ehlccup Riesman lectures on"Abyss of leisure"by Dick PurtillIn the third of his series of lectures under the general title,"The future of America,” David Riesman discussed last Mon¬day, the "Abyss of leisure,” which has opened up before theAmerican workingman.Vol. 66, No. 20 University of Chicago, Friday, Jan. 31, 1958 » More and more people inthis country were movingjfrom a "subsistence” to a "lux¬ury” way of, life, he said, and work was seriously affecting ourculture. Ambition, initiative, andcreativity have declined, he said.Riesman offered as one possibleFootball greats to receiveawards at Knox-UC game* leaders and industrialists haveThree famous figures of Maroon football, Amos Alonzo Stagg, Walter H. Eckersall, and realized that this “new leisure” ^nal^^e towards the workJay Berwanger, will be honored tomorrow night when certificates of their election to the Aside from this, the social re-football hall of fame will be presented in a ceremony at half-time of the Knox-Chicago bas- four-day week proposal last year percussions of the productiveketball game in the Field house. by most members of his union process, stated Riesman should be_ ,.rvu t, e a-u n/r-j ' n- mi _ u . . ... ..... , _ was symptomatic of the fact that considered as part of the "wholeThe Old Man of the Midway, now 9d, will not be piesent to accept the ceitificate repre- many people don’t know what to product” of a productive process.sonling his election as an outstanding coach, out will respond in a telephone broadcast from do with the leisure they have now, Factories could and should bemore and more of the gains of solution, the returning of moreAmerican productivity were being responsibility and creative partici-devoted to increasing the leisure pation to the worker. Procedurestime of the worker. Many Ameri- which seem efficient but reducecans now literally have more lei- the worker to a “semi-animatesure than they know what to do cog” in the machinery may bewith. actually inefficient because bore-Riesman pointed out that labor do™ and listlessness increase ab¬senteeism, carelessness and a hos-his home in Stockton, Califor¬nia. Harold W. Lewis, ’23,president of the Order of the“C.” will accept the certificate onbehalf of Stagg. the legendary Maroon players. AI* « powerful runner who broke awayPlon pep rally, dance for long runs, he gained morethan a mile from scrimmage inA pre-game pep rally will be his career. He also was an ex-The only one elected to the hall held on campus before the UC- ceptional punter and defensiveof fame as both a coach and a Knox basketball game tomorrow, player. Now in a manufacturingplayer, Stagg already has among The rally will start from the business, Berwanger lives in Hins-his warehouse of mementos the fieldhouse at 7 pm, proceed down dale, and will be the only one ofcertificate recognizing his playing Woodlawn, around campus and *he trio to receive his certificateback to the fieldhouse. Cheerlead- *n Person.ers for the rally will be Judy Bow- The certificates will be present¬ly, Margie Witherspoon Brown, ed by Harvey Harman, executiveYolande “Yoki” deBruyn, Anne secretary of the National Foot-James, Ray Markel and John ball Foundation and Hall of Fame.Clark. Chancellor Lawrence A. KimptonThe basketball.game will begin will accept the three certificates Riesman added. Studies have schools where workers couldshown that many workingmen, learn lessons of creativity and re¬even those who dislike their jobs, sponsibility which would affectwould still work even if they were their attitude toward leisure,financially independent. Unless something is done toThe sociologist pointed out that solve these problems, Riesmanthe uncreative use of leisure, to- foresees a generation "preparedgether with the monotonous na- for paradise lost, and not knowingture of much of modern factory what to do with paradise found.”prowess at Yale in the primitiveera of football in the 1880’s.He was athletic director andfootball coach — and sometimebaseball, basketball, and trackcoach as well — for the 41 yearsfrom the day UC was opened in1892 until his retirement in June, at 8 pm. UC will have as its op- which are presented to the Uni-1933. vAfter he left Chicago he coachedthe College of Pacific^ to nationalfame, and then assisted his son, ponent undefeated Knox college,leader in the Midwest conference.Inter-fraternity and Inter-clubcouncils will co-sponsor an all- versity. Three similar certificateswill be hung in the hall of fameat Rutgers university.Three other former ChicagoA arm uu.ii ms sum, n«5,7™ players have been honored by theAmos A onzo. Jr., at Susquehanna campus da^ at the gymnasium Ra> f Fam(,. „ Bezdeky wuniversity. No man had more to of Ida Noyes hall after the game. as Pen“s ,vania statedo with the development of inter¬collegiate sport than Stagg. itmmMiiMmiMwgmiUfJiM ? m' mumWalter Eckersall, three-time‘‘All America” choice, and elected 2 to 0 Chicago upset of the “pointto the football hall of fame as the a minute” Michigan team on"all time” quarterback, estab- Thanksgiving Day, 1905. A foot-lislied an enduring reputation in ball official and a sports writerfor the Chicago Tribune, "Eck”died in 1930 at the age of 45.A nephew, Walter G. Eckersall,who graduated from Chicago in college; Paul Des Jardiens, ’15, asa Maroon player; and H. O. Cris-ler, ’22, as coach of the Universityof Michigan. Kimpton to speak at FSUChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton will speak on "Thegreat university” at the official inauguration of RobertM. Strozier as president of Florida State university onFebruary 12.Strozier resigned as UC dean of students last summerto assume the duties of FSU president in September.Dignitaries planning to attend will include the headsof all member institutions of the Southern Associationof Colleges and Secondary Schools; heads of private andstate universities throughout the country; administra¬tive officers of national honor societies, educational asso¬ciations, learned societies and educational foundations;and members of the local and state governments.his four seasons of play, 1903, ’04,05, and ’06.He was not only a great runnerand field general but one of theoutstanding punters and drop 1937* will receive the certificatekickers. In two games he kicked on behalf of the Eckersall family,five field goals. One of his most Jay Berwanger, who played inbrilliant performances was in the 1933, ’34, and ’35, was the last ofNight of Sin tonight underrococo roof of Ida NoyesUnder the rococo roof of Ida Noyes hall, cardsharps andsarsaparilla sippers will come together tonight for StudentUnion’s "Night of Sin.” At 8:30 tonight, the would-be bank-breaker, after a small deposit of 60 cents at the gate, willfind himself in front of poker, *bridge, and blackjack tables, ettes from those charming Frenchwith a wad of fake money in his cigarette girls, long a feature ofland- Night of Sin. Ida Noyes cut-rateIf he so desires, he will also sarsaparilla will be sold, at thebe able to play roulette or chuck- price its name implies. There willa-luck, as well as buy his cigar-. also be dancing in the East loungeonly, for those who are too ener¬vated by the action of gamblingand prefer to conserve their en¬ergy by dancing.At the end of the evening therewill be an auction, at which timepairs of tickets to Wash Prom,Beaux Arts ball, and other C-dances will be sold to the highestbidder. Also up for auction aretwo prize members of Abdul Ham-lik’s seraglio, to go to the bidderwho had the greatest success inthe night’s gambling. Start midyear orientationmain wing of dorm opens%UC welcomes 105 new students to campus as the midyear orientation program beginstoday.Orientation activities have been planned to acquaint the new students with the universityand to make their start here "pleasant and effective.”Members of the Student Orientation board will be present at all meetings and throughoutthe orientation period to answer questions and aid the students.University houses will be .open to the new students to- student organizations and join and James Newman, director ofday Students who have re- those groups in which they are Burton Judson courts, will pre¬served accommodations in the especially interested. • side over a required meeting forresidence halls may occupy their On Thursday, a reception will all midyear entering students inrooms after 12 noon Section "B” he held for all new students at the theatre of Ida Noyes hall atof the new women’s dorm was the Reynolds club in Mandel hall 1:30 pm.opened for the new girls and at 6 pm there will be a dinner From 7:30 to 10 pm on Friday,The first activity for the enter- in, ,‘el».h“'ln the Coffee shop Orientation board[will sponsor a. _ of Mandel hall. square dance at Ida Noyes hall.ance-required meeting in Social At 8 pm Thursday, Chancellor Other Orientation board activ-Science’100 on Satnrdav Feh l Lawrence A. Kimpton will partlci- Ities will Include Sunday morningat 9 am. Dean of students' John p! pa'a “ an i"f°™al discussion services at Rockefeller memorialNetherton and dean of the college * ,at ?bapcand tours of the UniversityRobert E. Streeter will present Braas'eli,ha11ol °rten‘aljT,VT*' Bbrafles. Ia?. by S,a;,cy C'T'n:the addresses of welcome Knox „Next Friday Mrs. Ruth O. Mo assistant director for readers'C. Hill, College examiner, will Carn' assistant dean of students, services.Applications for seminaravailable from NSA officeFifteen students from National Student association (NSA)members schools will participate in the sixth internationalstudent relations seminar in Cambridge, Massachusetts, fromJune 28 to August 30.ErratumLast week’s caption forthe Inter-club king candi¬dates erroneously listed"John Phelby” as one of thejudges. The gentleman isEmery T. Filbey, vice-pres¬ident emeritus of the Uni¬versity. give an explanation of the Collegeplacement tests.Harold Haydon, dean of stu¬dents in the College, and LynnChadwell, chairman of the Orien¬tation board, will preside.Saturday evening all new and“old” students are invited to theChicago vs. Knox college basket¬ball game, pre-game pep rally andpost-game dance to be held atBartlett gymnasium.Three illustrious “C-Men,”Amos Alonzo Stagg, Walter Her¬bert Eckersall and John Jay Ber¬wanger, will be honored at thehalf-time of the game by thepresentation of the certificates ofmembership in the football hallof fame.Another highlight of the orien¬tation program is activities night,to be held on Wednesday eveningat Ida Noyes hall from 7:30 to 11pm. New students will have theopportunity to meet the leaders of Application forms and in- particularly encouraged to appljformation are available from admission.Expenses of the participants ar«international affairs office, coverecj by scholarships. This inNSA, 142 Mt. Auburn street, Cam- eludes two weeks at the eleventhbridge 38, Mass. The deadline is National Student congress.March 15. Areas covered in the intensiveAll graduate and undergrade sel"ina<- include the development. . ,, .. ... ® , of the international student moveate students are eligible, although nient, problems and policies of naarea specialists, student govern- tional unions of students, studenlment officers and those with par- exchange, and international proticular language competence In gramming on the American camFrench, Spanish and Arabic are pus.Ebony features Wilkins ; Jerald Brauer discussesformer UC child 'prodigy'Ebony magazine features in its February issue “one of theyoungest students ever admitted to the University of Chicago,”in an article called “Adjustment of a genius.”Dr. J. Ernest Wilkins, Jr., a former UC “child prodigy, nowa top nuclear scientist, is com-pletely adjusted, happily mar- school at 10 and high school at 13.ried and one of the brightest, more He became one of the youngestrespected and aggressive men in students ever admitted to UC. Hehis field.”"Wilkins finished grammarUC study findscosmic ray lineUC scientists have discovered acosmic ray "equator,” a linewhere intensity of the high en¬ergy particles from outer spaceis at a minimum.Information has been gatheredfrom stations around the worldincluding Antarctica and from in¬struments sent into the upper at¬mosphere by balloon. This infor- contends Ebony.earned his AB degree at 16, hisMA at 17 and his PhD at 19—allwith high honors,” states Ebonymagazine.Wilkins, son of the assistantsecretary of labor, J. Ernest Wil¬kins, and a recent Eisenhower ap¬pointment to the new civil rightscommission, "has disproved all ofthe popular misconceptions aboutpersons of exceptional intellectualability. Among these were the be¬liefs that bright children are phys¬ically frail, can’t keep good jobs,are never well adjusted, poor mar¬riage risks, and that they do notremain bright as they grow older,” means, ends of educationby Dick PurtillIn the first of a series of Student Government sponsored lectures on “The means and endsof a Chicago education,” dean Jerald C. Brauer of federated theological faculty discussedrecently ends of education in general and the ideas about them which have prevailed atthis university.Referring often to the ideas of William R ainey Harper, the first president of the Univer¬sity, Brauer said that, though few would dispute the common idea that the purpose of auniversity is “to advance —knowledge,” this was not the the subject. Harper, he said, had wards these ends, and unless itlast word, or even the first on the “good old Protestant notion” tried to realize its unity as a com-that the purpose of knowledge is munity of scholars, said Brauer,mation showed a 40 to 45 degreeshift to the west of the inclinedcosmic ray equator in relation tothe magnetic equator, which sug¬gests the presence of magneticfields in space which alter thecourse of incoming cosmic rays.The study of the effects of cos- According to the magazine. Wil¬kins, 34, is a stockholder in the $4million Nuclear Development Cor¬poration of America, a private re¬search organization which designsnuclear reactors.Wilkins is married and the fa¬ther of two children of whommic rays on man is important to Ebony declares: “eminent psy-the accomplishment of space chologists say they are far bright-flight. er than most children,” to serve mankind.In light of Harper’s ideas, Brau¬er said, the purpose of highereducation might be said to be: “tosearch for truth, to communicatetruth, to persuade men of thevalue of truth, and to nurture anddiscipline men and women whocan take part creatively in civiliza¬tion.”As means to this end, Brauerrecommended a curriculum which it had failed in its purpose.Speaking as a theologian, addedBrauer, he felt that the role of atheological faculty in a universitywas to constantly remind the oth¬er fields of learning of the ulti¬mate destiny of mankind and ofthe Christian foundations of West¬ern civilization.He remarked that there wasgreat value in discussion and ex¬change of ideas between a theo-would enable students to use lan- logical faculty and other depart*guage effectively, which woulddevelop their critical and reflec¬tive capacities and which woulddevelop their capacities and pow¬ers of imagination and of what hetermed "total outreach.”Unless a University worked fo¬ ments of a university. A theologi¬cal faculty, he said, should if nec¬essary be a gadfly, constantlymaking the university examine itsideas and purposes. "A universitywithout a theological faculty.” heconcluded, "isn’t worth its salt.”Kimpton, Brauer willspeak at UC lectureA Campus-to-Career Case History UC’s federated theological schools will sponsor a confer¬ence Sunday and Monday with the theme of “Religion facesthe atomic age.”The conference consists of seven meetings which will beheld on Sunday and Monday.The climax of the conference Broadcasting company, directorwill be a dinner meeting at the of the midwest office of the Insti-Palmer house on Monday. All tute of International Educationother sessions will be held on the and Robert Marschner, senior re-UC campus. search associate, Standard OilAt the Oriental institute at 2 company and president of Ihepm Sunday, Gradner Murphy, di- I*oard °f education, Homewood-rector of research of the Men- Flossmoor, Illinois,ninger foundation and Seward Jerald Brauer, dean and associ*Hilther, professor of pastoral a<e Professor of church history oftheology, federated theological FTF] wiU speak on “Educatingfaculty will speak on “Facing the masters for the atomic age,’ infears of the atomic age.” hla Noyes hall at 12 pm.At 2 pm “Religion and its roleAt 8 pm on Sunday, John Nu- jn the world of business” will beveen, director of the John Nuveen explored by Edward C. Logelin,company and Alexander Miller, vice-president of the United Statesassociate professor of religion at steel corporation and James C.Stanford university will discuss Worthy, vice-president of Sears"Christianity and communism:' Roebuck and company,two faiths in conflict.” At 6:30 pm in the Red LacquerOn Monday at 10 am in Breas- room of the Palmer house, Chan-ted hall "What should religion de- cellor Lawrence A. Kimpton, ITar-mand of public education today?” old Urey, Nobel prize winner andwill be discussed by Fran Utley, Jerald C. Brauer will discuss “Re¬news commentator, National ligion faces the atomic age.”Westport’s “Mr. Telephone Company”The Westport, Connecticut, office ofSouthern New England Telephone Com¬pany is managed by JoJm F. Lehr, A.B.,Yale, ’52. In Westport, John is “Mr.Telephone Company.”“This job has everything,”,John says;“responsibility, independence, a chanceto contribute to the community as wellas the company. I have 8600 accountsin my office, and every one of those ac¬counts is a person who has to be pleasedwith our telephone service. I’m in closecontact with the town officials, and takepart in many civic activities. Needlessto say, it’s a very interesting assignment.“How I happened to choose a careerwith the telephone company tells yousomething about the business. After adozen or so interview's with various firms, I picked the telephone companybecause it offered two things I was look¬ing for—immediate opportunity, andlong-range opportunity, too.“You see, I wras married in my senioryear at college, so I wanted a careerwhere I could start with a good salary,and get the training I’d need to advancein the shortest possible time. That’s whatI wanted immediately.“The rapid expansion of the telephonebusiness assured me of the long-rangeopportunities, because that expansion iscreating more and more management vpositions to be filled. In fact, here I am,Manager in Westport, after only fiveyears in the company. I don’t know ofanother business where you can findmore opportunities to get ahead.”Find out about career opportunities for you in the BellTelephone Companies. Talk with the Bell interviewerwhen he visits your campus. And read the Bell Telephonebooklet on file in your Placement Office, or write for“Challenge and Opportunity” to: College EmploymentSupervisor, American Telephone and Telegraph Company,195 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y. BELLTELEPHONECOMPANIESL J UC faculty membersrecipients of awardsThree faculty members were named recipients of awardstotaling $13,000 by the American Council of Learned Socie¬ties last Friday at the council’s annual meeting in Blooming¬ton, Indiana. They are among forty-eight scholars in thehumanities and social scienceswho received the grants.A post-doctoral fellowshipamounting to $7,000 was receivedby Ernest Sirluck, associate pro¬fessor of English. Grant-in-aid fel-"Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekSCHOENBERGMoses and AaronK 3L-242*14.59 lovvships of $3,000 each went toOscar Broneer, professor of clas¬sical archaeology, and Donald F.Lach, associate professor of his¬tory.Sirluck, a specialist In theworks of the poet Milton and thePuritan Revolution, will use hisgrant for a year’s work on a bookhe is writing, “Milton and theLaw of Nature.” He will conductresearch for the book in librariesin the United States and GreatBritain.Field director for a UC expedi¬tion now in Greece, Broneer willuse his grant to continue his workin that country. Since 1952 he hasbeen in charge of excavations be¬ing done at the site of the ancientIsthmian games near ancientCorinth.Donald F. Lach received hisgrant for the support of researchhe is conducting for the first vol¬ume of a history, the “Impact ofthe Far East in Europe, 1500 to1800.” His special field is Euro¬pean history of the early modernperiod.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 31, 1958Offer summer opportunityto study in Europe: IIEAmericans who want to learn while they vacation abroad will have the opportunity to dogo in the United Kingdom, and Austria next summer, it was announced by the Institute ofInternational Education. Information and scholarship forms may be obtained from IIE,116 South Michigan, CE 6-8232.Six-week courses are offered by four British university summer schools. At Stratford-upon-Avon the summer school will be Shakespeare and Elizabethan drama, with a specialseminar course on Elizabethanmusic. At Oxford the subjectwill be the literature, politicsand arts of seventeenth centuryEngland. In London, courses willbe given on literature, art andsocial change in England from3789 to 1870. The theme of theEdinburgh school will be theEuropean inheritance, with theopportunity of making a specialstudy of history, literature or phil¬osophy. Each school offers excur¬sions to nearby points of interestgenerally not open to tourists.The fees for the British summerschools including board, room andtuition, arc between $221 to $236.There is an additional administra¬tion fee of $15. A few full scholar¬ships are available to qualifiedgraduate students as well as alimited number of partial scholar¬ ships open to graduates and un¬dergraduates.Although these courses are gen¬erally intended for college gradu¬ates, undergraduate students intheir last two years will be con¬sidered. Competition for scholar¬ships available closes March 1while admission of non-scholar¬ship students closes March 31.In Austria there are two specialsummer schools of interest toAmericans. The University ofVienna is conducting a summerprogram at its St. Wolfgang cam¬pus near Salzburg. Courses willbe offered in German language,European history, art. music, poli¬tics and psychology. The cost ofa six - week program, includingregistration, tuition, maintenance,tours and attendance at the Salz¬burg festival, is $220. A few schol¬arships are available covering tui¬ tion and maintenance.The Austro-American society ofVienna is also sponsoring a Ger¬man language and cultural sem¬inar in Salzburg. This seminar isspecially designed for students in¬terested in an intensive study ofthe German language. In addi¬tion, courses will be offered inAustrian art and European mu¬sic. The six-week program costs$180 including tuition, mainte¬nance, tours and attendance at theSalzburg festival. A limitel num¬ber of scholarships covering tui¬tion and maintenance are avail¬able.Admission applications must bereturned by June 19 and applica¬tions for scholarships by April 15.Applicants for both of the Aus¬trian programs must have com¬pleted two years of college byJune 1958.Corporations very strongCorporate enterprise wields a power which "can enslave us beyond present belief or per¬haps set us free beyond present imagination,” according to a recent study by the Fund forthe Republic.”Some of the largest US corporations, the report stated, "are units which can be thoughtof in somewhat the way we have heretofore thought of nations.”The report is part of the Fund’s current study of modern institutions and their effects on Ida Noyes gets darkroomfor use of UC publicationsby Jean Kwoneditor, Cap and GownA shiny-new and well-equipped darkroom has been addedto publications facilities in Ida Noyes, announced MaroonEditor Gary Mokotoff recently.Under the aegis of the student activities office, finishingtouches on the darkroom were completed shortly after theChristmas interim after two year's of waiting, Mokotoff re¬ported."Now all we need are people, preferably photographers,"moaned editor Mokotoff.Membership on the publications photography staffs en¬titles all qualified photographers to full use of the darkroomequipment (but not supplies) at any time not required forproduction.Further information concerning qualifications and dutiesis available through the Maroon, extension 3266.UC won its case to demolish four square blocks of south¬west Hyde Park for married student housing (above! re¬cently. The Illinois Supreme court dismissed a final appealby residents in that area.individual freedom and justice.A. A. Berle, Jr., former assist¬ant secretary of State andnow professor of corporation lawat Columbia university wrote thereport in consultation with tenother persons including RobertRed field, UC professor of anthro¬pology, and Robert M. Hutchins,former UC chancellor, now direc¬tor of the Fund.Must work with systemBerle believed that, contrary toclassic liberal thinking, the devel¬opment of immense corporatepower “is not the product of evil-minded men. I believe we musttry to work with the system. Thedangers are obvious but historycannot usually be reversed.” Mostof the results of American cor¬porate development, he declared,“are rather surprisingly good.”About two-thirds of the eco¬nomic productive power of theUS. excluding agriculture, areowned or controlled by a group ofnot more than 500 corporations,he asserted, and that “in terms ofpower without regard to assetpositions, in each of that 500. astill smaller group has the ulti¬mate decision-making power.”Control by directorsFor practical purposes, he said,the control or power element inmost corporations rests in itsgroup of directors, and the direc¬tors themselves are an “automaticself perpetuating oligarchy.”Berle believed that the welfarefunds and pension trust funds area* emerging power element m thecorporation picture and that pen¬sion truSt funds will eventually reach $70 to $80 billion, if notmore. He wrote:“This will mean that if the pen¬sion trusts continue to take thegood equities as they have beendoing they may well have the pre¬vailing control-stockholding posi¬tion and the capacity to make itabsolute. They will have, say 20per cent to 30 per cent of the goodequity stocks and the capacity toincrease that to 40 per cent or 50per cent (45 per cent for practicalpurposes is a majority at any bigstockholders’ meeting).”So far trustees of pensionfunds have not exercised theirpower as voting stockholders butas their holdings increase “thesituation cannot last very muchlonger,” Berle stated.Property “socialized”Control-ownership of major sec¬tors of our corporate economy bythe pension trusts would amountto “socializing” property withouta revolution, according to Berle.He said: “The private propertysystem is production, which beganwith our great-grandfather’s farmand forge, has almost vanished inthe vast area of American econ¬omy dominated by this system.Instead we have something whichdiffers from the Russian or social¬ist system mainly in its philosoph¬ical content. Under a pure social¬ist or communist system, intheory, every worker has an old-age pension at the end of hislabors. We are developing thesame thing by ‘socializing’ prop¬erty without a revolution. It isone of our more amazing achieve¬ments. Whether one likes it ornot depends on one’s philosophy.” Flight leaders deadlinethis Wednesday says SCWednesday is the last day applications will be accepted at the student activities office inIda Noyes for flight leaders on this year’s Student Government-sponsored European flightThe flight will depart on June 25 and return on September 16. A four-engine DC6 willcarry 68 UC students and faculty members to Europe. All persons going on the trip willshare the expense, which will be approximately $320 per person. Those who are interestedin participating in the flight should go to the student activities office.Flight leaders must distrib¬ute publicity, write letters inanswer to inquiries and setdates for payment of the chartercosts.Jacques Dulin, last year’s lead- aser, said, “In sjiort, he will have tosell the flight, help people makeup their minds, remind them ofpayments, tell them details andinformation on the flight, etc. Heshould plan to spend at least tenor fifteen hours a week in the SG office and other time outside theoffice in contacting people.” about himself. In addition, itwould be helpful to have a letterOn the applications the person of recommendation from a personshould state any experience hehas had of an organizational sort,well as general information connection with the University,either in the administration orfaculty.Larkin on TVTwo ex-UC students, Bruce Larkin and Holly O’Connor,talk with recently appointed United States informationagency director George V. Allen and Ruth Hagy followingtheir appearance on Ruth Hagy’s College News conferencelast Sunday in a nationwidebroadcast over the American dent of the United States Nationalbroadcasting company network. student assiciation and has re-Miss KSS “stated that there has been waste honal student meeting in Nigeria.In the U SIA and promised to Miss O Connor has been active in Markel crowned kingof r58 Inter-club ballRay Markel, Quadrangler candidate was crowned king ofthe Inter-club ball last Saturday evening by Mrs. John P.Netherton, wife of UC’s dean of students.Markel was crowned at the stroke of 11:35 pm at Inter¬club’s annual ball which washeld in the grand ballroom of teric and Don Richards, Wyvern.the Del Prado hotel. . Candidates were judged by Mrs.Other candidates and their spon- Netherton, Emery T. Filbey, vice-soring clubs were Art Doyle, president emeritus of UC andDelta Sigma; Jay Israel, Mortar John I. Kirkpatrick, vice-chancel-Board; John “Sam” McElwec, Eso- lor.tighten up the Agency student government and YoungMiss O’Connor and Larkin ap- Democrat activities at Chicago.peared as part of College newsconference’s program of presentIng outstanding students in inter College News conference,broadcast each Sunday afternoonon ABC, has won awards for corn-views with key public figures, munity service, educational valueLarkin is international vice presi- and newsmaking. FREE DELIVERY-< NICKYSPIZZERIANO 7-9063 D & G's Clearance SaleCorduroy Pants . . . .formerly to 6.95 Now 4.44Corduroy Sport Cootsformerly to 15.95 Now 8.88Crew Neck Sweatersformerly to 6.95 Now 3.99Ivy League Shirts. . .formerly to 4.95 Now 1.99Prices Lotcer Than Erer atD & C Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-2728“I*» the Neighborhood for 40 Years**Hours: 9 a.m. - 8 p.nt., Mon. - Fit. — 9 o.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdayJan. 31, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3EditorialAchtung! B & G;is flag getting wet•THE FLAG (of the UnitedStates of America) should notbe displayed on days when theweather is inclement,” accordingto public law 829 of the 77th Con¬gress, section 2c (to amend publiclaw 623 entitled "a joint resolu¬tion to codify and emphasize exist¬ing rules and customs pertainingto the display and use of the flagof the United States of America”).We have noted with increasedconcern that our favorite OldGlory, located five stories abovethe base of the flag pole in thecentral quadrangle, has too oftenbeen subjected to Chicago’s rain, snow, sleet, hail, etc. (last Mon¬day for example). It is bad enoughthat the flag is forced to survivethe violent gusts of the Windycity.IF THE department of build¬ings and grounds, which is re¬sponsible for the raising and low¬ering of the flag, does not wishto go to the law library to checkon public law 829 (77th Congress),we wish to inform them that anexplanation of the law will befound in the "Handbook for Boys”published by the Boy Scouts ofAmerica. Copies are available atthe University Bookstore.cfuccup11 laroonIssued every Friday throughout the school year and intermittently during theManner quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212last 39th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions 3265 and1266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptions by mail, $3 per year.Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday. Deadline for all material 3 pm,Wednesday.Editor-in-chiefGory MokotoffMonaging editor Associate editorRobert J. Holasz Rochelle M. DubnowNewt editor Godfly editor Culture editorMory Finkle Richord Brooks John HerzogSports editor Colendor editor Copy editorRichord Cousens Neol Johnston Donna DovisCartoonistsLizo Flonnery, Dick MontgomeryPhotographic itoW: Robert Molone, Dove Coffey.Business MonogerLowrence D. KesslerAdvertising monogerPhyllit Ritzenberg Office monogerArt Toitel Circulation monogerJoon Helmken Kimpton to speakon UC educationin Breasted hallChancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton will present the con¬cluding lecture of the series "Themeans and ends of a Chicago edu¬cation” next Thursday at 8 pm inBreasted hall.The programs, which is spon¬sored by the student-faculty rela¬tions committee of Student Gov¬ernment, will consist of an extem¬poraneous talk with an informalquestion and answer discussionfollowing.LETTER'Clive Craynever opposedto Russ swap’As friends of Clive Gray, wefeel compelled to clarify hisposition on Russian exchangewhich was reported in last week'sMaroon.Gray never was opposed toSoviet exchange. He specificallyadvocated year-long exchanges ofthe type that are now being insti¬tuted. He opposed specific men¬tion of Russian exchange in theresolution of the 1954 NSA con¬gress because at that lime theRussians were negotiating in badfaith. Exchange arrangementswere made with them only to bebroken off at the last minute.For this reason, NSA’s nationalofficers felt that time and moneycould be better spent in arrangingexchanges with other countries.They did not want Russian ex¬change specifically mentioned be¬cause they did not want to bebound to waste time and moneywhen the Soviets were only inter¬ested in making propaganda outof the McCarran-Walters immi¬gration law.Howard TurnerBuford KnowlesGADFLYChange divisional exam systemTHERE IS in the divisionsin unplanned, unchanging,ind dull examination systemvhich sadly compares with thetarefully planned, continuallyihanging examination system ofIhe College. The educationalibuses of these examinations are{enerally recognized by both stu-lent and faculty; very little has►een done to correct them.Although the course examina¬tions given in the divisions arefar from perfection, they have therirtue of being tied down to par¬ticular, recently acquired coursenaterial. One must leave the im¬provement of these course exam-hiations to the particular profes-lor, (who should receive individ¬ual criticism from the student).Unfortunately, the good studentloes not wish to risk the loss ofIhe professor’s good graces byrriticizing; the bad student’s crit¬icism will appear to be "sourgrapes.” One can only hope forbetter judgment of the professorhi regards to limitations of time,more papers, and extended takehome examinations.There are greater abuses ofcommon sense in the more impor¬tant examinations; the MA qual¬ifying examination and the PhDpreliminary examination, the oralfield examinations and the finalthesis examinations. These exam¬inations, created by the collectiveirresponsibility of the faculty,face the difficult chore of testingdone over long periods of time.MOST OF the faculty of the di¬visions seems to be under the mis¬apprehension that the way to testover longer periods of time issimply to ask more general, more4 • CHICAGO M A inclusive questions. Consequently,these examinations consist ofquestions so comprehensive as toallow for only the most superficialkind of treatment by the studentand a kind of academic free asso¬ciation around anything andeverything the student might haveread. For example, a student re¬cently took a field examinationwhich had as part of a questionto be answered in three hours, theintellectual history for four cen¬turies. What is the value of suchquestions?Such general questions allowfor no creativity of questioning onthe part of the faculty, and nonew insights on the part of thestudent. The test is merely a stim¬ulus .for the worst kind of stand¬ard academic regurgitation.Moreover, the ability of the stu¬dent to think in the field is indi¬cated only by the courses or thethesis, (which perhaps has beenread by one faculty member); this,ability is not tested in harrassingoral examinations on every bookwritten in the field or on a thesiswhich has never been read.THE REMEDIES possible forsuch an undesirable examinationsystem must certainly take ac¬count of the practical limitationsof the professor’s time. We do notwant to turn a distinguished fac¬ulty into a distinguished testingservice. However, many remediessuggest themselves;• Dividing the large examina¬tions into smaller sections takenat two quarter intervals when ma¬terial is fresh in mind would elim¬inate sterile reviewing, and makepossible more limited and betterquestioning. At present, the exam-R O 0 N • Ian. 31, 1958 inations do not worry about inte¬gration of material; it seems non¬sense in most cases to expect gradintegrations of a student who isstill professionally a beginner inthe field.• Making use of extended oneproblem-take home examinations,allowing the student to show, (ina more limited way than a thesiswould indicate), how he thinks ina particular field. Perhaps theretaining of t h e department ofcourse papers written by the stu¬dent would make an effective in¬tellectual file on the student.• Require the testing facultyto have read the thesis or per¬haps adequate summaries oftheses, and drastically limit thescope of material to be dealt within the oral examination.It is quite possible that there-ere more subtle and better rem¬edies to the abuses. These aremerely suggestions.Such a rehearsal of abuses andremedies, when recognized byeveryone, appears a useless task.There appears to be no organizedbody to survey, evaluate, andchange divisional testing methods.One can merely hope such a re¬minder stirs some general campusdiscussion about the abuses andsuggests general tonics for thestudent faculty relations commit¬tee.PERHAPS THE departmentalclub can deal with particularabuses of its particular depart¬ment. The remainder of the taskis up to the individual who musthave courage enough to voice hiscontempt and disgust to the fac¬ulty at past examinations he hasseen and taken. 1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoITALIAN RESTAURANT & PIZZERIAFeaturing — Hors d'oeuyre TableSmall Lorga Small Lorga12” 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 «*» All Pitta to 11C Students(ADVERTISEMENT)A SCHOOL AWAY FROM SCHOOLStudents majoring in science, like all other Americanstudents, have a wild yearning for culture, but, alas,when a student is after a degree in engineering or mathor like that, he simply does not have time to take all theliberal arts courses his heart pines for.And what is being done about this unhappy situation?I'll tell you what: Enlightened corporations everywhereare setting up on-the-job liberal arts programs for thenewly employed science graduate—courses designed tobroaden his cultural base—for the enlightened corpora¬tion realizes that the truly cultured employee is the trulyvaluable employee.Take, for example, Lambswool Sigafoos.A week after his graduation, Lambswool reported toMr. Femur, the personnel director of an enlightened cor¬poration engaged in the manufacture of cotter pins andwing nuts. “How do you do?” said Lambswool. “I’mLambswool Sigafoos and I’ve come to work.”.“Sit down,” said Mr. Femur, chuckling kindly. “Havea Marlboro.”“Thank you,” said Lambswool. “I like Marlboros.I like their filter and their flavor.”“Me too,” said Mr. Femur, blinking humanely, “And Ilike their flip-top box. When my flip-top box of Marlborosis empty, I use it to keep fish hooks in.”“Know what I do when my flip-top box of Marlborosis empty?” asked Lambswool.“What?” said Mr. Femur, sniggering graciously.“I buy some more Marlboros,” said Lambswool.“A sound idea,” said Mr. Femur, vibrating fetchingly.“But enough chit-chat. Come along to the campus.”“Campus?” said Lambswool, puzzled. “But I’ve cometo work. Take me to my drawing board.”“This is an enlightened corporation,” said Mr. Femur,yodelling viciously. “First you must get your culturalbase broadened.”Mr. Femur took Lambswool to the training campus,which looked like any other campus. It had ivy-coveredbuildings, dormitories, fraternity and sorority houses, astadium, a deer park, and a moat. Lambswool was givena roommate, a beanie, and copies of the company hymnand rouser, and the enlightened corporation proceeded tofill the gap in his culture.First he was taught to read, then to print capital letters,then capital and small letters. Then there was an attemptto teach him script, but it was ultimately abandoned.From these fundamentals, Lambswool progressed slowlybut steadily through the more complex disciplines. Hewas diligent, and the corporation was patient, and in theend they were rewarded, for when Lambswool finished,he could play a clavier, compose a triolet, parse a sentence,and identify the birthstone for every month of the year.His lengthy schooling finally over, Lambswool wasassigned to an important executive position where heserved with immense distinction.... Not, however, forlong, because one week later he reached retirement age.Today, still spry, he lives in St. Petersburg, Florida,where he supplements his pension by parsing sentencesfor tourists. e is&8, m»> sm™*®4 4 0Here's a sentence that’s easy to parse: Subject—you. Verb—yet. Object—a lot to like in a Marlboro, whose makers bringyou this column throughout the school year.Installing UNIVAC Sol Tax, William Bradburyin Ad bldg.basement discuss Hyde Park renewalby Nancy PenkavaSol Tax, chairman of the anthropology department; William Bradbury, professor of so¬cial sciences; and an audience of about 50 engaged in a verbal free-for-all on “race relationsand urban renewal in Hyde Park” last Thursday. Both men have been active in the life ofthe community, which extends from 47 to 60 streets and from Lake Michigan to CottageGrove avenue, for several years. While they differed regarding what to do, the two agreedthat the major issues involved are moral problems.Tax provided background southwest Hyde Park project, ing, “We cannot assume that colorinformation on the changes which will displace Negroes for is irrelevant to our social distinc-"Let'o see, Tom, it says here, insert wire A 2346I hole M 195/*New orchestrahad impressive that have been taking place;for instance, there has been anincrease in Negro residence inHyde Park from 6 per cent in 1950to 37 per cent in 1956. He statedthat in June, 1956, 53 of the 142blocks in the area had a morethan 50 per cent Negro popula¬tion, with 23 having more than 90-per cent. The number of dwellingunits had increased because ofreconversion.Tax pointed out that Negroesare being squeezed out by theHyde Park A and B projects,I which will have higher rents thanJ the old buildings, and by therehearses;traditioninto UC housing. Tax also claimed thatthe purpose of the Tenant Re¬ferral service is to rent vacanciesto whites and supposedly to en¬courage rental to Negroes inwhite areas, in an effort to keepthe community inter racial.In discussing the cultural dif¬ferences found among people ofdifferent backgrounds, Tax statedthat a person may not wish tochange his cultural behavior sim¬ply because he changes his socialclass. Tax also said he favorssome public housing for the areaand that he would like to makethe whole community a realestate co-operative.Bradbury then replied, declar¬ing himself definitely in favor ofintegration rather than Tax’s rela¬tively “hands off’’ position. Hefurther opposed this idea by say- tions, because most people thinkrace is important and act on thatthought; because there is a raci¬ally differentiated housing mar¬ket with real trouble in values,etc.; because race is a usefulrough index to cultural and classdifferences; and because thesefactors must be recognized inworking for an inter racial com¬munity.’'Bradbury favors the Tenant Re¬ferral service and the establish¬ment of a color quota, which hefeels necessary to keep the areamixed. He would not like to seeany public housing, as he believesit would be a center of infectionfor the surrounding area.The campus N A A C P groupplans to sponsor further meetingson related topics in the nearfuture.by Mary FinkleUC’s new Symphony orchestra, under the baton of Joseph Kreines, convened for the firsttime Sunday evening.Kreines led an enthusiastic group of about 25 musicians in the Brahms symphony No. 2and Mozart symphony No. 40. UC student James McCawley, assistant conductor, then di¬rected the embryo orchestra in an excerpt from a symphony of his own composition.A Bach fugue, from “The Well-tempered Clavichord”, is being transcribed for use in thenear future by Don Wilson, aco-organizer of the group.Conductor Kreines receivedhis BA in music from UC. He isworking toward an MA from theUniversity of Illinois and is cur¬rently engaged in writing histhesis.He has studied conducting atTanglewood, Massachusetts, forthe past two summers and plansto return this year. Kreines has anumber of compositions to hiscredit. He is also a member of thenew Chicago symphony chorus.The old UC Symphony orches¬tra, now extinct for about nineyears, nevertheless had a long andimpressive life. The reason for the ceived much more attention than erick Stock. Stock himself wasthe fall. It was organized in 1931, occasionally a guest conductor ofand its first conductor, Carl Brick- the UC Symphony orchestra dur-en, was first chairman of the mu- mg those years,sic department. Under his guid- At the time the orchestra dis-ance, the orchestra performed a solved, it was considered unwiseBrahms centennial almost imme- to retain or reorganize a group,diately after its inception, includ- contrary to the atmosphere of stu-ing several Brahms choral works dent interest. Not until this yearand the second piano concerto was enough such interest mus- Student health reportsStudent Health has reported “increased incidents” ofillness on campus during the last two weeks. Cases ofstrep throat and influenza are frequent, though it hasnot been possible to differentiate between strains of flu.Diagnoses of measles have been made for two students.Students are encouraged to get their polio and flushots as soon as possible. The inoculations cost 50 centsapiece, and booster flu shots will be given free to stu¬dents who paid $1 in the fall. Polyvalent (Asian andregular) flue vaccine will be available at student healthin about ten days.A new part-time psychiatrist has joined the mentalhygiene staff. She is Dr. Marjorie Hayes, the first femalepsychiatrist to be associated with student health.with a well-known artist.Operas were presented —notablyWeinberger’s “Shwanda” in April1936, again with professional solo¬ists.In 1938, Seigmund Levarie tookover the helm, Lavarie also direct-cessation of the orchestra was e4 Collegium Musicum, of whichlack of student Interest. A veryweak UC participation, largelysupplemented by professional"ringers,” faltered through a sin¬gle, uninspired performance dur¬ing the final year and then crum¬pled entirely.The rise of the orchestra re- he was the instigator. He later be¬came dean of the Chicago Musicalcollege and is now chairman ofthe music department of Brooklyncollege.He was succeeded by HansLange, one-time assistant underboth Arturo Toscanini and Fred- tered.In the words of one student in¬stigator, the new orchestra “fol¬lowed the pattern of a fugue,”with one or two people setting thetheme and other taking it up inturn.Rehearsals are held every Sun¬day night, 7-9:30, in Mandel hall.All are invited, and there is a par¬ticular need for violinists, violists,double-bass players, and a harpist.The orchestra plans to give itsfirst concert during festival of thearts. A system of auditions is in¬tended for next year. Apply for FrankfurtApplications for the 1958-1959 exchange program withFrankfurt university, sponsored by Student Government, maybe obtained at the activities office. Deadline for returning ap¬plications is next Friday.Exile fells of Batista ruleby Nancy PenkavaThe Batista dictatorship in Cuba was the subject of a talk Monday night by ProfessorMario Llenera, a political exile and leader of anti-Batista forces. Llenera discussed presentconditions in Cuba generally and among the troops of Fidel Castro, revolutionary leaderwho controls one of the eastern provinces.Llenera emphasized that Batista “has no program whatsoever; he wants power simplyfor its own sake and the wealth it can bring.” The professor also stated that Batista’s secretpolice may enter a home at All undergraduates andgraduates may apply. Tuition,room, board and travel expenseswill be covered for the person se¬lected, selection being made bya board of administration and fac¬ulty members, and students on thebasis of academic ability, activi¬ties and proficiency in German.To determine this proficiency, aGerman examination will be givenFebruary 14.UC and Frankfurt have partici¬pated as “sister” universities in afaculty exchange program, sum¬mer seminars and a book drive.In October, 1948, a committee of student leaders and facultymembers was organized by DeanRobert Strozier to investigate pos¬sibility of a student exchange pro-gram. Negotiations with theFrankfurt general students com¬mittee resulted in the exchange of1951-52. Clive Gray, SG president,1953-1954, was the first UC ex¬changee.For more Information aboutFrankfurt university, studentsmay speak with this year’s ex¬changees, Klauspeter Thome, Al¬pha Delta Phi house, and HelenaMohring, International house.mayany time and imprison, tor¬ture or kill the men, women,and children in it. (The dictatorcontrols the 30,000 man mercen¬ary army; 15,000 man regular president of the 26th of Julymovement, as the revolt is called,claimed that, if matters continueas they have been going, Batistashould be ousted in about sixmonths. He explained that sabo- Finally, Llenera advised all whoare interested to read an articlewritten by Castro in Decemberand outlining his program whichappears in the February Coronet. STEVEN'S LUNCH1206 E. 55th ,Soda Fountain Home-Cooked MealsClosed Sundays and Holidayspolice; and small naval and air t is continuous and that “90forces as well as the secret po- cent of the people of Cuba areL-lenera further declared with Castro morally.”that Bahsta has a monopoly of the Lienera added that the recentmatch industry; owns most of the c against Perez Jimenez oftelephone industry, radio stations, Venezuela means Batista will nonewspapers, and sugar mills; and longer have him as an ally> andis the biggest holder in the re- the professor expects this to be agional branch of Pan American. great psychological advantage forWhile there are several groups the dictator’s enemies. Batistaof political exiles opposing Batista, has, as a result of comments byCastro’s troops are the only ones the US ambassador to Cuba,actually fighting him on the promised freedom of the pressisland. The legal reason they give within 45 days, and Llerna hopesfor their revolution is a constitu- this will allow Americans to gettlonal provision allowing violence a clearer picture of the situationagainst violence. Castro has ap- 0n the island. He should like itproximately 2,000 men, the lead- very much if this would meanera of whom were trained in that America would stop sendingmountain guerilla warfare by Batista arms and withdraw itsMexican mountees. military mission (both supposedlyLlenera, who is Castro’s repre- there to strengthen hemispheric^ntative to the United States and defense). In Addition To Our24 HOUR SERVICENOW We Offer3 DAY SERVICEBring Your Films to thePHOTOGRAPHIC DEPARTMENTUNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE on Black and Whiteon ColorJan. 31, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5/Coming events on quadranglesFriday 31 JanuaryLe Ceecle Francais, program. “TwentyQuMUoDt," 4 pm, Ida Noyes.thcv.tre.Mathematical biology meeting. “Fixedcharges and bioelectric potentials,”George Karreman, dept of basic re¬search, Eastern Pennsylvania Psychia¬tric Institute, 4:30 pnqu 5741 Drexel.Documentary film group, “Earth,” 1930,7:15, 9:15 pm, Soc. Sol. 122. Seriesticket only.Sabbath services, Hill el foundation, 7:45,5715 Woodlawn.Ilillel fireside, “The problem of God,”Bernard Loomer, prof federated theo¬logical faculty, first In a series, 8:30m, foundation house, 5715 Wood-iwn.Lecture: “The God-Man,” the Reverendprof O. P. Kretzman. president Val¬paraiso university, 7:15 pm, Chapelhouse.Calvert dub skating party, 8 pm. Northstands rink.Night of Sin, Student Union, 8:30 pm,Ida Noyes.University theatre, “Tonight at 8:30,”Reynolds club theatre, admissioncharge.Saturday 1 FebruaryDiscussion seminar, “Problems facingAmerica’s youth: the state of civilliberties,” socialist youth committeeof Chicago, 10 am-5 pm, Ida Noyes.Varsity swimming meet, UC vs. Knoxand Carleton colleges, 1:30 pm, Bart¬lett.Varsity wrestling meet, UC vs. NotreDame, 3 pm, Bartlett.Varsity gymnastics meet, UC vs. North¬western, 4:40 pm, Bartlett.Varsity basketball game, UC vs. Knoxcollege, also presentation of certifi¬cates of membership In the footballhall of fame to' Amos Alonzo Stagg,Walter Kckersall, Jay Berwanger, 8 pm. Fleldhouse. Students free, general $1.University theatre, “Tonight at 8.30,”series of experimental and originalone-act plays, 8:30 pm, Reynolds clubtheatre, admission charge.Radio broadcast, “The Sacred Note.”program of choral music by the UCchoir, 10:15 pm, WBBM.Sunday 2 FebruaryEpiscopal communion service, 8:30 am.Bond chapel.Lutheran communion service, 10 am,Hilton chapel.University religious service, “Nationalvices and national virtues,” ReverendAlexander Miller, Stanford university,11 am. Rockefeller memorial chapel.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30. 10, 11 am,DeSales house, 5735 S. University.Discussion seminar, "Perspectives forsocialist youth,” 10 am to 5 pm, soc.set. 122.Conference, “Religion faces the atomicage,” federated theological schools,2 pm, Breasted.Lecture: “Adenauer and the future ofGermany,” William Halperin. chair¬man dept of history, 4:30 pm, DeSaleshouse, 5735 S. University.Lecture: “What is the church?” GerhardSpiegler, Baptist student fellowship,8 pm, Hyde Park Baptist church, 5600Woodlawn, supper 50 cents.Lecture: “The Human Image” series.“Life without father: matriarchy andDagwood Bumpstead,” Nicholas Lotz,Methodist minister, University of Illi¬nois, Methodist Graduate fellowship,8 pm, Chapel house.Social dancing, instruction. 7 to 8 pm.dancing 8 to 11, International house,50 cents non-residents.Rehearsal, UC symphony orchestra,7 pm, Mandel hall.Discussion series, “Perspectives of theUniversity,” “The students,” panel¬ists, William R. Harmon, John L. Kim,What's it like toFirst of all, what does an Applied Science Representa¬tive do? In John Jackson’s own words, “I workconstantly with key executives of the many and variedcustomers served by IBM in the territory for which Iam responsible, advising them on the use of theirelectronic data processing machines. I consult withthese customers, analyze their scientific and technicalproblems for solution with IBM machines. Occasion¬ally, I write papers and give talks and demonstrationson electronic computing. All in all, it’s pretty fascinating• . . ** In other words, he is a full-fledged computingexpert, a consultant... and a very important personin this coming age of automation through eJnctronics.A consulting sales fobDuring the three years that John Jackson has spentwith IBM as an Applied Science Representative, hehas guided innumerable customers to new and betterways of doing thingswith electronic com¬puters. For example, aleading aircraft manu¬facturer wanted toexperiment with a radi¬cally different designfor a nuclear reactor.Although the basic for¬mat had been estab¬lished, the project stillrequired many monthsof toil with mathemat¬ical equations. Theaircraft people decidedthat they couldn’t afford to wait that long, so theycalled on IBM. After consultation with top executives,John Jackson helped to map out a computer programthat saved the organization over 100 days of pencil-chewing arithmetic. Later, for this same company, heorganized the establishment of computer systems foraircraft performance predictions and for data reduc¬tion of wind tunnel tests. At the same time, he workedwith this company’s own employees, training them inthe use of IBM equipment. He remains in touch withthis customer to assist with new studies and problemsas they develop.A new field for the mathematician—IBM computer*Why did John Jackson decide to join IBM? Today,he is exercising his mathematical know-how in a fieldthat was practically unheard of ten years ago. Evennow, this kind of work may be news to you. It was tohim a few years back when he was an undergraduateat the University of Colorado. At that time, he was6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 31, 1958 Elmer E. Kline, Porter fellowship,7:30 pm. Swift hall common room.University theatre, “Tonight at 8:30,”8:30 pm, Reynolds club theatre, ad¬mission charge.Monday 3 FebruaryInternational house movie: “Stars ofthe Russian Ballet.” east lounge, 7 and9 pm, 50 cents.Conference: “Religion faces the AtomicAge,” Breasted hall, 10 am; Ida Noyes,12 n and 2; Palmer house. 6:30 pm,FTS program: Breasted hall, 2 pm;Quadrangle club. 6; Breasted hall, 8.Chicago Review staff meeting, Reviewoffice, 7:30.Maroon meeting, Maroon office, 3:30.Discussion on functional newspaperdesign.Tuesday 4 FebruaryLecture, “The Responsibilities of Busi¬ness and Labor,” Maurice F. X. Dono¬hue, dean of University college, 8 pm,Breasted hall, $1 for students.International house folk, dancing, 7-8pm, instruction; 8-11, dancing. 50cents non-residents.Socialist club lecture, “Socialism andAmerican Foreign Policy,” AlbertGoldman, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Wednesday 5 FebruaryW9YWQ, UC amateur radio club, tech¬nical meeting, 9:15 pm, room 301, Rey¬nolds club.Country dancers, beginners welcome,8 pm, Ida Noyes.Carillon concert, commemorating birth¬day of John R. Rockefeller. Jr., JamesR. Lawson, carillonneur, Rockefellerchapel, 4:30 pm.Antinomies meeting. “A different viewof the Foundations of mathematics.”Saunders MacLane, Internationalhouse, room A, 8 pm. Chicago Review presenting TrumanCapote. Mandel hall, 8:15 pm, stu¬dents, $1.International house education commit¬tee lecture, Ladls K. D. Krlstof, “Eastand West: the quest for justice andthe quest for freedom,” Int househome room, 8 pm.Ilillel public lecture, Yves Simon, “Isthere a God?” 5715 Woodlawn, 8 pm.Illustrated lecture series: “Raphael:creative methods and artistic Inten¬tions,” John White, lecturer, Univer¬sity of London, Alexander White, vis¬iting professor of art, soc scl 122,8:30 pm.New dorm coffee hours, recreation room,new women's dorm, 9-11 pm.Thursday 6 FebruaryTV program,, “All Things Considered,”topic: “Is toll television coming?”Ford foundation.The international scope ofAmerican business and industry, Ted Leltzell, director of public rela¬tions for Zenith radio corporation*Fred Sorenson, broadcaster on stationWCIA, Champaign, Illinois; Joseph JSchwab; moderator, Donald Meikle-John; channel 11, 9:30 pmStudent-faculty relations committee ofSO discussion on “The means andend of a Chicago education,” Chancel¬lor Lawrence A. Kimpton, Breastedhall, 8 pm.Ilillel coffee hour. Dr. Philip M. Mar-golls, asst prof of psychiatry, review¬ing Myth and Guilt by Theodore Reik5715 Woodlawn. 3:30 pm.Communication club lecture, DavidRelsman, “Objectivity and et.hno-centrlsm of foreign news reporting ”soc sci 201, 7:30 pm.Green hall coffee hour, 9-11 pm.Tolling of tenor bell in Mitchell Towercommemorating the beheading ofCharles I.and the need of the governmentfor officials with knowledge offoreign law has created a demandfor lawyers with training In legalsystems of their countries, accord¬ing to Dean Levi. The fellowshipsalso train teachers for the field offoreign law.Commonwealth gradsappointed UC law fellowsFour British Commonwealth fellows at the UC law schoolhave been named by Edward H. Levi, dean of the school.The fellows are law graduates of British Commonwealthschools who are brought to the US for a year’s study of Amer¬ican law. The program isfinanced by a grant from theMathematician John B. Jackson, like many othermathematicians, engineers and physicists, came toIBM directly from graduate school. Today, an AppliedScience Representative, he reviews his progress andtells how he uses his math background in a new field.3 with IBMconsidering mathematical research. But he liked theexcitement and diversification of business and indus¬try, and he wanted to use his mathematical backgroundin that area. It was not until he was interviewed byIBM that he becameaware of this new fieldfor mathematicians. Afew months later, he be¬gan his career as an Ap¬plied Science trainee.John Jackson has pro¬gressed rapidly sincehe joined the Company.He’s now the Wash¬ington representativeoperating with one ofIBM's key Divisions,Military Products, in the Washington, D. C., office.With his wife Katherine, daughter Lisa, and John, Jr.,he enjoys life in the nation’s capital.Discussing a mathematics problem Interesting and chal¬lenging responsibilities,plus the knowledge thathe is making a sub¬stantial contribution ina rapidly expandingarea of IBM that isimportant to the Com¬pany and to the nation,assure John Jacksonthat he is moving alonga road of real futureopportunities.e e eThis profile is just one example of what it’s like to bewith IBM. There are excellent opportunities for well-qualified college men in Research, Development, Manu¬facturing, Sales and Applied Science. Why not askyour College Placement Director when IBM will nextinterview on your campus? Or, for information abouthow your degree will fit you for an IBM career, justwrite or call the manager of the nearest IBM office:IBM Corp.618 S. Michigan AvenueChicago 5, III.IBM INTERNATIONALBUSINESS MACHINESCORPORATIONCAT* PROCESSING • ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS ♦ MILITARY PRODUCTSSPECIAL ENGINEERING PRODUCTS • SUPPLIES • TIME EQUIPMENT The fellows include: Robert D.Carswell', whose home is in Bel¬fast, Northern Ireland. He re¬ceived his BA and law degreesfrom Oxford university.From London, Engand, is DavidB. Casson, who graduated fromthe London school of economicswith the LLB degree in 1957.James K. Walsh, of Perth, West¬ern Australia, received the bache¬lor’s degree from Aquinas college,Perth, and the LLB degree fromthe University of Western Aus¬tralia.William L. Twining, whosehome is Dar-es-Salaam, Tangan¬yika, Africa, holds bacheloi’’s andlaw degrees from Oxford univer¬sity.Services on TVSunday services at Rocke¬feller memorial chapel will bebroadcast weekly over radiostation WGN. The broadcast, re¬corded at the morning service,will be heard at 1:30 pm.Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery ServiceQottliebBEAUTY SALON1350 E. 53rdComplete BeautyServiceExpertPermanent WavingHair Cutting& TintingModerate PricesHY 3-8302 HY 3-8303Junior YearinNew YorkAn vrusuat one- yearto liege programSee your thanor writefor brochure lo:Dean F. H. McCloskeyWashington SquareCollegeNew York UniversityNew York 3. N.Y.3A democratic aristocracy right here at the US! Yes, anygroup or organization may submit a name for campus queenelections (except APO-ers, who are counting ballots) andperhaps win fame and fortune.If fame and fortune aren't satisfactory, your residence hallor fraternity may win a leg on the house decorations cupby the exertion of a little creative effort in decorating. Allthis and Wash Prom (why, it's THE big formal, my dear!),too. V/UCB will sponsor seriesof 'human image1 lecturesWUCB, the student-run broadcasting station, will begin a new series of weekly eveninglectures this Monday at 7 pm, Fred Masterson, general manager for the station, announced.The station can be heard at 640 on AM radios in International house, Burton-Judson andC-group dormitories."The Human Image,” a series of lectures currently being given at Chapel house by theMethodist Graduate fellowship, will comprise the first five weeks of tape-recorded program¬ming. Reuel N. Denney,'pro- *fessor of social sciences in the will hold its annual, 24 hour, fund plans to install a new transmitterCollege will discuss "Portrait raising marathon. Funds collected in the new women's dormitoryGive money prizes to UCstudents for writing, music of the spectator: a view of popu¬lar culture," this Monday. Thetalk was originally heard atChapel house January 12.On succeeding MorFays, HaroldHaydon, dean of students in theCollege and associate professor ofart, will speak on “The nakedcrowd: an analysis of AbnerDean’s cartoons”; “Pogo’s Repub¬lic: has Pogo replaced Plato?”will be given by Robert Moors,associate dean of students, Chi- by paid record requests and con- later this quarter. In addition ittributions from the audience, willgo to the Frankfurt exchange.The program begins at 7 pm inthe Burton lounge of Burton-Jud¬son.The station also announcedEntries for the Olga and Paul Menn foundation prizes are “fhouf la°theT:‘ andnow being accepted, the department of English has announced. Dagwood Bumpstead,” by Nicho-A first prize of $1,000 and a second prize of $500 will be las Lotz, Methodist minister, Uni-warded in each of the following categories: an original short £0^0““"^' power'^Ttho* * positive laugh,” by Anthony Bar-judged to be not of sufficient ton, graduate student in psychol-merit to justify the awards as ogy.announced. Friday, February 14, WUCBawstory or novel, an originalplay of one or more acts, andan original musical composition.Manuscripts must be submittedto Miss Fern E. Fister, depart¬ment of English, Wieboldt hall,room 205. not later than April 1.Awards will be announced beforethe end of the spring quarter.Each manuscript must be type¬written. Each musical score mustbe written in ink. All entries mustbe submitted under a pen nameand accompanied by a sealed en¬velope containing the contestant’sreal name.Further information concerningihe competition can be obtainedfrom Richard Stern, Wieboldthall, Room 409A.Competition is open to Univer¬sity of Chicago students:• who are at least 20 and notyet 26 years old on the final dateof submission of entries;• who are candidates for abachelor’s degree (Old plan orNew plan) in 1958 or who are inthe divisions or schools and havethree or more quarters of worktwith full registration) remainingafter June 1958, before comple¬tion of the requirements for ainaster’s degree;• who are In residence throughthe autumn, winter and springquarters of this academic year;• who have been in residencenot fewer than t\y° quarters inany year prior to the academicyear 1957-58• and who have not previouslywon first prize in this contest.Any or all of the six prizes maybe withheld or reduced if manu¬scripts which are submitted are Do you need areal estate loan?Call UsC.W.H0FF&C0.Incorporated(Serving since 1890)1346 E 55 HY 3-2215 is currently accumulating a rec¬ord library “designed to bring thefinest recorded music to the cam¬pus listeners.” iJimmy’sSINCE 1940MODEL CAMERAAuthorized LeieuDealerMSA Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTH e Specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Down to Down1342 E. 53rd St.Dr. N. J. De FrancoDr. N. R. NelsonOPTOMETRISTS•138 1.63 HY 3-53525 pizzas forpiice of 4NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063 Feelin’ blue? Need money, too?Students, we’ve got news for you!We wantWHATS A VtKINC AFTERA TONSILLECTOMY?HOARSE NORSESylvia LevensonPenn. State WHAT IS A CONVERSATIONBETWEEN PANCAKE T0SSERS?BATTER CHATTERNoel BeaulacPembroke Send yours in andMAKE 25MOST POPULAR GAME that ever went to col¬lege—that’s Sticklers! Just write a simple riddleand a two-word rhyming answer. For example:* What’s a big cat shot full of holes? (Answer:peppered leopard.) Both words must have thesame number of syllables—bleak freak, fluenttruant, vinery finery. Send Sticklers, with yourname, address, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Don’t dodrawings! We’ll pay $25 for every Stickler weuse in our ads—and for hundreds that never seeprint. While you’re Stickling, light up a lightsmoke—light up a Lucky. You’ll say it’s thebest-tasting cigarette you ever smoked!LIGHT UP A liqht SMOKE-LIGHT UP A LUCKY!NA T- Cm Product of effie jJrvvuecm tJv6<v<xo~(£»ya<z ny -» tis our middle nameJan. 31, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristEyes ExaminedVisual TrainingGlasses FittedRepair Service1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372 Captures yourpersonalityas well asyour personphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. JAM SESSIONPHI SIGMA DELTA5625 S. WoodlawnJazz ComboDancingRefreshmentsToday — 4-5:30 P.M.FREEE.E.'s, M.E.'s, A.E.'s, Math, Physicsand Chemistry Majors: "Chicago Maroon"CLASSIFIEDSUniversity rate 30c per line. Others 60c per line.Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265WantedWANTED: Somebody with connect.onsto handle tuxedo aud/or flower conces¬sion for Washington Promenade. Con¬tact student activities office. Ida Noyea.Ride wanted daily from vicinity 2800 N.Sheridan. Share expenses BtJ 1-1645.Wanted: Student agent for greetingcards, sell to store—commission. Write:Hand Print Cards. 133 W. 19th St.. NewYork City 11, N. Y.Wanted: Pregnant cat. so that kittenscan be used In psychological experi¬ments. Cat can be returned, If request¬ed. Call Nagumo. FA 4-2474. Persona!TO FRANTIC RUSHING COMMITTEEA pledge In hand la worth three inmouth. Confucius.STEVE: Actives are and always will bebetter than pledges. Big Brother.Thanks to the entire campus for making“Gaslight Gaieties'' such a big successHope to see you all at the Strawberryfestival. Phi Sigma Delta.JAM SESSION today, 4 to 5:30 pm atPhi Slg house. 5625 S. Woodlawn. JAZZcombo (Kahan, Olesen, Haddix, etc.)dancing, refreshments. Free.CECIL: See you at the jam session.Phi Slg house today. Penelope.JOIN IN THEVANGUARD For saleMake an offer. Must vacate ultra-deluxebrick Hyde Park residence near IC.Completely modernized 9-room and 2'itile bath plus large 5-room apartmenton third floor. Maid's quarters In base¬ment. Asking $34,500 Including carpetsand appliances. Will finance. Mrs. Red-fern. C. W. Hoff & Co., Inc. 1348 E, 55th.HY 3-2215.VESPA, new and used. Libby. BO 8-5570. GEORGE: John Quincy Schwartz drop¬ped In the other day and tells me thatour presence Is requested at Wash PromIt’s on your birthday and It’s so verysweet of them ... do hurry back fromthat nasty old Valley Forge place,MARTHASnooktims—See you all at the SocialistHootenanny, Essex Community Church.7400 S. Blackstone. Passion Pot.Dear Passion Pot. O K Socialist Brawlsare even better than frat parties’Snookums.OF SCIENCEWe have entered the age of fully guided supersonicmissile flight. This state can be attributed, in largemeasure, to scientists and other technical men at theApplied Physics Laboratory (APL) of The Johns Hop¬kins University. Since 1945 we have been in the vanguardof the guided missile field.Young engineers and scientists with above-averageability will want to know more about APL: how webuilt the first ramjet engine, the first large booster rocket,achieved fully guided supersonic flight as far back as1948, developed TALOS, one of the country's most suc¬cessful long range missiles, and how we are presentlyengaged in missile programs of such urgency that littleis spared to facilitate their progress.You'll also be interested in finding out why the recordof achievement of our 550-man engineering and scientificstaff is exceptional, about how we can allow greaterscope for creative thinking because our sole goal istechnical achievement.Our laboratories, covering over 350,000 square feet,are located in rolling countryside midway betweenWashington, D. C. and Baltimore, Md. These facilities,combined with those of our 18 major contractors andGovernment test stations provide exceptional opportu¬nities for staff members to develop and extend theircapabilities.For detailed information on APL, an organization ofand for technical men and scientists, ask your PlacementOfficer for our new 30-page publication or write: Pro¬fessional Staff Appointments.< INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS STHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13A representative of the Applied Physics Laboratoryof The Johns Hopkins University will be on yourcampus on the days indicated. Please contact yourL placement officer now and arrange for an interview. ^Tne Johns Hophins UniversityApplied PhysicsLahoratory8621 Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring, Maryland Co-op apt. for sale excellent locationnear UC. 6 rms.. 2 baths, large sunporch, modern kitchen. Low assessment.Near stores and transportation. Call BU8-8237, evenings or Saturday. Memo: Esoteric actives.“Puppy Passion”—Feb. 7th at 8:00.Children’s costumes—bring a date;Fiji house and don’t be late.Eso Class of '58.For rentMale student wanted to share 7-roomapt. or to rent room and pvt. bath. Allfurnished, air conditioned. Good neigh¬borhood, Unlv. area. Call PL 2-1667.Large man's room, one block from cam¬pus. BU 8-7257.Vi, 1'4, 1 Room furnished apts. Rea¬sonable For students. 6107 Dorchester.FA 4-5538.ServicesExpert 1348 E. 55th.Professional typing and editing. CallFA 4-3189, evenings.Offset reproduction, mimeographing,photo copying, executive IBM typing.Save by typing up your own stencil oroffset master. Free pick-up and delivery.Mayda. HY 3-4541.RUSSIAN: Tutoring or beginning stu¬dents. Thorough instruction, indiv. orgroup, with recorders and tapes forhome use. DO 3-0249. 9-10 p m.Will do typing at home. Near campus.Marilyn Mayers. HY 3-9634. Will the person who took the wrongblue overcoat at Phi Sig’s Gay NinetyParty please call BE 5-3150. Will returnyours.Come to a weekend of discussion on Per¬spectives for Socialist Youth. Attendwith groups from Madison, Detroit,Oberlin, Cleveland. Twin Cities. Chi-fago, N. Y., L. A., Phlla., Denver. Toron-o, Antioch, Ypsllanti, and BuffaloTopics at the Midwest Conference willbe: Sat.. Feb. 1. Problems Facing Amer¬ica's Youth, The State of Civil Liberties—Ida Noyes. 10-5 pm: Sat. night—6 pm.refreshments; 7 pm—Dinner and danc¬ing. Hootenanny, skits'—Essex Commu¬nity Church. 7400 S. Blackstone: Sun .Feb. 2—Perspectives for Socialist Youth—Soc. Scl. 122 (not Reynolds Club asformerly advertised) 10-5 pm.-Sponsoredby Socialist Youth Committee.For sale: One hammer. N. U.Help wantedStudents wanted for part time deliverywork. Must have driver's license. Hours;4-8; $1.00 per hr. PL 2-9097.Professor’s family needs companion for2 school-age children, weekday after¬noons, 12-4 p.m. Salary, or in exeh. forrm. Job open for 2 years, starting Sept.,’58. DR 3-2318.r NORTHWESTERNRADIO AND TV$3 Service Coll — Plus PortsNinety-Day Guarantee on All PartsDR 3-979.-;0&XC44WC PAINT & HARDWARE CO.Hyde Park's Most Complete.Paint and Hardware Store1154-58 E. 55th St. UC Discount HY 3-3840Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. MI 3-2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOften Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.tn. - II p.m.IHARPER LIQUORS |* 1114-16 E. 55th St. IV vy. The Finest Selection of £imported and Domestic W ine *❖ at Lowest Prices ❖Taylor's New York State Wine . . ....y5 $1.59California Rhine or Burgundy . . . Vi gal. .98Imported Sherry 1.49Italian Chianti .98German Rhine Wines .... 1/5 1.29Kosher Wine .791947 French Pommard . . . . Vs 2.49- *French Table Wines Vsteed Beer Free DeliveryFAirfax 4-1233, 1318, 76998 • CHICACO MAROON e Jan. 31, 1958Allison discusses science, nationby Uklis RozeDr. Samuel K. Allison, pro,fessor of physics, discussed"Science and the nation” lastvfck. The lecture was part of aseries on US domestic policy.~Dr. Allison first read an ac¬count by Dr. Johnson of the RoyalSociety of London on “science andthe nation” in England in 1588(the year of the Armada). Up tothat time there had been no math¬ematics professorships in thecountry. Spurred by the danger,the government decided that per¬haps science was a good thing forthe country (and especially themilitary) to have, and helped es¬tablish a two-year lecture series inmathematics. When the two yearswere over? the danger had passed,and a renewal was obtained onlywith difficulty. When two moreyears had passed, the lectureswere dropped altogether.“There may be a certain anal¬ogy to this in the present situa¬tion,” commented Allison. “Myfriend Clifton Utley has observeda noticeable change in the beha¬vior of TV audiences. Today theyare much more willing to listento a serious discussion of scienceand national affairs than theywore before the appearance of thesputniks. This is fine, but weshould not forget that Americanscience will need just as muchsupport when the danger will ap¬pear to have passed. Science can’tjust fade away in times of secu¬rity.”True of basic researchThis is especially true of basicresearch, observed Allison. No¬where Is the isolation of the scien¬tist from the man in industry orpolitics more evident,” and per¬haps fortuitously so. If the poli¬ticians really knew what scien¬tists mean by basic research, it isouite possible that the money forit would not be appropriated.”“In general,” commented Alli¬son, “the basic research programis working well, and Is often ad¬ministered with Intelligence. Thefinancial support Is almost aslarge as the scientists could ab¬sorb, although more could be used.In particular the National Sciencefoundation budget should besharply increased. What has actu¬ally happened is that it has beencut by 20 per cent this year.”Allison then passed on to a con¬sideration of Russian science. “Be¬cause of the recent Russian suc¬cesses in missile and satellite de¬velopment, we have assumed thatthey are generally ahead of us.There is little support for such anassumption.“Russians don’t think so”'The Russian scientists them¬selves don’t think so, and thehead of the Russian Academy ofScience has said that is is a dan¬ce r o u s, complacency - breedingopinion to hold.”A scanning of the list of recentNebel prizewinners and othercriteria shows that the West isstill the leader in most fields ofseienee. “But what is ominous forthe West is the rate of growthof Russian science.”To meet this danger, Allisonproposed a remodeling of ourpresent educational system. “Weare faced with a great problemhere, and we shouldn’t expect toKristof lectureson Cold WarUadis K. D. Kristof willspeak on “East and West: Thequest for justice and the questjfor Freedom,” this Wednesday at18 pm, in the Homeroom of Inter¬national house.Kristof was born in Rumania8ad has studied at the UniversityPoznan in Poland. He is per¬sonally acquainted with both Sta¬tist and Titoist philosophies,having lived in both Soviet Rus¬sia and Yugoslavia.’ inee coming to the United^ates in 1952, Kristof has spe¬cialized in Soviet studies, and her.ow working for his PhD inlbiPolitical science. He is a formerIndent of International house. wave a magic wand and see cal¬culus in the eighth grade.”Russia graduates 54,000 engi¬neers annually, America only19,000. Forty-two per cent of thehigh school curriculum in Russiais devoted to the study of science(70 per cent to science plus for¬eign language). In comparison,less than one-third of Americanstudents have had a year of chem¬istry, less than one-fourth a yearof physics, and less than oneseventh a year of mathematics beyond plane geometry or algebraThe most popular foreign language is Spanish, which is worthless in science. students have never had a chanceto see what university physics islike.” think would waste their time in sonnel teaching high school sci-The marvel of it all is the factthat American science trainingfor the two or three years preced¬ing the PhD is so good. Our train¬ed PhD’s in physics from the tenforemost universities are the envyof the world. But we should re¬member that these graduateswould be even better if collegesdid not have to waste time onskills that should have been ac¬quired in high school.”Suggest changes“The answer is not a threefoldincrease in the number of engi¬neering graduates, but a modestincrease in quantity and great in¬crease in quality of graduatingengineers.” Allison suggested two changesin our present system of educa¬tion. trying for a PhD. We should makethe MS an honorable degree, andgrant it when the student has hadenough training to teach his sub¬ject well. This would supply thehigh schools with qualified scienceinstructors. Something must bedone to put students in touch withpeople who have a professionalfeeling for science.“The problem won’t be solvedby spending a bit of money topurchase new high school scienceequipment,” warned Dr. Allison.“We can begin alleviating it onlywhen we have high grade per- ence.Dr. Allison is the ex-director ofthe Enrico Fermi institute of nu¬clear studies. He is a professorof physics at the UC and has beenhere as a student and teachersince 1917. He has served on thescientific advisory board of theOffice of Naval Research and theNational Science foundation.Allison’s lecture was the firstin a series of seven sponsored bythe downtown center of UC deal¬ing with US domestic policy. Lec¬tures will be held Tuesday eve¬ning at 8 pm in Breasted hall.Great differenceOne of the great differences inthe two educational systems isthe fact that America has a fargreater percentage of young peo¬ple in school than docs Russia.“In educating everyone, we havecome perilously close to educatingno one,” claimed Dr. Allison. Sci¬ence in particular is generallytaught at a low level in most ofthe country’s high schools. “Phys¬ics is often given by footballcoaches, in the spring. And 75per cent of high school science “First, we should give up orpostpone the idea of equal educa¬tion for everyone and establish afew schools for the gifted. It cer¬tainly is not democratic, but thenthe Lord was not democratic whenhe parceled out the skills and apti¬tudes to men.” Such high schoolswould be under federal control,and entrants would be chosen bycompetitive examinations. “Weneed schools where the bright stu¬dent is not stifled.” Plan youth hostel in IsraelDan Perlman, graduate in the social sciences, will lead agroup of UC students in a youth hostel workshop this sum¬mer in Israel.According to Perlman, the group is scheduled to leave Chi¬cago June 29 on a chartered. , , . , „ contact Perlmanairplane which will stop for view Park. at 5448 Eastseveral days in London and Paris Organized by the Sharon Youthbefore proceeding to Israel. On hostel, the workshop will concurAugust 25 the group will fly to with tenth anniversary eelebra-A second proposal made by Alli¬son concerned the status of thepresent master’s degree in sci¬ence. “Today the MS is a degreein ill repute. It’s a consolationprize given to the people who we Rome and then return to the US. tions to be held in Israel this sum-Total cost of the trip is $975. mer. Seminars in Hebrew, arche-Perlman indicated that this price ology, and contemporary cultureincluded roundtrip transportation, will be conducted for college-agescheduled excursions, and room students from all parts of theand board. Students interested in country at Herzliyea beach on thethe youth hostel workshop can shores of the Mediterranean.ANNOUNCINGHI-FI Conies to the Univ. of ChicagoIN NEW DRAMATIC FORMS!!IN SMOKING — THE NEW HI-FI (HIGH FILTRATION) PARLIAMENTNOW AT POPULAR FILTER PRICESIN LISTENING — FROM THE SOUND CAPITOL OF THE WORLDCAPITOL ^^HI-FI PHONOGRAPHSTOGETHER THEY BRING YOUAn Exciting Campus Contest Open to All Clubs, Groups,Organizations, Fraternities, Women’sClubs, Etc. All are Eligible to WinThis Ultra-Modern Capitol Four-Speed HI-FI ConsoleRetail Value $200plus$100 Worth of Capitol HI-FI Albums- of Your ChoiceThis Treasured Prize Will be Award¬ed to the Group that Merely Collectsthe Most Empty Flip-Top Boxes of the HI-FI PARLIAMENT,MARLBORO, or PHILIP MORRIS.IT'S AS SIMPLE AS THAT — Just a Counting of the Boxes Will Determine the Winner ! !Start Saving Any Empty Boxes of These Brands Immediately! Begin Now and Get a Head Start! Smoke These Brands,Make up Collection Parties, Steam 'em From Your Best Girl. We Don't Want Jingles! (They require intelligence).We've Got Nothing to Unscramble! (We can't stand tie-breakers). Nothing to Rhyme! (What could possibly rhymewith High Filtration Parliament?) Neatness Doesn't Mean a Thing. (We're all slobs at heart). JUST COLLECT BOXES!!Contest Will Run from Feb. 1st to Feb. 28. Retain All Boxes till Close of Contest. Grand Prize Now on Display atThe Disc Stop in and See This Prize as Well as a Complete Selectionof Fine Recordings. Watch for Further Details of Contestin This Paper1367 E. 57th St.*The first cigarette that meets the standards of United States Testing CompanyJan. 31, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9——The Art institute is currently exhibiting, until March 7, paintings and draw ins of one ofthe most curious as well as significant modern masters; George Seurat. This exhibition ofhis works, completed theoretical in concept, in practice often contains a kind of reluctantpoetry. In this accumulation which represents most of Seurat's output, there are paintingsw'hich are mere optical demonstrations, and others, just as methodical, which are mysteri¬ous and even disturbing. The paintings, as a group, are rather enigmatic.As is evident from am of u,,, >utT.nv. and as subtle phere so thills ■ be mbreatthe canvases in the show, modulations into depth. With an able; on the othei. the dots be>nncourtesy Irt Institute of ChicagoSeurat's 'Le CirqueH Monday, February 3—50c—Hit Star* of the Russian BaMet (Russian )UNIVERSITY HOTEL BORDONEMovers and Light HaulingLU 2-4660Newly Decorated Rooms — Private Tub and ShowerKitchenettes Available. Daily Maid Service. Reasonable Retes.Two Blocks from 1C, Permanent and Transient Guests.5519 Blackstone DO 3-4100ADAPTED FROM THE MWmTtie One ThatGot Away "Y WE HA VENTr SEEN AWHALE IN. WEEKS/ . /WE.BLYE, ^AND THERE'S TALKr OF MUTINY/M”. • C J. BUTTWINSTONTASTES rGOOD!I J- LIKE A )CIGARETTESHOULD/THE LOOKOUT 15 THE JjONLY CNE^ PUPPED HIS UD/ f AHOY,THERE- ]J WHAT KEEPS Jf ( V YOU SO HAPPY? WINSTON'S EASY DRAWING TOOTHE FLAVOR COMES RIGHT Jr\ through TO yOil! ryhPACK.Oft BOX,MATES/* l SCVN0..0S I04ACCO C0„MATES, D/G THAT NEW CRUSH-PROOf BOX'/ ‘ v • , ' -the PHOENIX and the MUSE«> *- . ^ .'OFickin t KhA pretty slim this week. Not puny, just sparse. Maybe it's a natural reaction to last week'smultitude off happenings. Whatever it is, it's here to read about. Herewith . . .Events on campus . . .University TheatreUniversity theatre will presentthe second half of its two-part edi¬tion of 'Tonight at 8:30,” Febru¬ary 7 through 9 in the third floorReynods club theatre.Highlighting the productionwill be an original stage adapta¬tion of J. D. Salinger’s "Zooey.”It is the story of a sensitive boydeeply concerned with coming togrips with life. Also on the sameprogram will be Brock' Brower’slight fantasy about a medievalduke who has lost his executionerand of the job hunters who mustfind a way of decapitating thecharming duchess.In addition, the program willfeature Frank Hamilton’s ar¬rangement of the ballad of JohnHenry: the well known folk talestaged as a spontaneous bluescomposition, a composite of ele¬ments of music, drama, and thedance And to round off the eve¬ning: Tennessee Williams’ delight¬ful poke-in-the-ribs at Boston so¬ciety, his "Case of the CrushedPetunias’* and John Herzog’smusical comments on OgdenNash’s "It * a Wise Child."Tickets for the production may be obtained in advance at the Rey¬nolds club desk or may be re¬served by calling MI 3-0800, ex¬tension 1062. All seats are $1.Truman CapoteNovelist and playwright Tru¬man Capote will speak at Mandelhall Wednesday, February 5, at8:15 pm. Capote will read selec¬tions from some of his best-knownbooks and from his newest, yet-unpublished work. Advance tick¬ets may be obtained from theChicago Review, the sponsoringorganization. Reserved seats are$1.75, general admission $1.50, and student tickets $1. Tickets willalso be sold at the door.B-J moviesTonight at 7:30, 9:30, and 11:30,the B-J movies will show "TheOxbow Incident,” starring HenryFonda, Dana Andrews, and HenryMorgan.. . . and offWorld PlayhouseOpening tonight at the WorldPlayhouse is the internationalprize-winner, "The Last Bridge,”starring Maria Schell. Winner ofthe Catholic International andProtestant Film awards as wellas Cannes Film festival awards,"The Last Bridge” deals with theconflict of a woman doctor duringthe last war, who is torn betweenduty and patriotism. Captured byYugoslavian guerillas, she isforced to tend to enemy wounded,only to find her fellow prisonershostile and distrustful. Thewoman doctor, in a climacticdemonstration of kindness, rend¬ers a compromising light of en¬couragement to both sides.Chicago SymphonyNext Thursday and FridayFritz Reiner will return to con¬duct the Chicago Symphony or¬ chestra in Beethoven’s Eighthsymphony and Brahms’ SecondPiano concerto. Emil Gilels willbe the soloist.'Tonight at 8:30' presentsunusual, original playsAn entertaining and unusualprogram presented by Universitytheatre’s *Tonight at 8:30” be¬gins tonight and will run throughSunday In the Reynolds’ clubtheatre. An original one-acter byOmar Shapll of WFMT fame isset in ancient Egypt and spins atale of a complex political con¬spiracy of three generals againstt h e Pharoah, Menkeperre theGreat The text of the play isbased on historical fact and itsstructure is sharp and colorful;the result Is unusually theatrical.Wayne Caudill has directed itwith imagination and energy. Fur¬ther, the production is designedrichly and brightly with morecare given to carefully chosen, ac¬curate detail than in most major productions presented at the Uni¬versity Theatre."Tonight at 8:30” shows are en¬tirely student run, and more oftenthan not, they offer an excite¬ment and unconventionality moreworth seeing than the smooth,shall I say slick, fare so oftenpresented during the rest of theyear.The second play of the evening’sentertainment in store for thosein search of "it’s magic time” di¬version this coming weekend isanother brand new play, chosento be published in Margaret May-orga’s collection of "Best One ActPlays of the Year 1954-55.” "FiveDays” is an exercise a la BertBrecht in power packing tragi¬comic irony.As a companion piece to "TheLesson of Haar Megido” it is well chosen. Both plays deal with war,with power, with humanity, butShapli’s play is in a style char¬acterized, let us say, by an imageof a plumed falcon while HenryZenger’s can be said, in complyingwith this analogy, to employ thebroad outlines of a cooked goose.One needn’t have exposed nerveendings to be sensitive to the dis¬tinction between the two plays,but Wayne Caudill has done wellto draw out the elements in eachwhich are worth heightening. Allin all, it is highly recommendablefare for the weekend.Zachary J. Bildad University Theatre will present Henry Zeigner's award¬winning "Five Days" today through Sunday in the Reynoldsclub theatre. Above members of the cast (left to right)Willard Moody, Justin Leiber and Sam Robinson. On thefloor, the deceased, Hal Slate.TERRY’S PIZZA"The World’s Best”SPECIAL OFFERWith This Coupon — Mon., Tue*., Wed., Thun. Only25c Discount on ony Pizzaeaten here ... or deliveredSmall 1.00 Large 1.95Medium 1.45 Giant 2.95Free Delivery for U. of C. Students1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045Snappy Radio fir TV ServiceQuick, Efficient TV Applianceand RepairPick-up t Delivery onHomo Repairs — $3Day Colts — 10% Off on Porte829 E. 61et St. MU 4-7375 BROWNIE McGHEESONNY TERRYlegate of hDrnSUMS? 7-2*33tlieliyjk Jc^/thmfcteNC7907. ^Pa^pBitdW4tud«i tutte so* alL pMf<rtnmeiNow, thru Feb. 6 — Sun. matinee, 2 pmAdult* onlyBED OF GRASSTko Film Doily: "From Greece, filmed ogainst a peaceful volley ofwheot fields, it is a story of social irony, murder, rape ond suffering.Starring o rustic beauty, Anno Brazzou ond a solid supporting cost,the film in part is reminiscent of La Sorciere's mood. The script isbrimming with social misfortune — the heroine is o frequent ropevictim of the townsmen ... the photography is quite striking ondthere is some wonderful folk music in the background ..." Plusthe Athens Symphony Orchestral "Ployed with fierce dignity ..."— The Boston Herald■no »ftd ——ROMAN HOLIDAY"Gregory Peck ond Audrey Hepburn in a delightful flight of fancyabout a precocious princess ond a scoop-happy news photogropher . . .It's good fun." — Don McCabe• Richard tit, Feb. 7.* ' » i . . ucePRE-ELECTRICSHAVE LOTION to gat a bettor shave!Quicker . . . closer . . . smoother . . .no matter what machine you use. 1.00plvs *«<SHULTON N«w York • Toronto1 Jan. 31, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11— —mm ' ■\ Cagers beat IITfor third in rowThe hoopsters, riding high on a three-game winning streak,defeated Illinois Tech last Saturday night, 73-62. John Davey,athlete of the week, and Ted Romoser, led the scoring attacktotaling 56 points between them.Chicago played its usualdefensive ball and held Tech seventh victory of the year next, , ,, , . ., .. Saturday night when it playsin check throughout the game. At Knox ^ th<,sficldhOTJse, at g pm.half time, Chicago led, 40-35. Chi¬cago’s defense is rated No. 1 inthe nation among small schools,holding its opponents to an aver¬age of 44.6 points per game. Chi¬cago is also rated No. 3 in the na¬tion in committing the least num¬ber of fouls per game.The team will be seeking its In between halves the award pre¬sentation will be made to WalterEckersall, Amos Alonzo Stagg,and Jay Berwanger.The “B” team also scored theirthird straight victory by defeat¬ing Tech’s second team. HowardRuttenberg again captured scor¬ing honors for the Maroons.Tankers win handilyRallying after a dismaying start, Chicago’s swimmers wonlast Saturday’s meet against St. Louis U., 47-32. Misfortunestruck the UCers in the first relay team when both their teamswere disqualified, thus losing the seven points the Chicagoteam had hoped for.Tom Lisco suffered his first thirds. This coupled with theirdefeat of the season as he de- winning the relay accounted forparted from his usual 50, 60, and their final victory. Hoffer, once100 yard events and just got again in the winner’s circle, tooktouched out in the 220 yard free- a first place in the 200-yard but-style. St. Louis pressed forward, terfly. Lisco took a first in thetaking a first and second in the 100-yard free style, and Currie60-yard free style and a first in and Mauer won the 200-yard back-the diving event. Gaines and Burk- stroke and 440 yard free stylehardt of Chicago took second and events, irrespectively. Siegle andthird, respectively, in diving. At Hosek swam beautifully takingthis point the score was 19-8 in St. a first and second in the 200-yardLouis’ favor. breaststroke. These, coupled withIn the remaining individual the winning relay (Dec, Mauer,races Chicago took five first Currie, Lisco) enabled Chicago toplaces, one second, and four win its first dual meet of the year. Davey named asathlete of week 1The athletic staff has namedJohn D^vey, regular guard onthe varsity basketball team, asathlete of the week, for his out¬standing performance against Illi-nois Tech last Saturday.He is a graduate of Universityhigh school, where he earned all.league honors for two years, andled the private school league inscoring one year.Davey, a freshman, has a 16.6game average for the nine gamesto date. In addition, his defensiveplay has been excellent. He hasdemonstrated the poise and cour¬age of a seasoned veteran. In Sat¬urday’s win over a strong IllinoisTech team Davey hit for 32points and played aggressively ondefense to earn his athlete of theweek award. -Skate now underStaggs standsphoto by MaloneJohn Davey sets his sights on the basket, as Ted Rosomer(background) watches, and Gary Pearson (foreground) setshimself for the rebound. The ice skating season is infull action under the north standsof Stagg field and on the Midway.Students, faculty, and Universityemployees can use the skatingfacilities under the stands by pre¬senting an ID card. Skates areavailable for rental there. Thehours are 4-5:30 and 8-10 pm,Monday through Friday, Satur¬day morning and afternoons from3 5:30.Wisconsin whips gymnastsGymnastics season got underway recently when coach BobKreidler’s men met the University of Wisconsin at Madison.The Maroons lost by a score of 69-43.Coach Kreidler said the score was no indication of theteam’s ability since Chicago,with a few breaks, might have placed third in side horse andtied or even beaten the Badgers, high bar, and fourth in parallelsOutstanding performer for Chi- and rings,cago was "athlete of the week"Bill Leicht whose 10 points madehim the scoring leader. Leichtwon the trampoline, was secondon the side horse and in tumbling,and took fifth in free exercises.George Andros, new on the mid¬way won the rings, took secondin the parallels, fourth in freeexercise, trampoline and high bar,and fifth in tumbling. John Bow¬man coming out of retirement Play badmintonInterdormitory badminton willbegin this Tuesday from 4:30 to6 pm in the Ida Noyes gym, theWomen’s Athletic association(WAA) has announced. Each girlparticipating will get one pointfor her dormitory for attendingand two points for each game shewins.WAA has also announced thefollowing basketball schedule. Allgames are held in the gym.Monday—UC vs. WAVES 7:30 pmTuesday—Gates vs. third floor newdorm 7 pmThursday—Second floor vs. Green-Beecher 4:30 pmQuadranglers vs. Mortarboards... 7 pmDelta Sigma-Wyverns vs.Esoterics 7 pm r-WTi: AUTO INSURANCE: TERM INSURANCE[ Phone Of Write\ Joseph H. Aaron, '27 j►135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060<LaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaJ9/ie fjrftjmni PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433UC trackmentake Wheaton Life insurance can guarantee youa retirement income which youcannot outlive and also providefor your dependants if you dieat an early age.Representative Let me tell you how.RALPH J. WOOD JR., ’481 N. LaSalle Chicago 2, III.FR 2-2390 • RE 1-0*«>5SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAUC’s varsity track teamdowned their first opponent,Wheaton college, by a scoreof 57 to 47, recently in the field-house.High point honors for the Ma¬roon’s went to Hosea Martin with11% points. Martin won the 60-yard dash, the 440-yard run, andwas a member of the winning milerelay team.UC’s Earl Allen scored 9 pointsby winning the 70-yard high hur¬dles and tying for first in the 70-yard low hurdles. Gar Williamsalso helped the cause by winningthe mile and placing second inthe two-mile.Have a WORLD of FUN ITravel with fITAUnbelievable Low CostEuropeb#m $585Orient-65 Ooyt tr.m $998Many tour, includecollege creditJAik 11VAwono mm, iiAlto low-cott trip, to Moxico$149 up. South Amorica $499 up,Hawaii Study Tour $498 up andAround tho World $1398 up.Aik Your Trav«l Agtnt332 S. MichiganAve., Chicago 4,7-2557INC. HA BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGWINTER SPECIALTUNE UP $650-• Anti-Freeze• Snow Tires• Road Service$1595Heavy Duty BatterySPECIAL ! !Harper Super ServiceDealer in Sinclair Proaucts5556 HARPER PL 2 9654 TONY 0BNN8TT—XXCLUtlVt COLUMBIA H«COHOIN« AXT1*TTune Up With TonyGet your exclusive TONY BENNETTautographed edition of hits. This remarkablerecord features songs like “Rags toRiches,” “Cold, Cold Heart,” “Come NextSpring,” “Because of You”... six bighits in total! And it’s all yours for only251 ($1.29 value). Just pick up the couponat the store where you buy Coca-Cola. <j|Q^ Qp qqqp TASTEeORYRiBHT 1999 THC COOA-OOLA 00mRANV.8ottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by'The Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.12 • CHICACO MAROON • Jan. 31, 1958