Judges pick Miss UC finalistsMiss University of Chicago, vintage 1958, will be chosenby an all-campus vote from the eight finalists pictured above.Selected from the original 30 nominees by Harold Haydon,dean of students in the College; James Newman, head of Bur-ton-Judson; and Charles O'Connell, director of admissions;the candidates are (left to right, starting from above) : LoisAdelman, Phi Sigma Delta; Marilyn Treadway, WAA; CarlineJohnson, Sigma; Carol Fernstrom, Phi Gamma Delta; CarolEberty, Quadranglers; Kathleen Donnelly, Gates; Ann James,Beta Theta Pi; and Sharon Connors, Italian club.Dean of students John P. Netherton will crown the winnerat the Wash Prom, at approximately 10:45. The Prom, UC'sannual formal, will be held in Ida Noyes next Saturday nightbetween the hours of 9:30 and 12:30. Two bands will play:the big band, led by Al Ford, will be in the Cloister club, andthe small ensemble, headed by Ed Drum, will perform in thelibrary.Students may vote for their candidates Tuesday, Wednes¬day and Thursday, from 9 to 1 1 am in Cobb hall; 1 1 to 2 pmin Mandel hall corridor; 5:30 to 7 pm in Burton court on Tues¬day, Judson court on Wednesday, and Thursday in Ida Noyes.To vote, there is a ten cent donation, proceeds to go to acharity, according to Alpha Phi Omega, who is running theelection.G. Stigler appointedto business facultyGeorge J. Stigler has accepted an appointment on the ~Y\\ c^ca4°11 laroonfaculty of the school of business, Dean W. Allen Wallis ofthe school announced last week.Stigler’s appointment is as Charles R. Walgreen professorof American institutions, anddirector of the Walgreenfoundation. The Walgreen foun¬dation was established at the Uni¬versity in 1937 by the founder ofthe Walgreen Drug company toprovide instruction and researchin the history, development andcurrent state of American insti¬tutions. Vol. 66, No. 22 University of Chicago, Friday, Feb. 14, 1958A professor of economics atColumbia University since 1947,Stigler is currently on leave ofabsence, at the Ford foundation’scenter for advanced study of thebehavioral sciences, at Stanford,California. He will join the schoolof business faculty as of July 1.“Stigler’s works in both theo¬retical and applied economicshave been among the most impor¬tant of the last quarter century,'*Dean Wallis said in announcingthe appointment.“He frequently tests and clari¬fies accepted theory by using it in real applications. His recent bookon scientific personnel is an ex¬ample of important contributionsarising out of this interplay offact and theory.“A strong opponent of interfer¬ence with the free working ofcompetition, whether from gov¬ernment, labor or industry, Stig¬ler has asserted that private mon¬opoly is relatively unimportantand that where monopolies arefound they can usually be tracedto government sponsorship.”Heads societyThe Mt. Pelerin society, ofwhich Stigler was one of thefounders, is a group of conserva¬tive economists and political scien¬tists of the “Marshallian school.”Included in its membership arefive other University of Chicagofaculty members, Frank H.Knight, Aaron Director, FriedrichA. Hayek, Milton Friedman, andDean Wallis. UC invites Marc Chagallfor visiting professorshipMarc Chagall will arrive on the UC campus from France for a three-week stay beginningThursday. He will be visiting professor to the University’s committee on social thought, ofwhich John U. Nef is chairman.The Committee on social thought will hold a reception in the library of Ida Noyes hallfor the artist oh Wednesday, March 5 at 4 pm to enable interested students to meet themaster.At the University, Chagallwill conduct three seminarsfor faculty members, students,and associates of the committee.The subject of these seminarswill be "Art and Life.”In connection with the firstvisit of Chagall to Chicago since1946 the Renaissance society andStudent Governmentmeeting held last Tuesdayin Law North (above) wasadjourned for lack of a quo¬rum for the second time thisquarter. the committee are sponsoring anexhibition of his paintings andgraphics. Arranged by the Chi¬cago collector, Joseph RandallShapiro, the show will containwork from private collections inthe city which are seldom seenby the public. The exhibition, inGoodspeed hall, will begin tomor¬row and continue throughMarch 8.Chagall is making his secondvisit to the University in his 70thyear. On his 1946 trip to theUnited States he participated in alecture series, sponsored by theCommittee on social thought on“The works of the mind.”For the exhibition in the Renais¬sance galleries, Mr. and Mrs. Wal¬ter Paepcke are loaning two paint¬ings, “The Blue Cock” and “ThePurple Angel.” Mr. and Mrs. Jo¬seph Randall Shapiro are show¬ing two oil paintings, “The GreenViolinist” and “Mother Goose.”From the collection of Mr. andMrs. Morton G. Neumann willcome “Still Life and Lovers.”Other paintings in the exhibi¬tion will be “Blue Horse,” “Ma¬donna,” and “Self-Portrait” lentby Selwyn Schwartz; “Lovers and Flowers” lent by Mr. and Mrs.Joseph Stein; “The Fool Who SoldHis Sanity” lent by Mr. and Mrs.James Walsdorf; “Flowers withLovers” lent by Mr. and Mrs. A.Rodger Green, and “Mother andChild” and “The Village” fromJohn U. Nef’s collection. Therealso will be examples of Cha¬gall’s illustrations for Fontaine’s“Fables,” the Bible, and Gogol’s“Dead Souls.”After studying at the Imperialschool in Russia, Chagall went toParis in 1910. There he exhibitedhis paintings at the Salon desIndependents and made friendswith writers and painters of thenew school. The first big exhibi¬tion of his work was in 1914 inDer Sturm gallery in Berlin. Thisexhibition was a sensation, foster¬ing the expressionist movementin Germany and serving as a fore¬runner of the surrealist move¬ment in France.Chagall’s illustrations of “DeadSouls,” Fontain's “Fables," andthe Bible established him as anetcher and illustrator. He design¬ed fanciful costumes and sceneryfor two ballets, “Aleko” by Mas¬sine and Stravinsky’s “Firebird.”KIMPT0N ON EDUCAN0N seepageLAK gives views on educationall now profiting vastly.”Faculty communication“But Hutchins felt the only wayto create this new College was to|- by Gary MokotoffReasons behind the latest proposed changes in the College curriculum were explained byChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton to over 250 students last Thursday evening. The talk wasthe last of the series on “The means and ends of a Chicago education/' sponsored by thestudent-faculty relations committee of Student Government.Beginning with the origin of the University and the College, Kimpton outlined variousproblems created by the Old (Hutchins) AB and by the present joint degree programs,created “under armed truce”in 1953. the College," Kimpton continued, cent of these students did not“The University was found- Enrico Fermi, late professor of place out of sufficient courses,ed primarily as a graduate physics, “often lectured in the they were spending three yearsjcrhool " Kimnton stated “William natural sciences 3 course. Both he instead of the expected two in theRainey Harper, our first presi- and the students enjoyed it;” he College.”dent, tacked on the College as an added that Fermi once remarked, The chancellor indicated thatafterthought. In this sense, we w^en be saw the syllabi for this the early entrant system had beenare different than other univer- course, “It’s great, but it is not discouraged by the University insities, most of which were found- science.” recent years, but added that it ised as colleges.” AM A R #. A “once again in a position to em-Kimpton asserted that one of AB n0t accepted phasize early entrants. Many highthe University’s biggest problems Another reason why the Old AB schools now give advanced workhas always been how the College was discontinued, according to which is good, and we can capital-curriculum should be arranged. Kimpton, was that the degree, de- ize on it.”He explained that Robert M. signed to be given at the end of ,Hutchins, his predecessor, felt the second year of college, was Ke-examine placements"something had to be done with not accepted at other institutions. He described Hutchins’ feelingcollege education” in this country, “Although Graduate Record ex- that students should go at theirand his plan “was an educational aminations showed that UC grad- own pace in the College. The phil-experiment from which you are uates were as good as those who osophy was “let us examine stu-finished other currieulums, our dents when they enter and placestudents were admitted at the jun- them in the program where theyior year level when they went to belong; advance them or moveother schools.” them backwards.”When the University complained Stating his own views on place-creat«T a separate^ faculty That about such treatment, the chan- ment examinations, Kimpton heldwould generate the new curricu- cellor explained, the other schools there is a great need for investiga-lum he envisioned ” the chancellor answered by asking how much tion and improvement in the sys-SnuS “The University prides time a Chicago AB student had tern “The placement test for MathItself in being one university to for an MA here- When ABC (the fundamental mathe-Thprp ic much interdepartmental the University said “three years,” matics course) has little to docommunication. T h e physicists the schools replied that UC was with the materials in the coursetalk with the bioloeists the biol- 3ust treating its AB graduates as itself,” he remarked. (The chan-©cistswith thesocialscientists allege 3uniors anyway, since oth- cellor, in a previous interview,andthere is eve n some inter- er MA Programs required only reported he had recently read thechange of material between the one year* math syllabus.)humanities and the other divi- Consequently, hecontinued, ^ ,sions.” many Old AB students were New degrees giveAs examples, Kimpton cited the !orced to take a Chicago MA be- new problemsInvention of the Carbon 14 dating °Fe * e^ went to other graduate “The new (1953) programsmethod by Willard F. Libby, pro- sc 001s‘lessor of chemistry, as a product Was greatest Systemof conversations over the Quad- „The Hutchins AB was the fin- J J wrangle club luncheon table be- est system Df general education the student finds himself with twotween Libby and members of the devised that the US had ever advisors, a College and a division-Oriental institute; and the fact seen >> Kimpton asserted “Har- al one- The normal- load for stu-that some faculty members hold vard and Yale-followed later with dents taking College courses isjoint appointments in more than their own systems, similar to four5 in the divisions it is three.one department. ours. Everyone borrows frequent- ^he divisional grading system op-“It’s this kind of cross-fertiliza- ly from us and denies it emphati- ^,raJes ona Quart®rly basis; ^thetion that makes the University cally,” he said.What it is, he commented. Responding to questioning as to“Harvard has failed at being the reasons for changing the “Old , J J ^ , ,one university,” the Chancellor College” system if he thought it an . Ulld9rgraduate ^acuhy withcommented. “The Harvard law was so good, the chancellor re- jurisdiction °ver the undergrad-school is as much a part of their plied, “How long can you call a uate Pr°gram as a whole. No long-college as it is of Princeton.” degree an AB, if no one accepts er w*d the curriculum be split be-Communication re-established it? If we had gotten five other t^veen ^ College and the divi-Communication re established schoo]s tQ folJow maybe we sions with each facuty strugglingWhen general and specialized could have held Qut The 'nl -n_ for the students’ time. In addition,education were combined in the stitution that followed the Hutch- a d^an of students of the under-1953 New AB programs, commu- ins p]an was Shimer college and graduate faculty will counsel allnication was again established wound up buying that* Enroll* College students, Kimpton an*among the faculties, Kimpton con- ment in the College dropped from nounced- “A student will not havetinued. 3500 to slightly over 1200 students ciear hiroself with two groups“But again, as with all innova- in 1953. When does a degree be- ar*y longer-”tions, unexpected things hap- come useless,” he queried, “when w. . AR jpened,” he asserted. “Because there are only ten students in the NeweST AD degreethey were separated too long, the College?” describedCollege and divisional faculties ......Earlv entrant1 The councd of the faculty sen-T. , ate (the supreme ruling body overprogram retained all currieulums) formed an execu-Discussing the early entrant tive committee on undergraduatesvere established easily in the so- Program, the chancellor said that education (ECUE, pronounced ek-cial sciences and the humanities Hutchins felt the second two years way) last fall, Kimpton reported,and to some extent in the biologi- of high school in America were a The committee was charged withsciences but not too well in the ^vaste of time and therefore estab- the responsibility for making annhvsiral sciences ” be renorted lished a program whereby stu- extensive analysis of the problemsP TKircnn'c Li iLt th* dents could enter the University of the College, and its recommen-after the second year ol high dations will be final. "ECUE isdown on tbo .- i. . ^ school. The result, as planned, now coming seriously to gripsdown on thG CoIIg^g snd rnutil3t6 • . • « ...*^1. 11 i , ,It Thev fail to realize that the was a four-year program which with the problems and expects todivicinn^i men ean enntrihnte in terminated at the equivalent of make a report by the end of thisdivisional men can contribute to ,, , ’ „ ,, , , ,the sophomore year of college. quarter, Kimpton stated.“But this system did not work (The committee consists of tenout,” Kimpton stated. “Very few faculty members: four from thestudents came as early entrants. College, one-from each of the fourThe high schools did not like this divisions, one representing theprogram and did everything to professional schools, and thediscourage it. Most students came chancellor.)after their senior year in high “The committee’s report will in¬school anyway. Because 80 per elude plans for a new four-year photo by Malone'You think you've got problems."were arranged for the faculty, notfor the students,” Kimpton stated.“In the joint degree programs,College on a yearly comprehen¬sive examination system.“Therefore we hope to establishdidn’t fall into each other’s arms.The negotiations resulting in the1953 New AB were made under•armed truce.’ CommunicationsNORTHWESTERNRADIO AND TV$3 Service Coll — Plus PartsNinety-Day Guarantee on All PartsDR 3-9795L’assurance-vie est un moyen surqui permet a un homme de reve-nu modestc de pourvoir, d’unefa$on permanente, k la s6curitede sa famille.laissez-mo! vous expliquer comment.Ralph J. Wood Jr. #48Representative 1 N. LaSalle St. Chicago 2, III.FR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855LA COMPAGNIE D'ASSURANCE VIE SUN LIFE DU CANADA Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristEyes ExominedVisual TrainingGlasses FittedRepair Service1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372 AB program consisting of twoyears of general education, oneyear of ‘free or guided electives,’and the final year devoted to de¬partmental concentration,” thechancellor announced.The two years of general educa¬tion as described by Kimpton willconsist of eight comprehensiveexaminations that will be requiredof all students in the College. “Nolonger will there be an ad hocarrangement whereby one of thecurrent College courses is loppedoff here and another there until afour year program is arrived atfor each individual student afterhe takes the placement examina¬tions. Acceleration or decelerationthrough placement tests will notbe eliminated.”Answers questionsTo queries about the nature ofthe new general educationcourses, Kimpton replied that hedid not know what would com¬prise the eight comps; the Col¬lege faculty would have to decide.“Personally, I’d hate to see OMPgo. I think it is a great course,”he commented. (The College ter¬minal course, organizations, meth¬ods, and principles of knowledge,is a philosophy course designed tointegrate the other College coursematerials. The Chancellor holdsan appointment as professor ofphilosophy.)To another question, the chan¬cellor said, “Hutchins believedthat there was a magic total of 14courses defining an educated man.I disagree. There is no set num¬ber.”According to Kimpton, the freeelective year is advantageous tostudents who want to try some¬thing outside their own fields ofspecialization. A physics studentmight, for example, want to findout about Chinese civilization,philosophy, or Russian.BS degree woesWith regard to the current BSdegree, Kimpton said he person¬ally would like to see an AB de¬gree in the physical sciences forstudents not wanting to specializein some particular branch of thisfield. ‘The current feeling inthese sciences is to push the stu¬dent as rapidly as possiblethrough the undergraduate pro¬gram into specialization in theMA and PhD programs,” he con¬tinued.“UC students should be able toenter any physical science gradu¬ ate school In the country, but allrequire an equivalent of 214 yearsof specialization. How can youhave two years of general educa¬tion plus this specialization andstill get a four year program?”he asked. “This is one of the realproblems facing ECUE. How canwe get in enough science andmathematics to satisfy the grad¬uate schools and enough generaleducation to keep us satisfied thatthe student is a product of theCollege of the University of Chi¬cago?”Kimpton suggested, as his ownpersonal opinion, two possiblesolutions.• The bachelor of science de¬gree should become an “elite” de¬gree available only to studentsplacing out of several courses.• A 414 or five year degree forthose who do not place out ofthese courses.. . . and the MA, tooThe chancellor said that hisnext big job at UC will be themaster’s degree programs. “Uni¬versities never made sense out ofthe MA,” he stated. “It was a con¬solation prize for those who couldnot make the PhD. Some studentscannot financially afford to con¬tinue into the PhD program.Therefore, they should get a use¬ful master's degree.“The MA should not be athoughtless one year after theBA. There should be a three-yearprogram for students enteringthe University from junior col¬leges or those wanting a terminalmaster’s degree. The only mas¬ter’s degrees that are worth any¬thing are the English ones. MA-Oxon (Oxford) and MA-Cantab(Cambridge) are recognized.”Among additional commentsmade by the chancellor duringthe discussion was the assertionthat he would like to see fourthings retained from the Hutchinsera*v• The comprehensive system,• general education courses,• a college faculty devoted toteaching, and• the early entrant system.In reply to a series of questionsimplying that the College cur¬riculum has been moving down¬hill since the changes of 1953,Kimpton remarked, “People fee!that the educational system wehave is at a peak, and any changeis a disintegration.”&/e tjd/6um PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-44332 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 14, 1958WUCB marathon tonight;'Pro Nausea' plays againA concert of a-tunal music by the “world-famous" Pro Nausea will highlight WUCB’sseventh annual 24-hour marathon. The show will begin at 7 pm today in the Burton loungeof Burton-Judson courts, station manager Fred Masterson announced.The “musical" group, under the direction of Sir Frederick Beckman, will play “JangleBells," “The Sewers of Rome," “Nemo’s Suite in Nothing Flat" and the world premier ofthe “1945 Overture."All funds raised at the mar¬athon will be given to theFrankfurt exchange program. r From 1 am to noon tomorrow.Importance of educationincreasing says Riesmanby Dick Purtill from funds other than those sup- Folklore society, Recorder societyplied by the University,” Master- an<* a Jazz group."Some *1,300 is needed yearly son stated. Students may con- (he studen,.run broadcasting sta-for this program and must come tribute by requests for records tjon wjn present “Music 'tiland encores by the Pro Nausea. Noon,” a program of classical mu-An added feature this year, will sic which begins with Beethoven’sbe the sale of 16-inch popular and Quartet No. 7 and concludes withhill-billy records which students Beethoven’s Quartet No. 9.may stomp on, sail through the Students can listen to the pro¬air or destroy in any way they gram at 640 on AM radios in In-choose,” he said. ternational house, B-J, C-groupDean of students John P. Neth- and the new women's dormito-erton will kick-off the marathon, ries. Those interested in beingHis appearance will be followed part of the studio audience mayby Hutchins’ “Farewell Address.' come into the lounge to see theEducation, and its relation to American culture, was the theme of David Riesman’s lec- f!; Women wiil be all°wed inture Monday', the fifth in his series on "The Future of America ” Developing themes.stated KSars.'un"",^ £mSHcSSnS Zn&SS.iii earlier lectures, Riesman indicated how the increasing importance of education in thiscountry had brought to the fore certain problems inherent in American democracy.On the one hand, he said, American culture tended towards a leveling egalitarianism; onthe other hand, it emphasized freedom of opportunity, by which the exceptional individualcould raise himself to a posi- . ,, ^tion above the common level. g y . . on S0CietyIn regard to education this In regard to higher education, on^ociety.dichotomy manifested itself Riesman called attention to the who have an exceptional impact Urge students to getfirst polio shots nowStudents may receive their first or second polio shots atRiesman offered a few tentativeas ivivS...rtu v«icu aucuuuu - .... solution3 to these problems. Athe problem of quantity versus problemsoflargeuniversities.es- study at a small college withquality. pedal ly state-supported ones some time spent in the larger con- Student Health. Vaccine is available to students and theirAmerican education is unique, wliich aim at accepting all high text a university appears, he wives and children at 50 cents per shotKiesman polntedout,inj>ercent- school.graduates who_ apply for said. t0 ^ th? id?aI. A mor? car?. student Health stressed the importance of receiving thefirst inoculation immediately,lage of population reached, the admission. At such schools, the sciecti0n by students of a col-length of time spent in school, faculty is often too remote from jege suite(j to their needs, com-ici.Bi.i ui tunc «* T iege suited io meir neeus, com- fh f to vaccinating individual studentsand the breadth of responsibility the students, and gifted students bined vvith- more attention on the durinS the regular hours, is cur-undertaken by the educational arc often "lost in the shuffle." t ot the coUeges ,0 the nceds •*““*rently schedulingsystem. But the quality of the Riesman mentioned recent sur- of the student who really wantseducation given to these 7 ...."v,mrun thefriskeof yr''°° "™uld «« far towards resolving shots Tuesday morn-educating tlie students ■ — ” " — empnasis auouiu w piaecu that resistenee mav be most effee-tracting students capable of prof- tive during the season following Student health recommendsiting by high education, and that Indlvidualf ®anli single that students not intending to re-the prestige and social value of a „ eWe iL ceive the advised three shotsonset of the polio season. *cllujr B“1CU“IUI* vario«s campus, ,, , , , .. Thn<?e whn h-»vo nravmnciv groups. Fraternity members need-ees^M smal^eolletT1"with high to profit by:his college education ta^ fLt and”dthots «rst °r vaccination's...... low. cess 01 small colleges, wun mgn wouid g0 far towards resolving advised tn wait until Mav fnr can receive shots Tuesday morn-of only half- entrance standards and dedicated the probiom. He felt that more f. . .... • , - in nrr\Jr ing by signing the lists posted onents who pass faculties in turning out graduates emphasis should be placed on at- that resistenee mav be most effee. th®ir house bulletin boards.Tennessee governorto speak at MandelFrank G. Clement, governor of Tennessee, will speak on“State’s rights and political realism" Wednesday, February26, at 8 pm in Mandel hall.Sponsored jointly by University College and the Adult Edu¬cation council of Greater Chi- ent turned them down, denounc-cagO, the talk IS pait Ot tne jng ^em for their behavior. Hedowntown center s ‘ Issues of the f0]d them he intended to continueDay” series. Admission is $1. Tick- Tennessee’s plan for gradual de-ets are available at the College, gp^j*gg^tion.19 S. LaSalle and the Adult Edu- Clement’s political oratory re-ration council, 53 W. Jackson cejVed national note the same yearboulevard. when he keynoted the DemocraticThe 37-year-old governor, who national convention in this cityis the youngest chief executive of (“How lowng o’ America, howany state in the Union, gained na- lowng).tional recognition in 1956 whenlie fought pro-segregationists in jj*his state. A group of men entered Xhis office, demanding that he call £a special session of the legislature | prestigecollege education should be de-emphasized.In concluding, Riesman prom¬ised to explore these issues fur¬ther in the remaining lectures ofthe series. er shots, which should be admin¬istered to all once each year, arealso advised to obtain this addi¬tional immunity just prior tosummer. through a specially scheduled or¬ganization should call for an ap¬pointment. This measure wouldcircumvent unnecessary waitingThe health service, in addition at the health service.GUADALAJARASUMMER SCHOOLThe accredited bilingual schoolsponsored by the UniversidadAutonoma de Guadalajara andmembers of Stanford Universityfaculty will offer in Guadalajara,Mexico, June 30 - Aug.9, coursesin art, folklore, geography, his¬tory, language and literature. $225covers tuition, board and room.Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, Box K,Stanford University, Calif. Snappy Radio & TV ServiceQuick, Efficient TV Applianceand RepairPick-up & Delivery onHome Repair* — $3Day Colls — 10% Off on Part*829 E. 61 st St. MU 4-7375 MODEL CAMERAAuthorized LetcaDealerJASA Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Are.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery Service♦%**« ♦!to pass laws negating the dec!sions of the Supreme court. ClemFREE DELIVERYat NICKYSPIZZERIANO 7-9063 MARTHA SCHLAMMEFolksingerSaturday, Feb. 22 — 8:30 pmFirst Methodist Church of EvanstonHinman & Church AvenuesReserved Section $1.75 General Admission $1.25For tickets, write to: Hillel Foundation, 1740 Judson Ave., EvanstonDA 8-0650 CR 5-9731•JmJ* #*♦ »J* ♦{♦♦J*tJ*tI**J**J* **• **M*M»* *** *♦*Jprint it on yourshopping list.*#Budweiser.KING OP BEERSANHEUSER eUSCH. INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES Only 15 More Days !!• Marlboro• Philip Morris• ParliamentsYep, just 15 more days of searching forempty boxes of your favorite cigarettes.Every group on campus is trying to winthe $200 grand prize. And just a simplecounting of the empties will determinethe winner.See the Grand Prize,The $200 Capitol Hi-Fi, in the windows ofThe DISC1367 E. 57th StreetCLOTHES for CLASSReg. $14.95All Wool Flannel Pants $ 7.95Reg. $8.95Crew Neck Sweaters 4.95Ivy League Shirts from 2.95All Wool Sport Coats from 19.95Wool Suburban Coats from, 9.95Our Prices Can't Be Beat ... It's Smart To Buy For LessD & G Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-3738“lit the Neighborhood for 49 Years**Hours: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. —— 9 a.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdayFeb. 14, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3EDITOR'S COLUMN V 1411 E. 53rdUC business school goeshunting for more facultyTHE DAYS OF WilliamRainey Harper’s quest for agreat faculty is currently be¬ing relived in the University’sschool of business. In the pastyear, the school has announcedthe appointment of an additional20 members, the most recent be¬ing economist George J. Stiglerof Columbia university.While Harper used Rockefeller’smoney as an important lure, tliisfactor is not that important in"raids” of the business school onother institutions’. According toJames H. Lorie, associate dean ofthe business school, the kind ofperson coming to UC is not pri¬marily interested in the usuallysmall difference in pay they arereceiving.One of the key factors, Loriestated, is the great deal of free¬dom here. "The individual facultymembers teach relatively little,compared to other businessschools,” he said. "In addition,they are not told how to teach andeven have some freedom in choos¬ing the courses. The businessschool faculty enjoys the lack oforganization or regimentation de¬termining how the faculty mem¬ber should spend his time in re¬search."The attraction of the city itselfhas helped in our faculty recruit¬ing plans,” Lorie commented."Chicago is one of the best placesto have a school of business sinceit is a great business center.”THE "ONE UNIVERSITY”principle has also helped in ac¬quiring new members, Lorie indi¬cated. "Our faculty members holdappointments in many depart¬ments. There is no fear of profes¬sional isolation as in many otherinstitutions,” he said. W. AllenWallis, dean of the businessschool, holds professorships ineconomics, statistics and theschool.According to many persons, thereputation of Wallis has helpedtoo. The dean is active in nationalbusiness groups and is on theboard of directors of some of themore influential private researchorganizations in the country.FACULTY MEMBERS whichhave recently joined the businessschool include, in addition to Stig¬ler, Bernard Berelson, formerlydirector of the behavioral scienceprogram of the Ford foundation;Yale Brozen, formerly professorin the technological institute andthe department of economics,Northwestern university; John S.McGee, formerly economist, pet¬roleum division, First NationalCity Bank of New York; GeorgeP. Schultz, formerly associate pro¬fessor of industrial relations atMassachusetts Institute of Tech-HP Theatreloses appealA number of years ago, I movedto Hyde Park because I had heardthat it presented a lively neigh¬borhood for enjoyable living. TheUniversity, Jimmy’s bar, the Com¬pass players and the Hyde Parktheatre were wonderful places formy family to study, relax, and ingeneral, live graciously.However, the University haschanged, Jimmy’s is not what itused to be, the Compass playersmoved away and the Hyde Parktheatre, alas, has stopped present¬ing intelligent, enjoyable moviefare. It is hard to say just whathas hit this formerly wonderfulcommunity, but it seems the bot¬tom has fallen out.To be fair, one has to say thatthe Hydd Park theatre held outthe longest; that is until a coupleof weeks ago when the most god¬awful stuff began to appear.Movies that ceased to appeal tojunior matinee audiences yearsago came in, not only as “art"movies, but billed as “great” andmomentous,” and “the movies yourequested.”Robert Uphaus nology; and Edward L. Wallace,formerly chairman of the depart¬ment of accounting and associateprofessor of accounting at theUniversity of Buffalo.Help!MEMBERS OF the StudentRepresentative party (SRP) whohave been absent from the lasttwo sessions of Student Govern¬ment, received a letter last weekpleading with them to come tomeetings."Student Government electionswere held in the fall of 1957. Youwere elected,” snapped Carlie Bur¬rows, majority leader at the be¬ginning of the note. ". Assem¬bly meetings are important. Thefirst Government meeting thisquarter was adjourned because ofthe lack of a quorum. ... In our(SRP) platform, we stated thatwe were aware of the lack of in¬terest in SG on this campus andwould attempt to promote moreconcern. Must we begin by con¬vincing our own members of theGovernment?”THE LETTER ADDED that theassembly members were expectedto attend the parliamentary cau¬cuses which are held before SGmeetings. "An uninformed bodycan be worse than no body at all,”commented Miss Burrows."At the last meeting of the Gov¬ernment, though numericallyspeaking SRP had a majority, be¬cause of the lack of discussion atthe parliamentary caucus, by theend of the meeting ISL had thevoting majority!” panicked MissBurrows.Someone once said that a wom¬an could never end a letter with¬out a “P.S.” True to the femininetradition, the letter ended, “P.S.By Tuesday, the secretariat willhave prepared the official SGcopy of the ABC’s of Robert’sRules of Order in two pages orless. These will be passed outTuesday.”Laud TaylorSTUDENT GOVERNMENTSrecently concluded lecture serieson "The means and ends of a Chi¬cago education” was essentiallythe product of one man; Robert P.Taylor, chairman of SG’s student-faculty relations committee.We would like to thank him forthe first service to the studentbody that the Government hasdone so far since it started meet¬ing in Law North last November.The poor attendance at the foursessions only reaffirms the beliefthat most College students like totalk about the curriculum among themselves but are not interestedin hearing the administration pre¬sent their side of the story.'C & G imaginative'UC*s ANNUAL got a pat onthe back from a national publica¬tion for yearbook staffs and advis¬ers recently.Photolith magazine devoted itslead two-page spread, headlined"Classes come first at Chicago,”to the 1957 Cap &, Gown. Thearticle stated the book had imag¬inative reports, broad coverageand balanced layouts to make the50th anniversary edition a ‘‘bookto remember.”Criticizing other college year¬books for their lack of coveragein curriculum, the magazine stat¬ed "many otherwise superior year¬books entirely bypass academicmatters. Others mention coursesand schools only very casually, aspart of the introduction to the fac¬ulty. In still other yearbooks, thereporting sounds too much likethe catalog.”In the critical analysis of Cap &Gown, the reviewer said that per¬sons who write catalog copyshould note the report on curricu¬lum in the 1957 edition of theyearbook.CONSIDERING THAT Photo¬lith has extensive readership inhigh school as well as collegeyearbook staffs and advisers, thearticle almost appeared to be writ¬ten by our own development of¬fice. The three illustrations ofpage layout included the sectionon Humanities, which mentionedthat UC administrators are activein this division, and brief biogra¬phies of top men in this field.("McKeon—Charles F. Grey dis¬tinguished service professor — isknown to almost every Collegestudent as the editor of the Mod¬em library ‘Introduction to Aris¬totle,’ a book which is used in atleast four of the undergraduatecourses.”)The article was quick to pointout that "activities are also re¬membered and covered in this uni¬versity book.” The other two pagelayouts shown were devoted to"the University played host thissummer to the ninth National Stu¬dent congress of the United StatesNational Student association,”complete with pretty campusscene; and the page on StudentGovernment which includedamong its pictures, one of a for¬mer UC student who went placesin student affairs—Bruce Larkin,international affairs vice-presi¬dent of NSA.Gary Mokotoff~Y\\ c^ca^°11 laroonIssued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andintermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon,Ida Noyes hall, 1212 East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800,extensions 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionsby mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday. Deadlinefor all material 3 pm, Wednesday..Editor-in-chiefGary MokotoffManaging editor Associate editorRobert J. Halasz Rochelle M. DubnowNews editorMary FinkleSports editorRichard Cousens Gadfly editorRichard BrooksCalendar editorNeol Johnston Culture editorJohn HerzogCopy editorDonna Davis FA 4-5525 — HY 3-53(1® 1Cafe EnricoITALIAN RESTAURANT 6 PIZZERIAFeaturing — Hors d'oewvre TableSmall Large12” 14”Cheete 1.15 1.55Sausage 1.45 1.95Anchovy 1.45 1.95Pepper & Onion 1.20 1.80 Small12”Combination .. 1.75Mushroom .... 1.60Shrimp 1.75Bacon & Onion. 1.60 Utf*14”2.252.102.252.10Free Delivery m AH Plus ie UC StudentsCartoonistsLiza Flannery, Dick MontgomeryPhotographic #toff: Robert Malone, Dave Coffey, Sandy Weinberg.Editorial staff: Claire Birnbaum, Ina Brody, Tom Cablk, Robert Coale, JaneForer, Lance Haddix, Dorothy Haptas, Irene Kenneth, Jenny Korling,Ruth Losemore, Gene Moss, Nancy Penkova, Dick Purtill, Uldis Rcze,Elizabeth Stroup.Business ManagerLawrence D. KesslerAdvertising managerPhyllis Ritzenberg Office managerArt Taitel Circulation managerJoan Helmken *4<( ADVERTISEMENT )On Campus withMscfiMman(By the Author of "Rally Round the Flay, Boyd”, and*• Barefoot Boy soil* Cheek.”)THE PLEDGE YOU SAVEMAY BE YOUR OWNToday’s column is directed at those young female undergradu¬ates who have recently pledged 6ororitiee and are worried, poorlambs, that they won’t make good. Following is a list of simpleinstructions which, if faithfully observed, will positively guaran¬tee that you will be a mad success as a sorority girl.First, let us take up the matter of housemothers. The house¬mother is your friend, your guide, your mentor. You must treather with respect. When you wish to speak to her, address her as“Mother Sigafoos” or "Ma’am.” In no circumstances must yousay, “Hey, fat lady.’!Second, let us discuss laundry. Never hang your wash on thefront porch of the sorority house. This is unsightly and showsa want of breeding. Use the Chapter Room.Third, meals. Always remember that planning and preparingmeals for a houseful of healthy girls is no simple task. Your cookgoes to a great deal of trouble to make your menu varied andnourishing. The least you can do is show your appreciation.Don’t just devour your food; praise it. Exclaim with delight,“What delicious pork jowls 1” or "WThat a yummy soupbonc!”or “What scrumptious fish heads 1” or “What clear water!”Fourth, clothing. Never forget that your appearance reflectsnot just on yourself but on the whole house. It was well enoughbefore you joined a sorority to lounge around campus in yourold middy blouse and gym bloomers, but now you must takegreat pains to dress in a manner which excites admiring com¬ments from all who observe you. A few years ago, for example,there was a Chi Omega named Camille Ataturk at the Univer¬sity of Iowa who brought gobs of glory to all her sorors.CmlkWoz Hie iMeeiottfCamille hit on the ingenious notion of suiting her garb tothe class she was attending. For instance, to English Lit shewore a buskin and jerkin. To German she wore lederhosen andcarried a stein of pilsener. To Econ she wore 120 yards of tickertape. Her shiningest hour came one day when she dressed as awhite mouse for Psych Lab. Not only her Chi Omega sisters,but the entire student body went into deep mourning when shewas killed by the janitor’s cat.Finally, let us take up the most important topic of all Irefer, of course, to dating.As we have seen, the way you dress reflects on your sorority,but the men you date reflect even more. Be absolutely certainthat your date is an acceptable fellow. Don’t beat about thebush; ask him point-blank, “Are you an acceptable fellow?’!Unless he replies, “Yeah, hey,” send him packing.But don’t just take his word that he is acceptable. Inspecthim closely. Are his fingernails clean? Is his black leather jacketfreshly oiled? Is his ukulele in tune? Does he carry publicliability insurance? And, most significant of all, docs he smokeMarlboros?If he’s a Marlboro man, you know he’s a lot of man. Youknow he has taste and discernment, wit and wisdom, characterand sapience, decency and warmth, presence and poise, talentand grit, filter and flavor. You will be proud of him, your sororitywill be proud of him, the makers of Marlboro will be proud ofhim, and I will be paid for this column. , © iwm. st.uia»• • • 4The makers of Marlboro wish to announce that Mr.Shulman has been paid for this column and will continueto be paid for bringing you his homely philosophy through¬out the school year•,4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 14, 1958LETTER TO GADFLYGADFLY Int'l relations committeestill functions excellentlyBook space lacking in bookstoreDURING A RECENT visit to the University’s bookstore, I came upon several hundredvolumes of newly-arrived paperback editions piled up along the western fringes of the booksection. (Should outlanders think it strange to find a book section in a book store, they mustbe warned that the worst is yet to come.)The plight of these books seemed sad indeed. “Where are you going to put all of thesebooks,” I inquired of the lady in charge. “We’ll start worrying about it pretty soon,” shereplied. Book-loVer and anxi-ous lad, I began worrying instead be allocated to Lady Eux- veloping services, and decided thatright away. ton’s wallets, children’s dolls and while the manager might thinkMy first worry, of course, is the Woolite. these things pleasant, it was in¬fact most of the titles could not What of the manager’s position deed hard to see how he couldbe seen, with the books stacked on brassieres? There seemed to consider them so essential to theup as they were. But this was only be plenty of space for them. Also, academic life that he would bea small and unimportant worry: no lady’s umbrellas were piled on willing to leave books on the floorit could, perhaps be solved by a the floor; the handbags were (and on ledges and in boxes, andlittle hands and knee action. primonently displayed for all toHowever, this first and little see; and sweaters and blouses hadworry led to a bigger one: How space galore. What would Freudcould the bookstore (a loose term, not say?—provided of course youcould rescue one of his books tofind out.IT IS SURELY evident that Iwas greatly intrigued by my wor-me that sometimes, particularly rjes< especially since they came ers if anyone took my other wor-after a large lunch, I can t fit in jnciutje the newest bookstore ries seriously (as I hope theyamong the tightly knit maze of sensation, “Pizza Pups.” With a will). And I couldn’t help worry-paperback book-racks which are COpy 0f Parrington (he had been ing about all the nice ladies whopushed cozily together near the on the floor, too) in my hand sell this non-book material. WhatI tasted one of these delicacies, about these folks?The result was ever more worry. WHAT WOULD end my wor-I could not conceive how a person r}es? Short of adding a secondpossibly could be more willing to story to the book store, I can onlyfill a shelf with the “Pups” (they suggest sending the non-bookare long and take up a lot of customers to the places that spe-t ... space, and are not very good) cialize in the supplying of theirexcept them), not even piled or than to stock copies of the work needs (i.e. Como’s, which does a Just a reminder to Gadfly andhis readers that the committee oninternational relations has notwithered away b,ut is still func¬tioning in good health.The elimination of the doctoralprogram resulted from an inter¬nal committee decision and notfrom University policy. Chancel¬lor Lawrence A. Kimptoh andChauncy D. Harris, dean of thesocial sciences division have con¬tinued to support the program andactivities of the committee.I may add that interdisciplinary activity seems, to this facultymember at least, exceptionallyvigorous. Departmental programsdo not interfere with interdiscip¬linary work at UC. On the con¬trary, such work is encouraged,but there is something to be saidfor the view that the PhD shouldbe required to master the toolsand subject matter of at leastone discipline.Morton A. Kaplanacting director of studiescommittee on inti relationsindeed) sell these handsome volumes if the prospective buyerscouldn’t see them?NOW THIS, in turn, remindedwestern edge of the store, andtherefore, sometimes can’t evensee the titles of books that arenot stacked up.And this reminded me of allthe books which weren’t in thebookstore at all, (altho* one would on inaccessible racks) in order tomake them possible.But then, in my soft-heartedway, I couldn’t help worryingabout what would happen to allthe Pizza-Puppy eaters, (I reallyknow what will happen to them),doll carriers, and brassiere-wear-in accessible racks.Soon I found myself worryingabout the conscience of the man¬ager. I wondered how he couldlet all those lovely books be hid¬den from the eyes of the Univer¬sity’s book-lovers and knowledgeseekers (this includes the entirecommunity here, of course), whenhe had so much potential room inwhich to display them?DOES THE MANAGER reallythink, that modern glassware andinsipid Valentine cards are moreimportant in a book store thanbooks? Could a book store man¬ager really believe that spacewhich could be given to E. K.Rand’s excellent study of “TheFounders of the Middle Age”(now located on the floor) should of the giant among American in¬tellectual historians.I worried too about the man¬ager and cameras and photo-de- much better job on pizza). Asfor the ladies, train them to sellbooks. The bookstore could welluse their services.ISL presentstheo bikel• sundoy, feb. 23• 8 pm, mondel hall• tickets $1.50, $1.25, $1reynolds club desk• mail orders'ISL box 302reynolds club57th and universityuniversity of Chicago^Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekVIVALDISix Sonatas for CelloOp. 14Janigra and Veyroa - LacroixXWN 18623*3.19 "As Bergson lucidly explains, ... in finding a chaos, allthat we have discovered is that we have stumbled uponsome order which is not the particular order we areseeking." — A. J. ToynbeeM «H. MarxMARX BROTHERS FILMSpresented bpThe Documentary Film GroupFebruary 14February 21February 28Admission by Series Ticket-At the CircusGrand Sham Opera — Buster Keaton (short)A Day at the Race*Selected Comic ShortsA Night at the OperaGo Slow on the BrightonAdventure* at Jimmie(Shorts)$1.25 Soc. Sci. 122, 7:15 & 9:15 p.iGETTING BETTER 1 V YTH E HOURBlock and White Prints .24 HoursColor Slides and Prints - .48 HoursEnlargements and PassportsTop Speed - Top Quality .48 HoursUNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave. fwwe er» rryr tr w w rvrvvrvvi: BORDONE i<| Movers and Light Hauling«LU 2-4660 The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236UNIVERSITY HOTELNewly Decorated Rooms — Private Tub and ShowerKitchenettes Available. Daily Maid Service. Reasonable Rates.Two Blocks from 1C. Permanent and Transient Guests.5519 Blackstone DO 3-4109STEVEN'S LUNCH1206 E. 55thSoda Fountain Home-Cooked MealsClosed Sundays and HolidaysHARPER IWines and Liquors 11114-16 E. 55th St.Quality Wines at Lowest PricesGermon Rhine Wines — $1.19 ....3 for $3.251949 French Pommard : 2.191953 Gervey Chambertin 2.981949 Saint - Emillion 1.591949 Chateau Moyne - Bert Sauternes. . . 1.89Chateau Hout Brion 3.981953 Chateau d'Yquen 5.98Drop its and Browse thru ourSelf Service Wine Sectionleed Beer Free deliveryFA 4-1318, 1233, 7699STUDENTS!—FACULTYIONE DAY SERVICENEW REDUCED LAUNDRY RATESMONDAY THRU FRIDAY8 lbs. 50c 10c eachadditional lb.washed, dried, and foldedSHIRTS (with bundle) 20 eafinished, washed and driedRugs, bedspreads, slip covers,drapes ANY sizeIQib with 30 lb. orderChicago9s FirstHYDE PARK SELF SERVICE LAUNDRY912 E. 55th St. MU 4-9519Feb. 14, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • £Coming events on quadranglesFriday 14 FebruaryUC Rifle club. 2:30 pm, Field house.Open to all students.Second annual UC indoor boys’ andJuniors’ clay court tennis champion¬ships. 7 pm. Field house.Wing ding square dance, folk lore so¬ciety, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.University concert, Eudice Shapiro, vio¬lin, 8:30 pm, Mandel hall. Admissioncharge.Lecture, Warner Wick: The God of thephilosophers, 8:30 pm, Hillel house.Sabbath service at 7:45 pm.Have a WORLD of FUN!Travel with fITA. Unbelievable Low CostEurope60 Doy. from $585Orient43-65 Oey* from $998Many fours includecollege credit.Also low-cost trips to Moxico$149 up. South America $699 up,Hawaii Study Tour $498 up andAround the World $1398 up. Saturday 15 FebruarySecond annual UC Indoor boys’ andJuniors’ clay court tennis champion¬ships, 9 pru, Field house.Art exhibitions: Marc Chagall — Paint¬ings and graphic works from Chicagocollectors, Goodspeed 108 9 am-5 pm,Monday through Friday; 1-5 pm, Sat¬urday. Through March 8.Interlanguage teachers rally, 10 am,Soc. Sci. 122.Radio broadcast: The Sacred Note, 10:15pm, WBBM, UC chair.Sunday 16 FebruaryEpiscopal communion service, 8:30 am.Bond chapel. Followed by trip to St.Constantine's Greek Orthodox church.Lutheran communion service, 10 am,Hilton chapel.University religious service, World Stu¬Aik ’if'Ilf JLl*,,r »0»t0 T8AVEI, IIAik Your Trov«l Agent332 S. Michigan, Ave., Chicago 4,'**• HA 7-2557 Captures yourpersonalityas well asyour personphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St.TUXEDO RENTALfor Wash PromReasonable ratesWEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAYReynolds clubAir Conditioning-temperatures made !o order—ior all-weather comfort. Get a demonstration! dent Day of Prayer, 11 am. Rockefellerchapel.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, 11 am,DeSale house.Second annual UC indoor boys’ and Jun¬iors’ clay court tennis championships,9 am. Field house.UC Svmphony orchestra, 2 pm, Mandelhall.Calvert club, lecture: Church and statein Gautemala, 4 30 pm, DeSales house.Carillon recital, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel. James R. Lawson, chapelcarlllonneur.Eastern Orthodox vesper service, 6:45pm, Bond chapel.UC Symphony orchestra, 7 pm, Mandelhall.ISL Caucus, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes, eastlounge.Social dancing, 8-11 pm, Int. House.50 cents for non-residents.Monday 17 FebruaryArt exhibition: Water-colors by RaineyBennett; prints by Roland Glnzel,9 am-4 pm, Monday through Satur¬day, Lexington.Art exhibition: Marc Chagall: paint¬ings and graphic works from Chicagocollections. 9 am-5 pm, Mondaythrough Friday, 1-5 pm Saturday,Goodspeed 108.Art exhibition: Works by Max Kahn,9:30 am-5:30 pm and 7:30-10:30 pm,Monday through Thursday, 9:30 am-4:30 pm Friday. Hillel house.Maroon staff meeting, 3:30 pm, Maroonoffice.Lecture series: The American future.David Riesman, 4 pm, Mandel.Lecture series: Research in cancer. Dr.John H. Bittner, 5 pm, Pathology 117.Motion picture: "On Approval,” 7 and9 pm, Int house. Admission 50c.Quaker student fellowship: 7 pm, SocSci 122.Lecture series: Adult brain cells Invitro, R. Geiger, 7:30 pm. Abbott 133.Tuesday 18 FebruarySeminar, School of Business. Railroadabandonment—the role of the com¬petitive ideal, 3:30 pm, Haskell com¬mon room.Meeting of the council of the UniversitySenate, 3:40 pm, Law south. Lecture, Sir John Maud: Britain*!power problem and the atom. 4 pm,Soc Sci 122.Colloquium: Institute for the study ofmetals, Peter M. Llequellyn: Hyper-fine structure In paramagnetic reso¬nance, 4:15 pm, Research Institutes211.Senior Mathematics club, Prof. FritzJohn: Admissibility of data for gen¬eral partial differential equationswith constant coefficients, 4:30 pm,Eckhart 206.WAA Basketball, 7 pm, Ida Noyes.Mardi Gras party, Calvert club. Canter¬bury club, Lutheran students organi¬zation, 7:30 pm, DeSales house. Coe-tumes optional.UC Concert band rehearsal, 7:30 pm,Mandel hall.Lecture series, William Bradbury: Mi¬norities, 8 pm, Breasted hall. Admis¬sion charge.Folk dancing, 8-11 pm, Int house. 50fee for non-residents. Instructionfrom 7-8.Gates Hall coffee hour, 10-12 pm, Gateshall.Wednesday 19 FebruaryReligious service, FTF, 11:30 am. Bondchapel.Lecture, Prof. Margaret Read: Educa¬tion and social development In thenew nations of West Africa, 3 pm,Judd 126.Carillon Recital, 4:30 pm. Rockefellerchapel, Lawson.Evensong (Episcopal), 5:05 pm. Bondchapel.Lecture: Antimonies. Vere Chappell,s pm, Swift Common room, Zeno'sParadoxes.Glee club rehearsal, 7 pm, Ida Noyes.Thorstein Veblen centennial. Politicsclub. Reuel Denney, Bernard Rosen¬berg and David Riesman 8 pm. IdaNoyes. Admission charge.Lecture, Walter Z. LaquCur: Russia andthe Middle East, 8 pm, Hillel house.Country dancers, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.William Vaughn Moody lecture: NancyHale: The autobiographical elementIn fiction, 8:30 pm. Mandel hall.Politics club, Bernard Rosenberg. ReuelDenney, and David Riesman, speak¬ing "On Thorstein Veblen," 8 pm In/DraareddcveHyde Park's Most CompletePaint and Hardware Store1 154-58 E. 55th St. UC Discount HY 3-3840Impala Sport Coupe with Body by Fisher. Every window of every Chevrolet is Safety Plate Class.A BEAUTIFULLY MOVING THING! *58 CHEVROLETIt brings you a RADICAL NEW V8,* a new Full Coilsuspension, a new Safety-Girder frame —more new things than any carever offered before. Don’t put off driving this one!Chevy was built to put a zest into drivingthat hasn’t been there before. You sensethis the instant you feel the silkenresponse of an engine like the new Turbo-Thrust V8. It’s an extra-cost option thatgives you extra-quick action the second your foot flicks the gas pedal. Chevy’snew Full Coil suspension is standard. Or,for the last word in comfort, you can evenhave a real air ride, optional at extra cost.See your Chevrolet dealer for good-as-goldbuys right now! * Optional at extra cost. Only franchised Chevrolet dealer•display this famous trademark Ida Noyes. Admission TS uents gen¬eral, SO cents student.Lecture, law school. Prof. George UStlgler: The Goals of economic doIIcv’8:30 pm, Breasted hall. y*Lecture series: Prof. John White Ra¬phael: Creative methods and artisticintentions — dramatic narrative andformal drama, 8:30 pm, Soc Sci 122.W9YWQ meeting, 9:15 pm, Reynoldsclub 301.Thursday 20 FebruaryEpiscopal communion service, 11:30 amBond chapel.WAA, basketball. 4:30 pm, Ida Noyes1st floor vs. Green-Beecher.WAA basketball, 7 pm. Ida Noyes, Quadsvs. Esoterics: Mortarboards vs. DeltaSlgma-Wyvern.Communications club, David Apter- In-format'on patterns. In Uganda andGhana, 7 :30 pm, Soc Sci 201.Statistics seminar, Robert Tsutakawa*Statistical comments on an astrologi¬cal Investigation of Jung, 4 pm, Eck¬hart 207.History club. Prof. Avery O. Craven*The Academic man in a democracy7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Economics seminar, Dennis Munbv*Pricing of public utility services inGreat Britain, 7:45 pm. Law southAlpha Phi *mega, open meeting, 8 pm.IdaLecture series. Don Fllcklnger: Man inspace, age of space travel series. 8 pm,Mandel hall. Admission by series tick¬ets only.Scandinavian flub, Prof. FranklenScott: Eplorlng Sweden’s past, 8 pm,Ida Noyes.Television series. All Things Considered,Profs. Alfred E. Emmerson, F. ClarkHowell, Morris Llpton, Donald Melkle-John: Ninety-nine years of evolution,9:30 pm. Channel 11.Green ball coffee hour, 10-12 pm. Greenhall.Friday 21 FebruaryChime concert, 12:15 pm, Mitchelltower. Georgia March.Varsity wrestling meet, UC vs. Elm¬hurst, 4 pm, Bartlett gym.Senior mathematics club,Edwin Hewitt:Some new results on uniform ap¬proximation by polynomials, 4:30 pm,Eckhart 206.Varsity track meet, UC vs. Bradley U ,7:30 pm. Field house.Lecture series: Works of the Mind, Pi of.Amerlco Castro : Cervantes’ DonQuixote. 8 pm, 32 W. Randolph St.Admission charge.UC Concert band concert, 8:15 pm.Mandel hall.QottliebBEAUTY SALON1350 E. 53rdComplete BeautyServiceExpertPermanent WavingHair Cutting& TintingModerate PricesHY 3-8302 HY 3-8303See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer for quick appraisal—prompt delivery!CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 14, 1958 QreatSovietViolinistLEONIDKOGAN"With the elect"— NY TimesLongest ovation inBoston historyTONIGHT8:30ORCHESTRAHALLTickets at box office1.75-2.50-3.30-4.40Auspices:Allied ArtsCorporationContests offer prizes fortreative poetry and proseFour creative writing contests awarding cash prizes which range from $25 to $100 areopen to UC students this year. Winners of the Academy of American Poets prize, the Flor¬ence James Adams Poetry Reading contest, the John Billings Fiske prizes in poetry, andthe David Blair McLaughlin prize for the writing of prose will be announced in the June con¬vocation program.The Academy of American Poets prize of $100 is awarded annually by the University tothe undergraduate studentwho submits the best poem orgroup of poems during theyear.All manuscripts must be type¬written and in the English office,Wieboldt 205, by March 17. No re¬striction as to length or style isimposed, but no manuscript maybe submitted which has been pre¬viously published. Entries shouldbe unsigned but accompanied bya sealed envelope containing thename of the writer.First, second, and third prizesof $75, $50, $25, respectively, willbe awarded In the annual Flor¬ence James Adams Poetry read¬ing contest. Preliminary compe¬tition will be held in Bond chapelOffer *500 prizefor best essayA $500 prize for the best at 3 pm, April 18. The finalswill be held at the same time andplace on April 25.Any student in the Universityfrom the ages of 17 to 26 inclu¬sive, and who has completed atleast two quarters of residence,is eligible to compete.Selections read must be non-dramatic poetry and have the ap¬proval of the department of Eng¬lish. Contestants must register inthe English office by April 14.John Billings Fiske PoetryThree facultymembers appearon radio showThree UC faculty membersopened the new “Viewpoint”radio series Sunday, on. y t/—% . . , WMAQ, with a discussion of theessay by a UC student on the effects of independence on newtopic of “The effect Of the St. nations and how independence prizes of $100, $50, and $25 areawarded annually for an originalpoem or group of related poems.All registered UC students areeligible to compete.Contributions should reach theEnglish office not later thanMay 1.A critical essay relating to thehumanities or social sciences maybe submitted by early entrants, orcollege students with less thantwo years of academic work at theUniversity, for competition in the$100 McLaughlin prize for thewriting of prose.Contributions should not ex¬ceed 300 words in length andshould be submitted, in typewrit¬ten form, to the dean of students,room 304 of the Administrationbuilding by May 2.Honors and preceptorial essayswill be considered for this awardif copies are submitted in the pre¬scribed manner. Study in EnglandTomorrow is the deadline to file applications for fel¬lowships offered by the English-speaking union of Chi¬cago. Two grants, each in the amount of $2,000, are beingoffered for graduate study in England for the year1958-59.Applicants must be residents of Illinois. No limitationis set on the field of study. It is expected that those apply¬ing would be interested in promoting relations and under¬standing between citizens of Great Britain and the US,and would act in some part as good-will ambassadorsfor this country.Applicants will be considered by the University’s com¬mittee on fellowships and then recommended to theEnglish-speaking union for the competion. Blanks maybe obtained in room 304 of the administration building.Offer fellowships topublic service BArsStudents interested in public affairs and public servicecareers who will receive a B.A. in June have been offered anopportunity to apply for fellowships to study at three differ¬ent southern universities. Each fellowship grant includes$1500 a year plus college feesand is approximately $1,950 in bama.total value. Beginning this June, recipientsThe deadline for submitting ap- will serve with a public agency,plications is March 10. For eligi- such as TVA or a department inbility requirements and other in- a city or state government. In theformation, students should write 1958-59 school year, they will taketo the educational director, South- graduate courses at one of theern Regional Training Program three institutions, the Universitiesin Public Administrative, Univer- of Alabama, Kentucky, or Ten¬sity of Alabama, University, Ala- nessee.Lawrence seaway on Mid-westimports” is being offered by theImporters’ association of Chicago.Any student working for anAB or BS degree at the Univer¬sity is eligible to submit an essay.The essay should contain ap¬proximately four to five thou¬sand words, supported by statis¬tical data. Paper's are due no laterthan 5 pm April 18 at the SocialScience staff office in Cobb 303.A committee of the social sci¬ence staff will judge the essayson the basis of research, treat¬ment of the topic, and maturityof presentation of the material.The winner will be notified, andthe prize will be awarded at theconclusion of the spring quarter. affects their attitude toward theUnited States.Participants in “Viewpoint fromAbroad,” broadcast at 12:05 p.m.,were David Apter, assistant pro¬fessor of political science; DonaldLach, associate professor of his¬tory, and Norton Ginsburg, asso¬ciate professor of geography. Allhave traveled recently in Africa,East Asia, and Southeast Asia.5 pizzas forprice of 4NIGKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-90631227 E. 55th St. HY 3-7911DELIA'S BEAUTY SALONAll Branches of Beauty Service — Moderately PricedRazor and Scissors Hair Cutting — A SpecialtySkilled BeauticiansTOWARD MATURITY IN RELIGIONOrientation Series onUnitarianism-Thursday EveningsFeb. 20—4s Unitarianism a Religion?Feb. 27—Man's Inner Conflicts and TensionsMar. 6—Can Evil Be Redeemed?Mar. 13—Unitarianism and MysticismMar. 20—Why a Church?Coffee at 7-.30 p.m. Discussion ot 8 p.m.rSponsored hy The Channing-Hiurray Club andFirst Unitarian ChurchLeslie T. Pennington, MinisterBE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGWINTER SPECIALTUNE UP $6S0»• Anti-Freeze• Snow Tires• Road ServiceHeavy Dufy Battery $1595SPECIAL ! !Harper Super ServiceDeafer in Sinclair Products5556 HARPER PL 2-9654 Ever meet a trusting soul?“You can’t go wrong looking for a job these days,” heassures you. “Opportunities are great all over. All the goodcompanies have about the same to offer.”Do they? A lot of not-so-trusting souls think otherwise.They suspect that some companies have much more to offerthan others, and they want to find out which those are.We’ll help. We want to tell you how much the Bell Tele¬phone Companies offer in the way of advancement oppor¬tunities, training, pay and benefits, professional associatesand working conditions. No matter what your educationalbackground—the arts, the sciences, business or engineering—make a date to talk with a Bell interviewer when he visitsyour campus. You can also get information about the careersthese companies offer by reading the Bell Telephone bookleton file in your Placement Office, or by writing for “Challengeand Opportunity” to:College Employment SupervisorAmerican Telephone ond Telegraph Companyy 195 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y.BELL. TELEPHONE COMPANIESFeb. 14, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Teachers holdLanguage WeekInterlanguage Teachers’Committee of Greater Chi¬cago will observe NationalForeign Language week (Febru¬ary 16-22) tomorrow, with a rallyin room 122, Social Sciences build¬ing.Mme. Marie-Antoinette Martin,head of the French staff of theUniversity’s Laboratory school,president of the American Asso¬ciation of Teachers of French,and chairman of its Chicago chap¬ter, is in charge of the program.Napier Wilt, UC dean of hu¬manities, will welcome the group.Elfriede M. Ackermann, Chicagohigh school principal emeritus,will speak on “The Function ofthe ITCGC”; and John U. Nef,chairman of the Committee onSocial Thought, will address thegroup on “The United States andthe world community.”A 12:30 luncheon at the Quad¬rangle club at which the speakerwill be Robert Burwell. professorand chairman of the departmentof chemistry, Northwestern uni¬versity, will be followed by a tourof the campus. Germany offers fellowship CLASSIFIEDSFederal Republic of Germany has made available a one-yearfellowship for study in Germany, to be awarded by UC.The academic year will extend from November 1, 1958, toJuly 31,1959. :Proficiency in the German gram are eligible for considera-language is required. There is tl0"’ , „ .. .... . . ,, , The fellowship will carry ano restriction on the field of stipend of ^ caiman marksstudy. Graduate students are pre- (approximately $88) a monthferred, but students in the last plus round-trip passage from avear of the bachelor’s degree pro- eastern coast port to the uni¬versity in Germany.Further details and applica¬tions may be obtained in room304, administration building.Deadline for applicants is Feb¬ruary 25.The women of Green hallwill hold their “My Funny f-allr t\nValentine” open house Sunday 1 a 1 WBIfrom 2 to 5 pm in their lounge,day theme, the girls will serveFollowing the St. Valentine’s“pink passion punch’’ and valen- ministrative assistant to thetine cookies. dean of Harvard graduateAs Green may not be a girls’ school of business administration,dormitory next year, the girls will talk next Friday with thirdwill present a skit and a movie and fourth year students consid- University rate 30c per line. Others 60c per line.Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265PersonalGreen to holdValentine partybusiness careerWesley W. Marple, Jr., ad- To Phi Psi: Congratulations on your 3-0win over Nicky’s.To Phi Psi: Nicky’s challenges you to agame Monday, 8:30.Anyone interested In Joining the motor¬cade to the Knox game In Galesburgon Friday. Feb. 21. contact Max Liberiesor Joe Whittington at the Phi Slghouse. 5625 S. Woodlawn, PL 2-9477.Steve: Hear you will be going to Duda-ville university acme night soon. BigBrother.Larry: You must go to Dudaville andlearn all about Duda. Jon.Max (Elois) Hear that Phi Slgs are goingto Galesburg to see Chicago beat Knox.Rickety - rackety - Shanty town, who’sgoing to keep those Ma-roona down?Nobody! Nobody! Nobody! Max.What’s the cry, gang? Beat Knoxl Joe.Let's fight. Rah! Rah! Let’s win, Rah!Rah! Let's cheat! Shakespeare.Wanted: One enlarger. G. Stoll.UC orchestra needs harpist with harp.Contact Don at PL 2-8838. 21-j. 114, 1 room furnished apts. Reason¬able. For students. 6107 Dorchester.FA 4-5538.Room. Nice apt. BU 8-5128.Room, male, quiet, newly decorated.MU 4-8493.WantedAm looking for co-driver to Boston onor about March 8. Foreign lecturertraveling In own car Is willing to pay(not much) pilot knowing his way onturnptkes and all that. Box 23, Soc. Set.bldg.LOOP BOOKSTORESalesman, weekends and after classes to11 pm, 20 hrs. weekly. Permanent, goodsalary. Call between 2 and 6 pm, DS2-7185.Student desiring free room and boardin exchange for babysitting. MI 3-4283.For saledepicting the history of the uni¬versity and Green hall.Music for dancing or listening ering graduate work in businessadministration.He will speak in the administra-will be played during the open tion building, p-o o m 202, fromhouse. 10:30-11:30 am and 1:30-2:30 pm. 1948 4-door Dodge, $70. Call GR 5-8770during the day. After 6 p.m , UN 4-9268.Ultra-deluxe two flat, completely re¬modeled. Nr. 52nd and Blackstone. Bidsdrive. 2-car gar. $25,000 Mrs. Redfera.C W Hoff & CO.. Inc HI 3-2215.E-V Empire speaker enclosure, price.MI 2-8694, before 5 pm weekdays.3-bed room apt., across from campus to xh rm*** ashare with professional woman or ma- Three 6 rms., converted apts^two 4ture grad, student. Ext. 3591. between ^ pe/y^pA^u J in low 30’s. Terms. Mr. Walker.C. W. Hoff & Co., Inc. HY 3-J215For rentFIND OUT what It's like to be with IBMcampus interviews for IBS8 graduates with.A., B.S., M.A., M.S., Ph.D. DEGREESFEBRUARY 21If your Interest Is In: and degree or major Is:Sales,.:.:.:.: Liberal Arts • Business • Accounting •Engineering • MathematicsEngineering Research and Development Physics • Mechanical • Electrical Engineering •Engineering Physics • MathematicsManufacturing..: Industrial • Electrical • Mechanical •Physics • MathematicsApplied Science Physics • Mathematics • EngineeringContact yourcollege placement office for an appointment todaySOME FACTS ABOUT IBMThe growth of the company has been spectacularsince its inception in 1914. This has been espe¬cially true in recent years, as business, industry,science and government have turned increasinglyto automation through electronic computers.Such growth naturally provides many oppor¬tunities for advancement to well-qualified collegegraduates. IBM company policies and practiceslay a firm groundwork for rewarding, enjoyableand secure careers.At IBM, for example, individual merit isquickly recognized by increased responsibilityand remuneration. Through “small-team” proj¬ ect systems . . . cordial employee-managementrelations ... excellent financial rewards ... out¬standing company-paid benefits ... the potentialexists for well-established careers. IBM-sponsorededucational and training programs are among themost advanced in the American businessworld today.IBM laboratories and manufacturing facilitiesare located in Endieott, Kingston, Owego, Pough¬keepsie, Yorktown, N. Y.; San Jose, Calif.;Lexington, Ky.; and Rochester, Minn. Sales andservice offices in 198 principal cities throughoutthe United States.If you cannot attend interviews,write or call the manager of thenearest IBM office:IBM Corp.2432 W. 63 rd StreetChicago 29, Ml. IBM INTERNATIONALBUSINESS MACHINESCORPORATION DATA PROCESSINGELECTRIC TYPEWRITERSMILITARY PRODUCTSSPECIAL ENGINEERING PRODUCTSSUPPLIESTIME EQUIPMENT ServicesWill do typing at homr. Near campus.Marilyn Mayers, HY 3-9634.ProfessionalFA 4-3189. typing and editing. CallOffset reproduction, mimeographing,photo copying, executive IBM typing.Save by typing up your own stencil oroffset matter. Free pick-up and delivery.Mayda. HY 3-4541.Kxpert income tax service. 1348 K. 55th.What’S almost mid-term time in theYOUT great new contest.e H Have you made aOCOre ■ count yet?In Your Organization's Driveto Collect Cigarette BoxesGrond prize, remember, is $200Capitol Hi-Fi console record playerand $100 worth of Capitol records.Save only boxes ofMarlboro • Philip Morrisand sew Hi-Fi ParliamentThe tony to IearnHEBREW is to livein un all HebrewenvironmentCAMP SHARONof theCollege of Jewish Studiesoffers it, June 29 - August22, at Clear Lake, Buchan¬an, Michigan.Regular classes in Hebrew, Bible,Hebrew and Rabbinic Literature,plus camping and College credits.inquire atCollege ofJewish Studies72 East 11th StreetHA 7-5578C II 0 II VI \ VMFMDMAL THEATHEFebruary 14 thru March 2THE GREAT KATHERINETHE MAN OF DESTINYA farcial“double-header byGeorge Bernard ShawFri. Sat. Sun. 8:30Tue. Thurs. 7:30Matinee Thurs. 3:00Tickets may be ordered at Hie StudentService Center at $0.85 each or byphone at CE 6-2337.THK ART INSTiTI TE OF fHH'AtiOMonroe Sirrel mil I ulumhin Drijve • Chica*o 3. IHj8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 14, 1958Student Forum wins Ten educators from Indiaover 97 contestants will study UC proceduresStudent forum staged a victory over 97 contestant teams M min the Owen Coon debating tournament held at Northwestern Ten prominent educators from India began an intensive study of examination methodsuniversity last weekend. The defeat was an upset to the West procedures at UC yesterday under the direction of Benjamin S. Bloom, professor of edu-Point cadets, who were ranked second in the nation last year.Hersha Sue Fisher, Eliza- —beth Truninger, Mike Ban, wiu compete at the University ofand William Hawkins comprised „ _. , Co-directors Bob Cornwell andthe winnirfg team. cation and chief examiner for the University.Training these educators in examining is part of a ten-year program of educational re¬form proposed by Bloom, which the Indian Ministry of Education is carrying out in coopera¬tion with state and local educational agencies.“India is using its examin-Mort Brody Miticipate a high posi- mg system as a major tool in , The present external examin- clarified through the examiningEight other Student forum rep- tion for the UC team at the West developing its educational sys- ing sy®tfnJ in Indrav ^ bee" a process and gradually will be in-resentatives participated in a for- Point national competition this tern to am its needs as a mod--ncir tournament at Purdue uni year- This hopes are based on the em, independent nation. We will ™tlo.n 0 t]ie °f hf said,1 The examining processensic tournament at ruraue uni- . th*/dphntors thus far heln these educators develon edu- P°orly understood subject matter, also will serve as a way of help-versity, also last weekend. Bar- ^ugh the varshy is composed rational go^ls which will serve according to Bloom. ing teachers develop learning exbara Rosenbloom, Steve Horan, entirely of first and second year India as it goes through economicMike Ediden, Ben Manaster, Leon students. and social change,” Bloom said. . . . ^sion of secondary education willbe carried out by stages to broad¬en the goals of Indian education.The new educational goals willinclude not only knowledge ofsubject matter, but also the appli- tend special seminars and visitcation of principles and ideas to classrooms in secondary schools,new problems, skill in using and An important part of their studyThe first Henry Simons lecture, established at the Univer- relating ideas and other abilities will be an apprenticeship each. , . .in problem solving. will serve with a member of thesity of Chicago to honor the late professor m the department These educational goals will be University’s examining staff.of economics of the University’s law school, will be givencounter last Thursday. Next Wednesday. . ~ "weekend the forum varsity team George J. Stigler, recently appointed CharlesGlacier, Jim Milgram, Ted Coop¬er, and Jerry Zaug defeated sev¬eral midwest teams on the topic,“Right to work laws vs. unionshop.”The previous week, Student for¬um participated in a tournamentat Eastern Illinois university atCharlottsville, and met the Uni¬versity of Illinois in a Westernconference debate. Purdue debat¬ers were on campus for an en- Stigler to give Walgreenlecture on economic goals He said that the ten-year pro- periences for students aroundgram of the Ministry for the revi- these new educational goals.The Indian educators willspend the first five months of theprogram at the University incourses given by the departmentof education. They also will at-Appoint new facultyassistant professorsUC announced recently the appointments of Dr. Nancy E.Warner as assistant professor of pathology, and DorothyStock as assistant professor of psychology in the departmentof psychiatry.Both new faculty membersare University ofgraduates. Dr. Warner took her_ and the American medical asso-Ourago clation.Miss Stock took her PhB (1942),SB and MD degrees from the uni- MA (1948) and PhD (1952) de-versity in 1944 and 1949 respec- grees from UC. A specialist intively, and was an intern in its group dynamics and group thera-Billings hospital from 1949-50 and py, she was a research assistanta resident in pathology in 1950-53. with the Naval Research labora-She was a resident at Cedars of tory (1951-52), research associateLebanon hospital, Los Angeles with the department of educationfrom 1953-54 and from 1954 until (1952-55) and since 1955 was aher Chicago appointment was as- project director at Chicago’s vet-sistant laboratory pathologist erans administration researchthere. She is a member of the hospital. She is a member of theAmerican Board of Pathology, the American psychological associa-College of American Pathologists tion. R. Wal¬green professor of Americaninstitutions and director of theWalgreen foundation at the UCbusiness school, will give the lec¬ture at 8:30 pm in Breasted hall.His subject will be, “The goalsof economic policy.”Simons, who died in 1946, wasa leading spokesman for the clas¬sical school of economics, knownas a staunch advocate of free en¬terprise. Among his publicationsare: “A Positive Program forLaissez Faire,” “Some Proposalsfor a Liberal Economic Policy,”“Personal Income Taxation,” and“Economic Policy for a Free So¬ciety.”Stigler, who will give the lec¬ture, has been professor of eco¬nomics at Columbia universitysince 1947 and is currently onleave of absence at the Ford foun¬dation’s center for advanced studyof the behavioral sciences, at Stan¬ford, California. He will join thebusiness faculty this July 1.The lecture is open to the pub¬lic without charge.feed the whole man . • •There's nothing like a good meal to moke you feel great. Wehave the ingredients — steak or hamburger, mushrooms, crispsalad greens, desserts that are guaranteed to make you glow.But we have more. We have a place for you to meet old friendsand make new ones. We will eagerly listen to your ideas on whato store should really be. We know you're more thon o body tostuff with food. Do you know us?CO-OP SUPER MARTiff ore Than a Store5535 S. Harper Plenty of Free Parking TERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best”SPECIAL OFFERWith This Coupon — Mon., Two*., Wed, Thwrs. Only25c Discount on any Pizzaeaten here ... or deliveredSmall 1.00 Large 1.95Medium 1.45 Giant 2.95Free Delivery for U. ef C. Student, -1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045irope.You jThat’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 orAmerican ExpressTravel Service,member: Institute ofInternational Education and Councilon Student Travel. . or simply mail the handy coupon.American Express Travel Service65 Broadway, New York 6, N. Y. «/o Trawl SaUt DMtUmYes! Please do send me complete information c*13about 1958 Student Tours of Europe!NameAddress^.City Zone State.PROTECT YOUR TRAVEL FUNDS WITH AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES - SPENDABLE EVERYWHEREFeb. 14, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9ISL sponsors BikelTheodore Bikel, noted actor andfolk singer will present a folkconcert, Sunday, February 23, at8 pm in Mandel hall. The concertwill be sponsored by The Inde¬pendent Student league.Tickets are available at theReynolds club desk, Ida Noyesdesk, and at the door. Admissionis $1.50, reserved; $1.25, general;and $1.00; students. Mail ordersmay be obtained from ISL, Box302, Reynolds club, Chicago 37,Illinois.Bikel's repertoire includes folksongs of 15 countries in as manylanguages. He accompanies him¬self on the guitar.As an actor, Bikel has appearedin England in A Streetcar NamedDesire. He has also played op¬posite Julie Harris in The Larkas de Beaudricourt. The latter wasa recent hit on Broadway. Amongthe movies he has made areAfrican Queen, A Day To Re¬member. and The Little Kidnap¬pers.Bikel was originally from Vien¬na but went to Israel to work ona kibbutz. In 1943, he left andbegan his acting career. He at- urday. _tended the Royal Academy of Art The exhibit consists of 14in London. paintings in oil and casein, whichJust recently he has appeared include several done in Italy, Mex-in successful concerts at the Lyric ico, and Florida and ranging inopera house and the Gate of style from near-representationalHorn. This is the first time he has to semi-abstract. Subject matterappeared on campus. includes a self-portrait, still life,Theo Bikel Milton Mayerto speak onAmerican spiritMilton Mayer, author andlecturer, will speak on “Thedeliquescence of the Americanspirit,” Monday, at 7 p.m. in SocialSciences 122.Mayer, former assistant profes¬sor at UC, has written “TheyThought They Were Free,” a bookbased on his year in Germanywhere he was professor of socialresearch at Frankfort university.His articles have been publishedin Harpers, Saturday EveningPost, Life, Christian Century,Catholic Digest, and Common¬weal. He is contributing editor ofNegro Digest, Fellowship, andThe Progressive.Mayer’s lecture is sponsored bymany campus organizations, in¬cluding SRP.Exhibition at HardingPaintings by Richard Harancik and Richard Conte will beexhibited this month at the George F. Harding museum, 4853S. Lake Park avenue. The museum is open to the public, ad¬mission free, from 1 to 5 pm daily except Monday and Sat- Will reach moonwithin ten yearsby Uldis Roze“Man may reach the moon within ten years if he concen¬trates the full extent of his energy on achieving this goal,”asserted Fred L. Whipple in a lecture at Mandel recently.Whipple is director of the Smithsonian Astrophysical observa¬tory and professor of astron- "jmy at Harvard university, nate research and developmentsHe has been frequently honored in this field. The commissionfor his research on meteors, com- would be patterned after theets, and other astronomical phe- Atomic Energy commission, andnomena. would operate in close conjunc-Speaking on “Space Satellites,” tion with the defense department.Whipple outlined a theoretical It would have a substantial budgettime table for man’s conquest of and operate under independentspace. authority. It would draw on the1959-Impact on moon with solid military and on industry for ma-ob-ect terials. Research would be done1960 Satellite in orbit around in universities.moon. *T sincerely feel that this proj-1960 Impact on moon with object ect is vital to the future and therelaying signals.Man in satellite orbitaround earth and returned.Man in orbit around moon.1965—Manned satellite station.1968 -Manned expedition to19621963 security of the United States,”said Whipple. “If we fail to takethese steps, we may fall so farbehind the Soviets that it wouldbe impossible to catch up again.”Getting down to specifics, Whip-moon’s surface and return, pie described the problems of set-landscapes, and interiors.Barancik studied at the Beaux-Arts, and at the Universities ofChicago, Nebraska, Illinois, andCambridge. Conte studied at theUniversity of Illinois and in Flo¬rence. Italy. 1971—Manned expedition to moonand set up base.This would be an ideal progressof events, he continued, and couldonly be realized by a drastic re¬ ting up a space station. “To dothis we must get the material up,provide an environment for man,and bring him back to earthagain.”“The space station that I shallResearch commission coordi-WHAT IS A BOX FOR STORINGF1VE-DOUAR BIUS?RICHARD BARTOLOMEI.HOrsTRA Fin Tin what is a seasonal musician?25TH-CENTURY SPACESHIPS? They mayhave wall-to-wall gravity, wide-screen radarand pine-scented oxygen. But one thing’ssure—they’ll be loaded with Luckies! Afterall, what on earth (or off) tastes better thana Lucky? So when man makes his splashin the Big Dipper, Luckies will be a StellarSeller! (It’s universal knowledge that youcan’t beat fine, light, good-tasting tobaccothat’s toasted to taste even better.) Butdon’t put off till the 25th century whatyou can do today. Try Luckies right now!STUDENTS! MAKE $25Do you like to shirk work?Here’s some easy money—startStickling! We’ll pay $25 forevery Stickler we print—andfor hundreds more that neverget used. Sticklers are simpleriddles with two-word rhyminganswers. Both words must havethe same number of syllables.(Don’t do drawings.) Send yourSticklers with your name, ad¬dress, college and class toHappy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A,Mount Vernon, N. Y. organization of our present satel- talk about here will ■ h 500lite program He proposed the ere- tons. It will ^ carried * in aation of a Rocket and Satellite scries of three-stage rockets, eachcarrying a payload of three tons.The station will be assembled inspace. It will be 200 feet in diam¬eter and will have a velocity of18,000 mph.”To solve the problem of weight¬lessness, the station will rotate,thus simulating gravity. Withoutthis it would be difficult to eat,drink, or even breathe.Bringing man back to earth willbe accomplished by a glider de¬vice. The problem here is the tre¬mendous heat created on wingsurfaces by friction.“The benefits provided by thisspace station will be as great asany in the history of modernscience,” Whipple stated enthusi¬astically. “It will change weatherforecasting from an art to anexact science. We will be able toforecast wind conditions, tem¬peratures, and humidity severaltimes a day. We may even intro¬duce weather control on a largescale.”The advantages to astronomywill be even greater, he said. Manwill be able to observe the uni¬verse, unhampered by a layer ofatmosphere. He will be able tolearn more about the moon andhow it evolved, thus casting morelight on the evolution of the earthitself. He will better understandhow supernovae occur, and whathappens when galaxies collide. Hewill probably resolve the questionof life on Mars and Venus.benton bassett. Summer Drummer\, PRINCETONWHAT IS A CROOKEO GAMBLING BOAT?BETTE BROWN.yU OF CINCINNATI Cyp ShipWHAT IS A MAN WHO FIXESTRAFFIC SIGNALS?R04ER COURTNET.SACRAMENTO STATC Blinker TinkerWHAT IS A FAIR-WEATHER FRIEND?Nt/ /MICHAEL BURKE. JR.. Phony CronyPENN STATE WHAT IS AN ARGUMENTBETWEEN DONKEYS?PAUL HARRINCTOnJPROVIDENCE COLC Bray FrayLIGHT UP A<©R T SMOKE -LIGHT UP A LUCKY!Product of J&tWtacan (J<j^a.ceo-£crrryiany — Jtdaexo u our middle name UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies’ haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor10 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 14, 1958 A session ofMODERN JAZZSunday, Feb. 23—3:30 p.m.CLUB CHINACO1101 S. Loomis St.Gene Esposito—Piano & TrumpetLeroy Jackson—BatsDom Jaconetty—DrumsJoe Daley—Tenor SaxFeaturingLee Loving—VocalistNeville Black—Dancerand guest artistsAdmission — 90cthe PHOENIX and the MUSEThere’s relatively more in acultural way going on on campusthan there was at last look. Olparticular interest are the threefree art exhibitions, of particularinterest partly because they arefree, which not all art exhibitionsare. But however that may be, itundoubtedly is, and that withoutthe reflections of this editor. Inthis column. Which follows ...Events on campus . . .University ConcertTonight’s University Concertfeatures Eunice Shapiro, violinist, and Ralph Berkowitz, pianist. Theprogram will include Schubert’sDuo for violin and piano, opus162, Stravinsky’s Duo Concertantfor violin and piano, and Beetho¬ven’s Sonata for violin and piano,opus 96.Doc filmStarting tonight the documenta¬ry film group is showing anotherpackage series, featuring Marxbrothers’ movies and shorts. Ad¬mission to the three weekly show¬ings is $1.25, by series ticket only.Tonight’s program includes "At the Circus” and “Grand SlamOpera,” a Buster Keaton short.Next Friday night the series willfeature "A Day at the Races” andselected comic shorts. And onFebruary 28 the program willconsist of “A Night at the Opera”and two shorts, “Go Slow on theBrighton” and “Adventures ofJimmie.”The films will be shown eachFriday at 7:15 and 9:15 pm inSocial Sciences 122.Art exhibitsTwo art exhibitions on campus are now in progress and a thirdstarts tomorrow.Iit Lexington hall there is a /jsVvffdisplay of water colors by RaineyBennett and prints by RolandGinzel. The exhibition is openfrom 9 am to 4 pm weekdays andlasts through February 25. ay*Lexington gallery showswater colors by BennettLexington gallery will be exhibiting a series of transparent and opaque water colors byRainey Bennett and several prints by Roland Ginsel through February 25.Bennett’s paintings cover a variety of subjects with local settings as well as scenes fromHouston, Texas; New Orleans; Rio de Janeiro; and Lima, Peru. “They are all characterizedby fresh, vibrant colors,” according to Freeman Schoolcraft, director of Lexington studioand gallery, “and are sufficiently exciting in subject matter to attract the layman but suf¬ficiently sophisticated to ex- •cite the sophisticated observ¬er.”“Transparent water colors area very, very difficult medium,”explained Schoolcraft. “You can¬not paint over and over to anygreat extend with destroying thefreshness and prime quality ofthe transparency." pressure to a well-defined relief.The suspension of forms in spacegive the prints a three dimension¬al, floating effect.“I have always thought of print¬making as having quite specificlimitations,” said Schoolcraft,“but I have a feeling that RolandGinsel has broken through many craft will teach classes In paint¬ing for beginners in oil and watercolors. Classes will meet fromtwo to three every Wednesday inLexington. There will be nocharge. Hillel house houses an exhibi¬tion of works by Max Kahn. It isopen 9:30 to 5:30 and 7:30 to 10:30Monday through Thursday, and9:30 to 4:30 Friday, through Feb¬ruary 25.And starting tomorrow, an ex¬hibition of painting and graphicwork by:Marc Chagaffassembled from Chicago collec¬tion with the visit of Chagall tothe campus at the invitation ofthe committee on social thought,will be held in Goodspeed hall,Monday through Friday 9 to 5,Saturdays 1 to 5, throughMarch 8.Moody lectureNext Tuesday, February 18,Nancy Hale, American novelistand story writer will lecture on“The Autobiographical element infiction.” The lecture will be at8:30 pm in Mandel hall.. . . and offChicago SymphonyNext Thursday and Friday Fritz Reiner will conduct the Chi¬cago Symphony in Mozart’s“Linz” Symphony, no 36 in Cmajor, and Mahler’s Song of theEarth, an extended cycle of sixsongs based on translations fromthe Chinese. Soloists will beChrista Ludwig, contralto, ayoung member of the ViennaState opera, and Richard Lewis,tenor, a member of the GJynde*bourne and Covent Garden operacompanies.Goodman TheatreOpening tonight and runningthrough March 2 at Goodman the¬atre are Shaw’s “The Great Kath¬erine” and “The Man of Destiny.”Richard Dyer-BennetOn Tuesday, February 25, at 8pm, Richard Dyer-Bennet willgive a recital of poems set tomusic, at 820 N. Michigan. Forfree tickets, send a self-addressedstamped envelope to Visiting Poetseries, 820 N. Michigan.Prints on exhibition by Roland of them.Ginsel have been forced under Beginning February 19, School-Jimmy 9sSINCE 1940 Dr. N. J. De FrancoDr. N. R. NelsonOPTOMETRISTS1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352give your Valentinea lasting gift...r\ handmade^ jewelry byJ RosemaryT ZwickHI.roe each pieceindividuallydesgined... yetso modestly pricedUNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE§Ht section INTERNATIONALFOLK MUSICCONCERTFeaturingThe Drinking GourdSingersSpecial Guest —Ella JenkinsSat., Feb. 15 — 8:30Eleventh Street TheatreTickets: $1.75 — Reynolds Cluber Student Zionist Ovgonizotion$2.00 at the doorBenefit of Ma-ayanBaruch School, IsraelInternational House MoviesMonday evenings, 7 & 9 p.m. — East LoungeMondey, February 17 — 50c — On Approval lEng.): cSwroKweWflic Twite JaKte/ttatteRICHARD IIIno advance m pricesNow, through February 20 — Continued first run. Attend the eorlyevening showings on week nights for best seating.Flint times:Friday — 6:35, 9:20Saturday and Sunday — 2:00, 4:45, 7:30, 10:15Monday thru Thursday — 6:35, 9:20YeartiEscapade, Come Back, Little ShebaComing:Wild is the WindGame of Love, The Last Bridgev> —msw <v w. .v. —i,. 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MASSACHUSETTSFeb. 14, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Hold tennis tourney Cagers win two, lose onein busy week of basketballToday, tomorrow, and Sunday, UC will play host to theOiggest tournament of the indoor season, the Chicago Invita¬tional Junior and Boys Singles and Doubles Tournament. Thecompetition in this tournament is keener than in the National IndoorTournament. There will be ranking players from Kentucky, Iowa,Illinois, Missouri, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Minnesota, competingfor honors and the outcome of this meet will undoubtedly influencethe national rankings in indoor tennis.The tournament will begin on Friday at 7 p.m. All five courtswill be continuously in use, providing plenty of action. There willbe no admission charge.Fencers fall before Illinoisand MSU in first meetOpening their 1958 competitive season at East Lansing ina double dual meet, Chicago’s fencers were unable to comethrough with a win, losing to Michigan State 18-9 and toIllinois 19-8.Against Michigan State, in 2 and Nordin won 2 for 4 P°ints... .... T- , , j for Chicago, and giving their op-foil competition, Knecht and ponents 5S Team totals- ChicagoWeisz both won bouts to give 9 and Michigan State 18.Chicago 2 points to Michigan In their match with Illinois,State’s 7. In epee Kenyon won Maroon fencers in foil lost 7-21 bout and Crissie 2. which gave "‘th ,Wei?z Tand Be£f winni"SChicago 3 points to Michigan 1 bout each In epee Chicago madeState's 8. In sabre Michelis won tha >*st showing with a -4 wonand 5 lost count. Grassie andRoipelle each won a bout whileKenyon won 2. Nordin and Mc-VOpb • • • Ginnis won bouts in sabre forChicago’s 2 points to Illinois’ 7.Sports’ page readers may have Team totals: Chicago 8, Illinois 19.noted something strange aboutthe one-column picture in last ■week’s issue. The picture was not 1*11 lG flOUTSDick Cousens, varsity wrestlergrappling with Notre Dame’s fof range firing'Bronco Nagurski, Jr., as the cap- 9 9tion indicated, but Dave Dec. var- New weekday hours for opensity swimmer as he emerged from range firing have been announcedBartlett pool after winning the 60 by the rifle club. In addition toyard sprint in the competition the Tuesday night hours fromagainst Knox and Carleton col- 7:30 to 9:30, the range will beleges. available to students Friday after -The wrestling picture was cut noons from 2:30 to 4:30. An in-from the paper and the captions structor will be on the range atwere inadvertently switched—ED. all times. Three tough games in less than a week gave coach Joe Stampf’s varsity cagers plentyof seasoning with two wins against one overtime loss. _ -The squad finally found their “shootin’ ” eye and were able to take the Lawrence Vikingsinto camp to the tune of 66-51 last Tuesday night at the fieldhouse. Chicago had little diffi¬culty in staying in front of their opponent, scorewise, and some of the regulars were re¬lieved of their chores toward the end of the game and replaced by reserves and members ofthe “B” squad. Chicago’s -Pearson was the high point night. In addition to being ham- away an 11-point win over theman with 20. pered by court conditions, Coach Techhawks in an earlier game onThe small court at Illinois Tech Stampf felt that the squad played Chicago’s court. Davey with 16proved to be one factor in the a rather ragged game throughout and Pearson with 14 were highMaroon’s overtime loss to IIT 42- and probably could have made a scorers for Chicago.41, in a real thriller last Friday belter showing since they tucked With but seconds to go, Pear¬son dropped in the winning bas¬ket in a whirlwind finish to beatSt. Olaf 37-36, Monday night atthe field house. The scoring see¬sawed back and forth until thefinal whistle sounded. It lookedfor a time as if Chicago wouldwind up with another tie scoreand play-off session in overtimeto make their won-lost record 9-5for the season.Next Friday, the team willjourney to Galesburg for an eve¬ning game with Knox. A delega¬tion of students, including abouttwenty members of Phi SigmaDelta, will be going to cheer themon.De Franco, UC wrestler,chosen as athlete of weekThe athletic staff has named Joseph M. DeFranco as Ath¬lete of the week for his outstanding work while participatingon the wrestling team this year. DeFranco is a first year stu¬dent from Erie, Pa.The staff says: “Joe De-Franco has portrayed the typeof characteristics every coachlikes to see among his team mem¬bers. While competing in his firstyear of collegiate wrestling, Joehas worked hard in practice, ledhis teammates, and stimulatedthe squad to better wrestling by‘putting out’ when the going gottough.”“Against Beloit, Joe pinned hisopponent in 1:47.0. Against LakeForest, he lost a very close match to a fine wrestler. In the NotreDame meet Joe’s opponent re¬ceived one point for riding timejust enough to defeat him 5-4 onpoints. In Saturday’s meet, atWabash, Crawfordsvifle, I n d .,against a strong opponent, Joedecisioned him, 3-1.“Desire, determination, andhard work have been qualities forwhich Joe can be praised for pos¬session this early in his collegiateexperiences and which make himdeserving of this athlete of theweek award.” ! W * o wWOw ww www— ~ ~» Home Owner's Insurance> Mortgage Insurancel Phone or Writ#! Joseph H. Aaron, '27 jJl35 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-106o!Ellen Coughlin Beauty SalonSI05 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-20G0SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. —— 9 a.m. - 11 p.m. Surprise yourValentinewith FlowersMitzie 9s55th and Kenwood Ml 3-4020Student DiscountfFlower Wire ServieeA new idea in smoking!* menthol fresh* rich tobacco taste* modern filter, too Perfect Spring days are all too few ... but you can always enjoy a Salem Cigarette... and a Salem refreshes your taste just as Spring refreshes you. Yes, the freshesttaste in cigarettes flows through Salem’s pure white filter. Rich tobacco tastewith a new surprise softness. That’s Salem ... You’ll love ’em!Smoke Salem... Smoke Refreshed12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 14, 1958