Vol. 64. No. 50 University of Chicago, Tuesday, May 8, 1956 31Crossman elected'Maroon' editorIn probably the shortest election in Maroon history, Ronald J. Grossman was elected edi¬tor-in-chief last Friday for the forthcoming school year. He was unopposed.Grossman was elected editor by the required two-thirds vote of the staff members pres¬ent at the meeting. 25 members were present.The entire meeting lasted twenty minutes and took only one ballot, as compared to lastvear’s election which lasted over 23 hours and ended on the 36th ballot.tion of staff positions.”“I hope to have a greater divi¬sion of labor in the top staff posi¬tions,” Grossman stated. ‘‘I alsohope to have every staff memberable to cope with such technicalproblems as page ‘dummying,’headline writing, and photo¬graphic problems,” he said.Grossman has been reporter,photo editor, news editor, and isnow executive news editor of theMaroon.During the past school year hehas been chairman of World Uni¬versity Service and Treasurer ofPhi Sigma Delta fraternity. Lastyear Grossman was a member ofCap and Gown staff.A candidate for a BS degree inthe biological sciences division,Grossman hopes to enter medicalschool in a year from this fall.In his acceptance speech,Grossman, a pre-med studentfrom Omaha, Nebraska,stressed a better organization ofphoto by BystrynRonald J. Grossman the staff and a wider distributionof the work among the staff mem¬bers.When asked whether he would,continue bi-weekly issues of theMaroon or return to publishingonce a week, Grossman stated,‘‘This depends on a lot of things;staff organization and financesfor the coming year, for example.”Among his plans for the Ma¬roon in the coming year, Grosss-man named extensive coverage ofthe NSA convention at UC thissummer, a series of feature ar¬ticles on the University, and morecomprehensive news coverage.The only appointment the edi¬tor-elect has announced for nextyear’s staff is Gary Mokotoff asbusiness manager. Grossmanstated that further appointmentswould be made after “re-evalua- photo by BystrynApproximately 150 persons attended this year’s version of DeltaUpsilon’s Rose dance.Nicknamed “Brass-knucks ball” by a DU’er, the all campus openhouse and dance went off smoothly as compared to last year, when agroup of local hoods attempted to crash the party, stabbing a mem¬ber of the fraternity.A campus policeman stood guard outside the front door during theparty. A policeman is a standard feature at all fraternity open housessince last year’s incident.Summer, fall, registeropen for graduatesUndergraduate students wishing to register in ad¬vance for this summer or for the school, year 1956-57should do so before June 1.Registration should be made with the student’s adviser byappointment. Directions for registration can be obtained fromthe secretary to the advisers in Administration building 201.Registration for summer courses at the opening of the sum¬mer quarter will be on June 25. This is primarily for new stu¬dents but returning students who could not register in advancemay also register then.Students taking comprehensive examinations in August mustregister by July 10.India editors tour US, visit UC Poet Eliotby Oliver LeeF.ight Indian scholars andeducators are visiting UC un¬dergraduate classes these twoweeks, on an assignment to.study the methods of general edu¬cation followed in the UnitedStates and England.The group was appointed bythe government of India as acommission on general highereducation, with the task of help¬ing to develop courses for Indianuniversities that would encouragereflective citizenship.With the intention of visitingthe institutions with the most ad¬vanced systems of general educa¬tion, the commission has spent oris spending approximately twoweeks each at Columbia, Am¬herst, UC, and the University ofWisconsin, with shorter visits toHarvard, Yale, and Oberlin. It will(hen go to England to visit uni¬versities there.At the end of their tour, theeducators will prepare outlines ofexperimental courses in the hu¬manities, social sciences, and nat¬ural sciences. Twenty-four Indianuniversities have expressed inter¬est in employing the results ofthis study in setting up the gen¬eral education courses now beingplanned.The commission, which will beat UC for the duration of thisweek, is headed by Dr. S. Bhaga-vantum, vice chancellor of Os-mania university in Hyderabadand director of its physical lab¬oratories.Bhagavantum stated to this re¬Friday's Maroonlast until June 1This Friday is the last is¬sue of the Maroon beforethe examination period. Theonly issue following this Fri¬day's issue will be publishedon June 1.Deadline for stories, cal¬endar notices and advertise¬ments is tomorrow at 5 p.m. porter that there is general agree¬ment in India that higher educa¬tion there has been too specializedand should be balanced through abroadening of programs. Therehas been rather too much empha¬sis on the physical sciences inIndia, he said.Bhagavantum pointed out thatwhen the Indian universities wereadministered by the British gov¬ernment, a one-sided emphasis ofa worse sort took place due to thegovernment’s primary concernwith training Indians for the civilservice. The aim of education, hesaid, must of course be broaderthan that; it must be the prepara¬tion for intelligent citizenship.The outstanding impression hehas gained from observing gen¬eral education in the UnitedStates, said Bhagavantum, is that“the programs differ markedlyShow RussianUniversity lifeon film tomorrowThe new Soviet film MoscowUniversity: Palace of Science willbe shown tomorrow evening at7:15 and 9:15 in Social Sciences122. The 75 cent admission feewill go to the UC-Soviet studentexchange program.Nai'rated in English, the filmdepicts student life at Moscowuniversity through color scenes ofclasses, laboratories, dormitorylife, clubs, and social activities.On the same program will be aSoviet cartoon, Three Bags ofCunning, in color with Englishdialogue.Recently Academician Ivan Pet¬rovsky, president of Moscow uni¬versity, announced the Soviet ac¬ceptance of UC’s Soviet studentexchange plan submitted by SGlast fall. The acceptance givenover Radio Moscow program andheard by WUCB stated, in part,“It is hoped that the student bodyof this university will soon betalking with their colleagues fromChicago. In return several stu¬dents of Moscow university willgo to Chicago to study.” from one institution to the next,as each has built in the light of itsown background and traditions.”Dr. S. M. Sethna, chairman ofthe chemistry department at theUniversity of Baroda, expressedthe opinion that the level of dis¬cussion in UC undergraduateclasses is “quite high.” He saidthat in Indian universities, class¬room discussion is kept at a min¬imum by the size of the classes.Splitting of large classes into sec¬tions is not feasible because of ashortage of teachers, he said. Heapproved of the fact that at UCthe instructor usually calls stu¬dents by name, which is also feas¬ible only in small classes.Umashankar Joshi, director ofthe school of Gujarati language and literature at Gujarat univer¬sity, saw special merit in the UCpractice of drawing on various de¬partments for instructors in gen¬eral education courses. “It is notonly the specialists who teachclasses,” he said, and the short¬age of specialized teachers is thuscircumvented.Dr. Mohmud Hosain, registrarof the Aligarh Muslim university,chose to show a lively interest incurrent problems of Americanforeign policy. His main thesiswas that the cold war is nowshowing signs of abatement andthat the U. S. should seize this op¬portunity to co-operate with Rus¬sia so that the terrible danger ofa third world war may be re¬moved. in ChicagoPoet T. S. Eliot, is visitingChicago for a few days on ashort trip through the U.S.He is staying at the home, of JohnU. Nef, chairman of the commit¬tee on social thought.Eliot attended a dinner withNef and a small party at theQuadrangle club Wednesday eve¬ning. He will fill a few more socialengagements during his stayhere, but is not scheduled to makeany public appearances.Eliot recently has been in thenational spotlight due to his “goslow” policy in the South whichrecommends slow adaptive, cau¬tious, desegregation in oppositionto forceful, sharp measures.Survey compares Maroonwith other college papersby Gary MokotoffCollege newspapers receive approximately 47% of their money from some form of cir¬culation revenue, a current Maroon survey shows.Approximately 66% of the colleges have activities fees from which a percentage goesto the newspaper. Where a fee is lacking, the newspaper charges for copies, or receives aset subsidy from the administration of the educational program.The Maroon was the only paper that did not get either a fixed university subsidy or a cir¬culation revenue.Many newspapers thatcharge, suffer a low circula¬tion. Fraternities, sororities anddorm groups have one subscrip¬tion for many people. The DailyCardinal of the University of Wis¬consin has a circulation of 2,000as compared to a 14,500 enroll¬ment for the university. Theyestimate their ^readership at 75per cent of enrollment.Ad rates varyAdvertising rates vary with cir¬culation but the dailies, whichusually have the largest circula¬tion, have very low rates. Theaverage rate, daily and weeklypapers combined, is about $1.13.Percentage - wise, advertising ac¬counts for 51 per cent of the news¬paper’s revenue.On staff salaries, the Marooncame out ahead. The full-tuition scholarship to the editor and thehalf tuition scholarships to themanaging editor and businessmanager put it out ahead of otherweeklies, but behind most of thedailies that paid their staff.Pay system oddThe editor-in-chief was not nec¬essarily the highest pay staffmember. The delivery managerusually makes more than the edi¬tor, and the advertising managerand business manager with theircommissions also make more.This is true of the Maroon as w ellas other papers.Staff size did not vary as thefrequency of publication. TheSwarthmore Phoenix, a weekly,has a staff of 72, while the Uni¬versity of Colorado Daily has astaff of 18. Subsidies varied usual¬ly with the papers needs with a high of $27,000 by the Daily TarHeel.Few papers have their ownpresses, and only one, the Har¬vard Crimson, listed revenuefrom printing other publications.This accounted for 12 per cent oftheir revenue.Comparisons soughtThe purpose of the survey wasto compare Maroon finances withother papers.Part of the comparison is listedbelow:Maroon AveragePrinting costs foreight-page paper .. ..$323 00 $310 00Local advertising rateNational advertising .. 1.75 1.13.. 1.54 1.15% Revenue from:Advertising 1°nCO 51%University subsidy, stu-dent activities fund orcirculation 0% 47%Miscellaneous . . 17% • 2%•University makes up deficit.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON •, 1956Distribute booklets UC alum joins CARE;Robert M. Hutchins, President of the Fund for the Republic,has announced that the Fund will finance distribution of 50,-000 copies of a Department of Defense publication entitled“Who are communists and why?"Hutchins, UC president and distributes in Indiachancellor for 21 years, leftUC to become president ofthe Fund for the Republic.This pamphlet, originally pub¬lished by the Office of ArmedForces information and education,is one of a six-part “Know yourcommunist enemy” series. It de¬scribes the various types of Com¬munists and discusses the basis ' Charles Sumner Stone, Jr., a UC alumnus with an MA(1951) degree in sociology, left this week for India to beginhis first foreign assignment. In India he will join the CAREmission chief in supervising the distribution of 120,000 CAREfood packages among recentport and tactics used by the Com¬munist party in the US.Other publications to be dis¬tributed by the fund are copiesof Mill’s essay “On Liberty,” “The flood victims and other needy After his department store ex-Formation of the Massachusetts families.Constitution,’* and address givenby Admiral S. E. Morrison of Har¬vard university at a celebrationin commemoration of the 175thanniversary of the Massachusettsof Communist appeals for sup- constitution.ACLU honors McGiffert Stone was hired several yearsago by Carson, Pirie, Scott andcompany to integrate Negroes in.the sales force and clerical per¬sonnel of the store. The projectproved to be a lasting success. perience, Stone joined the Ameri¬can Foundation for Political edu¬cation as a field representative,touring the US, to set up inte¬grated educational programs atcolleges and with civic groups.In 1954 he entered the Law schoolof the University of Connecticut,but interrupted his law studiesthere to join the overseas staffof CARE.In 1948 Mr. Stone graduatedfrom Wesleyan University witha BS in political science and Charles StoneArthur C. McGiffert, Jr., president of the Chicago Theological seminary, was electedThursday as honorary chairman of the Illinois division of the American Civil Liberties union. ^ _McGiffert has just completed five years as chairman of the organization. Robert T. Drake, went to the UC for post-graduate newspaper.Chicago attorney, has taken over the position of chairmanOthers connected with UC work. At the same time he work¬ed on the editorial staff of theChicago Globe a weekly Negrowho were named to the boardof directors in the recent electionsare Harry Kalven and Roscoe Stef¬fen of the Law school; C. HermanPritchett of political science;Frederick S. Carney, MethodistStart campaignCampus NAACP is conductinga “Bundles for the South” cam¬paign tomorrow, Thursday, andFriday. The campaign is a partof a nation-wide effort to providerelief for victims of the WhiteCitizens council’s economic pres¬sure in the South. Receiving sta¬tions for food, clothing and dona¬tions will be placed at variouspoints on campus. chaplain to UC; and Mrs. AnselmStrauss, wife of the UC sociolo¬gist. Donald Mieklejohn of thecollege social sciences staff is alsoon the board.Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Aye.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery Service HARM WHIU ASUWILanguages, Vocabulary, facts, figures —fanything spoken can be learned while 1you sleep with new universfty-tested Iand proved method. Rush $2.00 fot ■fact-filled, illustrated instruction book:"SLEEP-LEARNING, ITS THEORY.APPLICATION & TECHNIQUE.” Results «guaranteed. Satisfaction guaranteed. ISlMpdtoming Research AssociationP.O. Box 610 Omaha, Nebraska |she said she'dpicked a LEMONwhen we didthe MERENGUEThere we were, dancin’ up astorm. She had on a straplessorgandy number that made herlook like an Italian movie star.1 was in heaven...’til she no¬ticed that I wasn’t wearing anAfter Six. Talk obout coldshoulders! She could have madeon Eskimo’s teeth chatter.Next dance, I won’t make thesame mistake! In fact, tomorrow,t may even cut Sociology 387(The Laplander, His Care, Cureend Prevention) so I can pickup my new After Six DinnerJacket. I hear it’s cool, comfort¬able, colorful and has thatcrazy Super Stain-Shy fabricfinish. HATRACK FORUNWELCOME GUESTSGregory SchmitzU. of WisconsinWINNING BASKET ASSEEN FROM BALCONtRichard HidaniIndiana State Teacher* LUCKIES RING THE BELL with college students allover the country! The reason; Luckies taste bet¬ter. That’s because they’re made of fine tobacco—mild, naturally good-tasting tobacco that’sTOASTED to taste better. Now check thatDroodle above; Lucky-smoking midget in tele¬phone booth. He may be short on stature, buthe’s mighty long on smoking enjoyment. Nexttime, ask for Luckies yourself. You’ll say it’sthe best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked!DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price. ■fo^s*e,bI COLLEGE SMOKERS! PREFER LUCKIES ITADPOLECONVENTIONLorenzo ZolaU. of Colorado WORM ENTERINGSHAVING-CREAM TUBERoger AtwoodlYale Luckies lead all other brands,regular or king size, among36,075 college students ques¬tioned coast to coast. Thenumber-one reason: Luckiestaste better.of Dntifdealers everywhere UICMES TASTE BETTER - Cleaner, fresher. Smoother!feoduct or J^nAU&an e/u&X£<r£cnry2<i'np America’s leading manufacturer or cigarettes©AT. Co,May 8- >956 Page 3Crises made Presidency great rby Oliver LeeAmericans, too, feel theneed of myths, symbols,shrines, slogans, hymns, he¬roics, and heroes, said ClintonRossiter, professor of governmentat Cornell university, in review¬ing the history of the AmericanPresidency in his Walgreen lec¬tures concluded last week.Rossiter reviewed the majorrontributions made by the majorPresidents to the growth of thepower and prestige of the office.He considered the major Presi¬dents to be Washington, Jeffer¬son, Jackson, Lincoln, TheodoreRoosevelt, Wilson, and FranklinD. Roosevelt. Each of these is anauthentic folk hero, said Rossiter,and Abraham Lincoln is the rich¬est symbol among them.It is during the terms of thesePresidents that the Presidencybecame powerful, said Rossiter.There intervened the Presidentialterms of lesser men, in whosehands the power and prestige ofthe office frequently sank quitelow. *But this did not stunt thegrowth of the Presidency, for'‘each new strong President picked up where the precedingstrong one had left off,” Rossiterpointed out. He gave as examplesthe fact that Lincoln availed him¬self of the precedents set by Jack-son a generation before, and thatFranklin D. Roosevelt ‘‘lookedback to Wilson over the barelyvisible heads of Hoover, Coolidge,and Harding” for precedents andinspiration.Aside from the personalities,Rossiter cited four other causesof the growth of the Presidencyto its modern stature, causeswhich at times representedmighty waves upon which one ofour great Presidents rode intooffice. These were the rise ofAmerican democracy, the growthof our industrial might, our emer¬gence as a world power, and aseries of grave emergencies.Rates three modemsIn his lecture on our three mostrecent presidents, Rossiter rankedRoosevelt highest, Truman next,and Eisenhower last, although hepointed out that judgment ofEisenhower’s presidency may bepremature, since it may yet havefour more years to go.Roosevelt's presidency may well be judged by future historians asthe most exciting, time of the Re¬public, predicted Rossiter, and itsessence was a confident eagernessto meet trouble head-on.Despite a long list of failuresand weaknesses, Rossiter said,Roosevelt’s place in history isfirmly fixed alongside of Jacksonand Wilson, and “a sizeable step,which may grow smaller withtime, below Washington and Lin¬coln.”Truman was president in atleast as decisive a time as thoseof Jackson and Wilson, said Ros¬siter, during which it was nomean achievement just to havegone through the motions of be¬ing president. “And Truman didconsiderably more than to gothrough the motions.”Truman also had a record ofmistakes of commission and omis¬sion, but they, like those of Roose¬velt, will fade in the view of fu¬ture generations, said Rossiter.Truman left a record of manygreat decisions in internationalaffairs, not one of which has yetbeen proven to be against the bestinterest of the nation, assertedthe Cornell political scientist. Being a classic case study of “apresident who grows in office,”Truman may become a symbol ofthe democratic belief that “plainmen can govern themselves.” Ros¬siter held that the office Trumanhanded on to Eisenhower “was noless magnificent than the officehe received from Roosevelt.”As for Eisenhower, Rossiterstated that his mission was notto “crusade” but to give us peaceand relaxation at home andabroad. The country is baskingin a climate of unity it has notenjoyed for 30 years. For this thecountry is grateful, but such isnot the stuff of which historicalgreatness is made, Rossiter said.Eisenhower has taken steps to¬ward peace in the last two yearswhich no Democratic presidentwould have dared to take, Ros¬siter pointed out, for “no one canwave the bloody shirt of treasonat Eisenhower, even if he cor¬responds with Marshal Zhukov.”Another essential task accom¬plished by Eisenhower was “topersuade most of the Republicanleaders to follow him into the 20thcentury.” The Republican party,Rossiter said, had to be given ex¬ perience in office in order to learnthat Whiggery is dead.In conclusion* Rossiter declaredthat any major reduction now inthe great powers of the presiden*cy would be damaging. No gov¬ernment, he said, "can exercisethe supervision that ours doesover the economy at home or hon¬or the bargains that ours hasmade abroad unless it has astrong, unified, energetic execu¬tive to lead it.”To meetin TunisThe sixth international stuVentpress conference, sponsored bythe Union Generate des Etudiantsde Tunisie (UGET.) and the coor¬dinating secretariat of NationalUnions of Students will be heldthis year in Tunis on July 25to 30.The conference is open to thestudent press of all countries andto any other interested students.Although a precise agenda has,not been made up, it is expectedthat the two major topics of dis¬cussion will be the purpose aridresponsibilities of a student pressand the technical aspects of pub¬lishing a newspaper.Student Government presentsMOSCOWUNIVERSITY:Palace of Scienceplus Soviet cartoonMay 9 Soc. Sci. 1227:15 &9:15 Admission75cBenefit UC-Moscowuniversity exchangeEXPERT PACKINGMODERN STORAGE^Sanitized service' as¬sures you a clean, safemove. And every de¬tail is Pre-Planned tosave you work, worry.No extra cost. CallPETERSONMOVING & STORAGE CO.55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterfield 8-6711DIVISIONS:Barrett General ChemicalMutual Chemical National AnilineNitrogen SemetSolvaySolvay Process • InternationalAllied to serve you betterHERE'S HOW THEY'REALLIEDpartytime PAPERandlifetime CHROMEMaybe you can’t see the connection between paper and hand-'some chrome plating—but if’s there. Like so many things,both products begin with chemistry—and alkalies are indis¬pensable to both.Allied Chemical’s Solvay Process Division is a leading pro¬ducer of alkalies—like caustic soda and soda ash used inpapermaking. Another Allied Division, Mutual Chemical, usessoda ash in the making of chromium chemicals, such aschromic acid for plating.Because Allied’s seven divisions are foremost producers ofchemicals, there are scores of cases where two or more divi¬sions team up to contribute to a finished product or to servea particular industry.Allied Chemical altogether turns out more than 3,000 products,'Seen or unseen, they’re helping everyone who makes, growsor uses things—that is, you,l61 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 6. N. Y. H ALSTED ou,°oobCHILDREN FREE Phone WA. 8-7979Quick to ReachEasy to Get toEssaness WonderfulFamily TheatreEvery NightIs aWonderfulVacation•Late Show FridayMidnite Show SaturdayPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 8, 1956Editor's Column Student CommentPaper shares common plight Not enough power for SCwith other campus publications Concurrently with the administration’s series of curricular modi-fications there have occurred many administrational decisions affect-ing student prerogative and responsibility. The undermining has beenso thoroughly and cleverly done that a campus faction recently peti¬tioned for the dissolution of Student Government, the central voice ofcampus, yet we must exist on a lower subsidy thanthe Pier Illini, a paper of 4000 circulation that pub¬lishes only 27 times a year compared with our 56Letters get means one less for us.Joy BurhachGary MokotoffSuggests more comprehensive calendar ~Y\\ dvicaao11 laroonOften I sit down in the eveningafter a hard day’s work in classesor at the hospital, and look overthe students’ scandal sheet to de¬termine which of my friends willnext be taking the long, lonesometrail to oblivion because theirnames are mis-spelled, or theiractivities mis-reported.Tonight, however, I take type¬writer in hand because of a moreconsistent and — to me — tangiblething. One feature of the old,once-weekly, last-year’s-model Ma¬roon that I thought was a realservice was the fact that the cal¬endar for the entire coming weekwas printed in the paper, and Iwas able to foresee coming eventswith some chance to plan forthem. One thing about the new,the wonderful, this-year’s-model-and-no-money-down Maroon thatI feel is truly a lack is that one can see coming events no morethan four days ahead of time.*This makes it hard to enjoy theevents offered in many fields bythe University, since:1. It is often hard to rearrangethe writing of that ol’paper onfour days notice,2. Tickets may be sold out bythe time that a recluse such asapartment - dwelling, part-time¬working, studious (?) people likeme hear that something is hap¬pening,3. Money is often budgeted outfor other things by the time it ispossible to know of such thingsthrough the paper, and,4. Did you ever try getting adate to such a thing as “GhostSonata” on three days’ notice?Seriously, I feel that I would bemuch happier if you could atleast schedule major events on the campus for at least a weekahead of time in an organized andcentralized place like the “Calen¬dar” instead of leaving the personto find if he is able an eventamong the myriad advertisementsthat grace the pages of the Ma¬roon. Certainly this would be lessthan feasible for such recurrentitems as club meetings, but formaj_or, once-a-year-or-not-much-oftener items, I, for one, would bevery happy to have some sem¬blance of ample warning.My thanks for your patience, ifindeed you have gotten this far,and my compliments to yourcourage.William B. Bell*Only three (3-on Tuesdays. count ’em—3) Issued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermittentlyduring the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, at 1212 Fast59th Street, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephone: editorial offices, Midway 3-0800,ext. 1003 and 326S; Business and advertising office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3205.Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Business office hours: 2 p.m. to 5 p.tn., Mon¬day through Saturday.Editor-in-chief Joy S. BurbachManaging Editor Norman LewakBusiness manager Gary MokotoffExecutive news editor Ronald GrossmanAdvertising manager Lawrence KesslerSupplement editor Jean KwonNews editors Fred Karst, Sue TaxCultural editor Judy PodoreSports editor Robert HalaszNews feature editor Sue TaxCopy editors Jean Kwon, Fabian NechelesProduction manager Robert QuinnPhoto editor John BystrynHither and Yon Robert MacDonaldPersonnel manager Jack BurbachCalendar editor Earl HerrickOffice manager Adrienne KinkaldStaff: Ed Berckman. Robert Bergman, Roger Bernhardt, William Brandon. DonBroder, Joyce Ellin, Saralee Feldman, Jack Forman, Gerson Greenberg. JeanneHargltt, John Herzog, Nelson Hyman, Oliver Lee, Quentin Ludgin, Dave Mailman,Chuck Mittman, Robert Moody, Lowell Pickett, Spike Plnney, Diane Pollock,Lynford Russell, Art Taitel, Joseph Weslowski, David Zack.Clear up mis-statementOur failure to give a clear ex¬planation of the need for a busi¬ness manager on the staff of Chi¬cago Review has led to some mis¬taken assumptions. The magazinehas not had an individual desig¬nated as business manager sincethe spring quarter, 1965. Theduties and responsibilities of thisposition have been shared by theeditors and heads of departments.In the current Review we havelisted Daisy S. K. Yee as business manager. This is an error. MissYee has been a diligent and con¬scientious office manager for themagazine since the middle of lastsummer, in charge of subscriptionfulfillment and orders; she hasnot been responsible for the fullscope of Review business activ¬ities. I am sure our present diffi¬culties would be in part dimin¬ished if we additional staff mem¬bers as efficient as Miss Yee.I-achlan MacDonald,Editor, Chicago ReviewGive 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. The new Arrow FREE-WAYputs "action" in a shirt...Here’s a knitted shirt just made foractive sports (and lounging around,as well). The feather-light fabricis bias-cut for perfect freedom inany position. The back, cut longerthan the front, lets the collar fityour neck just right. In 20 colors.Wear it correctly—with the ArrowBermuda shorts (6 different col¬ors)—and you’ve made the per¬fect choice for summer FREE¬WAY, $3.95. Shorts, $3.95 up.-ARROW-—first in fashionSHIRTS • TIES • SIACKSMay S. 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Phone: Ml 3-0800 Ext. 3265Reopened under new management. Col¬lier’s house restaurant. 6324 Woodlawn.Specializing in fried chicken, steaksand chops, prime ribs of beef. Openfrom 5 p.m. Sundays from 1 to 10.Closed Monday.Did you see anyone riding a blue Duneltracing bicycle? Bicycle was lifted from5535 University 6:30 p.m. Saturday, May5. Reward. Call HY 3-1134.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.ALL A COED NEEDS TO KNOW ABOUT CAR REPAIRS Books Bought• Any Subject• Any Language• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Pork 3-03211204 E. 55th St.Crammingfor Exams'?fight “Book Fatigue" SafetyYour doctor will tell you — aNoDoz Awakcner is safe as anaverage cup of hot, black cof«]fee. 1 ake a NoDoz Awakenerwhen you cram for that exam...or when mid-afternoonbrings on those “3 o’clock cob.'webs.” You'll find NoDoz givesyou a lift w ithout a letdown..helps you snap back to normaland fight fatigue safely!15 fobfePf lorge economy(for Greek Row endDorms) 60 toblefs —Timken* bearings keep America on the GQ... andyou keep going up when you go with the Timken Company SAFE AS COFFEEChicago MaroonCLASSIFIEDSprudent rote 5c per wordRide wanted? Rider wanted?Try a Maroon classified. Your lastlime to advertise before June 1 is inthis Friday’s issue. Deadline is to¬morrow.For Rent Others 10c per wordWantedFirst floor apartment. Four large rooms.60th and Woodlawn. Ideal for Univer¬sity couple. Children welcome. $75 permonth. Call Mr. Sodus. NO 7-2224.Apartment for rent or sublease for 2 or3. Available June 1. Near 55th andWoodlawn. NO 7-8228.Faculty apartment. 3 rooms furnishedto rent. $115 per month. June 3 toSeptember 28. Telephone MU 4-0098any day except Friday, Saturday.Furnished apartment ava.table June 10for summer or year. 4 rooms (2 bed¬rooms): back porch. $115 per month.Call MI 3-3188 evenings or Ext. 3235 days. Wanted: A light well furnished roomIn private home for UC student fromJune 1 thru August 31. Would like tobaby sit and/or work in lieu of part orall of rent. Call Lynford Russell. PL2-9693.Good opportunity for female studentwho is fond of children. Room, boardand small salary in return for services.Call ES 5-3863.NoticesMany thanks to the person who re¬turned the “borrowed” bound volumeof last year’s Maroons. Will the personwho "borrowed” the press relation’s pic¬tures of Stagg, Hutchins, etc., pleasereturn them to the Maroon office. Noquestions asked. Poets read workNew Chicago poets will recite their own' published workson May 7 at 8:15 in Ida Noyes theatre. Admission will befree.This is the second lecture in a series of two, sponsored bythe Chicago Review. Any “published” poet interested shouldcontact the Review.A play by Ruth Herschberger, first in the series, was givenon May 6.Wright, Davidon,Socolar to sperakat disarmament conferenceThree UC faculty members will take part as speakers andpanel members in a disarmament conference in ChicagoSaturday.They are Quincy Wright, professor of political scien<re,William C. Davidon, research ——:—————:—— •associate in the Enrico Fermiinstitute for nuclear studies, andSidney J. Socolar, assistant pro¬fessor of physical sciences in theCollege.Representatives of the Chicago office of the naval officer The all day conference will alsoprocurement bureau will be in the North lounge of the Rey- hear a report on the UN disarm*-nolds club from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on Thursday, to in- ™ent commission by a represents-terview senior men and graduate students who are interested tlv<: °f I?a.ro1/’ E-Sta.ssen> specialin the Navy’s Officer Candi-Navy recruits at Reynoldsassistant to the President on dio>degree from an accredited college armament. Senator Alexanderor university and must be citi- Wiley (Rep., Wis.), will also actCandidate zens of the United States. dress the conference.Teachers meet at Judd halldate program.The Naval Officerprogram is designed to train col¬lege graduates to hold responsiblepositions as officers in the USNaval service.In order to be eligible for any The Department of Education sponsored an open housecommissioning program in the f0r secondary school teachers, principals, superintendents,Naval service, applicants must and members of the Boards of Education from Chicago, Uli-hold a baccalaureate or superior nois, Wisconsin, Indiana, and Michigan, Saturday, May 5.Programs concentrated onopportunities offered by ateaching career and recent devel¬opments in educational methodsand research. At 1:30 p.m. in Juddhall, R. Wendell Harrison, vicepresidents of the University, wel¬comed the educators, and FrancisS. Chase, chairman of the Depart¬ment of Education spoke on “TheSchool of the Future.’'Afterwards the visitors attend¬ed a series of nine group sessions.Speaking at the sessions were:Bruno Bettelheim, Robert J.Havighurst, Jficob W. Getzels,Mildred C. Letton, James G. Har¬low, Helen M. Robinson, MauriceL. Hartung, Kenneth J. Rehage,and Benjamin S. Bloom.WHEN Mother was a coed, she didn't drive much. Butwhen she did, a man usually went along. The manwaa an indispensable accessory—to fix the car when itgot balky*If today's coed takes • man along, It’s strictly for com¬pany. Fixing her make-up in the rear-view mirror is theonly kind of "car repair” ahe needs to know. •>**.From the beginning, auto makers have aimed for a vir¬tually trouble-proof car. They’ve spent millions to getcars that way. It helps explain why so many cars today useTimken* tapered roller bearings to overcome friction invital moving parts —in wheels, In pinions, in steeringgears. Every American car but one uses Timken bearingsto keep them on the go with minimum maintenance.Keeping cars rolling along smoothly js just one exampleof how the Timken Company keeps America on the go¬by working hand-in-hand with all industry. By pioneeringimprovements in machines and ip^chjpery. By increasing speed and precision, decreasing wear and maintenance.The pioneering spirit has helped make us the world’slargest manufacturer of tapered roller bearings and remov¬able rock bits, and a leading producer of fine alloy steel.Because the best place to keep going—and keep going up—is with a company that’s on the go, you may be interestedin what lies ahead for promising college graduates at theTimken Company. For details, write for our bookletUThls Is Timken”. The Timken Roller Bearing Company,Canton 6, Ohio;TIMKENTftADK-MARK PEG. Us S. PAT. OFF.TAPERED ROllER BEARINGSSUMMER EMPLOYMENTFor school teochers ond students, men or women. Pleasant ond digni¬fied work. An opportunity to earn between $1000 ond $1500 duringyour vacation. Unbelievable? Its true ond we con pro.e it. For thefirst time Northwestern is offering direct-to-consumer on item thathas always been needed but has never been available. It sells itself.Experience not necessary. No investment. Personal interview andtraining. Write Northwestern Corporation, 403 Nicollet Ave., Min¬neapolis 1, Minn.AWhen June rolls aroundAnd you’re homeward hound,For the best smoke you’ve found—Have a CAMEL!pure, plegsutelft. J. ft«7<i<>14. Tobacco Co., Wntoahlu, N. C.camelIt's a psycho logical fad: Pleasure helpsyour disposition. If you're a smoker,remember — more people getmore pure pleasure from Camelsthan from any other cigarette!mNo other cigarette is sorich-tasting, yet so mild!There once lived a crazy,mixed-up old giant. He lived atthe top of a beanstalk and he gothis kicks out of a little red hen.Of course, that wasn’t bad, becausethat chicken laid golden eggs.Now down at the bottom ofthe stalk lived our boy, Jackson.Our boy was low on loot and hismother... man, she wasn’t makingit at all. The feedbag was M. T.So Jackson started thinking of away to get loot fast: ‘‘How,’*said he to himself, “could I getthat frantic chicken away from thatcharacter upstairs?” He lookedaround the hut for something totrade—How about an old piano Uncle Looey’s plectrum banjo? Wait aminute!!! In the cistern was a six-cancarton of Budweiser! So he gets theBud and sashays up the stalk. Well,citizens, there’s no use dragging thisBudweiser bit out: The giant buys theBud, gives Jackson the hen, mom’sdoing great and so will you if you’reup to date. Get Budweiser, man. •.it’s the world’s favorite beer!All cisterns;.. and brothems, too,for that matter... should discoverthat there is a difference in beers:This Budweiser.; .it is the most:roll? Mom’s bifocals? -Mr( BudweiKINO OP BERKSANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES, May «. 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pa«e T.Judo travels, works outA combined IIT-UC team was guest of Purdue last Saturday. The encounter, a 'work¬out’, rather than a match, was probably the first intercollegiate meeting of its kind in Plan interim canoeingas Outing club trip«the area.TRA VELINGDURING VA CA TION THead for theseHILTON & STATLER HOTELSOfferingSPECIAL STUDENT RATESIN NEW YORKWASHINGTON-BOSTONBUFFALO-HARTFORDHOTEL NEW YORKERNEW YORK1 in a room $5.50 a night2 in a room $4.50 a night3 in a room $3.50 a night4 in a room $3.00 a nightSTATLER HOTELS JNNEW YORK • BUFFALOWASHINGTON • BOSTONAND HARTFORD1 in a room $6.50 a night2 in a room $5.50 a night3 in a room $4.50 a night4 in a room $4.00 a nightWALDORF-ASTORIA andTHE PLAZA, NEW YORK1 in a room $8.00 a night2 in a room $6.50 a night3 in a room $5.50 a nightFOR RESERVATIONSwrite direct to Student RelatioiMiRepresentative at the hotel of yourchoice.For faculty or group rates in any ofthese hotels, write Miss Anne Hill¬man, Student Relations Director.Eastern Division Hilton Hotels, HotelStatler, New York City.Conrad N. Hilton, PresidentQoCCL'GoioL, (Lot4•jjO't wm, dx&to/dc ifc STICKDEODORANTQuickest, cleanest deodorantyou’ve ever usedl Simply glide stickunder arms—it melts in instantly.ContainsTHIOBIPHENE* the mosteffective anti-bacteria agent. It’sthe New Kind of Social Security— gives you absolute assurance.4 to 5 months' supply, IOO•Trademark I p|us faxThe Ceca-Cola Bottiing Company of Chicago, Inc.•'Cako*' U • registered trae mork. © 1M5. THE COCA-COLA COMPANY no more• runny liquid• sticky cream• messy fingersAt leading department and drag stores.SHULTONNew York Torontoand good—all over—wnen yo»pause for Coca-Cola. It’s sparkling with quickrefreshment...and it’s so pure and wholesome—naturally friendly to your figure. Let it dothings—good things—for you.The UC group, showing a variety of styles, also performed at the Midwest judo tourna¬ment of last month. Twelve — —men from Chicago practiced very rapidly during the post-wart with about thirty from Pur- years, both as a national and in¬due. Joe Kakatzu from the Jiu- ternational sport. We would alsojilzu institute, who traveled with like to see it grow in an intercol-the visiting team, demonstrated kgiate basis,his highly interesting versions of *seems to appeal strongly'geveral throws. to students even when they areAfter practice. Bill Kaufman, Predominantly intellectually in-one of the instructors of the team, '“S'?’ ",Jas„a hlgh, r«!“aUo“. value and it offers potentially farcommented, Judo has spread greater opportunities for inter-AREYOII INSTEP?asks ANNE FRANCIS co-starred in MGM’s“FORBIDDEN PLANET”in Cinemascope * “ ‘The girl in your life, like Anne, dressesproperly for each occasion. And sheyou to be in step, too, with shoeclike:City Club style T771 City Club sty!# 84462 City Club style 84680for lelssrs “off for dess MS bull- when you're shours" ness "dressed-up knight"Choose your 3-pair shoe wardrobe from these and hun¬dreds of other smart City Club styles at your dealer’s,from 83.96 to $18.96. Also ask to see Wesboro shoes foryoung men, from $7.96 to $9.96.by Peters ■ distinctive shoes for menas advertised in ESQUIRE collegiate competition than othersports: practically anybody canparticipate since there are fourdivisions, according to skill, whichrange from beginners of a fewweeks to men of several years’experience, and competition iswithin the group. We certainlyhope that the UC club will growwith the sport, both in skill andnumbers.’’Golfers losein triangularThe golf team met Navy Pierand Beloit out on Longwood coun¬try club golf course, and lost toboth schools by identical scores of1614 to 114. Navy Pier beat Beloitin the other match, 11-7. Medalistwas Jim Hughes of Beloit, whoshot a 78.The golfers hope to do better inthe Chicago intercollegiate tour¬nament on Friday, which will con¬sist of 36 holes of play. Do you want to shoot the rapids or skim over glass-clearlakes like the fellow above is doing. If interested, call EugeneMaier in Hitchock hall.The UC outing club is plan¬ning a canoe trip with all ofthese exciting activities fromJune 8 to 9.YOUNG SOCIALIST LEAGUE ANDINDEPENDENT SOCIALIST LEAGUE PRESENTSSTALINISM WITHOUT STALINSpeaker: Max Shacht-manMoy 13 — 8 p.m.Ida Noyes Admission: general, 50cstudents, 25c JV sportsFriday, JV baseball, LutherSouth. North field, 3:30.Friday, JV tennis, North Park,Varsity courts, 3:30.Social Securityin 3 seconds'Wi¬fiPage S THE CHICAGO MAROON May 8, 1956Coming events on quadranglesTuesday, May 8Intervarsity Christian fellowship lunch¬eon. "War and Peace,” 12:30 p.m., IdaNoyes.University theatre workshop. 3:30 p.m.,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.Chicago Review staff meeting, 4:30Reynolds club.WA.\ picnic, 4:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Blackfriars meeting, 7 p.m.. Ida Noyes.Oocfilm: Tillie’s Punctured Romance,7:15 and 9:15 p.m., Social Science 122,40 cents.YSL meeting, 7:30 p.m.. Ida Noyes.ITS wives lecture, “The early Church,”by assoc, prof. Robert M. Grant, 8p.m., 5757 Woodlawn.Folk dancing, (instruction from 8 p.m.l,8:30. Int. house, 50 cents non-resi¬dents.Wednesday, May 9Wal green lecture, "American economyand the new economics: 'Low pres¬sure’ versus ‘high pressure’ econom¬ics.” prof. Alvin H. Hausen. HarvardU., 4:30 p.m., Social Science 122,Weavershere soonThe Weavers, nationally famousfolk song grouo, will give theirfirst Chicago concert appearanceat Orchestra hall on Friday eve¬ning, May 18, at 8:30. The fourWeavers — Pete Seeger, RonnieGilbert, Fred Hellerman and Lee Zoology club meeting, "Melanophorephysiology In relation to the mode ofhormone action,” 4:30 p.m., Zoology14.Carillon recital, 4:30 p.m., Rockefellerchapel.Student Zionist organization meeting,4:30 p.m., Ida Noye» hall.Rickctt lecture. "Changing patterns Inpublic health." bv Dr. John C. Bugherof Rockefeller foundation, 5 p.m.,Billings P-117.Apollo club meeting, 7:45 p.m., IdaNoyes hall.Country dancers, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes,wear tennis shoes.Thursday, May 10Statistics seminar, "Approximate con¬fidence procedure in multiple regres¬sion by asst. prof. David L. Wallace,4 p.m., Eckhart 207.WAA meeting. 4:30 p.m.. Ida Noyes.Economics seminar, "The theory of thebalance of payments and the problemof a common European currency.” byprof. Tibor Scltovsky of NorthwesternUniv., 7:45 p.m.. Law South.Lecture, "Philosophic thought in India.”by K. Satchidananda Murty, lecturerand head of philosophy dept.. WaltairUniv., India, sponsored by philosophy and Oriental languages depts., 8 p.m.,Social Science 132.TV broadcast, “The humanities — thearts of today,” with music by Mrs.Jeanne Bamberger and Leland Smith.UC instructors, 9:30 p.m., WTTW,channel 11.Friday, May 11Seminar. "Research needed in the fieldof child care.” by Connie Fish ofWelfare council of metropolitan Chi¬cago. 3:30 p.m., Social Science 105.Walgreen lecture, "American economyand the new economics: Monetarypolicy in an advanced society,” prof.Alvin H. Hausen. Harvard U., 4:30p.m., p.m.. Social Science 122.Lutheran students banquet, 6 p.m.. IdaNoyes.Hillel foundation sabbath service, withinformal evening following, 7:45 p.m.,5715 Woodlawn.University concert, Roman Tolenberg,violinist, playing Beethoven: sonatain D major, op. 12, no. 1; Mozart:adagio In E major, K. 261; Franck:sonata in A major; Debussy: sonata;Paganini: caprice no. 24; Szymanow¬ski: Fontaine d’ Arethuse; and Bar-tok: Roumanian dances; 8:30 p.m.,Mandel hail. Girls Walked A Mile From J. Paul Sheedy* TillWildroot Cream-Oil Gave Him Confidence"Dunli anything tonight hotvy?*’ Sheedy asked his little desert flower. "Getlost!” she sbeiked, "Your hair's too shaggy, Sheedy. Confidentially itsphinx!" Well, this was really insultao. So Jf. Paul got some WildrootCream-Oil. Now he’s the picture of confidence becausehe knou s his hair looks handsome and healthy the wayNature intented . . . neat but not greasy. Take Shcedy'sadvice. If you want to be popular, get a bottle or tubeof Wildroot Cream-Oil. Nomad-der if your hair isstraight or curly, thick or thin, a few drops of WildrootCream-Oil every morning will keep you looking yourbest. You’ll agree Wildroot really keeps Sahara-n placeall day long.* of 131 So. Harris Hill RJ., Williamstillt, N. Y.Wildroot Cream-Oilgives you confidenceHays—will present a program <“Folk songs around the worldTickets are priced from $1.50 1$4.TheSHORTESTRoute••• to business successDis thorough training insecretarial skills. Katha¬rine Gibbs is favored bymost college women...and employers, too.d U Special Course for College Women\ / Write College Dean forV GIBBS GIRLS AT WORKKATHARINEGIBBSSECRETARIALBOSTON 16. . . 21 Marlborough StPROVIDENCE 6 . . . ISO Angall StNEW YORK 17. . . . 2J0 Park Av».MONTCLAIR, N. j. . 33 Plymouth SL jSPECIAL PRICETO STUDENTSOn Student HealthService Prescriptions3 RegisteredPharmaciststo Serve YouREADER’SCampus Drug Store1001 E. 611upin *56Round Trb viaSteamshipFRCQUENT SAILINGS *3 | QTourist Retifld Trip AirI420fl0 A s46080 mChoice of Over 100ST8BENT GLASS T9BRS $£ J ATRAVEL STUDY TOURSCONDUCTED TOURS DpUniversity Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines, hasrendered efficient travel serviceon a business basis since 1926.\ f ' ' ' t*See your local travel ogeM *■»folders and details or writeUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CQ.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Moss. 1. SUPERIOR tASTESo good to your taste because of L&M’ssuperior tobaccos. Richer, taslier-espe-cially selected for filter smoking. For theflavor you want, here’s the filter you need. •Jccerr*So quick on the draw!,Yes, the flavorcomes clean—through L&M’s all whiteMiracle Tip. Pure white inside, purewhite outside for cleaner,better smoking.Make Today Your Big Red Letter Day!boom * Mvus Tosaooo Gu