MSA dissolves in faceof new housing crisisby David Aock Review may suspendChicago Review may suspend publication with the cur¬rent issue. A meeting of the Review staff, open to thecampus, will be held today at 4:30 p.m. in the Reviewoffice, Reynolds club third floor. Plans for reorganiza¬tion or suspension will be discussed. It is rumored thatlack of funds due to the failure of the student activitiesfee to pass is a contributing tactor.Deadline nears forphotograph exchangeThe Mamed Students association, organized four years ago in the hope of fosteringbetter communications between pre-fab dweller's and the administration, has been dissolved.Further negotiations between students now living in university housing projects and theadministration regarding housing for the students when present pre-fabs are demolishednext year will be carried on by organizations from individual groups rather than an asso¬ciation trying to represent all married students.phiAdmitted SarrfVirftnr" Ruth °* McCarn- assistant dean Greenwood and Drexel, but atcl la/ president of the defunct 0f students’ who was instrumen- present, according to Fowlie, theMSA. He attributed the associa- tal in £ettinS the group started Dudley field group has in effect Deadline for a photo contest sponsored by the Cameration’s failure to lack of communi- in 1952. As late as Sunday night, taken the place of the Married club and Student Government is May 1. The theme of theration between married students she had received only informal Students’ association and will contest is student or University life on or off campus. Pic-generally, and the fact that most notice of the group’s dissolution, negotiate for all married stu- tures entered in the contest will be used in the display onof them “had little time to devote An executive committee of the dents. Tomorrow night’s meeting student life at the University .. T1111Y1 ’ . . . A ~to it.’ Membership in the organi- Dudley field organization, the of the Dudley field organization of Chicago to be exchanged the number-of entries. Any size•/ation was 72, a very small por- only one now actively represent* should serve to clarify the mar* for a similar display with the P1(4ure with negative is accept*tion of married students. Ven- jng married students according ried students’ stand on the Uni* University of Moscow. able but 8 by 10 inches is the sizeturella mentioned that the dues to Alfred F. Fowlie, chairman versity’s housing proposal, and Prizes of $25. $10, and $5 will preferred. Prints will become theof ,)0 cents a year, while not a of the group, met Sunday night to perhaps to make clear exactly be awarded to the winners of the property of Student Government.who is doing the task formerly contest. There is a 25-eent entry Entries may be sent to the SjGshouldered by the MSA. fee per person, but no limit on office in care of Otto Feinst^in.major factor, might have had discuss accepting the Universitysomething to do with the associa* offer of apartments at $65 alion’s gradual demise. month, not including utilities.Venturella, while deploring the The doomed prefabs and bar-dissolution of the MSA, expressed racks ranged in price from $50 tothe belief that if married students $55 a month, with utilities. Fowlieorganize in the future, it will be believes the students “want aa small group, rather than an better offer as far as money isattempt at a representative body, concerned,’’ and the problem willHe stressed that the MSA was an be put before the whole group to-attempt to form a community of morrow night before any definitemarried students, which failed in decision is made,part due to the very fact that the The Dudley field group repre¬students were physically sepa- Sents students not formerly mem¬rated as well as not vitally inter* bers of MSA as well as formerested. members of the association. Infor*The Married Students’ associa- mal groups have been formed attion had ostensibly been active some of the other dwelling Vol. 64, No. 48until last weekend, according to groups, such as the ones on *j\A cbicaao11 laroonUniversity of Chicago, Tuesday, May 1, 1956Masauerade highlights festivalDancers don unheard of garb;clever, topical costumes appearby Ronald GrossmanThe Festival of the Arts reached its climax Saturday night as the Beaux Arts masquer¬ade ball filled Hutchinson commons with colors, music, and gaiety.The high point of four days of Festival activity,'the ball allowed those attending to lettheir imaginations run rampant in dreaming up costumes to fit the occasion. (For anaccount of costumes and the grand march see caption to the left and below this story.)Featured event of the evening was the first performance by the Blackfriars, one - timepopular UC organ nation Blackfriars using the traditional recent history as one of thei ^aS ^een CtetUHCt Since theme “It’s blackfriar time money raisers in the current $32.71941. again.” Bringing the University’s million campaign.The group, whose purpose is to history up to date, the group did Members of the Blackfriar re-stage and present musical reviews a spoof of the vegetarian cutlets Vue were Sylvia Hedley, Lallieand musical comedies, was re- oft-times served in Burton-Judson Whetzig, Elin Ballantine, Barbaravived this year and gave their men’s dorms—a quartet singing QUjnrlj Irene Samorajski’, Robertafirst performance at the ball. “Gimme some more B-J vegepat- Smiskoll, Linda Freeman; BuddyWith piano accompaniment by ties.” Schreiber, Phil Bloomfield, JohnDouglas Maurer and narration by Barbara Quinn sang “The Rolker, Phil Coleman, Pow Wool-Bill Dunning, the group sang Money Song” to “Quentin L. Walter Fish and Fredtheir way through the history ot Quentin" who represented very SchmidtAs a curvaceous cocktail glass stem topped with a glittering transparentbrim, Shari Pinch, Chicago-area model, (below) led a group which cameto Beaux Arts as a martini, with Robert Quinn os a vermouth bottle andLou Laflin as the gin. Prizewinners Barbara Culp and William Worrell(left) appeared as brilliantly colored playing cards.photo by Bystrynphoto by BystrynHighlight of the evening was the grand processional ofmasqueraders, led by Lieutenant Governor John W. and Mrs.Chapman.Marching three times arund the Commons, with the ven¬erable visages of Harper, Bur¬ton, Judson and Hutchinslooking down, costumed couplespassed by the judging standwhere “Most and Best” costumeswere chosen.Acting as judges were: dancerRuth Page; Margo Hoff, well-known Chicago artist;and CharlesPercy, UC trustee.The most humorous costumeawards were Herman Kattlove,who appeared dressed as an Eng¬lish schoolboy, and Carole Borde¬lon, costumed as a marionette.Awards for the most handsomecostumes were given to a couplewho came as an exotic easternprince and princess—Ollie Ellisonand Lydia Armstrong.Most original costumes werejudged to be Alan Gordon andFrances Moore who could barelyhe distinguished inside a Christ¬mas tree and Christmast gift, re¬ spectively.Barbara Culp and her escort,William Worrell, resident head ofSnell hall, took the award for bestcouple as the Queen and King ofSpades. Although three sets ofcouples appeared as playingcards, their costume was chosenthe best.Five couples were given a jointaward as the best-costumed group.The comptroller of the Univer¬sity, an assistant professor in thedepartment of surgery, a profes¬sor of mathematics, an assistantprofessor in the department ofmusic, appeared as the “Mad Hat¬ters”—all wearing mad costumes.The “Hatters” are better knownin real life as John and Kay Kirk¬patrick, Dwight and EleanorClark, Eugene and Marion North-rup, Leonard and Lee Meyers, andCyril and Betty Houle. Other costume highlights of theevening included: a group of sixUC’ers who came as members ofthe “Stupid Government” withtwo parties represented—Inade¬quate Students League and SomeRepulsive Party. Dressed as chil¬dren, the six sucked on lollypops,fought with each other and hand¬ed out mimeographed platformson which the fake ISL proposedsuch things as “a committee tostudy re-instating Aristotle“Schwartz” and appropriationsfor tents to house Dudley Fieldresidents after July.” The phonySRP’ers opposed almost everypoint of the ISL platform and in¬cluded opposition to “gold bathtubs for married students on thegrounds that gold doesn’t wearnearly as well as platinum.”Dean and Mrs. Robert Strozierin authentic Machiavellian attire,and Dean and Mrs. John Nether-ton as a circus beauty and clownwere some of the outtsanding cos¬tumes. Dean Netherton was notrecognized by even his closest as¬sociates, so meticulously donewas the make-up on his face.Although rain cut attendanceto the ball somewhat, dancerswere well satisfied as two groupssupplied the music. Jerry Gliddenand his NBC orchestra providedhighly dancabie numbers in theCommons, while Bobby Nagataniand his combo came out with hotjazz and Latin rhythms in thenorth Reynolds club lounge.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 1. 1956LettersChides Maroonfor pensive turnThe Maroon, with unusuallyrare good sense, is seldom philo¬sophical. When it is one shouldbecome properly suspicious. Yourcurious editorial comments aboutMiss Hannah Arendt’s equallyodd Walgreen lectures . . . repre¬sents a species of philosophic“howler” of the most naive sort.The notion that there is a certainclass of questions the mere con¬templation of which is a goodin itself . . . represents that piouskind of mental paralysis one as¬sociates with the infant, the agedand the press. For those who hadthe misfortune to hear any or allof Miss Arendt’s lectures here isprecious and bitter irony — ob¬scurity complimenting deeper ob¬scurity on its clarity, nonsensecongratulating nonsense on itssensibleness. . . .It is simply absurd to say that“we really can know nothing,”since it is quite obvious that weknow considerable. ... I suspectMiss Arendt and the Maroon edi¬torialist are really referring towhat are qalled philosophical ormoral or religious questions whenthey express their pious “ehins-up” possimism. Well what aboutthem? Trivally, these questionsfall into three categories . . .meaningless questions for which it makes no sense to give an an¬swer. . . . Secondly, there arequestions for which the asker willaccept only a special kind of an¬swer which a little explorationshows is logically inapplicable tothe question. . . . Finally, thereare those questioners who ... canalways summon up a further“Why?” to plague their auditors. . . every “Why?” asks a differ¬ ent question altogether. . . .We can conclude that there areno questions unanswerable inprinciple, but instead a relativelysimple linguistic confusion. Theeditorialist and Miss Arendt aremistaken in trying to draw mor¬als from logically misleading ar¬guments. They are looking foressences when they should benoting family resemblances. . . .Allen N. HerzogIssued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermittentlyduring the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, at 1213 East59th Street, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephone: 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. to 5 p.in., Mon¬day through Saturday.Editor-in-chief Joy S. BurbachManaging Editor Norman LewokBusiness manager Gary MokotoffExecutive news editor.Advertising manager .Supplement editor ...News editorsCultural editorSports editorNews feature editor...Copy editorsProduction managers.Photo editorPersonnel manager...,Calendar editorOffice manager Ronald GrossmanLawrence KesslerJean KwonFred Karst, Sue TaxJudy PodoreRobert HalaszSue TaxJean Kwon. Fabian Necheles. .John Herzog, Robert QuinnJohn BystrynJack BurbachEarl HerrickAdrienne KlnkaldStaff: Ed Berckman, Robert Bergman. Roger Bernhardt, Willianv-Brandon, DonBroder, Joyce Ellin, Saralee Feldman, Jack Forman. Gerson Greenberg, JeanneHargltt, Nelson Hyman, Oliver Lee. Quentin Ludgln, Robert MacDonald, DaveMailman, Chuck Mittman, Robert Moody, Lowell Pickett, Spike Plnney, DianePollock, Lynford Russell, Art Taltel, David Zack."There’s opportunity in a growing company"A Campus-to-Career Case HistoryDick Walsh (right) discussing carrier equipment which will providemany additional long distance circuits out of Philadelphia.As an Engineer in the TransmissionSection of Bell Telephone Company ofPennsylvania, Richard M. Walsh plansfor the future.‘ Our group’s responsibility,” saysDick, “is to see that we have sufficientfacilities to handle present and futureneeds. Telephone usage is growing everyyear, and we keep up with this growthby keeping ahead of it.“For instance, to meet the increasingdemand for communication circuits inour area, we’re adding 70,000 new chan¬nel miles this year alone, at a cost of$3,500,000. Laying new cable will giveus 40,000 of those channel miles, andwe’ll get the other 30,000 through use ofcarrier equipment, which lets us send a number of long distance calls on eachpair of wires simultaneously.“Thus, though a cable might have only300 pairs of wires, we can, with carrier,make it carry over 3000 telephone callsat one time. Using carrier equipment toget extra circuits out of cable—which isexpensive to make and lay—is an exampleof how we engineer to give high-gradeservice at the lowest possible cost.“Before I graduated from college I hadinterviews with twenty-eight companies.Out of all these I chose the telephonecompany because it had the most to oilerin the way of interesting work, trainingand opportunity. This certainly turnedout to be true. In a growing businessyour opportunities grow, loo.”Dick Walsh graduated in 1953 from the University ofDelaware with a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering. Thereare many interesting career opportunities in other BellTelephone Companies, and in Bell Telephone Labora¬tories, Western Eleetric and Sandia Corporation. Yourplacement officer can give you more information aboutall Bell System Companies. . BellTelephoneSystem 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.— ' ■5f<r-xy' lr to Campus(Author of **Barefoot Boy IVit/i Cheek," etc.}THE TRUE AND TYPICAL CASE OFCHATSWORTH OSCEOLAThe school year draws to an end, and everybody iswondering about the future — everybody, that is, except theengineers. Today there is not a single engineer on a singlecampus who has not received a dozen fabulous offers froma dozen corporations.All this, of course, you know. But do you know just howfabulous these offers are? Do you have any idea how wildlythe corporations are competing? Let me cite for you the trueand typical ease of Chatsworth Osceola, a true and typicalsenior.Chatsworth, walking across the M.I.T. campus oneday last week, was hailed by a man parked at the curb in ayellow convertible studded with precious gemstones. “Hello,”said the man. “I am Darien T. Sigafoos of the Sigafoos Bear¬ing and Bushing Company. Do you like this car?”“Yeah, hey,” said Chatsworth.“It’s yours,” said Sigafoos.“Thanks, hey,” said Chatsworth.“Do you like Philip Morris?” said Sigafoos.“Of corris!” said Chatsworth.“Here is a pack,” said Sigafoos. “And a new pack will bedelivered to you at six-hour intervals every day as long asyou shall live.”“Thanks, hey,” said Chatsworth.“Does your wife like Philip Morris?” said Sigafoos.“I’m not married,” said Chatsworth.“Do you want to be?” said Sigafoos.“What American boy doesn’t?” said Chatsworth.Sigafoos pressed a button on the dashboard of theconvertible, and the trunk opened up, and out came a nubilemaiden with golden hair, flawless features, a perfect disposi¬tion, and the appendix already removed. “This is LaurelGeduldig,” said Sigafoos. “Would you like to marry her?”“Is her appendix out?” said Chatsworth.“Yes,” said Sigafoos.“Okay,” said Chatsworth.“Congratulations,” said Sigafoos. “And for the happybride, a pack of Philip Morris every six hours for the restof her life.”“Thanks, hey,” said Laurel.“Now then,” said Sigafoos to Chatsworth, “let’s get downto business. My company will start you at $45,000 a year.You will retire at full salary upon reaching the age of 28.When you start work, we will give you a three-story housemade of bullion, complete with a French Provincial swimmingpool. We will provide sitter service for all your childrenuntil they are safely through puberty. We will guarantee tokeep your teeth in good repair; also the teeth of your wifeand children unto the third generation. We will send yourdentist a pack of Philip Morris every six hours as long ashe shall live.... Now, son, think carefully about this offer.Meanwhile, here is one thousand dollars in small, unmarkedbills, which places you under no obligation whatsoever.”“It certainly seems like a fair offer,” said Chatsworth.“But there is something you should know. I am not an en¬gineer. In fact, I don’t go to M.I.T. I am a poetry majorat Harvard. I just came over here on a bird walk.”“Oh,” said Sigafoos.“I guess I don’t get to keep this money and the convertibleand Laurel now, do I?” said Chatsworth.“Of course you do,” said Sigafoos. “And if you’d like thejob, my offer still stands.” ©Max Shulman. 1956The makers of Philip Morris, who sponsor this column, arc de¬lighted to know that times are so good for the engineers. To maketimes even better—for the engineers and everybody else— here sa gentle suggestion: Philip Morris, of corris!May I, 1*56 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pag* 3photos by Bystryn and Grossma*Pictured left ond above are some of the gaily costumed revelers who attended the second annual BeauxArts ball in Hutchinson commons and the Reynolds club. The event, the most elaborately decorated affair ofthe year, featured two dance bands and the first performance by the reorganized Blackfriars dramaticsociety.Page ballet-play delightfulalthough cramped by stageRuth Page’s notions about the terpsichore an art were explored delightfully last Wednes¬day in her “experimental” presentation of the ballet-play Suzanna and the Barber for Stu¬dent Government benefit.Basically, according to Miss Page, good dancing conveys emotion well, while good balletis a successful combination of the arts of design and lighting, of music arrangement andperformance, as well as of dancing, to produce a unified work. And in these respects, theperformance was most grati- cause of the midget-size pros- to murder a metaphor, is in thefying and entertaining. cenium that Mandel hall affords, dancing. Miss Page’s ability andMoreover even in the But fr0111 the indications that did her insistence on creativity andi ’ .u appear, particularly the costumes, on the faithful interpretation ofcramped environment or tne it is obvious that Clave deserves each character and his motivationMandel hall stage, which is hardly his reputation. His sense of sug- in making a ballet, all contributedmore than an oversized coffee fasting reality without attempt- to the success of the presentation.with wings (and precious imitate it is a delight to Even the dancers seemed to havelittle o* those), the Page company bebold(li , , lun; the audience certainly did.succeeded in creating the iairy- But ,he pr0o£ ol the puddin~ b* K'TOntale-like atmosphere which is dear'Art makes reality realas reader accepts place"by Ed BerckmanThe responsibility of art is “to make reality real”, novelistEudora Welty said here Thursday night, “and this beginsto happen the moment place is accepted as true by th«reader.”Miss Welty was speaking on, as she put it, “the place ofplace in fiction” in the last William Vaughn Moody lecture ofthe year before a full house atMandel hall.to all balletomanes and theater¬goers in general.This is not to say that the pro¬duction was perfect. Mandel hall,according to Miss Page, is one ofthe worst theaters for ballet inthe country. And the Mandel per¬formance was without most ofthe scenery and completely sansorchestra.But, all things taken into ac¬count, the “experiment” proveda fruitful one, for Miss Page gotthe “understanding and apprecia¬tive audience” for which sheasked, one which did not put totest her earlier statement that“few ballets have survived disas¬trous opening nights.”Rossini’s music to the Barber ofSeville, adapted by Isaac vanGrove, seemed well adapted tochoreography, although somesympathy might be reserved forthe pianist who had to make awhole orchestra’s worth of musicwith only two hands. Neal Kavanis to be congratulated for his suc¬cessful resistance of the urge toplay as loudly as possible justbecause he was outnumbered.(By the way, Suzanna did notappear in the original Rossinilibretto but was borrowed fromthe sequel, the Marriage ofFigaro.)Of the four changes of sceneryoriginally designed by AntoniClave, world-reknowned Paris ar¬tist, only one could be used be- towns. This is also true of “ThePonder Heart,” a recent noveletteA novel is “the most pleas- Which has been adapted for theant of things,” she said, “and has stage and is currently playingthe broadest possible subject — on Broadway,you and me. VVe have to be there,” Fiction is truth and lieand the location, the place, makes Art not only pleases, Miss Wel-this possible. “Location is not ty continued, but through it oneonly to be used but discovered — country can speak reliably to an-and the discovery is of us, not other if it can hear at all. “Theof the location.” art that truth most di-“Place is the crossroads of cir- rectly and fully is fiction.” Putcumstance, the proving-ground of another way, “fiction is a liewhat happened. Place is where never in its inside thoughts, al-the W’riter has his roots — and ways in its outside looks.”man has always found his God inhis place. Place focuses the gi¬gantic eye of genuis.” The novel or short story “mustoffer a surface continuous, un¬broken, trustworthy, always inMiss Welty felt there are signs touch with the senses. The writerin contemporary fiction that place uses selection, changing the worldis being neglected, and she ex¬pressed her regret at this neglect.“It may seem that I’m urging ‘re- as he writes it. He acts with ev¬ery word.”Miss Welty referred to GustaveNick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Are.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery Service gional’ writing,” she said, “but Flaubert’s work as being “em<that’s an outsider’s term. Who bedded like rock in the placehas not confined themselves to a where it comes from.” Above all,region?” she continued, it was FlaubertMost of Miss Welty’s own nov- who showed that no blur orels and short stories, including vagueness is allowable in writing.“Petrified Man,” of which shegave a reading Thursday night, She quoted the French novel¬ist: “Poetry is a precise as ge-S. Hurok PresentsJANPEERCEAmerica's foremost tenorSaturday, May 5 — 8 p.m.SOUTH SHORE TEMPLE7215 South Jeffry Blvd.Tickets: $4 - $3 - $2.50Speciol student rote $1.25on $2.50 seatsTickets at student service center,Reynolds club are located in small Mississippi ometery — after a certain pointone never makes a mistake aboutthe soul.”Miss \yelty emphasized thatcharacters must be drawn moredefinite and less shadowy thanin the real world. “Place can betransparent, translucent, but notpeople. Even if he is likely thecharacter must seem more like¬ly.”Concluding her talk, she saidthat “The challenge to the writertoday is not in the theme, whichis always old and tried, or place,which has always been visitedbefore. It is only the vision thatcan be new — but that is enough.**'N3:30 TO 6 P.M. DAH.Y820 On YourRadio DialArts ball caps gala festivalAre you playingthe rightSpalding ball ?For*tlie low handicap per, Spalding’s newhigh-compression AIR-FLITE® offersmaximum distance. The exclusivedura-thin* cover withstands scuffingand bruising far longer. $14.75 doz.,3 for $3.75.The Spalding KRO-FLITE® couples dis¬tance with superb durability. The toughcover will stand up under surprisinglyrough treatment and the ball staysround, white and puttablc. $14.75 doz.,3 for $3.75.The Spalding OLYMPIC® is a medium-priced ball with a very tough skin. Itcombines exceptional wearing qualitieswith a playability usually associatedwith higher-priced balls. $11.40 doz.,3 for $2.85.Many golfers choose the Spaldinghonor.® Popularly priced, it offersgood durability and playability. Likeall Spalding balls, it features True Ten¬sion winding for extra resilience. $9.00doz., 3 for $2.25.Get economy and quality in this golf ball.Spalding’s victor® is an “economy’’ball with plenty of distance. The extra¬thick cover promises great durability.$7.00 doz., 3 for $1.75.•TRADE* MARKSpaldingSETS THE PACE IN SPORTSPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 1, 1955Dancing emotional art’ Jazz trio sparks UC“Dancing is a fluid and ephemeral art,” declared Ruth Page, well-known choreographer,prefacing her “experimental” presentation of her new ballet-play, Suzanna and the Barber,last Wednesday evening in Mandell hall.“Dancers are not intellectual critics,” continued Miss Page; “dancing is an’emotionalart.” She explained that if an artist could analyze his work completely, he is not really anartist, since a true artist does his work by creative intuition, which cannot always be ex¬plained. by Fabian Necheles and Bill Mathieu, , , ,, since movement interests“A good choreographer,” more than singing.”stated she, “must have some- mething to say, and then he mustbe able to say it in movement.”But a ballet is much more thanjust movement, Miss Page con¬tinued; there are many aspectsof the production — music, cos¬tumes and stage design, lighting,makeup, the story (if any), andso forth — which must combinesuccessfully to form a “drama”.“We are to judge the whole, whichjs greater than the sum of itsparts,” she asserted.‘How to ... *In putting together a ballet,continued Miss Page, one mustfirst have music and a unifyingthought with which to work. Op¬eras, of course, have both, butthey are very long, and oftentheir stories are too complicated.“Most balletomanes,” she com¬plained. “want simple stories, orno stories at all. They hate toread program notes.”Nevertheless, she said, she hasadapted the mysic of five operasto ballet purposes. Part of thereason for this was the fact thatduring her many years of experi¬ence as ballet director for a num¬ber of opera companies — amongthem Chicago’s Lyric Theatre —she has been exposed to a greatdeal of operatic music.“All artists being sponges,” sheeffused, “I soaked opera up . . .and came to see the operas froma choreographic standpoint . . . Music adaptableAs an experiment in adaptabil¬ity, she suggested that membersof the audience who objected tothis music-borrowing try to im¬agine what singers would do withSwan Lake or Giselle.Another reason why she hasused opera music in so many bal¬lets, said Miss Page, is that it isvery difficult to get suitablescores from modern composers.Opera music, on the other hand,quite often has a quality readilyadaptable to the dance.“I do have a couple of scoresup my sleeve, though,” she said.One is Darius Milhaud's The Brils,based on the poem by Edgar Al¬lan poe. Another is The Triumphof Chastity, by Jacques Ibert. “Iassure you chastity rarely tri¬umphs in my work.” she smiled.Lesson in creationWhen creating a ballet, MissPage revealed, the first thing shedoes is to listen to the music,carefully and repeatedly. Then,working with dancers (“I like towork on flesh and blood”), shecombines her choreographicknowledge with inspiration andslowly produces an organizedwork.Two things are important, shecontinued: first, it is much bet¬ter to give your dancers someroom in which to create — letthem add nuances — and second, it is always necessary to under¬stand the motivation of each ofthe characters, so that they re¬main coherent.As an illustration, she askedmembers of her company, to dem¬onstrate a number of possibilitiesfor variation in a given set ofdance steps. They attempted itadagio, in a tragic manner, thencomic, then upside-down, and fi¬nally avec le jazz hot.Combine theater arts“My hope,” c o nt i n u e d MissPage “is for a time when the the¬ater arts (which have been sepa¬rated in Western society for abouttwo centuries) will again be re¬united.” The oriental theater, sheexplained, has no such separation,and the artist there must be ableto act, dance, and sing well beforehe is regarded as consummate.Hence, she explained, this bal¬let-play experimentally combinesboth movement and spoken lines.“My final interest,” she stated,“is in the overall unity of thework as a whole.”Art, not politicsMiss Page concluded her talkwith a reference to a comparisonbetween the subsidized state bal¬let companies to be found in Eu¬rope and the free-lance Americancompanies,' a comparison suggest¬ed by Leonide Massine, interna¬tionally famous choreopgrapherand dancer (he appeared in themovies Red Shoes and Tales ofHoffman), who favored free en¬terprise. The Bud Powell trio, featured by the Jazz club last Fridaycame off quite smoothly. The “quite” indicates that the planecarrying the trio was delayed for 45 minutes.During this interlude students Bill Mathieu, Horace Silverand Oscar Peterson, musically capable jazz-wise, profession¬ally soothed and entertained the restless audience. They werespurred on by reknownedbass-man Percy Heath.The Powell trio had a uni¬queness of thought and freshnessof technique. They played every¬thing from a fast “Old BlackMagic” to a slow ballad, “Imagi¬nation.” The ballad was soulfuland conveyed much feeling.Tommy Potter displayed expertskill in his solo work on the bass.Eldon Jones’ co-ordination on thedrums was remarkable. Bud Pow¬ ell, the unifying force of the trioplayed good jazz but, consideringhis class, could have played bet-ter.The trio played colorful hard-driving music; the response ofthe half-full house was immaai-late and vigorous. The trio wastightly knitted. Each playerwould take up a conversationstraed by the feature instrument,carrying it on with a mean¬ing on a personal subjective level,then tying it in with the contextof the trio.The concert was unique in thatthe Powell trio was the first tointroduce the piano as a featureinstrument in a jazz trio. In thepast the piano was utilized onlyas an instrument of accompani¬ment.Bud Powell A publication by UC’s jazz club,states that “the Bud Powell andCole Porter trios made the mostimportant contributions to thedevelopment of pure jazz in thelast ten years.” They aiso mentionthat Bud Powell has the best triotoday, utilizing the piano as afeature instrument.Why Sen. Estes Kefauverreads The Reader’s DigestMany groups give musicYoung, but fineby John Herzog traded from the otherwise well-rehearsed performance.The general impression left bythe concert, however, was a dis¬tinctly pleasant one.For a group less than fourmonths old, the Appolonian so¬ciety gave an excellent perform¬ance last Saturday night.Seated around a table in thecustomary style for performingmadrigals, the group of eightsang with a unity and assurancemarred by only a few slips dur¬ing the somewhat lengthy pro¬gram.The selection of material couldperhaps have been more varied,showing too great a preponder¬ance of 16th century works.Certain distinct limitations inthe quality of the voices, however,could not be surmounted, evenwith the expert direction of Law¬rence Lerner, a physics grad stu¬dent. The thin tone on the highsoprano notes and the occasionalJack of depth and balance de- Mix glee, horns (English), ‘Come let’s be merry(English), Weep you no more sadfountains by Horton, and the UCAlma Mater.The recital was co-sponsored bythe Honorable Robert WhyteMason, British consul-general inChicago.A brass choir conducted byLouis Lason, and the Men’s Gleeclub, led by Dennis Cowan, gavea joint recital last Thursday noonin Hutchinson court.Performing atop the roof ofMandel corridor, the choir played“Trumpet Fanfare,” “Tower So¬nata,” “March from OccasionalOverture,” among other selec¬tions.Following the brass band’s pre¬sentation, the Glee club sang thetraditional “Hymns Eucharistus,”and “Since first I saw your face” Books Bought• Any Subject• Any Language• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Park 3-03211204 E. 55th St. "A magazine like The Reader's Digest takes up whereschool leaves off. It touches on an impressive array ofsignificant suhfi'cts. It throws a white light on the issuesthat confront us. It educates as it entertains.”HALSTED°"uD°°*CHILDREN FREE-Phone WA. 8-7979 SPECIAL PRICETO STUDENTSOn Student Health FOR In May Reader’sDigest don’t miss:CONDENSATION FROM BEST SELLER: “HOW TO UVE365 DAYS A YEAR.” Half of those seeking medicalaid can blame badly handled emotions, says Dr.John Schindler. Here he contrasts the damage doneby flare-ups and worry with the healing power ofgood emotions, and gives 7 steps for cultivating ahappier disposition.THE CURIOUS CUSTOM OF GOING STEADY. Cameron.Shipp describes the elaborate rituals and taboos ofmodem teen-age social life.THE ART OF UNDERSTANDING OTHER PEOPLE. Beforewe judge another, we Bhould ask: “Might I not beas bad or worse if faced with his troubles?” Clar¬ence Hall shows how amazingly our souls are en¬larged by searching out the best in others.WHAT WOMEN DON’T KNOW ABOUT BEING FEMALE.“As a doctor,” says Marion Hilliard, “I don’t be¬lieve there is such a thing as a platonic relation¬ship between a man and woman who are alone to¬gether a good deal.” Here are her reasons.Get May Reader’s Digestat your newsstand today—only 25#43 articles of lasting interest, including the best from leadingmagazines and current books, condensed to save your time.VMay 1, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5*Ghost Sonata9actors at bestAn example of student theatre at its best was given lastweek in the presentation by University theatre of AugustStrindberg’s The Ghost Sonata.This strange, melancholy drama symbolically portrays themalignant evil that creepsthrough human existence,corrupting even the beautifulthings of life, exorcised only byatonement, and only finally van¬quished by death.This is a considerably more dif¬ficult type of drama than is usual¬ly attempted by a college group;yet the moods of eerie mystery, ofpalpable, pervasive, noxious evil,of the agonized longing for theaffirmation of beauty, and of thefateful inevitability of finaltragedy, are all skillfully inter¬woven and sustained until thefianl denouement.My vote for the outstandingportrayal of the play goes to OttoSenz, who as the Old Man, wasa cruel, scheming, grasping in¬carnation of evil, who yet waspathetic in his final demise.There was power and authority inthis excellent portrayal.Donald McCabe as the youngStudent also gave a convincing,moving performance. The ratherdreamlike quality of his voice andbearing were well suited to theFolk flocks formfor HootenannyFolklore society’s contribution1o the Festival, a Hootenannyfeaturing guest folk singers andperformers, from the Chicagoarea, played to an overflowinghall Friday and came to an end15 minutes after the official clos¬ing time when a sleepy Buildingsand Grounds guard arrived.The informal concert was high¬lighted by the appearance of anumber of instruments foreign tothe usual folk music fan, includ¬ing a set of bongo and congadrums and a bagpipe which re¬portedly brought down the housewith a solo in “Mama don’t ’low.” part, and despite an opening-nighttendency to rush his lines, he gaveto his role a sense of wonder andsadness which was much in har¬mony with the play’s generalspirit.A very good performance wasalso given by Linda Libera, as theYoung Lady. She played with re¬straint and beauty the role of theyoung girl ravaged from withinby the malignant principle whichis the drama’s dominant theme.Also quite good was Honore,as the Mummy, a frighteningpersonification of beauty cor¬rupted, living in a weird self-imposed confinement.Among the smaller parts. Fred-ric Hirseh was excellent as Bengt-soon. Robert Dalton, as Johann-son, was also good. Kenneth At-katz, however, somewhat lackedconviction as the Colonel.The other members of the castalso gave competent perform¬ances. However, Gerald Siegel asthe Dead Man, and Nancy Sam-mos as the Milkmaid, were notsufficiently spectre-like.The cast generally exhibitedthe smooth teamwork and excel¬lent articulation which gave evi¬dence of Marvin Phillips’ abledirection.Reynolds Club theatre was idealfor the intimate nature of thisdrama, which Strindberg wroteas a “chamber play” for just sucha setting. The set, however, look¬ed confused and cluttered, anddetracted from the otherwisehaunting, mysterious mood of theplay. The music, composed espe¬cially for this drama by LelandSmith of the music department,contributed a great deal to thismood. Particularly good also wasthe lighting, which was used withimagination. Costuming wras ef¬fective.Tom Seess 'Unity of churchand art are onlyhope to salvation'by Ed Bcrckman“If art and the church fail toremind us of the vision of joy andgoodness, no other is likely tosucceed,” John F. Hayward, as¬sistant professor of religion andart, said in a Rockefeller chapelsermon Sunday, the final day ofthe Festival of the Arts.“Today’s artist feels required tobe grim lest he appear to misrep¬resent the present situation andbe called just an entertainer, andso he may forget his traditionalfunction: the celebration of joyand goodness in the face ofdeath.”But the Christian and the artistare able to speak of man’s sinand sorrow only because theyfirst know the goodness of crea¬tion and the experience of love,Hayward asserted. “It is the goodnews of the gospel of joy whichgives the lie to the pit of hellwhich creation, as civilization, hasdug for itself.”Some artists today give us onlya barren existentialist vision,without the lyricism which cansing of “all this juice and all thisjoy,” said Hayward, quoting fromthe poet, Gerard Manley Hopkins.Hayward referred to Picasso’sharlequins as examples of artthat reveals dignity and hope inspite of loneliness. Even thatpainter’s “Guernica” has “nobil¬ity of structure and classic grav¬ity” so that it becomes “divinegoodness crucified, not a pictureof meaninglessness.”-Hear bandUC’s concert band presented itssecond concert of the year to alarge informal crowd in Hutchin¬son court at twilight Friday, de¬spite threatening clouds. “I wasvery pleased and surprised at theturnout,” commented LouisLason, conductor of the 45-pieceensemble.Highlights of the program in¬cluded a suite for military bandby Gustav Holst, and a Bach pre¬lude and fugue arranged for band. Foreign beautydecorates festivalphoto by BystiynLadies demonstrating Japanese writing were among those par¬ticipating in the international exhibition at International house Sun¬day afternoon.photo by BystrynPretty girls from foreign lands decorated the exhibition, whichwas followed by the Festival of Nations, attended by over kOOguests, held in the auditorium Sunday evening.— YOU’LL BOTH GO FOR THIS CIGARETTE!WinstonS'frvofceWIIVSTOIVA'-tfrum’s NJo.l■ Winston is the cigarette that gives you flavor in filter smoking— full, rich, tobacco flavor! No wonder Winston’s so popular with collegesmokers clear across the country. Along with real flavor, Winston also brings youa finer filter that works so well the flavor comes right through. Try Winston!R. 3. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.’■ Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 1, 1956<*tart<< «/m#?/vNew Soviet ce^ist to p'ayJ- t ^ lAy & M/& ^ mA*s wjf Msitlav Rostropovich, cellist, another of the new galaxy orQnvlnf Qrficf^ will annnar qf Ornh^ctm Vm 11 nn Mnn/lntrMsitlav Rostropovich, cellist, another of the new galaxy orSoviet artists, will appear at Orchestra hall on Monday. *Rostropovich (accented like Shostakovitch) will play suchtraditional western works asBach’s “sixth suite for unac¬companied cello,” Brahm’s ‘‘firstsonata for cello and piano,” andHindemith’s "sonata for solo cel-The Spring issue of the Chicago review presents an outstanding example of the slow start.The three stories which comprise the fiction section give a completely “blah” impression.Utterly unconvincing dialect writing spoils an otherwise lovely story in the first selection,“The Shoes”, by Evan Brandon. “Feet of Clay”, by Emily Whitehurst Stone, is a meticu¬lously boring new-old-South-meets-cousin story. Only a partial redemption for the qualityof the other stories is “The Elephant Woman”, a delightful tale by Amos Tutuola, a West lo,” as well as several pieces by 3-1877African writer with a tender, siavit’s “As True as I Stood,” andmyth-like style. Robert Pack’s "An AttemptedThe essay section includes Blessing,” were fairly interesting,a couple of fair pieces by Edmund The real highlights of the sec-Carpenter-Marshall McLuhan and tion, in fact the only things thatLawrence Lipton, on the influ- keep it from being slightly disap- Tuesday, May 1 Russian composers, including onewritten by himself.Tickets are available at the boxoffice, or from the Council forAmerican - Soviet friendship, ANCalendarence of the mass media, and thedisaffiliation of the artist fromcertain of society’s "baser” insti¬tutions, respectively. Its real dis¬tinction comes from a couple ofreally excellent sketches by KurtTucholsky, including such linesas:"Because of inclement weather, pointing, are two translations. Atranslation of some of Rilke’spoems by Lola Gruenthal Greg¬ory is faithful to the writer’s styleand content, and Grace Hunter’stranslation of a contemporarySwedish poet, Werner Aspen-strom, is poetry in its own right,however well it recreates the orig-the German revolution took place inal. For example:in music.”Although of mixed quality, thepoetry section is decidely betterthan the prose. As usual, severalcompletely undistinguished poemswere included, but not as many asusual. Some of the original poems,such as Paul Petrie’s "Spastic Boyin an Art Museum,” Donald R.Met opera tenorto sing SaturdayJan Peerce, tenor for the Metro¬politan opera, will give a recitalof opera selections at the SouthShore temple, 7215 Jeffery, Sat¬urday at 8:15 p.m.Special balcony tickets for UCstudents are $1.25 at the studentservice center.I was top man onthe VARSITY squad,but my date thoughtI was a DRAG!Ir's the June Prom and we're outon this terrace. The night’s softand warm and so is the girl,|So am I, cause it’s 82°). Sud¬denly, she says: "Look at you!You’re miserable in that ModelT tux, but do you have to makeme suffer, too?" "But...” says I,"Don’t but me!" she replies,* Haven't you heard about theair-conditioned comfort of AfterSix formal wear?"Matter of fact, I hadn’t. So thenext day, I looked over some ofthose After Six jobs. Man, theyreally "come on." Make youlook slimmer, taller, handsomer.And, looNt at those colors! SunsetTones, Parfait Colors, FrostyWhite. All, with that SuperStain-Shy fabric finish. Take myadvice. Try on a cool After SixDinner Jacket soon!ofdealer* everywhere "The mountains fade, the skyturns yellow as hay.The cattle drink until the springcomplain.Everything happens as in anold story.Even the herd boy ought now todie.”There is nothing wrong with athing getting better as it goesalong; it is only to be feared thatthe reader will be so discouragedthat he gives up too soon.John Herzog Intervarsity Christian fellowship lunch¬eon, “Alcoholism, a Christian ap¬proach,” 12:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Varsity tennis matches, UC vs. Tennes¬see A. & I. State U., 1:30 p.m., Varsitycourts.University theatre workshop, 3:30 p.m.,Reynolds club 306.Varsity track meet, UC vs. Wright JC,4 p.m., Stagg field.Metals institute colloquium, “Paramag¬netic resonance spectra of ions of theiron group in cubic crystalline fields,"4:15 p.m.. Research Institutes 211.CHICAGO REVIEW special open staffmeeting to discuss reorganization,4:30 p.m., Reynolds club 302-304.Docfilm: Mexican Rns Ride (Mexlcanl,1950), 7:15 and 9:15 p.m., Social Sci¬ence 122, 40 cents.Rocket society business meeting, 7:30p.m., Eckhart 203.May Day celebration, sponsored by YSL.Socialist club, et al, 8 p.m., Midlandhotel, 172 W. Adams. .Peace center lecture-discussion, “Whospeaks for peace?" by Paul M.Sweezy. Marxist historian, 8 p.m., Inthouse.Lecture, “Federal organization forwater-resource development.” Adm.Ben Moreel (ret.), of Hoover com¬mission, 8 p.m., Social science 122. FTS wives lecture, “John,” by assoc,prof. Robert M. Grant, 8 p.m., 5757Woodlawn.Folk dancing, (instruction from 8 p.m.),9:30, Int. house. 50 cents non-resi¬dents.Madrigal singers rehearsal, 8 p.m., IdaNoyes.Vivekananda lecture, “Indlan-Amerlcanrelations: problems and prospects.”pres. Grayson Kirk. Columbia U., 8:15p.m., Breasted hali.Wednesday, May 2MAROON staff meeting, 4 p.m., Maroonoffice, Ida Noyes.Pre-med club, election of officers andfilm, 4 p.m., Abbott 133.Walgreen lecture, "The American Presi¬dency: the modern Presidents: Roose¬velt. Truman, and Eisenhower.” byprof. Clinton Rossiter, Cornell Unlv.,4:30 p.m., Social Science 122.Student Zionist organization meeting,4:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Carillon recital, 4:30 p.m., Rockefellerchapel.Young Socialist league lecture. “ThePullman strike, railroad brotherhoods,and Haymarket riot,” 7:30 p.m., IdaNoyes.Lecture, “Federal developments in navi¬gation, reclamation, and flood con¬trol,” Adm. Moreell, 8 p.m., SocialScience 122. Society for social research, “Hierarchyas a specific sociological content ofart,” prof. Hugh Duncan, 8 p.m., So¬cial science 201.Country dancers, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes, weartennis shoes.WUCB broadcasts, "Jazz for the Con¬noisseur,” 8:05 p.m.; “Chamber hall,”with J. C. Bach. Vivaldi, and Handel,9; and opera. House of the dead, byJanacek, 10; 640 kc.Thursday, May 3Varsity tennis matrhes, UC V3. WrightJC, 2 p.m., Varsity courts.Statistics seminar. “Some tests of ran¬domness for a sequence of events.”prof. David R. Cox, U. of N. Carolina,4 p.m., Eckhardt 207.Walgreen lecture. “The American Presi¬dency: The Presidency reconsidered,”prof. Rossiter, 4:30 p.m., Social Sci¬ence 122.League for civil liberties panel discus¬sion, "Can Russia evolve toward afree society,” 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Lecture, "Federal power developments,”by Adm. Moreell, 8 p.m.. Social Sci¬ence 122.Channing club discussion. “Concep¬tions of God and man,” with Rev.L. T. Pennington, 8 p.m., 5638 Wood-lawn.TV broadcast, “Modern painting; thefree imagination," asst. prof. JoshuaTaylor. 9:30 p.m., WTTW, channel il.DOUGHNUTFOB DIETEBSHarry IrelandU. of Oklahoma 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 67A,Mount Vernon, N. Y.LUCKIES TASTE BETTER - Cleaner, fresher. Smoother!CV©A.T.C*. PRODUCT OF AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER OT CIGARETTESMay I, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Review of the universityshown for alumni Friday“Your University Today”, a review of the University foralumni, will be presented in the Civic Opera house Fridayevening at 8:15.The program, a series of sketches and expositions of ac¬tivities on campus and inclassroom, intends to providethree forms of entertainment •—“informative,” “provocative,” and“nostalgic.” It will.be a stage pre¬sentation with the UC eoneertband providing musical accom¬paniment.Student narrators will co-ordi¬nate the show and direct the audi¬ence’s attention to a flow of wide¬ly varied entertainment made upof segments varying in lengthfrom three to twelve minuteseach.The presentations will rangefrom a college class in humanitiesto a scene in Bartlett gymnasium,from an experiment in medicalresearch to a film of newsreelclippings depicting Midway lifeback in 1904. Invite studentsThe Alumni association has ex¬tended an invitation to all stu¬dents to its extravaganza “YourUniversity Today” at the CivicOpera House Friday, May 4, 8:15p.m. Free tickets can be obtainedat the student activities office inIda Noyes hall. UC scientists honored;four elected to academyFour University scientists were honored with membership in the National Academy ofScience, bringing the total of UC active faculty members thus recognized to twenty-six.The announcement was made in a telegram sent to Chancellor Kimpton by Hugh Dryden,secretary of the Academy.Maria Goeppert Mayer, volunteer professor of physics in The Enrico Fermi Institute forNuclear Studies and a member of the Argonne National Laboratory staff, became thethird living woman memberof the National academy, thehighest honor in Americanscience. She is an internationalauthority on the structure of theatom.Also elected was Dr. C. PhillipMiller, professor of medicine, not¬ed for his investigation of infec¬tious disease. Dr. Miller is cur¬ rently studying “the patterns ofinfection following exposui’e toradition.” He has been a memberof the medical school facultysince 1925. in the galaxy the earth is part of.Fourth member of the Univer¬sity faculty elected this year wasWalter Zinn, professor of phy¬sics, who is on leave serving asWilliam W. Morgan, professor director of Argonne national lab-Accepting contributionsfor CARE book sale of astronomy in Yerkes observa¬tory, became the third member ofthe University’s astronomy de¬partment to win membership inthe National Academy of Sci¬ences. In recent years he hasstudied the structure of the MilkyWay, and discovered spiral areas oratory, operated by U.C. on con¬tract with the Atomic Energycommittee. A member of the teamthat built the original atomic pilein the west stands of Stagg field,Zinn is regarded as one of theworld’s leading authorities onatomic reactors.Contributions for the Hyde Park Co-op’s annual book saleOther program items include for the benefit of CARE will be accepted beginning May 5.i1m nf lho iq™ Wnch' Persons who have books which they would like to give toCARE committee can bring them to the CARE table nearfilm coverage of the 1956 Washjngton Prom (including the Chan-rellor's difficulties with theQueen’s crown), the Beta ThetaPi 1955 Interfraternity sing win¬ners and an extraordinary Uni¬versity film of how weather ismade.Instruction in Chinese, a dra¬matization of America’s chang¬ing social fabric and a “Chicagostyle” debate are other featuresof the varied program.Invitations to the presentation Celebrate child health day;give baby book to mothersthe entrance of the Co-op at5537 S. Harper avenue.The sale is scheduled for threesuccessive Saturdays, May 12, 19,and 26.Proceeds from this year’s book Mothers’ Aid of Lying-in hospital will participate in Child Healthday, today, by presenting its perennial best seller, Our baby’s firstseven years to the mothers of all babies born in Chicago that day.President Dwight D. Eisenhower, in order “to emphasize the impor¬tance of abundant health for all children,” proclaimed today as ChildHealth day. The day was actually established in 1928 by an act of Con-pitals and institutions.CARE packages of plows, agri¬cultural tools, sewing machines,play equipment, looms, carpenterkits, American bookshelf chil-sale will go toward the support dren’s books and midwifery kits gress. That same year Dr. Joseph B. DeLee, founder of Chicago Lying-of CARE village projects in Mex- maY a^ be sent. in hospital, suggested the book Our baby’s first seven years. Mothersico. CARE in Mexico is unique in I ast year the CARE committee of some 200 babies, if the Chicago estimates are correct, will receivethat is has a program limited to of the Co-op adopted the Koreantechnical aid in a concentrated village of Tap Shim Ni. Fundshave been sent to 22,000 alumni self-help program. CARE chan- from the 1955 book sale purchas-in the Chicago area. Seats are on nels gifts to existing projects in ed valuable equipment and ani-a first come—first served basis— Mexico which are under the su- mals for refugees from commu-none are reserved. pervision of existing schools, hos- nism in Tap Shim Ni. the book.Mothers’ Aid, organized in 1904, and now having a membership of1,800, has contributed in excess of a million dollars to the hospital.All of the money has been raised by the group’s own activities, with¬out public appeals. The baby book has been one of its chief sourcesof income.©iWyi &jwd/orHow to FTusli a,Royal HusbandAnd then there’s thestory of Cinderella.Seems that after Cindyhad been out-pointedby her nothin’ sisters,she tops them when herFairy Godmothershows up with a In the scramble to beat the deadline she loses hershoe—and the dragnet is on! When the Princearrives, Cindy puts an opener to a couple cans ofcold Budweiser... well, he doesn’t even check theshoe size. Says he: ‘‘Pack up the king (the boy’sno square; he knows Bud is the king of beers)—you’re booked for star billing at the Palace!”And at your palace, too, Bud rates top billing... fornothing quite matches that Budweiser taste! Just tryit and see!magical do-it-yourself kit. Cindyhas herself a real ball, cutting caperswith Junior at the Palace. But at midnightshe’s shakin’ and quakin’... because that’swhen the lease expires on the do-it-yourself kit. KING OF BEERSANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. . ST. LOUIS • NEWARK . LOS ANGELESTHE CHICAGO MAROON May !, 195$Page 8Sports briefsGolfers win 1, lose 2The varsity golfers won their first match of the year on the friend¬ly confines of their home course at the Longwood Country clubThursday.It was a triangular match, the UC defeating St. Joseph’s, 814-6^,but losing to Illinois Professional Schools, 10-5. A St. Joseph’s manwas medalist with a 77 score.Last Tuesday was a poorer day for the golfers, as they were beatenby Western Michigan. 18’>s-2,2. The third team, Loyola, cancelled theirappearance. Bob Phillipson scored two of the Maroon’s points, Wen¬dell Maramoto scoring one-half point. Maramoto was the medalistwith a 78 score.Taylor, U-high win twicewhile getting only four hits.In a game played here last Tues¬day, Luther North outseored theJV horsehiders, winning 7-5.Last Friday’s win gives Uni¬versity High a 3-1 record in regu¬lar league play in the PrivateSchool league. They entertainChicago Christian in a game to beheld there today. Softball leagues start;Coulter tries for sweepThe intramural softball leagues are slated to start thisweek, as college house, fraternity, and divisional teams willbe grappling for the year’s last major sports title.Coulter house has won all the major titles this year andwill be looking for a clean other intramurals contests thissweep by winning the softball quarter will be held in golf andcrown. Handball was Coulter’s horseshoes. An intramural bowl-only loss in any team intramural jngr tournament is now undersport this year, where Linn house way.Nemon Taylor pitched his sec¬ond straight two-hitter to lead the{University High baseball squad toa 7-0 win Friday in a game playedagainst Glenwood there.Taylor had previously pitchedthe JVers to an identical 7-0 vic¬tory against North Park the pre¬vious Thursday in a game thatsaw the Maroons score freelyCoulter ACbeats facultyThe Coulter Athletic Club, com¬posed of residents, associates, andalumni of Coulter house, found achance to get even with their in¬structors Thursday. Coulter ACdowned the faculty. 23-9 in thesemi-annual faculty-studentsgame.About thirty people, mostlyleurious B-Jers, watched the gamein back of Burton-Judson. Coulterused 18 players, and the facultyten, including Dean Streeter,catcher, and Joe Stampf, firstbaseman.Although Coulter led all theway, the game was fairly closeuntil the last inning, when Coulterscored heavily. Their manager,Athan Theoharis, noted that “de¬fects of age became apparent” atthis stage.No games, rainSpring rains may be good forthe farmers, but they weren’t wel¬comed by the baseball and tennissquads, both being faked out bythe inclement weather over theweekend. downed it.Psi Upsilon dominance in thefraternity league has been almostas marked as Coulter’s in the col¬lege house league, but they wereupended by Phi Kappa Psi in theintramural track meet.The Eagles, made up of lawschool students, have had the bestrecord this year in the divisionalleague. Coleman winsrelays mileAlthough the UC varsityrunners who went to the star-studded Drake Relays lastFriday were unable to place, PhilColeman, representing the U.C.Track Club, scored a victory- inthe invitational mile. Colemanswept across the finish line of thewater-soaked track in the time of4:19.The Drake Relays, held inDesMoines, Iowa, attracts collegerunners from all over the coun¬try, particularly the Midwest.CLASSIFIEDSStudent rate 5c per word. Others 10c per word. Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265Sports held on campusDay Team Opponent Site TimeTuesday Track Wright J.C. Stagg field 4:00Tuesday JV track Englewood Stagg field 4:00Thurs. Tennis Wright J.C. Varsity cts. 1:30Friday Baseball Illinois Tech Stagg field 3:30Friday JV baseball Walther North field 3:30 For Rent Dta Kak vwe probodete vashy vremeny?Vasha studentka.4-Room neatly furnished apartment.Near campus and ICRR. Phone Green¬field. BU 8-9424. A Rose is a Rose Is a Rose Dance. DeltaUpsilon. Saturday night. May 5.Notices31-; Rooms, $105, utilities, elevator build¬ing. Sublet June 15-September 15. Op¬tion' on next year. Furnished or unfur¬nished. Wall to wall carpet. 5455 Black-stone. MU 4-2838. Reopened under new management. Col¬lier's house restaurant. 6324 Woodlawn.Specializing In fried chicken, steaks andServices chops, prime ribs of beef. Open from5 p.m. Sundays from 1 to 10. ClosedMonday.Mathematics. Instruction and applica¬tions for individual or group. Loop orSouth Side. Special arrangements forgroup formed by yourself. Soglin &Assoc. 28 East Jackson. WE 9-2127. WantedGenial geniuses want quiet quartersnear campus for summer. Call DavidZack or John Herzog at PL 2-9176.Personal 5 or 6 room furnished apartment to beleased by 4 male U. of C. graduates fromOctober 1, 1956 to May 31, 1957. If youknow someone vacating such an apart¬ment or would like to sublease one.contact Larry Kessler, 1005 E. 60th. Ml3-0800 after 6:30.Citizens’ parade on cerebral palsy indesperate need of volunteers for houseto house campaign In University areaon May 22. 7-9 p.m. Call Barbara Eisen-berg. MI 3-3125.Save Holiday Time...Save Holiday Money..FLY UNITEDAIR COACH!Bound for a resort? Boundfor home? United AirCoach can save preciousvacation time . . . even asmuch as days! The low, lowfares will surprise you, androomy 2-abreast seatingmeans comfort all the way.Check the savings in timeand money at your Unitedticket office or your travelagent !JP* ‘ Satisfy Yourself with a Milder. Better-Tasting smoke—packed for more pleasure by exclusive Accu-RayThe more perfectly packed your To the touch ... to the taste, Firm and pleasing to the lipscigarette, the more pleasure it an Accu-Ray Chesterfield satis- . . . mild yet deeply satisfying togives ... and Accu-Ray packs fies the most... burns more the taste — Chesterfield alone isChesterfield far more perfectly, evenly, smokes much smoother, pleasure-packed by Accu-Ray.MILD, YETTHEYChesterfieldObootn ft Mnw Tmmco Ca