’ 1,1 »" —'Big Table' banned by USOn the grounds that it isobscene and therefore unmail¬able, Big Table, a new literaryquarterly formed by former edi¬tors of the Chicago Review, hasbeen banned from the UnitedStates mails.The magazine was published onMarch 17; since March 18 theChicago post office has been con¬fiscating copies. The staff of BigTable was not aware of this untilApril 24. A ruling was requestedand yesterday Bost Office councilgeneral Washburton announcedihat Big Table was “non-mailablebecause of obscenity and filthywriting.’’ Explicit reference wasmade to Old Angle Midnight andNaked Lunch.A1 Podell, business manager ofBig Table, estimated the totalnumber of confiscated copies at441.A Post Office hearing will beheld June 2, at which the editorsof the magazine, in conjunctionwith the American Civil liberties union, will attempt to clear theissue. If this fails, the staff willtake the issue to court, again withACLU assistance. “If necessary,the Supreme Court,’’ Podell con¬tinued.Irving Rosenthal, former Re¬view editor and editor of thisissue commented: “This is theresult of pressures applied byofficials high in the Republicanadministration because they areembari’assed about the satire onPresident Eisenhower in BigTable” (a reference to chapter 7of Naked Lunch).The Big Table editors haveasked the Post Office for permis¬sion to mail several hundredcopies of the quarterly to variousnationally known poets, critics,teachers and authors in order toelicit comments of the, literaryquality of thfe work. The staffhopes to use these comments intheir own defense at the June 2hearing. 58-59 Maroon awardedhighest ACP honor ratingThe 1958-59 Chicago Maroon has been awarded the All-American honor rating in the60th annual Associated Collegiate press critical analysis. The All-American honor rating,the highest awarded, indicates “distinctly superior achievement.” The Maroon was amongthe six newspapers in the country to receive this rating.The Maroon rated highest in creativeness. ACP described the Maroon features “amongthe best seen,” rated the editorials superior and editorial page makeup, the best in the paper.The paper received 40 points above the amount needed for the highest rating.The Maroon was judged by members of the “woiking press” in comparison with other college pa¬pers and was rated in the areas of news sources, balance, treatment of copy, vitality, creativeness,news stories, style, leads, features, copy reading, speech and interview articles, editorials, editorialpage features, sports coverage, sports writing, layout, nameplate, editorial page makeup, sportsdisplay, headlines, headline schedule, typography, printing, photography and other areas.469 college newspapers were rated in this semester’s ACP service.And while we’re on the subject . . . the May 15 issue of the Maroon will be the last issue until theend of the examination period. The last issue of the year will appear on June 5 and will include areview of the year. Deadlines for the May 15 issue are: calendar, Tuesday, May 13; advertising andeditorial copy, May 13. Editorial and advertising matter for the June 5 issue may be sent to the Maroonoffice during the examination period. Deadlines for that issue are: calendar, June 2; editorial and ad¬vertising, June 3. The first issue of the summer quarter will appear on June 26.Vol. 67, No. 33 University of Chicago, May 8, 1959 31Pulitzer Prize awarded toL. D. White: UC historianThe Pulitzer Prize commit¬tee announced today that its1959 award for history hadbeen given to “The RepublicanEra—1869 to 1901” by the lateLeonard D. White, of the UCfaculty.Jean Schneider, who was pro¬fessor White’s research associatein the preparation of the book,also was cited by the Pulitzer com¬mittee.The book was the final volumein a four-part series on the historyof the federal administrative proc¬ess in the United States. It was published in March, 1958 by Mac¬millan. only one month after pro¬fessor White died.Miss Schneider said: “I onlywish that professor White werealive today to learn of this greatnews. It was his intellectual stat¬ure and knowledge of the Amer¬ican administrative process whichmade the four-volume work amonument to scholarship.”“The Republican Era” coversthe years beginning with Presi¬dent Grant’s administration andends with the assumption of thepresidency by Theodore Rooseveltin 1901. Professor White traced the changes, expansion and prog¬ress of the great government de¬partments and the personalitiesof the men at the helm over theyears.The three previously-publishedvolumes in the series were:“The Federalists” (19481, “TheJeffersonians” (1951), and “TheJacksonians” (1954).Dr. White, who was 67 yearsold when he died, was a memberof the faculty from 1920 to 1956.He pioneered in study of thefield of public administration, and(See “Pulitzer,” page 8) (above) Barbara Wallace, bead dietitian at the Newwomen's dormitory is shown supervising preparation of someof the hundreds of pounds of food consumed daily in dormi¬tory dining room. A Maroon feature describing the foodpreparation aspect of Rh & C begins on page 16 of thisissue. The feature will be completed next week, (photo byWahl)Law school profs tell of 'jury project' studyTwo UC professors havestated that courts should keepa record on how judges usetheir time on the job.They told judges and attorneysof the Seventh Federal circuitWednesday that “some record-keeping” would help cut down de¬lays in American court systems.The two professors are HarryKalven, Jr. and Hans Zeisel, whohave been working for the pasttwo years on the UC Law school“Delay in the Courts” study.“We muse emphasize that thejudge cannot be regarded as anordinary employe,” they said.“The problem of the judge’s timeis (he delicate one of utilizing theefficiency of modern businesswithout destroying the dignity of(lie judge and his court.”After examining the patternshi which judicial hours are spent,they said that “if judge perform¬ance is not recorded, it remains in¬visible.”“It would seem, therefore, thatone of the minimum requirementshere is some record-keeping whichmeasures performance of indi¬vidual pudges,” they said.“Number of cases and even typeof dispositions will not suffice,”they said, “although they are bet¬ter than nothing.“Eventually, some accounting intimeunits will suggest itself,**they said. ^Normally, it should suffice to keep the visibility (ofeach judge’s personal record) in¬ternal within the court, whichthen, if necessary, can take re¬medial action.The two men gave a previewof their forthcoming book, Delayin the courts, to a joint meet¬ing in Chicago of the Bar associ¬ation and the Judicial Conferenceof the Seventh Circuit of Illinois,Indiana and Wisconsin.“One bold stroke will not elim¬inate the burden of delay in ad¬ministering justice in this coun¬try,” Kalven said, “but the pxob-lem must not be abandoned be¬cause of despair over its size.”Kalven said that the “size of theeffort needed to clear out delaysis popularly over-rated.”In New York city, for example,they estimate that it would takethe work of one judge for 12 yearsor 12 judges for one year to clearup the pending cases.“To be sure, the figures forChicago,—which has the longestdelay of any court in the country— will be considerably larger,”Zeisal added. Statistical studies onChicago courts have not beenmade by this group, Zeisal said.In notes prepared for the com¬bination lecture-discussion sessionat the Knickerbocker hotel at 2:30pm Wednesday, May 6, Kalvenand Zeisel said that a great im¬provement in court load could come from a series of “modest”steps in these directions:• Speeding up the trial process.• Improving settlement proce¬dures before trial.• Making more effective use ofjudges’ time.“We have been combining theresources of the law and the be¬havioral sciences in a search forthe facts about our legal systemand its operation,” Zeisel said indescribing the project at the Lawschool. “These facts give us a real¬istic assessment of the problem.”In an illustration, Kalven saidthat if the extreme step of elim¬inating jury trials in personal in¬jury suits in New York city weretaken, the savings would amountto only the time of 1.6 judges peryear in a court whose law divisionhas some 26 judges, and it wouldstill take from five to seven yearsto clear up the cases.“But without sacrificing such abasic right as jury trial, the sameposition can be reached by addingtwo judges to the court,” Kalvensaid,Kalven and Zeisel offered theseobservations:• Abolition of jury trials in per¬sonal injury cases won’t help dra¬matically and would destroy abasic democratic right to trial byjury.• Speeding up the jury trial hasbeen successful in New Jersey and this solution deserves more atten¬tion than it is getting.• Pressure to settle cases beforethey come to trial can be carriedtoo far and result in denying thecourt to meritorious litigation.• As a remedy for delay, pre-trialhearings have an offsetting costsince they give judges less timefor actual trials.• Some improvement can be ob¬tained by having judges workharder and longer, but the magni¬tude of delay won’t yield fully tothis kind of effort alone.• Adding substitute judges suchas arbitrators and auditors tendsto raise suspicions that some easesare getting “second class justice.”• The use of impartial medicalexperts wil ltend to speed up set¬tlement and hence reduce de¬mands for trial.The professors said their re¬search turned up these facts: 71per cent of New York court suitsare settled without trial; yet thesecases take up only 16.2 per centof the total court time; Not quitefive out of eveiy one hundxed per¬sonal injury claims ever reachthe trial stage in New Yoi'k cityand not quite two are ever triedto completion; The fact thatlengthy delays are in prospectdoes not materially affect the ra¬tio of cases settled to thosebrought to trial, though it mayaffect the size of the settlement^ In New Jersey, the same type ofcases take 40 per cent less time totry than in New York city; NewYork city judges lose 13.4 per centof the available whole trial dayscompared with 6.3 for New Jerseyjudges; In 43 AD, Roman Em¬peror Claudius tried to clear upcourt congestion by shorteningthe judges’ summer vacation, butthe decree didn’t stick for morethan a year. New Yoi'k city triedthe same remedy in 1956 with thesame results—it lasted one year.Kalven, a professor of law, andZeisel, a professor of law andsociology, and a number of col¬leagues, have worked on the UCLaw school “jury project” since1954. The project brings togetherthe resources of the behavioralsciences and legal authorities toseek a greater understanding ofthe actual pi’oeesses of the law.The study has expanded beyondthe initial series of questions onthe operation of the jury systemin the United States. Its ramifica¬tions now extend from the studyof court delay to mental healthquestions in insanity trials.At least six and possibly ninevolumes are expected to emergefrom the overall project. Delay inthe Courts, to be published soonby Little, Brown and Companyis the first in the series.Blackfriars, UT announcenew officers for '59-60The University’s two theatrical organizations, University theatre and Blackfriars, lastweek elected their officers for the next academic year.UT elects a board of directors consisting of three, four, or five of its members. The prin¬cipal function of this group is to produce the annual Tonight at 8:30 series. Ozzie Conklinand Neal Johnston will serve as co-presidents of the three-man board with Ira Fistell, com¬pleting the group.turn CBilfl Tuesday night Blackfriars^ will ■ 911 azf called an official end t0 theby Lance Haddix “Sour Mash” year, by electingEsoteric has won the Interclub council’s annual IC sing.The sing, held last Sunday in Ida Noyes hall was attended byparents and friends of the girlThe Esoterics, directed bywhite, chose the selections“Come Sing Ye, My Sisters,”"Halls of Ivy,” and ‘Campus Eve¬ning Song.” Having won the qual¬ity award three times, they thusretire the eup with their choraltriumph this year.Also competing in the singwere: Delta Sigma, Mortarboard,Quadrangler, and Sigma, directedby Helen Faricy and singing,"Wave the flag for old Chicago,”"In these delightful pleasantgroves,” and “To Delta Sigma”;Mortarboard, who sang, ‘‘With alittle bit of luck,” ‘‘Oklahoma,”and "Blue and Gold,” under thedirection of Carol Baumeister,Quadrangler, directed by MaryJoan Spiegel in "Quadranglerinarching song,” "My fair ladymedley,” and "Some folks”; Sig- 5 who are in clubs on campus.Julie Hacker and dressed inma, whose numbers included"Sigma marching song,” Ken¬tucky babe,” and “Give me yourtired, your poor,” as directed byCarleen Johnson.The judges for the competitionwere Marshall Bialosky, instruc¬tor of humanities, Chris Moore,founder of University Glee cluband choral director of Blackfriars,and Edward Rosenheim, associateprofessor of humanities.Also awarded last Sunday w’erethe quantity cup, prize for theclub with the most members par¬ticipating, and the basketball tro¬phy, which rewarded the winnerof last Winter’s girls club basket¬ball tournament. Both of theabove awards went to the Quad-ranglers. its new five-man board. ReplacingJohn Mueller as abbot (producer)will be Jim Best, who last yearserved as treasurer.The position of prior, who actsas the abbot’s assistant, and whois responsible for publicity andpromotion, will be filled by ArtPeterson. Mike Hrinda will serveas treasurer and Abby Sheldonwas elected secretary of the newboard.As usual, the outgoing abbot,John Mueller, will complete thefive-man board. Elected as an ex-officio member of the board wasFred Schmidt, producer of thesecond Blackfriar production,“Alpha Ceniauri.”Jim Best’s final function astreasurer was to announce thatfor the first time in several dec¬ades Blackfriars expect to show aprofit. A fine place to study geology, geography,archaeology, the force of tides, and, as o recentPhoenix cartoon indicated, even anthropology, thePoint is once again throwing its hat (?) into thering challenging the year-long popularity of Harper-reading rooms as a local for studying students.Shown above is a graduate student in the divisionof biological sciences examining the rocks forlichens, (photo by McMahon)Rifes of spring, water fighfs beginby Neal JohnstonThe sounds of spring were longand loud late Monday evening andearly Tuesday morning (mostlythe latter) when the studenthouses along University andWoodlawn celebrated the comingof warm weather with their ownpeculiar rites, an inter-fraternitywater-fight.The original causes of the affairare difficult to trace, even at thisdate and even after considerablehistorical research; the riot seemsto have begun simultaneously attwo different locations.The night of May 4, 1959, washot and sultry and fraternitymeetings were long. This is prob¬ably the reason that so many men were awake at the hour of 12:30.The situation was explosive.At 12:37 an older member ofBeta Theta Pi was baptising ayounger member with beer on thefront porch; while this was goingon both individuals were suddenlydrenched with a deluge of waterthrown from Alpha Delta Phi.At the same time, up the streetsome of the new members of PhiGamma Delta decided to throwtheir pledge master into Botanypond and proceeded to do so.At 12:39 some members of PsiUpsilon, seeing the entire activechapter of Phi Gamma Delta onits way to the pond, brought allof their various hoses, water con¬tainers and fire extinguishers toawait the return of their nearNotice — 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. Powl 1, Minn. Phone CApitol 2-51841411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525— HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & GalleryNEW POLICY• Open 7 nights• Closed tue. and wed. lunch• Featuring Complete wine menuand Hors d'oeuvre TableCheese . Smoll12".1.30 Combination . . . . Small12". . 2.25Sausage .1.65 Mushroom . . .2.00Anchovy ......... .1.65 Shrimp . , 2.25Pepper Cr Onion . . . .1.50 Bacon & Onion . .. .2.00Free Delivery on 411 Pixta to FC StudentsAttention Chow Hounds!Special every Tuesday night — all the fried chickenyou can eat . . . $1.95CHICAGO MAROON • May 8, 1959 neighbors.At 12:42 three Phi Delta Thetasinformed the about-to-be-millingBetas and Alpha Dolts that thingswere brewing up the street andseveral Betas went off to see,were picked up by the returningPhi Gams and carried off into thePhi Gam house, currently beingbombarded by the Psi U’s.At 12:51 a Maroon reporter try¬ing to cover the event in the com¬paratively dry interior of the PhiGam house was thrown out thefront window by a group of itsinhabitants.12:58 a surging mass of AlphaDelts and Phi Delts attacked Betahouse, which stood the seigebravely, but receiving much in¬ternal damage from its defenders,accidentally knocking over theirown water balloons.—At. this point a break mustoccur in the narrative. YourMaroon reporter, on re-enteringPhi Gam house, was inadvertentlylocked up in one of the interiorrooms—At 1:07 two Chicago policemenon three-wheelers were calmed bytwo Betas who explained that allthe noise was caused by a PhiGam initiation. The three-wheel¬ers departed.At 1:14 the five fraternities, actively engaged at this moment,all collected in front of Calvertclub to determine further action,since all participating houseswere wet up to capacity already.It was decided to attack DeltaUpsilon.At 1:16 various and sundryDU’s firmly closed and locked allwindows, except for one youngman, who, by ill luck, was sleep¬ing in a room with opened win¬dows.At 1:25 the five original houses,supplemented by various mem¬bers of DU, surrounded Zeta BetaTau.At 1:26 the group, now number¬ing over 100, entered ZBT house.Nothing happened. »By 1:28 nothing had happened.By 1:29 the group, deciding thatthe far-flung towers of ZBT weretoo far flung from the source ofthe noise, left, collecting severalZBT’s and Phi Sigma Deltas alongthe way.At 1:30 the group had collectedoutside the New Women’s dormi¬tory, shouting some monosyllabicwords this reporter was unable todistinguish.At 1:50 approximately 30 UCundergraduates climbed over thehigh, barracade wall of the dormi¬tory.Bermudas$3.98 upDrip-Dry Cotton Dresses$10.95 up oCucille 31507 east 53rd st.mi 3-9898TheExclusive CleanersFor Your Out of Season Wear . • . , BOXSTORAGE—protected and insured againstFire, TF.eft, and MotFis. Fill it witFi—Woolgarments, dresses, suits, jackets, slacks,skirts, sweaters, robes, ski & snow suits,and otFter houseFiold items. ONLY $3.50Insured for $150.00And, all apparel is beau¬tifully cleaned and press¬ed when returned to you.Furs and fur - trimmedclothing excluded.1309 E. 57th St. Ml 3-0602We Operate Our Own Plant At 1:51 those people on the farside of the wall discovered thatthey had spilled almost all of theirwater en route.At 1:53 it was decided that therewas next to no reason for beingon the far side of the fence, andthe group climbed back.At 2:04 the group, ndw about110, arrived at the C-group, againshouting some unintelligiblewords, again discovering that rthad no water.At 2:12 a hose was discoveredinside the tennis courts at Univer¬sity and 58th, the wall was scaledand the hose turned on.At 2:14, the crowd returnedwith full buckets to Green hall,and met closed windows and auniformed policeman. The crowdimmediately left.By 2:16 the policeman hadcaught one student and demandedthe students identification card.Seeing this, and seeing that thiswa$ but one policeman, the restof the dispersed group amalgmedand returned.At 2:20 the policeman explainedto the group that the noise it wasmaking was disturbing the Kimp-tons. (Chancellor Kimpton, vaca-tioping in Tennessee was unavailable for comment)(See “Editorial,” page 4)Soap box forumcauses commentA group of Univresity stu¬dents with an interest in thebroader social implications ofpacifism have formed a campusorganization: Students for non¬violence. They have set up anobjective of working to build astudent peace movement.Utilizing "one of America's old¬est traditions,” the group spon¬sors a weekly soap-box forum.Every Wednesday noon twospeakers mount a soap-box inHutchinson court, give their viewson current topics, and answerquestions from interested pas¬sers-by.Last Friday a soap-box sessionwas held which had some ratherinteresting implications. For fur¬ther comment see the editorial onpage four and the letter to theeditor on page five.Students for Non-violence wibhold an open meeting Tuesday a’7:30 in Ida Noyes. The topic fordiscussion will be Pacifism andsocialism.Lowell Mason speaks inobservance of Law DayLowell B. Mason, former federal trade commissioner, said on Law day, May 1, that th*American Bar association needs members who are willing to fight for due process of lav*tMason said that he could see no advantage in his resigning from the American Bar asso¬ciation.In an address, Mason noted that Chief justice Earl Warren, of the Supreme court, “ap-in the ABA because of a committee report criticizing th$(above) This betatron can be yours for a mere fraction ofits worth. The valuable piece of merchandise is being offeredfor sale by the research institute.Law lecture May 14Will Maslow, general counsel for the American Jewish-con¬gress, will speak on “Civil rights, civil liberties and the privateattorney general,” in a public lecture sponsored by the lawschool, next Wednesday, May 13th, at 4:30 pm in Law north.In addition to his position with the American Jewish congress,Maslow is currently teaching courses on civil rights and liberties atthe New school for social research, and is a member of the executivecommittee of the world Jewish congress.Maslow served as chairman of the commission on civil rights ofthe national association of intergroup relations officers, as directorof field operations for the war-time President’s committee on fairemployment practices, as a trial attorney and examiner for the na¬tional labor relations board, associate counsel for the New York citydepartment of investigations, and as a reporter on the New YorkTimes.Maslow has also written articles published in several law reviews,and has published articles and book reviews in such periodicals asthe Annals, the Nation, the New Republic, and the Saturday Review.He graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Cornell, holds a law degree fromColumbia university and is a member of the New York and Supremecourt bars. parently resigned membershipcourt’s defense of due process.But I can see no advantage inleaving the field to thosezealots who whine at the bar ofpublic opinion for the curtailmentof rights they feel confident theythemselves will never need.”Mason, a former Illinois statesenator and a Northwestern uni¬versity law school alumnus, saidthat he believed that “due processis the only way a democracy caninsure itself against the blunders,tyrannies and the officiousness ofthose who think they can use to¬talitarian means to achieve dem¬ocratic ends.“Why don’t some members ofthe American Bar associationthink very much of the Bill ofrights?” asked Mason.“Is it because constant associa¬tion of due process with allegedcommunists, thieves, kidnappers,and bank rdbbers has degradedthe high regard this basic con¬cept of liberty and justice oncecommanded? This denegationoccurs simply because such pro¬tections to liberty are seldomdramatized except when called in¬to play by the arrest, indictmentor trial of those charged withcrime.“People do not realize that theBill of rights and due process dealonly collaterally with accused per¬sons. Their fnajor function is to protect democracy, not persons.”The talk was entitled, “Clar¬ence Darrow’s Unreported Case.”Mason said that this referred toDarrow’s role as chairman of acitizen’s committee to investigatethe NRA in the early days of theNRA.Mason, who was Darrow’s chiefcounsel on the committee, dis¬closed how Darrow came to theconclusion that the NRA was athreat to free enterprise and todemocracy. He detailed Darrow’sreport to President Roosevelt towhom NRA was among the key¬stones of New deal policy.“As I saw it then, Darrow’svisit only persuaded the Presi¬dent to sit out the change ofpublic sentiment if there was tobe one,” Masdn said. “As I see itnow, it was the beginning of theend of NRA.”Mason urged that Darrow’scourage in bucking the tide ofpopular opinion that all was go¬ing well — such as he said Presi¬dent Roosevelt felt about theNRA program — should be dis¬played to challenge complacencytoday.“Those who think the funda¬mental concepts of Anglo-Ameri¬can jurisprudence in the world ofcommerce are the breath of lifein the United States are fortyyears behind the times andmm 0 _ m should be brought up to date,”Knight & Stagg are named =7 Mason cautioned against theM A • _ __ _ apathy stemming from fears ofr O W M g ffl mJk r t r ^0 Wu w destruction in an atomic war as^ ■ MTHkEMm W l ■ V W ■ ■ the “last great fallacy the com¬munists encourage and withFiank H. Knight and Amos Alonzo Stagg have been named as two of seven great living which many people in this coun-Americans by the chamber of commerce of the United States.Knight, whose field is the theory of philosophy of economics, is professor emeritus ofeconomics at the university.Born in 1885 in McLean County, Illinois, Knight received his PhD from Cornell in 1916,and taught economics at Cornell and UC. He went to the University of Iowa in 1919 andwas appointed professor in1922. try needlessly burden themselven.“What is there so new aboutdeath that its threat now makesobsolete the greatest instrumentof freedom ever created by themind of man — the Constitutionof the United States? If we areriding to extinction, groveling onthe floor of the tumbrel will notslow the journey.”The faculty of the UC Lawschool sponsored the address.The address was offered as partof the Law school’s participationin the national observance of lairday, May 1st, as proclaimed byPresident Eisenhower.'Spring thing' atnew dorm Wed.New dorm’s last social ac¬tivity of the year is to be“Spring Thing,” next Wednes¬day from 9-12 pm. There will befolk-singing, a jazz concert, anddancing. Free refreshments willbe served.;is professor of economics.His work was recognized by ap- theorist in economics, and in his spiring example of sportsmanship,I, ^ ^ , , _Tr, . -iQoo writings has discussed the impact fair play and religious faith heHe t etui ned to UC m 1.^.0 0f economic changes upon individ- has set for college athletes.”uals and relationships between Stagg, for many years footballscience, philosophy and social coach at UC lives in retirementpointment in 1945 as professor of problems. in California.the social sciences. In 1946 he be- Knight’s citation from the Both Stagg and Knight werecame professor of philosophy and chamber of commerce reads: honored at the chamber’s 47thMorton D Hull Distinguished “For his achievements as a nnual meeting. Awards have beenscholar, writer, and educator in made each year since 1957 to thosethe field of economics, where he who, in the opinion of the busi-has brilliantly represented and ness group, “by their own initia-contributed to the conservative tive, self-reliance and ambitionview.” have made notable contributionsAmos Alonzo Stagg, for the “in- to human progress.service professor.He is a member and past presi¬dent of the American EconomicsAssociation and a member of theEconomic History society and theAmerican society and the Ameri¬can council of Learned Societies.Since his retirement in 1951,Knight has been awarded honor¬ary degrees from the Universitiesof Glasgow, Princeton, Northwest¬ern. and Columbia.Long known as an originalthinker in economic theory,Knight in recent years has beenstudying philosophic implicationsof economics.He is known as a conservative/ Uettr Contact oCenieAbyDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372 GRAND PRIX of MEADOWDALEF.I.A. 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Play safe.Keep a supply handy.The safe stay awake tablet—• available everywhere NEWESTWASH and WEAR SLACKSby DICKIESThese are Bedford cordsShrunk for permanent fit.They're WASH and WEARfor minimum care!with the exclusive Dickiesfeature — Easy-Alter Outlets.Lets out-waist l’/a" withoutsewing.Dickies are Worth hiOur Prices Can’t Be Beat . .It’s Smart To Buy For LessD & GCLOTHES SHOP744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728“In the Neighborhoodfor 40 Years"Hours: 9 a.m.-8 p.m., Mon.-Fri.-9 a.m.-9 p.m., SaturdayWatch for opening ofD & G's new store at851 East 63rdMay 8, 1959 • C H I 6 A G O M A R 6 0 NI~the Chicago maroonfounded — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and intermittently during the summer quarter,by students of the University of Chicago. Inquiries should be sent to the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E. 59thStreet, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus.Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5, Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material, 4 pm,Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 pm Wednesday before publication.All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the individual opinions of the authors. Oh&nnns withMsocShukan(By the Author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys! "and,“Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")SCHULTZ ISA MANY SPLENDORED THINGFreedom or license?Freedom of speech in the United States is certainly to be considered as a quasi-inalien-able right, and one for which men have been ready to lay down their lives. It is indeedunfortunate, therefore, when some misguided persons abuse this right to the extent of plac¬ing the University in a less than favorable aspect.The public burning of the American flag during a Students for non-violence forum last Friday is cer¬tainly demonstrable of a puerile lack of foresight. The picture of a Negro on a platform touching a (match to the flag and then throwing it on the ground is one which we hope will not reach places likePoplarville, Mississippi, or Trumbull Park, or Little Rock, or any other potential hotbed for the obviouspropaganda that is sure to follow.If cheap theatrics are to be employed for the sake of an argument, it is fervently hoped that the im¬plications of the dramatics upon the individual’s race, university, city, and country will be consideredin the future.‘Joke? has serious meaningeLast Monday evening, between midnight and 3 am a water fight was held ranging up anddown University and Woodlawn avenues. This was not an especially significant or notableevent; what interest it has attracted, in these pages and elsewhere, is more a result of thenovelty of such events than any intrinsic significance. However, there were two fairly major aspectswhich we would like to consider here.About 2 pm a rather strange incident occurred outside Green hall. A campus security officer demandeda student’s identification card, the student started to give it to him, the guard grabbed at the card and thestudent refused to give it up under force. At this point the guard pulled his gun. He held the gun againstthe student’s ribs while struggling, with his other hand, for the I-D card. This is a most regrettable in¬cident. The guard was aw?re that the young man was a student, was one of the people that he, theguard, is hired to protect, moreover, the guard should have realized that the situation at that timecalled for no such action.In a letter to a Maroon reporter covering the incident, Dean Ruth McCain wrote: “You and I havediscussed the incident when a guard demanded an identification card from a student who, on a showof reluctance, was treated in a way we thoroughly disapprove of — the guard pulled his gun on thestudent.“The guard has been identified, he admitted the incident, said he realized he was wrong the minutehe did it and that he was very sorry. He has been severely reprimanded and it is quite possible thatfurther action will be taken against him/'It is important to note that the University administration and the chief security officer of the Univer¬sity, Tony Eidson, in no way condone this action.Our second point of interest is with the nature of the event itself. It is obvious that the chief desireof the students involved was to get wet and to make a great deal of noise, both activities rather difficultto accomplish under usual conditions. Both of these desires were fulfilled.The "riot” was not destructive, was not premeditated, and relieved some very real tensions — DeanMcCarn knows of no really comparable event in the last nine years. The administration took no strongaction against individuals, or against the participating fraternities, and it will take none. The Maroonhas no great objection to throwing water at people who want water thrown at them. It was a joketo the people involved, and we treated it as a joke in our coverage of it.However, there were serious aspects, not considered at the time. The noise, lasting as it did longInto the night, in no way helped improve relations between the fraternities and the residents livingalong Woodlawn and University. Eight separate complaints were phoned in to the University, andundoubtedly there were many more that weren’t.Among the people kept up for most of the night were faculty members with important classes toteach in the morning, a doctor, a man who certainly needs to be alert on his job, and one rather sickindividual.The “rioting” groups didn’t consider the inconvenience they were causing; perhaps they couldn’t beexpected to consider this point at that time, but now there is time for some reflection. All of the resi¬dents who made complaints have had a chance to catch up on their sleep, and no one is really angry,but, it is to be hoped and it is to be expected that there will be no more inter-fraternity water-fightsfor some time to come.endorsementAt the last meeting of theJnter-fraternity council a rep¬resentative from Kappa AlphaPsi made a rather unusual re¬quest, namely that some of thenon-Chicago members of its chap¬ter be allowed to participate inUC inter-mural activties. This re¬quest should be passed.Kappa Alpha Psi is, effectually,an all Negro fraternity. The Iotachapter, while chartered throughthe University of Chicago, con¬tains students from Loyola, De-Pauw and Chicago teachers col¬lege. In fact, it’s rather large chapter contains only three activemembers from Chicago and twopledges.The Iota chapter wants tostrengthen its position here, feel¬ing it has a legitimate functionto perform. It wants to advanceitself by a more active participa¬tion in University affairs, includ¬ing athletics. However, the fra¬ternity doesn’t believe that it canpresent much of a case for itselfwith only five participating UCmembers.For this reason it has asked theI-F council for permission to match its own Chicago studentparticipation with an equal num¬ber of Iota chapter members fromother schools until the chapterimproves its condition.This proposal has certain diffi¬culties involved in it: insurancefor participating non-UC students,participation of Varsity athletesfrom other schools on UC inter¬mural teams, and so forth. Butthese problems are not insur¬mountable. While it is a breakwith tradition, the I-F councilshould add its endorsement to theKappa Alpha Psi petition.UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor SPECIALTO U. OF C. STUDENTSAny :t pizzas for the price of 2small $1.00 .... ..large $1.95 FREE UCmedium $1.45 P*PI |\/PDYx large $2.95 DtLIVtKTgiant $3,95Terry's Pizza1518 East 63 Ml 3-40454 • CHICAGO M A R O O N • May 8, 1959* Beppo Schultz, boulevardier, raconteur, connoisseur, sportsman,bon vivant, hail fellow well met—in short, typical Americancollege man—smokes today’s new Marlboros.“Why do you smoke today’s new Marlboros, hey?’’ a friendrecently asked Beppo Schultz.“I smoke today’s new Marlboros,” replied Beppo, looking upfrom his 2.9 litre L-head Hotchkiss drive double overhead cam¬shaft British sports car, “because they are new."“New?” said the friend. “What do you mean—new?”“I mean the flavor’s great, the filter’s improved, the cigaretteis designed for today’s easier, breezier living,” said Beppo.“Like this 2.9 litre L-head Hotchkiss drive double overheadcamshaft British sports car?” asked the friend.“Exactly,” said Beppo.“She’s a beauty,” said the friend, looking admiringly at thecar. “How long have you had her?”“It's a male,” said Beppo.“Sorry,” said the friend. “How long have you had him?”“About a year,” said Beppo.“Have you done a lot of work on him?” asked the friend.“Oh, have I not!” cried Beppo. “] have replaced the pushrodswith a Roots type supercharger. 1 have replaced the torque witha synchromesh. I have replaced the tachometer with a doubleside draft carburetor.”“Gracious!” exclaimed the friend.“I have replaced the hood with a bonnet,” said Beppo.“Land o’ Goshen!” exclaimed the friend..“And I have put gloves in the glove compartment,” said Beppo.“My, you have been the busy one,” said the friend. “Youmust be exhausted.”“Maybe a trifle,” said Beppo, with a brave little smile.“Know what I do when I’m tired?” said the friend.“Light a Marlboro?” ventured Beppo.“Oh, pshaw, you guessed!” said the friend, pouting.“But it was easy,” said Beppo, chuckling kindlily. “When theeyelids droop and the musculature sags and the psyche is de¬pleted, what is more natural than to perk up with today’s newMarlboro?”“A great new smoke with better ‘makinV and a great newfilter!” proclaimed the friend, bis young eyes glistening.“Changed to keep pace with today’s changing world!” de¬clared Beppo, whirling his arms in concentric circles. “A ciga¬rette for a sunnier age, an age of greater leisure and more beck¬oning horizons!”Now, tired but happy, Beppo and his friend lit Marlboros andsmoked for a time in deep, silent contentment. At length thefriend spoke. “He certainly is a beauty,” he said.“You mean my 2.9 litre L-head Hotchkiss drive double over¬head camshaft British sports car?” asked Beppo.“Yes,” said the friend. “How fast will he go?”“Well, I don't rightly know,” said Beppo. “I can’t find theStarter.” ® 1959 Max Shuman* •If you’re sticking with the good old non-filter cigarette, youcan’t do better than Philip Morris—a mild, rich, tasty smoke,made by the people who make Marlboros.DID YOU KNOWThe protection you give your familytoday may have to be provided bylife insurance tomorrow. Make sureyou have enough life insurance.As the Sun Life represent¬ative in your community,may I he of service ?Ralph J. Wood Jr. '48SUN LIFE OF CANADARepresentative , N LoSo||e * Chicago 2, III.FR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADANon-violence group defends Friday forumWE WOULD like to takethis opportunity to elucidatethe motives behind both ourorganization itself and its spon¬sorship of soap-boxing in frontof the Coffee shop.The Students for Nonviolenceorganization was formed by stu¬dents on this campus who feelthat the present internationalpolicy can lead us only to disaster,and that students can and musttake the initiative in looking forand working toward constructivealternatives to the arms race.With this motivation we meetalternate Tuesday evenings withSpeakers on various aspects of thepresent policy and/or alternativesuggestions, or to discuss arti¬cles and books, by military stra¬tegists, scientists, religious lead¬ers and statesmen, on the abovetopics, with the emphasis on non¬violent resistance as an organizedami constructive method.The quest for a constructivealternative to the arms race iscommon to all our members andparticipants, but from there onour group encompasses a verybroad variety of beliefs and atti¬tudes toward forms of govern¬ment (or nongovernment), eco¬ nomic systems, and moral valuesand motivation.WHEN WE proposed to havean open forum on campus, it waswith the hope that we wouldbreak through the apathy andcynicism which pervades the stu¬dent body. Our policy basedfirmly on a premise of freedomof speech and aimed at stimulat¬ing discussion is twofold:1) In the hope of having thegeneral student body look at andevaluate the present policy, wewould present our alternativesfrom the various points of viewof our heterogeneous member¬ship.2) We hoped that a generalopen forum could be establishedat which diverse groups could pre¬sent their ideas relative to thepolitical and social welfare of ournation and the world. Needless tosay these speakers do not neces¬sarily reflect the views of the Stu¬dents for Nonviolence organiza¬tion. This is also the situationwhen our organization partici¬pants diverge from their commonground and speak on theirbroader political, social and eco¬nomic ideas.AS QIJR general policy is toprovide freedom of speech before the student body, we realize thatit is necessary to make clear ourrelationship to the ideas of theindividual speakers and we fur¬ther realize that we have thusfar failed to do so explicitly.The incident that precipitatedthis letter was our latest soap boxon May 1 featuring JoffreStewart. We do not regret havinghim sjreak, though as a groupwe do not approve of his rhetori¬cal technique nor advocate hisideas and suggestions. We do re¬gret that it was not made clearat the time that Joffre was speak¬ing as an individual and not re¬flecting the ideas of our organi¬zation.There will, therefore, be achange in our general format.From now on all speakers willappear under the auspices of theStudents for Nonviolence, butonly those presenting our ideaswill be provided with our spon¬sorship.We hope that we have clarifiedour position and that anyone in¬terested in more information willfeel free to contact us.Phil A It bachMarlene SarnatExecutive committee members Letter policyThe Maroon publishes letters to the editor on subjectsof interest to the student body. No unsigned letters willbe printed under any circumstances, however, the writer'sname will be withheld, or noms de plume used, on request.Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced, using60-character space margins. Please type on one side ofthe paper only. Letters over 250 words are subject toediting.Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andintermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon,Ida Noyes hall, 1212 East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-0800,extensions 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionsby mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday.►i»> Kimpton has right to opinionbut should interpret responsiblyChancellor Kimpton, whileon vacation in the South, hasbeen quoted as saying that,“The Supreme Court decision(1954) lias worsened race rela¬tions in the South.”As an individual, the chancellorhas a right to his own opinion,but we feel that as a representa¬tive of the university, he has theobligation of responsibly inter¬preting one of our most seriouscurrent problems.The Maroon did not give com¬plete coverage of the chancellor’sremarks; (See editor’s note) butone can infer from what is printedthat he is saying two things: thatrace relations has been the con¬tact of people of different racialgroups in harmony, and, secondlythat since the Supreme Court deci¬sion of 1954, the amount of suchharmonious contact has decreased,therefore the decision has broughtabout a worsening of race rela¬tions.One wonders if the chancellorrealized that educated opinion hasasserted that among the mainreasons for the lack of harmo¬nious contact has been the out¬lawing of the NAACP in severalsouthern states, the forcing of theUrban League out of the Commu¬nity Chest, and the dispersionof inter racial discussion groups.Ttiese actions have been forced by the same groups whose pur¬pose the Supreme Court has ruledto be illegal.What the chancellor did not saywas that in the past race relationshave always involved the contactof different racial groups in sub¬ordinate and superordinate posi¬tions. The classical form of suchcontact was (he slave state, whoseconflict was at a minimum andharmony of sorts at a maximum.Such was the state of the UnitedStates before the Civil War. Sincereconstruction, the South hasmaintained a caste system wherethe Negro is “legally segregated”and kept subordinate in social,cultural and political affairs. Thissegregation breeds, and has bred,inequality in basic life opportuni¬ties as well as in social institu¬tions such as schools, hospitals,and other welfare services. It wasthis basic inequality in the systemagainst which the Supreme Courtspoke out—the inherent inequal¬ity of a caste system which wouldkeep the American Negro subor¬dinate forever. It is from thissame system that the lynchingand other atrocities, which havefilled our newspapers in the pastweek, have sprung — atrocitieswhich the chancellor apparentlydoes not take into considerationwhen he offers his opinion on racerelations. These conditions must be kept always in mind whendiscussing race relations or onemay fall into the trap of determin¬ing the nature of race relationsby considering only the amountof contact alone, rather than thetype of conflict — by the verymeeting of different groups,rather than by the presence or ab¬sence of small interracial groups,than by the absence of Negro rep¬resentatives in Congress from theSouth.The Supreme Court dealt withthe basic considerations of racerelations when it ruled that sepa¬rate but equal educational facili¬ties were inherently unequal andin so doing the court has broughtrace relations closer to an equali-tarian basis than it has been be¬fore in the history of this coun¬try. For this the Supreme Courthas been under constant pressurefrom the reactionary forces in theSouth, forces which are nowjoined, inadvertently I hope, byour chancellor, who falsely per¬ceived of race relations in termsof the amount of contact, ratherthan the type of contact.Lula White(Editor's note: The Maroonreported Chancellor Kimpton'sfull statement as relayed overthe Associated Press wire serv¬ice.)(More letters, page 6) Editor-in-chiefRochelle Meta DubnowAssociate editor Business managerNeal Johnston Lawrence D. KesslerAdvertising manager Jerry BretlingerEditorial board. .....Dubnow (chairman), Bretlinger, Conklir^Hoddix, Johnston, KesslerExecutive news editor Lance HaddixNews editors Joel Ashenfarb, Sandy SciacchitanoSports editor Bill SpadyCulture editor Rosiland ConklinCalendar editor Marge SchwarzCopyreaders Reed Paccos, Larry Lindgren, Riki MossArtists Ron Burton, Rick Ellis, R. David SilverLecture editor Albert N PodellArt critic Max KozloffCirculation manager Joan HelmkenMorgue editor Pat MasserMaroon photo editor Karl FiglioEditor emeritus Gary MokotoffPhoto staff Al Berger, Gretchen Grant, Jim Pear,Morris Newman, John McMahonEditorial staff: Tom Cablk, Bertram Cohler, Murray Darrish, Rosemary Galli,Marilyn Guse, Phillip Marcus, Riki Moss, Avima Ruder, Shelley Stolowichfor the finest elec¬tronic service, bring itto CHELTEN T.V.CORP., 2915 E. 79thSt. or Call ES 5-36663/te PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433ON 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.Trousers .50c- Skirts . 50cJackets .. .50c Dresses . .95cSuits . .95c Suits (2-piece) . .. . . .95cTop Coats . 1.00 Light Coat . .95cOver Coats 1.10 Heavy Coat .1.10ISewl 20% off on all laundryUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT SERVICE CENTERReynolds Club Basement HOURS11:00-1:004:00-5:00Mon.-Fri. DON'T MISS THESE NEW BOOKS!Tillichs Theology of Culture $4.00Mills: The Sociological Imagination $6.00Packard: The Status Seekers $4,50Barzun: The House of Intellect $5.00Four New Meridian Paperbacks, including the Rose Aristotle.. $1.45University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEMay 8, 1959 • CHICAGO M’ A R 0 0 N •'tt >*"";::nrA 11 1"tii XDecision crumbled patternThe unanimous decision of the nation’s highest tribunal in 1954 (segregation in the pub¬lic schools is inherently unequal) did not disturb normal racial relations in the South.Normal racial relations cannot exist in a segregated society buttressed by custom and law.The decision of the United States Supreme Court crumbled a pattern (often described as paternal), andcreated, that is, re constructed a pattern of equality for citizens based upon inherent rights rather thanindividual benevolence and charity.Chancellor Kimpton’s address in Tennessee is descriptive of existing feelings among many citizensin the hard and soft core areas; but feelings are not to be equated with legal rights. They are feelings.As a result of a positive decision a new and vigorous climate of human relations is developing midstthe tension and violence. To be sure, men are not necessarily changing their attitud.es, but they arechanging their behavior; and our expectancy is changed behavior. We trust that the religious andeducational institutions will effect attitudinal changes. Editor Ralph McGill, Atlanta Constitution, oncewrote:“Our problem simply is learning to live with the change.” Mr. Kimpton’s prediction of “eventual”recognition of the law of the land is a peculiar language that is heard frequently, not from our freesociety’s loyal supporters, but from its untimely oppositionists.Surely, we know full well that the illustrious chancellor is in support of the law of the land and ofall its democratic guarantees of citizenship; but the American dilemma is not resolved by redundancyof statements of implied doubt, hesitancy, anc^vague gradualism.The dilemma is resolved in the firm conviction of law, order, and rights—now! Higher education mustbe committed to these goals in positive affirmations rather than casual suspicions or doubts.Samuel Lucius CandyTHE TAREYTON RING MARKS THE REALTHING!HERE’S HOW TAREYTON’S DUAL FILTER WORKS:1* It combines ar> efficient purewhite outer filter...2. with a unique inner filter of acti¬vated charcoal ... which has beendefinitely proved to make the smokeof a cigarette milder and smoother.new dual filter TareytonProduct of i/At dnuMxan 'Jv&teto-^onuuvnu — c/o&ueto is our middle name *. r. f.L orryxmy ■~ CHICA6° MAROON • May 8, 1959"»ft ■ ■ , ■ , ^<n jminiini a — —: uiaiMSJj(/shuhTNnw.C*QlEVIU£,GETTINGVRlfXjKV/Eft! VERYSA6!the mrhwGfcNEftfUlVHLDUtE.* OWETO NtNlttftLCttftftTIHG „efficiency? &0T I'MAUaJRYS rt(YMNtMRLOKRRTYNfreHiciency-(OHtfiE CftrtI GO FROMTHERE ? VOOTIHNP WORK SoCHeZm^TIik a iwshie cftfROTv.KING WO OMftftEUA w&bSHtmintsWfe toit AMOClEflALf HVSICrbT I HOHSEKSETftUERV rnOTHEH'[got to urrnTT> RCttPT HER00V fOR WHftlhe is—Be HeI NUCLEAR „Iphvsicist ORWWBRELUT BfcSlbtS. * KVOEBR PHYSICISTSDIDN'T HAVE MN STANDS 10TO KEEP THEIR VMWKUASIN. THEY’D All GET DIET F*jDD»t dr pKEUWQKlft.I CANCtftTHiNtY SEE VJELL KID,SHE'S GOY ABftOOfrl CLCttlFV»U Ofwtwuins,»T wiU!Rudy'sAuthorizedU of C Class RingsSoles OMEGA ServiceIndividuallydesigned, handmadejeteelrg(Discount to students)1523 East 53rd st.NOrmal 7-2666SPORTSMANSHIPSome champions are neverconquered or even challenged.Such is the case of this knit¬ted pullover sport shirt. It is •supreme performer in the wayIt looks and feels, the way itwashes and wears. With golf,era and all sportsmen, it al«ways wins.Cotton *500Ban Ion *8°°JBrittanp,ltd.7104 S. JefferyPL 2-4030Open Mon. Cx Thurs. eves.Free Parking atCyril Court Garage1948 E. 71st PI. Scripts?All persons interested inwriting a script for the 1%0Blaekfriar show are invitedto meet at 7 pm, May 12, atIda Noyes hall.A plot summation andone developed scene withdialogue must be submittedby July 31 to the Black-friar box in Reynolds club.Scripts will be judged bythree competent critics,whose final decision will beannounced in October.Any further questionswill be answered at theMay 12 meeting.Minds, too,need cultivatingyocd all measure.Our nation, up to now, hasbeen richly rewarded by thequality of thought nourishedin our colleges and universi¬ties. The kind of learning de¬veloped there has made pos¬sible our American way of life.Today these colleges arefacing a serious crisis. Lowsalaries are driving too manygifted teachers into otherfields. Many classrooms areseriously overcrowded. And by1967 enrollments are expectedto double!Our institutions of higherlearning are doing their bestto meet these challenges. Butthey need help. Help th6 col¬lege of. your choiee now, andhelp perpetuate the AmericanWay of 1ff6.' *If you Wont to know more about whatthe college crisis means to you, writefor a free booklet to: HIGHER EDU¬CATION, Box 36, Times Square Sta¬tion, New York 36, New York.■Evaluate Hyde Park renewalWill urban renewal work in a neighborhoodundergoing rapid racial change?Chicago is betting $9.2 million of its own moneythat it will. And the city has just persauded the federalgovernment to earmark $28.5 million* for the biggestproject of its kind the nation has yet seen: a five-yearsurgery to slice out 20 per cent of a blight-infected 1.3square mile area fringing the University of Chicago inhopes of saving the rest.If the operation succeeds, it should offer a pattern oftreatment for a score of major urban neighborhoodssuffering similar ills. Already, successes and failures ofthe Hyde Park-Kenwood community have shown manyanother slum-threatened neighborhood how to overcomeprofiteering slumlords, corrupt or indifferent officials,legal red tape. It was the birthplace of the neighborhood- ••••. •='The article appearing on this page is reprintedfrom House and Home magazine.■: <*„ * e, 5 'block group—a tool so vital in fighting blight via re¬habilitation and conservation that the idea is becomingnational doctrine. It represents the first majort effortby a university to mobilize renewal against a collar ofslums threatening to envelop its multi-million dollarplant and convert its residential environs into the kindof neighborhood where professors will not live. At least20 other schools face the same problem. Working toward*the same goals, the university and the communityaround it have developed some of the nation’s sharpestslum-fighting methods.Hyde Park-Kenwood is far from non controversial. Itlias refused to sidestep the relation between race prob¬lems and blight, at the same time remaining steadfastlyinterracial in its approach. It is the first area where re¬newal plans have drawn the heaviest artillery of theCatholic ehurch in an effort first to block, then amendthem. A lot more than money—in fact, whole philoso¬phies of urban renewal—ride on the outcome.The plan opens a huge market for the private housingindustry. It assumes that public funds, used against theworst blight in the neighborhood, will be matched with$30 million by owners of the remaining 80 per cent—goaded by the law if necessary—to remove blight-invitingconditions. And, that the two will make a neighborhoodso pleasant to live in that its express-train shift frommiddle class to poor residency will be stopped.If Hyde Park-Kenwood is successful, it should sparka huge amount of rehabilitation work across the nationin old city neighborhoods-work housing contractorscan tap if they try—Its value as a demonstration is fargreater than its own giant dollar scope.And it will prove the ideas of the men who fought towrite the whole concept of urban renewal into the Hous¬ing Act of 1954—the concept that the federal govern¬ment should, as HHF Administrator Cole says, “helpthose who help themselves.”‘Chicago qualified for 75 per cent federal aid in HydePark-Kenwood by agreeing to pay all administrativecosts of program, estimated at an extra $1 million ormore. What does a neighborhood like Hyde Park-Kenwoodhave to do to set the stage for a $30 million rehabilitationmarket? Heine’s what this community has done:1. Recognized the threat of blight at the grass-rootslevel and organized to fight it through volunteer effort.2. Mobilized institutions in the area to add their weightto the fight.3. Campaigned with unique effectiveness to nudgeinert city officials into enforcing existing codes and toget new laws to provide new slum-fighting tools.4. Conducted a community-wide self-diagnosis andplanned carefully and well on the basis of its findings.Specifically, the plan in Hyde Park calls for demolish¬ing relatively few buildings (600 out of 3,077). Some105 acres thus cleared will be redeveloped to reduce popu¬lation density, provide more parks, school space, parkingand ther amenities. Meanwhile, vigorous enforcementof the city’s building and housing laws plus more de¬molition if needed, will bring remaining structures upto standard.What gives the plan a prospect of success is the community’s monumental battle to get this far, which hasgenerated a uniquely broad understanding of the prob¬lem. Big question: can the plan be carried out fastenough and thoroughly enough to keep most of theresidents who may otherwise give up the fight and moveout? (Planners say yes, though it will probably takelonger than the five years allotted.) Big threat: tre¬mendous pressure of low - income families (mostlyNegro i who would replace them.Hyde Park-Kenwood, (population 75,000) edged on oneside by the breezy, beach-fringed shore of Lake Michi¬gan, on another by the University of Chicago, is collaredon two others by the city’s notorious south side Negroghetto, which includes some of the nation’s most crowd¬ed slums. Residents of these slums, mostly recent arri¬vals from the rural South, attracted by industrial jobsand under constant pressure by still more newcomers,inevitably seek better housing. Some find it in Univer¬sity-oriented, interracial Hyde Park-Kenwood.The problem was first recognized by a small groupof Quakers led by Mrs. Julia Abrahamson, who saw thatunscrupulous landlords were exploiting the aching needfor Negro housing, charging high rents that forcedlow-income tenants to crowd themselves far beyond thecapacities of their apartments. In 1949, the group formedthe Hyde Park-Kenwood Community confei’ence, organ¬ized the neighborhood by blocks to watch for and reportillegal housing practices. At the same time they wel¬comed and attempted to interest new arrivals of allraces in keeping up the neighborhood.Two years later the university, alarmed at the decaywhich was spreading in spite of the grass-roots effortto slop it, stepped into the picture through formation ofthe South East Chicago commission, headed by Execu¬tive Director Julian Levi. If Julia Abrahamson’s con¬ciliatory persuasion left inert officialdom still inert (e.g.,over adequate street lighting, building code enforce¬ment, police protection), or if slumlords proved unre¬pentant, Levi roared in with a frontal assault using thefinancial and political resources of the University.Blunt, foghorn-voiced Levi and mild, trim Julia Abra¬hamson formed a team that won the respect, eventuallythe support of city officials. By 1956, when Mrs. Abra¬ hamson left the conference, physical conversions ofgood apartments to cell-like slum units had been stoppeddead and city services to the community were close topar. But conversion by use—moving three or four fami¬lies into one apartment—had not. And the populationmakeup of the area continued to shift until it was farbeyond the 20 per cent many experts say is the “tippingpoint” beyond which a neighborhood “goes black.”Hyde Park-Kenwood has not yet tipped (though byDecember, 1958, it was 37 per cent Negro), thanks tothe strenuous efforts of the citizens and the University.But it was evident that stronger measures than those inuse which by then included “spot redevelopment” ofsome blight sores by the Chicago Land Clearance com¬mission—were needed. And the community was alreadyat work on them. The result was the urban renewalplan, hammered out by SECC planner Jack Meltzer—under a $198,000 federal planning advance—for Chicago’sCommunity Conservation board. Close cooperation withplanning committees of both community groups, and twolong rounds of block-by-block meetings with residentsproduced a plan that had near-complete community sup¬port by the spring of ’58.But the fight was not over. While most major issueshad been settled, and Chicago’s mortgage bankers were(through the Chicago Association of Commerce) pledg¬ing to lend the estimated $30 million that property own¬ers would need to carry out their part of the plan, a newand impressive adversary arose: the Catholic Arch¬diocese of Chicago.Msgr. John J. Egan, executive director of the Cardi¬nal’s committee on conservation appeared before the citycouncil’s public hearings on the plan, said the archdio¬cese could not approve the plan as it stood. In half-Catholic Chicago, the statement was a weighty one.Egan argued that the plan (which calls for razing6,000 dwelling units, eventual replacement with 2,000)!would displace thousands into other crowded neighbor¬hoods to create slum problems there.Retorted Janies V. Cunningham, executive director ofthe conference and a Catholic (and friend of FatherEgan) himself: “If there is no plan thousands upon thou¬sands of families are going to flee the deterioration andmove to other neighborhoods in far greater numbersthan orderly relocation might bring.” He warned that‘if there is no plan, nearly all the 30.000 (dwelling unitsin the area) are going to be lost in time as standardunits.”Underlying this debate and openly brought out byother critics was the problem of public housing and therace question. On one side, opposing any increasein the 84 public housing units planned, were those (chief¬ly the University) who feared low-income (and primarilyNegro) housing would jeopardize availability of mortgage money for the vital private rehabilitation phase ofthe project. On the other, were those (including theUrban league, several churches, some aldermen and evenCunningham’s group) who feared the project mightprice the neighborhood out of reach of most Negroes,spoil its inter-racial character. Result: the plan wasapproved without change, but with a recommendationthat public housing units be hiked to 200.Is the plan subtly anti-Negro? Supporters say nowSome still say yes. (60 per cent of families to be dis¬placed are Negro.) Says University anthropologist SolTax: “The chief point is that nothing at all could havebeen done if racial integration had not been an explicitand integral part of the plan.”Ivy imports to UC‘’Penny Poems,” an enter¬prise begun by a group of Yaleuniversity graduate students,will go on sale at the book¬store today.Helped by Yale press, sev¬eral hundred copies of onepoem were distributed everyday. An attempt is being madeCLEG PATRA, snake charmer,saysl “Alltna queens admire handsome hair...so asp for Wildroot!” to extend the sale of the poems(which cost a penny, ofcourse) to other universities.Copies of a new poem will ap¬pear each day for the nexttwo weeks at the magazinecounter.mnr?inSteamshipRound Trip*340 up - frequent sailings1Thrift Round Trip by AIRSHANNON LONDON PARIS$408.60 $444.60 $480.60Rates to other destinations onapplication. By using stop overprivileges, your entire transportation in Europe may be containedin your air ticket.CARS available on rental, purchaseor repurchase guarantee basis.Choice of Over 100Student Class Tours $CQCTravel Study Tours J ^Conducted Tours "University Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines, hasrendered efficient travel serviceon a business basis since 1926.See your local travel agent forfolders and details or write us.UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mass. PRE-ELECTRICSHAVE LOTION to go* a bottor shovelQuicker . . . closer . . , smoother . .no matter what machine you use. 1.00plus >J«SKULTON New York • Torontohither & yonRiesman: more coeducation for Harvard(Harvard university) DavidRiesman, former UC professorin the social sciences, present¬ly Henry Ford II Professor of so¬cial sciences, declared recentlythat “further integration” of Har¬vard and Radcliffe “is the onlyreasonable path left open to themnow. that the men are getting in orderto think they arc getting a goodeducation.” (The Harvard Crim¬son) to worry much longer. Highereducation may soon be a luxurywhich not every person can af¬ford.“Since Radcliffe shares the Har¬vard faculty, it is difficult for meto see how she can use her inde¬pendence,” he said, and added thatfurther integration would enableRadcliffe to help Harvard by de¬veloping a more liberal, less ca¬reer-oriented, attitude toward edu¬cation and would “hopefully”make girls less “anti-career.”During college, able girls should“take charge,” he emphasized.“They must run the Crimson, in¬stead of just being reporters.”Riesman asserted, however, thatcoeducation is not necessarily thebest education. He agreed withLionel Trilling that since this isa “male dominated world, girlshave to get an education as bad as (Antioch College) — A green-thumbed Antioch student was thecause of a bit of consernationwhen he was found clearing spacefor a garden behind his dormitory.Declared senior Bernie Finifter,“It’s the natural thing to do. I justfeel the urge. It’s great relaxationfrom book learning. Helps to clearthe cobwebs.”He explained that he intendedto plant radishes, lettuce, cucum¬bers, beans, and perhaps evenflowers. “I like to work in soiland I like to watch things grow.I may get a couple of crops ofradishes and some lettuce if theweather’s good.”Housing coordinator Hank Boi¬ler warned against other studentsattempting to imitate Finifter’shorticultural activities lest An¬tioch begin to resemble a farm,though nothing could be found inthe legislative code prohibitingthe planting of a garden. (AntiochCollege Record)(University of Minnesota) —Educators who are worried be¬cause “anybody can go to collegein this day and age” won’t have Minnesota apparently intends toabandon its “median” policy andskyrocket to the top of the tuitionheap. A $15 increase would put usonly six small dollars behind Ohiostate, where the tuition amountsto $270 a year.California’s tuition is $136 year¬ly. All other major state institu¬tions have a $200 bill or higherfor their students. In Wisconsin,the legislature is proposing a $20tuition hike.According to Changing Times,the Kiplinger magazine of March,1959, the cost of a college educa¬tion has risen more sharply since1946 than other “commodities.”While tuition rose 235 per cent,the cost of a quart of milk, for ex¬ample, rose only 47 per cent, ac¬cording to the report. Other com¬parisons: bread, 90 per cent; steel,122 per cent; automobile (Chevro¬let), 140 per cent; coal, 82 per cent.The complete cost of a collegeeducation has risen 77 per centsince 1946, so the increase in tui¬tion appears to be out of line incomparison with the whole cost.Since a college education is worth thousands of dollars andstudents pay only about 50 per¬cent of the bill, some think thetuition hike is justified. But whena nation desperately needs college-trained persons, it should notmake education a luxury. (TheMinnesota Daily)(University of Minnesota)—TheAll-University Congress lastmonth passed on its own demise;AUC president Wayne Andersonwas reported happy about the de¬cision. The university’s SenateCommittee on Student Affairs dis¬banded the body and will set upthe new government.Minnesota students voted lastspring to abolish the congress, butthe senate committee disregardedthis referendum, deciding later totake over the reorganization ofthe government.An editorial comments, “Con¬gress has always been a target ofcriticism, as is to be expected forany organization trying to repre¬sent a large and diversified elec¬torate. An even more difficulttask was gaining enough strengthto make the student voice loudenough to be heard as far as theAdministration Building.” (TheMinnesota Daily)(University of Texas) —In pro¬ test of high grade point averagesand “in the interest of togetherness” 17 junior women founded anorganization called Bored Martyrs, announcing their existenceat a meeting of Mortar Board, na¬tional senior women’s honorarysociety. The Bored Martyrs feltthe Mortar Boards worthy of their“honorable Recognition . . . where¬as we, the Bored Martyrs, have toour credit 1.99 grade averages orbelow and/or no campus activi¬ties, and whereas we . . . are assured that togetherness is vitalto the sociological, psychological,economical, intellectual, and po¬litical well-being of both groups. ’(The Daily Texan)THINKLISH The Maroon will resumeits series on the academicinterests and purposes ofthe various schools andcommittees in the Univer¬sity.Starting June 5, theschools of business and lawwill be discussed. The serieswill consider the medicalchool, graduate library andthe Social Service admin¬istration beginning nextsummer. The committeeson international relationsand human developmentwill also be included in thisseries.Pulitzer Prizeis awarded UC'er(from page 1)CIGARETTES English; NEARSIGHTED PROFESSORThlnkllsh translation; This fellow has somany degrees, he looks like a thermom¬eter. He’s so myopic, he needs glasses toview things with alarm. Though quitethe man of letters, the only ones he favorsare L.S./M.F.T. “I take a dim view ofother brands,” he says. “Give me thehonest taste of a Lucky Strike!” We seethis chap as a sort of squintellectual (butremarkably farsighted when it comesto cigarettes). wrote the first text book on thatsubject. Dr. White was an expertin the field of personnel adminis¬tration, and served from 1931-33as a member of the Chicago CivilService commission and from 1934to 1937 as a member of the USCivil Service commission.From 1939-41 he also was amember of President Roosevelt’scommittee on civil service im¬provement, and from 1950 to 1952was a member of the Loyalty Re¬view board. Dr. White was presi-dent of the American PoliticalScience association in 1914. and ofthe American society for PublicAdministration, 1947.English: ViKING OARSMENHOW TO MAKE *25Take a word—television, for example. With it, you can make commer¬cial TV (sellevision), loud TV (yellevision), bad TV (smellevision) andgood TV (swellevision). That’s Thinklish—and it’s that easy! We’repaying $25 for the Thinklish words judged best— your check is itchingto go! Send your words to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, NewYork. Enclose your name, address, college or university and class. He received the Bancroft Amcr-j ican History prize for ‘The JackI sonians.” Among other recogni-I tion, he was given in 1954 theWarner Stockberger award of theSociety for Personnel Administra¬tion and the Rockefeller PublicService award of Princeton uni¬versity, 1952.Dr. White was chairman of thepolitical science department from1940 to 1948, and was appointedErnest DeWitt Burton Distin¬guished Service professor of publie administration in 1955.1; HORSEPOWERGet the genuine articleGet the honest tasteof a LUCKY STRIKE Thinklish:u OF AASHINGFO*'fP.tOEFUCK GRAYEnglish: OOO POUND EUROPEDublin to the iron Curtain; Africato Sweden. You’re accompanied —not herded. College age only. Alsoshort trips. $724-$l,390.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255 Sequoia (Box 4) — Pasadena, Cal.(nglish hallway in a haunted house English: STOCK JUDGEThink!Thinklish: HORRIDORSSIfcWtL iUINDA®* u- rWr//j/);Me|FE: EAVIJ. 6aiAN£u coUMc EE ... SAC***1*™ Vttf* TheDisc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the *reek© A T. Ca. Product of c//\l<J<stfac%c-fenytais our ?niddU name• CHICAGO MAROON May 8, 1959 Stravinsky - AGONBerg — 3 Pieces for OrcheslroWebern — 6 Pieces for OrchestraHANS ROSBAUDxwn 18807 $2.49HI TTr.t";Tr ! _AM IF newsJPN suggests alum group 3rd year Rhodes may wedPlans for a proposed AlumniInter-fraternity council werediscussed at the Tuesdaymeeting of the I-F council.In response to a suggestion byDean of students John P. Nether-ton that such an alumni groupbe formed, the council will holda luncheon meeting, tentativelyscheduled for May 21, with mem¬bers of the various brotherhoodalumni associations. Members ofFord Foundationwill give awardsThe Fund for Adult educa¬tion, established by the Fordfoundation, Wednesday in¬vited applications for approxi¬mately 36 fellowships to be award¬ed on April 1, 1960, in the fieldsof mass communications and lib¬eral education. The fellowships,totaling $200 thousand are de¬signed to enable individuals inthese fields to engage in study ortraining for a period of from sixto twelve months that will broad¬en and liberalize their knowledgeand increase their effectiveness.The mass media fellowships areopen to individuals in creative andtransmissive positions in print(newspapers and magazine), ra¬dio and television stations (com¬mercial or education), and educa¬tional film production, who dealwith world, political, and econo¬mic affairs, education, the sci¬ences, and the arts. In addition,applicants may be faculty mem¬bers of schools of journalism andother university and college de¬partments directly concerned withthe professional training of masscommunicators.Inquiries and requests for appli¬cations for the 1960-61 fellowshipsshould be addressed to either Lib¬eral Adult Education fellowshipsor Mass Media fellowships, bothat: the Fund for Adult education,200 Bloomingdale road, WhitePlains, New York. the I-F council and the adminis¬tration will be present.Outgoing president Marty Kainstated that the dean feels sucha group is a necessary liaison be¬tween the fraternities and the ad¬ministration, especially in thearea of financial responsibility forthe upkeep of the chapter houses.In other council business, Mil-ton Lopez of Kappa Alpha Psi an¬swered questions concerning thepresent operation of Iota chap¬ter. The chapter, though affiliatedwith the University, has mem¬bers who attend other Chicagoarea schools. There has been somequestion recently, as to whetherthe fraternity could maintain itsstatus as a campus fraternity be¬cause of the small number of UCstudents in the group.Lopez stated that his fraternityplans to increase its social andathletic participation on campus,and take a more active role inI-F council. A motion is being sentto the chapters that the fraternitysystem recommends to the intra¬mural athletic office that mem¬bers of Kappa Alpha Psi not reg¬istered on campus be allowed toparticipate in fraternity athletics.Another motion tabled untilnext meeting states that “a pledgewho fails to make grades duringthe normal pledge period and isheld over as an inactive or dis¬affiliated pledge shall have hissubsequent grades considered inthe following manner; compre¬hensive grades of previous yearsshall receive three time theweight of quarterly grades ofthose years. Quarterly grades ofthe current year, whether divi¬sional or College, shall receiveequal weight wiUi comprehensivegrades of previous years.” Thepurpose of the motion is to ade¬quately reward a pledge for schol¬astic improvement.Kain announced that the annualChancellor’s dinner will be heldMay 14. The executive committeeplans to meet with the registrarsoon to discuss grade averagesand grade structure. by Paul BowmanRhodes scholars who arepermitted to remain at Oxforduniversity for a third year ontheir scholarship will henceforthbe allowed to marry and retaintheir scholarships. This announce¬ment was made by Dr. CourtneySmith, president of Swarthmorecollege and American secretary ofthe Rhodes scholarships.Smith said that his announce¬ment in no other way changesthe regulations for Rhodes can¬didates. An applicant must bea single male who is a citizenof the United States with at leastfive years residence. He musthave at least junior standing insome recognized degree-grantingfour year American college or uni¬versity, and must be age 18 to 24on October 1 of the year in whichhe applies. Active military dutyover 90 days since June 27, 1950,may be subtracted from the appli¬cant’s age.Rhodes scholarships were es¬tablished by the will of Cecil JohnRhodes in 1899. Rhodes, a Britishstatesman and African pioneerwhose vast fortune was basedupon his development of SouthAfrica’s gold and diamond re¬sources, provided that RhodesScholars would be selected fromthe United States, Canada, theUnion of South Africa, Rhodesia,Australia, and New Zealand. Be¬fore his death in 1903 Rhodes add¬ed Germany to the list of coun¬tries which would select RhodesScholars. The German Scholar¬ships were not reinstituted alterWorld War II. The Rhodes trusthas since Rhodes’ death includedJamaica, Bermuda, India, Maltaand Pakistan in the 'Scholarshiplist. A recent announcement byLord Elton, Secretary of theRhodes trust, said that Ceylon,Malaya, Nigeria, Ghana and theremaining portion of the WestIndian Federation would over thenext five years be added to theRhodes scholarship program.In providing for his Scholarsthe special opportunities of an education at Oxford, Cecil Rhodesproved himself uniquely awareof the possibilities of internationaleducational exchange. Rhodes feltthat cooperation between the Brit¬ish Commonwealth of Nationsand the United States was an ab¬solute necessity if the world wereto enjoy peace. At Oxford youngmen of these nations would notonly enjoy the academic benefitsof one of the greatest universities,but would learn to understand andrespect scholars of other nations.Rhodes’ basis for the selectionof his Scholars was rigorous andfar-sighted. Candidates must, inthe first place, exhibit outstandingacademic abilities. Rhodes flatlystated that he was not interestedin the “bookworm.” He trustedthe selection committees to distin¬guish between genuine ability and“industrious mediocrity.”A Rhodes scholar must havequalities of manhood, truthful¬ness, courage, devotion to duty,sympathy, kindliness, unselfish¬ness, and fellowship. Further, hemust exhibit moral force of char¬acter and instincts to lead and totake an interest in his fellow men.Rhodes was seeking Scholars whowould be interested in public,rather than their own special, wel¬fare.Finally, Cecil Rhodes desiredthe young men selected as Schol¬ars to have physical vigor, asshown by fondness for and suc¬cess in sports. Rhodes had in mindparticularly the almost universalparticipation by English studentsin games akin to intramuralsports in American colleges anduniversities. His requirement ofphysical vigor again illustratedRhodes’ search for the Scholar ofmature personality, potential abil¬ity, and balanced interests.Rhodes stated in his will that“no student shall be qualified ordisqualified for election to a Schol¬arship on account of his race orreligious opinions.”The action modifying the regu¬lation on marriage is the firstpermanent change in the require¬ment that only single men be al¬lowed to hold Rhodes. scholar¬ships. The regulation was once before suspended in 1946, 1947,and 1948, when veterans (or menwith wartime deferments), whowere married and who would havebeen eligible at any time duringthe wartime suspension of thescholarships, could be selected.For non-veterans the regulationsdid not change.Oxford university is actually aloose federation of colleges. Mem¬bership in the university is ac¬quired and retained only throughmembership in a college, hall,or other recognized society, whichis itself a federated member ofthe university. For most Amer¬ican Rhodes scholars the closestassociations and the most lastingfriendships grow from life in oneof the twenty-eight colleges orhalls for men. Rhodes scholarsnormally “live in college” duringat least their first year and inmany colleges their second. In thisway they can most easily meet theother undergraduates of the col¬lege, eating meals with them inhall, talking in their rooms, takingpart in college athletics and col¬lege festivities. And it is becauseonly unmarried students may“live in’ and share the advantagesof college life that the Rhodestrustees have adhei’ed to the regu¬lation prohibiting Rhodes scholarsfrom continuing to receive a sti¬pend if they marry during theperiod of their scholarships. Thenew ruling, however, permits theRhodes scholar in his third yearto marry without forfeiting hisscholarship.As Lord Eton, the secretary ofthe Rhodes trust, has written,“Experience after , the last war,when ex-service scholars were per¬mitted to marry, without forfeit¬ure, has shown that a marriedRhodes scholar can continue bothto do his work and to share in thesocial life of the university, andperhaps in a new stratum of itThe regulations as to applicationsfor permission to marry will re¬quire evidence to be shown thatthe joint income of husband andwife is likely to be sufficient tokeep them in adequate comfort,and that they have been able tofind suitable accommodations.”Next year's student aideshave been chosen by UCThe following people have been chosen Student aides for the year 1959-60, according toHarold A. Anderson, marshal of the University:Malcolm D. Barton, Donald S. Burnett, Eugene R. De Sombre, Alice Ling-Hsiu Chung,Susan M. Fisher, Dana R. Fraser, Patricia K. Hopkins, Martin L. Kain, Mara Kalve, Michael J. Kin¬dred, Michael J. Kinney, Stefanie Ruth Krainin, Maria A. Lindquist, Lettie Marie McSpadden, ColeyC. Mills, Jr., James D. Oleson, Sandra Sue Platz, George J. Plzak, Susan K. Rupp, and Marilyn E.Treadway.R. Wendell Harrison, vice-president of the University and dean of faculties, will give a luncheon inhonor of the Student aides this month, Anderson said.The ten men and ten women were picked on the basis of their scholarship, campus activity, per¬sonality and “reasonable pulchritude.”► «!* Bicycles, Parts, Accessories *► < i► special student offer *\ ACE CYCLE SHOP j► 1621 e. 55th st. < |PRINTS400 subjectsProcessed 1.001.98SUMMIT BOOKS138 S. WABASH WERT • VALUE • VALORmC* In any language there's value in living at the Versailles. Cheer¬ful surroundings, for refined people who appreciate a quiet,restful, hor..c-like atmosphere. Elegant hotel rooms and 2\'aroom 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.“76e ‘Ve'McUtled5234 DORCHESTER FA 4-0200 III<>VACUA • VALOR • VACaptures yourpersonalityas well asyour personSow wifh . . . CoronaStudio1314 E. 53rd St.MU 4-7424 WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghettiraviolimostaccioli sandwiches:beef,sausage Cr meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st. “MM" II A Ml tuf|p MtYRIIMT 0 IIM fMC MM-MIA IProm trotterShe's the queen of the campus, and ofcourse she favors you Iqiqw what«,♦the cold crisp taste of Coca-Cola. Sheknows that anytime, everywhere, Coke bthe real refreshment. We don’t say thatthe secret of her success is Coca-Cola... but it helps!BE REALLY REFRESHED...HAVE A COKElBottled under authority of the Coco-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.May 8, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • v-W$m&100 THIRD PRIZES:25 SECOND PRIZES:rot \iMKin srmropitomcHI H SI IS"Big Stereo styleilengineered tor the mostexacting tasteRambler - American"*-Big-car roominess...small-car economy . . .tops in performance ICHICAGO MAROON • May 8, 1959Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. W1 3-2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.tn. - II p.m. 24-HourKodachrome color filmprocessingModel Camera Shop1342 E. 55th HY 3-S259 HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Dawn to Dawn 1342east 53 st.LIGHT UP AND LIVE IT UP I 3 great cigarettes offer you $27 chances to win!So pick your pack—save the six wrappers—and get going! Itfs 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 *T*(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! IM1RS0N INANSIS I OHHA DIOSPacked with powerplays 1500 hrs on I setol batteries500 FOURTH PRIZESCartons of America s finest cigarettesRULES—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. AH 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. W’hen 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. W'hat will soon appear in a bombed-out city.CLUES 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 & Myers, P. 0 Box 271, New York 46, New York. Besure lo attach six empty package wrappers ol the same brand (orfacsimile) from Chesterfield, L8M, or Oasis cigarettes.Nam*.Addrest.College ...This 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.O Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.COLLEGE PUZZLE CONTESTFOR STUDENTS AND FACULTY MEMBERSAcademic Freedom week Pre-registration beginssponsoring three eventsAcademic Freedom week continues this weekend with threemore events sponsored by Student Government. Tonight F.Raymond Marks, former staff counsel to the American CivilLiberties union, will speak on “The Fifth Amendment: Its Historyand Significance,” at eight in Ida Noyes East lounge.Tomorrow afternoon Harry Barnard, Chicago Daily News column-ist and frequent contributor to The Nation, will speak on civil liber¬ties. Barnard will be preceded by the hour-long film “An Almanac ofLiberty,” based on William O. Douglas’ book of the same name. Theprogram begins at three in Ida Noyes east lounge.The final event of Academic Freedom week will be a debate ondie question “Should Loyalty Oaths Be Required of College Profes¬sors?” between two Law school Independents and two SRPers. Thedebate, which will be mediated by an ISLer and sponsored by SG,TSL, SRP, and the Law school Independents, will be Sunday in IdaNoyes East lounge at .three. Students in residence mayregister in advance for the1959 Summer quarter accord¬ing to the following schedule:May 11-June 5CollegeJune 8-12Humanities, Social sciencesJune 1-3School of Social Service *administration, Law schoolJune 8 11Graduate school of BusinessJune 1-5Biological sciences, School ofMedicine, Physical sciences,Graduate Library schoolThe student begins his registra¬tion in the office of the appropri¬ate dean of students where he pre¬pares his registration cards and has them checked and signed bythe dean. The student then goesto the Registrar’s office, Admin¬istration 103, where he will havehis fees assessed. The Registrarwill direct the student to the Bur¬sar’s ofifee where he will pay ormake arrangements for paymentof fees.Dean’s Approval of registra¬tion: A registration will not beaccepted in the office of the Reg¬istrar unless it has been signed bythe Dean. The dean or his assist¬ant checks all items which havebeen entered on the cards. In des¬ignating courses write in thename of the department, not thename of the Division, before thecourse number. The number ofunits (amount of credit) must beDespres speaks on civil libertiesby Albert N. PodellAcademic Freedom weekfound Alderman Leon Despreson campus to speak on civilliberties, Chicago, and UC.On civil liberties, the FifthWard alderman concluded that••they have not declined; in fact,they have increased, but they arenever secure. The touchstone ofihe civil liberties question is theintegration crisis — on all itsfronts.”Despres, who had just comefrom a hearing of the US CivilRights commission on housingsegregation in Chicago, felt thatthis housing integration was Chi-(. go's most important problem.He noted that the city witnessesi the hearing has spoken strong¬ly against open occupancy. He feltthe city administration fearedthat open occupancy would makefor an explosive political situa¬ tion, but he thought their fearswere ill-founded.He added that his own proposedopen - occupancy ordinance wasmaking slow progress in gainingsupporters on the City Council.(This law would make it a crimefor a landlord to deny housingaccommodations to anyone be¬cause of race, creed, or color. Thespeaker predicted the passage ofthe ordinance in four or fiveyears.Turning to some recent Su¬preme court actions, Despres saidthat he strongly disagreed withthe decisions on confessions,double jeopardy, and search with¬out warrants — feeling that theCourt was permitting infringe¬ments on traditional civil liber¬ties.Returning to the Chicago scene,Despres urged that the presentmotion picture censorship law beabolished. “Such licensing of ex¬ pression,” he added “is uncalledfor. There is no pre-censorship ofbooks and newspapers, and thereshould be no pre-censorship offilms either.”As for UC, Despres felt that ithad an excellent record on civilliberties. He particularly cited theinstances in which the adminis¬tration supported professors whohad been attacked for allegedCommunists associations.On the other hand, Despresseemed sorely disappointed withthe handling of the Chicago Re¬view situation. He said that hefelt the material, published in BigTable, was strong but not obsceneand that the University should nothave interfered in its publication.In this regard, he went on totake exception to some of theremarks made by NeanderthalRosenheim, as reported in lastweek’s Maroon.Despres specifically felt that Rosenheim was wrong in callingthe suppressed material “obscene”and “bad literature.” He deniedthat the students had any “uni¬lateral agreement with the Uni¬versity” which they had broken.The speaker, a graduate of theUC Law school, went on tostrongly challenge Rosenheim’sadmonition that “we have an ob¬ligation to fight . . . the 57thStreet syndrome.” noted in the unit column on Regis¬trar’s and Bursar’s cards for eachcourse. Clearly mark class sectiondesignation if more than one sec¬tion of the course is provided.Where appropriate, the notation“R” (no credit), or “pro forma”(no credit or tuitoin fee) shouldbe made. “Post Doctoral” shouldbe entered on both Registrar’sand Bursar’s cards for studentsin that category. These cardsmust each bear the dean’s signa¬ture.Students enrolling in coursesgiven in divisions other than theirown, must have the approval ofthe other division or school.Veterans enrolled under Pub¬lic Law 16, 346, 550, 894 or Cana¬dian veterans must take their reg¬istration cards to the Adviser toVeterans, 5706 University (Rey¬nolds club), room 201, beforegoing to the Registrar's office.The dean of students prepareschange of registration cards whena student wishes to change hisregistration after his fees havebeen assessed. There is a fee of$2.00 for changes of registrationmade after June 29.A representative from the officeof the Registrar will be locatedon the second floor of the Admin¬istration building between thedean’s office and the office of Ad¬missions to supply students fromthe divisions and'Medical schoolwith forms for registration.Guggenheims awarded toten of unusual creativitySeven faculty members andthree from Argonne Nationallaboratory have been grantedfellowships in the 35th series ofawards announced last Sunday bythe John Simon Guggenheim Me¬morial foundation in New York.Individual grants vary from $2,000to $4,000, depending on the workbring undertaken by the recipient.They are granted to personsconsidered of high potential forscholastic research based uponprevious publication of the contri¬butions to knowledge and to thoseu bo have shown unusual creativeability in the fine arts.UC recipients are: Leo A. Good¬man, professor of statistics andsociology, for studies in appliedstatistics in sociology.Robert M. Grant, professor ofNew Testament, federated theo¬logical faculty, on studies of earlyhistory of the Christian church.Leopold Haimson, assistant pro¬fessor of Russian history, studiesof the movement of opinions with¬in the Russian intelligentsia be¬tween 1905 and 1917.Bert F. Hoselitz, professor ofsocial sciences, studies of struc¬tural and institutional changes inculture and social relations in acountry under rapid economicgrowth.Stuart A. Rice, assistant profes¬sor of chemistry, a study of cer¬tain aspects of dense media.Stuart M. Tave, assistant pro¬fessor of English, studies of theTheodore A. Gillwill preach Sun.I he Reverend Dr. TheodoreA. Gill will preach the sermon’‘Our Lover’s Quarrel with theY oi id” for tomorrow’s 11 amRockefeller chapel service. Gill ispresident of the San Franciscotheological seminary, San Ansel-mo, California. prose style of early 19th centuryEngland.Carl M. York Jr., assistant pro¬fessor of physics, a study of inter¬action of mesons (minute atomicparts).Argonne laboratory recipientsare:Bernard M. Abraham, senior chemist at Argonne, for studieson liquid helium.Robert Norman Feinstein, asso¬ciate biochemist, a study of therole of cathepsins relative to irra¬diation.John P. Schiffer, assistant phys¬icist, study of average propertiesof nuclear energy levels.Truman feted tonitetickets are availableHighlighting the programof a nationwide celebration ofHarry S. Truman’s 75th birth¬day, tonight at 7:30 at the CivicOpera house, Adlai Stevenson andMort Sahl on stage, and JackBenny, Marian Anderson, JimmyDurante, on closed circuit tele¬vision from New York will headthe list of entertainers and poli¬ticians paying tribute to the for¬mer President.The Democratic National com¬mittee and the Democratic Fed¬ eration of Illinois, sponsors of theTruman Diamond jubilee, haveprovided the University withthirty tickets to the programwhich are available at the Stu¬dent Activities office on a “firstcome, first served” basis.Other tickets are available fromFlorence Meadows in the Alumniassociation.Following an original musicalby Leonard Bernstein, HarryTruman will climax the programwith a speech.The Disc 1367 E. 57Hi St.INTRODUCTORY SALE ON OCR NEWCOLLECTION OF MUSICAL SCORES20% OFFFOR THE MONTH OF MAY ONLY we can offerthis special price on a wide selection of scoresfrom Monteverdi to Webern — VOCAL, SYM¬PHONIC, AND CHAMBER MUSIC — Lea Pocket,Eulenburg, Baerenreiter, and many others.COME IN AND SEE WHAT IS AVAILABLEWeekdays, Noon till 10 p.m. Saturdays, 10 till 5 p. HO SBD IT FDBRA column of incidental intelligenceby dOCktli brand“THIRTY DAYS HATHSEPTEMBER," ETC.No need to recite further fromthis bit of doggerel which hasserved us all as a pony eversince grade school. For thisuniversal handy reference weare indebted to a man namedRichard Grafton who was niceenough to compose the rhymeway back in 1570. “LOVE IS BUND"Next to the Bible, Shake¬speare is the richest source ofcommon quotes. He's respon¬sible for this one, too. See his“Merchant of Venice," Act II,Scene 6:“But love is blind, and lov¬ers connot seeThe petty follies that them¬selves commit."“PUT IT IN YOUR PIPE"No, Sir Walter Raleigh didn'toriginate this smoker's chal¬lenge. It was R. H. Barham, in“The Lay of St. Odille":“For this you've my word,and I never yet broke it,So put that in your pipe,My Lord Otto, and smokeit."Jockey T-Shirts• RANDThe most respected, creative name m underwear is Jockeybrand. It stands to reason, then, that Jockey brand T-shirtsare unmatched for quality as well as styling. You can choosefrom standard T-shirt, “taper-fee" shirt, sleeveless l-shirt, andV-neck T-shirt models. Every mon needs a drawer full ofT-shirts—and the label to look for is Jockey brand. Let itguide you to the world's finest underwear.May 8, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Postmaster is sued Jaguar “52” XK120 roadster. A blackbeauty at a reasonable price. ContactCurt Ormond at Hitchcock Hall.American Civil LiberitiesUnion of Illinois filed suit re¬cently against Chicago Post¬master Carl Schroeder. charginghim with illegally confiscatingmail from Iron Curtain countries.The suit was filed by the ACLUoh behalf of Mrs. Helen Hughes,managing editor of the UC-pub-lished American Journal of Soci¬ology, and wife of EverettHughes, professor of sociology.The suit asks for immediate re¬lease of the confiscated materialand for $1,000 damages for wrong¬ful dete*tion.The postoffice, according to theACLU, has been confiscating “millions of pieces of mail’’ de¬clared foreign political propagan¬da and releasing them only if theaddressees sign an affidavitswearing that the publications arenot for dissemination and alsoswearing that they had “ordered,subscribed to, or desired” thesepublications.Congress has passed a law au¬thorizing the confiscation of mailof a treasonable nature, but theACLU feels that Schroeder clearlywent beyond this in confiscatingmail of a non-treasonable nature,however propagandists it mighthave been. ServicesHome typing—thesis, dissertations, etc.N. MacDougall. OA 4-3240.SEWING — Alterations, hems, curtains.Call MU 4-3941.PersonalWORKSHOP IN CREATIVE WRITINGPLaza 2-8377Help stamp out mental health. Spendthis Sat. or Sun sweltering at a stenopad and typewriter, slaving over dullbusiness letters for poor pay Call AlPodell, PA 4-8200. Male, female, or fac¬ulty wife acceptable.Wanted: Grad students to participatein experiments on problem solving.6 hours, $12. Further work if inter¬ested. Contact Miss Kier, MichaelReese hospital, DA 6-5700, ext. 278. The woman shown above is examining some of the dozensof chickens prepared for a Sunday dinner. The new equip¬ment installed in the kitchens facilitates such large prepara¬tion.RH&C explainedGET SATISFYING FLAVOR...No flat f'iltered-out' -flavor!No dry "smoked-out"taste! (from page 16)Contrary to popular rumor, theUniversity receives no govern¬ment surplus aid on commoditieslike milk and butter, and, in anaitempt to control cost studentswere limited to two glasses ofmilk per day until 1954.At this time, Miss Kay noticedthat many students took twoglasses and didn’t drink the sec¬ond glass, and a good deal of milkwas being wasted. So, in 1954 apolicy of unlimited seconds onmilk was introduced. The amountof milk consumed immediatelywent down by one third.The supervisors of the unitmust also manage their em¬ployees, both the 137 full timeworkers and 78 part time studentemployees. Students are used asmuch as possible, Miss Carpenterclaimed. Certain difficulties areinherent in such a practice. Stu¬dents have to be able to fit theirclass schedule into the commons’meal schedule. There are alsomany jobs which demand a con¬tinuity of working hours.Despite this, there is only oneposition in each unit which couldbe filled by a student which isnot. That position is the one ofmeat-server in the serving line.It was early discovered that meatlasts only half as long when por¬tioned out by a student and thedining halls save a great deal ofmoney by hiring a higher-wageunion employee.The two head dieticians alsotake care of their equipment; thisis not a simple problem. There isno great difficulty in preservingand caring for the pot washers,dish washers, ovens, refrigeratorsand stoves, but dishes and silverare another question. There isno end of apartment dwellers inHyde Park who, knowingly or not,are eating off B-J crockery. Onegirl this year sent her mother acomplete place setting for eight,compliments of the New dorma-tory.Some of this has been elimi¬nated by the current use of paperdishes on suck-trays. Mrs. Wallacecomments that the number of sicktrays requested has diminishedsince they stopped sending china.But there is still a significant lossin equipment.During the interview for thisarticle, a Maroon reporter, havinglunch in the New dorm beganlooking about for an ash tray,and although Mrs. Wallace hadstarted the year with 100 dozenash trays they were hard to findin the dining room. No doubt theywere plentiful in the student’srooms.C A T Co. You canlighteitherend!See howPall Mallsfamous lengthof fine tobaccotravels andgentles the smoke— makes it mild —but does notfilter out thatsatisfying flavor! HERE'S WHY SMOKE ^RAVELED* THROUGH FINE TOBACCO TASTES BESTIVfou get Fall Mali's famous length ofthe finest tobocco6 money can buy Roll Mali's fbmous length travelsond gentles the smoke naturally.. 3 Travels it ever, under, around ondthrough Rail Mali's fine tobaccoslOutstanding-.. and tb^y are Mild!Product of <J&ns/uean — c/utfaeto- tl our middle nameClassifiedsFor rentMan's room. $8 per week. 57th & Dor¬chester. MU 4-8493.Small room, private bath, close to cam¬pus, Co-op. IC. Kit. priv. avail. Gradmale preferred. Clean. PL 2-1667.Working girl to share house with 3other girls. FA 4-1721 after 6 p.m.2t4 rms.. It., airy, 1st fl. New refr. $80.IC. shop. BU 8-7121, Sat., Sun. eves. Rooms for rent. $25-$45 per month. Eve¬ning meals. Phi Kappa Psi frat., 5555Woodlawn, PL 2-9704.2 Yi 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 4-0200 Six room house, Indiana State Dunes.Chesterton. Indiana. Unfurnished. WriteR. Axford, 2300 Hayes, Racine, Wiscon¬sin. MElrose 3-6269.Avail. June 1, Pleasant neWly-decorated,housekeeping rm. on 1st fl. Near Univ.Tenants mostly grad students. Only$37.50 per mo.See mngr., 6042 Ingleside. MU 4-5654For saleLovely lge. rm., kit. priv. & sharing4 rm. apt. Near CTA, IC. MI 3-2723. New Eng. bikes, discounts. MI 3-9048.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 Em* 57th St.MU 4-9236'i-'-v | .Maroon thindads win tenth straight meetby Bill SpadyChicago’s varsity trackmenran their undefeated dualmeet string in 1959 to tenstraight with two very impressivewins during the past week. TheMaroons won five dual meets intheir undefeated winter campaignand have added five more in theoutdoor season. Coach Ted Hay-don’s thinclads swamped Grinnell102-29 last Friday at Grinnell, andthey trimmed Bradley 83*4-47*4in a meet Monday at Stagg field.The Maroons won 12 of the 14events plus the mile relay againstGrinnell, and they captured elevensecond places to completely sub¬due the hosts. Walt Greene andMitch Watkins opened the scor¬ing with a 1-2 in the shot put,CJreene winning with a 39' put.Ivan Carlson won the mile in4:41.3 with Gar Williams a closesecond. George Karcazes hit thetape a pace ahead of Pete McKeonin :49.7 to win the 440; and A1Jacobs and Hosea Martin tookNew researcheron UC med staffDr. Ake Hanngren, of theUniversity of Stockholm Kar-olinska hospital, who special¬izes in the study and treatment oftuberculosis and chest diseases,has joined researchers of the de¬partment of pharmacology in us¬ing radioactive isotopes in a studyof new antituberculosis drugs.Dr. Hanngren is working withLloyd J. Roth, associate profes¬sor and chairman of the depart¬ment of pharmacology; and JohnE. Kasik, instructor, and JamesAlexander Miller, fellow in thedepartment of medicine.They are using tritium, an iso¬tope of hydrogen, to trace a newanti-tuberculosis drug called cy¬closerine in the body.Dr. Hanngren’s visit is spon¬sored by the Trygger foundationof the Swedish Medical associa¬tion. He plans to remain in theUnited States for about sixmonths. the two top spots in the 100,Jacobs winning in :10.0.Don Richards, Watkins, andDennis O’Leary swept the 120high hurdles in :15.9; and BudPerschke followed with a 1:59.2clocking in the 889 to win easily.Jacobs streaked the 220 in :22.6for a first, and Vic Neill led DaveHouk across in the two-mile in10:18.6 to capture another first.Lin Black, Watkins, and Normanof Grinnell tied for first in thehigh jump at 5' 10".Grinnell captured one of itsfirsts in the broad jump, as Fisheredged Watkins and Richards witha leap of 20' 314". In the 220 lowhurdles Watkins won in :25.7,trailed by Richards in secondplace. Dave Northrop cleared IT7" to win the pole vault, whileDon Fagin took second. Watkinsand Fagin captured the initial twoplaces in the discus, Watkinsthrowing 118' 9" to win.Grinnell’s other first place waswon by Rutherford in the javelin,who beat Chicago’s Jerry Abelesand Ragin, with a heave of 168'114". The Maroons’ mile relayquartet of Gary Augustine, JimSkinner, McKeon, and Karcazeswon easily in 3:24.3 to close themeet.The powerful Chicagoans re¬turned home Monday afternoonto dispense with Bradley in anequally efficient m anner, Al¬though the visitors swept in theshot put, the Maroons won thefirst two spots in the initial fourrunning events to set the winningpace. Perschke won the mile in4:37 followed by Neill, Karcazes,McKeon, and Skinner swept the440 in that order in :49.3; Jacobsand Martin backed their effortswith a :10.0 hundred yard dash;and Watkins skimmed the 120high hurdles in :15.0, with Rich¬ards close behind, to win.Carlson hit the tape in 2:00.4 towin the 880, and Jacobs and Mar¬tin followed with Jacobs finish¬ing in 22.3 for first place andMartin second. Richards took sec¬ond behind Mesan of Bradley inthe high jump with Dave Houktying for third, and Fagin cleared12' 6" to win the pole vault withNorthrop adding a third.Richards took second in thebroad jump, and he and Watkinstook 2-3 in the 220 lows. Watkinstook third in the discus, and thetrio of Ralph Garber, Abeles, andFagin swept the javelin. Garberwinning it with a 149' 10" toss. The Chicago relay team of Augus¬tine, Randy Denny, Perschke, andJerry Gehman hit 3:33.2 to winand close the meet.The team travels to Albion thisafternoon, and they will attendthe Elmhurst Invitational Relaystomorrow at Elmhurst college.Next week, the varsity hosts theUC Track Club, Northern Illinois,and Marquette in a four-way bat¬tle at Stagg field on Saturdayafternoon.Varsity tennisOnly Marquette stands in theway of a possible undefeated reg¬ular season for Chicago’s tennissquad, which has compiled an8-0-1 mark to date. Navy Pier andDePaul were the latest victims forCoach Bill Moyle’s netters duringthe past week; the Maroons top¬ped the Pier 10-1 last Tuesday,and swamped DePaul last Thurs¬day 7-0.Against Navy Pier the hostingMaroons won six of the sevensingles matches and all threedoubles contests. Len Friedmanwon 6-2, 6-1; John Berall followed2-6, 6-4, 11-9; Will Provine lost1-6, 1-6; Mike Nussbaum won 7-5,6-2; Mike Roskin gained a 6-0, 6-4verdict; Max Liberies went threesets 6-1, 3-6, 6-3 to win; BernieHoffman blanked his opponent6-0, 6-0; and Les Hutton finishedon the strong end of a 6-0, 8-6, 6-4count.The Friedman-Berall duo won8-4; Nusbaum and Libowitz fol¬lowed 8-6; and Liberies and Hoff¬man closed the run away 8-6.The Maroons were victorious inall five singles trials and bothdoubles contest against DePaul.Friedman won 6-1, 2-6, 6-0; andBerall followed with an impres¬sive 6-3, 6-1. Roskin won in threesets 6-2, 2-6, 6-0; Liberies tookclose sets 7-5, 6-4; and Libowitzwent thre to close the singles ac¬tion 3-6, 6-2, 6-0. Berall-Friedmanmaintained their winning streak6-0, 6-4; and Roskin and Provineclosed the match with a decisive6-2, 6-0 win.The Maroons host the ChicagoIntercollegiate Championshipsnext Friday and Saturday. Theywill face top college competitionin the Chicago area.Varsity golfChicago’s golfers won twomatches last Friday, but droppedthree on Tuesday in two outings.Baseball squad scores;next game tomorrowIn the past week, Coach KyleAnderson’s baseball squad addedmore victories to its 3-2 regularseason record with a 5-4 win overNavy Pier last Thursday, and a4-3 victory over Knox in a double-header Saturday, at Stagg field.Maroon defense collapsed in thesecond game of the twin bill, how¬ever, dropping a run away to thevisitors 12-4.Rick Williams scattered sevenhits over nine innings againstNavy Pier, and drove in the win¬ning run to aid his own cause inIhe Chicago win on Thursday.The Maroons collected ten hitswith Jon Nicholson, John Loose,and Williams each going two forfour at the plate, while shortstopTommy O’Connor set the offen¬sive pace with a triple, a singleand two walks. Nicholson drovein two runs, while Chuck FaidleyVeek to speakat Soc Sci 122William Veek, manager andcontrolling stockholder in theChicago White Sox, will speakon the problems connected withhis position next Wednesdayafternoon, May 13, in Social Sci¬ences 122 at 1:30.The talk is one of a series spon¬sored by the graduate school ofBusiness. and Bill Bauer each knocked in atally.Pitcher Nemon Taylor contin¬ued his win streak against Knoxin the first contest Saturday after¬noon. Jack Markin and O’Connorwielded big bats against the visi¬tors; Markin had a perfect threefor three afternoon and O’Con¬nor’s two for three proved a de¬ciding factor. Ira Levy collecteda double in two official times atbat.Taylor gave Knox only fivehits in seven innings, while theMaroons backed him with fine de¬fensive play except for a singleerror. The Chicagoans broke a3-3 deadlock in the bottom of theeighth when O’Connor rapped atriple down the left field line, andMarkin smacked a single to drivehim across with the deciding run.Coach Anderson praised the de¬termined effort of Ben Majusko-vic, his hurler in the second game,who gave up only six hits andtwo earned runs, but the Maroondeiense collapsed in the fifth in¬ning, and Majuskovic had to “goit alone.” Chicago drew ahead 3-3at the end of the fourth inning,but their efforts were futile, asthey gave up six runs on two hitsand made five errors in the top ofthe fifth.Both teams had eight hits, butthe hosts gave up as many errors,while Knox’s fielding allowed onlyone mistake. Levy and Faidley each slapped a double and a triple;second basement John Loose hita three-bagger, but Chicago couldnot pile enough runs to compen¬sate. for its poor fielding.The squad places its 5-3 recordon the block against Navy Pierhere tomorrow afternoon; Val¬paraiso here on Tuesday; and Chi¬cago Teachers college at Staggfield next Friday afternoon.J. PAUL SHEEDY.* hair scientist, says:"Makes your hair look doggone hand¬some!”•of lit Sa. Harr** HtU H<i.. H N.f.Just a little bitof Wildroot J,**and... WOW r The Maroons stopped Lewis 14*4-3*4 and DePaul 14-4 at Lewis onFriday, but they lost to Beloit 21-3,Wisconsin of Milwaukee 16*4-7*4,and Rockford 12*4-11 *4 at Beloiton Tuesday.Steve Klein and Dave Kreismanboth fired 81’s to lead at Lewis.Marshall Sylvan carded an 82,Henry Halladay shot an 84, DaveSilver hit an 87, and Nick De-Merell anchored the top six en¬tries with an 88.Klein was chosen Athlete of theWeek by the athletic departmentfor his fine play throughout theseason. He has totaled 41 team points against only nine for hisopponerrts, and his average foreight outings is a 77.8.Klein shot a 78 in the Tuesdaymatch to earn low honors onthe Maroons’ squad; no otherChicagoan shot below 80. Thesquad will participate in the Chi¬cago Intercollegiate Tournamentat White Pines next Friday. SevenChicago area schools will eachsend a six-man team to vie fewteam medalist honors. Coach BobKreidler hopes that next week’sfinal outing for his team will adda bright note to the present sevenwins nine losses record.Sports calendarMAY9 Baseball, Varsity vs. Navy Pier, Stagg field.12 Baseball, Varsity vs. Valparaiso, Stagg field.15 Baseball, Varsity vs. Chicago Teachers, Stagg field.Tennis, Chicago Intercollegiate Championships, varsitycou rts.16 Baseball, Varsity vs. Lake Forest, doubleheader, Staggfield.Tennis, Chicago intercollegiate Championships, varsitycourts.Track, Varsity vs. UC Track club, Marquette, NorthernIII., Stagg field.PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO."Hyde Park's Most Complete Point & Hordware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th st.Universal Army StoreHeadquarters for sport and work wearFlop pocket wosh & wear ivy league trousers — Wash & wear dressshirts — camping equip. — Complete line of keds footwear — trenchcoats — luggage and trunks.1144 East 55th st. DO 3-95720 % reduction with this coupon__mmmGet a head starton your vacation!FLY UNITEDAIR LINESGoing home for the holidays? Or maybe planning atrip somewhere? You’ll have extra days for extra fun ifyou travel via United. Chances arc you’ll save money,too. United Air Coach Mainliner® fares arc low. Yourchoice of fast, convenient schedules to 80 major citiescoast to coast and Hawaii. See your Travel Agent orcall your nearest United Air Lines office today.May 8, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13Find UT play provocativeAny director of Measure for Measure wouldprobably endorse its classification as one of Shake¬speare's “problem” comedies. But by problems hewould mean a headache. Reading over this playwit+i an eye to production, one begins to appreciatesome of the critical problems involved in tryingto make this play performable. It is not surprisingttoat even the most enterprising of Shakespearianproducers have tended to steer clear of it. WhenI heard that UT was going to attempt it I wasimpressed with their courage, but filled with fore¬bodings. Happily, I can report that this production,under the direction of Paul Sills, is definitely worthseeing. Shakespearian purists will be outraged bysome of the liberties that are taken with the text,but the production is a provocative one and it iseertainly not dull.ANY SHAKEPEARIAN play is a considerablechallenge to a director. This play immediately con¬fronts the director with the necessity of resolvinga number of inner conflicts in some credible way.First of all, if the Duke is the central figure in theaction, what manner of man is he and what roledoes he play? Traditionally, the Duke is treatedas an omniscient, godlike figure, the means forresolving the serious moral issues that have beenraised in the play. Such an interpretation worksin the first three acts. But how can such an ap¬proach make the last two acts credible and inter¬esting to an audience? In these two acts we findShakespeare using all the devices, all the conven¬tions of his light comedies in working out theresolution. For example, there is the old reliablesubstitution gimmick: the substitution of Marianafor Isabella. This is really no more convincing (noris it meant to be), no more serious than thesubstitution, in Twelfth Night, of Sebastian forViola as Olivia’s husband. It is merely a stockdevice for resolving a comic dilemma.Paul Sills tries to give a continuity and comicconsistency to the play by reducing the Duke toa more human and eccentric figure. Instead of anomnicient manipulator of human destinies, Wil¬liam Bezdek makes him into a fussy, slightly vaingentleman, delighted with his own cleverness ashe fumbles his way through a series of complica¬tions, Bezdek does a capable job of conveying thebustling liveliness of this Duke. Perhaps he is alittle too fussy, a little too frenetic in his move¬ments. given the amount of time that he is bn thestage.With a Duke of tihs kind on the stage there is anatural shift in focus. The emphasis now fallsupon a frothy picture of the seamier side of citylife. Every last ounce of bawdy fun is extractedfrom the varied collection of shady city typeswhich Shakespeare populated this city state. Norhas Paul Sills hesitated to radically alter charac¬ters to fit this comic world. The Provost, for ex¬ ample, a kindly, decent soul in the text, becomesa pompous, bribe-taking politico, as played byNeal Johnston. But most startling of all is thetransformation of Claudio. Bob Reiser somehowmanages to transform the pathetic Claudio into aweirdly ludicrous figure. The effect is painfullyincongruous and yet, at times, hilariously funny.His grotesquely disheveled costume, his look ofinfinite bewilderment and chagrin reminded memost of all of the stooge in burlesque comicroutines.PAUL SILLS obviously worked hard.to givethe play color, bounce and a raucous vitality. Ifthe actors, in the performance I saw, sometimesfailed to come through with as much zest andexuberance as this kind of production demands,there were enough spirited performances to sug¬gest the inherent possibilities. Perhaps the over¬all spirit is most exuberantly symbolized by thatmost unmusical marching band that prances regu¬larly through the theater (rumor has it that theyare regugees from a Bavarian beer hall*. AndrewDuncan, doubling as Elbow and Barnardine (and,I understand, with true versatility, providing thevoice of the offstage cow), does a fine job of con¬veying the vacuous indignation of Elbow and thecorporeal grossness of Barnardine. Jo Anne Sehlagas Mistress Overdone, Otto Senz as Pompey andMark Benny as Abhorson (a wonderfully’ comicfigure of an executioner) add their touches of hu¬mor to the whole. And Otto Schlesinger accom¬modates himself to the general atmosphere byplaying Escalus quite broadly as a senile buffoon.Lucio, who, next to the Duke, is the most omni¬present figure on the stage, is played by FredHirsch as a mannered and insolent dandy. A fewstock mannerisms suffice because of the control¬led effectiveness of his tautly precious voice. Hisrelative immobility and disembodied presence asa synical commentator offer an effective contrastto the energetic bustle all around him.But what can such an interpretation of the playdo with characters like Isabella and Angeio? Itcannot be denied that their powerful morgents onthe stage are necessarily attenuated. Natalie Crohnhas the looks and bearing for an Isabella: tall,with a graceful erectness of carriage. But heracting ability is not up to the taxing demands ofthis role. In any case, she is not permitted to ex¬ploit her role seriously. Almost every one of hermost passionate moments is exploded by someviolent physical activity that converts the seriousinto the ludicrous.Only Fred Wranovics’ Angelo refuses to yield tothe general atmosphere that prevails1. He standsout in startling contrast: a mordant and aloofsolitary, pursuing Isabella’s chastity with the samelogical fury that he had previously expended onhunting out all vices. His complete detachment,(See “Measure,” page li»)KGDL KROSSWORD No. 26ACROSS1. Urges6. There’s usuallya run in it9. Her,non-objectively12. With Her, hecould be Hoover13. Agra is turnedto jelly14. We (German)15. This is no bull16. 18th-centuryhair pieces18. Platform that’salmost a daisy20. Scorch21. Tailor-made forboth sexes22. liebe dich23. This is silly24. Thursday’smissile26. Negative27. la-la28. Gulliver'sfather31. America'sRefreshingCigarette32. Romanmarket places33. The Pres.34. He could beserious36. Major37. Think39. You say itbefore you sayyou’re sorry42. Now there are4943. Dash44. Chastisement ofbackward pals45. What little boysare around littlegirls46. Mansfieldian47. The ThinMan’s dog DOWN1. Flow’s escort2. Whiz’s firstname3. When all thiswill end4. What onecan dowith relations5. They're takenwith conviction6. Good forwhiskies, bad-for girls7. Important partsof traffic8. He hasn’t quitegot the price9. “ fromhots "10. When on yours,you’re cocky11. Gaelic17. Stick around,kid19. Not quite quite21. Kools are23. They gowith outs25. The guy whogot her awayfrom you29. Free (German)30. A Koolso cleanand fresh —31. Southern shrub34. Birdsthat disturbthe muse35. A Grimm story36. Say it isn’t so38. Collector’sitem40. Good standingat thepoker table41. SaratogaSprings i3 one 1 9 10 111 1417122 ■I24 25271 31I 33 ■■ 39 40 411 44| 47• As cool and clean as a breath of fresh air.• Finest leaf tobacco... mild refreshing menthol —and the world’s most thoroughly tested filter!• With every puff your mouth feels clean,your throat refreshed!,Omcricas Mosf IMeshing Cjgaietfe. ALSO REGULAR SIZE KOOL WITHOUT FILTERl£ 19 59. Brown A Williamson Tobacco Covp. Imaginary Invalidopens tonightTonight, the Goodman Me¬morial theatre will open atwo-week run of Chicago’snewest and oldest play. The Imag¬inary Invalid. Australian-bornMurray Matheson stars as Arganin director John Reich’s transla¬tion of the classic French farce-comedy.Goodman Theatre’s presenta¬tion of the Imaginary Invalid Willrun from May 8 through May 24.General admission is $2.00. 1GDM **®R!d Msajd ™ousOf S+OJ-J wojfTpfwgU3/v\SNV IQDyCalendarFriday, 8 May,Class in elementary Hebrew I, 11:30 am.5715 Woodlawn avenue, HUlel foun¬dation.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing. 12:30 pm, Ida Noyes small lounge.Non-denomlnational Bible study InEphesians.Political Science association depart¬mental seminar, 3:30 pm, social sci¬ences 302. "The relation between eco¬nomics and political philosophy.” Jo*seph Cropsey, assistant professor of, political science.Sabbath service, 7:45 pm. 5715 Wood-lawn avenue. Hillel foundation.Lecture series: "Biography," UniversityCollege. 64 East Lake street, 8 pm.“Examples of biographies better notto have been written." Harry Barnard,columnist, Chicago Daily News andnoted biographer.Lecture series: “Works of the mind.”University College, 8 pm. “Dostoevski'sCrime ar.d Punishment," Mark Ashin,associate professor of English In theCollege.University Theatre presentation: "Meas¬ure for measure," by William Shake¬speare. 8:30 pm, Reynolds club theatre.Admission tickets to com¬prehensive examinations forCollege general courses willbe mailed on the basis ofaddresses on file in the of¬fice of the Registrar. If youhave any reason to doubtthe correctness of your ad¬dress or if your address haschanged since the beginningof the Spring Quarter, andyou have not filed a Changeof Address form in the of¬fice of the Registrar, checkwith that office at once. fessor of economics. University ofWisconsin.TV program: "All things considered"Channel 11, 9:30 pm "Emotionalproblems of the aging," Dr. C. KnightAldrich, professor and chairman " ofthe University's department of psy¬chiatry, will moderate the discussionbetween Dr. Ewald W. Busse, profes¬sor and chairman, department ofsychiatry, Duke University school ofMedicine and Hospital; and DrGeorge V. LeRoy, professor, depart¬ment of medicine and associate deanof the division of biological sciencesat the University.Wednesday, 13 MayHug Ivri (Hebrew speaking group), 12 30pm. Hillel house.Class in Yiddish, 11 am, 5715 Woodlawnavenue. HUlel house.Graduate School of Business lecture"Some marketing problems of theChicago White Sox." social sciences122. 1:30 pm. Speaker: William VeeckWhite Sox Baseball club.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellermemorial chapel. James Lawsonchapel carllloneur.Organ recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller chapelHeinrich Fleischer, organist.Episcopal evensong, 5:05 pm, Bondchapel.University Glee club rehearsal. 7 pmIda Noyes theatre.Lecture series: "Images of Chicago.”University College, 7:30 pm, “The lostimage of a new art: Chicago In tele¬vision," Studs Terkel, jazz expert,folklorist and radio and televisionpersonality.Lecture series: "Self portrait of the ar¬tist In the 20th century,” UniversityCollege, 8 pm "The impact of theoriesof abstraction upon the self portrait:and of the deepening gap between theexpression of the self and the portraitof the self," Max Kozloff, lecturer InUniversity College.Graduate Library School lecture: "Booksand culture,” 7:45 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Speaker: Reucl DenneyCountry dancers, 8 pm, Ida Noyes hallWest House coffee hour, 9 pm. firstfloor lounge. Coffee, companionshipThursday, 14 MayEpiscopal Holy Communion. 11 30 amBond chapel.CHICAGO MAROON • May 8, 1959J *••••*%**». *A ’At- Saturday, 9 May Friday, 15 MayTV program: "Frankly speaking.”WBBM. 1:45 pm. "Modern science andeducation,” Joseph J. Schwab, Wil¬liam Rainey Harper professor of nat¬ural sciences, and Knox C. Hill, asso¬ciate professor of humanities in theCollege. Moderator: Jacob Scher, asso¬ciate professor of journalism, North¬western university.University Theatre presentation: “Meas¬ure for measure,” by William Shake¬speare. 8:30 pm, Reynolds club theatre.Sunday, 10 MayEpiscopal choral Eucharist, 8:30 am,Bond chapel.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10 and 11am, DeSales house, 5735 Universityavenue. Sponsored by Calvert club.Bridge club, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Duplicate bridge will be played.SRP caucus, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Universtiy Theatre presentation: "Meas¬ure for measure," by William Shake¬speare, 8 :30 pm, Reynolds club theatre.Monday, 11 MayClass in elementary Hebrew II, 5715Woodlawn avenue, 4 pm. Sponsoredby Hillel foundation.Folk dance group, 4:30 pm, Hillel house.Tuesday, 12 MayMaroon staff meeting, 4 pm. Ida Noyes.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing, 12:30 pm, Ida Noyes small lounge.Non-denominatlonal Bible study inI Peter.Lecture series: “Problems of the presi¬dency,” University College, 7 pm."The president as chief administra¬tor,” Herbert Storing, assistant pro¬fessor, department of political sci¬ence.University Symphony Orchestra re¬hearsal, 7:30 pm, Mandel hall.Students for Non-violence meeting, 7:30pm. Ida Noyes hall. Topic: “Socialismand pacifism." All are invited.Department of economics seminar: "Em¬pirical studies of production and In¬ventory movements,” social sciences122, 7:45 pm. Speaker: Jack Johnston,Ford foundation visiting research pro- Class in elementary Hebrew I, 11:30 am,Hillel house.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing, 12:30, Ida Noyes small loungeNoh-denomlnational Bible study inEphesians.Political Science Association depart¬mental seminar. 3:30 pm, social sci¬ences 302. “Political philosophy andpolitical science," Allen Gewirth. pro¬fessor, department of philosophy.Lecture series: "Biography." UniversityCollege, 8 pm. "Biography and thepsychoanalytic approach," Harry Bar¬nard, columnist, Chicago Daily News,and noted biographer.University Symphony Orchestra concert.8:30 pm. Mandel hall. Program: Over¬ture to Don Giovanni, ConcertosNumbers 23 and 24, all by Mozart.Conductor: Joseph Krelmes; soloist:Robert Howat, piano.Maroon editor’s election, 3 30, Ida’ Noyes.All dormitories on campuswill hold open house thisSunday from 2 to 4 pm. Stu¬dents interested in movinginto the dorms may view therooms then.TAhSAM-Y&.NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63 rd St. BU 8-9018■ Sunday, 10 MayRadio program: Faith of our Fathers.WGN, 7:30 am, “The Christian Re¬sponse to the World Revolution.” TheReverend Wlnburn T. Thomas, guestprofessor of missions, McCormicktheological seminary, and UC choir.Radio program: Frankly Speaking.WBBM, 8 pm, "Modern Science andEducation.” Joseph J. Schwab, Wil¬liam Rainey Harper professor of nat¬ural sciences, and Knox C. Hill, asso¬ciate professor of humanities In thecollege. Moderator: Jacob Scher. asso¬ciate professor of journalism. North¬western university.Radio program : The Sacred Note.WBBM, 8:15 pm. A program of choralmusic by the UC choir, Richard Vlk-strom, director, Heinrich Fleischer,organist.You won't have to potyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711Culture Vulture4k- ■ ' i-'i* - / ... ’ . -sv ,>•_ • . . • dAs spring temporarily popsup her balmy head, Greek re¬vivals of old college customsspew forth in Bacchic andvaguely barbaric splendor, andlawns are littered with oldcigarette butts and Hum Iclasses, culture, as an indoorsport, loses its many-splen-dored appeal, and Botany pondblooms with anti-cultural tree-carvers.With such a state of affairshi all too obvious evidence, awell-bred vulture could onlydraw up his cultural feathersin conservative contempt and trot alone to all the aestheticair-conditioned affairs in theoffing. Disdain ill-becomes thetrue athlete, however. We willmerely force ourself to discusssaid worthwhile events.On CampusTheatreUniversity Theatre’s productionof Measure for Measure will runfor its second weekend of per¬formances tonight, tomorrow andSunday, May 8-10. The play, byShakespeare, of course, is pro¬duced as a comedy with all thefrills and appropriate and funnyin its context. Saturday and Sunday, May 16thand 17th, University Theatre willhold tryouts for Court theatre, theorganization’s series of semi-stockproductions held annually inHutchinson court during the sum¬mer. This summer’s court produc¬tions will include Shakespeare’sOthello, Congrieve’s Love forLove, and Francesca de Rimini.Tryouts are open to anyone withor without a yen, who plans to behere part of this summer. Tryeeswill try in Hutchinson court —Mandel hall in case of rain.Motion PicturesThis evening Doc Films will pre¬sent Desire. Because Marlene Die¬maroon reviewsBrother Antoninus readsBrother Antoninus (William Everson) exchanged a uniform of the Dominicans for onewith “squarer” shoulders Sunday night, and presented himself and his poetry to an over¬flow crowd in Ida Noyes hall.Now, most reviewers have a thesis. But I, dear readers, have none. I have, instead, a problem.The poet, a tertiary lay brother who lives in San Francisco, has been called “the ‘beat’ monk,” andrefers to himself as a “ ‘beat’ in my heart.” Yet, while he feels a certain affinity with the "beats” intheir rebellion against the “squares” — who take no risks, and consequently lack vitality—, he admitsthat “actually the ‘beats’ repudiate my solution of Catholicism.”The issue, in this respect, seems clear enough, despite the demands by certain discussion group mem¬bers* on a television show the preceding night, that Brother Antoninus categorically defend or attacksubway satori and fried shoes. The presence of the "beats" has been already overpopularized. We willnot find Brother Antoninus by exploring this controversy.The poems were religious, affirmative and intensely personal. The delivery was just as personal.It would be blind infringement to suggest that certain standards were disregarded here.The interchange, in Brother Antoninus’ eyes, went further than mere affirmation or entertainment.He spoke of a growing understanding between himself and the audience: “It was good that we did notflinch from each other. You see, it was valuable.”Was there understanding? The transient and multi level characteristics of such a communion shouldexclude it from shallow reviews.Much of an awareness which the audience seemed to carry from the session was based more ontheir conception of a gaping wound, than on an ability to see beyond the “self that gagged (BrotherAntoninus’) soul.” Granted that the audience may have been embarrassed by the poet’s manner anddisclosures. What, then, needs to be said in judgment?Finally, Brother Antoninus, who has been called “the most durable and profoundly moving of theSan Francisco Renaissance’ poets,” insisted on his amateur status, the necessity for exposing an unpre¬dictable “creative unconscious,” and his disgust with the “glare of fascination” which has focused onhim as a “beat.”Perhaps the best answer is to write a news story, not a review at all. . . .Marvin Bellmeasure tor(from page 14)even in his moments of passion, link him, if butmomentarily, to characters like Iago, Richard IIIand Macbeth (the Macbeth of the final act).Wranowies is obviously most comfortable in hisgrander moments. He declaims his set speecheswith relish and force (though he has an unfor¬tunate tendency to swallow some of his lines).But his rigid stiffness and his fixed look of dis¬dainful aloofness, which serve him adequately inthe earlier acts, make him look uncomfortableand out of place in the judgment scene at the end.And at the end he, too, surrenders to the forces ofcomedy. He is a picture of comic abjectness asMariana drags him off to be married.Incongruous though he may be, Angelo faresbetter than Isabella. I feel that it was a mistaketo attempt to lower the moments of high serious¬ness in the play. Granting that they stand out insharp contrast from the rest of the production, measure...they still can offer pleasurable moments. In anycase, the solution tried is even less satisfactory.THE WHOLE production is immeasurably aidedby the handsome and effective set designed byKazdailis. Given the problems he faced: a smallstage, a number of scene changes and the need fora set that would be both colorful and substantial,I think he managed remarkably well.This is basically an esemble production, andone feels the controlling hand of the directorthroughout. Anyone who has read the play withan eye to the problems involved in producing it onthe stage can appreciate the intelligent labor thatwent into working them out. If Sills’ conceptionsdo not always work out, they work often enoughto keep the play moving and to make it, as a whole,an enjoyable theatrical experience. Of how manyproductions of Measure for Measure could thistruthfully be said?Harold Lubin trich stars, Doc Films claim theyneed say no more about the film.We may cheerfully and that thefilm also features Gary Cooperand John Halliday, that admissionis 50c and that film will be shownin Soc Sci 122. More than this ispresumably necessary, but can beforgotten.Monday, International Housewill present Born Yesterday. Ifyou were born before tomorrowyou may still see the film for acalm, mature 50c.MusicThursday the UC Glee club willsing around and about Hutchin¬son court in a concert of springsongs, including works by Morley,Copeland, Haydn, and others. Theconcert will probably be average.The music is good. There is no ad¬mission.Off CampusMusicIf you haven’t guessed alreadythat 1959 is Handel’s 200th you’veignored the predominance of Han¬del on everybody’s program thisyear. About 15 Messiah’s overChristmas, a dash of Israel inEgypt for Passover and a spot ofJudas Maceabaetis for no reasonin particular is the dear man’sscore to date.This evening Temple IsaiahIsrael will present yet anotherHandel oratorio — Samson — fea¬turing soloists from the Lyricopera and directed by AndrewFoldi, staff member of the UCmusic school and lecturer in UC’sfine arts program.Members of the Chicago Con¬servatory opera workshop willperform in Mozart’s The MagicFlute next Tuesday and Wednes¬day at the 11th Street theatre.The production will include bothchorus and ballet managed by di¬rector, George Lawner. The Chica¬go Conservatory is one of thecountry’s better music schools.Mozart is one of Germany’s bettercomposers. The Magic Flute isone of the world’s better operas.This is one of the world’s simplestrecommendations.Art ExhibitionsAn exhibition of Italian productdesign, selected by Massimo Vig-nelli, a member of the Italian de¬sign association, will be open tothe public at the Illinois Instituteof Technology Institute of designnext Monday. This exhibition isremarkable for the quality andquantity of its parts as well asfor its premierness. It is the firstMidwest exhibition of its kind,and is supposedly fairly represen¬ tative of the various trends in ew-rent Italian design.The Art Institute’s annual ex¬hibition of works by artists in theChicago area opens next Wednes¬day, to run through June 8. Theexhibit includes a momentousnumber of works, mostly modern,and highly selected, and includesthe added attraction of prize win¬ners labeled offering the superiorviewer a change to disagree vio¬lently, if privately, with a groupof well-known artist-judges.Motion PicturesThis w'eek the Hyde Park the¬atre will feature The CaptainFrom Koepeniek adapted fromCarl Zuckmayer’s comedy. Thestory is that of an ex-convict-cobbler, who, because of his ob¬vious non-entitness is unable toprocure a leave-the-country pass¬port. He squeezes into a second¬hand army captain’s uniform andis immediately greeted with jump¬ing obsequiousness from the mili¬taristic Germans who previouslykicked him down. The film obvi¬ously satirizes everything Prus¬sian within reach.The Captain From Ivoepeiiii-kwill run with Dreaming Lips,which features Maria Schell’s lilt¬ing bicuspids in several bits o4delicious acting.Happy Is the Bride, a Britishmarital comedy will open this eve¬ning at the Surf. The film involvesa gay young couple with practicaland opposed parents, relatives andpolice connections. The marriagefinally comes about, after a seriesof twirling whirlwind episodes,unconcerned with courtship assuch.Room at the Top, adapted fromJohn. Braine’s jiovel of Britain’sangry young men, is currentlyplaying at the Esquire theatre.The book was recommended in anEnglish history course as tremen¬dously indicative of Britain’s po¬litical trends and structures. Thefilm too indicates these trends*although centering more on theplot of the book than on its rami¬fications.The story deals with a youngman’s powerful social and politi¬cal drives which center on hisdesire to overcome existing socialbarriers, marry into a prominentfamily, and become wealthy andpowerful as a natural result oisuch an action.The film has received threeacademy awards, including onefor the best film from any source.Both because of its possible sig¬nificance so far as 20th centuryBritish politics are concerned, andbecause of its own merits as afilm it should be worth seeing.the a Ld-r S3 **e7-^0?1yde park theatreStudent rate 65cupon presentation of ID cord AnotherFirst-showingSouth- •/The Qreen Door Book Shop1450 East 57th Street HY 3-5829-We carry all the Free Press booksChi«*tirio*s Most Complete Sleekof Quality Paper Backs= Chicago’* Molt Unusual= Motion Picture Theatre DEARBORNAT DIVISIONPhono DE 7-174)s: Again reminds alj College Student* of tho5 Special Student Rates always in effect at| EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK __ SKOAL| INCt. FM. * SAT. EVENINGS 75* *AT£ENT1 ‘ JUST SHOW CASHIER TOUR ,\D. CARP NOWNew British Comedy“Happy Is The Bride”Ian Cormichoet - Cecil ParkerTerry Thomas - Joyce Grenfell Et CLARK Theatredark fir madisonopen 7:30 a,m.late show 4 a.m.fr 2-2845Spring Film Festivalfri. may 8“a place in the sun*“sergeant york”sat. may 9“face in the crowd*“the last bridge*sun. may 10“the eagle,” rudolph valentino4 chaplin filmsrobert benchley & w. c. fieldsshortsmon. may 11“paths of glory*“the barefoot contessa”tues. may 12“the great man*“witness for the prosecution”wed. may 13“singin’ in the rain”“3 coins in the fountain”tbur, may 14 * ’ ’ i“marty”“viva zapata!”fri. may 15“cowboy”“stalag 11”sat. may 16“citizen kane”“alexander nevsky**sun. may 17“tight little island*“bicycie thief”50c at all timescollege student pricegive your i.d. card to the cashier CARL ZUCKMAYERSzany comedy about the self-appointed coptain and the guffaws heard‘round the world!the CAPTAIN from KOEPENICKThe new Helmut Kautner production in technicolor and starring HeinzRuhrmmn in a rave-reviewed performance!"Magnificent!" "Excellent!"—— Crowtber, N.Y. Times — N.Y. Daily News"Howlingly funny!" "Hiloriou*!"— Cue mag. — N-Y. World Tele-Sun"A genuine work of art" — N.Y. Post— (i ml —The IncomparableMARIA SCHELL in her first European filmsince "Gervaise" and "LastBridge"DREAMING LIPSCo-starring long-time favorite of the German theatre, 0. W. Fischerin his American debut ... A brilliant musical background by AlisMelicher and the Berlin Philharmonic.May &,.1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15UC kitchens prepare 2700 meals daily(above) Between meals kitchen employees spend muchtime cleaning and re-stockcng the two new service countersin the New Dorm dining unit. Over five hundred studentscome through these lines for each meal, (photo by Wahl)Serving 550 students in the NewWomen’s dorm and an additional350 students in Burton-Judson.Barbara C. Wallace and C. RuthCarpenter, head dieticians at thenew dorms and B-J, respectively,have the regular problem of keep¬ing their dinners, their cooks andtheir budget in a semblance ofhappy terms, 20 times a week.The Residence Halls and Com¬mons department, according toLylas E. Kay, its director, is anauxiliary enterprise of the Uni¬versity, receiving no assistancefrom the general funds of theUniversity. It must therefore bea self-sustaining operation, which,if not profit making, must not bedeficit spending.House and feed‘The function of residence hallsand commons,” Miss Kay ex¬plained, “is to house and feed stu¬dents living on campus, plus feed¬ing transient students, faculty andStaff in the commons.” In orderto fulfill this obligation, each resi¬dence hall which provides boardcontracts to students is staffedwith a food supervisor or traineddietitian and an assistant, in addi¬tion to a housing supervisor.The duties of a food supervisorare numerous. She plans themenus, directs preparation andservice of meals, requisitions,food and supplies, employs andtrains personnel, and plans workschedules for the personnel.The planning of a menu encom¬passes numerous considerations.Always at the top is consciousnessOf cost. A student on board con¬tract in a residence hall pays $265per quarter, or approximately$2 .16 a day. From this income thekitchen staff must pay for food,labor, supplies, gas, laundry, cart¬age, heat, hot water, electricity,insurance, replacement of smalland large equipment furniture,building and maintenance repairsand replacement. Approximately40% of the board-income is spentOil food, 36% on labor and 24%on the type of overhead men¬tioned above. But this means thatbach dietician has less than $.90a day to spend on food for eachStudent.Menu planningAmong other considerations,each dietician must think of theappeal of the food she serves,appeal both to eye and to taste.It has been found that color playsan important part in food accept¬ability. For this reason, Mrs. Wal- and nature of the kitchen equip¬ment available for any one meal.There are not enough ovens avail¬able for any one meal. There arenot enough ovens available toserve a baked meat, baked pota¬toes, and a baked vegetable atthe same meal.Fresh meat dailyIn planning a menu, a dieticianmust also take into considerationthe demands placed upon herlabor force. To serve grilled eggsfor breakfast, hamburgers forlunch and cube steaks for dinnerwould require several cooks tospend the entire day over a grill;the dieticians would hesitate toask this from any of their em¬ployees.Despite all these considerationsand the actual low food budgetavailable, RH&C attempts to pro¬vide the best possible quality offood. Meats are all bought freshdaily, except when Emma M.Frost (the assistant director ofRH&C) finds an unusual specialon an available meat.Leftovers are never saved formore than one day, and thenalways with an alternative selec¬tion. Soups are all made daily; theonly canned varieties used aretomato and cream of celery.Tastes differSatisfying the tastes of the stu¬dents is, if anything even moredifficult. Although both B-J andthe New dorm serve approxi¬mately the same foods (both unitsusing the same standardized reci¬pes) the two units exhibit dif¬ferent tastes. Miss Carpenter re¬ports that one of her most popu¬lar luncheon entrees is hot dogs,while Mrs. Wallace claims thatscarcely anyone will eat them atthe New dorm. Both dieticiansagreed without reservation thatthe most popular item at each oftheir kitchens are hamburgers.Moreover, tastes seem tochange from year to year; anitem popular some time ago, whenprepared and served in exactlythe same manner as before, mightvery well be rejected by a newgroup. Both women find them¬selves “playing it by ear” at thebeginning of each new year.Mrs. Wallace commented thatworking in the coeducationalNew dorm unit has exhibitedanother fact: the different sexesdon’t agree as to taste. Girls drinkmuch more coffee and much lessmilk than do the men of the Newdorm; while boys prefer more which appeal to the majority ofthe group. Granted, everyone doesnot like all foods, hence at cer¬tain times the meal may not al¬ways meet with complete appeal.We cannot afford ‘seconds’ onmost meat items’ but do allowseconds on vegetables, bread andall the milk a student wishes.”A continual effox't is made tomake meals as satisfactory aspossible. Both kitchens are alwaysworking on new recipes and areattempting to standardize them.Very unpopular items tend todrop off the regular menus. MissCarpenter, for example, discov¬ered that the boys in B-J had nextto no interest in smoked tongue(incidentally a rather expensiveitem), and has stopped servingit.Five choicesLast year the kitchens intro¬duced a policy of offering two dif¬ferent main entrees at each meal,providing for greater variety. Itwas discovered that the old ‘stand¬bys’, as much as people might de¬mand variety, were more popularthan new ‘experimental’ dishes.Miss Kay commented that thispolicy appeared not satisfactory.Both of the food supervisorsexpressed a desire to hear stu¬dent complaints and suggestions.A committee was organized thisyear in Burton-Judson by thepresidents of the various housesto present suggestions on food-service, many of them, such asproviding a choice between fruitand juice at breakfast, have beenaccepted.Welcome suggestionsNo such group has been organ¬ized in the New dorm, but manyindividuals have made sugges¬tions. Some, of course have notbeen acceptable. Among thesehave been requests to servefrench bread daily (french breadcan’t be kept without gettingstale), the elimination of filler inhamburgers, (they fall apart whencooked in the quantities necessaryto meet the sudden deluge atlunch time — over 1,000 are pre¬pared in advance) and permissionto carry food out of the units(being a self-paying operation,the commons have no desire tofeed Hyde Park.) “We must pro¬vide control and protection for thestudent on board contracts whoultimately pay for every bit offree food eaten,” Miss Kay ex¬plained. She went on to say that onereason student disquiet developsis simply that anyone would gettired of eating the same type ofcooking three times every day.There is nothing to be done aboutthis. However, it is felt that bynot serving a Sunday dinner, astudent is provided with an oppor¬tunity to get some variety byeating out.Board cost lowThe cost of University boardcontracts is relatively quite low.Students at Harvard pay $590 for21 meals a week, but they areprovided with unlimited secondson everything, including meat.Students at Yale pay $250 for 18meals, while Princeton people pay$560 for 21 meals.Wisconsin charges $320 persemester for room and two mealsa day, while UCLA charges $385to $415 each semester for roomand board. Harvey Mudd college in Claremont, California, bills itsstudents $455 a year for twentymeals. UC board contracts costonly $495 for three quarters.Among their other activities,these women are directly responsible for ordering, which, in thevolume used, demands a good dealof time.Last year the 550 students eating in New dorm consumed 10,-401 gallons of milk plus 7,293quarts of skim milk and 2,350quarts of cream. They ate tenthousand eggs, over 7 thousandpounds of butter and almost fourthousand pounds of Chicken, andalmost twice as much turkey.Over thirty five tons of potatoeswere disposed of in these elevenweeks, along with six tons ofbeef, 8,550 loaves of bread and apaltry 1,343 pounds of coffee.Miss Kay provided an interest¬ing note on milk consumption,(see “RH&C,” page 12)lace claims she would never serve salads and heavier desserts thanjsweet potatoes and beets together do the distaff side.•-the colors clash too much. “Each supervisor” Miss Kay ex-Also to be considered is amount plained, “tries to provide menusAuto InsuranceHome Owners InsurancePhone or writeJoseph H. Aaron, '215524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986 Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRIST1138 i. 63 HY 3-5352STERNS CAMPUS DRUGS61st Or Ellis45$125 SOUTHERN FRIED1 CHICKENala carte dinnerwith all of the trimmings, chef salad, dressing,roll, butter, and beverageSPECIAL — Hot Meat Loaf Sandwich ONLY 65c16 • CHICAGO MAR 0 O N • May 8, 1959 ‘If he should get by you, Emma,double back for the Camels! ”lav»*.•**. < More people keep going backfor Camels than any othercigarette today. The Camelblend of costly tobaccos hasnever been equalled for richflavor and easygoing mild¬ness. Today as always,the best tobacco makes thebest smoke.By-past the fadsand faney stuff .. •Have a realcigarette-have a CAMELB. J. BeynoldsTub. Co.,Winston-Salem,N.0,