wm956Defermentdeadline todayToday is the last* day formen of draft age to applyfor deferment for the com¬ing year. Application shouldbe made in the registrar'soffice. cfucaaoVol. 64, No. 51 University of Chicago, Friday, May 11, 1956 31 This is the last issue of theMaroon before the examination5p4&4. The next issue will beon Titne l.f, JThe June i issue, which isthe last before the beginningof the summer quarter, will behighlighted by a review of the1955-56 school year.Copy and advertising dead¬line for this issue is Tuesday,May 29.SU reorganizes to 'fillvacuum in campus life'by Sue TaxStudent Union, which was dissolved last year, reorganized Tuesday evening, and will im¬mediately throw its hat into the social ring with an after-comp C-dance.Sylvia Boyd, president of the newly-revived organization, announced that some 35 stu¬dents had organized and registered Student Union to fill an “obvious and drastic vacuum incampus social activities.”Other officers of the new SU are Penny Rich, vice-president; Joan Raphael, secretary, andBuford Knowles,Sylvia Boyd (I), president of the new Student Union, discussespuns with Penny Rich, vice-president of the group. treasurer.All four officers are formermembers of SU.Sylvia Boyd emphasized that“there will be a continuity ofpersonnel and objectives with thepast. We consider this a continua¬tion of an organization with along and successful history andwe are confident that the prob-Residents of Dudleyget official eviction fieldnoticeUniversity sponsored housing for married students has definite advantages, a report ofthe Family Study Center shows. See page 4 for a story on the recent study. lems which led to a one-yearlapse will be overcome.”Comments on C-danceIn regard to the after-compC-dance should be a novelty.”tional annual campus event, MissBoyd said, “By now, having aC-dance should be no novelty.”The dance will be held in IdaNoyes gymnasium from 9 to 12:30p.m. SU has provided for the mu¬sic of Benny Young’s band. Thecharge will be $1 per couple.Rick Karlin, a former presidentof SU, said that a deficit on thedance had been budgeted and theactivities office would make it up.Dean of Students Robert M. Stro-zier said, “We do not anticipate adeficit.”Announce other plansSU will continue its formerprogram of C-dances, Hi-fi con¬ nate the campus social program,nothing had been done to fill thegap left by SU. He felt, however,that in keeping with the Univer¬sity’s policy in student activities,any move to fill this vacancyshould come from the studentbody. He expressed great satis¬faction that the Student Unionwas to be revived and assured thefullest cooperation of his office.Mrs. Newman, who was namedWednesday as the new directorof student activities, added thatthe Student Union would bea large help and boost to the sum.mer activities program.No clash with SACMiss Boyd, Mrs. Newman, andStrozier all emphasized their feel¬ing that there is no conflict be¬tween the functions of SAC andSU. SU will sponsor social events,while SAC will continue to co-Notices officially terminating tenancy on June 30 will be served on all residents of Dudley certs- orientation week events,field early next week, the dean of students office announced this week. Students in Dudley summer open houses and picnics, or and schedule events onflew who Wish to arrange to move to any of the 41 available apartments or 14 available “mps„usc sn “ s’^ j0an kaphael, new secrelary ofpt e-fabs must sign a lease before 3 p.m. May 22. board will begin to consider a SU and former member of SU,Rents in the available pre-fat>s will be the same as cur¬rent rents on Dudley field, $55.Rents in the apartments vary#rom $57 to $75.While all of the Dudley fieldbarracks have two bedrooms andrent at $55 per month includingutilities, only eight of the 41 avail¬able apartments have more thanone bedroom. The cheapest of thetwo bedroom apartments willrent for $70. The $57 and $59apartments do not have bedroomsat all. but merely two “in-a-door”beds.All of the 47 families now inDudley field who will need hous¬ing have children.The University, through Ruth0 McCarn, assistant dean of stu¬dents,, will consider applicationsfor personal subsidy from thosewhose financial situation makesit impossible for them to continuein the University because of in¬ creased rents.On March 7, a meeting of theMarried Students associationwent on record as opposing rentsof $65 to $75 a month plus utili-No authorization has as yetcome from the business officeof the University to let the con¬tract for demolition of the pre¬fabs now on Dudley field. W. R.Z e 11 n e r, superintendent ofbuildings and grounds, report¬ed last year that usually abouttwo months notice is givenB & G to secure such contracts.Although no plans have beenmade for the demolition work,groundbreaking ceremonies onthe Dudley field site areplanned for mid-June. A newwomen’s dormitory is sched¬uled for the field. ties as higher than most of themcould afford. At that time, theassociation decided upon furthernegotiations. Recent negotiations,however, have been carried onby a group from Dudley fieldalone. summer program and plans fornext year.Comments on the reorganiza¬tion of SU have come from sev¬eral corners of campus. Strozierstated that he realized at aboutthe middle of the year that whileSAC had been created to coordi- who also has a seat on SAC, said,“It’s about time another organi¬zation was formed that will dosomething instead of talk aboutit!”Old SU’ers commentThree former SU president?See ‘Reorganizes,’ page 2Mrs. Newman moves upMary Alice Ross Newman has been named director of student activities, Dean of Stu¬dents Robert M. Strozier announced Wednesday. Strozier headed the Student Activitiesoffice during the past year after Arthur Kiendl resigned to become associate dean of Dart¬mouth college.Mrs. Newman served as as¬sociate director of student ac¬tivities under Kiendl and assist-tant director under Strozier. Sheholds a PhD in American historyfrom UC and has taught in thecollege here. On July 1, 1956,when her new appointment will take effect, Mrs. Newman willalso become an assistant profes¬sor of history in the college.“I am very pleased to be tak¬ing over,” stated Mrs. Newman.“I hope we will continue to havea friendly office where peoplewill feel welcome to drop in andKiendl gives his view on new SUby Ronald Grossman“Student Union? Fine! Let’em go!” said Arthur Kiendl,in a long-distance telephoneinterview from Hanover, NewArthur J. Kiendl Hampshire,Kiendl, as director of studentactivities at UC last year, was in¬strumental in the dissolution ofthe old Student Union and in theformation of SAC as a group totake over some of the functionsof SU. Now associate dean of stu¬dents at Dartmouth college, hewas asked to give his commentson the proposed re-establishmervtof Student Union.Kiendl expressed great interestin the move, and questionedwhether the Social Activitiescouncil would remain in existence.Told SAC would remain, hesaid, “I have no vested interestin SAC, and if there is no con¬flict with the new SU, let themboth function.”Asked w!.at he thought themain reason for the dissolution ofStudent Union last year was.Kiendl expressed the belief thatlethargy was the trouble.“If people are vitally interestedin doing the job, fine. I never sawany conflict in the organizationitself, just a lack of interest andenergy on the part of those inSU,” he stated. Kiendl went on to say that SU’sbiggest difficulty at UC in pastyears was the fact that it was self-perpetuating—“like inbreeding ina family, the structure tends toweaken,” he said.Questioned if he thought all¬campus elections would solve theproblem of getting interested stu¬dents to work in SU, Kiendlthought he “just couldn’t say.”“But,” he stated, “the group defi¬nitely needs diverse elements init with various viewpoints, whichthe old SU did not have. No far-reaching effects ever came out ofthe old organization during thetime I knew it.”The last question posed Kiendlwas, “Should the administrationsubsidize or support financiallythe new organization?”“Student Activities should beas self-supporting as possible,”answered the former student ac¬tivities director. “The lack ofjnoney or affluence of organiza¬tions becomes the dominating fac¬tor in its existence when schoQladministrations subsidize them,”he stated. Kiendl went on to mention thesituation at Dartmouth, where al¬most no student organizations aresupported by the administration..“All finances go through the stu¬dent body, with the groups col¬lecting fines (in the case of Stu¬dent Government) and sponsor¬ing money-raising events such asdances to bring funds into theircoffers,” Kiendl said.At the time Kiendl was involvedin the dissolution of the old SU,he stated:“We want channels of com¬munication on a grass-rootslevel . . . there has been littleor no communication and coor¬dination between the manysmall, parallel organizations.Student Union was structurallyunable to do this.”When Kiendl left UC last yearto take over the Dartmouth posi¬tion, he stated that lie very muchregretted leaving UC. At thattime he observed about UC:“I feel as if I were walkingout of a motion picture In themiddle without knowing how* it’s going to end.” talk about student life.Mrs. Newman is a graduate ofWellesley college, where sheserved as president of the studentgovernment and as Wellesley rep¬resentative to the first NSA con¬gress.Her husband, James Newman,is a history instructor in the col¬lege and is resident head of Salis¬bury house in Burton-Judson.Strozier, who took on the stu¬dent activities post in addition tohis deanship, will resume teach¬ing next year. He is a professorin the department of Romancelanguages.A new assistant director of theoffice will be named at a futuredate.photo by BystrjyMary Alice Newman *' J' 4) *Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 11, 195$]Explain new SU revival; NSA delegation's roleclaim 'SAC fails to act'Student Union was organized in 1947 to fill the social needsof an enrollment of approximately 8,000 students in the post¬war period. In 1949 it was rated third best in the country bythe National Association of Student Unions.SU dissolved in March of1955. A re-evaluation commit¬tee consisting of Arthur Kiendl,then director of student activities; ure to obtain good leadershipwere all suggested as causes.Kiendl explained why his officefavored dissolution of SU: “Westructure of the campus, difficul¬ties of the organizational structure of the Union itself, and fail- was created to take on responsi¬bility for all the all-campus socialprograms and to coordinate thescheduling of events.In June Kiendl resigned hispost as director of student activi¬ties for a position at Dartmouth,and Robert M. Strozier began to!n double as dean of students andreorganizes . . .from page 1)had comments to make.Rick Karlin, who served1952-53, and who is married to (jjrector of the student activitiesthe former Ruthe Rieger, also a 0ffjcepast SU officer, stated. My SAC did not, from the time ofwife and I are looking forward to its formationt sponsor an all-bemg^able to attend a C-dance campUS social event, except for*£am- organization of a Wash PromBill Hillman, who was president committee, although it had thefor part of 1954 and is now study- power to do so. This had been theing law at Boston university, was major function of the Studentcontacted by telephone Wednes- Union. It is on the basis of thisday. He said, “I was extremely lack that SU has been revived,disappointed when SU was dis¬banded in spite of its long andsuccessful history, merely be¬cause it had run into hard sled¬ding. I am confident the presentcore can overcome the formerdifficulties and organize a sue- nrl “XL™*, XX/ftrlA"cessful active group.” un VV UJ UlBruce Larkin, president in 1953- Indian educatorsto speak SundayEdward Rosenheim, Jr., assist-54, commented: “The abolition of ant professor of humanities in theStudent Union was to have college, will interview three mem-brought a new era in all-campus bers of the Indian governmentsocial programming. That era did commission on higher educationnot arrive. A new Union organi- on UC’s New World radio pro-zation can fill the need. Student gram. The program will be broad-Unlon collapsed in part as a con- cast at 10:35 a.m. Sunday, oversequence of the dropping under- NBC’s network show, Monitor,graduate enrollment, the dearth The men to speak are three ofof extra-curricular personnel, eight commission representativesMore ‘freshmen’ will mean both touring the United States to studygreater demand for events and American methods of higher edu-more personnel to service them.” cation.YOUNG SOCIALIST LEAGUE ANDINDEPENDENT SOCIALIST LEAGUE PRESENTSSTALINISM WITHOUT STALINSpeaker: Max ShachtmanMoy 1 3 — 8 p.m.Ida Noyes Admission: general, 50cstudents, 25cPETERSONMOVING & STORAGE CO.55rh & Ellis Avenue Butterfield 8-6711AOEHT'OR SERVING UNITED STATES,!CANADA, ALASKA,HAWAII-ft PUERTO RICO * ! subject of Dean's meetingThe proper relationship of the National Students Association delegation to the StudentGovernment formed the center Monday for informal discussion by the students called to-gether by Dean of Students Robert M. Strozier.Strozier emphasized that the next meeting of the group discussing Student GovernmentWednesday, 3:30 p.m., Ida Noyes, would be open to all interested persons. “I never intendedthe meetings to be closed,” he asserted.Strozier also commented, in — —Maury Mandel, SU treasurer; want channels of communicationMary Alice Newman of the stu- on a grass roots level. . . . Overdent activities office; and Dale the years there has grown up aLevy, then SU president, made type of parallelism in student or-the decision to disband. ganizations.” He explained that“Student Union has been losing there were many small organiza-effectiveness,” Miss Levy said at tions doing essentially the samethe time thing, with little or no coordina-Reasons offered for the failure “0tn or «-°P<™Uon between them,were threefold. General student strueturaly unable toapathy and changes in the social rT^Early in May of last year theSocial Activities council (SAC) answer to a question by JanPorter, Student Governmentpresident who had not been pres¬ent at either of the two previousmeetings, that the “results” of thesessions would be referred to Stu¬dent Government.Sydney Gurewitz, SRP memberwho had served on the studentgovernment NS A committee thisyear, suggested that a specialeffort should be made to insurethat all NSA congress delegatesserve on one of the Student Gov¬ ernment committees.Her suggestion, which receivedgeneral agreement from thosepresent at the meeting, followedabout 30 minutes discussion onthe type of activities appropriateto the NSA committee of StudentGovernment, and the proper rolein the government of the return¬ing delegates.Alternative suggestions madeincluded appointment of the dele¬gates from the ranks of StudentGovernment, sending all officersUC fraternity initiatesBroadway show starA UC fraternity succeeded in initiating a Broadway starinto its membership Monday evening.Melvyn Douglas, star of ‘‘Inherit the Wind,” Broadwayplay currently showing in Chicago, was made an honorarymember of UC’s Zeta Beta Tau fraternity at the fraternity’s formalinitiation held at the Sheraton hotel.According to members of the fraternity, Douglas was asked totake part in the ceremony because of his “contributions to welfareorganizations of various kinds and to the theatrical field.” Douglashas starred in plays and movies and has directed many productionsin the past. and committee chairmen as dele-gates, and composing the NSAcommittee of Student Govern-ment of the returning delegates.Those present at Monday’??meeting also were in generalagreement that Student Govern-ment elections might better beheld in the spring so that the gov-eminent would be ready to beginwork by fall.Briefly mentioned at the meet¬ing was the problem of the meth¬od of picking the Student Gov-ernment representatives. MartinGendell, one of the originators ofthe “oust SG” petition, comment¬ed that he could not see the ad¬vantage of representation by divi-sions and schools over all-campusrepresentation, since he did notfeel questions came up uponwhich the academic units as suchwould be involved, but rather all¬campus questions.Miss Porter asserted that judg¬ing from the NSA elections/which are all-campus elections,the college would win most of theseats. There should be no dis¬enfranchisement of students justbecause they do not choose to beinterested in the government, sheadded.HALSTEDTD°°"CHILDREN FREE-Phone W«‘ 8-7979Quick to ReachEasy to Get toEttMMtt WonderfulFamily TheatreEvery NightIs aWonderfulVacation•Late Show FridayMidnite Show Saturday COMPASS5475 S. Lake Park Compass Moves NorthLast Nights at the DockTonight thru SundayDon't Min“UNDER DEAD WOOD”An Original ScenarioSketches of Life in Hyde Fork—— phis —The Living PlayboySHOW STARTS AT 9:00 P.M.SUNDAY MINIMUM — $1.00SCHNEEMANN'S1328 East 57th StreetFor All Your BooksPlease note our new hours effectiveuntil September 15, 1956Monday through Friday: 8 A.M. to 1 P.M. &6 P.M. to MidnightSaturday: 8 A.M. to 8 P.M.Sunday: 3 P.M. to 10 P.M. #We shall be closed from July 23through 28 and from August 27through SepL 1THE RED DOOR BOOK SHOPNOrmal 7-6111May ", 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3SG meetingChicago Reviewoffers full-tuition SG to evaluate itselfA full-tuition scholarship will be offered to the UC student who JosePh Wesolowskiqualifies as business manager for the Chicago Review, Dean of stu- Student Government has voted to evalute itself. A report on the government’s activitiesdents Robert M. Strozier announced last Tuesday. The scholarship is to be prepared by the summer executive committee, and campus groups are to be can-will be available whether or not the magazine’s next issue goes vassed to find out what they think of the government.to press. ..... _ .. ^ ... ... , . _ ,, A motion that the administration be approached on taking the student directory fromMcDonald in the Review offlce ReynoWs dub Rm on tha m0ney aI’0tted t0 * f0r °th?Ji PUrp0f^fa‘led'Monday or Tuesday. , 1 « was opposed as untimely because such a move might be taken as evidence of SG irre-MacDonald, who is editor of the Review, stated that the duties reputation for corrupt govern- campus activities on their viewsof the business manager will be to direct advertising, subscription 1 Jhidh led to ment; ^ ^ would lead o£ SG was amended to the m0.handling, sales to newsdealers and bookstores and special fund-rais- me motion tor the repoi t was F , , .. ,ing activities. In the event that the magazine is suspended, the busi- °Pened by SG President Janice to double representation by stu- tion for the report,ness manager will be charged with closing accounts and handling Porter’s (SRP) announcement dents who belonged to more than Miss Metros opposed the gen-repayment of subscribers. that Dean of Students Robert M. one activity; and this would not eral proposition that the stu-Strozier has not yet authorized a work order for the summer issue Strozier recommended revalua- solve the problem of commuters dents should be informed of theof the UC student literary magazine. A search for additional funds tion o£ SG by a committee. She who did not attend activities. She workings and policies of the gov-to subsidize the magazine is continuing. called attention to suggestions also said that NSA members ernment, saying that the studentwhich had been made in the should be elected and pointed out body will not be convinced byDean’s committee that representa- that UC being predominately a manifestos but by giving themfives be taken from student graduate school, students elected dances and married student’sgroups and living groups as is in the spring might not be back housing. Other suggestions weredone at the University of South- in the fall. that SG should be one govern-ern California, that elections be The report is to contain what ment instead of ISL and SRP, andheld in the spring and that NSA the government has done, what it that SG should have more power,delegates be delegated by SG. has not been able to do and why, Miss Metros stated that SG hadThese issues were not discussed and a statement of the philosophy more power than in many schools,further after Jan Metros (ISL- and workings of the student gov- Others felt that the dean did notcoll.) asserted that USC has a ernment. The move to canvass want SG to have any power be-Strawberrytime comingStrawberry Festival, Phi SigmaDelta fraternity’s annual all-cam¬pus open house, will be Saturday.June 2, at the Phi Sig house, 5625Woodlawn.All the strawberries and icecream a person can eat will beserved. Proceeds will go tocharity.The event will begin after theannual Inter-fraternity Sing inHutchinson court. A band will OopsThe reading by new Chicagopoets of their own published work,sponsored by the Chicago Review,will take place Thursday, May 17,at 8:15 p.m. in Ida Noyes, notMay 7, as stated in Tuesday'sMaroon.Int house to secede from Union;rry>frr»r>trvr rtTrrrfeBORDONE| Movers and Light Hauling «VI 6-9632B cause it would oppose everythinghe did.John Lyon (ISL, coll.) assertedthat a report drafted to satisfyboth parties would be both wishy-washy and general and make theSG look ridiculous in the eyes ofthe students.The motion on Ihe student di¬rectory was brought up in the dis-with it, he said. last week’s profits from the Int cussion which preceded tentative. . , . ... . t At the dance all the parapher- house cafeteria, will be installed acceptance of the 1956-57 budgetnaKa of fuli sovereignty, flag, on the top floor of the house; and for negotiation with the admm-aeainst the Chicago weather coat-of-arms. and national picture all pigeons, residents, and other Oration,against tne cmcago weatner. gallery—will be in evidence, and obstructions will be removed.Contrary to some reports, the several bureaucrats will be pres- The government plans an ag-independenee movement was in- ent in person. gressive foreign policy towarditiated by the Int house council No interference from federal Hyde Park, free food for all mice,itself — patrons of the cafeteria troops is expected. As a precau- proclamation of John D. Rocke-A dance will be held at International house Saturday from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the as¬sembly hall. Admission will be 35 cents for each person. The Dick McGill trio will play.Arthur Ghent, chairman of the dance and president-elect of Int house, asserts that theprovide music for dancing. The dance is in commemoration of the historic occasion that will occur that day when the areafestival is the forty second annual bounded by Blackstone, 59thbackyard strawberry festival of street, Dorchester, and thethe fraternity.and ex-editors of the house news- tionary measure, however, threepaper have had nothing to do anti-aircraft guns, purchased with Maroon almost,at times, fool'Everyone loves a gay motherespecially us—so wa'v« collacted all sorts of things to make her day more wonderful. • ••Handkerchiefs, scarves and stoles — a brilliant col¬lection from Mexico, Switzerland, India, Italy and Spain... from $1.00 to $18.00 ... in linen, cotton, wool, chiffon,hand-embroidered sari silks, and contemporary Americaudesigns on silk or linen by Tammis Keefe.Our selection of blouses for Mother’s Day in¬clude many made for us alone to sell in Chi¬cago. Cotton blouses from $8.95. Superblytailored shirts of true Indian bleeding madrasin exquisite colors are $8.50. A new selectionof handwoven skirts from Mexicohas arrived. These cannot be seenanywhere else in the Midwest.From $10.00 to $21.95. There arealso unusual herring bone weavestraight skirts in pure linen, dyedto match an orlon top. The skirtsare $10.00 and $11.50 — the tops$5.00. Sizes 10 to 18.We’ve increased our space for china, crys¬tal and ceramics. Dozens of beautiful piecesarrive daily and our policy at the new Domino’continues to be that of offering you only themost carefully selected pieces at low to mod¬erate prices.And don’t miss our special section of new casse¬roles in pottery, eriamelware and oven proof Waer-tisla Arabia china.If Mother’s in town bring her along to The Domino.She’ll love it.THE DOMINO1450 E. 57TH STREETHours; Weekdays — 12 - 8 p.m. — Sat — 10 'til 6 feller as the father of his country,and removal of the tree overhang¬ing the tennis courts. The newgovernment shortly expects afive-billion-dollar loan from the 1oof • 0l,.. . ,,US which b why admission is 52The Maroon apologizes for stat¬ing the views of William Faulk¬ner as those of T. S. Eliot in itslow.Free Spring Check-L-pfor got*r Camera atMODEL CAMERA SHOP1339 E. 55th St. HY 3-9259NSA Discount two people mixed up.In the words of Eliot appropri¬ate to the Maroon it is; “Full ofhigh sentence, but a bit obtuse;at times, indeed, almost ridicu¬lous—Almost. at times, the Fool/'(from “The love song of J. Al¬fred Prufroek”). Now let’s see. . . that was T. S. Eliot that saidit . . . wasn’t it?SHIRTS 11€ EachBeautifully Washed and Ironedwhen included with ourWASH and DRY service8 LBs. —89cKWIK-WAYCASH AND CARRY LAUNDRY“Doing Student Laundry for 45 Years*91214 E. 61st Street Between Woodlawn and KimbarkNICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063Barbecue Ribs - Chicken - Ravioli - SpaghettiFree delivery to U. of C, studentsOn any orderTable Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M.Open til! 3 AM. on Friday and SaturdayDelivery Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M.Student Union Once Again PresentsTHE AFTER COMP C-DANCEFRIDAY, JUNE 1 9:00 - 12:30IDA NOYES HALL GYMNASIUMWITH THE BENNY YOUNG BANDINFORMAL $1 «R COUPLEPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROONFomily Study surveyReportA sociological differentiation ofUC married students living inUniversity housing and non-Uni-versity housing has been releasedby the Family Study center. Thecurrently-circulating pilot study,prologema to a forthcoming socio¬logical report with “more theoret¬ical objectives” was conducted byEugene Litwak, the center's as¬sistant director.After examining material frominterviews with 100 more-or-lessrandomly selected students, Lit¬wak concluded that “University-sponsored housing meant thatpeople who might not be able tofVivat* dwelle.t*Private dwellers take a longtime to go through school, be¬cause they spend so much timeearning their rent. 11. 1956favorsafford to go to the University arcgoing, that it led to an academi¬cally mature student, that it tend¬ed to alleviate delay in finishingone's training, and that handledcorrectly it would lead to highpositive identification with theUniversity.”The report differentiates mar¬ried-student housing into threeclasses: 1) barracKs and pre-fabs,2) University owned apartmentsin buildings occupied predomin¬antly by University students orpersonnel, and 3) private apart¬ment with heterogeneous neigh¬bors.Reids higherAll barracks families are cur¬rently paying less than $60 month¬ly rent. Only 10 per cent of mar¬ried students living in privatedwellings pay this little rent. Thereport estimates that if barracksstudents were thrown on the pri¬vate rental market and all otherconditions were to remain thesame, only 10 per cent of themwould be able to find places attheir present rent.“Thus it can be seen that an ex¬treme shift in University policywould greatly increase the rentalburden of those now living in thebarracks,” Litwak concludes.While paying substantiallymore rent, students living in pri¬vate dwellings have greater avail¬able financial resources. Of cou¬ples with children living in pri¬vate apartments, 83 per cent haveincomes of $5,000 and above. Only10 per cent of barracks-dwellershave income this high. This samefinancial picture holds, with mod¬ifications, for childless couples.A minority with high incomes dolive under modest rents, however.While the sample size utilizedin the report is 100. by the timeinterviewees are classified by UC married housingchildren non-children and hous¬ing-type criteria, percentage esti¬mates are usually made fromgroups of 15-20 families.Check reliabilityAs a cross-check on reliabilityof income reports, students wereasked which of nine major expen¬ditures they owned (car, refrig¬erator, washing machine, dryer,air conditioner, telephone, etc).Among people with children 58per cent of those living in privatedwellings have six or more ofthese items while approximately14 per cent of those living inUniversity-subsidized apartmentshave as many as six or moreitems.The pilot report does not con¬sider the additional financial bur¬den on families where both hus¬band and wife pay tuition.Fewer resourcesLitwak concludes that “thegreat bulk of the people living inUniversity apartments have few¬er resources than those living inprivate apartments.”The report gives reference ma¬terial against the argument that“people in the University build¬ings are poorer because they donot work as much. If they workedas much they would make asmuch. (And afford more expen¬sive housing.)” Fifty per cent ofmen with children living in Uni¬versity apartments work morethan 20 hours a week while only40 per cent living in private apart¬ments do so. Husbands in child¬less families living in Universityapartments work less than thosein private buildings. There issome reason to feel that these lat¬ter differences might be due topeople in private dwellings tak¬ing fewer courses or the husbandnot being a student. Residencedifferences in the number of •50»•25%i families WITHOUT CHILDRENarm psc-ra* <* #*m**>s6=3 u»MVC«StTt apartmentsf~~l PRIVATE APARTMENTSLESS THAN$3,500 • YEAR ♦3,500-15000YEAR MORE tHAm*5000 YEARhours wives worked are neg¬ligible.Take more coursesWhat relationships exist be¬tween type of dwelling and aca¬demic status? Seventy-three percent of the men with children whoare living in University apart¬ments are taking three or morecourses while only 50 per cent ofthose living in private apartmentsare taking three or more courses.Over 21 per cent of the womenwithout children who are livingin private dwellings are taking afull-time load, and 54 per cent aretaking one or more courses.Of men without children livingin private apartments 24 per centare taking no courses. Every manin University barracks is takingcourses.While men in private dwellingswho have no children work morethan others, the report notes thatit might be at the expense of tak¬ing fewer courses.Means delay“Private dwelling standards,”according to the report mean adelay in career either by takingfewer courses, waiting until onehas accumulated sufficient moneythrough lucrative jobs before con¬tinuing a career, or delaying mar¬ riage until the man is finishedand then having the wife go toschool before her children arrive.”In further noting that privatedwellers tend to delay education,the report further points out thatthough respondents in Universitydwellings were generally youngerthey had the same if not higherdegree aspirations as well asmore course work behind themat the University.Leads to identificationUniversity housing leads to along-term identification with theUniversity, the report notes, sum¬marizing that “the unique factorabout married student housing isthat positive orientation and par¬ticipation involves the entire fam¬ily rather than just the single stu¬dent. . . . There is some evidencegathered in other studies thatcommunity living arrangementssuch as those in the barrackswould be most congenial to par¬ticipation and a positive refer¬ence.”“It might also be added,” thereport cautions, “that insofar asthe living conditions provided bythe University are unsatisfactory,the process of negative identifica¬tion could take place with just asstrong feelings.”1 Letters to tl le edi itorQuestions SG ban move;'power breeds maturity'The present controversy overthe role and the effectiveness ofStudent Government will not besolved by one more letter. Neither,will iheSG be able to completelyvindicate itself and to enlist firmsupport from a sympathetic stu¬dent body. The evils of the gov¬ernment are many. Therefore itscritics are many. Some of thesecriticise through ignorance of thepresent organization.The recent petition to dissolvethe government allegedly had 500signatures. Several years ago a petition allegedly had 1400 names.Its signers registered protest overthe policy and practices of theuniversity student housing file.No meeting of “Student Leaders”has ever been called by the Deanto re-evaluate the housing file.This merely exemplifies my be¬lief that until the students(through their government) aregiven some responsibility in themeaningful side of campus life,their government by necessitywill concern itself with trivia anditems of special interest. Other specifics on which the SG hasmet head-on with the administra¬tive brick wall includes coopera¬tive living, eating, and book fa¬cilities, and better student-facultyrelations on a university-widescale. I feel as though we in thegovernment have been relegatedto a play pen, and if we growtired of trying to climb out overwalls that are always too high tobe surmounted, we are then ridi¬culed for playing a bit.Joel RosenthalSolicit debate with LYL;to discussEarlier -his year an appeal wasmade through the Maroon in aletter to the editor asking stu¬dents to support the Labor Youthleague's fight to get off the Attor¬ney General's list. A later appealfor support in this matter camein the form of a petition fromihe Wisconsin student body cir¬culated here by our SG.We of the Young Socialistleague, while disagreeing withLYL politically, support its fightagainst the AG's list and feel thatthe campus should have the op¬portunity to hear the LYL presentand fefend some of its other poli¬cies. Since the LYL is a youthgroup that is not a recognizedstudent organization on this cam¬pus, we should like to give theman opportunity to participate in adiscussion. 20th CongressThe repudiation of Stalin by thetwentieth congress of the RussianCommunist party has arousedwidespread interest, raised newquestions, and re-raised some oldones, among them some of a par¬ticular interest to youth. At ameeting of the Manhattan sectionof the LYL on April 6, Leon Wof-sey, national chairman of theLYL, stated that the LYL was in¬ terested in debating such ques¬tions with socialists.Therefore, the Young Socialistleague proposes to sponsor a pub¬lic discussion, to be held on cam¬pus, between representatives ofthe YSL and LYL on the topic,“The Meaning of the TwentiethCongress.”Kdward Jack CollinsChairman, YSLGive 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. Student misses WUCB;can't find anyone homeAs a leader of a major campuscommunication medium, perhapsyou can tell me what lias hap¬pened to WCUB, (sic) ihe littleradio station that broadcasts onthe B-J electric lines.I have ben listening to WCUB(sic) for several months, eversince a floormate told me aboutthem, but now all I hear is theFM programs. I would almostventure to say that their pro¬grams got worse and worse andfinally folded up entirely. Couldyou print this and find out if thisis what happened? I have tried tocall somebody at the WBUC (sic)~t/y\ cntcaao11 laroonIssued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermittentlyduring the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, at 1212 East5itth Street, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephone: Editorial offices, Midway 3-MOO,ext. 1003 and 3266: Business and advertising office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 32*>->-Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Business office hours: 2 p.m. to 5 p.m., Mon¬day through Saturday.Editor-in-chief Joy S. BurbochManaging Editor Norman LewokBusiness manager Gary Mokotofftelephone, hut there is never anyanswer. WCUB (sic) was a nicestation sometimes, and it oughtto be worth a news story in theMaroon if they have quit. Is itbecause of the student fund beingdefeated?Irving FreidinanEditor’s note: WUCB, in the per¬son of Sheldon Danielson, an¬swered their telephone Wednes¬day evening and informed theMaroon that studio broadcastingended Sunday evening and thestation is now rebroadcasting FMonly for the rest of the quarter.( 1Executive news editor Ronald GrossmanAdvertising manager Lawrence KesslerNews editors Fred Karst, Sue "laxCultural editor Judy P<x oreSports editor Robert HaiaszNews feature editor ®ue.Copy editors Jean Kwon, FabianProduction manager Robert Q1)*1"Photo editor John By6try*lHither and Yon Robert MacDonaiaPersonnel manager JackCalendar editor Earl HerrickOffice manager Adrienne KinkatuStaff: Ed Berckman, Robert Bergman, Roger Bernhardt, William Brandon,_DoBroder, Joyce Ellin, Saralee Feldman, Jack Forman, Gerson Greenberg, jeann.Hargitt. John Herzog, Nelson Hyman, Oliver Lee, Quentin Ludgin, Dave Mailman,Chuck Mittman, Robert Moody, Lowell Pickett, Spike Pinney, Diane Fonoc*.Lynford Russell, Art Taltel, Joseph Weslowskl, David Zack.May II, 1»5« THE CHICAGO MAROON Rage 5Give excerpts from *'University Today'l An abridged version of the alumni presentation, “YourUniversity Today,” which was presented at the opera houselast Friday night, will be presented on television’s channeljl, station WTTW, from 9:30 to 10:15 Tuesday.Four sections of the orig- “ "inal presentation will be used on the telecast. They will be JoshTaylor and his art class; AlvarRELIANCE camera *PHOTO SUPPLIES1517 Cost 63* St.BU 8-6040 Hermanson and his fencers; W.Lloyd Warner speaking on "Suc¬cessful wives of successful execu¬tives," with the pantomime assist¬ance of Alex Hassilev and CarolHorning; and Herlee Creel giving"a lesson in Chinese." Capitalism vs. socialismdebated in Mandel hallby Fred KarstThe drawbacks of capitalism are deficient production and wasteful production, PaulSweezy, Marxist economist told a crowd of 600 in Mandel Friday.“No socialist society provides the freedom necessary for a debate such as this,” declaredProfessor Milton Friedman of the UC economics department in the debate with Sweezy,editor of the Monthly Review.The debate, “Socialism vs. Capitalism,” sponsored by the newly formed Public Affairsforum, was moved from Social :Sciences 122, where it was or- torically it is the only system Friedman stated: "Communistigipally scheduled, to Breasted that has raised the standard of society has turned Marx’s dictumQ&Campns withMax Staten(Author of *•Barefoot Boy With Cheek," ett.fTILL WE MEET AGAINI always find myself yawning hugely when a comedian,having finished his act, steps out in front of the curtain,takes off his putty nose, assumes a sincere stance, and de¬livers an oration full of tender and lofty sentiments.So how come I’m doing precisely the same thing right now ?Two reasons. First, because I couldn’t possibly make youlaugh at this time of the year; cramming for finals has leftyou wan, woebegone, and in no mood for innocent merriment. hall, and finally to Mandel hallin order to accommodate the hugecrowd which turned out.Sweezy starts debateSweezy began the debate by de¬scribing the system of socialismand capitalism as being in com¬petition with each other, with thecapitalist system continuing toexist only because of war. “Thesocialist system has already wonthe struggle,” he said. He con¬tended that the capitalist systemhas been responsible for thesquandering of natural resources.When Professor Malcolm Sharpof the law school, moderator ofthe debate, introduced ProfessorFriedman as a capitalist, Friedman protested that he is a believer in the capitalist systemthough not himself a capitalistFriedman asserted that capitalism is the only kind of economicsystem consistent with freedomand civil liberties and that his- life of the masses of people. on its head. Communist societySweezy agreed that capitalism has been the most efficient ex-has brought about?a rise in stand- ploiter of^the masses in^historyards of living but expressed thebelief that it is only a step in anevolution toward socialism.Political freedom lackingFriedman stated that capital¬ism itself does not bring freedom,although it is one of the neces¬sary preconditions. He cited theexamples of fascist countries inwhich capitalism existed althoughcivil liberties were suppressed.Friedman asserted that the rea¬son for greater civil liberties incapitalist countries is the sepa¬ration of political and economicpower.No socialist state has any sig¬nificant amount of political free¬dom,” F*r i e d m a n contended."There was more freedom in Ger¬many, Japan, and Spain thanthere is in Russia today," he de¬clared. «. he said. He referred to John Stu¬art Mill who said that the bulkof the people put in back break¬ing labor the bulk of the time."Today this is true only in Com¬munist countries,” he concluded.Socialism not acceptableIn the discussion period Sweezysaid that socialism is not likelyto be acceptable to the majorityof Americans at the present time,because the socialist countries arefar less advanced than the capital¬ist countries. After the socialistcountries catch up with the capi¬talist countries, he stated, thecapitalist nations will recognizesocialism’s superiority.Public Affairs forum will pre¬sent a speech by John Wexley,author of The Judgment of Jivlius and Ethel Rosenberg, at 3.30this afternoon in Rosenwald 2.Second, because this is the last column of the currentseries, and I’d be a liar if I didn’t admit I was just a tinybit choked up.It was two years ago that the makers of Philip Morrisasked me to write this column. My first impulse, frankly,was to say no. Though I am a man who likes a dollar as wellas the next fellow, my talents just do not seem to lead mein the direction of writing advertising copy. When calledupon to rhapsodize about soap or sox or cigarettes, I get togiggling uncontrollably and have to be helped home.“Buddies,” said I to the makers of Philip Morris, “I smokePhilip Morris myself, and I think it’s a jim-dandy cigarette.But that’s all I think it is — a cigarette. Not a graven image.Not a love object. Just a smoke. I’m afraid I can’t get rev¬erent enough to write ad copy for you.”To my astonishment, they seemed delighted. “Reverenceis not required,” said the people at Philip Morris. They as¬sured me that I would not be required to write fulsome com¬mercials — that I could rib the cigarette and the company allI liked —that my columns would be mine alone, with noediting, no suggestions, and no supervision.“Hah!” I said by way of reply.But they kept insisting and finally, my thin breast full ofmisgivings, I went to work.For the first few weeks they were scrupulously true totheir words. Not one syllable, not one comma, was everchanged; not one quarter-ounce of pressure was ever exerted.But my doubts were not laid to rest. "When will the honey¬moon be over?” I kept asking myself.The answer, gentle readers, is that the honeymoon isstill going on. This finishes my second year for Philip Morris.During that time, though I’m sure my copy caused an occa¬sional conniption fit in the boardroom, my carte blanche hasremained as blanche as the day it was issued. Whatever I’veperpetrated in this column has been, as they guaranteed,mine alone.They’ve been living dolls, the makers of Philip Morris,and I think I may be forgiven for getting a trifle misty. Andas long as the stops are out, let me say that it’s also been abig charge writing for you, the college population of America.Your response has warmed my old heart, and on the occasionswhen I’ve visited your campuses, it’s been deeply gratifyingto see that you’re still as pleasantly disorganized as ever.I figure that as long as the likes of you exist, I’m in business.So, for now, goodbye. Stay well. Stay happy. Stay loose.©Max Shulman, 1956Old Max has said it all. We, the makers of Philip Morris, can only-add a heartfelt second chomsi Stay well. Stay happy. Stay loose. Publish yearbook soonCap and Gown has announced that the 49th volume c<Mheyearbook will be published between May 18 and May 25.Pre-publication subscriptions may still be bought for $2.00deposit and $2.50 upon publication of the book. After publica-— tion the price will be $5.00.TRAVELINGDURING VACATION?Head for theseHILTON & STATLER HOTELSOfferingSPECIAL STUDENT RATESIN NEW YORKWASHINGTON-BOSTuNBUFFALO-HARTFORD. HOTEL 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 INNEW 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 RelationsRepresentative 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 S. Hilton, President Books Bought• Any Subject• Any Language• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Park 3-03211204 E. 55th St. Pre-publication subscriptionsmay be purchased at the Cap& Gown office, third floor, IdaNoyes. After publication, theyearbook may be purchased atthe Cap & Gown office, the Stu¬dent Service Center, or at variousbooths which will be set up oncampus.Incorrect dates for the Out¬ing club canoeing trip weregiven in the Maroon las^week.The correct dates are June 8-17.^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiHiiimHiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiimimtiiiuntiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu| International House Movies 1| Assembly Hall, 8 p.m.§ Monday, May 14 — 45c — Folly To Be Wise (English) |^IIIIHIIIIIIIUnillllllllllllllllllllllllllHlIllllllllllllllllllllllHtllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllllllllllllECOMO 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 - \Student Union Once Again PresentsTHE AFTER COMP C-DANCEFRIDAY, JUNE 1 9:00-12:30IDA NOYES HALL GYMNASIUMWITH THE BENNY YOUNG BANDINFORMAL $1 PER COUPLEPage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 11, 1956UC publishes first volume Preregistration scheduleof Assyrian dictionary *The first volume of the Assyrian Dictionary, the most comprehensive dictionary of thelargest of the languages of the ancient world, was published this week.Eventually expected to embrace some 30,000 words, the dictionary has required the serv¬ices of 50 scholars at a cost of $800,000. It has been 35 years in the making. The last ofthe 20 volumes in the diction- They included some 40,000 private guages.ary will not be published for je^ers an(j business documents, The dictionary also contains inanother decade. The dictionary „ ... . .as well as literary, governmental,religious and scientific texts.Definitions extensiveThe dictionary is entirely Now — June 1CollegeMay 28 - June 1Graduate Library schoolSocial Service administrationMay 28 - 31Law school June 4-7Business schoolJune 4 - 8Biological sciences divisionHumanities divisionPhysical sciences divisionSocial sciences divisionMedical schoolCollege comp schedulewill sell for $10 a volume.The dictionary is jointly pub¬lished by the UC Oriental Insti¬tute and J. J. Augustin of Gluck- truded foreign words from an¬cient Sumerian, the language ofthe most ancient known civiliza¬tion, Hittite, and Elamite.stadt, Germany. The editorial English, with the exception of aboard for the dictionary consistsof these faculty members: IgnaceJ. Gelb, professor of Assyriology;Thorkild Jacobsen, professor ofsocial institutions; Benno Lands- cuneiform design on the title pagewhich is an ancient inscriptionof praise to the goddess of writ¬ing. The definitions are extensivein many cases, citing severalberger, professor emeritus of as- known uses of the words.svriology; and A. Leo Oppenheim,professor of assyriology.The first published volume,number six, containing the letterH, was edited by Oppenheim.Include 40,000 papersThe dictionary sums up thelanguage written in tiny wedge-shaped marks on clay by the in¬habitants of what is today thecountry of Iraq. Thousands uponthousands of clay tablets andmonumental inscriptions in stoneand metal have been decipheredto gather the two million refer¬ence cards that were used in themaking of the dictionary.The oldest texts used as a basisfor the dictionary date back be¬fore 2,000 B.C., the latest onesfrom about 100 A.D. The tabletscame from many sections of theNear East, frefrn Iran to Egypt. The cuneiform itself consistedof nearly 1,000 different signs. Itwas eventually displaced by theAramaic language, spoken inPalestine in the days of Christ,which used a more convenientalphabet.Although named the “AssyrianDictionary,” the dictionary is ac¬tually a dictionary of Akkadian,the dominant and oldest knownSemitic language. Akkadian is acollective term including bothAssyrian and Babylonian lan- Trotsky editorto discuss Stalin“Stalinism without Stalin” willbe discussed Sunday at 8 p.m.in Ida Noyes by Max Shachtman,one-time member of the commu¬nist party and presently chairmanof the Independent SocialistLeague.Shachtman was in the Commu¬nist Party in the 1920's but wasexpelled in 1929 for “Trotskyistdeviationism.” He is author ofThe Right for Socialism and edi¬tor of most of Leon Trotsky’sEnglish works.The lecture is sponsored by theYoung Socialist League. Saturday, May 12Mathematics (3 hours) see also May 31Saturday, May 19English (6 hours) see also May 24Monday, May 21Humanities 3 and all vsriajeUTuesday, May 22History and precepto«.tnSocial sciences 2Wednesday, May 23all foreign languagesThursday, May 24English (3 hours)OMP and all variantsFriday, May 25Natural sciences 2FREE 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."Enjoy Our Fine Continental Cuisine inRelaxed Air Conditioned Atmosphere’*CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTWeekdays ond Saturday: Open from 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.Sundays: Open from 4 p.m. - 10 p.m.1508 E. 57tl» Street Phone PLaza 2-9355Drive with care . . . everywhere!"One-Fifty” 2-door Sedan—with beautiful Body by Fisher! “Two-Ten” 2-door Sedan—one of 20 frisky new Cherrolets!HOT PERFORMERSwith heart-warming prices!The “One-Fifty” and“Two-Ten” Series bringyou Chevrolet1 s sassystyling and record-break¬ing road action at pricesyou'll warm up to fast! You won’t find us playing favor¬ites. You get the same lively powerin “Two-Ten” and “One-Fifty”models that you do in Bel Airs. Upto 225 h.p.! The same performance,too—the wide-awake kind thatrates Chevy the peppiest, easiesthandling car.on the road! And look at the model choiceyou’ve got. Twenty in all, includingfour hardtops—two of them “Two-Tens.” Six station wagons—three“Two-Tens” and one “One-Fifty.”So even among the lower pricedChevrolets you have plenty ofchoice. Come in and look them over!Bel Air Sport Sedan—here’s your buy for the most luxury and distinction in Chevrolet’s field!AIR CONDITIONING-TEMPERATURES MADE TO ORDER-AT NEW LOW COST. LET US DEMONSTRATE.See Your Chevrolet Dealer Saturday, May 26Natural sciences 1Natural sciences 3 all variantsPhysicsMonday, May 28Social sciences 1Social sciences 3 and preceptorialTuesday, May 29Humanities 2Thursday, May 31Mathematics (6 hours)Friday, June 1Humanities 1 and all variantsMore Fun!In the companyof friends home¬ward bound youcan make it a''party” all theway. There'sroom to roam,time to visit, andnothing to worry about.More Comfort!Restful coaches,loads ofluggage space,refreshmentsand swell mealsen route. Notough driving oncrowded highways. No waiting forskies to clear. Yes sir! The train ittops in transportation 1What Savings!Team up wdthfriends and enjoythese money¬saving, round-tripbargains! GROUPiECONOMY 'FARES*—Save 25%when 3 or morebound for thesame home town travel togetherboth ways. Tickets good for 30 days.Grand ifreturning to summer school.COACH PARTY FARES-Savingsof 28% when 25 or more travel to¬gether on going trip home. Returnsingly or together for summer schoolor fall semester.*Pxcept for focal travel between New Yorl-Washington and points east of Lancasitr, Pa.5m your travel or ticket bjmI NOW!Ask about these big money saving plans!RAILROADSMay 11, 1956, THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Coming events on quadranglesFriday, May 1!rublic Affairs Forum, John Wexleyspeaking on the Rosenberg case.Rosenwald 2, 3:30 p.m.Business club, “The impact of the AFL-CIO merger on labor-management re¬lations, 3:30 p.m., Haskell commons.r\p and GOWN staff meeting, 3:30p m., c&G office—Ida Noyes, electionof editor-in-chief.Seminar, “Research needed in the fieldof child care,” by Connie Fish of Wel¬fare council of metropolitan Chicago,3 30 p.m.. Social Science 105.Walgreen lecture, “American economyand the new economics: Monetarypolicy in an advanced society,” prof.Alvin H. Hatisen, Harvard U., 4:30p m.. Social Science 122.I.utheran students banquet, 6 p.m., IdaNoyes.Ilillel foundation sabbath service, withinformal evening following, 7:45 p.m.,5715 Woodlawn.Folk dancing, presented by folk danc¬ers association, Instruction and danc¬ing, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes gym, 75 cent6.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* Arcthuse; and Bar- tok: Roumanian dances. 8:30 p.m.,Mandel hall.Saturday, May 12Varsity baseball game, UC vs. Beloit col¬lege, 2 p.m., Stagg field.Business club annual dinner-dance,Quadrangle club, cocktails 6 p.m.,dinner 7, dance 9, $3.75 per couple.Korean students meeting, 6 p.m., IdaNoyes.Dance at International house, In assem-'bly hall, music by Dick McGill trio,refreshments, 9 p.m.-l a.m., 35 cents.Radio broadcast, “The sacred note,”with Rockefeller chapel choir, 10:15p.m., WBBM.Sunday, May 13Episcopal 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, “Education in a newdemocracy,” with three Indian educa¬tors, 10:35 a.m., WMAQ.University religious service, pres. Wal¬lace W. Robbins of Meadville, preach¬ing, 11 a.m.. Rockefeller chapel.Cash for BooksWe will pay more for current editions at this timeof the year, so bring in all your books and takeadvantage of the current high market price.TEXTBOOKS - REFERENCE BOOKS - SETSYour 10% Bonus Curd appliesSA VE ON SUMMERSCHOOL BOOKSWilcox & Follett Co.1255 S. Wabash HA 7-2614-5 Modern dance club technique class,3:15 p.m., Ida Noyes.Calvert club lecture, “Buddha, Zara-thustra, and the Dead Sea scrolls,”Rev. Luigi Zabkar, Loyola U., 7:30p.m., 5735 University.SRP caucus, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Young socialist league lecture, “Stalin¬ism Without Stalin, implications ofthe 20th CPSU congress,” by MaxSchachtman, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes, ad¬mission 50 cents, students 25 cents.Concert of music by Bela Bartok, byUC Musical society and music dept.,8:30 p.m., Mandel hall.Monday, May 14Varsity baseball game, UC vs. ValparaisoU., 3:30 p.m., Stagg field.Anthropology seminar, “The origin oftoolmaking,” Kenneth P. Oakley,British museum, 4 p.m., Social Sci¬ence 224.Physiology* seminar, “Endocrine factorsIn hirsutism,” 4 p.m., Abbott 133.Sociology seminar, “What the municipalgovernment of Chicago is doing tosolve Its social problems,” 4 p.m.,Social Science 302.Walgreen lecture, “American economyand the new economics: The Ameri¬can economy on the march,” prof.Hausen, 4:30 p.m., Social Science 122.Movie: Folly to Be Wise (English), 8p.m., Int. house assembly hall, 45cents.Tuesday, May 15Intervarsity Christian fellowship lunch¬eon, "The challenge of Skid row,”12:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.University theatre workshop, 3:30 p.m.,Reynolds club 306.Varsity track meet, UC vs. Carroll col¬lege, 4 p.m., Stagg field.Metals institute colloquium, “The kinet¬ics of magnetization,” 4:15 p.m., Re¬search Institutes 211.Blackfriars meeting, 7 p.m., Ida Noyes.Folk dancing, (instruction from 8 p.m.),8:30, Int. house, 50 cents non-resi¬dents.Wednesday, May 16Play: Pyramus and Thisby, 3 p.m.,Hutchinson court, also Thursday andFriday.Open meeting to discuss the role of SO,3:30 p.m., Ida Noyes east lounge.Walgreen lecture, “American ■ economyand the new economics: Ten yearsunder the full-employment act,” prof..Hausen, 4:30 p.m., Social Science 122.Senior mathematics club, “Integrationand differentiation term by term ofMoore-Smith sequences of functions,”prof. Klaus Krickeberg, U. of Illinois,4:30 p.m.. Eckhart 206.Zoology club, “Cosmic-ray heavy pri¬maries in biological material,” prof.'H 0(A»60ftN At DIVISIONS. H«r*k present*- JBff ui,h ULANOVAmusical score byfcEKUKI PKOKOFIKVot: fc:00, 8:00, 10:00Students presenting their ID cardsat box office will be admitted for75 cents.Regretfully, I have to call it quits after 18 years.As the little dog said who teas curtailed, this is posi¬tively the end.Your lost- chance to get bargains, everything has to be sold tothe bare walls. 4 roses by any other name won't smell as sweetany more. Schenley and J. W. Dant gin at $3.25. Carioca andRon-Rico rum at $3.50. An excellent quality 7 year old straightwhiskey at $3.50, Hannah & Hogg blend at $3.25. Highland*Queen scotch, $4.75, and many other bargains. As we only haveanother week or two to go, we will shoot the works.She came from a family of swimmers. Her brotherwas killetl in a DU E on skid row.Explanation of playboy as to how he went through hss inheri¬tance: spent 2/3 on liquor, race horses and women; the restwas spent foolishly.The new recruit didn’t salute the colonel• Do yourealize who I am? asked the officer. I run this entireoutfit. I’m in clutrge of twenty five thousand sol¬diers• You yot a good job* said the private, don’t louseit up. iHYDE PARK LIQUOR STOREFree Delivery1405 East 55th Street PL 2-8830Herman J. Schorer and Jack 1%’ixon, ProprietorsIf the average person had a good sense of humor and knew how to laughot himself and his trials and tribulations, the psychiatrists would have toclose shop and sell their cow-chez.To all my friends and customers, Thanks for your kind wishes Herman B. Chase, Brown U., 4:30p.m.. Zoology 14.Student Zionist organization meeting,4:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Student nurses dinner, dance, 6 p.m.,Ida Noyes.Science fiction club meeting, 7:30 p.m.,Ida Noyes.Apollo club rehearsal, 7:45 p.m., IdaNoyes.Country dancers, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes,wear tennis shoes.Thursday, May 17Varsity tennis matches, Chicago Inter¬collegiate tournament, 1:30 p.m., Var¬sity courts.Play: Pyramus and Thisby, 3 p.m.,Hutchinson court.Varsity baseball game, UC vs. ChicagoTeachers College, 3:30 p.m., Staggfield.Psychology club, “Recent experimentsconcerning reinforcement theory,”Kenneth W. Spence, 4:30 p.m., Swift106.Microbiology club, “Bacterial oxidationof steriods,” 4:30 p.m., Ricketts Nl.Economics seminar, “The postwar Dutcheconomy: facts, forecasts, and poli¬cies,” prof. Hans Thell, 7:45 p.m.,Law South.Graduate library school club, 8 p.m., IdaNoyes library.Campus archaeology society, 8 p.m., IdaNoyes.CHICAGO REVIEW poetry reading, 8:15p.m., Ida Noyes.TV broadcast, “The humanities: thearts of today,” 9:30 p.m., WTTW,channel 11.Friday, May 18Varsity tennis matches, Chicago Inter¬collegiate tournament, 1:30 p.m., Var¬sity courts.Play: Pyramus and Thisby, 3 p.m.,Hutchinson court.Preliminary tryouts for Jewett Biblereading prize, 3 p.m., Bond chapel.FTF lecture, “Hindu theism, ancientand modern,” Rev. Paul D. Devanan-dan. of India Pakistan and CeylonYMCA, and Union theological semi¬nary prof., 3:30 p.m., Swift commons.Walgreen lecture, "American economyand the new economics: Standardsand values in a free society,” prof.Hausen, 4:30 p.m.. Social Science 122.Mathematical biology, “The Intrinsicnature of dental carles,” assoc, prof.Frank J. Orland, Zoller clinic, 4:30p.m., 5741 Drexel.Cercle francais, “Entre Perpignan etPau,” lecture with slides by prof,emeritus Otto F. Bond, 7:30 p.m.,Ida Noyes library, refreshments, 25rnents non-members.Hillel foundation sabbath service, withinformal evening following, 7:45 p.m..5715 Woodlawn.Outing club meeting, 8 p.m., Ida Noyeshall.Dramatic readings by Tore Segelcke ofNational theatre. Oslo, Norway, 8:30p.m., Mandel hall.Saturday, May 19Varsity baseball game, UC vs. Lewis col¬lege, 1:30 p.m., Stagg field.International relations club, 7 p.m , IdaNoyes.Dames club dance, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Radio broadcast, “The sacred note,”with music by Rockefeller chapelchoir, 10:15 p.m., WBBM.Sunday, May 20Episcopal communion service, 8:30 pmBond 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.University religious service, rev. prof. Paul D. Devanandan preaching, 11a.m.. Rockefeller chapel.Chicago dance club symposium, 3 p.m.,Ida Noyes.Aldergate festival presented by Metho¬dist student union, prof. Julian HarUof Yale U., preaching, 4 p.m.. Rocke¬feller chapel.Monday, May 21Movie: The Male Animal (US film),8 p.m., Int house assembly hall, 35cents.Tuesday, May 22Intervarsity Christian fellowship lunch¬eon, “The message of modern litera¬ture,” 12:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.University theatre workshop, 3:30 p.m.,Reynolds club 306.Blackfriars meeting, 7 p.m., Ida >y’ies.Young socialist league meeting, 7:30p.m., Ida Noyes.Folk dancing, (Instruction from 3 p.m ),9:30. Int. house, 50 cents non-resi¬dents.Wednesday, May 23Student Zionist organization meeting,4:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Dames club fashion show, 7:30 p.m.,Ida Noyes.Apollo club rehearsal, 7:45 p.m., IdaNoyes.Country dancers, 8 p.m., Ida Noyoa,wear tennis shoes.Thursday, May 24Business school annual dinner, addressby George W. Mitchell, vice pres.,federal reserve bank of Chicago, 6p.m., Quadrangle club.Friday, May 25Hillel foundation sabbath service, withinformal evening following, 7:45 p m..5715 Woodlawn.CTS dance, 8:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Sunday, May 27Episcopal communion service, 8:30 p.m.Bond chapel.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, 11a.m., 5735 University.Lutheran Communion service, 10 a.m.,Hitlon chapel.International house coffee hour, 10a.m.-noon.Clinics religious service, 10 a.m., Bill¬ings 0-4.University religious service, Dean JohnB. Thompson preaching, 11 a.m.,Rockefeller chapel.SRP caucus, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Monday, May 28Movie: The I.ady Vanishes (English),8 p.m., Int house assembly hall, 45cents.Tuesday, May 29Intervarsity Christian fellowship lunch¬eon, “God’s search for man,” 12:30p.m., Ida Noyes.University theatre workshop, 3:30 p.m.,Reynolds club 306.Blackfriars meeting, 7 p.m., Ida Noves.Young socialist league meeting, 7:30p.m., Ida Noyes.Madrigal singers, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes.Dames club meeting, 8 pm., Ida Noyes.Folk dancing, (instruction from 8 p in.),9:30, Int house, 50 cents non-resi¬dents.Wednesday, May 30Memorial day—University holiday.Thursday, May 31WAA award dinner, 6 p.m., Ida Noyes.Friday, June 1Hillel foundation sabbath service, withinformal evening following, 7:45 p.m..5715 Woodlawn.All-campus dance, sponsored by the newSU, 9 p.m., Ida Noyes hall.ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter Service1IV 3-96.il 1322 £. 55ih Si.IT’S A FACT . . .that the Sun Life AssuranceCompany of Canada has welliover a million policyholdersthroughout the world.In the more than three-quartersvof a century of the Company’sexistence over two billion dollarshas been paid to policyholdersand beneficiaries./S U N LIFE ASSU RANCECOMPANY OF CANADARalph J.Wood, Jr.,'481 N. LaSalleChicago 2,IllinoisFR 2-2390RE 1-0855 SHORTHANDIN 6 WEEKSukM/20u^no WORDS PER MINUTE (S,lFamous ABC system. Now taught inover 400 cities. New day & Eveningclasses start each Monday. Attendfirst class as GUEST. Special SummerClasses for College Students. ALSOthorough, intensive SPEEDTYPINGcourse. Use coupon to send for 16-Dage brochure.SPEEDWRITING SCHOOL37 S. Wabash Financial 6-5471I Speedwriting SchoolJ 37 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago 3, III.J Please send me without obligation! your 16-page brochure on Speed-J writing.I „■ NameI Address-! CityII Phone Zone- ■.1 i__; — ’' f' JI Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON 'May 11, !956Play Palestrina, Holst inAI dersgate festival May 20as the founder of Methodism.Professor Hart is Noah PorterMusic by Palestrina, Bach, Has- lutionary, religious, and socialler, Holst, and others, and a ser- changes in 18th century Englandmon by Yale university ProfessorJulian N. Hart will be featuredat the Aldersgate festival at professor of philosophical theol-Rockefeller chapel on Sunday ogy at Yale university. His majorafternoon, May 20, at 4 p.m. interest has been a study of theSponsored by the Methodist church s relation to the presentstudent union, the Aldersgate fes¬tival commemorates John Wes¬ley’s religious experience at Al- cultural situation. The sermon isentitled “The Renewal of Man/'The choir of the First Method-dersgate in 1738, after which he ist church of Oak Park will becontributed substantially to revo- directed by Dr. Corliss R. Arnold. Crowd seesMoscow UMoscow university, Palace ofScience, the movie of Moscowuniversity sponsored by Stu¬dent Government Wednesdaynight, attracted 255 people.This showing was the first inthe Chicago area. Three Bagsof Cunning a Soviet cartoonaccompanied the film whichshowed student life both onand off campus. Profits wentto Soviet student exchange pro¬gram. Bugher gets Ricketts medal;cited for work with virusesThe annual Howard Taylor Ricketts medal was awardedWednesday to Dr. John C. Bugher, director of medical edu¬cation and public health for the Rockefeller foundation.Dr. Bugher, former deputy director of the Atomic Energycommission, was awarded the ——-medal for his research in the lished in 1910 by Mrs. Howardpublic health aspects of virus dis- Taylor Ricketts in honor of hereases and the biological and medi- husband, a UC physician whocal effects of atomic energy. died of typhus that year DrDr. George V LeRoy, associate Ricketts had proved during thedean of the division of biological 1905 epidemic of Rocky Mountainsciences, presented the award at spotted fever that the disease wasa meeting at which Dr. Bugher transmitted by a tick,addressed the medical faculty on“Changing patterns in publichealth.”.The Ricketts prize was estab-Chicago MaroonCLASSIFIED ADSStudent rote 5c per word Other* 1 Oc per word Phone: Ml 3-0800 Ext. 3265For RentFaculty apartment. 5\'2 rooms furnished.For sublease. June 10-Sept. 10. $105 per B-J, PL 2-9698.month. Call BU 8-7139. Wanted: A light well furnished room in Keopened under new management. Col- YSL presents—Stalinism without Stalin,private home for UC student from June lier’s house restaurant. 6324 Woodlawn. Max Schactman speaker. This Sunday,1 thru August 31. Would like to baby Specializing in fried chicken, steaks 8 p.m., Ida Noyes. Students 25 cents,sit and/or do yard work In lieu of part and chops, prime ribs of beef. Open general 50 cents,or all of rent. Call Lynford Russell, from 5 p.m., Sundays from 1 to 10.Closed Monday. Divine takes call;vacates deanshipWilliam N. Hawley, dean ofstudents and lecturer in the divin¬ity school, has accepted a call tobecome rector of the Holy TrinityEpiscopal church in Oxford, Ohio.Dr. Hawley received his Mas¬ter’s and Bachelor of Divinity de¬grees from the University of Chi¬cago. He assumed his presentposition in the divinity school in1948 and was acting dean in1954-55.No one lias been appointed toRooms for rent during summer. Com- ^5390 Cleave mes-mon room privileges. Recreational fa- August. Call NO 7 5390, or leave mescllltles. $30 a month. Call John Saada, sage for Nat Gray at Law School.Phi Gamma Delta. PL 2-9874. Good opportunity for femaie student.... , _ . , who ts fond of children. Room, boardFurnished 4-room apt. for rent. June and sman salary In return for services.15-Sept. 10. $82.50 per month. Call Mrs/ Call jgg 5.3063Howell, MI 3-0800. ext. 2656.■ 7 " ’ Male or female, steady position, mana-f need to sublet my apartment for sum- gerial capacity. Pull charge of collegemer quarter. 54th and Greenwood, textbook department. Salary open,somewhat furnished $65 per month. Faulkner’s, 65 E. Lake Street. AN 3-7337,Call Herrick, FA 4-5473 at unreasonable tOT Mr Faulkner,hours. Wanted: Apartment for subletting for Earl Robinson, singer, folklorist, com¬poser of Ballads for Americans, Joe Hill,Lonesome Train, House I Live In, singsSaturday evening, June 2, Kenwood -Ellis community church . 46th andGreenwood. Tickets. $1.25. May be pur¬chased at Hyde Park Co-op, 5535Harper; Werner's books, 338 3. Michl To the men of 7.BT: The men of Phi replace him yet.Big will meet you 3 p.m. Tuesday atBotany Pond. For Information call PL2-9477.For SaleCo-op apartment for sale. 4*i rooms. 2blocks from school. Total price $6,200.gan; student service center, Reynolds Down payment $3,800. Sixty dollars perclut,> month pays for mortgage, tax, insur¬ance, fuel, upkeep, improvements, sca¬venger, etc. Phone ext. 1572.Studio upright piano. Like new. $300.Ride Wanted The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57rtt St.MU 4-9236Ride wanted to near Short Hills. New FA 4*0143Faculty apartment. 3 rooms furnishedto rent $115 per month. June 3 toSeptember 28. Telephone MU 4-0098any day except Friday, Saturday.Country living—furnished coach house.Two bedroom house over 3-car garage.S80. Summer sublease or permanently.Lichtenstein. WA 4-7496, dinnertime.May be seen today. Retail store clerks, cashiers, typists for Jersey, to arrive by Saturday, June 9, . . , „ . ,summer employment, June 1 to Oct. noon. Can help drive. Contact Jeanne s *1,7 .t1. Hours arranged. Salary $1.20 and Hargttt, ext. 1068, 4:44-7 p.m. ** *'nup. Faulkners, 65 E. Lake Street. AN3-7337, ask for Mr. Faulkner, Ride to Los Angeles around June 1.Opportunity for a student's wife as a Ramelb, MI 3-6000.part or full time secretary in the de¬partment of pathology, Billings hos¬pital, U of C. For further informationcall MI 3-0800, ext. 3633. Will share driving, and expenses. Carlo mlsc- HY 3-6312 $25 Lightmeter (Weston II), $10. Tripod (Pan-head) $7.50. Clock-radio, $10. Holt Ger¬man records. $15. Desk, $7.50. Chairs,Personal Pre-meds! Reichart miscroscopes forsale at 25% discount! Approved by everymedical school. P. Carmel. PL 2-9648.Lake Michigan cottage, modern, private room unfurnished or seml-fur-beach, woods, screened porch, ping-pong, fireplace, piano, three bedrooms.FA 4-9191.Desirable two bedroom apartment tosublet June 1 to October 1. Unusualopportunity for University family. $65per month. Call HY 3-7633.First floor apartment. Four large rooms.60th and Woodlawn. Ideal for Univer¬sity couple, children welcome. $75 permonth. Call Mr. Sodus. NO 7-2224.Six-room faculty apartment availableAugust 1. Third floor, light, attractive.Two baths, recently remodeled. Reason¬able rent. DO 3-6841. Evenings.Summer quarter. $30 per month. Maidservice, linens. TV, recreation room withping pong. Bar. Kitchen facilities. CallGary Stoll, PL 2-9648. Delta Upsilon.5714 Woodlawn. nished apartment for young couple(graduate students), starting aboutJune 1. Willing to pay $60-$65 includ- Polish female student at Medical Acad¬emy wishes to correspond with Ameri¬can female student. She Is studying Bystryn, 636 B.J., MI 3-6000.pharmacy. Write Janowiak Stabislov. Electronic flash outfit. Hershey SunliteII. Bulb good for 50,000 flashes. Guidenumber 160. New batteries, $40. Johning utilities and heat. If you are moving Szosecin-Dabie: Apteka, Poland. Orig-out or know somebody who will vacate, lnal let,'er in Maroon office,please contact Joe Greif, ext. 1072 after . ... 7 . 777 7“. , .. .9 p.m. LcdV6 message. .. s^y*..^®et me by the liolc in t>iia£vile wall. Pyramus. Moving West, must sell furniture usedless than nine months. Includes dinetteset, cocktail table, bookcases, bed, hi-fiset, many other Hems. Call PL 2-8393after 5. Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372ServicesSingle room for one or two persons.Kitchen privileges with use of home.$10-$15 per week. LA 1-5000. ext. 2393.days. Mrs. K. Jones. P( 5-1782 after 7and weekends.Room for girl student in exchange forbaby sitting. Board extra. SA 1-1834.WantedWanted. Five or six room furnishedapartment to be leased by four maleUC graduate students from Oct. 1, 1956thru May 31, 1957. If you know some¬one who would like to sublease one,please contact: Larry Kessler, 1005 E.60th St., MI 3-6000, after 6:30 p.m. Instruction in Italian grammar andcomposition. DO 3-9721 after 6 p.m.Typing. KE 8-4842. Nancy.Tutoring. If you are having, have had,or contemplate having difficulty withNat Scl 1, why not utilize your sum¬mer recess to take or retake the comp?My qualifications: I am the grader forthe course, am in the Physics depart¬ment, and am presently preparing fourstudents for the May comp. If inter¬ested telephone Art Luehrmann at KE6-1996.Students: Enjoy your meals at the PhiGamma Delta house this summer.Lunch 55 cents. Dinner 95 cents. CallJohn Saada. PL 2-9874.Typing done at home, pick and deliverto University campus. Reasonable rates,accurate work. Phone MU 4-2490, after5 p.m.NoticesThere will be an old style glee clubparty at 6019 Klmbark tomorrow nightat 8. NEW SPRING FICTIONA WALK ON THE WILD SIDE, by Nelson Algren $ 4.50Algren says: "This is a story that tries to tell something about the nat¬ural toughness of women and men ... It is really about any street of anybig town in the country."COMFORT ME WITH APPLES, by Peter De Vries $ 3.50An adroit sex-farce, a comic novel of sensibility, and a crime-detectionpiece, all rolled into one — by the author of TUNNEL OF LOVE.MONA LISA, by Tiffany Thayer, in 3 volumes $12.50A stunning recreation of the Renaissance in Italy, when the Kingdomof Naples was ruled by Queen Joan II. Penetrating and witty. OnlyTiffany Thayer could have written it.UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUEV/ 'vV,J /f P\ 4sj /; y::i *tr^1 \/1 '?v' -vmmmk wmmmh for graduates with <t major in>Cstatistics^. engineering or. tlie sciences - V At MIT's Lincoln Laboratory in Lexington,RAND is helping to develop programsfor the new SAGE system of continentalair defense. The SAGE system, perhapsthe most advanced and comprehensive efforttoward complete automation yet attempted,is centered around the largest and mostintricate digital computer designed todate — the AN/FSQ-7.(Zn/aviUoK offers opportunities in computer programming at Lexington, MassachusettsFor further information aboutopportunities at The RANDCorporation, write or callcollect, Harold Willson, Jr.,205 Park Square Bldg.,Liberty2*2783, Boston 16, Mass.•The RAND Corporation is a nonprofit organization cngageJ in research‘primarily'con‘eerA?tTwith*National ieturit/. ’ * *WZSWtffiRS&tTHE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9May 11# 1^56Stevenson, Pogocampaign againSeymour Dresner, UC student,has been named chairman of thenewly-formed Illinois StudentsFor Stevenson.Treasurer of UC’s Students ForStevenson, Dresner was elected tohead the Illinois group by dele¬gates from eight Illinois colleges.The Stevenson enthusiasts deter¬mined to form the statewide or¬ganization while participating inthe national Stevenson rallywhich was held in Chicago dur¬ing April.Work has already started to¬ward securing positions at theAugust 14 Democratic nationalconvention for those studentswho are actively supporting thecandidacy of Stevenson, accord¬ing to Dresner. POCO APHERINT MAKES »1«IMPRESSION ON WASHINGTONSOCIETYS/he tMSum PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55tl» STREET MIDWAY 3-4433It’s Here—It’s HereAnother Italian Fiesta FirstTHE ITALIANSUBMARINESANDWICHcontainsCapicoleMortadellaProvloneSalamiHam PepperOmciniTomatoesOilPepper, SaltYou’ve never had anything like it!PhonesMU 4-1014MU 4-1015MU 4-9022 FREEDELIVERY5 p.m. to 3 o.m.7 days a weekITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA1427 Eost 67th St. 'Why late spurt?'by Oliver LeeEconomic stagnation took place in Europe after the first world war, whereas the secondworld war was followed by an incredible outburst of economic progress. How to accountfor this difference was the task chosen by Alvin H. Hansen, professor of political economyat Harvard university, in the second of the current Walgreen lectures.The series is titled “The American economy and the new economics.” It opened with alecture on “Keynesian thinking and the problem of our time,” in which Hansen showedhimself to be a strong sup-Send aid southIn an attempt to aid thousands of Negroes in the South who arereportedly being victimized by an economic “squeeze,” the UC branchof the NAACP is conducting a campaign to secure “bundles for theSouth.” Food, clothing, and monetary donations will be collectedtoday, the third and final day of the drive.Receiving stations for the “bundles for the South” donated byUC students will be located in Mandel half from 11 a.m.-3 p.m., aswell as in dormitories and fraternity houses.According to Ray WiTkerson, NAACP president, many reliefstations in the South have exhausted their supplies and funds. Thesefunds are to offset what Time magazine has called “shaip, sophisti¬cated weapons of economic and political pressure.”In place of "bloodletting and blunt instruments,” Time reported,White Citizens’ councils have used economic weapons to “changethe minds of Negroes who work for school integration or whiteswho aid them.” porter of Keynesian econom¬ics. The audience both timesoverflowed the capacity of SocialScience 122.The economic dislocations ofthe first world war were not thecause of the subsequent stagna¬tion, Hansen said, because thedisruptions of the second worldwar did not lead to similar stagna¬tion after 1945.The causes of stagnation in the1920’s and 1930’s consisted in partof certain “real” factors which which we now possess, Hansenventured, the immense unemploy¬ment and low per capita incomecould have been avoided.Hansen labeled as “low-pres¬sure economics” the economic lib¬eralism then prevailing In con¬trast, the policies of the democra¬cies today, which emphasize theconcepts of aggregate demand,growth, and full employment, helabeled as “high-pressure eco¬nomics.”, Use high-pressure meansThe United States, England, many, which since 1945 has pur¬sued a low-pressure policy, hasmade remarkable economic prog¬ress.Germany, he said, had plantsand equipment which were newand up-to-date, its working classis efficient and skilled, and itsentrepreneurial class energeticand resourceful. These factors,again, operate irrespective of theeconomic policies of the govern¬ment.US remains stableThe Harvard economist, authorw,°»!d havc operated irrespective France, Holland, and the Scandi- of Business Cycles and Nationalof the economic policies pursued,Hansen held. Among these themost important was the slowingdown of the increase in popula¬tion. putting a damper on capitalinvestment.Governments to blameBut the basic fault lay withthe governments, which were be¬wildered by the post-war eco¬nomic problems and merely reliedon obsolete policies. If those gov- navian countries have since thesecond world war employed high-pressure economics, W’hieh hasled to great increases in capitalinvestment, employment, produc¬tivity, and per capita income, Han¬sen said.Hansen admitted that Englandand France present the least satis¬factory record in capital invest¬ment, but cited special reasonsfor this. Similarly, he had an ex-ernments had had the knowledge planation for the fact that Ger-Poetry prize to WellwarthGeorg E. Wellwarth, a student in the humanities division, won firstprize in the Florence James Adams poetry reading contest, the deanof students’ office announced Monday.Second prize went to Robert Emmitt ami third prize to DouglasWhite.Twenty-seven students competed in the preliminaries and of these,seven were chosen for the finals.Judges for the contest were Roland Rude of the Northwesternschool of speech, Paul Carroll and Richard Stern of the Universityof Chicago.The prizes were $75, $30, and $20 for first, second and third places,respectively.Mother’s FavoriteFlowers from ...Mitzie’s Flower Shopat two convenient stores1225 E. 63rd St. 1301 E. 55th St.HY 3-5353 Ml 3-4020Intimations of Immortality, at...We cerry o com¬plete line of wines,liquors ond imports 55th fir UniversityMl 3-0524U of C Studentstake their laundryUNIVERSITYQuick Laundry1376 I. 55PL 2-9097 Income (1951) and other books,explained that the American econ¬omy has been quite stable sincethe end of the last war. The infla¬tionary spurts due to the endingof war-time controls and laterdue to the beginning of the Ko¬rean war quickly petered out, hesaid. “It is just not true that wehave been living in a period ofcontinuous inflation.”The American economy worksbest under high pressure, Hansenconcluded. “High-pressure eco¬nomics has its problems,” he said,“but the advanced democraciesare irrevocably committed to bothfull employment and stability.”Passportsat SC officeAn agent of the U.S. De¬partment of State passportdivision will be in the StudentGovernment office, in Ida Noyeshall, at 10 a.m., tomorrow, toprocess passports for membersof the Student Government Fly¬ing Tiger charter flight and otherpersons traveling abroad whohave all the prerequisites for apassport.For 15 cents at the SG officefrom 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. duringthe week students can purchasean International Student identitycard, which entitles the studentto special discounts and facilitieswhile traveling abroad. The cardis standard certification that theholder is a bona fide student. SGpurchased the cards through theUnited States National StudentAssociation. tThere'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 Murrow &Company(In the heart ot theWholesale Market)Daily 9 to 5:30 Saturdays 9 to 3:30318 W. Adorns St. Suite 401SPECIAL PRICETO STUDENTSOn Student HealthService Prescriptions3 RegisteredPharmaciststo Serve YouREADER’SCampus Drug Store1001 E. 61et /Page 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 11, 1956Speak today on Rosenberg case UT plans for future jMorton’s Sobell’s motion this week for a new trial has generated new interest in his con¬viction, with Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, on charges of conspiracy to commit espionage.John Wexley, author of The Judgment of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, will discuss Sobell’smotion and other aspects of the Rosenberg case at a meeting sponsored by the Public Ai-fairs forum in Rosenwald 2 this afternoon at 3:30. Admission will be free; there will be acollection. Wexley will be introduced by Ste phen S. Love, professor of law at Northwest-em university. „t The Western PoUtid Qu.r.According to Malcolm terly, published by the UniversitySharp, UC professor of law 0f Utah, Francis D. WormuthNationaland president of theLawyer’s guild, in a review ofThe Judgment of Julius andE t h e 1 Rosenberg and WilliamReuben’s The Atom Spy Hoax(Monthly Review), December,1955>:“. . . Both writers insist thatthere is no adequate evidence thatany atomic espionage whatevertook place in the sequence of said:“ To believe Greenglass’testimony we must assume that anautomobile mechanic who failedall his higli school science coursescould piece together the sup¬posed disclosures by scientistsand his alleged stolen glimpsesinto a workable atomic bomb, thathe could draw an accurate planof the bomb, and that he could the Judgment ofJulius and EthelRosenbenevents which were treated at the repeat the feat from memorytrial as constituting the Rosen- nearly six years later . . .“Obviously the Department ofJustice cannot answer all critic¬isms. But unless it answers Mr.Wexley’s we must conclude thatthe Rosenberg case is our Drey¬fus case, outdoing the first insordidness, cruelty, and terror.”Sobell is now serving a 30-yearprison sentence in Alcatraz. Pro¬fessor Sharp stated in his review,of Fuchs, Harry Gold, and the «it (the Sobell case) rests on evi-Greenglasses, which are the basis denoe of less credibility and forceof the proceedings against the than that which convicted theberg-Sobell cases. Both draw at¬tention to the late Dean Wig-'more’s warnings about the useof uncorroborated confessions asevidence of guilt . . ,“Both Mr. Reuben and Mr.Wexley raise grave doubts aboutthe reliability of the confessions Roseribergs . . . No one claimsthat Sobell had anything to dowith atomic espionage . . . TheSobell case is the outstandingexample of the serious lastingeffects of the spy scare.”Rosenbergs . . . The reader willperhaps remember that no one‘except the Greenglasses con¬nected the Rosenbergs withatomic espionage; and that theonly other evidence of anythinglike espionage of any kind ontheir part was the very peculiartestimony of a confessed perjurernamed Elichter, principally to at¬tempts at clearly non-atomicespionage.”In the December, 1955, issue CANOE TRIPSSeek solitude and adventure in theQuetico - Superior wilderness. Canoe,complete camping equipment and ex¬cellent food supplies only $3.50 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 1 8 x 101 walletMOTHER S DAY*9308 Proofs ShownBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St.> rrvvf»v>vv»»rnvLOAN INSURANCE .PENSION INSURANCEPhone o» Writo• Joseph H. Aaron, *27 ;>135 S. LaSalle S». • RA 6-1060!choice seats forPete Seeger AThe WeaversOrchestra RaNFriday, May 18Call Mr. WolinsAN 3-1877 3:30 TO 6 P.M. DAILY820 On YourRadio Dial BETZ JEWELRYHyde Pork's Finest JewelersExpert Jewelryand Watch RepairingOMEGA - HAMILTON - LONGINEAND OTHER BRAND NAMEWATCHESIVSJ Difcount to Student*1523 E. 53rd PL 2-3038FLINT GREENDACRON AND POPLINLopseom 7 Vi " Hook Ven*$42.50608 n. michigan avenueWhitehall 3-2410 Art, M«si< & Psychiatry Join Handsin the Feature Color Film"DREAMS THAT MONEY CAN BUY"Savon Dreams created by:bans RICHTERfemand LEGERmarcel DUCHAMPalexander CALDER“The girl with the Pre-fobricoted Heartdreams.Return showing by Popular Request!May 17 & 18 6:30 & 8:30 Admission $1.00Sinho Hall, Rm. 785 Roosevelt U. 430 S. MichiganROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETYdarius MILHAUDPaul BOWLESlouis APPLEBAUMjahn LATOUCHEand other provocative'AvvTvvrrv rvrTrTTTTvrvT?TvrrvTvvfTTfrrvirv*TTr1956 GRADUATES!THE PROFESSIONAL DIVISIONof theILLINOISSTATE EMPLOYMENT SERVICEHasmany fine employment opportunities in thevarious professional fieldsBefore you make a decision regarding yourfuture, visit thePROFESSIONAL DIVISION73 West Washington Street ChicagoInterviewing Hours: 8:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.Monday through FridayNo Fees Charged for Placement ServicekAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Famed Norwegian actress Tore Segelcke will appear underUniversity Theatre in scenes from Hans Christian Ander¬sen’s The Little Match Girl, Ibsen’s A Doll House, ArnerGargorg’s Springtime, Love Mother, Bjomson’s Bergljot, andJean Anouilh’s Medea, inMandel hall Friday, May 18,at 8:30.In her first American tour,Mme. Segelcke has been receivingcritical and popular recognitionwherever she has appeared.Tickets, priced at $1.50, $1 and50 cents (student rate), are avail¬able at the Reynolds club and theoffice of Scandinavian Studies,Wieboldt 404. Tickets for the festival will heon sale soon. Admission to allthree plays will be $2.50, singleadmissions $1.Tryouts for University Thea¬tre’s second annual outdoor sum¬mer drama festival will be heldevery afternoon from 1 to 5 fromMay 14 until May 20.Three classic plays, requiringa company of forty, will be pre¬sented in the outdoor Hutchinsoncourt theatre from July 1 to Au¬gust 12. The plays, to be directedby Marvin Phillips, are Shake¬speare’s Twelfth Night, Euripides’The Trojan Women, and AnatoleFrance’s The Man Who Marrieda Dumb Wife. TheDisc1367 E. 57H» St.•Recordof the weekKurt Weill - Bart Brecht. DER JASAGEROpera based an Japanese Noh PlayMCM 3270 $3.99Now Shotring — Exclusive In Chicago!"B & K VISIT TO INDIA"A full length documentary in color, of highlights of the visit ofRussian leaders to fabulous India. Also — o NEW Russian comedyin color. STUDENT RATE — 50c.3210 MadisonCINEMA ANNEX Free ParkingCAN YOU MAKE ENDS MEET?If you can, you probably won't need the financial counseling serviceoffered by,the Hyde Park Co-op Federal Credit Union.But we realize, that with the high cost of living, a little bad luckcan put many hard-working people behind the proverbial 8-ball.A credit union counsellor will help you set up a new budget, con¬fidentially of course, if you feel you need such help.Remember, financial difficulties occur in the best of families. Askabout counseling at the Credit Union desk in the Co-op store.Hyde Pork Co-op Federal Credit Union5535 S. HARPER AVE. DO 3-1031SB9 a Qocaj-QoQa,,<?"w 1m DRIXK tL AOf course. ’Most everyonedocs—often. Because afew moments over ice-cold Coca-Cola refresh you so.It’s sparkling with natural goodness, pureand wholesome—and naturally friendlyto your figure. Feel like haying a Coke?IOTTIED UNDEN AUTHORITY OP THE COCA-COLA COMPANY IVThe Coca-Cole Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.“CoW it a raghtamd trada-marfc. • © 1950, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY» 6May 11/ 1956 THE CHICACO MAROON Page *1Cultural events|£‘Pyramus and Thisby9 playsin court for campaigners“Pyramus and Thisby,” a farcical section of Shakespeare’s A Mid¬summer Night's Dream, will be presented in the Court theatre(Hutchinson court) by the Student Committee on the UniversityCampaign at 3 p.m., Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, May 16, 17,and 18. Admission will be free.Stars of the play are Donald McClintock, Student Forum director,and George Crawford. They will enact the fateful affair of the twolovers, Pyramus and Thisby, which ends in a denouement like thatof Romeo and Juliet.Reached for comment on the play, committee member Eddie Sim¬mons commented, “It swings.”The performances will be announced by a trumpeter in tights, whowill proclaim the prologue. There will be no free coffee.★ ★ ★Musical society presents BartokA concert devoted to the works of Bela Bartok will be presentedthis Sunday, May 13, in Mandel hall by the UC Musical society. Theconcert will begin at 8:20 p.m. Admission is without ticket andwithout charge.Sunday’s program comprises six works for various combinations,representing over a thirty-year period in the composer’s work. Pianoworks include the “Six Bulgarian Dances” from Mikrokosmos, two“Dirges,” and the Sonata; the Sonatas I and II for violin and piano(the first is probably a first Chicago performance) and “Contrasts”tor clarinet, violin ami piano, complete the program. The latter workwas written in 1938 for Benny Goodman and Joseph Szigeti.Performers include Mayne Miller, Ronald Jacobowitz- and LeoTreitler, piano; Robert Bloch, violin; and Joseph Longo, clarinet. Soviet cellist Rostropovichpresents'impeccable'recitalThe recital of ’cellist Mstislav Rostropovich, following those of Soviet pianist Emil Gilelsand violinist David Oistrakh, was probably even more of a success for us than it was forthe rest of the crowd that packed Orchestra hall Monday night and rocked the venerableedifice for some minutes after his second encore.It would be presumptuous for us to criticize the 29-year-old ’cellist’s technique and bow¬ing any more than to say that they approached perfection; like that of Oistrakh and Gilels,Rostropovich’s playing was ——CASHFOR YOURTEXT BOOKS(Lner 6AH 3-7337 technically impeccable.The recital opened withBrahms' first 'cello sonata, awork which doesn’t completelyexplore the potentialities of theinstrument. Nonetheless, the So¬viet virtuoso made it a good ve¬hicle for displaying an incompar¬able rich tone in the lower regis¬ter. A change in mood was pro¬duced by Bach’s sixth and mostdifficult suite for unaccompanied’cello. Rostropovich’s interpreta¬tion of Bach rested strongly onthe contrast between sotto vocepassages and bold exposition.High point of the evening wasDimitri Shostakovich’s sonata for’cello and piano, which affordedaccompanist Alexandre Dedukhinample opportunity to concertizein his own right. The verve ofboth performers, especially inthis sonata, came out far morethan in most solo recitals.On the program, Rostropovichclosed the concert with two shortpieces by Debussy and a “flash”composition of his own, “Humor¬esque,” which, although primarilya display piece for the composer’sown instrument, contained someinteresting harmonic constructionbetween the 'cello and piano. Twoencores announced by Dedukhinwere a dance by Prokoviev and“El Fandango,” another piece byRostropovich.What made the evening doublyinteresting to us was the chanceto talk with the Russian ’cellist ata reception after the recital.Though Rostropovich himselfspeaks no English, and we couldonly garble a Russian equivalentof “Howdy do,” a genial graduateof the University of Moscow,known to us as Mr. Ivanov, wason hand to interpret questionsand answers and add personalcomments.According to Rostropovich, whohyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student rate 50c all performancesStarting Friday, May 11 — Four Days Only!— REQUEST RE-SHOWUS'G —One of the Best of the British madcapcomedies — the one you most wantedto see again!and —“GENEVIEVE”“THE PROMOTER”Alec Guinnessas his familiarfunny self in Joan GreenwoodValerie HobsonStarting Tuesday, May 15 — Three Days Only!“NEW FACES” ERTHA KITT and company in »LEONARD SILLMAN's Stage Hit .Excitingly filmed in Cinemascope!andJOHN HUSTON and TRUMAN CAPOTE's screwball satire on international spy stories.The Marvelous Cast; Humphrey __ wm a ■ ■■§■■■■ npiiil ■■Bogart-Cina Lollobrigida - PeterUQt AT TUC IB E. If 11 77Lorre - Jennifer Jones - Robert mmmm I I 111 m3 mmt V I LiCOMINGFriday, May 25ALFRED HITCHCOCK“THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY”The trouble with Horry was that he was deed andwouldn't stay buried. ... A farce comedy in theEnglish manner in a New England setting. A Hitch¬cock murder mystery with a minimum of violenceand a maximum number of laughs, giggles, andNew Engiondish chuckles.— and —Friday, May It AT LONG LAST—One of the greatest motion pictures ever mode—“CITIZEN KANE”Starring Writer-Producer-DirectorORSON WELLES—— and —*One of the most suspenseful!“THE WINDOW”STARRING BOBBY DRISCOLLIMPORTANT: There will be a special Saturdaymatinee, doers open at 2. . . . All seats 50e until 6.We urge you to come early and enjoy a choice ofseats.ANNOUNCEMENT: They (the distributors) have taken "WAGES OFfrom us and all theatres again! We'll keep on trying!“CHANCE MEETING”A Charming Little British film persuasively written,beautifully acted, with a stirring performance byODILE VERSOIS (the girl ALEC GUINNESS starredin “To Paris with Love")FEAR" away teaches at the Moscow conserva¬tory of music, music is a popularfield of study in the Soviet Union.There are over 2000 music stu¬dents in Moscow alone, and manymore throughout Russia. Youngpeople interested in becoming mu¬sicians can enter one of thirtymusical schools, go from there toeither of two high schools of mu¬sic, finally entering the Moscowconservatory.The Soviet ’cellist insisted thatthe cultural exchange betweenRussia and the United States isfar from one-sided. Tenor JanPeerce will sing in Moscow onJune 6, while Isaac Stern, whohas been recording duo violinworks with Oistrakh, is playingthere now. The U. S. State Depart¬ment-sponsored tbur of “Porgyand Bess” was wildly applaudedin the USSR, and plans to havethe Bolshoi theater ballet tour theUnited States may go into effectnext fall, according to interpre¬ter Ivanov.Foreign artists from manycountries besides the UnitedStates have also been received inRussia, and when asked what hethought of the supposedly Amer¬ican custom of autograph seek¬ing, Rostropovich admitted thatforeign artists in Russia are oftenbesieged as badly as he was afterhis Chicago recital.Possibly of even greater inter¬est is a proposed composer ex¬ change being negotiated betweenRussian sources and the Ameri¬can composers’ organization, AS-CAP. Arrangements now beingconsidered may lead to a programthat will bring such foremost Rus¬sian composers as Shostakovichand Kabelevsky to this countrywithin the next year, possibly forguest conductor appearances.When asked whether Americancomposers find an audience inRussia, as Soviet composers havein the United States, Rostropov¬ich smiled enthusiastically and!mentioned the popularity of Aar¬on Copland, Samuel Barber andRoy Harris. “Gershwin is well-liked in Russia too,” he said, “al¬though one must remember thathis music is not associated withwhat you know as ‘popular music'in the United States.”Rostropovich and interpreterboth perked up when the word“worker” came into the conversa¬tion. In reply to the gambit thatworkers in America for the mostpart didn’t furnish an audiejicefor serious (reinterpreted fromgood) music, the Russians cried,“In the USSR the worker is veryanxious to hear serious music.”The ’cellist and other Soviet mu¬sicians are constantly playing tolarge audiences throughout theSoviet Union.David ZackRobert McMahanJacobowitz to give benefit recitalUC student Ronald Jacobowitz will give a piano recital at Curtishall in the Fine Arts building Sunday, June 3, at 3:30 p.m.He will play pieces by Bach, Beethoven, Berg, Mozart, Rr*e!,and Schumann,Jacobowitz graduated from City College of New York, magna cumlaude, with a bachelor’s degree in music. He has recently received aPrinceton national fellowship to study musicology.Tickets are available at Hillel foundation, 5715 Woodlawn, for $1.50.There is a special student rate of $1.00.The performance is a benefit for the Orthodox Jewish cejiter ofHyde Park.TERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best”FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95MEDIUM .....1.45 GIANT 2.95We also carry a fall line of Italian foods1518 E. 63rJ Ml 3-4045| Orchestra Hall Fri. Eve., May 18 || First Concert Appearance in Chicago |THE WEAVERS I| AMERICA’S MOST POPULAR FOLK SINGERS §| — with — |1 PETE SEEGER |§ (who packed them at Mandel Hall) §| "Folk Songs Around the World"| Tickets: $1.50, $2.50, $3.00, $4.00 fromALLIED ARTS CORP.1, 20 N., Wacker Dr. Chicago 6 s^iiiiiiiiimiiiuiiiiiiiitiiiiiiimiiiiiiimmmnuiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimimiwimmumiiiimmimuiiiHHimmHii:Page 12 THE CHICACO MAROON May n. 19564|Outstanding record’ Maroon nine loses twice;made by tennis teams team blanked on three hitsby Max Clay and Dick CousensThe Maroon nine dropped one game to Illinois Tech last Friday by a score of 8 to 3 andby Steve CohenAs a result of a postponement and additions to the schedule,Coach Bill Moyle’s varsity tennis squads played four matcheswithin five days and showed the results of practice and coach- lost to Valparaiso Tuesday, 2 to 0.ing by winning them all. The four victories boosted the com- In the game against IIT, Chicago maintained a three-run lead until the sixth inning whenbined “A” and “B” squad record from a creditable 7-1 to an Dale Gustafson, the Maroon’s pitcher began to tire. Tech scored one run in the sixth andoutstanding 11-1. two in the seventh to tie the score. The score remained tied until the ninth inning whenOn Thursday, May 3, the year this proved to be a disastrous Tech exploded with five runs. Len Springer, making his first appearance of the year wasmatch when Chicago lost 9-0. called in to relieve Gustafson .in the ninth after Tech’s runs George Gray, who stole three and pitching proved Ineffective ashad scored and quickly retired bases. A Maroon fielding gem "the side. However Chicago was came in the fourth inning whenunable to score in their half of theinning.Make fielding gemvarsity “B” trounced WrightJunior college on the varsitycourts 8 to 1 with Bob Hartfield,Sherm Wheeler, Walt Neville,Jerry Caditz, Steve Cohen, andDave Penn all racking up singlesvictories and losing only one ofthe three doubles played.Two days later the “A” squadbeat Navy Pier by the same 8 to 1score. A1 Cooper, Ray Kunze,Herb West, A1 Knight, ChuckHorwitz and Sherm Wheeler du¬plicated the “B” team record bywinning all singles matches andlosing one of the doubles. Thismatch was also played on the var¬sity courts.The “B” team, after a three dayrest took on Lake Forest collegeand shut them out 9-0. This wasthe second 9-0 victory over LakeForest this spring and only Hart- Correction '•WIn the May 4 issue of theMaroon, it was erroneouslystated that Frank Randazzowon the shot put in the juniorvarsity meet held here betweenEnglewood and Universityhigh. The actual winner of theshot put was Xavier Gordon. the Maroon nine were shut out ononly three hits. Frank Ferrisstarted the pitching chores forChicago but had to be relieved infield's match was close, going ners, Jim Caffey winning twothree sets. Kent Karohl charged a hard hitground ball and threw to GeneCrain at the plate to catch a Tech the sixth inning by Len Springerrunner. Crain made an exception- when he ran into trouble.Chicago scored one run each in al play', digging the low throw Springer proved inadequate andthe 2nd, 3rd, and 4th innings on out of the dirt and tagging the was in turn relieved by John Juri-hits by Frankenfeld, Colby, Crain, runner at the same time. cek in the eighth who finished theGray, Currie, and Gustafson. A Hurlers belted game in fine form. Chicago’s of-highlight of Chicago’s offense In the game against Valparaiso fense was led by Karohl, who gotwas the excellent base running of Tuesday both Chicago’s hitting two hits and Colby, who made TheMaroons’ only other safe blow. Afew other Chicago players hit theball well but unfortunately theywere straight at the fielders.Chicago has a game againstThe varsity and track club runners joined forces against two track powerhouses, but to N°rth Central ^nday- Beloit Sat-no avail, as both Illinois and Michigan edged the UC Track club. amiaTujsanveryhfghahope^0onf,;ie'The Illinois meet, held at Champaign, last Wednesday was a heartbreaker to lose, as gaining the fine form displayedIllinois nosed a 66 1/3 to 65 2/3 victory over the runners. The track club had eight win- in earlier games.UC edged by runnersOn the next day. Tuesday, May8. the Varsity “A” took the threehour drive up to Milwaukee andreturned with a 5-4 victory overMarquette. Weakened by theabsence of Number 2 man Ray events to be UCTC’s highest Michigan displayed the prowesspoint totaler. that makes them the championsCaffey wins twice °* r^en‘Caffey won the 100 and 200 Coleman wins twiceyard dashes in 9.7 and 22.5 sec- Phil Coleman was the trackonds, respectively. Phil Coleman club’s big winner, taking both theK u nze, ” Chicago took only” two of ■ won the two mile run in 9:18.1, mile and half mile events Cole- cere "and" team' managcrs'fornext yearTTinar Larsen wasthe six singles with Cooper and Bob Kelly won the mile Merle man breezed to a K20.i vietory in elected president of next year’s WAA.West winning easily and Knight, Crouse won the 880, Paul Hoff- the mile and posted a l.oo.— time — —Hartfield, Horwitz and Wheeler man took the broad jump, Terry in the 880. Jim Caffey won thelosing. The Chicago netmen came Ellis won the shot put, and Joel 100 yard dash in 9.9 and finished Fiances Moore, secretary;through in the clutch however, McNulty won the 120 yard high second in the 220. Hoffman won Carol Coggeshall, treasurer.hurdles in the fine time of 14.8 the broad jump again. A good Judy Boley and Clara Smithseconds, edging Illinois’ Abe second place performance was were elected social co-chairmen,Woodson. Mitch Watkins, Frank turned in by Bob Kelly, who fin- while Pat Lucas and Julie Cham*and helped by Coach Moyle’s pastemphasis on doubles play took allthree doubles and the match awayfrom Marquette.There have been only two closematches all season, the one lostto talent laden Great Lakes andthe victory over Marquette. Thelast regular match before the Chi-c a g o Invitational Tournamentplayed here May 15-16 will be with WAA elects Larsen presidentsuccessful year reportedMonday the Women’s Athletic Association elected new offi-Other offiers elected were; Marlene Nelson, vice-president;ager; Joan Kruger, tennis man¬ager; and Carol Chekytis, volley¬ball manager.A WAA banquet and awardsLoomos, Hosea Martin, and Dan ished second to Ron Wallingford, berlain were chosen as publicity dinner will be held on May 31. AllTrifone were varsity runners who Michigan’s ace two miler, who co-chairmen. ’ — 1 - ^ ^picked up points.On Saturday the UCTC againtook a trip, this time to AnnArbor, Michigan, where theysquared off in a triangular meetwith Michigan and Marquette.a perenially strong Notre Dame Michigan won, with 81 points, to won in 9:14.Mitch Watkins led the varsityrunners with two second places,and Frank Loomos scored afourth in the low hurdles.On Tuesday the varsity willmeet Carroll college on Staggsquad played at South Bend. Last UCTC’s 46, and Marquette’s 34. field at 4:00.Teams to have busy next weeksThe next two weeks will see the last exploits of all University of Chicago teams exceptthe varsity baseball and track squads. The baseballers will be in action as late as May 30,when they compete in the Chicago Intercollegiate tournament, and May 31, when they facethe alumni The team managers were ap¬pointed by a combination of lastyear’s and this year’s executiveboard. They are Mary Lou Wick*ersheim, hockey manager; Ther¬esa Riley, bowling manager; JudyStevens, basketball manager; Yo¬landa DeBruyn, swimming man- members are invited.Dotty Hess, WAA’s outgoingpresident, said that it has been agood year for the organization,and that the fine turnout at Mrs.Rosalie Wax’s concert, sponsoredby WAA, had brought moremoney into the treasury than hadbeen inherited last year.As for the trackmen, theseason never ends for thosewith ambition in an Olympic year.Although the varsity runners willend their season officially May22 in a meet against Wright Jun¬ior college, the UC track club willhold its open meet June 2. Forsome varsity men and track clubmembers, there will be the Cen¬tral Collegiate meet, and, for amore select few, the NCAA, Na¬tional AAU, and Olympic trialmeets, all to be held in California.Those who place in the top threeof any event will take the trip toMelbourne, Australia, in late No¬vember.The tennis squad, having one ofits more successful years, hassuffered only one defeat. In addi¬tion to away matches with Mar¬quette and Notre Dame, they willcompete in the Chicago Intercol¬legiate tourney May 17 and 18,and they have the capabilities towin.The golf squad bows out May19 in the last of nine matches.Of the junior varsity teams,the track squad will participatein the state high school meet atChampaign May 18, and they areexpected to successfully defendtheir Private school league titleat Stagg field May 25._The baseballers bow out hereMay 18, while the tennis teamcompetes in the private schooltournament on the varsity courts,May 25 and 26.As always, the “C” dinner, in¬terfraternity sing, and “C” blank¬et' awards will highlight the ath¬letic year. The former will be heldMay 31, the latter two on June 2. Dale Team, Opponent Site TimeMay 11 JV tennis, North Park f Varsity courts 3:30May 11 JV baseball, Luther South North field 3:30 -May 12 Baseball, Beloit Stagg field 2:00May 14 Baseball, Valparaiso Stagg field 3:30May 14 JV tennis, Harvard H. S. Varsity courts 3:30May 15 JV track, St. George Stagg field 4:00May 17 Baseball, Chicago Tchrs. Stagg field 3:30May 17 Tennis, Chicago Intcoll. Varsity courts 1:30May 18 Tennis, Chicago Intcoll. Varsity courts 1:30May 18 JV baseball, Parker Stagg field 3:30May 19 Baseball, Chicago Tourn. Stagg field 2:00May 19 UCTC, Camp Carson Stagg field 6:00May 22 Track, Wright J. C. Stagg field 4:00May 25 JV track, P.S.L. tour. Stagg field 4:00May'25 JV tennis, P.S.L. tour. Varsity courts 1:00May 26 JV tennis, P.S.L. tour. Varsity courts 1:00May 26 Baseball, Chicago tour. Stagg field 2:00May 30 Baseball, Chicago tour. Stagg field 2:00May 31 Alumni. Alumni Stagg field 3:30June 2 UCTC, UCTC open meet Stagg field •Beat Coulter, 11-7In an electrifying upset, Mathews house upended their next-doorneighbor, Coulter, in an intramural softball league game, 11-7. Thiswas Coulter’s first loss to another house in a league game in anyof the major intramural sports. Now Coulter is tied for third placewith Mead with a 1-1 record, while Linn and Dodd are 3 0. Mathewshad a poorly regarded team which lost its first two games.Mathews scores 9Mathews trailer! 6-0 after two innings of play, but a nine run out¬burst, aided by damaging errors in Coulter’s outfield, shot Mathewsinto an 11-7 lead. Otherwise there were few errors. It was indeed abig victory for Mathpws and should fan the flames of rivalry betweenthe two adjoining houses.Phi Kappa Psi and Zeta Beta Tau lead the fraternity league with20 records. ZBT won an important victory when they edged PsiUpsilon, 3-2.In the divisional league, Salisbury house and Alpha Delta Philead with 1-0 records. The secret—they’reSYNCHRO-DYNED ij They’re called the sweetest playing clubs in the book, andjfor good reason. Spalding’s exclusive SYNCHRO-DYNED® jclub process, a scientifically exact system of weight coordi¬nation, gives each club in the set the identical swing and,•“contact feel” to help groove your swing.And this new Bobby Jones set is as handsome as they come>The irons feature an exclusive tough alloy steel with aglistening high-polish finish that lasts season after season.^If you’re interested in whittling strokes off your game (andwho isn’t?) see and swing the 1956 Bobby Jones SYNCHRO-jDYNED clubs at your Spalding dealer’s.Play Spalding Clubs and Balls—golfs most winning;combination.