Blackf riars in Mandelon April 18 and 19 *i v\ cfucaao11 laroonVol. 66, No. 28 University of Chicago, Friday, Apr. 11, 1958 t^H^> 31Explain UC housing file;SC is circulating petitionby Mary FlnkleAbolition of segregated housing from the listings available to students is the object ofa petition to Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton now being circulated by Student. Govern¬ment. The petition bears the endorsement of 19 student organizations.The present situation is that the University maintains a file in the student housing bureauof all neighborhood rental listings sent to the bureau in buildings which are not owned,operated, or supervised by UC. The University places no restrictions against this housing, withthe exception of basement —dwellings, which are consid- which the administration takes re- main suggestions: 1. That the UCered unacceptable because Of sponsibility but only as a conveni- establish a completely non-dis-the imminent danger of such resi- ent referenec for students. criminatory housing file, abolish*dential units. At one time in the University’s inS any such discriminatory filesAnother file lists whatever history, a file conforming to the as may exist; and 2. that this fileavailable dwelling units for mar- requirements of the present peti- be maintained by the administra-"Alpha Centauri,* 1958’s Blackfriar’s production, will be ried students are owned by the tion was maintained; that is, no tion> as their responsibility to thepresented at Mandel hall on April 18 and 19. University, and, in these, no dis- listings were accepted unless they students. A form, appropriate forPIn the rnusieal comSfy^our space explorers, Bob Dalton. ^ " were found t0 »«**”*»** Iandlords dcsir,ng *? reg,ster *Jerry Mast, George McKenna and Jim Olson rocket away fromAmerica to the planet Ubetwhich revolves around the sunAlpha Centauri. There, as ex¬pected, they find a race of peoplein which there is an excess of fourfemales, Kay Donnelly, CarolEbert, Anne James, and CarolKline. Several interplanetary loveaffairs naturally follow.“As far as we know, this is thefirst science fiction musical come¬dy ever produced,” says FredSchmidt, producer of “Alpha Cen-tauri.” year’s Blackfiars began last May,and the book used, by John Muel¬ler, was chosen from among sev¬eral submitted on the same gen¬eral subjectExecutive director of the pro¬duction is Michael Hall, and Wil¬liam Zavis is staging director. Mu¬sic is by Bill Mathieu and DougMaurer.Tickets are now on sale at Rey¬nolds club, Woodworths book- tory by an employed inspector, vacancy with the University toIn general, the University up- But in 1945, because of an employ- fiU out- accompanied the Propo-holds a policy of non-discrimina- ment shortage and other similar sa^* One °f the questions it askedThe writing of the book for this store, and Ida Noyes hall. tion and complies with the recommendation of the Midwest com¬mittee against discrimination inhigher education, that “approvedoff-campus dwellings must con¬form to a non-discriminatory pol¬icy.”The fly in the ointment with re¬gard to the file of privately-owned(non-University) housing is thatit is neither approved nor disap¬proved. The housing is merelylisted, not inspected. The list isnot maintained as a service for obstacles, the system had to bediscontinued.From 1945 till 1951, the file con¬tained all listings, just as it doesnow. But if a person who was aptto be discriminated against soughthousing through the file, he wouldbe directed by an employee in thehousing bureau to the listingsmost likely to be open to him. The was, “Is the vacancy open to allregardless of race, color, orcreed?”SG supported the proposal, call¬ing it to the attention of the ad¬ministration that the file is runby an interracial institution, op¬posed to any form of discrimina¬tion; therefore, it is under obliga¬tion to oppose discriminationUC's 7958 rife of spring,FOTA opens April 22 University was under sharp crit- through positive steps and to pro¬tect those subject to .discrimina¬tion.Dean Netherton’s rejection ofthe proposal led to the petitionnow being distributed. He calledit “impracticable” on severalgrounds. First, the administrativeand “detective work” necessaryin carrying out such a projectwould require several additionalwell-trained employees who couldnot be fit into the University\ icism for this practice and even¬tually suspended it.Protesting the present situation,the community relations commit¬tee of SG approached dean of stu¬dents John P. Netherton with aproposal based on the credo, “Wefeel that it is the responsibility ofthe administration to provideequal and impartial housing forall students, regardless of race,creed, color, or political belief."The proposal embodied two See t ge 910 seats more on Wight%A new return date and a better aircraft have been arrangedby John HerzogMore imminent than most people realize is the University’s rite of spring: the Festival ofthe Arts. Opening a week from Tuesday, the Festival proper will last six days, through April27, with some related activities occurring later.Though the scope of the activities of the Festival is University-wide both in nature and . "“'T ualea ^‘lier a^^5nave ucen arra"?ealocation, the bulk of the happenings of the observance will be in three places: Ida Noyes, t(J jack Nitsch( flight leader> &Mandel Hall, and Hillel House.--Ida Noyes will house the Review is presenting Robert Frost April 23 at 8:00 Hans Tischler, as-Jazz workshop's presentation *n * sprlng reading on May 1 at «*ia‘« Professor ot music at. . a o-13- Roosevelt University, will speak‘Evolution Of jazz: A social ^he main attractions at Hillel on “Music of Israel." Hillel’s ownresponse" at 4:30 on Tuesday, span the breadth of the Festival chamber music group will give aApril 22. On Thursday, April 24 temporally. Continuing through recital there on April 27. And onthe Creative-writing workshop tbe Festival and through May 16 April 20 Homer Goldberg, assist- The plane will return from Amsterdam to New York onSeptember 2; the flight abroad will leave New York on June25 for Amsterdam.A pressurized DC-6 will be used instead of the original DC-4.This will assure a faster, more comfortable flight.Nitsch said that less than ten seats were left and that per¬sons still wishing to make deposits should call at the Studentwill meet there from 12:30 to 5:00. is the current university of Chi- ant professor of English here will Government office, Ida Noyes, before Wednesday betweenAnd Saturday the 26th will see theold girl’s most massive contribu¬tion to the proceedings, the tradi¬tional Beaux Arts MasqueradeBall, this year featuring costumejudging by the cast of My FairLady (replete with Brian Aherne,Anne Rogers, and spouses).Mandel hall will get into theact the first day of the Festivalwith a talk on “Elements of mod- cago faculty art exhibition. On speak on “Poetry of Israel.” 11 and 12:30, campus extension 3274.Ford foundation gives *1,375,000Grant of $1,375,000 by the portance to us. It provides in-Ford foundation to UC for creased opportunity for researchsupport of the expanded pro- and education and also indicatesthat our own confidence in the have been in the social sciences to 75 men and women already iasupplement such standard sub- executive positions.ern architecture” by Richard W. gram of teaching and research school’s program of business edu-Bennet (Harry Weese, designer of of the business school wasthe new men s dorm, previouslyscheduled to speak, will be prevented by illness). Wednesday,April 23 at 8:30 Reuel Denney willspeak on “Writers, readers — andlisteners” there.The 24th will see what looksfrom here like an anything-but-boring program: three com¬posers discussing a controver¬sial technique in musical com an¬nounced Wednesday by Chancel¬lor Lawrence A. Kimpton.Two endowed professorships of$500,000 each are provided in thegrant. Another $250,000 will pro¬vide, at an average of $50,000 ayear over a five-year period, fel¬lowships for PhD students. Theremaining $125,000 is for support cation anti research is shared bythe Ford foundation,” W. AllenWallis, dean of the school of busi¬ness said.“This grant, the largest everreceived by the school of business,moves us appreciably toward therealization of our ambitious ten-year plan for the development ofthe school.”Nearly 30 new appointments jects as finance, management andmarketing.The enlarged faculty also willbe required, Wallis has said, tomeet the clearly foreseeable in¬crease in business school enroll¬ments. Both for teaching and re¬search, he hopes to provide six ad¬ditional endowed professorshipsto the two established by the Fordfoundation, At Chicago, Wallishas planned for an increase by The school of Business, the sec¬ond oldest in the country, is cele¬brating its 60th anniversary thisyear.Announce risein house ratesA five dollar increase per quar-position. Leland Smith, assistant °f faculty research over the next have been made to the school ofprofessor of music here, and Leon¬ard Meyer, associate professor ofmusic, will discuss “Musique Con¬crete and Electronic Music: ANew Art?” with Vladimir Ussa*chevsky, professor of music atColumbia University. And Fridaythe 25th Mandel will house a con¬cert of works by American corn- five years.One of the two endowed profes¬sorships will be held by a directorof research for the school. Theother is a rotating professorshipin teaching or research whichmay be held by either membersof the school or visiting profes¬sors. No individual may hold theposers given by the Musical So- professorship more than twociety.' years in ten.After the Festival, the Chicago “This grant is of enromous im- business since Wallis was namedits dean late in 1956, increasingthe faculty to 46. He has stressedthe importance of the social sci¬ences to enable school of businessto anticipate and relate changes insociety to business problems,rather than recognizing the socialforces only after business itselfhas identified them and made itsadjustments. Many of the school’srecent appointments therefore 1966 to 1,800 students from the ter in board contracts, startingpresent 700 total on the Midway, this summer quarter, was an-in the executive program, and the nounced by Weston L. Krogman,courses offered downtown. business manager of campus op-One element of business edu- erations, yesterday.cation which he plans to expand ^ sa™e ^me Frogman an-. . ,. . nounced a $4 per quarter “adjust-are programs to keep the school s men^« upward in room rent inalumni and business men gener- Snell-Hitchcock and Blake. Thisally abreast of business research, will bring their rates into lineOne of the activities of the school with the other quadrangles'has been its executive program, houses.instituted In 1943, a two-year These increase, have been madecourse, meeting two hours twice necessary by rising food and labora week, for a selected group of costs, Krogman stated.• *Observe Israel's tenthanniversary during weekHillel foundation and the Israeli Student society will present a number of cultural eventscommemorating Israel’s tenth anniversary of independence.“The fact that Israel is approaching its tenth year has quite universal meaning, we be¬lieve,” Yehudi Messinger, staff member of the Israeli consulate and participant in the cam¬pus cultural program, announced earlier this week.“Israel’s existence is a republic is a vindication of the faith of the world, and, in particular^the UN in the Jewish nationwhich had suffered for thou- College of Jewish studies, andsands of years. In culture, in "religion in Israel,” by Rabbimodern science, in world order Maurice Pekarsky, religious lead-and justice, Israel has lived up to er at Hillel.this faith.” On Thursday evening at 8:30The program begins Monday at the consul general of Israel, D. S.8 pm, when four films will be Tesher, will speak at Internation- An Oneg Shabbat on April 25will be dedicated to the anniver¬sary of Israel. Messinger willspeak on “Israel: A laboratoryfor social experiment,” at 8:30 forthe Hillel fireside. Folk dancingand singing, led by the Hillel folkshown in social sciences 122. “The al House. Also on this program, dance group, will follow the fire-book and the idol.” “The wilder- the Oz ensemble, an Israel dance side.ness of Zin,” “Leonard Bernstein,” group, will perform. Homer Goldberg, assistant pro-and “A letter from roni” are to A lecture-recital, entitled “Music fessor of English, will addressbe featured. of Israel,” will be presented on “Poetry of Israel” to a Hillel audi-A series of three Hebrew dis- April 23 by Professor Hans Tisch- ence on April 30. Goldberg’s ma-cussions are next on the agenda, ler of Roosevelt university. The terial is based on a special editionWednesday at 12:30, Jona Rosen- event will begin at 8 pm at Hillel. of a Hebrew poetry magazine,feld, research assistant in the de¬partment of psychology, willspeak on “Sabra in Israel and This isSmith wins Bell fellowshipAmerica.” Scheduled for futuredates are the lecture-discussions,“Modern hebrew literature in Is¬rael,” by Morris Altman of thefree deliveryOMAR’S PIZZA1145 E. 55thHY 3-5150 "PETERSON MOVING George E. Smith, a UCgraduate student working forhis PhD in the physical sci¬ences, has been named as oneof 14 recipients of the Bell Tele¬phone laboratories graduate fel¬lowships for his work in experi¬mental solid state physics.The annual awards each carry agrant of $2,000 _to the recipientand an additional $2,000 to covertuition, fees, and other expensesat the college he has chosen fordoctoral work. The winners, whomust be working in sciences re¬lating to communications, wereselected by a committee of scien¬tists and engineers at Bell labora¬tories.Smith, a resident of Uppermmfrom our University ShopATTRACTIVE SPORTWEAR FORLATE SPRING AND SUMMEROur Navy Blue Flannel Blazers, $40Our Cotton Corduroy Odd Jackets, $30Odd Jackets oj Hand- Woven India Madras inUnusual Plaids or Strifes, $35Tropical Worsted Odd Trousers in Oxfordor Charcoal Grey and Olive, $ 19.50Washable Dacron* -Rayon-and-MohairOdd Trousers m Oxford or Medium Grey,or Brown, $17.50White or Khaki Chino Odd Trousers, $ 10.50Plain or Striped Lisle Polo Shirts, $.4Jacket »ize* 35 to 42. Houser waists 29 to 34*Dv Pont’* fiberWTAMttMM t«1tQ.IMPHens juraishlngjfljate hoe*74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, lit,NEW YORK • CHICAGO • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCO Darby, Pa., received his B.A. inphysics from the University ofPennsylvania in 1955 and his Mas¬ter of Science degree from U. C. in1956.A research assistant at theMoore school of electrical engi¬neering, University of Pennsyl¬vania, in 1954, he became a teach¬ing assistant here in 1955.pr—George E. Smith GRANGER E. WESTBERG, associate professor of religion andhealth with a joint appointment in the federated theological facultyand the division of the biological science. Rev. Westberg teachescourses in the medical school and FTF in which he tries to integratesimilar areas of religioh and medicine. These courses are not in thedepartment of psychiatry. *Rev. Westberg spends about* two-thirds of his working time inteaching and the other third working at other medical schools anddoing work in which he has a professional interest. The Religion-medicine case conference, a weekly meeting of medical and the¬ological personnel in which case studies of interest to both are pre¬sented, is one of his projects.Articles by Rev. Westberg have appeared in several professionaljournals including Clinics of North America, and Post graduatemedicine. He has also published a book, “Nurse, pastor and patient,”(1955) in which he discusses the role of the nurse in meeting thereligious needs of her patients.Fifteen years ago he helped form the fellowship of AmericanProtestant chaplains association, an organization based on a minis-ters-as-healers theme.Granger Westberg got his AB at Augustana college in 1935 andhis BD from its theological seminary in 1939. For the next five yearshe was pastor of a church in Bloomington and a students’ advisorat Illinois state normal. Until 1942 he was at Augustana hospital onthe near north side where he developed an interest in clinical the¬ological education. Even though he is a Lutheran minister, he taughtat McCormick theological seminary, a Presbyterian school. He hasbeen at UC since 1952.Helen Johnson, whom Rev. Westberg met at Augustana college,became Mrs Westberg in 1939 They now have four children, Jane, 17,W’ho is at Augustana college, John, 14, and Joan, 9, at the lab schooland Jill, 3. Rev. Westberg is a member of the Chicago PlannedParenthood clinic.The Westbergs like swimming, boating, and do-it-yourself home¬making. Their Lake Geneva cabin gives them ample opportunity torelax in these pursuits.Rev. Westberg is enthusiastic about matters related to menialhealth in general and to the mental health problems of the physicallyill in particular. He is currently working on a workshop sponsored hythe psychiatry, religion and health sections of the university in whichministers will receive special integrated training in these fields.(Photo and article by Ed Szkirpan)Chancellor's dinner heldOver 300 -women students dined with Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton. and several fac¬ulty members Tuesday night at Ida Noyes hall at the annual Chancellor’s dinner, sponsoredby Interdorm council. *One faculty member and a student hostess sat with several students around each candle¬lit table. Chancellor Kimpton also sat at a table with students. A roast beef dinner wasserved.After dinner, a smallerciowd leconvened in the li- others to be guided by the stu- of general education, he said theySsJthTpri^Sn *dViSer; an<* 3 ,OUr,h !’ear WOuld not be' ,he result ‘h0Irthe college curriculum, and an- of specialized education. All four ping off the more advanced cokswered questions. years would be under the super- lege courses, but that the collegeHe first briefly reviewed the ten- vision of a special college faculty, curriculum would be reorganizedtative plans for the new program, which would include men from 1° fit into two years.This wobld include two years the divisions. He added that the Another change might be toof general education courses; physical sciences might cause allow entering students to placeone year of electives, some en- some exceptions to the plans. out of just one or two quarterstirely up to the student’s choice. Elaborating on the two years of a general course.ALEXANDERS RESTAURANT1137 East 63rd St.Special Sunday Dinner Menu IncludesROAST PRIME RIB of NATIVE BEEF, Au Jus*1.75Including choice of: Soups, salads,potatoes, vegetables, beverages, dessertsSunday Dinner Prices Range 1 from $V5 to $275Open 24 hrs. MU 4-5735MHHHMHHMHMMHMHHMMMHMUMHUiUHBUUIUUUUI Seven days each week2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 11, 1958Religious art less conservativeby Uldis Roxe“Changing traditions in re-ligioMS art” was the title ofthis year’s first Charming-Mtitray lecture, delivered lastTuesday by associate professor©f art Harold Haydon. Haydon is*480 dean of students in the col¬lege and an artist in his ownright.As an illustration of the changethat is taking place, Haydon re¬called a time in the ’40s when hewas Sitting in as art advisor fora church building committee. Thedesign of the stained glass win¬dow was being discussed, andHaydon suggested that a famousartist be engaged. This proposalwas received in the usual mannerfor such proposals, but to provethat the committee did not lackartistic sensibility, one elderlymember observed that “if Michel¬angelo were alive today, therewould be no question of who would do our window." “But he isalive today,” answered Haydon,“and his name is Picasso.” Whenthe ehurch was built, it containedthe standard factory-producedwindow.And yet, today Abraham Ratt-ner, a leading American artist,has been made an honorary mem¬ber of this same window-makersguild, which had so long resistednew artists and new patterns.This change in tradition is mostnoticeable in the field of architec¬ture, Haydon continued. Eight outof ten edifices built by architectstoday are modern in style.The old tradition of the gothicand colonial church still lasts, hesaid. “It had something whichseemed to express religion. It alsohad the approval of the art his¬torians and church leaders, whohad perhaps absorbed it fromtheir days as divinity students.But within the last few yearssomething has happened. Therehas been a search for new formsFord grant for study offarming's role in growthThat the contribution of raw materials and the agriculturalsector to economic growth will be studied by UC with a grantof $125,000 from the Ford foundation, was announced Wednes¬day. The study will be directed by Theodore W. Schultz, chair-of ‘man of the departmenteconomics, and D. Gale John¬son. professor of economics.Until the last decade, Schultzsaid, experts were generally of theopinion that raw materials andagriculture had little to contributeto economic growth, and that in- crease jn productivity of agricul-dustry was the great source of in- |ure jn united States and Can-creasing national wealth. Now theexperts are not so certain aboutthis theory, and are engaged in aworld wide debate about it.“The tremendous growth of theagricultural sector in Mexico, out¬distancing the growth of the econ¬omy as a whole, and the grindingto a halt of the economy of Argen- and new means of expression.”This is especially remarkable inview of the artistic conservative¬ness of the U.S., which is some¬times estimated to be about 40years behind other countries in itsartistic preferences.Haydon suggested that part ofthe reason may be a simple eco¬nomic one: “We build modernchuches for the same reason webuild modern schools: they arecheaper.”Much of the building activity istaking place in the suburbs, wheremodern architecture finds a morecongenial setting. And the ques¬tion of taste may not be as insig¬nificant as is often thought.“But much of the leadership ofarchitects and church heads inthis area is due to the rethinkingof a basic question—why do peo¬ple gather together in places ofworship?”Haydon offered as examples ofthis rethinking Wright’s Unitytemple in Oak Park. The ceilingconsists of a skylight, “to let inthe light of heaven.” When thepeople leave, they walk out thefront way, so as not to turn theirbacks upon the altar. Wright isnow erecting a synagogue in Pitts¬burgh which will consist mainlytina, after a planned change fromagriculture t o industrialization,make the question of agriculturalcontribution to economic growtha matter of real importance,”Schultz said.Likewise, the explosiveada puts this question into focus.”The study supported by theFord foundation grant will inves¬tigate the elements of economicgrowth in both poor and richcountries. The grant also will pro¬vide fellowships to train graduatestudents from foreign countries inthis research. Phi Delta Theta\presentsSilly Strutall campus open houseSaturday, April 1910 pmafter Blackfriar*5737 wood lawn avenue of windows and will be a place oflight, reading and study.Haydon then turned from archi¬tecture to religious painting andsculpture. “Here the older tradi¬tion is stronger and better able toresist the new. It is still phrasedin Renaissance terms. The imagesused have been imitated and re¬imitated until they have ceased tobe an experience. One does noteven have to look at them—theyare nothing and contribute noth¬ing, unless it be a feeling of dead¬ness wherever they are placed.They are “safe” and stimulate nointerest or feeling.”Economy is an important rea¬son for this—there are no artiststo pay.As an example of expressivemodern religious art, Haydon list¬ed Rico LeBrun’s “Crucifixion,”which hung in Rockefeller chapeluntil last year, and is now on per¬manent loan to the University ofSyracuse.In this type of art, the burdenof communication is placed on theviewer. Too often he will make noattempt to communicate, or willturn away from this art becauseit is “controversial” or does notmeet his cliches of beauty, Hay¬don stated. Attempts are being made to in¬troduce such art into more placesof worship. Some years ago aNew York gallery scattered a coblection of abstract art all over thecountry. These works had beendone for little or nothing by theartists. They have met a mixedreception, perhaps because muchof it went into places where itmay have been rejected withoutits religious symbolism, accordingto Haydon.The situation even here ischanging, and artists can affordto ask more pay for their worksand better showplaces, he main¬tained.But painting and sculpture willhave to go far to catch up witharchitecture. “It can do this, withthe aid of architects and enlight¬ened church leaders,” Haydon em¬phasized. “Let it solve the problemof communication, without toomuch compromise—seeming andnot being new. But painting andsculpture will succeed best if theycan challenge people to look fresh¬ly at what is around them andgive it new meanings. Then it willbe modern and have a style thatis suitable, and that suits,” he con¬cluded.CLASS ROOM IVYIvy Jeans and Ivy Chino Pants $2.95All Wool Ivy Flannels $7.95Crew Neck Sweaters $5.95Ivy Shirts $2.95 & $3.95D & C Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-2738“In the Neighborhood for 40 Years’*Hours: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m., Moo. - Fri. — 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.f SaturdayFOR THE WOMAN OFEXECUTIVE ABILITY:A challenging job and world-wldotravel as an officer in theU. S. Air ForceThere are few other jobs open to today’s woman of execu¬tive ability that offer the opportunity for responsibility,job equality, world-wide travel and adventure, as that of anofficer in the U. S. Air Force. Now, for the first time inyears, the Air Force offers direct commissions to those whocan qualify. If you make the grade, you will embark on acareer that fits ideally with your talents. You'll have achance to serve yourself while you serve your country, aswell. Investigate your chances for a direct commission inthe U. S. Air Force today.MAIL THE COUPON NOW FOR FULL INFORMATIONON YOUR OPPORTUNITIES FOR A DIRECT COMMISSION. Iju. s.AIR FORCE WAF Officer Information, Dept. B21,Box 7608, Washington 4, D. C.Please send me more information on my opportunities for a DIRECT COMMISSION in theU. S. Air Force. I am a U. S. citiaen between the ages of 21 through 33, unmarried and withoutdependents under 18 years of age.Name -City Zone State —College Hagraa Mnjnr XuhjartApr. 11, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3SRPer claims he is aliveonly by miracle; we all areI am alive today only by a miracle. We all are. The present US government policy toward nu¬clear testing is a threat to the entire human race. Humanity has often, in the past, put upwith grave dangers to avoid greater evils, but this is not such a time.As students, the intellectual leaders of tomorrow which may not come, we all have animportant role to play. We also have a duty to play it.Geneticist H. J. Muller, a Noble prize winner, warns that the number of lives ‘ seriouslycurtailed or injured through¬out the world in future gener¬ations as a result of tests al¬ready held, is in all probability inthe hundreds of thousands or mil¬lions.”The Atomic Energy commissionattempts to reassure us by speak¬ing of "negligible” effects. Per¬haps they are accurate statistical¬ly, but they should be remindedthat they are dealing not withstatistics, but with human beings.In a world population of nearlythree billion, a million people canform a statistically negligiblequantity; but it is still a millionpeople.The United States already hassufficient bombs to "overkill” Russia several times. Would ournational security be improved ifwe could "overkill” them?We are told that further testswill enable us to develop a "clean”bomb. So what? When in historyhave nations hesitated to use theultimate in destructive weapons interms of war? The people of Hiro¬shima and Nagasaki would findthat a difficult question to an¬swer.A recent pc&m in Punch warns:To call the H-bomb clean,Makes sound and sensedivergentUnless it's meant to meanThe Ultimate Detergent.There is need for a campus or¬ganization to bring speakers andFOR BOYS & GIRLS, MEN & WOMENW ITH “PROBLEM” SKINS!ELI M l NATEPIMPLESWITHIN 30 DAYSOR YOUR MONEY BACK!The oil - NEW.omazing "CAM¬PUS" Facial-Treatment Kit of¬fers IMMEDIATE relief from theembarrassment and discomfort ofunsightly acne, pimples, blem¬ishes and other skin disorders!Whot's more, we'll PROVE thotthe "CAMPUS" Kit will clear upthat "problem" skin ... or showDEFINITE IMPROVEMENT with¬in 30 days ... or YOUR MONEYBACK! Fair enough? The "CAMPUS" Kit consists of6 different effectively-medicatedcomponent parts: Face Soap,Blemish Cream, Facial - Pack,"Coverall" Blemish - Stick, FaceLotion ond Vitamin A, 25,000USP Units. 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A clearer, healthier,smoother, glowing complexion . . . ond withsuch a wonderful, new feeling of perfectgrooming!Over a month's supply, postage-paid direct-to-you for only . . .Fill Out the Order Form Below and Mail To-Day!INTERNATIONAL STANDARD LABORATORIES, INC.700 Prudential Building, Houston 25, Texas.Enclosed is $4.95 (Check, Money-Order, Cash) forCAMPUS KIT.NAME (Print)ADDRESS:CITY : ZONE : STATE..9/te PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433ANDERSON CAMPUS TOURSBerkeley, California Copenhagen, DenmarkUnusual itineraries, university leadership, modest prices!Ages 18 to 26See our itineraries before you decide!Midwest representative: Knowles Cooke304 Washington BoulevardTelephone: Village 8-3691 Oak Park, Illinois I^ *« 58V Round Trip via'Steamship $QAflFREQUENT SAILINGS U“tUThrift Round Trip by AirUPSHANNON LONDON PARIS$399.60 S444.6D $480.60Rates to other destinations on applicationBy using stop-over privileges, your entiretronsportotion in Europe moy be contolnedin your air ticket.Choice of Over 100ISTUDENTCLASSTOURS.Itravelstudytours *595CONDUCTED TOURS u*University Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines, hasrendered efficient travel serviceon a business basis since 1926.See your local travel agent forfolder* and detail* or write u*.UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mats. *V\\ cnicaao11 laroonfurther information to campusand to the community, and workwith other interested organiza¬tions in informing public opinion.Student Representative party(SRP) has set up an internationalaffairs committee for this job.We will work independently,through Student Government, andthrough the National Student as¬sociation.We invite members of both par¬ties and independents to contactco-chairman Bill Weir and BobHarris, and to join us in Ida NoyesSunday afternoon at 4 to work onwhat might well be termed "Oper¬ation Survival.”Jay GoldenbergSRP international affairscommitteeWho stole arrow?Not I says friarDear Dick Robin:Who shot your arrow in the air?I must admit I wasn't there(But if I had, sir,I wouldn’t be sad, sir.)It may be blamed on infancy,But surely not on jealousy!(Alrea4ly our societyhas garnered notoriety.)A blackbird(Editor’s note: The author is re¬ferring to the article in last week’sMaroon accusing the Blackfriar’smusical comedy group of stealingthe University theater’s arrowwhich normally hangs in Mandelhall corridor.) Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school near andintermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago MaroonIda Noyes hall, 1212 East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-oj«w|’extensions 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionsby mail, S3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday. Deadlinefor all material 3 pm, Wednesday.Editor-in-chiefGory MokotoffBlames CORSO forenmity toward deanOnce again SG has enlarged a tempest in a teacup into atyphoon in a samovar. The case in point is the CORSO com¬mittee’s garbled version of the dean’s suggestions for codifiedstudent regulations. '—'Possibly the most ineffec- ";,ie al anlagonis.„ of tll,live of the government s many majority toward the dean, the aircommittees, CORSO has per- cf secrecy, and the cavalier disre-formed a disservice to the stu- gar(j for careful study have led todent body, and has created a po- ^e plethora of rumors and hear-tentially dangerous situation say pervading the campus,which will certainly interfere in The m.timed open hearing —any further government dealings two dayS notice during the firstwith the dean s office. week of the quarter—did little toAt the beginning of the winter clarify the situation. No concretequarter, dean of students John P. suggestions were brought up norNetherton suggested certain was information as to the back-changes in student regulations, ground and necessity for revisedamong them: limitation of off- student regulations provided,campus advertising: scholastic Small wonder that SG hasstanding for office bidders in cer- neither adequate knowledge nor atain student organizations; cha- clear position on the dean’s pio-peron rulings; and liquor regu¬lations. The dean agreed to SG posals.The mishandling of the dean'sincorporating his suggestions into proposals is only one indicationthe revised Student code. SG, in of the ineffectiveness of some ofturn, assigned these suggestions the committees of the govern-to CORSO for study and recom- ment. Too often, vital issues aremendation. At this crucial point,the proposed legislation sat, andsat, and sat, until . . . not understood by inept chairmen,too often minority committeemembers were not notified ofBob Lerner (SRP-Cal), chair- meetings, and too often necessaryman of CORSO, scheduled an information was treated as intel-open hearing with two days notice ligence to be distributed only toduring the first week of the the privileged few. It is .sad corn-spring quarter. During the pre- mentary on the majority paityvious quarter, only one committee that the only effective committeesmeeting had been held. Minority of the government were Electionsmembers of the committee were and rules, and Student faculty re¬told that the written suggestions lations, both headed by memberswere secret and that only the of the minority parties.“gist” of the suggestions could be Rodney DangerfieldSRP and ISL unite!At Student Government meeting Tuesday night there tvasa general aura of agreement produced by common interest inthe proposed student code.A motion introduced by Bob Lerner (SRP), chairman ofCORSO, and revised by a“styles committee” stated:Student Government endorsesthese principles:The University administrationhas no right to make rulings con¬cerning student organizations ex¬cept when a question of legality isat stake.Further, that Student Govern¬ment has no right to interfere inthe affairs of student organiza¬tions except when the student Billof Rights is violated.In an extended debate BobMarch (SRP) said that this mo¬tion is the "irreducible opinion ofSG and that it is time to end equivocation (over the code)now.”The debate began to take a turnwhen Diane Cobb (ISL) pointedout that ISL does "agree on notwanting the administration to runstudent organizations.”At this point the question wascalled, the motion passed by anoverwhelming majority and witha wave of applause the meetingadjourned—for the first time inquite a while, SG was wrapped ina blanket of "togetherness” be¬cause of its disagreement with theAdministration.Judy TuslinetLurry Blandin« i take aBud Break”Budweiser.KING OF BEERSANHEUSER BUSCH. INC. • SI. IOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 11, 1958GADFLY"If I may use such a ludicrous figure of speech, (I)am sort of a gadfly . . . attached to the state, and allday long and in all places am always fastening uponyou, arousing and persuading and reproaching you.”— Plato's APOLOGYClarifies dean-students controversyIn the past few weeks, there has been much misinformed debate aboutthe recent proposals by dean of students John P. Netherton redefining Uni¬versity policies with regard to student activities.Since these policies have a significant impact upon student activities,Gadfly will this week eschew universal judgments for a particular accountof the proposed changes.AT THE present time none of the rulings arefinal. When the dean of students office tentativelywrote up the statement of policy and Student Gov.ernment saw there was so much student objectionto the rules, SG requested that their committee onrecognized student organizations (CORSO) con.sider these problems and try to work out the rulesby themselves. CORSO has been considering theseproblems for two months and some of its membersare currently leading a campaign against them.One of the reasons for all the excitement is thatfew persons have seen the proposed rules and aregetting all information by the grapevine. MaryAlice Newman, director of student activities, statedthat she would be glad to discuss the matter withany interested students. Appointments may bemade at her office in Ida Noyes hall.As to the specific University policies involved:THK ADMINISTRATION desires to have theright of approval over those on-campus eventswhich might jeopardize its tax-exempt status.All events held on campus must be:• within the educational aims of the University;• must be non-profit;• all proceeds must stay in the hands of studentorganizations and cannot go to outside groups.For the last 10 years the corporation counselfor the city of Chicago has been complaining aboutthe use of University facilities, specifically Mandelhall, for what they consider “commercial” pur¬poses. There Is a city and state ordinance whichsays the facilities of an academic institution mustcomply to the above-mentioned three rules.CONSEQUENTLY the administration has de¬cided to curtail the use of Mandel hall. These newrules would not only affect student organizationsbut many outside groups.When the rules go into effect, campus chapterswill no longer be able to sponsor events in Mandelhall and give some of the “profits” to their nationalorganization. According to Mrs. Newman, WorldUniversity service committee will most likely bean exception, as the aims of the national organiza¬tion can be considered within the academic aimsof the University.Off campus groups, even though they are non¬profit, will no longer be allowed to use Mandel hallif they charge admission to their event.ON THE PROBLEM of off-campus advertising,it is the opinion of the University’s legal office thata direct attempt to invite the public to an event oncampus is equivalent to turning it into a com¬mercial enterprise.It has been noted by students that other univer¬sities appear to have equal or greater freedom ofactivities without losing their tax-exempt status.The Maroon contacted Roosevelt university, whichis situated in the Loop, but, unfortunately, accord¬ing to their student government president, his uni¬versity has never had an analagous situation.WITH REGARD TO MEMBERSHIP and officein student organizations.The dean’s office stated in a letter to CORSO that it seems “inappropriate” for non-students toplay an active part in theatrical, literary and musi¬cal organizations. In these cases, the Universitysupplies staff and support in order to provide anopportunity for its students to broaden their skills.Where non-students take part, students are nothaving the experience. Even though a student isless skilled in playing an instrument or a part ina play than a non-student, he is the one who shouldhave the opportunity to learn through doing.”IN ADDITION the dean of students’ office wouldlike to see a requirement that officers of majorstudent organizations (not all student organiza¬tions) must have a “C” average and must havebeen in residence for at least one year.The letter to CORSO stated: “A student who hasnot been able to handle his academic work satis¬factorily will do a disservice to himself and to hisoffice if he undertakes the heavy responsibilitiesof a major position. Further, it seems unwise fora student who has not been a part of the Universityfor at least a year to assume a major post whichrequires considerable backlog of experience in theUniversity. . . Netherton felt that students whoenter in October should be eligible for offices wrhichare elected in the following spring.Some students have objected to this on thegrounds that the individual organizations shoulddetermine their own membership requirements.CONCERNING social regulations, the adminis¬tration has pointed out that most of the rules havebeen in existence for quite some time. They haveasserted that all they wish to do is codify them, sothat student organizations will know exactly whatthey are?One new rule concerning social regulations hasmet with student opposition: the requirement offaculty chaperons. The previous rule was that anyperson over 23 years of age could chaperon a party.What the dean’s office would like to see is theelimination of the age requirement. Mrs. Newmanstated that age is no reasonable criterion.In the place of the old requirement will be a rulethat faculty members as chaperons are stronglypreferred, that student organizations should ap¬proach faculty members. If they are unable to getany, the student activities office plans to have afile of available persons. This file should be readyby the beginning of next ai%imn quarter, accordingto Mrs. Newman. Until the publication of the re¬vised student code, the present regulations will bein effect.THE FINAL POINT concerns the rumor about“censorship of mail.” It has been a long-standingUniversity policy that all letters to off-campuspersons which bind the University, or purport torepresent the University, its faculty or its students,must first be approved by the dean of students’office. Netherton stated, “It would be foolish foranyone to think that we intended to require everypiece of material be turned into the dean ofstudents’ office for approval.”Dean's rules anti-freedomWhen I first heard of the administration’s new and re-enacted rules dealing with studentactivities, I was shocked. I felt the Administration was whittling away the students’ free¬doms. I wrote a letter to the Maroon expressing my disapproval of the Administration’sactions.After writing the letter, the fear of the Administration’s reprisal administered throughrefusal of scholarship and hindrance in acquiring a job on the residence staff, caused me torationalize, to decide that theissues were not important. Thefear of University reprisalcaused me to suppress my feel¬ings, abandon my beliefs, and for¬get the Issues.Only after I realized what thisfear had done, did I realize thegravity of the situation. Maybe itis not important If the studentscan’t have a person of their choiceto speak or perform; maybe itis not Important that student or¬ganizations can’t have an unreg¬istered, unchaperoned party.But the effect that this policyand administrative policy of thepast has on the student’s feelingsconcerning his rights of free ex¬pression is important. The admin¬istration’s policy has instilled inmyself and other students a fear—the fear to express our thoughtsand beliefs, the fear to expressour disapproval of the administra¬tion’s policy. When a Universitythat stands for freedom ofthought and expression instills inI a student the fear to express him¬self, the University is definitelyundermining the principles thatshould be its supporting girders.The University must decidewhether it wants the students tostand terrorized before it, fearfulof expressing their thoughts. If itdoes, there is no problem; but ifnot the University should re¬evaluate the situation.Thomas Paine said. “But suchis the irresistible nature of truth,that all it asks, and all it wants,is the liberty of appearing.” Theessence of what I am asking isthat the administration givetruth the liberty of appearing by4| m v -International not instilling in its students thefear to express themselves.For the best teachers and booksare but a pile of timber whichneeds the spark of academic free¬dom to enable it to become a pro¬ductive fire, a fire that will cre¬mate ignorance with flames oftruth, if this spark is snuffed out,the University and its studentswill deteriorate into an unproduc¬tive mass of ignorance^I plead with the University toweigh the value of academic free¬dom against the rules that formany years seemed needless tothe University.Name withheldHouse MoviesMonday evenings, 7:30 p.m. — Assembly HallMonday, April 14 — 50c — The Imposter (Japan)tmsm m mmmrn. * m 4 SCIENCE MADE SIMPLE: No. 3Once again the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes, bless tlieir tat¬tooed hearts, have consented to let me use this space, normallyintended for levity, to bring you a brief lesson in science.They are generous, openhanded men, the makers of Marlboro,hearty, ruddy, and full of the joy of living, as anyone can tellwho has sampled their wares. In Marlboro you will find nostinting, no stinginess. Marlboro’s pleasures are rich, manifold,and bountiful. You get a lot to like with a Marlboro—filter,flavor, flip-top box, and, in some models, power steering.The science that we take up today is called astronomy, fromthe Greek words astro meaning “sore” and nomy meaning“back”. Sore backs were the occupational disease of the earlyGreek astronomers, and no wonder! They used to spend everyblessed night lying on the damp ground and looking up at thesky, and if there’s a better way to get a sore back, I’d like tohear about it. Especially in the moist Mediterranean area,where Greece is generally considered to be.Lumbago and related disorders kept astronomy from be¬coming very popular until Galileo, an unemployed muleteer ofPamplona, fashioned a homemade telescope in 1924 out ofthree Social Security cards and an ordinary ice cube. Whatschoolboy does not know that stirring story—how Galileostepped up to his telescope, how he looked heavenward, howhis face filled with wonder, how he stepped back and whisperedthe words heard round the world; “Let them eat cake!”Well sir, you can imagine what happened then! WilliamJennings Bryan snatched Nell Gwynne from the shadow of theguillotine at Oslo; Chancellor Bismarck brought in four gushersin a single afternoon; Enos Slaughter was signed by the Han¬seatic League; Crete was declared off limits to Wellington’sarmy; and William Faulkner won the Davis Cup for his im¬mortal Penrod and Sam.But after a while things calmed down and astronomers beganthe staggering task of naming all the heavenly bodies. Firstman to name a star was Sigafoos of Mt. Wilson, and the namehe chose was Betelgeuse, after his dear wife, Betelgeuse Sigafoos,prom queen at Michigan State from 1919 to 1931,Then the Major Brothers of Yerkes Observatory named starsafter their wives, Ursa and Canis, and Witnick of Harvardnamed one after his wife, Big Dipper, and soon all the starswere named.Astronomers then turned to the question: is there life onother planets? The answer was a flat, unequivocal no. Spectro¬scopic studies proved without a doubt that the atmosphereon the other planets was far too harsh to permit the culture ofthe fine tobaccos that go into Marlboro Cigarettes ... And whocan live without Marlboro?, & 19>8 Mat Shuimaa* * *This celestial column—like the author’s more earthy ones—is brought to you by the makers of Marlboro, the filtercigarette with the long white ash. And in all the solar systemyou won’t find a better smoke.1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoFeaturing — Complete Wine List andHors d'oeuvre TableSmalt Large Small Larg#12" 14" 12" 14"Cheese 1.15 1.55 Combination ..1.75 2.25Sausage 1.45 1.95 Mushroom .... 1.60 2.10Anchovy .... 1.45 1.95 Shrimp 1.75 2.25Pepper & Onion 1.20 1.80 Bacon & Onion. 1.60 2.10Free Delieery on AU Pizza to UC StudentsApr. 11, 1958 • CHICACO MAROON • 5"(/ofoefiUmitekfo/acem&ntAu cours des annees, l’expe-rience acquise en s’occupantdes finances de milliers defamilies a demontr6 quel'assurance-vie devrait repre¬senter le premier placementd un homme. L’assurance-vie . . . voila le placementqui assure a votre familleune protection immediate...le placement qui constitueune base solide pour votreavenir financier.Sun Life duCanadaRalph J.Wood Jr.'481 N. LaSalle St.Representative Chicago 2, III.FR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855NothBIG CLEAN TASTE OF TOP-TOBACCO REGULAR KINGComing events on quadranglesFriday 11 AprilJut workshop jam session, guests;Reynolds club, 3.30 pm.Undergraduate math club: SaundersMncLane speaking on prime numbers,IMthart 206, 3:30 pm.■Met fireside panel discussion; "Aca¬demic freedom—Is it an Issue today?"Moderator Prof. Donald Melklejohn;Btudent panel Robert Oerwln, DonaldMiller, Linda Rosenberg. Hlllel foun¬dation, 5715 Woodlawn Ave., 8:30 pm;Sabbath service 7:45 pm.*Meademic freedom: is it an issue?" 8;30pm, Hlllel foundation. Panel dlscus-’lth student speakers Lindaiberg. Bob Oerwln and Don Mil-Donald Melklejohn, associate pro->or of philosophy (College), mod¬erator.Pan! Robeson concert, 8:30 pm. Man-del hall, sponsored by 8RP. Admission•barge.Saturday 12 AprilRecorder society, Ida Noyes Library,3:30 pm. DC symphony orchestra rehearsal. Man-del hall, 7 pm.Social dancing: instruction 7 pm. danc¬ing 8 pm. International house, 50cents to non-residents.Monday 14 AprilMaroon staff meeting. Maroon office,3:30 pm.Speech by John Gates, ex-CommunIst,former editor of Daily Worker, on hisexperiences and freedom of the press;Soc 8cl 122, 4 pm.Folk dancing, beginners 7:30. advanced8;45 pm, Hlllel foundation, 5715 Wood-lawn.Japanese movie, "The Imposter," Inter¬national house assembly hall, 7:30 pm,50 cents.John Gates, former editor of the DallyWorker, speaking on academic free¬dom and his experiences. 4 pm. 8oeScl 122, admission 35 cents, sponsoredby Student Government."Academic freedom — an Asian view,"Dr. K. Bhaskara Rao, professor ofEnglish literature. University of My¬sore, India, 8 pm, Rosenwald 2. Spon¬sored by WUS.English class for foreigners, intermedi¬ate, International house, 10 am.Panl Robeson concert, 8:30 pm, Mandel Tnecrlnv 1 Anrilhall, sponsored by SRP. Admission J uesuo7 1 ^•barge.Sunday 13 AprilRoman Catholic masses. DeSales house,5735 University, 8:30, 10. 11 am.Record concert, International bouse,borne room. 10:30 am.Open meeting SRP International affairscommittee; concerning student actionon nuclear tests. Ida Noyes library,4 pm.Carillon concert, James R. Lawson, ca-rillonneur, 4:30 p.m.Mortgage insuranceEducational InsuranceConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. EverettRA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986EUROPESvauiwt 1951 —'t h*iWeH M *e vi—ol, pie, Nor* Africa, >*eo-•*•*!«. tori Gormooy. CtvcSoslovoklo. Ivrim,OoMMrit. otid Ireland. A low-priced. dWareetUed el tnp far Me tovng le iplrif vrite dea lwoof le be berded aroend. Write lb:•non SUMMER TOURSSaquoio (Baa C), toeadaaa, CaM, Rocket society, Eckhart 202. 7:45 pm.Lecture series, “Art and Religion.” "Re¬ligious Aspects of Music,” by MaxJanowski. Breasted hall, 8:30 pm.Gates hall coffee hour, coffee and cook¬ies, 10-12 pm.Concert band rehearsal, Reynolds clubnorth lounge, 7:30 pm."The limits (if any) of academic free¬dom,” Malcolm Sharp, professor law,3:30 pm, Soc Scl 122. Sponsored bySRP.Wednesday 16 AprilEpiscopal evensong, Brent house, 5540Woodlawn, 5:05 pm.Hug Ivri luncheon discussion, Hlllelfoundation, 12:30, 50 cents by reserva¬tion. “The Sabra In Israel and Amer¬ica” will be discussed In Hebrew byJona M. Rosenfeld, Dept of Psychiatry.Varsity tennis match, Chicago vs. IIT,varsity courts, 1:30 pm.Varsity track meet, Chicago vs. CentralMichigan, Stagg field, 4 pm.Carillon recital, Rockefeller chapel, 4:30pm.Organ recital, Heinrich Fleischer, uni¬versity organist, Rockefeller chapel,5 pm.History club, "The history of history;an Ivory tower?” Karl J. Weintraub,instructor in history in the College.Ida Noyes, 8 pm.Lecture Series; “Anthropology In theModern World.” "Race and Culture,”Bol Tax, chairman of the departmentof anthropology. Social Sciences 122,8 pm. Discussion group on political freedomon this campus led by Jack Hlrsch,3 30 pm, Reynolds club. Sponsored byStudent Forum for Socialist Educa¬tion."Academic freedom and desegregation,"8 pm. Ida Noyes. Sponsored by cam¬pus chapter NAACP.Thursday 17 AprilVarsity baseball game, Chicago vs. Chi¬cago Teachers, Stagg field, 3:30 pm.Lecture series: “Mass persuasion andindividual freedom.” “The psychologi¬cal effect of military power,” RobertE. Osgood, assistant professor of poli¬tical science. 19 S. LaSalle St., 8 pm.Green hall coffee hour, 9-11. Specialguest: Aiirora Roxas. Filipino gradu¬ate student In the humanities.Student panel on academic freedom onthis campus in "relation to the new‘Dean'8 code,” 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Speakers College dean of student Har¬old Haydon, students Fred Cohn, BobLerner, Dianne Cobb: moderator JohnAnderson. Sponsored by Student Gov¬ernment.Friday 18 April"Teller, testing and new nuclear perils,"I. F. Stone, editor of I. F. Stone'sWeekly, 4 pm. Soc Scl 122. Sponsoredby the politics club. CLASSIFIEDSUniversity rate 30c par line. Others 60c per lino.Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265For rent Ride wantedLarge six-room furnished apt., nearcampus & IC. Ideal for three male stu¬dents to share with 4th. Ph.: Bill Sense,MI 3-6000, Ext. 1053.One room, newly painted, furnished apt.On campus. Ph.: BU 8-5229 or MI 3-0963.UC Faculty member’s furnished housein Homewood available for 12 or 15months from July 1. Convenient ICtransportation. 2 BR and study, screen¬ed porch, half basement. $175. Ph.; MI3-0800, ext. 3423.Pleasant front rm. for man. Prlv. ent.V2 blk. IC. 88. FA 4-8543. From vie. of Austin A Madison st* tocampus. Will contribute for gas Ph •CO 1-8329 after 5 p.m.To Boston, New York area, leaving earlyThursday. April 24. Will share expensedPh.: OR 5-3500. ext. 202.PersonalFor sale:stock. 18,000 shares of telephoneL.S.Student working April through Julydesires to live with German speakingfamily. Please call MI 3-0800. ext 242&Spacious man's room with maid serv- For yonr Sunday dinner outing, Alex-lce, 1 blk. from campus. BU 8-7257. 'ander's rest. 1137 E. 63rd.1404 East 57th StreetThree-room furnished apartment qearIC. Call Mr. Maddock, BU 8-1855.For sale Tuesday, April 15. 7:45 p.m. RocketsSoc. meeting. Eckhart 202.Griszchetoes out ; you forgot to take the pota-of the oven. Panic! MotherArt entries dueEntries for the all-studentart exhibition to be heldduring the fourth annualFestival of the Arts will bedue on April 20 or 21 atthe Robie house, site of theexhibit. Works should bedelivered, ready for display,from noon to 6 pm April 20or 9:30 to noon, 1:30 to 6pm April 21.Any University student,except those enrolled in theArt Institute-downtown col¬lege program, may submitup to five entries in one orseveral media. 55th at Ridgewood Court. Three story,6 apt. building. Income $6,000 per year.Priced to sell at $34,000. Phone: C. W.Hoff Co.. Inc., Mrs. Redfem. HY 3-2215.For UC family. Two story brick, 4 bdrm.residence. Heated porch, new gas hotwater boiler, full basement. 2-car ga¬rage, beautiful, landscaped lot. Phonefor appt. C. W. Hoff Co. Inc., HY 3-2215.Sohmer baby grand In excellent condl- Plato: This Is true,tlon. Phone DR 3-6398.3-piece dining room set, 6 chairs, goodcondition. Call after 6 pm at CA 7-4595. Did you hear about Doris? Why absoTlutely everyone knows about it! it'scommon knowledge that she’s going toabsolutely every event during Festivalof the Arts. Why, of course, dahhhlingIt’s the thing to do. It's shoo.Renee DuBoisPlato: What do you want to do tonight!Socrates: I don't know.Plato: Let us think. Is not our real goalIn doing anything pleasure?ServicesFrench tutor. Specialized in collegeexams preparation. Moderate fee. Phone:HY 3-8112. Socrates: Then there Is no problem forevery manner of pleasure can befound at the Phi Delt all campus Silly• Sttrut open house on April 19 at 10pm.Help wantedExpert income tax service. 1348 E. 55th.Will do typing at home. Marilyn Mayers.Phone: PL 2-0143.Offset reproduction, mimeographing,photo copying, executive IBM typing.Save by typing up your own stencil oroffset master. Free pick-up and dellv-ery. Mayda. HY 3-4541.Tutoring in economics, labor economics,and finance. Phone: KI 5-2454.instruction in German. Reasonablerates. Ph: MI 3-5694 or PL 2-4415.MEN OF AMERICA:48THE TEST-DRIVERTest cars speedingOn a hairpin turn!Four wheels flying!Spinning tires burn!Where the cars are tested,You'll find a manStops to take big pleasure*When and where he can..CHESTERFIELDLive-action shot — Chrysler ProvingGrounds, Chelsea, Michigan Secretarial position at Hlllel foundationavailable after June 1. For Interview,call PL 2-1127.WUCB presentsjazz vocalists“Jazz Vocalists” will bo thetheme of “Omnibus of Jazz”Monday night, at 7 pm overthe campus radio station, WUCB,at 640 kilocycles.The weekly program, presentedby UC Jazz workshop, will be ex¬panded into a 90-minute show be¬ginning Monday night.The program will feature songsby Joe Williams of the CountBasie band; June Christy, femaleexponent of the “cool” school:Frank Sinatra; and Ella Fitzger¬ald, consistently voted top jazzvocalist in magazine polls.Popular jazz vocal groups, suchas the Four Freshmen and theHi-Lo’s will perform also.TAI-SAM-A&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd Sf. BU 8-90186 • CHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 11,1958Explain SC commitees;formulate bills on floorby Robert HalaszAlthough visitors to Student Government’s Tuesday night meetings in Law North see thedebates over bills on the floor, they usually have no opportunity to witness the process bywhich these bills are formulated in committee.Six regular committees perform the legislative functions of Student Government: the elec¬tions and rules committee, committee on recognized student organizations (CORSO), thestudent-faculty relations committee, campus, action committee, NS A- student rights com¬mittee, and the community re-lations committees. Any StU- Gary Stoll, (ind-college), this com- on making the arrangements fordent may join one Of these mittee also administers elections the SG flight, and worked in con-committees, although the chair- and investigates charges of votingmen are usually elected by the as- fraud. Election slatesListed below are the SRP and ISL slates for Student Gov¬ernment and NSA. Forty-nine seats are at stake in the SQelection. ISL is conceding nine seats by being able to fill thebtslate; SRP is conceding three. The NSA lists are complete.SG electionssembly from the majority party.The elections and rules commit¬tee’s job may sound rather prosaicto the Independent observer, butthis group can be crucial in de¬ciding the everyday procedural is¬sues which occur from time totime in the administration of Stu¬dent Government. Headed byPOGOSAVSiIFM9UCANY wremtMy CORSO has very recently flaredinto prominence because this com¬mittee is concerned with the stu¬dent code, which is in conflict withrulings by Dean Netherton. Rec¬ognized student groups on cam¬pus are under CORSO’s jurisdic¬tion, and it recommends action onapplications for recognition. Itmay indict and prosecute violatorsof the student code before the stu¬dent-faculty-administration court.The committee’s chairman is BobLerner (SRP-college).The campus-action committeeconcerns itself with student needsThis year they have been working junction with O-Board to help newstudents.The community relations com¬mittee is currently circulating apetition urging a non-discrimina-tory housing file. Earlier theyconsulted officials concerned withHyde Park redevelopment.The student-faculty relationscommittee sponsored and publi¬cized a series of lectures on thecollege curriculum. This groupalso was responsible for the MarcChagall tea when he was on cam¬pus. This committee should not beconfused with the student-facultyadvisory board, a special groupcomposed of student and facultymembers.VOTEA*ymy.'.but Vote rUNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor Ballot box scheduleThe ballot box schedule, as announced by the electionand rules committee of Student Government (Gary "LittleCaesar" Stoll, chairman) is as follows:Thursday 17 AprilCobb hall 9:15- 4:30Mandel corridor 9:15- 7:00Social Sciences 9:15-10:45Law school 10:15-12:45Medical school 11 :00- 1 :00Harper library 1:15- 4:30Haskell hall 9:15-10:00International house 5:00- 7:00Judson court . ...^ 5:00- 7:00Burton court 5:00- 7 :Q0Friday 18 AprilCobb hall 9:15- 4:30Mandel corridor 9:15- 7:00Swift hall 9:15-10:45Social Sciences 9:15- 4:30Eckhart hall * 11 :00- 2:45Judd hall 3:00- 4:30Gates hall 5:00- 7:00Burton court 5:00- 7:00Ida Noyes hall • 5:00- 7:00Ballots will be counted in Reynolds club lounge Fridaynight and it is rumored that parties and/or wakes willbe held in the neighborhood thereafter.after every shaveSplash on Old Spice After Shave Lotion. Feel yourface wake up and live! So good for your skin...so good for your ego. Brisk as an ocean breeze,Old Spice makes you feel like a new man. Confident.Assured. Relaxed. Yoo knou> you’re at your bestwhen you top off your shave with Old Spice! 100olus ta uceAFTER SHAVE LOTIONby SHULTON SRP College (18 seats)ISLLois AdelmanZev AelonyNancy AheamCarlie BurrowsKen CaseMady ChalkWalter DaumSarah M. FieldJane ForerNancy FriedmanMike RossmanJenny KorlingBob LernerLinda RosenbergCarol “Sam” SilverJudy TushnetBruce VermazenEd WolfHumanities Linn BrandweinMarge BrownMaureen ByersJohn CashmanDiane CobbBert CohlerPhil EpsteinBob GerwinDave IsraelstamBiD KatzFran MooreKen NordinDon RichardsTerry SmithBill SpadyChuck BoothMarilyn TreadwayCynthia Desmond(4 seats)Colleen CummingsJustin LeiberAlexander Donald McDonaldJoel Rosenthal .Tyler HainesEthel KovitzGeorge RobertsRoger RyanPhysical sciences (4 seats)Dick Sommerfield John EganDorothy Chacarestos Bill PohlCal Herman Fred PoliakEd WalbridgeSocial sciences (9 seats)Edith Blackbird Helen Model 1Marvin GoldsteinRoman KolcowiezRalph NicholasJerry PearlmutterTony SylvesterMolly SchwartzAlbert WahrhaftingHal YoungbloodBiological sciences <2 seats)Murray Hozinsky Dave FreifelderVennie WilsonMike PadnosThomas G. SmithSarah Ufgaard Law (3 seats)Diana EganGeorge KarcazesPete LangrockBusiness (2Jacob M. MichaelsonMedical schoolDavid HalprinRobert Perlman seats)Steve AppelMark Walker(2 seats)Dick TraceyA1 YusinJack ForestEd RiddickBill WeirJoan Perranaud FTS (3 seats)Raymond Lee OwensClark KuchemanGeorge WrightSSA (1GLS (1 seat)Nancy Mackseat)Andre NiteckiNSA electionsSRP ISLNotionalLois AdelmanCarlie BurrowsKarl M. FingerLeon KassLinda RosenbergRegionolKen CaseMarty GoldsmithBob LernerCarol “Sam” SilverJudy Tushnet delegatesDave IsraelstamPhil EpsteinRosemary GalliBob GerwinJinx KennickdelegatesSteve AppelJohn CashmanDiane Cobb- Don RichardsKen NordinEllen Coughlin Beauty Salon51 OS Lake Park Ave. MI 3-2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Men, - Sat, — 9 a.m. - II p.m.Apr. 11, 1958—>0IQ»9 o o * g 0 <» « <»o** Jy c* jl £ £ JZ- no <? £ i? ~ ^<i**m*°I A-a Aa " "*• * *« rf A>> /»• O C *V„V7i,oO'°‘OC °*0 0 0C9 0 0*O o e « r B0 ■*^j2 QA ^o A $ * NSA congress will be in Ohio;emphasis on campus problemsAa^g^gVe A®®5#h£Z£&&*j£sc*c*s. “Student responsibility in an age of change” will be the theme of the eleventh congress ofthe National Student association this year at Ohio Wesleyan university, Delaware, Ohio.The ten-day meeting, starting on August 20, will bring together approximately 1,000 stu¬dents, educators and foreign guests. UC will send five delegates and other interested persons.Congress emphasis will be on campus programming and campus problems, according toNSA. The major issues are expected to be:• size of the federal schol- ~~ :arship program; Some 250 colleges and universl congress.• desegregation; ties are expected to be represented Deans, faculty member# andEVERY STUDENT leader's dream • impact of education on Amer- at this meeting. The conference is other adult educators will beican student values; • opened to non-member as well as guests of the students and will• quality of academic stand- member schools of NSA. participate in workshop sessionsards; The student editorial affairs on student-faculty-administration• intercollegiate athletics; conference (SEAC) will be held relations, as well as observing sub-• religion on campus; under the direction of Ed Kahn of commission meetings.• expanded scope of exchange the Colorado Daily. This meeting Ohio Wesleyan campus Is locat-with Iron Curtain countries, and will bring together editors and ed 30 miles northeast of Colum-the Soviet Union in particular. staff writers from the principal bus, at the geographic center ofSpecial meetings will be held student newspapers and will be NSA membership. Congress coor-for three days prior to the con- keynoted by a leading journalist, dinator will be Philip Meek, repre-gress. These will include the The only national meeting of sentative-at-large to the six-mem-eighth annual student-body presi- educators to be arranged and di- ber student council. Meek willdentls’ conference which is the rected by students will be held work with the NSA staff in mak-only national intercollegiate meet- for the third consecutive year ing arrangements for the meet¬ing of executives of student gov- during the opening days of the ing.ernments.PAINT & HARDWARE CO.Hyde Park's Most CompletePaint and Hardware Store1154-58 E. 55th St. UC Discount HY 3-3840 24-HourKodachrome color filmprocessingModel Camera Shop1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURAHTWe Specialize laRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Down to Down1342 E. 53rd St. PETERSON MOVINGPRE-INVENTORY SALEYASHICA "C" REFLEX CAMERA; used very little .. . .$33.00POLAROID MODEL "95" CAMERA - $40.00MOVIE SCREENS; 30" x 40" $10.00These are just a few examples of the TREMENDOUS SAVINGSyou can make during the month of April.Come in and see us at the Photographic Sectionof theUNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Axe. < Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristEyes ExaminedGlasses FittedContact LensesVisual Training1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372 Special Offer25c discount on ony pizzaMon., Tues., Wed., Thurs., OnlyFree delivery toUC StudentsTerry’s Pizza1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045UNIVERSITY HOTELNewly Decorated Rooms — Private Tub and ShowerKitchenettes Available. Doily Maid Service. Reasonable Rates.Two Blocks from 1C. Permanent and Transient Guests.5519 Blackstone DO 3-4100SRP confers on problems Housinoby Maureen SegalSRP heW a Conference Day Program on Saturday, April 5, in Ida Noyes to study problemsof local, national and international scope. The five woskships (Academic Freedom, CivilLiberties, International Affairs, Education, and Arts) had two tasks! 1) to try to under¬stand the fundamental aspects erf the controversial issues confronting our generation- and2) to suggest how to implement change of policy where necessary.A unanimous rejection of the entire new student code proposals was one of the outcomesof the Academic Freedom — —workshop. SRP hopes to spon- were discovered by the Education formsor a forum during AcademicFreedom week with Dean Nether-ton and/or Mary Alice Newman,and students, throwing the flooropen to questions workshop: to develop the individ¬ual, to extend the limits of humanknowledge, and to fit the individ¬ual to society so that he may operate in it effectively. The feelingThe people in the Civil Rights was that the present college sysworkshop were concerned primar¬ily with this question as relativeto the city of Chicago as the com¬mittee saw it: how to pressurethe “formal freedoms” of the Ne¬gro Into actuality when severelyrestricted by a city governmentunwilling to enforce liberal lawsalready in existence, the tacitagreement among newspaper’sto refuse to acknowledge andprint the real problem, and thelong process of civil educationnecessary to change public opin¬ion.The talk then centered on theHyde Park - Kenwood Redevelop¬ment Plan, and the group formu¬lated two questions. Is an inter¬racial community only possiblewhen Inhabited by upper-incomebracket individuals? If this exam¬ple were to be followed in otherareas of the city, what will hap¬pen to those white and negro peo¬ple who are permanently dis¬placed? The committee took forits immediate task to assembleand distribute available data onthe problems of interracial living.The International Affairs work¬shop agreed that: 1) nuclear test¬ing is wrong morally, and becauseit is physically harmful, 2) Testbans are possible without a gen¬eral East-West settlement. A gen¬eral education program was setin motion.The Economic committee dis¬cussed the recession; its solutionssuggested by the economists, itseffects on students and what wecan do about it. Federal aid to edu¬cation, cooperatives, and attemptsto influence a cut in the tuitionwere favored by the group.Three purposes of education tern, being not quite adequate asit is, should by no means be re¬duced to greater inadequacy bythe recent proposals of the admin¬istration.The Committee on the Arts, op¬erating on the thesis that an art is a means of communica¬tion, discussed briefly the natureof this communication and its im¬plication for SRP. This communi¬cation maj* consist, in part orwholly, it was felt, of a psycho¬logical state, "mystical” if youwill, but may be educative in thesense that it may arouse concernabout or awareness of some prob¬lem besetting human existence. Apermanent committee was estab¬lished to plan a program of crea¬tion and participation in the arts.Hold workshop hereMeans and methods for improving American high schooleducation will be planned at a workshop in secondary educa¬tion to be held here July 7-25.The workshop, an outgrowth of the National conferenceon the American high schoolheld last October at the Uni¬versity, will explore major as¬pects developed by the conference.Francis S. Chase, chairman ofthe university's department of ed¬ucation, and workshop director,outlined its four purposes:“1. To redefine the tasks of sec¬ondary schools in the light of cur¬rent demands.“2. To apply existing knowl¬edge of human behavior and theprocess of learning to the rede¬fined objectives and tasks of theschool."3. To analyze these new fac¬tors for implications regardingschool and staff organization, cur¬riculum, and administration."4. To explore measures forachieving the indicated changes.”Associate workshop director isKenneth W. Lund, superintendentof Oak Park-River Forest highschool, Oak Park; assistant direc¬tor is Harold A. Anderson, associ¬ate professor of education. vancement of Education; Alex¬ander J. Stoddard, consultant tothe Fund for the Advancement ofEducation; Ralph W. Tyler, di¬rector of the center for advancedstudy in the behavioral sicences,Stanford, California; John Fisch¬er, superintendent of schools, Bal¬timore, Maryland; William H.Cornog, superintendent of theNew Trier township high school,Winnetka, and Herbert Lionel El-vin, professor of education anddirector designate of the instituteof education, University of Lon¬don, England.UC faculty members in the de¬partment of education as well asin the humanities, biological andphysical sciences, and the socialsciences will serve as consultantsin their fields.Activities planned include lec¬tures, small group meetings, andindividual conferences. Workshopparticipants from the same schoolwill receive assistance from the (Continued from page 1)budget at least in the immediatefuture.If, the administration feels, thehousing bureau were to rely onlyon the application, landlordswould perhaps n o t be truthful,and the present situation wouldnot improve.SG countered these objectionsby maintaining that, in order toput a theoretical non-discrimina-tory policy into practice, some sac¬rifices have to be made. In addi¬tion, if some few landlords weredishonest in filling out the appli¬cation, they would be found outand eliminated from the listingseasily enough.The administration does not be¬lieve this to be as easy as SG sug¬gests.The proposal was also called“untimely,” as the office is al¬ready beginning a thorough studyof the housing files,” claimedNetherton.Ruth O. McCarn, assistant deanof students, after the petition wasbeing circulated, raised other ob¬jections in regard to the proposal.She termed it unnecessary, inlight of the instability of theneighborhood and the subsequentdecrease in the number of unitsavailable. This factor would com¬plicate administration almost tothe point of hopelessness.Furthermore, it is not consist¬ent with the University's “hands- off” policy, which allows studentsabove the first year level com¬plete freedom in choosing a placeto live. Since it does not, then,own or supervise apartment build¬ings for single students, the ad¬ministration does not consider itappropriate to tell a private land¬lord, “You must take such andsuch a tenant.”The final objection raised by theadministration stresses that dis¬crimination is not the only factorthat would have to be inspected.A long list of health and safetyfactors would have to be kept incontinual check.SG counters the charges bymaintaining that if a group holdsfast to a non-discriminatory pol¬icy, its constituents must be ex¬pected to comply. Those who don’tcan advertise for rooms, apart¬ments, and houses elsewhere inthe neighborhood; landlords canalso advertise vacancies by thesemeans.Mrs. McCarn expressed theopinion that, consistent with Uni¬versity policy, the housing bureaumust either list all vacancies ornot list any at all. "I believe thatdiscrimination is an important is¬sue, and I am proud to be associat¬ed with a university that does notpractice it within its own family.The dean of students’ office haslong been troubled about the prob¬lem of listing non-University fa¬cilities and has given seriousthought to the matter.”Guest lecturers and consultants workshop staff and consultants inwill include: Clarence H. Faust, working on plans for their ownpresident of the Fund for the Ad- schools. Huggins named to GermanOrder for work in cancerDr. Charles B. Huggins, cancer authority and director ofthe Ben May laboratory for cancer research at UC, has beennamed to membership in the Order of Pour le Merite by theGerman Federal Republic.President Theodor Heusswill install Dr. Huggins and as a military honor, the order nowthe other newly elected member, provides recognition in the artsGeorg von Hevasy, professor of and sciences with membershipphysics and chemistry at the uni- limited to 30. Thornton Wilder,versities of Copenhagen and Stock- author and playwright, and Ar-holm, in a ceremony at Bonn on thur H. Compton, physicist, areJuly 7. the only other American mem-Founded by Frederick the Great bers.There’s an important future ahead for the men who wear these wingsThe Air Force pilot or navigator is a man ofmany talents. He is, first of all, a master ofthe air—and no finer exists. In addition, hehas a firm background in engineering, elec¬tronics, astro-navigation and allied fields.Then, too, he must show outstanding quali¬ties of initiative, leadership and self-reliance.He is, in short, a man eminently prepared for an important career in the new Age of Space.As a college graduate, you will be givenpriority consideration for the Air ForceAviation Cadet Program. While openings arelimited, you will be tested and advised imme¬diately of qualification status. Find out if youmeasure up. Paste the attached coupon on apost card and mail it now. MAIL THIS COUPON TODAYAviation Cadet Information, Dept. C-21Box 7608, Washington 4, D. C. —.Please send me details on my opportunities as an Aviation Cadet in theU. S. Air Force. I am a U. S. citizen, between the ages of 19 and 26f4 and aresident of the U. S. or possessions. I am interested in"0 Pilot □ Navigatortraining.Name CollegeU. S. AIR FORCE AVIATION CADET PROGRAM Stree tCityApr. 11, 1958 • Zone StateCHICAGO MAROON 9Teddy Wilson speaks UC group finds stone ageabout modern jazz remo;ns on African tripby lna BrodyNegro and white jazz musicians in the United States areapproaching a meeting of musical minds, Teddy Wilson, na¬tionally known jazz pianist, stated last week in Ida Noyeslibrary.He and Arvell Shaw, for- piece, was originally a Frenchmerly a member of Louis march. Shaw said.Armstrong’s ‘'All-Stars,” spoke on Brooks Johnson, president ofthe contemporary jazz situation Jazz workshop, which sponsoredto an estimated 150 UC students, the speakers, said that the organi-Wilson said that jazz has come zahon hopes to bring more pro-a long way since the '20s, when fessional jazz musicians on cam-records were sold with the label Pus during the Spring quarter,reading “white jazz” on one side, Johnson reminded the audienceand “black jazz” on the flip side that student musicians have aof the disc. He attributed the weekly jam session in the south“meeting of musical minds” to lounge of Reynolds club Fridaysociological changes.Discussing another conflict,that between classical music andjazz, Wilson suggested that per¬haps more could be done to bringabout an exchange of musicalideas between the two fields.Shaw, in answering questions composed of F. Clark Howell, as¬sistant professor, and his wife,Betty, who have returned to cam¬pus, and Maxine Kleindienst andafternoons, beginning about 3:30.Core appointedfund chairmanAppointment of Budd Goreon the Negro heritage in jazz, said gus Chicago-area chairman forthat some of the worst jazz he had .. -.ruror , , • , ,, TT .ever heard was played on Africa's 1958 fund drive of the Uni-Gold coast. versity of Chicago Alumni foun-Although the influence of the dation has been announced byAmerican Negro’s sense of Howard L. Willett, Jr., nationalrhythm in jazz is taken for grant- chairman of the foundation,ed. the heritage of European melo- As Chicago area chairman Goredie and harmonic structure is will direct solicitation of the 20,-often overlooked. For example, 000 UC alumni living in the city“High Society,” an old Dixieland and suburbs. artifacts were found only in fourupper layers of beach sand. Thesesandy layers were deposited indry years when the lake was shal¬low and are separated by claystrata formed during years of eyes" set in vertical bony projec¬tions; a short necked, heavy¬bodied giraffe with antlers likethose of a moose; a three toedhorse that persisted in AfricaTHE MENTAL MARVEL mentioned above is so studioushe made Phi Bete in his junior year—of high school!When he walks into classrooms, professors stand. Thelast time he got lees than 100%, the proctor wascheating. When it comes to smoking, he gets straightA’s for taste. He smokes (All together, class!) LuckyStrike! Naturally, our student is fully versed on thesubject of Lucky’s fine, light, good-tasting tobacco.He’s well aware that it’s toasted to taste even better.So when someone asks him for a cigarette, he’shappy to spread the good taste. And that makes hima Kind Grind! Assignment: try Luckies yourself!Don't just stand there. • •STICKLE! MAKE *25Stickless are simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers.Both words must have the same number of syllables. (Nodrawings, please!) We’ll shell out $25 for all we use — and forhundreds that never see print. So send stacks of ’em with yourname, address, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box67A, Mount Vernon, New York. Excavations by UC anthropologists have uncovered th* shores of a small extinct lake onwhich prehistoric East Africans camped and operated a stone tool factory some 100,000years ago.While no human skeletal remains were found, an estimated 10,000 samples of primitivetools and the preserved bones of both giant and present forms of animals were excavated.The archaeological site, called Isimila and located in central Tanganyika, is considered therichest source of old stone age ~tools of its period in the world, ry’* unique location 5,800 f««t used for chopping, hammering, orThe Chicago group was above s*a level in the Iringa high- ** missiles for downing animals.lands. Stone industries of prehto- Some of the bones found weretoric man that were previously rhil?0'''. *L _ . ®ros, and lion. The most completediscovered in East and Central skeleton was that of a hippopota-Africa are situated in low lying mus, whose missing skull andGlen Cole, graduate students, who valleys. limbs were probably carried awayhave remained at the site to nm- advantage* trom the site-tinue further excavations this There were omer advantages , .summer besides a source of fresh water to , Mos* the bones in the lowersummer.. . . . .. layer belonged to 20 extinct spo-Tho depth and kind of earth the those Pleistocene period inhaM- cies of gigantic proportions. Thesetools were found in indicate that tants. These include game attract- include a large elephant equippedman worked on its shores only in ed to the water and an abundance with straight 14 foot long tuskseras of drought during the lake’s of fine-grained stone outcrops a giant hippo with “periscope5,000 to 25,000 later years. The that provided raw material for ~tools.Among the animal bones In thebottom sand layer, which repre¬sents the period when the sitewas used for slaughtering, were while being extinct elsewhere fortiny (as little as an inch long) a million previous years; and fourheavy rainfall when the lake was stone flake tools probably used in varieties of giant wart hog. one asboring and scraping hides. Also large as today’s rhinoceros.Early man’s periodic need for in this level were softball-sized The upper three levels of sandan oasis helps explain the facto- round stones that could have been while containing virtually no ani¬mal bones, yielded thousands ofstone tools. These range in sizefrom tiny flake scrapers andround missiles to large sharp-edged cleavers. Also found werehuge pointed implements that re¬semble hand axes, but were tooheavy to have been so wielded;instead, they may have beendropped from trees to kill animalsdriven under them.In addition to excavating thisone site, the Chicago group dis¬covered evidence at Isimila of tworoughly contemporary sites withsimilar stone industries and of ayounger (50,000 to 75,000 yearsago), more advanced Industry.Also discovered, 10 miles away,was a fourth, still younger (25,000to 50.000 years ago) site contain¬ing stone products, such as spearheads, that until then had neverbeen found in central Tanganyika.Skyway to open,connect toll roadUC students eastbound byautomobile from Chicago willfind their traveling time outof the city shortened when theCalumet Skyway opens nextWednesday.The expressway, with a toll of25 cents, is a 7 Vi mile long bridgeextending from 66th and State tothe Illinois-Indiana state linewhere it connects with the Indi¬ana toll road, eliminating a time-consuming route on conventionalstreets. Drivers may take StonyIsland avenue south to 76th street,where an entrance to the Skywayis provided.WHAT DO TV WRESTLERS USE?CAROLYN NYCRCN. fVurfo JudoPEMRROKCWHAT IS A TERM EXAM IN RUSTICS?ooijglas oustiahout. Vinyl FindMICHIGANLIGHT UP A liT. C*> SMOKE-LIGHT UP A LUCKY!Product of J'/mtAtean <Jc$xeeois our middle name DRESSYOURPARTMIm Marlow* and th* woman Myour ilia baeaeeh you to keep in*t«p with fathlonl City Club maka*It uafty with a oraat naw (electionMarion Mariew* of ehoae for dree*, play and everylovaly star rinyi Sea tor yourealt-todayl*1 radio analelevMwLCITY CLUBA» Advertiaeq In Eaquire10 • CHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 11,1958Culture VultureIt has become customary to begin this colnmn with an introduction, whether or not theihowever, should be brief.A partial list of things to do for people who pass ail their courses without studying anywayTonight: The Odetta—Lehrer concert at Orchestra hall, 8:30 pm.Tomorrow: The Paul Robeson concert at Mandel hall, 8:30 pm.Sunday: Musical society concert, Int. house, 8:15 pm.Monday: “Doctor in the House” and “Doctor at Sea,” Hyde park theatre.Tuesday: Lecture, “Religious aspects of music,” Breasted hall, 8:30.Wednesday: “American Festival ballet,” Int house, 8:30 pm.Thursday: Chicago Symphony, Orchestra hall, 8:15 pm.Friday: Biackfriars, Mandel hail, 8:30 pm.Further information for those people who won’t take my word for it: is anything to introduce. Introductions,On “Religious aspects of music” Tues- Friday by showing two movies, symphony. Rudolf Firkusny is the fxhlblt^*n® t0 ^uyday evening at 8:30 pm in Breast- “Ecstasy,” with Hedy Lamarr and piano soloist. Chica^go Exhibitions calen-1__.11 rm. • a • . .. . _ _ _ at tho A rt motitn+n M;hinKcampusTheatre.. .Biackfriars opens one week ed I<f^tVre hall‘ This eYent is sP°n* “Psyche,” based upon the novel offrom tonight, and from all I have s°r£d by the Channing Murray Pierre Louy. A series admission to More musicheard the production promises to c u ’ the *°ur different programs costs The only event fitting in thisbe excellent. This year’s show is Ballet $2» a single admission is 60 cents, category is tonight’s Odetta-TomThe UC dance club is sponsor- This series is being shown in Judd Lehrer concert. Certainly one of tow>n. The Monroe gallery at 59 E.Monroe displays each month thework of various Chicago artists.The Hyde Park Art center at 1506Hyde Park features a student-member show. On the near northside, both the Arts club of Chi¬cago, in 109 E. Ontario and theExhibit A gallery at 47 E. Pear¬son, hang the works of some ofthe best local artists.People interested in these moredar” at the Art institute, whichlists all galleries around the city.in all probability the first science-fiction musical ever produced.Tickets are on sale at the Reyn¬olds club desk and at the bookstore.Concerts and recitalsPaul Robeson presents the firstof his two concerts this evening inMandel. Only $2.50 tickets arestill on sale, but judging from thereviews he has gotten earlier ont his concert tour, it’s well worththe price. Robeson will sing every¬thing from folk songs and spir¬ituals to selections from Otello.Robeson is here to sing; he willnot lecture. Both tonight’s and to¬morrow’s concerts will begin at8:30Sunday evening, the Musical so¬ciety will present its first of suchworld-wide accredited composersas Purcell, Brahms, Hindemith,and two preludes by locally ac¬credited UC composer, WilliamMathieu.LecturesSol Tax, chairman of the depart¬ment of anthropology, will givethe second in his series of lec¬tures on cultural anthropology,Wednesday evening, at 8 pm inSoc Sci 122. This lecture will cen¬ter around the question: are indi¬vidual or cultural differences dueto differences in racial potential?Max Janowski will speak on theJimmy'sSINCE 1940WOODLAWNBOWLINGLANES6225 Cottage Grove16 NEW ALLEYSSpecial Afternoon Ratesto College Students —35c per lineFA 4-3373for informationChuck Hall, mgr.'"Disc1367 E. 57tl» St.Recordof the week•LANDOWSKAThe Art of theHarpsichordLM 2194*3.99 ing a performance of the Amer¬ican Festival ballet, Wednesdayevening at 8:30 pm. The perform¬ance will be given in the Int. houseauditorium. The ticket price, $2,is cut down to $1.25, for students.Motion picturesQuite a number of good movieswill be shown around campus thisweek. Tonight, in B-J you can seeAlec Guinness in “The Detec¬tive.” Next Friday B-J will screen“All the King’s Men.” Shows startat 7:30, 9:30, and 11:30, admissionis 40 cents.Monday nights, the Israeli stu¬dent society will honor Israel’stenth anniversary by showingfour Israeli films. “The Book andthe Idol,” “The Wilderness ofZin,” “A letter from Roni” and“Leonard Bernstein.” This will beheld in Soc Sci 122. There is anadmission charge of one quarter.The Int. house film this Mon¬day is a Japanese import: “TheImpostor.” The picture starts at7:30, fifty cent admission.Doc Film opens its spring quar¬ter series “Of Love and Lust” next 126 at 8 pm and again at 9:15.Off campusTheater“Visit to a Small Planet” hastwo weeks left to run at the Har¬ris; good seats are available to allperformances. This show featuresCyril Ritchard and nothing else.“My Fair Lady” has been at theShubert long enough to establishvoting privileges. Good seats areavailable to this show too, justpick a year, cross your fingersand go to the box office.Concerts and recitalsNext Thursday and Friday theChicago Symphony will play thedances from the "Three-CorneredHat,” Dvorak’s piano 'concerto inG minor and Beethoven’s Fourth Motion picturesThe Hyde Park has a doctoredthe most unique couplings ever UP double feature: “Doctor in theenvisioned by an ambitious pro¬moter. Tickets go from $4 downto $1.75, unfortunately, the boxoffice is probably sold out.Art exhibitsThe Art institute is eurrentllybiding time with some small, butstill highly interesting exhibits.Among these are the PrimitiveOceanic sculpture display, printsby Renoir, and some 100 works byone of the patron saints of Italianfuturism, Umberto Boccioni.There’s a lot to be seen in someof the smaller galleries about House,” and, “Doctor at Sea,” thelatter with Brigitte Bardot. TheWorld Playhouse has a Greekfilm, “A Girl in Black,” “Nightsof Cabiria” is at the Surf, and"Escapade in Japan” is inhabitingthe Esquire.Dr. N. J. De FrancoDr. N. R. NelsonOPTOMETRISTS1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352Captures yourpersonalityas well asyour personphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St.'y?vr’r-o vwwwww + vwwirrl BORDONE►| Movers and Light Hauling •; LU 2-4660ijllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!llllllllllllllll!l!IIIIIIIIIII| It’s BIACKFRIARS j= time again — April 18 fir 19 ==E Tickets available for EEE the 1958 musical EE| “ALPHA CENTAURI” |EE at Reynolds Club Desk EEEE Woodworth's EEEE Ida Noyes Desk EEE U of C Bookstore =EE Student: $1.90, 1.40, .90 j=jH Reg. Adm.: $2.40, 1.90, 1.40 ||Iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii... \ * “ ”UielUfle yoAlutluatteDOCTOR IN THE HOUSEDirk Bogarde, Kay Kendall, James Robertson Justice, andall in colour. Mademoiselle called it "a dilly". KennethMore won England's best actor award for the film, de¬scribed by the Net* York Times as "zany, ribald, unin¬hibited, truly funny!"— AND —DOCTOR AT SEADirk Bogarde, with James Robertson Justice and BrigitteBardot also aboard. In colour.Plus a few minutes' preview that will break up all butthe very staid.Friday fir Saturday: Doctor in the House, 6:00, 9:15;• Doctor at Sea, 7:35, 10:55Sunday: Doctor in the House, 2:00, 5:15, 8:35; Doctorat Sea, 3:35, 6:55, 10:15 OSCAR BRAND presentsan .evening of folk songs8:30 pm Friday, Apr. 18Tech Institute AuditoriumSheridan and Noyes — EvanstonGeneral Admission — $1.00Tickets from: Scott Holt Activities OfficeSheridan Cr UniversityEvanston. * anhilarious, #< exciting,intimate,psychological gamefor adults onlyApr. 11, 1958 • C H I C A c O MAROON • IIAAUP reports on alleged John Gates to speakJohn Gates, former editor of the Dally Worker, wiH discussviolations of acad freedom :-v *-- * *■ •**-•**University of Southern California,Alabama Polytechnic institute,Texas Technological college, andLivingstone college.THEY SPAN a seven-year pe¬riod. Nine cases are new; four War II. As a result of an investi¬gation by the House committeeon un-American activities, he wasimprisoned. It was during thisperiod that Gates first began todoubt his past convictions. Lastyear, he officially resigned fromthe Communist party.His doubts and his eventual dis-' Reports of committee investigations alleging that nine colleges and universities had vio- dent Government,lated academic freedom in the dismissals of 13 teachers were published recently by the Gates worked for the partyAmerican Association of University Professors. for more than two decades. HeThe reports will be considered by the association’s committee on academic freedom and fou ht against the Fascists intamre. This committee may, at its discretion recommend eraasure of theadministratJonsof (he gh civU war and Worldthe educational institutions concerned to the AAUP annual meeting in Denver on April 25.Csscs occurred cit New York *University University of Ver- the dismissal were “either im- refusing to reappoint Byron R.mont, University of Michigan, proper or not supported by sub- Abernathy Herbert M. G™enbergReed rolle^e Dirkinson eollepe stantial evidence and because and Per G. Stensland last JulyReed college, Dickinson college, defenses werg .<seriousiy apparently over a local politicalprejudiced” by the procedure. dispute. The proceedings wereREED COLLEGE, Portland, held to have been “arbitrary andOregon, was rebuked for the dis- “a flagrant denial of due process,missal of Stanley Moore in Au- Livingstone college, Salisbury,,s aie new- luur gust, 1954, on grounds that his North Carolina, was “stronglywere held over for lack of infor- case “did not receive a sufficiently condemned for canceling a con- inusi0nment concerning not thewere neia over ior iacK or mior . determination on the basis tract with Gerard M. Mertens be- . . . ,. , , .mation from 1956 when a special S^-fSSSe^tandLrds ” cause he is a Unitarian. The col- goals’ but the means employed bycommittee published brief reports 01 permissiwe sranuai uh. le is related to the African the Communists to attain themon 18 cases as part of an effort ^jckmson c o ’ Methodist Episcopal Zion church, will be the subject of his talk."to review the effects upon aca- Pennsylvania, was criticized m meflemic freedom and tenure of the dismissal of Laurant R. LaVallee £ _ _ ■ __ ■national effort to achieve military on June 1, 1956, for proceedings jrllQPIlT DlcSSsecurity and combat Soviet com- that "suffered from numerous .*munism.” procedural defects.**The allegations as to each insti- Southern California was repri-tution follow. The cases of the manded for the suspension in 1955first eight teachers involved non- and failure to reappoint in 1956cooperation with Congressional Andreies Deinum in having "vio-Committees Investigating commu- lated the applicable principles ofnism. academic freedom and due pro-New York university was critic- cess.”Ized for “ambiguous” and “vague” Alabama Polytech receivedwording of its charges against criticism for failure to reappointLyman E. Bradley, dismissed Bud R. Hutchinson last May 8, inJune, 1951, and Edwin Berry Bur- a controversy over Hutchinson’s the Communist party Monday at 4 pm in Social Science* 122.Admission is 35 cents and the program is sponsored by Stu-John GatesHumor mags, newspapersattacked on US campusPros and cons on student press rights had their share of the limelight this year.. The fine line between elegantly risque and downright obscene material in college humorgum, dismissed A^ril, 1953. They integration views, for "unsound magazines and newspapers was the issue in at least two universities; University of Marylandr. . ’ . 3 j..” ■ anJ lTnitMn.il,, nt Uinnininhad refused to answer questions judgmentfrom Congressional committees TEXAS TECH bore censure forrelated to communist activity.FAILURE TO pay them a year’s 0 mSalary on dismissal also was de- 5CI6I1CG OfOlOCTSnounced. The university’s contin- ■ 1ued insistence that its statement©f policy on academic freedom and University of Virginia.At Maryland, a committee investigating bad taste in the student humor magazine OldLine brought a permanent ouster for its editor, Tina Fragle.Several students on the fac-at museum now Ulty senate committee on stu- out at whom he pleased and Gideonse. In 1950, the' College re-dent TMihlieatinns which con- that he had ***” fair and resP°n* voked the charter of the 13-year-ducted the probe, 'voted agaLt sib!e. !n *“"d*ta* the newspaper old student newspaper Vanguardand tenure has no legal standing Two hundred and fifty high the female editor. Students who an. Lsre ‘ ?|™, ar£;a ,a m.iifiniS2iwas noted “with apprehension." school students will enter projects voted to fire her included editors n a jres^lt.of.the in^lde.nt’tbe °*ated tbe new mu t p e edltoriUniversity of V e r m o n t was in the science fair this weekend at of the yearbook and newspaper. Vara. na , ,enl a;,e, COr\ . , , . ...eritcized for “clear and unjustifi- the Museum of Science and Indus- Administration and f a c u 11 y dUCting a Stfy °! Chf ^ ?nd (™S ru e required he public*able violations of academic ten- try. mfmSrs aJ M^vland and some pr0per WayJ°?Ul°Ut ff^egiate tloP to pnnt editorials pro...... . x. . j:omtccai * irtV r» L*,. mTtA itavo umn tha mei“Ders at Maryiana, ana some newspaper.” The Great Southeast and con, on all controversial is*ure in the dismissal of Alex B. The entrants, who have won the students, were reported to have regional"student editorial affairs sues)Nvokiff m August, 19o3, and for right to compete by their showing Dbiected to the “general tone” of reglonal sturfPl aIIalr* suesJ"pravp offenses against reeog- in local school district science ?"Jeciea tne general tone 01 conference (SEAC) supportedgrave onenses against recog m local scnooi aistnct science the magazine. No specific stories Bass and accused the student sen.nized principles in its hearing fairs, have set up exhibits and or cartoons were cited. mss ana accusea tne stuaent senprocedure. This has since been demonstrations on electrostaticgreatly improved, it said. photography, solar batteries, VirginiaUniversity of Michigan was cen- thrust measurement, and relatedsured for “unjustified summary subjects.suspension of Mark Nickerson The museum, a short walk eastand H. Chandler Davis prior to down 57th street, is open fromtheir dismissal without pay in 9:30 am to 4 pm on weekdays andAugust, 1954. It was also repri- 9:30 to 6 pm on Saturdays and p^fmanded because the grounds for Sundays. Admission is free. The mid-winter issue of the hu¬mor magazine, Virginia Specta- ate of paternalism.ColoradoThe problem of distributing off-campus publications at Coloradotor, was the subject of debate on university came to a head lastMore freedom of speechreported on two campuses the University of Virginia camA parody on Punch was asell-out in three days.University president, ColgateDarden, was less amused at the is¬sue of Punch and appointed a fac¬ulty committee to see if the issuediscredited the University byprinting obscene material.The special committee did not November when copies of theYoung Socialist were stoppedfrom circulation by the univer¬sity’s president.After much pressure from the BrooklynLast spring, three editors of theKingsman, the latest studentnewspaper, were suspended fromtheir posts for failure to complywith regulations directing pre¬publication consultation with theadviser.A few weeks ago, the editorialboard of the Kingsoian resignedin protest against “interference"by college administrators. TheGreater freedom of speech versity of Idaho voted overwhelmnn twn mirlwpstprn oamniises ingly in favor of using University found vulgar or obscene material;has been the subject of con facilities for speakers on contro- but it did decide that the issuecerted student action during the vf?jal ias“es; Somf. 82 P® «n* "discredited the name of the Uni- |K|[)| AKI PROFpast month • °f the students participating in a versity of Virginia, one of the 11 x r ixv^ip * special survey expressed the feel- most serious charges the admin-At the University of Illinois, the jng that a knowledge of partisan istration could make.Student Senate has been informed activities was an important part NOT ONLY did the committeethat a temporary easing of a ban of college life. aia me committeeon pc,ideal speakers has been The chairman of the Studentmade permanent. The modifica- senafe committee on the politicaltion, which was adopted by the speakers ban at Illinois said thatboard of trustees, allows candi- the partial lifting of the ban ondates in the presidential election campus would be followed by Sen-to speak on campus. ate action to further liberalize the Colorado Daily and other sources, student editors refused to followa campus compromise was reach- the multiple editorial rule,ed and distribution is now being President Gideonse, incidental-permitted from a central location, ly, is a former UC faculty memberFor years, Brooklyn college and according to one present cam*a staunchspecifically report that it had newspaper editors have been bat- pus administratorthng their president, Harry D. anti-Hutchins man.To give Asian viewof academic freedom_ a[e at,llon lo Iurmer iineraiize in? * t a , K. Bhaskara Rao, professor of English literature at thet Meanwhile students at the uni. ruling against partisan speakers. ,“e” IZv?“preseS°S- ol of Mysore, fodia,jvill speak on campus MondayCharges blacklists existin American universities indict the Spectator, it also cen¬sured the Cavalier Daily, the Vir¬ginia newspaper, for irresponsi¬bility. The report continued that“the irresponsibility of ‘Paunch’and ‘The Cavalier Daily’ alikeUniversity’s present policypermitting student sovereignty.”The committee concluded that“the necessarily normative func¬tion of any educational institu- admission charge,tion,” plus the probable desire of Dr. Rao has traveled widely inVirginia citizens, requires that the . . , . ... .students be held responsible to Asia and IS aware of the necdsof Asian students and universi¬ties. His concern for increasingworld awareness and internation-Students of the University of al understanding has made himNorth Carolina, in a recall elec- at 8 pm in Rosenwald 2. Dr. Rao, currently on a lecture tourfor World University service, will discuss “Academic freedom— an Asian view.” There is no ■■■successful in interpreting toAmerican students the life andproblems of India and Asia.He received his doctorate inat the StateCharging that a blacklist exists today in American universities “that is as mean and cruel as any inquisition,” Dean the university.Louis M. Hacker of the school of general studies, Columbia North Carolinauniversity, gave his definition of this “inquisition” in the April12 issue of The Nation, an in-dependent weekly. jp 1 h e 1 r traffic professionally. tion ousted Tar Heel editor NeilDour, Hacker wrote: ?nl,y ,0° ,frequently;. ‘h« a<lmm.s. ^ , ,, m a few monthsv wiuic. trators of universities have not’ "Teachers have been asked to defended their colleagues under ag0’sign special loyalty oaths; to attack; worse still, they have not The Bass roca11 binged, appar-purge themselves before investi- had the courage to restore to entIy» on whether he was abusing English literaturegating committees by giving academic life men who have been bis printing privileges or not. The University of Iowa where he wasnames of associates; and to sur- discharged from teaching posts opposition, led by the campaign WUS chairman in 1953-54. He wasrender an important protection simply because they ref used to an- manager for the defeated editorial also chairman of the World Re-against self-incrimination — the swer questions about their private candidate last spring, accused latedness commission of thesafeguards afforded by the Fifth lives by legislative committes ” Bass of partiality, of ridiculing YMCA, chairman of the interna-Amendment An editorial in the same issue of letters to the editor, ignoring oth- tional affairs committee of the“They (the teachers) spend The Nation stated; “As long as frs> °f being “obscene, unfair, and Student council, and secretary oftheir time and substance defend- this blacklist exists, freedom in immoral.’’ the international affairs commit-ing themselves against calumnl- education must remain a critical THE OUSTED editor continual- tee of the Iowa region of the USjators, some of whom are engaged problem.” ly claimed that it was his right to National Student association,12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 11,1958 Dr. K. Bhoskoro Rao