Vol. 65, No. 19 University of Chicago, Friday, January 11, 1957Wives of UC faculty mem¬bers cavort in scenes fromthe nineteenth annual facultywives performance given Wednes¬day evening at the Quadrangleclub.The performance and dinner isgiven for the entertainment of“disenfranchised” wives of facul¬ty members attending the annualboard of trustees meeting thesame evening. Since wives of fac¬ ulty members were not invited tothe trustees dinner, the idea ofthe faculty wives dinner and pep*formance was conceived.General chairman of the eve¬ning was Mrs. Charner Perry. Theskit, “Confidential Expose,” waswritten and produced by Mrs. Wil¬liam Birenbaum. The perform¬ance was directed by Mrs. ErnestHaggard. Stage managers wereMrs. Charles Olmsted and Mrs.Albert Dahlberg.Work progresses Landers views UC girls;thinks they are 'attractive'Work will begin on the first floor of the new women’s dor¬mitory in about ten days. Only the Woodlawn building—build¬ing A — will be started at this time, the foreman for theSollitt construction companystated, although 80 per cent ofthe foundation is already com¬plete for three of the projectedbuildings.Building A is slated for com¬pletion in September, to relieve a( tu rent pressing shortage ofwomen’s housing.Forty-five men are working onthe dorms, and. according to thef ireman, have moved 9500 cubicyards of earth, an average of 21.1cubic yards per man.According to the contract withthe George Sollitt company theWoodlawn wing of the buildingmust be completed by September. A spokesman for the firm report¬ed that no undue difficulties hadbeen encountered in the construc¬tion to date.Last June it was announcedthat foundations would be laid be¬fore the end of the summer, butconstruction was not actually be¬gun until November. ChancellorLawrence A. Kimpton at thattime blamed the delay on “unbe¬lievable bureaucratic red tape”in getting federal aid. Federal aidwas needed since not enough un¬restricted funds had been receivedin the campaign to begin thethree million dollar project with¬out a loan.Bloom on sabbatical;returns this summerBenjamin S. Bloom, professor of education, but known tostudents in the college as the University examiner, has re¬cently left on sabbatical leave to make a round the world trip.However, he has not left examination and testing methodsbehind, for he is serving in thecapacity of advisor and con¬sultant to university and sec¬ondary school groups in India.Before he returns to the Univer¬sity this summer, he w'ill alsoobserve the testing practices inEurope, specifically in Eng¬land, in addition to acting as aconsultant to the Ministry of Edu¬cation in Israel.An authority on the framing ofexaminations and analysis of aca¬ demic achievement, Bloom is theco-author of a recent book, Meth¬ods in Personality Assessment,which provides a new basis ofpredicting which individuals aremost likely to be successful inspecialized studies.Since his absence from the Uni¬versity staff is temporary, therewill be no replacement for Bloomin the examiner’s office for thenext two quarters. “A woman in Minneapolis might at this very moment be wrapping garbage in me,” saidAnn Landers Monday evening in Judson lounge when describing the popularity of her Sun-Times advice to the lovelorn column.Miss Landers, in real life Mrs. Jules Lederer, has been writing the column since October,1955, and has seen her popularity grow to the point that her column now appears in over100 newspapers.Only recently has the pub¬lic learned the real identity ofAnn Landers. Letters such as““Dear Ann Landers: Quit tryingto kid the public. I know you’re aman! My second cousin said thatshe went out with you in 194G inPocatello, Idaho.” prompted Mrs.Lederer to insist that her realidentity be revealed to the public.Mrs. Lederer commented thatshe receives as many as 5000 let¬ters a month, all of which receiveher personal attention. About fiveper cent are “obviously phony.”She added that half of her letterscome from men. “I bet you knowwhat they’re troubled about. It’swomen.”When asked why many havemarriage difficulties, Mrs. Led¬erer stated that “Too many peo¬ple have the idea that marriageis like what you see in Interna¬tional silver ads.” Young bridesare disillusioned when they findthat their husbands don’t live upto the “Hollywood” standards.They are hurt when their hus¬bands don’t have neatly combedhair and unwrinkled pajamas inthe morning as per the Holly¬wood myth.About people in general shesaid, “Everyone has at least oneneurosis. An advice column is a ‘‘Let’s lie down and talk things over.”poor man’s couch ... a modernsymbol of metal health. We’re liv¬ing in an age in which it has be¬come fashionable to lie down andtalk things over.” She referred topsychiatrists as “headshrinkers”but later apologized saying thatshe often avails herself of theirservices.Several people asked her whatshe thought her qualificationswere for writing such a column.She replied that she had a greatdeal of experience in problemFraternities seek more membersby Bob HalaszIn less than two weeks time,the fraternities on campus willonce again hold their biannualrushing activities, the purpose ofwhich is to provide new blood forthese organizations which are al¬most as old as the Universityitself.As to defining exactly what afraternity on the UC campusdoes, the useful C-Book tells us:“Ten national Greek letter frater¬nities, each with its own house,provide social and activity cen¬ters for approximately 300 activemembers at Chicago.”Gorr explainsHerb Gorr, president of theInter-Fraternity Council feelsthat a fraternity’s function oncampus is to provide living spacefor students—but also to be abasis for social life and a. training{round for getting along withothers.Whatever the theoretical orreal role of the fraternity on cam¬ pus, the fact is that the ten na¬tional fraternities with their 300members, and about 55 pledgesfrom fall rushing, do play a largepart in the social life of the cam¬pus. The organizations charge be-tweet $40 and $100 as an initia¬tion fee, with rent being some¬where between $75 and $100 aquarter in most cases.The Inter-Fraternity Council iscomposed of a representativefrom each house, and its job isto regulate the activities of thehouses. It has grown in powerover the last few years, and hasthe power to recognize or expelany fraternity on campus.The ten fraternities are the sur¬vivors of a period (1930-1951),commonly called the Hutchinsera, during which the number offraternities dwindled from a highof thirty-three to their present,number. They had to deal with anunfriendly administration, whichon November 16, 1945, bannedfraternities from pledging Col¬lege students. On the same day, an editorial in the Maroon pro¬nounced the fraternities dead.But the remaining fraternitiesrode out the storm, were finallyreinstated, and saw the dawn ofa new day when Hutchins leftin 1951.Gain membersChancellor Kimpton was quickto assure them that he was “allfor the fraternities at the Univer¬sity of Chicago.” Since then, fra¬ternity membership has risensteadily if unspectacularly. Lastyear’s I-F council president, Lar¬ry Sherman, was able to an¬nounce a substantial gain inmembership. Three national fra¬ternities are trying to get backon campus, and one, Tau KappaEpsilon, has been waiting in thewings for several years, pendingapproval by the administrationand the I-F council. Kimpton’sgoal of 3000 undergraduates by1960 should also contribute toraising membership.Nevertheless, an aura of thepast still lingers over the frater¬ nities. The impressive edifice ofPhi Kappa Psi, on 56th and Wood¬lawn, reminds one of the palmierdays in the 20’s, when membersof the cream of Chicago societybelonged to fraternities here anddonated money lavishly. Last fall,Delta Upsilon looked way back to1905 for a theme suitable for theirfall party, inviting members ofthe famous Chicago team thatbeat Fielding Yost’s Michiganteam.The lean years have also ef¬fected a change in attitude of thefraternities here, as elsewhere.The great depression ended thegoldfish-swallowing days. Sher¬man last year said that “frater¬nities at Chicago have been ableto concentrate on the primarypurpose—academic—of a univer¬sity.”If- so, a new relationship be¬tween the administration, stu¬dents, and fraternities exists, dif¬ferent in degree from both the-jazz age and the Hutchins days. solving, she has been happily mar¬ried for eighteen years, and moreimportant than rfhat she has areal understanding of people anda genuine love for them. She saidthat she often discusses many ofthe problems with trained psy¬chologists and psychiatrists.As for the purpose of the col¬umn, she claimed that its firstuse was to serve as a way for peo¬ple to let off steam, to tell oth¬ers what they have to say. In ad¬dition, it provides the valuableservice of letting the general pub¬lic know how to get in contactwith the many service and webfare agencies in Chicago and tolet those unfamiliar with themknow of their existence.Many students tried to bringMrs. Lederer into the UC girlscontroversy. She was forced tokeep out of the controversy onthe basis of lack of information.She did comment however thatshe found UC girls in the audi¬ence “quite attractive.”Dean guestDean of Students RobertM. Strozier will be the guestof honor at a Student Gov¬ernment sponsored recep¬tion Monday.All campus is invited tothe SG reception at 4 pm inIda Noyes hall to honorthe dean on his 10th anni¬versary as Dean of Stu¬dents.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 11, 19571957Cap&Gowninitiates changesPhoenix, the campus humor magazine which has not beenpublished since before the war, will be included in the 195750th anniversary Cap and Gown, announced yearbook editorEliza Houston.The addition is one of several major changes in format de¬termined partly by cost and partly for aesthetic reasons, saidproduction and the use of an un¬coated book paper.Advertising revenue is expect¬ed to surpass $1300, with $800 insigned contracts and about $200in contracts promised, as com¬pared with a total of $600 in thelast book, according to JohnSaada, business manager.The book will contain 192 pagesand will be bound in a three-color("not necessarily the colors of theUniversity, either” according tothe artist in charge) cloth cover.Promised date of publicationfor the book is the first weekin May.Income to defray printingcosts is expected from threesources: advertising, sales, andan administration subsidy fromthe student activities budget.A change in printing method,from letterpress to offset, is ex¬pected to reduce the cost fromabout $6000 to $4000. The offsetmethod, a photographic reproduc¬tion process, requires, however,that the yearbook staff do thefinal pasting of photographs andcopy.The process makes possible asuperior quality of picture re- Banners, blossoms, and bettingWith gay medieval banners,colorful baronial dancing hall,blazing torches, and castleequipped with dungeon, the mem¬bers of Alpha Delta Phi claimthey “have maintained a tradi¬tion which has come to rival inprominence other leading socialevents of the school year.”As before, on the second Satur¬day in the winter quarter, theAlpha Delts will become hosts toall members of the University.Guests will be welcomed to danc¬ing in the main hall where battleflags, shields, and armor will bedisplayed against the drapedwalls. Other guests may find itcosier in the candlelight of thedungeon cabaret, where softdrinks, ginger ale, and ice willbe provided.The shadings of the muskystonework may remind the manyguests who are returning, of lastyear’s spider room, of previoustorture chambers, and of the re¬puted beheaded mannequinwhose mysterious disappearance has never been solved. Otherswill remember the rickety draw¬bridge and blazing front torchesof other years.With promises of the merriestentertainment, the members ofAlpha Delta Phi extend a heartywelcome to the whole campus tojoin this medieval celebration inthe gray gothic castle at 5747 Uni¬versity, tomorrow, at 9.C-Dance"June in January” will be thetheme of the January 26 C-dance,the first of the winter quartersponsored by Student Union. AnnGuckenheimer, chairman of theevent, stated that the dancewould be similar to college springdances in decor. Garlands of flow¬ers, leaves and other spring-likedecorations will be used in deco¬rating the Cloister club of IdaNoyes for this dance. To comple¬ment the decorations, students at¬tending the "June in January”dance are asked to dress in springclothes, regardless of our blus¬tery Chicago weather.The dance will begin at 9 pm and is scheduled to end at mid-night. The dance band of BillyHeller will be featured and as aspecial attraction the CountryDancers will present several num¬bers during intermission.The admission for this eventwill be 75 cents per person. Ev-eryone is welcome.Night of SinFor the admission price of 50cents, and no passport, UCers canspend the evening of January 18in the genuine, disreputable at¬mosphere of a Monte Carlo casino— in Ida Noyes.The annual "Night of Sin” willfeature sufficient attractions toplease the individual tastes of itspatrons. Student Union will spon¬sor chuck-a-luck, a roulette wheel,crap tables, "beat the dealer,” andother games of similar nature.Greenbacks will be supplied atthe door.The highlight of the eveningwill be presentation of the "Sin¬ner of the Year” award. A charm¬ing young female will be auc¬tioned off.HERE ARE THE CORRECTANSWERS TO THE OLD GOLDPUZZLESCheck the record of your answers against these, to see if you are automaticallyeligible to compete in the tie-breakers.1. Smith 7. Oberlin 13. Stephens 19. Georgetown2. Purdue 8. Harvard 14. Princeton 20. Middlebury3. Tulane 9. Colgate 15. Dartmouth 21. Johns Hopkins4. Beloit 10. Stanford 16. Wellesley 22. Brigham Young5. Rollins 11. Bryn Mawr 17. Notre Dame 23. Western Reserve6. Rutgers 12. Grinnell 18. Vanderbilt 24. NorthwesternEnough entries have been checked to show that many players have correctly solved all24 puzzles, thereby creating a tie for all prizes.If the record of your answers to the first 24 puzzles, mailed on or before December 19,conforms with the correct answers published herein, you are automatically eligible tocompete in the tie-breaking puzzles. The series of tie-breakers will be published in thispaper, commencing on or about February 1st. Watch for the tie-breakers!Please note Rule 2 as published in the official Tangle School rules at the beginning ofthe contest... which reads as follows:0 Rule 2(1$ In case more than one person solves correctly the same number of puzzles, theprize tied for and as many subsequent prizes as there are persons tied, will be reserved andthose so tying will be required to solve a set of tie-breaking puzzles, to determine the orderin which the reserved prizes will be awarded.YOU’LL GO FOR OLD GOLDSToday’s Old Golds are an exclusive blend of fine, nature-ripened tobaccos ... so rich... so light... so golden bright.That’s why Old Gold Regulars and King Size.. .without a filter.. .TASTE GREAT STRAIGHT.For the same reason, OLD GOLD FILTERS give you THE BEST TASTE YET IN A FILTERCIGARETTE.O156015CIGARETTESFILTER KINGS 015 Gol5CIGARETTESKING SIZE 015 GoldCIGARETTESREGULAR SIZS Get a pack... or acprton andsee if youdon tagree.NO OTHER CIGARETTE CAN MATCHTHE TASTE OF TODAY’SOLD GOLDSCopyright 19SG, Harry H. Hull late* Judge speaks atPhi Sig reunionUC’s chapter of Phi Sigma Del¬ta fraternity recently celebratedits thirty-fifth anniversary witha luncheon featuring a formerPhi Sig from UC, Stanley Mosk,now a judge of the superior courtof Los Angeles.Judge Mosk, the principalspeaker at the luncheon, talkedon the role of the United Nationsas an agency for bringing aboutworld peace and the furtheringof human rights.Another former Phi Sig fromUC attending the reunion wasLeonard Aries, now executive di¬rector of the National ConferenceSTUDENTWIVESWORK ON CAMPUSThe Personnel Office has awide variety of full-timeclerical and technical posi¬tions that are open. We aresure there is one that willinterest you.WE NEEDSecretariesStenographersTypistsBookkeepersClerksClinical TechniciansResearch Technicians(including)Medical ChemistsHematologistsHistologistsBacteriologistsBENEFITS INCLUDE3 weeks' paid vacation2 weeks* sick leaveTuition remissionLibrary and recreationalprivilegesapply NOWPersonnel Office956 E. 58th St. of Christians and Jews. Aries,coming from Washington, D. C.for the event, spoke on achieve¬ments of Phi Sigma Delta. Hementioned the elimination of ra¬cial and religious discriminationwithin the fraternity, the elimina¬tion of hazing and other types of"punishment” and the establish¬ment of a scholarship fund by thealumni of Mu chapter (UC) toprovide scholarships for needystudents.Harry Sondheim, president ofUC’s chapter of Phi Sig, and sev¬eral other Phi Sigs representedthe active chapter at the reunion.Friedmanto debatesocialistMilton Friedman, professor ofeconomics, will again debate a so¬cialist under the sponsorship ofthe Public Affairs forum. Thecurrent debate, with Harry Brav-erman, co-editor of the AmericanSocialist, is scheduled for Mondayat 4 pm in Social Sciences 322.CHICAGO'S NEWESTAND MOST DISTINCTIVEshop for menTWEED SLITSfor the tweedyImported Ballantyne, Shetland*,Donegals, and Princeton weavesJANUARY SPECIALS$5995608 n. michigan avenueWhitehall 3-2410Jan. 11, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3SG 'gripe' commission convene; Start Fox fundinvite campus to open hearingsby Norman Lewak1 Student Government’s commission on SG (nicknamed by some the “little Hoover com¬mission”) began its operations Wednesday night with an organizational meeting.Two open and many semi-closed (members and press, only) meetings were scheduled. All In memory of Stanley Fox, late SG member from the hu¬manities, Student Government Tuesday night unanimouslyset up an interest-free student loan fund.Fifty dollars was appropriated to start the fund and thevice-president was empowered to make arrangements for the admin¬istration and the raising of funds. Student donations will be gladlyaccepted.Also appropriated were $30 for the Strozier reception (Monday,students, especially those with gripes and proposals, have been invited to the open meetings Ida Noyes, 4 pm, everyone invited) and $20 for midyear orientation.to be held the Tuesday evenings of January 15 and 29 in Law north at 7:30. The commis¬sion must report back to the assembly by February 5.According to Sylvia Thomp-son (ISL-soc), chairman ofthe commission, it is hard toforecast the exact nature of thecommission’s reports. The com¬mission has a general idea ofwhat it will discuss, but the spe¬cifics are still very tentative.Miss Thompson reported that“All legitimate gripes and pro¬posals would be discussed.” Sherequested that the interested par¬ties submit their contributions inwriting. “The open meetingscould accomplish much more ifthose participating put down • Size of the executive coun¬cil.• The committee system inall its aspects; how many,which ones, what they shoulddo, etc.• Legislation procedure.Because of the difficulty ofamending the constitution (a two-thirds vote of students in a gen¬eral election), Miss Thompsonanticipates that the proposedchanges would take the form oflegislation and/or code changes. col), vice-president; Richard John¬son (ISL-col) representing theelection and rules committee;Joel Rosenthal for SRP; BufordKnowles for ISL; and DickBrooks, Jon Isenberg and JeffreySteinberg as non - Government,non-party members. Two vacancies were filled: Penny Rich (ISL) in the College toreplace Jan Metros (elected to the court), and Arthur Green (ISL)in FTS to replace Durett Wagner (resigned).Also, two new committee chairmen were elected: Herb Zipperian(ISL-col) student needs chairman to replace John Lamb (resignedchairmanship on doctor’s orders), and Dave Orlinsky (ISL-soc) toNSA chairman to replace Jan Metros (elected to court).Zipperian, as student needs chairman, announced that the FlyingTiger flight to Europe would once again be chartered by SG forthis summer. He said that they are now looking for a flight leaderwho would receive a free flight for taking over the administrativechores of arranging the flight.Talks of "in-between" cave manmi„ut The existence of an “in-between” type of caveman who was a forebearer of modern mancame." Those not klfendln^the^ attempt ' a couple amendments «nd in the Middle East some 75.000 years ago was told by UC anthropologist F. Clarkmeetings could leave their pro- hoping to “liberalize” the consti- Howell, recently. .. . . _poSais in the commission’s box tution. Howell, an assistant professor of anthropology, said this prehistoric form of human wasin the SG office, second floor of Informal precedent changes more advanced than the Neanderthal man but still not a modem man. He said this theoryIda Noyes. Miss Thompson is es- and clarification of procedure will was the^result of a recent re-evaluation of fossilized human skeletons found 25 years agopecially interested in hearing also probably occupy a sizeable in four Palestinian caves. — -mpetitioners of lastfrom thespring.Some of the tentative subjectsthat the commission will investi¬gate are:• Election laws in general.and the suitable size of theassembly. portion of the commission’s pro¬posals.Other members of the commis¬sion besides Miss Thompson (whois a member by virtue of herchairmanship of the committeeon recognized student organiza¬tions) are: Rosemary Galli (ISL- Anthropologists had earlier and like him have close anatomi- in a cave near Dusseldorf, Ger-cal parallels with modem man. many, in 1856. A skull of anotherA generally accepted theory Neanderthal man had been foundman* has held that Palestinian man eight years earlier on Gibraltar,was the result of the intermixing but had escaped scientific notice,of Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon, The Dusseldorf fossils were longtheorized that the continent ofEurope spawned modemHowever, according to Howell, itSouthwest Asia—whichwas in¬cludes the Middle East—that saw °r modern, man. But no remains the subject of controversy, until1 J many subsequent finds producedagreement that a distinct race ofman. the Classic Neanderthal, hadonce lived.Who's mod?It has been remarked byone Noel Coward that maddogs and Englishmen go outin the noonday sun. Ap¬parently, though, there is oneon this campus who doubtsthis world renowned theory,for last Saturday evening onemad dog was reported on theloose in Ida Noyes hall.The dog pound, ever on thealert, sent dog catchers in fullregalia (equipped with nets)to the scene of the disaster. Atthis time it is not known whowas more “mad”: the hypo- thetical dog, the joker whocalled, or the dog catchers. this evolutionary transformation.Howell presented his theory ata symposium commemorating the100th Anniversary of the Discov¬ery of Neantherthal Man at theAmerican Association for theAdvancement of Science annualmeeting in New York City.He said that when the Palestin¬ian bones were discovered anthro¬pologists thought they belongedto the long war period called theLast Interglacian stage.New evidence indicates thisspecies of man lived tens of thou¬sands of years later, at the be¬ginning of the Last Glaciation orIce age, and was broadly contem¬porary with the Neanderthal manof Europe.This new evidence includesradio-carbon dating, and recentgeological studies in the MiddleEast which give another checkon the time.The skeleton of a child, foundin Central Asia, and the bones ofan infant in the Crimea, are con¬temporary with Palestinian man have so far been found to indi¬cate that Neanderthal man pene¬trated to the Middle East fromEurope.Artifacts such as stone toolsadd weight to the theory that theimmediate precursors of modernman lived in the Middle East, Dr.Howell said.First Neanderthal man to cometo attention of scientists resultedfrom the discovery by workers ofa fossilized skull and limb bones Jimmy’sSINCE 1940Des (hoses qui arrivent...L’an dernier, la Sun Life a paye 121 reclama¬tions au deces en vertu de polices en vigueurdepuis moins d’un an — cependant, chacun desdetenteurs de polices decedes remplissaient lesconditions de sante requises de la Compagnie.Cela peut vous arriver; protegez les votres parl'assurance-vie.RALPH J. WOOD, JR., '48Representative 1 N. LaSalle Chicago 2, IllinoisFR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA Clearance SaleAM wool ivy league pants now $7.99Ivy league shirts now 2 for $5.00Mohair blend hooded coats now $19.99Suburban coats now $11.88Sport coats (wool) now $19.99Suits and overcoats (wool) now $28.95Our prices can't be beat . . .- it's smart to buy for lessD & G Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728“In the Neighborhood for 10 Years'*Hours: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 a.m. - 9 p.m., Saturday— tmih^ —■» ~w~m —wr -<-rw nn~T ~M—10% Discount to UC Students and PersonnelAll Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW MET PRICES8-LBS. WASHED & FLUFF DRIED 59'10-LBS. FLAT WORK $1“DRESS SHIRTS ‘- 22*QUALITY DRY CLEANING — RAPID SERVICE — REASONABLE PRICESFREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERYPhone PLaza 2-9097UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1376 E. 55th Street COMO PIZZERIAannounces the opening of their newCafe EnricoRESTAURANTServing the finest in Italian foodsHors d'oeuvres tableMODERATE PRICESFree delivery to students on pUza1411 E. 53rdFA 4-5525 • HY 3-5300o Hours: 11 a.m. - 1 a.m. Open Fri. to 2 a.m. Sot. to 3 a.m..s.ACO MAROON • Jan. 11, 1957EditoriolTheatrical series promisescontinued Studebaker qualityLast Fall a group of Chicago businessmenteamed with some of the finest theatricaltalent in the country in an effort to turn anidea that has been thought of and dreamedabout for a long time into a reality. Theyformed the Studebaker theater company,which offered a series of five plays with firstclass acting and direction. This first effortto give Chicago a repertoire theater broughtan immediate burst of enthusiasm in the formof subscriptions by Chicagoans long theaterstarved, and as the season went on a growingappreciation was shown by both audience andcritics.While still in the middle of its first series,the Studebaker theater offered anotherseries, to begin February 19. Productionsscheduled include Arthur Miller’s latest play,VTievv From the Bridge; Chekhov’s classicRussian drama, The Cherry Orchard; Lysi- strata, Aristophanes’ lusty farce; Ansky’sfamous treatment of Hebrew mysticism, TheDubbuk; and a Tennessee Williams’ festivalevening, featuring three of the controversialplaywright’s one acters. To mention thatAgnes Moorehead may star in one produc¬tion, and that Arthur Miller is expected todirect his own play, may give an idea of thecaliber of performance to be expected fromChicago’s new repertoire theater in its sec¬ond series.Enthusiastic response to Studebaker’s pleafor subscribers can help to make what haslong been a dream of Chicago drama lovers apermanent addition to the cultural life of ourcity. The students of the University of Chi¬cago and others who live in the most cul¬turally awake area of Chicago, can enjoy thefine second series of plays and at the sametime help to ensure the continued existenceof legitimate theater in this city.Letters to the editorThe 'great controversy’: finisAs of late there has beenmuch discussion concerningthe qualities of the (CEN¬SORED) of the University ofChicago. A large portion of thiscontroversy has looked upon our(CENSORED) in an obviously un¬favorable light, while the remain¬ing portion has viewed the (CEN¬SORED) as representative ofbeauty, personality, and culture.Nevertheless, we feel that the(CENSORED) possesses qualitieswhich are not to be found on anyother coeducational campus. Itthen follows that the (CEN¬SORED) is unique; and, obvious¬ ly, is not uniqueness a quality tobe possessed? Indeed, we assertthat the question is rather where¬in this uniqueness resides. Cer¬tainly, this is just what the greatpoet Markham suggested whenhe wrote the immortal words:“Whose was the hand thatslanted back this brow?“Whose was the breath thatblew out the light .within, thisbrain?’’ to which Shelley re¬plied:“She walks in beauty like thenightOf cloudless climes and starryskies . . .**Requests help in findingHyde Park discriminationGadfly, in your issue of Jan¬uary 4, charges Billings (hos¬pital) with being guilty ofcertain racially discriminatorypractices. In view of UC’s wellestablished reputation as a liberalinstitution these charges are par¬ticularly disturbing and, if theyare based on fact, Gadfly’s con¬cern is well founded and shouldbe shared by each of his readers.There is, however, a very realdifficulty with articles such asGadfly’s (unsigned, unspecific) inthat . . . they cannot facilitate asolution to the problem unlessbased on and backed by demon¬strable fact.The civil rights committee of(he Hyde Park unit of theNAACP .. . has frequently faced this difficulty. That is, in areaswhere with factual evidence wemight well be effective we areoften seriously handicapped be¬cause individuals who have directknowledge of discrimination failto bring their knowledge to ourattention.We therefore strongly urge . . .any . . . person who has knowl¬edge of discriminatory practicesanywhere in the Hyde Park areato contact us immediately.Contact can be made throughSid Lens at FI 6-1857 or throughthe undersigned at 6106 Ellis,FA 4-1706.Scott Arden, chairmanCivil Rights committee,Hyde Park unit, NAACPIssued every Friday throughout the school year and intermittently during theummer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, at 1212 East 59th Street,Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3266; Busi¬ness and advertising office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3265. Subscriptions by mail, $3per year. Business office hours: 2 p in. to 5 p.m., Monday through Saturday. But arc their positions tenable?To resolve this question we mayperhaps search for another ap¬proach.Since time immemorial thisproblem has baffled philosophers,stunned nations, and has mani¬fested itself as the source of thegreatest confusion and injusticein the social relations of mankind.However, we believe that presentday knowledge supplies the an¬swer to this question; indeed, notonly supplies the answer, butteaches it in its highest institu¬tion of learning—the University,and in particular, this University.But it is at this University thatthe problem of uniqueness hasarisen, as we have already agreed.If our University is the source ofthe solution, and likewise thesource of our problem, then theproblem is identical with its solu¬tion—in fact, they arc one. Thus,we are forced to attack this prob¬lem from the point of view of thenroblem of the solution ratherthm the solution of the problem.The conclusions of this newapproach can be only obvious,and furthermore their acceptancenow cannot be avoided by anyreasoning reader—they are mere¬ly a new course of action, whichis the solution and hence theproblem. . . . the uniqueness ofthe (CENSORED) is now givenmeaning and structure, and thoseviewpoints both favorable anu un¬favorable have no bearing on theproblem whatsoever.We propose that those newcourses of action be adopted assoon as possible, so as to dispelall further confusion and doubtwhich exists in the problem ofthe (CENSORED).E.M., It.II., P.P., M.P.(Names withheld)Praises look of'New Maroon'Congratulations for your“New Maroon.”Editor-in-chief. . . . . , . . Ronald J. GrossmanManaging editor .Norman LewakBusiness manager ...Gary MokotoffAdvertising manager. .Lawrence D. KesslerEditorial assistant ...Bob BrownNews editors Rochelle Dubnow, Bob HalaszCulture editor Dave ZackLecture editor Harold BernhardtCopy editors . Kathy Ailer, Betsy KirtleyProduction manager .Jeon KwonSports Editor George KarcazesPhoto editor Bob WilsonArt editor Kent FlanneryColendor editor .Jeanne HerrickOffice monoger Art TaitelEditor-in-chief, emeritus .Joy BurbachEditoriol stoff Zelda Eisen, Mory Finkle, Sue Fisher,Oliver Lee, Dick Montgomery, Sue Needlemon, Marge Russell. DoveSchlessinger, Sue Shapiro A year ago I looked forward toreading the Maroon about asmuch as a Social Sciences stu¬dent would look forward to read¬ing a Biochem assignment. Thisyear I would be willing to standin line for a Maroon, or read oversomebody else’s shoulder, to findout the campus news.Keep up the good work.Omar Draper(Editor’s note: To ReaderDraper and others who havevoiced similar sentiments — ourmost grateful thanks. Despite theexigencies of the New Year andpersonal academic matters, weshall continue working towardsan even better “New Maroon.” NICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063;5 for 4 OI144S!on group orders of pizzaget 5 for the price of 4!Free delivery to V. of f. studentsTable Service Delivery Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M. 11 AM. to 2 A.M.Open lid 3 A.M. on Friday and SaturdayClosed Mondays 'On Campus MocShuhan(Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek,” etc.)EAT, DRINK, AND BE MARRIEDOn a recent tour of seven million American colleges,I was struck by two outstanding facts: first, the greatnumber of students who smoke Philip Morris; and second,the great number of students who are married.The first phenomenon — the vast multitude of PhilipMorris smokers — comes as no surprise, for what couldbe more intelligent than to smoke Philip Morris? Afterall, pleasure is what you smoke for, and pleasure is whatPhilip Morris delivers. Try one. Light up and see foryourself.... Or, if you like, don't light up. Just takea Philip Morris, unlighted, and puff a couple of times.Get that wonderful fiavor? You bet you do! Even with¬out lighting you can taste Philip Morris’s fine naturaltobacco. Aiso, you can make your package of PhilipMorris last practically forever.No,* I say, it was not the great number of PhilipMorris smokers that astounded me; it was the greatnumber of married students. Latest statistics show thatat some coeducational colleges, the proportion of marriedundergraduates runs as high as twenty per cent! And,what is even more startling, fully one-quarter of thesemarriages have been blessed with issue!Now’, to the young campus couple who are parentsfor the first time, the baby is likely to be a source of con¬siderable worry. Therefore, let me devote today’s columnto a few helpful hints on the care of babies.First of all, we will take up the matter of diet. Inthe past, babies wyere raised largely on table scraps. This,however, was outlawed by the Smoot-Hawley Act, andtoday babies are fed a scientific formula consisting ofdextrose, maltose, distilled water, evaporated milk, anda twist of lemon peel.After eating, the baby tends to grow sleepy. A lullabyis very useful to help it fall asleep. In case you don’tknow any lullabies, make one up. For example:Go to sleep, my little infant,Goo-goo moo-moo poo-poo binfant.A baby sleeps best on its stomach, so place it that wayin its crib. Then to make sure it will not turn itself overduring the night, lay a soft but fairly heavy object on itsback —another baby, for instance.So, as you see, raising a baby is no great problem.All you need is a little patience and a lot of love. Alsodiapers, rompers, soakers, crib, mattress, sheets, bumpers,blankets, high chair, diapers, talcum, baby oil, fish liveroil, paregoric, diapers, safety pins, cotton, cotton coveredtoothpicks, bottles, diapers, nipples, diapers, bottlebrushes, booties, diapers, nighties, wrappers, diapers,rattles, teething rings, pacifiers, diapers, and unlimited*Un(*S* ©Max Shulman, 19&«When Baby in fail usleep — the little angell — tvhy not relaxand give yourself a treat? With Philip Morris, of eorris!Made in long size and regular by the sponsors of this column.Jan. 11, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5mis GADFLYPysch clinic dangerous?Is the practice of "administration referrals" to the student mentaHiealth clinic one of potential dan¬ger to the privacy and personal freedom of students? The writer of this week's Gadfly, a graduate stu¬dent in the social sciences, thinks that it is. He has recently spent over a year doing research on thesocial consequences of the practice and theory of the mental hygiene professions.T noted with some interest an ar¬ticle in the Maroon during theautumn quarter on the expansion ofthe psychiatric clinic of the studenthealth service.While such expansion may proveto be a wholesome development for thecampus community, providing those ex¬periencing personal difficulties with op¬portunities to resolve their difficultiesand lead a more satisfying life, I believethere are certain dangers, of which thestudent body should be made aware, ina psychotherapeutic clinic being connec¬ted to a university.The article states that 14 per cent ofthe clinic’s patients during a one-monthperiod were “administration referrals.''This raises several questions.Privacy assaultedFirst, how could the Administrationknow enough about a student to deter¬mine if he “needs” therapy? Obviouslythe 15 minutes or half hour* that an ad¬visor or dean sees a student each quar¬ter is not sufficient for this. Informa¬tion about the student must come fromelsewhere. But how?By means of communications from ad¬visers, teachers, househeads, and per¬ haps others; information that studentshave given about themselves in applica¬tion forms; information from references;the psychological test taken during ori¬entation week; probably informationfrom the supervisors of those studentsemployed by the University, etc.In other words, the ODS (Office ofthe Dean of Students) maintains aminiature intelligence network bywhich It collects information pertain¬ing not only to each student’s aca¬demic ability but also to personalmatters, probably including his person¬ality, private life, beliefs, attitudes,and interests. The information obtain¬ed by this system is stored in eachstudent’s secret dosier in the ODS.Our knowledge of how this intelli¬gence system operates is naturally verylimited, but one thing is clear: the ODSknows enough about the personal livesof students to be able to account for 14per cent of the patients in the mentalhygiene clinic. Obviously the privacy ofthe student body is being Violated.Pressure likelyThe second problem raised by “admin¬istration referrals” is the possibility thatODS men are pressuring those whom they consider “maladjusted” or “devi¬ant” into entering therapy.That this is happening at UC is sug¬gested in several places in the Maroonarticle. In one place, for example, itasserts that during a one-month period“slightly under 50 per cent of the mentalhygiene clinic’s patients voluntarilysought care, 14 per cent were administra¬tion referrals, and the rest were referredby student health (my italics).” If one-half of the patients came to the clinic“voluntarily,” how must the other halfhave come?The question arises, what form ofpressure could be applied, to a student?Obviously threats of expulsion from theUniversity or of reduction in scholarshipor of black marks on a person’s records.That the ODS is contemtuous enough ofpersonal freedom to use such methodsis indicated by the threat of a dean afew years ago to reduce the scholarshipof a couple if they got married contraryto the wishes of the girl's parents.It is not likely, however, that outrightcoercion is often used. Subtler techniques—“warm acceptance,” cajoling, etc.—areprobably more effective in dealing withmost students. Personal freedomBoth the use of compulsion and theinfringement of privacy are contraryto the principles of a free society for,if freedom means anything, it meansthe right to lead one’s personal life ashe sees fit.The use of compulsion as an aid inaltering an individual’s personal modeof life—which is essentially what psycho¬therapy consists of—directly violatesthat right. And the infringement of pri¬vacy makes a mockery of it, for privacyis vital to freedom in that it hindersmen in power from obtaining knowledgeof how people lead their personal livesand thus hinders the use of such knowl¬edge as a basis for penalizing or manip¬ulating people.If the mental hygiene clinic genuinelyrespects the personal freedom of itsprospective patients, it will unequivo¬cally refuse to accept “administrationreferrals” for treatment since they en¬tail the infringement of privacy andprobably the use of pressure as well. Un¬fortunately even if the clinic does prom¬ise to do this, there will be no objectiveway to determine if it is actually livingup to its promise since both the clinicand ODS operate in secrecy.Investigations fail to stopfootball code violationsFor a time this autumn, collegefootball seemed to be caught inone of the waves of public moral¬ity which have been advancing fora decade or so. It is hard to arguewith a good, loud vow to be pure,but carried into college footballthis sort of thing could havebeen tragic, at least to those ofus who like football skillful, fastand exciting.Drive out the tramp athletes, asa California athletic official prom¬ised in September, or stop recruit¬ing farmhands, as a Midwesterneducator pledged in October, andwhat have you got left to playfootball? You’ve got students,that’s what, and once you’ve seenone student play, you’ve seenthem all.This article by RogerKahn is a reprint from "TheNation,"Fortunately for us spectators,by now it has become clear as agolden autumn afternoon that thecolleges did not intend to drivethe halfbacks out of their admis¬sion offices, after all. They wereonly pretending out there on thePacific coast and at Ann Arbor,Michigan. For after such phrasesas “dual morality must be elim¬inated” echoed into silence earlyin the season, students onceagainst were confined to class¬rooms and the distinction betweenfootball players at ambitious col¬leges and the professionals in theNational football league remainedsmall: the college players wouldnever accept checks.From a great professional foot¬ball player out of Texas comes astory, only slightly atypical, whichshows the lengths to which thepresidents and their recruiters arepresently willing to go. Severalscouts from the University ofOklahoma were looking for back-field prospects in the oil country°f Texas, the pro star reports, andthe best they saw was the son ofa man who owns a few' dozen wells. They made an introductoryoffer of room, board, books, tui¬tion and $40 a month expenses,but the boy laughed them off.“My daddy can afford to sendme to college,” the boy said, “andhe wants me to go to Texas.”“Can you think of somethingyou’d really like to have?” one ofthe scouts asked.“Nope,” the boy said, gesturingshlying toward six derricks in thedistance.“Say,” the second scout said ina flash of inspiration. “You gotany real close friends on yourhigh school team?”“Sure,” the boy said. “My twobest buddies.”‘Tell you what,” the scout said.“You come on up to play at Okla¬homa and we’ll give your two bud¬dies scholarships so’s they cancome along, too. What do yousay?” Ultimately, this boy saidno, but Oklahoma scouts usuallyhear yes, which in part explainswhy the Oklahoma football teamhas not been defeated in fouryears.&i<y)tt)dads pun nvqioojColleges first branched into thesideline of professional footballduring the 1920s and the reasonput forth most often concernsmortgages. After World War I, itappears, countless colleges erect¬ed stadiums as memorials withoutfully realizing what they were get¬ting into. Long after the last eu¬logy had been delivered, there re¬mained sizeable bank notes to bepaid. Track, soccer and girl’s fieldhockey drew few spectators tothe expensive stadiums, but foot¬ball meant cash customers. Sincegood football teams drew morefans and more money than ordi¬nary ones, it was only a questionof time before the colleges weredoing all they could to attract thebest football players alive.Meanwhile, universities whichhad neglected to build memorialstadiums gazed in wonder at foot¬ball gate-receipts and started theirown construction at the firstthaw. Ever since, colleges havenot attempted to stop attractinggood players. Instead, they havetried to find rationalizationswhich would make such a policygibe with a philosophy of educa¬tion.With potential income running over a million dollars a year fora good team, competition has beenrough. Some schools, such asNYU and Fordham, which triedand failed to compete at a reason¬able profit, have dropped footballaltogether. Others, such as NotreDame, succeeded at the cost ofdeveloping a Hamlet’s MotherComplex. Invariably, they protesttoo much; ask an innocent ques¬tion about the way a Notre Damefullback runs and you are toldimmediately what a whiz he is atorganic chemistry.Virtually every college current¬ly involved in football is a mem¬ber of a sprawling supervisoryorganization called the NationalCollegiate Athletic Association,which successfully worked • outthe limited television contractthat is in operation but has beenless successful in policing its re¬cruiting “sanity code.” Actually,the teams in the NCAA fall intomore specific categories and eachhas been somewhat different inits reaction to the morality wTave.The Ivy League: These eightwealthy Eastern universities,aloof and proud because most oftheir football players are literate,this year banded into a formalleague after 50 years of consistentbut informal competition. Yale,beaten only by Colgate, a non¬league member, won the cham¬pionship rather handily. All theIvies have agreed to prohibit ath¬letic scholarships and in practicegood athletes get only a slightlydisproportionate number of theiracademic grants.Harvard, Princeton and the restdo not have to make lavish offers.Bright high school athletes sel¬dom miss the significance of anIvy League diploma, and the pointis stressed by many alumni whooffer post-graduate jobs as lure.The caliber of football is only fair,but the Ivies are a happy, stuffyworld unto themselves.The Big Ten: Over the last 20years, this group of large Mid¬western colleges has played thebest football in the country. Con¬cerned about recruiting getting sofar out of hand that two decades "Is this the sport for me?"of sharp practice might come tolight, the Big Ten investigated it¬self for most of this year. InOctober the investigating commit¬tee reported a series of com¬plaints:1. The coaches, whose jobs de¬pend on winning, constantlyevaded the rules on recruiting andfinancial aid to athletes. But, thecommittee conceded, the ruleswere not as clear as they shouldbe. Aid, for example, is to be basedon need and, citing “need,” Mich¬igan was given $560 a year forpocket money out of a scholar¬ship fund to a star end who was a“C-minus” student.2. One school spent $13,600 toentertain football prospects lastyear. This year at least 500 pros¬pective student athletes will visiteach Big Ten school at the school’sexpense.3. “Make-work” jobs have in¬creased four-fold in 10 years—andthere were quite a few around 10years ago.4. Despite a rule that athleticdepartments must file statementson financial aid to athletes, onecollege had no statement in thefile for the past five years.Good Big Ten athletes have got¬ten room, board, books, tuition,tickets and subsistence. The re¬port is an admirable document,but star athletes will continue toreceive room, board, etc.The South and Southwest:Whether these teams are groupedin leagues is meaningless becausetheir league rules are so loose.Traditionally, anything the NCAAcan’t prove goes.Notre Dame: This school’s poor¬est season since 1933 was only aterrible accident. Notre Dame willde-emphasize its football aboutthe same time the New YorkYankees decide to de-emphasizebaseball. Athletes at Notre Dame must maintain a 77 average, butgetting first crack at nearly everyRoman Catholic high school in thecountry, Notre Dame has littletrouble finding recruits who arebright as well as strong.The Pacific Coast Conference:Here morality hit home hardest.For a while, in fact, GovernorGoodwin Knight was urging theCalifornia schools to form theirown private league. Practices sim¬ilar to those of the Big Ten flour¬ished here, but somewhat moreopenly and somewhat less smooth¬ly. Colleges swiped athletes fromone another, jealousies grewfierce and last year the schoolseagerly began to blow whistles oneach other. As a result, Victor O.Schmidt, commissioner of theconference and an ambitious, seri¬ous lawyer, found himself hip-deep in evidence embarrassing toeverybody.When Schmidt tried to investi¬gate the athletic program ofU.C.L.A. and Washington at firsthand, the two colleges refused tohold still. He then banned U.C.L.A.from the Rose Bowl for threeyears and Washington for two,moves that could cost each uni¬versity almost $100,000. When heturned on California and SouthernCalifornia, both admitted over-active recruiting. He fined Cali¬fornia $25,000 and banned U.S.C.from the Rose Bowl for threeyears, in addition to fining thatschool $10,000.Already there is talk in coastathletic circles that Schmidtwants to become a governor.“He’ll get tired of playing cop,”a friend from U.S.C. has been tell¬ing me bitterly.More than 25 years ago, JohnKieran proposed a solution to col¬lege football’s numerous emphasisproblems. “Stop charging admis¬sion,” Kieran urged. It is signifi¬cant that in the last 25 years bothprices and emphasis have beenstepped up.6DR. JOHN E. JACOBS joined General Elec¬tric full time in 1950, after receiving hiaB.S. in electrical engineering in ’47, hisM.S. in ’48, and his Ph.D. in '50, all atNorthwestern Univ. He served in the Navyin World W’ar II, and worked part timeat General Electric while in college.The Advent of the IdevilologyThis article by Steve Magnus, first year student in thecollege, is the first of a projected series of creative writingto be published in the Maroon. This and all subsequent arti¬cles are subject to editing by the Maroon, but all rewritingwill be done by the author.Authors with work they wish to submit for this seriesshould contact the editor-in-chief, Maroon office, 3rd floor,Ida Noyes hall, Ext. 3265.What had started out as an inane and affectedly relaxed get together hadrun out of main topics. The people gathered in the apartment glanced about thewalls trying to find a provocative painting."Van Gogh re-intensifies that which he is unsure of," spoke a soft, sonorousattrib- ~don’t deceive us, it’s our fault the room might contain. Theyvoice. Another voiceuted this to the buffer andvague quality of the thicklines in Van Gogh’s works. Ahigh-pitched inquisitive voicepiped, “Perhaps Van Gogheven made a painting of suchan intense nature that it wasmore lines than content.”Suddenly a turgid voiceblurted, “All damn artists lielike rats and make us wastetime trying to explain thingsthey never bothered to figureout.” The room suddenly stir¬red. An indignant womanspoke softly, but incisively,“Maybe artists don’t figureout meanings, but to so desireto paint is a wonderful thing initself, even if they don’t haveanything in particular to say.”“Then they’ve got no businesstrying to deceive us into think¬ing that they do.” “But they if we believe that they didhave something definite tosay.” “They make us think wedo merely by painting,” saidthe brutal, turgid voice. “Butif the artists don’t intention¬ally deceive us why blamethem?” “Who cares if theydon’t intend to? It’s the re¬sult that counts.”A discussion of pragmatism,of ethics, of motives, of endsand means, supply and de¬mand, production and con¬sumption, the artist and thepublic—all of this could haveresulted. Yet no sooner hadthe people in that little roomopened a door that would leadto an endless philosophic ques¬tion, they, rather than enter,just seemed to stand in thehallway and marvel over whatWhat young people are doing at GeneralYoung engineerpioneers new waysto use x-rayA now x-ray inspection system which intensi¬fies an x-ray image more than 10.000 times inbrightness and transmits it to a conventionalTV screen has been developed recently byGeneral Electric. When perfected, it may en¬able medical specialists to perform “long-dis¬tance” diagnosis on patients in remote areas.One of the principal men who developed x-raytelevision — called TVX for short — is Dr. JohnE. Jacobs, Manager of the Advanced Develop¬ment Laboratory of General Electric’s X-RayDepartment in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.Jacobs’ Work Is Important, ResponsibleAs an electronics specialist, Dr. Jacobs’ workin the past has been devoted to the study ofphotoconductors—substances whose propertieschange under the influence of radiation — andthe use of x-ray in industrial inspection. Thisin turn led to his development of the x-ray-sensitive camera tube used in TVX.His present administrative duties with theAdvanced Development Lab allow him moretime for teaching others what he has learned.He now teaches the second-year graduate courseat Northwestern in vacuum-tube networks, andhas recently been named McKay Visiting Pro¬fessor for 1957 by the University of Californiaat Berkeley, where he will give a two-w'eekseries of lectures on photoconduction.27,000 College Graduates at General ElectricSince his youth, when he was a licensed radio“ham,” John Jacobs has been devoted to thestudy of electricity and electronics. Like eachof our 27,000 college graduates, he is beinggiven the chance to grow and realize his fullpotential. For General Electric has long be¬lieved this: when fresh young minds are giventhe freedom to develop, everybody benefits —the individual, the Company, and the country.Educational Relations, General ElectricCompany, Schenectady 5, New York Electric"Progress Is Our Most Important Productmcdai uT. cI cPTEGENERAL m ELECTRIC did not enter, to become ('in¬fo roiled in the philosophicwars, they stood outsidewatching.The people gathered in theapartment did not enter therealm that only the mostthick-skinned and daringwould enter, as gladiators inthe arena being goaded andjeered at by spectators on theperiphery. Even though theymay have seen this realm nsone in which great mindsgathered on clouds and lazilyground out the ideas innatelyplanted in their systems. Theyprobably had no conception ofthe arena where writhing fig¬ures stuggled under a hot sun,dredging their deepest convic¬tions from the core of theirbeings.The man with the turgidvoice explained why he didn’tmake his deep-seated opinionsinto an ideology. “Idevilol¬ogy,” he said, “That’s t heword. Trying to open theelamp-shut minds of man¬kind. No thanks, let othersfind themselves without myhelp. “Soon the party endedwith, “I must re-read James,”“More Hegel,” “Don’t forgotBergson.” As each person leftthrough the door of the apart¬ment, each one of them felt alittle flickering fcGling ethe¬real, yet almost as thoughthey could be walking out ona sun-scorched arena, feelingempty, somewhat strange, andfar less eager than afraid. ,AUTO INSURANCETERM INSURANCEPhone or WriteI Joseph H. Aaron, '27|l35 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-10601The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236Valentine Special1 _ 8x10 —$6.956 proofsphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th StreetJan. 11, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Coming events on quadranglesFriday 11 January*'TK lecture series, “Life and the spirit,"' Mxtb ot series through Tuesday 29Yin Paul Tillich, German theologian,Harvard, 11:30 am, Mandel, free.< ercle Francaise, 4 pm, Ida Noyeslecture, “East Europe revolt,” Harry' Braverman, editor American Socialist,public affairs forum, 8 pm, Midland■hotel. 172 W. Adams, 50 cents.11,11,,) fireside, “Jews in America; somewavs of self discovery.” Prof. Danielj Boorstin, 8:30 pm, Hillel house, 5715Woodlawn (Sabbath service 7:45).I’niversity concert, Pine Arts quartet,playing Beethoven and Bartok, 8:30pm, Mandel hall, $1.50.I"|- Tonight at 8:30. “The marriageproposal,” by Chekhov, “The highschool,” from Sholom Alelehem, “Allmen's troubles come In bed,*' by UC’erMartha Silverman. 8:30 pm, Reynoldsclub theatre, 75 cents advance or $1at door.World University service, 9 pm, IdaNoyes.Saturday 12 JanuaryVarsity track, UC track clvib Chicago-land open meet, 2 and 7 pm Fieldhouse.fcKP square dance, all welcome, folkdancing, singing. Hardy Freeman,caller. 8 pm, Ida Noyes, 25 cents.Science fiction club, 8 pm. Ida Noyes.FT—Tonight at 8:30, "Marriage pro¬posal” Chekhov, "High school” Alei-chrm, “All men’s troubles come Inbed” Silverman, 8:30 pm, Reynoldsclub theater, 75 cents.Open bouse, dancing band, 9 pm, 5747University.Sunday 13 JanuaryEpiscopal communion, weekly. 8:30 am.Bond chapel, (breakfast afterwards,35 cents).University Christian religious service,"A compact with the future.” DeanThompson. 11 am. Rockefeller chapel.(Children up to age five can be leftaf nursery In Chapel house, 5810Woodlawn, 10:45 am till end of serv¬ice every week.)Orientation board, 3 pm, Ida NoyesCanterbury weekly supper, 6 pm, 5540Woodlawn, 50 cents.Baptist fellowship weekly supper, “Sexethics,” Mrs. W. A. Pitcher. 6 pm,Hyde Park Baptist church, 50 cents.Quaker weekly supper-discussion, allwelcome, supper 6 pm, discussion 7j>m, 5817 Woodlawn.Methodist lecture series “Critics of re¬ligion,” first, “The critic as philos¬opher: Bertrand Russell,” Paul ArthurSchlipp, philosophy prof Northwest¬ern u, every other week 8 pm. Chapelhouse.Bond chapel concert, Bond choir andCollegium Muslcum, Bach choralpreludes and sonata for flue andharpsichord in E flat major, “O Mag¬num Mysterlum” motet and parodybv Thomas Vittoria, "Cantate Do¬mino." Heinrich Sehuetz, admissiononly by free ticket from Swift 101,8 30 pm. Bond.xr—Tonight at 8:30, Ibsen’s “I,ovecomedy,” dramatic reading, 8:30 pm,Reynolds club, $1.Monday 14 JanuaryLecture, “Life and the spirit,” visitingprof Paul Tillich. 11:30 am. Mandel.Student Government reception for DeanStrozier, 4 pm, Ida Noyes.Lecture - debate, “Can capitalism assurecontinued prosperity for US?" Prof.Milton Friedman, Harry Braverman, co-editor American Socialist, 4 pm,Soc Science 122.Botany and Zoology clubs, “Dutch elmdisease,” 4:30 pm. Botany 106.Film: “Captain’s Paradise,” 7 and 9 pm,Int house east lounge, 45 cents.Camera club, 7:30 pm. Eckhart 202.Questioning and discussion, Dean Stro¬zier, “Civil Liberties at UC," paneland questions from floor, Leagvie forcivil liberties, time on posters incor¬rect, actual time 8 pm, Soc Scl 201.Lecture, "Central problem in New Tes¬tament study, prof Robert M. Grant,8 pm, Swift commons.Lecture, “Art and the spiritual situa¬tion,” aPul Tillich, visiting prof, firstof 3 lectres on condition of modernman exhibit, 8:15 pm, Breasted hall.Tuesday 15 JanuaryLecture, “Life and the spirit,” visitingprof. Paul Tillich, 11:30 am, Mandel.MAROON staff meeting, 3:30 pm, IdaNoyes.Concert band rehearsal, full ensemble,7:30 pm, Mandel.Social research society forum, “The di¬lemma between teaching and researchIn sociology,” Clyde Hart, PhilipHouser, Everett Hughes, Peter Rossi,8 pm, Soc Scl 201.Jazz club concert, jam session 8 pm,Ida Noyes.Canterbury weekly lecture, “Work ofthe church in prisons,” Rev. JamesoJnes Jr., chaplain county Jail, foun¬der St. Leonard’s house, 8 pm, 5540Woodlawn. /FTF wives, “Heritage and War andPeace,” Kermit Eby. 2nd of 3 lectures,8 pm, 5757 Wood wain.Alpha Phi Omega, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Wednesday 16 JanuaryFTF worship service, Paul Tillich,preacher, 11:30 am. Bond chapel.Intervarsity Christian fellowship, week¬ly luncheon discussion, 12:30 pm, IdaNoyes.Varsity wrestling meet, UC vs. NavyPier, 3:30 pm, Bartlett.Evensong, weekly. Canterbury associa¬tion, 5:05 pm. Bond.Glee club rehearsal, weekly, 7 pm, IdaNoyes.NAACP special meeting, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes.Orchestra comediae-musicalis rehearsal,7:30, Ida Noyes.Music of Japan lecture, “Itinerant min¬strels in Japan,” Eta Harich-Schnei-der, musicologist. 8:15 pm. Soc Scl122 (reception afterwards Goodspeedhall),Thursday 17 JanuaryHoly communion, weekly, Canterburyclub, 7:30 am. Bond chapel.Lecture, “Life and the spirit," visitingprof. Paul Tillich, 11:30 am. Mandel.Concert band rehearsal, full ensemble,7:30 m, Mandel hall.Student union meeting, 7 pm, IdaNoyes.Festival of Arts meeting, 7:30 pm,IdaNoyes.Lecture, “Historians and history inBritain today,” Charles I. Mowat,Graduate history club, all invited, 8pm, Int house room A.SU dance committee, planning meeting,8 pm, Ida Noyes.Japanese music series, “Music in Budd¬hism,” visiting prof Eta Harlch,Schneider, 8:15 pm, Soc Sci 122.Friday 18 JanuaryLecture. “Life and the spirit,” visitingprof. Paul Tillich, 11:30 am, Mandel. University concert, Eudice Shapiro, vio¬lin, 8:30 pm, Mandel hall, $1:50.Night of Sin, gambling, auction, re¬freshments, Student Union, 8:30-11pm. Ida Noyes, 50 cents.UT—Tonight at 8:30, "Fergus,” RuthHershberger, “Dinner Bridge” RingLardner, “This Property is Con¬demned” Tennessee Williams, 8:30pm, Reynolds club theater.Saturday 18 JanuaryVarsity exercise, gymnastic 1 pm, track2 pm, wrestling 3:30 pm, basketball8 pm. aBrtlett and field house.Folk concert, Rosalie Wax. Young so¬cialist league. 8:30 pm. Soc Sci 122,25 cents (social with refreshments at1543 e. 50, 10 pm).UT—Tonight at 8:30, same as Friday,8:30 pm, Reynolds club, $1.Sunday 20 JanuaryUniversity religious service (mainlyChristian), weekly, New Testament,prof Marcus K Barth, 11 am, Rocke¬feller chapel.Foster open house, everyone welcome,2-5 pm, Foster hall.UT—Tonight at 8:30, “The CocktailParty,” T. S. Eliot dramatic reading,8:30 pm, Reynolds club, 75 cents ad¬vance, $1 door.Virus sex'investigatedInvestigations which may helpreveal how a tiny virus particleenters a living cell and then con¬verts that cell to a factor for pro¬ducing swarms of new virus par¬ticles will be continued at the UCunder a grant of $82,586 from theNational Foundation for Infan¬tile Paralysis.The March of Dimes-supportedproject will also study the chem¬ical make-up of the HeLa cellused for cultivating polio viruses,according to Earl A. Evans, pro¬fessor and chairman of the de¬partment of biochemistry at theUniversity, who is directing theresearch. HeLa cells are derivedfrom human tissue and are wide¬ly used for the study of viruses.The grant of $82,586 to continuethe investigation for the currentyear was announced yesterday byUC chancellor, Lawrence A.Kimpton and Basil O'Connor,president of the National Foun¬dation.Mr. Evans’ co-workers on theresearch project are ProfessorLloyd M. Kozloff and Ray Kop-pelman, Roy P. Mackal, HowardGoldfine, James F. O'Donnell,and Peter Dukes.we want you...to hove the ’‘FACTS ... aboutvitamins, minerals and NutriliteFood Supplement." This valuableinformation is available to you inconvenient booklet form. You mayread it without obligation.Phone \ow ForYour Free Copt/NORMAN REGLIN6040 South InglesideFA 4-2492 Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. 3-2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — .9 o.tu. - 11 p.m.Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganSTUDENTRATE60‘Every day EXCEPTSaturday, uponpresentation ofyour studentI. D. card TheDisc1367 E. 57th St.•RECORDOF THE WEEKTreasury ofModern PoetsW. B. Yeots, T. S. Eliot,Wallace Stevens and othersRead by the AuthorsTwo 12” Records $9.58NEW SPRING BOOKSAS A SPECKLED BIRD, by John,on $3.50An absorbing story of corruption in a Midwestern university.THE GUARDIANS, by Stewart (paper-bound) $1.35A witty novel of Oxford intrigue, by the author also known as Michael Innes.THE PHILADELPHIAN, by Powell .. $3.95Family saga, written by a kindly Marquand, with plenty of crises throughfour generations.THE PROVING FLIGHT, by Beaty $3.75Drama in the sky, with the first flight of a new turbo-jet plane and the peopleinvolved in it.University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue Schein is elected fellow;Leland Smith gets awardLeland C. Smith, UC instructorin the department of music, hasbeen granted a $1000 award bythe William and Noma Copleyfoundation for achievements inthe field of music.A member of the UC facultysince 1952, Smith has composed asymphony and numerous worksfor small instrumental groups in¬cluding an opera, "Santa Claus,’*from a play by E. E. Cummings,Marcel Schein, professor ofphysics at the University of Chi¬cago, has been elected a Fellow ofthe New York Academy of Sci¬ences.Schein was honored inrecognition of his work in the in¬vestigation of cosmic rays, thehigh energy particles which orig¬inate in outer space.Leland SmithUC medical school ratedfifteenth best in countryUC has the fifteenth best medical school in the country mthe opinion of Medical Economics magazine. The rating wasmade by Greer Williams in a copyrighted article in the De¬cember issue.Williams said: “In my own personal opinion, the last namedschool (i.e., Chicago) belongs up near the top. But I can’tmake the statistics see eye to •eye with me.”The evaluation was made onthe following factors: number ofstudent applications, percentageof graduates passing state boards,number of graduates in privatepractice, number of graduatescertified specialists, number toproduce medical school deans,number to produce medical school teachers, number of members ofthe AMA house of delegates.The fourteen schools precedingChicago are (in order): Harvard,Pennsylvania. Columbia, Mich¬igan. Johns Hopkins, Northwest¬ern, New York University, Wash¬ington (St. Louis), Minnesota,Yale, Jefferson, Tulane, Cornell,and Colorado. .University of ChicagoMASTER AND PH.D. GRADUATESPOSITIONS AVAILABLE INTHE INSTITUTE FORAIR WEAPONS RESEARCHinMATHEMATICSPHYSICSCHEMISTRYAERONAUTICSELECTRONICas analytically applied to the scientific evaluation of aerialcombat systems.The Institute for Air Weapons Research is engaged in thestudy of aerial combat systems for the Air Research andDevelopment Command United States Air Force.The Institute is interested in people with scientific back¬grounds together with specialized knowledge in the.fieldsof applied mathematics, mathematical probability, statis¬tics, physics, or the engineering sciences.Excellent opportunities to continue formal education andfor advancement.Salaries are commensurate with individual backgroundand aptitude.Write to:INSTITUTE FORAIR WEAPONS RESEARCHUniversity of ChicagoMuseum of Science & Industry57th and Lake Shore DriveChicago 37, Illinois8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. II, 1957FIRST TIMEIN CHICAGOJoEGLAZERSingsSONGSOFFREEDOMMANDEL HALLSATURDAY, FEB. 28:30 P.M.General Admission $1Reserved Seats $1.50SPONSORS:Student Governmentand American CivilLiberties Unionexcept whenhe sang atthe NationalDemocraticConvention Chicago MaroonCLASSIFIED ADSStudent rate 5c per word Others 10c per word Phone: Ml 3-0800 Ext. 3265ServicesMathematics. Tutoring and instructionin the standard courses Tor individualor group. Loop or south side. Specialarrangements for group formed byyourself. Soglin and Associates. 28 e.Jackson. WE 9-2127. Female university employee and stu¬dent needs IV2 or 2»/2 room apt. nearcampus. Will pay reasonable rent. Hasexcellent references. Call MI 3-0800,Ext. 2602 days, AT 4480, Apt. 429 eve¬nings. Free room—private—and board in ex¬change for baby sitting four nights aWeek. No work involved. For student,working girl, or teacher. Near Univer¬sity. DO 3-3730. Cashmeres; 36-40, V-M 3 speed automatic changer; perfect condition- vercheap. After 6 pm. PL 2-2069French tutoring, coaching and trans¬lations. Native teacher. Reasonable. NO7-6162. Two capable girls to work full time forpublic affairs organization near Uni¬versity of Chicago. Jobs open: secretaryto executive director; secretary to as¬sistant director. Good salary. Call MU4-7430 between 9 am and 5 pm. For saleCarmen’s Used Furniture store. Movingand light hauling. 13oo e. oath, mu 1-9003. MU 4-8843.Moving—2 students with convertedambulance. Lowest rates. BU 8-6535,RA 6-4145. Secretarial position available. Location;Midway. $300 per month. 35 hour week.For information, call Mrs. Abram, HY3-0533. Used furniture—desks $3 up; lamps $1up; chairs $2 up; end tables $1 up;dressers, bookcases, couches, etc., atvery low prices. M&F Furniture Co.,6140 Cottage Grove. Open dally 9 to6 pm. Stay-at-home and listen to fine ht-imusic on your very own system. If yoidon’t have a system, call Audio Consultants, c/o Jean Kwon, Foster 16 f0student discount. Sorry, no homeavailable.LostExperienced typist desires essays, termpapers, etc., to type in my home. Willpick up and deliver. Nominal fee. CallRE 4-8019 after 6 pm. Ride wanted. 54th and Cornell to 58thand Ellis, Mon. thru Frl. between 8 and8:30 am. Call ext. 3323 days or NO 7-6957 evenings. 475 uncalled suits, topcoats, tuxedos,$17.50 up; famous brands; sizes 35 *to50; oen daily, 9 am to 7 pm. AbbottClothing Company, 4086 N. Broadway,Corner Belle Plaine. Black Slieaffer fountain pen lost probably in Cobb hall last week Call iniHouse 422.Please help uS find black, fluffy pupjvwith monkey face. Lost Monday. Cottage Grove near 59th. Reward. PL 2-4395Will translate documents in French orsimple German. Quick service; reason¬able rates. Call ext. 3323 days or NO7-6957 evenings. Math student want job on or nearcampus. Typing, filing, and calculatingexperience. Can work 20-25 hrs. weeklyin afternoons. Anything reasonable con¬sidered. Contact Shirlee Ross, HY 3-8474. Hold reception for AdamsPersonals Mature graduate student desires roomin exchange for baby slitting evenings.Address Box 201 c/o the MAROON.Xo give away: large male cat, house-broken, affectionate. Call DO 3-1285. For rentQ: Have reserved a berth in the SheenaFan Club for you as an associate mem¬ber. Promote the ideals of clean livingin the jungle — mosquitoes notwith¬standing. Liana. 2 furnished 2-room apartments. Con¬venient to campus. Int. House, IC.Phone BU 8-9424. Greenfield.Wanted Room for student. $7 a week. DO 3-6737.5295 s. KenwoodTyping at home wanted. A. Morrison,IN 8-3626. Desirable furnished single and doublestudio rooms. Community kitchen.Near UC. FA 4-4442. Dr. and Mrs. James Luthera faretvell reception in theAdams, formerly professor oftheological faculty, assumes hisnew duties as Professor of Chris¬tian ethics at Harvard the endof this month.Those who attend the receptionand contribute one dollar will re¬ceive a book of selected writingsby Adams.Fifteen organizations are spon¬soring the farewell for Adams,who is at present a member of theadvisory board of the American Adams will be feted Sunday aQuadrangle club at 3:30 pmreligious ethics in the federate!Civil Liberties union, Chicago; ;member of the national advisor;council, Protestants and othe:Americans united for the separation of Church and State; edito:of the Phoenix series of volumeon theology and social ethics published by University press, coeditor, Journal of Religion, published by UC, and associate editor, Faith and Freedom.LIGHTING A LUCKY? You might rub two sticks together—but it’ll take you hours to see the light. You mightuse ten-dollar bills—if you’ve got money to burn. Or youmight insist on matches—in which case you’ll be aLighter Slighter! Any way you light it, a Lucky tastes outof this world. It’s all cigarette . . . nothing but fine, mild,good-tasting tobacco that’s TOASTED tor taste evenbetter. Try a Lucky right now. You’ll say it’s the best¬tasting cigarette you ever smoked!DON’T JUST STAND THERE ..tSTICKLE! MAKE *25WHAT IS A NORSEMAN WHOMISSED THE BOAT!•OR CUD0IHFC.ST. LOUIS U. Hiking Viking Luckies Sticklers are simple riddleswith two-word rhyming an¬swers. Both words must havethe same number of syllables.(No drawings, please!) We’llshell out $25 for all we use—and for hundreds that neversee print. So send stacks of’em with your name, address,college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, MountVernon, N. Y.Taste Better“IT’S TOASTED” TO TASTE BETTER . . . CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!WHAT IS WIND FROM ARAGWEED PATCH!HAROLD FISCHBECK.U. OF COLORADO Sneeze Breeze WHAT IS A CRAZY KILT!RUDOLPH KAGERER.PURDUE Mad Plaid WHAT IS A MAN WHOSTEALS GLASSWARE!JIM MAYNARD.IOWA STATE COLLEGE Pitcher Snitcher WHAT IS A NEW ENGLANDLOVER BOY!Maine SwainTONI RORB.MICHIGAN STATE©A. T. Co. product of %//u, J&rWu&cvn AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTESJan. 11, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9Students experiment in UT productionsTonight at 8:30, University Theatre’s annual experiment in student-directed drama, be¬gins tonight with a comedy by Anton Chekhov, an adaptation from the writings of SholomAleichem, and an original play by UC student Martha Silverman. The program will beginat the time indicated, in the little theater atop the Reynolds club. Tomorrow will be thesecond and last production of the three plays, and a single concert reading of Love’s Com¬edy, by Henrik Ibsen, will be presented Sunday.Tickets will be 75 cents in —-—:—— : ———. , <C1 . ., . school with a restrictive “quota work of Ibsen,advance and <>1 at me door, system.” The principle parts are Zavis says of the play, "It is aThe Marriage Proposal, by Aaron Katz, played by Herbert tragicomedy, which contrastsChekhov will be first on tonight's FriedmarU Hannah Katz, played two different conceptions of mor-’ ’ k by Nancy Butkin; and Moishe, ality: that of the artist with thatprogram. It is concerned with a played by Morton Friedman. of society . . . concretised in theyoung man’s proposal to a young The single performance of specific problem of love and mar-woman, and complicated by their Love’s Comedy on Sunday will riage—or, for Ibsen, love versusmutual tendency to get so in- also be the first performance of marriage.’'volved in arguments that they that play one of Ihsen's earliest, The charaeters for this play in-, ,, , . . in the United States. William Za- elude Falk, played by Zavis; Svan-forget the proposal. The central vis is directing a concert reading, hild, played by Linda Libera;characters are Chuhukov, played in whjch the characters read their Guldstad, played by George Star-by Tom Lass well; Lumov, played parts and yet move about the buck; Strawman, played by Mar-by Roy Wander; and Natalya, stage, and make entrances and vin Phillips; and Miss Jay, playedplayed by Lydia Swenton. Direc- exits> by Natalie Sue Crohn,tor is Carol Horning, a student in Zavis, a student in the art de- Marvin Phillips, permanent di*the department of history, who partment, has been a member of rector of University Theatre,has been a member of Lniversity University Theatre for six years, views the entire series of TonightIIe collaborated in adapting the at 8:30 performances as “an op-ho placed a leadin role in the piay from the Harford transla- portunity for the student diree-j11®!01* UT production, The tion with Thor Gabrielsen, a visit- tors to make their own innova-PeS!l thf ^ Sf t d in2 instructor in the department tions, insights, and mistakes, andht nff n°l oirecieu lor of Germanic languages and litera- as an opportunity to performthe lheatie before. ture, who teaches a course in original and unfamiliar works.”Next will be the original playAll Men’s Troubles Come in Bed.Martha Silverman, a student inthe college, will direct her owndrama, which she adapted from ashort story she had written. Shedescribes the play as the “conflictsand artificial resolutions amongthree friends—a couple and anextra man,” and notes that “theentire action takes place on abed.” The three friends are Alan,played by Willard Moody; Greta,played by Alice Bronstein, andGordie, played by Martin Roth.Following an intermission, thefinal play tonight will be TheHigh School, adapted by ArnoldPerl from Sholom Aleichem, prob¬ably the foremost writer of Jew¬ish folklore. It is one of a num¬ber of plays from a full-lengthevening of plays produced underthe name The World of SholomAleichem, which enjoyed a longoff-Broadway run. The High UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE1144 E. 55th DO 2-9572Hcodquorters for Sport and! Work WeorComplete Comp OutfittersLUGGAGE - TRUNKSHooded Parka JacketsABOVE: Wayne Caudill, Roger Brues, and Basil Gillitis playwith an oversized tinkertoy on the UT premises during production<>f Tonight at 8:30. LOWER: Discussing the weather or somethingare Martin Rotli, Willard Moody, and Alice Bronstein, the cast ofAll Men’s Troubles Come In Bed. inexpensive reeereaiion atReynolds Club Billiard RoomSNOOKER —BILLIARDS—POCKET POOLOpen from 9 am - 10 pmLadies invited!School is about a middle classJewish family in Czarist Russiatrying to get their boy into a highv o’ m'tr vw** wwwBORDONE> Movers and Light Hauling!VI 6-9832 <<< afie ejfffum PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433i SQUAREP DANCEFolk Dancing andSingingJanuary 12, 8:00 p.m.Ida Noyes Hall — 25cupin '57Round Trip viaSteamship $9f)f}fDEQUENT SAILINGS UWWTourist Round Trip Air*46Q80lewtr roles for groups on chartersand for 17-day excursion*Choice of Over 100STUDENT TOURSTRAVEL STUDY TOURSUniversity Travel Co., official / jbonded agents for all lines, has ■rendered efficient travel serviceon a business basis since 1926.See your local travel agent forIders and details or write «»• CALYPSOSZBTOPEN HOUSESaturday, January 19»*■■■■■a■■■■■k. TERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best”SPECIAL OFEERWITH THIS COUPON25c Discount on any Pizzaeaten here ... or deliveredSmall 1.00 LargeMedium 1.45 Giant 1.952.95FREE DELIVERY FORU. OF C. STUDENTS15131 E. G3r«i III 3-1015 NO PRICEINCREASE YETYou can still buy at*21,9003 and 4 bedroom split-levelswith 2 ceramic baths and kitchen.Gas heat, basements.inMARYNOOKWONDERFULFINANCING30-year FHA and VAwith $1,900 down to vetsBEST LOCATIONIN CHICAGONear 1C — Expressway — LakeModel home . . . 8571 WoodlawnBA 1-2973HO • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 11, 1957Culture Vulturer The Culture Vulture, still a benign buzzard with an omnivorous interest in things musical, dramatic, artistic, and neither one nor t’other but close to thebroad category of culture, continues to tell Maroon readers of such things as fell prey to his sweeping glance.On Campus . . .. Art Exhibit, C ondition ofModem Man*The Condition of ModernMan,” exhibit of contemporaryart sponsored jointly by the Ren¬aissance society and the Inter¬church council, may be seen atGoodspeed gallery until Febru¬ary 2.See the Vulture’s art-reviewingcohorts columns for a UC art stu¬dent’s view of the exhibit. Youcan drop in to make your ownjudgment on weekdays from 9 to5. or Saturday afternoons. Lec¬tures in conjunction with theshow will be given in Breastedhall at 8:15 on three evenings thismonth. January 14. Paul Tillich,visiting professor from Harvard,will speak on “Art and the spirit¬ual situation,” on January 22there will be a discussion of theexhibit by four faculty members,and on January 28, John Simonwill speak on “Two view’s of man:medieval and modern.”Tonight at 8:30‘Tonight at 8:30,” annual Uni¬versity Theatre production ex¬plored by the Maroon’s bird Inperson (if this Pogoish possibilitycan be) last week, opens tonight(at 8:30!). Tonight and tomorrowChekhov’s classic one-act comedy ‘The Marriage Proposal,” “TheHigh School,” by Sholem Aleich-em, and Martha Silverman’s orig¬inal, “All Men’s Troubles Comein Bed” will brave the critical andinterested glances of what UTdirector Marvin Phillips predictswill be a capacity audience. Sun¬day evening Ibsen’s early play,Love’s Comedy will be presentedfor the first time in this country.All three performances will be inUT’s own theater on the thirdfloor of the Reynold’s club. Con¬ventional staging will be em¬ployed this week, but next week¬end you might expect to see some¬thing different in productionmethods. Admission. $L at thedoor, 75 cents in advance at Rey¬nolds club desk.University ConcertsTonight (at 8:30) the Fine Artsquartet will present the first pro¬gram during the winter quarteron University concert series. Theprogram will include Bartok’sFifth Quartet, the BeethovenOpus 18, and an as yet unan¬nounced work by a contemporarycomposer. The Fine Arts quartethas established its own traditionof presenting contemporaryworks for string quartet, and ina sense offers a comparison be¬tween old and accepted works^iiniiiiiiimuiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiuiiiuiiiiiiiiiiittimttiiiitiiiii!iniiittimmiittt!tiiiutiiiii!iiti!iiimiiiti!iiniiiiuiiitimii^International House Movies| Monday evenings, 7:00 Jk 9:00 p.m. — East Lounge |Monday, January 14 — 45c — Captain's Paradise (English)slllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimillllllllllllllllllf?EARL ROBINSON Sings jat 8th Annual Festival of Nationalities 'Saturday. January 12 — 8:15 P.M. £MILDA THEATRE — 3140 S. Hoisted St.Admission $1.25Auspices: Midwest Committee for Protection of Foreign Bom and those with new and startlingpotentialities. People without se¬ries tickets can be admitted for$1.50. Tickets may be purchasedat the University concert office,located in the music building, inadvance.MadrigalThe Madrigal singers, directedby Mathew Zuckerbraun, meet inIda Noyes at 7:30 each Tuesday.The group, which sang for sev¬eral different affairs during theholiday season, has openings fora few female voices.Downtown . . .Chicago symphonyChicago symphony orchestraleft the cavernous Medinah tem¬ple last week to return to themore plush but still widely yawn¬ing cavity of the Civic Operahouse on Wacker drive. There’sstill no word on a more perma¬nent home for the orchestra,which is staying out of its tradi¬tional auditorium, Orchestra hallon Michigan avenue, until dangerof the walls falling down is over.The programs to be presented atthe Wacker drive location seemsound, and guest conductors GarlBohm and Bruno Walter bothshould provide a change frompermanent conductor Fritz Rein¬er, relaxing for a spell, ratherthan a step down.Programs coming up: This aft¬ernoon at 2 pm: Karl Bohm, di¬rector, Frances Yeend, soprano.Mozart’s Symphony No. 40, Threefragments from Berg’s “Wozzek.”and Strauss’s tone poem, “EinHeldenleben” are scheduled.Tuesday, concertmaster JohnWeicher will direct a children’sconcert at 2 p.m. Theme will be“Nature in Music,” and the or¬chestra will play various andMODEL CAMERAHyde Park's most completephoto and hobby shopExport modelsNSA Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 sundry fragments, including twomovements from Hayden’s trum¬pet concerto.Next Thursday at 8:15 and Fri¬day at 2 pm, octogenarian BrunoWalter will direct a formidableorchestral program including Bee¬thoven’s “Coriolanus” overtureand his Fourth Symphony, aswell as Mahler’s First Symphony,At the Opera house, as at Or¬chestra hall, students will be ad¬mitted to the gallery for 65 centsat all afternoon concerts. Undera recent arrangement, reservedseats for all Chicago symphonyconcerts may be purchased at theStudent Service Center, located inReynolds club basement.Chicago Chamber orchestraNext Wednesday Dieter Koberwill direct his Chicago chamberorchestra in a concert of contem¬porary and American music inthe Art Institute’s Main Gallery.Concert will begin at 7 pm, justbefore the official opening of theInstitute’s exhibit of Americanworks shown this summer at anexhibit of paintings from theworld over in Venice. The Cham¬ber orchestra will play the worldpremiere of “Concerto for StringOrchestra” by the contemporaryAmerican, John La Montaine.Also on the program will be "FivePieces” by Hindemith and Ar¬thur Foote’s “Suite in F.”Art InstituteThe Art Institute, which admitsID bearing UC students free atany time, has announced a newexhibit by life photographer LisaLarsen, which will be shown inGallery 5 until April. Americanpainting and sculpture shown atthe Bienalle in Venice this sum¬mer will go on display next Wed¬nesday evening until March 3.Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Are.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery Service Folk FestivalMilda hall, 3140 South Halsted,will be the scene of a Festival ofNationalities this Saturday at8:15 pm. Midwest committee forthe Protection of the ForeignBom sponsors the affair, whichwill feature singing and dancegroups from Chicago and Mil¬waukee Negro, Lithuanian, Jew¬ish, Greek, and Mexican culturalsocieties. Tickets cost $1 in ad¬vance and $1.25 at the door.Studeb&ker theaterThe Goetz’s adaptation of An¬dre Gide's The Immoralist con¬tinues at the Studebaker theateruntil January 20, when Shake¬speare’s Much Ado About Noth¬ing will begin a month’s dun.Tickets, $1.25 and up at the door.Look elsewhere for news ofStudebaker’s sensational new se¬ries, which starts February 19.Students interested in helping theStudebaker campaign at the Uni¬versity can contact Dick Romainat NO 7-0025, or leave a messagewith Culture Vulture in the Ma¬roon office.WFMTChicago’s cultural radio sta¬tion. WFMT, begins its sixth yearof broadcasting this month. TheFM station, at 98.7 kilocycles ifanyone hasn’t heard, broadcastsgood music and other programsof interest from 3 pm ’till aftermidnight on weekdays, with athree-hour wake-up program be¬ginning at 6:30 am. Saturdaysand Sundays broadcasting beginsat 10 am. UC’s campus station,WUCB, which can be picked up inC-Group, B-J and Internationalhouse at the left end of any amradio’s dial, rebroadcasts WFMTwhen no student-produced pro¬grams are scheduled.EUROPE20 Countries, 70 Days, $1305Summer '57—shorter trip optionalEurope for Collegians255 Sequoia, Pasadena, Californioh. J. mrNOLDSTOBACCO CO.,> WINSTOM-SALKM, ■. O.No guesswork here! Your first puff will tell you, this filtercigarette tastes like a cigarette! There’s rich, full flavor here.And a pure, snowy-white filter that does its job so well theflavor really comes through to you. That’s why Winstonis America’s favorite filter smoke. Make it yours!Smoke WINSTON ...enjoy the snow-white filter in the cork-smooth tip!has the answer on flavor !Jan. 11, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Faith amid violence: show gives Musicologist to givedisquieting view of modern man ^opan lecture series^ a Af wnll fin a rtiiKiAnf a1- fin v>aa 1 iThe Renaissance society is now presenting one of its very finest exhibitions, a collection ofpaintings entitled “The Condition of Modern Man.” On view till February 2, in Goodspeedhall, this is a disquieting group of works that either have explicit religious iconography ordeal more generally with possibilities of faith. They all make some statement about experi¬ence today and are remarkable in how unanimously they find that experience broken withdissension and violence.This exhibition is reminis¬cent of one on Religious Artheld a few years back at theArt Institute; the same accenton tragedy is here as was therethen. Chagall’s “White Crucifix-Oops...James Luther Adams did notgive Sunday’s sermon in Rock¬efeller chapel as reported bylast week’s Maroon. The ser¬mon was given by Paul Tillich,world famed theologian whois on campus to present a se¬ries of 16 lectures. These lec¬tures are given every Monday,Tuesday, Thursday, and Fri¬day at 11:30 in Mandel hall. ion,” for instance, or the Katzman“View of Prague” both pictureChrist perishing over again in thesnow and fire of World War II.Equally vivid is the “Resurrec¬tion,” by the usually bloodlessDavid Aronson. He combines aview of Christ in a coffin seen di¬rectly from overhead with a lit¬erally vertical ascent of ironiclittle putty, so that the spectator’ssense of gravity is wrenched un¬easily from beneath him. Thecolor harmony is of strong pinksand greens and light blues re¬lieved against dark grays; thestyle, with its distortions and at¬tenuations, would recall ChaimSoutine, if Soutine had beenSpanish.The largest and the worstpainting in the show is AbrahamRattner’s "The Last Judgment.”Teeth, just as fingers,leave identifiable prints Profuse, melodramatic, with itsSunday comics color and abuse ofangles, it torments the eye. Muchmore quietly handled, but im¬measurably richer in color, is“The Rabbi,” by Hyman Bloom.These are the less familiar worksamong some generally excellentexamples of Roualt Klee, andRedon, from the Shapiro collec¬tion.Contrasting with these, as alsowith the toughness and grittinessof Beckman and Dubuffet, aretwo cryptic, disturbing works: theGolub “Totemic Crucifixion,” andJoyce Treiman's “Cain and Abel.”The Golub suggests some Sphinx-like fetish. The Treiman seemsto grasp the horror of the mur¬der, while being almost complete¬ly abstract in its form. These arethe grimmest paintings in theshow. They are the farthest re¬moved from grace, faith, or hope.Perhaps significantly, they arealso the latest to have been fin¬ished. —Max Kozloff “The music of Japan” will be the subject of three lecturesby Eta Harich-Schneider, eminent musicologist and authorityon Oriental music. The series will run January 16, 17, and 21at 8:15 pm in Social Science 122.The lectures will be illustrated by tape recordings fromMadame Harich-Schneider’s collection, covering Buddhist,Shinto, and Japanese courtmusic, music from the Notheater, and folklore, (therepertory of the Gose, blind)itinerant women musicians ofJapan.Following Wednesday’s lecture Court musicians'of Japan.’there will be an open reception private study.After the US occupation of Ja¬pan in 1945 she gave lectures onmusic at the US Army college inTokyo and became an instructorin western music for the Imperialand tea for the lecturer in thegalleries of the Renaissance so¬ciety in Goodspeed hall.Madame Harich-Schneider, anaccomplished harpsichordist inpre-Nazi Germany, studied withWanda Lewandowska, and wasappointed to a professorship atthe National Academy of Musicin Berlin in 1932.She remained with the academyfor seven years, during whichtime she published three musi-cological works, one of whichis termed a classic among mod¬ern books on the harpsichord.Her anti-Nazi sympathies ledto a rude discharge from this po¬sition, and she left for Japan todevote herself to teaching and In 1949 she came to the US,and in 1954 was named master ofarts at the New School for SocialResearch in New York city. Dur¬ing the years 1953-1955 she re¬ceived a Guggenheim researchfellowship which enabled her toreturn to Japan for further work.She spent many months in Japa¬nese monasteries and studyingBuddhist chants, collecting alarge library of recordings fromwhich she will select examplesfor her lectures.The lectures, on “Regional min¬strels in Japan,” “Music in Budd¬hism,” and “Japanese imperialcourt music,” are being sponsoredby the departments of anthopol-ogy and music and the Renais¬sance society.The chances are less than one in a billion that any two per¬sons have identical sets of teeth.Dr. Albert A. Dahlberg, research associate of UC’s ZollerMemorial Dental Clinic and department of anthropology, soreported in an afternoon sym- WTTW giving American folk historyposium at the American Asso¬ciation for the Advancement ofScience’s annual meeting in NewVork Saturday.‘The form and markings onteeth reflect the sum total of avariety of possible conditions inexperience and history of thetooth or dentition,” Dahlberg said.Identifying persons by teeth isstatistically dependable because oftheir permanence and of the bio¬logical laws and concepts involvedin tooth development.The teeth of large groups ofpeople such as races make iden¬tification of one of its membersquite certain. As an exampleDahlberg cited the shovel-shapedincisor or front biting tooth thatis found in all American Indians.Only two per cent of Caucasians(whites) have the same type oftooth. When anthropologists un¬cover a skull with a shovel¬shaped incisor, the chances there¬fore are 50 to 1 it belonged to anIndian.Another method of identifica¬tion is in the rings found on crosssections of teeth, which show arhythmic deposit of tissue on eachtooth which can be read like therings on a tree. Dr. Dahlbergexplained that during abnormalperiods such as poor nutrition orillness, the character of the ring’eposits changes. It is highly im¬probable that the same change inring structure would occur iden¬tically in two persons. *Teeth uncovered by anthropolo¬ gists are clues to the age of theperson they belonged to. This isdetermined by wear on the sur¬face of the tooth and the kind of “Everybody’s America,” a new series of television essays on US folk history, will beshown over WTTW, Channel 11, weekly beginning Thursday at 9:30 pm. Produced by theUC radio and television office, the series will feature R. Richard Wohl, associate professorof the.social sciences. Future programs will include concerned with abandoned, de-The programs, according to “Saints and Sinners in the Nurs- prived, or homeless children intooth it is, since certain types—- \y0hl, will deal with historical ery,” a discussion of 19th century the cities of the 19th century; andsue as wisdom teem occur at childhood ideals; “Waifs, Strays studies of the hero, the Chicagoasdifferent ages.Dr. Dahlberg listed these otheridentifying factors:—anatomical form and struc¬ture of the teeth;—artificial markings or changessuch as fillings, injuries, and de¬liberate mutilating or decoratingunique to certain cultures;—effect of environment anduse. The teeth of certain Indians,for instance, are used to workleather and therefore have char¬acteristic markings; people whodrink well water may have hardteeth coatings from the fluorides.All of these combinations of fac¬tors, Dr. Dahlberg said, give aprobability of one in a millionthat any two persons will havean identical tooth; multiplied bythe number of teeth each individ¬ual possesses, the probabilitydrops to less than one in a billion. events which have had widespreadand lasting effects upon greatnumbers of people. Thus the firstprogram, “Lizzie Revisited,” con¬cerns the Model T and its reper¬cussions in American civilization.The second program, “HumbugAs a Fine Art,” scheduled forJanuary 24, will trace the careerof P. T. Barnum and relate it tothe development of mass mediaof entertainment, the cult andculture of the celebrity, and thedevelopment of latter-day no¬tions of entertainment and enter¬tainers. and Ragamuffins,’humanitarian and a study ofsocial work fire, Horatio Alger,ture,” among others. and “Cul-FREE RESEARCH AIDIf you are doing research on theSoviet Union (or are just inter¬ested) use the help available at theoffices and Ubrary of the ChicagoCouncil of American-Soviet Friend¬ship, Suite 403, 189 W Madison AN3-1877, AN 3-1878. Open $-5. Monday-Saturday.i .•..-..-..•..-..•..•.A.-..-..-..-..iUP, AP, & INS,all carry stories these days on "tight money.'Banks are granting fewer and smaller loansto curb the inflation spiral.DUNCANSTATIONERS &PRINTERS1313 E. 55thHY 3-4111( Next Door to Pott Office)OFFICE SUPPLIESARTISTS' MATERIALMECHANICALDRAWINGEQUIPMENTJVSA DiscountWatch for Openingof Our NewSelf-Service Store The exception to the rule is theHyde Park Co-op Federal Credit Union5535 S. Harper DO. 3-1113 IiY?YitIxX, . . . f hyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student rote 50c oil performancesStarting Friday, January 11GERARD PHILIPE and MICHELE MORGANin RENE CLAIR STHE GRAND MANEUVER n“CURRENT AND CHOICE . . Something VERY FRENCH, some¬thing subtly exciting to watch . . . Exquisite, sensitive direction thatcombines sophisticated laughter and simple sadness to create the moodof a RENAISSANCE LOVE SONG AND RENE CLAIR SINGS IT ASSWEETLY AS RONSARD!" —Time Magazine■— and —GEORGE BERNARD SHAW'SWitty . . . Chorming . , . Outrageous Lampoon, . . of Poverty, Organized Chority, Big Business... of Politics, Journalism, and Professors of Greeku MAJOR BARBARA"Rex Harrison as the PROFESSOR andRobert Newton, Jean Simmons, ond Robert MorleyStarting Friday, January 18- FIRST OUTLYING SHOWING —\\ WAR AND PEACE nHEY, PAISANIWe#ve gof 'em good, we deliver 'em hoiPizzo pie for your bull-session or gel-togetherPhonesMU 4-1014MU 4-1015MU 4-9022 Give us o Ringand We'll Deliver!5 p.m. to 3 a.m.7 days a weekITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA1427 East 67th Street Practical Evening ClassesFor Men And WomenincludingEffective Public SpeakingPersonal TypingTyping II (Business)Improving Your ShorthandConversational Spanish I, II, IIIContract Bridge for BeginnersBridge RefresherStarting Your Own BusinessConversational FrenchFrench II Conversational GermanUniverse of Modern ScienceCeramics Hr Enameling JewelryBallroom & Latin AmericanDancing Classes, I, II, & IIIBeginners PhotographyColor PhotographySketching and PaintingJesus As A TeocherParty Entertainment10-WEEK WINTER TERMBEGINS JANUARY 14, 1957HYDE PARK YMCA1400 E. 53rd St. FA 4-530012 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 11,1957Track prospect bright; UC Varsity, track club tienewcomers promising by George KarrazesChicago’s varsity trackmen battled the UC track club to a spectacular ZV/^V/o tie,last Saturday, which was climaxed by the varsity taking the last two events and comingCoach Ted Haydon of the track team, in looking forward Up from behind to secure the tie.towards the coming season, commented that this year’s team The high scorer of the meet was Dan Trifone, of the varsity, who won both the high andpromises to be one of the most “interesting” ever. low hurdles as well as tying for first in the high jump. , , , .Last year's squad won sixteen and lost only one of their Alan Jacobs, also of the vars.ty, tied the schools record m the 60-yard dash by record-contests. However, Mr. Haydon is prompt to add, the team „,„c cu,pnt hv ending in such a rare tie was thehas been weakened by the loss of such consistent point scor- ^ hi8h jump. Trifone of the varsity. the track club men with Roger tied for first with Roscoe Majorers as Frank Loomos, in the Johnson will be able to run the Reynolds taking first, followed 0£ track club, while Marchigh and low hurdles and the hurdles and thus make up for our by,x^l ^igdo",and Menz!®* Goff of the track club tied fordash; ^dltch WstkinSj in DOvil losses in this event. Weis responsible for the after*hurdles, the high jump and Other promising newcomers noon’s most thrilling finish when. third with Bill Weaver of the var¬sity._ _ -T .u • i - , The broad jump was won bybroad jump; Dewey Jones, in the are Dave Northrop in the pole with only a few yards to go, he George White of the track club,hurdles and high jump and Joe Yf11 Goldstein passed Hosea Martin and Jim Caf- Mitch Watkins second, andluuaies ana g j p. Hanel in the shot put; Bill Weav- fey to win the 440 yard run. An- Ril| vveaver thirdHoward and Dick Couscns in the er the broad jump and high other fine performance was Char-shot put. jump; Bud Perschke, Ivan Carl- lie Rhyne’s 4:23.9 mile whichto Kelly’sdition of many promising new- die distances; and Dan Cosgrovecomers. Among the most promis- in the distance runs. The last event of the afternoonwas the mile relay, which thevarsity had to win in order tosecure the tie. The varsity teamof Hosea Martin, Pete McKeon,ing are Alan Jacobs and BrooksJohnson, who are both top notchThis year’s squad, on the other son, Ronaldo Meyersberg, and placed him secondhand, is strengthened by the ad- speedy Pete McKeon in^the mid- (UCTC) 4:18.0 effort.Art Omohundro helped the var¬sity s cause by winning the 880 Qeorge Karcazes, and ChuckReturning letter-men from last in front of the track clubs Bob Rhyne won jn tjie Rrne 0f 3:31.5.year's squad are: ace distance Kelly and George White. Tomorrow, the Third Annualsprinters. Jacobs tied the world’s runners Art Omohundro and Dave Northrop and Maurice chicagoland' Open Track Meetrecord in the 70 yard dash two Charlie Rhyne; Dan Trifone in Bush placed first and second in wil] £e held at the Fieldhouse,weeks ago and tied the school’s the hurdles and high jump; Dave the pole vault for the varsity, the preijminaries set for 2record in the 60 yard dash last Houk,.Ned Price. Bill Krol and while the shot put was being Evening finals be^in at 7:30week. Johnson, who hails from Spike Pinney in the 2-mile; Bob swept by the track club’s Jack m‘ ^he preliminaries are openTufts and is currently enrolled in Mason in the high jump; Hosea Grotewohl, Terry Ellis, and BobEC’s Law school, has run almost Martin and George Karcazes in Theisen.comparable times in the dashes, the 440, and Tinkie Ileynes in the Probably the event which wasis a twenty-two foot broad jump- ggo. most responsible for this meetand has also high jumped sixfeet. It is possible that Jacobs andUC 9 train without charge and a general ad¬mission fee of $1 will be chargedfor the evening events. Studentsand faculty with ID cards will beadmitted for 50 cents.Sports calendar Bob KellyCoach Kyle Anderson an- Saturday, January 12—Chicagoland Open track meet,2:00 and 7:00 pm, fieldhousenounced that anyone interest- Tuesday, January 1;ed in coming out for baseballshould be ready for practicesessions Monday, January 14, atthe Fieldhouse.-Mr. Anderson is currently at¬tending the National Collegiatemeetings in St. Louis and fulfill¬ing his duties as Secretary-Treas¬urer of the American Associationof College Baseball Coaches.Spring training camp opens inthe Fieldhouse on the 14th andregular pxactice sessions will beheld, beginning at 12:30 pm Mon¬day through Friday, until theseason starts in the Spring Quar- Varsity v. Wabash, basketball,8:00 pm, fieldhouseWednesday, January 16—■Varsity v. Navy Pier Tllinl,wrestling, 3:30 pm, BartlettgymSaturday, January 19—Varsity v. Wisconsin, gymnas¬tics, 1 pm, BartlettVarsity v. Wheaton, track, 2:00pm, fieldhouseVarsity v. Beloit, wrestling, 3:30pm, BartlettVarsity v. Aurora, basketball, 8:00 pm. fieldhouseFriday, January 25—Varsity v. George Williams,8:00 pm, fieldhouseSaturday, January 26—Varsity v. Lawrence Tech,, fenc¬ing, 1:30 pm, BartlettVarsity v. Western Illinois,gymnastics, 1:30 pm, BartlettInvitational Relays track meet,-2:00 pm, fieldhouseVarsity v. Knox, wrestling, 3:30pm, BartlettWednesday, January 30—•Varsity v. Notre Dame, swim¬ming, 3:30 pm, Bartlett poolVarsity v. Wilson Jr. College,track 4:00 pm, fieldhouse PAINT & HARDWARE CO.1 154-58 E. 55th St. HY 3-3840NSA Discountter.UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor A CASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter ServiceIIY ii:i22 E. 55th St.19 fys&b QjJki CL©DoVANAn •xclusfve, hygLenically clean mov*Ing service—at NOEXTRA COST. Forlocal or long-dls*tance moving, call.PETERSONMOVING & STORAGE CO.55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterfield 8-6711SERVING 0. S.CANAOAAtASKAHAWAII ANOPUWTO m IT’S FOR REAL! by Chester FieldPENNY WISE*POUND FOOLISH*Tm sad to say,” said Tootsie Brown,“The weight I gain just gets me down.Each bite, each drop of this or that,Immediately turns to fat.Some girls, I note, can eat and eatAnd yet they still look trim and neat.To aggravate the situationI much dislike my fat’s location.I wouldn’t so much want to change me.If only I could rearrange me.”MORALt Rearrange your smokingideas and find what contentmentmeans. Get real pleasure, realsatisfaction, with Chesterfield—-thecigarette that’s packed moresmoothly by Accu*Ray for thesmoothest-tasting smoke today!Smoke for real ... smoke Chesterfield*$50 goes to ANN BLACKMAR, Bowling GreenState University for her Chester Field poem,O U(r*tt ft Mr.n Totaceo Os. Of course. Most.everyone does—often*Because a few momentsover ice-cold Coca-Colarefresh you so.. ' <It’s sparkling with natural goodness, pure andwholesome—and naturally friendly to your figure..feel like having a Coke?;Borneo VNoet auinmiyy or fHt'eecA«c©*A oowaanvTb« CccaGoTa Bilrtim"Cofcft* h « Company pi CUiftOgo, Uft.e T*M. TME CCCA-COSA COH,fk*rl