>6r,e«f-»»iynISIS i IEIS I ;iess . ;>;-v f>>4:< i* Vol. 64, No. 47 University of Chicago, Friday, April 27, 1956 C“"SrTv>o 3 ]I Parties to preludeBeaux Arts Ballby Chuck MittmanThe Festival of the Arts will reach a high point Saturday evening as a gala masqueradeatmosphere will pervade the campus in anticipation of the Beaux Arts Ball.Festivities will start with pre-Ball parties. The Quadrangle club will be the scene of abuffet for faculty and alumni, while the Psi Upsilon house will be open to all cornel's. Stu¬dents are invited to join the fun any time after 8:30 p.m. as refreshments flow forth, com¬pliments of the Beaux Arts committee.At 10 p.m. activities will Rosenheim. Rosenheim, assistant Student leadersproper function oTen student leaders chosen by the Dean’s officeday to discuss the “proper function” of Student Government.Professor Kermit Eby and Dean of Students in the collegeJohn Netherton met with the students, as well as Mary Alice New¬man and Dean Robert M. Strozier.Strozier called the meeting after receiving a petition with about500 signatures requesting that a meeting of student leaders, Gov¬ernment members, and interested persons be called to discuss theGovernment.Members of both parties claimed this question was the differencebetween the parties, while non-politicians seemed only able to discussthe advantages of representation from dorms and fraternities.The groups will try again this Monday.shift to the Commons, where professor of Humanities in the ||Jerry Glidden and his NBC college, will act as M.C. for the torchestra will supply the music judging.for dancing masqueraders. In ad- Costumes will be selected bydition, the Reynolds lounge will judges Ruth Page, noted artistrock with the Latin rhythms of Marfo Hoff, and Mr. CharlesBobby Nagatani and his combo. Percy, UC trustee. Prizes will beRefreshments will be available at awarded the best male and femalethe C Shop, or at the Psi U house masqueraders for most original,where the party will continue most humorous and best lookingcostumes, as well as awards forwell past the end of the BallA high point in the evening willbe the announcement of the prize best couple and best groupwinning costumes by Edward costume.Tell small assemblyabout army reservesOnly five undergraduate students were present at the un¬dergraduate assembly Tuesday evening at which CaptainRobert Keats of the United States Army reserve spoke on“The reserve forces act of 1955.”Captain Keats explainedthat men under 18 and a halfyears of age have the opportunityof joining a reserve unit andserving six months on active dutyin addition to 7 and one-half yearsin the “ready” reserve. Previouslythe law required a minimum oftwo years of active duty.He pointed out that even formen who are over 18 and one-halfthe advantages of higher pay andgrade and choice of service andbranch are available through serv¬ing in the reserves before beingcalled to active duty for twoyears. Altogether six years ofservice are required. By takingcorrespondence courses it is pos- photo by QuinnLeft to right, Alice Zwolinski,Phyllis Friedman, and BettyBlunier prepare Beaux Artsdecorations in Lexington Stu¬dio. The ball, with two dancebands, will be held tomorrow_ night at 10 in Hutchinson Com- Beaux Artson color TVFive UC students will appear onWNBQ’s “Bob and Kay Show”this afternoon, to tell about twofeatures of Festival of fhe Arts.Two couples in Beaux Arts Ballcostume will appear before thestation’s color cameras, and fourPhilippine dancers, who are per¬forming at the Festival of theNations in International housewill demonstrate their contribu¬tion to the Festival.The “Bob and Kay Show” istelecast, in color, over channel 5from 12:45 to 2 o’clock in theafternoon.The four students attending theBall who will be on the programare: Barbara Quinn, Bobbi Wha¬ley, Walter Fish, and ColemanLevin. Miss Quinn and Fish arealso in the Blackfriars revue, anintermission feature of the Ball.Margaret Henninger of Inter¬national house will be in chargeof the other half of the interview,and will discuss the Festival ofthe Nations. Schedule testA special Selective Servicecollege qualification test willbe held on Thursday, May 17.Colonel Paul G. Armstrong,state director of Selective Serv¬ice, announced that this testwill be given for the benefitof those students who were un¬able to take the two previousexams.To be eligible to apply forthe special test a student neednot have applied for one of theprevious tests. Applicants willreceive special aid in filling outthe necessary forms from theirlocal board clerks. Applicationsfor the May 17 test must bepostmarked not later than mid¬night, May 7.Choir performsUC choir, with members of theChicago Symphony orchestra, willpresent a Mozart memorial con¬cert at 3 p.m. Sunday in Rocke¬feller memorial chapel, as partof the Festival of the Arts.The choir, under the directionof Richard Vikstrom, will deliverthe concert from the Chapel chan¬cel, instead of from the choir loftin the rear of the Chapel, whereit has appeared in previous con¬certs.Admission to the concert is $2.sible to receive a commission inthe reserves, he added.Keats stated that it is more ad¬vantageous to belong to a readyreserve unit than to a state con¬trol group. Individuals in controlgroups can be called on activeduty for two years by order of thePresident. A reserve unit can onlybe called up as a group.After men are discharged bythe ready reserve they are placedin the standby reserve which canbe called to active duty only inthe event of a declaration of war.Men who wait until they aredrafted have no choice of serviceor branch or the time when theywill serve on active duty. WUCB receives broadcastRadio Moscow Tuesday night confirmed reports that an exchange between the Universityof Chicago and the University of Moscow will take place. WUCB received and recorded thebroadcast.The statement was made by Academician Ivan Petrovsky, President of the University ofMoscow. Petrovsky’s answerwas translated by Radio Mos¬cow.“I’m very glad to inform youthat we accept (the exchange in¬vitation). It must be hoped thatthe student body of this Univer¬sity will soon be talking withtheir colleagues from Chicago.In return, several students ofMoscow University will go toChicago to study.”The full broadcast will be heardon WUCB tonight at 8 p.m. .The Radio Moscow broadcastis the only answer the StudentGovernment has received to itsinvitation, extended last quarter. The Soviet embassy in Washing¬ton, contacted Monday, reportedthat it had no information on theacceptance.Academician Petrovsky addedthat exchanges with Harvard andColumbia are also possible. “Weare ready to consider any pro¬posal American universities maymake,” he said. According to Ra¬dio Moscow, the University nowhas exchange students fromChina, France, Italy, Hungary,Bulgaria, “and other countries.”The Tuesday broadcast, re¬corded by Radio,/ Midway, con¬cluded “You’ve been listening toArendt sees history as unknowable by manby Oliver LeeModern man’s insistence onfinding a meaning in historyarose from his despair aboutthe possibility of beholdingtruth in any other way, saidHannah Arendt in the last twoof the Walgreen lectures on theVila Activa last week.Truths conflictWhen the 16th century astron¬omers established the fact thatthe sun, contrary to appearances,does not revolve around the earth,man began to doubt the Veracityof his senses, Miss Arendt said.Objective truth might indeed ex¬ist, but his senses could not betrusted to acquaint him with it.Therefore the contemplative truth-»f the Greeks and the divine truthof the Christians, both beingtruths about the external worldwhich were revealed to manthrough his senses, had to be dis¬ carded.Modern man was thus thrownback upon himself. If he couldnot know the truth about the ex¬ternal world, Miss Arendt rea¬soned, at least he knew his ownsensations of pain and pleasurewhen in contact with the world.Hence arose the philosophy ofhedonism.But the immortality envisionedby Greek philosophy or Christiandoctrine had to be replaced withsomething new. Since the truthsclaimed by them were now con¬sidered illusory, the immortalitypromised by them became re¬garded as figments of the imag¬ination. Belief in immortality hadto be grounded on perception oftruth.Traces history-consciousnessThere was one group of things,besides his sensations, aboutwhich man thought he knew thetruth, namely those things which man was himself engaged in cre¬ating, such as objects of art, ofutility, or the very process of his¬tory.Thus history-consciousness be¬came an obsession towards theend of the 18th century, MissArendt stated. “The purpose ofevery so-called ideology of the19th century was to find the keywith which to unlock the meaningof history.”Denies predictabilityBut, Miss Arendt claimed, themeaning of history is not know-able by man, for although the in¬dividual knows his own action,the consequences of this actionare unpredictable and hence itsmeaning unknowable. “Only whenit is all over do we know whatit has been all about,” she saidof history.The search for meaning led tothe discovery not of meaning butof patterns, Miss Arendt stated. She said that, as for any pagefulof random dots a mathematicalcurve can be found to account forall of them, so patterns can befound for historical events, andall of them will be right. “Thetrouble is not that nothing makessense, but that everything makessense,” and, because of this, final¬ly nothing makes sense.Disturb nature processMiss Arendt closed on the som¬ber note that 20th century man,not content with the unpredicta¬bility of history, has begun tointerfere with the processes ofnature to the extent that natureitself may become unpredictable.We can start processes in na¬ture, as we have been doing inhistory, but we may soon nolonger understand them. MissArendt concluded that the futurescientist may confess that “Inever quite know what I amdoing.” the hand of friendship, stretchingbetween Soviet and Americanstudents.”Russia’s acceptance surprisedmany students here. Though aSoviet exchange has been a goalof the National Stddent Associa¬tion and Student Government forsome time, no previous offers hadbeen accepted. A visit of Sovietstudent newspaper editors failedwhen the editors refused to com¬ply with the fingerprinting re¬quirements of the MacCarran-Walter act and were denied visas.The Anti-Fascist League of SovietStudents (the Russian Union ofStudents) has turned down NS Aproposals for a long term aca¬demic exchange, involving studyat one institution for a year ormore.specialEurope tourA tour of Scandinavia, theSoviet Union, Austria, andSwitzerland is available to UCfaculty and students who will bein Europe this summer at a costof $760, including transportation.Mary Ann Chacarestos, NSACommittee chairman in chargeof the Flying Tiger flight to Eu¬rope, announced that the tourwould leave Amsterdam June 26under the supervision of theAmerican federation of teachers.The special educational tourhas been arranged with Intourist,the Soviet tourist agency, by Pro¬fessor S. K. Allison, UC alumnus.All interested persons may con¬tact Alice Jay, Hotel Hamilton, 20S. Dearborn, AN 3-0761 or MaryAnn Chacarestos at the SG office.Page Z THE CHICAGO MAROON April 27, 1956♦ LUCKY DROODLESANYONE ?xone stateschool LUCKIES TASTE BETTER-<%a/>er, fresher. Smoother!<7# V „ <?'/?©A.T.Co. PRODUCT OF AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTESCalendar HITHER AND YONFriday, April 27’Events which Are on the Festival ofthe Arts program.Bookstore will be closed all day.Memorial service for Byron Rainey, 12noon, Rockefeller chapel.’Poetry reading contest, 3:30 p.m., Bondchapel.Seminar, "The low-income family andIts problems," Julia L. Dubln, Chi¬cago welfare department, 3:30 pjn..Social Science 105.Walgreen lecture, "The American Presi¬dency: The Presidency in history,” byprof. Clinton Rossiter, Cornell Unlv.,4:30 p.m.. Social Science 122.’Concert by Madrigal singers, 4:30 p.m.,Hutchinson court.J.utheran students, supper (6 p.m.) anddiscussion with prof. Kermit Etay on“The Industrial world,” 7 p.m., Chapelhouse.•Docfilm: Miss Julie, movie from playby Strindberg, 7 and 9 p.m., SocialScience 122.•Concert by Concert band, 7 p.m.,Hutchinson court.TVCCB broadcast. Quartets No. 3 and 4,by Bartok, 7:05 p.m., 640 kc.Hillel 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-manship," prof. Franz Hildebrandt,Drew Univ., 8 p.m., 5757 Woodlawn.University theatre: Ghost sonata, byStrindberg, 8:30.•University concert, Andrew Foldl. bass,and Robert Lodiue, piano. 8:30 p.m.,Mandel hall.•Hootenanny by the Folklore socletv,8:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Saturday, April 28Bookstore closed today, too.Apollonian society rehearsal, 10 a m ,Ida Noyes.•Concours d'Elegance of automotive de¬sign. 12 noon- 4 p.m., the Circle.•Varsity baseball game. UC vs. Knoxcollege. 1 p.m., Stagg field.WUCB broadcast of two taped Soe Scl 2lectures, 1 p.m., 640 kc.Varsity tennis matches, T7C vs. Elm¬hurst college. 1:30 p.m.. Varsity courts.Bach singers rehearsal. 2 p.m., Ida Noyes.Madrigal singers rehearsal, 3 p.m., IdaNoyes.Docfilm: Miss Julie, 3 p.m., Social Sci¬ence 122.Concert by the Apollonian society, 7:30p.m., Ida Noyes.UT: Ghost Sonata, 8:30 p.m., Reynoldsclub.Beaux arts ball, 10 p.m., Hutchinsoncommons, masquerade. Sunday, April 29 City college paper seizedEpiscopal communion service, 8:30 p.m. C7 JL JLMOTHER’S DAYi 8*i° $A50I wallet y8 Proofs ShownBU 8-08761457-9 vE. 57th St.STUDY IN EUROPETwo Semesters of Study andtravel through 8 countries—$1780For those American students whoaspire to o broader educationthrough foreign study and travel,the Institute of European Studiesdedicates its program.Students live in Austrian homesond attend the English taughtcourses offered by the Universityof Vienna,Price covers: round trip oceanpossage. Room and board in Vi¬enna, ond while travelling. Trav¬el costs. Tuition ond registrationfees at the University of Viennafor two semesters.Travel through: Holland, Belgium,France, Italy, Germany, Spain,Morocco and Austria.Sailing date: September 8, 1956.SS Zuiderkruif, from New York.APPLICATION DEADLINE:June 15, 1956For free brochure explaining thisprogram, send this coupon to:THE INSTITUTE OFEUROPEAN STUDIES7325 South Maryland AvenueChicago 19, Illinois Episcopal communion service, 8:30 p.m.Bond chapel.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10. 11am., 5735 University.Lutheran Communion service, 10 A.an.,Hilton chapel.International house coffee hour, 10a.m.-noon.Clinics religious service, 10 a m., Bill¬ings 0-4.Radio broadcast, “Freud and the scienceof psychoanalysis,” 10:35 a.m., WMAQ.•University religions service. Rev. JohnF. Hayward, asst. prof, of religion andart preaching, 11 a.m . Rockefellerchapel.•Carillon recital of music by Mozart,2:30 p.m., Rockefeller.•Concert, "Requiem” and "Vesperaesolennes,” by Mozart, chapel choirand Chicago symphony members, 3p.m.. Rockefeller.International exhibition, 3-7:30 p.m,Int house.Modern dance club technique, 3:15 p.m.,Ida Noyes.Porter foundation joint meeting, withsupper. 6 p.m.. Swift commons,WUCB broadcast, Hum 1, music byRavel and Debussy, 7 p.m.. 640 kc.•Festival of nations, 8 p.m.. Int. house.•Concert by UC musical society of worksby UC’ers, 8:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.UT: Ghost Sonata by Strindberg, 8:30p.m., Reynolds club.WUCB broadcast, Hum 3, The Tempestby Shakespeare, 9 p.m., G40 kc.Monday, April 30Sociology seminar, “Research needed toguide slum clearance and planning ofland use,” 4 p.m.. Social Science 302.R. M. Lillibridge, land clearance com¬mission.Physiology seminar, "Spontaneous re-warming of the hypothermic cura-rlzed dog,” 4 p.m., Abbott 133.Walgreen lecture, "The American Presi¬dency: The modern Presidency,’* prof.Rossiter, 4:30 p.m., Social Science 122.Botany club, "Past, present, and futureof plant embryology,” prof. P. Mahe-shwari, U. of Delhi, India, 4:30 p.m.,Botany 106. .Movie: Pagllaccl (Italian), 8 p.m., Inthouse assembly hall, 45 cents.WUCB concert: 8:05 p.m —Mahler—“Dasheld Van Der Erd ”; 9:00 — Brahms —Symphony No. 1. Earlier this month the entirepress run of the April Fool’s edi¬tion of Main Events, studentnewspaper at CCNY, was seizedand impounded in a surprise raidby the college Administration.The paper and seven members ofits managing board were suspend¬ed for printing what PresidentBuell Gallagher described as “in¬decency, obscenity, vulgarity, andprobable criminal libel’' in theApril Fool’s issue.Later, two of the editors werereinstated, but the other five re¬main out for the remainder ofthe semester.Editor-in-Chief Maurice J.Weiss charged the authoritieswith “Gestapo-like tactics.’’Managing editor Martin Osdobysaid, “Evidently the college au¬thorities had learned that ourissue intended to expose the Ad¬ministration’s ineptitude and cor¬ruption.”Fraternity goes localAdministration officers, faculty,and freshmen at Dartmouth col¬lege gave almost unanimous ap¬proval last week to Phi SigmaKappa’s decision to become a localfraternity. The resignation of thehouse resulted from dissatisfac¬tions with discriminatory and fi¬ nancial aspects of the nationalorganization.Associate Dean Arthur H.Kiendl Jr., who was formerly UCdirector of student activities, con¬gratulated the fourth local houseon the campus. He stated, "Themembers of Phi Tau (the newname of the fraternity) haveshown with action what theybelieve.”Death of the TexanThe Daily Texan is just aboutdead. For 55 years it has spokenfearlessly. Student editors saidwhat they thought when theythought it the way they thoughtit. No more. A faculty memberwill take over nightly supervisionof all news stories and editorialsnext September. . . . Policiesadopted by the governing boardsay criticisms of state legislatorsshould not be “violent or person¬al” and, as (the Texan) says, “thenew rules, with the usual high-sounding phraseology in whichcensorship statements arecouched, are highly restrictive.’’The Regents, chanting hosannasto oil and gas, student conform¬ity, two oilwells in every back¬yard, and a free spirit in everypot, prevail. CCNY holds AF WeekThe right of Communists 10teach "particularly in elementaryschools,” was disputed recentlyby Norman Thomas speaking atCity College celebration of Aca¬demic Feedom Week.Thomas concluded his speechby plea for “equality of treatmentfor all people, and the search forways to put enthusiastic studentsupport behind civil rights legis¬lation.”Other speakers at the celebra¬tion seemed less contradictoryand less eager to prove theirpatriotism.Professor Walter Metzger ofColumbia asserted that the realquestion should be “Who is to de¬termine who shall teach?” liecited trustee control of univer¬sities as a basic fault in our sys¬tem. “When the trustees and thefaculty are in conflict, the trus¬tee never thinks that he ought toresign.”Bayard Rustin, Executive Sec¬retary of the War Resistorsleague, warned of a stifling of thegrowing process of students.Learning to think can only comeabout, he stated, “when one comesin contact with people of differentpolitical beliefs.”address XXXXXXXXXXXXWHAT’S THIS?For solution seeparagraph below.END OF ALOVE LETTERJosephU. of Ne Houumprrew HampshireBUG, SNUG IN RUGJames KechnV, of MinnesotaBIRD’S-EYE VIEWOF SALT SHAKERCarl NoahPurdueStudents!EARN $25!Cut yourself in on the LuckyDroodle gold mine. We pay $25for all we use—and for a wholeraft we don’t use! Send yourDroodles with descriptive titles.Include your name, address, col¬lege and class and the name andaddress of the dealer in your col¬lege town from whom you buycigarettes most often. Address:Lucky Droodle, Box.67 A, MountVernon, N. Y.p beH&-to fas** IT’S EASY TO SEE why Luckies tastebetter—especially when you studythe Droodle above: Eye chart forenthusiastic Lucky smoker. There’smore to Luckies’ better taste thanmeets the eye. Sure, Lucky StrikeMeans Fine Tobacco—but then thatmild, naturally good-tasting tobaccois TOASTED to taste even better!So light up a Lucky! You can lookforward to the best-tasting cigaretteyou ever smoked!DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price BUG AWAITING FATE ONPHONOGRAPH RECORDRichard SpectorHarvardAPPETIZER FORFIRE EATERGerald EscottNortheastern U.April 27, 195« THE CHICAGO MAROON Rape 3Announce plans fornew law buildingProgress of plans for financing a new law school building,part of a development expected to make Chicago the center oflegal research in the United States, was reported to alumniof the law school Wednesdaynight at a dinner given by the wil1 *orm the nucleus o{ the coun-University’s trustees and the trys lar&est center of legal re-law school faculty. search- comparable to Chicago’sAlready substantially financed P°sition in medical ^search,by a Ford foundation grant and Expanded facilities for the lawby individual contributions, the sch°o1 have l**n made ur^ent by Plan handy helpful handbook;C-book returns from 15 year exileby Sue TaxA handy, pocket-size campus tell-all, the likes of which last appeared in 1941-42, will againbe seen on campus this coming fall. The “C-Book” will replace the Student Handbook, for¬merly published by Student Government.Contents of the new book will probably not differ substantially from those of the old one,with the exception of a few items which no longer have a place on campus as they did in 1941.The first 60 pages of the book are devoted to information concerning the campus. Thereare lists of UC administrative ’building is one of the objectivesof the University’s current $32,-000,000 fund campaign.The new building will be lo¬cated adjacent to two existingand independent centers of legalresearch on the Midway: the newAmerican Bar center and the Pub¬lic Administration clearing housewhich contains 24 organizationsconcerned with technical and ad¬ministrative aspects of state, localand federal governments,j, The three separate institutionsl-C councilelects officersInterclub council has elected of¬ficers to serve for the year 1956-57. New officers are: president,E1 e n i e Kostopoulos, Quadran-glers; secretary, Barbara Quinn,Delta Sigma; treasurer, RobertaSmiskol, Esoteric; social chair¬man, Nancy Sammons, Delta Sig¬ma; publicity chairman, SallyKollenberg, Mortarboard; rushingchairman, Mary Slabodnik, Eso¬teric; service chairman, SylviaStenlund, Sigma; and Social Ac¬tivities Council representative,Irene Samorajski, Esoteric. the development of individualizedand seminar types of instruction,the growth of the student body,and extensive research projectssuch as that on the jury system.Speakers at last night’s dinnerincluded Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton, Edward L. Ryerson,chairman of the UCs board oftrustees, Dean Edward H. Levi ofthe law school, E. Smythe Gam-brell, president of the AmericanBar association, and Herbert Em¬merich, director of the PublicAdministration clearing house.Service todayThere will be a memorialservice in memory of UC stu¬dent Byron Rainey at 12 noontoday in the chancel of Rocke¬feller memorial chapeL officers and a directory ofUniversity offices, lists of reli¬gious organizations, residencehalls, dining halls, and libraries.The section on religious activitiesincludes a list of churches in thecommunity.An interesting list of 1942 cam¬pus traditions appears in the C-Book. several of which seem tohave been forgotten in the inter¬vening years:1. NKVER walk on the seal in Mitch¬ell Tower.2. The "C** Bench Is for the exclusiveuse of Seniors and “C” men —FRESHMEN BEWARE.3. The senior bench is to be used bySeniors only. 4. Say "University of Chicago"—not"Chicago University."5. "C's" are worn on Thursdays.6. The Mitchell Tower chimes play theAlma Mater each evening at 10:06p.m., the athlete’s curfew.7. All types of high school Insigniaare taboo on campus.8. Stand when the Alma Mater isplayed.9. Annual Senior mustache race: twoweeks prior to the opening of Black-friars. (The Spic-N-Span burned downseveral years ago.)Coupon good for 10% off on corsageand free boutonniere. Bemis Florist.(Bemis is no longer in businessin the community.)This coupon entitle you to one pack¬age of chrome needles. Strader’srecord store.(Neither is Strader’s now in the10. Fraternities are not to be referred community.)Kabisch gets to as "frats."11. Our women arc "University women"—not co-eds.12. Windows in Harper library andHutchinson Commons are neverwashed.13. The Coffee-shop is traditionallyused for cut-classes.14. Interfratemlty Ball on Thanksgiv¬ing Eve.15. Washington Prom on the Eve ofWashington’s Birthday.16. FRESHMEN BEWARE OF THWBOTANY FOND!New l-F This coupon entitles you to one freecolored pocket handkerchief duringfirst quarter at Winter’s Men’s shop.50% off on a corsage. Mltzie florist.Coupon for linen handkerchief.George’s men’s shop.(These three stores are stillprominent on 55th street. Win¬ter’s is now called Gabe’s.)And . . .This coupon entitles you to onefree air cleaner service with pur¬chase of gasoline at Walgrom’sStandard service.(The service station is no long¬er in the community, but, then,few students own cars.)Under the general heading oftisements are six small green cou- undergraduate activities fall apons, pasted onto the pages by “Campus Who’s Who,” (listinginstructor, was given an Amer- one end, containing the following what we now call “student lead-ers ); lists of student organiza¬tions. fraternities and women’sAdvertisements, which are in¬terspersed throughout the 1942book, are from university commu-medicalgrantnKy businessesAmong ,hc adver-William Kabisch, a UC anatomymeetSPECIAL PRICETO STUDENTSOn Student HealthService Prescriptions3 RegisteredPharmaciststo Serve YouREADER’SCampus Drug Store1001 E. 61t Newly • elected Interfraternitycouncil officers will officially takeoffice on May 1.The officers who were electedlast month are as follows: Herb¬ert Gore, Beta Theta Pi, presi¬dent; Armand Matusen, Psi Upsi-lon, secretary; and Gary Stoll,Delta Upsilon, treasurer. Reign¬ing as president during the pastyear was Lawrence Sherman,Zeia Beta Tau. ican Cyanamid company’s Lederle messages:Medical Faculty awards. Theawards total $234,853, to be divid¬ed among sixteen recipients, ac¬cording to K. C. Towe, presidentof American Cyanamid.Kabisch will use the three-yeargrant to finance research in thecellular defense mechanisms ofthe body. The study concerns thedispersion and absorption ofradio-active bacteria injected into UC‘This coupon good for one milk ...... , . . .shake during first quarter. Splc-n- clubs (with rushing rules), pro-span restaurant." fessional fraternities; shortsquibs on the student publics-f tions; articles on musical and91 lb dramatic facilities, social centers,and athletic facilities, several■■ l pages on the extensive UC ath-■ rOUCl letic *acHkies for men and wom¬en; a one-page calendar of theUC’s New World program will yea.r’ a registration and ex¬amination schedule for the year.The next seventy pages are de-the bloodstream of experimental commemorate the hundredth an-animals. niversary of Sigmund Freud’s voted to7n Sp^intr^nt'calendarKabisch, who received his M.S. birth (May 6, 1856) on the NBC for the academic year, includingand Ph.D. degrees from UC, has network show Monitor. The events to be held on campus bybeen a member of the staff since broadcast will take place Sunday the various university organiza-1954. *££lllllllHlllltt!IIIIIIIIIIIU(IHIIillllimttlHN!ltlNIIIIIIIIUtHltlll!lltllllllHIIHIIIUttllHlttmil!llltlltfllllllllilll!!llllllllllH at 10:35 a.m. tions. Mary Alice Newman, assist-The program is entitled “Freud ant director of student activitiesm - and the science cf psychoanal- and associate editor of the “C-Tlirn In f 1ftA Housing /Ids . . . < ► ysis.” Participants will be Ernest Book,” has asked that all campus^ 4 Jones, British psychiatrist and bi- organizations submit their sched-ographer of Freud; Robert P. ules for the coming year in orderKnight, medical director of the that they be included in the newAusten Riggs foundation at book.Stockbridge, Massachusetts, and Pasted on the back cover is apast president of the American map of the campus, printed byPsychoanalytic association; and Woodworth’s bookstore.Douglas Bond, professor of psy¬chiatry at Western Reserve uni¬versity and member of the execu¬tive council of the American Psy¬choanalytic Association.Edwin W. Rosenheim, Jr., as¬sistant professor of humanitiesat UC. will be the moderator forbefore you reod this and you will note that furnished apartmentsusually have more expensive rentals than unfurnished units.Also note that within a year the cost of furnishings often is lessthan the savings on rent in an unfurnished apartment.But you don't have the cash on bond for necessary furniture.Here is where your credit union can help you. Compare our interestrote on loans today.Hyde Park Co-op Federal Credit Union5535 S. HARPER AVE. DO 3-1031 Jimmy's(Hyde Park Liquors)| 1405 E. 55th PL 2-8830 |I FREE DELIVERY - FREE ICE CUBES (-with Order I| Liquor should be used in moderation only. || Use your head instead of letting it go to || your head. || A dentist married a manicurist and |1 it wasn’t long before they started || fighting tooth and nail. |i I have a large stock of my own Hyde Park label || gin, 90 proof, quality compares with any popular || brand. Close out price — $3.00 a fifth. §1 A high grade line of fine quality French white |1 burgundy Chablis and Beaujolais to close at E| $1.75 a fifth. Formerly sold at $2.50 to $3.00. jBargains on many other items5riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiii,>inii^ 'Imagine!MOVING BAY a/x/nothing to <fo/'it's all PRE-PLANNEDOur expert* “blueprint" every de¬tail in advance—fake all the workand worry off your hand*. Andwe move you in a ©SanitizedVan! No extra cost.PETERSONMOVING & STORAGE CO.55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterfield 8-6711 SINCE 1940the program.PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433COMO PIZZERIA1520 E. 55 FA 4-5525Free Delivery to U.C. StudentsON ALL PIZZASMALLCHEESE 1.15SAUSAGE 1.45ANCHOVY 1.45PEPPER and ONION .. 1.30SHRIMP 1.70COMBINATION 1.75SPECIAL!Vz Fried Chicken 1.00Potatoes and BreadPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 27, 1956LettersInvited to speakby committeeIn its effort to sponsor eventsduring Academic Freedom Weekin which the greatest possiblenumber of opinions could be rep¬resented, the academic freedomweek committee asked not onlyHerbert Aptheker, but also thefollowing persons to speak oncampus during the week of April9-13—William Buckley, -thor ofGod and Man at Yale and editor of the “National Review”; Repre¬sentative Francis Walter, co-au¬thor of the MeCarran-Walter act;Herbert Brownell, Attorney Gen¬eral of the United States; FultonLewis, Jr., radio commentator.The committee is sorry that,unfortunately, none of these menfelt he had the time to appear inChicago during the month ofApril.Janice Hubkafor the academic freedomweek Committee ofStudent GovernmentIssued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermittentlyduring the summer quarter, on a non-profit basis by the publisher, the ChicagoMaroon, at 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: Editorial offices,Midway 3-0800. ext. 1003 and 3266; Business and advertising office, Midway 3-0800,ext. 3265 Subscriptions by mail. $3 per year. Business office hours: 2 p.m. to5 p.m., Monday through Saturday.Editor-in-chief Joy S. BurbachManaging Editor Norman LewakBusiness manager Gary Mokotoff Assails Maroon's'misinformation'May I quote from the lead edi¬torial in today’s issue; “. . . per¬haps students are no longer will¬ing to pay five cents a day for theMaroon, . . . .” Perhaps theyoughtn't be blamed, either, fornot wishing to pay for misinfor¬mation. In the article entitled,Old Oxford tradition will be en¬acted by Glee club, we are toldthat . . . “The brass choir, elevenmembers of the Concert band con¬ducted by Denis Cowan, will pre¬sent . . Unfortunately, it’s adirty lie, and you know it! Thebrass ensemble is not, was not,and in all probability will not beconducted by Mr. Cowan. Its con¬ductor is Mr. Louis Lason, a manwho works hard all year longwith the band, and who at leastdeserves the courtesy of a properacknowledgment in the pages ofthe Maroon.Executive news editorAdvertising manager .Supplement editors...News editorCultural editorSports editorNews feature editor...Copy editorsProduction manager..Photo editorPersonnel manager...,Calendar editorOffice manager Ronald GrossmanLawrence KesslerJean Kwon, Bob QuinnSue Tax. Fred KarstJudy PodoreRobert HalaszSue TaxJean Kwon. Fabian Necheles. Robert Quinn, John HerzogJohn BystrynJack BurbachEarl HerrickAdrienne KinkaidStaff: Ed Berckman. William Brandon, Don Broder, Joyce Ellin. Saralee Feldman,Jack Forman, Miriam Garfin, Gerson Greenberg. Jeanne Hargitt, Nelson Hyman,Oliver Lee. Quentin Ludgin, Robert MacDonald. Chuck Mittman, Robert Moody,Lowell Pickett, Spike Pinney. Diane Pollock, Lynford Russell, Richard Ward,Art Taitel, David Zack, George Zygmund.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. Free Spring Check-Upfor your Camera atMODEL CAMERA SHOP1329 F. 55th St. HY 3-9259NSA Discount Morton L. BrownUNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorA Special Offer forUniversity of ChicagoStudentsDISSENT"Enjoy Our Fine Continental Cuisine inRelaxed Air Conditioned Atmosphere”CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTWeekdays and Saturday: Open from 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.Sundays: Open from 4 p.m. - 10 p.m.1508 E. 57th Street Phone PFar.a 2-9355 the non-conformist quarterlymagazine including amongits editors and contributorsC. Wright MillsNorman MailerErich Fromm, Irving HoweMeyer SchapiroIgnazio Silone, Lewis CoserTERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best”FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95W'c also carry a full line of Italian foods1518 E. 63rJ Ml 3-4045 Offers You 3 Issuesfor One DollarSingle Copy 75cIf you are looking for a newslant on political and cultur¬al questions and are tired ofconformity and timidity —write, enclosing $1.00 toDISSENT509 Fifth Ave. New York 17, N.Y.Name . . ,AddressSchool(Send summer address also toassure getting summer issue)This offer expires June 30, 1956NEW BOOKS IN ANTHROPOLOGY AND SOCIOLOGYPEASANT SOCIETY AND CULTURE, by Redfield $2.75Redfield outlines a speculative foundation for the emergence of anthro¬pology from the mere study of primitive tribes.TWO MAJOR WORKS, by Charles H. Cooley $7.50HUMAN NATURE AND THE SOCIAL ORDER, and SOCIAL ORGANI¬ZATION, now available in one volume.THE POWER ELITE, by C. Wright Mills $6.00Mills examines the "lightly-knit and basically irresponsible" group ofpeople who are the center of power in America today.CURRENT ANTHROPOLOGY, Thomas, ed. (paper) $3.50A supplement to ANTHROPOLOGY TODAY.UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter ServiceHY 3-96.il 1322 E. SSih St.ICEROYSare SmootherHere is the reason:'Only VICEROY has 20,000filters in every tip—twice as many filters as theother two largest-selling filter brands—to givethat smoother taste—that VICEROY taste!VICEROYS are Smoother thanany other cigarette. BecauseViceroys have twice as manyfilters as the other twoleading filter brands!THE MOST FILTERSFOR THESMOOTHEST TASTEThe exclusive Viceroy filter is ihadekfrom pure cellulose*— soft, snow-white/natural!,A student (below) appears to be absorbed in admiration ofApril 27, 1956 Page 5Festival of Arts in full swingSuggest original costumesfor Beaux Arts masqueradeby Grenville Beardsley“What, goes the eternal question, “can I possibly wear?”Saturday, the Beaux Arts Ball complicates the matter with another question, more re¬cent but equally popular: “Who am I?”For most ball-goers, the questions are difficult. (Mrs. Kimpton, according to rumor, hasalready solved the second by deciding to go as a wall safe. What one wears to be a wall safewe leave to her.) As a public <Your costume and role forthe Ball will, of course, dependupon the natural appearanceof yourself and your date. If shehas red hair and an olive complex¬ion and you are tall and thin, youmight go as an hors d’oeuvre. Ifshe is blonde and you have a rou¬lette wheel, you might go asGrace and Rainier.Other costume possibilities il¬lustrate pairs of words: rhythmand blues, rock and roll, war andpeace, bagels and lox, etc. Cos¬tumes for these are obvious.‘Crazy’ costumesIf your physical appearanceholds no fruitful possibilities forcostumes, your mental conditionmay suggest more imaginativedress. If you are a masochist, forexample, you can go as a door¬mat. If you are compulsively neat, ice, the Maroon here offerswear an eye on the back of yourhead. Should you be the harassedkind, you could even go as anulcer.If you have delusions of grand¬eur, you could go as the EmpireState building, or perhaps asMount Everest. And, of course, ifyou feel you’re well-balanced, youmight go as a gyroscope, or per¬haps the Rock of Gibraltar.Originality plusSo much for psychopathology.For that matter, you could do thesame with personality types. Ifyou talk a lot, you can go as amatador and throw the bull. Ifyou think you’re deep, you can goas a crevice.Gregarious souls may favor col¬lective identities and clothing. Ifyou are sextuplets, you could allcome as Tallulah Bankhead andknock ’em dead. Otherwise, come some suggestions.as centipedes, millipedes, or theseven deadly sins.If you find yourself part of atriangle, you, your girl, and yourrival might go as bell, book, andcandle, the three blind mice, orthe like. .Math, yet! . 1 ,If you cannot get a date, youcan still cut large parentheses outof heavy paper and go as a single-ton set, from,the mathematics o’Jecourse. College courses, indeed,contain a wealth of ideas. Carryten or twelve blankets or coppersand go as a Kwakiutl Indian.If you’re too lazy to make upan elaborate costume, you can goas Adam and Eve. Or you cantake an object which will attractattention: a tame panther, an ele¬phant, the Hope diamond—all aresimple, yet devastating.And if you really can’t afford acostume, there’s always the Manin the Gray Flannel Suit.you can go as a card catalogue;puuius uy uysiryilHi!lei dancers perform (above) in lobby of Ida Noyes hall.>f the statues op exhibit in Hutchinson court. if you're the sneaky kind, you cango as a keyhole.In case you’re just plain neu¬rotic, you can go as Freud andcouch. If you’re paranoic, you canT* 1 *CoSTUmES- <vV^ APRIL 28- Uk/faASKl/v&-ftX MiPNiG-HTEHQM lOp.JjfCOMMON’S$4L00 a couple . . . tickets available at Reynolds clubiB and Administration building, Information desk.W• 'M Sponsor jazz pianistBud Powell, noted progressive jazz pianist from New York,will appear with his trio this afternoon at 2:30 in Mandel hall,sponsored by the UC Jazz club. Admission to this Festival ofthe Arts event is $1.25.The club has announcedthat if this concert is success¬ful it will sponsor a subscriptionseries of concerts next year, fea¬turing top name artists represent¬ing all schools of jazz.Powell has been said to possess“incomparable facility, technique,and a highly original and. individ¬ual style,” according to Jazz clubpresident, Frank Broude.“Bud Powell made the piano anintegral part of bop,” accordingto Barry Ulanov in his History ofJazz in America.”“He has managed to earn theunanimous admiration of his con¬temporaries and to forge an in¬eradicable place for himself in theinternational hall of jazz fame,”commented Leonard Feather ofDownbeat magazine.Powell was born in New Yorkin 1924 to a musical family, andhas spent most of his time plac¬ing and studying in the metro¬polis.Although he ceased formalschooling at the age of fifteen, hehas received the equivalent of acollege training in serious musictheory and composition.Powell’s trio includes bassistTommy Potter, formerly withArtie Shaw, Charlie Parker, MilesDavis, and Illinois Jaquet; andElvin Jones, who has drummedwith the Kenny Burrell and MilesDavis groups. photo by StricklinBud Powell, progressive jazzpianist, who will appear withhis trio today.Extend exhibitThe Ida Noyes student artexhibit, originally scheduled toclose tomorrow, has been ex¬tended to Monday, May 7, ac¬cording to Mary Alice New¬man, associate director of stu¬dent activities.Entries may be claimed inthe activities office on the sec¬ond floor during the hours8:30-5, Tuesday through Fri¬day (May 8-11).That fancy auto show (Concours d'Elcgonce) is zooming post — to¬morrow in the Circle (in front of Administration building), from 12 noonto 4 p.m. All welcome to look, admire, envy. Bring your model cars, too,if you like.THE CHICAGO MAROONRage 6 April 27, 1956Hootenanny to be held tonight Lauds Presidencypresented by Folklore society by Oliver Lee1‘Office of Freedom: the American Presidency” is the topicof the current Walgreen lectures, which are delivered byThe usual banjos and guitars will be joined tonight by bagpipes, fiddles, and bongo Clinton L. Rossiter, professor of government and author ofdrums as the Folklore Society presents a “hootenanny,” featuring seven leading midwest-ern folk musicians, four students, and three UC alumni in a two-and-a-half hour “jamsession,” in Breasted hall at 8:30 p.m., for the Festival of the Arts.Admission is 50 cents for non-members, 25 cents for members.“Hootenanny,” in the folk-enthusiast’s lexicon, refers to an “all-star” concert-and-sing.All of the artists appearinghave given concerts, radio and Ella Jenkins. Miss Hall has ap- Bums, and Bob March are the UCnight club shows in Chicago,and most have appeared on theUC campus before. The “hoote¬nanny” brings nearly the entirecoterie of performing Chicago-area folk musicians together forthe first time.Guest performers include calyp-sonian Neville Black, Jamaica-born calypso singer who has ap¬peared at the Blue Angehand theCompass. Bemie Asbel, who hasappeared in concerts, night clubs,on WFMT and television, will pro¬vide ballads on the guitar. Banjo-ist Bob Gibson is a recent importto Chicago, and has appeared at peared frequently with NevilleBlack as accompanist, and willalso appear as a soloist. Ella Jenk¬ins has appeared all over Chicago,including a Mandel hall concert,singing Afro-Cuban chants.Folklore society members MoeHirsch, John Ketterson, Charity student body’s contribution to theconcert, while alumni will be rep¬resented by Georgie March andguitarist Pete Stein; guitarist-fid¬dle player Pete Stone, also analumnus, will perform on both in¬struments and act as master ofceremonies. onand government.The purpose of these lectures,said Rossiter, is to make good astatement by the British scholarJohn Bright to the effect that theAmerican Presidency is the mostmajestic office on earth and themost worthy of respect.Rossiter’s opening lecture onthe powers of the Presidency em¬phasized the fact that the Amer¬ican President is not only thechief executive, but the chief ofstate as well. He is, said Rossiter,“prime minister and king rolledHold world premiereA world premiere, two first performances in Chicago and into on€ ”other works ranging over more than two centuries make up Cites new powersthe UC Musical society’s program for the Festival of the Arts, Recent developments have add-the Offbeat Room and' the Old to be presented this Sunday at 8:15 p.m. in the Ida Noyes ed areas to the powers of theIJoiriolKiirrr P o rr n t n a T\ 1 a . “™ -- - - - , _ _ _Heidelburg. Bagpipe playeGeorge Armstrong and his guit-ariste wife Jerri have appeared inconcerts and at the Compass.Drums from the Caribbean willbe provided by Tavelda Hall andHold Festivalof NationsOver eight hundred persons areexpected to attend the Festival ofNations to be held Sunday at In¬ternational house, according toMarguerite Henninger, coordinat¬ing chairman of the event. Lastyear’s festival was the best-at¬tended single event in the Festivalof the Arts weekend.Delegates from foreign lega¬tions in Chicago, together withforeign students and nationalsfrom the Chicago area, have beeninvited to the gala occasion.Dances and folk songs, togetherwith motion pictures from Pakis¬tan. Turkey, and Austria, are fea¬tured in the afternoon exhibition,W’hich starts at 3 p.m.An evening stage show, lastingwell over two and a half hours,and including folk dances andsongs from Austria, Italy, and thePhilippines, has been planned.Admission to the festival iswithout charge.CANOE TRIPSS<-rk solitude and adventure in theQuetico - Superior wilderness. Canoe,complete camping equipment and ex¬cellent food supplies 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 .7170, ELY, MINNESOTA3.30 TO 6 P.M. DART820 On YourRadio DialhaIsted0 000CHILDREN FREE-Phone WA. 8-7979Quick to ReachEasy to Get toEssaness WonderfulFamily TheatreEvery NightIs aWonderfulVacation•Late Show FridayMidnite Show Saturday library.The first performances in¬dicate one of the aims of the so¬ciety: to present worthwhile butlittle-heard music of any kind.The group also furnishes an op¬portunity for music lovers to hearstandard works, especially cham¬ber music, in a more intimate andappropriate setting than can beprovided in a concert hall.Sunday’s concert will openwith Telemann’s Suite in G minorfor violin and continuo, followedby the first Chicago performanceof Robert Palmer’s second pianosonata. Palmer is regularly onthe faculty of Cornell university,but is teaching this year at theUniversity of Illinois; this sonatawas completed in 1948.The first performance of asuite for unaccompanied violin(completed this year) by RobertBloch, a student in the music de¬partment, and Alban Berg’s FourPieces for clarinet and piano,probably a first Chicago perform¬ance, round out the first half ofthe program. Berg is the mostcelebrated pupil of Arnold Scho¬enberg and, after him, the fore¬most exponent of the twelve toneschool; the works here presented,however, are relatively early andare not influenced by that tech¬nique. The clarinet pieces datefrom 1913, and the Sonata lor pi-VI 6-9832Choice Seats for;MSTISLAVROSTROPOVICHTop Soviet CellistMonday EveningMay 7Orchestra HallCall Mr. WollinsAN 3-1877TheDisc1367 E. 57th St.•Recordof the weekRICHARDDYER-BENNETFolk SongsDyer-Bennet Records No, 112" record$3.99 ano, which follows, from 1908.The latter work, a short examplein one movement, is listed asopus 1. »Admission to the concert is free,and all are invited.Band givesconcert hereUC’s rejuvenated concert band,under the baton of Louis Lason,will present a twilight concertthis evening in Hutchinson court.Selections on the program in¬clude a prelude and fugue (dminor) by Johann Sebastian Bach,a concert suite by Gustav Holst,and Wing Ding, an original workfor band by Milton Singer. Theprogram is expected to last aboutan hour.Closing numbers will be Chi¬cago songs “Wave the Flag” andthe rarely-heard Alma Mater.In case of rain, the concert willbe held in Mandel hall. the well-known Conservatism in America (1955) and otherbooks on American history . —audience over a wide range ofpolitical and social restraints.These were the "proud, jealousand independent Congress," theSupreme Court (which, however,"can be expected to go on ration¬alizing most pretentions of mostPresidents"), the unwieldy bu¬reaucracy, the political parties(the President’s own no less thanthe opposing party), the federalsystem, the innumerable pressuregroups, the President’s “col¬leagues and constituents over-seas,” and finally, and most im¬portantly, public opinion.Stresses public opinionPublic opinion, said Rossiter, isthe backbone which lendsstrength to the resistance of Con¬gress and other institutionsagainst the misuse of Presidentialpower. Without the support ofpublic opinion, these variouschecks upon his power are inef¬fective.Conversely, the President "cando anything with the help of pub¬lic opinion, but nothing withoutit or against it.” Rossiter heldthat the President can steer pub¬lic opinion a bit, but cannot rangefar outside the accepted limits,these being constitutionalism, pri¬vate enterprise, personal liberty,and Christian morality.The third lecture, on “the Pres¬idency in history” is being giventoday at 4:30 p.m.President which the Constitutionhad not anticipated. Such are hispositions as "manager of pros¬perity" and as leader of the coali¬tion of free nations, Rossiterpointed out.In explaining that the Presi¬dency is strictly a one-man jobbecause it is the President who al¬ways has the final responsibilitywithin the executive, Rossiter toldof being informed on reliable au¬thority that former PresidentHarry Truman had a sign on hisdesk which read: “The buck stopshere.”Discusses limitsIn the second lecture, on thelimits upon the Presidency, Ros¬siter assigned but minor impor¬tance to the Constitutional safe¬guards against abuse of Presi¬dential power, while taking his Material for the 1956 Festi¬val supplement was preparedby:Jeon KwonRobert QuinnSpike FinneyFIRE & THEFT INSURANCELIFE INSURANCEPhone or Write► Joseph H. Aaron, '27 |► 135 S. LaSalle St.* ’*4*1 • RA 6-1060- RELIANCE CAMERA APHOTO SUPPLIES1517 Eoit 63rd St.BU 8-6040j |9VV»T*WT¥Vt»ttrryTrwiBORDONE i' j[ Movers and Light Hauling <<< From Bachto Qustav Holst.TWILIGHTBAND CONCERTTONIGHTHutchinson CourtTonight, 7 p. m. Friday, April 27Admission FreeIn case of inclement weather concert will be held in Mandel hallApril 27# 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7UC nine edges Navy Pier Varsity, track club tieon Binford's hit in tenthby Max Clay and George KarcazesThe Maroon nine defeated Navy Pier last Tuesday in 10 innings by a score of 6 to 5.A1 Binford was the hero of the hour as he came through with a clutch hit in the 10th inningwith two out and two on base.Wayne Capenegro, Chicago’s starting pitcher, did very well until the sixth inning when afinger blister marred his control, causing Coach Kyle Anderson to remove him from thegame. * —————r™— . ... a homer by Crain in the thirdinning accounted for another ofChicago’s runs. The fine playing,both offensively and defensively,which was displayed in this game,points optimistically towards thecoming double-header with Knoxcollege this Saturday.U-highers runIvan Carlson and Pete Mc-Keon’s scored all of Univer¬sity high’s points, as WendellPhillips high school won a tri¬angular meet on Stagg fieldWednesday, with 68 points to Mt.Carmel’s 43 and U-high’s 25. Phil¬lips is a perennial track power¬house in the public school league.Carlson won both the mile and880 yard run for the JVers, andpicked up a second place in thebroad jump as well. McKeon wonthe broad jump, took a third inthe high jump and a fourth in the220 yard dash. The Varsity track squad met the UC Track club once moreout on Stagg field on a rainy Wednesday, and this time tiedthe track club 56*4-56*4. The Varsity had previously wonindoors and the Track club won outdoors about two weeks ago.Frank Loomos was back inHe had allowed five runs toscore before Dale Gustafsoncame in to put out the fire.Gustafson allowed only one hit inthe remaining four innings of theball game, as he chalked up histhird win of the year.Things looked black for the Ma¬roons in the eighth inning whenthe Pier lllini were ahead 5 to 3. Then, with two men out and twomen on base, Kent Karohl singledhome the tying runs.With darkness approaching inthe tenth inning and the gameabout to be called, the Maroonsbegan their rally. With two outKarohl singled and Jean Craindrew a walk setting the stage forBinford’s strategic blow. stride after his long layoff,winning the 220-yard low hurdlesand the 100-yard dash for the var¬sity trackmen. The other doublewinners were Dan Trifone, whowon in the 120 yard high hurdlesand the broad jump for the var¬sity, and Terry Ellis, of the trackclub, who outdistanced his com¬petitors in the shot put and dis¬cus.Mitch Watkins and DeweyJones tied in the high jump forthe Maroons’ other victory. Vic¬torious track club runners besidesEllis were Walt Dieke in the mile, Jim Caffey in the 440, Arne Rich¬ards in the two-mile, Mangerumin the 220-lard dash, and BobKelly in the 880. Kelly, who cus¬tomarily runs longer races, rana fine 1:57.8 half mile.The next varisty meet will beheld Wednesday, May 1, at Staggfield against Wright junior col¬lege. However, a few varsitymembers will run in the DrakeRelays held Friday and Saturdayat Des Moines, Iowa. The track¬men competing will be Bill Gram,Frank Loomos, Hosea Martin,Mitch Watkins, Dan Trifone, andpossibly Dewey Jones.Netmen lick Elmhurst, 8-1by Steve CohenHeading for one of its best seasons in recent years, CoachBill Moyle’s varsity tennis team defeated Elmhurst college8 to 1 on the Varsity courts last Tuesday afternoon.The netmen played without their Number one man, RayKunze, sidelined with a footblister, but they swept all sixsingles matches and two of thethree doubles. The squad has com¬piled a seven win, one loss recordphoto by BernickA1 Binford stretches as a Navy Tier man hustles in vain to beatthe throw.^ttiiiiuiuiiiuituiuiiiutiiiiiiiituiiuiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiMitiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiimiiiiiiiuiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitu| International House Movies §| Assembly Hall, 8 p.m. §Monday, April 30 — 45c s| Pagliacci (Italian) |^iiiiiiiiitiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitiiimiE Loomos faces inductionOne of the UC’s outstanding athletes, Frank Loomos facesan induction call into the armed forces in the near future.Loomos, one of the top hur- W jflDSdlcrs in the Midwest will besorely missed by Ted Havdon’strack team. ifBecause his induction date falls R--—prior to the end of this academic ~ TTquarter, Loomos is attempting to mmmhave his induction deferred untilafter his examinations. |||||||Frank Loomos mm.. amm - UHHRluiimmimiiiiimimmmiimuiimmiiiiiiiiiimmiiiimiiiiiiimmiimmmi!:| Check These Features 1| V PROMPT SERVICE IE V DEPENDABILITY =| V ECONOMY §E ... and then remember ... =E — The Students Favorite — =j1 University Quick Laundry |= 1376 East 55th Street =| PLaza 2-9097 |5iiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii>iiiiiiimiif? and will try to stretch its victorystreak next Tuesday when itplays Tennessee A & I Stateuniversity.There were only two closematches during the whole day.Herb West, playing number one,squeezed by Elmhurst’s E. Goss,6-4, 8-6. Cohen and Hartfield, Var¬sity “B” team players, lost toGroebe and Kovach 6-4, 6-3 in thedoubles. All of the other matcheswere one-sided affairs with AllanCooper (no. 2), A1 Knight (no. 3),Chuck Horwitz (no. 4), ShermanWheeler (no. 5), and WalterNeville no. 6), winning a totalof eighty-four games, while los¬ing only twenty to Elmhurst.Although the weather was clearand bright, the high gusty windsand low (47 degrees) temperaturemade playing difficult. Severalspectators chose to view thematches from warm Eckhardthall rather than the woodenstands facing the northern groupof the varsity courts.S. Hurok PresentsJANPEERCEAmerica's foremost tenorSaturday, May 5 — 8 p.m.SOUTH SHORE TEMPLE7215 South Jeffry Bivd.Tickets: $4 - $3 - $2.50Special student rate $1.25on $2.50 seatsTickets at student service center,Reynolds clubhyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student rate 50c all performancesA New and GREATERALECu GUINNESS IIIThe PRISONER H co-starringJACK HAWKINSPerhaps the most PROVOCATIVE Drama of our Motion Picture Era, • . and Certainly Two of the Finest Performances of all Time!THE CRITICAL RAVES:“ONE OF THE BEST OF THE YEAR ... the range of Mr.Guinness' talent is brilliantly and movingly revealed. Beautifully donein every way, with a trenchant script by Bridget Boland . . . strongdirection by Peter Glenville . . . fine performances by Jack Hawkinsand Wilfrid Lawson. All of this is immensely absorbing."— Bosley Crowther, N.Y. Times“★★★★ — 4 STARS “CERTAINLY ONE OF. . . a powerfully appealing HIS BEST . . . Guinness givesdrama ... at all times challeng¬ing to the imagination. Guinness'performance is masterly."—Kate Cameron, N.Y. DailyNews“NOTHING SHORT OFSUPERB ... a compellingnarrative, tensely dramatic. Theperformances of Guinness andHawkins are nothing short ofsuperb."— Rose Pelswick, N. Y. a strong, lean performance, a su¬perbly controlled bit of acting.Hawkins is excellent as the in¬quisitor."— William K. Zinsser,N.Y.’ Herald Tribune“GUINNESS SUPREME. . . this picture leaves the last¬ing inspiration of a monumentalexperience ... the impact isshattering."— Alton Cook, N.Y. WorldTelegramJournal American— and —MAI ZETTERLING and theSADLER WELLS BALLET "DANCE LITTLE LADY"Featuring TERENCE MORGAN ond MANDY MILLER'Color, music and delightful talents! ENCHANTING!"— New York Times DACRON and WOOLTROPICAL7«/2 Ox. $59.50608 n. michigan avenueWhitehall 3-2410tfoz^Q/WUxiC0a*•.. And familiar things are the best. Like Coca-Gala. Fullof fresh, keen sparkle . . . natural quick energy . . . andit’s so pure and wholesome — naturally friendly to yourfigure. Have it whenever you like.IOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.-Col.” « e registered trade mark. © 1956, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY1Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 27, 1956Guinness film shown JeannerecitalHyde Park theater at 53rd street and Lake Park avenuewill feature the new “different” Alec Guinness film “ThePrisoner” as its addition to the Festival of the Arts program.The film, which begins today and run's for one week, wras ratedby the New York Times as “one of the best films of the year.” Guin¬ness plays the part of a cardinal of the Roman Catholic church whois arrested and charged with treason in one of the present European“police states.”The Cardinal is put through a psychological ordeal which forceshim to make a full and degrading “Confession” at a shamelesslystaged public “trial.”Co feature is “Dance Little Lady” starring Mai Zetterling and theSadler Wells ballet, rated by the New York Times as “Enchanting.”During these Festival of Arts performances, the Hyde Park willextend its special student rate of fifty cents to alumni, faculty, otherfestival participants and guests.The only theater near the University which specializes in “art”programs, the Hyde Park has been considered to be an “importantcultural campus adjunct.” Last year the theater was chosen as the“atypical metropolitan art theater” for a recent research project inProfessor Ken Adler’s Mass Communications course on the quad¬rangles. Bamberger’s pianouneven in qualityThe first performance anywhere of a recent sonata by Leland Smith, who is on the far-ulty of the UC music department, highlighted Jeanne Bamberger’s piano recital in Mandelhall last Friday. Mr. Smith is already known to Mandel hall audiences by his opera, “SantaClaus,” performed there last September, and a number of other works played by the Musi¬cal Society and throughout Chicago; a quintet will be performed by the International Soci¬ety for Contemporary Music May 6 in Fullerton hall.The sonataCLASSIFIEDSStudent rate 5c per word. Others 10c per word. Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265PersonalThe Ghost Sonata, tonight. Saturdayand Sunday. 8:30 p.m. in the Reynoldsclub theatre.Bunny:Help! I’m sick. Frankie Machine.Yes, Earl.For SaleWell-maintained 36-inch gas stove. Bestoffer. Cali ext. 3282.WantedWanted: Five or six room furnishedapartment to be leased by four maleU of C graduate students from October1. 1956, thru May 31, 1957. If you knowsomeone vacating such an apartment orsomeone who would like to subleaseone. please contact: Larry Kessler, 1005E 60th St., phone MI 3-6000, after6:30 p.m.Someone to type 20 to 30 page paper.Call BU 8-4880 after 5 p.m.There’s No Sale LikeWholesaleDeor Student:Chances are, you love Cash-mere Sweaters by Hinda andother famous brands.. . . Here's how you can save33 1/3% to 5© %All Sizes — Colors — StylesBy Buying at Wholesale PricesCome toSamuel Murrow &Company(In the heart of theWholesale Market)Daily 9 to 5:30 Saturdays 9 to 3:30318 W. Adams St. Suite 401ARE YOUR TROUBLESLITTLE ONES?Do you ever worry about thefuture of your young familyshould you suddenly be calledby death? Sun Life Family In¬come assurance will replace yourincome while the children aregiowing up and take care ofyour widow for life.SUN LIFE ASSU R ANCECOMPANY OF CANADARalph J.Wood, Jr.,'481 N. LaSalleChicago 2,IllinoisFR 2-2390RE 1-0855 ServicesWhat’s a hootenanny? It’s the biggestfolk music concert in 9 states (andAlaska) TONIGHT at Breasted hall,1155 E. 58th. at 8:30. Blues, calypso, bal¬lads. etc. By Bernie Asbel, Neville Black,Bob Gibson and 1 dozen (12) others. Mathematics. Instruction and applica¬tions for individual or group. Loop orSouth Side. Special arrangements forgroup formed by yourself. Soglin &Associates. 28 East Jackson. WE 9-2127.“Citizens parade on cerebral palsy"’ indesperate need of volunteers for house-to-house campaign in University areaOil May 22. 7-9 p.m. Call Barbara Eisen-berg. MI 3-3125. For Rent4-room neatly furnished apt. Near cam¬pus and ICRR. Phone Greenfield, BU8-9424.Basement room. Private entrance andbath. $8 per week. 5703 Maryland. CallDO 3-3710.1* room kitchenette apartment. Newlydecorated. Refrigerator. Close to cam¬pus. FA 4-5538. 6107 Dorchester.Apartment for summer quarter, twobedrooms, study, new kitchen, diningroom, with utilities. $90. Call FA 4-9165.Not icesReopened under new management. Col¬lier’s house restaurant. 6324 Woodlawn.Specializing in fried chicken, steaksand chops, prime ribs of beef. Openfrom 5 p.m.. Sundays from 1 to 10.Closed Monday. seems to be awork with great potentialitieswhich, in the first movement,are only partially realized. It is inthree movements: a March withTrio, a Rondo, and a Coda, and isdescribed by the composer as be¬ing in a rather “mannered” form.I must agree, but in the Marchthe form does not jibe with thematerial. It is always risky to an¬alyze such a work after one or,as in my case, two hearings, butafter listening once with score inhand and once without, I had aninescapable impression; namely,that the material of the firstmovement absolutely demands alarge sonata treatment, or at leasta large scale treatment. As it isoverbalanced by the rondo,which is certainly not overlong,but simply on a larger scale. Thetheme of the March is manneredenough in itself, and this effectcould hardly but persist; in pres¬ent form, the effect is rather re¬dundant. Of course one under¬stands the contemporary compos¬er’s prejudice against obviouslytraditional forms, particularlysonata - like forms, but the de¬mands of the material must come first. And the material is certain¬ly good enough to be fashionedinto a first rate piece, as are theother movements as they stand.Mrs. Bamberger played this ex¬traordinarily difficult work withcommand and feeling. Such, un¬fortunately, was less the casewith the other works on the pro¬gram. a beautiful Haydn sonataand the well known Schubert Son¬ata Op. 78, in G major. The Haydnwas technically quite good, butrhythmically irregular and ill-de¬fined; the Schubert had beautifulmoments, but was without a totalconception, and the third andfourth movements were very rag¬ged. Such a work always seemsmuch too long, to the performernot less than the audience, with¬out a completely relaxed and al¬most improvisatory approach.For the Menuetto, too, there is apurely physical problem, of de¬manding a pianist with a largehand and enough physical forcefor the large repeated chords and octaves. As beautiful as this oneis, there is, fortunately, no dearthof Schubert sonatas.The taste of Beethoven’s “FuerElise” after the Schubert is ques¬tionable at best, although thismay be a result of associations;but its performance at half tempoand with memory slips, which canbe forgiven in a Schubert sonatabut hardly in an encore, provideda more anticlimactic ending to analready declining program.Robert Bloc’llEye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372LostLost.—Arumath slide rule. Finder callNelson Hyman, at MI 3-6000. Reward.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 EatF 57th St.MU 4-9236 Books Bought• Any Subject• Any Language• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Park 3-03211204 E. 55th St. tVVVrVy?VVVTTVTTVTWTTTTVTTV T VTTyTTVWTVVVtVTTV’1956 GRADUATES!THE PROFESSIONAL DIVISIONof theSTATE ILLINOISEMPLOYMENT SERVICEHasmany fine employment opportunities invarious professional fields theBefore you make a decision regarding yourfuture, visit thePROFESSIONAL DIVISION73 West Washington Street ChicagoInterviewing Hours: 8:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.Monday through FridayNo Fees Charged for Placement ServiceaaAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAaaA.SHORTHANDIN 6 WEEKSU0 WORDS PER MINUTE <g)Famous ABC system. Now taught inover 400 cities. New day Gr Eveningclasses start each Monday. Attendfirst class as GUEST. Special SummerClasses for College Students. ALSOthorough, intensive SPEEDTYPINGcourse. Use coupon to send for 16-page brochure.SPEEDWRITING SCHOOL37 S. Wabash Financial 6-5471Speedwriting School37 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago 3, III.Please send me without obligationyou» 16-page brochure on Speed¬writing.Name.Address-City Zone_I Phone- Just look around campus. You’ll see that the‘.‘custom” details of this Arrow University shirtare definitely “college correct.” The box pleat,the soft-roll button-down collar, and the backbutton are basic requirements. In 9 solid colors,tin’s is the oxford shirt for you. Wear it withcomfortable Arrow Bermuda shorts. They’repoplin, and available in 6 Colors. Shirts, $5.00.Tie, $2.50.Shorts, $5.00. From any angle —it says "College man ff—first in fashionShIRTS • TIES * SLACKSj