i m ChicagoM aroonVol. 66, No. 36 University of Chicago, Friday, June 6, 1958Sports, education interestRussian editors, studentsby Gary MokotoffSix editors of Russian youth and university publications visited Chicago, May 24-31, aspart of an exchange program between the United States National Student association andthe Soviet Committee of Youth Organizations.While in the city, the editors visited the mayor, US Steel works, Museum of Science andIndustry and numerous press conferences. On campus, the Russians were the guests atvarious receptions and occupied their available spare time in bull sessions.The editors are Alexei Gre-chukin, 36, head of youth and Chicago students seemed moststudent life section of Herald interested in the educational sys-of Institutes of Higher Learning; tern in Russia. The editors in-Mikhail Khaldeyev, 38, main edi- formed them that all students re-tor Molodot Konimunlst (young ceive ten years of pre-universitycommunist); Vladlin Troshkin, 28, education. Upon graduation, alldeputy editor Road to tne Screen, those interested in continuingof the Cinematography Institute their work in higher educationof Moscow; Anatoly Valyuzhe- must take an examination for en-nich, 31, editor of the Russian edi- trance to a university,tion of World Student News, a A few select students, winnerspublication of the International of a gold medal for scholastic ex-Union of Students; Vitally Voitko, cellence, are automatically admit-31, editor-in-chief of For Pedagog- ted to a university. There is notical Specialists, a K1 e v student enough room in the Russian uni¬newspaper; and Yuri Voronov, 28, versities for all interested stu- (above) B-J resident Athan Theoharis discusses life inRussia with student editor Vladlin Troshkin of the Cinema-graphic Institute of Moscow. UC students seemed to be mostinterested in Russian academic life.After leaving UC the six Russian editors' itinerary includedSalt Lake City, San Francisco, Washington and Raleigh.ECUE report approved;trustees must vote nowReport of the executive committee on undergraduate education passed the Faculty Sen¬ate council with four amendments by a majority last Tuesday. The report must now beapproved by the board of trustees.Amendments involve:• Splitting the College faculty into four sections; biological sciences, humanities, physicaldeputy editor of Komsomolskaia dents and only those with the sciences and social sciences. Each section will include all faculty members of the new Col-Pravda, Young Communist highest grades in the examine- , concerned with its fieldLeague paper of Soviet students tion plus the gold medal winners “7" W1W1 v! , ;Q ,and8youth** (circulation 2.6 mil- are admitted. should be responsible to This has been changed to •‘Since by placement test, the course re-u x * ~ and the new College for the educa- admission requirements for some quirements which they must ful-1 ', . .. f. rj... tional program therein. four-year programs include train- fill for the bachelor’s degree willers TsTdenfat a.lLbia univor sians were quick to defend the Each section will have a chair- tag in certain specific areas, the not exceed four academic years££tho acted as interpreter, the attitude of their country; on man appointed according to Uni- foUowmg rules should govern the at normal work loads.Russian editors lived at the Alpha others they hedged. Four of the versity statute. The internal or- treatment of deficiencies in such The second part was left un-Delta Phi and Beta Theta Pi fra- editors are members of the Com- ganization of each section should programs: touched, namely “A student notternities. munist party, one is not old be left to the discretion of its The first point originally read admittable at entrance to such aUC students were so interested enough but hopes to become a faculty. This does not preclude “An entering student should be program should be permitted toin learning about life in Russia member and one does not plan the formation of intersectional admitted to such a program only transfer to it as soon as he hasthat one of the editors comment- to become a member. bodies of a consultative or execu- if by virtue of advanced standing done sufficient work to enableed towards the end of the visit, Questioned by an International tive nature. or accreditation by placement him to complete the program“all we do is answer questions, house resident whether his news- • With regard to the three tests the course requirements within four academic years atand hardly have time to ask any." paper is ever censored by the uni- quarter-courses in the third, elec- which he must fulfill for the bach- normal work loads.At Burton-Judson men’s dormi- versity administration, Troshkin, tive year, which the student elor s degree will not exceed four • The final amendment to thetories, some 50 residents ad- one of the party who stated he chooses in consultation with his academic years at normal work ECUE report is the omissionjourned to the patio after lunch- could speak English, claimed he adviser: such adjustments of ex- load." of the section stating the commit-ing with the Russians and pro- could not understand the question isting requirements as may be it now reads: “Entering stu- ^fe *s discharged from its duties,ceeded with a barrage of ques- needed in order to provide initialtions. (see ‘Russians,' page 16) lists of approved fields or coursesshall be provided by informal con¬sultation between the present Col dents who have not met such The coJJncil chay*.ccl*. . . . , ,,, lor could recall ECUE at any timeadmission requirements should be he desired and could dismiss itadmitted only if, by virtue of ad- at any time and therefore the see-lege faculty and the faculties of vanced standing or accreditation tion was unnecessary’,the several areas of concentra¬tion.• Concerning students inadmis-sable to four-year programs uponentrance into the College, the em¬phasis has been removed fromthe fact that there will be 4%-year programs to the hope thatalmost all degrees will conformto the four-year degree.The original report stated that“since some programs will con¬tinue to be offered which, becauseof the volume of specialized re¬quirements, can be completed infour years only by unusually pre¬pared students, the followingrules should govern enrollmentin such programs:" Next issue June 27This is the last issue of the Maroon for the spring quarter.The next issue will be published on June 27. Deadline for copyand advertising matter for that issue will be Wednesday,June 25.Until the Maroon's summer quarter office hours are an¬nounced in the June 27 issue, copy and messages may be leftin the Maroon mail box, Ida Noyes desk, 1212 East 59th street.For information call Ml 3-0800, ext. 3265, 3266 or 3270.Kilmuir, Warren dedicatelaw school as 600 watchWith the heads of the British and American judicial systems as leading participants, thecornerstone of new law school building was laid Wednesday, May 28.Viscount Kilmuir, Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain, and Chief Justice Earl Warrenjoined Mayor Daley and other celebrities present at the cornerstone ceremonies.In a short speech Kilmuir told an audience of approximately 400 members of the Ameri¬can bar, deans and faculty members of Middle Western law schools that “without law we canonly live in an increasinglyphotoi by Mokotoff(above) Russian editor Mikhail Khaldeyev gets some tipsoa how to throw an American football from B-J resident BillSpady. Khaldeyev also took part in the current campus fad,Frisbee, and played some baseball. Khaldeyev was especiallyinterested in American sports. Soccer is his hobby. dangerous jungle of anarchy.” six-story library, stacks, and fac-A reception in Burton-Jud- ulty office building, to which willson followed the ceremony.The new building, to cost $4.1million, will be located at 60thstreet and University avenue. Itwill be actually three connectedstructures, the largest being a be connected a class and seminar-room building. In turn, this willbe joined to an auditorium andmoot court building.Designed in contemporary styleby Eero Saarinen and associates, domutory.the law school will have the Saari¬nen “trademark” of a reflectingpool in front of the 60th streetfacade of the library building.Completion and use is scheduledfor autumn 1959. Saarinen’s firmalso designed the new women’sThis isLEE WILCOX, associate director of UC’s office of radioand television. Her major duties are the creation and produc¬tion of educational radio and television programs for UC. Sheis also lecturer in speech at the Meadville Theological school,instructing student ministers in the techniques of public speaking.Lee produces "Science 58,” the daily, 7 am Channel 7 series directedto interested, intelligent adults wanting to increase their understand¬ing of modern science. She is responsible for the production of edu¬cational programs and series for UC whether they appear on Channel11 or through the usual commercial stations and has both producedand moderated the radio series, "Books in the Making.” The producerof a television show sees a program series through from the firstIdeas to the final production, from approving sets to providing coffee.Show business has been the domineering force in Lee’s life fromthe time she played a minor but influential role in a kindergartenproduction of "Chicken Little.” She built puppet theaters and enter¬tained audiences when in third and fourth grades; played roles in theWinnetka community theater, and the North Shore Country dayachool (Winnetka) Gilbert and Sullivan operettas.A camp counsellor in dramatics, during the summers, Lee majoredIn drama and psychology at college, where she acted, sang, wrote anddirected shows until her graduation from Vassar with honors in 1947.She has also studied at the Northwestern university school of speechand at the Metropolitan opera house studios in New York.Until Miss Wilcox came to UC in 1955, she had done much stagework; apearing on Broadway with Josephine Hull and Eddie Dowlingin "Minnie and Mr. Williams,” and in Alfred Drake’s "The Liar,”touring the Borscht Circuit as Lola in "Come Back Little Sheba,”singing alto leads in Gilbert and Sullivan operettas with the Masqueand Lyre Light opera company, acting with the Princeton theater’s"Intime” and touring Loewe’s vaudeville circuit in the comedy team,"Joe Philips and the Chick.” She has sung in concert in New Yorkand Amesbury, Mass.She has a brother, Robert, a Chicago lawyer, and a sister, Mrs.Robert H. Jones, of Boston, who together have made Lee an auntseven times over.Lee’s interests and hobbies are as varied as her career. Theyinclude sedate activities like play-reading and cooking, to singing(soon with th Chicago Symphony orchestra chorus), traveling, swim¬ming and sailing. Maybe she will someday paddle a canoe across theAmerican continent, a project she considers when the pace becomestoo fast.(article and photo by Ed Szkirpan)PAINT ft HARDWARE CO.Hyde Park's Most CompletePaint and Hardware Store1154-58 E. 55th St. UC Discount HY 3-3840Why take your winter woolens home?for youPock in os much os youwish in this spacious box. . . ot one low price!STORE ALL YOURWOOLENS . . . dresses,suits, jackets, skirts, chil¬dren's snow suits, blank¬est and Household items,windbreakers, ski suits,etc., ANYTHING exceptfur or fur trimmed cootspluscleaningcharge(incl. $100 ins.)AAAX BROOK CO.1013 E. 61st St. MY 3-6868 — Ml 3-7447Prompt Pick-up and Delivery Faculty, students honoredat second annual programTeaching awards, student scholastic and athletic prizes and the alumni - dean’s awardswere presented at the second annual honors assembly, May 29.R. Wendell Harrison, vice-president of the University and dean of the faculties, presentedthe Quantrell awards for excellence in undergraduate teaching to four members of the Col¬lege faculty.They are Maynard C. Krueger, associate professor of economics in the College; ViolaManderfeld, associate profes¬sor in the department of lan¬guages and literatures on theCollege; Stuart M. Tave, assistantprofessor and secretary of the de¬partment of English; and IzaakWirszup, assistant professor ofmathematics in the College.College dean of students, Har¬old Haydon, who presided at theassembly, awarded the following17 prizes for scholastic and ath¬letic excellence. Amounts of theawards are indicated.Florence Adams prizes for ex¬cellence in artistic reading toWayne Caudill ($75\ Adele Kon-iger ($50) and Peter Smith ($25).Academy of American Poetsprize to an undergraduate for thebest poem or group of poems toRonald Offen ($100). Ivan Ar-guelles and Elizabeth Friedmanreceived first and second honor¬able mention, respectively.Millard P. Binyon memorialfund prize for talented undergrad¬uate humanists to William R. Har¬mon ($50).Susan Colver Rosenberger prizefor constructive study and orig¬inal research in the departmentof education to Charles E. Bidwell($300). Elizabeth Susan Dixon honoraward to a student in the schoolof social service administrationfor outstanding work in the firstyear and promise of futureachievement in the field of socialwork to Mrs. Joan W. Swift ($25).John Billings Fiske poetryprizes for an original poem orcycle of poems to (first) WilliamR. Harmon ($100) and (third)Ronald Offen ($25).French government prize forspecial work in French in theCollege to Kerry Pataki a book,"Conte (short stories) Musset.”Henry Ginsburg memorial prizein the department of physiologyto (first) Norman L. Mages($100) and (second) Dario B. Do-mizi ($50).Goethe prizes to College stu¬dent for excellence in the study ofGerman language and literatureto Dean H. Kenyon ($50), DonnaE. Logan ($50). Cynthia MacLanereceived an honorable mention.Milo P. Jewett prizes for excel¬lence in Bible reading to (first)Tommy J. Lasswell ($150) and(second) John N. Gregg ($75).Olga and Paul Menn foundationprizes: for an original piece of fiction to Paul A. D’Andrea ($750)and Alexander MacDonald ($250);for an original music composition,William Mathieu ($100).Theodore Lee Neff prize forexcellence in the study of Frenchlanguage and literature to Mar¬shall R. Schwartz ($75).Elizabeth R. Norton prize forexcellence in research in chemis¬try to Warren J. Pendergast($50).Political Institutions prizes toPatricia Hopkins ($150), MaryFinkel ($100), Sharon Fink el$50) and Brian McKnlght ($50).Elsa Rhinehardt honor awardto a student in the school of socialadministration for outstandingwork in the first year and prom¬ise of future achievement in thefield of social work to Joan Fo*<cr($25).Athletic awards are:William B. Bond medal to thevarsity track athlete scoring thegreatest number of points duringthe season to Hosea Martin.Amos Alonzo Stagg medal tothe senior athlete with the bestall-around record for athletics,scholarship and character to JohnJ. Bowman.Ten graduating studentsget alumni-dean's awardsTen graduating students were cited “for their contribution to the extra-curriculum” atthe second annual honors awards assembly, May 29.Next Saturday, at the Inter-fraternity sing they will receive medals of recognition andthree-year memberships in the alumni association.Award winners are Elin Ballantyne, John J. Bowman, Lynn F. Chadwell, William R.Harmon, Eliza Houston, Rachel Sue Jacobson, Robert W. Lawler, W. Douglas Maurer, HeleneS. Rudoff and Gary G. Stoll.Awards are only given to sen- serverance, enthusiasm, and tire- in athletics have won him theiors. Jean Kwon, a graduate less effort, she has helped to con- high respect and regard of bothstudent, received an honorable ceive and accomplish the return faculty and students.”mention. of the Society of Blackfriars toCitations for the winners are the University.”as follows: Bowman — "His outstanding Miss Chadwell—"As a memberof Student Government, Orienta¬tion board, and Nu Pi Sigma, sheMiss Ballantyne — "With per- sportsmanship and achievements hag been a highly respected leaderof opinion and action in the cam¬pus community.”Harmon — "Integrity, scholar¬ship and wit have characterizedthe quality of his participation indormitory affairs, the publica¬tions and the life of the campus.”German students atU-highwin Chicago area awardsFor the third straight year students of German language atUniversity high school took home first prizes in an annualscholarship contest sponsored in collaboration with UC,Northwestern, Roosevelt, andParticipating in the contestwere 168 German studentsfrom the Chicago area. In Class A(German II students), MariannaTax won first prize; ErnestaKracke was third, and David Col¬lier and Rea Ginsberg tied forfifth.In Class B (German II studentswith some German home back¬ground), Gerald Adler took firstplace. the University of Illinois.Richard Friedman was first inClass C (German III students).David Kraines and KatherineDoyle took fourth and seventh,respectively.German is a rather new subjectat U-high, having only recentlybeen restored by Professor ViolaManderfeld after a long interrup¬tion.william shakespeareCORIOLANUSjuly 1 to july 6july 10 to july 13 moliereTHE IMAGINARYINVALIDJuly 17 to july 20july 24 to july 27percy bysse she I leyTHE CENCI -july 31 to august 3august 7 to august 108:30 P.M,single admission $1.00 except Saturday $1.25season tickets $2.50 now on sale atREYNOLDS CLUB57th fir UniversityCOURT THEATRETHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO Miss Houston—"Her character,personality and spirit will notsoon be forgotten by those whohave known her as a student,friend and as editor of a distin¬guished yearbook.”Miss Jacobson—"Her Integrityand selfless concern for the Uni¬versity and for the larger com¬munity have been repeatedly dem-ontrated through her participa¬tion in Inter-dorm council andWdrld University service.”Lawler—"In the residence hallsand in all-campus organizations,he has demonstrated the highestqualities of leadership, loyaltyand service.”Maurer—"As a student of sci¬ence, athlete and musician, he hasmade a memorable contributionto campus life. His music will beheard on the quadrangles longafter he has left his alma mater.”Miss Rudoff—"Her quiet lead¬ership and sincere concern forthe University have character¬ized her contribution to the resi¬dence halls and to the women'shonor society, Nu Pi Sigma.”Stoll — "His independent spiritand loyalty to his University havebeen ably demonstrated in his con¬tribution to his fraternity, theInter-fraternity council and theStudent Government.”Miss Kwon—“Zeal, selfless ef¬fort and creative talent have char¬acterized her work in studentpublications. She has tirelesslygiven of herself to create a year¬book of great merit.”2 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 6, 1958Alumni return for 1958 reunionby Rochelle DubnowUC’s largest alumni turnout in 20 years will make its appearance on campus from June 11to 14 for the traditional alumni weekend.An alumni school, reunions, brunches, dinners, and tours have been planned for the return¬ing UC’ers.The 1958 alumni reunion festivities will be unique in many ways. For the first time themain part of the alumni group will be housed on campus in the new women’s dormitory (whichwill ■become “co-ed” for the —occasion). Theclass of ’33, the ical alumni senior scientific ses- biography, “Roosevelt and Hop-largest returning reunion sions in BiUings, an °wl and Ser‘ kins.” In 1954 he published “Thearmm will nccimv an antira finnr Pent convention and a Phi Beta American President,” now in wideof the dorm KaPPa dinner at the Quadrangle use as a college text. Hyman is aAttending the University durin? club' regular contributor to the Newthe depression years, the class of medical alumni class of 33 York Times Sunday magazine,'33 was financially unable to pub- meet at 10 ana Thursday in The Reporter, The Saturday Re-lish a Cap and Gown. The situa¬tion will be remedied this yearhowever; the class of ’33 will pub¬lish the Recap and Gown and dis¬tribute the book to all class mem¬bers.The “slightly behind the dead¬line” yearbook is being edited byJohn Holloway and ex Marooneditor Warren Johnston who isnow vice-president in charge ofpublic relations for NorthernTrust Insurance company. Billings. Also on Thursday will view and is special editor for Thebe the alumni brunch at which Annals of the American Academyof Political and Social Science.Since 1954 he has been the as¬sistant to the chairman of theboard of the Washington Post andTimes Herald.The Order of the “C” dinnerand school of business reunion Alumni recruitThe alumni recruiting program, formerly under super¬vision of the alumni office, will next year become partof the office of admissions.Any alumnus is eligible to be a member of his local commit¬tee and can join through the admissions office. Local commit¬tees aid in the admissions program through individual andgroup recruitment drives; they also aid in evaluating potentialstudents through interviews.According to a committee-member who graduated last year,“This is the way to make sure that the new students will notbe of inferior quality, as some people seem to fear. It’s lotsof fun and a good excuse for not contributing any money.”‘angry young men” and Califor- to well-remembered spots on cam-nia's “Beat generation.”As Tower Topics magazinepoints out in its most recent issue,alumni will find that manychanges have occurred on campusin the last year.“When the buildings came downon 55th street,” Tower Topicswrote, “the scene of many an es- pus will find the new dormswhere the prefabs stood in Dudleyfield; the law school rising nextto Burton-Judson; the Low-tem-erature lab in the parking lot be¬hind the Research institutions,and renovated varsity courts."(Editor’s note: Not to mentionUniversity Tavern’s new loca-capade became rubble. A stroll tion.)third-year UC student M. J. Sla-bodnick will speak. “India” will bethe subject of the program andIndian civilization will be sum¬marized by anthropologist McKimMarriott, linguist A. B. van Bui-lenen, political scientist MyronWeiner, and members of the will also take place Thursday.Indian civilization course staff. A performance of Faculty-One of the highlights of the Revels will be presented on Fri-weekend will be the fourth annual day.communications dinner to be at- Alumni school is'scheduled forOutstanding members of (he tended by alumni in the field of Saturday, June 14. In conjunctionclass of 33 are: Samuel Reshev- communications and former Uni- with this event Leonard Meyer,sky, the world s champion chess versity publications editors. associate professor of music willplayer; Truman Gibson, Jr., pres- Principal speaker at the dinner lecture on “Emotion and Meaningident of the International Boxing wjji be Sydney Hyman, who as in Music”; Lloyd Kozloff, assist-club: Father Harold Rigney, undergraduate edited Phoenix, ant professor of biochemistry willreturned recently to the United wrote a Blackfriars show, was an discuss virus and its importanceStates after five years impris* undergraduate Marshal of the with regard to theories of evolu-onement in a Red China prison University and a member of Owl tion and the causes of cancer; Anncamp; Ted Haydon, UC’s track and Serpent. Larimore and Wesley Calef, mem-coach, and Mrs. Haydon. Hyman collaborated with Rob- bers of the geography department + n rods rrea ker at t hVl958 Torn munir ationsdi n nor siatimlavatThe alumni weekend schedule ert E. Sherwood in the prepara- will explain the impact of West- tured sPeaKer at tne communications dinner baturtiay atwill begin Wednesday with Med- tion of the Pulitzer-prize-winning ern civilization on African na¬tional culture and on the manage¬ment of public domain; “The gift¬ed adolescent in school and so¬ciety” will be discussed by Jacob Communicators hearHyman on presidencySidney Hyman, ’35, assistant to the chairman of the boardof the Washington Post and Times Herald, will be the fea-794 to receive degreesat 1958 spring convocation 5 pm in the Quadrangle club. The event is part of the annualalumni reunion. award, will present the second an-In addition, Leo Rosten, 30, nuaI communication award to anmember of the board of editors of outstanding alumnus in the field.Look magazine, will act as master Last >s award was won byW. Getzels, associate professor of of ceremonies. Clifton Utley, 26, Earle Ludgjn >20, member of theeducation; Richard Stern, assist- National Broadcasting company jjc board”of trustees and chair-ant professor of English will con- news commentator and winner of man of the board 0f Earle Ludgintrast the literature of England’s the 1958 Dupont Commentator’s and company advertising agency.Hyman entered the Universityin 1931 where he edited thePhoenix, wrote a Blackfriarsshow, was an undergraduate Mar¬shal of the University, a memberof Owl and Serpent senior men’shonorary, served as a reporterfor the Chicago Herald and Exam-Ex-UCer wins FulbrightCaroline N. Lee, former UC Park area. He has been a memberstudent, has been awarded a of the Seneral assembly of IllinoisUC will award 794 degrees next weekend during two con¬vocations in Rockefeller chapel.At 3 pm Friday, all degrees other than bachelor’s will beconferred. These include: 54 masters of science, 179 mastersof arts, 56 doctors of philos- ,ophy, 65 doctors of judicature, Speakers at both convocations Fulbright scholarship to study for 18 years*95 masters in business adminis- will be Chancellor Lawrence A. painting at the Sorbonne, Paris, Miss Lee’s grant calls for study manned to arnuirp atration, four masters in compara- Kimpton. Kimpton’s speech, al- France. from September 30, 1958 to Octo- BAinlaw and an MA in internativ law, and two masters of law. though concerning the bachelors Miss Lee, who received her her 24, 1959 at the Sorbonne’s in- tjonaj reiations by 1937.Two-hundred-and-ninety-five degree, shall be nameless for, as bachelor’s degree at the Univer- stitute of art and archeology. As ^ tbe d}nner Hyman will dis-bachelors and 44 bachelors of di- he has stated, he “doesn't like sity, is the daughter of Noble W. a student at the University, she cugs Changing'fashions in presi-Lee, dean of the John Marshall was a member of the Maroon, dents» He is the author of “TheLaw school and Republican State Acrotheatre, Student Government American President” which isnow in use as a college text.vinity degrees will be awarded at titles.”10 am Saturday. In line with the UC tradition,Three additional honorary de- students will receive diplomas in- representative from the Hyde and Quadranglers.grees are to be presented. Accord- dividuahy. Many other universi-ing to University custom names ties merely have the student01 the winners will be announced stand during the ceremonies andonly at the convocation. receive his diploma later.Artistic, thirsty???paint new UT muralby Rochelle DubnowBeing demolished along with University Tavern (UT),historic University of Chicago “pub,” is former UCerEd Maupin’s “back room” mural depicting Universitylife vintage ’54.George and Sam (You’ve gotta be of age and prove it)UT’s owners are in quest of another artist who wishes tobe immortalized upon the back room walls of the newUT at 55th and Ellis.If you’re a poor starving Rembrandt or a prosperousstudent in the joint degree program with the Art instituteand wish to pour out your soul upon George and Sam’sclean walls . . . scurry over to UT.Maybe they’ll treat you to a glass of milk.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 $2.95 & $ 3.95Our Prices Can't Be Beat... it's Smart To Buy For LessD & G Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-2728“In the Neighborhood tor 40 Years*9Hours: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 a.m. - 9 p.m., Saturday Cap & Gownw $4.50 «until Monday, June 9ON SALEBookstore — Activities OfficeGA A V T V1\ If I mIntellectual anomie and the UCerTHE UNIVERSITY stu¬dent, graduate and under¬graduate, is a victim ofintellectual .anomie. This anomieis neither the feeling of anonym¬ity nor a social asceticism. It isnot (as many of us would like tothink) the aloneness of Heming¬way writing his short stories inMichigan, nor the aloneness ofMarx in England; it is not thealoneness of originality, of geniusfenced in by new ideas away fromold intellectual pastures.The anomie of the UC studentis the inability of the student toseriously and extensively com¬municate to others his ownideas, his own thesis work, hisown brand of thought.Anyone who has lived throughthe isolation of writing a thesis,who has suffered the anxiety oftense and frozen question periodsin class or public lectures, who hasfailed in talking seriously to otherstudents in other fields, knowsthe symptoms of anomie. Themany times we’ve stifled our be¬ liefs, comments, and opinions, areproducts of our anomie.THE OBJECTIVE descriptionof our anomie is a lack of com¬munication, not only betweencamus and life, teacher and stu¬dent, but student and studentThere is no doubt of the valueof this lost communication. Thevestiges of active intellectual in¬tercourse moves the mediocreminds of law students to a sur¬prising width and depth; re-edu¬cates the members of the collegefaculty who possess esprit demens; and begins to stir the mindof the divinity school student.But inter- and intra-departmentalstudent communication is hardcome by in most divisions. Why?IT IS DIFFICULT to knowwhich comes first—the fragmen¬tation of academic subject mat¬ters or lack of communication;each encourages the other, lead¬ing to a vicious cycle in which thestudents are caught.The subject matter is largely defined by the books read, writ¬ten and analyzed. Students of onesubject read different books fromstudents in another subject. Sincethese books are the basis forcommunication between students,communication ceases. This lackof communication rests ultimate¬ly on the inability of students tostep outside their books and, asRobert Frost puts it, “swing”their knowledge.But how often does the UC stu¬dent have an opportunity to stepoutside an author’s written word?Rarely and fleetingly! Yet, thisopportunity is best realized in se¬rious inter-student talk.THE TURNING of departmentsinto intellectual cafeterias in or¬der to attract many students re¬sults in a lack of unity and com¬munication within a subject mat¬ter. If professors on the samesubject can't understand one an¬other, how can we expect studentunderstanding?The continuously changingstructure of departmental and college requirements makes ver¬tical communication betweenmore and less advanced studentsdifficult. Perhaps experimental-ism is backfiring.Probably the chief cause forlack of active intellectual inter¬course between students, is thestudent's own inability to askquestions and make commentsbravely and clearly. It is as muchthe haunting spectre of fellow stu¬dents’ opinions as a fear of pro¬fessorial reprisal which deadensUC classes. Students can onlylearn the habit of risking failure,refutation, and argument, by talk¬ing to one another, in academicclubs, serious informal groups,and classrooms.KIMPTON IS missing the boatif he identifies & university com¬munity with active physical andsocial renewal. The exiling of lawschool across the Midway (nomatter how beautiful the build¬ing is), the waning of the inter¬departmental committees, the fur¬ther fragmentation of academicWHAT'S THE FOREMAN IN ACATCHUR FACTORY?rSWAAON VACHON.V Of DETROIT Sonet BootWHAT IS REANUT RUTTER?00,ROBERT altiiai. Spreadable EdibleW Or PITTSBURGHWHAT'S A BANK'S ARMORED CAR?Jennifer belt. Buck TruckRADCUrFEWHAT IS AN INERT SKIER?HELEN 2AY NOR.U or AKRON Slope Dope LAST CALL FOR STICKLERS! If you haven’tStickled by now, you may never get the chance again! Sticklersare simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers. Bothwords must have the same number of syllables. (Don’t dodrawings.) Send stacks of ’em with your name, address, collegeand class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y.DOESN'T UET LUCKJIS FOR^GRADUATION PRESENT--.( see oeto^) /~~ < §=kCIGARETTESA\V •' \\» \V*VGRADUATION PRESENTS? You may get a (Groan!) 6-cylinder European sportscar or a (Yawn!) 6-month European vacation. These silly baubles just provethat parents don’t understand the college generation. What every senior really wants(C’mon now, admit it!) is a generous supply of Luckies! Luckies, as everyone knows,are the best-tasting cigarettes on earth. They’re packed with rich, good-tastingtobacco, toasted to taste even better. So the senior who doesn’t receive ’em is boundto be a Sad, Grad! Why let parents spoil commencement—it only happens (Sob!) once.Tell ’em to gift-wrap those Luckies right now!WHAT'S A GROUP OF l*’" " 'S?CAROL BRADSHAW.COLORADO STATE Heavy Bevy WHAT IS AN OSTRACIZED BEE?BARBARA FELLOW.Dt PAUW Lone Drone WHAT ARE A ROBOTS RELATIVES?BON GUTHRIE.U OF WICHITA Tin KinTHE BEST-TASTING CIGARETTE YOU EVER SMOKED!Product of <J& iJv&xccedjrrryui+y — c/o^axcc- is our middle nameHa. r. Ci ) paths which the college studentmay take to a BA are measuresleading away from a university"community” with communica¬tion.While the University adminis¬tration lags behind, the UC stu¬dent must become enough (butnot too much) of an "organizationman” to create his own oppor¬tunities to communicate. Depart¬mental clubs, informal seriousstudy groups, a stabilized basicdepartmental curriculum, studentacademic publications, formal con¬tact between students of otherfields (the related field programin the divisions Is a mockery),some formal connection betweenthe thesis writer and his fellowstudents, continual formal contactwith classmates, interdepartmen¬tal tables at the Commons, intel¬lectual upgrading of the Maroon,the reading of prize student pa¬pers by their authors to the de¬partment or university at large,the replacing of silly debate withserious discussion, a graduatehonors system which means some¬thing—these and others are someof the instruments for killing theanomie of the UC student body.UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorFor the Graduating(Congratulations)For the Beta-PlayboyParty(Corsages)For ony other occasion(Flowers)fromMitzie ’sFlower Shop1340 E. 55th St.Ml 3-4020Student Discount4 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 6, 1958■Rededicate Palmer bellsin Mitchell tower MondayCeremonies commemorating the 50th anniversary of the dedication of Alice FreemanPalmer memorial chimes in Mitchell tower will be held in the ringing chamber of thetower Monday at noon, announced the Societas Campanariorum (Society of Bell Ringers).During the Ceremony a bronze plaque in memory of Roy B. Nelson (1877-1956), firstMitchell tower chime-master, will be presented to the University. Nelson, class of 1901, servedas chime-master from 1909 to 1919. He was an assistant in the department of Greek from1911 to 1919 and an instructor —— -—————r—r — ,in the Extension (Home Also silent today is the change- Each night at 10:05, one of the Exhibit to focuson modern AfricaReynolds club and International house will host the exhibi¬tion, “A focus on Africa — land of contrasts,’' starting June18 and tentatively scheduled until June 23.The African students association of Chicago has plannedthe exhibition to include a dis-play of arts and crafts and a house assembly hall from 7 to 9.series of films. At the same time, A donation of 50 cents is required'ioio ringinS which makes Mitchell members of the society rings theStudy) department from 191~ tower unique among bell towers ‘Alma Mater.” This is done inrh ‘ ii in the united States. Mitchell compliance with a request madeThe ceremony will be an- tower was modeled after Magda- by former coach Amos Alonzonounced with a chime concert by jen tower at Oxford university. Stagg who, in 1904, gave the Uni-James R. Lawson, University ca- The ten bells in Mitchell towr, versity a check for $1000 for arillotieur and present Mitchell the ten bells at Magdalen, “goodnight chime” for UC’s ath-tower chime-master. Lawson will were installed for change-ringing, letes. Stagg hoped the chime’splay portions of the original chime j e with ropes and wheels. “sweet cadence” would serve as adedication service. At the conclu- According to Lawson, this is "last word with them before theysion of the ceremony, a prayer of standard procedure in England fall asleep; to speak to them ofrededication of the bells will be where tune-playing on bells is love and loyalty and sacrifice forgiven, followed by a performance i00ked upon with suspicion as fit their University and of hope andby student chimer, Bruce Cushna. on]y for foreigners. Lawson added inspiration and endeavor for theMade In England by tfie same that almost all good Ehglish bell morrow.”foundry that cast 'Big Bon. the towers—and there are some 5,000 Although the days of Chicago’sPalmer memor ial bells were 0f them, are equipped for change- football fame are history, and itbrought to the University and ded- ringing only. Outside England is doubtful that today’s athletesicated on June 9, 1903. On that there are only a few, and Mitchell are in bed by 10:05, the traditionday the ten bells which constitute tower is one of T5 in North is still maintained. (Rumor has itthe chime were accepted by Uni- America. that Stagg set curfew at 10:30,versity President Henry Pratt por a few brief years, change- thus the gridmen had 25 minutesJudson. v ringing was actually practiced at to go from their girl friends’For the past 50 years, the bells the University by a band of eight homes to the dormitories or fra-have been rung an average of rjngers imported from England ternities.)three times a day, five days a jor this purpose. On November 21, Listeners to this bell benedic-week for a total of approximately igpg ^e fjrst successful peal was tion may occasionally hear im-39.000 “concerts.” At one time the achieved. By 1911, however, the mediately following the ‘Almabells sounded every fifteen min- change-ringing had stopped due to Mater,’ an Alpha Delta Phi fra¬mes mechanically. the “nervousness of our neigh- ternity song, for the ringing hasIn the ringing chamber of hours.” been performed for several yearsMitchell “tower, which is also a Tune playing, on the other by student chimer Cushna andcampanological museum, still hand, or “clocking” as the Eng- other members of this fraternity,stands the old clock mechanism lish call it, was practiced from the Special chime concerts are rungwhich was specially designed and first and never permitted to lapse, by other student bell-ringers onmade by the Chicago Manual One chime-master, who rang for the birthdays of Chancellor Law-Training school. four years in the 1920s, was Don- rence A. Kimpton (October 7),In 1932,, the mechanism was aid Bond, now professor of Eng- William Rainey Harper, firstturned off forever and the Parsi- lish at UC. At the present time, president of the University, (Julyfal chime of Rockefeller memorial the bells are rung by student 26) and Alice Freeman Palmer,chapel began its regular time- members of t^e Sottas Camna- first dean of women, (Februarykeeping for the University. nariorum. 21).The Chicago bell ringers try tomaintain a campanological linkbetween Mitchell tower and itsMagdalen tower prototype. An¬nually, on January 30, the 2,443pound “tenor” or largest bell inMitchell tower is tolled commemo¬rating the anniversary of the be¬heading of Charles I. Oxford inthose days was predominantly aRoyalist university. the sixth annual All-African student conference will be held in In¬ternational house, with its maintheme, “Pan-African solidarity.”ity.” <• for admission to each evening offilms.The Rhodesias and Nyasaland.Ghana, Morocco, Nigeria, BelgianCongo, French Equatorial Africa,The admission-free arts and Liberia. Tunisia, and French Westcrafts showing at Reynolds club Africa will be represented in thewill feature wood carvings in movies. Featured are “Safari tosuch African hardwoods as sa- Adventure.” “Daybreak in Udi,”pale, muhugu, mahogany, and and “The Boy Kumasenu.”ebony. A special display. East The agenda of the AASU con-African “wonders in wood,” im- ference reads as follows:ported by a Washington, DC, June 19: reception for delegatesfirm, is included in the collec- and University faculty mem-tion. Some items of ivory and bers, personnel, and students atsafari-famed leather works from International house;Morocco and other African cen- June 20: conference session at In¬ters will also be on display. ternational house and a publicModerately - priced utility and lecture at Mandel hall;gift items will be on sale at ba- jime 21: conference session atzaar booths, intermingled with international house and thefeatures designed to bring anawareness of African customs,way of life, and contemporaryculture to spectators.The film festival includes a dif¬ferent set of movies each nightof the exhibition in International sixth annual ball and Africanentertainment program at theTrianon ballroom;June 22: final conference sessionand the sixth annual banquetat the First Baptist church ofChicago.On mental healthParish leaders planexperimental projectClergymen from a “typical American community” havebeen ftivited by the University to participate in an experi¬mental project designed to help them prevent mental illnessamong their parishioners.Believed to be the first ofits kind, the project has been ical faculty.made possible through a $6,850 Kokomo, Indiana, has beengrant from Lilly Endowment, Inc., chosen as the “typical AmericanIndianapolis, Indiana. It will be community” where the projectdirected by the Reverend Gran- will be launched. Clergymen ofger E. Westberg, professor of re- all faiths as well as psychiatristligion and health in the school of Dr. E. Hoight have been invitedmedicine and federated theolog- to participate.Twenty-six schools formscience research societyTwenty-six educational and research institutions, including UC, announced last monththat they had formed an inter-university corporation to be known as Associated MidwestUniversities.The new non-profit corporation is intended to promote, encourage and conduct researchand education in all branches of science.It plans to establish headquarters at the Argonne National laboratory’s main site nearLemont. A meeting of reprephoto by MokotoffStudent chimer. Leon Cleser, plays a tune on the ten-bellAlice Freeman Palmer memorial bells in Mitchell tower. Thebells are chimed three times daily: at noon, 6 pm and 10:05in the evening.House summer residentsin Snell-Hitchcock dormsAccommodations for summer quarter students will be avail¬able in Snell and Hitchcock halls. Snell and sections one andtwo of Hitchcock will be used for men’s housing, and sectionsthree, four and five of Hitchcock for women.Contracts will be for room sentatives of the cooperatinginstitutions to complete thetransfer is scheduled for nextTuesday at Argonne’s site.Dr. James H. Jensen, provost,Iowa State college, will be initialpresident of the organization.Commenting on its establishment,Jensen said:“This is an important day in thehistory of scientific organizationin America's middle-west. We an¬ticipate that Associated MidwestUniversities will utilize effectively and efficiently the vast reservoirof scientific manpower, knowl¬edge and facilities available inthis populous area.”Dr. Norman Hilberry, Argonnedirector commented:“Argonne welcomes the forma¬tion of this new organization togive impetus to scientific devel¬opment in the middle-west. Itpromises to become one of themost active groups of its kind inthe United States.’1 tute of Technology, Case Instituteof Technology, Illinois Instituteof Technology, Iowa State Collegeof Agriculture and MechanicalArts, Kansas State, Loyola, Mar¬quette, Mayo foundation, Mich¬igan State University of Agricul¬ture and Applied Sciences, North¬western, Oklahoma State, Purdue,St. Louis, Iowa State, Washington,Wayne, Western Reserve, Cincin¬nati, Illinois, Kansas, Michigan,The members are: Battelle Me- Minnesota, Missouri, Notre Dame,morial institute, Carnegie Insti- and UC.^•vrrrrnnv-only. Hutchinson commonsand Billings cafeteria will be openduring the summer, however, andthe kitchen facilities in the base¬ment of Snell-Hitchcock will beavailable.Men’s housing will range from$85 to $118 for the summer quar- tween $90.50 and $115.50. Roomsare completely furnished, exceptfor towels. Bed linens are fur¬nished and laundered. Laundryfacilities, ironing boards and ironsare available.Application may be made to theter. Women’s housing will be be- student housing office.1144 E. 55th UNIVERSAL ARMY STORESALE NOW IN PROGRESS19% Discount on All MerchandiseWith This Coupon Only DO 3-9572ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • $1. LOUIS • NEWARK • 10$ ANGELESJune 6, 1958 • C H I C A C O MAROONCJCIE. Rabinowitch discusses nuclear bombsby Harold Bernhardt“The capacity of mankindto destroy itself originates inwhat happened on this cam¬pus 15 years ago when manfirst found a key and opened thedoor to nuclear explosion,” lec¬tured Eugene Rabinowitch, Edi¬tor of The Bulletin of the AtomicScientists, to more than 90 per¬sons at Breasted hall recently.Sponsored by the departmentof political science, Dr. Rabino¬witch spoke with considerable au¬thority both as a physicist and asa participant in the Manhattanproject that achieved the firstatomic chain reaction.After the fission bomb came thefusion or H-bomb, “and then an¬other invention was made, to alarge extent by Dr. Teller, thatyou can multiply enormously thepower of an H-bomb by surround¬ing it with an outside uraniumshield.’* So was born the superH-bomb, Rabinowitch continued,which not only produces energyof an order 1000 times greaterthan a Hiroshima-type A-bomb,Captures yourpersonalityms well asyour personphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. but also produces 1000 times moreradioactive fallout.Lethal depositsWhereas bombs between oneand 20 megatons in size can de¬stroy a whole city the size ofChicago or New York, “if youmultiply the fission materials by1000, you can cover areas of per¬haps 20 thousand square mileswith a lethal deposit of radioactiv¬ity, immediately speaking.”Further, Rabinowitch declared,"you have a large amount of radio¬activity going up into the air inthe form of very small material,half deported in 10 years, settlingall over the world, mostly in thenorthern hemisphere.”“And now comes one final de¬velopment—the long range rock¬et,” he observed. "This is the endof a very short path, starting withthe Stagg field stands in 1942,tests in June and July 1945, useat Hiroshima and Nagasaki inAugust 1945, and H bombs in 1954.Now three nations in the worldpossess these weapons and alsothe means of practically instan¬taneous delivery.”Rabinowitch described a so-called clean bomb as an "ineffi¬cient” H-bomb, i.e. one withoutthe outside uranium shield. Atmost clean bombs representsmaller-fused fission reactions, hesaid."You end up with a bomb thatonly produces as much radioactiv¬ity as a couple of Hiroshimabombs,” he said. But, used in largequantities, there would still be aradioactivity problem. "The onlything I can conceive,” Rabino¬witch stated, ‘is that we’re goingto have a more varied arsenalranging from small tactical all the way up to the dirtiest H-bomb."Perhaps the answer to thequestion of how to blow the worldup,” he continued, “is to use 1000nuclear bombs of all sizes.”Reminding his audience of theclock on the cover of The Bulletinof the Atomic Scientists, thehands of which are nearly at 12o’clock, Rabinowitch asked "Howdo we go on living with the pos¬session of these weapons in thehands of several nations, how livewith catastrophe?”Preventive weaponsAddressing himself to "the pres¬ent optimistic assumption thateveryone is so afraid that neitherside will use them,” Rabinowitchsaid that the Soviet threat againstGreat Britain and France “actedto contain the Suez thing.” Simi¬larly, the USA’s threatened use ofnuclear weapons against the Sov¬iet Union "prevented the out¬break of war between Turkey andSyria.”"But it didn’t work in Lebanon,and the threat will pretty soonnot be believed,” he said. As forthe use of small atomic weaponsin local wars, perhaps officialAmerican policy, "the other sidehas no obligation to accept this.”Not only is there danger thata small atomic war might spreadand grow, but a war might beunleashed by a simple humanerror, from an incident, such asfrom flying atomic planes at theSoviet Union. The air fleets ofboth sides might meet, on thebasis of the same radar blips, andatomic war result from this, Rabi¬nowitch pointed out.As for the probability of anysuch thing happening being small,he noted that "even one chance in 10,000 over a hundred years willpile up. We have to integrate thisdanger over the period it remains.Whatever time we have is just inthe nature of a reprieve, time todo something about the volcanoon which all of us are sitting.”"When the atomic arms werefirst developed right here on thecampus of the University the ideaarose particularly among scien¬tists that we need by all meansto eliminate atomic arms from na¬tional arsenals,” Rabinowitch de¬clared.Difficult as it was to do some¬thing about this then, the situa¬tion has grown more difficult, hesaid. Other nations have enteredthe nuclear arms race, and soonstill others will. Atomic produc¬tion has become a big industry.“Nuclear explosives sufficient toblow up every city in the worldcould easily be hidden in one roomin this building.”"You first have to have a mu¬tual trust,* a political settlement.Only then you can proceed withatomic disarmament on the basisof a community of interest.”Continuing, Rabinowitch em¬phasized: "There is only one dis¬armament step which remainspossible, from the point of tech¬nical controls, the occasion offurther tests of nuclear weapons.”"This is one step that could becarried out,” he said. "The realimportance of this step would besupporting a recognition by themajor nations that they are en¬gaged in a death race and wouldlike to have it stopped.”Should take leadHe counseled a recognition byeveryone that the pursuit of na¬tional interest must cease. Next,CONVERTING MORE PEOPLE TO CHEVY!This superbly fashioned Impala Convertible is making new friends forCHEVROLET faster than you can say TURBO-THRUST V8.*Here's the car that puts you in a top-down, fun-heartedf go-places mood! the United States should show byits deeds that it was ready to sub¬ordinate its own national Interestto the greater world interest. Hadthe US gone ahead with inter¬nationalizing the Panama canalafter the second World war, thestatu? of the Suez canal mighthave followed suit, and the Suezcrisis might never have arisen,Rabinowitch said."We should help nations to theextent they really need help andnot to the extent that we needthem,” he added. We should callfor a freezing of the world mapon an “as is” basis, pledging nochange of frontiers by force.Projects like the IGY, atomsfor peace, and even common eco¬nomic efforts with the Russianson behalf of others could lead tomutual trust."I can offer nothing except thegradual build-up of world com¬munity and the gradual creationof areas of common interest,” hestated in conclusion.A short question period fol¬lowed.Sorter honoredGeorge H. Sorter, account¬ing instructor in businessschool, has been elected a memberof the American Institute of Cer¬tified Public Accountants.Sorter holds a CPA certificatefrom the State of Illinois and isa member of the Illinois Societyof Certified Public Accountants.Wins chem prizeRichard D. Partos has beenawarded the American Insti¬tute of Chemists medal asthe outstanding student in UC’sdepartment of chemistry.”The award is one of a seriespresented by AIC to recognize"outstanding ability in scholar¬ship as well as personal leader¬ship.”Once you’ve been infected by the fun ofdriving this Impala Convertible, no othercar can take its place. Whisking along withthe top down holds that same extra some¬thing as cooking in the open, dancing underthe stars or just relaxing in a lawn chair—with only a cloud or two and the sweet smell of summer between you and the sky.It’s not simply that this car is a convertible—for it is much more than that. Yourdealer's waiting now with the facts on thenew Turbo-Thrust V8, the Safety-Girderframe and all the other features that meanmore summer fun in a Chevy.•Optional at extra cost The only all-new carin the low-price field. Get Them Hot atNIGKYSPIZZERIA *1235 E. 55thThe Impala Convertible with Body by Fisher and Solely Plate Glass. • Air conditioning-temperatures made to order-for all-weather comfort. Get a demonstration!FOHWAP.DSee your local authorized Chevrolet dealer for quick appraisal—prompt delivery! SSI f°°*FIFTY BetterthanCap &Gownand slightly more expensiveA boundvolume of theMAROON36 issues of the campus newspoperattractively bound in maroon cloth-covered board with your nomestomped in gold on the front cover.• 36 issues• 420 pagesA limited edition of only 20 copiesonlyORDER NOW!add $1 to cover pcstage and hand¬ling if it will have to be mailedto you.Business ManagerChicago MARGON1212 East 59 StreetChicogo 37, IllinoisEnclosed is for ....copies of the 1957-58 Maroonbound volume. 'NomeAddress6 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 6, 1958Top story of yearNew philosophy in dean's officeby Gary MokotoffThe 1957-58 school yearushered in a new dean of stu¬dents to the University. Thechange was more than one ofpersonnel. To a large extent itwas a change in the philosophy ofthe dean’s office.In June 1957, Robert M. Strozierannounced that he had acceptedthe presidency of Florida Stateuniversity. After serving elevenyears in the post, Strozier headedJohn P. Nethertonfor his homeland, the South.In his place came John P. Neth¬erton, a rising young administra¬tor. Netherton was assistant deanof the College from 1951-55; deanof students in the College, 1955-56;and associate dean of studentsprevious to his current appoint¬ment.In this, his first year as dean ofthe non-curricular aspect of stu¬dent life, Netherton has alreadyindicated that his views differfrom his predecessor’s.Last February, Netherton an¬nounced that the University’s so¬cial regulations would be codified"so students will know them.” In¬cluded with the old regulationswere some new ones such as fac¬ulty chaperones.Under the Strozier administra¬tion, the ruling only stated that aperson had to be over 23 years ofage and needed the approval of the student activities office in or¬der to be eligible.It appears that Strozier’s phi¬losophy was that students couldhandle themselves as responsibleadults. While few parties everreach the public grapevine as get¬ting out of hand, Netherton doesnot seem to want to take thatchance.With all the student complaintsabout the ruling which now statesthat both students and faculty canchaperone social affairs, with thelatter "strongly preferred," it doesnot represent for the dean morethan a foothold in regulating stu¬dent social life. If students dislikethe idea of faculty chaperonage,a wave of unregistered partieswill ensue, thus making the mat¬ter worse."We had a rule against it”The new social rules include ex¬tension of hours for parties "sothey can be brought closer toreality.” Why weren’t theybrought closer to reality underthe Strozier administration? Theanswer could be that his philos¬ophy was “let’s have a rule, soif something goes wrong we cansay we had a rule against it.”Netherton seems to feel that rulesare made to be enforced.To date, all the campus has wit¬nessed is the tentative rules.Whether the new dean will en¬force them strictly and what thestudents’ reaction will be to theenforcement remains to be seen.Another suggestion from thedean of students’ office concernsregulations which come under thejurisdiction of Student Govern¬ment.The "Mandel hall controversy”states that events in Universitybuildings must be “within the edu¬cational aims of the University;must be non-profit; and all pro¬ceeds must stay within the Uni¬versity.Netherton would like to see nooff-campus advertising; also nonon-students in theatrical, literaryand musical organizations; and fi¬nally that officers in the majorstudent organizations must havea "C” average and must be inresidence at least one year priorto taking office.These rules, in addition to thesocial regulations, bring out an¬other difference between the two deans. When Strozier decided hewould like to see something done,for the most part he suggestedthe item to the appropriate stu¬dent organization and hoped itwould be instituted. Let studentsdo what they wanted to do with¬out meddling from the dean ofstudents’ office, was his philos¬ophy. Netherton appears to prefermaking the rulings himself andthen hear student opinion.One of the reasons for anti-deanof student sentiment this year isthat students are analyzing Neth-erton’s actions in terms of Stro¬zier’s.One striking difference betweenthe two is that Netherton is farmore informal in conversationthan his predecessor. What Stro¬zier said in a positive way, waslaw; he never made a statementunless he wag sure what the re¬action would be. The new deanuses the expression "now this isoff the record” often. This wasrarely heard from Strozier. Stu¬dents tend to take Netherton’swords as Strozier’s law, when ac¬tually it represents nothing morethan a "feeler” to test studentopinion.This informal attitude is a wel¬come trait of the new dean. As- . . and when were you dean of students?'suming that deans of students are“basically evil,” to which moststudents will agree, it is better toknow what he is thinking about.No student seemed to know whichside Strozier was on in an issue.He was a master at diplomacy. Hewas quite capable of defendingboth sides of a topic in fine Soc-ratic fashion, and indeed, d i dsometimes. Students now knowwhat the dean of students standsfor, although they may not agreewith him.The Maroon benefitted fromthis informality. "Off the record”comments mean future stories.Netherton has been far morewilling to give the Maroon stories than his predecessor* When thenewspaper’s editors would seeStrozier and inform him of a tipthey had received through thecampus grapevine, the formerdean would occasionally remark“Oh, you didn’t know aboutthat?”, and then proceed to givethe story.This school year was one of re¬organizing the dean of studentsoffice. Students should judge thedean on his own merits and notin the light of his predecessor.Where they disagree with Neth¬erton and find no relief, they canalways remain true to the Chica¬go motto, "Rules are made to bebroken.”Robert M. StrozierDr. N. J. De FrancoDr. N. R. NelsonOPTOMETRISTS1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352 The protection you give yourfamily today may have to beprovided by life insurance to¬morrow. Make sure you haveenough life insurance.Telephonez 6:Rolph J. Wood Jr. '481 N. LaSalle St. Chicago 2, 111.FR 2-2390 O RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADARepresentativeEllen Coughlin Beauty SalonSI03 Lake Park Ave, Ml 3-20C0SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.m. - 11 p.m.Special GBEASE 8075and WASH JLSimon ize• Mechanic• Road Service• Across fromCo-opHarper Super ServiceDealer Im Sinclair Product*5556 HARPER PL 2-9654* mJ ■.. . ; - • \ “ - * - ■■ - - — ^ALEXANDER’S RESTAURANT1137 East 63rd St.Special Sunday Dinner Menu IncludesCHICKEN A LA KINGwith fresh mushrooms in wine sauce$1.65Including choice of: Soups9 salads^potatoes9 vegetables, beverages, dessertsmm Sunday Dinner Prices Range from $115 to $275Open 24 hrs.v -W.v.vii avX MU 4-5735 Seven days eachJune 6, 1958 e CHICAGO MAROON • 7Culture good in retrospect and in prospectby Neal JohnstonThe season has come for reminiscing. Culture, like “My Fair Lady,” is most likely hereto ftay, yet the struggle for existence is continuous and in the struggle for social existencethe physical sciences have a decided and preponderant edge. Consequently it is reassuringto took back and see we’re still around. *Spring is a peculiarly appropriate time for such historical recollections. Spring is the timeof year to look back particularly because there is not a good deal to look forward to. Let’snow take stock of what wehave.On campus' Universitytheater has completed one of itsbest seasons. Four full length ma¬jor productions, one series of stu¬dent produced one-act plays, andone New York import indicate itsactive and busy schedule. Evenbigger things are in the air apro¬pos to this department. UT isundertaking to organize a circuitof mid-western schools for thepurpose of importing and touring©ff-Broadway plays. “Blood Wed¬ding,” “Three Penny Opera” and“Garden District” would be wel¬come theater fare anywhere. Theenthusiastic response which greet¬ed “Endgame" was a good signtor the success of this plan.There is even some hope thatUT might get out of its hopeless¬ly inadequate Reynolds clubtheater, and I do not mean via thehopelessly inadequate formerChapel known as Mandel hall. UTis severely limited in its presentconstricted surroundings.Taking things in order, thefirst play of the year was thearena production of Lorca’s“Yerma.” Staged by UT directorMarv Phillips with original musicand choreography, “Yerma” wasa tragedy of barrenness. SusanBrinkley was a little unsure ofherself in the title role of the girlwho cannot conceive, but this wasmore than made up for by HaymBemsen’s performance as Juan,Next Septembertake, your class notes inSpeedwritinp •SHORTHAND• Just 6 weeks• This summer| (mornings or afternoons)e Uses ABC s ... 120words per minutePrepare for easier studying,higher grades, or for aGLAMOROUS CAREER;learn modern method inChicago’s largest shorthandschool. Typing also. ve Evening School —12-14 weekse Coll, visit, ot write NOW forSpecial Summer ScheduleASK for the NANCYTAYLOR CHARM SCHOOLbrochureSpeedwritinp■=* SECRETARIAL SCHOOL ©The School With o Business AtmosphereV South Wabash Avenue, Chicago 3FINANCIAL 6-5471> AIR-CONDITIONED -< Yerma’s moody and dark hus¬band.The second act death scene wasa masterful combination of grace,form and smouldering intensity.Doreen Lewis and Connie Mathieualso gave notably successful real¬ity to their roles.“yerma’’ was followed by Chris¬topher Fry’s “The Dark Is LightEnough.” Fry’s play sufferedfrom being a little too static, butthe language was beautiful. JoyCarlin’s performance as a dvingcountess was little short of sup¬erb. As to Neal Johnston’s per¬formance of the suoporting role,I can say little for I am he. How¬ever, the Maroon reviewer wrote;“Johnston is superbly arrogant.”Type casting all the way!Spring quarter opened with thestudent produced 'Tonight at8:30” series. The first weekend when UT presented Brecht’s“Galileo” and 120 period cos-tumes simultaneously; neithercould have been much better.Georg Wellwarth’s “Galileo” andWayne Caudil’s costumes deservedand received numerous compli¬ments.Side note of “Galileo”: the com¬bination of 27 actors, 120 cos¬tumes and everybody’s make-upmingling in two small rooms re¬sulted in one of the most tre¬mendous scenes of organizedhavoc I have ever witnessed.Finally, five of UT’s top actorsunited to perform Jean Cocteau’s“Intimate Relations.” The nightI saw it there was a little troublewith one of the props, but this isabout as major a complaint as Ican lodge against the show. Theevenness of the production is at¬tested by the fact that UT’s direc¬tors were unable to pick out the‘The Lesson of Har Megiddo and one ac^or receive the regu“Five Days” was severely ham¬pered by circulating pneumonia,but bygones and bygones andeveryone lived through the week.The main attractions the secondweek-end were Bill Bezdick’s ver- lar Elmer award—the award wasgiven to all five; Martha Roth,Bill Bezdick, Jo Ann Schlagg, NedGaylin and Bonita Fabbri.Finally, UT imported theCherry Lane theater’s productionsion of J. D. Sallinger s Zooey, ^ <*En(jgame,” Samuel Beckett’s(with Pete Smith in the title rolereceiving more than enough sup¬port from Gloria Porath andJoyce Nevis'), and Thessly Bev¬erly's new ballet “John Henry.”Omar Shapli directed the final name drama written in the “What-the - hell - did-that -last-line-meanschool.” Nevertheless, the num¬ber of walkouts was surprisinglylow, only about 12 a night. Every¬body made money, everybody wasproduction of the winter quarter gQod everybody enjoyed itwhether they understood it or not.BlockfriarsBlaekfriar’s was not quite sototally successful. The show hadexcellent music and moments.The staging was fine. But theshow felt the serious handicapof lacking a book. This much canbe said for the story, however,the idea of a space-musical wasoriginated considerable prior tosputnik. Carol Ebert, as an “age¬ing” inter-plantetary blonde andJim Oleson as a flunk-out fromIIT gave the show some of itsbrighter moments.The downtown theaters, fewas they are, have not been exact¬ly bursting with new productions.Five especially noteworthy showscome to mind. "The Diary ofAnne Frank” was one of the mostpoignant and dramatic plays Ihave ever seen. The acting wasspotty, but this you could forgetall about whenever Joseph Schild-kraut was on stage; fortunatelythat was almost continually.Early last fall "My Fair Lady”bounced into the Shubert and forgood reasons has not yet re¬bounded. Eugene O’Neill’s monu¬mental tragedy “A Long Day’sJourney into Night” enjoyed afairly long and fairly profitablerun at the Erlanger.Also pleasantly memorablewere Eric Portmann’s perform¬ances in “Separate Tables” andMelvin Douglas’ spontaneous act¬ing in an excellent tragi-comedyby Jean Anhouil whose title Icannot for the life of me remem¬ber.As its final offering of theyear, University theater im¬ported the New York com¬pany of Samuel Beckett'sstrange one-acted "End¬game." Here, Lester Raw¬lins as a blind king andAlvin Epstein as his equallybut indifferently blind slaverehearse one of the earlyscenes of the play. Goodman theaterThe Goodman theater improvedtremendously under the ablethough perhaps overly-ambitiousnew director John Reich. Their■<-' v< =*** ifInternational House MoviesMondoy evenings, 7:30 p.m. — Assembly HellMondoy, June 9 — 50«— Lovers 5 Lollipops (USA)UNIVERSITY HOTELNewly Decorated Rooms — Private Tub and ShowerKitchenettes Available. Daily Maid Service. Reasonable Rates.Two Blocks from 1C. Permanent ond Transient Guests.5519 Blackstone DO 3-4100 University theater's first two productions of the year wereverse dramas presented in arena-style. Here Haym Bernsenconfronts Susan Brinkley in the final scene of Garcia Lorca'stragedy "Yerma.'* The play was directed by Marvin Phillips.productions of ‘Tiger at theGates” (the original title is moreliterally translated as: “The Tro¬jan War Will Not Take Place”)and Tennessee Williams’ “Ca-mino Real” were the high pointsof this year’s season. One possibleproduction for next year is a ver¬sion of Kafka’s “The Trial.”Motion pictures have been nu¬merous—they usually are. Whatis significant though is that manyof them have been good. DocFim presented a number of inter¬esting series this vear. Existen¬tialist shorts, the Marx brothersand a series intriguingly entitled”Of Love and Lust” were the ma¬jor efforts of the quarter. It wasdeed strange to see the voluptiousscenes of “Ecstasy” unfold’ng onthe staid, pure walls of Judd l?fi.but su^h is life and/or love. Allin all Doc Films accounted formany very interesting, if notdownright erotic, evenings.A little later the Burton-.Tudsonmovies started again. Aside fromtheir undeniable aesthetic value,these shows served the doublefunction of proving to some ofB J’s more permanent residentsthat there really is an outsideworld and at the same time in¬troducing some outsiders to thatstrange worlds across the mid¬way. No, VWinia, Burton-Judsonis not a myth.Arf exhibitsAnd while we’re on the visual,let’s take a look at the plastic.There is an old story about anaging undergraduate who tooka new student down to the Art in¬stitute with him to view some ofhis favorite paintings. She stoodin front of Picasso’s “Blue Guitar¬ist” for a few minutes, then look¬ed up at him with her soft, brown,deep, innocent, ante-bellum, anti-Hutchin’s eyes and said: "whereare my eyes supposed to go?”The Renaissance society hasdone its best to make such tragicoccurrences as infreouent as pos¬sible. To the best of my knowl¬edge, nobody asked Masc Chagalwhere one’s eyes were supposedto go. Aside from the magnificent(that’s one adjective I don’t thinkI’ve used so far this article) show¬ing of Chagal’s work, the societykept its wails in Goodspeed filledand covered all year long. Nowthe gallery is showing variousCALLNICKYSFOR PIZZAMO 7-9063 works by artist members in allsorts of media.FOTA brought forth a wholespate of exhibitions. Goodspeedhoused an architectural displayof models of the Hyde park re¬development program, executedunder the direction of HarryWeese. Lexington had seulotureby Simon Gordon and Robiehhuse became attractive insideand out while the annual Studentdisplay was in process. Hillelhouse managed throughout theyear to find noteworthy paintingsto grace its walls.Then there was music. Therewas music in Mandel, Ida Noyes,Int house and eve-jv other con¬ceivable place equipped with fourwalls and/or a piano. There was acontinual stream of music com¬ing in your ears, though neverenough for it started coming outyour ears.Lvric operaThe Lyric opera, the Chicagosvmnhony and the UC concertsall started their own series andthe year itself promisingly. TheJ -vric’s “Otello,” the symphony’sReiner and the music denart-ment’s Paul Draper left little tobe desired. My own special prefer¬ences were Verdi’s “RequiemMass,” Leonard Shu re’s technic¬ally demanding but artisticallyrewarding all-Beethoven concert.It’s no simple task to select one“best” Lyric opera production.Visiting choirs and groups heldup their own rather admirable. Iparticularlv remember the Mun¬ster choir’s rendition of CarlOrff’s "Catuili Carmini.”Folk sonosThe folksier artists did all rightfor themselves, too. MarthaSchlamme started things off in aWUS - sponsored concert. Odetta,Theo Bikel and Paul Robeson fol¬lowed in quick order; the lastnamed with a sumrising andgratifying lack of ado. Bikel’safter-the-concert concert in Hillelhouse accounted for anothermemorable two hours.Local talent bloomed freely.The Music society was revivedlate in the Autumn quarter andpresented selections from Lelandsee Culture, p. 9Summer Jewish StudiesEnrich Your Jewish BackgroundPrepare for Jewish TeachingMon., Wed. EveningsJune 23 <— July 20College CreditCOLLEGE OFJEWISH STUDIES72 East Eleventh StreetHArrison 7-5578t • CHICAGO MAROON • June 6, 1958* av*. ' > 1 V- ' . V' - • .. . ’ ■ ;-,y -rAthletic participation increasesby Dan CosgroveSports has taken on a new look on the Midway this year. Student interest and participa-tion in intercollegiate and intramural athletics arc at a new high over by-gone years. Thevarsity gymnasts had Big Ten competition exclusively; the tennis team had a remarkablerecord, the basketball schedule was enlarged and improved; the swimming squad showedvast improvement; and the track team and University of Chicago Track club have becomemore powerful.This year’s football classwas bigger and better than Coach Bill Moyle’s racket squad, very excellent chance of betteringever with 4y men staying out No amount of praise is too great this year’s 11 and 7 recordthe whole year. The class held for the men that have establishedscrimmages with North Central the fine record that the netmen JW,mmm9and North Park colleges and in- have. During the year the tennis Coach Moyle produced a finestructlon on the various theories squad has won ten and lost only swimming squad with Tom Lisco,of the sport The deep interest for one. Captain Ken Currie, Mark Hofferthe sport held by the class was But that is not half the story. as.1he individual standouts. Highmost evident on November 8 at The squad won 72 out of 86 indi- point of 6-5 season was thethe Intersquad scrimmage. One vidual and doubles matches with walkaway in a triple meet be-of the boys showed up with a 101- Bertrand Saporta winning eleven tween Knox> Carleton, and Chi-degree temperature and had to be singles matches in a row. Letter cag0\sent home. winners were Karl Finger, Roger Chicago's losses were mostly to“I’m quite sure that football Herst, Phil Kaufman, Mvron How- Big Ten schools> but with six let>could be handled in an intelligent land, Saporta. Richard Thomason, [ermeni returning, Coach Moyleway on this campus, but as long and Richard Thompson. hopes to have no losses. Highas I’m here it’ll be handled as theUniversity wishes,” Coach Haasstated.GymnasticsHeaded by letter men John Bow¬man In free exercise and highbar, George Andros on the tram¬poline and rings, and Bill Leichton the side horse and tumbling,the gymnastics squad took onseven Big Ten schools and madean excellent account of them¬selves although they lost all sevenmeets.Bowman placed fifth out of 50in the high bar preliminaries ofthe NCAA Gymnastic meet. In thefinals he placed ninth while Chi¬cago placed 19th in the tourna¬ment.TennisPerhaps the most successfulvarsity team this year has been BasketballWith the exit of Nels Norgrenand the entrance of Joe Stampf,the varsity basketball squad hadits most successful season since1923.The spark being given byStampf, the varsity upgraded theschedule by playing eight newteams and was rated second inthe nation for defensive play witha 49-point per game average.For the first time in many yearsa coach was appointed for the“B” team and a regular schedulewas established.Next year the team will travelto the east and add another fourteams to the schedule.If all goes well, John Daveyand Gary Pearson, this year’shigh scorers, will lead the five re¬turning lettermen who have a In February, three football greats of another era in Chi¬cago's history were elected to the National Football Hall ofFame. (Above), Jay Berwanger '36, right, receives his cer¬tificate of membership from Harvey Harman, executive sec¬retary of the National Football foundation.Others cited were the grand "Old Man" of football coachAmos Alonzo Stagg and Walter Ickersall, Maroon star ofthe first decade of this century.Who knows what evillurks in the hearts of men.scorers were: Lisco, 109%; Cur¬rie, 62%, and Hoffer, 60%.TrackThis year Ted Haydon fash¬ioned another fine track squad(from page 8) doubtedly that of our wandering In spite of a flurry of badSmith’s new opera “Santa Claus” minstrel David Riesman. Frank breaks and injuries, the trackmenbased on potTi y by e e cum- L1°yd Wright’s single and singu- came through with a 13-5 recordCulture review...mings. (If anyone puts capitals lar appearance was well-attended and were able to beat everybodyin it’s the tvnesetter not I) The (Mandel hall was sold out!) and in the Midwest conference. ItsApollonian society presented a well received. The Chicago Re- losses were all to those powerfulmadrigal concert in Breasted dur- view had a notable success with University of Michigan farming FOTA week which assured ** lecture- series. First Nelson teams ’ which can perennially beatevervnne nresent that this erouD Algren then Truman Capote and the Big Ten champions,is not defunct The UC symphony! Robert Frost came, read, talked Among the individual starstoo raised its lone-forgotten and discussed with an interested were Walter Perschke, Gar Wil-loftv head for the first time in and large group. I shall probably liams, Bill Weaver, Brooks John-ten vears presenting aBeethov^ never forget Capote bouncing out son, Hosea Martin, George Kar-Brahms. Bart ok and Borodin pro- onto Mandel’s stage in the all-em- cazes Jerry Abies, Earl Allen, andpram The Jazz workshop did bracing glow of a pink spotlight Don Fagin.Interesting things in their and bubbling up onto his two tall Williams set the varsity twosome Interesting things in their F mile record in 9:10.2, “The War-reRoger ^Sessions was on campus That, then, was the year. I 3" ttin the early part of the year to want as a final word to give my railed but once m the 880, thediscuss the classical tradition in thanks to all the off-campus ad- individualrelation to music, in particular ults who have made these events mentionthe classical tradition in relation possible. With few exceptions, all w tis are to° numerous t0 mention,to his recent composition, “The of the sponsoring organizations QOiTIdyll of Theocritus.” would long ago have been cast The varsity golf team ended itsThe idea of a lecture-oerform- into the black-depths of bank-ance caught hold and was re- ruptcy if they had depended upon ^llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllpeated several times throughout student attendance. All this is == ==the year. During FOTA Vladimir here at hand: why not make more = BE A MAGICIAH EEUssachevsky from Columbia dis- use of it n^xt year?cussed and played “Musique Con- On the other hand, anyone whoCrete” and electronic music. Just had seen all these things woulda couple weeks ago Heinrich Flei- most likely not be around nextscher, chapel organist, discussedandJThere were many more musical average. All in all we’ve doneevents during the year, but it’s rather well for ourselves in the —getting rather late and my mem- last ^ine or ^ months. I have =ory is waning. By the way, tor sincerest expectations 0l d„. =konwa synonym lor fntereXg Ing Just as wellin the next twelve. ^IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH• memorable • note-worthy - worthwhile - ambitious -rewarding - inspiring - heart ren¬dering?Neither was there a dearth oflectures. The most roaring, push¬ing and shoving success was un-PETERSON MOVING season at the Chicagoland Golftourney by taking third placewhile the star of the team, Wen¬dell “Moto” Marumoto, placedfirst in the meet with a 72-74.In fact it has been “Moto’s”constantly excellent play that hasinspired his teammates and been acredit to his ancestors. In a sea¬son of four wins and eight losses“Moto” was backed by “Bishop”Styzens, Bernard Hansan, RobertPhilleo, P. Williams, Paul Waltz,M. Silvan, and, for the last fewmeets, newcomer Mike Robinson.“Most of the good men will begone next year so the field willbe wide open,” Coach KoomanBoycheff has remarked.Cross countryDespite the fact the harrierslost, the first four of their meets,they were able to gather roundthe flag and end the season witha five and five record.The season, which was one ofrebuilding since four lettermendidn’t return, was further ham¬pered by that insidious flu whichmanaged to knock out most of ourrunners for a meet or two. The outstanding thinclad of theyear was Gar Williams, who, be¬ing undefeated in the season alsoset the home course record for thethree miles in 14:41.8, and theBradley course in 16:50.0. Wil¬liams was backed by lettermenNed Price, Ivan Carlson, Bill Krol,and an extremely promising new¬comer, George Osborne.SoccerLed by Giovanni Giura and Cap¬tain Ron Sutton, the soccer teamconcentrated on character build¬ing as it lost its five Midwestconference games and tied two.The team’s only win wasagainst Lake Forest Academy.Unless new blood is found some¬where, the two returning letter-men Ron Crutchfield and RomanWirwzcauk can hardly be expect¬ed to rally a competing team be¬hind them.Letter winners this year wereGuira, Sutton, Charles Knight,Robert Fish, Crutchfield, andWirzczuk. High scorer was Wir-szczuk.WRITE= Dr. Meyer Block =— Presidenti ’l .fn year to take advantage of them. = ^ . , , . =md played the Organ Mass of ^ ^ ^ g as a grade = Dr. Block'* Instituted~ — - J~- = of Magicians =240 Rivington StreetNew York 2, N.Y. ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeingand Refinishing ofShoes and Handbags• Colors matched • Toes cut out• Vamps lowered t PlatformsremovedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'NARROW HEELSHeels changed — Any style —■Any colorBackstraps Removed and Springa-lators inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfox 4-96221749 East 55th St. Light Duck Pants$4.95DAG Clothes Shop744 East 63 rdSpecial Offer25c discount on any pizzaMan., Tues., Wed., Thurs., OnlyFree delivery toUC StudentsTerry’s Pizza1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045GASHFor Your Old andDiscontinued TextbooksSell Your Books Now BeforeThey Are Superseded by24-HourKodachrome colorfilmprocessingModel Camera Shop1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 #tio&608 n. michiganWhitehall 3-2410Discerning tastes will instontlywelcome this favoured tab collarshirt. In character, in comfort, incorrectness, it typifies the uniqueskills and craftsmanship ofNew England's finest shirtmakers.Tailored of superb broadcloth . . .in white with french cuffs, andpreferred soft-tone stripings withbutton cuffs.THE TRADITIONAL TAB $5.95TAKES ON ADDED APPEAL by BedCOtl ■/M\June 6, 1958 • CHICACO MAROON •headlines this yearWhat sort of a year was 1957-58? A year like any other year — but, as usual, with a fewexceptions: the College curriculum was changed for the 95th time; Hyde Park and Univer¬sity redevelopment continued, sometimes with more publicity than actual work produced;the cost of academic living, tax emptions notwithstanding, went up by a factor of nearly20 per cent; visiting Hungarians and Russians played tourist on the quadrangles within thespace of a year. sThese were the major to graduate; $80 more. . moved into the campus’ latestevents of an Otherwise quiet . . Stoic? Well, if dad doesn’t building.period: mind.College changesSans rallies, protests, and sit-down strikes, the “newest" Col- The girls promptly dubbed theirnew home the “cheesebox," andother appropriate phrases fortheir “cinderbox wilderness.”After the dining unit got underRussians“UC in Russian swap’screamed the headline in the Janlege was born this week (see page uary 24 issue as the Student Rep- way and the students had some1) when the council of the Faculty resentative party received their Soc II under their belts, the namesSenate passed the report of the fondest desire: two full-blooded got better: “the phallic symbol.”executive committee on under- Russians to live on campus next When the typical department ofgraduate education (ECUE). year as part of a US National buildings and grounds’pace madeThis new College includes all °” there, would * ™>the undergraduate curriculum Soviet Youth exchange. landscaping for quite some time,!L, f hi The exchange was four years residents threatened to plant cab-T. member! in the makinS and when the baSe> corn, tomatoes and radishesof the present College members McCarran-Walter Immigration act in the muddy soil.and approximately an equal num was amended last October to omit “How long are we going to callber of divisional members. fingerprinting requirements for it the ‘new dorm’?,” queried theTwo kinds of bachelor’s degrees cultural exchangees, the way was campus. One person suggested itwill be granted. Both will require paved for State department nego-two years of general education tiations with USSR.(present College), i.e. eight cours¬es. The BA degree provides forone year of concentration and one Student GovernmentFor the first time in its six- should be named after Alice Free¬man Palmer, first dean of women.Residents could then claim theylive at Chicago’s “Palmer house.”Plan IR center‘Charles Stewart Mott, of Flint,year of work in guided and free year history, Student Representa-electives. The last two years of tive party took two SG electionswork for the BS will be in either }n a row They won \n the fall by Michigan, has made a gift of $1the physical or biological sci- 30 to 10 members of Independ- million for the construction of aences. ent Students league and two in- building to house the IndustrialThe new College will have jur- depedents (in the College). In Relations center,” announced theisdiction over the two years of the first spring election under jead story of the November 22general education, but the report the new Constitution. SRP inrecommended that the old Col- April again defeated ISL 27-22.lege faculty set up the new eight- SRP also took the last two Na-course curiculum. The new Col- tional Student association elec- corner of Kimbark and 60 strteet.lege will also set the last two tions: They made a clean sweep Three stories high, it will houseyears of the BA programs. Phy last spring and won six to four research and administrative of¬fices, laboratories, conferenceThe buildings already underconstruction, at the southwestIn its short tenure in office, rooms, and library among othervery little if anything was accom- facilities for the center.Robie house is savedAfter stirring up a year of in-sci and Bi sci will retain control this one.over their parts of the BS degrees.Both degrees will be “four- plished by the lame duck govern-year" degrees but the placements ment. SG mainly devoted its timewill be retained and deficiency to organization and investigation,requirements will be instituted to The new Government made a ternational controversy over itsequalize the backgrounds of the good start this spring when about impending demolition, Robiestudents in a program. 15 members of its executive cohn- bouse found an “angel” in Wil-Although this report has just cil headed by President Joel ba™ Zeckendorf, redeveloper ofbeen presented and approved, its Rosenthal showed up to the coun- Park.contents had been known since cil’s first meeting. n<ded president of Webb &February when the Chancellor ^ .... ."app was reputed to have Paidspoke to the students on the gen- Buildings Frank Lloyderal thinking of the committee. Buildings had their fair share .if™ landmark which was builtof the news during this academic *n *be firs* decade of this cen-year. The University area wasfilled with cries of development—redevelopment; destruction—re-Ro ise tuition costIn October, the University announced its first tuition increase Zeckendorf plans to use Robieas his office during the Hydein five years. Effective next quar- construction; save this building— Park redevelopment period. Thereter undergraduate and graduate tear down another,tuition for the normal three-quar- We$* sfan<|$ go;ngIn mid-August, just one day be¬fore the 95th birthday of Amos is current enthusiasm for thestructure to be made into anarchitectural museum afterwards.New men's dormIn anticipation of rising en¬ter academic year will be $840 andthe medical school $1000. In addi-eraTi'Uv-!oen,LW^rryea* *®° A.‘onzo‘Stegg, ChS'3"‘famousIn the next issuey the Maroon footba11 coach, demolition of west rollment, the University an-reported that students took the gf"** **??”• ^ord‘ng th<!|eVent "ou”«^ P1?"8 “> b“i<d *raise in a “stoic manner” Others f posterity were newsreel cam- men s dormitory on the southwestfelt differentiv r' ° 9 eramen and photographers from corner of 55 and University.Tn o Tr in +ua 0 et., most of the mass media- Housing 332 students, the build-den. remaSeS . Jt w Zu “w The stands were declared struo- i„g will be located on the ru-• uLwreifv SLi'ha™ turally unsound by the University mored site of Millikan’s famous™ and the cRy ordinance officials, oil drop experiment which helpednnn Thus, the famous building, site of him gain ; Nobel prize. Alsofhrnuehnnf fa,, n.el man’s first self sustaining nuclear scheduled for demolition was Uni-"*?»>" a"d lootball games of versity tavern CUT), noted UCyesteryear, was demolished. One- bistro who has now moved downhalf of the building is still stand- to Ellis avenue.years of schooling. You decide ona certain amount of outside workto help you out.“Suddenly, you find you need anadditional $12.50 per quarter forhealth service . . . you find you ing but is slated for demolition.Complete new women's dorm The dwelling unit will have asquare shape with notched cor-Midst'electrirfans’and" telephone ners Each bedroom will face theoutside and a central core willcan take only three courses the men putting the finishing touches service elements (loungelast two years for $230 per quar- on the new women s residence |lous'? service elements (lounge,ter. even if you need four courses halls, approximately 180 UC coeds iaun ry’ e evators> etc >Little Rock studentsvisit Chicago campus (below) Annual Inter¬fraternity sing will be heldin Hutchinson court on June14 at 9:30 pm. Student Union instituted a "campus hangout" this yearin Ida Noyes hall. Students came stag or drag for eveningsof pizza, cokes, coffee and talk. The hangout remained openweekdays until midnight.(below) "Fearless Fosdick" found himself passing outparking tickets this year as the University ritstituted no park¬ing regulations on a large portion of the quadrangles' thru-ways.WUCB made the rarely-used Mitchell tower studios theirnew home beginning last winter quarter. The new facilitieswere a badly needed improvement over the old, unsound-proof ones in B-J.The student radio station has made some improvementsin the studio and is currently building a control panel for theengineering room. Visions of grandeur include an FM trans¬mitter so the station can take in a larger audience.College—tuition—SC fillNine Negro school children who attended Central highschool, Little Rock, Arkansas, site of segregationist mob-violence, visited campus last Saturday. They were guestsof Student Government and the campus chapter of the Na¬tional Association for the Ad-vancement of Colored People were back at Central. I want all(N A ACPI. kids to be able to go to schoolApproximately 40 UCers attend- with no prejudice.”ed a reception in Ida Noyes hall. Others recounted the insultsAmong the nine was Minnie- and physical attacks they receivedJean Brown, recently expelled but none said that they regrettedfrom Central high and now at- the decision to attend, and all ex¬tending an interracial school in pressed a determination to returnNew York City. Questioned how in the fall.she liked the New York school, All nine are members of theiftie replied “Fine, but I wish I NAACP youth council.10 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 6, 1958Hope apathy won't kill US scholarshipsChances of a Federal scholar¬ship program for college studentspassing this session of Congressare good, according to a poll ofleading members of the Houseand Senate conducted by theNational Student News.Tn a series of interviews withkey Senators and Representa¬tives, it was learned that there isgeneral support among legisla¬tors for a scholarship program,along with supplementary aid toinstitutions of higher education.However, lack of support forFederal aid to education fromthe campuses themselves mayhave a negative effort on Con¬gress when the actual vote comeswithin the next two months.Senator Hubert H. HumphreyID-Minn.), one of the first legis¬lators to propose a Federal schol¬arship program, said in an exclu¬sive statement "Very frankly, al¬though this legislation is beingpressed very vigorously byfriends of education or CapitolHill and is being guided by suchdedicated and capable men asSenator Hill and CongressmanElliott, there has been consider¬ably less sustaining and articulatesupport from our colleges anduniversities, both faculties andstudent bodies, than I would liketo see to ensure passage of thislegislation.”"For those students who aredeeply interested in this legisla¬tion,” Senator Humphrey said, "Imight suggest that they not con¬fine themselves merely to posi¬tions from student groups, butrather engage in some non-parti¬san political action with their par¬ents, with the adult organizationsin their communities, with news¬papers and with their facultiesto stimulate support for this spe¬cific legislation.”Has low priorityWith the emphasis on emer¬gency anti - recession legislation,several Congressmen felt that theFederal aid to education programwould be threatened with a lowpriority in legislative scheduling.Pointing out that Congress isbeing "pressed very hal’d andvery effectively” by many differ¬ent groups concerned with othertypes of bills, Senator Humphreywarned "unless there are deeplyinterested and articulate and per¬sistent groups of citizens pushingother legislation, that legislationis liable to be left in the dust.”"It is so much easier,^ hepointed out *n urging student ac¬tion in the community, “to move legislation forward with a realground-swell of public opinionopinion running.”Division of opinion in the aca¬demic community concerning fed¬eral scholarships was also notedby Senator Ralph Yarborough(D-Texas). An outspoken advo¬cate of federal assistance tostates and local communities inbolstering public education, Sena¬tor Yarborough is a member ofthe Senate committee on laborand public welfare, which hasbeen hearing testimony for thepast several months on the pro¬posed legislation to widen fed¬eral aid to education. Leadingeducators and public figures haveappeared before the committee(including USNSA President RayFarabee) and, while most wereagreed on the need for certaintvrw • of assistance, especially inproviding for more teachers andfor raising teacher salaries, ac¬cording to Senator Yarboroughthere was not the same unani¬mity concerning a Federal Schol¬arship program.Nevertheless, the Senatorpointed out, "a million qualifiedyoung Americans are not in col¬lege because of financial inabilityto go. One-half of the top 30 percent, scholastically, of high schoolgraduates never go to college be¬cause of financial adversity."Our most precious resource isthe human resource, and it is themost neglected and wasted. Wedam out* rivers, conserve our soil,and enrich our soil, but we letour youth go untrained.”Introduces billSeveral months ago SenatorYarborough introduced legislationto extend educational benefits ofthe GI Bill of Rights to all vet¬erans, including volunteers, draft¬ees, men and women, who servedafter January 31, 1955. This wasthe termination date of education¬al benefits under the GI Bill.Scoring this as contributing to anunnecessary waste of the talentsof many able youth, he would ex¬tend federal scholarships to vet¬erans serving since that date.With almost unanimous Demo¬cratic support pledged to the HillBill (S.3187) and with similar Re¬publican effort backing theEisenhower - Folsom program(S.3163), it is most probable that the Senate will pass one or theother of these bills, or a com¬promise between them. A spokes¬man in the office of Senator Lyn¬don Johnson (D-Texas), Senatemajority leader, predicted thatthe Hill proposals would pass.If there were cut in the budgetfor the Hill program, however,it appears likely that they wouldbe made in the appropriations forsome 240,000 scholarships duringthe next six years. This is not in¬evitable, but appears likely, espe¬cially with a lack of a concertedeffort on the part of those mostconcerned, principally college ad¬ministrators, students and theirparents, to hack the bill and to in¬form their Senators of their sup¬port of this particular form offederal aid.Passage less likelyThe chances of the passage ofa similar bill in the House of Rep¬resentatives seems somewhat lesslikely. Carl Elliott (D-Ala.) chairsthe subcommittee on special edu¬cation which has heard testimonyon the proposed legislation frommore than 200 witnesses. USNSAexecutive vice president DonaldClifford appeared before the Elli¬ott committe in early April topresent testimony on behalf ofsome one million students in sup¬port of a federal scholarshipprogram.A member of the Elliott com¬mittee, Representative Frank J.Thompson Jr. (D-N.J.) told theNational Student News that hefelt that the committee would re¬port out a bill which would havea "good chance” of passing theHouse. "Although,” he said, "itmay not be as liberal as we hadhoped for in the beginning.”Queried about possible sourcesof opposition to a federal aid toeducation program, Representa¬tive Thompson discounted theprobability of another stalemateover the question of attaching ananti-segregation provision to themeasure. Such action has effec¬tively killed proposed federal aidprograms in the past.On April 23, the House defeated this type of amendment when itwas proposed by Rep. JamesRoosevelt (D-Calif.) in connectionwith H.R. 11378, a bill to continuefederal aid for the constructionand operation of schools in areasaffected by federal activity. TheRoosevelt amendment would havebarred federal funds to schooldistricts which could not provethat they were conforming withthe Supreme Court decision relat¬ing to racial segregation in publicschools.Amendment losesAlthough Roosevelt agreed thatfederal assistance should begiven to these areas (which in¬cluded such districts as thosearound the Redstone Arsenal inAlabama and those adjoiningWashington itself, in Marylandand Virginia) he said that theFederal government has a respon¬sibility to see that ‘this financialassistance is not used to thwartthe law of the land.” The amend¬ment was defeated by a vote of25 to 132. The bill itself passed.By many observers this wastaken as indication of Congres¬sional determination to facesquarely the issue of federal aidto education without gettingbogged down in what Rep. Gra¬ham Barden (D-N.C.) called "sideissues.”Funds to sectarians?Another, and related, issuewhich might threaten passage ofa Federal program this year isthat of assistance to sectarian in¬stitutions. The largest singlegroup to be affected would beRoman Catholic institutions, andseveral groups and individualshave already expressd them¬selves as opposed to Federalfunds being used to construct orfinance the operations of theseschools and colleges. Earlier thisyear, the president of the JesuitEducational association, Rev. Ed¬ward B. Rooney, S.J. issued astatement supporting improve¬ment and expansion of educa¬tional opportunity but noting that"If these objectives can be at¬tained only through Federal aid, then that aid should be madeavailable on an across-the-boardbasis for all students and for allinstitutions.”While this may be a criticalissue in relation to certain aspectsof the proposed Federal Aid pro¬gram, particularly school con¬struction and expansion of facili¬ties, most of the Congressmen in¬terviewed by the National StudentNews did not feel that it wouldnecessarily affect the scholarshipprogram since, as one legislatorpointed out, these grants wouldbe made on an individual basis,the choice of the school wherethe scholarship is to be appliedbeing determined by the studenthimself.Urge student opinionSenators and Representativesinterviewed were unanimous inurging expression of student opin¬ion in relation to this legislation.Representative Thompson strong-ly recommended that all membersof Congress be sent letters, notsimply members of the commit¬tees involved. Barring an earlyadjournment, which is seen asunlikely, Congress will be consid¬ering this legislation within thenext two months.An impartial comparison ofthe two major proposals, the Hill-Elliott bill (S.3187) and the Eisen-hower-Folsom program (S.3163),has been repared by the staff ofthe committee on labor and pub¬lic welfare of the Senate. Studentgovernments, political scienceclubs, regional and campusUSNSA personnel, and individualstudents interested in securingcopies of this important and help¬ful analysis of the pending legisla¬tion should write the Chief Clerkof the committee, Stewart F.McClure, for further information.Bermuda Shorts$3.95D & G Clothes Shop744 East 63rdHOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTH’e Specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Down to Down1342 E. 53rd St. PETERSON MOVING c//ie photographers1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433N *6139 KENWOODf' /w/ttil/2l//2 room apartmentin modern elevatorbuilding, for individual or couple. . . Private kitchen and bath, ofcourse . . . wall-to-wall carpeting.. . furnished or semi-furnishedrefined persona only... referencesrequired. FA. 4-2415. Jimmy’sSINCE 1940Harper Wines & Liquors1114-16 E. 55th St.OUTSTANDING WINE VALUESFinest quality German Riesling.... $2.49 VsFrench Medoc, or Graves VsImported Beaujolais $1.49 Vs1953 Vintage Pommard $2.19 VsFREE DELIVERYFA 4-1233, 7699, 1318 Secretaries andIBM Technical TypistsPrepare reproducible copy for offsetprinting from rough-draft copy. •37’A hour week, paid vacation andsick leave. Convenient location.Call or Write:Institute for Air Weapons ResearchMuseum of Science k IndustryChicago 37, Illinois BU 8-8300June 6, 1958 • CHICACO MAROON • 11I Coming events I fraffian official discusseseducation in his countryFriday, 6 JuneTV program, “Science 1958." UC scien¬tists discussing astronomy, channel7, 7 pm.Play reading by the Shaw society. “TheMagnificent Humbug,” group leavingInt house at 7 pm for the Shermanhotel.Saturday, 7 JuneRadio broadcast. The University of Chi¬cago choir, “The Sacred Note," WBBM,10:15 pm.Radio Broadcast, Professor JosephSchwab and guests discussing themost influential books of our time,“Impetus,” WBBM, 7:45 pm.Tea at Int honse, 8 pm.Sunday, 8 JuneConcert by the University of ChicagoSymphony orchestra, 7 pm. Mandelhall.Tuesday, 10 JuneWorkshop in silkscreen processing. 7pm, Int house. Thursday, 12 JuneAlumni baseball game, 3:30 pm. Stagefield.TV program, Channel 11, “A1I Thing#Considered” with UC professors con¬sidering problems in education, 9:30pm.Friday, 13 JuneFaculty Revels, 8:30, Mandel hall Ad¬mission charge.Saturday, 14 JuneLecture by Jacob Getzels. “Gifted adol¬escents In schools and society,” 10:30am, Soc Scl 122.Lecture by Richard Stern. "Literatureand the angry young men,” 10.30 am.Classics 10.Concert by the Fine Art# quartet, Inthuose, 8:30 pmInter-fraternity sing. 9:30 pm. Hutchin¬son court.Thursday, 19 JunaTV program, Channel 11. AH Thing#Considered,” panel of UC archeolo¬gists.Wednesday, 11 June Friday, 20 June“The Communist," one-act play star¬ring Fritz Lieber, 8:30 pm. Ida NoyesTheater.Maroon staff meeting. 3 90 pm. Maroonoffice. Play-reading, “Cyrano Bergerac," 8 pm.Int houseFriday, 27 JuneNext MAROON issue.Cap and Gown staffto plan '59 yearbookCap and Gown will hold an informal organizational meetingfor the 1959 yearbook Tuesday at 1:30 pm on the third floorof Ida Noyes.Students interested in all aspects of yearbook production— photography, writing, ad-57th Art Fairopens tomorrowvertising and sales, layout,copy- and proofreading, and “gen¬eral idiot work”—are invited toattend, according to Jean Kwon,new editor emeritus.Selection of a new editor-in-chief and major staff officers, andgeneral groundwork for the nextedition of Cap and Gown will bediscussed.Interested persons unable to at¬tend are requested to communi¬cate their names and summer ad- Tomorrow and Sunday, thenorth side of 57th street fromKenwood to Kimbark willagain assume the appearanceof Paris’ “left bank,” as theeleventh annual 57th street Artfair opens. In case of rain, thefair, running from noon until by Neal JohnstonDr. Nuri Hafidh, director of curriculum and textbooks in the state of Iraq, took time outfrom his state department sponsored tour of the United States to discuss the nature of theeducational system of his country.The 48-year-old educator and scholar, who was on campus this week, has completed thethird month of far-flung four-month cross-country jaunt. Dr. Hafidh has been observingour educational system with hopes of incorporating some of its best aspects into that erf hiscountry.However, this isn't Dr.Hafidh’s first introduction toWestern education. He receivedhis Ed.D. from Columbia univer¬sity in 1951 after much work atthe University of London. In fact.Iraq’s school system isn’t nearlyas foreign as one might think.This system, which Hafidh hashad a major hand in forming,bears a close resemblance to thatof Germany. All children, startingat the age of six, attend elemen¬tary school for six years. Thenthey enter an intermediate school,resembling our junior high schoolfor three years.After this all students take agovernment exam to determinewhether or not they can go on topreparatory school (high school).Those who pass this test have anoption between three programs:scientific, literary and business.The choice is trichotomous—thereare no electives.The scientific student wouldthen spend two years taking solidgeometry, trigonometry, advancedalgebra, advanced physics, ad¬vanced chemistry, biology, zool¬ogy and botany, plus Arabic andEnglish. Students wishing to pur¬ sue literary or commercial ca¬reers would take courses of a cor¬responding complexity but of adifferent content. A 11 studentstake required courses in religiouseducation.After high school, students takeanother exam which will allowthem to go on to college, the Uni¬versity of Baghdad. Here studentswho will ultimately be employedby the state, such as teachers, doc¬tors, etc., are financed fully bythe government. However, only35 to 40 percent of the studentstaking this exam pass it.While making the universal ob¬servation that our scientific andmathematics programs are virtu¬ally non-existent at the secondarylevel, Dr. Hafidh did find some as¬pects of our schools highly ac¬ceptable.He would like to introducesomething equivalent to our pol¬icy towards electives. There aremore than three kinds of people;there should be more than threekinds of academic programs,Hafidh said.However, Dr. Hafidh stressedthroughout the conversation that the US and Iraq face differentproblems and different situations.Our solutions are not necessarilyapplicable to difficulties his coun¬try faces. Iraq must base its edu¬cation upon its history and cul¬ture, which is, of course, Islamic.HafidhCLASSIFIED ADSStud##! rolf 30c par h## Other# 60c per K#e Phone: Ml 3-0800 Set. 3X65Rides/RidersFor saleWantedServicesYou can rent an electric refrigeratorfor $4 50 up per month. CO 4-9231French tutoring, translation, FA 4-3367.PersonalGraduation dance, Friday. May 13 onpatio of Ida Noyes. 9:30 to 12:30. Formal.$2.50 per couple. Sponsored by I-F andI-C councils, Student union. For your Sunday drainer outing, Alex¬ander'# restaurant. 1137 E. 63rd.One or two persons to share drivingand expense# to Loa Angeles. Leave be¬tween June 7 and 14 at your conven¬ience. ID 2-7769. *Riders wanted to Miami on the 12tb or13th. Share driving and expense#. CaliMarty Lefkoe. MI 3-6000.Ride wanted to New York City, eveningof June 16 or any time June 17. CallMokotoff. PL 2-9718. For rentApt. for sale. Monthly assessment only$70! 57th and Maryland, 4\'2 rms. plusenclosed sunporch. Large yard. 3rd floor,quiet, sunny, automatic washer. Equity$4,200 Russel Smith, ext. 1572 or Lom¬bard 1569.Complete apartment furnishings. Rea¬sonable. HY 3-8184.New bicycles, discounts. MI 3-9048,1957 Volks., sun roof. $1,770. GA 3-4966.195S Triumph Tiger - Cub motorcycle(200 cci. Very good condition. $270.Xdward Blank. MI 3-2368. „Leaving in June? Stuck with lease un¬til next fall? We will gladly sublease,provided you won’t want it back. Wewant: 6 or more rooms, rent $130 orless, east of campus, south of 55th.Phone Herrick, PL 2-7875. 1 >4-Room furnished apartment. Nearcampus $10 per week Student# only6107 Dorchester. FA 4-5538.Summer rooms for rent. Kitchen facil.$31 per month. Beta Theta PI. BU 8-9381.UC faculty member's furnished housein Homewood, available for 12 or 15months from July 1. Convenient to ICtrans. 2 br and study (or 3 br). screenedporch, half-basement. MI 3-0800, ext.3423 or SY 8-7057.Summer rooms, men, singles anddoubles. $35 per month. Weekday maidservice. Cooking, storing. TV and recrea¬tional facilities. 5714 Woodlawn, PL2-9648. Ask for Wallace Reed. Male student wants to share fully furnlshed (hi-fi and TV) centrally located3,2 room apartment tor summer, beginnlng June 15 and possibly for next academlc year Rent only $52 50, includingutilities MU 4-2838, early mornings orlate evenings.Furnished six-room apartment to sub¬let. 54th and Kills. July 1-Oct. 1 orlonger. HY 3-6949. evenings.Large furnished room, 12' x 20*. withtile bath, dressing room and closet, Indeluxe elevator building Moderatelypriced. Versailles apartments. FA 4-0201.3-room furnished apartments near cam¬pus and IC, reasonable. See StanleyWernis on premises, 1404 E. 57th St.DO 3-6921.Fully furn. 5-rm , 2 bdrm. apt. for sum¬mer sublease. Excellent neighborhood,>2 block from golf course and children’splayground. Near UC. $100 per mo.(normal rent, $132 50 unfurn.) Avail¬able mid-June. FA 4-3324.Lake Mich, cot., modern, priv. beach,fireplace, piano, porch, FA 4-9191.4>4-room apartment, close to campus,available for occupancy June 15. Fur¬nished. MU 4-5702 or BU 8-5119.Rooms at Phi Kappa Psi, 5555 Wood-lawn. PL 2-9704. Full kitchen facilities,$25-$40 month.Mature girl to share apt. 9 mos. lease.Immediate occupancy. MU 4-3273.To sublet: 4-room furn. apt., July andAugust. 1 blk. from campus. Hy 3-6203.Spacious 4 rooms and bath In returnfor services. University and Ray schoolarea. MU 4-5714.Faculty apartment. Six-week sublet be¬ginning June 16: 6019 8 Iagleside. Sixrooms. $250. DO 3-1939 Spacious room for man. One blk. fromcampus. Maid service. MU 4-5714.June 13-July 26. Six room furnishedhome. Country town, 35 miles west.$150 Call Naperville 576M.Summer roommate wanted for fur¬nished apartment. Two blocks fromcampus. $34/month. MU 4-2867.1^-room kitchenette apartment, newlydecorated, moderately priced: in fire¬proof elevator building. Doorman, nightwatchman. With or without completemaid and linen service. 5234 Dorchester.FA 4-0200. *3 Female students need 1 or 2 room¬mates to share 8 rm. apt. for summerand/or next year, 2 blocks from cam¬pus. 2 baths, individual bdrms. $130mo. PL 2-2069, eves.LostBrown tobacco pouch with Kaywoodiepipe In It. If found, contact Ed Adel-man, ZBT.Help wanted1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300 Secretary-assistant; Hillel foundation.For Interview, PL 2-1127.dresses by mail or telephone tothe yearbook office, Ida Noyeshall, extension 3273.A second meeting is plannedfor Thursday at 1:30 pm, when afree-for-all critique session of therecently - published 1958 editionwill be held. Innocent bystandersare invited to attend or submitcriticisms and ideas by any meanspermitted under the US postalregulations. nightfall, will be held the follow¬ing weekend.Persons may purchase draw¬ings, paintings, sculpture andcraftwork. Last year, 250 artiststook part in the exhibit with salestotaling about $40,000. The Artfair is composed of works of in¬dividual exhibitors over the ageof 16.De gustibusnon est disputandum"—and, quiteliterally, there's no question about it—when it comes to taste, Coca-Cola winshands down. In Latin, Greek or Sanskrit,“Have a Coke" means the same thing—it's an invitation to the most refreshingpa\&e of your life. Shall we?SIGN OF GOOD TASTEtottfod vndor authority of Tho Cota-Colo Company hy(ua('i7</V12 • Th# Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, I no.CHICAGO MAROON June 6, 1958 Cafe EnricoFeaturing — Complete Wine List andHors d'oeuvre TableSmall Lorge Small Large12" 14" 12" 14"Cheese . . . ...1.15 1.55 Combination ..1.75 2.25Sausage . . . .. .1.45 1.95 Mushroom ....1.60 2.10Anchovy ...1.45 1.95 Shrimp 1.75 2.25Pepper & Onion 1.30 1.80 Bacon & Onion . 1.60 2.10Free Delivery oh All Pizza to UC Students Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristEyes ExaminedGlasses FittedContact LensesVisual Training1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372CAUTToj U C finds intellectual sport;frisbie rage hits campus6in stars at open meetThe varsity scored heavily in the Twilight open meet, Sat¬urday, May 16-17, on Stagg field. University of Chicago Trackclub, Northern Ill. State, Loyola, and several unattached menalso competed.relay team of Martin, Carlson,Karcazes, and Skinner ran a fine3:23.4 to win. Weaver won thebroad jump with his 22' 2ef¬fort for Chicago’s only field eventfirst. by Tyler Thompson“Seven Attend English Comp—West Stands to be Saved for Fris¬bie Hall of Fame — UniversityBookstore selling more Frisbiesthan Books — Kimpton appointsECUF to investigate situation.”These and other headlines maybe expected to appear shortly inthe Maroon.From a candy store on 53 streethas spread a disease even moreprevalent and more widely dis¬persed than the spring-fever or-fganization. It has supplanted eventhe traditional UC sports such assquirrel-feeding and college-bury¬ing Even the small radical groupwhich was kicking up such a fussa month ago to “Save StaggField” as a Roman arena intowhich to throw agitators hasgiven its backing to the new sport.For the benefit of those gluedto desks or C-shop tables, frisbieis a pie-sized plastic disc whichflies up, down, backwards, orsideways when flipped backhand.It is reported that the membersof one social fraternity haveFour varsity menathletes of weekOutstanding performancewas by varsity vaulter DonFagin’s 13' winning pole vault.Finishing their dual meet sea¬son with a 13-5 record, the Ma¬roons battled an undefeated Brad¬ley team at Peoria, Monday, May19, losing by a 68 to 63 score. Chi¬cago won six out of nine runningevents, and the broad jump, butweaknesses in the shot and discusevents proved too much of a han¬dicap for the Maroons to over¬come.Williams won the mile, Kar¬cazes the 440 for Chicago. Martin _ , •won the 100 in a sizzling :09.7 and I'our members of the varsity athletic teams have beenthe 220 in :21.9, around a turn, named “athlete of the week,” the physical education depart-Williams and Osborne tied 'for ment announced. They are Bruce Griffin, baseball; Hoseafirst in the two-mile. The mile Martin, track; Wendell Marumoto, golf; and Bertrand Sporta,tennis.Griffin pitched a three-hitgame against Wayne State uni¬versity, recently, to lead the base¬ball team to an 11-3 victory. Mar-^jn ran :09.7 in the 100-yard dash,:21.9 in the 220-yard dash and:50.1 in the winning mile relay forthree first places in the recentdual meet with Bradley univer¬sity at Peoria.Marumoto became the Chicagointercollegiate champion and med¬alist May 16 in the golf tourna¬ment on the Mount Prospectcourse. Saporta led the Maroonnetters to a team tennis cham¬pionship during the intercollegiatetennis tournament on varsitycourts May 16-17. He has also hadeleven straight dual meet vic¬tories.“For these outstanding athleticaccomplishments,” the coachingstaff of the athletic departmenthas chosen these four men “ath¬letes of the week.”Intrajnural sportsPsi U, Mathewsemerge, winnersBy winning the softball championship, Psi Upsilon becamethe first fraternity to win all the major intramural sports.Under the direction of Ronald Crutchfield, Psi U lost onlybadminton of the twelve intramural sports and that by butone point.house division.The final standings:Psi UpsilonPhi Kappa PsiPhi Gamma DeltaZeta Beta TauBeta Theta PiDelta Upsilon [3 to hold Phi Sigma Delta 393by taking Phi Delta Theta 233the college House division:Mathews 130914Vincent 121614152014 Coulter 9871020 Salisbury 612i • 815 Linn 419741 Mead 16059914 Foster 123478 Dodd 81GOING ANYWHERE THIS SUMMER?ARE YOU VACATIONING ABROAD? AT HOME?Books Can Help You THEME. Try These Xew Titles:THE RHINE AND ITS CASTLES, by Monk Gibbon ... $4.50Here, alive and fascinating, is a complete picture of the Rhine country, itsromantic castles and its tangy wine.FODOR’S ’58 GUIDES: FRANCE, ITALY, GERMANY ea. $3.95New, money-saving guides. Packed with facts.THE ART OF TRAVEL, by Henry Janies $5.50Edited by the University of Chicago's own Morton D. Zabel, this elegant,shrewd travel-writing by a master of prose will delight even stay-at-homes!y learned to flip it forehand as well,but this is nigh-impossible.There are three main categoriesof throws, each with its own de¬fense:1. the baseball curve. Standerect lifting frisbie with bothhands above head. Raise left knee,continue back, and bring frisbiein left hand behind you and passto right hand. In same motion,crouch forward and flip verticallyfrom right side, fooling opponentwho is expecting a left-hand shot.Frisbie will curbe around and hithim on side.2. the distance or haymaker (ifit hits him) shot. Nonchalantlyface away from opponent, holdingfrisbie like discus in right hand.Whirl unexpectedly to right andrelease vertical with strong wristflip. Flies straight at opponentwith considerable speed.3. the ballet or fraternity friz.Begin with frisbie held in crookedright wrist in front of body. Gent¬ly push wrist forward and fliphorizontally, with left arm andleg arched out gracefully to rear,as you balance on right leg. Donot try to lift right leg. Frisbieflies straight above opponent’shead, hovers, and descends slow¬ly. Can be plucked from air ifyou have short fingernails.Defense against 1. Extend left arm straight out to absorb im¬pact. After catching betweenthumb and fingers, go into quickreturn 1. Opponent will be takenoff-guard.Defense against 2. Run.Defense against 3. Pluck frisbiegently from air with right hand,spin to right and go into 2.Frisbie has been suggested byan irate B-J resident as a helmetor weapon against the 17 pigeonsnesting on the rafters inside Jud-son dining room.Pro-football detractors of thenew sport decline to give it status,claiming that it is simply a deca¬dent form of ball playing result¬ing from current world tensions.Anti-footballers claim that frisbiewill bring running and increasedbody contact, and eventually foot¬ball, back to campus.But the true frisbie player isa gentle, middle-of-the-road fellowwho makes no claims. He simplytakes one of the colored discs outto the quadrangles just west ofthe varsity tennis courts, andquietly practices throw 3, perhapshumming a line from Alice orChristopher Robin as he watchesits smooth flight. He doesn’t careabout political struggles or squir¬rels or BMOCS. He just likesfrisbie.Haydon to Russia;will coach US teamEdward “Ted” Haydon, UC track coach will accompany atrack team representing the US behind the Iron Curtain. Theteam will compete with Russian stars, July 27 and 28, in adual meet encompassing the full Olympic schedule with theexception of the marathon.The US team will be composedof the top two men in each eventat the National AAU Outdoormeet at Bakersfield, California.Haydon will be one of the fourcoaches accompanying the ath¬letes. He is leader of UC’s varsitytrack and crosscountry teams andthe UC Track club.Haydon, who was elected by a by the National AAU Track andField committee. He chose theRussian tour over similar toursto Germany and Italy. Confirma¬tion of the Russian jaunt, how¬ever, hasn’t been received.“I consider this honor to be rec¬ognition of the University’s partin sponsoring AAU events andthe Track club more than I con-governing board, is third in prior- sider it a personal honor,” Hay-ity on a list of coaches approved don commented.SmedleyARE YOU SUREYOU DONT NEED AMANS DEODORANT?yill. ■ 7 WJYi? rMJMennen Spray Deodorant for Men keepson working all day long—working toprevent odor, working to check perspiration.For this non-stop protection, get Mennen!60c and *1.00WIN $25! For oach college cartoon situationsubmitted and used! Show how Smodloy gets the brushoff!Send sketch er description and name, address and callage toThe Mennen Company, c/a “Smedley”, Morristown, N. J.June 6, 1958 • CHICACO MAROON • 13Culture VultureThe Russian editors have come and gone, but one strange fact lingers on. I asked one of them who his favor¬ite English author was. The answer? E. M. Forster. Hum. Ill students, take heart. Equally surprising, the edi¬tor to whom I spoke was quite familiar with George Orwell's "1984" and "Animal Farm."ON CAMPUSClose your eyes and think ofsome activity or event you’d liketo see tonight. It doesn’t matterhow outlandish your wish. Hopethat the Metropolitan opera isperforming an uncut version ofthe entire Ring in Mandel hall.Imagine that the Royal Ballet hasjogged over from London and iscavorting on the Midway. Wishthat Franklin Roosevelt hasn’treally died but has only fadedaway and has decided to reappearhere, tonight. It doesn’t matterhow impossible, for no matterwhat.you want to do this week—you won’t be able to. There is aslittle going on on campus as isphysically possible. You’d do bet¬ter to pack your clothes.TheatreNot much till next month. Courttheatre has already started re¬hearsals for Coriolanus under thedirection of Marvin Phillips. Peo¬ple, mostly males, are still needed,both for tech work and acting (al¬though by now this latter cate¬gory is. reduced to first and .sec¬ond senators and such like).Coriolanus will play in Hutchin¬son court July 1-6 and 10-13.Following this closely will be amusical version of Moliere’s riot¬ous comedy The Imaginary Inva¬lid with custom made music forthe cast created by William Ma-thieu. Richard D’Anjou is direct¬ing this new version of the oldcomedy.Concerts and recitalsThere are more immediate pros¬pects for things brightening up this department. The Fine Artsquartet will play its first concertsince its recent European tour,Saturday, June 14, in the Hoperoom at Int. house at 8:30 pm.The program for the concert,which is presented as a benefitfor the Circle Pine center co-opcamp in Michigan, includes Mo¬zart’s quartet in C major (k 465),Beethoven’s quartet in C major,opus 59 No. 3, and Bartok’s fourthquartet.Tickets, which cost $2 are onsale at Int. house and the HydePark Co-op.Art exhibitionsThe Renaissance society willcontinue to make its presence feltthroughout the summer by pre¬senting its annual exhibition ofworks by artist-members. Thisshow includes paintings, prints,drawings and sculpture.The Goodspeed galleries willmaintain their regular hoursthroughout the summer quarter,except that they will not be openSaturday morning after June 14.OFF CAMPUSTheatreMy Fair Lady remains the onlyshow in downtown Chicago, but aflock of summer theatres areopening within the next fewweeks. Here we list a mere hand¬ful of the more promising attrac¬tions:The Hinsdale summer theatre’sfirst production is Inherit theWind with Sidney Blackmer. Thedrama will be running June 2-14,and is to be followed by LindaDarnell in Tea and Sympathy,June 16-28. The Music theatre is presentingHelen Gallagher in Annie GetYour Gun from June 7 to 22.Their next musical will be Won¬derful Town with Kaye Ballard,scheduled to run June 23-July 6.The Edgewater Beach play¬house does not open until June 23when it will present The Remark¬able Mr. Pennypacker with Bur¬gess Meredith in the title role.For ticket prices, location of thetheatre, curtain time, etc., youshould refer to the WFMT pro¬gram guide or one of the news¬papers.Concerts and recitalsHere too we have a plurality.Grant park offers free music,free grass, freely circulating auto¬mobiles blowing their horns andthe IC. This last named providesnot only transportation but alsoappropriate background soundsthi'oughout the performances. Theairplanes landing at Meigs fieldadd their part. But it is free.Its season starts June 25 with Joseph Rosenstock conductingJorge Bolet in Prokofieff’s secondpiano concerto, with Brahms Sym¬phony number 2.Around the first of July, Ra-vlnia, which is not quite so noisybut also not quite so free, willopen its doors and arms to allcontributors.Art exhibitsThe Little gallery, 1328 E. 57this exhibiting water colors by Em¬my Stone and pottery by Alix andWarin MacKenzie. Emmy Stone isthe wife of professor Marshall H.Stone.The S. R. Schwartz gallery isfarther south, 2243 East 71st St.to be more precise, but what’s alittle walk for an art lover? Thecurrent show is composed of re¬cent oils by the French painterJean Chevalleau.The Art Institute does morethan hide the IC tracks, it alsohouses some of the greatest paint¬ings ever collected at one spot. In addition to the regular collec¬tions, they are now showing aspecial exhibition of the works ofMarin.Motion picturesThree current movies soundespecially interesting. At the Surfyou can find a new award winningfilm based upon Rouge et Noir,better known to Hum II studentsas the Red and the Black.The World playhouse is featur¬ing the Bolshoi ballet. Several ofthe seven dances photographeddon’t come off too well on thescreen. Their rather wild Walpur-gisnacht from Faust is simply toobig and too fast to fit onto ascreen, but Ulanova comes acrossas well as could be desired. And,after all, she’s what you’re goingto see.The old reliable Hyde ParkStrindburg’s Miss Julie and Fer-nandel’s Three Feet in Bed plusa Mr. Magoo cartoon. Coming upsoon, an Alec Guinness festival.Court theatre rehearsingfor summer productionExchange student attendsforeign student assemblyHelena Mohring, Student Government Frankfurt exchangestudent, is one of 42 foreign scholars selected to participate inthe Williamsburg (Va.) International assembly to be heldnext week.Programmed as an annualevent after its initial success serve as faculty; eight Americanlast year, the International as- graduate students will act assembly is a series of formal and hosts.informal discussions on how for- Together with the other partici-eign students feel about American pants in the program, Miss Moh-democracy after several years of ring was chosen on the basis ofstudy in this country. personal qualifications and cam-Ten top authorities in US life— pus record from more than 150politics, communications, science, applicants in colleges and univer-business, labor, and culture—will sities throughout the country.FREE DELIVERY- NICKYSPIZZERIANO 7-9063 The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 Eat* 57th St.MU 4-9236 Plays of Shakespeare, Moliere, Shelley and 80 actors and technicians are now in rehearsalfor UC’s fourth season of outdoor drama in the Court theater.While most student activities are quiet in the summer, University theater operates adrama festival. Three plays — "Coriolanus" by Shakespeare, "The Imaginary Invalid" byMoliere and "The Cenci" by Shelley will be offered from July 1 through August 10. Seasontickets are on sale at Reynoldsclub desk.The theater, for the firsttime, is offering courses in play¬reading and production under thesponsorship of the fine arts pro¬gram of the Downtown center.Students and adults may enrollfor a ten-week session. Besidesstudy the plays of Shakespeareand Moliere, students will visitother summer theaters, receivelectures from directors andtheater scholars and have an op¬portunity to participate in somephase of theater production. Forfurther information call or write,the fine arts program. 64 E. Lakestreet, or telephone FI 6-8300.Major roles for the season arecast, but there are some maleacting roles and production jobsstill open. Further auditions areSunday, at 1 pm, in Court theater.Auditior.ers should ask for MeyerBraiterman or Marvin Phillips.Students and staff cast in thethree plays include: FrederickHirsch, Lee Wilcox, William Bez-dek, Peter Smith, Don McClin-tock, Willard Moody, John Her¬zog, Otto Schlesinger, WilliamMathieu, Jo Anne Schlag, Ken¬neth Atkatz and David Ingle. Gloria Foster as seen as "Hecuba" in Court Theatre'sproduction of "Trojan Women" two summers ago. She willportray "Volumnia" in Shakespeare's "Coriolanus/' the firstof three offerings this year.ALUMNI ...GRADUATESWhile Off Campus Why NotEnjoy UC Life The Year Round?Let Us Bring It To YouA One Year Subscription ToThe Maroon For Only *1.25 To the Chicago MaroonEnclosed please find $1.25 for a one year sub¬scription to the MAROON.This offer starts with the June 27 issue, whichis the first of the four issues to be published duringthe summer, and extends through the next schoolyear when the MAROON will follow its regularpublication schedule.Name ClassAddressMail or bring to MAROON office, 1212 E. 59 St., Chicago 3714 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 6, 1958Endgame' box-office successSamuel Beckett’s Endgame was a box-office smash in Mandel hall May 22-24. The 90-minute, intermissionless, four-player script was presented by a New York group under thedirection of Allen Schneider.University Theatre, under the direction of Marvin Phillips, was impresario for the occa¬sion. UT made enough over the nut on the Irish-born author’s lengthy symbolic allusionsto the late stages of a chess game to look forward to its outdoor summer season of classicrevivals with fiscal confidence. * — — —This was good news to the this drama and its production, the Norman Vincent Peale of themany Of US who know the U Kazdailis’ set is as “realistic” as Disorganized Men. As such, hetheater as one of the most praise¬worthy artistic ventures in ouruniversity neighborhood. Morethan some parts of the universityscene UT holds the torch high,and commands an outstanding inrange and depth of repertory overall other community and campustheaters in this country.Endgame is a do-it-to-yourselfJob cum Jonah. You get the kitwithout the instructions. Possiblybecause boredom is hard to elab¬orate on, American reviewershave generally treated the scriptwith too elaborate a courtesy.The action has to do with a check¬mate of a ruling force, a check¬mate that is also, for many rea¬sons, a stalemate.Doses of disillusionThe mode Is tragi comic anddoes hot ask for appreciation orcriticism as an experiment in senses an implosion of meaningsin everything from Auschwitz totranquilizers. What can we makeof a life in which there is a bitof Auschwitz in everything, anda bit of tranquilizer in everyAuschwitz?Even this pins down too firm¬ly the vagueness of Endgame’sdissent from prefabricated free¬doms.The answers are not provided.But then, neither are the ques¬tions, really.Effortful ambiguityAnti climax, reptition ad nau¬seam, effortful ambiguity, andthe effort to ritualize effect bydirect appeals to the audience donot carry themselves. It may beimpossible to collapse the termsthe theater I heard Hamm Gf Eliot’s “the glory, the horror(played by Lester Rawlins) and and the boredom” entirely intoClove (played by Alvin Epstein) the last term of series. The en-compared respectively to Eisen- thusiasm of the players and theirhower and Nixon. The grounds: willingness to be the intellectuala prison-yard by Van Gogh. Thestage is loaded with pregnantprops: high-up windows, symbolicladders, wheel-thrones, trap¬doors, masks, and the miniatureAuschwitzes of two ash-cans con¬taining a King (P. J. Kelly) anda Queen (Nydia Westman), leftover from some other game. Thestandard machinery from theflea-market of expressionistdrama is used melodramatically.If Godot was the model “T”Ford of existential expressionism,Endgame is its Edsel.Political comparisonLike a pizza pie, Endgame wastaken in separate wedges ofmeaning by separate members ofthe audience. On the way out of Many of the four thousand people who saw the fourMandel hall performances of "Endgame" will remember thismoment as P. J. Kelly hears Nydia Westman say the line:'Time for love?"catharsis. Quite the reverse. It the older man Hamm is an au- victims of this script make a sug-might be entitled a small achieve¬ment in the mithridatic brand ofdrama. I call it mithridatic be¬cause by giving the audience suc¬cessive small doses of the arsenicof disillusion, it builds up theirresistance to, and their toleranceof, such poisons. The uneasinessof the audience raises from thefact that its members would pre¬fer to be resistant to disillusionwithout possessing a tolerancefor It without being involved inresisting it.Let’s have no talk about the thority who occupies a thronewithout being able to get ontohis feet, and the younger manClove is a patsy who movesaround at the cost of never beingable to sit down. This may be fairto the present climate of decisionin the US, but it is hardly fair toto play. The enactment could havebeen heard qjso as a commentaryon the good life as practised byby Democrats’ teeth-grip on aleash handled by Southern sena¬tors.My own interpretation is only gestion, however. The impossi¬bility I have referred to is eitherdenied by them, or still a secretfrom them. I wonder which.Reuel Denney UC symphony*wants membersUC symphony orchestra, planning for an August con¬cert, will continue rehearsals during summer quarter,according to orchestra member, James McCawley,Musicians interested in participating in the summersymphony should contact Donald Wilson, RE 4-1915, orMcCawley, box 48, Eckhart hall.uei S nave no tam aoout me ivry uwn uiiuipiciauun wuyheroic parsimony of means in indirectly ideological. Beckett is'Sacred Note' citedagain for third year"The Sacred Note,” UC’s radio series of religious choralmusic has been cited by Ohio State university institute foreducation by radio-television. This is the third year in theprogram’s three-year history that it has received such acitation. ’Heard locally at 10:15 pm logical approach which has nowSaturday,' on WBBM, ‘The Sacred enhanced its value as a culturalNote” is also broadcast by 36 and informational series and inother stations in the United States no way lessens the profound devo-and Canada. It features the UC tional atmosphere created,” thechoir, directed by Richard Vik- citation stated. Its technical pro-strom, with musicological com- duction was also praised,mentary by University organist, Narrators for “The SacredHeinrich Fleischer. Note” are Marvin Phillips, direc-The programs utilize choral mu- tor of University theater and Alansic qf all major faiths in a cross- Frank, of the University Courtdenominational framework. theater. Norbert Hruby and MaryThe program “is to be com- Deters of the UC radio and televi-mended for an improved musico- sion office are producers.BlackfriarsShow records hereRecordings of the Blackfriars 1958 production, "Alpha Cen-tauri” are available at the Phi Delta Theta house, 5737 Wood-lawn.The discs, containing over 60 minutes of music and encasedin a white jacket covered with cartoons and comments on theshow, are priced at $2.98.Twenty-five extra records are available for those whohaven’t ordered previously. Free delivery may be arrangedby calling Jim Best, Fred Schmidt, or John Mueller at BU8-9856. Latest issue of Reviewdiscusses Zen BuddhismDevoted in large part to Zen Buddhism (the Japanese way-out zany philosophy that now¬adays has wandered into "Beat Generation” San Francisco poetry), the latest issue of Chi¬cago Review will be published June 10.A literary quarterly with international distribution and a reputation for rescuing poetry,prose, in fact, art in general, from the "false hands of the false,” Chicago Review is on saleat neighborhood bookshops. —The spring issue was filled Whalen and Burrough, and hasCfnM L’vin MAin/tA im L « J i.! 1 x! j • • _ nwith San Francisco writers in¬cluding K e r o u a c, Ginsberg,Science fiction%club to presentThe Communist'"The Communist,” a one-act play by humorist andscience - fiction writer RobertBloch, will be presented bythe UC Science Fiction clubWednesday in Ida Noyes theater.The play, which deals with apossible future persecution of sci¬ence fiction writers and fans be¬cause of imagined subversive ac¬tivities, will star Fritz Leiber, au¬thor of fantasy and science fic¬tion and former associate editorof Science Digest.Curtain for “The Communist”will rise at 8:30 pm. The play willbe produced by members of theclub, and will feature Rick Prairie(Bi Sci) and Johnny Walker Har-tigan (College) in supportingroles. Admission is free. had critical mention twice in theNew York Times.The “Zen issue” is prefaced bya statement on “Beat Zen andSquare Zen” by Alan Watts, au¬thor of "the Way of Zen.” Dr.D. T. Suzuki, leading Zen scholarin America has translated a ser¬mon of Rinzai, an earlyZen patri¬arch; and there are essays de¬scribing the place of Zen in thearts, in literature, and in psy¬chology, other erudite transla¬tions, and an inside account oflife in a Zen monastery in Kyotoby the San Francisco writer GarySnyder. Also a Zen story by JerryKerouac. The rest of the issue is takenup by a newly-translated piece bySamuel Beckett, book reviewsand Japanese abstract calligraphy.All of which should make en¬lightening — at least — reading,coming from a periodical that hasalways been committed to bring¬ing new uncommercial (and oflate, unacademic) writers intoprint as well as presenting read¬ings and lectures by eminent poetsand critics (Robert Frost, Tru¬man Capote, Frank Lloyd Wright,Nelson Algren, Stephen Spender,E. S. Cummings, and Edith Sit¬well).Don ShelbyA TASTE TO THE GRADUATING/,. ’nachman 6OWN MADE• CHOCOLATES • ICE CREAM • COOKIESPHONE HYDE PARK 3-98821307 EAST 53 rd ST. CHICAGO 15, ILL.ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting Cards —• Children's BooksReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651 TheDisc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the week•Mahler & BrahmsFischer - DceskauwithFurtwaenglerAngel 35522$3.19 ^iiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitiiiiitiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitiiiiiimmitiii»iPiii»iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimn»^I tUe poM ItlmJte Ip\m W079Q7IMISS JULIE latepaltU 53 ml jt/iat |adults only£ Bosley Crowther, N. Y. Times: "Shocking—o fine creation . . . oH major film". The New Yorker: "Don't miss Julie". Grand Prix Win-S ner, Cannes Film Festival. The haunting film version of Strindberg's5 play, photographed by Goran Strindberg.| — end —| Fernandel's 3 FEET IN BED§ — plus —| MEET MOTHER MAGOO1 Times: Fri. fir Sat.: 3FIB, 6:00; 9:20. MJ, 7:35, 10:55rs Sun.: 3FIB, 2:10, 5:30, 8:50. MJ, 3:50, 7:05,10:25 -coming Guinness FestivalJune 6, 195S • CHICACO MAROON • ISRussians visit(from page one)and asked another member of hisparty, Grechukin, to interpret forhim.The latter, who was labeled bysome UC students as the PR (pub¬lic relations) man, stated thatthere is no censorship. He addedthat many times the newspaperscriticize the administration inmatters pertaining to student life.Grechukin said that the newspa¬pers do not take editorial standson national and international af¬fairs.Trade CigarettesThe editors passed out Russian-made cigarettes and pins from theMoscow Youth festival and Mos¬cow university. In exchange someUCers gave the Russian “SANE"(committee for a sane nuclear pol¬icy) and “A free University in afree society" buttons. One brandof cigarettes was probably the onewhich made Bob Hope remarkthat it had a filter so long “thatby the time the smoke reachedyour mouth you had lost thehabit." Another brand, said oneUCer was “so mild that you couldbarely taste it.”Khaldeyev, wrho is married andhas two girls aged 12 and 1 (allbut one of the editors are mar¬ried), spent much of his freetime learning sports that areunique to the US. At B-J, resi¬dents showed him how to throwa football pass. Khaldeyev con¬siders one of his hobbies Russianfootball (soccer). At B-J he alsobecame involved in a frisbee-toss-ing game. On the Midway he andVoitko participated in a game ofbaseball with some US studentsand neighborhood teen-agers.Troshkin, who plans to get adegree in cinematography, occa¬sionally separated from the groupto take pictures of the Universityan dof the city. Although he tookpictures of many campus build¬ings, he refused to go into the Enrico Fermi institute for nuclearstudies and the Chicago theolog¬ical seminary.On the Tuesday of their six-dayvisit, Troshkin took technicolormoving pictures with sound ofmembers of the Folklore societysinging “This Land Is Your Land"in front of the Ida Noyes cloister.The cost of the 600 feet of film,over $450, will be paid by Mos¬cow’s Cinematography institute.Approximately $114 of theamount was for the services oftwo men from the labor union.The editors seemed to be mostinterested in the wages and work¬ing hours of American workers.At the United States Steel worksin Gary, and even in the artificialcoal mine at the Museum of Sci¬ence and Industry they asked thesalaries and hours of the men.Valyuzhenich, who is majoringin English literature, stated thatErnest Hemingway was his favor¬ite American author. He puts“heart and soul" into his charac¬ters, he stated. His favorite Hem¬ingway personality is Robert Jor¬dan in “For Whom the Bell Tolls."Movies and PoodlesThe Russians saw the Holly¬wood version of “From Here toEternity” (at their own request),and one of them stated whatmany Americans state about Hol¬lywood movie versions: “the bookwas better."Shortly before they left cam¬pus, Voronov, who was leader ofthe group, presented each of thefraternities where the Russianslived with an album of Russianfolksongs.In exchange, a group of notedSRPers (they will never live itdown) gave the Russians UCsweatshirts for the unmarriededitors and toy maroon and whiteFrench poodles with “Cs" ontheir sides for the children of theother editors. German president to visitUC campus on TuesdayPresident Theodor Heuss of the Federal republic of Germany will visit the UniversityTuesday, as part of his three-week tour of the United States. ...While on campus the president will be guest at a chancellor s dinnei and reception in the^Heuss,gtheCfirst German head of state to visit the US, began his tour Wednesday in Wash¬ington, D.C. His itinerary includes stopovers in Philadelphia, Hanover, New Hampshire; De¬troit, Chicago, San Francisco,the Grand Canyon, Williams- have included editing the weekly Baden since 1946, and of the Gerburg and Charlottesville, vir- journal, Die Hilfe, Neckar Zei- man Bundestag since August 1949.ginia; and New York City. He will tung, the bi-monthly Maera, the jn September 1949 he was elect-return to Germany June 23. weekly German ed president, being re-elected JulyAn author, journalist and his- H,,,e and K»»eln**Kar 17 1954tonan, Heuss studied at the Uni- He"J began his poiiticai ca. Heuss has traveled in France,rSSSn* h,>BnrIrtor% decree in reer in 1924 as a member of lhe Italy. Sweden, Denmark, Nether-receiving his Doctors degree in Reichstag. He has been a member lands, Greece, Yugoslavia andpolitical science m 1905. Aside pariiament for Wuerttemberg- Turkey,from books, his literary activitiesBritish award to HugginsDr. Charles B. Huggins, professor of urology and directorof Ben May laboratory for cancer research, has been namedto receive the University of London’s third Comfort Crook-shank cancer research award.The award was conferredFLYAt Lowest Air FaresScheduled 4-Engine Douglas SkymastersNew York ..... $26.00*Philadelphia ..... 26.00*Detroit 11.00*California 67.50*Florida 43.00*Hawaii ..... 166.00* fare* plin tax10% Discount to Students andFaculty on Return TripCallMU 4-1144open 6 am to midnightDel Prado Air Travel ServiceLobby «— Del Prado Hotel Theodor Heuss on last Tuesday by Lord Astorof Hever, council chairman of theMiddlesex hospital of the collegeof medicine at London in recogni¬tion of Dr. Huggins’ “fundamen¬tal contributions to surgery ofcancer.” A lecture by Dr. Hugginsfollowed the presentation.The triennial Crookshankaward consists of a silver medaland 250 pounds. It has been previ¬ously awarded in 1951 to Prof. J.J. Bittner of the University ofMichigan, and in 1954 to W. Samp¬son Handley of London.Dr. Huggins, who pioneered thetreatment of certain cancers by hormonal control, has been atChicago since 1927 and has beendirector of the Ben May labora¬tory since 1951.On July 7, Dr. Huggins will re¬ceive from the president of theGerman federal republic its Or¬der of Pour le Merite.Mortgage InsuranceEducational InsuranceConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5916TODAY ISTHANKSGIVING DAY!THANKS TOBURTON-JUDSONSNELL-HITCHCOCKNEW WOMEN'S DORMC-GROUPTHANKS TOMANY, MANY INDIVIDUAL STUDENTS,FACULTY MEMDERS, FRATERNITIES &UC PERSONNEL & THEIR FAMILIESFor supporting our Personalized, Low-Cost Laundry& Dry Cleaning service♦We will continue serving the summer students &personnel. To those who will return in the fall, weare looking forward to serving you again♦THANKS AQAIN!University Quick Laundry1024 East 55th PLaza 2-909716 • CHICACO MAROON • Juno 6, 1958