Buddhist scholarsappointed to FTFTwo internationally-known scholars of Buddhism have beennamed visiting professors of the history of religions, Jerald C.Brauer, dean of the University’s Federated Theological fac¬ulty, announced last week. “They are U Pe Maung Tin, *rom Rangoon college and fromacting director of the Institute °**old univer®ity‘, _ . , - t,. .... _ . On campus he will teach coura-for the Study of Buddhism in es on Buddhism, including oneBurma, and Ichiro Hori, Japanese dealing with contemporary trendsscholar who just completed a in Buddhism in Ceylon and Bur- Vd. 6, No. 15 University of Chicago, Friday, Dec. 6, 1957 31year as a visiting professor atHarvard university.“These appointments Inaugu¬rate the first phase of a new pro¬gram of interreligious and inter-cultural exchange between theFederated Theological faculty andoriental universities," said DeanBrauer.“Both men, through regularand special lectures and confer¬ences, will explore the nature androle of Buddhism in the contem¬porary world situation, particu¬larly in relation to Christianity.”Maung Tin, University of Ran¬goon emeritus professor of orien¬tal studies and research professoron Buddhist texts, served as pres¬ident of Rangoon university from3942 to 1945. He holds degrees ma. He is a specialist in the Palilanguage, the sacred language ofTheravada, or southern, Bud¬dhism.Hori, who holds a doctoratefrom the University of Tokyo, hasbeen on the faculties of Tohokuuniversity and Kokugakuin uni¬versity. He is a specialist in Ma- Fear directs policy of USsays Halperin in final talkby Uldis Roze“If one had to characterize the past 25 years of US history, one could best describe it ashayana Buddhism, the Buddhism the age of fear. Fear has been the guiding principle of our economic and foreign policy dur-practiced in China and Japan. ing this time,” claimed professor S. William Halperin at Tuesday’s foreign policy lectureon Germany.Halperin is the acting chairman of the UC history department.“A foreign policy based on fear is bound to fail,” asserted Dr. Halperin.“It is true that a country "ity,” * his, “A Study of Japanese should have a healthy concern the result must ultimately be self- as a mortal danger to the US, heThe author of “A HistoricalStudy of Japanese Buddhism,”“Folk Belief,” and, with FumioMasutani, of “A ComparativeStudy of Buddhism and Christian-Folk Beliefs,” is considered a defi¬nitive study on the types of re¬ligious beliefs of Shinto, Bud¬dhism, and Shamanism.The exchange program is sup¬ported by a grant from the Rocke¬feller foundation. for its safety, but once fear isallowed to pervade its relationswith other nations, panic and hys¬teria result. These introduce emo¬tional elements into a situationwhich originally may have hadrational grounds for alarm, andUC's intellectsbattle of wits will stageat Hillel defeat.”When did fear enter Americanlife? The economic crisis of the1930’s must be seen as respon¬sible, the professor replied. Inour foreign policy toward Ger¬many, the crucial event was thefall of France in 1940. The col¬lapse of this familiar fixturebrought into our attitude towardGermany an acute and pervasivefear that lasted until the adventof the Cold War in 1947.A victorious Germany was seen continued. Pearl Harbor putAmerica formally into the war,and by May, 1945, Germany wasdefeated.The fear was still with us, ac¬cording to Dr. Halperin. Germanywas partitioned and stripped ofits territories east of the Oder-Niesse. We embarked on a pro¬gram of deNazification, demili¬tarization, and deindustrialization(Morgenthau plan). The disman¬tling of industrial plants soon pro-(See “Fear,” page 3)by Mary FinkleThe fifteenth annual earth-shaking discursive missile will be launched at Hillel foundationWednesday night at 7:30, arbitrarily scattering potato pancakes and professors in its para¬bolic path.A faculty symposium will again battle wits, staking reputation and sanity over “The latkevs. the hamantash.”The celebration will herald the arrival of Hanukkah, the Jewish Festival of lights, whichbegins December 17 at sun¬down.(For the benefit of the un¬initiated, a latke is a potato pan¬cake, and hamantash is a confec¬tioner’s answer to the isoscelestriangle.)The metaphysical, rabbinical,political, physiological, and otherequally baffling implications ofthe issue will be unfolded.Moderator and probably refereeof the event will be an importfrom the University of Michi¬gan’s department of Near Easternstudies, Herb Paper. Herman Fin¬er, professor of political science;Reverend Martin Graebner, Lu¬theran chaplain to the University;Dr. Rachmiel Levine, lecturer inthe department of physiology; and Hans Morganthau, professorof political science will burst forthwith ideas on subjects that evenSocrates dared not tackle.Their respective topics are,“Satellites and the celestiallatke”; “The philological, socio¬logical, and rabbinical approach”;“Physiology and gastronomy”;and “The latke, hamantash, andpower politics.”Morganthau, in one of his self-designated “wonderfully pro¬found” moments, disclosed, “Thisis an occasion to demonstrate theprinciples of power politics insuch primitive weapons as thelatke and the hamantash, side byside with Sputnik and the H-bomb.” When last heard from, Rev.Graebner was “bogged down inthe vast mass of research whichmust be put down in hopelesslybrief compass for my five-hourpresentation.”He refused to disclose more,excusing himself on the groundsthat, “time taken for discussionnow may be a premature disclo¬sure of the utterly new philolog¬ical approach to this most impor¬tant subject. The international re¬percussions alone are frightening,though not sinister.”After the symposium, latkesand cider will be served. Admis¬sion is free to Hillel members, 25cents to others. Somebody goofed!Directory omits 1300Approximately 1300 names, representing students whoadvance-registered for this school year, were omitted fromthe 1957-58 student directory.According to Mrs. Kate Turabian, editor of official publica¬tions, the University will pub- ; *lish a supplement to the direc¬tory, which should be ready inabout ten days. All unsold copiesof the directory have been recalledand the supplement will be at¬tached to them.Mrs. Turabian added that stu¬dents who have already purchaseddirectories will be able to get freecopies of the supplement at theBookstore.David L. Madsen, registrar,stated that students who regis¬tered last spring and summerquarter apparently were not giv¬en student directory cards to fill out. Many of these students, how¬ever, claimed they did fill themout.Madsen added that he was plac¬ing some of his personnel on thejob of going through the regis¬trar’s files to compile the list ofthose students who were omitted.Among those students omittedwere 24 members of Student Gov¬ernment, half of the fraternitypresidents, the editor of Cap AGown, the yearbook and the Chi¬cago Review, the literary quar¬terly, and various members of theMaroon staff.Parthenon represents a victoryby Rosemary Galli dess of Athens. Phidias supervisedits building on the Acropolis, aIn a soft questioning voice site determined by predecessorwith a slight British accent, temples. Though similar to other, tt -r-,1 temples of the age, the Parthenonlessor Peter H. von Blanc- js unjque n js “not only a housekenhagen, associate professor of gods,” stressed von Blancken-ot classical archeology, challenged hagen, “but a work of art to bethe interpretation of the Parthe¬non as an extremely harmoniousrepresentation of the victory of observed, understood, enjoyed.”Its uniqueness is discovered in therefinement of architectural de¬tail, in the limits placed on thecivilization and democracy before representational decoration, andin the fact that its architect, Icti¬nus, wrote a treatise on it. Closereading of such detail, and of thetexts on the Parthenon, and ob¬servation of represented legendswill unfold the real message: theprogram of the Parthenon.Uses slidesUsing slides, von Blanckenhagenled the audience into the worldand drama of the temple. Therethe theme of tragedy is seen as itdevelops. A magnificently-col-umned gateway is the entrance.Two paths lead to the terrace onwhich the Parthenon rests. A pil¬grim’s first view, then, was of theWest pediment representing Ath¬ena’s clash with Poseidon for pro-action of Athens. Another battle,o the Athenians against the Ama-opened the topic by defining the zons, is seen on the west metopes.Parthenon and locating it in his- On the frieze placed above thetoy. Commissioned under the cella wall at the sides, the Pan-Perlclean government, it was athenaic festal procession moves,tollt as a shrine to Athena, god- Thus the first impression is ofan overflow crowd Tuesday nightIn Social Sciences 122.In contrast he pointed to thelegend of Pandora carved on thebase of Athena’s statue (on slidefilm) as the key to the real mes¬sage of the Parthenon.“The Parthenon is not a monu¬ment of sweetness and light, orenlightened democracy. It is in¬finitely more profound, an in¬sight into the classic concept ofman, the closest work of art tothe Sophoclean tragedy.” The lec¬ture, The program of the Parthe-fian, was jointly sponsored by thetonmittee on social thought andthe department of Art.Defines ParthenonProfessor von Blanckenhagen Athens in its divine, mythical, andactual representation.Detailed studies of the proces¬sional figures showed the men’sbodies to be typically youthful de¬spite actual age. “This,” vonBlanckenhagen demonstrated,“signifies man seen in his prime;what man is is clearly seen inyouth.” Here youth is the truestexpression of man, not an ideal¬ization, but the norm. Individual¬ity is depicted only in the proces¬sional horses, in the animal world.The procession moves on, climax¬ing in the east frieze with theassembly of the gods. There is ahush, a piety about the approach¬ing sacrifice to be seen in the mov¬ing figures.Four conflicts are pictured onthe metopes. On the north is theTrojan war, the west shows thebattling Amazons and Athenians,the east portrays the gods in theirstruggle for supremacy with thegiants, and the south reveals themortal duels of centuars and men.This last battle symbolizes men’sfight with his animal side. Againthe centaurs show individuality ofexpression, their faces mirrorfierceness, violence, and nobility.The men’s faces show no suchqualities. In comparison the facesof men seem closer to the godsthan to centaurs. (Apollo’s head,a centaur’s, and that of a youthwere studied on the screen by the audience.) There is a hint of trag¬edy here, as in more metopes cen¬taurs win over men; in othersthere is the suspense of conflict;in fewer, men win.In the assembly of the gods onthe east frieze, this hint of trag¬edy continues. Athena turns herback on the approaching proces¬sion. Only the gods (Hermes andAphrodite) closest to humanityshow any concern. “Humans can¬not expect any help, the gods don'tcare a damn,” pronounced vonBlanckenhagen.Describes AthenaInside the Parthenon, the statueof Athena, seven times life size,appears aloof in her gold, ivory,and ebony raiment. On her shieldare images of the cruelty of war,again, the Amazon battle, in whichsome interpretations find Thesusand Daedalus fighting, othersthink the two fighters are Periclesand Phidias. Von Blanckenhagenprefers to believe it is both theformer symbolizing the latter.The base of the Athena’s statueprovides the key to the programof the Parthenon. Here the “mostcruel” legend of Pandora is rep¬resented. Portrayed, as in noneof the other legends, is isolatedman, man without the gods.“This does not cause misery, orsorrow, instead a pride, passion,and knowledge, an acceptance ofman’s destiny. Beauty and perfec¬ tion are given to man in hisprime. Man’s greatest chance isto die in this moment.” This con¬cept of man (as seen in closestudy of the friezes, metopes,etc.), which finds its interpreta¬tion only in tragedy, is the pro¬gram of the Parthenon. As Phi¬dias and Pericles might have pro¬claimed, von Blankenhagen con¬cluded the main body of the lec¬ture, “No one but we know this,no one but we represent this, now,in this moment of our history.”Peter von BlanckenhagenCaptures yourpersonalityas well asyour personphotographerBU -08761457-9 L 57th St. Register forU CollegeAdvance registration forthe winter quarter at Uni¬versity College will be nextThursday from 2 to 7 pm, thedowntown center has an¬nounced.Currently enrolled studentsmay register at room 809 ofthe downtown center, 19 S. La¬Salle.NACASCIENTISTSRESEARCHIN AERONAUTICSPushing foward the frontiers of flightNACA For over forty years the notion's research organizationdevoted to the generation t>f scientific knowledge essen¬tial to assure Americon leadership in Aeronautics.NACA The research team — engineer, scientist and technician—a concentration of knowledge and skills working co¬operatively to solve research's challenging problems.NACA offers unexcelled research facilities, a stimulating pro¬fessional environment, and a challenging assignmentfor.SCIENTISTSChemists, MS,Ph.D.Physicists, BS,MS,Ph.D.Mathematicians, BS,MS,PhD. For positions in Aerodynomics,Nuclear research, Rocketry, Fuelsresearch, High temperature ma¬terials research, Instrumentation,Digital computing and other re¬search areas.See Representative—NACA, Lewis Flight PropulsionLaboratory, Cleveland 11, OhioNACA also operates other researchcenters at Langley Field, Virginia;Moffett Field, California and Edwards,California. Dr. MelvinGersteinon campusThursday,December 12See your place¬ment office forinterviewappointmentNational Advisory Committee for AeronauticsComplimentsof aO'Friend"COW" S a OM'irCMI TIAIOMM. COOVfLCKf tM7 Vx« CCCAUiA COM’MWThey kept warning me this wouldhappen if 1 didn't think of some superway to describe that absolutely uniquegood taste of Coca-Cola. So who's aShakespeare? So no ad ... that’s badlBut, there’s always Coke ...and that’s good!SIGN OF GOOD TASTEBotHod under authority of Tho Coco-Cola Company byThe Coca-Colo Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.» c H ICAGO MAROON • Dec. 6, 1957 CLASSIFIED ADSStudent rote 30c per linoRiders - Rides wantedRiders wanted to Miami Beach, leavingDecember 20. to share driving and ex¬penses. ED 4-2635.Ride wanted from LaGrange to U ofC and return daily. Will share expenses.Call Frank Morrow, FL 2-3109, after7 pm.To Tulsa, Oklahoma, willing to drive,share expenses. For Christmas interim.Call ext. 3273 afternoons.ServicesWill dd typing at home. Near campus.Marilyn Mayers, HY 3-9634.Will tutor French, on any level. Rea¬sonable rates. BU 1-9032.Carmen's Movers, moving and lighthauling. Furniture bought and sold.1211 E. 63rd. MU 4-9003. Others 60c per linoPersonals Phone: Ml 3-0800For rent 326jCONGRATULATIONS!If you have provided for yourfamily in the event of yourdeath or for your retirementyears if you survive, and ifyou have safeguarded yourhome for your family andensured an education for yourchildren, then you certainlydeserve congratulations. If,however, you have neglectedto provide foT arty of thesecontingencies, then you willwant to consider a policy fromthe Sun Life of Canada, oneof the world’s great life insur¬ance companies. With the pro¬per Sun Life coverage you, too,will be open to congratulationsfrom all those who depend onyou.RepresentativeRALPH J. WOOD JR. ’48SUN LIFE OF CANADA1 N. LaSalle St.FR 2-2390 Chicago 2, III.RE 1-0855 Ken: Why doesn’t ZBT have a CalypsoOpen house this January 11? Art.Art: Well Art, you see It’s this way. Inpre-Arlstotellan times . . . aw . . . Whynot!!Penelope: Phi Slg and Sigma Caslonopens Jan. 10, 1958, gambling, taxidancers.,refreshments, dancing—at Gas¬light Gaieties. Cecil.Maximillian: Rocked to Elvis throughthe punch bowl last Monday at Phi Slghouse—when again? Presley Fan Club.Wanted: Musicians, particularly drum¬mers, bassoonists, and piano players;to play original music for a Universitytheatre production in January (fourperformances). Contact John Herzog,1131 E. Hyde Park, PL 2-8947. or leaveinformation In Maroon office, cultureeditor’s box.Veree Unimportant: At the risk of be¬ing trivial, frivolous, and soclal-scien-tist-like. let us say that your part Inour particular frantic scheme of thingslast Monday belled your name. Two nowwell-fed birds.New and used cars. Come and see finecars. Real clean one-owners. Bargainprices. 6020 Cottage Grove. Used CarManager Harry W. Hutcherson.Will chaperone In exchange for freedrinks. Over 23. Contact Dickson orTaylor. PL 2-9648.Jimmy (Calypso) Bowman: Congratula¬tions on finding employment on Janu¬ary 11. Ysur Agent.Give Santa Claus a hand by orderingconvenient-size, convenient-price hl-flsystem from Audio Consultants, c/oJean Kwon, 5810 Harper, MI 3-6912 after9 pm.'Will do typing. Call V. Palchel, 5429 8.Harper, MI 3-9840 after 6 pm, DE 7-6376business phone.Lost and foundLost: Small black Ronson cigarettelighter. Sentimental value. Ext. 3243. You can rent an electric refrigerate Ifor 44 50 to $5.50 per month. CO 4-935?14-room furnished apt. Near campua$10 per week. Students only. 8107 iv»*Chester. FA 4-5538.WantedYoung woman to share apt with bust,nesswoman. Vic. 79th and Essex Callbefore • am or after 4 pm. ES 5-7734,Wanted persons proficient in ArabiaAmharic, Armenian, French, German.Greek, Hebrew, Italian, Ladino, Persian.Portuguese, Spanish, Turkish, Urdu,Yiddish, etc., with good diction, pleas¬ant speaking voice, for fascinating edu¬cational recording project. Write toP.O. Box 8451, Chicago 7.Wife of graduate student of facultymember to manage deluxe 8-story, fire¬proof apartment building close to UC.Excellent salary plus lovely apartmentin building. Real opportunity for per¬sonable, attractive young woman. Fa2-3300.Part-time help wanted at Hyde Parktheatre. Male, 3 to 4 evenings, usher andassistant positions open. Also, feraalarelief cashier and candy oounter attend¬ant. Ttpply In person at theatre anyevening.For saleFor sale: 2 pairs ladies’ Imported ,,Hu-manlc" ski boots—1 pr. size 6V2 narrow,1 pr. size 7 narrow (American sizes),Orig cost, $30, now $15. Used only on*season, Call Sid Zwlck, WA 2-6667,9 to 6. ^’50 Plymouth, 2-dr sedan. 57,000 miles!Very excellent condition. Call HY 3-7171,6-7 pm.Raccoon coat. Very good condition Siz*16 $100. Call after 6 pm. PR 8-5261.For adoption or sale. Babied 1956 Volks!wagen. Fairly priced. Bower. ST 2-4040,days; NU 4-4482. nights.TERRY’S PIZZA“THe World’s Best”SPECIAL OFFERWith This Coupon — Mon., Tues., Wed., Thur*. Only25c Discount on ony Pizzaeaten here ... or deliveredSmall 1.00 Large 1.95Medium 145 Giant 2.95Free Delivery for U. of C. Students1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045iWholesale - SAVE 50%Buy Your DiamondsFor Half Retail Price“All Diamonds Fully Insured”Written Life-Time Quarantee“No Loss Trade-In Quarantee”Three Ways to Buy WholesaleLoy-Away — Cash — Charge Accounts AvailableWrite today for Diamond Catalogue and Buyer’s CardL.R. SOHN&CO Diamond ImportersWholesalers5 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-Fear directs policy ... Wassail party this Wednesday(from page 1)dueed catastrophic economic re¬sults.“A new chapter in US-Germanrelations was opened in 1947.Again it was fear that promptedthe change,” explained the doc¬tor ‘ But this time fear of Russia.To this day US policy has notbeen dictated by a positive con¬cern for the future of Germany,but by a compulsive dread of Rus¬sia.”Of this policy, West Germanyhas proved to be by far the great¬est beneficiary, Dr. Halperinstated. In 1948 an independentgovernment was granted to thethree western zones. A constitu¬tion was drafted and ratified. Thefirst elections were held in Au¬gust. 1949. The Christian Demo¬crats (conservative) and SocialDemocrats (moderate) emergedas the two strong parties.The Communists were decisive¬ly rejected, receiving less than6 per cent of the popular vote andseating 15 deputies in the 402-member Bundestag. In Septemberof the same year the US militaryoccupation was officially termi¬nated.The US also backed importanteconomic measures: currency re¬form. jettisoning of the Morgen-than philosophy, and the grantingof large amounts of economic aid(4.5 billion by 1954, and moresince). These steps helped pro¬duce the spectacular economic re¬covery that has so amazed theworld.“But Germany has had to pay aprice for American aid and poli¬tical ties,” Dr. Halperin said.“These policies have led to a deep¬ening political cleavage betweenEast and West Germany, so thatfor the foreseeabie future thequestion of reunification has beenclosed.”Some of the events which have-led to this state of affairs are, he added: The Russians feared aunited Germany after their ex¬periences in World War II. Whenthe US went ahead with economicand political reconstruction in theWest, the Russians counteredwith the Berlin blockade and theestablishment of a puppet regimein the East.Up to this time the US has per¬sisted in its program of demili¬tarization, but after Korea thispolicy was changed. According toDr. Halperin, this was a danger¬ous and unjustifiable step at thistime, since the whole democraticexperiment might have beenwrecked.Despite the protests of- theFrench, the British Laborites, andthe Germans themselves, the USpersisted and in 1955 pushedthrough authority for a 500,000-man German national army aspart of NATO. Russia retaliatedwith the Warsaw Pact. This step,the professor maintained, hasmade reunification far more hope¬less than it had been before, andthe recent electoral victory ofAdenauer has put the questionon ice for years to come.“And this is where the US, theRussians, and maybe even theWest Germans want it,” addedDr. Halperin.“Such a situation is dangerous,and presents one of the greatestthreats to our uneasy peace. Boththe East and the West are beingbuilt up militarily, and the peril isaggravated by the near-certaintythat atomic weapons will be usedin any clash that occurs.“Our panic and hysteria overthe sputniks has increased thedanger.* At the forthcoming NATO conference Dulles mightask for the stockpiling of atomicweapons and the 1500-mile mis¬siles in Germany and on the restof the continent. These steps willmost certainly call out Russiancountermeasures.”Dr. Halperin suggested a pos¬sible first step toward the lessen¬ing of this danger. It is basedupon the Kennan suggestion thatforeign troops be withdrawn bothfrom East and West Germany.Such a geographical separationof US and Russian troops, he ex¬plained. would reduce the mutualfear and tension, and create inthe continental powers a higherdegree of conscientiousness intheir own defense.But the stockpiling of nucleararmaments on the continentwould make any Russian with¬drawal from East Europe un¬thinkable, since the Russianswould never entrust such weaponsto the satellites.“Are such proposals utopian?”queried Dr. Halperin. “Perhaps,but we must not let fear and panicprevent us from trying again andagain in the hope that one of theseappeals will succeed. The stakesare too great for us to desist.“If we fail, we would lose lit¬tle, and would gain the. respectand friendship of the uncommit¬ted peoples of the world. And bythe very act of trying, we woulddemonstrate that we have con¬quered panic and hysteria. Theseare among our most dreadfulenemies.”Dr. Halperin’s lecture concludedthe fall series sponsored by theDowntown center on issues of USforeign policy.The ColletteLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236MODEL CAMERAAuthorized LeiemDealer1VSA Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTWe Specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Dawn to Dawn1342 E. 53rd St.MidwesternRadio and TV$3 service callDR 3-9795EUROPESummer 1958Special conducted "YOUTHTOUR" (age: 18-30). 18 Coun¬tries, 60 to 63 days in Europe.Round-trip by ship: deluxe busand First Class Rail. All-inclusiveprice $1,249. Other tours by shipand by oir. for detailed informa¬tion, write:KNIGHT TOURSProf. Loring D. Knecht, Director(French Dept., St. Olaf College)P.O. Box 350, Northfield, Minn. BUY-WISE... PRICE-WISECorduroy Sport Coats $9.95Ivy All Wool Flannel Pants 7.95Ivy Corduroy Pants 4.95Ivy Shirts $2.95 & 3.95Imported Lambs Wool Crew Necks 5.95Lambs Wool Blend L.S. Polo Shirts ...... 5.95Our Prices Can't Be Beat ... It's Smart To Buy For LessD & G Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-2728“In the Neighborhood for 40 Years'*Hours: 9 o.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 a.m. - 9 p.m., Saturday10% Discount fro UC Students and PersonnelAll Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW MET PRICES3-LBS. WASHED & FLUFF DRIED . . . 59'10-LBS. FLAT WORK T’DRESS SHIRTS 22'QUALITY DRY CLEANING — RAPID SERVICE — REASONABLE PRICESFREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERYPhone PLaza 2-9097UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1024 E. 55th St. Annual Wassail party willbe held Wednesday afternoonat 3 pm in Ida Noyes hall.The pre-Christmas event is opento all students, faculty, and ad¬ministration advisers. Free was¬sail and Christmas cake will beserved. Although Santa Claus will bethere, his pseudonym to UCers isbeing kept top secret. In the pastformer dean of students RobertM. Strozier performed the role.A tree-lighting ceremony is alsobeing planned, which will official¬ly open the season. Christmascarols will also be sung.{j/w PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433No better gift for the traveler!famousjj* H ■ nMiuRJ(KB**Formerly $29.95. Now slashed t» INI MttAOJOf tOHO-HAfiHere’s a gift that will be appreciated for a lifetime —the world-famous 40-lesson course that has. taughtthousands to speak French, Spanish, Italian and Ger¬man! It’s the quick, easy, effortless way to learn aforeign language, based on the phenomenally success¬ful “U. S. Army method.” The complete course thatformerly took twenty 78 RPM records is now availableon four unbreakable, long-playing (33Vi RPM) rec¬ords — resulting in the lowest price in history!With a Living Language Course, anyone canlearn a language as naturally and casually as youlearned English as a child. Just listen — and learn!That’s all there is to it — no Bull grammar to memorize.The instructors are always on hand. They never losepatience, repeat over and over again as often as nec¬essary. conversation manual lets you see each wordand phrase as you hear it. Free 16,000 word two-waydictionary with each set! Quantities limited. Write,WOODWORTH’SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St.Open Evenings — Monday, Wednesday, Friday |Dec. <*-1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3UC losing great faculty;no one is replacing themgoing than while attracting students of ahigh quality, it is important thatUC should have the names whichwill attract such students.__ In interviews to the press, Dr.longer are to be numbered among faculty members who will make Urey gave no specific reason forDuring the last four years UC noted scholars arehas lost four scholars outstanding coming to UC.In their fields of study. EnMco Although the University has out-Fermi, Anton J. Carlson, David standing facilities, a well-earnedReisman, and Harold Urey no reputation, and plenty of youngChicago’s faculty.To a certain extent this is to beexpected, because scholars comeend go these days from univer¬sity to university with ever-in¬creasing frequency, and the pas¬sage of time means the loss ofmen like Carlson and Fermi. Nev¬ertheless, observation shows more fact remains that outsiders judgea university by its big names.Urey is one of the biggest namesin the physical sciences, and onewhich any university can ill-af-ford to lose. Since the Universitywould like to raise enrollment,LETTERClarifies comments weather attracted him, a factorwhich can be important when aman reaches 65. But perhaps it isbecause of UC’s compulsory re¬tirement rule, which makes itnecessary for a faculty memberto rely on a series of “gentleman’sagreements” or other ruses forgetting around the rule, if hewants to stay on.Men noted for their contribu¬tions to knowledge do not come toa grinding halt at 65 and neither_ ^ u ec j •<. ,, u will Dr. Urey. Hisdeoarture oughtI cannot agree with Professor Boycheff, despite my attach- t0 Rive the administration somement to sport (letter November 22), that sport comes any- food for thought,where near art in importance.“Frank Lloyd Wright is the Stagg of architecture and AmosAlonzo Stagg is the Wright offootball,” was, however, aphrase I used in my interviewwith the Maroon. If it had beenprinted it might have modifiedthe effect of my commentary ontome readers.Perhaps a more tolerant read¬ing of my syntax would also havesuggested to some readers that apersonal attack on either of thesemen was not my actual aim.I doubt that my dissatisfactionswith one aspect or another of theachievements of these men canmuch dim their Olympian youth-In-age.I do think that Wright deviatesfrom his own best genius with hisLoop skyscraper plan; and I dothink that Stagg credits contem¬porary football with morality¬building qualities that it may havehad in his playing and coachingdays but hardly has today.Lest Stagg should nurse awound unintended by me, I amwriting him a personal note along these lines, and I thank professorBoycheff for a challenge enablingme to clarify.Keitel DenneyProfessorSocial Sciences (College)MICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063Small MediumCHEESE $ 95 $1.40SAUSAGE 1.15 1.65ANCHOVIES 1.15 1.65 .ONION 1.00 1.50PEPPER 1.15 1.65i i Other Combinations on RequestFree Delivery to F. of C. studentsTable Service Delivery ServiceA M. to 2 A.M. 1 1 A M. to 2 A.M.Open till 3 A.M. on Friday and SaturdayClosed Mondays „XTHE Holidays areMAY WE SUGGEST: ComingA WAY TO SAVE TIME, MONEYShop with cash — avoid long delays and high interest pay¬ments at a dozen different places. Come into the Credit Unionand arrange a loan to fit YOUR needs. Lowest rates in townbecause you borrow from yourself.A WONDERFUL GIFTFor any young person (or old, for that matter) ... a CreditUnion account of his very own. Deposits as small as a quartercheerfully accepted. Stick a dime or quarter saver from theCredit Union in his stocking . . . stick a C. U. calendar inyour wallet.% A PAINLESS WAY TO SAVELeave your pocket change — a dollar or two — at the CreditUnion each time you shop. You won't even miss it and nextholiday season or vacation time your dollars and dividendswill be waiting for you. -f/yx cfucaao11 larooriHYDE PARK CO-OP FEDERAL CREDIT UNION5535 SOUTH HARPER AVENUECHICAGO 37, ILLINOIS• CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 6, 1957 Issued every Friday throughout the school year and Intermittently duringsummer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago MAROON, Ida Noyes hall, 12UEast 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions 3265 and3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptions by mail, $3 per year.Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday. Deadline for all material 3Wednesday.their contributions to the various his decision to leave for Califor-fields of study in the future, the nja> perhaps the mild California Editor-in-chiefGary MokotoffManaging editor Associate editorRobert J. Haiasz Rochelle M. Dubnow(A DV ERTISEMENT)Oil Campos withMaxShulman(By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys! "and,“Barefoot Boy with Cheek")DECK THE HALLSThe days grow short, the nights grow long, the north winddoth blow, and a light frost appears on the knees of coeds.Christmas is ieumen in, and once more our keen youngminds turn to the vexing problem of Christmas gifts.Let us examine first the most vexing of all gift problems:What do you buy for the person who has everything? Wellsir, when you encounter this dilemma, the best thing todo is seize it by the horns. Ask yourself this question: Doeshe truly have everything? Does he, for example, have abirthmark? A Mach number? A lacrosse net? An I-beam?An S-hook? A U-bolt? A T-square? A Primus stove?(There is, incidentally, quite an interesting little storyabout how Primus came to invent the stove. Before Primus’sinvention, cooking was rather a hazardous occupation.People just built fires any old place—the floor, the closet,the escritoire—and often as not the whole house would goup in flames along with the dinner. Primus, a gooseplucker of Frankfurt-am-Main, kept thinking there mustbe a more efficient way to cook. Finally, in a flash of in¬spiration, it came to him: Why not build a device to containthe fire and keep it from spreading?...te firnUk w i>! k‘Um it ouf of pop?r-(Well sir, he built precisely such a device and named itafter his beloved wife Stove. Primus’s first Stove, it mustbe confessed, was less than a triumph; his mistake was inbuilding it out of paper. The next Stove, built of wood,fared hardly better. Not until he made one out of metalcould the Stove really be called a success.(But even then the Stove was not entirely satisfactory.The trouble was that the Stove filled up with ashes andbecame useless after a few weeks. It remained for Primus’sson Frederick to conquer that problem. He invented amechanism to remove ashes from the bottom of the Stoveand was thenceforth known to posterity as Frederick theGrate.) 'But I digress. We were discussing Christmas gifts. Thisyear, as every year, a popular gift is the smoking jacket.And what do the smoking jackets smoke? Why, Marlboro,of course—every man jacket of them. And why wouldn’tthey smoke Marlboros? Why wouldn’t anybody with ataste bud in his head? You get such a lot to like in a Marl¬boro—filter ... flavor... flip-top box.Here is no filter to hollow the cheeks and bug the eye¬balls; here is a filter that draws nice and easy. Here is noflavor to pale and pall; here is a flavor ever fresh, everrestful. Here is no flimsy pack to crumble and shred itsprecious cargo; here is a sturdy box that keeps each ciga¬rette plump and pristine.Speaking of smoking, the year’s most unusual gift itemis a brand-new cigarette lighter that never needs refilling.You are scoffing. You are saying you have heard such claimsbefore. But it’s true, I promise you. This new lighternever, never needs refilling! The fuel supply lasts forever.Of course, there are certain disadvantages. For onething, the lighter is rather bulky—170 feet long and threestories high.But look on the bright side: As the fuel runs out, youcan" rent rooms in it. © 1057, Max ShulwaGood to give, good to receive, at Christmas or any other timeIs a carton of filter-tip Marlboros, whose makers take pleasurein bringing you this column throughout the tchool year,\/GADFLYLanguage training lackingThe author of this week's Gadfly is a graduate student in the departmentof philosophy. His minor is in classical languages. He was a student in theCollege from 1948-49. After a brief tour with the armed forces he returnedto campus last year. \\ 1411 I. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300I! Cafe EnricoITALIAN RESTAURANT & PIZZERIAFeaturing — Hors d'oeuvre TableSmall Large Small Large12" 14" 12" 14"Cheese 1.15 1.55 Combination .1.75 2.25Sausage .1.45 1.95 Mushroom . . . .1.60 2.10Anchovy .... .1.45 1.95 Shrimp .1.75 2.25Pepper & Onion 1.20 1.80 Bacon & Onion 1.60 2.10Free Delivery on All Pizza <• I/C StudentsT would like to preface mycontribution to Gadfly by stat¬ing quite explicitly that I willnot permit my language to be per¬verted by nonsensical demands ofjournalistic prose which evidentlyis part of Maroon policy.IN THE COLLEGE, and to alesser extent in the divisions, theeffort to gain the most compre¬hensive purview of knowledgeleads to its being studied in apopular manner rather than in ascholarly manner. A popular man¬ner takes account of the intellec¬tual limitations of the audience—The Story of Philosophy, Mathe¬matics for the Millions, and allthe college courses are good ex¬amples. The scholarly manner isnot restricted to the intellectuallimitations of the audience, andhence serves professional com¬petence.Consider, my dear reader, thenatural science courses of the Col¬lege. There adolescents are con¬fronted with the most recent dis¬coveries in relativity and quan¬tum theory, (all In the popularmode, of course), rather than cal¬culus, classical mechanics hydro¬dynamics, etc., which are moreappropriate to their abilities andprevious training. What is thepurpose of this odd emphasis? Toenable the graduate to patter ami¬ably about relativity at cocktailparties? A perverted notion ofcurrency of knowledge? Or per¬haps the naive notion that theUniversity is to introduce the stu¬dent to every scientist, philoso¬pher, historian, etc., in the uni¬verse?Temerariously, Gadfly suggeststhat a sequence of courses involv¬ing calculus, elementary Newton¬ian physics, chemistry would suf¬fice for the physical scientific por¬tion of the natural sciencesHave a WORLD of miTravel with tITAUnbelievable Low CostEurope60 o-y. tr*m $585Orient*43-65 Day* Gam $998Many loan inductcoH.g. trtdil.WERTLA VALEURVALORVALIAIn ony language there Is value inliving at The Versailles. Cheerfulsurroundings in a well maintainedbuilding for refined people whoappreciate a quiet, restful/ home¬like atmosphere. Delightful 1 Viand 2 Vi room apartments taste¬fully decorated now available fur¬nished or unfurnished at unusuallyattractive rates. Parcel receiving,uniformed night attendant, maidand linen service if desired.VERSAILLESAPARTMENTS5234 Dorchester Are. FA 4-0200 courses, for thorough knowledgeof several fundamental topics ispreferable to superficial knowl¬edge of many.APPARENTLY THE two scientific divisions are of the sameopinion as Gadfly, since they werethe principal initiators of recentchanges in the College curricu¬lum. Perhaps the newly effectedliaison of the College with the di¬visions will end the conditionsthat allowed such eccentricities asaforementioned to flourish.In the instance of the human¬ities, the situation is far worse.For translated classics constitutea large portion of the College stu¬dents’ fare, yet the principal vir¬tue of classical education—rigor¬ous training in difficult languages—is wanting. The result of this isa bastardized version of an Eng¬lish classical education—fatheredby the College, born by the Mod¬ern Library. Again preparationfor glibness rather than for schol¬arship seems to be the goal. TheModern Library classical scholarundertakes humanistic graduatestudies—with a knowledge of onelanguage. He has read Plato, Aris¬totle, et al, but does not know aparticle of Greek. The time whichshould have been devoted to thestudy of languages was devotedto reading extensively and super¬ficially on many topics.CERTAINLY, for the highestdegree of scholarship, humanisticand religious writings should beread in their original languages;and for the greatest currency inscientific knowledge, reading abil¬ity in several most important mod¬ern languages is requisite. Yetthe modest linguistic require¬ments for higher degrees are, inall instances, a reading examina¬ tion at the end of training in one,or at most two, languages. Exceptin foreign language courses, writ¬ings in foreign languages are nev¬er assigned; the hiatus is filled bytranslatiohs. But are not theseshadows of shadows, owing inter¬pretations in one tongue of thethoughts an author expresses inanother? What is more pitifulthan the sight of potential divines,who, by doctrine, accept the Bibleas the revealed word of God, yetare unable to read Scripture inthe original Greek, Hebrew, andAramaic. It were as though theybelieved that Moses spoke in Eliz¬abethan English!GADFLY SUGGESTS; (1) requiring proficiency in Latin orGerman or French of all entrants;(2) requiring proficiency in Latin,German, and French of all B.A.graduates (or graduate entrants)in humanities, or, for scientificstudents, Russian in lieu ofLatin. Simultaneously, tremend¬ous influence should be exertedagainst the indolent public schoolsystems of this country to theend that they assume responsibil¬ity for this linguistic training,which properly belongs to the pri¬mary and secondary schools.The only alternative to the sug¬gested program would be to estab¬lish two different degrees; onewhich would be a proaedeutic forgraduate studies, and would sub¬serve future professional advance¬ment by grounding the student inscholarly subjects, especially lan¬guages; the other which would bea terminal education, and whosepurpose would be to afford a con¬spectus of all knowledge as his¬torically received, without obedi¬ence to scholarly criteria.Larnpsack •trlklno ottmde In cImsIc strip**Exclusive at Beacon*sReflecting theselectivityend eroftmonthipcharacteristic atNew England*A nest shlrtmaker.A shlrf with theiftdlsputabtu authorityof good taste,executed l« a flnefabric of combedexford stripes.luxuriously detailedwith center pleatsend center button oncollar back. AvailableIn button-DownCollar with lust(be proper slope.608 n. michigan WHitehall 3-2410 *5.95i: DID’JA EVER DISCOVERan unusual store withhundreds of items you'venever seen before? Andhave you ever desiredsome gimmick and didn'tknow where to get it?I'm the guy that canfind anything.Exotics Trading Post ’Open Noon to 9 P.M.1115 E. 55th St. FA 4-0306< >♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦tS?tS0 JAIso low-cost trips to Mexicown*" $149 up, South America JAW up,Hawaii Study Tour $498 up andAround the World $1398 up.Aik Your Travel Agant332 S. MichiganAve., Chicago 4,me. HA 7-2557 Floor Cushions... for casual extra seatingoo!L Lozybock Floor Cushions ore designed for today's contemporary homes where"floor sitting" ie practically a way of life... cosuol and informal. These cushionswill add immeasurably to the floor sitter's comfort and a^o be a color accent inyour home. Buy a stock and see what a success they will make at every party.Made of practically indestructible poly-foam and with washable zipper covers inbrilliant accent colors.18xi8x2 — $6.95; 19x19x3-$9.95; 22x22x3-$12.95Also see Lozybock sofa pillows in matching colors.accent./ 1462 cast 53rd street. SPECIAL CHRISTMAS HOURSbeginning DECEMBER 9th9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon. thru Fri.Saturday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.Sunday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.Dec. 6. 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5To hold Christmas partyEnglish wassail,~ a treetrimmed with emblems ofmany nations, and Americancookies will make “Christmas'round the world*’ the theme atthe annual Christmas party forwomen University employees.The 26th annual party will beRELIANCE CAMERA &PHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63rd St.BU 8-6040 held Thursday from 4 to 6 pm inIda Noyes hall.As In other years, guests willremember the children of theMary MacDowell settlement (for¬merly the University of Chicagosettlement) by bringing gifts forthem. * Coming events on quadranglesDr. N. J, De FrancoDr. N. R. NelsonOPTOMETRISTS1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352A\S\\\\\\\\V\\\VV\\VV\\\VVVVWWV\V\V\V\\\V\\V)ZBT CALYPSO OPEN HOUSE5749 S. WoodlawnSaturday, January 11 — 8:30 p.m.A CASA Book StoreChristmas cards — imported and foreign languageFeaturing one of the best 5c collections in the cityAlso imported — children's books, small giftsand Christmas tree ornaments.1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651 Friday 6 DecemberLutheran fellowship program. "Demon¬stration of Advent customs, ancientand modern” — discussion of winterquarter program. Supper at 6. pro¬gram at 7, Chapel house. 5810 Wood-lawn Admission charge for supper.Motion picture: “Volpone,” 7:15 and9:15 pm, Soc Sci 122. Admissioncharge.Sabbath service, 7:45 pro, Hillel house.Wing ding and square dance. 8 pm, IdaNoyes. No shoes. (15 cents for mem¬bers, 35 cents general admission.)University concert. Phoenix quartet,8:30 pm, Mandel hall. Admissioncharge.Saturday 7 DecemberMidwest open gymnastics meet, 7 pm,Fieldhouse. Admission charge.Musicomedy night (Orchestra comediae-musicalis) Ida Noves theatre, 7:30 pm.Radio broadcast. “The Sacred Note,”10:15 pm, WBBM. A program of choral'music by the UC choir, Richard Vlk-strom director.Sunday 8 DecemberUniversity religious service. Rockefellerchapel, 11 am. the Reverend KennethI. Brown, executive director Danforthfoundation. St. Louis, “Christian ex¬travagance.”Episcopal communion service. 8:30 am.Bo,id Chape! (followed by breakfast.Swift hall, for 35 cents).Roman Catholic masses. 8.30, 10. 11 am,DeSales house.Lutheran communion service, 10 am,Hilton chapel.Record concert. 10 am to noon, Inthouse home room.English class for foreign persons learn¬ ing English, 2-4 pm. Int house.Carillon >concert, chapel carlllonneurJames R. Lawson, 4:30 pm, Rockefel¬ler chapel.Glee club rehearsal, 4:30 pm. Ida Noyes.Porter fellowship, supper 6 pm, program7:30 pm. Swift hall common room,prof Markus K. Barth speaks on“What Is Biblical Criticism AUAbout?” (50 cents charge for supper.)Hillel Sunday supper, 6 pm, Hillelhouse. 75 cents admission charge.WBBM-TV, channel 2, presents "I’d Likato Be a Public Relations Expert.” 3:30pm.Social Dancing, 8-11, Int house, instruc¬tion provided from 7-8. 50 cents feefor non-residents.Lecture, “Japanese Buddhism,” profHurl of Tohoku university, Japan,8 pm. Fenn house. 5638 Woodlawn.Lecture, "Faith and doubt in the socialorder,” Kermlt Eby, prof of social sci¬ences, 8 pm. Chapel house, 5810Woodlawn.Monday 9 DecemberMotion picture. “Great Caruso,” 7 and9 pm, Int house east lounge. Admis¬sion charge of 50 cents.Orchestra comediae-musicalis rehearsal,7:30 pm, Mandel hall.Evensong, 8 pm. Bond Chapel EpiscopalBishop Gerald F. Burrlll will give thesermon.Tuesday 10 DecemberSociety for rocket research, specialmeeting and election of officers. 7:45pm. Eckhart 202.UC concert band rehearsal, 7:30 pm,Mandel hall.Folk dancing, 8-11 pm. Int house, pre¬ceded by instruction from 7-8. 50-centadmission for non-residents.’PnayteteMe PAINT & HARDWARE CO.Wallpaper - Houseware - PlumbingComplete Line of Rental Tools1154-58 E. 55th St. UC Discount HY 3-3840'(WHAT* WinJet SMOKE** ?J LUCKYJ^-rrJ(seeWHAT IS ACANDY-CHEWING SISTER!william macurdy. Nibbling SiblingDARTMOUTH & ANY NORMAL DORM’LL be full of Luckysmokers! You can count ’em by carloadson any campus — and no wonder! ALucky, you see, is a light smoke—theright smoke for everyone. It’s made ofnothing but naturally hght tobacco ...golden rich, wonderfully good-tastingtobacco that’s toasted to taste even bet¬ter. Find a set of dorms without Luckysmokers, and you’ve stumbled on amighty Odd Quad! Don’t you miss out—hght up a Lucky. You’ll say a hghtsmoke’s the right smoke for you!STUDENTS! MAKE *25Do you like to shirk work? Here’s some easymoney—start Stickling! We'll pay $25 for everyStickler we print—and for hundreds more thatnever get used. Sticklers are simple riddles withtwo-word rhyming answers. Both words musthave the same number of syllables.(Don’t do drawings.) Send yourSticklers with your name, address,college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky,Box 67 A, Mt. Vernon, N.Y.WHAT'S AN AGILE SECRET AGENT!RONALD RILEY.BOSTON COLLEGE Spry Spy WHAT IS A GATHERINGOF PHI BETESPSmarty PartyRIERRE VAN RYSSELBERGHE.U. Or WASHINGTON WHAT IS A MAN WHOHOARDS SAITINES!MARYLIN FISHER.SAN JOSE JR COLL. Cracker StackerLIGHt UP A SMOKE -LIGHT UP A LUCKY I*4 T Ce.t Product of <j/mjvue<vn (Jcfwexcd&nyiaTip — <Jo$xnceo- is our. tniddU name6 * CHI CAGO MAROON • Dec. 6, 1957 Faculty seminar (school of buslne^isoc sci 302. 3:30 pm "The pure theoryof business budgeting.” Erwin kNemmerg, associate professor schoolof commerce, University of W'scorTsin: visiting associate professor <vrbusiness administration, Northwest!ern university. unnwesuMeeting of the Council of the Universlty Senate. Law south, 3:40 pmColloquium: Institute for the studv ctmetals, research Institutes 211 Vjspm, "Cyclotron Resonance In metals -R N. Dexter, department of DhvsWUniversity of IWsconsln. P y irs*Junior Mathematics club, Eckhart 20s4:30 pm "What Is algebraic topolo^v^*Elon Lima, graduate studentBasketball game. Field house. 8Chicago “B” Team vs. Fifth ArmyLecture series: "Travel and interna,tional understanding” (UniversityCollege), Art Institute. 8pm “France -Myron C. Clement, French Govern¬ment tourist office.Wednesday 11 DecemberCarillon recital. Rockefeller chapel 4 topm. Mr. Lawson.Evensong and prayer, (Canterbury asso¬ciation), 5:05 pm. Bond chapelGlee club rehearsal. 7 pm. Ida NovesHanukkah party: The great debate onthe latke versus the hamantash 7 inpm, Hillel house.Country dancers, 8 pm. Ida Noyes hallW9YWQ weekly technical meeting 9 ispm, room 301, Reynolds club.WTTW, channel II. presents “A Christ.mas Painting,” 9:30 pm.Religious service (Federated Theologicalfaculty), Bond chapel. 11:30 am.Concert: “Christmas In song.”’ Bondchapel. 8:30 pm, Unlverstty of ChicagoGlee club, William H. Delhi, director.Thursday 12 DecemberEpiscopal holy communion, 7:30 amBond chapel.WTTW, channel 11, “Today’s Cities inTomorrow—Traffic and the City" withprof. Ifarold M. Mayei. 9:30 pmCommunication Club, 8oc Sci 201. 7 Mpm, “Reporting Science and Tech¬nology In the Age of Sputnik.” ArthurSnider, Science Editor, the ChicagoDally News.Coffee hour, weekly. Green hall, 9 pmHU fin iriti 6/11\ CMIfJli.Orr in '58f Round Trip viaiSteamship $OAA' FREQUENT SAIUN8S ,V"ffU MThrift Romd Trip by AirSHANNON LONDON PARIS<363.80 <416.00 <452.001Rotas to other destinations on application•y using stop-over privileges, your entireIron sportoflbn ip Europe may bo contain tdIn your air ticket.Ckoicu uf Ovor INTUDENTCLASSTOURS•TRAVELSTUBYTOURS *595CONDUCTEBTOURS MUniversity Travel Co„ officialbonded agents for all lines, hasrendered efficient travel serviceon a business basis since J 926.See year laeol Navel agent lotfoMar* and daOaUa aUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq. Cambridge, Mass.WILBUB JUST WOKE UP TOTHE FACT THAT HE£ IN CLASS!KEEP ALERT TOR ABETTER POINT AYE RACE!Don’t let that "drowsy feel*ing” cramp your style in class... or when you’re "hittingthe books”. Take a NoDoaAwakener! In a few minutes,CHi’ll be your normal best...ide awake . , , alert! You!doctor will tell you—NoDoaAwakeners are safe as coffee.Keep a pack handy!15 TABLETS, 35c35tablets fla handy tia J«9c NOQOZaw a K l N E R5the PHOENIX and the MUSEWonder how many people have wondered what would happen if there ever came a week when there wa*nothing to .ay m the introduction of this column? Well, I for one, have wondered, but no longer. For nowain going to find out. For there indeed is . . . nothing to say in the introduction to this column. Ostensibly*n<* wh?*,,s happening is that lam just filling up vacant paper with vacant verbiage.And that not too verdant, either. Ah, well, such is life. And, for that matter, such is the column. Such,sucVif then • • •CULTURE AND THATTHERE STUFF ON ~CAMPUSUniversity concert Clee club concert Chicago Symphony. Also on the Goodman theatreNext Wednesday at 8:30 pm in Program will be Brahms’ “Tragic Opening tonight at GoodmanBond chapel, the University Glee overture,” opus 81, and good old theaPtre a®d run^g through De-club will give its Christmas con- Pictures at an Exhibition. cember 22 is Everyman, Hugo “The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T.” Dr.Sff*;,oe chorus, led by William Then Thursday and Friday, Von Hofmannstal’s 20th century Seuss should make more movies,Havine vented his Indignation E?lh1, numbersiby Pales- Brahms will carry the day, with "classic." thinks the phoenix.ooite enough UM.the phot, Al^'feaTur'ed in th'eToncertwill pluTht symphonrnum^fsTn Hyd. P„k theatre ^ tornow, now the Hyde Park»s Hn^ersit/con^ 2 ^usif 35S •>“ s£ ‘major, ’STSm&S *££ -Uted-ahouf Creek tiim. It is rumfeature the Phoenix quartet in a imoto. Admission is free,program including works by Arri- .. . .aga, Dohnanyi, and Beethoven. Society concert ..The Phoenix quartet consists of _™en’ ** music (somewhatDavid Sackson, Fred Manzella, Christmas) in a chapel is your Chicago Chamber orchestraRalph Hersh, and Ray Schweitzer. come back next Saturday, Sunday at 8:15 in Fullerton hallAs usual, tickets are on sale (until December 14, and hear the musi- Dieter Kober will lead the Chi-mid-afternoon today) at the con- ca* society in another ‘ Christmas cagorChamber orchestra in a con¬cert office at 5802 Woodlawn, for con<^rt. Featured will be organ cert consisting ot Arcangelo Cor-$1,50, or the student rate of $1. works by Bach and Daquin, sev- eili’s Concerto Grosso, opus 6,madrigals and two duets by number 8 (Christmas -concerto),OCM conceit Monteverdi, two modern numbers, Harry Josephson’s Reverie forNormally subsidiary to Black- one a song with harpsichord ac- Flute and Strings, Bach’s Bran-friars (providing, as it does, the companiment by Donald Jenni, denburg concerto number 5, Diet-non-vocal music for the annual sod the other soprano ari^i from j-jch Buxtehude’s Cantata numberproduction of the same name), Leland Smiths recently per- 45^ several Christmas arias of theOrchestra Commedia Musicalis formed opera Santa Claus, and baroque and romantic eras, andis appearing independently in a several carols with lute, viola de Francesco Manfredi’s Concertoconcert tomorrow night. In a pro- gamba, and recorder accompani- Grosso in C major (Christmasgram of music from several ment. Admission is also free. _ ... , . A , , . . ning through next Friday. TheFrancescatti as soloist. And of gic places to multiply their influ- second feature on the bill is “Thecourse all these times Reiner will ence some five-hundredfold in Passionate Sentry.”Broadway musicals as well assome numbers from last year’sBlaokfriars show, the group willbe conducted alternately by DougMaurer and Bill Mathieu. The con- MATTERS OF LIKE ILKELSEWHEREChicago Symphony orchestraTuesday afternoon, Zino Fran-ccrt will be at 7:30 in Ida Noyes cescatti will play the Mendelssohn tion of the Art Institute, and arethird floor theatre. E minor violin concerto with the priced at $1.50, $2.50, and $3.50concerto). Featured soloists willbe Aksel Schiotz, baritone, Doro¬thy Lane, harpsichord, and Wal-frid Kujala, flute. Tickets (allseats reserved) are available atthe department of museum educa-Jimmy'sSINCE 1940 Ellen Coughlin Beauty SalonSI05 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.m. - 11 p.m.Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristEyes ExaminedVisual TrainingGlasses FittedRepair Servico• •1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372 HawaiianParty Supplies and DecorationsBeachcomber's Treasure Chesty Curios and NoveltiesM Lounging Wear, Muu Muus,Aloha ShirtsHawaiian Prints Made in the IslandsHamman’s of Honolulu1636 E. 55th FA 4-6451Ifillllllliikl BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGMFMimi/U THFATIll 1 WINTEB SPECIALDecember 6 thru December 22Huge Vm Hofmannsthal'sEVERYMANIn Hie famed Salzburg Festival versionstarringDONALD BUKAFri. Sat. Sun. 8:30Tue. Thurs. 7:30Matinee Thurs. 3:00Tickets may be ordered at Hie StudentService Center at $0.85 each ar byphone at CE 6-2337. TUNE UP l650-p• Anti-FreezefaMMEfiLln • Road .ServiceHeavy Duty Battery 5^"*SPECIAL ! !Harper Super ServiceDealer in Sinclair Protlucts5556 HARPER PL 2-9654The OriginalMrs. Snyder’s CandiesAre Available Again For YourHoliday Requirementsat theUNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE the lxg.de Jqjft piotte~pto*W079o7i pokJ^/ 53 M4tiuterit H&te 50* 011 p&rfoMriQM&lNow, thro Dec. 12 — Sunday matinee, 2 pmSTELLA the fiim debut of MELINA MERCOURI,^ first lady of the Greek theatre“Pulses with life. Has insight and compassion"!— Zinzer, HERALD TRIBUNE"The desire to search out life with the camera and throw it on thescreen without apology or moral stricture."— Knight, SATURDAY REVIEWShot in and around Athens, under the superb and powerful hand ofwriter-director MICHAEL CACCOYANNIS. Stella is Greece's full emer¬gence into film art.— and —-THE PASSIONATE SENTRYNICEL PATRICK • PEGGY CUMMINS • GEORGE COLESaid to be 'Screamingly sophisticated'IV FUTURE• Grohom Greene's LOSER TAKES ALL, breadth and colour with Ros-sano Brazzi — THE SILKEN AFFAIR, by a brace of 'New Yorker'writers, with David Niven and Genevieve Page. Dee. 13• Marina Vlady, LA SORCIERE: 18 years wrought this amazing thing,and the story is also lovely — THE THIRD KEY, with Jack Hawkinsand Scotland Yard doing it again, tautly. Dec. 20• FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS: Hemingway out of John Donne,Tamiroff, Paxinou, Bergman, Cooper, and not cut. A revival especiallyfor those disappointed in recent Hollywood Hemingways. Also CONEYISLAND, USA, with colour and a Venice award, plus a short on stuntdriving. Dee. 27• PAPA, MAMA, THE MAID AND I and THE NAKED EYE. (A qual¬ity documentary of photography). Jan. 3• Femandel in PANTALOONS — THE WEAPON, plus a short onBernard Show. Jon. 105802 ELLIS AVENUE STUDENTS!We have thousands ofFULL-TIMEPART-TIMEjobs in departmentand retail storesthrough-outChicago• Convenient hours• Liberal discountsContact theProfessional, Sales & Clerical OfficeIllinois State Employment Service73 West Washington StreetChicago, IllinoisDec. 6, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7NAAU Sr. cross countryrace in Washington parkNational Amateur Athletic Union senior 10,000 meter (6y4 miles) cross country champion¬ships will be held under the sponsorship of the University of Chicago Track club tomorrowat Washington Park course.Ted Haydon, UCTC coach and director of the meet, predicts a dramatic three-team fightfor the team title between the defending champions of the New York Athletic club, UCTC(runner up in the last three championships), the University of Houston track club (win¬ners of the National AAU 'Junior Championship at Louis- 01ymPic team; George King Jr., Gar Williams, varsity track star;ville this last Thanksgiving an outstanding miler. Bob Kelly, fourth in the NAAUvine, inis last inannsgiving ^ uc ^ ^ ^ race last year; and Hal Higd(mday* lenge the NYAC and Houston Ben Almageur, Lawton Lamb andOther contending teams are the with a we]1 balanced team includ- Dr. Walter Deike, who are allphoto by DephoureMaroon cagers downRipon college 52-43Maroon cagers started their season with a very impressivewin over Ripon by a score of 52-43. Coach Joe Stampf said itwas a very good team effort. Chicago was pressed throughoutwith a variety of defenses but the Maroons managed to breakthrough everything Ripon threw up against them. Cleveland Striders, Buffalo YMCAtrack club, Toronto Olympic club,and the Cleveland Magyar athleticclub. Additional club and collegeteams are expected to enter be¬fore the Dec. 3 deadline.The New York AC team is head¬ed by Peter McArdle, who recent¬ly ran an 18:50.8 four mile race;Curt Stone, a member of the 1956Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Are.Ml, 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery Service ing Phil Coleman, 1956 Olympian; capable of good performances.STEVEN'S LUNCH1206 E. 55thSoda Fountain Home-Cooked MealsClosed Sundays and HolidaysUNIVERSITY HOTELNewly Decorated Rooms — Private Tub and ShowerKitchenettes Available; Daily Maid Service. Reasonable Rates.Two Blocks from 1C. Permanent and Transient Guests.5319 Blnckslone DO S-4109TheDisc1367 E. 57th St_Recordof the weekSCHWARZKOPFSings Christmas Songs .Angel 35530*3.19 dark theatreCollege Student Price50* at all timesJust present your studentidentification card at theClark Theatre box office, 11N. Clark.For off-beat entertain¬ment, each week the Clarkoffers its Sunday Film Cuildand Friday Musicomedy Day. !■» w w irtt wwwwwwwwwwwww wu iI AUTO INSURANCE: TERM INSURANCE ;I Phone or Writs JI Joseph Hv Aaron, '27 j►133 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060< International House MoviesMonday evenings, 7 A 9 p.m. — East LoungeMonday, Dec. 9 — 50c — Great Caruso (Tech.) (USA)CARS TO DRIVEFlorida - CaliforniaPoints West, East and SouthGas allowance — fee refundedAAA DRIVEAWAY343 S. Dearborn WE 9-2364BORDONE\ Movers and Light Hauling!LU 2-4660--------------REMEMBER-WINS70H COMES IN BOTH RACKAND CRUSH-PROOF BOXl8 • C H I CAGO MAROON # Dec. 6, 1957 t.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO C0_winston-saum.n.C#