proposes College changejby Rochelle Dubnow professor of mathematics and Ex- “too tight a program. There isAc- thA autumn miartoi* amineG Earl Pritchard, associ- too little left for the students . . .^ ^ qua iter ate professor and secretary of the there is no opportunity for in-of the 1958-59 academic year department of history; Gerson M. dividual initiative.” The electiveUC expects to put into effect a Rosenthal, Jr> assistant professor year of the proposed curriculumnew college program created by °* natural sciences and advisor in would present a period of time inthe Directive committee on under*' College; Charles W. Wegener, which the student could “sensiblygraduate education, stated Chan¬cellor Lawrence A. Kimpton in aninterview yesterday. associate professor of humanities browse.”and chairman of the Organiza- The nevv ab program would re-tion, methods and principles of tain the placement tests for acce-The committee, initiated this fall !i?0Q.!™5e (5>M?) staff and Hen; leration purposes but they tooand headed by the chancellor con¬cerns itself with evolving a sys¬tem that deals specifically withthe undergraduate in a schoolwhere the main emphasis hasvery often been placed on the edu¬cation of the graduate student.Members of the committee are;Kimpton, chairman; R. WendellHarrison, vice president of theUniversity and dean of the facul¬ties; William C. Bradbury, associ¬ate professor of sociology, secre¬tary to council on tutorial studiesand advisor in the College; Jo¬seph Ceithaml, dean of studentsin the division of biological sci ry Sams, associate professor ofEnglish in the College.New deanThe new program will involvethe creation of a faculty whichwill have complete jurisdictionover the undergrad and the ap¬pointment of an undergraduatedean of students and staff “con¬cerned with the whole range ofundergraduate activity.” would undergo a “thorough over¬haul.”In addition, the present Collegefaculty would be asked for a pro¬gram including only 8 compre¬hensive examinations.Kimpton explained that underthe new program the Bachelor ofscience degree will take morethan 4 years to obtain unless theapplicant for the degree can placeAnother plan under discussion out °£ required subjects.by the committee on undergrad¬uate education affects the AB andBS degree programs.The proposed AB degree willcontain two years of general edu* The BS candidate will also berequired to take the 2 years ofgeneral education. Because thepre-professional degree for a stu¬dent who proposes to go on forences, and associate professor of cation rather than the 14 compre- an MA, PhD or MD usually hasbiochemistry; Corwin D. Edwards,professor, school of business;George J. Metcalf, chairman andprofessor, department of Ger¬manic languages and literaturesand professor department of lin¬guistics in the College; Eugene P. nensive examinations; 1 year offree or “guided elective” coursesand a fourth year of concentra¬tion within a department.UC outstandingKimpton stated that while thepresent degree program is “oneNorthrop, William Rainey Harper of the finest in the country” it is 2Vt years of already prescribedpreparatory courses, the require¬ments in the degree programwould necessarily take longer tofulfill.Not retroactiveNeither program would haveany retroactive aspects. Kimpton outlined the history ofUC’s College curriculum, callingit “atypical on the universityscene.”“UC,” he pointed out, “was begunby President William Rainey Har¬per as a graduate institution.Harper concerned himself withgraduate work and then added un¬dergraduate education.” The prob¬lem of how to emphasize the Col¬lege evolved from this situation.'Hutchins plan“Hutchins,” Kimpton illustrat¬ed, “decided to alleviate the prob¬lem by enforcing his plan ofgeneral undergraduate educationrather than specialized work . . .placement exams for accelerationand entrance into College afterthe completion of two years ofhigh school work.”“As in all experimental plans,”Kimpton went on, “situations oc¬curred that were not anticipated.”Both public and private highschools resented the exclusion ofthe last years of high school, butas a result strengthened theirhigh school programs consider¬ably, “although still not enough,”Kimpton observed.The AB degree became as “thecoin of the realm” and “did notstand up at other colleges.”As a result of Hutchins’ beliefthat separate faculties should be created, the College became r»mote from the divisions.During 1953-54 the AB degreewas relocated, faculties becamereassociated and the AB regainedstature, Kimpton related.The Chancellor expressed thefact that “too many degree pro¬grams that we now have grew outof hostile relations.” There Is a“need for better communicationbetween the College and the divi¬sions.” It is hoped that this re-evaluation will bring about evenmore flexibility and a greaterunderstanding than is now prev¬alent.Regarding enrollment, Kimptonexpressed the hope that the un¬dergraduate body would be en¬larged in the next few years and“move slowly towards 4,000 whilethe graduate body would be “per¬haps reduced by greater selec¬tivity.”“The emphasis has always beentoward graduate studies. . . . Wehaven’t done our fair share oftraining as far as terminal de¬grees are concerned,” Kimptonstated.The chancellor voiced his desireto enlarge the College faculty,and stressed the “enormously im¬portant" general education pro¬gram at UC. “After all,” quipped(see ‘LAK,’ page 3)UC gridders honoredVol. 66, No. 21 University of Chicago, Friday, Feb. 7, 1958 «^^^»31Nat'l student associationproposes editor exchangeExchange of five editors of youth and student newspapers has been proposed by theUnited States National Student association to the Committee o youth organizations of theUSSR. The Soviet youth group has said it will respond soon.Bruce D. Larkin, USNSA international vice president, said in announcing the exchangeproposal that it had arisen from negotiations between US Ambassador William S. B.Lacy and Soviet Ambassador Georgi N. Zaroubin. The State department suggested thisproject to USNSA.Tentatively, the exchange month’s visit; the Soviet groupcustomed to new situations andwould carry US editors to the Would spend the month of May can get to the core of issuesSoviet Union in April for a . ...here. quickly.photo by CoffeyJay Berwanger '36 (right) receives his certificate ofmembership to the Football Hall of Fame from HarveyHarman, executive secretary of the National Football foun¬dation during half-time of the Knox-Chicago basketballgame fast Saturday, In addition, Amos Alonso Stagg andWalter Eckersall received recognition.Science has won conflictwith religion states Urey- by Ina Brody Larkin indicated that his asso¬ciation’s policy on USSR ex¬change has favored yearlongacademic exchanges as “a morefruitful approach to understand¬ing” than short range touristschemes. Claiming that a shorterprogram is more appropriate forstudent and youth editors, hepointed out that editors are ac- This is USNSA’s first Sovietexchange program in the elevenyears since its founding. Lastsummer USNSA conducted asummer student program in Po¬land through its educationaltravel subsidiary. Larkins statedthat the Polish program will berepeated this summer.Science has won the conflict with religion over the nature and origin of the universe,Harold C. Urey, professor of chemistry, stated at a conference of the federated theologi¬cal faculty on “Religion faces the atomic age.”The conflict began nearly 100 years ago when Darwin published his “Origin of Species,”and Huxley and Wilberforce debated the theory of evolution and descent of man, the Nobelprize-winning scientist said. “Regardless of who was considered to be the winner in 1860,Huxley had won by 1958,” heclaimed. in this field that religion has science and the materialistic nec-“We can boast today that made its great contribution to essities and luxuries supplied byman possesses the most magnifi- ....... _t al1 tirnp„ .. its application to give us a soundcent view of a marvelous uni- moral life and noble aspirations?”verse that he has ever had.” How wil re lgion main am le ^ present( pe0pie emphasizeHowever, science has not given old values? Can it do so without material possessions rather thanUs “a valid personal reason for the miraculous, and without^ il- striving to become better persons,our existence on this planet or logical dogmas? he asked. “Can t0 understand our freedoms, andfor the belief that each life is val- it make use of the magnificent to have a better philosophy gov-uable,” he said. “It is precisely view of the universe supplied by erning our lives and our rela-m m j !•* tions with others, the scientistIda to try for mte life no‘we *..*», „Ur"< . democracy to other countries, butIda Noyes hall will become an “evening hangout” starting do we not think of automobilesthis Monday, Walter Jeschke, Ida Noyes guard, announced and radios rather than the Bill ofrecentlv Rights of our Constitution?”. ’ # ing, 9 pm until closing, Jeschke He mentioned that he had oftenAs it is an experiment, the stated. talked with the religious men ofbuilding will be open until Cokes and coffee will be avail- Oxford who were seeking an-midnight Mondav through Fri- able and a record Player and rec‘ swers to the problems religiondav f Vh \ y “ ords are being installed. “Just like faces today. “I wish them and ally or the next two weeks. The t^e Coca-Cola ads,” he remarked, of you present the greatest suc-library will be available for danc- The evenings will be sponsored cess in these efforts,” he con-singing and general carous- by Student Union. eluded, John Mueller, Doug Maurer and Bill Mathieu (left toright) work over the music for the coming Blackfriars mu¬sical comedy which will be presented on April 18 and 19.photo by MaloneEssay contest begins View desegregation offersfor Israel: workshop on whole American sceneThe second David Petegorsky scholarship, for six weeks,all expense paid, study-vacation trip in Israel this summer,will be granted to the college student who submits the best2,000 word essay on the subject, “Why I want to attend thesummer workshop in Israel.” The following material was prepared by the campus chapter of the Nationalassociation for the advancement of colored people (NAACP) in conjunction withNegro history week, which will be observed next week.The award, which is given ing offered in this city, by the The right and most effective way to look at the Negro’s relationship to Americanannually to four students by the Chicago women’s division of the civilization is to consider it not as an isolated race matter and minority group concern, butAmerican Jewish congress, is be- conRreSs rather in the context of the whole of American civilization. Thereupon, one inevitably be-:<• American college students ages comes involved "1th history and fortunes of both the majority and the minority groupsPetterssen IS 1721 of any ragce or faith are in politics, education, literature and the entire stream of American creative thought.g|gpresident eb£*ble for'the scholarship, which ^ Such a view would, we believe, enable a student to better understand occurrences as theis offered in memory of the late Supreme Court decision ofSverre Petterssen, professor David Petegorsky, who served as May 17, 1954, the contrary to e brought closer theof meteorology and director of national director of the congress fact stereotype of the Negro, i?Jion of the American idthe rise of American drama inthe 20th Century, and, most cer¬tainly, jazz.Those who recognize the de¬structive effects of segregation rights decrees in recent years dominated the national stage forreal- at least seventy years: (1830 litOO)'ideal.The origin of the Negro stereo¬type as a jester can be found inthe nature of American slavery.Slavery was in this country abso- was the main perpetuator of theNegro stereotype long after itceased to conform to fact and isstill present in the dark cornersof American life.One can early see how a stub-its Weather Forecasting re- for eleven years prior to his deathsearch center, was elected pres- inWent of the American Meteor- Deadline for essays is midnight,ological society for 1958 59 at the March 15. Winners will be an-society’s annual meeting in New nouneed four weeks later. The —**':*' ]ute- bylaw the slave could ownYork Citv scholarship covers all costs of recognize them in reciprocal ’ ^ _ . . .Petterssen is a noted authority transportation, lodging, field trips terms. The Supreme Court deci- ^ - ’ ‘' ‘ • , . P orn^stereotype may block under*-Petterssen is a noted authority i « f’ . -nn w_„ hv T a “Necro from murder by his master, standing and adjustment forthorWof three3L on^hat s£b-' six credits which are transferable victory” in" the literal sense, but or allowed a family. Such a sys- decades because the way twoject. He came to the University to any accredited American col- has significant and meaningful ^ T' desmeration^that* an^n ftout^ach^hir ^in 1952 from the US Air Force air lege or university. implication for the Caucasian ma- **£**££%! ^veloos to mnl i T”weather service, where for four Under the award’s terms, the jority. If the test of a democ- . . ’ . . masters thin whnt thn twl ^Tyears he had directed scientific Chicago winner will join three racy’s effectiveness is to be found J. . , , ^ ‘ Ufn h J 1 g / JPsendees. He was born in Hadsel, other students at the workshop in the impact of its philosophy . ’f. mac.tpr<;.‘ a5>e‘ An 1.!?K'a.r,cc 0i bo{n.{heNorway in 1898, received his MSc conducted by New York univer- upon minority groups, then the * ’ . . pnmmiLmPnVihl co^tnbution to Amen.-anand PhD degrees from Oslo uni- sity’s school of Hebrew culture shift in philosophy and intent of 1 j the ™ure and tbe evolu,l®n of theversity, and from 1945-48 was and education. Israeli statesmen the Supreme Court has both th-gqnnt>..- Negro stereotype can be founddeputy director of the Norwegian and educators will instruct on paved the way for the formidable A1__ South s official jesters. And in American drama of the earlyForecasting service. government operations, educa- succession of affirmative civilMark Negro history weekwith NAACP discussionA symposium will commemorate on campus Negro history week, February 9-16. “TheNegro in American civilization,” scheduled for Thursday at 7:30 pm in Ida Noyes, is beingsponsored by the UC chapter of NAACP.Negro history week was initiated by a UC graduate of 1907-08, the late Carter C.Woodson. Its purpose, according to UC chapter president Laurence Landry, is to acknowl¬edge contributions made by Negroes to American civilization.“Jim Crow society breeds «Yhe dominant historiography The organization was active inand needs a Jim Crow his- in the US either omits the bringing into national focus thetoriography, Landry stated. Negro people or presents them fact that, between 1888 and 1918as a people without a past, as a there were over thirty-two hun-people who have been docile, pas- dred lynchings in the US, mostlysive, parasitic, imitative. This picture is not true.”RELIANCE CAMERA &PHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63rd St.BU 8-6040 confined to the South. Over 78per cent of the victims wereSince its origin in 1910, NAACP Negro. the sad fart is that this led to nineteen hundreds. The pioneer-the most ingrained and falsely ing geniuses in the developmentSouthern stereotype—the “happy, of a native American recognizedcontented slave.” the Negro life and folkways asThis infallable psychological a potential source of nativeweapon of appeal and appease- idioms from which a major addi-ment for the other defenseless tion to a national drama couldNegro was also the genesis of a be developed. To be sure, themajor form of American theatre: plays of this period were only ablack face minstrels and its later meager transition in the stereo-stenchild, vaudeville. type from farce and buffooneryThis same vaudeville which of the minstrels to folk comedyschool giveshonor scholarship prizesThe school of business has announced an honor scholar¬ship program with UC’s college.The college will nominate a candidate for the honor schol¬arship award, which will include full tuition for an academicyear. The scholarship will be —renewable upon application Metcalf, dean of students in thefor a second year of study in the school of business, and a memberhas represented a union of Ne¬groes and whites of generallysimilar class and professionalbackgrounds and ideologies. More recently, NAACP foughttoward the eventual outlawingof the restrictive covenant in 1949and segregated schools in 1954. business school providing satis¬factory performance is main¬tained.Fifty-four universities and col- of the College faculty.College students interested inapplying for the 1958-59 honorscholarship should so informleges throughout the country are Dean Haydon or Dean Metcalf5 pizzas forprice of 4NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063 Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.in. -II p.m.STEVEN'S LUNCH1206 E. 55thSoda Fountain Home-Cooked MealsClosed Sundays and Holidays participating in the scholarshipprogram. Thirty-three candidatesfrom these schools have beennominated for honor scholarshipsin the school of business for1958-59.The candidate will be selectedby a scholarship committee, whichwill include Harold Haydon, deanof students in the College, Harold before February 24. College stu¬dents who wish to enter the busi¬ness school on the fourth yearprofessional option plan are eli¬gible for the scholarship. Studentswho will receive the Bachelor’sdegree before the autumn quar¬ter, 1958, including those in thealso are invited to apply,joint Bachelor’s degree programs,International Hou.se MoviesMonday evenings, 7 & 9 p.m. — East LoungeMonday, February 10—50c — Breoking the Sound Barrier tEng.)NORTHWESTERNRADIO AND TV$3 Service Coll — Plus PortsNinety-Day Guarantee on All PartsDR 3-9795 UNIVERSITY HOTELNewly Decorated Rooms — Private Tub and ShowerKitchenettes Available. Daily Maid Service. Reasonable Rates.Two Blocks from 1C. Permanent and Transient Guests.5519 Blackstone DO 3-4100wherethere’s life...there’sBudweiser.KINO OP BEERSANHEUSER BUSCH. IHC • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK LOS ANGELES "Piogsieddiac PAINT t HARDWARE CO.Hyde Park's Mast CompletePaint and Hardware Store1154-58 E. 55th St. UC Discount HY 3-3840| DON’T BE A TOURISTin Europe next summerClassrooms Abroad offers you a vacation with upurpose under professional guidance.10 days of intensive shipboard instruction in German orFrench.6 weeks at the University of Grenoble or the Free Univer¬sity of BerlinLanguage instruction in groups of 6-8; proceed at yourown speed.Full auditing privileges at either universityLive with German or French families2 free tickets per week to theaters, concerts, and movies2-week tour through France, Italy, Switzerland, and Bel¬gium or Germany, Austria, and Switzerland.Beginners and advanced students: Write to ClassroomsAbroad, 18 Auburn Street, Worcester 5/ Mass.a CHICACO MAIO • Feb. 7LAK proposes change(from page I)Kimp<on, "we’re not going to turnout plumbers here!”“The problem of money," Kimp-expounded, “is a very realone. and increased enrollment andgreater faculty goes hand in handwith expensive enlargement ofphysical facilities. However, thechancellor stated, "I am in no way pessimistic,” He pointed out thata new men’s dormitory and busi¬ness school were in the process ofbeing planned. The southwardmovement of the law school andbusiness school across the Mid¬way will free the two presentbuildings for College use. "Smalldiscussion groups will still bemaintained as enrollment grows,"concluded Kimpton.Vocational guidance examavailable to all UC studentsOffice of vocational guidance and placement will admin¬ister vocational guidance tests to registered students at theUniversity of Chicago for $7.50. The University also offersthe examinations to alumni for $15 and the general publicor $25.Appointments may be made Nations and objectives realist!-by telephone, letter or in per- calIy*son The office is located in the During the initial interview theAdministration building, room cl»ent and counselor discuss fac-3^5 tors which bear on the client'seducational and vocational prob-Initial appointments are usual- ]ems js probable that a testingly on a Tuesday or Thursday program will be arranged. Themorning. After this interview the particular tests used depend onclient spends the rest of the day. client’s background and inter-and frequently part of another ests. They may include measuresTuesday or Thursday, taking 0f mental ability, achievement,tests. When testing is completed aptitude, interest, and personal-an appointment is made for dis- jfy The time required for testingcussion and evaluation of the test |s typically a day or a day andresults and personal date in rela- a half.tion to the individual’s plans. To While the program is intendedpermit time for test scoring, this primarily for students at the Uni-interview is scheduled for at least versity, it is open to others whena week after the tests are taken, time permits. We have found thaftThe vocational guidance service it is best suited to individuals be-is based on the needs of the indi- tween the ages of sixteen andvidual; its objective is to assist thirty, inclusive, and limit it tothe client in evaluating his quali- those in this age range. French gendarmes arrestAlgerian student leadersFrench police arrested numerous national and local leaders of the Union Generale desEtudiants Musulmans Algeriens (UGEMA), the national union of Algerain students lastweek, according to the coordinating secretariat of the National Unions of Students(COSEC). In addition, the French government ordered dissolution of the organization.The reason advanced by the French government for the action was that the organiza¬tion was “violating the external security of the State.”COSEC was informed by£ •< m «UGEMA and the Union Na- arrests followed a series of ar-tionale des Etudiants de rests of Algerian students.France (UNEF) of the arrest andboth groups currently are protest¬ing to the French government.The United States National Stu¬dent association has already pro¬ ofNSA rep deported from many national unionsstudents including NSA.Khemisti’s whereabouts wereunknown for 54 days after hisinternment and he was finallyClement’ Moore European seen in AI£iers- He has apparent*aent association has already pro- v-'emenr woore turopean ]y been denied cholce of legaltested the dissolution of UGEMA representative for the United counsel aRd was ^legally extra*and the arrest of its leaders. In a states National btudent asso- cjited from France to Algeria,letter to the French embassy in ciation (NSA), was deported Bruce Larkin, NSA internation-Washington, NSA stated that they from France on January 1 3 for al affairs vice-president, urgesfound "this an extraordinary ac- “threatening the external se- "all individual students and stu-tion and know of no other similar curity of the state", according dent governments puzzled by theevent on the student scene in re- coordinating secretariat facts of the case to manifest theircent years . . . USNSA has long Qf National Unions of concern to the French embassy,stood to protect basic academic c«-uc|ents “A number of local inquiriesfreedoms and the right to organ- ’ ., will best demonstrate the wide-ize freely for the furtherance of Moore who was a student spread rcaetion to the treatmentknowledge and educational oppor- at the Institut des Sciences 0f Khemisti and the others," hetunity. We shall continue to criti- Politiques in Paris, made a said. Letter should be addressedcize actions of individuals or gov- speech at the Union Generale to the Embassy of France, Wash*ernments which contravene these d*s Etudiants Musulmans Al- ington, D. C.principles of academic freedom." gerjens (UGEMA) congress’in A spokesman for UGEMA toldThose arrested include the pres- December in which he ex-- NSA shortly before its dissolutionWent international vice-president ", ^ s rt of NSA that the letters of protest Iron,and twelve regional officials. , IIUFMA in acniratinnc national unions of students wereSome of the students were seized in itsJ^P,ra*'ons reproduced in the French press,in the Cite Universitaire. which tor national independence. The letter added “We thank youhas traditionally been considered Currently in London, he is with all our hearts for it (the pro¬as a place of sanctuary in France. appealing the decision. test). This immediate and spon-The students rooms were| taneous gesture makes concretesearched and the arrest effected tmmommmmimmm m for us the friendship which is eon-without notification of the univer- UGEMA general secretary Mo- stantly being reaffirmed betweensitv authorities by the police. hammed Khemisti’s arrest last our two national unions and theThe dissolution and wave of November resulted in protests student of our two countries.”Suburbs symbolway of life says of USRiesmanby Elizabeth StroupDavid Riesman opened his lecture entitled “Suburban Sadness” last Monday at Mandelhall by acknowledging that he spoke as “one who loves the city and the country, but notthe suburb.”In this fourth in a series of lectures on “The American Future.” Riesman’s observationson the American suburbs substantiated his claim that the situation is unhealthy in manyrespects. *“Suburbs in the last dozen mass as far as ideas and achieve- mobile to work and the wife, leftvoars have become a svmhol ments are concerned. withodut a means of transporta-yeai S na\ e Decome a symooi As the radii ]engt}ien an(j more tion, lives in near seclusion. Herof the American way of life,” amj more people move to the sub- associations are fragmentary,Riesman said. In the typical sub- urbs, the city as a central meeting she has little selectivity of friends,urb where middle and lower-mid- place disappears. The home, rath- breadth of view becomes ingrowndie class citizens live in typical or than even the neighborhood, and her life empty.ranch style homes complete with becomes the gathering place.TV antennas, theemphasis is on Gathering around the barbequeuniformity and conformity. Plt *n g°0(l weather and the TV., .... . . set in inclement weather, a sense“Uniformity dictates in mossen- f , „ closeness is effected butareas," remarked R.esman, ditteren;lallon ls lost. Plan CJA campaignHillei foundation again is conducting the CombinedJewish Appeal campaign on this campus. The campaignwill be held from this Monday to next Monday.Funds are needed for settlement and care of immigrants. TheCJR provides money for construction of housing, procurementof food, and medical care. In the US money goes to maintenanceof medical, social, educational and community services. Forexample, in Chicago CJA maintains, through the Jewish federa¬tion, Michael Reese and Mount Sinai and the Winfield Tuber-0 culosis hospitals, the Jewish Vocational service, Drexel homefor the aged, and the Jewish Family Community service.Student CJA representatives, who will approach the Jewishbody next week, will be glad to explain further distribution ofthese funds and work of these agencies.tial GUADALAJARASUMMER SCHOOL• The accredited bilingual schoolbut conformity involves a psy* jn school, the loss of dif- sponsored by the Universidadchological and moral mechanism. ferentiation is ais0 felt. Riesman Autonoma de Guadalajara andMaking this distinction, the so- contrasted New York City with members of Stanford Universityciologist stated that decentraliza- its variety of high schools special faculty will offer in Guadalajara,tion and loss of differentiation are {z[ng in science or art, with the Mexico, June 30-Aug. 9, coursesthe results. Because the suburb is suburban secondary schools that in art, folklore, geography, his-a civic and social entity, the new necessarily amalgomate curricu- tory, language and literature. $225suburbanite suffers less from ex- lums and thereby settle for medi- COVers tuition board and roomelusion than from surfeit inclu- ocrity.sion. The suburbanite’s associates The suburbanite breadwinner isare all similar in age, status and required to spend a great deal ofideas. This leads to the loss of time traveling to and from hisdifferentiation and to stagnation. job. “The human waste hereCities have always been the cen- seems terribly important," Ries-ter of human differentiation and man said.human achievement. “The city Another serious effect of sub-has specialization, not only in urban life is the captivity of thelabor, but in outlook," Riesman housewife. An increasing numberadded. Cities provide the critical of husbands drive the family auto- Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, Box K,Stanford University, Calif. STUDENTS SPECIALClosing out on allCORDUROY SPORT COATSformerly to $15.95reduced to $G.G6Our Prices Can't Be Beat ... It's Smart To Buy For LessD & C Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-2738“la the Neighborhood tor 40 Years'*Hours: 9 o.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 o.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdayLOST-A Widow's Home...... because her husband would never face the factthat he could die, and he failed to safeguard hishouse with a Sun Life of Canada Mortgage policy.Be sure that such a fate doesn’t befall your wife.Why not call me today on this veryimportant matter?Ralph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LA SALLE STREETCHICAGO 2, ILLINOISFR 2-2390 . RE 1-0855Repreientotiv*SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA 10% Discount to UC Students and PersonnelAll Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW NET PRICES8-LBS. WASHED & FLUFF DRIED . . . 59‘10-LBS. FLAT WORK T‘DRESS SHIRTS ,. 22'QUALITY DRY CLEANING — RAPID SERVICE — REASONABLE PRICESFREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERYPhone PI.a/a 2-9097UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1024 E. 55th St.v, U.IIII11'II%m Editors columnClarifies ‘general service’ feeThere has been some undue concern about the new “general service” fee rate whichwill go into effect this summer quarter. Many students feel that an increase in the feewill mean an increase in services. It will not, unless greater faculty salaries, badly neededrepair of buildings and increasing the budget for Harper library (whose rating has droppeddue to budget slashes) constitutes “services.”The “general service” fee is not truly a service fee. It might be more appropriately becalled a “budget” fee. Allmoney from student fees goes "other campus may register at amount the University will re-i UC as a student-at-large m order ceive from the fee.into the bmversitys general t0 one course which is not Another question raised istte various tStartm^ns ^m no °,,ered on hl> <TOn campus He v‘he,her ,he is "nfair ,0 s,u'regard as to Whether it came already P*ying his token dents who require scholarshipfrom tuition fees non specific amount ,or 8tudent health, li- aid. The University cannot figureAte ’ sPec,I,c brary, student activities, etc., on the needs of scholarship appli-ow men •.. his campus, and therefore should cants that exactly. It gives oneSome students have asked ^ have to pay the fee on thls half (uition, fu]1 tuition andmore - than - tuition scholarshipsThe service fee is just a token when in actuality the need of fi-amount in lieu of an itemized one. nancial assistance is not multipleThe cost to run the various stu- factors of tuition,dent services far exceeds the Gary Mokotoff"Why a special fee, why not onelump sum for tuition ?” The fee Ballows for flexibility in the sys¬tem. For example, a student onLETTERStudents Uniondisgrace to UCStudent Union is a disgraceto the campus. I assume itwas originally organized topromote some semblance of socialactivity on the campus. This hasbeen the most dismal social sea¬son in years.For example, last Friday’sNight of Sin. In years past, thisused to be one of the top eventson campus. I recall hundreds ofpeople crowding all three floorsof Ida Noyes. Publicity was funnyand attractive. What happenedthis year? A cheap "teaser” cam¬paign on poorly mimeoed paper.We were promised dancing, butSU did not even bother setting upa phonograph. There wasn’tcrowd enough to fill up one wingof the first floor. I only hope thatsomebody shows up for WashProm.What should be done is no busi¬ness of mine, but some of the so¬cial climbers using the SU officeand telephone should get on thestick and start something worth¬while.—Rodney G. Dangerfield -i/y\ efucaao11 laroonIssued every Friday throughout the school year and intermittently during thesummer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes ball, 1212East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800. extensions 3265 and3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptions by mail, $3 per year.Office hours: 1 to 5 pm. Monday through Friday. Deadline for all material 3 pm.Wednesday.Editor-in-chiefMokotoffGoryMonaging editorRobert J. Halasz Associate editorRochelle M. DubnowNews editor Gadfly editor Culture editorMory Finkle Richard Brooks John HerzogSports editor Calendar editor Copy editorRichard Cousens Neol Johnston Donno DovisCartoonistsLiza Flonnery, Dick MontgomeryPhotogrophic stoff: Robert Malone, Dove Coffey.Business ManagerLawrence D. KesslerAdvertising manager Office manager Circulation monagerPhyllis Ritzenberg Art Toitel Joon HelmkenEditorial stoff: Claire Birnboum, Ino Erody, Tom Coblk, Robert Coole, JaneForer, Lonce Haddix, Dorothy Hoptos, Irene Kenneth, Jenny Korling,Ruth Losemore, Steve Meltz, Gene Moss, Nancy Penkovo, Dick Purtill,Uldis Roze, Elizabeth Stroup, Carol Werner.GADFLYInterdepartment committees dieONE BY ONE, the interdepartmental commit¬tees have weakened or disappeared. Although afew have established themselves as permanentscholastic bodies, others such as the city planningcommittee or the international relations commit¬tee have withered away. At the same time, underKimpton, no further attempts have been made toadministratively link various departments of theuniversity.Perhaps the destruction of the committee savedmoney. Perhaps, students could learn the samethings on a program within a particular depart¬ment. But, the change ruins possible serious talkbetween faculty members of different depart¬ments, and the study of the interrelationships be¬tween subject matters suffers.THE DESIRE by students and faculty for inter¬departmental points of view is frustrated by ad¬ministrative inertia. Faculty members informallyarrange to cooperate on projects, while studentsfollow a patchwork program of minor fields.The greatest outlet for interdepartmental yearn¬ings is the informal lecture series which threatensto keep profs and students too busy to go toclasses. Departments, departmental clubs, com¬peting church groups, government committees,university and divisions, political clubs, et al., spon¬sor tempting lectures, panels, and discussions.Many discussions are on interdepartmental sub¬jects or draw professors and students from dif¬ferent departments.No matter how impressive the titles of theselectures may sound, teg. Is There A God?), theseries themselves are not an adequate substitutefor interdepartmental committees. The professorswho speak at these lectures must organize theirmaterial outside of their main concerns; moreover,they frequently take neither their subject nor theiraudience too seriously. This audience is usually4 • CHICAGO MA'ROON • made up of students who are there to relax andenjoy a light lecture. Consequently, a superficialacademic good time is had by all.AN'EFFECTIVE, (which means an experimen¬tal), committee program will cost money which isnot being used for necessary material expansion;there will be a shortage of teachers whose aca¬demic interests are already directed in traditionalchannels; students will be reluctant to enter suchcommittees, since they will want degrees in fieldsestablished at other universities. Yet, these aresurmountable problems met in attempting to suc¬ceed at anything new and original.On the other hand, time and money will be savedby the costly duplication of effort in the depart¬ment which has experts in outside fields on itsstaff. (The law, business and divinity schools areoutstanding examples.)The problem of setting up committees beginswith the definition of their fields. The field ofstudy could be a practical problem in our society,war or inflation; the field may be defined in termsof common methodology: science and social sci¬ence; philosophy and literature; or the problemmay be defined in terms of the relations of fieldswhich grows out of theoretical problems: human¬ities and historical inquiry, ethics and the socialsciences.Obviously, a tentative definition of the fieldwould have to suffice at its inception. The fieldcould then work out its own definition.THE ADMINISTRATION should regard thesecommittees as flexible and experimental ratherthan rigid and timeless. Interest in the inquiry andsuccess of enquiry would be criteria of permanence.The ideal would be to make the university itselfa large experiment in various ways of combiningand pursuing knowledge.Coming down to the realities, perhaps a startcould be made by having a committee for thereorganization of the dicisions. Or would this bea way of saying boodbye to an interdepartmentalcommittee system which we need but do not have.Feb. 7, 1958 1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoITALIAN RESTAURANT & PIZZERIAFeaturing — Hors d'oeuvre TableSmoll Large Small12" 14" 12"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 fir Onion. 1.60 2.10Free Delivery on Alt Flxxu to VC Student*(ADVERTISEMENT)On Campos withMaxStraJman{By the Author 0/ "Rally Round the Flog, Boys!" andMBarefoot Boy 1cith Cheek.")BE IT. EVER SO HUMBLEToday let us apply the hot white light of sustained thinking tothe greatest single problem besetting American colleges. I refer,of course, to homesickness.It is enough to rend the heart, walking along a campus atnight and listening to entire dormitories sobbing themselves tosleep. And in the morning when the poor, lorn students risefrom their tear-stained pallets and refuse their breakfasts andshamble off to class, their lips trembling, their eyelids gritty,it is enough to turn the bones to aspic.What can be done to overcome homesickness? Well sir, theobvious solution is for the student to put his home on rollersand bring it to college with him. This, however, presents threeserious problems:1) It is likely to play hob with your wine cellar; many wines,as we all know, will not travel.0(tMkaittimltfolhlbrdl2) There is the matter of getting your house through theHolland Tunnel, which has a clearance of only 14 feet, 8 inches.This, of course, is ample for ranch houses, but quite impossiblefor Cape Cods, Georgians, and Saltboxes, and I, for one, thinkit would be a flagrant injustice to deny higher education tostudents from Cape Cod, Georgia, and Saltbox.3) There is the question of public utilities. Your house—and, of course, all the other houses in your town—has wiresleading to the municipal power plant, pipes leading to the mu¬nicipal water supply and gas main. So you will find when youstart rolling your house to college that you are, willy-nilly,dragging all the other houses in town with you. This will resultin gross population shifts and will make the Bureau of theCensus cross as bears.No, I’m afraid that taking your house to college is not feasi¬ble. The thing to do, then, is to make your campus lodgings asclose a replica of your home as possible.Adorn your quarters with familiar objects, things that willconstantly remind you of home. Your brother Sam, for instance.Or your citizenship papers. Or a carton of Marlboros.There is nothing like Marlboros, dear friends, to make youfeel completely at home. They’re so easy, so friendly, so wel¬come, so likable. The filter is great. The flavor is marvelous. TheFlip-Top Box is wonderful. The tattoo iB optional.Decorating your diggings with familiar objects is an excellentremedy for homesickness, but it is not without its hazards.Take, for instance, the case of Tignor Sigafoos and EstabrookRaunch who were assigned to share a room last fall in thefreshman dorm.Tignor, an ice-skating addict from Minnesota, brought withhim 44 barrels over which he had jumped the previous winterto win the Minnesota Jumping-Over-Barrels Championship.Estabrook, a history major from Massachusetts, broughtPlymouth Rock.Well sir, there was simply not enough room for 44 barrels andPlymouth Rock too. Tignor and Estabrook fell into such a vio¬lent quarrel that the entire dorm was keot awake for twelvedays and twelve nights. Finally the Dean of Men was called into adjudicate the dispute. He listened carefully to both sides <4the argument, then took Tignor and Estabrook and pierced tbeifears and sold them to gypsies. ' « i»m mu et>uin>*a• • *And now all is quiet in the dorm, and everyone tit» Inpeace and tmoket his Marlboros, whose makers bring youthis column throughout the school year.Coming events on quadranglesFriday 7 FebruaryVarsity track meet, 7:30 pm, Plel<t-house. Chicago vs. Memphis 8tat«i and Wayne State.University theatre: Tonight at 1:38,experimental productions, 8:30 pm,Reynolds club theatre. $1 admission.Fireside conversation: "Shabboe Goy, and Sunday Jew." by Gerhard Meyer,I s 30 pm, Hlllel house. Sabbath serviceI at 7:45.Saturday 8 FebruaryUniversity theatre: Tonight at 8:38.experimental drama, 8:30 pm. Rey¬nolds club theatre. $1 admission.Radio broadcast: The sacred note.WBBM. 10:15 pm. a program of choralmusic with the UC choir.Student-faculty skating party, 3 to 4pm North stands. Free refreshments.Sunday 9 FebruaryEpiscopal communion service, 8:34 am.Bond chapel.Lutheran communion service, 10 am,Hilton chapel.Roman catholic masses, 8:30, 10, 11 am.DeSales house.University religious service, 11 am.Rockefeller chapel. Rev. Thompson,Dean of the chapel, speaker.Viewpoint: television discussion pro¬gram presenting UC profs David Ap-ter. Donald Lach, and Norton Gins-burg: The Viewpoint from abroad,12.05 pm. WMAQ.UC Symphony orchestra, 3 pm, Mandelhall.Carillon recital, 4.30 pm. Rockefellerchapel. James R. Lawson, chapelcarUlonneur.Quaker student fellowship: folk sing¬ing. 4:30 pm; supper. 6 pm (35 cents)and folk dancing at Gage Park field- house, 55th and Western, 7 pm. Trans¬portation from Quaker house.Baptist student fellowship, 6 pm. HydePark Baptist church. 5600 Woodlawn.Christianity and radicalism In Rus¬sia." Supper. 50 cents.UC Symphony orchestra rehearsal,T pm. Mandel hall.Social dancing, 8-11 pm. Int house. 50cents fee for non-residents. Instruc¬tion provided from 7-8.“Summa Ilumorlogica: the power of apositive belly laugh." 8 pm. Chapelhouse, Anthony Barton, speaker.University theatre: Tonight at 8:30.experimental works, 8:30 pm, Rey¬nolds club theatre. $1 admission.Monday 10 FebruaryArt exhibition: Water colors by RaineyBennett; prints by Roland Ginzel,college humanity staff, 9-4 am. Lex¬ington studios, through February 25.Art exhibition: Works by Max Kahn.Hlllel house. 9:30 am-5:30 pm and7:30-10:30. Monday through Thurs¬day, 9:30-4:30 Friday, through Feb¬ruary 35.Leetnre series: The American future,David Rlesman: ‘'Education for every¬body," 4 pm, Mandel hall.Botany club: Arthur W. Ghent: "Eco¬logical studies of Insect outbreaks inthe Canadian boreal forest," 4:30 pm.Botany 106.Maroon staff meeting, 3:30 pm, Maroonoffice.Motion picture: "Breaking th# soundbarrier,” 7 and 9 pm, Int house. Ad¬mission charge.Lecture series: "Topics In the physi¬ology and biochemistry of nerve,brain, and muscle: The fate of glu¬cose in the brain." Dr. A. Gieger,7:30 pm, Abbott 133. Lecture: ‘What is judgment," HerbertA. Simon, 8 pm, Social Science 122.Varsity basketball game, 8 pm. Field-house. UC vs. St. Olaf college.New Testament club, Dr. Samuel Sand-mel: "A Jewish understanding of Je¬sus." 8 pm. Swift hall commons.Tuesday 11 FebruaryColloquium: Institute for the study ofmetals: Charles P. Bean: "The prop¬erties of very fine ferromagnetic par¬ticles," 4:15 pm. Research Institutes211rJunior mathematics club, Arunas Liu-levlclus: “The Torsion products.”4:30 pm, Eckhart.Public lecture, Sir John Maud: "Brit¬ain's power problem: The atom.”4 pm, 8oc Set 122.Zoology club, Paul Weiss: "Problems ofcell contact,” 4:30 pm. Zoology 14.Society for rocket research, 7:45 pm,Eck 202.Lecture series: "U. S. Domestic Policy:Implications of population trends fordomestic policy.” 8 pm, Breasted hall.Admission charge.Lecture series: ‘‘Travel and Internation¬al understanding. Scandinavia II."Henning Koefoed, 8 pm. Art Institute.Admission charge.Coffee hour, 10 to 12 pm. Gates hall.Politics club: Peter Hoban: “The team¬sters and their place In the labormovement." 8 pm, Ida Noyes. Ad¬mission charge.Folk dancing, 8-11 pm, Int house. 50cents admission charge for non-resi¬dents. Instruction from 7-8.Christian Science organization, 7:15pm, Thorndyke Hilton chapel, testi¬monial meeting.Hither & YonSays f oof ball has ifs place(Minnesota Daily) Hugh (Duf¬fy) Daugherty, head footballcoach at Michigan State univer¬sity, said he firmly believes foot¬ball has a very important placeon the campus.Speaking at University of Min¬nesota’s Newman student center,the 1955 “coach of the year’’ saida college campus would be verydismal place without the spiritand fun which football provides,"Of course,” lie said, "the sportmust be put In its proper place.The tail should not be made towag the dog.”The part of students In thegame is very important, becausethe players need their backingand enthusiasms, he added."Football Is a great rallyingpoint for the whole school,” hesaid.Explaining how the campusbenefits from the sport, he citedreports from campus psychiatristand counselors showing that stu¬dents have fewer troubles duringthe football season. He gave foot¬ball the credit for releasing theiremotions.Integration atCambridge(Harvard Crimson) the Har¬vard Yearbook is joining thetrend toward Integration. CyrilV. Smith, Jr., ’58 president, an¬nounced that for the first timeRadcliffe candidates will be ac¬cepted for the spring competition. Comment of the weekWith regard to a book drive forAsian students: "Works by stand¬ard authors — Dickens, Haw¬thorne, Plato, William James, etc.—are useful regardless of publi¬cation date.” (Reprinted fromNational Student News, a pub¬lication of the National Studentassociation).(University of Connecticut).Tension abounds throughout thebotany department on this cam¬pus. A "plant-napper” made awaywith a prize Venus’ Fly Trapplant, the department’s onlymeat-eating plant. Officials haveexpressed the fear that no insectwill be safe until the plant is re¬cove r e d . (Connecticut DailyCampus).Courses lousy(University of Kansas). "Thisclass is certainly lousy,” said theomnipresent voice-from-the-back-of-the-room. He was right. Theclass was entomology, and theprofessor was giving each stu¬dent a louse of his own.The lice were bacteria free, sosaid the professor, and anyonewho wanted to let a louse feed onhis arm could do so.A contest was run to see whoselouse would start feeding first.It was a two-second tie betweenthe instructor’s louse and onewhose master was a sophomore.Through a microscope, studentswatched the pump in each louse’shead draw blood into his body. The body is transparent, so theflow could be seen. (Daily Kan¬san). -Call for philosophy(Utah State university). Edi¬tors of the campus newspaperhere are urging their school’s ad¬ministration to introduce a pro¬gram of basic philosophy coursesin the curriculum.Calling the lack an "educationalloophole,” the writers say "itseems a bit naive to believe wecan get along without such a ba¬sic area of knowledge as philos¬ophy.” The school offers onlyone philosophy class now andthat is in night school. (StudentLife). Wednesday 12 FebruaryReligious service (FTF), 11:30 &m. Bondchapel. Rev. Alvin Pitcher.Carillon recital, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel. James Lawson.Evensong (Episcopal) 5:05 pm. Bondchapel.Lecture, Prof. Joseph Rlvlin: "Juda¬ism and Christianity In Islam," 8pm, Hlllel house.Glee club rehearsal, 7 pm. Ida Noyes.Concert band rehearsal, 7 pm, Mandelhall.Country dancers, 8 pm. Ida Noyes.Parapsychology club, 8 pm. Ida Noyes.Illustrated lecture: Prof. Luis Perlcot yGarcia: “Prehistoric art in Spain,”8:30 pm. Breasted hall.Lecture series: John White: "Raphael—creative methods and artistic Inten¬tions,” 8:30 pm. Soc Scl 122.W9YWQ technical meeting, 9:15 pm,Reynolds club third floor.Coffee hour, New dorms, 5825 Wood-lawn.Thursday 13 FebruaryEpiscopal communion service, 11:30am. Bond chapel.Microbiology club, Assistant Prof JohnD. Arnold: “Studies on membraneswith predetermined porosities." 4:30pm, Ricketts N-l.Experiment in International living,meeting for those interested in goingbroad this summer with the experi¬ment, 4 pm, Ida Noyes,NAACP meeting, 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes.Alpha Phi Omega smoker, 8 pm, IdaNoyes.WUCB marathonFebruary 14,15WUCB, UC’s AM radio sta-tion, will hold its annualmarathon on February 14 and15 for the benefit of the Frank¬furt exchange. The show willstart at 8 pm Friday, ending ap¬proximately a little after 8 on Sat¬urday evening. The proceeds willbe used to help cover the expensesof the German students.Program, schedules will be dis¬tributed around campus earlynext week. Lecture, Walter Z. Laqueur: “Intellec¬tual ferment In the 8oviet orbit,"8 pm, Soc Scl 122.Student-faculty relations committee ot80, 8 pm, Soc Sci 122.Green hall coffee hour, 9-11 pm. Greekhall. Special guest, Aryeh Motzkln.Israeli graduate student.Television series: “AH things consid¬ered," 9:30 pm, Channel 11: “Is onelanguage enough?”Friday 14 FebruarySecond annual University of ChicagoIndoor boys and Juniors’ clay-courttennis championships, 7 pm. Field-house.University concert, 8:30 pm. Mandelhall. Eudive Chapiro, violin.Folklore society wingding and squaredance. Members, 20 cents, non-mem¬bers, 40 cents. Ida Noyes.Summer sessionin GuadalajaraA bilingual summer schoolsponsored by the UniversidadAutonoma de Guadalajara inco-operation with members of thefaculty of Stanford university andother American universities willbe held in Guadalajara, Mexico^from June 30 to August 9.The offerings will include ai%folklore, history, Spanish lang¬uage and literature courses. Twohundred and twenty-five dollarswill cover the tuition, board, androom for six weeks. For more in¬formation, write to professorJuan B. Rael, box K, Stanford uni¬versity, California.|vvrrvv?v»rrT»VT*»*TriBORDONE| Movers and Light Hauling !LU 2-4660* ' 43/te *jdwum PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery Service ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting Cards — Children's BooksReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 55th St. H\ 3-9651The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 Dr. N. J. De FrancoDr. N. R. NelsonOPTOMETRISTS1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352TERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best”SPECIAL OITEBWith Thif Coupon — Mon., Twos., Wed., Tliurs. Only25c Discount on any Pizza• eaten here ... or deliveredSmall 1.00 Large 1.05Medium 1-45 Giant 2.95Free Delivery for U. of C. Students1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045 PRE-ELECTRICSHAVE LOTION to got a bettor .have!Quicker m closer » • • smoother .. roo matter what machine you use. 1.00ffcrt lo*" .SNUlTOIt HowToA • TorontoFeb. 7, 1958 • . C H 1C AGO MAROON • SCaptures yourpersonalityas well as *your person '■ ^r, ■ - 1111 ..-m ■ t r | ^ - ** -Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristEyes ExaminedVisual TrainingGlasses FittedRepair Service1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372 photographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. BARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor ,E.E.’s, M.E.’s, A.E.’s, Math, Physics and Chemistry Ma|ors:first uncensored photo of TAIOS, long range guided missile developed by APL for the Navy,Technical achievementis our concernThe Applied Physics Laboratory(APL) of The Johns HopkinsUniversity exists solely to makescientific and technical advances.For this reason we are able tooffer our staff members freedomto explore tangential ideas,which frequently lead to signifi¬cant accomplishments. Amongour “firsts” are the world’sfirst supersonic ramjet and thefirst large booster rocket. Asfar back as 1948 we achievedfully-guided supersonic flight.Today two guided missilesthat grew out of our pioneerwork are in production: TheTERRIER is now a fleet serviceweapon, and TALOS (above)has been adapted for land aswell as ship-based operation.When TALOS was recentlyunveiled by the Navy, APLshared honors with many asso¬ciate and subcontractors whohad worked under our technicaldirection in its development.We are presently engaged inmissile assignments of a highly advanced nature which cannotbe divulged for security reasons.Suffice it to say that, as always,our work is of such vital im¬portance and urgency that littleis spared to facilitate its progress.Scientists and engineers at APLare in the vanguard of scienceand enjoy the keenest sort ofresponsibility and challenge.For information on oppor¬tunities awaiting men withbetter-than-average academicrecords, ask your PlacementOfficer for our new 30-pagepublication or write: Profes¬sional Staff' Appointments.Interviews on campusTHURSDAYFEBRUARY 13A representative of the Applied Physicslaboratory of The Johns Hopkins Universitywill be on your campus on the days in¬dicated. Please contact your placementofficer now and arrange for on interview.Hie Johns Hopkins UniversityApplied Physics Laboratory8621 Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring, Maryland University rate 30c per line. Others 60e per tini.Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265WantedThe Maroon needs someone to handleIts advertising. Hours to suit. 15-25 tors,per week. Liberal commission. No ex¬perience needed—we will train. Jobopen Immediately, for remainder ofthis year and next. Contact L. Kessler,Ext. 3265 afternoons, or MU 4-1308 eves.Need extra money? Ambitious, person¬able women to work own hours. WriteBox NO, 410. Maroon.Wanted: 7 to 12 room bouse In Unlv.area for facility member. Mrs. Redfern.C. W. Hoff and Co. HY 3-2215. Moving, must sell modern 9 non turn.like new Kitchen set. bdrm. set couch'21" TV, 21" window fan. bkcase. trainingbed., 2 ceramic tbls., 1 record cabinet. 1sliding door cabinet, and others, ixi6-0705.ServicesWanted: 1 set World Book. Call OscarKenlg. Days. PL 2-1127. Evenings andweekends, BA 1-1859. Professional typing and editing CallFA 4-3189, evenings.Expert income tax service. 1348 E. SStii,Will do typing at home. Near campus.Marilyn Mayers. HY 3-9634.Offset reproduction, mimeographing,photo copying, executive IBM typing.Save by typing up your own stencil oroffset master. Free pick-up and deliv¬ery. Mayda. HY 3-4541.For rent PersonalMale 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,anytime.2*4, 114, 1 room furnished apts . reason¬able. For students. 6107 Dorchester. FA4-5538.For rent—occupancy March 1. Mostluxurious apt. on South Side. 8 spaciousrms, carpeted thruout, 3 tile baths,all tile cabinet kitchen. Other attrac¬tions too numerous to mention. Oarageavailable. Only $175 per mo Shown byappt. only. Write Box No. 36. Maroon. . Need extra money? Sell advertising torthe Maroon. Contact L Kessler, Maroon.Ext. 3265 aft.. MU 4-1308 eves.Don't be angry. I'll meet you at. theConcert Band rehearsal. Wednesday «t7 pm. Melvin C. Coznowskl.Phi Sig. It Is rumored that ZBT stoletwelve of your Marlboro boxes Guardthem with your lives. Stooly.Fiji: I hear that DU has 56 emptiesalready. Good luck on sweepstakes 340,Monster: On second thought, my waste¬basket Is quite big. Only 21 days untilpartial freedom, - Iriotte.Room. Nice apt. BU 8-5128.New Viking tape deck and preamp. $65.DR 3-6398. LostNear 55th and Ridgewood Ct.Three 6 rms. concerted apts., two 4rms , four 3 rms. Clean bldg. Good In¬vestment. Income $6,000 per year. PriceIn low 30’s. Terms. Mr. Walker.C. W. Hoff Si Co. Hy 3-2215 1 os I in Ida Ndvt's Hall. Notebookand three schoolbooks: Smith A Kioke-metster: Calculus with Analytical Geo¬metry. Flelhsner; Die Kunst der Pros*.Chiles: German Grammar and Conver¬sation. Book II. Finder please return toIda Noyes desk. : , ' . ■QottliebBEAUTY SALON1350 t. 53rdComplete BeautyServiceExpertPermanent WavingHair Cutting& TintingModerate PricesHY 3-8302 HY 3-8303 FREE DELIVERY* NIGKYSPIZZERIAYO 7-9063Snappy Radio & TV ServiceQuick, Efficient TV Applionccand RepairPick-up & Delivery onHome Repairs — $3Day Calls ..**■«■ 10 % Off on Parts829 E. 61st St. MU 4-7375ff Iurope-That’s why American Express Student Tours are expertlyplanned to include a full measure of individual leisure—ample free time to discover your Europe—as well asthe most comprehensive sight-seeing program availableanywhere! Visit England, Scotland, Ireland, Holland,Belgium, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, TheRivieras and France—accompanied by distinguishedtour leaders—enjoy superb American Express servicethroughout.10 Special Tours . . , 48 to 63 days .. . via famous ships:United States, Liberte, Nieuw Amsterdam, Atlantic,Italia, New York. $1,198 up.Other tours available . . . from 35 days .. . $769 up.You can alwaysTRAVEL NOW—PAY LATERwhen you go American Express!For complete information, see yourCampus Representative,local Travel Agent. American Express\ Travel Servicemember: InstituteInternational Education and Councilon Student Travel... or simply mail the handy coupon,• • • a a • • a a a • • • • a aa a a a • a • a a a a a a • a a a a a a a a • a a a a • aAmerican Express Travel Service65 Broadway, New York 6, N. Y. c/o Travel Sales DivisionYes! Please do send me complete information c*13about 1958 Student Tours of Europe!Name «AddressCity Zone State.UtOTTCT YO0B TPAVfl FUNDS WITH AWf RICAN FXPMSS TPAVREPS CHtQUIS - SPtNOABU CVERYWHfPC*•*#•••#«*•• • # • • •11 -v. ' :Sputnik woke U.S. up: Brauer"Russian scientific achieve¬ments represented in thesputniks have done more forAmerica than our recent preach¬ing, writing, and cries for nationalrepentance," stated Jerald C,Brauer, dean of the federatedtheological faculty.Brauer spoke in the Red Lac¬quer room of the Palmer house toover 1000 persons attending theconference “Religion faces theAtomic age.”Russia’s achievements haveshown us to be a nation of “con¬temptuous pride and self assur¬ance,” he said. “We were certainthat no people on earth possessed< ur knowledge and wisdom. Wetook our prideful stance beforeGod and the peoples of the worldfirmly rooted and grounded in-ourtechnological achievements.“Suddenly our assurance hasbeen shattered,” the dean said.“Our deadliest enemies now ap¬pear as intelligent and as capableas we."Brauer said that the sputniksalso show us to be a frustratedand insecure people. In fact, headded, “we even appear as a fear¬ful people. Our childish reactionsto the Russian discoveries * seri¬ously question our ability to exer¬cise responsible world leadershipat this time of crisis.”He felt that as a nation, theUnited States was not ready tolive responsibly either with thedangers or the unparalleled op¬portunities of the atomic age. Al¬though this is undoubtedly trueof other nations, the US findsitself in a position of unusualresponsibility for world leader¬ship.Brauer expressed three “deepfears about our people." “First, Iam apalled by the extent to whichour struggle with Russia colorsand determines so much of ourbelief, thinking and mores,” hesaid. “We are so obsessed by theEast-West opposition that Russiahas become a bar before which weJudge all our actions.“It Is almost as though by a per¬verse twist of history we are moreconcerned about our competitionJimmy \sSINCE 1940MODEL CAMERAAuthorized LeieaDealerJVS.4 Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTlie Specialize inRound-O-Beet and WafflesOpen from Down to Dawn1342 E. 53rd St. with Russia than we are aboutour stance before God.”The American attitude towardeducation, racial Integration andaiding undeveloped nations wascited. With regard to education,he stated that Russia’s sputniksnot the pleas of Americans in re¬cent years created interest in theweakness of our educational sys¬tem. t*~Brauer assertsBrauer asserted that the raceproblem is now discussed pri¬marily in relation to Russian reac¬tions. “Not the fear of God, notthe unjust misuse of fellowhuman beings but the fear of abad comparison with Russian isto determine our handling of therace question,” the theologianasserted.Even in aid to underdevelopedpeoples and nations, the plea isoften made that we must do thisor Russia will out bid us he added.Such a point of view, Brauer felt,was surrendering all initiative toRussia. “We are so obsessed withour situation in relation to Russiain the atomic age that we do nothave the freedom to exhibit thebest that is in us.“It is because our faith is notin God but in our strength andweapons that we constantly judgeourselves by comparison with theweapons and action of our com¬petitors. When they appear ahead, our people panic and look forsecurity in regaining armed su¬premacy.“Our actions stand scrutiny be¬fore God,” Brauer stated, “and notbefore Russia. Granted the realityand problems of power politics,economic forces, and complex so-cio-historical circumstances theremust be yet another perspectivebrought into play.”Religion misusedA second problem, Brauer stat¬ed, is the misuse of religion toguarantee our safety. “As theperils and difficulties of theatomic age become ever more ap¬parent, there will be increasingpressure to turn to religion. Wewill be tempted to find our secur¬ity in our assertion that we are agodly and a good people.“If one is encouraged to be ofa spiritual nature and believe inGod because one’s enemy is ma¬terialistic and atheistic, the enemyhas already won the day,” he said.“This is what the Judeo-Christiantradition calls taking God’s namein vain.”The theologian further statedthat when religion is used as ajustification for all the nationwishes to do, God is made a ser¬vant to the national will. “But Godis God and will not be mocked,”he said.“The Judeo-Christian under¬ standing cf God working in his¬tory makes clear that no peopleor nation can trifle with Him. Hehas a purpose beyond the purposeof any particular nation or groupof nations. His law and will arenot to be used for self-justificationor self-glorification,” he stated.The problem of the creativepotential of atomic energy wasthe last point about which Brauerwas concerned. “I am haunted bythe specter of Aldous Huxley’s‘Brave New World’ rapidly beingbrought into being through thenewly released energies .of theatomic age,” he remarked.Man image“This new world in the name ofhappiness, safety, and undreamed¬ of prosperity remakes man in theimage of the test tube. So busyis the world seeking self pres¬ervation and desperately pushingthe advances of science that itneither has the time nor the per¬spective to ask the basic ques¬tion—why?”Is the purpose of man’s controlover nature merely to extend ourphysical lives, to be more com¬fortable, to eat better, to travelmore rapidly, or to have greatervariety of recreation? Brauerqueried. “Man cannot live apartfrom God. He has made us forHimself and if mkn loses thevision of the ultimate meaning oflife, he loses everything eventhough he creates a bright bravenew world.Alice Teasdale diesAlice Ferguson Teasdale, retired assistant professor in theschool of business and former assistant director and super¬visor of student dining halls, died last Sunday in Blooming¬ton, Illinois.Mrs. Teasdale was born in on the school of business facultyOrion, Illinois, October 4 was in ISSI. She taught courses-.ooo on institutional management and1888. She was first appointed to food purchasing. Her teachingthe University Commons staff as continued to September, 1956, al-supervisor of the dining halls in though she reached the retiring192^ and her first appointment age in 1953.Have a WORLD of FUNlTravel with IITAUnbelievable Low Cost■^Europe60 °°y* *»•"• $585Orient3-65 o.y. h»„ $998Meny four! indue*' '— rcl tolleg* t'tdil.Also low-cost trip* to Mexico$149 up. South America $<199 up,Hawaii Study Tour $498 up andAround th« World $1398 up.Ask Your Trowel Agent332 S. MichiganAve., Chicago 4,WtllJJMYiL IWC HA 7-2557 ' WHAT IS AN IRRITATING MONSTER?•ary lair. Naggin’ DragonOKLAHOMA A. * M. MOVIE STARS can have the best of everything. The one above (Miss Va VaVoom) drives a limousine so swanky it carries a sports car instead of a spare. Herswimming pool’s so large it has tides. When it comes to cigarettes, Miss Voom picks(Surprise! Surprise!) Lucky Strike. Says she, “A Lucky is just as light as they come,dahlings. Its divine taste comes from fine tobacco ... and simply everyone knows it’stoasted to taste even better!” All of which makes her a Quotable Notable! Light up aLucky yourself. You’ll say, “It’s the best-tasting cigarette I ever smoked!” End quote.WHAT IS A CROCHETING CONTEST?LEE SCANLOH.AMHERST Lace Race WHAT IS A GOURMET SOCIETY?CAROLE SCOTT.KENT STATE U. Grub ClubWHAT SOUND DOES ABROKEN CLOCK MAKE?INNA X0MARN1TSKT.CHATHAM COLLEGE Sick Tick WHAT IS A CHIN STRAP?KAREN RUNNING.AUGUSTANA COLLEGE Face Brace Stuck for dough?START STICKLING! MAKE $25We’ll pay $25 for every Stickler we print— '*4^, mand for hundreds more that never get used!So start Stickling—they’re so easy you canthink of dozens in seconds! Sticklers aresimple riddles with two-word rhyminganswers. Both words must havethe same number of syllables.(Don’t do drawings.) Send ’em allwith your name, address, collegeand class to Happy-Joe-Lucky,Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y.WHAT 1$ THE SECOND VIOLIN IN A TRIO?amelia lew. Middle FiddleCAL. COLt. OF ARTS « CRAFTSLIGHT UP AIGA. T. CV-» SMOKE-LIGHT UP A LUCKY!Product of <//& jJnwu&an — <Jo&xas<r is our middle nameFeb. 7, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7U of C BOOKSTORE S'1?,SPStarts Friday, February 7 —■ Two weeks only! — Limited QuantitiesCalling All Students and Faculty to Our SpecialTREMENDOUS SAVINGS UP TO 80% — Brand-new Editions fromLeading Publishers... Important Subjects and Authors... BIG SELECTION1. CANCER AND ALLIED DISEASES, by R. W.Raven. Signs and symptoms of the majortypes; cure and alleviation. Ulus.Pub at $2.25. Sale $12. HEART DISEASE, by G Bourne Diagnosisand treatment of coronary thrombosis, angina,endocarditis, tachycardia, heart failure, rheu¬matic heart, etc. Color lints.Pub. at $2.25 Sale $13. SKIN DISEASES, by R T. Brain Origins andtreatment of eczema, dermatitis, psoriasis,erysipelas. Impetigo, alopecia, warts, rashes,•tc. Many illus. Pub. at $2.25 .Sale $14. METHODS IN MEDICINE, by G. R. Herr¬mann A guide for clinical investigation andtreatment of medical disorders.Pub. at $8.00 Sale $1.495 PHARMACOLOGIC PRINCIPLES OF MEDI¬CAL PRACTICE, by J. Krantz & C Carr. Howcurrently used therapeutic drugs affect theheart, nerves, reproductive system, metabolism,etc. 1,116 pp„ illus. Pub at $10.00... .Sale $1.986. PAIN SENSATIONS AND REACTIONS, by J.Hardy, et al. Physiological and psychologicalanalyzes — types, thresholds, measuring painIntensity, effects of analgesic agents, etc.Illus Pub. at $6.50 Sale $1.987. PEPTIC ULCER — Pain Patterns. Diagnosis,and Medical Treatment, by Smith & Rivers. Aguide to accurate diagnosis and successfulmanagement of peptic ulcer. 576 pp., 210 illus.Pub. at $12.50 Sale $2.988. TCBERCULOSIS. by F. M Pottenger. Phthts-logenesis, immunology, pathologic physiology,diagnosis, and treatment 600 pp., 105 illus.Pub. at $12.50 Sale $2.989. UTEROTUBAL INSUFFLATION, by I. C.Rubin. A diagnostic method of determiningthe tubal factor in sterility. 453 pp., 159 Illus.,foiblio. Pub. at $10.50 Sale $2.9810 ATLAS OF GENITO-URINARY SURGERY,by P R Roen, M.D. Detailed survey; 162 illus.Pub at $10.00 Sale $2.9811. PRACTICAL THERAPEUTICS, by M. 2.Rehfuss. A comprehensive, definative work.938 pages, hundreds of illustrations, graphs,tables and diagrams. 800 pages on Treatmentof Specific Disorders. Pub. at $15.00 . Sale $5.9812. THE CYCLOPEDIA OF MEDICINE, ed. byG. M Piersol et al. Chapters by 76 leadingphysicians. 833 pp., fully illus.Pub. at $10.00 .....Sale $3.9813. DISEASES OF THE HEART & CIRCULA¬TION, by P. Wood. The diagnosis and treat¬ment of heart failure, rheumatic and pul¬monary heart disease, etc. 589 pp., illus.Pub at $6.75 Sale $3.9814. LAYMAN’S MEDICAL DICTIONARY, byDr. H Swartz. Over 2,000 terms in medicine,surgery, psychiatry and anatomy, clearly andhelpfully explained. Plates, tables.Pub. at $4.75 Sale $1.9815. AVIATION MEDICINE, by Harry G Arm¬strong, M.D. Care and treatment of fliers.Over 500 pages. Illus. with diagrams.Pub. at $6.50 Sale $116. PENICILLIN IN NEUROLOGY, by A Walk¬er & H. Johnson. Administration, toxicity,effects on nervous tissue in health and dis¬ease, etc. 95 illus. Pub. at $5.00.,., Sale $117. INDEX OF TREATMENT IN SMALL ANI¬MAL PRACTICE, by H Kirk. Covers all com¬mon disorders encountered by the veterinarian.826 pp.. 177 Illus. Pub. at $8.00 Sale $1.9818. HANDBOOK OF ANATOMY, by J K Young6 G W. Miller. Comprehensive and concise —for all medical, dental and art students andnurses. 142 illus. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.4919. PAR1DONTAL DISEASE, by E. Fish Com¬plete guide to diagnosis and treatment—withan atlas of pathology. 87 illus.Pub at $6.75 Sale $1.9829.A Textbook of CLINICAL PATHOLOGY, ed.by S Miller. Latest edition of the standardwork—1,060 pp., 247 illus., 34 in color.Pub at $9.00 Sale $2.9821. THE INFECTIOUS DISEASES OF DOMES¬TIC ANIMALS, by W. H Hagan & D. W. Bruner.Comprehensive. 900-page study—etiology, diag¬nosis, treatment, 154 Ulus.Pub. at $8.75 Sale $1.9822. BIOCHEMISTRY AND HUMAN METABOL¬ISM, by B, Walker, et al. Comprehensive workfor medical students—principles and clinicalapplications. 812 pp„ Ulus.Pub at $9.00 Sale $i23. Hemingway, Salinger, Farrell, et al — INSEARCH OF HERESY, by J. W. Aldridge. Pene¬trating demands by the young critic who is nothappy with “little mags,” universities, andconformity. Pub. at $4.00 Sale $124. Sean O’Casey — SUNSET AND EVENINGSTAR. Beautiful, deeply moving memoirs ofhU visit to America, the war years spent InEngland In self-imposed exile, his friendshipswith Shaw and Yeats, etc.Pub. at $4.75 Sale $1.4925. Alfred North Whitehead — SCIENCE ANDPHILOSOPHY. 21 brilliant essays—from “Auto¬biographical Notes” and “Memories” to “JohnDewey and His Influence” ana “Einstein’sTheory,” Pub. at $4.75 Sale $1.98 2$. CHICAGO’S LEFT BANK, by Alson HSmith. Scintillating kaleidoscope of the butch¬ers and poets, Jaoz-men and students, geniusesand gangsters who made the legends of the"City of the Big Shoulders." Photos.Pub. at $3.95 Sale $127. FORTY-FIVE CONTEMPORARY MEXICANARTISTS —153 Reproductions. By VirginiaStewart. Orozco, Rivera, Cavarrublas, Chariot,Tamayo — and others important In Mexico butlittle known outside their own country. 9"xUV*”. Pub. at $10.00..., Sale $3.9828. Mathematics’ Human Side—THE BEQUESTOF THE GREEKS, by T. Dantzig The giftedthinkers of ancient times and their flashes ofInsight which developed -the science. Illus¬trated. Pub. at $3.95 Sale $1.9829. Wildlife in the Big City — THE NATURALHISTORY OF A YARD, by L. Dubkin. Delight¬ful, charmingly illustrated account of the de¬velopment of a tiny colony of trees, squirrelsand birds in the midst of Chicago's apartment-houses. Pub. at $3.50. Sale $130. The Story of PREHISTORIC MAN, by ALeroi-Gourhan. The human, day-to-day storyof prehistoric man’s life, work, religion andart, as revealed by the most recent scientificdiscoveries. 48 plates. Pub. at $4,75...Sale $1.9831. MORE CASSEROLE COOKERY, by M.Tracy. Essential for all modern homemakers*150 quick, easy and exciting dishes—each canbe prepared in advance, and is accompaniedby a salad recipe and suggested menu.Pub. at $2.50 Sale $132. CLASSICS OF BIOLOGY, bv A P Suner.Fascinating survey of the entire field, with dis¬cussions of famous controversies, extracts fromthe writings of Lavoisier, Darwin, 62 others.Pub. at $7.50 sale $2.9833. TREASURY OF WORLD LITERATURE, ed,by D. D. Runes. A huge, 1,450-page collectionof the world's literary treasures! 300 entriesrepresenting every genre from Homer to Joyce.Pub. $15,00 sale $5.8834. Dream Interpretation—THE DREAM; MIR¬ROR OF CONSCIENCE, by Werner Wolff. Ahighly-absorbing history, from 2.000 B.C, topost-Freudian theories. Unusual Ulus.Pub. at $8.50 Sale $3.9835. LIFE, THE GREAT ADVENTURE, by J,Restand and P. Bodin. A scientist and a novel¬ist bluntly discuss sex, heredity, and man¬kind’s future. Pub. at $3.50 Sale $136. Living Fossils — SEARCH BENEATH THESEA, by J. L. B. Smith. Thrilling account ofthe successful 14-year African search for theCoelacanth—the fantastic, “four legged” fishpresumed extinct for 50,000,000 years! Photos.Pub. at $3.95 Sale $1.4949. THE COMPLETE MADISON: His BasicWritings, ed. St intro, by S. K. Padover. Thefirst book to embody his comprehensive politi¬cal and social thought—his "Federalist” papers,contributions to the Constitutional Conven¬tions, scores of other Important works.Pub. at $4.00 .Sale $1.9850. Fletcher Pratt—CIVIL WAR ON WESTERNWATERS. The heroic story of the great battles,selges, vessels and personalities of the Confed¬erate and Union river navies—up till the sur¬render of the Ironclad “Missouri."Pub. at $3.50 Sale $1.9851. The Bullfight—FIESTA IN PAMPLONA. 85Photographs, 15 in full color, by Inge Morath,revealing as never before, the wild, gloriousspectacle of the bullfight. Text by D. Aubler,cover design by Picasso. 8*-)"ll" Import.Pub, at $10.00 Sale $3.98 52. “Big Bill’' Haywood, Clarence Darrow *THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN REVOLUTION, by S.H. Holbrook. The life and trial of Harry Or¬chard. hired assassin-arsonist of the WesternFederation of Miners. Pub. at $3.95... .Sale $153. A HALF CENTURY OF COLOR, by L. W.Slpley The whole story of the growth andtechniques of color photography in the graphicarts Over 240 outstanding Illustrations, manyin full color. 7,,i"xl01,i"’. Pub at $8.00 . Sale $2.9854. PSYCHOANALYSIS TODAY, ed. by SanderLorand. Ferenczi, Alexander, Brill, Jones and25 others discuss every aspect of psychoan¬alysis. Pub. at $6.00... Sale $2.9855. ART: THE IMAGE OF THE WEST—With65 Fine Plates. By J. Braun-Vogelsteln. Fromthe ancient Greeks to Picasso,Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.9856. DICTIONARY OF ARTS AND CRAFTS, ed.by J. L. Stoutenburgh, Jr. Complete listing ofnames, terms, tools, materials, techniques, his¬tories. etc. Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.9857. Boswell. Pepys, Adams, Walton, Steffens,et al.—ONE MIGHTY TORRENT, by E. John¬son. The lives, times, values, and motive* ofthe world's famous biographers. 591 pages. In¬dexed. Pub. at $6.50 Sale $2.9858. THE HISTORY OF MATHEMATICS, by J.E. Hofmann. From prehistoric times to Des¬cartes. Pub. at $4.75 ....... Sale $1.9859. Spinoza —THE ETHICS: THE ROAD TOINNER FREEDOM. The brilliant philosophicaldefense of liberty in a new. clear and much-needed translation by D. D. Runes.Pub. at $3.00 Sale $1.9860. Psychiatry in GROUP LIFE, by M. C. Greco.The nature and treatment oi defense mechan¬isms, unconscious processes, etc. With case his¬tories. Pub. at $4.75 Sale $161. Prophetic Rebel—HENRI POINCARE, by T.Dantzig. Remarkably readable study of the19th century genius whose iconoclastic workultimately was corroborated by Einstein.Pub. at $3.00 Sale $162. ABE LINCOLN: An Anthology. Sandburg,Whitman, Churchill and over 60 others pre¬sent an inspiring picture of the Great Eman¬cipator. Illus. Pub. at $3.50 Sale $163. LORD BYRON—COLLECTED CONVERSA¬TIONS—His Very Self and Voice, ed. by E. J.Lovell. “The most notorious and graceful talk¬er in Europe” as recorded by Shelley, Coleridge,Lady Byron, Leigh Hunt, Countess GulccolUand 145 other contemporaries—676 pp.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $1.9864. The Wisdom or the East — BUDDHISTTEXTS THROUGH THE AGES. A treasury ofthe most Important prose and verse of Budd¬hist thought — trails, into modern Englishfrom Sanskrit, Tibetan, Japanese, etc.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $1.9$65. YOUNG MR. NEWMAN, by M. Ward. Afascinating biography tracing the developmentof his thought from Evangellclsm to RomanCatholicism. Copiously documented, 475 pp.,Ulus. Pub at $4.50 Sale ft66. DR. JOHNSON’S LICHFIELD, by M. A.Hopkins. An ironic portrait of the great man.his philandering friends, and his coterie ofcoddling women. Illus. Pub at $4.00....Sale $167. MAN AND THE UNDERWATER WORLD,by Pierre de La til & Jean R1 voire. The fascinat¬ing story of Man’s endeavors to explore thethree-quarters of the earth’s surface that liesbeneath the sea—from ancient Rome to thefrogmen of today. 73 Ulus.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9868. WITCHCRAFT, MAGIC AND ALCHEMY-376 Illustrations. By G. de Glvry. 376 occultsymbols, as portrayed in rare engravings, mas¬terpieces by da Vinci, Rembrandt, others—aunique history. Special $2.98PORTFOLIOS OF COLOR PRINTSAT INCREDIBLE SAVINGSFantastic savings on ready-to-frame, decorative color prints! A choice collection ofbeautiful American and European reproductions in handsome portfolios.37. MOTHER GOOSE NURSERY’ PICTURES,by Leonard Welsgard, noted children's illus¬trator. Six large, colorful prints to brightenbaby's room. 13"xl6“—set of 6—Special 1.0038. EIGHT FRENCH POSTERS: Picasso,Matisse, Leger, Chagall. Brilliantly colorful,strikingly sophisticated — directly repro¬duced from the original lithographs. 16"x20". Pub. at $8.00........set of 8—now $2.9839 CHINESE FLOWERS — Blossoms andBulbs from “The Mustard Seed Garden.”Four of the most beautiful paintings fromthis famous series, rendered in wash colorsand ink with unsurpassed delicacy. 15*/2"x13*i". Pub. at $5.00 set of 4—now $1.9840. MODIGLIANI PRINTS. A magnificentpresentation of the vibrant colors and boldportrait techniques that have made Modig¬liani a favorite modern. 16"x20".Pub. at $6.00...., set of 4—now $2.9841. JAPANESE HORSES. Superbly decora¬tive silkscreens of a famous contemporaryseries—marvelously captures all the beautyand appeal of the horse. 13"x20".Pub. at $6.00., set of 4—now $2.9842. —HOKUSAI PRINTS. Japanese life andtravel In the 18th century, delicately por¬trayed. Il"x9".Pub. at $3.00 set of 4—now $1 43. KATIIE KOLLWITZ DRAWINGS. Beau¬tiful, sensitive lithographs of the mostpowerful and passionate drawings of socialprotest since Goya. llViwxl4".Pub. at $3.00 set of 9—now $144. UTRILLO’S MONTMARTRE SCENES.Full of sunlit warmth and beauty—greatfavorites with interior decorators. 17"xl4*.Pub. at $12.00 set of 4—now $2.9845. WATERCOLORS BY SALVADOR DALI.Brilliant shades and fantastic shapes by thefamous surrealist. 14"xl7".Pub. at $15.00 set of 6—now $1.4946. DEGAS DANCERS & BALLET SCENES.Masterpieces of composition and color —highly decorative. Il"xl4".Pub. at $3.50 set of 6—now $1.9847. VAN GOGH MASTERPIECES. Includes“Sunflowers,” “Gypsy Camp,” “Peach Or¬chard” and other famous paintings. Il"xl4".Pub. at $6.00 set of 8—now $148. SIX MEDIEVAL ILLUMINATIONS. Su¬perb silkscreen reproductions on parch¬ment-type paper. The age of chivalry de¬lightfully portrayed In gay colors andmetallic gold. 9"xl2".Pub. at $5.00 set of 6—now $2.988 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 7, 1958 69. Eskimo Life and Lore—LAND OP TH8LONG DAY, by D. WUklnson. Fascinating ac¬count by the adopted son of an Eskimo family1,000 miles NORTH of the Arctic Circle. Photos’Pub at $4.00 Sale $170. Henry Bergson’s THE CREATIVE MIND,The great scientist’s own summary of his bril¬liant life, work and thought: his contributionsto evolutionary theory, his views on sciencereligion, philosophy, etc. Pub at $4.00 Sale $1.9*71. TREASURY OF PHILOSOPHY, by D. DRunes. Nearly 1,300 pages covering the wholespan of recorded philosophical thought andwriting—basic works of Plato, Thomas Aquinas.Descartes, Spinoza, Schopenhauer, Dewey.Schwletzer and nearly 400 others—each selec¬tion accompanied by a biographical sketch.Pub at $15.00. Sale $5.9872. SONGS OF THE POGO. by Walt Kelly StN. Monath. 30 songs for all occasions frombirthdays to clandestine trysts—each is intro¬duced by Walt Kelly; color illus. throughout.8%xll", hardbound. Pub. at $3.95 Sale $173. THE YEARBOOK OF PSYCHOANALYSIS.Vol. 5. Ed. by Sandor Lorand. Recent develop¬ments in psychoanalytic thought. Articles byAnna Freud. Franz Alexander, Lawrence Kuble.many others. Pub. at $7.50 Sale $1.9874. GREAT NOVELS OF TURGENEV. Four ofhis finest novels—Fathers and Sons. Smoke,On the Eve, and Rudln—plus three longstories, in fresh translations by Harry Stev¬ens. The Borzoi ed.; 801 pp.Pub. at $4.95 Sale $2 9575. A HISTORY OF ENGLAND, by O. Smith.Political, cultural, economic and social devel¬opments from the Stone Age through theWorld Wars—875 pages with maps.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.9876. A LITTLE TREASURY OF AMERICANPROSE from Colonial Times to Today, ed. byO. Mayberry. Selections from Ben Franklin.Poe, Mark Twain. Santayana. Hemingway, 80others—950 pp., 61 portraits, de luxe ed.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9877. GOODBYE TO UNCLE TOM, by J. C. Fur¬nas. Uncluttered by prejudice or special plead¬ing. this is perhaps the most enlighteningbook about the American Negro to appear inour time—a dramatic, thoroughly documentedhistorical analysis. Illus.Pub. at $6.00.. Sale $1.9878. A Quarto of MODERN LITERATURE, ed.by L. Brown & P. G. Perrin. 155 selections from.80 great writers—Joyce, Hemingway. Faulkner,Thurber. 8andburg, Dylan Thomas, Mencken,et al. 8xl0*a, 630 pp. Pub. at f5.00... .Sale $1.9879. FRANCE LIVES — Luxuriously Illustrated.A tribute to French accomplishment, 1939-44,In all the major and minor arts—scores ofcolor plates of works by Matisse, Dufy, Braque,et al. 10*/2xl4". Pub. at $3.00 Sale $180. DICTIONARY OF NEW WORDS, by MRelfer; Intro, by Partridge. From underworldlingo to technical terms—thousands of impor¬tant new words clearly explained.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.9881.THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS, by HowardMumford Jones. How “Happiness” has beenexplained In law, philosophy, literature, psy¬chology, etc. Pub. at $3.50 .....Sale $182. THE WRITER OBSERVED, by Harvey Brelt,Fascinating Interviews with Hemingway, Faulk¬ner, T. 8. Eliot, Huxley and 55 other outstand¬ing contemporary writers.Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.4983. THE SHORT STORIES OF DOSTOEVSKY—17 masterpieces by the tormented genious,revealing his profound Insights Into man'svolcanic struggle with his compulsions. 630pages. W. Phillips, ed. Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.9884. IDEAS OF THE GREAT ECONOMISTS, bfG. Soule. Sparkling, forthright survey of eco¬nomic thinkers since the early Greeks, theirpersonalities and ideas. Indexed.Pub. at $3.50 Sale $1.9885. BASIC PROBLEMS IN PSYCHIATRY, e<Lby J. Wortis, M.D. A symposium on the scope,role and limitations of psychiatry.Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.9886. THE MOZART HANDBOOK, ed. by l>. Bian-colli. 629 pages, 43 contributors. New Insightsinto every aspect of his life, times and musle—the most comprehensive study available anda “must” for music lovers.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $3.9887.Learn Spanish — MANUAL OF SPANISHCONVERSATION. By T. Noell. Thousands ofeveryday expressions and colloquialisms forthe tourist or Btudent. Arranged with Englishequivalents. Pub. at $2.56 Sale $t88.ELECTRONICS, by A. W. Keen. An intro¬duction for the non-technlcal reader to allaspects of electronics: control devices, circuitelements, electronic sound, radio, television,etc. Profusely Illustrated. __ „Pub. at $5.00 Sal# $1.9889. Chaucer to Dylan Thomas—SEVEN CEN¬TURIES OF VERSE, ed. by A. J. M. Smith. 400selections from the best poets of the Englishlanguage—Shakespeare, Donne, Milton, Byron,Shelley, Emerson, Poe, Whitman, Yeats, Sand¬burg, Eliot, Cummings, 95 others. 850 pp.Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.9$90. The Memoirs of General de Gaulle—THECALL TO HONOR. An essential supplement tothe records presented by Churchill and others—momentous, brilliantly written, packed withnew revelations. Xllua. Pub. at $5.00... .Sale $1NSA plans program for studentsin period of educational concernThe US National Student association has designed a course of positive action centeringaround the Question, “What is the role of the student in this period of widespread concernabout American education?”A three-fold policy has been put forth in a statement by NSA president Ray Farabee ofthe University of Texas.The first point on the program is that the student must become the center of a moreadequate educational program ——— —-—-— —Wfpr rneets his indi- *Create greater awareness of the financial status of the state;academic frwdom and the pul • that the scholarships shouldbe granted to students in allvidual needs and the demands p^gg 0f education through the^-iWNTCA^honM that the stu- spon.sorsh5p of * National aca- fields on the basis of a singledent and his intellectual develop- de£l£ exam5nat.ion- designed to predictwji] become the Drimarv he.tb,rd resolution calls for success in college; that a pre--rn amid the multitude of *inancial assistance from private requisite for eligibility should beand governmental sources to in- a pre determined minimum per¬ron cernproposals for American educa- gure opportunjty and a quai,ion; and that the development ity of education!of educational policy will providemore than temporary solutions tothe basic problem. ityPresident Farabee asserts,“There is immediate need for a centile score on the single nation¬al examination; and that no per¬son should be denied opportunityto take the examination because Experiment will meetExperiment in International Living program com¬mittee will hold an explanatory meeting next Thursdayin Ida Noyes hall.Robert Huffman, alumni secretary of the nationalorganization will verbally illustrate a film, “The Ex¬periment way” and will explain the international livingprogram.Select groups of about ten member are sent each sum¬mer to most of the West European countries as well asPoland, Yugoslavia, Nigeria, India, Japan and Mexico.The program which has been in existence since 1932includes a month’s homestay with a family in the coun¬try of the student’s choice, a period of extended travelin the company of young people of the country and anopportunity for independent travel.With offices in twenty countries, the Experiment hasits headquarters in Putney, Vermont. About 800 personswill be sent abroad in 1958, and 400 will visit this countryunder a similar program, according to the group.More responsibility for his own °f raCe’ religion’ national oriSin-k«» arships which will indicate that political belief, or sex;political belief, or sex;that the amount of each schol-• that each recipient be author¬ized to use his scholarship at anyaccredited institution of highereducation in the nation, subjectto his admission.In compliance with this policy,education would be assumed by ^mcator. and legislators are eon- . Ina, Ine amthe individual student, according . • inai ine amto the second proposal in the NSA nln ars,hip be based on financial need;statement It is sueeested that der>^ rather than the mere pro andstatement, it is suggestea mat ductjon of manpower for an inter¬ns goal might be achieved national scienf£ competition.”through a senes of campus pro- A the tenth studentgrams across the nation, spon- conpreSs last summer at the Uni-sor^ b>\th.e association. versify f Michi the Nat5onalIncluded in these programs are execu[ive commtttee of the NSAr‘lnL°' , * t ♦ . . . . endorsed the one billion dollar the committee is more in‘favor• Stimulate interest in teach- program recommended by Presi- 0f the "defense education pro-ing:. .. ,, , dent Eisenhower; though it was gram» advocated by Senator• Increase the effectiveness of believed that 10,000 scholarships LiSter Hill and Representativeteaching through student-faculty WOuld be inadequate in view of Carl Elliott which provides forcommittees to consider improve- the estimated 100,000 academic- 40,000 scholarships per year.ally capable high school gradu- —- —• Improve the quality of eurric- ates each year who cannot attendohim, again by means of student- college for financial reasons,faculty study and discussion of The USNSA would prefer a fed-the issues involved; eral scholarship program whichprovided:• adequately large scholar¬ships;• assignment of grants on apus human relation activity; and state quota basis, varying with Alpha Phi Omega to holdsmoker at Ida Noyes hallAlpha Phi Omega will hold its semi-annual smoker nextThursday at 8 pm in Ida Noyes hall, Rick Prairie, presidentof the organization has announced.Requirements for membership in the national servicefraternity are a previous af¬filiation with scouting and adesire to render service to others.APO crosses all lines of honorary,social and professional brother¬hoods, and the membership of thecampus chapter includes students from these other fraternities.The UC chapter, which was re¬activated last spring, has alreadypoll watched at Student Govern¬ment elections, acted as ushers atthe Blackfriars performances andhosts during the alumni reunion.• Enlarge counseling and guida nee services;• Increase equality of educational opportunity through cam-Downtown college to offerthree college prep coursesBeginning Monday, downtown center will offer three eve¬ning courses to college preparatory students; elementaryFrench, elementary German, and special reading.French and German are accelerated courses especiallydesigned for mid-year highschool graduates and highschool upper - classmen withoutprior study of the languages whowant to fill college entrance re¬quirements.Courses meet four hours a weekfrom February 10 to June 14 andcarry a total of six hours of col¬lege credit.The courses may be taken as aforeign language component inprograms leading toward a bache¬lor's degree from UC.An additional unit of the coursewill be offered during the sum¬mer 1958 quarter and will carrythree hours credit. Classes meetat the downtown center, 19 S. La¬Salle street.Speed reading is a program di¬rected toward increasing readingability and comprehension as wellas developing a flexible readingrate appropriate to what is being their original reading speeds, andto increase their comprehension.For additional information onthese courses, phone the studentcenter, Dearborn 2-7245. Studentsmay register in person at 19 S.LaSalle street.Rabbi to discussJews and JesusRabbi Samuel Sandmel willaddress the New Testamentclub on “A Jewish under¬standing of Jesus,” this Mondayat 8 pm in the Swift hall commonroom.An outstanding authority in thearea of Jewish and Hellenisticbackgrounds of the New Testa¬ment, Sandmel has recently pub¬lished “A Jewish understandingof the New Testament” and “Phi-read. Classes will meet twice lo’s place in Judaism.”weekly at 22 E. Van Buren street Formerly H i 11 e 1 professor offor ten or eleven weeks starting Jewish literature and thought atApr*l 1. Vanderbilt university, he is cur-Use of the SRA reading accel- rently Provost of Hebrew Unionerator will enable most students college — Jewish Institute of Re-who complete the course to double ligion at Cincinnati, Ohio.How Many Today?Or Haven't You Started Saving YET for the Big$200 Capitol Hi-Fi set and $100 worth of records?See the grand prize at the DISC, 1367 E. 57th.Start Picking Up• MARLBORO• PARLIAMENT• PHILIP MORRISEmpty Boxes TodayThat'* right. Be « scavenger —— it's worth it for 30 days jus* to win thisgrond prise. Be on the alert for empty boxes of these three popularcigarettes. Save them and wotch the Chicogo Maroon tor furtherinstructions. A final count of the boxes will determine the winner. To err is human... to erase, divine withEATON’S CORRASABLE BONDTypewriter PaperTry it! Just the flick of a pencil-eraserand your typing errors are gone! It’slike magic! The special surface ofCorrasable Bond erases without a trace.Your first typing effort is the finishedcopy when Corrasable puts thingsright. This fine quality bond gives ahandsome appearance to all your work.Saves time and money, too!Erasable Corrfsable Is available In all the weights you mightrequire—light, medium and heavy weights. In convenient 100*sheet packets and 500-sheet ream boxes. A Berkshire Type*writer Paper, backed by the famous Eaton name.EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDMade only by EatonEATON PAPER CORPORATION PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTSFeb. 7, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9featuringSunday, Feb. 9 — 3-8 pChicago fir DearbornAmoteur Guitarists —Don't forget your instrumentsNot so absent-minded when you getright down to it. He remembered themost important item—the Coke! Yes,people will forgive you almost anythingif you just remember to bring alongtheir favorite sparkling drink—ice-coldCoca-Cola. Do have another, professor! SIGN OF GOOD TASTEBottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company byTh* Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.MAROON • Feb. 7, 1958newly starred jazz groupIff audiences are any indication, jazz on this campus got up and walked on all fours lastTuesday night. The occasion was a symposiu m sponsored by the Jazz Workshop, a nevrstudent organization on campus. Featured w as J. J. Johnson, trombonist, a consistent win¬ner in Downbeat; Metronome, and Playboy polls.J. J. opened the symposium with an explanation of what many consider a catastrophicincident in more recent jazz history — namely, the disbanding of the J. J. and Kai quintet,lie pointed out that the groupwas from its first conception*an exceptional one, with nointentions of continuing indefi¬nitely as a playing unit. Whenthe group did part ways it wasnot, explained the trombonist, be¬cause of any adverse feelings oneither his or Kai’s part but ratherbecause all “musical possibilitieshad been explored.**In answer to questions on hisrecordings and jazz in general i. J. made these comments:East and west coast jazz: "ThisEast Coast and West Coast jazzthing I think is getting out ofhand, so that no one really knowswhat is meant. One thing forsure, is that these names werenot brought about by musiciansbut by promoters, etc., who usethese terms as gimmicks for com¬mercial purposes.**On his playing: *Td like to think my playing has changed,has improved over the span ofeight or nine years. I*d like tothink my playing is more fluid,or more fluent.”On big bands: ‘There are nottoo many places for big bands.I like writing for big bands andI suppose I would like leadingone but in terms of playing, Ithink smaller groups provide abetter creative outlet.”On jazz at the Philharmonic:“It’s a challenge.”The symposium was the firstpresentation of the Workshop. Itplans further programs of thissort with the addition of musicalperformances. According toBrooks Johnson, president of thegroup the objectives of the Work¬shop are:• to provide an outlet for thoseinterested in jazz, both in termsof listening and discussion,• to form a nucleus of musi-ing will be Wednesday, February 12. And by the way, what cians both on the UC campus andmotif are you using for your house decorations? The judging !n th.e community interested in• . , ~ ,, rL , learning to play jazz,for that will be on the Saturday of Wash Prom, the 22ndProm judging Feb. 12Wash Prom draws nearer with every issue of the Maroon.Iff your house or organization wants a lass competing in theWash Prom Queen contest, deliver the information as to thegirl’s name and the group whose candidate she is to theStudent Activities Office by Tuesday, February 11. The judg-of this month.You can pick up tickets for the Prom at the Reynolds clubdesk, the Ida Noyes desk, or at the door of the dance.1227 E. 55th Sr. HY 3-7911DELIA'S BEAUTY SALONAll Brandies of Beauty Service — Moderately PricedRazor add Scissor* Hoir Cutting — A SpecialtySkilled Brautician* The Workshop intends to pro¬vide competent local and namemusicians to criticize, evaluate,and sit in with the nucleus group.Johnson (no relation to J. J.)pointed out that this arrangementwould offer a tremendous oppor¬tunity for the fans to become fa¬miliar with the intricacies of jazzas well as be entertained.The next meeting of the Work¬shop will be Monday, Northlounge, Reynolds club.Squire Lance I Gloria Porath and Pete Smith emote in "Zooey," currentUT production from the Story by J. D. Salinger.UC v8:30' play livelyFor two weeks the campus and neighborhood have beenoverrun with posters announcing in bold type that the Uni¬versity theatre’s “Tonight at 8:30” is doing two programsof “experimental drama.” ■' ■ - • . .'———:———It’s unfortunate that in the Crushed Petunias” that's actuallypast few years e?cperimehtal optimistic.drama has become a catch phrase Granted, these are not “down-use dto lump together everything town” shows, though Zooey doesfrom a production of Lysistrata use, surely, the only fiber glassat the YWCA to an off Broadway bathtub in the city, and the seistaging of the “Don Juan in Hell” for “The Tender Edge” is amazscene with movement instead of ingly opulent in the Reynolds clubstools. Theatre goers, this review- Theatre. The evening’s entertain¬er included, have become susp- ment is unpretentiously student:cious. In this instance, the final student acted, directed and pro¬week-end of the “8:30” series, the duced. While experience is oftensuspicions are ungrounded. lacking, enthusiasm is alwaysThe shows are experimental in abundant. 'the original sense of the word. Peter Smith, who plays the title1 hey are tests of new plays, roje “Zooey” deserves an extrayoung actors and novice directors. rurtain call for a lot more thanThe results are lively. enthusiasm. His performance ofWitness the program: an adapt- Salinger’s cursing, over-stimulat-ation of a short story, Zooey, by e(j. petulant ex-Quiz Kid is by farJ. D. Salinger that was first pub- the best of the evening. Joycelished a few months ago in The Nevis does an excellent job as hisNew lorker; a verse play called sister, pulling the covers over her“The Tender Edge by Brock head and saying her “Jesus pray-Bower which came out in the er ” and Gloria Porath, as Mother-most recent New World Writing; Bessie, supports them both well.Fiank Hamiltons guitar and Bill Bezdick, who thought up the“John Henry in a dance drama; vvhole thing, doing both the adapt-an Ogden Nash reading supple- ation an dthe direction, is the un-mented with music by John Her- sung hero 0f the piece.zog; and a Tennessee Williams f . ....plly called -'The Case ol the f-‘nda L!bera P™ey Plays del,..... cately and convincingly a lastDuchess in “The Tender Edge.”The music in the Ogden Nash"It’s a Wise Child” reading is tooimportant to be described as “in¬cidental.”The Frank Hamilton guitar in“John Henry” is up to Hamilton'sown fine standards, though onemight quarrel that the dance in¬terpretation is a bit sensual forthe working class.To see Tennessee Williams with¬out magnolias, in fact in a NewEngland setting, is refreshing, tosay the least. ?rThe second of the “Tonight at8:30” series has no press agent,student or otherwise, to shout,“Look, folks, we’re experi¬mentin’!” There’s no need. Theshows, without exception, arefresh an dunusual. It’s well worthclimbing three flights of stairs tosee them. —Mildred Magnus~**N07*>7, Me itmtRICHARD IIIno advance in pricesNow, through Februory 13 — Initio! outlying showing. Attend the j§early evening showings on week nights for best seating.Film times:Friday — 6:35, 9:20Saturday and Sunday — 4:46, 7:30, 10:15Monday thru Thursday — 6:35, 9:20Ike PHOENIX and the MSIWhat is a phoenix book? Well, a Phoenix book is a book published by the University of Chicago °ress, buta phoenix book is an entirely different thing. It's a book belonging to this, phoenix, muse-chaser, and other¬wise culture^ editor of the MAROON. And what brings this up is that most of them disappeared this week. Hisbooks, that is. If you were around Ida Noyes Hall Monday night (at the basketball game, for instance), andyou happen to notice that you have some spare books, you may well be in the possession of them. If, so pleasereturn them to the^ Ida Noyes desk, for the life of art presupposes the life of the curriculum. Meanwhile, let¬ting the presupposition ride on faith, column continues. Forthwith . . ,Events on campus . . .University theatreThe second half of "Tonight at8:30” opens tonight in the thirdfloor Reynolds club theatre. Thestudent-directed and in part stu¬dent-written production will beextremely various.First on the program will be anoriginal stage adaptation of J. D.Salinger’s short story “Zooey,”followed by Brock Brower’s lightfantasy "The Tender Edge.” Nextwill be "John Henry,” an arrange¬ment of the folk ballad with danc¬ing, and Tennessee Williams’ 'TheCase of the Crushed Petunia.”And completing the evening willbe "It’s a Wise Child,” with wordsby Ogden Nash and music byJohn Herzog.Moody lectureOn February 19 Nancy Hale,American novelist and story writ¬ er will lecture on “The Autobio¬graphical element in fiction.” Thelecture will be at 8:30 pm in Man-del hall.• . . and offWFMTAgain in February radio stationWFMT (98.7 fm) will feature aseries of five o’clock readingsfrom classic children’s literature.Today at five, Oscar Wilde’s story‘The Happy Prince,” read byBasil Rathbone, will be broadcast.And on Monday, Wednesday, andThursday of next week “Alice inWonderland,” read and sung byCyril Ritchard, will be featured.On Sunday at 3 WFMT willbroadcast the La Scala version ofVerdi’s "La Forza del Destino,”with Maria Callas and RichardTucker.Virtuosi di RomaTomorrow night at 8:30 the Vir¬ tuosi di Roma will play at Orches¬tra hall. Admission is from $1.75to $4.40. Call HA 7-0362.Jose GrecoSunday at 2:30 pm Jose Grecoand his company of Spanish danc¬ers will perform at the Operahouse. Tickets are $1.75 to $4.40.Call FI 6-0270.Chicago Symphony orchestraTuesday afternoon at 2 the Chi¬cago Symphony, with Fritz Rein¬er, conductor, and Andre Tchai-kowsky, piano, soloist, will per¬form Berlioz’s Overture to “Bea¬trice and Benedict,” Mozart’s Con¬certo for Piano, No. 25 in C ma¬jor, Bach’s Concerto for Piano,No. 5 in F minor, and Beethoven’sSymphony No. 8 in F major.Thursday night and Friday aft¬ernoon the same crew will collab¬orate on Mendelssohn’s Overtureto “Ruy Bias,” Schumann’s Con¬ certo for Piano in A minor, Strav¬insky’s Divertimento from “TheFairy’s Kiss,” and Ravel’s “Span¬ish Rhapsody.”Leonid KoganViolinist Leonid Kogan, de¬scribed by the New York Timesas being “with the elect” of theviolin world, will play in Orches¬tra hall on Friday evening, Febru¬ary 14. Tickets and $1.75 to $4.40,AN 3-1877.ErlangerEugene O’Neill’s “Long Day’sJourney into the Night,” nowplaying at the Erlanger Theatre,will close February 15.American Ballet theatreOn the weekend of February14-16 the American Ballet theatrewill present the following pro¬grams at the Opera house:Friday, February 14, 8:30 pm,“Paean,” "Offenbach in the Un-& L Product Development Engineer Robert Schopp, likemany other engineers, mathematicians and physicists,came to IBM directly from college. Here he reviews hisprogress and tells how he translated his M.E. degreeinto a rewarding career.What’s it tike to be with TPlfiDm“I guess everybody’s a little concerned about his firstassignment on a new job,” Robert Schopp says. ”1know I was. For one thing, I was worried about gettingstuck in some work I didn’t like—and not being ableto get into what I really wanted to do.”Bob Schopp joined IBM in 1954. He already knewsomething about the company and electronic com¬puters, having worked part time during college at thecollege IBM machine installation. ’’But I still didn’tknow just how my M.E. degree from Kansas Statewould be put to use,” he recalls.He started as a Machine Designer in Production Engin¬eering, with cost reduction work as his primary respon¬sibility. ‘‘But, like most M.E.’s,” Bob Schopp says,“I'm a ’tinkerer’ by nature. I soon saw that ProductDevelopment was the place for me. So I received atransfer. You can do this at IBM because they believethat what’s best for you is best for the company.”Promoted in six months A problem in circuitry packagingPromoted six monthslater to AssociateEngineer, he now worksas part of a small groupheaded up by a ProjectEngineer. This “team” .consists of anotherM.E. and himself, an j VE.E. and a model- '"maker. Bob Schopp is l 'an “idea man”—thatis, his efforts are de-Bab works in a smalt loam voted to basic develop¬ments rather than spe¬cific jobs. Right now, his project entails the creation ofthe “ultimate package in printed circuitry.” His group“brain storms” this project in continual sessions. Theresults are put in model form. Then the group tries to“tear the idea to shreds” in order to create somethingeven better.MI call this practical creaticeness/’ Bob Schopp says.“You create freely, yet you work toward a practicalend. I guess maybe a quarter of my time goes into’dreaming.’ To me, this job is more creative thanproduction, less creative than pure research.”Many opportunities for the M.E.While circuitry packaging is his present work area,there are many other challenging projects under wayat IBM. All are handled by the same “small-team”approach. “There are many ways,” Bob Schopp says,“in which an M.E. can contribute to the developmentof computers or other IBM machines. You may work oneither analog or digital computers, or on their com¬ ponents—memory cores or transistors. You may beasked to design special jigs and fixtures—for thisnew field often calls forunique equipment. Youmay work with servo¬mechanisms or auto¬mation setups.“This computer field isso new, particularly inthe component area,”he emphasizes, “thatthere’s always thechance you’ll come upwith something reallyimportant. And believeme, if it’s good, IBMwill use it.”Asked about advancement opportunities at IBM, BobSchopp reports, “At the rate IBM is expanding, anyman who works and hasa desire to get aheadcan’t help but advance.The potential’s there,all right. Why, I’ve seenover 300 new manage¬ment positions createdin the time I’ve been atIBM. Jobwise, I canhead either toward Pro¬ject Engineer —thatmeans management—or toward Staff Engi-Chocking a computor component neer — the technicalside of the business. Both have equal advantages froma ’get-ahead’ point of view.”a a •This profile is just one example of what it’s like to bewith IBM. There are many other excellent opportuni¬ties for well-qualified college men in Research, Devel¬opment, Manufacturing, Sales and Applied Science.Why not ask your College Placement Director whenIBM will next interview on your campus? Or, for infor¬mation about how your degree will fit you for an IBMcareer, just write to:Mr. R. A. WhitehornoIBM Corp., Dopt. 828S90 Madison AvonuaNew York 22, N. Y.IBM INTERN ATIOM AtBUSINESS MACHINESCORFOIATIONDATA PROCESSING * ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS • MILITARY PRODUCTSSPECIAL ENGINEERING PRODUCTS • SUPPLIES • TIME EQUIPMENT derworld,” "Black Swan peaux,”"Interplay.”Saturday, February 15,2:30 pm,"Les Sylphides,” “Les Patineurs,”“Graduation Ball.”Saturday, 8:30 p.m. “Theme andVariations,” “Billy the Kid,”“Nutcracker,” “Fancy Free.”Sunday, February 16, 7:30 pm,“Les Sylphides,” “The Combat,”“Paquita Pas de Deaux.”For reservations call FI 6-0270.George LondonOn Sunday, February 16, at 3:30pm, George London, bass-bari¬tone, will appear at Orchestrahall. Admission is $1.75-$4.40.Richard Dyer-BennetOn Tuesday, February 25, at 8pm, Richard Dyer - Bennet willgive a recital of poems set to mu¬sic, at 820 N. Michigan For freetickets, send a self-addressed,stamped enveloped to VisitingPoet series, 820 N. Michigan.The T^V •DtSC1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the week•MYRA HESSSCHUMANN—SYMPHONIC ETUDESAngel 35591‘3.19dark theatreCollege Student Price50 at all timesJust present your studentidentification card at theClark Theatre box office, 11N. Clark.For off-beat entertain¬ment, each week the Clarkoffers its Sunday Film Guildand Friday Musicomedy Day.«PFeb. 7, 1958 • tC H '58Round Trip viarSteamship $04flFREQUENT SAILINGSThrift Round Trip by AirSHANNON LONDON PARIS$39240 $44460 $48040Said to other destinations on opplicotionBy using stop-over privileges, your entiretronsportotion in Europe may be containedin your oir ticket.Choice of Over 10$ISTUDENTCLASSTOURS 4„„iTRAVELSTUBYTOVRS *595CONDUCTED TOURS MUniversity Travel Co„ officialbonded agents for aU linos, hasrendered efficient travel serviceon o business basis since 1926.See your local »ravoJ«g«n*folders andUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, MassI C A G O M A R 0 O N • 11Athletes hare big day SaturdayLast Saturday was quite a day for the Chicago sports contingent, as the basketball,swimming, wrestling, and gymnastics teams were in action. In the afternoon, the grapplerswere smothered by Notre Dame and the gymnasts edged by Northwestern, while the swim¬mers splashed to victory down below in the Bartlett pool. In the evening, a pep rally turnedout a full capacity crowd to watch the cagers play Knox in the Field house. Although theylost 63-52, the crowd had a chance to see Chancellor Kimpton and hear Amos Alonzo Staggby long-distance telephone, as three old UC football greats were awarded certificates to thefootball hall of fame.Playing to a packed houselast Saturday night, Chicago’scager^ were unable to over¬come superior height and someclassy basket shooting, and weredefeated by Knox, 63-52.Chicago was able to pull upto within four point of their op¬ponents once or twice and wereonly 7 points behind at half time.They showed spurts of fine of¬fensive play late in the game butwere unable to overcome the Si-washers’ lead and go out in front.The Maroons played their usualgpod defensive game but wereunable to hit the hoop when itwould have meant points addedto their score. Davey, for Chi¬cago, was high point man with19 points.* * *In a dual meet with North¬western last Saturday held inBartlett Gynasium, Chicagolost to the Wildcats 62-50. Bow¬man won the high bar for Chi¬cago, Andros won on the stillrings, and Leight took the tum¬bling event.Chicago was blanked in thefree exercise event but Leichtand Andros scored points in thetrampoline. Bowman and Bishopdid likewise in the sidehorse,while Bowman added team pointsin the parallels and rings. photo by Coffey"Come on down" shoutcheerleaders and torch bear¬ers (above) at the pre-gamerally last Saturday. The ralli-ers received the usual coldshoulder but many studentsshowed up for the basketballgame without their encour¬agement. The sign in thebackground says "Lookworld; we're normal!"photo by MaloneDick Cousens, (under¬neath ) MAROON sportseditor and varsity wrestlergrapples with Bronco Na-gurski, Jr., of Notre Dameat last Saturday's meet. TheTigers lost 26-0.Girl cagers winSwimmers take opponentsWith a comfortable 15-point lead over Carleton and 27points over Knox, the UC swimmers used last Saturday’smeet to tilt the season’s record to four wins and three losses.The meet started with Chicago’s relay team of Currie,Hoffer, Hosek, and Weissstroking to first place with atime of 4:26.4 minutes. Doug Mau-Girls’ varsity basketball team rer and Tom Lisc0 contlnued thedefeated the WAVES 33 to 31 last trend by taking firsts in the 220Monday. The game was close yard and 60 yard free style events,throughout all the quarters and respectively,the winning basket was scored by A1 Gaines edged into secondPat Talson just seconds before place behind Carleton’s Lorengthe final whistle. in the diving event. Burkhardt,Women s Athletic association Chicago’s second diver, took a(WAA) has scheduled a game fourth place. Mark Hoffer tookwith Mundelein college for second place in the 200 yard but-Wednesday at 4:30 pm in the Ida terfly.,i,A .. . In the following event, the 100>-ard *ree style, Lisco swam todormitory basketball schedule for victory withJa 0:54.0, tying the Currie honoredThe athletic staff has namedKenneth Currie, captain of thevarsity swimming team, as ath¬lete of the week for his outstand¬ing performance in the Knox-Carleton-Chicago triangular meet,last Saturday, in which Chicagowas victorious. Team scores: Chi¬cago 65, Carleton 50, Knox 37.Ken won the 200 yard backstroke and swam on both the 400yard medley and the 400 yard freestyle relay teams, both of whichwere 1st place winners.Edmonton, Alberta, claims Kenas a native son. He is, “an inspir¬ing leader and member of theteam, a conscientious competitorand most deserving of this Ath¬lete of the Week award.’’ photo by CoffeyTed Romoser scores two points for the Maroon cagersagainst Knox college at last Saturday's game. The Maroons,who are considered to have one of the best defensive squadsin the country kept the Knox midwest conference champsdown to a 63-52 loss.Trackmen go to Michiganby “Harold Hay don”An ambitious group of varsity and Track club team mem¬bers braved a blizzard and icy roads to treat Michigan trackfans to some sterling performances at Ann Arbor, last Friday.First Maroon man to make his mark was Brooks Johnson,who placed fifth in the 60- ‘yard dash in what was per- San’s Brendon O’Reilly with ahaps the fastest sprint field in the {££ pleet 514 lnchcs in ,llehistory of the meet. Vieing with !Johnson for the limelight was GarWilliams who ran away with thetwo mile title, with a time of9:35.2. But even his moment ofglory was eclipsed when new-com¬er Dick Richardson shocked thelarge gathering by tieing Michi- i; nniiM a\MENUimi THEATIIEFebruary 14 thru March 2THE GREAT KATHERINETHE MAN OF DESTINYA farcial“double-header byGeorge Bernard ShawFri. Sat. Suit. 8:30Tue. Thurs. 7:30Matinee Thurs. 3:00Tickets may be ordered at the StudentService Center at $0.85 each or byphone at CE 6-2337.THK A K T IVSTiTITfc OF ( IIIIAliOMonro#- Street and t .oltimhue Drive et.hirago 3. IlliwoUnext week:Tuesday 7 pm—Fourth floor new dorm vs.Green-BeecherGates vs. First floorThursday 4:30 pm—Second floor vs. Third floorThursday 7:00 pm—Quadranglers vs. Delta-WyvernMortarboards vs. EsotericsIn addition, a badminton gameis planned for this Tuesday at4:30 in the gym. existing team record. Currie, theteam captain, kept up UC’s stringof firsts by swimming to victoryin the 200 yard backstroke.yrvv#r#vvwvwwv#TV¥v»! ANNUITIES: RETIREMENT INSURANCE ;[ Phone or Write <! Joseph H. Aaron, '27 j. >135 S. LaSalle St 1060<BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGWINTER SPECIALTUNE UP *650 up• Anti-Freeze• Snow Tires• Road ServiceHeavy Duty Battery $1595SPECIAL ! !Harper Super ServiceDealer in Sinclair Products5556 HARPER PL 2-9654 For perfect fit...famous ARROWMitoga® tailoringExclusive Mitoga® tailoring ismade to order for a youngman’s "build”. Has plenty ofroom for action. Yet fits trimlybecause it tapers to follow yourcontours from collar to cuff towaist. This Glen is a fineexample. At your Arrow re¬tailer’s, $5.00. Cluett, Pea¬body & Co., Inc.ARROW— first in fashion12 • CHIC A CO MAROON • Feb. 7, 1958