M*h\ — M r* n if*rtrtss Special report out June 5\ gntu UUur *_"The average college student is not partciularly responsible.His quite genuine feeling that his college is doing a good jobbut could do a better one is not motivated by any deep under-<*4VTlf f B VB K ■■ B M IV M M M H w' H standing of higher education of its purposes" . . . "In a gen-, — _ _ _ _ _ _ _ eration the college professor has lost 50 per cent in economic,VZT(. ^B ■ H status as compared to the average American. His real incomeJl B B B ^^B^ ^^Br fl fl has declined substantially while that of the average Americanhas risen by 70 to 80 per cent." There are two of the subjects— — . that wilf be dealt with in a special Maroon report on the stateVol. 67f No. 34 University of Chicago, May 15, 1959 31 of American education which will appear in the June 5 issue,—— : — • the last Maroon of the school year.Mackauer awarded Harper professorshipA William Rainey Harper Mackauer received most of his transferred to a small gymnasium states citizen. In the Feb. 5 “The history course is based onprofessorship has been award- formal education at schools in to teach the classics, until 1937 Maroon he expressed his attitude the same principals by which theed to Christian Mackauer, Germany. After graduating from when he was dismissed from pub- towards the studv of history and College in general is guided:chairman of the History of west- gymnasium, he studied history lie service. In 1939, two weeks be- 3 3 knowledge is treated as a process,ern civilization course in the Col- and classics at the universities of fore the outbreak of the second lts importance: not as a secure and final posses-loge. University dean of the facul- Freiburg, Bonn, and Frankfurt, world war, the Mackauers escaped “An historically educated man sion. Not information but under¬lies R. Wen da 11 Harrison an- graduating from the University to England. He then spent a year has a fuller existence, lives a standing, not broad coverage butnounced today. of Frankfurt in 1920. at Oxford, while waiting for an richer, more complete life than a relatively intensive study of se-Ma,k„.,Pr who received the Then, after one year of practice opportunity to come to America, man deaf to the language of his- lected representative phenomena* 1 mn oi.antrell award for excel- teaching, Mackauer undertook a doing research on the knowledge tory. Those who have cultivated is our aim. In their first classien^e in undergraduate teaching most active Program. Between of plato and the nature of plato’s their historical sense have been hour we challenge our students* JLJwillOfficially assume the 1921 and 1935 he taught (simul- scholarship during the middle human m a higher meaning of with Collingwood’s protest thatnofiition onJulvl taneously) history, economic his- ages. this word-just as those whose ‘nothing capable of being learnt,T , . .. . tory and sociology at the Academy At UC Mackauer has taught mmd has been opened to music, by heart, nothing capable of beingMackauer an w e emi‘ Df Labor (a worker’s educational divisional courses in Roman his- to the visual arts, to the beauty memorized is history.”grated to the ni e< . ates rom branch of Frankfurt university), tory, Greek, social science two o£ mature, or to the delights of Mackauer’s most immediateEngland in 0, wving escapee cjassics and history at a Frank- and the history of western civili- mathematical imagination; you problem is collapsing a threefiom Germany in . .. arrive f0rt gymnasium, seminars for fu- zation course, of which he has can bve without any of these quarter course to fit the programh<r>V11Ver+t!-y i? . 1Cf?° m ture teachers on the art of teach- been chairman since 1954. The experiences, but you will be in- of the new college, one which willvear at^sohooMn^on^Isla*^ ing history and some additional white-haired educator has been eS y Poorer- still provide the* student with hisaM^^chu’sen, wo* in aduU education. connected with the history course ^ “notlnow Z Sn^llST £ ~school, and finally, a year in Ore- In 1933 Hitler closed the Acad- since its inception in 1946, the roots. If we try to escape fromgon. emy of Labor, and Mackauer was same year he became a United our past without having squarelyfaced it we lay ourselves open to £*%»> rCQ A^ ^ the stricture that one hundred fwT J ^W4M If ** Mtk Ilf j1* jj £ Jflj fOf C/j JTff% by 3acob Burkhardt elected todaym v w m m ^ 'mm m m m w type of civilized man <who haslargely scuttled everything his- Editor-in-chief of the Chicago• m • Jf ML _ fa Bfa torical, i.e., all continuity of intel- Maroon for the 1959-60 academicft Sfafa M Wfa JHB m 4* M If I Mtt f m lectual life.’ And even our differ- year will be elected this afternoon.If If II \M I %4 I I W mwL mM • mm ences from everything past, our The weekly newspaper, one ofvery peculiarity as Americans of the few in the country withouthv Sandra Sciacatano tling and yachting. Locations for made up of works of the outstand- the mid-20th century, can best be administrative censorship, publi-mi Tt • -f , „-i, events are now only tentative. ing composers of the Americas. grasped by those who see them- cation boards or faculty advisorsT lie University campus will Although athletes will use train- Folk music song and dance selves against the background of e ects its editor by a vote of thebe transformed in part into ing faciiities of the University, no groups of the Americas are to be men aKnd instltu.tl0ns °f otber staff. Only the position of editorthe Pan-American ‘‘Village’’ eVents will be held here Accord- 8 P . . ‘ ages; by comparison and contrast is elective. All other positions arefor tiiroe weeks this summer ing to Walter L. Hass, director of Presented on Programs through- the student becomes aware of his by appointment of the editor-in-wlien 1600 athletes and officials athletics, almost all members of ou*" Chicago. own identity. chief,from 26 countries arrive August j^e University coaching staff are18 for the Third Pan-American helping to organize the games. 0 • • • •games. j. Kyle Anderson, UC baseball UrATACCAfC Itl ICHIVHIHCThey will be housed and fed in coach, was named manager of the WL U w ▼ \m IVW Bill ■ T II B^UUniversity dormitories, while Ida US baseball team. Kyle, a UCNoyes hall has been requisitioned alumnus, is the veteran of a brief BA* B •as “nerve center” of the village stint with the Pittsburgh Pirates m JLi Bfi*' fi 4F* jpr! an m r*n_ *S** in jfmtLwhore each team will set up its and of minor league ball. Edward ^8 g E fl ill g B 11*” lid CT B 1 C B B B iL i 1 ^ Bdesk. M. Haydon, associate professor of m m m™ ™ ™ m ■ ■Honorary co-chairman Mayor physical education is chairman ofRichard J. Daley (President Ei- the men’s division of track and Serious misgivings about American education were voiced by the majority of 50 retiringsenhower is honorary chairman) field. college professors interviewed in the current Newsweek (May 18).requested the use of University Costs this year will be covered William Franklin Edergton, 65, professor of Oriental languages at UC said in the article:facilities, taking the idea from by a $500,000 government grant, “The best American learning is of the same quality as the best European learning, and theMexico’s plan to house athletes donations, and ticket receipts, wors^ js 0f the same quality as the worst European. We have less of the best and more ofat the University of Mexico city while the city itself underwrites worsh This is an unavoidable by-product of our struggle to educate everybody. The in¬ducing tne last Pan-American the games. " • , . ^ ^_ j . ■ 17 47 3games four years ago. The Pan-American games cul- Silent demand of youngThe Pan-American games are a minate a month-long Festival of Americans tor more and net- — ■ # jm ^ ^•kind of prelude to the Olympic the Americas beginning August 3. ter education IS the most AnlUIT CT I 1 ^1 ■ Cgames which follow them by a The purpose of the festival is to favorable feature of the situation. ■ ■ ■ ■ * WT W ^iUVIWl Iyear. Soldier Field will be the advance the principles of Pan- “The greatest challenges to _ , 0 .scene of opening and closing cere- Americanism, the movement to- higher learning are to distin- date, exactly 849 students have received notice of theirmonies. Final events are being ward social, commercial, political guish between the pursuit of admission to the University of Chicago, announced Charlesscheduled on the weekend for con- and military cooperation between knowledge and the pursuit of job O’Connell, director of admissions. This figure represents ap-venience. countries of this hemisphere. The competence,” stated Paul Kirk- proximately 90 per cent of theEvents will be held at various games represent a step in the so- patrick of Stanford. total number of students who will of May 7, 169 accepted studentsspots throughout the city and sur- cial aims. For Edward H. Taylor of Kan- be accepted. replied, 120 accepted and 49 re¬rounding area. A million-dollar An exhibit of contemporary art sas university, the challenge “is At the same time as the accept- jected Chicago s offer,swimming pool is being construct- and architecture of the Americas for a revolution in the schools of ance notices were mailed, May 1, O’Connell explained that theed in Portage park for the swim- will be presented by the Art In- education that will create teachers 29^ applicants were rejected, proportion of accepting studentsming, diving, and water polo con- stitute, and the Museum of Nat- with learning as well as tech- These figures account for 1,144 at this point is unrealisticallytests. A 400-meter 10-lane track ural History has scheduled what niques of teaching.” o£ the i’300 applications received, high. He only expects 50 per centwill be built in Soldier Field. is hoped will be the greatest show- “Classical studies have atro- T.he remaininS applications were of the 849 students accepted toThe games will include events ing of Pre-Columbian art ever Dhied ” said Geooree N Shuster e*£ber withdrawn or incomplete actually be in the 1959 enteringin baseball, basketball, boxing, assembled. president of New York City’s and tbere£ore» *n process. As class,cycling, equestrian sports, fene- Concerts featuring the Chicago Hunter college. BBBBKI f?ing, soccer, gymnastics, riding, Symphony orchestra and a Pan- HarJan L Cracken of Louisianaswimming cross country, rowing, American Festival orchestra with gtate university stated: q do notshooting, skeet, tennis volleyball, leaders and soloists fft>m the think our greatest challenge is towater polo, weightlifting, wres- Americas will present programs surpass Russia in math or phys._ - » ics. It is just as important thatLast Maroon before exams aZfrsVSte.straight thinking we do, the lessThe Maroon staff, having discovered during their feature straight shooting we will have toon the College that there is more to campus than Ida Noyes do-” . _ I'hall, will suspend publication for two weeks to observe with all The chairman of Yale’s philos-due reverence the yearly panic of examination time. Knowing ophy department, Charles H. Hen-how lost campus will be without the comfort of the weekly del, said, "It is better to haveMaroon, we suggest that until June 5, our next publication quaVtyta!uLan’lifWManeftheir ^ UP ’° d3'e With *he N*W Yo,k TimeS fare of everytod? and neglect -y * everybody.” - vtv/^ V -In this 20 page issue: Esther Cloudman Dunn of » -Honors assembly 2 gmitk college had this farewell:Maroon^Sito^dafs re .*!!!!.! ^4 <We re strong on research that Residents of Salisbury house compete to win places on theClassifieds . *.... . . .7 leads int® new and extended tiddlywink team which will face the champion team ofRiesman: on Americans*! !!! 11!!!!!!!!!!!!*.!!!!! 1 * * * *9 awareness* But we’re short on the Cambridge university. For more information on UC's winkingSports-Pan American news . . . . . . 15# 17 use of tbe Past t0 balance and situation see the special Maroon tiddlywink report in theCulture 18# 19 check our new discoveries.” June 5 issue* (photo by Berger)■MBS*'v' i *» ^ » . &M8NS .. ■.' ,<- --■- **, > *****New members for societyThe Maroon key honor so¬ciety has twelve new members.The newly chosen members ofthe group that serves ..s the offi¬cial hosts and hostesses of theUniversity were announced byJohn P. Netherton, dean of stu¬dents on Wednesday at a recep¬tion for the society in the libraryof Ida Noyes hall.They are:Bert Collier, Nancy Cox, HelenFancy, George Furtado, Bill Haw¬kins, Peter Jacobs, Wendy Good,Norma Schmidt. Alice Schaeffer,Bill Spady, Ron Shelton and Nat¬alie Ostroot.The group founded last year bythe dean of students has served as tour leaders and hosts for theoffice of admissions, alumni week,FOTA, and many other Univer¬sity functions. "The scope of theorganizations activities has wid¬ened greatly since its beginningand continues to grow and widen,”it was expressed at the reception.Miss Margaret Perry, assistantdirector of admissions, pointedout that any department of theUniversity may call on membersof the Maroon key society for as¬sistance. Until the group choosesan executive board, members ofthe University wishing the serv¬ices of Maroon key people maycontact Miss Perry. Over 13 thousand dollarswill be awarded in JuneOver 13 thousand dollars will be awarded at the June 10 honors convocation, announcedGeorge Playe, director of financial aid and manager of the award program.This sum includes the four $1,000 Quantrell awards made to outstanding undergraduatefaculty members and the $1,000 first place and $500 second place awards made to winnersof the Sergei play writing contest, a biennial competition of national scope and not con¬fined to students.This leaves some 000 to scripture, English prose, play mented, is In getting rid of all thebe awarded as prizes to stu- writln*’ muslcaI '•omposition, prize money at hand. Moat ot ,heFrench, and common dialect funds have stipulations as to whoGreek. is or is not eligible, some of themThe honors assembly will be Qu^e detailed and complex, some-held Wednesday, June 10 in the bmes it s difficult finding peoplelounge of Ida Noyes hall at 4 pm. wbo 0ua^*ty.dents for excellence in a num¬ber of fields: poetry writing, ar¬tistic reading, undergraduate hu¬manistic studies, track, medicalresearch, field and case work,psysiology, German, reading ofTareyton’s Dual Filterfilters as no sinsle filter can:t It combines an efficient purewhite outer filter...2. with a unique inner filter ofACTIVATED CHARCOAL... Which hasbeen definitely proved to make thesmoke of a cigarette milder andsmoother. THE TAREYTON RINGMARKS THE REAL THING!Hooray for college students! They’remaking new Dual Filter Tareytonthe big smoke on American campusesAre you part of this movement ?If so, thanks. If not, try ’emlNEW DUAL FILTER TOTeVtOtlfhdwd qf %/& ttivwlJv&XK* — Jv&OCV it <mr mMU ua/ if*.*am ^ f Immediately following the awardceremony, there will be a recep¬tion in the patio of Ida Noyes forwinners and guests.Playe asserted that these sumsare regarded as prizes for excel¬lence, and although to receive a$50 prize does not necessarily callfor a $50 reduction in scholarship.Quite the opposite” Playe con- At other times judges refuse tomake awards, especially when theawards are of a very high sum,feeling that none of the worksentered in the competition areworth the money. On several oc¬casions judges have refused toaward the $1000 first prizes in theMenn competition. The stricturesin the terms of the various com¬petitions must be adhered to rig-tinued. “Such a practice would all idly, for the University has thebut destroy the idea behind an danger of losing the funds, butaward.” Playe expressed a desire that allof the various funds be awardedOne of his problems, Playe com- this year.uc press wins honorFour books published within the end of the month. A thirdthe last year by the UC Press Press book in this exhibit is Owenhave been chosen for display Wlster Out West: His Journal amiin local graphic arts exhibits edited by Fanny Kemblewhich opened in Chicago the first Wister Here the book and jacketweek in May. were designed by Andor Braun.Included in the 99 examples of [n ,the Book Clinic competition,printing art in the 32nd annual “°°ks are Judged on the basis ofSTA (Society of Typographic “S"’ prin,in*’ binding. read-arts) Design in Chicago printing ^now’how^ °Ver'ali publishin«exhibit, which will be at the ArtInstitute through June 5, are ninebooks. Two of these are UC presspublications: Petrarch at Vau-cluse: Letters in Verse and Prose,translated by Ernest Hatch Wil¬kins, and The Sister Arts: TheTradition of Literary Pictorialismand English Poetry from Drydento Gray, by Jean Hagstrum. «— - ~~Books and jackets in each case Wednesday> Ma-V 20, at 7:30 pm,were designed, respectively, by ^ was ann°unced by John SchuetGreer Allen and Norman W^olfe, WUCB managerto be picked soonElections for WUCB stationmanager for the 1959-60 aca¬demic year will be held nextof the Press’s printing depart¬ment. Also in the STA exhibit isthe cover of the Press’s paperbackedition of The History of Nature,by C. F. von Weizsacker, designedby Ed and Jane Bedno.The Wilkins and Hagstrumbooks are also among the 59 booksselected for the Chicago BookClinic show, which will be at theChicago Public library through man, current station manager.Schuerman said that applirations for the station manager po¬sition would be received at theWUCB office, 302 Reynolds Club,until 11:00 pm tomorrow, or bySchuerman at Foster 32, sam«deadline.The station manager electionswill be held in W’UCB’s Mitchelltower studios, just above Hutchinson commons.HI-FI & STEREO for Hie finest elec¬tronic service, bring itto CHELTEN T.V.CORP., 2915 E. 79thSt. or Coll ES 5-3666Harper Wines & Liquors1114-16 E. 55th St.LARGEST SELECTION OFIMPORTED & DOMESTICWINES-LIQUORSBEERSat low pricesFree Prompt DeliveryTelephone FA 4-1233 • 1318 - 7699aJury project is first tryat empirical jury study“The jury project is prob¬ably the first attempt at asystematic empirical researchon the jury. It is a real scientificcontribution because it affords anopportunity to experiment withsmall groups in an institutional¬ized setting.”Miss Rita James, sociologistand research associate on theproject spoke of this UC Lawschool study of that “old and hon¬ored institution," the jury. Uni¬quely, the project brings togetherthe resources of the social sci¬ences and legal authorities, andits results arc aimed at these twoplus a third, the "educated laypublic.”The study has been in effectsince 1953 under a grant fromthe Ford foundation. Researchprobably will be concluded thisfall, while results will be pub¬lished in eight volumes at six-month intervals.The project had something lossthan a calm beginning. TheMaroon and Cap & Gown re¬ported in 1956 . . . “It receiveda rude awakening when it wasscrutinized in a Senate commit¬tee investigation. Financed withSI.400,000 in Ford foundationfunds, it sent researchers scurry¬ing across the country in searchof information. 1,400 formerjurors were interviewed, judgesquestioned, and the 112,000 Peoriapopulation was polled to ascertainUC psychiatristsdiscuss dreamsUC psychiatrists will dis¬cuss “When do you dream?”on Channel 11, next Tuesdayfrom 9:30 to 10 pm. Dr. WilliamOffenkranz, associate professorin the department of psychiatryat Billings hospital, Dr. AllanRechtscaffen, an assistant profes¬sor, and Dr. Harry Trosman, alsoan assistant professor, will delib¬erate on the importance ofdreams.This program is part of the AllThings Considered series, whichis produced by the University.The three psychiatrists are activ-ly engaged in research projectswhich investigate dreams.Abbey will speakat chapel serviceDr. Merrill R Abbey willpreach the sermon “WhenTruth Comes Home” atRockefeller chapel’s services thisSunday at 11 am.His publications include thebook Creed of Our Hope, 1954,and articles in Religion in Life,The Pulpit, The Christian Advo¬cate, and various other periodi¬cals. their opinions about jury proce¬dure. Simulated jury trials werehie dand the deliberations of sixujjies in a Wichita Federal Dis¬trict court were tape-recorded.“This final point brought thewrath of the Internal SecuritySub committee, and its investiga¬tion erupted in front-pages acrossthe nation. Dean Edward H. Leviand Professor Harry Kalvin, Jr.were questioned in such a lineas to make the unadvised record¬ing appear part of a red plot toundermine American justice. Leg¬islation to ban further jury-tap¬ping was threatened, despiteproject-praise from many distin¬guished lawyers and judges, in¬cluding the tacit approval of theSolicitor General and US SupremeCourt justices.“The findings of the Jury Pro¬ject have not yet been revealed.Regardless of their recommenda¬tions, the Law School tackled aproblem at its roots and openedthe way for a nation-wide greatdebate on one of the keystones ofAnglo-Saxon law. ”Two main branches, one usinga “survey approach,” the otheran "experimental approach” formthe basic structure of the projectaccording to Miss James. Bothbranches are coordinated byHarry Kalven, Jr., professor Inthe law school.There are also sub - branches,such as historical studies of thejury, and polls of communitypublic-opinion of court procedure.Hans Zeisel, professor in theLaw school and department ofsocial science, 'assisted by PhilipEnnis, heads the survey branch.Fred Strodtbeck, associate pro¬fessor in sociology and psychologyheads the experimental depart¬ment.Miss James described one ofthe experimental projects. Actualrecords of court trials are record¬ed and played before real juroi'sin a court room. The jurors areunder normal conditions, andthough they are informed thatthey are part of an experiment,they receive the usual instruc¬tions from the judge. They fillout, anonymously, special ques¬tionnaires to help researchers dis¬cover such things as what in factis the process of decision-making,who among the jurors are mostinfluential, does social status of the juror have an influence onhis part in the decision, can oneman dictate the decision.“These are questions,” saidMiss James, “that will be of valueto the lawyer,” since he has theright to challenge the appearanceof any juror before a case, andmust decide which jurors mightharm his case.“A valuable aspects of this typeof experiment is the use of theexperimental variable,” she ad¬ded, because the effect of specificlaws or withholding of informa¬tion can be seen. For example,one-half of the juries hearing acivil case are told that the defend¬ant has no insurance, one-half are_told that he has insurance. Or inan insanity, one-half are informedof one law governing the determi¬nation of insanity while the otherhalf are told another law. In thislast case the effect of differentlaws governing the same situa¬tion can be studied.What are the goals of such astudy? Miss James emphasizedthe fact that the project is not“trying to dictate policy,, not rec¬ommending how to change thesystem. It is essentially a researchproject.”Results will be published inseven more volumes, the first,Delay in the Courts, by Zeisel,Kalven, and Buchholz, having re¬cently been published. Ten or 12articles already have appeared invarious journals.The books will be of value in¬dividually; one is not a pre¬requisite for another. They are:A general volume coordinatingthe experimental work and se-selected findings. This volumewill digest and review compara¬tively the experimental studies,then subject them to critical com¬parison in terms of other projectfindings. (Kalven and Strodt¬beck.)The experimental jury mono¬graph. A combined presentationof three full monographic reportsof experimental trials. (Strodt¬beck et al.)A volume on judge-jury differ¬ence. This is a report on the broadsurvey results of similarity anddifferences in judge and jury de¬cisions supplemented by descrip¬tive statistics on the use of thejury today (Zeisel, Ennis and Kal¬ven). ‘ Alice Schaefferis 1959 playmateAlice Schaeffer, star of therecent Blackfriar production“Sour Mash” was named cam¬pus playmate for 1959 at BetaTheta Pi’s playboy party lastFriday. Miss Schaeffer wascrowned by Margaret Brown,playmate of 1958. Also present atthe crowning were Eleanor Brad¬ley, Playboy magazine’s MissFebruary, who presented MissSchaeffer with a bouquet of roses,and Hugh Heffner, editor andpublisher of Playboy. Bob Coresand his orchestra provided musicfor a scene of playmates, rabbits,playboys, and the like.Maroon features resumedTwo Maroon features will be resumed in our next issue,June 5. The series of feature articles on the various academicunits of the university will begin again with an examinationof the Law school, written by Edward Levi, dean of the school, andthe business school, with an article written written by James Lorie,acting dean of the Business school. This series will continue withstudies of all the professional schools, the four divisions, the 60 odddepartments, and the 20 inter departmental committees.The second feature series, which will be resumed and concludedin the June 5 issue is the study of the residence halls and commonsdepartment of the University, with an article examining the problemsconfronting dormitory management at the University.— *Elect McAuliffe Italian will haveFOTA chairman comps next yearDennis McAuliffe was elect¬ed chairman of the 1960 Fes¬tival of the Arts at a meetingof the festival committee Tues¬day. McAuliffe is a member ofPhi Gamma DeltaAlso discussed at Tuesday’smeeting was the possibility ofhaving another festival, or somecomparable event, in the fall. Thisidea, along with an evaluation ofthe past festival and the FOTAconstitution, will be discussed atmeeting of the committee at somefuture date. Italian will be offered as acomprehensive course in theacademic year 1959-60, an¬nounced Harold Haydon, dean ofstudents in the college. A secondyear of Italian, also in the formof a comprehensive, will also beavailable.Formerly Italian has been avail¬able only as a divisional sequence,under the new system, only com¬prehensive grades will count.30 %OFFTrousers 50cJackets 50cSuits 95cTop Coats 1.00Over Coats 1.10ON QUALITYDRY CLEANINGAll work done by a regular Chicagowholesaler whose plant serves otherretail stores in addition to his own out¬lets. You get this service because ofour non-profit policy and low overhead.Skirts 50cDresses 95cSuits (2-piece) 95cLight Coat 95c► 4 1 IVewl 20% off on all laundry[ Bicycles, Parts, Accessories <| special student offer < 1UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO HOURS; ACE CYCLE SHOP < : STUDENT SERVICE CENTER 11:00-1:00; 1621 e. 55th st. ) Reynolds Club Basement 4:00-5:00Mon.-Fri.ON ATOMS AND PEACETHE DEVIL'S REPERTOIRE, by Gollanz . $2.50An impassioned plea for nuclear sanity by the distinguished British publisher and author.COMMON SENSE AND NUCLEAR WARFARE, by B. Russell $2.50Bertrand Russell outlines a program of common defense for East and West.PEACE OR ATOMIC WAR? by Schweitzer .$1.50* Albert Schweitzer calls for “a gigantic leap into peace" and a new spirit of good sense andmorality.THE SOCIAL IMPACT OF BOMB DESTRUCTION, by Ikle ...$3.95The first book-length work dealing with the sociological and demographic impact of widespreadbomb destruction.University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE It’s smart to buy for lessThis motto has been our guiding principle in themany years we have been in business in the Universityarea. It is what has created the legion of satisfied cus¬tomers who have found at D Cr G Clothes Shop the tastefulivy-league apparel they desire, and at unbeatable prices.Expenses are kept low, and we conscientiously seekthe best values in the clothing industry. Consequently,we can operate on a low margin of profit and pass suchsavings on to the customer. We have no peers when itcomes to price, quality and style.If you have not yet become acquainted with us,please stop in — every effort will be made to serve yourneeds.Our Prices Can't Be Beat. . . It’s Smart To Buy For LessD & G Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728"In the Neighborhood for 40 Years"Hours: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. —9 a.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdaynWatch for the opening of %D&G's new store at 851 E. 63rdMay 15, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3the Chicago maroonfounded — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and Intermittently during the summer quarter,fcy students of the University of Chicago. Inquiries should be sent to the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E. 50thStreet, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800. extensions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus.Subscriptions by mall, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5. Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material, 4 pm,Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 pm Wednesday before publication.All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signed•dltorial material represents the Individual opinions of the authors.Jazz—city of Chicago’s losscan be University’s gain“IT’S GOING to be a great summer in Chicago!” a local daily proclaimed in banner head¬lines recently, citing such summertime diversions as Queen Elizabeth’s visit and the Pan-American games.One outstanding summertime event was omitted from this list, and if city officials have their way,•eems likely to be omitted from Chicago's summertime itinerary — Playboy magazine’s jazz festival.The festival, originally scheduled in Soldier field for effriy August, featured modern jazzmen likeDave Brubeck and Gerry Mulligan.THIS MONTH Park district officials suddenly announced that the festival could not proceed asscheduled. The Pan American Games committee, district officials said, thought that the cool cats’performance might disturb the track prepared for the athletic contest.Committee spokesmen replied that it was the Park district itself which had ruled that the festivalwould disturb the track. Then the truth wormed its way into print: the festival was banned because itssponsor, Playboy magazine, prints pictures of beautiful women, appropriately clothed.Regardless of who made the decision, and why, the Maroon believes that the banning of the festivaldealt a serious blow to Chicago summertime diversions. But the city’s loss can be the University’s gain.The Maroon urges that the University invite Playboy magazine to present its jazz festival in Staggfield. Stagg field, which withstood the death of Big Ten football and the birth of the atomic age, shouldcertainly be able to endure the bop and beat of Brubeck and Mulligan. *THE M^BOON believes that a campus which proudly presents a Festival of the Arts should welcomeoutstanding representatives of America’s native art form.The Maroon feels that it shouldn’t matter in the least w’hether the jazzmen are sponsored by Playboy,Time or The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. It believes that the students of the University and thecitizens of the city would enjoy their cool breeze on a summer nightnOlEWLlEMOUYfLlf, tWQuitting m JoeAt W VWeREUflSTAND - I UJBNTAn otevfATitNUlIlH MoCt t&ll, ftAWApST COULD FindVpu A PositionIN SD*tfc 1068VAS A HRuTREE?6 HVW&fc VOOH-t EUfcN GET TO fitfl TAMMANY WAUL TREE ~VtANDlNG THERD CLOCKED IN ,HRRWS TWEEDS fiND SUNGLASSES.HO MOlEVlUt,1 THINK I'LLGO FOR THETOP T06-THE PRESIDENCY!Voo CANT et a HALL TREEAND A PRESIDENTIALCandidate TOO. IF YOUUEftE All COVERED WITH COATSTHE VOTERS WOULDN'T UABLE To SEE YOU FOR WHAT TILL WE MEET AGAINThis is the last column of my fifth year of writing for PhilipMorris and Marlboro. I have made it a custom in the lastcolumn of each year not to be funny. I know I have alsorealized this aim in many other columns during the year, butthat was not for lack of trying. Today 1 am not trying. I am nottrying for two reasons: First, because you are getting ready forfinal exams and in your present state of shock, nothing in theworld could possibly make you laugh. And second, this finalcolumn of the year is for many of us a leave-taking, and good¬byes always make me too misty to be funny.For me the year ends neither with a hang nor a whimper, butwith a glow—a warm, pleasant, mellow glow—the kind of glowyou will find, for example, at the end of a Philip Morris orMarlboro.It has been in every way a gratifying experience, my fiveyears with the makers of Philip Morris and Marlboro, and Iwould like to take this opportunity to extend my heartfeltappreciation to these good tobacconists, to assure them thatthe memory of their kindness will remain ever green in myheart, and to remind them that they still owe me for the Ikstthree columns.And in these waning days of the school year, let me addressmyself seriously to you, my readers. Have I trod on any toesthis year? Ruffled any feelings? Jostled any sensibilities? Ifso, I am sorry.Have I occasioned any laughs? Chuckles? Sniggers? Monal.isa smiles? If so, I’m glad.Have I persuaded any of you to try Philip Morris andMarlboro? To taste thaUfine flavor? To smoke that excellenttobacco? If so, you are glad.And now the long, lazy summer lies ahead. But for me sum¬mer is never lazy. It is, in fart, the busiest time of year. Twosummers ago, for instance, I was out ringing doorbells everysingle day, morning, noon, and night. There was a contest,you see, and the kid in my neighborhood who sold the mostbluing won a pony. I am proud to report that I was the luckywinner.I^ast summer I was also out ringing doorbells every singleday, morning, noon, and night. 1 was trying to aell the pony.This summer I am not going to be out ringing doorbells.I am going to saddle the pony and ride to Hollywood, California.What am I going to do in Hollywood, California? I am going towrite a series of half-hour television comedies called THEMANY LOVES OF DOBIE GILLIS, and starting in October,1959, your friends and mine, the makers of Philip Morris andMarlboro, are going to bring you this program over the Colum¬bia Broadcasting System every Tuesday night at 8:30. Whydon’t you speak to your housemother and ask her if she’ll letyou stay up to see it?And now good-bye. For me it’s been kicks all the way, and Ihope for you it hasn’t been altogether unbearable. Have a goodsummer. Stay well. Stay cool. Stay loose.For us, the makers of Philip Morris and Marlboro, it'sbeen kicks too, and ice would like to echo kindly old Max’sparting icords: Stag well. Stag cool. Stag loose.Jimmy: ‘it is not my practice’to serve alcohol to minorsIn a recent edition of yourpaper Ned Rosenheim usedthe name of my establishmentIn an article printed by you. WhileI realize that Rosenheim used mybusiness name as an aid to anunderstanding of the major thrustof his article with, I presume, noIntent to defame me personally orinjure my business, I wish none¬theless to make the following statement for publication:It is not now and has neverbeen my practice to serve alco¬holic beverages to minors. Indeed,it has been my sincere attempt tooperate my business with the ut¬most integrity which, as an aside,includes strict adherence to theIllinois laws relating to the admis¬sion and service of alcoholic bev¬erages to minors. I am sure most of the readerswho read Rosenheim’s article willrecognize that he did not mean toimply that I would serve minors,or ever have. But, in the interestof clarity on the subject I wouldappreciate your printing this let¬ter.James Wilson, proprietorWoodlawn Tap & Liquors DID YOU KNOWthat over two-thirds of Sun Life'spolicy payments are now being madeto living policyholders and annui- •tants? More than ever, life insur¬ance is for the living.As the Sun Life representative in yowrcommunity, may I be of service?RALPH J. WOOD JR. '48Representative j N. LaSalle Sr. Chicago 1, IB.FR 2-2390 RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAFilbey comments on a SO year careerEMERY T. FILBEY cameto work for the University in1900, two years after thedeath of president Harper; he hasserved under Judson, under Bur¬ton and Mason, worked with Hut¬chins and Kimpton. Filbey is nowconcluding his fiftieth year ofservice with the University withthe title of vice-president emeri¬tus.Having known the universitythrough all but 17 years of itsentire history, Filbey has seen agreat many changes in the struc¬ture and nature of the school;in fact he has himself been di¬rectly responsible for many of thedevelopments in this University.He has seen the school from anumber of vantage points.Filbey grew up on an Indianafarm. Before receiving a degreefrom the Terra Haute teacherscollege, he had already taughtschool in a one-room school housefor five years. After leaving col¬lege, Filbey spent two years super¬vising tne technical courses of¬fered in the B 1 u f f t o n Indianaschool system. Then in 1909, whenhe was thirty years old, he cameto the University for some workin the summer quarter and stayedon, first teaching shop work inthe lab school, then assumingresponsibility for shop work andmechanical drawing at the school.TUN YEARS after he arrivedhere the future dean of the facul¬ties, was drafted into the depart¬ment of education; four years later, in 1923, he was appointeddean of University college. It wasduring this period that Filbeyspent some time as a professorin our school of business and sometime on leave of absence with theinstitute of American meat pack¬ers.Filbey remained dean of thedowntown college under the ad¬ministrations of Burton andMason, while at the same timedoing work in the central offices,but it wasn’t until the arrival ofRobert M. Hutchins in 1929 thathe began to devote his full timeto central administrative work.As dean of the faculties andvice-president of the College, Fil¬bey played an integral role in theredevelopment of the college dur¬ing the 30’s; so highly regarded amember of the central adminis¬tration was he that when hereached the age of compulsoryretirement in 1944, he was award¬ed the title of vice-president eme¬ritus, and he kept his office andthe University kept his experi¬ence, knowledge and service.Filbey has encompassed a wideknowledge of the peculiar prob¬lems of the various universitydepartments due to his work inspecial projects. The books in hisfifth floor office, relicks of hisadministrative forrays, testify tothe variety of the fields he hasworked in: The Thunder Storm(a book actually about thunderstorms and not an historicalnovel), General Surgery, Reau¬mur’s Memories on Steel and Iron fa book about steel and iron), ThePeople Shall Judge, Financing theCollege Education of Faculty Chil¬dren; One, Two, Three, Infinity;Public Relations; The Case ofGeneral Yamashita, The NationalDebt, Rural Mexico, and How toStay Rich.THE IMMEDIATE project con¬fronting Filbey, who in the pasthas served as acting dean of sev¬eral of the academic units on cam¬pus, including the Federated Theo¬logical faculty, is the improve¬ment of the Laboratory school, interms of space, equipment andbuildings.Filbey’s position has affordedhim an unparralleled opportunityof observe the change and devel¬opment of the University. “Ourdevelopment has been unusualhere. We’re a unique institution;unique not only in terms of ourexcellence, but also in regard toour very structure.“Five years before Chicago wasfounded, in 1888 there were onlysome 300 graduate students in theentire country. Everyone went toEurope Oxford, Cambridge, theSorbonne—Harper’s conception ofa graduate institution was tre¬mendously novel. The initial em¬phasis upon the schools has itseffect upon the college even today.Harper originally established alarge number of academic unitsand the college drew its coursesand staff from these graduatedepartments. It wasn’t until the30s that the college had its owndean of faculty or budget andcould really ‘call its own shots.’.”“HARPER HAD the requisitedrive, insight and imaginationnecessary to make his Universitya reality, but he accomplishedwhat he did only by disregardingthe question of ‘available funds.’It’s not without accuracy to saythat Harper rode to glory in aburst of deficits!”At the time of Harper’s deathFilbey holds that the Universitywas in need of sound businessmanagement and President Jud¬son provided this. Judson consoli¬dated the institution, built a bud¬get and lived within it. As a mat¬ter of fact the University regu¬larly showed a surplus during hisadministration. But little academ¬ic development took place duringJudson’s term of office.When Burton was selected aspresident in 1923 it was obviousthat the college program neededrevamping. Before turning to this,however, Burton constructed adevelopment program, the plansof which stretched out to 1950.It was this project which initiallybrought Filbey into the President’soffice. New buildings were con¬structed, the economic positionwas solidified and endoweredchairs were introducted to thefaculty. Then Burton turned to the college, establishing a com¬mission one-half faculty and one-half trustees, to examine the needsof the undergraduate program.“The College at this time” Filbeyexplained,” “was in an unusualposition. Collegiate educationaround the country was not whatit is now and we had many trans¬fer students. There were as manyseniors as freshmen, a quite ex¬ceptional condition. The studentbody was quite mature, in termsof age at least. Many college stu¬dents had already taught in pub¬lic schools for several years be¬fore coming here to completetheir degree work. The Collegefaculty didn't exist and the under¬graduate program lacked auto-nimy.”BURTON’S committee reported,recommending, among otherthings a six-year grade school,four-year high school four year-college program, the equivalent ofthe early entrant system. But,before he could act, president Bur¬ton died.The next president, Max Mason,established a second commissionto investigate the problem, andthe commission report was muchthe same. Mason left the campusin 1928 to accept a Rockefellerfoundation position, again beforeany action could be taken. In afarewell speech Mason com¬mented that while he had spenta good deal of time talking aboutthe College he had done nothingand hoped that his successorwould take some action.His successor, of course, wasRobert Maynard Hutchins, andHutchins put the recommenda¬tions of the Mason and Burtoncommission into operation.With Hutchins came the depres¬sion, and the depression broughtsome very special conditions. “Wedid construct,” Filbey continued “afine general education program,one that provided the type of edu¬ cation we feel to be absolutelynecessary for any real education.”But the depression brought a lotof ‘broke’ students, and campusactivity declined. Student activi¬ties declined even further duringthe war when there were next tono students on campus, broke orotherwise.“We turned much of our atten¬tion to the defense effort. Eck-hardt, Ryerson, the Law school,the Botany building, even thearmor in Washington park, wereall turned over to the defenseeffort. I was responsible for partof the wartime activity. This wasone of the reasons I stayed onafter 1944, to help lead the situa¬tion back to normal.”IF THE University had to fewstudents during the war it had toomany in the post war period. “Wehad hundreds of returning GI’s—men with familys and a lot oftime to make up. who couldn’tafford much time for anythingbut their studies and their work."If student activties were suffer¬ing, the College was having itstroubles, too. It existed somewhatas an island, an island withoutany bridges, to use Filbey’s words.It’s degree was often held as‘debassed currency’ and was oftennot accepted. Further changeswere necessary.THE COLLEGE began tochange to a four year institutionof a residential nature, a changefor the better according to theeighty year old educator. An in¬creased on-campus student bodywill necessitate an increased pro¬gram of student activities, a pro¬gram which Filbey holds to a quitedesirable aspect of general educa¬tion. “The social situation hereis in a time of change,” he con¬cluded, “and I think the socialsituation, and the University asa whole, is changing for the bet¬ter.”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.Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristEyes ExaminedGlasses FittedContact LensesVisual Training1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-83721411 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 TableSmall Small12” 12”Cheese . .1.30 Combination .... . .2.25Sausage . .1.65 Mushroom . .2.00Anchovy . .1.65 Shrimp ...2.25Pepper & Onion . . .1.50 Bacon & Onion . . .2.00Free Delivery on All Pizza to MJC StudentsAttention Chow Hounds!Special every Tuesday night — all the fried chickenyou can eat . . . $1.95 see us for your cjCucille’sCotton Ponchos $2.98with, or without, rope belts 1507 east 53rd st.mi 3-9898Don't want to cart your bookshome for the summer? Get topprices through us.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT SERVICE CENTERReynolds Club RusementHours: 11-1 and 4-5, tlon.-Fri. TOUR 7COUNTRIES INPRIVATE BUS... 85 days travel inEurope... 6 semester hourscredit. .. study and live atOxford Univ.10 days!‘1155all expenses iricl.Students already signed up:Wellesley, Radciffe, Bryn Mowr,Grinell, Ripon and Shimer College(U. of C).To: Dean Robert Ashley, Ripon iCollege Renaissance Tour, |Ripon, Wisconsin. !□ Rush further information to Ime. j□ Enclosed is $100. Please |hold a reservation for me. iNameSchoolAddressMay 15, T959 CHICAGO MAROON • 5May issue of 'Mademoisellefeatures UC folklore societyThe Folklore society an¬nounces the election of itsofficers for next year. Theyare: president, Mannie Meyers;vice-president, Kathleen Dunn;secretaries, Linda Morrison andShorty Spiro; treasurer, FredCohn.Those interested in joining thefolksingers should attend the firstwang-dung next fall.Those interested in working onthe executive council should con¬tact the treasurer this summer orthe president next fall. The Folklore society’s latestclaim to fame lies in an articleabout them in the current issueof Mademoiselle:“The late ‘Big Bill’ Broonzy, oneof the greatest country blues sing¬ers, worked at the university(Iowa) as a janitor for severalyears before his death last year.He taught his songs to students,and his influence is still felt onthe campus. When Broonzy died,the U. of Chicago’s folklore soci¬ety helped pay for his funeral,having earned nearly a thousanddollars by sponsoring concerts with visiting folk artists.“The fantastic growth of thisfolklore society — from a.smallgroup five years ago to the univer¬sity’s largest student organizationthis year—is typical of folk or-anizations throuhout the country.Besides concerts, the group offersless formal wing dings that drawan average audience of two hun¬dred students.“Chicago students also attendSunday hootenannies at the Gateof Horn, a night club whose regu¬lar entertaineres are folk musi¬cians.”ARCHIMS02Smakes another great discovery...It's what's up frontthat countsYou can reproduce the experimentIt’s easy as 7T. (Yes, you can do itin the bathtub.) Assuming that youhave first visited your friendly tobac¬conist, simply light your first Winstonand smoke it. Reasoning backwards,the discovery proceeds as follows:first, you will notice a delightfulflavor, in the class of fresh coffee orof bread baking. Obviously, such flavor cannot come from the filter.Therefore, it’s what’s up front thatcounts: Winston’s Filter-Blend. Thetobaccos are selected for flavor andmildness, then specially processed forfilter smoking. This extra step is thereal difference between Winston andall other filter cigarettes. Besides,it’s why Winston is America’s best¬selling filter cigarette.41 Eureka! Winston tastes good ...like a cigarette should!”S. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO C0..wTnSt6n-SAIEH.M.S. Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andIntermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago MaroonIda Noyes hall, 1212 East 5?th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-osoo’extensions 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionsby mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday.Editor-in-chiefRochelle Meta DubnowAssociate editor Business managerNeal Johnston Lawrence D. KesslerAdvertising managerEditorial boardHaddix, Johnston, KesslerExecutive news editorNews editorsSports editorCulture editor Jerry BretlingcrDubnow (chairman), Bretlinger, Conklin,Lance HoddixJoel Ashenfarb, Sandy SciacchitonoBill SpadyROsilond ConklinCalendar editor Marge SchwarzCopyreaders Reed Paccos, Lorry Lindgren, Riki MossArtists Ron Burton, Rick Ellis, R. David SilverLecture editor Albert N. PodcllArt critic Max KoztoffCirculation manager Joan HctmkenMorgue editor Pot MasserMaroon photo editor Karl FiglioEditor emeritus Gary MokotcffPhoto sroft. . Al Berger, Gretchen Grant, Jim Peor,John McMahon.Editorial stoff: Tom Coblk, Bertram Cohler, Murray Darrish, Rosemary GoIli,Marilyn Guse, Phillip Marcus, Riki Moss, Avima Ruder, Shelley StolowichAccepting job applicationsThe personnel office is still accepting applications of stu¬dents looking for summer jobs in the Chicago area, accordingto Donna M. Smith, interviewer for part-time and student em¬ployment.The basis of placement, Mrs. Smith stressed, is skill ratherthan early registration. Although there is no deadline, enoughstudents have placed their names on file by this time to makeplacement for very late applicants difficult.Students wanting to work outside the Chicago area can getsuggestions from the personnel office.Students must present their ID cards when registering.KOOKf' U A A<AI<T<IIIO T*.e<-MA*«. COAYAIIHT Q IM( TNI COCA-COLA CC»’A»*.Madison Avenue...Yea, up and down ad alley you'll find thesmartest account execs call for Coke duringimportant meetings. The cold crisp taste,the real refreshment of Coca-Colaare just what the client ordered. So upperiscope and take a look into thesituation. Ad men of the future!—startjtotur training now—climb into a gray flannelsuit and relax with a Coke! <)BE REALLY REFRESHED...HAVE A COKE!Bottled under authority of the Coca-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.For rent For salei rm. apt. with and. rear porch, parti/turn avsll. from June 15 or July t. Ourteaso expires Oe«. 1 St you eon renewth«i ifyou want. $#0/mo. 55th & Ridge¬wood. NO T-5472.aiaelr. double and triple ruu. tar rent.Linen and maid service, use of kitchenand public rooms June 14-Oet. 1, #105-#115. Contact L. lAeberrnan, PL 2-9477,sublet for summer: 5-rm. apt. 60th StWoodlawn. Furn. MU 4-36384 rm. apt., view on Midway. #75/mo.ut.il lnel. June 15-flept. is. Allan Bloom,1205 E. 60th. HY 3-2747. 105# MG-A roadster, wire wheels, fullyequipped, like new. Sat., 8un. eves.,HO 5-1603, weekdays, FI 6-9155.New Eng. bikes, discounts. MI 3-9048.Dining; rm. set: table, 6 chairs, smallbreakfront, and buffet; bedroom set:double bed, two chests; also, kitchenset: table—formica top. four chairs. Ex¬cellent condition. Will sell sets Individ¬ually. Call CA 7-4595.Vacating apt. Must sell furniture. Bar¬gain prices. Call HL 3-5868.Help wanted4 turn, mu., air cond., dishwasher,sublet. June 15 te about Sept 1. #00 permo. HY 3-1703.Small room, private "bath, close to cam¬pus. Co-op. IC. Kit. priv. avail. Gradmale preferred. Clean. PL 3-1667,4 rm. furn. apt., 3 bdrms. Summer sub¬lease or sublease and newt year 55th StKim bark. #llS/mo. DO 3-1458.2 Vi BOOMSCheerful newly decorated, attractivelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator bldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man. Maid and linen service available.Reasonable monthly rate.VERSAILLES APARTMENTS5234 Dorchestvr FA 4-0200Roomi for rent. #25-#45 per month Eve¬ning meals. Phi Kappa Fsl frat. 5555Woodlawn, FL 2-9704.Lake Michigan Cottage, mod., for 8.fireplace, piano, sc. porch Prtv. beach.NO 7-8661 after 8 p.m.ftrrmmnPaperbarksSUMMIT BOOKS138 S. Wabashdrive „CarYour 0*n,rEUROPEtEASEsNEWCorPURCHASE a NEW Car*font a late MoM CarVOLKSWAGENSIMCA RENAULTHtLLMAN PORSCHEMERCEDESavailable 1... or bring It home with you.Th# pleasant, ecenomkol way totravel in Europe. We make all ar¬rangements for the Plan you prefer.Write for full detail#UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Horvmrd 5q ' C/am’hrido *• . Mer. . Wanted: Student* at the University ofChicago, both men and women, for salesopportunities in Chicago or in otherlocalities throughout the United States.Work la your home town this summer.Set your own terms. For Interview withrepresentative of Stanley Home Prod¬ucts College Division, be at VocationalGuidance office, rm. 200, Reynolds club,10 to 4 on Monday, May 18. WORKSHOP IN CREATIV* WRITINGFLaza 2-8377FIGHT TOGETHERNESS. Read RigTable. Copies on sale at the main US.Post Office and at quality bookstoresthroughout the nation.For sale, one black cat. BU 8-9381.Services.Home typing—thesis, dissertations, etc.N. MacDougall, OA 4-3240.SEWING — Atelartlons, hems, curtains,Call MU 4-3941.Extension students, six hours of ac¬counting or more, position available Inyour line. Call Jack Young only, atFI 6-5800 PersonalPart time: MA or PhD in spare timewrite correspondence course in elemen¬tary math and/or psychology. WriteR. Hess, 154 Beverly Dr, Metairie, Lou¬isiana.Male grad, students to participate inexperiments on problem solving. 6hours, $12. Further work if interested.Contact Miss Kler. Michael Reese hos¬pital, DA 6-5700. ext. 287. Wanted: lightweight bicycle, good eon-diiton. Call MI 3-0800, ext. 2304.Larger class needed for third year Rus¬sian this summer. If you would like tosee It offered, please Inform the lan¬guage Instructors this week.BOOK BAZAAR. Books galore, buildyour political and radical library. Low,low prices at the Socialist party-YPSLbazaar. Sat. May 16. 8 p.m 400 S State,room 504 (cor. Van Buren). 3rd yr. student, entering law school Infall, desires to exchange—baby sitting,phone answering, and other chores—for room and board. Starting either thissummer or next fall. Call Fred Coha,DO 3-0042.Summer is a good time to start pianolessons. Experienced teacher with mas¬ter of music degre available. Refer¬ences provided. Children a specialty.Phone PL 2-2787.JD, GC, BK, GP, MB and the rest ofthe zoos. Happy Mothers day. R.Cool summer rm*., singles and doubles,kit. priv.. maid service, TV. $3S/ato5714 Woodlawn. PL 2-9648, ask for BarryBrennan.Loan applicationsfor summer dueAH students who are cur¬rently planning to make loanapplications for the summerquarter and for next academicyear should file their applicationsnow in the office of financial aid,announced Miss Constance Cro¬nin of the financial aid depart¬mentLoans may be considered forthe entire next year at this time.Applications filed before the endof spring quarter will result inprompt decisions which wouldotherwise be impossible at the be¬ginning of every quarter due tothe great rush of work.The office of financial aid is inroom 304 of the Administrationbuilding. Yale rioters shown mercy;threaten suit against copsFourty-two students arrested at Yale last March in thesnowball riots which have since warranted coverage in thenational press and a two-page spread in Life, have beengranted a reprieve by the city attorney who said, “In the best interestof all concerned . . . these cases should not and ought not be prose¬cuted at this time.’*However, it turns out that the city of New Haven may just beducking a threatened suit by Yale against the police of that town.Legitimate charges can only be brought against six of the 42 arrestedstudents. In addition, many innocent bystanders were clubbed andmanhandled by police, including faculty members, reporters, and thechapel organist, who was just emerging from his place of occupationwhen he was beset by the “townies” who proceeded to set him alla-rumple. There have also been reports that students were beatenin squad cars on the way to the station.Applications now acceptedfor dormitories next year‘•Although the final figuresare not in as yet, there ap¬pears to be a trend towardsreturning to University dormi¬tories,” claimed James Newman,director of student housing.Room preference is given tostudents in the following order:(1) those wanting to return totheir same room, (2) those want¬ing to return to the house, (3)those in the dormitory systemwishing to change houses, (4)those outside the system wanting to give in one of the Universitydormitories, and (5) new stu¬dents. This preference will be re¬linquished after this week.This summer, much of the Uni¬versity housing space will befilled with participants in theforthcoming Pan - Americangames. Sections in the Snell-Hitchcock group will be open forstudents.The new men’s dormitory, nowunder construction, is not ex¬pected to be ready for occupancybefore the fall of I960. Lost and foundLost: watch. Probably on 57th St.Omega. Reward. HY 3-8512.Found: Man’s wristwatch at North field.Owner contact the Business Club. Has¬kell Hall.Found: last week, the sum of $11. Con¬tact Ghurye, ext. 2636. Eckhart 211.Found: A Grand Old Fraternity's plaque.Contact the loser of many trophies.Probe found formetallic electronsA new method for pryinginto the “private family life”of electrons in metal was de¬scribed last Monday on campus.Physicist Morrel H. Cohen tolda top-level group of industrial andgovernment scientists how soundwaves and magnetic forces canbe combined to examine the sub¬atomic world of metal crystals.“For the first time, we have atheory and a method that willgive us new kinds of informationabout the electrons that ‘glue’ to¬gether the atoms in metals,” Co¬hen said.Cohen, an associate professorof physics, was the first of sevenUniversity scientists to speak atthe two - day spring conferencewith industrial sponsors of theinstitutes for basic research onthe campus. The conference inthe Research Institutes buildingis one of the regularly scheduledquarterly meetings between Uni¬versity scientists and the top sci¬entific echelon of firms enrolledas sponsors of basic scientific in¬vestigation programs.Universal Army StoreHeadquarters for sport mud work wearFlap pocket wash & wear ivy league trousers — Wash fir wear dressshirts — camping equip. — Complete line of keds footwear — trenchcoats —— luggage and trunks.1144 East 55Hi st. DO 3-957210 % reduction with this coupon^—Israel Students Organisationinvites you te celebrateISRAEL'S 11th INDEPENDENCE DAY• Address: Hon, D. S. Tesher, Consul General of Israel• Israeli artists: Aldema fir Rachel Hadas• Kinneret Group• Refreshments & folk dancesSun, May 17 — 8 pm — 50c donation — International MouseTheExclusive CleanersBOX STORAGE, far your out of season wear. Proteced andinsured against fire, theft, end moths. Ail apparel is beautifullycleaned and pressed when returned te you. Furs and fur-trim garmentsexcluded. Fill it with woolens, sweaters, dresses, suits, jackets,slocks, ski and snow suits, and other household items.Only $.7.50 . . . Insured for $150.041309 E. 57th St. Ml 3-0602We Operate Our Own Plant Rudy’sAuthorized0 of C Class HingeSalas OMEGA ServieeIndividuallydesigned, handmadejewelry(Discount to students)1523 Enst 53rd st.NOrmal 7-2666STUCK?WITH A PILE OFOLD BOOKS— 4 —CASHFOR YOURBOOKSNOW!FREESHAEFFER CARTRIDGEPENTOEVERYONESELLINGBOOKS VALUEDAT$5.00 OR MOREFOLLETT'S BOOKS324 S. WABASH AVE.*IN THE LOOP*'DOLLARS FOR BOOKSMay 15, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7su sponsor ballStudent Union will sponsor the Graduation ball this year,according to SU president Nancy Cox. The dance will be heldat Ida Noyes hall on Friday, June 13, from 9 to 1 pm.The function is open to students, faculty and alumni. Dress is seml-Jwrmal (suits and ties). Admission is free, and there wiil be a danceband and refreshments."The Graduation ball is traditional at UC, but in the past it has beenE formal dance," Miss Cox stated. "To make it more attractive toStudents and graduates this year, we have made it informal and will»ot charge admission." events on quadranglesFriday, 15 MayLecture series: “Psychotherapy.’' 10 am,Rosenwald 2. Dr. Aaron Karush, pro¬lessor, Columbia university.Class in elementary Hebrew I, 11:30 am,11:30 am, 5715 Woodlawn avenue, Hil-lel foundation.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing, 12:30 pm, Ida Noyes small lounge.Non-denominatlonal Bible study InEphesians.Newborn conference, 1 pm, Lying-inhospital, Dora DeLee hall.Political Science association depart¬mental seminar, 3:30 pm, social scl-zences 302. “Political philosophy and r.art. Conductor: Joseph Kretmea;soloist: Robert Howat, piano.Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRIST1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352TAl-SAM-AfcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Dallyn A.M. to 14:30 PJ«.ORDERS TO TAKE OUTISIS East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 Spring convoc.announcementsAnnouncements of thespring convocation may bepurchased by 1959 graduatesat the University informationdesk in the administrationbuilding.The announcements sell for10 cents each. Treasurers of student or¬ganizations are reminded tomake an appointment for anaudit of their accounts be¬fore the end of the quarterwith the Audtior for studentorganizations, Student ac¬tivities, Ida Noyes hall.I'm sold manon Goldmanfor WUCBstation manager political science," Allan Gewlrth, pro¬fessor, department of philosophy.Informal coffee hour for students Inter¬ested In social work, 4 pm, Reynoldsclub North lounge. Sponsored by SSAclub.Sabbath service, 7:45 pm, 5715 Wood-lawn avenue, Hlllel foundation.Lecture series: “Biography,” 8 pm, Uni¬versity College, 64 East Lake street,"Biography and the psychoanalyticapproach,” Harry Barnard, columnist,Chicago Daily News and noted biog¬rapher.Maroon editor’s election, 4:30 pm,Ida Noyes hall, third floor, onlycurrent staff members mayattend.University Symphony Orchestra publicconcert, 8.56 pm, Mandel hail. Pro¬gram: Overture to Don Giovanni, con¬certos numbers 23 and 24, all by Mo- Scfurdoy, 16 MayChest conference, 8 am, Billings hos¬pital M-137.Diseases of the nervous system, • am.Billings M-137. Dr. Douglas N.Buchanan.Pediatrics clinical conference, 14:30 am,Billings M-137.Sunday, 17 MayEpiscopal choral Eucharist, 8M am,Bond chapel.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 14 and11 am, DeSales house, 5735 Universityavenue. Sponsored by Calvert club.Co-ed baseball game between I8L andSRP. 2:30 pm, Midway opposite Rock¬efeller chapelCarillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel.Bridge club meeting, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyeshall. Duplicate bridge will be played.Celebration of Israel’s 11th Independ¬ence day, 8 pm, International house.Address by the honorable D. 8. Tesher,consul general of Israel; refreshments,folk dancing. Donation 50 cents. Spon¬sored by Israel Students organization.Monday, 18 MayClass in elementary Hebrew n. 4 pm.5715 Woodlawn avenue. Hlllel foun¬dation.Folk dance group, 4:30 pm. 5715 Wood¬lawn avenue. Hlllel foundation.Tuesday, 19 MayInter-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing, 12:30 pm. Ida Noyes small lounge.Non-denomlnatlonal Bible study In IPeter.Lecture series: “Problems of the presi¬dency,” 7 pm. University College."The president and pressure groups."Grant McConnell, associate professor,department of political science.Wednesday, 20 MayClass in Yiddish, 11 am, 5715 Woodlawnavenue, Hlllel. Bug Ivri (Hebrew speaking group 12 3fipm. 5715 Woodlawn avenue. Hlllelfoundation. ’The Hillel foundation biannounced that students camnow file applications torthree Hillel scholarships theHenry Monsky Fellowshipaward, the B'nai B'rithWomen's Hillel scholarship,and the Golbus Memoriallscholarship.Application forms areavailable at the Hillel fours-dation, 5715 WoodlawnAve.Parapsychology club meeting, 8 pm jd£Noyes.Carillon concert, 4 J0 pm, Rockefellwmemorial chapel. wOrgan recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller Memo¬rial chapel.Episcopal evensong, 5:05 pm Bonechapel.Lecture series: “The Image of Chicago *University College. 7 pm. “The popu-lar image,” Herman Kogan, critic andco-author of "Chicago: a pic tor:,,history, lords of the levee.”Country dancers, 8 pm, Ida Noyet haiThursday, 21 MayEpiscopal Holy Communion, 11 30Bond chapel.Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship me<:-lng, 6:30 pm, International houseroom A Study In the writings of Luketo discover the claims of Jesus Chits:THiNKUSHerf* ,***.' boyal Australian mammal Cnglish: MUSCLE-MAN CONTESTIt; Thintiwk? U**B*"^IIP Thinkiith.- KfNGAROOcuir. WllS6i-- Thinklish: FLEXIBITIONJOSEPH AXUNE. KENT StAT| W,English: DELEGATES TO A JAZZ CONVENTIONThinklish translation: When the secre¬tary of this meeting makes notes, he usesa saxophone. The chairman is the onlyguy who can rap his gavel with a syn¬copated beat. The delegates (in Think¬lish it’s hepresentatives!) come from allschools of jazz: hot, cool, and room tem¬perature. But they’re in perfect harmonyon one thing: the honest taste of a LuckyStrike. Get Luckies yourself. (You’lltrumpet their praises.) English: MALE FOREBEARSi atni 0‘NIELHOW TO MAKE *25Take a word—substitute, for example. With it, you can make an artificialhedge (shrubstitute), a washing machine (tubstitute), an English lemonade stand(puhstitute) and dehydrated food (grubstitute). That’s Thinklish—- and it’s thateasy! We’re paying $25 for the Thinklish words judged best—your check isitching to go! Send your words to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N.Y.Enclose your name, address, college or university and class.Get the genuine articleGet the honest tasteof a LUCKY STRIKE£ 4. r. ctf. Product of <J^ruice<in </vrfouxo~£&tyMi*y~ <J’J$xc£G is our middle name» ? C H ICAGO M.A BOON f May 15, 195? Friday, 22 MayClass In rlfmvnUry Hebrew I. 11 30 sir5715 Woodlawn avenue. Hillel foun¬dation.Lecture series: “Biography." 8 pm. Uni¬versity College. "Biography as litera¬ture,” H a rr y Barnard, columnistChicago Daily News, and noted biog¬rapher.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship meet¬ing, 12 30 pm. Ida Noyes small loungeNon-denomlnatlonal Bible study »Ephesians.UC visiting profnamed for 59-60Bernard A. Weisberger hasbeen appointed visiting asso¬ciate professor of Americanhistory for the 1959-60 academicyear.Walter Johnson, professor andchairman of the Department otHistory at the University of Chicago, announced the appointmentWeisberger is currently an associate professor at Wayne Stateuniversity, Detroit, and author oi"They Gathered at the River,” a1958 selection of the Rcligiou*Book club.Aslib director togive speach hereLeslie Wilson, London, Eng¬land, director of the interna¬tional organization, “Aslib,”will be a guest of the GraduateLibrary school May 18 at a dinnerat the Quadrangle club for members of Aslib in the Chicago area.Wilson will give a public address the same evening at 8 pmin Social Sciences 122, on "Pres¬ent Activities and Future Plansof Aslib.”Aslib is an association of indus¬trial firms, government depart¬ments, research associations andinstitutions, universities andlearned societies, and private individuals engaged in handling orseeking specialized informationGet WILDR00TCREAM-OIL CharlieHelen of Troy, N.Y. says: "There"’s nogreece, just natural good grooming J"90 Ju*t » llttl* bit■Ml Wilo'roof f ^M and...WOWiTerry's Pizza1518 East 63 Ml 3-4045smolllorga Any 3 pizzas for the price of 2$1.00 medium ......$1.45 FREE UC$1.95 x-lorge $2.95 ,./CDVgiant $3.95 DELIVERY-IUSCH. INC. • ST. LOUIS . NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • MIAMI • TAMPAIn any language there's value In living at the Versailles. Cheer¬ful surroundings, for refined people who appreciate a quiet,restful, home-like atmosphere. Elegant hotel rooms and 2'/2room apartments tastefully decorated, furnished or un-furnlshed,at attractive rates. Parcel receiving. Doorman, Night Watchman;maid and linen service if desired. Rentals as low as $65 per month.*l/en4cUCte4-5234 DORCHESTER FA 4-0200 ftilato◄>VACUA • VALOR • VASPECIAL TO U. OF C.STUDENTSJimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.WERT • VALUE • VALORRiesman calls Americansapathetic and forgetfull Students honor JohnsonA dinner will be held Friday evening, May 22nd, at theSheraton-Blackstone hotel to honor Professor Earl S. John¬son who is retiring.David Riesman, formerhead of the department of so¬cial sciences at UC and cur¬rently in the department of socialrelations at Harvard university,slates in an article written forthe Bulletin of the Atomic Scien¬tists that it is hard for people likeourselves, in the educated uppermiddle class, to imagine the ex¬tent of the willingness of peopleto forget, to fail to register, todistort, and to overlook what allmess media seem so urgently tosay and even what eventst as weourselves react to them) seem tosay.Tn "Private people and publicpolicy," Riesman went on to say,‘ People of limited education (butnot necessarily limited intelli¬gence) seldom have frameworkin which to locate data which donot appear directly relevant."Reisman, the author of TheLonely Crowd lamented that peo¬ple are not so much concernedwith the issues a candidate forpublic office may have spoken for.The public is more often inter¬ested in whether an official is a"good guy” or not. If he is, he willundoubtedly vote right on the im¬portant issues and has done so inthe past, regardless of what thenewspapers report.But I think it is more impor-iant to sffe that the leaders,though considerably less com¬placent than their constituencies,nevertheless resemble them infundamental perceptions, in lackof willingness to face alternatives,and in a basic optimism.” Ries¬man also proposed that just aspeople in the Midwest were notconcerned with Formosa and whothe Secretary of State is, Wash¬ington is reciprocally overcon-reined with imaginary reactionson the part of the public to edi¬torials and headlines.The belief that workers are lib¬eral while only their bosses arereactionar yis true only if liberal¬ism Is defined as governmentalintervention in the economicstate, asserts Reisman.Riesman then posed this ques¬tion: "How then are we to ex¬plain the fact that the Democrats,the party which the working classand the underprivileged havetended to favor, have also beenthe part, in many instances, ofliberalism in international af¬fairs?”The answer to this question isfever answered directly by Ries¬man. From the succeeding para¬ graphs we may suppose that heis only praising the Democratsfor their discretion in bringingapathetic groups into the politicalarena on foreign policy. For ex¬ample, the urging of the politic¬ally uninvolved into an issueagainst nuclear fallout might re¬sult in a great impatience withthe communists and the completeambiguity of the world situationin general. This impatience couldlead us impulsively into anotherwar."The battles over foreign policyare conducted between relativelysmall minorities, elites if youplease, which seek continuouslyto find mass support for theirpositions, in order to defeat thecompetition and to give them¬selves a sense of legitimacy. Onesuch minority is world-mindedand fundamentally cosmopolitan,and it is growing apace as moreand more Americans travelabroad; young people in collegeare less and less given to old-fashioned American chauvinism.Another minority is geopoliticallybut not psychologically global,and for its policies of many mis-sle bases and world bipolarizationit is driven to seek backing fromthe great majority of provincialand ethnocentric Americans—thelatter are brought into the con¬duct of foreign affairs in a peri¬pheral way, for example, to swellthe three to one majority of thosewho are against recognizing RedChina or permitting trade withthe Communist bloc.”Riesman then cites othergroups and their reasons for non-commital attitudes. Academia:“There is great reluctance amongthe educated to become alienatedfrom the country at large, notwith respect to attitudes towardtail fins, television, or the Read¬er’s Digest, but with respect tothose attitudes of unreflectingpatriotism that bespeak thetough, masculine, no-nonsenseAmerican."Riesman then laments thewatered-down news coverage thatis prevalent in mass media today.This low level of understandingin reports that confront us dailyis most unlike the band of roman¬tic roving foreign correspondentswho brought enthusiasm if notalways good judgment to report¬ing between the two world wars.After proposing that the Strate¬gic Air Command is the only non-apathetic group existing today,Riesman said, "I have misgivings about looking for that audience Inthe amorphous public at large."There is. It goes without say¬ing, no guarantee that self-clari¬fication in the minds of a few cansave us. But I believe it is worthengaging in on its own account,and there is always the chance,as infinitesimal in the beginningas a genetic mutation, that it maybe of practical help."* Present and former studentstook the initiative in organizingthe affair to mark ProfessorJohnson’s 27-year career at theUniversity.Johnson is chairman of the com¬mittee on the Divisional Mastersdegree and has been in chargeof the sequence for preparationof teachers in the Social Sciences. The Earl S. Johnson committee;formed by students and formerstudents, is headed by RichardHammett, 1364 East Madisqp ParkAvenue. Treasurer is Miss Bar¬bara Tauber.Colleagues, friends, studentsand ex-students are invited to thedinner in the Mayfair room. Tick¬ets are $5.75 each.C. Johnson tells of ideafor a six point programA six-point long-range pro¬gram for putting Americanagriculture on a “profitableand self-sustaining basis” was out¬lined recently by a UniversityeconomistThe program is designed to cor¬rect the "contradictory govern¬ment programs” that manipulatefarm prices, resources, and in¬comes without regard for the "ob¬jectives in other areas of nationaleconomic policy,” said D. GaleJohnson, professor of agriculturaleconomics.In a speech prepared for theannual meeting here of the eco¬nomic section of the AmericanAssociation for the Advancementof Science, Johnson said that evenif his program were followed with“great vigor,” agriculture couldnot become self-supporting "inless than five to ten years.”He said this is because “the is¬sues to be dealt with are complex and difficult of solution."He warned against any imme¬diate and sudden change in pro¬gram.Johnson, who has served as aconsultant to the departments ofstate, army, and agriculture, andto the Tennessee Valley authorityand the RAND corporation, pro¬posed the nation adopt thesecourses for its agricultural policy:1. “We should stop trying tofool the farmers about the pros¬pective demand, supply and priceconditions that are likely to pre¬vail over the next several yearsand about the possibilities of gov¬ernment action to effectively limitthe output of agricultural prod¬ucts.”2. “We should stop all pro¬grams that increase agriculturaloutput and that cannot be justi¬fied on a direct benefit-cost basis.”3. The inventories now held andstocks to be accumulated in thenext three or four years by the Commodity credit corporationshould be withdrawn from theAmerican market and disposed ofthrough foreign aid programs.This could be done over six toeight years in a way that would“maximize the economic develop¬ment of the recipient nations,"without significantly effecting thedemand for our own exports mthose of friendly nations.4. “ A transition schedule ofprice supports to cover a periodof five years should be put intoeffect.” This would bring CCCstocks in line with market pricesand allow farmers to adjust tothe lower prices.5. “Price supports would not beused to influence the level offarm prices.” 'If they were con¬tinued after five years,- it wouldbe to reduce price uncertaintyconfronting farmers and provideeven year-to-year distribution ofstorable supplies.(see ‘G’ page 11)SATURDAY. When youmake your plans for the weekend,remember: where there’s life,there’s Budweiser.Michigan university's SCdiscusses freedom bills(Student editorial Press Service) — A series of eight proposals on academic freedom werediscussed at a recent meeting of the student government council at the University of Michi¬gan.One proposal recommended student organizations not be required to submit membership lists to theOffice of Student Affairs. Council member A1 Haber, who drafted the proposals, said public distrustof certain political ideologies might discourage a student from joining a political club if he knew hisname would be associated with it.Haber also offered a proposal asking the university to take any actions necessary to remove a cen¬sure placed on it by the American Association of University Professors. The censure was for failureto observe general principles of academic freedom and tenure.In order to help preserve the right of the student another proposal was made to guarantee a studentfacing discipline the right to both public hearings and appeal of any decision. The motion also statedthat a student should be able to speak on his own behalf and to hear all evidence entered in his case.The problem of university communication with a student's parents, without his knowledge, was thesubject of another proposal. It recommended that no contact be made with parents without the stu¬dent’s consent or at least knowledge. (Cases involving municipal officials might be exceptions.) Haberalso proposed that any information given to an university official in confidence not be revealed to anyother official or person.As a reaction to the policy that in some of the ROTC programs a student who drops out of theprogram also is suspended from the University of Michigan, ii was suggested such students be giventhe right to petition to re-enter the institution.A questioning of the university’s present policy on controversial speakers on campus was the basisof another proposal.Haber’s list of proposals concluded with the suggestion the student government publish a booklet set¬ting forth for all University of Michigan students the principles and particulars of academic freedom.He considered this the most important of all his proposals, Haber said.The proposals are now being studied by a committee. It was set up to investigate individual instancesfalling within the broad areas of the proposals. The committee will also study the possibility of offeringmore specific proposals before the Council. Exchange(New York Times) Harvarduniversity and LeningradState university have tenta¬tively agred to exchange profes¬sors.The arrangement, if negotia¬tions are successful, will go-intoeffect next September, startingwith two or three professoi’s. It ishopes that the program will even¬tually become more extensive.Columbia university has a simi¬lar arrangement with MoscowState university, and if events gosmoothly, the exchange may be¬gin in February.The Harvard - Leningrad ex¬change will focus on researchwork, the Columbia-Moscow mayemphasize the teaching aspect ofthe program.Harlan H. Hatcher, president ofthe Univex’sity of Michigan, nowvisiting the Soviet Union, seemsinterested in having his schoolparticipate in an exchange.Exchange social scientists willgive the universities a problem.American economists in the So¬viet will be thought preaching“anti-scientific bourgeois perver¬sions,” while the Russians in theUnited States will be regarded as is forecastspreading “communist propa¬ganda.”Tfie Soviet-American culturalexchange agreement which wasconcluded last summer laid thevisionary groundwork for thepresent inter-university negotia¬tions.Miller new headof math labAppointment of Dr. WilliamF. Miller as director of the ap¬plied mathematics division atArgonne National laboratory wasannounced today by Dr. NormanHilberry, laboratory director.Dr. Miller, who has been serv¬ing as acting head of the divisionsince July 8, will direct activitieswhich fall into three general cate¬gories. The applied mathematicsdivision provides consultation onmathematical problems for otherArgonne divisions, carries out re¬search in mathematical methods,and finds answers to complexmathematical problems for scien¬tists at the laboratory.Define "fascist". radical" "reactionary"by Philip S. Marcusand Riki Moss“Fascist,” “radical,” “re¬actionary,” “liberal”: termswhich have been used so oftenand so generally that they havelost all real meaning. In a lectureentitled “Authoritarianism — left,right, and center,” sociology pro¬fessor Seymour Lipset attemptedto add precision and comprehen¬sion to these often ambiguouswords. The lecture was the sec¬ond in a series by visiting profes-’sors sponsored by the sociologydepartment.”“Right - wing authoritarianismhas been a target of Western pat¬terns of change since 1776 or, forthat matter, since 1215” Lipsetsaid. But it was not until 1917,when the dictatorship of the pro¬letariat became a Russian reality,that authoritarianism from theleft became a recognized pheno¬menon. It was the lecturer’s con¬tention that fascism, the thirdgreat social disease, representsauthoritarianism from the center.Explains termsWhat are the meanings of theterms left, right and center? Theyoriginate from the seating plansof the French assemblies inwhich the aristocracy sat on the right and the Jacobins on the left.Lipset’s first step, therefore, wasa three-part division of societyinto working, middle, and upperclasses.Isolates factionsLipset then isolated the extrem¬ist and authoritarism elementspresent in each of the three socialstratas. The major strains of left-wing or working class extremismwere cited as communism andPeronism. This latter movementdiffers from Marxism in being na¬tionalistic and militaristic. TheVargas movement in Barzil wasused as an example.Salazar in Portugal, Franco inSpain, the Horthyites in Hungary,the pre-1956 Gaullist movementand the French and Italian mon¬archists were examples given ofcontemporary right-wing authori¬tarianism. Although the monarchor traditionalistic ruler is the idealof this movement, it is not strong¬ly totalitarian; complete loyaltyis not demanded, expected, oreven necessarily desired by theregime. This means that fredomof speech is tolerated as long asanti-government feelings are notexpressed in meetings, leaflets,etc. The right-wing authoritarianmovement is dedicated, accordingto Lipset, to preserving the statusquo of class and religious distinc¬$35 IN CASH FOR YOUTHAT'S RIGHT! . . . you eat free,absolutely free, when you take your date (or anyone else)to TONY ZALE'S, COMO INN, HONOLULU HARRY'SCLUB WAIKIKI AND, nine other fashionable restaurants,in and near the Loop. Book of $40.00 in FREE MEALS... 12 restaurants —Only $4.95’! YOU SAVE $35.00!!!Free meals good for a year. No gimmicks, no stringsattached. Discounts for volume sales to Frats, Clubs,Groups of any sort. Ideal for Fraternity or Club Dinners.We are a sales promotion company and can make thisoffer at this price because the RESTAURANTS — NOTYOU — pay us to get you interested in them.Here's another Idea, two guys (or girls) can split thecost. That way each one gets $20.00 in free meals foronly $2.47!!!This is a good one. Don't pass it up! Offer good atTHIS PRICE for LIMITED TIME ONLY!!Call Ml 2-6362; ask for Mr. Arnold; after 7:00 pm. callEA 7-3220 OR SEND $4.95 with name and address toRestaurant Promotions Inc.2801 N. Sheridan Rd. Chicago 14, 111. tions: it is conservative, not revo¬lutionary. *What conditions breed thesemovements? As Lipset explainedit, right wing authoritarianism isfound in underdeveloped coun¬tries while working class extrem¬ism is most commonly accom¬panied by new industrialization.In a newly industrialized society,such as Latin America, it is theworking class who feels most op¬pressed and is consequently mostlikely to react in an extreme way.On the other hand, in a highlyindustrialized society like ourown, the danger of extremism isfrom the middle class.Main pointAt this point, Lipset reached themain theme of his lecture. Liberalideology, he said, is characterizedby support of individual rightsagainst concentrated power. Inearlier times, liberalism opposedthrone and altar while favoringa limited state. Max Weber haspointed out that this was the mosteconomically efficient position forthe middle classes. But an ad¬vanced industrial society forces liberalism from a revolutionaxyto a reactionary position.Our society features govern¬ment regulation, heavy taxes, cor¬porate business empires, and pow¬erful labor unions. It would beunrealistic and irrational, Lipsetsaid, to be against these institu¬tions. The first liberal reactionto our industrialization took thefoi'm of anti trust and anti-cartellegislation; and the contemporaryliberal position, accoi’ding to Lip¬set, is best represented by Taftrepublicans in this country, theLiberty party in England, and theRadical party in France. Hereliberalism means the protest ofthe small businessman and trades¬man against the concentratedpower of labor, corporate, indus¬try, and government.It is when this reaction becomesextreme, by attempting to over¬throw the state through force inorder to restore power to the mid¬dle classes that one has fascism,cited Lipset.Cites casesHis first example of a fascistmovement was the National So¬ cialist party of Adolph Hitler.Accoi'ding to Lipset, voting re¬turns in the thirties show that theNazi rise correlated heavily witha declining vote of liberal middleclass parties. There was no cor¬related decline with right wingconservative parties or with theapathetic non-voting part of thepopulation. The evidence is notthat big business supported theNazis, but that big business wascowardly after the Nazis rose topower.- Nazi's standIt was the frustrated small bus¬inessman and small farmer whoprovided the core of fascist sup¬port. The larger the city, the smal¬ler the Nazi vote. Catholics, intel¬lectuals, urbanites were stronglyanti-Nazi. The Nazi ideology,which Lipset described as beingagainst big business trusts, tradeunion and Marxism, while beinganti-semetic (Jew's wei’e identifiedwith banks and departmentstores), was supported by the bull:of the German middle class. Lip¬set described the ideal Nazi as a(see “Lipset,” page 11)Harvard objects to oathHarvard’s President Pusey has sent a letter to Massachusetts’ State Senator Kennedyasking him to fight the affidavit and oath requirements in the National Defense Educationact of 1958.The highly controversial section in the act requires that applicants for financial aid submit an affidavitcertifying that “he does not believe in, and is not a member of and does not support any organizationthat believes in^ or teaches the overthrow of the United States Government” by unconstitutionalmethods. Further, the applicant must swear to “support and defend the Constitution and laws ofthe United States against all its enemies.”Pusey has called the act “a direct personal affront” to the faculties and student bodies of Americancolleges. ‘The Congress has singled out,” according to Pusey, “our college people alone as a specialgroup and then said to them by implication, We are not sure you are fine loyal Americans, as a matterof fact we rather think you are not.’ ” . fHowever, Pusey announced that although Harvard declaims this odious section of the Act, it hasnevertheless accepted its relatively small appointment of loan money. The spirit which instigated Con¬gress to appropriate such a fund is in any case a laudable one.cine fjdiium PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433Only through your participation will American youthbe fully represented among the youth of the world!YOUTH FESTIVALVienna — July 26 to August 4for further information:American Youth Festival Org.National Office608 S. DearbornChicago, Illinois The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236MODEL CAMERAAuthorized LeicaDealerNS A Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259SG has discussed possible reorganizationStudent Government con¬sidered reorganization of itsassembly and discussed thepros and cons of the NationalStudent association at last Tues¬day night’s meeting. It was thelast meeting of this quarter.Three different proposals for restrUcting the assembly wereofferred by Jack Eagon (ISL-PhySci), chairman of the election andrules committee. They are:• an all-undergraduate assem¬bly with no graduate participants;• councils from the College,the various divisions and profes-Johnson outlinesUS farm program(from page 9)6. "We must develop a pro¬gram to facilitate the transfer oflabor from farm to non-farm oc¬cupation.” Workers have beenleaving the farms at a rate of amillion a year since 1950, "butthis has not been rapid enoughto bring about desirable adjust¬ments in agricultural output” orin returns to farmers and theirunpaid family workers.Johnson, who has three timeswon a national agricultural eco¬nomics award, said that while"there are many strengths in theposition of American agriculturetoday, we should no longer ignorethe adjustments that face it. Wecan ill afford another decade ofimprovisation and contradiction.”Referring back to his first pro¬posed step for the future, John¬son said: “It would be of consider¬able help to the farmers, bothpresent and prospective, if theywere given the most intelligentestimates that could be made ofthe probable price levels of farmproducts that are likely to emergeat the end of the next decade iffarm price supports were with¬drawn or designed to reflect longrun market conditions."No one seems to be happywith the present situation. Farm¬ers believe their incomes are toolow, consumers think food pricesare too high, taxpayers object tothe heavy governmental expendi¬tures, and competing producersin friendly nations object to thedamage done to their foreignmarkets due to our frenzied ef¬fort to dispose of our surplusstocks,” he said.All of these complaints seem tobe well-founded, he added. The rough total effect of allthe government programs in thepostwar period was to have "in¬duced farmers to increase outputby as much as eight to ten percent,” he said.The first of the farmers’ post¬war difficulties resulted from"the continuation of price sup¬ports at 90 per cent of parity intothe postwar period,” he said. "Amajor blunder in economic poli¬cy” was Johnson’s evaluation.In 1947-48 farm organizations,the US department of agriculture,and most agricultural economists,he said, were agreed that 90 percent parity "represented a levelthat was certain to lead to exactlythe kinds of difficulties that wenow find ourselves in.” Parity at90 per cent, he said, is an "exam¬ple of logrolling very reminiscentof tariff legislation.”Second, Johnson said, the Agri¬cultural Conservation program, ineffect since 193G, helps increaseboth output and governmentalcosts of price support while re¬ducing net farm income.Under the ACP program, thefederal government pays for halfor more of the costs of such farmpractices as fertilization, erosioncontrol, pasture improvements,drainage, and protective covercrops."Many of the applications andactivities would have been car¬ried out by the farmers withoutpayments,” he said. "One of thepurposes of the program is tofind a means of giving money tofarmers without it being too ob¬vious. sional schools would create andexecutive committee composed ofthe presidents of each academicdivision council to coordinate allSG activities;• retain the present SG struc¬ture but make elections campus¬wide rather than by academic divi¬sions, which is the current man¬ner.All proposals were sent backto committee for further consid¬eration and will be reported backto the assembly in the autumnquarter. If the assembly approvesa reorganized Government, therewill be a campus-wide referendumnext spring.The function of the NationalStudent association was then con¬sidered. Some members felt thatbenefits gained from NSA werenot great enough to warrant an expense of $50 a year for duesand several additional hundredsof dollars as travelling expensesfor delegates to the annual NSAcongress. Some of the servicesNSA provides are student dis¬counts, cooperative travel plansand opportunities to talk with stu¬dents from US and foreign insti¬tutions about common problems.It was pointed out by support¬ers of NSA that the nationalgroup serves as a lobbying groupin Washington, agitating for pro¬student legislation such as fed¬eral aid to education.The possibility of additionalSunday library space was re¬ported by Bob Gerwin (ISL-Col-lege), chairman of the campusaction committee. Gerwin alsostated that his committee was con¬sidering such student services as the possibility of laying a concreteW'alk leading from the new dor¬mitory to Lexington hall; theresumation of an SG-publishedstudent directory; and publicationof a list of neighborhood and Loopstores where students are entitledto discounts on merchandise.Need for better student-facultycommunications and the need forre-evaluation and improvement ofthe house faculty fellow systemwere reported by Judy Frost (ISL-College), chairman of the student-faculty relations committee.The final business of the meet¬ing was a “summer enabling act,”which gives all Governmentpower for the summer quarterto an executive committee. In thisway, many current projects maybe carried out before the autumnquarter.Flood control presentsproblem to geographersProblems of America’s rivercities flood control were ex¬amined by TJC geographers inUniversity of Chicago reports.The group of six geographers,led by Gilbert F. White, professorand chairman of the departmentof geography, found that despitethe $4 billion spent in 21 yearsto reduce the dangers, "the meanannual reported flood losses haveincreased over the period of rec¬ord and at a rate that has notdeclined notably since 1936.”White’s group found a "per¬sistant human invasion” of floodplains that further increased thesusceptibility of cities to damageby floods. They estimated that onemillion acres of the United Statesare urban flood plains.The study showed that, evenin cities which declined in popu¬lation during 1936-57, the numberof buildings on the flood plainsincreased. Social scientists gener¬ally attribute city sprawl to threestimulants: population growth,centripetal forces and public im¬provements. The first two are"natural.” The last is, for river cities often federally sponsored,as flood plains are prime targetsfor urban renewal programs.Their run-down condition is dueboth to the constant threat offloods and to the fact that theirbuildings are usually the oldestin town.Another federally sponsoredExpressways for a national net¬work of superhighways begunlast fall will use freely urbanflood plains as rights of way be¬cause the lands are level and easyto get. These highways willattract still further occupancy offlood plains, said the report, isthe construction of new highways,potential flood lands, the authorsbelieve.The most ironic federal stimu¬lant to the build-up is the govern¬ment’s flood-protection works, thegeographers maintained. The USArmy corps of engineers buildscontrol projects to prevent all floods but the big ones that occurperhaps once every 50 to 500years. Unduly optimistic develop¬ers, even before the engineeringworks are begun, charge into theflood plains and begin raising newstructures.This in no way blames thecorps, the report points out. Itsprojects are well designed to keepaway the waters of floods forwhich they are planned. "Therealways remains, however, the pos¬sibility of a flood that one daywill exceed the design capacity,”the report says. "The exactstimulant to the march to thenot be estimated with any aceu-^.mount of loss that may be pos¬sible from catastrophic floods can-racy.'At best, it must be a roughguess. Rare events in single basinswhich may not occur for as muchas 500 years have a way of loom¬ing high on the national tallysheet.”Upset defines terms(from page 10)small town protestant provincialbusinessman.The second example of a fascistmovement presented by Lipsetwas the Poujadist movement inFrance. Poujade’s ideology wasNaziism and extremism. He ap¬pealed to the petty bourgeouse,the artisan, and the peasant whiledeclaiming against big business,trusts, government taxation, so¬cial security, Marxism, and de¬partment stores: anti-semiticismwas again noted. The lecturer wasconcerned with pointing out thatPoujadist strength came frompoorly industrialized areas. Gaul-list strength lies in well-to-do in¬dustrialized areas: DeGaulle hasclearly attempted to disassociatehimself from extremist support¬ers such as the North African“colons.”Lipset’s final example of a fas¬cist movement was that of Sena¬tor McCarthy. He had no partyand no organization but did pos¬sess an ideology which Lipset re¬lated to the Populist and Progres¬sive movements of the 19th cen¬tury. The populists were mostlyfarmers and petty bourgeousieprotesting against the control ofrailroads, banks, trusts, and bigbusiness. They distrusted parlia¬ mentary democratic institutions,political parties, and foreigners.They supported referendums anddirect democracy. It is interesting,said Lipset, to observe how HueyLong acquired the populist votein Louisiana. McCarthy’s support¬ ers, according to Lipset, werelargely disgruntled small businessmen who responded to his denun¬ciations of the left (socialists, newdealers, fellow travelers) and alsoof the right (the traitors fromGroton and Harvard). RECORDER SALEone week only20% OFFAdler • Weiss • Duskin • Olympiaalsoa complete line of musical accessoriesThe Disc 1367 E. 57th St.Tell 'emyou saw it inthe MAROON continentalsProudly offered by the stores listedwith this ad. They know quality and style forcampus and vacation wear. See theirselection of fabrics and colors now ... andwait ’til you see the low price!SARTORIAL STANDOUT IN SLACKSD & G CLOTHES744 E. 63our prices cort't be beot . .it's smart to buy for iess FRANK S DEPT. STORE813 W. 79th StreetRA 3-6200phone orders acceptedDICKIES ARE SHOWN AT ALE THE FINER STORESGABES STORE FOR MENN.W. corner of 55th andKenwood THE FAIR STORE95th & WesternEvergreen Shopping PlazaStudents Dept.May 15, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11' r ♦'Vogue' sponsors contest State dept, holds examsThe winner of Voguejs 25th annual Prix de Paris may bewatching the fireworks along the Seine on Bastille Day, 1960.Vogue’s search for editorial and writing talent among collegeseniors all over the country promises a two-week trip to Paris, allexpenses paid — or $1,000 — to the first prize winner. Second prizein the college contest is $500, and ten honorable mention awards are$25 each.The 25th Prix de Paris is open to all seniors in accredited collegesin the United States who will compete on a bachelor’s degree bysummer of 1960. All twelve top winners will receive first chance atjobs on Vogue, Glamour, House & Garden, Bride’s, Vogue PatternBook and Vogue Knitting Book. Other outstanding contestants willbe recommended by Vogue for jobs in publishing, merchnadising,and advertising.Th£ first quiz appears in the August 1 college issue. The secondwill appear in December. Entrants who answer both quizzes satis¬factorily will be eligible to write a 1,500 word thesis on one of severaltopics which will be listed in Vogue’s February 1 (I960) Americanaissue.Entries will be judged by the magazine’s editors on grasp of sub¬ject matter, general intelligence, originality, and demonstration ofspecial talents.Enrollment blanks may be obtained by writing the Prix de Parisdirector, Vogue, 420 Lexington avenue, New York 17, New York. US state department willhold its next written ForeignService Officer examinationon Dec. 5, 1959, in approximately65 centers throughout the US andat foreign service posts abroad.In announcing the examination,the state department is seeking tointerest undergraduate and grad¬uate students who have studiedin such fields as economics, pub¬lic and business administration,language and area studies, his¬tory, and political science.To be eligible to take the exam¬ination, a candidate must be anAmerican citizen of at least nineyears’ standing and must be atleast 21 and under 32 years of ageas of Oct. 19, 1959. Persons 20years of age may also apply if acollege graduate or a senior incollege. A candidate’s spouse neednot be a citizen on the date of theJUST YOUR TYPEThat’s why more people buy Smith-Corona Portablesthan any other Portable Typewriter!What a campus beauty! Always letter-perfect — and has figures to match!And won’t your fellow-students envy you! ’Cause with your Smith-CoronaPortable, you’ll be able to make better grades ... studies will be easier ...assignments go faster, leaving you more time for campus activities. .And to teach you typing the correctway—the easy way—Smith-Corona nowoffers this exclusive, $23.95 home studycourse on records that teaches touchtyping in just ten days—and it’s yoursfree with any Smith-Corona PortableTypewriter including Smith-Corona’snew Electric Portable! So visit yourSmith-Corona dealer soon, and learnhow to type this easy way on the world’sfinest and fastest portable typewriter!* >■ Smith-CoronaAt school, at home, In business ... you’llalways be glad you know how to type!CHICAGO MAROON • examination, but must have ob¬tained citizenship prior to the dateof appointment. Early announce¬ment of the test has been made inresponse to inquiries received asa result of the cancellation of lastDecember’s exam.Candidates who are successfulin the one - day written exam;which tests their facility in Eng¬lish expression, general abilityand background, will subsequent¬ly be given oral examinations bypanels which will meet in regionalcenters throughout the UnitedStates. Fluency in a language,while not an examination require¬ment, must be attained before anofficer can advance in the Serv¬ice. Those candidates who passthe oral test Will then be given aphysical exam and a backgroundinvestigation.If found qualified in all respectscandidates will be placed on areigster and appointments will bemade therefrom as needed, in theorder of exam scores. The namesof candidates failing io receiveappointments within 30 monthsfrom the date of the written examwill be removed from this regis¬ter. Upon appointment, the candi¬date will receieve three commis¬sions from the President: as For¬eign Service officer Class 8: asSecretary in the Diplomatic Serv¬ice. and as Vice Consul of Career.Application forms and other in¬formation may be obtained imme¬diately by writing to the Boardof Examinei’s for the ForeignService, Department of State,Washington, D.C. The closingdate for filing the application isOct. 19, 1959.The starting salary for the new¬ly appointed foreign service offi¬cer ranges from $5,225 to $5,885per year, depending upon thequalifications, experience, marital status, and age at the time of ajFpointment Also, certain allow¬ances, plus insurance, medical, ed¬ucational and retirement benefitsare granted, as well as annual andsick leave.A new’ly appointed Officer maysereve his first tour of duty eitherin the Department’s headquartersin Washington, DC, or at one ofthe 286 Amerecian embassies, le¬gations, and consulates abroad.The new officer may be assignedto several functions to give himvaried training and experience inconsulas work, in administrativeassignments, including ones inthe accounting and managementfields, and in political, economic,international finance, and com¬mercial reporting.UC graduate washonored (or workDr. John M. Stalnakcr, aUC graduate, was honored atthe annual awards banquet ofthe National Vocational Guidanceassociation at the University ofSouthern California Town andGown last Thursday.Dr. Stalnaker was chosen be¬cause of his outstanding work inthe field of vocational guidancefor youth. He has served-es con¬sultant for projects sponsored bysuch groups as the Fund for theAdvancement of Science, the Na¬tional Science foundation, theFord foundation, the State depart¬ment in the area of foreign serv¬ice examinations, the Navy, andthe Air Force.In 1955 he became president ofthe National Merit Scholarshipcorporation, and has directed thatorganization, financed by 75 com¬panies and foundations ever sincethen.May 15/ 1959UC prof to Pakistan Science foundation offers'Francis S. Chase, chairman of the department of education,departed Wednesday for a month-long inspection tour of UC’seducation project in Pakistan,It will be Chase’s second visit t© the newly-developing country.In 1957, Chase headed the advisory delegation that helped Pakistaniofficials draft plans for three educational programs under a Fordfoundation grantThe University programs, later approved and developed, are fi¬nanced by the Ford foundation in cooperation with the governmentof Pakistan. The programs set up "pilot" secondary schools forteacher programs, expanded student activities in universities, andestablished education extension centers for the training of schoolofficials and teachers.A number of UC representatives are now in Pakistan as advisorsto the program. A group of educators from Pakistan will enter theUniversity next September as trainees.Chase said the purpose of his current trip Is to obtain a betterunderstanding of the problems of advisors abroad and to set up aself-regulating organization to handle some of these problems. fellowship applicationsApplications for fellowshipswill be accepted by the Na¬tional Science foundationthrough October 5, Alan T. Wat¬erman, foundation director, an¬nounced May 13. The fellowshipswill be under the Senior Postdoc¬toral and Science Faculty Fellow¬ship programs.Together the two programs In¬clude awards in the mathematical,physical, medical, biological, andengineering sciences. Also inclu-Teens to study math hereThree hundred able Chi¬cago area teenagers with abent for science and mathe¬matics are being selected for sixweeks of special training on cam¬pus this summer.The mathematics staff of theCollege will conduct the coursesponsored by the National Sciencefoundation to encourage the sci¬entific interests of able secondaryschool students.The course, being directed byprofessor William H. Meyer willstart June 29 and run throughAugust 7.Mathematics classes will meet910 a.m each day, except Satur¬days and Sundays, and scienceclasses 10-11:30 am on Tuesdaysand Thursdays.A special program of extra¬curricular activities is being ar¬ranged for the young scholars.The University library and ath¬letic facilities will be open tothem.There is no charge for tuition,but there will be a $10 registra¬tion and recreation fee.Requirements for applicationinclude completion of at least thesophomore year, at least a full-year course in high school alge¬bra, at least a full-year course in high school geometry, and a full-year course in biology or chemis¬try or physics in high school.Qualified students may obtainapplication forms and further in¬ formation about the programfrom the head of their high schoolmathematics department, whowill accept applications throughMay 15. ded are anthropology, psychology(excluding clinical psychology)interdisciplinary fields (compris¬ed of overlapping fields in two ormore sciences), and selected so¬cial sciences.To be eligible for the SeniorPostdoctoral fellowships, candi¬dates must be citizens of the Uni¬ted States and must have held thedoctoral degree for at least fiveyears or have equivalent educa¬tion or experience. Senior Post¬doctoral fellows will be selectedon the basis of ability as ev¬idenced by letters of recommenda¬tion and scientific achievement.Candidates’ qualifications willbe evaluated by panels of scien¬tists operating under the sponsor¬ship of the National Academy ofSciences-National Research coun¬cil. The National Science founda¬tion will make the final selectionof the 75 fellows.Science Faculty fellowships are directed toward college teachersof science, mathematics, or engi¬neering. Requirements are UScitizenship, a baccalaureate de¬gree or its equivalent, and a teach¬ing of not less than three yearsas a full time faculty member atcollegiate level.Again, letters of recommenda¬tion and professional or scientificachievement are required, andthe National Science foundationfinally chooses the 30 fellows.Annual stipends up to twelvethousand dollars are awarded un¬der both programs. They will beadjusted to match as closely asfeasible the salaried income ofthe fellows.Applications are to be obtainedat the fellowships section, divisionof scientific personnel and educa¬tion, National Science foundation.Washington 25, DC.Successful candidates will beannounced December 7.Millions of times a yeas'drivers and students keepawake with safe NoDozLet NoDoz® alert youthrough college, too Get satisfying flavor..,So friendly to your taste!Youcan *light either end!NoDoz keeps you alert with caf¬feine—the same pleasant stim¬ulant you enjoy in coffee. Fast¬er, handier, more reliable: non¬habit-forming NoDoz delivers anaccurate amount of dependablestimulation to keep your mindand body alert during study andexams until you can rest or sleep.P. S.: When you need NoDozvit’ll probably be late. Play safe.,Keep a supply handy.VThe safe stay awake table1*—" available everywhere NO FLAT"FILTERED-OUT"FLAVOR! See how Pall Mall’s famous length of finetobacco travels and gentles the smoke-makes it mild—but does not filter outthat satisfying flavor!•NO DRY! "SMOKED-OUT" :\ TASTE!**** •••**Outstanding...and they are Mild! HERE'S WHY SMOKE ^RAVELED* THROUGH FINE TOBACCO TASTES BESTI You get Pall Mali’s ^ Pall Mall’s famous ^ Travels it over,famous length of the length travels and 3 under, around andfinest tobaccos / gentles the smoke through Pall Mali’smoney can buy. "" naturally.. ; fine tobaccos!O*.!, C*. Tr»im ( pf ii miJdh ktmtIIImP Rambler “AmericanBig-car roominess .small-car economytops ic performance COt IIMRIA SURFOI'HDNIiHI 11 St ISKir Stereo” styledengineered tor the mostenacting taste100 THIRD PRIZESIMIRSON I RrtNSIS I ORRADIOSRacked with poweroMv 1500 his on l $<v ;,.jttenesHOBBY HOUSEwe ^peciolice inRovnd-O-Beef and Waffle*Open from Down to Down 1342east 53 at. EUROPEDublin to the Iron Curtain. Africato Damian. You're accompanied —not herded. College age only. Alaoshort trips. fK4-fl,3M.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS355 Sequoia (Box 4) — Paeadeua. Cal. Ellen Coughlin Beauty SalonSIM lake Park Ave. Ml I4N«SPECIALISTS Iff HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOften Men. - Smt. — 9 non. - II p.m.E PUZZLE CONTESTFOR STUDENTS AND FACULTY MEMBERSUOHT UP AMD LIVE IT UP I 3 great cigarettes offer yon 627 chances to who!So pick your pack—save the six wrappers—and get going! tt*s crossword frazzle 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 due 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! 500 FOURTH PRIZESCartons of America s finest cigarettesRULfS-PLEASE HEAD 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 witn 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. 0. 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-RicbardsCorporation, 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 lees thefollowing statement: “My favorite cigarette is(Chesterfield) (L&M) or (Oasis) becauseEntries 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 theeontestantssubmittingthem. All entries becomethe property of Liggett & Myers and none willbe returned.>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. | HORRY! ENTER NOW! CONTEST CLOSES MAY 29,1950 1I CLUES ACROSS:1. These may indicate that a nation is prepared to wage war in the air.■ 6. Some college studentsI *10. When at Light up an Oasis.I 'll. Sinking ship deserter.112. Plural pronoun.13. One expects •... . discussions in a sociology class.116. A student’s careless might annoy a short-story instructor.17. Initials of Uruguay and Denmark.18. Germanium (Chem.)119. Nova Scotia (Abbr.)21. It probably would count when you pick a horse to bet on.122. Sometimes a girl on a date must into her pocketbook to helppay the tab.23. The muscle-builder’s may fascinate a poorly developed mao.124. Chemical Engineer (Abbr.)26. Campers will probably be by a forest fire.129. When starting a trip, tourists usually look forward to the first31. At home.32. Literate in Arts (Abbr.)133. Familiar for faculty member.35. Associate in Arts (Abbr.)36. One could appear quite harmless at times.137. Reverse the first part of "L&M".38. What will soon appear in a bombed-out city.I CLUES DOWN:11. The beginning and end of pleasure.I 2. A rural ...» can be inviting to a vacationist.I 3. Second and third letters of OASIS.4. When one is packed, it could be exasperating to remembera few articles that ahouldibe* included.6. 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.16.8 tone, Bronze and Iren20. 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. o, tgniBSOH S !3PRINT CLEARLY! ENTER AS OFTEN AS YOU WISHWail to Liggett & Myers. P. 0 8ok 271, New York 46. New York. Besure to attach sis empty package wrappers of the seme Need (orfacsimile) from Chesterfield. LAM, er Oasis cigarettes.AddressCollege -This entry must be postmarhed before midnight. May 29.1959, endreceived at ?. 0. Box 27L, New Verk 46, Haw York, by midnight,leee 5. 1959.O Llffsfl t Myso TsbsM* Oismmm ■Bigger, thirstier *59 cars priced .M* “out of your class**?...less to own! "GENTLEMAN AND SCHOLAR"High proise, indeed, for anyman I But did you know thatthe description comes fromRobert Borns—who said it firstabout a dog? Here's the quote:"His locked, lettered, brawbross collarShowed him the gentlemanond scholarYou'll find the couplet inBurns' "The Twa Dogs.""MAN BITES DOG"That's everybody's definitionof news, and we're all in¬debted to John B. Bogart, cityeditor of the old New YorkSun (1873-90) who first said:"When a dog bites a man,that is not news, because ithappens so often. But if amon bites a dog, that isnews!"Coach Anderson to guidebaseball players for USWHO SAID IT FIRST?A column of incidental intelligenceby Jockey brand"THE MORNING AFTER"This horrible time was first im¬mortalized by George Ade in"The Sultan of Sulu." Here'sthe way he put its"But, R-E-M-O-R-S-EIThe water-wagon is theplace for me;It is no time for mirth andlaughter,The cold, gray dawn of themorning after I"Jockey UnderwearWhat's true about expressions is also true about styles.Somebody always got there f irst. Take Jockey brand under¬wear. Jockey brand is made only by Coopers. Coopersinvented Jockey underwear—and no copy can comparewith Jockey brand for quality, comfort ond fit. For under¬wear that feels better because it fits better, insist on Jockeybrand — the original comfort-tailored underwear. You'llfind it at better stores everywhere. Recognize it by theJockey trade mark.fashioned by the house ofSports calendar J. Kyle Anderson, baseball coach, was named manager of the United States baseball teamfor the 1959 Pan-American games, the US Olympic committee announced last Saturday.John H. Kobs, baseball coach at Michigan State university was named coach of the USteam.Anderson and Kobs were recommended for the posts by the Olympic baseball committeeEverett D. Barnes, athletic director of Colgate university, is chairman.The two will direct the play- :—: ———— : ■ers from all over the country durm® tae Pan-Amenean games, have that many in the westernwho will renresent the T in Nations that will compete in hemisphere alone."baseball competition at Chicago h*sch*].1 a™ th e , Anderson said specific d a tesnext August United States, Canada, Mexico, have not yet been set for baseballAnrWcrm =. Trr1 on.™,,,,,, v.™ Venezuela, Costa Rica, the Domin- in the Pan-American games, but■en on the coachL staff ica?J^Public, Dutch West Indies, both Wrigley field and Comiskeyphoto by BergerRevive chess tourneyAnother “old” UC stand-by has been revived, that is aB-J chess tournament, announced Roger Bernhardt. Thetournament, organized by the B-J council of house presidents,was the first held In eight years. The event was won by a Salisburyhouse team.The winning team, headed by Wayne Janda and completed by An¬thony Berrocoso, Ken Driessel and Bill Butler, were presented withthe renovated old trophy-plaque by Director of student activitiesJames E. Newman.The same evening Wally Jankowsky and John Biesem won the B-Jtiddlywink championship. They will go on to compete for the officialUniversity team, which will meet Cambridge university later thisyear. been on the coaching staff for 29 ^ Puerto Ricoyears. The veteran of a brief stint thf* tnH.votoa ,with the Pittsburgh Pirates and of indicated thejminnr* moo „ •, . send teams include Panama,minor league ball in 1928 said he r'.iKaovn«,fc ttc — tv.;,. Cuba’ Colombia, and Brazil.July 17 is the deadline for en-expects the US team this year to^ the best ever put into Pan- tri^A^erson'Sa7dAmerican competition.Walter L. Hass, director of ath- park will be used.Vet announcer tohead radio newsWUCB Station ManagerJohn Schuerman has an-"Baseball is not yet a competi-letics, said he is "greatly pleased" ® SP°U in the Olympic games,with Anderson’s appointment. Anderson said. "But growing in-"Kyle is one of the finest *erest ind£atesA Jt ma^ graduate ^ ^eilcher ?o he no"t ofcoaches in the country, a fine WUCB News DirectorFleischer will supervise theBesides the enthusiasm (or base "T „™i,°111 annaivm* in „mot. station s news program, broad¬cast nightly at 8 pm.Fleischer, while in the Unitedtvauica m uw amnuy, a line —; ° —gentleman, and I’m happy the aven^ t° Olympic event in aOlympic committee saw fit to give *ew yearshethese qualities recognition,said.Haas added that the athleticMAY15 Baseball, Varsity versus Chicago Teachers college at Staggfield.'Tennis, Chicago Intercollegiate championships at varsitycourts.16 Baseball, Varsity vs. Lake Forest in double header at Staqqfield..Tennis, Finals of Chicago Intercollegiate.Track, Varsity vs. UCTC, Northern Illinois, and Maruette;Stagg field.18 Track, Varsity vs. Wabash at Stagg field. ball already apparent in the west-“7.TT — bcmisPheie, he said, base rieiscner, wnne in tne unitedfacilities on campus will be made bah has caught on in Australia, States Navy reccntly, acted as aavailable to athletes in the Pan- JaPan- Korea, the Netherlands, neWswriter and announcer for theAmerican games for practice pur- and Germany. us Armed Forces Radio service’sposes. Almost all members of the At least twelve nations must Far East network, serving atUniversity coaching staff are have teams ready for competition their radio stations in Iwakunihelping organize the games, Hass to qualify as an Olympic event, and Tokyo. Fleischer returned tosaid. . Anderson said, "and we already the University in Midyear, 1959."The US Olympics baseball se¬lection committee will pick thebest talent from America’s col¬leges, the three branches of serv¬ice, American Legion teams, andvarious amateur baseball federa¬tions,” Anderson said.The Maroons’ coach, whosesquad now has a 64 record thisseason, said “Kobs and I will workwith the boys for a couple ofweeks at the Naval Training cen¬ter at Great Lakes, Illinois, beforethey come to the University tostay at the Pan-American village.”The Pan-American village is thename given to housing facilitieson campus where approximately1,600 visiting athletes will stayGet the quality car with built-in savings—Rambler ’59. Save more than ever on firstcost, on gas. Highest resale, too. EnjoyPersonalized Comfort: individual sectionalsofa front seats. See your Rambler dealer. New 100-Inch wheelbase RAMBLER AMERICAN*1835Sug£«»ted delivered price tt Kenoalu,Wisconsin, for 2-door sedan st left.State and local taxes If iny, automatictransmission snd optionil equipment,extra.SEE YODR RAMBLER DEALER TODAY ADD SAVEGLADES RESTAURANT1527 E. 55th St.*109 SPECIAL $109Try our delicious BROILED CLUB STEAK — with chef's salad,french dressing, french fries, hard roil, bread and butter.The Qreen Door Book ShopWe carry all the Free Press books1450 East 57th Street HY 3-5829Chicago's Most Complete Stock ,of Quality Paper HacksYou won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711May 15, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15CHEVY’S THE HOTTEST ONE AGAIN!HOTTEST LOOKING, HOTTEST SAVING,r o-j/vM/crcw i myutu VVIVvvr iHOTTEST SELLING OF THE LEADING LOW-PRICED 3What we mean—this new Chevy’swhipped up a one-car heat wave. Itsfresh style caught on right away, ofcourse. But—whether you prefer aV8 or 6—where Chevrolet really leaves the other cars in the shade isout on the road. A pair of Chevy 6’scame in one-two in their class in thisyear’s Mobilgas Economy Run. Andthe winning average was 22.38 m.p.g. Why not drop down to your dealer'and see for your¬self why Chevy’sthis year’s hot¬test selling car? YOU have a stakein higher educationThis country needs educatedpeople as never before, and theneed will increase. Our wholefuture may depend on men andwomen who have learned in col¬lege to think soundly and choosewisely —in business, in industry,Tn civic affairs.Our colleges are facing a crisis.Already the pressure of applica¬tions is straining their capacity.It will double by 1967.It’s not just a matter of add¬ing classroom, laboratory anddormitory space. Faculties, too,must be enlarged and strength¬ened. High standards of teachingmust be maintained. That meansincreased salaries lor prolessors.For your own sake, your chil¬dren’s sake, your country’s sake,help the colleges or universitiesof your choice -now!If you want to know what the collegeerisij meant to you, write for a freebooklet to: HIGHER EDUCATION,Box 36, Timet Square Station, NewYork 36, New York.Tell 'emTry the hot one—see your local authorized Chevrolet dealer! you saw it inThe MAROONM Do You Think for Yourself ? ("zxs&r")1. Do you think that men who look you straight in Adthe eye when they talk are (a) to be trusted? (b) bQnearsighted? (c) watching your reaction? cd2. Of three men who have asked her for a date, shoulda girl pick (a) the one with a big car and money?(b) the one who makes lots of jokes, but is broke?(c) the one who helped her study for an exam?. AO«□ca 5. Do you think the maxim “A penny saved is apenny earned” is (a) an excuse for miserliness?(b) a thrift precept more people should follow?(c) a disastrous economic policy?6. Do you believe that the expression “Every cloudhas a silver lining” is (a) sticky sentimentality?(b) optimism with a poetic license? (c) faultymeteorology? AdBdcQAdBdCQMountaineers say they climb a mountain “becauseit’s there.” Does this strike you as (a) logical?(b) indicative of an. inferiority complex? (c) asymbol of man’s drive to conquer nature? AdBdCD 7. Do you think that helping other people at all timeswill (a) give you a lot of fun? (b) win you a lot offriends? (c) get you into a lot of trouble? AdBdcd4. If you were offered a million dollars to be the first Adman to fly to the moon, would you (a) leap at the Bdchance? (b) take the money and hire someone cdelse to go? (c) find out why the job paid so much? 8. Do you think the primary purpose of parking a[meters is to (a) stop all-day parking? (b) raise b[- money? (c) make people leave their cars at home? c [9. In choosing a filter cigarette, would you A □depend most (a) on the claims you read b □and hear? (b) on satisfying yourself that c Qyou're getting the right filtration andtaste? (C) on the recommendations ofyour friends?When you think for yourself... you dependon judgment, not chance, in your choice ofcigarettes. That is why men and womenwho think for themselves usually smokeVICEROY. They know that only VICEROYhas a thinking man's filter and a smokingman's taste.*If you have checked (C) on three out of thefirst four questions, and (B) on four out of thelast five... you certainly think for yourselflO1959, Brown A Wlllluaiion Tobacco Cory.The Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows— Familiarpack orcrush*proofbox.ONLY VICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN’SFILTER...A SMOKING MAN’S TASTEI16 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 15, 1959—f ...►>A Varsityby Bill SpadyThree varsity teams areplaying host to teams from allover the state this weekend.The undefeated track team willvie against the Track club, Mar¬quette university, and NorthernIllinois, winner of last week’sElmhurst relays, in a quadrangu¬lar meet at Stagg field at 5:30 pmtomorrow.The Maroon tennis squad com¬pletes against a large number ofnet squads in the fifth annualChicago Intercollegiate Tennischampionships today and tomor¬row. Play begins at 1:30 thisafternoon on the varsity courts orfield house courts depending onthe weather, and the finals willcontinue through tomorrow after¬noon.Baseball fans can attend adouble header between the Chi¬cago varsity and Lake Forest atSiagg field tomorrow at 12:30.The UC golf squad is competingIn the Chicago Intercollegiatetournament at White Pines today.Varsity tennisMarquette’s tennis squad wasall that coach Bill Moyle had ex¬acted but his outclassed nettersput up a determined bid for vic¬tory before falling to the visitors7 2 May 7. Although the unbeatenMarquette men snapped theMaroons’ undefeated string atnine straight, the Chicagoansended the year with an excellent8-1-1 record.Freshman Len Friedman play¬ing first-man for the Maroonsdropped two close sets to Mar¬quette’s Mulcahy, one of the mid¬west’s finest intercollegiate play¬ers, 64 and 7-5. Will Provineforced Luke to three sets beforelosing a 3-6, 6-3, 4-6 verdict. Athird freshman, John Berall, alsoforced his opponent to go threesets before falling 3-6, 7-5, 345.Carl Finger lost straight sets toMcLoone 64, 6-2; and Max Liber¬ies fell before the visitors’ Span-genberg 6-1, 6-4. Mike Nussbaumwas the only Chicagoan to winhis singles match, dropping Soveyin close sets 7-5, 8-6.In doubles Friedman and Beralllost to Mulcahy and Luke 6-4, 6-2;but the team of Finger and Nuss¬baum went three sets to stop Mar¬quette 2-6, 6-44, 7-5. The Liberles-Provine duo lost in the finalmatch of the day 6-0, 61.The Maroons are hosting theChicago Intercollegiate tourna¬ment today and tomorrow, fea¬turing teams from all over theChicago area. Moyle expects thetoughest competition for theCaptures yourpersonalityas well asyour personNow with ... CoronaStudio1314 E. 53rd St.MU 4-74240. Washington, famous father, says:"Makes your hair look real GeorgeP teams meet state rivals todayMaroons to come from Rooseveltuniversity, but he feels that theMaroons could capture the teamtitle, providing the players con¬tributed top performances."The boys have really workedhard and improved this year,”stated Moyle. “They deserve a lotot credit for their desire and afine season.”Varsity baseballRick Williams led the Chicagobaseball team to a 12-4 victoryover Illinois Tech at Stagg fieldlast Tuesday, May 4, giving thevisitors only 6 hits and 3 earnedruns in nine innings, while aidinghis own cause with a double andstriking out 14 batters. The fastball throwing freshman receivedfine hitting and fielding supportfrom his teammates. Jack Mar¬kin scored every time he came tothe plate after collecting threewalks and a triple. Jon Nicholsondrove across 3 runs with two hits,and Ira Levy used a fair of blowsto push across 4 more Chicagoruns. Bill Bauer got two of Chi¬cago’s nine hits and also drove arun across. The team completedtwo double plays.In a game on May 6, the Maroonbats were almost silent while theU of Wisconsin at Milwaukeesquad hammered out 14 hits andtook advantage of 3 errors in sub¬duing the visiting Chicagoans10-1. Coach* Kyle Anderson’s ninecould not find the range with theirbats as they collected only twohits. Bob Griffin and Ben Majus-kovic did the mound chores forthe Maroons.Navy Pier revenged a recent54 win by the Maroons with a17-0 shellacking of the local squad.Dependable Neeman Taylor wastagged with a deluge of hits, andthe Maroons again failed to hitwell, collecting only 4 in the en¬tire game.The squad faced Lake Forest ina double header tomorrow atStagg Field, and they go againstNavy Pier on Thursday in thefirst round of the Chicagolandtournament to be held at StaggField from May 21 throughMay 26.Versify golfCoach Bob Kreidler’s varsitygolfers finished their regular sea¬son with three wins in a four¬way match at White Pines, May 7.The much improved Maroonsstopped St. Joseph’s college 10*4-914, DePaul 18-6, and Navy Pier17-7 to boast their final season’stotals to 10 wins and 9 defeats. Steve Klein led the Maroonsagain this week with a 77, andfreshman Ray Strecker was justa stroke off the pace with a 78.Nick DeMerell carded an 81,freshman Dave Silver an 84, Mar¬shall Sylvan an 84, and DaveKreisman an 86.Today the Maroons are compet¬ing in the Chicago Intercollegiatetournament at White Pines. Withgood performances from his keyplayers, Kreidler hopes that hissquad will place high in the stand¬ings. A look at next year’s pros¬pects also reflects a feeling ofoptimism. Kreidler will welcomesix experienced sophomores andjuniors next spring, althoughKlein, Sylvan, and DeMerell willhave completed their final year ofintercollegiate competition thisyear.Inframural sportsJerry Zaug of Alpha Delt wonthe All University golf tourna¬ment from Don Clifford in a play¬off match after both men hadcarded 80’s in the initial 18 holesof play. Zaug fired a 78 over theJackson Park course to nip Clif¬ford by only one stroke. Thirty-one students participated in thetourney held on April 30, accord¬ing to Chet McGraw, UC intra¬mural director.The field has been narrowedconsiderably in tiie race for theAll University softball title. Vin¬cent won the house league titlewith a playoff win over East II,and Psi Upsilon continued todominate fraternity circles bytopping Delta Upsilon in a play¬off contest. The two teams willbattle to determine the right toplay the winner of the divisionalleague which is still undeter¬mined at this writing.Nine men are left in the singleelimination tennis tournamentnow entering its final two rounds.Craven and Rodnitzky of Psi Uand Goldman and Zagel of Betaremain in the fraternity section,while Lillien, Lefkon, and Pennhave yet to determine the winnerof the house section. Skyles andBellman face each other for divi¬sional honors.The horseshoes tournament isalso in its final playoff stages,with teams from Phi Gam, theAir Force, Phi Delt, Coulter andEast II still to play off for theAll University championship. ThePhi Gams won the fraternitycompetition, Coulter won thehouse league, the Air Force wonthe B section title, and Air Force<444444444444444444 i4 r4yw'vrwww'WW^rwvw'V'wwvwwTrwwwv'W'v^ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghettiraviolimostaccioli sandwiches:beef,sausage Gr meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.Laaa a aa a aaaaaa m. AAAAAAA OAAAAAAAAAAA A, A A. A A A A A AWANTEDStudents at the University of Chicago, both menand women, for sales opportunity in Chicago or inother localities throughout the United States.• work in your home town this summer• set your own work hoursFor interview with representative of Stanley HomeProducts College Division be at;VOCATIONALGUIDANCE OFFICERoom 200, Reynolds Club10 to 4, Monday, Moy 18 “C” will face the winner of thePhi Delt “C”-East II “C” matchto determine the winner in thatsection of the single eliminationtourney.Varsity trackCoach Ted Haydon took histrackmen and a ten meet winningstreak to Albion college last Fri¬day, and the Maroons returnedwith an 80 14/15 - 50 1/15 victoryover the hosts. Although compet¬ing at only partial strength, theChicagoans captured ten of the14 first places, seven seconds, andeight thirds.Walt Greene of Chicago placedthird in the shot put behind thewinning throw of 39'11" by Albi¬on’s Chope. Gar Williams andIvan Carlson placed first andthird in the mile, Williams win¬ning in 4:28.2 and Carlson cross¬ing the line in 4:32. The Maroonscontinued their domination in therunning events with Jerry Geh-man, Jim Skinner, and GaryAugustine sweeping the 440 withGehman’s winning time of 51.8.Mitch Watkins stepped the 120high hurdles in 15.1 to win, andDon Richards pulled third. A1Jacobs followed with a close winover teammate Hosea Martin inthe 100 yard dash, both men hit¬ting the tape in 10 flat. WaltPerschke cruised the 880 in 1:57.4,and Jacobs and Martin followedwith a 1-2 in the 220, Jacobs win¬ning in 22.1. The unusual fractions in themeet score were the result of afive-way tie for first in the highjump, and a two-way finish forthird in the pole vault. MitchWatkins and Don Fagin tied withthree Albion jumpers in the highjump at 5'6", and Fagin and DaveNorthrop took 1-2 in the vaultwith two members of the hostteam tying for third. Fagincleared ll'8"*to win.Don Richards boosted the Chi¬cago score with a pair of firsts,winning the 220 low hurdlesahead of Watkins in 25.1, andbroad jumping 20'7" with Wat¬kins placing third. Williams re¬turned from his mile victory towin the two mile in 9:44.8 withfreshman Vic Neill running a fine10:00.6 for third place.Albion’s Sagendorf out threwboth Watkins and Fagin in thediscuss to win with a 115'9T4*toss. Watkins and Fagin againtook second and third behindAlbion’s Hudson in the javelin.Hudson threw the spear 165'9*for first place. The hosts’ mile re¬lay team won the event in 3:33.7to close the meetTomorrow the Maroons willplay host to three other squads ina twilight meet at Stagg field at5:30 pm. The varsity will com¬pete against the UC Track club,Northern Illinois, and Marauettein one of the biggest home meetsof the year.for perfect footwork and comfortProfessionally designed by and for top-flight tennisplayers. Featuring a flexible arch for comfort; anabrasion-resistant sole that stands up to any playingsurface; laces to the toe to insure perfect fit, completesupport. Fully cushioned, heel to toe. About $8.50.LOOK FOR THE KEDS LABELtT&e. S-£oe otf CAaf*Y><^yu-United States RubberRoek«fell«r Ctftt*', Now York 20, N.Y. C *v’■dMay 15, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 17wUniversity theatre holds tryout tomorrow1<3DHOf s+oh ojoy. ip+*^SDuring the academic year,this courtyard (left) remainsempty and unnoticed by thematted eyes of the C-shop.The junction of its two walksis marked only by a stentor-like fountain. But in thesummer ... T [1 3 N rc 7m n s[s iTbp iTs3 X M 3 8 1 3 1 Idi V T 3 h 3 1 d c i ns 1 0 H I ,4HKl | <01 fd 1 iV d 0 | XDV no*. WW.| ■N m i 3d n i Ji 9 i MV id j L Sr S UL]i 3 m 3 Sa 3 s V ip Is i Vi 3 ITT t ]Q3 a 3 8 ■T j|v T sl |nc ) ift V 1 ■ o y *la W E ffi v i V3 d n T i \ /■ □0H0BQ3 i i 1 i /i /I 0 o / SBC iII i 1 V H 1 5 m 1 N □in L SKDM. . . Hutchinson court be¬comes the setting for theproductions of Court Thea¬tre. This summer, those whoremain in Chicago can wit¬ness the transformation ofthis courtyard when "Othel¬lo/' "Love for love/' and"Francesca de Remini" arepresented.KGDL (CROSSWORD No. 27ACROSS1. Yo-yo compo¬nent7. They go outwith bows13. A cinematicHoward14. Kool’s penguin15. You’ll shinewhen your hairstarts to16. What she’s gotthat gets you17. Recordingbrothers18. Short notein memoriarn20. Cap,no peaking!21. Not backward22. Handy workon the bass23. Eliot's Adam24. Apollo’s sister26. In a box27. Sui(one ol a kind)29. It ain’t hay,exactly32. a Kool36. Ireland37. It used tofix prices (abbr.)33. King-SizeFilter Kool40. Switch fromthem to Kools41. Kind ofclassman43. The stateof France44. Navy man45. Roused46. They knowtheir Croats47. At least 7months away DOWN1. Cayers, butno hens2. This’ll giveyou the shakes3. Center newlychanged4. That's my Burl!5. Decisivemoment6. Impish gnome7. Where Chloewas lost8. Hawaiian city9. Everything10. Windsthatblow good11. Tongue lashing12. Appeared19. Setup for apaint job22. Unscrambledit spells mews23. A hit onthe head25. State ofAlaska'sfirst Governor26. Smoke aKool arette28. LittleRhode Island29. The* couldbe upsets30. Good for th es31. Jack the33. , divins34. The glibare quickon it35. 2/3 plastered39. Elvis, for short40. Cut, butnot classes42. The endof Jack Webb 1 2 3 4 5 4 ■ 7 8 9 10 11 1213 ■ 1415 “17 J ■ 19 Lj | 2021 ■ 22 ■ 2324 25 ■ 2427• 2829 30 31 32 33 34 3536 m' ARE VC >U K DDL h 3738 ■ 39 fcNUUGH TVJKRACK this?" 4041 42 4 4344 1 fi m l 4546• \ H k 47★ ★ ★• As cool and clean as a breath of fresh air.s Finest leaf tobacco. ..mild refreshing menthol-,and the world's most thoroughly tested filter 1s With every puff your mouth feels dean.your throat refreshed!QmeHccLS Mosf Rbfieshir$ Qgaidfe.. . ALSO REGULAR SIZE KOOL WITHOUT FILTERI01830, Brown A Williamson Tobacco Corn. MILO MCNTHOLKINO-SIZE.''***»18 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 15, 1959 Tryouts for University the¬atre’s summer season, CourtTheatre, will be held in Hutch¬inson court tomorrow and Sun¬day, from 1 to 4 pm.This summer’s schedule will in¬clude Shakespeare’s Othello, Con¬greve’s Love for Love and Boker’sFrancesca de Remini.Othello, of course, is Shake- pass players, and served as guestdirector for UT’s recent produc¬tion of Shakespeare’s Measurefor Measure. He is currentlyworking at the Gate of Horn.Congreve’s Love for Love, apost Restoration comedy with allthe complications and furbelowssuch a play usually contains, willbe directed by John Callahan,assistant director of Student ac¬tivities.speare’s great tragedy of theMoor of Venice who, provoked byhis lying lieutenant, becomes jeal¬ous of his wife, eventually killingboth her and himself.UT’s production of Othello willbe co-directed by Andy Duncanand Paul Sills. Formerly a UCstudent and a member of UT, Mr.Duncan has worked in profession¬al theatre and is currently servingas a psychiatric social worker forthe Cook County jail. Mr. Sillshas directed productions at theStudebaker, was one of thefounders and directors of Play-writes, worked with the Com- Norbert Hruby, associate deanof the Downtown College will di¬rect Francesca de Remini. Theplay is based on the couple in theInferno section of Dante’s DivineComedy, who are tied for foreverin a strong din. In the plot of theplay a woman is married to ahideously deformed warrior, withno particular inclination to marryher. She falls in love with hisbrother, and of course the even¬tual result is tragic.Tryouts for all three plays andfor various technical jobs will beheld simultaneously tomorrowand Sunday. Arfyone who will bein Chicago this summer is elig¬ible.PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO."Hyde Park's Most Complete Paint & Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55tl»|IIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!I!IIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|= Chicago’s Most Unusualzjj Motion Picture Theatre DEARBORNAT DIVISIONPhone DE 7-1741Again reminds all College Students of theSpecial Student Rales always In effect atSPECIAL7E« STUDENT* V (ATIEVERY DAY OF THE WEEKINCL. FRI. & SAT. EVENINGS NOW1' —JUST SHOW CASHIER YOUR I.D. CARPAdopted from Dostoievsky'* 2_ Crime and Punishment §uiimimiiiiimmiiiiiiiiniiniimiiimnuiuiHiuHiiuuiiiiiiininiimniuiniHiiiiiiiiiiiuiumiiiiiiHiiiiuiiiiiiiiiuunE“The MostDangerous Sin”Culture VultureTraditionally, In the almostlast issue of the Maroon, theordinary, overtly - ostentaciousvulture will chatter complain-ingly about comps and such.Because comps are going andthe vulture is going, and be¬cause I haven't any full-fledgedcomps anyway, I will speakabout comps. I will not speakon University Theatre, thatwonderful, cheerful, activelyavaricious organization. I willnot even discuss the quite valu¬able liquidorous institutions on55th street or the spring madefor squirrels and parasitic ivy,or the statue of Brutus-in-the-lion's-den on the Maroon officedesk. In fact I won't say any¬thing—but will merely sit inhorrific contemplation of theultimate absolute good.On campusTheatreTomorrow and Sunday Univer¬sity Theatre will hold tryouts forCourt theatre’s summer produc¬tions. This year’s plays includeShakespeare’s Othello, Congreve’sI/>ve for Love and Beker’s Fran¬cesca de Remini.Anyone who doesn’t know a bitabout Othello should go and readit immediately. The play will bedirected by Andy Duncan, a for¬mer UC student and UT member,currently working as a psychia¬tric social worker for the CookCounty jail, and Paul Sills, whohas in the past been affiliatedwith the Studebaker, Playwrites,a Fulbright scholarship, and Uni¬versity theatre’s Measure forMeasure.Anyone Interested in tryoutsfor cast, crew, and miscellany Isinvited to appear over at Hutchin¬son court tomorrow or Sunday.An essential quality for a Courtactor is the ability to bellow overthe chimes of Mitchell tower. Anessential quality for anyone inCourt Theatre is the ability tospend part of the summer in Chi¬cago.Tonight from 8 to 11, a readingof Giradoux’s The Mad Womanof Chaillot will be presented inInternational House Room A.MusicThis evening the UC symphonyorchestra Mozart, concert, whichwas so rudely halted by a snapped piano leg during the Festival ofthe arts, will proceed as previ¬ously scheduled. The program in¬cludes the overture to DonGio-avnni, and two piano concerts.Joseph Kreines and Robert Howatwill direct and solo respectively—always assuming that the pianoremains intact, unsullied andSteinwayishly grand. The concertwill congregate in Mandel Hall at8:30. There is no admissioncharge.Heinrich Fleischer, the littlepublicized but much renowned UCorganist will give a concert inRockefeller chapel, Sunday at 3.The program will include worksby Purcell, Handel, Lenel andBach, all pre-elassical, all goodand all surrounded by gorgeousimitation English Gothic architec¬ture. There will be no admissioncharge.Lectures, etc.Not exactly a lecture nor anetcetera, Reuel Denney, professorof Social science in the college,will read his own poetry in a pro¬gram at the loop YWCA a weekfrom Wednesday, May 27. Thisyear is obviously a good one forthe creative efforts of the UCfaculty. One Pulitzer prize, a con¬cert of original works by Mr.Bialosky, several miscellaneousbooks, an exhibition of quite re¬spectable faculty art works, etc.,Douglas Moore, an Americancomposer, will speak freely on thepresent and future of Americanopera next Thursday in Mandelhall. Believe it or not, there havebeen operatie composers besidesMozart, Wagner, and Menotti.And there have been Americanoperas other than Porgy andBess. Moore is composer of sev¬eral of the latter. His work isprimarily on American themes —The Ballad of Baby Doe, TheHeadless Horseman, and TheDevil and Daniel Webster areamong them, and he received aPulitzer prize for Giants in theEarth. Included among his otherworks are symphonic and cham¬ber pieces and a couple of veryreputable books. If prizes or de¬gress be a recommendation, hehas them. If this be a push in thedirection of the lecture, let it beso.Off campusArt exhibitionsMartyl, a very prominent Amer¬ ican painter, has a one-man showat the Feingarten galleries, open¬ing tomorrow, to run throughJune 6. Her paintings are bold,strong, relatively non objective,and quite individual. She herselfis an individual. Although per¬haps the following quote maycharacterize her:“Beauty is something wonderfuland strange that the artist fash¬ion’s out of the chaos of the worldin the torment of his soul. Andwhen he has found it, it is notgiven to all to know it. To recog¬nize it you must repeat the adven¬ture of the artist. It is a melodyhe sings to you, and to hear itagain in your own heart, you wantknowledge and sensitiveness andimagination.”TheatreAbout a month ago the Uni¬tarian church began a series ofdrama-discussion t he a t re-in-the-round presentations with Sartre’sNo Exit. Because of its experi¬mentalness, the kind of dramapresented, the original opportun¬ity for the audience to discuss theplay with the actors and the wholeaudience-cast rapport which isoften effected by theatre-inthe-round, this series seems quitevaluable. The second productionin the series, Andriev’s ne WhoGets Slapped, will be presentedtomorrow and Sunday and againon May 23 and 24,* in Woolmanhall of the 1st Unitarian church.The play is a psychological dramaset in a European circus. The dis¬cussion will probably be a gor¬geous psychological experimentfor both cast and audience. Amen.The higher eschalons of Chi¬cago theatre are still presentingGarden District, The Dark at theTop of the Stairs, and The MusicMan. The former is a TennesseeWilliams play in an excellent pro¬ duction. The play, or rather plays(two included — “Something Un¬spoken” and Suddenly Las Sum¬mer”) deal with the conflict ofwomen in the luxury Garden dis¬trict of New Orleans.According to Pollack in theHyde Park Herald, Jules Pfeiffer,the producer of Fun Time at theStudebaker has noisily nosed outthe cast of said production andis now starring as the sole mem¬ber of the castMotion picturesA week from today The Caseof Dr. Laurent will open at theHyde Park with Irving Lerner’sMurder by Contract. Dr. Laurentwith Jean Gabin centers aroundan Alpine village doctor and hisbelief in natural childbirth. Per¬haps the most memorable sceneof the film is the birth scene, re¬portedly a tasteful, and com¬pletely undisguised filming. TheHyde Park will be the only thea¬tre in Chicago to present Dr. l.au-rent in the original French.Murder by Contract, despite itstitle is not a common trashy mys¬tery. It has been well reviewed,concentrates on story, and actingrather than technical effects, isconcise and employs well its direc¬tor’s experience in filming docu¬mentaries. The Surf presentation of TheMost Dangerous Sin, adaptedfrom Dostoievsky’s Crime andPunishment will open this evening. The film stars Jean Gabinin an adaptation that seems tohave diluted only the plot from abook in which the plot is coveredby much more important elementsof character study and socialanalysis. At the same time therei much within the story line Thatcould create an excellent suspensefilm. This production may havedone this.MusicMonday, May 24, the ChicagoChamber orchestra will presenta free concert in the Art Institute,including Handel’s ConcertoGrosso No. 5, Baccherini’s fifthsymphony and an unannouncedwork by an unidentified Chicagocomposer. The same day, the an¬nual Chicago Gamanfa ganu willsing a whole program of four partWelsch songs at Curtis Hall. Thetitle alone is appealing.This Sunday the last public per¬formance by Kirsten Flagsteada soprano with remarkable ability,will be broadcast over WFMT at2:00 p.m. in a complete presenta¬tion of Wagner’s Die Goetterdae-nierrung, Mrs. F. Glagstead willsing the part of Bruennhilda.id t'o M0?1yde park theatreJOINCOURTTHEATRETryouts this Saturday and Sunday after¬noon, 1 pm on — in the Court (in case ofrain, Mandel Hall)All roles open for:“Othello”“Love for Love”“Francesca da Rimini:» WESTERN STYLEFrom the big country wheremen are tall and long onderring-do come authenticslacks tapered to a new de¬gree. Not an inch of super¬fluity mars their masculinity*Back pockets and cuffs areconspicuous by their absence.Solid *750Stripe $950.Brittany,£td.7104 S. JefferyPL 2-4030Open Mon. & Thurs. eves.Free Parking atCvril Court Garage1948 E. 71st PI. Student rote 65cupon presentation of ID cardStarts today 4 days only!Two ALFRED HITCHCOCK hits“The TROUBLE WITH HARRY”The droll, off-beat comedy about a body that “discov¬ered" and unexpected vein of Hitchcock and the impu¬dent, piquant talents of Shirley MacLaine.«*»« “vertigo” 37z NsrrStarts Tires. tf«»# 1.9 thru Thurs. 21 3 dags only!Our favorites among last year's and this year's• Academy Award NomineesHenry Fonda David NivenLee J. Cobb , Deborah KerrEd Begley an“ Wendy HillerJack Warden in Terence Rattigan's“12 Angry Men” “Seperate Tables”NOTE: Low School, we especially recommend to your scholars “12Angry Men''; Medical School, we especially recommend to you“The Case of Dr. Laurent".Starts Friday, May 22 —JEAN GABIN inJean-Paul Le Chinois'“The CASE of DR. LAURENT”Only Chicago showing of the original, unduhhedversion!"A worm, witty, wise movie . . . frankly polemic, frankly phy¬siological. A boby is born—t>n camera in the final utterly candid,spectacular scene, but far earlier than that, Old Pro and Jean Gobin,os a weary, kindly village doctor, and Nicole Courcel os his firstnatural-childbirth convent, have given the film warm, memorableappeal."—Time mag.New York Times: New York Post:“SUSPENSE and EXHILARAT- “Handled with force and artistry,ING. Bold, intelligent and taste- it mounts to a climax with well¬ful. The drama of birth is still organized suspense!"incomparable!New Yorker: “JEAN GABIN is MEMORABLE in what amounts to anillustrated lecture on natural childbirth that is at once dramatic andenlightenina, done with verve, hardheaded realism, and always withgood taste!" and Irving Lerner's“MURDER BY CONTRACT”Art-hur Knight, Saturday Review of Lit: Sleeperof fhe Year! ... It would be presumptuous ofme to suggest that Mr. Lerner's picture is any¬thing more than a beautifully made, tremendous¬ly exciting melodrama . . . but I offer it as can¬didate for "sleeper of the year" ... in movieparlance, an inexpensive picture that somehowcaptures the imagination of the public withoutbenefit of any special advertising or exploita¬tion . . . the kind of movie you see in the bottomhalf of a double bill, then go home and tell yourfriends about—-without ever mentioning thestar-studded, expensive picture that got you intothe theatre in the first place."May 15, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 19■rIVI '59 Summer travel previewedWith the start of the annualsummer rush abroad onlyabout a month away, manyattractive low-cost opportuni¬ties still exist for the student trav¬eler who has been late in makingplans.A check of agencies and organ¬izations active in the student trav¬el field discloses that somethingof a “buyer’s market” exists thisseason. Many popular tours thatin previous years were bookedsolid by the beginning of the year,or shortly thereafter, still have alimited number of openings forlatecomers.This does not mean that a sharpdecline is expected this summerin the number of student travelersgoing. If anything, the total thisyear is expected to be slightly~ahead of last year’s record total.But, as one travel agency officialput it: “We’re having to workmuch harder to do as well or alittle better than last year.”Another official, who directsone of the larger programs in thefield, confirmed this, but addedthat “a spring rusn” was develop¬ing among those who want to signup for summer tours.One reason for some of the va¬cancies is that many agencies andorganizations have scheduled ex¬panded programs this year. Like¬wise, the availability of some low-c o s t transportation accommoda-tlbn at this late date is a reflec¬tion of the fact that more shipswere chartered this year and morespaces reserved. In previousyears, the lack of low-cost studentaccommodations s o m w h a t re¬stricted the number who wentabroad.The non-profit Council on stu¬dent travel, 179 Broadway, which-e handles travel arrangements formore than sixty American organ¬izations and institutions, as wellas for independent travelers, re¬ports that some space is still avail¬able on the following all-studenteastbound sailings:The I r p i n i a (Grimaldi-Siosaline), sailing from Montreal June19 for Mediterranean ports. One¬way rates: dormitory, $230; tour¬ist, $257; first class, $335. (Trans¬portation from New York city toMontreal by special train will beprovided at no extra cost.)The A s c a n i a (Grimaldi-Siosaline), sailing from New York cityto Western European ports onJuly 2. One-way rates $181 to$277, depending on accommoda¬tions and port.A special “Travelers’ Recrea¬tion and Information program” isCLARK Theatredark & madisonopen 7:30 a.m.lore show 4 a.m.fr 2-2845Spring Film FestivalFri., May 15"Cowboy"“Stalag 17”Sat., May 16“Alexander Nevsekey”“Citizen Kane"Sun., May 17“Tight Little Island”“Bicycle Thief”special college student price 50cat all times—Just show your l.d.card to the cashier provided on all council-charteredships. This program includes for¬eign-language instruction, orienta¬tion sessions, art lectures, forums,travel tips and other featuresdesigned to enable the studenttraveler to get the most out of histrip.Another agency that provideslow-cost student transportation isthe Netherlands office for For¬eign student relations, 29 Broad¬way. Dutch Government ships areused and bookings are limited tobona fide students up to 30 yearsof age, who are matriculating atAmerican colleges and universi¬ties.Eastbound sailings for Rotter¬dam will leave New York cityJune 27 to 30. The westboundsailings from Rotterdam to NewYork city will be on Aug. 31 andSept. 1. One-way rates range from$170 to $177.50. The crossings takenine days.Passage on these ships, too, in¬cludes special orientation pro¬grams, language classes and evenDixieland jazz concerts.For those who want to goabroad as members of a study ortour group (and thus avoid han¬dling their own travel arrange¬ments and itinerary) there is anunusually large number of pro¬grams to choose from this year.Tour prices generally range fromabout $750 to $2,000 dependingupon length of stay, countries vis¬ited, type of accommodations, andfeatures provided.Some tours provide credit appli¬cable toward a college degree, andthese often require formal or in¬formal academic work. Writtenreports or examinations are some¬times required by the colleges be¬fore credit is granted.Towever, most tours skip theacademic side and stress organ¬ized sight-seeing to places of his¬torical, cultural and scenic in¬terest.Tour groups generally range insize from ten to fifty and are un¬der the direction of professionaltour leaders or educators who arefamiliar with the countries to bevisited.The price of the tour usuallyincludes round-trip passage, trans¬portation and accommodationswhile abroad, meals, and variousfees. Some free time for inde¬pendent sight-seeing is usuallyprovided.One of the most extensive andvaried programs has been ar¬ranged again this year by theUnited States National Student association (NSA), 701 Seventhavenue. Although many tours arealready filled, Andre Bonard. theassociation’s travel director, re¬ports that some openings stillexist in the following trips:Seventy-five-day tour of Hol¬land, England, Scotland, Franceand Italy, $990; seventy-threedays in Holland, Germany, Switz¬erland, Italy and France $995; aseventy-three-day “drive-it-your-self” motor tour of Germany, Aus¬tria, Italy, Switzerland, Franceand Belfium, $999, plus the costof gasoline and some meals, andan eighty-three-day trip throughPoland and Western Europe,$1,230.This year, for the first time,NSA scheduled a special “teentour” for high school studentsaged 14 to 17. This was soonbooked solid, and a second suchtour is now also being planned forthis summer.Also available are trips to theSoviet Union and to the Orient.An excellent publication for stu¬dents contemplating a Europeantrip is the USNSA Work, Studyand Travel abroad, 1959, availablefrom the NSA, Philadelphia, Pa.“Work, Study, Travel Abroad”is divided into the three mainclassifications of work, study andtravel. Subdivisions of the travelsection deal with tour selection,advantages and disadvantages oftour travel as opposed to inde¬pendent travel, a currency con¬version tahle, passport data, cloth¬ing hints, transportation material,a listing of inexpensive studenthostels and restaurants, and alisting of festivals and specialevents in Europe in 1959.Under the study section, thereader will find material on sum¬mer sessions at European univer¬sities, seminars, workshops, schol¬arships, and awards for studyabroad, Junior Year Abroad pro¬grams, etc. Organizations spon¬soring scholarships are also listed,and descriptive information con¬cerning several scholarships isgiven.The Work section discussesprospects of American studentsfor obtaining summer or perma¬nent employment abroad the ic-strictions involved, the swindlesFire & Theft InsuranceMalpractice InsuranceConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986ACASA BOOKSTOREGood Used BooksCarefully selected Imports of cards, giftschildren's booksreliable typewriter service1322 E. 55th St. IIY 3-9651ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeingand Refinislung ofShoes and Handbags) Colors matched • Toes cut out• Vamps lowered • Platformsremoved'QUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'NARROW HEELSHeels stylechanged — AnyAny color3ackstraps Removed and Springa-iators inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber Product’sFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St. STERN'S CAMPUS DRUGS61st & Ellis45$<|25 SOUTHERN FRIED1 CHICKEN *1ala carte dinnerwith all of the trimmings, chef salad, dressing,roll, butter, and beverageSPECIAL —— Boiled ham potato salad with sliced tomatoes 75c• CHICAGO MAROON • May 15, 1959 and rackets to avoid, and all neces¬sary information for the studentwho looking for an exciting jobabroad. A listing of work lookingfor an exciting job abroad. A list¬ing of work camps and voluntarywork projects is also given.A special feature of this year’sbook is a survey made by theMaxwell school of Public Affairs of Syracuse university, dealingwith the much neglected topic ofthe preparedness of the studenttraveler for his or her Europeanexperience.Work, Study, Travel Abroadcosts $1.00, and may be obtainedby writing USNSA EDUCATION-AL TRAVEL, INC., 701 SeventhAvenue, New York 36, New York.Get $100,000 grantThe Sears-Roebuck founda¬tion today gave UC the firstannual portion of a five-yeargift of $100,000 for general sup¬port of the graduate school ofBusiness.Fowler B. McConnell, chairmanof the board of the foundation,and Arthur M. Wood, secretaryof the foundation, will presentstock certificates worth $20,000to the University in a ceremonyin McConnell’s office at 925 SouthHoman Avenue, Chicago, at 11:30am.McConnell and Wood are trus¬tees of the University.UC will be represented byChancellor John I. Kirkpatrickand James H. Lorie, associatedean of the graduate school ofBusiness.The Sears-Roebuck foundationa non-profit institution dedicatedto the economic and social im-Broadcasting to stopWUCB ends studio broadcasting for the 1958-59 academicyear tonight. The station will broadcast live programmingfrom its Mitchell tower studios for the last time this quarterfrom 7 to 11 pm.John Schuerman, station manager, said that autumn quarter pro¬gramming will begin with special Orientation week broadcasts, andwill commence on a regular basis shortly thereafter.Schuerman also said that WUCB intends to continue its AM trans¬mission of the FM broadcasts of Chicago radio station WFMT duringthe end of the spring quarter and through the entire summer quarter.The'WFMT rebroadcasts have been temporarily interrupted whileWUCB’s FM tune is being repaired. Technical director Jack Reed hassaid that the transmission of WFMT over 640 kc to university dormi¬tories will be resumed “in the near future.”HIP, HIP, HURRAYfor theGREYHOUND’wayto save money!Got the good word aboutGreyhound ScenicruiserService®? It’s the latest,the greatest way to go...with air-conditioning, pic¬ture windows, air-suspen¬sion ride and completerestroom! You'll have aball headin' home on aGreyhound — it’s oftenfaster than other publictransportation, and alwaysless expensive! COMPARE THESE LOW,LOW FARES:(One Way)Si. Louis $ 6.55Detroit 8.80Cincinnati 9.20New York 24.85•plus taxBAGGAGE PROBLEMS? You can take more with you on aGreyhound. Or, send your belongings by Greyhound PackageExpress. They arrive in hours and cost you less!ITS SUCH A COMFORTTO TAKE THE BUS...ANDLEAVE THE DRIVING TO US!GREYHOUND TERMINALClark & Randolph FI 6-5000provement of the American com¬munity, has allocated the $100,000gift in five portions over a five-year period.During the first year, $5,000 willbe set aside for an architecturalstudy of the space needs of theschool of Business and the remain¬der will be devoted to educationand research, which includesmembership in the associates pro¬gram of the school.In the remaining four years ofthe program, $5,000 will be util¬ized each year for two fellowshipsin the graduate school of Businessand the remainder for generaloperations of the School.Dean of the graduate school ofBusiness is W. Allen Wallis, cur¬rently on leave to serve as execu¬tive vice-chairman of PresidentEisenhower’s Cabinet Committeeon Price Stability for Economicgrowth in Washington, DC.i—