Reveal new College gen ed prograinby Gary Mokotoft'The committee on policyand personnel of the facultysenate has made its recom¬mendations to the College facultyregarding the general educationcomponent of the forthcomingnew undergraduate curriculum,the Marron learned the recom¬mendations were passed January27 and will officially take then-place in the curriculum in the1960-61 academic year.The new general educationcourses are: biological sciences,English composition, foreign lan¬guage, physical sciences, humani¬ties, social sciences, history ofWestern civilization and mathe¬matics. These courses conformwith the recommendations of theexecutive committee on undergra¬duate education which recom¬mended last May that the generaleducation requirements lx* reducedto eight courses instead of thepresent 14.In addition, the committee re¬commended establishing a “quar¬ter-course unit”, similar to the“credits” system at other acade¬mic institutions, for determiningthe quanity of each subject a stu¬dent will be required to take.The general education staffshave been- instructed to preparethe following course offerings andstudents will be required to take,either through accrediting o rcourse examination, 24 quarter-course units in order to satisfythe general education componentof the bachelor’s degree.• in biological sciences, Eng¬lish composition foreign language,and physical sciences students willbe offered either a two quarter ora three quarter sequence.9 in humanities and socialsciences—a three, a five and a six quarter sequence.• in history of Western civili¬zation and mathematics—a twoquarter sequence only.It will not be required that allquarters of instruction be commonfor all students enrolled in asequence of given length.The report also discussed the re¬lated points of placement, tests,accreditation, acceleration and re¬medial skills.Placement tests will serve onlyto the extent that they will aidin shaping the student’s program.Students will receive no accredita¬tion for courses from which theyare excused by orientation weektesting. They will only receive ac¬creditation [i.e., credit with agrade in a specific areal if theyapply for special accrediting ex¬aminations to be given during thefirst quarter in residence. Theselatter set of examinations wouldbe “roughly equivalent in rigor tocomprehensive examinations,” thereport stated.The placement tests might besomewhat briefer than the pre¬sent tests, since their functionwill be primarily diagnostic andprogram-shaping. Thus accredita¬ tion will be awarded only on thebasis of examinations.With regard to acceleration, anystudent who is able to n eet thestandards in less than two yearswill be accelerated to the fullextent, and insofar as generaleducation requirement are con¬cerned, is free to use the timesaved either to reduce the timefor a degree or to take additionalcourses.Students requiring improvementof basic skills treading, writingand mathematics] will be offeredno-credit, half-tuition ‘basic skillscourses”. The writers of the re¬port stated that they did not wanta simple carry-over into the newprogram o f the present basicskills courses but rather, an “ima¬ginative approach to the problempresented by a small group ofstudents.”The commmittee on policy andpersonnel realized difficulty i ssetting up biological and physicalscience curriculms due to the needfor extensive specializationcourses in the undergraduate cur¬riculum.To this point they suggestedthat: • particular courses be ac¬cepted as meeting the general edu¬cation requirements up to themaximum number o f quarter-course units allocated in that area,regardless of the individual stu¬dent’s performance on “programplacement tests.”• there be developed programplacement tests and accreditationexaminations in these substitutecourses.• in programs where such sub¬stitution of courses is under con¬sideration, serious attention begiven to the creation for such pur¬poses of advanced courses inmathematics and the scienceswhich pursue at a higher levelthe broad objective of areas inthe general education curriculum.The need for a new Collegecurriculum was formulated i nspring quarter, 1957 with theforming of the executive commit¬tee on undergraduate education.In May 1958, this committee re¬commended to the faculty, in ad¬dition to the two-year general edu¬cation component, one year of“elective” courses and a final yearof specialization.ChicagoVol. 67, No. 20 University of Chicago, Friday, February 6, 1959 3 1Beatniks visit Chicago, but not UCby James Hoge, Jr.“Someone highjacked mysatchel of poetry,” moanedbeatnik poet Allen Ginsbergat the Gate of Horn nightclubSunday afternoon.Inspired by this sterling exam¬ple of the human penchant forsouvenir grabbing, the off-beatpoets Ginsberg and Gregory Corsoended their three hour readingsession and canceled an eveningappearance at the University ofChicago.So lapsed the third successiveattempt of the beat generation topenetrate the ivied sanctuaries ofUC.The first attempt was the welldocumented effort to print beatgeneration fiction In the winteredition of the Chicago Review.The second was a poetry reading by Alien Ginsberg, scheduled inearly December, but canceled byformer Review editor, IrvingRosenthal during the Review con¬troversy. And last, Ginsberg andCorso planned to end their Chieago visit Sunday witli an un¬scheduled reading at a campusfraternity.In all, the young writers spentsix hectic days in our ice encrust¬ed city.They came Tuesday from NewYork city with two fellow travel¬ers, Peter Orlovsky and JohnFles. Driving a ramshackle autoand dressed in equally ramshackleclothes, the foursome embodiedthe illusion of a latter day Grapes-of-Wrath-trek.Their “pad - away - from home”was in a local youth hostel calledthe Art circle, at 541 Demingplace. The Circle houses aspiringartists, writers, and ballet danc¬ers. The residents, in reference to the thick mahogany woodworkand dark hallways, have accec-tionately nicknamed the estab¬lishment, “Charles Addams sum¬mer White House.”First of the major events onthe poets’ agenda was a Wednes¬day night cocktail party in a plushLake Shore apartment. Amidstmodern art masterpieces and La¬tin American statuary, the youngbards read from their poetry,talked of the world, and imbibeda healthy quantity of spiritualcheer. The evening was marredonly by Corso's mild disappoint¬ment at the inability of his redsweatshirt to compete in brilli¬ancy with the Picasso’s and Ma-tises adorning the walls.Thursday night came the bigattraction. Before more than800 people in the Bal Tabarinroom of the Hotel Sherman, thepoets held forth until after mid¬night chimes. Like old Wilkie buttons, anoccasional out-of-date beard couldbe seen here and there in thecrowd of minks, slacks, blue sergesuits and dungerees. One enter¬prising devotee took advantage offree admission to whiskered gentsby attaching false curls to hischinny-chin-chin.Ginsberg read from a varietyof works including Howl, Sun¬flower Sutra and Ignu. He madehis best impression perhaps withthe moving preface of the “kad-dish” to his mother and the start¬lingly humorous, The Lions areReal.Corso was clearly most appreci¬ated for his comical and satiricalpieces. His poems on marriageand young man’s attachment tohis hair were best received.The audience was attentive andresponsive. The poets digging it,read carefully, stressing the(see ‘Beatniks’ page 2)SFC sets date for Freeman hearingby Rochelle DubnowThe Student Faculty courtof Student Government hasset the date of the hearing inthe Robin Freeman case for Mon¬day evening, February 16 at 8pm. The hearing will be held inthe law school and is open to thepublic.Freeman, tried and found guiltyof damaging dormitory propertyby the East house tribunal twoweeks ago has appealed his caseto the SG court.The tribunal recommended thatFreeman be assessed the cost ofEight Miss UCcandidate chosenMiss UC candidates for Wash¬ington Prom are pictured to theleft, (top to bottom) they are:Wendy Good, Molly O’Rourke,Maggie Stinson, Carole Fern-strom, Verlaine Lawrence, JoyStevens, Barbara Quinn and MaryLou Wickersheim. For the can¬didates sponsoring organizationsand further information aboutWash Prom, see page 16. repairing the damage done, thathe move from East house andthat he be referred to the disci¬plinary committee of the Univer¬sity with the recommendationthat he be placed on probation forthe remainder of the year.According to the constitutionof East house, adopted in the fallquarter of 1958, the decision ofthe tribunal was subject to fur¬ther review by John Hammet, resi¬dent house head of the dormitoryand James Newman, director ofhousing.Newman stated in his recom¬mendation, “I concur that he(Freeman) should pay for . thedamage . . . and that he shouldmove from East house. Referralto the disciplinary committee doesnot, however, seem to me to becalled for by the facts of thecase.” Newman went on to statethat Freeman would be placed onacademic probation within theHouse system for the remainderof the academic year.The Student Faculty court de¬clined to issue a restraining in¬junction to prevent the removalof Freeman from East house. Aspokesman for the court said that the “eviction” was not irrever¬sible, and that the court * couldorder his return if they thoughtit proper.The spokesman conjecturedthat “the essential issue beforethe student faculty court in thismatter does not involve the ad¬ministration’s power to relocatestudents, but is rather the ques¬tion of whether the residents ofa dormitory house can set uptheir own tribunal to determinethe guilt of innocence of individ¬uals within the house and reporttheir findings to the administra¬tion.”Newman told the Maroon thathe would file an “amicus curiae”brief at the SFC hearing. Severalpeople have intervened in the caseto file such briefs. The SFCspokesman pointed out that anymember of the University mayfile an ‘amicus’ brief with thecourt.It is the general feeling of theStudent Faculty court has nojurisdiction over dormitory mat¬ters.When asked the status of theEast house court Newman re¬ viewed the court’s historical ori¬gin and stated that “early in th€fall quarter damage was done toa common room of East houseand Hammett called the Housecouncil together to consider theproblem.” Two alternatives were“deary” possible, Newman pointedout, “on the one hand, the staffcould, as it has traditionally done,conduct an investigation and ifthe ‘culprit’ were found handlethe matter through the usual ad¬ministrative channels. If the per¬son were not found who had donethe damage, all residents of thehouse would be held responsibleand would share the financialburden of repairing the damage.On the other hand, the residentsof the house could accept respon¬sibility for investigating the inci¬dent, establishing responsibilityand assessing damages. The Easthouse council chose the latteralternative and established pro¬cedures which were incorporatedinto a constitution ratified by thehouse.” Newman stated that hegave his approval to the studentsaccepting this responsibility, withthe understanding that any pro¬ceedings under the Constitution(see ‘Freeman’ page 16)Beatniks have a ball in Chicago(from pagerhythm of their lyrical offeringsand hitting the timing perfectly ontheir humorous poems.Still, several matrons of thearts spent the greater part of theevening in the rest room recover¬ing from shock stimulated by un¬familiar vocabulary. To a youngermember of the female contingentthey confided their expectationsof a more Robert Frostian pro¬gram.Following the reading and anintermission champagne party. A.C. Spectorsky, associate publisherof Playboy, moderated a panel dis¬cussion on beat generation litera¬ture. Besides the poets, the panelincluded Arthur C. Clarke, a notedBritish science expert. Clarke wac,most intrigued by Ginsberg’spoem, 'Rocket” and Corso’s poem“Bomb.” On Sunday, Ginsberg and Corsoagain took to reading with anafternoon stand at the Gate ofHorn. In expectation of an over¬flow crowd, tables were removedand extra seats installed. Suchfar-sighted measures proved asfutile as trying to trip a loco-mot ive with a piece of string. Over300 eager partisans and curiousgawkers combined in an effort tofit into a room with 120 capacity.One poor lad, coming fromdownstate Springfield, was 30minutes late due to traffic. Andthat was half hour after the lastknown inch of space had beenfilled. The door attendant, unableto turn away a hapless afficiondosfrom such far lands, squeezed himinto an overlooked crack in thewall.During a break at 6 pm Gins- burg’s folio of poetry and corres¬pondence disappeared from thepodium. After a fruitless search,the disappointed poets retired totheir press agent's flat and calledit a day as far as Chicago wasconcerned.At the end of their stay, Gins¬berg and Corso could not ciaimthey were neglected by the Chi¬cago press. They might complain,however, about the general qualityof the coverage.Setting what was to becomethe overused approach to “thebeatnik phenomena in our midst,”the Sun-Times ran a front pagestory on the Wednesday partyunder the byline of Bentley Steg-ner. Being the first and the bestof its kind, the Sun-Times storycould claim originality and genu¬ine humor. Such \droit digs as“Corso, who wrote a poem aboutTHE TAREYTON RING MIRKS THE REAL THING!A FAR REACHING AOVANCE IN FILTER SMOKING!From Me. to Mo. and clear out to Calif.,New Dual Filter Tareytons have quicklybecome the big smoke on American cam¬puses.Why so? It’s because the unique Dual Fil¬ter does more than just give you high filtra¬tion. It actually selects and balances theflavor elements in the smoke to bring outthe best in fine tobacco taste. Try Tareytonstoday—in the bright, new packl 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 theadditionalfilteringaction ofactivated charcoal in a unique innerfilter. The extraordinary purifying abll-ity of Activated Charcoal is widelyknown to science. It has been defi¬nitely proved that it makes the smokeof a cigarette milder and smoother.TIE REAL TUNG IN MILBNESS... IN FINE TOBACCO TASTE!NEW DUAL FILTER2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 6, 1959 fried shoes, wore footgear thatmust have been his inspiration,”typified the article.Reviewing the Thursday nightrecital, the other papers pickedup the gauntlet of cute prose, butwere evidently too tired to raiseit above their waists.Chicago American**r Dan Tuck¬er employed the hackneyed “I-am-a-square approach.First step of this rapier-liketechnique was an association ofthe critic with the brotherhood ofman in the general terraine ofsquareness.Next came a series of sortiesmade from the side of the mouth,the purpose being to show theridiculousness of the subject be¬ing criticized without ever havingto explain why. As a final bril¬liant thrust, a backhanded selfcompliment were set forth. Itusually amounted to a deep rootedproclamation of the ultimate su¬periority of squareness. In theAmerican article the dogma wasas follows: "... The HaplessSquare had located the exit andwas out on the sidewalk, readingthe back of an old CTA transfer.It sounded groat.”The exception to the hackneyednorm was provided by the Sun-Times book editor Hoke Norris.Evidently feeling secure of his joband his reading public, Norriswaited until the Sunday enter¬tainment section to have his say.And in the interviewing time hedid some thinking. The result wasChicago's only sound criticism andthoughtful evaluation of the Gins-berg-Corso visit. Norris stressedthe excessive length of much ofthe poetry, its lack of sharpness,and its tendency to become“. . . mere jottings of disparateimpressions.”He also gave credit where due.‘Corso” said Norris, “(isl a poetwith a genuine gift for humor . . .”The beat poets’ Midwesternjuant was made for the benefitof the literary quarterly, BigTable, which was born of the re¬cent Chicago Review controversy.Big Table was founded onChristmas Day by former editorsof the Review who had a parting of the ways with the University.The disagreement centered ondiffering opinions on what wasfit and proper for adult eyes andears.The University’s strong standwas attributed to varied rumors.Tough minded realists chalked thewhole thing up to “bad publicity”■—mentioning no names, of course.In any event, there was a con¬troversy, and the unexpected offshoot of the affair was the birthof a new review, “dedicated toany and all good fiction, poetry,and art considered significant bythe editors.”Expounding the magazines’ po¬licy with a light touch. Chief editorPaul Carroll quipped, “I’d print asonnet by Vice President Nixonif it was good.”Monday, with the new reviewon its way, Ginsberg and Corso(who confided to a Chicago col¬umnist that he is, at times, a“neatnik” sporting $300 silk suitsand Brooks Brothers gear) dug-out and the pair flew back to theirNew York Bowery “pad” withtickets provided by a gratefulBig Table.SG to releaseReview reportThe report of the SpecialCommittee of Student Gov¬ernment investigating lastquarter’s Chicago Review incidenthas been published. Copies will bedistributed to the faculty and ad¬ditional copies will be available tointerested students beginning io-day or Monday at the ReynoldsClub desk.The committee was appointedto investigate “the reasons for theresignation of the Review editorsand for the failure of the publica¬tion of the Winter issue.” Accord¬ing to the committee, “ the reportcontains an accurate account ofthe causes of the above events.It has been compiled from in¬terviews with Review staff mem¬bers, faculty, administration offi¬cials, and University Press per¬sonnel.CHECKS P Jf,small and LARGE rsLucille Aare the Springperennial 1507 east 53rd ft.from $14.95 mi 3-9898Virginia Ham SteakJuicy, tender, sugar-cured ham, broiled on « »open flame, with pineapple ring, cherry, po-tatoes and either salad or vegetable. ■(This ham would tempt a Rabbi!)STERN S CAMPUS DRUGS61st fir Ellis☆ WRIGHTSHIRTS15 cents LAUNDRYwith Hydro bundle COMPLETELAUNDRY AND DRY☆ CLEANING SERVICE1315 EAST 57TH STREETMl 3-2079Big 10 and Mid-west lifeRevive 'Fun & Trash' culture study grant madeA new edition of "Fun and Trash," WUCB's radio program,will be presented at the student hangout at 10:30 Thursday,evening. This will be the second "Fun and Trash" to be pre¬sented this year. Student Union, which sponsors the hangout,hopes to develop this into a weekly floor show.Kent Flannery will be in charge of the 45 minute parodyof a well known and long running radio show.Student Hangout, open from 9 to 12 every weeknight, islocated throughout Ida Noyes first floor. Featuring fresh ham¬burgers, coffee, soft drinks, assorted additional food, the Hang¬out was set up as a refuge for and from study breaks.BMW—— A $254,000 grant by Carnegie corporation forstudies of educational functions of the Big Tenuniversities and UC in the life of the Midwest wasannounced by Gordon N. Ray, University of Illinoisvice president and provost, chairman of the uni¬versities’ committee on institutional cooperation.The grant will be spread over a four-year periodfor operations established last fall under a previous$40,000 grant by the Carnegie corporation.A research center to carry on studies of educa¬tional problems which the institutions share incommon was set up at Illinois with Professor Hen¬ning Larsen, formerly vice president and provostof that university, as staff director.Projected studies will deal with planning for thefuture, including enrollment and admissions poli¬ cies, and with the history and present status ofcoordination among state-supported institutions ofhigher education in the seven states represented.Professor Larsen, commenting on the new grant,pointed out that “more and more educators recog¬nize that higher education faces a real crisis. Thesituation is explosive, and no one institution canface it alone. The Council of Ten and Chicago areamong the largest and most powerful institutionsin our country; all are from the same general area,the Midwest, and their problems are common. It isin a hope that more intense cooperation of thegroup can lead to higher achievement both inteaching and research that the corporation hasmade its generous grant.”Schlesinger gets accolade Clauses go at NUThe Navy Merit award, highest honor that theNavy can confer upon a civilian, has been awardedto Herman I. Schlesinger, professor in the depart¬ment of chemistry.Schlesinger was honored for his research in thehydrides of light metals, for work which he hasdone much in the production of hydrogen, forthe synthesis of certain organic compounds, andmore recently, for the development of adequater<x ket fuel.This is the third major award that Schlesinger,has won in the past few months. Previously hehad received the Williard Gibbs medal and the Priestley medal, the highest honor in Americanchemistry.The award will be presented next week in Wash¬ington by Rear Admiral Rawson Bennett, the chiefof Naval research. The Priestly and the Gibbsawards will be presented sometime in the spring.Schlesinger is an authority on boron hydrides,compounds use in some jet and rocket fuels. Work¬ing with the atomic energy commission and otherresearch and development bodies of the govern¬ment, he has carried out duties that led to moreefficient methods of producing boron hydrides.Foundation awards grantsF ive University scientists have been awarded advanced fellowships by the National Sci¬ence foundation. The announcement was made recently by the foundation.Three of the scientists were among 40 awarded senior doctoral fellowships in the US.Each will leave the campus in July to study for one year at a European laboratory. Thethree from the University are:Leo A. Goodman, professorof statistics and sociology,-who will go to the Universityof London.Math staff nextfor faculty teaUndergraduates may nowmeet their College instructorsfor tea Tuesdays in Swiftcommons, and Thursdays inClassics 21 from 3 lo 4:30 pm.Future teas will feature mem¬bers of the mathematics ABCstaff [February 101, humanities 3[February 12], English [Feb¬ruary 171, natural sciences 2 and[February 19], languages [Feb¬ruary 24], OMP [February 26].The get-togethers are sponsoredby Orientation board, t o“strengthen student-faculty ties.” Norman H. Nachtrieb, profes¬sor of chemistry in the institutefor the study of metals, who willgo to the Polytechnic Institute ofMilan, Italy.Valentine L. Telegdi, associateprofessor of physics in the EnricoFermi institute for nuclearstudies, who will continue his re¬search at the University of Gen¬eva, Switzerland.Two UC faculty membersamong 242 other scientists whowere awarded NSF Science Fac¬ulty fellowships are:Augustus F. Bausch, assistantprofessor of mathematics in theCollege, to Princeton university.Aaron Sayvetz, professor ofnatural sciences in the College, toMassachusetts Institute of Tech¬nology.In its announcement, the NSFexplained that “Science Facultyand Senior Postdoctoral fellow¬ships carry stipends adjusted to approximate the regular salariesof award recipients.“These stipends may be appliedtoward study or research in anaccredited nonprofit institution ofhigher learning in the UnitedStates or in a nonprofit institu¬tion of higher education abroad.”UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorPROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO.“Hyde Park's Most Complete Paint £r Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 1154-58 I. 55»h at. *WASW^PROMy ALEXANDER’SRESTAURANT (SEPS)—The president of Northwestern’s Panhellenicassociation has publicly spoken out in support of the moveto have Greek houses remove their discriminatory clauses bySeptember 1, 1963 or else be forced to relinquish their national affili¬ations.Speaking at a Panhel meeting recently, Suzanne Straight, Pi BetaPhi, also defended SGB’s right to act on this issue.“This matter concerns the entire student body and therefore shouldbe handled by SGB,” Miss Straight said.Thus Miss Straight became the first-known fraternity or sororityleader in the long standing jurisdictional dispute between SGB andthe inter-Greek groups to support the ultimate authority of studentgovernment over Panhellenic.“The university doesn’t believe in racial discrimination, and it iscontradictory to allow discriminatory groups,” Miss Straight said.Opposing Miss Straight’s views were Rusty Conklin, Delta DeltaDelta, and Sally Thurnau, Kappa Kappa Gamma. Miss Conklin sug¬gested that instead of the present motion, the 1963 date be pushedback to 1970 with a student, faculty, administration board to meetannually to determine progress on the elimination of discriminatoryclauses.fa$ die gang’s all-there!/on American ExpressSfudentlours of EuropeWherever, whenever, however you travel, your bestassurance of the finest service is American Express!On American Express Student Tours of Europe you’llbe escorted on exciting itineraries covering such fascin¬ating countries as England . . . Belgium . . . Germany... Austria . . . Switzerland . . . Italy ... The Rivieras. . . and France. And you’ll have ample free time andlots of individual leisure to really live life abroad!7 Student Tours of Europe . . . featuring distinguished leadersfrom prominent colleges as tour conductors . . .40 to 62 days ... by sea and by air ... $1,397 and up.4 Educational Student Tours of Europe . . . with experienced escorts... by sea ... 44 to 57 days ... $872 and up.Other European Tours Available . . . from 14 days . . . $672 and up.Also, Tours to Florida, Bermuda, Mexico, West indies and Hawaii.You can always Travel Now—Pay Later when yougo American Express!Member: Institute of International Education andCouncil on Student Travel.For complete information, see your Campus Repre¬sentative, local Travel Agent or American ExpressTravel Service ... or simply mail the handy coupon.AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVEL SERVICE65 Broadway, New York 6, N. Y. e/o Travel Saie» DitUw*C-l 3Yes! Please send me complete informationabout 1959 Student Tours of Europe!NameAddressCity Zone. , State.PROTECT YOUR TRAVEL FUNDS WITH AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES-SPENDABLE EVERYWHEREAPPLY NOW FOR YOUR COMPREHENSIVE AMERICAN EXPRESS W0RLD-WI0E CREDIT CARDFor specially planned student tours at student prices,consult your authorixed AMERICAN EXPRESScampus representative.Write: Travel Organizers A^oriaiionBox 1801 New Haven. Conn.Feb. 6, 1959■■ .u< i w • CHICAGOA—V - MAROON"? — —- :<fit *j. n\ 1 the Chicago maroon• - - ■ : - ... .■fRoEEWcEflTHAT'S WHfll IVEft IhP-fiaMWG CfiSt **ADVANCE* PARANOIA Ihounded —— 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and Intermittently during the summer quarterby the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E 59th Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800extentions, 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.non-SG'ers for committee...On January 27 a bill for government self-evaluation was introduced to SG and passed. Thisbill called for the formation of a bi-partisan committee to consider the effectiveness of SG inview of the lack of support and interest of the student body. Three members of ISL and fourmembers of SRP were elected to the committee and through a piece of party wizardry amember of ISL secured the chairmanship.Why are the interests of these two parties the only one represented? The purpose of thiscommittee is to evaluate the effectiveness of SG in gneral, not the platforms of policies ofISL or SRP I suggest the formation of a new committee including not only representativesfrom ISL and SRP but representatives from independent members of SG. In addition, sincethis self-evaluation involves an analysis of the attitudes and interests of the student body, Isuggest that several students not directly connected with SG be elected to this committee.Only under these conditions will any constructive evaluation result. Lincoln RamirezFree beer!(the sorsoporilla variety) plus information obout positions available o»Hie Maroon staff may be obtained at tbe Moroon's open house, thisTuesdoy from 3:30 to 5. Midyeor entrants and other interested UC'ers•re invited to attend.•4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444«4444444| i Most ( JlllMlilll♦ Mvtion Picture 1 lienirePhone DE 7-1763Ag ain remind* all College Students of tireSpecial Student Rales always in effect atEVERY DAY OF THE WEEK1NCL. FRI. i SAT. EVENINGS MOW-75*JVST SHOW CMHin YOU* 1.0. CAMDSfECfAlSTUDENTlATi Mr. Hu lot ReturnsJacques Tati"MY UNCLE"f tm*W4tmt4m.tmm»4lt«4l4HI44t444imW444»W44ni»444t4t« < MAHALIA JACKSONA LANGSTON NUGNESAn Epic of AmericonaFrom Spiritual toGospel SongFriday, Feb. 13th, 8:30 PMORCHESTRA HALLTickets at Box Office orMail Orders to: Old TownSchool of Folk Music3 33 W. North Ave. Chicapo 14WHiteholl 4-7475Tickets$1.85, $2.65. $3.20, $3.9510% Discount to UC Students and PersonnelAll Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW NET PRICES8-LBS WASHED & FLUFF DRIED . . . 59‘10-LBS. FLAT WORK $131DRESS SHIRTS * 22*QUALITY DRY CLEANING — RAPID SERVICE — REASONABLE PRICESFREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERYPhone PLaza 2 94)97UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1024 E. 55th St.PAY FOR YOUR LIFEINSURANCE THE EASY WAYYOU CAN ARRANGE TO HAVE THE PREMIUMS ON YOUR OWN LIFE INSURANCE(AND THAT OF MEMBERS OF YOUR FAMILY, IF YOU ARE PAYING THEPREMIUMS) PAID AUTOMATICALLY FROM YOUR BANK ACCOUNT EVERYMONTH WITH THE NEW SUN LIFE AUTOMATIC MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANThis is a time saving, money saving feature.—&UI-RALPH J. WOOD JR. 48SUN LIFE OF CANADAChicago 2, III.RE 1-08551 N. LaSalle St.FR 2-2390 RepresentotivSUN LIFE OF CANADA4 • CHICAGO M A R O ON "• Feb:’ 6, 1959^ A S • • » *'t •% 9 (* e ■* The Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekPurcellCOME YE SONSOF ARTOL 50166$3.99 )‘fad CAN'T HAVETHOt PARANOIA-<AW AREN'T 35NET! IT'SfftoBABLV OMIVA SCHIZOID. j.KNlATlOKir / OOfS THISWEAK rMA HERETIC?.0* GbOA6t, I WANT PRISTINE Pl/REPARANOIA AND I'Ll GET IT IP I HAVETO mARCH ON viennhrnokMn®SflnStftCTtQN! _(OflM'T Do ANY7/ \ GOOD! THE o*H(( 1 5OtOTt0N 15 TOVi. 1 SWITCH THE JRT£eftouZD J THAT'S WHAT I LL DO! I'Ll TWbftR A DoUBiC BKEftSTEP SUITgrow a mustache.* wd Owe M* )HAIR LUKE PON HP1ECH6. /h WW! VlUANWNSATISFACTOHPRETEHSk ATBEST! BUT .Pm)1!LOOSE HOPE -tVNfcfc SOME 0HEWW-L GHf6 MW ASfcT °P SMOCKTAeRTNieNTs ft*Noo* birthday?Orientation is endedThe mid year class will conclude its orientation activitiestonight and will begin classes Monday.There are about 70 entrants, including fifteen transfer stu¬dents. Approximately half of the entrants are from Chicago,but only 25 of these will live in the dormitories. The largenumber of Chicago residents may be explained by the factthat the midyear system was set up to admit high school grad¬uates in January as well as in June.Entrants will register tomorrow from 8:30 am to 12 noonin the Administration building and will begin classes Monday.Several orientation activities are scheduled for this afternoon.'Entering men will meet for discussion with James Newmanand entering women with Mrs. Marjorie Ravitts and Mrs. RuthMcCarn in Ida Noyes at 1 :30. Students will then confer withsenior advisers in the departments of humanities, social sci¬ences, physical sciences and biological sciences at 2:20. Areception in Ida Noyes library will follow.O-week activities began with a meeting of the entire classlast Saturday with addresses by Eve Leoff, O Board president,deans Harold Haydon, John P. Netherton, and Robert E. Street¬er, and Knox Hill College examiner. This week included campustours Sunday and a dinner in the C-Shop Tuesday night.Jittimy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.French paperbacksSUMMIT Books138 S. WabashThe CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 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 8-6711Have a WORLD of FUNlTravel with fITAUnbelievable Low CostEurope60 Day* ♦»•«* $645 GLADIS RESTAURANT1527 East 55th st.orders to carry outopen 24 hoursDO 3-9788Orient-65 Day* tram $998-«• uiiKL I Many tours include$tt credit.Alio low-cost trip* to M*xico$169 up. South America 5699 up,Hawaii Study Tour $549 up andAround the World $1798 up.A»k Your Travel Agent*6th | Mh. 332 Se. Michigan Ay*.T,or w »•»$• >*m. me. Chicoso 4. NA /•«» Max HorkheimerProfessor of Sociology, Fronkfort-ammaim ond the University ofChicago, Director of the Institutefor Social Research.Will speok on Sociology ondPhilosophy12 Feb. 1959in Room 122, Social Sciencesbuilding ot 8:15 p**».' »*• rCLASSIFIED ADSFor Rentfor rent. $25-$45 per month. Eve-null, meals. Phi Kappa Psl frat, 5555Woodlawn. PL 2-9704.- -pi iinfurn. *ot. on Dorchester near«-0228; or WA 5-6935 between/ 9 am St5 P‘»»-3 rm turn, apt., 53rd Sc Klmbark. $82.50.Call Mrs Hufford, PI 6-8300. 9:30-5:30.2 */Z ROOMSCheerful, newly decorated, attractivelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator bldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man Maid and linen service available.Reasonable monthly rate.VERSAILLES APARTMENTS52.34 Dorchester FA 4-0200 Room Sc bath, close to campus, IC, Co¬op. etc., with some kit. prlv. Gradstudent preferred—male. Air cond. dur¬ing summer. Avail. Feb. 15. PL 2-1667,anytime.Spacious rms. in elegant residence nearlake Sc IC. Available for students orbusiness girls. MU 4-7844. WantedStudent wanted for part-time incometax work. Simple returns. Phone Cas-ner, CEdarcrest 3-4053, STewart 3-6681.ServicesSpacTou? 7 nri.weekd^*- Un*versit^*t HY FVoftch umrsiLweexaays. converse'ioTT Y®!u: children, students,nsJlRPRt; /-A 4"3367.For Sale SEWING—Alterations, hems, curtains.Call MU 4-3941.THE UTMOSTIn design and constructionApartments full of distinctive ideas andappointments. Unusually distinctiveone and two bedroom apartment units.Beam ceilings, louvre doors, ample clos¬ets and storage, glass enclosed tub andshower, electric range, refrigerator,washer and dryer, furnished each apart¬ment. Individual thermostat each room,hooded stove vent, modern interiordecor and accessories, gas lighted off-street parking. Now leasing rentals. $90to $125 a month. Phone EDlson 1-1500:office located at 15429 Dixie Highway(Western Avenue). For Nat Sci II: 4 turret 600X-25X re¬search microscope, substage lamp, slides$15. Soc. Sci. 2: US Army Map6—$3.DA 8-6059, Evanston.New Eng. bikes, discounts. MI 3-9048.Hi-fi equipment for sale. Estimated re¬tail, $1,200. Jensen Imperial speakers;Rek-o-Kut B12-H turntable and arm;Pickering 350-D cartridge; Scott 121-Cpreamp; Harmon-Kardon tuner; Dyna-kit amplifier. 60 watts. Best price of¬fered. Call FA 4-9490 after 7 pm.PRICED TO SELLLovely 10-rm., 2-bath residence on largelot near 54th & Harper. Excellent con¬dition with automatic heat and beau¬tiful fenced yard. Call Mrs. Redfern,HY 3-2215.C. W. HOFF & CO., INC. Personal U High grads reuniteThe first general reunion of the graduates of the Universityof Chicago High school will be held Tuesday at the Pick Con¬gress hotel.Robert Merriam, deputy assistant to President Eisenhower forinter departmental affairs, will be among the speakers at the dinner.He was a member of the class of 1935. tFrederick M. Gillies, chairman of Acme Steel corporation, whois in charge of the event, said alumni throughout the world havebeen invited.“Individual classes have held reunions from time to time,” Gilliessaid, “but this is the first time all of the classes will be together.”tfltfa’llUaia &bout the old days, of course” Gillies said, “but wealso will be considering fhe flltUJVb COima of the school as a leader inthe proper education of teenagers.”Fearless Fosdick feels flowers fascinate.Morris Newman. PL 2-9492.Lost: a set of car keys in handmade It.brown key case near 60th and Univer¬sity. Finder please call ext. 3445.WORKSHOP IN CREATIVE WRITINGPLaza 2-8377Going 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, no insurance worries! Campusrepresentative: HY 3-5228. MODEL CAMERAAuthorized LeieaDealerNS A Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259APO will have a smoker CLOISTER'SVALET SHOP1415 East 58thin Cloister Bldg.DO 3-7056cleaning, repairing, weavingline of men’s clothingreasonably priced.Alpha Phi Omega will holdi rushing smoker Tuesday at7:30 pm in Ida Noyes hall,[•'iank Keenan, chapter presidentinnounced.Requirements for membershipn the national service fraternityire a previous afliliation withscouting and a desire to renderservice to others. “APO crossestil lines of honorary, social andprofessional fraternities,” Keenansaid, "and the membership of this?ampus chapter includes male stu-lents from these other brother-loods.”Outing club plantrip to WisconsinThe Outing club will sponsora trip to Rib mountain nearWausau, Wisconsin, from Feb¬ruary 13 through 15. The estimat¬ed cost, a club representative said,will be $16, including room, boardand round trip transportation.There is a limited amount ofspace still available, he added. In¬terested persons should contactWendy Good in Beecher or DavidJaecks in Shell for reservations orinformation. Activities of the group have in¬cluded poll watching lor the Stu¬dent Government elections, usher¬ing for Kluektriars performances,acting as student guides duringalumni week and raising moneyfor World University service andthe Frankfurt student exchange.The fraternity does not main-Photographs for'59CapandGownto be taken soonCap and Gown, the Univer¬sity yearbook, will Lake groupphotos for the 1959 editionbeginning this week, according toeditor Walter Fish. Male residentsare expected to wear sports coatsand ties. Photographs of new'dorm residents will be taken in thebasement lounge of West housenext Wednesday evening, accord¬ing to the following schedule:West 1, 7:30 pm; West 2, 7:45;West 3, 8; West 4, 8:15; North 4,8:30; North 1, 8:45; North 2, 9;North 3, 9:15; East 1, 9:30; East2, 9:45; East 3, 10; East 4, 10:15. tain a chapter house. Instead itmeets regularly on campus andholds its social functions in thehouse of its members. *WASM**PR0MHERBERT APTHEKERHistorian, Editor Dr. KURT ROSEN8AUM"Political Affairs" OptometristSpeaks on“Negro Liberation Today” Eyes ExaminedSun., Feb. 15th, 7:30 pm Glasses FittedFine Arts Building Contact Lenses410 South Michigan Blvd. Visual TrainingMusic HallGeneral Admission $1.00 1132 E. 55th StSTUDENTS 50 HY 3-8372Auspices: Freedom of Press Comm.The Qreen Door Book Shop1451 EAST 57TH STREETHY 3-5829 Chicago 37, III.Quality paperbacks — Fine children's booksSpecial orders filled promptly NOW!big discountsfor studentsand facultySHERATONHOTELSwith a SheratonStudent or FacultyI.D. cardHere’s how to cut your travelexpenses. Sheraton Hotels havespecial low rates for students,faculty, and all other college per¬sonnel during weekends, vaca¬tions, and summer. Rates evenlower with two or more people inthe same room. Group rates arealso available for clubs, teams,and other organizations.Arrangements may be madefor credit privileges at SheratonHotels. The Sheraton Student-Faculty Plan is good at all 48Sheraton Hotels in 39 cities in theU. S. A. and in Canada.You must present your I.D.card when you register at thehotel to be eligible for thesespecial discounts,Get your Sheraton I. D. card from:HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and Waffles 1342Open from Down to Dawn east 53 st. tytfimiM photographers College Relations DepartmentSheraton Building470 Atlantic AvenueBoston 17, Massachusetts1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433Universal 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 3-95720 % reduction with this coupon^_M_«Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 «.»«. - 11 p.m.mm m|iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimmiMiHMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiii^Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood |UNUSUAL FOOD |DELIGHTFULATMOSPHERE jPOPULARI PRICES |^'lllltlillllllllllllliilliiiiiiiiiiiiitiiKIllllllUlllilllllillllllllUllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllilllllllllllllllllllllllillUl Great buy!the trim-fittingARROW GlenIt’s the shirt with the stand¬out choice in collars — theregular button-down, or per¬manent stay Arrow Glen.Exclusive Mitoga® tailoringcarries through the trim, tap¬ered look from collar to waistto cuff. “Sanforized” broad¬cloth or oxford in stripes,checks, solids. $4.00 up.Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc.ARROW-»—first In fashionprofileThe life and the times of Walter JeschkeProbably one of the most interesting and per¬sonally best known men on campus is WalterJeschke, the Ida Noyes guard. Although his titleis officially that of guard, to those that know him—and they are legion — he is a friend, advisor, helper, en¬cyclopaedia of University knowledge, and a compendiumof recent information. Not only that, but he has probablybeen in active participation in student functions as longas or longer than anyone else at UC.Walter comes from the Free City of Danzig — oncethe Republic of Danzig — on the northern coast Ofwhat is now Pok&rrd, He went to the normal school thatwas required of everybody for 12 years, and when hegraduated he won a two-year scholarship to a Gym¬nasium. He did not attend, however, because his parentswere unable to afford the cost of school books.“I had to learn a trade,” Walter said, “and so I wentinto clerking — what is commonly called accounting inAmerica. There is a three year apprenticeship for thistrade, and you had to go to night school during mostof this time.”When he had finished the apprenticeship. Walter wentto work for a wholesale house in Danzig. Here hebecame acquainted with international trade regulations,tariffs, and the like. He led an active and inquiring life,being interested in politics, and the literary works ofsuch men as Goethe and Schiller.However, the city absorbed the business in which hewas working, i.e. tobacco sales, and Walter ended uppushing a handcart. This was not at all to his liking,and he decided to leave when he eventually realized thatthere was no future in the pushcart business.Walter here mentioned another fact which may havebad some bearing on his leaving Danzig. He was amember of the Social Democrat party, which opposedHitler’s storm troopers. “I ;tarted to check my contacts in America, and wasable to get in on the next year’s quota, in 1926,” hesaid. “I arrived in New York first, and although I hada good job offer there, I had to go on to Chicago becausethat was the destination listed on my ticket. Eventhough times were good, I found it hard at first toget a job.”Walter found a job in a laundry located near theMidway, but he became ill and had to leave this job.When he recovered he started a grocery store in a basement on Woodlawn ave. His bad luck continuedfor the building was sold, and when the new ownerdoubled the rent, he was forced to abandon his business.It was at this point that he first applied for a jobat the University and was given one with buildings andgrounds, working in the University Press building. Astime went on, he became a fcu^rr.«"; Snd fern he was’tiuru^TTeu io the- Laboratory school. Here, in what wasprobably his first University job in a class building, hefound that he enjoyed very much helping and workingwith the students.“Then I became ill again,” Walter continued. “Thedoctors at Billings did not know what was wrong withme, or why, and so during my six week stay there Iwas sort of a medical experiment. The University wasconsiderate to me, though, and when I got out of thehospital they put me on as a guard in the OrientalInstitute, w’here I wouldn’t be required to do muchphysical labor.”He worked at the Institute for about eight monthsbefore he was transferred to Ida Noyes hall as a guard.He has been here since.Walter recalled the early days of Ida Noyes, whenit was a hall run almost exclusively for women. Menwere usually not allowed on the upper floors, and whenthey were, it was because of some special occasion. Allmen had to remove their hats and couldn’t smoke.Walter’s philosophy is a simple one — “Students aremy business” — and is well exemplified by his actions.His life here, he emphasizes, has been exciting and stimu¬lating, and he expressed pleasure that he had alwaysbeen lucky to have superiors who gave him free reign,and who have been generally understanding. He hadhigh praise for the student activities office also, torenabling him to make much closer contact with thestudents.John MillsUNIVERSITYHOTEL5519 S. BLACKSTONEDORCHESTER 3-4100Cleon rooms, oil with privote bath,shower and telephone. Daily maidservice, 24 hour switchboard. Alltransportation, 2 blocks to I.C.Transient and permanent. Reason¬able rates. Captures yourpersonalityas well asyour personphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. Rudy’sAuthorizedU of C Class RingsSales OMEGA ServiceIndivitluallg designed,handmade jewelry(Discount to students)1523 East 53rd st.NOrmal 7-2666 MarylandTelephowe - SecretarialService. 841 eost 63rd st — suite 201Special attention toTERM PAPERS — THESESPhone for appointmentDOrchester 3-2945 “1QDM mougOf S+OH U404j. cpfim5E m N 1 3 3 M s V 3’ dH 0 3 s 3 8 O a 1 1 VE V W s n € N 3 a 1 0 HE d Y n 0 d 3 3 a 00 0 i d 1 1T1 3 s 0 i 0 3 d V 3 s 3s 1 d X V A 3 T 1 V ;dH 0 7T 0 1 a O 1 T V3 i s N k,' n Hs 3 1 s 3 ■ ► < A u 1 n 0 aA 1 V 1 1 * * N 0 0 i0 3 Vi 0 a I .cS'lti 85VH8 I 3 0 I a~s Tj V 3 2 I nOD* AO*. ftjvrv| F4 Lv a 3fcHMSNV 1CDMKGDL KROSSWORD No. 16ACROSS1. Hot compressfor cool student5. Deanly talks10. It’s Institutedin Texas11. He didn’t buy abalcony ticket12. Coin changesreligiously13. Land of amove14. Slugfest15. He ranwith Adlal16. Quiet, cat!IT. H step18. Dulcet-toneddamsel20. Role too smallto get yourteeth in23. Pinchpunch line26. Water boy’sburden27. She startsevasive action28. Revised risk29. Work free31. Skeleton’sabode33. King-size Koolshave afilter34. Also divine35. Weirdy38. Handpercussion42. Kwai baby44. Proverbia’holiday**’45. Kind of gone46. They couldbe sober48. Me, myselfand I49. Podder60. Kind of galmoms like 61. So what elseis 1DOWN1. Cheat, a littlechildishly2. Puerto’s lastname3. Helpinghearing4. Kools are6. Help! Wow!Boohoo!6. Switch from7. They’re reallylovers8. Kind of gramor phone9. Beans18. Date who’sall arms19. Kind of Vegas20. Radar talk21. Start ofIvy League22. Asking a galreal nice like24. Qo. in France25. DDE’spredecessor30. You pay ’emwhen you err32. Hopper witha hunger35. Feels rough,this smoothie36. Performance,while rocking?37. Miss Fitz.39. You said it.Preach!40. Kind of boy bob41. Kools arefresh43. hear this!44. Buzzin’ cousin47. Half a beer• As cool and clean as a breath of fresh air.,• Finest leaf tobacco.. .mild refreshing menthol —and the world Is moet thoroughly tested filter 1• With every puff your mouth feels dean*your throat refreshed!Omericok Most-Refreshing QgaietfeALSO REGULAR SIZE KOOL WITHOUT FILTERI•ss»0. Brown * Wtlliamaon Tobacco Cor*.6 • $ H | c A qf O M U QON ,• JFeb. 6, 1?5? ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRCan vas fleece-linedCampus Shoes(women's only, in white)Reg. $6.95SALE $3.75EQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'NARROW HEELSHeels changed — Any style —Any colorBackstraps Removed and Springa-lators inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfax 4-96221749 Eost 55th St. TAhSAM-YkNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 Eost 63rd St. BU 8-9018AatACASA BOOKSTOREGood Used BooksCarefully selected Imports of cards, giftschildren's booksreliable typewriter service1322 E. 35th St. HY 3-9651TERRY’S PIZZAFree lJC Deliverysmall 1.00 large 195medium 1.45 x-large 2.95giant — 3.95chicken — shrimp — sandwiches1518 e. 63rd MI 3-404525e discount on oU pizzas, Mon, Tu, Wad, Thors, only,with this couponComing events on quadranglesFriday, 6 Februaryi iire series: -Psychotherapy. Rosen-wild 2 10 am. Dr. Nathan Ackerman.i..tit-varsity Christian fellowship meet-in,. 12 30'pm. Ida Noyes East lounge.Non - d enom 1 national Bible study.i-nderersauate mathematics clnb meet-l.m 3 30 pm. Eckhart 207. P. R. Hal-moe will speak on “Squaring theseminar^ "The county Judge as theuuardian of election legality." SocialSciences 302. 3:30 pm. Judge Otto Ker¬ne, court of Cook county.wtUT Social Action committee meet¬ing 4 pm. Ida Noyes hall...... inn- series: "Pharmacology and phy¬siology series.” 64 East Lake street,6 urn "The physiology of conscious¬ness learning and memory.” Kao Li¬ang Chow, assistant professor, depart¬ment of physiology.11, the ran student group cost dinner.Chapel house. 6 pm. Student paneldiscussion, “Quo vadis Christian.lecture series: “The stillpoint: a lec-‘ ture-demonstratlon series on thedance” 64 E. Lake street. 8:15 pm.The art of the choreographer.” Wal¬ter Camryn, Stone-Camryn School ofBdllstiRecord dance, International house roomCDE. 7 pm. Admission 50 cents.dillel foundation, “The Biblical poetand the human dilemma,” 5715 Wood-lawn avenue, 8:30 pm. The first in aseries of three readings With com¬mentary. ‘‘Ecclesiastes (the power ofnegative thinking.)” Readings by KenAtkatz and William Bezdek of Uni¬versity Theatre. Commentary by Jaro-slav Pelikan. associate professor, fed¬erated theological faculty. Presentedin cooperation with University Thea¬tre Sabbath service 7:45 pm.Saturday, 7 FebruaryEnglish class. International house roomB, 10 to 12 noon.Recorder society meeting. Ida NoyesEast lounge, 2 pm.Chinese New Year, one-act play andbuffet dinner. International house,7 pm. Admission $2.50 per person.Saturday night tea for Internationalhouse students only, home room,8 pm.Concert. Cynthia Gooding, folk singer.Mandel hall, 8:30 pm. Admission $1 25student, $1.75 general. Sponsored byPolitics club.Sunday, 8 FebruaryRoman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10 and IIa in. DeSales house, 5735 Universityavenue. Sponsored by Calvert club.Chamber music workshop, Ida Noyeslibrary, 7:30 pm, sponsored by musi¬cal society.Bridge club, first meettng. Ida Noyeslounge, 7:30 pm.Sunday evening coffee hour, 5715 Wood-lawn avenue, 8 pm, sponsored by Hil-lel foundation. “Justice In the OldTestament.” A discussion of law andcovenant by Robert Sacks is thefourth In a series of seven lecture-discussions on "Justice.”Monday, 9 FebruaryFolk dance group, 5715 Woodlawn ave¬nue. 4 pm, sponsored by Hillel foun¬dation.Class in elementary Hebrew. 5715 Wood-lawn avenue, Hillel foundation, 4 pm.English class, International house roomB. 63:0 pm.Movie: "Genevieve,” i British i. Interna-Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRIST1138 E. 68 HY 3-5352Bicycles, Ports, Accessoriesspecial student offer JACE CYCLE SHOP1621 e. 55th st. ;***AAaA*a*aA***AAaaaaA24-HourKodachrome colorfilmprocessingModel Camera Shop1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Retirement InsuranceAnnuitiesConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986Drive-in Floristscan supply yourWASH PROMCORSAGESOrchids $3white orchids $4 fir $5carnations $2 to $3roses $2 Or $3mums $1.50 to $2.50campus reprranttatitieMorris NewmanPL 2-9492 tional house East lounge, 7 and 9 pm.Admission 50 cents.Lecture: “The history of the Negro,”sponsored by NAACP, Reynolds club,8 pm. Dr. Samhuel Gandy of theNational Council of Christians andJews.Tuesday, 10 FebruaryInlervarsity Christian fellowship. IdaNoyes east lounge. 12:30 pm. Non-denominational Bible study.Folk dancing, International house as¬sembly hall, 8 pm. Admission 50 cents.Record concert. International househome room, 8:30 pm.Lecture series: "The individual’s experi¬ence in psychotherapy,” Downtowncenter, 8 pm, John M. Butler, associ¬ate professor of psychology; executivesecretary, Counseling center.Lecture series: “Art of the Scandinavianfilm": “Historical introduction — thestory of Gosta Berling, Sweden, 1924.”Downtown center, 7:30 pm, modera¬tor: Helen Englund, executive direc¬tor, American Scandinavian founda¬tion; coordinator: Henry Breltrose,department of Radlo-TV-Film, North¬western university.Lecture-debate: “The Negro in HydePark” by the aldermanic candidates,sponsored by the NAACP and SRP.8 pm,‘‘Open Occupancy: The turning pointfor desegregation.” 8 pm, Social Sci¬ences 201, sponsored by the Politicsclub and the NAACP. Warren Lehmanof the Mayor's housing committee.“The Negro on Film,” 7:15 and 9:15 pm,Judd 126, sponsored by Doc Films andthe NAACP.Wednesday, 11 FebruaryHug Ivri discussion In Hebrew, “Jewishawareness in Israel.” 5715 Woodlawnavenue, 12:30 pm. Sponsored by Hillelfoundation. Elihu Katz, assistant pro¬ fessor, department of sociology willspeak. Luncheon 50 cents by reserva¬tion or bring own. Tea will be served.Lecture: “Who's on base—an operatingmanager controls his operations.”Sponsored by business school. Breastedhall, 1:30 pm. Bud Sills, vice-presi¬dent, Spiegel.Class in elementary Yiddish, 5715 Wood¬lawn avenue, 3:30 pm, sponsored byHillel foundation.Lecture: “The history of the Negro pro¬test movement in America.” Classics16, 4 pro. Geqrge Rawick, instructorin the social sciences. Sponsored byNAACP.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel.Organ recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller chapel,Heinrich Fleischer.English class. International house roomB. 6:30 pm.University Glee club rehearsal, 7 pm,Ida Noyes theatre.Lecture: Warren Lehman, of the Mayor'scommittee on housing, speaking on“Open occupancy.” Social Sciences201, 8 pm. Sponsored by Politics club.West house coffee hour, 9 to 11 pm,first floor lounge. Music, food, com¬panionship.Thursday, 12 FebruaryLecture: “Brain stimulation experi¬ments on higher functions.” Swiftcommons, 1:30 pm. Sponsored by de¬partment of psychology. Dr. JamesOlds of the brain research center,University of Michigan. Discussionand coffee hour will follow.Greek Students club, Ida Noyes Eastlounge, 7:30 pm. Refreshments followmeeting.Flying Maroons meeting, Ida Noyes,third floor, 7:30 pm.Record concert. International househome room, 8:)f> pm.Lecture series: “The art of the ancient near east.” Oriental institute museum,8 pm, Downtown center, PenelopeWeadock, research associate, Orientalinstitute. manager, WFMT. Social Sciences 20L7:30 pm.Business offersFriday, 13 February ________ # ;jWatch out for black cats and don’t P® wl OIV*Watch out for black cats and don’twalk under ladders!Intervarsity Christian fellowship, IdaNoyes east lounge, 12:30 pm. Non-denominational Bible study.NAACP Social Action committee meet¬ing, Ida Noyes hall, 4 pm.Lutheran student group cost dinner,chapel house, 5810 Woodlawn avenue,6 pm. Lenten vesper service, Thorn¬dike Hilton chapel, 7 pm. Discussion,“What Is Lent?” 7:30 pm.Record dance, International house roomCDA, 7 pm. Admisison 50 cents.Fireside conversation: Selections fromthe book of “Psalms.” 5715 Woodlawnavenue, Hillel foundation, 8:30 pm.Second in a series of three readingsand commentary “The Biblical poetand the human dilemma.” Readingsby Tom Nolan. Kent Atkatz and Wil¬liam Bezdek of University Theatre,and commentary by professor WalterHarrelson, dean of the divinity school.Sabbath service 7:45_ pm.“The Physiology of sleep.” 6 pm,, Down¬town center, Nathaniel Kleitman. pro¬fessor. department of physiology.“Aristotle’s Ethics,” Yves R. Simon,8 pm. Downtown center, professor,committee on social thought.Lecture series: “Primitive art: Oceania,”8:15 pm, Art institute, Allen Sawyer,curator of primitive art, the Art Insti¬tute.Square Dance sponsored by the Folk¬lore society. A one-hour program ofNegro folksongs. 8 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Communication club lecture series:“The Public Images of Private Insti-tuions,” “Chicago’s fine arts station.”Ray Nordstrand, assistant station Graduate business schoolwill renew its honor scholar¬ship program with the Collegefor 1959-60, according to an an¬nouncement made by Dean W.Allen Wallis.By February J5 the College willnominate a student who is eligiblefor transfer to the school and fora full-tuition scholarship.More than 58 colleges and uni¬versities are participating in theschool’s scholarship program.“The existence of these scholar¬ships represents an affirmation ofthe school’s commitment to gen¬eral education as the basis forspecialized study in business ad¬ministration,’’ Wallis said.The 1958-59 honor scholar fromthe College was Frank J. Krippel,Jr.! He is one of three studentsfrom the College, now registeredin the school, who were named tothe Dean’s Honor list for out¬standing scholastic performancein the autumn quarter, 1958.IBM invites the 1959 Graduatewith Bachelor’s or Master’s Degreeto discuss career opportunitiesContact your college placement officefor an appointment for campus interviewsFebruary 20Career opportunities If your degree major is iniSales Liberal Arts • Business • Accounting •Engineering • MathematicsApplied Science Physics ♦ Mathematics • EngineeringResearch.. Physics • Mechanical •> Engineering Physics • MathematicsSome facts about IBMIBM’s phenomenal growth offers unlimited professional opportunities tohighly qualified graduates. Company policies lay a firm groundworkfor stimulating and rewarding careers in the areas listed above. At IBM,you will find respect for the individual.. . small-team operations . ..early recognition of merit. .. good financial reward .. . outstandingcompany-paid benefits . . . and many educational and training programs;IBM’s laboratories and manufacturing facilities are located in Endicott,Kingston, Owego, Poughkeepsie, Yorktown, N.Y.; Burlington, Vt.;San Jose, Calif.; Lexington, Ky.; and Rochester, Minn. Sales and serviceoffices are located in 198 principal cities throughout the United States.If you cannot attend the interviews, write or call the managerof the nearest IBM office:IBM Corp.2432 W. 63rd StreetChicago 29, III.IBM INTERNATIONALBUSINESS MACHINESCORPORATION DATA PROCESSING • ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS •SPECIAL ENGINEERING PRODUCTS • SUPPLiES MILITARY PRODUCTS• TIME EQUIPMENTTHE UNIVERSITY of CHICACOsale begins Friday, February 6GRAND BOOK BOOKSTOREfor 2 weeks onlySALEBecause of space limitations this list constitutes only afraction of the many titles available . . . come early andtake advantage of such bargains as: Orig. published of 2.00 to 25.00now 1.00 to 6.89SAVE 50% TO 70%f. The Heavens Around Us—SONG OF THESKY, by Guy Murchie. A big, timely bookabout the exploration of space. Illus.Pub. at $5.00 Sale—$1.00t. The Bull In Art and Culture—THE HORNAND THE SWORD. With a Folio of 60 Photosplus 40 Line Drawings. By J. R. Conrad. Richlydetailed history of the bull as a recurringsymbol of power and sexuality.Pub. at $5.00 Sale—$1.493. H. V. Kaltenborn’s IT SEEMS LIKE YES¬TERDAY. 210 photos, cartoons and other illus¬trations. A brilliant picture-text survey ofevents and personalities of the 20th century.8"xl0Vi". Pub. at $5.95 Sale—$2.984. The Life of Byron—PASSION FOR EXCITE¬MENT, by E. Bigland. The incredible life andpersonality of the most famous and fashion¬able poet of his age. Pub. at $5.00..Sale $1.005. YOUNG AMERICA: 1830-1840, by R. J. Riegel.The social, economic and cultural sourcesof American attitudes during the Age of Jack-son. Illus. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.98C. SCHIZOPHRENIA, by Manfred Sakel, M.D.Authoritative explanation of his epoch-makingInsulin “shock” therapy—plus a complete de¬scription and history of this psychosis.Pub. at $f.00 Sale—$2.987. FRANCE 1940-1955, by Alexander Werth,fwd. by C. D. H. Colye. Uniquely importantstudy of the economic and social upheavalFrance experienced in 15 crucial years. 764 pp.Appendices on Algeria; the French press.Pub. at $6.00 Sale—$1.98t American Adventurer — AUTOBIOGRAPHYOF GEN. ISAAC J. WISTAR. The true lifestory of the man whose privately raised regi¬ment is credited with saving the Union atGettysburg. Ulus., pull-out map.Pub. at $5.00 Sale—$1.989 Marco Polo’s Life and Times—VENETIANADVENTURER, by H. H. Hart. First biographyof the 13th century hero to provide a sharplyetched image of his vivid personality againstthe backgrounds of medieval Italy and exoticCathay. Profusely illus.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.9810. The Wright Brothers’ FLIGHT INTO HIS¬TORY, by E. E. Freudenthal. Complete, color¬ful history of the early air age. Period photos.Pub. at $3.75 Sale—$1.9811 UTAMARO: The Art of the Japanese Wood¬cut Portrait. With 68 plates, 59 in full-color.By Hajeck-Forman. Bound in a Japanese styleportfolio, with wood disc and cord clasp.8"xl0y2". Imported Special—$5.9812. A Marine's War Journal — THE LASTPARALLEL, by M. Russ. A recruit's actual rec¬ord of hell in Korea in combat with the fa¬mous 1st Marine Division. With sketches anddiagrams. Pub. at $3.95 Sale $1.0013. TREASURY OF WORLD LITERATURE, ed.by D. D. Runes. A huge, 1,450-page collectionof the world's literary treasures!Pub. at $15.00 Sale—$5.8814. KINSEY'S MYTH OF FEMALE SEXUAL¬ITY. E. Bergler, M.D. and W. S. Kroger, M.D.,pinpoint the naive, dangerously misleading,non-scientific findings in Kinsey’s report onfemale sexual mores. Pub. at $3.75..Sale—$1.9815. THE IMPRESSIONISTS IN FRANCE—with50 Plates in Full Color, by G. F. Hartlaub.Brilliant color reproductions of masterpiecesby all the leading French Impressionists. Withbiographies and correspondence. 9l/4"xl3". Im¬ported Special — $3.9816. A Strange Relationship—WOODROW WIL¬SON AND COLONEL HOUSE, by A. L. and J. L.George. The first study showing how Wilson’scompulsive hunger for approval was fed byEdward M. House. Fully recreates their dra¬matic break at the Paris Peace Conference—the first step toward Wilson’s ultimate trage¬dy. Annotated. Pub. at $6.00 Sale—$1.9817.THE SECRET FORMULAS AND TECH¬NIQUES OF THE MASTERS, by J. Maroger.Tells today’s painter how to achieve Renais¬sance richness of color, brilliance of tone, andpermanence of pigment.Pub. at $4.50 Sale—$2.9818.ECONOMIC FORCES IN AMERICAN HIS¬TORY, by G. Soule. 568-page economic historyof the U. S., emphasizing the increasing com¬plexity of the economic process in recenttimes. Pub. at $4.75 Sale—$1.9819. THE FACE OF PARIS, by H. P. Clunn.Complete reconstruction—1789 to now—of theevolution of the world’s most beautifullyplanned city. 92 photo plates: modern views,historic prints and maps Special—$2.9820. MAN AND HIS PHYSICAL WORLD,by D. E. Gray. A non-technical, informativesurvey of man’s ceaseless efforts to harness theworld's natural resources. Illus.Pub. at $5.75 .Sale—$1.9821. Fanny and Robert Louis Stevenson—OURSAMOAN ADVENTURE. The candid, revealing,and often humorous diary of RLS's Americanwife, describing their last four years togetheron the romantic South Sea island. Photos.Pub. at $5.25 Sale—$1.98 22. The Disaster That Changed History—THELISBON EARTHQUAKE, by T. D. Kendrick,Director of the British Museum. Vivid accounto fthe catastrophe which took 15,000 lives andforever destroyed the Age of Optimism. Illus.Pub. at $4.00 Sale—$1.0023. THE SCRIPTURES OF MANKIND, by C. S.Braden. Comprehensive introduction to allthose world religions—distinguished by sacredliteratures (The Bible, Koran, Talmud, Bhaga-vad-Gita, etc.) 496 pp. Pub. at $6.50.Sale—$2.9824. THE MAID OF ORLEANS, by S. Stolpe.Highly original study of Joan of Arc and theera of the Hundred Years War. Emphasizes theimportance of her religious achievement aswell as its political and military consequences.With a map of 16th century France.Pub. at $4.00 Sale—$1.9825. THE MEMOIRS OF CORDELL HULL. Twovolumes, 1,742 pages crammed with behind-the-scenes revelations of 50 years of Americanand international politics. Two vols. ,Pub. at $10.50 Sale—$2.9826. THE SECRET DIARIES OF HAROLD L.ICKES. The complete three-volume set—2,192pages. The candid, caustic, colorful journalsof FDR’s incorruptible Secretary of the Inte¬rior. Pub, at $18.00. Very Special—the 3 vols.now $3.9827. A Treasury of English Literature—THEHIGH HILL OF MUSES, ed. by Hugh Kiilgs-mill, 421 selections from the work of 86 greatwriters. Pub. at $6.25 Sale—$1.0028. DURER—148 Large Plates. 10 in Full Color.Text (in French) by Henri Bodmer. An awe¬inspiring collection of the paintings, draw¬ings, woodcuts and engravings of the greatestmaster of German art. A handsome 10"xl4"import. Pub. at $12.50 Sale—$4.98 38.KINGDOM OF THE SAINTS—The Story ofBrigham Young and the Mormons, by Ray B.West, Jr. The epic saga of this unique Ameri¬can religion, 'from its beginnings in 1830 tothe present day. Illus. Pub. at $6.00.Sale $1.9839.MOZART, by A. Kolb. Intro, by Jean Girau-doux. First biography to point up the subtlepsychological effects of each significant eventof Mozart’s tragic life and incandescent career40.American Frontier-MEN OF THE WEST¬ERN WATERS, by D. Van Every. Colorful ac¬count of taming the vast Appalachian to Mis¬sissippi territory against tremendous odds andferocious Indian resistance. Illus.Pub. at $4.00 Sale-$1.9841 LOVE POEMS by E. E. Cummings: PUELLAMEA. Illustrated with drawings by Klee, Pi-casso and Modigliani. Golden Eagle Press col-lector’s edition, printed in sepia ink on an¬tique paper. Pub. at $3.75 Sale—$1.0042. Henri Cartier-Bresson's THE PEOPLE OFMOSCOW. 160 superb black-and-white photo¬graphs. The world famous camera genius cap¬tures the off-guard face of the Muscovite.Captions throughout. Pub. at $10.00.Sale—$2.9843. VALUES AND PERSONALITY, by Dr. Wer¬ner Wolff. The theories and techniques ofexistential psychology and experimental depthpsychology. Case histories.44. Sights and Spectacles of WESTMINSTERHALL, by H. St. G. Saunders. A chronicle ofthe great moments In history enacted in thewide hall of London's most remarkable, fabledbuilding. Illus. Pub. at $5.25 Sale—$1.9845. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE PAPACY, by H.Kuhner. Historical, chronological accounts ofthe more than 260 Popes of the Roman Catho¬lic Church. Illus. Pub. at $6.00 Sale—$3.98PORTFOLIOS OF COLOR PRINTSAT INCREDIBLE SAVINGSFantastic savings on a choice collection of ready-to-frame, decorative color prints!78. FARM ANIMALS by Leonard Weisgard.These large, brightly colored scenes captureall the adventure and delight of farm lifeand are just superb for the nursery or play¬room. 13"xl6". Special: set of 6 — now $1.0079. CIRCUS ANIMALS by Leonard Weisgard.All the color and excitement of the great¬est show on earth, marvelously captured forchildren of all ages. 13"xl6".Special: set of 6—now $1.0080. SUNNY SPAIN. Colorful yet delicatewatercolors of marketplaces, bustling har¬bors, bridges and cathedrals in six Spanishlandmarks. Il%"x9". Pub. at $2.50.Set of 6 — now $1.0081. JAPANESE COSTUME PRINTS by Kuni-sada. A striking foursome of gorgeouslycostumed female figures personifying theseasons of the year. 9"xl33/4". Pub. at $2.50.Set of 4 — now $1.0082. SIX PICASSO PAINTINGS. Striking por¬traits and still lifes selected from his“blue,” neo-classic and abstract periods.14"xl6". Pub. at $6.00. .Set of 6 — now $2.98 83. STILL LIFE TREASURES by HENK BOS.The sparkling gloss of fruits, the beauty oftime-honored pewter and china—all arecaptured with nostalgia, superb lightingand color. 12"xll".Pub. at $4.00 Set of 6 — now $1.9884. ANCIENT CHINESE CAVE PAINTINGS.“Primitive” art — yet so subtle and sophis¬ticated In conception and design! 12"xl6’\Pub. at $6.00 Set of 6 — now $2.9885. CHARLES M. RUSSELL—WATERCOL¬ORS OF THE OLD WEST. Exciting paint¬ings of life on the open plains, by the fa¬mous “cowboy artist” who has won belatedrecognition as the equal of Remington.20"xl6". Pub. at $7.50..Set of 6 — now $2.9886. VENICE WATERCOLORS. All the colorand enchantment of the famous squaresand canals, gondolas and facades. 10"xl4".Pub. at $4.00 Set of 4 — now $1.0087. TOREROS! Peak moments of dangerand daring in the bullring. 9',i"xl2>i".Pub. at $3.00 Set of 4 — now $1.0029. Spinoza—THE ETHICS: THE ROAD TOINNER FREEDOM. The brilliant philosophicaldefense of liberty that influenced the thoughtof leading thinkers from Goethe to Einstein.Special—$1.0030. THEATRICAL COMPANION TO SHAW —With Over 125 Pages of Photographs. By R.Mander and J. Mitchenson. Complete pictorialrecord of GBS’ 53 plays.Pub. at $9.00 Sale—$3.9831. How To SING WELL, SPEAK WELL, byJ. A. Fracht and E. Robinson. Easy-to-followset of result-getting exercises for improvirgvocal power, diction, etc.Pub at $3.75 Sale—$1.4932. Natural History—AMERICAN POSSUMS, byCarl G. Hartman, famous zoologist. Illustratedwith more than 100 cave drawings, old en¬gravings and spectacular close - up photos.83i"xli". Tub. at Sale—$1.9833. CASE HISTORIES IN PSYCHOSOMATICMEDICINE, ed. by Dr. H. W. Miles, et al. Ulus.Pub. at $4.50 Sale—$1.9834. HOKUSAI — 48 Reproductions in Color.Intro, by J. Hloucha. The life and art of Ja¬pan’s greatest master, reproducing his bestworks on individual pages removable for fram¬ing. Cloth-covered, Japanese-styled portfoliobinding, with ribbon ties and bone clasps.Imported Special—$5.8835. A Fine Anthology — THE ROMANTICREADER. 621 choice pages of those who mir¬rored the moods, rages and enthusiasms of theAge of Romanticism. Ed. by H. E. Hugo.Pub. at $4.95 Sale—$2.9836. Fodor's Travel Guide to BENELUX. 440profusely Illustrated pages. Background notes.Pub. at $3.95 Sale—$1.0037. PASCIN. The masterpieces of the tragic yettender artist who committed suicide at thepeak of his career. A limited edition, 9l/2"x12*2", printed in France. Text (in French) byAndre Warnod. Pub. at $12.50 Sale—$7.95 46. Spanish—THE DUDEN PICTORIAL ENCY¬CLOPEDIA—With 348 Detailed Plates. The all-inclusive guide—over 30,000 everyday terms InSpanish. Bilingual Indexes. 932 pp. 63,i"xl0‘4".Pub. at $7.50 Sale—$2.9847. Wife & Mother of Presidents—ABIGAILADAMS, by J. Whitney. A fascinating biog¬raphy. Illus. Pub. at $3.75 Sale—$1.0048. BELA BARTOK, by S. Moreux. An Impor¬tant book on the great composer. Illus.Pub. at $5.25 Sale—$1.9849. The Panama Canal—CADIZ TO CATHAY,by Capt. M. DuVal. The fabulous plots, In¬trigues and price holdups preceding the im¬mediate grant of the Canal Zone to the U.S.Ulus., Appendices. Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.9850. AMBROSE BIERCE: The Devil’s Lexicog¬rapher, by P. Fatout. Featuring a rich sam¬pling of the famous journalist’s historic news¬print vendettas and the Mencken-like wit ofhis books. Photos. Pub. at $4.00 Sale—$1.9851. LOR D CHESTERFIELD’S LETTERS InThree Volumes, ed. by J. Bradshaw. A brilliantkey to the mores and lax morals of fashionable18th century English society. Over 4,000 pp.Indexed Special—$4.95 the set52. History of BOATS AND BOATMEN, by T. C.Lethbridge. Engrossing account of the com¬plex patterns of Western sea-faring, 45 draw¬ings and photogravure plates.Pub. at $3.50 Sale—$1.9853. LIFE UNDER THE MICROSCOPE—With46(1 Captioned Photographs. 4 Full-Page ColorPlates. By O. Jirovec et al. A beautiful volumeon the microscope and its contribution toman’s knowledge and control of nature. 9x12".Special—$9.9554. Struggle For Survival—BIRDS FIGHTING,by S. Smith and E. Hosklng. Fascinatingstudies of the aerial combats and aggressivedisplays of many different common bird spe¬cies Over 60 extraordinary plates.Pub. at $4.50 Sale—$1.98 55. REPTILE LIFE — 145 Photb-IUustration,5 in Full Color. By Z. Vogel. All the varietyfascination and unsuspected beauty of thereptile world captured in fine plates and au¬thoritative text. 8*2"xll" import.Pub. at $8.75 Sale—$3.«*x56. Bunker Kill to Yorklown—THE AMERICANREBELLION, by Sir Henry Clinton. First pubUcation of the British Commander-In-Chiefscomplete narrative of hls campaigns, 1775-1782. . . the only extensive first-hand account ofthe problems of the high command on eitherside. Contemporary maps, frontispiece. 657 ppPub. at $7.50 Sale— $3 9*57. J. K. Huysman—TIIE FIRST DECADENT,by J. Laver. First biographical-critical studyIn English of the notorious fin de sierlcFrench novelist who made an art of sensualityUlus. Pub. at $6.25 Sale—$1.9*58. DRINKING IN COLLEGE, by R Strausand S. D. Bacon. True facts on the customsand attitudes toward alcohol of 17,000 menand women in 27 colleges throughout, thecountry. Pub. at $4.00 Sale—$1.0059. Through The Ages With SOIL AND CIVIL¬IZATION, E. Hyams. From prehistoric Chinato modern Europe—a masterly study of theInter-relationships of soil and mankind Pho¬tos and maps. Pub. at $4.50 Sale—$l.»*60. The Future OF SOCIETIES AND MEN. bvC. P. Haskins. A searching and utterly fascin¬ating study of significant trends in the for¬mation. growth and duration of societiesPub. at $5.00 Sale—$1.9*61. PARIS—Text and Photos by Robert Dois¬neau. 148 magnificent plates In gravure. Anunforgettable pictorial valentine to Paris8*«"xll". Pub. at $7.50, paper Sale —$3.9*62. TREASURY OF PlIILOSPOHY, by D DRunes. Nearly 1,300 pages covering the wholespan of recorded philosophical thought andwriting—each selection accompanied by a biog¬raphical sketch. Pub. at S15.00 Sale—$5.**63. THE PAINTINGS OF LEONARDO l)AVINCI. Over 100 Illustrations, several In colorText by G. Castelfranco. Pub. at $1.95. Sale SI64. ACADEMIC FREEDOM, by Russell KirkTimely, Important study of the true meaningof academic freedom. Pub. at $3.75..Sale—$1.0065. A Study of GEORGE ORWELL, by C. Hol¬lis. How the famous author’s experiences af¬fected the development of his social and poli¬tical thought. Pub. at $3.95 Sale—$1.4966. A TREASURY OF EARLY CHRISTIANITVed. by Anne Fremantle. First one-volume col¬lection from the writings which for sevencenturies constituted the only literature ofChristendom. 624 pp. Pub. at $6.00. .Sale- $2.9*67. Samuel Taylor Coleridge—THE INDIFFER¬ENT HORSEMAN, by M. Carpenter. Engrossingstudy of the famous 19th century poet: hislife, poetry and relation to the other Roman¬tics. Pub. at $6.25 Sale—$1.9*68. INDUCED DELUSIONS, by C. H. Campbell.M.D. A provocative study of Sigmund Freud,by a distinguished disciple who broke withFreudianism, and came to regard it as a theorywith greater emotional than scientific validityPub .at $4.00 Sale—$1.4969. TIIE STRUGGLE FOR PALESTINE, by J C.Hurewitz. The authoritative history of theturbulent background and events which led tothe establishment of the Republic of IsraelUlus Pub. at $6.00 Sale—$1.9*70. SANTAYANA AND THE SENSE OlBEAUTY, by W. E. Arnett, Intro, by Irwin Etl-man. Acute, provocative analysis of Santa¬yana’s all-pervading philosophy of art.Pub. at $4.50 Sale—$1.4971. THE WAR WITHOUT GRANT, by Co! Rob¬ert R. McCormick. A vigorously written historyreconstructing and analyzing the significanceof all the battles and campaigns in whichGrant was not a participant. 20 pull-out, 4-color military maps. Pub. at $7.50..Sale—$2.9*72. Batsford's History of CHINESE ART, byRoger Fry et al. With 87 magnificent colorand black-and-white illustrations. All aspectsof 40 centuries of Chinese fine and minorarts. Map. marks and dynastic table.Pub. at S6.00 Sale—$2.9*73. SICILY —with 169 Full-Page, AnnotatedPlates. By H. M. Schwarz. A lavish tribute tothe Mediterranean’s largest island. 9’i"xl2"Pub. at $10.00 Sale—$4.9*74. VIENNA. Over 125 incomparable photo¬graphs, by A. Macku. 8>2"x9»,i".Pub. at $5.50 Sale—$2.9*75. THE GREATEST BIBLE STORIES: A Cath¬olic Anthology From World Literature, ed. byAnne Fremantle. Brilliant stories by Flaubert.Bachelll, Maurlac, Auden, 15 others.Pub. at $3.50 Sale—$1.9*76. ART TREASURES OF THE VATICAN. 255reproductions of Incomparable fidelity, 57 ingorgeous color, of the world’s richest and mostvaried collection. Beautifully printed andbound. Pub. $7.50 Sale—$5.9*77. THE AGE OF EXTRAVAGANCE. An An¬thology of amusing stories, memoirs and pho¬tos of the fun-loving, free-spending era ofEdward VII and Teddy Roosevelt.Pub. at $6.00 Sale- »l 49MEDICAL BOOKS88. PEPTIC ULCER—Pain Patterns, Diag¬nosis, and Medical Treatment, by Smith &Rivers. A guide to accurate diagnosis andsuccessful management of peptic ulcer. 576pp., 210 illus. Pub. at $12.50 Sale—$1.0089. RECENT ADVANCES IN PEDIATRICS,by D. Gairdner. Newly described conditions.Pub. at $8.75 Sale — $1.0090. RECENT ADVANCES IN DERMATOL¬OGY, by W. W. Goldsmith & F F. Hellier.Summarizes most important work of past20 years. Pub. at $8.50 Sale $1.0091. STRABISMUS: A CLINICAL HAND¬BOOK, by G. J. Epstein. Practical pro¬cedures. Pub. at $6.00 Sale—$1.9892. VAGINAL INFECTIONS, INFESTA¬TIONS, AND DISCHARGES, by J. B. Bern-stlne & A. E. Rakoff. Incidence, etiology,diagnosis, treatment, etc.Pub. at $10.00 Sale—$2.9893. HANDBOOK OF DIGESTIVE DISEASES,by John L. Kantor and Anthony M. Kasich.Every aspect of the gastrointestinal dis¬eases. 658 pp., 148 illus.Pub. at $8.00 Sale — $1.00 94. METHODS IN MEDICINE, by G. R. Herr¬mann. A guide for clinical Investigation andtreatment of medical disorders.Pub. at $8.00 Sale — $1.4995. PATHOLOGY IN GENERAL SURGERY,by P. W. Schafer. Comprehensive, system¬atic explanations of the nature and originof 180 surgical diseases. 71,i"xl0>£", 573-pagevolume. Pub. at $20.50 Sale — $4.8896. MONOGRAPHS IN MEDICINE, 20 physi¬cians and professors discuss timely subjectsof medical thought and practice. 655 pp.,Illus. Pub. at $12.00 Sale — $1.4997. MEDICAL TREATMENT: Principles andTheir Application. Edited by Geoffrey Ev¬ans, M.D., F.R.C.P. Over 1,400 up-to-datepages alphabetically arranged by subject,by 53 specialists. Pub. at $21.00. .Sale—$3.9898. 1956 MEDICAL PROGRESS, ed. by Mor¬ris Ftshbein. Authoritative review of ad¬vances in study of glands, antibiotics, drugsIn psychiatry, etc. Pub. at $6.00. .Sale—$1.0099. ANXIETY AND STRESS by H. Basowitzet al. Coordinates the techniques of bio¬chemistry, psychiatry and psychology Inparatroop training. Pub. at $8. .Sale—$2.98 100. PSYCHIATRY AND MEDICINE, by L. A.Osborn. Integrates the principles of psy¬chiatry with the practice of medicine.Pub. at $7.50 Sale—$2.98101. PEDIATRIC ALLERGY, by R. Chobot.Hypersensitivities, diagnostic procedures,specific allergies, etc. Pub. at $6. Sale—$1.98102. MONOGRAPHS ON SURGERY. Special¬ists report on important branches of gen¬eral surgery, gynecology, orthopedics, urol¬ogy. 508 pp., 225 Illus. Pub. at $12.50. Sale $1103. The CYCLOPEDIA OF MEDICINE, ed.by G. M. Piersol et al. Chapters by 7fl lead¬ing physicians, 833 pp., fully Ulus.Pub. at $10.00 Sale—$3.98104. ANTIBIOTICS. Ed. by G. Irving. Jr., &H. Herrick. Authoritative study of theirdevelopment, production and clinical use.Pub. at $6.75 ..Sale—$1.98105. ATLAS OF GENITO-URINARY SUR¬GERY, by P. R. Roen, M.D. Detailed survey;162 illus. Pub. at $10.00 Sale—$1.98106. HISTOPATHOLOGY OF THE PERI¬PHERAL AND CENTRAL NERVOUS SYS¬TEMS, by C. Hassln. Enlarged, revised edi¬tion. 612 pp., 325 illus. Pub. at $6.Sale—$1.00 107. UTEROTUBAL INSUFFLATION, by I. CRubin. A diagnostic method of determiningthe tubal factor in sterility, 453 pp., 159illus., biblio. Pub. at $10.50 Sale — $1.98108. PARASITES OF DOMESTIC ANIMALSby T. Cameron. The basic manual for vet¬erinary students and surgeons on Internaland external parasites. 170 Ulus.Pub. at $7.00 Sale — $1.0#109. TIIE ABILITIES OF BABIES, by R.Griffiths. Fundamentals of studies In intel¬ligence testing. Pub. at $6.50 Sale—$1.00110. LAYMAN S MEDICAL DICTIONARY, byH. Schwartz. Over 2,000 entries—all the ba¬sic terms clearly and helpfully explained.Plates, tables. Pub. at $4.75 Sale—$1.98111. UNDERSTANDING SURGERY, ed byR. E. Rothenberg, M D. Direct answers tocommon questions about surgery and theconditions necessitating it. Profusely Illus*trated. Pub. at $4.95 ...Sale — $1.98112. THE L'OMMONSENSE PSYCHIATRYOF DR. ADOLF MEYER, ed. by Alfred Lief.An invaluable source book on the work andIdeas of the eminent psychiatrist. 677 ppPub. at $7.50 Sale — $1498 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 6, 1959Bureaucracy of elite' urged at Hillel talkby Murray Darrish“We cannot help being ruled byofficials. What we may be able to dois to select and educate a bureau¬cracy which by inclination and trainingcould be expected to treat us fairly andi-ule us wisely.”With this statement, Herbert Storing,assistant professor in the department ofpolitical science, expressed one of themajor conclusions of his lecture on “Jus¬tice and the bureaucracy” presented Sun¬day at Hillel. Third in a series of sevenlecture-discussions on justice, the talkdealt with both the interrelation of publicadministration and basic concepts ofjustice and “prevailing notions of howthe American civil service ought to beconceived.”Storing beganPublic administration, Storing began,is distinguished from the administrationof justice, or due process of law, by basicassumption of everyday language.“When we criticize the courts we al¬most always point to an absence of jus¬tice; when we criticize public administra¬tion we may have in mind nothing morethan an absence of system.”“But,” he added emphatically, “publicadministration begins with a question ofjustice, for it begins with the distributionof places of trust, honor, and profit.”In support of this proposition, that theselection of administrators is connectedwith the problem of justice, Storing firstcited the government’s loyalty-securityprogram, which had been discussed atlength in a previous lecture in relationto due process of law, as a legitimateconsideration relevant to public employ¬ment.Apart from loyalty, he went on, underthe present merit system “the govern¬ment tries to select the man most eom-petent among those available to do acertain job.” In comparison, Storing thenpointed out the alternative systems ofselection that had arisen in the courseof American history.First considered was Washington’s“rule of fitness,” by which he sought to“draw to the service of the governmentmen who would strengthen its moralcharacter and at the same time reward,encourage, and instruct Americans in cer¬tain solid virtues — integrity, sobriety,public spiritedness, honor, and of courseloyalty to the constitution.” In evaluating Washington’s preferencefor men who would give “dignity andlustre to our National Character,” Storing first indicated his belbf in the valueof selecting men of personal merit aswell as for sheer technical ability.“Washington saw the extent to whichthe maintenance of just government de¬pended on the maintenance in govern¬ment and society at large of the pre¬eminent place of honorable men.”With rotation, he continued, the ordi¬nary private citizen replaced the gentle¬man, and he was displaced in turn bythe party worker and political gamblerwhen rotation degenerated into the spoilssystem.“What reformers did not sufficientlysee was that, however much they mighttry to remove the selection of civil serv¬ants from politics, the kind of man thatthis system produced was bound to havepolitical and social effects.”Storing then introduced the term “ad¬ministrative justice,” which, he explained,is the practice of administrators todayof interpreting and applying the law, anddeciding controversies between privateparties and between government agenciesand private citizens without giving in¬dividuals some of the traditional princi¬ples of due process of law.“Not only does this produce better,chea|>er, and faster justice, defenders ofadministrative justice claim,” he conti¬nued, “but also it may give rise to sub¬stantial justice in a broader sense, evenat the risk of some Injustice in the indi¬vidual case, because it tends to view' theindividual case in the context of longrange policy.”Admitting that" that virtue and self-restraint is indeed rare” which admini¬strative justice demands from a good ad¬ministrator, Storing added that hethought, no one wpuld contend that thebusiness of administration, as it affectsindividuals for good or evil, should bebound by all the strict requirements ofdue process of law and subject to the de¬tailed surveillance of the courts. Againhe concluded that administrators shouldbe chosen on the basis of personal meritas well as competence.Must abandon“Since in administration we are com¬pelled to abandon many of the judicialforms, it is all the more important thatwe seek to strengthen among our civil- servant judges the judicial temper andthat part of the judicial wisdom whichgoes beyond procedural due process. Werequire fair and honorable men.”Returning to the principles of theAmerican civil service system, Storingbegan to examine the concept of a purelyinstrumental neutrality intended to pre¬vent the development of bureaucracy.Does not work“One trouble with this neutrality,” hecommented, “is that it does not work.The administrator has a will of his ownand he must be allowed to use it. More¬over, whenever the administrator has tomake a decision which raises a questionabout the ends served, the criterion ofefficiency has nothing to say to him andthe principles of administration cannot beused to hold him accountable.”As the best example of the presentreexamination of the theory of civil serv¬ice neutrality, Storing cited the Hoovercommission’s report and went on to ex¬plain that the proposal, which drawswidely on the British system, advocatesa “senior civil service” of career admini¬strators.Not only would they be free from en¬tanglement in immediate political issues,he continued, but, in addition, they wouldhave knowledge and experience in themachinery of government, devotion tothe common good, and “personal rank,exclusiveness, and an ability and dutyto serve the public at the highest levelsof administration.”The lecture-discussion scries will con¬tinue Sunday at 8 pm with the topic“Justice in the Old Testament” to bediscussed by Robert Sacks of the Arabicdepartment.• ^The following are corrections of state¬ments in an article in the MAROON con¬cerning the lecture “Justice: the rangeof the idea,” delivered by Laurence Bcrnsat Hillel January 18.According to Aristotle, justice “refersto a habit or a fixed disposition to actjustly; and not a blind habit but a habitof voluntarily, or, even more, deliberatelychoosing to act justly. He also indicatesthat perhaps the ultimate test for evalu¬ating any “law, legal system, or politicalorder, is to be found in the quality of thepeopk it tends to produce and encourageand those it tends to discourage andeliminate.” Greek philosophers distinguished be¬tween the natural, what is primary, fun¬damental, and persistent, and the artifi¬cial or conventional, what is secondary,deriviative, and transient. Nature, theybelieved, is of a higher dignity than artor convention partly because it deter¬mines the very framework within whicheverything else moves, Berns said.Aristotle’s belief is that justice is "de¬pendent upon both nature and conven¬tion, nature providing the impulse andend, and art and convention supplyingthe institutions which order men towardsthat end.Presents argumentPlato’s character Glaucon in The Re¬public presents an argument on behalf ofinjustice to be refuted by Socrates. "Bynature to commit injustice is good but tosuffer it is evil . . . The many wreak, wholack the power or virtue to do what theyreally would like to do, out of fear andself-interest make a compact with eachother to commit nor suffer injustice.Justice, then, is really approved only asa poor, conventional substitute for thelife of injustice.”In Thomas Hobbes* opinion, “fear, be¬ing the primary passion and self-preser¬vation the fundamental right, peace andsecurity become the overall goals of so¬ciety. Since the overall goals of societyare lowered, mo-rad standards in generalare lowered. And politic — no longerconcerned with moral improvement — be¬comes the art. of devising law's and insti¬tutions in such a way that men are drivenby their own self-interest into becominggood citizens.”In concluding, Bems returned to ananalogy he had first cited in The Repub¬lic, calling into question the test of invi¬sibility which Glaucon had posed as animaginative experiment to show whetherman is innately selfish or social.“Perhaps most men need to have otherswatching them to live well, or ‘to liveaccording to nature.’“If justice is the social or politicalvirtue, it may be that justice can onlyexist in the open, where men can bothsee and tfhderstand each other’s mutualneeds.”Do You Think for Yourself1. If you were about to buy an automobile,would you (A) study the road-testreports in the magazines, or (B) selectthe car that looks best to you? d 5. In buying a radio, would you beinfluenced more by (A) low price, or,(B) product features despite aslightly higher price?2. When confronted with a menu withlots of foreign terms, do you (A) askwhat is in each dish, or (B) accept thewaiter’s recommendation? o 6. When deciding on what movie to see,do you usually prefer films that (A)are gay and diverting, or (B) have asocial message? d3. When invited to play an unfamiliargame, do you (A) refuse to play untilyou fully understand the rules, or (B)pick up the rules as you go along? d d 7. When you run into a foreign phrase ina textbook, do you first (A) head fora dictionary to find the meaning, or (B)try to dope out the meaning yourself? d dMan Who Thinks for Himself Knows - ONLY VICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN’SFILTER ... A SMOKING MAN’S TASTEl4. When invited to a party, do you (A)accept, hoping to enjoy yourself nomatter who attends, or (B) try to learnwho will be there before accepting? d e □ 8. When reading the paper, do you (A)catch yourself concentrating onscandal stories, or (B) spend your timeon news and editorial matter?9. In choosing a filter cigarette,(A) are you easily swayed bybold claims, or (B) do youthink for yourself and stick.by your decision? aIf you're the kind of person who thinks foryourself . . . you use judgment in yourchoice of cigarettes, as in everything else.Men and women who think for themselvesusually smoke VICEROY. Their reason?Best in the world. They know that onlyVICEROY has a thinking man's filter anda smoking man’s taste.*If you checked (A) on three out of the firstfour questions, and (B) on four out of the lastfive ... you really think for yourself!O 1959i Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. d dFamiliarpack crcrush-proofbox.NAACP celebrates Negro history weekby Carol BrentUC celebration of the 34th annual National Negro History week bythe University chapter of the National Association for the Advancementof Colored People will begin Monday.Why is there the need for stressing Negro history? What is the purpose ofsuleh an observance? What relation does this have to “changing human relations”today?The contribution of the Negro to America’s progress is not generally known.Many courses in American history imply that the Negro is inherently inferior,omitting any facts concerning his achievements. In many texts wording tends toperpetuate current group antagonisms by using sterotypes as “superstitous,” "child¬like,” “comical,” “simple” Negroes. Several textbooks present dubious statementsas facts. One states, “on the whole, the slaves of the United States were treatedpretty considerately,” . . . However, slave revolts seem to show much dissatisfactionwith this “considerate treatment.”An addition to such faults is the actual omission of any facts like these whichshow that Negroes have played a normal and constructive part in history: a Negrowas the first American to fall in the Revolutionary war; many Negroes, only a fewyears out of slavery, assumed positions of responsibility and helped to modernize,democratize, and rebuild their states during reconstruction; a Negro was the firstpermanent settler in Chicago.Because of the slanted picture presented in many public schools, “history”strengthens the attitudes opposed to brotherhood. Implied inferiority in the class¬rooms tend to mislead the white students’ thinking and undermines the Negrostudent's self confidence.Therefore, the object of Negro History week is to improve intergroup relation¬ships. The purpose, stated in the Negro History Bulletin is “to inculcate and appreci¬ation of the past of the Negro and to promote an understanding of his present status.”Negro History week, by correcting distortions and omissions in the record of America,strives to refute the belief that the Negro is inferior by nature; to bring an under¬standing and correction of his degraded status and to accelerate the acceptance ofbrother hood. National Negro History Week CalendarMonday, February 9Dr. Samuel Gandy, of the National Council of Christians and Jews, willspeak on “The Background of the Negro in America.” 8 pm, Reynolds Club.Sponsored by the NAACP.Lecture: “Negro history, past and present,” 8:30 pm, Social Sciences 108.Sponsored by the Socialist Youth Committee.Tuesday, February 10Lecture-debate: “The Negro in Hyde Park” by the aldermanic candidates.8 pm. Ida Noyes hall. Sponsored by the Student Representative Party andthe NAACP.Wednesday, February 11George Rawick will speak on “The history of the Negro protest movementfrom 1916 until the present.” 4 pm, Classics 16. Sponsored by the NAACP.“Open Occupancy: the turning point for desegregation.” Warren Lehmanof the Mayor’s housing committee, 8 pm, Social Sciences 201. Sponsored bythe Politics Club.Thursday, February 12“The Negro on Film” 7:15 and 9:15 pm. Judd 126, sponsored by DocFilms and the NAACP.Friday, February 13Square Dance sponsored by the Folklore Society. A one-hour program ofNegro folksongs included. 8 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Saturday, February 14Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee in a folksong concert at Mandel hall.8 pm, sponsored by the NAACP. Admission general $1.00, reserved $1.50.Get satisfying flavor...So friendly to your taste!NO FLAT: "FILTERED-OUT"FLAVOR!NO DRY"SMOKED-OUT" iTASTE! •••••••••/ / •MERE'S WHY See how Pall Mall’s famous length of finetobacco travels and gentles the smoke—makes it mild—but does not filter outthat satisfying flavor!traveled" through fine tobacco tastes bestOutstanding...and they are Mild! You get Pall Mall’sfamous length of thefinest tobaccosmoney can buy. Pall Mall’s famouslength travels andgentles the smokenaturally. .. Travels it over,under, around andthrough Pall Mall'sfine tobaccos 1©A.T.Co. Pti'duil of jfnuAuean ’Jv&hfjco ^vnyxany — >J</&ure{>- is rn> iniddlr name?10- • CHICAGO MAROON • . Feb. 6, J$59 Educational biasis NSA's display“Discrimination in highereducation” is the theme of theUC’s NSA delegation displayfor negro History week. The dis¬play will be on exhibition in thenorth lounge of the Reynolds club.The delegation begins its studyby the assumption that, “Every¬one has the right to education,"as stated i n the InternationalDeclaration of Human Rights.Article 26. They then proceed todetermine whether or not every¬one is actually afforded the oppor¬tunity to practice this right. Sta¬tistics from such sources as the1950 census, and the SouthernStates Cooperative Program inEducational Administration indi¬cate a striking inequality of suchopportunity.For example, 2.2 per cent of thenon-white population over 25years old completes college ascompared to 6.4 percent of thewhite population over 25. One rea¬son for such a contrast is thatless is spent on educating Negroyoungsters. In 1952 eight southernstates spent an average of $115.08per year on their Negro pupils, asagainst $164.88 per year on theirwhite pupils.WASU.-PROMA *EUROPESE2SteamshipRound Trip$340 up - frequent sailingsThrift Round Trip by AIRSHANNON$399.60 LONDON$444.60 PARIS$480.60Rates to other destinations onapplication. By using stop-overprivileges, your entire transporta¬tion in Europe may be containedin your air ticket.CARS available on rental, purchaseor repurchase guarantee basis.Choice of Over 100*595Student Class ToursTravel Study ToursConducted Tours I1University Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines, hasrendered efficient travel serviceon a business basis since 1926.See your local travel agent forfolders and details or write us.UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvcjrd Sq , Cambridge, Mass.Show tickets on saleTickets for the Thursday evening March 12 performanceof the Music Man at the Shubert theatre may be purchased atthe Student Service center, basement of the Reynolds club.Through a special arrangement with Mtuy McDowellsettte«ftC7it, sponsoring the event, several hundred tickets at$2.50 and $5.00 were made available to the center. A servicefee of 25 cents per ticket will be charged. The Service centeris open Monday through Friday, 11:30 to 1:30 and 4 to 5. Volunteers are neededfor research projects beingcarried out by the Para¬psychology club, announcedthe club's president SteveAbrams (pictured to theright). The Parapsychologyclub has received nationalrecognition in the past fortheir original experiments.Students interested in vol¬unteering their services mayleave their names, addressesand phone numbers in theParapsychology club mailboxat the Reynolds club desk. pjplftigpi -i *Israeli problem discussedby Philip S. Marcus“Israel regards the accept¬ance and absorption of allJewish refugees as her mostimportant duty. Why is there noroom for the one million Arabrefugees who are living undersuch inhuman conditions? TheUN decision gives the Arab ref¬ugees the right to go back. ButIsrael says, ‘No’.”This was one of the questionsput by Karem Wahid, studentfrom Iraq, to the new Israeliconsul in Chicago, Isaac Unna,as part of the recent Hillelsymposium on “Israel and theMiddle East.” The discussion wasmoderated by Maurice F. X. Dona¬hue, Dean of University College,and featured Unna and a five-member panel of students fromIraq, Jordan, India, South Africa,and Ghana.Unna documented his reply withrelevant UN general assemblyresolutions. First, reviewing thehistory of the problem, Unnapointed out that when the 1947UN partition was not peacefullyaccepted by the surrounding Arabcountries, 650,000 (not 1 million)Arabs fled from Palestine, butthis was a two-way stream, forabout 450,000 Middle Eastern Jewsfled from neighboring Arab coun¬tries to Israel.Then, reading from a copy ofthe UN resolution referred to byWahid, Unna quoted the state¬ment of the general assembly thatthose Arab refugees desiring toreturn and live peacefully withtheir neighbors should be enabledto do so, and those who did notdesire should receive compensa¬tion (Unna stressed the word“peacefully”).Israel stands ready to offer com¬pensation, the diplomat claimed.But as for repatriation, he de¬clared, “There isn’t a single Arabrefugee who says ‘I am willing togo back and live as a peacefullaw-abiding citizen under the flagof Israel.’ ” On the contrary, Un¬na implied, these Arabs want tomake the destruction of Israel thebasis of their return.The young consul went on toaccuse the Arab government ofbuilding “a human monumentof hatred and frustration out ofthese Arab refugee camps throughrefusal to assimilate the refugeesinto their own populations andthrough the dishonest use of sta¬ tistics which feature the mysteri¬ous total absence of a death ratewithout any corresponding de¬cline in the birth rate.”When questioned by Kofi Ofosaof Ghana about the condition ofthe Arab minority which remain¬ed in Israel—some twelve per centof the population—the Israeli re¬plied that they have “more poli¬tical freedom and higher economicbenefits than in any other (sic)Arab country, although there areemotional and psychological prob¬lems, due to the changeover frommajority to minority status.There are certain restrictionswhich we must impose becausefamily ties across the border haveled to serious cases of espionagefor the United Arab Republic."In response to a question fromShankar Shetty of India, Unna de¬clared that reconciliation with theArab countries was a major diplo¬matic objective of Israel, and heexpressed the hope that India andother neutral Afro-Asian neutralcountries would act as mediator.Ofosa, who won the sympathyof the audience by his poise andhumor, responded:“The Afro-Asian bloc does notwant to stand with the West norwith Russia, who are preparingan atomic war. But Israel is iden¬tified with the West; how thencan we admit Israel to our coun¬cils? We are seeking to recoveran identity that has been deniedto us. Every educated Ghanianwants to make it clear above allthat he is not a ‘black English¬man’ but a Ghanian.“The Jewish people have suf¬fered during the second worldwar, and we believe that Israelshould be recognized as a sover¬eign nation. But the Westernnations have incorporated the cul¬ture of the Jewish people at thebasis of their own culture. Howcan you convince the Afro-Asianpeople that in accepting Israelthey are not accepting the West?”However, when questioned whyGhana is in fact quite friendly toIsrael, Ofosa replied: “We needknowledge in our country. Israelhas the knowledge and the willing¬ness to help. We choose Israelrather than the US or Russia be¬cause we don’t want to bind our¬selves to vote a certain way orfollow certain policies in returnfor aid.” Issa Khalil of Jordan repeatedlystressed the fact that Israel wasan invading culture from theWest and must make more of aneffort to adapt herself to the pre¬vailing Arab culture of the MiddleEast.Shankar Shetty of India, on theother hand, commented that hiscountry did not regard Israel asWestern at all, and stated thatalthough Israel was excludedfrom the Bandung conference be¬cause of the hostility o' the Arabstates, Israeli delegations to otherconferences were regarded as ac- igw* - -ceptable Asiatic delegations. mmmm: m y :s' y'A < . •A Campus-to-Career Case HistoryJohn O’Neil likes the interesting contacts his job gives him. At left, he talks with Bill Shaw,Manager of radio station KSFO, about the baseball reporting service John helped develop. Atright, he discusses a private-line telephone service with R. E. Kaehler, President of The PacificCoast Stock Exchange, San Francisco Division.He sells ideas-to sellcommunicationsSan Francisco baseball fans don’t knowit, but they’re indebted to John R. O’Neilof the Pacific Telephone and TelegraphCompany.John made it possible for them to getup-to-the-minute reports on Giants base¬ball games last season. He sold radiostation KSFO on the idea of recordinginning-by-inning announcements usingautomatic answering equipment. Fanswould simply dial an advertised phonenumber. The service began last August,and was a big bit.That’s an example of the kind of cre¬ative selling John does. “We really sellan idea and then provide the equipment to do the job,” is the way John puts it.John joined Pacific Telephone aftergraduating from the University of Cali¬fornia with an A.B. degree in 1956. Hewanted to work into management throughSales and was impressed with the train¬ing program and advancement opportu¬nities offered by the Telephone Company.“As a Telephone Company salesman,I deal w ith owners and managers of top-level businesses,” John says. “Everycontact is a challenge to solve a commu¬nication problem or to sell an idea forbetter service. What’s more, I’m gettingvaluable experience that will help memove ahead in the telephone business.”John O’Neil is one of many young men who are finding in¬teresting careers in the Bell Telephone Companies. Findout about the opportunities for you. Talk with the Bellinterviewer when he visits your campus. And read theBell Telephone booklet on file in your Placement Office. ■■LI.TELEPHONECOMPANIESColts reIt is a commonly acceptedtruism that aM good thingsmust have have end. Likewise,all bad things must also ulti¬mately conclude. Apropos tothe Culture Vulture it simplymeans that this bird is on thewing, and like it or not, is fly¬ing off into the sunset hopingto find in its golden rest big¬ger and better things.First, a bit of ornithologicalhistory. I wrote my first cul¬ture article a year ago lastautumn, the same week inwhich My Fair Lady opened atthe Shubert theatre. I pro¬ceeded blithely along until oneyear ago this week when Iadopted the re-exhumed titleof Culture Vulture. (The col¬umn at this point was calledThe Phoenix and the Muse.)I immediately proceeded towrite my first column andfirst introduction. Since it wasthe best I have ever written Iwill here wipe, sentimentallywipe, my eye with my feath¬ered wing and reproduce theentire intro:After much hT"»t t'AO fiftjmic* continuing its rehearsals for series “Bibtfcal Poetry and thefon^mumDon Mt'dhr<5fnto(% ng^ntjUating^^uman Dilemma.” The series will,” a musical eomedy insist of three o< £ead-phoenix has rescinded his annual Tonight ------lofty perch to his (her, its?) tion. Readings were held thisolder rival the Culture Vul- week for Giradoux’s Electra. to Soapsudsoioer rival, me v.uirure vu. ^ directed by Richard D’Anjou. about an ancient southern wash- mg and discussion of variousand to open the first week in erwoman with a superiority com- parts of the Old Testament. TheMarch. The show was supposedly plex and a strange fascination for first evening will center on va-cast as of 3 pm today. This pro- American Family Flakes. This rious parts of Ecclesiastes withduction will, of course, receive production, under the auspices of readers. Ken Atkatz and Bill Bez-overly-sufficient notice in this an alternate title to be announced dek of UT, and commentator Pro-ture. This later bird will con¬tinue to pick over theremnants of departed events,and hungrily hover overthose approaching. "I writhein flames" cries the phoenix; coiumn within the next few next week, will open April 17. fessor Jaroslav Pelikan of theweeks. So we might as well for- Tonight, Hillel, in cooperation federated theological faculty. Allget about it for now. with University Theatre, will pre- three programs will be held atBlackfriars can be assured to sent the first program in its new Hillel house, at 8:30 pm."I write . , , enflamed" an¬swers the vulture.Unfortunately the flamesdied down, and instead of get¬ting better, things just gotlonger until I decided thatthey must come to a roaringhalt. But when?But now, of course! I startedopened. I^Lumed tMs perch a* 8:3# series, present's us with a ‘process in the weather of the heart.’ The heart, ofand pose exactly one year ago, whose enchantments, disenchantments, moments of error and moments of tiuth we areand this is the week that My the moving1 witness, belongs to Joanna, who is (successively) a rustic lass, UC coed, andFair Lady closes. What more denizen of Hyde Park. And each locale beat's with it, for Joanna, its own characteristicfitting and/or theatrical mo- shocks to the spirit.Tonight at 8:30 reviewed‘La Follia,’ an original play by Omar Shapli, and presented as part of the Tonightinnaiv-ment to leave? i Tnererore The p]av then, is a chroni-herewith resend my well- 1carved niche to a most talented cle of the crucial stagesvulturesque vulturess. The end. her passage from early, Oft COrtlpUS 0f direct encounter with HydeTheatre Park and its ‘way of life,’ to aUniversity Theatre, as everyone final, rather dogged reaffirmation somewhat unconvincingly portrayed by Joyce Nevis. This is notto say that Miss Nevislargely ineffective or wholly un-ete, increasing sophistication born , , ‘ „ ... , • of* ’ . ^ able; any particular scene is at-musing our should know, just closed its fifth of values. The role of Joanna is a rather persuasive characteriza¬tion and interplay. But it is pre-English: INEBRIATED RELATIVEf^ TURKiSH CHECKROOM 9 fish: bovineThmklisht F6ZIDENCEPATRICIA MCStROV. CORNER Thinklish: DRUNCLELARI. RASE. ARIZONA STATE C01ULucky Strike presents W<*OSlCV. OfTHINKUSH—the funniest, easiest way yet to make money!MAKE$25!PUT IN A GOOD WORD ANDSpeak English all your life and what doesit get you? Nothing! But start speakingThinklish and you may make $25! Justput two words together to form a new (andmuch funnier) one. Example: precisionflight of bumblebees: Swarmation. (Note:the two original words form the newone: swarm-f formation.) We’ll pay $25each for the hundreds and hundreds ofGet the genuine articleGet the honest tasteof a LUCKY STRIKE© * * • c* Drodud of J&nt/uewn </<rf£iece — o12 • C H 1C AGO M A ROON • Feb. 6, !$5& cisely this growth and progresscT the character, to which theis either wb°lc labor of the play is directed,that she does not communicate.One feels that, though we wit¬ness her experiencing a set of in¬tended to, she presents us with cidents meant to be regarded ascrucial, she seems to be largelyunaffected by the process. KenAtkatz does a very competent jobof portraying the six differen1 ‘in¬fluential’ men in Joanna’s career,ranging from Roderick, the in¬genuous small-town boy who‘spoons’ on drug-store stools, toJerry whose manner and meansare more direct. But betweenthese very distinct poles of charac¬terization, the intervening charac¬ters are not so well delineated,causing an unfortunate ambiguityii the presentation of distinct peo¬ple.The difficulty is heightened bythe fact the characters involvedderive from a limited and distinc¬tive strata of Hyde Park ‘society,’and are represented doing similarthings. What is needed is a great¬er wealth of characterizing detail,which can be supplied by actor orauthor. Bill Bezdek does very wellas Schwartz, the UC student whofunctions as a cynical commenta¬tor on the passing scene. His per¬formance, like Atkatz’s, is smooth,assured, capable, and he makes avery effective cementing force be¬tween scenes which, by virtue oftheir variety, rapid pace, and shortduration, would otherwise besomewhat bewildering and difficultto interpret.As for the play itself, it wouldbe difficult to state its themebaldly without doing it a great dis¬service, making it, for example,sound very soph.noric. But thevirtue of La Follia is that it docsnot state anything baldly; it fore¬goes the very real temptation toeditorialize, or to drive home someintense little message. The dia¬logue is natural, unforced, and in¬teresting, and if our interest iscarried eagerly from scene toscene, it is because they very nice¬ly capture it and reawaken in usa remembrance of similar experi¬ences of our own.Even when an occasional dra¬matic cliche is indulged in, asw'hen the newly-deflowered Joan¬na expresses a morbid interest inher lover’s former conquests [adevice even sanctified by Holly¬wood in The Sun Also Rises],some of the lines used in thisscene take on new interest andmeaning when they recur in alater context. The play is slightlymarred, however, by a superfluityof local references; when such de¬vices are used too often, the in¬trinsic goodness of a line is tradedfor the merely entertaining appealof the familiar.The play is sufficiently goodthat it need not do this, and byproviding a universal setting, itcould set about the more worthytask of attracting a wider audi¬ence. It’s a very w'orth-w’hile pro¬duction, and I, for one, would en¬joy seeing it again when it is puri¬fied of the minor imperfectionsthat now attend it.Raymond K. Bakernew Thinklish words judged best —andwe’ll feature many of them in our collegeads. Send your Thinklish words (withEnglish translations) to Lucky Strike,Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Enclosename, address, college or university, andclass. And while you’re at it, light up aLucky. Get the full, rich taste of fine to¬bacco—the honest taste of a Lucky Strike.■hour middle nomNP-vH*Forsberg reviews UTAvante-garde playwright, Eugene Ionesco shared billing with UC showman DonMcClintock at University Theatre’s Tonight at 8:30 drama series last Friday evening.Tn the informal theatre-workshop atmosphere of the Reynold’s club we were treatedto a double bill: Ionesco’s The Bald Soprano and McClintock’s Inter Alia, a musical thingin one act.To our knowledge, University Theatre scored a “first” in producing an Ionesco playin the Chicago area. The Bald *Soprano is plotless pot-poin- pvesen1aiion of Beckett’s End- Center McClintock's belly-laughsand blackouts bounced around likeri of verbiage with an Englishsetting written for the Frenchtheatre by a Rumanian who hadnever visited England. But onecan’t explain Ionesco; one canonly experience him. Beginningwith a commonplace situation, likeMr. and Mrs. Smith at home, heforms with the aid of comfortableconversation, Babbit-like banali¬ties, a cacaphony of clinches, plati¬tudes and proverbs Tall so smuglylogical, yet so hum-drum familiarlan illogical pattern.Under Neal Johnston’s direction,Ihe UT production abounded withvitality. Tom Nolan, Carol Horn¬ing, Roger Downey and FredHirsch were good for the play.Thou energetic and interesting,Joyce Nevis and Barbara Vroomperformed with a lack of tastethat was simply not good for theplay. fThis is in no way intendedfor Miss Nevis’ musical-comedymaid’s costume. Even in Ionesco,both the costume and Miss Nevis’gams were in the best of taste!]Set designer Ann Davidow com¬promised between the conventionaland the surrealistic. The effectwas logical confusion, and this isnot Ionesco! In my opinion, thesetting for The Bald Sopranoshould not mirror the language inany way. The brillinatly illogicalis best offset by the commonplaceand dull. TBest demonstrated byStanley Kazdalis’ setting for UTsSeats availableon Europe flightStudent Government spon¬sored charter flight to Europestill has seats available. Theplane will leave New York forAmsterdam on June 22 and re¬turn from Paris September 5. Thepro rata share per person for theround trip will be $280. Students,faculty, employes of the Univer¬sity and their immediate familiesare eligible for the flight. A de¬posit of $100 will be required. Allpersons interested in this flightshould make their applicationsnow. Within a week space willonly be available in case of can¬cellation.For information call ErichKlinghammer, Student Govern¬ment office, Ida Noyes hall, Mon¬day to Friday, 12 to 1:30. Exten¬sion 3274. Evenings or weekendscall DO-3 8158.3 Students makedean's honor listDorothea Cayton, BenjaminF. King, and Frank Krippelhave been named to the dean’shonor list at the business schoolfor their "superior scholastic per¬formance in the autumn quarter,’’announced College dean of stu¬dents Harold Haydon. Krippel isthe honor scholar from the Col¬lege for 1958-59.Int house givenbridge creditsInternational house hasbeen accepted as an affiliateof the American ContractBridge league, and will be granteda franchise to hold duplicatebridge tournaments and to issuemaster points.Tournaments will be open tothe faculty, students, Internation¬al house members and residents.They will be held on two Satur¬day afternoons during the month,and admission will be $1, exceptfor master point matches whenthe charge will be $1.25. Prizeswill be awarded at both tourna¬ments. game last spring]. Wuh Ionescoand Beckett the setting should notenhance the language but shouldprovide it rather w'ith a congenialenvironment.• • •The musical. Inter Alla was apleasant and topical after-piece tothe Ionesco. Musical note followednote, and words followed words,all in logical succession, all addingup to some very good humor. basketballs under Michael Hall’scoaching. The tunes were tunes,the jokes were jokes, the effectwas fun, and all we missed werethe pitchers of Bock. Jo AnneSchlag titilated us with “I’ve beenRedeveloped’’ — and the companynumber satirizing the “beatniks”was particularly well written,staged, and performed.Rolf Forsberg Folk singer Cynthia Gooding will present a concert tomor¬row at 8:30 pm in Mandel hall. Miss Gooding has recordedalbums in many languages, and has sung and recorded withTheodore Bikel. She has often been featured on WFMT's"Midnight Special." The concert is sponsored by the Politicsclub. Tickets will be available at the door: $1.25 for studentsand $1.50, general.Quartet present a varied' programThe Parrenin quartet pre¬sented a program of unusualinterest last Friday in thethird of the University Concertsseries works by Stravinsky, Faure,Husa and Bartok were announced.At the last minute however theDebussy quartet was substitutedin place of Bartok Third quartet.Most of this music is seldomheard. The Stravinsky concertinois one of that composer’s moreobscure works, the Faure is rarelyheard in this country and Husais a name not often seen on pro¬grams.The interesting and varied pro¬gram was no doubt in part re¬sponsible for the large and at¬tentive audience.It is only natural to form somesort of judgement of the musicheard, even on a single hearing.Unfortunately, in the places whereit mattered most, [namely in theStravinsky and Faure] the levejof performance did not rise abovemediocrity. The result was thatthe Stravinsky lacked the verve and energy that this music de¬mands. The violin concertino partsin the middle were marred by ex¬cessive rubato and faulty en¬semble. The dynamic level wasnever softer than mezzo-piano, andnever louder than mezzo-forte.The Faure was a completelyroutine run-through played withno conviction. The players seemedto be concentrating mainly on thetask of staying together, and inplaces their intonation was sofaulty that we were unable to dis¬tinguish what notes were beirgplayed. Played in this mannerthe quartet was extremely bor¬ing. Even under ideal conditionsit is not easy to assimilate thiswork. Late Faure [this quartetis his last work] is often sereneand aloof, removed from the ordi¬nary world, and requires a specialattitude both on the part of theperformer and the listener. Thequartet had all these qualities;and, despite its forbidding ex¬terior, it could be a rewardingmusical experience. The second half of the programbegan with a work by Husa, whichturned out to be quite successfulfrom several points of view. Ithad energy and personality, andthe Parrenin quartet summonedforth considerably more enthusi¬asm in its execution of this workthan it had before intermission.The Husa composition relies heavi¬ly on special effects and stringtechnique for its interest, with theresult that on first impression, isnot a work of great profundity.It seems to reveal its entiremusical content on one hearing.The overall effect was, neverthe¬less, quite agreeable.After having heard the Husa,we Were quite in agreement withthe change in the program. Bartokwould have overloaded the con¬cert since the Bartok Third quar¬tet has a great deal in commonwith the Husa.The Debussy quartet received the best performance of the eve¬ning. The second movement inparticular seemed to work outvery ' well. The first movementsuffered from slight rhythmic in¬stability, and from the additionof some ponticella effects whichwere not Debussy’s. All in all,however, this could be considereda representative performance ofthis work.Despite the shortcomings of theperformance the audience seemedto be sufficiently appreciative ofthe opportunity to hear so muchunfamiliar music of high caliber,that it requested an encore.Easley Blackwood•Photo credits unlisted in thelast issue of the Maroon go VoPete Argaman for photos onpage one and page seven andto Arnold Finklin for his photoin the lower left corner of pageeight.Mil E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoFeaturing — Complete Wine List andHors d'oeuvre TableSmall Smoll12'* 12"Cheese . .1.25 Combination .2.00Sausage . .1.50 Mushroom .1.75Anchovy . .1.50 Shrimp .2.00Pepper & Onion . . . . .1.35 Bacon & Onion .1.75Free Delivery on ,411 Pizza to UC StudentsACADIA THEATRE2739 West 55thre 7-4667student rotesjust 10 minutes west on 55thplenty of side street parkingFri-Sot-Sun — Feb 6-7-8'The Miracle of Marcelino'— plus —"Fort Massacre" CLARK Theatredark fir madisonopen 7 o.m.lote show 4 o.m.50c college student priceat all timesjust present your student identi¬fication card at the boxoffice.Sunday Film Guild ProgramsFeb 8 “Jazz Singer”“Juarez”Feb 15 “The last hurrah”“Tunnel of love”Different double feature daily “A MAJOR EVENT OF THE DANCE SEASON... A MUST!">OHN MARTIN, NEW YORK TIMESTHE RANK ORGANIZATION•ok** pride in presentingA Poul Ciinner-I. R. MoxweM Production THEfilmed in Londonin Eoslmon color RcJsJfO*y - C mi ■BALLETlecturing ‘GISELLE’’ in two actsstarringGALINA ULANOVAExactly os presented beforeHer Majesty Queen Elizabeth IIot the Royal Opera House, Covent GardenHAMILTON theatre71st and Paxtonone day onlyThurs., Feb. 12th, 2:30 — 7:30 — 9:30No reserved seats. Advance prices for this performanceonly. HY 3-1121BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGWINTER SPECIALTUNE UP s650 »r• Anti-Freeze• Snow Tires• Road ServiceHeavy Duty Battery C 95SPECIAL ! ! I ^Harper Super ServiceDealer in Sinclair Products5556 HARPER PL 2-9654 Harper Wines & Liquors1114-16 E. 55th St.Fine Quality mines at Loieest PricesChianti . .$ .98 Qt.Chateau BottledFrench Wines .... . . .Reg. $3.29. . . .$1.98 VsHungarian Wines . . . . $2.39 VsFrench Burgundy . . . . . .Reg. $2.47. . . $1.29 VsFine Dooro Port . $1.79 VsCalifornia Wines, full 1 Zl gallon . .$ .98Christian Bros. Wines6.5 oz. Bottles 3 for $1.00Free Delivery Iced KeerFAirfax 4-1318, 7699, 1233Feb. 6, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13SjMflit5 if■j jtii1i V‘ Sports calendarFebruarySwimming; Bradley, Bartlett, 3:30 pm.Gymastics; Wisconsin and UIC, Bartlett, 8 pm.Wrestling; Wabash, Bartlett, 2 pm.Basketball; Varsity versus Merchant Marine academy, Field-house, 8 pm."B" team versus Wilson junior college, Fieldhouse, 6:30 pm.Track; U of Illinois Open, Champaign.Tennis; UC Invitational tournament, Fieldhouse.Tennis; UC Invitational tournament, Fieldhouse.UC fencers have a duel while their seconds photolurk in the background. Argaman Will hold tennis matchThe third annual University Invitational Indoor Junior andBoys Tennis tournament will be held in the fieldhouse today,tomorrow and Sunday, and will boast some of the country’sfinest high school tennis stars.UC tennis coach Bill Moyle reported that competition for the threeday tourney will begin at 7 pm and that trophies will be awardedthe winner and runner-up in each classification.Some 75 entries have been submitted including players from allover the mid-west and southern states according to Mpyle, and“. . . this tournament is rapidly gaining precedent over the nationalchampionships each year.” There is no admission charge to any ofthe matches.Maroons yield to hoopsters final barrageby Bill SpadyA well-played first halfproved not enough for CoachJoe Stampf’s basketball quin¬tet at the Fieldhouse Saturdaynight. Knox college's hoopstersunleashed an almost mechanicalbarrage of free throws and piledup 37 points in the second half topull out a 61-54 win over the Ma¬roons.Chicago fans watched a 35-24halftime lead vanish to a 43-43 tieafter thirteen minutes of the finalperiod. A pair of jump shots byUC forward Gary Pearson closedthe gap to 52-53 with two minutesremaining in the game. The Knoxscoring machine added three bas¬kets and two charity tosses in thefinal minute and a half to ice thegame for the invaders, whileMitch Watkins’ free throw pro¬vided the Maroons’ only gain forthe same period.The first half found the Knoxdefense unable to cope with SteveUllman’s driving lay-ins and Wat¬kins’ jump shots as the Maroonstook command of the floor. Chi¬cago canned thirteen of 16 gifttosses in the initial period andzeroed in eleven baskets from thefield. Knox hit eight free throwsin eight tries, but the visitorsscored only eight field goals against fine defensive work byPearson, Clarence Woods, andJerry Toren. Watkins collectedthirteen points and Ullman talliedeleven to lead the first-half scor¬ing.In the second period, Knoxfound the key to Chicago’s de¬fense and fired home twelve fieldgoals and nine (out of thirteen)free tosses. The Maroons wereheld to only five buckets and nine( for 17) from the foul line.Pearson’s eight points led thehosts’ second-half scoring, withWatson adding five and Ullmansix. Knox’s Faubel hit nine in thesecond period, while his teammateGranning added eight to elevenfor his first half to capture gamescoring honors with 19 points.Watkins trailed with 18, Ullmanhit his season’s high with 17, andPearson followed with 13.The Maroons hit 16 times for42 points from the field for a .381percentage, but Knox canned 21from the floor in 34 attempts, a.583 maik. Knox’s free-throw per¬centage of .826, 19 for 23 com¬pared to Chicago’s 22 for 32, .687,proved the margin of victory. Inthe rebound department Chicagocleared 29 and Knox grabbed off20. The loss evened the Maroons’season record to 7-7. They face theUS Merchant Marine academy to¬ morrow night at 8 pm in theFieldhouse.Chicago - KnoxWoods 6 Hoopes 3Pearson 13 Faubel 11Watkins 18 Granning ....19Toren 0 Pierson 13Ullman 17 Geraghty ....11Tegtmeier 0 Pankus 4Tankmen split twoCoach Bill Moyle’s swim¬mers split a pair of meets inMinnesota last weekend, top¬ping Carleton 53-42 Friday nightand losing a close contest to Min¬nesota 46-49 on Saturday. RogerHarman contributed the 16th rec¬ord of this season to the books ashe churned the 200 yard butterflyin 2:24, breaking the old Chicagomark of 2:26.9 which he set justa few weeks ago. Harman, TomLisco, and Paul Schutt were thesparks of the Minnesota meet aseach placed in three events.The Maroons tripped Carletonwithout some of their key men.The UC 400 yard medley relayteam of Colburn, Siegel, Kauf¬man, and Weiss won in 4:36.5. Inthe 220 freestyle, Phil Helmuthand Dave Dec placed one-two in2:33.4; and Bud Weiss and FrankMcGraw turned the same trick inthe 100 freestyle with a :59. clock¬ing. Currie and Helmuth took thefirst two places in the 440 free¬style in 5:30.4, and McGrawMore men in high placessmoke Camels than anyother cigarette today. Forthe 10th straight year, thiscigarette outsells everyother — every filter, everyking-size, every regular.The Camel blend of costlytobaccos has never beenequalled for rich flavor andeasygoing mildness. Thebest tobacco makes the bestsmoke.Climb above fadsand fancy stuff . . .Have a realcigarette-have a CAMEL nabbed a second in the 60 free¬style. Bill Zimmerman placedthird in the 200 yard butterfly,Colburn grabbed third in the 200backstroke, and Siegel won a sec¬ond in the 200 breaststroke. A1Gaines won the diving, and the400 freestyle relay of Jerry Ful¬ton, Weiss, McGraw, and Decclosed the meet in 4:05.6.Lisco and Harman each placedfirst in three events against Min¬nesota. Lisco won the 50 freestylein 23.9 and the 100 freestyle in52.8, Harman took the 200 butter¬fly and the 200 breaststroke, whileboth swam on the winning 400freestyle relay team with Currieand Schutt in 3.46.2. Schutt spentthe night before the meet in theMinnesota hospital with a highfever, but he managed to grab twoseconds despite his illness. Hefinished runner-up in the 220 free¬style and the 440 freestyle. Weissplaced third in the 100, Currietook third in the 200 backstroke,Siegel nabbed second in the 200breaststroke, and Gaines won asecond in diving.Racers rack recordFour Chicago sprintersbroke the Michigan AAU 880relay record at the Universityof Michigan last Saturday, and anumber of other UC Track clubmembers placed well among atough field of competitors. Thequartet of Hosea Martin, PeteMcKeon, George Karcazes, and A1Jacobs covered the half mile in1:31.2 to highlight the UCTC ef¬fort. Walt Perschke, McKeon,Martin, and Karcazes combinedtheir efforts in a 3:26.1 mile relayfor fourth place behind Loyola’swinning time of 3:25. Anotherquartet of Kevin Waring, GaryAugustine, Victor Neill, and Pres¬ton Grant earned a fourth for theMaroons in the distance medley.A1 Jacobs was edged at the wire in the 60 yard dash by winnerHayes Jones of Eastern Michiganin 6.25. Gar Williams won the twomile run in 9:27.7 and Hal Higdonplaced third with a 9:35.5 clock¬ing. Dick Richardson won thehigh jump at 6-8, as Floyd Smithtied for second with a 66 leap.In the mile Dick Pond and TerlWheeler nabbed second andfourth respectively with times of4:17.1 and 4:22.3. Ed Hoyle cleared14-8 in the pole vault to earn a tiefor first.'B7 basketbalfers fallRon Wangerin’s “B” basket¬ball team lost its sixth andseventh games of the seasonthis past week. In a preliminaryto the Knox-Chicago varsity gameSaturday night, the Maroons fellbefore Purdue Extension 73-35and Monday night dropped a closedecision to UIC 51-44.In the Purdue contest, the Ma¬roons hit only nine field goals in33 attempts, a meager .272, whilethe visitors enjoyed a .531 shooting mark, 26 for 29. The storywas the same at the foul line, asthe hosts collected 17 for 26 (.654*and the visitors 21 for 29 (.724*.Les Hutton led the Chicago scor¬ers with thirteen, and A1 Wilcoxcollected ten.Tumblers topple twiceMaroon gymnasts traveledto Muncie, Indiana, to meetBall State Teachers collegeand Southern Illinois universityin a double-dual meet last Satur¬day. Southern Illinois took tophonors for the day by defeatingthe Maroons 89 to 22 and takingBall State 82 to 30. Ball State splitfor the day by defeating Chicago72 to 39. For the Maroon effortsGeorge Andros placed first on therings, and Joe Kuypers placedfirst on trampoline and third intumbling.WL\j Rel ijionlYou are Cordially Invited to a Series ofMonday Evening Discussions★ The Earmarks of Authentic Religion Feb. 9Man's Encounter with the Self Feb.^ The Self Seeks Communion: .Feb. 9.Feb. 16Feb. 23. Mar. 29“Ok-oh! There goesour last pack of CamelsV*Fenn House 8:00 pm5638 Woodlawn AvenueR. J. ReynoldsTob. Co., Winston-Salem, N. C. Sponsored by the Channing-Murray Club and First Unitarian ChurchLeslie T. Pennington, MinisterCHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 6# 1959Western cir. curriculum latestby Christian Mackauerchairman, History staffThe history course was alate-comer in the “old” Col¬lege. For a number of yearsafter the degree requirements hadbeen defined, the students’ his¬torical education was consideredthe common responsibility of thehumanities and the social sci¬ences. It soon became apparentthat such a task threatened toburden these courses with dutiesforeign to their proper concernsand that in the end, in spite of allgood intentions, history was leftout in the cold.Authorized in '46In 1946, therefore, the Collegefaculty authorized the organiza¬tion of an experimenta’ independ¬ent one-year course in the historyof Western civilization. Thiscourse opened in the fall of thatyear with eleven courageous stu¬dents offering themselves asguinea pigs. They were taughtby teams of two different teach¬ers in each of three quarters. Itwas great fun and we learnt a lotabout what could and what shouldnot be done in such a course. Theexperiment was repeated the yearafter, with 180 volunteers. From1949 on, the course was requiredof all candidates for the CollegeAB degree.Any statements about ‘ends’ or‘purpose’ of a history course aspart of a general education cur¬riculum can only articulate theobvious.On the lowest level: the studentmust acquire some solid knowl¬edge of mere facts, a command ofa minimum array of dates anddata which allows him to putnames and events in their properplaces. Such a stock of informa¬tion is a tool no educated man cando without; it is not history. Intheir first class hour we challengeour students with Collingwood’sprotest that "nothing capable ofbeing learnt by heart, nothingcapable of being memorized ishistory.”On a higher level, this coursewants to satisfy by legitimatemeans the student’s natural curi¬osity about man’s past; we try tosketch for him the dramatic andmoving story of man’s achieve¬ments and defeats.Specific task metOn a third level, we meet theproper, the specific task of edu¬cation through the study of his¬tory; for this task I can think ofno more precise designation thanthe admittedly vague term of thedevelopment of the student’s his¬torical sense: the awakening andsharpening of his sensitivity forthe historical dimension in allhuman experience. This includes,on the one side, the ability to per¬ceive historical distinctness, afeeling for the peculiarity, theuniqueness of historical epochs,an awareness of the manifoldrealizations of the wide range ofhuman potentialities in differentcultures. It means, as well, asense of development, the con¬sciousness of continuous change, of man moving through tim,efrom a dark past to a dark futurethrough a dimly lightened nearerpast and present. An historicallyeducated man has a fuller exist¬ence, lives a richer, more completelife than a man deaf to the lan¬guage of history. Those who havecultivated their historical sensehave become human in a highermeaning of this word—just asthose whose mind has been open¬ed to music, to the visual arts, tothe beauty of nature, or to thedelights of mathematical imagi¬nation; you can live without anyof these experiences, but you willbe inestimably poorer.This alone would be enough tojustify the inclusion of the studyof history ir. a liberal education.There are, in addition, more spe-knowledge of our past can giveus a genetic understanding of theworld in which we live; no fulland correct analysis of any majorcontemporary problem is possibleif the historical dimension is leftout of our investigation. And wecannot understand ourselves ifwe do not know our roots. If wetry to escape from our past with¬out having squarely faced it welay ourselves open to the stric¬ture that, one hundred years ago,has been pronounced by JacobBurckhardt against that type ofcivilized man "who has largelyscuttled everything historical, i.e.,all continuity of intellectual life.”And even our differences fromeverything past, our very pecu¬liarity as Americans of the niid-20th century, can best be graspedby those who see themselvesagainst the background of menand institutions of other ages;by comparison and contrast thestudent becomes aware of his ownidentity.No lessonsOne claim we do not make forour field of studies: we do notbelieve in ‘lessons’ of history inthe narrow sense of that word.History cannot provide us with abook of recipes that would saveus from making decisions of ourown. But the study of history ex¬poses us to an inexhaustiblewealth of vicarious experiencesand so gives depth and breadth toour deliberations and ‘wisdom’ toour decisions. Looking at humanbeings in action, under an in¬finite variety of circumstances,following them through theirtriumphs and travails, will teachus something about man himself,about his powers and his limits.To quote Burckhardt again:"through historical experienceswe do not want to become moreprudent, for some other occasion,but wise, for ever.”In the carefully planned andbalanced scheme of the ‘old’ Col¬lege, the history course, from itsinception, had been entrustedwith one additional function: to¬gether with OMP, it has servedas an ‘integration’ course for thecurriculum as a whole. It wascharged with the task of unifyingthe students’ educational experi¬ence by placing the materials pre¬sented by o*her courses in their historical context — horizontally,by establishing their connectionsand emphasizing their affinitieswith other phenomena of thesame epoch; vertically, by illumi¬nating some of their antecedentsand consequences. To assure suchan integration, the staff teachingthis course was composed of menand women of very differentbackgrounds: to a hard core ofprofessional historians were add¬ed a number of instructors whosemain competence and interestswere located in some other field.By pooling their knowledge andexchanging their experiences themembers of the staff have builtup a curriculum and are keepingawake an awareness of the taskwhich make it certain that at leastsome essential contributions tothis form of integration emergein the actual class room discus¬sion.Knowledge it processNow to the course itself, itscontent, structure, methods. Thehistory course is based on thesame principles by which the Col¬lege in general is guided: knowl¬edge is treated as a process, notas a secure and final possession.Not information but understand¬ing, not broad coverage but rela¬tively intensive study of selected,representative phenomena is ouraim. We single out, at present,eight shorter or longer episodesfrom the whole range of westernhistory: the Greek state of thesixth and fifth centuries BC; thefall of the Roman republic andthe first two centuries of theRoman empire; the beginnings ofChristianity and the establish¬ment of the Christian empire inthe fourth century AD; the highMiddle Ages; Renaissance andReformation;England and Francearound 1700; the French revolu¬tion; Europe in the 19th century.There is nothing sacred aboutthis number eight and about thesespecific choices. We frequentlyreplace one topic by another orradically change its content tomake the course better and to pro¬vide ourselves with new chal¬lenges that keep us on our toes.The material studied within eachtopic consists of original con¬temporary documents and, occa¬sionally, of some essays by mod¬ern scholars; in the second casewe usually put two or more diver¬gent interpretations against eachother to whet the student’s in¬genuity and to keep him alertagainst any dogmatic pronounce¬ments.The student Is expected to makehimself thoroughly familiar withevery single document and tostore it in his mind for perma¬nent reference.The class discussion (threehours a week) helps him tosqueeze out of these records amaximum of relevant informa- Mackauer quotedChristian Mackauer, chairman of the history of Westerncivilization course staff, received most of his formal educationin Germany. After graduating from Gymnasium, Mackauerstudied history and classics at the universities of Freiburg,Bonn, and Frankfort, graduating from the University of Frank¬fort in 1920.Then after one year of practice teaching, Mackauer under¬took a most active program. Between 1921 and 1935 he simul¬taneously taught history, economic history, and sociology atthe Academy of Labor, a worker's educational branch of Frank¬fort university; classics and history at a Frankfort gymnasium;seminars for future teachers on the art of teaching history;plus additional work in adult education.In 1933 Hitler closed the Academy of Labor, and Mackauerwas transferred to a small Gymnasium to teach the classics,until 1937 when he was dismissed from public service. In 1939,two weeks before the start of World War II, Mackauer andhis wife escaped to England. He then spent a year at Oxford,while waiting for an opportunity to come to America; spendingsome of his time doing research on the knowledge of Plato inthe middle ages.In 1940, their visas having been approved, the Mackauerscame to America. Between 1940 and 1942 he taught in threedifferent schools in Long Island, Oregon, and Massachusetts.In 1943, he arrived at Chicago where he has taught socialscience two, history and Greek. Next quartei he will teach adivisional course on the Roman empire.Mackauer became an American citizen in 1946. In 1954he was elected chairman of the history course, a course withwhich he has been intimately connected since its inception.In 1956 he received the $1000 Quantrell award for excellencein teaching, and the following year he became a full professor.' ' - ' 's - <$! V t-s-bstion and to connect one piece withthe other, horizontally and verti¬cally, to create the picture of anepoch or the outline of a long-range development. In additionto the three discussion meetingsthere is one lecture hour a week.Some of the lectures present suchaspects of an epoch as cannoteasily be derived from oursources; others give examples ofpossible modes of integration ofthe materials the student hasstudied; many lectures help fillthe gaps between the chosentopics (thse gaps vary in lengthfrom a few decades to five ormore centuries).But, on the whole, the studenthas to acquire his knowledge ofthe continuous web of historythrough his own effort. He hasto study and restudy the hand¬book that has been written by theformer chairman of the course,William McNeill, and is carefullytailored to our specific needs.Some students may feel this to bea drudgery, but they cannot bespared it. The documents cannotbe left hanging in empty space;any attempt to ‘discuss’ themwithout a grasp of a minimum ofstubborn historical facts would bean empty exercise of intellectualcleverness. We hope at least that out of all(his each student will build uphis own mental picture of thecourse of western civilization. Itwill be a rough sketch, at best; tofill it in and correct it will be alife-long task. To stimulate fhisstriving for a synthesis and yetto caution the student againsthasty and one-sided commitmentsto one particular solution we haveadded a ninth topic of discussion— which actually comes as thefirst in our sequence—in whichwe present half a dozen differentinterpretations of western historyby prominent historians and phi¬losophers of history, from Bos-suet to Toynbee. The examplesare so selected and grouped thatthey present at the same time aspecimen of intellectual history inits dialectical structure.It is still too early to talk aboutthe future. But it now looks asif all students of the new Collegeare going to have an opportunityof taking a course in the historyof Western civilization althoughsome will have to be satisfiedwith a shorter version. To many,we hope, the course will be of¬fered approximately in its presentform.KEN JOFFE PRESENTS8RJ jfewjaam Jg 2 PERFORMANCES . . . 8 and 11 P.M.1 MilES^ )MOmuEgrn „+ \JaughafvALL SEATS RESERVED, TICKETS $2.85 mid $3.85 lad. TaxEVANSTON: Baca Radio,1741 Sherman.LOOP: Discount Records,201 N. LaSalle; Hudson-Ross, 8 E. Randolph; Sey-_ mour’s Records, 439 S.<21 saJe. I Wabash.at: I NORTH: Lisbon’s, 43 E.^ ■ Oak.MAIL ORDERS: Enclose Self-Addressed, Stamped Envelope to:NEW JAZZ, CIVIC OPERA MOUSE, CHGO.SOUTH: Met Music, 328 E.58th; Sutherland Lounge,4659 S. Drexel; Hamilton’sMusic, 519 E. 79th. at the j^yde park thaatra1AM PAPK AT / NO 7-9071 / STUOCNT HATE 50< AU ««fO»MANCESstarling trlday tabruary 6: FRENCH CINEMEDiAN FERNANDEL OF SUCH FUNNY FAMILIARS AS "THE -SHEEP HAS FIVE LEGS,’’ "PANTALOONS," "THE DRESSMAKER" AND-■ "THE LITTLE WORLD OF DON CAMILLO" IN A NEW COMEDY THRILLER:• as a clarinetist and 15 year husband,I Fernandel embarks on a French "seven year: itch" when, wife out of town, a friend; fixes him up with a chorus girl who: teasingly turns her back on him and' reveals the all too literal knife in it!. . . torn between the justice of thegendarme and the justice of an irate wife,:THE SHORT SHOW- jOFFERING ANOTHER SERVING OF APPETEASING FILM MORSELS FROM A TYPICAL :HYDE PARK MENU FOR MOVIE-GOERS: PABLO CASALS. A VISIT AND A-MASTERFUL PERFORMANCE OF BACH, AND A BOB BENCHLEY FESTIVAL #1. "A :wtr.uT A*r tup \Jtrwmrc " "Tur* rntinTsurt) dp tup Awn "unut to ctmi r'T" *he settles for the cloak of cloak-and-Idagger only to find it carries a record!of seven other murders. . .in typical;Fernandel fashion the comic bumbles into;a fitting funny conclusion while justice is!laughlingly undone... "The humor crackles" !—The NcwYork Times: "Asfunny as abar-;rel of monkeys"--The New York Daily News ;: NIGHT AT THE MOVIES," "THE COURTSHIP OFNTHE NEWT' AND 'TlOW TO SUBLETi nm/ nun tu dudll a ~A HYDE PARK SPECIAL I Wednesday, February nth, a sneak preview of a new prizeZ....:.... .~*..,lr:.7N._LZ“..;.„DANISH FILM DIRECTED BY "day OF WRATH'' DIRECTOR, CARL WINNINGDREYERto coma: PATHS* P/.NCMALI, THE DOCTORS DILEMMA, INSPECTO* MAIGSET, MY UNCLE• 15Washington prom next on SU's agenda(from page 1)All pictures on this pageshow Student Union’s annualNight of Sin festivities,(above) Alice Schaeffer, one ofSU’s “slave girls’’ holds up theMaroon’s contribution to the auc¬tion, “Nepherteehee” reputed (byMaroon staff) to be the founderof O-board, Nepherteehee sold for$175,000 smackeroos. R. DavidSilver, (center photo) picturedwith another attractive SU slavegirl, seryed as the auctioneer,(extreme right) “Stick with mebaby and we’ll go places togeth¬er," the young man shown seemsto say. With that “roll" whowouldn’t?Student Union also operatesthe ‘Hangout’ popular meetingplace open Monday through Fri¬day, from 9 to 12 o'clock in IdaNoyes hall. Available at this‘Hangout,’ in addition to managerAndy Moore’s company, are ham¬burgers, hot dogs, cokes, toastedcheese sandwiches and the atmos¬phere of Joseph R, Shapiro’spaintings. The eight young ladies pic¬tured on page one were chosenfrom 35 as the candidates inthe Miss UC contest. They werechosen on the basis of “appear-;ance, grooming, poise and person-"ality.” . ?|Miss University of Chicago willbe chosen by an all campus votewhich will take place nextWednesday. The balloting will be!held at Ida Noyes, B-J courts, 4h<\new dorms and the Reynolds club.Tickets for the prom, to be heldon February 21 at Ida Noyes hall,will go on sale the same day. fMiss UC will be crowned bydean of student John P. Netherton at the dance.The finalists and their sponsors!are: Wendy Good, Outing club;;Molly O’Rourke, Phi Kappa Psi;Maggie Stinson, Salisbury house;Verlaine Lawrence, Sigma; CaroleFernstrom, Psi Upsilon; Joy Stev¬ens, north house, and Barbara!Quinn, Cap and Gown.Freeman to have SFC hearing on 16th(from page 1)would be subject to administra¬tive review. The court, if con¬vened, would make recommenda¬tions to him, but the ultimatedecision on disciplinary actionwould be made by the directorin consultation with the househead.“All this is preliminary to say¬ing that the powers of the courtare delegated by the dean of stu¬dents office and that ultimateresponsibility rests with the direc¬tor, as a representative of thedean of students, said Newman.“This is the legal basis for thejurisdiction of the court. There is,of course, a larger question thanthe mere legality of the court:that is, whether student courtsas such are a “good thing.” Myview is that students are capableof managing their own affairsand that they should be encour¬aged to do so. . . .“As for the present system, itbrings into glaring light the de¬fects in this judicial system.”Many, including the justices ofthe court themselves, Newmanoffered, have pointed out the in¬equity of having a single bodyas investigators, as judges, rulingon points of law, and as a jurydetermining guilt or innocence.“I was troubled myself, statedNewman,” ... after a carefulstudy of the transcript of the trial, my judgment was that thedefendant was allowed to presenthis case to his full advantage andthat the verdict was just.”Newman went on, “the obviousdefects in the Constitution shouldbe changed if the judicial systemis to be kept, but they did notstand in the way of justice in thisparticular case. (Editor’s note:Members of East house will voteon several constitutional changesin the near future.)Newman stated that he felt themembers of the court themselvesdeserved commendation. “Theyundertook a difficult task and car¬ried it through in a mature andresponsible fashion. They haveborn the brunt of a certainamount of criticism, I think un¬justly. Whatever one may thinkof student courts as such, thisparticular group of students hasdone well.”On the subject of student courts“in general” Newman stated:“I would approach that ques¬tion from this direction. Man hasnever, despite the high hopes ofMarx, Condorcet and other Utopi¬ans, achieved a perfect society,and in the foreseeable future wemust count on the fact that therewill be disturbances to law andorder in the dormitories as thereare in society at large. The ques¬tion is where will the authorityfor handling such disturbances rest? Ideally there would be noauthority at all, and my experi¬ence is that that is what manystudents would really like. Sincethis is not possible, it must resteither with the staff or the stu¬dents or in some working rela¬tionship between the two. Up tonow, the House System staff hashandled infractions of the publicorder, acting in fact as benevolentdespots. This has many advan¬tages. It is, on the whole, efficient,just and relatively painless tothose residents of the Houses whostay out of trouble. It’s grave dis¬advantages are that it keeps stu¬dents in an immature situationwhere older adults are handlingimportant problems for them andthat it denies them full citizen¬ship in the body politic which iswhat a House really is. The diffi¬culties that arise inevitably in acommunity are the problems ofthe members of that community,whether in a dormitory, a townor a nation. The men and womenwho live in dormitories today willbe citizens of the larger worldvery soon. As such, they will befaced with problems without ex¬perience in the problem-solvingprocess. It seems wise to me thatthey should have this experiencein the manageable world of a Uni¬versity House under the guidanceof the staff as a preparation forthe complex issues they will facein the future.” He continued . . . “It is oftenobjected that students are put intoo difficult a position whenasked to judge their peers or, onthe other hand, that their deci¬sions are not wise. But questionsof social policy are never easilysolved nor are they often solvedperfectly. Maturity and goodjudgment are achieved onlythrough the problem-solving proc¬ess and we do not really do stu¬dents a favor by sparing them thepain involved. Again, experiencein other schools and in other situ¬ations at the University of Chi¬cago indicate that when studentsare given responsibility they han¬dle it well. And where they donot, there is always the restrain¬ ing hand of the Staff and otherrepresentatives of the dean ofstudents. ‘4‘Two other tilings strike me inregard to this question. First, abasic question here is whether wetrust students. The answer is yes.when they are in a situation!which they can manage. The!problems that arise in a University House, it seems to me, fallwithin the range of their compe !tence. Second, one of the mostconstant demands of students atfthis University is for freedom!!With a student court in a dormitory, students are given freedom:freedom from staff control andfreedom to run their own com¬munity. Yet the prospect of freedom with responsibility seemsappalling to mcny. This is paradoxical, indeed.”Bible classes to meetA tradition of Bible criticism and study begun at UC byWilliam Rainey Harper will be continued this quarter in aBible study on Sunday mornings. Rockefeller chapel with thecooperation of the Methodist foundation and the Porter foun¬dation in the fall quarter began a series of studies for theUniversity community. The first series was conducted byDean Walter Harrelson of the divinity school. Sundays, from9:30 to 10:30 am in Ida Noyes library, the study will be con-tinued. Dr. Ernest Saunders, professor of New Testament.Garret seminary will conduct a study of “The Mission of theChurch: Studies in Ephesians.” The purpose of the study isto afford an opportunity for critical and informed conversa¬tion on the Bible. :All members of the University community may attend andtake part in the discussion.16 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 6, 1959