The Ford foundation today announced a $249,000St ant to UC to step up its South Asian study pro¬gram.The grandt will enable the Committee on South Asianstudies of UC to broaden the scope of its training andresearch.The funds are being made available “at a most oppor¬tune time,” said Professor George V. Bobrinskoy, chair¬man of the committee. _“A bkmce at the map and the world news shows howimportant the area from Pakistan to the Philippines hasbecome to Americans,” he said.‘The importance of Indian alone with its enormouspopulation indicates a need for greater scholarship andunderstanding of that nation and its sub-continent,” saidBobrinskoy, who also is chairman of the department oflinguistics.More than half the Ford Foundation funds will beused for faculty salaries to round out an array of aca¬demic talent focusin gon South Asian problems.Bobrinskoy said that the funds would make possiblethree major appointments, adding a specialist in Ben¬gali language and literature, another in Sanskrit andIndie Studies and a third in the economics of South Asia.The new resources also will permit the collection ofs|>ecial library materials for the South Asian area andan expanded research and field investigation programby senior members of the UC staff.The Committee on South Asian studies is composed ofscholars and scientists in anthropology, languages, re¬ligion, history, geography, siocology, philosophy andliterature.The Committee was organized to stimulate graduatelevel study of South Asian problems. UC’s undergraduateprograms provide introductions to the civilizations of India, China and Islam in a three-pronged educationaleffort, to increase understanding of that part of theworld.Professor Milton B. Singer, a social anthropologist andsecretary to the Committee on South Asian studies,illustrated the magnitude of the task of Americans inunderstanding Asian cultures this way:“Suppose that Columbus had been an Asian and hadset sail from India and had crossed the Pacific insteadof the Atlantic to discover America. Suppose that theNorth American continent had been settled from theEastern instead of the Western World.Then the problems of the United States today wouldbe to learn almost from the very beginning about thelanguage and culture of the nations of Europe, just aswe must do for the nations of Asia.“From what we actually know of European life andhistory and from the little we are aware of in SouthAsian life, we can take the measure of the task facingAmerican scholars, educators, statesmen, businessmenand technicians.”Since 1951, a growing number of UC faculty and re¬search workers have been active in the South Asianfield, particularly in India. The Committee on SouthAsian studies was formed in 1954 and at present hasa total staff of 34 teaching related subjects or engagedin research. More than 40 graduate students are en¬rolled in Committee programs.Contributing tothe scholarly concentration on SouthAsia at UC are the center for the study of the ChristianWorld mission, the center for Comparative education,the Philippine studies program, the Population center,the Research center in economic development and cul¬tural change, and the Program on comparative cul¬tures and civilizations.The Committee on Far Eastern civilizations of UC isconcentrating its attention on problems of China, Japan and Korea. Its chairman is Associate Professor EdwardA. Kracke, Jr., in the department of Oriental languages.In addition to Bobrinskoy, who is a professor of San¬skrit, and Singer, who is a professor of social sciencesin the College of the University, and in its departmentof anthropology, the members of the Committee onSouth Asian studies include:R. Pierce Beaver, professor of Missions and director ofthe center for the study of the Christian World mission;Francis S. Chase, professor of education, chairman ofthe department of education, and dean of the school o|education; Fred Eggan, professor of anthropology anddirector of the Philippines studies program; MircenEliade, professor of history of religions; Norton S. Gina-burg, associate professor of geograph;Philip M. Hauser, professor of siciology and chairmanof the department of sociology; Stephen N. Hay, assist*ant professor of history; Marshall G. S. Hodgson, an*sistant professor on the committee on social thoughtand assistant professor of social science in the Collegeand chairman of the Islamic civilization course; Bert F.Hoselitz, professor of social sciences and director, re¬search center in economic development and culturalchange; Joseph M. Kitagawa, assistant professor of his¬tory of religions;Donald F. Lach, associate professor of modern his¬tory; McKim Marriott, assistant professor in the depart¬ment of anthropology and assistant professor of socialscience in the College; Richard P. McKeon, Charles F.Grey distinguished service professor in the departmentof philosophy and classical languages and literature#and chairman of the committee on the analysis of ideasand the study of methods; Earl H. Pritchard, associateprofessor of Far Eastern history and institutions;Edward A. Shils, professor of sociology and of socialthought; Earl H. Pritchard, associate professor of FarEastern history and institutions.In this 20 page issueUC's Libby resigns AEC. . 1LAK conferes 1New prep school 3Douglas speaks here. 3Editorial page 4News on SFA Hearing 5Calendar, classifieds . 6Wash Prom news 9Photo essay 10, 11Religion 12, 13Culture 18, 19LAK, Ike meet. discuss new committeeby Rochelle DubnowUC’s Chancellor LawrenceLawrence A. Kimpton dis¬cussed plans for a committeeto chart national goals at a Whitehouse breakfast meeting withPresident Eisenhower on Wednes¬day.Eisenhower outlined the planto create such a committee in hisstate of the Union message toCongress last month.Robert E. Merriam, UC alum¬nus, deputy assistant to Eisen¬hower and long-time friend ofKimpton also attended the break¬fast. -At his news conference later,the President declined to commenton the contention that he intendedto name Kimpton committeechairman. He said that they hadnot talked about appointments,but discussed ideas and “found agreat deal of common ground inwhich we were Interested.'’Eisenhower said of Kimptom“I must say that it was, morethan anything else, an opportun¬ity to get to meet this man ofwhom I had heard so much, andI must say that what I had beentold in the past was not betterthan my impression now. I thinkhe is a very fine man.”The President first mentioned his committee on national goalsin his State of the Union addresslast month. He said that he want¬ed an appraisal of national po¬tentials concerned with these af¬fairs: living standards, health andeducation, the people’s “betterassurance of life, liberty and theirgreater opportunities,” plus pro¬posals on how such goals shouldbe met, and by what level of gov¬ernment—local, state or federal.White house sources said thePresident has not made up hismind as to the committee’s leader¬ship and that recently he has talk¬ed to several other educators andprofessional men and leaders oflabor, finance and management ingeneral terms about the project.James C. Haggerty, Whitehouse press secretary said thatEisenhower wanted to talk overhis plan with “a leading educatorfrom the middle west.”The discussion has ranged overmethods of operation, objectivesand the like, rather than on per¬sonal matters.In his January 9, 1959, state ofthe Union address the Presidentgave the basis of his plans forthe committee. He stated:“We can successfully sustainsecurity and remain true to ourheritage of freedom if we clearly visualize the tasks ahead and setout to perform them with resolu¬tion and vigor. We must first de¬fine these tasks and then under¬stand what we must do to ac¬complish them.“If progress is to be steady wemust have long-term guides ex¬tending far ahead, certainly five,possibly even ten years. Theymust reflect the knowledge thatbefore the end of five years wewill have a population of morethan 190,000,000 people. Theymust be goals that stand high,and so inspire every citizen toclimb always toward mountinglevels of moral, intellectual andmaterial strength. Every ad¬vance toward them cannot fail tostir pride in the in individual andnational achievements.“Now to define these goals, Iintend to mobilize help fromevery available source.“We need more than politicallyordained national objectives if weare to challenge the best effortsof free men and women. A groupof selfless, able and devoted indi¬viduals, outside of government,could effectively participate inmaking the necessary appraisalsof the potentials of our future.The result would be the establish¬ment of national goals that wouldPercy will head committeeCharles H. Percy, 39, UC trustee and president of Bell and Howell, has been chosen tohead a distinguished Republican committee to develop issues for the party’s 1960 campaign.Percy has been described as being “modern” and progressive in his philosophy of Re¬publicanism.He resigned last Friday as president of the United Republican fund of Illinois and at the same timerelinquished his membership on the Republican national finance committee.The new committee has been organized by Republican national chairman Meade Alcorn with theapproval of President Eisenhower.Its purpose is to draw up a new statement of Republican goals and Republican philosophy of govern¬ment in the light of existing conditions and to define the issues for 1960 in terms that it is hoped willrally voters to the Republican ticketIt is expected that this study’s declaration will have a strong influence on the 1960 RepublicanPlatform.One of the problems the Percy committee Is expected to deal with hs that of attracting more politicalscientists to the Republican cause. Republican officials estimate that about 75 per cent of the nation’sPolitical science community supports the Democratic party. not only spur us on to our finestefforts but would meet the sterntest of practicality.The committee I’ve plannedwill comprise educators and rep¬resentatives of labor, manage¬ment, finance, the professions, agriculture and every other kindof useful activity.“Such a study would update andsupplement, in the light of con*tinuous changes in our societyand its economy, the monumental(See ‘Kimpton’ page 17)Libby resigns AECWillard Libby, UC nuclearchemist and the leading au¬thority on radio carbon datingresigned fro mthe Atomic Energycommission on Wednesday. Hesaid he had to go back to teach¬ing and research “if I am to re¬main a scientist. Libby is onacademic leave from UC. It isnot definite where he will teach.Though not officially confirmed,it is speculated that Warren C.Johnson, UC’s dean of the physi¬cal sciences will succeed Libby onthe AEC. Libby, the only member of thefive-man commission with an ex-tensive scientific backgroundmade his resignation effectiveJune 30.President Eisenhower, saying itwas a “difficult task” to acceptthe resignation, did not immedtately announce a successor.Libby will have completed threeyears of his five-year term onJune 30.As an AEC member, Libby ha#concerned himself with the atom*#(see ‘Libby’ page 17)photo by FigltoFolkmusic is going through a period of renaissance, saidUC's Folklore society president Fred Cohn. For more aboutfolk music at UC, see the Maroon's photo essay on page10 and 1 LnewsbitsScientists to confer on link in researchTHE REAL THING IN MILDNESS...THE REAL THING IN FINE TOBACCO TASTE!It doesn’t take a «£BK to know why newDual Filter Tareytons have become so pop¬ular so quickly! It’s because the unique DualFilter does more than just give you highfdtration. It selects and balances the flavorelements in the smoke to bring out the bestin fine tobacco taste. Try Tareytons today—you’ll seel Here’s why Tareyton’s Dual Filterfilters as no single filter can:1. It combines the efficient filteringaction of a pure white outer filter. . .2. withtheadditionalfilteringactionofACTIVATED CHARCOAL in a unique innerfilter. The extraordinary purifying abil¬ity of Activated Charcoal is widelyknown to science. It has been defi¬nitely proved that it makes the smokeof a cigarette milder and smoother.NEW DUAL FILTER TareVtOTlf »#’ f ^ \ * \ * y. * , tndnfix-dmAUKim S&cx+CXyumy «&£«» u our mMUntm* ( © 4. T. CO.)feb. 20#19592€ H i C A G O- M A R O O NTHE TAREYTON RINGSome 50 scientists from industry and government will be¬gin, Monday, a two-day “cram session” with Universitychemists.The sessions are designed to provide a link between scientistsengaged in basic research at the University and scientists conductingapplied research. The visitors represent corporations and agencieswhich help support University research.Chairman of the meeting will be Wilbert H. Urry, professor ofchemistry. The conference, which is being held at the institutes forbasic research, consists of morning lectures on recent advances inchemistry and free afternoons for shop talk with the faculty in theirlaboratories.At a luncheon on Tuesday in the Quadrangle club, Dr. Charles B.Huggins, professor of urology and director of the Ben May labora¬tory for cancer research, will speak on “Chemistry and cancer.”Among corporations and agencies represented at the conferenceare the Aluminum Company of America, E. I. Du Pont de Nemoursand company, International Harvester, Standard Oil (Indiana),Union Carbide corporation, the office of naval research, and the USAir Force office of scientific research.Conferences such as this, between University and industrialscientists, are held three times a year, in October, February, andMay. Theodore M. Switz, director of industry relations in the devel¬opment office, is coordinator. Russ exchangeA Russian exchange pro¬gram is scheduled for nextyear, announced George V.Bobrinskoy, associate professorand chairman of the departmentof linguistics.The program will be similar tothat of last year, involving 30 stu¬dents this year as compared to the20 that were sent last year.To qualify for the exchangeprogram, a student must have“completed his graduate work andbe working on his dissertation,have well defined aims, and havegood control of the Russian lan¬guage.” For students deficient inthe language, classes will be heldduring the summer and will bepaid for by the organization whichis sponsoring the exchange pro¬MARKS THE REAL THING! gram, most likely ,the Ford foun¬dation, said Bobrinskoy.Applications can be obtained atroom 305 of the administrationbuilding and should be returnedto that room as early as possible.Chess exhibitionGordon Dunham, a mem¬ber of the chess team, will givea chess exhibition in Jimmy’sthis Sunday at 2 pm. Blindfolded,he will play four boards simul¬taneously. Dunham’s competitionwill be selected by ballot fromthose “present and willing.”Sculpture offeredA course in creative sculp¬ture will be offered in Lex¬ington studio every Tuesdayfrom 1:30 to 4:00 pm by FreemanSchoolcraft, head of the studio.Prospective sculptors may jointhe classes at any point in thecourse, Schoolcraft said.A class in etching, linoleumblock printing, wood cut, aqua¬tint and drypoint will also beginat the studio next Thursday. Pittermann concluded that“everyday phenomena in theSoviet economy, especially in thebig cities, bear strong resem.blance to the National Socialisteconomic policy under Hitler.”“However,” he said, “the un¬opened expanse of Russian spacemight not necessitate policy ofexpansion at the cost of'neighbor-ing states. Still, the about-facefrom communist idealism and thestrengthened trend toward nation¬alism is undeniable.”Speaking about socialist parties,he stressed the difficulties thatinhibit their development duringan earlier period of repression inmost European countries, but hesaid such socialist parties as theAustrians had developed intostrong bulwarks against commu¬nism and today constitute an es¬sential feature of Europeandemocracy.Pitterman lecturesDr. Bruno Pittermann vicechancellor of Austria, deliver¬ed the Norman Wait HarrisMemorial foundation lecture lastFriday on “Political tendencies inEurope.”Pittermann, who is a memberof the Socialist party in Austria,said, “the rising generation, evenin the Communist party, is rathermore Russian-oriented than com¬munist.”He said in his prepared talkthat “Communism (in Russia)takes more and more the positionof a national economic doctrinethan that of an all-embracing out¬look, determining every aspect oflife.”Pittermann based his talk onhis personal experiences as amember of the Austrian govern¬ment delegation to the SovietUnion.From his personal experiences, Argonne awardedThe University’s ArgonneCancer Research hospital re¬ceived the US atomic energycommission’s million-hour awardof merit for safety Thursday,February 12.Dr. Leon O. Jacobson, professorof medicine and director of thehospital, accepted the award.Presenting it were Martin Pow¬ers, contract administrator, andDonald M. Gardner, director ofhealth and safety. Both are withthe AEC’s Chicago operationsoffice.Argonne Hospital, built in 1953,was the first hospital especiallydesigned and equipped to use all *known radiation sources in stud¬ies of the treatment of cancer. Ithas been called “the first hospi¬tal of the atomic age.”WASU.-PR0M von Buck comingAlla von Buch, young Ger¬man pianist, will present aconcert Sunday, March 1, at8:30 pm in Mandel hall. The con¬cert, sponsored by the music de¬partment, is free. Miss von Buchwill perform works by Shosta¬kovich, Scarlatti, Beethoven, Schu¬mann, Chopin, and Prokofiev.Born in Kiev in the Ukraine,she moved to Germany in her *childhood and was graduatedfrom a music conservatory inMunich at the age of 19. She hassince performed throughout Eur¬ope.Jimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGWINTER SPECIALTUNE UP *650 **p• Anti-Freeze• Snow Tires• Road ServiceHeavy Duty Battery $4| CSPECIAL ! ! ■ ^Harper Super ServiceDenier in Sinclair Products5556 HARPER PL 2-9654TERRY’S PIZZAFree fJC Deliverysmall 1.00 large 1-^5medium 1.45 x-large 2.95giant — 3.95chicken — shrimp — sandwiches1518 e. 63rd Ml 3-404525c discount on all pizzas, Mon, Tu, Wed, Thurs, only,with this couponPlan new UC prep schoolplans for a new $2.6 millionbuilding for the Universityhigh school were detailedWednesday, February 11, at adinner attended by more than 450alumni of the 56-year-old prepa¬ratory school.The role of the school and plansfor its growth were outlined at adinner in the Gold room of thePick Congress hotel. It markedthe first general reunion ever heldby the high school. ChancellorLawrence A. Kimpton describedthe high school as the “symbol ofPhoenix comingout this week!Phoenix magazine, written'and edited by a wide varietyof birds will make its appear¬ance on campus this week.The magazine devoted to a‘eulogy’ of Phoenix’s sister publi¬cation the Chicago Maroon hasnot announced a definite publica¬tion date.Just keep your eyes open, an¬nounced Ladybird Selma Meyeri no relation to Lyndon Johnson'swife.)Phoenix, hot off the ashes willbe available for 25 cents a copy. leadership in American secondaryeducation."Robert Merriam. deputy assist¬ant to President Eisenhower forinter-department affairs, came byair from Washington to attendthe event. He is a member of theclass of 1935.Roy A. Larmee, director of pre-collegiate education at the Uni¬versity, said the expanded highschool is the core of a major de¬velopment program for the entiresystem. The new building willprovide: seven new science labora¬tories; an expanded library of20.000 volumes; a new foreignlanguage laboratory; 22 addi¬tional classrooms; a completecafeteria.The new building will be lo¬cated in the center of the groupof pre collegiate and departmentof education buildings bounded by58th and 59th streets and Dor¬chester and Kimbark avenues.The University of Chicago pre-collegiate system began in 1896with 12 students; in 1903 the highschool was opened. Enrollmenthas grown to nearly 1.200. Lar¬mee reported, about equally di¬vided between high school andelementary school. The develop¬ment goal hopes to serve a totalof 1,600 students. The stature ofthe school in educational circles attracts from 1.300 to 1,500 visi¬tors every year from all over theworld, Larmee said.Kimpton explained the closerelationship between the highschool and other university activi¬ties. “Our plans to keep the highschool a symbol of leadership insecondary education are not anisolated undertaking; they areinterwoven in such developmentsas the committee on pre-collegiateeducation and the new graduateschool of education—all concern¬ed with the quality of teaching inthe schools and the standards ofeducation.“I may say with some pride thatwe had gone into action beforethe condition of American sec¬ondary education became a some¬what hysterical matter of nationalconcern after Sputnik I.“We are rebuilding a faculty inthe pre-collegiate schools whosedevotion and skill was being de¬feated only by the passing ofyears. We have renewed thespirit of innovation and controlledexperimentation that so long havemarked University high.“This reunion tonight marksthe commitment of the Universityto a bright new period in Univer¬sity high school and the future ofAmerican education.” Folksinger Theodore Bikel will bring his banjo and hisgolden voice to UC this weekend. Sponsored by ISL, he willbe at Mandel hall for a concert on Sunday night, February22, at 8 pm. Tickets are on sale at Ida Noyes desk, Mandelcorridor, and will be available at the door. Reserved seats,$2; general admission, $1.50; students, $1.25.Senator Douglas speaks on civil rightsby Albert N. PodellAn overflow crowd jammed Breasted hall tothear Senator Paul H. Douglas speak last Friday.Douglas, noting his surroundings, commentedtfiat “this hall was always set aside for mummies when1 was at the University," but added that he was glad tobe back anyway.The Illinois legislator declined to speak on “TheBudget and the Porkbarrel," his announced topic, butinstead delivered an address on civil rights and the fili¬buster, as hinted in last week’s Maroon. His questionperiod was primarily centered on civil rights, nationaldefense, and the local aldermanic race.“The Senate,” the smiling, white-haired congressmanbegan, “has historically been the graveyard of civilrights. And rule 22 has been the grave digger. The coun¬try has been ready for many years for affirmative actionin the field of civil rights, but it couldn’t be gottenthrough the Senate because of the filibustering tacticswhich the southerners would employ."“The House,” he went on, “would pass anti-lynchingbills, FEPC bills, anti-poll-tax bills, and the like, but thesouth would delay and never permit the Senate to voteon them. And so bills which had the support of a ma¬jority ot both houses would never be passed.”The senator, lecturing without notes but with obvious familiarity with his topic, went on to outline the historyof parliamentary procedure in the Senate—the lapse ofthe power of the vice president to call recalcitrant andloquacious senators to order, the lack of restriction ondebate up to 1917, the famous Norris-La Follette fili¬buster of that year, and the proposal by Senator TomWalsh for limiting debate by a vote of two-thirds of thesenators present and voting (rule 22).In 1948, he continued, rule 22 was changed to make iteven more difficult for filibusters to be curbed. Underthe new version, two-thirds of the senators elected andsworn were required to curtail debate. Further, therehad to be unanimous consent to close off debate on a mo¬tion to change the rules of the Senate.“This new rule,” the senator commented, “protectedthe filibuster more than ever. It’s first provision put civilrights into a cell, and the second provision threw awaythe key.”Douglas went on to recount in detail the various at¬tempts on the part of the Senate liberals to amend rule22.He did not consider the amendment this year to bemuch of an improvement. He termed it “a minisculeconcession.”He emphasized that the proposals of the Senate lib¬erals were neither “gags nor guillotines,” “but that weare merely trying to establish the right of the majority to vote after there has been full, free, and protracteddebate.”Douglas discussed the Senate coalition which had de¬feated the attempt of the Senate liberals to change Rule22. It was a coalition of southern and southwesternDemocrats, conservative Republicans, and senators fromthe mountain states and from Alaska. “This coalition,”he added, “may stay together and may be a powerfulforce on many issues.”Douglas spoke briefly on the Civil war amendmentsto the constitution, the history of Jim Crow and civilrights legislation, the attitude of the Supreme Court oncivil rights, the effectiveness of the NAACP, and theposition of Senator Johnson, Vice President Nixon, andPresident Eisenhower in the recent controversy overcivil rights.Turning to the local scene, the senator admitted thathis name had been improperly used in several newspaperadvertisements for aldermanic candidate Allen Dropkin.The senator further noted that Dropkin supporters hadbeen widely quoting from a letter he wrote four yearsago and in regard to an entirely different election.When asked whom he favored between Dropkin and in¬cumbent Despres, the senator said that he wished toremain neutral in public and would only reveal hischoice “in the solitude of the voting booth.”HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and Waffles 1342Open from Dawn to Dawn east 53 st.Stumped by big-car gas costs?IQgntoferEven better economy for ’59!:Switch to Rambler ’59 ; : : you can savehundreds of dollars on first cost. More milesper gallon. Highest resale. Easiest to park.Try Rambler Personalized Comfort; indi¬vidual sectional sofa front seats. Go Rambler.TEST-DRIVE THE ’89 RAMBLERAT YOUR RAMBLER DEALER’S Mat Coupon Today for YourFREE 1959 CAR X-RAYCompares aH the leading low-priced make*32 pages ... 136 photos ... authentic!AMERICAN MOTORS SALES CORPORATIONDept 10, Detroit 32, Michigan.Gentlemen: Send immediately, without obligation,my 1959 CAR X-RAY, pottage paid.NAME,ADDRESS-cmZONf .STATF. It’s smart to buy for lessThis motto has been our guiding principle in themany years we have been in business in the Universityarea. It is what has created the legion of satisfied cus¬tomers who have found at D Gr G Clothes Shop the tastefulivy-league apparel they desire, and at unbeatable prices.Expenses are kept low, and we conscientiously seekthe best values in the clothing industry. Consequently,we can operate on a low margin of profit and pass suchsavings on to the customer. We have no peers when itcomes to price, quality and style.If you have not yet become acquainted with t*s,please stop in — every effort will be made to serve yourneeds. iOur Prices Can't Be Beat ... It's Smart To Buy For LessD & G Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728the Neighborhood for 40 Years*’Hours: 9 am. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. —9 a.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdayFeb. 20, 1959 • CHICAGO MA R 0—— 0 N||fe HRfifl_ * W:the Chicago maroonfounded — 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 3-0800es tent ions, 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.UC silent on oathWant money for your college education? Sure you can have it—courtesy of Uncle Samand the new National Defense Education ActAny strings attached?Just a few. For instance: “No part of any funds appropriated or otherwise made available for ex¬penditure under the authority of this Act shall be used to make payments or loans to any individualunless such individual (1) has executed and filed with the Commissioner an affidavit that he does notbelieve in, and is not a member of and does not support any organization that believes in or teaches,the overthrow of the United States Government by force or violence or by any illegal or unconstitutionalmethods, and (2) has taken and subscribed to an oath or affirmation of allegiance in the following form:"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the United States ofAmerica and will support and defend the Constitution and laws of the United States against all itsenemies, foreign and domestic”Sensible? Seems so.Simply based on the theory that the enemies of the nation don’t merit having that nation foot thebill for their education. We agree.But also based on theory that those believing or teaching overthrow of the government will admit thesame and decline to accept filthy capitalist lucre. Similarly, that those who refuse to sign the oathare probably communists—or have something dreadful to hide. Afraid we can’t buy these theories—evenif they are perfectly logical to our old friend, Senator Karl Mundt, who introduced them.What to do? Protest.Many prominent universities have flatly refused to accept any funds under the Act. Others, includingHarvard, Yale, Swarthmore, and Wisconsin, issued statements by their presidents protesting againstthe inclusion of the loyalty oath provision.Chicago? No word.Chancellor Kimpton is working on aspects of the act in his capacity as President of the AmericanAssociation of Universities, we hear, but has said nothing in his capacity as Chancellor of UC. Mean¬while the scholarship office has accepted the federal money and has announced that applications forthe loans will be accepted.The reason for evading the point in his own back yard? We’re not sure. We would welcome an answer.MOLEVILLE£I W’UUT HlPH ALPHAS?QUIT LdflVHNG AT HIM, CtAIKMCt!YOU KNOW HE'S AN ALPH ALPHAAND ENIGMA CHIS DON'T WAVE BvTT MOttVtUfc,THffV* MVfcWlHER DOESN’T MATTER,ENIGMA CutTAANSCtNPS MEREFAMILY %RELATIONSHIP !rCAN EN16M0 W4IREflME MV HOWE*AND FATHER ANDEVEN OLD BARF"THE FAMILY DOG ?^ - T * (Yet, evenV OlP £>ARf T i — 'Vou SEE, SON - OUR FMIUNnV\*N‘T LIKE OTHER FfMEftNmES!00*5 is ft BRAVE NEWFRATERNITV! ^(C rC<— ur. \GadflyVSFA powerless... On Campos withMaxShuJman(By the Author of “Rally Round the Flay, Boys!” and,“Barefoot Boy with Cheek”)POVERTY CAN BE FUNIt is no disgrace to be poor. It is an error, but it is no disgrace.So if your purse is empty, do not sktdk and brood and hideyour head in shame. Stand tall. Admit your poverty. Admit itfreely and frankly and all kinds of good things will happen toyou. Take, for instance, the case of Blossom Sigafoos.Blossom, an impecunious freshman at an Eastern girls'college, was smart as a whip and round as a dumpling, andscarcely a day went by when she didn’t get invited to a partyweekend at one of the nearby men’s schools. But Blossom neveraccepted. She did not have the rail fare; she did not have theclothes. Weekend after weekend, while her classmates wentfrolicking, Blossom sat alone, saved from utter despair only byher pack of Marlboros, for even an exchequer as slim as Blos¬som’s can afford the joys of Marlboro—joys far beyond theirpaltry price: rich, mellow tobaccos, lovingly cured and care¬fully packed; a new improved filter that works like a charm.Croesus himself could not buy a better cigarette!However, Marlboro’s most passionate admirers—amongwhose number 1 am paid to count myself —would not claimthat Marlboro can entirely replace love and romance, and Blos¬som grew steadily moroser.Then one day came a phone call from an intelligent sopho¬more named Tom O’Shanter at a nearby men’s college. “Blos¬som,” said Tom, “I want you to come down next week for thebarley festival, and I won’t take no for an answer.”“No,” said Blossom.“Foolish girl,” said Tom gently. “I know why you refuse me.It is because you are poor, isn't it?”“Yes,” said Blossom.“1 will send you a railroad ticket,” said Tom. “Also a smallsalami in case you get hungry on the train.”“But 1 have nothing to wear,” said Blossom.Tom replied, “I will send you one suit of cashmere, twogowns of lace, three slacks of velvet, four shoes of calf, five socksof nylon, and a partridge in a pear tree.”“That is most kind,” said Blossom, “hut I fear I cannotdance and enjoy myself while back home my poor lame brotherTiny Tim lies abed.”“Send him to Mayo Brothers and put it on my tab,” saidTom.“You are terribly decent,” said Blossom, “hut I cannot cometo your party because all the other girls at the party will hefrom rich, distinguished families, and my father is hut a humblewoodcutter.”“I will buy him Yosemite,” said Tom.“You have a great heart,” said Blossom. “Hold the phonewhile I ask our wise and kindly old Dean of Women whether itis proper for me to accept all these gifts.”She went forthwith and asked the Dean of Women, andthe Dean of Women laid her wise and kindly old hand onBlossom’s cheek and said, “Child, let not false pride rob youof happiness. Accept these gifts from Tom.”“Lord love you, Wise and Kindly,” breathed Blossom, drop¬ping grateful tears into the Dean’s reticule. “I must run andtell Tom.”“Yes, run, child,” said the Dean, a smile wrinkling her wiseand kindly old eyes. “And ask him has he got an older brother.”The makers of fitter-tip Marlboro, who bring you tliiscolumn,are also the makers of non-filter Philip Morris, who alsobring you this column. Whichever you choose, you’re right.The current Freeman versus tribunal case before the student - faculty - administrationcourt underlines the point that this judiciary body lacks a method of enforcing its decisions.Before any court of law can be effective, it must have at its disposal a non-partial “police”force whose function is to make sure that the rulings are carried out. SFA court has no such policeforce.Its only recourse is to the Dean of Students John P. Netherton who may force students to accept theruling of the court, if he so desires. But the dean usually has his own definite opinions and in manycases before the court, he has been clearly involved.In 1951, then Dean of Students Robert M. Strozier, fired the editor of the Maroon for sponsoringan East Berlin Youth rally. The SFA court ruled that in his action, Strozier violated the student billof rights. Did this mean that the editor was reinstated? No, for the court had no way of coercing theadministration to rescind its decision.Netherton is involved in the Freeman case. The director of student housing has approved the ver¬dict of the tribunal evicting Freeman from East h >use and fining him for defacing house property.II the court rules the East house tribunal is contra y to the student bill of rights and the Student Gov¬ernment constitution, is the tribunal’s decision null and void? Only if Netherton says so. Again thecourt has no way to coerce the administration to accept its ruling.It appears that in matters involving the administration, the SFA court is really not an instrumentth rough which students can protect their rights. For if the decision goes against the dean, he canignore it, and if the court rules in his favor, he can use the judiciary as his own arguing point. 1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoFeaturing — Complete Wine List andHors d'oeuvre Table12"Cheese 1.25Sausage 1.50Anchovy 1.50Pepper & Onion 1.35 12"Combination 2.00Mushroom 1.75Shrimp 2.00Bacon & Onion 1-75Free Delivery on /til Pizza to UC Students4 CH ICAGO' MAROON • Feb. 20, 1959 •k • »• r..»v/r.•/*>//#>..>>■/,vy» -v./ -%v v >... , y/. /v.v.y - ’\SVV,*V.V.V.**,V.W«V* .VA/ i r if ' . 1 tiiyl*'L-i SFA holds hearing in law north Mondayby Bert Cohler andLinda MorrisonThe Student - Faculty - Ad¬ministration Court convenedfcuH Monday in Law north toneview the case of Robin Freemanv*>. the East house tribunal, andafter hearing briefs presented byboth sides, recessed to considerthe matter, announcing that itwould render its decision in theMaroon next Friday.The SFA court members (stu¬dents! Roger Bernhardt, PeterLangrock, Phillip Hoffman, DonVillarejo and (facutly) MargaretPerry. Donald Miklejohn andHarry Kalvin will rule only onwhether the court has jurisdictionin this matter.In the brief of the counsel. Rob¬ert Imhoff. for the plaintiff. Free¬man, it was stated that article IIof the Student Bill of Rights wasviolated. (The right of students toa clear and concise statement be-Ibre entering the University or. inthe case of divisions and profes¬sional schools, at the time of reg¬istration. of their contractualrights, obligations, and responsi¬bilities pertaining to educational and extra-curricular activities andUniversity housing.) On the otherhand, the counsel for the defense,Gil Johnson, (the tribunal) main¬tained that the student is givennotice of his obligations to Uni¬versity housing at the time ofentrance. In proof of this point,the counsel for the defense quotedthe Announcement - Undergradu¬ate Program, which says: “Thestudents manage many ot theirown affairs through self-govern¬ing organizations in the houses.”The housing contract states thatthe student is responsible fordamage beyond ordinary wearand tear to residence halls, pre¬mises, and furnishings.It was also stated by the plain¬tiff that the SFA Court had juris¬diction over the case under Arti¬cle V, section B1 of the Constitu¬tion of Student Government. (Tohear all cases referred to it bythe office of the dean of students,by the Assembly, or by tsudentsentitled by acts of the Assembly,provisions of the student code, orrevisions of the Constitution ofthe Bill of Rights to petition theCourt. The counsel for the defense de¬nied the power of the SFA Courtover any integral part of the hous¬ing system, such as the Easthouse constitution. It denied thepower of the court over the caseof any student involved in a dis¬pute with a non-Cor.so-recognizedorganization, and to this point,article 11, section E5 was quoted,pointing out that the assembly ofthe Student Government has nopower to recognize integral partsof student housing. By implica¬tion, then, since SG has no juris¬diction over non-Corso-recognizedorganizaitons, the SFA Court hasnone. However, there is no ex¬plicit statement dealing with thepart of the constitution whichstates the powers of the courtthat limits the court in this man¬ner.The case for the plaintiff sub¬mitted that the members of theTribunal were biased, and thatthey ordered the procedures usedin the Tribunal hearing in a man¬ner that would give the greatestpossible weight to the statementsof the prosecution, and felt thathe evidence offered by the prose-Brown outlines causes ofineffective administrationA professor who heads a staff of 1,400 persons said yesterday that success as a bosssometimes means tolerating inefficiency.The advice came from Ray E. Brown, professor in the business school and superintendentof the 711-bed UC clinics.Brown outlined “Some causes of ineffective administration” to the Association Executives forum ata luncheon at the LaSalle hotel.One of the most common pitfalls, he said, is the “tendency to attempt only perfect solutions insteadof the accomplishable.”“This can be described as the all or-none complex,” Brown said.The boss with that attitude can become paralyzed into doing nothing, Brown warned, or can swing tothe other extreme and take “too radical" measures.“The successful administrator must on occasions tolerate conditions of inefficiency rather than courtfailure by attempting to clear all obstacles with one great push,” the professor said. “He must deter¬mine his goals and evaluate the opposition to them.”Brown recommended that a proper course for the boss would be to maintain “constant pressuretoward the desired ends without allowing the pressure to explode into an open break.”“Among his repertory of virtues the effective administrator needs a high frustration level,” Brownsaid. “Somewhere between the extremes of procrastination and those of abortive change the effectiveadministrator finds the path of consistent progress.”Brown also gave these guides to successful administration:• Avoid the urge to act from expediency, “the attempt to buy your way out of problems by yieldingto immediate pressures and ignoring the long run effects. . . . Sidestepping an important issue is justas bad as stiff-arming it.”• “It isn’t possible to have all sides like all decisions, but it is possible and important that they re¬spect them.”• “Zig-zag decision-making imposes an intolerable burden on those who have the task of keeping instep with the leader.”• “The obsession to win represents another serious handicap. . . . Too much emphasis is given in ad¬ministration to the necessity of saving face and not enough thought paid to the problem of savingrespect. . . .”• “There can be no battle of ideas within the organization if the reward is disfavor and ill-will fromthe boss.” cution was insufficient for convic¬tion.The counsel for the plaintiffstated in the Court hearing Mon¬day night that Freeman had ap¬peared before the tribunal beo-cause he believed there might bepossible repercussions from thedean of students office. He alsosaid that “They (the tribunal)said they would hold the trialwithout me if I did not appear.”The counsel for the plaintiffstated that the powers of Easthouse, as he conceived of them,were purely representative andnot disciplinary. The defendenthad not assented to the constitu¬tion which was in effect at thattime. (There have been recent re¬visions of the East house constitu¬tion.) The counsel for the plain¬tiff asserted that students do nothave the power of self-govern¬ment in purely University mat¬ters such as damage to Universityproperty.The counsel for the defense,emphasized in its case that thedean of students has the rightto delegate his power both tomembers of his staff and the stu¬dent judicial bodies. He pointedout that the constitution of Easthouse was valid because it hasbeen passed by a majority voteand approved by the dean ofstudents.James Newman, director of stu¬dent housing, and John P. Nether-ton, dean of students, submittedan amici curiae brief to the Court,stating that the SFA court did nothave jurisdiction over actions ofthe dean of students office thatpertain to student housing, be¬cause matters of conflict in stu¬dent housing indicated as beyondthe powers of the court by theConstitution of the Student Gov¬ernment. They stated that thedean of students has power todelegate authority to certain dis¬ciplinary groups, among thembeing the student housing govern¬ments and the director of studenthousing.The amici curiae brief empha¬sized that the tribunal only hadpowers to recommend disciplinaryaction, and that the actual deci¬ sions rested with the director ofhousing. Therefore, if the plaintiffhas a complaint, he should go tothe director of student housing.Such a complaint cannot properlybe heard by the SFA Court, sinceit has no jurisdiction over casesinvolving exercise of disciplinary'powers by the Dean or his repre¬sentatives.Langrock, one of the justicesquestioned the counsel for the de¬fense on the legality, under Illi¬nois state law, of the tribunal.Quoting from section 381 of theIllinois Criminal Code, he dis¬closed that “If two or more per¬sons shall, without authority oflaw, assemble and try anotherfor a real or pretended offenseor for being a person of badrepute, with intent to intimidateor inflict any injury or punish¬ment upon the person so tried,the person so offending shall beimprisoned in the penitentiary notless than one nor more than threeyears.” The tribunal, claimed thecounsel for the defense, did notintimidate or punish Freeman inany way, nor did it cast suspicionsof bad repute on his character.The hearing was attended by al¬most 100 students.letter to editorLetter knownonly to friendsDuring the course of theweek it has been brought tomy attention that there is afeeling on campus that Miss Yokide Bruyn was aware of the factthat my letter about her write-incandidacy was to be published inthe Maroon.I wish to clarify the point thatMiss de Bruyn knew nothingabout the letter. It was purely agesture on the part of many ofher friends on campus and theletter was in no way known to heruntil it came out in the Maroon.Andrew Moore•The letter was written only byAndrew Moore and was mistaken¬ly attributed to Jack Stanek.February 15-22BrotherhoodBelieve It — Live ItSupport ItSponsored bvTHE NATIONAL CONFERENCEOF CHRISTIANS ANO JEWS• Maintain an impersonal status. There is a difference between liking associates and liking everythingthey do. “The rules of fair play are applied more strictly to the administrator than to anyone else andthese rules require that a person be told where he stands and why.”• Don’t make the mistake of thinking that people act logically. “Individuals do not usually act eitherlogically or illogically, when they are personally involved. In such instances they are most apt to actnon logically.” COIN METEREDLAUNDROMATDO IT YOURSELF — SAVE MONEY10% Discount to UC Students and PersonnelAll Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW NET PRICES8-LBS WASHED & FLUFF DRIED . . . 59‘10-LBS. FLAT WORK ‘I31DRESS SHIRTS >• 22‘QUALITY DRY CLEANING — RAP!D SERVICE — REASONABLE PRICESFREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERYPhone PLaxa 2-9097UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1024 E. 55th St. WASH20c8 LB. LOAD DRY10'10 MinutesSAVE 5 0%ON YOUR LAUNDRYUse as many machines as you need — do your studyingas you do your laundry — all your laundry washed anddried in less than an hour.7 DAYS &7 NIGHTSIncluding Sundays fir HolidaysLAUNDROMAT1455 East 53rd Street1463 East 51st Street: o East ,47tht,Street rFeb. 20, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Coming events on quadrangles "1QDM -»s+l!d Hsajj /vtou$Of sfOH wcuj. 401.1^3Friday, 20 FcbruoryVAACt* Social Action committee meet¬ing, 4 pm. Ida Noyes hall.Record dance, 7 pm. Internationalhouse Admission 50 cents.later-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing, 12:30 pm, Ida Noyes East lounge.Non-denominational Bible study.Lecture series: ‘‘Unsolved problems ofadministrative science.” (departmentof political science), Social Sciences122, 4:30 pm. “The dilemma of com¬mand versus consultation.” Mr. Em¬merich.Lecture series: "Pharmacology andphysiology series," 64 East Lake street,6 pm. “Some effects of tranquilizingdrugs on behavior.” Howard F. Hunt,professor and chairman, departmentof psychology.Sabbath service, 5715 Woodlawn avenue,Hillel foundation, 7:45 pm.Lecture series: “Primitive art: Oceania,”(University College), The Art insti¬tute. 8:15 pm. “The art of NewGuinea.” Allen Sawyer, curator ofprimitive art, Art institute.University concert, Mandel hall, 8:30pm, Societa Corelli, string ensemble.Works of Corelli, Scarlatti, Bocche¬rini, and Handel.Saturday, 21 February music by the University choir, Rich¬ard Vikstrom, director; HeinrichFleischer, organist.Sunday, 22 FebruaryRoman Catholic masses. 8:10. 10 and 11am, 5735 University avenue, DeSaleehouse. Sponsored by Calvert club.Choral Eucharist, (Episcopal), 8:30 am,Bond Chapel.Rockefeller chapel service. 11 am, “Howis Christ the answer?” The ReverendEdwin T. Dahlberg, president of theNational Council of Churches.Gordon Dunham, member. Universitychess team, will play four boards si¬multaneously, blindfolded. Jimmy's,2 pm.Channing - Murray Liberal religiousgroup, dinner. 6:30 pm, 50 cents; Fennhouse, 5638 Woodlawn avenue. Speak¬er, Professor Albert Hayes, professorof humanities, “Artistic and religiousvision in Joseph Conrad' ‘Heart ofdarkness.’ ” 7:30 pm. For reservations,phone Don Meyer by Saturday, MU4-5009.Bridge club. 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes lounge.Duplicate bridge will be played.Baroque concert, 8:30 pm. Bond chapel.Works of des Prez, Bach and Handel.Sponsored by Musical society.Monday, 23 FebruaryFolk dance group. 4 pm. 5715 Woodlawnavenue. Sponsored by Hillel founda¬tion. «Class in elementary Hebrew, 4 pm, 5715Woodlawn avenue. Sponsored by Hillelfoundation. Folk dancing. 8 pm. International houseassembly room. Admission 50 cents.Record concert, 8 30 pm, Internationalhouse home room.Gates hall coffee hour, 10 to 12 pm,Gates hall. Coffee, cookies, music, etc.15 cents.Wednesday, 25 FebruaryClass in elementary Yiddish. 3:30 pm,5715 Woodlawn avenue, Hillel founda¬tion.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm. Rockefellerchapel. Heinrich Fleischer, chapel or¬ganist.Episcopal evensong. 5:05 pm, Bondchapel.English class. 6:30 pm. Internationalhouse, room B.University Glee club rehearsal, 7 pm,Ida Noyes theatre.Seminar: “Bonds and uncertainty,” 7:45pm, law south. Speaker: Franco Mo¬digliani. professor of economics, Car¬negie Institute of Technology, schoolof industrial administration. Spon¬sored by department of economics.American Humanist association meet¬ing, Hyde Park chapter, home of JohnForwalter, 5711 Harper avenue. 8 pm.Discussion topic: “A Humanist looksat the individual.”Greek Students club social hour, 8 pm.Ida Noyes library. Folk dancing, re¬freshments. tours. Topic: “Norway: destination ofEuropean odyssey.” Refreshments.Charge 50 cents.Record concert, 8:30 pm, Internationalhouse home room.Friday, 27 FebruaryInter-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing. 12 :30 pm, Ida Noyes East lounge.Non-denomlnational Bible study.NAACP Social Action committee meet¬ing. 4 pm, Ida Noyes hall. AININv a 3□□□□□□B00’□ DO □sA T a n iV 1 0 0b V A EdJ. 0 VH 1 1 MlS V A vlV 0 V dlRecord dance. International house roomCDE, 7 pm. Admission 50 cents. U3MSNV 1GDMCLASSIFIEDSFor RentFurn. apt. for 3 or 4 grads, nurses, orInterns. Phone evenings, MI 3-3807.1Skylite studio rm., cheap. DO 2-2320.Sublease beautiful 4t£ rm. apt. in So.Shore. Wall-to-wall carpeting, drapes,refrig, and living rm. furn. for sale. Canbe seen evenings and weekends. Kan-steln, 2235 E. 70th St.Rooms for rent. $25-$45 per month. Eve¬ning meals. Phi Kappa Psi frat, 5555Woodlawn, PL 2-9704. WantedMale students, ages 18-30, to participatein psychological study at Michael Reesehospital. Pays $10 00 for two mornings.8:45 am to 11 am; Mon., Tues. or Wed.Call: Mrs. White, DA 6-5700. ext. 286WANTED TO RENT1*3-2 rm. apt., furn. or unfurn. foroccupancy on or about June 1. Rentunder $90 per month. G. L. Briggs,Foster Hall or ext. 3265.ServicesEnglish class, 10 to 12 noon, Interna¬tional house room B.Chime concert, Mitchell tower, 12:15pm. Commemorating the birthday ofAlice Freeman Palmer. The Mitchelltower chime was installed as a memo¬rial to Mrs. Palmer. David Frodin,ehimer.Saturday night tea for Internationalhouse students only, 8 pm, homeroom.Radio program: “The Sacred Note,”WBBM, 10:15 pm. A program of choral English class, 6:30 pm, Internationalhouse room B.Movies, Albeniz, (Argentina), 7 and 9pm. International house, East lounge.Admission 50 cents.Tuesday, 24 FebruaryInter-varsity Christian fellowship, 12:30pm, Ida Noyes, East lounge. Non-denominational Bible study.Rocket society general meeting, 7:45pm, Eckhart 207. Country dancers. 8 pm, Ida Noyes. Be¬ginners wanted.West house coffee hour, 9 to 11 pm,5825 Woodlawn avenue. Dancing, mu¬sic, food, companionship. First floorlounge.Thursday, 26 FebruaryEpiscopal Communion service, 11:30 am.Bond chapel.Politics club meeting, 7:30 pm. SocialSciences 201. Lewis Coser, editor ofDissent will speak on “Is the intellec¬tual obsolete?” Admission 25 cents,student; 75 cents general.Communication club lecture series:“The public images of private insti-tuions,” 7:30 pm, Social Sciences 122.William Kaples, vice-president, InlandSteel corporation, speaking on “Alarge business, corporation.”Scandinavian club meeting, 8 pm, IdaNoyes East lounge. Color slides andcommentary on Europe by ArneBrekke. conductor of three European 2-rm. unfurn. apt. on Dorchester near51st. $70/month Phone Sherry Glatt,KE 6-0228; or WA 5-6935, between 9 amand 5 pm.3-rm. furn. apt., 53rd & Kimbark $82 50.Call Mrs. Hufford. FI 6-8300, 9:30-5:30.Room in student apt., $35 per monthincl. utilities, kitchen priv. MU 4-8440.2 Vi ROOMSCheerful, newly decorated, attractivelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator bldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man. Maid and linen service available.Reasonable monthly rate.V ERS AI LEES A I’ARTM ENTS5234 Dorchester FA 4-0200Spacious rms. in elegant residence nearlake and IC. Available for students orbusiness girls. MU 4-7844.Large room to rent. 2 blocks from com¬mons. 2 large closets. Kitchen privileges.Piano to practice on. Female student.HY 3-8460.Available March 1, attractive 3‘,2-roombasement apartment, unfurnished. Cor¬nell near 53rd, $100. Phone PL 2-1940,eves, or weekend.For Sale Europe-bound? Rent a car for as littleas $3 11 per day incl. Insurance: or buya fine European vehicle; prices: from$784 to $7,784 HY 3-5228.SEWING — Alterations, hems, curtain*.Call MU 4-3941.French tutoring: children, students,conversation. Translation. FA 4-3367.Expert tutoring in German. Spanish,French At Russian, by expert linguist.Reas, rates. M. Lowenstetn, CE 6-8922.Dressmaking — Suits, alterations. PI,2-3519. 5428 Woodlawn, (2C).PersonalsLost: Poems! In unmarked manila en¬velope. If found please turn in to deskat Gates hall. Reward might be privatereading.WORKSHOP IN CREATIVE WRITINGPL 2-8377Lost: Lady's Bulova watch, vie. Blark-stone, 57th, or Gordons. Reward. Ext.3800.ACASA BOOKSTOREGood Used BooksCarefully selected Imports of cards, giftschildren's booksreliable typewriter service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651Complete household furnishings. SO —KQDL KROSSWORD No. 17ACROSS1. Between a hopand a jump6. Animal fromGreen Bay?9. Wall encounteredon some dates10. Miss Gardnerad infinitum11. They attracteyes12. Kind of stand13. It follows youdown South14. Don’t getcaught in it15. Gal who lookslike unmade bed17. Marilyn’s one18. Kind of do21. Half a songat Yale22. This makesa profoundimpression25. With lemonin your mouth26. All you needto get ahead27. Paint28. Snick and .29. Tackle's rainy-day facial30. Chow34. Kind of etera35. Biblical birthreference37. She soundslike money38. Instrument ofthe conniver40. Temple, but farfrom PhiUy42. Flipped43. Horse & soap44. Hams marbles45. But shemay not bea cheap dateDOWNL Got beyondfirst base,illicitly 2. Are yousmoking ’em?Good!3. You’re braveif you’reusing this4. Petsin confusion6.Manhandle6. He getsthe air7. Meow fromgirl on phone?8. A good placefor “hots”9. Hock popularin Ireland16. Early morningcut17. Overimbiber19. It’s good inthe hole20. What Popsaw inClara Bow21. Crosby cat22. Gnatty crowd23. Kools’ mildrefreshingingredient24. Right ontarget25. Drink notfavored by17 Down27. Favoredreceptacleof 17 Down29. Pinochleor ginmaneuvers31. Dress up32. Something tolive for33. Aqueoussolutions35. Favoritevegetableof thisgeneration?36. The first manto break it wins39. Point incompasses41. Short general 1 5 6 7 8I 101 12141 17• As cool and clean as a breath of fresh air.• Finest leaf tobacco... mild refreshing menthol —and the worlds most thoroughly tested filter!• With every puff your mouth feels clean,your throat refreshed !Omericas Moshftfefieehing Qgatefte...ALSO REGULAR SIZE KOOL WITHOUT FILTERI• <\Y • !&»•. Beow A 4 M 1 tt**,. 4 ,v /,< mild mintmolKING-SIZEQigarettek A** *4 O O * A M• CHIC AGO Q fit a :> ( lM A R OO N /iViVi'tWAo V*V«Y»Y*.wmfetr. 20; 195* m 8-1975.New Eng. bikes, discounts. MI 3-9048.Living rm. furniture: tables, chairs,lamps, sofa. Good condition. BA 1-7108.1956 Volkswagen. Good condition, 1stowner, driven 26.000 mis., VW-serviceevery 1600 mis. $1,600 For contact, callFA 4-0200 and leave a message or sendpostcard to: Dr. Robert Helntz, 5234Dorchester, Apt. 410. “Old Angel Midnight,” Naked Lunch,"The Garment of Rha,” and "FurtherSorrows of Priapus.” Writings by JackKerouac, Edward Dahlberg, and Wil¬liam S. Borroughs. All coming in BigTable 1. In two weeks. At quality book¬stores throughout Chicago and the na¬tion.D.S. Thanks, kids! I loves ya all* Re¬member U. T. Monday.SchultzieHealth grant offeredThe National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis will offerscholarships for college students who are planning graduatestudy in medicine or medical social work, reported George L.Playe, director of financial aid.Applicants for scholarships in the field of medicine must be cur¬rently completing requirements for admission to medical school inthe fall of 1959. Applicants must be accepted by a medical schoolby May 1, 1959, Playe said.In the field of medical social work, applicants should be enteringtheir junior year of college in the fall of 1959. They should also beplanning to take a master’s degree in a graduate school of socialwork offering a “medical social field work placement.”The foundation is offering at least 101 scholarships in each of thesefields annually. Each scholarship is worth $500 a year for four years.Students interested in these scholarships may obtain informationat the office of finacial aid. The deadline for applications for allof these scholarships is May 1, 1959.* WRIGHTshirts LAUNDRY15 centswith Hydro bundle COMPLETELAUNDRY AND DRY^ CLEANING SERVICE1315 EAST 57TH STREETMl 3-2073University literary prizesincrease their cash valueCash prizes, awarded for excellence in the various annual University literary contests,have all been significantly increased, in some cases, extended, Fern Fister, general secre-netarv of the English department, has announced.The department, which manages most of these contests, she continued, is somewhat con¬cerned by the small number of people who have lately participated. All too often theseawards have gone a-begging, she said, or, have not been given out because of inferior worksubmitted.This should not be the case selections read must first work following graduation fromthis vear, however, Miss SG flightthese contests are:The Academy ofAmerican Poets prize be approved by the English de- high school; and (b) students inpartment, represented by Cathe- the College who entered the Uni-Fister added, with the increased rine Ham. According to Adam’s versity prior to graduation fromawards being offered. Among intentions, more stress is laid on high school.interpretative reading than on The McLaughlin prize has notdeclamatory aspects of vocal ex- been awarded in the last twopression; therefore the selections years, because of unsatisfactoryread must be from non-dramatic response. Edward Wasiolek ex¬poetry, and the reading is to be plained that essays written forThe best poem, or group of done book in hand, and is not to be University courses are quite ac-poems submitted during the year “recitation.” ceptable, the only requirementsto this contest will earn its author Students interested in this com- being that the essay be betweenC1AA Ti 5c 5c and ^hanc Petition must be registered by 1,500 and 3,000 words in.length.S100. This is the fifth, and perhaps April 13 in the English of£ice, .’ . - - -the final year this award will be Wieboldt 205.There is no restriction as to Billings Fiskelength, but all manuscripts mustbe typewritten and in the Englishoffice by March 16. All entries The unsigned essays should bedeposited in the office of the deanof students, room 304 in the Ad¬ministration building no laterthan May 1.. . . r ,, t- 1 Further information about allThe requirements for the Fiske ,hese award rizes and .■ tintaW n tan .ryntt AtlO 1 lir PUVlllOT1 T /“Vprize in poetryv- liIVtJVr vA »Y CAX vlijj U X XOv. O C* I Ivl V \-J 1X X 1JV.should be unsigned, accompanied award are generally similar to titions may be obtained in thebv an envelope containing the those of the American academy English officeauthor’s name. No work which of poets competition, however, the Jhas been published will be con- Competition here is not confined *or ^te, p,,ze 1,lforniat,<>nsidered bv the committee. to undergraduates but is open to This summer Student Government will again offer a flightfrom New York to Amsterdam on June 22 to returning fromParis to New York September 5 for the pro rata share per per¬son of $280. Part of the price will be refunded if all 100 seatsare booked, according to an SG representative.SG is able to lower this year's price by $50. because it haschartered a Stratocruiser. The plane is operated by Transoceanairlines, an independent company chartered by the CAB.Applications for the flight have been far more numerousthan usual, said Erich Kling Nammer, the SG flight agent.But there are still some vacancies. Students, faculty and em¬ployees of the University and their families may still apply tothe flight leader for seats. A deposit of $100 will be requiredto confirm the booking. Further information and applicationsmay be obtained from Klinghammer at the SG office in IdaNoyes hall (Ext. 3274) from 12 to 1 :30 pm, Monday throughFriday.Other services are being offered for the first time this yearto flight members. These include:1. A round-trip flight from Chicago to New York also byStratocruiser, for $49.2. Motor-coaches to take flight members from Amsterdamairport to the center of the city, and from the center of Paristo Le Bourget airport on the return trip.3. A room-booking service, without charge, for the hotelsof Amsterdam and Paris (minimum three nights; choices avail¬able of tourist or first class hotels, or in other European cities.Other facilities include a range of tours on either side ofthe Atlantic. For the Midwesterners there is a three-day tourof New York, which includes hotel room, sight seeing andtheater shows, for $1 8.50Starting from Amsterdam are-such tours as 24 days in Berlin-Moscow-Warsaw for $465, fourteen days in Czechoslovakia-Bayreuth-Nurnberg for $165, or two weeks in Yugoslaviafor $129.The Florence JamesAdams Poetry ReadingContestFour prizes will bo awarded inthe Adams poetry reading contestthis year, instead of three as in(he past. The awards will consistof $125. $100, $75, and $50- anincrease of $50 in each award.The preliminary competitionwill be held in Bond chapel at3 pm in April 17. All contestantswill have four minutes for theirreading .The contest is open toall students between 17 and 26who have completed at least twoquarters here and are currently,registered for two or more cours¬es. No previous winner is eligiblefor competition.A second, final, competitionwill bo held April 24 at which timeeach reader will have ten minutes.Brotui Knoon weekfiM jtj.ySponsored ||‘|iz - mNational tj S IslCdafeninco J V l’• ot ■'CHRIS fi \ NS and JEWS any regularly registered student.Prizes of $150, $75 and $25 will beawarded, although if the judgesfeel none of the works submittedmerits the award, it will be with¬held.Only one work may be submit¬ted by a student, although it maybe a cycle of poems as well as onelong poem. There is no limit asto length. The competition is notopen for previously publishedworkers, nor for works of previ¬ous prize winners.Contributions, which must besigned with a pseudonym, shouldreach the English office not laterthan May 1.The David BlairMcLaughlin Prize forthe Writing of ProseOne University competition nottoo well known is the McLaughlinprose contest. An annual prize isawarded for a critical essay onsome subject relating to the hu¬manities or the social sciences.The amount of the prize each yearis $100, and in addition a $50 sec¬ond prize has been added.The compeition is restricted to:(a) students who have completedless than two years of college SG takes stand on issuesby Bert CohlerFour current campus issues were discussed at the Student Government meeting held lastTuesday evening. The government took a stand against the tribunal in the Freeman-Tribunalcontroversy. Following a discussion of the Post office policy of registration for all “subver-sive” mail from “Iron Curtain” *countries, the government post- ah student organizations come Rosenthal informed the assem-nnnpri artinn nn thp mattpr until under the bill of rights, in the bly that the American Civil Liber-, , , view of the government. Further- ties union had expressed an inter¬file legal aspects of an official more believed that the idea of esl in this matter and that it wasprotest were further investigated, such a tribunal, as a general poli- interested in making a test caseThe group then discussed the Cy( Was very poor. ' out of it, believing th Post officeloyalty oath requirements in the The question of registration of law would not stand up in court.National Defense Education act all mail sent from behind the Students were cautioned hv aof 1958. Before adjourning, the “ilon Curtain” was discussed at btudems were cautioned by aassembly considered that alder- the meeting Ts explained by neB?bf f™mf the 8«h?°Jmanic race in the fifth ward, and Rosenthal the government voluntefe™g for tbe testissued its approval of the Des- hTd received cardf In case becauf °.f the P°ssible Pe£. mu leieiveu 7. r , : sonal and legal consequences. ItP ^ weeks, informing it that it had was moved that the executiveThe stand of the government received mail from behind the committee be empowered bv SGboth as expressed in the view of “Iron Curtain” and that such mail to send for the mail in the nameits solicitor-general and at the was being held at the Post office of the president o£’ government,meeting, is that SG does not share until the government indicated, and that the-members of the ex-the belief of the defense counsel by returning such a statement, ecutive committee sign theirthat the student bill of rights pro- that it wanted the mail, and that namcs jn a official capacity.tects students only from regis- any information .contained in thetered student organizations, for mail would not be disseminated. (see ‘UC’ page 13)Universal Army StoreHeadquarters for sport and work wearHooded parka jackets — hooded sweatshirts — Ivy league corduroytrousers — wash & wear Ivy league trousers — luggage & trunks1144 East 55th st. DO 3-9572- 10 % reduction with this eouoowThe Qreen Door Book Shop1451 EAST 57TH STREETHY 3-5829 Chicago 37, III.Quality paperbacks — Fine children's booksSpecial orders filled promptlyNEW LOWEST AIR FARESN.Y. .PHILA.FLORIDACALIF.HONOLULU $ 23.2525.0037.0567.50166.50each way round tripadd 10 % tax Ask thefamily ifyou're worthit forspring interimBy-pass the folderol with daily non-stop schedules:DC6B sleeper seats, light meals and a perfect safety record.Reserve now and save . • . reserve late, pay the freight!CALLt BUYERS' GUIDE — PL 2-2323DO 3-7694 (ten to midnite) Stays moist and firm throughout your shave!regular or new mentholatedTake your choice of new, cool mentholated or regularSmooth Shave. Both have rich, thick Old Spice quality-lather that won’t dry up before you’ve finished shaving.Both soften your beard instantly—end razor drag com¬pletely. For the closest, cleanest, quickest shaves...tryOld Spice Smooth Shave! ]00each uceSMOOTH SHAVEby SHULTONFeb. 20, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Who Is Trying To Stir Up RacialUnrest In The Fifth Ward?LOOK AT THE RECORD!The Despres forces must carry the responsibility for injecting the race issueinto the aldermanic campaign. In order to gain votes they have attemptedto discredit civic leaders with proven records of work on behalf of Negroprogress.The Despres group has embarked upon a premeditated program of calumnydesigned soley to stir up interracial anxieties.WHAT ARE THE FACTS?Read the record for yourself. Read carefully the Despres charges as firstpublished in a Hyde Park Herald editorial and now being circulated through¬out the ward by the Despres organization as handbills.This skillfully weasel-worded attack, cloaked in the guise of civic virtue,defeats its purpose on its own face.Designed to make it appear that a wide-scale appeal to racial bigotry is takingplace, the smear conveniently omits the fact that the community leaderswho are accused have been honored for their work on behalf of the Negro,even by the groups which the Despres campaign purports to represent.Plainly it is the handbill itself which injects the racial issue into the cam¬paign.THEY CHALLENGED' US TO CHECKTHEIR STORY ... WE DID! THIS IS HYPOCRISY AND INDECENCY!These were the results:1. The editor of the Hyde Park Herald could not give us the "namesof the culprits."2. The publisher of the.Hyde Park Herald did not have the names whenwe called him. HE ASKED US TO CALL BACK IN THREE DAYS!3. At that time, he lamely supplied us with the names of THREE sup¬posed precinct workers. These three persons were ghosts, and theDESPRES FORCES KNEW THIS! With forethought and premeditation the Despres forces not only injected theracial issue into the campaign, THEY ARE PUMPING IT IN WHOLESALEA prized fact in the record of the Fifth Ward Democratic organization isthat here, in our area, is to be found one of the most outstanding examplesof an interracial community.To charge that the leaders of that organization would attempt to destroy thistreasured accomplishment is sheer nonsense!To act as if Fifth Ward voters can be hoodwinked by such appeals to bigotryis not only an insult to the community, it is an affront to the dozens of Negroprecinct captains and Negro precinct workers who labor in behalf of thecause they support.YET, DESPRES CONTINUESTHESE CALUMNIES!Even though these charges have been thoroughly discredited, Despres andhis advisors still repeat them. THE ACCUSATIONS IN THE HANDBILLS ARETOTALLY FALSE...AND DESPRES KNOWS IT!Read tor yourself the self-contradictions, the implications of "proof," thecontrived self-righteousness.They have been spreading these racial antagonisms city-wide — over the These charges are fabrications from the Despres camp in order to gain votesradio, on television, in the press. . the expense of community unrest!~ . .... ..I Thus Despres again shows his irresponsibility and hypocrisy in his bid forDespres strategy is clear. From the moment this attack was published, re- votesj 1 1prints of it, as handbills, were distributed by Despres' workers in those areas /of the ward with a large Negro population. Such action calls for condemnation — not for a vote of approval!CHECK THE FACTSTHEN VOTE FOR ALLEN DROPKINfor Alderman of the Fifth WardCITIZENS COMMITTEE FOR DROPKIN. <Paid Political Advertisement)>" >■"“ ■ ■ i— "-4—> ,v:^ — : ■——8 • CHICAGO MAROON • F*b; 20, 1Wphotos by Grantto preserveour traditions . . .lets KEEPDESPRESA high standard of public serviceis on integral partof our neighborhood's way of life.We expect the servicesof our alderman to be given freely,to all citizensregardless of politics or position.As alderman we need a man of integrityguided by conscience and common sense.Hyde Park - Kenwood rightfully expectsits alderman to work in theinterest of all its citizens.To preserve Hyde Park's traditional high standardsof public service,we ask you to join us mre-electing a man who has been everything an aldermanshould be. Let's keep Despres.1344 E. 55th St. BU 8-7411Prom is set for tomorrowFlowers for Wash PromfromMitzies Flower Shoptwo convenient stores1301 E. 55th st. 1255 E. 63rd st.Ml 3-4020 HY 3-5353 DESPRESAlderman,5th WardPictured above and to the right are decorations up on campus for Wash Prom weekend.by Alan DessaintWhen UC students begin to trim their beards and take their best formal out of mothballs,tt means only one thing—Wash prom is here again.Lane Emery’s orchestra and Del Rene’s jazz combo will share the spotlight with MissUC tomorrow night at the 56th annual prom.The only all-campus formal dance of the year will begin at 9 pm in a completely redeco¬rated Ida Noyes hall. Bids, at $5 each, are still available at Burton-Judson, New dorms,International house, fraterni¬ties, Reynolds club, Ida Noyes,and at the door.Lane Emery, dean of the de¬partment of music and theory atRoosevelt university, plays at theannual New Year’s ball at thegovernor’s mansion in Spring-field. He has also appeared at theUC Inter-club ball, and has writ¬ten several books on music in¬struction. Emery will ‘conduct’ to¬morrow night in a southern man¬sion atmosphere in the Cloisterclub; while Del Rene will keep thelibrary jumping with his popularjazz combo.Dean of Students John P. Neth-erton will be on hand to announceand crown Miss UC,’ Who waselected yesterday by student vot¬ers from an assemblage of eightcandidates, Carole Fernstrom,Wendy Good. Verlaine Lawrence,Molly O’Rourke, Barbara Quinn,Joy Stevens, Maggie Stinson, andMary Lou Wickersheim.The winner will be presentedwith a bouquet of roses by lastyear’s Miss UC, Lois Adelman.The crowning will take place inthe foyer of Ida Noyes about 11:30pm; the winner will be designatedMiss UC of 1959 and presentedwith a loving cup inscribed withher name.The contest for fhe best-deco¬ rated house on campus, being heldin conjunction with the Prom, haselicited many displays. Amongthese is Green house’s modernis¬tic Picasso painting with the cap¬tion, “And after all that posing,Pablo didn’t even ask me to theProm!” Phi Delta Theta came upwith this one: "Our nation’sidol—” underneath which hung ahuge dollar bill. Phi Sigma Deltare-captioned the proverbial cherrytree story: “Forget about thatdamn tree and find my prom tick¬ets!” The new dorms hung a ban¬ner with the question, “GeorgeWashington slept where?”—andtacked on a picture of a huge bednext to it.Winner of the best - decoratedhouse, judged last Tuesday, willbe presented with a permanenttrophy. The judges for this con¬test were Harold Haydon, Collegedean of students; Charles O’Con¬nell, director of admissions; andMrs. Mary Alice Newman, direc¬tor of student activities.Alpha Phi Omega will handlerefreshments and UniversityTheater will help handle decora¬tions, while numerous other stu¬dent organizations are also help¬ing with this year’s prom.“Faculty and administrativemembers are especially urged to attend,” announced Nancy Cox,’chairman of the planning commit¬tee for the prom. She further ad¬ded that men may come in suitsif formal wear is against theirethics.Committee toRe-electLEON M... 20, 1959 -• € H1C A*fr-O.. M Al AO.K..f... 9™ I1*3".10 » CHICAGO MAROON » Feb. 20, 1959- by Rocnthis fact is the FolkIcsociety ten years in exience and one of the mThe sudden rise inpopularity of folk musicis nothing new to theUniversity of Chicagocampus. Long beforeHarry Belafonte ap¬peared on the horizonand "Hang down yourhead, Tom Dooley" and"Scarlet Ribbons" wereon the "top ten tune"list in America, UC haddeveloped and perfecteda thriving and intenseinterest in folk music. Infact, in many eyes UChas been as well knownfor its black stockingedand guitar strummingset as for its discovery ofthe atomic bomb.Living testimony toM. Dubnow The society's Fridayevening Wing Dings inIdo Noyes hall are excep¬tionally well attended.Why the sudden risein interest in folk musicespecially on the collegescene? In answer, theFolklore society's presi¬dent Frederick Cohn,third year student in theCollege stated: "Folkmusic is the means thatstudents depend upon forfreedom of expression. . . the spoken andprinted word may be sup¬pressed . . . but in songstudents have found themeans of free expres¬sion. (Photo above byPete Argaman. All otherphotos by Karl Figlio.)popular (and we mightadd — richest) campusorganizations.CHICAGO MAROON • 11mQuakers sponsorreligious forumThe Quaker Student fellow¬ship will sponsor a discussionon Quakerism with severalUniversity of Chicago Quaker pro¬fessors Sunday at 8 pm at thehome of Gilbert White, chairmanof the geology department, 5608Kenwood.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 Em* 57th St,MU 4-9236Biblical, political origins of jusficeby Murray Darrish“When seeking to understand wholes within wholes, thepolitical state within the whole of nature, and man within thestate, ... in a way parallel to the search after the begin¬nings of all things, we are led to wonder about and to concern our¬selves with the beginnings of specifically political or human things—of cities and states, of laws, justice, and virtue.’*These two concerns—the beginnings of all things and the begin¬nings of human or political institutions—formed the bases of dis¬cussion in “Justice: the beginnings," fifth in a series of seven lecture-discussions presented at Hillel February 15 by Warren Winiarski,lecturer in the liberal arts in the University College.BEGINNING with the origin of all things, Winiarski first analyzedthe “antagonism” between the Bible and the arts. “If the arts can in,part satisfy man’s needs, then what his needs imply, namely depend¬ence, weakness, and incompleteness, can be partially overcome bythe practice of those arts,” he pointed out.“But man’s goodness and righteousness come about by obedienceto divinely given law. And if obedience is piety, and the root ofobedience is to be found in man’s need for and dependence on God,then the root of piety is the need for and dependence on God.”THUS, in order not to lessen the dependence of man upon God andremove one of the roots of piety, Winiarski continued, whenever thearts are permitted in the Bible, it seems to be in the context of are-affirmation of man’s dependence on God.And the arts appear as opposed to and as a substitute for provi¬dence, he explained. For art is opposed to what is random or bychance and seeks to conquer it, but the Biblical equivalent of chance—with respect at least to all things that concern man—is providence,God’s planned justice. “Art presents itself as an alternative to, or a kind of image of,creation,” Winiarski went on. “For as God’s creation is to the voidwhich preceded it, so is man’s art or making to the unformed thingsthat are works upon. But,” he added emphatically, “creation is thebeginning, and man’s art is only the image of the beginning,” andfor this reason art is considered subordinate to divine providence inthe Bible.MOVING to the second basic phase of the talk, the origin of politicalinstitutions, Winiarski introduced the main theories expounded inThe Prince by Machiavelli, explaining that “no other man of whomwe have memory devoted hmself with such apparently uncompro¬mising openness of speech to the problems of political beginnings.”According to Machiavelli, he began, the prince is synonymouswith the beginning and cause of all fundamental political institutions;and since princely acts are necessary in republics as well as princi¬palities, it is the acts of princes rather than those of republics whichare the true beginnings.To Machiavelli, “the quantitatively highest and most exalted kindof prince,” Winiarski continued, “is the new prince, who introducesnew orders and modes to make a new state. All other politicalsituations are derivative from this one.”And in founding the new pricipalities, he went on. Machiavelliindicates the need to commit what would in a non-founding situationbe called crimes. “Every moral end thus presupposes some immoralbeginning; all legitimacy, legality, and justice rest upon what wouldbe considered illegitimacy, unlawfulness, and injustice.”The series will continue Sunday at 8 pm with the topic “Justiceand the economic order,” to be discussed by Joseph Cropsey, assistantprofessor in the department of political science.GET SATISFYING FLAVOR...No flat "filtered-out "flavor!No dry "smoked-out ^taste! DeSales househost to author“A bridge links two shores,spans an abyss, opens a roadfor communication; it is thusan instrument of peace, as is thisbridge ...”So begins the statement of pur¬pose of volume I of The Bridge,a yearbook of Judaeo-Christianstudies, edited by the ReverendJohn M. Oesterreieher, director ofthe institute of Judaeo-Christianstudies at Seton hall university.This Sunday, at 4:30 pm. FatherOesterreieher will speak at De-Sales house. 5735 University avenue, on the topic which occupiedvolume in of The Bridge. “Thethought of Martin Buber.”The introduction to volume ITThas this to say about MartinBuber and itself: “On February 8,1958. Martin Buber, of all moderninterpreters of Judaism the mostwidely known and revered, com¬pleted 80 years of his pilgrimage.It was with this day in mind thatthis volume was conceived: All itsessays, not only those dealing ex¬pressly with his thought but alsothose not mentioning his name,take up themes that have engagedhim at some time or other duringhis long life.”Born in a small Moravian town,in his youth Father Oesterreieherwas influenced by the writings ofBuber, Soren Kierkegaard, Dos¬toevski, and Cardinal Newman.In the 1930’s after his ordination,he founded in Vienna the OpusSancti Pauli, an institute designedto combat racism and anti-semi-tism. Forced to flee the Gestapo,first in Austria and later inFrance, Father Oesterreiehercame to this country in 1940where he has continued his work.T. Switz will tellof ChristianityEspiscopal Church councilat the University will sponsora lecture entitled “Why I ama Christian,” on Sunday. Dr. Theo¬dore M. Switz, assistant to vice-president in charge of develop¬ment, director industry relationsand College lecturer, will be thespeaker.The meeting will begin at 5:30pm with an informal supper. Thelecture will follow.See howPbll Mali'sgreater lengthof fine tobaccosfilters the smokeand makes itmild —but does notfilter out 1hatsatisfyingflavor! POA PLAVOA ANO MILDNESS, EINE TOBACCO FILTERS BESTI You get greater length of the Q Pali Moll's greoter length Q filters it over, under, around andfinest tobaccos money oan buy dm filters the smoke naturally.. U through PaK Malt's fine tobacooslOutstanding .and they are Mild!—St&utmo- h o*r middU mm*12 4 CH1CA GO M A R;0 ON* Feb. 20, 1959 The Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekHANDELDetti«ge« Te Deumepk 3540$2.99 wmmmmDay of orayer observed“The Calling of the Church (Protestant) inAfrica, Asia, Europe, and India” was dis¬cussed by a panel of four foreign graduatestudents last Sunday evening in observance ofUniversal Student Day of Prayer. The discussionfollowed a dinner in Swift Commons.Panelists were Kofi Ofosu, Ghana, who Is Ininternational«relations; Gruit Sluiter, Holland,anthropology; Yoon Yong Kim, Korea, interna¬tional relations, and P. T. Thomas, India, federatedrheological schools. Don Browning, advisor to theDisciple Student Fellowship at the UniversityChurch of the Disciples of Christ, moderated thepanel.Ofosu spoke of the arrogance of Christian mis¬sionaries in Africa. “The attitude of the mission¬aries was that everything African was bad and un¬christian and everything Western was good andChristian.” He said that because of this attitude,Mohammedism “will be the religion of Africannationalism.”Miss Sluiter, speaking for Europe, told of theChurch’s emergence from World War II “realiz¬ ing that Europe had thought it was Christian butit was not.” There is no “new confidence” to replacethis “false confidence,” she maintained, and thesolution is for the Church to “wait for renewalof a sense of purpose in silence, in prayer, and incommunion with the rest of the world.”Kim made the assertion that the most “para¬mount need is a new systematic thought to fill theaching void created by the fall of Confucionism,Shintoism, and Buddhism.” He ended his talk withthe question, “Can the Church fill the void ofthought?”“In India,” asserted Thomas, “the Church hasbeen reactionary,” on the side of colonialism, andforeign. He feels that the most important task ofthe Church in India is “to provide a unified wit¬ness and this unity can only come about whenindividual denominations are willing to lose theiridentities.”Moderator Browning commented on the “greatamount of impact brought home to the group.” Headded that “this would serve to strip WesternChristian pretentions and give us a more concreteunderstanding of our true mission to the world.”UC's SC votes on policy(from page 7)Later, the matter was postponedfinding further legal investiga¬tion.A bill was introduced in theassembly urging that letters ofprotest of the loyalty oath in theNational Defense Education actbe sent to the secretary of theDepartment of health, education,and welfare, as well as to Con- the UC delegation was a leadingproponent at last summer’s na¬tional congress of NSA for aneducation bill free from loyaltyrestrictions. The bill proposed tothe assembly also urged that thechancellor be urged to submit theUniversity position on this mateerlo the federal authorities.Other actions of the eveningincluded discussion of the best separate NSA and governmentelections, rather than holdingthem at the same time as is nowthe practice.The government also consideredthe current aldermanic race inthe fifth ward and took the fol-lowing position: “The studentgovernment doesn’t regard theposition of alderman Leon Des-pres on housing as contrary to photo by GrantIt snowed again last Tuesday . . .Bach concert on campusgrssmen, urging th repeal of such time for the annual SG elections,an oath. SG was reminded that and of the advisibility of holding the interest oi students »n the Music of Johann Sebastian Bach will be presented in anUniversity. organ recital at 3:00 pm Sunday, March 1, in Rockefellermemorial chapel, by Heinrich Fleischer, UC organist.Award for grad studyThe Federal Republic of Germany is again planning to makeavailable to the University one full scholarship, coveringstudy in a German university for 1959-60.The scholarship will carry a stipend of 350 German marks a monthbeginning November 1, 1959, and ending July 31, 1960. In addition,round-trip passage, tourist class, from New York to Bremerhaven,and a round-trip railroad fare by second class express train fromBremerhaven to the university will be provided. .Group reservations for all the fellows under the program will bemade by the German Academic Exchange service. Each fellow, uponapplication, may also receive one supplementary grant of 500 Ger¬man marks for language instruction or travel within the republic.Student fees except for the social service fee of about 30 marks asemester will be included in the scholarship.The award is available for any field of study; all graduate studentsand undergraduates planning to receive their bachelor’s degrees bythe end of the summer quarter 1959 are eligible to apply.Applications must be filed not later than February 24 with the com¬mittee on fellowships. These forms may be obtained in the Adminis¬tration building, room 314. Applications should include a proposalof study; applicants will be required to show proficiency in theGerman language. The committee will announce its action on appli¬cations on April 1. Captures yourpersonalityas well asyour personphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St.EUROPEDublin to tbe Iron Curtain; Africato Sweden. You're accompanied —not herded. College age only. Alsoshort trips. $724-$l,390.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255 Sequoia (Box 4) — Pasadena, Cal.—ARROW*first in fashionCheck this new collar style- the ARROW GlenHere’s a broadcloth shirt withfeatures that please the college manwith an eye for style. The collar(button-down, of course), is a shorter,neater-looking model. The finebroadcloth cools you throughoutthe warm days ahead.There are trimchecks in manycolor combinations,solids and white, of course.$4.00 up. The program will include Prelude and Fugue in C Minor, G Major,A Major and E Minor, and three chorale preludes, "Oh Lamb ofGod, Most Holy,” “Savior of the Nations, Come,” and “Wake, Awake,A Voice Is Calling.”Fleischer is a former organist of St. Paul’s University Church inLeipzig, where Bach was once organist. He has been a member ofthe faculty of the Leipzig conservatory and was associate professorof music at Valparaiso (Indiana) university 3949-1953.The recital is open to the public without ticket and without charge.*EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDTypewriter PaperIt’s easy to flick off your mistakes on Eaton’sCorrasable Bond. Make a pass with a pencil eraser andtyping errors are gone—like magic—no error evidenceleft. Corrasable lias an exceptional surface—eraseswithout a trace. Once does it—there’s no need toretype. Saves time; money, too. The perfect paper im¬perfection—erasable Corrasable.Eaton's Corrasable Bond isavailable in light, medium,heavy weights and onionskin. In convenient 100-sheet packets and 500-sheet ream boxes. ABerksh ire TypetvriterPaper, backed by thefamous Eaton name.EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDMade only by EatonEATON PAPER CORPORATION (E) PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTSFeb.' 20,-1959i,r,i—— • C H 1C A G O VM A ROOM • H——imULii—— : ■ ■ ■ ■ •Trackers, tankers place firstmedley relay in 4:31.7. and Liscopushed Sehutt to his 220 freestylerecord to give the hosts a big lead.McGraw and Dec placed two-threein the 60 freestyle, and Gaineswon a third in the diving. Zimmer¬man and Kaufman finished one-three in the 200 butterfly, andHelmuth won the 440 freestyle in5:35. McGraw and Dec finishedtwo-three in the 100 freestyle,Colburn won the 200 backstrokein 2:42, and Harmon and Siegeltook the two leading spots in the200 breaststroke in 2:39. The Ma¬roons dropped the final relay to ond half freethrows, while Waynehit only four in nine attempts.The Maroons canned twelve shotsfrom the field in the final period,and Wayne hit 10 as the overallshooting percentages found Chicago trailing .406 (24-59) toWayne’s .500 (22-44), From thefree throw line the Maroons hit17 in 34 tries, and Wayne 8 for 15.The Maroons out-rebounded thevisitors 55-26.Gary Pearson led the Maroonsin both the scoring and rebound¬ing departments, as he canned 3opoints (Chicago’s high for theby Bill SpadyTrack coach Ted Haydonshifted his varsity performersaround last Friday, limitingmost to only one event againstW’ayne State as the Maroon thin-clads ran over the visitors 69-35in a dual meet. The following day,the UC Track club won the teamtitle in the National AAU Indoorchampionships, as varsity mem¬bers Gar Williams and A1 Jacobsset NAAU records.Williams sped the three milein 14.33, and Jacobs covered the60 yard dash in 6.2. Other out¬standing performers for the var¬sity in the meet were George Kar-cazes in the mile relay and sprintmedley and Don Richards in bothhurdle events. Don Fagin cleared12-0 m the polp vault for thirdplace, and the Chicago sprint med¬ley team of Karcazes, Frank Loo¬mis, Jacobs, and Hosea Martincovered the 1060 yards in 1:57. forfirst place.Against Wayne, Ivan Carlsonand Williams began an assault inthe running events with the twotop spots in the mile in 4:45.1, andPreston Grant and Kevin Waring took second and third in the twomile. Jacobs and Martin sweptthe 60 yard dash in 6.4, and Kar¬cazes and Walt Perschke grabbedthe first two 440 spots in 51.9.Ned Price and Vic Neill also fin¬ished 1-2 in the 880 yard run in2:03.8. In the hurdles Richardsskimmed the 70 yard high hur¬dles in 9.5 with Dennis O’Learyplacing third. O’Leary won the70 yard low hurdles in 8.8.In the field events, Lin Blackwon the high jump at 5-8, andFagin collected a first in the polevault at 12-8. Richards leaped toa second in the broad jump, andMike Hrinda and Fagin took thesecond and third spots in the shotput. The Chicago mile relay teamof Gary Augustine, O’Leary, SteveMcCready. and Pete McKeon cov¬ered the distance in 3:38.9 to closethe meet with a final win for thehosts.Tankers set 3 recordsChicago’s torpedo-likeswimmers are not only sink¬ing team after team but alsoshattering record after record.Bill Moyle’s splashers swampedValparaiso 72-14 last Friday after¬noon and trimmed University ofIllinois-Chicago 50-36 at Bartlett,Tuesday, while adding three morenew records to their list. Rodger Harmon churned the 100 yardbutterfly in 57.9 in an exhibitionagainst Valparaiso to break boththe varsity and pool records, andPaul Sehutt snapped the 220 yardfreestyle mark in 2:14.4 againstUIC.The Maroons grabbed everyfirst place against “Valpo” in oneof the most lopsided wins in years.The 400 medley relay team ofCurrie, Siegel, Zimmerman, andDec started off the rout in 4:30.6.Sehutt and Helmuth added a 1-2punch in the 220 freestyle in 2:25.Weiss and McGraw took the firsttwo spots in the 60 freestyle in31.3, and Gaines added a first inthe diving. In the 200 butterflyZimmerman and Kaufman placedone-three in 2:49.9, while Dec andWeiss followed with another one-two in the 100 freestyle in 58.6.The Maroons grabbed the toptwo places in the final threeevents, as Currie and Colburntook the 200 backstroke in 2:29.8,Zimmerman and Fulton won the440 freestyle in 6:01.5, and Siegeland Von Hentig copped the 200breast stroke in 2:46. Fulton,Weiss, McGraw, and Dec won the400 freestyle relay in 4:06.2 toclose the meet.UIC proved a stiffer foe, butthe Maroons took five firsts, fourseconds, and four thirds from thevisitors. Currie, Zimmerman, Sie¬gel and Helmuth won the 400 UIC.Cagers boost record to 9-7Chicago’s varsity basket¬ball quintet boosted its sea¬son’s record to 9-7 with twoimpressive wins during the pastweek, topping Wayne State 65-52last Friday and out running Chi¬cago Teachers 97-76 Tuesday nightat the fieldhouse.The Maroons hit stride in theirbattle with highly regardedWayne. Forward Gary Pearsonspearheaded a second half drivewhich found the fastbreakingStaters neither able to stop theUC offense nor generate muchof a scoring punch of their own.After an evenly matched 28-28first half, the Maroons paved theway to victory with 13 of 20 sec¬ year) and nabbed 19 reboundsMitch Watkins dropped in 18 forthe hosts as he and Pearson contributed 29 of Chicago’s 37 secondhalf points. Henry of Wayne hit24 and proved the spark of thevisitor’s attack.Chicago piled up its biggest offensive night in two years againstthe scrappy Teachers with a 47point first half and 50 in the finalstanza. Chicago hit .474 from thefield (36 for 76) and added 25 freethrows. The Teachers hit only tenfrom the charity line and 33 fromthe floor. Neville of the Teacherswas high for the game with 34.Watkins led the Chicago scoringwith 22, Pearson trailed with 20,and Clarence Woods followed with17. Guard John Davey saw hisfirst action in several games forthe Maroons and scored eight14 They said it couldn’tThey said nobodycould do it...• butwitht settle for one without the other?@4959 Liggett ft My«rt Toteooo CompanyPII'M Is kindest: to your taste,** says James Arness. “There are twogood reasons why 1 know you’ll like ’em. They’re truly low in tar, withmore exciting taste than you’ll find in any other cigarette.”LOW TAR: L*M’s patented filtering process adds extra filter fibers electro¬statically, crosswise to the stream of smoke... makes L*M truly low in tar.MORE TASTE: ifM’s rich mixture of slow burning tobaccos brings you moreexciting taste than any other cigarette.Live Modern... change to modern 1‘M• CHICAG O MAROON *- - ■ Feb, 20, 1959■■ Mil . points. Chicago faces IIT at thefield house tomorrow niglit at X.Wrestlers suffer firstdefeat ,Only two points separatedChicago’s grapplers fromwhat could have been theirsixth win in seven starts, but theMaroons dropped a 16-15 decisionto a powerful Knox squad at Barilett last Saturday. As Coach DaleBjorklund had predicted, Knoxwas one of the toughest squadsthe Maroons will face this season,and he views tomorrow’s matchwith undefeated DePauw at 3:30in Bartlett as another tough challenge for his matmen.At 123 lb. class, Rochester wonby forfeit for Chicago, and RonChutter at 130 followed with a11-11 draw with Hitchcock toplace the hosts in a temporary7-2 lead. The story was told inthe next five matches, as only157 pound Warren Ruby survivedwith a 9-3 win over Johanson.Tony Kocalis dropped his firstmatch to Todd 9-5 in the 137 class,and Mike Schilder found himseltat the wrong end of a 94 score toRow in the 147 bracket. AfterRuby’s win, Knox’s Reiners madeWarren Pollans the 22nd consecu¬tive dual meet victim on his perfeet list of college victories witha 6-0 decision. Carl Figlio waspinned by Richards in 1:26; butheavyweight Bob Sonnenburg’sfall over Neinhuis in 5:41 was notenough to close the 10-16 gap.Intramurals enter playoffsUC intramural basketballteams are currently playingoff for the all-Universitychampionship at the Fieldhouse.as league play ended last weekPsi Upsilon took the fraternit\crown, Vincent won the housechampionship, the “Outlaws'grabbed the Red divisional trophyPhi Alpha Delta won top honorsin the Blue divisional league, and“Macs” triumphed in the B league.In the individual scoring race.Bill Gernon of Phi Delta Thetaand John Clark of Psi U led thefraternity league with 69 and 68respectively. Vincent’s Jim Hilgendorf and Elliot Lilien of Doddplaced one and two in the houseleague with 127 and 80. The Redleague title was a toss-up betweenprobably the two finest intramural players in the University, A1Weiss of Mathews and Bill Lesterof the “Outlaws,” both with 112points. Clifford of AAF and Richmond of Phi Alpha Delta led theBlue league race with 62 and 5;>.Two Psi U’s battled to the wirein the B league race, as Hent>Halladay beat Nick DeMerrell102-100. for the crown..v.’.V v.v.Baseball team going southThe baseball team will head south this spring —just as the professional teams do.Maroon track athletes also are going east to take part in the National Amateur Athleticunion senior meets at New York."It’s all part of our continuing program to put team and individual players into national Wrestlicompetition whenever we think they’re ready,” athletic director Walter L. Hass announcedon February 12. Sports calendarHass disclosed at a sportsnews conference that negotia¬tions were partly completedto send the baseball squad intothe southland, playing such teamsas Mississippi college, Clinton,Mississippi; Delta State college,Cleveland, Mississippi; Millsapscollege, Jackson, Missisippi; Mem¬phis Naval Base, Memphis, Ten¬nessee; Fort Knox, Kentucky, andEvansville college, Evansville,Indiana.Except for area trips, this willbe the first time the baseball teamhas gone on a major out-of-statetour since 1950."We have games set up duringthe March 20 to March 30 vaca¬tion,” Hass said. “It’s just a ques¬tion of adjusting dates on theschedule.”Hass also said Alan Jacobs andCar Williams, both seniors andChicagoans, will represent thevarsity in the NAAU senior trackmeet tomorrow.Jacobs, a sprinter entered forthe 60-yard dash, has been run¬ning against top notchers the pastcouple of years, and visited Israelas a member of the US team inDie Maccabean games in 1957, hesaid. Williams, a 3-miler. recentlydefended his title in 2-mile compe¬tition at the Michigan Amateur Athletic union meet, defeating theNCAA cross country champion.Haas announced two weeks agothat the Maroon basketball squadwas making an Eastern tour in1960, meeting such opponents asArmy and Johns Hopkins univer¬sity; Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology will include Chicagoon its midwestern swing. added: "We got off to a slow startlast year, but we finished strong.Our ball club will be better thisyear ,and if this gang stays to¬gether we can put on a respect¬able performance with anybody.”"What we are working for isan annual spring trip, plus a bal¬anced spring season at home,”Anderson said. "It’s essentially FEBRUARYng, DePauw, 3:30 pm, Bartlett gym.Basketball, Illinois Tech, 8 pm, Fieldhouse.23. I-M basketball playoffs, 7-10 pm, Fieldhouse.24. Basketball, New Bedford Tech, 8 pm, Fieldhouse.25. Basketball, Thornton Junior college, 7:30 pm, Fieldhouse.Spring skiing plannedFor the tenth consecutive year the Outing club will sponsor"I can definitely say we’ll be the same program the basketball a ski trip to Arapahoe basin, Colorado, during the spring innnnr oocf onralvi ? 1 OfJ 1 Uncr. too i c* J. ! DA AAgoing east again in 1961,” Hasscommented. “And I wouldn’t ruleout a trip west in the next coupleof years. The most significant as¬pect of our schedule changes, isthat it proves that athletes whocome to the UC are not going toget lost. The boy or team whohas it, goes.”Hass said the University’s deci¬sion to switch to four-year under¬graduate programs has improvedpotentials in almost all sportsprograms.“This continuity is helping ushold on to seasoned performers.It. the past, we lost many playersjust as they were reaching theirpeak. Twelve veterans are return¬ing to the baseball team from lastyear, and we have four or fivevery promising newcomers whoshould go the four-year route,”Hass explained.Baseball Coach Kyle Anderson team is developing.Joe Stampf, chief basketballcoach, also was optimistic aboutMaroon chances in next year’s ex¬panded schedule. He pointed outthat the Maroons have an 8-6 rec¬ord so far this season, adding thatas of two weeks ago the basket¬ball squad was eighth in defenseamong the nation’s small colleges.“But we won the last twogames,” he said, "bringing our54 point scored - upon averagedown to 51, or what was thensecond in the nation. Last year wefinished second.”“All eleven members of thisyear’s team will be back nextyear,” Stampf said. “This seasonsickness kept John Davey, ourhigh scorer last year, out of thelineup most of the time. Yes, pros¬pects are brighter.” terim, March 20-29.According to Harold Lucas, the club’s president, the snow is at itsbest during this time of year. “The weather is delightful, and theskiing uncrowded,” he said. Half of Arapahoe Basin is above timberline, providing a variety of ski trails for experts, intermediate, andbeginning skiers, Lucas added.At least one third of the group is expected to be beginners.The trip price of $85 will cover room, board, transportation andinsurance. Skis, boots, and poles may be rented for about $10.The club will meet March 5 at 7:30 pm in Ida Noyes hall to discussthe trip, at which time a $25 deposit will be collected, Lucas stated.Further information may be obtained by calling Bennett Humphreyat PL-2-9250.Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Hon. • Sat. — 9 a.m. - 11 p.m.Ladies' games endby Marge SchwartzQuadranglers went down to their first Inter-club baskelballtourney defeat In two years, by losing to Delta Sigma, 24-21.In Tuesday’s game. Delta Sigma hung on to an early lead untilthe second nuarter when the A Campus-to-Career Case HistoryQuads eked out a twi-pointmargin. Delta Sigma, however,after a frantic fourth quarter,came out on top 24-21.Next Tuesday, Quadranglerstake on the Esoteric in the finalgame of the tournament.If Esoterics wins, Delta Sigmawith a 3-1 record will be declared• hampion. Quaranglers, now witha 2-1 record, will get a chance ata play-off game wtih Delta Sigmaif they come out on top.Quadranglers have won thetournament for two years in arow and if they win again thisyear, they will retire the trophy.Tn inter-dorm basketball, Greenhall and West 4 are tied with a3-0 record each. North 4 was inthe number three spot with a final 2-2 tally. The date of the cham¬pionship game between the win¬ners of the inter-club and inter¬dorm tournaments was originallyscheduled for Thursday, February27, but may have to be postponeddue to the possible play-off in theinter-club circuit.Women’s varsity basketballteam has chalked a 4-2 record thusfar this season. The hoopstershave totaled 302 points againsttheir opponents’ 241. NormaSchmidt leads the scoring with atotal of an even 100 points, fol¬lowed by Pat Toalson with 92. Inthe most recent games, the visit¬ing North Central college teamwas overthrown 41-24; but in avery close finish last week, thevarsity went down to a 59-57 de¬feat by Mundelein.Sports news....(from page 14)Play begins Monday for the all-I'diversity squash tournament;and entries for the all-Universitybadminton and free throw tour¬neys are due Monday, with playscheduled to start Thursday forthe free throwers and Monday,March 2, for the badminton en¬tries. In the all-University hand¬ball tournament, DeMerrell, win¬ner of the fraternity division,meets Clothier of the house brack¬et for the right to play divisionalchamp Willis for the final cham¬pionship.Fencers loseCoach Alvar Hermanson’sfencers fell before NotreDame 20-7 ana Wayne State18 3 in a three way meet at Bart¬lett gym last Saturday. The squadtravels to Indiana tomorrow tomeet the Hoosiers and Wisconsinin another rugged meet.The Maroons showed best in9WASM-’PROM epee, as they fell before bothsquads 4-5. In the sabre, NotreDame swamped the hosts 8-1, andWayne gained a 6-3 advantage.The foil proved no more success¬ful, as Notre Dame won seven outof the nine points and Waynetook eight to Chicago’s one.Andros leads gymnastsChicago’s varsity gymnas¬tic team tied Northern Illinoisuniversity 56-56 in their finalhome match of the year at Bartlettgym Friday night. Captain GeorgeAndros placed in six of the sevenevents for the Maroons and wasselected "athlete of the week” forhis efforts. Andros won firsts inthe high bar and rings, a secondin the parallel bars, a third infree exercise, and fifths in thetrampoline and tumbling. Fresh¬man Joe Kuypers also won histwo specialties, tumbling andtrampoline in addition to takinga second in free exercise. Bisshoppwon the side horse for the Ma¬roons.The final meet for the Maroonswill be February 28, at Blooming¬ton, Indiana, with kjidiana andWestern Illinois. Dave Karlen discusses the training of new operators with one of his Chief Operators.Still under 30...and heIsupervises 400 peopleIn the telephone company men withability move along quickly into impor¬tant supervisory positions. Take the caseof David C. Karlen, for example.Dave was hired by the New York Tele¬phone Company right after graduationin June, 1954. For seven months he re¬ceived rotational training to familiarizehim with the various departments of thecompany. Then Uncle Sam borrowedhim for 25 months.He returned in February, 1957, andcompleted his training. In June, he wasmade Traffic Superintendent of somesmall telephone exchanges outside Utica.He gained valuable experience in han¬ dling people, planning work loads, andmany other supervisory duties.In June, 1958, Dave moved to Platts-burg — also as Traffic Superintendent,but with far greater responsibilities.Here, he is directly responsible for seventelephone offices over 4000 square miles.Fourteen management people and 400operators are under his supervision.“A campus interview started me onmy telephone career,” says Dave. "Theopportunities with the telephone com¬pany sounded terrific — and they havebeen. What’s more, you get excellenttraining to prepare you for new jobassignments.”Dave Karlen graduated from St. Lawrence University witha B.S. degree. He is one of many young men who are find¬ing rewarding careers in the Bell Telephone Companies.Find out about opportunities for you. Talk with the Bellinterviewer when he next visits your campus. And read theBell Telephone booklet on tile in your Placement Office. BELLTELEPHONECOMPANIES* ■ ■ :JL. jC H I c V6't> M A t JCLAji .4 ii■■Wilkinson tells of middle agesby John A. McCaflumIn his public lecture lastFriday, Bertie Wilkinson,visiting professor of medievalstudies, spoke on “Order and lib¬erty in tl?* late middle ages.”Wilkinson was born in York¬shire and did his graduate workunder the medievalist T. F. Toutof the University of Manchester.He is presently on the staff ofthe University of Toronto.In his opening remarks, Wilkin¬son underlined the need for a com¬prehensive interpretation of thethirteenth, fourteenth, and fif¬teenth centuries to explain Eng¬lish constitution history and “in¬deed any constitutional history”tin this connection, the speakernoted England’s advantage in be¬ ing the one state in the medievalworld where the question of or¬der and liberty was successfullyfaced*.Two conditions were advancedto explain England’s success withthis problem. In the first place,Wilkinson declared, if men hadnot been able to express the oldfeudal concepts in terms of newideas and institutions, chaoswould have resulted. To avoidthis, a whole group of ideas asso¬ciated with the growth of par¬liament evolved. Secondly, henoted, political balance was pre¬served between the power of gov¬ernment and the power of thecommunity.Here the speaker struck out atthe “Whig interpretation on his¬tory” in its repetition of the the-cot+on knittee shirtsfrom $2.98with matching pedal pushersfrom $6.50 oCucilie 31507 east 53rd st.mi 3-9898 ory that the sovereigns were re¬duced si power by the attacks ofthe governed—in the sense thatall the people were opposing themonarch.To the contrary, the speaker ob¬served, there were important ele¬ments in English political lifethat point out the changing align¬ments of crown, magnates, andcommons throught the middleages. Wilkinson then outlined thedominant feature of this periodin the evolution of the Englishstate.The thirteenth century, he de¬clared, illustrated the expandingpower of government as seen inthe power of the king. Yet opposi¬tion to this expansion was ex¬pressed both in the Magna Chartaand in the reforms of Simon deMontfort. This position of theking opposed by a coalition ofmagnates and people “seemed tobe so successful as to be the con¬dition of unlimited progress inEngland.”This, however, could continueonly as long as the conditions ofthe thirteenth century obtained,the lecturer added. He went on topoint out that liberty was not go¬ing to be defended indefinitely bya coalition which placed all theking’s subjects against the king’spower.The fourteenth century was de¬ scribed as generally the “periodof the relative decline of royalpower.” The crises of this centurywere not, the speaker felt, due tothe threat of misuses of royalpower but rather to the growingchallenge from the great landholders. Certain documentary evi¬dence long overlooked by histor¬ians was held by Wilkinson to beadequate testimony of the “rad¬ical” nature of the fourteenthcentury.Turning to the fifteenth centu¬ry, the speaker claimed it hadbeen “virtually neglected" by thehistorians. Stubbs’ constitutionalstudies, written in the 19th centu¬ry, have not been replaced. Yetthe lecturer declared that theybear “no relation to the major po¬litical crises.”The fifteenth century, Wilkin¬son continued, was not just thebarren civil war sometimestermed “bastard feudalism.” Itwas a “period of decisively impor¬tant readjustment” of the align¬ment of the main forces in pol¬itics. More particularly, he stated,the revolution of 1399 was really“a triumph of the aristocracyover the monarchy.” He went onto point to the dangers arisingfrom a weak monarchy. This mon¬archy had to seek support fromthe populace to survive. This wasrevolutionary in breaking the tra-/ft English: DRIVE-IN MOVIE ON A RAINY NIGHTThinklish translation: This drive-in’s mainfeature: pictures matched to the weather. InJanuary, it’s Snow White; in July, Hot Spell.When it pours, of course, the program is all wet:Singing in the Rain, Hatful of Rain and Rain-tree County. On such nights, theonly (Thinklish) word for thisplace is damphitheater! Betterturn on your windshield wipers,light up a Lucky, and enjoy thehonest taste of fine tobacco.Then It's Always Fair Weather! EngKsh: hoop;n MAKE $25Start talking our language—we’ve gothundreds of checks just itching to go!We’re paying $25 each for the Thinklishwords judged best! Thinklish is easy: it’snew words from two words—like those onthis page. Send yours to Lucky Strike,Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Enclose yourname, address, college and class.Get the genuine articleGet the honest tasteof a LUCKY STRIKEEnglish: SEASlC'u u..MAYFLOWER PASSENGER English: LOUD-MOUTHED APE Thinklish: SP1NST1TUTIONEnglish : CHARLES HUSTED. U OF COLORADOS°°A.FOUNTAIN bossThinklish: SCOCPERV1SORbob hurley, northeaster*English: DOZING WRAITH dffional popular support of mag¬nates m their struggle againstroyal power, he concluded.Despite his earlier statement,Wilkinson said that even in 1399the power of the monarchy insome ways was expanding. Grandnotions of royal power continuedOn the continent this was trans¬lated into various forms of despotism.The speaker went on to discussm detail the feud between Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester amiHenry Cardinal Beaufort.After having spun the web ofthese dynastic disputes, Wilkinson delineated how the Yorkistsin 1461 differed in their positionfrom the Lancastrians in 1399The Yorkists “drew their inspi¬ration not simply from their claimof legitimacy and the need forstrong government.” They were“ ble to set up a stronger monarchy based on a different political alignment. The monarchy be¬gan to depend on the popular forthe first time in recent history."In closing, the speaker hailedEdward IV as “a great parliamen¬tarian who was able to create aharmony between Parliament andcouncil.”“Liberty and order were suc¬cessfully reconciled within the in¬stitutions of the English state. Sosuccessful was this achievementthat England enjoyed freedomfrom major wars for more thana century.”TAI-SAM-YbNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen DailyM A M to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018RudyAuthorizedU of C Class RingsSales OMEGA Serviceindividually designed,handmade jeu'elry(Discount to students*1523 East 53rd st.NOrmal 7-2666MarylandTelephone - SecretarialService. 841 east 63rd jt — suite 201 .Special attention toTERM PAPERS — THESESPhone for appointmentDOrchester 3-2945Thinklish: 1LLGRIMfc.0. TV'JHEY. eovoea collese Thinklish. BLABOQNJl* EEWIS. 0. Of N CAROLINA Thinks - NAPPARITTON,T.V OF CH‘<-ACO^ gRUCE MtRCHA«T® *■ CV / A '* . , . • Product of <./£ J*frrwue-a/n is vur middle Mmo16 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 20, 1959 Have a WORLD of FUN!travel with IITAUnbelievable Low CostEuropehem $645Orient3-65 Ooyt ,£L $998UITKL 1 Mony ,our* in‘lud*college credit.low-cost trips to Wex*co$169 up, South America $699 up,Hawaii Study Tour $549 up anaAround the World $1798 up>Ask Your Travel Agert26th V | f 332 Se. Michigan M.VWW mould TAAvd wC. Cliitaja 4* MKim pi on, Ike confer on new committee(Continued from page 1)work of the committee on recentsocial trends which was appoint¬ed in 1931 by President Hoover,jts report has stood the test oflime and has had a beneficial in¬fluence on national development."The new committee would beconcerned, among other things,with the acceleration of our econ¬omy's growth and the livingstandards of our people, theirhealth and education, their betterassurance of life and liberty and their greater oppo ies. Itwould also be concerned withmethods to meet such goals andwhat levels of government- local,state, or Federal — might orshould be particularly concerned.“As one example, consider ourschools, operated under the au¬thority of local communities andstates. In their capacity and intheir quality they conform to norecognizable standards. In someplaces facilities are ample, inothers meager. Pay of teachers ranges between widp limits, fromthe adequate to the shameful. Aswould be expected, quality ofteaching varies just as widely.But to our teachers we committhe most valuable possession ofthe nation and of the family—ourchildren.“We must have teachers of com¬petence. To obtain and hold themwe need standards. We need aiss'spA n - ChicagoMaraonIssurd every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andIntermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon,Ida Noyes hall, 1212 East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-0800,extensions 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionsbt mall, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday.Editor-in-chiefRochelle M. DubnowManaging editor Associate editor Business managerDonna Davis Neal Johnston Lawrence D. KesslerAdvertising manager Gordon L. BriggsEditoriol board Rochelle M. Dubnow (choirmon), Gordon Briggs,Ozzie Conklin, Donno Davis, Neol Johnston, Lawrence D. KesslerMews editor Lance HaddixSports editor Ehll SpodyCoiendor editor Marge SchwarzProfiles Robert Lovine, John MillsSG reporter Bert CohlerArtists Ron Burton, Rick Ellis, R. Dovid SilverCirculation monomer Joon HelmkenExchange editor Lance HaddixLecture editor Albert N. PodellAssistant culture editor Ozzie ConklinReligion editor Sandra ScniacatanoMorgue editor Pat MosserEditor emeritus Gory MokotoffPhoto co-ordinator Les KitePhotogrophic staff Gretchen Grant, Jerome Buchmon, Karl Figlio,Deon Chronis, John Woll, Morris Newman, John McMahon, Tom Fentoniditoriol staff: Joel Ashenfarb, Tom Coblk, Ozzie Conklin, Murray Dorrish,Allan Dessoint, Rosemary Golli, James Hoge, Jr., Robert Lovine, JohnMills, Linda Morrison, Albert Podell, Sandro Schiacatono, Morge Schwarz,Shelly StolowichSAVIEZVOUS. . . que plus de $600,000 sont verses,chaque jour ouvruble, aux detenteurs depolices, beneficiaires et rentiers de laSun Life du Canada?En qualite de reptesentantSun Life de voire localite,puis-je vou.s etre utile?RALPH J. WOOD JR. 48SUN LIFE OF CANADA1 N. LaSalle St. Chicago 2, III.FR 2-2390 RE 1-0855LA COMPAGNIE DASSURANCE-VIE SUN LIFE DU CANADARepresentative Bicycles, Parts, Accessoriesspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1621 e. 55th st.Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristEyes ExominedGlosses FittedContact LensesVisual Training1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372NEW! JUST PUBLISHED! NEW!Important Paper-Bound Titles From The University of ChicagoPRESS PHOENIX SERIESMarjorie Grene: INTRODUCTION TO EXISTENTIALISM $1.25Stimulating, daring, perceptive.A. T. Olmsteod: HISTORY OF THE PERSIAN EMPIRE $2.95A historical, colorful pageant.Diamond Jenness: THE PEOPLE OF THE TWILIGHT $1.50Two years among the Eskimos above the Arctic CircleTHE ODES OF PINDAR, translated by Richmond Lattimore $1.25Faithful, magnificent, re-creative. *.Peter M. Buck: VIKINGS OF THE PACIFIC $1.95The settlement of Polynesia by a Stone Age people.C. F. von Weizsacker: THE HISTORY OF NATURE $1.25Nature and man's relation to noture.UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.wvvvvvvTVvvvrTrTvrvrrrrrvvvTVTV*vTvvvvvvvvt»T(ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage & meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st. 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 8-6711 national goal. And once estab¬lished I am certain that publicopinion would compel steady pro¬gress toward its accomplishment.“Such studies would be hope¬ful, I believe, to government atall levels and to all individuals.The goals so established couldhelp us see our current problems,needs in perspective. And theywould spur progress. “We do not forget, of course,that our nation’s progress and fis¬cal integrity are interdependentand inseparable. We can affordeverything we clearly need, butwe cannot afford one cent ofwaste. We must examine everyitem of governmental expensecritically. To do otherwise wouldbetray our nation’s future.Winner of DU"name-the-catlottery namedAnnouncement of winners ofthe semi-annual FecundityAwards, sponsored by the Del¬ta Upsilon branch of ChicagoLying-In hospital, located un¬derneath Wally Reed's desk,was made at a special luncheonheld Wednesday.Incipient pregnancy of Del¬ta Upsilon's mascot, "Cat",precipitated the various con¬tests.Winner of the litler lotterywas Wallace E. Reed who cor¬rectly estimated the size of thelitter as four. W. E. Reed wonthe anchor pool by guessing thetime of birth of the first kittenas 12:31 pm. W. Elzie Reedis recipient of the Name theKitty award for his suggestednames:"Cat ," "Cat "Cat ," anda b c"Cat ."dAt last report, both motherand offsprings were doing well.The father is, however, un¬available for comment. Libby gets award(from page 1)weapons testing controversy. Hehad taken the position that radio¬active fallout from atomic testingis not sufficiently harmful to re¬quire the stopping of tests assome scientists contend.Before hi sappointment to hispresent five year term on thecommission, Libby served with itfor two years to complete the un¬expired term of Henry de W’olfSmyth.Prsident Eisenhower said in hisletter accepting Libby’s resigna¬tion: “The scientific perspectiveyou have provided to our delibera¬tions on complex problems hasbeen of much value both to meand I am sure to the AtomicEnergy commission. I am grate¬ful for the highly significant service you have rendered and Iwish you a long and satisfyingcareer in your chosen field.’’•Libby has been named 1959 re¬cipient of ickinson college’s an¬nual Priesley award for serviceto mankind through science today.Libby was the first to find car¬bon-14 atoms in nature. He is thesecond UC scientist to win theaward. The other, Harold Urey,discoverer of deuterium, washonored in 1955.The award, a Wedgwood me¬dallion and $1,000 will be present¬ed March 19 during Dickinson’sannual Joseph Priestly celebra¬tion, a day long program in mem¬ory of the discover of oxygen.Libby will make the principaladdress.9Ae PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO.“Hyde Park's Most Complete Point & Hordwore Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th st.•'OOKf l« A A((IIT|X(0 CtfKlSM Q »••• THC COCA-Q0UAProm trotterVAT-* She’s the queen of the campus, and ofcourse she favors you know what...the cold crisp taste of Coca-Cola. Sheknows that anytime, everywhere, Coke lathe real refreshment. We don’t say thatthe secret of her success is Coca-Cola•.. but it helps!BE REALLY REFRESHED ...HAVE A COKEIBottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicogo, Inc.Feb. 20, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 17( u t ; r>come to UC"Crime does not pay"by Ozzie ConklinUniversity Theatre, like any self-respecting semi-intellectual theatre group occasionallyproduces something younger than primitive cave-drawings and older than lewd Elizabethandrama. And like any decent look-ahead-to-the-modern group should they’re producingclassicism in a modernized version. Giradoux’s Eleetra, an unusual sophisticated restatementof the Greek legend will open in the Reynold’s Club theatre one week from Tuesday.The Homeric legend of Electra-Orestes should be well-known to any liberally directedenthusiast who’s trifled withthe Odyessy or any decentGreek playwright. Agamem¬non, returning from the Trojanwar, Is killed by his wife and herlover. His son, Orestes, spurredon by Eleetra, eventually kills themurderers in revence, and is pur¬sued by three Furies for all eter¬nity. Each murderer is thus pun¬ished in turn. The gods’ justice iscompleted and everything is tiedup in one neat little package.Giradoux's adaptation of thisrather simple structure concen¬trates on Eleetra, the daughter ofAgamemnon. She is consumed bya desire for her kind of justice.This intense single-minded con¬centration on one conception andits logical consequences serve asa motivating force for the wholeplay. As Electra's realization ofwhat must follow from her ideaof rightness grows, the problemof the play grows. The events the beauty of each. In Eleetra,the reality of the legend and theevents which occur become trans¬formed into subordinate resultsof an intense conflict of ideolo¬gies. Electra’s pure justice con¬flicts with the desires of all theother characters — the almostweak search of Orestes for godbut unjustified happiness, thepracticality of a reformed king,the worldliness of her mother.This subordination of action toa consideration of the conflict be¬tween reality and the ideal fo¬cuses and supports the action inits turn. The play is both pro¬found and active. The emotions Itcontains are intense and self-expressive. The whole takes placewithin the framework of a mod¬ernized chorus, conceptions whichare both modern and universaland a setting that defines its timeas timeless. mission tickets are $1.50. Student-tickets are $1 if purchased beforeopening night. All performancewill be in the Reynold's clubtheatre at 8:30 pm.Dermot McNamara (left)and Helena Carrol in a scenefrom New York's big off-Broadway hit, The Playboyof the Western World, pre¬sented by the Irish players.This production togetherwith Three One - Acts ofSynge is being brought toChicago by University The¬atre. It will open March 17,in Mandel hall.Irish playerswhich occur are not inevitable inthe sense that they are predes¬tined by perverse fates. But theymust occur because of the extentto which Electra's own strengthoi>erates on the other characters.It has been said of Giradouxthat his whole concentration wason the relationship of the real tothe ideal, in an attempt to show University Theatre’s productionof Eleetra will run March 3through 8. It will feature Mary-Ann E r m a n as Eleetra, TomNolan as Asgisthus, Jim Olesenas Orestes, Honore Singer as Cly-temnestra and Roger Downey asthe Beggar.Tickets are now on sale at theReynold’s club desk. General ad- University Theatre and University College have completed arrangements for bringingan original off-Broadway production with the Irish players to the city next month.The players, coming direct from their New York run, will present two productions ofworks by John M. Synge, Playboy of the Western World and Three One-aets. This secondproduction, an evening of shorter works by the Irish master, includes The Shadow of theGlenn, The Tinker’s Wedding, and Riders to the Sea.The two w'orks will be pre¬sented in Mandel hall, on al¬ternate evenings. Playboy ofthe Western World will open therun. This is the second time in lessthan a year that the UniversityTheatre has brought an off-Broad¬way production to Chicago. Mar-ots PURE WHITE MODERNjnLTERonly the beginning of a WINSTONwhat'sfrontthat counts vin E. Phillips, director of the the¬atre, explained why his group hasundertaken this additional func¬tion:“This University has a culturalas well as an educational obligation to the people of Chicago. Inthe midst of 5 million people thereis a large and discerning audiencewhich will support good theatrewhen good theatre is made available to them. Last year when ourtheatre brought this audience theoff-Broadway production of Endgame we promised to bring moreprofessional shows to the city ateducational prices. It has taken usuntil now to find the right pro¬duction.”This view as to the “rightness”of the production has been voicedby many of the New York critics.Brooks Atkinson wrote: “A mas¬terpiece . . . this is the finest Play¬boy we have had since the Abbeytheatre ceased visiting America.”Walter Kerr expressed theseviews: “Deep and genuine, andthe words fall on the ear with aWinston puts itsfine, flavorfulup fronttobaccos, specially processedfor filter smokingIt. /. Hejrnold* Xob. Co.,Wtniton-SaUMU.N.aTASTES GOOD LIKE A CIGARETTE SHOULD 1 heady, holiday intoxication thattime hasn’t begun to touch.”There will be 8:30 curtains onMarch 17, 18, 19 and 22. On March20 and 21, Friday and Saturday,there will bo two performanceseach night, one at 6:30 and one at9:30 pm. Prices range from $2.50to $4 for non-student tickets. Student-faculty tickets for the March19 performance and the March 2<»and 21 6:30 performances will be$1.50. Discount tickets for theMarch 20 and 21 performanceswill be $2.50. Student-faculty tickets will be on sale at the Mandelbox office and the Downtown college bookstore from March 2through 15 only, and must be pur¬chased in person. Further inhu¬mation may be obtained by callingMI-3-0800, extension 3297.Spanish PaperbacksSUMMIT BOOKS138 So. WabashACADIA THEATRE2739 West 55tf»re 7-4667Cary Grant & Sophie Loren“HOUSEBOAT”PLUSMartin & Lewis in“AT WAR WITHTHE ARMY”STUDENT RATESJest 10 Minutes West on 5StfcPlenty of Side Street Poifcln*18 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 20, 1959Culture VultureDespite the embryonic law courts and the anti-climactic New dorm, the atmosphere on this campus is definitely GOTHIC.Anyone who glances past the glare of ice and the squirrels to the Gothic janitor's closet in the library or to the classic linesof the C-shop can see this quite clearly. Now the 'itle of this column is decidedly Un-Gothic. Spurred on by the SPGMCT(Society for the Preservation of Gothicism in Maroon Column Titles), we have examined this problem and come up withonly one solution. Rather than call ourselves the Flatter Satyr or the Pureoil Gargoyle, which after all have nothing whatso¬ever to do with ART, we will forget about the whole thing and proceed to flatter satyr-like and garble gargoyly about thethings happening ...On campusTheatreOne week from Tuesday, Uni¬versity Theatre, the most fluctualcultural institution on campus willpresent Giradoux’s Electra. Thisplay includes no decrepit pianos,Hyde Park bars or decayed Ger¬man romanticism. It does involvea modernization and refocusingof the classical Electra-Oresteslegend. For the uninitiate who didnot attend tryouts, said legend in¬volves Electra and her brother ina thread of circumstances whicheventually force Orestes to killhis mother and her lover, in retri¬bution for their murder of his fa¬ther, Agamemnon, several yearsbefore.Giradoux’s version of the leg¬end, like that of Sophocles centerson Electra herself. In Giradoux,however, Electra becomes morethan a mere mass of responses;she becomes the motivating forcefor effecting her own conceptionof justice. The play progresses.We shall however, desist.Performances of Electra willrun March 3 through March 8in the Reynold’s Club theatre. Stu¬dent tickets will be $1. Ticketsshould soon appear in great arrayat the Reynold’s club desk.March 17 through 22 UniversityTheatre will present the originaloff Broadway company of theIrish players in Mandel hall. Thecompany will do two productionsby John M. Synge on alternateevenings. Playboy of the WesternWorld will open the run. Theother production will includethree one-act plays by Synge: TheShadow of the Glenn, The Tin¬ker’s Wedding, and Riders to theSea. According to my somewhatperverted calendar, the Irish play¬ ers will be playing on St. Patrick’sDay. All members of the audiencewill be required to present a realfour leaf clover at the door.Student-faculty discount ticketsfor the run will be available forthe March 19 8:30 pm perform¬ance and the March 20 and 21 per¬formances (6:30 pm) for $1.50.Student-faculty rates for theMarch 21 performance (9:30 pm)for $2.50. Discount tickets will beon sale at the Mandel box officeand the Downtown College book¬store from March 2 throughMarch 15 only and must be pur¬chased in person.The third and last evening inthe Hillel-University production“The Biblical Poet and the HumanDilemma” will be presented inHillel house at 8:30 pm today. Theprogram will include readings andcommentary on the book of “Job.”To the man who really knowswhiskey, the term Sour Mash is tobourbon what Sterling is to silver,a hell ma*k of quality denotingthe genuine. To a Blackfriars witha superfluity of scripts, however,Cowering Fish has a much strong¬er appeal. This new brilliant ver¬sion of an old Coptic legend in¬volves an albino shark who isallergic to salt water. In McSklin-tock’s modernization of the legendhe solves his problem with a quickslug of fermenting seaweed everyhour on the hour. (Depending, ofcourse, on his position in relationto the Greenwich meridian.) Theproduction may open on April 17.MusicSunday at 8:30 pm, the Musicalsociety will present a chamberrecital in Bond chapel. The pro¬gram will include a Handel organconcerto, a motet by Joaquin desPrez sung by the choral singers, directed by Robert Tucker, musicfor the virginals by such 16th cen¬tury composers as Farnaby, As¬ton, and Anonymous, and a selec¬tion from Bach’s Cantata number174.Motion picturesThis evening, Burton-Judsoncourts, situated on the other sideof the Midway Plaisance skatingrink, will present Mr. Roberts.Also this evening DocumentaryFilm group will present The LastLaugh in Social Science 122. Ifyou intend to see both films, theappropriate order should be ob¬vious.Off campusArt exhibitionsThe Art institute’s Gauguinloan exhibition, organized by theMetropolitan Museum of Art, willrun until March 29. In connectionwith the exhibition, the Art insti¬tute is presenting a series of lec¬tures, talks and films on Gauguinand the places where he painted.Admission to the exhibition is 50cents. The institute is also pre¬senting an exhibition of tapestriesby Egyptian children.The Modigliani exhibition at theArts club will close next Thurs¬day. Not knowing the extent ofthe exhibition I cannot ethicallyrecommend it. However, knowingthe extent of Modigliani, one canhint delicately that the exhibition might vaguely be worth seeingdefinitely.TheatreThis evening, the Goodman the¬atre’s production of Sean O’Ca¬sey’s Purple Dust will open, torun through March 8. The play de¬scribes some amazingly successfulefforts on the part of Irishmento frustrate imperialistic English¬men. One can assume that it’s aivunruly mixture of Irish red andEnglish blue blood that makes thedust purple, to which the greenof some very yellow shamrockswill be the complement.The by-now-old-faithfuls BothYour Houses at the AmericanCalvacade theatre and Two forthe Seesaw at the Michael Toddare still faithfully growing old.Damn Yankees still takes potshots at dry Martinis at Theatre270 in the Hotel Belmont. In addi¬tion to these familiarities, Mere¬dith Willson’s The Music Man isplaying at the Shubert. Assumingthis to be a semi permanent insti¬tution we will proceed to the so-called lower forms of theatricalexperience.Motion picturesThe Hyde Park is at present ina maze of scheduling that prom¬ises to provide decent films no matter what. For the past threedays it presented La Strada andLust for Life. This weekend itwill either continue to run theaforementioned films or it willfeature The Brothers Karamazovand The Last Bridge. Tuesday itmay be presenting Bad Day atBlack Rock or it may not. In anycase, the Hyde Park will be pre¬senting movies during the nextweek from among those listedabove. For further informationsee the Maroon ad which has alater deadline than I do.The Surf theatre has apparentlyinstitutionalized My Uncle. Thefilm is a good comedy — there¬fore it should be relegated to aninstitution of some sort, judgingby the law of averages. What sortof institution depends on the exactdevoutness in your personal idol¬ization of Aristotle.MusicThe Thursday-Friday programof the Chicago Symphony orches¬tra next week will include Lalo’sSymphonie Espagnole with vio¬linist Henryk Szeryng, conductedby Walter Hendl. The reminder ofthe program—Moussorgsky’s ANight on Bare Mountain and Mo¬zart's 40th — will be directed byFritz Reiner.WASW.-PR0MCLARK Theafredark & madisonopen 7 o.m.iafe show 4 o.m.50c college student priceot oil timesjust present your student identi¬fication card at the boxoffice.Sunday Film Guild ProgramsFeb 22 “The King and I”“To Paris with Love"Mar 1 “The constant husband”“Mr. Hulot’s holiday”Different double feature daily Chicago's Most UnusualMotion Picture TheatreAgain reminds all College Students of theSpecial Student Rates always in effect at Phone DE 7-1763EVERY DAY OF THE WEEKINCL. FRt. & SAT. EVENINGS SPECIALSTUDENTIW RATE NOW-Mr. Huiot ReturnsJacques Tati"MY UNCLE"r ♦♦♦MrmwmmwrttwomrHrooooowowHHtwrHHroi <JUST SHOW CASHIBR YOUR t.D. CARDFri., Sat., Sun.,FEB. 27,28, MAR. I 8 th ST. THEATRE741 S. WabashHailed on triumphant tours ofEurope, Canada and South AmericaThe Exciting and AuthenticOranim ZaharIsraeli Troupethe leading inter|>ret>ers ofSONGS, DANCES & MUSIC OF MODERN ISRAEL• Voriety: “Accomplished group hove a fresh view point."• NY Post: “Unsuoul art that stays in the memory."• Notionol Jewish Post and Opinion: “Vigorous Israeli spirit . • •stirring and exciting."EVES, at 8:30, $3.85; 3:30, 2.75, 2.20. Only Mat.—Mar. 1, 3 p.m.,$3 30, 2.75, 2.20, 1.85. Tickets — mail: Triangle Prod., 79 W.Monroe, AN 3-6386 or The Disc, 1367 E. 57th. Enjoy this Summerat the Unii'ersity of n*!£, heulU You’re Outof Your Mind,Charlie Brown!The new PEANUTS bookby Charles M. Schulx*1°° RINEHART1 PSYCHIATRIC CARE5 4United Feature Syndicate, Inc.Here's an unforgettable 6 weekprogram that costs youless than a summer at home!Enjoy a summer of travel fun... orearn college credits at the Universityof Hawaii’s famous Summer Session.Meet young people from all over theworld...enjoy a host of social activ¬ities and special events...all in anexciting Hawaii Summer Programthat anyone can afford. And, your par¬ents will approve.The cost is low. Six weeks of grandliving plus round trip transportationplus planned social events ... all forns little as $495! Imagine! That's lessthan you might spend for an ordinarysummer at home.I .cave for Honolulu June 12 by shiper June 21 by air. Return August 3.But we urge you to act now! Mailcoupon or write to: Dr. R. E. Cralle,University Study Tour to Hawaii,2275 Mission St., San Francisco, 10.•r. M F. Cr»U<, WrtcnrVnl.wOt, st.a, Tnr u *»>U -Xns M.ilio, st, Su rrwcisM 10, CtlllwailFREE. Please send full information onHawaii Summer Program to:—*«•- ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦#llUAe JoHJutlieafctepte N07 9O7I lake paJtkl 53 M itaeetStudent admission rate 50cupon presentation of IDMom playing—held over!—today A tomorrow only!GUILETTA MASSINI ANTHONY QUINN RICHARD BASEHARTin Fredrico Fellini's multi-award winnerLA STRADA(the original language version)— and —With KIRK DOUGLAS as VINCENT VANGOGH and ANTHONY QUINN os LUST I Of LIFEPAUL GAUGUINStarts Sunday Feb 22 thru Thurs Feb 26 —Cannes film festival GRAND PRIXbest actress AWARD WINNER MARIA SCHELLin TWO great filmsThe Last Bridge and Brothers KaramazovTo come:Fri., Feb. 27—George Bernord Shaw's DOCTOR'S DILEMMA and afterthat: Tosco, Stars of the Russian Ballet, Boris Gogonov, Father Pon-chali, My Uncle, Day of Wrath, Roots, Inspector Maigret, Ordett(Chicago premire)Feb. 20, 1959 • C H I C A G O MAR O O N • T9interpretation of philosophy.\OMP-anIN nil-. < <»M> quailit the rmiiM* problemsabout knowledge tie iv1 < u mu i 11 ed l>\ . «>■ -idenng ns,n«)Uisitio!t. II.-to again the quo-aions rat-oil air outbedded dtN-pls in out oiilit a i > .I'Miminipio a:ul .lisrouisrcom m nin^ inquiry, discovery. and proof in knowledgeot ■ "science;" VVlial does it mean- to •••leant" and whattriakos rl possible-’ What . . . -t;; to. utopot datum torinquiry and what do wo mean In 'ohsei v at iott" .or "experienee"?The problem of .“induelion” is examined in < hurtlelet istit debates eoiieerning ‘e\|>eiinient." "diseo\er\.""hypothesis.'’ and "proof,” and the advance, of science"in various kinds of attempts i<» chart ils history, markout its important moments, and evaluate its conditionat a given stage. Again; the immediate materials of thecourse are classical statements of these problems, but“logicians" like Mill, Knssell. and Bacon, "melaphysi-cians" like Descartes and James, and • sebmtist.s" likeby Charles W. Wegner '*/ ,* :jrh i vo\yr> ; t'-eilcge o^di2#)oni mftfhodt*'-•g. ■ anu pr ' ric if.'! Os stfjff . « •■ Pll II .OSOPHKKS ma\ be del med for somepUXTK>6§i and not very rip'u .ui-l> as those who, eoneerns themselves about mallei - which human-x fry in going about its ordinary business quite properly1 ' ■ . • . ■ i 'i'll a < 0 I HU W It lb-! pr cl'.«ing this definition we,, must grant-that the “ordinary”,.c.b of humanifv m. lude.s such things as physiesand Merovingian history as well as humdrum activities; like investment banking and welding. The organizationsmethods and principles course, as< an introduction topi by and at it tog i hh ;< ui se is - mj>l> oi - .'• way in which philosophical problems can be discussedb> asking questions whieh put us in a reflective attitudewot' respect to ilit* whole range of limuan enterpuses1 ;-v r >" ■<** ff ' VV? * '* >H ' • - *'* * ~ ; * ..JjfSr v** ^ Y* a ■ \ J rHowever, it is important to note tiiat OMP is only* . one way of doing this job. The name of the course —organizations, methods and principles ot know ledge — i, is sufficient to suggest the s|>e<tial way in which it !oi Approaches its problems. All questions about the nature i„r and value of human a<“iivities ran ,be,(stated in one wayor another as tftieetfOlHI ationt i,mni ledge." ienee,"or some similar term ami ()VII‘ rlmoscs to raise themthat way. The reason for this choice is not a devious .one. OMP was originally conceived as an “integration”coitr-i m a eurricuhitn specifically,,designed to be broad. and inti llccfuallv oriental, Questions about knowledge—P. its forms, limitations, acquisition and structure—seemto be the most direct way of raising philosophical prob¬lem- lor students in such *a program.Consequently, the fi st part of the course is, devoted-to a. consideration of various terms, distinctions, andproblems* which arise when one takes a look at. theworld of' knowledge as a whole. Students; who have4,1 f>been exploring .various fields of .knowledge, are here-, simply given an-opportunity to ask, what .they have' z bo pod <)i other-wise’interrelated. The subject-matter of .this part of-.the2 course might be'-stated as an investigation of the variqusj lE^Jspfcte at interrelate subr.igfe-.wy. ™ * <- _ .4,■ 1- hi e ,'y. Charles W Wegener received bis BA in phdn Ito ■ • b . towled ;e.to Iheii.-Vyiophy from UC in 1942. He was sent to the Pacific"mbdefi Of acquisition and dev elopment , , A , . ‘ , . , , ,• g g; ■ .bleirn i,ro „„l l„„l ... son',-, f.., bV the Arm>' dur,n9 ,h« J»» »"<• 'c>ur„ed *• *«..p/,., j* '..'i go elo.u In ■ in such'cniiinxinpl.io’ icm.uk-. . r» i ye rs i t y ^ in ^,1 9 *4 7, receiving his PhD in 1950. ,'.’f» •' L"" •»' excellent physicist, hut when it com.’-^He'was appointed an instructor in 1950, an assist- ■ •... polity s ho knows no more than Kdo.” or in the a. ,-.. nf professot I95, and an a„ocjate p,o(csso, iUiiii,' i: ,I-Sian'"scict> . <■' 1| "lie gent i J. ’ • ’,|3e *** appointed chairman ot OMP in 1953' 1.t . ' ! frequent lv.Jhongb ,\,u ini'slN^c'xt e sod h\ m .r'v 1 ,l„ o » ii t l-r,- ; - lo-. I. io ^z.Wescner won the Quan.rell Tench, „g pn.o ,n .lathematicnl * ^ ■" , t- _ s', i r> •" 19 >4 «s currently a member ot the executive 'S ‘ commirtee on undergraduate education — the com !k T- . , . , | ,‘.rnort that has Effected the recent changes in theI T SI so, iir anotht'r JS©tt'§e?its'-sub|0( l ni.iP.'i^is-'io r^n _ i ■.!,w - yc -. *•> » s, , . r-eV* p * ywt— MDitlm. In connection with the reorqam , <WsE.om.MimGmi !p. . •• _ - y , mvvi,y. ' ' v ■ | t ition Oi the College staff, he has been appointed vdlj^mployed* Vn^discu'ssionj^ibou^the,. worldVof^chairman of the new'philosophy section of the hu-;re&l ’ ’ ' tKli'stSitrj n ,, ~~ •* '' •'^^ffpurmand^applied. knowledge..thcorctical and'Trac,:^|y^k..<iy-(.g: *> Af ■ „ - ,v ’ X '■ ’ L isl summer Wegener edited and Ivlp -d Mrrifto the Humanities a study purKayafrdi z S ! , . ... mkv# s’ l^,'yv” • OosVde'rnis. whu n't leiriselvos-.'V ' un<^ ^or Adult Education.‘v; » t ‘ . % ■u,l,<,f',no.,'n,ns a.o'oN , f Ncx, year he wi„ be on , lcava ab«,^e* M*'*"X. f V' • .'T the University as visiting professor ol philosophy at •gj^SgrcT ' ’Ai 1 ^ Williams college in Will'ams Town, Massachusetts.h.V .r - i r ' - f V,' fYr" ’ ' " ' r" ' ‘ * ,MODEL CAMERAlulhorizrd I #*»<•«Dealer.YVt Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3 9259Lenten Special Platonic andSynipos. r-"... vf'flf-. - - , » .not so Platonic, at .f ■> ' ’V' r. y>.• ■*.« '* 4'1.University.' liquors" • I next " lioof *CV• .'- - - ,11 H.iiOXUfv'Complete Catfish Dinner, s:- ^ • r *c • -•'z^with®th^®sual'.^s'alb'd^bowl"; -potatoes, .vegetable, a m^1Eakandnfcfe„merry,• *3*‘ • -4.4'^'' f * ‘‘4W „ I> iK- <0:1. ..^4#STERN rCAMPUS DRUGS"4 & Ellis, , , GLADIS RESTAURANT1 527 East 55th st ,ord< rs ' to carry' oulopen 24 hourj'■ DO 3-9738Auto Insurance ^Home Owners Insurance’Phone or write ^Joseph H. Aaron, '2715524 S. Everett Avc,;./Jf|RA 6-1060 Ml 3^593N ;j/DeFrancoOptometrist \ j MBA DEGREE CANDIDATES, interested in assignments in Sales, Finance, 14;-i and Engineering Administration fare invited to meet Representatives of IBM on 'Today —‘February 20U -V.GUADALAJARA*SUMMER SCHOOJSponsored by the Um- ’9S|:U NIV E R SIT Yv ■^^H‘OTEL|4^P55V9V5; blackstone :Wvo*CHESTer; 3 41 00 '. witi pnvati | itn>^ 4 ‘ v - I,^rv^eV24*h'our \*t ra nspo'rta 11 dry >. 2 j*b I o c k s i to^l ’.C.g£* 'r'- - -- - „ z-k „•s; ■ • • •pbteSrat• h-ftrullt i1*1t lUOjJiMr Arizona in co-operation with .pr^fr im Stanford UnivUniversity of California, and Guaj■ laiojora, H mlH offw lit < Suodc .jara, Mexico, June 29 to Au,courses in oil folkloro. 0* ;i’ (jrnl ' ’ tyri2$ 3' oi)vor,. (mm■; d 148Sroom. For more information, ple<$5write (o Professor Juon B F-Box- K, Stanford University,For appiuauiK-nt plospo I • I y It; r Q| 11 i ( f gfl • i 1 l I Q Office.INTERNATIONAL* BUSINEbS MACHINES CORPORATION