University of Chicago, December 4, 1959 Apply for flight leaderApplications are open for Student Flight leader for the 1960Student Government flight to Europe, announced SG executivecouncil. »Application must be submitted in written form before 4:30 pmMonday at Student activities office or SG office, both on thesecond floor of Ida Noyes hall.Address, telephone number, and time the applicant can bereached must be included in all applications. Last year’s flightleader and members of SG Executive council will intervieweach candidate before SG assembly makes the final appoint¬ment.Harper open on SundaysSunday hours are now in effect at Harper library, reports Stanley E. Gwynn, assistant di¬rector for readers’ services. The two first-floor study halis and Harper reserve room wereopen from 2-10 pm last Sunday.“Considering our late decision to open and the lack of publicity, the facilities were wellused,” commented Gwynn. Fifty-five persons were using the library at 3 pm, a high for theday. An evening high of 43 was reached at 8 pm. The combined seating capacity of the two'"'•Rook' circulation was low" At the beginning of the semes- shelving — will be delivered onno,<’i Gwynn. “We expect that it ^r.’ ca™pus librar;ies’ exceP* the time.”ill .)ick up in the future.” One °ner?tal institute library, started “The new reading room willcn day book ten two-day °Pening their doors at 8:30 am. seat 220, approximately doublingh »oks 1 and 31 overnight books Tbe Social sciences reading room its past capacity,” Gwynn contin-•'"related from the reserve desk now rema‘ns °Pen until 11 pm on ued. Probably not all of the fur-“\Ve are still experimenting,”stated circulation and reserve li¬brarian Helen M. Lee. “Thereforewe are starting with the most lib¬eral Sunday circulation regula- weeknights. H a rp e r circulation niture will have arrived when theand reserve added service during building opens.”the supper hour.Refurbishing progresses“We art* hoping to open the new Edward Narkis of the librarystaff has been appointed librarianof the new library. (photo by Berger)Members of student government discuss the loyalty oathprovision of the National Defense Education act. See story oapage 3.tions possible. If necessary we Business-economics library in thewill lighten the system later.”Entrance to Harper on Sundayswill be from the quadrangle side.The 59th street doors will belocked. old Law building on January 4 asplanned,” announced Gwynn. “Thealteration and refurbishing arerunning on schedule so far. Ap¬parently the major equipment —Student Directoriesgo on sale in dorms College presidents stateopposition to loyalty oathThree college presidents are president of Yale, and Indiana uni- ity of this Act shall be used toThe new UC Student Direc¬tory goes on sale this weekendin the dormitories, and will beavailable in Mandel corridor for the Autumn quarter. Also in¬cluded are lists of student organ¬izations and officers, fraternityhouses, dormitories, and adminis- currently at work drawing upa document which will formal¬ly opose the disclaimer sectionof the “loyalty oath,” that sec- versity’s President Herman B.Wells have been asked by theAssociation of American Univer¬sities (AAU) to consider the pos¬sibilities of drafting a petition toand Cobb hall on Monday. The tratjv® °^!c.e5lprice, is fifty cents.Prepared by the Office of Offirial Alpha Phi Omega, men’s serv¬ice fraternity, will sell the direc¬tories in the dormitory diningPublications, the directory halls over ,he weekend ande.vcs the name, campus and home Mande, and Cobb Monday Theaddress, and telephone number of Bookstore will carry a supply be-all students registered on campus ginning Monday. make payments or loans to anyindividual unless such individual(1) has executed and filed withthe Commissioner an affidavitthat he does not believe in, andis not a member of and does notstriking this disclaimer (Section suport any organization that be-1001(f) (1)). lieves in or teaches, the overthrowTo this date, 14 colleges and uni- of the United States Governmentversities have refused to accept by force or violence or by anyfunds from the NDEA on t h e illegal or unconstitutional meth-grounds that the disclaimer is un- ods. and (2) has taken and sub¬desirable. Harvard, Yale, Grin- scribed to an oath or affirmationnell, St. John’s, Oberlin, Goucher, in the following form: ‘I do sol-Nathan M. Pusey, president of Antioch, Wilmington, Bennington, emnly swear (or affirm) that IHarvard, A. Whitney Griswold, Reed, Sarah Lawrence, Bryn will bear true faith and allegianceMawr, Haverford, and Swarth- to the United States of Americamore have denounced the section and will support and defend thetion of the National Defense congress to amend the NDEA bvEducation act of 1958 (NDEA)which requires anyone acceptingfunds under this act to swear (1)that he does not belong to anyorganization which is unconstitu¬tionally founded, and (2) that heis a loyal citizen of the UnitedStates.Schedule '8:30' fry outsby Maggie StinsonTryouts for University Theatre’s production Tonight at 8:30 will be, held this Sundayfrom 2 to 4 pm and Monday from 7 to 10 pm in the Reynolds Club theatre.The program for the first weekend is made up of three one-acts: Miss Julie by Strind¬berg; The Gamblers, by Gogol; and Song of Songs, by Girodoux. The Infernal Machine byJean Cocteau will run the second weekend.Miss Julie is about the rising and falling of social orders, and has three characters: alower - class valet who, throughyears of service, has acquired thepolish of a gentleman; a maidwho lies, steals, cheats, and goesto church faithfully every Sun¬day; and the mistress of thehouse. Miss Julie will be directedby Michael Hall.Song of Songs has approxi¬mately four men and four womenin the cast. The mood is extreme¬ly French, and the play is full ofsymbols of life and death. Char¬lotte Stendal, who was the assist¬ant director of P e p e 1, the Un¬buried Russian, will direct theGirodoux.Bob Reiser will need seven menfor his production of The Gam¬blers. This farce has the sameelements of humor as Gogol’s fa¬mous Inspector General, and iswritten in the same style. 'In The Infernal Machine, Coc¬teau makes his Oedipus a shal¬low opportunist and dolt whomanages to outwit the Sphinxthrough pure luck, and his Joe-asta, an aging nymphomaniac.Cocteau’s thesis is that Oedipus’and Jocasta’s historical positionsas hero and heroine are as fraudu¬lent as their titles of king andqueen. The director, Neal John¬ston. will probably stage his playin the round, and will need a castof about ten people.Anyone interested in costumes,sets, lights, sound, or make - upshould see the directors duringProduct, A » ?i\9e "eW °f aSt ye" * To"',3ht at 8:3° produced (he last week of Janu,.lto . - Ta,e Ba,« Soprano, construct one of the props not ary and the first week of Feb-Jed ,n *he P^y. ruary. as dangerous.State UC's positionChancellor Lawrence A. Kimp-ton, president of the Associationof American Universities, has saidthat although he considers thedisclaimer objectionable it wouldbe impossible for UC to back outof its agreement with the govern¬ment at this time since the Uni¬versity has not only loaned someof the funds given to it under theNDEA this year but has alsopromised support to many stu¬dents next quarter in accordancewith the contract.Kimpton stated further that ifa group of universities should gobefore Congress in protest of theoath it might be best if that groupwere made up of schools repre¬senting both the block of collegeswhich had accepted Governmentfunds together with hose who hadturned the money down.This controversial section of theNDEA reads as follows: Section1001(f)“No part of any funds appro¬priated or otherwise made avail¬able for expenditure under author- Constitution and laws of theUnited States against all its ene¬mies, foreign and domestic.' Theprovisions of Section 1001 of title18, United States Code, shall beapplicable with respect to suchaffidavits.”What has happened so farSenators Kennedy of Massachu¬setts and Clark of Pennsylvaniaintroduced a bill (S. 819) in thelast session of Congress (86thCongress, first session) to havethe National Defense Educationact amended by striking section1001(f). Hearings were held onthe bill on April 29 and May 5.The committee voted 12-3 to re¬port the bill favorable. It was thendebated on the floor of the Senate,July 21-23. An amendment offeredby Senator Javits of New Yorkto retain the oath while eliminat¬ing the affidavit was passed by avote of 46 to 45. Shortly thereafterthe Senate voted, 49 to 42, to sendthe amended bill back to the Com¬mittee on Labor and Public Wel¬fare for further study. It is thehope of the AAU that the amend¬ed bill (S. 819) will come beforethe Congress in its next sessionand will be passed.LAK is Carnagie trusteeChancellor Lavvrence A.Kimpton has been named anew trustee on the board ofthe Carnegie foundation forthe advancement of teaching, itwas announced Monday. Twoother trustees elected to servewith him on the 25-member boardare Robert F. Goheen, Presidentof Princeton university, and Kath¬erine E. McBride, President ofBryn Mawr college.The new trustees were electedat the Foundation’s annual meet¬ing, at which the members of theboard, most of them college anduniversity presidents, discussedthe role of American higher edu¬ cation in international affairs.Carter Davidson, president ofUnion college and chancellor ofUnion university, will be chair¬man of the board for the comingyear; William V. Houston, presi¬dent of Rice institute, will serveas vice chairman.The Carnegie foundation forthe advancement of teaching wasfounded in 1906 by the late An¬drew Carnegie for the primarypurpose of providing pensions forretired college teachers and theirwidows. Upon occasion it alsosponsors inquiries into variouseducational problems. John W.Gardner is president of the Foun¬dation.'Centennial effective, successful“The panels of the Darwincentennial celebration wereextraordinarily effective andsuccessful. The panelists wereable to get together and, aftershort preparation, reach con¬crete proposals. Everybodylearned something new.” Sospoke Sol Tax, chairman of theDarwin centennial when asked toevaluate the results of the cele¬bration.The centennial celebration,Which was held last week, hadas its purpose the discussion andevaluation of the wTork of CharlesDarwin and subsequent researchin the field of evolution. Fivepanel discussions formed the nu¬cleus of the centennial, with sev¬eral speeches supplementingthem.The first panel discussion, heldon November 24, considered thetopic “The origin of life.” Thepanel started out by trying tofind a definition of life. It wasdecided that life is too compli¬cated a process to define in a feweasy words. The panel then dis¬cussed the conditions that musthave been present on earth at thetime when life began, the prob¬ability of life existing on otherplanets, and the possibility' oflife being produced in a test tube.The panel concluded that theprobability is great that life doesexist on other planets, and that,although life could not startspontaneously on earth underpresent conditions, it might wellbe synthetically produced by theend of this century.Panel discusses lifeThe second panel discussed•The evolution of life.” The panelapproached the problem of bio¬logical evolution and how naturalselection works to produce su¬perior forms of life. The panelwas in agreement that biologicalprogress is marked by the emer¬gence of new types of life. Eachof these alters the evolutionarypattern and introduces new im¬provements into the species.The third centennial panel, heldon November 27, talked about"man as an organism.” The panelfirst classified man as to his po¬sition in the animal kingdom. Itwas agreed that because each evolutionary step in man requiresa long period of time, he haslonger than most animals toadapt to his environment. It wasalso agreed that although man issubject to the process of naturalselection, as are all animals, he“has invented for himself or hasacquired something which reallyamounts to a new evolutionarysystem.”The fourth panel approachedthe problem of “the evolution ofthe mind.” The panel decidedthat there are great difficultiesin this study because it involvesthe study of lower forms of life,and that such studies are incon¬clusive because they involve theprojection of human feelings intosub-human situations.5th panel convenesThe fifth panel discussed “So¬cial and cultural evolution.” con¬trasting it to biological evolution.The panel generally agreed withSir Julian Huxley’s statementthat in biological evolution theorganism has no choice as towhere it will go, but is subjectto forces beyond its control. So¬cial evolution, on the other hand,is produced by transmission of ex¬perience, and the organism hassome control of it.The 284th convocation of UC,in honor of the Darwin centennialcelebration, was held on Thurs¬day, November 26. Seven honor¬ary degrees were given at theconvocation. Degree recipientswere: Sir Charles Darwin, grand¬son of the developer of the theoryof evolution and a noted theo¬retical physicist in his own right;Theodosius Dobzhansky, profes¬sor of zoology at Columbia uni¬versity; Sir Julian Huxley, biolo¬gist and author; Alfred Kroeber,professor of anthropology at theUniversity of California; Her¬mann Muller, distinguished serv¬ice professor of zoology at Indi¬ana university, and Nobel Prizewinner, George Simpson, profes¬sor of vertebrate paleontology atHarvard university, and SewallWright, professor of zoology atthe University of Wisconsin.The convocation address wasdelivered by Huxley. He spokeon “The evolutionary vision.” Inhis speech, Huxley said that “Allaspects of reality are subject toEllen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 lake Park Ave.SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.m. - 11 p.mMl 3-2060after every shave evolution, indeed all reality is asingle process of evolution.”Huxley went on to say that“Evolutionary man can no longertake refuge from his lonelinessin the arms of a divinized father-figure whom he himself has cre¬ated.” This comment broughtforth criticism from the RomanCatholic diocese in Chicago.When asked for comment on theHuxley speech, centennial chair¬man Tax said, “Huxley is cour¬ageous for saying what he be- years ago with Sol Tax, UC pro¬fessor of anthropology. Tax firstcontacted Sir Charles Darwin andSir Julian Huxley to see if theywould be available for such aprogram. “When they said thatthey would,” said Tax, “we rea¬lized that nobody else had planneda major Darwin centennial, andwe were able to proceed with ourplans at full speed.” Leadingauthorities on all fields con¬nected with evolution were in¬vited to attend the centennial.Delegates to the Darwin centennial celebration dine atHutchinson commons.lieves to be the truth, but if any¬one supposes that one’s belief inreligion affect, his belief in evo¬lution, he is being foolish.”Tax went on to say that “Re¬ligion is a personal matter; it isa complex pattern in all of us.People have trouble enough try¬ing to figure out what they be¬lieve in without trying to ex¬plain other’s beliefs, and especial¬ly without telling them what tobelieve.” He said that the cen¬tennial committee has gotten agreat deal of mail concerning theHuxley speech, and that the largemajority of it has been compli¬mentary to Huxley.The idea for a celebration hon¬oring and evaluating the work ofCharles Darwin originated four Procedure for the centennialrequired all but a few of thepanelists to write papers in theirfields. These papers were dis¬tributed among the panelists tobe read as background material.The papers will now be printedin book form and, according toCharles Callendar, conference di¬rector of the centennial, “shouldconstitute a valuable addition toliterature on evolution.”Agendas for the panels woredrawn up shortly in advance ofthe celebration. From there thepanels were spontaneous. Issueswere discussed as they came up,with nobody knowing in exactlywhat direction the discussionwould proceed.The Wenner-Gren foundation,the National Science foundation,and the National Institute ofHealth joined the University insponsoring the centennial. TheNational Science foundation andthe Wenner-Gren foundation con¬tributed $13,000 and $5,000 dol¬lars respectively to be used forthe transportation and living expenses of participants in thepanels. The National InstitutesWe believe that to behelpful we must be bothsincere and ready to serveMay we be helpful toyou? Our business is mov¬ing and storage.PETERSON MOVINCAND STORAGE CO.1011 E. 55th St.BU 8-6711 - for Health contributed $10,000lor conference expenses. The Uni.versity is also contributing anunspecified amount of moneytoward conference expenses. 9According to Tax, “We have notyet checked our books, but « <* areundoubtedly going to go broke.Wre did not attempt to makemoney.” Printing bills aloneshould run close to $20,000, iuvcording to Tax. “However,” hecontinued, “we do expect to makea little money from the produc¬tion of ‘Time Will TelF and fromthe bus service that we ran be¬tween the convention hotel andMandel hall.”Splash on Old Spice After Shave Lotion. Feel yourface wake up and live! So good for your skin ...so good for your ego. Brisk as an ocean breeze,Old Spice makes you feel like a new man. Confident.Assured. Relaxed. You know you’re at your bestwhen you top off your shave with Old Spice! ^00 AFTER SHAVE LOTIONby SHULTON 1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 —HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & QallerySmall 12“Cheese 1.30Sausage 1.65Anchovy 1.65Pepper & Onion .... 1.50 Small 12“Combination 2.25Mushroom 2.00Shrimp 2.25Bacon & Onion .... 2.00Free Delivery on All Pizza to VC StudentsAttention Chow Hounds!Special every Tuesday night — all -the fried chickenyou can eat . . . $1.95“This has also been a shoe¬string operation where help isconcerned,” said Tax. “CharlesCallendar and two or three peo¬ple in the office have done thework of an entire office staff.They have worked twenly hoursa day for the past several weeks."UC Chancellor Lawrence A,Kimpton said of the centennial,“I thought that it was a magnifi¬cent kind of Jhing, precisely thekind of thing that a universityought to be doing. The presenta¬tion was supurb. A great deal ofcredit goes to Tax. Be foie ihecentennial began I had great res-ervations about not being able toget the right kind of people forthe panels. Tax, with great in¬genuity, solved that problem.”N. Tinbergen, of Oxford unkversity, summed up the opinionsof guest panelists by saying, “wehave admired so much the un¬tiring devotion of Dr. Sol Taxand all his staff, not only for thesmooth organization of this meet¬ing but also for the creation ofthis friendly and stimulating at¬mosphere, and we have all feltthat we were very welcome here."Huxley said of the panels, *Tthought that they were a greatsuccess in general. I got somenew points of view, or which 1am glad. I also am pleased thatI made many new friends amongmy colleagues.“The panels brought togetherbiologists and anthropologists toget a common point of view onwhat evolution means in theirfields. Waddington’s ideas aboutwhy man believes things easilywhen he is very young and Mul¬ler’s ideas on the relation of nat¬ural selection and cultural selec¬tion were new and interesting. Ingeneral it was a really great suc¬cess. I was very pleased with theaudience interest in the panels."Hans Gaffron of UC, chairmanof the first centennial panel,agreed with Huxley, He said, Ithink that it has done much bet¬ter than anyone could have ex¬pected. We on the panels hadmisgivings before it started, butthev all turned out to be false.”However a panel member whoasked that his name not be men¬tioned, said, “I don’t think thatthe panels accomplished a greatdeal except bringing evolution be¬fore the eye of the public. Cer¬tainly nothing new was said. Tthink that the most importantpart of the celebration will bethe publication of the book of cen¬tennial papers.”Tax, however, said that thepanels were “successful beyondanyone’s imagination.” He feelsthat, although “It will In* a longtime before we are really able toknow what effect the panels hadand in what direction they haveled us,” we do know that thepanels “legitimized organic evo¬lution as a fact rather than »theory^and for the first time in50 years legitimized cultural evo¬lution.”SG battles loyalty oath“The University of Chicago should withdraw from the National Defense Education act un¬less the loyalty oath and disclaimer provisions of that act are removed during this session of•ongress,” charged Student Government last Tuesday night. This resolution, one of severalbrought to the assembly, came from the NSA-academic freedom committee.In addition to the regular procedures of business, the Government also passed a resolutionasking for greater traffic safety provisions near the new dorm plus the construction of a ce-walk in back of Rockefeller — — —; j It Was decided that the A second group felt that SG man of CORSO (committee onfLiestion of the establishment of cou,d only ask the administra- recognized student activities)stud 'nt activities council should tion to consider withdrawal. A and Dave Frodin was seated toSo* be brought before the campus third element held that objection-this same group,h. the forthcoming all-campus ref- able as the oaths were- the money Having completed its agenda,1I |nl meant too much to too many stu- the three hour long meeting con-CrOai 1 Paradise, chairman of the for the University to with- eluded at 10:30. SG meetings areNSVAcademic Freedom commit- draW‘ in the North lecture roomJL‘a„d author of the resolution AU these were presented of the old Law school building^•oncer ning the federal education as amendments to the original Any student is eligible to attendact. explained her position saying: resolution; all were defeated."In recent years American col- The Campus action committeelege students have witnessed a submitted a resolution callingproliferation of various types of upon the University to petitionloyalty oaths and disclaimer affi- the City Council to establish adavits. At present, attention has legal crosswalk between the eastcentered upon Section 1001 (f> of and west sides of Woodlawn ave-the National Defense Education nue in front of the New dorm.The same bill also asked that a 1A ,permanent walk be built in back u^y, spoke Thursday on “Newof the Chapel to replace the mud labor legislation” to an audi-path which now exists. ence which filled BreastedJim Thomason, chairman of hall. He was sponsored by thethis section. Other colleges have this committee, pointed out that Committee on Industrial, Rela-participated in the program, but some five hundred students cross tions.nevertheless have objected to this this point every day, despite Douglas prefaced his lecture bythe fact that it is illegal and that stating, “There seems to be athere are intersections at the cor- twelve year cycle in labor legisla-ners of 58th and 59th streets, tion in the United States. ThisHe maintained that there was no has been noted in the labor re-realistic way of stopping this form years 1935, 1947, and now,flow, and that the University 1959- 1 feel that this is due to asubtle throat to academic free- ought to act to make the situa- periodic surge of idealism, whichand observe. (photo by Berger)Student Government president Maureen Byers counts thevote on NDEA resolution.Senator Douglas speaksact of 1958. (This is the oath anddisclaimer provision.)“At least seven colleges haverefused to participate in theNDEA program solely because ofSpecific provision.Majority agreesMiss Paradise fears that theoath and disclaimer constitute a U. S. Senator Paul Douglas,former member of the UC fac-dom. She claims that 1, there is adanger that their meaning may beexpanded through interpretation.2. there is danger that they willserve as a first step toward morerestrictive legislation, 3, the re¬quirement of signing a loyaltyoath implies that a college stu¬dent is disloyal until he makes tion safer. cries for the creation of new in-Maureen Byers, chairman of solutions to combat abuses ofthe Government assembly, added *aws a^d ^[b'ca* Practiees whichthat several people have beenseriously hurt slipping on themud or ice on the path in backof the Chapel while taking thisshortcut. She stated that thereis some reason to believe that thea positive statement expressing University is willing to constructhis loyalty, and 4, a student’s re- this cement walk,fusal to sign because of principleunfortunately results in suspicionof disloyalty.The majority of the govern¬ment agreed with this thesis. The SAC to have 25 membersThe Student Activities councilquestion was old business, leftfull resolution went on to expand unfinished at the last meeting ofthe point, reading: “In the case Government. The council, as pro¬of the NDEA, the (disclaimer) af- posed, would include the headsfidavit is terminologlcally un- of some 25 student organizations,clear (E.G. the words ‘believe in,’ This group would be responsible occur in the many and variedfields of endeavor in the U.S. to¬day. Furthermore, it is not sur¬prising that the abuses shoulddevelop in the field of labor, norin any other field, as every en¬deavor has its share of corrup¬tion; witness the recent scandalsin the field of radio and televi¬sion.”He then continued by showinghow a series of labor investiga¬tions by a Senate committee ofwhich he was a member from1955 to 1957 served to show whereand why legislation was needed.Douglas cited the Welfare andPension Fund bills of 1957 as be‘supports,’ and ‘illegal methods’), for drafting and maintaining 'nff tbe f'rst s*pP in *be creationThis leaves a wide area for inter- without many major conflicts apretation and the danger of a schedule of activities for the en-resultant expansion of the mean- tire academic year, help arrangeing of the act. for meeting space, and provide“It also leaves a student In the for an interchange of ideas andposition of not knowing whether resources amongst student activi-in believing and supporting a cer- ties.tain organization and receiving Jim Thomason objected thatmoney under the divisions of the these two amendments amend theNDEA, he is committing a crime.” meaning out of the resolution, butThe resolution also urged the the asse™bly passed both, andUniversity to work with the ended by rejecting the original of new labor laws. The resultsof the committee's investigationas far back as 1957 were turnedover to Senator John Kennedy,and it was Kennedy who, in thelight of further investigation,drew up the first all-inclusive la¬bor reform bill.Commenting on the Report andDisclosure act of 1959, Douglassaid, “If people who are handlingmoney know that the way in which they will do so is to bebrought to public attention, thenI feel that they will be less in¬clined to misuse that money.”Douglas said that he felt thatthe Report act was probably oneof the best parts of this year’slabor legislation. However, he isat present working on an amend¬ment to the bill with Kennedy toexempt unions with less than 250members from the long and costlywork involved and to prepare forthem a shorfer report form which,in requiring less of a staff to bemaintained by a union, would beless costly to handle and whichwould easily fit into the budgetof smaller unions.Douglas then outlined the ma¬jor achievements of labor legisla¬tion this year and primarily ofthe Revised Labor 'act of 1959,originally the Landrtim-Griffinhill; but a bill, which when finallypassed, more closely resembledthe Kennedy-Ervin bill.The contents of this bill are:1) union members are guaranteedthe right to speak at meetings.2) union members have the rightto elect officials; a) locals everythree years by secret ballot, andb) nationals every five years bysecret ballot or roll-call vote ata convention. 3) union membershave the right to run for an officeand to have their election propa¬ganda distributed among unionmembers. 4) union membershave the right to a just hearingbefore any disciplanary actioncan be taken against them or be¬fore they can be dropped fromthe union. 5) no national can holda local union in trusteeship far more than 18 months. 6) for aperiod of five years from thepassage of this bill, no memberof the Communist party or a per¬son who has been jailed for afelony may hold, or be elected to,any union office. Douglas ex¬plained the last part of this legis¬lation by calling the five yearperiod” a delousing period duringwhich we hope the unions willcleanse themselves of some highlyundesirable officials.”Douglas then proceeded to ex¬plain how the Landrum-Griffinand Kennedy-Ervin bills were dis¬cussed in the House-Senate con¬ference committee and the com¬promise bill drawn up which waspassed by both houses. He alsoexplained the meaning of the vot¬ing breakdown on the bills, al¬though he did not draw any con¬clusions from it. He explained hisposition on these bills by statingthat although the final bill wascalled the Landrum-Griffin bill,the proposal which he wasagainst, he voted for it, as in itsfinal form, because he felt it moreclosety resembled the Kennedy-Ervin bill of which he was infavor. The one and a half hourperiod terminated with a questionand answer period.EUROPEWe'll see the usual plus Russia,Scandinavia. Yugoslavia and N.Africa. A different trip—for thosewho don’t want to be herdedaround. Also shorter trips.Budget priced.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255 Sequoia. Box C4Pasadena, CaliforniaAmerican Association of Univer¬sities in urgig the repeal of Sec¬tion 1001(f). A copy of the entireresolution will be sent to theCongress.Some government representa¬tives objected to the resolution inalthough no one disagreedwith the stated objections to theloyalty oath.One segment felt that the aetton urging UC to drop out of theprogram unless the objectionableclauses are removed this yearwas too hasty. They felt that UCshould l>e urged to withdraw, butthat no time limit should beattached. resolution, not one assemblymember voting in favor of it.In other action, Liz Heath wasseated as chairman of the Elec¬tions and Rules committee, BillHawkins who was chairman, hav¬ing resigned earlier that evening.Mair Benkoil and Bill Routt com¬pleted the five member commit¬tee. Bog Cogan was made chair-M0DEL CAMERAWholesaleCatalogue Prices onCameras, Projectors, Recorders1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 Wear (Contact oCenieSbyDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372 TANENBAUM PHARMACY1H2 E. 55th 5500 CornellBU 8-1142 Ml 3-5300Free DeliveryStudent and Faculty Discount on AllYour Drug Weeds> TTVTnmrVTTVfTTTVfTVTTVVTTTTVVWTVTVTTrrTTTVITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage £r meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st. «<<<<<<<444444i30% OFF On QualityDRY CLEANINGAil work done by a regular Chicaga Wholesaler whose plant servesothtir retail stores in addition to his own outlets. You get this servicebecause of our non-profit policy and low overhead.Trousers 50cJaukel-s 50cSuit's 95cTopcoats 1.00Overcoats 1.10 Shirts 50cDresses 95cSuits (2 piece) . . .95cLight Coat 95cHeayy Coat ....1.10JVesrf 20% Off on All LaundryUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT SERVICE CENTERReynolds Club BasementHoan: 11:30- 1:30 — 3:30- 5:30 Give these Wonderful Children’s Books for ChristmasTHE GOLDEN BOOK OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION ...$4.95THE GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY BOOK OF SCOUTING $4.95THE LOOKING GLASS LIBRARY — TEN TITLES (each) $1.50Old favorites in charming formatAlso Activity boxes for younger children $1.00 and upBUY EARLY WHILE SELECTIONS ARE COMPLETEUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEDecember 4, 1959 • CHICACOMAROON • 3the Chicago maroonfounded —■ 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and intermittently during the summer quarterby students of the University of Chicago. Inquiries should be sent to the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E. 59thStreet, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus.Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5, Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material, 4 pm,Tuesday: deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 pm Wednesday before publication.All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the individual opinions of the authors. On Campos withMafShaJman(Author oJ “l Was a Teen-age Dwarf ”, “The ManyLoves of Dohie Gillis”, etc.)TV OR NOT TVUC’s position on ‘loyalty oath’will help get section droppedTwo weeks ago the Maroon published aneditorial urging the University of Chicago todrop out of the National Defense Educationact on the grounds that the loyalty oath anddisclaimer affidavits of the act were an in-tollerable violation and invasion of academicfreedoms. This editorial was written and approvedin a hasty indignation. Last Tuesday Student gov¬ernment passed a resolution on this same topic,a resolution showing greater restraint and some¬what deeper thought. After reflection, we feel thatthe position Government took was superior to ourown.If the disclaimer affidavit, and the loyalty oathare not deleted from the bill, UC should certainlydrop out of the NDEA. It certainly should refuseto administer these funds. But the Universityshould not drop out immediately. There are tworeasons for this.For one, financially it would be extremely diffi¬cult for the University to withdraw at this moment.At the moment the NDEA funds administered byUC total $284,528; nine tenths of this amount wascontributed by the federal government. $141,353.29has already been loaned, the remaining $143,174.71has been promised. These funds have been awardedto some 460 students. The total amount of moneyinvolved is over a quarter of a million dollars, andfrankly, the University does not have a quarter ofa million dollars it can return to the federal gov¬ernment at this moment. It does have 460 to whomit has made a promise.Moreover, Chancellor Kimpton is probably cor¬rect when he maintains that UC can do more toeffect these changes in the NDEA bill by remain¬ing a member of it as long as possible. The with¬drawal of Harvard and Yale instead of influencingcongressmen against the bill, seems to have in¬fluenced congress against Harvard and Yale. TheUniversity of Chicago is none too widely loved,nor is it especially influential on Capitol Hill.We cannot remain a participant forever, asthings stand. For every nine Federal dollars used as a loan, one dollar must come from the schoolusing the loan. As long as we contribute moneyinto this program, we are giving more than tacitapproval to the bill as it stands.Concern over section 1001(f) of the Defense edu¬cation act is of concern to more than the studentbody. It is of concern also to the faculty: Chicago’sparticipation in the program is currently underconsideration in the Committee of the Council ofthe Faculty senate. It is of concern to the adminis¬tration: Chancellor Kimpton is chairman of theAmerican association of Universities, an organiza¬tion which has recently become a most stringentand active opponent of section 1001(f).Perhaps Chicago was wrong to accept the moneyin the first place; this is beside the point for wedid accept the money. We now have no choice butto participate wisely. Wise participation demandsa wise attempt to improve the law. If congressrefuses to improve the law, a wise participationdemands withdrawal.We believe that the administration of the Uni¬versity is acting wisely; we think that StudentGovernment acted wisely in writing and passingthe resolution it did. We quote the conclusion ofthat resolution:“Student Government of the University of Chi¬cago, in full recognition of the position of the ad¬ministration of the University and the difficultiesthat it would encounter upon withdrawing fromthe NDEA this year, urges that:1. This resolution be sent to this session ofthe United States Congress.2. The University of Chicago work with theAmerican Association of Universities in urgingthe repeal of Section 1001 (f) during this sessionof the United States Congress.3. That, in the event that Section 1001 (f) isnot deleted from the NDEA during this session ofthe United States Congress, the University of Chi¬cago withdraw from participation in the NationalDefense Education act of 1958.Who’s negligence will causeEB’s Huxley film to he mute?Tf you take a famous biologist’sspeech, a movie company, a spe¬cial University convocation, a taperecorder, Buildings and Grounds,and try to combine them, w'hat doyou get?“A real goof," says DavidRidgeway, producer for Encyclo¬pedia Britannica films.“Spilt milk,” says Sol Tax, pro¬fessor in the department of an¬thropology and chairman of theDarwin Centennial committee.In any event, no one got a re¬cording of Sir Julian Huxley scontroversial speech, deliveredlast Thursday at a special convo¬cation in Rockefeller Chapel.John Scheurman, president ofWUCB, had been asked by theDarwin centennial committee torecord the convocation proceed¬ings. “When I attempted to set upmy recorder,” said Scheurman,“the Chapel electrician told methat I would not be allowed to in¬stall my equipment, as he hadnot received an order from Build¬ings and Grounds authorizing meto make the recordings in theChapel.’According to chairman Tax,“We had received clearance forshooting movies in the Chapel. Ijust assumed that the sound re¬cordings were included in theclearance for the movies.” (Ency¬clopaedia Britannica films is pro¬ducing a documentary film of thewhole centennial.) “We are goingto use the movies of the convoca¬tion in newsreel form,” said pro-d u c e r Ridgeway. “We hadn’tplanned on using any recordingsof the speech, but rather on hav¬ing the film’s narrator supply thebackground for the shots of theconvocation. Still, we might have used some of the tapes if theyhad been available.”W. R. Zellner, superintendentof Buildings and Grounds, claimsthat the electrician was entirelyjustified in. refusing to allowScheuerman to set up his record¬ing equipment.. “We can’t havejust anybody tampering with ouramplifiers, and we don’t allowindiscriminant placing of micro¬phones.“If the committee had specific¬ally requested the sound record¬ing wre would have cooperatedvfith them just as we have co¬operated with them on all the pro¬visions for the Darwin centen¬nial.”In this we definitely agree with Zellner. Expensive equipmentthat is owned by the Universityshould not be tampered with “in-discriminantly.” However, theCentennial happened only once.There was -only one chance torecord Huxley’s spech—the mostcontroversial of the centennial.Surely, a historic recording suchas this should not be dependentfor its existence on an electri¬cian’s interpretation of hjs author¬ization instructions.However, what’s done is done.Encyclopaedia Britannica filmshas hundreds of feet of film ofHuxley delivering his speech-all silent. In Tax’s words, “I don’timagine we can do the centennialover again.”Editors-in-chiefNeal Johnston Lance HaddixManaging editor, Ozzie ConklinBusiness Manager Advertising ManagerWilliam G. Bauer James SchardienNews editor Ken PierceFeature editor Jay GreenbergPhotography coordinator -4 Steve CarsonCulture editor Maggie StinsonSports editor ......... Bill SpadyEditorial staff: Joel Ashenfarb, Frances Brown, Jeanne Crawford, Bert Cohler,Debby Dinitz, Dorothy Dorf, Francesca Falkenstein, Dean Fischer, MaitlondGriffith, Matthew Hirschorn, John Juskevice, Elliott Landau, David Noble,Tony Quagliano, Kitty Scoville, Tamor Verga. The academic world has made its first tentative steps intotelevision—a few lectures, a few seminars, a few lab demonstra¬tions—but colleges have not yet begun to use television’s vastcapacity to dramatize, to amuse, to stir the senses, to unshackletiie imagination. Like, for example, the following:ANNOUNCER: Howdy, folksies. Well, it’s time again forthat lovable, laughable pair, Emmett Twonkey Magruder,Pli. D., and Felicia May Crimscott, M.A., in that rollicking,roistering fun show, American History 101 .. . And here theyare—the team that took the "hiss” out of “history”—EmmettTwonkey Magruder and Felicia May Crimscott!DR. MAGRUDER: Howdy, folksies. A funny thing hap¬pened to me on the way to my doctorate. A mendicant ap¬proached me and said, “Excuse me, sir, will you give me 25cents for a sandwich?” and I replied, “Perhaps I will, my goodman. Let me see the sandwich.”MISS CRIMSCOTT: Oh, how droll, Dr. Magruder! Howdelicious! You're a regular Joe Penner!... But enough ofbadinage. let us turn to our rollicking, roistering fun show,American History 101.1)R. MAGRUDER: Today we will dramatize the taut andtingling story of John Smith and Pocahontas. I will playCaptain Smith and Miss Magruder will play Pocahontas.ANNOUNCER: But first a message from our sponsor...Folksies, have you tried Alpine Cigarettes yet? Have youtreated yourself to that fresh filtration, that subtle coolness,that extra-lring, extra-efficient filter? Have you? Hmmni?... If not, wake your tobacconist and get some Alpines at once!... And now to our grim and gripping story. Picture, if youwill, a still summer night. An Indian maid stands by a moonlitbrook. Suddenly she hears a footstep behind her. She turns . ..MISS CRIMSCOTT: Oh I John Smith! You-um startle-urame-um!DR. MAGRUDER: Howdy, Pocahontas. What are youdoing by the brook?MISS CRIMSCOTT: Just washing out a few scalps. Butwhat-um you-um want-uni?DR. MAGRUDER: I came to see the Chief.MISS CRIMSCOTT: You-um can’t-um. Chief is leaving forChicago.DR. MAGRUDER: On what track?ANNOUNCER: And speaking of tracks, stay on the righttrack with Alpines—the track that leads straight to smokingpleasure, to fun, to frolic, to sweet content. . . And now backto those two gassers, Emmett Twonkey Magruder and FeliciaMay Crimscott.DR. MAGRUDER: Well, folksies, that's all for today. Seeyou next week, same time, same channel.MISS CRIMSCOTT: Stay tuned now for “William CullenBryant—Girl Intern.”ANNOUNCER: And remember, folksies, there was a timewhen you needed to smoke two cigarettes to get what you getfrom one Alpine —one cigarette for light menthol, one for highfiltration. Today you can get it all in a single Alpine, which meansyou no longer have to go around smoking two cigarettes at atime, causing your friends to snigger, and violating the fire laws.And speaking of TV, remember to watch Max Shulman’t“The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis” on CBS every Tuesdaynight—presented by Marlboro Cigarettes, from the rnukeryof Philip Morris and Alpine.December 15 —January 3ODETTAThe Gate .of Horn — 753 N. Dearborn4 • CHICAGO MAROON • December 4, 1959GADF LYAre nursery rhymes subversive?We usually pride ourselvesUpon being quite sensitive toproper standards. When folkSnging became so “in group"that it was “out” in the tastesof all right thinking individ¬ualists, we were among the firstfc> hide our Pete Seeger records.And then when folk singing wentout of style in the tastes of allOthers we rediscovered it. Point¬ing out that it represented thebest, the most simple and pro¬found ideals within America'sheritage, her basic moral sim¬plicity. we were again among thefirst to re find our Pete Seegerjeeoids and play them.And once again we are amongstthe first, perhaps the veity first,to recognize a growing danger.A danger that is affecting thevery taproots of our civilization,the pure faith of our young ones.A few perspicacious groupshave become aware of it and at¬tempted to stop its growth inthose areas which affect them.Such an institution is the South¬ern library which recently banned• childrens book concerning themarriage between two rabbits,one black and one white. It did90 for the book obviouslypreached integration and hencewas subversive. For this gesturewe all owe them a vote of grati¬tude.But rather than just thankingtheir work, we must follow it andtake stock ourselves. We mustdetermine whether what our chil¬dren read today corrupts them.We must decide whether chil¬drens’ books, through most in no¬fen l appearing stories, sublimi-nally preach subversion, and if and adversly, hence subversly,affects American foreign trade.Peter Piper requires furtherthought.Yankee Doodle is quite patri¬otic, but he travels by horse: amode obsolete and non-economic-ally consumptive. Should we putYankee Doodle into “one of thelow-priced three” and while travel¬ing in this, have him mention effi¬cient gas mileage, Yankee can betaught in all the public schools.Jack Horner will become thepatron saint of the dried fruit in¬dustry and Little Boy Blue canteach the importance of respon¬sibility. Even though Boy Blueteaches this by a negative exam¬ple, this is acceptable if restrictedto the upper grades.Hey diddle, diddle, the cat and the fiddle, the cow jumped overthe moon, is fine. It implies thatcows are the only people capableof reaching the moon, or evenwanting too, and no one want toconsider their country a cow.These examples are taken fromrhymes currently taught to chil¬dren. We have just re-examinedthem in the light of current Amer¬ican truths. Now we are ready togeneralize these criticisms andturn them into a new, all inclu¬sive standard of literary criticism.Our age is the best of all pos¬sible ages, h e n*c e those beliefswhich have formed our age arethe best of all possible beliefs.And thus a literary critique basedon these beliefs will be the bestof all possible literary critiques.Returning to the rhymes, we have negatively judged thosewhich are adverse to the Ameri¬can economy, hence our literarystandard must approve of onlythose things which improve theAmerican economy. So too, whichmust condemn all things contro¬versial for they would raise dis¬sension among the American peo¬ple. And the American people arethe best of all possible people.And they are the best becausethey have faith. Thus no literaturecan be approved which shakes orquestions this faith. And such sub¬versive literature includes bothall criticisms of our governmentand of our customs. So down withsocial criticism.Now what we have said istheory and perhaps too abstract.So we have written an example which embodies the above princi¬ples and clarifies them. The para¬graph below is an example of theproper literary style for children.For the best of our all possiblecitizenry were once children.Within seven sentences we havetaught good grooming, considera¬tion, and the need for warmth inwinter.“We like penguins. They’reamazingly sensible animals andalways so well dresed. This is avery important point, their beingwell dressed. It shows considera¬tion. And penguins don’t get coldin winter. Humans get very coldin winter. This is unfortunate.It would be nice for all of us tochange into penguins during thewinter.”Citizen KaneBlakemore comments on Huxley speacliby William B. Blakemoreacting dean of the chapeldean of DisciplesDivinity houseBetween Sir Julian Huxleyand the theologians there isan issue on which they havenot yet joined, and so far asI can tell there is somewhatmore reluctance on the partof most theologians to join theissue than there is on Sir Julian'spart. This is because so many ofthe responding theologians takethe position, also stated often inthis is so we must act. Together the press, that Huxley predictedtet us reaffirm our literary stand- the demise of religion. He did noSuch thing.For example, when Mother Hub- Huxle asserted that religionbard says her cupboard is bare, , , , .k> she really following Karl Marx alonS Wlth other elements of cul-wlio preaches that the lower class- ture, has evolved and will con-<H> are starving? tinue to do so. Far from announc-And remember Jack Spratt. he’s ing the coming demise of religion,against the dairy association. And gjr Julian prognosticated reli-“VI«*»•' «*■" Th* to human need, an organism sub¬ject to evolution; the theology ofthe future state of religion, as hepresented it, can properly be iden¬tified as a humanism. There wascertainly nothing novel in hear¬ing such ideas expressed at UCand even in Rockefeller Memo¬rial chapel.Editor’s note: Sir Julian Hux¬ley, English scientist andgrandson of biologist ThomasHuxley, delivered an addressentitled “The EvolutionaryVision” at a special Universityconvocation held last Thurs¬day in Rockefeller chapel.Huxley's views on the evolu¬tion of religion set forth in theaddress have been attacked bya number of religious leaders.The Maroon has asked WilliamB. Blakemore to comment onHuxley’s speech.The evolutionary character ofman’s religion was recognizedhere a half a century ago, and wasexpounded—even homiletically — a long and noble tradition extend¬ing back to the earliest ages ofphilosophy. Within that traditionthere have been greater and lesserexpositors of that particular pointof view.Ceneral theory offeredThe great significance of SirJulian’s address is that he placedhumanism in the context of avery grand idea, namely, the gen¬eral theory of evolution. To doso was new, for while it has beenin the making for many decades,it has been only recently that ageneral theory of evolution asover against such special doc¬trines as a theory of biologicalevolution or of social or of cul¬tural evolution has been pro¬pounded.The year 1859 saw the launch¬ing of a doctrine of biological evo¬lution, while 1959 and the DarwinCentennial are surely alreadyfamous for providing the plat¬form for large-scale exposition ofa doctrine of general evolution.It is certainly an exciting concep¬tion and one of tremendous gran-deus. It is by now obvious that Is evolution a general concept?Either everything in religioncan be subsumed under the con¬cept of evolution or that conceptis not fully a general concept. Ifit can be demonstrated that evo¬lution is a general concept, thenreligion and science have a greatdeal of discussion to carry for¬ward together. Religion deals witha massive body of evidence whichit asserts can be subsumed onlyunder the concept of God and isnot accounted for by any descrip¬tion of eyolution yet proposed.By such terms as “the ground ofbeing,” “the unconditioned,” and“grace,” religion is dealing withexperiences which it believes exist¬ing doctrines of evolution do nottake into account.At the expense of over-simplifi¬cation may I suggest that it mayyet prove that the idea of evolu¬tion may have to be modified ina godly direction, and the idea ofGod may have to admit an evolu¬tionary attribute in diety.When the doctrine of relativitywas propounded, the general theo¬logical line became that the con-. . the concept of evolution is largely cept of reiativity was certainlypluses. Peter Piper is rather ques- eluding and climactic paragraphs by guch uc fjgures ag Shailer applicable to the physical universe inapplicable to the idea of deitytionable. On the one hand he doespromote peppers, but his verseis difficult to learn and many peo¬ple become discouraged.Now thesepeople will connect discourage¬ment with peppers and swearnever to eat them again. This willSlow up the import of peppers of his address were devoted tooutlining the lineaments of thenew religion, and, as Huxley him¬self said, “what might be calledits theology.”Huxley identified religion as apsychosocial organism relevantFjoCEVlltEr ISflv there,umt hua, \■W«T'S AW fWfc&CTlUt WRVOU'VJE GOT on <(0ORHHNTER COAT ...cfktf*.WHAT txMOST CVATTRACT*ARE JAOTHV (JUT -ME MO ms HAVE BetNdecent ft boot it, iwux $AV THAT. TWEV'UE _AGfifctl TO H.VAftOUMO AWHEftO IN HfttOfoeAvArtofci'. GOT ISN'TthatSACR1- *LCfrtwS? Mathews, dean of the Divinityschool, Edward Scribner Ames ofthe Department of Philosophy,James Tufts, John Dewey, Ells¬worth Faris of“ the Departmentof Sociology and others. CertainlyA. Eustace Haydon was as elo¬quent a protagonist for humanismas could be heard anywhere. Fur¬thermore, humanist thought has and also to human culture as wellas to biology. There is a massivebody of evidence pointing towarda general theory of evolution.Huxley’s statement of religionwas set within a very great "ideawhich everyone is*going to haveto take seriously, particularly thetheologians. What Sir Julianseems to realize is that the gen¬eral theory of evolution stands orfalls at the level of theology.t^TEN mOUEVRlC. <***JOOVEGCH MOTHS VOUJON'T HAVE TIME Eofttheological /J^hnicauties.i THEN THEYJUST DON'TONOEftSTMrt*.OlO POfC JOHNmi HAVE NWWtflower <t< Offers tuition solutionTo the Editors:I would like to offer a solution both to the problems of lowenrollment and high tuition. If the administration were tooffer a bounty to old students for each new student they couldinduce to enroll in the College,both problems would be solved.Tuition would go down and enroll¬ment would go up.I propose the following scale:For each A student brought %toDean Simpson’s office, a ten percent remission on tuition.For each high school basketballstar turned in at the athletic of¬fice, 20 per cent and free admis¬sion to all home games.For each beautiful girl escortedto the public relations office,. 30per cent and two tickets to the B-Jdinner dance.You will note that the scale isordered in accordance with thevalue that the new College placeson each type of student.•I think my plan is, “a brilliantdose of rationalism.” If the Boardof Trustees wishes to make meChancellor, I will accept my due.Henry Etzkowits Then a few years ago. CharlesHartshorne, formerly of the UCfaculty, wrote a book entitled“The Divine Relativity” in which,for many of us, he demonstratedthat God would not be much ofa God after all unless, instead ofbeing beyond all relations, hewere the most related, interactive¬ly related to all there is.A parallel task regarding evo¬lution and divinity may yet lieaccomplished—or it may proveimpossible. Only time will tell,and only then will we knowwhether there can lx* a generaltheory ot evolution or whetherevolution is a limited term. Theissue was raised by Huxley, butis was by no means settled atthe Darwin Centennial. •College examiner Hillclarifies statementsTo the editors of The Maroon:An article in the November 13 Maroon indicated that Ifound the results of this year’s placement examinations andthe related “mitigation” procedures “disappointing.” This istrue, but I find that there has been some misunderstanding of whatI meant. (I do not think that the misunderstanding is the fault ofthe article.) I did not mean to imply, nor do I believe, that this year’sentering class is in any sense below standard for University ofChicago entering classes. On the contrary, the evidence that I haveseen testifies that the class is a very good one indeed. My disappoint¬ment (which is shared my many of my colleagues) is with the systemwe used this year to determine degree programs for enteringstudents.Sincerely yours,Knox C. HillCollege ExaminerDecember 4, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 501 Fom-PonTshak.1 too! You Will onlyn to students.-not t0jers. ^organization a\j otpard tables at o.Vrli'' *0■ > Oil 'io(IdjV1 i s,?'mlfte fpes th.ihtheue as a^f< ry-uiry at d de-t, and.J1.aton campusire of idi as.groups' andw o r k tod tO dt fr .itlirhAve ?fcV‘lonl rovci,s|aliizations'lt.nKesslerRhinstineSuggests SAC improvements This is UC'S ' ist<?Dear Sirs: how divorced from society, and cause the public treasures some-two vears the ISL Dlat- having no responsibility to im- thing about university life that Student Government lias The selling of Pom-fnrm has calleH for the U- Prove society — more specifically is not emphasized here. held a general assembly meet- ers ca" be fun too! You. K1- , f f nx j t the University community can not The formal organization- num ing, an executive council meet- be selling them to studentlaonsnmeni oi a oiuaeni be abolished by creation of an ber of members, specific members jngt and received the following outside strangers.Activities council (SAC). As SAC SAC could however, be the for a given year- would only serve publication this week,majority leader in Student formal center of the opposite as a means for assigning the re- The gG member wlsponsibility for maintaining thecouncil, its existence and tradi¬tional principles, and to minimizecumbersome procedure difficul¬ties. Such organization would notbe a means to eliminate the par-Government it was my clear point of Vjew.responsibility to work for the Based on a common ground ofcreation of such a group. I at- purpose and concern, it would betempted to fullfill this respon- a group which by eliminatingsibility by participating in dis- needles conflicts, and by establish-cussions and drafting sessions for ing maximum communication,appropriate legislation, and by consultation, cooperation, and eo- ticipation of, or the services anddebating positively on the general ordination between student organ- potential value to, a particularquestion in the Assembly. How- izations could help convey the organization. Nor would it sug-ever, when the SAC resolution idea that the extracurricular doescame to a vote, not one “aye” was have a purpose and is worthwhile,heard, not even my own. and -IS not some sort of playpenBelow I attempt to give some for (bose who have the time andof the major positive and negative energy to waste. SAC would not tions of ISL do not stop with thethe SAC. The positive The SG member who gave thispublication to the Maroon re¬marked that he felt all threeevents were appropriate to theparticular “Geist” of UC.Dear Sir:Our PomPoms are: on woodsticks, guaranteed to be fluffy.Would your class or organizationgest that a particular organiza- like to have fun promoting specta-tion is not on the “good” list of tor spirit at your games?student activities.Future action. Platform obliga- If they would, then order someof our tissue Pom-Pom shakers One school"We set up cardHomeroom doorhour. . . . The first daylooked at them. . . . Thewhen we set up thewas a mad rush and wethree gross in less thanThe students sure wentand brought the moneythem on the second day.”You cannot lose, as weaccept the return of anyijot sell. . . . How can weWe can, because we(in your school colors) in time for the letters coming in froviews on the sac. me positive be a group that would dictate defeat of a particular resolution,ones are those held by myself, and/or direct a program or char- The chances remain for a positive your next big game. (You prob- schools how they will s<but not necessarily ISL, and in acter for student activities over and generally acceptable solution ably have seen our Pom-Poms at will be surprised, too.the past by ISL platform and jbe objections of a particular or- to be formulated.policy committees. These views ganization or organizations, norand principles were not sufficient¬ly expressed or embodied in thelegislation defeated. Perhaps theynever can be put in p r a c t i c a 1terms. The negative views are, Ithink, the fears that caused therejection of the SAC.The shite of student activities.Finding the cause for the diffi¬culty of most group to maintain:a broad basis of participation: a would it serve as a means to co¬erce or obligate a particular or¬ganization to an action incon¬sistent with the principles, views,desires, or abilities of that organ-ization.SAC would constantly maintainthat student organizations existbecause they have at least tenstudent members and a facultysponsor. It would not, with or Majority floor leaderJim Thomason (ISL)Student Assembly the big college games on televi¬sion.) Very truly yours,PRODUPolitics club is against STo the Editors: themselves, they are to select rep- and the fact that manyThe proposal for a student resentatives for each of the cate- frown upon dissent, or 1activities council now before £ories of hobby, political, relig- they must protect thehigh quality program of activity: wjthout the encouragement of the Student Government may not !ous’ an<? departmental groups from politics entirely,or even existence would be a nice xJmVersUy administration, which be approved, but some of theproblemfor.'a mothational te- wou]d selectively encourage and principles behind it will con¬tinue on the ascendancy at theUniversity of Chicago, and thePolitics club is vitally concernedwith them. into which all other organizations partially responsible for tlisearch team. I postulate, how- promofe certain types of org\ni-ever, a general attitude that extra- zatjons or activity, thereby concurricular activities are not the veyjng a faiSP image of the char-concern of the serious student. acjer and ideais of the UniversityLife — religious, cultural, social, comrnunjty to the public. It wouldand political responsibilities by common consent work to in¬sure that the office space, facili-somehow seems to stop at theboundaries of the campus. Somecontinuestudents may even continue a specjai considerations granted apersonal isolation from society The SAC amendment repre¬sents Inter-Fraternity council, In-ter-Ciub council, Cap and Gown,ties, budget subsidies, and other WAA, the Music society, Black-friars, the Maroon, etc. (completeeven after finishing their formaleducation. ~ student organization by the Uni¬versity administration was on thebasis of its value to the Univer-Solution? Such an attitude of sity community and not on the list in Maroon- as “all campus,general interest student organiza¬tions” and therefore sets them upas the coordinators of all studentthe academic pursuits being some- basis of public relations, i.e. be- activity at this University. Among have been neatly divided.More coordination of activitiesmay be needed, but the SAC as ithas been proposed is both un¬democratic and unrepresentative.It represents the belief on the partof some “student leaders” and ad¬ministrative officials that studentlife out of classes should be dom¬inated by social, cultural and hon¬orary groups. There is a strongdesire in the administration formore regulated and directed stu¬dent extracurricular activity, andthe fraternities and social leaguesare seen as the forces to channelFIRST STRING..You candepend on that refreshingWeisei® taste. Which is whythe campus crowd agrees— nation of political ithroughout our country.The SAC proposal t hYoung Democrats, Younglicans, Young Peoplesleague, ISL, SRP, PoliStudent Peace union, anYoung Socialists all he reped by one delegate—chosencouncil, Blackfriars, et al..posterous. On the otherwhy Blackfriars, Glee club,society, Folklore society, anorchestra should needgate each on such a couequally open to question.The Politics club hopes tand to stabilize students’ lives. Inaddition, the University seems to University will continue asbe engaged in a campaign to ter of intellectual inquirychange the image of UC in theeyes of the public. A steadily in¬creasing emphasis on social ac¬tivity can isolate the non-conform¬ist in politics or personal affairs,while reassuring the outsideworld. bate in class and out, aevery political group on <will contribute its share ofWe urge that othertheir representatives w omaintain CORSO and tothe SAC proposal,The Politics club looks upon the will work against coni roveUniversity as a center for the ex- and non-social organizalichange of ideas. Since we must all this campus.spend the rest of our lives undersome kind of political control,now is the time to exercise free¬dom of inquiry and choice. Tomor¬row, how well we have chosen ourpolitical ideas and how deeply weunderstand the problems of oursociety will be tested by reality.A university should provide astimulating political atmosphere, The executiveof the Politics club:RosalynNancy AheaWalter DauAnn BancBen CohenJudyPROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO.'Hyde Park's Most Complete Point & Hardware Store'Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E.Nave a WORLD offUHl60 D«yiSttWORt$?LN0 Libs27th Years Travel with tITAUnbelievable low Cost-Europefrtffl $67$Orient43-65 ,ie«n»from $998Many fours indudacollege creditAlso low-cost trips to Mexico$169 up. South America $699 up,Hawaii Study Tour $598 up ondAround the World $1898 up.Ask Your Trove! Agent332 Se. Mitkigo* lit.(kicage 4, NA 7 2557WORLD TRAVEL The TREVI“ffijde Park's FinestEspresso House'9 itSun., Tues., Thurs.4:00 pm - 1:00 amWeekends5:00 pm - 3:30 am ;SHOW TIMETues., 9:00 - 1:00 am|I;Thurs. 9:00 - 1 :00 am'Fri., 9:30 - 2:30 amSat., 9:30- 2:30 am1553 E. 57thCampus Bus Stopat the door6 • CHICAGO MAROON • December 4, 1959Biology teachers meet-Many high school teacherswould risk losing their jobs ifth< > discussed evolution in theirclassrooms the way evolution wasdiscussed at the Darwin centen¬nial." said Richard Boyajian di¬re tor of the National conferencefor high school biology teachersheld last week at UC.Bovajian has been reading pa¬pers written by the 63 teachersironr the continental UnitedStates and Puerto Rico, attendingthe conference on the teachingof evolution. “Many of theseteachers are afraid of recrimina¬tions from local school adminis¬trations and fellow teacherswhich might result from theirteaching evolution as an accepted fact, instead of as a theory,”stated Boyajian.Most of the teachers disagreedwith Sir vJulian Huxley’s conten¬tion that the need for a belief inGod wil ‘‘evolve out” of our so¬ciety. “They do not see any con¬flict between all that is knownabout evolution and belief in asupreme being,” continued Boya¬jian.‘‘However, in many cases, youare presenting ideas that are con¬trary to the student’s previousupbringing. The ideas of evolu¬tion must be conveyed to highschool classes with caution andveisdom, and can't be done withdisregard to the effect on thestudent. ‘‘Huxley told the teachers thathe is only concerned with thebiological facts, and that teachingthem to students is out of hisexperience.”All of the teachers at tne con¬ference felt that “the usual text¬books available for high schooldo not give proper emphasis toevolution. The reason for this isthat high school textbooks arewritten to sell in bulk. Publish¬ers feel that they must cater tothe conservative attitude of thepublic, and avoid offending com¬munities or pressure groups.”Boyadjian feels that “the bookseven avoid the use of the word‘evolution.’ So as not to conjureup resentment, ‘evolution’ is re-placed by ‘development’ or‘change through the ages. In fact,evolution is often relegated to asub-chapter role, so it won’t haveBoorstin will lecture (pnoto oy uarson)Workmen repair the roof of Robie house, the building de¬signed in 1908 by Frank Lloyd Wright.in Nepal this month Ford foundation sponsors JD studyDaniel J. Boorstin, historyprofessor at the UC has beenchosen to be the first gov¬ernment-sponsored Americanaeademican to lecture inNepal.Professor Boorstin is scheduledto make an extensive lecture tourof ttic Near East and the Far Eastunder the U. S. Department ofState’s international educationalexchange service program. Hewill lecture on American civiliza¬tion and American history inleading universities and at cul¬tural centers in those areas.Boorstin left November 2y forAnkara, Turkey, rte will be inTurkey until December 6 for lec¬tures to students and intellectualgroups.From December 6 to December11, he will be in Teheran, Iran, tolecture to various groups. Thenhe will fly to Pakistan for a three-day stay in Karachi.About mid-December, he isscheduled to arrive in New Delhifor a briefing session prior todelivering a series of lectures inIndia and Nepal.During the Christmas period,Boorstin will fly to Kathmandu,the capital of Nepal, for a seriesof lectures there on the UnitedStates.Boorstin said that the State de¬partment had informed him thathe will be the first American,Under the education exchangeprogram, to lecture there. Boorstin began his career as alawyer. A native of Atlanta, Geor¬gia, his family moved to Okla¬homa when he was two years old.He received his early educationin Tulsa’s public schools. Then,not quite sixteen, he entered Har¬vard university where, in 1934, hereceived a Bachelor of Arts de¬gree in English history and litera¬ture.As a Rhodes scholar, he studiedlaw at Balliol college, Oxford,England, and in 1937 became oneof the new Americans entitled topractice in Her Majesty’s highcourts. But shortly thereafter, hereceived a Sterling fellowship toYale law school where, in 1938,he received a Doctor of Jurispru¬dence degree.From 1938 to 1942, he taughtlegal history, and English andAmerican history at Harvard. Hewas on the faculty of Swarthmorecollege (1942-44), and in 1944 be¬came a professor of American his¬tory at UC. He is the author andeditor of a number of books. to appear in the table of con¬tents.”In contrast, the teachers gen¬erally agreed that “evolution isthe underlying biological idea.of Illinois. There are no limita¬tions on the fields of study.The purpose of these scholar¬ships is to develop a better under¬standing between the people ofGreat Britain and this country. Itis to be hoped by the Union thatany applicant for this awardwould be interested in promotingrelations and understanding be¬tween the citizens of Great Bri¬tain and the citizens of this coun¬try; would act in some measureas an ambassador of good willfrom this country to the countrywhich he or she is visiting andwould return to this country witha better understanding of the dif- Ford foundation has granted$24,600 to UC for a joint Uni¬versity - community programficulties which at t'imes havecaused friction between these twoEnglish speaking nations.Applicants will be considered bythe University’s Committee onFellowships, and recommended tothe English Speaking union ofChicago for the competition. Ap¬plication forms may be obtainedfrom the Office of the Committeeon Fellowships, in the Administra¬tion building, room 304. Applica¬tions should be filed not later thanDecember 15, 1959. on the understanding, preven¬tion, and treatment of juvenile de¬linquency to be sponsored by theSchool of Social Service Ad¬ministration, the department ofsociology, and the Committee onHuman development, announcedClyde E. Murray, assistant deanof SSA.The study and experimentationon methods of delinquency controland treatment and the sharing ofinformation concerning the na¬ture, purpose, and method of cur¬rent inquiries into the problemare the objects of this year’s pro¬gram.The Institute for JuvenileResearch, the YMCA DetachedWorker project, the Chicago Com¬mons association, and the Chicagopublic schools are some of thecommunity agencies participatingin the program.Participating from UC are thedepartments of psychology andpsychiatry and the Law schooLACASA Book StoreX Cards X - Imported fir Domestic - Foreign LanguageFeaturing one of the best 5c collections in the city.Also imported-Children's Books, Cards & Small Gifts.RELIABLE TYPEWRITER SERVICE1322 E. 55th HY 3-9651 Nickey’sHas Added Something NewFor Your Eating EnjoymentVeal ScallopiniandChicken Cacciatori1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa'Offer $2,000 grantThe Chicago chapter of the English Speaking union is againproviding two scholarships in the amount of $2,000 each forgraduate students for a year of study in England duriYig theyear 1960-61. The applicants must be residents of the StateAfter visiting Nepal, Boorstinwill lecture for several weeks inthe Calcutta area, then go tosouthern India for lectures in theMadras region and finally backin the New Delhi sector.On his return to the UnitedStates, in early 1960, Boorstinplans to stop off in Thailand, thePhilippines and Hawaii.Herman Cameras Inc.• We specialize in service• We advise honestly• We carry all standard moke.6 S. LaSalle St.DE 2-2300 BEVERLY HILLSNURSING HOMELicensed and approved for aged,chronically ill and convalescentresidents. Registered Nurse andlocal doctor on call. Twenty-fourhour service, licensed practicalnurses and nurses aids. Excellentfood, convenient to bus and R.I.,near churches of all faiths.10347 Longwood DriveChicago 43, III.Phone BE 8-4454A DELIGHTFUL,DE LUXE, TREASURYOF PEANUTS!along with PEANUTS • MOM PEANUTS • GOOD GRIEF,MORI PSANUTSI • GOOD OL' CHARLIE BROWN • SNOOPYYOU'RE OUT OF YOUR MIND, CHARLIE BROWNI • BUT WfLOVE YOU, CHARUB BROWN Only $1.00 oadiRINEHART • New York 16Favorites Old and Newby CHARLES M. SCHULZA perfect gift at$2.95now on safe atall booksallers Have a real cigarette-have a CAMELDecember 4, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Huxley: reality is evolution'ty ni’C " WHS not until loss tlinn a him- ley. "his loneliness is onlv$rindeed died thousand tyars ago that out. Ho is not alone a 'Wtroeess ,!K,n ‘,(,idd begin to deserve the Thanks to the axtronon Cyjulian titli' ,,f dominant type, and not now knows that he is on*T'*®‘ til! less than 10,000 years ago that the many organisms 11 J|C0 'he became fullv dominant. w it ness to the trend tow 1ke feller “Han's destiny is to be the sole nenoo. -^ajhe Yen aK‘*nl for the future evolution of “The only way in wl 1tion of this planet. If he doe* not destroy present split between reii>seienee could be mended $$be through ihe acceptance lloern e of the fact and \aliie>‘ligion as an organ of e\o|man, and the aeeeptamH|fi«n that religions do anVijtjevolve,” stated Huxley, '&■Huxley commented • n„Ijwell-developed, well-pat tei.jdividual human being Y4Jstrictly scientific sense. tl.eJ]of est phenomenon of whichany knowledge: and the y ■of individual personalities .;eworld’s highest richness, liesaid that our new idea.symust jettison the dem«£■ - “Human 1$f are not born equal in y a.‘.potentialities, and human')]Charles Da^wln's.- book.' rOh the .'•‘•"f';.*- M »*Origin ofSpeeies. ’ . , , ■T' i,rs "f ‘‘'"lutionarytune be*fore him to exercise bis’in tlic c;n lv■ stages, a new .lI1(in(.A •• '*group, however successful it will ‘ , ’’ . . ...eventuallv heroine, is few and . u,'n ,,n <° s;,> ,ha,y lT,feeble, and shows no signs of the “ >> through possessing a ™m<\success it max eventually achieve " •“ has become the dominantOur prehuman ape ancestors^;P°r^lon °f; this ]>lanet and thewrere newer particularly success-, a"on* responsible for its lutuie, , , . *." • . solution . .'..and he must faceahtindant. H.ux- ,hjs ln „ulsi(1,,ley. “For their transformat on e\olutionary patterninto man a series of stops were thought there is no longer eitherneeded. These steps took the bet need or Vo o m for tiie super-ter part of half-a million Years; natural. The earth was not cre¬ated: it evolved. So did religion.f's 4 y. Religions a ret organs of psyeho-I Op I social man c'oncWnod with human myth, of equality,destiny’ and with experiences■ I ■ j ^ saerodness and transcendencel||U B ■ ^ . “Eyolutionary man can no, -v i longer take refuge from his loney lm<;ss: iiiyt lie, aiaiis :ofy;y (liyini/eii;^ ,1T.Y'^ father figure whom he has him-’■ self cicMted,” Huxley -stated, “1101Y|||||jjB y - \!„v , making’ decisions by shelter 11:1? 1 , r , ~ Authority, nor absolve himselfm|flHy ” ... i ,VM ^rt ? ,‘pYc'M nt problems and planning^ , of an omniscient but^unfoitui ' i ■■.(photo by Hill)In his convocation speech, Sir Julian Huxley said, "Finally,the evolutionary vision is enabling us to discern however in¬completely, the lineaments of the new religion that we canbe sure will arise to serve the needs of the coming era."Above, Huxley appears on the television program "At Ran¬dom" with Adlai E. Stevenson. ,Y'Cu pi n res your )j personalityi «s well asyour personNow *vilh . . .Stutlio1314 E 53rd St. Cnronn7areyfonDUAL FILTERHere's how the Dual Filter does it:■. . ■ -1. It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL,, . > ' nitety proved to make the smoke Of a cigarette mild and smooth0 v/y yY'H'Y' t w* * /. .' ^ vs-f c_ * e ^t . yy,- Some fraternities get athletes. Some getbrains.-This fraternity gets virtually everybody,including women. It has fanatically loyal: members in more than 100 countries aroundthe world; It has no pin and its only ritual le , 'the simple act of enjoying Coca-Cola everysingle day of the year.Its name? L O R—Lovers of Refreshment.Join up today.’ 2. 1 n efficient'pure white outer filter. Together they bring>you the; ■ ■: o? the best tobaccos— the mildness and taste that pay off in pleasure! -;; . ■ t ■ ■ . ' ■’NEW rwimJhrevtor1 J’u i/yil uj ijA* y'/»uumn Jv&Ctx- Ccrnatinu- ' . " ’ ■ ■. ■, -■ . *y * 2. ' ” ■ ^ s- - * 5 * v, ~t • CHIC AG 0 MAROON • December 4, 195$ u out middle Kami Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by’I'he Coco-Cole Bortlmf Company ot Chicago, Inc,POPULAR FILTER PRICE■Y Which victual is better? Nethertoru plays Santaby Jay Greenberg“I understand survival of the fittest to mean survival of the flattest —and that meansthe latke,” said Gerhard Meyer, professor of economics. Meyer’s statement was the firstin the thirteenth annual debate on “The latke versus the hammantash.”A latke, a round, flat potato pancake, is the traditional food of the Jewish Hannukahcelebration. The hammantash is a triangular cookie, filled with either prune or poppy seedsand is the traditional food of the Purim holiday. Each year Hillel foundation sponsors acolloquy on the relative merits of — . for underprivileged kidsDean Netherton, in a familiar role, will be a merry generousSanta Claus this season to fifty underprivileged children fromChicago’s southwest side.the two foods. This year’s discus¬sion will be held on Tuesday, De¬cember 8 at 7:30 pm. The debatewill take place at Hillel house,5715 Woodlawn avenue. Admis¬sion is free.Leading members of the UCfaculty take part in the colloquy.According to Rabbi Maurice Pe-karsky, director of Hillel founda¬tion, “The field of the latke andthe hammantash is unique in thatrepresentatives of every depart¬ment in the university are activein research.”In previous years, the colloquyhas covered the topic “The latkeand/or the hammantash: themetaphysical, historical, mystical,physiological, anthropological, so¬ciological, etc., implications.”This year, however, in honor ofthe Darwin centennial celebra¬tion, the topic for discussion willbe, “The latke and/or the ham¬mantash: are they fit to survive.”Sol Tax, chairman of the Dar¬win centennial, will serve as mod¬erator of the discussion. Whenasked his position in the debate,Tax replied, “As the years go by,it becomes more difficult to de¬termine the relative merits ofboth. As we take a long view ofthe problem in this centennialyear, it appears that we mightnot be able to decide. However,we are looking forward to defin¬itive proof of the superiority ofeither one or the other. We arelooking, at the very least, foran argument that will end theargument. This cannot go on fortoo much longer, it is too muchfun.’Although Tax refused to com¬mit himself to either side in thedebate, his position might be found in a telegram which hesent to the colloquy while doingresearch on the topic in Rio Pie-dras, Puerto Rico, in 1956. Thetelegram stated in part, “Unex¬pected discovery equivalent to rosetta stone demands immediatereport. Suggest cancelling sym¬posium and that all objective par¬ticipants fly here to witness finaldemonstration of unequivocallatke domination.” All are coming to the Christmasparty tomorrow afternoon at thePhi Gamma Delta fraternityhouse. The event is being spon¬sored by the fraternity, alongwith two women’s clubs, the Mor¬tarboards and the Quadranglers.The fraternity and women’sclubs first organized this projectin 1946. Since then they have held such a party each year, with theaid Of numerous merchants in theHyde Park, Woodlawn, and Ken¬wood areas who have donatedgifts for the occasion.The children, ages 6-11, arefrom the Mary McDowell settle¬ment house.Classified AdsFor rent1-1F6-2-3 rm. furnished apts. Reason¬able. Near University of Chicago. 6107Dorchester. PL 2-9641.One place available In spacious, wellfurn. bachelor's apartment near cam¬pus. NO 7-6946.ServicesSewing, alterations, hems. DO 3-1550.Staff writer for the Stan Kenton or¬chestra. BA, from the University Col¬lege. is currently giving lessons to thosewho wish to complement their musicalbackground with more specific, formaltraining in jazz techniques. For fur¬ther information, call Bill Mathieu,WA 4-1458. Help wantedGirl wanted to baby-sit a few eveningsa week and an occasional afternoon,help with dinnef dishes, in exchange forroom and board. Start now or nextquarter. Call evenings, PLaza 2-0496."Driver wanted to return Chev. ’52, goodcondition, from Santa Monica to Chi¬cago. Mileage paid and agreeable com¬pensation on expenses. Call ext. 3270.Occupational therapy asst. Part-time.Psychiatric ward of general hosp., sew¬ing, knitting, etc. Call Mr. Ebersole,MU 4-6100, ext. 5281.PersonalCreative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.Ride wanted to New York area forChristmas vacation, will share drivingand expenses. Contact Samuel Farber,Hitchcock Hall 33. MI 3-0800, ext. 260. U.—Forget about the baby! Meet me atOrchestra Concert tonite, 8:30 at Man-del hall and we can talk sensibly. Pan.Hamlet & Ophelia: Now gods, stand upfor bastards. Edgar.Little Girl: How about that? Old Man.Offers accepted for one beat, mean, dis-illusionde old roommate. Housebroken,safe with children. Club 5 boys (2).Ophelia: ’Twas a long day’s Journey intonight. Hamlet.Dr.: To quote a famous friend—“It’sfantastic!”—Gmelichs that is. j.Cachito: Te extrano. India.1411 E. 53rd For saleRoyal portable in excellent condition.HY 3-2780, rm. 133.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236Wanted2 bedroom furnished apt. wanted by Ride wanted—Dec. 17 or 18 to Wash.DC. or vicinity. Share driving andcosts. Bob Hauser, Salisbury 811.Viva el amor!!!Dec. 15 or Jan. 1st on. FA 4-8200, ext. Hamlet, old man, it’s O.K., we love638—weekdays 7-9 pm, Sat. 9-12am. you. j. & p.a □□ Q all the Free Press books-THE GREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 East 57th HY 3-5829Chicago's most complete'Stockof quality paper bocks FA 4-5525 —HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & GalleryPresents Something NewITALIAN FIESTA DINNERSFeatured• Shrimp • Roast Beef • Fried ChickenPlus our popular Hors d'oeuvre tableMon., Wed. & Thurs. Nights OnlyHors d'oeuvre table 7 nightsx^4 ExecutiveWomen of There is an excitingfuture for you as anOfficer in the U. S.Air ForceIf you are a woman who responds to a challenging job...who enjoysstimulating world-wide travel...who finds fun in association withyoung, imaginative people...you should investigate your opportu¬nities as a WAF officer. Women in the Air Force work side-by-sidewith male Air Force officers, receive the same pay and privileges,have equal chance for assignment and advancement. Investigatevour chances for a commission in the United States Air Force.WAF WOMEN IN THE AIR FORCEWAF Information, Dept. W 9Box 7608, Washington 4, D. C.se send me more information on my opportunities for a commission in the U.S. Aire. I am a U. S. citi/en between 20VJ and 27*i jears of age, ha\c a baccalaureate degreei an accredited college or university, am unmarried and without dependents.me —tvCollege. -Degree- Subject-December 4, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • >11£ ,111 Schedule job interviews ing eyeThe following organizations will conduct recruiting interviewsat the Office of Vocational Guidance and Placement during theweek of December 7. Interview appointments may be arrangedthrough Lowell Calvin, room 200, Reynolds club. Friday, 4 DecemberDecember 7—Operations Evaluation group of Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology, Washington, DC, will interview SM and PhDcandidates in chemistry, mathematics, physics, and sta¬tistics.December 8 —Lincoln laboratory of Massachusetts Institute of Technol¬ogy, Lexington, Massachusetts, will interview prospectiveSM and PhD graduates in mathematics, physics, and chem¬istry (physical only). Will also speak with advanced degreerecipients in other disciplines for summer employment.December 8 ■ —Central Intelligence agency, Washington, DC, will speakwith SM and PhD candidates in physicsa nd advanced degreecandidates in library science, international relations, politi¬cal science, geography (with interest other than Westernhemisphere) and language specialists (Eastern Europe,Orient, Southeast Asia exclusive of India). Will also inter¬view PhD candidates in astronomy and biophysics. Matins with sermon according to theLutheran use, 11:30 am, Bond chapel.Jazz club meeting, 2 pm, Ida Noyeslibrary.Varsity swimming meet. 3:30 pm. Bart¬lett gymnasium. UC "B" team vs.Crane junior college.Undergraduate math club meeting, 3:30pm, Eckhart 206. Brief organizationmeeting to plan future activities.Mathematical biology meeting, 4:30 pm,5741 Drexel avenue. “Mathematicalstudies of the interaction of respira¬tory gases with whole blood." S. R.Bernard, graduate student.Motion picture series: “The Germanfilm," 7:15 and 9:15 pm, Social Sci¬ence 122. “Murders among us."Lecture series: “Works of the mind,8 pm, 64 E. Lake street. “Plato’s‘Meno,’ ” George Anastaple, lecturerin the liberal arts.University symphony orchestra concert,8:30 pm, Mandel hall. Academic Fes¬tival overture, Brahms; Symphonynumber 5. Tchaikovsky; NobilissimaVisione, Hindemith.Sunday, 6 DecemberDecember 9—Aveo Research and Advanced Development division, Wil¬mington, Massachusetts, will interview physicists at allacademic levels, and SM and PhD candidates in mathe¬matics and chemistry (physical only). Will also speak withadvanced degree recipients in above disciplines for summeremployment.December 10—Kroger company, Chicago, Illinois, will interview for Com¬pany’s Store Management program leading to opportunitiesin merchandising and general management. Radio broadcast: “Faith of our fathers.”8:30 am, WGN. The Reverend KyleHaseldon, minister, the Baptist tem¬ple, Charleston, West Virginia.Roman Catholic masses. 8:30. 10. and 11am, De Sales house, 5735 Universityavenue.Episcopal communion service, 9:30 am.Bond chapel.Sick study circle religious service, 10am. 829 E. 60th street.Lutheran communion service, 10 am,Hilton chapel.University religious service, 11 am,Rockefeller chapel. The ReverendSchubert Ogden, assistant professor,Perkins school of theology, SouthernMethodist university.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel. James R. Lawson, chapelenrillonneur.Musical society meeting. 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes east lounge. Informal concertand meeting.Inter-religious fellowship, 7:30 pm, 1314LUCKY STRIKE presents\DR. FROOO’SMORAL OF THE MONTH:Make the most of your collegedays. (The nights wiff probablyhaunt you the rest of your life.)Dear Dr. Frood: Is it all right to studywith the TV on? DistractedDear Distracted: Better not. You mightmiss some of the story.Dear Dr. Frood: The Dean is trying toforce me to go to classes. I think this isunfair because last season I scored 16touchdowns, intercepted 18 passes andkicked 22 field goals in 23 attempts.What should I do? Letter ManDear Letter Man: I fail to see how goingto classes will help. Better practice yourkicking.tO*Dear Dr. Frood: I am a very plain girland 1 don't have much personality. All1 want is a man who will love me. Whycan t 1 find one?SadDear Sad: You’re too particular. Field-goal expertkicks about classes(See below)Dear Dr. Frood: I want to get married,but I don't like children. What shallI do?SurlyDear Surly: Marry an adult.Dear Dr. Frood: My husband teaches ata girl’s college. I know it's silly, but sinceI’m middle-aged and stout, I am veryjealous and worry all the time. Whatshould Ido?Plump, TiredDear Plump, Tired: Keep worrying. Dear Dr. Frood: How can T keep peoplefrom borrowing my Luckies?PesteredDear Pestered: Put them in a Brand Xpack.DR. FROOD ON HOWTO BE A BEATNIKI've drawn up instructions forbecoming a Beatnik: Let yourhair grow until your hearing isnoticeably impaired. Whenbeard covers your tie, discardtie. Hang your shoes and socksin effigy. Sell your sink forscrap. Stock your room withcigarettes—because you won'tbe allowed on the street anymore. (Better make ’em Luckiesand enjoy your isolation!)COLLEGE STUDENTS SMOKEMORE LUCKIES THANANY OTHER REGULAR!When it comes to choosing their regular smoke,college students head right for fine tobacco.Result: Lucky Strike tops every other regularsold. Lucky’s taste boats all the rest becauseL.S./M.F.T.—Lucky Strike means fine tobacco.TOBACCO AND TASTE TOO FINE TO FILTER!©*■ r.cei Product of cf^onyutny — (Jurfxxexo is our middle name10 • CHICAGO MAROON • December 4, 1959 E. 54th street. Discussion of “Suffer¬ing.”Bridge club meeting, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyeshall. Duplicate bridge will be played.Radio broadcast: "The sacred note,”8:15 pm, WBBM. Program of Choralmusic by the UC choir.Monday, 7 DecemberArt exhibition: Contemporary art foryoung collectors, 10 am-5 pm, Mon-day-Friday; 1-5 pm, Saturday andSunday, through December 16, Good-speed 108.Louis Block fund lecture (Botany club)4:30 pm. Old Botany 106. "Mineralcomposition of plants in relation togrowth,” Albert Ulrich, professor, de¬partment of plant physiology. Univer¬sity of California.Motion picture, 7 and 9 pm, Interna¬tional house. “Solid Gold Cadillac."Tuesday, 8 DecemberMatins with sermon according to theLutheran use. 11:30 am. Bond chapel.Meeting of the council of the universitysenate, 3:40 pm, Law South.Senior mathematics club meeting, 4:30pm, Eckhart 206. "The classical groupsof algebraic topology.” Michael Atl-yah, assistant lecturer of mathe¬matics, Institute for advanced studyand Cambridge university.Varsity basketball games, 6:15 and 8pm, Field house. UC "B“ team vs. St.Procopius “B” team.Student peace union and politics clublecture, 7:30 pm, Soc-Sclence 122.“What price peace,” Milton Mayer,author and former lecturer at Uni¬versity College.Hillel foundation annual mid-wintercolloquy, 7:30 pm, Hillel house, 5715Woodlawn avenue. "The latke and/orthe hammantash: Are they fit tosurvive?” Sol Tax, professor of an¬thropology, moderator.Inter Varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30pm. Ida Noyes library. Biblically ori¬ented discussion on prayer followedby an Informal coffee hour.Lexington studio, 7:30 pm. Lexingtonstudio. Sketch class, live model. Stu¬dents please bring own drawing mate¬rials. Instruction will be given; dona¬tion 50 cents. Glee club rehearsal. 8 pm, Ida Noveseast lounge. Rehearsal singers wel¬come.Television series: “All things consid¬ered,’i 8:30 pm. WTTW (channel 11,"The workings of the Christian Sci¬ence Monitor,” Erwin Canham edi¬tor-in-chief, Christian Science Moni¬tor, and Milburn Akers, managingeditor, Chicago Sun-Times.Wednesday, 9 DecemberDivinity school religious service, n 30am. Bond chapel.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm. Rockefellerchapel, James R. Lawson, chapel carll-lonneur.Episcopal evensong. 5:05 pm Bondchapel.W9YWQ meeting, 7 pm. Reynolds clubthird floor. Meeting of UC amateurradio club. Code practice, etc.Country dancers. 8 pm, Ida Noyes hall.All dances taught.Illustrated lecture, 8:30 pm. Breastedhall of the Oriental Institute. “Han-sanlu, a Mannean fortress of the 9thcentury B.C.,” Robert H. Dyson, Jr.,assistant curator, near eastern sec¬tion, University museum, and asso¬ciate, department of anthropology.University of Pennsylvania.Thursday, 10 DecemberEpiscopal church council holy com¬munion, 11:30 am, Bond chapelInter Varsity Christian fellowship, 12:30pm. Swift 202. Prayer meeting.Student union wassail party, 3:30 pm.Ida Noyes hall.Episcopal church council choir prac¬tice, 8 pm, Brent house.Television series: News Perspectives.10 pm. WTTW (channel 11). "Aboutimmunity," WlUtam Burros, profes¬sor, department of microbiology,Friday, 11 DecemberIndustrial Relations center researchseminar, 9 am, Mott building.The eucharist according to the Luth¬eran use, 11:30 am. Bond chapel.Jazz club meeting, 2 pm, Ida Noyeslibrary.Organization of Arab students meet¬ing, 3:30 pm, Rosen wald 2. FayezSayegll will speak on "The Arabs luthe East and West.”Department of geography colloquium,4 pm, Rosen wald 41. “The spaceeconomy,” Walter Isard, departmentof regional science, University ofPennsylvania.Mathematical biology meeting, 4:30 pm.5741 Drexel avenue “Cell populationtheory.” Daniel Oldfield, physicist,Argonne cancer research hospital.University concert, 8:30 pm, Mandelhall. Quartet music by Haydn, Mall-plere, and Schubert. Quartette Car-mlrelli.i 1Those who would wish to gifta gentleman with a fashion*able and practical garmentwill wisely purchase thishandsomely knit vest whichenjoys the forefront of fashion.tO00I Brittang,I ltd.7104 South JefferyPLaxa 2-4030Open Mon. and Thurs. Eves.Free Parking st Cyril ConstGarage, 1948 E. 71st PI.★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★it iAnnounce schedule for quarterly examsThe office of the dean ofstudents has announced thefollowing schedule of quarter¬ly examinations for this quar¬ter. Although some sched¬uling for examination hall bylast name may be announcedlater, the list below is official.Anthropology 110- Wednesday,December 16, 1:30-3:30 pm, Walk¬er seminar room.Art: Art 195—Friday, December15, 8-10 am, Goodspeed hall 101;Art 209 Wednesday, December16. 1:30-3:30 pm, Goodspeed 101;_A,-t 220 Wednesday, December16, 10:30-12:30, Classics 10; Art221 Wednesday, December 16,4 6 pm, Goodspeed 101; Art 260 —Friday, December 18, 10:30-12:30,Classics 10.Biology: Biology 111 —Wednes¬day, December 16, 10:30-12:30,Mandel hall. Laboratory examswill be given December 17 athours signed up for by individualstudents. Biology 113, section 61,Wednesday, December 16, 1:30-3:30 pm, Natural sciences labora¬tory 6; Biology 113, section 71 —Moday, December 14, 1:30-3:30pm. Natural sciences laboratory6; Biology 201—Friday, December18, 9:30-10:30 am. Botany 106. Lab¬oratory exams will be giv^n De¬cember 17 at hours signed up forby individual students.Botany 250 Thursday, Decem¬ber 17, 4-6 pm, Botany 205.Chemistry: Chemistry 105 —Wednesday, December 16, 8-10am, Kent 107, and Rosenwald 2;Chemistry 220 — Thursday, De¬cember 17, 1:30-3:30, Kent 103;Chemistry 223 — Wednesday, De¬cember 16, 8-10 am, Kent 103;Chemistry 240 (241) Wednesday,December 16, 10:30-12:30, Kent107; Chemistry 261—Friday, De¬cember 18, 9-10 am, Kent 103.Chinese 217 — Wednesday, De¬cember 16, 1:30-2:30 pm, Orientalinstitute 210.Chinese civilization — Wednes¬day, December 16, 1:30-2:30 pm,Classics 10.Education 201- Friday, Decem¬ber 18, 8-10 am, Judd 110, Judd111.English: English 101, Monday,December 14, 9:30-12:30, Kent 107,Rosenwald 2; English 105—Mon¬day, December 14, 9:30-12:30, Judd126, Cobb 110; English 208 — Fri¬day, December 18, 10:30-12 *9,Wieboldt 203; English 230 — Tues-day, December 15, 10:30-12:30,Classics 18; English 243 — Friday,December 18, 8-10 am, Wieboldt203; English 259 —- Wednesday,December 16, 1:30-3:30 pm, Clas¬sics 11; English 266- Wednesday,December 16, 10:30-12:30, Wie¬boldt 102; English 275—Thursday,December 17, 1:30-3:30, Wieboldt202; English 287 — Monday, De¬cember 14,1:30-3:30, Classics 11. French: French 101 —Tuesday,December 15, 8-10. am, Cobb 110,Judd 126; French 102 — Wednes¬day, December 16, 8-10 am, Cobb415; French 201 — Tuesday, De¬cember 15, 8-10 am, Cobb 406,Cobb 407; French 204 — Wednes¬day, December 16, 4-6 pm, Cobb102; French 207—Wednesday, De¬cember 16, 8-10 am, Wieboldt 102;French 210 — Friday, December18, 8-10 am, Wieboldt 102; French212 — Wednesday, December 16,1:30-3:30 pm, Wiebolda 402;French 245 — Friday, December18, 10:30-12:30, Wieboldt 102;French 279 — Monday, December14, 1:30-3:30 pm, Wieboldt 402.Geography: Geography 201 —Thursday, December 17, 8-10 am,Rosenwald 28; Geography 207 —Wednesday, December 15, 11:30-12:30, Rosenwald 28; Geography247 — Friday, December 18, 10:30-12:30, Rosenwald 28; Geography257 — Friday, December 18, 8-10am, Rosenwald 28.German: German 101 — Tues¬day, December 15, 8-10 am, Kent107, Classics 10; German 234 —Wednesday, December 16, 10:30-12:30, Wieboldt 203.Greek 101 — Friday, December18, 8-10 am, Cobb 415.History: History 131—Tuesday,December 15, 1:30-3:30 pm, Man-del hall; History 211 — Wednes¬day, December 16, 10:30-12:30 am,Classics 11; History 231 — Friday,December 18, 10:30-12:30, SocialSciences 305; History 271 — Mon¬day, December 14, 8:30-10:30 am,Classics 10.History of culture 200 Wednes¬day, December 16, 4 6 pm, Wie¬boldt 202.Humanities: Humanities 111 —Monday, December 14, 4-6 pm,Mandel hall, Cobb 110; Humani¬ties 121 — Thursday, December17, 10:30-12 noon, Mandel hall;Humanities 201 — Tuesday, De¬cember 15, 10:30-12:30, Rosenwald2, Classics 10; Humanities 211 —Thursday, December 17, 10:30-hyde park's first cafeH espressoPURCHASE a NEW Car*VOLKSWAGEN SIMCAMERCEDES RENAULTHILLMAN PORSCHE’with Repurchase Plan available... or bring it home with you.The pleasant, economical way totravel in Europe. We make all ar¬rangements for the Plan you prefer.Write for full detailsRound Trip Steamer $400 upRound Trip Air $408.60 upChoice of Over 100Student Class Tours tlVATravel Study Tours OfrConducted Tours “pSee your local travel agent torfolders and details or write us.UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mass. THEDISCRIMINATINGMANthinks of Sun Life ofCanada when he thinks oflife insurance because heknows that the Sun Life isone of the world’s greatlife insurance companiesand that its up-to-datepolicy plans are backed by89 years of experience inthe public service.Representative1 represent the Sim Life As¬surance Company of Canada.Our modern plans can betailored to fit your own in¬dividual needs. May 1 dis¬cuss some of these plans withyou? There is no obligation, -of course.SUN LIFE OF CANADARalph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LoSolleFR 2-2390 Chicago, III.• FA 4-6800 12:30, Cobb 409; Humanities 221— Friday, December 18, 10:30-12:30, Cobb 407.Ideas and methods 201 — Mon¬day, December 14, 1:30-3:30, Swift204.Indian civilization — Monday,December 14, 1:30-3:30, Classics10.Islamic civilization — Wednes¬day, December 16, 10:30-12:30,Cobb 103.Italian: Italian 101 — Tuesday,DeceYnber 15, 8-10, Cobb 107; Ital¬ian 201 — Wednesday, December16, 10:30-12:30, Cobb 416..Latin: Latin 101 — Friday, De¬cember 18. 10:30-12:30, Cobb 415;Latin 204 — Wednesday, Decem¬ber 16, 10:30-12:30, Classics 34.Linguistics 221 — Wednesday,December 16, 8-10 am, Classics411.Mathematics: Math 101 —Tues¬day, December 15, 4-6 pm, Kent107, Law north, Law south; Math102 — Friday, December 18, 10:30-12:30, Cobb 305; Math 150 — Tues¬day, December 15, 4-6 pm, Cobb110, Classics 10; Math 151—Tues¬day, December 15, 4 6 pm, Rosen¬wald 2, Eckhart 133, Eckhart 312;Math 153 — Wednesday, Decem¬ber 16, 7:30-9:30, Eckhart 308.Microbiology 221 — Thursday,December 17, 10:30-12:30, Ricketslaboratory, north 1.Music: Music 151 — Friday, De¬ cember 18, 10:30-12:30, Music 201;Music 201 — Wednesday, Decem¬ber 16, 1:30-3:30 pm, Music 101;Music 221 — Friday, December 18,8-10 am, Music 101; Music 223 —Thursday, December 17, 1:30-3:30pm, Music 201.Philosophy: Philosophy 200 —Monday, December 14, 4-6 pm,Judd 126; Philosophy 203—Thurs¬day, December 17, 10:30-12:30,Classics 17; Philosophy 204 — Fri¬day, December 18, 10:30-12:30,Cobb 101; Philosophy 231 —Wednesday, December 16, 8-10am. Social spiences 302.Physical sciences: Physical sci¬ences 105 — Thursday, December17, 12:45-3:30, Rosenwald 2, Eck¬hart 133; Physical sciences 201 —Tuesday, December 15, 1:30-3:30,Cobb 102.Physics: Physics 111 — Tues¬day, December 15, 10:30-12:30,Eckhart 133; Physics 121 —Wednesday, December 16, 1:30-3:30, Eckhart 133; Physics 131 —Friday, December 18, 8-10 am,Eckhart 133; Physics 201 —Wednesday, December 16. 8-10 am,Eckhart 202; Physics 215—Friday,December 18, 10:30-12:30, Eckhart133; Physics 225 — Monday, De¬cember 14, 9:30-12:30, Law south;Physics 235 — Friday, December18, 8-11 am, Cobb 110.Political science 255 — Thurs¬day, December 17, 10:30-12:30, So¬cial science 108. Psychology 211 — Friday, De¬cember 18, 10:30-12:30, Abbott 133.Russian: Russian 101 — Tues¬day, December 15, 8-10 am, Rosen¬wald 2; Russian 281 — Wednes¬day, December 16, 4-6 pm, Classics16; Russian 284 — Wednesday,December 16, 4-6 pm, Cobb 103;Russian 287 — Wednesday, De¬cember 16, 1:30-3:30, Classics 20.Social sciences: Social sciences021 — Thursday, December 17,8-10 am, Mandel hall; Social sci¬ences 031 — Thursday, December17, 4-6 pm, Kent 107, Cobb 110;Social sciences 111 — Tuesday,December 15, 1:30-3:30, Rosen¬wald 2, Kent 107; Social sciences115 — Tuesday, December 15,1:30-3:30, Eckhart 133; Social sci¬ences 250 — Friday, December 18,8-10 am, Cobb 107.Sociology 210 — Thursday, De¬cember 17", 8-10 am. Classics 18.Spanish: Spanish 101 — Tues¬day, December 15, 8-10 am, Swift106; Spanish 201 — Wednesday,December 16, 1:30-3:30 pm, Cobb416.Zoology: Zoology 207 Wednes¬day, December 16, 1:30-3:30, Zool¬ogy 14; Zoology 240 — Friday,December 18, 8:30-10:30 am, Whit¬man laboratories 201.For undergraduate coursesnot listed above, students willconsult their instructors.A Campus-to-Career Case Historyopen daily till 1open weekends till 21369 East 57th Street- —* ^Mark Dollard (center) discusses an impending customer service problem with two of his supervisors.There’s a message for youin Mark Dollard’s progress storyMark C. Dollard earned his B.A. degreein English from \ale University in June,1955. He joined the New York TelephoneCompany the following July 18th. Threeand a half years later, he became a Dis¬trict Manager for the company in NewYork City —with a staff of 87 people re¬porting to him and responsibility for49.000 customer accounts.Mark’s choice of a telephone career cameafter numerous job interviews in a varietyof business fields. “What sold me,” hesays, “was the telephone company’s repu¬tation for solid managerial training, sta¬bility and growth. And I was impressedby the high caliber of people 1 met duringmy visit to the company.”And those are the things to which Markcredits his rapid advancement. His train¬ing during his first two years covered awide range of activities . .. including thehandling of customer contacts in thebusiness office, selling communications services to businessmen and supervising a^business office.“It was the company's vigorous growththat created the opportunity for me to be¬come District Manager iri January, 1959,”Mark points out.“What I like most about my present posi¬tion is the variety of managerial responsi¬bilities I have,” he says. “It’s interesting,stimulating work. I deal with sales andmarketing programs, handle personnelproblems and make a lot of public rela¬tions contacts.”* * *The message for you? Stability, growth,systematic training and genuine advance¬ment opportunities all add up to rewardingcareers with the Bell Telephone Companies.Be sure to look into the opportunities foryou. Talk with the Bell interviewer whenhe visits your campus — and read the BellTelephone booklet on file in your Place¬ment Office. You'll like what vou learn.BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESDecember 4, 1959 • CHICAGO MARO 0 N • t:«SportsSwimmers win first meetCoach Bill Moyle’s swimmingteam inaugurated its ’59 'GO sea¬son Tuesday with a 60-34 thrash¬ing of Wright Junior college. Inthis meet Coach Moyle withdrewhis top swimmers in order to giveexperience to some of his new¬comers.Barnett Weiss was the top scor¬ing Maroon performer, as hegarnered two individual firstsand also swam on a winning med¬ley team. Other UC swimmerswho performed in the meet wereSteve Colburn, Len Frazer, PhilHellmuth, Paul Hoffer, and BillZimmerman. Coach Moyle indi¬cated that he was very pleasedwith the outcome and that a simi¬lar lineup would face Crane Jun¬ior college at Bartlett tonight.He also pointed out that only10 lettermen are returning fromlast year's fine team which posteda splendid 9-2-1 record againstBig Ten and other rugged compe¬tition. Because of this lack ofdepth, the Maroons will havetrouble matching the powerfulBig Ten aggregates this year.“Last season, which was the bestin UC history, we could handlethe Big Ten Teams,” said Moyle.“But this time around, our inex¬perience may hurt us, though wewill still give them all they cancope with.”Wrestlers will open seasonat KnoxThe varsity wrestlers will opentheir ’59- 60 season with the KnoxGifts for All OccasionsKOGA GIFT SHOPQuality and ServiceIs Our 1HottaImported and Domestic Dry GoodsChinaware - Jewelry - KimonosSandals - Greeting CardsUlisa Kogn 1203 F. 55 St.Ml 4-6856 Chicago 15, III. Invitational, December 12. Wres¬tle-offs for the eight berths onthe squad traveling to Knox willbe concluded early next week andCoach Paul D. Bengston has is¬sued a challenge to any collegestudent to test his varsity chargesin actual combat.“The battle for the 157-lb. slotwill be the most exciting,” re¬ports Bengston. Scrappers PhilMetzger and John Merskin willgrapple for this slot along withCaptain Warren Pollans, andheavyweight Bob Sonnenberg,who must still defeat freshmanJerry Bathke to insure his posi¬tion.Four intramural teams getin finalsFour teams remain in the finalsof the pre-Christmas basketballtournament, with another quar¬tet of teams vieing for the con¬solation championship. The Mud-ders, Kingfishers, Unknowns, andHitchcock still remain in the win¬ners’ bracket, while Dodd, Inter¬national house, East II, and PsiUpsilpn B remain in the consola¬tion bracket. The finals will beMonday at the Field house.In the race for the all-Univer-sity athletic championship, PsiUpsilon and East II lead theirrespective leagues. P o i n t s areawarded for entry, participation,and place of finish.Fraternnity League: 1. Psi Up¬silon 393’2, 2. Delta Upsilon, 268,3. Phi Delta Theta, 261, 4. PhiKappa Psi 238, 5. Zeta Beta Tau218, 6. Beta Theta Pi 192*4, 7. PhiGamma Delta 187, 8. Phi SigmaDelta 85; House League: 1. EastII, 365, 2. Vincent 261, 3. East IV220, 4. Mead 205, 5. Dodd 20014,6. Salisbury 200, 7. East III 19114,8. Chamberlin 178, 9. Foster 101,10. East I 47.Women's athleticsThe Women’s Athletic Associa¬tion (WAA) announced today thewinners of the interdorm volley¬ball and tennis tournaments, thewinners of the interdorm swim¬ming marathon, UC’s intercollegi¬ate record in volleyball, and some plans for the basketball team. Thetournaments are organized on aninterfloor basis except for Green,Beecher and Kelly, which com¬pete by houses.In the volleyball tournamentFourth floor West and SecondNorth won first and secondplaces, with 4-0 and 3-1 records, respectively, and Second Westand Third North tied for thirdplace, each with a 2-2 record. Ineight games since October thevarsity volleyball team has a rec¬ord of 3 wins, 4 defeats, and onetie. On October 31, UC lost twoout of three games to St. Xavierat UC. BBSS UE&BBIH0BBEBB BBSBOQBEQEMH BESSBOHBBBOl/j^! IBson ElL-3sogmBgglOBH caeca00EEC30 BlzjuEEO HEOBBBBBEG3HH mHIlDBfflSBBBBS □EBB EBOCDimi-ViU3MSNV TODMMaroons best Lawrenceby Bill SpadyChicago’s varsity basketballteam opened its 1959-60 sea¬son with a hair raising 59-57victory over a scrappy and ag¬gressive Lawrence college fiveat the Field house Tuesdaynight. Seven lettermen and fivefreshmen saw action for CoachJoe Stampf’s Maroons, while thevisiting Vikings played only 8men.The lead changed several timesduring the first 10 minutes of thegame with both squads shootingwell from both the field and thefoul line. Chicago stalwart GaryPearson broke a 23-23 deadlockwith a pair of free throws, and theMaroons rolled to a 37-31 half timelead on the strength of Jerry To-ren’s driving lav-ins and thesquad’s superior rebounding anddefense.The hosts collected 14 fieldgoals in 34 attempts and tallied 9out of 10 free throws in the firsthalf; while Lawrence hit 11 of 27field goal attempts and 9 of 11free throw chances. Toren canned5 baskets and 2 of 3 charity tosses,and Pearson hit 3 floor shots and3 for 3 at the foul stripe to carrythe Maroons’ offensive load inthe first 20 minutes of play. Law¬rence’s fireball guard ChuckKnocke and center Jim Rasmus¬sen totaled 11 and 9 first halfpoints respectively.As a team the Maroons werewhistled down 15 times, whileLawrence committed 17 fouls. Thewinners shot .386 from the field,22 for 57, and .652 from the char¬ ity stripe, 15 for 23. Lawrenceshot .379 from the floor, 22 for 58,and .722 from the line, 13 for 18.Chicago cleared 44 rebounds withPearson getting 14, Ericson 7,and Woods 6.Chicago’s offensive machineoperated sporadically during thesecond half, and the Lawrencefull-court press kept intense pres¬sure on the Maroon guards. TheChicago lead dwindled to 40-38 until a basket and a pair of freethrows by Toren temporarilysparked the offense. Knocke, Ras¬mussen, and forward Jim Jordanhit consistently for the visitors,and only a pair of baskets by 6'7*freshman Gene Erickson and sin¬gle free throws by Joel Zemansand sophomore transfer FredPaulsell kept the hosts’ offensemoving.KQDL KROSSWORD No. 10ACROSS1. Kind ofnecessities6, Birds inBernstein (var.)9. There’s one forevery he12. What you areto Pop untilyou work14. Wow’s firstnameifi. The bad guy inWesterns16. English drinkl'i. Angry kind ofland18. They’re crossedby duelpersonalities20. Affected smile23. Tears for grasswidows?24. Needlers25. Bats backward27. Tiny socialist28. Suburban29. The doohickeyon type like this32. Whose limbs arefor the birds33. Places (Latin)34. Belonging to9 Across35. emptor37. Kind of cry39. Yes from aWave40. Make the nextone a Kool45. Start in service46. With Kools,you’re moreall day long47. It’s for Art’ssake48. Latin versionof 5 Down49. What chicksgrow up to be DOWN1. Springsville2. It's “perlite”to do this whenyou cut in3. This wa3 thething in Roma4. A state orbuilding5. To be (French)6. A kind of creek7. Gives inwithout a word8. White rain? „9. Where inflationpays off10. What alibis andcarafes shoulddo11. Members of theLambs Club?13. Makes likecoffee19. Olive drabs,briefly20. Most of a spasm21. It plantsbombs at sea22. Not the life-of-the-party type26. Subjects ofPop’s lecture30. Willie’s pad31. Kind of Frenchcarriage32. Beat the wheat35. House in Spain36. Old school items37. Bill O’s lastname38. yousmoking Kools?41. Girls’ FriendlySociety (abbr.)42. Article43. Half a packof KooUEdgar, Edwin;Edward 1 9 10 1 11 14■ 1 619■ 23 mI25 2628|321 3442 43 44LL44 When yaur throat tells j §you its time for a changeyou needa real change...YOU NEED THE.JAeiitJic£J\J\ao&OF kgdl^• 1959, Brown J. WUtUmjoa Tobtcco Corp. t (photo by Berger)Gus Pearson, number 52, gets set to grab rebound forChicago.Universal Army StoreHeadquarters for sport and work wearFlap pocket wash fir wear ivy league trousers — Wash fir wear dressshirts — camping equip. — Complete line of keds footwear — trenchcoats — luggage and trunks.1144 East 55th st. DO 3-957210 % reduction with this coupon _____HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and Waffles 1342Open from Dawn to Dawn east 53 st.**!%>-'* SAVE ONAIRLINE TICKETSFly Non-stop in New DC-6-BPressurized Comforton Scheduled Supplemental AirlinesOne WayChicago to New York $28.60Chicago to Los Angeles $74.25(Tax Included)Apply to Travel Desk in lobby ofHOTEL DEL PRADO53rd St. & Hyde Pork Bird.Chicago 15, III.Phone HYde Perk 3-960012 • CHICAGO MAROON • December 4, 1959► Studio encourages artistsby Dorothy DorfHe rapidly charcoaled in acubic drawing of the the hu¬man figure and turning to thewatching class, began to showthem how the body moves."You have to begin determin¬ing the movements and dimen¬sions of the parts relative to eachother,” said D. Wurtzel, talkingto his Tuesday night Lexingtonstudio sketch class. Turning fromhis sketch to the model, he con¬tinued, ‘‘Imagine the model as acomposition of rectangular planes.And then when you begin to drawon the two dimensional paper youwill have in mind the idea thatthe model is composed of solidshapes.”“Now drawing itself is a cre¬ation of space. Once you createthe space you create the modelherself,” pointed out Wurtzel, re¬ferring to the relation of themodel to the area around her.He remarked that just as themodel can be looked at as a com¬position of geometric shapes, sotoo, she turns the air directlyaround her into forms. As an ex¬ample the bend of the model'sarm turns the empty space be¬tween the crook of her elbow andher side into a triangle.“Life study drawing is alwaysan analvsis and a craft. And drawing is a craft. What we dohere,” said Wurtzel, turning to theclass busy sketching a pose themodel had just taken, "is learn acraft, and the stricter a disciplinedrawing is, the better. For draw¬ing is not an art, but a prepara¬tion for creating a work of art. Apainter has to learn to draw justas he must learn about color andthe use of oils. Once he has ac¬quired these skills he can beginto make a work of art,” saidWurtzel.On Tuesday evenings, from 7:30to 10, Lexington studio holds afigure drawing class. Approxi¬mately 25 30 people attend each week and models are suppliedthrough the Art institute."Last year this class did nothave any instruction. The teacherwas really a monitor who ar¬ranged for the models and collect¬ed the fifty cent fee,” remarkedWurtzel. "But since the begin¬ning of this year I have offeredindividual help, and whenever Ifeel I have something special tosay I give a short lecture."We have about fifty steadymembers and some twenty-fivecome each week. They are aboutevenly divided between Universitystudents and Hyde Park resi¬dents,’ he added.Schedule Wassail PartyStudent Union will present the annual Wassail party on Dec.10 in Ida Noyes hall, according to Dave Emin, chairman of theevent for this year. Hot wassail will flow from 3 to 5 p.m. inthe lounge and library, served by campus is invited to join in theten young ladies from West and festivitiesNorth houses. The student Union a]so w}shesMusical entertainment will be to announce that it is going toprovided by various organizations publish a Student Activities Cal-on and near the campus, together endar for the Winter Quarter onwith the singing of carols. The or about the fifteenth of Janu-Christmas tree will be lighted by ary. We urge all organizationsMrs. Lawrence A. Kimpton at on campus to submit any plansabout 4 pm. One of the featured they may have for events duringorganizations will be the Society Winter quarter, and to get themof Bell-Ringers with Christmas in during the first week of Janu-music on handbells. Everyone on ary. A member of the art class sketches her impression of themodel. (photo by Malone)GLADIS restaurant1527 E. 55th DO 3-9788We Specialize in Well-Bolanced Meals atPopular Prices, ond Midnite Snacks- ORDERS TO GOAuto InsuranceHome Owners InsurancePhone or writeJoseph H. Aaron, "275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986<Bicycle*, Ports, Accessories <special student offer •ACE CYCLE SHOP j1621 55,h «. j**«*«A*6iit***««iA****4, i TAhSAM-YfcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Dailytl A M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 iort 63rd St. BU 8-9018foreign car hospital I clinicSA 1-3161dealers in:castrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli & michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespecialists in: speed tuning #custom engine installationsclutchgear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachworkbob tester MG psychiatrist7215 exchange ave.Chicago 90,Illinois be firstin your classto JET HOMEin a hurry!You can be cavorting back home withNola (or whatever her name is) onyour next holiday while your stodgyclassmates are scarcely off the campuswhen you travel on United Air Lines'new DC-8 Jet Mainliners —built byDouglas, which makes big, comfort¬able airplanes like nobody. .United’s DC-8s are roomy enougheven for basketball players. And theloudest noise you’ll hear is the softsnoring of the guy in the next seat. Two lounges, yet, First Class or AirCoach, for pinochle, loafing or (perishforbid) reading. Two trim steward¬esses deftly serve truly Lucullian(i.e., terrific) meals.Just one thing: people are goingfor United’s DC-8 Jet Mainliner®service like crazy. So make reserva¬tions early and avoid being at the endof a line a block long. Call a travelagent or the United Air Lines ticketoffice that’s nearest to you.JET MAINLINER, BY DOUGLASEXTRA CARE HAS MADE IT THE BEST OF THE JETSDecember 4, 1959 • C H I C A G O M A R O O N • If,• •*\VvV. „\ ,,Praise production's colorby Vern Lisle' Time Will Tell, the Darwin musical presented last weekend in Mandel hall, representedan impossible idea that came extremely close to working. As such it didn’t miss by much.Proporting to tell the story of Darwin’s life, the show’s authors, Robert Ashenhurst andRobert Poliak, did well to forget their original intention. Darwin speaks in only three of theshow’s seven scenes, and participates on only four of the musical’s 22 numbers. This was fort¬unate, for Rick Riccardo, who played Darwin, sang as poorly as he acted; the few lines hehad were excruciating. 'The music and lyrics, a joint generally it slowed down a pro- Almost every word in the choralAshenhurt-Pollaek product, were duction which needed speed,excellent. They uniformly fit the A few clearly stood out. Thismood, tone and purpose of the jnciuded Win Stracke, making aShow. Especially memorable were brief appearance as the boatswain“Geologising,” "The meeting of of th<r h.M.S. Beagle, Jo Annethe British Association,” “The Ser- Sehlag, who aged gracefully andmon on Evolution.” and “Time acted with charm as Darwin’sWill Tell,” the title song of the wife, Emma Wedgewood. Carolproduction. Horning, one of the few VictorianThe settings, designed by Har- female principals wearing herold Haydon, were among the most own hair, was equally irrepres-imaginatiye in recent Mandel his- sible as Emma’s sister and as atory. Haydon caught a real Vic- member of the chorus. Alec Suth-torian flavor by the use of ab- erland, acting as a special repre-Stract design. The seven settings sentative of the authors, managedwere simultaneously functional to break up the entire audienceand complete. by merely walking across theThe many costumes needed for stage,the production were tastefully John Netherton, cast as an in-axecuted. and the scoring of the sufferably boring American peda-music, arranged for two pianos gogue was never boring himself;by Robert McMahan left little to rather his brief appearance was number came through clearly; thecredit for this going properly tomusical director Roland Bailey.Time Will Tell was a successfulproduction that could have stoodmore speed, more unity and a bet¬ter plot, but a production thatpleased in spite of its faults. Shown waiting for opening night curtain are Mrs. RobertAshenhurst, Mrs. Louis Crawford, and Mrs. Robert Farwell.All were members of the chorus.be desired. Hyde Park-Kenwood renewalprojects celebrate tenth yearby Mary FinkelTwo major neighborhood renewal projects have been activated during the ten-yearexistence of the Hyde Park-Ken wood community conference.The first of these, Hyde Park A and B, is basically a slum clearance effort. Made possi¬ble by the Federal Housing act, this project is under the auspices of the Chicago Landclearance commission. The commission buys up blighted property that has been approvedfor clearance, demolishes it, and sells it to private contractors for purposes of rebuilding.All the acquisition and most of ~the demolition in the area desig- Aside from the shopping center,one of the most successful bits ofthe evening. Finally, Robert G.Page, as the conceited and self-confident anti-Darwinian BishopSamuel Wilberforce, was a sheer nated “A .and B” has been accom- all other structures in the pro¬delight.All in all, the chorus was forcedto carry the weight of this show,and with a few exceptions whenover-acting was slightly galling, plished. The new shopping center jects are of a residential charac-at 55th and Lake Park is part ofthe project and is very near com¬pletion. The new Co op super¬market is located there, as arealso a bookstore and Lowe’s new ter. 250 town houses (row houses)and 540 apartments in two largehigh-rise buildings will complete renewal of partially dilapidatedindividual buildings, is the prin¬ciple employed in the urban re¬newal project.Covering the entire region be¬tween 47th and 63rd streets, Cot-the chorus carried its job off well, record store.Company closes Thieves'by Jeanne CrawfordShown above is WinStracke as he appeared inTime Will Tell.Ted Liss’ direction was not sohappy. A static quality permeatedthe entire show. In certain scenes,such as the Huxley-Wilberforeedebate, this static reserved tonewas used to great advantage, but the new Hyde Park A and B. Thus tage Grove and Lake Michigan,far eighteen of the town houses the urban renewal plans call for(fifteen on 54th street between acquisition of more than 600 build-Dorchoster and Blackstone, and ings, most of which are in near-three near 55th and Lake Park) slum condition. In the first stageare finished and occupied. The of the project, roughly designated,two high-rise buildings — Uni- 177 of the buildings will be ao-versity apartments on 55th street quired. Six have been bought al-“It’s over, our fine escapade,” lamented Lady Hurf in —are in the elementary stages ready, although the title has offi-Thieves’ Carnival. ‘‘Here we are alone again like bobbing of construction. daily cleared on only one of them,corks. It’s only for those who have played it w ith all the The Hyde Park-Kenwood urban the one which was razed Wednes-zest of youth flhat the comedy is a success, and only then renewal project, approved in city day.because they were playing their youth, a thing which sue- council December 7, 1958, encom- The Community conservationceeds always. They were not even conscious of the comedy.” PasseJ a n?ut?J greater scope than board has jurisdiction over theThe Company of the Four’s -— A and B, both m area and in the renewal program. The program iswill follow at the close of each fundamental concepts underlying being financed by a combinationperformance. The show, played the program. Not merely slum of federal, state, and local funds,in three-quarter round, will begin clearance, but Neighborhood eon- In addition to the financing ofat 8 pm tonight, tomorrow, and servation, which embodies numer- acquisition and demolition, fed-, See Russiain 1960Economy Student/Teacher summertours, American conducted, from $493.■ Rusfia by Motorcouch. 17-daysfrom Warsaw or Helsinki. Visit ruraltowns plus major cities.■ Diamond Grand Tour. Russia,Poland, Czechoslovakia, Scandinavia,Western Europe highlights.■ Collegiate Circle. Black SeaCruise, Russia, Poland, Czechoslo¬vakia, Scandinavia, Benelux, W. Europe.■ Eastern Europe Adventure. Firstlime available. Bulgaria, Roumania,Russia, Poland, Czechoslovakia, West¬ern Europe scenic route.■ See your Travel Agent or writeMaupintourf-400 Madison Ave., New York 17, N. Y. production of Jean Anoulih’s wit¬ty masquerade, Thieves’ Carnival,met success last weekend inWoolman hall of the First Uni¬tarian church. Responsive audi¬ences helped the cast of fifteen toperform its best.The play has two aspects: it isa lively, romantic farce and a seri¬ous work concerned with humanartificiality and disguise. It is ahilarious riddle, a w'itty satire onthe real and false, the empty andalive.The thieves, disguised as Span¬ish grandees, are invited to staywith a wealthy English familywhich has two young daughters. Sunday. For tickets, call FA 4- ous aspects ranging from diver- eral loans are available to private4100 or MI 3-4170. Tickets will sion of through traffic from resi- owners for the rehabilitation ofalso be sold at the door. dential streets to owner-financed their properties.Panel traces developmentof mind throughout agesby Tamer VergaThe evolution of mind the fourth panel of the Darwin centennial, tried to trace the evolu-All the characters except one tJon 0f mjn(j behavior, and the brain. Each of the members of the panel, which included a psy-rlon rrntAi’ o Brit* I zvx n va t/\/\ ’ ’ 4daughter and her lover, are toocaught up in their disguises tofeel any real emotion.Anoulis uses all the elementsof old-fashioned drama. Theorchestra-pit musician of the ageof melodrama is moved onto thestage and becomes a character.Disguises are often changed.Characters are always looking forsomeone who is not there. Lots ofcostumes and music dominate theset.A discussion and coffee hour choanalyst, an organic neurologist, three neurophysiologists (one of them a disciple of Pav¬lov), a cultural anthropologist, a historian of medicine, an experimental psychologist, azoologist, and a biologist.One of the difficulties in tracing the evolution of behavior was pointed out by N. Tinber¬gen, of Oxford university, theSHUBERT THEATRE22 W. MONROE CHICAGO • NOWNIGHTS (Exc. Sun.I 8:30 P.M • MATS. WED. & SAT 2 P MHOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS?Make them extra-special .. . seeMEREDITH WILLSON'S MaUcalJlitPr**rj*± su FORREST TUCKERJ|| * •>> I Entire Production Stated by |^ JV I UADTAII AH PA^Jfl jNONE SEATEDDURING FIRST SCENE Entire Production Staged1 MORTON DA COSTASEATS AT BOX OFFICE 0B BY MAILWith Remittance EncloseStamped Self-Addressed Envelop*PRICES (Inti. Tax): Mon. thru Thurt. Evot.Main Floor 5.50; Mezz. 5.50, 4.95; 1 st Bale.4.95, 4.40, 2nd Bale. 3.00, 2.50; Fri. and Sat.Eve*. Main Floor 6.60; Mezz. 6.60, 5.50; 1stBole. 5.50, 4.40, 2nd Bale. 3.50, 2.50; Wed.and Sat. Mat*. Main Floor 4.40; Mezz. 4.40,3.85; 1*t Bale. 3.50, 2.75; 2nd Bate. 2.20; NewYear** Eve Price*: Orch. 7.70; Mezz. 7.70,6.60; let Bale. 6 60, 5.50; 2nd Bale. 4.40. 3.50(Tax in<.) zoologist. He mentioned the dif¬ficulties in objectively interpret¬ing the behavior of lower ani¬mals, since such interpretationsare based mostly on the projec¬tions of our own feelings intosituations in which sub - humananimals are involved. In the inter¬pretation of very early life, asevidenced in fossils, where theinterpretations are based on mor¬phological considerations, thereis always the danger that the par¬ticular specimen in question mayhave had aberrations and is nottruly representative of its type.As far as human behavior isconcerned, another problemwhich has so far only inadequate¬ly been handled, the panel de¬ cided, is the locating of the pre-adaptative traces and bases ofman’s symbolic activity in earlierforms of life. A developmentbrought about by natural selec¬tion, such as human symbolicactivity, can only have takenplace due to pre-adaptative me¬chanisms in the earlier organismsfrom which man evolved.Sir Julian Huxley brought upthe case of the development ofbright colored display in certainanimals. He stated his belief that it is hard to distinguish in mostsuch cases whether an evolution¬ary development brought aboutby natural selection, such as abil¬ity to differentiate colors, actu¬ally preceded the adopting of col¬ors, or vice versa, or whetherthey were spontaneous and simul¬taneous.The next question brought upwas whether many human be¬havior patterns usually consid¬ered typically human are “notreally too typically human butthese developments must have are linked up with being social?”taken place as a result of the As with so many of these otherevolved capacity to distinguish epistomological questions, thecolor on the part of the animals panel gave no decisive answer.involved, but some of the otherpanel members pointed out thatglillllKillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllljlllltllllllllllllllllllllllligFifty-Seventh at Kenwood §mmi m UNUSUAL FOODDELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICESHiYiiiimittiiiiiHiiiiiitiiitmaiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiitmttmmiitiitiiiiHiHiiiHiiiittiiiHmtimttiiimiimimimitmit The panel discussed the ques¬tion of the preservation of cul¬tural experience on the part ofhumans, and pointed out thevalue of the contributions psy-1 chologists since Freud have made,S in their theories about collectiveS unconscious inheritance.Dr. N. J, DeFrancoOPTOMETRISTEyes examined Gla**e* fitted1138 I. 63 HY 3-5352CHICAGO MAROON • December 4, 1959Culture VultureAh! Christmas is in the air again. The streets are decorated with motheaten elves and gnomes; the department stores arefilled with things that nobody in his right mind should buy, but does; the Santa Clauses stand on corners and ring tinnybells trying to get people to donate their ill-gotten money to such worthwhile charities as the Preservation of worn-out man¬hole covers; and the strains of the Messiah float through the streets outside every school, church, and club in existence.Just for the record, there were seven or so performances of the Messiah last year, but this year we have come up with an evenbetter number. As far as I can make out, there are to be eight live performances that are definitely scheduled, five or six morethat might take place, and three that are to be broadcast on one radio station or another. At this rate, there will be sometwenty performances next year and in ten years or so, people will have to start celebrating Christmas on the Fourth of Julyin order to fit all the Messiahs in. This will upset all the department stores that have to cope with publicity for Hallowe'enand Thanksgiving and all excuses for sales in between. But thiowill upset the economy of the nation, and that would be un-American. The only thing to do is to set up a committee. Everyone wanting to do the Messiah will apply for permission, andtheir reasons for the performance will be carefully considered. All those organixations that have no right or reason to do theMessiah will be weeded out, and with luck, the starting time for performances will be moved up to Thanksgiving. This mightlead to unpleasantnesses committed by those who aren't allowed to warble that the people imagine a vain thing, but thesepersonal vendettas can be dealt with by another committee, and certainly committees are the most American thing in America.But until that time comes, the Messiahs will start next week and there must be some culture around to tide us over until then.ON CAMPUSLecturesLectures, of course, have noright at all to be in this particularpart of Culture Vulture. But thisparticular talk is of such particu¬lar and peculiarly overwhelmingimportance that it has to be men¬tioned first. (And besides, it’ssponsored by the Maroon andiherefore, the best thing to hitthis campus since the last issue ofsaid paper.) The lecture is enti¬tled, “Tarantara, the Nebbish inour society,” by Herb Gardner,creator of the Nebbishes, Taran¬tara, and also Framp. (In caseyou didn’t realize it, those are thesounds’*made by trumpets.) Andin case you don’t see the necessityfor trumpets, just think of thesocial import of such a lecture;consider the light it casts on thepresent day world; think howsuch a lecture, with all the fasci¬nating information it contains,can broaden your horizons. Think,and then go to the lecture. Afterall, it’s free and it will pass anafternoon pleasantly. What couldbe more delightful than sitting inMandel hall on a usually dullWednesday? What could be morerelaxing than sliding up and downin the Mandel seats and listeningto a discussion of the Nebbish?And, I repeat, it’s sponsored bythe Maroon, and what’s good forthe Maroon is good for the cam¬pus. Said lecture, by the way,is at 3:30, December 9.TheatreThe board of University Thea¬tre has announced the programfor Tonight at 8:30, UT’s next pro¬duction. The plays for the firstweekend are Strindberg’s Miss Ju¬lie, directed by Mike Hall, Gogol’sThe Gamblers, directed by BobReiser, and Girodoux’s Song ofSongs, which will be directed by Charlotte Stendal. As a slight de¬parture from customary proce¬dure, the play for the secondweek is a three-act; Cocteau’s In¬fernal Machine, directed by NealJohnston. Tryouts for all fourplays will be held Sunday andMonday (December 6, 7) eveningsat 7 pm in the Reynolds club the¬atre. Collectively, the plays willrequire twenty-eight people forthe casts alone, and as many techpeople as possible. Anyone want¬ing to act. work lights, sound, dodesign, carpentry, costumes, any¬thing at all should come eitherSunday afternoon or Mondaynight and talk to the directors.Tonight at 8:30 will be producedthe last weekend in January andthe first in February.This is the last weekend forAnouilh’s Thieves’ Carnival, pro¬duced by the Company of Four,which, as has been said manytimes before, is Hyde Park’s new¬est and for that matter, only dra¬ma group. They are supposed todo an excellent job. Performancesare at 8:30 at Woolman hall on57th.Motion picturesDoc Films, hallowed be theirname for presenting us with goodmovies that aren’t usually shownby normal art theatres, is endingits series of German films withMurders Among Us. This movie,made in 1946, is a study of theemotions of the German peopleafter the Second World War. DocFilms are shown at 7:15 and 9:15in Social Sciences 122.The Brave Bulls, with Mel Fer¬rer, Anthony Quinn, and Miro¬slava is Burton-Judson’s last of¬fering of the quarter. The storyis about a matador who is gored,and subsequently loses his nerve.By the end of the picture, he hasregained it, of course, but in themeantime, there are some goodshots of bull fighting. B-J holdsforth in Judson dining hall at8:00 and 10:00 pm, Friday evening.International House is showingThe Solid Gold Cadillac with JudyHoliday and Paul Douglas De¬cember 7. The plot concerns a naive young lady who goes to astockholders’ meeting and decidesthat the company is being run thewrong way. Int House movies areat 7:00 and 9:00 pm in the Eastlounge.MusicNo longer is there a dearth ofmusic on campus. In fact, thereis so much that, although thequarter may go out in a burst ofsong and symphony, anybody whogoes to all these musical delights,may go out in a welter of “Incom-pletes.” At any rate, here is a listfor the not-too-avid culture seekerto choose from.The first great event is the ap¬pearance of the new UC Sympho¬ny Orchestra tonight at 8:30 inMandel hall. Under the directionof H. Colin Slim, they will playBrahms’ Academic Festival Over¬ture, Tschaikowsky’s Fifth Sym¬phony, and Nobilissima Visione byHindemith. Judging from thesounds that have issued from thetheatre in Ida Noyes, right downthe hall from the Maroon offices,the concert, ambitious though itmay seem, should be good. Andit’s free. What better way tospend Friday night?The next musical treat is an in¬formal concert and meeting ofthe Music society in Ida NoyesEast lounge this Sunday at 7:30pm. The Music society makes upthe performing groups from thepeople who come to the meeting,so most of the music is the cham¬ber type, that doesn’t requiremany players and should be doneimpromptu anyway, or so I havebeen given to understand. Butsince there are always lots ofpeople, there are lots of groups toperform, and ergo, lots of music.The Music society meetings areopen to the public and are free.And there’s another evening takenup by musical pursuits.For their third offering, Univer¬sity Concerts is sponsoring theQuartette Carmirelli. The pro¬gram includes pieces by Haydn,Malipiere, and Schubert. Saidoffering is December 11 at 8:30in Mandel hall.Cheerful, newly decorated, ottrac-tievly furnished apartment. Safe,fireproof deluxe elevator building.Doorman. Night watchman. Maidand linen service available. Rea¬sonable monthly rotes from $87.50. Clark theatreP ^\C at all timesw special student price cJarii & madisaaopen 7:30 o.m.late show 4 o.m.fr. 2-2845just present your i.d. card to the cashier ot the boxoffiee"every triday is ladies' day — women odmitted for 25c"fri., dec. 4*4 was a malewarbride”’’dream boat”sat., dec. 5“rio bravo”‘’kings thief”sun., dec. f••with a song in myheart”“call me madam” fri. 11th -“meet me in lasvegas”“on moonlight bay”sat. 12th“the girl mostlikely”“tonight we sing”sun. 13th“anything goes”“show boat” fri. 18th“phone call froma stranger”“julie”sat. 19th“something ofvalue”“knights of theround table”sun. 20th“east of eden”“rebel withouta cause”THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree 1J.C. DeliveryT e rry ’s 11518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045 This next is what music review¬ers would call a musical incident:something on the order of a musicsalon held by Erna Salm of 5488S. Everett, just east of Hyde Parkblvd., from 3:00 to 4:00 pm everythird Sunday of each month. ThisSunday, December 6, * there willbe a clarinetist playing Debussy,a trio playing Haydn, and a vio¬linist playing Beethoven and St.Saens. The salon is open to any¬one who cares to come.The last and greatest event is,of course, Handel’s Messiah,which is performed annually inRockefeller chapel. Richard Vik-strom will conduct the UC choirand members of the Chicago Sym¬phony Orchestra. The soloists areCharlotte Brent, soprano; MarthaLarrimore, contralto; Roger Fil¬let, tenor; Edward Warner, bass;and Heinrich Fleischer, organist.The performance is on Sunday,December 13 at 3:00 pm in Rocke¬feller chapel, and if you have anyslight intention of going, you hadbetter get the tickets now, becausethey usually become less and lessavailable as December goes on.Tickets can be purchased at Uni¬versity bookstore, Woodworths,and at the Chapel office.OFF CAMPUSTheatreWest Side Story has a numberof new people in the cast, sothere are lots of new interpreta¬tions of old characters. All ofwhich means that if you haveseen it, you should go again tosee if anything is changed andwhat it is if it has (changed, thatis). And if you haven’t seen ityet, you should go now so thatif there are more changes made,you can go see them. All of this isvery complicated, but what itmeans is that everyone shouldsee West Side Story.The Cave Dwellers, a comedyby William Saroyan, opens to¬night at the Goodman theatre.Studs'Terkel and Eugenie Leonto- vitch have the leading roles. The -tplay is directed by Eugenie Leon-tovitch. As a bit of incidental in¬formation, dear to Humanities 2students and lovers of coincidence,she actually did leave Russia toescape the revolution. This mayaccount for her excellent perform¬ance as the duchess in the stageplay Anastasia. The Cave Dwell¬ers will run for two weeks.MusicThere is no more opera untilnext year. Sic transit gloria mun-di. The Chicago symphony orches¬tra is still going, but all you haveto do is look in the paper to findout what they are playing, sowe’ll dispense with that. And thatleaves lots of space for all thelittle things that are going on, viz:all sorts of chamber concerts, Tu¬dor madrigal singers, and bothRudolph Serkin and David Ois-trakh performing next week.Oistrakh will play with theChicago symphony orchestra De¬cember 11 at the opera housetSerkin will perform at OrchestraHall December 12; the Tudormadrigal singers will give forthwith the 14th and 15th centurya cappella compositions on De¬cember 9 for free at Ganz Hall,Roosevelt university; and the Fes¬tival String Quartet will playBeethoven, Mozart and Dvorak onthe same Wednesday at the JamesSimpson theatre, Chicago NaturalHistory Museum. There are a mil-lion more obscure things happen¬ing, but they require a catalogueor the WFMT Fine Arts Guide inwhich I found them. The easiestthing for you to do is buy theguide, and then you won’t needme at all. But whatever you do,don’t forget the eight perform¬ances of the Messiah.WFMT will give a broadcast ofMacbeth this Sunday at 8:00 pm.Alec Guinness and Pamela Brownstar in a complete and uncut ver¬sion, supported by the Old Vieplayers.‘ L4lc 7-^071yde park theatre Student rate 65eupon presentation of ID cardNow Playing — Held over thru Monday, Dec. 7INGMAR BERGMAN'SPlus Marcel Marceau fir Mr. MagooStarts Tuesday, Dec. 8 — For Three Days OnlyBETTE DAVIS — CARY MERRILL"ALL ABOUT EVE"—— and —JOANNE WOODWARD"THREE FACES OF EVE"Starts Friday, Dec. 11PADDY CHAYEFSKY'S"MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT"Honored official U.S. entry at the Cannes Film Festival— ond —JACK HAWKINS"TWO HEADED SPY"A superior British thrillerDecember 4, 1959 • CHICACOMAROON • 15Nebbishes invade UCThe place of the Nebbish in today’s society will be discussedby Herb Gardner, creator of “The Nebbishes” at a lecture inMandel hall on Wednesday, December 9 at 3:30 pm. The lec-ture is sponsored by the Maroon and is without admissioncharge.The lecture is the occasion forthe first Chicago visit of theyoung New York cartoonist,whose comic strips appear eachweek in the Chicago SundayTribune.Gardner was an actor at 12. aprize-winning sculptor at 14. apublished playwright at age 16. ashort story writer at 21, and anovelist at 23.Today, at age 25, he is bestknown as creator of “The Neb¬bishes,’' a weekly cartoon stripwhich began casually as' a seriesof cartoons in his college news¬paper (Antioch). Nebbishes arealso featured on greeting cards,ash trays, pennants, napkins, andnumerous other items carried bythousands of gift and departmentstores across the nation.The Nebbish line consists of “gifts for the man who has noth¬ing.” Perhaps the most famousof these is the one that shows tw«»incredibly relax e d gentlemen,with their feet on a table, cap-tioned “Next Week We’ve Got toGet Organized.” Over 1,250,000copies of this have been sold sofar, Gardner reports.Nebbish is a Yiddish termmeaning ‘Host soul.”Gardner’s Nebbishes are morethan that. They have become aprominent American figure, anoffice by-word, a campus motto.They are forever something thatmost of us sometimes representPersons who have never metGardner’s balloon-like creaturesin his Tribune comic strip haveprobably met their counterpartsin the street, in class, or in them¬selves.mOLUTEli NOT.THERE’S AN IMPORTANT FUTURE AHEAD FOR THE MENThe Air Force pilot or navigator is a man of many talents. He is, first of all,a master of the skies—and no finer exists. In addition, he has a firm back¬ground in astro-navigation, electronics, engineering and allied fields. Then,too, he must show outstanding qualities of leadership, initiative and self-reliance. In short, he is a man eminently prepared for an important futurein the new Age of Space. Find out today if you can qualify as an Air Forcepilot or navigator. Paste the attached coupon on a postal card and mail it nowGRADUATE THEN FLYU.S. AIR FORCE AVIATION CADET PROGRAM MAIL THIS COUPON TODAYAviation Cadet Information, Dept. A-9;Box 7G08, Washington 4, D. C.Please send me details on my opportunities as an Aviation Cadet In the U. S. AirForce. I am a U.S. citizen, between the ages of 19 and 26Va and a resident of thtU.S. or possessions. I am interested in D Pilot (H Navigator training.Name. College -Street_City Zone State16 • CHICAGO MAROON • December 4, 1959