a j ChicagoM a r cron1yd. 66, No. 31 University of Chicago, Friday, Apr. 25, 1958Argonne opens new labsfor research in radiationSix new laboratories for basic research, including a thickly shielded “hot cave” forexperiments with materials of high radioactivity, were opened Wednesday at the nation’sfirst atomic hospital, the-Argonne cancer research hospitalThe hospital is operated by UC as part of its medical and biological research centerunder a contract with the Atomic Energy commission, which provided the $180,000 for thenew facilities. It is the only hospital in the country specifically constructed for the use ofall forms of radiation in thetreatment and study of cancer, equipment, is through five-inch yttrium-90, and directly as in theThe new laboratories are lo- thick solid steel outer doors and placing of plastic encased iodine-cated on the basement level, andare in addition to four laborato¬ries and a radioactive isotopepharmacy which have been oper¬ating on that floor since the build¬ing was opened five years ago.THE NEW laboratories are air -inch thick steel inner doors. 131 and cesium- 131 adjacent toTHE “CAVE” is located in one cancerous tissue or palladium-103of two high radiation level labora- in to tumors,tories that are under the direction Two other laboratories are un-of Dr. Paul V. Harper, Jr., asso- der the direction of Dr. Attallahelate professor of surgery. Kappas, assistant professor ofDr. Harper’s research concerns medicine, who is studying factors A brass choir photo by Deplioureconditioned, and, as are all of the use,of, radioactive isotope in that inOuence the body’s produc.laboratories in the building, are <he control of cancer, both by in- tion and transformation of steroidequipped with special safety de- direct application, as in the de- hormones and their relation to en-1 struction of the pituitary gland by doenne disorders.UC defends chess titleat midwest college tourneyUC will send a team of four students as defending cham¬pions to the Midwest Intercollegiate chess tournament to beheld May 10-11 at the University of Michigan.They are Charles Henin, first board; Rob Kirby, secondvices, ineludig hoods for the han¬dling of radioactive materialswhere tliere may be any possibil¬ity of air contamination.Exira protection is afforded bythe “hot cave” which is largeenough (seven feet long, 5 feetwide, seven feet high) to containlaboratory apparatus for experi¬ments with highly radioactive ma¬terials.This box is equipped with me¬chanical manipulators for remote¬ly handling such materials fromoutside the 15-inch thick steel and board; Mike Robinson, third,ferrophosphorus concrete walls, and Mitchell Sweig, fourth. is a master’s candidate in psy-Entry to the interior, for the pur- The latter three are College- chology.pose of setting up experimental physical science majors and Henin jn addition to holding the titleof Midwest collegiate champions(the tournament was founded atUC two years ago—Chicago plao-* ing third), the University holdsthe US collegiate champions title.The next national tournament isthis December. On top of Mitchell tower, a brass choir opened the fourthannual festival of the arts Tuesday afternoon. In additionto the group, the English hand bell group played someEnglish tunes and student chimers rang the Alice FreemanPalmer memorial chimes in the same tower.Lay cornerstone forhome of IR centerThe ceremony Wednesday afternoon of the cornerstone lay¬ing for the Charles Stewart Mott building, new home of theUC industrial relations center, was the occasion of an invita¬tional conference on “Industry, education and the commu¬nity.” —NINE STUDENTSMeasles hits UC;lab school affectedWith Asian flu hitting cam¬pus last autumn, this springappears to be the season for Ger¬man measles.According to student health,nine students reporting to theclinic were diagnosed as havingthe illness. Mrs. Helen McConnellof the service stated, however,that it seems to have tapered off.Students in the laboratorySchool (elementary and secondarySchools) reported that quite a few of their classmates were absentfrom the classes because of themeasles.Dr. Helen C. Newman, labschool physician, remarked thatthe elementary and secondaryschools “usually have some sortof contagious disease around thistime of the year.” She was reluc¬tant to say how many studentswere 111.Give dorm rates Strawberry queendeadline nearWednesday, April 30, is thedeadline for submitting nomi¬nations for this year’s Straw¬berry festival queen. The queenwill be chosen by an all-campuselection on May 6 and 7, andcrowned at the festival by JohnP. Netherton.Names of candidates may besubmitted either to the Studentactivities office or the Phi Sighouse, PL 2-9477. In honor Of Mott, who pi¬oneered through the Mott founda¬tion the community school con¬cept which has made his homecity of Flint, Michigan, a school-centered community, the confer¬ence considered some basic devel¬opments and problems of modernsociety.AMONG THE speakers wereChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton;Robert K. Bums, executive offi¬cer of the industrial relations cen¬ter; W. Allen Wallis, dean of thebusiness school; John A. Simpson,professor in the Fermi institutefor nuclear studies; Francis S.Chase, chairman of the depart¬ment of education, and Philip M. Hauser, chairman of the depart-,ment of sociology.Mott spoke at the luncheon, on“Strengthening the communityand its education—a' pioneeringapproach.”The cornerstone ceremony wasat 2:30 pm at the site of the new$1,300,000 building, 60th street andKimbark avenue.Tape recordings of the speechesat the conference were depositedin the cornerstone, together withdocuments relating to the giftand the industrial relations cen¬ter. The cornerstone is to beopened in 1990, at the time ofthe centennial celebration of theUniversity, to provide a look, onthe eve of the 21st century, of thepurposes and achievements of theprogram of the University and theMott foundation.Time to think about where to liveby Nancy PenkavaIf you haven’t already, now| is the time to think about| where you will live next year.| Here is a list of dormitories andwho can live in which, plus some| additional housing information.For women: Blake, Beecher,Gates, and Green halls and Westand North houses of the new dor¬mitory. Blake and Beecher will bereserved for graduates andwomen over 21; Gates for womenover 18. Quarterly rates, whichare posted on bulletin boards inthe dorms, range from $92.50 fora double room in Gates to $290 for a single room with meals inthe new dorm. Applications for alldorms are now being accepted.For men: Graduates and menover 20: Chamberlin, Hitchcock,Snell, Foster, Kelly, and third andfourth floors of Mathews. Lawschool men: Linn and first andsecond floors of Mathews. Others:the remaining houses in Burton-Judson and East house of the newdorm. Returning undergraduatemen with two years in the Collegemay also live in Foster. Quarterlyrates range from $85 for room to$293 for room and board. Appl-cations are being accepted now.Room only contracts are limitedto graduate students and menphoto by Dephoare RUMOR HAS IT that a certain fraternity decided to addits contribution to the festival of the arts finery by hanginga street sign on a lamp post in Hutchinson court (above).Indicating the comer of West Monroe and South Michiganavenue, the signs perplexed the campus since Michigan in¬tersects East Monroe. over 20 or women over 18 whohave lived in the dorms before.NEXT YEAR all students en¬tering from high school or withless than two years of collegecredit will be required to live in aresidence hall, unless they liveat home or with relatives. Stu¬dents 21 at the time of their ad¬mission to the University may pe¬tition the director of housing forpermission to live elsewhere. Re¬quests for permission to live withrelatives must be made by the stu¬dent’s parents or guardians inwriting to the director of housing.James E. Newman, director ofBurton-Judson. courts, /stated thatall petitions from students 21 andover will probably be granted.Newman also said that there hasbeen a good deal of confusionabout what* is contained in thisnew regulatoin and expressed thehope that now the situation wouldbe clarified. He stated that about95 per cent of entering studentsin 1957 lived in dorms, and that therefore this regulation will ap¬ply to only a small minority.Newman explained that the Uni¬versity’s concern is that these 5per cent found it difficult to findtheir place in the University com¬munity, as evidenced by the highdrop-out rate of students 20 andunder among them. He concludedby stating that there is nothingbehind the regulation that doesnot meet the eye.ALTHOUGH the prefabricatedhouses at 58th and Drexel are be¬ing tom down, there will be nodiminution in the number of Uni¬versity-owned apartments avail¬able.Students interested in a five-dayper week contract for next yearare advised to file one of the appli¬cations which will be availablethis week. Assignments will bemade in the new dorms after Sep¬tember 1, if possible, for 75 percent of the standard price. Thisarrangement is limited to studentsliving ha the Chicago area.This IsROBERT DONALD ERICKSON, art teacher in the lab school of UC.His major job is teaching courses in art and photography in the labschool and arts and wafts at the Orthogenic school. He is chairmanof the lab school’s art department and is the faculty chairman of thepre-freshman and freshman group and a member of policy committee,and is co-chairman of the group which keeps the Hyde Park Theatreand the Cinema supplied with art exhibits.Members of the lab school faculty are expected to take part in re¬search work in addition to their teaching activities. Erickson hastaken part in several projects in the past 13 years including the seven-year Haggard study longitudinal case studies of children from thethird through the 10th grade concerning all aspects of their develop¬ment—physical, emotional, mental, and social, and at present is work¬ing in a study of curriculum, groupings, and teacher efficiency, spon¬sored by a Ford foundation grant..Bob.Erickson has published articles in periodicals such as Arts andActivities magazine, The School Review, and The Elementary SchoolJournal; and has written a book, yet unpublished (the editor andpreface writer died within days of the anticipated publishing date, andit was withdrawn at the request of the author).From 1935 till 1942 Erickson attended several schools includingthe school of forestry of the University of Minnesota, the WorksProjects art school in Minneapolis, the Minneapolis school of art andManakato state teachers college where he received his BS in scienceand mathematics. Then he completed a major in art in Manakato.Till 1945 Bob Erickson was taking courses at the Art institute ofChicago and at the Institute of Design where he received the firstMA awarded by that institution.During his long schooling Erickson worked at many differing ac¬tivities including teaching, singing, and choir directing. His interestin children is manifest by his work in the Orthogenic school, histeaching of children’s classes at the Institute of Design from ’45-’48,and his designing of educational toys for children, some of which cur¬rently are being sold through a New York mail order firm.In 1947 Erickson married Cathline Mortz, then a lab school kinder¬garten teacher. Cathline was director of the Coop Nursery schoolfrom *47-’50. She now directs her own nursery of Daniel, 6% andDiane, 2%.Erickson’s hobbies and interests are as varied as his educationranging from be-bop to Stravinsky in music, to writing stories andpoetry, to collecting rare sheet music and records and furniture, tocooking, photography, and the designing and building of cameras.His is a “it’s what you do with what you’ve got” philosophy, andErickson feels that his job in the lab school is more compatible thanany other to this mode of living.(Photo a Artie)* by Ed Szkirpan) Three professors speakabout function of theologyby Philip Shell’’The typical American university loday is not a community of scholars, but only the placqwhere such a community may be found and survive, if at all. Let us not assume that it musfiexist, and frustrate ourselves looking for it.” So Prof. Sidney E. Mead advised the annur*'theological faculty-student conference in its closing session Tuesday in Swift commons. T1conference theme was “The function of a theological faculty in the university.”Mead, who is professor of history of American Christianity and president of MeadvilfaJtheological seminary, made 7 " ~the statement in reaction to The theological faculty, like the man injury, theology has th#the theme and the views Of university, he said, might there- highest place in the university,two preceding speakers, Professor fore more profitably ask how it Nonetheless, the truths of th<Walter Harrelson, dean of divin- has come to the condition in ology, according to Hutchinsity school, and Professor Perry D. which it finds itself, and where it must be measured by the rest oLeFevre of Chicago theological is going, rather than attempting man’s knowledge. LeFevre dre\seminary. to justify its own existence in the from this the conclusion that fa*Mead criticized the search for f*** of others> some speeu- interdisciplinary conversationv!an overall rationale for the uni- terrns which might not theology has much to learnversity and the theological faculty *Pp*jr' well as to give,in particular, and pleaded for an In contrast, LeFevre, in the Following LeFevre, Harrelsonappreciation for the complexity of opening speech, took the function stated that the university is bysuch entities as “historical emer- of a theological faculty to be that definition a community of freegents,” whose segments do not exemplifying what he called an(j responsible scholarship. Thaalways relate to one another in the “theological concern,” the con- university was so conceived by itacern with that on which man founder, William R. Harper. With-places his ultimate trust or builds jn this community the theologicalhis hierarchy of values.any clear and logical fashion.faculty is defined by its subjectLeFevre suggested that serious matter,conversation between theologians Approaches to this subject mathand those in other disciplines ter are in part determined by thamight begin with the question of choices that have been made inNetherton to beon radio SundayDean of students John P. Neth- ultimate concern which all men the past and are being made iaerton and director of student ac- ask, or with problems of truth, the ongoing life of the theologicaltivities Mary Alice Newman will vaiue» and the like which underlie faculty. They are also determineddiscuss "The Place of Student Ac- eVfr^,scholarly inquiry. by its self-understanding and Kgn ™ LeFevre reviewed former Chan- interpretation of the contempttivities this Sunday at 7 pm on ceJior Hutchins’ “idea of the uni- rary human situation.WUCB. versity” along with those of Car- In no way, however, would thisIncluded in the discussion will dinal Newman and Karl Jasper, exhaust the scope of its responsebe such topics as the recently de- He recalled Hutchins’ early in- bility, nor compromise the stand-bated Student Code the effeets of sistence upon an ordering and ards of sound scholarship. HarrekStudent rnvemment on the iJl Phoning discipline, a metaphys- son shared LeFevre’s concernStudent Government on the code, jcs that W0U](j bring a unity to with apologetics, and pointed outthe position of the University in university learning. that there are various degrees otregard to control over student or- Hutchins identified the natural ways in which the confessionalgamzations, and how a budget is theology of some Christian think- position may.be held within theset up for an organization. ers with such a metaphysics. But, theological faculty.This is the third program in the speaking at the founding of the During the discussion that fdtseries “Enquiry” which features federated theological faculty in lowed the speeches, many issuesmembers of the faculty and ad- 1943, he recognized that meta- were raised. Among them was thaministration and are designed to physics alone does not answer observation that there is a ge»give the student a better idea of certain ultimate problems of hu- eral breakdown of communicationhow the University is operated. man life and the being of God. He within the university concerning“Enquiry” is produced and di- went so far as to say that since problems of “ultimate concern."rected by John Schuerman. The theology, both natural and re- The conference did not adjournstation can be heard at 640 kc on vealed, is concerned with these with a single formulation ofAM dials. basic matters underlying all hu- lution to these problems.lest yourpersonality powef Taboo or not taboo \\ that is the question )But if you want to enjoy smoking as never before,switch to Camels. Nothing else tastes so rich,smokes so mild. Today more people smoke Camelsthan any other cigarette. The best tobacco givesyou the best smoke. Try Camels and you’ll agree!have a CamelR. J. Reynold. Tobacco Company,Winston-Salem, N. C.If you answered “No” to all questions, you obvi¬ously smoke Camels — a real cigarette. Only 6 or7 “No” answers mean you better get on to Camelsfast. Fewer than 6 “No’s” and it really doesn’tmatter what you smoke. Anything’s good enough!1. Do you feel unqualified to judge a campus beauty contest? VIS(For men only!)2. Do you think going to a big party the night before is thebest way to overcome pre-exam jitters?— — □3. Do you find the company of the opposite sex annoying? □-i 14. Do you think fads and fancy stuff can give you the fulltobacco flavor of a real cigarette?-.5. Whenever one of your professors makes a grammaticalerror, do you call it to his attention? ... □□6. Do you and your date sit In the back row of the balconyonly because you’re both farsighted?.7. Do you think cowboy shows will ever be banned fromtelevision?S. De you consider Ibid, the most quoted Latin author? ■CD□■CD NOCD1=3CD1=3I ICDCDCDHave a real cigarette2 • CHICACO MAROON • Apr. 25, 1958in automation: BennettBusiness decisions in automation often display lack of imagination and judgment RearAdmiral Rawson Bennett, chief of naval research, told 500 executives Monday at a confer¬ence sponsored by UC.He spoke on “Three keys to the future: basic research, automation, and cutting costs,” atthe University’s third annual conference on automation, operations research, and businessplanning in the Morrison hotel. The conference was sponsored by the business school andUniversity college.Admiral Bennett cautionedbusinessmen against plungingblindly into automation. “I amnot an opponent of automation,but often businessmen fastentheir eyes on the pounds of hard¬ware per man hour, compute theamortization of the capital invest¬ment, and forget flexibility.’'He described a situation where« company considered automatiz¬ing its library but after analyzingits reference system discoveredthat, despite the glamour of auto¬mation, two good reference librar¬ians could produce faster results. old products rather than creationof new ones.“Automation might magnifyobstacles in the way of the intro¬duction of truly new products,”he said, “since radically new prod¬ucts seldom originate where onemight expect them.”In addition to automation, Ad¬miral Bennett said that businessprogress depended on other fac¬tors. “Science and research mustbe used to generate new prod¬ucts,” he said. “There is tax legis¬ lation pending which should makeit more feasible for business tocarry somewhat more of the basicresearch burden. Let us hope itis passed in our common nationalinterest.”“Costs must be kept low enoughfor success in the marketplace,”he said, reminding managers andengineers never to lose sight ofthe goal of designing and produc¬ing the simplest, cheapest productto satisfy customer demand whiledelivering reasonable profit.Fulbright bulletin ready Parking on campus?photo by MokotoffIn answer to the parking problem on campus, some stu¬dents placed a sign on the Hull court gate indicating ampleparking space just a few miles from campus.Admiral Bennett urged thatbusinessmen take a positive ap¬proach to automation. He saidthat without deep thought in thenew product area automationmight freeze into improvement ofl-F elects officersLast Tuesday night, the In¬terfraternity council held itseslection of officers for the com¬ing year. Chosen were: MartyKain, Phi Sigma Delta, president;Dave Israelstam, Zeta Beta Tau,secretary, and Jim McQuade, Del¬ta Upsilon, treasurer.They will succeed A1 Lobsenz,ZBT; Don Richards, Kappa AlphaPsi, and Joe DePierre, Alpha Delt,respectively.Open FOTA atMitchell towerOn Tuesday, festival of the artswas officially rung in by the com¬bined forces of a brass choir, Eng¬lish handbell ringers, and. the bellsof Mitchell tower.The ceremony, modeled aftersimilar May Day proceedings atOxford university, began at noonwith a series of bongs as EricUnander, student chimer, rang“Chime Prelude” on the AliceFreeman Palmer memorialchimes. Unander concluded hisperformance with “Four Tunesfor Ten Bells,” composed by F.Jay Pepper in honor of the 50thanniversary of the dedication ofthe Mitchell tower bells.Following the bells, the brasschoir, situated on the roof, playedsix pieces. At 12:35 “Chime Inter¬lude” was rung. Then came elevenpieces by the English HandbellRingers, performing two bells toa man. The ringing of “ChimePostlude” from the tower con¬cluded the ceremony. The best-known international exchange project, the Ful¬bright program, is given full treatment in a special Fulbrightissue of the News Bulletin, the monthly publication devotedto international education and published by the Institute ofInternational Education.Copies of the Fulbright spe¬cial issue may be obtained for 25cents by writing the Institute of now in operation.International Education, 1 East67 street, New York City.The theme of the March issueis “Around the world with theFulbright program” and is car¬ried out in definitive articles de¬scribing how this exchange isprogressing in various areas.Richard P. Gilson, a former Ful- day to raise funds for World uni-brighter himself, reports on the versily service,potentials of the program in the Blossoms of all colors will lendSouth Pacific while the total their springtime touch to the char¬itable drive. They will be sold byUC damsels stationed at the book¬store, C-bench, Reynolds club anda definitive look at how the pro¬gram has grown and where it isHold carnationsale WednesdayInterdormitory council willsponsoi a carnation sale Wednes-growth and impact of the Ful¬bright act is examined by C. J.Nuesse, of the board of foreignscholarships. Other articles deal circulating around campus. If thewith the programs progress mSardinia and Finland.One of the highlights of the spe¬cial News Bulletin issue is a pic- weather is unfavorable to Aprilposies, the sale will be postponeduntil Thursday, May day.The carnations are priced at 25Gary StollUMOC candidatetake a“Bud Break"Budweiser,KING OF BEERSANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES File deferment formsfor selective serviceEvery student, excluding 1958 mid-year entrants, who iscompleting an academic year of study in June, and who wishesto be deferred for the ensuing academic year by the Univer¬sity, must request the registrar, before May 9, to submit SSSForm 109 to his local board.To do this, selective service S; May 8, T-Z; May 9, for studentsregistrants should file an SSS in¬formation card (the present onesbecome obsolete) and requestform 109 be sent to their localboards in the office of the Regis¬trar, Administration building,room 103, between 10:00 am and3:30 pm, according to the follow¬ing schedule: April 29, A-C (ini¬tial for student’s last name); April30, D-G; May 1, H-J; May 2, K-L; who could not (for good reason)prepare and file the SSS card onthe date scheduled.Secondly, the student shouldnotify his local board before May9 that he intends to continue hisstudies in the University or in an¬other institution, that he is scor¬ing deferment as a student, andthat he has asked the registrarto prepare SSS Form 109. For th spurpose the student should usethe official letter which may beture feature that tells the story cents apiece or five for $1.of the Fulbright exchange. A sec- A salewoman may be recog-tion of statistics gives the reader nized by her red carnation.Vote today for Ugly ManToday is the last day for stu¬dents to vote in the “Ugliest Manon Campus” contest currently be-Ang sponsored by Alpha PhiOmega. Students may cast theirballots by placing any amount ofmoney in the appropriate bottleat the UMOC display in Mandelhall corridor.Candidates for the award areGary Stoll, sponsored by DeltaUpsilon, John Longstreet, PhiDelta Theta; Nelson Hyman, PhiSigma Delta, and Jerry Weiss,Zeta Beta Tau.In addition, students will be al¬lowed to cast apathy votes by vot¬ing for last year's winner, ArtTaitel.Proceeds will go to Student Gov¬ernment’s Frankfort exchangeprogram. The person with thegreatest number of votes (money)will be declared the winner. Thewinner will be announced at theBeaux Arts ball tomorrow night. May 5, M-N; May 6, O-R; May 7, obtained from the registrar.ANDERSON CAMPUS TOURSBerkeley, California Copenhagen, DenmarkUnusual itineraries, university leadership, modest prices!Ages 18 to 26See our itineraries before you decide!Midwest representative: Knowles Cooke" 304 Washington BoulevardTelephone: Village 8-3691 Oak Park, IllinoisGABE'S STORE FOR MENN.W. Corner 55th fir Kenwood HY 3-5160For your selection ——Entire new stock ofSummer Clothing and FurnishingsAll nationally advertised merchandiseUniversity's finest store for menInternational House MoviesMonday evenings, 7:30 p.m. — Assembly HadMonday, April 28 — 50c — A Double Life (USA)IVY FOR SPRING & SUMMERWash Cr Wear Suits—(Coats $15—Pants $7.95) .$22.95Polished Cotton Suits—(Coats $10—Pants $4.95) $14.95Cord Suits—(Coats $10—Pants $4.95) $14.95Short Sleeve Ivy Shirts $ 2.95Out* Prices Can't Be Beat... it's Smart'To Buy For LessD & G Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-3728“ft* the Neighborhood for 40 Year***Hours: 9 o.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 o.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdayApr. 25, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3*, j jww h WSIrt wws* wwk 'vft'f -~ -.-r'v.v.-......,,.., "—~-—"■"""— -—' »—"—■ —- - .. ■.-■■ ■ -v " ' •••“ •-—■■ 1 l,,l,,wrLetters to the editorApproves of SC's standon University housing fileIn Mary Finkle’s article (Maroon, April 11) explaining the UC housing file, I find norelevant arguments for not supporting SG’s position.Miss Finkle quotes dean of students John P. Netherton and assistant dean Ruth O. McCarnrs presenting the following five arguments. As each is summarized, I will describe brieflythe reasons why I feel that it is weak.1. SG’s proposal is untimelybecause a thorough study ofthe housing file is beginning.It seems to me that this is themost proper time to suggest animprovement such as this.2. The proposal is unnecessarybecause of the unstable neighbor¬hood and the number of unitsavailable. The proposal wouldseem to be unecessary only in theabsence of discrimination.3. The proposal is inconsistentwith the policy of allowing stu¬dents to choose their own dwell¬ings. An available list does notforce the student to choose onlyfrom this list.4. The proposal forces the land¬lord to take any tenant. The land¬lord has the freedom to decidewhether he wishes to be placedon the list or not. Since the Uni¬versity has a basic policy of non¬discrimination in regard to race orreligion in University housing,this practice should be consistentfor non-University housing, too.5. The proposal necessitates new direction for Student Gov- Although Joel Rosenthal hashealth and safety factor check, ernment. Most of those who were many merits, he does not seem toAlong with the first argument,this seems to be more an argu¬ment in favor than against theproposal, since the checks areseemingly desirable.Daniel S. Schubert n/yt cfttccup11 laroonProtests SRP old guard';disappointed at RosenthalThe recent elections evoked greater interest in StudentGovernment than we have seen on this campus in a longtime. Both parties offered slates of candidates who were, forthe most part, new people with a fresh outlook toward Stu¬dent Government. In lookingover the list of those who were College. It would seem wise forelected, we were encouraged as SRP to put forward for SG offi-to the possibilities for accomplish- ces new people who understandment during the coming year. We the needs of the College studentsare convinced that the personali- and are in sympathy with the newties and attitudes of most mem- spirit that is dominant in bothbers of the Assembly should be parties.conducive to co-operation and ef- Thirty-three votes in a divisionfective action, if the leadership of where 500 students were eligibleSG will permit it. to vote is hardly sufficient evi-It seems to us that if this year’s dence that the SRP choice for theSG is to be effective, political an- Presidency has received an en-tagonisms must be submerged, dorsement from an informed andThe elected ISL’ers are new peo- interested electorate with whompie who are prepared to look in a he has discussed the issues. Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andIntermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon.Ida Noyes hall, 1212 East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-0800extensions 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionsby mail, $3 per year.. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday. Deadlinefor all ma*«-fal 3 pm. Wednesday. .Editor-in-chiefGary MokotoffAssociate editorRochelle M. DubnowManaging editorRobert J. HalaszNews editorMary FinkleSports editor- Dan Cosgrove Gadfly editorRichard BrooksCartoonistsLiza FlanneryDick MontgomeryAlan Petlin Culture editorNeal JohnstonCopy editorDonna DovisPhotographic staff: Robert Molone, Dove Coffey, Ed Dephoure.Editorial staff: Claire Birnbaum, Ino Brody, Tom Coblk, Jone Forer, LanceHoddix, John Herzog, Irene Kenneth, Gene Moss, Noncy Penkovo, DickPurl ill, jjldis Roze, Corol Silver, Elizabeth Stroup, Ed Szkirpon.Business Manager.Lawrence D. KesslerAdvertising monagerGordon Briggs Circulation monogerJoan Helmkenelected from SRP are also inter¬ested in making SG more impor¬tant and effective than it hasbeen irf the past. be in sympathy with the newtrend in Student Government. Wewere disappointed when Joel andLinda Rosenberg, in offering ISLfree deliveryOMAR’S PIZZA1145 E. 55fhHY 3-5150 But SRP has nominated for the opportunity to participate inSG Presidency an old guard a coalition, refused to considerSRP’er. In light of this, we think ISL’ers for any of the more im-they should present a clear pic- P°rtant posts,ture of their aims for next year’s ISF, Policy Advisorygovernment and should explain Committeethe kind of co-operation betweenthe parties.Let’s face it. The students mostdirectly affected by SG are in the Letter policyThe Maroon publishes letters to the editor on subjectsof interest to the student body. No unsigned letters willbe printed under any circumstances, however, the writer'sname will be withheld, or noms de plume used, on request.Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced, using60-character space margins. Please type on one side ofthe paper only. Letters over 250 words are subject toediting. ^Dutch boy desires pen pal... I am 18 years of age your university is well known inand hope to pass my secon- Holland, and because you havedary school final examination many relations. I kindly requestin July and then hope to be admit¬ted at a commercial university fortwo years.My hobbies are photographyand to learn to know foreign coun¬tries with their peoples, togetherwith their habits, life, culture,character and so on.I am writing to you because you to help me in finding a cor¬respondent friend in your neigh¬borhood who is willing to writeabout himself and many otherthings in which he takes also agreat interest.Dolf VanGraas, Jr.Frans Zwaanstr, 80Zandvoort, Holland"Mill" <• A •it irnit nnti.<tn. eonrmwu mm ntt ooca-mia company.Absent-minded ProfessorNot so absent-minded when you getright down to it. He remembered themost important item—the Cokel Yes,people will forgive you almost anythingif you just remember to bring alongtheir favorite sparkling drink—ice-coldCoca-Cola. Do have another, professor! SIGN OF GOOD TASTEBottled wider authority of The Coeo-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.• CHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 25, 1958 1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoFeaturing — Complete Wine List andHors d'oeuvre TableSmoli Large Smoli Large14*12" 14" 12"Cheese 1.15 1.55 Combination ..1.75 2.25Sausage 1.45 1.95 Mushroom .... 1.60 2.10Anchovy .... 1.45 1.95 Shrimp 1.75 2.25Pepper & Onion 1.30 1.80 Bacon Cr Onion. 1.60 2.10Free Delivery on All Pizza to VC Students Join activities,be intellectual:espouses writer“Spring is busting out allover” and so are we dear stu¬dent, busting at the seams.Our student organizations arefor the most part a flop. We areblessed with a few that actuallyIry to get things accomplished;the major policy of the rest seemsto be to give the administrationhell.All true intellectuals wouldagree that a liberal education con¬sists of a great deal more thanmerely memorizing a few books;and seeing that we have such avast number of “intellectuals” onthis campus, it should be all tooobvious that we are a sorry lot.Our intellectuals are a greatbunch: neurotics, introverts, slop-py-dressers, people who remainaloof from others, and what-notswho are totally ineffective humanbeings. Essentially our “intellec¬tuals” are just afraid to live or tobe seen living.Wake up! Join student organ¬izations and be active in them.Let’s drop the act and live a little,only then will we be deserving ofthe name intellectuals.F. G.PRE-INVENTORY SALElook in display windowUNIVERSITY of CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.4G A D F LY"If I may use such a ludicrous figure of speech, (1) am sort of a gadfly . ... attached to the state, and allday long and in all places am always fastening upon you, arousing and persuading and reproaching you."— Plato's APOLOGYHousing file: an arena for emotion or thoughtSECONDLY, there are the ar¬guments in terms of the advan¬tages and disadvantages of havinga housing file like the presentone. The housing file enables stu¬dents to have maximum knowl¬edge of housing availabilities. Itenables landlords to find “compatible” students.A prevention of unmarked “discriminatory*’ listings would savethe “discriminated” person fromembarrassment when applying ata house which does “discrimirate.” A change in the file wouldgive students the knowledge ofwho “discriminates,” and the op¬portunity to boycott such hous¬ing. The long run hope of thosewho want to change the housingfile, I presume, is to discouragelandlords from “discriminating.”THIRDLY, there is the argu¬ment denying the possibility ofimplementing a non-discrimina-tory housing file. These argu¬ments are central to the adminis¬tration's position and consist ofthe following: There are mechani¬cal problems of keeping the fileLight info that live Modern flavorYou get a moreeffective filteron todays L*MLook for the patent number * • * *on every pack...yourassurance that you are gettingL‘M’s exclusive filtering action Best tastin’ smoke you’ll ever find!Put yourself behind the pleasure end of an L&M. Get the flavor, thefull rich taste of the Southland’s finest cigarette tobaccos. The patentedMiracle Tip is pure white inside, pure white outside, as a filtershould be for cleaner, better smoking. £1033 Liggett ft Mybiu Tobacco Co.WILBUR JUST WOKE UP TOThe fact that he's in class!KEEP AliRT FORABETTER POINT AVERAGEIpon’t let that “drowsy feel*lAg” cramp your style in class... Of when you’re "hittingthe books”. Take a NoDotAwakener! Id a few minute*you’ll be your normal best...wide awake .. . alert! YoiHdoctor will tell ybu—NoDoaAwakener* are safe as-Coffee.Keep a Pack handy!15 TABLETS, 3Sc ^35 tablets "lo lundy tin**« NOQOZn W A K E N E R 5I PASSION AND principles arethe main ingredients of the cur¬rent debate about the UC housing‘file. There are many arguments,both for and against the petitionto end the “discriminatory’* file.Yet all the debate seems unsatis¬fying. When the arguments areHone, the weight of the number ofStudents or the power of the ad¬ministration will prevail but thedebate will have little effect.In this debate, each proponentand opponent rarely has met eachother’s arguments. And eachehampion of “non-discrimination”and defender of “landlord rights”cites a fraction of the total argu¬ments on either side. These argu¬ments fall Into three categories:FIRST, there are the argu¬ments in terms of rights and free¬doms of the students, landlords,administration and people in gen¬eral. Students have the completefreedom to choose a place to live;landlords have the freedom tochoose their students. The admin¬istration has the right to run itshousing file as it sees fit. Thepeople have a right not to be dis¬criminated against because of col¬or, race, or creed. General state¬ments about the basic moralityor depravity of man may also beput in this category. non-discriminatory. There is toomuch flux and instability in theneighborhood to keep a non-dis¬criminatory housing file. The pro¬posals are “untimely.” There arepersonnel and budgetary prob¬lems.The difficulty which appeals torights and freedoms is simplythat they meet counter-appeals ofrights and freedoms. Generalprinciples of man’s moralityand/or depravity are riddled withexceptions. Bramble bushes ofargument are generated, and eventhe experienced UC dialecticiansget lost. One can’t help feelingthat at such times, “right” and“freedom” become tools for thepreferences and emotions of theirusers.The subject of the consequencesof changing the file is susceptibleto more intelligent discussion.What proportion of landlordshave any extensive contact withtheir student occupants, and iscompatibility really an issue?How many students will really be saved embarrassment by a non-discriminatory housing file? Willa non-discriminatory housing fileactually have any effect on thelandlords’ practices? Will there beany pressure on the landlords ordoes he have other sources fortenants? And even if the non-dis¬criminatory housing file actuallydocs form an economic pressureon the landlord, will it have anyeffect on him, or are “discrimina¬tions” of this sort too deep to betouched by economic pressure?These are questions which can beintelligently discussed.When the administration ad¬vances arguments about the pos¬sibility of implementing such aproposal as the petition, theystand with unimpeachable author¬ity. After all, they know whattheir budget is, they know “theadministrative difficulties.” But,with all candor, I doubt whetheror not “administrative difficul¬ties” and “untimeliness” are notsimply names for bureaucratic in¬ertia. It would seem to me that the test here would be whether ornot the administration is willingto talk at length about its “admin¬istrative difficulties.”Such questions could be dis¬cussed as, Why couldn’t studentscontribute time and labor to keep¬ing the housing files? What kindof-“well-trained” personnel is re¬quired? How much work in factis involved in keeping housingfiles for an unstable neighbor¬hood? What is this administra¬tion’s “thorough study” and whenwill its results be available? If theadministration won’t talk al>outits “administrative difficulties,”tiien their argument should be re¬garded as a dodge, and treatedwith all the contempt which stu¬dents have the power to muster.Gadfly suggests an order ofargument for this established is¬sue which is the reverse of theway the debate has taken place.First, questions such as, What ispossible, what will the adminis¬tration talk about, and what willit do? should be clarified. Second. what are we students trying toaccomplish by this housing file?Will it convert landlords? Will wecause a student housing short¬age? Such questions are worthyof intelligent discussion. Thirdly,at the very end of the discussion,when possibilities and conse¬quences have been looked at. per¬haps rights and freedoms can beasserted.Jimmy'sSINCE 1940FREE DELIVERY^ NICKYSPIZZERIANO 7-9063You'll be siftin' on top of the world when you change to liMApr. 25/ 1958 • CHICACO MAROON • 5CLASSIFIEDSUniversity rote 30c per line. Others 60c per line.Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265 Coming events on quadranglesFriday 25 AprilWanted For rentRide to Cleveland, Frt May 2. Barry Park Forest 2 bedroom home for rent.Kahan, B-J, PL 2-9526. $125. Lease, no dogs. Near school and. shopping. Available June 1. Phone PIBaggage rack for top of small car. Call 8-5245 or MI 3-0800, ext. 2521, and leaveDO 3-3257. message for T, A. Chandler.IJC’s faculty member's furnished housein Homewood available for 12 or 15months from July 1. Convenient to ICtrans. 2 BR and study (or 3 BR),screened porch, half-basement. MI 3-0800, ext 3423 or SY 8-7057.Available May 1. Most luxurious apart¬ment on South Side. Short distancefrom campus. 8 spacious rooms carpetedthroughout. 3 tile baths and showerstalls. Tile cabinet kitchen. Other at¬tractions too numerous to mention. Ga¬rage available. Only $175 per month.Phone EN 4-0161 after 7:30 pm.Attractive apt. to share with femalestudent. S. PH Blvd. Ph: Maroon.Transportation wanted for quiet me¬dium sized dog to Washington DC be¬fore June 1. $10. PL 2-0953.Mature student desires job weeks of4/28, 6/16, 6/23 and/or Saturdays. Typ¬ing 50 wpm. Education-math major.A. Tate, Gates hall after 6 pm or leavemessage.Woman, secretarial experience nec. Seeor phone Miss Punity; Amer. Bar Assn;HY 3-0533. ext 268.For saleNew bicycles, discounts. MI 3-9048.For TJC familyMust sell, make an offer! Two storybrick, four bedrom residence, heatedporch, new gas hot water boiler, fullbasement, two car garage, beautifullylandscaped lot. Phone for appt. Mrs.Redfem; C. W. Hoff & Co., Inc. HY3-2215.54th and HarperEight room frame house, nice yard andlow taxes, priced to sell at $12,500. Mrs.Redfern; C. W. Hoff & Co., Inc. HY3-2215. PersonalDr. N. J. De FrancoDr. N. R. NelsonOPTOMETRISTSIIM E. 63 NY 3-5352 Giving way prize white duck. Call BU8-9870, ask for Duck.Stud: I'll see you tonight at 2 am.Lonely.For your Sunday dinner outing, Alex¬ander’s restaurant. 1137 E. 63rd.Moses supposes his toeses are roses,but Moses supposes erroneously. Every¬one else knows that roses are rose6 andwhat Delta Upsilon's ROSE DANCE willbe.“I know a bank where the wild thymeblows, where oxsllps and the noddingviolet grows. Quite over-canopied withluscious woodbine, with srweet muskroses and hayfever at Delta Upsilon’sROSE DANCE, May 3 . . , Shakespeare.All alumnae of Nu PI Sigma, women’shonorary society, are cordially invited tothe formal Initiation on Wed. April 30,1058 at Ida Noyes hall; 7:30 pm. PleaseRSVP to Tnly Larson. Gates hall. Jazz workshop Jam session, 3:30, Rey¬nolds club south lounge.Lutheran student group meeting, dinnerat 6 pm (charge for dinner), discus¬sion at 7, "The roots of Americanculture,” Sidney Mead, professor ontheology faculty, department of his¬tory, president of Meadville theologi¬cal school.Calvert club, weekend retreat. Childerleyretreat house. Wheeling, leave fromDeSales house 7 pm, return 5 pm,Sunday.Undergraduate math club lecture,P. Brauer, “Non-linear ordinary dif¬ferential equations,” 3:30, Eckhart 206.Radio broadcast, Science 58. WGN, Re¬view of high and low temperaturephenomena, 7 am.Le Cercle Francais, selections from“Knock,” by Jules Romalns, 3:30, IdaNoyes library.Hillel foundation, celebration of Israel’stenth anniversary. Sabbath service,7:45, lecture, "Israel: a laboratory forsocial experiment,” Jehuda Messlnger,dean of State Kibbutz teachers’ col¬lege In Israel, at 8:30, folk dancingand singing.Documentary films, “Extase” and"Psyche,” $2.00 series, 60 cents singleadmission, Judd 126, 7 and 9 pm.University theatre, “Intimate relations.”Jean Cocteau, Reynolds club theatre,8:30, admission charge.Saturday 26 AprilHelen Sobell speaking on her husband’scase, sponsored by SRP, Soc Sci. 122,1 pm.Recorder society, Ida Noyes hall, 2:30.English class for foreigners. Intermedi¬ate, 10 am-12, International house.University Theatre, “Intimate Rela¬tions,” Jean Cocteau, Reynolds elubtheatre, S:30, admission charge.Sunday 27 AprilTV program, WBBM-TV, channel 2,"The atom and space,” 1 pm.Roman Catholic masses, DeSales house,8; 30. 10, and 11 am.Hind chamber musie players’ recital,works by Haydn, Mozart, Bloch, Men¬delssohn, 3 pm.U€ symphony orchestra rehearsal, Man-del hall, 7 pm. SRP caucus, Ida Noyes, 7:30.Rockefeller chapel service. Reverend J.Russell Chandron, principal of Unitedtheological college, Bangalore, SouthIndia, 11 am.English class for foreigners, intermedi¬ate, International house, 2-4 pm.Social dancing. International house, in¬struction, 7-8 pm, dancing, 8-11 pm.50 cents for non-residents.Concert, Bond chapel choir, 8:30 ppa.University theatre, “Intimate relations.”Jean Cocteau, Reynolds club theatre,8:30, admission charge.International exhibition: movies, slides,food bazaar, International house,3 pm.Festival of the nations, songs anddances from around the world. Inter¬national house, 8:30, admission charge.Monday 28 AprilTelevision series, Science 58, 7 am,WON-TV, "What Is statistics?" W.Allen Wallis, professor of statisticsand economics, dean of businessschool.Radio program. Omnibus of Jazz, "JazzInvades Broadway,” Johnny WalkerHartlgan and Brooks Johnson, boats,WUCB, 7 pm.English class for foreigners, advanced.International house, 7-9 pm.Maroon staff meeting, Ida Noyes, 3:36.Hillel folk dance group, beginners 7:30,advanced, 8:45.International house movie, “A doublelife” (US), assembly hall, 7:30, admis¬sion 50 cents. ’Lecture series; “Buddhism in Chinesehistory and culture," "Configurationsof Chinese pre-Buddhist culture," Ar¬thur P. Wright, associate professorof history, Stanford university, 8oc.Sci 122, 4:30.Tuesday 29 AprilTelevision series, Science 58. WGN-TV,“Computing machines,” Nicholas Met¬ropolis, director, Fermi institute fornuclear studies, 7 am.Varsity tennis match, UC vs. Universityof Illinois - Chicago, varsity courts,1:30.Student government meeting, LawNorth. 7:30.Gates-Blake coffee hour, Gates lounge,^ 10-12 pm.MM’•******* BON VOYAGE presents? You might give asubstantial checking account in the LeftBank of Paris. A deck of cards for playingLondon Bridge. Or walking shoes in whichto Rome Italy. Better yet, give Luckies—and make your present a Partin' Carton!A Lucky, after all, is the best-tasting ciga¬rette anywhere. In Paris you hear, “UnLuckee? C’est merveilleux! ” (That’sFrench!) Roughly translated, it means: it’sall fine, light, good-tasting tobacco, toastedto taste even better. (That’s advertising!)Just light up a Lucky and see for yourself!(Now, that’s smart!) Stuck for dough?STARTSTICKLING! MAKE $25We’D pay $25 for every Stickler weprint—and for hundreds more thatnever get used! So start Stickling—they’re so easy you can think of dozensin seconds! Sticklers are simple riddleswith two-word rhyming answers.Both words must have the same num¬ber of syllables. (Don’t do drawings.)Send ’em all with yourname, address, collegeand class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A,Mount Vernon, N. Y.what is a long-distanceWALKING CHAMPION?WAITER LEYLAND.WILLIAM AND MARY Pace Ace WHAT IS A MODEST MISTAKE?anne LUBEii. Humble BumbleBROOKLYN C0LLE6EWHAT 1$ A TEN-DAY DICTATOR?f^l•0*BON WAKEFIELD.«. Of KANSAS Brief Chief WHAT 1$ A SHEEP’S “HELLO "?Bleating Greeting WHAT IS AN ADROIT FISHERMAN?WILLIAM WILLIAMS.YOUNGSTOWN U. Master Caster WHAT IS A MOTHER WHOSPARES THE ROD?Toddler CoddlerDONNA SHEA.BUFFALO STATE TEACHERSLIGHT UP A Uqht SMOKE -LIGHT UP A LUCKY!met*?] Product of iS&nuiextn — So&uoto- is our middle name Concert band rehearsal, Hand'd7:30. \ 'Department of psychology lecture se¬ries, “The Adlerian approach to psy«chodynamlcs and therapy,” Dr. Ru.dolph Drelkurs, Pathology 117.Wednesday 30 AprilTelevision series, Science 58, WGN-TV“Mathematical laws In Physics,” Richlard H. Dalltz, professor In departmentof physics and Fermi Institute, 7 am.Carillon concert, J \ m e s R. LawsoivRockefeller chapel carlllonneur, 4 3olEnglish class for foreigners, advanced.International house, 7-9 pm.Canterbury association discussion onpaper, "The Communist credo and th* IChristian creed,” by J. H. HallowellLlBrent house, 7:30-9:30.Hillel foundation public lecture, “Th«poetry of Israel,” Homer Goldberg, Iassistant professor of English. 8 pm. |Hug Ivrl discussion in Hebrew, “Re¬ligion In Israel.” Rabbi Maurice Pe-karsky, luncheon 50 cents by reserva¬tion, 12:30.Episcopal evensong, Bond chapel. 5:0S.Glee club rehearsal, Ida Noyes, 7 pm.Country dancers, Ida Noyes, beginnerswelcome, 8 pm.New dorm coffee hour, 9-11,W9YWQ, amateur radio club technicalmeeting, room 301, Reynolds cluh,9;15.Science fiction club, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.Lecture series: "Buddhism In Chines*history and culture,” “The period ofpreparation ca A.D. 65-317,” see Mon¬day notice.Organ recital, Rockefeller chapel. Hein¬rich Fleischer, works of Bach, Pachel¬bel, and Scheldt, 5 pm.Lecture series: "Anthropology in themodern world,” Sol Tax, professor andchairman, department of anthro-pology,, “Progress.” Breasted hall,8 pm, admission charge.Thursday 1 May |Television series, “All things consid¬ered,” Channel 11, “The end of anexperiment,” Donald Melklejohn, asso¬ciate professor of philosophy In thecollege, moderator: Charles H. 8hire-man, Hubert L. Will; Alton A. Lin¬ford, professor and dean, school ofaoclal service administration, 9:30.International relations elub leeturev"Prospects of economic developmentin India,” Bert P. Hoselltz, director ofstudies, committee on internationalrelations, room A, International house,8 pm.Robert Frost, commentary on the theme,"The great misgiving,” sponsored byChicago Review, Mandel hall, 8:15, $2reserved. 1.50 general admission, $1students.Official bulletinStudent healthPersons Interested In getting poliobooster shots may receive them at stu¬dent health at a charge of 50 cents,from 9 am to noon, according to thefollowing schedule:Today, persons with final Initials D-O;Tuesday, May 6. H-K; Friday, May 9,L-M; Tuesday. May 13, N-R; Frldav. May16, S-V; Tuesday, May 20, W-Z; Friday,May 23. students’ wives and children;Tuesday, May 27, persons who are un¬able to come In earlier.Selective serviceMale students seeking deferment fromthe selective service (draft) should filean SSS form 109.Male students seeking deferment fromthe selective service (draft) should re¬quest the registrar to submit SSS form109 to his local board.Students should go to the registrar’soffice, Administration 103, according tothe following schedule-April 29, persons with final InitialA-C; April 30, D-G: May I, H-J; May 2,K-L; May 5, M-N; May 6, O-R; May 7, S;May 8, T-Z; May 9, students who couldnot, for good reason, prepare and filethe SSS card on the date scheduled.DeadlinesDean of students, CollegeApplication for spring convocationbachelor’s degree, April 15. Petition fordegree in absentia submitted to deanof students in the College, May 16Application for twelfth - grade certifi¬cates, May 29. Registration for compre¬hensive examinations in Spring quar¬ter, office of test administration.May 29, ,Application for room in residence hallfor sum me r quarter, $10 deposit.May 29.Application for room in residence hallfor academic year 1958-59, $25 deposit.May 8, Forms and information avail¬able from house heads and housingoffice, Administration 103 after thisThursday.Advice registration for summer andnext academic year should be madewith adviser. Administration 201. Con¬firmation of advance registration bya $20 registration deposit to the Bur¬sar by July 15.Students planning to receive bachelor’sdegrees this quarter and who planadmission to a division or profes¬sional school of the University shouldfile their applications this quarter.Forms available at College advisersoffice except law school where theycan be obtained from the office ofthe dean, first floor Law building.Students who expect to complete gen¬eral-studies component of bachelor’sprogram for AB with professional op¬tion In the spring quarter, and planto enter the graduate library school,law school or business school in thesummer or the autumn should filetheir applications immediately.ScholarshipsStudents now In the College may applyfor tuitional scholarships for next fall.Deadline Is next Thursday.TAKSAM-YfcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT.13IS East 63rd St. BU 8-90116 • CHICACO MAROON • Apr. 25, 1958tacott#MASH 'H WEAR SUITSDACRON A COTTON$2995HIM MNMIU.M. TO »l« 4*AM a, nlehlqoa ««<mwlltaholl 1-2410 Stunht* So* ol »U-Ii/tlh ihi tnintimirtf nturttr.Collegiate travel groups Close laundry serviceto visit Berlin, GrenobleTwo groups of 20 selected American college students will visit Berlin, Germany andGrenoble, France next summer to study the language, culture, art, and civilzation of Ger¬many or France.Full information on the program can be obtained by writing to Classroom Abroad, 18Auburn street, Worcester 5, Massachusetts.The program does not aim at impressions or “tourism” but rather at the experience ofbecoming acquainted with the personality of a city, according to the group. It has beenfound that, with a modest de-gree of application, a student ropean affairs. families and will have oppor-can acquire the equivalent of The Berlin group will have full tunity to meet young people froma year’s training in college French auditing privileges at the Free student, religious, and political or-or German over the course of the university. The Grenoble students ganizations.twelve-week summer. will have access to a large num-Graded classes in intensive lan- ber oi courses at the Universityguage training will begin on of Grenoble. All academic and so- . , _board ship and continue through- dal activities will be open to both tor; J/1? , aSt Berl1^ universityout the trip. Students will hear groups. and Potsdam Grenoble “the citylec tures on European history and Members of Classrooms Abroad Wltn a mountam at the end ofwill read about contemporary Eu- wiU live with German and French evc.ry ,reo Interdormitory council has closed the laundry-dry cleaningstudent service in C-group. The branch, which operated as anintermediary service between residents of C-group, Gates-Blake, and the new women’s dormitory, and University Quicklaundry, 1024 E. 55th, ceasedfunctioning because it was Jazz #\ri V^IICBsteadily losing money.The laundry grants students a "Jazz invades Broadway”20 per cent discount on all dry will be the theme of Mondaycleaning and laundry. ID council night’s "Omnibus in Jazz,” theadded half of this discount (ten UC Jazz workshop’s weekly radioBerlin affords opportunities tovisit refugee camps, the East sec- per cent) to each bill, using themoney to pay a council memberhired to handle incoming and out¬going garments.Since few residents made use series over WUCB.Beginning at 7 pm, selectionswill be heard from the musicals“My Fair Lady,” “Li’l Abner,*•“Kiss Me Kate,” “Babes in Arms,**Mother's aid donatesto obstetrics lab fundAt its annual Mothers day luncheon Monday, May 5, Mrs.Sol T. DeLee, president of the UC Lying-in hospital Mothers’aid, will present a check for $20,000 to the University.Instead of marking the half-way point toward the group’spledge to build a modem re-search laboratory in obstetrics of the luncheon. Assisting her areand gynecology, the check will Mrs. A. Leon Reinstein and Mrs.represent achievement of only Julius Abler,one-fourth, of the goal because is situated conven¬iently for excursions into theFrench and Swiss Alps and theRiviera.The Berlin stay will be followedby a two-week tour of Germany,Austria, and Switzerland. TheFrench group will travel throughFrance, Switzerland, northernItaly, and Belgium.Heading the German group willbe Dr. Frank Hirschbach, a nativeof Berlin, now assistant professorof German at Clark university.The French group will be led byJohn K. Simon, a member of theFrench department of Yale uni¬versity. of this convenience, ID council and other Broadway productions,did not make enough money to Music will be taken from thecover the salary for the ten hours works of Richard Rodgers, Colea week the branch was open. Lastquarter the service lost approxi¬mately $50, about the same as inautumn quarter, and there wasstill a deficit from last year.Because most of those usingthe service were the men livingin Kelly and Foster and ID coun¬cil is a women’s organization, itwas considered unwise to con¬tinue operating the branch atsuch a loss, a council spokesmanstated.A branch will probably be open¬ed in the new women’s dormitorynext year, when the entire dormwill be occupied and a basementroom can be made available. Porter, Frederick Loewe and GeneDePaul.The program is produced andnarrated by Johnny Walker Han-tigan and Brooks Johnson, presi¬dent of the Jazz workshop. Vis¬itors will be permitted in the newMitchell tower studio during thtbroadcast. ^The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 fact 57th St.MU 4-9234Mothers’ aid has now doubled itsoriginal $300,000 pledge for theproject.Ending Mothers’ aid’s 54th yearof raising funds for the health,welfare and safety of mothers,the luncheon will be at 12:30 pmin the Grand ballroom of thePalmer house. This year the aux¬iliary has -contributed $38,000,bringing to $150,000 the amountraised toward the $600,000 goal.At the Mother’s day luncheonthe 1,800 members will be askedto contribute to the “My Motherfund” which is used to supportresearch. Rabbi Ralph Simon,sniritual leader of Rodfci Zedekcongregation, will make the ap¬peal.Except for the “My Motherfund,” all of the funds raised bythe Mothers’ aid come from suchenterprises as the baby book.“Our Baby’s First Seven Years,”t tie two gift shops, one located inLying-In and the other in Glencoe,and the sale of baby portraits,scrapbooks, and monogrammedhandkerchiefs.Speakers at the luncheon willl e Mrs. George V. Bobrinskoy,president of Lying-In board of di¬rectors; Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshail,dean of UC’s division of biologicalsciences; Dr. M. Edward Davis,Joseph Bolivar DeLee, professorand chairman of the departmentof obstetrics and gynecology, andDr. H. Close Hesseltine, professorof obstetrics and gynecology.Mrs. Edwin M. May is chairman Where there’s a Man.there’s a MarlboroV long white ash mean#;ood tobacco and a mildmoke.liter flower of cel•u«v?v acetate (modern ef-: ective filter material) in, ust one Marlboro Selec*rate Filter* Mild-smoking Marlboro combines a prizedrecipe (created in Richmond, Virginia)of the world’s great tobaccos with acellulose acetate filter of consistentdependability. You get big friendly flavorwith all the mildness a man could ask for.MarlboroYOU BET A LOT TO LIKE-FILTER • PLAVOR • TUP-TOP BOXApr. 25. 1958 • CHICACO MAROON • tIMiia—ngii i'iinri iifii nriiinmiWhite spray pounding!Wind a-biowing free!Keen eyes lookFor danger on the sea!With the ships on patrol.You’ll find a manStops to take big pleasureWhen and where he can..CHESTERFIELDLive-action shot—U. S. Coast GuardQ I'gjetf & Myen Tobocco Co.Baseballers are improved,should have good seasonLike the Maroon basketball team, which was the best in years, the UC baseball squad thisseason should turn in a notably improved performance, according to its coach.Coach Kyle Anderson, observing'his twenty-fifth year as coach, has what he considersthe best squad in a decade. Though the Maroon talent will produce no bonus babies, An¬derson said, he has an array of pitchers and some respectable hitters around whom to builda team. ; Bad day at StaggUC trackmen beaten' jrEven though it was a beautiful day in the rest of the city,there were clouds over Stagg field April 16, as the Maroonthinclads lost to the strong Central Michigan Chippewas83 1/6 to 47 5/6. ~Chicago’s sports policy is toplay any student who has nothad three years of varsitycompetition and so Anderson’splayers range all the way fromfirst-year to graduate students.Five lettermen are back from lastseason but newcomers will con¬tribute the improvement over lastyear.Of the lettermen, Gene Crainhas the catcher’s position clinched.Two other lettermen, Hal Shields,and Jack Markin, have taken overcenter and right fields. HarrySchimbcrg, who played there lastyear, is the starter in left field.From last year’s pitching staff,Anderson has a righthander. BenMijuskovic, letterman. and two lefties, Robert Griffin and StevePotemkin, who turned in somegood games. He also has a prom¬ising newcomer, Neman Taylor, afirst-year man, who pitched threeyears at University high.Another outstanding newcomeris Tom O’Connor, who has takenover at shortstop. Bill Richmond,a transfer student in his first sea¬son, is the first baseman. IraLevy, of the 1957 squad, is at sec¬ond, and a freshman, RichardThompson, from Oklahoma City,is the starter at third.Thursday, April 17, the Maroonsmet Chicago Teachers on theStagg field diamond and smashedthem 11 to 3. Mijuskovic, lastyear’s mound ace, had the gameKarcazes athlete of weekGeorge D. Karcazes, running his third year as a memberof the varsity track team, has been chosen athlete of theweek as a result of his recent j>erformances, it was announcedby the athletic staff.At the Bradley relays inPeoria, April 12, Karcazes rana 440 leg in the mile relay in :49.4,helping to establish a new meetrecord. Against Central Michigan,April 16, Karcazes, who is a stu¬dent in the law school, ran his best individual 440, in :50.3, al¬though placing only third in thatrace. At the Ohio relays, April 19,he ran a relay 440 in :48.9 to con¬tribute to his team’s winning ofsecond place in the college milerelay. well in hand all the way.It was the warmest day on rec¬ord for the Chicago area and idealfor baseball. Mijuskovic had hiscurve ball working well and hisfast ball was right in there, show¬ing up better that any he hasthrown to date. O’Connor andCrain hit well for Chicago andthe team as a whole is beginningto show continued improv ementat all positions.LINE SCORE:Chicago 213 300 020—11 12 3Teachers 000 002 010— 3 3 5The weatherman doused the dia¬mond on'Stagg field with heavyshowers Saturday afternoon andstruck out the game between theMaroons and Lake Forest afterthree innings of play with thescore tied at 4-all.The Maroon’s schedule for theremainder of the season is:April 20—Glenview naval air base atChicago29—Chicago at ValparaisoMay 1—Illinois Institute ot Technol¬ogy at Chicago3—Chicago at Beloit6—University of Illinois. Chicagoat Chicago8—Chicago at Lake Forest10—Beloit at Chicago13—Illinois Institute of Technol¬ogy at Chicago17—Wayne State university atChicago 2 games24—Chicago30— baseball31— tournamentXune 5—Alumni game The afternoon began withVanderHeuval (CM) winningthe mile in 4:20.2 with William*and Cohen of Chicago second andthird, respectively.George Karcazes put up a vali¬ant fight in the 440 while sprint¬ing :50.3, but took only third tothe :49.0 efforts of Meyers andBlack (CM).Brooks Johnson dashed a 9.9 tocop first in the 100 yard dash butwas surprised by Meyers (CM) inthe 220 yard and took second.Earl Allen met opposition inthe hurdles but was able to grabsecond in the 120 yard high hur¬dles and g^third In the 220 yardlow hurdles.In the 880, Pedro ‘The Train”Perschke, with his usual strongfinish overtook Walter “Bud”Arft (CM) in the last 100 yardsto win in 1:58.4, while Charlie B.Price (CM) placed third.Avenging his defeat in the mile,Gar Williams ground Vander¬Heuval into the track in the two- mile. With a burst of speed at the1)4 mile mark, Williams openeda lead that continued to widen tillthe finish of the race. The clockwas stopped at 9:44.5 as Williamscross the finish; Osborne of Chi¬cago placed third.In the field events, Chicago wasblanked in the shot put; Schmidplaced third in the broad Jump;and Fagin and Schmid placed sec¬ond and third In the pole vault.Bill Weaver, in his first jumpssince his knee injury last fall,won the high Jump with an effortof 6' 0' while Allen and McKeonof Chicago placed second andthird.To round out the day Cousensplaced' third in the discus and“Butcher” Abeles took second inthe javelin.This weekend Carlson, Johnson,Karcazes, Martin, Osborne, Per-schke, Price, and Young will trav¬el to the Drake relays where theywill meet with tough nation widecompetition.UC netmen roll over Tech;team has enviable recordAs spring returned to the Midway, Coach Bill Moyle’s un¬yielding tennis squad continued its winning ways and addetito its record this year whichmatches won and 1 lost.On April 16, Illinois TechMEN OF AMERICA;SEA DUTYNothing satisfies like theBIG CLEAN TASTE OF TOP-TOBACCO REGULAR KING now stands at 45 individualwas cut down 9-0. In this meetHowland, Saporta, Thompson.Herst, Kaufman, and Finger toyedwith the opposition as they easilywon their singles matches. Thedoubles teams of Kaufman-Herstand Tonidandel-Tomanson had nodifficulty in taking their matches,but Howland-Thompson had tocome back after a 4-6, to win 4 6.6-2, 9-7.On April 18, the netmen tooktheir daily exercise while defeat¬ing Army administration, 7-0. Itwas like a broken record as How¬land, Saporta, Herst, Kaufman,and Auerbach triumphed In theirsingles matches. The doublesteams of Finger-Tomanson andHerst-Kaufman had no trouble intheir victories.WAA girlswin in tennisWAA scored a four-two victoryover North Central In a tennismatch last Saturday. A rematchwill be played on the varsitycourts tomorrow.Members of the WAA tennisteam are Gay Dawson, DahliaGrekliunas,* Phyllis RitzenBerg,Norma Schmidt, Elizabeth Stroup,and Sandra Weinberg.Fourth floor of the new wom¬en’s dormitory holds the lead inthe WAA interdormitory swimmarathon. The Green-Beechermermaids occupy second place.HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTH'e Specialize inRound-O-Beef and Waffle:Open from Dawn fo Down1342 E. 53rd St.WOODLAWNBOWLINGLANES6225 Cottage Grove16 NEW ALLEYSSpecial Afternoon Ratesto College Students —35c per lineFA 4-3373for informationChuck Hall, mgr. *iABlackfriar show receives He,en Sobe,l.fo give talkdirector's mixed receptionBlackfriar’s launched their annual musical last Friday night. “Alpha Centauri,” describedas a “space opera,” came off as a spring-f.everish blast-off from the physics lab to the hal¬lowed boards of Mandel hall.Four space explorers land on Ubet, a planet of Alpha Centauri, motivated by sex, scienceand radium. They are met by a pair of pretty robots and a dancer, doing (of all things!)Russian ballet. —Eventually they meet the lint clinging to the back of his ship from the performers. If suchstars Inhabitants; mostly tuxedo, conducted his tunes and was the case in “Alpha Centauri/1pretty girls in pastel tunics, those of Messrs. Meyer, Mathieu Zavis deserves his share of theand Zavis with a kind of tense just applause,seriousness. The tunes, however, In the thin atmosphere of thiswefe bright and lively, as easy to production’s costuming and set-listen to as to forget when the tings, Garry Harris’ infrequentshow is over. space gimmicks were a welcomeCarol Ebert, one of the more contradiction to the Gothic ofpromising shapes in outer space, Mandel hall,forgot her self-consciousness long Question: Where is Alpha Cen-enough to bring charm and levity tauri, teacher?to “If I Were Sirius” — and Jim Answer: Any fool knows that.Olesen’s crackling vitality made 0n the othor side of the scrim! Mrs. Helen Sobell, wife of Morton Sobell, will speak thisSaturday at 1 pm in Soc Sci 122 on the recent developmentsin her husband’s case. Sobell was implicated in the espionagetrial of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, and sentenced to 30 yearsin prison. UC will housePan-Am athletesDuring late summer 1959,clemency after having been denied campus Will house approx-a retrial earlier in the year. Dr. imately 1700 athletes partici-According to Harvey Per¬kins, executive secretary of theChicago Sobell Committee, Sobellis now appealing for executiveRolf Forsberg, formerly adirector of Playwright's the-tre, is now a producer forWTTW# channel 11. Nostranger to University dra¬matics, Forsberg recentlydirected Trojan Women forUniversity Theatre. Thissummer, Forsberg will util¬ize a recent grant to studyat Norway's National Thea¬tre school. up for his thin baritone in thesinging of “Rich, Rich, Rich!”, asong in the best traditions of mu¬sical comedy.Bob Dalton as the incurable Rolf ForsbergBible-readingThe earth men start pairing oIf . “".“““.V rtlannpd MOndaVv ,h the girls, and the whole S'*t.he™t!c,lan- Je,rry P,annea IVlOnaayI ing’s turning out to be an inter- ™v,tab!e, '"Semous1 anetary junior prom, when the McK'nnabSs -x-evading captain ol the expedi- ibfJm.^f?P„fa.pt.ain._wea,:nf_h,.st on pushes an item called “NoTouching Planetary Girls” from Harold Urey said some time agothat he could not tell, after read¬ing the transcripts of the trial,what Sobell was actually chargedwith, and what were the actualgrounds for his conviction andthirty-year sentence. Sobell wasallegedly kidnapped in Mexico bythe FBI, brought back to thiscountry for trial, and in March of1951, sentenced to thirty years inprison.Mrs. Sobell recently spoke atthe University of California atBerkley, about the case. She, andthe many affiliated Committeesfor Morton Sobell, have beenworking ever since his trial toeffect his release. She will besponsored by SRP. pating in the Pan - Americangames, to be held at that time inChicago.Final plans, released this week,confirmed such an arrangementalthough earlier it had beenplanned to house the athletes inseveral different places. Prelim¬inary heats will be held at dif¬ferent fields, but the finals willbe in Soldiers’ field. Twenty-sixcountries will participate.PETERSON MOVINGbald plate like a space helmet, The preliminaries of the MiloP. Jewett Bible reading contestwill be held Monday, May 5, at 3, , pm, in Bond chapel. The contestwere often as amusing to watch is open to ali students of the fed-k s Space Travel manualSoon another grim member oft’ e expedition finds he prefersi diation-burns to romance. Afterr vera. ..ght-years of conversa-1 ons in statistics and interplanerylatter, a makeshift harmonymakes do, and an audience whichr .ver really left the launching1 Id is left smiling pleasantly.John Mueller's book for thef' ow, which must necessarily as they were sometimes difficult erated theological schools. Stu-to understand in their pattersongs. dents wishing to compete shouldregister in the office of the deanof students in the divinity school,Swift 103.To be eligible students must beconcluding their second year ofgraduate theological educationThe orchestra was delightfulwhen it was brisk and music-hall-ish, but in such numbers as thefinale (a kind of Beethoven’s“Ninth” from outer space) —though well meaning, our ears one year of which must haveheard more musicology than mu- taken place on this campus,sical comedy. First prize is $150; second $75.Without an arresting story line Emphasis will be placed upon therve as the terra firma under to develop, William Zavis could student’s ability to effectively ex-lis take-off, gets lost in all that not have done better than to stage press the meaning and spirit ofthe production 1 i k e a conscien- the biblical passages which he se-tious traffic cop. In a production lects.such as this one, a director often The finals are to be held onDouglas Maurer, a pale young spends a part of himself “bring- Friday, May 16, also at 3 pm inman with a touch of glitter-dust ing out” vitality and showman- Bond chapel.ihless, empty space. His comet’st' il of a plot begins disintegratj ig long before the final curtain.f'aptures yourpersonalityas well asyour person UNIVERSITY HOTELNewly Decorated Rooms — Private Tub and ShowerKitchenettes Available. Daily Maid Service. Reasonable Rates.Two Blocks from 1C. Permanent and Transient Guests.5519 Blackstone \ DO 3-4100photographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St.ALASKAvacationSix weeks of inexpensive Alcanhighway trip to Alaska for camp¬ing, hiking, etc., with other stu¬dents. Share station wagon, travel,expenses.Leave approx. July 1Call WE 5-7080, days. Huth Life insurance is the one certainway a man of moderate meanscan plan for the security of hisfamily on a permanent basis.Let me tell you how.Ralph J. Wood Jr. '481 N. LaSalle St. Chicago 2, III.FR 2-2390 . RE !-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAIt's the MADdest 1Masked for it, but here’s a:k permanent collection ofSo best of Mad’s barrel of fun —larious satire, parody, burles¬que , offbeat art and assortedsanyisms about every facet of theAmerican scene. It’s a great giftlor a Mad friend. Hardbound.A cheap $2.95FOR KEEPSby the Editors of MedNow at your bookstore. But if youdon’t want to go in and ask for it,send $2.95 to Crown Publishers,Dept. 76. 419 Fourth Avenue,New York 16, N. Y. If you don'tgo stark, raving Mad within tendays, return the book for refund.Send for your copy Today! (Weneed the business.) —— ■■ ■ --2-WANTED!xj; College Students ond Teachersto have theXX time of their lives• ...X serving this summer as| CAMP COUNSELORS| APPLY NOW| ... the demand for these positions is greotf SENIOR COUNSELOR OPENINGSIj* ... for men and women over 19v❖X Come in or Write lor Application Form»!.«§• Camping UnitX* Professional, Sales & Clerical OfficeILLINOIS STATE -I EMPLOYMENT SERVICE73 West Washington Street Chicago, Illinois(Official referrol agency for Camp Counselor Referral BureauAmericon Comping Association, Chicago Section)NO FEES CHARGED I*f1txix1I1 WHEN YOU’RE GOING FOR FUNVAGABONDGO MAN GO IN...VISCOUNTU.S. KEDS BOOSTERSSlIPON BOOSTERNow you can enjoy coot comfort and lookyour casual best—in U.S. Keds Boosters9.Breathable fabrics allow cooling air to cir¬culate freely. And you walk on the plushcomfort of Keds’ Fulf-cushioned Insole.So go for a pair of U. S Keds Boosters.Narrows and mediums from $5.95. LOOK FOR THE BLUE LABELin,1 in mil i *~7%e S-Aoe orf CAemy>ur*4-United States RubberROCKEFELLER CENTER, NEW YORK 20, N. V.We carry a complete line ofU. Sr KEDSUniversal Army Store1144 East 55th10% reduction with this couponApr. 25, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9-• *Applaud UT performanceUniversity theater offers a major contribution to this year’s festival of the Arte in abrilliant production of Jean Cocteau’s Intimate Relations (Les Parents Terrible*). Theaudience greeted the play enthusiastically without a visible trace of the moral or aestheticoutrage which this work has so often aroused in the pastTempers flared, and there was a great deal of violence and abuse — but only on the stageof the Reynolds club theater. No scandal appears likely, although this is apparently the firstperformance of Cocteau’s con-troversial drama ever to be centrated form and in its tragic lying the Ioom woman into releas-attempted in Chicago. theme. There are only five char- ing his son, and at the next mo-If we recall the tempestuous alters and two simple settings, ment he is the ridiculous middle-early history of the play, we shall and the action unfolds rapidly and aged lover pleading his own causeperhaps be better able to appre- surely over a three-day period. It against that of a young rival. Indate the significance of its pres- is obvious that in his use of the the last act a change of heart onervt «surres<* in the festival of the Oedipus theme and in his evoca- the part of the selfish adultsent^success in le.nval 01 me ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ mah(, ( ha[)pyIn 1938 intimate Relations was is continuinS his experimentation resolution for the young loversretted as" unnro^taeTvX wt,h ,aken ,rom Greek whose affection, have been ruth,rejected as unpromising by the dl.ama lessly sacrjflMd to th« evll j.alou.However, despite these parallels s^s ®f their elders,with the ancient theater, it is wise However, In the course of work-other theater, only to be pro- to remember that Intimate Rein- ing out this sentimental and high-claimed immoral and banned by *s a bourgeois drama dealing iy moral conclusion, there is stillthe city fathers of Paris whose modern characters and situa- one thrill left—the suicide andmoral indignation flared angrily tions k* modern dress. ghastly death of the insanely pos-at Cocteau’s depiction of incest For these characters and situa- sessive mother, a proper punish-The play was revived in 1941 bons Cocteau has gone back, not ment of the forces of disorder andunder the German occupation, but \° the Greeks, but to the French negation.met with an even less favorable drama of the boulevards before in his handling of these fa-reception; the police, anxious to ^.e World War. He utilizes miliar materials, Cocteau showssuppress a play that might sug- wbh zest and ingenuity the stock a hesitation between irony andgest to the conquerors that materials and techniques of the conviction which produces an at-Freneh family life was something celebrated bedroom farce and the mosphere of ambiguity; IntimateLast Friday Doc films showed one of the most sensational less than noble and heroic, melodrama of passion. It is in Relations constantly tends to-commercial films of the last 25 years: Exlase. This Czech film ^‘n?b^eon'°***; P™«»» ofThesI bid‘“formula. jfSouMmade in 1933 was directed by Gustav Machaty and starred tha, Ccrma„ authorities! ,hat m can «nd the best claim be interesting to compare Cor-Hedy Keisler. (Miss Keisler later became known to American shocked at such irregularities, t? call Intimate Relations a clas- teau’s play with Anouilh’s Thefamous director and actor LouisJouvet. Shortly afterwards in thesame year it was accepted by an-photo by MaloneJo Ann Schlagg and Bonita Fabbri are shown boro playinga climactic last scene of the second act of Jean Cocteau'stragedy "Intimate Relations" now playing at the Reynoldsclub theatre.'Extase' sensationalaudiences as Hedy Lamarr.) do9ed the theater. It was not un- si<y ** *s a clasp‘c of dramaturgy, Waltz of the Toreadors in whichtfl 1945 that Intimate Relations a dazzling pastiche, a virtuoso ex- the elements of parody becomeThe Story concerns a girl tively. However, a poor job of dub- ullv "Performed” to erc«« in theatricality. It is this explicitbing made the film almost ludv i*ceessIUI,y PerIormea m blatant theatricality with its * Zwho marries a man she later findsshe does not love. She desert, him Such trite dialogue a, -not France. For the very reason that Inli-rrnnrthvj hut nujj.- jtnf,-<n.j Inlightofthesevicissitudes.lt ^ ‘ ! ,h! di * bl? T mate Relations is such polished,, , . „ . , ,,, „ goodbye but au revolr” detracted . 1n . m.ru., tL._ that makes the play such a pleas-and later falls in love with another ?reatlv from the nualitv of the w possible to marvel at tne in- study in stage techniques andman u/ith urimni hat m ««>« • ovvvyx telligent calm that prevailed at • dramatic styles, it offers amazingman with whom she has an affair* movie. It was a pity that this com- ., _ r*««’« ttia thpmp nf tViA nnri enn * ai *_ i jhas been unfaithful and commitssuicide. In the version shown lastFriday, the girl and her lover arereunited at the end.Tr , , , .. . . the Chicago premiere of Cocteau’s The theme of the father and son opportunities to those who wouldHer husband discovers that she ! in love with the samc woman Perform it. The University the-!?a^h h d The explanation perhaps lies in without knowing H is an old re- ater has risen to the occasion andious souna tracK. the fact that Cocteau enfant ter- source in French farces and com- made the most of these poSSibii.Also shown on last Friday’s pro- rlble has become Cocteau ven- edies, going back at least to Mo- ities; both the direction and thegram was the surrealistic film erable mefnber of the French liere’s The Miser. Cocteau un- acting are superior. In the limited“Psyche.” The erotic technicolor Academy. Where once he could abashedly works variations on cast and the simplified decor, wcThe story was photographically movie offered a foretaste of the only shock and offend, now he can this theme, profiting from the discover that sense of precisionand dramatically well told. The in- Doc Films’ May 2 program which only please and entertain. Inti- liability of its staleness by letting and feeling for composition sofamous nude sequence was well wil1 consist entirely of contempo- mate Relations has become, in its his characters point out this very essential in the theater. The twohandled and at no time ob«ren«. rary experimen,al art film*Symbolism was used very effec- Bob WilliamsPAINT & HARDWARE CO.Hyde Park's Mast CompletePaint and Hardware Store1154-58 E. 55th S». UC Discount HY 3-3840 24-HourKodachrome colorfilmprocessingModel Camera Shop1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259V? every day a home-comingA faaious New Orleans store once hired a New York expert toimprove its clerks' efficiency. The efficiency rose. And the cus¬tomers stayed home. They just plain didn't tike the rush-actthey were given by harried clerks who were efficiently omittingall pleasant greetings.We're not against efficiency—we thrive on it. But at the Co-opefficiency is laced with real friendliness. The staff has time fora smile and a helpful deed. The customers set their own pace,hurrying or taking time to visit friends and neighbors, as theyplease. You're at home!CO-OP SUPER MARTown strange way, a classic. fact to the audience. contrasting sets by Ferrand EnnisSOME CRITICS have seen the The other basic situation, that are extremely effective and taste-play as classical both in its con- of the father and mother forcing ful, Ned Gaylin is remarkable asthe seemingly depraved but really Michel, a difficult role whichinnocent woman to slander her- could have been absurd or revolt-self and give up her hold on their ing, but which he has made ap-middle-class son, has an equally pealing and moving. Martha Rothvenerable history in the theatre, is excellent in the taxing role ofIt is the basic formula in innu- Yvonne, the fanatical mother; shemerable sentimental melodramas, has made convincing and horri-of which La Dame aux Camillas fying the grotesque denouement,by Dumas fils is the most fa- Jo Ann Schlagg is also excellentmous. in the strange role of the auntIN THE BIG SCENE between the who seems to represent Fate,father and the girl in the second Equally convincing are Bonitaact, Cocteau is able to juxtapose Fabbri as the engaging youngthese two situations with brilliant girl, mistress to both father andeffect. At one moment Georges is son, and William Bezdek as thethe proper, bourgeois father bul- baffled father who Imagines hewill invent an underwater ma¬chine gun. In fact, what Is out¬standing is that there are no weaklinks and that in addition to beingindividually good, the actors per¬form so well together. To directorRichard d’Anjou goes the ereditMore Than a Store5535 S. Harper Plenty of Free Parking Nicky’s PizzaatCampus HangoutDaniel GeroukfTHE GLAMOUR Of HOLLYWOOD .. .THE EXCITEMENT Of SANFRANCISCO .. .THE WHITE BEACHES Of SANTA BARBARA ...THE SERENITY OF THE SACRAMENTO VALLEYFor Summer Session education in California,.you have a uniquechoice of four campuses where you can participate in graduateand undergraduate courses, education workshops and seminarsconducted by a distinguished faculty. ,,«f i i,» .UNIVERSITY OP; pAL | Ft vtt ABerkeley / Los Angeles /Santa Barbara /|f>aviswrite for free catalogue and complete information to:Director. Statewide Summer Sessions, University of CafiformaDept. CHI Los Angeles 24, California ‘i ; - : •:.. - •■*>, ■ >; u * *this summer it’s• CHICAGO MAROON • Apr. 25, 1958Culture VultureFestival of the arts ic not over yet. You still have three more days in which to see art exhibits, musical productions, drama, lectures . . .but relax! There are only 72 more hours of it. Starting Monday you can once more sleep late, luxuriate in bed all afternoon, play bridge allevening, study for comps during various coffee hours, and you won't be plagued out of aesthetic lethargy until next year's FOTA week.ON CAMPUSTheaterUniversity theater will presentthe three final performances oftheir final production of the yearthis week-end. Jean Cocteau isdoing rather well for himself onthe third floor of Reynolds club.Tickets, at $1 and $1.25, are stillon sale for the Friday and Sundayshows, but you’d do well to actquickly. For reservations call ex¬tension 1062.And from the personal, biasedand un-erring way in which I seethings, Martha Roth’s third actis one of themost electrifying per¬formances I have ever seen onany stage.Concerts and recitalsEven the most avant guardeyoung composers, to my knowl¬edge, have never been called mem¬bers of “the silent generation.”There is some contradiction therein terms. This evening, the musicsociety will present a program ofthe works of five contemporaryAmerican composers, and silencewill not reign.Works by Muczynski, Charkov-sky, Swift, Imbrie and UC profes¬sor Leland Smith will be played.The concert is free and starts at8:30.The annual Twilight concert atthe Apollonian society will begiven at 7:30 pm, Saturday inBreasted hall. The featured workon the program is a group of tenfive-part madrigals by ThomasWee Ikes. Other composers on theprogram are Purcell, Gibbon, Las*sys, Morely, Palestrina and Mo¬zart.Int house will contribute toFOTA by staging "festival of na¬tions” a program of songs anddances from around the world,performed by people who reallydo such things. This unusual pro¬gram will begin at 8:30 pm inthe Int house auditorium; thereis an admission charge.The last event in the festival isalso musical in nature. The Bondchapel choir will present at recitalof religious and devotional music,Sunday at 8:30 pm in Bond.' The Hillel music group will playchamber music composed byHaydn, Mozart, and MendelSsohnSunday at 3:30 pm in Hillel house.Next Thursday, University Gleeclub will take It upon itself to "bring in the May.” At 1 noon onthe first of May the Glee club willoffer a program a cappella selec¬tions including "The Heavens AreTelling” by Haydn, and Paul Hin¬demith’s "Verger." Also, portionsof Randall Thompson’s "ThePeaceable Kingdom” will be sung.The concert will under open, andhopefully, blue skies, in Hutchin¬son courtEvery Wednesday throughoutthe quarter, James A. Lawson,chapel carrillonneur and HeinrichFleischer, chapel organist presenta concert of organ and chime mu¬sic. 4:30 pm, in the chapel.Art exhibitionsRight at this moment, if youname a building, there is mostlikely, an art exhibit in it. Fourexcellent shows are running oncampus right now.An exhibition by members ofthe University’s art faculty is dis¬played in Hillel house. This showcloses at four o’clock this after¬noon and won’t be open tomorrowor Sunday, but the show will runthrough to May 16.Sculpture by Simon Gordon isnot exactly hanging, but is cer¬tainly on display in Lexingtonhall. Gordon is noted for his useof widely different media in hisartAn architectural display con¬structed by Harry Weese and as¬sociates is on view in the Renais¬sance galleries, Goodspeed hall.Weese is the proposed architectof the new residence house formen.Those people who are familiarwith the exterior of Robie house,but would like to see the inside,and at the same time see whatstudent artists are doing have aunique opportunity to promotetwo institutions at one throw.LecturesHomer Goldberg, assistant pro¬fessor of English In the collegewill speak on the "poetry ofIsrael” Wednesday at 8 pm inHillel house.ReadingsThis new Culture vulture cate¬ gory was created for the benefitof the Florence James Adamspoetry reading contest. This prob¬lem could possibly be disposed ofwithout this new distinction, butwe are not that staunchly con¬servative. Besides which, all weknow about it is the title and thefact that it begins at 3 pm todayin Bond chapel.As long as this category hasbeen created, we might as welltake full advantage of it and in¬clude Robert Frost’s ‘‘spring read¬ing” under it. Mr. Frost will ap¬pear at 8:15 pm, Thursday, underthe auspices of the Chicago Re¬view. The subject of his readingwill be*. “The great misgiving.”Student tickets may be bought for$1 at the Reynolds club desk.Motion picturesDoc film continues its series‘‘Of Love and Lust” by screening"Devil in the Flesh” tonight. Thisstory of a strange love affair be¬tween an adolescent and a mar¬ried woman will" be shown twice,at 7 and again at 9:15 in Judd 126.Tickets are 60 cents. *Next Friday will be five shortfilms: "Fireworks,” “Wedlock,”"Pleasure Garden,” "DesperateHeart,” and "Together.” The finalfilm in the series "The Childrenof Paradise” will be presented Fri¬day, May 9.This evening, Burton-Judsonwill present the award-winningfilm "Snake Pit.” The three dif¬ferent screenings start at 7:30,9:30 and 11:30. Admission is 40cents. Next Friday you can seeOrson Wells’ famous movie, "Cit¬izen Kane.”Monday evening, Int house willfeature the American film "ADouble Life.” Int house films areshown on Monday nights at 7:30in the Home room. Fifty-cent ad¬mission.????????I admit my total inadequacy incategorizing the Beaux Arts mas¬querade ball; Tm not even sureit’s cultural. But I would suggestyou be in Ida Noyes hall at 10 pmtomorrow to find out for your¬self. OFF CAMPUSTheaterIt is customary to say that such-and-such a show is running atsuch-and-such a theater; but youcan’t say this about "My FairLady.” Indeed, this show isn’t run¬ning anyway, it has settled downto spend its old age in quiet com¬fort at the Shubert theater. CyrilRitchard and "Visit to a SmallPlanet” (listed in order of prefer¬ence) isn’t running either, but itis leaving in a couple days.Art exhibitionsAfter long, hard and continuouseffort the Art institute of Chi¬cago has finally achieved a placefor itself in the community. Andsince it is now safely established,and since it’s not running anymajor show this week, we’ll de¬vote our attention to the smallergalleries about town.There are 61 galleries listed inthe Chicago exhibitions calendar,among the more interesting arethe following: The Monroe gal¬lery, 59 E. Monroe; Hyde ParkArt center* 1506 E. Hyde Park;Johnson galleries, 424 S. Mich¬igan; the Arts club of Chicago,109 E. Ontario; the Exhibit A gal¬lery, 47 E. Pearson st.; Old Townart center, 1714 N. Wells; Mainstreet gallery; and the S. R.Schwartz gallery at 2213 E. 71ststConcerts and recitalsThe Chicago Symphony has de¬parted for the season; in its wakeis the Metropolitan opera and theRussian Moiseyev folk dance com¬pany.Also of general interest to UCstudents is an Odetta concert sponsored by the Student unionof I IT. She will sing a week fromtomorrow at 8:30 pm in the Stu¬dent union, 47 W. 33rd st. Ticketreservations may be made by call¬ing VI-2-9074.Motion picturesOpening tonight at the HydePark is the “Golden Age of Com¬edy,” a documentary which hasbeen praised greatly, despite thenot very notable absence of Brig¬itte Bardot. Coupled with this is"A W. C. Fields Festival.”At the Esquire is EugeneO Neil’s "Desire Under the Elms”;the Surf theater Is showing"Nights of Cabria”; and the Worldplayhouse is running the Greeksfilm "A Girl in Black.”Folk SingersFor those so inclined, Bob Gib¬son and Will Holt are playing atthe Gate of Horn in which iscalled, in a burst of alliteration,a sprightly spring sing.IN THE AIRSpecial student and faculty dis¬count tickets to “End Game” arenow on sale at the Reynolds clubdesk. After next week though, nosuch discounts will be available.To insure getting good seats be¬fore they go on general sale, stopby and pick up a couple.The Mandel hall situation isnot nearly so bad as many peopleare making it out to be. More onthis later.Get Them Hot otNICKYSPIZZERIA1235 E. 55thPHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433BORDONEI Movers and Light HaulingLU 2-4660 Ellen Coughlin Beauty SalonS10S Lake Park Ave. MI 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon* • Sat. — 9 a.m. - 11 p.m. 1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekeMOZARTConcerto forPinto fir HarpConcerto for ClarinetEduard Van Beinumthe Concertgebouwof AmsterdamEpic 3456*3.19 THEHALSTEDOUTDOORTHEATREHalsted at City LimitsNOW OPENAlways an enjoyableevening at the Halstedwith top entertainmentLate shows everyFriday and SaturdayWA 8-7979ALEXANDER’S RESTAURANT1137 East 63rd St.Special Sunday Dinner Menu IncludesMAST PRIME RIB of NATIVE BEEF, Au Jos*1.75including choice of: Soups, sulods9potatoes9 vegetables9 beverages9 desserts phm NO-75071 lalci? pahld 53 ml ttneetSunday Dinner Prices Range from *1H to *275 pHOpen 24 hr$. MU 4-57351»IIW» Seven days each week THE GOLDEN AGE OF COMEDYFirst-run from midwest premiere, put together by Robert Youngson —-winner of two Academy Award for documentaries — from MockSennett ond Hal Roach two reefers mode between 1923 and 1928.Laurel & Hardy, Ben Turpin, Will Rogers, Jean Harlow, Harry Langdon,Carole Lombard, the Keystone Kops. The N.Y. Ports "Jumps ond ex¬plodes and races . .N.Y. Herald Tribune: "Heedless impishness . . .*N.Y. Doily Nows: "The greatest list ©f stor comedions ever, In thebest comedy bits of their long careers!"— AND —A W. C. FIELDS FESTIVALThe Fatal Gloss of Boer, The Barbershop ond The Pharmecirt illustrateField's special kind of pathos and ©miable vulgarity.Friday fir Saturday: Fields at 5:30, 7:50, 10:10; ColdenAge at 6:25, 8:45, 11:05Sunday: Golden Age at 1:45, 4:05, 6:25, 8:45, 11:05;Fields 3:05, 5:25, 7:45, 10:05I Monday - Thursday: Golden Age at 6:05, 8:25, 10:40;I Fields at 7:25, 9:45Attend early weekend and Sunday matinee showings for best seating.Student rate, os always, 50 cents with t.D.- msApr. 25, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11/ads. These men were interested posed of “early entrants” startingS?. 5K Sou'l?— —^?ral education in the and continuing into the^first twot was* inclined to years ot" college. Iif this proposal,' jree with them. Tri,.i907-8'.he ini- ^Burtoriianticipated-ilie later-pearlyf>nVf* mated! in debate«r.and| never "ful-ial- "son, it' was agreed-upon thaCthelok^Umvwslty Hlege/facuity * damaged*1 high -stand- ig^^rdslto'fliea'P^ingfl ^iKtKreefpresi#m N$g ^lieved* ln research ;f irst, \plllpi^plsKSBii4#mad^<mith'espe.c>.pleWinpthetedea$.i»1|tlai^^afs^stem|.wlie^Byl^sWu*s=fe;Kssa^Senmr College-tmore specuiwdMucatiQnMysmtridl^njiSM!th r ee^Ho we ver| thesplan^ was* n§ unfeasible/ || JgfiboilecjPFesidehcyof:!rffllmllliji education, int.The photo above shows members of the Cap and Govn j*• unufu.llymmiskSffetumMy to sell Cep and Gowns. %®^eS^^p>I^^ltogether^ti#yaa[5re:ika:s kd^the ;?™po tS&&SI1Pro^saliwas^learly^espoused ^radically new progm-1practical if only because of the in the Junior College, to cons -tluerce of college alumni. This4.0f.five comprehensive examm'aftUorSEiliWgj^S^WMe^^EdlMigifeuifdeB^oclS^sclence'sl^hd^an^eie^l^^^^raduaje^eniollmen^wasjelping which^mighKinclude5 some^ Mli4,f»PJiy;#h'?Md^tsfp.ffit1-\etgraduateacializati0n.':.F. u;r,.t heirjmi) ramUpaB^je^wir.tm(*nIs;'~-?yy.,,- ■_./ " • ’'.group propose! an end to . •>•• ‘?j^l|lm^re‘si'deMf^ur^h|appomteti3|f111 wit*!li|^|^^®Hi«nM^n®c^pM™g^|plan^student^toukl|h«’/--Hitu|MMaridyTO\^ji^^?dSr>dpu lfefet h roe||mpre4^ m p r enens iy es/fffp;je J|f>vitlij1thc»st;u(k‘nts.vpllisjsulr;ccsspr^-'n ,lis ''i.ii.u field, and two ,eGhaunccj%Bo;u'cJi%%^p^'suadediiITjj5§5tf leldsVThus, Tn^theiSon vr| *f§|§p|^v^i^M^^^^t|^^l:i|fgi8^^^^pJot;'(iccis.i.6,riS;c6,u p^ner made;' on■ .qrnmitte®W,asliiEeadyMo^pr4S|vorsrtyJwassfwithoutc?a fpresid-11 i•sct|M i tsippiiicl u s ipnsgitwoippn ths§|IM tf ;.theJ: a ppoi n t men t jo f yRgb;j rt|||[resi:gneda|:lreM^^idency#tnWda^gs,chppi^im^April.V1929.g-was,~jd ^-Tlsf» ■ : ''Jit'vf,Mci;.it.c J( o'inniir:‘i'c^r.vpoi t--- tin^<l to usher in a now era' a:: j.jf;0|i^^iit’tie^l>it<^f .Bobyipj^* /-;V«sC’wt,,- ,.- ( 1-anrnmTrwiaiiiri>tiiiiii-,'if'r h-t in nr-’ • • - -/fewt ; > .-*«As this photo ^of ithe-Ma - y;roorv e’eirca] 19 (O^f siib ws; H:I U C ’ ^9 re a te^rre^ws pa p'r?, Kas f'changedfinvmany!, ways.^At £l^.m^p^^cv^^weielcday;:'^KSMKteiiltiMarSri; wetfe^• n MEIIil^now^ the'<b?ooit- §stbre^' ‘i^tl^itaf^mtBifc^Wlpoke^Hflre1" mnd^irWBec^^i^lia^ 5 5thffir"1 U n i v© r»itySI'Mi‘£A a ;•: ’a*/ie H&J:T ARE YOU iSURE^.*YOU DONT NEED AliSlIMQdORMrr?^^KUR^yw|||p'B^W■Op^nen'i«n If iHg^resSEfgro.i^edl|^ass^%£ijtteaJip«*' XIImism-fw^rm oing' *5714\WOODLAWHTAVESX'TURDArr;MAY:-.3^9 00|PM,1 ,-> * -* -A ■ e u- < j*?S©Sir|konsiAuto InsuranceHome Owners InsuraheeJPhone ’jr write . Connecticut-;!^'^ - ^Mutual - Life v,.^,Joseph H.,Aaron,, '23$fc&*%V552\S.. Everett Avo‘ 'X.A.A 6' lOfiotf*.. Ml.l 1-598^'hAon-'.^X'f V‘%vv ^‘.tLt.KJ/.v^Qr.>.yj^ife^Mennerr'Spray.t.Depdoranf for Men keeps? :.jA*cn>woVking• all day long*? working to p're-^^v'ent odor,,working->'to!check< perspiration.^^. For4his..non-stop protection, get Mennen!,’ ■;•' .:1 !lv- ■ • !;•;i^^^^^»ii^”r:00 i;Ml *3-4045K:y -''C./ --t: