Zachariasen new phy sci head►4> CresTvita. IcitSci|exco!entia UturWilliam H. Zachariasen, anauthority on the man-madeelements of the atomic age,becomes dean of the division ofPhysical sciences of the UC„onSunday, March 15, 1959.The appointment was an¬nounced by Lawrence A. Kimpton.Zachariasen, 53, has been chair¬man of the department of physicsat UC and will continue in thatpost until a successor is named.Warren C. Johnson, 57, vicepresident of UC in charge of spe¬cial scientific programs, was, inaddition, dean of the physical sci¬ences until Zachariascn’s appoint¬ment was made.During World War II, Zacharia¬sen served with the UC Metallur¬gical laboratory, part of the “Man¬hattan District” atomic effort.Zachariasen, a native of Nor¬way, has been a member of theUC faculty since 1930 and chair¬man of the department of Dhysicssince 1956. He also served aschairman from 1945 to 1949. Hehas been professor of physicssince 1945. As dean of the division of Phys¬ical sciences he will be the ad¬ministrative head of one of UC’sfour major divisions devoted tobasic studies at both the gradu¬ate and undergraduate level.The others are the division ofBiological sciences, whose dean isDr. Lowell T. Coggeshall; the di¬vision of the Humanities, whosedean is Napier Wilt; and the divi¬sion of Social sciences, whosedean is Chauncy D. Harris.Included in the physical sci¬ences division are eight depart¬ments and three institutes. Thedepartments are: astronomy andastrophysics, chemistry, ge¬ography, geology, mathematics,meteorology, physics and sta¬tistics.The institutes are: the Institutefor Computer research, the Insti¬tute for the Study of metals, andthe Enrico Fermi Institute forNuclear studies.The division includes 500 stu¬dents and 250 faculty members,including 19 associates in the USWeather bureau office on campus. Zachariasen was born at Lan-gesund, Norway, February 5,1906.In 1928, at the age of 22, he be¬came the youngest man to earna PhD degree from the Universityof Oslo.He also holds an honorary Doc¬tor of Sciences degree from thePolytechnic Institute of Brooklyn,which he received in 1955. He is afellow of the American Physicalsociety and a member of the Na¬tional Academy of sciences, thenation’s top scientific body.The citation accompanying Za-chariasen’s honorary degree stat¬ed he had “earned the acclaim ofyour colleagues for your enor¬mous contributions to the under¬standing of the chemistry andstructure of transuranium ele¬ments, which greatly advancedthe controlled use of nuclearenergy.”He has been invited to attendthe International Crystallographicconference in Leningrad, Russia,May 21-27, 1959.As a senior physicist with theMetallurgical Laboratory, Zacha¬riasen identified the chemical per¬sonalities of compounds of suchnew radioactive substances as plu¬tonium, which were produced in the heart of the world’s firstnuclear reactor at the Universityof Chicago.In his work on thethe substances, Zachhriasenceeded in analyzing less than ahundred-thousandth of a gram ofthe new compounds—all that wasavailable initially.His analyses shed light onchemical properties of the newcompounds. With this knowledge,other scientists were able to iso¬late plutonium from uranium inthe nuclear reactor. The pluto¬nium was used for atomic bombs.Zachariasen used a techniquewhich he has since applied tohundreds of compounds of thetransurani um elements. It iscalled X-ray diffraction. In thistechnique a microscopic beam ofX-rays is aimed on a pinhead¬sized sample of the substance.Measurements are then madeof the angles at which the broken-up beam bounces off and thestrength of the "splinter” beams.Working backwards, with penciland paper, then deduces thegeometric arrangements of atomsnecessary to produce the observedresults.This geometric arrangement is William H. Zachariasenknown as the crystal structure ofthe substance. Knowing this pro¬vides many clues as to how thesubstance would chemically react.For his current studies, Zachari-sen frequently uses the facilitiesof the Argonne National labora¬tory and the Los Alamos Scien¬tific laboratory, both US AtomicEnergy commission establish¬ments.ChicagoVol. 67, No. 25 University of Chicago, March 13, 1959 31Woodrow Wilson grantsare awarded to 14 UC'ersFourteen fourth year stu¬dents and graduates from UCwere among the WoodrowWilson fellows selected for theacademic year 1959-1960.Those selected, with their fieldof study and choice of university,are: Anthony C. Amberg, Kanka¬kee, HI. (English literature, Yale) ;Barry W. Brown, Riverside, Ill.(mathematics, Harvard); DonaldBurnett, Dayton, Ohio (chemistry,University of California at Ber¬keley) ; Marshall M. Cohen, Chi¬cago, Ill. (mathematics, Univer¬sity of Michigan); Karl Gottes-man, White Plains, N. Y. (Germanlanguage and literature, Colum¬bia University); Eugene A. Her¬man, Silver Springs, Md. (mathe¬matics, University of Michigan);Eve L. Leoff, Methuen, Mass.(English literature, Radcliffe); Robert E. Lucas, Seattle, Wash,(ancient history, Harvard); Let-tie McSpadden, Geneva, Ohio (po¬litical science, University of Cali¬fornia at Berkeley); Willard Mil¬ler Jr., Dundee, Ill. (mathematicalphysics, University of Californiaat Berkeley); John W. MorganJr., Milledgeville, Ga. (history ofphilosophy), Princeton); SandraPlatz, Chicago, Ill. (philosophy,Yale; Judith C. Victor, Los An¬geles, Calif, (mathematics, unde¬cided); Susan M. Walsh, Chicago,Ill. (French literature, Yale).The Woodrow Wilson Nationalfellowship foundation named 1,200American and Canadian studentsas Wilson fellows. The fellowswere chosen from 7,000 candi¬dates, all nominated and allscreened by committees of facultymembers. These candidates came from over 700 undergraduate col¬leges.There are 875 men and 325women in this year’s group ofwinnei’s. The humanities fieldshave claimed 38% of this group,the social sciences 34%, and thenatural sciences and mathematics28%.The Wilson Fellowship pro¬gram, backed by a $25 milliongrant from the Ford foundation,recruits and supports promisingscholars for their first year ofgraduate study.Next year the elected fellowsbegin graduate work at 80 differ¬ent universities. Each fellow re¬ceives a living allowance of $1,500plus the full cost of tuition andfees. Married students receive ad¬ditional stipends.'59 Faculty Revels tonightUC'ers seem to dig jaxx the most (next to folk music).* campus jaxx club's sessions in the Reynolds club go onad infinitum" on Friday afternoons despite the grumblingfhe chess playing set. For the Maroon's photo essay on thecampus jaxx-men see pages eight and nine. The 1959 Quadrangle clubrevels, an annual musical showproduced and performed bythe members of the well knownHyde Park social club, will takeplace on Friday and Saturdaynights, March 13 and 14 at 8:30pm at Mandel hall.This year’s show, “We’reUnique,” is a satirical revue whichruefully views the University-Hyde Park community as it seesitself—a distinctive neighborhoodundergoing great changes. All thewriters, actors, and productionstaff are active participants in thesocial and intellectual life of HydePark and Chicago as a whole, andare well known for their contri¬butions in many fields of intellec¬tual and social service.Among the sketches are the fol¬lowing of special interest:“I’d Rather be Wright,”—a skiton a famous architect“Crescat Scientia” — an aca¬demic number dealing with aPhD oral examination.“Co-opted” — a scene at the local Co-op supermarket whereanything can happen.The sketches for the show havebeen written by: Edward Rosen¬heim, asosciate professor of hu¬manities, formerly director ofEducational broadcasting and wellknown to Chicago viewers for hiswork on WTTW; Robert E.Streeter, professor of Englishand dean of the College; LeonCarnovsky, professor in the Grad¬uate Libi'ary school; Arthur Fried¬man, professor of English, recent¬ly returned from a year in Eng¬land; Carol (Mrs. Henry) Sams,member of the staff of theNational Parent - Teacher Maga¬zine; Alec Sutherland, director ofEducational Broadcasting andnewly appointed director of thecenter for continuing education;Michael Braude, local businessman; Dr. Thomas B. Coolidge,professor in the department ofBiochemistry; Robert Ashenhurst,assistant professor in the schoolof Business.The show is produced by Ann(Mrs. Arthur) Friedman, well known for her work with theChildren’s Theater of Evanston.The director is Nancy (Mrs.James) Lorie, who has taughtdrama at Francis Parker School.She is a sister of Robert Ashen¬hurst.Full details of the cast will bemade available later. Tickets,price $3, can be purchased fromthe Quadrangle club, 1155 E. 57thstreet (telephone: HY 3-8601).Adieu!With this issue the Maroon ends publication ff«the winter quarter. Deadlines for the first issue cthe spring quarter are Tuesday, March 31 for calendaand. Wednesday afternoorApril 1 for editorial matteiBearing the double F ruling in mind the Maroon stafbids you a fond adieu untiApril 3.Chapel will present Bach concert TQDM -»»Wd tjsauj /wougsjoH ujad- tpfj/vtgThe St Matthew Passion, an oratorio by Bach, will be pre¬sented by the UC Choir, conducted by Richard E. Vikstrom,director of chapel music, at 3 pm Sunday in Rockefeller chapeLTickets, available at the chapel, are priced at $2.50 for the generalpublic and $2 for faculty and students.Members of the Chicago symphony orchestra will join the 45*member choir in a program that will follow the composer's directionfor the original Good Friday performance in Leipzig, Germany, 1729.Soloists are Charlotte Vikstrom, Martha Larrimore, Patricia Sage,Roger Pillet, Jackson Sheats, Denis Cowan, Kay Graves, AndrewFoldi, and Millicent Frischle. The choir will be accompanied on theorgan by Heinrich Fleischer, chapel organist.The St. Matthew Passion, story of Christ’s betrayal and crucifixion,is based on chapters 26 and 27 of the Gospel according to St. Matthew.Twelve of the 24 scenes are given in chorale form, while the remain¬ing twelve are marked by arias. b 3 JL O [Al3 Oj V N hrd V 1 s\ ■1 N n AU 3 s N V1 3 N 3 1s 1 1 M SH3MSNV 10DMRichard E. Vikstrom, director of chapel music, conductsthe UC Choir which will present Bach's "St. MatthewPassion" at 3:00 p.m. Sunday, March 15, in Rockefellerchapel. Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra alsowill participate. '59 Beaux Arts ball plansare announced by FOTADr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRIST1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352 The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 The Beaux Arts ball, crea¬tive writing workshop, and anall campus skit presentationare already in their formativestages in preparation for the fifthannual Festival of the Arts.The theme of this year’s BeauxArts ball is poetry. Costumes neednot follow the same motif in or¬der to be appropriate. Prizes willbe awarded to exceptional groupsand individuals, the categories ofHave a MRU) of miTravel with IITAUnbelievable low CostEurope60 Doy* from $645Orient*43-65 Pn« «*•*■ $998 24-HourKodochrome colorfilmprocessingModel Camera Shop1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 Bicycles, Ports, Accessoriesrerww'o v erw tTTrtTTTi►>►| special student offer► ACE CYCLE SHOP1621 c. 55th st.kAAAAAAAAAAAAiMany tourt includeto Hag* credit.'AIm low-cost trips to Mexico5169 up. South America 5699 up,Hawaii Study Tour 5549 up andAround tha World 51791 up.Ask Your Trovol Agent332 So. Mukigon Am., MC. Ckkofo 4, HA 7 MSI Universal Army StoreHeadquarters for spart and work wearHooded parka jackets — hooded sweatshirts — Ivy league corduroytrousers — wash & wear Ivy league trousers — luggage & trunks1144 East 55th st. DO 3-9572_______________ 10% reduction with this coupcnKQDL KROSSWORD No. 20ACROSS1. Mount for astarry night8. Important partsof burlesque13. Spent toomuch time atthe feed bag14. Reversible15. Mildrefreshing16. Goose in a 'mixed-up snare17. Short for Ikeor Elvis18. Nothing, madeout of yarn20. Kind of versity21. Half ofWittenberg witha lotta sex22. One responseto “What do .you say?’*23. Fresco’sfirst name24. Measure ofnewspaper space26. Poll cat27. Best partof Barry29. Hardly thosefellers inWee terns80. Creates ahot neck32. It’s run outof on moonlightdrives85. Theatricalcowshed86. Cheezit,the cops!40. Kind of ego42. Understandingbetween nations44. Once youa Kool,you’ll always45. Unparchthe lips46. Manhandled67. They rhymewith fetchers DOWN1. Companion ctcircumstance2. Kind of age3. Thin-soundingsound4. Scraps at theend of sports6. Jongg’sfirst name6. This musicjust hasn’tgot tone7. Sit down; 4light upa Kool8. Don’t go!9. Lad fromKentucky10. Another wayto switchfrom “hots"11. Rock ’n’ roller12. Are thesebass sergeants?19. Slightlyreluctant21. They even madea rope out of it22. Switch fromhots toFilter Kool25. Kind ofY tower28. The 4929. This one'simpossible31. Frenchymoo juice32. When thisis last,you’re finished33. Gal fromAlabama34. Put away35. Made babies37. Pot fattener38. Road inViterbo39. of iniquity41. It sounds asIf she sawa mouse43. Half n twitch 1 2 3 4 5 6 H13 J1517 ! ■ ’*ARE VOU KQDLENOUGH TOKRACK*THI£?*32 33 34 Hff540 41 !4446 J• As cool and clean as a breath, of fresh air..• Finest leaf tobacco...mild refreshing menthol.and the ■worlds moot thoroughly tested filter 10 With every puff your mouth feels clean.your throat refreshed 1Omericos Most- IMeshing Cjgatefe... ALSO REGULAR SIZE KOOL WITHOUT FILTER0 1958. Brawn A WllliAoiK* Tobacca Ur*AGO MAROON • March 13, 1959 which will be announced at some will be accepted after April forfuture date, the discussion.The ball will be held at theQuadrangle club and will featurethe Marvin Jacobs band. Ticketsfor the ball will be sold at $3.50in places to be designated shortly.The all-student creative work¬shop will be held on Friday, April25, at 2 pm in Ida Noyes hall. Thewritings of several students willbe considered at this time and thewriters will be on hand to defendtheir works. Those writings chos¬en by the Phoenix staff will beprinted in a special FOTA issueof Phoenix magazine.The works should be in the fieldof fiction, drama, or poetry andshould be submitted to Earl Fen-delman at 25 Kelly hall no laterthan April 1. in order to be eligibleto appear in Phoenix. Writings An innovation to this year’s fes¬tival is the all campus skit presentation which will be held on Tues¬day, April 21, at 7:30 pm on thevarsity tennis courts outside ofEckhart hall. All campus livingorganizations are eligible to enterone skit apiece. A prize will boawarded for the best stunt in theopinion of the judges.All entries are due by April 1.This does not necessarily meanthat the skits must be in theirfinal stages by that date. Anygroup that is planning to presenta skit should merely submit itsentry before that time. Entriesshould be submitted to the festivaloffice at Ida Noyes. All skits mustbe in shape by April 19. A partyis scheduled to follow afterwards.DRESSES!DRESSES!!DRESSES!!!Design, Fabric, ond SizeI on name U!We hare it! aCucille J1507 east 53r<l st.mi 3-9898?TV»VTTT¥TTVTVt>V»TfTVT»T?VTVVTVWVVVV?»t9tTVITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli «. beef,mostaccioli sausage Cr meatballFree Delivery Over $2.09MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.t>eer lusts* • 1plus• BEATNIK PARTIES• POKER PARTIES• BEACH PARTIES• WEINER ROASTplusFREE GOLF Iplusall exciting sports! SKOAL STUDtNT VACATION RATtSIPar Person • Double Oct-20 ©f 200 roomsMor. 16 thru Apr. I •In the immediate vicinity ofGUIFSTREAM RACE TRACK,I JAI-ALAI, DOG TRACKoI Complete, ’round the clock* social programDANCING • ENTERTAINMENT 6> ■ • O RT ROTH. f■ON THE OCEAN • MOUYWOOD-ky-»H»*« |FLORIDASet Youc Trovol Agent or Wrilt D/Vectscientists coming Expect flu cases to rise;vaccine available at costFour Russian medical scientists, one a woman, were tlfeguests Thursday, of two Chicago biologists who plan an ex¬change visit to Russia in May.The hosts are Dwight J. Ingle, professor of physiology m theUniversity’s Ben May laboratory for cancer research; and Dr. Rach-miel Levine, chairman of the department of medicine at MichaelReese hospital and professiorial lecturer in physiology at the Uni¬versity.The four Russians spent Thursday morning visiting'Universitylaboratories, had lunch at the Quadrangle club, and spent the after¬noon at Michael Reese hospital medical center laboratories.At 5:30 pm Thursday they joined hospital staff members at asocktail party and buffet supper in Mandel lounge of Kaplan Pavilion.The Russians, all of whom are endocrinologists, are;Prof. Vassily G. Baranov, head of the laboratory of human growth,physiology, and pathology, Pavlov institute of physiology, Leningrad;Dr. Eugenia A. Kolli, chief of the division of biochemistry, All-Unioninstitute of experimental endocrinology, Moscow;Prof. Nicolai A. Yudaev, head of the laboratory of neural and hor¬monal regulation of biochemical processes, institute of biologicaland medical chemistry, Academy of Medical sciences, Moscow;Dr. Alexander K. Gorchakov, director of Kiev stomatological insti¬tute and professor of surgery, Kiev Medical institute, Kiev. “We are now entering what appears to be one of the more severe ‘flu’ encounters in recentyears,” commented student health director Dr. Henrietta Herbolshiemer.“For the past twenty years,” she continued, “the number of ‘flu’ cases has risen apprecia¬bly every spring and autumn, and this spring will be anything but an exception.”Student health has just procured large quantities of poli-valent influenza vaccine, which isnow available for all students at cost. Two shots, which will cost 50c each, must be takenwithin a two week period for ’full immunization. The vac¬cine may be obtained duringany of the regular student healthhours.The poli-valant vaccine is effec¬tive against five strains of influ¬enza: Asian flu, type “A,” type“A ■ prime” type “B” and thePuerto Rican form of the virus.The next epidemic, predicted onthe basis of multitudes of cyclicaldata, b expected to result fromthe type “B” virus. “These various viruses are dis¬tinguishable only on the basis ofextensive laboratory analysis;they all produce the same dis¬ea s e, ” Dr. Herbolshiemer ex¬plained. “However, immunizationagainst one strain has only slighteffects upon the other strains;this vaccine offers effective pre-ventitive action against all com¬mon forms of influenza.”An influenza vaccine is a com¬paratively recent development, de-New comp registration method toldThe dean of students in theCollege, the examiner, and theregistrar have announced anew plan for registration forcomprehensive examinations. Thenew plan of registration makes itunnecessary for most students toregister in person for the exam¬inations. The change will benefitthose students who not beingaware that they were required toregister personally for compre-hensives found themselves ineli¬gible to take them at the time ofadmission.Automatic registration1. Students officially enrolledfi e„ registered) during the 1959spring quarter in the final quar¬ter of a general studies course(e.g., humanities 3C, social sci¬ences 2C, German 1C, etc.) of¬fered to prepare them for the com¬prehensive examination in thatsubject will be automaticallyregistered for that examinationby virtue of their registration inthe course. During the springquarter, admission tickets to theexaminations will be mailed toeach student who is automaticallyregistered.2 A student who has completeda course is not required to takethe comprehensive examinationimmediately upon completion ofthat course. If a student decidesto postpone taking an examina¬tion and is officially enrolled in the course designed to preparehim for that examination in the1959 spring quarter, he must can¬cel the automatic registration bynotifying the registrar by May 20.Failure to cancel his registrationand non-appearance at the exam¬ination will result in an entry of“absent” on the student’s officialrecord. This, while it will in noway affect the grade earned inthe future on the examination,will result in the assessment of afirst repetition fee ($10.00) be¬fore a future examination can betaken. Furthermore, the studentshould realize that the entry “ab¬sent” on the permanent recordmay be interpreted adverselywhen the record is consulted.The above applies also to stu¬dents who will be taking collegecourses in the 1959 summer quar¬ter. The date for cancellation ofautomatic registration in the sum¬mer quarter is August 19.Personal registrationand feesHI-FI and STERO SERVICECourtesy, Economy, and Repair Service by the finestelectronic specialists is available to you at the CHELTENTELEVISION CORP. We are conveniently located at2915 East 79th St.Our spcciml err rives include:O Frequency response and undistored output test,a Frequency response end undistorted output test.• Perfect repair for amplifiers, pre-amps., and AM-FM tuners.• Excellent service foe tape recorders, auto, record changers,and radios.For guaranteed satisfaction, CALL ES 5-3666Chelten Television Corp. 2915 East 79th St.☆SHIRTS WRIGHTLAUNDRY15 centswith Hydro bundle☆ COMPLETELAUNDRY AND DRYCLEANING SERVICE1315 EAST 57TH STREETMl 3-2073 inatlon fee of $80.00 per courseper quarter ($240.00) before tak¬ing the examination. Students li¬able for any examination feesshould stop at the office of theregistrar (examinations desk) be¬fore May 1 (summer quarter—July 31) to register in person andreceive their fee statements. Pay¬ment in full must be made to thebursar before May 15 (summerquarter August 14). A studentwho has not paid the examinationfee, when applicable, before tak¬ing an examination, will be as¬sessed a late payment fee of $5pdf course per quarter; no entryof the examination grade will bemade, nor will transcripts be is¬sued or will further registrationin the university be permitted un¬til full payment is made.3. A student may, if he wishes,repeat an examination in order toraise his grade. The higher grade is counted on the student’s rec¬ord. However, a student who hasreceived the bachelor’s degreemay not repeat a college com¬prehensive examination in orderto raise the grade. If a studentdecides to repeat an examinationin the 1959 spring (or summer)quarter, he must also register inperson for it, in the registrar’soffice by May 1 (or July 31). Acharge of $10 will be made for thefirst repetition, and $20 for eachsubsequent repetition. These feesmust be paid by May 15 (or Au¬gust 14).4. A student who has registeredfor and completed course workleading to an examination priorto the 1959 spring (or summer)quarter must also register in per¬son for the comprehensive exam¬inations with the examinationsclerk in the registrar’s office nolater than May 1 (or July 31).1. There is no fee for the firstadministration of a comprehen¬sive examination if a student hasofficially registered and paid forthe quarter-courses offered to pre¬pare him for that examination.2. If a student has not registered and paid for any or all ofthe preparatory quarter-courses,however, he is assessed an exam- ^ hail, hail #tf-thegahcjsalHhetelJ'on American ExpressSfudentTours of EuropeWherever, whenever, however you travel, your bestassurance of the finest service is American Express!On American Express Student Tours of Europe you’llbe escorted on exciting itineraries covering such fascin¬ating countries as England . . . Belgium . . . Germany... Austria ... Switzerland ... Italy ... The Rivieras. . . and France. And you’ll have ample free time andlots of individual leisure to really live life abroad!? 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Please send me complete informationabout 1959 Student Tours of Europe!Name.AddressCity Zone State.PROTECT YOUR TRAVEL FUNDS WITH AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CMEQUES-SPENDABLE EVERYWHEREAPPIV NOW FOR V0UR COMPREHENSIVE AMERICAN EXPRESS WORLD-WIDE CREDIT CARP veloped in the mid-forties on thebasis of many experiments madeupon military personnel and,among others, many studentshere at the University. The anti¬bodies controlling the “B” strainwhich is particularly botheringstudent health now, was devel¬oped a few miles to the north, atthe Great Lakes influenza station.Student health officials regrethaving to charge for the shots,however small the cost; however,the department’s budget coversno such expenses. The best it cando is to buy in bulk and sell atcost, which is what it’s doing.UNIVERSITYHOTEL5519 S. BLACKSTONEDORCHESTER 3-4100Cleon rooms, oil with privote both,shower and telephone. Daily maidservice, 24 hour switchboard. Alltransportation, 2 blocks to I.C.Transient and permanent. Reason¬able rates.NEWESTWASH and WEAR SLACKSby DICKIESonly $^J95Thaw art Bedford cordsShrunk for permanent fitThey're WASH and WEARfor minimum carolwith the exclusive Dickiesfeature—Easy-Alter Outlets.Lets out waist 1W withoutsawing.Make a Special Trip.»Dickies ore Worth tftOur Prices Can’t Be Beat . . .It’s Smart To Buy For LessD&GCLOTHES SHOP744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728'In the Neighborhoodfor 40 Years”Hours: 9 a.m.-8 p.m., Mon.-Fri.9 a.m.-9 p.m., SaturdayMarch 13, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3 53•• I11ithe Chicago maroonfounded — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and Intermittently during the summer quarter,by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E 59th Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800•xtentions, 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 material9 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.the maroon reviewsQuadrangle club revelsThe cast and crew of Facul¬ty Revels have been usingMandel hall for rehearsalsevery night this week in prepa¬ration for this evening, as manymore “student” activity wantingto use the hall now knows.We stopped in to watch the dressrehearsal Wednesday evening;frankly, were impressed by ourfaculty in a completely new senseof the word. They have produceda fine, intelligent, witty and lit¬erate satirical review. It’s authors,actors, and directors deserve bothcommendation and full housesfor both tonight’s and tomorrow’sperformances.There is an aphorism in thetheatre to the effect that a “good”dress rehearsal is bad luck; thisof course is more a rationaliza¬tion than a rational station—yetthe Revels seem to come out ontop either way. Things wererather frantic in front of thestage and in back of the stage, butwhat was happening on the stagewas simply funny.The show begins with a quasi-Hyde-Park-panorama and a socialinvestigator, superbly played byLee Myer, wife of Leonard Meyer,who sings:I’m a scientific prober, I’m in¬cisive, brisk and sober,And I’m off upon a missionthat will guarantee my fame.They’ve exhausted social topicsfrom Lake Forest to thetropics,With a single hot exception,which is where I stake myclaim.For my work lies in the city,and statistical and witty,I’ll develop the developers —that’s where I’ll make mymark.Though admiring or deploring,I shall never cease exploring,For the secret, special ETHOSthat is hiding in Hyde Park.Her search is somewhat justi¬fied by the chorus which con¬cludes the opening scene:WE’RE UNIQUE, WE’REUNIQUEUniformly different, uniformlybleakNever ever listen, but we dearlylove to speak . . .The show goes on to examineSome of the phenomena which justify this extravagently individ¬ualistic claim. We see a famousarchitect, designer of a mile-highbuilding who announces defi¬nitely: I’d rather be Wright thanresident.We see the telephone operatorat the Quadrangle club who plain¬tively asks the question: Howmany jobs are there which need agirl who can explain the locationof the men’s room in every lan¬guage from Lithuanian to ancientHitite. Lee Wilcox, who handlesthis monolog, goes through somenightmareishly complicated busi¬ness with professional aplomb; ifanyone steals the show it is she.Along the lines of the firmquadrangle foundation alreadylaid we also are introduced to agroup of professors bemoaning,yet condoning Quadrangle lunch¬es and we meet Ruth Nether ton,wife of the dean of students, whogives a new meaning to the Pan-American games.We receive an art lecture fromAlec Sutherland on a Renoir nude,more a lush than luscious, theoriginal title of which was “TheOut Patient.”We witness the oral examina¬tion of a hapless PhD candidatewhose thesis was so long that noone seems to have read it. Thesketch includes a short disgres-sion into the possibility of a down-or-out system in the faculty—onewhere young PhD possessors arehired as full professors and retireat age sixty-five as instructorsemeritus. Finally, we see a memorableproduction number investigatingthe shopping habits of patrons ofthe Co-op, the store, as Mrs. Neth-erton sings it, that has a soul.Here we find two young loverswho sing:We fell in love in the householdsuppliesLux made our dream eome true;a young woman who comes in tobuy a dozen eggs and who encoun¬ters petitions, salesmen, celerypraulines, ammoniated oatmeal,instant garbage, a children’s per¬formance of Oedipus Rex entitled“I Don’t Remember Mama,” camp¬ers, hamsters, and madness; andfinally an irate gourmet who com¬plains:Out of marinated whale?What, no whale? no sale!Call this a super market?Tickets are still available forboth performances; tonight andtomorrow. They can be purchasedat the Quadrangle club in theafternoons and will go on saleat the door about 5 pm. Ticketsare $3 apiece, but the show isconsiderably better and a numberof productions running in the loopnow.Deserving special commenda¬tion are the authors, includingArthur Friedman, Robert E.Streeter, Carol Sams, Leon Car-novsky, Alec Sutherland and Rob¬ert Ashenhurst; the producer anddirector, Ann Friedman and Nan¬cy Lorie; the choreographer JoanGrant and the composer ShirleyGenther.photos by NewmanHALF-PRICE SALE OF BEACON BOOKSLIMITED TIME ONLY — CLOTH BOUND EDITIONS!Here are a few of the many titles offered:Hern: THE SACRED SHRINE Was $7.50, now $1.98Kaufmann: THOMAS MANN Was $6.00, now $1.98Lesser: FICTION AND THE UNCONSCIOUS. .Was $5.00, now $1.98Burckhardt: JUDMENTS ON HISTORYAND HISTORIANS Was $6.00, now $1.98UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue4 • CHICAGO MAROON March I3f 1959 On Campus(T (By the Author of "Ratty Round the•‘Barefoot Boy with Ch withRatty Round the Flag, Boyd ''and,Barefoot Boy with Cheek.”)THE TRUE AND TYPICAL CASEOF CHATSWORTH OSCEOLAYou all know, of course, that every engineering senior is receiv¬ing fabulous offers from dozens of corporations, but do youknow just how fabulous these offers are? Do you have any ideahow widely the corporations are competing? Let me cite foryou the true and typical case of Chatsworth Osceola, a trueand typical senior.Chatsworth, walking across the M.I.T. campus one day lastweek, was hailed by a man sitting in a yellow convertiblestudded with precious gem stones. “Hello,” said the man, “I amNorwalk T. Sigafoos of the Sigafoos Bearing and Bushing Com¬pany. Do you like this car?”“Yeah, hey,” said Chatsworth.“It’s yours,” said Sigafoos.“Thanks, hey,” said Chatsworth.“Do you like Philip Morris?” said Sigafoos“Of corns,” said Chatsworth.“Here is a pack,” said Sigafoos. “And a new pack will bedelivered to you at twelve-minute intervale every day ae longas you shall live.”“Thanks, hey,” said Chatsworth.“Does your wife like Philip Morris?” said Sigafoos.“She would,” said Chatsworth, “but I’m not married.”“Do you want to be?” said Sigafoos.“What American boy doesn’t?” said Chatsworth.Sigafoos pressed a button on the dashboard of his convertibleand the trunk opened up and out came a nubile maiden withgolden hair, flawless features, a perfect disposition, and theappendix already removed. “This is Laurel Geduldig,” 6aidSigafoos. “Would you like to marry her?”“Is her appendix out?” said Chatsworth.“Yes,” said Sigafoos.“Okay, hey,” said Chatsworth.“Congratulations,” said Sigafoos. ”And for the happy bride,a pack of Philip Morris every twelve minutes for the rest ofher life.”.“Thanks, hey,” said Laurel.“Now then,” said Sigafoos to Chatsworth, “let’s get downto business. My company will start you at $45,000 a year. Youwill retire at full salary upon reaching the age of 26. When youstart work, we will give you a three-story house made of bullion,complete with a French Provincial swimming pool. We willprovide sitter service for all your children until they are safelythrough puberty. We will keep your teeth in good repair, andalso the teeth of your wife and children unto the third genera¬tion. We will send your dentist a pack of Philip Morris everytwelve minutes as long as he shall live ... Now, son, I want youto think carefully about this offer. Meanwhile, here is tenthousand dollars in small, unmarked bills, which places youunder no obligation whatsoever.”“It certainly seems like a fair offer,” said Chatsworth. “Butthere is something you should know. I am not an engineer. Infact, I don’t go to M.I.T. at all. I am a poetry major at Harvard.I just came over here on a bird walk.”“Oh,” said Sigafoos.“I guess I don’t get to keep the money and the convertibleand Laurel now, do I?” said Chatsworth.“Of course you do,” said Sigafoos. “And if you’d like the job,my offer still stands.” © xsse, M»*8bJos»»* * *Speaking of engineers, the Philip Morris company makes afilter cigarette that’s engineered to please the most discern-ing of filter smokers—Marlboro, the cigarette with better•‘makin’s.” More flavor plus more filter equals more cigarette t1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & GalleryFeaturing — Complete Wine List andHors d'oeuvre TableCheese . . Small12“. . .1.25 Combination .... Smell12"....2.00Sausage . . . . .1.50 Mushroom ,...1.75Anchovy . ...1.50 Shrimp ....2.00Pepper & Onion . . ...1.35 Bacon Cr Onion. .. .. .1.75Free Delivery oh Alt Plzxm to UC Student*ITT HIIHUM—BUI IIWUIII—jillll—iHollingsworth—ivy leaguer at ChicagoI dashed up the stairs ofCbbb hall amid the chaos ofclass changes, and accostedf. Rogers Hollingsworth just asto stepped out of room 308. Heuras surrounded by a group ofStudents and was indistinguish¬able from them, for, you see thissocial sciences I instructor looksmore like a college student thando most college students.I MUMBLED something abouthn interview and he led me to hisoffice for what proved to be abrief, somewhat disorganized, butthoroughly enjoyable conversa¬tion.J, Rogers Hollingsworth epit¬omizes the intellectual approachto education and the collegiateapproach to personal appearance.Nattily dressed in ivy league fash¬ion. this youthful instructor cap¬tivates his audience by his goodlooks and 4iis educated southernaccent. The Impression is com¬plete when he directs his studentstn an intellectual discussion ofAmerican history.The twenty - six - year - old Hol¬lingsworth, a native of Alabama,Is in his second year of teachingat the University. He did under¬graduate work in the East andthe South, and came to the Uni¬versity of Chicago for his PhD.He is married, (his wife did grad¬uate work in German at the Uni¬ though firm in his desire to studyhistory, has not always been in¬terested in the same area of hisfield. "I turned from the study ofdiplomatic history to the study ofintellectual history. History is,versity of Wisconsin), and has nochildren.Hollingsworth has always beenInterested in history, even to thepoint of placing it as his favoriteavocation. “I like tennis and swim¬ming, but my basic hobby is thestudy of history.” Hollingsworth,EUROPEDublin 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. Get Them Hot atNICKYSPIZZERIA1235 E. 55thDID YOU KNOWthat over two-thirds of Sun Life’spolicy payments are now being madeto living policyholders and annui¬tants? More than ever, life insuranceis for the living.Ac Hie Sun Life representative in yourcommunity, may I be of service?RALPH J. WOOD JR. '48I N. LaSalle St. Chicago 2, IH.FR 2-2390 RE 1-0855RepresentativeSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADACOIN METEREDLAUNDROMATDO IT YOURSELF — SAVE MONEYWASH DRY20 108-LB. LOAD 10 MinutesSAVE 5 0%ON YOUR LAUNDRYUse as many machines as you need — do your studyingas you do your laundry — all your laundry washed anddried in less than an hour.OPEN 7 DAYS &7 NIGHTSIncluding Sundays & HolidaysLAUNDROMAT1455 East 53rd Street1463 East 51st Street1232 East 47th Street writing in collaboration with BillWiley. The book, an introductionto basic history readings at thecollege level, is to be publishedby Crowell publishers.In conjunction with his interestin diplomatic history and worlddiplomatic history, Hollingsworthis now doing a study of the Demo¬cratic party of the late nineteenthand early twentieth century. “Poli¬tical parties and politicians re¬flect the thinking of the peopleof a society. Political parties areespecially good for institutionsfor the study of American society;the parties tend to be divided asthe people.”HE FEELS that “one of theafter all, the study of human be¬ings, why and how they do whatthey do. Intellectual history, then,delves into the thinking and mo¬tivations of individuals, and thevalues and sentiments of groupsat specific periods of history.”Concerning philosophy, he re¬sponded “Naturally, I am inter¬ested in philosophy: actually theline between philosophy and his¬tory is very thin.”HOLLINGSWORTH is now peculiar ch.'y'acteristics of Ameri¬can history is the willingness ofAmericans to compromise. Thisability to compromise is. however,facilitated by the fact that theAmerican people do not find itnecessary to compromise on suchcrucial problems as church andstate or regime, as has frequentlybeen the case for Europeans. Theyare able, with few exceptions, tokeep the basic principles theycherish out of politics.Even though Social Science I isnot a formal history course, Mr.Hollingsworth’s students statethat he frequently manifests his conception of history through hismethods of teaching. His regularstudents contend that this methodis stimulating and informative.This opinion is buttressed by thepresence of many auditors in his8:30 and 10:30 classes.Hollingsworth enjoys teachingand students and feels there issomething of value in Americanhistory for all students. “Historyis the best means of identifyingoneself with one’s society. A his¬torian makes use of all the dis¬ciplines; he is in effect, a jackof all trades. History is interest¬ing and utilitarian; a study ofthe past is a help in solving prob¬lems of the present and future.”TO BE so enthusiastic aboutteaching and students I felt thatMr. Hollingsworth must be satis¬fied with his environment. I askedhim.“I like teaching here very much.Besides boasting an outstandingfaculty, the University, more thanany other school, is a microcosmof American society, and after all,one of the purposes of an educa¬tion is to enable a student to studyhis society.”Our discussion ended and weboth lost ourselves in the hourlychange of classes. It was nolonger difficult to distinguish the instructor from his students.Dennis McAuliffo165 to receivedegrees Mar. 20The university will award165 degrees at its 281st Con¬vocation, Friday, March 20th.Lawrence A. Kimpton, chancel¬lor, will preside at ceremonies at3 pm, in Rockefeller chapel.Thorfin R. Hogness, professorin the department of Chemistryand director of the Chicago Mid¬way laboratory, will give the Con¬vocation address, “Science and itsgoal.”Int house tells offirst bridge clubInternational house associa¬tion announces the first ses¬sion of the International housebridge club, an affiliate of theAmerican contract bridge leagueon Saturday, March 14, 1:30 pm.These duplicate bridge tourna¬ments are open to faculty mem¬bers, university students, andI.H.A. members and will offer par¬ticipants an opportunity to obtainfractional and master points. Theclub will meet each second andfourth Saturday afternoons of themonth. Admission $1.rA Campus-to-Career Case Historylooking forward to the publica¬tion of a history textbook he isBill Gibb$ discusses procedure for « cutover to direct distance dialing with one of his men.He’s getting the advancement he looked for... and right in his own home stateWilliam C. Gibbs graduated from Vir¬ginia Polytechnic Institute in 1956 witha 6.S. degree in business administration.He joined The Chesapeake & PotomacTelephone Company of Virginia because,“I was familiar with the company andconfident that it offered the best possi¬bilities for advancement. And I wantedto stay in my home state.”Today, after two and one-half yearswith the telephone company, Bill super¬vises eight men. His group is responsiblefor maintaining outside telephone facili¬ties ranging from telephone poles andwires to mountaintop microwave relaytowers. These facilities are spread oversome 2500 square miles.“I’m really getting basic supervisoryexperience on this job,” Bill says. ‘‘My assignments during training and myearlier jobs gave me a solid feel of tele¬phone company operations. But I findthe greatest challenge and satisfactioncome from working through others.”Some of the interesting training assign¬ments Bill refers to involved arrangingfor TV and mobile radio pick-up for thepresidential inauguration, the ArmedForces day show at Quantico and otherevents of national interest.“So far I’ve gotten just what I waslooking bar in a telephone career,” Billsays. “The training and experience I’vereceived have been tops. And with thecompany constantly growing to meetservice demands, it looks to me like therewill be plenty of opportunity to keepmoving ahead in the business.”Bill Gibbs found the opportunity he was looking forwith a Bell Telephone Company ... in the state ofhis choice. You may, too. Talk with the Bell inter¬viewer when he visits your campus and read the BellTelephone booklet on file in your Placement Office. BELL.TELEPHONECOMPANIESMarch 13, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5 1ii?LjSi-ljImolEVIllIIMlT^W ffllXIt TOLD•WOT X SHOULD 6EMORt FORCEFUL kHTH(HRL&, fAOLEV/lUE ! HE TWHKS X SHOULDSTO W HMD ftSSEUTTHHrx^lSoit?GIRLS WITH SHEER „fORCE Of »WEVIE«T? I WTfc TO DESmoV AW5 SAriH IN HIS OlftDRD.EWT IT WOM<TWORK, CUIrISc" »X WHS EOEAEHll ONCEfWD H GCI WE VJOTHmGssuarwtN8MWr<X WHS WELCCIWtDWITH CfEN HWVISe»HM OLD GIRL¬FRIEND. WWTIUDWWtLfeOORME! I X COW-TZW) OVER TO ftSStRl WV \dersonrutv, rowrting cmmim, HNt> SflVOHL-WRt. HOT ONFOR' tTUNATELV X FRILfcD TO NOTICE. (THftT SHE WAS ONlV WAITING FO* 'A THROWN BOOMERANG TO REA)**!,7 WAS DOWN IN 1AUSTRALIA,FILMINGAn bdorkjinalRoot- grubbing DttWHEN SODDtNtV...mClassifiedsFor rentbooms for rent in fraternity house,reasonable rates, meals available, nearcampus. Call Mr. Edidln PL 2-9477.B very nice 4-rm. apts., unfurn. 1st <te3rd fl Sunny, cross-ventilated, yard,garden, garage. Ideal for Unlv. couple.May 1. MI 3-1952.Spacious rms. In elegant residence nearlake & IC. Available for students orbusiness girls. MU 4-7844.24 ROOMSCheerful, newly decorated, attractivelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator bldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man. Maid and linen service available.Reasonable monthly rate.VERSAILLES APARTMENTS8234 Dorchester FA 4-0200Rooms for rent. $25-$45 per month. Eve¬ning meals. Phi Kappa Psl frat, 5555Woodlawn, PL 2-9704.S-rro. furn. apt., 53rd & Klmbark. $82.50.CaQ Mrs. Hufford, FI 6-8300, 9:30-5:30.Attn ctive 3'<i room basement apt. Unf.Cornell near'53rd. *100. HY 3-8720, eve¬nings or weekends.RM. DLX. APT. Unfurn. Tile bath &t.. shower, stove, ref., nr. 54th & Dor-letter. Avail. Mar. 28. Sublease. $110.L 2 -1740. 5 rm. modern apt., 2nd floor, carpeted.$135. Avail. April l. 6757 Cornell, FA4-4983.For sale•48 Chevy, good motor, good gas & oilmileage, radio & heater. $75. See JoanKrueRer, Green. MI 3-0800.New Eng. bikes, discounts. MI 3-9048.WantedRide to New York and back. Leavingabout the 19th, returning about the30th. Shanker Shetty. Hitchcock Hall,ext. 260. 'Ride wanted to New York city over in¬terim. Leave Friday, March 20, or earlySaturday, March 21. Call Gary Moko-toff, PL 2-9718, eves.STUDENT WIVESwith experience in histological tech¬niques. Positions now available. ApplyUC Personnel Office.ServicesHome typing—thesis, dissertations, etcN. MacDougall, OA 4-3240.Typing, all kinds. T. McCrimmon, 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).Personal. . . with Gloria Farnsquarth, and Inearly died laughing when Georgeshowed up at the Beaux Arts Bill with¬out a costume.Sincerely,April Twenty-fifthShure ’n’ begorra, I’ll seePat’s day In Mandel Hall. ya Mike, StSean.WORKSHOP IN CREATIVE WRITINGPLaza 2-8377,Now you can be one of the lucky 10,000to own Vol. I, No. 1 of Big Table—con¬taining all the material from the sup¬pressed winter, 1958 Chicago Review.160 pages for one dollar. Available atthe University Bookstore, Woodworth’s,International House, Greendoor Book¬store, and at quality bookstoresthroughout Chicago and the nation.5625 University:Like, man, it was way out! Endsville!Thanks! D.S.THE TAREYTON RING MARKS THE REAL THING!NEW DUAL FILTER(®4, T. CoJHere’s Why Tareyton’s Dual Filterfilters as no single filter can:t. It combines an efficient purewhite outer filter...2. with a unique inner filter ofACTIVATED CHARCOAL . which_hasbeen definitely proved to make thesmoke of a cigarette milder andsmoother.Notice how many Dual Filter Tareytonsmokers you see around campus thesedays? Why so? Just try the cigaretteyourself. You’ll see “why so”! M ft mwuu MAM.MMN. eOWIHHT 0 IMS ml •Mft.SOlA eot'""*-BE REALLY REFRESHED ...HAVE A COKE!Bottled under authority of Tho Cdca-Cofo Company ByThe Coca-Cole Bottling Company of Chicago, leeDr. Livingstone ?What a happy man he would have been tfhis man Stanley could have brought alonga carton of Coke! That cold crisp taste,that lively lift would certainly hit the spotwith any tired explorer. In fact, after youfnext safari to class—wouldn’t Coca-Colataste good to you?UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor TAhSAM-YMCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCAMT01W.se AMDA MERIC AM DISH ISOpen DallyH A M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1311 Enet 63rd Sr. BU 8-9018Coming events on quadranglesFriday, 13 MarchInter-varsity Christian fellowshipmeeting, 12:30 pm. Ida NoyesEast lounge, non-denomination-al Bible study in Ephesians.Lutheran student group meetingand cost dinner, 6 pm, Chapelhouse, 5810 Woodlawn avenue.Lenten vespers, 7 pm, Thorn-dike-Hilton chapel, discussion,7:30 pm, “The Gospel of St.Mark; the Passion and Resur¬rection narrative,” the Rever-The Personnel office, 956East 58th street, is now ac¬cepting student registrationsfor summer employment inthe Chicago area. Studentsinterested in summer workmay apply at the Personneloffice, Monday through Fri¬day, between 9 and 4.end A. R. Kretzmann, St. Luke’sLutheran church.Lecture series: “Pharmacologyand physiology series,” Univer¬sity College, 64 East Lakestreet, 6 pm. “Metabolism ofradioisotopes with special ref¬erence to boneseeking radio¬isotopes.' William P. Norris,biological and medical researchdivision, Argonne National lab¬oratory.Sabbath service, H i 11 e 1 founda¬tion, 5715 Woodlawn avenue,7:45 pm.Quadrangle chib “Revels,” Man-del hall, 8:30 pm. Tickets maybe obtained at the Quadrangleclub.Record dance, 7 pm. Internationalhouse, room CDE. Admission 50cents.Soturday, 14 MarchEnglish class, 10 am, International house room B.Quadrangle club “Revels,” Man-del hall, 8:30 pm. Tickets maybe obtained at the Quadrangleclub.Radio program: “The SacredNote," WBBM, 10:15 pm. Aprogram of choral music by theUniversity choir, Richard Vik-strom, director; HeinrichFleischer, organist.■ vjy.Sunday, 15 MarchRoman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10and 11 am, DeSales house, 5735University avenue. Sponsoredby Calvert club.Choral eucharist (Episcopal), 8:30am, Bond chapel.Rockefeller chapel service, 11 am.Young Peoples Socialist leaguebusiness meeting, 3 pm, IdaNoyes hall.St. Matthew Passion, J. S. Bach,3 pm, Rockefeller memorialchapel. The University choirand members of the ChicagoSymphony orchestra; RichardVikstrom, director; HeinrichFJeischer, organist. Tickets;General admission, $2.50; stu¬dent-faculty, $2.Bridge club meeting, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes lounge. Duplicate bridgewill be played.Monday, 16 MarchFolk dance group, 4 pm, 5715Woodlawn avenue. Sponsored by Hillel foundation. Beginnersand advanced.Class In elementary Hebrew, 4pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue,sponsored by Hillel foundation.English class, 6:30 pm, Interna¬tiona] house room B.Movie, “Phantom horse,” (Japan),7 and 9 pm, International houseEast lounge. Admission 50 cents,Tuesday, 17 MarchInter-varsity Christian fellowshipmeeting, 12:30 pm, Ida NoyesEast lounge. Non-denomination-al Bible study in I Peter.Lecture series: “Art of the Scan¬dinavian film,” University Col¬lege, 7:30 pm. "Documentaryfilm in Norway and Denmark.”Films to be shown: Kon Tiki,Norway, 1953; The wedding ofPalo, Denmark, 1934.Lecture series: “New develop¬ments in group psychotherapy,”University College, 8 pm. “Atherapeutic community in amental hospital.” Dr. Arnold D.Tobin, Chicago State hospital.Blackfriars rehearsal, 7 pm, IdaNoyes theatre. All cast.Folk dancing, 8 pm, Internationalhouse assembly room. Admis¬sion 50 cents.Gates hall coffee hour, 10 to 12pm, Gates hall. Coffee, cookies,music, 15 cents.The Irish players, Mandel hall,8:30 pm. Presented by Univer¬sity theatre and University ColRudy'sAuthorizedU •# C Claw KieyiSeles OMEGA ServiceiMHvhiNsllydesigned, hmndmndejetcelry(Discount to stwkeltl1523 East 53 rd st.NOrmal 7-2666 TERRY’S PIZZAFree i/C Deliverysmall 1.00medium 1.45giant —chicken — shrimp1518 e. 63rd large 1.95x-large 2.953.95— sandwichesMl 3-464525c discount an all pizzas, Man, Tu, Wed, Thurs, only,with this couponeneSJJ Wear Contact XhrDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-83724PRANKLIN,electrician.Mr*: “Wildroo*Sruomi your heir bettet i* no cttra charset”§§■ JvitalitttowtB.^rrwo'w ru HIP, HIP, HURRAYfor theGREYHOUND® wayto save money!Got the good word aboutGreyhound ScenicruiserService®? It’s the latest,the greatest way to go...with air-conditioning, pic¬ture windows, air-suspen¬sion ride and completerestroom! You’ll have aball headin’ home on aGreyhound —it’s oftenfaster than other publictransportation, and alwaysless expensive! COMPARE THESE LOW,LOW FARES:St. Louis ...... . ..$ 6.55Detroit . .. 8.55Cincinnati ... 9.20New York ... 24.85*pl«* taxBAGGAGE PROBLEMS? You can take more with you on aGreyhound. Or, send your belongings by Greyhound PackageExpress. They arrive in hours and cost you less!ITS SUCH A COMFORTTO TAKE THE BUS...ANDLEAVE THE DRIVING TO US! GREYHOUND lege. “Playboy of the westernworld.”Wednesday, 18 MarchClass in elementary Yiddish, 3:30pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue.Sponsored by Hillel foundation.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rocke¬feller chapel.Organ recital, 5 pm, Rockefellerchapel. Heinrich Fleischer, Uni¬versity organist.Episcopal evensong, 5:06 pm,Bond chapel.English class, 6:30 pm, Interna¬tional house room B.Lecture: “ESP learning experi¬ments, series B,” 8 pm, IdaNoyes 11 b r a r y. Steven I.Abrams, sponsored by Para¬psychology society.Country dancers, 8 pm, Ida Noyes.Irish players, “Three one-acts ofSynge,” 8:30 pm, Mandel halLThursday, 19 MarchEpiscopal communion service,11:30 am. Bond chapel.Lecture series: “Selecting yourcommon stocks,” UniversityCollege, 7:30 pm. “Other se¬lected industries and summary,”William C. Norby, vice presi¬dent, Haris Trust and Savingsbank.Lecture series: “The art of theancient Near East,” last meet¬ing of series, guided tour of the Oriental Institute museum,8 pm.Irish players, “Playboy of thewestern world,” Mandel hall,8:30 pm.Friday, 20 MarchInter-varsity Christian fellowshipmeeting, 12:30 pm, Ida NoyesEast lounge. Non-denominatioa-al Bible study in Ephesians.Irish players, “Thre one-act playsof Synge,” 6:30 and 9:30 pm,Mandel hall.Record dance, 7 pm, Internationalhouse, room CDE. Admission 50cents.Lecture series: “Primitive art ofCentral and South America,"8:15 pm, the Art Institute. “Theart of ancient Mexico,” AlanSawyer, curator of primitiveart, the1 Art Institute.''I've just got to get toHie Festival of the Arts fromApril 17 to 26!"who an n ramA column of incidental intelligenceby JOCkHj brand ^“THIRTY DAYS HATHSEPTEMBER,” ETC.No need to recite further fromthis bit of doggerel which hasserved us all as a pony eversince grade school. For thisuniversal handy reference weare indebted to a man namedRichard Grafton who was niceenough to compose the rhymeway back in 1570. “LOVE IS BUND”Next to the Bible, Shake¬speare is the richest source ofcommon quotes. He's respon¬sible for this one, too. See his"Merchant of Venice," Act II,Scene 6:“But love is blind, and lov¬ers cannot see -The petty follies that them¬selves commit."“PUT IT IN YOUR PIPE"No, Sir Walter Raleigh didn'toriginate this smoker's chal¬lenge. It was R. H. Barham, in"The Lay of St. Odille":"For this you've my word,and I never yet broke it,So put that in your pipe,My Lord Otto, and smokeJoekeif T-Shirts66AN6The most respected, creative name in underwear is Jockeybrand. It stands to reason, then, that Jockey brand T-shirtsare unmatched for quality as well as styling. You can choosefrom standard T-shirt, "taper-tee" shirt, sleeveless l-shirt, andV-neck T-shirt models. Every man needs a drawer full ofT-shirts—and the label to look for is Jockey brand. Let itguide you to the world's finest underwear.March 13, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Like to listen ..The Jazz musicians' club', an outgrowth of the Jozz *opast few years in the west lounge of the Reynolds club. Hewho enjoy listening con sit around and dig. The session Icyjthings swing. Improvisation and a good ear are the cluemake out a chart, but since ~— .there are no music stands tenor; Clyde Flowers, boss*written music is usually a Tom Kronquist, drums; Didhang-up. Sometimes the Marcus, trombone; Aaronmusicians take their axes Myers, tenor,upstairs and play on WUCB,as they did on the recentmarathon. Sometimes theygo to the near North tomake a gig at the Collegeof Complexes. Sometimeswhen they can't make thechanges in a chorus, theygo home to their recordplayers and listen to theBird, who really has a lot tosay. Next month, some ofthe players will go make thescene at South Bend, wherethey will compete with othercombos in the Midwest col¬legiate jazz festival.The group misses BillMathieu who went pro andbopped out to the coast towork for Stan Kenton. Regu¬larly performing nowadaysare Rusty Allen, trumpet;Rick Ayesse, tenor; WarenBernhart, piano; John Brink,tig the Jazz dubKolshop, has been meeting every Friday afternoon during theHi >' those who blow can perfect their bridge in "April." Thosey> three until six, sometimes longer, depending on howre. Every once in a while someone will get ambitious andr;*■n ' Recently the musicianswve become so dense, andbe glare of brass so brighthot the club sometimes has to split into two comboswhich alternate in ployingthe tunes. This is known asthe plan of shift A andshift B.While shift A is ploying,shift B can either join theoudience and sing syllables— incidentally, Kay Kaiserhas just released the latestset of syllables; they are:Aye — Yew — Dway — Bee— Doo — Bah — Daw — Bo— Aii — or they can go out¬side and turn on.The things which bugjazz musicians the most arehornmen who take 37 chor¬uses, audiences which playchess, spittle in a slide,Bernie's Tune, honkers, andpeople who say, "Crazy,cool, cat." The things whichplease a jazz musician themost are tea, pianos thatare in tune, "Indiana"played Qt 140, and peoplewho listen, (photos by Figlio— caption by Haddix),Crass grows, bells ring, Offers 5 fellowshipswnnVin Pnnnrlo fA»» tlm nf f n tprna t ion a1 F-Hiipfai'An i r-Players come to MandelNext Tuesday, St. Patrick’sDay, grass and clover will be¬gin to grow again, Lent willtake a holiday, Mitchell Towerbells will play only Irish folksongs and the Irish Players willopen in Mandel hall. The IrishPlayers, an original off-Broadwaycompany, brought to the campusby University Theatre and Univer¬sity college, will play in a six dayrun of two alternating produc¬tions, Playboy of the WesternWorld, by John Millington Synge,and Three One-Acts of Synge.The Irish Players company wasfounded three years ago by Der-mot McNamarra, who will playthe title role in Playboy, and Helena Carroll, who will playPegeen Mike, the Irish girl inPlayboy. They have managed tosurvive as a repertory companyever since their founding, unfor¬tunately a record life for reper¬tory companies. The company in¬cludes, in addition to many as¬sorted Irishmen, Thomas Makim,a noted folk singer, a former BigTen high-jump champion, and afew-odd New York actors.Featured in the two productionsto be presented next week will beElspeth Barch, playing the lead in“Riders to the Sea,” the Tinker’smother in ‘Tinker’s Wedding”an3 the Widow Quin in Playboy. The Irish Players will runMarch 17 through 22, in Mandelhall. There will be two perform¬ances each on Friday and Satur¬day, March 20 and 21 at 6:30 and9:30 pm. All other performancesare at 8:30 pm. Student-facultydiscount tickets, available for theThursday, Friday and Saturdayperformances only, will not be onsale after Sunday, March 15. Alltickets are on sale at the Mandelcorridor box office.The Irish Players have just fin¬ished a performance of these sameplays in Boston, where the re¬views were just as admiring asthe New York critics.The whole is equalto the sum of its parts(But some of its parts are more equal than others!)Even Euclid had to admit...It's what's up frontthat countsEuclid proved that a straightline is the shortest distancebetween two points. And ifyou’ll walk a straight line to thenearest pack of Winstons, you’llfind it the shortest distance toa really enjoyable smoke. It’sthe tobacco up front that makes the difference and that’s whereWinston packs its own exclusiveFilter-Blend—a special selectionof light, mild tobacco, speciallyprocessed for filter smoking.You’ll find Filter-Blend givesWinston a flavor without paral¬lel. In fact, it’s axiomatic that...WINSTON TASTES GOOD, LIKE A CIGARETTE SHOULD!fi.1. REYNOLDS TOSACCO CO.. WINSTON-SALEM.f.C. "The Canada council for theencouragement of the arts,humanities, and social sciencesis offering five fellowship forstudy in Canada during the aca¬demic year 1959-60,” reports theInstitute of international educa¬tion.The awards, offered for studyin Canada in the arts, humanities,and social sciences, are “open toartists, scholars, musicians, writ¬ers, and teachers” who haveshown "exceptional promise.” Theawards are subject to admissionto a Canadian university and areavailable only for work leading toa master’s degree or equivalentstanding. The awards pay $2,000plus round trip traveling expenses.The Institute warns that theCouncil will give preference tocandidates under 35 years of age.George L. Playe, director of fi¬nancial aid in the University, willsupply application forms to inter¬ested students. All applicationsmust be returned to the Institute of International Eductaion, 1 East67th Street, New York 21, NewYork, by April 15, 1959.Van Cliburn hereearly next fallUC to host tourneyEUROPELEASE a NEW CorPURCHASE a NEW Car*Rent a Late Model Car GLADIS RESTAURANT1527 East 55th st.orders to carry sat■S— 24 heartDO 3-97S8VOLKSWAGENSIMCA RENAULTHILLMAN PORSCHEMERCEDES[♦with Repurchase Flan available!... or bring it home with you.The pleasant, economical way totravel in Europe. We make aH ar¬rangements for the Plan you prefer.Write for full detailsUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO. Junior YearNew YorkAn unutual one-yearcollege programWrite lorbrochure totDeanF.H. McCloskeyWaskiflCtM SqMTtCollettHr* Yart UniversityNew York 3, N.Y.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 Dl RECTORY-1959, with OVER 100,000 summer listings in 49STATES & 38 countries:‘SHIPS ‘TRAVEL ‘RANCHES ‘TV ‘INDUSTRY‘RESEARCH ‘RESORTS & HOTELS ‘GOV'T‘RADIO ‘STUDY ‘OIL co's ‘CONSTRUCTION‘FARMS ‘NAT'NL & STATE PARKS ‘CAMPSmoreIncludes 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.Mrs. Alfred O'Gara, chair¬man of the Women’s board ofthe UC Cancer research foun-dation has announced that theVan Cliburn concert, originallyscheduled for February 25 wouldtake place in fall, in either Sep¬tember or early October.Van Cliburn cancelled the con¬cert sponsored by the board dueto illness.He expressed regret that he was?unable to play at the originally?scheduled time and stated thathe was “most anxious to do something for cancer research."All ticketholders will receiveletters stating that they may re¬turn their tickets and receirefund or hold them for the con¬cert in the fall, retaining the samelseats they have now.The university plays host to the third annual Invitationalindoor intercollegiate singles and doubles tennis tournament.Saturday and Sunday, March 14 and 15 at the field hou.s.* •The six singles and three doubles flights will include teams fromIowa, last year’s Big Ten tennis champions; Toledo university, M iquette, Bowling Green, arid Chicago. Competition will begin tomor¬row morning at 9 am, last through the day, and will complete onSunday, at 9 am. Bill Moyle, director of the tourney, predicts aexcellent tennis for the weekend affair.10 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 13, 1959sports newsSpady outlinesBy Bill SpadyLast Friday’s snow stormprevented five Midwest con¬ference schools from attend¬ing the ninth annual UC-Midwestconference indoor track meet, butthe five who did attend, Beloit,Grinnell, Knox, Monmouth, andRipon, found the UC varsity farsuperior in nearly every event.The hosting Maroons won themeet with 103 Vz points, whileBeloit arriving late scored 49,Grinnell 42(4, Ripon 33, Mon¬mouth 22, and Knox 8.Chicago scored firsts in threeof the five relay events, and wonfive of the eight individual eventsin virtually running away withthe meet. In the 60 yard dash, A1Brooks tied Hosea Martin’s rec¬ord of 6.2 in winning the eventwith Martin taking second a stepbehind. George Lejnieks tookfifth for the Maroons. Mitch Wat¬kins and Don Richards placed 2-3in the 60 yard high hurdles behindOsiewalski of Ripon, and the same(wo finished 1 and 2 in the broadjump with leaps of 21-1014, and20-11.Lin Black tied for first in thehigh jump at 5-8, and Watkinstied for third at 5-6. Don Fagincleared 13-2 to win the pole vault,Dave Northrop topped 11-8 forthird, and Nick Tingley cleared11-4 for fourth. In the remainingfield event, Mike Hrinda tookfourth in the shot put with aheave of 39-2.Chicago’s distance medley relayteam of Gary Augustine, Vic Neill,Ivan Carlson and Gar Williamstied the old record of 10:43.6 forthe victory. The Maroons’ sprintmedley relay team of George Kar-cazes, Jerry Gehman, George Lej-neiks, and Walt Perschke wasnipped at the wire by Beloit in3:41.2 for second place. Vic Neillfollowed with a second in the twomile, and Dave Houk finishedthird. Watkins finished his busyday with a 7.4 win in the 60 lowswith teammate Dennis O'Learynabbing fifth place.Chicago’s 880 relay team ofMartin, Pete McKeon, Karcazes, and Jacobs lost over thirty yardswhen they dropped the baton dur¬ing the first exchange but re¬covered to take second place be¬hind Ripon’s time of 1:35.9. Thehosts’ two mile relay quartet ofKevin Waring, Ned Price, Mc¬Keon, and Carlson won the eventin 8:25.8. In the final event of themeet, the Chicago mile relay teamoutdistanced the other competi¬tors in racking up their final winof the day. Martin, Gehman, Au¬gustine, and Perschke covered themile in 3:30.4.A small contingent of varsityand Track club members traveledto the Milwaukee Journal gamesat Milwaukee, Monday night, andthe relay team of Martin, Mc¬Keon, Jacobs, and Karcazes re¬turned with a first place, a newmeet record, and permanent pos¬session of the relay trophy. Thequartet beat teams from Whea¬ton and U of Wisconsin at Mil¬waukee in covering the 1080 yardsin 2:27.8. Jacobs placed third inthe open 50 yard dash behindWard Miller of Illinois, and IraMurchison of the Track club, innosing out some of the country’sbest known sprinters. Gar Wil¬liams placed fifth in the two milebehind the world record-breakingperformance of Max Truex ofSouthern California.Varsity swimmingChicago’s power-laden swimteam faced some very stiff com¬petition from Loyola in last Sat¬urday’s Chicago IntercollegiateChampionships held at Bartlettgym, but the Maroons met thechallenge and edged Loyola andfour other teams to win the teamtitle. The hosts scored 93 pointsto 83 for Loyola, while UIC fin¬ished with 18, George Williamswith 15, Wright Jr. with 8, andIIT with 4.Loyola began the day by win¬ning the 400 medley relay in 4:10,far ahead of Chicago’s 4:25 secondplace. Paul Schutt followed witha win in the 220 freestyle in 2:13.4,and teammate Phil Helmuth add¬ed a point with fifth place. TheMaroons continued their assault weeks sports activitieson the first places with Tom Lis-co taking the 60 freestyle in 28.4,and Bud Weiss tallying fourth.Trummer of Loyola set a newpool and meet record with a 1:02.4clocking in the 100 back stroke,just ahead of Chicago’s Dan Cur¬rie and Steve Colburn. RogerHarmon of Chicago added anotherpool and meet record with a 57.1effort in the 100 butterfly. TheMaroons set a new meet recordand swept the first three places inthe 100 freestyle, as Schutt ledLisco and Weiss across in 52.1.Harmon set two more records inthe 200 breast stroke as he ledDan Siegel to the finish in 2:32.3,snapping both the pool and meetstandards.Inframural sporfsThree more all-university tour¬naments were completed thisweek in UC intramural circles,and a fourth—squash—is sched¬uled for completion next week.Volleyball, softball, golf, andhorse shoes will highlight thespring quarter activities accord¬ing to Chet McGraw, intramuraldirector.Dave Freifelder, one of the topranked ping pong players in thecountry, topped Roman Wirszc-zuk 21-15, 21-13, 21-9, for the All-University title last week. JohnOsgood of East III won the all¬university badminton tourneyfrom Chuck Werner of Psi Uafter each had won his respectivesingle-elimination bracket.Psi U slipped past Vincent 110-109 to capture the free throwcrown from the House leaguechampions. Howard Hill pacedthe Psi U deadeyes with 24 of 25,while Bill Haley and Henry Halla-day both hit 22, and Bill Hines andJim Castles each canned 21. JerryWoolpey led the Vincent scoringwith 23, Nelson Crowell andGeorge Bissinger added a pair of22s, and Jim Hilgendorf and JerryScheffer each hit 21. Three mentied for the individual highhonors, all hitting 24; Howard Hillof Psi U, Bob Fishback a Psi Ushooting for North House, andD. Skiles of East. GolfCoach Bob Kreidler has calleda meeting for all prospective var¬sity golfers on Monday, March 16,at 4 pm in the trophy room ofBartlett gym. The 1959 seasonopens April 6, at Wabash college.Fourteen matches will follow theopener, climaxed by the ChicagoIntercollegiate Tournament, May15. \IBaseballChicago’s varsity baseball teamopens its season at Cleveland,35 letters Miss., against Delta State collegeon March 23. The Maroons playDelta State the following day, andare then scheduled to go againstMississippi college of Clinton,Miss., in two encounters March 25and 26. The fourteen man travel¬ing squad will then move northto face Vanderbilt at Nashville,Tenn., on March 27, and the KyleAnderson coached diamondmenwill finish their trip with a March28 tussle with Evansville collegeof Evansville, Indiana.awardedThirty-five major letters were awarded to Chicago athletesin five major sports at a meeting held in the trophy room ofBartlett gym, Monday afternoon. Eleven awards were pre¬sented in swimming, nine in basketball, six in fencing, three ingymnastics, and six in wrestling.Coach Bill Moyle presented awards to the finest crop of swim¬mers ever to attend UC. During the season the Maroon swimmerssmashed close to 40 meet, pool, and varsity records and compileda 13-2-1 record for the year. Dave Dec and Ken Currie were chosenco-captains of the squad. Others to receive their Major C awardwere A1 Gaines, Phil Helmuth, Tom Lisco, Bill Zimmerman, RogerHarmon, Frank McGraw, Paul Siegel, Paul Schutt, and Bud Weiss.Nine basketball players received major awards from varsity coachJoe Stampf. Gary Pearson was selected honorary captain, and fin¬ished the year as the Maroons’ high scorer and rebounder with 296points and 248 rebounds in 19 games. Mitch Watkins tallied 211 in14 games and snared 110 rebounds, and Clarence Woods turned in afine season with 218 points and 184 rebounds to his credit. JohnDavey, who missed close to half of the season with injuries, SteveUllman, freshman guard who scored 120 points in the season, andRay Strecker also played outstanding roles in the Maroons’ success¬ful season. Gary Tegtmeier, Jerry Tomasovic, and Jerry Toren alsoreceived awards.Chicago’s wrestling team finished 5-5 for the season, and coachDale Bjorklund presented awards to his six top grapplers. TonyKocalis who boasted a 7-2-1- record was chosen honorary captain, andBob Sonnenburg whose 8-1 record led the Maroons was selected mostvaluable member of the team by his teammates. Ron Chutter (3-4-2)and Warren Pollans (7-3) earned their first awards, while WarrenRuby (4-4-2) and Mike Schilder (7-2) were presented with their sec¬ond major awards.Varsity gymnastics coach Bob Kreidler presented major lettersto three outstanding gymnasts: George Andros, captain of the squad,Fred Bisshopp, and freshman Joe Kuypers. Kunio Kato, VictorMlotok, and Ken Driessel were presented Old English C’s.Although the varsity fencing team did not finish with an impres¬sive record, Coach Alvar Hermanson cited six of his top performersfor varsity awards: Joe Grassie, Dick Kenyon, Guy McDonald, Mil-ton McGinnis, Ken Nordin, and R. F. Venegas. Gideon Weisz, EdScheiner, Jim Milgram, Bob Riopelle, and Ron Shelton received OldEnglish C letters.Do You Think for Yourself? (jsssmsss^*)I. Does it bother you to admit that you y_8haven’t read a very popular book?2. Do you think there are degrees of yescheating in a game or examination?.3. Are there certain foods you fee! yEssure you’d dislike without havingever tried them?/4. Would you be seriously concerned to yesread in your horoscope that catastrophewould befall you tomorrow? 5. Do you often fall short of cash several sdays before your pay or allowance isscheduled to come through?<5. When you’re driving, do you liketo be first getting away from astop light about to change?It Would you be reluctant to learn anew sport in the presence of friendswho were experts?ft. Have you found it to be personallytrue that “a man’s best friendjs his dog”?' v.sQ noQ'YES □ HDYES □ NO3. Do you believe your choice-' of a filter cigaretteshould be based on hearsay £If you’re the kind of person who thinksforyourself, then choosing a cigarette will bebased on a careful study of.the factsj-rnoton quick decisions*Men and women'who "think for them*Selves usually smoke VICEROY. Their goodjudgment tells them there’s only one ciga¬rette with a thinking man’s filter and a:smoking man’s taste. And.that cigarette isviceroy:*If you've answered “NO” to'eight out of.[the nine questions above, you really thinkfor yourself! • IM», Brown * Wllliunnou Tobacco Co**.The Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows Familialpack ojrcrush-"proofbox.ONLYVICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN’SFILTER... A SMOKING MAN’S TASTE IMarch 13, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • HArgonne wins again New uses of the atomTwo national awards forSetting a 3,000,000 man-hoursafety record during the pastyear were presented to the Ar*gonna National laboratory.Argonne received the NationalSafety council's award of honor,and the award of honor from theUS Atomic Energy commission.They were given to the labora¬tory in a ceremony held Wednes¬day in the Chemistry buildingmidi tori urn. Presentations were made byHoward Pyle, president, NationalSafety council; and A. Tammaro,assistant general manager for re-search and industrial develop¬ment, US Atomic Energy commis¬sion. Dr. Norman Hilberry ac¬cepted the awards.In connection with the cere¬mony, Argonne gave certificatesof merit for no disabling injuriesover periods ranging from one toten years to 24 of its divisionsand departments. shown by Argonne labNew uses of atomic energyin plant growth studies will beshown by the Argonne Na¬tional laboratory and UC at aninternational flower show.The joint exhibit will be stagedat the Chicago World Flowershow, to be held March 14-22 atthe International amphitheatre,42nd and Halsted.Scientists study hereFifty-four nuclear scientistsand engineers from nineteenfree world countries and theUS arrived at Argonne Nationallaboratory recently to begin atwenty-week course in the peace¬ful uses of atomic energy.They are participants in theeighth session of the Interna¬tional school of nuclear scienceand engineering, sponsored bythe US Atomic Energy commis¬sion as part of President Eisen-hc./er's “atoms for peace” pro¬gram.Th#y will study nuclear reac¬ tors—their design, construction,instrumentation, and use, andalso will receive training in otheraspects of nuclear science and en¬gineering not generally availablein colleges and universities.Completion of the eighth ses¬sion next June will bring to 474the number of scientists and engi¬neers trained at the InternationalSchool. Most of the foreign par¬ticipants are selected by atomicenergy commissions in their homecountries. They represent gov¬ernmental, academic and indus¬trial organizations. Visitors to the display will beable to see: 1) how tomato plantstake up and distribute phosphorusin their systems (phosphorus isa mineral element essential toplant growth); 2) the effects of agrowth-regulating hormone called Paul D. Voth, Dr. Wayne J. Me-Ilrath and Dr. Lawrence Bogoradof the UC botany department; andDr. John Skok of Argonne’s plantphysiology group.The Chicago World Flowershow is sponsored by the ChicagoHorticultural society in coopera¬tion with the Central Westernzone, Garden club of America, theChicago Council on Foreign rela¬ tions, and the Men’s Garden didof America.The Argonne National labortory is one of America’s leadiratomic energy research and dvelopment centers, operated tthe UC for the US Atomic Enerj;commission. Argonne’s main siis located on a 3,700 acre tract <land 25 miles southwest of Clcago near Lamont, Illinois.Natl meeting of societyheld from March 24-27gibberellic acid on the develop¬ment of flowers; 3) the effectsof radiation on flowers; and 4) amodel of an “atomic greenhouse.”The greenhouses are used atArgonne to grow plants in a radio¬active atmosphere.The exhibit is being jointlystaged by the plant physiologygroup of Argonne’s division ofbiological and medical researchand UCs department of botany.In addition to Dr. Scully, thosearranging the exhibit were; Dr. A national meeting of theAmerican Meteorological so¬ciety will be held at the Shore-land hotel, 55th and the lake,March 24-27. The first day’s ses¬sions will consider the instrumen¬tation problem in air pollution.Other sessions will be concernedwith meteorology in the Arctic,in the upper atmosphere andspace, and in the Soviet Union.Several sessions should be par¬ticularly interesting to non-me¬teorologists. These are water re¬sources (9 am March 25), Weather risk analysis for management clcisions (9 am March 26), tlscientific basis of weather contr(8 pm March 26), and meteortogy in the Soviet Union (9 aiMarch 27). Professor HerbeiRiehl of the department of Mteorology is program chairman <the meeting, and Professor Gbert F. White of the departmeiof geography is chairman of tlwater resources session.THINKUSH The evening session is for pepie interested in separating ta<from fantasy in the realm <weather control, a highly contnversial topic. Professor EdwaiTeller of the University of Calfornia, who was formerly at U<will be the chairman.At the banquet to be held Marc25 the speaker will be NormaHilberry, director, Argonne N;tional laboratory, who will speaon “Meteorology in relation to tliother physical sciences.”Further information may be oitained from Bernice Aokermaiext. 2630.WILUAM». Get the genuine articleGet the honest tasteof a LUCKY STRIKEH0VACK, WISCONSIN STAT6 C01.U*Engllsh: SLOW-WITTED BASEBALL PLAYERThlnkiish translation: The guys who patrol the fences on this man'steam include a slugger (cloutfielder), a braggart (shoutfidder) and a^ sorehead (poutfielder)—reading from left field to right. The clod inquestion—a loutfidder—rarely breaks into the line-up. He thinksRBI is the second line of an eye chart. But he’s no doubtfielder whenit comes to smoking. He goes all out for the honest taste of finetobacco ... the unforgettable taste of a Lucky Strike!HOWTOMAKE *25: COED BULL SESSIONTake a word—institution, for example.With it, you can make an aquarium(/institution), a bowling alley (pinstitu-tion), a fireworks factory (dinstitution)or a saloon (ginstitution). That’s Think,fish—and it’s that easy! We’re paying$25 for the Thinkfish words judged best—your check’s itching to go! Send yourwords to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mt.Vernon, N.Y. Enclose your name, ad¬dress, university and class.• 4. r.«» Product of iS/w c/cfae*& Cvnyuiyy — Jv&zeo u our middle namfU • CHICAGO MAROON ext. 2630; Lawrence A. HugheiNormal 7-3966, office until shortlafter 5 pm, Normal 7-0251 home.TROUSERSiBUiiS-aiuitisssBy whot ever they moy be known,the proprietor has a large selectionof these garments made accordingto style dictates with plain frontand tapered leg. A goodly choiceof stylish materials are on hand.$16.50 and upJSrittanji,ltd.7104 S. JefferyPL 2-4030Open Mon. & Thurs. evesFree Parking atCyril Court Garage1948 E. 71st PL• March 13,1959Culture VultureSpring Has fallen, sprung,jumped and kicked, and gen¬erally landed with a thumpupon us. By the time you fin¬ish this paragraph it may havedisappeared again, but for themoment it's definitely here.For the first time since No¬vember 21st, the squirrels pullat your shirt-tails instead ofmournfully peering at you frombehind a snow drift. Studentseat their book-store-wormy ap¬ples on the benches on thequads instead of just inside thelibrary door. The small eagerfaces of mathematics studentsgaze superiorly from the topof Eckhart balcony, scoffing atthe apple-eaters and the squir¬rel-feeders. And quarterliesraise their tear-bespattered,electrographic - lead - smearedheads. Shall we discuss nowwhat you might have seen nextweek had you not decided thatthis quarter the single-F rulereally counted? Or shall weforget about the whole thingand go out and watch the out¬side? Spring or not spring,death, quarterlies, taxes, andthe culture vulture are inevit¬able — we shall go on . . .On CampusTheatreNext Tuesday, The Irishplayers, an original off-Broad-way company will open intheatre and University college.They will be welcomed by a spe¬cial concert of Mitchell Towerbolls playing Irish folk songs.The company will perform intwo alternating productions, Play¬boy of the Western World, andThree One-Acts of Synge. Play¬boy, a well-known comedy by John Millington Synge, involves ayoung man who escapes to anIrish village thinking he killedhis father. The action movesthrough an Irish pub, wherePegeen Mike, a frank young col¬leen with a strange affection forhandsome murderers, and an Irishwidow with motherly feelings to¬ward parricides clash over theyoung man in question. The actionmoves on to an Irish race trackwhere Irish beer or ale or whiskeyor whatever-it-is flows freely, andthe playboy joins the race. Theaction move on the dialogue growsmore Irish and the play becomestremendously funny.The three one-acts in the secondproduction will be The Shadowof the Glenn, The Tinker’s Wed¬ding, and Riders to the Sea. Thetwo former are again lively Irishcomedies employing all the nuan¬ces and gaities of Synge’s usualdialogue in naturally normal, na¬turally humorous situations in¬volving natural charicatures ofcharacters.Riders to the Sea, is perhapsone of the best one-acts ever writ¬ten, It centers around one charac¬ter and her lament for her lostsons, husband, and husband'sfather, all killed by the sea. Thelanguage used in the play displaysthe same sense of word-power,and word-connotation as to thedialogues in Synge’s comedies, butit is transformed by the themeinto strong and appropriately tra-gicprose-poetry. The Irish players will run Tues¬day, March 17th through SundayMarch 22nd. There will be twoperformances, at 6:30 and 9:30pm on Friday, March 20 and Sat¬urday, March 21. All other per¬formances will begin at 8:30 pm.Student-faculty discount ticketsmay still be available by somequirk of fate until Sunday. Atlast count over 700 had been soldalready. All tickets are reservedand are on sale at Mandel corri¬dor box office.University Theatre, havingpolished off Electra last Sundayare now ready to begin rubbingMeasure for Measure. Tryouts forthe latter, written by an obscureEnglish playwrite known to theuninitiate as Shakespeare, and tothe well-versed as Marlowe, John¬son, or TS Eliot, will be held to¬morrow at 2 pm and Mondayafternoon from 1 pm on in theReynold’s Club Theatre. Anyonemay tryout. Anyone who does try¬out is asked to bring a script ifpossible. ,The Blackfriar’s director, NumbHush, has rejected all availablescripts and decided to recast theentire show when he chooses anew one. His old cast declaresthey were not fired — they re¬signed. We agree.The Faculty Revels, presentedannually by the Quadrangle club,will run tonight and tomorrowin Mandel hall. Because the Revelsare determined to keep themselvesa secret, we can reveal absolutelynothing about the plot, characters, etc., etc., etc., of the show. Ticketsare still available at the Quad¬rangle club for $3. Curtain will beat 8:30 pm.Motion PicturesBurton-Judson films will pre¬sent Alexander Nevsky this eve¬ning at 9:00 pm. I don’t knowwhether or not this is the versionof the film in which Prokofieff co¬operated with the director. I’mnot even sure it’s a film versionof the cantata. But if it's the lat¬ter, and even more so if it’s theformer, it’s certainly worth see¬ing. Admission is, as per usual,40c.Monday evening Internationalhouse will present PhantomHorse, a Japanese movie abouta modern farm boy who centersall his affection on an unrespon¬sive race horse, and of the livesof those around him.Off CampusMusicThe Wallfiseh Duo, consideredone of the foremost viola-pianoduos in Europe will perform withthe Chicago Chamber orchestraat the Art Institute Sunday at 4pm. The program will includeSchumann’s Maerchenbilder, aHindemith sonata for viola, andpiano, a Stamitz concerto forviola and orchestra, and works byHandel and von Gluck. Studentadmission is $1.Next Thursday and Friday theChicago Symphony orchestra willperform Berlioz’s Roman Carni¬val Overture, Debussy’s Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun, Profco-fieff’s second piano concerto, withsoloist Andre Tchaikovsky, andShostokovich’s 6th symphony. OnTuesday, March 24th, the orches¬tra will repeat the Prokofieff andthe Debussy. Dvorak’s CarnivalOverture and selections fromTchaikowsky’s Nutcracker Suitewill complete the program.On Thursday and Friday, March26 and 27, the Chicago symphony,with violist Milton Preves will pre¬sent the Oberon Overture, byWeber, Bartok’s Viola concerto,and Beethoven’s 2nd symphony.On Saturday, March 28, the or¬chestra with pianist FrancescaBernasconi will present Thomas’Raymond Overture, Saint-Saens*second concerto and selectionsfrom Tchaikowsky’s Nutcracker.The Apollo Music club, conduc¬ted by Henry Veld, and accompa¬nied by the Chicago symphony,will sing the Brahms Requiem andKodaly’s Te Deum, Tues day,March 31st, in Orchestra HalLAdmission is from $l-$3.50.This evening a program oisongs of all kinds will be pre¬sented by the YMCA at the EighthStreet theatre. Studs Terkel, pro¬ducer of the radio show, WaxMuseum will narrate the concert.Appearing in the program willbe Chet Roble, Brother John Selbers, Win Strake, and Richard Pick.Tickets and information are avail¬able at the Reynold’s Club Ex¬change Center.Tuesday, at 8:20 pm Myra Heo\(see page 14)PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO."Hyde Pork's Most Complete Paint & Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountMY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th *t. HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Dawn te Down 1342east 53 st.Retirement InsuranceAnnuitiesConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S.RA 6-1060 Everett Ave.Ml 3-5986ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRCanvas fleece-linedCampus Shoes'women's only, in white)Reg. $6.95SALE $3.75EQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'NARROW HEELSHeels changed — Any style —Any colorBackstraps Removed and Springa-lators inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St.i PAUL SHEBDY,* hair scientist, says:Makes your hair look doggone hand¬some!", _ into. Iftm* HiU HH., H. t.Jvst a little bitof Wildrootand...WOW/I Impala Sport Coupe—like every Chevy—has Safety Plate Glass all around.Chevy stops quickest... goes farthest on a gallon!Chevy showed the best brakes of theleading low-priced three in a test ofrepeated stops at highway speeds con¬ducted and certified by NASCAR*.Chevy also won over the other two ina NASCAR economy run—-with thehighest gas mileage for 6’s and V8’s atcruising speeds of just over 55 milesan hour. Here’s a car that knows how to getthe most out of a gallon. And it’s theonly car in its field to bring youhydraulic valve lifters in all popularengines—6 and V8. This meanssmoother, quieter performance for you.There are many other advances justas fundamental as the efficiency ofChevrolet’s engines and the depend¬ ability of its new brakes (with more lin¬ing area than any other low-priced car).But why not stop by your dealer’s andlet Chevy do its own sweet talking!*Wa/ionaI Association for Stock Car Adrancmontend Research.see your local authorized Chevrolet dealer for quick appraisal—early detivery!March 13, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13Forest Tucker, star of Hie Blackfriar production "TheSoured Man," delves into the deeper points of the script,which describes the tragic life of a trombone salesman. APlatonic tragedy with xe« overtones, "The Sired Mandarin,"will make its initial appearance on campus during Festivalo# the Arts week, (photo by Harve)Ellen Coughlin Beauty SalonSI05 Luke Park Ave, Ml 3*2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. • Sat. — 9 a.m. - II p.m.m - ■ •j The Qreen Door Book Shop1451 EAST 57TH STREETHY 3-5829 Chicago 37, MLQuality paperbacks — Fine children's book#Special! orders filled promptlyduring Spring vacation, plan to visitOUR FINE UNIVERSITY SHOPcreated lor today's undergraduatesOur University Shop features exclusivestyles at moderate prices, in sizes 35 to 42...including new items you’ll want for lateSpring. And attractive furnishings, too.Lightweight Dacron*-and- WorstedTropical Suits, $60Washable 70% Dacron, 30% WorstedSuits, $60Washable Dacron-and-CottonPoplin Suits, $40Attractive Tweed Sport Jackets, $45Printed India Madras Odd Jackets, $37.50And sport and polo shirts, Odd Trousers, etc.•Dm Poat’r fibe*If TAtUfHIO til#IN(tens furnishings, fiats echoes74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, lU*NEW YORK ♦ CHICAGO • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCO UT lauded for productionThe real success of Univer¬sity Theater’s presentation ofGiraudoux’s Electra must bemeasured against the difficultiesinherent in the play. A genuine“chef-d’oeuvres manque” — orstill awaiting its moment—Elec¬tra is nearly stifled by intricacyof thought, dramatic finesse andfeatures of surpassing beauty.The spectator’s wonder nevercompletely transcends his per¬plexity. The play is like Agamem¬non’s palace as described in theopening scene: there is no rightside to it: built half of stones fromGaul, half of marble from Argos,it is laughing and crying at thesame time.Giraudoux has retained thebare essentials of Aeschylus’ plot—the return of Orestes and theassassination of Clytemnestraand Aegisthes—but he has con¬ceived the action as a change in Electra which we can best tracethrough her conflict with Aegis¬thes. These two collide when theyboth “reveal” themselves, or dis¬cover what they must be, at thesame time.Electra is a creature of rarebeauty: she is absolutely pure.During the first half of the play,she is moved only by pure, un¬reasoned hatred for Clytemnestraand Aegisthes. Her gradual dis¬covery of a cause which trans¬mutes this hate into a pure andtotal commitment to truth andjustice is more than her ownmaturation; it is, in a literarysense, the birth of tragedy and,in a philosophical sense, the real¬ization of the historic destiny ofhuman conscience. Unlike So¬phocles’ Antigone and Moliere’smisanthrope, with whom she in¬vites comparison, she has noweakness. Her shortcomings as a dramatic personage are, in parian indictment of us: we cannotlove her because we cannot pityher. Mary Ann Erman played th<admirable, superhuman Electrawithout compromise and wellmtaintaining a noble rigidity ternpered only slightly by nuances ottenderness.Aegisthes Is a machiavellianrogue whose chief concern Is toavoid “signaling” the gods. He is.therefore, anti-tragic and antihistoric and the fated enemy ofElectra. In the second act he hashis vision and reveals himself as.almost, the Prince. His duty is todefend the local and temporalvalues and, of course, he needsElectra just as every state needsa noble lie. Electra is intransigeant and refuses to delay, even forone day, his punishment. With an• (see “UT,” page 15)• turkey lurkey • henny penny • culturefamous concert pianist will giveat recital at Orchestra hall. Sat¬urday. March 21st there will bea recital given by the tenor JussiBjoerling at Orchestra hall. Andto finish off the paragraph, whichis growing progressively moreredundant and awkward, AndresSegovia, guitarist will appear atOrchestra hall, Sunday, March 29at 3:30. Admission is in all casesabove $1.55. exhorbitant andworth it.TheatreThe earth may fall apart, thesun decide to stay rneath theworld for a week or so, and Rocke¬feller Chapel’s bells may not tollevery Sunday, but theatre in Chi¬cago stays the same. Holdingforth for an indefinite period are:The Girls in 509 at the Civic Thea¬tre, The Music Man at the Shu-bert, Two for the Seesaw at theMichael Todd, and Warm Penin¬sula with Julie Harris, at the Erlanger. (The latter will closeApril 4.) Rumor has it that theGoodman is threatening to doThe Imaginary Invalid in a dif¬ferent musical version from thatused by University Theatre. Forinformation call the Goodmantheatre. They haven’t released athing.Motion PicturesThis evening the Hyde Park willopen the film Boris Godonov sungby members of the Russian Bol¬shoi theatre. The film is interest¬ing enough as an example of Rus¬sian movie-producing technique—the colors are spectacularlystrange. In addition the music istremendous. Playing with BorisGodunov will be the second partOf the Bolshoi Ballet.The World Playhouse Is stillmaking money from Alec Guin¬ness in The Horse’s Mouth. TheSurf is still presenting Mad LittleIsland, about which I still knownothing. Shall we proceed?OPENINGTUESDAYMARCH 17thruMARCH 22tor rightprrf or matures outyTHEIRISHPLAYERS•m repertory — Art ExhibitionsHaving bowed three times to¬ward the lake and the Art Insti¬tute’s Gauguin exhibition, whichTHE /rolici '951 E. 55th ST.Sagan'sBONJOUR TRISTESSEDavid NivenJean SebergDeborah KerrPkM,BELL, BOOK ondCANDLEKim NovakErnie KovacsJames StewartAdmission 60cMU 4-9086 will continue till March 29, womay take note of a few other phidling exhibits.The Johnson galleries will prosent an exhibition honoring theFauvist Charles Camoin, lncluding works by Pux, Brayer, Dufy.Derain. Vlamick, Chagall, andothers, to run from March 20 toApril 11. The Feingarten galleriesis currently presenting an exhibition of paintings by Guerreschito continue until April 3. TheMain Street gallery is presentingan exhibition of lithographs, oils,drawings and sculptures, b\Rodin, Maillol, Marini, Kokoshk;.and Erni.Marion Andersonwill give benefitMarion Anderson will givea benefit performance for theCooperative Nursery schoolan Sunday, April 5th, at 3:30 pmat Orchestra hall.Tickets for the concert will sellfor $4 with a limited number selling at $2 and $3.For tickets or further Information call Jeanne Orlikoff atMuseum 4-8159. Tickets are alsoavailable at the education desk atthe coop.Small Cheese .... 95cSmall Sausage . .$1.15NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063Freedom-of-PressCommitteeOPEN FORUMSpresentsVICTOR PERLOEconomist _ AuthorOftCHINA TODAYSun. March 15th 7:30 pmFine Arts Building410 S. Michigan Music RoomGem'I Adm. $1.00 Students 50cPLAYBOY OF THEWESTERN WORLDandTHREE ONE-ACTSOF SYNGEMandel Hall box officeopen daily,Mon-Sat, 10 am to 6 pm ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦»»♦♦»»»♦»»»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦« „FORMIDABLE! ijthe jazz review jjThe highly-acclaimed, new monthly, edited by Nat Hentoff and Martin oWilliams, covering in depth for the first time all schools and styles ,,of jazz, and written by internationally-known musicions ond writers ' JFirst 4 issues include analyses of Rollins ond Monk by Gunfher Schul- <>ler; the stories of Walter Page and Buddy Tate as told to Frank Driggs; *’an appraisal of Count Basie by Andre Hodeir; etc. Also record and <>book reviews by the largest staff of any jazz publication; selections oof blues lyrics; and a survey of the press by Nat Hentoff. nAPRIL ISSUE ON NEWSSTANDS NOW!Copies 50c each. Special student subscriptions, 1 year (12 issues’,$4.25. Write: Box 128, Village Station, New York 14, N Y.*Eric Larrabee, Harpers14 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 13, 1959Festival of the Arts coming next quarterby Joel AshenfarbMusic, art, poetry, archi¬tecture, folksinging, folkart,drama, jazz, comedie, religion,cinema; all these and many more•twill be presented in a series of'’lectures, exhibits, talks, tours,parties, competitions, and thelike at the fifth annual Festivalof the Arts during the springquarter.The festival is somewhat sim¬ilar to the ancient Greek festivals' of a few centuries back which oc¬curred annually, semi-annually,and sometimes spontaneously forthe purpose of pleasing the godsand having a good time. Its funda¬mental purpose as stated by itsoriginators back in 1955 when thefirst festival was organized is, "tointegrate the arts to display the‘ best works and draw attention tothe quality and variety of themany artistic activities normallyengaged in by the students andfaculty members.” This purposehas been the motivation for thepast four festivals and will setl the pace for the forthcoming festi¬val next April.-The festival’s coming can bedetected from the outset of the spring quarter when the campusis transformed into a maze ofgaily colored posters, banners,emblems, displays, publicitystunts, and other indications ofthe future events. With the ap¬pearance of warm weather andaccompanying green covering ofthe quadrangles, the festival’s an¬ticipation becomes even more ex¬citing.It should be noted that festivalattendance is not limited to thestudents on campus. Alumni, par¬ents, prospective students, andother interested individuals areinvited to come.One of the highlights and mostanticipated events of the festivalis the Beaux Arts ball which oc¬curs on the second weekend of thefestival. The ball is a masqueradedance where individuals andgroups on campus have an oppor¬tunity to exhibit their ingenuityin designing unique and unusualcostumes following some under¬lying theme.The ball is usually judged bysome notable personalities, andprizes are awarded for the mostexceptional costumes.An outstanding memory of the first Beaux Arts ball was theparticipation of the faculty, whocame as characters from Alice InWonderland.The ball is unified by a prevail¬ing motif w'hich sets the tone forthe decorations and festivities.The costumes do not necessarilyhave to follow the same theme asthe ball. The themes of previousballs have ranged from the me¬dieval period, which motivated thefirst ball four years ago, to morecultured environments such as thetheatre, which set the trend forlast year’s ball.This year’s festival will main¬tain the same gala pageantry, en¬thusiasm, distinguished off cam¬pus speakers, student and facultyexhibits, and other presentationscommon to previous festivals, plusa few added attractions.The festival will run for ninedays, beginning on Friday after¬noon, April 17, and continuing tillSunday, April 26.It can be divided into two parts;that which involves student par¬ticipation, and that which is com¬posed of off-campus participants.Though plans for the coming fes¬tival have not have completelyUT's production praised(from page 14)un - princelike gesture Aegisthesleaves Electra and her weapons,Orestes, unguarded. He dies,borne down by his sinful past,Clytemnestra, as the invadingCorinthian army begins to de¬stroy the city. As Aegisthes, ThomNolan was particularly eftectivein delivering his thought-chargedtirades. He was less successful,however, in conveying the real orimagined grandeur of the "re¬vealed” Aegisthes.Honore Singer showed thegreatest mastery of the classicmanner that director, Richardd’Anjou, wisely imposed on theprincipals. Her false, all-too-liuman but queenly Clytemnestracommanded respect. Jim Olesen’sOrestes was more stiff than re¬strained. One had the impressionr of seeing him always in profileand in two dimensions.So much for the Argive marble.The letter figures are liewm fromGallic stone. Willard Moody wasthe cuckolded judge. This misfor-lunc does not excuse his diction,which, by following an arbitraryrhythmic pattern, stressed thewrong words and made his longerspeeches unintelligible. Carol Horning was adequate as hisfaithless wife, Agatha.Agatha’s relationship with Elec¬tra, by the way, illustrates thesubtle intercourse between dra¬matic levels which helps to holdthe play together. The exampleof Electra impels Agatha to pub¬lish enthusiastically her duty tobetray a husband she detests, andAgatha's proclamation gives Elec¬tra the long-sought key to Cly-temnestra’s motives.Giraudoux was too skillful toleave loose ends dangling, but thecomplexity of the play proved tobe too much even for UT’s elitefollowing. Thus in the final, cru¬cial confrontation of Electra andAegisthes, there is such a tangleof themes and motifs that thewhole affair becomes obscure andtedious. • «Foreseeing the spectator’strouble, Giraudoux obligingly pro¬vided a chorus of Furies and twocharacters, a gardener and a beg¬gar, who comment on the action.Unfortunately, the beggar under¬stands not words but only people.The gardener understands onlythe seasons and he plants at ran¬dom in the palace. Roger Down¬ey’s beggar was an engaging fel¬ low, though rather more whim¬sical and less ruminant than hemight have been. Ken Atkatz didwell as the inconsequent and sen¬timental gardener and the kitten¬ish Furies caused much perversedelight in the audience.For the curious, Electra is amaze of problems ranging fromthe theology of indifferent andsluggish gods to the zoology ofamorous hedgehogs. In between,Electra is, somehow, a clean cutthrough this tangled skein. Uni¬versity Theater has reminded usof a fascinating play and, evenmore, has given an intelligent andenjoyable production of it Forwhich, many thanks.Morris ParslowCLARK Theatredark & madisonopen 7 a.m.late show 4 a.m.50c college student priceot all timesjust present your student identi¬fication card at the boxoffice.Sunday Film Guild ProgramsMar. 15: "The roots of heaven”"The high cost of loving”Mar. 22: “I want to live”“The one that got away”Different double feature dailyFREE DELIVERY^ NICKYSPIZZERIA7-9063 CARS TO DRIVEEast Coast, West and South, someround trips.gas allowance, fee refundedAAA DRIVE AWAY343 S. Dearborn W'E J-2364^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiimiitiiiiiimimiiiiitiniiii^S Chicago s Mosl L’nimialS Motion Picture llieatrePhone DE 7-1763Again rcniiivji all College Student* of theSpecial Student Rale* always In effect atEVERY DAY OF THE WEEK!NCL. FRI. I SAT. EVENINGS 75'JUST SHOW CASHieK YOUH I.D. C ARPSTUDENTKATE NOWstarts Mar. 20 §Laurence Olivier's ="Henry V" 1^llllllllllllHIIIItllltllHtHIftlHIIItlllUltlllUMIttllttHIUtllltHllllllftlUlllllltlllimilllltltltHllllHimilttHIWIIIIIIIIlim?Maria Schell'Dreaming Lips' The Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the week%Bach Cantata Ariassung byFischer-DieskauAngel 35698$3.19a festivalOF OPERA AND BALLET'VSTUDENT RATE —resumed at the oldterms, 50c uponpresentation of I.D.ot box office theboris godunov lote pork ot 53rd streetyde park theatreModes! Petrevick MoossorfsVy*t operawith Pushkin's librettoGO«■CPFull of pageantry, pomp ond spectacle, the result is a rich, musicolmasterpiece of medieval Russia; A. Pirogov makes an impressivePons with o deep strong bass that conveys all the pathos and dramaof the role “A superb film handsomely screened, it exhibits ex¬traordinary richness of detail. . a drometic opero well suited forthe screen sweeping ond spectocufor”--Poris Arden, Sun-TimesSTARS OF THE RUSSIAN BALLET : PART 2 “0QThe Russions go on unchallenged when they cloim they inventedthe classic ballet, they're still inventing new ond exciting balletslike B V Asofiev's THE FLAMES OF PARIS danced by Chobuki-am, Gottlieb ond the Bolshoi Company ond improving such beloved"oldies” os SWAN LAKE danced by Ulonovo, Dudmskcya ond theBolshoi oco&» worked out, a number of eventshave been definitely scheduled.Active student participation isperhaps one of the main causesof the festival’s popularity. Thisyear’s festival, as in the past, willfeature presentations from manyof the active student organizationson campus. On Friday evening,April 17, Blackfriars will presenttheir annual musical comedy, thisyear’s production entitled SireMash, by Don McClintock. A num¬ber of campus musical organiza¬tions are scheduled to participatein the festival, among which arethe jazz dub, the University or¬chestra, and the folklore society.Included in the group of studentexhibits that will be featured inthe festival is the student artshow, one of the most popularevents in previous festivals, whichwill be held at the new dorms.A unique feature of this year’sfestival will be the skit competi¬tion which will be held on theoutdoor tennis courts outside ofEckhart hall.Last, but not least, will be theBeaux Arts ball which is sched¬uled for Saturday evening, April25, at the Quadrangle club. Thetheme of this year’s ball is poetry.These are but a few of the manyplanned events in which studentscan participate.The festival will be highlightedby the appearance of many offcampus guests and organizations.The Chicago Review will sponsorSaul Bellow (’37), a noted author,who will speak at Mandel hall.The Rockefeller chapel choir andmembers of the Chicago sympho¬ny orchestra will present Handel’sIsrael in Egypt. Another highlightof the festival will be the appear¬ance of Mrs. Enrico Fermi, whowill be living in the new dormi¬tory and meeting informally withstudents.The campus will be studdedwith many exhibits during the festival period, among which arethe previously mentioned studentart exhibit, the faculty art exhibit,and an exhibit of drawings byPicasso in the Renaissance socie¬ty. Much attention will be fo¬cussed upon the new dormitorieswhich will play host to the out¬door sculpture show and the stu¬dent art exhibit."All these and many moreeveqts will be encompassed by thefestival,” commented Mike Kin¬dred, chairman of the festivalcommittee. "There are many dif¬ferent areas of interest and par¬ticipation involved in the festivaland anyone who is interested inparticipating in any phase of thefestival is invited to join.” Forfurther information call MikeKindred at PL 2 9874.£fAe PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433The case of the typing paperthat erased without a trace —or,EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDTypewriter PaperIt’s a cincli to "rub out”typing errors and leave no"clues”, when you useEaton’s Corrasable BondPaper. Never smears, neversmudges—becauseCorrasable’s like-magicsurface ... erases without atrace! (A flick of the wristand a pencil eraser putsthings right!) This finequality bond paper gives ahandsome appearance to allyour work. It’s a perfectcrime not to use it!Erasable Corrasable is available in all the weights youmight require—from onionskin to heavy bond. In con¬venient 100-sheet packets and 500-sheet ream boxesA Berkshire Typewriter Paper, backed by the famousEaton name.EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDMade only by EatonEATON PAPER CORPORATION :’]E: PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTSMarch 13, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15Farrant co-ordinatorThe appointment of JaneFarrant as coordinator of pub¬lic relations for the HydePark-Kenwood urban renewalprogram was announced today.The announcement was madejointly by Harry Bovshow, execu¬tive director, Hyde Park-KenwoodCommunity conference, and Ju¬lian Levi, executive director,South East Chicago commission.Miss Farrant will work closelywith both organizations in con¬ducting a community public rela¬tions program for the Hyde Park-Kenwood area.She will also participate in ex¬plaining to news media in Chicagoand throughout the world theprogress of the Hyde Park-Ken¬wood urban renewal program, the first of its type in the UnitedStates.Miss Farrant was assistant di¬rector of public information andeducation, American Hospital as¬sociation, 1956 -1959. She was sen¬ior assistant, press relations, atthe University, 1954-1956. She liasbeen advertising manager of aGrand Rapids, Mich., departmentstore, and a bureau manager forUnited Press International.Miss Farrant received a bache¬lor of arts degree in English fromthe University of Michigan and amaster of arts degree, also in Eng¬lish, from UC.Her office is located at presentin Room 501, administrationbuilding.(left) SRP, ISL and PSA conforming to the UC traditionof innovation did a bit of research in the fine art of basketball last Friday evening with unusual results . . . think they'llneed a grant for further study!! (photo by Figlio)Freund lectures tor UC law schoolby Philip S. Marcus“What picture of FelixFrankfQrter as a teachershould be held before theminds of students who will beconscious of his spiritual presencein their classrooms?” So askedPaul Freund, Karl M. Loeb Uni¬versity professor of the Harvardlaw school, lecturing here on theSupreme Court justice in whosehonor the UC law school has re¬cently named one of its class¬rooms. But the picture he pro¬ceeded to paint was not so muchof a man as of a tradition—thetradition of Holmes, Brandeis andFrankfurter.This tradition of judicial phi¬losophy, as described by Profes¬sor Freund, is profoundly andpassionately concerned with ab¬stract principles, and is at thesame time profoundly mistrustfulof man’s capacity for wreakinginjustice* on individuals through dictum, “General propositions donot decide particular cases” andon the other hand, we have Frank¬furter’s statement, “There comesa time when general considera¬tions underlying particular situa-his very devotion to abstractions.On the one hand, we have Holmes’tions must be exposed.” For ex¬ample, while devotion to freedomof speech is certainly part of thistradition, there is also a refusalto reduce the complexity of lifeto absolute uncomplicated princi¬ples, so that freedom of speechwould not be extended to coveranti-semitic pamphlets or incite¬ments to race riots.And so the judge is faced withthe painful question; how do youdraw the line between respect forthe integrity of the individual,and respect for the structure ofgovernment, the lecturer asked.One answer is to be found in theBill of Rights, above all in the fifth amendment, which concerns“due process of law.” For Frank¬furter, “That a conclusion satis¬fies one’s personal consciencedoes not adequately guarantee itsvalidity. The method of arrivingat the decision provides the mostsatisfactory criterion available tous.” Thus, procedural considera¬tions and legal craftsmanship be¬come all-important to Frankfurteras a safeguard against excessivelypersonal judgments, Freund ob¬served.This is reflected, commentedFreund, in the recent SupremeCourt decisions on internal secur¬ity cases, where the court had atendency to decide no more thanwas necessary to each case, andto make the decision on technicaland procedural rather than onconstitutional grounds whereverpossible. This also gives the legis¬lature a chance for sober secondthought. Frankfurters concern for prop¬er procedure was also illustratedby Freund in his testimony beforean English Royal Crown Com¬mission studying capital punish¬ment. Frankfurter opposed it, onthe grounds that the attendantcheap, sensationalized publicity,especially in this country, tendsto make a fair trial impossible.A second answer to the problem,of where to draw the line is to befound in the study of history. Ina course in public utilities givenone year by Frankfurter at theHarvard law school, and knowninformally as the casc-of-thc-month club, it would have beensacrilege to approach a given caseas an illustration of a generalpoint or principle. For Frank¬furter, each case was a process,involving the geography of theregion, the biographies of theparties involved, and the back¬ground under which the relevant legislation was passed.History is a primary interestfor Frankfurter, not as inertknowledge, but in Holmes’ words,as a “way of freeing ourselvesfrom the fetters born of our ownmisunderstandings.” In 1926. indecisions concerning criminal lawand petty offenses, Frankfurterwrote, “American .social policysuffers all too much from the ab¬stract dictation of the Constitu¬tion. The Constitution does notsave Congress and the SupremeCourt from the necessity of giv¬ing past history present judgment.”Freund summed up his lecturein saying, “Frankfurter places Idsultimate faith in articulated rea¬son, though he has no unreal illu¬sions about that fragile instru¬ment. The infusion of reason intothe workings of society Is primar¬ily the work of the class room andthe law court.”LENTEN SPECIALComplete Catfish DinnerEat and be merry, for the check is only . . . $1.25Also, Stern's eggs-actly the way you like them!STERN'S CAMPUS DRUGS61st fir EllisBRANDEIS UNIVERSITYSUMMER SCHOOL1959 SESSIONJUNE 22— JULY 31* Coeducational* For Graduate and qualifiedUndergraduate studentsCredit Transferableinstitutes in:ARCHAEOLOGYMUSICPHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATIONPHYSICSPSYCHOLOGYTHEATER* Special Colloquia, Lecturesand ConcertsFor further information, clip and mail to:Brandeis University Summer School, Rabb C-7Waltham, MassachusettsPlease send detoils of InstituteNameAddress .Graduate Undergraduate Our advice on your mov¬ing or storage problem isentirely free and withoutobligation. But it is amaz¬ing how often we find youhave need of our services.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711% Oh, a little bit of BabylonFell out of the Sky of BlueUniversity liquors (next door)carries a complete line.Bigger, thirstier *59 cars priced.' a "out of your class!’?' * ‘ m %Get the quality car with built-in savings—Rambler ’59. Save more than ever on firstcost, on gas. Highest resale, too. EnjoyPersonalized Comfort: individual sectionalsofa front seats. See your Rambler dealer. Now 100-Inch whoelbaso RAMBLER AMERICAN*1835Suu«st*d dolivtred ptflca at Kanotha,Wisconsin, tor 2-door sodan at UtLStsto and local tsxos, If any, automatictransmission and optional l•xtra.SEE YOUR RAMBLER DEALER TODAY AND SAVE16 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 13, 1959