LAK comments on national postleaves for three-month vacationby Rochelle DubnowChancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton has stated that hehas not been asked to acceptthe chairmanship of a new advi¬sory committee on national goals.Kimpton was called to Wash¬ington on February 18 to discussthe formation of such a commit¬tee with President Eisenhower.It was subsequently reportedthat Eisenhower has chosenKimpton for the chairmanshipand Frank Pace, Jr., president of General Dynamics corporation forvice-chairmanship of the proposedcommittee. The appointment ofKimpton, however, was to be con¬tingent on his being able to ar¬range for adequate leave from UCto direct the long range study ofsecurity, solvency and nationalgrowth. At the time of the re¬ported appointment a spokesmanfor the University trustees saidthat the board would have to giveserious consideration to releasingKimpton for the lVa years needed to make the study.The President announced his in¬tention of appointing the commit¬tee in his State of the union mes¬sage on January 9. It was under¬stood that Eisenhower wanted thecommittee report in December,1960, a month before he leaves of¬fice. Eisenhower hoped that itwould be a work that would com¬mand the respect of both parties.Kimpton said of his meetingwith the President in a statementissued on March 19, “Our meetingVol. 67, No. 26 University of Chicago, April 3, 1959 31 concerned the form and functionsof the Presidential commission onNational objectives which thePresident originally proposed inhis State of the union message toCongress this year.“The future and the work of hisCommisison are of extreme im¬portance to every American. It isvital that the membership of thisCommission and its staff be thefinest that this country can offer.In talking with the President, onesenses how significant the workof this Commission will be.“Although the President waskind enough to discuss the meth¬od and procedures of this Com¬misison with me, he at no timeasked me to become chairman.Even if he had, I could not acceptthe chairmanship because of priorpersonal and professional commit¬ments.“Both as Chancellor of the Uni¬versity of Chicago and as Presi¬dent of the Association of Ameri¬can universities, I am intenselyinterested in the work of thisCommission. In both capacities, Ihave pledged to the President thefullest degree of support I can give."The bi-partisan committee isnot to be confused with the newRepublican committee on Goalsand Issues headed by UC trusteeand president of Bell and Howell,Charles Percy. However, Percy isone of those to whom the Presi¬dent talked when the idea of pro¬posing a committee on nationalgoals first came up.It is likely that he will be amember of the President’s com¬mittee.Kimpton and his wife, Marciahave already left the city for athree-month vacation, the first va¬cation Kimpton has had since hebecame chancellor eight yearsago.During Kimpton’s absenceR. Wendell Harrison, vice presi¬dent and dean of the faculties willbe in charge of University admin¬istration.The Kimpton’s, on their vaca¬tion, will cruise on their 28-footpower boat up and down the Ten¬nessee, Ohio and Mississippirivers. They will return in timefor the opening of the Summerquarter.*2,400,000 to Education schoolThe graduate school of edu¬cation has received a grantfrom the Ford foundation for$2 million to speed what theFoundation called “a break¬through in teacher education.”The action is the first phase ofa concerted new effort to supportimproved training for teachers,the Ford foundation said.The grant to the University wasamong the nearly $10 millionawarded by the foundation tonine major educational institu¬tions in the country.The grant was the second larg¬est among the Ford grants. (Har¬vard received $2.8 million). In the middle-west, one other institution,the University of Wisconsin, wasincluded on the list of nine.“We indeed are proud to an¬nounce assurance of this largegrant so soon after the establish¬ment of our new graduate schoolof education,” said Dean FrancisS. Chase. The new graduateschool was officially opened No¬vember 17, 1958.“Our school is dedicated to pro¬viding society with the teacher-scholars that our times need sodesperately,” he added. “We needteachers who are scholars andscholars who are teachers.”The new graduate school of education, organized around acore of specialists in educationaltheory and practice, operates withthe faculties of other divisions ofthe University providing the “con¬tent courses” for the prospectiveteachers. The eight-year Fordgrant will enable the Universityto collaborate with school sys¬tems in the Chicago area. It nowis co-operating with 14 elemen¬tary and high schools in four mid¬dle-western states.This co-operation includes aidin curriculum revision, organiza¬tion of teaching teams, and useof films, television, and othermodern aids. The Master of Arts in teach¬ing program emphasizes graduateWork and a year’s internship ona teaching team in one of the co¬operating school systems.The new school was establishedto extend the contributions of theUniversity to the improvement ofelementary and secondary educa¬tion. The unit will be a centerfor the preparation of teachersfor both elementary and second¬ary schools. Other contributionsto school improvemenT are alsoplanned.The school of education In¬cludes the precollegiate schools—the nursery school, the elemen¬tary school, The University highschool, and the orthogenic school—all of which make importantcontributions to the preparationof teachers, to research, and tothe testing of ideas to improveschool practice.Also included are several Uni¬versity agencies that carry onresearch, give training, and offereducational services. Amongthese are the audio-visual center,the comparative education center,the midwest administration cen¬ter, the reading clinic, and theschool improvement program. The new school co-ordinate ac¬tivities of the precollegiateschools, the various educationalcenters, the College, and graduatedepartments engaged in the prep¬aration of teachers.In a statement on the Fordgrant, Dean Chase said: “It is ourplan to use the Ford foundationfunds over an eight-year periodto improve teacher-education tech¬niques, seek methods to betterschool practices and for research."Dean Chase added that theSchool would include the follow¬ing objectives under its Ford-fi¬nanced program:• To increase knowledge abouthow learning takes place;• To prepare teachers who areskillful in expediting learning;• To improve the content ofinstruction in our schools;• To reorganize school formore effective learning;• To help schools to organizeteaching teams to make moreeffective use of specialized tal¬ents;• To demonstrate the possibil¬ity of accelerating learningthrough the use of films, televi¬sion, and other modern aids tolearning.Editor Dubnow questionsIndian ambassador on TVThe first annual conference for student editors ended at the Overseas press club Sunday,March 15.The three-day national conference, sponsored jointly by the United States National Stu-Maroon editor(above, right) is pictured dur¬ing the March 15 broadcast ofRuth Hagy's "College newsconference." Other panelistson the network television showwere (I to r) Paul Sigmund,teaching fellow at Harvard,Richard Taub, editor-in-chief,Michigan Daily, Curtis Gans,editor-in-chief, North CarolinaDaily Tar Heel, and RobertKiley, president, US NationalStudent association. The fivepanelists interviewed MohamedAli Currin Chagla, Indian am¬bassador to the United States,v tb« telecast Chagla corn- security pactrecently signed by the UnitedStates, Pakistan, Iraq and Tur¬key. He voiced the feeling thatthe pact would increase ten¬sions and conflicts and compelIndia to bolster her defensesagainst what he called Pakis¬tan's aggressive designs.(Photo by Ann Meuer —New York city) dent association and the club introduced the 120 participating student editors to members of the work¬ing press.Rochelle Dubnow, editor-in-chief of the Maroon was one of 120 college editors chosen to attend theconference at which international affairs received particular attention at round table sessions wherestudents exchanged views with foreign correspondents and other news specialists.Five of the 120, including Miss Dubnow, were selected to appear on Ruth Hagy’s television pro¬gram, College News conference broadcast by the American broadcasting company. In an interviewwith Mohammed-Ali-Currim Chagla, India’s ambassador to the United States, the students heard Chaglacriticize the security pact signed last week by the US, Pakistan, Iraq and Turkey.In answer to a question by Miss Dubnow, Chagla said the pact would “increase international tensionsand conflicts” and compel India to bolster her defenses against what he described as Pakistan’saggressive designs. He said India would rather spend money on economic development.Chagla said India was attempting to fight poverty by democratic means. If America is interestedin democracy, he said, then she should be interested in India, because India today is the’largest demoo-racy in the East.In an address to a conference at the Overseas Press club Chagla said Indian-American friendshipwould resist all passing differences because it was rooted in a common devotion to human dignity.The conference was made possible by grants from the Foundation for youth and student affairs,Ruth Hagy’s “College News Conference,” Time magazine and Seventeen magazine.Cambridge challenges UCsee editorial, page 4SG election April 16 Finer awarded Fulbright1959 spring elections for the Student assembly of StudentGovernment and the national and regional delegations forthe National Student association will be held on April 16and 17.All candidates who will appear on the ballots must file pledge formsand petitions by twelve noon, Monday, April 6.Pledge and petition forms and copies of the election law are avail¬able at Ida Noyes hall desk and Reynolds club desk.Student assembly distribution can be obtained from Election andRules after today.For additional information on the elections call E and R 4:30 to5:30, Monday through Saturday, room 218, Ida Noyes hall, ext. 3274.«r mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmommmmommmm wwww jw. w. mmummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmSupplements comingThe Maroon will publish the first of two special springsupplements next Tuesday, April 14. The issue, will presentthe slates of the political parties, and an explanation of theNational Student association, as well as coverage to the candidates,parties, and other relevant material.The other special edition will be published Tuesday, April 21 andwill contain information on the fifth annual Festival of the Arts aswell as SG NSA election results.Shapiro drawing April 15Drawing for rental of the available at Ida Noyes and whenJoseph Randall Shapiro “Art filled out with five choices shouldto live with” collection will be dropped in the registrationbe held on April 15 at 8 pm in Ida boxNoyes halL The collection includes paint-All undergraduates living in the ln^ by Leger, Goya, Kahn, anddormitory system or off campus Coen.are eligible to draw for one of the A rental fee of fifty cents perpaintings In the collection which quarter is charged and the paint-is now on exhibit in the foyer of ings should be returned to theIda Noyes. Student activities office on MayRegistration cards are now 20. University political scientist has been given a Fulbright award to teach in the Nether-lands this fall.Herman Finer, professor in the department of political science, was chosen to help theDutch launch a program to develop the ecenomies of the Far Eastern and Pacific peoples. He is adirector of the Chicago Regional Port authority.Finer will teach at the Institute of Social studies at The Hague and at the University of Leyden, fromSeptember to December, 1959. He'said the Institute of Social Studies plans to offer Western technicalassistance in the economic and educational field to develop native-born administrators and educators.Brought up in England, Finer is a specialist in the field of comparative government. He became anAmerican citizen in 1952.His books include "Theory and Practice of Modern Government” (1931); "English Local Government"(1933); "Mussolini's Italy” (1935); “Municipal Trading” (1941); "The Road to Reaction” (1945); "Amerlea's Destiny” (1947); "Administration and Nursing Service” (1951); and "Governments of GreaterEuropean Powers” (1956).His lecture on "Government and Human Nature" brought him the national award for the besteducational television program in 1955.Announce SFA decisionThe Student-faculty court will deliver its opinion on the appeal of Robin Freeman, con¬victed early last quarter by the East house tribunal for damage to the dormitory. The opin¬ion will be read Tuesday evening at 7 pm in Law south.The original tribunal recommended that Freeman be assessed the cost of repairing the damage done,that he be moved from East house and that he be referred to the disciplinary'committee of the University with the recommendation that he be placed on probation for the remainder of the year.This decision was found acceptable to resident househead John Hammet and director of studenthousing, James Newman. The case, however, was never referred to the disciplinary committee.The Student Faculty court refused to consider the "eviction” from East house, claiming "the essen¬tial issue before the court in this matter does not involve the administration's power to relocate students, but is rather the question of whether the residents of a dormitory house can set up their owntribunal to determine the guilt or innocence of individuals within the house and report their findingsto the administration.”The student faculty court is composed of four students and three faculty members: Roger Bernharf.Pete Langrock, Phil Hoffman, Don Villarejo, Donald Micklejohn, Margaret E. Perry and Harry Calvin.Ronald Tercheck, who normally sits on the court, disqualified himself from this case.BE OUR GUEST AT"The Music Man"IWin FREE TICKETS to "Music Mon", plus hi-fi CAPITOLrecord albums of the show. mA great package-saving contest commencing immediately,and ending May 2nd. For U. of C. students only.Start saving any empty packs ofMARLBORO, PARLIAMENT and PHILIP MORRIS — now!HERE'S ALL YOU DO TO WINStart buying, saving, or picking up allempty packs of only the above 3 brands(either flip-top boxes or soft packs), andturn them in each week for contestpoints at:STERN DRUGSSTINEWAY DRUGSContest points will be awarded as fol¬lows :wk. ending April II, each packdeposited worth 20 pointswk. ending April 18, each packdeposited worth 20 pointswk. ending April 25, each packdeposited worth 10 pointswk. ending May 2, each packdeposited worth 5 pointsHere's whet you win HERE ARE THE ONLY RULES1. Only Philip Morris, Parliament, andMarlboro boxes will be accepted forpoint value.2. Your name Cr address must be oneach pack.3. Deposit empty packs each week bySaturday at 6 pm in the containerat Stern Drugs or Stineway Drugs.No boxes will be accepted after6 pm on May 2nd.10 BIG PRIZES IN ALLEach prize is the same — consisting of:2 tickets for "Music Man" show$4.40 seats for a Sat. night in May1 Capitol original cast album of"Music Man", list $5.98Each prize has a value of nearly $15.00!Prizes will be awarded to the top ten entrants accumulating the greatest total numberof points for boxes submitted for the entire four week period.START NOW !Submit boxes early for top point valueWinners will be notified by mail, and a list posted at Stern Drugs and Steinway DrugsSAVE THIS AD FOR EASY REFERENCE UC given $10,000 grantby B. F. Goodrich companyGifts totaling $50,000 tofive leading privately financeduniversities were announcedtoday by The B. F. Goodrich com¬pany.The unrestricted gifts of $10,-000 each have been made to UC,Harvard, Yale, Princeton, andCornell.UC was one of five universitiesselected for being "among themost productive privately fi¬nanced institutions in traininggraduate students for universityteaching, careers, and for re¬search and the professions.”Colleges and universities throughout the nation receivedmore than $120,000 in 1958 underthe B. F. Goodrich program.Political party caucusesISL- Sunday, April 5, 8 pmIda Noyes library.PSA—(a) Open executive committee meeting — Sunday,April 5, 7 pm—Ida Noyes,lb) Closed executive committee meeting — in middle ofweek.(c) Open caucus — Sunday,April 12, 8 pm—Ida Noyes.SRP—Sunday, April 5, 7:30 pm— Ida Noyes.FREE DELIVERY- NICKYSPIZZERIANO 7-9063 EUROPEDublin to the Iron Curtain; Africato Sweden. You’re accompanied —not herded. College, age only. Alsoshort trips. $?24-fl,390.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255 Sequoia (Box 4) — Pasadena. Cal< f V WW WWW WWW ttTm»tTTT*TT<iT*T<tffy*fTtllrrTt»Tt»TITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage Gr meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.ON QUALITYDRY CLEANINCAll work done by a regular Chicogowholesaler whose plant serves otherretail stores in oddition to his own out¬lets. You get this service because ofour non-profit policy ond low overheodSuitsTrousers ..50c Dresses 95cJackets . .50c Suits (2-piece) 95cTop Coats .1.00 Light Coat . .. 95cOver Coats .1.10 Heavy Coat . . 1.10UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO HOURSSTUDENT SERVICE CENTER 11:00-1:004:00-5:00Reynold* Club Basement Mon.-Fri.WUS to have party NORC to start new study:Admission to hospitalThe World University service on campus is sponsoring anauction dance which will be held on Saturday, April 11, from8 30 to 12 pm at the Cloister club.The merchandise for the auction is being contributed by the localmerchants around campus and will range anywhere from ladies’lingerie to a three-pound ham. A complete list of articles will be foundin next week’s Maroon. The national opinion research center (NORC) at UC has just received a $200,000 grantfrom the Health Information foundation for a two-and-a-half-year study of factors otherAdmission is fifty cents and will be refunded to anyone who pur¬chases something at the auction. Faculty members and Universityemployees are invited to attend. ........ .Review at hangoutchairman of the Department ofMeteorology, for “Research invf Cloud Physics.”Byers and Roscoe R. Braham,Aaron Meyers and his quartet will supply the music for the dance, than the purely medical affecting the utilization of hospital care by individuals. The ac¬ceptance of the grant was announced in Chicago this week by Chauncy D. Harris, dean ofthe division of the social sciences and trustee of NORC.Admissions to hospitals, which in this country exceed 20 million per year, are governednot only by the medical needsof the applicants but by both s*u^y °f these factors is expected periences of people enrolled inj , f • i • •, to develop a better understanding two contrasting types of compre-... ... . . . , . ia^ anQ Proressional JuaS“ of the role of the hospital and the hensive medical-care insuranceBlackfriars will present a musical review m the SU Campus ments of optimum conditions for demands made upon it by the plans.hangout on April 9 at 10:J0 pm: The review will consist of treatment, by considerations of community. Of special Interest The new study will be based onacts done in the past and perhaps the musical comedy troupe patient comfort, and by other per- and study will be the bearing of a sampie of admissions to hospi-will give a preview of their new show Lizard Bile which will open sonal and social factors. hospital insurance coverage on tajs jn state of Massachusetts.Apnl 1G. These same factors may also decisions to hospitalize or not to it will have full cooperation of the• John Corbin, new manager of the Hangout, says that the “bung- affect the patient’s length of stay hospitalize when other factors af- Massachusetts Medical society,hole” is now open from 9 until 11:30 pm. in the h o s p i t a 1. A systematic fecting the decision are controlled. the Massachusetts Hospital asso-This is another in a series of ciation, and the Blue Cross-Bluestudies on which NORC and the Shield plans in that state.Health Information foundation The Health Information founda-have cooperated during the last tion was organized in 1950 as asix years. Other studies have in- contribution by the drug, pharma-. ,«• r . t . eluded two surveys, based on na- ceutical, chemical, and allied in-Nat ional Science foundation associate professor of meteorol- The two University of Chicago tional samples, of the role of pre- dustries to research and educa-has ma.de grants totaling ogy, were awarded $114,300 for a grants were part of the $1.14 mil- paid medical and hospital insur- tion in the social and economic as-$498,000 for two weather one-year study of the “Physical lion allocated for fiscal 1959 by ance in family costs for health pects of medical care. The chiefmodification projects on campus. Effects of Silver Iodide Seeding in the government agency, for 13 care; a national sample survey reason for the foundation’s inter-A throe-year grant of $383,700 the Great Plains.” The research weather modification studies. of the health problems of older est in this study, according towas given to Horace R. Byers, will be done by the Department of Byers said the Great Plains people in the context of their George Bugbee, its president, isMeteorology Cloud Physics lab- field work conducted under the other problems; a national study the need to make the wisest pos-oratory, of which Byers is direc- National Foundation grant information, attitudes, and sible use of limited hospital facil-tor and Braham associate direc- will study the physical changes in other subjective factors affecting ities, particularly in view of theUC awarded NSF granttor. seeded clouds.UC, University of Texasjoin depts of astronomy*UC and the University of Texas announced March 24, that a joint department of astron¬omy is being developed to serve both institutions.The two universities also disclosed that arrangements are being made with the Univer¬sity of Chile for construction of an observatory in the Southern hemisphere.The announcement was made by R. Wendell Harrison, UC vice president and dean offaculties, and Gordon Whaley, dean of the graduate school of the University of Texas.Professor Gerard P. Kuiper, the amounts and kinds of health increasing demands that are go-care families and individuals get; ing to be made upon them in theand a study of attitudes and ex- next few years.chairman of the UC depart¬ment of astronomy, will headthe now joint department. A co¬operative research program inastronomy has existed between\he two universities since 1932.The proposed observatory nearSantiago, Chile, will add a thirdmajor installation available to thetwo schools.The UC department of astron¬omy lias its headquarters atYerkes observatory on Lake Gen¬eva at Williams bay, Wisconsin. A40-inch refracting telescope thereis the largest of its type in theworld.The University of Texas ownsthe McDonald observatory atMount Locke in the Davis moun¬tains of Texas and has scheduled-a $300,000 expansion program forthe observatory. Under the coop¬erative agreement, UC has pro¬vided the scientific staff for Mc¬Donald observatory which housesthe fourth largest reflecting tele¬scope in the world. Professor Kuiper is director ofboth Yerkes and McDonald ob¬servatories.A large telescope is contem¬plated for the observatory inChile to give the astronomers ac¬cess to southern skies.Kuiper said that "university of¬ficials displayed an intense inter¬est in developing the new observ¬atory.”An expanded exchange pro¬gram for astronomy studentsamong the three universities also is contemplated, Kuiper said.Under Kuiper’s chairmanship,the joint department of astron¬omy will have an assistant to thechairman at each university. As¬sociate Professor Frank Edmondshas been appointed to that postat the University of Texas andAssistant Professor Helmut Abtat UC.Seven senior faculty members,four in residence at Williams bayand three in residence at Texas,v/ill compose the new department.\ MODEL CAMERAAuthorized l.oicaDealerI%SA Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 ^iitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiitmiimimiii^\wm if^;;r!DELIGHTFUL |ATMOSPHEREPOPULAR 1PRICES^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHtiiiiiiiiiiitiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitimtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittitiiiiiiiiiiiiimtiiiiinT?Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRISTH38 E. 63 HY 3-5352% Louise BarkerNow withCorona StudiesPhotography that capturesyour personality as well asyour personMU 4-74241314 E. 53rd St. OFF BEAT ECONOMY TOURSIN EUROPEA wide range of tours specially planned for UC students.Starting from Amsterdam, London or Paris.NEW TRACKS, AWAY FROM THE BEATEN TOURISTTRAPS. EUROPEAN COMPANY ON THE TOURS, ENG¬LISH GUIDES. All costs included (hotels, transport, meals,tips, taxes, sight-seeing). No hidden extras on theseeconomy prices.RUSSIA By specially* charted Soviet jets. Visit Moscow,15 days Leningrad, Ukraine, Crimea. All for $438!BERLIN, WARSAW, RUSSIA The route East is yours for24 days motor coach tour. 3 Vz leisurely weeks, for $465.SPAIN—14 days YUGOSLAVIA—1 4 daysonly $143 only $129SCANDINAVIA—12 days - GREECE—5 days cruiseonly $168 only $50CZECHOSLOVAKIA Cr GERMANY—14 days, only $165ITALY FRANCE, BRITAIN, SWITZERLAND and the rest: We cancost special tours for you at $10 a day, wherever and whenever youwant. Our European agents can meet you in every town. Send now tordetoiled travel folders:WORLDWAYS TRAVEL475 5th Avenue, New York 17, N. Y. rFor the man whocan’t pressafter every mealThese DICKIES flap-pocket Ivyslacks take minimum carebecause they’re real Wash andWear. Your exact size assuredwith the exclusive Dickies“no sew” waistband let-out.Bull sessions, class or heavy dateD & G CLOTHES744 E. 63our prices can’t be beat . .it’s smart to buy for less THE FAIR STORE95th Cr WesternEvergreen Shopping PlazaStudents Dept.GABES STORE OR MENN.W. corner of 55th andKenwood FRANK'S DEPT. STORE813 W. 79th StreetRA 3-6200phone orders acceptedDMCKIES ARE SHOWN AT ALL THE FMNER STORESApril 3, 1959 • CHICAGO. MAROON • 3th e 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,extentions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus. Subscriptions by mall, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5,Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material, 4 pm, Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material,3 pm Wednesday before publication.All urifeigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the Individual opinions of the authors. HOW TO BE ATHUMPING BIG SUCCESS ON CAMPUSCambridge challenges UCThe Cambridge university tiddlywinks club having recently become British championsby virtue of a resounding victory over Oxford university have challenged the Universityof Chicago to a match against them.Frank G. Kershaw, honorary secretary of the Cambridge university tiddlywinks club stated in a let¬ter to the Maroon that the Cambridge team plans a tour of America in September to play the principalAmerican universities and hopes that the University of Chicago will raise a team and organize a matchagainst Cambridge. “We feel sure that you will be keen to take part.” Kershaw wrote.We hope that some tiddlywink fans at UC “will be keen” to take part in what should definitely be themost interesting, and perhaps the most outstanding sporting event in recent history.For the benefit of prospective tiddlywinks players the Maroon has printed on page five of this issuethe complete international rules of tiddlywinks.Those interested in accepting the Cambridge challenge may contact the Maroon editor, Ida Noyes hall,^212 e. 59th street or may write directly to Frank G. Kershaw, Cambridge University Tiddlywinksclub, Christ’s college, Cambridge, England.Must consider rulingOne of the many considerations the newcollege faculty must soon consider is whetheror not to continue the single F rule now inoperation.PRIOR TO 1957 there was no F rule of any sort.To take a comprehensive a student had to do littlebut be in Bartlett the day the exam was given. Inthe fall of ’57, however, the double F rule was putinto effect. Under this ruling a student became dis¬qualified from taking a comprehensive if he hadfailed both of the previous two quarto’s work inthat course. This summer the new single-F rulewas announced.All these programs have individual merit andarticulate adherents. A choice among these, andthe additional possible programs, is difficult tomake.The single F program has two principle virtues.For one, it is a protection for the student. Compre¬hensive grades go on a student’s permanent record;an F or a D may be improved, but they can neverbe erased. In no circumstances does an F look good.Under this program students who appear to beheaded for an F are weeded out before the compre¬hensive, are given a chance to improve before anypermanent damage is done. In humanities one, forinstance, the staff has real hopes of not havingto give any F’s on the cpmprehensive.In addition, the single-F rule provides a stronginducement for continual preparation in all collegecourses. This sort of year long preparation andstudy is necessary both for top grades and for thatreal comprehension of a course, to which gradesare incidental.This system has operated with some success, butat the same time, the success is not as remarkableas it may seem. The number of F’s has decreasedfrom 800 last year to 150 this year. A largeportion of the students who shared 200 F’s Autumnquarter, if allowed to continue in their coursesWinter quarter, might be expected to boost thetotal considerably higher than 150. Morever, thenumber of R’s jumped from 50 to 400. That thisrise and the single F rule are related is certain.R’s mask a great many F's.IN ADDITION, sympathetic instructors, and insome cases staffs, give a great many D grades,which, under previous conditions, would have beenF’s. So, all in all, the diminished number of Fs isnot nearly as impressive as it might at first seem.Moreover, under this system each of the fourteencollege staffs have evolved their own definition ofan F. The Latin and Greek staffs give Incompletesrather than F’s to all students who failed Autumnquarter, the German staff found practically nooccasion for the I, humanities are agreed to grantthe grade only under extraordinary circumstances,while the English staff gives no Incompletes what¬soever. OMP gave probationary D’s, while the His¬tory staff relied heavily on the grade R. It is some¬what difficult to protest that there is any uniformagreement about the meaning of the grade F whenthere are thirty-six times as many F’s given inmathematics ABC as in social science one.Whatever becomes of the single F rule, it is obvi¬ous that its purpose, intent and application needa more universal agreement.THE SYSTEM, or perhaps, the lack of system inuse before ’57 had its advantages and disadvan¬tages also. It in no way penalized a student for iinitial ignorance. The argument of the adherents ofthis plan is essentially: a student enters a classfor the purpose of learning and what is of momentis simply what he has learned when the course isover and the classe is done. Knowing nothing of"chemistry or physics, a student entering a Naturalscience one course cannot be expected to do aswell as the student possessing a familiarity withthese subjects. But at the end of the year he shouldhave an understanding of chemistry, physics andelementary natural science, and he should be ableto demonstrate this knowledge on a comprehensiveexam.However charitable this view, it is not withoutits defects. Many students quite justifiably protestthat they do not want to risk everything on oneexam—an exam contingent upon so many extra¬academic considerations, from the weather to emo¬tional panic.THE DOUBLE-F was a compromise, combiningthe best features of the single-F plan and free reg¬istration plan along w’ith the worst features ofboth.There is a fourth possible program which hasreceived little campus consideration but merits agood deal: the program which has been in effectat Shimer college since 1956, which is being triedin the natural science two course. It is essentiallya program in which quarterly grades count 30 or40 per cent of the final grade.At Shimer it has been found that counting quar¬terly grades affects about three grades out of ten,raises twice as many grades as it lowers, and veryseldom changes a grade more than one letter ineither direction. When comps are repeated by in¬dependent preparation, the quarterlies are notcounted. The system provides the same impetusfor constant work as does the single-F rule, per¬haps more, without the cataclysmic effects; at thesame time it does provide a protection for thosestudents who freeze when taking a major testsuch as a comprehensive.But this system too has its defects. The argumentapplied to the single-F rule—that it penalizes thestudent for his early mistakes—applies doublyhere. It would be especially hard for entering stu-dwents who do not know what to expect until theyhave already taken a battery of quarterlies. Fur¬ther, it is another step away from the old Chicagoplan, another step when we should be clingingtenaciously to what we have left. Any final state¬ment here must wait until we see what actuallyhappens in natural science two this year.A FIFTH ALTERNATIVE is possible. In naturalscience two this year students are given the optionto elect one of two ways for preparing for thecomp. They may either register for a three-hourcomprehensive, in which case quarterlies arecounted, or they may register for a nine hour comp,in which case they receive no quarterly advisorygrade other than R.This plan seems to adopt the best of all the possi¬bilities; the student is allowed to make his owndecisions and the two alternatives would seem tomake everybody happy. (It is interesting to note,however, that next to no one has registered for thenine hour comprehensive.) But again, final com¬ment must wait until final results come in.IN ANY CASE, our intention here is not to posea solution, but rather, to calll attention to a cam¬pus problem which needs intelligent and open-minded consideration.O N April 3, 1959 While up in the attic last week hiding from the tax man, I cameacross a letter, yellow with age, that dear old Dad had sent mewhen I was a freshman. I reproduce it below in the hope thatit may light your way as it did mine.“Dear Son, (Dad always called me Son. This was short forSonnenbcrg, which used to be my first name. I traded it lastyear with a man named Max. lie threw in two outfielders anda left-handed pitcher... But I digress.)“Dear Son, (Dad wrote).“I suppose you are finding college very big and bewildering,and maybe a little frightening too. Well, it need not be that wayif you will follow a few simple rules.“First of all, if you have any problems, take them to yourteachers. They want to help you. That’s what they are there for.Perhaps they seem a little aloof, but that is only because theyare so busy. You will find your teachers warm as toast andfriendly as pups if you will call on them at an hour when theyare not overly busy. Four a.m., for instance.“Second, learn to budget your time. What with classes, activi¬ties, studying, and social life all competing for your time, it iseasy to fall into sloppy habits. Set up a rigid schedule and stickto it. Remember, there are only 24 hours a day. Three of thesehours must be spent in class. For every hour in class you must,of touree, spend two hours studying. So there go six morehours. Then, as we all know, for every hour studying, you mustspend two hours sleeping. This accounts for twelve more hours.Then there are meals—three hours each for breakfast and lunch,four hours for dinner. Never forget, Sonnenberg, you mustchew each mouthful twelve hundred times. You show me abackward student, and I’ll show you a man who bolts his food.“But college is more than just sleeping, eating, and studying.There are also many interesting activities which you must notmiss. You’ll want to give at least three hours a day to the campusnewspaper, and, of course, another three hours each to thedramatic and music clubs. And let’s say a total of eight hoursdaily to the stamp club, the debating club, and the foreignaffairs club. Then, of course, nine or ten hours for fencing andbird-walking, and another ten or twelve for ceramics and three-card monte.“Finally we come to the most important part of each day—what I call ‘The Quiet Time.’ This is a period in which yourenew yourself—just relax and think great thoughts and smokeMarlboro Cigarettes. Why Marlboro? Because they are thenatural complement to the active life. They haVe better ‘makin V;the filter filters; the flavor is rich and mellow and a treat to thetired, a boon to the spent, a safe liarbor to the storm-tossed.That’s why.“Well, Sonnenberg, I guess that’s about all. Your kindly oldmother sends her love. She has just finished putting up rathera large batch of pickles—in fact, 350,000 jars. I told her thatwith you away at school, we would not need so many, butkindly old Mother is such a creature of habit that, though I hither quite hard several times, I could not dissuade her.Keep 'em flying,Dad.”Here’* more advice to freshmen—and upperclassmen too.If non-filter cigarettes are your pleasure, double your pleas¬ure with Philip Morris, made by the makers of Marlboro.DID YOU KNOW, .. that over $600,000 is being paidout every working day to policy¬holders, beneficiaries and annuitantsof the Sun Life of Canada?As the Sun Life representative in yourcommunity, may I be of service?RALPH J. WOOD JR. '48Representative 1 N. LaSalle St. Chicago 2, III-IrR 2-2390 RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAThe international rules of tiddlywinksTiddlywinks is a game for four players, thosewho play opposite each other being partners. Theaim of the game is to flick the winks into the potThe should have a surface of a felt-like, non-pile structure, e.g. blanket, carpet, or rug, large enoughto permit the winks to be placed 3 feet from the pot.Where possible, public tournaments should be playedon needleloom carpets, 2 yards by 1 yard.The pot should be 1 Vi inches high, with a top dia¬meter of T/t inches. If ever a wink rests against thetMise rim of the pot, it is moved to lie flat on thecarpet, just touching the pot.The counters. Each player plays with 6 counters called"winks": 2 large ones, thickness 3/32 of an inch, dia¬meter approximately % of an inch; 4 small ones, thick¬ness 1/16 of an inch, diameter approximately % of aninch. A larger counter (approximately 1% inches indiameter) is used to flick the winks into the pot, andis called a “squidger."The score. The first player to pot all his winks scores4 points. The second player to pot all his winks scores2 points. The third player to pot all his winks scores1 point. The fourth player to pot all his winks scores0 points. Partners add their scores together.The start. The winks are placed three feet from thepot and each player squidges any one of his winkstowards the pot. These winks are brought back to thestarting position and the player whose wink was nearestthe pot has first squidge. Note: should there be a tiefor “nearest the pot" on the initial squidge. those con¬cerned have a resquidge. Play proceeds in a clockwise direction. Each playermay play only his own winks and has one shot perturn, with an additional shot for every wink he potsin that turn.Bounds. If, at any time, a player squidges his ownwink off the mat, he replaces it on the edge where itleft and misses his next turn.Note: If, during “desquopping” (see below) a playercauses another player’s wink to leave the mat, neitherplayer looses a turn.“Squopping." (a) Any wink or winks, covered how¬ever slightly by another wink, may not be played. Theact of covering another’s wink is called “squopping.”Note: A wink cannot be squopped until it has beenbrought into play by being squidged from its startingposition, (b) In a pile of two or more winks, only theuncovered winks can be played and must be playedin the following manner: the squidger must first comeinto contact only with the player’s uncovered wink anda short, continuous stroke must be made. (This shot isknown as “desquopping” and may be sufficiently vigor¬ous to free all or some of the squopped winks), (c)When all the remaining winks of one pair are squop¬ped, the opposing pair counts its remaining free winks(i.e. ones that are not covering, covered, or potted) andhas the same number of free turns. With the next shot,one wink of either of the squopped opponents must befreed. (If this shot does not free the opponent’s wink,the covering wink must be moved aside to allow theopponent to play). Note: When a squopped player’s wink has been freedafter the completion of the free turns, or if it becomesfreed during the free turns, the player must be allowedto have at least one turn before being squopped again.Note: If one member of a squopping pair has no play¬able winks the free turns are all taken by the othermember. Otherwise the free turns are shared betweenthe two players in normal rotation. If, during the courseof the free turns, one of the pair pots all his free winks,he is obliged to play one of any covering winks he mayhave, and with this shot he must free at least one wink(not necessarily his opponents), (d) As soon as one ofthe four players has potted all his winks, Squoppingceases to have any effect and all squopped winks areimmediately uncovered, as are any which may becomecovered during the remainder of the game. This un¬covering is done by moving the covered wink aside,always at the same distance from the pot, until it nolonger covers any other wink.Disturbance of winks. Any winks disturbed in anaccidental manner, e.g. by the follow-through of a shotor by bodily contact, should be replaced in their formerpositions. If a wink in flight accidentally touches thebody or clothing of any of the players, it is likewisereplaced in its former position and the next player con¬tinues with his turn. If a player deliberately interfereswith any wink or impedes his opponent, he and hispartner shall be disqualified from this game and theopponents shall receive all 7 points.If a player pots his opponent’s or his partner’s winkhe does not have an additional shot. . _Winter F's number 143One hundred and forty-three “F’s” were given to 143 Students in college comprehensivecourses last quarter, announced Harold Hay don, dean of students in the college.Concerning the Autumn quarter, 205 “F’s” were given to 177 students. These figures com¬pare fal)orably to last year’s. During the one academic year the college worked under thedouble-F rule, there averaged over 800 F’s per quarter, Haydon continued.“These figures are not yet final,” added Myra Binyon of the dean’s office. “There wereerrors in reporting and re¬cording which are still beingcorrected. But, there are def¬initely fewer failures than lastquarter."This is not quite as hearteningis it might be, for the great ma¬jority of students receiving F’sin the Autumn quarter were notallowed to continue in Winterquarter classes until achievingsatisfactory Autumn grades. Most students meeting a per¬sonal Armeggidon earlier in theacademic year registered for mid¬year classes or took one-quartercourses to fill out their programs.Of the few students allowed tocontinue in courses they failed,only four double-Fed. Conse¬quently almost all F’s are newblows.There are additional considera¬ tions which temper this improve¬ment. Last year about fifty stu¬dents registered for “R’s" eachquarter. In the Autumn therewere over 250 R's; this quarterHaydon estimated that a total of400 R’s were registered. In gen¬eral it has been found that R’sturn out to be D’s and F’s moreoften that A’s and B’s.Moreover, over thirty studentsregistered or received the gradeof Incomplete. This is, however,a drop from the 41 I’s recordedlast quarter.lMued «T9ry Friday throufhaat the University *f Chieagd eeheol year andiateminently during the dimmer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon,Ida Noyes hail, lilt East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-MM,estensions SMS and 32M. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionsby mail, $s per year. Office honrs: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday.Editor-in-chiefRochelle Meta DubnowAssociate editor Business managerNeal Johnston Lawrence D. Kessler The F’s break down in the fol¬lowing manner (the Autumnquarter figures are given inparenthesis): humanities one, 12(19); humanities two, 12 (11);humanities three, 6 (6); socialscience one, 1 (4); social sciencetwo, 7 (3); social science three, 7(9); natural science one, 10 (24);natural science two, 11 (20); Eng¬lish, 13 (10); mathematics, 36(21); OMP, 1 (8); OMP naturalscience three physical, 5 (1);OMP-natural science three bio¬logical, 3 (2); history of westerncivilization, 4 (5); French, 10 (12)German, 14 (23); Spanish, 4 (11).There were no F’s reported fornatural science three.Deplores lack of studentsupport for cultural eventsAt the end of last quarter University Theatre and University College brought the off-Buadway company The Irish Players to campus in an effort to make better theater avail¬able in Chicago through the support of professional non-Chicago companies. The choice ofprogram was perhaps a poor one. The plays presented, although recognized works, acted by a reputablecompany, certainly do not represent the most esoteric twentieth century theatre, and in many waystheir appeal was limited. Nor was the time particularly well-chosen. Many students have serious objec¬tions to attending a three-hour play the night before an important exam, and many students left Chicagobefore the final performances.But at the same time the plays presented were good theatre acted by a well-known and well-reviewedcompany. And the enterprise as a whole did not meet with the kind of support such an endeavor wouldseem to merit. The production barely managed to pay for itself.This partial failure was not completely caused by a lack of student support. As a matter of fact, prob¬ably a larger proportion of the studen body saw these productions than have attended any otherdramatic production in the past ten years. This after all was a comedy presented by a “name" com¬pany. But the fact that the enterprise was not wholly successful, together with the fact that UniversityTheatre is usually forced to rely much more on general Chicago than on the student body for itsaudiences, is indicative of a lag in cultural interest on the part of that body.Nor is the lack of support for University Theatre the only instance of such a lag. Many lecturers herespeak to empty houses. Many concerts have few students in the audience. Considering the ideals forwhich the University is supposed to stand, which include the production of educated end cultured mem¬bers of society, such a deficiency is deplorable. Students here jump to help many causes, radical andreactionary. They seem to be forgetting one cause which by attending this University they formallysupport—the extension of aesthetic events, productions, exhibitions, etc., in short, the extension ofculture in the society surrounding them. For the man whocan’t pressafter every mealThese DICKIES flap-pocket Ivyslacks take minimum carebecause they’re real Wash andWear. Your exact size assuredwith the exclusive Dickies“no sew” waistband let-out.Our Prices Can't Be Beat . . . It’s Smart To Buy For LessD & C Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728“In the Neighborhood for 40 Years"Hours: 9 a m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. —9 a.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdayNeal JohnstonRichard P.McKeon injuredin Pennsylvania accidentRichard P. McKeon, a distinguished service professor at UC has been in serious conditionin a Lebanon, Pennsylvania hospital since last Saturday, after being struck by a hit-and-run driver.McKeon and two sons were returning from Cambridge, Massachusetts, where they vis¬ited McKeon’s daughter, Nora, 17, at Radcliffe college. Coming west on the PennsylvaniaTurnpike, they developed car trouble and stopped at a Lebanon garage for repairs.As McKeon and his sonMichael, 15, were crossing astreet, an automobile drivenby a 16-year-old boy struck them.Michael, who was grazed by the 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 K3DM -o+i.'d MS ayOf s+oy cuoy-HODBBhU3MSNV IQDmconcussion, but no fractures, andthat he should be released fromthe hospital by the end of nextweek.McKeon, who has been at UC Charter flight announceslast applications acceptedcar, told the Maroon that his for 25 years, was the dean of thefather was dragged or carried by division of Humanities from 1935the car for one block. Two or until 1947. A leading authoritythree people witnessed the acci- on Aristole, he edited the Modern _. . .. , . , , . , ,, ~dent and one of them got the Library book, introduction to Final applications are now being accepted for seats on the Student Government spon-car’s license number. But though Aristole, a volume well-known to sored charter flight to Europe. The plane will leave for Amsterdam on June 22, and returnthe police knew where the driver Humanities II students. He is now to New York from Paris on September 5. Pro rata share for 4he round trip is $280.was, his father turned him in a Charles T. Grey distinguished Hot meals will be served on both flights without charge, and there is a club room forseveral hours fater. It was feared service professor in the depart- those who want to bring their own drinks, guitars or playing cards.at first that, besides multiple ments of Philosophy and. Classical Applications for this “super-economy” flight can be made by registered students, Fae-lacerations on his face and head, Language and Literature, and is ujty members, and employees —McKeon might have suffered a the chairman of the committeeskull fracture. However, Michael for analysis of ideas and studysaid that McKeon had a serious of methods.Offer language study and their immediate familieswith the flight leader, ErichKlinghammer. Office hours at theSG office in Ida Noyes hall are12 to 1 pm each weekday, exten¬sion 3274, or evenings, DO 3-8158.In the spring quarter, UC’s downtown center will open anew program of intensive training in European languages andcultures. According to John E. Harr, director of the newprogram, its purpose is to provide students, businessmen, andtourists with a “realistic opportunity of cracking the communicationsbarrier.’' . .Tuition for the approximately 110 hours of instruction is $190for the first registration from a family or company, and $150 foreach subsequent registration. “Any intensive program of this kindrequires an investment of time and money, but the stakes are worthit,” Harr pointed out. “Actually, the tuition cost per hour of instruc¬tion is low.”Students will meet for ten hours a week for 11 weeks to developgood basic conversational ability which can “ripen into fluency withtravel and experience,” Harr added. The program is based on methods“best calculated to achieve results.” Two instructors will be assignedto each group, and they will take turns providing stimulated discus¬sion and variation in accents. Important respites to the intensivelanguage study will be found in lectures, discussions and films on the flights for as little as $49.40 pluscultures of the areas in which the languages are spoken. tax. This is 30 per cent cheaperAbout 90 per cent of the seats arenow booked.The following services are alsobeing offered to flight membersthis year for the first time:• Chicago (Midway) — NewYork (Idlewild): Round tripKQOL KROSSWORD No. 21ACROSS1. They usuallycome in 3's6. Head, back,heart, tooth—they’re related9. Which was to bedemonstrated(L. abbr.)12. Retrospectiveview of a Kool13. Kind of miss14. Kind of corn15. Undergroundblind date16. Single girlsover 7018. Sum total ofhot music DOWN1. Mater’s firstname2. No smoke is soa Kool3. Bridge ante4. Draw roughly;very tunny!5. Wild ox foundin an oak6. He’s strictlyfrom Gaul7. Pilgrimageto Mecca8. Girl Hermanembraces9. TV doings forthe brainy set 1 2 3121518 j r 6 7 8 1r 'r 17 r 10 nr20. Symbol of penny 10. This is final21. West Point, U* Kmdinitially24. Der Kaiser’skind27. “Mother of theGods”28. Reversible girl20. Nobel Prizewinner amidstworrySO. buddies33. Full of wonder34. Scene of bullsession35. Mildrefreshing42. Pop’s no longer enchantment17. Cflte d’in France19. It goes witha cry22. A boundary23. Vark’a, firstname24. Ali25. Scent26. Item for awindow shopper3U Singles32. A Yankee33. Needy ofyour constantasked when thisis popped ^Stephen44. It gave a 37. He’s in thecruller a - rackets racketdifferent handle »*• Kind of fooling45. Gobs, initially 39. First name of46. Loyal and less playwright sthan legal daughter, c<>-47. Mazes and median s wifemunicipalities 40. Opposite ofboth have news—yet ex¬dead tremely mobile48. , drink and 41. Opposite ofbe merry more49. No half 42. That’s FrenchNelson, he 43. Alaska is %60. Part of “afras” part of it• As cool and clean as a breath of fresh air!• Finest leaf tobacco77. mild refreshing menthol —and the worlds most thoroughly tested filter!• With, every puff your mouth feels clean,your.throat refreshed!/QwcHcgs MostlMesning Qgatdfe...ALSO REGULAR SIZE KOOL WITHOUT FILTERI• 1859, Brown A Williamson Tobacco Corp,6 • CHICAGO MA R O O N • April 3, 1959A ’ ’ >Ti, \~ ,'i . >• , \ 11 »/ f> jl i1 Qigarettei-' * WMhMWA M,v * than the coach-flights offered bythe commercial airlines.• Hotel bookings: Rooms maybe reserved at hotels in Amster¬dam, New York, or in any Euro¬pean city (minimum of threenights) at tourist class hotels.• Bus service: Between the air¬port and the city center in Am¬sterdam and also in Paris, at aprice considerably below the com¬mercial fare.• Tours: Specifically designedfor students, tours are being or¬ganized at an economical and all-inclusive price in New York, inmany countries of Europe, and ona cost-saving “package” basis.Many of them start from Amster¬dam in late June.Black appointedto religious grantThe Danforth foundationhas just announced the ap¬pointment of William GrantBlack, currently in study at UC, • Movie meeting: All chariermembers and persons interestedin the flight are invited to a meet¬ing next Thursday at 7:30 pm inthe Ida Noyes library. A stereo-picture show of European eoun-"tries in color will be given, coffeeand cookies will be served, andarrangements for the trip to NewYork by plane or car pool can hi'made. People from various Euro¬pean countries will be present toanswer any questions concerningtraveling in their respectivChomelands.J.White featuredin music festivalat Mandel hallThe UC chapter of theYouth March for Integratedschools is sponsoring a con¬cert featuring Josh White andother jazz musicians and folksingers at Mandel hall this Satur-fts one of the thirteen Danforth day at 8:00- Tickets for the con-*Campus Christian workers for theacademic year 1959-60.The award allows an academicyear of graduate study in the uni¬versity or theological school of cert are $1.25 for general admis¬sion and $1.50 for reserved seatsand can be obtained in the cor¬ridor of Mandel hall.The concert is being held forthe candidate’s choice. Recipients the purpose of supplying fundsare chosen from applicants in the for the forthcoming m a r c it tofields of college chaplaincy, direc- Washington DC on April *18 totorships of religious activities and protest the president’s lack ofdenominational student programs, action on integration and to <!<*-and YMCA or YWCA secretary- mand congressional action in pro¬ships. '1 he candidates are chosen posing strong and comprehensiveon the basis of professional legislation.growth, intellectual promise, per- This month-s march is the fo].sonahty, and vitality of religious low.up to the first youth march*C°wur merRt u *° Washington which took place™,am B1?ck was gently as- last October. The initial campaignuniversity YMCA ^ ^ Indmna vvas drawn UP by a £rouP of (1,‘university imla. jzons consisting of Roy Wilkins,NAACP president; Mrs. RalphBunche; Martin Luthor King jr.;A. Phillip Randolf, president ofthe brotherhood of sleeping carporters union; and Jackie Robin¬son. It starfed with 1,000 youthsfrom New York City and endedup with 12,000 youths from manyeast coast cities.The UC delegation will leave onApril 17 at 7 am and will returnat noon on Sunday.Rudy’sAuthorizedU of C Class RingsSales OMEGA Serviceindividuallydesigned, handmadejewelry(Discount to students)1523 East 53rd st.NOrmal 7-2666ISL CAUCUSSunday, April 58:00 pmIda Noyes Librarydiscussion and ratificationof party platformnomination of ISL slatefor spring electionsClosed only to members of other partiesnew registrationWilliam Van Cleve, the Reg¬istrar, today announced newregulations to keep track ofsection changes or coursesdropped from or added to stu¬dents' registrations. The regula¬tions become effective beginningthe Spring quarter, and affectonly general studies courses withcomprehensive examinations.Obtaining classadmission ticketsIf a section is dropped and an¬other added, or if a course isdropped and none is added, aclass admission ticket (a greenIBM style card imprinted withyour name and course identifica¬tion) must be obtained from theInstructor of the course you areleaving. First, the student shouldsee his adviser, fill out a changeof registration card, have thechange recorded by the tallyclerk in the College dean of stu¬dent’s office, and then show thechage of registration card to theInstructor when he is asked forthe green class admission ticket.For the change of registration tobe official, the old class admis¬sion ticket must be delivered tothe registrar’s office, togetherwith the approved change of reg¬istration card. Instructors will have receivedclass admission tickets for all cor¬rectly registered students by Mon¬day, April 6. Changes of registra¬tion will be accepted by the Regis¬trar prior to that date, providedstudents obtain the signature ofthe releasing Instructor in the"Remarks” column of the changeof registration card next to theentry for the section or coursebeing dropped.If a student withdraws entirelyfrom the College, he should: (a)obtain the approval of his with¬drawal from the College dean ofstudents; (b) retrieve a class ad¬mission ticket from each of hisgeneral studies course Instruc¬tors; and (c) turn in his approvedwithdrawal (the change of regis¬tration card indicating with¬drawal from all courses) and his4class admission tickets to theRegistrar. Steps (b) and (c) areunnecessary between quartersand in the Summer when a stu¬dent is not registered.Registration not officialwithout correct ticketInstructors of general studiescourses will require a class ad¬ mission ticket for every studentclaiming official registration intheir course or section. For stu¬dents who registered in advance,the Registrar will send these tick¬ets to Instructors by April 6 onthe basis of information appear¬ing on students’ advance registra¬tion cards; Instructors will directstudents for whom they do nothave class admisison tickets tothe Registrar’s office to have their registrations verified. If ver¬ified, the student will be givena class ticket to present to hisInstructor.For students registering per¬sonally this Spring, a class admis¬sion ticket will be issued to thestudent for each of his coursesat the time he registers; thisticket should be delivered to theInstructor at the first meeting ofthe class. For students changingto a different section or adding a course to their registrations afterthe regular registration period(March 31), the Registrar willsupply a class admission ticketfor the new section or course atthe time the student brings inhis approved and tallied changeof registration card, together withthe class admission ticket for theclass he is dropping.The new ticket should be deliv¬ered to the Instructor at the firstclass meeting attended.Draft exams announcedSelective service qualifica¬tion test will be given April30, according to the office ofthe registrar. Male students plan¬ning to take the examinationshould obtain an application fromthe local draft board, 1519 W. 63rdstreet. The form must then bemailed to the board, postmarkedno later than midnight, April 9.To be eligible to take the test,an applicant:• must be a selective service reg¬ istrant who intends to requestdeferment as a student,• must be satisfactorily pursuinga full-time course, undergraduateor graduate, leading to a degree,• must not previously have takenthe test.Students who are early entrantsand have not qualified for thetwelfth grade certificate are noteligible.The selective service systemConvocation held, 158 get degreesy Degrees were granted to158 students at the 281st con¬vocation held March 20 inRockefeller chapel. Thorfin R.Hognoss, professor of chemistryand director of Chicago Midwaylaboratories gave the convocationaddress.Of the 158 degrees granted, 24were bachelor of arts or science.Higher degrees awarded included18 master of arts or sciences, 43master of business administra¬tion. ten law degrees, two bach¬elor of divinity and 31 doctor ofphilosophy.Soc largest degreeSocial sciences was the largestcategory in number of degreesawarded. Seven bachelor, 35 mas¬ter and 19 PhD degrees wereawarded in this division.Hogness told the graduatesthat science and technology havebecome interdependent partnersin a "feedback” system thatbrings science closer to its goal:Russian circlehas a meetingThe first meeting of theRussian circle will be in Socialsciences 122 Tuesday, April 7,at 7:30 pm. The Russian circlewas formed last quarter by stu¬dents interested in Russian andSoviet culture and history. Dur¬ing the first half hour of the firstmeeting an organization meetingwill be held with election of offi¬cers and a discussion of the aimsof the group and plans for futuremeetings. All students of Russianliterature, history, and language,plus those interested in currentSoviet affairs, are invited to at¬tend.At 8 pm, Ladis Kristof, lecturerin Russian history at the Down¬town College, will discuss "BorisPasternak and Some TraditionalRussian Political and Religioust tl c a s : Kenoticism, Sobomost,’and Doctor Zhivago.** understanding of the riddle oflife and the universe.System increases knowledge"Left on its own, this systemcan only increase the scope ofman’s knowledge at an ever in¬creasing rate,” he said.In the Convocation address, en¬titled “Science and its goal,” Hog¬ness said the search for more andbetter engineers and scientistswas accelerated in both the Unit¬ed States and the USSR at theend of World War II.Hogness sketched the evolutionof science "and its partner, tech¬nology,” and showed how theseparate fields had become in¬terdependent in the past 150years, each stimulating the ofhertowards fresh ideas and in newdirections.Science expandedAlthough science has expandedIts relationship with other discip¬lines, the fundamental goals re¬main unchanged: greater under¬standing of life and the universe.**We are probing deeper anddeeper into the ultimate structureof matter, its destruction, and itsformation” for an understandingof cosmogenesis — the riddle ofthe universe, Hogness said.At the same time explorationscontinue with ever increasingscope into the microcosm of theatom and biogenesis—the riddleof life.The impact of new develop¬ments on society has producedproblems which are quite unfa¬miliar to history, Hogness said. "One of the most pressing ofthese problems, in the democraticsociety in which we live, is thatof informing the general public ofthe nature of the world in whichwe live."With scientific discovery pil¬ing on top of scientific discovery,and with technology rapidly ap¬plying these discoveries so thatthey affect us all, by what mech¬anism can the general public be¬come sufficiently informed to de¬cide what use should and shouldnot be made of these applica¬tions?”-Hogness said.Information is function"The problem of informing thepublic of the nature of these sci¬entific discoveries and their appli¬cation is a proper function of ouruniversities,” he said. "But sci¬entists, too, have a certain respon¬sibility in seeking a solution tothis problem and others raised bythe startling growth of science.”He added, however, that respon¬sibility is not limited to the sci¬entists and the university. "All ofus, particularly your generation(of graduating students) sharethis responsibility.”The scientist cannot solve all» /the problems of mankind, "norsatisfy man’s yearnings, nor his incessant search for answers tolife's tremendous uncertainties."The vital fields of the arts,philosophy, and religion (andothers) have their equally signifi¬cant and challenging roles to playin interpreting man’s life as helives it, in influencing his think¬ing, his sense of values, his faith,and his struggle with the deep hu¬man and spiritual problems whichonly total education and religioncan touch,” Hogness concluded.Lab is activityChicago midway laboratory, ofwhich Hogness has been directorsince 1951, is one of the three ac¬tivities of the laboratory of ap¬plied sciences which perform re¬search on significant defenseproblems confronting the UnitedStates. has established this testing pro¬gram to provide local boards withevidence of the relative qualifica¬tions of registrants for collegestudy. The test scores are sent di¬rectly to the student's local board.YMCA offersclasses for HPThe Hyde Park YMCA willstart a new series of informalclasses for men and women onApril 6. The program includes acourse in Russian, speech correc¬tion, guitar playing, square danc¬ing, applied psychology, and firstaid.In addition to these there arecourses in dancing, bridge,French, German, Spanish, photog¬raphy, rapid reading, ceramics,painting, investments, typing,shorthand, public speaking, cre¬ative writing, interior decorating,office machines, weaving, govern¬ment, art appreciation, golf, greatbooks, and many others.The tuition fee for these classesis the lowest in the city, $6.00 to$10.00 per course, to make themaccessible to all men and womenwho are interested in improvingtheir skill and knowledge. Forfurther information call or writeHyde Park YMCA, 1400 E 53rdstreet, Chicago 15, telephone: FA4-5300.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 Exclusive CleanersQuality Dry Cleaningsame-day servicein by 12, out by 3no extra charge1309 E. 57th St. Laundry Specialshirts 1 5csheets 19cpillowcases 7cMl 3-0602K PETER PIPERnursery school &KINDERGARTENChildren accepted 2-6 yts. oidCollege trained personnel14*S t 60 Ml 1-2172 HI-FI and STEREO 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 special services include:• Frequency response and undistorted output test.• Intarmodulotion, harasouic nnd frequency distortion test.• Perfect repair for amplifiers, pre-amps., and AM-FM tuners.• Excellent service for tope recorders, auto, record changers,and radios.Fsr guaranteed satisfaction, CALL ES 5-3666Cheltea Television Carp. 2915 East 79th St. 1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 —HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & GalleryNEW POLICYa Open 7 nights• Closed tue. and wed. lunch• Featuring —— Complete wine menuand Hors d'oeuvre TableCheese Small12"Combination Small12". .2.25Sausage Mushroom ......Anchovy ShrimpPepper & Onion ....1.50 Bacon fir Onion .., ..2.00Free Delivery on AU Pizza to 11C StudentsCOUPON WORTH $.25On any deliveryOr on any luncheon and/ordinner servedApril 3, 1959 •CHICAGO MAROON • 7HERE’S WHY '^ TAREYTON’S DUAL FILTER ^| FILTERS AS NO SINGLE FILTER CAN1. It combines an efficient pure white outer1 with a unique inner filter of activatedcharcoal ... which has been definitelyproved to make the smoke of a cigarettemilder and smoother.-i• . ■i ''.. r..UC has new trustees Griswold loves a riot butAnderson to appearNoted contralto Marion An¬derson will present a benefitconcert Sunday at 3:30 pm inOrchestra hall. The performanceis sponsored by the CooperativeNursery school of Hyde Park.Tickets are $4, $3 and $2. Thereis a limited number of $3 and $2Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristEyes ExaminedGlasses FittedContact LensesVisual Training1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372 seats. A special rate for studentsis available for the $4 tickets;these will be sold at $2.50.Tickets are available at theeducation desk of the Hyde ParkCoop and the Reynolds club desk.For further information callJeanne Orlikoff, MU 4-8159.Billings cafeteriagets new hoursNew hours have gone intoeffect at the cafeteria in Bil¬lings hospital.Breakfast is now being servedfrom 6:30 to 9 am, lunch from 11am to 1:30 pm, and dinner from5 to 6:45 pm. A late supper canbe had from 7:30 pm to 3 am.The new times for the coffeehours are as follows: 9 to 11 am,1:30 to 5 pm, and 6:45 to 7:30 pm.3Ae *jtU6um PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433Two new trustees have been elected to the University can¬cer research foundation board.They are Myron H. Fox, president of the Bell Savings andLoan association, and Eugene M. Kinney, vice president andgeneral manager of the hearing aid division of Zenith Radiocorporation. all Yalies on probation .The announcement of their United States Savings and Loanelection was made by Maurice league.Goldblatt, chairman of the Kinney joined Zenith in 1947foundation. The foundation pro- after service with the Navy in thevides for financial aid for scien- Pacific area. In the next decade,fists working on cancer research he handled assignments in eachproblems at the University. phase of Zenith’s home officeFox was one of the thirteen operations. He was appointed as-original founders of Bell Savings, sistant general manager of the "The faculty and the stu¬dent-run Yale News of Yaleuniversity>feel ashamed of thestudents’ part in Thursday’s andSaturday’s disturbances, but seeno reason for the brutality dis¬played by the New Haven police,”said an editor of the News lastweek.He is director of the Chicago Bet- Zenith hearing aid division in Jan-ter Business bureau and the Fed- uary, 1957, and in December, 1957,eral Home Loan bank of Chicago, he became the division’s generalHe is also a member of the manager.Chicago central area committee The following January, theand the advisory committee of the Zenith boat'd of directors electedCivic federation and a member of Kinney vice president in chargethe legislative committee of the of the hearing aid division. Two weeks ago Thursday, asnow ball fight in front of twofreshman dormitories turned intoa general melee with the NewHaven poiiee. The two dorms arenow on social probation and therest of the student body is nowon general probation. Yale’s Pres¬ident Griswold, who at the startTHE TAREYTON RING of his academic career stated that punks started something and wethere was nothing that he enjoyed finished it for them.” The majormore than a riot, claimed the inci- incident occurred on Saturday fdent set relations with the town when students threw snowballshack ten years and threatened ex- at policemen during a St. Pat-pulsion to any student who fur- rick’s Day parade,ther misbehaves. Some students say that the"One policeman reported to the barrage of snowballs was in re-New Haven Register that Yale sponse to the beating of severalstudents were arrested Thursday students and faculty members bybecause they threw snowballs at the police who used their billyparading girls from neighboring clubs to stem a surging crowd.Albert us Magnus college. Offi- "Following the outbreak,” therials and students denied this cjty police (leaving the parade)claim,” he said. moved into the crowd, used clubsWith the arrest of 25 students on students who were scramblingThursday and 16 more on Satur- out of their path and charged onday, one policeman said, "Those the college gates.MOEEWHEiWRING HRS COfAC 10 LAMPUS BNP,(fe USUAL, SlUDEKJTS A Attupteno to Mot! flN WSAHMWjg- ClAMBUONGDOWN OUT <* 4)ft NtOt IWSTVUBRARVES INTO IKE STREETS TOBCSUK|SLOSHED POuN (PHH HRt HOStSwt RND IT huttfWORE EKEiriMGTO PHNCfc 1HRW6HCHE SAD THINGTHOUGH... THERE ARECERTAlHUf GOING TOA LOT 0t WSAP-PWlOTEh FlRETVtEA)sitting Around the0U> CHECktabOAROTHIS WRING IT WtrDON'T RSOM NONSENSE.CLARENCE? ITSHOULD HOT At THE AIM 0EAMERICAS GREAT UNH/ERWESTO MEftEiy PROVIDE ftFftOOCfor a reul FOVRTY-VEAft-00) RftEhEKU BOCK VA TRoopER!TH« SMftMD HAVEBEEN FARSIGHTEDENOUGH to 5UMTCMTO SMUfFtteDAfcfiAAMVAV !vr?ShUHtfTHtya nave toGO HOME...DRAGGING TMEiftMOSES fifcHfUDv THEM. JiTHE REAL THING IN MILDNESS...THE REAL THING IN FINE TOBACCO TASTE INew Dual Filter Tareytons are fast becoming a big smoke on U.S.campuses! Just take a look. You’ll see. And why, are they so popular?just take a puff. You’ll see.NEW DUAL FILTER JforeVtOno*rmMUn*m ©* *’ «* rKUvaKtbbl Vt PAINT & HARDWARE CO."Hyde Park's Most Complete Point & Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th tf.Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave.SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Men, • Set, — 9 «.w. - 11 p.m.Ml 3-20*0» • CHICAGO MAROON • April 3, I9S9UC prof writes new book'Cod & Caesar' publishedof historical theology, is oneof the contributing authors to(.ml and Caesar, a book to be pub¬lished April 1st by Augsburg pub¬lishing house, Minneapolis, Min¬nesota.God and Caesar consists of aseries of essays which present aChristian approach to socialethics. Dr. Pelikan writes on“Totalitarianism and democracy:a religious anaylysis,” pointingout the implications and demandsupon the Church and the individ¬ual Christian, living under eachform of government.The essays in God and Caesargrew out of the annual Lutheransocial ethics seminar sponsoredby Valparaiso university. Valpa¬raiso, Indiana. The book includesnine carefully selected and editedessays, presented over the pastdozen years.“These essays,” says Dr. O. P.Dr. Smith to givelecture on GreeceOn Sunday, April 5, theEpiscopal church on campusat UC will begin a scries ofSunday evening programs. Dr.Gertrude Smith, chairman of theClassics department at the Uni¬versity will give an illustratedlecture entitled, “Pagan andChristian Greece.” Last summerMiss Smith was the Director ofthe American school of Classicalstudies in Athens, Greece. Thisschool, composed of Americanstudents studying classical lan¬guages. history and archaeology,devoted six weeks to research inthe ancient monuments, both inAthens and in the most importanthistorical and archaeological sitesthroughout the Greek countrysideand in the Island of Crete.Two years ago Miss Smith wasawarded the medal of the Orderof the Beneficence. The presenta¬tion was made at the Greek Em¬bassy in Washington with theAmbassador from Greece actingon behalf of King Paul in the Kretzmann, chairman of the discerning editorial review priorseminar, “are the final result of to publication. . . . The essaysa long process of winnowing, present varying points of view,beginning with criticism of the but all members are united Inoriginal essays by the entire their loyalty to the Scriptures,membership, their re-writing by and their urgent desire to havethe authors, an examination by them speak dynamically to oura subcommittee, and finally a conditions at mid-century.”Give chapel speakersTen outstanding preachers have been scheduled for Sun¬day services at Rockefeller chapel this spring. The non-denominational services in the chapel start at 11 am.Next Sunday The Rev. George Buttrick, preacher to the university,Harvard university; April 12, The Rev. James Luther Adams, EdwardMailinckrodt Jr., professor of divinity, Harvard university; April 19,Siegfried Reinhardt, department of art, Washington university, St.Louis;April 26, The Rev. Joseph Sittler. professor of theology, federatedtheological faculty; May 3, The Rev. Winburn T. Thomas, visitinglecturer, World Mission of the Church, McCormick theological semi¬nary, Chicago; May 10, The Rev. Theodore Gill, president, San Fran¬cisco theological seminary;May 17, The Rev. Merrill Abbey, professor of preaching, Garrettseminary, Evanston; May 24, The Rev. Benjamin S. Mays, president,Morehouse college, Atlanta Georgia; May 31, The Rev. Ewell J.Roagin, assistant to the dean, Rockefeller memorial chapel; June 7,Convocation Sunday. The Rev. Bernard Loomer, professor of philos¬ophy of religion, federated theological faculty.G. Buttrick to preachGeorge Arthur Buttrick, preacher to Harvard universityand professor of Christian morals, will give the sermon“Strange Providence” for this Sunday’s services at Rocke¬feller chapel. Buttrick was the center of the recent discussion of theplace of religion on the Harvard campus.Born in England, he was graduated from Victoria university, Man¬chester, with honors in philosophy and holds a DD degree fromHamilton college, Middlebury college, Yale university, Miami uni¬versity and Princeton university, a LitD from Albright college, anLLD from Bethany college, and a DST from Columbia university.His ministry includes pastorates at First Congregational church,Rutland, Vermont, and Madison avenue Presbyterian church, NewYork city. In 1951-52, Buttrick traveled around the world as JosephCook lecturer under the auspices of the board of Foreign Missionsof the Presbyterian church, USA, visiting the Philippines, Japan,Hong Kong, Thailand, Indonesia, India, Pakistan, the near East, andParts of Europe.GLADIS RESTAURANT1527 East 55th st.orders to carry outopen 24 hoursDO 3-9788 CANOE TRIPSPersonal service lor wilderness canoetrips Into the Quetico-Superlor wild¬erness. Camping equipment. Grum¬man aluminum canoes and choicefood supplies only $6 00 per personper day. For complete Informationwrite Bill Rom, CANOE COUNTRYOUTFITTERS, Bo* 717, Ely. Minn. Plan organ recitalDr. Klaus Speer, professor of music at the University ofHouston, Texas, will give an organ recital April 12 at 3 pmin the Rockefeller memorial chapel at 59 and Woodlawn.Admission is without ticket and without charge.Dr. Speer is also director of music at the Episcopal church of theRedeemer, Houston. He studied with Fritz Heitmann in Berlin, andCarl Weinrich in Princeton. In 1956 he received PhD from IndianaState university on research on early Portuguese keyboard music.Dr. Speer is well known as an organ recitalist, editor of organ andchoral music, and as a lecturer.ProgramPrelude and Fugue in F Sharp Minor Dietrich BuxtehudeSuite du second ton (1706) Jean-Adam GuilainThree Organ Chorales of Easter Tide Ernst PeppingToccata, Recitative, and Fugue Elmer SchoettleTwo Organ Chorales on “All Glory Be to God on High” J. S. BachToccata and Fugue in F Major J. S. BachComplete DinnerBAKED TURKEY,Dressing $1.25 ala carte. . . and all the trimmingsSTERN'S CAMPUS DRUGS61st & Ellisceremonies.The meeting will be held at IBrent house, the Episcopal uni¬versity center, 5540 S. Woodlawn |Avenue, and will begin with an ,informal buffet supper at 5:30pm. I "tTTTTTT* rTV’TTTW-VVVVV1Bicycles, Parts, Accessoriesspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1621 e. 55th st.The Qreeti Door Book Shop1450 E. 57th STREETHY 3-5829 • Chicago 37, III.Quality paperbacks Fine Children's booksSpecial orders filled promptlyWERT . VALOR • VA> In any language there's UJ* value in living at the Versailles. Cheerfulsurroundings, for refined people who ap¬preciate a quiet, restful, home-like at¬mosphere. Elegant hotel rooms and 2-Vzroom apartments tastefully decorated,furnished or un-furnished, at attractiverates. Parcel receiving, Doorman, NightWatchman; maid and linen service if de¬sired.*7&e 'Ve'Maiiled■■J 5234 DORCHESTERVACUA • FA 4-0200 <>£ B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Obl.Win.tuo Salem, N. CL“I see your husband's after her Camels again l"More red-blooded skiers chase after Camelsthan any other cigarette today. The Camelblend of costly tobaccos has never beenequalled for rich flavor and easygoing mild¬ness. The best tobacco makes the best smoke.Leave fads and fancy stuff to beginners ...Have a real cigarettehave a CAMELApril 3, 1959 • C H 1C A G 0 - M A R 0*> N~» 9<1 charmaffhope fo*§!self-inter# sVieOlCM- LEXICON 0| English: BOORISH LOVER BOY ,■k. • ' « f i •flHHNMBMk ' Think) ish translation: The appropriateword for this gent is Crassanova! Main.. reasons: 1. He's the only guy we know ■:' w^° sen(^s JoiniCKigraphod lovi* letters. 2./ He's the only guy who doesn’t makefl advances when he runs out of gas (the*1 gal’s too busy pushing his car). rl’oo ...k ® I thoughtless to buy his own cigarettes,fl this bird only dates girls who appreciateIK ■ the honest taste < i fine tobacco. “We,• always have something in common,” he .“Her Luckies!”sr , 4 ► v*.'1 1' if/* . *> / ’ 1 „?TV 5 rfo'SAILOR’S DEBT English: RUN-DOWN CHICKEN COOPrTMM«W .*?”klish: ^UCTIONARy£LUA8UH *'00^E. STAT£ „ n,ReptileThiftU*5hHENEMENT{mM* Think fish•A»ei REDMAN. SEATTU»* Thinidtfh^tMMETT COMHQLLTGOBLIGATION SANTA CLARAGetWILDROOTCREAM-OIL ChariiHOW TO MAKE *25•tajvurvii&v ested gratification of artificial!a dis- appetites. Political virtue must!See justice in man's needs and fine artsby Murray Darrish In order that citizens Have the dude the passage advocating a Turning to the actual substance Rome, Sparta, and primitivism!"Tothe arts«!!!*%!* moral and intellectual training was to the detriment of Geneva, contention:hhi are a legitimate concern of the represented what Enlightenment 1. Rosseau begins witha a it ' society as a whole,” he pointed could easily become. cussion of the effects of drama on come first, and the greatness ofjwitn a capital a, it is good. outj «which should in principle "Because the authors of arti- men in general, the issue being the arts, for which Rosseau also?The question that arises from ^ willing to sacrifice even very des like that on Geneva do not whether theatrical beauties have pleads, will come later, based onjthis new, impartial evaluation of charming or respectable pursuits take into consideration the dif- a necessary connection with beau- the true greatness of political!the arts—as moral educators, to Gn the alter of its liberty ” ferences between disinterested tiful souls. man.” ,/|§££ As "one of the last great voices search for truth and the necessary 2 ^ is followed by a study To celebrate the success of th*th f mnsiHpratinf nf “Tmc. raised h1 favor of censorship,” prf.J.Vdl^ef and sP^cial mterests of 0f the sort of societies which are discussion series, iastead of the-f- i th fi . „ | x . * Bloom cited Jean Jacques Ros- Political 11 f e, Rosseau argued, reqUjreti to support a theater, and customary tea and sweet rolls ^tice and the fine arts, last in a _ their science turns into propa- eencral eff^t of its presence ana sweet rolls, ^ganda on the one hand and on the £'that”f‘SJSSS keff °f ^ and trays of —sSother it damages the real inter¬ests of their nation,” he .added inthe process of clarifying theseries o£ seven lectures-discus- ?fau fli,!*1?, *?!“ta,tio" g ‘gsions on Justice, presented at Encyclopedists belief that theHillel recently by Allan Bloom,lecturer in the liberal arts in theUniversity college. .“The arms of repression havebeen for so long used only tobolster corrupt and decaying re¬gimes or to institute tyrannicalones,” he explained in character cultivation of reason, the progressin the sciences, and the dissemi¬nation of that knowledge through _the Encyclopedia—as well as the French philosopher s basic con-taste for the fine arts — would temion. eiiieniimiiii-iii wmi-u wuuiu ubbimake society ever more decent si0^rt”cS of Sty‘ffi enhancc and strengthen its freetions its coming displaces. wiches were provided, whi<-h, as3. Last he presents an analysis one °b®erver P°*n^ ou} between',:of the institutions of Geneva and sandwiches, all attending certain-;a suggestion as to the sorts of ly did “justice” to. *J|rentertainment which would most zHHand men ever happier.Rosseau’s definite break with love is not the passion sufficient republican way of life.„11W, r.v. a., v.mmvn,,- . .. , , to bind society together or on “Rosseau engages in this latterizing the modern ““suspicion” of the ^miSht^ent, he explained, to base man’s duties to one argument to give a model of thecensorship, “that the free develop- Pan?e a*??ut in.a A”*0-! t0 ? Alem- another, Bloom commented as he - true statesmanship of the philoso-_ . . a* Q „„„ bert, editor of the Enyclopedia, .....te a nedssarfcon*tfonPTnot Prc‘“'ia8 aEa‘"^ aa article ad- “vocating the establishment of ame core, of a republican way of thca(erBin his birthpia«.*. _ .... . and “the modern image of theIt is hard to believe that during unique polis for him, governed bythe greater part of recorded his- citizens.” » vtory philosophic men thought re- Yearbook offers!pages for $15 |tlie fundamental argu- pher,” Bloom explained, “a states- Cap and Gown, the cam pupmanshlp grounded on conscious- yearbook, has announced ^Another passion, not? derivia- pess ,of the inadequacy^ of uni- special offer, which, accorgitive from self-love, exists for Ros- versal reasoning to take account ing to its editor, Walter .PishYgllseau—beneficence, t which, van- ,.o£ the conditions appropriate to “unique in the annals of annuals^ishes under the criticism of ii^eccnt ^ Full pages in the 1959 yearbookreason, or, at least that of the places.” t l ; will be sold to individuals for $i;5fpublics required the greatest self- Indign^t that the authority of Enlightenment. “The progress of ;Returning to the primary argu-. The purchased page may|irj§imposed restraints and tyrannies society and science succeeds in ment in Rosseau’s network of elude anything the buyer wishes?:the least, Bloom went on to com- * * ,y V1 p ^, dimming its lights,” he Pointed .... .. -Onlv as long as the message is5;np1;:ment For in their opinion a free vldual-Vol,alre' who was bored out, -and vanity takes its place; “"'f'Hons, he concluded, “On y .,]ibe,ou‘or commercial\ndsociety, governed by its members, 1° Geneva without a theater, and but the health of society depends oy the uncompromising return to V}0iate post Office regult||needs the most careful education who persuaded d’Alembert to in- on fanning its embers.’,’ ' • .^ -7 the principles of antiquity — tions,” Fish added “The purchasc|!able page section will con formclosely to the unifying themejoKthis year’s book-discontinuity,’,' hesaid. .Prospective page owners mapphone Fish at the Cap ami Gbwjpoffice, extension 3273, or. at Snellhall.Qat.ci.» CHICAGO MAROON ... .Take a word—ambition, for example. With it, you can make fake desire tosucceed (shambition), acting aspirations (hambitionthe desire to study * v -^ (emmbition) or the urge to win at bridge (s/am6»fion). That’s Thinklish—and 7 ! ^it’s that easy! We’re paying $25 for the Thinklish words judged best—your ‘V• check is itching to go! Send your words to Lucky Strike, Box 67 A, Mt. Vernon, ‘N. Y. Enclose your name, address, university and class..Get the genuine articleGet the honest tasteof a LUCKY STRIKE.i. ,, J... ■„Product of i/&<j/rniiu£<in <Jc — Uo^uexo is our middle nameApril 3# 1959 PACKARDMADMO-MUSIRE SHIRTS• Tailonid To Imoiviow-»L Miasunimints.OVIM 100 FAAAICt Fo»Dnesi. Sfori Sniat*.i Fit Ant Man. Risako-,km Or Sizei Choice Or Couai.1Curr. Boor Sttk.SATuriEo Custom(m—Coait-To-Coait|ONLY $3.95Frofemity monograms in. Greek lettering available 'j:k<HY 3-5192 %for appointment1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekPaul Robeson* x ,, . -r New RecordingAAL 3333.99J. PAUL Sheedy,* hair experifjffijfi“Wildroot tames those cowlickil**?:•<* tit So. Harris MU Rd.. WMtamnlUs. N. T.Just a Httla bitof Wildroot f . S7**nd...WOWIProfile typical University College studentby Tom CablkThe “typical1” Downtowncenter student is a confirmedoptimist about his personalfuture, an inveterate reader, adevotee of classical music, takesadult courses for "intellectual en¬richment," and, of the seriousissues in American society todayis most likely to be concernedabout civil rights and improve¬ment of education.This is a partial "profile"emerging from results of the mas¬sive student inventory filled outby 2,535 Downtown center stu¬dents in the autumn quarter, amajor part of the center’s "self-study” research project.Most students value their ex¬perience in adult education highly.One third say it is the most valu¬able educational experience theyhave had, while half classify it isimportant, but not the most im¬portant. Less than half voicedany criticism of classes they havetaken. Of these, half said coursesare unsastisfactory because .theyare not able to devote enoughtime to them. Other criticisms ofcourses are: instructor is dull orinadequate (10%); subject matterturned out to be less interestingthan expected (12%); course ispoorly planned (7%).Sizeable minorities among thestudents criticize Downtown cen¬ter facilities, counseling and tui¬tion. 30% registered complaintsabout facilities, with classrooms(10%), the student lounge (8%),and the canteen (7%) draggingthe heaviest fire. Of the 875 stu-dents who received academiccounseling, 14% feel they werenot adequately counseled.Regarding tuition, 20% of thestudents say costs have kept themfrom taking some Downtown cen¬ter courses, but half say tuitionSociology dept,sponsors lectures“Contemporary approachesto the study of social organiza¬tion" will be the topic of alecture series sponsored by thedepartment of sociology this quar¬ter in Social sciences 122. The lec¬tures will be given Wednesdaysat 4:30 pm.Next week Kingsley Davis, Uni¬versity of California, will discuss"Social structure and socialchange.” For the following weeks,speakers and topics are:April 15—Seymour M. Lipset,University of California "Au¬thoritarianism: Left, right, andcenter”.April 22—George C. Homans,Harvard university, (at presentat the center for advancedstudy in the behavioral scien¬ces) "Structural determinantsof marriage rules”April 29—Meyer Fortes, Cam¬bridge university "Ritual insti¬tutions as dynamic factors insocial structure”May 6—Talcott Parsons, Harvarduniversity "The problem of sys¬tematic analysis of a large-scalesociety: the American case”May 13—John W. M. Whiting,Harvard university "Child rear¬ing practices and kinship struc¬ture”May 20—Herbert A. Simon, Car¬negie institute of Technology"Simulating complex human be¬havior” has never been a major consider¬ation. 95% of all students discusstheir courses with persons out¬side the Downtown center, andtwo-thirds report that others re¬gard their act of taking adultclasses as a "good idea.” Con¬firmation is found in the fact thatone-fourth say they were firstdrawn to the Downtown centerby hearing about it from someoneelse.Slightly more than half of thestudents are women and slightlyless than half are enrolled incredit courses. One-third of thecredit students are formally ad¬mitted to UC degree programs,and another third plan to use theircredits at other institutions. Halfof the students are married. Ofthese, 80% have children. Only10% of the students are under 20years of age, while 40% are be¬tween 21 and 30, 25% between 31and 40, and the remaining fourthover 40. Fifteen students are over66 years of age.Downtown center students arehighly mobile in terms of wherethey live, but not in employment.One-fourth changed residence inthe past year, and half expect toInt house hasevents in springInternational house has an¬nounced its calendar of com¬ing events for the springquarter. In addition to providingliving accommodations for a largenumber of graduate students andforeign students, Internationalhouse boasts a wide variety ofcultural and educational pro¬grams.Of greatest general campus in¬terest is the weekly Int housemovie. Showing mostly foreignart films, these motion picturesare screened every Monday eve¬ning at 8 pm. There is a fiftycent admission charge.On April 6 a British film, Pri¬vate’s Progress, will be shown.The next two weeks will be de¬voted to French fare with TheCupboard was Bare shown inApril 13 and Fernandel in TheDressmaker on the 20th.Great Britain will dominate therest of the quarter with Don Qui¬xote on May 4, The Green Man onMay 18, Panic in the Parlor onJune 1 and Escapade on June 8.Bom Yesterday, an Americanproduct, will be screened on May11 and a Russian motion picture,Gift for Music, will be exhibitedon May 25.In addition to its motion pictureschedules International houseoffers English classes for foreignstudents three times a week, rec¬ord concerts twice a week, plusfolk dancing and concert and cof¬fee hours. All these events arelisted weekly in the calendar ofcoming events in the Maroon.New chess clubfor Jimmy'sOne of the newest HydePark organizations will go in¬to action. No parades, peti¬tions, placards, or any other para¬phernalia so common to HydePark groups will be in sightthough when Jimmy’s Chess clubwill meet Maury’s book store in aten board match. The meet will beheld in Jimmy’s bar at 3 pm andthe of-age public is invited towatch, drink, or play chess amongthemselves.R HOBBY HOUSwe specialize Inound-O-Beef and WaffleOpen from Down to Down E Ps IESTAURANT1342east 53 st.Universol Army StoreHeadquarters for sport and work wearHooded pork a jackets — hooded sweatshirts — Ivy league corduroytrousers —• wash & wear Ivy league trousers —- luggage & trunks1144 East 55th st. DO 3-9572reduction With this COUpOn________ move within the next five years.Only slightly more than half haveheld more than two jobs sincefinishing full time school, and lessthan one-fourth expect to changejobs in the next five years. Ineducational and income levels,Downtown center students areconsiderably higher than the gen¬eral population. One-half hold abachelor’s degree or higher de¬gree, and another one-third havehad some previous college workat an undergraduate level. Only10% have family incomes of lessthan $4,500 while almost 20%have family incomes in the $10,-000 to $15,000 bracket.One-third of the students, one-fifth Catholics, and one-seventhJewish. Approximately 25% haveno religious affiliation. In politics,25% are independents, 30% favoroffer informationon summer jobsThe Camp unit of the Pro¬fessional placement center ofthe New York State employ¬ment service in New York Cityfurnishes information concerningsummer camp jobs. It will referapplicants to employers who listopenings.Jobs are available in the NewEngland states, New York, Penn¬sylvania, and New Jersey in boys’,girls’, co-ed, private, organization¬al, settlement house, ‘Y,’ hotel andbungalow colony, and local daycamps.Jobs are on all levels for bothyoung men and women, the prin¬cipal demand being for good all¬round general counselors. Spe¬cialists are needed in athletics,drama, dance, arts and crafts, mu¬sic, nature study, photography,water sports and to work withhandicapped, orthopedic, blind,emotionally disturbed, and men¬tally retarded children. A fewhead counselors, camp directors,and dietitians are also needed.Applications which will be ac¬cepted through June, should bemade in person. Out-of-townersmay write for an application. Theaddress is: Camp unit, Profes¬sional placement center, NewYork State Employment service,444 Madison avenue, New York22, N. Y.Requirements for the jobswhich run from July 1 to August31 are as follows: must be cur¬rently attending college and havesome group leadership experi¬ence; must be in good health; or¬ganizational camp workers mustbe college students or graduateswith social science, social work orteacher training courses; special¬ists must have good training intheir particular skill; head dieti¬cians must have experience andassistants must have recent col¬lege degrees in home economics;head counselors and directorsmust have good camp backgroundas well as administrative experi¬ence.60 DAY EUROPEANTRAVEL STUDY TOURINCLUDESAirline Transportation•SO Days in Paris•40 Honr Course in Cnltnre ofEurope Today At PrivateAccredited University•30 Day Tour, 5 DifferentItineraries, Including USSR•Organized Weekendsfaet/6/>aoeSwadute A/OJVI miS-FlANCE-EUKOH ASSOCIATION || FOR TRAVEL AND STUDY sJ 10 lost «»lfc Street, Ntw Yak 17, ».Y. XI tlMM mi m year fra* It y«g« I| ireduirs. I{ Kami I| Mittn . f| Oty Stats IFARIS-FRANCE-FUROPE ASSOCIATIONFOR TRAVEL AND STUDY10 East 49th Street, Now York J7J.Y. Republican candidates, 40% favorDemocratic candidates.Most students expect improve¬ment in both job status and in¬come within the next five years.Two-thirds expect higher incomeswhile less than 5% fear lower in¬comes. The remainder decidednot to attempt a guess. Excludinghousewives, almost half of thestudents expect to be in the sameoccupation five years from now,but at a higher level.Ninety per cent of the studentsclassify reading as an importantleisure time activity, and 60% saythey have read three or morebooks not related to their class-work in the previous two months.Other leisure time activities rank¬ing high are: listening to FMradio, attending plays and enter¬taining or visiting friends. Amongforms of exercise, walking, hik¬ing, and swimming rate highest.Downtown center students aredecided classicists in musicaltastes ■— 65% cite symphonicmusic of the "romantic” period(Brahms, Chopin, Tschaikovsky)as a favorite and half favor the"pre-romantics” (Bach, Mozart,Vivaldi). Only 85 students out of2,535 favor rock ’n roll, country,or western music. Other forms,such as opera, folk music, dixie¬land, and modern jazz, scoredhighly.Among motives that influencedstudents to enroll in adult classes, "intellectual enrichment” received80% of the votes. Among factorsdeemed "most important” by stu¬dents, three each received ap¬proximately 25% of the vote&—intellectual stimulation, job im¬provement, and earning a degree.In choosing from among seven"goals” of American society, afourth of the students said that"securing the rights of all Ameri¬cans rgardless of race or creed”is the most important to them.About 30% selected "improvingeducation” as the most importantAltick lecture onI iteratu re of 18 5 9On Friday, April 10, Rich¬ard D. Altick, professor ofEnglish at Ohio State univer¬sity, will be visiting to quad¬rangles to lecture on “1859: theliterature of an imminent democ¬racy.” The lecture will be at 4 pmin social sciences 122. Admissionis without ticket and withoutcharge.Altick will survey some aspectsof mass reading in 1859 and willcompare the way things werethen with the way things arenow; his viewpoint is likely tobe controversial and of interestboth to humanists and to socialscientists, reports Stuart Tave ofthe English department. .WEI1 MIT FIR\ column of tnddontol Intelligencby JOCJctif brand s:• n* PRACTICE WHATYOU PREACH”Sounds like advice right outof "Poor Richard”, but Plau¬tus said It many centuriesbefore Ben Franklin. Clas¬sical scholars,of course, knowthis statement in its originallaffnt"Faciat /pse quod faciamvtwades.” "EVERYONE TO HISOWN TASTE”There has never been anyaccounting for tastes, andthe man who appreciatedthis truth first was Francois.Rabelais. In his "Pantogruel”,he coined this now-famousjudgment!"Every one to hit fotfe, atthe woman taid when thekitted her cow.""LOVED AND LOST**It’s better than not loving otall according to Lord Tenny¬son's "In Memoriam", XXVII:"I hold it true, whate'er be¬fall/I feel it, when I sorrowmoti/'Tlt better to haveloved and lott/Than neverto have loved at off.”Jockey SKANTS*striped brief“Purely sensotlonol'*—that's the judgment of col¬lege men who have teenthe new Jockey StripedSKANTS. Jockey stylistshave taken this 100%stretch nylon bikini-stylebrief ...added candystripes...and produced agarment you’ll really enjoywearing.SKANTS is Cut high on thesides with a low waistbandand comes In a choice ofred, black, green, rust orblue stripes. Look fprSKANTS—in stripes, or sol¬ids—in the Jockey depart¬ment at your campus store.fashioned by the house ofPrize newsUSC announces opening of chem. contestThe opening of the 1959contest in colloid and surfacechemistry among collegeundergraduates is announced bythe University of Southern Cali¬fornia. The contest is sponsoredby the Continental Oil companyof Houston, Texas, and PoncaCity. Oklahoma, and is now in itsthird year.Students of chemistry, biochem¬istry and chemical engineering atall accredited universities of theUS and Canada are eligible if they are regular undergraduates onApril 1, 1959.The contestants may entereither a report on a research pro¬ject conducted by themselves oran essay on the subject, ‘The con¬tribution of Irving Langmuir tocolloid and surface chemistry."Langmuir, American Nobel prizewinner in chemistry, passed awayless than two years ago. He waswith the General Electric co.,Schenectady, New York. The bestessay and the best report will re¬ceive each prizes of $500 and the second best each $200 under con¬test regulations. Honorable men¬tion prizes of $50 each are alsoprovided.The deadline for submitting en¬tries is July 1, 1959. Entry blanksmay be obtained immediately bywriting to Prof. K. J. Mysels,Chemistry department, Universityof Southern California, LosAngeles 7, California. The prizeswill be awarded by a panel ofanonymous judges and will be dis¬tributed September 1. As contest chairman. Dr. Mysels kins university; V. K. La Mor,is being assisted by an advisory C o 1 u m b i a university; and Mar-committee composed of Profes- jorie Void, University of Southernsors P. II. Emmett, Johns Hop- California.Ground breaking Apr. 14for UC's diagnostic centerGroundbreaking ceremonies for a $1.98 million Diagnosticcenter building at University clinics have' been set for 11:30am, Tuesday, April 14.The new building, to be located at 59 and Drexel, will pro¬vide a central location to serve the 200 thousand out-patient| - visitors to the clinics each year. The Diagnostic «rnter build-Losmic ray equipment lost ing will be immediately accessible to the hospital group’s 36University scientists arehoping that a Midwesternfarmer will turn up a packageof cosmic ray equipment duringspring plowing.An instrument - laden gondolawas carried aloft from the cam¬pus January 9, by balloons anddropped from a height of 100.000feet with an orange and whiteparachute breaking its fall.Physicist Keith B. Fenton of the Enrico Fermi Institute of Nuclearstudies said the gondola originallywas expected to come down 150to 200 miles southeast of Chicago,but it has not been reported.A $25 reward goes to the finderof the plastic-covered 40-pound15 x 15 x 20 inch package con¬taining the records of a govern¬ment - sponsored experiment togain information on cosmic rays.The equipment is safe..A red sign on the package says: ATTENTION“This cosmic ray equipment Is theproperty of the U. S. Air Force and theUniversity of Chicago. The finder willreceive a $25 reward for finding andprotecting this equipment. The findermust call immediately the Universityof Chicago, Chicago, Illinois. Telephonenumber Midway 3-0800 (Chicago willaccept the charge for the call If thefinder mentions It Is cosmic ray equip¬ment). The University will promptlysend a representative to coliect tbUequipment and pay the reward.“The equipment must be stored In adry and safe location until claimed bythe University of Chicago. Do not tam¬per with or open this equipment—U.S.Government property.“This equipment la safe!" Maurice Goldblatt, chairman of the University cancer re¬search foundation, and Vice-chancellor John I. Kirkpatrick,will give addresses at the groundbreaking ceremonies.Following the ceremonies there will be a luncheon at theQuadrangle club where Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, dean ofthe biological sciences division, will speak.Guests invited to the ceremony and luncheon include theboard of trustees of the UC cancer research foundation, offi¬cers of the Nathan Goldblatt Women’s society, officers ofGoldblatt Brothers employees fund, officers of the CancerResearch foundation, and donors to the building fund.They said it couldn'tof be done...They said nobodycould do it...but —f L&M isI JLowilPJll k in, tar with,© 1959 Ligg«tt 4 M/ers Tobacco Companj| "JjM is kindest to your taste because L‘M combines the twojl essentials of modern smoking,” says TV’s Jack Lescoulie.. // LOW TAR:, L*M’s patented filtering process adds extra filter fibers electro-wKSL statically, crosswise to the stream of smoke... makes L*M truly low in tar.igljp MORE TASTE: EM’s rich mixture of slow burning tobaccos brings you moreexciting taste than any other cigarette.s Live Modern... change to modern L‘MC-H1C. A (; PJ M AJLP O.N * -April 3, 1959 ClassifiedsFor RentPrivate rm. and bath and meals In ex¬change for babysitting and dinnerdishes. Female preferred. FA 4-0329.Rms. in student apt. $30 and $40 permo., lncl. kitchen facilities and utilitiesMU 4-8440.7 rm. unfurn. apt, Kenwood Ave. AvailMay 1. HY 3-9336.2'i ROOMSCheerful, newly decorated, attractivelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator bldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man. Maid and linen service availableReasonable monthly rate.VERSAILLES APARTMENTS5234 Dorchester FA 4-0200For SalePortable typewriter—almost new, excel¬lent condition. Royal standard. CallOR 4-0895.Used Vespa scooter, excellent conditionBO 8-5570.New Eng. bikes, discounts. MI 3-9048(See display ad, page 13)3-FLAT BRICK, $26,500Ideal Hyde Park location. In vicinityof 54th and Ellis. Desirable for occu¬pancy by university personnel. One6 rm. apt., one 5 rm. apt., and one 3*^Present income In excess of$3,600. Ceramic tile mod. baths, cabinetkit. in all apts., many closets, spaciousrms., and light and airy. TR 4-0335.~j- ■ .... ■.ServicesWill care for child In my home. Ml3-5797.Electric typing. NO 7-4439 after 5 p.mSEWING — Alterations, hems, curtains.Call MU 4-3941.RUSSIAN and FRENCH: private lessonsFredericks. SU 7-7363, ext. 22.Home typing—thesis, dissertations, etc.N. MacDougall, OA 4-3240.Personal3-S Laundry and Dry Cleaning Service.Opens Monday, April 6 In Foster B3.Serving Gates-Blake, C Group, NewDorm. Sponsored by Beecher, FosterHouse Councils. ‘‘Service for Studentsby Students.”LOST, $10 reward: woman’s silver ring.1 Inlaid turquoise and 4 Inlaid onyxpieces. Leslie Burns, 5405 Woodlawn.FOLKLORE SOCIETY of the Universitywill be holding auditions for Its “HOOT-NANNY” of April 17. Tryouts Will takeplace from 1:30-4:00. April 4, In IdaNoyes Hall. Non-students are eligible,and everyone is Invited. For further In¬formation, call Carl Finger In Hitch¬cock Hall after 8 pm.BRADLEY THE BUYER says, “Forgetem all. Squares on both sides. BigTable’s the only complete mag In theIndustry.” So get the habit and buyBig Table—at the Greendoor Book Shop.Woodworth’s, the University Book Store,and Int. House, 160 pages and a red,white and blue starerd and striped cover(suitable for framing) for only $1.MISTAKE IN POSTER: WusathonAaron Myer’s Quartet, not quintet.WORKSHOP IN CREATIVE WRITINGPLaza 2-8377WontedLightweight bicycle. Call ext. 2304.Mr. Garber.Foreign studentsForeign students are help¬ing emotionally ill hospital pa¬tients learn more about howthe rest of the world lives.The students, who come fromall parts of the globe, are givingregular, informal talks to patientswhose illnesses vary from simpleanxieties to severe psychoses. Thetalks* are part of the treatmentplan for the emotionally ill atBillings hospital."The more familiar a patient iswith the rest of the world,” saidDr. Philip M. Margolis, chief ofin-patient psychiatric service atBillings, "the more comfortablehe feels in relation to his own en¬vironment."With the toleration that comeswith understanding, the patientsees his own problems in morerealistic perspective.”Dr. Margolis, an assistant pro¬fessor of psychiatry, said the ef¬fect of the talks could be likenedto the regular visits of a beautyoperator to patients in the ward.“Both involve the patient’s self¬esteem,” he said, "one throughthe beautification of the body, the other through the satisfaction ofintellectual curiosity."The talks are only one part ofthe activities program so it is dif¬ficult to assess their value sepa¬rately. However, we believe theyhelp."One thing is certain: Patients,students and hospital workerslook forward to the talks both asan educational experience and asa chance to make friends withpeople from varying backgroundsand cultures,” Dr. Margolis said.Some speakers show up in na¬tive costumes, while others bringmaps and slides to illustrate theirtalks. They are told they mayspeak about any aspect of thecountry they think will be of in¬terest—its culture, its social ar¬rangements, its economy, and itsrole in international affairs."Just treat this group as youwould such a gathering as a PTAmeeting” Dr. Margolis tells thestudents.Dr. Margolis says the talks ful¬fill three general objectives of theactivities program:• the diversion of disturbing im¬pulses into socially acceptablechannels,Book marks 50thSchool of social service ad¬ministration marked its 50thanniversary with a book,“Justice for the Child.”Ten experts from throughoutthe country have been invited tocontribute articles. They werejoined with University socialworkers in a two-day planningsession for the volume on campuslast weekend.On the evening of March 26, theschool of social service adminis¬tration hosted a dinner at theQuadrangle club at which the 10participants in the book projectmet the school’s visiting commit¬tee, members of the local bar andjudiciary, selected social agencyexecutives and others in Chicagointerested in improving court pro¬cedures involving juveniles.The school has been intimatelyassociated since its founding in1908 with the reforms that theJuvenile court represents. Amongthe school’s founders were num¬bered many of those pioneers whohelped bring into being in Chicagothe country’s and perhaps theworld’s first juvenile court.Alton A. Linford, dean of theSmall Cheese .... 95cSmall Sausage . .$1.15NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-90635624 DREXELCompact, 3 bedroom, 2 bathhome in Ray school district.Modern kitchen, oil heat.Income from 5 garages payscost of taxes and heat. Newredwood siding, large fencedyard. Sale, $ 1 5,000. HY3-2525.Parker - Holsman School of Social Service admin¬istration, has invited the follow¬ing to contribute essays to thebook:Richard Clendenen, professor,school of social administration,Ohio State university; Bernard C.Fisher, director, bureau of publicaffairs, Community Service soci¬ety of New York; Alfred J. Kahn,professor, New York school ofsocial work, Columbia university;Orman W. Ketcham, judge, Juve¬nile court for the District ofColumbia, Washington, D.C.Paul W. Keve, director, depart¬ment of court service, HennepinCounty district and Juvenilecourts, Minneapolis, Minnesota;Monrad G. Paulsen, professor,school of law, Columbia univer¬sity; Monroe Paxman, judge,Juvenile court of the State ofUtah, Provo, Utah; Mrs. ElliotStudt, Russel Sage professor,Rutgers university, New Bruns¬wick, New Jersey; Paul W. Tap-pan, chairman, department of so¬ciology and anthropology, NewYork university, and Will C. Turn-bladh, director, National Proba¬tion and Parole association, NewYork City, New York.Mortgage InsuranceEducational InsuranceConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986TAKXAM-YfcNCHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising fatCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 1«:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018AC ASA BOOKSTOREGood Used BooksCarefully selected Imports of cards, giftschildren's booksreliable typewriter service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651 aid ill• identification with a group,* the approximation of normal,everyday experience. —"For example, he said, "personswith destructive impulses some¬times channel them effectively bywatching boxing matches, but inthis case, the talks may serve thepurpose of handling these feel¬ings by lively debate."Attending the talks in a grouphelps to diminish the patient’sisolation, aloneness, or apartness,the psychiatrist said."Finally, we think the thera¬peutic process should include do¬ing things the patients ordinarilywould do. If they go to lectureswhen they are at home, why notherp?” Dr. Margolis concluded. Dr. Lwoff is honoredDr. Andre M. Lwoff, head of the department of microbialphysiology, Pasteur institute, Paris, was awarded an honorarydoctorate of science degree.The citation, presented by William H. Taliaferro, Eliakim HastingsMoore distinguished service professor and chairman of the depart¬ment of microbiology, read: “Andre Mxehal Lwoff, ingenious experi¬menter and profound student of microbiology whose work on minuteforms of life has profoundly influenced our general concepts ofgenetics, metabolism, and the production of disease in all organisms.”A Dunham lecturer at Harvard university in 1947 and MarjoryStephenson lecturer of the society for general microbiology, London,1957, Dr. Lwoff is noted for his contributions to the study of the lifecycle, the physiology and biochemistry of protozoa and bacteria,especially the nature and function of growth factors, and lysogenyand factors controlling the relation between viruses and the host cell.' v-.'ELEMENTARY... why more and more students than everare buying the world’s first electric portable typewriter!^College assignments are as easy as Tt with the new Smith-Corona ElectricPortable Typewriter! ’Cause whether you’re an expert or a beginner, you cando your work so easily, effortlessly and with less chance for error. On theSmith-Corona Electric Portable, everything you type has a uniform, printed,professional look. Result? Better grades and more free time for campus fun! \And now — to teach you to type thecorrect way, the easy way —Smith-Corona offers this exclusive, $23.95home study course on records thatteaches touch typing in just ten days-and it’s yours free with any Smith-Corona Portable Typewriter! So seeyour Smith-Corona dealer soon, andlearn to type in just ten days on theworld’s finest and fastest portable!Smith-Coronatha world’s first electric portable, April 3, 1959' •. CHICAGO , M AROON • 13Economic role of education is elucidatedViewing people as wealth and a cumulation of human wealth rep-man as an investment is tradition- resented by scientific and technofally distasteful, he admitted, be- logical knowledge, so that the ob-cause it smacks of slavery, in- served increase in income-capitaldentured service, and the reduo- ratios arises from a too limitedtion of human spiritual value to conception of capital, which takesa material component But John no account of human capital, ifStuart Mill was wrong when hesaid “people should not be con- ■ • • ■ • if?sidered as wealth because wealth JlffHOT BUXlllBr¥|.is for the benefit of people," the ■ | jeconomist claimed, because "noth- 0X0060S DI0OQ6Slng in the concept of human . ** |swealth implies that it is not for The Junior Auxiliary of thethe benefit of people. It is the Cancer Research fund has ex¬task of poets and philosophers to ceeded its most recent fundkeep us on guard.” goal.What Schultz termed the "hti- The organization of youngman wealth hypothesis” may ex- women pledged to raise $10,098plain several paradoxes and pus- two years ago to remodel Univer-zles in economics, he suggested, sity laboratories for lung cancerFor example, the problem of why research. ?f||American income has risen so Mrs. William V. Barborka, aux-much more than the correspond- fliary president, announced thating increase in tangible capital the goal has been reached and anand man-hour labor—a phenom- additional $902 raised for a totalenon most recently brought to of $11,000. v**‘public attention by Mortimer Ad- The sum has been presented toler—was tentatively explained by Wiliiarri E. Adams, who holds_ . , . . ' . Z the James Nelson and AnnaSchultz in terms of the large a©- LoUise Raymond professorship inthe department of Surgery. He isdirector of the laboratories usedfor thoracic - cardiovascular re¬search surgery at Billings hos¬pital.‘The alterations made possibleby this very generous gift haveaided very materially investigative work carried out in theselaboratories,” Dr. Adams said.“Since cancer of the lung corntinues to be one of the most prev¬alent in man as well as increasingin frequency,” Dr. Adams added,“there is great need for investiga¬tion as to the cause as well as-control of this tumor.”A reception for the newlyelected officers of the Auxiliarywas held Wednesday, at the homeof Floyd J. Landis, secretary, UCCancer Research foundation.A new look at the economic wealth with the following ques- dichotomy between labor and capi-role Of education may provide tions: Are. t h e underdeveloped tal being especially sharpened byanswers to practical and ur- countries, in their scramble for JJarx-tends.to ieconomistsgent problems as well as para- daI^s* roads, factories and steel regadoxes in economic theory, as- mills, paying too httle attention1 to input free of P^compo ^sorted Ted Schultz, chairman of education? Is India spend,ng too he continued, so that modern sta-the economics department, in the much on irrigation and too little tistical ec?nom,<^fteiinndsj^n0^fourth annunal Sydney A. Teller in training her cultivators how to working hour of an electronicslecture last Wednesdav rise irrigation? Does the pittance engineer equal to one workingSchultz called for recognition spent by the Iraq Devel°Pment hour of a migrant farm worker.hoard on training farmers to use The comprehensive concept ofSlrtanf3 anH nrrJ.i^Jive nart nf new agricultural implements and capital which includes humanth^natinn’s wealth with tinlihie machines represent an optimum wealth was introduced by thecanlfaL allocation of resources? American economist Irving Fisch-capnai. And is our own country spend- er at the beginning of the centuryIt is a simple truth, he said, jng too much for roads and auto- jn his book The Nature of Capital"that most people invest in them- mobiles and too little for educa- and Income but met no success be-selves.” Citing recent studies in- tion, health and housing? The cause of the great prestige of Al-dieating that the American male chronic pockets of poverty in this feed Marshall who criticized it asreceives an annual return of 14.8 country among American Ne- «not jn close enough touch withper cent on money spent for for- groes, migrant farm workers, and the language of the market place,mal education past the eighth rurai Appalachian areas were re- although incontestable from angrade, the agriculture expert and tated by Schultz to the deplorable abstract mathematical poiht offormer sociologist criticized the educational standards set for view”fgy*?*10" tultion.?nd..text; these groups. However, It Is possible to ob-toe spent in educational pursuits U*"*' *77* "“I °fhftUT,,,1 w sider human beings as capital, 0f investment of man in himselfThe economist emphasized the he explained, for several reasons, which falls within Marshall's mar-pracUc^importance ?f the failure The traditional d i s t i n c t i 0 n be- ket-plaee restriction of capital,to recognize the value of human tween land, labor and capital—the Schultz declared.pllflNo flat "filtered-out "flavor!No dry *smoked-out"taste 1GERMAN BOOKS . .riie end of the series138 So. Wabash. £: fe#*• fro.s-l«-&: ritMillions of times a yeardrivers and students keepawake with safe NoDozotic*HERE'S WHY SMOKE ^TRAVELED* THROUGH FINE TOBACCO TASTES BESTSee howPall Mall'sfamous lengthof fine tobaccotravels andgentles the smoke—makes it mild —but does notfilter out that -sgtislying flavor! NoDoz keeps you alert with caf¬feine—the same pleasant stim¬ulant you enjoy in coffee. Fast¬er, handier, more reliable: non¬habit-forming NoDoz delivers anaccurate amount of dependablestimulation to keep your mindand body alert during study andexams until you can rest or sleep,P. S.: When you need NoDoz,it'll probably be late. Play safe.Keep a supply handy.toft famous lengfa of O RoB Malik famous length travelsiocoos money con buy £j ond QsnUse ihe smolcs nahjoSuOutstanding'.. and they are Mild!frWurf tf —5u&utmr if mir middlt mm*Trousls It oust, under, around andfarouph Roll Mol's fine tobaoooslThe sate stay awake tabtat-• available avsrywhers r■ fi . . v,-Baseball squad defeatedby Bill SpadyCoach Kyle Anderson’s baseball squaddropped four of their five games againstthree southern colleges: Delta state, Missis¬sippi college, and Vanderbilt; and it was apparentthat Injuries and early season inexperience plaguedthe visiting Maroons seriously.The first encounter against Delta state saw onlytwo Chicagoans collect hits. Dick Thompson andIra Levy both got two hits in five tries at the plate,while the hosts collected nine hits and capitalizedon three Maroon errors in wrapping up a 10-0 win.The hosts took advantage of 15 hits and five costlymistakes in pounding the Maroons 23 8 in their sec¬ond encounter. Four Chicago batsmen had gooddays at the plate; Chuck Faidley and John Looseboth hit 2-3, Jack Markins got two for four, andTom O’Connor hit 2-5. Mississippi college also found the range on Chi¬cago pitching in winning the first of their two-game series 19-2, but Faidley allowed only 7 hitsand was backed up by some fine hitting and field¬ing to stop the hosts 9-7. Bill Bauer collected threesingles in five trips to the plate, and Thompsonhad a single and a double in three attempts topace the visitors’ twelve-hit attack.Jon Nicholson’s 2-4 was the lone spark of theMaroon’s attack in the final game of the quintetas the Chicagoans fell before some excellent Van*derbilt university pitching in dropping the game9-3. Thompson paced all hitters on the 14-man trav¬eling squad with 6 for 17 in the five-game series,a fine .368, while Levy was close behind with .353,six for seventeen.With the backbone of the squad underclassmen,Anderson is hoping for a season of improvementand added experience during 1959. Sports calendarAPRIL3 Tennis, B team vs. Wright Jr. college, 1:30 pm.4 Traek, Varsity vs. Track club, Stagg field, 2 pm.4 Intramural Volleyball at Bartlett through Friday, 4-6and 7-9.6 Tennis, Varsity vs. Elmhurst, 1:30 pm.CTS announces fundApproximately $1,167,133 isavailable for the Second Cen¬tury development program asof December 23, announced theChicago Theological seminary.The campaign was launched tomeet the urgent housing needswhich faced the Seminary and tounderlie the resources and facili¬ties needed to continue the high caliber training for ministers ofthe future.Short range goal of the cam¬paign is $2,035,000, with the initialaim being financing for the re¬cently begun residence for mar¬ried students. Other goals of theprogram, whose ten-year target is$4,535,000, are scholarship funds,faculty salary increases, and im¬provements in the library!Friday, 3 AprilMeeting of the faculty of the College,Law south, 3:30 pm.Sabbath service, Hlllel foundation, 3715Woodlawn avenue, 7:45 pm.%Saturday, 4 AprilChest conference, 8 am. Billings M-137.Diseases of the nervous system, 9 am,Billings M-137, Dr. Douglas M. Bu¬chanan.Pediatrics clinical conference, 10:30 am,Billings M-137.Lecture (Biochemistry): '‘Disorganiza¬tion of the bacterial cell by antibio¬tics.” 10:30 am. Abbott 101. E. P. Gale,reader In chemical microbiology, Uni¬versity of Cambridge.Radio program: “The Sacred Note.”WBBM, 10:15 pm. A program of choralComing events on. quadranglesUndergraduates planningto graduate in June must filean application with the reg¬istrar's office by April 15.According to William VanCleve, registrar, a $5 latefee will be assessed to stu¬dents registering after thedeadline.A candidate who cannotbe present at convocationwithout serious hardshipmay petition to receive hisdegree in absentia, VanCleve stated. Petitions mustbe submitted to the dean ofstudents in the College nolater than May 15. Studentsabsent from convocationwithout permission will notreceive their diplomas untilthe following convocationand must pay a fee of $20.Bachelor's degrees will beconferred at the spring con¬vocation on June 13.music by the University choir, Rich¬ard Vikstrom, director; HeinrichFleischer, organist.Josh White, Ella Jenkins, Dora McGhee,the Gene Esposito Jazz ensemble, LeeLoving, and the Neville Black dancetrio at a folk music and Jazz festival,Mandel hall, 8 pm, reserved seats$1.50, general admission $1.25. Ticketson sale at Mandel corridor.Sunday, 5, AprilRoman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10 and 11am, DeSales house, 5735 Universityavenue. Sponsored by Calvert club.Rockefeller chapel service, 11 am.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel.Young Peoples Socialist League, “A So-All organizations are re¬minded that forms for calen¬dar notices for the springquarter may be picked up inthe Maroon office. Deadlinefor calendar notices is Tues¬day at 4 pm.UNIVERSITYBARBER SHBP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor clalist Approach to the Cold War.,”4 pm. Business meeting for all mem¬bers at 3 pm sharp, Ida Noyes hall,East Lounge.Bridge club, Ida Noyes lounge, 7:30 pm.Duplicate bridge will be played.Monday, 6 AprilMaroon staff meeting, 3:30, Ida Noyeshall, 1212 E. 59th, third floor.Clinicopathologic conference, 5 pm, Bil¬lings P-117.Tuesday 7, AprilLecture‘series: ‘‘Current research in so¬cial gerontology,” Judd 126, 4 pm,‘‘Patterns of personality and adjust¬ment to aging.” Dr. Suzanne Reichard,associate research psychologist, insti¬tute of industrial relations, Universityof California.Lecture series: “Problem of the Presi¬dency,” University College, 64 EastLake street, 7 pm. “Does the Presi¬dency meet the needs of the time?”Charles Hardin, associate professor,department of political science, Uni¬versity of Chicago.University symphony orchestra rehear¬sal, 7:30 pm, - Reynolds club northlounge.Economics seminar: “Randomization Inthe theory of threats and promises,”law south, 7:45 pm. Speaker: ThomasSchelllng of the economics -division ofthe Rand corporation.Russian Circle, organization meeting,7:30 pm, Social sciences 122.Lecture: “Boris Pasternak and SomeTraditional Russian Political and Re¬ligious Ideas: Kenotlcism, Sobornost’,and Doctor Zhivago.” Ladis Krlstof,lecturer In Russian history at theDowntown College, 8 pm, Social sci¬ences 122.Wednesday, 8 AprilLecture series: “Contemporary ap¬proaches to the study of social organ¬ization,” Social sciences 122, 4:30 pm.“Social structure and social change,”Kingsley Davis, professor of sociology,University of California, and presi¬dent of the American Sociology so¬ciety.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel.Organ recital, 5 pm, Rockefeller chapel,Heinrich Fleischer, University organ¬ist.Lecture series: “Dr. Zhivago,” UniversityCollege, 6:15 pm. "Dr. Zhivago andRussian tradtlonal values,” Ladis K. D.Krlstof, lecturer in University College.University Glee club rehearsal, 7 pm,Ida Noyes theater.Parapsychology Society emergencymeeting; all members requested toattend. Library, Ida Noyes hall, 8 pmsharp.Thursday 9, AprilLecture series: “Cooking—the universalart,” University College, 3 pm. ‘‘Cook¬ing Is an art,” Alma Lach, food editor,Chicago Sun-Times.Lecture series: “Worldways,” UniversityCollege, 6:15 pm. “An Inquiry Intopolitical problems in today’s world—Turkey and Japan,” moderator, AbbasKessel, member of the City Planningcommission, lecturer on world affairs.Guest panelists from many nationswill take part in this lecture-discus¬ sion series.LUCRETIA BORdlA, hostess, says:"Wildroot really does something for aman’s poisonality!”sJust a littkbitof Wildroot f ^and...WOW! Friday, 10 AprilLecture series: “Works of the mind,”University College, 8 pm. “Aristotle’s Poetics.” Laurence B. Berns, lecturerin the liberal arts, University College.Lecture series: “Biography,” UniversityCollege, 8 pm. "Biography as an ap noted biographer.University concert, Mandel hall, 8:30pm. New York Woodwind quintet.Friday, 3 April— 12 MB . .O‘.0j.a)9alr..proach to history.” Harry Barnard, Newborn conference, 1 pm, Dora De Leecolumnist, Chicago Daily News, and hall.Schedule of examinationsTuesday, April 7General education testsWednesday, April 8General education testsSaturday, April 11Admissions testNational admissions test for graduatestudy in businessMonday, April 20Reading examination In FrenchIn the division of the social sciencesIn the division of biological sciencesIn the division of physical sciencesIn the division of the humanitiesIn the Schools ,Monday, April 27Reading examination in GermanIn the division of the social sciencesIn the division of biological sciencesIn the division of physical sciencesIn the division of the humanitiesIn the SchoolsSaturday, May 2Medical college admissions testMonday, May 4Reading examination (other thanFrench and German by petitiononly)Tuesday, May 5General education testsWednesday, May 6General education tests Monday- Friday,May 11-15Examinations for the Bachelors andMasters DegreesIn the division of the humanitiesIn the division of the Social SciencesSaturday, May 16Examination III—School of Business(Registration in Business School)Tuesday, June 9General education testsWednesday, June 10General education testsCollege ComprehensiveExaminationsMonday, May 25EnglishO.M.P.O.M.P. Natural sciences biologicalO.M.P. Natural sciences physicalTuesday, May 26Natural sciences 2Wednesday, May 27Social sciences 2Social sciences 3Sbcial sciences 3 philosophySocial sciences 3 preceptorial Thursday, May 28HistoryHistory preceptorialSocial sciences ISocial sciences IIFriday, May 29University holidaySaturday, May 30Memorial dayMonday, June 1Humanities 1Humanities 3 artHumanities 3Humanities 3 FrenchHumanities 3 GermanHumanities 3 musicHumanities 3 preceptorialTuesday, June 2Natural sciences 1Natural sciences 3 biologicalPhysicsWednesday, June 3Humanities 2Thursday, June 4French 1 Latin 1French 2 Russian 1German 1 Spanish 1German 2 Spanish 2Greek 1Friday, June 5Mathematicsafter every shavev;7-4?» •Splash on Old Spice After Shave Lotion. Feel yourface wake up and live! So good for your skin...so good for your ego. Brisk as an ocean breeze.Old Spice makes you feel like a new man. Confident.Assured. Relaxed. You know you're at your bestwhen you top off your shave with Old Spice! 10° uceAFTER SHAVE IOTIONby SHUITONplus to*April 3, 1959 • CHICAGO- MAR OO N •15-up/in^jnmItut•■■ Advertise in the MaroonSPLURGE! Next time /really go all out...have a steak with yourBudwefeen Sure!...where there’s life, there’s Bud*••mm*• m » mwiii iww *«*c *»mgm 0 tm wm. mmLucky u*'i%%today it the modern teeage. Lota and lots of it in refrigeratorsready to ice up the Coke. And whatcould be more delicious than frosty. Coca-Cola^ , the real refreshment.With its cold crisp taste and _lively lift it’s always Coke for ThePause J^at^fra^lBB'lfRtfLL^r'^flWkESHED ... HAVE A COKBlBottled Milder authority of Hm Coca-Colo Con*pony ByTba Coca-Colo Bottling Corn pony of Chicago, Inc.Do You Think for Yourself ?(%?&tssg.)1. When your friends impart confidences,do you feel (A) uncomfortable, or(B) complimented? *□2. Do you prefer a task which demands(A) the organization of complex details,or (B) a constant flow of ideas?3. Would your first reaction to a difficultcommittee appointment be that you hadbeen (A) “stuck,” or (B) honored? d*□ Do you find that you work or studymore effectively (A) under supervision*or (B) on your own schedule?Is it your feeling that closefriendships with superiors would be(A) a great help, or (B) actually ahindrance to your career with a firm?7. Which, to your.mind, haa the greaterinfluence on you in making a good grade:<A) the instructor, or (B) the subjectmatter of a course?t00Z 4. If you were a contestant on a quizffyf program which of these questionU ** categories would you prefer: (A) popularsongs of today, or (B) current events? 8. Do you believe that the saying “hastemakes waste” is (A) always true, or(B) often false?9. Which would weigh mordheavily in your choice of filtercigarettes: (A) the opinionsof friends with similar tastes,or (B) your ownconsidered judgment? dIt is usually the case that men and womenwho really think for themselves comearound to VICEROY as their brand of filtercigarette ... for two very good reasons;'VICEROY is the one cigarette that give^them a thinking man’s filter and a smokingman’s taste.*// you checked (B) oH any six of the ninequestions . . . you really think for yourself!9 1#69. Brown * Willlanuon Totwcca Carp.The Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows- Familiarpack orcrush*proof,box.'ONLY VICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN'S.FILTER ... A SMOKING MAN’S.TASTElCommittee to tell of the new Hyde ParkA major campaign to tellthe "New Hyde Park” storyis being developed by a com¬mittee of businessmen and prop¬erty owners interested in thefuture of the Hyde Park-Kenwoodneighborhood.Harold J. Green, assistant tothe president, South Side bankand trust company, is chairmanof the newly formed 18-membercommittee. The committee willsteer a long-range public infor¬mation program on the advan¬tages of the area, using allmedia, Green said.“I firmly believe that the NewHyde Park is the best place inthe city of Chicago to live,” heasserted. "Where else do you finda residential neighborhood bound¬ed by parks, high-speed transpor¬tation, and by Lake Michigan?Where else do you find such aconcentration of cultural institu¬tions and organizations?"Nowhere else in the countrywill $135 million be spent in newconstruction and rehabilitation ofapartment buildings, institutions,stores and offices in such a con¬centrated area and in such a shortspace of time. The New HydePark is becoming a city within acity," Green said.The committee’s first step wasan announcement that it wouldarrange financing for an adver¬ tising campaign in the metro¬politan Chicago area on the NewHyde Park, with particular stresson apartment rentals.The term "New Hyde Park” hasbeen selected by the committee todesignate the 819-acre area from47 to 59 streets and from CottageGrove to Lake Michigan. The firstphase of a long-range develop¬ment program is currently under¬way, with the construction of ashopping center and 225 townhouses by Webb & Knapp, Inc.Construction of two ten-storyelevator apartment buildings witha total of 540 units at 55th streeta block east of the Illinois Centralrailroad tracks will start thisspring.The "New Hyde Park” develop¬ment program is Chicago’s larg¬est. Cost of the project ofremodeling and modernizing ex¬isting structures and reconstruct¬ing approximately 20 per cent ofthe buildings in the 106-acre coredevelopment area will be an esti¬mated $39 million. In addition,some $57 million of private fi¬nancing will be made availablefor improvements.The total money to be spent inthe area, including the Webb &Knapp project, the long-rangedevelopment plan, and the expan¬sion plans of institutions in thearea, amounts to more than $135million.— why is thy spring?experts eligibleas Moscow fair guides“Personable Americans be¬tween the ages of 20 and 35,who know their own countryand its government, speak Rus¬sian fluently and have a generalknowledge of Soviet affairs” maybe accepted this summer as guidesat the American national exhibi¬tion in Moscow, according to theexhibition’s headquarters.A total of 60 men and womenfrom various sections of the coun¬try will be selected for the six-week-long exhibition of Americanscientific, cultural, and technolog¬ical developments in Moscow’sSokolniki park.Applicants may write to the of¬fice of the American national ex¬hibition in Moscow, 425 Thirdstreet SE, Washington, DC. Thedateline for applications is March25. Final selections from a list ofqualified applicants will be madeby a board of Russian-languageand Soviet-area specialists earlyin April.According to tentative plans,the guides will be in the SovietUnion for about 60 days. Theywill leave for Europe by ship onor about June 19, and will arrivein Moscow July 1. They will begiven an intensive training courseaboard ship and on-the-spot train¬ing at the exhibition site.Transportation to the SovietUnion and return, per diem ex¬penses while in training, and uni¬forms will be provided by theexhibition office. A salary of $16a day while in the Soviet Unionis also provided. Exhibition offi¬cials foods and lodging for theguides will be furnished by Sovietauthorities at a special rate. New Hyde Park housing.Area real estate evaluatedSometime in April Blackfriars will present Hour Dash, theheart-warming story of a Big Ten track star who falls in lovewith a vivacious UC coed. They meet at an Olympic marathon,held in the Fieldhouse, where she gives him a sample package ofcigarettes. They start dating. Milly (that’s her name), however, hasno affection for Joe (that’s his name). She plans to use him to gettickets to the Pan-American games. Joe, in the meantime, becomesinfatuated with the Aristotelian atmosphere of 55th street pubs anddecides to give up athletics for a life of truth and light.He buys a copy of "Posterior Pervertibus” and becomes a bartender(selling non-filter cigarettes under the counter). Milly elopes withJoe’s track coach, and they honeymoon on the bus en-route to Mel¬bourne (an action-packed scene).The Blackfriars are sure that the many warm and familiar sceneswill touch deeply into the inner recesses of each and every soul oncampus, according to a recent spokesman."Sour Flash” will bring three nights of music and mirth to Mandelhall this April. Springtime, we await thee anxiously! by Franklin BroudeWith a little care in itsmanagement, Hyde Park canbecome a growing, dynamiccommunity without the sterilityof the renewed community whichsurrounds Washington universityin St. Louis. This was the conten¬tion of James C. Downs, Jr., chair¬man of the Real Estate Researchcorporation and former Housingand Development coordinator forthe city of Chicago, in his appear¬ance as the twentieth lecturer inthe graduate school of Business’continuing lecture series. Downs’topic was ‘The Chicago real estatemarket.”Downs covered a number ofthings which the work of theRERC has brought to light. Thefirst of these is a new type ofdwelling unit, the “Megalopoli-tan,” a substantial real estate con¬sumer. There are four groups ofmegalopolitans. The first are thegroups of young single peoplewho get together for the purposesof sharing an apartment. A goodexample of these might be two orthree young, unmarried Business¬men who share an apartmentclose to their work. In addition,there are the aged; the "dynamic elders” (those couples in theirearly fifties, whose children aregrown and in their own homes,who are still active in the eco¬nomic and social life of the com¬munity) ; and the fatherless fami¬lies. These four types of dwellingunits draw their megalopolitancharacter from the fact that theyall gravitate to the center of thecity with its conveniences.Another area examined by thespeaker was the movement trendsin housing. At this moment, thereis a great movement toward de¬centralization in urban area in theUS. This is in contrast to the restof the western world wherein thebusinessman and his family livealmost within walking distance ofhis office or place of business in¬stead of “a sleeper ride away.”Downs feels that this trend willbe reversed and that the circlewill be made back to the city. Co¬incidentally, the slums, which fol¬low on the heels of evacuation ofan area, will end up, therefore inthe suburbs.Downs noted certain cautionswhich should be made by anyonewho is trying to forecast the'growth of the real estate market.For example, we have, in Amer¬ica, overcome our anti-polygamy laws by “serial polygamy” where¬by marriage to more than onepartner is on a consecutive basisas opposed to a concurrent basis.Since this remarriage rate is in¬cluded in the reported marriagerate, which is so often used as aforecasting tool, it becomes ap¬parent that we must look forother tools of forecasting. Amongthese are unemployment rates, va¬cancy rates and their distributionby area, mortgage loan volume,etc. Here again, though, he cau¬tioned that in the field of the vol¬ume of mortgage loans, for ex¬ample, the volume may describethe pressure to loan more thanthe actual pressure to buy withborrowed funds. His lecture serv¬ed to indicate the complexity ofthe real estate market which mustbe mastered to insure profitableinvestment.The next school of business lec¬ture will be Wednesday, April 8at 1:30 pm in Social sciences 122.Herbert V. Prochnow, Vice presi¬dent of the First National bank ofChicago, will speak on "Someproblems in international financeand foreign policy.” Students andfaculty members of the Univer¬sity are cordially invited to attend.$30,000 award to AlbertA. Adrian Albert, professor and chairman of the department of mathematics has beenawarded a $30,000 grant for the support of his research into modern abstract algebra.The funds were provided by the Esso Educatioafoundation. The money will also be usedto support the work t>f post-doctoral students.Albert is author of four books on mathematics, and is chairman of the mathematics section of theNational Academy of sciences, the nation’s top scientific body.On April 23, Albert will be chairman of a symposium on finite groups to be held in New York andsponsored by the American mathematical society and the Institute for Defense analyses.Obviously,he makes the gradeWe don’t mean just at exam time,either. The comfort-consciousguy can tell at a glance that thesesmart Arrow shirts make warmweather a breeze. The medium-spread collar and fresh patternsare just right, alone or with acasual jacket. Arrow sports shirtscome in a variety of fine patterns,priced from $4.00 up.-ARROW-first in fashionApril 3, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 17.— ■ ■ » V"I T-Politics and the beat generationby David Me ReynoldsReprinted from ‘The Village Voice*Discussions of the beatgeneration remind me verymuch of blind men trying totell what an elephant is like. Thisis so because on the one hand somany of those discussing the beatgeneration really don’t know whatthey are talking about, and on theother because the beat generationitself is a very complex animal.It is a generation which consistsof jazz festivals. Zen Buddhism,peyote, a return to Catholicism,early marriage, no marriage,marijuana, street gangs, poetry,and general confusion. It is there¬fore both a safe and a dangeroussubject to treat with. Safe in thatanything you say will be partlytrue, and dangerous in that any¬thing you say will be correctlytermed an over simplification.To make my job easier I amlimiting my comments to whatmight be called the "jazz-poetrysection” of the beat generation.The beat generation has with¬drawn itself from organized so¬ciety. Its drive is not a revolution¬ary drive toward a new society,but simply a rebellious breakfrom the existing society, a driveto discover personal reality andmeaning outside of a social frame¬work which the hipster finds un¬real and meaningless. Mort Sahl,for example, devastates the exist¬ing social system with almost ev¬ery word he speaks. The man isdynamite. But ail he is really say¬ing is NO. The disturbing thingabout this younger generation isits refusal to even try changingthe world — i.e., the world isphony and politics is a drag.There are three reasons thathelp account for a generation ofvouth who have "dis-affiliated”¥rom society.FIRST IS THE BOMB. Youngpeople ah over the world are bornand grow up knowing there maybe no tomorrow. Not simply no"personal tomorrow,” but no to¬morrow for the human race. Thelast act is almost over, the curtainis about to come down, the playwasn’t very good anyway, andnow the younger spectators aregetting restless in their seats. Arecent poll of teenagers, beingasked what they thought causedjuvenile delinquency, turned upthe fact that almost half felt the"world situation” was one reason—a feeling perfectly expressed bya young girl who said: “After all,CLARK Theatredark fir madisonopen 7 a.m.late show 4 a.m.g college student priceUC at all timesjust present your student identi¬fication card at the boxoffice.Sunday Film Guild ProgramsApril 5: “The Pride and thePassion”“The Prisoner"April 12: “Old Man and the Sea”“Black OrchidDifferent double feature daily the kids feel they have nothingto lose. We’ll all be blown to bitsanyway.” We train our schoolchildren to hide under desks andflatten against walls in simulatedbomb attacks, and then wonderthat they lack a sense of socialresponsibility when they get alittle older. Kids are too wise.Only adult s—and only govern¬ment officials at that—are foolishenough to believe in Civil De¬fense. The kids know better.The second factor is that youthtoday emerges into a society thatis in a state of profound andceaseless change. This is the ageof technology and the human racehasn’t even begun to adjust to it.The old patterns of culture, offamily relationships, of regionalties—all are loosened or sweptaway.OUTSIDE OF our immediatecircle of friends there is no realsense of community. Our relationswith others fire a constantly shift¬ing series of impersonal contacts.Things are too big or too faraway. Politics is something in theNew York Times or Washington,DC. We are a crowd in which noone is going anywhere in relationto anyone else. We do not knowone another, our faces having be¬come shifting masks and abstractshadows. Youth feels alienatedfrom contemporary society. Theyemerge into it without being ableto identify with it. In that samesurvey on juvenile delinquency,one student said: “We live in theworld, yet we have no say as towhat should or shouldn’t happen.”The third factor is that in themidst of all this tremendouschange in the social framework,we have lost our sense of moralvalues which might possibly havesustained us in a period of suchprofound upheaval. Both the USand Soviet Russia are led bypower groups which are patentlydishonest, and every bright high-school student knows this. The"free world” of John FosterDulles includes Franco, Chiang,Rhee, Trujillo—and until very re¬cently Batista and Jiminez. The"people’s democracy of the Com¬munist bloc” is a morbid farce un¬derlined with the blood of tens ofthousands of Hungarian workers.Nor is this all. Students whoknow history begin to feel thatthe present governments don’teven allow a decent interval be¬tween lies. For example, Russiawas viewed as a brutal dictator¬ship until 1942, at which pointFranklin Delano Roosevelt andHenry Luce discovered it was ademocracy—a fact of which theRussian people were themselvestotally unaware—and it remaineda democracy until 1945, when itsuddenly reverted to a dictator¬ship. On the other hand, Germanyand Japan were, in 1945, so mor¬ally depraved that we vowed toreduce Germany to a 1 a n d offarmers and wrote into the Japa¬nese constitution a clause againstJapan ever having an army again.By 1950 our government waspleased to report that the Ger-lm.0e paXk,|fhmbiepheru MO 7907i lake paKkj 53 tul gtiteetStudent admission rate 50cupon presentation of EDFIRST AND EXCLUSIVE SHOWING OF THE ORIGINALVERSION WITH THE FRENCH SOUNDTRACKJacques Tati “MY UNCLE’’Mr. Hulot is back again in the New York Critics Award comedy*that playfully points its barbs at modern times."Tati is preserving of humorthat is almost lost on the screen!The indestructible enchantmentof slapstick comedy as it wasperformed by classic screen com¬ edians Chaplin, Keaton, andLloyd, is returned to our aware¬ness by Jacques Tati. He has theeye of a satirist, plus the skill ofa clown"* Also nominated for an Academy Award in theHost Foreign Film category. mans and Japanese had under¬gone a most wondrous spiritualtransformation — they had notonly become democratic but werenow so peace-loving that we in¬sisted they re-arm (over the vig¬orous protests, let it be noted, ofthe majority of both the Germanand Japanese public!. On theCommunist side of the fence wehave Marshall Tita. undergoingthe fascinating metamorphosisfrom hero to counter-revolution¬ary to hero to deviationist.These points simply illustratethe basic issue. In the nineteenthcentury we had substituted forfaith in God a faith in the inher¬ent goodness and rationality ofman. This faith was mortallywounded by World War I, andthen buried by the senseless mur¬der of millions of Jews under Hit¬ler and by the bloody miscarriageof the Russian Revolution. Hav¬ing lost faith in God, we now lostfaith in ourselves. Lacking anymoral absolutes, we drift aboutin a tepid sea of “relative values.”Youth is again wiser than adults—they know too well that a set of"relative values” which not onlypermits and tolerates but de¬mands the building of hydrogenbombs is not a set of values at all,but a rationale for insanity.The hipster is desperate to findsome meaning in life. The socialframework does not offer thismeaning — he must conduct thesearch for real values on his own.The "future” having no meaningas a concept in a world preparingfor suicide, the hipster can onlydefine reality by actions in t h epresent—by a series of personaland direct experiences. Seen thus,peyote, marijuana, and the seriesof disjointed and seemingly irre¬sponsible actions of the beat gene¬ration take on a new meaning, forthese actions are all part of thesearch for reality, all part of theeffort to engage in conscious per¬sonal actions in a world whereconscious personal actions becomeincreasingly difficult. The only"real” reality for the hipster isthe cool scene, the cool sound, andthe ability to be aware of onesselfand to prove one’s existence bypersonal actions.IN A RECENT issue of TheVoice James Weehsler wasappalled by the "flight and irre¬sponsibility” of the beat genera¬tion. However, in point of fact itis Kerouac and Ginsberg who areoperating at the deeper level ofreality. When Weehsler com¬plained that “life is complicatedenough without turning it into apoem,” the answer of the beatgeneration is that unless we canturn human life into a poem ithas no meaning, no value. AsKenneth Patchen put it: "Gentleand loving, all else is treason.”The beat generation has a better“sense of the times”—their fearof war is not an abstract fear ofeventual conflict. It is an immedi¬ate concern, expressed by Law¬rence Ferlinghetti, about “anystray asinine action by any strayasinine second lieutenant pressingany strange button anywhere faraway over an arctic ocean thusilluminating the world once andfor all.”But what meaning does the beatgeneration have for t h o s e of uswho are not beat, who are po¬ litically Involved, who conceive ofa future and have faith in theability of the human race toevolve beyond mass murder? Andwhat of the beat generation Itself—where is it gbing?Taking the last question first,I have a strong feeling that nosensitive person can remain saneif he believes in nothing but him¬self, his own immediate experi¬ences and sensations. These mem¬bers of the beat generation whoas a consequence of repecting theexisting social system, remainturned in upon themselves, mustultimately become religious or gomad. Without a sense of values ofsome kind, life becomes impos¬sible. This accounts, I think forthe surge of interest in the cultof Zen, and the attempt throughreligion to find meaning in life.HOWEVER, other members ofthe beat generation are taking adifferent and healthier direction.Some who began as rebels seemto evolve slowly into writers whowant to do more than protest —who want to change society.There is an awareness that onecan find an existential meaningto life through involvement in so¬cial struggle; a realization thateven if "the issue is in doubt” re¬garding man’s fate, the struggleitself has meaning.The writers and poets of thebeat generation begin to makepolitical sounds. In Ferlinghett’srecent poem, "tentative descrip¬tion of a dinner to promote theimpeachment of president Eisen¬hower,” there is a warning thateven the hipster is about to leavethe coffee table and engage him¬self in the task of changing thesocial order—particularly in thefollowing lines: "And some men also despaired and sat down inBohemia and were too busy tocome/ But other men came whoseonly political action during thepast,twenty years had been toflush a protesting toilet and run/And those came who had nevermarched in sports car protest pa¬rades and those came who hadnever been arrested for sailing aprotesting Golden Rule in unpaci¬fic oceans.”The beat generation Itself maynot be able to play a direct orresponsible role in politics. Forall the sophistication of its mem¬bers, they are naive in politicalterms, too easily equating thenecessary compromise of politicalaction with the unnecessary be¬trayal of moral values which theysense so deeply in the present sit¬uation.But the beat generation by itsvery existence serves notice onall of us who are political that ifwe want to involve youth in poli¬tics we must develop a politics ofaction. The beat generation canunderstand Gandhi much betterthan they can understand Roose¬velt. They can understand MartinLuther King much better thanthey can understand Hubert Hum¬phrey. They can understand theHungarian workers much betterthan they can understandMikoyan.THE BEAT generation is notyet political, but it knows thatmany of us who are political donot know—that neither the liberalnor the radical movements haveany significance for human valuesif we do not learn to base ourpolitics on the individual humanbeing. The future has hope andmeaning only if we learn to actwith integrity in the presentThe perfect hide-away:«:<* .Playboy’s weekend hideaway, as featured in the magazine’s Aprilissue, is a perfect place to study (?) during vacations and post¬graduation. This ideal layout for a bachelor’s dormitory comprisesseparate but integrated areas: center is the 44’x32’ living roomwith glass walls facing lake and pool (floor is continuous with pool-side); at left is guest wing (27'x36')( two steps up from theliving room, with glass wall cantilevered over pool, private patio andbath; at right is master’s wing (56' x 25'), four steps up from livingroom and providing sleeping and dressing areas, lounging area withglass wall facing lake and sun deck cantilevered over the water,divided bath, private patio above pool. Beneath guest room is arecreation room whose windows are below the surface of the pool;under master’s wing is garage and boat house with swimming andboarding dock under sun deck. Cost is not mentioned, but a handydo-it-yourself guide is found in the issue.Its new “Weekend Hideaway,” Playboy points out, is intended forthe man who “wants his own place away from the city’s hurly-burly,a place where he can relax for a weekend or a week, with companionsof his choosing, in a house of his own which provides his accustomedcomforts and whatever degree of privacy or gregariousness, for¬mality or informality, the occasions of his pleasure require.”Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave. -|iiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiimiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiii^is Chicago » Most Unusual= Motion Picture [lieatrePhon* DE 7-1761Again reminds all College StuJenU of tli«Special Student Rates always in effect atEVERY DAY OF THE WEEKINCL. FRI. & SAT. EVENINGS NOW75* SPECIALSTUDENTRATEJUST SHOW CASHIER YOUR IJ). CARD Showtlmes sWeekdays: 6:30, 9:00 ^Sat.: 3:10, 5:30, 7:50, 10 p.m. =Sun.: 2, 4:15, 6-40, 9 p.m. r;nlllllllllllllllllliillilllllllllltllimillllllHIHlIllllltlllllltlllllitilllllllillillllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllfeLAURENCE OLIVER'S"HENRY V" acadia theaterFri. - Sat. - Sun.April 3-4-5Spencer Tracy in"OLD MAN and the SEA"Kim Novak - James Stewart"BELL, BOOK Cr CANDLE"both in colorSpecial Student Ratesplenty of on-street parkingRE 7-46672739 W. 55th St.• CHICAGO MAROON • Aprils, 1959Culture VultureHaving seen Hie lovely usesto which unquotable quotescan be put# I've decided toquote unquotably in an appro¬priately bird-of-preyish fash¬ion. This is also motivated bya strong feeling of natural lazi¬ness which prompts me to letother people write my gibber¬ish. Let hell do its will — Iam possessed by a new demon.Unquotable: "Now beforewe begin, have that bell-towerremoved for I can never seeone seat higher than the otherswithout wanting to place my¬self in it." (perverted Napo¬leon.)On CampusTheatreMeasures for Measure, theShakespearean comedyclaimed by some to be tragic,will be presented by UniversityTheatre about the first of May.The tragedy (which some mis¬anthropic individuals insist ondubbing a comedy) involves ayoung man about to be beheadedfor getting a maid with child, aduke with a penchant for leavinghis dukedom, a young lady witha penchant for holiness, and aducal regent with a strong likingfor holy young ladies, in a typi¬cally complex whirl of Shakes¬pearean dialogue and plotting.For a good epitomization of theplay see Harrison’s CompleteWorks of Shakespeare. For a per¬formance of said play, see Univer¬sity Theatre’s production.Blackfriar’s coming production,Bloated Mass will open April 17.The musical involves a SouthernBaptist monk who tries to copythe complete works of WilliamFaulkner in beautiful Gothicscript to preserve them for pos¬terity. He dies in the attempt. Themusic is adapted from authenticsecond century chants sung bythe early Christian martyrs asthey marched to meet the lions.The lyrics are not by WilliamFaulkner.MusicNext Friday the New YorkWoodwind quintet will appear inMandel Hall in the last of the cur¬rent series of UC concerts. Theprogram will include works byDanzi, Etler, Wellesz, and Fran-caix. Student admission is $1.Tomorrow night the UC YouthMarch committee will sponsor ajazz and folk music program inMandel hall. The program willfeature Josh White.For those who see and approvethe above program, or for thosewho don’t see it and/or don’t ap¬prove it, the Fine Arts programis sponsoring an eight weeks lec¬ture and discussion series on jazz.The purpose of this series is toprovide a basic set of standardsor frame of reference by which or In which to judge or considerjazz. The .course will be taughtby Eddie Baker, jazz pianist andleader of a jazz trio. Tuition willbe $32.Art ExhibitionsThe Renaissance society is pre¬senting an exhibition of contem¬porary wall hangings in weavingand needlework. The exhibition is,as always, in Goodspecd hall.Off CampusTheatreThe lamblike March and theparrot-like April bring with theircalendaric opposition a change inthe list in Chicago plays. TheWarm Peninsula at the Erlangerand The Girls in 509 at the CivicTheatre will both close tomorrownight. Two for the Seesaw at theMichael Todd will close a weekfrom tomorrow. The Music Manwill sing for five more aeans atleast.This evening Goodman thea¬tre’s presentation of The Trialwill open, to run through April19. The Trial is Andre Gide’s adap¬tation of Kafka’s famous avon-garde novel about the young manon trial for some crime unknownto him, of which he knows he isguilty. The book was a classic.Gide’s play as the dramatizationof the book should also be great.A lightly murky play, The Darkat the Top of the Stairs will openMonday at the Erlanger, withmuch of its Broadway cast. Gar¬den District, two short plays byTennessee Williams set in the Gar¬den District of New York, willopen at the Civic theatre Tuesday.The two plays, Something Un¬spoken, and Suddenly Last Sum¬mer, will feature Cathleen Nesbittand Diana Barymorc.Motion PicturesThis evening, Mon Onele withJacques Tati will open at theHyde Park. We have already goneinto great raptures over this film—it played downtown for an in¬terminable period. It’s every bitas good, funny, satirical, etc., etc.,etc., now as it was then, and inaddition, it's being produced inthe original French. We will givethe Hyde Park a gentle pat onthe back for its insistence on thegenuine article, give the movieitself a larger back-pat for its ownquality, and present a generalshove to all theatre goers in thedirection of the Hyde Park.Laurence Olivier’s productionof Shakespeare’s Henry V is nowrunning at the Surf Theatre.From what I remember of thefilm (I saw it when both themovie and I were quite young)it is not only exciting, spectacular,and colorful — it is also closelyrelated to the play written byShakespeare, a fairly unusualcharacteristic for a film versionof anything. Playing with Olivierare Robert Newton, Renee Asher-son, Leo Genn, Felix Alymer, andEsmond Knight.Never Steal Anything Smallwith James Cagney will open atthe Esquire this evening. The filmis a musical comedy about aunion leader trying to steal asmall portion of the Atlantic har¬ bor coast, including the New Yorkwaterfront. The movie is basedon Maxwell Anderson’s play“Devil’s Hornpipe” and will fea¬ture a small union imp with atalent for tap dancing.This evening the Art Institutewill present a free showing ofJacque’s Tati’s Mr. Huelet’s Holi¬day, the first and supposedly bestTati film.MusicTomorrow the Chicago Sym¬phony orchestra with various andsundry soloists will present a pro¬gram including Vivaldi’s Concertofor Piccolo, Haydn’s Concerto forTrumpet in E flat, McBride’sSwing Stuff, Debussy’s Sacredand Profane Dances, and Sibel-maroon reviews lius’ Violin Concerto. Their pro¬gram next Thursday and Fridaywill feature Antonion Janigro onthe cello. The program will in¬clude Beethoven’s Fidelio Over¬ture, Haydn’s 100th Symphonyand Strauss’ Don Quixote.Sunday at 3:30, Marian Ander¬son, contralto, will give a recitalin Orchestra hall. This is worthyof note, simply because it isworthy of note.Art ExhibitionsThis afternoon the Art Insti¬tute’s exhibition of Dutch draw¬ings will open its twenty-four daystay. The drawings, lent by vari¬ous galleries and private collec¬tors in Holland, include severalworks by Rembrandt, many of the other 17th century masters, andearlier works dating as far as1410. The drawings were selectedby the Director of the Print roomof Amsterdam’s Rijks museum,and the exhibition was brought tothis country by the NetherlandsEmbassy and the Smithsonian In¬stitute.The Schwartz galleries’ exhibi¬tion of European oil paintings, in¬cluding works by Max Guntherand Yves Le Veque. will close to¬morrow. The Johnson Galleriesexhibition in honor of FauvistCharles Camoin will continuethrough April 11. The Findlaygalleries exhibition of paintingsby Dufy, Edzard, Corbcllini, Ei-sendick, and Sabouraud will con¬tinue through the rest of April.A fine bit of talk . . .It was two nights of theatrein the old style — bodies allover the stage. In the first ofthe three one-acters, “In theShadow of the Glen,” there wasold Dan Burke’s body, feigningdeath and fretted by flies andfuries as he lies there waitingto discover what kind of talk hiscoaxing young wife makes withthe men passing. In ‘The Tinker’sWedding” it was a priest’s body,writhing in a sack while atop ofhim old Mary Byrne, wearing herhangover like a garland, evokesa splendid vision of all the porterher son and his doxy will be ableto conjure out of their rejectedwedding-fee. And then, all laugh¬ing done, in “Riders to the Sea”there was the cold body of hersixth and last son returned toMaurya by the devouring sea sothat the good white wood boughtfor a brother’s coffin shall notbe wasted.In Playboy it was a little dif¬ferent—there for the first halfof the play the body lay in apotato-patch off-stage, vivid onlyas a fable of doughty oedipaldeeds to enflame a barmaid’sheart; when it staggers into thescene later it is a dirty thing, abrutal, indestructible bit of real¬ity, to make men weak and wom¬en venomous.In truth Synge’s world offerslittle scope for men, either asactors or humans. They work,die or grow old, look for a littleease in the evening, and to theextent that they are men and notboys or beggers have little to sayfor themselves. But the womentalk a blue streak, and preferablyover the recumbent body of aman. We can dismiss the notion,I think, that this has anythingto do with the national characterof the Irish, or that it reflectssome kind of anthropologicalreality of a peasant folk.There are those who mightargue that it follows rather fromthat womanization of the theatreabout which Mr. Thurber wasrecently complaining; and theywould no doubt find it significantthat Synge himself was a dis¬ covery of those two redoubtablepioneers of the serious, Miss Hor-niman and Lady Gregory. My¬self, I prefer to derive Synge’sdiminution of the male more di¬rectly from his concern with dic¬tion. The story goes that Yeatsfound him as a young man in aParis garret writing bad sym¬bolist poems, and sent him pack¬ing back to the Irish hinterlandsto find a more worthy way oflife.What Synge found there, ofcourse, was not a way of life buta way of talking. A poor, pathetic,pidginized kind of speech, repeti¬tive, poor in syntactical flexibity,capable of expressing only themost elementary actions, emo¬tions and sensory responses: alanguage for animals rather thanmen. And by committing himselfso consistently to this kind oftrade-language, Synge was con¬strained to invent a way of lifeto fit it.A childish, elemental language,that came into being from thecommerce of bailiff and tenant,its very structure imposes thedual modes of submission anddominance; a language 'of pri¬mary process, that permits onlythe lowest order of qualificationsor generalization, what wonderthat only Synge’s women can useit well? The peculiar dramaticinversions of Synge’s Ireland, Iwould argue then, in which themen are the passive butts of fe¬male needs and whims, comefrom the world of his words andnot from any world he had ob¬served.It is still a grand world, ofcourse, even if a small one; andthe Irish Players evoked it andinvested it with a brilliant author¬ity. Miss Elspeth March carriesthe main burdens of the companywith assurance, moving from thelow farce of Mary Byrne to the high tragedy of Maurya withnever a falter. Miss Helena Car-roll snares and belabors her menwith indefatigable spriteliness —there was even one precariousmoment in “Riders to the Sea”whpn, as her flashing eyesroamed the stage, she seemedmore interested in finding asweetheart than in keening fora brother. Between the bodies, theboys and the beggars there is in¬evitably less to choose; althoughDermot McNamara’s Christy, andRonald Bishop as his indestruct¬ible Da’, helped notably to makethis performance of The Playboyone of the most satisfying I haveever seen.Mark BenneyNew UC groupoffers sales helpPublicity, an organizationconcerned with providing freesales and general promotionto student organizations, has re¬cently been formed. The newgroup is composed of ten mem¬bers.Jim Best, president, describedPublicity’s operation by taking ahypothetical case. “An organiza¬tion comes to us and asks for helpbecause they are having a dancein the’ near future and want tohold down their losses to a mini¬mum. One, two, or three people,depending upon the size of thejob, are assigned and these peoplework in conjunction with the pub¬licity staff and executive boardof the organization. “Our primaryconcern is to do a sales and pro¬motional job for the organiza¬tion.”SALE - SALE - SALEDIMI - A- DAYPRICES GO DOWN TEN CENTS EVERY DAY!!!SOME BOOKS SHOPWORN; SOME ARE NEWTITLES RANGE FROM PHILOSOPHY THROUGH "HOW TOSALE STARTS FRIDAY, APRIL 3rdFOR TWO WEEKS, OR UNTIL SUPPLY IS EXHAUSTEDUNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE58th and Ellis Helenca Cardigans P .//>and Pullovers csLucille Aassorted colors $2.98machine washable . . . 3.98 1507 east 53rd st.6.50 mi 3-9898TERRY’S PIZZAFree VC Detiverysmall 1.00medium 1.451518 c. 63rd large 1.95x-large 2.95MI 3-404525c discount on oil pizxos, Mon. - Thurs. only, with this coupon.This offer definitely expires Thursdoy, April 9April 3,1959 0 CHICAGO MAROON • 19Fifth FOTA opening April 17Fifth annual Festival of theArts, a program of culture ina carnival atmosphere, opensa 10-day stand on campus April 17.Planned events range from jazzconcerts to international song-and dance programs, but the em¬phasis will be on art exhibits, lit¬erary lectures and discussions,and classical music. Other topevents include an original musicalcomedy and a Beaux Arts Ball.Campus buildings and frater¬nity houses in the area will befestoooned by various student or¬ganizations to lend color to theaffair.The festival opens noon, Friday,April 17, with members of Black-friars. one of the oldest studentorganizations on campus, parad¬ing in “hillbilly” costumes whilea carillon-chime concert rings outfrom Rockefeller chapel andand Mitchell tower.Appointed Author in Residenceat the festival is Mrs. LauraFermi, wife of the man whoheaded the team that first re¬leased the energy of the atom.Novelist Saul Bellow also willgive a lecture.All events are open to the gen¬eral public.A day-by-day breakdown of pro¬gram events follows: (This in¬cludes only special events for theday listed. There will also be con¬tinuing exhibits on campus.)Friday, April 172:30 — All-student outdoor jazzconcert at Hutchinson court. (In¬doors at the Reynolds club in caseOf rain.!3:00—Preliminaries of the Flor¬ence James Adams Poetry Read¬ing contest at Joseph Bond chapel.8:15—Dramatic readings. ‘TheWorld of Sholom Aleichem,” cele¬brating the centennial of his birth,presented by Hillel foundation incooperation with University Thea¬tre. at Hillel foundation.8:30 — Hootenanny featuringleading professional folk artists inChicago and local University tal¬ent, presented by the Folkloresociety. Assembly room, Interna-tilonal house, general admission$1.25. members $1.00.8:30 -Sour Clash, an originalmusical comedy on the tragic lifeof a trombone salesman, a Black-friars all-student produciton atMandel hall. General admission $2.00, $2.50; students $1.00, $1.50.Saturday, April 188:30—Sour ClashSunday, April 1911:00 — Religious services atRockefeller chapel. Sermon bySiegfried Reinhardt, departmentof art, Washington university,winner of $7,000 prize for muralpaintings in 1952 and exhibitor innumerous art museums.2:00—Formal opening of Festi¬val exhibitions. (Many of theseexhibits will be open to public be¬fore the formal opening; and willcontinue so during the festival.)Pablo Picasso; graphic works,Renaissance society galleries.Student Art exhibit: New Resi¬dence halls.The architect and the Univer¬sity; Lexington hall.Outdoor Sculpture show; NewResidence halls.Phrygian Art exhibit: Orientalinstitute.Faculty Art exhibit: Ida Noyeshall.3:00 — Reception for students,faculty, and festival guests tomeet exhibiting and performingartists, lounge, New Residencehalls.Special music on the LauraSpelman Rockefeller Carillon atRockefeller chapel.4:00 — Chamber Music concertat the library of Ida Noyes hall,offered by the Music society andthe Apollonian society.8:30—Sour Clash.Monday, April 209:30 pm—Informal reception tomeet Laura Fermi, author ofAtoms In the Family and Atomsfor the World, and visiting authorin residence for Festival of theArts. Lounge, New Residencehalls.Tuesday, April 217:00—Arts carnival: all campusskit competition at Varsity ten¬nis courts (or Ida Noyes theaterin case of rain).9:00 — Carnival dance: all-cam¬pus street party at the circle inthe main quadrangles (or IdaNoyes theatre in case of rain).Wednesday, April 224:30—Special program of musicon the Laura Spelman Rockefel¬ler carillon, Rockefeller chapel.8:30—A concert of Mozartplayed by the University Sym¬phony Orchestra conducted by Joseph Kreines at Mandel hall;Robert Howat, pianistThursday, April 238:00—Panel discussion of PabloPicasso’s graphic works, followedby gallery talks and reception atRenaissance society galleries.Panel members are James Gil¬bert, associate professor of hu¬manities; Harold Haydon, associ¬ate professor of Art, and JoshuaTaylor, associate professor of ArtFriday, April 242:00—Creative writing work¬shop, informal criticism of stu¬dent manuscripts. Library, IdaNoyes hall.3:00—Finals of Florence JamesAdams poetry reading contest atJoseph Bond chapel.4:30—Debate, Chicago-style. Ano - holds - barred debate betweenMark Benney, assistant professorof social sciences, and Reuel Den¬ney, professor of social sciences,at Room 122, social science build¬ing.8:15—Lecture and discussion bySaul Bellow, author of The Ad¬ventures of A u g i e March andHenderson, the Rain King, pre¬sented by the Chicago Review atMandel hall. General admission$1.25, students $1.00.8:15—Concert by the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra ensemble,sponsored by the First Unitarianchurch in cooperation with theFestival of the Arts. First Uni¬tarian church, 1174 East 57thstreet. General admission $2.00,students $1.00.8:15 — Passover folk song re¬cital, by Helene Alter, soprano,accompanied by Dr. Milton Alter,guitar, Hillel foundation.Festival Saturday, April 2511:00—Sports Car rally, spon¬sored by the Wright foreign andsports car club, Wright Juniorcollege. Cars assemble at Circle,main quadrangles, at 10:00.1:30—Varsity tennis match atvarsity tennis courts. (Opponentto be announced.)1:30—Lectures and demonstra¬tions at each of the following ex¬hibitions. Student guides will es¬cort groups to demonstration,leaving New Residence halls at1:15.Pablo Picasso: Graphic works,Harodl Haydon, associate profes¬sor of art, the' Renaissance so¬ciety galleries. Outdoor Sculpture show: Free¬man Schoolcraft, lecturer of art,courtyard of New Residence halls.Artists at work; Max Kahn,visiting instructor of art, withdemonstrations by fine arts stu¬dents. Exhibits of lithography,pottery, and student works, Mid¬way studios.1:00 - 5:00 — All art exhibitionsopen.3:00—Sour Clash performance.4:30 — Reception with Black-friars cast for students, facultyand festival guests, at Reynoldsclub.9:30 — Beaux Arts MasqueradeBall at the Quadrangle club.Theme for costumes is poetry andfantasy. $3.50 per couple.Sunday, April 2611:00—Religious services atRockefeller chapel. Sermon by Jo¬seph Sittler, professor of the fed¬erated Theological faculty of theUniversity and author of The Structure of Christian Ethics andThe Doctrine of the World.1:00-5:00 — All art exhibitionsopen.2:30—Special music from Han-del on the Laura Spelman Rookefeller carillon at Rockefellerchapel.3:00—The University Choir andmembers of the Chicago Sym-phony Orchestra present Handel sIsrael In Egypt, conducted byRichard Vikstrom, at Rockefellerchapel. General admission $2.50,students and faculty $2.00.3:00-6:00 —International exhibi-tion of paintings, sculpture, rugs,movies, and food bazaar at Inter¬national house.8:00—Festival of nations: revueof songs, dances, plays and skitsfrom around the world at Inter¬national house. Admission, 50c.8:15—Brother Antoninus, O.P.,San Francisco poet, reading hisown poetry at Ida Noyes hall.Liberal arts grads soughtby agency for teachersPrivate and public schools are seeking liberal arts graduatesfor their faculties, according to an announcement by the Co¬operative Bureau for Teachers. The agency recommends thatJune graduates investigate possibilities soon.The Cooperative Bureau —t~ r—rr—;—I—r—rfor Teachers is a non-nrofit and thorough llberal arts bark-ground over those who have spe-^ , P a cialized in teacher training."ment agency. Its policies are de- : : salaries in too leveltermined by a board of educators *51 * ™t ... . , , ... private schools range from $3Ofnfrom private schools, public ,7,-schools colleges and universities depending upon qualifieations. Many private schools offerChairman of the board is DeanEdward K. Graham of Boston uni¬versity.The demand for liberal arts maintenance facilities for marriedand single teachers in addition tothe salary.Public schools are also utilizinggraduates as teachers is definitely more liberal arts graduates. Manincreasing, according to Mary public school superintendents nowWatson, director of the bureau, hire liberal arts graduates and al“If a student is interested in teach- jow them to complete their ro-ing, he should not count himself quired education courses throughout because he lacks specific train- in-service training and sumn ciing in the field of education, she school courses.saic*- Students may obtain further in-“Unfortunately many liberal formation by writing the Cooperaarts students do not realize that tive Bureau for Teachers, 22 Eastit is possible to obtain teaching 42nd street, New York City. Inpositions without a degree in edu- cases where a personal interviewcation,” the director added. “In in New York is not possible, arfact, many independent schools rangements may be made to meetand a number of public schools and talk with members of thenow prefer teachers with a sound board of the bureau, and teachers ’■1Donnelly donates building to UCR. R. Donnelley & Sonscompany has donated a largeunused printing plant to UC,Gen. Charles C. Haffner Jr., chair¬man, said at the annual meeting.A university spokesman saidappraisal of the property has notbeen completed, blit that it is val¬ued at approximately $2 million.The plant, at Springfield, Ohio, was previously used by Crowell-Collier Publishing company toprint The American, Woman’sHome Companion and Collier’smagazines, before their publica¬tion was terminated.Donnelley acquired the plantand equipment two years ago, andhas since dismantled the printingequipment and moved it to other locations, Gen. Haffner said, ad¬ding that the structure itself couldnot be fitted into Donnelley’splans.The plant consists of about 870,-000 square feet of floor space inconnecting buildings and coverstwo square blocks. Albert C. Svo-boda, assistant treasurer of theuniversity, said the property will be offered to manufacturers forleasing either as a whole or inparts.The income from the propertywill be of “inestimable value” tothe university’s teaching and re¬search programs, Vice ChancellorJohn I. Kirkpatrick commented.He said the plant once employed2,500 workers. Built in stages from 1909 to 1956, the averageage of the buildings is 24 year*.In other action, Donnelleyshareholders approved reduct ionof the capital of the company byretiring 93,616 shares of treasurycapital stock. The shares now willbe carried as authorized but un¬issued.Is censorship growing? FOTA needs writingA “substantial movement”is developing in favor of cen¬sorship of the mass media inthe US, according to a study madefor the Fund for the Republic byCharles Winick, a social scientist.In a pamphlet, Taste and thecensor in television, published to¬day by the Fund, Winick listedsome reasons for the increase incensorship activities:Advocacy of some forms of cen¬sorship by “respected intellec¬tuals.” Dr. Winick cited WalterLippman’s statement: “. . . believ¬ing as I do in freedom of speechand thought, I see no objectionsin principle to censorship of themass entertainment of the young.. . the risks to our liberty are .. .less than the risks of unmanage¬able violence.”The 50 per cent increase in juve¬nile delinquency in the post-waryears. This had “led a number cfCongressional and other legisla¬tive committees to examine theculpability of the mass media.” Propaganda use by the SovietUnion of the content of US media.A Senate report, for example,noted that “Soviet propagandacites ... a number of instruments... in support of its favorite anti-American theme—the degeneracyof American culture. The attacksare usually supported with exam¬ples drawn from the less desirableAmerican motion pictures, tele¬vision programs, literature, dramaand art.”The “watchdog” functions of in¬fluential national and local or¬ganizations. Among the effectivemedia scrutiny programs, Dr. Wi¬nick mentioned those of the Na¬tional Organization for De¬cent Literature’s “community vig¬ilance” and the General Federa¬tion of Women’s Clubs’ “publicopinion in action.”“A number of government agen¬cies have approved the work ofthese groups,” Winick said. Thereis apparently a growing trend to¬ward organized social control overmedia, and this may presage a reinterpretation of the historicalAmerican attitudes toward censor¬ship.The comparisons between tele¬vision, theater and print mediaand the criticism that televisioncensors have reduced the levelof television art and are destroy¬ing the taste of the public cannotbe accepted unreservedly. Thegeneral public has seldom shownany great interest in high art.After all, the 15 leading best¬selling books published since 1895are made up of seven novels byMickey Spillane, three inspira¬tional volumes, two other novels,(God’s Little Acre and Gone Withthe Wind), two cookbooks, andone baby book. Less than 40 percent of the American public readsa book in any given year, accord¬ing to a number of different pollson the subject. The total undupli-catcd circulation of the twentyleading literary and ‘little’ quar¬terly magazines in the UnitedStates is under 35,000, Original works of fiction, poetry, and drama are neededfor the FOTA creative-writing workshop to be held Fridayafternoon, April 24. The Workshop, an annual event in thefestival, will provide authors an opportunity to read theirworks before a critical audience of students and faculty. Someof the work submitted in advance will be published in a spe¬cial issue of the Phoenix magazine to be on sale during thefestival.Deadline for publication in the Phoenix is April 7. Materialfor the workshop may be submitted as late as April 20 toEarl Fendelman, workshop chairman, in room 25 Kelly hall.Blackfriarsopen salesTickets for the forthcoming performance of Sour Mash byBlackfriars will go on sale Monday at the Mandel hall boxoffice and the University bookstore. The student musical com¬edy group will present three 8:30 performances April 17-J-9in Mandel hall.General admission is $2.50, $2 and $1. Student tickets arc$2, $1.50 and $1. There is an additional discount for groupsof 20 or more persons.Mail orders should be sent to Blackfriars, 5706 S. Univer¬sity. Phone reservations will be accepted at extension 3287.20 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 3, 1959