Student robbed,beaten SaturdayAnother student was beaten and robbedui’day morning in the almost weeklyUC students as the victims.Gene Eisman, studerft in thesuffered severe lacerations onhis face and chin when twohoodlums accosted him at about5 am Saturday in front of thePhi Sigma Delta fraternity house,at 5625 Woodlawn avenue, whereEisman lives. Eisman had walkedto the house from 63rd street.According to Eisman, one ofthe fellows walked toward him,acting as if he were looking fora residence on the block. As heapproached Eisman, the hoodraised what looked like a ban¬daged hand and struck him in the near campus Sat-series of crimes withCollege from Miami, Florida,then emptied Eisman’s pocketsstealing his wallet, watch, andmiscellaneous items. The wallethad five dollars and some checksin it.Eisman explained that whatlooked like a "bandaged hand’’must have been some sort of"brass knucks” or spikes held tothe back of the hoodlum’s handwith tape. When he hit Eisman,the edges of the device cut hisface and chin deeply, requiringtwo stitches in Eisman’s chin. -r-—— ——Vol. 65, No. 38 University of Chicago, Friday, May 10, 1957 31Big Bertha greetedwith cheers, hootsby Norm Lewakface....... Police have not found the two ‘Comp fever” hit UC Tuesday night as a bonfire-lit “football” rally (and “anti-rally”)and the3 thug "joined b/hls^nart Sodiums. Eisman reported that was held on Stagg field after a two-mile parade led by Big Bertha, the world’s largest drum,ner who had’been waiting in the they drove off in a late model, Bertha, originally owned by UC, was returned temporarily this week from its presentowners, the University of — —Texas. al wood for the new bonfire was that the athletic staff would notcar, began kicking him. They green Mercury sedan.(below) "Big Bertha" and her entourage of cheer¬leaders, SG members and little boys lead Tuesday evening'sparade to Stagg field.Seated in the back seat of the car is SG'er Arthur Greenand cheerleaders (left to right) Butch Kline, Jinx Ken-nick, Marge Brown and Dave Leonetti. The bonfire, consisting of obtained later from Kent halj.wood from Kent hall (now being F^rade deviated from itsremodeled), was prematurely set original route of the fraternities,off Tuesday afternoon when some C-group, and Burton-Judson whenunidentified students doused it the Bertha enthusiasts feared disfavor the return of football ifthe proper authorities approvedsuch return.McClintock, who played foot¬ball at Kansas State indicated hiswith kerosene and lit it. Addition- damage to the drum from anti- dislike of the fact that footballby the joint degrees.Passible means of closer com¬munication in the other direction,between the students and the ad¬visory committee, was discussedat Monday’s meeting of the com¬mittee.It was decided that the Maroonwould be tile best means of com¬munication. Not only would themeetings be covered, but it wassuggested that opinion in theform of "letters to the editor” betaken note of. Letters not printedcould be forwarded to the com¬mittee. Dean Strozier emphasizedthat such opinion would be valu¬able to the members of the com¬mittee.Personal contact with thesemembers was the other means ofcommunication suggested.Discuss core curriculum The question was raised if all stu¬dents should take the samecourses or if some sort of electivesystem to suit the individual tohis curriculum might not be bet¬ter.(It was in reference to thisquestion that Strozier felt theopinions of other students shouldbe asked for. Opinions on othermatters pertaining to student-fac¬ulty communication were alsoasked for.)Another possibility suggestedwas to make five College coursesa "normal” load. This would in¬crease the number of comps astudent would be able to take.Revised curriculum proposedThe revised curriculum whichwas proposed included tencourses. It was assumed that stu¬dents would take at least eight ofthe courses. The three sequencesAfter discussing the feasibility would be composed of two°f a "core curriculum," a possiblecore was outlined. The studentmembers seemed favorable to theidea of revising the present 14College courses so that a commonProgram of eight to ten comps courses each, an introductory anda terminal course. Logic wouldbecome a part of the Englishcourse and math ABC would bedropped.All students would take the football forces in B-JB-J expresses disfavorSince the parade took the horse¬path between the Midway and60th street, the disfavor fromswarms of students in B-J in theform of water “bombs” and fire¬works from the windows fronting60th street did not do any dam¬age. However, there was an inci¬dent in which one B-J residentwas arrested by the campus po¬lice for throwing water-filled bal¬loons.The "anti-football” forces keptjoining the parade—especially atB-J, and staged their own "anti¬rally” on Stagg field along withthe regular rally. In front of theChancellor’s house, the proces¬sion was greeted by Mrs. Kimp-ton and Dean of Students RobertM. Strozier (the Chancellor was has become a “big business” onthe national collegiate scene. Heexpressed the hope that if foot¬ball returned to UC, it would doso as a sport instead of a busi¬ness. suggesting that perhaps UCcould pioneer the returning offootball to its "proper role.”The speakers were greeted withfavor by the "pro-football” ranksand disfavor by the “anti-football¬ers.” However, a flurry of boosbroke the "pro” forces when Mc¬Clintock suggested football on asmall-time basis.See page 10 for morepictures of the rally.While waiting for Haas theseven or eight piece band played"Wave the Flag” and cheerlead-. . . . ers Butch Kline, Dave Leonetti,out of town). Shouts °f ‘ We want M B and Jinx Ken,nickfootball” were alternated with"Down with football.”Another student arrestedOn the way to Stagg field an¬other student was arrested by thecampus police for trying to blockthe car that was towing BigBertha. The arrested studentswere soon released. led cheers. Once again cries of"we want football” alternatedwith shouts of “down with foot¬ball.” Signs saying "football foirChicago” were satirized by signssuch as “run down Rosary (agirls* school)”.The parade was led by BigBertha carried in a trailer hitchedWalter Haas, UC director of to a 1957 black Mercury convert*Faculty committee asksstudent advisory opinionStudent voice will be heard by a special committee of the Councilx)f the Faculty SenateWednesday.Student Government president Don Miller and Dean Robert Strozier have been invitedto the next meeting of the executive committee on undergraduate education. They wereinvited in their role as co-chairmen of the student, faculty advisory committee to reporton the deliberations of the advisory committee. The Council created the executive com¬mittee last quarter to attempt *to solve the problems caused would be taken by all students, three Introductory courses, Eng- athletics, and Don McClintock,student director of Student For¬um, spoke briefly to the three tofour hundred students at the halfhour rally. Haas indicated that ible furnished by Hyde .Park’sLincoln • Mercury dealer, LakePark Motors, located at 5 6 0 0Lake Park avenue. The agency isowned by Stewart Tauber.(below) A six-foot two-inch cigar smoking "baby"was Charlie Aquila's answer to Big Bertha.Aquila followed the parade route seated comfortably,even if a bit cramped, in a baby carriage.lish-logic, history, and OMP.They would then be required totake two of the three terminalcourses (probably not in the ma¬jor fields). The question of whatto do with foreign language wasleft unanswered. Making it a di¬visional requirement or takingfive courses in the first year weresuggested.The sequences were compressedas follows:• Social sciences—drop soc I;soc II (methods of the social sci¬ences) would be the introductorycourse: soc III would remain asthe terminal course.• Humanities—hum I and IIwould be combined as the intro¬ductory course; hum III would re¬main as the terminal course.• Natural sciences—nat sci Iand II would be dropped: a newintroductory course would haveto be drawn up (it was suggestedthat perhaps it could revolvearound the “scientific method”and how it applied to the variousnatural sciences); nat sci IIIwould remain as the terminalcourse. It s comp time againThis is the last Maroon until after College compre-hensives.The next issue, the annual Review of the Year edition,will be published during the last week of school — May31 to June 7.Deadline for copy, advertising and calendar notices isSaturday, June 1.2»CiH,l,C ACO M A It O ON . May 10. 1957• -tioriorsn\v:i 11 Jronicfiijf.onc^j -Hnt^sUrdt'nt jpieet-lm Mpppaim 1 m-, ggteO l Ma>-2.\ .>T- V pmin.?tlTo£Cj<>ist ertcTubTiaiijtmnaS'-’orv^isseni Rly|\v i 1 kbe^Ke lclfundorff nef§ oipit*> pmfsfrjrH^pfii^^^tudeniwGo^eriimi n t £;11rfi*; Ct»9f p^y*->‘-ell‘|J!stii»U!'‘ ■(sis»SeS®gSS*yi5™*i J*almrvnifasso/;iatioimandltheWaeamsfoff'tcc!P' .| 1 t'pliliiliutos,'f,cl«is^s[f;if®‘&th^sf'}Tv ’’ivafiffi^l^u^Wproposarfior^a sc§*i<j£yioS^v^tuous orvingenious mentr^.raSwralca’iSLtcietVA -'< « ,fPs ■sw*Wi«&. *t • v tv t®* ;¥V 4 Uh t1on®of^ Gaggosh alJpFa’ n <1Ifpnedmar^bringsLthefw ta^UC ao-.,-^t i\o .faculty,- ..whof a re ? mo m be rs of.. •J;iank!m pn>|-o«'<) j.>ubp'jvt>\rofp$P?'f-ijespc>ntlent V*;t■\w WmM%A n T^m bbVs^Sinv^t h^iprae t ica Ijffiai ~ts£lilr1 ' * - a§g Pm^iyfjftivu«n^o\.er *m nij iSffiratMwPmfp|aroK}?e'^f<>n-venien< «■-* r-q’Mv^Tent^tjS whatIjffit ap®5MfpifeatyyijflMpffitel pMEogqe|Killl^^^pgSBiBEiaBgIHgwSan q prM^^KX, j ■' ;. m<i * ■ - ■ >■ - 1 V.’-1' ; '. .''' V -nl nV>^tion^r6g3.V'm,ldWn^^i^rt\^yWy?<^^MtgQi-n^n^rdignllwnadeflmaWftKWi,1 Uo .•» 1 ■ ■’111 ‘ '^-: :ln fa t hleti^pwpnWf^p iii' PJ^^blS^tuSmK J *J •' *f*t li»tcro^tliiyg^^Miam^i^MjLjj^i^^fe^^p-fr^h^entMa^Wasi^ProTnl^dMoyKr "jIkon Pan el M'••• ■■':— ——— -MMl^Pwm 1 ay»May^ i;6^T'heyMwhM^^^|rbrh- N;ir,l h\A;es.t(>H^pfmWlfu^yo^gunwei^sil ie^ii^^pa noril»ifripwMx^» Bersgifal nrfy<l u. va-.i i o nfromm,itj.<«^^i«^n®!ffgi^gg?rBgKisB=aarafefaRgiCTjggBa. •■ •• m■,.,.... •.;■ i. - ■v -•‘•os&A'irla/**’ r’fvM.> J.,J" i .» •i'AiUfc'if'-. ,.’x‘■'' Jur.e .VlT'T.n liVrss s'.’l• " ': *':" y KSPSS Mill. .; 11 ■ ;- »a, ^“^^g-r.^t-hblaEsM^^mp.h^s^wBMWfg’vIri'iftmeilinlath €s< h.ilaf^hip - . * 1 ■ Fb'urii ; :.'d•! '* A I'tnno tiaiA-r' hi’ i>>n- f<in,;thV'^stinirn.•r-'qj.uiTpT.-^vitnout* L.’. pt.ym trr f, - ,: Jun- - ’ ." ; *7 1 \y ■■< ■' V;.. ; ;V J"^*Hy Q ~ the brill i a n't CcholaTf®^Ffteltelibw'lo-streteh \:G&:dollai^#:greyhounds ,hc usv'to-M#**:^ ' ?~ ‘- - ~v' - y, •-’’ '.i‘ ^ )\ liat-a inanr ^ - is iiniMn iant % ‘ 'jKi r -f ■*#•, . — i_....-■■' yv,:' /: .yy 'ifMw,-*A\-:„j> _J:'' "i 'ffifa yjVVgc gfrTf'o<Sh<e!;’Si~'ayj^^^^Qd ■’; •■.|i£6.: ^ <.:;/•.0-^..i'';-4,y;.:j' '.^|KW'(fh (<@101 A^Wjp • ONIOj> < M i ' f>. I ."> ’ PJiil-iil* l i V * a»,»IWMMfeMiV' -and '"”• ,,,e *'«"»« to '••y:t AoT-HTeI*®„5»>-' ■WtJ^VS ■ ■>;;•B-^u‘j§:h;L-E;S*SI*Mu&r|dgN:i^^gBreYjl^®mffi^fmoni’a!yntrnrxr&tsimiamsmimmMay 10, 1957 • CHICACO MAROON' • JSummer SG board chosen Strozier indicted by SC;is unconcerned by actioninvolve the Dean’s office in Its and regulations of student organ!-internal affairs. He said that they zations, so his use of the veto inA summer executive board to carry on the work of SGwas set up at Tuesday’s SG meeting.Rosemary Galli (ISL-Coll), will be acting president; MaryAnn Chacarestos (SRP-soc sci), acting vice-president; Nor¬man Phelps (ISL-Coll), treasurer; Barbara McKenna (ISL-Coll),secretary; and John DeZauche (ISL-Coll), Arthur Green (UT-FTS),Muriel Hoppes (Ind-GLS), John Lamb (ISL-Coll), Mallory Pearce(SRP-bi sci), and Sarah Silverman (SRP-soc sci) as committee chair¬man.Misses Chacarestos, Hoppies. and Silverman were elected Tues¬day night to their positions on the summer Government. Miss Galli . ,. , ine su cornas vice-president will act as summer president in the absence of Don Q9a'?sJ h'mA .Dir^tor Assembly the power to refer is in conflict with University p<*Miller. The other members are members of the permanent execu- of Student Activities Mary caSes to the Student Faculty icy “It is definitely a Universitytive council._____ ....... Alice Newman by a coalition Administration court. Who mayof UT and SRP members atby Norm LewakDean Robert Strozier have been unsuccessful in their this matter is illegal,refused to take seriously previous attempts and it wouldthe "indictment" passed be no different this time. Dean Strozier answered thesecharges by saying that he ha®The SG constitution gives the the power to veto anything thatPearce was elected Tuesday as permanent election and rules chair-__man to replace Penny.Rich (UT-Coll) who will not be returning this Student Government Tuesday the constitution/all. Also elected to E & R were Arthur Green (UT-FTS) and Otto night.Peinstein (SRP-soc sci). He j-j^ ^js -1S not firsttime that SG has attempted to policy that an organization shouldbe indicted is not spelled out in not incur new bills when it cat*^Degree time approaches;tells of Convocation scene The bill charges Dean Strozierand Mrs. Newman as follows;“The Student Assembly herebyconditionally and separately in- not pay the old ones” he said.According to Mrs. Newman, SGis already $400 over their budgetthis year.The “indictment” was concH*diets the Director of Student Ac- tional as follows;tivities or the Dean of Students “The Assembly will indict ap-on separate charges which arise propriately unless the followingfrom uses of powers which vio- conditions are realized at the sub-late the Statute of Powers, Con- sequent meetings with the Deanstitution, and Bill of Rights of the and the Director of Student Acpby Sheila Fields Student Government.“1. The Director of Student tivities.T. The Director of Student A»Activities early in the spring tivities must agree that her con*, , , .. , , quarter issued a decree that the nection with the Government ifAs the spring convocation draws near, a young students fancy lightly turns to thoughts ticket agency of the student serv- not regulative except that sheof receiving a degree. To most, this degree will represent the termination of their formal ice center be closed. Only the may cast one vote in the commit,education; to many, it will be a passport to a new planet in the universe of higher educa- Assembly can rescind its own tee on recognized student organ!-tion; and to all, it will be a cherished symbol. To provide the proper background for this legislation; the Statute of Powers zations (CORSO of SG) and shelong-awaited moment is the challenge of the convocation. grants no one power to repeal may pass judgment on activitiesEssentially, a convocation is the summoning of an assembly. In this instance, the assem¬bly is composed of the student conferring of the'college or jointdegrees, and the other for themasters and professional degrees.In (he solemnity of Rockefeller ^h© address at the spring convo¬cation is traditionally given bybody, faculty, administration,hoard of trustees, and friendsand relatives of the graduates.chapel, the convocations are held.They are dignified, not marred byostentation. Every movement ischaracterized by precision anddispatch. But most important ofall, every graduate has a momentof personal glory.Perhaps the most unique fea¬ture of the UC convocation is that the ChancellonThis year, the graduate degreeswill be part of the Alumni Daycelebration and will be UC’s 275thconvocation. Included in this num¬bering are various convocationswhich have been called for specialevents such as the conferring ofeach student stands alone, facing an honorary degree upon Dr. Al-the audience, as his name is read,end is presented his diploma byihe Chancellor. Great pains aretaken to create this situation, i.e.,the virtual elimination of the“mass-production” atmosphere socommon in such ceremonies to- bert Schweitzer, famous scientist,philosopher, and humanitarian.Obviously, these assembliesare not spontaneous events andrequire much planning and organ¬ization. For the past eleven years,the man-behind-the-scenes hasday, and the maintenance of a been Professor Harold A. Ander-precious personalized tradition. son, Marshal of the University.So that every graduating stu- The Marshal is appointed by thedent may have the opportunity to Chancellor to take charge of theparticipate in a convocation, they convocations. Ten or twelve as- legislation.“2. The Dean of Students inhis letter of March 5 informedthe Government that unless itcould demonstrate ability to pay in accordance with the StudentCode.“2. The Dean of Students mustagree that his power does not ex¬tend to the normal internal at-the manager and employees of fairs of the Government. For irt-the service center, he would veto stance, he certainly can specifythe minimum wage bill. The Sta- how much the Government cantute of Powers grants the Dean spend, but he cannot specify ho«veto power only over recognition it will be spent.”1235 NICKY’SRESTAURANTNO 7-9063PIZZERIA &E. 55th5 for 4 OFFER!on group orders of pizxa — get 5 for the price of 4!Free delivery to U, of C. studentsTable Service Delivery ServiceI 1 A.M. to 2 A.M. 11 A. M. to 2 A M.Open till 3 A.M. on Friday and SaturdayClosed Mondaysthe marshall in escorting the fac-are normally held five times a sistant marshals are also chosen .......year. There are usually two by the chancellor from the uni- an<I visiting dignitaries irspring convocations—one for the versity faculty. These men assist the procession. 4*i -; ☆> ALL LAUNDRY i!i<< SERVICES<<<< : io%►► < ►1. FREE pickup fir delivery !I<<i \ DISCOUNT 2. Wash & fluff dry<i ► 3. Flatwork & familyintegration and cooperation << TO finish<< ►► 4. Shirts & chinos <►<<<< UC►► 5. Quality dry cleaning <►<< STUDENTS 6. Any size cotton rug !!The future belongs to you who believe in these concepts — or << ►► a washed & dried o< ►it belongs to no one. But do the ideas which inspire us really <<< : TV < >Rapid, Convenientprove "practical"? <<i<< ►►► Economical<►i ill nnl/ 1 AiinnKifThe Hyde Park Co-op says "yes!" Our integrated staff, inter- <<<* i university uuicK Laundry;;<►racial Board, multi-faith membership work harmoniously, effec- i<< ; 1024 E. 55th► PL 2-9097 ;►tively. On cooperative principles our store has grown from a tinybuying-club to a thriving business. Come in and see what CAN I jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH^lie ahead. Polished Cotton or |Baby CordSuits 14.95 11 Pants 4.95CO-OP SUPER MART i Our Prices Can't Be Beat . . . It's Smart To Buy For Less =iff ore Than a Store 1D & C Clothes Shop 15535 S. Harper Plenty of Free Parking | 744 F. 63rd St. MI 3-2728 |• - ’ ’ “In the Neighborhood for 40 Year**'—— — Hours: 9 o.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 a.rti. - 9 p.m., Saturday 3i 1iiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiieiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiituHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiitiiiiiiiiii' :>i...34 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 10, 1957 xeditorialSeek golden mean on issuesrelated to ‘the change’ at UCUC in the past three years has been under¬going a period of change. Associated withthe change are various issues related by thefact that in most people’s minds one siderepresents the “old” order and the other, the“new” order. Some of these issue includethe change in the College curriculum, theStatus of student activities, and football.The latter issue seems to have beenbrought up again due to the return of BigBertha. We do not agree that Big Bertha’sreturn is necessarily related to the return offootball. Students in both extremes (i.e.“for” and “against” football) see such arelationship .The Maroon in the recent past has nottaken “sides” on these issues which areargued on emotional as well as rationalgrounds. This is simply because the Maroonas well as the campus is composed of peoplewho are emotionally biased toward one sideor the other. However, there is another,more basic, reason for not supporting a causeWhich has emotional overtones.WE ABE A MONOPOLY on campus.Throwing our support to one side would,if successful, be unfair to the other side.Because most people (even UC students) be-Jieve what they read, the chances are thatour support or condemnation of an issuewould be successful. This would be unfor¬tunate because on the emotional issues, withwhich the University is currently grappling,there are valid points to be made on bothsides.Friday, we ran editorials on two such emo-editor's column tional issues dealing with the change. Inboth editorials we did not favor one side orthe other. In fact, in the curriculum editor¬ial, we suggested that it was invalid to emo¬tionally take one side and refuse to recognizethe position of the other. In both cases wefavored a position of the mean, a position ofcompromise.IN ANY PERIOD OF CHANGE, there willalways exist people on one extreme or theother. There will be people who are so caughtup in the dangers of the extreme againstwhich the change is a reaction, that theywill not listen to arguments for keeping anyof tlie old system. There will always be peo¬ple for whom the old system was so goodthat they refuse to see that it might haveshortcomings which have to be corrected.In such a period of flux, it is the duty ofany medium of communication that mightexist as a monopoly to recognize the exist¬ence of the extremes and to attempt to in¬form each extreme as to the position of theother. Any editorial or other comment madeby such monopoly should recognize the va¬lidity of both sides (we are assuming thatin the example of the present change oc¬curring at UC that both sides do have validarguments). It should resist the temptationof following an emotional bias.As in the recent past, the Maroon now hasa fairly even sprinkling of people who are“for” or “against” football. Thus, we do notrun editorials “for” or “against” football.Yet, an editorial explaining our position ofthe “mean” is valid at this time.Berfha here with a bangIt isn’t often that the Maroon gets a chance for a truly exclusive “scoop.” Bringing back•“Big Bertha,” the world’s largest drum, gave us one of those rare opportunities for notonly a scoop, but a special issue publicizing her return and subsequent events.As the above editorial indicates, the Maroon is not yet in a position to stand firmly oneither side of the football “is¬sue” which threatens to raisestrong feelings at UC for threatened and committed. The duct themselves as adults. At theplanned bonfire was kerosenedmany years to come. Our support ai?d burned Tuesday afternoon.©f the big drum’s return, both The Parade had to by pass B-J be-financially and editorially was oause of threatened violence. Anti-done entirely on the basis of the football signs were torn up and _news and publiicty value of the burned by the pro-football forces, of the great past of a great Uniheight of the rally, the anxietyon the part of those entrustedwith Big Bertha can hardly be de¬scribed. We do not regret bring¬ing back Big Bertha—she is part•vent.We had a lot of fun at the rally—we would have had a lot of fun•>t any rally—whether for the re¬turn of football, better food in The juvenile actions of the versity and deserving of atten-“pro” and “con” football contin¬gents were unbefitting students tion. We only regret that soipeUC students proved to be un-of the University of Chicago. It worthy of our trust.is true that the rally itself wasconducted without much violence.B-J, or dedicating a new campus yej. there prevailed at the rallybuilding. But rallies have other an un€aSy tension between theeffects. evenly divided forces. We areBy their nature, rallies excite thankful that this did not erupt•motions. Emotions unfortunate- into violence.ly sometimes are expressed in theform of violence. Violence leadsto destruction. It is indeed a disappointment tothe Maroon who aided in bringingBig Bertha back for perhaps the Credits and kudosThe “Big Bertha” rally wasonly possible because of the ef¬forts and cooperation of manypeople.Special thanks go to Mr. StewartTauber, president of Lake ParkMotors, Hyde Park’s Lincoln-Mer-cury dealer. Mr. Tauber gracious¬ly provided the 1957 Mercury conAt Tuesday’s rally, emotions biggest scoop of the year that vertible which pulled BerthaWere aroused, destruction was some UC students cannot con- 1_ x. -a- x,-i/v/v ctucacjo11 laroonIssued every Friday throughout the school year and Intermittently during thesummer.quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, 1212 East 59 Street, Chi¬cago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3266; Businessand advertising office, Midway 3-0800. ext. 3265. Subscriptions by mail, $3 peryear. Business office hours: 2 pm to 5 pm, Monday through Friday.Editor-in-chief Ronald J. GrossmanAssociate editor Norman LewakManaging editor Robert HalaszBusiness manager Gary MokotoffAdvertising manager Lawrence D. KesslerExecutive news editor ....Rochelle DubnowCulture editor Dave ZackLecture editor Harold BernhardtCopy editor Betsy KirtleyProduction manager Jean KwonSports editor George KarcazesEditorial assistant ..Bob BrownOffice manager Art ToitelPhotographers Niles Bernick, Roland FinstonCartoonists Kent Flannery, Dick Montgomery, Gwen WeberEditorial staff. ...Richord Cousens, Zeldo Eisen, Sheila Fields, Mary Finkle,Oliver Lee, Phyllis Ritzenberg, Marge Russell, Sharon Schultz, Maureen Segel through the streets along the pa¬rade route.Thanks are also due for theterrific cooperation of the UCcampus police who provided theparade escort and whose effortskept damage to Bertha and rally-ers (pro and con) to a minimum.Many rumors were circulatedconcerning treatment of some stu¬dents by the campus police. Ifthey had any basis in fact, themaliciousness of those studentsperhaps deserved such treatment.We are grateful also to themany Buildings and Grounds em¬ployees who helped with the stor¬age of Bertha, and performed theamazing task of cleaning up thedouble-bonfire debris the nextmorning.To Coach Kyle Anderson forhis help in the use of Stagg field,to Walter Jeschke, Ida Noyesguard for the loud-speaker sys¬tem, to Coach Wally Haas andDon “UT” McClintook — manythanks.And to the University of Texas,where Bertha now belongs (andwill return soon): take good careof her—we may want her backsooner than you think!And sitting behind the wheel ofthat new Mercury . . . well, Capi¬talism is great!—Ron Grossman Perennial yearbook annualExactly what a bass drum has to do with football, or what foot¬ball has to do with an education, or what education has to do witHthe kosnios-at-large, or what kosmoses have to do with an advertisement, or what an advertisement has to do with the 1957 yearbook(yclepps, Cap & Gown, who are coming out Wednesday-next, at theabsolute lost but not leased figure of $5.00* and who are an excd»lently conceived, and almost as well executed, and reasonably weUsold tome, so to speak, containing as it were, not only photographyparagraphs, animated cartoons, captions, but also friendly wordsfrom your neighborhood commercial enterprises promising a laugha minute—if you read slowly) has to do with anything, nobody knows.So rush on down to your corner student leader and buy.*Really smart people would have bought one long ago, but tbaCganother story—for $4.50.On Campus(! (Author of “Barefoot Boy With withMajcQholman(Author of “Barefoot Boy With Cheek,” etc.)LANGUAGE MADE SIMPLE: No. 2Exams loom closer and closer. The sands run out; thechips are down. This, you will agree, is no time for levity.Accordingly, I have asked the makers of Philip Morriswhether I might not dispense with jesting in today’s col¬umn and instead devote it to a cram course in languages.Their consent was cheerfully given, for they are fine,great-hearted men, the makers of Philip Morris, just asfull of natural goodness as the cigarettes they turn out,just as friendly, just as jolly, just as regular, just as un¬filtered, just as agreeable. “Why, bless you, child!” criedthe makers. “Of course!” Then they rumpled my chest¬nut curls and somebody cried “Not it!” and before youcould say flip-top box, a game of Squat Tag was on, andwe played 'til the moon was over the yardarm, and then,pink and tousled, we all went inside and had flagons oftemperance punch and Philip Morris cigarettes and fellinto our trundle beds and slept the clock around!But I digress. Today let us turn our attention to thestudy of languages.Do you realize how important languages are? I mustconfess that, until recently, I did not. “What good willSpanish ever do me?” I kept asking.Well sir, I found out. Recently I took a trip to LatinAmerica, and every day I thanked my lucky stars forhaving learned Spanish in college. W’hile my fellow tour¬ists stumbled and bumbled, I was perfectly at home.j ElSQvM>gf nola Visltf, SezonfesI recall our first stop in Mexico City. I stepped fromthe airplane, walked over to the nearest colorful native,and said, “Hasta la vista, senorita. (Good morning, sir.)jPero las lastimas y calimadades se agravaban mas y mascada dial” (Has thy footman finished sweeping out thychamber?)“No, sir,” he replied in Spanish. “He is an idle rogue.”“How is thy footman called?” I asked.“He is called Diego,” replied my friend, “and the littledaughter of his fat sister is called Juanita. She has twosmall books, one gray cat, three black dogs, 24 redchickens, one fat pig, eight pewter mugs, and a partridgein a pear tree.”“Wilt thou have a Philip Morris cigarette?” I asked.“Gracious,” he said thankfully.We lit Philip Morrises and smoked contentedly thebetter part of the day.“Perhaps by now my footman shall have finished sweep¬ing my chamber,” he said. “Wilt thou not come to myhouse?”“Gracious,” I said.Arm in arm we walked to his house, but, alas, hisfootman had not yet swept out his chamber. So we eachtook a barrel stave and beat the impudent scamp untilit wras time for my airplane to take off.Aloha, Mexico, brooding land of enchantment!©Max Shulman, 1967Farewell, Mexico • . . Hello, U.S.A., land of the long size andregular, the flip-top box, the fresh, natural, zestful smoke —Vhilip Morris, of corris! — whose makers bring you this columnthroughout the school year.Ask adult protest || “We want football” was the rousing cry heard on the UCmidway last Tuesday evening. A group of enthusiastic andwhat might be called “rah-rah” students had assembled fora parade around campus, down©n to B-J, and eventually re¬turning to Stagg field for ahuge pep rally. At B J the stu¬dents were greeted with firecrack¬ers and other juvenile Fourth ofJuly type “toys,” water balloons.Itosings, and general catcalls fromthe B J boys. The campus policeStepped in and arrested one boy|or throwing water bombs.I' This should have served aswarning that actions of that sortwould not be allowed. But no. asttie parade progressed, variouspeople threw firecrackers under¬neath cars, tossed huge sticks atdrivers in cars, and tried to formA cordon in front of the car bear¬ing Big Bertha.At the rally Coach Haas deliv¬ered a speech in favor of support¬ing all phases of campus activityIn the midst of jeers and hootsfrom the students apparently op¬posed to bringing back football. fraternity row, past C-group,Whether football should orshould not be brought back to UCis not the major problem, but theaction of those students so de¬termined to prevent others hold¬ing opposite opinions the right tospeak is of prime importance. Inconsistency with the tradition offree speech, we are protesting theoutright rude and dangerousmethods used by the opponents ofthe opinions held by the paraders.Protest against football if youwill, for that is your privilege, butit is also the privilege for pro¬ponents of football to be heard.Throwing sticks to win one’spoint has no place at a universitywhere the peaceful expression ofthe individual’s freedom is sohighly regarded.Janice AldrinNancy MoultonSylvia HedleyAdrienne Kinkaid'Rally signs burned'J* Is this University and its students as dedicated to freedomof speech as they like to pretend they are? We think not.This is a freedom they grant only to themselves; they haveproved it again and again. Now they have lent themselvesto petty vandalism in theirefforts to repress the opinionsof others.‘ I am speaking of the incidentWhich occurred at the “pro-foot¬ball” rally, Tuesday night (whichthe Maroon gave sifpport to in adisgusting manner). When therally first came to our attentionlast Sunday, we began makingsigns to carry to the rally, to dem¬onstrate, in a peaceful manner,that there are students on thiscampus who do not feel footballat UC is desirable. These signs contained nothing derogatory, Infact, they merely carried thename of our organization.These signs, which representedhours of labor, were rudely andmaliciously torn from our handsby the rabidly emotional “pro¬footballers” and pitched into thebonfire. This showed on thdirpart, utter contempt for the rightsand property of others. We canonly be proud that none of ourgroup stooped to their level.Nora Hansen Lee answers MorgenthauMay I reply briefly to one fundamental poi nt raised in Professor Hans Morgenthau’s let¬ter last week.I have been fully aware that Morgenthau has often used such sentences as “the struggleover Asia is in good measurea struggle for the minds. Of with what Morgenthau said in his theory of international relations,men. Diagnosing the Asian Hillel lecture about the role of. is not diametrically opposed toaspect of the cold war in feuch ideology in the Middle East. He that of the above quotation onterms would seem to indicate an TT ... Asia, then the term “diametricempnasis on ti\e ideological as- opposition has no meaning,pects of international politics. Un- mg of the king of Saudi Arabia # almost every single one offortunately, the real content of “plays into the hands of the So- the index references to “ideol-Morgenthau’s writings make the vjet Union” because (and Mor- ogies” in Morgenthau’s Politicscontrary emphasis.. genthau will attest to the almost Among refers to Karl Mann.For example, in an article in fu,-~ heim s concept of “particular id©-the New Republic entitled “Ideo- . ^ ology,” which Morgenthau prae*logical Windmills” (March 12, quotation): ticallv uses as a synonym for1956), Morgenthau wrote: “Th4 “akts, «« appear as the main propaganda.’ 6 support of a kind of pre-historic regime 1 1 *“Nowhere in Asia, with the excep- (to use the word ‘feudal’ would be a Morgenthau knows that thistlon of Japan, is the conflict between slander an feudalism), which will an- r>r.rl„or.t uaCommunism and democracy relevant or tagonize all those who are opposed to concept, as ne uses it, is quiteeven intelligible as a philosophic con- the regime not only in Saudi Arabia but distinct from the normally used,ha, «««pt»' which lm.uai.” This is an outright statement snouia oe pointed out mat pii^g a philosophic conviction inSSSSSS* struggle6 ovelfe°thfy under- this statement assigns an over- the justice and truth embodied indeveloped areas. riding importance, in foreign pol- such ideas as democracy, commu-Contrast the above quotation jcyj ^ ^e ideological contest be- nism, freedom, absolutism, liberal*, ’ , , , , ism. conservatism, and so forth,tween tyranny and freedom, be- R is this latter concept of ideol,tween a “pre historic” regime and 0gy which I have charged Morgenrprogressivism, thau with minimizing in thisthey sing huh? If the import of this statement, writings, and not the former." from the point of view of the Oliver LeeWell, what didsing, huh?We wish to thank MissFinkle for her constructivecriticisms of our concert inMandel hall (Maroon, May 3). Ibeg to elucidate however, that theaddition of more male voices in“June Is Bustin’ Out All Over”would not have helped the per¬formance of Oklahoma one iota;this number was one of those inthe medley not scored for chorus.William H. DeihlDirector, UC Glee Club(Editor’s note: Two other let¬ters w^re received in connectionwith reviews printed in the May3 issue. One, from Bea Spechko,a member of the concert band—which gave the performance joint¬ly with the glee club—stated:“ ‘June Is Busting Out All Over’was not included in the medley,and, as a matter of fact, did notappear on the program at all.. TERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best”SPECIAL OFFERWITH THIS COUPON25c Discount on any Pizzaeaten here ... or deliveredSmall 1.00Medium 1.45 Large 1.95Giant 2.95FREE DELIVERY FORU. OF C. STUDENTS1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045U. S.AIR FORCE IF YOU YEARN FORWORLD-WIDE TRAVEL...and are capable of executiveresponsibility...the U.S.Air Force has achallenging and rewardingjob for youfThere are few other jobs open to you as a woman of executive abilitythat offer the opportunity for responsibility, job equality, worldwidetravel and adventure, than as an officer in the U. S. Air Force. Now, forthe first time in years, the Air Force offers direct commissions to thosewho can qualify. If you make the grade, you will embark on a careerthat fits in ideally with your talents. You'll have a chance to serveyourself while you serve your country well. Investigate your chancesfor a direct commission in the U.S. Ah Force today.MAIL THE COUPON NOW FOR FULL INFORMATION ONYOUR OPPORTUNITIES FOR A DIRECT COMMISSION.*•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• <jmWAF, P.O. Box 2200, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio waf 93 onPlease send me more information on my opportunities for a DIRECT COMMISSIONas a WAF officer in the U. S. Air Force.NAMEADDRESSCITY TOME STATECOI.r.EC.F. *nviIHEK MAJOR SURJKCTII;Mj* * 0 0 N, •.< May 10, 1957.CHIC AC 0other of a smoll child.The fa lyes iding oft campus at $110 montl^cr^°^lC ^0USC builda Is Seminary seemudents who would;,n uApC,; , Mc0 i ff 6VrightV 'the only *1 • -' c- §0^. ed?&te-K*Ifi-a o.-a.Cv, ■ /-.s.. '<;r Destruction opposed B veryone, malternativestubborn os hhe fact-That collegei and women havelouts are fbid; in at-in fact,' “Wait wait,t to have children ”t\r _ _f 1 rtAc clnnln ct„|t by choice, and should have &RLdecry^sidered "the ' consequences, moi^V^atifeat^&rii1 thoroughly in advance. ' ; job few chi3 complete the requirements for.a .titOife if'not in'fact. _C creases with regularity, (TS it Tho University finds single s.u- ■BP^^yjS"1 1" ,:~7 aiirT • I, ... . n^sblf, along >$nth the other "of the dents,' unencumbereji^by "depend —* § %bto feel that il l not really the 10-' Federated Theological Schools, ent<; .easier to house at lower D , . m;jct At , • — -sponsibililv of a umxersity to find will add another sear to its three rates ‘ * ;r“ R°b,e house- m the m,dst of controversy, a more senoujjrtudents who are man led lf-tu total of eight \ ears before a man Buf thelni\ei^ \ Is planning : '4^|Pldents want r,m?is,u hous.ng has fin,shed enough schoolmg to housing for man ,ed students >ou • A second bedroom however ,* n,e ptoblem s m„m M ,-V> 1 ** ■ ' - ; , , ■ ' , • v' •, K -,'vva -lbnVf sav? ,What ab<nit the -South .West .,. nwtya-;frill.-St udents who work 20 pav . the rent risked..for ;:l \H<>$brvlV ^aT.'mRlVbT«ho"m:, dn:'o.„MS a PhD Wh.le popuTnl,.m « iOu-Pa, k pl.-,n ” Wl.nt ..bou* ll,o . to 3.P, hmu- .1 »«k m ...Id,I,on Vltinni.K -A "'">'1®t,;.: V ,r ’ - ' , ' playgrounds? And the green :^to. a full load;of oourst's (and oyer iuit.il ,lm-m ^ nmk' l.il, ,JiT]■■ "- 1 " ” grassy And all those dozens and * halffofft married studenTmen do)f>iecent increases* m lent^Wo^^dozens of 1 < \t> \ oniUiedioom# "ftcn^nuM of not ebuy keep no tu o bedroom ip.iiini.nlS'‘apart men ts?t',^rt;i l; n ly 'irregular hours Young less than $100 -plus ;u 11: • TjHjironCA -;'y ■ : y o-’1:' - '1 'bb;; - ••■'..ideal, .foivfam,In- enth.no duV; ‘ ' • w heie the> - ran -l< > t> .' How then can the hmnr.'T^^dreri;‘biit as.a homeVfbr ^tU(ie.nts;i:‘'N<?.V;,though, someone.; is .typing. ym be helped on :a. s'lm, [$.£3vwth<children the\ ate foolha5rd\ ^exen^thpugh^someone^isi h'Ji ^ i s ^ The a\eiage st tulerO^furBEvervdne^ftom^he M \vi;th pne th.ldnou'd~the second liedroW a'frill uhic HM°t>comp]etc^ sghe the^robFernV^>ayments of aiVQndl$10stud.r . - - pied enough to^. Yet i / piol . ? - 'not com .ud medu . (\pnn, s ol tmarry and have children will huvebple.ely t housing? "The neighhur' ,Iren's regular I. „>s to* the d,^?W:d Qivilh °u h ood con tains, adequate" ho’using^fepuld be us'vl bn rent*C>Xjj nuffl, necessity ats;oAVheri you sell books os wellass when you |buy-%‘CALL|NOrmal 1Zl6 lJJTHE I RED^DOOR BOOK SHOP3 28_.EAST, 5:7.»hrSTR:EETs,«g®^l^Chicago 37, IlfNOrmol 7-filvvy e" A*’ short- nh,r’e immc<}iatr^*ff2ginm of financial relufjthoiredgl<i\v«l by^aVlosernook-aibhe^future seems necessaivvTIu^ffs!mrmhbssA?'T:urrent nhllosonhv,\Mia.t#s?tli!• shop 1< 1 - .be .single;g-;uidpreluseCregistration''to theTn?fre^BORDONE. ■ , e . , - movers and Light Hau. A .ifeiVI 6-9832 m'n , r _:'^^-'r'5?239i: H at peri’; AMBmgwMm ?.42?fr, smfsW-Student DiscountDelivery ServiceiAVV.-/ 1 . \jfst :>>!•«&, *> M l|/.t -e'lu Ia IMr..,aMRnpt;,Chevrolet sjfnignKperjorm-Ame-pulling'endsYouye got#i^gel^iei^i^^ifi%hg%l(^su^%buridlfe^mThe»low.rDricelnelai!^^^^^^^ln<^irfiisS8^fehev>v*s^e^Pobitrattion8^aiaaxle^f,l^^i^gdre&^ihl'ersIgreat^Rb^r,1 p®■thewheel-'Uiatj’gr/^^nolythe'-wheel that:i^slips. You|have surer]controlyand better,.tractionn*on?jany;road^surface$l^«»By|amTjffiie^lo iking for a real ^t'wapc *irti^t, ;^r^notifi u;^|fr (Ifiiilt^a1 j|i t^j usf|[P^l^hi \a^u i'WoThffit it hi hit/ uigq^t y hei^\;^^^^^raWhMby^itp»iT|thmo^p;rite^ekl|fp'i '..t-h- -!A? 'mMn* fa s2(. h \^t i affV^st < ni^a^l tt^jl^h^^ ndtpp'fi ^placeWi ,;h.t;bigker:|5'., M'Mi'tbJt u\going button the’^I; T!. ;b ^ :;" t ^ j M', k« v i •■ ? 1 ■: 1 r O [ n > 1: ■ ■^ot^)yi0or|rxai.hj)ie;|there»ish.’t- a hill ^^^mK^ia^;m|jnake|i_g|l)feathe; hard_^jOn! v fr a;Tiii><«I*(?lifvrT>r*t”d7;t 1 «■ rf> CHEVROLEm( I I A M INMM; t>i:\r. ONy ■ I in: CHAMPION! ,f^5w S® ■■ "»r^]^^Sharkskins Ayaleras^ > t i o na|*at ioxlraseo%h • p.er 1 ormanc’t -e i.available at .extr.ihiHrfariumSjtraueniark^hevrolet li^p|||b95' \y|i.-gaiy'Il CHEVROLETMay 10, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Chicago MaroonCLASSIFIED ADSStudent rat# 30e per lin# Others 60c per line Phone: Ml 3-0800 Ext. 3265WantedHelp wanted: Two secretarial positionswith considerable responsibility: one inpersonnel placement; one in publica¬tions. Political or social science back¬ground desirable. Apply; Miss Hallman,The American Society for Public Ad¬ministration, 6042 Kimbark, Mil 4-7430.Wanted—Male help (2) part-time, gen¬eral staff duties. Immediate openings,or interviewing aipplicants now for sum¬mer employment. Hyde Park Theatre,5210 s. Lake Park. Apply In person anyevening at theater.Roommates wanted: 7 rooms, 2 porches,3 bathrooms, $37.50. Call Ruderman,NO 7-8508, late evenings, 5611 Cornell.SUMMER JOBSCamp Henry HornerRound Lake, IllinoisCOUNSELORS, SPECIALISTS. ETC.Deborah Boys Club3401 W. Alnslie St.Day Camp CounselorsYMJC YOUTH CENTER7601 S. Phillips Ave.Day Camp CounselorsFor Information, call RA 6-8891Ride to Boston or New York, week ofMav 27. Contact Susan Jacobson, ext.1040.Men needed for camp counseling posi¬tions. June 14 through July 31. Marriedcouples through Aug. 3d. MilwaukeeCommunity Chest agency camp. 2020 e.North Ave., Milwaukee, Wisconsin.Baby sitter. Tuns, afternoons. 75 centsper hour. HY 3-0623.Legal secy, wants rm. In prt. hm„ cook.,priv. E. of IC. 5ist-56th. McVey, eves.,ST 3-0495.Counselors — Male and female. HydePark Day Camp. July 1-Aug 23. DO3-0838.Ride to Southern California, June 6, orthereabouts. Call Bob, MI 3-7173.Two students (male) looking for twoother students to share comfortable8 room apartment for summer months.Two baths. Individual bedrooms. Hi-fi,completely furnished. Two blocks fromcampus. Approximately $35 per month.MU 4-1308, evenings.For rent To sublet—5-rcom furnished apartment—June 1 through Sept. 15. New washer,refrigerator. TV. Children welcome. HYApartment to share: Student (students)wanted to Share furnished apartmentfor summer quarter. $33 per month.TLJTT O AAA A2%-Room furnished apt. in new build¬ing for rent, month of June. Call ElaineHrones, days, ext. 3591, eves. MU 4-8651.5-Room furnished apartment, 1 blockfrom campus. HY 3-0296.6-room apt. to share with 1 or 2 women;3 bedrooms, total rent $75. AvailableJune 1, HY 3-2543.PersonalsKind Sir: If “the nicest things comelast,” what comes first? Peter Rabbit.Seattle — Los Angeles — Phoenix. Drivenew cars. Leave now or later. Gas al¬lowance. Small deposit required. Amer¬ican Auto Drive-A-Way, 5506 Lake Park.PL 2-3020.Lost: 2 small black notebrooks con¬taining record catalogue. Steve Abrams,EA 7-9148 or leave at Reynolds olubdesk.Liberal reward for return of books andnotes taken May 8, Wednesday. No ques¬tions asked. Contact RO 1-5531, ArtPayer.Folksong enthusiasts: PKK featuringfestival of folk songs. Friday, May 17.8:30 pm, Great hall, 1560 H In man, Ev¬anston. Tickets available at Reynoldsclub desk.Q-: Boo-hoo, where was you? Even theMaroon Is blue. Mr. Mxtyzxplk.Betty—cherished friend, sorority-sister,Phi Beta Kappa-college days are gone.Have faith in yourself and your future.I'm on your side. Sheila. Brother Howard: Us chiilluns gotta sticktogether. Don’t forget Nat. ScL Love ya.Votre SoeurE. D.—You’re sick, love.—M. D.For saleFore! Sale—3-year-old Tommy Armour.MacGregor golf clubs, complete set. oneprice. $75. Call Bob Fhiiipson. NO 7-6779or MU 4-9825-6.Summer cottons for sale. Sizes 7-12Very reasonable. Call PL 2-2060 after 6Webcor phonograph, 3-speed automaticwith records. Carl Phelffer, 364 Chamberlaln.ServicesThere’s something new In life insurancefor the student family. Equitable Life’s“Living Insurance.” Low premium, jadaptable, flexible. Call Alfred S. Na¬than, FR 2-0400.Kadlac's Auto service has moved to 7633s. Jeffery blvd. RE 1-4333.Light moving and hauling. Reasonablerates. HU 8-5223.CARMEN’S USED FURNITURE store.Moving and light hauling. 1211 e. 63rdSt. MU 4-8843, MU 4-9003.Tutoring—I am presently organizing anumber of small groups whom I shallassist this summer to prepare for theNatural sciences I comprehensive inAugust. Those Interested should tele¬phone Art at KE 6-1996.I can recommend a good housekeeper.Excellent with children. Reasonable.MU 4-0299.Though vicissitudes and comps mayoome and go, Audio Consultants willstill continue to offer discounts to theweak, the weary, as well as the strongand the summery, c/o Jean Kwon,Foster 16.Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Hon. - Sat. — 9 a.m. -II p.m.Comfortable newly decorated roomswith private tub and shower. Dally maidservice. Reasonable rates. All transpor¬tation, 2 blocks from IC. UniversityHotel. 5519 Blackstone, DO 3-4100.Want to sublet newly furnished. 3-roomapartment, June 5-Sept. 28. E. Lawson.PL 2-0509.I.ake Mich, cottage: private beach,woods, piano, fireplace. FA 4-9191. •pnaynetowe PAINT & HARDWARE CO.Wallpaper - Tools - Houseware - Plumbing1154-58 E. 55th St. HY 3-3840UC DiscountBuy Your DiamondsWholesale - S AV E 50%Diamond Rings For Half Retail Price“All Diamonds Fully Insured”“Written Life-Time (guarantee”“No Loss Trade-In (guarantee”“Three Ways to Buy Wholesale”Lay-Away — Cash — Charge Accounts AvailableWrite today for Diamond Catalogue and Buyer's CardLn r/MjL| r Diamond Importers. K. jUnll W LU. Wholesalers5 SOUTH WABASH ROOM 804 59 E. MADISON DE 2-4113Free Parking — 219 S. WabashOpen Mon. Nites Till 9 PM — Thurs. Till 8 PM — Sat. Till 5 PM |rvv>vvvvvvvtvvv»vfvv»vwr»v*»tvvtrvfvwv»»wvvt*|GABE S STORE FOR MEN rN.W. Corner 55th & Kenwood HY 3-5160Entire New Line ofSummer Clothing fir FurnishingsAll nationally odvertised merchandiseUniversity's finest store for men JHOME-RUN CHAMPION, SAYS :'VICEROY HASTHE SMOOTHESTTASTE OF Alii'SMOOTH! From the finest tobacco grown, Viceroy selects onlythe Smooth Flavor Leaf... Deep-Cured golden brown for extra smoothness ISUPER SMOOTH! Only Viceroy smooths each puffthrough 20,000 filters made from pure cellulose—soft, snow-white, natural!i • CHICAGO MAROON • May 10, 1957UC abandoned GothSeventh in a series on thehistory and buildings of theUniversity. The eighth andfinal installment — UC'sfuture plans — will appearin the last issue of the year.by Bob HalaszBy the year 1940, PresidentHutchins had made the Uni¬versity to fit his own ideas oneducation in many differentfields. Athletics were de-empha-fiized and football finally dropped.Hutchins adopted the College ashis pet educational project. In thefield of finances, Hutchins pre¬ferred to use University funds forincreases in faculty salaries thanfor the improvement and expan¬sion of the University’s physicalfacilities,Hutchins’ policy, plus the de¬pression and its effect on every¬one’s pocketbook, resulted in atotal ending of all new buildingactivity in the late thirties.However, the will of a widowdeceased since 1924, contributed to the buildjjng of Abbott hall. Thewill of the widow of Dr. WallaceA. Abbott, had specified that in1939 one-half of her estate shouldbe distributed to charitable or¬ganizations in perpetuation of herhusband’s memory and for thebenefit of mankind. The money,some one million dollars, wasdesignated to “benefit the causeof medical, chemical, or surgicalscience.”Abbott Memorial hall was dedi¬cated October, 1940, and its facili¬ties, located on 58th between Ellisand Ingleside avenues, are usedfor classes as well as research inthe biological sciences. The de¬partments of physiology, bio¬chemistry, and pharmacologyhave labs there.In explaining the changes thatthe war had wrought, PresidentHutchins said of the University:“It will have to do all the war re¬search it can handle. It will haveto take on all the soldiers andsailors it can accommodate.That was exactly what the Uni¬versity did. Bartlett gymnasiumwas turned into a navy barracks,and the basketball floor, site of registration and comprehensiveexams, was occupied by tripledeck bunks. From early 1942 tolate 1944, when the navy left,4.224 men were trained as radiooperators.Vets take overOver at International house, agroup of air cadets lived in muchbetter style. They were going tometeorology school. Sunny fieldwas turned over to the cadets,where they practiced semaphoreflag signals. Burton Judson wasalso partially occupied by themilitary, and civilian studentsoften had to show their creden¬tials.While the UC was accommodat¬ing the military, other men wereworking on important researchprojects on campus. The most fa¬mous one, of course, was the oneheaded by the late physicist En¬rico Fermi, which first succeededin setting off the first self sus¬tained controlled nuclear chain-reaction, in the West Stands.Other scientific projects were go¬ing on however—Stagg field was,and still is, used for cosmic rayballoon launchings. For many veterans the re-entryinto civilian life meant going toschool, and armed with the GIbill, veterans converged on theUC campus much like anywhereelse. Soon after the war 40 percent of the students were veter¬ans, and housing problems beingwhat they were, the UC, likemany other schools, constructedtemporary pre - fabricated unitsfor the married veterans. The“prefab city-’ must have madethe veterans feel like home, whatwith the barracks - like atmos¬phere, and although the influxof GI's is long gone, some of theprefabs still remain, althoughnot for much longer.Following the war, industry be¬gan to realize the possibilities ofpeace-time science, particularly inatomic work. With the backing ofbig companies, the UC began tobe greatly dependent on endow¬ment by business rather than byprivate donors.To meet the demand for somuch scientific work, three build¬ings were built adjoiningly in1949: The Institute for NuclearStudies, the Institute for thetoa youngmanwith the world on a string of Radiobiology and BiophysicsThe building cost $7,500,00f|and possessed nothing but thebest and latest of equipment, ftcontains 300 rooms, and has 13L.272 square feet of working spaceThe Institute of Metals has a vj*bration free laboratory and Vscale sensitive to weight of one-one millionth of a gram. Anoth<*rlab is two stories high and shield¬ed throughout with lead.Enrico Fermi laid the cornef-stone for the building, and DrRobert E. Wilson of Standard Oilof Indiana spoke on the futurfeof scientific work, financed bybusiness. He said: “Can businessafford it? The real question is can <business afford not to supportsuch work. The danger is not &that the achievements of basic L0science will remain unutilized bift nK’that pure research will not beadequately supported.”UC gets cyclotron r |bu,The following year, the IonAccelerator building was con¬structed adjoining on the northof the Institute building on 56t£and Ellis. It contains a syncro-cyclotron which cost $2,200,000,and is one of the biggest atom-smashing devices in the world. Itwas financed by office of nawflresearch and contributions to theUC Cancer Research foundation.Also located in the Acceleratorbuilding was a long-promised 1Q0million volt betatron, used for re¬search on high energy gammarays.The giant 170-inch cyelotrqpwas not UC’s first, however. Inthe 1930’s, the late Dr. Ilarknessof the chemistry department con¬structed a 21-inch machine in tileBuildings and Grounds servicebuilding (behind the lTC Pressbuilding).Although plans were made tbmove the smaller cyclotron intothe accelerator building, the ideawas dropped because of spacelimitations. Although the old cf gr<u.sarh«wa! oitwacei0V(mimialesis'Regntai10qu, th<i' be«1decbiS59tmefrolotTltis June, the graduates of our engi¬neering and scientific schools, pocketsstuffed with job offers, have “the worldon a string.’*But there’s another “string” attachedto this fabulous situation: A man canonly accept one job offer.How can the graduate make up hismind wisely about his vital decision?We’re not going to try to tell you.And we’re going to resist the tempta¬tion to point out the many advantagesof working for IBM —much as ourcompany, like every other, needs top-notch engineering and scientific talent.Were merely going to leave you withone thought that may help you makeyour decision:IBM’s President has stated this pol¬icy: “. . . 7 ivant this company to beknown as the one which has the great¬est respect for the individual.* IIBM INTERNATIONALBUSINESS MACHINESCORPORATION (below) An overhead shot of 1170-inch synchrocyclotron. This pkfinal stages of installation, showsand the vacuum pumps (looking iscientist perches on the top,coil ojcolleague stands with his back to(top, center).BATA PROCESSING • ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERSMILITARY PRODUCTS • SPECIAL ENGINEERING PRODUCTS • TIME EQUIPMENTMay 10, 1957 • CHICACO MAROON • 9riotron is now dismantled, themagnet is still in use and can bepeon in the service building.A sidelight to the acceleratorbuilding construction involves theI great amount of water which isused for cooling purposes withj the cyclotron.As the story goes, when UCiwzfs in its first struggling exist¬ence, it received a gift from thejolty of Chicago in the form of noj water bills—forever. The -city re¬ceived something of a shock, how¬ever, when it discovered that asj much as 200 gallons of water perminute is used by the mammothatom smasher.| According to John Marshall, as-isistant professor of physics in thei Research Institute, the city stillgrants free water to UC, but re-1 tarns the right to shut off waterto the Institute should a fire re¬quire more water pressure inthe vicinity. So far this ha*s never1 been done.The same year, 1950, saw the■ dedication of the Nathan Gold-I blStt memorial hospital, near1 59th and Ellis. The hospital stem¬med from a million dollar giftfrom the Goldblatt Brothersfoundation in' 1946. The hospitallot of the "business end", of theFhi$ picture, taken in 1951 duringshows the radio-frequency unitoking like large sewer pipes). A,coil o,f the giant magnet while aack to one of the vacuum pumps A proposed design for the administration building. Notethe arch-way and connection with Jones lab (left) and Cobbhall (right). This design was in accordance with the "masterplan" for the University calling for a completely enclosedmain quadrangle. Both the plan and the architecture seen inthe drawing were abandoned with the advent of post-war con>struction. Admin buildingarouses protestis devoted to cancer research andtreatment.Nathan Goldblatt was a wealthyChicago merchant before hisdeath, due to cancer in 1944. Hisbrothers pledged themselves tohelping lick the dread disease.Although the hospital is pri¬marily devoted to research in can¬cer, there are 52 beds for patients.A UC Committee on Cancer wasformed, consisting of 21 scien¬tists in thirteen departments. Atthe dedication of the hospital,Governor Adlai E. Stevenson andMayor Martin Kennedy spoke.New ero is Kimpton'sThe succession of ChancellorKimpton to the top job in 1951,and his subsequent money cam¬paign, has introduced another eraof building, of which the firstproduct can be seen going up justnorth of Ida Noyes. But this be¬longs to the present and futureof the University, and not to thepast. A big shock was in store formany UC grads when in August,1946, the university announced itsintention of building an adminis¬tration building in modern archi¬tecture instead of the familiarEnglish Gothic.A picture of the proposed build¬ing decorated the cover of theUniversity of Chicago Magazine,and drew an immediate, loud, andunfavorable reaction from alum¬ni. Comments ranged from nos¬talgic recollections of studentdays at the “City of Gray,” toterse phrases such as: “unspeak¬able monstrosity.”The university countered . byhaving articles printed on thechange. One architect criticizedEnglish Gothic architecture on(right) The huge, 100-toncrane in the accelerator build¬ing lifting one of the concreteblocks which form the shield¬ing in both the cyclotron andbetatron installations.The giant blocks are liftedlike toys by the crane, movingon tracks at the top of the ac¬celerator building. Note thesize of the men compared tothe crane and concrete block(bottom, center),(below) A brave soul standsbetween the two “pole discs”of the 160-ton magnet in thesynchrocyclotron. This photo,taken at an early stage in as¬sembly of the atom-smashingmachine, indicates the tremen¬dous size of the cyclotron, oncethe world's largest. American campuses in general.The architects, Holabird & Root,described the $1,500,000 buildingas “conservative modern designin limestone which will harmon¬ize with the Gothic architectureof the campus.”“Each age has its own expres¬sion” was the warcry of thosewho applauded the change. LaterWilliam V. Morgenstem, directorof press relations, summed up thereaction to modern structuressuch as the accelerator building,by saying: “A building to housea cyclotron simply can’t be giventhe Gothic look.”At any rate, the administra¬tion officials moved into the build¬ing without fanfare in 1948.alumn i10 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 10, 1957Broads and circuses UC gives prize :to Jonas E. Salk ■Dr. Jonas E. Salk, 42-year-old developer of the widely *used polio vaccine, was named by UC, on May 3 the winnerof its Howard Taylor Ricketts prize, to be awarded on May 17 1The prize, a distinguished national medical award, will bepresented to Salk for “his “~ ,contributions to basic re- awarded1 in 1913. 6115 pnze was '1search in the field of immun¬ology and the practical utiliza¬tion of this knowledge in the de¬velopment of a vaccine for polio¬myelitis.”Salk, professor and head of theDepartment of preventive medi¬cine at the University of Pitts¬burgh’s Medical school, will givethe annual Ricketts Prize lecturefollowing presentation of theaward by Dr. Lowell T. Cogges-hall, professor of medicine andDean of the division of biologicalsciences at UC.Mrs. Ricketts established theprize in memory of her husband,a University of Chicago physicianand bacteriologist. Dr. Rickettsdied in Mexico on May 3, 1910, oftyphus fever, a disease in whichhe was conducting pioneering re¬search.Announcement of the recipientrrVifiirfntffil MT ?"<l| M*-,** !" fro"* of. ,he Chancellor's house. traditloSuy mS? on May " tteDean of Students Robert M. Strozier and Mrs. Kimpton are standing on the porch in the anniversary of Dr. Rickett’sbackground. The action took place during Tuesday's Big Bertha rally. death.iveget full exciting ...smoke L*MflavorAnd this summer...get acquaintedwith the modern L*M Crush-proof boxthat's "taking over'' on campus!Get with it! Now you can get your L&M’s in the newest/most modern box... the L&M Crush-proof box thatcloses tight...protects your cigarettes...or, if you prefer,enjoy your L&M’s in famous packs—King or Regular.Yes, get the full, exciting flavor that makes L&M...... America's fastest-crowing cigarette Death takesMrs. WatsonMrs. Jean Watson, 56, ;UC admissions counselor forover ten years, died in hersleep Wednesday night.Mrs. Watson began working forthe University in 1944 in the hous-ing bureau. In 1945 she enteredthe admissions office, and hasworked as a counselor since then.She is survived by her hus-band, James D. and two children:James, Jr., a UC graduate nowteaching at Harvard universityand Mrs. Elizabeth Meyer, livingin Jakarta, Java.Mrs. Watson was a resident ofChesterton, Indiana.©1957 Liggett t Myers Tobacco Co, For the Best in JazzThe Blue NoteNOW PLAYINGMaynard Ferguson BandMort SahlMAY 15 - 26Woody Herman BandMAY 29 - JUNE 2Count Basie BandJUNE 5 - 16Stan Kenton BandCOMINGDuke EllingtonDizzy GillespieukMnoup™,Epeedwriting120 WORDS MR MINUII (a,vJFamous ABC system. Now taught inover 400 cities. New day & Eveningclasses start each Monday.- Attendfirst class as GUEST. Saecial SummerClasses for College Students. ALSOthorough, intensive SPEEDTVPINGcourse. Use coupon to send for 16-oage brochure.SPEEDWRITING SCHOOL37 $. Wabosh. Financial 6-5471I Speedwriting School■ 37 S. Wabash Ave.. Chicago 3. III.J Please send me without obligation! your 16-page brochure on Speea-I writing.■Zone■ JMay 10, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Fey describes Koinonia farmby Harold BernhardtHarold Fey, editor of TheChristian Century and a min¬ister of the Disciples of ChristChurch, told more than 50persons at Quaker House lastSunday night the agonizing storyof Koinonia Farm, an inter racialufopian Christian community lo¬cated 8 miles southwest of Ameri¬cas, Georgia.Founded in November, 1942, bytwo native southerners, ClarenceJordan and Martin England, “toexpress to the fullest in our dailylives the Kingdom of God as Jesusrevealed it,” the farm grew toover 1,000 acres and, until recentattacks, supported a tiny commu¬nity of 60 Negro and Caucasoid people by producing peanuts,corn, small grains, sweet pota¬toes, vegetables, hogs, poultryand cattle.“The thing that probably trig¬gered off the ‘trouble,’ as it is re¬ferred to,” Fey said, “was an ac¬tion in March, 1956, of ClarenceJordan—he helped when askedin the application of two youngNegro men to enter Georgia Busi¬ness College in Atlanta.” For 14years before this, he continued,the community had had “only amoderate amount of difficulty inefforts to share in common abrotherly relation with theirwhite and colored neighbors.”Ceorgia governor calls“By the time Clarence Jordangot home from Atlanta, the gov¬ernor of Georgia had called up the local sheriff to find out 'whatthat man Jordan was up to,’ ”Fey remarked, “and the localAmericus press headlined the in¬cident.” It was clear for segrega¬tionists to see that “here was aman who was ready to help aNegro breach the wall of segrega¬tion.” .Anonymous calls beginAnonymous phone calls beganthe same day, and customers quitbuying Koinonia eggs and otherproducts, forcing them eventuallyto cut their flock down from 4,000layers to 800. The economic boy¬cott of Koinonia has spread onand on, and they are now virtual¬ly isolated with local dealers re¬fusing to sell them gasoline, fer¬tilizer, butane gas for heating andcooking, lumber, and even themechanical servicing of vehicles.“There have been cross burn¬ings, shootings, fires, and bomb-Devil's advocate questionsmystical view of universeby Harold BernhardtThanking his audience for applause at his introduction two weeks ago, the lecturer pre¬dicted “you won’t be doing it when I finish with you.” “I am here in the nature of thedevil’s advocate,” George McVittie explained, “a man who indulges in the opposition.”Chairman of astronomy at the University of Illinois, McVittie delivered the fifth of theUniversity College science series before a capacity crowd of 300 in Kent hall.“Previous speakers,” Dr. McVittie declared, “have presented you with a rather mysticview of the results of astro-nomical study of the universe, Spectroscopic analysis of gal- radiotelescope would be that of abut astronomers are human axies reveals the red shift phe- rather short-sighted man lookingbeings like the rest of you and nomenon as was brought out by at Jupiter.”their attitudes color their opin- other speakers, Dr. McVittie no- “The distance of a galaxy isions just like a businessman’s fed, and on the whole the red something not determined, andwould.” shift, i.e., the lengthening of which you deduce from otherNo answer possible emitted red waves, increases the things that are not measurementsConsidering the nature of the farther the galaxy. of distance at all,” he continued,data involved in discussions of "But lhe number 0f objects in- Unfortunately many astrono-the universe, the interpretive the- volved in these data are very mers think today in terms of thecry chosen by the discussant, and small, a minute sample, 800 of classical mechanics of the 19thtechnological advances in astro- million or thousand million century, instead of using themore appropriate Einsteiniangeneral theory of relativity, heamplified.Data scant“When you go behind the magicwords in textbooks ‘it can benomical advances in astronomical galaxies,” he saidinstruments, Dr. McVittie assert¬ed lhat no unique answer is pos¬sible to what the universe is,‘there are many possible uni¬verses.”“The kinds of universes we’regoing to study are universes of Hadiotelescopy limitedAs far as radiotelescopy is con¬cerned, it has only been effectivefrom 1945 and has its limitationstoo. “If you point a radiotelescope shown that,’ you find that thein certain directions, you get whole structure of generaliza-which only a part can be studied waves but from galactic objects tjons rests upon extremely scantbecause the rest of it is presum- that apparently don’t emit light,” evidential data,” Dr. McVittie stat-ably too far away,” he said. he observed. ed. “We have done too much inGalaxies, now regarded as fun- "The optic analogy to using a a hurry.”damental units of astronomical_____study, were first really identifiedwhen the 100" telescope at Mt.Wilson in California was builtafter the 1st World War.HALSTED°h3D°°"CHILDREN FREE • Phone WA. 8-7979ESSANESS WONDERFULFAMILY THEATREEvery night is likevacation timeFRIDAY NIGHTisCOLLEGE NITEFINE MOVIES"BEST EATS" 1! BE PREPARED FOR SUMMER DRIVINGSUMMER SPECIALTUNE UP $6.50 »p• Washing• Lubrication• Road ServiceSPECIAL ! !Simonix *12 50HARPER SUPER SERVICEDealer in Sinclair Products5556 Harper Ave. PL 2-9654SPRING COLORSPRESERVE THEM ON COLOR FILMSEE FINISHED PRINTS IN LESS THAN A WEEKENJOY THEM ALL YEAR AROUNDGET YOUR FILMS TODAYHAVE THEM DEVELOPEDATUNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave. ings,” Fey declared, “resultingin the total destruction of theirroadside market and its process¬ing facilities, amounting to an es¬timated damage of $7,000.”Homes have received shotgun,pistol, rifle and even machine gunfire in the night, but so far noone has yet been wounded, hecommented. “Tracer bullets wereused one time, and it was said bysome that such use might be anoccasion for the FBI to bebrought into the case, since theArmed Forces are the only oneswho have tracer ammunition, andit was probably members of theNational Guard that were respon¬sible.Violence takes placeBut far from the local authori¬ties detecting the persons whohave been keeping Koinonia un¬der fire and in a state of siegethe past year and two months, aninvestigating Grand Jury cameup with a finding that “whateverviolence has taken place has beendone by the Koinonians them¬selves for publicity and* resultingprofit.”Since there has been no effort,on the part of the legally consti¬tuted authorities to guard them,the Koinonians maintain a vigilat night, with just a piece of pa¬per and a pencil as their onlyarmament. Fey pointed out: "They are pacifists and don’twant or intend to hurt anybody.”Koinonia resists evilThe members of KoinoniaFarm have found a method ofresisting evil that is as clear andwell thought out in form as thatused by Gandhi or anyone else,Fey asserted, and they have over¬come to date the various formsof violence and terrorism thatthey have been matched against.“I think this little community isbeing provided with strength out¬side itself to carry on and to servea cause of conscience,” he said.“They are trying to live outwhat their conscience asks ofthem,” Fey said. “I believe thiscommunity ought to have theright to exist, to go on existingon its own terms—and it ought tobe helped to exist. Without be¬lieving that this is the type ofpattern for all society, we can andshould help them.”In order to survive againstthe boycott and bombings, theKoinonians have had to develop amail order business for theirpecans and hams and other prod¬ucts. But due to the cancellationof all insurance on their property,they now find themselves in theposition of having their mort¬gages which require insurancecalled, and face the prospect ofsubstantial loss in' the event offurther terroristic attacks. *Men in the knowknow true from falseClassical music is preferredover popular music bycollege menn true Q falseFalse. Popular music is more popu¬lar on campus, according to recordsales. After college, too.College men prefer todate college gals[~"j TRUE Q FALSETrue. Only in isolated colleges whereno women’s colleges are near docollege men turn to the town gals.WJockey is a Trademark.It refers to underwear madeonly by Coopers0 TRUE Q FALSETrue. Jockey is a registered brandand trademark of Cooper’s, Inc. Itapplies only to Jockey brand briefs,Midways® longs, undershirts,T-shirtsand boxer shorts. Each the veryfinest and most comfortable of itskind, too.Men on the gogo for Jockeu underwearA cdiud Dmmad* only by12 CHICACO MAROON • May 10, 1957Mark Israel independence Downtown College offersSummer courses for allIsrael’s Ninth Independence Day, which falls on May 15,will be marked in Chicago by a party and show that eve¬ning at the International house.Entertainment will be provided by the Tzabar Group ofplayers, singers and dancers, who render a colorful interpretation ofJewish life and scene from Israel. This group has become famousthrough appearances in all parts of the country and by performanceson television, radio and records, through a captivating presentationusing the magnetic medium of songs, dances, and instrumental music.A running commentary keeps the program pattern moving swiftlythroughout, and provides a refreshing and exciting experience. Thecommentary is handled by Dog Seltzer, the talented composer,arranger, director and accordionist of the Tzabar Group who intro¬duces and explains the Israeli songs and dances in a way that canbe enjoyed by any audience. Samuel Silver, editor, American Judaism,says, “The Tzabar group is one of the most sensational I have ever^een, a thrilling experience.”The public is invited to join with the sponsoring Israeli StudentOrganization in a festive and joyous celebration. Refreshments anddancing will follow the piogram. A donation of fifty cents maybe paid at the door. The party starts at 8 p.m.|.bMmiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitii!iiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiuimitiitiiiitiimiiiiiiiiii!tifimmiHiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiitig1 COMO’S Cafe Enrico lI RESTAURANT & PIZZERIA1411 E. 53 FA 4-5525 - HY 3 -5300Small Large Small Large12" 14" 12" 14"Cheese .1.15 1.55 Combination . . 1.75 2.25Sausage .1.45 1.95 Chicken Liver . . 1.60 2.10Anchovy .1.45 1.95 Mushroom . . . . 1.60 2.10Pepper & Onion 1.30 1.80 Shrimp 1.75 2.25Bacon & Onion .1.60 2.10 Pepperoni . . . . 1.60 2.10Free Delivery on All Pizza to EJC StudentsiiiiiiintiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuif University college, UC’s downtown branch, is offering a wide program of courses thissummer, with subjects ranging from the seventeenth century lyric to the treatment ofdelinquents. Most courses can be taken on either a credit or non-credit basis.The college is housed on the eighth and ninth floors of the YMCA building, at 19 S.LaSalle. It offers a year-round program of evening courses, for students who are unableto carry a full-time academic program. Some 6,000 such people are currently enrolled, alarger total than study on the ~—* * * " “ * major divisions of a great univer-sity. The college was the firstinstitution of its kind, and its pro¬gram has been imitated at manyother schools. The national GreatBooks and World Politics discus¬sion programs both grew out ofdiscussion classes at UniversityCollege.Enrollment is open without for¬mal admission procedure to any¬one 17 or older.Secretary Wilsonappoints GleiserMiss Fern W. Gleiser, the firstwoman of full professorial rankin the UC school of business hasbeen appointed by Charles E. Wil¬son, secretary of defense, to theUS defense advisory committeeon women in the services.A professor of institution eco¬nomics and management, MissGleiser is a recognized authorityin the field of food management.As a member of the committeeshe will be one of a group of lead¬ing American women who advisethe department of defense in mat¬ters pertaining to servicewomen.Miss Gleiser has been a profes¬sor in the school of business since1944. Before her appointment tothe UC she was head of the insti¬tution management departmentat Iowa State college. She is apast president of the AmericanDietetic association.University campus. Its namenotwithstanding, Universitycollege grants no bachelor’s‘de¬gree. It does confer a higherdegree, and is the only institu¬tion in the country that grantsa master’s degree but no bache¬lor’s.In addition to its regular creditcourses, the college sponsors aprogram of noncredit courses “forpersons of diverse interests whowish to acquire skills and studysubjects on a college level but donot need or desire formal collegecredit.” Since 1946, the collegehas offered its “Basic program,’ of general education patternedafter the old BA.The college also sponsors lec¬tures by prominent scholars. Thecurrent highly popular series,‘The Origin of the Universe” is aUniversity college program, andthe recent Martin Buber lecturewas also College sponsored.This summer the college is alsoholding classes at its out-of-townbranch, “The Clearing” in Doorcounty, Wisconsin. Four seven-week trips there will combine va¬cationing and liberal arts.The University College wasfounded in 1900, because Presi¬dent William Rainey Harperthought that an adult education= a four-year non-credit program department should be one of theThe CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 Jimmy'sSINCE 1940WHEN THE FISHING'S FINE, the gent in our Stickler spendsall day in a dory. He’ll take along tons of tackle and bucketsof bait—but if he forgets his Luckies, watch out! By the timehe gets to port, he’ll be a mighty Cranky Yankee! You see,you just can’t beat a Lucky for taste. A Lucky is all cigarette;;. nothing but fine tobacco—mild, good-tasting tobaccothat’s TOASTED to taste even better. So why fish around?Try Luckies right now. You’ll say they’re the best-tastingcigarette you ever smoked! WHAT'S AN ATTRACTIVE WORK OF ART!iOO MATHER.«. OR COLORADO Fetching Etching WHAT IS A WOODEN NICKEL*Oaken Token• CTTV FfiCCLANO.■AftoucvreWHAT IS AN ANGRY F*$HI WHAT'S A MAN WHO STEALSBABY CLOTHES!%Snarlin' Martin Diaper SwiperBOB ABER JAMES WEDDLE.U.C.L.A. U. OF CALIFORNIAWHAT IS A FAST SEARCH! WHAT ARE VERY SMALL JOINTS!wSir / iP*, *****Brink Frisk Bees' Kneesdyer ruocleb, j*. MURRAY RAM TIME'S RUNNING OUT! We’re still shelling out$25 for every Stickler we accept—and we’re stillaccepting plenty! But time is getting short—sostart Stickling now! Sticklers are simple riddleswith two-word rhyming answers. Bothwords must have the same number ofsyllables. Send your Sticklers, with yourname, address, college, and class, toHappy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, MountVernon, N. Y. And send ’em soon!LuckiesTasteBetter“IT'S TOASTED” TO TASTE BETTER . . .CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER I©a. t. Co. Product of jJnwu&an '—{/u&ieco- is our middle name FELICITATIONS!Si vous arez pourvu a votre fa-mille advenant votre deces oua vos annees de retraite si vousvivez jusque-la, et si vous avezmis a l’abri le foyer de votrefamille et garanti l’instructionde vos enfants, vous meritezsurement des felicitations. Si,cependant, vous avez neglige depourvoir a l’une ou l’autre deces eventualites, vous ferez biend etudier une police de la SunLife du Canada, une des gran¬de* compagnies d’assurance-viedu monde. Dument protege parI’assurance Sun Life, vous aussiserez felicite par tous ceux quicomptent sur vous.SUN LIFE DU CANADARalph J.Wood, Jr*'48] M. LaSalleChicago 2,IllinoisFR 2-2390 I14'SJr. May 10, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13 • IIComing events on quadranglest< >• > Friday 10 MayElection of the 1957-58 Maroone<iitor. Staff members only.Maroon office. 2:30 pm.Lecture, “Augustan art cxf conversa¬tion;” English prof. Herbert Davis,Toronto U English dept, 4 pm, SocSci 122.Lutheran banquet, “Christian liberty,’*PTF prof Jaroslav Pelikan, 5 pm, IdaNoyes.Filipino nurses association, 6 pm, IdaNoves.Doc film: Sitting Pretty, Clifton Webb,last of Masters-of-fllm-comedy series,series admission at door $1.50, 7:15and 9:15 pm, Soc Sci 122.Lecture, “The attack on the supremecourt,” chairman Political science,C Herman Uritchett, John Leightonof NAACP legal defense comt filedsegregation brief, film first Chicagoshowing “With Liberty and justicefor all,” ACLU, 8 pm, 1st Unitarianchurch.ft — Tonight at 8:30, one act plays:Strindberg “The Stronger," Schildt“Gallowsman,” St. Exupery "LittlePrince” dance, music, reading: Meyer“Clever People," Williams “27 Wagonsof Cotton,” tickets, advance 75 cents,at door $1. 8:30 pm, Reynolds clubtheater.Law students Spring dance, everyonewelcome, couple $2.50, 9 pm-2 am,7901 Stony Island Ave. Hall.Lecture, “The evolution of life,” Zo¬ology prof, H. J. Mueller, Indiana U,Creation of life and universe, 50 cents,8 pm, Mandel haH.Art exhibition, works of uc art faculty,9 am-5 pm. last day. Goodspeed hall.Saturday 11 MayBook sale, proceeds to CARE in Mexico,Hyde Park Co-op store.Chess tournament, 9 am-11 pm, IdaNoyes.Bach singers, rehearsal, 1:30-4 30 pun.Chapel house.Varsity tennis, UC vs Cincinnati U, Ipm, 56th and University courts.Varsity baseball, UC vs. Beloit college,2 pm, Stagg field.Physics dept, dance, 8 pm-1 am, IdaNoye6.Folk music concert, John Jacob Niles,American ballads, Momentum ’57. $2,8 30 pm, Ida Noyes.UT—Tonight at 8:30, 5 one-act plays,75 cents advance, $1 door, 8:30 pm,Reynolds club theater.Radio broadcast, “Sacred note,” weekly,10:15 pm, WMAQ.Musical show, “Around HP-Kenwood in80 minutes,” HP Neighborhood club,also cake sale, 8 pm, 5440 Kenwood.Sunday 12 MayEpiscopal communion, 8:30 am. Bondchapel (breakfast following, 35 cents,Swift commons)Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, 11 am,DeSales house.Lutheran communion, 10 am, Hiltonchapel.Chess tourney, 9 am-11 pm. Ida Noyes.Calvert club, spring picnic, IndianaDunes State park.Radio broadcast, “In defense ofmother,” Dr. Edward O. Harper, psy¬chiatrist. Cleveland university hos¬pitals, Dr C Knight Aldrich, chair¬man dept of psychiatry, UC, AlbertDeutsch author. New World, Monitor,10:35 am. WMAQ.University Christian religious service,Dean John B Thompson, preaching,11 am. Rockefeller chapel.Organ recital, Ludwig Lenel, music profMuhlenberg college, playing Bach,Sweellnck, Schuetz, Franck, Langilals,and own compositions, 3 pm, Rocke¬feller chapel.Glee club, rehearsal. 4:30 pm. Ida Noyes.Porter fellowship, closing banquet,Chapel house.Quaker fellowship, folk dance at Gagepark fieldhouse, transportation pro¬vided, 7 pm, Quaker house, 5615Woodlawn, (supper 35 cents, 6 pm).Canterbury lecture, “Social systems:political and religious,” soc. prof.Everett C Hughes, 7:30 m, Brenthouse, 3540 Woodlawn.UT—Tonight at 8:30. 5 one act plays,75 cents advance, $1 door, 8:30 pm,Reynolds club.Monday 13 MayVarsity tennis contest, UC vs MarquetteU, spectators welcome, 1:30 pm, var¬sity courts.Comp cancellation, last day to cancelfor spring quarter, Ad bldg.expert PACKINGMODERN STORAGE®$anitized lervice os-»ure* you a clean, safemove. And every de¬tail it Pre-Planned to•lave you work, worry.No extra cost. CallPETERSONMoving & Storage Co.55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterfield 8-6711SfftVtNQ U. C]CANADAALASKAHAWAII ANDPUfSTO RICO Lecture, “Chaucer and the- languageof poetry,” visiting English prof, C. LWrenn, Oxford U,._3rd of series “Eng¬lish language and the tradition ofpoetry,” free, 4:30 pm, Soc sci 122.Peace lecture, “Let’s end all nucleartesting—before it’s too late,” physicsprof Sidney Socolar “Physicists pointof view,” Kumio Susaki, uc studentformerly of Saitama U, Draw a, Japan,“How the people of Japan feel aboutnuclear testing,” soc. prof. RobertPickus, former AFSC peace director,“What can be done,” UC peace cen¬ter, 8 pm, Soc sci 122.Film: Northwest Passage, 45 cents, 8pm, Int house.Tuesday 14 MayReligious service, 7:30 am. Hill el house.Varsity baseball, UC vs. Navy Pier, spec¬tators welcome, 3:30 pm, Stagg field.NSA delegation, planning session, allof delegation, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Rocket society lecture, “Newer chemicalfuels,” films, 7:30 pm, Bckhart 202.Southeast Chicago commission, openmeeting, all welcome Including stu¬dents, 8-10 pm, Mandel hall.Jazz club, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Folk dancing, free, instruction, weekly,8 pm, Int house.Coffee hour, all welcome, 10-12 pm,Gates hall lounge.Wednesday 15 MayArt exhibit, paintings and sculptureby Louise and Maurice Yochim, lastday of exhibit, 10 am-4 pm, Hillelhouse, 5715 Woodlawn.FTF worship, health and religion profGranger Westberg, ii;30 am, Bondchapel.Intervarsity Christian fellowship,luncheon, 12:30 noon, Ida Noyes.Lecture, "Milton and poetic tradition,”visiting prof CL Wrenn, 4th of series,“English language and tradition ofpoetry,” 4:30 pm, Soc sci 122.Episcopal evensong, Canterbury ciub,5:05 pm, Bond chapel.Glee club rehearsal, 7 pm. Ida. Noyes.Israel’s 9th Independence day, addressHon. S. Pratt, consul general of Israel,Tzabar group, songs, refreshments, allwelcome, donation 50 cents, 8 pm,Int house.Social dance class, instruction, weekly,free for females. 50 cents males, 8-0pm, Int house room CDE.Country dancers, 8 pm, Ida NoyesLutheran seminar, ‘"Hie Christian Cen¬tury,” prof Martin Marty, 7:30 pm,Chapel house.Thursday 16 MayReligious service, reading of Torah ifenough males, weekly, 7:30 am, Hillelhouse.Episcopal communion, weekly, 7:3C am,Bond chapel.CHICAGO REVIEW, staff meeting, 4:30pm, Reynolds club 304.Lecture, “Poverty, charity and casework in late Victorian England,” his¬tory prof Charles L. Mowat, first Sid¬ney and Julia Teller lecture fund forSSA on subjects related to social wel¬fare, 4:30 pm, Soc Sci 122.Polish club, Bronislaw Z. Lewandowski,noted Polish actor, recitation of mon¬ologues and poems, free, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes.Communication lecture, “Criteria forevaluating press performance,” JohnR Malone, newspaper consultant andadvertising executive, prof KennethP Adler, 7:30 pm, Soc Sci 106.Coffee hour, weekly, all welcome, 9-11pm, Green hall. Dames club, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.TV broadcast, “What’s modern aboutmodem poetry?” novelist, poet, criticHoward Nemerov; editor of PoetryHenry Rago; Eng. prof. Richard Stem;Hum. prof. Edward Rosenheim, “Allthings considered” series, and adap¬tation of UC Round table radio pro¬gram for TV, 9:30-10 pm, Channel 11.TV_broadcast, “Biography of Skid Row,”UC lab school ( high school and gradeschool) student moderators ConnieOberhaus, Lawrence Aaron, teacherRobt. G. Hanvey, “History around us”series, 7-7:30 pm. Channel 11.Friday 17 MayChicago intercollegiate tennis, cham¬pionships, Sat also, 1:30 pm, varsitycourts.Lecture, “Poliomyelitis—from the per¬spective of biology,” Dr Jonas E Salk,Pittsburg med school, discoverer ofSalk vaccine, Howard Taylor Rickettsaward and lecture, 5 pm, Pathology117.Lecture, “The origin and evolution ofman,” anthro. prof. F. Clark Howell,50 cents, 7:45 pm, Mandel hall.Social dance, all types of dancing,square, folk, South American, waltz,first of weekly dances, all welcome,benefit room scholarship fund, 75cents, 8-13:4i5 pm, Int house assemblyhall.Saturday 18 MayBook sale, proceeds to Care in Mexico,9 am-1 pm, Hyde Park Co-op store.Harper near 55th.Folk music concert, Peggy Seeger,daughter of Pete Seeger, mainly forchildren, including UC students’ chil¬dren, Student Representatives Party,75 cents, 2:30 pm, Mandel hall.Dance concert, Paul Draper, famous In¬terpretative and tap danseur, StudentRepresentative Party, $1, $2, 8:30 pm,Mandel hall.Radio program, “Sacred note,” weekly,10:15 pm, WBBM.Sunday 19 MayEpiscopal communion, 8:30 am. Bondchapel, breakfast afterward, 35 cents,Swift commons.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, 11 am,DeSales house.Lutheran communion, 10 am, Hiltonchapel.Radio broadcast, “New World,” NBC’s“Monitor,” weekly 10:35 am, WMAQ.University Christian religious service,Rev. J Coert Rylaarsdam, Old Testa¬ment theoolgy prof weekly, 11 am,Rockefeller chapel.Kenwood open house, escorted toursthrough homes and apts. lived innow, free, 4th annual, 2-5 pm, IsaiahIsrael community home.Kappa Alpha Psi, 3:30 pm. Ida Noyes.Methodist religious festival, “Alders-gate,” honoring John Wesley, sect'sfounder, Rev Eugene L. Smith, gen¬eral secretary of Meth board of mis¬sions, DePauw U Indiana Choir, 5thannual, 4 pm, Rockefeller chapel.Methodist supper, buffet, 5 pm, IdaNoyes.Jazz Concert, Duke Ellington and or¬chestra, “Jazz at aMndel hall,” bene¬fit for HP Co-op nursery school at5445 HP boulevard, 6th annual, $2.50,students $2, 8 pm, Mandel hall,Monday 20 MaySettlement league, 1:30-5 m, Ida Noyes.Tour, UtS Steel corporation. South Chi¬cago works, sign up immediately,leave 8:45 am, Int house main lounge.Lucky girl!Next time one of her dates bring up the Schleswig-Holstein question, she’ll really be ready for him.Ready for that test tomorrow, too ... if that bottle ofCoke keeps her as alert tonight as it does other people.Bottled under authority ofThe Coco-Colo Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Companyof Chicago, Inc. Lecture, “Wordsworth’s poetic diction,”visiting prof of Anglo-Saxon, C. L.Wrenn, 5th of series, “English lan¬guage and tradition of poetry,” 4:30pm, Soc sci 122.Film: Dumbo, circus elephant, WaltDisney, 45 cents, 8 pm, Int house.Tuesday 21 MayLecture, “Orpheus and Erasmus Dar¬win: the relations between poetry andscience,” Elizabeth Sewell, PrincetonU lecturer in literary criticism, 4:30pm, Soc sci 122.Varsity track, UC vs Wright Jr. College,4 pm, Stagg field.Jazz club, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Folk dancing, instruction, weekly, 8 pm,Int house.Lecture, “Changing styles In Americanhumor,” Bennett Cerf, Random housecompany publisher, 8:30 pm, Mandelhall, about $1.Wednesday 22 MayIntervarsity Christian fellowship, lunch¬eon, noon 12:30, Ida Noyes.Lecture, “Mr TS Eliot and the lan¬guage of contemporary poetry,” visit¬ing prof CL Wrenn, 6th and last ofseries, “English language and tradi¬tion of poetry,” 4:30 pm, Soc sci 122.Woman’s athletic association, WAA,4:45 pm, Ida Noyes.Episcopal evensong, weekly, 5:05 pmBond chapel.Glee club, rehearsal, 7 pm. Ida Noyes.Science fiction club, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Country dancers, gym shoes, 8 pm, IdaNoyes.Thursday 23 MayEpiscopal communion, for comps, 7:30am. Bond chapel.Student Government honors day, Deansawards, literary contests awards,teaching prizes, college spring 1957graduate gift to undergraduate fac¬ulty member, 3:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Lecture, “The Socialist international oftoday and Its future prospects,” Her¬man Singer, national secretary of So¬cialist Party-Socialist DemocraticParty, all welcome, 4 pm, Soc sci 122.TV broadcast, “The sleeping car town,”story of town of Pullman, UC Lataschool students Connie Oberhaus andLawrence Aaron, 7-7:30 pm, Channel11.Communication seminar, “New designin news—can interpretation be objec¬tive?'’ Chicago American city editor,Wesley Hartzell, 7:30 pm, Soc sci 106.Baha’i world fellowship, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes.Opera concert, “La Boheme,” Pucinl,Metropolitan opera, opening nightbenefit UC cancer research founda¬tion, $4 through $10 per ticket, nostudnt perices, from 38 S Dearborn,8 pm, Opera house, 20 N Wacker Dr. Friday 24 MayCircle Francais. 4 pm, Ida Noyes.Social dance, CTS, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Lecture, "Possible life forms,” forum:biochemist prof Hans Gaffron, Yerkesresearch assoc Allen Lenham, Math-bio chairman Nicholas Rashevsky,last of series “Creation of life anduniverse,” 75 cents, 8 pm, Kent 106.Sunday 26 MayEpiscopal communion, 8:30 am, Bondchape], (breakfast following, 35 cents.Swift commons, weekly)Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, 11 an,DeSales house.Lutheran communion, 10 am, Hiltonchapel.Radio broadcast, “New world,” weekly10:35 am, WMAQ.University Christian religious service,weekly, 11 am, Rockefeller chapel(children may be left at Chapelhouse, 10:45-1215 am).Bond chapel concert, Collegium Musl-cum and BC choir, Richard Vickstromconductor, admission by free ticketonly, obtainable before Friday 24May at Divinity school office, Swift101, 3 pm. Bond chapel.Chicago dance council, 3:30 pm, IdaNoyes.Canterbury lecture, “Freud, friend orfoe?” last of series, Rev. William Gra¬ham, Victoria province, Australia, 7:30pm, Brent house, 5540 Woodlawn.Tuesday 28 MayLecture, “The Negro struggle in the la¬bor movement,” Herbert Hill, NAACPnational labor secretary, all invit«J,watch bulletin board for time andplace, (probably 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes).Communication seminar, “Why aren’tmore newspapers like the New YorkTimes?” panel discussion, factors in¬fluencing newspaper reporting ofpublic affairs, 7:30 pm, Soc sci 106.Folk dancing, weekly, 8 pm, Int house.Coffee hour, weekly, 10-12 pm, Gateshall lounge.Wednesday 29 MayWAA dinner, annually, awards, 5 pm,Ida Noyes.Episcopal evensong, weekly, 5:05 pm,Bond chapel.Picnic, Memorial day eve, potluck,sponsored by WUS, all welcome, res¬ervations Herb Hahn in BJ by Tues¬day 28 May.Glee club, 7 pm, Ida Noyes.Social dance class, 8 pm, Int house.Thursday 30 MayUniversity holiday, no classes or comps.Social research, conference, all day, alsoFriday, Ida Noyes. •TV broadcast, “Teenager In old Chi¬cago,” Lab school students ConnieOberhafts and Lawrence Aaron, serieson Chicago's past, 7-7:30 pm, Chan¬nel M.14 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 10, 1957Culture VultureLast Fall the Maroon spawned a vulture. Unlike either the ordinary run of buzzards or the sort meant by Dorothy Parkerwhen she coined the term, Culture Vulture has always been a benign bird. Concerts, plays, art exhibits, plus a host of et ceterashave been the prey of our unorthodoxly anonymous columnist. While vultural culture may seem corny at times a weekly columnhas tried to give a pretty clear student’s eye view of various events that fit under the broad heading “Culture” on campus andelsewhere in Chicago. As the year comes to a close, fevents on campus become fewer and fewer, and not only does the Vulturerecognize that most students would rather not be exposed to the alluring things going on downtown, but to avoid temptationcompletely he has taken to ignoring most of them himself until summer comes in.Campus events . . .Remarkably few cultural eventsare taking place on campus dur¬ing the month when that princeof pastimes, studying, reigns com¬pletely supreme. By presentcount, there’ll be two concerts go¬ing on in Mandel during the mer¬ry month.Folk concertJohn Jacob Niles will bringthree dulcimers to Mandel hailtomorrow night for a program ofAmerican folk ballads. Niles hasbeen collecting ballads for somefifty years, and his collection ofsongs from the southern Appal¬achian is reputed to be the world’slargest. Besides singing and mak¬ing his own dulcimers the bal-ladeer has w r i 11 e n numeroussongs, several books and an ora¬torio. Sponsored by ExhibitionMomentum, the concert begins at8:30 pm, and student tickets costa dollar.Jazz In MandelOn Sunday, May 19, D u k*eEllington and his sizeable aggre¬gation will appear in Mandel. Theperformance will benefit theHyde Park nursery school, and issponsored by UC’s InterclubCouncil. Tickets cost $2 for stu¬dents, and don’t believe the ru¬mors that Jazz Club is startingto use rah-rah college team re¬ cruiting techniques. Performancestarts at 8 pm.. Tonight at 8:30The last student theater pro¬duction until the group movesoutside for a summer season isrunning this weekend in the Rey¬nolds club garret. The miniatureauditorium on the third floor ofUC’s red plush student centerisn’t air conditioned, but the en¬core of last January’s sell-outseries should be sort of cool, any¬way. Five plays are on the slate,and to find out exactly how cooleach is look -to the next page.Admission to the student-runshows is pegged at a buck forjust anyone, and 75 cents for peo¬ple who buy tickets in advance.Come before 8:30 to be sure ofgetting one of the hundred seatsthat are usually sold out by cur¬tain time.Court TheatreThe auditorium used by UT’ssummertime incarnation isn’t air-conditioned either, but the breezesusually blow pleasantly throughHutchinson court, where perform¬ances take place during the warmmonths. Last summer was a typi¬cal Court Theatre season: twoweek runs of three classic playswere put on. UT-(and Court Thea¬tre) director Marvin Phillips ad¬mits the possibility that Shake¬hyde park theatreLake Park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student Rate 50c all performancesStarting Friday, May 10The BEST ACTRESS of the Year in her Newest Role!INGRID BERGMAN in JEAN RENOIR'S' PARIS DOES STRANGE THINGS''"LOVES of ELENA" — Original Title)with MEL FERRER and JEAN MARAISA Gay and Romantic yet Highly Stylized French Farce . . . exquisitelyphotographed in Eastman Color by Claude Renoir. BERGMAN andFERRER are engaging in a complete change of pace as playful, frivol¬ous people . . . JEAN MARAIS appears in his first English-speaking role.—- and —BERGMAN again in one of Her First GREAT ROLES!with HUMPHREY BOGART //^ A C A DI A k.1 C A 11SIDNEY GREENSTREET LAjADLANLAPETER LORRE — CONRAD VEIDT — PAUL HENREIDStarting Friday, May 17MAX OPHULS' production of GUY DE MAUPASSANT'S"LE PLAISIR" JHSg .starring JEAN GABIN — DANIELLE DARRIEUX — SIMONE SIMONCLAUDE DAUPHIN — DANIEL GELIN — PIERRE BRASSEURand the voice of Guy de Maupassant by PETER USTINOVBased on 3 tales by Guy de Maupassant . . ."The Mash," "The Model," "The House of Madame Tellier""It affords such pleasures as are few and unrestrained in this hardworld!" — Bosley Crowther, N.Y. TIMES." 'Le Ploisir' is for the pleasure of sophisticates. 'The House ofMadame Tellier' is pure Gallic audacity!" — N.Y. DAILY NEWS."A very handsome and very funny show! A pungent delight . . .director M. OPHULS (La Ronde) hos caught the brass ring!"— N.Y. HERALD— and —CAROL REED'S production of WOLF MANKOWITZ'"A KID FOR 2 FARTHINGS" '* g£-starring CELIA JOHNSON — DIANA DORSCAROL REED, the master of the unexpected, brings you a motionpicture of poignant beauty which is likened to his "Fallen Idol" for itssensitive telling of a child's dreams.Starting Friday, May 24The TpTod°uctLGa7HR,E "OEDIPUS REX"The Stratford Ontario Festival players"Spectacular and awesome . . . this film is a jewel of great price!"— Bosely Crowder, NEW YORK TIMES"A distinguished production and.a revelation of new possibilities inthe motion picture. ... It brings us nearer than any performance Ihave ever seen to a realization of what Greek theatre was."— Thornton Wilder"Not just another good movie . . . but one of the handful of greatmovies ever made." -— Gilbert Seldes"This production of a supreme work of art is in itself a work of art."— Clifton Fadimon"Excellent . . . Time does not trim down the terror of true tragedy!"— Life Magazine— and —Kay Kendall In J. Arthur Rank'stan'oirmichael "SIMON AND LAURA""Fast and sophisticated!’* "Deft and subtle!’*— N.Y. Daily NEWS —N.Y. HER. TRIB.Coming Soon: "Simon & Laura," Fernondel in "Wold Oats," "WeeGeordie," "Royal Affairs in Versailles," "Albert Schweitzer," andpossibly even "La Strada" if ... * A summer crowd relaxes while watching Court Theatreplayers perform in Hutchinson court. The 1957 season isscheduled to begin July 1st, and tryouts are taking placealready in UT’s Reynolds club office.speare’s Corialanus will receiveone of the few stagings that timidproducers dare sponsor this sum¬mer, and is hinting that a dram¬atization of Herman Melville’sMoby Dick may take place underthe stars. Definite plans shouldbe revealed well before July 1st,when the six week season begins.Students interested in takingpart in UC’s brand of summerstock are invited to the theatre’soffice, Reynolds club 303, from1 to 3 pm any weekday beforeJune 1st. The plays projectedso far call for a lot of maleparts, but Phillips is interview¬ing for tech and other produc¬tion positions as well as actors.Off campusBright thoughts for during andafter comps and papers mightconcern the Hyde Park theater’scoming attractions. There’s a pos¬sibility that the hit Italian film"La Strada” in its original uncutversion will come to the southside specialty theater within afew weeks. UC’s favorite entrepre¬neurs are battling tooth and nail against showing a dubbed versionof the movie, and if efforts aresuccessful, the show should behere starting the twenty-fourth.Studebaker theatreWaiting f or Godot, SamuelBeckett’s play about a group ofmen sitting around a tree whichpacked an off Broadway house inNew York for some months re¬cently, will be the last productionof Chicago’s repertory theater.Quite a juggling took place dur¬ing Studebaker’s surprise secondseason, but from the fact that thebox office will be closed duringBeckett’s play’s run, it seems thatsomebody thinks a second Viewfrom the Bridge is about to hitChicago. Rumor has it that a fewfree passes will find their wayinto the hands of students beforethe season’s end.Waiting for Godot is scheduledto open next Tuesday. Tonightthrough Sunday Clifford Odet’sFlowering Peach will go on forthe last times. Passes admittingstudents to any performance forhalf price can be picked up at theMaroon office this afternoon.&/t€ ejd/Sum f PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433IT’S FOR REAL! i by Chester FieldOUR LAWLESS LANGUAGE*The laws that govern plural wordsI think are strictly for the birds.If goose in plural comes out geeseWhy are not two of moose then meese?If two of mouse comes out as miceShould not the plural house be hicefIf we say he, and his, and himThen why not she, and shis, and shim tNo wonder kids flunk out of schools... English doesn’t follow rules!MORAL * The singularly plural pleasuresof Chesterfield King make a man feeltall as a hice. So don’t be a geese!Take your pleasure BIG. TakeChesterfield King. Big length . ..big flavor . .. the smoothest naturaltobacco filter. Try ’em. /,Chesterfield King gives you moreof what you’ro smoking for!*$50 goes to Paul R. Salomons. City College ofN. Y., for kit Chester Field poem.$50 for every philosophicbl verse accepted for publi¬cation. Chesterfield, P. O. Box 21, New York 46, N. Y.O UgCAtt A My era Tobacco Co. Portrait StylistBlack and White andDirect ColorPhotographyBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th Sf.^Disc1367 E. 57th St.SPECIAL!Columbia JazzEllington, Brubeck,Armstrong and othersAny 2 — Only $3.99Hyde Park ExhibitEntries for the annual HydePark Art exhibition will be re¬ceived today through Monday atthe local art center’s gallery, 1335East 55th street. Selection ofpaintings to be displayed June1st through 21st will be by threeChicago art experts, George D.Culler, Arnold H. Maremont andAllan Frumkin. There’s a $1.50entry fee, and the six prizes tobe awarded range from $150 to$25.Orchestra NewsFritz Reiner, director of theChicago symphony, will tradeplaces with the Philadelphia or¬chestra’s Eugene Ormandy forthree March concerts. Lesscheery news concerns next fall’sopening concert — the orginallyscheduled performance of Bee¬thoven’s Ninth with Bruno Wal¬ter on the podium has been can¬celled due to the maestro’s recentillness, and the season will openwith an as yet unannounced pro¬gram directed by REINER.Closer on the calendar is theopening of Ravinia’s season, June27. There’ll be nine weeks of mu¬sic, drama and movies at the openair auditorium which is locatedabout twenty miles north of Chi¬cago and easily accessible bynorth shore train. Ravinia’s 1937summer festival is scheduled tobegin June 17th with the first ofsix performances of SeanO’Casey’s "Pictures, in the Hall¬way," replete with original NewYork cast. Included among 21 per¬formances of the Chicago sym¬phony orchestra will be four com¬poser-conductor concerts, featur¬ing Virgil Thomson, Roy Harris,Lukas Foss and Walter Piston,— mm'Tonight' opens tonight;Production won't be dullAn accurate review of a play written on the strength of a rehearsal tvfo nights beforethe opening is perhaps a nonexistent commodity. The judicious separation of the potentialproduction proper from the hysterical backstage shouts and frantic flickering of the wronglights at the wrong time is not always easy even for the anxious director, much less atotal stranger. However . . :It seems safe to say University Theatre’s current Tonight at 8:30 evening is not goingto be a dull one. The past —trend in this series toward pk>t deals with a clash between irritated to have his play calledincreased student participa¬tion appears to have reached itslogical climax with the assump¬tion by students of*ihe various two women over the offstage hus- Noel Cowardian in vein as heband of one. The piece is written would to have himself called aas a monologue, a fact which oc- Talented Young Man. Yet it is,casionally makes the contest seem and he is, and the audience will. ^ re<5non«sihilirteQ nf nrvw d tri^f one-sided. However, Alice be entertained. Connie Mathieufacets and responsibilities of pro- Bronstem, as the vehement lady, .. T u v,. ,n *duction as well as direction and and Lucille deVise, as the word- d d Ish hclnd e the twoacting. The five short plays on less one, achieve an impression of main roles with appropriate light-the program are as varied as one give and take which builds to an ness.could wish, ranging from an orig- effective climax. The play’s direc- The production then moves oninal romantic comedy to a roaring tion, by Fred Hirsh, is competent, to Tennessee Williams with a co¬supernatural melodrama. The Clever People, an original herent production of Twenty-The Stronger, by August by John Meyer, is the next item. Seven Wagons of Cotton. WillardStrindberg, opens the bill. The Mr. Meyer would probably be as Moody and Carol Turner dis¬played facility and comprehen¬sion of their parts as the cottongin operator and his light-headedyoung wife. Marvin Bassan, asthe coldly vengeful outsider, tend¬ed to display more coldness thandetermination on revenge. Theplay was intelligently directed byTwo UC radio programs received national awards from Martha Silverman.Ohio State university’s Institute for education by radio and The next piece was an experi-television. ‘The Sacred Note,” a radio program of religious mental fantasy br^l °d .st‘E*u', . . . , . \ , . , pery’s fable, The Little Prince. Bychoral music, received for the second successive year the far the best part of this was thefirst award for religious pro¬gramming. The program fea¬tures the UC choir directed byRichard Vikstrom. The secondprogram ‘The Voices of Christ¬mas” also featuring the choir, re¬ceived an honorable mention forone-time broadcasts. May 10, 1957 e CHICAGO MAROON • 15Waa-Mu ...Blackfriars head seesNU s gaudy musicalby Michael HallI stood backstage on Monday night and watched a showcalled Caught in the Act. Its week-long run, which ends to¬morrow night, has been sold out for two months, and yetthe title is probably new to you. Caught in the Act is betterknown, however, as the 1957 — ——possible that the really importantthing is the knowledge that you’vedone the show and done it Tyell;that nothing can match that thrillif your heart and soul are in it.The energy which moves the. . college show is the same energymoving force behind Waa-Mu. On which can and will enrich anyedition of Northwestern’sWaa-Mu show.Across the stage stood Joe Mill¬er, director of student affairs atNorthwestern and, from its in¬ception twenty-six shows ago, thestage was a cast of one hundredand twenty-five NU guys and university. The lessons learnedare valuable regardless of futuregals; backed up by a staff of over ambitions. And fun is a good ex-^undred’ and _hnanced_ by a cuse for itself any time. This past1957 budget of $25,200, it is the year bas seen the revival of the2 UC programs receiveannual national awards biggest,' gaudiest student musicalin America. It was easy to seewhy. In the words of Miller,“From its beginning to the pres¬ent day, Waa-Mu always has beenmore than a theatrical perform- traditional Blackfriars show. Asa tradition, it has been lauded andscorned, criticized and heartilythumped on the back. It is, ofcourse, meaningless as a tradi¬tion unless brought to life by theance. More important than the students. Without people, it is anshow itself are the students who empty name; with them, it can bemake it; and what happens to and js a walking opportunity. Itthem in the process is the real asks the student body for theirWaa-Mu story.” talents and energy; it gives in re-What happened to them is that turn the excitement only a bigthey, like hundreds before them, college show can. It asks the pub¬reading by Otto Schlesinger andof un-hackneyed choral music Susan Brinkley of this remark-with appropriately dignified text, aWe text. Bill Mathieu’s musicalsuperbly produced.” accompaninment and Pam Mar-The two programs were the vel’s dancing are only occasional-only ones orginating in Chicago jy effective. Generally they mere-to receive awards. ly distract from St.-Exupery’sBoth ‘The Sacred Note” and narrative.The citation accompanying the "t Tnhv^nf SchUdt’s furious and moodyaward to ‘‘The Sacred Note” says h* melodrama The Gallows Man con-that the program ‘‘is a deeply the UCpubTllcu relations depart- cludes the evening. Bill Zavis and. program a y ment. Dean John B. Thompson of T r iwa a vmiemt Rncchmmoving religious musical pro Rockefeller Memorial chanel was Ll, Libera, as a violent Russiangram which cuts across denom- th^the^Wic^l ronsultant^Burton colonel and hls young housekeeP"inational lines. The series is ex- „ theological consultant. Burton er> play wjth skm and appropri.eellently produced and cannot fail ^The^a^tore^Se^dwrd ate in(tensity‘ Zavis’ direction ^,« leave the listener with a feel- ^ “ tight ahd workmanlike.sor of the humanities in the col¬lege, and Marvin Phillips, direc¬tor of University Theatre. Dr.Heinrich Fleischer was the or- were caught up in the magic ofperformance. A college show is lie for its moral and financial sup¬port; its members must give innever any better than the people return the very best of them-in and around it; if they believe selves.and work for their belief, nothingcan stop them. They will havelearned in the most exciting way (Mike Hal! was named direc¬tor of the 1958 version of Black¬friars last week.)International Hon.se MoviesAssembly Hall, 8 p.m.ing of respect for the ideas pre¬sented.” It is heard over stationWBBM each Saturday evening at10:15.‘‘The Voices of Christmas,”heard last December on the NBC enetwork, was cited as “a scholar-Jy yet entertaining performance ‘Tonight at 8:30” opens tonightin the Reynolds Club Theatre andruns through Sunday night. Tick¬ets are available at the door.Enzo Ives Monday, May 13—45c—Northwest Postage (American—Technicolor)Monday, May 20—45c—Dumbo 'Wolt Disney—Technicolor)Mondoy, Moy 27—45c—New Faces 'American—Technicolor) -I to CREWCUT PHI SIGMA DELTApresentsSTRAWBERRY FESTIVALSATURDAY, JUNE 8IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING THE INTER-FRATERNITY SINGQueen Contest — Dancing — EntertainmentFREE — Strawberries and Ice CreamAT DRUG STORES A BARBER SHOREEye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. -Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372YOU ^ARE ELIGIBLE - .Send Todayfor FREE V'Professional and ^ -wr fBusinessman'sWholesale DiamondBrochure. Write Jackson'sDiamond Brokers, Dept. I ‘644 Broad way, Gary, Ind Complete Your Education with Travel . . .^jLu^TWA^UI ^»«* Seeing new and exciting places, meetinginteresting, prominent people, is a part ofyour everyday life as a TWA Hostess.You’ll enjoy the wonderful world of flying ifyou can qualify for this exciting, rewardingcareer. Fly the Finest . . . 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Convenient schedules.Call or visit your nearest Unitedoffice or authorized travel agenttoday.Trr:^ — rr-16 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 10, 1957Track club meets Big 10; Netmen outclass UICsplits with Iowa, MSU Await big match soonr* In a prevue of the Third Annual Chicago IntercollegiateUC’s Varsity track stars combined forces with the UC Track club against the Univer- Tennis Championship the Maroon netmen beat the Universitysity of Iowa on Stagg field Saturday, and against Michigan State, at East Lansing Tuesday, of Illinois at Chicago, 8-2. Due to their inexperience UICThe trackmen fared better against Iowa than against Michigan, however, feeling the ab- was thoroughly outclassed by the superior play of Chicago,sence of Phil Coleman, Ted Wheeler, Floyd Smith and Joel McNulty in the latter meet. Maybe it was the good weath- Tllin . nrpvilo rIn the meet against Iowa, the UCTC won by the score of 67 to 54. They lost to Michigan er, the first they have had all come because these two ®e°ut;State, 84 to 57.c rr ,,u Mile Relay: Iowa 1st; UCTC Shot Put: Michigan 1st; Mich-Starring for the Tlack club 2nd. Time: 3:25.0 igan 2nd; Terry Ellis (UCTC)in the Iowa meet v\as Floyd (Starring \n the Michigan State 3rd. Distance: 50' 9"^.mith, who estabished a e meet vvere A1 Jacobs, the meet’s Discus: Michigan 1st - MichiganStagg Field record in winning the on.Iy doubIe winner, who wont 2nd; Terry Ellis^(UCTC) 3rd. Dis-high jump with a jump of 6 8v* . ^th the 100 and 220 yard dashes,* tanee: 149' 2"and Dan Trifone, high scorer ofthe meet.) year., or have’been the main contenders";*^ past years for the championship.spectators, because somethingserved as inspiration for the The matches will start prom ,;vMaroons to play them best tennis >t 1;30 pm on the varslt^ C0Jr|'with six singles and 3 doublesSummary:Mile: Michigan 1st; Michigan(UCTC) 3rd.% Summary:Mile: Bob Kelly (UCTC) 1st;Ned Price (UCTC) 2nd; IvanCarson (UCTC) 3rd. Time 4:30.0440 yard run: Harry Price 2nd; Bob Kelly(UCTC) 1st; Iowa 2nd; George Time: 4:16.3Karcazes (UCTC) 3rd. Time: 50.3 ioo yard dash: A1 Jacobs (UC-100 yard dash: A1 Jacobs TC) 1st; Jim Caffey (UCTC) 2nd;(UCTC) 1st; Jim Caffey (UCTC) Michigan 3rd. Time: 9.62nd; Iowa 3rd. Time: 9.5 440 yard run: Michigan 1st;120 yard High Hurdles: Joel Dan Trifone (UCTC) 2nd. Time:McNulty (UCTC) 1st; Iowa 2nd; 14.9 Javelin: Michigan 1st; JerryButeherson (UCTC) 2nd; Michi¬gan 3rd. Distance: 152' 7"_ Mile Relay: Michigan 1st; UC¬TC (Perschke, Karcazes, Martin,Price) 2nd. Time: 3:22.3 ucof the year. Not that they haveplayed that bad the rest of theyear, coming into this match witha record of 5 wins and 1 loss.Chicago’s netmen will have areal chance to prove their worth singlesin the Chicago Intercollegiatechampionships coming up May strominger17-18 here on campus. As earlier !££££*mentioned Chicago’s match with FingerPennchampions to be crowned, as wellas team title and runner-up.Summary:% UICDan Trifone (UCTC) 3rd. Time:14.3880 yard run: Iowa 1st; BudPerschke (UCTC) 2nd; Iowa 3rd.Time: 21.7 880 yard run: Michigan 1st;Michigan 2nd; Michigan 3rd,Time: 1:57.9Two miler Michigan 1st; HalHigdon Fieldhouse site of AAUgym meet; many compete RoublesHowland-K un zleHorwltz-HearrjrFlueok-Ltb. HarrisonHamiltonDetlnaWillisDudleFredrlltsonHoffman WinnerChicagoUTCOhlcv! goChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoHarrison-HamiltonChicagoDettna-DudleChicagoWlUls-FredrlksonUIO220 yard dash: Iowa 1st; Iowa JimeL 9J20.3 », T . ,xrr,*- 220 yard dash: A1 Jacobs (UC-2nd; Brooks Johnson (UCTC) 3rd.Time: 21.7Two mile run: Phil Coleman(UCTC) 1st; Ted Wheeler (UC¬TC) 2nd; Hal Higdon (UCTC)3rd. Time: 9:06.5220 yard Low Hurdles: Iowa1st; Iowa 2nd; George Karcazes.(UCTC) 3rd. Time; 24.7High Jump: Floyd Smith (UC¬TC) 1st; Iowa 2nd; Dan Trifone(UCTC) 3rd. Height: 6'8#" (newStagg Field record.)Pole Vault: Iowa 1st; DaveNorthrop (UCTC) 2nd; Height:13' 6’Shot Put: Terry Ellis (UCTC)1st; Iowa 2nd; Roger Forsyth(UCTC) 3rd. Distance; 47' 5"Discus: Iowa 1st; Terry Ellis(UCTC) 2nd; Carl Nuss (UCTC)3rd. Distance: 150' 0"Broad Jump: Phil Hoffman(UCTC) 1st; Iowa 2nd; Iowa 3rd.Distance; 22 0 imbfabn. Last Friday and Saturday the National AAU gymnastics(UCTC) 2nd; Michigan championship was held in the UC fieldhouse. Every top gym¬nast in America was present, and they all turned in creditableperformances.. Outstanding among the men was Jack Beck-OlympianTC) 1st; Jim Caffey (UCTC) 2nd;Michigan 3rd. Time 21.4220 yard Low Hurdles: Michi¬gan 1st; Dan Trifone (UCTC)2nd; Michigan 3rd. Time 24.5Broad Jump: Phil Hoffman(UCTC) 1st; Michigan 2nd; DanTrifone (UCTC) 3rd. Distance:22' 3"High Jump: Dan Trifone (UCTC) 1st; Michigan 2nd; Michigan3rd. Height: 6' 2"Pole Vault: Bob Apellman andMichigan tie for 1st at 13'. 4";Michigan 3rd ner, former Olympian andlast year’s champ, who tookthe men’s all-around cham¬pionship. In the women’s divisionit was Muriel Davis, outstandingfor her beauty as well as gymnas¬tic ability, who took the all aroundtitle. Both competitors werepressed by keen competition towin their championships.The meet itself was run verywell primarily due to the effortsof the gymnastics coach BobKreidler. 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