Must file draft formsAll male students who plan on continuing in schoolfor another full academic year must request the registrar'soffice to submit SS 109 forms to their local draft boards.The registrar's office said that it is imperative thatregistrants adhere to the schedule below. However, stu¬dents for whom the deadline has passed or, who couldnot file on the dates given below for good reason, mayfile their applications on May 11.Those students whose last name begins with the lettersA-J should have filed earlier this week; K-L should filetoday; M-N, May 7; O-R, May 8; S, May 9; and T-Z,May 10.No offer of *65Dudley field saysThe newly formed committee for Dudley Field housing late Wednesday clarified its po¬sition in the current housing crisis. (‘'Because of Dudley Field’s immediate and particularproblems, a committee independent of MSA is and representing Dudley Field residentsonly, is meeting with Dean McCarn and Dean Strozier to discuss housing.”) According to aspokesman for the group, neither this committee nor any other group representing marriedstudents has yet met to discuss the acceptance of apartments at $65, not including utilities.“No such offer has yet beenmade by the University ad¬ministration,” the group said.Refused on principleIn March, before the Dudleyfield croup had been organized,the Married Students associationopposed on princple a rate sched¬ule of $65-$75 a month. However,no specific offer of apartments atthis rate has been made, accord¬ing to spokesmen for the Dudleyfield group.1’ u r t h er commenting on thenews article that appeared inTuesday’s Maroon, the new Dud¬ley Ejeld committee said: “Afront page story in last week’sMaroon erroneously stated that‘MSA dissolves in face of newhousing crisis.’ This is not true;MSA has not dissolved, and withover fifty members, is in littledanger of being dissolved.”Sam Venturella, MSA president,admitted that the statements at¬tributed to him were not those ofmany of the members of MSA. “Iwas only expressing my opinion,”he told the Maroon. “It was not aconstitutional dissolution,” hestated.When asked whether lie fore¬sees a meeting of MSA in the fu¬ture. he answered that he doesnot foresee a meeting but thatthere might be demands for onefrom other members of the group.He declined to comment onwhether he would respond totheir demands to call such a meet¬ing.Venturella, who has not attend¬ed any recent meetings of MSA,explained that inasmuch as he isleaving school, he is no longerdirectly concerned with the af¬fairs of the group.In a further communicationoriginally intended for theMaroon Letters to the Editor, theCommittee for Dudley field hous¬ing said:One further point should be clarified:Dudley field families who will needhousing after July 1 are different fromother married students in that theyface an immediate problem. Both asmarried people with children and asstudents, however, they have vast com¬mon interests with other students, mar¬ried and unmarried, who need adequatehousing. Other married students willsoon face a similar problem of reloca¬tion.It has been said—by students repre¬senting MSA, by students representingDudley Field, and by administratorsrepresenting the University—that whathappens to Dudley Field will stand asa precedent for future married studenthousing. Many residents here are awareof their unique position. They feel notonly the pressure of the immediate, butmoral obligation to make that precedentworthy of future married students.Formed early in the winterGive quarter of last year, MSA was es¬tablished in order to meet thehousing needs of married stu¬dents. It replaced the earlier Pre¬fab council shortly after the pre¬fabs were threatened with demoli¬tion in the spring of last year.The pre fabs were made avail¬able to the University by the gov¬ernment in 1947. At that time atwo-year permit was issued andcontinued to be extended regular¬ly. The permit was extended forone more year last April.The pre fabs violate the zoninglaws and have been permitted byspecial ordinance only.Last January letters were sentto some 300 tenants in apartmentsowned by the University inform¬ing them that their apartmentswere to be used for married stu¬dents’ housing. At that time theUniversity was charged with “cal¬lous disregard and lack of concernfor the people of this community.”Ground will be broken on Dud¬ley field for the girls’ dorms inJune, while the pre fabs now onDudley field are not scheduled fordemolition until July. Right: One of the Dudley fieldpre-fobs which ore scheduled to betorn down this summer.Selected groupagrees on SG job“Student Government should not speak for the student body on questions that do notrelate to students as students,” agreed members of a group discussing the proper functionof SG.The group, consisting of students selected by the Dean’s office, had met on April 23with Dean of Students Robert M. Strozier, but were able only to blame current confusionconcering SG’s function on partisan differences.At Monday’s meeting, withErr deadlineThe deadline for the photocontest sponsored by SG is May11; not May 1.The theme of the contest isstudent and University life.Pictures entered in the contestwill be used in the display ofstudent life at UC to be ex¬changed for a similar displayfrom the University of Mos¬cow. Entries may be sent to theSG office in care of Otto Fein-stein. members of one of the twocampus political organiza¬tions, Student Representativeparty, not present, dwelt almostentirely on the problem of whatactiviiies lie legitimately withinthe sphere of SG, citing examplesof recent actions taken by SGwhich lie outside governmentpowers. In contrast, it was agreedthat the recent letter to AutherlneLucy of Alabama was a legiti¬mate act as having been writtento a student in reference to aneducational problem.Politicians absentDean Strozier, during Monday’smeeting, commented, “The em¬phasis on party faction which hadmarred the first meeting was notin evidence this week.” Membersof both political parties present -at last week’s meeting, but whoEmergencydeclaredUnless the Chicago Review can go to press with its summerissue and obtain a capable business manager, it will suspendpublication until October and attempt to reorganize at thattime. At an emergency staff meeting held Tuesday in theReview office, Editor LachlanMacDonald said the magazinecannot continue without addition¬al subsidy and a more active staff.MacDonald pointed out that thepremiere of Soviet film;Moscow U in glorious color summer issue deadline of March30 has not been met. “This wasdue chiefly to the refusal of theadministration to provide a workorder to the University of Chicagopress, which prints the Review.The work order was refused dueto the large deficit the magazinehas accrued since 1952 and thelack of additional funds to payfurther press bills,” MacDonaldstated. He told staff members that were not present Monday, notedthat the question of the properfunction of SG had been of majorimportance in the last two cam¬paigns.During last fall’s campaigning,Jan Metros of ISL and JoelRosenthal of SRP were askedtheir views on SG’s proper realm.SRP at that time stated:“... We reject the ISL con¬cept of the government’s han¬dling only matters which af¬fects students as students asan absurdly parochial view.”In contrast, ISL emphasizedthat:**. . . Student governmentshould not pretend to repre¬sent the campus on matterswhich do not concern the stu¬dents as students . . .”In the previous year’s cam¬paign, ISL members had definedSG as a service organization andclaimed that:“. . . SG should assume arestrictive role in regard tonon-campus affairs ...”This statement was made in aclass debate over the resolution“ISL can best serve studentneeds.” SRP countered with:“. . . This ISL view of SG isnot ‘restricted’ but ‘constricted’. . . ” Students are part of agreater society, and must ac¬knowledge their membership inthis democratic society by takingan active part in it...” Compare USC systemMonday’s meeting opened witha description of the student gov¬ernment system used at the Uni¬versity of Southern Californiapresented by Martin Gendell,member of the committee whichcirculated the recent “oust SG”petition.Gendell contended that the sys¬tem of government by a studentsenate composed of representa¬tives from large campus organi¬zations and living groups wouldnot permit the development of aparty system.Other business conducted at themeeting were suggestions forpositive actions to be taken by thegovernment. On the strength ofcomments made by Ed Norbeck, astudent “sitting in” on the meet¬ing, the group agreed that set¬ting up a committee to handlecommunications with the admin¬istration on minor problems, anda committee to make suggestionsabout the curriculum, seemed tobe “worthwhile functions” of SG.No definite steps were takento implement any of the sugges¬tions made at the meeting. Thegroup will meet again next Mon¬day at 3:30 in the east lounge ofIda Noyes. Students present atMonday’s meeting expressed hopethat representatives of groups in¬cluding the Maroon, Cap andGown, and SRP will be present.3 he Chicago premiere of a new Soviet film, Moscow uni- Dean Robert M. Strozier has been UT imports Scandinavianactress for upcoming showMme. Tore Segelcke, Scandinavia’s leading dramatic ac¬tress will appear at 8:30 in Mandel hall, Friday evening,versity: Palace of science” is next Wednesday in Social Sci¬ences 122 at 7:15 and 9:15.The film, which deals with student life at Moscow University,may be of special interest to UC students in view of the fact thatthe UC-Soviet exchange program will go into effect next year.Narrated in English, the movie shows color scenes of classes, lab¬oratories, dormitory life, dances, clubs and social life. The film alsoshows kitchen and dining facilities of other foreign exchangestudents.Also to be shown is a Soviet cartoon called “Three bags of cun¬ning,” in color with English dialogue.The 75 cent admission fee for the one hour show will go to thekUC Soviet exchange program. active in trying to get wide sup¬port from the divisions and pro¬fessional schools of the Univer¬sity, but no definite subsidy hasbeen announced to date.The meeting ended with an at¬tempted reorganization of thestaff which bogged down whenno one could be found to assumethe duties of business manager.Motions were made to request theadministration to provide a busi¬ness manager scholarship. The performance is sponsored by University Theatre incooperation with the Office ofScandinavian studies.Reservations can be made atUniversity Theatre, the Office ofScandinavian studies, or the stu¬dent ticket agency. Tickets willgo on sale Tuesday priced at $1.50,$1.00 and $.50 (student rate).Mme. Segelcke, who made herAmerican debut in New York afew weeks ago, has been ac¬claimed by critics abroad and in New York as one of the world’sgreatest character actresses.Brooks Atkinson, New YorkTimes drama critic, after seeingher perform, described Mme. Seg¬elcke as . a tall woman withblazing eyes, a sensitive face thateasily forms a tragic mask, per¬sonal humility and extraordinarydepth as a stage aitist ... anartist of first rank .. •”fage Z THE CHICAGO MAROON May 4, W56Fulbright scholarship Coming events on quadranglesinformation availableDU to holdRose danceFor RentCompetitions for U.S. Government scholarships for grad¬uate study abroad for 1957-58 are now open, it was announcedTuesday.A brochure describing overseas study awards under theFulbright act and the Buenos Aires convention has just beenpublished by the Institute of international education. Thisbrochure and application blanks may be obtained from Pro¬fessor Walter Johnson of thehistory department, Fulbrightadviser at UC.The two programs will give al¬most one thousand American citi¬zens the chance to study abroadnext year. Competition closes^ .. .. ... . ., .. November 1, 1956.Delta Upsilon will hold its fea¬ture social event of the year—theRose dance—Saturday night at 9p.m. The dance, traditionally thebest - attended fraternity openhouse, is admission-free to theentire campus. Music will be pro¬vided by Siu Clayton’s band.The entire first floor and frontfacade of the DU house is to becovered with white, rose-festoonedIrellises. Tall white columns willbe erected within the house anda canopy over the front porch—these, too, covered with thousandsof roses.Members of the fraternity esti¬mate that some 300 or more peo¬ple will attend. Refreshments willbe provided. The house is locatedat 5714 S. Woodlawn avenue.Sponsor oratoryon 'freedom'Two weeks free at the Encamp¬ment for Citizenship this summerin New York will go to winners ofa May 27 oratorical contest. Spon¬sored by the Chicago Youth coun¬cil of the National Association forthe Advancement of Colored Peo¬ple, the contest is in observanceof the Supreme Court’s May 17,1954. decision to end segregationin U.S. public schools.All Chicagoland college fresh¬men, sophomores, and high schoolseniors, ages 17-21 may enter. Thespeeches, on the theme "Towardfreedom,” are limited to 2,000words and 6 minutes.Information about the contestis available from the NAACP of¬fice at 841 E. 63rd, DO 3-6406. Varsity tennis matches, UC vs. U. of 111.-Chlcago, 1:30 p.m.. Varsity courts.MAROON staff meeting, 3 p.m.. Maroonoffice, Ida Noyes. Editor election be¬gins.Varsity baseball game. UC vs. HI. Inst,of Tech, 3:30 p.m., Stagg field.Sociology seminar, “Objectives forhealth and welfare In Cook county,”Raymond M. Hilliard, director, countywelfare department, 3:30 p.m., SocialScience 105.Forum, “Socialism vs. Capitalism,”Paul Sweezy and prof. Milton Fried¬man, prof. Malcolm Sharp moderat¬ing, 4 p.m., Social Science 122.Mathematical biology, “Neuromechan¬ism for adaptation to optimal condi¬tions with reference to visual accom¬modation,” prof. Nicholas Rashevsky,4:30 p.m., 5741 Drexel.Lutheran students, dinner (6 p.m.), anddiscussion at 7 on "Hie individualand his world,” Chapel house.CLASSIFIEDSStudeat rate 5c par word. Others 10c per word. Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265Basement room, private entrance andbath. No cooking. $8 weekly. 5703 Mary¬land. DO 3-3710.1'4-Room furnished apartment avail¬able June 1 for single person, preferablybachelor. $55 . 60th and Kimbark. SenoRealty. AT 5-4900.2U}-Room furnished apartment. Privatebath. Available now. $75. 60th and Kim¬bark. Seno Realty. AT 5-4900.Faculty apartment, 3 rooms furnishedto rent, $115 per month. June 3 toSept. 28. Telephone MU 4-0098, any dayexcept Friday, Saturday.Apartment for rent or sublease for 2 or3. Available June 1. Near 55tli on Wood-lawn. NO 7-8228. Couple want ride to L. A.. Calif., endof spring cjuarter. will share driving andexpenses. Call Shelly, MI 3-0800, ext.1001.Student, 21, drive station wagon, 11:30-1:30; 3-6:30. $1.25 per hour. BU 8-7900.NoticesReopened under new management. Col¬liers House Restaurant. 6324 Woodlawn.Specializing In fried chicken, steaks andchops, prime ribs of beef. Open from5 p.m. Sundays from 1 to 10. ClosedMonday.WantedFree Spring Check-Lpfar your Camera atMODEL CAMERA SHOP1329 E. 55th St. HY 3-9259NSA DiscountHALSTEDOUDOORCHILDREN ERIE Phone WA. 8-7979Quick to ReachEasy to Get toEssaness WonderfulFamily TheatreEvery Nightis aWonderfulVacation•Lote Show FridayMidnite Show Saturday There’s No Sale LikeWholesaleDear Student:Chances are, you love Cash-mere Sweaters by Hinda andother famous brands.. . . Here's how you can save33 1/3% to 50%All Sizes — Colors — StylesBy Buying at Wholesale PricesCome toSamuel Marrow &Company(In the heart of theWholesale Market)Daily 9 to 5:30 Saturdays 9 to 3:30318 W. Adorns St. Suite 401TERRY’S PIZZA“The World's Beat”FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL .1.00 LARGE .......1.95MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95We also carry a fall line ef Ifoilinn foods1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045 ServicesMathematics. 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.PersonalMarcel Marceau and Charles ChaplinIn one program. Doc Film, Tuesday.Admission 40 cents.The broken bone In 0305 says "lots ofthanks for visits.” The bone and I willtry to get out next week.If you weren't one of the first 500 toask for I GO POGO buttons at theMaroon office, and consequently weren'table to get one. we just received anadditional 500. Come up to the Maroonoffice. Ida Noyes. Doc film study series. La Marseillaise,7:15 and 9:15 p.m.. Social Science 122,admission by series ticket only.Cercle francals, “Le theatre de pleln airen France et lc theatre antiqued'Orange.” prof. Alphone V. Roche.Nortnwe6tem U., 7:30 p.m.. Ida Noyeslibrary, 25 cents non-members.Lecture, “Hoover commission findingsand recommendations on water re¬sources and power,” Adm. Ben Mor-eell (ret.), of the commission, 8 p.m.,Social Science 122.WUCB broadcast, complete opera, Woz-zeck, by Berg, 8:35 p m., 640 kc.Saturday, May 5WUCB broadcast, Puccini's MadameButterfly, 7.05 p.m., 640 kc.Radio broadcast, “The sacred note,"with Rockefeller chapel choir, 10:15p.m., WBBlf.World University Service. Midwest Con¬ference at International House. Morn¬ing sessions beginning at 9 a.m. Dis¬cussions and seminars on this year'sfund raising drive, and plans for nextyear's drive. All interested In workingwith WUS Invited to attend.Sunday, May 6Episcopal communion service, 8:30 p.m.Bond chape).Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, 11a.m., 5735 University.Lutheran Communion service, 10 a.m.,Hilton chapel.International house coffee hour, 10a.m.-noon.Clinics religious service, 10 a m., Bill¬ings 0-4.Radio broadcast, “Freud and the NewWorld,” with trans-Atlantic partici¬pants, 10:35 a.m., WMAQ.University religious service. Rev. ShaunHerron, editor. The British Weekly,London, preaching, 11 a.m., Rocke¬feller chapel. *University theatre annual spring party,all associated with UT In past 2 yearsinvited, 3 p.m., Reynolds club theatre.Modern dance club technique class,3:15 p.nf, Ida Noyes.Carillon recital, 4:30 p.m.. Rockefeller.WUCB broadcast. Humanities 1 mu¬sic, 7 p.m., 640 kc. Italian elub meeting, 7:30 pm I(la« Noyes. ’ *SRP caucus, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Reading of play Martin Luther by RmhHerachberger, by UT members forbenefit of Chicago Review, 8pm uiaNoyes theatre. * ’ aMonday, May 7Art exhibit by Renaissance societywatercolor drawings, lithographs andwoven textile designs, 9 a.m.-5 n mMonday-Friday; 1-5 p.m., Saturday*Goodspeed 108, open through Satur¬day.Manuscript exhibit from UC librarycollections. Harper W-61, 9 a m-5 p.m., Monday-Friday; 9 a.m-1 p mSaturday, open through June 3. ’Varsity tennis matches, UC vs TakeForest college, 1:30 p.m., Varsitycourts.Anthropology seminar, “Research inIndonesia,” by prof. Roger Needham.Oxford U., 4 p.m.. Social Science 224Sociology seminar, “Research needed onsocial and community aspects ofhealth,” 4 p.m.. Social Science 302.Walgreen lecture, “American economyand the new economics; Kevnesianthinking,” prof. Alvin H. Hausen.Harvard U., 4:30 p.m., Social Sci¬ence 122.Movie: Lifeboat (U. S. fltm) 8pm Inthouse assembly hall, 35 cents.Tuesday, May 8Intervarsity Christian fellowship lunch¬eon, "War and Peace,” 12:30 pm., IdaNoyes.University theatre workshop, 3.30 p.nv,Reynolds club 306.Metals- institute colloquium, “Thermalproperties of the Magnesium-cadmiumsystem and certain transition metalsand metal-hydrogen systems at re¬duced temperatures,” prof. W E.Wallace. U. of Pittsburgh, 4:15 p.m.,Research Institutes 211.WAA picnic, 4:30 p m., Ida Noves.Blarkfriars meeting, 7 p.m., Ida Noves.Docfilm: Tillie’s Punctured Romance,7:15 and 9:15 p.m., Social Science 122,40 cents.YSL meeting, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.FTS wives lecture, “The early Church”by assoc, prof. Robert M. Grant, 8p.m., 5757 Woodlawn.Folk dancing. (Instruction from 8 p m.),9:30, Int. house, 50 cents non-resi¬dents.Wanted: Five or six room furnishedapartment to be leased by four maleU. of C. graduate students from Octo¬ber 1, 1956. thru May 31, 1957. If youknow someone vacating such an apart¬ment or someone who will sublease one,please contact: Larry Kessler, 1005 E.60th St., phone Ml 3-6000, after 6:30p.m.Good opportunity for female 6tudentwho Is fond of children. Room, board,and small salary In return for services.Call ES 5-3863.COMPLETE RECENT SET OF WORLDBOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA. CALL FA 4-2636.CANOE TRIPSSeek 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 717C, ELY, MINNESOTA MOTHER’S DAY1*9508 Proofs Shown4cr. /jaSiA'tBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. An Invitation ToDELTA UPSILON'SRose DanceStu Clayton's BandSATURDAY, MAY 5-9 p.m.At SCHNEEMANN'SThe SUNDAYNEW YORK TIMESOn Sale EverySUNDAY at 3 P. M.WHENEVER YOU BUY THENEW YORK TIMES AT THE RED DOOR,YOU HELP US MAINTAIN ANDIMPROVE OUR SERVICETHE RED DOOR ROOK SHOP1328 East 57th StreetNOrmal 7-6111THE CHICAGO MAROON Rage 3'•May 1956Analyst commemorates Freudby Fred Solomon"One hundred years ago there came into life a being whose long years of work and insight were to make such contributions toknowledge as profoundly to influence the civilization of every country. And we may safely say that the full impact of that influ¬ence has yet to be experienced/'With this statement, Ernest Jones, 77-year-old colleague, friend, and biographer of Sigmund Freud, opened his Freud centenaryaddress to a standing-room-only crowd of 800 psychoanalysts at the Morrison hotel last Saturday.Jones' address, entitled "Our attitude toward greatness," was the climax of the 1956 annual meeting of the American Psy¬choanalytic association. It ~tt~Z 1—77delivered on a program w“lc“ meets Freuds concept of they dream of them by night.” (20 per day), fond of dogs and ap- equivalent of thirty dollars to— *he human personality. ‘‘It (re- Having discussed definitions of pie strudel, and prone to agitated leave peacefully. When she askedinc .f .. hunrirpth anni- Pressl°n^ represents a part of the greatness and varying attitudes gesticulation while speaking. Professor Freud what she shouldniemora./I,J.!,i„ uirfi, human mind that signifies a toward “great” (fatherly) men as Lehrman amused the analysts do, he replied,‘‘Give it to them, Igrowth over many tens of thou- these apply to Freud’s special by telling of the day in 1937 when suppose. But you know, Martha,more than I ever got forsingle visit.”versarv of Freud’s birth.once. ’ Karl Menninger, director ^ect degree 0f civilization we have alysis.°f the famous clinic in Topeka hitherto attained. ‘‘We do not yet possess a com-and self-proclaimed convert to "when Freud revealed to the prehensive textbook of psychoan-analytic psychiatry, chose^ Freud public gaze aspects of our human- alysis. When that appears ... stu-and American psychiatry as his ity the existence of which we dents may well think they can dis-. - have such strong reasons to pense with reading Freud him-ignore or deny, much of what he sef. If so they will lose much. . ..revealed was bound up with in- Even if they absorb an excellenttense emotions of shame and book on psychoanalysis theyguilt,” Jones continued. “It was would profit greatly by then pro-Freud’s understanding of this ceeding to study the stagesstate of affairs that enabled him through which Freud's thoughtto bear with stoic fortitude the passed . . .”fierce attacks made for so many Soldiers make moreyears on his work, attacks which After Jones’ address, most ofAchievement lonelyJones in his speech stressed twounique features in Freud’s discov¬eries which have had considerableeffect on the world’s attitude to¬ward him, whether he was “great”or not.The first of these features isthe loneliness of Freud’s achieve¬ment. “He was not adding to a UC radio program givestrans-Atlantic Freud“Freud and the New World” will be the topic of a trans-Atlantic discussion on the UC’s New World network radioprogram on NBC’s Monitor series, at 10:35 a.m.Commemorating the international celebration of the psy¬chiatrist’s 100th birthday, the speakers will discuss Sigmund Freud'scontribution to the culture of our lime. The program will be mod¬erated by Edward Rosenheim, Jr., assistant professor of humanitiesat UC.... . . , still continue in more sporadic the analysts viewed movies filmed Princess Marie Bonaparte, France’s leading psychoanalyst, andscientific edifice that was already and increasjngiy disguised form.” and narrated by Philip Lehrman Nobel prize-winner Lord Adrian of Cambridge, past president of thensmg. said the British analyst. Freud’s persistent good humor of New York, entitled “Professor Royal Society, will speak from London. Dr. Lawrence Kubie, psycho-'On the contrary, he had to build js evidenced by the now famous Freud, his family and colleagues, analyst, author and past president of the New York Psychoanalyticthe very foundations of a com- comment, “Thej- may abuse my 1928-29.” The films showed Freud society, and Alfred Kazin, author and visiting professor of Englishpleteh new one. doctrines by day. but I am sure to be an incessant cigar smoker at Amherst college, will speak from New York.But more important than thisimmediate difficulty of being un¬derstood was the second featureof his discoveries—that of enorm¬ous unconscious resistance to theacceptance of his ideas.While there was much emotion¬al opi>osition to the theories ofCopernicus and Darwin, thesecontroversies centered on con¬scious attitudes which provedamenable to further considerationand the passage of time. Kirk gives Vivekenanda lectureby Eld BerckmanThere is a great need for cultural interchange between India and the United States as well as for moreof a live-and-let-live attitude in U.S. foreign policy, Columbia university president Grayson Kirk told aBreasted hall audience Tuesday in the second annual Vivekenanda memorial lecture.Technical and financial assistance to India is good and must be continued, but it lacks the mutualitywhich is possible in such pro- jng our careful study and un- current there. A third misunderstanding is onOi quite different quality and grams as student and profes- derstanding.” He added that In- Kirk spoke of three common colonialism, where the U. S. isquantity is the inner resistance sor exchanges, he said. But he dians might lose some of their misconceptions about Indo-Amer- embarrassed by its “psychologicalwould not urge this interchange ideas that we were crass and jcan relations. One is the U. S. heritage of colonialism.” On thejust as a weapon to combat Soviet materialistic as they got to know assumption that those not willing other hand, Kirk felt that becauseinfiltration us better. to side with us must be against Indians minimize the Russian[▼▼▼▼ W WWW V V W* fWWWWWWW''9WAUTO INSURANCETERM INSURANCEPkoiM or Write 4| Joseph H. Aaron, '27 J►135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060! infiltration.President Kirk stated that thereis no more room in the modernworld for any notions of Indiansas backward and inferior people.“Indian culture is richly deserv-“Enjotf Our Fine Continental C trial tie inRelaxed Air Conditioned Atmetphere”CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTWeekdays and Saturday: Open from 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.Sundays: Open from 4 p.m. - 10 p.m.ISOS E. 57th Street Phene PLnza 2-9355 We ask too much us. The Indians say we ask tooThe Columbia president, whose much; as one official told Presi-academic field has been interna- dent Kirk, you ought to let Indiational relations, spent a month in follow for 20 years the policy youIndia last year, talking with poli- had for 150, that is, to be free oftical and academic leaders. He entangling alliances,said that in his experience he metwith little of the anti-Americanfeeling w’hich is reported to beBooks Bought• Any Subject• Any Language .• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Park 3-03211204 E. 55th St. Estimates differThere is also a difference inAmerican and Indian estimates ofRussia’s intention in the field offoreign policy. Indians feel thatas fellow-Asians they understandRussians better, Kirk said; inany case we should not think theyare pro-Communist because theydisagree with us. threat, they do not understandwhy we are so concerned in ourpolicies on colonialism to safe¬guard our friendships with Brit¬ain and France.President Kirk added that weexpect too much gratitude andtoo many results too early for theaid we give. “The giver may thinkhis motivation is all p h i 1 a n -thropic, but the recipient tendsto look the gift horse in themouth.”prrrrrrrrryryyrrrf^rnnrTi\ BORDONE i► jI Movers and Light Hauling <; VI 6-9832 i- f;m v:3U of C Studentstake their laundryUNIVERSITYQuick Laundry | International House Movies §| Assembly Hall, 8 p.m. * =| Monday, May 7 — 35c — Lifeboat (American) 1mi!IIIHIHIUimiltlimUIIHHHtHinimilllHIUIHiUIHIIIHIIUtlltHIIIUIIIIHininiilllllllHUIUII«lttlHimilHIUIUIHIIl^ Flub sermonheadThe headline in Tuesday’s Is¬sue: “ ‘Unity of church and artare only hope of salvation’ ”over the article on John F. Hay¬ward’s sermon should haveread “Church and art both givevision of joy.” Hayward madeno mention of salvation or ofunity of church and art in hissermon.1376 E. 55PL 2-9097 COMO 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!Vi Fried Chicken ....1.00Potatoes and Bread THIS COULD BETHE MOST IMPORTANTEXPERIENCE OFYOUR LIFEHere's a unique opportunity forsingle young men and women ofcollege background ot one of theworld's foremost neuro-psychiatrichospitals.You'll play a vital role in return¬ing patients with mental and ner¬vous disorders to normal living.You'll gain priceless knowledge ofhuman behavior. You'll make areal contribution to America'sgreatest health problem.Training program, classroom studyand job rotation will take you intoevery major area of hospital work.You'll be able to save a majorpart of your cash earnings. Fullroom and board and a programrecreational activities are provid¬ed. You'll live, work and play ina campus atmosphere with otheryoung men and women like your¬self. Talk to your placement of¬fice — or write us direct.Barbara St. JohnPersonnel Division160 Retreat AvenueHartford, Conn.rage Z THE CHICAGO MAROON M»r 4, 1956Fulbright scholarship Coming events on quadranglesinformation availa ble Fridoy/ Moy 4•f Varsity tennis matches, l Doc film study series. La Marseillaise,7:15 and 9:15 p.m.. Social Science 122,admission by series ticket only. meeting, 7:3® pre IdaCompetitions for U.S. Government scholarships for grad¬uate study abroad for 1957-58 are now open, it was announcedTuesday.A brochure describing overseas study awards under theFulbright act and the Buenos Aires convention has just beenpublished by the Institute of international education. Thisbrochure and application blanks may be obtained from Pro¬fessor Walter Johnson of thehistory department, Fulbrightadviser at UC.The two programs will give al¬most one thousand American citi¬zens the chance to study abroadnext year. Competition closesNovember 1,1956.DU to holdRose danceDelta Upsilon will hold its fea¬ture social event of the year—theRose dance—Saturday night at 9p.m. The dance, traditionally thebest - attended fraternity openhouse, is admission-free to theentire campus. Music will be pro¬vided by Stu Clayton’s band.The entire first floor and frontfacade of the DU house is to becovered with white, rose-festoonedtrellises. Tall white columns willbe erected within the house and Varsity tennis matches, UC vs. U. of 111.-Chlcago, 1:30 p.m.. Varsity courts.MAROON staff meeting, 3 p.m.. Maroonoffice, Ida Noyes. Editor election be¬gins.Varsity baseball game, UC vs. HI. Inst,of Tech, 3:30 p.m., Stagg field.Sociology seminar, "Objectives forhealth and welfare In Cook county.”Raymond M. Hilliard, director, countywelfare department, 3:30 p.m., SocialScience 105.Forum, "Socialism vs. Capitalism,"Paul Sweezy and prof. Milton Fried¬man, prof. Malcolm Sharp moderat¬ing, 4 p.m.. Social Science 122.Mathematical biology, "Neuromechan¬ism for adaptation to optimal condi¬tions with reference to visual accom¬modation,” prof. Nicholas Rashevsky,4:30 p.m., 5741 Drexel.Lutheran students, dinner (6 p.m.), anddiscussion at 7 on “The Individualand his world,” Chapel house. Italian clubNoyes.SRP caucus, 7:30 p.m., Ida NoyesCercle franeais, "Le theatre de plein air Rrading of play Martin Luther bv R,„sen Prance et le theatre antique Herschberger. by UT members ,Pd Orange, prof. Alphone V. Roche, benefit of Chicago Review, a n mNoyes theatre. ■ «aCLASSIFIEDSSts^est vote 5c per word. Others 10c per word. Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265For RentBasement room, private entrance andbath. No cooking. $8 weekly. 5703 Mary¬land. DO 3-3710.1'4-Koom furnished apartment avail¬able June 1 for single person, preferablya CanODV over the front porch— bachelor. $55. 60th and Kimbark. Senoc Realty. AT 5-4900.2Vi-Koom furnished apartment. Privatebath. Available now. $75. 60th and Kim¬bark. Seno Realty. AT 5-4900.Faculty apartment, 3 rooms furnishedto rent, $115 per month. June 3 toSept. 28. Telephone MU 4-0098, any dayexcept Friday, Saturday.Apartment for rent or sublease for 2 or3. Available June 1. Near 55tli on Wood-lawn. NO 7-8228.NoticesReopened under new management. Col¬liers House Restaurant. 6324 Woodlawn.Specializing in fried chicken, steaks andchops, prime ribs of beef. Open from5 p.m. Sundays from 1 to 10. ClosedMonday.WantedFree Spring Check-Upfor gour Camera atMODEL CAMERA SHOP1329 E. 55th St. HY 3-9259NSA DiscountHALSTEDOTboORCHILDREN FREE Phone WA. 8-7979Quick to ReachEasy to Get toEssaness WonderfulFamily TheatreEvery Nightis aWonderfulVacation•Late Show FridayMidnite Show Saturday 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 50%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 401TERRY’S PIZZA“The World's Best"FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL •...... .1.00 LARGE .........1.95MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95w« carry a fall line •# Italian1518 L 63ri Ml 3-4045 Couple want ride to L. A., Calif., endof spring quarter, will share driving andexpenses. Call Shelly, MI 3-0800, ext.1001.Student, 21, drive station wagon, 11:30-1:30; 3-6:30. $1.25 per hour. BU 8-7900.these, too, covered with thousandsof roses.Members of the fraternity esti¬mate that some 300 or more peo¬ple will attend. Refreshments willbe provided. The house is locatedat 5714 S. Woodlawn avenue.Sponsor oratoryon 'freedom'Two weeks free at the Encamp¬ment for Citizenship this summerin New York will go to winners ofa May 27 oratorical contest. Spon¬sored by the Chieago Youth coun¬cil of the National Association forthe Advancement of Colored Peo¬ple, the contest is in observanceof the Supreme Court's May 17,1954. decision to end segregationin U.S. public schools.All Chicagoland college fresh¬men, sophomores, and high school Good opportunity for female studentseniors, ages 17-21 may enter. Thespeeches, on the theme “Towardfreedom,” are limited to 2,000words and 6 minutes.Information about the contestis available from the NAACP of¬fice at 841 E. 63rd, DO 3-6406. ServicesMathematics. Instruction and applica¬tions for Individual or group. Loop orSouth Side. Special arrangements forgroup formed by yourself. Soglln &Assoc., 28 East Jackson. WE 9-2127.PersonalMarcel Marceau and Charles Chaplinin one program. Doc Film, Tuesday.Admission 40 cents.The broken bone in 0305 says “lots ofthanks for visits." The bone and I willtry to get out next week.If you weren't one of the first 500 toask for I GO POGO buttons at theMaroon office, and consequently weren'table to get one, we just received anadditional 500. Come up to the Maroonoffice. Ida Noyes. Northwestern U., 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyeslibrary, 25 cents non-members.Lecture, "Hoover commission findingsand recommendations on water re¬sources and power,” Adm. Ben Mor-eell (ret.), of the commission, 8 p.m..Social Science 122.WUCB broadcast, complete opera, Woz-zeck, by Berg, 8:35 p.m., 640 kc.Saturday, May 5WUCB broadcast, Puccini's MadameButterfly, 7:05 p.m., 640 kc.Radio broadcast, "The sacred note,”with Rockefeller chapel choir, 10:15p.m., WBBU.World University Service, Midwest Con¬ference at International House. Morn¬ing sessions beginning at 9 a.m. Dis¬cussions and seminars on this year’sfund raising drive, and plans for nextyear's drive. All Interested In workingwith WUS Invited to attend.Sunday, May 6Episcopal communion service, 8 30 p.m.Bond chapel.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, 11a.m., 5735 University.Lutheran Communion service, 10 a.m.,Hilton chapel.International house coffee hour, 10a.m.-noon.Clinics religious service, 10 a m., Bill¬ings 0-4.Radio broadcast, "Freud and the NewWorld,” with trans-Atlantic partici¬pants, 10:35 a.m., WMAQ.University religious service. Rev. ShaunHerron, editor. The British Weekly,London, preaching, 11 a.m., Rocke¬feller chapel. *University theatre annual spring party,all associated with UT in past 2 yearsinvited, 3 p.m., Reynolds club theatre.Modern dance club technique class,3:15 p.m., Ida Noyes.Carillon recital, 4:30 p.m.. Rockefeller.WUCB broadcast. Humanities 1 mu¬sic, 7 p.m., 640 kc. Monday, May 7Art exhibit by Renaissance societvwatercolor drawings, lithographs ariciwoven textile designs, 9 a.m -5 Y> mMonday-Frlday; 1-5 p.m., Saturday*Goodspeed 108, open through Satur¬day.Manuscript exhibit from UC librarvcollections, Harper W-61, 9 am.5 p.m.. Monday-Frlday; 9 a.m.-I pm'Saturday, open through June 3. ’Varsity tennis matches, UCForest college, 1:30 pm,courts. ;. LakeVarsityAnthropology seminar. “Research inIndonesia,” by prof. Roger NeedhamOxford U., 4 p.m.. Social Science 224’Sociology seminar, "Research needed onsocial and community aspects ofhealth” 4 p.m., Social Science 302.Walgreen lecture, "American economyand the new economics: Kevnesiaiithinking,” prof. Alvin H. kausen.Harvard U„ 4:30 p.m., Social Sci¬ence 122.Movie: Lifeboat (U. S. film) 8 p ni Tr,thouse assembly hall, 35 cents.Tuesday, May 8Intervarsity Christian fellowship lunch¬eon, "War and Peace,” 12:30 p m IdaNoyes.University theatre workshop, 3:30 p.m,Reynolds club 306Metals institute colloquium, “Thermalproperties of the Magnesium-cadmiumsystem and certain transition metalsand metal-hydrogen systems at re¬duced temperatures.” prof. W. e.Wallace, U. of Pittsburgh, 4:15 p.m.,Research Institutes 211.WAA picnic, 4:30 p.m., Ida Noves.Blackfri&rs meeting, 7 p.m.. Ida Noves.Docfiim: Tlllie’s Punctured Romance,7:15 and 9:15 p.m., Social Science 122,40 cents.YSL meeting, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noves.FTS wives lecture, "The early Church"by assoc, prof. Robert M. Grant, 8p.m., 5757 Woodlawn.Folk dancing. (Instruction from 8 p.m.),9:30, Int. house, 50 cents non-rcsi-dents.Wanted: Five or six room furnishedapartment to be leased by four maleU. of C. graduate students from Octo¬ber 1, 1956, thru May 31, 1957. If youknow someone vacating such an apart¬ment or someone who will sublease one,please contact: Larry Kessler, 1005 E.60th St., phone MI 3-6000, after 6:30p.m.and small salary In return for services.Call ES 5-3863.COMPLETE RECENT SET OF WORLDBOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA. CALL FA 4-2636.CANOE TRIPSSeek solitude and adventure in theOuetlco - 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 717C, ELY, MINNESOTA MOTHER’S DAY! wJle? *9508 Proofs ShownBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. An Invitation ToDELTA UPSILON'SRose DanceStu Clayton's BandSATURDAY, MAY 5-9 p.m.At SCHNEEMANN'SThe SUNDAYNEW YORK TIMESOn Sale EverySUNDAY at 3 P. M.WHENEVER YOU BUY THENEW YORK TIMES AT THE RED DOOR,YOU HELP US MAINTAIN ANDIMPROVE OUR SERVICETHE RED DOOR BOOK SHOP1328 East 57th StreetNOrmal 7-6111May 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Analyst commemorates Freudby Fred Solomon"One hundred years ago there came into life a being whose long years of work and insight were to make such contributions toknowledge as profoundly to influence the civilization of every country. And we may safely say that the full impact of that influ¬ence has yet to be experienced/'With this statement, Ernest Jones, 77-year-old colleague, friend, and biographer of Sigmund Freud, opened his Freud centenaryaddress to a standing-room-only crowd of 800 psychoanalysts at the Morrison hotel last Saturday.Jones' address, entitled "Our attitude toward greatness," was the climax of the 1956 annual meeting of the American Psy¬choanalytic association. Itwas delivered on a programincluding two other talks com¬memorating the hundreth anniversary of Freud’s birth. which meets Freud’s concept of they dream of them by night.” (20 per day), fond of dogs and ap- equivalent of thirty dollars tothe human personality. ‘‘It (re- Having discussed definitions of pie strudel, and prone to agitated leave peacefully. When she askedpression) represents a part of the greatness and varying attitudes gesticulation while speaking. Professor Freud what she shouldhuman mind that signifies agrowth over many tens of thou- Lehrman amused the analysts do, he replied, “Give it to them, Itoward “great” (fatherly) men ast W7v»ld*»r nnp nf Frpud'«s —* j these apply to Freud’s special by telling of the day in 1937 when suppose. But you know, Martha,Rober t ’.r n sanc*s °* years> without which no case, Jones made several com- storm troopers appeared at Mrs. that is more than I ever got forearly stuaen s ’. community life would be possible ments about the study of science, Freud’s door demanding the a single visit.”“Freud and the history of sci- and certainly not even the imper- and especially about psychoan-cncc." Karl Menmnger, director fect degree of civilization we have alysis.ot the famous clime in Topeka hitherto attained. “We do not yet possess a com-and self-proclaimed “convert toanalytic psychiatry, chose “Freudand American psychiatry" as histopic.Achievement lonely “When Freud revealed to the prehensive textbook of psychoan-public gaze aspects of our human- alysis. When that appears ... stu-ity the existence of which we dents may well think they can dis¬have such strong reasons to pense with reading ^reud him-ignore or deny, much of what he sef. If so they will lose much. ...Jones in his speech stressed two reVealed was bound up with in- Even if they absorb an excellentunique features in Freud s discov- tense emotions of shame and book on psychoanalysis theycries which have had considerable Jones continued. “It was would profit greatly by then pro-effect on the world s attitude to- preud’s understanding of this ceeding to study the stagesward him, whether he was “greator not UC radio program givestrans-Atlantic Freud“Freud and the New World” will be the topic of a trans-Atlantic discussion on the UC’s New World network radioprogram on NBC’s Monitor series, at 10:35 a.m.Commemorating the international celebration of the psy-to bear with stoic fortitude thethe loneliness of Freud’s achievement. “He was not adding to ascientific edifice that was alreadyrising.” said the British analyst. state of affairs that enabled him through which Freud's thought chiatrist’s 100th birthday, the speakers will discuss Sigmund Freud’scontribution to the culture of our lime. The program will be mod¬erated by Edward Rosenheim, Jr., assistant professor of humanitiesat UC.Princess Marie Bonaparte, France’s leading psychoanalyst, andThe first of these features is fierce attacks made for so manyyears on his work, attacks which passed . . .”Soldiers make moreAfter Jones’ address, most ofstill continue in more sporadic the analysts viewed movies filmedand increasingly disguised form.” and narrated by Philip Lehrman Nobel prize-winner Lord Adrian of Cambridge, past president of theimportantimmediate difficulty of being un¬derstood was the second featureof his discoveries—-that of enorm¬ous unconscious resistance to theacceptance of his ideas.While there was much emotion¬al opi>osition to the theories ofCopernicus and Darwin, thesecontroversies centered on con¬scious attitudes which provedamenable to further considerationand the passage of time.Of quite different quality andquantity is the inner resistance|'*rr AUTO INSURANCETERM INSURANCEPhone or Writ# <> Joseph H. Aaron, '27 ;► 135 S. LaSalle S*. • “ ‘4A4AAA Kirk gives Vivekenanda lectureby Ed Berckman . *There is a great need for cultural interchange between India and the United States as well as for moreof a live-and-let-live attitude in U.S. foreign policy, Columbia university president Grayson Kirk told aBreasted hall audience Tuesday in the second annual Vivekenanda memorial lecture.Technical and financial assistance to India is good and must be continued, but it lacks the mutualitywhich is possible in such pro- jng 0f our carefui study and un- current there. A third misunderstanding is ongrams as student and profes- derstanding.” He added that In- Kirk spoke of three common colonialism, where the U. S. issor exchanges, he said. But he dians might lose some of their misconeeDtions about Indo-Amer- embarrassed by its “psychologicalwould not urge this interchange ideas that we were crass and ican reiations One is the U S. heritage of colonialism.” On thejust as a weapon to combat Soviet materialistic as they got to know assumption that those not willing other hand, Kirk felt that becauseinfiltration. us better. to side with us must be against Indians minimize the RussianRA 6-1060;**»***«*r - 1 infiltration.President Kirk stated that thereis no more room in the modernworld for any notions of Indiansas backward and inferior people.“Indian culture is richly deserv-“Enjotf Our Fine Continental Calvin** 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.ISOS E. 57th Street Phene PLnzn 2-9355 We ask too muchThe Columbia president, whoseacademic field has been interna¬tional relations, spent a month inIndia last year, talking with poli¬tical and academic leaders. He entangling alliancessaid that in his experience he metwith little of the anti-Americanfeeling which is reported to be us. The Indians say we ask toomuch; as one official told Presi¬dent Kirk, you ought to let Indiafollow for 20 years the policy youhad for 150, that is, to be free ofBooks Bought• Any Subject• Any Language .• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Park 3-03211204 E. 55th St. Estimates differThere is also a difference inAmerican and Indian estimates ofRussia’s intention in the field offoreign policy. Indians feel thatas fellow-Asians they understandRussians better, Kirk said; inany case we should not think theyare pro-Communist because theydisagree with us. threat, they do not understandwhy we are so concerned in ourpolicies on colonialism to safe¬guard our friendships with Brit¬ain and France.President Kirk added that weexpect too much gratitude andtoo many results too early for theaid we give. “The giver may thinkhis motivation is all p h i 1 a n -thropic, but the recipient tendsto look the gift horse in themouth.”[?>***?**?rr**vrr*»»**<I BORDONE► 4| Movers and Light Hauling <| VI 6-9832U of C Studentstake their laundryUNIVERSITYQuick Laundry i i1376 E. 55PL 2-9097 HlllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllltlllllllilllllllllllilltlilllllltlillllllltiitllilliltlHItllilllllllllllllllllllllllilliltllllllllNIlil^| International House Movies || Assembly Hall, 8 p.m. =~Monday, May 7 — 35c — Lifeboat (American) |miiiiiiHHiiiHniiiiiiiiiiHiiHHiHiniinuiiwiiHiHiiiiHiuiiiiiiiiHiiiminniiHiHiiHiitiiiHiiiuiiiniuii!itiHiHiiimiiim Flub sermonheadThe headline in Tuesday’s Is¬sue: “ ‘Unity of church and artare only hope of salvation’ ”over the article on John F. Hay¬ward’s sermon should haveread “Church and art both givevision of joy.” Hayward madeno mention of salvation or ofunity of church and art in hissermon.COMO PIZZERIA1520 E. 55 FA 4-5525Free Delivery to U.C. StudentsON ALL PIZZASMALLCHEESE ..1.15SAUSAGEANCHOVY . ;i.45PEPPER ond ONION ..1.30SHRIMP ..1.70COMBINATION ..1.75SPECIAL!Vi Fried Chicken ....1.00Potatoes and Bread THIS COULD BETHE MOST IMPORTANTEXPERIENCE OFYOUR LIFEHere’s a unique opportunity forsingle young men and women ofcollege background at one of theworld's foremost neuro-psychiatrichospitals.You'll play a vital role in return¬ing patients with mental and ner¬vous disorders to normal living.You'll gain priceless knowledge ofhuman behavior. You'll make areal contribution to America'sgreatest health problem.Training program, classroom studyand job rotation will take you intoevery major area of hospital work.You'll be able to sava a majorpart of your cash earnings. Fullroom and board and a programrecreational activities are provid¬ed. You'll live, work ond play ina campus atmosphere with otheryoung men and women like your¬self. Talk to your placement of¬fice — or write us direct.Barbara St. JohnPersonnel Division160 Retreat AvenueHartford, Conn.»Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 4, 1956Editor's columnDissenters, not dissension missingDean of Students Robert M. Strozier was weof the previous meeting was gone. However,representatives of the Student Representativelast week's meeting.The Maroon representative was missing notthe top part of the staff were free. The Maroonos to be good representative units. II pleased with the results of this week's meeting of "Student Leaders" The dissentthis might be worded better: the dissenters of the previous meeting were gone. Noparty, or of the Maroon, were present. These two groups were the chief dissenters atvbecause no one on the entire staff could attend, although it is true that none ofwas unrepresented because I do not feel that large interest groups are so constituted“Now that we have decided everyone is a giraffe The editor of the Maroonis in no special position torepresent student opinion on Stu¬dent Government. The editor ofthe Maroon can discuss editorialpolicy, or even the advantages ofa student activities fee to studentpublications. The editor can dis¬cuss proper regulations for theuse of Ida Noyes, or regulationsfor registering student organiza¬tions. In short, the editor of theMaroon can discuss things of twosorts authoritatively — newspa¬pers and matters relating to theMaroon as a student organization.For this reason, I oppose repre¬sentation by large student groups.The editor of the Maroon wouldcertainly not have time, norLetters to the editorFestival bells evoke thoughtsof tradition-covered battlementsThe bells and songs lately heard on campuswith May-day festivals, a survival of pagansome thoughts of English universities, and thave a tradition against it. Yet “battlementedand our spiritual origins in Europe, will not letus forget that we are an academic community inthe mainstream of a venerable tradition. We have,I fear, compromised too much with the Americansoil; no need to regurgitate that argument here!Rather, let us ask, what can be done to betterrealize the ideal of a solid academic community.I do not suggest that our perverted versions ofGothic be razed, that we build residential colleges;nor that we all study classics with tutors; nor thatthe committee on social thought replace the ad¬ministration— though all this would help. One6tep was the Festival, another the faculty-studentdiscussion during Academic Freedom week, a prac¬tice deserving higher cultivation. The most impor¬tant and thus far most neglected function of a Uni¬versity is this extra-curricular association. I mightfurther suggest that faculty members invite stu¬dents to their homes; this requires interest on both were pleasurable, partly because of their linkrites. But this is not all. They invoke alsoradition. We lack tradition here, or rathertowers,” reflections invoked by the Festival,sides, and also salaries that will enable instructorsto own respectable houses. More instructors mightbe dorm resident heads. Other improvements couldcome from our “literary organs.” The few essayprizes might be added to significantly, affordinga sense of scholarship outside of prescribed studies.The college might put more emphasis on creativeresearch, rather than narrow readings on broadsubjects. And so on. In short, I ask for a new spirit,where walking the quadrangles, feeling a senseof hallowed learning, one can say — softly, notaloud — “Vivat academia, vivant professores, etc.”This stems from a paranoic delusion that we arehere to participate in a tradition. Perhaps the Chan¬cellor could assure us that is still our aim? (Oroffer what he has to replace it?) We have a start:Inscribed all around us is “Crescat scienlia vitaexcolatur.” “Collin Dale”Supporters of NS A independentprotest 'obstructionism' chargeIt was with great regret that we, the supporters of Dale Renguette in the recent NSAelections, noted the label of obstructionist applied to us in the April 24 Maroon. This is un¬fair since at no time did we obstruct any part of the election. We tried at all times to workwithin the bounds of the election rules. If at times we asked for clarification of the rules,it was only because we werenovices. We hardly feel thatthis is obstructionism.We learned from Robert Stein,chairman of the E and R commit¬tee, that at no time did he makethe statement that the only mar¬ring incident was “obstructionisttactics by supporters of write-incandidate David (sic) Renguette.”Furthermore Mr. Stein considers this label unjust. Since he did notmake this statement, who did?Since the statement seems to be aquotation, someone must be re¬sponsible. We can only assumethat the Maroon is editorializingon the front page. If this is true,we feel we must add our com¬plaint to the others in regard tothe unfair and inaccurate report¬ ing of the Maroon, e.g. Letters tothe Editor, April 20, from AlbertSciacky and April 27 from Mor¬ton L. Brown.Robert T. CornwellGil JohnsonJohn L. KimRobert C. MacDonaldEdward T. RoachTom WattersonIN THE SPRING ESPECIALLYbeautiful campus picture possibilities blossom forth in Hundreds of spots.And do you realize that picture taking need not necessarily be an expen¬sive hobby? It can be, sure, but you would be surprised at the percentageof films we develop for amateurs who use inexpensive cameras withamazingly satisfactory results. Ask Rudy Gerson to tell you how it's done.UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE would any of the executive staff.They would not be able to remainuninvolved enough to edit thecopy about controversies in thisGovernment. They would not rep¬resent a group with unified views.Popularity passeThe other matter which was“settled” at Monday’s meeting,that Student Government shouldnot speak for the student bodyon questions that do not relate tostudents as students, was also set¬tled easily because certain groupswere unpresented. The StudentRepresentative party was unrep¬resented.To those such as Dean Strozierwho consider such comments fac¬tionalism which should be for¬gotten, I can only comment thatthe whole basis of a party systemis that parties stand for things, and run on platforms. The popu¬larity contest went out with highschool, we hope.Representation by DeanPolitical parties on this campusdo have views on the proper func¬tion of Government, and a com-mittee of students picked almostat random by the Dean seems tohave no right to rule out theviews of a segment of the UCpopulation large enough to tWtSRP to the Government last fa,:.Fortunately, unless the Doanoverrules the student code, suchchanges cannot be made by thissmall hand-picked group. Theymust pass two-thirds of the stu-dent body, as the activities feewould have had to. And everyoneknows that almost nothing everpasses by two-thirds referendum.Joy S. Burba* li~Y\\ efucaao11 laroonIssued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermiitentlTduring the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, at 1212 East59tli Street, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephone: Editorial offices, Midway ii-<i8<io,ext. 1003 and 3266; Business and advertising office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3265.Subscriptions by mail, S3 per year. Business office hours: 2 p.m. to 5 p.m., Mon¬day through Saturday.Editor-in-chief Joy S. BurbochManaging Editor Norman LewakBusi ness manager Gary MokotoffExecutive news editor Ronald GrossmanAdvertising manager Lawrence KesslerSupplement editor .' Jean KwonNews editors Fred Karst. Sue TaxCultural editor Judv PodoreSports editor Robert HalaszNews feature editor Sue TaxCopy editors jean ICwon. Fabian NechelesProduction managers . . .Robert Quinn, John HerzogPhoto editor John BystrynPersonnel manager jack BurbachCalendar editor Earl HerrickOffice manager Adrienne KinkaldFLASH!!Latest Headline NewsRUSSIA WANTS BETTER AMERICAN TIES!How obout Gobe's or George's Men'sShop on 55th St. . . . They have lovely ties.American Medical Association reports the onlythings to do for a common cold are 1 ) rest,and 2) take reasonable doses of alcohol. Resultswill be peripheral vasodilatation and re-establishcirculation in chilled cutaneous and mucosalsurfaces.Thai’s medical doubletalk for:A pint will get you wellJUDGE: Why did you hit that similing fortuneteller?PRISONER: I always wanted to strike a happymedium.1 also want to strike a happy medium in sellingout my stock.I have until about the end of this month to lick-wee-date, so whatever is left has to go. Gins,whiskies, domestic and imports. Soft drinks atsacrifice prices.Drop in. If you don't see whot you don't want,don't ask for it because we haven't got it, but ifyou want it we will get it.FREE DELIVERY - FREE ICE CUBESwith OrderBoxes of book matches — 10cHyde Park Liquors1405 E. 55th PL 2-8830May 4, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5UC'ers sketch campus sceneA novel alumni album vvhich will give UC students and graduates a first-hand synopsis of present-day student and academic life at UC will be pre¬sented in the Civic Opera house this evening at 8:15.Originally created as> a program for alumni only, the gala production was opened to students early this week. Free tickets are now available atthe student activities office in Ida Noyes hall.In a review of Your University Today, students and faculty members will show light and serious aspects of the campus and classroom for morethan 3,000 Chicago-area alumni of the University. —In the nostalgia department,the alumni will view “Midwaymemories,” a ten-minute filmmade up of old newsreels, show-On Ei/e/c/ Cct/nfius... Co/fcga Menti/xfli/omen d/e cf/eca/er/ng cofic/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 exclusfve Viceroy filter Is' fttade^Hijto lo^iBoft^snew-, white,”1 ni a lesson in Chinese poetry.Color films of research on cloudformation and what makes it rainwill be shown by Dr. Roscoe Bra-ham, meteorologist in charge ofthe University’s cloud physicscourt, and winners of the BeauxArts ball costume contest, will befeatured in person on the pro¬gram.To demonstrate the serious aca-ing scenes of Midway life dating demic work of the University,back to 1916. , alumni will eavesdrop on a col- projectOne sketch depicting the lighter le£e humanities class, conducted Social scientist W. Lloyd War-■ i . , , by Professor Joshua C. Taylor, toside of present-day undergradu- . ... ... .. .. B see how like or unlike their ownate life will show “Chicago style” undergraduate classes today’sdebaters being heckled by their classroom instruction is.audience. A second sketch will be Current research in the divi-a replica of Bartlett gymnasium sions will be illustrated by fourwith undergraduates demonstrat- lecture - demonstrations. Dr. M.ing the wide range of sports they Edward Davis, chief of staff attake part in. It will be highlightedby instruction in “Hollywoodstyle” fencing by Alvar B. Her-manson, University fencing coach.Motion pictures of the 1956Washington Prom and BeauxArts ball will revive alumnimemories of their own socialevents on the campus. This year’sWashington Prom queen and her the University’s Lying-in hospitalwill review sixty years progressin maternity care, and outlinestill-unsolved problems which theUniversity’s researchers arestudying.From the humanities division.Herrlee G. Creel, chairman of thedepartment of oriental languagesand literature, will give the alum- ner, author of the recently pub¬lished “Big business leaders ofAmerica,” will discuss his find¬ings on the traits of the success¬ful business executive and" hiswife.Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimp-ton will introduce five distin¬guished emeritus professors, whotaught many of the alumni duringtheir undergraduate days.Student narrators will providerunning commentary on the show.Music on the program will be pro¬vided by the University’s Concertband, and singers of Beta ThetaPi fraternity, winners of lastyear’s Interfraternity sing.Slums to vanish: HauserDuring the next 25 years Chi¬cago slums may well become amemory of the past, Philip M.Hauser, professor of sociology,said Wednesday at an Alumni as¬sociation luncheon.“Our inner-decayed areas thathave actually become depopulat¬ed during the first half of the cen¬tury will be repopulated by 1980,and a cycle will probably havebeen set up of population circulat¬ing between suburbs and city asthe best way to meet the require¬ments of the family cycle.“The physical problem of Chi-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.Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenboumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 cago, as highlighted by our pres¬ent-day efforts at slum clearanceand rehabilitation of middle-agedareas, may be stated as a twen¬tieth century hangover from anineteenth century spree,” Hau¬ser said.During the nineteenth century,whole neighborhoods and com¬munities grew at one time in¬stead of building by building. Inconsequence, when decay begins,the whole neighborhood or com¬munity decays, not just one struc¬ture at a time.Here at mid-century, Chicago isfinally waking up to the effects ofthe nineteenth century growthspree, he said.He listed these three fronts as(1) the necessity of developingmetropolitan area consciousness,with increased attention to metro¬politan area solutions of problemsrelating to traffic, water sanita¬tion, health, recreation, delin¬quency and crime, police, schoolsand welfare; (2) urban renewal;(3) acceptance and assimilationof Southern Negroes.Hauser predicted that by 1965Negroes will make up about 1/5of, the city’s population, and bySPECIAL PRICETO STUDENTSOn Student HealthService Prescriptions3 RegisteredPharmaciststo Serve YouREADER’SCampus Drug Store1001 E. 611 0CAM0RN AI DIVISION$4 aiielV ROMEO * JULIETULANOVAmusical score byMEMU PIMWIEVof: 6:00. 8:00. 10:00Students presenting their ID cordsot box office will be admitted for75 cents.if 1980 may well constitute 1/4 to1/3 of the population of the city,which will total about 7.9 millionpeople.“Many Negroes come from dis¬advantaged parts of the ruralSouth where they were neverprepared for urban living. Tofacilitate the difficult problemof adjustment will require a ma¬jor effort on the part of the entirecommunity.“What is needed is the sametype of special effort, but on amuch larger scale, that was madeat the beginning of the century tohelp foreign born groups to be¬come adjusted to life in a metro¬politan area for which they alsowere ill-prepared,” Hauser con¬cluded.Economiststo debateMarxist Economist Paul Sweezyand Professor Milton Friedman ofthe department of economics willdebate "Socialism vs. Capitalism”this afternoon at 4 p.m. in Soc.Sci. 122. A new campus group,Public Affairs Forum, is present¬ing the debate as the first of aseries of programs devoted totopics of current interest.3:30 TO 6 r.M. DAILY820 On YourRadio DialACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter ServiceMY 3-fHi.H 1322 E. 5Zth Si. FLINT GREENDacron and PoplinLopseom 7 ’/i " Hook Vent$42.50608 n. michigan avenueWhitehall 3-2410THE CHICAGO MAROON May 4, 1S|56Page 6NEWPUP-TOP »OXFirm to keepcigarettes fromcrushing.No tobacco inyour pocketPOPULARILTIER PRICE (MADE IN RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, PROM A NEW MARlRORO RECIPE)Hat in ring,Pogo in hatCampaign buttons bearing thefamiiiar "I GO POGO" are againavertable at the Maroon office. Sports CalendarDay TeamFriday TennisFriday BaseballFriday JV BaseballMonday “B” TennisMonday JV Tennis OpponentUICIllinois TechWaltherLake ForestElgin SiteVarsity cts.Stagg fieldNorth fieldVarsity cts.Varsity cts. Time2:003:303:301:30U-high trackmen winby George KarcasesU-high’s track team beat Englewood last Tuesday by ascore of 57 M: to 43*2 in a dual meet which was run simul¬taneously with the Varsity’s meet against Wilson junior col¬lege. The high scorer and star of this meet was Pete McKeon,who won the 100 yard dash and the 220 yard dash, and also took sec¬ond place in both the high jump and broad jump. Ivan Carlson ranonly the mile, and won it easily. Another double winner for the JVerswas Randazzo, who won the shot put and the discus. John Keller,who is a U-higher, won the 120 yard high hurdles and the 220 yardlow hurdles, he also took thirds in the high jump and broad jump. Varsity trackmen romp;top Wilson, 914-214by Frank Loonios and Van GalliosThe Maroon cindermen, led by Dick Cousens, romped to anoverwhelming victory over Wilson junior college last Tuesday,by a score of 91 % to 2V/j. Cousens, preparing for a berthon the ’56 Olympic decathlon team, won all three weightevents, ran on the winning mile relay team, and took thirdplace in the 220 yd. low hurdles.Hosea Martin and Art Omo-hundro each won two events.Omohundro won the mile andtwo-mile, while Martin continuedhis winning streak through fourmeets by again winning the 100and 220-yard dashes.Other winners were Bill Gramin the 440, Tinkie Heyns in the880, Dan Trifone in the 120 yardhurdles, Frank Loomos in the 220yard low hurdles, Mitch Watkinsin the broad jump and DeweyJones in the high jump. Helping Cousens out in the milerelay were George Karcazes, DonRichards and Ned Price Thisquartet set a new meet record ina hotly contested race againstWilson’s conference winning milerelay team.Tomorrow the varsity will teamup with the Track club to take onthe Wolverines from the Univer-sity of Michigan. Michigan is theBig Ten champion, and this meetpromises to be the best dual meetin the country this season.You get the man-size flavor of honest tobacco withouthuffing and puffing. This filter works good anddraws easy. The Flip-Top Box keeps every cigarettein good shape. You’d expect it to cost more, but it doesn’t.May 4, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Present Herschberger's 'Martin Luther'in special new 'reading performance'The first campus performance of Ruth Herschberger’s verse play Martin Luther will begiven Sunday evening at 8 in the Ida Noyes theater.Prices for the performance, a benefit for the Chicago Review, are general admission SIand student rate 75 cents. —William Tsokos, and Lawrence I plays a small part as Pope Leo,Zerkel. Also featured will be and a child actor, Robert Ver-David Shepherd of Compass, who I ville, of the Jack and Jill players.Play local music\\ oodwinds and piano, with emphasis on music by Chicagocomposers, will be featured at the International Societv forcontemporary music’s concert at Fullerton hall of the Artinstitute on Sunday, 8:20 p.m. Dyer-Bennet hereHeading the cast of nine isGeorg Wellwarth, winner ofthis year’s Florence James Adamspoetry reading contest. The playis directed by Roland Rude, ofNorthwestern university, whobrought his adaptation of Kafka’sThe Trial to UC last year.A special method developed atNorthwestern of “reading per¬formance’’ will be used, unlike anordinary “reading’’ in that actorshave their parts memorized, andmake “exits and entrances” (butnot out of sight), and “speak toeach other” by speaking over theheads of the audiences, as thoughthe other characters were to befound in the back of the audi¬torium.The performance is acted, there¬fore, and not read, although thereis no costuming and the stagingis not conventional.Miss Herschberger is a winnerof the Poetry magazine HarrietMonroe memorial prize and theauthor of two books, A Way ofHappening (poems) and Adam’sRib (a defense of modern wom¬en). Her work has appeared inB»*st AmeVican Short Stories,Poetry, Partisan Review, KenyonReview, and other publications.University theatre players fea¬tured in the performance areGeorge Crawford, 'Alex Hassilev,Robert Emmitt, Omar Shapli, The opening work will bethe Serenade Concertante(1956) for piano and woodwindquintet by Richard Swift who isan MA candidate in the UC musicdepartment. He has been called instructor at UC, will be repre-ed in 1951 which has been playedsehted by a wind quintet complet-on the radio in California and inconcert in New York.The concert will give the firstone of the most promising young American presentation of Oboe4-^. .* • CAnafa htr ITareil Tirol/ ic acomposers to appear in Chicago inrecent years.” Leland Smith, anTheater partyUniversity Theatre will holdits annual Spring theater partySunday afternoon at 3 in theReynolds club theater. All stu¬dents associated with the thea¬ter in the last two years areinvited to attend- The partywill feature taped music frompast shows, refreshments, anda preview performance of “Py-ramus and Thisbe” from Wil¬liam Shakespeare’s A Midsum¬mer-Night’s Dream.3he tMwum PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433MICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063Barbecue Ribs > Chicken - Ravioli - SpaghettiFree delivery to IK of C. studentsOn any orderTable Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M.Open tilt 3 A.M. on Friday and SaturdayDelivery Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M.J. Paul Sheedy* Had A Hangdog Look TillWildroot Cream-Oil Gave Him Confidencewm bounded by * lack of confidence! Every girlhe talked to told him be wu barking up the wrong uee. "Fido’nt get adate pretty toon,” be howled, “I’m gonna flea the campus and go hometo mutter.” Then he got wise to Wildroot Cream-Oil.Now ha has confidence in amy situation becausehe noee his hair looks healthy and handsome, the wayNature intended ... neat but not greasy. Contains thahtart of Lanolin, the very best part of Nature’s finest hairand scalp conditioner. Get yourself a bottle or tube ofWildroot Cream-Oil, Americe’s biggest selling btir tonic.It gives you the confidence you need to be s gsy dog.* if 131 Ss. Kerr* Hill JU, WMismtvUle, N. Y.WHdrol OrMM-ONbWm you confktoiMolWildroot Compti,. lac.. Buffalo 11, N. Y. Sonata by Karel Jirak who is aprofessor of music at the ChicagoMusical college. Other composerswhose works will be presentedare Anthony Donato, professor ofmusic at Northwestern univer¬sity, and New York composer,Wallingford Riegger. Richard Dyer-Bennet will ising in two Mandel hall con- jicerts May 25 and 26 at 8:30p.m.The concerts are beingsponsored by the Parents’ as¬sociation of the Universitynursery school. A campus saleof tickets is planned. Theyare now available at $1.50 and$2.50 at the nursery school at5750 Woodlawn, the Disc, andby mail by writing box 2, fac¬ulty exchange.Show Marceau mimeA short film featuring Marcel Marceau in three of his celebratedpantomime roles has been added to Documentary film group’s Tues¬day program.Already scheduled for the program is one of Chaplin’s earliest fea¬ture films, Tillie’s Punctured Romance.Marceau, the French mimic who recently enjoyed a successful tourin the United States, included a three week run in Chicago, will beseen in the film in “David and Goliath” (he plays both parts), “TheButterfly Chase,” and “Bip and the Lion Tamer.” All three pantomimeselections were included in Marceau’s Chicago performance.The program will be shown on Tuesday, May 8, in Social Sciences122 at 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. Admission is 40 cents.Foldi sings best Mandel concertThe best University concert of the season, in this reviewer’s opinion, was presented lastFriday by Andrew Foldi, bass, in a concert which was a work of art in programming alone.Mozart, Purcell, Dowland, Schubert, Moussorgsky, Bartok and Bloch made up a programwhich had the sole defect of lacking a single dull moment.Foldi has a rich and versa-tile, if not overpowering voice,but it is his perfect control andJimmy’sSINCE 1940TheDisc1367 E. 57H» St.Recordof the weekOISTRAKHMendelssohnondMoaart No. 4Special Price 2.69 pervading musieality that werethe distinguishing features of therecital. He sings with well-nighperfect intonation, an amazingflexibility for his range in floridpassages, and a consistent combi¬nation of good taste and feeling,and shows himself to be an excel¬lent actor when required, mostobviously in the “Catalogue Aria”from Don Giovanni and in Mous-sourgsky’s “Song of the Flea.”If there was a high point onsuch a consistently good programit was probably the Bartok cycleof five songs entitled “On theChoice Seats for:MSTISLAVROSTROPOVICHTop Soviet CellistMonday EveningMay 7Orchestra HallColl Mr. WolinsAN 3-1877 Farm,” an exciting, little-heardwork. The only weak point wasthat his diction is occasionally un¬clear in the English songs, whichsomes makes the humorousworks lose their effect.Robert L o d i n e, the pianist,showed himself as a discreet andsympathetic accompanist; his per¬formances were, however, gener¬ally tentative and occasionally in¬accurate, and did not always giveenough character to the individ¬ual works. This was particularlytrue of the first group of earlyEnglish songs. Often, too, thesinger's voice could have taken,and needed, much more support.The audience, owing to theweather and the festival wassmall, but was very appreciative,and Foldi seemd to improve andgrow warmer right up to the end.Robert BlochThe CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 Ea«t 57rti St.MU 4-9236You'll -Feel SAFERmoving in aVQr\A clean move isthe safest movefor your preci¬ous belongings...and thecleanest moveIs a ^Sanitized L*meve. An extraservice ... noextra cost.PETERSONRIOVINS & ST0RA6E CO.55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterfield 8-6711 YOU DON’T NAVE TO BE A BOTANIST . . .to know that money doesn't grow on lilac bushes. It only grows whenyou start a planned savings program.Whether your goals are education, your own business, retirement,a home, automobile or just one appliance, the sooner you start savingthe sooner your dreams will come true.Including expected dividends* a person saving 50 cents a daystarting today would have about $380 on May 1, 1958.Come in today for your passbook.Hyde Park Co-op Federal Credit Union5535 S. HARPER AVE. DO 3-1031 .* Annual rate 4% last 2 yearshyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student rate 50c all performancesStorting Friday, May 4“DIAGNOSIS: FUNNY!" — Now York Time*"DOCTOR 't SEA"and introducing the enchanting new French gamin, BRIGITTE BAR-DOT, in the gay and giddy smash English comedy hit! ... It rollickslike GENEVIEVE! ... It frolics like "DOCTOR in the HOUSE!"— and —ACADEMY AWARD ENTRA-ACTESWINNER CARTOON CATEGORY "SPEEDY GONZALES"WINNER SHORT DOC. "SURVIVAL CITY"— plus Request Repeat Showing of —■PETE SEEGER'S "TO HEAR A BANJO PLAY"Our Next Progroms — All Your Favorites and Requests!Fri.-Mon., May 11-14: "GENEVIEVE" ond ALEC GUINNESSas his familiar funny self) in "THE PROMOTER"Tues.-Wed.-Thurs., May 15-16-17. JOHN HUSTON and TRUMANCAPOTE'S screwball satire "BEAT THE DEVIL" and ERTHA KITT inLEONARD SILLMAN'S "NEW FACES"Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 4, 1956Display Lebrun’s ‘Crucifixion'Crucifixion, a great three-paneled paintingby Rico Lebrun, has been loaned to the Univer¬sity by the Seligmann galleries in New York.The painting is on display on the north wallof the east transept of Rockefeller chapel.A Neapolitan-born Los Angeles painter andteacher, Lebrun worked more than three yearson a gigantic Crucifixion cycle. This paintinghas been shown at the Museum of Modern Artin New York and at the Art institute.The painting is to be donated to one of sev¬eral universities which have expressed an in¬terest in displaying it permanently. UC is oneof the last to have requested it. The work contains some conscious borrowingsfrom orthodox triptychs of the Middle ages andRenaissance and the filtered influence of Tint¬oretto, El Greco, and Picasso. It has often beencompared with Picasso's Guernica.Lebrun has also employed contemporary sym¬bols and techniques. Thus the traditional sym¬bols of the crowing rooster, the crude cross andladder, the hammer and crown of thorns, arecombined in strange perspectives with brokensegmented bodies, armor-like figures, and, mod¬ern tragic symbols composed with jagged lightand shadow.i :L■K At 1 |photos by Grossmanchoice seats for . . .Pete Seeger <&The WeaversOrchestra HallFriday, May 18Call Mr. WolinsAN 3-1877 UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor /BE PREPARED FOR SUMMER DRIVINGSUMMER SPECIALTUNE UP $4.98 -HARPER Road ServiceMechanic on DutyComplete LubricationSPECIAL ! !Heavy Duty Battery *14 95SUPER SERVICEDealer in Sinclair Products5556 Harper Ave. PL 2-9654 Jobs WITH A FUTUREara straight ahead for college womenwho prepare for them with Gibbs secre¬tarial training. Employers aro invariablypartial to candidates who have this dualqualification.Special Course for College WomenWrite College Dean forGIBBS GIRLS AT WORKKATHARINEGIBBSSKCftKTARIALBoston t(. 21 Mirtborouth St. Now York 17, 230 Park AveProvidence 6, 1S5 Angall St. Montclair, Ml, 33 Plymouth StTHREE SCORE AND TEN...People nowadays often live be¬yond the biblical span of 70years. The wise man makes surethat he will not outlive his in-. come. A Sun Life retirementpolicy will give you a guaranteedincome for as iong as you live.Start saviug today.SUN LIFE ASSURANCECOMPANY OF CANADARalph J.Wood, Jr.,'481 N. LaSalleChicago 2,IllinoisFR 2-2390RE 1-0855 •OTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY Of THE COCA-COLA COMPANY IVThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company oI Chicago, Inc.“Coke** it a regirtereJ Ha Jo mark. © 19M. THE COCA-COLA COMPANYThat's where the pause thatrefreshes with ice-cold Coke began.Now it’s enjoyed fifty million times a day.Must be something to it. And there is. Have aoice-cold Coca-Cola and see...right now.9 ea/rvte,■^u5wt GxQcwdfa!!