FOTA, Blackfriars open todayAt 3 pm today Governor ofIllinois William G. Stratton willofficially open the fifth annualFestival of the Arts at the newdorm.FOTA which will last throughnext Sunday will feature a mul¬titude of special activities nextweek.At 3:30 Governor Stratton willgive a public lecture on the topic■‘The Governor’s Formal and in¬formal control of the state legis¬lature.” This will be held in room122, or the social science build¬ing.In between the Governor’s firstand final appearance Friday, theFlorence James Adams poetryreading contest preliminaries willbe held in Bond chapel.The UC Jazz club will give anopen air concert in Hutchinsoncourt. The master of ceremoniesat this will be Don Gold, jazzcritic featured on WFMT’s Mon¬day night jazz show and formereditor of Downbeat. In addition toregular Jazz club musicians War¬ren Bernhardt (piano) RickAyesse (tenor) Bill Mathieu(trumpet, and just back from atour with Kenton), Rusty Allen(trumpet) Clude Flowers (bass),nick Marcus (trombone) andTom Conquest (drums), the jazzgroup will include some of the leading Chicago area professionaljazz musicians.Two highly different, but some¬what related events will close outthe first evening of the Festival.At 8:30 that evening the Folkloresociety will sponsor a Hootenan¬ny.A Hootenany, for the uniniti¬ated, is an informal concert, orperhaps, a formal whing-ding.The evening will include folkmusic from many areas, foreignand domestic, ballads, blues, spir¬ituals, work songs and so forth. Itinvolved banjos, guitars, drums,bagpipes (?) a ‘fiddle’ and appar¬ently anything that goes.Included in the song-fest areFlemming Born, Suzanne Pollard,Kitch Childs, and Frank Hamil¬ton. The Hootenanny will be heldin international house at 8:30 pmand there will be a $1.25 admis¬sion charge.A little ways down the street,Blackfriar’s will present theirown, only somewhat sophisticated,folk-music concoction, Sour Mash.Student tickets are already onsale and cost $1 and $.50.This completes the full sched¬ule of a rather busy first day ofa rather busy Festival of the Arts.Sunday afternoon a receptionwill be held for students, facultyand Festival guests to meet someof the artists involved in FOTA, artists of both the exhibiting andthe performing ilk. This recep¬tion will be in the New dorm at3 pm.The Board of trustees,. UC ad¬ministrators and faculty membershave been invited to the Sundayreception. It is open to all mem¬bers of the ‘academic’ communitywho wish to attend.Another reception marks themost notable event on the follow¬ing Monday, April 20, when Mrs.Laura Fermia, author of Atomsin the Family and Atoms for theWorld, and the visiting author inresidence for the Festival will beintroduced at an informal recep¬tion, at 9 pm in Ida Noyes.Saturday, the 25th, will marka sports car rally, sponsored bythe Foreign and Sports car clubof Wright junior college. Carsshould begin to assemble at 10am in the circle of the main quad¬rangles. Spectators should beginto assemble shortly thereafter.Later that afternoon at 4:30 pman unusual opportunity to get be¬hind the scenes, or in this case,behind the scene, when Black¬friars will hold a back stage‘Green Room’ reception wherestudents faculty and Festivalguests will have an opportunityto meet the Blackfriars’ cast.For a complete calendar ofevents, see the ‘purple’ flyer inthis Issue.ChicagoVol. 67, No. 29 University of Chicago, April 17, 1959 31Vintage ear to be prizeat '59 Beaux Arts ballJust what you’ve alwaysdreamed of owning ... a1937-40 vintage Plymouthautomobile. It can be your’s, ifyou are one of the lucky winnersat the Beaux Arts ball, the cli¬mactic event of the fifth annualFestival of the Arts. The ball willbe held at the Quadrangle cluband will be the first time in his¬ tory that a UC student dance hasbeen held in the hallowed halls ofthe faculty club.Also included in the list ofprizes are 10 pizzas, 2 dinners atMorton’s, and (if you’re notalready bloated) 2 dinners at theT-Hut. In addition, the Maroon isdonating an original Moleville, agenuine beat Cambridge Tiddly¬winks set. Other prizes are: aApplications are dueScholarship applications deadline for the forthcomingacademic year is May 1, announced George L. Playe, directorof financial aid. This deadline applies to students-in-residencewho want aid for the forthcoming summer, autumn, winter, andspring quarters.The only scholarships available for next winter and spring will bethose relinquished after the autumn quarter, Playe said. There isno definite grade average required, nor is there a set amount awardedto a student, he added. Each student will be considered individually.Applications may be gotten from the office of financial aid, Ad¬ministration 304. bouquet from Mitzi’s and a slideviewer will be offered.Included among the list oljudges for this year’s ball is Mrand Mrs. Henry Rago, editor oJPoetry magazine; dean and MrsJeff Metcalf of the businessschool; dean and Mrs. Gerald CBrauer of the FTF; and probablyone other to be announced at alater date.The entertainment will be MCedby Alec Sutherland (who will alsogive an art appreciation lecture);Ruth Netherton, of Revels fame;a 12 man barbership “octet” fromRevels; and Sarah McGee andRay Lubar in a dance from thePied Piper.. Buildings and Grounds (BOG) in keeping with the UCtradition of alertness of the world around them strengthenthe flagpole in the main quadrangle for the additional burdenof stars numbers 49 and 50.It is rumored that Alaska and Hawaii were admitted tothe United States in conjunction with the Festival of theArts — as every event occurring this month seems to havebeen, (photo by Figlio)In this 16 page issuePagesFestival news 1, 16and everywhereCenter named for Goldblatt 3Bellow coming 2O'Connell forecasts . 2Big Table review ........4Harrison profile 6Blackfriar photo essay 8, 9The Maroon will publish its FOTA supplement issue onTuesday. It will contain complete listings of all Festivalactivities. Also see special "purple" flyer within this issue. U newspaper dissolved byUniversity administrationBoth Queens college newspapers are being dissolved and a revised publication with apaid student editor and increased faculty supervision will replace them.The announcement was released to the daily press today. Members of the papers had noknowledge of the action prior to a query about the college’s press release from the Daily News. Editorsexpressed dismay and “shock” about the action.Laura Ettinger, managing editor of the Queen Crown, stated, ‘I’ve given four years of my life tothis paper. Now, it means nothing.” - -As outlined by the Faculty Committee on Student Activities and services, the revised publicationwould have a student editor who would be appointed by the committee. Traditionally, the editor has beenelected by the staff. A faculty advisor, who would be relieved of some of his teaching assignments, wouldalso be appointed, “to provide the students with valuable training in the principles and practices ofgood college journalism.”The editor will receive $600 annually, and a business manager, who will be chosen in the same maa<ner, will be paid $400. Editors of the municipal college papers do not receive salaries.The new ruling also applies to the College literary magazine, “whose faculty advisor will be ea>pected to work in close cooperation with the student editor and the staff.”The press release states that “there will be no change in the traditional policy at Queens collegeof freedom from censorship for the new newspaper.”Queens was recently the site of widespread controversy over the suppression of an issue of theEnglish club publication, “New Poems.”At the time, the Catholic Teachers’ association of Brooklyn, called for “effective” pre-publication ce*corship of all municipal college publications.O'Connell discusses nextyear's enrollment forecastThe main quadrangles have5,321 registered students, an¬nounced William Van Cleve,registrar. College enrollment is2,055; 2,171 students are in the di¬visions and 1,055 in the graduateschools.In addition, 621 students areregistered in the downtown pro¬gram, 142 in the executive pro¬gram and a total of 1,352 in thedowntown University College.Charles O’Connell, director of'the office of admissions, expectsare undergraduate enrollment tobe approximately the same nextyear.Last year 481 new college stu¬ dents registered; this year the troduced. All candidates nowadmissions office hopes to in- a $10 registration fee. In thecrease the figure to between 500 the fee was only $5 andand 550. waived for scholarship applicAt this time, approximately ^ Connell called this former1,500 applications have been re- *em good natured andceived; this figure includes many structed with the best of istudents who will be turned down but a totally unreaand many students who have sent one*applications to literally dozens ofother schools. An additional 300 ■■ _ ■ ■« ■ _ ■applications from transfer stu- ESTdDllSfl STIIClCdents and about 50 applicationsfrom early entrants have been re- |3(J||cf f*V C©nf”0rceived. "On May 1, notice of acceptance Student service centerReview sponsors Bellowby Arnold Crane Province of Quebec in 1915. andflfiSaul Bellow, author of the re- grew up in the midwest. During;cently published novel “Hender- the thirties he was a student at«yson the Rain King," will speak on UC. In 1940 he began publishingcontemporary fiction under the in national magazines, a n d he t?sponsorship of the Chicago Re- wrqte of the Best Stories of 1944 7 |view Friday, April 24, at 8:15 pm In 1952 Bellow received a National • 7in Mandel hall. - Institute of Arts and LetterpplBellow, one of America’s lead- award, and his reputation asing novelists, was born in the novelist was solidly established^^with the publication of “The A<l||||ventures of Augie March," whichwon the National Book award formmmise for Augie seemed univet 7^Penn Wanciidie New Kepul>li«-RHBB^P ^^B ^^B iinporiant hook, and front now <• f|H H any discussion of fiction in Ante)ica in our time will have to lakeaccount of it.” The New York ;Times book-reviewer, R. G. Davisrapc FAT VEGETABLE ^ found most of Augie’s adventure’s^^'“marvelously convincing." Time^S) summed up opinion with its esnj mate that “the story is goo d2FT n enough to push 38-year-old SaulCv Bellow to the forefront of young ^ :■ftl/f JV . _ er, postwar U. S. novelists."General admission for Bellow'j|Vlecture and discussion of contenii4|vporary fiction may be order e|l>; 'C.from the Chicago Review, a ltdtickets may be bought at the dooi -on the evening of April 24. Theprice is $1.25; students, $1. •'Tve just got to get toHie Festival of the Arts fromApril 17 to 26!"English: ‘CANINE COLOGNE flying hitchhikerThinklish THUMBtNGBlRDThinklish: CURFUMEDIANA STATE TEACHERSrhm*>“ plumpkinHA">"rT, U 0rdercolaEnglish: HIP SINGING GROUPto. Thinklish translation: These guys are socL far out, they wear space helmets. TheyjJ never ask, “How High the MoonV' Theyl # know. When there were seven of them,jy they were a heptet. But since they’veadded a man, simple arithmetic makesj# them a rocktet! Naturally, when they taketen, they take Luckies. Like anyone else-Tjf (square, round or what-have-you), theyJB know all about the honest taste of fine/ tobacco. Consensus: flipsville! French paperbacksSUMMIT Books138 S. WabashORIENTAL AMBULANCEGet Them Hot atNICKYSPIZZERIA1235 E. 55thThinklish: SICKSHAW■ ICHAAD HARRISON. THE CITADELHOW TO MAKE *25 LEASE a NEW CarPURCHASE a NEW Car*Rent a late Model CarTake a word—garbage, for example. With it, you can make the contents ofan auto junk yard (carbage), Hollywood refuse (starbage), incinerator dust(charbage) or glass-factory rejects garbage). That’s Thinklish—and it’s thateasy! We’re paying $25 for the Thinklish words judged best—your check isitching to go! Send your words to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N.Y.Enclose your name, address, university and class.Get the genuine articleGet the honest tasteof a LUCKY STRIKEProduct of <J& {Jv&ecc-Ccnyxity- — cJu&w&r is our middle nam ‘with Repurchase Plan available... or bring it home with you.The pleasant, economical way fotravel in Europe. We make all or*rangements for the Plan you prefer.Write for full detailsDRIVEfWW INEUROPEVOLKSWAGENSIMCA RENAULTHILLMAN PORSCHE„ MERCEDESUNIVERSITY TRAVEL COHjcirvard Sq , Combridqf*. MavsUC medical clinic buildingnamed Goldblatt pavilionA $198 million building to serveas a diagnostic center for theUC clinics was named the Gold-‘blatt pavilion last Tuesday atground breaking ceremonies.John I. Kirkpatrick, vice-chan-rollor of the University, an¬nounced the name was chosen to<rjve threefold recognition to the( loldblatt Brothers Employees Na¬than Goldblatt cancer researchfund, the Nathan Goldblatt so¬ciety for cancer research and theGoldblatt family.“The good works these thou¬sands of people have inspired willhe recognized in the name of thisnew building,” Kirkpatrick said.The Goldblatt pavilion will beused as the outpatient buildingfor t lie clinics, providing a centraladmissions section for the eighthospitals of the group. The pavi¬lion also will be the center for theNuclear medicinehead appointedAn expert on the biologicaleffects on nuclear radiationhas been appointed head ofilie newly established section onnuclear medicine at the school ofmedicine.He is Dr. John Howard Rust,who is at present project director,department of food technology,Massachusetts Institute of Tech¬nology.The special unit to study thelong-range impact on nuclear en¬ergy on public health matters hasbeen set up at the University,birthplace of the atomic age. withthe assistance of the Rockefellerfoundation.Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall. deanof the division of biological sci¬ences. made the announcement ofDr. Rust’s appointment as headof the nuclear medicine sectionand professor of pharmacology.Some of the types of problemsthe section on nuclear medicinewill explore include:• The increase in natural back¬ground radiation due to by-prod¬ucts of all current uses of nuclearenergy devices.• The actual or probable conse¬quences genetics and physiologicof the increased exposure ofman and domestic animals to ion¬izing radiation.• Existing and proposed legis¬lative controls of factors respon¬sible for increased exposure toradiation.• Medicolegal aspects of per¬sonal injury and compensationproblems of personnel engaged inthe nuclear energy industry, andothers.• The psychological reactionsof society to the threatening as¬pects of nuclear energy.UC psychologistdescribes changeA UC psychologist todaytold a group of businessmenand their wives how execu¬tives change from company menin their 30’s to family men in thier50’s.William E. Henry, associate pro¬fessor of the committee on humandevelopment and the department* of psychology, said that as busi¬nessmen grow older, they beginto question more and more the•system of which they are a part.“The man whose life was totallyorganized to the demands of hisjob when he was 30 years oldfinds that, at 50, he has a broader.‘perspective,” Henry said.“His efforts are then bent to¬ward re-establishing the personalrelations which may have suf-ierod over the years and making*us job a part, rather than thewhole, of his experience . .The basic nature of this prin¬ciple of change appears to ben movement from an active, com¬bative, outer world orientation to■ui adaptive, conforming and ab¬stract inner world orientation,”Henry said. 200 thousand annual outpatientvisits to the clinics.The diagnostic facilities plan¬ned for the new building includethe latest in cancer detectiontests. Automatic cell counting andautomatic blood chemistry ma¬chines will be installed. NewX-ray equipment, designed to re¬duce substantially the amount ofradiation given to patients, willpermit microfilming of the stom¬ach and colon in addition to thechest areas.Rav E. Brown, superintendentof the clinics, said, “When thisbuilding is completed in June,1960, we will have one of the larg¬est voluntary clinics in the coun¬try.”The building will link ChicagoLving-in hospital and Billings hos¬pital and thus provide a connec¬tion with all the clinics from Ellisto Maryland avenues along theMidway.Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall. deanof the biological sciences said ata luncheon held in the Quad¬rangle club following the cere¬monies that the new building isa dramatic measure of the marchof medicine.“We must remember that aquarter century ago, the physicalgap between Billings hospital andChicago Lying-in hospital was con¬sidered a necessary precaution toguard against possible spread ofinfection,” he said. “With the ad¬vance of modern medicine thatdegree of separation is no longernecessary.”“The Goldblatt pavilion makingthe final connection among the36 clinical areas of the clinics willstand as a monument to medicalprogress,” Dr. Coggeshall said.A sweeping concave facade willmark the entrance to the buildingfrom the south. The building willconsist of a basement, a first andsecond floor and a roof which willprovide a recreational area for thepsychiatry unit on the third floorof Billings hospital to the east.The first floor will be the mainlobby for outpatients and will in¬clude the registration facilitiesand other administrative func¬tions incidental to the outpatientwork. The second floor will havemany of the medical facilitiesneeded for the diagnosis of can¬cer and other diseases.The new building will permitthe re-design of existing facilities in other hospital clinics. An ex¬pansion of the gastro-intestinalclinic in Billings hospital is plan¬ned. The space allocated to theclinics for chest diseases and in¬fectious diseases also will be in¬creased.To the west, research labora¬tories will be expanded in ChicagoLying-in hospital and the labora¬tory of exfoliative cytology, forthe detection of cancer in gyne¬cological and obstetrical patients,will be connected to the new build¬ing.1C sing May 3;elect new officersAt the first meeting of theInter-club council on Monday,April 16, officers were electedfor the coming year. They are:President, W. Carleen Johnson,Sigma; Secretary, Helen Faricy,Delta Sigma; Treasurer, CarolFernstrom, Mortarboard; Publici¬ty chairman, Barbara Flynn, Eso¬teric; Social chairman, SandyJenkins, Delta Sigma; Sing chair¬man, Sue Strodthoff, Sigma; Serv¬ice chairman, Abbie Sheldon,Quadranglers.This year’s Inter-club sing willbe held May 3 at 3 pm in IdaNoyes hall, announces BarbaraFlynn, publicity chairman. Thesing, held annually, provides theGirls’ clubs on campus an oppor¬tunity to compete for recognitionin singing. All girls participatingare asked to invite their mothersto the event. There will be a teaheld in Ida Noyes lounge follow¬ing the sing.McKeon releasedfrom hospitalRichard P. McKeon, chair¬man of the committee on an¬alysis of ideas and study ofmethods, was discharged yester¬day from Billings hospital. Mc¬Keon was injured by a hit-and-rundriver in Lebanon, Pennsylvania,on March 28. suffering a seriousconcussion.The Charles T. Grey distin¬guished service professor inthe departments of philosophyand classical languages and liter¬ature, has been on campus for 25years. He was the dean of the On Friday, April 24, the Fine Arts program will present a.concert of chamber music compositions by Marshall Bialosky.The concert will be open to the public at no admission chargeand will be held in Fullerton hall, the Art Institute, at 8:15 pm.The program will include selections performed by a brass trio, soloviolin, string quartet and piano. Vocal compositions will be included.The composer is an instructor of humanities in the college and amember of the staff of the Fine Arts program. He has been a studentof Lionel Nowak and Luigi Dallapiccola; before coming to the Uni¬versity he spent two years in Italy on a Fulbright grant. Bialoskyhas recently been the recipient of the Wechsler award from Tangle-wood, which commissioned the final work of the program.Youths go to CapitolForty students will leave Chicago today to join the tenthMarch for Integrated schools in Washington. They will marchdown Constitution avenue with 20,000 students from all partsof the nation to the Lincoln memorial where Speaker of the HouseSam Rayburn and Senator Paul Douglas will go to the White Houseto present petitions requesting school integration signed by 1 millionstudents, according to David Greenstone, chairman of the UC chapterof the Youth march.The Qreen Door Book ShopHY 3-5829 Chicago 37, III.1450 EAST 57th STREETChieago's Must Complete Stoekof Quality Paper Hacks30 %OFFTrousers 50cJackets 50cSuits 95cTop Coats 1.00Over Coats 1.10Hew! 20% off on alt laundryON QUALITYDRY CLEANINGAll work done by a regular Chicagowholesaler whose plant serves otherretail stores in addition to his own out¬lets. You get this service because ofour non-profit policy and low overhead.Skirts 50cDresses 95cSuits (2-piece) . „ . . . .95cLight Coat 95cHeavy Coat 1.10UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT SERVICE CENTERReynolds €'lub Basement HOURS11:00-1:004:00-5:00Mon.-Fri. THIS SUIT FOR A "SONG"WASH andWEARforMINIMUMCARE...buyitforMAXIMUMWEARIvy-Styled in trim propor¬tions for business, forschool, for informal occa¬sions anywhere, anytime.Famous-name dacron-cotton fabrics. Slacks areflap-pocket Ivy model.Popular CHARCOAL BROWNPopular CHARCOAL GRAYandi95$2495Make a Special Trip...Dickies are Worth It!Our Prices Can't Be Beat . . . It’s Smart To Buy For LestD & G 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., SaturdayAprill 7, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3the maroon reviewsThe ’Big Table’ was emptyBig Table 1, with a star-spangled, George M.Cohan cover, is probably the most recent ad¬dition to the ranks of American literary quar¬terlies. The circumstances of its birth are sinister— it carries the complete contents of the never-published winter 1959 Chicago Review—but, moreimportant, it contains the work of a new group ofwriters. These writers have been identified asspokesmen for what is variously called “The SanFrancisco Group,” “The Beat Generation Writers,”or, simply, “The Hipsters.”NOW A literary movement is important, ulti¬mately, not because the people who make it upare well-organized and in close communication, noteven because they are serious about writing, butbecause the literature which emerges from themovement has positive value. In the case of the hipwriters this question has too often been ignored;critics have diverted themselves with speculatingabout the cultural-implications of the rise of hip.The publication of Big Table again introduces thefinal literary question: is this work any good?Wiiliam S. Burroughs is featured at greatestlength in the issue with a selection from his work-in-progress Naked Lunch. Naked Lunch is a ren¬dition—it can’t be called a continuous narrative—of the world of narcotics. It is a rendition from theinside, and as such it has a peculiar power; butit is a power that is utterly, even hopelessly un¬controlled.In theory the continuity of the episodes couldbe defended as a planned series of glimpses at (orfrom) a world which is, itself, disjointed and float¬ing free; but in fact one encounters, blasted ontothe page like buckshot, anecdotes about never-identified total strangers; arch satires of “square”(really dime-novel) view’s of addiction, obscurepolitical satires which sound like George Orwellgone insane, and a residue of materials w'hichseem to be personal communications of the authorto himself.The most striking characteristic of Burroughs’work is its private, even secret quality. It seemsobvious that the author’s personal friends and asso¬ciates are the intended readers for much of NakedLunch; and, in fact, the short-circuits is so com¬plete at times that even they are excluded. Thislack of real communication reaches its logical pointof absurdity when, in chapter nine, we find onlyan unintelligible scrawl.JACK KEROLAC’s “Old Angel Midnight” is adeceptive piece of work. It is, he says, “spontane¬ously multilingual and intended to represent thebabble of world tongues at midnight in the win¬dow.” Spontaneous or not, the multiplicity is moreof device than language, since, apart from a fewlines in Spanish and French, the piece is a montageof experimental utterances in English.Variety, if not form, is achieved through the useof various kinds of dialect, through anagrams andother kinds of cipher, and through the changingconsciousness of Old Angel Midnight himself, whois, presumably, the observing, commenting centerof the world.GREGORY CORSO gets mentioned three times,as do Gary Snyder, Allen Ginsberg and Burroughs.Philip Whalen gets in only twice (has he been upto something square?), but Kerouac himself getsmentioned at least six times, and he works in aplug for his recent volume of poems Mexico CityBlues. He also praises three people who are drink¬ing companions of his—Neal, Donlin and Sublitte—whose names supposedly, are intended to call forthcertain significant reactions in the reader.The reaction of this reader, I’m afraid, was thatKerouac as writing a kind of beat gossip column.I got the distressing picture of a lot of peoplein North beach bars going through Big Table tosee if they “got in.”In the matter of technique, Kerouac is clearlyin the debt of Janies Joyce. Since, however, thework of Joyce is virtually unmatched for its fierce, iron discipline, unswerving artistic purpose, andits total freedom from the merely personal, it isnecessary to add that Kerouac has welched on thedebt. What were, with Joyce, devices to accomplisha complex artistic purpose, are, with Kerouac,mere puzzles, the working out of which affordsits own proper narcissistic pleasure.Gregory Corso’s three poems “Power” (forAllen Ginsberg), “Army,” and “Police,” are didac¬tic verse treatments of the individual’s plight inthe face of world politics, war and civil authority.As a whole the poems are lacking in trenchancy,are rambling and repititious and are frequentlyweakened by Corso’s use of a frame of referencew'hich doesn’t produce effective imagery. In“Power,” for example, he employs the comic-stripand the sports page;Since I depend on heroes for opinion andacceptanceI live by proper truth and errorSHAZAM!O but how sad is Ted Williams gypped andchiseledAll alone in center fieldLet me be your wise Buck Rogers!It’s not just that the appeal in the last lineis faintly disturbing (what, really, does he mean?),but the w’hole effect is vapid and merely topical.He is most effective where, paradoxically, he ismost conventional. He is in the convention of theWorld War I Poets—Owen, Sasoon, Brooke—whenhe writes, in “Army:”From Foxhole illusion where I sitsecretly drawing pictures of my motherI know I am but a stupid boy waiting to beshotYet no thing that I know' in man wishes meto die.The second line is unusual only because it con¬tains a degree of sentimentality unknown even in1919.“Army” is the best of the three poems, but evenin “Army” he resorts, at the end, to a kind ofeasy out, and depends on the histrionics of suchlines as “Death! Death! Death! Death! Death and“Army! Army! Army! Army!”THE CONTRIBUTION of Edward Dahlberg isof quite a different order from the rest of themagazine. His genesis poem, “The Garment of Ra,”is so far different from the narcissisim of Kerouacor the w'ildness of Burroughs that its fault is anover-intellectual quality that produces dryness:The first parent of knowledge was Adam,And Eden was metaphysical,But the word was invented by Cain.Malice is the tongue of Cain that slew Abel.The four rivers of ParadiseAre love, justice, peace and charity;The Tree of Good and Evil is the intellect,But the tree no man can touch is God.Indeed, the presence of Dahlberg’s work in thiscompany is surprising. Amid all this shrillnesshis voice, quiet, controlled and just a little dull,reminds one of an aging lecturer droning on un¬heard amid the din of an undergraduate dispute.All in all the effect of Big Table is unimpressive.The magazine also contains an editorial by IrvingRosenthall which, among other things, makes aparticularly vicious and unjustified attack onRichard G. Stern. It is a fit subject for one ofDahlberg’s reflections on the vanity of humanwishes to see Stern, who unsuccessfully foughtthe suppression of the Review, and who thensuccessfully fought to keep the magazine alivefor future issues, being vilified for his trouble.But Rosenthal raises a big question. In my opinionthe University—by giving the world the impres¬sion that it had knuckled down to the demands ofa scandal-happy newspaper gossip—has done muchmore damage to the cause of American lettersthat could ever have been done by the publicationof some writing which is, of negligible value.Robert F. 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' /Jp-*Satisfied Customers —Coast-To-CoastONLY $3.95Fraternity monograms inGreek lettering availableHY 3-5192for appointment 12”Cheese 1.30Sausage 1.65Anchovy 1.65Pepper & Onion .... 1.50 Small12"Combination 2.25Mushroom 2.00Shrimp 2.25Bacon fir Onion . . . .2.00Free Delivery on All l*i::a in MJC StudentsTHIS COUPON MOUTH $.25On any deliveryOr on any luncheon and/ordinner served4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 17,1959•’ A \v v- .< > i Vii H v c-.iv ,• ( ' (!,.*>A On Campos withMaxShuJman(By the Author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys! "and,“Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")VIVE LE POPCORN!The other day as I was walking down the street picking uptinfoil, (Marlboro, incidentally, ha„s the best tinfoil, which isnot surprising when you consider that they have the best ciga¬rettes, which is not surprising when you consider that they takethe best filters and put them together with the best tobaccosand rush them to your tobacco counter, fresh and firm andloaded with smoking pleasure). The other day, I say, as I waswalking down the street picking up tinfoil, (1 have, incidentally,the second largest ball of tinfoil in our family. My brotherEleanor’s is bigger—more than four miles in diameter—but, ofcourse, he is taller than 1). The other day, as I was saving, whilewalking down the street picking up tinfoil, I passed a campusand right beside it, a movie theatre which specialized in show¬ing foreign films. Most campuses have foreign movie theatresclose by, because foreign movies are full of culture, art, andesoteriea, and where is culture more rife, art more rampant,and esoteriea more endemic than on a campus?Nowhere; that’s where.T hope you have all been taking advantage of your local foreignfilm theatre. Here you will find no simple-minded Hollywoodproducts, marked by treacly sentimentality and machine-madebravura. Here you will find life itself—in all its grimness, itspoverty, its naked, raw passion!Have you, for instance, seen the recent French import, LeCrayon lie Mon Oncle (“The Kneecap”), a savage and uncom¬promising story of a man named Claude, whose consumingambition is to get a job as a meter reader with the Paris waterdepartment? But he is unable, alas, to afford the flashlightone needs for this position. His wife, Bon-Bon, sells her hairto a wigmaker and buys him a flashlight. Then, alas, Claudediscovers that one also requires a leatherette bow tie. This timehis two 3’oung daughters, Caramel and Nougat, sell their hairto a wigmaker. So now Claude has his leatherette bow tie,but now, alas, his flashlight battery is burned out and thewhole family, alas, is bald.Or have you seen the latest Italian masterpiece, La Donna EMobile (I Ache All Over), a heart-shattering tale of a boy andhis dog? Malvolio, a Venetian lad of nine, loves his little dogwith every fibre of his being. He has one great dream: to enterthe dog in the annual Venetian dog show. But this, alas, requiresan entrance fee, and Malvolio, alas, is penniless. However, hesaves and scrimps and steals and finally gets enough togetherto enter the dog in the show. The dog, alas, comes in twenty-third. Malvolio sells him to a vivisectionist.Or have you seen the new Japanese triumph, Kibutzi-Sah(The Radish), a pulse-stirring historical romance about Yamoto,a poor farmer, and his daughter Ethel who are accosted by awarlord one morning on their way to market? The warlord cutsYamoto in half with his samurai sword and runs off with Ethel.V hen Yamoto recovers, he seeks out Ethel’s fiancf:, RedButtons, and together they find the warlord and kill him. But,alas, the warlord was also a sorcerer and he whimsically turnedEthel into a whooping crane. Loyal Red Buttons takes Ethelhome where he feeds her fish heads for twenty years and keepshoping she'll turn back into a woman. JShe never does. Alas.(& 1909 Max Shulwao0• • •If there’s smoking in the balcony of your theatre, we hopeyou’ll be smoking Philip Morris—or, if you prefer filters,Marlboro . . . Marlboro—new improved tiller, tine rich flavor■—from the makers of Philip Morris.DID YOU KNOW. . . that Sun Life of Canada is oneof the world’s leading life insurancecompanies, w ith well over 100 branchoffices throughout North America?As the Sun Life represent¬ative in your community,may l he of service?1V. Ralph J. Wood Jr. '48N. LoSolle St. Chicago 2, III.FR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855CANADARepresentativern x-alstfv wSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF*j(DH Msaii /vvouSOf S+OH U404j- MOfl/V^3 9X In nn o p [±i AialvIaUlslV d OQEEEJffls I N i n 9 NMdl¥ fa 1 n 0 □DOPI a 0 D am v|H □ a a d dp o]E Jj 1N m a fl EBB1tamps ]6\ 0 0 EdQ1 DDEi iV 0DEDX □BEL A 9 ■no* So**, 1 □□ Coming events on quadranglesti3/V\SNV K3DXH. Fleischer cutsside for BowdonHeinrich Fleischer, Univer¬sity organist, recently had arecording released by Bourdonrecords in association with radiostation WFMT.The recording, “German Musicfor the* Organ,” is availablethrough WFMT or Custom Rec¬ords, 25 E. Grove St., Lombard,Illinois. One side of the recordingwas made on the chapel organand the record jacket design is ofthe casing of the chapel organ. Friday, 17 AprilOpening of the Fiftn Annual Festival ofthe Arts, Hutchinson court, 12 noon.Mitchell Tower chime concert, Kath¬ryn Dunn, student chimer; carillonconcert, James Lawson, carlllonneurRockefeller chapel; strolling Black-friars players In costume.Class in elementary Hebrew I, 5715Woodlawn avenue, 11:30 am. Spon¬sored by Hillel foundation.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing, 12:30 pm, Ida Noyes East lounge.Non-denominational Bible study inEphesians.Newborn conference, 1 pm, Lying-Inhospital, Dora DeLee hall.Political Science Association depart¬mental seminar, 3:30 pm, social sci¬ence 122. Governor William Strattonof Illinois, "The Governor’s formaland Informal control of the legisla¬ture.”Jazz concert, 2:30 pm. Hutchinson court.(Reynolds club in case of rain.)contest, 3 pm. Bond chapel.Florence James Adams poetry-readingLecture series: "The impersonal godsand the want for personal certainty ofsalvation In imperial times,” 4 pm,Rosenwald 2. Speaker: Mr. Latte.Sponsored by Federated Theologicalfaculty and the Hiram W. Thomaslecture committee.Sabbath service, 5715 Woodlawn avenue,7:45 pm, Hillel foundation.Lecture series: “Biography,” 8 pm. Uni¬versity College, 64 East Lake street,"How biographies get written,’’ HarryBarnard, columnist, Chicago DailyNews.Hootnanny, 8:30 pm. Internationalhouse. Sponsored by Folklore society.Blackfriars all-student production,"Sour Mash,” 8:30 pm, Mandel hall.rentRoom for male student In faculty home,one block from campus; private en¬trance. MU 5-5714.IM.AISANCE ON THE MIDWAY60th & Stoney Island3'., rra unfurn. apts. Moderately priced.Switchbd service avail. Res mngr., DO3-4300Baird & Warner, agentsBU 8-1855Rooms for rent. $25-$45 per month Eve¬ning meals. Phi Kappa Psl fiat., 5555Woodlawn, PL 2-9704. SEWING—Alterations, hems.Call MU 4-3941.BABY SITTING: Will care for child inmy home, days Mon-Frl. AT 5-0516.Home typing—thesis, dissertations, etc.N. MacDougall, OA 4-3240.PersonalMake It a clean campaign—sSs2 Vt ROOMSCheerful, newly decorated, attractivelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator bldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man Maid and linen service available.Reasonable monthly rate.VERSAILLES APARTMENTS5234 Dorchester FA 4-0200Unfurnished apts., 2*2 rms., $70; 3*2rm bedrom apt., $80. Bus at door. Seejanitor, 1649 E 67th, or phone EA 7-2833.For saleAvailable May 1: lrg. 2-rm. furn. apt.,separate kit. & rear entrance, backporch, 3rd fl. Bldg, near Unlv., occupiedmostly by grad, students, perfect forstudent at $60 per mo. MU 4-5654 orsee mngr., 6042 Ingleside. WORKSHOP IN CREATIVE WRITINGPLaza 2-8377SINGERSRehearsals for the Musical SocietyChorus are being held each Tues. eve.at 7:30, and Sat. morn, at 10:15. If youhave sung in a chorus and would enjoysinging music primarily from the 15th*.16th, and 20th centuries, drop in onone of our rehearsals, 5411 Dorchester.DO 3-2896.Related Congratulations: Dr. W. E.Brady, April 4.Phi Belts—We hereby challenge the active chap¬ter (alumni excludedi to a man-for-man tug-of-war across Botany Pond onSunday following Beaux Arts Ball, the26th, at 3 pm. Stakes are a keg of beer.PhikeiasOpen house for all ex-Shimerites andretinue begins 7:30 tonight. 1351 E: 53rd.Jackson Park Highlands brick home.Completely remodeled interior, 8 rms.,2*2 baths. Ideal for fac. or Univ. per¬sonnel. 6833 S. Cregier, FA 4-1119. Brother Antoninus, the Dominicanmonk of the San Francisco poets willread his poems at the Francis Parkerschool, 330 West Webster St., on Friday,April 24. $1.50 general.Living rm. furn., lamps, drapes, sofabed, oriental rugs, high chair. Excellentcondition. SO 8-1975. Join the Maroon and see the world.Freezer—Phllco upright. Excellent con¬dition. MI 3-1952.Custom made sofa. Havre brown, likenew. Call MU 4-12608.New Eng. bikes, discounts. MI 3-9043.ServicesElectric typing. NO 7-4439 after 5 pm. Help wantedSATURDAY JOBS(male or female)Earnings up to $30 IF YOUare free to work on Sat.enjoy speaking to peoplecan follow simple instruct.Transportation from UC & completetraining furnished. Apply Fri. after¬noons or Sat. 9 am - 12 noon, suite 210,Prudential building, or call RA 6-0980.Bicycles, Ports, Accessoriesspecial student offerAGE CYCLE SHOP1621 e. 55th it. ORDET'the word: FASCINATING'WERT • VALUE • VALOR<► In any language there’s value in living at the Versailles. Cheer¬ful surroundings, for refined people who appreciate a quiet,restful, home-like atmosphere. Elegant hotel rooms and 2*iroom apartments tastefully decorated, furnished or un-furnished,at attractive rates. Parcel receiving, Doorman, Night Watchman;maid and linen service If desired. Rentals as low as $65 per month. UJc ‘VeteeuClet5224 DORCHESTER FA 4-0200VACLIA • VALOR • VA<> Saturday, 18 AprilChest conference, 8 am, Billings hos¬pital M-137.Diseases of the nervous system, 9 am,Billings hospital M-137. Dr. DouglasN. Buchanan.Pediatrics clinical conference, 10:30 am,Billings M-137.TV program : “Frankly speaking.”WBBM, 1:45 pm. Philip M. Hauser,chairman, department of sociology, ina discussion of population problems.Moderator: Jacob Scher, associate pro¬fessor of journalism, Northwesternuniversity.Blackfriars all-student production,“Sour Mash,” 8:30 pm. Mandel hall.Radio program: "The Sacred Note,”WBBM, 10:15 pm. A program of choralmusic by the University choir. Rich¬ard Vikstrom. director; HeinrichFleischer, organist.Sunday, 19 AprilRadio program: "Faith of our fathers,”WGN, 7:30 a. "He that loseth his life. . . ,” The Reverend James LutherAdams, Edward Mallinckrodt profes¬sor of divinity, Harvard University,and the University choir.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10 and 11am, DeSales house. 5735 Universityavenue. Sponsored by Calvert club.Chamber music concert, 4 pm. Ida tloyeslibrary. Sponsored by Musical societyand Apollonian society.Quaker Student fellowship meeting, Tpm, Quaker house, 5615 Woodlawnavenue. “Quaker basis for action,”Kale Williams, executive secretary ofAmerican Friends service committeewill speak.Bridge club meeting. 7:30 pm, Ida Noyeslounge. Duplicate bridge will beplayed.Radio program: “Frankly speaking,”WBBM, 8 pm, Philip M. Hauser, chair¬man, department of sociology. Uni¬versity of Chicago, in a discussion ofpopulation problems. Moderator: Ja¬cob Scher. associate professor of jour¬nalism, Northwestern University.Monday, 20 AprilClass in elementary Hebrew II, 4 pm,5715 Woodlawn avenue, Hillel founda.tion.Folk dance group. 4:30 pm. 5715 Wood¬lawn avenue, Hillel foundation.Lecture series: “The revolution inBritish party politics, 1880-1920," 4:30pm, social sciences 122. Henry Pel-ling. fellow, the Queen’s College, Ox¬ford.Tuesda,y 21 AprilInter-varsity Christian fellowship, 12:30pm. Ida Noyes East lounge.. Non-denomlnatlonal Bible study in I Peter.Lecture series: "Current research insocial gerontology.” 4 pm, Judd 126."The measurement of morale in theaging.” Dr. Elaine Cumming, director,Kansas City Study of Adult Life.Gates hall coffee hour, 10 to 12 mid¬night. Gates hall. Coffee, companion¬ship. This will be the only coffee hourthis quarter.Wednesday, 22 AprilClass in Yiddish, 11 am, 5715 Woodlawnavenue, Hillel foundation.Hug Ivri (Hebrew speaking group. 12:30 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue, Hillelfoundation.Lecture (Graduate School of Business):"Convertile financing of A. T & T.in the post-war period.” 1:30 pm,social science 122. P. G. Eckert, execu¬tive on financial staff, and actingassistant vice - president of finance,Illinois Bell Telephone company.Lecture: "Image intensifiers for astro¬nomical research,” 3:30 pm. Eckhart133. Dr. W. A. Hiltner, Yerkes Observa¬tory.Carillon concert. 5:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel, James Lawson.Organ recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller chapel,Heinrich Fleischer.University Glee club rehearsal, 7 pm,Ida Noyes theatre.Country dancers, 8 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Beginners welcome.West house coffee hour, 9 pm, first floorlounge. Music, food, companionship.Thursday, 23 AprilPanel discussion: "Pablo Picasso: gra¬phic works, ” 8 pm. Renaissance So¬ciety galleries, 1010 East 59th street.James Giilbert, associate professor ofhumanities; Harold Haydon. associ¬ate professor of art; Joshua Taylor,associate professor of art.Lecture: “The hip poets and the BeatGeneration,” 8 pm. Internationalhouse room A. Speaker: Robert Lucid,English instructor in the College.Sponsored by the Graduate LibrarySchool club.Friday, 24 AprilClass in elementary Hebrew I, 11:30 am,5715 Woodlawn avenue, Hillel founrdation.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing, 12:30 pm, Ida Noyes East lounge.Non-denominational Bible study inEphesians.Florence James Adams poetry-readingcontest (finals), 3 pm. Bond chapel.Political Science association depart¬mental seminar: title to be announced,3:30 pm, social science 302. GeorgeFischer, professor of Russian history,Brandeis University.Benefit concert, 8:15 pm. First Unitarianchurch, 1174 East 57th street. ChicagoSymphony ensemble presented by theFirst Unitarian church and the Chan-ning-Murray club in cooperation withFestival of the Arts. Admission: $1student, $2 general: tickets availableat Reynolds club and the churchoffice.Lecture. 8:15 pm. Mandel hall. Saul Bel¬low, author of "The Adventures ofAugle March" and "Henderson, theRain King.”Concert: Compositions by Marshall Bia-losky (University College), 8:30 pm, Fullerton hall, the Art Institute. Per¬formed by members of the Chicagosymphony and the NBC Studio or¬chestra.Poetry reading: Dominican Monk of SanFrancisco poets, Brother Antoninus,reading his poems, 8:30 pm, FrancisParker school, 330 West Webster.Sponsored by the Maroon and Calvertclub. Admission at door; $1 students;$1.50 general.Grant given forpathology studyNational Association forRetarded Children approved agrant of $46,000 to the Uni¬versity for expanded research inreproductive and fetal pathology.The grant was given to the Uni¬versity in a ceremony last Fridayin the office of Lowell T. Cogge-shall, dean of the biological sci¬ences division.Dr. M. Edward David, JosephBolivar DeLee professor of ob¬stetrics and gynecology, chair¬man of the department of obstet¬rics and gynecology of the schoolof medicine and chief of serviceof Chicago Lying-In hospital, saidthat “the aim of the hospital is togive every mother a livinghealthy baby at the end of preg¬nancy. We are carrying on re¬search in many fields at the pres¬ent time which can be expected tocontribute a great deal towardthis end. We are consequentlyvery happy to have this newgrant.”The University of Chicago si¬multaneously announced the ap¬pointment of Dr. Uwe E. Freese,now completing his residency inobstetrics and gynecology, towork on the expanded researchproject-.Universal Army StoreHeadquarters for sport and work wearFlop pockef wash & wear ivy league trousers — Wash & wear dressshirts — camping equip. — Complete line of keds footwear — trenchcoats — luggage and trunks.1144 East 55th st. DO 3-9572^ammm___ 10 % reduction with this coupon^_HOBBY HOUSE Pwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and Waffle* IESTAORANT1342Open from Down to Dawn east 53 st. KGDL KROSSWORD No. 23ACROSSL Blow takenby scapegoats4. Goes AWOL8. Enraptured9. Combo10. Khan andothers11. She’s amixed-up dean12. Isn’t it time youa Kool ?13. For thediscriminatingbeer drinker14. An almostfamous fellow16. The time therewill be in theold town tonight18. Mysteriousnon-AvaGardner19. Hand a line21. Performed anelbow operation23. New Haven-ite24. Kind wordfor a prof26. Break to followup with a Kool28. Inby oneself81. Irish expletive(var.)32. Which was to bedemonstrated(L. abbr.)34. Little Edith36. How Miamigot started36. 2 doz. sheetsof paper38. French one(fem.)39. Famous novelabout Willie’skinfolk42. Take it off43. Que vous?44. Your one ahdonly. Easy now!46. \ egetable thatsounds like anoompah-maker DOWN1. Cuba has anew2. Author of39 Across3. Small unitsof whiskey(abbr.)4. It has a tip,but nc filter6. Your no-degreedays6. What icy fingersmake you do7. Put on an act8. The green stuff15. Wonder drug16. She’scompanion17. Small town18. Roman officialwho’s mostlyidle (var.)20. What youmust never say22. Californiauniversity25. You may behere now26. It’s noOccident27. This shouldmake thingseven28. Alone, no placsto go29. Why can’tyou behave?30. Plant 'em now;dig ’em later33. One German36. Square at somecolleges37. He just wantedpottage40. PortugueseIndia41. Kind of Arts(abbr.)• As cool and clean as a breath o£ fresh air.• Finest leaf tobacco... mild refreshing menthol —and the worlds most thoroughly tested filter!• With every puff your mouth feels clean.your throat refreshed!Qmericas Mosf Meshing Qgaidfc...ALSO REGULAR SIZE KOOL WITHOUT FILTER!q 1959. Biowa * Williamson Tobacco Corn.April 17, 1959 • C MIC A G 0 M A R 0 O N • 5profile '■vi k-yde park theatreORDET"the word: FASCINATING' Harrison is scientist, administratorCANOE TRIPSPersonal service for wilderness canoetrips into the Quetico-Superior wil¬derness. Camping equipment, Grum¬man aluminum canoes and choicefood supplies only $6.00 per personper dav. For complete informationwrite Bill Rom. CANOE COUNTRYOUTFITTERS, Box 717 C, Ely, Minn.MODEL CAMERAAuthorized LeieaDealerNSA Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 The desk in R. Wendell Harrison’s office is comfortablycluttered with a flood of books overflowing from a floodedbookcase. On top of a stack of loose sheets, sociology texts,educational matter, and “the People Shall Judge” there was even acopy of Big Table (a literary movement from which Harrison has¬tened to disassociate himself).From the nature of all this literature it was somewhat of a joltto recall that apart from being vice-president of the University andDean of the faculties, Harrison is a full professor in the departmentof micro biology and the Zoller dental clinic.However, he hastened to explain that his administrative duties,albeit with some misgivings on his part, had practically forced himto give up biology, except in a titular manner.Harrison spent most of his early academic life on both sides ofthe instructor’s desk. After receiving a BS in chemistry from South¬ern Methodist university, several years of teaching biology at SMU,summer work here towards a Master’s degree and PhD and six yearsexclusively devoted to research at Washington University in St.Louis, Harrison returned to Chicago to accept a joint appointmentsoft! What taste fromyonder FILTER-BLENDITS WHATS UP FRONT THAT COUNTSThis filter, be it e’er so pure and whit©Must needs give flavor too, full clear and brightElse would the trusting smoker, filled with hopeAgain be dashed, dejected be ... and mope.And thus we come to Winston’s obvious truthIt’s what’s up front that counts —and ’tis, forsoothIn that the fine tobaccos, in the endAre by exclusive process —Filter-Blend —Become the tastiest taste that e’er hath playedAcross your dancing taste-buds, man or maid!Be ye not slow, therefore, to test the witOf what we say: that Winston, friend, is it;For that with ev’ry smoke ye do delayYe are not gath’ring rosebuds while ye mayl“ We are advertised by our loving friends...”KINO HENRY VI. PART III. AQT V. SC. Ill».3. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO.. WINSTON-SALEM. N, C. in the department of micro biology and the dental clinic. This wasa full time research position, working with a few graduate studentson projects, but involving no teaching assignments.Biological research was extremely appealing to Harrison. He wasbeginning to amass a significant reputation in his field when, in1941, the Dean of the division of biological science approached himabout accepting a position as associate dean. Harrison was quitedubious about the prospect.He did accept, ultimately, only because of the special nature ofthe work, then influenced very strongly by the war effort. Certainprojects, such as maleria research, were dictated by the world situa¬tion; someone had to organize the program, and Harrison accepted.But he didn’t expect to like it; the three or four hours a day hewould be able to spend on his own research didn’t seem enough,and he fully ended to return to his laboratory very shortly.But he found an appeal in administrative work which he hadn’texpected, and in 1943 accepted the deanship of the division with aconsiderably diminished reservation. His time in the lab, alreadyshort, was cut out completely in 1947 when, upon the retirementof Emery Filbey, he became vice president of the University anddean of its faculties.Instead of manipulating test-tubes and microbes, Harrison nowspends lys time manipulating people and money. His work dividesinto two interrelated branches, that of co-ordination of the manyacademic aspects of the University, and that of the main budgetofficer. These two functions are combined into one because theoffice of the Dean of the faculties provides the most complete over¬all view of the academic situation of the University (excepting,of course, the office of the chancellor); an understanding indespen-sible for any intelligent control of the budget.As Dean of the faculties, Harrison must approve a promotionproviding full tenure, i.e., the promotion of. an assistant professorto associate professor, full professor or to an endowed chair; heis a member of all faculties, a member of all the various Universityboards and acting chairman of the board of precollegiate educationand the council on teacher education. Among other meetings, Harri¬son attended all of the sessions of the .executive committee on under¬graduate education last year.As budget-officer, Harrison must plan the budget, a year in ad¬vance, (“it’s never big enough”) and decide the relative merits ofmany different projects.When three different departments want money for special projectsand there is only money enough for one, trouble must of necessitystart and the dean of the faculties function. He attempts to act“by persuasion” rather than by executive decision.Harrison long ago found that it is less difficult to reject an ideaon the grounds that money was lacking than on the grounds thatthe idea isn’t good enough. In any case, money usually is lack in;:and Harrison affirms that “any university which isn’t trying to dotwice as much as it can afford isn’t a very good school.”Nearing the University’s compulsory retirement age of 65, Hanison has not given much consideration to how he’ll spend his retirement. In the “precious little non-University time” he has now, heenjoys Photography, finishing and Beethoven piano sonatas. Hewould like to do more in all these fields, but has little expectationof going back into research.“I think its a common problem for all administrators; that is.giving up academic work. I regret my research and sometimes feelrather jealous when one of my former colleagues makes an important discovery. I probably won t go back into it; it would takeme several years just to get into ‘shape.’ But I enjoy this positiontoo; there’s a real satisfaction in administrative work.“It is a curious and interesting fact that universities move lor-ward in great surges of productivity and stimulating enthusiasm.I have a strong conviction that despite eternal financial stringenciesthe University is beginning one of these exciting periods of renaissance, for which the hard work in the present decade has providedthe basis.”The dean of the faculties, vice-president of the University and,during Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton’s absence, chief officer ofthe University has done his share of ‘hard work.’Neal Johnston i’ wwwwwww'yITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage & meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.Notice — Senior Men Students — U. S. CitizensIf you need money to complete your senior year andsecure your diplomaWrite, 'phone or call for loan application form as wehave such funds available.STEVENS BROS. FOUNDATION INC.610-612 Endicott Bldg. St. Poul 1, Minn. Phone CApital 2-5184Station gives returnsIRP exPla,ns campaign standSpecial radio coverage of the Student Government electionreturns will be offered to WUCB listeners at 8 tonight.The student radio station will have microphones located inthe Reynolds club north lounge, and will broadcast the election re¬turns as they come in. Folk music and jazz will be played duringperiods of relative ballot counting inactivity.Johnny Walker Hartigan and Mike Wolfson will announce thebroadcast informing listeners of the history of Student Government,interviewing prominent members of the various parties, and report¬ing the counting of the ballots.WUCB broadcasts at a frequency of 640 kilocycles with transmit¬ters located in the new residence halls, Burton-Judson courts, Inter¬national house, and the C-group. “We are definitely seriouslyinterested in becoming govern¬ment members. However, webelieve that a serious campaignis not necessarily devoid of allelements of enjoyment,” said JohnMills, spokesman for the ImperialRevolutionary party, running aslate in the College.The party made its debut oncampus last week. Their slatefeatured a ‘royal’ title for eachcandidate running i.e., the grand-duke of Dodd, etc. “A party has to start at sometime,” said Mills in answer to aquery of why IRP members hadshown no interest in governmentup to this time. “The ideas in ourplatform were formulated recent¬ly,” he went on.Shorty Shapiro, campaign man¬ager of IRP stated that he feltthat the position of his party wasnot made clear by the Maroonon Tuesday. “We are a legitimateparty with a constructive pro¬gram. We feel that the other par¬ties are neglecting what they con¬ sider to be the real issue involvedin this election, the present repre*sentative system. If elected, w»intend to revise the system to oneof representation by place of rest*dence.”IRP’s platform states that Gov¬ernment should stick to campufproblems only.On this line, Mills was asked ifthat means IRP advocates drop¬ping out of NSA. “That’s hard tosay right now,” Mills said, “Ithink we should wait, and remainin for the time being.”Prochnow: "Middle East oil vital"by Franklin Broude“The Middle East, with itsoil reserves, is essential to theexistence of Western Europe. . The Middle East and its oilreserves are not now vital to theexistence of Russia . . . Russiadoesn’t need Middle Eastern oil orthe other resources of this area,but if she could get control of thisarea without war, she could bringEurope to its knees without firinga shot.” This was the dramaticpronouncement of Herbert V.Prochnow, vice-president of theFirst National bank of Chicago.He was speaking as the twenty-first lecturer in the graduateschool of business’ continuingseries.Prochnow went on, ”... To becertain that this vital oil flows toEurope, Western Europe musthave i>eace and stability in theMiddle East ... To upset West¬ern Europe, the Russian policyobviously will be one of creatingeconomic and political instabilityin the Middle East, but as this oilis not essential to the survival ofRussia, she will not deliberatelygo so far as to precipitate a warbecause of the oil—that would de¬stroy her as well as us.To illustrate the amount andvalue of the Middle East, Proch¬now cited some comparative sta¬tistics. He did this by comparingthe Middle East with the US. “Wethink we’re wealthy in this coun¬try, but we have something like15 per cent of the oil of the freeworld’s oil reserves ... In the lasthundred years, we've actuallydrilled about a million, si?t hun¬dred thousand oil wells produc¬ing oil wells. We have found some¬thing like 94 billion barrels of oil.But around the Persian gulf, inthe Middle East, about 1,500 wellshave been drilled, at least 105 bil¬lion barrels of oil were found withthese 1,500 wells. That’s 11 billionbarrels more oil than we found with over 1.000 times as manywells!He stated further that, “Theaverage oil well in the US pro¬duces something like twelve bar¬rels of oil a day compared withthe average in the Middle East of5,000 barrels a day per well. In thelittle country of Kuwait . . . aboutone-tenth the size of th~ state ofIllinois . . . they drilled 214 wellsand two came in dry. These 212wells produce an average of 5,000barrels per well per day . . . Theyhave some wells that are produc¬ing 14,000 barrels a day. This ismore oil in ten days than the aver¬age US well produces in a lifetimeof 30 years. Now ... we can begin to see why this struggle is goingon in the Middle East.“Mr. Nasser got control of thecanal; he got . . . control of thepipeline ... if he can get the oil. . . Mr. Nasser could become oneof the most powerful, and in somerespects, the most powerful per¬son in the world. That’s one rea¬son why we see this struggle inIraq ... In modern civilization,oil is power.” This is why Proch¬now feels that the Middle Eastlooms ever larger in its impor¬tance to us and our survival. “Thenation that controls the MiddleEast today is in a position to domi¬nate the entire world.”He then went on to cover the other major areas of the world.He showed the inflation and dollardepreciation that is running ram¬pant in South America. Although,in some countries, notably Brazil,there are vast building programsin progress (both public and pri¬vate) the economies of the coun-tries to the south of us are in verybad economic, political, and socialconditions. Argentina is some¬what to be looked up to becauseit has an illiteracy rate of only14 per cent as against the averagein South America of nearly 55 percent. A festival of nations willbe held at International houseon April 26. It will includeexhibits from various countries,evening performances of moviesand slides, and foods from dif¬ferent countries which will besold.Those interested in participat¬ing should contact the Interna¬tional house activities office forfurther informatios. (FA 4-8200)All nations are invited to partici¬pate.This is the fourth year that thefestival has been held’in conjunc¬tion with Festival of the Arts.You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.*PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-671 1ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRCanvas fleece-IitierfCampus Shoes(women'* only, in wliit*'Reg. $6.95SALE $3.75EQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'NARROW HEELSHeel* changed —Any style —Any colorBackstraps Removed and Springa-lators inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St. (SHE COOED BE EOUD• • „» i»dv was a collegeNot long ago this Y°“ ^ responsibili-senior. Today, in one ofties and decision anizations. Today,the world’s larSep . 8 an officer in theshe’s stationed m Pan •• _Women’s Army Corps.Her professional and social J - bu.y • • •editing • • • happily balanced.On duty, this Y°--^iSU.and traditional privi¬leges of an Army officer. ^ evenings andOff duty, she enjoys her leisme • ^acatk>n.) Perhapsweekends plus ^ at the Sorbonne. Or make ashe’ll attend evening d a holiday on the Fraskiing trip to St. Mor^ Or ^d, ^ # ^ of fun.Riviera. Whatever she does ^ ^ Paris. ItOf course, her Honolulu, Tokyo ... evenmight have been Hetdelbei g,New York or Los Ange e - ^ untform will beBut wherever this yaw*^world of opportunity•on the Champs Elysees.CmsUL.. S—"-"Ft“T~a special preview ofyourself this summer of orientation trainingV°“'U l^hont any ^doting the sommer ° u (0 helpj y»o deadI graduate. If you** no obligation.* the coupon- There s no THE ADJUTANT GENERALDopartmont of tho ArmyWashington 35, D. C„ ATTN: AGSN-LPlease tell me more about a world-traveling,executive career in the Women’s Army Corps.Cltv- .Zone.College or University.Major .Graduation Claaa."The jovial Friars full of gleeCy"Woncha let me do myduty,Can't you see I gotta,I'll be spreadin' thegospel of freedom,I'll be makin' theworld safe . ."The red one in themiddleIs for bravery inbattleWhen we stormedthe beach atChateaux SonIgnition . . Cy: "It's the army that I want . .Polly: "It's the city that I want . .Senator: "She will find the city pretty,he the army less than charming."8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Aprill 7, 1959 This evening at the opening day of Fes¬tival of the Arts Blackfriars will present theforty-third more-or-less annual original mu¬sical comedy effort, Sour Mash, that’s right JT,1 repeat, Sour Mash. This show, the product ofDon McClintok and Elmer Mass and countlessmyriads of ‘friends’, is part of a long tradition.The organization was organized in 1904. Thiswas before the University discovered the virtuesand advantages of apathy, and the originators ofthe group managed to find enough men to fillMandel hall stage for its first production.As an old program of the period explains it,“In May, 1904, the first show, The Passing or PahliKhan, was given. The King’s Kalendar Keeper fol¬lowed the next year and made up most of themoney lost on the first production. The Hushingof Raxes came in 1906 and the reputation of theOrder was established.” -~g jjA somewhat later program continues the his¬tory, ‘‘The Daily Maroon in those days had nodistinguished dramatic critics and the reporterwho recorded the event gave unstinted praise.”In any case Blackfriars continued (as an allmale show) until 1942 presenting such highlyalliterative, if not highly literate, production as,Sure Enough Segregation, The LyricalPseudo Psuffragettes, Sapturing Calypso, ThePranks of Paprika, A Rhenish Rhomance, and AMyth in MandeLInterupted by the war in ’42, Blackfriars’ wasresurrected in 1956 when it was discovered thatthe old organization still had some money in thebank; money that nobody could touch except tkri*Blackfriars. So, the organization was revived andperformed at the Beaux Arts ball that year.The following year, 1957, a full length musicalwas undertaken. Gamma Delta Iota shared manyof the problems of The Passing of Pahli KhanTwo things had changed however. ^For one, the Maroon had developed a more orless dramatic critic of some distinguishment, andthis musical about the conflict between a pro¬football UC fraternity, Omicron Alpha Phi (abbri-tiated OAF), and a pro-intellectual girls club,Gamma Delta Iota (whose secret words were Idon’t give a damn’), and a president Plimp’^rrroop forth from dull monastery""Gimme a fine wordly city man,Nothin' like a city man,Overalls I can't abide 'em,Stand up with no one inside 'em,Stinkin' beards I can't get close toGimme a fine wordly city man!"Mn contrast to former show’s Chancellor Bunnyhp Hutch, met with little or no friendly commentu. from the Maroon reviewer who dismissed it as‘college show, plain and simple.”of Another aspect of UC life had also changed;>ss hme no longer was when the abbot of Black-friars’ was better known on campus than the1js chancellor. It was no longer possible to findi0S enough males to fill Mandel stage, and girls were0f introduced into a Blackfriar cast for the first time.II They have managed to stay.In any case Alpha Centauri followed the next[( year and “made up most of the money lost ontljj the first show” to have history repeating itself,ol- This year’s production, Sour Mash, should behe idl the better and all the more proficient for the,R technical experience gained during the past twohe efforts.^ .Although no one will believe it, the play islS. 7 concerned with a group of back-woods hill-billies10 who are invaded by the army and the senate, whoer suspect the settlement of being a communist cellbecause of their refusal to meet the draft quotat|j and to pay taxes.The senator and the colonel are set somewhats, back in their military tracks when they discover•>«Ui-at no one in the settlement has ever heard ofthe draft or of taxes. But while the military may\ be stopped short, the show continues all the wayto its finale.The show has been directed by Robert Ashen-hurst of the Business school faculty, produced by11 fohn Mueller, and assisted by Mike Hall. The castie includes Gene Kadish, Alice Shaffer, Buddy Weiss,£» «*lohn Dietmann, Neal Johnston, Abbie Sheldon,Carol Horning and Paul Huntwork.All of which brings back to mind the Black-friars’ motto, which has been fortunately forgot-1 *en up to now, but it here revived:The jovial Friars full of glee,Troop forth from dull monastery;And, doffing cowl and gown, essay,To be the clowns in sportive play.From novice Friar to Abbot sage,Each Monk appears upon the stage.The curtain’s up, the sport’s begun;Gay laughter tells of mirth and fun!Let us all hope,photos by Harv* "Cy is backWhere's he beenWhat's he doneHe's been to the cityAin't he pretty?" 'Won't you love me justa littleDon't you really thinkyou ought toWon't you treat mekinda nice once ortwice . .Seth"Now you tell us thesefolks need democ¬racyAnd that maybe istrueBut if'n they don'twant a flagpole intheir fieldI guess I can't blame'em really . .April 17, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • $Jimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Are. Small Cheese .... 95cSmall Sausage . .$1.15NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063 Ellen Coughlin Beauty SalonSI OS Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-20S0SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.m. - IJ p.m.FOR STUDENTS AND FACULTY MEMBERSLIGHT UP AND LIVE IT UP I 3 great cigarettes offer you S27 chances to win!So pick your pack—save the six wrappers—and get going! It's crossword puzzle fun and realsmoking pleasure all the way!ENTER OFTEN-HAVE FUN—AND WIN! But think carefully! This puzzle is not as easy as it looks. Atfirst the DOWN and ACROSS clues may appear simple. There may appear to be more than one “right'*answer. For example, the clue might read: “Many a coed will be given her best date’s P--N.” Either “I**(PIN) or “E” (PEN) would seem to fit. But only one answer is apt and logical as decided by the judging staff,and therefore correct. Read the rules carefully. ENTER AS OFTEN AS YOU WISH. Good luck l . x"500 FOURTH PRIZES:Cartons of America's finest cigarettes25 SECOND PRIZES:100 THIRD PRIZES:Packed with iiowriplays IS00 Ins on I setol ti.it termsIMIHSON I MANSIS I OKKAOIOSRULES—PLEASE READ CAREFULLY1. The College Puzzle Contest is open to collegestudents and college faculty members except em¬ployees and their immediate families of Liggett& Myers and its advertising agencies.2. Fill in all missing letters ... print clearly. Useof obsolete, archaic, variant or foreign wordsprohibited. After you have completed the puzzle,send it along with six empty package wrappersof the same brand from L&M, Chesterfield orOasis cigarettes (or one reasonable hand-drawnfacsimile of a complete package wrapper of anyone of the three brands) to: Liggett & Myers,P. O. Box 271, New York 46, N. Y. Enter asoften as you wish, but be sure to enclose sixpackage wrappers (or a facsimile) with eachentry. Illegible entries will not be considered.3. Entries must be postmarked by midnight,Friday, May 29,1959 and received by midnight,Friday, June 5, 1959.4. Entries will be judged by the Bruce-RichardsCorporation, an independent judging organiza¬tion, on the basis of logic and aptness of thoughtof solutions. In the event of ties, contestants willbe required to complete in 25 words or less thefollowing statement: “My favorite cigarette is(Chesterfield) (L&M) or (Oasis) because ”,Entries will be judged on originality, aptness ofthought and interest by the Bruce-RichardsCorporation. Duplicate prizes will be awardedin event of final ties. Illegible entries will not beconsidered. By entering all entrants agree thatthe decision of the judges shall be final andbinding.5. Solutions must be the original work of thecontestants submitting them. All entries becomethe property of Liggett & Myers and none willbe returned.6. Winners will be notified by mail as soon aspossible after completion of the contest.7. This contest is subject to all Federal, Stateand local laws and regulations. HURRY! ENTER NOW! CONTEST CLOSES MAY 29,1959 1CLUES ACROSS:1. These may -indicate that a nation is prepared to wage war in the air.6. Some college students.10. When at Light up an Oasis.11. Sinking ship deserter. '12. Plural pronoun.13. One expects • discussions in a sociology class.16. A student’s careless might annoy a short-story instructor.17. Initials of Uruguay and Denmark.18. Germanium (Chem.)19. Nova Scotia (Abbr.)21. It probably would count when you pick a horse to bet on.22. Sometimes a girl on a date must into her pocketbook to helppay the tab.23. The muscle-builder’s may fascinate a poorly developed man.24. Chemical Engineer (Abbr.)26. Campers will probably be by a forest fire.29. When starting a trip, tourists usually look forward to the first31. At home.32. Literate in Arts (Abbr.)33. Familiar for faculty member.35. Associate in Arts (Abbr.)36. One could appear quite harmless at times.37. Reverse the first part of “L&M”.38. What will soon appear in a bombed-out city.CLUCS DOWN:1. The beginning and end of pleasure.2. A rural ...: can be inviting to a vacationist.3. Second and third letters of OASIS.4. When one is packed, it could be exasperating to remembera few articles that should be included.5. It would pay to be careful when glass is6. Grounds to relax on with a mild CHESTERFIELD.7. Author Ambler.8. District Attorney (Abbr.)9. A from Paris should please the average woman.12. An inveterate traveler will about distant lands.14 are hard to study.15. Stone, Bronze and Iron20. How Mexicans say, “Yes”.23. All L&M cigarettes are " high” in smoking pleasure.25. May be a decisive factor in winning a horse race.27. Initials of Oglethorpe, Iona, Rutgers and Emerson.28. United Nations Organization (Abbr.)30. Golf mound.32. Colloquial for place where the finest tobaccos are tested for L&M.33. Poet Laureate (Abbr.)34. Filter ends.35. What Abner might be called.36. Bachelor of Education degree. PRINT CLEARLY I ENTER AS OFTEN AS YOU WISHMail to Liggett ft Myers, P. 0 Box 271, New York 46. New York. Bosure to attach six empty package wrappers of the same brand (orfacsimile) from Chesterfield, L&M, or Oasis cigarettes.Mam*.Alldross.Collegefhis entry must be postmarked before midnight. May 29, 1959. andreceived at P. 0. Box 271, New York 46, New York, by midnight.June 5.1959.© t'U*tt t My*rs Tobacco Co wwJisport newsTennis team tallies topsin Tuesday's tournamentby Bill SpadyCoach Bill Moyle’s tennissquad has taken over wherehis swim team left off, and todate their record stands at fourwins and one tie. The Maroonstrimmed Wright Jr. college 6-1,Wilson Jr. 7-0, Elmhurst 8-1, tiedLake Forest 5-5 last week, andran over Illinois Tech 8-1 Tues¬day afternoon.Against Wright, the Maroonsdropped only one of their fivesingles matches and won bothdoubles events. Len Friedmanwon 6-3, 6-2, John Berall likewise6 4, 6-1, Mike Roskin, 6-1, 6-1, andBernard Hoffman 6-1, 6-0. Fried¬man and Berall won their doublesmatch 7-5, 6-4; and Bill Provineand Mike Nussbaum closed thematch with a 6-3, 6-2 victory.The Chicago netters won everymatch against Wilson. Max Liber¬ies opened with a 6-2, 6-4 win, fol¬lowed by Les Hutton 6-1, 6-4;Julian Simon 6-2, 6-2; Paul Schutt6-4, 3-6, 7-5; and Mike N.ussbaum6-0, 6-3. The doubles team of Liber¬ies and Hoffman won 6-1, 8-6; andthe Simon and Hutton duo closedthe action with a 6-2, 6-0 win.Elmhurst proved little tougherand the Maroons walked awaywith 5 singles victories and allthree doubles won. Friedman won-63, 6-3; Berall followed 6-0, 6-2;Roskin won 6-8, 6 2, 6-1; Nuss¬baum added an 8 6, 6-8, 6-2 victory;and Liberies finished the singlesmatches 6-2, 7-5. In doubles, Fried¬man and Berall won 6-2, 6-1; Pro¬vine and Mark Lebowitz followed2-6, 6 2, 6-2; and Nussbaum andLiberies closed the match with thefinal 8-3 counter.Moyle’s men won 4 of the 7singles matches against Lake For¬est, but they dropped two of thethree doubles sets. Friedman cameout on top 8-5, so did Berall with8-5, Nussbaum with 8-7, and Karlwith 8-3. Only Nussbaum andFinger won in doubles. Against IIT, Friedman won 6-3,9-7; Berall 5-7, 6-1, 6-3; Trovinoand Hoffman both 6-0, 6-1; Nuss¬baum 6-0, 6-4; and Liberies 5-7,6-1, 6-0. The duet of Berall andFriedman won 6-2, 6-1; and Ros¬kin and Libowitz also had littledifficulty 6-4, 6-0.The squad will place its unde¬feated record on the block againstWilson this afternoon on the var¬sity courts, and will travel toPeoria on Wednesday to faceBradley. Moyle explains the suc¬cess of the team thus far to “areal desire among the boys.” Thisyear’s squad lacks the experienceof last year’s team, but Moyle be¬lieves that the competition nowex.sting for the top spots on thesquad has given each performeran added incentive.Varsity baseballChicago’s hard luck baseballsquad dropped its first homegame of the season to ChicagoTeachers college 12-8 in a gamewhich started slowly and ended ina batting contest. The visitorscollected twelve hits from four UCpitchers, while the hosts slappedtwo Teachers pitchers for elevenhits. The story of the game wastold in the final three innings asthe Teachers put together sevenhits (a triple, a home run,, andfive singles), three walks, andtwo hit batsmen for eight runs;while the Maroons, leading 64after the 6th inning, could musteronly two runs on one hit in thefinal three innings, as Whitingof Teachers fanned seven men inthe same time.The fourth was UC’s only three-run inning. Jack Markin openedit getting hit by the pitcher andadvancing to third on JohnLoose’s single. Both scored withtwo out on Bill Bauer’s single.After Bauer reached second on anerror by the shortstop, Ira Levysmacked a single which drove himacross. The inning closed withSTERN’S CAMPUS DRUGS61ST & ELLISSancho: WHY PEDRO POOSH WIFEOFF CLIFF?Don: TEQUILLA, OF COURSE, BECAUSESHE CANT COOK LIKE STERN'S.ROAST TURKEYdressing, chef saladbread, butter, and beverageala carte dinner*1 25 *1 45 Levy on third after a stolen baseand another error.Don Stachniak pulled a singleand a double in four times up,and Bauer had the same in fiveattempts at the plate. Levy had2 for 4 with a pair of singles. TheMaroons host Wisconsin at Mil¬waukee this afternoon at Staggfield.Varsity trackA1 Jacobs, Hosea Martin, andGeorge Karcazes paced a red hotcrew of Chicago sprinters to theunofficial team championship inthe fourth annual Bradley relaysat Peoria Saturday afternoon. TheMaroons faced and beat a fieldconsisting of Wheaton, Loyola,Bradley, Eastern Illinois, WesternIllinois, Northern Illinois, Wiscon¬sin at Milwaukee, Eureka, Man¬kato State, Quincy, and IllinoisState Normal.Jacobs won the 100 yard dashin 9.6 and set a new meet recordin the process, while Martin fin¬ished second, a step behind, andbroke the record in the prelimi¬naries with a 9.8 clocking. Thetwo combined with Karcazes andPete McKeon in breaking the 440relay record with a 0:43.0 effort;and the foursome of Martin, MitchWatkins*. Karcazes, and Jacobsshatteered the 880 relay recordin the fine time of 1:29.3*Karcazes ran a brilliant 0:48.7anchor leg in the mile relay, lead¬ing the team of Bud Perschke,Jbrry Gehman, Martin, and him¬self to a third place in 3:25.5.Kevin Waring, Perschke, VicNeill, and Ivan Carlson took fifthin the 2-mile relay; the quartet ofJim Skinner, Gehman, McKeon,and Carlson finished in the samespot in the sprint medley. A1Gaines, Watkins, and Don Rich¬ards placed fourth in the shuttlehurdle relay; and J. Lejnieks,Randy Denny, Steve McCready,and Dennis O’Leary took fourthin the fershman 880 relay.Richards placed fifth in the in¬dividual 120 yard high hurdleevent, and aWtkins took secondin the broad jump. Coach TedHaydon will send some of his out¬standing performers to the Ohiorelays at Columbus tomorrow.Varsity golfChicago’s varsity golf squadevened its season’s record to twowins and two losses with a 13-11victory over North Central col¬lege at Lisle, Illinois, last Wednes¬day. Steve Klein led the squad forthe second straight match with a77, while Marshall Sylvan cardedan 81 and second man RayStercker finished with an 83. Nick(see ‘Golfers’ page 13) Dunbar seeks designA student competition in trade¬mark design will be judged by ajury of artists selected by the hCi-cago Artists guild, it was an¬nounced today by Herbert Rosen¬thal, president of Dunbar builderscorporation. Dunbar builders arethe largest builders of co-opera¬tive apartment buildings in thecountry.‘‘We seek a design of tomor¬row,” said Rosenthal, "so we areasking the designers of tomorrowwho are the students of today.”Dunbar is offering as first prize$100; second and third prizes are$50 and $25.The entries are expected fromfour leading art schools in Chi¬cago: the Institute of Design, theAmerican Academy of Fine arts,the Chicago Academy of Arts, andthe Art Institute. However, thecontest is open to all bona fideart students.The judges include Fred Staf-fen, president of the Artists guildand a successful commercial ar¬tist for the past 25 years. Otherjudges are Henry Freiday, vicepresideht of the Artists guild, andPhoebe Moore, a designer.Complete rules for the contestmay be obtained at any of thefour schools mentioned above or directly from Dunbar builders.Entries will be displayed at Dun¬bar builders and in a Loop loca¬tion to be announced later. Thecontest closes May 30.Outing club tripsare announcedThe Outing club announcedthe following schedule of tripsfor the spring quarter:April 19—Palos Hills forest pre¬serve.April 24-26—Starved Rock statepark.May 3-Morton Arboretum,Lisle, Illinois.May 8-10—Warren Dunes statepark, Michigan.May 30—Memorial Day canoetrip.All University students, alumni,and faculty members are eligibleto participate in the trips. TheApril 19 venture will leave frorrrIda Noyes at 8 am and will re¬turn to campus late in the after¬noon. The trip costs $1 and thoseinterested are advised to bringbox lunches.EUROPEDublin to the Iron Curtain; Africato Sweden. You’re accompanied —not herded. College age only. Alsoshort trips. $724-51,390.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255 Sequoia (Box 4) — Pasadena, Cal. Rudy’sAuthorizedU of C Class RingsSales OMEGA ServiceIndividuallydesigned, handmadejewelry(Discount to students)152S East 53rd st.NOrmal 7-2666ACASA BOOKSTOREGood Used BooksCarefully selected Imports of cards, giftschildren's booksreliable typewriter service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO."Hyde Pork's Most Complete Point & Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th st.For Your PersonalizedSHIRT-WAISTDRESSESCome to Lucille's oCucille1507 east 53rd s*.mi 3-9898 "Why pay the big-car price penalty l' Go Rambler \' Pay hundreds of dollars \less-save more than ever ion gas and upkeep iiiJ See why Rambler now outsells most big cars.■ Get bigger savings, highest resale, easier park-I ing, plus full 6-passenger room. Try Personal-| ized Comfort: separate sectional sofa front| seats. See your Rambler dealer and save.III SEE YOUR RAMBLER DEALER TODAYNew 100-Inch wheelbase RAMBLER AMERICAN .$1835 JIIIIaSuggested delivered price at Kenosha,Wise, for 2-door sedan at left Stateand local taxes, if any, automatic trans-mission and optional equipmant, extra.April 17, 1959 • CHICAGO’ MAROON • Mi hKfcriaWiflliriTI^ laaumMi4 ft •^ ^ hail, hail ^ ntf-thegahcjsalliheieljon American ExpressK/5Q StudentTours of EuropeWherever, whenever, however you travel, your bestassurance of the finest service is American Express!On American Express Student Tours of Europe you’llbe escorted on exciting itineraries covering such fascin¬ating countries as England . . . Belgium . . . Germany. . . Austria . . . Switzerland . . . Italy . . . The Rivieras. . . and France. And you’ll have ample free time andlots of individual leisure to really live life abroad!7 Student Tours of Europe . . . featuring distinguished leadersfrom prominent colleges as tour conductors . . .40 to 62 days . . . by sea and by air . .. $1,397 and up.4 Educational Student Tours of Europe . . . with experienced escorts... by sea ... 44 to 57 days . . . $872 and up.Other European Tours Available . . . from 14 days . . . $672 and up.Also, Tours to Florida, Bermuda, Mexico, West Indies and Hawaii.You can always Travel Now—Pay Later when yougo American Express!Member: Institute of International Education andCouncil on Student Travel.For complete information, see your Campus Repre¬sentative, local Travel Agent or American ExpressTravel Service ... or simply m^il the handy coupon.AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVEL SERVICE65 Broadway, New York 6, N. Y. e/o Trarel Salts Division *Yes! Please send me complete information C-13 •about 1959 Student Tours of Europe! ••Name •Address •City Zone State ?PROTECT YOUR TRAVEL FUNDS WITH AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CMEQUES-SPEN0A8LE EVERYWHEREAPPLY NOW FOR YOUR COMPREHENSIVE AMERICAN EXPRESS WORLD-WIDE CREDIT CARA Prom-perfect...or forany dateIt’s easy to see why Arrow WhiteShirts are the most popular oncampus. Authentic in every styledetail, they’re the best-fittingshirts in circulation today.Our exclusive Mitoga^-tailoringmakes them that way from collarto cuff to waist. “Sanforized” fab¬rics keep their fit and the wildestbop won’t pop their anchored but¬tons. $4.00 up.Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc."-ARROW-*-first in fashionLAST SALE BEFORE INVENTORY!SALE STARTS FRIDAY, APRIL 17HUNDREDS OF NEW TITLES AT GREAT REDUCTIONS59‘ - ‘7.98Some repeat items YOU may have missed earlierAlso Print Portfolios $1.00 and upBrush-stroke prints $1.98UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 EllisDo You Think for Yourself ? ( THIS TEST WILL GIVEYOU A CLUE!* )1. If your parents exhibited “baby pictures” of you' AQto a friend, would you be (a) embarrassed? (b) bqmerely interested in your friend’s reaction? (C)just plain annoyed?2. You are making a speech—and suddenly find youhave a large hole in your clothes. Would you (A)excuse yourself and leave? (b) pretend you didn’tknow the hole was there and finish the speech?(c) cover up the hole with a handkerchief?3. Would you rather have the characteristics of (a)U.S. Grant? (b) Thomas Edison? (c) J. P. Morgan?4. You have taken your date to dinner and find you’haven’t money to tip the waiter as well as takeyour date home. Would you (a) ignore the waiter?(b) take him aside and tell him you’ll tip him nextday? (c) tip him and walk your date home? aOB □CDAOBOCDaOboCO 5. Mathematics is your poorest subject, yet you arefascinated by the idea of being an atomic physicist.Would you (a) try to overcome your difficultieswith math? (b) pick an easier occupation? (c)ask yourself if it’s physics you like or its glamour?6. Your roommate is a nice person, but suddenlytakes to asserting an ability to foretell the future.Would you (a) notify the authorities? (b) ignorethe whole thing? (c) g;ve him tests to prove tohim he’s wrong?7. Do you believe the maxim “It’s a long lane thathas no turning” is (a) a complete non sequitur?(b) a well-known fact? (c) an allusion to a com¬mon phenomenon?.ADbQCQ9. In choosing a filter cigarette, would youpick one that (a) claims it filters best?(B) merely says it tastes good? (c)gives you a thinking man’s filter and asmoking man’s taste?If you're the kind of person who thinks foryourself . . , you use judgment in yourchoice of cigarettes, as in everything else;Men and women who think for themselvesusually smoke VICEROY. Their reason?Best in the world. They know that onlyVICEROY has a thinking man’s filter anda smoking man’s taste.*If you have checked (B) in three out of thefirst four questions, and (C) in four out ofthe last five ... you think for yourself! (1059, Brown ft Williamson Tobacco Cor^i AOBOCOADBOCOAOBOCO8. Would you rather have as a biithday present (a) AOsomething expensive? (b) something long-lasting? bQ(c) something beautiful? C □The Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows— Familiarpack orcrush-proofbox.ONLY VICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN’SFILTER... A SMOKING MAN’S TASTE I%jBm 991In case you're wonderingSpring is here!Golfers to faceRoosevelt next(from page 11)DeMerell’s 87, Dave Kreisman’s90, and Dave Silver’s 94 roundedout the scoring for the visitingChicagoans.Coach Bob Kreidler’s divotersface Roosevelt at Jackson Park onTuesday, April 21; and test Val¬paraiso and Wheaton at Long-wood on Thursday, April 23 intheir next two matches.Intramural sportsPsi U “A” will meet Psi U “B”in the finals of the all-universityintramural volleyball tournamentat Bartlett this afternoon. Bothteams worked their way throughfour rounds of action to reach thefinals, the A team beating housechampion East II, 15-6 and 17-15,and the B team trimming PhiGam 4C” 15-3 and 15 2 in theirsemi-final games. Over thirtyteams were entered in the initialround of competition.The intramural horse shoestourney is currently in progresswith close to 40 house, fraternity,and divisional teams battling forthe all-university trophy. Thesingles tennis tourney will beginthis week, and entries for thesoftball and golf participants aredeadlined for Monday, April 20.League play w'ill begin in soft-abll on April 27, and the golftourney will be held April 30, atJackson Park at 1:30.Sports calendarAPRIL17 Baseball; Varsity versus Wis¬consin at Milwaukee at StaggField.Tennis; B Team versus Wil¬son Jr. at Varsity courts.21 Golf; Varsity versus Roose¬velt U at Jackson Park.23 Baseball; Varsity versus Illi¬nois Tech at Stagg Field.Golf; Varsity versus Wheatonand Valparaiso at Longwood. Applications are dueThe committee on the preparation of secondary schoolteachers announced today that any student planning to gradu¬ate in June 1960 with the expectation of becoming a secondaryschool teacher should contact the ——committee this month. Altera- fer worfc jn the Laboratory schooltions in a number of features of will be based on the applicationsthe committee s program make it jn hand this quarter, and contrac-imperative that students submit tual arrangements for practiceapplications before May 1, an- teaching in the public schools willnounced John R. Ginther, chair-_ ... . • , be made from the list of appri-man of the committee on the prep¬aration of secondary school can*s’teachers. Application forms are availableThe schedule of autumn quar- in Judd 121.Captures yourpersonalityas well asyour personi\ow with . . . CoronaStudio1314 E. 53rd St.MU 4-7424 Harper Wines & Liquors1114-16 E. 55th St.CASH ’IS CARRYSPECIALSSCOTCH Reg. $6.25Hudson BoyWhite HorseHaig ond Haig NOW$4.98$4.98$4.98BONDED BOURBON 5thsOld TaylorI.W. Harper $529BOLDBONHill ond HillOld CrowGlenmore 5thsYellowstone $3.79$398GINGilbey'sFleischmann'sBooth's High ond Dry 00O'nIMPORTED MINESSt. GermainMargouGraves $|49 As fraternities begin the annual tug over recently thawedBotany pond, studying sunbathers appear on the New Dormcourtyard and the Midway, pilgrimages to the Point pop intoeveryone's thoughts, it is obvious that spring has at long lastsprung at UC. (photos by Grant and Figlio)HI-FI and STEREO SERVICECourtesy, Economy, and Repair Service by the finestelectronic specialists are available to you at the CHELTENTELEVISION CORP. We are conveniently located at2915 East 79th St.Our special services include;• Frequency response ond undistorted output test.• Intermodulation, harmonic and frequency distortion test.• Perfect repair for amplifiers, pre-amps., ond AM-FM tuners.• Excellent service for tope recorders, auto, record changers,ond radios.For guaranteed satisfaction, CALL ES 5-3666Chelten Television Corp. 2915 East 79th St.JOBS on SHIPSPLAN "NOW FOR SUMMEREARN HIGH PAY • TRAVEL THE WORLDMen-Women . . . work aboard Luxury Ocean LinersFreighters. Tankers. An opportunity to see the world,travel to many foreign lands while earning high pay.(No experience needed on many jobs.) Work fulltime, season, or on one-trip basis.For Information Write DeptUNIVERSAL SHIP INFORMATION1020 Broad Street Newark, N. J.SPECIALTO U. of C. STUDENTSOrder 2 pizzas (of ony kind),and gel a third one free!small $1.00medium 1.45large 1.95x-large 2.95 FREEUCDELIVERYTerry's Pizza1518 East 63 Ml 3-4045. , iWUCB gives readingA series of dramatic readings will begin Tuesday evening♦v,n WUCB. Tentatively scheduled to be presented is a one-actplay by William Saroyan. The cast will include Roger Downey,Johnny Walker Hartigan, Carol Horning, John Kim, Joyce Nevis,and Jim Olsen.The program will be presented every other week at 8:30 pm, andwill feature readings of scenes from plays, entire one-act plays, andGreek tragedies. Alternating with the drama program is the discus¬sion program “Symposium."The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th S».MU 4-9236 Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRIST1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352HOW THAT UT's' Measure'interpreted;production date May 1Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure, to be produced by University Theatre May 1-3 andMay 8-10, is a cheerfully complicated play with many sides. It is so complicated and so poly¬sided, in fact, that even the experts have never been able to agree on its best interpretation,but squabble gaily among themselves about divine mercy, crucial climaxes, unfortunateendings, etc.The story of the play begins when the Viennese duke decides that the immorality ofVienna has gotten out ofhand, and that he himself The regent proceeds to enforce eighteenth century Puritans feltdoesn’t want to antagonize 2m old law against extramarital that the play wasn t trying to sayevervbodv bv enforcing the avail- relations, condemning to death a anything and that it failed to puteverybody by eniorcing tne avail man ^ se(Juced his fi. up a decent show of saying noth.able moral laws. So he goes away, ancee The young man’s sister ing. University Theatre has de¬leaving his madly immoral city comes from a convent to plead for cided to interpret the play as ain the hands of a sourly moral his life, and the regent becomes comedy, with an underlyingregent, returning disguised as a infatuated with her. theme discussing the ielationshipThe plot which evolves from of man to society,this situation can be interpreted The progress of events in whichin many ways. One theorist feels the two principles become inthat the duke, who manages ev- volved is set against and arounderything unrecognized, represents an assortment of delightfully va-the divinity, and that the play riegaled people. Dispossessedtries to show the relationship of prostitutes, peaceful nuns, discon-divine justice and mercy. A few tented soldiers, a condemned mantoo sleepy to be hanged, and se-friar to watch the outcome of hisstrategy.orTareyton’s Dual Filterfilters as no single filter can:1. It combines an efficient purewhite outer filter...2. with a unique inner filter ofACTIVATED CHARCOAL . . . which hasbeen definitely proved to make thesmoke of a cigarette milder andsmoother. The Tareyton Ring Marks the Real Thing!Hooray for college students! They’re makingnew Dual Filter Tareyton the big smokeon American campuses! Are you part ofthis movement? If so, thanks. If not, try ’em!new dual filter TareytonProd** 4 tu our middu namt (<§A. T. Co.) Artist Reinhardtto speak Sunday rious pudges dispensing arbitraryElizabethan justice with all its16th century frills, all portray thekinds and parts of society whichcatch the principles and their co-Artist Siegfried Reinhardt horts in flavored and joyous comwill sneak at Rockefeller Me- overly,nS * serious tensionWill speak at rtoc expressing the hidden ideas ofmonal chapels tegular 11 am man and ^is inevitable involve-service this Sunday as the chap- ment jn any human action he triesel’s contribution to the festivalof the arts.Born in East Prussia in 1925, , . .Reinhardt gradualed from Wash- produced in the Reynold s Clubington university, majoring in to influence.Measure for Measure will beTheatre, Friday through Sunday,May 1-3 and May 8-10. All per¬formances will be at 8:30 pm.English.He is a self-taught artist. Saysone commentator: “Reinhardt’sGermanic heritage is revealed inthe unrelieved seriousness of hisart and in his penetration of hu¬man and spiritual problems."His works have been exhibitedat the Metropolitan Museum ofArt the Whitney museum and Apollonian society will jointlySE1“"h™« fte present a concert of chambermusic this Sunday. The presenta¬tion, a FOTA event, will takeplace in Ida Noyes library at 4 pm.The program of 16th, 17th, and18th century music will includevocal selections by J. S. Bach andJohn Willbye; Mozart’s Diverti-Music societiesjoin for concertThe Musical society and theage of 17, was in his home town,St. Louis.Reinhardt was the youngest of19 of the best painters under theage of 36 selected by Life maga¬zine in 1950. In 1952 Life did athree-page story with reproduc¬tions of his paintings. That same men*° No. 8, and works of Johanyear he was the winner of the Pezel and Jakob Obrecht per-$7,000 prize competition to design formed by a brass group,a mural painting for the lobbyof the Rand-McNally offices inSkokie.CLARK Theatredark & madisonopen 7 o.m.late show 4 a.m.50c college student priceat oil timesjust present your student identi¬fication card at the boxoffice.Sundoy Film Guild ProgramsApril 19: “Carmen Jones’’“Seven Year Itch”April 26: “Inn of the Sixth Hap¬piness”“White Wilderness”Different double feature daily The principal interest of bothorganizations is the performanceof chamber music. The Apollonians, a group of informal singers,are directed by Richard O’Neil,who has played with the LyricOpera in the past.In order to foster the playingof chamber music as well as stu¬dent interest in this specific typeof music, the Musical society has,for the past' two quarters, metonce a week. Those students inter¬ested in such a program shouldcontact Lenore Coral, New Resi¬dent hall.^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimimiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiHi!|2 Cltieago ■ Most UnusualEE Motion Picture I lieatre DEARBORNAT DIVISIONPhone DE 7-17*1SS Again reminds all College Students of the= Special StuJent Rales always in effect at= EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK§ INCL. FRI. 1 SAT. EVENINGS 75JUST SHOW CASHIER YOUR I.D. CARD HOWSPECIALSTUDENTTATE FERNANDEL |'FORBIDDEN FRUIT" ga French Love Drama SIllTheExclusive CleanersQualify Dry Cleaning and Laundry Servicessame-day service shirts 15c' Completein by 12, out by 3 storage Facilities sheets 19cand Box Storageno extra charge-- pillowcases 7c1309 E. 57th St. Ml 3-0602He Operate Our Own PlantD* "Culture VultureWith Student Governmentbattles in fully slanted tilt andfestival of the arts about topop up the resulting inclinedplane, one is apt to forgetwhether one is basically intel¬lectual and arty, or sly, craftyand political. The obvious solu¬tion to this weighty problem isto combine the two move¬ments. Why not elect Picassorepresentative from the socialscience division? He was acommunist. Handel would be adreadfully inofficious, if slight¬ly defunct, representative foranybody.On CampusTheatreTwo weeks from today Univer¬sity Theatre’s production of Meas¬ure for Meafure will open inReynolds club theatre. The playis not an Aristotelian tragedywith overtones of sordid roman¬ticism. Neither is it a cheerfulfamily comedy with undertonesof soap-suds. It is a seriously fun¬ny play with a plot, a point, anumber of puns and typicallyglorious Shakespearian dialogue.The play involves a young mancondemned to death for fornica¬tion, his nunnish sister, a regentand a brotherly duke in a whirlof social, intellectual, moral andgenuinely humorous interplay,around a Viennese mulberry tree.The play is serious in that thechief characters, the duke and thecondemned man’s sister, both con¬sider themselves above the ordi¬nary human mistakes and bothfind themselves caught by the hu¬man actions of the situations inwhich they become involved. Itis funny in its people, its situa¬tions, its pomposity and its con¬trasts.This evening at 8:30, Black-friar’s production of Sour Mashwill open, to run through Sunday,with a fourth performance a weekfrom tomorrow. This productionhas been variously called SourMush, Hour Dash, BorrowedHash, Cowering Fish, FourthFlash, Floured Flesh, No Dice,Bower Bath, Melted Mess, SewerFlush, Lizard Bile, The Sour andthe Fury, Paper Mesh, Call MeSour, Sour Drum Song, DourMash, Tower’s A-Blush, SourSlush, The Life and Times of DonMcClintock, Sour Muse, SkeweredA Fresh, etc. In short, the showhas had publicity. It hopes to pro¬duce Solid Cash.Brother Antonius, the “beatmonk,” will read his own poemsand those of other San Franciscopoets, next Friday at FrancisParker school and a week fromSunday in Ida Noyes at 8:30 pm.Brother Antonious is not beat! Herejects society like the beatniks,hut he finds his solution in Cath¬olicism, rather than direct aliena¬tion from society. In any case,heat or just tired, he will be spon¬sored by the Maroon, the Calvertclub and Big Table in the two pro-The Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the week•The Flaming AngelAn Opera by Prokofieff(3 records)0PWI304 $1.47 grams connected with FOTA.Sholom Aleichem in his willsaid he wanted no monuments orgreat inscriptions. If peoplewished to remember him and hisstories, they would gather togeth¬er and read them on the anniver¬sary of his death. In connectionwith University Theatre, Hillelwill therefore present a readingof Aleichem’s stories this eveningat 8:30 in Hillel foundation. Read¬ers will be University Theatre’sOtto Senz and Otto Schlessinger.MusicNext Friday, the Fine Arts pro¬gram will present a concert ofchamber music compositions byhumanities instructor Marshall Bi-alosky in Fullerton hall of the ArtInstitute. This is one of the firstprograms of music by a facultymember, and as such is fairlynoteworthy. In addition, Bialoskyis himself noteworthy. He studiedwith Lionel Nowak and Luigi Dal¬lapiccola and spent two years inItaly on a Fulbright. The musicwill include various chamberworks for various instrumentsand singers. There will be no ad¬mission charge.Musical society and the Apol¬lonian society will present a con¬cert of 16th, 17th and 18th centurymusic Sunday at 4 pm in IdaNoyes. The program will includeworks for brass by Obrecht andPezel, a Mozart woodwind diver -timo, and vocal works by Willbyeand Bach. The Willbye, incidental¬ly, is taken from a series of 16thcentury vocal works praisingQueen Elizabeth, a lady who in¬sisted on adolation in all formsof art, etc., and generally receivedhigh quality flattery.This evening the fifth annualhootenanny of the Folklore so¬ciety will hoot wildly in Interna¬tional house auditorium, in con¬nection with the opening of thefestival of the arts. The programwill include ballads, blues, spir¬ituals, work songs, humoroussongs, hillbilly music, banjos,guitars, drums, bagpipes, andprobably a paper-comb player.Professionals, semi - professionalsand amateur nothings will sing,play, dance, hop-scotch, etc. Gen¬eral admission is $1.25. The per¬formance will be at 8:30.Motion PicturesCarl Dreyer’s The Passion ofJoan of Arc will be shown by DocFilms in social sciences 122 at7:15 and 9:15 this evening. Theplot of the film is obvious. Theacting is said to be excellent.Also this evening B-J moyieswill present Eugene O’Neill’sLong Voyage Home, directed by John Ford. The film involves agroup of men taking a ship fromthe Caribbean to London duringthe war. These men like the seabetter than the land; their ownaffinity for it makes them feelmore at home. This plotless plotwhich evolves is quite effective.The film features Thomas Mitch¬ell and Barry Fitzgerald. If trulyO’Neillian it should certainly bemore than worth seeing.Off CampusMusicNext Thursday and Friday theChicago symphony with the Chi¬cago symphony chorus will pre¬sent Handel’s Judas Maceabaeus. The soloists will include MariaStader, Russell Oberlin, John Mc¬Collum, and Kenneth Smith. Alsofeatured on the program will bethe Kinder-choir of the First Uni¬tarian church. It’s a fine week forHandel.Also this evening, the Pro Mu-sica trio will perform in the Artsclub of Chicago. The program willinclude Schubert’s Trout Quintetand Tcherepnin’s Trio sonatas.Monday, Tong II Han, a youngKorean pianist will give a recitalin the Art institute’s Fullertonhall. This program is a benefitperformance for the Hospitalitycenter of Greater Chicago. Hanstudied at the Juilliard School ofG2EHH1m mrNAHwiSfRtW65 HEAE. * 1flNM'M VOtlHOdT IT IVHY THAT IJOW'T KMOUJ TKfcA fcfcftV- _ CAN PKK A GUnfiR.,SlPISAOTCME, AND CAST OFFiHmeiTlOlfS ffc QUICK A*LET’S SfcL, VOU’VE SIGNEDWE Oflt-CftMOltfffefe Wm WftWHED TOFIATS. Music sponsored by a few strayairmen who heard him play kiKorea. He has received excellentreviews.Motion PicturesSurf theatre is currently featur¬ing Fernandel in Forbidden Fruit,which it stoutly maintains is aFrench love drama. Fernandel,although French, is hardly lovely,and his comedy is rarely classifi¬able as “drama.” However, lovablecomedy may be called lovely dra¬ma and the film is shown with allits Fernandelish furbelows.This week, beginning Sunday,the Clark theatre is presentingC a r m e n Jones and The SevenYear Itch. The former at least isa tremendous movie. The latter issexy slapstick.Hyde Park will continue to pre¬sent Ordet through next week.The movie is faithfully religiousand religiously experimental andconsequently controversial. I re¬fuse to again take sides.Next Friday the Art institutewill give a free showing of LaStrada. If you haven’t seen it andhave the 62 cents IC fare, forheaven’s sake don’t miss it. It iscertainly a film classic.TR4 AG MV UTU-t-BoHEMIAN HEARTMIGHT, TIE NEVE*BEEN ABLE TO _PURGE fAVSCLF OF Acertain bourgeois600-A B«o! X USE DtODOAAHn!|KW ROOMMATE SIHOGGLHTHEM TO ME |H WOODENCRATES MARKED-FAR* tnACHINtAV. The Folklore Societypresents aHOOTENANNYCONCERTtonightat International HousefeaturingGeorge and Terry Elio JenkinsArmstrong Bob ond GeorgieFleming Brown MarchKitch Childs Suxonne PollardKarl Finger Pete SteinFrank Hamilton Pete StoneothersAdmission.pl.OO for members$1.25 othersTAhSAM-YMilCHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising :»CANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT13IS East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 SfAe PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433CHICAGO PREMIERE FIRST SHOWINGSTARTS FRIDAY APRIL 17CARL DREYER’SThe Word: FASCINATING“AN EXTRAORDINARY FILM”“AN EXPERIENCE”VENICE FILM FESTIVALGRAND PRIX "The picture is hypnotic ondsome portions will noil thespectator to the seat ..."Crowther, N.Y.TIMES IT’S BLACKFRIARSTIME AGAIN!presenting.SOURMASH« musical tale of ‘them thar hills9Mandel HallApril 17, 18, 19 8:30 pmTickets available at the Mandel Hall Box Officeand the University BookstorePrices: $2.50 $2.00 $1.50Students: $2.00 $1.50 $1.00Tickets may he reserved by callingAll 3-0800, ext. 3287April 17, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15Fire fir Theft InsuranceMalpractice InsuranceConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986 (left) Fifth annuel Festival of ike Arts chairman MikeKindred casts an approving eye in the direction of HelenRoth's FOTA publicity art work, (below) James Gilbertand Renee Feinberg adjust one of the paintings at the StudentArt exhibit being shown in the New dorm, (photos by Grant'(left) The sculptureshown to the left is part ofStudent Art shown at theNew dorm. Sculpture by Chi¬cago area artists is now be¬ing exhibited in the Newdorm courtyard, (photo by• April 17, 195916 • CHICAGO MAROON (left) Barbara Bernsteinstudies a selection from theexhibit at dorm, (above)Allan Fern of the Humani¬ties department and GeorgeFurtado prepare an architec¬tural exhibit at Lexington.The exhibit will be shownthroughout FOTA week.I fold you to keep rtiose moths owoy(left) The first work toarrive in the New dormcourtyard for the sculptureexhibit, "Division of theLoaves and Fishes," attract¬ed much attention, includingan assortment of coinsamounting to approximately97 cents. Suggestion for use:to establish a scholarship fordestitute and "flunking out"ex-Festival chairmen, (photoby Grant)