Maroons to go east in '60Director of athletics Walter Hass announced yesterday thatUC's varsity basketball teams will play Army, Johns Hopkinsand Massachusetts Institute of technology next year."We want to make the eastern trip to show everyone thatwe have a good program and to add color to our basketballschedule," stated Hass. "We're coming back with the samesquad we have this year and expect to make a reasonableshowing," he continued.1960 will pit the Maroons against Johns Hopkins (at JohnsHopkins) on February 12, against Army at West Point onFebruary 13 and against MIT at Chicago on February 7.The Maroons record this season shows 6 wins and 5 losses.i Edward D. Stonechosen to designUC's new centerAn internationally - famousAmerican architect has beervselected to design University'snew building to house its cen¬ter for continuing education.He is Edward D. Stone,New York City, whose Ameri¬can pavilion at the recently-concluded Brussels World'sfair and his recently-completedUnited States embassy in NewDelhi, India, have been hailedas masterpieces becauseare striking departures fromconventional modern architec-lural style.A grant of $2,856,000the W. K. Kellogg foundationof Battle Creek, Michigan, toassist in establishing the cen¬ter for continuing educationwas announced early in 1by Emory W. Morris, presidentof the foundation. The Kelloggfoundation has long helpeduniversities establish such resi¬dential centers foreducation.Total cost of thebuilding is expected to beproximately $3.5 million.The building will face theMidway from the south sideof 60th street between Ken¬wood and Kimbark avenues.Present plans call for comple¬tion of the building early in'961."This will be my first majoreffort in the Chicago metro¬politan area and it representsa real challenge," said Stone.Announcement of Stone'sengagement was made byChancellor Lawrence A. Kimp-ton."Dahhling . . . there are most definitely positions open on the news and business staffsof the Maroon for midyear entrants and other UC'ers who wish to apply," exhaled ouranswer to Auntie Marne, Auntie Gloria (Porath). Gloria pictured above relaxing in thelounge of Saarineen's dream dorm, the Chicago Hilton, (which she describes as "just tootoo devoone and absolutely dahhling, not enough drawer space, but really the most de-voone dwelling that I've dwelled in since I've dwelled at home, dahhling" ... is the proudpossessor of a new position herself — a lead in Blackfriars' production, The Sour and theMash, a tragedy based on the McClintock comedy, The Mashed and the Sour, a parody onthe beat generation, (photo by Chronis — caption by Dubnow)"It is our hope that Stonewill provide a design for thebuilding that will be symbolof the importance of continu¬ing education," the Chancel-i> lor said. "We at the Univer¬sity believe that the center willmake an important contribu¬tion to the growing stature ofthe city of Chicago as an inter¬national as well as national in¬tellectual crossroad."Stone's most recent archi-r tectural achievement is the(see ‘Edward’ page 7) Eastern schoolsalso oppose oathin education actMembers of the Ivy Leagueand six other Eastern schoolshave recently registered oppo¬sition to the anti - subversionprovision of the National De¬fense Education Act. The reg¬ulation in question wouldrequire all recipients of federalstipends under the act to dis¬claim in writing any belief in"subversive movements."The Maroon, in an editorialthis quarter, strongly opposedthe anti-subversion provisionof the act.In a letter to Arthur S. Flem¬ming, Secretary of Health,Education, and Welfare, A.Whitney Griswold, President ofYale University, commendedFlemming's Dec. 15 statementagainst the measure. Other IvyLeague presidents, includingHarvards Pusey, dispatchedsimilar notes to the Secretary.Griswold's letter presentedfour chief reasons for discard¬ing the controversial provision.First, he recalled instanceswhen educational processeshave "been distorted and dis¬rupted by forces operating un¬der the shelter of test oaths."In the second place, he con¬tinued, these pledges do littleto deter real transgressors, of¬fering them instead "a conven¬ient cloak." Thirdly, "it is ourconviction that belief cannotbe coerced or compelled," hewent on."Oaths and affidavits of thissort zre especially distastefulwhen they are required ofyoung people who are just en¬tering upon the most importantphase of their educational ex¬perience," since they representa "lack of confidence," Gris¬wold concluded.Six more institutions—BrynMawr, Haverford, Swarthmore,Bates, Bowdoin, and Colby —also have attacked the non-subversion pledge. Bryn Mawrand Haverford authorities haverefused to take part in theact's loan program.UC leads way in urban renewalby Lance HaddixUC led an academic march on thecapital last week seeking more livingroom for land-locked campusesUC’s proposal was supported by the Uni¬versity of Pennsylvania, New York uni¬versity, the University of Louisville, Bay-lorlor university and Seattle university.Their testimony was given to the UnitedStates Senate Banking and Currency com¬mittee under the chairmanship of SenatorJohn J. Sparkman, Democrat, Alabama.The school officials suggested that mem¬bers of the Committee consider a proposedamendment to the .Housing Act of 1949that would allow urban renewal authori¬ties to:1. Drop the restriction that at least 51per cent of urban renewal land arounda university be residential housing;versities for neighborhood improvements2. Permit the expenditures of the uni¬improvement contributions.to be counted with local governmental The witnesses were: Julien Levi, execu¬tive director, South East Chicago Com¬mission, (representing Chancellor Law¬rence A. Kimpton).John Moore, vice-president, Universityof Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa.George Baughman, vice-president, NewYork University, New York City.Charles Farnsley, counsel, the Univer¬sity of Louisville, Louisville, Ky.University of Maryland, speaking for theDr. Wilson H. Elkins, president of theleges and State Universities.American Association of Land Grant Col-Dr. Hurst R. Anderson, president ofAmerican University, who represented theAmerican Council on Education, theAmerican Association of Land Grant Col¬leges and State Universities, and theAssociation for Higher Education.A statement by the Rev. E. M. Evoy,chancellor of the University of Seattle,Seattle, Washington, was given to theCommittee.The officials reported that their schools, like the nearly 100 other urban univer¬sities through the country, were beingcut off from needed expansion by ringsof commercial and blighted areas that arebeing priced beyond their means.Meanwhile, they said that all the uni¬versities are hopefully planning to accom¬modate virtually double their present en¬rollment by the 1970s. They brought thisdilemma to the Senate Banking and Cur¬rency Committee.Citing estimates of at least six millioncollege students in the nation by 1970,Levi said that the major impact of thisexpansion required in our national in¬terest must fall upon the existing institu¬tions.Levi said:“Yet these institutions are ‘land-lockel’;they have no open campus area availablefor required expansion. The story overthe entire country is that it is virtuallyimpossible for such institutions to assem¬ble usable construction sites through theacquisition of needed laud by negotiations. “The problem has an even grimmeraspect. Many of the proudest universitiesin our country are today confronted withenvironments of slum and blight or nearslum and blight about them. These condi¬tions drive faculty out of the universitycommunities and turn faculty into com¬muters. The consequences of this migra¬tion are vital to the future of our nation.America cannot survive with punch-clockuniversities harassed by urban renewalproblems.“A simple example may make this clear.Over the past year, I have compared thecalendars of academic events carried on atthe University of Chicago in contrast to asimilar calendar of another distinguisheduniversity, also located in a great metro¬politan center. The Chicago schedules startat seven o’clock in the morning and rununtil 10 and 11 o’clock at night. Late after¬noon seminars, evening meetings, collo-qiums appear day after day.“The calendar of the other institution(see ‘UC’ page 2).Jlitvstfq,Winston puts itsup front...fine, flavorfultobaccos, specially processedfor filter smokingIt J. iipynolcU Tob. Co.Wlnaton-Saletn, N.0.2; • CHIC AGp T A RP O N. • Jan, 30, 1959 Louis GottshalkL Gottshalk gets $10,000Welcome midyearSeventy-two studentscomprising the Midyear en¬tering class will arrive oncampus tomorrow. Midyearorientation week will last un¬til Thursday, February 7. OnThursday evening. StudentGovernment will sponsoractivities night. (For furtherinformation see page 3.) Louis Gottshalk, professorof modern history, has receivedthe American Council ofLearned Societies prizes of10,000 dollars. At its fortiethannual meeting Saturday inRochester, New York, the So¬ciety announced its awards toten "distinguished scholars inthe humanities." The award isgiven on the basis of pastachievement and is unre¬stricted. Receiving support fromfoundations, and its members,the council is a non-profit fed¬eration of twenty-nine con¬stituent learned societies in thehumanities and social sciences.Also receiving an award,Ephraim Al Speiser, Ellis Pro¬fessor, Hebrew and SemiticLanguages and Literature, Uni¬versity of Pennsylvania, was aparticipant at the recent Ori¬ental Institute symposium oncivilization in December.UC leads seven universities in renewal(from page 1)only seldom records an event after 4:30in the afternoon. Why? The answer issimple. It has to do with the habits andrequirements of a commuting facultywhere the events of an academic day mustbe compressed between the hours whenthe commuters’ train arrives and the hourwhen it departs. This arrangement cre¬ates—not the ‘community of scholars’—it instead promotes ‘their mere collection’for a time. We need communities of aca¬demic commuters, not professional com¬muters.”Baughman, who said the 1970 college en¬rollment figures may even hit ten millionstudents, described the “staggering” de¬velopment problems faced by New Yorkuniversity. He complained of a lack ofroom in which to expand normally andsaid that there was no room at all in whichto expand new research projects. NYUis now launching a 100 million dollar de¬velopment program in order to modernize and improve the 74 buildings they nowhave. At the same time he told of havingto go the means of creating a unified cul¬tural center without imposing intolerablerestrictions upon future designers.Moore also said that the University ofPennsylvania is “land locked.”Farnsley, former mayor of Louisville,said that at least half of the expected stu¬dent increase will be youngsters who areliving away from home. “We should beable to create proper college environmentsfor these young people,” he said.Other representatives complained of thegovernment’s not meeting their requestfor additional funds.Elkins had urged a $500 million increasein the loan authorization for college hous¬ing and related facilities. The administra¬tion had recommended only $200 millionfor college housing. Anderson said thathe was shocked to learn of the President’srecommendations for a new formula thatwould increase the interest rate on college loans. He said that he was “emphaticallyopposed” to another administratidn pro¬posal which would bar public collegesfrom the loan program.The proposed amendment of Title I ofthe Housing Act of 1949 would:1. Eliminate the 5l per cent residentialrequirement where a college or a univer¬sity is involved in an urban renewalproject. Under the existing law, in orderfor a project to be eligible, either 51 percent of the area to be cleared must bepredominantly residential of 51 per centof the proposed new use must be resi¬dential.In actual application what happens is:a university surrounded by taverns, ware¬houses, cheap hotels, second hand shops,etc. cannot expand or rehabilitate its areaunless residential use of the property isordered where such property actuallyshould have been used for academic pur¬poses. This leads to gerry-mandering andA PURE WHITE MODERN FILTERis only the beginning of a WINSTONIt's what'sup frontthat counts disorderly and wasteful campus growthif at all possible. It also leads to the devel¬opment of residential areas in areas wherethey should not logically be located.2. Enable universities to directly con¬tribute to the support of urban renewalprojects by providing that expendituresthat universities make in support of theprogram can be credited towards the localshare. Would enable universities to act asresponsible citizens in their own localitiesin helping their own communities to solvetheir problems.3. Provides for a five-year retroactivecrediting provision for expenditures byuniversities, etc. for capital contributionsin urban renewal programs. This provisionis advocated in order that action may nowbe taken in many areas and so that thoseuniversities which have been alert to theirresponsibilities to expansion and citizen¬ship shall not be penalized for aggressiveaction.~ Grad applicationsdue by Feb. 15"Applications for graduatescholarships and fellowshipsgranted by the University forthe academic year -959-60 are dueby February 15,” announced Mrs.Anne Alschuler, secretary of thecommittee on fellowships andscholarships.Mrs. Alschuler reported thatawards for study in the divisions,the graduate school of business,the graduate library school, andthe divinity school will be an¬nounced on April 1.“University award will rangefrom $450 scholarships, which ishalf tuition, to $2,900 fellowships/'she added.WINSTON TASTES GOOD LIKE A CIGARETTE SHOULD l SaveTIMEEFFORTMONEY...with Sun Life of Canada'sbrand new Automatic Pay¬ment Plan for life insurancepremiums.If you’ve ever neglected topay a premium through over¬sight — if writing checks isone of the nuisances of yourlife — let me tell you aboutSun Life’s A.M.P.*. By asimple agreement betweenyourself, your bank and theSun Life, your premiums arepaid automatically eachmonth from your regularbank account. It’s not onlyconvenient — the plan’s auto¬matic features save the Com¬pany expense, and the savingis passed along to you.May I give you full details?* Automatic Monthly Payment.Ralph J.Hood Jr.,’481 N. LaSalle St.Representative Chicago 2, III.FR 2-2390 RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCECOMPANY OF CANADAXUC faculty discusses the new curriculumLast week the now nearly defunct oil collegefaculty conducted one of its last meetings. The pur¬pose of which, explained Robert E. Streeter, Deanof the College, was to submit recommendations to thenew college faculty pertaining to the construction of thetwo year general studies program in the college.The faculty called for students in joint-degree pro¬grams to meet requirements in natural science, biolog¬ical science, humanities, social sciences, mathematics,foreign language, English and history of western civiliza¬tion. These are not individual courses, but individualfields which must be covered.The new college faculty, chaired by Chancellor Kimp-ton, is expected to act upon these proposals some timenext week. Until the recommendations are officiallyratified, Dean Streeter does not wish to publicize the par¬ticular points in question. However, he did explain therationale for and the general nature of the new program."In its evaluation of the College, the Chancellor’s com¬mittee on undergraduate education proposed a three partdivision of the four year undergraduate program. A stu¬ dent will spend two years in a general studies program,one year in his field on concentration and a final yeartaking relatively ‘free’ elective courses.”The old faculty was asked by the gCUE committee tomake recommendations as to the nature of the generalstudies program for students registered for joint de¬grees.Streeter went on to explain that this is not as signifi¬cant a departure from the present system as it mightseem. "Since 1953 average UC student has taken only18.5 comprehensives, while placing our of only oneand a half.”Thus, the average student has four courses for whichhe has neither placement nor comprehensive credit. Theauthors of the ECUE report felt that it was difficult toconstruct a balanced program in the old system, whileworking with these conditions. "For this reason, theyasked the old faculty to assign priorities to those coursesdesignated for the general studies program.”Out of these eight basic areas a two year "core” cur¬riculum will be constructed. Additional comprehensive courses will be used in the elective program and to liUareas satisfied by placement credits.Exactly how placement tests will be handled is still indoubt. "Many members of the faculty” Streeter com¬mented, “feel that the present ‘all or nothing* placementsystem is unsatisfactory. A significant number of stu¬dents are improperly placed, either up or down. A moresubtle, and, of necessity, more complex placement sys¬tem will be constructed to work into the new program.”Under the new program, students registering for aNatural Science joint degree will be held for a minimumof eight general education courses, instead of the presentsix. However, certain substitutions may be approved,such as is currently done when Physics is taken in placeof Natural Science one. None of this will affect studentsalready registered.The old faculty is expected to meet at least one moretime to discuss and decide what is to be done with thepre-professional programs and with the tutorial studiessystem. The Maroon will publish further findings asthey are released by the new faculty.Thursday at IdaActivities night for mid yearentrants and other studentswill be held in Ida Noyes Hall,Thursday, from 7:30 pm to 1 1pm All organizations wishingto participate may call the stu¬dent activities secretary, exten¬sion 3272, in order to reservespace Those groups setting updisplays should arrive at IdaNoyes hall no later than 5:30pm Thursday to begin prepara¬tions. Other groups should ar¬rive no later than 6:45 pm.Organizations will be assignedplaces in Ida Noyes upon ar¬rival. All questions concerningActivities night can be answer¬ed by calling room 3106, Easthouse, New Dorm. Polio shots nowPolio inoculations for thosewho have had no previous im¬munization are now availablethrough Student Health Serviceat 50 cents per inoculation.Vaccinations will be given atthe following times: Wednes¬days, 9 am through noon, dur¬ing January and February forfirst and second shots, and 9am through noon on May 27,June 3, and June 10 for boost¬er shots.Interested students are askedto notify Student Health Serv¬ice, extension 2656, beforethey come in, to enable theservice to plan accordingly. SCF to hearThe Student Faculty Courthas granted a hearing to RobinFreeman, the defendant in theEast House trial two weeks ago.Freeman's counsel alleged thatthe actions of the East HouseTribunal violated certain pro¬tections guaranteed to Freemanby the Student Bill of Rights.The Student Faculty Court hasjurisdiction to protect studentsagainst denials of their rights.No date has been scheduledyet for this hearing. UC representsUC will be represented thisyear on Mademoiselle's nation¬al College Board by Edna Mau-rissa Arrington, '59 and Doro¬thy Cooperman, 62. They areamong students who competedwith applicants from collegesall over the country to winplaces on the Board, accordingto Mademoiselle. Other collegeboard members from UC areRochelle M. Dubnow andDeirdre Collins. Taube namedProfessor Henry Taube, 43,chairman of the department ofchemistry, has been named tohead one of the AmericanChemical society's nationalunits, the division of inorganicchemistry.Taube has been at the Uni¬versity since 1946. Four yearsago, in 1955, he received thefirst award of the AmericanChemical Society for NuclearApplications in chemistry.Meteorologist warns against H-bomb useA UC METEOROLOGIST warned last weekagainst using hydrogen bombs in the arctic toameliorate northern winter weather.Horace R. Byers, chairman of the department ofmeteorology, said the mechanics of rain-making arenot yet fully understood, let alone the ramifications ofchanging the weather at the top of the world.“Before we start melting arctic ice with thermonuclearenergy,” Byers said. "We should be sure we know whatthe side effects will be.”HIC SPOKE at the Resources for the Future, Incor¬porated, forum at the auditorium of the Museum of Nat¬ural history in Washington, D.C.Byers commented on speculation by Harry Wexler ofthe US weather bureau along this line: ten well-placedhydrogen bombs in the arctic would change ice to steam,the steam would form clouds, the clouds would trapthe sun’s head reflected from the ice, the warmth wouldmoderate the northern winter and reduce the intensityof cold waves rolling southward.Byers said that although rain-making is being done, scientists need to go back and do the basic research tofind the true reasons behind the phenomena. Proposalsfor “weather modification, not just cloud modification,”he said need even greater study."In cloud physics, we have a case where people triedto run before they learned to walk, and the consequenceshave been disconcerting to say the least. Now wt needdesperately to go through some of the beginning steps,”he said.Byers directed the government’s thunderstorm projectin 1945-49 and has led the Univeristy’s clour seeding ex¬periments in the tropics and the southwestern US.In the twelve years since scientific weather modifica¬tions siudies began. Byers said, "progress has been dis¬tressingly slow, mainly because most of the effort wentinto trying to apply at once principles that were toopoorly understood instead of into performing researchof fundamental importance for our understanding orthe atmospheric processes involved.”WHILE "we can only view the prospects of weathermodification with optimism," Byers said, “the practicalefficacy of cloud seeding is only partially resolved.” “Commercial rainmaking sprang up throughout theworild, and especially in the US, almost overnight. Un-scupulous operators in some instances engaged in thebusiness, making claims that were without validity.Even today this activity goes on unregulated, except bysome loose requirements of certain states," he said.We nev>d to have more statistically well-designed testsfor all kinds of clouds, Byers said. In addition, muchmore must be learned of such physical phenomena asthe effect on rain production of ground contours, elec¬trical currents within clouds, and the general structureand dynamics of clouds, he said.He said “we should find the true reason why onecloud produces rain while another like it in appearancedoes not.”Needed, he said, is an “index of seedability" for de¬termining in advance if a seeding effort would work orbe economically practical.It is simply a matter, he said, of going back and doingthe required basic research before we press further inattempting to control the weather.Sutherland madedirector of centerAlec Sutherland, who headsthe campus educational broad¬casting activities, has been ap¬pointed director of the new centerfor continuing education.R. Wendell Harrison, vice pres¬ident of the University and deanof the faculties, announced the ap¬pointment. He said that Suther¬land would remain in charge ofthe University office of radio andtelevision.The center for continuing edu¬cation will provide a place and aprogram for meetings of expertsfrom throughout the world onsubjects vital to adult education.The W. K. Kellogg foundation ofBattle Creek, Michigan, has madea grant of $2,856,000 for the cen¬ter.Sutherland joined the Univer¬sity as director of educationalbroadcasting in 1957. Previously,he had been North American pro¬gram director for the BritishBroadcasting corporation.He is a member of the interna¬tional committee of the NationalAssociation of Educational Broad¬casters and of the advisory com¬mittee for the institute for educa¬tion by radio-television at OhioState university. Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon51 OS Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. • Sat. 9 a.m. >11 p.m. Universal Army StoreHeadquarters for sport and work wearHooded parka jackets — hooded sweatshirts — Ivy league corduroytrousers — wash & wear Ivy league trousers — luggage & trunks1144 East 55th st. ‘ DO 3-957210 % reduction with this couponIt's fine for'the boys in the labs to run around in circles,but at The Shoreland we quit doing that years ago. Noexperiment here for good food and drink elegantly served.Outstanding facilities for parties, conferences, conven>tions, etc. Quality apartment and hotel accommodations.Attention to detail makes the difference. All services,food and rooms sensibly scaled.Visit our Surf Room, Coffee Shop or Wedgewood Room.THE SHORELAND HOTEL5454 Sourit Shore Drive PLaxa 2-1000 Smashing Clearance Sale!Reg. $55-$65 overcoats red. to $44.95Reg. $39.95-$49.95 suits red. to $29.95Reg. $29.95 sportcoats red. to $19.95Reg. $12.95 corduroy sportcoats red. to $ 8.88Reg. $7.95 pants red. to $ 4.95Reg. $4.95 shirts red. to $ 2.95Reg. $3.95 shirts red. to $ 1.95First eome, first serveOur Prices Can't Be Beat . . . It's Smart To Buy For LessD & C Clothes Shop744 K. 63rd St. MI 3-3728“In the Neighborhood for 40 Years**Hours: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m., Mm. - Fri. — 9 a.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdayJan. 30, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and intermittently during the summer quarter,hy 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.just like castroUC's first 'tribunal'...V *’ , ♦I'll be judge I'll be jury . . .I'll try the whole causeAnd condemn you to death.(Alice in wonderland)Wolfsonthe Chicago maroonfounded — 1892THE PEN IS MIGHTIER THAN THE SMOOCHBack in my courting days (the raccoon coat was all the rage,everybody was singing Good Morning, Mister Zip Zip Zip, andyoung Bonaparte had just left Corsica), back, I say, in mycourting days, the standard way to melt a girl’s heart was towrite poetry to her.I don’t understand why young men Way ha\re abandonedthis gambit. There is nothing like poetry for moving a difficultgirl. What’s more, poems are ridiculously easy to write. Therange of subjects is endless. You can write a poem about a girl shair, her eves,, her lips, her walk, her talk, her clothes—anythingat all. Indeed, one of my most effective love lyrics was calledTo Maud’s Pencil Box. It went like this:photos by KopplemanUT experimental... proud of it In your dear little leathered> pi-ncil boxAre pencils of yellow and rid,And if you don’t tell me you lone m* soon,PH hit you on top of the head.Honesty comjxds me to admit that this poem fell short ofsuccess. Nothing daunted, I wrote another one. This time 1pulled a switch; 1 threatened myself instead of Maud.Oh, Maud, pray stop this drivedA ml tell me you’ll be mine,For my sweetbreads they do shrivelAnd wind around my spine.My heart doth cease its beating.My spleen uncoils and warps,My liver slops secretingSoon I needs be a corpse.When this heart-rending ballad failed to win Maud, I couldonly conclude that she was cruel and heartless and I was betteroff without her. Accordingly I took back my Hi-Y pin, bade heradieu, and have not clapped eyes on her since. I4vst I heard,she was working in Galveston as a Pliinsoll line.But I did not mourn Maud long, for after Maud came Doris —Doris of the laughing eyes, Doris of the shimmering hair, Dorisof the golden tibiae! Within moments of meeting her, I whipjiedup a torrent of trochaic tetrameter:Oh, my sweet and dulcet Doris!I love you like a Philip MorrisWith its mild and rich tobaccoIn its white and scarlet paek-o.I’d swim from Louisville to \atchezFor Philip Morris and you and matches.When Nelson Algren, Studs Terkel, Ruel Denny, David Ray, Robert Schneideman, FredWranovics, and five hundred other people attended University Theatre's TONIGHT AT 8:30series last weekend — and three hundred more people were turnd away from the box-office— and the snow and sleet warned all to stay home — the theatre was pleasantly surprised.One of the original plays, La Follia, by Omar Shapli was so well received that we have beeninvited to present the production at Northwestern university. The other three plays, all stu¬dent acted and directed, were greeted with generous applause.I wish to thank the Maroon for its excellent news coverage, the administration for not re¬quiring box-office names in order to revive the football team, and a group of interested stu¬dents who were willing to encourage new playwrights.UT is frankly an experimental theatre (of course we have been criticized for experiment¬ing during a performance) and proud of ft. Each summer the classics are produced, now — toprove we are still moving, come to tryouts for our next production in March. The play wiHbe Electra by Jean Giraudoux, and casting will take place this Monday, Tuesday, and Wednes¬day Feb. 2-3-4, each evening at 7 in the Reynolds club theatre. Richard d'Anjou will directa cast of seven women and seven men.Marvin E. PhillipsDirector, University TheatreCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpccMlmiitf inCANTONESE AN®AMERICAN R1SHESOpen DallyM A.M. to 10:34 F.M.OMNMI TO TAKE OUT1311 Boot 63rS So. HI I-ROIE GAY PRINTS r .//,Pure oLucille SSilk & Rayon 1507 east 53rd st.Irtm *14** mi 3-9898 Well, of course, the dear girl couldn't resist a poem like that— what girl could?—and she instantly l>eeame my slave. Forthe rest of the semester she carried my washed my ear,and cored my apples. There is no telling where it all wouldhave ended if she hadn’t been drafted.So, men, you can see the power of poetry. Try it yourself. Allyou need is a rhyming dictionary, a quill pen, and a second¬hand lUUSe. O tftM, Mu Sbtttm.n* * ♦Let’s drop rhyme and turn to reason. 5rii« reason Marlborohas gone to the head of the filter cigarette class is simple:better “makin’s”—a flavor that pleases, a filter that works,Marlboro—from the makers of Philip Morris,1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoFeaturing — Complete Wine List endHors d'oeuvre TobleSmall12"Cheese . 1.25Sausage 1.50Anchovy 1.50Popper b Onion 1.35Vraes Be livery ooo AH Ptexe So E1C ASonionSa 12'Combinafiooi 2.00Mwehroom 1-75Shrimp 2.00Bacon b Onion 1.754 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 30, 1959'' V ' , . ■—-~ ......^r-.^,...,,,,,,. —,—rwrr- «•* mg*-- <t~ \ < -T"- if!< - aif <* ' ':~*:s | ,y.' y.z?-* fcp^ el*'s'2i:oritfc;'esellfllo£r .'i' %' • <-——■—■.■“... i^.—..— ..._ ... >.:.,"..'i: .*"■■I'm sure!..Party for Student Action came into being about two weeks ago. Wewfco originated the idea of a new party felt that the present condition of SGwarranted such action.In the past SG has not represented the campus and consequently hasbeen incapable of rendering any service to the campus. SRP has attemptedto provide only an SG which would represent the political voice of the campus.I* has failed. Not representing the campus it lacks the respect of the students,thus we have an SG which is totally ineffective. This should not be, for SG•an be a potentially effective body.In general terms, we are asking for a Student Government which willemphasize more economic service than it has in the past. SG's role shouldbe two-fold: to provide the campus with a political voice and to representand serve the student. We have several proposals to make and when wehave gathered enough facts we will appeal to the campus for their support.?SAers have been asked continually why they didn't attempt to workwithin the framework of SRP or ISL. In regard to this pertinent question,we feel that to work within either party as they are presently constituted,would hinder our efforts. W'e need the interest and support of students whohave had no previous interest in SG. We felrthat by working within eitherparty we could not attract these students. Any party that has been inexistence for 7 years bound to develop* a degree of political inflexibility,a certain degree of traditionalism. So too a party which has endured for11 years cannot contain much dynamism in a fight with apathy. To saddleourselves with the old core of SRP or ISL would result in total frustration.Most students have a certain conception of SG and will not willinglysurrender this image. To work from within is to merely embroider it, towork from without is to create a new one. We feel that if we create a newparty which has none of the stigmas of indolence and political partisanshipwe can reactivate campus interest in SG. We need more political wisdom.We need more experience and we appeal to our critics to join us and combinetheir knowledge with our determinism. Our goal is not to make PSA amajority party, but to make SG a working, useful organization. But wepemind you, the student, that no matter what kind of a program or platformany party presents it is doomed to failure without a student-supported SG.Larry HarrisRobert Brown I'm skeptical...The recent letter of Mr. M. Wolfson concerning the formation of anew student political party should be a sign of encouragement to those whoare critical of Student Government and its performance on the campus. Init he indicates that there are a number of students who are concerned withtransforming SG into a more meaningful student organization and, moreimportant, that some of these people are prepared to do more than justpublish their critiques.However, as a person closely associated with student politics and SGsince 1955, I am, at best, skeptical with regard to their apparent approachto solving the many real problems facing students. For example, Mr. Wolfsonsuggests that SG set up a book co-op, presumably to offer students texts atprices below the exorbitant rates one pays at local bookstores. Since Mr.yVolfson is new to the campus he is probably unaware of the fact that thisidea was first advocated by SRP in 1952 and has been periodically raisedagain in the ensuing years. This proposal has always received widespreadcampus support but, in spite of this fact, the administration has been un¬willing to grant approval. Apparently Mr. Wolfson believes that the organiza-.,tion of a new political party might change the administration view of thematter. I would seriousJy question whether it will.Again, Mr. Wolfson states the SG has been stagnant for many years.However, a glance at the front page of the last issue of the Maroon revealsan article concerning the co-op flight to Europe at a roundtrip cost of about$280 (less than half of the commercial fares). This flight, of course, issponsored by SG and was initially brought to the campus through the effortsof SG. In addition the student discount service at numerous motion picturetheatres and local commercial establishments is also an SG service. TheRussian student exchange program, a reality this year, was initially proposedby SRP on a national basis at a time when no other group seemed willingto endorse the idea. The Frankfurt exchange, initiated by an ISL government,still exists. National Academic Freedom week was born on this campusand introduced, through NSA, by a UC delegation. I could continue thisletter in a similar manner listing the various positive accomplishments ofSG but the point should be obvious, even to Mr. Wolfson.I believe that I am speaking for most SG members in welcoming thesenew students to participation in student politics. But I believe that the campuswould be best served if the PSA members joined SG committees and familiar¬ized themselves with the nature of the organization before championinga "new cause". Indeed, I think that their participation would not only givethem much needed experience but would also bring new and stimulatingideas to the present Student Assembly. It remains to be pointed out thatSG is a democratic organization and non-SG members have full speaking•*.nd voting rights at all open committee meetings (CORSO and E&R of coursehave closed membership).Myma CartGadflyDiscuss S C fever, failings — finds remedyThe periodic flourish of con¬cern over Student Governmenthas arisen again on campus.Indications of such activity:Last week’s Gadfly was de¬voted to consideration of thetwo traditional campus politi¬cal parties and a possible newset-up of SG. A committeewas established in studentgovernment to investigate itsfaults and inefficiencies. Anew campus political party,PSA, party for student action,was recently formed. A verybrief analysis of the situationon campus runs as follows:SRP is the majority in gov¬ernment, self-concerned andcontent with an inefficient, in¬effective, disrespected SG.ISL is the minority in gov¬ernment, concerned but un-enthusiastic and lackingsupport.PSA is naive, inexperienced,and out to make a name forthemselves on campus.SG itself lacks manpower,campus respect, and admin¬istration trust and coopera¬tion.CAL (campus at large) isactivity wise and politicallyapathetic.ODS (office of the dean ofstudents) is contemptuousand distrustful of an inde¬pendent SG, (i.e., all stu¬dents, no administration).This does not present a veryoptimistic picture. It seemsthat if there is to be an effec¬tive student government, allindividuals and groups con¬cerned will have to take anactive part and be willing foroeconciliation.®HE ROLES that such in¬ dividuals and groups shouldplay is best understood interms of what the end of stu¬dent government should be. Arepresentative student govern¬ment has two primary func¬tions. It should be a servicegroup to the campus, its or¬ganizations, and the students.It also should be a politicalcenter of the campus and thepolitical voice of the students,concerning itself with local,national, and internationalconsiderations. Two very basicexamples of these functionswould include establishmentof campus co-operatives ofvarious natures and expres¬sion of student opinion overthe Hyde Park redevelopmentto the city council. An effici¬ent, respected, and responsiblegovernment is necessary to ac¬complish such ends.There may be disagreementamong the parties about theemphasis of the respectivefunctions and this will en¬gender the continuation of aparty system. However, allparties involved should recog¬nize the primary importanceof both functions and turn thegovernment into an effectivebody rather than the narrowpolitical playground which ithas been in the past. A poli¬tically aware and concernedstudent body which votes inthe campus election wouldserve not only as an incentivefor the government membersto work but also would tendto keep party haggling to aminimum and set the interestsof the campus at the forefront.NOW THE great problemremains: how to get the cam¬pus at large and the adminis¬ tration to do their parts in thissystem in supporting and co¬operating with the govern¬ment.A student who, when con¬fronted by a governmenthopeful at election asks whatthe government does shouldunfortunately receive thetruthful answer "not a damnthing,” (apart from sending aletter off now and then andpassing some campus resolu¬tion that carries no weight.)With its present physical limi¬tations, and lack of responsi¬bility and power it can do littlemore.It is a small self-perpetuat¬ing political group with nopower and an unheard voice.To make the government theactivity and political centerabout which the student bodyis organized the administra¬tion is going to have to loosena few strings that they holdover the campus, includingpurse strings. Among the re¬sponsibilities of an improvedgovernment should be studentactivity, budgeting and calen¬daring.The government would thenhave power, responsibility andconsequently respect. Withadequate representation non¬government students andother activities would not haveto worry about the govern¬ment exploiting the campuswith its power. This would re¬quire quite a concession on thepart of the administration, butit would result in a respectedand responsible SG which is atthe center of an aware andautonomous student body.This appears desirable butthen again this may not be the view of those on the other side functional political organiza-of the desk. tion that it should be and theTHE FINAL result is utop- campus may approach theian, but with these ends in concerned, politically awaremind the government may ap- body that it should be.proach the representative, LinusGadfly PolicyGadfly is an attempt on the part of the Maroon to pro¬vide provocative ideas to the campus at large. The columnis meant to be written by students and faculty memberswho wish to have their ideas expressed in the Maroon, andis not a Maroon staff editorial column. Articles will beprinted unsgined, and the author's name will be held inthe strictest confidence by the Gadfly editor.The opinions expressed in the column Gadfly do notnecessarily represent the editorial policy of the Maroon,or its staff.Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andIntermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon,Ida Noyes hall, 1212 East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-0890,extensions 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionsby mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday.Editor-in-chiefRochelle M. DubnowManaging editor Associate editor Business managerDonna Davis Neal Johnston Lawrence D. KesslerAdvertising manager Gordon L. BriggsNews editor Lance HaddixCarpentry editor Lance HaddixSports editor Dan CosgroveCalendar editor Marge SchwarzProfiles Robert Lavine, John MillsSG reporter ... .Bert CohlerArtists Ron Burton, Rick Ellis, R. David SilverCirculation manager Joan HelmkinAssistant culture editor Ozzie ConklinEditor emeritus. , .Gary MokotoffPhoto co-ordinator .Les KitePhotographic staff Jerome Buchman, Karl Figlio,Dean Chronis, John Wall, Morris Newman, John McMahon, Tom FentonEditorial staff: Harold Bernhardt, Joel Ashenrarb, Tom Coblk, Shelley Stolo-wich, Robert Lavine, John Mills, Ozzie Conklin, Peter Jacobsen, LindaMorrison, Marge Schwarz, Bob Brown, Rosemary Galli, Albert PodellJan. 30, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5profileOld Maroon editors don't die —they join the facultyIf one day somebody wereto ask me what happens to re¬tired Maroon editors, I wouldsay that William H. McNeill is agood example of what should hap¬pen to an ex-editor.McNeill, a quiet, unassuminggentleman, is now a professor inthe department of history. He wasborn in Canada, but moved toChicago before he was ten. Hewent to the UC laboratoryschools, and received a AB andan MA from the University also— in addition to being Marooneditor and Phi Beta Kappa.Shortly after the opening ofWorld War II, he was draftedas a private in the army, buthe went to officer’s candidateschool and was discharged as amajor at the end of the war. In1947, a year after his separation,he received his PhD in historyfrom Cornell university. Thatsame year he came to UC, in themiddle of the organization of thehistory of Western civilizationscourse. He explained briefly whyhe was no longer teaching in theCollege:"Up until two years ago, I was^teaching on the College historystaff. I came here when theywere first starting the course,and took a part, with ChristianMackauer and five or six others,in planning the course.*T moved into the history de¬ partment because it was difficultfor me to retain my enthusiasmwhile teaching the same materialyear after year. In the depart¬ment I am able to vary the con¬tent of many of my courses prettymuch to suit myself.”McNeill was reluctant to dis¬cuss the College, and the changesnow taking place, because of histwo year absence and pre-medi-tated isolation. But he did com¬ment on some things which hethought were wrong in the oldCollege.“The graduates under the oldfourteen comprehensive systemlacked some qualifications for acareer or profession. The ideawould have worked if we hadgotten people in their second orthird year of high school, butmostly we had high school grad¬uates.'The way the College was work¬ing in 1950-53 was not the wayit was intended. The originalHutchin’s AB was intended to bean ‘education for citizenship* —not as a preparation for an MAor a PhD. It was supposed to con¬tain the last two years of highschool — an excellent high school— and then the first two yearsof college.‘‘It was planned with the reali¬zation that in the future moreand more people would be want¬ing AB’s, much as in previousPhones change numbersChanges in some campus telephone numbers, the result ofthe telephone system’s growth and the installation of a campusdial system, have been announced.As of March 1, clinic numbers will be taken off the Midway 3-0800line and placed, for outside calls, on the MUseum 4-6100 line. Newclinic exchanges, and those new numbers which will come into effectsometime during March, as conversions are possible, will be listed inthe University directory. The directory will be available for distribu¬tion to University departments and phone booths February 23.Geoffrey Plampin, editor of official publications, comments thatthere will “no doubt be some confusion” as the new exchanges comeinto effect, but that meanwhile, numbers will be available throughthe campus operator. — years people had set the highschool degree as their goal. TheHutchin’s AB was a terminal de¬gree.”“The plan broke down on in¬stitutional inertia. We shouldn’thave antagonized the high schooladministrators, even thoughmuch of the criticism was valid.You can’t change things by ‘sweetreason’ alone.“The present modifications,” hecontinued, “have some promise:their success depends on the fac¬ulty and persons in key positions,such as the dean of the college.“At the root of the problem,of course, is the poor quality ofthe American high school sys¬tem; and the poor quality of thepersonnel, which often scarespotentially good men.”Much of McNeill’s academic lifehas been directed toward thework which he is now writing;an integrated, comprehensive,universal world history which hetitles The Rise of the West Sincehe has been at the University, hehas written two books coveringworld or western history: one,extraordinarily familiar to manyUC students, is the History hand¬book for the history of westerncivilizations course; the other iscalled Past and Future.McNeill’s objection is that pre¬vious world histories have beentoo particulate. All of them treatthe rise and fall of the world'scivilizations as essentially parti¬culate events, with little or norelation to one another. Hewishes to show, much in the man¬ner of the handbook, how eachof these cultures interact witheach other, and where they arecontinuous; and how they haveresulted in the present-day domi¬nation of the West."... I am convinced that thereis a world history in a far moreintegral sense than Spengler andToynbee or the textbook writershave been ready to see.”by John Mills L.7-: . * \IHWilliam H. McNeillKGDL KROSSWORD No. 14ACROSS1. Esther Wil¬liams’ afterglow7. Put on an act13. The gyys whomade it14. Kind of galwho makes itthe hard way15. Guy who’llmake it in May16. Put in front of17. It’s usually righton top of you18. Low kindof heel19. Guided21. Letter forcrewmen?23. It’s human26. Does she giveyou your lumps?29. Riyer thatsounds like love30. That drivelyou hand her31. One way tomeet expenses32. Face the :Kools are cooler33. You and me,kid34. Middle ofa kiss35. Kind of potor session37. Tear jerker *40. Soldier boys43. Rockefellerhangout45. Opposite ofde starboard47. Get through48. Real cool49. Kind of walker50. Assessment forbeing a bad lad?DOWNL Cummerbund 2. Half of pleasure3. Fontanne’syouth4. Friend fromParis6. Remember:Kools arefresh6. “This GunFor ”7. Dance ofthe 30’s8. Bottle hitters9. It’s not quiteample10. Specializingin digs11. Is theresomebody T12. Peroxided20. Twitches22. Hoop-moti¬vated dances23. Cheer-leadertalk24. I love Latin25. It’s almost ascool as a Kool27. Sort of elope28. This is thething32. Big-date duds35. Sayonara folks36. Lighted,Koolly37. you tryKools, you’llstay with ’em38. FavoriteRussian wordat U.N.39. They go aroundwith ends40. Navy mascot41. My foolishfriend42. Hell of a river44. Plural of 34Across44. Kind of pal 1 7 3 4 5 H131517 Hie 7 8 9 10 II 12rLm Seven from UCPhi Beta KappasSeven graduates have beenelected to Phi Beta Kappa,national honorary society, fortheir scholarship.Chicagoans elected are: DanielU. Levine, who received a bach¬elor’s degree in 1954; and HeleneS. Rudoff, who was granted abachelor’s degree from the Uni¬versity in August.Others named to membershipin Phi Beta Kappa are: MissTerry K. Satinover, Joan C. Mohr,Robert V. Zener, Robert J. Beck. 1QD3H -iDUld Hsay /wou$of sfOH uiag. ipf i/vigffN ASa aHGHBBEBE■Ho irsrao3 N I 1« v 9 na 33 S 0 dA13W.0Ha 3 9 V X s i 3 3 a T S3 a ti 3 1 dA N Y a 1 YN a w V, rS n ■l X 3 0 HW a n w V3 0 V ar Ae M i VE 0 i N 3 sft N w n 1 VE S V T d sb3MSNV *)GDXHOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and Waffles 1342Open from Down to Dawn east 53 st.35 36 ■ 37 3843 444749 J 454850 46• At cool and dean at a breath oft Fineet leaf tobacco...mild refreshing mentholand the world’* moet tterpudhhr feted filter)■e With every puff your mouth fade dean,your throat refreehed IQmehcafc MostlSkficshii^C^offSlte,,... At60 REeULAR SIZE KOOL WITHOUT PtLTtlMei»#». Brown * WillUmien tUmn Cot*. SWITCH FROM j-|U|S TOitTERKGDLfroth air.IMUMMNTHOlNINB.HU The Qreert Door Book Shop1451 EAST 57TH STREETHY 3-5829 Chicago 37, III.Quolity paperbacks — Fine children's booksSpecial orders filled promptlyKEN JOFFE PRESENTSFewJaZz2 PERFORMANCES ... 8 and 11 P.M.liLES ^ 3t&efi»ua6 IviONKJUltlGRM „+ <|afwAyaumimALL SCATS RESERVED, TICKETS $2.»5 end $3.85 led. Ten* QUfarettei-*»L w LOOP: Discount Record*,2M H. LaSalle: Hudson-Rom, t E. Randolph; Sey¬mour's Records, 439 8.Wabash.NORTH: Lisbon's, 4t B.Oak. EVANSTON:Sherman.SUTH: Met Mask, Ml th; Sutherland Lounge,fUt 8. Drexel; ■Milton'sMask, ate R. mb.MAIL ORDERS: Endoae SoK-Addronod, Stamped Envelop* tecNKW JAZZ, CIVIC WERA house, choo6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 30, 1959CLASSIFIEDS Edward Stone to design...For rentitooms for rent. $25-$45 per month. Eve-ning meals. Phi Kappa Psl Frat, 5555Woodlawn. PL 2-9704., rm unfura. apt. on Dorchester nearc |af *70/month. Phone Sherry Glatt,KE 6-0228, or WA 5-6935 between 9 am* 5 pm.t rm turn. apt. 53rd Sc Klmbark. $82.50.Call Mrs. HUfford, FI 6-8300, 9:30-5:30.2'/2 ROOMSCheerful, newly decorated, attraclvelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator pldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man. Maid and linen service available.Reasonable monthly rate.VERSAILLES APARTMENTS5234 Dorchester FA 4-0200Spacious rms. in elegant residence nearlake Sc IC. Available for students orbusiness girls. MU 4-7844. Personal* For sale Going to Europe? Drive a new sedanwhile you’re there for $3.11 per day.Better yet, drive a car all summer andbring It back home with you for lessthan $1,100! International Auto planrents Fiats, Renaults, Peugots, and canarrange for your purchase of a Porsche.Jaguar, Hillman or other fine car. Nored tape, on Insurance worries! Campusrepresentative: HY 3-5228.Have the Beatniks replaced the Jukebox? The Nlcely-Nicelles.Found: Titfb women’s purses, one withimmigration ID card. Inquire at Activi¬ties office. International house.Lost: Lady’s gold Gruen watch, brokenband. Reward. Contact Hughes, BU8-1751.HOT DAMN! The Beatniks are in townagain. Raker, break the chains thatbind thee! A.G.Protegee meeting Mon., at tea. Usualtime ... Big Daddy>51, pijrm. Just washed. $100. HY 3-1052.New F.ng. bikes, discounts. MI 3-9048.WantedStudent wanted for part-time Incometax work. Simple returns. Phone Cas-ner, CEdarcrest 3-4053, STewart- 3-6681. Allen Ginsberg and Gregory Corso, "thebeatnik bards from the Frisco Front,”will be continuing their missionary ac¬tivity on behalf of BIG TABLE on Sun¬day from 3 to 6 at the Gate of Horn.Poetry, questions, and reading to jazz.Attention all Beatniks: use Arid to besure. The girls who sits next to you.WORKSHOP IN CREATIVE WRITINGPLaza 2-8377Services I want to start a nursery school and Ineed some customers (about six).Contact Anne O’Brien, DO 3-1967, 5417Kimbark.SEWING—Alterations, hems, curtains.Call MU 3-3941.HELP WANTED — SUPPORT GOODGOVERNMENT. Join the Despres Re-clectlon campaign. For fun, excitement,fresh air—and a liberal, honest govern¬ment-call campaign headquarters, BU8-7441. MARTHA: Please send me my linsey-woolsey comforter; standing up i*i boatson frozen rivers and saying my prayerskneeling in the snow may be fine forthe troops’ morale, but It’s sheer hellon these old bones. GEORGEErnie v. S. Hemingway:We need you In Cuba! *Lady Brett (from page 1)new United States embassy atNew Delhi, which the NewYork Times has said "is prob¬ably the most elegant in theworld." It was dedicated Janu¬ary 3, 1959, in the presenceof Prime Minister JawaharlalNehru, who said:"It was enchanted by thebuilding ... I think it is a verybeautiful structure and a veryattractive combination of typ¬ically Indian motifs with latestmodern techniques."Stone has designed hotelsall over the world (includingthe El Panama hotel two milesnortheast of Panama city) aswell as structures for educa¬tional institutions in other sec¬tions of the United States.Among his recent general edu¬cational buildings have beenthose for the Mohawk ValleyTechnical institute, Utica, NewYork; and the University ofArkansas; the University ofSouth Carolina; and Stanforduniversity."The University of ChicagoComing events on quadranglesFriday, 30 JanuaryLecture scries: “History and the king¬dom of God,” by Dr. Paul Tillich,11:30 pm. Mandel hall.Inler-varsity Christian fellowship, non-denominational Bible study group,meeting at 12:30 pm, Ida Noyes Eastlounge.Mathematics club meeting, 3:30 pm.Eckhart 207. S. Schanel will speak on“Mathematics and counting moun¬tains.”Zoology club special meeting. Zoology14. 4:30 pm. “Experiments on selec¬tion In tr^petld fruit fly,” L. C.Birch, reader In zoology. University ofSydney, Australia.Lecture series, “Pharmacology andThe report of the StudentGovernment committee onthe Chicago Review will bebe available for distributionin a week. The report is nowbeing printed.physiology,” 6 pm. Downtown center,“initiation and conduction of a nerveimpulse,” Julian M. Tobias, professorin tlie department of physiology.Sabbath service, 7:45 pm, Hillcl founda¬tion, 5715 Woodlawn.Lecture, sponsored by the Politics club,8 pin. Social Sciences 122. “The politi¬cal and moral implications of “DoctorZhivago,” Irving Howe, professor ofEnglish at Wayne university.Lecture series: “The still point: a lec¬ture-demonstration series on thedance,” 8:15 pm. Downtown center.“Ethnic dance: the spirit of Spanishdance,” Elissa Stigler. Instructor indance. Chicago Musical college.Lecture series: "The primitive art:sculpture of Negro Africa,” 8:15 pm,Art Institute. “The Art of CentralWest Africa,” Allen Sawyer, curatorof primitive art, Art institute.University Theatre: Tonight at 8:30,Reynolds club theatre.Record dance, 7 through 11 pm. Inter¬national house.“The political and moral implicationsof Doctor Zhivago,” 8 pm. Social Sci¬ences 122, sponsored by the PoliticsClub. Speaker, Irving Howe, editor ofDissent magazine.Social Action Committee MeetingNAACP, 4 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Happy birthday George.Saturday, 31 JanuaryUniversity Concert band rehearsal. 1:15pm, Mandel hall. Indian Republic day celebration. 8 pm,International house.University Theatre: Tonight at 8:30,Reynolds club theatre.Radio broadcast: “The Sacred Note.”10:15 pm. WBBM. A program of choralmusic by the University choir. Rich¬ard Vlkstrom, director; HeinrichFleischer, organist.“The demand for equality shakes thenation,” Bayard Rustln, secretary toRev. Martin Luther King, 10 am, Inthe Reynolds club. Sponsored by theYoung Peoples Socialist League.“Labor ” lecture by B. J. Widick, ChiefStewards' Body Local 7, UAW, 2 pm,Reynolds club. Sponsored by theYoung Peoples Socialist League.Michael Harrington speaking on social¬ism in America, 4 pm, Reynolds club.Sponsored by the Young Peoples So¬cialist League.Sunday, 1 FebruaryRoman Ctaliolic Masses, 8:30, 10 and 11am. DeSales house. 5735 Universityavenue. Sponsored by Calvert club.University religious service, 11 am,Rockefeller chapel.Lecture-discussion series: “Justice,” 8pm, Hillel foundation, 575 Woodlawnavenue. “Justice and the bureauc¬racy,” Herbert Storing, assistant pro¬fessor of political science.University Theatre: Tonight at 8:30,Reynolds club theatre.Musical society, chamber music work¬shop, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes library.“The mission of the church to the labormovement,” Prof. Kermlt Eby. precededby a luncheon at 6 pm. Church ofthe Disciples of Christ. 5655 Univer¬sity.Monday, 2 FebruaryMaroon meeting 3:30, Ida Noyes hall.Classes in elementary Hebrew, 4 pm.Hillel foundation, 5715 Woodlawn ave¬nue.Folk Dance group, 4:30 pm, Hillel foun¬dation, 5715 Woodlawn avenue.Lecture series, “Research in cancer,”pathology 117, 5 pm. “Radiation Car¬cinogenesis,” Dr. Shields Warren,professor of pathology. Harvard medi¬cal school.International house movies, 7 and 9 pm,International house The GoldenDemon.Publicity Committee Meeting. NAACP,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Tuesday, 3 FebruaryLecture-series: Psychotherapy.” Rosen -wald 2, 11 am. Dr. Nathan Ackerman.UC Symphony orchestra rehearsal, 7:30pm. Mandel hall.Black friars rehearsal, 7:30. Unitarianchurch. Wednesday, 4 FebruaryLecture, sponsored by the businessschool, 1:30 pm. Breasted hall. “Com¬monwealth Edison company’s newdividend policy: a report,” Gordon R.Corey, vice president, CommonwealthEdison company.Classes in elementary Yiddish. 3:30 pm,Hillel foundation, 5715 Woodlawn ave¬nue.Glee club rehearsal, 7 pm. Ida Noyestheatre.Coffee hour, dancing, music, food, com¬panionship between the hours of 9and 11 am, basement of West house.Dance Movie: “The Dancer’s World,”by Martha Graham, 4 pm. Ida Noyeshall. ,Lecture series, sponsored by the staffof the astronomy department, 3:30pm. Eckhart 133. Dr. W. W. Morganwill discuss “some characteristics ofgalaxies,” illustrated with slides.“The consequences of racial discrimina¬tion in the USA.” 4 pm, Classics 16,sponsored by the NAACP. Speaker,George Rawick.Thursday, 5 FebruaryDepartment of economics lecture, 7:45pm, Law south. “Asset quantities andasset prices,” Ralph Turvey. Fordfoundation visiting research profes¬sor of economics, reader in economics,London School of Economics.NAACP meeting, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyeshall.Flying Maroons meeting. 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes little theatre.NAACP Executive Committee meeting,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes hall. All those in¬terested are Invited.Friday, 6 FebruaryLecture series: “Psychotherapy,” Rosen-wald 2, 11 am, Dr. Nathan Ackerman.3Ae tfMum PHOTOGRAPHERS1 171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433 3 lAJear (Contact oCenieibyDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372Sterns Special SteakFit for Kings & Queens‘1.00with extrasGrilled Onions.French Fries 5alad BowlRoll & ButterSTERN'S CAMPUS DRUGS.. 61tt fir Ellis building" said Stone, "will bethe first for me that will com¬bine scholastic needs with therequirements of housing. I lookforward to the challenge ofcombining efficient hotel fa¬cilities in a university atmos¬phere.""The very idea of the con¬tinuing education center in¬trigues me," Stone said, "andI'm encouraged by the ideathat we don't stop learning.""I find that in a busy pro¬fessional life, you don't havetoo much time for reading andmeditation. Most of your lifeis used up getting on with thejob," he observed."I find I am kept alert bythe people I see," Stone said."And this is the secret of thecenter for continuing educa¬tion. I think it is a marvelousway to get benefit from othersin a concerted way. The con¬cept of the center offers botha relaxed and economical wayof handling time and people tolearn new things."Sometimes you just can'ttake time out to do the prepa¬ration for a formal attack onnew problems, but when yousit down with people, each onestimulates and encourages theother. In a few hours, you havehad a chance to accumulate agreat deal of knowledge," hesaid."The center for continuingeducation," he said, "strikesme in this way: It is a placethat busy people can learn a lotin a short while."Stone said that he had notyet conceived the basic de¬sign of the building. However, he said, he finds that the siteon the Midway is "fantasticallybeautiful.""Practically, the whole his¬tory of architecture of the past50 years is written there on thecampus/' he said.Stone recalled that he firstbecame acquainted with mod¬ern architecture when at 16 hesaw Frank Lloyd Wright'sRobie house on the campus."Wright calls that house thecornerstone of 'modern archi¬tecture,' " Stone said, "andnow I'm going to design abuilding some 400 yards away.I view that as another real chal¬lenge."The appointment of AlecSutherland, who heads Univer¬sity educational broadcastingactivities, to direct the newcenter was announced lastweek. Sutherland formerly wasNorth American program di¬rector for the British Broad¬casting corporation.Basic purpose of the centerfor continuing education is toprovide facilities for brief andconcentrated residential studyand to afford opportunities forretraining, refreshing, andbringing together groups ofpeople having like interests.Through the center, the Uni¬versity will seek to translatenew basic discoveries into prac¬tical programs of national im¬portance through frequent con¬ferences with national leaders.'■COKC” I* a OCailTCKCO TP«0£-MA»K. COPYlUeHT Q Iff* TMt C90A 091A COMPANY.Have a WORLD of FUN!Travel with IITAUnbelievable Low CostEuropefrom $645Orient<~m$998Many lOurt includecollege credit.Alto low-cost trips to Mexico$169 op, Sooth America $699 op,Hawaii Study Toor $549 op andAroond the World $1798 up.Ask Your Travol Agent331 So. Michigan Ave.„ INC. Ckitofo 4, HA 7-2JJ7 Q.E.D.Yes, it's been demonstrated time and timeagain, that for real refreshment it’s Cokeevery time! Add up that cold crisp taste,that lively lift and you really have a drinkworth going after. So whenever the crowdhas a multiple thirst, make the high signof good taste ... pass around theCoca-Cola! Quod Erat Demonstrandum!BE REALLY REFRESHED... HAVE A COKE IBottled under authority cf The Coca-Cola Company by/ The Coca-Ceie Bottling Company el Chicago, Inc.Jan. 30, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7If winter's come, can siDuring the past week JjC'ersdoubt that spring would everrecord eighteen inches'^ sncof five below, stairs hiddfn un<tains and endless stream , of hJaguars and their larger coudrifts of snow . . . most houglone would survive the v inter.While CTA and thf i^icahoped they'd never see apotheiUC'ers hoped that there wouldbeautiful, (photos left & right(above) Rona warms her srand manages a smile for the "I(of the development obl^e Priclast photographs by Price whcLeica to safety into the waitingnow disappeared in an avalanch(below) Rain, snow, sleet and the wrath of God welched a bit on the famousUnited St- tes post office motto . . . but nothing can stop a University of Chi¬cago Beta or Alpha Delt ... let alone four of the same . . . determined thattheir good friends and neighbors down the street — the Phi Gams and PsiU's should get their mail.pring be far behind? •(left) Henry, where are you . . . I've been waiting srnce last Monday foryou . . . quips snowed over Rona Adler as she risks pneumonia for the Maroon.Up to her knees in snow, Miss Adler was placed on the C-bench last Mondayand remained there until Wednesday to record the exact amount of inches ofthe recent snow falls, (photo by Price)i had good reason toappear . . . with a>wfall, temperaturesder miniature moun-settas, Volkswagens,interparts buried inhts were on whetherjgo automobile clubr winter, many mored be many others as\ by David Windsor)sneaker covered toes» "birdie," Harry PricePrices). These are thevho, after tossing hisng arms of editor Dub-nche.' (photo by Price)f* ■ 'fr-Wi*x MOLEVIlUlNO INVITAIIDN TO theANNUAL AH STMMflATISM8ARN BURNING !.Read poetry at Hyde ParkThrough the combined efforts of Rose Dunn, managing director of the Hyde Park theatre,and Ellen Borden Stevenson, noted art patroness, Chicago poets, all of whom have publishednationally, wiH read their work at 1 :30 pm, February 1st, at the Hyde Park, Lake Park and53rd street.A special feature of the program will be a display of some of the poets' most recent workHlustrated by Stanford Williamson, Chicago painter and art director for the Follette corpora¬tion. Guests are welcome to view the exhibit at 1:00 pm during the half hour coffee sessionpreceding the program.Reuel Denney, professor of sociology kt UC wit! serve as master of ceremonies. A poet andoo-author of "The Lonely Crowd," Denney's "The Connecticut River and Other Poems" wonthe Yale Younger Poets' prize in the late nineteen thirties.Slated to read their poems Sunday a re George Jackson, Margaret Danner, Charles Burch,Ed Morin, and David Lee Rubin. Jackson, who received his PhD from UC was formerly bookreview editor of the Chicago Review and has published in the Review, Folio, and the Caro¬lina Quarterly.Margaret Danner, employed by the social sciences department of UC has published in Poetryand the Chicago Review and has read the Review. Morin, who holds an MA in Englishfrom the University and is now teaching at Loyola, has published in Renascence, a critical quar¬terly, and was formerly managing editor of the Review.Rubin, a second year student m the College, is one of the poetry staff of the Review andhas published in the Review, New Orleans Poetry journal, and Fiddlehead. His work is to beanthologized this year in a collection of contemporary southern writing published publishedby the University of Kentucky press.Both Morin and Rubin have read before at the Stevenson 1020 Art Center, and Jacksonhas MC's Chicago Review readings at Ida Noyes hall. The reading will conclude at 2:30, withthe regular matinee to follow.MAKE *251 START TALKING OUR LANGUAGE! NO SUCCESS NT GETTINGDATE UHH THE l£V£LVHELEN WHOLESOME 3■"lAND A 9 MINUS lNGERMAN FOR NOT UMUWTlNGCOWIECTIM ! 9THlNKUSHWe’re paying $25 each for the hundreds of Think- Send yours to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mountlish words judged best! Thinkiish is easy: it’s new Vernon, New York. Enclose your name, address,words from two words—like those on this page. college or university, and class.?***; MALE SHELLFISH English: WOOING TECHNIQUE English: TALKING INSECTThinkiish: BOYSTERtVNOON 0L BO«DE. 0. 0f CAROLINA Thinkiish: HE ARTISTRY-,ruce k.tiwk. institute of tech..English: WATERFOWL FORMATION Thinkiish: WUTTERFLYBELLMEN HECHT. SYRACUSEEnglish: MIDNIGHT SNACKERThinkiish, SWANVOY Thinkiish: REFRIGER AIDERHARRIET BOYLE. MARYLANDROGER JENNINGS. U. OF CAL.English: MAN WHO CONDUCTSPOPULARITY SURVEYSThinkiish translation: This fellow knows more about polls than a telephonelineman. When someone starts, “Hail, hail, the gang’s all here!’’—he countsnoses to make sure. If he canvassed women, he’d be a galculator. If hetotted up crimes of violence, he’d be a stabulator. Actually, he checks onthe popularity of Luckies, and that makes him a lauditor! His latest surveymakes this heartwarming point: Students who want the honest taste offine tobacco are unanimously for Lucky Strike!Get the genuine articleGet the honest taste *of a LUCKY STRIKErc • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 30, 1959Product of i/& J&nauean <Jo(hicco rty — c/o&uxo is our middle name /COULD IT P0SSI6W B* THAT I'lAAU0U)£J> tm FFELINOS Ofl TEMPORAL OMNlfOTEfcCE TO\OONFUCT WITH AEAltrV *Writers to come,will meet UC'ersTwo young American au¬thors will be on campus inFebruary and March to leadclassroom discussions on the writ¬ing of fiction and poetry and togive public readings of theirworks.Flannery O’Connor will arriveon the compus on Monday, Feb.9 and will meet the class onTuesday and Thursday, Feb. 10and 12. The course is under thedirection of Richard G. Stern, as¬sistant professor of English, andmeets in Cobb Hall fxom 3:30 to5:30 pm.Miss O’Connor will present afree public reading of her worksat 8 pm, Friday, Feb. 13, in Man-del hall under the sponsorship ofthe Emily Talbot Fund.During the week, Miss O’Con¬nor will reside in the new wom¬en’s dorms and will be availablefor consultation with students.Miss O’Connor, whose' home isat Milledgeville, Georgia, is theauthor of A Good Man Is Hard ToFind, a collection of short stories,and Wise Blood, a novel.Bernard Melamud will arrive onMonday, March 9, and will meetthe class Tuesday and Thursday.March 10 and 12. Melamud, who ison the faculty of Oregon Statecollege, is the author of a novelon baseball called The Natural;The Assistant, another novel; andThe Magic Barrel, a collection ofshort stories.Melamud will present a freepublic reading of his works at 4pm Wednesday, March 11, in So¬cial Sciences i22.Larsen to speakat conferenceThe Society of technicalwriters and editors, Chicagochapter, is sponsoring a con¬ference on communicating scien¬tific and technical information onMonday, February 9, at the Knick¬erbocker hotel, 163 E. Walton.Elizabeth S. Kolpack, presidentof the chapter, v/ill begin the ses¬sion by. introducing the keynotespeaker, Carl Larson, director,public relations at UC, formerlydirector of public information atArgonne national laboratories.Larson will speak at 9 am. —'FREE DELIVERY- NICK YSPIZZERIANO 7-9063Hillel foundation sponsors series on 'Justice'by Murray Darrish“Is man by nature just?With a cloak of invisibilitywould any moral law stand inhis way?” This issue emreged asa major point of controversy atthe first of a series of sevenlecture - discussions, presented atHillel January 18 by LaurenceBerns, lecturer in the liberal artsin the University college.In an atte mpt “to combinebreadth of perspective with directpractical relevance,” justice willbe analyzed in regard to freedomand the rule of the law, bureauc¬racy, the old testament, its begin¬nings, the economic order, and thefine arts.In treating the range of justice,“clarifying the practical meaning. . . and examining some of thechief alternative theoretical ex¬planations,’ Berns began with apractical definition of justice as“a habit or settled disposition towant to do just actions.” He sup¬ported this with examples of itsoccurrence in resolving everydayproblems, which range from de¬termining what constitutes theright to rule to settling the ques¬tion of “who deserves the largestcut of the loot when a gang ofbank robbers divides up itsspoils.”Two forms“According to Aristotle justicetakes two forms,” Berns contin¬ued, “distributive and corrective.”The first is the apportioning ofall things of value in a commu¬nity— honor, power, and moneyfor example—to each man on thebasis of what good he has per¬formed for the group’s welfare.“What standard should be usedto determine merit has been theproblem through the ages,” headded, “wealth, the oligarchsmaintain, good citizenship thedemocrats would have it, and per¬sonal excellence in the opinion ofthe aristicrats and Aristotle him¬self.”Berns went on to point out thatcorrective justice, on the otherhand, is an "arithmetical” processof taking rather than giving, inwhich whatever is subtractedfrom the resources of the crimi¬nal—ranging from a fine to hislife—must equal his victim’s loss.The term being fully defined,Berns then began to work withthe tenets of three treatises onjustice to determine whether thewill to be just is “a natural, pri¬mary, and permanent trait of hu¬man character or a 'social virtue’performed with a conscious asso¬ciation and relation to others.”Aristotle's viewAs a beginning, Berns intro¬duced Aristotle’s point of view:"Justice is neither rooted in manby nature nor impressed on himby the laws.” Man, Aristotle de¬cided, is naturally social, and withconventional, or contrivted, sys¬tems of order arrives at his goals,which are not artificial.In contrast, Berns then citedPlato’s argument that, “justice isonly a substitute for the bold lifeof injury which is natural toThe CoUegeLAUNDERETTE1449 Cart 57th St.MU 4-9296 man.” Nor is justice good by na¬ture, Plato added, because manis not naturally social; he is "sel¬fish and grasping.” From the fearof suffering punishment thatwould outweight the pleasure ofwrongdoing, man retreats fromhis first impulse and is compelledas a member of society to exer¬cise restaint. Thus, what is socialreally hides what is natural. “Agood action carries its own re¬ward, just as true vices, like nar-.cotics and alcoholism, bring abouttheir own punishment,” Bernscommented as an aside. "What isthought bad today? Committinga crime or getting caught? Andis the good of an action in doingit or appearing virtuous?”Nothing ennoblingAs his final source of conflict,Burns turned to the seventeenthcentury author and philosopherThomas Hobbes, explaining firstthat he shares in Plato’s beliefthat man’s natural tendency is toplease himself before pleasingothers.*“But in Hobbes’ opinion,” Bernswent on, “there is nothing en¬nobling about the state of naturalman, which is just what he mustrun away from. There is no law,no order, no property. The'onlyredeeming thing about the nat¬ural state is the possibility of get¬ting out.” And Hobbes’ conclusionon the basis of this logic is, thatman should earnestly aspire tosome social contract, the commonadoption of a body of principlesto live by, as the only escape fromthe primeval state. "Politics,then,” Berns concluded, “is theart of devising laws and institu¬tions in sue ha way that man’sown self-interests drive h i m toacting for the public good.”Man's passions“Human behavior must be un¬derstood in terms of man’s pas¬sions, not their objects. Thoughtscannot control them, but serveas scouts and spies rather thanmasters,” Berns continued, in ex¬plaining Hobbes’ conclusions. Fur¬ther pointing out the parallel, headded, "What would man’s con¬dition be, Hobbes asks, if no com¬mon power were set over him tokeep order by fear, as in civilwar and tne powers of absolutekings?”Will continueWith this broad introduction,defining terms and setting forththe major problems of the study,the series was continued Sundaynight January 25 at 8 pm with thesecond lecture. It was deliveredby George Anastaplo, lecturer inthe liberal arts in the Universitycollege, and is entitled "Justice,freedom, and the rule of law.”“The value of the (government)loyalty program to even immedi-atet military security, in its nar¬ rowest sense, is questionable,”stated Anastaplo. “There has beenin this wholesale business a kindof inhumanity that beti’ays a lackof commitment to the cause ofjustice as well as an unawe.i CilcSSof what makes for political healthin a community, of what makesfor enduring security.”This statement, and the way inwhich its relation to the signifi¬cance of due process of law wasdeveloped, exemplifies a majorfactor in the value of Anastaplo’slecture, the linking of due processand its consequences to pertinenttopics of heated controversy.Concerned with the "relationbetween freedom, justice, and le¬gal procedures,” Anastaplo beganby pointing out the need for trueunderstanding and appreciation ofthe merits of due process, firstremarking that “at times, indeed,we have almost as little respectfor ther ule of law as the mostcynical gangster—but for differ¬ent reasons, of course: we are con¬cerned that justice be done.Established procedures"Simply speaking, due processmeans that an adjudication hasbeen held according to establishedlegal procedures of a certain char¬acter. It is designed to provide a‘fair trial’ by insisting upon pro-ceding in such a way as to pre¬clude pre-judgment,” he went on,"in such a way as to insure themaximum degree of detachmentand an orderly and adequate pre¬sentation of evidence and argu¬ments; in such a way as.to permitthe parties involved to learn whatit is they are confronted by.”To this definition he added thesuggestion of what may be “atthe core of the American conceptof due process of law,” that dueprocess is ultimately based on theseparation of the powers of thebranches of the government. Thisidea Anastaplo applied to the "in¬quisitorial” aspects of congres¬sional investigations of the lastthree decades, concluding thatthey may be '“improper” underthe rule of law."The program has at its veryfoundations the notion that thereshould be only minimum adher¬ence to those procedures thathave, up to our generation, beentraditionally regarded as essen¬tialIn support of the view thatthere has been an injustice in these cases that traditional legalprocedures would have prevented,he maintained that “a number ofcitizens have been severely penal¬ized for the supposed holding ofopinions as well as associationsthat have never been establishedas illegal by any competent tri¬bunal. Dubious inferences havebeen permitted and the most sus¬pect evidence relied upon.”Hatch act suggestedIn place of “what has beencalled ‘bargain-counter treason,’ ”Anastaplo suggested a vigorousapplication of the Hatch act, firstenacted in 1939, which prohibitspolitical activity on the part of afederal government employee.“I would take seriously theCommunist party’s claim that itis a legitimate political party andinsist that Communist party mem¬bers be obliged at the risk of los¬ing government employment, justas are Democrats and Republi¬cans, to abstain from any politicalactivity (aside from voting) whileemployed by the government.This means that the defaultingemployee has to be charged andtried in a more or less judicialmanner. Another merit to this ap¬proach is that this application istruly general and hence morelikely to be restrained and reason¬able.”Anastaplo then turned to Mil¬ton’s (“one of* the patron saints•f due process”) “Speech for theLiberty of Unlicensed Printing,”the “classic” argument againstcensorship of literature beforeprinting and distribution. Point¬ing out the combination of the de¬cline in the quality of the censors,overloaded with dull material, andtheir natural tendency to “playsafe” because it is by far morepreferable to force the author toalter a questionable manuscriptthan to be held accountable forapproving it, Milton concludedthat personal whim and preju¬dices would become increasinglymore important, rules and stand¬ards less so.Old abuses"And here, in act, are the oldabuses in so modern an institutionas the federal loyalty program,”Anastaplo added.Yet there are times, he contin¬ued, when adherence to well-thought-out and useful rules can only lead to the greatest injustice,as in Henry Cecil’s novel No Bailfor the Judge, when the investiga¬tor’s knowledge of the murderer’#actual identity is almost complete¬ly useless in court where tradfctional rules are adhered to.Enlarging upon this point,Anastaplo cited the case of thenotorious Lord Haw-Haw, Wi¬liam Joyce, who was executed bythe British for treason afterbroadcasting propaganda for Gee-many during the second WorldWar.The lecture-discussion serle-swill continue Sunday, at 8 pmwith the topic “Justice and bu¬reaucracy” to be discussed by Her¬bert Storing, assistant professorin the department of politicalscience.C. Columbus, world traveler, saj“My hair looks great since Icovered Wildroot.”Jvit a little bitof Wildrootand ...WOW!Captures yourpersonalityas tvell asyour personphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St.TERRrS PIZZAFree l/C Delivery•mall 1.00Medium .....1.45 Urge 1.95x-levge 2.951.95- - Jummi mm >ee^wifh ji9NV«r9P P»rimp »•MIS e. Uni MI 3-404515. .iimi m «. ,1mm. Mm. T«. WW, Tfcww. PRI-SLICTRICSHAW LOTION ai JuntNt -JtiH memb pm we. MOS*M» ftMOSHMfTON MswVsrii • TsrsMsJen. 10, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • Ifby Dan CosgroveCoach Haydon’s varsity tracksquad opened its season with a63-41 triumph over Wheaton lastSaturday, winning eight of thetwelve events.As Gar Williams placed secondin the mile to start off the meet,A1 Jacobs blasted a :06.3 to tie themeet record in the 60-yard dash,while Hosea Martin backed up histeammate with a second.George Karcazes, formerMaroon sports editor, turned ina :50.5 to win the 440 with HoseaMartin of 60-yard fame placingthird.Freshman Dennis O’Learyplaced third in the 70-yard highhurdles while Dick Couzens andMike Hiranda were placing one-two in the shot put.Dave Northrup and Nick Tingly per” Perschke as he adroitly slip- Roger Harmon then chopped round out the scoring 52-34.ped through the inside on a curve 1.8 seconds off the 2C0 yard but- After the meet the 400-yard freeto take the 880 in 2:01. terfly with Bill Zimmerman plac- style relay comprised of Currie,Don Richards and Dennis ing third. Currie and Colburn Harmon, Schutt, and Lisco slashedO’Leary placed first and third in placed one-two in the 200-yard the 2-year-old mark by four secstroke to make the event to set a new pool and newUniversity record.the 70-yard low hurdles. LindseyBlack tied for first in the highjump and Pete McKeon placedthidd.The scoring for the day wasrounded out with Chicago winningthe mile relay with the team ofMceKon, Karcazes,Perschke. onds setting the new mark at3:36.3.Schutt then set the record inthe 160-yard individual medley re¬lay hacking 2.1 seconds off theprevious record. Harmon, recov-ered from his two record settingMartin and style and Siegel placed second in* events proceeded to take two sec- winning them 81 each and drop-’the 200-yard breast stroke to onds off the 100-yard butterfly ping the foil competition 5-4.back stroke to make the score44-17.Lisco then came back to winthe 100-yard free style while set¬ting a new pool record and chop¬ping .8 seconds off the record.Hellmuth took the 440-yard free- UC defeatsCoach Hermanson’s varsityfencers defeated the Indiana TechWarriors in a dual meet Saturday,January 24, to open their 1959season. In their 20 7 victory, thebest performances were seen inthe epee and sabre, the MaroonsSwimmers swimCoach Bill Moyle’s varsityswimmers set another five rec¬ords last Saturday as it rolledover Wisconsin 52-34, bringing theseason total to six wins, one tie,one loss, and 15 new records. Intramurals now in vogueby BiU SpadyWhile basketball has dominated activity in winter quarter intramurals, handball and tableit- ius» emu u new 1CLUluo tennis tournaments are currently in their second round of single-elimination competition.Ken'currte, DaTsiegaTRoger Both tourneys are divided into separate sections (house, fraternity, divisional, open) andplaced two and three in the pole Harmon, and Frank McGraw took are held in Bartlett with the winners of each section playing off fot the All-Lniversity cham-vault, and Gar Williams returned the 400-yard medley relay in 4:19.6 pionship. Thirty-two men were entered in the initial round of handball, and some 80 entriesto win the two-mile in 9:54.5, with and Paul Schutt and Phil Hel- were posted prior to the first table tennis matches.a A_ tr: _ XT-Ill — yu: il -.1 -J - i..,* OOA r x — - — -teammate Vic Neill placing third.Don Richards won the broadjump at 20 feet 4 inches. PeteMcKeon placed third in the sameevent.A boxing attempt by Wheaton.failed to hamper Walter “Bum- muth placed one-two in the 220-yard free style to set the Maroonsahead 15-1. U, the Outlaws, Alpha DeltaTom Lisco won the 60 yard free Phi, and the Mac’s are cur-style and A1 Gaines and co-captain rently holding the top spots inDave Dec placed two and three in their respective leagues, althoughdiving. many of the leaders have yet toIn basketball, Vincent^ Psi face their toughest competitors. ning mate Jerry Abeles with 45The personal scoring race in lead the pack. Stevenson of Inter¬file ‘‘Red” divisional league is the national house leads the “Blue”closest, as Phi Delta Phi’s Pete* league with 23 in three games.Langrock with 47, George Lux ofthe Outlaws with 46, and his run-Get satisfying flavor...So friendly to your taste!NO FLAT"FILTERED-OUT"FLAVOR! See how Pall Mall’s famous length of finetobacco travels and gentles the smoke—makes it mild—but does not filter outthat satisfying flavor lNO DRY"SMOKED-OUT” •TASTE!***** *****Outstanding...and they are Mild! HERE'S WHY SMOKE TRAVELED" THROUGH FINE TOBACCO TASTES BESTYou get Pall Mali’s Pall Mall’s famous Travels it over,*J famous length of the 4O length travels and under, around and *JL finest tobaccos gentles the smoke through Pall Mali’smoney can buy. naturally ... fine tobaccos!4O length travels andgentles the smoke© *• f. Co.ifc Produd of jdnoueaoo —Sv&uceo- r* tmddk Vincent’s Jim Hilgondorf tops thehouse league with 55 in fourgames; Bill Gernon of Phi Deltheads the list of fraternity leaguescorers with 24 after three games;and Bernie Munk of the Mac’sholds first place in B league scor¬ing with 49 in four games.In the house league, Vincentstands like Goliath among midg¬ets. In four games it has piled up195 points to 48 for its opponents,and after winning a fifth by for¬feit lead the league with a 5-0mark. Coulter was awarded aprotest win over East II, and nowstands at 4 0 though it must faceVincent soon. East II holds downthird place with three wins and asingle loss. East III and Salisburyare 2-2. Mead 2-3, and Dodd andEast IV share the cellar with 1-4slates.Psi U and Phi Gam share thelead in the fraternity league withthree victories and no losses. ThePsi U’s have played only onegame, winning the others by for¬feit. They stopped a rugged PhiDelt team 35-30 after the PhiDelts had taken DU 23-12 earlier.Phi Sig and DU share third placewith Phi Delt at two wins and onedefeat. Beta, ZBT, and Alpha Delthave yet to win a game.Phi Alpha Delta is the onlyunbeaten five in the Blue league,boasting a 4-0 mark, while Inter¬national house and the Air Forceare tied for the runner-up spotat 3-1. North, Hitchcock, andChamberlain are even at 2-2, butAKK and the Dirty Disciples arelocked in the cellar without a win.Mathews and Fine Arts at 4-0pose the greatest threat to theOutlaws in Red league play. Withconvincing wins of 54-32, 59-34.63-22, and 58-22, the fast breakminded Outlaws look like theteam to beat, but the league leadremains deadlocked until furtheraction. Linn stands at 1-2, Billingsat 1-2, CTS at 1-3, Phi Delta Phiat 0-4 and Foster-Kelley at 04.The winner of the Red league willhold the role of favorite in theAll-University playoffs.GetWILDROOTCREAM-OIL Charife!J. Paul Shhbdt,* hair scientist, says 1 “ Keepsyour hair well-groomed Longer!'**V/»- So. Harrit HiU M.. W%lliomovi<lt. M.KJw$t a little bitof Wildrootand... WOW!fleft) Carole Anestakis,first year student in theCollege is pictured selectingher Shapiro collection paint¬ing at last Thursday's draw¬ing. (right) Pony-tailed EdnaHetherington is one of thefortunate undergraduateswho received her choice ofa painting from the collec¬tion."A number of excellent or¬iginal paintings from the recentShapiro exhibition are stillavailable for student loan," an¬nounced John Callahan of thestudent activities office.This loan exhibition whichwas established last Autumn byJoseph Randall Shapiro, con¬sists of 180 selected oils,watercolors, lithographs anddrawings.Although more people hadregistered for paintings thanthere were paintings to lend,last week's snow preventedmany students from attendingthe drawing.""A number of paintings, in¬cluding some of the best worksin tne collection were notclaimed," Callahan explained.According to present exhi¬bition rules, students wishingto obtain works must register for and be present at the draw¬ing; but under these circum¬stances, the rule is beingtemporarily waived. The re¬maining paintings will be dis¬tributed at the student activi¬ties office on a first come, firstserve basis, (photos by Pear,McMahon)Government will be Re-evaluated [ Bicycles, Poets, Accessories* specie I student offer> ACE CYCLE SHOP162! e. 55th ft.will be met with fovoroble stylein roinweor offered by thismerchont. Sewn of stout clothaccustomed to the rigors ofroinfoll, it serves admirably,safeguarding health os well OCthe oppeoronce.*30°°Brittany,ltd.7104 S. JefferyPL 2-4034)Open Men. h Thors, eves.UNFAVOURABLEby Bert CohlerStudent Government passedthe much debated Govern¬ment re-evaluation bill at itssecond meeting of the Winterquarter, held on January 27 inLaw north. This bill, passed infavor of others that were offeredin nearly an hour of debate, in itsfinal form, provides for an evalu¬ation of such matters as the roleof the Government on campus,the interest in Government andthe means by which this interestmay be increased, the relationshipof the Government to the facultyand administration, and the poten¬tial financial resources of the Gov¬ernment. It was also decided thatthe report should be brought be¬fore the government no later thanthe first week of the Spring quar¬ter. Much of the debate on the re-evaluation concert ed the possi¬bility of Constitutional re-organ¬ization, with many of the studentsfeeling that such re-organizationwas not as beneficial as workingwithin the present structure ofthe government which was feltby them to be adequate. Ed Rid¬dick (FTF), Carlie Burrows (Col¬lege, Martin Goldsmith (Col¬lege, Sam Silver (College), JohnScariano to giveaddress today inSoc Sci building"The young Turks in theIllinois state legislature" willbe the subject of a speech oncampus by state representativeAnthony Scariano at 3:30 pm to¬day. He will address the Univer¬sity’s Political Science association,a student group, at the SocialSciences building. Scariano, aDemocrat, is from the state’s firstdistrict. >, Cashman (College, Jim Thomason(College), and Maureen Byers(College) were elected to the re-evaluation committee and JimThomason was elected chairman.In other business before thegovernment, Joel Rosenthal re¬ported on a conversation heldwith Dean Netherton on the feas¬ibility of setting up a studentboard to handle such matters asacademic discipline. Rosenthalsaid that the first steps contem¬plated included the appointmentof some students to the existingFaculty - Administration board.This board, headed by Dean Mc¬Cain, considers such matters asstudent cheating, and dormitorydiscipline. At present this commit¬tee has no student representationand its membership varies de¬pending on the matters being con¬sidered. A re-organization of thepresent board, according to Ro¬senthal’s report, will occur afterthe existing.board is re-evaluatedby Dean McCarn and those whoserve on it. Joel said that DeanNetherton hoped that studentparticipation on the disciplinaryboard would give the students ex¬perience in such matters andmight make it possible to set upa student board at some futuredate.The government moved that aletter be sent to Mr. Justice Blackof the United States SupremeCourt, urging him not to retire,and expressing admiration for hiscontributions to the SupremeCourt. Further business at thismeeting included the announce¬ment that the South African De¬ fense Fund Drive had collectedover $450.00 and that more moneyis contemplated in an extensivedrive which is being aided by,among other groups, the Chan-ning-Murray club of the UnitarianChurch, and the Student Repre¬sentative Party. Fran Moore,chairman of Election & RulesCommittee, announced the elec¬tion, by the Executive Committee,of three new members to the Gov¬ernment: Charlotte Adelman (Col-lege-SRPt, Ruth Greenfield (Soc.Sci.-SRPt and Maddy Chalk (Col-lege-SRP. It was revealed thatthere are still 8 vacancies in thegovernment, 2 in Law, 2 in SocialSciences, 1 in Federated Theolog¬ical Faculty, 1 in Biological Sci¬ences, 1 in Social Service Adminis¬tration, and 1 in Medicine. Stu¬dents interested in filling thesevacancies are urged to apply toF*en Moore, chairman of Electionand Rules Committee. At the pres¬ent, there are 40 students in theGovernment of which 20 are SRPand 39 ISL, with the Presidentof the Student RepresentativeParty. ISL holds 12 college and 7 divisional seats while SRP holds6 college seats and 15 divisionalseats.Reports were presented to theGovernment on the possibility ofa concert to benefit the FrankfurtExchange and Bert Cohler askedfor help from Government andnon-Government persons interest¬ed in working on the concert. EveLeoff reminded the Governmentof the student-faculty teas spon¬sored jointly by Orientation Boardand Student Government and re¬minded the government that thenext such tea would be held nextweek.Rudy’sAuthorizedU of C Class RingsSato OMEGA S*r«ic«Individually designed,handmade jewelry< Discount to students)1523 loot 53rd *.MOrmol 7-2666 UNIVERSITYHOTEL5519 S. BLACKSTONEDORCHESTER 3-4100Cleon rooms, oil with privote both,shower and telephone. Doily maidservice, 24 hour switchboard. Alltransportation, 2 blocks to I.C.Transient and permanent. Reason¬able rates.24-HourKodo chrome color WmprocessingModel Camera Shop1342 E. 55th MY 3-9259PROGRESSIVE PAINT fr HARDWARE CO."Hyde Pork's Most Complete Point & Hordwore Store"Wollpoper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HouseworesUC DtaeouMMY 3-3940-1 1154-59 I. 55th ot. ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghettiravioli'mostaccioli sandwiches:beef,sausage & meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 Eaat «7rt» at.Culture VultureM«tch has happened here-abonH since this vulture lastswooped down upon these Fri¬day fields. It snowed. Univer¬sity Theatre opened. It snowed.Cars got stuck by the curbs.It snowed. University Theatreclosed. It snowed. Generally,a full, exciting and eventfulweek. It snowed.On CampusTheatreThe first Tonight at 8:30weekend has closed. The sec¬ond series of experimental one-acters will open this evening.The program consists of TheBaJtd Soprano, by Eugene Iones¬co, directed by Neal Johnston, and Inter Adia, a musical re¬view by Don McKlintock andMary Ann Erman, directed byMike Hall.It has been impressed uponme that very few people under¬stand precisely the nature ofTonight at 8:30. The title isjust a general term, used tocover a wide range of plays.For the past few years eachseparate "8:30" series has con¬sisted of two completely differ¬ent week-ends of theatre. Lastweek's shows will not be re¬peated.If you saw the production lastweek you will probably want tosee the totally new production this week. Unless, having seen theproduction last week you decidedthat under no circumstances doyou want to see this week’s show.This should not be the case.The Bald Soprano, an adventurein non-sequiturs, will open theevening. Never soul-searching,but solely centering around thequestion of what to do with eve¬nings when you don’t know whatto do, The Bald Soprano has justconcluded a very successful off-Broadway run. It contains someof the most memorable lines intheatre history, for example:“a, e, i, o, u, a, e, i, o, u, a, e, i,o, u, i!*\ “B, c, d, f, g, h, j, k, 1,m, n, p, q, r, s, t, v, w, x, z!!!"Following this in no uncertainorder will be Inter Allia, a new re-THE TAREYTON RING 1 MARKS THE REAL THING!THE REAL THING IN MILDNESS...THE REAL THING IN FINE TOBACCO TASTE!It doesn’t take a </>BK to know why newDual Filter Tareytons have become so pop¬ular so quickly! It’s because the unique DualFilter does more than just give you highfiltration. It selects and balances the flavorelements in the smoke to bring out the bestin fine tobacco taste. Try Tareytons today—you’ll seel Here's why Tareyton's Dual Filterfilters as no single filter can:1. It combines the efficient filteringaction of a pure white outer filter.. .2. with theadditionalfilteringactionofactivated charcoal in a unique innerfilter. The extraordinary purifying abil¬ity of Activated Charcoal is widelyknown to science. K has been defi¬nitely proved that it makes the smokeof a cigarette milder and smoother.new dual filter Tareyton• Jan. 30, 1959 view by the author of the currentBlackfiar’s show. Due to the greatobjections aroused by the recentMaroon expose, the producershave decided to translate theshow from the original Japaneseto the more intelligible Yiddishlanguage. Composed of bits, black¬outs, sketches, songs and produc¬tion numbers (though the latter,because of the small cast, cannotbe called mass produced), InterAllia will conclude the evening.Tickets for the shows are stillavailable for tonight. Saturday,and Sunday, at the rate of $1 per.The Reynolds club theatre willhold about 150 and there is no re¬served seating. Theatre doors willopen at 8 pm and the show willstart at 8:30.Speaking, as we were, of Black-friars, a new script has turned upwhich has won the hearts of manymembers of the Blackfriarboards. This never • before - men¬tioned script, written by noneother than Don McKlintock, isentitled Skewered Afresh. Theplot is concerned with a dashingyoung southern cavalier who. be¬ing seriously injured in a duel,dashes off to a monastery to takedueling lessons from an ac¬knowledged master. Imagine hissurprise when he discovers thatthe dueling master, with whom hehas fallen in love is in truth thesister of the villain who woundedhim in the. first place. Withstrength and fervor he rushes offto administer justice to the bru¬tish brother of the dueling masterhe loves. The villain, however,after permanently disposing ofthe dashing young southern cava¬lier returnes to find his sister,whom he marries. In the lastscene, a beautiful and movingchurch wedding, Mandel hall’sone stained glass window will beexposed to add atmosphere. *Concerts and recitalsTonight we have our first for¬mal concert of the year. Real livemusic with live musicians, no less.The Parrenin quartet will playStravinsky’s Concertino; Faure’sQuartet in E minor, opus 121;Husa’s Second quartet and Bar-tok’s Third String quartet. Thereis a standard student admissionof $1 for all the concerts in thisseries. Seats should still be avail¬able at the music office, If anyare left over they will go on saleThe Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekEPIC SALElast week at*2.49 ning shortly before the 8:30 concert.Art exhibitionsThe solo exhibition of works byBacia Gordon is still continuingat Hillel house with no announcedclosing in sight.A new exhibition has openedat the Renaissance society galleries in Goodspeed hall. Entitled,“tradition and change in the artsof India,” the show is being pre¬sented in conjunction with thecommittee on South Asianstudies. The two room exhibitionhall is opened from 9 am to 5 pmdaily.Because of the even more thanmildly abortive weather a weekago yesterday, some paintings arestill unclaimed from the JosephShapiro collection. Students whoare still interested in hangingsome quite fine contemporary artin their rooms should inquire atthe student activities desk in IdaNoyes. Preference will still bogiven to those students who putin applications, but even if youdidn’t apply before you have analmost certain change to pick upa painting.Motion picturesThis evening at 8 pm and againat 10 pm, Edge of the City willbe shown in the B-J cinema. Admission to these films, which areshown in the Judson dining roomsover there on the sinful side of60th street, is a paltry 40 cents.Next Friday the picture selectedis Julius Caesar with Brando.Mason and Geilgud.Here, on the safer side of thecampus. Doc Film is screeningThe White Sheik. This is the second film in a series of seven.Next Friday the movie will beBlind Husbands. Admission tothis series is 45, or $1.50 for anyfive of the seven films. The WhiteSheik will be shown in Judd 120at 7:15 and again at 9:15 pm.Monday, Int. House will showThe Golden Demon, a Japanesefilm based on a modern classicJapanese novel by Koyo Ozaki.These motion pictures are shownat 7 and 9 pm in the Int houseeast lounge with a 50c admission.Lectures“Dr. Zhivago and it’s moral andpolitical implications will be thetopic of a lecture by Irving Howewhich will be delivered at 8 pmthis evening in Social Science 122.There will at a 35 cent admissioncharge for students who wish tohear this noted editor and author.Off CampusTheatreAnd there is such a place, themiddle of which is My Fair Lady.This is the next to last time Ican legitimately mention thisshow, although I must admit thatmost of my mentionings in thepast have been rather illegitimate.Only nine more times will thatcharming, mustached and manlyhero carry that limp, prostrate,but mildly protesting form upthose long red carpeted stairs.My Fair Lady is all but gone withthe wind.(see ‘Vulture* page 15)DON’T BE A TOURIST INEUROPE NEXT SUMMERCLASSROOMS ABROAD offers you o vocation with a purposeunder professional guidance★ 10 days of intensive shipboard instruction in French, Germon,or Spanish^ 6 weeks at the University of Grenoble West Berlin orSantander★ Language instruction in classes of 6 to 8; proceed ot yourown speed -•fa Full auditing privileges ot oH universities ond participationm oil student activities★ Residence and meals with French, German, or Spanish familiesA txtertsive supplementary program and 2 free tickets per weekto theatres, concerts, movies^ • 2-week European tour after the study periodBeginners or advanced students, write to’CLASSROOM ABROAD, Box 4171 University StationMinneapolis 14, MinnesotaUT provides evening of delightful dramaThe most delightful import to arrive from France since Brigitte Bardotfirst began curling her lower lip must surely be Maurice Grivele's The PianoTuner, presented last weekend by the University Theatre in its Tonight at8:30 series.Translated, adapted, and in some measure discovered by Daniel Gerouldof the College humanities staff, Grivele's play sought to exploit the principlethat inefficiency in marriage, music, and private detecting can lead to wildlycomic results.Clearly a deep student of the French cuckold husband tradition, Grivelepresented a variation of this‘theme in the unfamiliar milieu of musiciansprevented by their native talents from ever achieving the highest orders intheir profession. The plays mixture of mistaken identities, misplaced righte¬ousness, and clear sinful intentions kept the comedy low and the laughterhigh throughout.Connie Mathieu was frighteningly skillful as the deceiving wife strug¬gling to master her disbelief at her husbands' insistence of knowing some¬thing about the other m^p in her life. Thomas Nolan as a somewhat myopicprivate eye caught the true farcical spirit of the play with uncommon skillin his highly stylized gestures and speech while David Ingle as the unruffledother man added solid support.George McKenna and Hans formed as untalented a group of musicians asthe local stage is likely to see in some time. William Bezdek played the roleof a bottle-wielding piano tuner in a riotous manner, while Roger Downeyalmost stole his part of the show with his interpretation of an insomniac vio¬linist ready to play duets at any hour of the night.Living Hours, an untypical work of Arthur Schnitzler, seemed a little outof place on this program. Its*sudden turn into serious channels after the two comedies, (Piano Tuner and La Follia), made the audience rather uneasy.The principal action, in a physical sense, had already taken place before theplay began, and the entire dialogue was a static attempt to find the reasonsbehind this action. The dominating character of the play is someone theaudience never gets to see.Thomas Nolan and David Ingle showed real versatility in their switch fromthe Grivele comedy to the more serious atmosphere of Schnitzler. LanceHaddix as the third member of the cast nicely maintained the somber moodof the play. - r ^Aria da Capo, by Edna St. Vincent Millay, left one with a rather ambiguousfeeling. Its strange mixture of classic commedia dell'arte figures of Colum¬bine and Pierrot alongside of some kind of vague tragedy created a disturb¬ingly mixed feeling. This play lacked real theatricality with its principalmovement seeming something imposed on it rather than growing out of itsinner structure.John Keller was very effective in his convincingly artificial Pierrot abettedby Rosalind Conklin as Columbine. Roberta Pikser and Maggie Stinson gavethe play what ever moment and drama it had by their dances and strangegames that developed into murders. .Robert Fish acted as their efficient on¬stage director.It was clear that a great deal of work and careful preparation on the partof the student actors, directors, and technicians had gone into these fourplays. University Theatre is to be congratulated for having provided a long,but entertaining evening. This university can hardly be said to excel in eventsthat call for "meeting the public/' but this gave solid evidence that t>eneathour scholarly exterior some real life does flow.Marshall Bialoskymiss UC... night of sin...The judging of the Miss University of Chicago contest will be held onWednesday, February 4, at 3 pm in Ida Noyes hall. The judges, who willdecide on the eight finalists are Margaret Perry, assistant dean of students,James Newman, director of student activities, and Robert Streeter, dean of studentsin the College. The names of finalist will be announced at the tea, and an all-campusvote will be held the following week.Another event connected with Wash Prom is the House Decoration Contest.Names and addresses of contestants should be submitted to the Student activitiesoffice—the deadline for entry is Thursday, February 12, at noon. The date for thejudging is February 17, and the judges are Mrs. Newman, assistant dean of stu¬dents; Charles O’Connell, director of admissions, and Harold Haydon, dean of theCollege.vultural annex... Student Union’s annual “Night of Sin” will take place this Saturday, Janu¬ary 31 in Ida Noyes hall from 8:30 to 12:30. The price of admission is 50cents and includes a thousand dollars in “cold cash.” Extra money will beavailable at the cashier’s booth.The chief occupation of the evening is gambling at the "casino,” where roulette,chuck-a-luck, blackjack, and games of poker will be in progress. There will alsobe refreshments and dancing at the cabaret, "Jerry’s Inferno” — however, atthis establishment, only American money will be accepted.The main event of the evening is the auction. Some of the items of interest,which may be purchased with the night’s winnings, are a pair of tickets to WashProm, gift certificates from a florist and Gingiss Bros., four slave girls, andseveral bottles of wine, a genuine Maroon staff excavation. For the sportsmindedLeft behind in the breeze willbe Look Back In Anger, at theBlackstone, Two For the Sea-sawat the Harris, Both Your Housesat the Eleventh street, The Youngand the Fair at the Goodman andopening Monday, Danin Yankeesat Theatre 270, Hotel Belmont.Concerts and recitalsThomas Beecham, the currentguest conductor of the ChicagoSymphony orchestra, will repeatyesterday’s program this after¬noon when he performs Mendels¬sohn’s overature to The FairyTalc of the Beautiful Melusina,Gretry’s Suite Zemire at- Ezor,Haydn’s 99th symphony, Schu¬bert’s Fifth symphony and Lis2t’sSymphonic Poem Number four,“Orpheus.”Tomorrow Beecham will con¬duct a lollipops concert whichwill contain the following, and allof the following at that: Suppe,averature to A Day in Vienna,Berlioz, “Dance of the Sylphs”and “Minuet of the Will-o-the-wisps” from the Damnation ofFaust, Saint-Saens Symphonicpoem, the Spinning Wheel ofOmphale, Delius, Sleigh Bide,Massenet, The Last Sleep of theVirgin and the Waltz of the Fairy,Mozart’s March in D major, Schu¬ bert’s 3rd symphony in D major,Sibelius’ Valse Triste, opus forty-four, and the same composer’sAlla Marcia from the suite,Karelia, opus 11 plus Chabrier’sEspana.Immediately after this the sym¬phony travels to Milwaukee. Itwill be back Tuesday when Wal¬ter Hendl conducts a youth con¬cert entitled Around the Worldwith Music and Outer Space, Too.Thursday and Friday, Febru¬ary 5 and 6 we return to a littlemore normality, when Beechamconducts, Handel-Bcecham Suitefrom The Faithful. Shepherd,Bizet’s First symphony, Berlioz’soverature to King Lear, opusfour, Delius, “the Walk to theParadise Garden” from A VillageBorneo and Juliet, Debussy’s Cor¬tege and Air de Dance, fromL’Enfant Prodigue and Chabrier’sEspana Rhapsody.Motion picturesProportedly are better than ever. At last, current events atthe Hyde Park would indicatethis. Current this week are Rus¬sia, a French film produced bythe same people who made Rififi,and M. Hulot’s Holiday. I havenot seen Razzia, but its predeces¬sor was as fine a film as I’veever encountered.As to the Tati film, it needsno more publicity than to an¬nounce that it is playing. Onefact, often ignored by students,is that theatre, even art theatres,are open during the week as wellas on Saturdays and Sundays.With the sort of houses thisdouble-bill should draw, youmight do well and get a betterseat by postponing your HydePark jaunt till after Sunday. Stu¬dent admission, as always, isalways 50 cents.My Uncle is still playing at theSurf. This second Tati film hasbeen running for a long and suc¬cessful time, but like all good Our advice on your mov¬ing or storage problem isentirely free and withoutobligation. But it is amaz¬ing how often we find youhave need of our services.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711ujiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiimiittiiiiiMiiiiiitiiiHiiiiiimiiiiiHiiimiimiiiitmimHHiiiiiiiiiiiiimiitiimiiiiiiitiiiMimiiiiie| Feb 6—-BLIND HUSBANDS| Feb 13—PIT OF LONELINESS| Feb 20—THE LAST LAUGH1 Feb 27—JOYLESS STREET JAN 30WALLS OFMALAPAGAwith Giulette Masinidirected by Fellini(La Strada)Friday eves, at 7:15 & 9:15 pmAdmission 45c JUDD 126MAHALIA JACKSON& LANGSTON HUGHESAn Epic of AmericanaFrom Spiritual toGospel SongFriday, Feb. 13th, 8:30 PMORCHESTRA HALLTickets at Box Office orMoil Orders to: Old TownSchool of Folk Music333 W. North Ave. Chicago 14WHiteholl 4-7475Tickets$1.85, $2.65, $3.20, $3.95CLARK Theatredark & madisonopen 7 o.m.lote show 4 a.m.C _ college student pricemIvC at all tinfesjust present your student identi¬fication card at the boxoffice.Sunday Film Guild ProgramsFeb 1 “Golden Age of Comedy”“Day at the Races” plusW. C. Fields and RobertBenchley shortsFeb S “Jazz Singer — “Juarez”Different double feature daily starting THEATRE 270presentsSaturday, Jan. 31 unAMklARTKINOS NEWSOVIET COMEDY HIT UAMNTHE WRESTLER YANKEES”AND THE CLOWN Featuring ProfessionalAll A 11 "Off-Loop" CastAVON STARTING FEB. 23327 W. Fullerton AT HOTEL BELMONTBelmont Ave. & Sheridan Rd.daily at 6 Performances Tickets $2.20Sat fir Sun at 1:30 Mondays thru avail, at boxFridays, 8:30 pm office or by mail ;?niiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiwmiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiimiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiimiiimimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii£JawtluajbteStudent admission rate 50cupon presentation of IDChicago’* Most UnusualMotion Picture TheatreAgain remind* all College Students of thetSpecial Student Rales always in effect atEVERY DAY OF THE WEEK __INCl. FRI. & SAT. EVENINGS 75JUST SHOW CASHIER YOUR I.D. CARP Phone DE 7-I7AJNOW-SPECIALSTUDENTRATE Mr. Hulot ReturnsJacques Tati"MY UNCLE"itHtWHMttrtnttmtttfttttHrHHHHtWtHH'MMtHHtHWtMtHt Starting Friday, Jan 30Two very famous Frenchmen —in two very different French filmsJean Gabin RAZZIAAnother story by "Rififi author” Auguste le Breton ond acted byremarkably versatile Jean Gabin, "Razzia” digs and turns the soilof the French drug trade, and as usual the last spadefulls are full ofearthy irony. No one will be seated during last 15 minutes.— and —Jacques Tati Mf. HULOT’S HOLIDAYTati in the first of the Hulot duo, "Mr. H.'s Holiday" ond "My UncleMr. H.," walks in a combination of jogtrot, skip and waddle throughthe Cannes Grand Prix film and leaves a wake of visually devastatingcomedy.The Hyde Park theater invites you to a public reading by ChicagoPoets — Charles Burch, Margaret Danner, George Jaxkson, EdwardMorin and David Lee Rubin — introduced by Reuel Denney; with apoetry manuscript display by calligrapher Stan Williamson.Sunday, Feb. 1st, 1:30 pm, in the theatre — coffee will be servedat 1. Admission free of charge.The regularly scheduled Sunday matinee performance will follow at2:30 pm.Jan. 30, 1959 • CHICAGO MAI|00 N • 15imr i mfill Chairman Krueger tells aims of Soe. 3by Maynard Kruegerchairman, College social science 3 staffSocial sciences 3 aims to help students to developcompetence in the ways and means of making de¬cisions about problems of social policy in which,as citizens, we participate collectively. In social sciences1, the student has acquired considerable knowledge ofthe framework of values and operative institutionswhose development has made American society whatit i$. In social sciences 2 he has acquired a more sys¬tematic appreciation-of the processes through whichhuman personality, social organization and culture shapeone another, and has formed some conception of thepossibilities and limits of deliberate individual self¬development and self-determination. In social sciences 3he is able to pursue further the questions raised at theend of social sciences 2: How far can we humans makeour own history? How far can free men deliberatelycontrol or remake their society and culture? But hiscentral explicit concern is perhaps more modest: Howare we to go about thinking our way through and actingout the social choices which our common membershipin a democratic society requires or invites us to make?THE COURSE is not comprehensive in the sense thatit pretends to “cover” all the important issues facingour society. We seek rather to develop a general com¬petence through th intensive study of a few selectedpublic policy issues. These problems are chosen asexemplifying important aspects of a single general prob¬lem, that of freedom and authority. The choice of thistheme is based upon the central position of freedom inAmerican social development and in the world situationtoday. (The preceding sentence was written in exactlythose words when the course was first given 25 yearsago.)Social freedom is not indivisible in the sense of admit¬ting no distinctions of kind or degree. Being free is amatter of both freedom from restrictions and freedomto do this or that particular thing. As regards the first,it may be that, if one performs a particular action, onewill not be punished by either formal or informal sanc¬tions. But one may lack the means to perform the action,and even the opportunity to acquire the means, or hemay be unaware that he lias any choice witli respect tothe action.We speak of a person as formally free when and sofar as he may do or not do a given thing without fear ofpunishment by others, and we speak of him as beingeffectively free when and so far as, in addition to formalfreedom, he has access to the means and the knowledgenecessary to make the choice a real one.As regards the second aspect of freedom, we com¬monly distinguish publicly protected “economic” free¬doms (the right to choose one’s own occupation, investin an enterprise of one’s choice, and choose amongconsumer goods), political and civil liberties (the rightto form or affiliate with political parties, to vote in elec¬tions, to speak one’s mind, to b tried by a jury of one’speers, etc.), and social-cultural freedoms (freedom toform a family or other association, to develop and ex¬press one’s aesthetic tastes, to inquire into interestingproblems). Each of these “kinds” of freedom overlapsthe others, and the presence or absence of a particular photo by NewmanMaynard Kreuger graduated in 1926 from theUniversity of Missouri with a BA in political science.Having received his master's degree in modernEuropean history from Missouri, he did graduatework in economics at the University of Berlin, theSorbonne in Paris, the University of Geneva, theUniversity of Pennsylvania, and the University ofChicago.Krueger has spent a great deal of time abroadin addition to time spent engaged in graduate study.He left for Europe for the first time during the mid¬dle of his senior year in college "I believe stronglythat every individual can and should take any op¬portunity to go abroad, no matter what the cir¬cumstances," Kreuger said.In 1922, while still in college, he took his firstteaching job in a one-room, eighth-grade Missourirural school. He taught history of economics forone year at Albion college, and also served as aninstructor in the economics department of the Uni¬versity of Pennsylvania.In 1932 he came to the University of Chicago inconnection with the new College social science pro¬gram. He helped construct what was to eventuallybecome social sciences 3. He has taught here eversince, with the exception of a six-month leave-of-absence in 1951 while working for EC A in con¬junction with the final stages of the Marshall plan.He has taught social sciences 1, 2, and 3, history,an economics course for social workers, and teach¬ing methods in the social sciences.In 1940 Kreuger ran for vice-president on theSocialist ticket. He is currently chairman of theIndependent Voters of Illinois, financial chairmanof the Hyde Park-Kenwood Community conference,and a member of the board of directors on the Na¬tional Housing Development association. This latterorganization attempts, through the building of openand controlled occupancy housing, to prove thatinter-racial housing can be built profitably.Krueger was made chairman of social sciences 3in 1957. freedom of any one “kind” affects many other particularfreedoms. This classification of freedoms correspondsto the conventionally distinguished “spheres” of society,and to the traditional division of labor in the socialsciences among economics, political science and sociology. We employ materials from all of these disciplinesand we make use of the abstracted aspects or "orders"of society to which these disciplines have addressedthemselves.FROM THE start of these Inquiries, however, theunity of social phenomena has forced itself upon ourattention, and eventually we have to look systematicallyat the ways in which the "orders” are interrelated in atotal societal system. This we do by examining a socialsystem which offers itself as a basic alternative to ourown—the Soviet system, and by considering freedom asan issue in a developing world society, in each caseboth using and combining political, economic and sociological materials and methods of analysis.Our aim Is to develop not professional social scientistsbut competence in the practical kind of judgment whichour graduates will have to exercise on problems whichwill differ in important but unforeseeable ways fromthose taken up in the course. Social-scientific knowledge—knowledge of particular facts and of regular socialprocesses and interdependencies, is indispensable towise policy judgment. Much analysis and discussion istherefore devoted to such knowledge. But decisions aboutsocial policy involve the choice of ends and proceduralrules as well as the discovery of efficient means. Wetherefore attend throughout the course to social philos¬ophers as well as to social scientists.In connection with each of the particular policy prohlems which we study intensively, we employ materialsof three distinct kinds:(1) general statements of social philosophy assertingand defending alternative views concerning thevalue of-the freedoms under consideration;(2) particular descriptions of contemporary Institu¬tions in which these freedoms are involved; and(3) analytic studies of the conditions and consequencesof these freedoms in terms of other valued socialarrangements.What the student must do is learn how these three*types of knowledge should be distinguished and com¬bined in the making of decisions on questions of socialpolicy. There is no single authoritative solution to thisbasic methodoligael problem, and the course ends bydiscussing it implicitly through the writings of socialphilosophers with sharply contrasting views.THIS COURSE, like the others In the sequence, aimsto help its students become reflective citizens in a freesociety, to enable them to see clearly and wholly thesociety and community to which they belong, to see thepart that social science can play in it, to distinguish asignificant problem from a trivial one, and to use aneducated layman’s intelligence in criticizing social-scientific and social-philosophic materials. In so far as i!achieves these aims, the sequence of courses may be apreparation for further study leading to a professionalcareer in social science or a related profession. But thisresult is a by-product of our primary concern: that thecitizen shall know how to make use of the social scientist,and shall understand the matters with respect to which1 he himself is and must be sovereign.Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRIST1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352 GLADIS RESTAURANT1527 East 55th st.orders to carry outopen 24 hoursDO 3-9788FREE!!one day onlyTwo beautiful ball point pens in attractive plasticcarrying case with the purchase of 5 packs ofMarlboro, Parliament or Philip Morris. TYPEWRITERSFULL YEAR GUARANTEEOn Both New or Reconditioned MachinesSpecial Type Installations — Language, Chemistry, MathRENTALS —ALL FIRST CLASS MACHINESRepairs — Chemical Washing — Complete OverhaulBy Highly Skilled, Conscientious MechanicsUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE