— — — —Chicago *Vol. 67, No. 24 University of Chicago, March 6, 1959 31Hauser calls for inventoryA UC sociologist today called for a nationalinventory of scientists and engineers beingtrained in American institutions.Professor Philip M. Hauser, chairman of thedepartment of Sociology at the University, said' the inventory would disclose whether Russia hasovertaken the US in producing more or better engi¬neers and scientists.In a talk prepared for the annual conference onhigher education at the Pick-Congress hotel,Hauser said the survey would enable an appraisalof claims made on the basis of Russian satellite^achievements.Hauser, an expert on world population problemsAnd a former acting director of the US CensusBureau said, “Facts about our professional per¬sonnel. including scientists and engineers are be¬coming increasingly needed both for nationaldefense and economic development purposes.“Considerations of policy in respect of training,recruiting and utilizing such personnel would un-I doubtedly be facilitated if more data were avail¬able.“Discussions of such policy matters, for thetime being, involve debate about the facts them¬selves. And facts cannot be ascertained by means01 polemics and majority vote.”Hauser outlined a three-part approach for meet-' ing our manpower needs.First, economists should offer colleges and uni¬versities their assistance in determining what in¬creases in college-trained personnel are necessary.Government, then, should coordinate and stimu¬late efforts to make up for any shortages found.Finally, institutions of higher learning should. modify their programs, depending upon the avail¬ability of fellowship and scholarship funds, and offer other types of inducements such as researchassistantships and teaching opportunities.Hauser participated in a discussion of “To whatextent should national manpower needs influencecollege policies?”Behind the concern over the Soviet satellites,Hauser said, lies a conflict of values in Americanlife.The Russian system of values led to a satelliteorbiting around the sun and to intercontinentalballistics missiles at the expense of the level ofliving of ttte Soviet people, Hauser said.The American system of values led to “cram¬ming more horsepower, chrome and larger finsinto and onto automobiles, on doing useful thingsfor American consumers and industry.“Institutions of higher learning in the US prob¬ably already turn out the necessary number andquality of college trained personnel, both to main¬tain a high level of living and national security,”' he said.“Our present value system is such that we seemto be willing tef risk our national security for the‘surfeit of honey’ of which 300-horsepower auto¬mobiles, tranquilizers and dreams of reduced fed¬eral expenditures and lowered tax rates aresymbols.“The race against time with the Soviets will berelatively little affected by what colleges do bet¬ter to meet national manpower needs in improving’the training of scientists, engineers and other pro¬fessional personnel.“It will be much more affected by what oursociety as a whole, including our institutions ofhigher learning, do about modifying our valuesystem, so that our resources — including ourskilled human resources — are allocated and util¬ized in a way to provide us with national securityas well as a high level of living.”Irish players here for UTby Ozziland E. ConklinOn St. Patrick’s Day, Tues¬day, March 17, the off-Broadway company, The IrishPlayers, will open in Mandel hallfor a six-night run, sponsored byUniversity College and UniversityTheatre. They will play in two al¬ternating productions — Playboynt the Western World and Three One-Acts of Synge. Playboy willopen the run.The Irish Players group wasestablished in 1956 by Dermot Mc¬Namara, formerly a member ofthe Gate and Abbey theaters andof the Dublin Players, and Hele¬na Carroll, daughter of Paul Vin¬cent Carroll, the Irish dramatist,and an established actress in herown right. Both Miss Carroll and McNamara will appear in the pro¬ductions.Host debate tourneyStudent forum’s UC debate will be host in a tournamentfor the Chicago area debate association which will take placetoday, in Eckhart.Schools attending the debate are Northwestern, Lake Forest, U ofIllinois, Navy Pier, Elmhurst, and Mundelein Seminary.The proposition to be debated is, resolved: the further develop¬ment of nuclear weapons should be prohibited by international agree¬ment.Two rounds of debate will be held, one at 7:00 and the other at8:00. If desired, a discussion of nuclear tests will be held.So far this year, the debating team has gone to Boston, Washing¬ton DC, Ann Arbor, University of Iowa, and Northwestern. In twoweeks the team will attend the West Point regional debate tourna¬ment.Review out March 11The Winter-Spring issue of Chicago Review will be on saleMarch 11. This issue will contain an excerpt from a novel-in-Pi ogress by Stanley Berne, and poems by William Dickey,John Napier, George Scarbrough, Edwin Morgan and William CarlosWilliams. Essays include “German Expressionism: 1905-1925” by H.Stefan Schuiltz, and “Aldous Huxley’s Social Criticism” by Rudolf B.Schmerl.Books reviewed are Pasternak’s Doctor Zhivago by Edward Wasi-olek, John Barth’s The End of the Road by David Kerner, Kerouac’sThe Dharma Bums by Samuel Bellman, Jung’s Psychology and Re¬gion: West and East by Alan W. Watts, and Philip O’Connor’sMemoirs of a Public Baby by Arthur Schlesinger Jr. Art work is byCarole Harrison, Kingo Fujii and Aatis Lillstrom.The Summer issue of the Review will center around the theme ofexistentialism and literature. This issue will present what is perhapsthe most comprehensive effort yet made to assess the effect of theExistentialist movement upon contemporary literature. Contributorswill include Marjorie Grene, William Barrett, Colin Wilson, WalterEaufmann, Hans Meyerhoff, Nathan Scott Jr., Van Meter Ames,Louis Rossi and others.Later issues this year will contain articles by Karl Jaspers, HannahArendt, Martin Heidegger, Albert Camus and Iris Murdoch, as wellas fiction and poetry by both well-known and new writers. nings. Miss Laura Phillips, star of the new Blackfriar's produc¬tion, "The Sour Drum Song," is pictured above enjoyingone of her rare moments of leisure in her Hyde Park home.Playboy of the Western World,by John Millington Synge, is acomedy included in many anthol¬ogies of great European plays.The action centers around an im¬mature young man who, thinkinghe has killed his father, runs offto an Irish village. The reactionsof the village to him, a youngIrish girl who thinks a murdererromantic and brave, an Irish pubdripped in for luck, and a hand¬some widow with maternal in¬stincts, all go together to developboth the boy’s maturity and anuproarious plot.The second production, ThreeOne-Acts of Synge, will include“The Shadow’ of the Glenn,” “TheTinker’s Wedding,” and “Ridersto the Sea.” “Riders,” the bestknown of the three, is sometimesconsidered the best one-act playever written. The whole play cen¬ters around the lament of a wom¬an for her lost sons, husband, and“father’s father.” The only com¬pletely serious work of the series,“Riders” employs the same sensi¬tive use of language used bySynge in his comedies, with allthe depth of emotion and thoughtthat go into its theme.The Irish Players will runMarch 17 through 22. There willbe three benefit performances:March 17 has been bought by theAlumni association, March 18 bythe South Side auxiliary of theArthritic and Rheumatism foun¬dation, and March 22 by the Wood-lawn Democratic club. There willtherefore be no student-discounttickets available for these eve? Miss Phillips considers herself an outgrowth of the theatre."Yes," she said in an exclusive interview with the Marooneditor, "you might say I was born in a trunk. The theatah ismy life . ... oh, yes, I've had my ups and my downs, poundingthe pavements in New York, it was tough going for a while,-but then I hit the big time and it was smooth sailing." MissPhillips feels that she has been "type cast" long enough."I've been type cast long enough," she said. I'm tired ofthese baby doll parts ... I just don't feel them! I'm an olderwoman at heart and I know that Don McClintock's lead char¬acter, a 49-year-old UC alumnae coming back to her firstreunion is my vehicle. This is really my kind of play."Miss Phillips has roller skates and will travel. She is avail¬able for booking through her agent, Marv Phillips, director ofUniversity theatre, (photo by Whallen)FOTA show at dormThe fifth annual Festival ofthe Arts will feature a studentart exhibition at the lounge ofthe new dormitory April 17through 27.In order to be eligible to entera work in the exhibit, a studentmust be enrolled at the Universityor Downtown College for at leasttwo quarters of the present schoolyear.Selection of the finalists anddistribution of the awards amongthe winning works have beendesignated to a group of off-cam¬pus painters and sculptors. On thejury of selection are GertrudeAbercrombie, Si Gordon, and Mar-tyl. On the jury of awards areRainey Bennett, Mary Zoe Green,and John Robertson. ute prizes amounting to $400, tobe divided among the followingcategories: first- and second-prizepainting; first- and second-prizesculpture; first-prize watercolor;first-prize graphics (prints anddrawings); and honorable men¬tions in each category. The valueof each award has not yet beenestablished.The committee hopes to distrib¬ Each student artist may submfta total of five works. Oil paintingsmust be framed and wired forhanging; prints, drawings andwatercolors must be properly ma^ted; watercolors preferablyframed.The information found in thebox following this story shouldbe secured to each work. The boxmay be clipped out and attachedto the work.Student-faculty tickets for theremaining five performances willbe available at the Mandel cor¬ridor box office until March 15only. The performances will be:Thursday, March 19, at 8:30 pm;Friday, March 20, at 6:30 and 9:30pm, and Saturday, March 21, at6:30 and 9:30 pm. Student-facultydiscount prices are $1.50 for the8:30 and 6:30 performances and$2.50 for the 9:30 performances. Artist's nameAddressPhoneMedium of workTitlePHce of work i §Marathon brings in >130 choir sings bachby Michael RobinsonApproximately $13.0 wasraised for the WUCB recordlibrary fund by the studentradio station’s eighth annual 27-hour Marathon broadcast lastweekend. Members of the Partyfor Student Action collected about$50.Highlight of the affair as usualwas the ever-popular Pro NauseaMusica, whose performance ofOttorino Resphigi’s “Sewers ofRome” was enthusiastically re¬ceived by an estimated assem¬blage of 100 in the Reynolds clubnorth lounge.The Marathon, which beganbroadcasting at 7 pm Friday andcontinued until approximately 10 pm Saturday, also featured per¬formances by student organiza¬tions including the Folklore socie¬ty, Glee club, Societas Campanari-orum, Sigma, University Theatre,and others.A tense moment for WUCBstaff members on duty at theMarathon occurred when, on Sat¬urday afternoon, members of BetaTheta Pi, scheduled to sing, stum¬bled in, obviously after havingconsumed large amounts of somebeverage from the beer mags theywere carrying. Fears Were al¬layed, however, as the Betas wenton to perform smoothly, wiihoutallowing their alcoholic enthusi¬asm to range too far out of con¬trol.Liz Kamborian’s characteriza¬ tion of “Miss Merrimac,” present¬ed periodically throughout theMarathon, “brought down thehouse” each time it was present¬ed. Miss Kamborian read weatherreports — to the accomplishmentof soft music in the manner Of“Miss Monitor” of NBC, as partof a feature called “Merrimac—Going Places and BreakingThings.”Another highlight of the Mara¬thon was a “live” performance ofcalypso and folk tunes Saturdayevening by two College midyearentrants, Larry Ross and KenPierce. Ross, on guitar, andPierce, on bongos, between themhave performed on NBC, CBS,ABC, other local commercial radiooutlets, and now WUCB. The UC Choir will present Bach’s great oratorio, St. Mat¬thew Pavssion, at 3 pm Sunday, March 15 in Rockefeller chapel'Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra will join the45-member choir in a program that will follow Bach’s direc¬tion’s for the original performance on Good FHday in LeipzigGermany, in 1729. ' F s’Soloists are Charlotte Vikstrom, Martha Larrimore, Pa¬tricia Sage, Roger Pillet, Jackson Sheats, Denis Cowan, KayGraves, Andrew Foldi and Millicent Frischle. Richard e’. Vik¬strom, director of chapel music, will conduct, and HeinrichFleischer, chapel organist, will play the organ.The St. Matthew Passion, the story of Christ’s betrayal andcrucifixion, is based on 141 verses in Chapters 26 and 27 ofthe Gospel according to St. Matthew. Twelve of the 24 scenesare given in chorale form, while the remaining twelve aremarked by arias.General admission is $2.50, and student and faculty admis¬sion is $2.00. Tickets are available at Rockefeller chapel.Kingsley Amis: "England not-so-Merrieby Albert N. PodellIn a key scene in the novelLucky Jim, the hero is calledupon to address a large audi¬ence on the subject of “MerrieEngland.” He does so, nervousand inebriated, and ends up imi¬tating the style of his colleagues,mocking the inane pedantry of thetypical academic lecture, andalienating a large part of hisaudience.In Mandel hall last Tuesdayevening, Kingsley Amis, authorof the epoch-marking Lucky Jim,was called upon to address a largeaudience on the subject of a not-so-Merrie England. Neither tensenor tipsy, imitating no one, anddelivering his lecture with barbedwit and tongue-in-the-cheek hu¬mor, he amused a large part ofhis audience and alienated onlyLord Beaverbrook and Colin Wil¬son.His Ralph Vaugh Moody lecturewas titled “The angry young menand after.”He began by noting that “thosewho have been called the angryyoung men agree on only onething—that the term means noth¬ing. And nothing would pleaseme more this evening than topronounce the last rites of thatgroup—but that would be prema¬ture. In future literary encyclo¬pedias the Angry Young Men mayperhaps occupy a three-line foot¬note, he added, although he didconcede that “there are a fewworks worth salvaging from therubble.” Amis said that the angryyoung man stereotype views Eng¬lish society as composed of fourrigidly stratified groups: “the ig¬norant and vulgar ruling class,the parvenue businessman, thetyrannical army of bureaucratssuppressing individual freedom,and the working class who lullthemselves to sleep with the opi¬ates of television and the footballpool while their masters plot toblow them into smithereens withthe Hydrogen bomb.”“But,” he grinned, “I personallydon’t think English life really isso stratified.”"Although,” he added after thelaughter had subsided, “I shouldhate to be thought of as beingoptimistic about society.”Assuming for the sake of argu¬ment that the previous portraitof English society was correct,Amis then asked what the intel¬ligent young man in Britain wassupposed to do about it.Twenty years ago, he pointedout, the young men could turn tothe Communist Party — althoughrecent Russian policies have madethat unpalatable.Ten years ago, he went on, “TheBritish Labour party could rea¬sonably expect the allegiance ofan adult still in possession of hisfaculties—but not any more.”He concluded that there is nopolitical solution which appealsto England’s discontented intel¬lectuals today.With this as background, Amisexplained the rise of the move¬ ment known as the angry youngmen.He discussed it from the time oftheir “manifesto” in the LondonDaily Express — “a letter signedby twelve of them and containingthe threat that unless England be¬came a fit place to live, the wholegang of them would migrate.”Getting down to specifics, Amisnoted that Osborne’s highly suc¬cessful play, I,ook Bark in Anger,"made the first thorough catalogof the complaints of the angryyoung men.” The lecturer grantedthat “Osborne had hit on some¬thing important in contemporaryEnglish life,” although he felt theplay unsatisfactory as a socialdocument because of Osborne’slife-long involvement with the the¬atrical profession which necessar¬ily made his views on society un¬representative of those of the na¬tion as a whole.Amis went on to call Osborne “awriter of great energy and poten¬tial power” and to note that “heis the only real angry young man.He has found out what to do withhis anger. He writes his plays andtells the English that they arehalf-dead.”After the Osborne play, Amiscontinued, the movement enteredits second stage, “the journalisticphase which consisted of attach¬ing the title ‘angry young men’to anyone of any sex who wasunder 40 and who could hold apen.”And it was during this phase, hefelt, that he and John Wain andIris Murdock had all been inap¬ propriately included in the catch¬all jif angry young men.Amis pondered why the group¬ing had caught on so quickly andconcluded that “most people don’tlike having to make up theirminds about things—and this in¬cludes writers. It saves them timeand trouble if they can put severalwriters under a label and regardthem as similar.”The lecturer went on to inveighagainst this “fixing of attentionupon a writer’s personality to theexclusion of a consideration of theartistic merits his work may have.Instead of asking, “Does this workexcite me?” one should ask, “Isit a good book?” To concentrateon feeling rather than quality isto develop a philistine Reader’sDigest attitude toward literature.”It was in this framework thatAmis discussed Colin Wilsonwhom he called “one of the mostremarkable arrivals on the Eng¬lish literary scene.” Wilson’s book,The Outsider, he explained, “isfull of vague philosophical pre¬tensions. He tries to make it seemas if all the men he writes aboutwere convinced of the futility ofhuman existence. He undertookto get down to the world viewsin certain philosophical and liter¬ary works — to extract the mes¬sage without bothering to includethe logic or the artistry. He triedto put culture in a compact, lit¬tle easy-to-open parcel box—andthe people ate it up.”In addition to Wilson, the speak¬er cited Bill Hopkins and StewartHolroy as two others who hadbeen “drafted” into the angryyoung men. Amis felt that astrong fascistic streak ranthrough much of their writingsand “their talk of the need for anew religion to teach the peopletheir proper place in society.”He further felt it was ridiculousto put the fascistic Wilson coteriein the same grouping as himself,John Wain, and John Osbornewho all, as he put it, “still hopefor the emergence of a sensibleand democratic Labour party oneof these days.”The speaker went on to discussthe attitude on the Young Agnriestoward the recent guiding lightsof English literature — D. H. Law¬rence (“held in general high es¬teem”), James Joyce (“establishedas a comic novelist of Dublinlife”), Virginia Woolfe (“about aslow as she will ever go”, EvelynWaugh (“still high but rapidly be¬ ing overhauled by Anthony P<nv>ers”), and George Orwell (“a highpriest to these writers”).Amis also spoke at length about. IIris Murdock (“powerful” and “adiscreet user of symbolism”),Philip Larkin (“one of the two orthree best British poets currentlyat work”), and William Golding("original and mature”).Amis concluded that “any coun¬ter-irritant to the angry young,men (e.g. the angry old men) *”seems welcome for the movementis still growing. They have evenconnected it with the Coffee BarGeneration and the Teddy Boysin Britain and with the Beat Gene¬ration in America. I suppose thechain will be complete when Louis 1Armstrong reaches Moscow.” " ^Seminar plannedin Soviet historyA “miniature seminar” inRussian history, given by Leo¬pold Haimson, assistant pro¬fessor of history, will be held onMonday, March 9, at 4:30 pm, inSocial Sciences 302.The seminar, sponsored by Ori¬entation board and Student Government, is the third in a series ofmeetings whose purpose is to ac¬quaint undergraduates with thevarious kinds of research cur- v?rently conducted in the university.Other speakers, in the springquarter portion of the series, willbe Joshua Taylor, associate pro¬fessor of art, and John Simpson,professor of physics.'Russian circle'formed for studyAn interdisciplinary “Rus¬sian circle” was formed lastweek by 20 students interestedin Russian and Soviet history andculture. All students with similarinterests are invited to join.The “Circle” plans to presentspeakers, films, and discussionsof topics of interest to membersof the group. Those having proj¬ect suggestions are invited tosubmit them to the “Russian Cir¬cle,” in care of the student activi¬ties office, Ida Noyes hall. Thefirst program is scheduled for thesecond week of the spring quarter.Leopold Haimson, assistant pro¬fessor of Russian history, thefaculty advisor to the group.f... and two cartons of Camels for our leader!More people drop in for Camels than any othercigarette on earth. It stands to reason: the besttobacco makes the best smoke. The Camel blendof costly tobaccos has never been equalled for richflavor and easygoing mildness.Put fads and farxy stuff in the past. ., B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.. Winston-Salem, N. C.Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGWINTEB SPECIALTUNE UP 'S'0-• Anti-Freeze• Snow Tires• Rood ServiceHeavy Dufy Battery M CSPECIAL ! ! ■ ^Harper Super ServiceDealer In Sinclair Produett5556 HARPER PL 2-9654Pre-registration scheduleannounced by registrar Going up!Students will be given anopportunity .to register in ad¬vance for the 1959 springquarter according to the follow¬ing schedule:March 16-20:HumanitiesBiological sciencesSchool of medicineMarch 9-13:Social sciencesPhysical sciencesGraduate library schoolSchool of social serviceadministrationMarch 9-10: ,Federation of theologicalschoolsLaw schoolMarch 16-19:Graduate school of businessThe student begins his registra¬tion in the office of the appropri¬ate dean of students, where heprepares his registration cardsand has them checked and signedhv the dean. He then goes to theregistrar’s office, Administrationld.3. where he will have his feesassessed. The registrar will directttie student to the bursar’s officewhere he will pay or make ar¬rangements for payment of fees.The deadline for payment of allfees for the spring quarter isApril 1.Seminar to beheld by NSAThe US National Students asso¬ciation is planning to hold its sev¬enth annual International StudentRelations seminar this summer atHarvard.Scholarships are a v a i 1 a b 1 ewhich cover the students’ ex¬penses,” and one is thereby leftfree to enjoy the nine weeks oflectures, discussions, and read¬ing." SG president Joel Rosenthalassures UC’ers.Applications can be made eithertiirough SG, or directly to:International Student RelationsseminarInternational commissionNSA, 142 Auburn StreetCambridge 38, Massachusetts A registration will not be ac¬cepted in the office of the regis¬trar unless it has been signed bythe appropriate dean, who checksall items entered on the cards.Each item must be filled out ac¬curately and completely, includingthe degree sought and the depart¬ment of specialization. In designa¬ting courses the name of the de¬partment, not the name of the di¬vision, should be written beforethe course number. It is Impera¬tive that the number of units(amount of credit) be noted in theunit column on cards B and D foreach course.Clearly mark class section des¬ignation if more than one sectionof the course is provided. Whereappropriate, the notation “R” (nocredit) or “pro forma” (no creditor tuition fee) should be made.“Post-Doctoral” should be enteredon both B and D cards for stu¬dents in that category. All B andD cards must bear the dean’s sig¬nature. Students enrolling in coursesgiven in Divisions other than theirown must have the approval of theother Division or School in the“remarks” column on the B and Dcards.Veterans enrolled under PublicLaw 16, 346, 550, 894, or Canadianveterans must take their registra¬tion cards to the advisor to vet¬erans, 5706 University (Reynoldsclub), room 201, before going tothe registrar’s office.The dean of students prepareschange of registration cards whena student wishes to change hisregistration after his fees have ibeen assessed.A clerk from the office of theregistrar will be located on thesecond floor of the Administrationbuilding between the dean’s officeand the office of admissions tosupply students from the divisionsand medical school with forms forregistration.Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.I1R0WWL Ml UNUSUAL FOODEUROPEDublin to the 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. = «* »■ TrTYPEWRITER SALESTILL GOING ONEXCELLENT SELECTIONS LEFT*10°° ®nd upBUT HURRYUNIVERSITY of CHICAGO R00KST0RE58th and EllisScholarship offeredStudents who are residents of the States of Illinois, Indiana,Iowa, Michigan, and Wisconsin and who are applying foradmission to a law school in this area to begin study in 1959,are eligible to apply for the Weymouth Kirkland Law scholarship.The scholarships are granted for one academic year and it isanticipated that the scholarship will be renewed provided that thescholarship holder sustains the high qualifications upon which theaward was based. The scholarships pay tuition plus $800 each yearin law school.Respective applicants should write at once to the Weymouth Kirk¬land foundation, Suite 2900, Prudential plaza, Chicago 1, Illinois forcomplete instructions as to the application procedure. Deadline forapplications is April 1, 1959.The dean of students in the Law school and the dean of studentsin the College will assist with information.hurry hurry hurry I Excavation for the new men's dorms is pictured above. IThe dorm is expected to be completed by autumn, 1959. ITo hear SG criticsSG's re-evaluation committee will hold an open hearing orSaturday, March 7, at 2:30 pm, in the east lounge of Ida Noyeihall.All students who wish to present their views on the re-evak**ation may attend.The meeting is being held to "determine the principle validcriticisms students have of the government", stated Jim Thoma¬son, chairman of the re-evaluation committee.While any UC student may attend the hearing, Thomaso*said that ft is hoped that "ex-SG members present and pastheads of campus organizations and graduate students" willattend the Saturday afternoon session.There is still an opportunity for unnoticed writers, unpub¬lished photographers and unknown artists to bring their workto light on the printed page. The Cap and Gown still has afew openings in the unique purchaseable page portion of thisyear’s product. Pages are going (fast) for $15 each . . .and the deadline is near.Walter Fish, editor, had only one comment: “hurryhurry-hurryhurryhurryhurryhurry." See Fish at Snell, Mueller atLancelot ^Vhyto FA 4-9723 or anyone at the Cap and Gown office.speaks TuesdayLancelot Law Whyte, Englishphysicist, philosopher, and free¬lance writer, will present a lec¬ture entitled, “The conscious, theunconscious, and the artist” onTuesday, March 10 at 8:30 pm inBreasted hall.Whyte is in the United Stateson a Graham foundation fellow¬ship. His lecture is being pre¬sented by the Renaissance societyof the University. £jl'llllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliillllllllltlll!lllllllltllllllllllliliiiiillillililililllliiliiiHlii!liilliiillllimilllllt£Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood |DELIGHTFUL gATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICESs7bmi(iiii<iiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiHimimiiimiiiiiiiiitiitimiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifi! THIS SUIT FOR A "SONG*WASH andWEARforMINIMUMCARE™buyDickiesforMAXIMUMWEARIvy-Styled In trim propor¬tions for business, forschool, for Informal occa¬sions anywhere, anytime.Famous-name dacron-cotton fabrics. Slacks areflap-pocket Ivy model.Popular CHARCOAL BROWNPopular CHARCOAL GRAYonly9524Moke a Special Trip...Dickies ore Worth ItlOur Prices Can’t Be Beat . . . It’s Smart To Buy For LessD & C Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728"In the Neighborhood for 40 Years"Hours: 9 a m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. —9 a m. - 9 p.m., Saturdaythe Chicago maroonfMmleiK — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University at Chicago school year and Intermittently during the summer quarter,ky the publisher, the Chicago Harooa, Ida Noyes hall, 1213 M. 56th Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-6600,extentions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus. Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5,Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material, 4 pm, Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material,3 pm Wednesday before publication.All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the individual opinions of the authors.SG loses respect, dignityIt is no news to anyone that the University of Chicago’s Student Government has sunkto an all-time low this year. Representing nothing and doing less, the Government haswasted a year, sometimes barely mustering a quorum at meetings and usually not evendoing that. Possibly the only thing that can be counted in the government’s favor is theStudent flight to Europe, which is being handl&d sanely and singlehandedly by one man,almost the only person that ever graces the deserted government office.At a school where student government could be something meaningful to its intelligentstudent body, SG has fallen so low that it has lost the interest of campus and the respectof many of its own members.Attempts at re-evaluation of the position of government have met opposition every diffi¬cult step of the way. Perhaps some in SG think they have achieved the best of all possible“worlds” . . . that is to be seriously doubted.It is indeed sad to see a government that might be useful, loose its usefulness; it is evensadder to see the same government lose its dignity as well.Stop discrimination at UCSeveral unfortunate inci¬dents have come to light re¬cently— situations in whichlandlords have refused rooms tostudents because they were Ne¬groes or foreigners.In Hyde Park, the Universitycan, if it wishes, exert consider¬able pressure to prevent such dis¬crimination. It can refuse to in¬clude landlords who discriminatein its file of recommended accom¬modations, and it can refuse topermit them to advertise in Uni¬versity publications or on Uni¬versity bulletin boards.A University official has statedthat the University “merely triesto perform a service for studentsseeking housing accommodationsand avoids making any sort ofvalue judgments about them.”A more positive and liberal at¬titude on the part of the Univer¬sity would be desired.But the problem of discrimina¬tion in housing is acute through¬out this vast interracial city, andlittle has been done to eliminate it,save for the activities of a fewprivate charitable and educationalgroups.The proper place for action isin the Chicago city council.It will be many, many years be¬fore Congress will be able to passa law preventing discriminationin housing. Attempts to put sucha law through the Illinois statelegislature have failed severaltimes. Chicago can ill-afford towait for outside legislation to pre-Freedom-of-PressCommitteeOPEN FORUMSpresentsVICTOR PERLOEconomist - AuthorOilCHINA TODAYSun. March 15th 7:30 pmFine Arts Building410 S. Michigan Music RoomGen'l Adm. $1.00 Students 50cUNIVERSITYHOTEL5519 S. BLACKSTONEDORCHESTER 3-4100Cleon rooms, oil with private bath,shower and telephone. Doily maidservice, 24 hour switchboard. Alltransportation, 2 blocks to I.C.Transient and permanent. Reason¬able rates. vent discrimination in housing.The burden of ameliorating thesituation must devolve upon theChicago city council, here andnow.Two liberal and respected legis¬lators, Aldermen Leon M. Despresand Claude W. B. Homan, in co¬operation with the Chicago com-misison on human relations, havesubmitted for discussion a draftof an open occupancy ordinancewhich would make it the declaredpolicy of the city “to assure equalopportunity to all residents to livein decent, sanitary and healthfulliving quarters, regardless of race,color, religion, national origin orancestry ...” It is law which weheartily endorse and for whosesuccessful passage through thecity council we earnestly hope.The proposed ordinance wouldmake it a punishable offense todiscriminate against a person be¬cause of his race, color, or creedin the rental or sale of a dwellingplace. Penalties are provided forviolators of the ordinance, andsevere penalties for continualoffenders.The law is fair and would notbe an infringement on individualproperty rights any more than,say, the fire and sanitation ordi¬nances.No landlord would be compelledto rent or sell to anyone who wasimmoral, impoverished, ill - man¬nered, or objectionable or anyground other than his race, creed,or color.Similar laws have already beenenacted in other progressive cities.The city would definitely bewithin its constitutional authority in enacting such legislation—thatauthority deriving from Section23-81, Chapter 24 of the Illinoisrevised statutes.According to its authors, theproposed ordinance would amongother things, help relieve the un¬sanitary, hazardous, and over¬crowded conditions in the city’sghettoes, decrease personal ten¬sions, improve the mental healthof those now discriminatedagainst and of their children, fos¬ter better relations with foreign¬ers now residing in the UnitedStates, reduce the taxes neededfor certain public services, encour¬age genuine open occupancy whileending the fear that “open occu¬pancy” means extension of theghetto, enable the city to plan ef¬fective urban conservation with¬out the obstacle of segregation,make possible genuine interracialneighborhoods without either sat¬uration or flights, and permit non¬whites to choose their dwellingson the same basis as other people.The proposed ordinance is con¬stitutionally sound and not with¬out precedent. It is workable, fair¬ly drawn, and much needed.The proposed ordinance shouldcommand the support of everycivic-minded Chicagoan, and es¬pecially the gentlemen on the CityCouncil.Albert N. PodellACASA bookstoreGood Used BooksCarefully selected Imports of cards, giftschildren's booksreliable typewriter service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651Dr. KURT ROSENBAUM Our advice on your mov-Optometrist ing or storage problem isentirely free and withoutEyes Examined obligation. Butitisamaz-Glosses Fitted ing how often we find youContact Lenses have need of our services.Visual Training PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1132 E. 55th St. 1011 East 55th StreetHY 3-8372 BUtterfield 8-6711 On Canons MthMaSirakn{By the A uthor of "Roily Round the Floy, Boyol "and,"Barefoot Boy wilA Cheek”)ADVENTURES IN SOCIAL SCIENCE: NO. 2Today, with earnestness and sobriety, we make the second ofour forays into social science. We take up the moet basic of ailsocial sciences—sociology itself.Sociology teaches us that man is a social animal. It is notinstinct or heredity that determines his conduct ; it is environ¬ment. This fact is vividly borne out when you consider the caseof Julio Sigafoos.Julio, abandoned as an infant in a dark wood near Cleveland,was adopted by a pack of wild dogs and reared as one of theirown. When Julio was found by a hunter at the age of twelve,the poor child was more canine than human. He ran on allfours, harked and growled, ate raw meat, lapped water with histongue, and could neither speak nor understand one single word.In short, he was a complete product of his environment.Julio, incidentally, was more fortunate than most wild chil¬dren. They never become truly humanized, but Julio was ex¬ceptional. Bit by bit, lie ltegan to talk and walk and eat anddrink as people do. His long-dormant mental processes, whenawakened at last, turned out to be fantastically acute. He wasso bright that he learned to read and write in a month, gotthrough grammar school in three years, and high school in two.And last June as thousands of spectators, knowing the oddsJulio had overcome, stood and raised cheer after cheer, he wasgraduated valedictorian from Cal Tech with a degree in astro¬physics!Who can say to what towering heights this incredible boywould have risen had he not been killed the day alter commence¬ment while chasing a car?But I digress. To return to sociology, people tend to gatherin groups—a tendency that began, as we all know, with theintroduction of Marlboro Cigarettes. What an aid to sociabilitythey are! How benignly one looks upon one’s fellows alter puff¬ing on Marlboro’s filter that really filters, on Marllxiro’s flavorthat’s really flavorful. How eager it makes one to extend thehand of friendship! How grateful we all are to Marlboro formaking possible this togetherness! How good not to live in thebleak pre-Marlboro world with every man a stranger!The groups that people live in today (thanks to Marlboro)vary widely in their customs. What is perfectly acceptable inone society may lie quite outlandish in another. Take, for in¬stance, the case of Ug Van Wyck.ITg, a Polynesian lad, grew up in an idyllic South Sea islewhere the leading event of the year was the feast of Max, thesun god. A quaint all-day ceremony was held, with tribaldancing, war chants, fat-lady races, pie-eating contests, and, forthe grand finale, the sacrifice of two dozen maidens.According to Ug’s folkways, sacrificing maidens was entirelyacceptable, but when, in his eighteenth year, he was sent as anexchange student to the University of Wisconsin, he soonlearned that Americans take a dim view of this practice—inWisconsin, at any rate. The first fifteen or twenty maidens Ugsacrificed, he was let off with a warning. When, however, hepersisted, drastic measures were taken: he was dcpledged bybis fraternity. A broken man, Ug quit school and moved toMilwaukee where today he eayis a meager living as a stein.• <& 1 ybb Mai Shulman• • •For real sociability, provide Marlboros for filter smokersand Philip Morris for non-filter smokers. Both are madeby the Philip Morris company; both sponsor this column;both are tops!1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300tCafe Enrico & GalleryFeaturing — Complete Wine List andHors d'oeuvre Table12"Cheese 1.25Sausage 1.50Anchovy 1.50Pepper Or Onion 1.35 Combination .Mushroom . . .ShrimpBacon & Onion Smoll12"2.001.752.001.75Free Delivery on /III Pizzu to VC Students4 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 6, 1959Wfe OMftTTWtTWC f#FELLOWS LOW t>OWN *OW THE SOCIAL SCALE, «£ 6E»NG OPPRESSED* ADVERTISEMENTSalways have handsomeGUVS WITH SNAPPYSMILES BMD TATTOOSANP DEEP SEA BSH*NGEquipment ! jn r&*&**&*>.VOUflG C4RLS SEE THOSEflH/tRHSET*£W?5 (\MDTHEN COMPARE WtWMWER'SHEft, W1?US5DOLTS QUITE tAlFRVOftMLYumth those 9#El$ONHIFTIE5! unless ConcessionsHR£ MADE, Wt 06LIPEOPLE ARE GOING TOQUIT BUYING PRODUCTSMNEKlISEft tN GOOD'LOOKING FELLOWS.UE'LL RUN AROUNDnude and uue omcooking s«errv » YE5SIR, UGLY PEOPLEHflVJE GOT TO BE IN ADSFROM NOW ON - AND Iwight shy right now,X’M AVAILABLE.MADISON AVENUE !UC hosts area meetsThis weekend Chicago plays host to two outstanding ath¬letic events of the year: the Midwest conference track meet,and the Chicago intercollegiate swimming championships.The Chicago varsity track team, undefeated this season, will goagainst ten Midwest conference teams at the field house'tonight at6:30. The meet will include five relays and eight individual events.The greatest swim team in the University’s history will competeagainst the top collegiate talent in the Chicago area at Bartletttonight/at 7:30 and tomorrow at 2:30. The athletic department isexpecting large crowds tor both events.letter to the editorUC girls well-rounded?Three weeks ago in the Ma¬roon it was asked “Is the Uni¬versity of Chicago a place todevelop socially adaptable, well-rounded individuals or an insti¬tution of learning. I told a mem¬ber of the university’s public re¬lations department that I wassending photographs of Folkloresociety events to Mademoiselle Magazine, for Mademoiselle to usein their article on Folk Music. Hetold me “send pictures of prettygirls in tight sweaters.” Lookslike the public relations depart¬ment thinks this is a place to de¬velop “well-rounded” individuals.P. S.—I did not take his advice.Fred CohnFor peaceful purposes and the benefit ofall mankind, NASA directs and implementsIIS. research efforts in aeronautics and omthe exploration of space.OFFERS ENGINEERS AND SCIENTISTS CHALLENGINGOPPORTUNITIES IN BASIC RESEARCH. EXPERIMENTALRESEARCH. DEVELOPMENT AND DESIGN. FIELDS OFENDEAVOR INCLUDE ROCKET, NUCLEAR AND ELECTRICPROPULSION SYSTEMS; AERODYNAMICS. STRUCTURES,GUIDANCE AND CONTROLS; MATERIALS. FACILITIESCONSTRUCTION, EQUIPMENT DESIGN.MAC A LEWIS RESEARCH CENTERnnOn 21000 brookpark roadCLEVELAND 35, OHIOMr. Melvin Gerstein on Campus March10, 1959 — See your Placement Officefor interview appointment.POSITIONS ARE FILLED IN ACCORDANCE WITHAERONAUTICAL RESEARCH SCIENTIST ANNOUNCEMENT *IBNASA ALSO OFCMTtS OTHft RESEARCH CENTWS AT LANOIST MLBVttOMRV MOfFfT FlilO, CALIFORNIA ANO (SWARDS, CALIFORNIA.NATIONAL aeronautics and space administration UC'er to head discussionA UC expert has been chos¬en to head an internationalpanel discussion on how tomake electronic brains thinkharder, faster and deeper.Nicholas C. Metropolis, directorof the University’s institute forcomputer research, was given theassignment. He is a professor inthe department of physics and inthe Enrico Fermi institute fornuclear studies.He was named to head the sym¬posium on the logic organizationfor very high speed computers atthe International Conference oninformation processing sponsoredby UNESCO, June 15-20 at Paris,France. He is one of five Ameri¬can computer men chosen byUNESCO to head group sessions.Metropolis said his symposiumwill be concerned with the nextstep in computer design. Discus¬ser will be such questions as whatsort of arithmetic instructionsshould a machine be given, howdo you “speak” to it and how doesit “speak” back, how much mem¬ory should a machine have andwhat should be the hierarchy ofthings stored, to what extentshould the machine “think” aheadso as to "know” what operationsto be prepared for, and what kindof logical operations should themachine be able to perform ascomparing two numbers and de¬termining which is the larger.Nicholas Constantine Metropo¬lis, director of the institute forcomputer research at UC and aprofessor in the department ofphysics and the Enrico Fermi in¬stitute for nuclbar studies, has made a career studying MANI¬ACS.MANIAC stands for “mathe¬matical analyzer, numerical inte¬grator and computer.” In otherwords, an elecronic computer. Metropolis’ electronic brainchild MANIAC 1 helped solve theintricate arithmetic involved inthe development of the hydrogenbomb at the Los Alamos scientificlaboratory.Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andIntermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon,Ida Noyes hall, 1312 East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-6extensions 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionby mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday.Editor-in-chiefRochelle Meta DubnowAssociate editorNeal Johnston Business managerLawrence D. KesslerISL vs. SRP tonightThe Independent Student League, weary from its battle ofthe mind, has challenged the Student Representative Party tofight it out on the basketball court in a co-ed game. The gameadmission free will be held tonight at 8 pm in Ida Noyes.Rejecting offers to play the losers or act as cheerleaders, the Partyfor Student Action accepted \he position of referee.ISL’s lineup is Phil Epstein, Don Richards, Diane Cobb, Fran Moore,John Cashman, and Bert Kohler. Sam Silver, Jay Goldenberg, AnnBancroft, Judy Barjacke, Mady Chalk, and Karl Finger are SRP’stentative players.Restrictive foul rules will be observed due to the participation offemale players.Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 tt.nt. -11 p.m.Get a head starton your vacation!FLY UNITEDAIR LINESGoing home for the holidays? Or maybe planning atrip somewhere? You’ll have extra days for extra fun ifyou travel via United. Chances arc you’ll save money,too. United Air Coach Mainliner® fares arc low. Yourchoice of fast, convenient schedules to 80 major citiescoast to coast and Hawaii. Sec your Travel Agent orcall your nearest United Air Lines office today. NEWESTWASH and WEAR SLACKSby DICKIESonly $^95These are Bedford cordsShrunk for permanent fit.They're WASH and WEARfor minimum care!with the exclusive Dickiesfeature—Easy-Alter Outlets.Lets out waist 1 Vi" withoutsewing.Moke a Special Trip...Dickies are Worth hiOur Prices Can’t Be Beat . . .It’s Smart To Buy For LessD & CCLOTHES SHOP744 E. 63rd Sf. Ml 3-2728“In the Neighborhoodfor 40 Years"Hours: 9 a.m.-8 p.m., Mon.-Fri.—9 a m.-9 p.m., SaturdayM»rcl« 6, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5'- <profileDr. Humphreys: enthusiasm is contagious 10DM H9aid ***»$of s+oji uiay.Eleanor M. Humphreys,MD, is a thin, energetic pro-lessor emeritus of pathology,who has just moved into an officeon the fifth floor of Billings hos¬pital. She retired about sixmonths ago, after more than 35years of teaching and research atVC; as she has emphasized, herretirement is only an opportunityto write the great number ofpapers she never had time forpreviously.Dr. Humphreys was born in asmall town in Vermont. She at¬tended Smith college as an under¬graduate, earning most of herown way through. She originallywanted to major in classics, witha minor in art, but after a veryshort time at Smith she changedher field to biology and medicine.“I decided to become a doctorthrough my interest in science,rather than for humanitaria rea¬sons; even though my interest inliberal arts, especially the lan¬guages, continued,” she said.She graduated from Smith inJ917, but, for a variety of reasonsWhich she stressed were not solelyfinancial—"I never hesitated tostart school without money”—shedid not enter medical school atUC until a number of years later,working in clinical research inbiochemistry and bacteriologyduring the interim; but when shedid finally start she was againable to pay her own way. “Myinterest in pathology developedwhile I was in medical school, andas a student assistant in pathol¬ogy, I came, back to the depart¬ment of pathology after m> in¬ternship. However, as a medicalstudent, I did some work in bac¬teriology, and most of my earlypapers were in this field.”At this point I interrupted herand asked if she would give me amore precise idea of what pa¬thology was and particularly herwork in it. She explained, “Pa¬thology is simply a knowledge ofdisease. I am now, however, adiagnostic pathologist, and forthe last 11 years have been incharge of the diagnostic pathol¬ ogy laboratory, working closelywith surgeons in the operatingrooms. Diagnostic pathology isalso the study of disease, but al¬ways m relation to a patient. Youdon’t decide on treatment pro¬cedures, but you often discusscases with the clinicians.“We pathologists also do au¬topsies to study disease, and tofnid out of clinical procedures anddiagnoses have been correct. Pa¬thology is an intermediary, afocal point between the patient,the student, the clinician, and theresearch scientists.” Dr. Hum¬phreys quoted the Frenchman Bi¬chat, who said: “Dissect in anato¬my, experiment in physiology,follow the disease, and make thepost-mortem examination in pa¬thology; this is the three fold waywithout which there can be noanatomist, no physiologist, nophysician.” This is the motto onthe wall of the morgue in Billings.I got an unexpected reactionwhen I asked her about researchwork she had done, or was doingnow. “I’m not terribly proud ofwhat I’ve done in the way of re¬search," she mused. “I get tooeasily involved in teaching —which I especially enjoy in small,informal laboratory groups; andin routine work.“I’m proud of my students,though, and I think that I’vehelped them particularly in oneway. Enthusiasm is contagious,and I have always felt enthusias¬tic about the courses I teach. Theyhave caught some of it too, I’msure.”I pressed her for more infor¬mation on the reseai'ch, though,and she finally divulged that shehad done some work on proteinsfor the government during thewar. Modest as always, however,she stressed that all her work hadbeen in collaboration with severalother people.-^Some of the important work,”she began, “was during the warand after, until 1948. We workedon nutritional problems whichwere of interest to the armedforces and the country; and when the pressure let up after the war,we did some collateral experimen¬tation. At the time, we were test¬ing protein adaquacy. Some foodscontain all the necessary aminoacids; these are called complete.Others lack important aminoacids, or contain them in formswhich are easily destroyed, suchas by mild cooking. It doesn’tmake too much difference to acivilian since his diet is variedlargely, but when making up pro¬visions for life rafts, or K-rationsfor troops, it can make a gooddeal of difference.”Since Dr. Humphreys did notseem inclined to talk about anyfurther about her research work,I asked her if she had any spe¬cific reactions to the University,which she apparently has likedweli enough to stick around forover 35 years.* One thing I liKe about the Uni¬versity of Chicago,” she com¬mented, “is that there is turmoilhere. Furthermore, the turmoilis over principles, rather thantrivia, and always in an attemptto make the University a betterplace. I don’t think I would likea school that was too peaceful.”“Psychologically,” she added,“Chicago and the University aremore interesting than any easterncity or university — and I haveseen a great many of them—be¬cause you are sure that many ofyour troubles are not intrinsic,but only due to the fact that youaren’t full grown yet. You canfeel that much better things areahead, because you are still along way from being a finishedproduct.”I had gathered by this time thatDr. Humphreys was quite a wellrounded person. When I askedher specifically about what herfeelings on the essentiality ordispensibility of variety in educa¬tion were, she agreed that it wasa necessary thing. She recalledthat although she had takenenough biochemist ry at Smith toget credit from UC’s medicalschool — much more than mostKGDL KROSSWORD No. 19ACROSS1. Fordham-ite4. Savoy-typedance9. Beta Kappa'sfirst name12. Rocky’s Albanypredecessor13. New Guinea14. End of a heel15. Studyingeach other18. How knightswould get onthe deans’19. Paradoxicalplace to go..out to20. out with22. Lamb who’sgone to pot26. It’s neededfor energy28. Do you dig it?29. Low man in thechoral society31. Giant inprogress92. Half of the■ opposite of fat33. Starta week end34. It’s the onlysnow fresh one43. Fellow lookingfor a shiner44. Beginning tobe taught45. What to givea martini46. World War IItheater47. VanishingNew Yorktransportation48. Much girl49. The thing of •it in Latin DOWN.1. Don’t do thiswith your motor2. Swanny river3. Rendezvous4. Counteradvances6. Sometimes alittle white lie6. Ob, daddy,a fish7. Trumpetaccessory8. Scrub-teamitem9. For literarypigs10. What Koolsdon’t, have11. Kind of tarred16. Make littleimpression17. Paint jobs20. Ducky network21. Are backward23. Going concern24. It’s human to25. Bigger than 33Down, but small27. What bikinisbarely do30. With a Y, it’skind of foolish31. Middle ofthe lowest34. Kiss Me girl35. It’s precious,O chum!36. Work in theLatin class37. Facto’sfirst name38. God (German)39. Came to rest40. To laughin Paris41. &42. God of love 1 2 n12 1151820 21262934 35 36434447 J L to i iH37 38 39 40I5tl• A9 cool and clean as a breath of fresh air.)• Finest leaf tobacco. mild refreshing menthol —and the world’s most thoroughly tested filter! \• With every puff your mouth feels clean,your throat refreshed!Qmericas Mosf-Rbfreshing Qgatdle^ . ALSO REGULAR SIZE KOOL WITHOUT FILTERI£ 1059, Brown 6 Williamson Tobacco Corp^6 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 6, 1959 people—she still looked for andgot what she called at that timea “distribution of courses,” whichfor her included languages, his¬tory, philisophy, logic, and evenegyptology.She interjected: “One interest¬ing thing while on the subject ofbackground. I think it was mucheasier to read and study beforetelevision, movies and cars. Every¬body read on the long, cold winterevenings. There was intellectualstimulus in your environment;everybody who could afford itbought books instead of a TV set.”John Mills W3MSNV TGDMUC gets Ford grantThe Ford foundation hasmade a grant of $61,500 to UCfor a summer seminar forbusiness teachers on new devel¬opments in business administra¬tion.Grants were made to manyother schools, including $25,000to Duke university for an exten¬sive study of the economy of theSouth. This W’ill be conducted byeconomists at several Southernuniversities and colleges. It willenable economists to organize astudy of the problems involved inaccelerating the development ofthe relatively low-income region.The research grant on the theSouthern economy is one of sev¬eral made by the Foundation inrecent years to shed light onurban artd regional problems.Other grants for regional eco¬nomic studies have been made inNew England and the Upper Mid¬west.“The Southern grant waspi>ompted by the region's eco¬nomic strides in the past twentyyears,” Thomas H. Carroll, vice president of the foundation, said.“From 1929 to 1956, per capitaincome in the South increased250 per cent, compared with 1per cent for the nation as a whole.“The grant will enable a com¬mittee of nine leading Southerneconomists to draw up an inte¬grated research program to guideand stimulate further development. The program will includesuch fields as population growth,migration, and rural labor re¬sources; capital accumulation andinvestment financing; changingpatterns of employment, laborproductivity, and industrial out¬put; income, consumption, andsavings; and public policy.”The committee will use at leasttwo-thirds of the grant to supportresearch by individual scholars.The rest of the funds will be usedfor annual research conferences,publication of monographs, andadministrative expenses.UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor MarylandTelephone - SecretarialService. 841 eost 63rd st— suite 201 .Special attention toTERM PAPERS — THESESPhone for appointmentDOrchester 3-2945The Qreen Door Book Shop1451 EAST 57TH STREETHY 3-5829 Chicago 37, III.Quality paperbacks — Fine children's booksSpeciol orders filled promptlyplot• BIATNIK PARTIES• POKER PARTIES• BEACH PARTIES• WEINER ROASTplotFREE QOLFI.plotall exciting tporltl’ ./>,In the Immtdiale vicinity ofGUIFSTREAM RACE TRACK,JAl-ALAI, DOG TRACK•Compute, ’round the dothsocial programDANCING • ENTERTAINMENT beer lusts •ttf M "I $ SPECIAL STUD! NT VACATION I ATI SIPer Person e Double Ote.20 of 200 roomsMor. 16 thru Apr. 18NMORT MOTHON THE OCEAN • MOUYWOOO*8H,"’,*CFLORIDASee Your Travel Agent or Write £>fr«dH arvard’s Riesman speaks(Harvard Crimson) “History, as well aslife history, is necessary for the study ofnational culture,” David Riesman, HenryFord II professor of social sciences, told an over¬flow crowd at Cambridge recently.Riesman, in his inaugural lecture, discussed theorigins and problems of work in the field of nation¬al character, with special reference to the Ameri¬cans case. He distinguished between two kinds ofapproach: the “classical,” emphasizing generaliza¬tions that can be applied to any society; and the“romantic,” concerned with a particular people ata single time and place.In his own The Lonely Crowd, Riesman said,falls into the romantic category, placing its empha¬sis on specific social strata in this country. The book takes the US as the chief example of post¬industrial society and seks to assess the meaningof this situation for individuals and for institutions.The study of national character, according toRiesman, has £rown out of an interaction of psy¬choanalysis, anthropology and history. The firsttwo fields have a kinship, he remarked, in theircommon concern fpr “underprivileged data,”(dreams, games, weaning habits), and search for“the rivulet of motive in the tidal wave of history.”But “groups, like scholars, may differ over what isbasic in society,” and to understand these differ¬ences, a study of history is necessary.In a fture “where people are even more differ¬ent from one another than they are now,” Ries¬man concluded, “national character may becomean even more tenuous concept than at present.”SC criticizes a UC team'YW' sponsors songsSongs of mankind through the ages will be the program of“Sing out, ol’ world” presented by the Young Women’s Chris¬tian association of Chicago on Friday, March 13 at the Eighthstreet theater.Studs Terkel, narrator of the concert, has selected songs from dif¬ferent parts of the world and from all walks of life for the theme of(he family of mankind in music. He is well known to Chicago audi¬ences as producer of the radio show, the Wax Museum.Artists appearing with Terkel are Chet Roble, the “barefoot boy ofjazz”; Brother John Sellers, interpreter of blues and spirituals;Richard Pick, master of the classic guitar, and another folk artistto be announced. “Sing out, ol’ world” includes folk songs, ballads,spirituals, blues, jazz, show tunes and classics. Proceeds of the concertwill go to the YWCA of Chicago.Tickets are available at all six YWCA centers in the Chicago area;Barnes theater ticket service in the Palmer house, and the Recorddepartment of the Main street bookstore, 642 N. Michigan avenue,for $1.50, $2, and $3. Mail orders will be handled by the Loop centerYWCA, 59 E. Monroe street. For further information call FR 2 6600.Five Canadian fellowshipsto be offered for next yearFive new fellowships for study in Canada in the fields ofthe arts, humanities and social sciences for the academic year1959-60 were announced today by the institute of Interna¬tional Education. The applicationdeadline is April 15, 1959. the equivalent. Awards for aca-The scholarships are offered demic study wiU be made subject* , to admission to a Canadian uni-by the Canada council for the en- .. , , . . , .versity. Students applying for m-oouragemcnt of the arts, humani- stitutions where French is spokenties and social sciences. The sti- -must demonstrate a good knowl-pend is $2,000 for the year plus edge of the language,round-trip travel. The council may Preference for the awards willconsider renewing an award for be given to those under 35 yearsanother year upon evidence of 0id.satisfactory work. Application forms may be se-Applicants in the arts may be cured from campus Fulbright ad-artists-, scholars, musicians, writ- visers or from the institute ofers and teachers who have shown International Education, 1 Eastexceptional promise in their work. 67th street, New York 21, NewCandidates applying for academic York. Final selection of awardeesstudy can do so only for work will be made by the Canada coun¬leading to a master’s degree or cil in Ottawa. Student Government criti¬cized the baseball team’sdecision to play Southern seg¬regated colleges this spring at itsseventh meeting of the year, heldlast Tuesday in Law North. TheGovernment also endorsed a pro¬posed bus trip to New York overthe interim and gave its approvalto a news letter to be published,giving a resume of its activitiesduring the past year. It also an¬nounced an investigation of thekind of loans being given out forstudents during the coming yearin an effort to estimate the effectof the new Federal loans on thepresent University loan policy.In a motion presented to theGovernment, it was urged that aletter be sent to the appropriateUniversity departments statingthat the Government believed thatthe baseball team should not playschools with segregated baseballteams, for this was opposed bothto the position of the Governmentin the past, and to the UnitedStates Constitution who expresslyprohibits segregation.It was announced that a bustrip was being organized to takeinterested students to New Yoi'k,and back to the University, duringthe Spring interim. The Govern¬ment was informed that a busseating 35 people had been rentedfrom the Trailways corporation,and that the bus would leave onFriday, March 20 at about 6 inthe evening from in front of Man-del hall. The bus would returnfrom New York on the afternoonof April 5. The price of the bustrip has been estimated at $33.00and students interested are urgedto contact Judy Bardacke in Westhouse. The trip is being co-spon¬sored with SRP. In other Government action onTuesday, it was moved and passedthat a newsletter be publishedduring the first week or so ofthe Spring quarter, stating theachievements of Government dur¬ing the past year. The motion topublish this newsletter indicatedthat such action was believed tobe necessary because of feeling onthe part of some members of theGovernment that the Maroon hadfailed to give adequate coverageto Government activities, outsideof the bi-weekly articles on themeetings, a feeling which was alsoexpressed by the NAACP.The chairman of the AcademicFreedom week, to be held duringthe Spring quarter, announcedthat plans were progressing satis¬factorily on programs to be givenby outstanding members of theUniversity and the community,and that much interest in thework of the committe had beenshown by the three political par¬ ties on campus, Independent Stu¬dents league, Student Representa¬tive party, and the Party for Stu¬dent action. SG was also remindedthat the annual Government andNSA elections would be held dur¬ing the third week of the springquarter.M. Barth will goon Frankfurt tripMarkus Barth of the UCdivinity school leaves on afive-week trip to Frankfurt,Germany, tomorrow.Barth’s visit is a part of theChicago-Frankfort project, whichis an exchange program betweenthe universities of Chicago andFrankfort instituted after thewar. While in Germany, he willpresent lectures on the subject ofanti-Semitism to students at theUniversity of Frankfort.PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433You're always readyfor a date..,thanks to ArrowWash and WearrYour timing is as neat a9 your ap*pearance when the shirt is a newArrow Wash and Wear. No wait¬ing for the laundry. Just suds—drip-dry—and you’re ready to go!Economical, too . . . your allow*ance goes further.Carefully tailored by Arrow of100% cotton oxford and broad¬cloth. Choice of collar styles inwhites, stripes, checks, solids. $4.00up. Underwear by Arrow, too.Cluett, Peabody & Co., /no,HARROW*first in fashion IN LIFE INSURANCE TOO...it’s wiseto provide_ „, forThe builder whose future requirements call for a 10-storey buildingbut whose current funds enable him to build only five or sixstoreys, makes sure he provides foundations for 10 storeys.In life insurance, also, it is wise to provide for future expansion.That's whv Sim Life’s Family Security Benefit is a wise lifeinsurance buy. Sun Life’s Family Security Benefit not only gives youhigh insurance coverage at a low rate now. It also provides thefoundations for future permanent expansion in your life insuranceprogramme.For full details, without obligation, please send the coupon below.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADARALPH J. WOOD JR. ’48 jN. LaSalle St. Chicago 2, III. |FR 2-2390 RE 1-0855Plca..t fend me information on Sun Life’t Family SecurityBenefit. I understand there h no obligation to me.NAME..ADDRESS.... _.OATE OP BIRTH...|IMarch 6, 1959 • CHICAGO MARO ON > 7Find more men in world affairs programA progress report on a World affairs corres¬pondence program at UC cited gains in the impactof male education, but alas, none for the oppositesex.Leonard S. Stein, director of the home study depart¬ment, admitted he is reluctant to explain why morewomen did not enroll in the World affairs program.Stein made an analysis of the course leading to “Thecitizen’s certificate in world affairs.” It was published inthe winter issue of Adult Education magazine.Stein piled up statistics to show that older men areturning in the best records, correspondence studentsaround the world include a movie producer and a convictand that the Certificate is a worthwhile goal ftfr adultsstudying at home.But when it came to explaining why more womendidn’t sign up for an education by mail in world politics,Stein made his point in this fashion:“More men than women enrolled in the program;further, men, especially older ones, are more active inpursuing program requirements. . . .“This leaves unanswered the question, of course, asto why women are less interested in the serious studyof world affairs than men.“This author, a mere male, will not even dare an ex¬planation; he only hopes future data will destroy this distinction and thus the need to explain it.“Still, one cannot help but recall the joke about thedivision of responsibility between a pair of spouses, asexplained by the husband:“ ‘My wife leaves to me all the important decisions—foreign policy, atomic energy, inflation and similar mat¬ters—while I leave to her tne unimportant decisions—where we shall live, what job I hold, how much wespend, etc.’ ”To obtain “The citizen’s certificate in world affairs,”eight courses must be completed. Four are required.They are World politics, American foreign policy, Rus¬sian foreign policy and on understanding history.The program was inaugurated in 1955 and the firstcertificate are expected to be granted in 1960.Stein noted that enrollment in the program became“radically higher” when the certificate goal was insti¬tuted.Stein said older men are more interested in studyingworld affairs via home correspondence courses thanany other single population group.He said:“If this finding continues to hold true, it suggests thatadult educators should concentrate their recruitmentmature men, rather than aiming at the general body ofefforts for intensive world affairs programs among more citizens.'S*ein continued, “We have found, for example, that a70-year-old consulting engineer or a middle-aged busi¬ness executive will have better completion records forthe program than, say, a young man or a housewife.”He said those attracted to the program are marked byfour characteristics: (1) over 35, (2) college-educated,(3) scattered widely in this nation and abroad, and,(4) middle-class by occupation.Age of the 132 registrants in the three-year surveyranged from 20 to 83. The average age for men was 41. icompared with 38.3 for women.The Home Study department is part of Universitycollege, adult education division of the University. Morethan 100,000 men and women have enrolled in its coursessince it was founded over sixty years ago.The primary aim of the Home Study department is toprovide adults—wherever they may be—an opportunityfor continuing systematic learning at the college levelthroughout their lives.UC was the first university to offer regular home cor¬respondence courses for college credit. William RaineyHarper, who long before the University was foundedin 1890 had been- conducting home study courses inHebrew and the Bible, organized the Home Study department as an integral part of the program.8 DUAL FILTERTHE TAREYTON RINGTHE REAL THING IN MILDNESS...THE REAL THING IN FINE TOBACCO TASTE!They were introduced only last semester,and already, New Dual Filter Tareytons arethe big smoke on American campuses! Howcome? 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It has been defi¬nitely proved that it makes the smokeof a cigarette milder and smoother.NEW DUAL FILTER• CHICAGO MAROON Here’s an unforgettable 6 ueekprogram that costs youless than a summer at home!Enjoy a summer of travel fun... orearn college credits at die Universityof Hawaii's famous Summer Session.Meet young people from all over theworld... enjoy a host of soc ial 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 foras little as $495! Imagine! That's lessthan you might spend for an ordinarysummer at home.Leave for Honolulu June 12 by shipor 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. L. Despres winsfifth ward raceChicago’s'renowned politi¬cal maverick, the Fifth Ward,a body of 64,000 people withUC in the middle, voted Tuesdayto send alderman Leon Despiesback to City Council for anotherfour-year term.Despres’ election is considereda significant one in that he wasthe only one of 47 aldermen elecied who did not have the endorse¬ment of the Democratic machine(One Republican alderman waselected, but he had Democratic-endorsement.)Despres ran as an Independent,and was supported in his bid forre-election by the IndependentVoters of Illinois, the DemocraticeFderation of Illinois and otheiorganizations.The Fifth Ward Democraticcandidate, Allen Dropkin, lost toDespres by 1,300 of the 16,000votes cast.As Despres told the Maroon,“the election was a decisive andheartening plebiscite for the in¬dependence and integrity of omcommunity. I mean that sin¬cerely.”The University community wassharply split over the campaignProminent among the Dropkinsupporters were Maurice F. X.Donohue, Dean of the Downtow nCenter; his wife, who headed theWomen’s Citizens Committee forDropkin, and Professors HermanFiner and Walter J. Blum.Br. Retort I. Crslle, Ik wiet v-ViiwtHf tttoy T««r t« Mavail7m Nifltol It., SM FfMKiMt 1«, C*ttf«»i4; FREE. Please send full Information onHawaii Summer Program to; On the other side, ProfessoiJerome G. Kerwin was co-chair¬man of the Committee to Re-electAlderman Despres, ProfessoiMaynard C. Kreuger held a poston Despres4 strategy committee,and Marshall Patner of the lawschool was the campaign manager.J wjv — toil sm»! * Echaat , , • Both candidates are graduatesof the University law school.•Drip drySlocks (f Walkerstarpoon dothchino$5.98 up• cjCuciile J1507 east 53rd st.mi 3-9898I TERRY’S PIZZAFree MJC Deliverysmall 1.00 large 195medium I.45 x-large 2.95giant — 3.95chicken — shrimp — sandwiches1518 e. G3rd MI 3-404525c discount on oil pixxas, Mon, Tu, Wed, Thurs, only,with this couponJ‘'Y Coggeshall speaks...A UC medical educator said last Mondaythat government support of research hassharply increased understanding between thescientist and the public.Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, dean of the division ofBiological sciences of the University, said the fed¬eral trend has contributed toward making research“everybody’s business."The policies of the federal government In pro¬viding assistance for projects, Dr. Coggeshall said,“have enabled the university scientist to contributehi a major way to the needs of the nation and atone and the same time permit all the freedom orperhaps even more freedom than he enjoyed underother forms of outside support."Dr. Coggeshall, who was special assistant to theUS secretary of health, education and welfare in1956, said that "public enlightenment is essentialto government assistance in research.”“Back of the headlines,” he said, "we must recog¬nize the interest of the public in the support ofresearch as evidenced by the ever-increasing ap¬propriations from Congress and the voluntaryphilanthropies, particularly in the health field."Dr. Coggeshall spoke at the 14th annual Con¬ference on higher education at the Pick-Congresshotel in Chicago. His topic was "To what extentshould national needs determine the nature andthe purpose of the university research program?"Newell discusses eye careA UC doctor warnedWednesday that new drugscarelessly used for simple eyedisease are causing more seriousdisorders to flare up.Dr. Frank W. Newell, professorof ophthalmology, said that manyeye disorders should be left alonerather than risk the complicationsfrom the drugs.He told the annual clinical con¬ference of the Chicago Medicalsociety at the Palmer house thatdoctors too often “emphasize thatwhich is new and neglect remediesand diagnostic steps which havebeen useful for years.”I>r. Newell, who heads the sec¬tion of ophthalmology of the Uni¬versity, said that "pink eye” orconjunctivitis, the most commoneye disorder, has been virtuallywiped out by sulfa drugs and anti¬biotics.The modern drugs, he said,“have virtually eliminated the con¬tagiousness of such conditions andreduced exposure of the eyes tomany bacteria harbored in lungsHave a WORLD of FUN!Travel with IITAUnbelievable Low CostEurope60 ewf JzL* $645Orient«~»$99SMany lourt includetoilet* credit.'AUe lew-coat trip* te Mexice$149 up, South America $499 up,Hawaii Study Tour $549 up andAround the World $1799 up.Aik Your Travel Agent111 Se. Avc.NO. Cblceae 4, HA 7-11» and throat that used to cause eyeinfections.However, "antibiotics are toooften supplied from the medicalcabinet of a relative or friendwho ‘had the same kind of pink¬eye’ some time in the past,” hesaid.These drugs, instead of helping,cause a super-sensitivity of theconjunctiva or eyeball coating, hesaid, and the irritated eye willthen violently react to many otherdrugs. Locally applied cortisone,for example, can then bring onfever blisters, he said.Physicians should urge their pa¬tients to throw away the unusedremainder of eye medicines forstill another reason. "Eye dropsand ointments are contaminatedby bacteria, viruses, or yeastsafter use,” Dr. Newell said. Infec¬tions caused by such germs cansometimes lead to blindness.Dr. Newell advised physiciansnot to use high-powered antibi¬10% Discount to UC Students ond PersonnelAll Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW NET PRICES8-LBS WASHED & FLUFF DRIED ... 59’10-LBS. FLAT WORK *1”DRESS SHIRTS - 22*QUALITY DRY CLEANING — RAPID SERVICE — REASONABLE PRICESFREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERYPhone PLaza 2-9097UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1024 E. 55th St. UC fights disease in east"National needs should affect our universityprograms and not necessarily in an adverse way,”he said. "However, it must be made absolutelycertain that, without any reservations or misunder¬standings, the university has the right to selectand conduct its own programs of undirected re¬search."Dr. Coggeshall, immediate past president of theAmerican Cancer society, said scientists now areoperating in an atmosphere of sharing their workwith the general public."The public is frequently aware of the univer¬sity scientists intentions and findings as soon as orsooner than his scientific colleagues,” Dr. Cogge¬shall said.Dr. Coggeshall said that until about 1940 uni¬versities and the government were largely unin¬formed about each other’s activities in research.Today, the situation is much different, he said."Modern communications have the public waitingalmost breathlessly for the outcome of previouslyannounced projects.”He estimated that about 70 per cent of all uni¬versity research and development is financed bythe government today."Our government’s needs, particularly in thisreign of the cold war, must to a considerable de¬gree be satisfied by university scientists,” Cogge¬shall said.otics alone or in combination withhormones immediately. Such"shot-gun" techniques, he said,"are of little value and may havea number of serious complica¬tions."Instead, doctors should make aneffort to find out exactly whatgerm is causing the trouble. "Thenature and sensitivity of the or¬ganism present should then gov¬ern the selection of medication,”Dr. Newell said.No chemical is known to speedup the healing of eye ills, Dr.Newell said, “but there are manywhich delay healing. In question¬able cases, delay of therapy ispreferable to trial or unknowntreatment."Doctors should think twiceabout prescribing “wonder” drugsbefore having tried such old-fash¬ioned remedies as hot or cold com¬presses and eye washes, he said. Two UC scientists are play¬ing an important role in thewar against disease in the fareast.They are Dr. J. Thomas Gray-ston, assistant professor in thedepartment of medicine, and Dr.Paul B. Johnson, instructor in thedepartments of microbiology andmedicine.Since September, 1957, theyhave been working on Formosain a medical research installationestablished by the US Navy.It is called NAMRU-2, or NavalMedical Research Unit.NAMRU’s mission is to providenew information on diseases ofpotential military significance inthe far east; and to provide thebiological knowledge required tocontrol animal and insect carriersof disease in this geographic area.A similar unit—called NAMRU-3—is operating in Egypt.Dr. Grayston reported on workat NAMRU-2 in a letter to a Uni¬versity medical publication.The twin scourges of the fareast are virus and parasitic dis¬eases. The battle against thesenatural enemies has carried thescientists beyond Formosa to anumber of other countries in thefar east. They have institutedtraining programs for local physi¬cians and research workers inthese nations.“During the first year atNAMRU-2, most of our effort hasbeen aimed at virus diseases suchas German measles, influenza, in¬fantile paralysis, smallpox, chol¬era and encephalitis,” Dr. Gray¬ston said. '"Not all of our work has beenconfined to Formosa. At varioustimes we have been called to Thai¬land, Pakistan, the Philippines,Okinawa and Japan to check onepidemics of smallpox, cholera,and influenza.He said NAMRU-2 has exten¬sive facilities for clinical research,including four large wards andthree isolation rooms that are ca¬pable of handling up to 30patients.The research unit is now staffedprofessionally by six US Navalmedical officers, three US civilianscientists and two resident Chi¬nese doctors. Grayston expects this staff to double or triple.There also are 101 local civilianemployees."We have planned programs forclinical research on diarrheal andrespiratory infections in foreignfamilies and resident Chinese. Theunit also is set up to make metab¬olic studies on patients with acutechronic liver disease.Grad synthesizesantibiotic cousinAndrew S. Kende, a Chicagoalumnus, who graduated in1950, was a member of a four-man research team at Lederlelaboratories division, AmericanCyanamid company, that chemi¬cally synthesized an antibiotiecompound related to aureomycinchlortetracyeline and other tetra¬cycline antibiotics. Previouslythese antibiotics could be madeonly by micro-organisms.This achievement, which wasreported in the February 20 Jour¬nal of the American Chemical So¬ciety, may lead to the discoveryof medically useful antibioticsthat cannot be derived from liv¬ing organisms.Kende was graduated from theUniversity in 1950. He also holdsgraduate degrees in chemistryfrom Harvard university, and in1948 he was awarded first prize inthe Westinghouse high-school sci¬ence talent search.Kraft to lectureon decrepit stars“Physical properties of oldnovae” will be the lecturetopic of Dr. Robert Kraft thisWednesday. The lecture will beat 3:30 pm on March 11 in Eck-hart 133.Dr. Kraft will talk about thosestars which have almost complet¬ed their life cycle. At the end ofa massive star’s evolution it mustlose mass to become a whitedwarf. He will discuss the processof mass loss and accompanyinginstabilities in these very ohstars.☆ WRIGHTSHIRTS LAUNDRY15 centswith Hydro bundle COMPLETELAUNDRY AND DRY☆ CLEANING SERVICE1315 EAST 57TH STREETMl 3-2073NOT A. SIGN OF A SLIP-UP!typing errors disappear like magic when you use Eaton’sCorrasable Bond. Never a trace of the word that waserased; errors can be flicked off CorrSsable’s special surfacewith an ordinary pencil eraser. Saves re-typing, time andmoney. And the sparkling new whiteness gives all typinga new brilliance. You can’t make a mistake gettingEaton’s Corrasable. (Rhymes with erasable.)Eaton's Corrasable Bond havailable in light, medium, heavyand onion skin weights. Incon venient 100-sheet packetsand 500-sheet ream boxes. ABerkshire Typewriter Paper, Mi-backed by the famousEaton name.Made only by EatonEATON’S CORRASABLE BONDTypewriter PaperEATON PAPER CORPORATION • TP % PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS**»!»'*’March 6, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9Conning events on9m — quadranglesFriday, 6 MarchInter-varsity Christian fellowship meet*ing, 12:30 pm, Ida Noyes East lounge.Non-denominational Bible study inEphesians.Mathematical biology meeting. 4:30 pm.5741 Drexel avenue. "An algebraic ap¬proach to the DNA - protein codingproblem.” Robert Rosen, graduatestudent in mathematical biology.Clinicopathologic conference, 5 pm, Bill¬ings P-117.Lutheran student group meeting andcost dinner, 6 pm. Chapel house, 5810Woodlawn avenue. Lenten vespers,7 pm, Thorndike-Hilton chapel. Dis¬cussion, 7:30 pm, Chapel house, “TheGospel of St, Mark: who is the son ofman?” The Reverend William Schoe-del and the Reverend Richard Baep-ler, doctoral candidates, FederatedTheological faculty.Lecture series: ‘‘Pharmacology and phy¬siology series” (University College),64 East Lake street, 6 pm. “Electron-microscopy of connective tissue,” Isi¬dore Gersh, professor of anatomy.Record dance, 7 pm. Internationalhouse room CDE. Admission 50 cents.Lecture series: “Works of the mind,”University College, 8 pm. “Machia-velli’s Prince,” Warren Winiarski, lec-Folksingers to beat NU tomorrowFolksingers Jean Ritchieand Oscar Brand will sharethe stage for “An Evening ofFolk song” at Northwestern uni¬versity’s Cahn auditorium, Sheri¬dan rd. and Emerson st., Evan¬ston, at 8:30 pm Saturday,March 7.Their appearance is sponsoredby the University’s society ofFolk arts. Tickets for $1.50 willbe sold at the door or may beordered by mail from Scott hallactivities office, Northwesternuniversity, Evanston.Miss Ritchie inherited her mu¬sical background from her nativeCumberland mountains of Ken¬tucky and her Seottish-Irish-Eng-lish ancestry. She graduated withPhi Beta Kappa honors from theUniversity of Kentucky and begana career in social work beforeturning to a fulltime musical ca¬reer.Brand returns to Northwesternafter performing before a capac¬ity audience in a solo appearancelast year. In addition to his repu¬tation as an award-winning folk-singer, he is the voice of manysinging commercials on radio andtelevision and has written scriptsfor both media. turer In the liberal arts, UniversityCollege.University concert, 8:30 pm, Mandelhall. Quartetto Italiano (Paolo Borcl-ana, Elisa Pegreffi, violins; Piero Fa-rulli, viola; Franco Rossi, cello).Student Government Re-evaluationcommittee meeting, 2:30 pm, IdaNoyes East lounge. Open hearing anddiscussion. All students who wish topresent their views are invited, par¬ticularly ex - government members,present and past heads of campus or¬ganizations, graduate students.Saturday, 7 MarchChest conference. 8 am, Billings M-137.Diseases of the nervous system. 9 am,Billings M-137.English class, 10 to 12 noon, Interna¬tional house room B.Pediatrics clinical conference, 10:30 am,. Billings M-137.Radio program: “The Sacred Note,”WBB9. 10:15 pm. A program of choralmusic by the University choir, Rich¬ard Vikstrom, director; HeinrichFleischer, organist.Sunday, 8 MarchRoman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10 and 11am, DeSales house, 5735 Universityavenue. Sponsored by Calvert club.Choral eucharist (Episcopal), 8:30 am,Bond chapel.Party for Student Action open caucus.8 pm, Ida Noyes East lounge. Every¬one invited.Bridge club meeting, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyeslounge. Duplicate bridge will beplayed.Students for Non - violence, 12 noon,outside C - shop. Open - air speaker.Karl Meyer, “We must resist war.”Everyone invited. (Held weather per¬mitting.)Monday, 9 MarchSpring Quarter advanced registrationbegins.Class in elementary Hebrew, 4 pm. 5715Woodlawn avenue, sponsored by Hil-lel foundation.Folk dance group, 4 pm, 5715 Woodlawnavenue, sponsored by Hlllel founda¬tion. Beginners and advanced wanted.English class, 6:30 pm, Internationalhouse room B.Movie, “The Frenchman goes wild,** 7and 9 pm, International house Eastlounge. Admission 50 cents.Lecture series: “Psychology of dreams,”University College, 8 pm. “Recent ad¬vances in experimental work on dreampsychology,” Dr. Harry Trosman, as¬sistant professor of psychiatry.March 9 through March 20Advanced registration for springquarter.Seminar: A seminar in Russian history,4:30 pm. led by Leopold Haimson,Social Sciences 302, sponsored by Oboard.Tuesday, 10 MarchInter-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing, 12:30 pm, Ida Noyes East lounge.Non-denominational Bible study inI Peter.Blackfriars rehearsal, 7 pm, Ida Noyestheatre. Both male and female castmembers.Lecture series: “Art of the Scandinavianfilm,” University College, 7:30 pm.“The film of fantasy,” Mac Lindahl,Swedish journalist and critic.Youth March for Integrated schoolscommittee meeting, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes library. All Interested are in¬vited.Seminar: “Some new data on plants andfirms,” Carl Kaysen, professor of eco¬nomics. Harvard university depart¬ment of economics. Law South, 7:45pm.Rocket society meeting, 7:45 pm, Eck-hart 207.Lecture series: “New developments ingroup psychotherapy,” University Col¬lege, 8 pm. “The Individual in grouppsychotherapy.” John M. Schlien, as¬sistant professor of human develop¬ment, University counseling center.Folk dancing, 8 pm, International houseassembly room. Admission 50 cents.Gates hall coffee hour, 10 to 12 pm,Gates hall. Coffee, cookies, dancing,15 cents.Wednesday, 11 MarchClass in elementary Yiddish, 3:30 pm,5715 Woodlawn avenue, sponsored byHillel foundation.Bernard Malamud will read from hisworks at 4 pm. Admission free. Soc.Sci. 122.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel.Organ recital, 5 pm, Rockefeller chapel.Heinrich Fleischer, University organ¬ist. Episcopal evensong, 5:05 pm, Bondchapel.English class,' 6:30 pm. Internationalhouse room B.University Glee club rehearsal, 7 pm,Ida Noyes theatre.Country dancers. 8 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Beginners wanted.Greek student club business meeting,8 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Thursday, 12 MarchEpiscopal Communion service, 11:30 am,Bond chapel.NAACP membership meeting. 7:30 pm,Ida Noyes hall.Publicity meeting, 7:30 pm, 5625 Wood¬lawn avenue. Open meeting for any¬one interested in doing publicity andsales promotion work for studentorganizations.stocks,” University College, 7:30 pm.“The paper industry,” Merle F. Kuhl-Lecture series: “Selecting your commonman, assistant trust officer, AmericanNational Bank and Trust company.Lecture series: “The art of the ancientNear East,” University College. 8 pm.“The art of Syria-Palestine and Iran,”Penelope Weadock, research associate,the Oriental institute. Lecture Series: “The public Images ofprivate institutions — labor unions”7:30 pm. social sciences 201, SDeaki-will be Irving Klass, director of in¬formation and public relations Chi¬cago Federation of Labor, sponsoredby Communication club.Friday, 13 MarchLook out! We have another one of thosedays this month!Inter-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing, 12:30 pm. Ida Noyes East loungeNon - denominational Bible study inEphesians.Lecture series: “Pharmacology and phy¬siology series.” University College, 6pm. "Metabolism of radlosotopes withspecial reference to bone-seeking rti-diostopes,” William P. Norris, biologi¬cal and medical research division,Argonne National Laboratory.Record dance, 7 pm, International houseroom CDE, admission 50 cents.Lutheran student group meeting andcost dinner, 6 pm. Chapel house, 5810Woodlawn avenue. Lenten vespers, 7pm, Thorndike-Hilton chapel, discus¬sion. 7:30 pm, “The Gospel of St.Mark: the Passion and Resurrectionnarrative,” the Reverend A. R. Kretz-mann, St. Luke's Lutheran church.CLASSIFIED ADSFor RentComfortable 2 rrn. furn. apt. with tilebath, light front rooms, clean. $90 permonth, incl. util. MU 4-9482 . 5134 Wood¬lawn.Newly furnished room and adjoiningbath. For single man. PL 2-6490.3V& rm. unfurnished apts. Moderatelypriced. Switchboard service available.Resident manager. DO 3-4300.Baird & Warner, agentsBUJl-185515 x 15 partially furn. rm. DO 3-2320.Spacious rms. in elegant residence nearlake & IC. Available for students orbusiness girls. MU 4-7844.2'/2 ROOMSCheerful, newly decorated, attractivelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator bldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man. Maid and linen service available.Reasonable monthly rate.VERSAILLES APARTMENTS5234 Dorchester FA 4-0200Rooms for rent. $25-$45 per month. Eve¬ning meals. Phi Kappa Psi frat. 5555Woodlawn, PL 2-9704,3 rm. furn. apt. 53rd & Kimbark. $82,50.Call Mrs. Hufford, FI 6-8300, 9:30-5:30,Attractive 3^i room basement apt. Unf.Cornell near 53rd. $100. HY 3-8720, eve¬nings or weekends.Rooms for rent in fraternity house, rea¬sonable rates, meals available, nearcampus. Call Mr. Edidoh. PL 2-9477.Large room to rent. 2 blocks from com¬mons. 2 large closets. Kitchen privileges.Piano to practice on. Female student.HY 3-8460. For SaleBrick 6-flat near 54th & Ingleside—6's—sacrifice at $45,000C. W. Hoff & Co., Inc.Mrs. Redfern HY 3-2215Deluxe 5-rm. brick bungalow, $15,000.Ideal for Unlv. family. Conveniently lo¬cated near CTA & IC, shopping, schools& churches. Many novel improvements,ultra-modern tile cabinet kitchen, tilebath, wall - to - wall carpeting, electricstove, end. back porch, 1-car frame ga¬rage, oil heat, lge. back yard. Exc. fi¬nancing. BA 1-7889 for appt. By owner.HOME PLUS INCOME2-flat on Ridgewood Ct., all new plumb¬ing & rewired. Priced to sell at $12,500.Mrs. Redfern. HY 3-2215.C. W. Hoff & Co., Inc.New Eng. bikes, discounts. MI 3-9048.By owner—8017 S. Kimbark. 7-rm. brk.Single level. Lge. knotty pine fam. rm.,or 4th bdrm. Gas ht, cab kit., tile bath,2-car gar. Close to schools and trans.ES 5-2347, $16,500.WantedSeveral women between ages of 20-30and 50-60 to volunteer for researchstudy. Would require hospitalization for6-9 days, arranged to suit your conven¬ience. Small stipend. Call Billings hos¬pital, MU 4-6100, ext. 5050.Sitter and companion for two children,ages 7 and 9 in exchange for room andboard. Call Mr. Koehnig: PL 2-1127 days;BA 1-1859, eves, and weekends. Ride wanted to New York City overinterim. Leave Friday, March 20, or earlySaturday, March 21. Call Gary Moko-toff, PL 2-9718, eves.ServicesTyping, all kinds. T. McCrtmmon, ext,5520; or NO 7-1697 after 5 pm.SEWING—Alterations, hems, curtains.Call MU 4-3941.Dressmaking — suits — alterations. PL2-3519. 5428 Woodlawn, (2C).Will care for child in my home. MI3-5797.PersonalsDear John:I understand that Sour Mash is goingto be exactly 1,500 miles off-Broadway.Lovely-to-look-at ’WORKSHOP IN CREATIVE WRITINGPLaza 2-8377Dear Satch,It’s like I dig this Beaux Arts Ballconception—crazy—like. I mean ends-ville.April Twenty-fifthCampus agent wanted for a swingingnew Jazz magazine. Good Bread if youdig the work. Contact Jazz Review, Vil¬lage Startton, P. O. Box 128, New York,N. Y.5625 University:Look out! We're cornin’ through! Seeya Monday.D. S.Do You Think for Yourself ? ("“ass?"1)1.Can you honestly say that you’ve madean effort to understand modern art? vesO noD2.If you were to break a New Year’sresolution, would you renew iton the spot rather than waituntil next year? YES Would you b6 at all hesitant to renta desirable apartment where theprevious occupants had died under/mysterious circumstances? YES [I] NOD6. If you were walking to town in ahurry, would you be unwilling toaccept a ride in a garbage truck? YES1H] NO|Z3.Would you be unwilling to play asingle game of “Russian Roulette”for a million dollars?i hh -□ 7. Would you be reluctant to participatein an important medical experimentwhich, though not dangerous, wouldcause some discomfort?, YES □9. Can an extravagant claimmake you switch fromone filter cigaretteto another?The truth is, thinking men and womenaren’t influenced by extravagant claims—*especially when choosing a filter cigarette.They use their heads! They know whatthey want. They know that onlj VICEROYgives them a thinking man’s filter ... asmoking manys taste.*If you have answered “YES” to three out ofthe first four questions, and “NO” to fourout of the last five .. * you certainly do thinkfor yOUrSelf! ©1959. Brown ft Williamson Tobacco Corp.Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows Familiarpack orcrush-proofbox.ONLY VICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN’SFILTER...A SMOKING MAN’S TASTEl4.Are you fully convinced that thesaying “Money does not buyhappiness” is completely true? YES □ 8. If you had an independent incomesufficient for all your needs,could you be happy never to goto work?. YES10 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 6, 1959Imperfect man basis of economic justiceWhat is the meaning ofjustice if one regards man asprimarily moved by his basiceconomic needs, and how consist¬ent is this meaning with the gen¬eral definition of justice?These two unknowns — theeconomic meaning of justice andits resemblance to the broadmeaning — served as goals in alogical exploration of justice interms of economic motivation, in"Justice and the economic order,”sixth in a series of seven lecture-discussions on justice being pre¬sented at Hillel, February 22 byJoseph Cropsey, assistant profes¬sor in the department of politicalscience.Similarities indicatedCropsey first pointed out thesimilarities between terms in hisgeneral definition of justice as“each man minding his own, andconfining himself to what isproper and appropriate to him,”and such basic economic terms asproperty and the verb "appropri¬ ate” — to indicate that even thegeneral definition suggested someconnection with economics.In addition he cited use of theword “economy” to mean articu¬lation, or organization, and thedefinition of justice sometimes asfidelity to contracts, emphasizingthe connotation of economic termsin each case.Who can claim?“Is it possible that the problemof justice is primarily the problemof property?” Cropsey went on.“Who can rightly claim how muchof anything, and what is the rightrelation of men as owners? . . .Let us proceed by considering theeconomic question and seeing ifit leads up to the same under¬standing of justice with which wehave begun.”The origin of the economic prob¬lem, he explained, is man’s “ex¬treme vulnerability” to death.Man expects postponable mortal¬ity in the failure to generate, orreproduce, in the privation of mat¬ ter, or lack of material subsistence, and at the hands of othermen.Eliminating the last of these onthe grounds that it had little con¬nection with the economic aspectsof the study, Cropsey then definedthe economic problem as “howbest to order the transformationsof matter that are indispensableto life, or what guidance man canget in devising the institutions ac¬cording to which he goes aboutsatisfying his needs.”Dismissing the family as notthe perfect human unit becauseits principle of ancestorship leavessome of man’s needs unsupplied,he instead contended that imper¬fect beings would turn to what isperfect, or complete, where thereis no necessity, “the Whole, One,Integer. Whollyl free of the influ¬ence of anything outside it, it iswholly free; wholly incapable ofbeing other than it is, it is whollymotionless, ordered, under law.”Man the microcosmThe more man is the micro¬ cosm, or the little world usingthe Whole as model, Cropsey re¬marked, the more the consequentneed fo rthe Whole, and the moreit can serve to guide the organiza¬tion of how to satisfy humanneeds.“But what happens if theexistence of the Integer is ques¬tioned?” he continued. “If themodel of nature does not exist,the One disappears as primaryand the parts act as primary, withthe whole as derivative from theparts. And in the parts the needsare primary, so their need is thelaw.”Parts set looseMoreover, the parts, or indivi¬duals, are set loose under the in¬fluence of the motive for self-preservation as the natural law,Cropsey explained. Their meta¬bolism with each other, the needfor generation or reproduction,and their metabolism with the“material externality,” or needfor food from the outside worldCollege turning playground: Ellisonby Dennis McAuliffe“Are we making a play¬ground out of college?” wasthe question posed, and af¬firmatively answered, by JeromeEllison of Indiana university inan article which appeared in theMarch 7 Saturday Evening Post.Ellison recognized a “generallack of Academic motivation”which is breeding colleges devotedto “love, comfort, money, andfun.” A remedy for this “secondcurriculum” is set forth by Elli¬son as a necessary and expedientmeasure. He contends the nation’sfuture is one of intelligent daring,requiring work of the mind,founded on education.In one instance cited by Ellison,a freshman girl at the Universityof Georgia was told, during acounseling session, that a certaincourse could not be taken untilabout two years prerequisite workwas completed “But I won’t behere that long,” the girl com¬plained. “At the end of this schoolyear I’m getting married.”The counselor asked who theyoung man was. “Oh, I’ve just gothere,” said the girl, "and haven’tmet him yet.” Sure enough, to thecounselor’s awe, the young missrealized her goal at the close ofthe next semester.Such instances as this have ledEllison to the conclusion lhat “it’spart of a growing national inclina¬tion to push education aside when¬ever it interferes with love orcomfort, money or fun.”A young dental student in oneof his courses stated that he waswearing himself out driving 100miles home twice a week to seehis girl friend. At a later occasionhe complained that the sciencecourses were killing him. He soonsolved his problem by marryinghis girl, moving into a universityapartment on campus, and trans¬ferring from dentistry to recrea¬tion. Thus he could get a bachelorof science degree by substitutingfor math, language, physics, andchemistry such courses as volley¬ball, archery, lacrosse, deepbreathing and refereeing.Ellison’s quarrel is “not withthe change in career, but with thereasons. Our crowded, roaringslums testify to our need fort rained recreation people. But thisyoung oaf switched, not becausehe had discovered a national need,but because he thought recrea¬tion would be easier. One has afeeling that when the sun beatshot on the city pavement and thefJum kids really need him, he’ll be•n front of the air conditioner.”Repeatedly, Ellison reports, hehas been tgld by students thatmath, a subject of importance inthis age of science, is “too hard.”Again, in a nation which must forhs survival get along with allpeople, he has been told that lan¬guage training is “t<^o hard.” This,he feels, is dangerous. “Commu¬nists and free men agree on atleast one thing—the abler, betterinformed side in this contest is cation will play an increasinglyvital role in the struggle. Wewater it down, it seems to me, atour own great peril. And water¬ing it down we cei'tainly are.”‘The fate of man depends nowmore than ever upon an educatedcitizenry. Half educated won’t do.Man’s survival hangs now uponhis wisdom,” he asserted.Education is not only a nationalproblem for Ellison but also anindividual one, for he has seen"too much of the power of highereducation to widen end ennoblehuman life to stand by withoutprotest while this power isvitiated.”He feels “some things aboutour mass higher education seembasically immoral. I am not herereferring to the sexual aspects ofmorality . . . The thing that con¬cerns me is an intellectual im¬morality. The encroachment uponthe main business of college ofan accumulation of irrelevancieswhich together make up a ‘secondcurriculum’ that often takesprecedence over the first.”“The second curriculum is thatodd mixture of status hunger, voo-more likely to prevail. Higher edu-doo, tradition, lust, stereotyped dissipation, love, solid achieve¬ment, and plain good fun some¬times called ‘college life.’ ”To illustrate the extent to whichthe second curriculum has taken,over, Ellison tells about a year’sactivities at a Big Ten school.They begin with a view of thecampus, a large, tree studdedlawn, dotted with buildings of col¬legiate architecture, and continuesinto the student union, “a rallyingpoint for snacking, dalliance, andamusement.” From morning untilnight the union sees an endlessarray of students drinking cof¬fee, playing cards or billiards,bowling, listening to music or justtalking. On weekends it beholdsstudents dancing at one of theweekly balls. Outs’de once againwe see the student living quarters,large fraternity houses, roominghouses, and residence halls, whilepervading the campus is the ubi¬quitous automobile."In some schools more thanhalf the students have cars. AtIndiana the school issues stickers,called ‘hunting licenses,’ whichpermit students to park on cam¬pus if they can find space. Check¬ing statistics we find that aboutone-fifth of the students are mar-ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAy-r vt w TTTTrrr t-t 'w'wwv wwvwTirwww wvn►►>►►►►►>►►>►►>►>►►►►u spaghettiraviolimostaccioli sandwiches:beef,sausage Cr meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.SUMMER ADVENTURE!JOBS IN U. S —38 COUNTRIES!U.R.A. has completed its EXTENSIVE STUDY ofCOLLEGE STUDENT SUMMER EMPLOYMENTproblems & has compiled its excitingly new STU¬DENT SUMMER EMPLOYMENT DIRECTORY-1959, with OVER 100,000 summer listings in 49STATES & 38 countries:•SHIPS ‘TRAVEL ‘RANCHES ‘TV ‘INDUSTRY‘RESEARCH ‘RESORTS & HOTELS ‘GOVT‘RADIO ‘STUDY ‘OIL co's ‘CONSTRUCTION•FARMS ‘NAT'NL & STATE PARKS ‘CAMPS* * 3 more I !Includes names, salaries, positions, etc., RESUMEEMPLOY. FORMS . . . EVERYTHING! Comparethis value for OVER 100,000 LISTINGS; Applyearly. Send $3.00 (chk/mo), name & address to:UNIVERSITY RESEARCH ASSOCIATES510 Madison Ave., N.Y. 22 N.Y. ried, catching the housing peopleunprepared and so influencing theunmarried girls that coed successis measured initially by datingand finally by marriage. There isthe program of ‘professionalizedathletics’ and its attendant home¬coming games and parades.“There is a big spring weekend,with most other weekends a spe¬cial for something. There are cam¬pus dances, weekly home talententertainments, and a large num¬ber of king and queen contests.One student, promoting his schoolyearbook, devised a queen queencontest. Only those previouslyelected a queen were eligible.Forty-three young women quali¬fied. There are university-spon-(see “Ellison,” page 14) the subsist, is the new microcosmof nature. And their articulationfollows no model of an articula¬tion of perfect freedom and want-lessness.“The mechanistic understand¬ing of society also sees the jus¬tice of the economic order in theconstrained freedom of theagents, and in the universality ofthe rule—the law of nature—thatguides them.” Cropsey declared,as he arrived at the two goals ofthe study. “(Justice in the eco¬nomic sense, then, is) freedomunder ineluctable law, and eachminding his own,” just as in thegeneral definition established atthe outset.The final lecture-discussion ofthe series will be presented Sun*day at 8 pm, with the topic “Jus¬tice and the fine arts” to be pre¬sented by Allan Bloom, lecturerin the liberal arts in UniversityCollege. Concerned with art as asource of moral education, thespeaker will discuss the conflictbetween modern artistic freedomand the ancient belief in a legiti¬mate supervision in the name ofreligion or the state.Trueblood givessermon SundayThe Rev. Dr. D. Elton True¬blood, professor of philosophyat Earlham college, Indiana,will preach the sermon at the11 am services Sunday, March 8at Rockefeller chapel.His topic will be “The paradoxof the word.”Dr. Trueblood is the author ofsixteen books, the most recent ofwhich is The Yoke of Christ.He is former Chief of ReligiousInformation, US informationagency, holds six doctorates, andhas lectured both in the UnitedStates and abroad.$ -the gah^alliheteljon American ExpressW59 Sfudeht Touts of EuropeWherever, whenever, however you travel, your bestassurance of the finest service is American Express!On American Express Student Tours of Europe you’llbe escorted on exciting itineraries covering such fascin¬ating countries as England . .. Belgium . . . Germany• a . Austria . .. Switzerland .,. Italy ,.. The Rivieras. . , and France. And you’ll have ample free time andlots of individual leisure to really live life abroad!7 Student Tours of Europe . , , featuring distinguished leadersfrom prominent colleges as tour conductors . . ,40 to 62 days ... by sea and by air... $1,397 and up.4 Educational Student Tours of Europe ... with experienced escorts... by sea ... 44 to 57 days ... $872 and up.Other European Tours Available . . . from 14 days . . . $672 and up.Also, Tours to Florida, Bermuda, Mexico, West Indies and Hawaii.You can always Travel Now—Pay Later when yougo American Express!Member: Institute of International Education andCouncil on Student Travel. *For complete information, see your Campus Repre¬sentative, local Travel Agent or American ExpressTravel Service ... or simply mail the handy coupon.AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVEL SERVICE66 Broadway, New York 6, N. Y. e/o TraniSviu DivUio»Yes! Please send me complete informationabout 1959 Student Tours of Europe!Name.Address. €-13 •>•4City I t • Zone...State.PROTECT YOUR TRAVEL FUNDS WITH AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CREQUES-SPENOABLE EVERYWHEREAPW HOW FOR YOUR COMPREHENSIVE AMERICAN EXPRESS W0Rt0-WWC CREDIT CAROMarch 6, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • WCHICK6MSTUDYP6CKONOMICSBasketball team sets 38 year recordMAKE *25 Cngli,h‘ highwayGet the genuine articleGet the honest tasteof a LUCKY STRIKE"ORMAN FORfNlN,SONACS SOODARO. KANSAS ClT* i«. COUW. *AY*e 5Ure v Jiff MSCHtR. TtMPLt W© a r ft Product of12 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 6, 1959 — <Jofwce<r u our mtiiJU namoeaeet Sports calendarby Bill SpadyChicago’s basketball fanswitnessed the most successfulseason in 38 years, as theMaroons climaxed their 13-6 rec¬ord with a 64-49 win over UIC atNavy Pier, Friday night. Lastyear's 11-7 mark was the best fora UC team since 1923-24 when theMaroons boasted an 11-6 mark,but the records regress back tothe 14-6 1920-21 season to find abetter year then this. In 19 games this season, Chi¬cago piled up 1147 points for a60.4 average to 1048 for the op¬position, a 54.1 per game figure,low enough for a current fourthplace national ranking. TheMaroons hit ,378 from the fieldfor the year while opposing teamshit slightly better .387. At the foulline the Maroons clicked on only305 of 555 attempts (.549) whilethe opposition enjoyed a betterpercentage .628 (310 for 493).Coach Joe Stampfs crew clearlyMarch6 Track; Midwest Conference Meet, Field house, 6:30 pm.Swimming; Chicago Intercollegiate, Bartlett, 7:30 pm.7 Swimming; Final of Chicago Intercollegiate, Bartlett,2:30 pm.II Track; B team vs. Wright Jr., Field house, 4:00 pm. sliowed supremacy in the re¬bounding department with 958to 731.The Maroons hit their offensivehigh against Chicago Teacherswith 97, as the Teachers hit 76 inthe same game for the opponents’high mark. The Northern Michi¬gan contest was the poorest offen¬sive effort for both Chicago andtheir opposition for the year, asthe Maroons fell 44-30.In Friday night’s game, the vis¬iting Maroons took complete com¬mand of the game in the first half,finishing the initial period with a36-16 lead. Clarence Woods hit 6 of7 field goal tries, and Mitch YY t-kins hit all 11 of his points in theopening stanza, as the Maroonslimited hosting Navy Pier to onlyfour successful shots from thefloor in the first twenty minutesof play. The second half was acomplete reversal, for the Maroons were unable to hit from thefield while their half-time leadgradually dwindled at the handsof the determined Pier-men. SteveUllman, with 13 second half points on 3 for 4 from the fieldand 7 for 9 at the charity stripe,was the only convincing offensivethreat that the Maroons could un¬leash. Gary Pearson finished thegame with 13 points and 19 re¬bounds, while Woods added only3 in the second half to capturethe game’s scoring honors with 76.Chicago hit .377 from the fieldwith 20 for 53 as UIC hit only.296 with 16 for 54. The Maroonsproved superior in every otherdepartment also, hitting .667 fromthe free throw line (24-36) toNavy Pier’s 17-27 (.629), clearing52 rebounds to UIC’s 41, and draw¬ing only 21 fouls to 25 for thehosts. Every Chicago player sawaction in the game.Varsity wrestlingAlthough Chicago’s varsitywrestling squad ended their sea¬son with a four - game lo s i n gstreak, they finished the year at5-5 and had the strongest UC team Basketballin recent years. Dale Bjorklund’sgrapplers were downed by IIT20-13 last Tuesday, and fell be¬fore strong Western Michigan228 last Saturday.Stan Irvine at 123 opened the lit match by getting pinned byHayshi in 1:10, and Ron Chut terat 130 dropped a tight 9-8 decisionto Kryanio. Tony Kocalis pinnedRegan in 4:20 in the 137 poundclass, but newcomer Pat Krolack(147) lost by a fall to McGuire in5:59. Warren Ruby at 157 drew10-10 with Stone, and WarrenPollans followed at 167 with a 50victory over Somers. Carl Figliowas pinned in 1:57 by Tregay, andBob Sonnenburg closed the matchwith 5-0 win over Blume.Against Western Michigan, Chi¬cago forfeited the 123 bout to thehosts, and Chutter lost a 15 9 ver¬dict to Wright to open the match.Kocalis beat Worden 3-0 and MikeSchilder followed with a pin overDownie in 2:51. The Maroonsdropped their final four matches.Ruby lost 4-0 to Karpinski, PolIans fell before Olmstead 4-3, Figllo was pinned in 1:24 by Forrester, and Sonnenburg lost hisfirst match of the season to Gua-lande 2-1.Coach Ron Wangerin's B basket¬ball quintet faced some stiff Jr.college compeition this season,failing to win any of their tengames though they dropped aclose 41-39 decision to Navy Pierin their most outstanding effortof the year. The Maroons scored306 points to 702 for the opposi¬tion.Ron Swanson led thf team inscoring with 110 points, while AtWilcox with 68, Ira Levy with 56,Jay Beitscher with 51, and LesHutton with 48 filled the otherfour top positions. Walt Jankow¬ski, Larry Stt*wart, Leo Greiner,Mike Einsman. and Dan Stein allreceived numerals.Varsity fencingIowa and Ohio State proved toostrong for Chicago’s fencingsquad at Bartlett, Saturday, asthe Maroons were downed by theHawkeyes 16-11, and fell beforethe Buckeyes 18-9 in the closing(«* ‘sports’ page 13)Start talking our language—we’ve got hun¬dreds of checks just itching to go! We’repaying $25 each for the Thinklish wordsjudged best! Thinklish is easy: it’s new wordsfrom two words—like those on this page. Sendyours to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon,N. Y. Enclose your name, address, collegeand class. English. HOG with two WIVESTIRT/SteamshipRound Trip*340 up - frequent soilings1Thrift Round Trip by AIRSHANNON$399.60 LONDON$444.60 PARIS$480.60Rates to other destinations onapplication. By using stop overprivileges, your entire transporta¬tion in Europe may be containedin your air ticket.CARS available on rental, purchaseor repurchase guarantee basis.Choice of Over 100*595Student Class ToursTravel Sludy Tours rConducted Tours pUniversity Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines, nasrendered efficient travelon a business basis since 1926.See your local travel agent forfoiders and details or write us.UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq ,■ Cambridge, MasRudy’sAuthorizedU of C Class RingsSales OMEGA ServiceIndividuallydesigned, handmadejewelry(Oiscount to students)1523 East 53rd st.NOrmai 7-2666PRINTS400 subjects @ 1.00Processed (a> l .98SUMMIT BOOKS138 S. WABASHEnglish: LIARS' CLUBThinklish translation: These guysknow stories so tail they tell ’em withskywriting! Their imaginations are sowiki they keep them in cages! The onething they don’t lie about—as youmight have guessed—is the honest tasteof a Lucky Strike. (Fine tobacco is finewith them!) In Thinklish, this bunchis a braggregation! And that’s no lie.m.Sports news annex ...(from page 12)match of the season. Coach AlvarHermartson’s duelers won only thesabre in their matches againstIowa 5 4, and they proved strong¬est in the same event against OhioState, losing 4-5. The Maroonsitrapped both the epee and foil toIowa with identical 6 3 scores, andlost to OSU in both events 7-2.Once again McGinnis was the out¬standing Chicago performer, win¬ning 4 of his 6 epee matches. Chi¬cago’s final record for the yearstands at 2 wins and 8 defeats.Varsity trackChicago’s varsity track squadwon its fourth straight indoordual meet with an 81-23 win overCornell college of Iowa at thefieldhouse last Friday. The Ma¬roons won every first place exceptthe final relay in humbling thevisitors with some outstandingpei formances. A1 Jacobs, GeorgeKarcazes, Pete McKeon, Don Rich¬ards, and Vic Neill were thesparks Of the Chicago victory. Thefollowing day the UC Track clubdropped highly regarded Indiana62-52 in a closely fought battle fea¬turing some of the outstandingtrack talent in the country. Ja¬ cobs, McKeon, Dave Northrop,Walt Perschke, and Gar Williamswere varsity competitors who con¬tributed to the scoring.Against Cornell, Gar Williamsand Ivan Carlson opened the meetwith a first and third in the milein 4:40. Jacobs and Hosea Martinfollowed with a 1-2 in the 60 in6.2, and Karcazes and McKeonfinished similarly in the 440 in50.5. Richards then won his firstof three events in the 70 yard highhurdles in 9.1 with Dennis O’Learytaking third. Neill ran an out¬standing race in defeating Cor¬nell’s Latimer in the two milewith a 10:06.5 clocking while histeammate Dave Houk picked upa third. Walt Perschke and NedPrice grabbed the two top spotsin the 880 in 2:01.5, and Richardsand O’Leary again placed 1-3 inthe 70 lows in 8.5. Chicago sweptall three places in the shot withMike Hrinda, Walt Greene, andDon Fagin setting a 37-10 mark.Richards won the broadjump witha leap of 20 3, and J. Lejinekspicked up a third for the Maroons.Lin Black, Fagin, and McKeonswept the high jump at 5-8, andFagin, Northrop, and Chuck Ting-Outlaws stop opposition,take all-campus hoop title ley also swept the pole vault at12-0. Cornell won the mile relay.Williams won the two mileagainst Indiana in 9:16.7, and Fa¬gin tied for first in the pole vaultat 13-0. Karcazes placed secondin the 440, and Jacobs finishedsecond behind Olympian Ira Mur¬chison in the 60.Tonight at 6:30 the Maroons willhost ten teams from the midwestconference in one of the featuremeets of the year. The meet, con¬sisting of eight individual eventsand five relays, will include teamsfrom Coe, Cornell, Carleton,Knox, St. Olaf, Ripon, Lawrence,Beloit, Monmouth, and Grinnellplus Chicago.Monday night Chicago’s sprintmedley team of Martin, Jacobs,Karcazes, and McKeon will com¬pete at the Milwaukee JournalGames in Milwaukee against Wis¬consin and Wheaton. Williamswill run the two mile, and Jacobsthe 60.Athlete of weekRobert Sonnenburg, aheavyweight wrestler, hasbeen named “Athlete of theWeek” by the coaching staff ofthe University.The 21-year-old native of SanDiego, California, was cited forhis performance February 21against De Pauw university. DePauw defeated the Maroons, 16-15.The largest intramural basketball season in several yearsended last week with the powerful Outlaws stopping all com¬petitors by very sizable margins in winning their third straightail University title. They crushed the Macs 57-12 in their first gameof the tourney, followed with a prodigious 97-47 win over Inter¬national house and trimmed Vincent in the finals 61-31.Vincent stopped Fine Arts Quintet 30-18 and Phi Alpha Delta 46-41in the semi-finals. Int house beat Coulter 33-13, Psi U A 33-28, lostto the Outlaws, and topped PAD for the third place spot in thetournament. The P A D’s took their first encounter with Phi DeltaTheta 36-17, and then dropped their final two games. In the onlyother game of the tourney, Fine Arts tripped Psi U B 41-27.Bill Lester of the Outlaws was chosen the outstanding player of thetournament and headed the list of clever men chosen on the Intra¬mural All-Star team. Others on the squad include Jim Hilgendorf ofVincent, Gene Downing of Int house, Dick Heise of Matthews, HenryHalladay of Psi U B, George Lux of the Outlaws, Art Smith of P A D,Bill Hines of Psi U A, Bill Gernon of Phi Delt, John Berall of Vincent,and John Clark of Psi U A.Badminton play started Tuesday night, and the intramural squashtournament is currently in its third round of competition. The 230-pound medical studentscored an individual 5-0 decisionover his opponent who had had a7-2 record.The staff citation called Sonnen¬burg “a consistently fine wrestlerthroughout the season.“He has worked hard in his fourvictories by falls and three victo¬ries by decisions,” the citationsaid. ‘‘He has not been defeatedthis season and usually comes upwith the necessary points to as¬sist his teammates to a team vic¬tory.”University director of athleticsWalter L. Hass said ‘‘Bob repre¬sents the kind of young man weare proud to see come to the Uni¬versity—a fine student, a fineathlete.”Sonnenburg is a life member ofthe California Scholarship federa¬tion.Universal Army Store Dr. N. J. DeFrancoIfHarters far sport and work (rearHooded parka jackets — hooded sweatshirts — Ivy league corduroytrousers — wash & wear Ivy leogae trousers — luggage & trunks OPTOMETRIST1138 E. 63 HY 3-53521144 East 55th st. DO 3-9572after every shaveon Afttt'SffMve 1M. PMyot#faee woke «f> mm* So good for yontr skin. . .so good for yoar ego. B*i«4c as a* ocean breeae,Old-Spice makes>ft*u fed kfcea new man. Confident.Assoied. Relaxed. ¥eu know jk>«J*e at your bestvken yxm top off'year eboue with Old Spice ! JOO uceAfTER SHAVE LOTIONlay SHUtTOND women's sportsWest Four clobbers Quads;varsity closes 6-2 seasonLast week in the women’s intramural basketball champion¬ship game, West Four, winner of the inter-dorm tournament,came up with a 50-13 victory over the inter-club tourneywinners, the Quadranglers. West Four, composed mainly of playersfrom the women’s varsity, held the Quads to a scoreless first quarterand maintained their lead throughout the game. The previous day,the Quads earned their chance to fight for the championship bydefeating the Esoterics 54-29 and then grabbing a 40-24 win overDelta Sigma in a play-off game. The Quads, winners of the inter-clubtournament for the third year, retire the trophy.The women’s varsity traveled to Mundelein last week and cameback with a close 49-43 victory to finish up the season with a 6 2record. Norma “Andy” Schmidt was season high-scorer with a 140point total. Pat Toalson was a close second with 128, followed by JoyWheaton, who tallied 98 points.Next on the agenda in the women’s sports calendar is the annualbasketball playday to be held tomorrow. Some of the nine collegesand universities expected to participate are Northwestern, Mundelein,Valparaiso, George Williams, Lake Forest and Wheaton. A total ofnineteen teams will represent the schools. Both Ida Noyes and Sunnygymnasiums will see continuous action from early morning to lateafternoon. Twenty basketball games are scheduled, with swimming,bowling, table tennis and bridge available for those not participatingin a game.Krout fund announcedDr. Maurice H. Krout re¬search fun in psychology hasbeen established at the Uni¬versity as a memorial to this psy¬chologist, who died November 27at the age of 60.“Those nearest and dearest tohim feel that a reasearch fundin psychology would be mostappropriate, and that the Univer¬sity, his alma mater, could ad¬minister this most effectively,"said Mrs. Esther Goetz Gilliland,chairman of the group of friendsworking on the project. professional books and of morethan 100 scientific articles. Hewas founder and director of theChicago Psychological institute,was a member of the facultiesof the University of Illinois,Roosevelt university, and theChicago City Junior colleges, andworked with the UC committeeon preparation of teachers.During World War II, Dr.Krout served as major in thearmy’s medical service corps. Hehas held numerous consultiveassignments and appointments invarious city, state and federalDr. Krout, a qualified psycho¬logical examiner of the state ofIllinois, was the author of many agencies and has participated inmany scientific organizationsboth in the US and Europe.HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRotmd-O-Beef and Waffles 1342Open from Dawn ta Dawn east 53 st.«nOK(‘» IS A ACQISTtACO TftAOf-MAKN. C )•(» VM| COCA.COCAMadison Avenue...Yes, up and down ad alley you’ll find thesmartest account execs call for Coke duringimportant meetings. The cold crisp taste,the real refreshment of Coca-Cola , . .are just what the client ordered. So upperiscope and take a look into the ■ .situation. Ad men of the future!—startyour training now—climb into a gray flanndsuit and relax with a Coke!BE REALLY REFRESHED ...HAVE A COKE!bottled under authority of The Coca‘Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.March 6, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROOM • 13J' bmi iI; jirIK<1■H- Pelikan talks at UK(University of Kansas Daily Kansan) — The university stu¬dent has become an organization man because he takes hisplace in that kind of society, Dr. Jaroslav J. Pelikan Jr., asso¬ciate professor of historical theology at UCDr. Pelikan spoke Monday morning at the all-school convocation, apart of the Religious emphasis week program.“Togetherness is a way of life inspired by McCalls and interde¬pendence has settled in this change since World War II," Pelikan said.He said that a person could not be an individual because he takeshis signals from what others do.Pelikan continued, “Even in the suburbs, they have togetherness.They rub their eyes together in the smoke from the barbecue pit, andwhen the smoke gets too bad, they go together to the air-conditioner.”“Is it possible to have a way of life which isn’t the shallowness oftogetherness, but isn’t corporate totalitarianism?" Pelikan asked.He said that to go beyond togetherness but not too far, a com¬munity must have several characteristics including a preservationof genuine self-hood and maintenance of unity and universality, allof which should be based on forgiveness and acceptance.“We must go beyond togetherness to a community between menand God,” Pelikan declared. “The student should realize this and beprofound in realism and expectation."Pelikan claimed that for most of us accomplishments are not crea¬tive achievements, but something that is a part of daily life. Exhibit closes March 7From Phidias to Picasso seems a greatdistance in Europe, and a vast gap separatescourtly arts from peasant crafts in the West.Yet the exhibition “Tradition and change in thearts of India,” currently showing at Goodspeedhall, shows how intimate may be the relations ofsuch diverse strands of cultural tradition whenthey exist and flourish simultaneously within thecivilization which gave them birth.A classic Buddha from the Kushana empire ofthe third century AD, massive jn black stone, sug¬gests the inspiration found by one contemporaryAsian painter, George Keyt, in India’s tradition ofmonumental sculpture. Brightly painted icons madefor the Pilgrim trade at the temple of Jagannathin Puri, Orissa, display the peasant roots of theart of Jaimini Roy, the best-known painter ofmodern India. Ancient Rome and modern Parisare not without effect on the artists of India, ascan be seen from several specimens in the exhibit,but their interest is predominantly directed inwardtoward indigenous modes.A primordial source and still-flowing fountain¬head of all the Hindu arts is revealed in the modelof a domestic shrine, set up in an inner room of thegallery. Swarms of gods and godlings, ancestralspirits and national cult heroes, press for inclusion in the daily rites of the Hindu home. This burgeoning pantheon, represented in miniatures of woodand clay for household use, demands and receivesmanifestation also on the greater scale of elegantdancing bronzes for high worship and in the decorations of a temple’s processional car.The exhibition, sponsored jointly by the Indiancivilization course of the College, and by theRenaissance society, was planned by McKim Matriott, assistant professor of anthropology and thesocial sciences. Contributors include Mr. WayneM. Hartwell of Chicago, long a resident of BombayMrs. E. B. Willis of Seattle, an expert on the hand-loom textiles of India, and many members of tin-university’s faculty.Many items of sculpture, painting, and textilesare offered for sale. The exhibition closes on Satuiday, March 7."It is a jungle,” remarked Prof. Ludwig Bat hhofer, chairman of the art department, at the opening ceremony. “It is a jungle so beautifully atranged by Mrs. Biesel of the Renaissance society,that we are all deceived into supposing that thereis some unity before our eyes.’’ The unity is thatof a living civilization, rich and diverse, whosemost sacred concerns are intertwined at evenlevel with the business of earthly existence.Ellison: College turning playground(from page II)sored programs of cultural, rec¬reational, and educational value.There are such clubs, sponsoredby the student union, as thebridge club, chess club, and oth¬ers. There are also the traditionalpranks each college generation isexpected to pull.’’ All this activitywill produce, as Ellison wrylycomments, “sound minds in soundThe Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the week•Hum I Quarterly!Arch Duke TrioXWN 18270$2.29 bodies—as long as both can standthe strain.’’“Fun, yes; love, certainly; mar¬riage in good time, of course Butshall these things be gained outof season at too dear a price?’’ heasked. “Some of us are beginningto ask what very little work andan awful lot of play make Jack.”Ellison continued with a recom¬mended remedy.‘The first step would be to pro¬hibit automobiles. . . . The nextstep would be to disband fraterni¬ties and sororities. . . . Besidesproviding the prime breedinggrounds of the ‘minimum effort’attitude, fraternities too oftenbred a tawdry Don Juanism, a cal¬low and provincial snobbishness,the habit of getting drunk, and aworld view no broader than adollar bill. Worst of all they con¬sume quantities of time, effort,money, and emotional stress . . .out of all proportion to the goodthey offer in terms of fellowship.”Another of Ellison’s remedialplans stipulates that universityhousing should not be offeredmarried couples until the male is21 years old. This would be a de¬terrent to impulsive teen-age mar¬riages. A third proposal includes atough two-year college programfor all high school graduates.Those really interested in contin¬uing for four years would be ina frame of mind to study; theothers would be weeded out.A great problem of education,he asserted, is that of teachingstandards. Referring to a speechby Richard B. Hovey of WesternMaryland college, Ellison pointedout that many college graduatescan’t spell correctly or writegrammatically. Quoting Hovey,Ellison points out “an individualteacher cannot suddenly decideto have standards; let him failhalf or more ot the class, and hewill soon be in trouble with hisadministrators. . . . Our studentknows that unless he is . . . unfor¬givably negligent, he will get by.”The teachers themselves areoften a disappointment to Ellison.' A “concern for tenure bendsmany teachers toward cautiousutterances, often blunting thekind of searching, outspoken dis¬course that might explode into exciting teaching and learning.”Some individuals do. of course,find courage to state their viewsregardless of the special interestsoffended. To Ellison it is in this in¬tellectual daring through educa¬tion we may hope to find the gloryof the future. The mechanical sideof that future is well publicized,but for Ellison “the new day ofthe human soul has . . . scarcelybeen mentioned.” He looks for¬ward to peaceful world coexis¬tence and the resulting leisureand plenty which will allow manto develop his potential in art andphilosophy. At this time “wewould stand before the goal ofgoals for all men—the penetrationinto the deepest meaning of lifeitself . . .“We need tough, seasoned, dis¬ciplined thinkers, incorruptable,enormously well informed, skilledin their chosen specialties, butwith an appreciation of all special¬ties—thinkers who cannot be di¬verted to limited or shoddy goals—and we need a lot of them.”ATTENTIONFACULTYSTUDENTS!Work for your M B L(Life Moster points in bridge)At 1st duplicate bridge TournamentSat. March 14 1:30 pmINTERNATIONAL HOUSEAffiliate of American Control Bridge League THE WOBBLIES, flaming chapter in labor history, or theunionism of tomorrow? Get this informative packet ofIndustrial Workers of the World publications for just $5.Packet includes:IWW, Its First Fifty Years, 203 pp (hard covers)Little Red Songbook — words to famous labor songs.Six month's subscription to the "Industrial Worker"(Postage paid. Make checks payable to C. Doehrer)METRO BOOKS, Apt. 21 5400 Greenwood Chi. 15IjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiis2 Cliica go’s Most Unusual— Motion Picture i liealrePhone DE 7-1761Again reminds all College Students of theSpecial Student Rates always in effect atSmash Scottish ComedyJEANNE CARSON ^“Mad Little Island” |siiimmiiiiittttiMimiimmmmmtiiHimttiitmmiitmmmiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiHdiiitnl Quartet Italianoplays tonightThe Quartetto Italiano.three young men and a wom¬an, will offer a program ofstring music tonight at 8:30 pm.in Mandel hall, in the fifth University concert of the season.They will present “Quartet inF Major,” opus posthumous. b\Cherubini; “Quartet in F major.”by Ravel; and "Quartet in D minor,” K. 421, by Mozart.The Quartetto Italiano wasfounded after the end of WorldWar II in the home of Paolo Boiciani, its first violinist. Othermembers are Elisa Pegreffi, violin; Piero >Farulli, viola, andraFnco Rossi, cello.General admission tickets are$2 each; student tickets $1. Tickets may be purchased at the door.Tickets availablefor SC flightThere are seats availableon the Student Governmentsponsored charter flight toEurope. Students, faculty, cmployees and their immediate fami¬lies are eligible to participate.This includes the Downtown oenter, and the Laboratory school.The pro rata share per personwill be $280.00 for the 100-seatplane, and $310.00 for the 80-seatplane. The plane will leave NewYork on June 22 and go to Amsterdam. The return trip will befrom Paris on September 5.For information call or seeErich Klinghammer, Student Government office, Ida Noyes hall,Monday through Friday from 12am to 1 pm, Extension 3274. Eve¬nings call DO 3-8158.CTS presidentin CambridgeArthur C. McGiffert, presi¬dent of the Chicago Theo¬logical seminary, departedJanuary 3 for the University ofCambridge, where he is spendingsix months as a senior lectureiin theology under the Fulbrighiprogram.MODEL CAMERAAuthorized LeieaDealerNSA Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259CLARK Theatrodark fir madison7 e.m.late skew 4 e.m.r A . college student priceJ UC at all time*just present your student identi¬fication card at the heaofnce-Sunday Film Guild Program*Mac • “Streetcar named desire”“Bachelor party”Mar. IS: “The roots of heaven”“The high cost of loving”Different double feature daily—“4 -‘•’fell!, ' —'Culture VultureLullabies, whether of Broad¬way or the Reynolds clubtheater, deserve to be heard.They're definitely an art form,particularly when you're in aparticular frame of mind de¬manding sleep, sleeping pills,anti-No-Dor, etc., etc., etc.Lullabies have strange powers— they soothe the nerves ofsavage birdlets, twitter softlyaround feathery eardrums,infiltrate gray-powder brainwaves, squat carefully on theirhaunches, and sit there andsulk. And the need for sleepand lullabies is obviously des¬perate when one looks at afire-hose sign and thinks au¬tomatically of curling up likea fire-hose in its watery nest,when a fascinating lecture onthe tomb habits of early Egyp¬tians only stimulates a tomb¬like snore or when a cup ofpure caffein only drugs oneinto coffee-klatching night¬mares. So sleep, already! Thereare, of course, some marvelousthings to sleep through thisweek. Sleep through them atthem, sleeping not slipping outto the back hall for that four¬teenth Marlboro. .On CampusTheatreUniversity Theatre’s pro¬duction of Giraudoux’s Elec-tra will close Sunday night.All those who have a strong desireto see this production and havenot yet bought tickets are vaguely(meaning almost) out of luck.There may be a few tickets leftfor Sunday night, and there willbe a few odd seats available atthe door — this is all. However,since those few seats are stillavailable in a hidden sort of way,may I say that the play is every¬thing it’s cracked up to be—itconcerns a lady named Electrawho, by sheer force of her ownperversity and drive for what sheconsiders to be truth, managesto twist everything to come outher way. All this is managed inadmirable French poetic prose,translated for the benefit of mono¬lingual audiences.The three remaining perform¬ances of Electra, like all precedingones, will be held in the Reynoldsclub theater. Curtain is at8:30 pm.The Irish Players, an originaloff-Broadway repertory company,brought to Chicago by UniversityTheatre, will play in two alternat¬ing productions March 17 through22. The opening production, Play¬boy of the Western World, is anIrish comedy by John MillingtonSynge, concerning a 20-year-oldlittle boy running away becausehe thinks he killed his father.Throughout the course of the play»he little boy grows up, the dia¬logue becomes both Irish poetry and dreadfully funny (two entirelydifferent things to a basically in¬telligent non-beatist), the actingbecomes “lively, fiery, and vital,”according to Brooks Atkinson, and April 17. The plot of this remark¬able operetta involves a poverty-stricken turkey-breeder in south¬ern Mongolia who becomes in¬volved in the annual migration tonorthern Mongolia and loses threethousand turklets in the confu¬sion. The script is hash, the musichash, the turkeys become hash,and the result of the whole thingresembles something served inthe average college dormitory onSaturday evening.Motion picturesMutiny on th<§ Bounty will bepresented by Burton-Judson mov¬ies tonight at 8 and again at 10:30.Admission is 40 cents. Monday at7 and 9 pm International housewill present Frenchman GoesWild, a comedy about a bus driv¬er’s wife, who, tired of waitingnights for her husband, runs awaywith a persistent lover. Admissionis 50 cents.Ronald BishopMandel hall stage collapses underthe pressure.The second production, ThreeOne-Acts of Sygne, will include“The Shadow of the Glenn,” “TheTinker’s Wedding,” and “Ridersto the Sea,” “The Shadow of theGlenn” involves a man who playsdead to discover his wife’s infi¬delity, a prominently existentquantity. “The Tinker’s Wedding”concerns a tinker and a girl whowant to marry, a holier-than-thoupriest with a prejudice againsttinkers, who doesn’t want to mar¬ry them, and a tinker’s motherwho doesn’t care much about any¬thing, and is delightfully drunkand blasphemous in all directions.“Riders to the Sea,” called by JohnGasner the greatest one-act everwritten, is essentially the dirge ofthe Irish woman for her lost sons,husband, and her father’s father,all killed by the sea. One kindlygentleman, who, if he didn’t takehum 3 somehow managed to readthe Poetics on his own, said of“Riders” that it managed to dowhat Aristotle would have consid¬ered impossible—to produce in aone-act play a full-blown tragedywith all the trimmings.The company includes amongits members the daughter of anIrish playwright, a New York ac¬tor, several assorted Irish actors,a folksinger, and a former BigTen high jumper. Despite all this,it has managed to survive threeyears off-Broadway, intact, andmaking money. This for a reper¬tory company is truly remarkable.Stydent-faculty tickets areavailable until March 15 for atotal of five performances. Theseare: Thursday, March 19, at 8:30;Friday, March 20, at 6:30 and9:30 pm; and Saturday, March 21,at 6:30 and 9:30 pm. Discountprices are $1.50 for the 8:30 and6:30 performances and $2.50 forthe 9:30 performances.Blackfriar’s forthcoming pro¬duction, Brooder’s Hash, will openINEED w5U You’re Outof Your Mind,Charlie Brown!The new PEANUTS bookby Charles M. Schulz*1°° RINEHARTPSYCHIATRIC CARSL . 5<t?>©United Ffiiui't SyndletU, Inc.^Kc k Symphony orchestra will appearin Mandel hall. Joseph Kreineswill conduct, and Robert Howatwill be the soloist for someone’spiano concertos number 23 in AThomas MakemMusicThe Quartetto Italiano will ap¬pear tonight at 8:30 in Mandel hallin the fifth of the University’s cur¬rent concert series. The programwill include workers by Cherubini,Ravel, and Mozart. Admission is$2.Sunday at 8:30 at University Merryman Gatchand number 24 in C. The programwill also include the overture toMozart’s Don Giovanni.Off CampusTheatreWarm Peninsula, a new play byJoe Masteroff, with Julie Harris,will open Monday at the Erlangertheater to run through April 4.The Girls in 509, with the originalBroadway cast, including PeggyWood and Imogene Coca, is play¬ing at the Civic theater, may Godpreserve us. The Music Man atthe Shubert and Two for the See¬saw at the Michael Todd are stillholding up.Sunday night from 7 to 11 pm,WFMT will broadcast the entire“Oresteia” of Aeschylus. The“Oresteia” includes three plays:Agamemnon, the story of theking’s return home from Troy andhis subsequent murder by his wifeand her lover; The Choephori,which tells of the vengeance ofAgamemnon’s son Orestes on hismother and her lover; and TheFuries, which deals with the prob¬ lem of Orestes’ own matxicidalguilt. About halfway through thebroadcast University Theatre’sproduction of a modern version ofthe secqnd play will begin. Thetwo productions will fight till theFuries give up from exhaustion.MusicTuesday at 2 pm the ChicagoSymphony orchestra, conductedby Reiner, and the Chicago Sym¬phony orchestra chorus, directedby Margaret Hillis, will present aconcert. The program will in¬clude Alexander Nevsky by Pro-kofieff, Chausson’s “Poem ofLove and of the Sea,” and Tchaik¬ovsky’s “Marche Miniature” and“Marche Slave.” A rehearsal ofAlexander Nevsky will be broad¬cast over WFMT Wednesday at7 pm. Coincidentally, Burton-Jud¬son movies are also presentingAlexander Nevsky next week.Anyone who hasn’t heard of Alexis obviously behind the times.Thursday and Friday the Chi¬cago Symphony will play Haydn’s“Clock” symphony and Bruck¬ner’s Symphony No. 3.Motion picturesTonight the Hyde Park will pre¬sent Don Viovanni and the selec¬tions from the Bolshoi ballet.Those who have neither the timenor money to get to the SalzburgFestival can still discover whatit’s like by attending the HydePark theatre’s festival, (see adbelow)The World Playhouse is still,and probably will be eternally,presenting The Horse’s Mouthwith Alec Guinness. The movie issupposedly superb.These two films are being pre¬sented as part of a film record ofthe Salzburg festival. For the firstweek of the festival, the “studentrate” that is usually offered bythe Hyde Park will be availableonly to student theater parties ofsix or more. Advance reservationsmay be made by phoning NO7-9071.The Surf is still presenting MadLittle Island, as can be seen deaf¬ly from the Maroon advertisement.don giovanni /J loke park at 53rd street-the fcyde park theatreWolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s opera"”w0#m migrg Those who hove neither the time nor the money to get to Salzburg,ca€D . J which includes nearly everybody, con still discover whot it is like<—»= this motion picture is distinguished entertainment, which is thedue of Mozart's opero, regorded by many including Bernard Shawha'os music's most glittering ochievement; here performed full length,«©■■■ JrPc gloriously sung and vigorously acted on Salzburg’s huge festivalcS.-g stage, designed by the late Max Reinhardt, with the Vienna PhiI-cS-g hormonic Orchestra and the Chorus and Ballet of the Vienna StateJJJ JJJJj r'.'ji Opera as conducted by Wilhelm Furtv/onglertE I STARS OF THE RUSSIAN BALLET : PART tas i A super-chorged piece of ballet theatre of sheer barbaric splendor,§ doncing ond miming os Golino Ulanova ondthe Bolshoi Pal Iet Com-CO pony donee TV Asofiev's THE FOUNTAIN OF BACKHCHISARIt*.wmsa festivaltwo partsOF OPERA AND BALLET boris godunov Mode si Petrovich Mouuprjtky's cpeWwith Pushkin's librettoG3COO j|toU 03C=£=gcu■MGO Full of pogeontry, pomp ond spectocle, the result is o rich musicalmasterpiece of medievol Russia; A. Pirogov mokes on impressiveBoris with o deep strong boss thot conveys ollthe pathos and dramaof the role. ."A superb film hondsomely screened, it exhibits ex¬traordinary richness of detail o dramatic opero well suited forthe screen sweeping ond spectocu(ar’’-Boris Arden, Sun-TimesSTARS OFTHE RUSSIAN BALLET : PART 2The Russians go on unchallenged when they cloim they inventedthe clossic ballet; they're still inventing new ond exciting balletslike B V Asaficv’s THE FLAMES OF PARIS donced by Chobuki*am, Gottlieb ond the Bolshoi Company ond improving such beloved''oldies’1 os SWAN LAKE donced by Ulancvo, Dudinskoya ond theQolshoiFor the,! s* week of the Festival the student rote will be ovoilohleonly to student theotre porties or groups of six or more, advancereservations may be mode by phoning NO 7-9071 after 6:00pmMarch 6, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON 151* Tr imW,if tm' t*■>1o / Examination objectives related■GS by Benjamin BloomThe UC faculty that created the new plan(1931) of the College wanted to develop a systemof examining which would serve three major pur¬poses. They wanted students to learn to interrelate sub¬ject matter over an entire year of work instead of oversmaller quarter units of work. They wanted students tobe free to learn new and complex materials in a greatvariety of ways unhampered by the feeling of being con¬stantly judged by the college instructor. They alsowanted examinations which were truly comprehensiveand which would be produced by careful and systematiceffortSecured timeThe Examiner’s office was developed to secure thetime and thought required to develop good examinationssince a great deal depended upon the single examinationthe student took in each subject field. Although it wasrecognized that many college teachers could constructexcellent examinations, it was believed that few collegeteachers gave much time or thought to their examina¬tions. All too frequently, final examinations are pro¬duced by faculty members at the last minute withrelatively little planning or effort. Perhaps the mostimportant contribution of the Examiner’s office has beenthe idea that good examinations require careful andsystematic thought over a period of time.Expected problemsOne of the earliest phenomena recognized by the ex¬aminers was that students devote much of their learning- effort to the kinds of problems and tasks on which theyexpect to be examined. If a student expects to be testedon material which can be memorized, he will spend agreat deal of time and effort in memorizing. If a studentexpects to be examined on his ability to apply the prin¬ciples and concepts of a field to new problems, he willattempt to learn how to apply principles and conceptsto new problems. If a student expects to be tested onhis ability to organize and interrelate a great range ofsubject matter, he will prepare by attempting to do justsuch organizing. It also became apparent that if thefaculty’s instructional efforts are at one level and theexamination is at a different level, the students will tendto learn only at the level on which they expect to beexamined. The policy of releasing old comprehensivesinsures that student expectation conforms to reality.It became very evident that only when the examina¬tions were in harmony with the faculty’s instructionalefforts could the examinations reinforce the classroomlearning. With this need in mind, it became necessaryfor the instructors to make clear the types of learningoutcomes expected so that the examiner could developexamination materials which were appropriate. Even¬tually it was found that the best examinations could beprepared by examiners who were also members of theteaching staff. The preparation of the comprehensiveexaminations has usually been a cooperative affair, in¬volving an examiner and the instructional staff.Multiple-choice variedAt one time in the history of the Examiner’s office,all questions were of the recognition or multiple-choice- type. However, as examiners and the teaching staff at¬tempted to construct examinations to measure some ofthe more complex kinds of problem solving, abilities toanalyze new material, ability to organize and interi’elatematerial, etc. they found it necessary to use a greatvariety of types of questions and examining procedures.Carefully constructed essay questions, sets of questionsrelated to a central problem, long papers written over aperiod of weeks, observations of-students in laboratorywork, and oral examinations were used as necessary tosample the kinds of thinking and performance the stu¬dent is able to do. The use of open book examinationsin which students are permitted to use their notes andbooks has enabled the examiners to test students underconditions which approximate the conditions underwhich a scholar makes use of all his resources and ma¬terials in attacking a new problem. The use of realproblems (rather than artificially contrived puzzles),art materials borrowed from the Art institute, musicalperformances by outstanding musicians, completepapers, articles, and books, as the materials on whichthe student is examined, has further emphasized thereality of the problems. Various studies show that theStudents are more highly motivated to do their best whenthey regard the problems on examinations as significantand real. We have also observed that the student’s viewof the examination as a meaningful and significant ex¬perience is directly related to the extent to which theexamination centers on problems to which the studentmust bring all that he has learned. The comprehensive examinations were primarily in¬tended as a method of grading the students. Such grad¬ing requires the securing of a total score for eachstudent. The faculty and the students became interestedin determining the level of achievement on each part ofthe examination. This has required the development ofpart scores which could be used for diagnostic purposes.In addition, the faculty wanted to determine the effec¬tiveness of particular learning material as well as thevalue of particular instructional methods. This has re¬quired the examiners to develop methods of analyzingthe test material in such a way as to help the facultyevaluate their curricular procedures. In the past, theexamination data have proven to be of greatest value tothe faculty when they were in the process of decidingon alternative instructional procedures or when theywere attempting to improve their present materials,instructional methods, or sequence of learning experi¬ences.Placement tests examinedA logical extension of the comprehensive examinationsystem was the placement tests. These tests made useof the examiners’ experience in constructing examina¬tions for the US Armed Forces Institute during the war.They permit the student to demonstrate his academicachievement even though he has developed this compe¬tence under a variety of learning conditions. These testshave been of value in determining the students’ programin the College. They have been used to determine thepoint at which the student could begin a sequence oflearning experiences as well as the likelihood that thestudent would fail unless given remedial instruction inaddition to the regular course work. It is of interest tonote the increasing use of placement tests throughoutthe country. Some of the departments and professionalschools in this University are now making use of theplacement test idea.UC experimentsThe early experimentation of the University with ad¬mission tests has been a real force in reducing thefailure rate among our students. Several years ago wefound that the College Entrance Examination Boardaptitude test had essentially the same predictive valueas our own entrance test battery. Since many of ourapplicants had already taken the College Board tests,it seemed appropriate to permit students to satisfyentrance-test requirements with either our own or theCollege Board test. This has permitted somewhat greaterflexibility in admission procedures. Recently, a grantfrom the National Council of Independent schools haspermitted us to study the effectiveness of high-schoolgrades in predicting college grades. This study, whichincluded 25,000 students in about 150 high schools and300 colleges, has made it clear that grades, if properlyscaled to take into consideration the differences in thestandards of high schools and colleges, are far betterpredictors of college success than any set of aptitudetests. The report on this research, which is to be pub¬lished in the near future, indicates that it is possible toalmost eliminate academic failure in higher educationif an academic predictor scale is used by high schools incounselling students and by colleges in admitting stu¬GLADIS RESTAURANT1527 East 55th st.orders to carry outopen 24 hoursDO 3-9788 Retirement InsuranceAnnuitiesConnecticut Mutuol LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060- Ml 3-5986 TAhSAM-Y&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESPROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO."Hyde Park's Most Complete Paint Gr Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — Housewares Open Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 PJtt.UC Discount ORDERS TO TAKE OUTHY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th st. 1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 dents. This same research finding has similar applies-tions at the graduate and professional school level.During the past six years the Examiner’s office hasbeen doing research for the National Science foundationand other governmental agencies on the characteristicsof students which lead to creativity and productivity inscientific and scholarly work. The results of this re¬search make it clear that it is possible to increase signifi¬cantly the incidence of creative graduates by carefulselection procedures. The research reveals the importance of the student’s methods of working, pattern ofinterests, and previous record of activities. It is likeljthat as more economical procedures are developed forassessing these characteristics in applicants for graduatework, it will be possible to maximize the likelihood thata given group of students will become the original andcreative leaders in a subject field.Training studentsThe Examiner’s office has been used for the trainingof students in examination methods. Many of these students have become leaders in examination work in thiscountry as well as abroad. Recently, the Governmentof India sent a team of outstanding educational leadersto the University of Chicago for training on examination procedures in relation to curriculum development.This team has begun work on a ten-year plan for therevision of secondary education in India. A similar pro¬gram is just beginning at the university level in India.The central focus of these plans is the interrelation between teaching, learning, and examining.Social, political, and other changes in the world havemade a number of nations very concerned about theadequacy of their present educational programs. Inorder to secure basic data for planning systematic educational development, they are beginning to lay plansfor comparable achievement testing. If these plans arcsuccessful, it is likely that many of the ideas aboutexamining developed by the examiners as well as someof the UC examiners will be utilized in this cooperativeventure in comparative education.Much of the work of the examiners has been in con¬nection with the College. In part, this has been truebecause of the significance of carefully constructed comprehensive examinations in this program as well as because of the relatively large number of students takinga particular course or examination. Thus, it is somewhatmore economical to have a single examiner spend a portion of his time in examination preparation than to haveeach instructor prepare and grade his own examinationsif several hundred students are involved. However, someof the departments and professional schools of the University have been interested in developing more ade¬quate examining procedures. While this work has neverhad the time and effort which has been expended on theCollege examinations, there are some indications thatmany departments and professional schools recognizethe need for carefully constructed comprehensive examinations. Perhaps the biggest obstacle to the improve¬ment of these examinations is the difficulty in findingpersons who have the necessary subject-matter compe¬tence as well as interest in the learning-examiningprocess.Consultants planMembers of the Examiner’s office have been involvedas consultants in planning the testing and other evalua¬tion of the effectiveness of new forms of instruction.During the last few years this has been related to theeffectiveness of instruction by TV. The results of thisresearch and the development of Video tape (sound andpicture) suggest that the lecture method of instructionis likely to disappear in the near future. It is quiteprobable that the material usually presented in a lectureor demonstration will either be read by the student (asis largely true at present in the College) or will beviewed by the students individually or in groups throughthe use of Video tape. The likelihood is that seminars,tutorial, and apprentice types of instruction will becomethe major forms of learning experiences involving stu¬dents and faculty. We have been interested in thesedevelopments especially for their implications for exam¬ining.Careful examination neededIt is possible that this will lead to more careful examination work to insure that students have learned thefundamental material of the subject and have the basicintellectual abilities and skills required. However, it isalso likely to mean that the instructor’s observation ofthe students in small groups and the papers, researchfindings, and other products of the students, will becomethe basis for the significant evaluations of the students'academic developmentCHICAGO MAROON • March 6, 1959