thereferenda preparatory to thecounting were E and R Com¬mittee members Sue Daskais photo by Bystrys(center) and Rosemary Galli(R) and E and R deputies Ar¬thur Schwarz (L) and BelindaForeee (center).Moscow said to approveUC-Soviet exchange planUnofficial reports say that Russia has accepted UC’sSoviet student exchange program. According to Mary AnnChacharestos, chairman of the NSA committee of SG, theChicago Tribune reported that they had heard from otherphoto by BystrynCounting up the votes last Friday night were (I. to r.) Ellen Aber¬nathy, Peter I-angrock, Edward Becker, Diane Pollock and threesupporters of write-in candidate Dale Renguette watch.I-F pledge councilproject succeeds“Where’d my shovel go?” called a Z.B.T. “Its over here.I'm using it,” returned a Phi Gam. ‘‘Well hurry with it, be¬cause I have to help the Phi Sigs and Kappa Alpha Psi’sWith this log we’ve found in the ground.”Shouts like these contin-Ued from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30i(noon), as the Interfraternitypledge project became a genuinesuccess.Sponsored by the Interfrater-nity pledge council, under thechairmanship of Ken Brown, two th~JV pledge"council"ITthelarge lots were cleared of glassand debris by over fifty membersof the pledge classes of fraterni¬ties and women’s clubs at UC. Maroon electsBurbach editorJoy S. Burbach was elected editor-in-chief in the specialMaroon election held Sunday. Mrs. Burbach will serve untilthe end 6T this school year.She had resigned from her post as co-editor last Tuesdayin order that a single editor be elected. Norman Lewak wasappointed managing editor following the resignation of DianePollock from that post.Mrs. Burbach was elected on the seventh ballot after PalmerPinney requested that his support be given to Mrs. Burbach.A two-thirds vote is necessary for election by the Maroon con¬stitution. Gary Mokotoff and Robert Quinn both declined thenomination as compromise candidates.Janice Hubka to lead nextyear’s O-board activitiesAfter completing their work for Directing the introduction of the University of Chicago to incoming students next yearwill be Janice Hubka, new president of O-board. She’ll lead 22 students who are alsomembers of the board, fifteen of them new this year, in Orientation board activities nextfall. sources that the Soviet accep¬tance was given on a student-exchange program from NorthAmerican service of Radio Mos¬cow, Saturday.The Maroon had received a tele¬gram from A. Petrov, editor ofYouth Programs at Radio Mos¬cow, announcing the broadcast.WUCB wras unsuccessful in theirattempt to locate the programSaturday, but another attemptwill be made when the programis rebroadcast tonight.According to the telegram, theprogram can be heard from 7:30to 9:30 p.m. on 25 and 31 meterbands.The Tribune’s report was basedon a report of the New YorkTimes news service which, re¬portedly heard it from Reuters,who heard it from the BritishBroadcasting Company’s monitorservice.ed the lots, the girls of Mortar¬board and Esoteric assisted in¬side the community house: filinglibrary cards and helping to takecare of the children.wumen s> uuus fti yjy-,. oArvi>p nrniprtWorking with the all-Greek se™ce pr?J.Hyde Park neighborhood club,the pledge of ZBT fraternity en-gaged in another communitygroup was John Ramey, directorof the Hyde Park Neighborhoodclub.The club, a privately supported The project consisted of remov¬ing obstacles, such as steel polesand concrete blocks from theyard adjoining the University ofcommunity house that depends Chicago Settlement house. Theupon individual donations, is de- ^led area will now be coveredsigned for children ages eleveu with crushed stones and used asto sixteen. Located at 5480 Ken¬wood, the club adjoins one of thelots that were cleared. The othersite was two blocks away, on Dor¬chester avenue.L While the fraternity men clean- a playground for children of thesurrounding community.The work was supervised byBob Frederick, staff member atthe settlement house, who pro¬vided refreshments. O-board members went task, the one with which most tours throughout the year. Be-through an intensive orienta- students have come in contact, is cause its budget has been in-tion course themselves during made up of a course which intro- creased for this year, O-boardthe winter quarter. Faculty and duces new students to the Univer- wju have six additional members,administration officials directed sity during O-Week. Miss Hubka a specified number of membersthe course which provided mem- stressed that the series of eight 0f the board are required to livebers with special information lectures given by members of the jn University dormitories duringabout the -University’s education- faculty last fall will be expanded, the year which they serve. Appli-al philosophy, the advisory sys* giving students a chance to learn cations were made during thetern, housing, student activities, n}°|:e. about the college and the Autumn quarter, and according tothe discussion method and other divisions during their first year, the board’s new president, a mem-topics having'*to do with the orien- As in the past, O-board mem- her of O-Board is expected totation program. bers will also assist the Develop- make the board his major extra-The major part of O-board’s ment office in leading campus curricular activity.Page 2 April 24, 1956UC nine split two games Varsity runners win;4 Track clubbers scoreThe Chicago nine lost to Navy Pier Thursday by a score of 4 to 3, but came back Satur¬day to defeat Illinois Tech 9 to 4.Wayne Capinegro looked very impressive on the mound against Navy Pier, by strikingout 3 and allowing only 7 scattered hits. However he lacked adequate defensive supportfrom his teammates, as Maroon errors contributed greatly to the Pier’s offense. At theend of nine innings the score was tied 3 to 3. In their half of the tenth, the Pier scoredthe winning run when John Frankenfeld’s throw to first base got away from A1 Binfordscoring a man from second. The Maroon defense was led by Gene Crain who drove intwo of Chicago’s runs andKent Karohl who drove in the their half of the first when their a man on base. Chicago was neverOther. first baseman hit a long home seriously threatened until theMaroons win run with a man on base. Chicago’s inning, then IIT began a, » . , rally that scored two runs beforeTn the »ame against Illinois next attack came in the fifth .. ~ ,in me todinc lumum the f]re was put out GustafsonTech, the Maroons displayed all when the Maroons scored five turned in a very fine performancethe excellent ball playing of which more runs on base hits by Dave on the mound for Chicago, yield-they are capable. Chicago’s of- Currie, Dale Gustafson, John ing only 6 hits and striking out 8.fense began in the first inning Frankenfeld, Grey, Kent Karohl, As a team the Maroons lookedwhen George Gray doubled. Gene and Binlord. very well balanced both often-. . , ^ ^ . sively and defensively and shouldCram singled, and A1 Binford Two more runs were added to ... , .finish the season with one of thetripled, driving in two Chicago Chicago’s score in the seventh most impressive records in recentruns. However, IIT tied it up in when Currie hit a home run with years.Maroon netmen win close matchThe UC tennis team came from behind to win their match with Beloit college, 5-4. TheWisconsin visitors tied the Maroon in the singles, so it was the double matches that provedto give Chicago its winning margin.Ray Kunze lost a tough three setter to Beloit’s No. 1 man, 2-6, 6-2, 4-6. A1 Cooper andA1 Knight won their matchesin straight sets, but Walt Ne¬ville and Charlie Honvitz lost,Horwitz losing a tough one, 12-10,2-6, 5-7. Sherman Wheeler wTonhis match.Kunze and Knight pulled outthat all-important No. 1 doublematches in three sets from Be¬loit’s top team, while the Cooper-Horwitz team also won, and theNeville-Wheeler squad lost. *Today the Maroon netmen meetElmhurst on the varsity courtsat 1:30. by Karca7.es and HalaszMitch Watkins starred again for the Maroon thinclads, lastSaturday, as they ran over Albion college by a score cf761/^-541/2. Watkins contributed three first places, winningthe 200 high hurdles, 220 low hurdles and the broad jump.His distance in the broad jump was an excellent 24 feet.Martin WinsHosea Martin stretched histhree this week, by again win¬ning the 100-yard dash andthe 220.Other firsts for the Maroonswere Dan Trifone who took thehigh jump with a 6' 2* jump, ArtOmohundro in the mile, Paul Bap¬tist in the 2 - m i 1 e and TinkieHeyns in the 880.Attendance at this meet wasslightly better than at other re¬cent meets as about thirty rootersfrom Albion showed up; a hand¬ful from UC. More people cametowards the end of the meet,when the baseball team came outto limber up for their gameagainst IIT which followed.Next meet for the trackmenwill be against the MilwaukeeState Teachers up in Wisconsintomorrow.Coleman winsWhile the varsity runners were string of double victories tocompeting against Albion collegeSaturday, four members of theUC Track club placed in the Ohiorelays at Columbus, Ohio. An¬other track club member, Phil ’Coleman, won the 3,000 metersteeplechase race down in IheTexas relays held in Austin. Cole¬man is a hot Olympic prospect inthis event and the mile run.Record tiedJim Caffey ran second in the100-yard dash at the Ohio relays,but the big story was ThaneBaker’s 9.3 second time in win¬ning this event. Baker, a formerKansas State runner, equalled theworld record, but it will not re¬ceive official recognition since hehad an eight-mile-an-hour windat his back.Bob Kelly finished second inthe mile run, and John Barnesran third in the 600-yard run.A Maroon netman preparesto powder his serve in.photo by BernhardtIt’s a pleasure to get to know Old Spice After ShaveLotion. Each time you shave you can look forward to some¬thing special: the Old Spice scent—brisk, crisp, fresh asall outdoors ... the tang of that vigorous astringent — ban¬ishes shave-soap film, heals tiny razor nicks. Splash onOld Spice—and start the day refreshed!Add Spice to Your Life... Old Spice For MenSHULTON New York • TorontoComing events on quadranglesThis calendar does not containevents presented by the Festival ofthe Arts. A special Festival calendarappears on page 5.Tuesday, April 24Intervarsity Christian fellowship lunch¬eon, “A new lost generation?” 12:30p.m., Ida Noyes.Varsity tennis matches, UC vs. Elm¬hurst college, 1:30 p.m., Varsity courts.Varsity baseball game, UC vs. U. of 1111-nois-Chicago, 3:30 p.m., Stagg field.Geography colloquium, “The arealfunctional organization of govern¬ment.” 3:30 p.m., Rosenwald 41.University theatre workshop, 3:30 p.m.,Reynolds club 306.Undergraduate assembly, “The reserveforces act of 1955,” by Capt. RobertKeats, USAR, 7.30 p.m., Social Sci¬ences 122.Blackfriars meeting, 7:30 p.m., IdaNoyes.Mountaineers meeting, illustrated talks,7:30 p.m., Rosenwald 26.Madrigal singers rehearsal, 8 p.m., IdaNoyes.Canterbury club, “Martin Luther andChristian liberty,” by Rev. MartinGraebner, 8 p.m., 5540 Woodlawn.FTS wives, “Paul,” by assoc, prof. Rob¬ert M. Grant, 8 p.m., 5757 Woodlawn.Organ recital by assoc, prof. Paul S’.Pettinga, U. of Illinois, 8.30 p.m..Rockefeller chapel.WUCB broadcast, opera arias, 8:30 p.m.,640 kc.Wednesday, April 25Pre-med club, tour of Meat institutefoundation, 2:30 p.m., 939 E. 57th.Walgreen lecture, “The American Presi¬ dency: the limits of the Presidency,”by prof. Clinton Rossiter, CornellUniv., 4:30 p.m.. Social Science 122.Zoology club, "Necleolar developmentin mammalian neurones,” asst. prof.Arthur LaVelle, U. of Ill., 3:30 p.m.,Zoology 14.Student Zionists discussion, “History ofmodern Israel in relation to thetimes,” 5 p.m., Ida Noyes.Lecture, “Martin Buber: the way ofdialogue,” by Seymour Cain, lecturer,Unlv. College, 8 p.m., 5715 Woodlawn.Color slide show, “England—countrylanes and city streets," 8 p.m.. Inter¬national house home room.WUCB broadcasts, “Jazz for the con-. noisseur," 8:05 p.m., and madrigals bythe Apollonian society, 9 p.m., 640 kc.Thursday, April 26WUCB broadcast, folk songs with BunnyDuskin singing, Rick Neff guitar, 7.05p.m., 640 kc.Channing club discussion, “Unitarianinterpretation of Jesus,” with Rev.Leslie T. Pennington, 8-p.m., 5638Woodlawn.Dames club meeting, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes.Moody lecture, “Place in fiction,” byEudora Welty, author, 8:30 p.m., Man-del hall.TV broadcast, “Modern painting: howreal is real?” asst. prof. Joshua Tay¬lor, 9:30 p.m., WTTW, channel 11.Friday, April 27Seminar, "The low-income family andits problems,” Julia L. Dubin, Chi¬cago welfare department, 3:30 p.m.,Social Science 105.Walgreen lecture, “The- American Presi¬ dency: the Presidency In history,”prof. Rossiter, 4:30 p.m.. Social Sci¬ence 122. ,WUCB broadcast. Quartets No. 3 and 4,by^ Bart ok, 7:05 pm., 640 kc. •Ilillel sabbath service, 7:45 p.m., andfireside with prof. Bernard M. Loomer,speaking on "The consequences of re¬ligious belief,” at 8:30, 5715 Woodlawn.Methodist students, “Wesley's church-manshtp,” prof. Franz Hildebrandt,Drew Univ., 8 p.m., 5757 Woodlawn.HALSTED 00008CHILDREN FREE• Phone WA. 8-7979Books Bought• Any Subject• Any Language• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Pork 3-03211204 E. 55th St. Quick to ReachEasy to Get toEssaness WonderfulFamily TheatreEvery NightIs 3WonderfulVacation•Lote Show FridoyMidnite Show Saturday VANAn exclusive, hygi-enically clean mov¬ing service—at NOEXTRA COST. Forlocal or long-dis¬tance moving, callPETERSONMOVING & STORAGE CO.55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterfield 8-6711April 24, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Announce Chileco-op programCooperation between UC and the Catholic university ofChile in a broad program of research and training in eco¬nomics, sponsored by the US government under “point four’'assistance, has been announced by Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton.The contract, with the international cooperation admin¬istration of the department ofstate, is for three years. Itprovides for research groupsboth in Chile and at UC onChilean economic problems, andspecialized training at UC forChilean economists who will then its chancellor is the Archbishopcarry on the study of their coun- 0f Concepcion, Monseigneur Al-Rottenberg, assistant professor ofeconomics at UC.The Catholic university of Chileis a private institution, andthough nominally denominationalis in fact a secular university.try’s development. The ICA hascommitted $375,000 to the proj¬ect.On special problemsAmong the special questionson which the research first willbo centered are: the chronic infla¬tion problem in Chile, the im¬provement of Chilean agriculture,and the development of Chileaneconomic resources, particularlyin relation to domestic and for¬eign investment.The UC department of eco¬nomics will administer the con¬tract. The department will assistthe Catholic university of Chile,located in Santiago, to establishthere an Ecpnomics Research cen¬ter . The center will be organizedunder the supervision of Simon gredo Silva Santiago.Correct twostoriesThe meeting for male under¬graduates on "How the armedforces reserve act affects youngmen” will be held tonight at 7:30in Social Science 122, not in Man-del hall as announced in Friday’sMaroon.The headline of the last SGstory belied the sense of the ar¬ticle, and should have read “Courtnixes Loomos for NSA; SG addsactivities fee bill to ballot.” NSA ResultsNATIONAL DELEGATEELECTED DEFEATEDJan Porter (SRP) 752 Athan Theoharis (ISL) . .629Bruce Larkin (ISL) 726 Diane Pollock (SRP) ..572Janice Metros (ISL) .... 720 Dorothy Hess (SRP) . .570Lynn Chadwell (ISL) .... 634 Philip Hoffman (SRP) . .508Rosemary Galli (ISL) 631 Mary Ann Chacarestos (SRP) . .Dale RenguetteB. Z. Goldstritch . .479.. 69.. 58NATIONAL ALTERNATEELECTEDJeanine Johnson (ISL) .Eliza Houston (ISL) ...Lubert Stryer (ISL) ...Emil Johnson (ISL) ...John Lyon (ISL) .744.647.655.644.614 DEFEATEDJoyce Everett (SRP) 602Janice Hubka (SF^P) 551James Flynn (SRP) 539Donald Villarejo (SRP) 539Harry Lopas (SRP) 480REGIONAL ALTERNATEELECTEDDavid Freifelder (ISL) .Donald Miller (ISL)Joan Kaplan' (ISL) . . . . ,William Harmon (ISL) .Peter Vandervoort (ISL)Richard Johnson (ISL) . ,Butch Kline (ISL) ....Debbie Mines (ISL) ...Bobbi Whaley (ISL) ...Barret Denton (ISL) .. .686.683.646,636.629.626.624,624.620.615 DEFEATEDDavid Schlessinger (SRP) 588Sarah Silverman (SRP) 546Holly O'Connor (SRP) 525Dorothy Kent (SRP) 502Donald Anderson (SRP) 492Tony Lloyd (SRP) 485Larry Shaderowfsky (SRP) 480Ted Dienstfrey (SRP) 457Timothy Essien (SRP) 420\Private liberal arts collegesresist conformity singlehanded9“The ideal of democracy, that all men are created equal, is the country’s greateststrength, but it also can constitute its greatest weakness,” Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimp¬ton said last Wednesday speaking before the Honors convocation of Knox college at Gales¬burg, Illinois.“The idea of equality is something that never has been and never will be, but whichnonetheless must be striven for as an ideal goal and one to approximate in reality,” Kimp¬ton told the convocation au¬dience.Kimpton went to to say thatit is consistent with our idealthat when inequalities occur thatplace men below the norm, weshould try to correct them. "Westrive to rehabilitate the injured;we provide special instruction forthe retarded; we develop correc¬tions for the handicapped. The im¬poverished may receive publicaid; the ill may receive treatmentat no expense.”"We take enormous care in ourgovernment, in our laws, and inour system of education, to ele¬vate those on the negative slopeof equality to a level commensur¬ate with other men,” Kimptonsaid."But if unequal opportunity isoffered upon the negative cure ofthe human norm, then unequal op¬portunity ought also to be offeredon the positive. And it is my seri¬ous contention that unless thishappens, our democracy, with allof its magnificent truth and ideal¬ism, will surely fail.”Pointing out that since the be¬ginning, the country has beenprodigal in its use of resources,including people, Kimpton saidthe time has come when the USmust exploit to the full its naturaland human resources if it is to equals and unequals alike.”Kimpton then said that only theprivately endowed liberal arts col¬lege, either within or apart fromthe contest of the private univer¬sity, has resisted the levelingprocess, he said."The liberal arts college has an¬nounced from the beginning itwill select only the superior stu¬dent and the one who really de¬sires an education,” Kimpton de¬clared.Continuing in his reference toliberal arts colleges, Kimptonstated, "It has announced its pur¬pose is to educate, and not to givesocial prestige, or an opportunityto demonstrate professional ath¬letic prowess, or to learn themechanics of a trade. Student diesByron Rainey, UC graduate student in the department of psychology,died early Sunday morning in his apartment at 5324 Harper.Rainey was dead when he was discovered by his room mate, RogerSeverson.A student active in campus religious groups, Rainey was president ofPorter foundation in 1953 and of his fraternity, Alpha Delta Phi, last year.He was a member of Owl and Serpent, Iron Mask, Student Government,Concert band, and was a Rockefeller chapel usher.At a coroner's inquest Monday morning, the cause of death was offi¬cially listed as undetermined. The jury found itself unable to determineif death was suicidal or accidental.Rainey had originally been in the division of physical sciences, and hadonly recently switched to psychology.Lag B'Omer to becelebrated in dunesLag B’Omer, the Jewish “Scholar’s festival,” will be cele¬brated by Hillel foundation with a picnic on Sunday at theIndiana dunes.The picnic is open to the entire campus free of charge.A car pool is now beingcar pool is now oeing ar¬ranged for those interested inattending, according to Bea Suss-kind of Hillel.Those planning to attend areasked to make reservations at Hillel before Thursday. Guestsare requested to bring their ownlunches, and Hillel will provide abeverage and dessert. Gars willleave for the dunes at 10:30 a.m.on Sunday.Fete poet-critic-philosopher-statesman;read, discuss Iqbal's life and worksStudent rate 5c per wordFor RentDouble rooms, for two boys or couple.Call after 5:30. HY 3-2608.Apartment to share with female nowand/or summer. PL 2-00X1.Four-room neatly furnished apartment.Near campus and IC. Phone Greenfieldat BU 8-9424.WantedBoy or man to wash walls and windowsfor $1.35 an hour. Call PL 2-4135 after6 p.m.Man to share expenses two or three weekJune fish, camp, photo trip to moun¬tain wilderness. MU 4-3352. compete in the race for survival."The future depends on our suc¬cess in the selection, and trainingof leaders, in government, busi¬ness, science, and the professions.The leader is the superior personand the success of our democracydepends upon his early selectionand development It is increasing¬ly realized these days that we arenofc selecting and encouragingthose who are superior.”In contrast, Kimpton pointed toSoviet Russia, where through acombination of coercion and in¬centives the youth are trained tothe limit of their potentiality andthen placed in positions of lead¬ership.Spqaking of present-day atti¬tudes towards “intellectuals,”Kimpton stated, "We view the in¬tellectual with suspicion andalarm, and the special word ‘egg¬head’ has been coined for the gift¬ed person who uses a better vo¬cabulary’ or has more sparklingideas than the average person.”“It is the curse of our democ¬racy and it ultimately will proveits undoing that there.hasdevel- Pakistan’s Mohammed Iqbal, a poet who was not only the greatest influence on the lit-ri^ the cult of the average it erary and s0cial thouSht of his intellectual generation but who also used his art towardwas’the solemn warning of Plato the end of P°htlcal independence for his nation, was honored Saturday night at Interna-over twomousandTyears ago that tional house on the 8th anniversary of his death.the danger of democracy was that Recitations of his poetry, a talk on his life and philosophy and films on Pakistan’s re-it would dispense equality to cent progress and on their folk songs and dances made up the commemoration program,sponsored by the Pakistan students association.Iqbal, who was the first to suggest a separate state forthe Moslems of India, could still write in his poetry that “Theinfidel as well as the faithful are all God’s creation.” Hejudged religion as well as artfrom the standpoint of the humanpersonality. "Goodness is not amatter of compulsion; it is theself’s free surrender to the moralideal.”Iqbal’s versatility was empha¬sized by a representative of thePakistan embassy in Washington,Mr. Ahmad. The poet-philosopherwas also an active lawyer, leadingpolitician, art critic, educational¬ist, and teacher (first at Cam¬bridge and then at the Universityof the Punjab in Lahore). He ex¬celled in all of these fields.Iqbal attempted in all ways tobring hope to his dejected people,to awaken them from their iner¬tia. "A life of unceasing strife,”he wrote, "is better than perpet¬ual peace.”Chicago MaroonCLASSIFIEDSOthers 10c per word Phone: Ml 3-0800 Ext. 3265Personal ServicesMiss Julie: Uncle Freud says all Is for¬given. Please come home, servants missyou.Opening Wednesday night. The GhostSonata. Tickets at the Reynolds Club orat the door. 8:30 p.m.You know I hate men. Karl, but .. .Is it true what they say about Sweden?Why not find out Friday evening orSaturday afternoon. Miss Julie. Soc Scl122. Mathematics. Instruction and applica¬tions for individual or group. Loop orSouth Side. Special arrangements forgroup formed by yourself. Soglin &Assoc., 28 E. Jackson, WE 9-2127.For SaleLost1 man’s black umbrella with darkcurved and carved handle. Reward.Andrew Midelka, B-J 446, PL 2-9628. 23-foot centerboard sloop with cabinand star-class rigging, trailer, sails, andcompass. Asking $500. Robert Rodgers,ext. 3275 days. BU 8-3458 evenings.Rummage sale! Bargains galore. Cloth¬ing and household items of all kinds.Come one come all while It lasts. 1379East 55 Street. Proceeds go to Rest Ha¬ven nonsectarian convalescent home(or the sick and aged. Golfers loseThe golf team took a beat¬ing in a triangular match,with Valparaiso and DePauwcollege, held at LaPorte, In¬diana. Both teams crushed theUC squad by identical scores of17(4T4. Valparaiso defeated De-pauw, 9y«-8^.Bob Kettleson of DePauw waslow man in the match with a 77score. Bob Phillipson, team cap*tain, was the Maroons’ onlyscorer, picking up both half¬points.Page 4 TKE CHICAGO MAROON April 24, 1956EditorialNo fees; now what?Student voters last week decisively defeated areferendum bill which proposed the institution ofa student activities fee on campus. The reason, anobvious one, seems valid. On Friday, the secondday of voting, the Maroon carried an announce¬ment of two new fees which have been institutedby the administration: student health and roomand board. Unwilling to dig even deeper into theirpockets, it is understandable that the studentsvoted against the bill.Another understandable student view is this:“We pay enough tuition to cover student activities.It should be up to the administration to allow forthem.” Maybe we do pay enough tuition (althoughUC tuition is lower than that of most equivalentschools), but the fact remains that only abouttwenty thousand dollars is spent each year by theadministration for student activities, about tenthousand of the amount going only to the Capand Gown and Maroon. This amount is insufficientto permit student activities appropriate to theneeds of this campus.Solution by means of a student activities fee hasfailed. The administration is unwilling to institutea fee on its own without student sentiment to backit. Thus it looks as if twenty thousand a year willcontinue as the budget for all student organiza¬tions and that the organizations and student serv¬ices will continue to operate at their present lowlevel.As long as the organizations remain at theirpresent level, it seems quite obvious that the stu¬dent body will remain unwilling to finance them.The circle is complete and vicious.Only a very few on campus remember the daysof a daily Maroon, large and frequent other pub¬lications, and an active and effective political lifeon campus.The contrast between then and now is a startlingone. The unsatisfactory state in which most stu¬dent organizations now find themselves is indica¬tive of the fact that there is not enough financialsupport available to them. Perhaps the campushas changed; maybe Wash Prom used to pay foritself while it now requires an administration sub¬sidy and still runs up a huge deficit; perhaps stu-Editorial dents are no longer willing to pay five cents a dayfor the Maroon or enough to support Cap andGown or the Review. But if there has been achange, we are stuck with it until there is anotherone. The best we can do is to remedy the presentsituation, not yearn for the one that is past.It is the duty of the administration to assess theneeds of the campus, including the various Univer¬sity services and facilities, the divisions, the pro¬fessional schools, the college, and the student activ¬ities. If the student body is such that it is willingto support such organizations as a student gov¬ernment and student publications to a greater ex¬tent than it is doing now, that is part of a load offthe administration’s back. If the student body willnot or cannot meet the administration half way,the obligation of the administration to the students—and the University—nevertheless remains.If University funds are not adequate to coverneeds, it does not stand to reason that the needsbe eliminated by eliminating the needy, as manystudent organizations will be eliminated of neces¬sity if they do not receive more support soon. Itdoes stand to reason that the University assess theimportance or potential importance of the organ¬izations to the campus and provide for them ifthey are unable to help themselves. Whether thejob requires merely a reorganization of the budgetor a budget increase is for the administration tofind out. If an increase is in order, the fact thatit takes the form of extra fees or of a general tui¬tion raise is of minor importance.In a complex organization like this Universitya substantial change at any point will have reper¬cussions. At the present time it seems necessarythat the UC administration be the point of initia¬tion, and it is improbable that such moves as itmight make toward “pushing the students to helpthe organizations to help themselves to help thecampus”—would be poorly received in the longrun.The administration properly seeks student sup¬port for its moves on their behalf, but in the endit must accept responsibility for the needs of theUniversity by itself.To ask—and not to knowThe Walgreen lectures would not ordinarily be a subject for an editorial. But this spring’sseries of talks by Miss Hannah Arendt had an additional meaning worth noting for stu¬dents who may not be too interested in the “Vita Activa”, her topic, or how the Greeksand Romans felt about itIn her closing lecture Friday, Miss Arendt, showing the relation of the active life to thecontemplative life, eventually got around to saying that we really can know nothing — orat least, we know only what ~ :— :—r~r—r ~ .. „ .wp makp raircplvpc others m the audience. As both wilth some school of thought. But. . Plato and Aristotle said, she con- the opinion everybody has, MissIn trying to understand life eluded, “the beginning of knowl- Arendt reminds us, is not anor history, the human mind edge is wonder.” And the ques- opinion everybody has, Missmakes patterns—order out of dis- tions which arise out of it never Arendt reminds us, is not an opin-order. But now we have discov- do justice to that original experi- ion.ered that the facts will bear out ence of wonder. So we keep asking Perhaps we can never knowmore than one pattern, more than questions and looking for an- how “right” Plato or Aristotleone explanation of a set of oc- swers. was. But we still read and respectcurences. You can make your pat- When a student becomes com them. We may not know or con-tern come • true. It is not that fused by the multiplicity of opin- vince anyone else that our an-nothing makes sense, she said, ions and the disagreement of ex- swers are right. So why keep ask-but that everything makes sense, perts, he may give up as futile his ing questions? This is one an-The knowledge of this is truly individual quest and questioning swer: precisely because we don’tfrightening, Miss Arendt ac- and allow himself to go along know the answers,knowledged. Modern man’s de¬spair of trusting his senses hasresulted in despair of his reason,and finally despair of faith. MissArendt herself was able to admitthis legitimate cause of frightwithout becoming panicky.If we can be sure of nothing,why study anything? Is not thesearch for truth and meaning self-defeating, doomed from the start?Miss Arendt’s answer must havepleased Professor McKeon among Give letter policyThe MAROON publishes letters to the editor on subjectsof interest to the student body. Such letters are subject toediting if longer than 250 words, so that the greatestnumber of opinions may be printed. No unsigned letterswill be accepted, although the writer's name will be with¬held on request.Pinney states views on MaroonIn a special Maroon editor’s election Sunday my former co - editor, Joy S. Burbach, waselected editor on the seventh ballot by the required two-thirds majority of the staff thenpresent. I feel that the results of this election entitle me to a personal statement to mybackers in the election and to the campus at large. I intend this as an apologia: not anapology but a justification of my character and conduct while co-editor.Sunday’s election was caused by the sudden resignation of Mrs. Burbach one week ago.At that time a Maroon article the Maroon print shop, Is of course in- bach and myself. I felt, naturally, that. , . ,. consequential. I was better qualified to be sole editorConcerning ner resignation What I cannot forgive her is the than Mrs. Burbach. I did not feel thatnnnfpH pvfpncivplv from thp statement that I do not believe that my fifteen-hour a week job as associatequuieu CAieiiMveiy iiuiu Uie elther editors nor managing editors editor of the University of ChicagoStatement she advanced in resign- should devote much time to the Magazine, kept me, in any way, from aT r,f Maroon. I have devoted as much time full performance of my duties on thejug. x Cttn lui give iiidiiy ui me Maroon as I believe necessary to Maroon. On Sunday, the majority of thethings in that Statement. The fully discharge my responsibilities as staff disagreed.thought that neither she nor myself co-editor. Perhaps no one is as aware I thank those members of the staffhad been editor during the year Is obvi- of the faults and virtues of the Maroon who supported me. To the paper as aous It is true that she and I had clash- as 1 am- Within the limits co-editorship whole, I wish sincere good luck. To theed over important matters several times Put on nay powers, I have tried to make campus I offer only the forlorn wishsince our term as co-editors began in the PaP«r <• good one. that they might have seen the MaroonSeptember. And the whimsical addition It has become apparent this year that would have been had I been soleof "Jr." to my name in that article, co-editorship is not a sound arrange- et,itor.which Mrs. Burbach did not delete at meat, at least not between Mrs. Bur- Palmer W. Pinney Issued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and In term it tend,during the summer quarter, on a non-profit basis by the publisher, the rhin-,.1Maroon, at 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: Editorial offird®Midway 3-0800, ext. 1003 and 3266; Business and advertising office, Midway 1 ftxnnext. 3265. Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Business office hours: 2 Vm VA5 p.m., Monday through Saturday. M *•Editor-in-chief - Joy S. BurbachManaging Editor Norman LewakBusiness manager Gary MokotoffOn Campus with.Msifihujman(Author of “Barefoot Boy With Chetk,** etc.)IT’S LATER THAN YOU THINK!An year long you’ve been promising yourself to gothere. Now summer vacation is just around the corner andyou still haven’t set foot in the place. Shame on you!But it’s not too late. Right now, this very minute, beforeyou weaken, lift up your head and forward march to theplace you have been avoiding ever since school began. I refer,of course, to the library.firmed or doylkino] r art*Now here you are at the library. That wasn’t so bad, wasit? Of course not! Go inside. What do you see? A sign thatsays “No SMOKING.” Go outside. Light & Philip Morris.Smoke. Go back inside.Because now you are ready. Now your tremblingresolution is rigid. Now your pulsing psyche is serene. Youhave been gentled by gentle Philip Morris. You have beentranquilized by a smoke that dotes and pampers and caresses,that lifts the fallen, repairs the shattered, straightens thebent, unravels the knotted, rights the askew, and fastens theunbuttoned.In the center of the library you see the main circulationdesk. Look in the card catalogue for the number of the bookyou want, write the number on a slip, and hand it to theefficient and obliging young lady at the desk. The efficientand obliging young lady then gives the slip to an efficientand obliging page boy who trots briskly back into the stacks,curls up on a limp leather encyclopedia, and sleeps for anhour or two. Then, puffy but refreshed, he returns your slipto the efficient and obliging young lady at the desk, who tellsyou one of three things; (a) “Your book is out.” (b) “Yourbook is at the bindery.” (c) “Your book is on reserve.”.Having learned that the circulation desk hasn’t theleast intention of ever parting with a book, let us now gointo the periodical room. Here we spend hours sifting throughan imposing array of magazines—magazines from all the farcorners of the earth, magazines of every nature and descrip¬tion— byit though we search diligently and well, we cannotfind Mad or Confidential.Next let us venture into the reference room. Here in thishushed, vaulted chamber, we find the true scholars of theuniversity — earnest, dedicated young men and women whocare for only one thing in the world: the pursuit of knowledge.Let us eavesdrop for a moment on this erudite coupleporing over heavy tomes at the corner table. Hush! Shespeaks:She: Whatcha readin’, hey?He: “The Origin of Species.” You ever read it?She: No, but I seen the movie.He: Oh.She: You like readin’?' He: Naah.She: What do you like?He: Hockey, licorice, girls, stuff like that.She: Me too, hey.He: You pinned or anything?She: Well, sort of. I’m wearin’ a fellow’s motorcycleemblem.... But it’s only platonic.He: Wanna go out for a smoke?She: Philip Morris?He : Of corris!And as our learned friends take their leave, let us too wendour way homeward—a trifle weary, perhaps, but enlightenedand renewed and better citizens for having spent these happyhours in the library. Aloha, library, aloha! ©MaxShulma„.meThe makers of Philip Morris, who sponsor this column, could writevolumes about the gentleness of today's Philip Morris, but tee'llonly tell you this: Take a leaf from our book. Enjoy Philip Morris.April 24, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Open FOTA in IdaA peal of bells and a hearty Hanodeid (seeIda opening story), together with an exhibi¬tion of plastic arts of less boisterous nature,will open UC's second annual Festival of theArts tomorrow afternoon at Ida Noyes hall.A weekend kaleidoscope of activity, de¬signed to appeal to many interests, has beenplanned, with well over a thousand students and friends of the university expected toparticipate, according to the festival com¬mittee.Major events are to be scheduled everyevening. A series of concerts by campus mu¬sicians and a number of art exhibits featuringboth student and professional artists, are someof the activities being pfanned.>photo by QuinnPat Lers practices in the Ida Noyes patio for the opening dancesof tomorrow’s festival.Give Ball themeThe second annual Beaux Arts masquerade baX will arrive on cam¬pus Saturday a week from tomorrow.The “English common room” (Hutchinson commons) will be dec¬orated with heralds and banners — resembling a council of war whichwas held in Nottingham in 1276. The campus organization which sub¬mits the best designed banner will win a prize.Prizes will be given for the best costumes in all possible categories.There will be two bands playing for the assemblage, one in thecommons, and one in the Reynolds club lounges, which will playwhile the “commons" band rests.Tickets (the only modern thing about the ball) are only $4 andare “on sale almost everywhere,” according to Jan Metros, studentchairman of the Beaux Arts ball committee. Specifically, they are atthe student service center and the medieval looking ticket booth inMandel corridor. Folk groups performas carillon peals outA music-dance combination unique in Chicago will be presented tomorrow afternoonwhen the Festival dancers and the Hillel folk dance group present a program of dancing inthe patio of Ida Noyes hall to the music of Rockefeller chapel carillon.Suzanne Talmy, Sol Agari, Lynn Alexander, and Yair Yahalom will give Israeli folk dancesat 2:30, 3:30 and 4:30. The Festival dancers, Patricia Lers, Mary Rose Curtis, Jo Schlagand Jean Hanson, will dance to music by Brahms, Bizet and Chopin played by James R.Lawson, chapel carillonneur,at 5 p.m.While the experimentalcombination of cjuffilon and danc¬ing is a Chicagoland “first,” it isnot unknown elsewhere. Lastsummer Mrs. Lawson watched aballet on the terrace of the Cha¬teau Laurier in Ottawa, Canada,by the Ottawa classical balletcompany accompanied by the 53- tion of two dances. The first, em:ploying^Yemenite hand move¬ments, depicts buds in the spring.The second is symbolic of the sep¬aration of the chaff of the wheatfrom the grain during a harvest.“Hanodeid’ depicts a lover of na¬ture wending his way in the fieldsand woods, stepping on a thorn,bell Peace tower carillon. The lumping over a stone, fully en-scene will be recreated tomorrow thfe outdoors. It is a happyamid the sunlight and breezes of and carefree dance of young peo-the Ida Noyes patio with theRockefeller bells making musicwhich will be heard all over theUC area.The Hillel group will performfour dances: “Hanodeid,” “Ha-kad,” *Tm B’arazim” and “Nit-sanim.” “Nitsanim’ is a combina-PROGRAM As I sat in my watch-toweralone,In your thirst you drank fromit—What a pity that I too am not apitcher!”The Festival dancers, led byMrs. Lers, will dance to the fol-lowing carill on selections:Brahm’s “Waltz in A,” Bizet’s“Carillon” from his L’ArlesienneSuite, and Chapin’s Prelude VIIand Mazurka in A.The Rockefeller carillon, neverbefore used for this purpose, isthe second largest in the world,having 72 bells, ranging from 10!4pounds to the Great Bourdon,weighing 36,926 pounds and hawing a diameter of almost ten feet.The carillon was installed in 1931,thre years after the dedication ofthe chapel. Lawson will play thecarillon from the control room,about 18 stories up in the tower.The room, about 20 square feetcontain two control panels. Eachpanel has keys that are struckwith the carilloneur’s clenchedhand and pedals that are struckwith his feet., , . ...... In the event of rain, the Hillelfolk dance group will perform in¬side Ida Noyes to recorded or¬chestral m u si c. The Festivalgors of their new surroundings.The origin of “Im B’arazin” isa large collective settlement inthe Valley of Esdraelon in Israelwhere the swamp has been chang¬ed into a fertile garden.“Hakad” means “the pitcher.”The words of the song are: dancers, however, will postponetheir performance until a laterdate and more favorable weather.The performance has been plan¬ned in honor of members’ wivesof the board of trustees who will“I saw you with a pitcher close be lunching in Ida Noyes hall asto your lips guests of FOTA.2:30—Opening of the Festival, Ida Noyes hall. Reception,Student and exhibition prizes awarded. Festival dancersaccompanied by Rockefeller carillon. Wednesday, April 25*8:30 p.m.—Ruth Page, Mandel hall. The ballet-play “Su-zanna and the Barber.”•8:30 p.m.—“Ghost Sonata” by Strindberg, Reynolds clubtheater.12:00 noon—Mitchell tower spring ceremony, Hutchinsoncourt. Socletas Campanarlorum, Brass choir, and Festivalglee club.2:30 p.m.—Baseball game, Burton-Judson field. Student vs.Faculty.3:30 p.m.—Artists at work. Midway studios and Lexingtonstudios. Marll Ehrman, weaving; Roland Glnzel, prlnt-Thursday, April 26making; Edmund Gelsbert, painting; Freeman School¬craft, sculpture; Charles Smith, printmaking.7-30 p.m.—Bach Singers, Ida Noyes hall.8:30 p.m.—Eudora Welty, Mandel hall, Wm. Vaughn Moodylecturer on “Place In fiction.”•8:30 p.m.—“Ghost Sonata” by Strindberg, Reynolds clubtheater.Friday, April 27play, Social Science 122. Chicago priemiere of SwedishfUm, Documentary Film group.8:30 p.m.—Hootenanny, Ida Noyes hall. Folklore society.•8:30 p.m.—Andrew Foldi, bass, and Robert Lodlne, piano.Mandel hall, University Concert series.•8:30 p.m.—“Ghost Sonata” by Strindberg, Reynolds olubtheater.•2:30 p.m.—Jazz In Mandel hall. The Jazz club.3:30 p.m.—Florence James Adams poetry reading contest,Bond chapel.4:30 p.m.—Madrigal Singers, Hutchinson court.7:00 p.m.—Twilight band concert, Hutchinson court, Uni¬versity Concert band.•7:00 & 9:00 p.m.—“Miss Julie,” adapted from Strindberg’sSaturday, April 28Social Science 122. Swedish film. Documentary Film group.6:00 to 10:00 p.m.—Buffet and party for Alumni and Fac¬ulty, Quadrangle club. Apollonian societypresents recitalApollonian society will present a recital of choral worksthis Saturday at 7:30 p.m. in the Ida Noyes library. Theprogram will include Italian, English and French madrigals,sacred music by Byrd and Hassler, and choral settings byHindemith of French poems by Rilke. The Appollonian so¬ciety’s eight singers are directed by tenor Lawrence Lerner,a graduate student and assist-12 :00 noon to 4:00 p.m.—Concours d’Elegance, the Circle.Automotive design.100 p.m.—Varsity baseball, Stagg field. Maroons vs. Knoxcollege.1:30 p.m.—Varsity tennis. Varsity courts at 58th and Uni¬versity, Maroons vs. Elmhurst college.•3:00 p.m.—“Miss Julie” adapted from Strindberg’s play, •7:30 p.m.—Choral recital, Ida Noyes hall, Apollonian society.*8:30 p.m.—“Gh06t Sonata” by Strindberg, Reynolds clubth6Rt6F.*10:00 p.m.—Beaux Arts Ball, Hutchinson commons. Mas¬querade. ant in the physics department.The Apollonian society’smethod of presentation followsthat of the famous Randolph sing¬ers, in that there is only one sing¬er per part. This allows a histori¬ cally accurate interpretation ofthe madrigals, which are oftenlove songs from the sixteenth andseventeenth centuries, performedat the time as family group recre¬ation.Sunday, April 293:00 to 7:30 p.m.—An international exhibition. Internationalhouse.. .8:00 p.m.—Festival of Nations, International house. Songsand dances from around the world.8:30 p.m.—Musical society, Ida Noyes hall. Recital of workscomposed by members of the University.*8:30 p.m.—“Ghost Sonata” by Strindberg, Reynolds clubtheater.11:00 a.m.—University religious service, Rockefeller chapel.John F. Hayward, assistant professor of religion and art.2:30 p.m.—Carillon recital, Rockefeller chapel. James Law-son, music of Mozart.•3:00 p.m.—Mozart’s “Requiem’* and “Vesperae Solennes,**Rockefeller chapel. Chapel choir and members of Chi¬cago Symphony orchestra.Exhibitions during the Festival:Rockefeller chapel—“The Crucifixion,” by Rico Lebrun.Harper W-fll—Manuscripts ol Eudora Welty and other Southern writers.Quadrangles—Works by Chicago sculptors.Goodspeed hall—Renaissance society.Mandel corridor—Camera club.Ida Noyes hall—Student art.Lexington hall, Midway studios, Blaine hall—student art,Oriental Institute.•Events for which admission is charged. Turn page fast*. # •Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 24, 1956Ruth Page presents world premiereby Robert QuinnHow do you write a ballet? A full-fledged lesson rn ballet making will be given tomorrow evening at 8:30 as choreographer RuthPage presents the world premiere of her new ballet-play Suzanna and the Barber in Mandel hall.Preceding the curtain-raising on the ballet, Miss Page will give the history of the ballet's creation in a lecture punctuated by dancedemonstrations.Adapted from Beaumar¬chais’ play The Barber of Se¬ville, Suzanna and the Barbertells the story of a factotum bar¬ber and his sweetheart, Suzanna,who contrive a happy ending tothe love story of a pair of theirsocial superiors.Music for the ballet has beenarranged by I s s a c Van Grovefrom Rossini’s Barber score, andwill be played by Neal Kayan atthe piano.Uses Lyric castThe verses to be spoken by thedancers have been written by VanGrove and Ira Wallach.The plot of Page’s ballet differssomewhat from that of Rossini'slibrettist. Suzanna, Figaro’s dy¬namic conspirator, played tomor¬row night by Miss Page, is not inthe Rossini work, appearing laterin Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro.The cast of the ballet, featuringdancers of Chicago’s Lyric thea¬tre, has been dancing with a phan- Ruth Page and company rehearse Slander scene (right) and barber¬shop scene (left) from her experimental production of Suzanne and the Barber, a ballet-play set to Rossini's music. The show, with sets designedby famed French artist Clave, opens tomorrow at Mandel hall.Miss Page suggested that UC hour, and production expensescould do a lot with the money it seem to increase exponentially,had if it stopped spending it ail Costumes for Suzanna cost $300on atom bombs.^ ^“You need a good theater,” she * _ , _ ,added Miss Page noted that more-or-Mis.s Page also valued size and less experimental productions likevisibility of an auditorium as cri- this one as vital to good ballet,teria of a good dance theater. She With a play, she noted, one canstated that the slope of the main run five weeks before a live audi-floor and remoteness of the Civic ence a„d th„, ex yourself toOpera house boxes disqualified it , . . „r. , , „as a "ood theater. the cntlcs- With a ballet you can t,“I like to watch the dancers’ and flaw-sP°tting period isfeet,” stated the vivacious Miss protracted over a longer periodPage, to whom such things are a of time,big significant part of life. She ..... .described the Paris opera as a Su“nna Mth ,n ,perfect ballet theater and also ‘You wont recognize this bal-praised the old Chicago auditori- let in a few years,” said Missum (now used by culture-minded Page of Suzanna.tom hero at recent rehearsals. Chicago as a bowling alley.) t.j reauv should have done aKenneth Johnson, playing a woo- “i would love to do ballet-in-the- ia77 ” Miss Paco said feel-ing count in disguise, was in New r0Und,” she said. It would demand ^ballet. Miss Page said, feelYork with Ballet Theatre for most a unique type of choreography, mg that UC was a great Jazz cen'of the rehearsals and learned his however one which looked good ter. She started her balletic careerlead part in absentia. He arrived from back and side as well as by designing jazz ballets,in town yesterday and will take a front. An entrechat six looks ugly Suzanna and the Barber is themidnight plane back to Gotham from the wings, she said. ..... . ,, . ,when the Suzanna curtain falls. fifth ballet choreographed byScenery for Suzanna, an un- ™°,,Py * det**rr^nt Miss Page under an operatic in¬usual combination of the modern Miss Page frankly classed her spiration. She has previouslyand the baroque, was designed in production as expert- adopted Carmen, II Trovatore (re To sing MozartIn honor of Wolfgang Ama¬deus Mozart, the Rockefellerchapel choir will present his“Requiem” and “Vesperae So-lennes” Sunday at 3 p.m. in thechapel.This year marks the 200thanniversary of Mozart’s biilh.Paris by Antoni Clave, who ac¬cording to Miss Page is Europe’smost outstanding designer.Mandel hall “worst” like this,” she noted.“The major difficulty in creating a* ballet is money,” she conFour sets were designed for the fessedballet, including a happy Figaro xUfflculUes createdmental.” “The universities are the titling it Revenge), The Merryplaces to do experimental jobs Widow, and Salome (which wasmore of a psychological study ofthe girl Salome and her mother,Herodias, than a full-fledged bal-fore-curtain and a movable streetscene. The inadequacies of theMandel stage necessitated cuttingthe four sets down to one, how¬ever. Even with only one set, how¬ever, Miss Page reported that thedancers were severely hampered.Mandel stage is so small that thedancers appear to be dancing onan oversized postage stamp; Man-del has no facilities for effectiveuse of fore-curtains and movablescenery.“This is the worst theater in thecountry for ballet,” Miss Pagecommented. by uniondemands keep many ballet pro-More art, less atomsIn the matter of ballet, Miss let). Miss Page felt that seeing anopera plot and hearing opera mu-usic ornated by expert design, up¬sets dyed-in-the-wool opera lovers.Suzanna is her first attempt tointegrate spoken dialogue withthe musical and choreographicline of a ballet.Duo a hitAlicia Markova danced TheMerry Widow and Revenge withLyric theater here this season.The two -ballets then moved toNew Yoxk for a recent duo en¬gagement (similar to that of theNutcracker in Chicago). MissPage said that the ballets had amarvelous reception in New Yorkand are now preparing a nationaltour.Miss Page felt that Suzannaductions from getting their wings.At educational institutions, how¬ever, non-union employees mayPage criticized, “the University of be used liberally. Miss Page’s castChicago is way behind the times, costs $50 for a single rehearsal wou^ probably be her last workof operatic inspiration. In thepast, she has even dared to chore¬ograph to Wagner’s music, de-COMPASS5475 S. Lake Park Wednesday thru SundayHAPPINESSWON’T BUY MONEY— and ——The Living FortuneFOLK MUSICTonightElfly StoneTuesday, May lBruce BuckleyandBob BlackAll Shows Start at 9 P.M.LOW PRICES CONTINUE FOR WEEK DAYS 3:30 TO 6 P.M. DA.K.YOn YourRadio Dial signing a dance for the love mu¬sic from Tristan. She said that itwould be her last attempt at Wag¬ner, although it was quite wellreceived.“Even Claudia Cassidy lovedit,” she exclaimed.Miss Page is not without rea¬son for her use of suites arrangedfrom operatic scores.“It’s terribly difficult to getgood new scores,” she lamented.Wants to do wellAt present, though, she doeshave a new score by Jacques Ibertup her operatic sleeve.“I wouldn’t have to use operasif people like Stravinsky gave meall their music,” she said wist¬fully.Miss Page felt that Three-Pen¬ny Opera would make a fine bal¬let. Before Kurt Weill’s death shehad discussed with him usingsome of his music.Suzanna and the Barber is notmodern in the usual sense of theterm “modern,” according toMiss Page. She felt that it is less“arty,” more simple, and of great¬er general appeal than much mod¬ern ballet. Ballet has frequentlydemanded that it be approachedfrom an intellectual angle ratherthan an intuitive one, accordingto Miss Page. She prefers the lat¬ter.Although she refers jokingly toa modern ballet she once dancedexclusively while crawling on thefloor, she feels that Martha Gra¬ham and Valerie Bettis are none¬theless ballet “greats.”She has good words for Balan¬chine, Tudor, and Robbins, too. Qive art prizesOpening event of the 1956 Fesi-val of the Arts will be a prize-win¬ning student art exhibit in IdaNoyes hall tomorrow from 2:30to 5 p.m.Containing painting in oil andwater color, drawings, sculpture,and prints done by students inall parts of the University, theexhibit will include an awardingof prizes totaling $200.Last year’s awarding was heldin Lexington, but Ida Noyes iscurrently being used to increasespace for hanging paintings. Anexhibit of student art will also befeatured at Lexington this year.photo by QuinnNathalie Marwoska puts thefinishing touches on her paint¬ing for tomorrow’s art exhibitas evening shadows darken Lex¬ington halLFESTIVAL OF THE ARTSTICKETSFOR ALL EVENTSMandel CorridorMon. - Fri., April 23 - 27 10:00 -2.00Other Times at Reynolds Club DeskThe old dispensationever new, atpiete Kim of whim,liquors and imports 55th & UniversityMl 3-0524AiApril 24, 1956 fag* 7At Magdalen tower, Oxford university, each May day morning, as has been done forcenturies, a black-robed male choir sings a Latin hymn to the May. This solemnly joyousceremony will be enacted in UC s Hutchinson court, Thursday afternoon at 2 when theGlee club sings the traditional “Hymnus Eucharisticus,” under the shadow of Mitchelltower.The open-air program features four events:by Thomas A. Vogler, student ~ a bell prelude rung on the Mitchell chimeschimer (12-12:15 p.m.); a of the ceremony are given. Thebrass choir trumpeting from general view is that the traditionthe Mandel corridor roof (12:15- that ^Presents a Mass sung for12:30); the Glee club singing four ^enlT VII, according to Francisselections (12:30-12:45); andbell postlude rung by student Wil¬liam Pohl (12:45-1).The brass choir, eleven mem¬bers of the Concert band conduct¬ed by Denis Cowan, will presentfive selections from their rooftoproost, including the singularlyappropriately titled "Tower Son¬ata” by Johann Pezel. Instru¬ments in the ensemble are fourcornets, two French horns, twotrombones, two baritones, andone tuba.The strikingly similarity be¬tween the Hutchinson court areaand Magdalen college inspired thecurrent adoption of the Oxfordfestival. While the Oxford toweris somewhat higher than Mitchelland has different corner pin¬nacles, the UC copy is almost aperfect one.The “Hymnus Eucharisticus” isthe college Grace of Magdalen col¬lege, written by Dr. ThomasSmith in tht? 17th century and setto music by Benjamin Rogers.Various accounts of the origin J. Hill, librarian at the Britishmuseum, London. Hill stated thatthe hymn may be as old as Mag¬dalen tower, as old as Magdalencollege, or even older. Hill sug¬gested that it may have begun asan inauguration ceremony whenthe tower was new.Anthony a Wood, Oxford his¬torian, said of the ceremony, “Theyouth of the city would come here(St. Bartholomew’s hospital inOxford) every May day with theirlords and laydes, garlands, fifs,flutes and drumms, to acknowl¬edge the coming in of the fruitsof the year, or (as wee may say)to salute the great goddess Floraand to attribute her all prais withdancing and musick.” (sic)In addition to the “HymnusEucharisticus,” the Glee club willsing “Weep no more, sad foun¬tain,” two English songs, and therarely heard UC Alma mater.Mitchell tower, like Magdalentower, has ten bells. The UCbells were cast in London in 1907.The largest weighs 2,400 poundsand is inscribed “A gracious wom¬an retaining honor."Blue nude plays sonataNick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Are.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery Service *yr photo by QuinnNancy Sammons (left) and OttoSens (right) on Ghost Sonata set.A blue nude has come again toUC to celebrate FOTA. Last year,John Fabion’s statue “Awaken¬ing (belqw, left) attracted ines¬timable student curiosty whenit was exhibited in Hutchinsoncourt. University Theatre has in¬corporated a blue mannequin as acentral figure in their currentproduction of The Ghost Sonata(pictured, below right) with OttoSenz.photo by Quinn Powell playsBud Powell, New York progres¬sive jazz pianist, will appear Fri¬day afternoon at 2:30 in Mandelhall, in a concert sponsored by theUC Jazz club. Admission is $1.25.Billed as “the amazing BudPowell,” he has been credited witha large role in guiding the devel¬opment of the musical idiom, to¬gether with Charlie Parker andothers.“Bud Powell made the piano anintegral part of bop,” says BarryUlanov in his History of Jazz inAmerica. He possesses “incom¬parable facility, technique, and auniquely spontaneous flow ofideas that are highly original andindividual,” according to Jazzclub President Frank Broude. photo by WiseUniversity theatre’s productionof Strindberg’s The Ghost Sonataopens tomorrow evening at 8:30for a five night engagement. Theseating arrangement in UT’s thirdfloor Reynolds club theater hasbeen markedly altered to give abetter view of the newly designedcompany street which extends diagonally from the stage.Student tickets for the bizarre Strindberg drama of romantic youthand vindictive old age are 50 cents.Int House holds feteRepresentatives of over forty nations of the world willdisplay their songs and dances in the Festival of NationsSunday at International house. Foreign students and nation¬als from the entire Chicago area have been invited to par¬ticipate in the fete, last event in the Festival of the Artsweekend. •An* afternoon exhibition ofdances and folk songs and lorefrom Asia, Europe, and theAmericas, will commence at 3p.m. in the main lounge, whilemotion pictures from Pakistan,Turkey, and Austria will be givencontinuous showing on the Na¬tional floor.The evening show begins at 8.featuring folk dances from Aus¬tria,^ Italy, among other coun¬tries, and a Filipino dance whichwill also be televised this Fridayon WBBM-TV at 12.Chairman of the 1955 Festivalis Marguerite Henninger of Inter¬national house.Athletes vs. aesthetes:are sports an art form?by Sue TaxItems like the following —Varsity tennis matches, UC vs. Elm?hurst college, 1:30 p.m., Varsity courts.are to be found in the Festival of the Arts calendar. Thequestion has been raised^ therefrom whether athletics area legitimate art form. Twofaculty members had com- Schoolcraft also mentioned thements to make when the ques- ancient Greeks as an example of Fiction topic ofWelty lectureEudora Welty, American novel¬ist and story writer, will give thel'98th William Vaughn Moody lec¬ture Thursday evening at 8:30p.m. in Mandel hall.The topic of her lecture will be“Place in fiction” and she will in¬clude readings from her stories.The lecture, the fourth and lastMoody lecture of tjge present aca¬demic year, is a part of tht Festi¬val of the Arts program.Miss Welty’s novel, The PonderHeart, was produced in a dramaticversion on Broadway this year.Her stories have appeared inmany American magazines in¬cluding the. New Yorker, South¬ern Review, Atlantic Monthly,and Harper’s Bazaar. She has alsopublished in foreign magazines.tion was posed.Freeman Schoolcraft, directorof the Lexington hall art studiosaid, “I never really consideredathletics being a competitor in thefine arts, although I suppose ittakes as much skill and control asin art.“But some' performances mys¬tify me. I don’t know exactlywhat their aesthetic qualities are.“Art is something which willsurvive and persist through time.Most works of art are consideredso because of their durability.“An athletic event somehowdoes not seem to have the elementof durability in time that seemsnecessary to a work of art.”Ted Haydon, UC track coach,commented: “It depends on howthe society defines it. The Greekscertainly did consider athleticsart. As for us, if it isn’t alreadyan art form, if it is included inenough Festivals it may get tobe one.”S. Hurok PresentsJANPEERCEAmerica’s foremost tenorSaturday, May 15 — 8 p.m.SOUTH SHORE TEMPLE7215 South Jefferey Blvd.Tickets: $4 - $3 - $1.50Special student rate $1.25on $2.50 seatsTickets at student service center,Reynolds club a society which considered ath¬letics as an art form.Haydon added, appropriate tothe present week on campus,“Some athletes look artistic and^^others look terrible. But I think Mm \i/i |sports have a place in a festival | 'If joccasion.”Festival, schmestival;baseball must go onby Bob HalaszRegardless of whether sports are considered part of thearts, baseball and softball will be in this year’s Festival ofthe Arts program.Thursday will see the faculty hook up against the Coulterhouse athletic club in back of Burton-Judson at 2:30 p.m.in the faculty’s annual softball meeting against the students.The Coulter house athleticclub is made up of Coulterresidents, associates, andalumni. Accompanying the ath¬letes will be the Coulter houseband, to give “spiritual and moralsupport.” Athan Theoharis, Coul¬ter’s manager, says that the fac¬ulty “look pretty good.”On Saturday the varsity base¬ball nine will square off againstKnox College at 1 p.m. in Staggfield for a double-header. TheMaroons would very much liketo reverse a 4-3 defeat in extrainnings they suffered from Knoxin their opener played down atKnox’s grounds under the worst Stop. Sports car shot*possible weather conditions. Saturday.’Old Oxford tradition will Rehearse 'Ghost Sonata7be enacted by Glee dubPage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 24, 1955‘Miss Julie’ coming Fridayby Roy TurnerEric Bentley, the distinguished drama critic, has said of Strindberg that, like Wagner,he needs to be freed from his own provincial and outdated ideas of decor and stage pre-sentation. Strindberg needs a director who can release his genius from some of the seif,imposed limitations that the text carries. “Direction,” says Bentley, “is not scholarship.”wAlf Sjoberg, who made his reputation as a director with the film Torment, has boldlyused the screen as a medium of release: he has frankly adapted Strindberg’s play, and indoing so he has avoided the , . ,np«” that nodesfrianlv the two of them toSether in a se' been secn in Chicago.) Perhapsstaginess that peaesuianiy cluded room ... ”, these are the the greatest compliment of all isfaithful transference from elements which compound Julie’s to be found in a film quarterly,stage to screen might have en- fate. whose reviewer has said of Sjo-tailed. (We have all seen filmed jg precisely these qualities of berg s adaption, the text hasplays and operas in which card- moo(j and atmosphere which Sjo- been ma(?e Plain • • • This is aboard was more evident than berg has foeen abie to capture in true realization. Few films havecharacter.) _ his film. The sound track rein- been ,s<\ stamped with thePutting the full range of the forces the image: the folk music unifying mind of an artist as Misstechniques of the film at the dis- in the garden twists drunkenly *u“e is*posital of Strindberg’s raw talent, out of tune during the seduction;Swedish actress Anita Bjork is seduced by her father's valet dur¬ing a drunken festival in film Miss Julie, coming Friday.Yaie exhibit hereAn “Arts festival” designed to acquaint the public with the fine artsactivities and resources of Yale university opened last Friday at theChicago Art institute. More than 75 art masterpieces will be shown,including early Italian primitives, modern masters, and ceramics,textiles and bronzes from the Near and Far East. The exhibit willrun through May 1. Sjoberg has played—successfully—for the emotional content ofMiss Julie (Friday, Social Sci¬ences 122; 50 cents).Anita Bjork — the beautifulSwedish actress who has stoodfavorable comparison with theyoung Garbo—plays the neuroticJulie, whose short, tragic lifereaches its climax and its end onMidsummer’s Eve.The mood of the evening andits fatal effects have been de¬ laughter and the sound of a bellare distorted and point up theemotional significance of a scene.This is not to say that the filmis all on one note. There are lyri¬cal and joyful moments, too. Aflashback to childhood has a freshspringlike quality, and there aremoments in the garden where thegrace of the statues, caught inthe fading twilight, and the heavysensuousness of the dance, con¬vey a richness which serves toscribed by Strindberg himself in offset the austerity of the mainthe preface to the play: "... the line of the action,excitation of the dance; the dark The film has received criticalof the night; the strongly aphro- acclaim wherever it has beendisiacal influence of the flowers; shown. (Incidentally, this Cannesand lastly the chance forcing of Festival prize winner has not yetMaterial for the 1956 Festi¬val supplement was preparedby:Jean KwonRobert QuinnGail Massie, staff artistie secret ofgetting aheadin the world!I don’t care what you’ve triedso far to become popular ...iron tablets, skin creams, dietpills, nasal sprays, lanolin orhormones. Medical science goes*o fo. and no further.But, there is today one sure wayto get the things you want outof life fast! 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