uc Directory on saler■ fhe 1958-59 student directory goes on sale today at theI bookstore and at Woodworth's. The "new and improved" direc-■ f0«y has a photograph of the new dorm on its cover.■ Larger, more readable print has been used throughout. "Wehave tried to make this a more attractive and useful directory,"stated Jeff Plampin, new head of the office of official publica¬tions which now publishes the manual.The directory contains the name, home and campus addressesand local telephone number of each student registered this fall.Price of the new directory is 45 cents. It will be sold by AlphaPhi Omega, campus service fraternity, in the dormitories overthis weekend and in Mandel corridor and Cobb hall next week. ChicagoVol. 67, No. 14 University of Chicago, Friday, December 5, 1958 31Criticizes lawyers lagging interest in history“In the case of Judge Wy¬zanski,” observed Bernard D.Moltzer, professor in the lawschool, “Harvard will be willingto share some of the credit withProvidence.”With this introduction, the hon¬orable Charles E. Wyzanski, Jr.,US district judge for Massaehu-sens, magna cum laude AB andI j,.B alumnus of Harvard univer¬sity. began the third Ernst Freund1, 'lure to a large Mandel hallaudience Monday night.-These lectures, sponsored bythe law school, are presented byoutstanding members of the-American legal profession andcommemorate Freund, whomMeltzer described as a pioneer inadministrative law and legislationand a founder of UC law school,and who was eulogized by Wyzan-»ki early in his speech.“The law has served historyvery well indeed,” Wyzanski as¬set ted. But it was the converse re¬lationship which he intended todiscuss; “and I’m mindful that I’mundertaking a formidable task.”The speaker nevertheless tookup the task unflinchingly and pur¬sued it without manuscript ornotes, speaking in a remarkablycoherent style with a highly- polished New England diction andan outstanding command of thelanguage.Wyzanski maintained that, al¬though several have assigned his¬tory a minor role in reference tolaw, there is. on the contrary, avery great value to be found inhistory—“and I think I’m not ex¬aggerating.”In fact, he went on to criticizemembers of the profession fortheir present lack of interest inthe subject, bringing out the de¬cline in the quality and extent oflawyers’ personal libraries andthe constantly diminishing impor¬tance of citing English law casesor establishing precedence inAmerican court cases today.Referring briefly to the develop¬ment of legal history per se, Wy¬zanski spoke about the presentstate of the judiciary systemmuch from a sociological point ofview'. “Elaborate methods of so¬cial control,” he called processesof law today. “Law has extendedits interest from problems offorce and fraud ... to problemswhich fall under the heading ofthe so-called welfare state.“What we have now is essen¬tially not distributive but prescrip¬tive justice . . . and a cross-ruffbetween courts and the adminis¬ tration, courts and the legisla¬ture.”He spoke of those who believethat justice is nothing more thana compromise of competing inter¬ests; that there is nothing inher¬ently valuable in justice and itmerely provides protectionJudge WyzanskiUC law school — searchingfor "everlasting brightness" against powerful individuals whomight otherwise cause a good dealof difficulty in society. He notedthe opinion of former US circuitcourt justice Lerned Hand, that“values and sacrifices are incom¬mensurable.”But casting aside these skep¬tical attitudes and establishing adefinition of compromise in judi¬cial values as a matter of “notweighing the unweighable,” Wy¬zanski began proposing a seriesof questions relating to the prob¬lem:“Are we all quite prepared tosay there are no values exceptvalues which can be altered inlight of present interest?“Is there (as he had originallymaintained) any value in his¬tory?”Then growing realistically skep¬tical himself, Wyzanski asked, “Ishistory a story of inevitable prog¬ress? Can we say something likethat with World wars I and II be¬fore our eyes? Or do we, likeCroce, think that history is thehistory of liberty; or, as otherssuch as Whitehead, that it is agradual broadening of the hu¬mane sympathies of mankind?“What is history? Is it a real¬ity?”Comprehending all these diffi¬ culties in asserting the “value” ofhistory to law, Wyzanski summar¬ized the main idea embodied inhis answer to these questionswhen he said, “And yet, we are sodeeply in need of being remindedof something other than our owninterest!“First,” he went on, “historyteaches us the error of ThomasJefferson—that this is a world ofthe living. We are not, in anysense, masters of the world. Wehave no license to commit waste.We must take into account thatwhich gives us stability andpromise.“And secondly, we learn fromhistory the concept of legitimacy—of authority founded on rightprinciples.“I realize that I may have gonea long way off the track of dis¬cussing the immediacy of his¬tory’s importance to law. But lawis not all cases, procedures, andcontroversy. It deals with nobleand difficult problems of the larg¬est kind.‘This (UC) law school hasnever assumed that its aim is toteach man only definitions anddistinctions. But,” he emphasizedas his closing remark, "to searchfor everlasting shoots of bright¬ness.”Praise international understanding centerby Rosemary I. Galfi"If force ruled before, thennow it can only destroy.” —JohnU. Nef.. 1Seldom are questions so vitalto the survival of the human raceexplored on the level, academicand sympathetic, which prevailedin the lecture series, “Civilizationand the Search for Wisdom.” Onemight hear talk on the defense of“Fortress America” at a NationalSecurity council meeting. Heateddebates proceed on the preventionof a surprise atomic attack inParis. Where in the game of'bluff,” where, When men playwith toy missiles and anti-missiles,does one hear the question asked,Why are men here?Themes expositedSuch were the themes expositedand discussed in Social Sciences122, November 24, 25 and Decem¬ber 2. John J. Nef, chairman ofthe Committee on Social Thought,tackled the problem of relatingforce to the objectives of man’slife by referring them to the prob¬lem of civilization itself in thesearch for wisdom. To the lecturesNef brought the methods and ana¬lytical refinements of the scholar.Put especially evident was theinsight afforded to this man bya wealth of inner experience andthe deep satisfaction of a full life.John Nef, educator and histor¬ian, has been with the universitysince 1929, first as assistant pro¬fessor of economics, then as asso¬ciate and full professor Gf eco¬nomic history. In 1945 he assumedbis present position. He has beenvisiting professor at the Instituted'Etudes Politique, University ofParis, and received the French Le¬gion of Honor decoration. Amonghis publications are: The Rise ofBritish Coal Industry, The United States and Civilization, andW’ar and Human Progress.'Roots in ethics“The roots of the first world¬wide revolution were in the Chris¬tian ethics.” Nef began by sketch¬ing a historical background. Itprovided a setting for free trade,for confidence in man’s lationalpowers, for man’s moral perfec¬tion. ,In the eighteenth century theword “civilization” was coined.The hopes of this century restedon the spread beyond Europe ofthis idea: limited warfare, and thespirit of decency, 1914 saw thecollapse of the moral older andthese ends of civilized unity.“Many of the world see in usa group of quarreling nationsdivided by two wars,” Nef de¬clared. Thus “the Christian heri¬tage which made possible thetriumph of industrialization is notbelieved in.” Only in the last fifty years has the destruction of theworld been seen possible by po¬litical wars.What is the place of the UnitedStates in this? Before World WarI, the US was a large isolatedisland. We can no longer remainaloof. We must provide leader¬ship.Nef proposed an experiment ineducation which could providethis needed leadership. He citedthe University’s Committee of So¬cial Thought, and the Centerfor International understandingin Paris.Lost beautyThe tragedy of industrialism isthat it lost our depths of beautyand wisdom. With the collapse ofthe moral order we fell victim tothe materialism of Marx. “Thetask of leadership is to replaceMarx, not refute him.”Seemingly only two world-orderconcepts are offered today; thetotalitarian and the constitutional.Here the distinction is only of means, not ends. A new concep¬tion is needed to help build thefoundations of civilization. Thisis a problem which relates to thehuman personality, to the wholeof life. It is not a problem Sciencecan solve alone.Here Nef identified the concep¬tion with Truth that "transcendsnatural space, matter, and time.It transcends bodily existence, theinner life which is us. It is partof the eternal, our most preciouspossession. It animates and givesmeaning to our lives. Here isexistence defeating time.”Wisdom is shared by all. Thistruth articulated by T. S. Eliotin an essay on Goethe provokedmany of the thoughts in these lec¬tures, Nef revealed in a side com¬ment. The “search for wisdommust be our way to confront theproblems of today.”Wisdom in artThe second lecture further de¬fined the search for wisdom. Itemerges from examples of worksYoung composers 'beat'?“Are young US composers,like poets and novelists, turn¬ing beat? The New YorkTime’s Howard Taubman suggest¬ed the question last week in com¬menting on the New York pre¬miere of “Symphony No. 1” by 25-year-old Indianapolis-born EaslyBlackwood. The work’s jadedtone, said critic Taubman, markedit as a “reflection of the beatgeneration.”Blackwood’s composition per¬formed by Charles Munch and theBoston Symphony, was grave,withdrawn and emotionally mut¬ed to a kind of rasping, weariedmonotone. It nevertheless re¬vealed Blackwood as a skilledtechnician and a stoutly original,musical thinker. The winner of a Time photoComposer Blackwood"anybody . . . can see thatI arr. net." recording project prize last sea¬son, the symphony will be re¬leased commercially by RCA Vic¬tor.The son of Bridge expert EasleyBlackwood, father of the Black¬wood four-trump convention, com¬poser Blackwood studied at Yaleunder Paul Hendemith, moved onto Paris, where he became a stu¬dent of Nadia Boulanger, for 35years the musical nanny of topUS composers. Now an instructorin the music department at theUniversity of Chicago, Blackwoodinsists that his composition hasno direct connection “with thetimes in which we live.” Does heregard himself as Heat? “Anybodylooking at my picture,” saysBlackwood, “could tell that I amnot(Time magazine). of art and from the conduct of theauthor. Its lessons are parabolic,helping indirectly, under the guid¬ance of the heart. The search forwisdom has no subject matter. Itmebraces all disciplines.No good, no evilOutlining the notion of a gen¬eration ago, that there is no goodro evil, Nef suggested that thiswas due to the skepticism of thoseinstitutions (church, school, etc.)preserving traditional virtues.“What is best people asked? Howcan anyone know?” After 1914people began to believe that therewere no answers. Thus they lostthe discipline of tentative an¬swers; this the seekers after wis¬dom must supply.Therefore, environment and op¬portunities should be made forthe creative mind, Nef urged. Heasked “Can anything be done togive tangible reality to the highestaspirations of man?” And he re¬plied that the two before-men¬tioned groups would work withyoung men and the men of actionto give body to highest ideals.Wisps of wisdom contained inthese men’s works might inspireteachers, parents, leaders.As Simone Weil has said, whatis needed is a new concept ofgrandeur to replace the rule offorce. “The only passion that isas strong as force, that can movehuman beings, is Love,” Nef af¬firmed.A fuller statement of thisthought proceeded in the thirdlecture. Its meaning was furtherfelt in the relation of art to life.“There are communications inlife which cannot be told by art,”Nef explained. These are experi¬ences between a man and a wom¬an which must be lived. Thesemoments of perfection are thesubject matter of art. Though thegreatest moments are lost to art,yet great art is created out of thedeep experiences of life. The artistmust be in love with his art. Onecan bring love to art only if one(see “Beauty,” page S),>>;' * '■c1 1Hanukkah atMandel .Hanukkah will be celebrated on the quadrangles by a pro¬gram in Mandel hall, sponsored by the Hillel foundation.Formerly the Maccabean festival, this program, absent fromcampus for the past five years, will take place at 3:30 pmon December 7.The program, devoted mainly to Jewish liturgic and folkmusic centering around the Hanukkah theme, will be pre¬sented by the combined choirs of Anshe Emet congregation Kostya' begins UCis now in residence classesat B-jby Neal JohnstonAfter many plans, delays and reservations, both political and transportational, the Rus¬sian student exchange program has finally become a reality. On the day before Thanks¬giving Konstantin Ivanovich Nesen moved into his permanent residence in Burton-Judsoncourts.Nesen, a twenty-eight-year-old student majoring in physiology, is as excited and asunder the direction of Erwin Jospe. A vocal soloist, cantor pleased with the exchange as is the entire campus. He derives more than personal satisfac-i • „ , .. • , * tinn frv-vTYi nmaranr “Thl«tion from the program: “Thisexchange is a good measure,many possibilities to betterknow each other.”Nesen comes here as a student,not as a tourist. He has every in¬tention and expectation of fur¬thering his studies. Just recently day) and through the many con¬tacts he hopes to make with stu¬dents.Nesen has a strong desire to student Valentin SergaevichShchukin.rived on campus with his fallowShchukin, a student at the MoC-cow Energetics institute who isMoses Silverman, will also participate.A unique feature of the festivities will be a chime concertpreceding the program in Mandel, when a number of speciallyadapted Hebraic melodies will be performed on the Mitchelltower bells by Rockefeller chapel carilloneur James R.Lawson.Rabbi Harry Kaplan, director of the midwest regionalHillel foundations, will address the audience on the subject,“Blessed is the flame.” A group of Hillel members will pre-candle-lighting ceremony. work in his major field, experi- understanding between all serious demic program at the UniversifcvThe Hanukkah program is being held in observance ot the mental physiology, at the Kiev re- students.” , of California.“festival of lights,” a week-long celebration which comment- search institute. Here, he intends Nesen flew from Moscow to UC representative for the ex¬orates the triumph in 162 BC of Judas Maccabeus in a war to take courses in physiology and New York via Copenhagen accom- change, Robert Taaffe, a politicalfor religious freedom. Hanukkah wall be observed this year genetics. '*J ' - - — ~learn and acclimate himself toour country, culture, society and majoring in radio technology, leftschool. He feels that he has al- campus last Morfday. After a eon-ready observed “many common ference with his advisors here, itgraduated from the University of traits between our students and was decided that he would be ableKiev, Nesen has already done our peoples. There is a universal to pursue a more satisfying aca-from December 7 to 14.Admission to the celebration is without charge.Are you the practicaltype? We are, at leastabout moving and storageproblems. We'd like tosolve yours . . . for aconsideration.Peterson Movingand Storage Co.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711 Have a MRU) of miTravel with IITAUnbelievable Low CostEurope6*> o«y* fr*m $645Orient1-65 Day* hem $998Eye-witness report documentedwith color slides ond tope re¬cordings ef o thirty day studyof Soviet life, emphasizingSTATUS OFSOVIET JEWSBY MANDEL TERMANMr. Termon interviewedrabbis in Moscow, Kievand Leningrad; spoke tothe editor of the onlyYiddish newspaper in theSoviet Union; conductedGallup-type poll of thehundreds of Jewish peo¬ple on preservation, ofYiddish culture; tape re¬corded cantor ond con¬gregation of Moscowsynagogue; interviewedmember of philosophybranch of Academy ofSciences on Jewish ques¬tion.Friday, Dec. 58:15 PM32 W. RANDOLPHHall C-2, 12th FloorAdm: 90cChi. Council of American-Soviet Friendship Nesen’s father, who was a casu¬alty while fighting in France dur¬ing the second world war, was ateacher as was also his mother.Nesen’s one sister is also a stu¬dent.Before entering the Kiev uni¬versity, Nesen (or Kostya as heprefers to be called) studied ina technical school and worked asan agronomist. Last spring, im¬mediately prior to receiving hisdiploma, Nesen was selected as panied by the fourteen other Rus- geography major, is already msian exchange students and ar- Russia.T-hut boycott endsMan-, tours includecallage credit.'Also low-cost trips to Mexico$169 up. South America $699 up,Hawaii Study Tour $549 up andAround the World $1798 up.Ask Your Travel Agent26thYearDr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRIST1138 L 63 HY 3-5352 As a result of a want ad in the January 5 issue of the Chi¬cago Tribune stating that there was an opening for a “whitewaitress” at the T-hut, the UC chapter of the NAACP organ¬ized a community boycott of the restaurantOn Friday afternoon, November 21, members of the or¬ganization picketed the 57th street dining room and distrib-one of the two students from the uted leaflets stating the facts of the matter and their positionUkraine to participate in this ex- jn case.The pressure proved successful, apparently, for the nextday the owner of the T-hut signed this statement: The Trop¬ical Hut will hire qualified applicants for any position thatbecomes open without regard to race, creed or color. Futurejob openings will be publicly announced by the advertisementor window sign so that all persons interested in working atin understanding the spoken lan- the Tropical Hut may apply “without regard to race, creed,Most of his familiarity or color.A spokesman for the group said “this was a neighborhoodrather than a University project, appealing to the moral in¬fluence of the community. The voice of the community wasoverwhelming on this matter, agreeing totally with the con¬clusions and suggestions of our leaflet.”change. This summer was spentas a scientific collaborator and inbrushing up on his English.Although he speaks Englishquite clearly, Nesen is still some¬what handicapped by a difficulty332 Sr Michigan Avr 8ua8e-mu iMvti, inc. Chicoja h, HA 7-2551 with our tongue has been a re¬sult of reading American andEnglish biological tracts and notfrom direct conversation. How¬ever, he feels quite certain thatthis problem will be amelioratedduring the year he will spendhere through his reading, h i sclasses (which began last Wednes- Virtue, beauty saveGET THE JUMPON VACATION FUN...GO GREYHOUND8! (from page 1)is in love. The test of art is itscapacity to triumph, like love,over familiarity.What is the artist’s responsibil¬ity to the public? The artist can¬not set out to solve practical prob¬lems yet if he is concerned withTruth, Beauty, and Virtue, thanhe is nearer the solutions of theatomic age than the scientist. Sci¬entific statements have little in¬fluence on moral issues, yet artdoes. The nature of art’s moraleffect is much less certain thanthe intellectual effect of science.If art is related to life than ithas to be related to the virtuouslife. Jt is here that realism hasfailed; unalleviated realism isnever great art because it doesnot convey the moral virtues which add to life. “Art is far fromlife today,” accused Nef, “the art¬ist has to start over again.” TheAmerican artist is afraid to puthis best into art, afraid of a discip¬lined life for his art. Thus theartist’s true responsibility is to bea better person than he is.Concluding, Nef commented:“Our task is to bring art and lifecloser together. The fundamentalcomponent of Beauty is Virtue;these two only can save theworld.”MimeographingFast service — Low ratesVan's Bookstore1555 E. 57thHY 3-5787 or PL 2-7218 SorryPardon our error! NotMary Finkle, but Bob Ler-ner wrote last Friday’s re¬view of the Leonard Shureconcert. Miss Finkle wouldlike it known, though, thatshe considered the articletop-rate and feels highlycomplimented on the bit ofplagiarism.• Lowest fares of all publictransportation!• Frequent departures! Quick¬est time to many cities!• Air-conditioned comfort;picture-window sightseeing;fully equipped restroom;on all Scenicruiser Service®schedules! Compare these low, low fares!New York, N.Y.. . $42.15*Spring’eld, ill.... 7.30St. Louis, Mo 11.00Indianapolis, Ind.. 9.45Minneapolis, Minn. 14.70Cleveland, Ohio. . . 17.65♦Round trip fare plus taixIT’S SUCH A COMFORT TO TAKE THE BUS..AND LEAVE THE DRIVING TO US!a„ Brainstorm! No matter how muchbaggage you're taking home—Greyhound can take it alt IGREYHOUND TERMINALFinancial 6-5000 Rondolph fir Clerk WRIGHTLAUNDRYCOMPLETELAUNDRY AND DRYCLEAN INC SERVICE1315 EAST 57TH STREETMl 3-2073 ,2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 5, 1958Medical tradition endsNashville, Tennessee — Thetradition in most Americanmedical school that only char-f,v patients be used for study iscoming to an end, a leading medi¬cal educator said today.will not be too long beforen10s< if not all medical teachingwill incorporate the so-called pri¬vate patient,” Dr. Lowell T. Cog-geshall of the University of Chi¬cago said.He said that the experience of| the UC clinics indicates that thepaying patient "feels proud” toparticipate in medical education.The disappearance of the char¬ity patient, Coggeshall said,is occurring because almost every¬ one in the United States will soonhave health and hospitalization in¬surance.Coggeshall is dean of the divi¬sion of the biological sciences.He was one of eight scheduledspeakers this morning at amedical education symposium inNashville, Tennessee, honoringDr. John Barlow Youmans, deanof the school of medicine at Van¬derbilt university, now retired.Dr. Coggeshall said his state¬ment about the prospect of train¬ing medical students with payingpatients is “contrary to many pre¬dictions.” But he offered these1957 statistics from the HealthInsurance council:—121,432,000 Americans pos-Glee club to performUniversity Glee club will describe “Christmas in Song,” inits concert Wednesday at 8:30 pm in Bond chapel.Directed by William H. Deihl, the chorus will present aprogram of traditional carols, works by Bach and Brahms, and onecomposition, Oh Lord Our God, We Humbly Pray, by Deihl, himself.Also programmed are the works. Ye Shall Have a Song, by RandallThompson; The Little Jesus Came to Town, by Will James; A Virgint nspotted, by William Billings, and There Were Shepherds in theFields, by Gilbert A. Alcock.1 he processional and recessional will be, respectively, AdesteFideles and Angels We Have Heard on High.Admission to the concert is free. sessed hospital coverage;—108,931,0X1 had surgical cov¬erage; and—71,813,000 had medical cover¬age.“Although the poor will alwaysbe with us, we find that even inour large metropolitan charityhospitals income from patientshas become a major source offinancial support,” he said in hisprepared text."The growing disappearance ofthe indigent patient,” according toCoggeshall, is due not only toprepayment health plans but tothe sharp increase in personal in¬comes of "those in the lower in¬come stratum.” •-Added to this, he said, are thefurtherance of guaranteed annualwages, unemployment benefits,tax laws biased in favor of lowerinepme, minimum wage laws “andincreases in the scope and bene¬fits of social security.”"These are just a few of thearguments. The government —federal, state, and local —is pay¬ing for more and more medicalcare,” he said."Fewer and fewer persons willbe troubled by insoluble financialproblems due to illness. Not touse them to teach the cominggenerations of doctors and healthpersonnel is looking backward notforward,” Coggeshall said.'O-board to holdmeeting SundayOrientation board will holdan open meeting Sunday at3:30 in Ida Noyes library.There will be a panel discussionentitled, "Utopian university andUC.” Speakers for this O-boardmeeting are William H. Zacharia-f sen, chairman of the departmentof physics; Knox C. Hill, associateprofessor of humanities and col¬lege examiner; and William H.McNeill, professor in the depart¬ment of history and the college. 9/ie PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeingand Refinishing ofShoes and Handbags• Colors matched 9 Toes cut out9 Vamps lowered 9 PlatformsremovedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'HARROW HEELSHeels changed — Any style ——Any colorBackstraps Removed and Springa-iotors inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired —— Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St. STERN'S CAMPUS DRUGS61st fr EllisWho sex there is no change m our menu . . ,For C*5r you gotMustacciolli, Spaghetti, Ravioliliberal portionsala carte For 91-00 you getA full half pound Stern's specialstript steak, with grilled onions,salad bowl, french fried pota¬toes, roll and butter.CLOTHES for CLASSReg. $12.95 all wool flannel pants $7.95Reg. $ 6.96 corduroy pants $4.95Reg. $ 8.95 lambs wool sweaters $4.95Reg. $19.95 corduroy sport coats $12.95Our Prices Can't Be Beat . . . It's Smart To Buy For LessD & G Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-2738*'ln the Neighborhood for 40 Years'9Hours: 9 o.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 o.m. - 9 p.m., Saturday?Kill Ml THE WOKIillIMPORTERSA Gift Shop of DistinctionREPORTSSanta is at his busiest plan¬ning Xmas deliveries.And here at his world’s work¬shop glamorous gifts may befound to fit in his pack.Santa is still waiting to addyour name to his list.A cheery welcome, in the trueHoliday spirit awaits your visit.1515 E. Hyde Park Blvd.(Walking distance Irorn the campus)“Enjoy an adventure inshopping.” Immortal Music in aCathedral SettingBoroque performance ofHandel’sMESSIAHRichard Vikstrom, conducting/ University of Chicago Choirand members ofThe Chicago Symphony OrchestraSunday — 3 pm — December 14ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59th & WoodlownTickets available atChapel house, U of C Bookstorefir Woodworth's Student $2.00General $2.50 UC to help striken familiesEwell Reagin, acting dean of Rockefeller memorial chapel,has formed a committee to receive contributions from thestudent-faculty-staff community on behalf of the families ofvictims of the tragic fire at Our Lady of the Angels school. Reaginsaid, "Our hearts go out to all who have suffered in this ordeal. Iam sure that all members of the University share in this feelingand will wish to join in providing material help as their meanspermit.”Reagin also said that the collection at next Sunday’s service inRockefeller chapel will be devoted to this purpose.Alpha Phi Omega and Nu Pi Sigma, service honorary societies havevolunteered to work with the committee. Frank Keenon, president ofAlpha Phi Omega, and Marlene Nelson, president of Nu Pi Sigma, arestudent members of the committee. Student Government presidentJoel Rosenthal is also a member ofjhe committee.Contributions may be mailed to or left at the Chapel office or th9offices of the faculty and administrative members of the committe#who are the following:9 Fred D. Bjorling; Director of Personnel, Ing 2039 Jerald C. Brauer, Dean of the Federated Theological Faculty,S 1019 John P. Netherton, Dean of Students, Adm 2019 Robert E. Streeter, Dean of the College, Go H 203The need is most urgent within the coming week, and it is hopedthat contributions will be received by Tuesday noon.HOBBY MOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and Waffles 1342Open from Dawn to Dawn east 53 -st.IMPORTANTGIFT BOOKSforCHRISTMASDr. Zhivago *500Pasternak's truly great book and Nobel Prize winner.'Lolita . *5A novel which defies classification. Best selletby Nabokov.Herblock’s Special for Today . . . *395430 superb cartoons. Some funny, some sad,but always timely.Rodgers & Hammerstein Songbook*1250A beautiful book to brighten your life.March of Archaeology *1500Scholarly C. W. Ceram's newest book. Large andcolorful illustrationsEloise at Christmas *350Eloise at her merriest. Her friends will be glad to addthis book to their library.Animals in India, Ylla $1Q00Elephants and tigers, birds and monkeys crowd betweenthese pages to make a highly interesting and realisticpicture of India.The American Revolution *1250A book of sound scholarship and great beauty. By theeditors of the American Heritage.Art News Annual *4*5A sophisticated guide to better understanding inthe plastic Arts.Post Carnival of Humor *7°°Rich in the kind of wit and gentle sarcasm which makesthe Post so famous.WOODWORTH’S store1311 E. 57th St.2 blocks East of Mandel halfOpen daily 8 to 6 M, W, F 8 am - 9 pmDec. 5, 1958 9 CHICAGO MAROON 9 3P-j, »! the Chicago maroonfounded — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and intermittently during the summer quarter,toy the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E 59th Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800.extentions, 3265 and 3266, Distributed without charge on campus. Subscriptions by mail. $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5,Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material. 4 pm, Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material,3 pm Wednesday before publication.All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the individual opinions of the authors.Review editor charges...Richard Stern, the chairman of the faculty committee for the Chicago Review has saidtn the October 31 and November 29 issues of the Maroon that “The University of Chicagodoes not . . . exert controls on the editorial policies of the responsible student editors of itspublications ... of course, the University is legally responsible for the publications and willtry to see that the laws of libel and other pertinent laws are not violated by them.”These statements are misleading. During the past two weeks the faculty committee notonly exercised “control” but exercised the most blatant form of censorship — it suppressedthe publication of the entire forthcoming winter issue. That is why the Review has “missed”it’s deadline. A fellow member of Stern’s committee Joshau Taylor threatened the Review,at a recent meeting, stating that if the publication wanted'to continue under Universitysponsorship it would have to print an “innocuous and noncontroversial” winter issue. (Thesewere the exact words used.)The criteria for determining whether future works were “innocuous and non-controver-sial” was to be decided by the faculty committee. All future works which seemed likely tofit into this undefined category were to be presented to the faculty committee in advance.The reason for this decision Taylor said, was that the works in question were collectivelyalthough not individually objectionable. (Previously Napier Wilt, dean of the division ofthe humanities and Robert Streeter, dean in the College, had told the Review editor, IrvingRosenthal, substantially the same story.)As a result the faculty committee’s ultimatum to the Review staff, six of the seven act¬ing editors, including myself, resigned. Rather than risk discontinuing the Review, the re¬mainder of the staff voted to accept the faculty committee’s terms and elected a new editor.It is obvious that the faculty committee trustees and the University administration lackconfidence in UC students’ ability to run a literary quarterly. This has been painfully dem¬onstrated to us. Why doesn’t the faculty committee have the courage, at least, to admit thisin print?J. Charles Horwitz €) Oout of our mail bag...The New York Post is con¬ducting a survey to determinewhat effect if any, “the BeatGeneration” and its prophets. . . Jack Kerouac, KennethRexroth, Allen Ginsberg, etc.. . . are having on our collegecampuses. Are any of theseauthors widely read, or readat all, at your school? Domany undergraduates on your campus identify themselveswith the Beat Generation?And if so, in what way?The Post wonders if youcould find time to contributeto this survey by writing afew paragraphs for us onwhat intrusion the Beat Gen¬eration has made at yourcampus, and in what way thisintrusion is visible. . .Joshua Taylor denied categorically the quotations, both direct and indirect, attributed to him.‘’Nobody is trying to censor the Review." Taylor claims that the words "innocuous and non¬controversial" were used only by out-going editor Rosenthal. Taylor stated that the only timehe spoke at the meeting was to clarify the position of the advisory council.He also denied the substance of the report; the committee did advise a different sort ofcontent matter for the next issue, it didn't command it. "The decision to not have winter-issue was made by the new editorial board."I|vI He signed, so what... GadflyTwo weeks ago this afternoon the UC chapter of the NAACP and others picketed theTropical Hut; the cause was that the manager of the restaurant had placed a want ad fora “white” waitress. Saturday morning, November 22, the boycott was ended when the man¬ager signed a document stating that he would no longer practice racial discrimination inhis hiring.So far the T-hut has not hired a Negro waitress, and the NAACP has, and can have noreal assurance that the restaurant ever will, but everyone seemed satisfied and relievedthat the entire affair was over. That other eateries in the neighborhood occasionally prac¬tice racial discrimination in the seating of their patrons did not detract from the vigor withwhich the T-hut was attacked. The owners of these other dining places provided theNAACP with no overt evidence.A subtle feeling that the whole affair was really rather petty was considerably height¬ened when we became aware that the advertisement which triggered all this appeared ina Chicago Tribune published on the 5th of last January. Does this time lag mean that theNAACP is having a difficult time finding causes? Does it mean that the group has a quitefull schedule? Does it mean that someone just happened to be reading an eleven-month-oldnewspaper? We are not quite sure. However, if the NAACP members have no better way tospend their Friday afternoons, we can but suggest a long, and careful re-reading of JohnStuart Mill’s “On Liberty.” *The bookery...A book review column forthe Maroon. Grand! Who willwrite it? We will. What willyou write about? Oh, new books,old books; good books and badbooks; hardcover and paperbooks; cheap books and remain¬dered books; bookstores and book¬sellers; the publishing world, thereading world and everythingnice: that’s what little columnsare made of.By the time all this had beendecided and a title chosen, it wasso late in the week for us to writea review. Also, being neophytes,we didn’t want to extend ournecks too far until we had be¬come established. This is our es¬tablishment. Why did we decideto assume this task? Because wethought we were the people mostqualified to do so? Certainly not.Because we thought that some¬one had to do it? No. Because wewanted the free books? Yup.Now that you know the history,morphology and extent of thisnew feature, let’s begin.Bookstores:For local color, we offer youthe Red and Green Doors, rur. byMr. and Mrs. Snowman, respec¬ tively. Mr. Snowman, proprietorof the Red Door, has a reputationfor being icy and is quite aschoosy about his clientele as heis about his books. Operating in abasement next to the T-Hut on57th street, Snowman offers a re¬spectable selection of foreign vol¬umes, the main emphasis being ona variety of French editions. Ti¬tles range from “Le Petit Hommede Disneyville” par Walt Disneyto Sein und Zeit by Heidigger. Ad¬ditionally, used books of all kindsare stocked at the door.Separated from her husband bythree blocks, Mrs. Snowman, pro¬prietress of the Green Door, sellsquality paperbacks and children’sbooks. Best of all, she offerssame-day editions of the NewYork Times and has the fastestspecial order service available inthe neighborhood.The UC book and brassiere storeat 58th and Ellis carries a com¬plete line of: gifts, stationery, fe¬minine underclothing, tobaccos,pipes, children’s records, and medstudents. The bookstore alsohouses a United States Post Officestation, a photography shop, and atypewriter repair shop. If your in¬terest should stray from lingerie, you might discover that they alsostock paperbacks, hardcovers, textbooks, syllabi, and old comps.You’re likely to find what you’relooking for here.You might well browse for anhour or so at Woodworth’s, alsoon 57th street. Although they(Woodworth’s) will probably nev¬er have as many sidelines as theUC bookstore, it has the finestcollection of higher-priced paper¬backs on or near campus and asubstantial number of used text¬books. And yes, Virginia, there isa post office.Which brings us directly to Ru¬dolph Van Tellingsen’s Bohemianbook bistro in the old art colonyat 57th and Stoney. Everythingused from G. B. Shaw’s Menschund Ubermenseh to Norman Vin¬cent Peale’s Civilization and ItsDiscontents, all jammed into or¬ange crates and lovingly coatedwith the sands of time, known inChicago as soot.Next week fn this column, bookreviews. We promise.And has anyone noticed? TheInland Steel building is rusting.P. BernzottG. Kauvar The current Kass-Davey-O-board-admission office con¬flict has its lighter side—whatwith Davey denouncing the ad¬missions office, the Maroon de¬nouncing Kass, O-board denounc¬ing denouncers, and Kass, appar¬ently, denouncing his sarnity.Perhaps the whole issue deservesto be taken lightly, for Kass andDavey, whatever their claims tothe contrary, are simply misin¬formed; the admissions office hasno exclusive list that it feeds outto select student organizations;Any member of a student groupshould know this from his ownexperience.Surely, more informationshould have been gathered fromthe office of admissions prior tothe Kass-Davey charges. This isa simple rule which underlies allscholarship: when in doubt, con¬sult the source. -The inquiring minds of thisUniversity are not caged in thelibraries, and allowed to preenonly in the class rooms. Are notobjectivity and well founded judg¬ment the twin virtues of allthought? Are we to be Gothic inour architecture, medieval in ourorganization, classic in our stat¬ure, and adolescent in our privatelives?On the other hand, once publiccharges had been raised, the factsof the matter could have beenbrought to light by a brief infor-matidnal statement from the ad¬missions office in the Maroon.Such has not yet appeared. Threepossible causes may account forthis noticeable lack—the office istoo busy, too dignified, guilty.If the first, then this is a spe¬cialized institution, indeed. Evi¬dently, we have reached the pointwhere one group of people, repre¬senting roughly 1,500 man powerhours per week, concentrating allof this time on selecting the stu¬dents who enter the University,cannot spare 15 minutes for the students who finally got in.If the office is too dignified tograce the pages of the studentnewspaper with a few well chosenremarks, then it must suffer theinferences of guilt that will Jol-low from its silence.In itself, this particular inci¬dent of student attack and admin¬istrative silence is of no majorsignificance. The disturbing element is in the chronic and repeti¬tive nature of these events. Whyis the state of communicationsso strainev'. unsatisfactory atthis University that students mustseek to publicly embarrass admin¬istrative officers into clarifyingpolicies which are probably soundand reasonable. Why are no othermembers of the University so re¬luctant to defend themselves ifneed be? Mutual suspicion anddistrust are not the hallmarks ofa healthy community. In refusingto reorganize the Intra-Universitychannels of communication, arewe not foolishly trying to main¬tain a free University in a freaksociety?icariMStudy proposedof Latke powersHillel will present its Latkeand Hamantashen debate thisyear with a new twist.On December 10 at 8 pm atHillel house, members of the UCfaculty will debate the merits ofthe Latke and/or the Hamantashand will decide which should re¬ceive a foundation grant forfurther research.It has been pointed out that theLatke, (translation—potato pan¬cake) is definitely implied inBoris Pasternak’s Dr. Zhivago, be¬cause of its restoration qualities.This, as well as the inner-direetedand other-directed qualities ofboth the latke and hamantash willbe discussed that evening.! mm m Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood |UNUSUAL FOODDELI6HTFUL4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Ok. 5, 1958SG letterVUo. fhsUAA-^ "tr*Mo. <y^AXj^oxt:<A <JUiu (y*w«»**v* cnm-tLiXu^JUajuuAl NARoow <*v***y- <>( li**4j^aa»^a^ <*- *A*-*y*-crtyv^yA^A4M.r/~»4i^A<^«^. OtJu£<>^,0^o-AA_e£-U<*4 A*» 4- 4^A#v(riw* . "T&aaa -Uit i?: ^"^A-Ui C^VVVA^A^U>AA^r t oA^jfc ^4 ^ a m m A. ^ iaJC# /CAA /4-A-c*!^AAAUAaC<M<-<-H^rLA^eujp^a^<4I ^AJL <JVvaax$a^l,<A^UAA4utoJw_ /^Lft Ay-e^tY^^iA«yC |A*. #VtX>e<«^C^CAP < «r^erw »Av ^AX^cea-c^-otP <*“0^^*^'^U^cl^At tL4*s*+X+*AjJ) OtA. p^fQ \/\tpv(£ ~c^t* -UM4^<X|^UUAa^^r tflVVUA I #\ AukAA.0 Q .A*- o<^|jdv «a* jr^-^-Jv3 AAA^AlJL-, o theMaroon answers its mailIt seems inconceivable and sad indeed to us that an organization as supposedly responsi¬ble as the University of Chicago’s Student Government should have such an intense lack ofinternal communication* and should rely on such very immature tactics as irate, exagger¬ated and misspelled “letter to the editor” writing.SG president Rosenthal and other members, representatives and “hanger-oners” of government choseto ignore repeated explanations on the part of the Maroon as to why the story on the end of theTropical-hut boycott did not appear in the pages of the paper last week. It seems obvious that thiswas done for the greater glory of Student Government and perhaps more — for the further martyr¬dom of the membership of “a major student organization” NAACP.The boycott and NAACP’s activities were given full coverage in the past weeks and letters bothpro and con have been published. NAACP was by no means ignored by the Maroon. In addition tocoverage on the boycott, discussions took place with Lawrence Landry of the organization for articlesin the paper commemorating Negro history week. Coverage on a proposed lecture series beginning Janu¬ary 14 and featuring David Rawick, instructor in social sciences in the College was aiso discussedwith another NAACP member. •Hampered by lack of space and extremely early deadlines due to the Thanksgiving holiday we wereunable to fully complete and run the story last week. On Sunday. Monday and Tuesday of this weekwe were approached by members of the NAACP including the groups’ president, David Noble. The sit¬uation was fully explained to them and they received assurance that the announcement of the boycott’send would appear in this issue, as it does. We also thought the matter would be of interest to SG presi¬dent Rosenthal. Therefore, on Tuesday afternoon of this week he was called and the situation wassimilarly explained to him.Both Rosenthal and NAACP gave the appearance of understanding the matter and accepted theMaroon’s assurance that the story would appear.We were amazed that the matter was not within the realm of human understanding of the NAACP,we were further amazed by the pettiness and childishness of these groups in attempting to get additionalpublicity by writing such a letter.As for ISL’s charge that we did not make mention of a concert under its sponsorship, we respect¬fully refer them to the issue in question and ask ISL to feast its eyes upon Culture Vulture whereinthe greater glories of Martha Schlamme are expounded.The Maroon cannot and does not promise anyone space in its pages. However, we attempt to fulfillas many requests for stories and publicity as is possible. Any student organization or University de¬partment should feel free to send information to the Maroon or come to its offices personally to dis¬cuss coverage. Because of the fact that we have had larger issues this year than in the past we haveattempted to give all areas of the University community wider coverage. We feel reasonably confi¬dent that we are achieving this goal.May we point out that while the Maroon is most certainly campus’/servant, it is most certainly notits slave. Rochelle DubnowEditor-in-chiefSi *. > 1 . . .. * ■;Boycotts ineffective way«to deal with discriminationThe manager of a local restaurant recently advertised for a “white” waitress. This hascreated a great deal of commotion on campus, moving several student groups to variousmoves including pressure in the form of picketing and “boycotts.”This is not the way to deal with discrimination.Elimination of prejudice and discrimination is a different and delicate task, and shouldbe attempted through the medium of education, not pressure. Great strides have been madein this country in the causeof racial equality over the pasttwenty or thirty years, butvery little of what has been done dice, they are of course wrong... . , , They should be corrected, theyhas been accomplished by pres- raa(je to see their error,If these people make their reputation of our community thatchoices on a basis of racial preju- the aforementioned manager ofthe local restaurant chooses tohire on the basis of racial discrim¬ination. But he has a right to dothey should be educated in the so, whether we like it or not.Perhaps our young friendsmight reconsider their m o d u ssure groups.But a more important concept is principles of human equality. Butat stake when student groups en- they should not be pressured. Notgage in this type of activity. I only are pressure groups usually operand^ And they might stop tospeak of the fundamental right of futile, in that they alienate more realize that they have no rightindividual liberty and social free- people than they force to submit to harass the actions of one whodom. The manager of the restau- (but probably do not convince), is acting within indisputable boun-rant has a basic right to hire but they violate the individual daries of social freedom, but thatwhom he pleases, as the apart- rights of the people whom they they have a clear-cut mission toment landlord has a right to pressure. This is a greater wrong help him to understand the errorchoose whom he wants to live in than the one to which they object, of the principles upon which hehis building. It is indeed unfortunate for the acts.Constant is wrong claims Routt of NAACPLast week you published aletter to the editor by oneDaniel Constant, dealing withthe actions (as it seemed to me) ofthe campus chapter of the Nation¬al Association for the advance¬ment of colored people concerningdiscriminatory employment prac¬tices in one of the neighborhood’sleading restaurants. Mr. Constantemphasized the importance of therights of the local businessmanand suggested that integrationwas only a “Good Thing” in mat¬ters such as schooling. He wrotethis article under the impressionthat our actions against the res¬taurant were still proceeding —which was not in fact the truth —although I will not insult his intel¬ligence by assuming that hisviews have changed since our pro¬cedure proved successful.First, let me say a word aboutthis action and its success. Forless than one day, beginning 5 pm.Friday, November 21, members ofIhe Campus NAACP and otherresidents of the University com¬munity, passed out leaflets askingPatrons of the restaurant in ques-[,on withold their patronagebecause the restaurant’s employ¬ ment policy was discriminatory.On the afternoon after this actionbegan, the manager of the res¬taurant signed a statement set¬ting forth a policy of non-discrim-inatory hiring which, he toldmembers of the Chapter, had al¬ways been his practice. The dis¬tribution of leaflets was haltedand posters were put up all overcampus announcing the end ofthis action.But the foregoing are merelyfacts which have no bearing uponthe validity of Mr. Constant’sarguments. The purpose of thisletter is to try to demonstrate whythe campus chapter has taken thestand it has on the issue of dis¬criminatory employment.In the first place, discriminationis a big thing. The force of it ismanifested not only in the ten¬sions that produce race-riots, butalso in the motives that last yearprompted one of the editors of theUS News and World Report towrite an article setting forth thetheory that each race uncon¬sciously believes itself superior toall others (the fallacy of this inthe present situation and the dis¬crimination inherent in such a doctrine I have no time to discusshere, but I will be glad to explainit personally). It is shown, notonly in the school situation, butalso in the accidental “nigger”that escapes your neighbor’stongue. We cannot eliminate dis¬crimination/ by putting an end torace-riots and segregated schoolsonly. There are deeper roots atwhich wt must strike before thisthing is finished—and until thoseroots are pulled out and allowedto wither and die, discriminationwill exist. Here the image of theHydra is only too apt. Heraclesfinally killed this beast by searingeach one of its nine necks to pre¬vent it from sprouting new heads,and by burying its one immortalhead so well that it has never beenfound and is remembered only asa legend. Tin’s must be our pur¬pose: to eradicate each overt facetof discrimination so effectivelythat it will never exist again, andto take the idea behind it and con¬sign it to the realm of myth.Now let us consider the rightsof the local businessman in regardto his employment policies. Mr.Constant says that he has a rightto employ whom he will, using what qualifications he will as abasis for hiring. In the main thisis a fair policy, and it is surely thedemocratic way. Yet, when thisidea enters the realm of race rela¬tions it loses its validity. Over one-tenth of the population of theUnited States is Negro, and thesepeople have not only a right todecent schooling and housing,they also have the right to work.They have, under the constitution,a right to equal opportunity. Ourcountry is based upon this ideal.If one businessman denies Ne¬groes the right to work in thesame jobs as those held by mem¬bers of another race, then he isdenying them the chance of equalopportunity. Surely it is clear thathe is infringing upon the rightsof Negroes as citizens of thiscountry by exercising what heconsiders to be his right to hirewhom he wishes^ upon what basishe wishes. In the question of con¬flicts of rights it is essential tbconsider which party it is justthat the nation uphold in termsof the nation’s own expediencyand honor: in this case, the smallbusinessman who, in most areasat least, will not go out of busi¬ ness because he employs Negroes,or one-tenth of the American peo¬ple. who may very well be forcedto live in squalor because of thepolicies of the small businessman.Bringing it down to the issue athand, it was demonstrated effec¬tively that the restaurant againstwhich action was taken lost a con¬siderable amount of businesswhen its practices were madeknown to the community, and itremains to be seen if there willbe a comparable loss when, and if,its staff is integrated.The problems of race may beviewed objectively, yet when thisis undertaken care must be exer¬cised to prevent a subjective reac¬tion entering the consideration ofthe problem, prompted perhapsby the fear of what would seem tobe gigantic weapons. It is impor¬tant to consider what discrimina¬tion is and Ijow it operates, and itis equally important to rememberthat all people have rights — inthis country at least. It is the feel¬ing of the University of Chicagochapter of the NAACP that theserights constitute the foundationsof our society and that it is ourduty to protect them.William D. Routt,Dec. 5, 1958 • CHICACO MAROON • 5 »vIjmmmore letters to editorOn Campos with>fe§hujman(By the Author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys! “and,“Barefoot Boy with Cheek”)ADVENTURES IN SOCIAL SCIENCE: NO. 1 Andros hopes UC will'flock to the tieldhouse'“The proper study of mankind is man/’ said Geoffrey Chaucerin his immortal Casey At the Bat, and I couldn't agree more. Inthese tangled times it is particularly proper to study man—howhe lives and works. Accordingly, this column, normally devotedto slapdash waggery, will from time to time turn a serious eyeon the social sciences.In making these occasional departures, I have the hearty ap¬proval of the makers of Philip Morris Cigarettes, whose interestis not only in providing young Americans with fine cigarettes,matchlessly blended of vintage tobaccos, grown with lovingrare and harvested with tender mercy, then cured with com¬passionate patience and rolled into firm tasty cylinders andbrought to you in long size or regular, in soft pack or flip-topbox, at prices which wreak no havoc on the.most stringent ofbudgets, but who are equally concerned with broadening theminds and extending the intellectual vistas of every collegeman and woman!I, for one, am not unmoved by this great-heartedness, andthough I know it is considered chic these days to disparage one’semployers, I shall not. Indeed, I shall cry “Huzzah!” for themakers of Philip Morris. I shall cry “Huzzah!” and “Viva!”and "014!” and “Ochichoonya!”But I digress. For our first lesson in social science, let usturn to economics, often called the queen of the social sciences.(Sociology is the king of the social sciences. Advertising is thejack.)Economics breaks down into two broad general classifica¬tions: 1) coins; 2) folding money. But before taking up thesetechnical aspects, let us survey briefly the history of economics.Economics was discovered by the Englishman, Adam Smith.He published his findings in 1786, but everybody giggled sohard that Smith, blushing hotly, gave up the whole thing andwent into the cough drop business w ith his brother.For long years after that economics lay neglected while theworld busied itself with other things, like the birth of VictorHugo, the last days of Pompeii, and the Bunny Hug.Then one day while flying a kite during a thunderstorm, theAmerican, Henry George (also called Thorstein Veblen), dis¬covered the law of diminishing returns, and then, boy, the fatwas in the fire! Before you could say “knife” the IndustrialRevolution was on! Mechanization and steam power resulledin prodigies of production. For example, before the IndustrialRevolution, a Welsh artisan, named Dylan Sigafoos, used tomake horse-shoes by hand at the rate of four a day. After theIndustrial Revolution, with the aid of a steam engine, Sigafooswas able to make entire horses!And so it went—factories rising from the plains, cities bur¬geoning around the factories, transport and commerce keepingpace—until today, thanks to economics, we have smog, reces¬sions, and economics textbooks at $7.50 per copy.© 1958 Max Shulman• • •The makers of Philip Morris are no economists, but they dounderstand supply and demand. Some people demand filtercigarettes, so they supply the finest—Marlboro, of course!Great flavor, improved filter—a lot to like!1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoFeaturing — Complete Wine List andHors d'oeuvre TableSmall12" - Small12“Cheese .1.25 Combination . .2.00Sausage .1.50 Mushroom . .1.75Anchovy .1.50 Shrimp . :2.00Pepper Cr Onion . . . .1.35 Bacon fir Onion . .1.75Frec Delivery on All Pizza to L'C Students At the June 1958 C-men’sannual awards banquet, Vice-Chancellor John I Kirkpatrickdefended the new look of Chi¬cago’s athletic program. Whilefootball alums sat with fangsbared, he spoke of the University’splans to produce the championmiler, and golf ar.d tennis aces.He not only overlooked the prob¬lem of attracting athletically tal¬ented students to UC, but impliedthat the fielding of a champion¬ship football team would not bethe administration’s principal ap¬proach. This letter is not intendedto be critical of the Vice-Chancel¬lor’s views. Personally, I stronglyagree with his hopes for the fu¬ture of the so-called “individualsports” at UC. Parenthetically,Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372This merchont offers on excellentopportunity to purchase fashion¬able suits of splendid character.The assortment of sizes he providesmakes his stare worthy of atten¬tion of all gentleman wishing tobe well dressed.*60 «pJBrittanji,t.td.7104 S. JefferyPL 2-4030Open Mon. & Thurs. eves. those in attendance, the athletes,alums, Dave Condon, and Mr.Kirkpatrick himself will remem¬ber the several small sears in¬flicted on his opinions. In the post¬dessert debate which naturally en¬sued, Mr. Kirkpatrick, in thisobserver’s opinion, came out sec¬ond best in what turned into atwo-sided “discussion” of footballat Chicago.But my purpose concerns moreimmediate, though no less excit¬ing campus activities. This week¬end—on campus—the UC playshost to the Midwest Open gymnas¬tics championships for men andwomen. Gymnastics is one of Mr.Kirkpatrick’s said individualsports. The competition in thisgreat sports wil be on the samehigh level for which the “Mid¬west” has long been known. Themeet will be in the tradition ofgymnastics skill and daring pre¬sented at UC in the May 1957 na¬tional AAU championships, vigor¬ously unattended by UC students.This letter is written in the hopethat the student body, if informedof the meet, will flock to the field-house on Friday, December 5 at6 pm, and Saturday, December 6at 2 pm and 7:30 pm with thesame enthusiasm that gymnasticsCaptures yourpersonalityas well asphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. receives in Europe, Japan andRussia. I would prefer to say "inthe belief,” but stepping back totake a long, round look at our¬selves, we know better, don’t we.I mention the times and place be-cause of the possibility thatproper mention on the sports pagemay have been crowded off by across-word puzzle.This is not the proper place 1 ifthere be one) to discuss popularconceptions of what gymnasticsis not. But. . . the fieldhouse, thisweekend, is the right place to findout what gymnastics-champion¬ship gymnastics—really is.George AndrosWilliams deliverschapel's sermonThe Rev. Colin Williamswill preach at Rockefeller me¬morial chapel SunrVv, Decem¬ber 7, on "The authority ofChrist.”It will be his last sermon in theChicago area before leaving tobecome Professor of SystematicTheology at Melbourne univer¬sity, Melbourne, Australia.For the past four years, he hasbeen assistant professor of historical theology at the GarrettBiblical institute at Northwesternuniversity, Evanston, Illinois.Services at Rockefeller memo¬rial chapel begin at 11 am. Theyare non-denominational.EUROPEDublin to the Iron Curtain; Africato Sweden. You're accompanied —not herded. College age only. Alsoshort trips.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255 Sequoia (Box 4) — Pasadena, Cal.Gosh frosh!how’d you catch on so quick? Catchon to the fact that Coca- Cola is thehep drink on campus, I mean. Alwaysdrink it, you say? Well—how aboutdropping over to the dorm anddowning a sparkling Coke or two withthe boys. The man who’s for Cokeis the man for us. SIGN OF GOOD TASTEBottled under authority of the Coco-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 5, 1958f profileHay don: 'art and humanism will save us'REALLY SOMETHINGTO WRITE HOME ABOUT...FOR CHRISTMASRtMISfiTONThose of us who remembertelevision are famiiiar withthe cigarette ad in which aman is shown manipulating a cy¬clotron. “Are you a nuclear phy¬sicist ?’’ he is asked. “No,” he re¬plies. “I’m a freelance mussel-digger. Nuclear physics is onlymy hobby.” ‘This,” concludes theannouncer, “is a man who thinksjor himself.”Though we may have reserva¬tions about the mussel-diggingphysicist, we can only have re¬spect Tor the versatility of HaroldHaydon. We may find him at suchvaried tasks as creating a mosaicfor a temple or building stonewalls in Vermont. But his mainoccupation is being dean of stu¬dents of the College.No one is born a dean, but Hay¬don was almost born a UC’er. Hisfather was a professor here, andmost of his education was ob¬tained on campus. He attendedthe laboratory school at a timewhen it gave “no homework andno exams.” “College,” he recalls,“was a shock. I was so scared ofthe examinations that I made PhiBeta Kappa in my junior year.”The college course he remem¬bered best had the magnificent ti¬tle of “the nature of the worldand man.” Through the course hewas able to hear great leaders inall the arts and sciences. “Later,I used my notes to ornament amural painting, later hung in aCanadian school. The painting be¬came quite popular with the stu¬dents. particularly before exams.”An undergraduate major inEnglish “. . . had the net effect ofdestroying my ability to spell.”As a graduate student, his inter¬est shifted from philosophy to art— he U;id been drawing picturessince the age of four—and art ledto an academic career. “A philos¬opher,” he explained, “deals inabstractions. But an artist mustget out and deal with the worlddirectly.”Art will save usHaydon maintains a great in¬terest in art. Besides teachinghumanities 1, he is presently en¬gaged in making a mosaic for aJewish temple in Gary, consistingof two panels, entitled The lawand The Legend. Asked aboutmodern art, he commented withapologies to Howard Devree, thatthere are three classes: ‘abstractexpressionism, abstract impres¬sionism, and abstract exhibition-0V\ Lawd/ WWi / nT'Please send me /)^Sm House fWhere/can 6e V$vPBEC UEDRigfy%Complete Steak Dinner$1.29HANK'SRIB & STEAKHOUSE1301 I. 47th ST.We Deliver — CallKi. 8-2522 Ism—the last of which is a dis¬ease.”As president of the Chicagochapter of the Artists’ Equity as¬sociation, he was recently in themiddle of a battle over whetherthe Art institute had the right touse a sculpture-purchasing trustfund for the purpose of erecting abuilding. “It was a matter of prin-ciple,” said Haydon. “If artists donot speak up regarding estheticmatters in the community, whowill?”“Art and humanism will bewhat saves us in the space age,”he asserted. “It will provide thegoal, sense of direction, and val¬ues for the technical authority.“The arts will be necessary tocreate the image of a world whichis desirable, as they always havebeen. They will be necessary totranslate aspirations into tangibleexpression.”Athletics boost academic workAs a student, Haydon was atrack star, holding the Big Tenconference record in the 70 yardhigh hurdles and the conferencemedal. “Sports,” he said, “can bea great assistance to intellectualwork. When I began athletic con¬ditioning I did better academicallyin spite of having less time tostudy in.“I see no reason why footballcould not be brought back to cam¬ pus if it were treated as just an¬other sport, without charging stu¬dents admission or using it tosupport the rest of the athleticprogram.”At present, he keeps in shapeby spending some time in summerat intensive training on a Ver¬mont farm. This consists of . . .“heavy labor, ranging from fellingtrees to building stone walls,which sees me through a year ofsitting in a chair and not sleep¬ing.”The CollegeMany students know Haydon asa gentle, courteous man who has,in an office that is a cross be¬tween the Metropolitan museumof art and “h6me,” straightenedout difficulties in their academiccareers. “My job,” he said, “is tointerpret the rules set by thefaculty and other ruling bodiesand to help the student make thebest academic adjustment to theUniversity. In effect, this meansprotecting the value of a Chicagodegree and yet making it possibleto attain.”Does the new double “F” ruletend to discourage independentstudy? he was asked.“This rule may be regarded asa penalty and hardship but itspurpose is to encourage the kindof study necessary for passing thefinal examination. It is paternalis¬ tic but, for some students, neces¬sary. Others can register for an R.In fact, its institution has encour¬aged more formal notification ofindependent preparation than lastyear.”Haydon views a future lowering of academic standards at UC asalmost impossible. “No school ismore self-critical on both a stu¬dent and faculty level. The facultywe have is itself a guaranteeagainst lowered standards.”Robert A. La vineHarold "Hal" Haydon photo by KiteREMINGTON^SHAVER! 4Hint for a Remington, ask for a Remington.If it gets really desperate, buy a Remingtonyourself (it’s worth it!). It’s the smoothestelectric shaver around!REMINGTON ROLLECTRIC® FOR MENA real man wants, and needs, a real man’s shaver ...a wan-sized Rollectric! Six diamond-honed cutters... largest live shaving area of all! Exclusive RollerCombs roll skin down, comb whiskers up to get yourHeavy Beard and Hidden Beard: whisker bases belowordinary shaving level. You get close, fast, comfort¬able shaves that last hours longer! 110V, AC-DC. REMINGTON PRINCESS FOR WOMENGentle, feminine shaver. Petite, yet with four timesas much live shaving area as any ether ladies’ shav¬ing implement. Exclusive Guard Combs make it sosafe it can’t chafe; you can shave back and forth—no need to worry about which side to use for legs orunderarms. You can apply a deodorant immediately.Three chic colors: Ivory, Pink, or Blue. AC only.products or J85c#fwtq/tan Etorfrlc. SSbucr, division of sperrv rand corporation, Bridgeport 2, conn.• 7:>OPEN MOUSEother business before'the g<»> ohjeeiion to this f,,.„ernment involved a criticism by many of the government membersthe NAACP of the failure of the who had worked to have tins no-Maroon to report “adequately” its tat ion taken off the cards. It wasboycott of the Tropical Hut pointed out that the final objectiveISL commented that the *s to eliminate all discriminatoryMaroon failed to print a story housing from the file, and it wasabout its concert, also. hop* (l that a. letter asking theThe student housing files came nIt* ThebanHi r»rH ^ rutlr •We' orup for discussion at the meeting. .. ... ., . lminated »>n2*. . ... , . .. . ”, the file would be a source ofThis housing file contains a list of barrassmonl t() th, University™all housing available m the neigh- , t given to the governmentborhood to l iiivci'sity students . . *eniPrpviou«? to last vear this file in- 1 ^ approval was given to ar \ , social committee for final correceluded an indication of the dis- .. M „ o . . ‘ ‘criminatory practices of the_land- versj^y- ® 0 * ni"lords but at the government’s re- ■quest, this notation was removed. Joel Rosenthal, president of theThe removal of this indication has government announced that hecaused severe embarrassment to had received a letter from Georgemany students, particularly Playe, director of financial aid,Negro students who have applied asking him to remind Studentsfor housing. • that they are expected to retainA motion was introduced at the an<* ,Qbc seriously the jobs thatgovernment meeting calling for received through student cmthe reinstatement of this notation Payment service,on the housing cards. There was ^ Pm a quorum wascalled for and. failing to musterone, the government adjourneduntil the second week of January.21st AMENDMENT PARTYTHC 25th ANNIVERSARY OF THEREPEAL OF PROHIBITION«c. 5, 1958 8:30 PM5555 Woodlown$49995Christmas Family Spatial2 Adult*. 2 Children. lSDaviThe Qreen Door Book Shop1451 EAST 57TH STREET1-5829 Chicago 37, fit.Quality paperbacks — Fine children's booksSpecial orders filled promptly1367 E. 57th Sr.608 tl. michigart avenueWhitehall 3-2410The natural preferencefor Oxford isfurther enhanced byherringbone patternin our authenticbutton-down shirt.In blue, white andcandy-stripes. Chicago’* Most Unusualmtirni PfctaiYe Stillin progressWESTMINSTERSALEDEARBORNAT DIVISIONPhone DE 7-1762Again remind, all College Studviils of tlieSpecial Student Rule? olwax r fn atEVER Y DAY OF THE WEEKINCL..FRI 6 SAT. EVENING SPECIALSTUDENThate Famous French Mystery“Inspector Maigret”Starring lean Gabin recordsJUST SHOW CASHftt rOUtt l D. CAMTHEY SAID IT COULDN'T BE DONE - BUT TODAYS L&M GIVES YOUlj^UjUi,lXi.i.l.i.li;i,i.i.l.|BDON'T SETTLE FOR ONE WITHOUT THE OTHER*Change to L*M and get ’em both. Such an improved filter and more taste! Bettertaste than in any other cigarette. Yes, today’s IffM combines these two essentialsof modern smoking enjoyment — less tars and more taste - in one great cigarette.THEY SAID IT COULDN’T BE DONE!Who would believe you could get collegecredits by watching TV? But television nowoffers daily classes in atomic physics -and over 300 colleges and universities acrossthe nation are giving credit for TV courses.m I rnrnmm MVI"S TOBACCO « * 4B 0 XLIGHT INTO THAT LIVE MODERN FLAVOR!MMH—Hi——I—IM1 ill 11 iniii 1 ill! ih 111111111111111111 '• ~!• ■ ■ :.LIGGETT S MYERS ‘0 CO, 19'8 . CHICAGO MAROON . Dec. 5, 1958ONE WEEK MIAMI BEACH HOLIDAYHOTEL ROOM & AIR TRAVEL £7! INCLUDEDDC 6s. 4 ENGINE SCHEDULED FLIGHTSPRESSURIZED. WITH RADAR. AIR-CONDITIONED55 E. WashingtonChicago 2CHESTERFIELD SYSTEMdents, and hotels in the town such a study. A further I'esolution the UC may attend a meeting atwhich do not house Negroes. Dave was made which suggested that Charlotte Adelman’s apartmentNoble LUC) illustrated possible both the region and the national 5?24 Ma , , on Sundav Dec’courses of action along the lines bodies could carry on such studies - ’ ’ ‘taken on our campus, like the ^be same time. The latter reso- at 2 Pm- purpose of thisTropical Hut boycott. lution was acceptable to all con- meeting is to discuss and beginThe general feeling of the par- cerno^- w'*b the modification that work on the plans for the researchlicipants in the workshop, accord- *he.,st,U(1y °,n discrimination be project on discrimination,in or to Riohr.nic o,,. iho.-o limited to the Illinois-Wisconsin 24-HourKodochrome eolorfilmprocessingModel Camera Shop1342 E. 55th HY 3-92 Bicycles, Ports, Accessoriesspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1621 e. 55th st.(Including1000 staples)HOMERwould have loved one... anprecision portable!When the student body sitsin class all day, getting numbat both ends, be crazy likea fox. Keep on your toes withNoDoz. Be alert for late-hourstudying and hep on latedates. Safe as coffee and muchmore convenient.SWINGLINE “TOT"Millions now in use. Uncondi¬tionally guaranteed. Makes bookcovers, fastens papers, arts andcrafts, mends, tacks, etc. Avail¬able at your college bookstore.SWINGLINE“Cub" Stapler $1,29+Note to Prexy:NoDoz willkeep your Wfaculties alert, too.—INCION© ISLAND CITY, NEY/ YORK, N. Y,Free UC Deliverysmall . 1.00 large 1 -95medium 1.45 x-large 2.95giant — 3.95chicken — shrimp — sondwiehes151ft e. 63rd MI 3*464525c discount on oil pizzos, Mon, Tu, Wed, Thurs, only,' with this coupon THE UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTOREUC'ers attend workshopUC students, Don Richards (ISL) and Charlotte Adelman (SRP) chaired the workshopon discrimination at the Illinois-Wisconsin regional meeting of the National Students asso¬ciation at Urbana, on November 22. The morning session of this workshop delved into thequestion of legal barriers to integration. Concerning fraternity clauses, Northwestern uni¬versity delegates maintained that although discriminatory clauses existed in some of theirfraternities, they had no problem of discrimination. This opinion was based on a poll thatthey had taken of the Negro — -students at Northwestern, problems and inquiries of re- ate fruitful discussion of the prob-They had asked these students gionaT schools about the organ- lem of discrimination.”if (hov wmilH hp intprpsfprl in i-7»tinnc and a _I hree other workshops wereif they would be interested in izations and agencies that canforming an all-Negro fraternity assist them in alleviating discrim-and results showed that they were inatory conditions. The commit-not. It was suggested by partici- tee will furnish the schools withpants in the workshop that it any other available informationmight be better if the Northwest- concerning the problem of collegi¬um Negro students were asked to ate discrimination,loin the fraternities already exist- Although the subcommissionThe Northwestern delegates which prepared these resolutionsi Tig-replied that the Negro studentswould not be able to afford it. Al¬though the workshop was notunanimous, it was decided by themajority of the members that itis necessary for schools to workat eliminating legal barriers likediscriminatory clauses before tru¬ly integrated campuses can beachieved.During the afternoon session,the social aspect of discriminationwas discussed. Students fromSouthern Illinois university wereconcerned about the restaurantsin their town which cater to stu¬dents but do not admit Negro stu- was interested in eliminating dis¬criminatory situations and gather¬ing information pertinent to theproblem, objections were raised tointroducing the resolutions at theplenary session by members ofthe regional executive council. Thecouncil was originally opposed toholding a workshop on this topic.These persons spoke against theresolutions. A substitute to thefirst resolution was made to theeffect that the NSA Vice Presi¬dent of Educational Affairs begiven the total responsibility tocarry on a study of discrimination,and that the region not pursue TRCM8UNS TRAUMAS!PSYCHOANALYSIS HflSBECOme ft PART OF ov*EVERYDAY LIFE! Ptof it uiHo have om KSCftMNlD ft FEiJ WKJtS lNSENSfmfofoi PSYCHIATRY MftidTO 10 ANYTHING FROM PRE¬SCRIBING TREATMENT 70PERFORMING frontal lobotOMIES Jheld at the regional. A workshopon leadership training was con¬cerned with preparing studentsto be leaders in community or¬ganizations. The Rotary club wasmentioned. A workshop on inter¬national awareness encouragedinviting foreign students to af¬fairs, for example sorority din¬ners, to promote internationalawareness on the part of the stu¬dents. A workshop on student re¬sponsibility, after determiningthat some students do indeed takeresponsibility, discussed meansfor improving the intellectual cli¬mate at a school. One means de¬cided upon was the sending ofbook lists to incoming pupils andasking them to read two or threeduring the summer.All students interested in work¬ing with the NSA delegates from EVEN SCHOOLGIRLS 0#THE CORNER ftREG05yp-IMG ftftOOT THEIR FftlttftfFIXATIONS!U'THEY'RE SAYING THINGS LIKE."THERE GOES LITHE 30HNMYDUREY- ALTH6U6H HE LOOKSHAPPY, WALWk* ALONG SUALlOk)m NvAWUES, HE'S ACTUALLYSUFFERING FROM RCU1E NEU¬RASTHENIA AND POSSIBLY SWplESCHIZOPHRENIA!" SO THEN HtfSE HELPFULURCHINS PRESCRIBE-PLAY THERAPY ANDATTEMPT TO DRfHu 30HNNVDUDLEY BACK INTO THEWORLD OF REALITY BYBEATING HIM WITH THVRJMJL h<WS'. PERSONALLY, /PS flLL 3MOAE THAN I CflA/STAND- I THINK I'U70ST CfifiUL HOME AffP•HT0 1ft UfiSHTUB FORA UTTLE BIT Of iHYDRO-THERAPY BEFORETHE COCKTAIL HOURROLLS RROUNO?'Jolly John’ to attend SU Wassail partyStudent Union has announced that next Thursday, December 1 I, wilt be the date of this year's annual Wassail party.The Wassail party is a traditional Christmas party, sponsored by the Union, at which all students may come to drink hotwassail and sing carols around the Christmas tree in Ida Noyes hall.Highlight of the Wassail party is the entrance of one Jolly Old Dean John P. Netherton, after Mrs. Lawrence A. Kimptonhas done the honors of the tree-lighting.Show at 'Hangout'The Student Union “Hangout,’' already a success becauseerf its hamburgers, announced today that, as the first stepin their policy of providing a place for student groups to en-,Certain, there will be a show next Thursday night.The show will be a new edition of WUCB’s once-famous•^un and Trash” shows, put on by Kent Flannery and otherswho have had a hand in the show before.This particular edition will be a takeoff on the weekendradio program, and will be called “Monotone.” It promisesgreat fun . . . and, perhaps, some trash.The show will only occupy a small part of the Hangout'susual 9 to 12 hohrs on Thursday night.gregg hodgsonUniversal Army StoreHeadquarters for sport and work wearHooded parka jackets — hooded sweatshirts — Ivy league corduroytrousers -— wash Sr wear Ivy league trousers — luggage Sr trunks1144 East 55th st. DO 3-957210% reduction with this coupon — SteamshipRound Trip*340 up - frequent sailingsThrift Round Trip by AIRSHANNON IONDON FA* IS$399.60 $444.60 $480.60Rates to other destinations onapplication. By using stop overprivileges, your entire transporta¬tion in Europe may be contained’ in your air ticketCARS available on rental, purchaseor repurchase guarantee basis.Choice of Over 100*595upStudent Class ToursTravel Study ToursConducted ToursUniversity Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines, hasrendered efficient travel serviceon a business basis since 1926.See your local travel agent forfolders and details or write us.UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Moss. Xmas comes to UCby Don TonjesGifts, ice cream, movies, songs, and Santa Claus — all theglitter, goodies, and Gemuetlichkeit that make up the won¬derful world of a child’s Christmas will be brought to someChicago children’s groups by several of the University fraternities.Parties are still in the planning stage for some, and others havecompleted arrangements.Approximately 50 boys and girls between ages six and twelve fromthe Mary McDowell settlement house will be entertained by PhiGamma Delta fraternity and Mortarboard girls’ club this Saturdayafternoon at 2 pm. Dean Netherton will be Santa Claus’ special repre¬sentative. Individual gifts with specific name tags will be wrappedby members of the fraternity and girls club.Sigma girls' club will assist Zeta Beta Tau fraternity at anotherparty for the Settlement house boys and girls, on December 13. Aturkey dinner will be featured.Neighborhood merchants cooperate in this activity by furnishinggifts and food for the children.Jimmy’s-and the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.Do You Think for Yourself ?(THESE QUESTIONSWILL TELL YOU,ONS)! * J1. Do you find going “off thebeaten track” on a trip(A) interesting and constructive, or'(B) merely inconvenient?2. In a heated discussion would yourather (A) be the “moderator,”or (B) jump in on a side usingany argument to win?Before making a complex decision,is your first move (A) to marshalthe facts, or (B) to ask theadvice of a respected friend?Do you (A) try to figure out aheadwhat each day will bring, or (B)face problems as they come along? □a -□-□ When writing a letter applying fora job, would you try to make it(A) original and off-beat, or (B)factual and concise?If you were getting furniture fora room, would you look first for(A) something comfortable, or (B)something colorful and unusual?7. Would you prefer a job (A) in an- J>x' old established firm offeringsecurity, or (B) a small company‘ntlulBnSr f which could expand rapidly?8. Would you rather be known as aperson who (A) works well withothers, or (B) acceptsresponsibility on his own?9. When you step up to a cigarettecounter, are you (A) confusedby all the conflicting filterclaims you’ve seen, or (B) sureof what you want because you’vethought things through?You will notice that men and womenwho think for themselves usually chooseVICEROY. Why? Because they’ve thoughtit through—-they know what they wantin a filter cigarette. And VICEROY givesit to them: a thinking man’s filter and asmoking man’s taste.,*If you have checked (A) on 3 out of thefirst 4 questions, and (B) on 4 out of thelast 5... you think for yourself!@1958, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., a °n□ -□□□Familiarpack orcrush*proof,,box.The Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows ONLY VICEROY'HAS A THINKING MAN’SFILTER •»« A SMOKING MAN'S .TASTE L 4'RkMMMaA■' ' ";i:Mm-h ':-;.■; -m-e-;.'■■■;..., ■■:: ■ ^ ■ - .■ ■ ■ #cUC to sponsor NAAU sr. championshipsUC will sponsor the 10,000meter, senior NAAU cross¬country championships for thesecond straight year tomorrow.Four minute miler Laszlo Taboriand a host of other world-renowned runners are expectedto participate.The meeting will be run over a6H mile course in Washingtonpark west of the campus. Startingand finish lines will be just westof 57th Street and Cottage Grove’ avenue.Tabori, who chose to stay inthe West rather than return toHungary after the 1956 Olympics,has run a 3:59.0 mile. He willrepresent Santa Clara, California,youth village in the national ama¬teur athletic union event.John Macy, who won the Indi¬vidual title in the event last year,will return. He once was a mem¬ber of Communist Poland’s tracklearn. He represented the Univer¬sity of Houston track club lastyear hut now' is unattached.Two Australians now with theUniversity of Houston club areexpected this year. They are Pat-rick Clohessey, who has run twomiles in 8:55.0, and Alan Law-rence, who placed sixth in the10.000 meters in the 1956 Olym¬pics.Other runners include MaxTreux of the Los Angeles Strid-crs. a member of the U. S. Olym¬pic team and also of the U. S.team that competed in Russia thissummer. Treux won the 19 57N’CAA cross-country.Also entered is Jerry Smartt,University of Houston track club,who won the NAAU 10/HX) meterjunior championship last year.The first American runner tofinish in Saturday’s race in Chi¬cago will he invited to compete ina meet at Sao Paulo, Brazil, onNew Year’s Day, according to1 ad Haydon, UC track coach anddirector of the NAAU event.The New York athletic club willl et urn to the December 6th con¬test to seek its ninth straightlearn victory. Last year, the Uni¬versity of Chicago placed secondfor the fourth straight year andthe University of Houston squadwas third.Other clubs running will include the Cleveland Magyar athleticclub, the Hamilton, Ontario, Olym¬pic club, and the Toronto Olympicclub.Haydon said there is a goodchance the UC team can upset theNew Yorkers tjjis year.The Maroons lost by only athree point difference, 45 48, lastyear, Haydon said.The UC club team includes:• Phil Coleman, Champaign, 1956Olympic runner and holder of theAmerican record for the 3,000 me¬ter steeplechase.• Hal Higdon, Chicago, formerUC track star and holder of theAmerican record for the one-hourrun.• Frank Hedgecock, Champaign,a former University of Illinoismiler. -• Art Omohundro, who lives inGlendora, California, holder of theUC indoor mile record.• Ben Almageur, Winnetka. Ill.,former captain of the Notre Dametrack team.• Ted Wheeler, Evanston, 1956Olympian and 4:04 miler.Other UC varsity runners ex¬pected to comoete are Ned Price,Orange, New Jersey; PrestonGrant. Chicago; and Dave Houke,Grand Ranids, Michigan.The UC track club won theNAAU Junior 10.000 meter cross¬country in Detroit, November 29.TrackLast Saturday at the War¬ren Valley golf club in Detroit,Michigan, the UC Track clubbrought to Chicago its first na¬tional championship since 194 6when Sid Luckman led the Bearsto victory over the Giants.The UCTC harriers gritted theirteeth at the weather <17 degreecold, a blizzard whipping around,and three inches of snow, on theground) but they showed theirstuff in individually placing 1st,3rd, 5th, 6th, and 7th in the Na¬tional AAU Junior JO,000 meterchampionships while copping thefirst place team trophy with alow score of 22 with the runner-up a far 13 points behind.Hal Higdon, former Varsitystar, carried the mail for the clubas he steamed through the finish tape in 38:04.4 with teammatesFrank Hedgecock, Ben Almaguer,'Art Omohundro, Arne Richardspulling in the other points.IntramuralsThis week’s intramuralsports were contained in thepre-Christmas basketballtournament, with the Air Force,Billings, Mathews, Phi GammaDelta, Salisbury, East II “B” andPsi Upsilon “A” and "0” still un¬defeated. Entry blanks for theregular league basketball for theWinter quarter; fraternity, house,and divisional have been mailedto the intramural representative.These should be returned by De¬cember 12th so that the schedulesmay be drawn up during Christ¬mas vacation and play may startimmediately after school starts.Standing currentlyall year championshipsHouse league Fraternity leaguePsi Upsilon 399 ViPhi Kappa Psi 282Beta Theta Pi 262 VtDelta Upsilon 245Phi Gamma Delta 154Phi Sigma Delta 28Zeta Beta Tan 18Alpha Delta Phi 11BasketballCoach Joe Stampf’s cagersopened the varsity basketballseason last Tuesday with a47-33 victory over Aurora. Center Clarence Woods scored the firstpoints of the season with a freethrow and a shot from outside thekey.The first half consisted of thesputtery play that comes withevery season’s opener althoughthe Aurora squad had already hada few games under their belts.Guard Gary Pearson was the biggun in the half, scoring 12 of theMaroon's 25 points and compound¬ing an average of .714. Close be¬hind Pearson was Woods with 9points and a .417 average.East 11 370«/2Coulter 299Salisbury - 282East I 269Vineent 268 VtDodd 208Mead 161East III 127East IV 41 Library petition soonPetitions for extending Sunday library facilities will becirculated soon on campus.Such petitions, requesting that libraries in addition to the“favorable influence” on the committee which will draw up newLaw library be opened for Sunday study, would be likely to have alibrary budget, according to Stanley Gwynn, assistant director oflibraries.Additional library space has been available in the past, but budgetcuts resulted in its closing, Gwynn said. The budget for next year’slibrary facilities will be drawn up soon, he added, and would be theproper target for the proposed petitions.Law school library, currently the only facilities available on Sun¬day, it itself the subject of another petition. Protesting that theirlibrary is overcrowded, Law school students have been circulatinga petition to bar all non-law students from studying there at any time.Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-20«0SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Hon. • Sat. —— 9 a.m. - 11 p.m.Get Them Hot atNICKYSPIZZERIA1235 E. 55th The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 ’ CHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.OKI)RRS TO TAKE OUT1318 Eost 63rd St. BU 8-9018PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO.\ “Hyde Pork's Most Complete Point & Hardware Store"Wollpoper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th st. ADORABLEa*kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk Christmas SuggestionsBOOKS FOR ADULTS - BOOKS FOR CHILDREN - ART BOOKS - BOOKS WITHFINE BINDINGS - ART PRINTS - MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONSPORTABLE TYPEWRITERSRECONDITIONED USED STANDARD TYPEWRITERSCAMERAS AND PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENTFOUNTAIN PENS - MECHANICAL PENCILS - SOCIAL STATIONERYLEATHER BRIEF CASES - STUDENT LAMPS - DESK PADSTENNIS RACQUETS - TENNIS BALLS - GOLF BALLSNAME BRAND SHIRTS - NECKTIES AND HOSE FOR MENNAME BRAND LINGERIE AND HOSE FOR WOMENCOSTUME JEWELRY AND U. OF C. RINGS FOR MEN AND WOMENBLOUSES - SKIRTS - HANDBAGS - TOILETRIES FOR WOMENINFANTS' WEAR - TOYS - STEIFF STUFFED ANIMALS FOR CHILDRENCOCKTAIL GLASSES - GENSE STAINLESS STEEL FLATWARE & HOLLOWAREBOOK ENDS - UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WEDGEWOOD PLATESIMPORTED SWEDISH, HOLLAND AND ITALIAN GIFT WARETHE ORIGINAL MRS. SNYDER'S CANDIESFree Gift WroppingFree Wrapping for MailingPost Office Located in the BuildingThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk Dear Anxious...Of course you may have a Christ*mas party when you get home .. jeven 7 would love to see some ofyour old friends again. Did I hear}rou groan? Daddy and I will hiden the den with the Van Cliburnalbum you gave him (and I seethrough that but won’t tell). Whatwell-trained parents are wefYes, I’ll arrange everything-butJimmy wants to decorate the tr$eall by himself, and Kathy insistswe have gifts for all, now that she'ilearning gift-wrapping at schoolSpeaking of gifts, I’m sure you'dapprove our decision; we couldn’tresist them ourselves.! For theboys, daddy selected a handsomeFaberg4 “Shave Kit’’ (won t theybe pleased with something so ut*terly masculine?) .. . and for thegirls, the most adorable set!It’s a brand-new and absolutelyenchanting “Nail Glace Kit” byyour beloved Juliette Marglen . . ,it holds six travel-size bottles (isn’tthat an Inspiration?) of lusciousfingertip colours - plus the mostmarvelous idea of all - GelatineCllaci Remover, in a tube! Hon¬estly, it’s the most, to borrow aphrase from you know who.The sets are 3.75 each, and daddysays it’s his treat (can you imaginehim shopping in a Perfume Depart¬ment? I could hardly drag himaway). If you think this is overly-generous </ certainly do), just re*member that it’s practically pea*nuts compared to your skiing triplast year-what with travel, hotel,clothes, long distance calls, andthat broken leg. Besides, well haveyou home, and that,-1 confess, isworth a fortune to us.Here come the kids, so love andkisses... 14f SAVIEZVOUSCities our greatest asset and challenge. . . que la Sun Life du Canada est vinedes plus importantes compagnies d’as-surance-vie du monde, avec plus de 100succursales dans toute l’Amerique duNord ?F.n quality de re present antSun Life de votre localite,puis-je to us etre utile ?Ralph J. Wood Jr. '481 N. LaSalle Sr. Chicago 2, lU.FR 2-2390 • RE 1-085SLA COMPAGNIE D'ASSURANCE-VIE SUN LIFE DU CANADARepresentativeSeventy experts will spendfour days this week at UC ex¬ploring how7 city life developedover the past 7,000 years.This pooling of top-rank author-this weekend at UC explor¬ing how7 city life developedities on the course of urban livingthrough the centuries began De¬cern ber 4th and will continuethrough Sunday in a symposiumof the Oriental Institute on thecampus.“The time is ripe to considerwhat we know about the relationbetween culture and city life.”said Carl H. Kraeling, director ofthe Oriental Institute.“The modern city is our great¬est asset and our greatest head¬ache.” he said. “It has been thatway since men first began to livein cities 7,000 years ago. If it hadnot been for the challenges andopportunities of the cities, civiliza¬ tion might never have reached itsgreatest heights.”To mark the opening of thesymposium. LTC’s Citzens boardmet yesterday to hear LewisMumford, authority on city andregional planning, discuss the“University City.”Mumford is currently a visitingprofessor at Massachusetts Insti¬tute of Technology. He will sumup the work of the symposium atthe closing session Sunday.James E. Day. president of theMidwest Stock exchange andchairman of the Citizens board,said in his invitations to its dis¬tinguished roster of leaders n thecity’s civic, social and industriallife, that Mumford’s topic is “mostappropriate because we can appre¬ciate from our acquaintance withUC that universities play a majorrole in the culture of the city.”The 70 scholars assembled fortheir first session at 2:45 pm yes¬ terday in the Egyptian hall of theOriental Institute.Their “homework" should bedone. They were given a massiveseries of documents to read be¬fore arrival to lay the ground¬work for the four-day discussionformally titled, “The Expansion ofSociety in the Ancient Near Eastand its Cultural Implications—Ur¬banization and Cultural Develop¬ment.”The 70 experts will face eachother, sitting in a hollow square.They will talk extemporaneously.Their words will be recorded audthe entire proceedings will bepublished later in book form.The setting in the Egyptianhall places the participants beforethe 16-foot high, 40-ton statue ofthe Assyrian Human-HeadedWinged Bull taken from the Pal¬ace of Sargon II who reigned inKhorsabad, Iraq, in 722-705 B.C.Towering over them will be thegiant portrait statue of Tuten¬khamon originally erected nearThebes, Egypt, in 1,350 B.C.Universities and institutionsrepresented at the symposiuminclude Harvard, Yale, JohnsHopkins, Michigan, California andBrown, as well as UC. Dr. Najial-Asil, former director of an¬tiquities of Iraq, also is expected.“We archeologists have beenlooking at the traces of man’searly history essentially as hu¬manists,” Kraeling said, “but thatis not enough. The symposiumwill bring together many pointsof view.”The participants will includeanthropologists, philologists, the¬ologians, political scientists, ge¬ ographers, economists, legal au¬thorities, sociologists, historians,linguists, a metallurgist and ameteorolgist.“Wre want them to explore withus the cultural manifestations ofcity life which began in the Orientand help us understand what partthe individual bits of cultureplayed in the life of socialgroups,” Kraeling said. “Art, literature, codified fewyinstitutionalized religion, leisure,crime all a*e city phenomena,*he said.WJiy did cities start, how didthey begin, what lessons of thepast can be applied to the pres¬ent? These are the questions the70 scholars will attempt to an¬swer and try to gain perspectiveon the answers.CLASSIFIEDSFor rent WantedFurnished rooms, $25-$40 per month. PhiKappa Psi, 5555 Woodlawn. PL 2-9704. Riders to N. Y. Leaving Dec. 18 7Call BU 8-6610, rm. 3323. $25 Round pm.trip.Hi rooms, private bath, unfurnished,near campus. Rent, $65. If interested,contact Mr. Fields at Ext. 1026.1 room furnished apt. for students.Reasonable, near campus. PL 2-9641.21/2 ROOMSCheerful, newly decorated, attractivelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator bldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man. Maid and linen service available.Reasonable monthly rate.VERSAILLES APARTMENTS5234 Dorchester FA 4-0200 — -—* ......,.0. nm snareexpenses Jos Sawlckl, 520 Coulter.Ride wanted from 48th <fc Dorchester to3800 Lake Shore drive, one way in after¬noon, after 3:30. Compensation. Buck¬ingham 1-1360.ServicesExperienced middle-aged woman willbabysit in your home. MU 4-7709 after6 pm.For sale SEWING — Alterations, hems, curtains.Call MU 4-3941.PersonalFREE. Theft & damage ins. for 1 yr.with ea. new English bike. MI 3-9048For Faculty MemberNear 53rd & University—large 7-room,2>/2 bath, brick residence, plus 5-roomapt on 3rd floor which pays expenses.Gas heat and modern tile baths andkitchen, with automatic dishwasher andgarbage disposals.C. W. HOFF & CO.. INC.Mrs. Redfern HY 3-2215Used steamer trunks, old but good con-dition. Peterson Moving 6c Storage Co., *,m: 25th anniversary of the “Renais-55th & Ellis sance” is tontte. Meet me at Phi Psi and’- we’ll check the action. LarryDear John: Like T can‘t stand Bach anylonger: take the '‘A’* train, i m goingto Phi Psi’s Jam tonite. Maryir YOU DESIRE PERFUME for your-self, for gifts, or to earn extra money,please send $1 for five test fragrances tnMONDIQUE FRERES. PERFUMERS TOPERFECTIONISTS. 550 FIFTH AVENUE,NEW YORK CITY.NEW CAREERS FORMEN OF AMERICA:JET SPECIALISTSNew jets range the world atclose to the speed of sound.People travel, products movein almost half the flyingtime. Wanted: more commercialjet aviation specialists.CHESTERFIELD KING circles theglobe with the Men of America inthe exciting world of jet travel.Nothing satisfies uke CHESTERFIELD KING©Liggett A. Myers Tobacco Co. Ghoul I: I seem to have been rousedfrom my evening vampire activities,friend.Ghoul II: And/rightly so, for we haveto ready our best shrouds for one ofthe biggest monster rallies of thecentury.Ghoul I: How so, sweet werewolfwthfriend?Ghoul II: Why some sympathetic frater.nlty, ZBT, is throwing us one of theghastliest (it’s a gas) parties It'scalled a Charles Addams party Inhonor of our favorite cartoonist.Ghoul I: Oh, how positively blood¬curdling it sounds. When is It comingoff, dear partner in crime?Ghoul II: Why, January 9th—and wecan even eat real earthish food anddance while we drink our blood.Ghoul I: Well, I’ll see you there Digyou later.Ghoul II: Don’t you mean, dig you uplater?H.P. restauranthas new ownersThe restaurant in the Picca¬dilly hotel, 51st street andBlackstone avenue, has ac¬quired new owners and a newname.Henry D. Witt, and his wife,Pauline, this week announced pur-chase of the restaurant, to lx*known as the Imperial.The establishment will alsohave a new and diversified menu.Witt said. The menu will bechanged daily and will be designedto accommodate business men’sluncheons, dinners and ala carteor late night snacks, he stated.The Witts come originally fromVirginia. Witt, a graduate of Dukeuniversity in Boston, has man¬aged hotel and restaurant in NewHampshire and in Germany.FREE DELIVERY» NICKYSPIZZERIANO 7-9063UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorCulture VultureThere is talk circulating around campus to the effect that one of our next new buildings might by a library. This wouldundoubtedly be a fine addition to our academic community. Not only would we have additional space to house other volumes*we would also have an additional place for the Harper librarians to tell disgruntled patrons to go.In the way our present library system is constructed, the only thing you can be assured of when entering Harper to withdrawa book is that (1) the book is lost, or (2) the book is checked out, or (3) the book is in some other library.So, infused as we are with a spirit of public dedication and motivated by an all-encompassing, ubitiquos literary passion, weare in the process of analyzing the contest of several of the various unlisted libraries about the campus, starting with the* IdaNoyes library.Ida Noyes, that home of so many good things, from the Campus Hangout to the Chicago Maroon, from the basement bowl¬ing alleys to the recently but momentarily televisionless third floor, Ida Noyes contains three large rooms on the first floor.The first room, by virtue of its approximate closeness to all means of access, is called "the lounge." Immediately to the westof this room is the "foyer," called such only by the whim of several irresponsible individuals, none of whom had any good reasonfor such nomenclature.The third room in this trio is, by virtue of a shelf of books, called "the library." We have just finished looking at thesebooks, and it is a fine collection. Where else can you find a copy of "The Anglo-Saxon Review, 1899" or the "News Bulletin ofthe bureau of vocational information 1922-1926?" Or the yearbook of the department of agriculture 1913? Have you beenyearning to read "The Marchioness of Brinvilliers" by Albert Smith and John Leech, or "A Woman's Record of DistinguishedWomen" by Sarah Josepha Hale, (authoress of "The Full Vigil of Love"), or "The Diaries of Sir Moses and Lady Montefiore"?The library also contains asubstantial number of workson foreign lands, such as“Character Building in An¬cient China,” "River Sceneryin France, ” "Atala” by Cha¬teaubriand (the tender storyof a white girl raised amongsavage Indians), "In the Landof the Strenuous Life,” theyearbook of Iowa State Teach¬ers college, 1918, entitled "TheBomb,” "Picturesque India,”"Peeps at many lands: India,”and "India and Christian Op¬portunity.”Christianity seems the dom¬inant motif of the entire bibli¬ographic collection. There youwill find such books as "Reli¬gious Radio — What To DoAnd How,” "Can We Still beChristians?” and two bookswhich seem^ to constitute apair "Students and the Mod¬ ern Missionary Crusade,” pub¬lished- in 1906, followed in1910 by "Students and thePresent Missionary Crisis.”We also discovered "A His¬tory of the University ofChicago 1891-1916,” which re¬prints the first and the orig¬inal Chicago cheer, composedby none other than that grandold man, Amos Alonzo Stagg.We reprint this in its entirety:Chi-ca-go, Chi-ca-go,Chi-ca-go — Go!Go Chi-ca, Go Chi-caGo Chi-ca-go!Now go see something aes¬thetic:ON CAMPUSTheaterUniversity Theatre will imme¬diately start work on its next* TOP TV-The Dmoh Shore production, “Tonight at 8:30.”Tryouts will be held Tuesday andWednesday evenings, from 7:30on, in the Reynolds dub theater,located in an obscure corner ofthe third floor.Two full programs of one-actplays have been scheduled, andlarge numbers of actors, design¬ers, and technicians1 are needed,desired, and even craved. The pro¬gram includes works of Edna St.Vincent Millay, Omar Shapli,Sehlitzner and an original musicalreview by Don McClintock.The theatre board, w'hich pro¬duces the 8:30 series, has madeit quite dear that, having triedout for Blackfriars, or even hav¬ing been cast by Blackfriars, willin no way preclude w'orking forUT. There should be no scheduleconflict. In fact, anyone who canlive through two weeks of UTShow—Sundoy—NBC-TV ond the performances should have awhole world of experience to leanback on while learning to livethrough two nights of Black¬friars.McClintock will be well repre¬sented literarily this season, forBlackfriars is also presenting amusical from his typewriter:Dour Mash, an anthropologicalstudy showing the effects of anadequate sewage plant upon adecadent Southern society. Try¬outs were last week.Concerts and recitalsOne week from tonight the sec¬ond UC concert series will bepresented. The Claremont quartetwill play Haydn’s quartet in Gminor, Beethoven’s quartet in Aminor and a new composition bya new faculty member: EaslyBlackwood’s first quartet. Studenttickets are still selling for oneBoone Chevy Showroom—weekly on dollar at the music department.Tickets will be on sale at thedoor the night of the perform¬ance, but they are not availableat the Reynolds club desk.Tomorrow, Richard Dyer-Ben-net, tenor and guitarist who hasgained and garnered quite an ex¬tensive following, will sing a smallportion of his huge repertoire inMandel hall. This concert, spon¬sored by the Esoterics, will beginat 8:30 pm. Tickets are $2 forreserved seats' and $1.50 for gen¬eral admission. Dyer-Bennet willpresent a varied program, selectedfrom folk and art songs over a600year period.Coming up considerably in thefuture, but worth waiting for, aretw’o significant musical events.On December 14, the UC Choirand members of the Chicago(see ‘culture* page 14)SUCCESSFULSTUDENTSM I T. LINCOLN LABOBATOBYbos openings for cilimited number of en¬gineers, physicists andmathematicians in orig¬inal research anddevelopment activities.M I T. LINCOLN LABOBATOBYis on electronics researchond development centerestablished by M.l.T. in1951.OUtt REPRESENTATIVEWILL BE ON CAMPUSDECEMBER 9CONTACT YOURPLACEMENT OFFICE NOWResearch and DevelopmentM. I. T.LINCOLNLABORATORYSOX 21 • LEXINOTON 79MASSACHUSETTS Be out guest for a pleasure test • • • #THIS IS THE OHE FOR WAGOHS! 1959 CHEVYChevrolet’s five stunningnew station ivagons for '59are shaped to the newAmerican taste with fresh,fine Slimline design. Andthey’re beautifully practical— with roomier, quieterBodies by Fisher, an evensmoother ride, new ease ofhandling! Wagons were never more beautiful ordutiful. From low-set headlights towing-shaped tailgate, these *59 Chev-rolets are as sweet looking as anythingon wheels. They’re just about thehandiest things on wheels, too—fromtheir overhead-curving windshield totheir longer, wider load platform.Besides additional cargo space, youalso get added seating room (4 inchesmore in front, over 3 inches in back).And you’ll find such other practicaladvantages as new easy-ratio steer¬ ing, Safety Plate Glass all around,bigger, safer brakes, smoother-than-ever Full Coil suspension and a roll-down rear window (electrically oper¬ated as standard equipment on the9-passenger Kingswood). Your dealer’swaiting now with all the details onwhy this year—more than ever—Chevy’s the one for wagons.now—see the wider selection of models at your local authorized Chevrolet dealers!Dec. 5, 1958 • CHICAGO MARO ON • IB%M culture vulture * vulture culture • culture vulture(from page 18)Symphony orchestra will presenta baroque performance of Han¬del's Messiah. The program isnot free; rather, student-facultytickets sell for $2. And, surpris¬ingly enough, they are notavailable at the Reynolds clubdesk; however, you can procurethem at the Chapel office, thebookstore, and at Woodworth’s.Performance time will be 3 pm.and the oratorio will be presentedin Rockefeller chapelOn the same date, the UC sym¬phony orchestra will present itsfirst concert of the year. The pro¬gram will consist of Mozart’soverture to The Magic Flute,Schumann’s fourth symphony,and Beethoven’s “Emperor" con-. , . give the jewelrywith PERSONALITYeoch piece individuallydesigned and hand*made byRosemary ZwickatUNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave. certo. This is a struggling organi¬zation which needs and deservessupport and credit for initiative,confidence and action. >Aft exhibitionsOne .of the best features of theGoodspeed galleries is its annualshow, “Contemporary art foryoung collectors,” which is nowhanging in the two-room exhibi¬tion hall. This show is composedof paintings and sketches avail¬able for purchase, all for pricesof under $75. Even if you don’twish to undertake building a col¬lection now, stop in to see theshow before it closes.If you are interested in purchas¬ing a picture, waste no time ingetting over; more than sixtypaintings have already been sold.The gallery is open from 9-5 Mon¬day through Friday and from 1to 5 pm on Saturdays. LecturesThis evening Allen Ginsbergwill give a reading and commen¬tary on his own poetry, including“Howl” and also will treat other“beat generations” authors to thepleasures of his analysis. Thisprogram was scheduled by thedirty old Chicago Review and,like it or not, is being sponsoredby the clean and cheerful newChicago Review. This is probablyputting any number of people ina difficult position, but Ginsberg’sdrawing power will undoubtedlyplace any number of people in alarge proportion of Mandel’s 1066seats, even with an $1 admissioncharge.“The ideal university and theUniversity of Chicago” will bethe topic of a discussion to beheld Sunday at 3:30 pm in theIda Noyes “library.” This paneltalk, sponsored by O-board, willfeature William McNeill, profes¬sor of History; Knox Hill, CollegeACASA BOOKSTORECood Used BooksCarefully selected Imports of cards, giftschildren's booksreliable typewriter service1322 E. 55th HY 3 9651for an evening op RARE eNtE*TA|nMENtwhy DON'T YOU DROP IN AT ZBT, HUH?WE INVITE THE ENTIRE CAMPUS TO ACHARLES aqdams pARTYFriday night January 9, 1959Ghouls - Ghosts - Dancing - Food - And general horror-filled funKGDL KROSSWORD No. lOACROSS1. Locust tree,interested7. Anchors13. Kool gives youa : regularor king-sizewith filter14. Bargain15. They’re usedin hanging16. Tea cakes17. Kind of roller18. Those in office19. God who soundslike a cheer20. A little light21. Coloradoresort town24. Ease (French)27. Bouncy rhythm28. America’s mostrefreshingcigarette29. Fusses andfumes31. Pass receivers32. Latin abbrevi¬ation for age33. For whom anyold flamewill do35. Alamos’ article37. Diner sign39. West Point43. Entertains45. Buy yourKools bythe47. Victory march48. Wake up49. La ,Argentinenewspaper50. It makesthings gel DOWN1., German “aha”2. Kind of chat3. First class:compound4. Kool isAmerica’s mostrefreshing __5. O’Neill saidhe cometh6. Roman coin7. English “achs"8. She-GI9. Your inner self10. What bringsout a spark11. Valley.12. Rudolph20. It’s great, asthese things go21. Man’snickname22. He’s generallydear23. You get itfrom Kools25. If it’s old,it’s Ireland26. Ex-New Yorkrail ways30. Horses33. Tiny mountain34. Mighty little .man of themovies35. But he has noluxury, living’way up north36. AH he neededwas bread, wine,verse and thou38. On the-oeean40. Flabbergast41. This old mankicked thebucket42. Dill used intennis?44. Piazza —Marco46. Exist 7 8 9 10 11 121416Switefi from H0i§ )■to Show fresh )KGDLWhat a wonderful difference when youswitch to Snow Fresh KOOL! At onceyour mouth feels clean and cool . . .your throat feels smoothed, refreshed!Enjoy the most refreshing experiencein smoking. Smoke KOOL . . , withmild, mild menthol.. .for a cleaner,fresher taste all through the day!Answer on Pg. 15.KOOL GIVES YOU A CHOICE-REGULAR.OR... KING-SIZE WITH FILTER!eiB5B. Brown * Williamson Tobacco Cor*.14 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 5, 1958 examiner; and William Zacharia-sen, chairman of the departmentof physics. While you’re there,take a look at the books in thelibrary.Motion picturesThis evening. Docfilm willscreen the final section of itslatest series, “How shall we singJehovah’s song in a foreignland?” You don’t need to remem¬ber this entire general title, how¬ever, to get in to see The Dybbtik.All you need is 35c and to knowwhere Soc. Sci. 122. If you havethe money and lack the knowl¬edge, just ask a policeman.OFF CAMPUSConcerts and recitalsThis afternoon the Chicagosymphony will repeat yesterday’sprogram, Strauss’ four last songs,Berlioz’ “Corsair” overture, andMahler’s fourth symphony. Tues¬day the Berlioz will be repeated,plus a number of short numbersby Bartok, Stravinsky and doFalla. The major work will bySaint-Saens’ fourth piano concerto.Thursday the program will againinclude the Saint-Saens, plusMozart’s symphony number 39and short pieces by Ginaztera andBorodin. This program will berepeated next Friday afternoon.This Sunday Rudolf Serkin willgive a recital in Orchestra hall.The concert, bogining at 3:30, willinclude Mendelssohn’s variations serieuses, Mozart’s Rondo in aminor, Beethoven’s sonata in \flat, opus 110, and twelve etudesby Chopin. Tickets run what eversort of gamut there is between$2 and- $5.Motion picturesCurrently the Surf theater iscontinuing to show the highlysuccessful (commercially and. artistically, to get really clicheful) French mystery InspectorMaigret, starring Jean Gabin.This has been held over for sometime, coming later in the monthwill be a revival of Glass Menagerie, with Gertrude Lawrence.This was Tennessee Williams'first-produced play and first mo¬tion picture, and in my opinion,the best of both. The Surf theater has a student-rate policy peimancntly: in effect; at any time,including weekends, seventy-fivecents and one student ID will getyou into this Near North art theater.Considerably south of this thea¬ter is the Hyde Park. The currentproduction is The Man Escaped;this award winning import is anexperiment with a totally newfilm technique which should proveto be quite interesting. DirectorRobert Bresson discovered that,according to its context, a com¬pletely expressionless face ap¬pears at times very happy, attimes very somber, and all othot-emotions to. He attempts toachieve his effects with a totallynew artistic dimension.ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA1427 E. 67th StreetIndividual PizzasCheese — 75c — Sausage — 80cgood for study breaks or partiesFree delivery for University students in dorms or frot houses only.Last order token at 1 :45 am.MU 4-1014- v- ■ \ three phones:MU 4-1015 MU 4 9022$1125 PRIVATE CAR TOURSC U R O P E $1125All Expense 7 Nations Including PassagePackage or Tailor-Made Tours for 1 to 7 PersonsScandinavian Graduate Student GuideSCANDINAVIAN STUDENT TRAVEL SERVICE500 Fifth Ave., New York City 36, N.Y,CALL OR WRITE: Rich or Barb FrankeUNiversity 9-9131 529 Michigan, Evanstonlate paKk,/ 53 H4 ith&tA MAN ESCAPEDpte M079O7IStudent admission rate (JOvupon presentation of IDROBERT BRESSON'S1957 Canne's Best-Directed-Filmof the year AwardBresson has demonstrated that the province of the film is as muchthe inner life of man as the flickering surface of things. A critic hassaid: ''Thanks to him, we know thot it is possible to adapt Proust forthe screen." . . . Realites, (Feb. 1958)Most notable French Wonderful thriller ...film of the year 1 Perhaps the film of the decadeSat. Review Lit. Manchester GuardianA New Dimension in TensionN. Y. Times— and —YVONNE MITCHELLS THE WOMAN IN ADRESSING GOWNInternational Critic's Best Picture Award at International Film Fes¬tival in Berlin.Starting Friday, Dec. 12 — GREAT FILM REVIVAL"A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE"British Academy Awardperformance asvy ♦ - . -&1/Coming events on quadranglesGates hall coffee hovir, 10 t.o pm,Gates hall.World Church fellowship, 7:30 pm, 5144Dorchester avenue. Henry Jones,speaker: "Let there be bread.”Lecture series, Choosing children’sbooks,” 8 pm, 64 East Lake street."Reading guidance in the home.” SaraFenwick, assistant professor of libraryscience, graduate library school.Lecture series: “Segregation and deseg¬regation: the balance sheet 1958.”8 pm. 64 East Lake street. “The south¬ern press and desegregation.” DonShoemaker, editor, Miami Herald.Wednesday,10 DecemberHug Ivri (Hebrew-speaking group),12:30 pm, 5 7 15 Woodlawn avenue,sponsored by Hillel foundation.Business lecture, 1:30 pm. Breasted hall."Electric railroading to uranium mill¬ing.” J. Houstoun M. Clinch of Stout,Baird, & Clinch.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm. Rockefellerchapel and new dormitory west wing.Parapsychology club meeting, 8 pm, IdaNoyes. Scandanavian club Christmas party, 8pm, Ida Noyes theater.Organ recital, 5 pm, Rockefeller chapel,Heinrich Fleischer.United Christian fellowship vespers,7 pm, Thorndike Hilton chapel.University glee club rehearsal, 7 pm,Ida Noyes theater.Country dancers, 8 pm, Ida Noyes danceroom.Coffee hour. 9 to 11 pm, West housebasement, 5825 Woodlawn.English class, 6:30 pm, Internationalhouse, room B.TV series, “Atomic primer,” WTTW, 7:30pm. “The way ahead.” Harold C. Urey,Martin A. Ryerson distinguished serv¬ice professor emeritus of chemistry;Morton Grodzins, professor of politicalscience; William O’Meara, professor ofphilosophy in the College; and JosephSittler, professor of theology, feder¬ated theological faculty.Tryouts for “Tonight at 8:30,” Reynoldsclub theater, 7:30 pm.Lecture series: “Archeology: discoveringthe roots of western civilization.”8 pm, 64 East Lake street. "Beginningslnv Mesopotamia.” Pinhas Delougaz,associate professor of Near Easternarcheology and chairman of the com¬mittee on archeological studies. Thursday,11 DecemberHoly Communion, Bond chapel. 11 30am. Sponsored by the Episcopalchurch.Class in Sabbath and holiday chants,3:0 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue. Spon¬sored by Hillel foundation.Cpffee hour of microbiology students’club, 4:30 pm, room 7, Ricketts northRobert Bennett will speak on "Theaspects of viral epidemiology withemphasis on the adenoviruses.”Hi-fi concert, 8:30 pm, Internationalhouse.Lecture: “The Aurora,” 3:30 pm. Eck-hart 133. Speaker: Dr. Joseph Cham¬berlain of Yerkes observatory.Friday, 12 DecemberJazz workshop Jam session with guests,Reynolds club, 3:30 pm.Record dance, 7 pm. Internationalhouse. Admission 50 cents.Pathology Block fund lecture, 5 pm, Bill¬ings P-117. “Nucleoprotein transfer ofthe antibody - forming mechanism.”Dr. Jaroslar Stertzl, Institute of Bi¬ology, Czechoslovak Academy of Sci¬ences, Prague.Chest conference, 5 pm, Billings M-433the world’s first elsctric portableSmith-CoronaELEMENTARY...why more and more students than everare buying the world’s first electric portable typewriter!College assignments are as easy as 7r with the new Smith-Corona ElectricPortable Typewriter! ’Cause whether you’re an expert or a beginner, you canlo your work so easily, effortlessly and with less chance for error. On theSmith-Corona Electric Portable, everything you type has a uniform, printed,irofessional look. Result? Better grades and more free time for campus fun!\nd now — to teach you to type thecorrect way, the easy way — Smith-corona offers this exclusive, $23.95lome study course on records thatteaches touch typing in just ten days-and it’s yours free with any-Smith-corona Portable Typewriter! So see/our Smith-Corona dealer soon, andearn to type in just ten days on thevorld’s finest and fastest portable!Friday, 5 DecemberReligious service, federated theologicalfaculty, 11:30 am, Bond chapel.Board of Radio meeting. Administration202, 3 pm. .jazz workshop jam session with guests,Reynolds club, 3:30 pm.(Undergraduate math club, 3:30 pm, Eck-hart 207. D. O. Scott speaking on• Game theory.”Mathematical biophysics meeting, 5741Drexel ave., 4:30 pm. Mathematicaltheory of nutrition of fishes,” Nicho¬las Rashevsky, professor of mathe¬matical biophysics.St Nicholas eve party, sponsored byCanterbury club, Calvert club, andLutheran student group. Cost dinner,6 pm: party. 7:15 pm. Chapel house,5810 Woodlawn ave.Record dance, 7 pm. Internationalhouse. Admission 50 cents.Film: All the King’s Men. Judson din¬ing hall, 8 and 10 pm.Saturday, 6 DecemberRecorder society meeting, 10 am, IdaNoyes east lounge.English class, 10 to 12 noon, Interna¬tional house, room B.Concert band rehearsal, 1 pm, Mandelhall. ^Radio program: “Impetus,” WBBM, 9:45pm. Joseph J. Schwab, William RaineyHarper professor of natural sciencesin the College, and guest experts, dis¬cuss “the most Influential books ofour time.”Radio program: “Frankly speaking.”WBBM, 10 pm. Walter L. Hass, directorof athletics, will discuss UC’s athleticprogram.Radio program: “The sacred note,”WBBM, 10:15 pm. A program of choralmusic by the University choir, Rich¬ard V 1 k s t r o m , director; HeinrichFleischer, organist.Audiology conference, 8 am, BillingsS-154.Diseases of the nervous system, 9 am,Billings M-137.Pediatric clinical conference, 10:30 am,Billings M-137.Richard Dyer-Bennett concert, 8:30 pm,Mandel hall. Admission: $2 reserved,$1.50 general admission. Sponsored byEsoteric women’s club, benefit of Eso¬teric scholarship fund.Sunday, 7 DecemberRadio program: “Faith of our fathers,"WGN, 7:30 am. “What God Ignored atAdvent,” preached by the Rev. JamesT. Cleland, dean of the chapel. Dukeuniversity, and the University choir.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10 and11 am, DeSales house, 5735 Universityave. Sponsored by Calvert club.Concert and coffee, 10 am, Internationalhouse. Coffee 10 cents.Rockefeller chapel service, 11 am, theReverend Colin Williams, assistantprofessor of historical theology, Gar¬rett Biblical Institute, Evanston, Illi¬nois.NSA Educational Affairs subcommission,2 pm, 5724 Maryland avenue. Peopleinterested In working on discrimina¬tion project for NSA Invited. Folk dance group, 7:30 pm. 5715 W’ood-1 a w n avenue, sponsored by Hillelfoundation.Channing - Murray Liberal religiousgroup, 7:30 pm, Fenn house, 5638Woodlawn avenue. Perry LeFevre, as¬sistant professor of religion and per¬sonality In the federated theologicalfaculty, speaks on “The frontiers ofReligion and psychology.” Carl E.Wennerstrom, Unitarian chaplain atBillings hospital, to lead discussion.Methodist graduate fellowship, 8 pm.Chapel house, 5810 Woodlawn avenue.Discussion of W. H. Auden’s “NewYear Letter.”Chamber music recital, 8:15 pm, IdaHanukkah festival, 3:30 pm, Mandelhall. Sponsored by B’nai B’rith Hillelfoundation. Speaker: Rabbi HarryKaplan, “Blessed Is the 'flame.” AlsoJewish Uturglc and folk music cen¬tering about Hanukkah theme.Noyes library, works of Mozart, Berg,Bartok.Lecture, “Modern literature and Issuesof Christian discrimination,” by Na¬than Scott of federated theologicalfaculty. The lecture, sponsored by theDisciples Student fellowship, will bepreceeded by supper at 6 pm in theUniversity Church of the Disclpiles ofChrist.Monday, 8 DecemberElementary Hebrew classes, 3:30 pm.5715 Woodlawn avenue, sponsored byHillel foundation.Cap and Gown staff meeting, 7 pm, IdaNoyes.English class, 6:30 pm, Internationa]house, room B.Movies, International house east lounge,7 and 9 pm.New Testament club lecture, 8 pm.Swift hall common room. ProfessorA. J. B. Higgins, University of Leeds,speaks on “The son of man problem:a survey.” Marcus Barth, discussionleader. Refreshments.Tuesday, 9 DecemberFolk dancing, 7 pm, International house,admission 50 cents.University symphony orchestra re¬hearsal, 7 pm, Mandel hall.Christian science organization meeting,7:15 pm, Thorndike Hilton chapel.Concert, "Christmas in Song,” Univer¬sity Glee club, 8:30 pm. Bond chapel.Tryouts for “Tonight at 8:30,” Reynoldsclub theater, 7:30 pm.Sketch class, 7:30 pm, Lexington hall.Live model with Instruction in draw¬ing. Materials to be provided by stri¬dent; 50 cent fee.Rocket society meeting, 7:45 pm, Eck-hart 207.Hi-fi concert, 8:30 pm, Internationalhouse.TV series: "Children growing!” WTTW,9:30 pm. “Clubs or gangs?” MarlaPiers, child care program, Institute forPsychoanalysis, Chicago, and Lee Wil¬cox, UC associate director of educa¬tional broadcasting.KC3DL ANSWERStudent’sTour to EuropeWith Dr. and Mrs. Geo. Mayer ofPurdue UniversityFROM N.Y. JUNE 2760 DAYS • II COUNTRIESfor free itinerarywrite:IRVINE’STRAVEL SERVICE127 Northwestern Ave.West Lafayette, Ind. Switch -Prom Motsto Snow Fresh KGDLIMPERIAL RESTAURANT51st at BlackstoneeardiaUy invites youto yet acquainted.Business Men's Luncheonscomplete, from 85c to $1.50DINNERScomplete, from $1.35 to $3.00cocktoils 50c with dinnerDAILY MENU CHANGE, AND ALA CARTEExcellent cuisine, pleosont otmosphere, cocktoilsFamily patronage invited»M PICCADILLY HOTELDec. 5, 1958 • CHICACO MARO 0 N • ISMan, society explored in Soc 2by Sally Cassidychairman, Social sciences 2 staffSocial sciences 2 has long been subtitled “Culture andPersonality.” In effect, cross-cultural contrast, compari¬son and judgment—are perhaps the most pervasivethemes of the course. On the other hand, as the titlealso suggests, the course develops around two polarinterests: man and society.Teaches to thinkThe social sciences 2 staff sees itself as furnishingstudents with a vocabulary for thinking about them¬selves and the problems of their times. We hope notonly to stir up interest but to suggest to the studentsconcepts, hypotheses, methods of problem-solving, pointsof comparison which will help them grasp in a surer,richer way, with greater confidence and greater appre¬ciation of the difficulties involved, problems which theywill meet in further research in social science or in theirlater studies and experience in general.The course is in effect a dialogue of gradually in¬creasing complexity between one master of social scienceand another. The anthropological discussion of MargaretMead and Ruth Benedict, early in the course, is ampli¬fied and changed when Emile Durkheim enters into theconversation. Sigmund Freud brings in his own distinc¬tive voice. Later, other themes and explanations arebrought in by Karl Marx and Weber. Contemporary ap¬plications and syntheses are provided by David Riesmanand Robert Redfield. We hope that this many-voicedconversation will convey to students the notion thatapproaches to social science are complementary, thatsociety and individual human, beings are sufficentlycomplex and profound to reward persistent, yet deft,study.We watch the masters at work. We see Mead learningabout Manus, learning the language, cataloguing the va¬rious children of the village, becoming privy to the localgossip, recoiling from local taboos, learning to think inthe Manus’ way. Whyte in his Boston slum, Wylie inhis French village, and Redfield in Chan Kom do muchthe same thing, but each adds another dimension ofinterest: .the illegal and the unfashionable, the educa¬tional system and politics, the problem of deliberateventure into a new kind of society.Questions ariseQuestions spring up about the patternings of culture,the way in which a child is brought to be a functioningadult in various societies; the mutually reenforcing func¬tions of religion and family; the way in which educa¬tional system, political decisions, and bowling games aresigns of underlying agreement as to how to behave insociety; who' is the leader; what are worthwhile goals.Then we hear Jean Piaget questioning children abouttheir games, playing marbles with them and in so doingdiscovering the roots of justice, the well-springs ofdemocratic life. We hear Freud explain to a not entirelyenthusiastic audience how he came to elaborate a the¬ory which seems so outlandish; we see him painfullyretracing his steps, reformulating his ideas, aiding newdimensions to his theory as evidence sifts in.Now questions come up about how you get someoneto tell you what he does not realize he knows; how youdeal with a child who may be all too willing to pleaseyou by telling you what he thinks* you want to hear;how you formulate questions so that they get at thesort of data that you are interested in; how you can besure about the meaning of your data; how you handlealternative explanations. Marx and Thorstein Veblen resemble each other lnthe acidity of their criticism of contemporary westernEuropean civilization. Marx is useful in providingextensive theory whch can be set up against the extotsive theories of Freud and Durkheim, and all thmallow us to raise questions as to the usefulness of the¬ories on this scale. The difficulties of accounting for tinorigins of society, the selection of key factors in society’s development, and their relation to a whole spatof institutions (such as law, religion, the state, the artsscience) are brought into play at this time.Thus our authors allow us to get some notion of directversus indirect approach to the study of human beingsofficial statistics; how to isolate variables so that we - and their groupings and the advantages and disadvatWe see Durkheim deliberately select an act—suicide—for closest study. We watch him laboriously assemblingdata on.suicides from all over the world. We see himtake the current, obvious theories one at a time (couldit be the weather? financial ruin? etcetera), put themto the test, and find them wanting. We see him cometo the conclusion that this seemingly solitary act iseminently social; and that each class, each social group,each religion inexorably furnishes its contigent to theannual number of suicides. This study gives us somenotion of how to set up a problem; how to handle datathat do not come in myths, or dreams, or personal ob¬servants, but from the seemingly forbidding rolls ofcan test what we ai'e interested in testing; and how toset up tables for their analysis.Weber focuses ideasWeber focuses his research on the social power ofideas. Jumping off from the question: How is it that thePi'Otestants and Catholics of his day differ so in the typeof education that they choose? Weber goes on to developand test hypotheses by turning to history. Here ourquestions take other forms: How do you question thepast? How do you reconstruct the culture of a period,the type of person who lived then, his motives, his way oflife? Here we are introduced to analysis of “idealtypes"—the deliberately abstract construct of a cer¬tain kind of person in order to see whether his attitudesand behaviour are of a certain consistency. Were theintense interest in personal salvation and heavy involve¬ment in industrial development aspects of a certain typeof Reformation man?Cassidy tells pastMiss Cassidy graduated in 1944 from Manhat-tanville college with a degree in the philosophyof English. She received her MA in Political sci-ence in 1946 and womed for a year at the Insti¬tute of Political Science in Paris. She has taughtin three countries — at the Ecole NormaleSupenieur in France, at the University of Mon¬treal in Canada, and in this country she hastaught in Louisiana and at Berkeley, where shealso worked for the social science research coun¬cil.In 1957 she received her doctorate from UCin sociology. She has also worked here in psychol¬ogy and mathematical statistics, and has taughtIntroductory sociology and social science researchmethods here as well as soc 41. In 1957-58 sheserved as acting chairman of social sciences 2and was appointed course chairman this year.Miss Cassidy lived abroad for the greater partof her childhood, principally in France., At pres¬ent she is working on a research project, eventu¬ally to become a book, on Immigrant groups inChicago, part of which is sponsored by the Com¬mittee pn Indian Rights of the Fund for the Re¬public. She has also done special work with ananthropologist on various sociological aspects ofthe Pentecostal church. tages of studying individuals, small groups, or manypeople. We get some notion of the difficulties of studyingpeople over a very long span of time, of studying peoplein the transitory groupings of a wedding, a bowlingmatch, a game of hide-and-go-seek.Perhaps most of all, the authors of social sciences 2allow us to “converse” with people who are fascinatedwith their fellow men, who are passionately interestedin finding out what is happening to them and why, andyet who have many other avowed and unavowed motives—to benefit American society, to fight race prejudice,to provide a substitute ethic for Christianity, to giverevolutionaries weapons for their fight, and so on. Thuswe see social science in some of its complexity and socialscientists in some of their dilemmas.Not just readingsIt would be a mistake to say that social sciences 2 iscomposed exclusively of a set of readings. It is also madeup of a staff, each member of which is engaged in research of his own, whose particular competence helnsmake the course interdisciplinary in action as well as inintent and content. It has always been true that the research and writing of Soc 2 staff members has stood indose reciprocal relation with classroom discussion.The staff contributes its contemporary interests inlectures so that students may know some of the challenges of modern research: how do you approach anesoteric group in Chicago such as the Pentecostalchurch, or gypsies, or American Indians; how do vil¬lages in India stack up against the villages we havestudied; how do American adolescents compare to ado¬lescents in Geneva; how does suburbia compare to theslum, the American housewife to the Manus or Hopiwoman?Winter — researchThe winter quarter essay topic invites students tomake a study of some local institution—a dorm, a drugstore, the C-shop, a lab—and thus to try out for themselves some of the ideas and techniques covered by thecourse. This provides the staff with renewed insightinto the University of Chicago subculture, and it givesthe students a foretaste of the arduousness and funof research.Social sciences 2 thus has as one of its major objectivesto stir the curiosity of students about people and groupsabout their own society, and about societies which arcstrange to them. It hopes to give them a new way otlooking at people, new questions to ask about the behavior they see around them, new bases of comparisonand experience. We hope that this interest in the humansituation will last and will be renewed as the studentgoes through life into new careers, new homes, nev\crises, new friendships, new learning.5 pizzas forprice of 4NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063 TERM INSURANCELIFE INSURANCEConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Are.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986EAST END PARKSHOPPE1650 east 53 streetDRESSES and HATSCOORDINATESLINGERIEHOSIERYGIFT ITEMS . Ifa 4-9635Come in and inquire . . . about ourMerchandise Club. You'll like it. If he did, the odds are he’llbe hotfooting it right backfor America’s most popularcigarette. Nothing else givesyou the rich tobacco flavorand easygoing mildness ofCamel’s costly blend. Itstands to reason: the besttobacco makes the bestsmoke.Instead of fadsand fancy stuff ...Have a real-cigarette -haveaGAMELM.f. Rem»M#Tot). Co.,Winit«n-Silem,K.C.16 • CHICAGO MAROON • Dec. 5, 1956