r.-j'J'MUM : mf.-\ 'ann;.»-itm v ■IT-•re-appointment as deanA new Dean is being sought to act as academic head of the division of social sciences. IChauncey Harris, present Dean has announced that he will not accept re-appointment when Ihis five year term of office expires at the end Of this quarter. Harris was appointed Dean Iof the division March 15, 1955, after serving as acting Dean from October 15, 1954, until Ithe time of his official appointment.The term of deanship is five years; after this time a committee from the faculty makesrecommendations to the Chancel- • — — _lor naming individuals who would The statutes of the University have at first-hand awareness ofhe acceptable to the faculty as are explicit concerning the selec- the problems of the present fac-Pean. It is customary that the tion of Deans. "When the Dean There is a large element withinpresent Dean be among those rec- f rMvisi°n> School, or College the division that hopes Harris canto the Chancellor tin- *,? appointed, the Faculty be persuaded to accept anotherotnmended to t e C . , shall ejePt a committee whose five year term. According to sev-less the outgoing Dean states that duty shall be to confer with the eral members of the faculty, Har-l,c does not wish re-appojntment. Chancellor or the President or the ris has won the unanimous admi-Harris Informed the social sci- Vice-President and Dean of Fac- ration of the faculty for his ad-once faculty of his decision to “lties- asc/rtaIn th« fug£es‘ ministration.I«ve hl» administrative posiUon ulty mem&re and t0 makc a list h S? °fat a general faculty meeting last of candidates. ?id ^ ?. havm,fJanuary 7. At that time a five' The Dean shall be appointed job during his five and one-halfman committee was selected to by the Chancellor under such reg- years in office,search for Harris* successor. Rations as may be adopted from Harris studied at BrighamMembors of the committee are .rciiancSlor has r^ed’and Si"? .“"economies hasL °Rh^ ”Fred Eggan, professor in the de- received suggestions , r o m the schoSr at Oxfort and ft UCpartment o, an,hropo,ogy; W. T. »mmittee ^ncerning ,heir list of b * received his Ph.D. Hejoined the UC faculty in 1943. Chauncey Harris, out going Dean of the Division of SocialSciences is shown above.Morton professor in the depart- h*s “n“iderf'i0IV ,?“ch*1 , „ member of the Faculty shall havement of History, Arnold C. Har* privilege of communicatingberger, associate professor in the his preferences or criticisms ofdepartment of economics, Eck- candidates directly to the Chan-hard H. Hess, associate professor cellor ... or to the members ofin the department of psychology, the committee.”and John I. Goodlad, professor in "The necessary qualificationsthe department of education, for the new Dean,” explained Eg-Hutchinson was a member of the gan, "include a broad generalcommittee which originally rec- knowledge of the whole range ofommended Harris. the social sciences. He must bed an adequate spokesman for theReturns to scholarship social science division with re.Harris announced that upon gar(j the administration as acompleting this quarter as Dean whole. He must also ^ a scholarl,e hopes to return to full time in hjs own right.”research and teaching. As Dean, the has only been able to teach Needs breadth of viewone single quarter course per Harberger expressed much theyear. - same view on the necessary qual-"I have enormously enjoyed the locations of any good dean. "Inprivilege of serving the Division the first place, the Dean of theas Its dean,” Harris explained, division of social sciences is deal-"I have received the warmest co- *n£ with a very heterogenousoperation from the chairman of group of people, more so than inthe departments and from the fac- ar,y other division, and he has toulty and also from the office of have a certain breadth of view,the Chancellor understanding of various disci-“I foe, that there ts a remark- Plines a"rt “ “Ltf 1°,ably good tradition within the <*>!>?, wlth w,dc vanet> o!division of Deans moving back •>roblems that ™me UP-into research. All of the former “Also because of the great va- University of Chicago, February 19, I960 311960 entrants will taketests^ for accreditationtests to students who entered last test in Biology 111-12-13 would, a college level before he enteredquarter. according to Hill. the College. It is obviously lessA complete battery of place- "Some credit awarded on the easy to know what this is nowment tests will be given to stu- basis of accreditation tests may that it will be next fall when wedents entering the College next not apply to a student's general are dealing with new students."fall. Determination of general education requirement but may Another feature of the accredi-education requirements in spe- in some cases be applied to some tation test is that it will givecific programs will be based on other requirement of his program transferable credit to the studentthe results of these tests. for the bachelor’s degree,” Hill who passes it. Other colleges andstated. "Ocassionally this may in- universities will usually not ac-courses passed by accreditation where they would accept creditfrom a test given specifically toHill stated that in some courses award such credit.the results of these tests.Students excused by placement , . ^ , , -from any of the 29 quarter units volve giving divisional credit for cept placement results as credit,required in the general education ’program may be invited to take testsadditional tests called accredita¬tion tests. On the basis of thesetests credit for a certain numberof quarter units of work in oneor more of the eight general edu¬cation areas may be reported tothe Registrar. "It may, of course,turn out in some cases that nostated '"in such casesd no’report Blackfriars, UC’s musical comedy group, will provide en-will be made to the Registrar; tertainment at the 57th annual Washington promenade,a student should not have failure which will be held tomorrow night at the Hotel Shoreland.in a test of this sort entered upon Lonny Bovar, Mike Einesman, Alice Schaeffer, and Buddyhis record.” Weiss will sing selections from two former Blackfriar produc-"In order to understand the sta- tions, “Alpha Centauri” and “Sour Mash.”tus of credit earned by accredita- Dancing will be held from 9 pm to 1 am. Jim Bestman’stion tests,” Hill continued,” it band will entertain.must be realized that the register- The winner of the Miss UC contest held last Wednesday,ing of such credit is an action dis- be announced at the prom. The seven finalists in the^ action which rec- contest are> Nancy Cox, Dorothy Sue Fisher, Judy Jackson,requirement A^Tudent may2 re-' Martha KinSsbury» Nancy MacFadden, Patricia Mayes, andce?ve college credit for work Betty Middlebrook. Miss UC will receive two complimentarywhich his degree program does tickets to the forthcoming Blackfriar’s production, Silvernot call for through an accredita- Bells and Cockle Shells.tion test.” Tickets for the dance are available at the Reynolds clubA student might, for example, desk, Ida Noyes hall, and at the door. The cost of tickets is $5.place out and receive credit for Dress for the prom, sponsored by Student Union, is optional.A feature on how the MAROON is produced appears onpage 16 of this issue. Shown above is one of the MAROONprinters, 'locking in' a page proof.uc receives $350,000from Carnegie FoundationUC has received a grant of esses of social acculturation are institutions and policy; Values,$350 000 from the Carnegie carried on in a climate of heavy socialization and the family; Valcorporation for the use of theCommittee lor trie Compaia* ence. ^New nations share the bur* social integration,tive Study of New Nations. The dens of participating in the inter- Edward A. Shils, professor ofgrant supports research and a national scene while their people sociology, committee on socialfive year program of graduate are sti11 faced with the problems thought, is chairman of the com-of simultaneous transformation mittee for the comparative studyin the economic, cultural, and po- of new nations. Other memberstraining with its focus on theproblems of new nations. Jitical spheres,” he said. include representatives from theDavid E. Apter, associate pro- Apter said the Committee will departments of anthropology, ed-fessor in the department of politi- explore the ways in which the ucation, geography, politicial scical science and secretary of the contemporary social science re- ence, sociology, and the Law~ . . „ . search can aid and assist policy school.’ ® ^ makers in new nations in their The Committee's program ofto some of the problems the Com- attempts to cope with some of the postgraduate study is designed tomittee hopes to explore. difficulties which come with in- attract students from three gen-“Seven new nations have dependence. eral areas; students in the socialemerged on the African continent "Faced with similar problems, sciences who are concerned withalone since World War II (Cam- economically and politically, these comparative studies in the newcroon, Ghana, Guinea, Libya, Mo- countries are themselves anxious nations, students engaged in therocco, Sudan and Tunisia) and at to promote some framework study of legal institutions in the , , . ...... ,. - _least five more will achieve inde- whereby they can collaborate new nations, and those interested ^ entenng students at mia-year, according to Georgependence before the year is out with one another to mount a joint in educational programs, reforms, L. Playe. dean of undergraduate students. Recommendations(Belgian Congo, Mali Federation, attack on problems of develop- and the political implications of to abolish the mid-year class are being prepared for Dean ofNigeria, Somalia, and Togoland). ment, social welfare, and social educational systems in new na- the College, Alan Simpson and the College Policy committeeNew nations also have sprung up mobilization,” Apter said. tkms. by the Director of Admissions and by other officials of thein Asia, including Burma and Pak- A feature of the Upon the completion of an in- College. ' *tatan, and we may expect tne coninrl|ttee wj]j be a seminar com- tense training period, Junior Fel- While some considerations fa-trend to continue, Apter sam. faculty members and in- lows and graduate students in the voring the dropping of the mid-"The problem of nation-building vited outsiders who will discuss program would plan to do field year entries are being regardedA group from this year's mid-year class sees Hie campuswith an O-board member as guide.College may eliminatemid-year matriculationThe College is considering termination of the practice ofaccording to Playe. It is felt thatthe admission of students into UClor most new nations comes after following topics as they relate research as part of their PhD in terms of the inconvenience of *** quarter system immedi-independence rather than before to new nations: Traditionalism dissertation preparation. A num- the present system to both the a“er the end of the firstIt,” he said. "Under such circum- a]rKj social innovation; Problems ber of fellowships and research university and the students, oth- ”‘£h school semester puts the stu-stances the ordinary conditions of c]C p]urai societies; Social mobility assistantships will be available, ers stem from a re-examination dent.s 80 admitted and their classnationhood are at best tenuous."Constitutional frameworks areoften a blue print for future po¬litical plans, rather than a tokenof institutional stability, and proc- and political commitment; Legal Apter said. of the reasons behind the practice,No activities nightActivities night, originallyscheduled for this evening, hasbeen cancelled, according tothe chairman of Student Gov¬ernment’s committee on recog¬nized organizations (CORSO).The event has been cancelledbecause of the lack of responseon the part of campus organ¬izations at UC. Nine had regis¬tered to participate in Activi¬ties night by last Wednesday,when the event was cancelled. “I am very pleased withthe resolution of Student Gov¬ernment asking the Student-Faculty Court to rule on thedegree of information re¬ sections out of step with the university. Some administrators alsofeel that the mid - year entrantcannot possibly finish his Bache¬lor’s work in exactly four years,while financial aid awards (uponor delay a room reservation lor there is a speaker who is not well p,! 1*r^area speaker sponsored by a campus known, the activities office tries system ° ° y ° a Iour^carorganization once they have in- to get as much information as 5formed the office of the speaker’s they can on him. "If the speakername, his topic, the organization is controversial, the downtownNewman defends his officeOne of the reasons for the open¬ing of the question of the mid-he represents, if any, and the newspapers will be calling and entranls was the gradualquired of an organization be- name of the sponsoring organiza- asking for information. We wantfore they can bring a speaker tocampus,” said James E. Newman, director of Student activi tion. to be in a position to help them diminution of the size of the mid¬year classes. Not as many highI believe that there has been as much as possible,” said New- ^hools graduate students at mid¬year as was formerly the case.Playe stated, "We don’t face theHold national bridgetournament SundayThe 1960 National Intercollegi- 37 states and Canada, participatedate Bridge tournament will hold in the tournament. Teams repre¬play for UC at 7:30 pm this com- senting Columbia and PrincetonIng Sunday, February 21, in Ida won the national championshipNoyes hall. Any full time under- titles and trophy cups,graduate student is eligible with- Prizes include trophy cups for some alarm about Student activi- man.ties. "This will give us a chance ties’ policy,” continued Newman. ‘There has never been an or-to clear up any misunderstandings “Our policy certainly has not ganization that was prohibited, or nee<* now, for admitting studentsas to actions by my office.” been to try to restrict in any way even advised not to bring a speak- a* mid-year.”At the February 9 meeting of those people who come to campus, er to campus,” Newman contin-SG, the Assembly voted to ask the but merely to be informed of who used. "I cannot conceive of a situa-court to decide whether the of- js coming. We want to be sure tion in which any organizationthat the University’s facilities are would even be advised not tobeing used in the best possible bring a speaker of their choice to tions of their own to Chancellormanner. For example, we would campus. If a speaker was in def- Kimpton, according to Playe.not want to give Mandell hall to inite violation of good taste, Ia speaker who will attract only believe that we might advise them200 people. It would be far better of the larger issues at stake, forfor all concerned if such a lecture instance the posible damage tofice of student activities can deny After the recommendationshave been submitted to him, Simp¬son and the Policy committee willprobably submit recommenda-"One of the difficulties in this sit¬uation is that the authority hasnot been precisely located, northe channels made certain. I trustwere scheduled for Breasted hall, the University. However, if the Dean Simpson will find them asor for Social Science 122.” organization persisted, the finalNewman went on to say that if decision would be in their hands.” he works on this problem,’concluded. PlayeRavitts explains hours systemThis year, for the first time, answer to the objections of par- Commenting on the fact thatout prior registration upon pay- the colleges winning the national time clock was installed in ents- According to Mrs. Marge no codified penalty system for in-ment of a fee of 75c. The Uni- titles, one cup for the college for f Ravitts, assistant director of stu- fringements of the rules existsversity is one of the more than the pair scoring highest on the the New Women S dormitory, dent housing, "The rules stand Mrs. Ravitts said "if we had an125 colleges and universities East-West hands and one cup for as all women entering the as a symbol that the University absolute punishment system itthroughout the United States the college of the North-South dormitory after eleven o’clock bel*eves *n regularity, though not would be impossible to be fair,which has entered the tourna- hand winners. Each of the Jour ^ . conformity. In a democracy we An exact single penalty cannotment. individual national winners will niust punch in. Househeads ap have to conform to some hold because each case is differ-Last year, 2038 students repre- receive a smaller cup for his per- know that a girl is in and have laws.” ent. It is difficult to set punish-senting 318 colleges located in manent possession. In addition, a record of her arrival. Auto- "Limits are no good unless they ments and they are decided upontificates for the four individual assigned hours and for comingschool champions. in after the absolute deadline ofFor any further information two am for 17 year olds, and threeconcerning the tournament con- am for 18 year olds,tact Ben Muckenhoupt’s HY 3- This system of dormitory rules1522. was set up by the University inThe TREVI“Hyde Park9* FinestEspresso Bouse99Sun.. Tues., Thurs.4:00 pm - 1:00 amWeekends5:00 pm - 3:30 am r T A nm restaurantUliflU 1 J 1527 e. 55th DO 3-9788W« Specialise in Well-Balanced Meals atPopular Prices, and Midnita SnacksOPEN ALL NICHT — ORDERS TO GOSHOW TIMETues., 9:00- 1:00 am Short on cash? Sell your usedThurs., 9:00 - 1:00 am texts and other books no longerFri., 9:30 - 2:30 am needed ot your own price through:Sat., 9:30-2:30 am1553 E. 57th UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT SERVICE CENTERCompos Bus Stop Reynolds Club Basementmt the door Hours: 11:00- 1:00 — 3:30-5:00 six o’clock have incurred thispunishment themselves forbreaking the rules.”is when a girl spends the night not be profitable but have to existout illegally or sneaks into the anyway.” She says that punish-dorm that she is punished. Girls ments are not to "set examples,”who must be in the dormitory by but that "things are always verypeaceful after a punishment.”Recent punishments for viola¬tion of hours have included fourweeks of eleven o’clock hours,three weeks of eight o’clock, andfour weeks of six o’clock. Whenasked if this confinement couldbe harmful Mrs. Ravitts said,"Girls who are adversly affectedby severe punishment are prob¬ably troubled anyway.”Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRISTEyes examined Glateat fitted113*1-63 HY 3-S352all the Free frets booksTNE GREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 East 57fh HY 3-5829Chicago's most complete stockof quality paper backs2 • CHICAGO MAROON a Feb. 19. 1960Change Cates-Blake to offices?vcrtoJfrom^adm-mltory tosm no'pZTor a^'slch ZS&g&JSZM"Z “ Mcs2savii« sr^-swts,^ Sr-SSSSSare successful. The Grounds- according to J. R. Mori- tiguous. Newman would like to HCollege, ~ —transformation would take scftl’ c^e* draftsman of B&G. maintain this co-educational sys-pl.ice this summer, turning the Blake, Gates and Goodsoeed *em' butThe only readily apparentUniversity's two oldest dormi- were the first dormitories built alternative is to house the 120tories Into offices for the Univer- on campus. Named after three of Gates-Blake girls in East housesirv’s newest college. the University’s original donors, in the New Women’s dormitory.__ finiia the three dorms were built to In as much as East house is in-hous« students in the Divinity habit«i *>y ™tn also, this tool,'B w°r . , / school. In the twenties, these would end a coeducational livingSrshtTh,,U-ned ‘° ‘,he 'SyS1Cm'students, the oltice of advisers, more uni^rsa, *“* t^Tr!tlren't ""W* new <•»"»thr offices of allth college enoU(,h Divinity students to fill The first tower of the newstaffs offices for as many mem- the houses< Men’s dorm ^ built on thebers of the^College faculty as pos- corner of 55th street and Univer.sib.c and the office of the Coll ge Goodspeed changed sity avenue will be ready forexaminer.. occupancy this fall. There isPlant formative r°£°n' space for 320 men ln this dorm.verted from a dorm into an office Thus even eiiminntinir <",»tAc-All plans are still at the for- building. It now houses the office slake the UniveJStv will ha^e anmatlve stage,” Simpson Insisted, of the Dean of the College, much additional 200 SDaees■ I do believe that the reconver- of the Art department and the au<“™nai juu spaces,sion will go through, but the Renaissance society art galleries. , Be.V)re. e 00plans still need the approval of Gates-Blake have filways been l1?®’ the tw° pld dorms came up,the Chancellor's office and the dorms, but the sex of their in- New7*ian estimated that thereBoard of Trustees.” habitants has been changed sev- vvou*d be some 1-0 to 1j0 vacan-Simpson feels that by uniting eral times,all these offices under one roof Gates-Blake now houses ap-offioes which are currently scat- proximately 120 women, mostlygraduate students. As the dormhas a large number of kitchens,many of its residents have nomeal contract with the University.No final decision has been made the new men's dorm could berushed into completion. JohnNetherton, Dean of Students, esti¬mates that the second tower couldbe completed in twelve months.This tower will also hold 320.“We decided to concentrate onCollege facilities instead of hous¬ing facilities because of the greatand pressing need of the College,”Netherton explained. “We simplygave it a very high priority.”Simpson has been advocatingthis proposed remodeling sincehe became Dean last April.Exterior unchangedThe reconverted Gates-Blakewill present exactly the same ex¬terior to the world, but the in¬terior will be completely redecor¬ated. Many of the present bed-_ , .. ,, , , Blake the housing system will be rooms can serve as offices, butBefore the question of remodel- fined to capacity. some walls will be removed, someCf tn/k /kl/1 /InWkvtn doors between rooms installedand the shower rooms completelyShould the rising enrollment redone.Build second towertered throughout the campus, theCollege will reap great benefitstroth in efficiency and morale.One member of the college ad¬ministration, who asked that he Kuiper goes to Arizonanot be quoted, commented that a as to where the Gates-Blake resi-final decision as to whether these dents will move, should the re-two buildings will be given to conversion proceed. The mostwould have to be completed by the C-group.Chair named for ReavisGerard P. Kuiper has re- where it was also revealed that Kuiper further explained that hesigned his position at the Uni- Professor William W. Morgan of would still have full use of Mc-versity as Professor and the Astronomy department will Donald and Yerkes observatoriesChairman of the Department be Kuiper’s succesor. for his research.the College had better come soon, likely site, according to James of Astronomy at Yerkes, it Although the actual appoint- Born in Holland, Kuiper re-The physical work of remodeling Newman, director of student was learned Wednesday. The I°ent wiU be made by Chancellor ceived his BS and PhD degreesthe interior of the two dorms housing, is Kelly and Foster in announcement came from the of- Lawrence A. .Kimpton, Morgan’s from Leyden university in 1927fiee of the Dean of Faculties recommendation to LAK had to and 1933 respectively.be made by the faculty in the As- He did wartime research attronomy department. Each depart- Harvard from 1943-45 and hasment in the University makes been a lecturer at that university,such a recommendation for its de- Kuiper said that he will probablypartment head once every three stay at Yerkes until the end ofA three-year rotating professorship in educational administration was announced last years. next summer.Tuesday by Chancellor Kimpton. The chair will be named for the late William Claude Reavis, When asked about his future The University operates theformer UC professor of education, and will bring a person preferably between 35 and 45, plans Kuiper replied that he in- Yerkes observatory at Williamswho already has shown the qualities of educational leadership to the campus every three tends to go to the University of Bay, Wisconsin as well as theyears. The academic position is designed to provide the holder with a steppingstone to a Arizona where he plans to es- McDonald observatory in Texasuniversity faculty or top-echelon school assignment, according to the Public Relations office, ^ablish a lunar and planetary Run in cooperation with the Uni-• c nu a t - - — laboratory.’’ Kuiper has been con- versity of Texas.trancis S. Chase, dean ot the ^is community,” Willis continued, or may not be nationally known nected with UC since 1936 atGraduate School of Education, Funds for the new professor- at present but who have exhib- which time he joined the staff asreported the announcement at a sbjp were raised jointly by the ited unusual potential for educa- assistant professor of astronomy.K' dinner meeting at the Hotel university and alumni and friends tional statesmanship of highest When Morgan was contactedDennis in Atlantic city. New Jer- of Reavjs UC professor emeritus order,” said Chase. He said he for a statement he said that heWilliam S. Gray who took charge hoped the selection would be com- would withhold comment until heof the campaign committee told pleted by fall. had been given official notifica-the Atlantic City meeting that Chase said that each appoint- tion of his appointment.soy, held in connection with theannual convention of the Amer¬ican Association of School admin¬istrators.Reavis, who was born at Fran¬cisco, Indiana, in 1881, died inChicago June 2, 1955 after a ca¬reer in public schools in Indiana,Illinois and Missouri and threedecades as a faculty member ineducation at UC. He wrote 11texts in educational administra¬tion and was described by Chan¬cellor Kimpton as a “Schoolman’sschoolman.”“There is hardly an organiza¬tion of school administrators indie Midwest or even the UnitedStates which he did not establishnr upon which he did not leavehis mark,” the Chancellor said.“There is no superintendent inthe United States so remote butthat he knew Claude Reavis pro¬fessionally and probably person¬ally.’'Benjamin C. Willis, superin¬tendent of the Chicago Publicschools, said that Reavis “influ- ment to the chair would be foronly three years in order “toidentify in this manner over aperiod of years a number of real¬ly outstanding men whom wewould be glad to invite to otherprofessorships in the University,or who alternatively might be¬come professors, deans or presi- Asked whether the offer fromArizona came before Morgan’sappointment. Kuiper said, “Theycame practically simultaneously.I have always been fond of theWest and had considered accept¬ing an appointment there in 1957.The University of Arizona has adents at other institutions or su- small observatory and a nationalperintendents of large school sys¬tems.”Chase also listed these advan¬tages of the rotation plan: “Ourfaculty will be kept in close andactive communication with out¬standing practitioners who wouldhave the capacity to learn a greatdeal from our ways of looking ateducation but would also helpgive us fresh points of view. Theappointments would provide na¬tional recognition for school ad¬ministrators who are going effec¬tively about the job of improvingthe educational experiences of the observatory is currently underconstruction at nearby Kitt Peak” ^ Wear (Contact aCenieibyDr, Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372I '"id the public education pro- the fund goal had been reached, children and youth with whom"‘am, °i thousands of villages, Chase, dean of the department thpv flpal »unities and major cities.” -of education, said the new pro-‘The vigor of American educa- fessorship was conceived to ex-hon today, the widespread inter- emplify Reavis’ work and idealsest the part of all its citizens, in a wide variety of educationaland the dramatic evidence that activities.education is approaching its best “We are seeking nominationsdays are a real tribute to this man of leaders of unusual dedication,stature and to a true citizen of intelligence, and power who may You are invitedto attend a sale of thePAINTINGS and SCULPTURERobert PippengerFebruary 21st ■■ 2-6 P.M,5405 DorchesterHI! E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & QallerySmall 12”Cheese 1.30Sausage .. .. 1.65Anchovy ..1.65Pepper Cr Onion 1.50 Smoll 12”Combination ...... .2.25Mushroom 2.00Shrimp ...2.25Bacon & Oqion 2.00Free Delivery on All Pizza to VC StudentsAttention Chow Hounds!Special every Tuesday night — all the fried chickenyou can eat . . . $1.95 TO BE CONTINUED . . .BIG BOOK SALE *torte<* *°st week — continued this week. See our full-page ad in the February12th Maroon for titles and descriptions.Art books and portfolios ot greatly reduced prices. Now this week dozens of new titles added inmany categories. Don't miss this opportunity!Sale ends February 20thl® ■ W . O _ ^ _ 1 uUni versify of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis AvenueFeb. 19, 1960 • CHICACO MAROON • 3p *the 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. >212 E. 59thStreet. Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800, extensions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus.Subscriptions by mall, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5, Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material. 4 pm.Tuesday: deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 pm Wednesday before publication. 'All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the Individual opinions of the authors.Review of curfew neededSeveial weeks ago, the Maroon ran an editorialstating that the system of hours for women isnot a fair one. The only answer that has beengiven to this editorial is that the system is notsubstantially different from that at other schools.We cannot accept this as a satisfactory answer.Certainly, the University of Chicago has nevershied away from being different when it wasfelt that its ideas were the right ones. Is class at¬tendance compulsory here because it is at mostother schools? Do we have a football team becauseHarvard has one? And is the Maroon strictlysupervised by the administration because the news¬papers of other colleges are? Certainly, there issome great inconsistency in picking out one areain which an attempt to conform with other insti¬tutions shoud be made.Whether it is standard practice in all universi¬ties or whether it is done only at UC, the women’shours system as it currently exists is irrationaland unfair. Is there any reason that an 18 yearold woman is not as capable of controlling heractions as an 18 year old boy? And is it just thata woman who has decided to live in an apartmentshould be allowed to keep any hours she pleases,whereas hac! she chosen to live in the dormitoriesher hours would have been controlled?It has been the position of the Maroon, and willcontinue to be until we hear a valid argument tothe contrary, that any woman over 18 who main¬tains a satisfactory grade average and has par¬ental consent should be given unlimited hours. Equally reprehensible as the hours systemitself is the manner in which punishment forbreaking the regulations is meted out. There isno set system, no specified scale of punishment.In general, women who have committed infrac¬tions of the rules are confined to the dormitoriesafter 6, 8, or 11 pm for a given amount of time,depending on the severity of their infractions andtheir past record.Certainly *t is the responsibility of every womanto comply with the rules, however objectionablethey may be, for as long as they exist. But is itin keeping with the spirit of liberalism that UCis known for that punishments of this severity,which is more in keeping with a boarding schoolor summer camp than an American university,be handed out?The extent of the punishment for any infractionis left solely to the offender’s house head. In de¬fense of the penalties, Mrs. Marge Ftavilts, househead of West house, said that it is in the “spirit ofdemocracy” that people should learn to respectand obey regulations. ^lowever, is it in the samespirit to have one person the sole judge andexecutioner of all violations? Would it not bebetter for the guilt and the degree of punishmentto be decided by a court made up of residents ofthe house, with the opportunity of appeal to thedisciplinary committee by either party?It is necessary that a review and eventual changeof the women’s hours system and punishmentsystem be made in the very near future.Is UC stuck inAs the time approaches whenthe snow and ice melt, andspring rains become more andmore imminent, we feel that con¬sideration of UC’s “buffalo wal¬low” — the stretch of mud be¬tween Woodlawn and Universityavenues — is again in order.Ever since the new women’sdormitories were constructed,hundreds of students who live iiithese dorms have found that theycan shorten their daily trips toand from the quadrangles by twoblocks if they follow the unpavedpath along Rockefeller chapel andLexington hall. Unfortunately,this path is of a lower level thanthe area surrounding it, so thatrainwater and melted snow andice flow into it freely and do notdrain readily — hence the name“buffalo wallow.” Veteran usersof the wallow are readily identi¬fiable by their mud-spatteredshoes, stockings, and trousers orskirts. Non-users may usually beseen running to their first class.In recent years, the Maroon,student government, and the stu¬dent body at large have all ap¬pealed to the administration to pave the path with concrete. J. LeeJones, University architect hascalled the matter a “serious prob¬lem,” and realizes that “some¬thing should be done about it”At the moment, the matter iscomplicated by the administra¬tion’s wish to curb the crossingof Woodlawn avenue in the middleof the block which is done by stu¬dents who traverse the buffalowallow. According to Dean ofstudents John P. Netherton, pav¬ing the wallow would increase thetemptation to jaywalk, thus add¬ing to the danger presented bystudents who already cross in themiddle of the block.Netherton, who is consideringthe paving of the wallow, and theconsequent jaywalking problem,has decided to first consider plansto eliminate the jaywalking prob¬lem. A tunnel under Woodlawnavenue, and a footbridge over ithave been suggested. Netherton,who has been considering thematter for over a month, has notyet reached any decision, al¬though he does favor the foot¬bridge. It appears that there willbe no decision in the near future. According to the Chicago de¬partment of public works, anyfootbridge over Woodlawn avenuewould have to be at least 14 feethigh. This bridge would take aminimum of three months to com¬plete, and cost the University ap¬proximately $10,000. However, wofeel that students who wouldrather cross in the middle of thestreet than walk to the corner,will not feel very much like as¬cending and descending 14 feet ofsteps. Thus, the footbridge wouldnot be successful as a deterrentto jaywalking.Since the jaywalking is boundto continue (J. Lee Jones, DeanNetherton and everyone else ad¬mit that jaywalking is humannature) we feel that the time andeffort being spent to eliminatethis inevitable problem could bet¬ter be used in planning the pavingof the wallow.For this spring, it appears thatUC students will again have toplunge through the depths of thewallow. Students would find thisyear’s wading much more bear¬able if they knew it would betheir last.Letters to the editorsMackauer explains viewThe following was written by Christian Mackauer as a jtersonal letter to Jay Greenberg, MAROONfeature editor. We are printing the letter in the hope that it will correct any misapprehensions as toMackauer’s opinions. The article in reference is the evaluation of the New College which appearedin last week's MAROON.Dear Mr. Greenberg:I enjoyed your article on the new curriculum, but the pleasure was mixed with a slightdiscomfort where I myself came in. I don’t always recognize my own jargon where I amlaying down the truth between quotation marks. That may be the natural hazard of aninterview.. _ . .. with the danger of becoming a is far above me. I am a WilliamOn one point, I am afraid, we lifetime intellectual boy scout. So Rainey Harper Professor of His-misunderstood each other. I am *» +„ <ru.4<n«nic.iiA<i cowl™misunuersiuou ecu.ii uum. x am reservations against the pres- tory, not a 'Distinguished Servicenot yearning for a ieturn to the ent curricuiUm concern less its Professor’ <the University Direc-14-Comp College. That college was jengtll than its ccmtent and co- tory notwithstanding),excellent, but it was not tailored lierence It was nice that you droppedto the needs of the high school postscript- If you in for that chat; please, feel freegraduate. When it became obvious w,ay ox posisonpi. ixthat we could not attract enough hfve torquot<: my nan^ Sincerelywith full regalia, please, spare sincerely,Christian W. Mackauerearly entrants, a change was due,not because of outside pressuresbut because—whether we like itor not—it is educationally un¬sound for most young people topostpone too long the choice ofa life career. A liberal educationis a marvelous adventure. But the embarrassment of a title thatthe jump has to be taken andtaken in time. There is no fastrule, to be sure. But to indulgein the pleasures of a full-timegeneral education beyond the ageof, say, twenty means playing Editors-in-chiefNeal Johnston Lance Haddix• CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 19, 1960 withMfcfihaJmanTeen-age Dwarf*. uThe ManuDobie Gillie”, tie.)THE SEARCH FOR BRIDEY SIGAFOOSIt was a dullish evening at the Theta house. The pledges weredown in the catacombs; the actives were sacked out upstairs,not doing much of anytliing. Mary Ellen Krumbald was stick¬ing pins in an effigy of the housemother; Evelyn Zinsmasterwas welding a manhole cover to her charm bracelet; AlgelicaMcKeesport was writing a letter to Fabian in blood. Like I say,it was a dullish evening.Suddenly Dolores Vladnay stood up and stamped her foot.“Chaps,” she said to her sorors, “this is too yawn-making 1 Let'sdo sometliing gay and mad and gasp-making. Anybody got anidea?”“No,” said the sorors, shaking their little sausage curls.“Think, chaps, thkvk!” said Dolores and passed Marlborocigarettes to everybody, for if there ever was a smoke to startyou thinking, it is mild and flavorful Marlboro 1 Things comeclear w hen you puff that good, clean smoke through that finefilter-^knOTs untie, dilemmas dissolve, problems evaporate,cobwebs vanish, fog disperses, and the benevolent sun poursradiance on a new and dewy world. Oh, happy world! Oh,Marlboro 1 Oh, soft packl Oh, flip-top box! Oh, get somealready!Now Geraldine Quidnunc, her drooping brain cells revivifiedby a good Marlboro, leapt up and eried, “Oh, I have a perfectgasser of an ideal let’s hypnotise somebody!”“Oh, capital!” cried the Boron. “Oh, tingle-making!”At this point, in walked a young pledge named Alice Blue-gown. “Excuse me, mistresses,” said she, tugging her forelock,“I have finished making your beds, doing your homework, andironing your pleats. Will there be anything else?”“Yea,” snapped Dolores Vladnay. “When I count to three,you will be hypnotised.”“Yes, excellency,” said Alice, bobbing a curtsey.“One, two, three,” said Dolores.Alice promptly went into a trance.“Go back,” said Dolores, “back into your childhood. Goback to your fifth birthday, back to your birth, to before yourbirth, to your last incarnation ... Now, who are you?”“My name is Bridey Sigafoos,” said Alice. “The year is 1818,and I am in County Cork.”“Coo!” said the sorors.“How old are you?” asked Dolores.“I am seven,” said Alice. ,“Where is your mother?” asked Dolores.“I don’t know,” said Alice. “She got sold at the fair lastyear.”“Coo!” said the sorors.“Tell us about yourself,” said Dolores.“I am five feet tall,” said Alice. “I have brown eyes, and Iweigh 3200 pounds.”“Coo!” said the sorors.“Isn’t that rather heavy for a girl?” said Dolores.“Who’s a girl?” said Alice. “I’m a black and white guernsey.”“Coo!” said the sorors.“Moo!” said Bridey Sigafoos.• It SO Mu BhalaaaWe, the makers of Marlboro, have our doubts about thisstory. About cigarettes, however, we hold these truths to heself-evident: Marlboro for filter smokers, Philip Morris fornon-filter smokers. Try some.Hmvc You Discovered Enrico for Lunch?Chuck Wagon BuffetMONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY• soup & salad • chicken• lasagne • saladsALL YOU DESIRE — $1.25Cafe Enrico & QalleryFA 4-5525 — HY 3-53001411 E. 53rdi i 'Trustees act on "Center ft More LettersThe basic structure ofUniversity College, the adulteducation extension of theUniversity of Chicago, hasbeen changed by action of theBoard of Trustees. Thetrustees at their last meetingpassed a recommendation callingfor the creation of a new aca¬demic Board under Article IX ofthe Statutes of the University.This new Board shall be called theBoard of Adult Education andshall have, under the Council ofthe University Senate, policy¬making powers over all adult edu¬cation activities of the University.This resolution also calls forthe elimination of the now exist¬ing Board of Radio.The new Board of Adult Educa¬tion will have jurisdiction overUniversity College, the Center forContinuing Education, the Radioand Television activities of theUniversity, and the Home studydepartment.No educational activity will beoffered by University Collegewithout the approval of the Boardof Adult Education. The Trustees'resolution also adds: ‘The adviceof the appropriate department(s)or sehool(s) will be sought whena proposed activity has any rele¬ vance, to the subject matter andinterests of a department orschool.No educational activity will beoffered for credit by UniversityCollege without the specific ap¬proval of the curriculum and in¬structor by the appropriate de¬partment or school of the Univer-sity.In the future, Maurice F. X.Donohue, the administrative headof University College shall beknown as the director, ratherthan the Dean.This decision brings to an enda debate as to the future of Uni¬versity College which has beenunder much discussion in UC aca¬demic circles for the past year.Last spring the University Senatecreated a faculty committee tostudy the Downtown College. Thecommittee, headed by DanielBoorstin, recommended the elim¬ination of the loop center as anautonomous unit, bringing a 11adult education classes to theHyde Park campus.This report was never discussedby the faculty senate, for theDowntown College itself was inthe process of completing alengthy self-study project. Thiscommittee, which contained three UC faculty members, reportedlast fall recommending the con¬tinuation of University College.The central complaint concern¬ing the adult extension was theabsence of faculty control over itsofferings, according to ChancellorLawrence A. Kimpton. “Manymembers of the faculty feel thatinferior academic courses are be¬ing presented in the name of theUniversity, thus damaging thename of the University,” Kimptonadded.Donohue, in the past, has com¬plained of the difficulty of obtain¬ing members of the Quadranglefaculties who will teach coursesin the loop.“I’m not quite sure how adulteducation is different from anyother sort of education,” Kimptonstated, “but we shall continue tooffer it.“It was one of the main ef¬forts of William Rainey Harper^and we won’t turn our baflks onthe idea. Besides, there is muchvalidity in the program. I justwish someone would define theterm for me.”Director Donohue, who is anassistant professor in the socialsciences, was unavailable forcomment. Ask for campus surveyon Selective ServiceBrockway to lecture onAfrica’s freedom fightFenner Brockway, Labor member of the British House of Commons will speak on“Africa’s fight for freedom,” tonight in Breasted hall of the Oriental institute in a lec¬ture sponsored by the UC chapter of the Young Peoples Socialist league (YPSL).Brockway, who is president of the Movement for Colonial Freedom, will report on thelatest developments in Nyasaland, Kenya and the Belgian Congo, discussing perspectivesfor the new nations and African independence movements, as well as examining Africa’srelation to communism, domo- Dear Sirs:You might be interested inthis editorial which appearedin the New York Post of Fri¬day, February 5, 1960:“Speaking of more seriousmilitary matters, the surveyof student opinion about the draftpublished on today’s school-and-college page deserves close scru¬tiny. Amid all the current contro¬versy over America’s militaryposture, few words have beenspoken on this issue; it has be¬come one of the unmentionablesof U.S. politics.“Whether they are right orwrong in their judgment, it isclear that many undergraduatessee little sense in mass conscrip¬tion in the atomic age. Adlai Ste¬venson raised the question in the1956 campaign; he was quicklytold that he was out of order.But the question persists.“It is natural that many youthsin a democracy should feel nopassion for a system which takestwo years out of their lives. Thesacrifice becomes peculiarly intol¬erable, however, if those who are making it are skeptical of thevalue of the effort, and wonderwhy there is no longer even anyaudible debate about alternativeprograms.”A possibility for action is sug¬gested. It is curious that such in¬stitutions as the Selective Servicesystem are seldom questioned, butare more likely taken for grantedas necessary evils. Something canbe done if there is a will. Opinionon the subject must be voiced —and voiced loudly. Whatever theoutcome, an airing of the matteris badly needed and may provebeneficial.A survey of the student body,as was done by the “Post” on fourNew York campuses, includingreasons for individual opinion,would be of interest and value.If reaction is strong and beliefthat the Selective Service pro¬gram is in need of examination isprevalent, the question could becalled to national attention andperhaps be brought into discus¬sion by the Presidential candi¬dates during the coming cam¬paign.Sincerely,Marianne L. Millercratic socialism and Western im¬perialism, according to Roz Kess¬ler. chairman of UC’s YPSL chap¬ter.Preceding Brock way’s talk,Michael Harrington, editor of An¬vil, will give a brief discussionconcerning French policy in Al¬geria and the position of Africarelative to US foreign policy,stated Miss Kessler. Harringtonhas made contributions to Com¬mentary, the Reporter, Common¬wealth, and Dissent.Fenner Brockway’s political ca¬reer began with his associationwith the Independent Labor party,early in this century, when heserved as editor of the party’spaper. He was imprisoned foranti-conscription activities duringWorld War I. Throughout theperiod between the first and sec¬ond world wars, he struggled forIndia’s independence in and outof Parliament, and was a per¬sonal friend of Ghandi and Nehru. Contemporary portraits tobfe exhibited in CoodspeedAn exhibition of contemporary portraiture will open to thepublic Monday in Goodspeed hall. Including the work of 14painters and sculptors, the show will run through the endof this quarter.The exhibition will include the erous sampling of portraiture inW’ork of 14 painters and sculptors, Chicago.almost all of whom will be rep- The exhibition will be open toresented b y several examples, the public daily except Sunday:Many of these, since they were Monday through Fridays from 10-executed as commissions, have 5 and Saturdays from 9-5.never before been on public ex¬hibition.The subjects offer great va¬riety; there are family groups,children, self-portaits of persons -p0 the Editors:of note in the arts and profes- j noted with interest the frontslous* page article in the Maroon onAmong the latter are “Francis February 5 pertaining to the de-Poulenc,” by Scribner Ames, a dine of certain categories ofdrawing; “Sylvia Shaw Judson,” criminal offenses in the Universi-by Frances Foy; “Mrs. Lawrence ty area. To be sure a drop of 1446A. Kimpton” and “Dr. Dallas B. reported offenses reflects a sig-Phemister,” by Edmund Giesbert; nificant improvement (sic) and“Portrait of an Artist” (Esteban represents no small effort on theVicente), by James Gilbert; “John part of those dedicated to urbanMcCutcheon,” by Sylvia Shaw improvement. Nevertheless theJudson, lent by the Chicago His- fact should not escape us thattorical society, and “Frank Lloyd ev<)n the improved figure forWright,” by Egon Weiner. 1958, 2515 reported crimes, is stillNelli Bar, Margaret Gardner, an astronomical amount and theMilton Horn, Marion Lukens, Har- fact that at least 272 of thesery Mintz, Freeman Schoolcraft, crimes occurred in the immediateLee Schillereff and Giorgio Spa- area of the University meansdaro complete the exhibition with that students must still exercisedistinguished work to offer a gen- exorbitant precautions whenCrime rate still highObjects to practicesin Miss UC contestTo the Editors of the Maroon:During the recent election of Miss University of Chicago,photographs of each candidate were displayed. All of themexcept one were taken by A1 Berger, a Maroon photographer.One of the candidates, however, could not appear for the sit¬ting, so she provided a picture — —which had been taken by a pro- either case, the basis for decisionfessional photographer. Because js not equal.of her photographer’s skill and su- There is no rule about who pro-perior developing processes, her vidcs the pictures. Traditionallypicture was more flattering than they have been those taken by thethe others. Maroon. In fairness to candidatesIs this fair to the entire group in the future, there should be aof candidates? It is possible that standard rule: either that eacha voter might not know any of candidate should furnish her ownthem, and would be forced to picture, or thaf they should alljudge merely on the basis of pic- be taken by a Maroon photogra-tures. He might be blindly at- pher. I am in favor of the lasttracted to the best photograph, course, since some candidatesOr he might wonder why this may not have the time or moneygirl had felt she had to have a to provide their own photographs,better picture than the others. In Sincerely yours,Charlotte Robertsonventuring on the streets at night.In short the University areacontinues to identify itself withgreater Chicago, the modernSodom, where crime often payslucratively and where pervertedsadist (sic) has relative freedomto implement his impulses muchto the enduring disgrace and lossof its citizenry and law enforce¬ment.Very truly yours,Johann Cohn If you are going to move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trou¬blesome problem.PETERSON MOVINCAND STORAGE CO.101 1 E 55th St.BU 8-671 1WASH PROMFEBRUARY 20th4 folk music concertTHE WEAVERS8:30 P.M.— Saturday, March 12OPERA HOUSETickets: $3.50, $2.50, $1.75Ry mail or In person atHYDE PARK CREDIT UNION55th and Lake Park SarnqufNOW SERVING COMPLETE7-COURSE DINNERS-$1.75Ample parkingfacilities InrearMany other attractivespecialtiesPopular pricesSPECIALTY ITEMS PREPARED TO ORDEROpen 5 p m. - 3 a.m.1510 E. 53rd St. PI, 2-9031Feb. 19. 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5NewsbitsFaculty members, alumni, receive awardsGet Longview awardsFour awards for literary ex¬cellence have been given totwo UC faculty members andtwo alumni. Edward A. Shils,professor in the Committeeon Social Thought, Richard G.Stern, assistant professor of Eng¬lish; James Purdy, and JeanLouis Garrigue received awardsfrom the Longview foundation.The awards are for outstandingcriticism, poetry and fiction pub¬lished between October, 1958 andOctober, 1959. A total of 33 prizes,each for $300 was announced bythe foundation.Shils received his award for anarticle, “The Culture of the IndianIntellectual,” which appeared in the Sewanee Review, Spring andSummer, 1959.James Purdy, a UC alumnus,was awarded the prize for hisshort story, “Everything Underthe Sun,” which appeared in Par¬tisan Review, Summer 1959. Hereceived his master’s degree inhumanities here in 1937.“Five Poems” by Jean. LouisGarrigue, appeared in Poetrymagazine December, 1958 andwon for him the Longview foun¬dation award. Garrigue graduatedwith a bachelor’s degree in hu¬manities in August, 1937.The aim of the Longview foun¬dation, according to Harold Ro¬senberg, the program director, isto “bring up the compensationfor good writing to the profes¬ sional level, regardless of whereit is published, and thus to aidin relieving authors of the pres¬sure to relax their standards orsubmit to extra-literary require¬ments in order to be paid for theirwork.”Westberg to preachReverend Granger E. West¬berg, associate professor ofReligion and Health, willspeak in Rockefeller chapelSunday, Feb. 21, on “Go, Preachand Heal.”Westberg was pastor of St.John’s Lutheran Church inBloomington, Ill. and served as acounselor to Lutheran students atIllinois State Normal universityand Illinois Wesleyan. In 1956 heDUAL FILTERDOES IT!It filters asno single filterfor received his present appointmentwhich constitutes a pioneering ef¬fort in the interrelationship of re¬ligion and medicine. He is theonly faculty member to hold ajoint appointment on both theMedical and Theological faculties.Westberg was an organizer ofthe American association of Prot¬estant Hospital Chaplains and be¬came its second president. He lec¬tures regularly in medical schoolsthroughout the country.He is the author of numerousarticles in medical and theologicaljournals and has written twobooks, Nurse, Pastor, and Patient,and Premarital Counseling.Zygmund getsmembership diplomaDr. Antoi Zygmund, professorof mathematics at UC was pre¬sented a membership diploma toPoland’s Academy of Sciences byPolish Ambassador Romuld Spa-sowski on February 12th.Four American universityscientists were also presentedmembership diplomas. The fourwere elected at a Polish Academyconvocation which also chosethirty other scientists and schol¬ars from nine countries in addi¬tion to the United States.Students offeredforeign jobsThe American Student Infor¬mation service (ASIS), a non¬profit agency that locates summer jobs in Europe for Americancollege students, is looking forstudents to fill such summer jobsas lifeguard on the French Rivi¬era, construction engineer inFrench Equatorial Africa, jazzmusician, gun-maker in Spain,water ski instructor in Switzer¬land and private secretary in Ger¬many. The Service, which hasbeen placing American collegestudents in Europe for twn years,now has over 3,000 positions, inall fields, open to US students.ASIS also has arranged aspecial student “summer pack- » waning hiui member*of the organization. Included inthe three hundred twenty-ninedollar package is the round-tripair fare to Europe, three hour oi i.entation course upon arrival, freefirst night accommodations. asummer job, complete health andaccident insurance for 95 days andthe use of the many ASIS facili¬ties which include free postalservice, social receptions, etc. Thenon-profit agency headquarters islocated at Jahnstrasse 5G-a,Frankfurt/Main, Germany, andthey have a branch office at theUniversity of Bridgeport, Bridge¬port, Connecticut. However, stu¬dents interested in summer jobsare requested to write directly iothe European office.WUCB auditionsWUCB, UC’s student radio sta¬tion, now has vacancies on its an¬nouncing staff says Johnny Walker Hartigan, WUCB chief announcer.“We need students to fill va¬cancies on our regular announeing staff,” Hartigan said “aswell as for our newly-formed re¬serve staff.” He said the reservestaff will be drawn upon whensubstitute announcers are neededfor absent regulars.Announcer auditions will beheld to select new announcerstomorrow (Saturday, 20 February1960) at 3:30 pm in WUCBsStudio A, on the second floor ofMitchell tower.Hartigan said he urges all interested students to attend theauditions. Those who cannot at¬tend, he said, should leave a note-addressed to the “chief announeer” in the WUCB box at theReynolds desk.Wing-ding froniteThe Folklore society will hold .»Wing-Ding tonight In conjunctionwith Negro History week. TiieWing-Ding, which is free to members and costs 25 cents to nonmembers, will be held at 8:30 inthe Reynolds Club lounge.FILTERPRICEHERE’S HOW THE DUAL FILTER DOES IT:1 It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL...defi¬nitely proved to make the smoke of a cigarette mild and smooth...2. with an efficient pure white outer filter. Together they bring you thereal thing in mildness and fine tobacco taste!NEWDUALFILTER< • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 19, 1960 Lucky girl!Next time one of her dates bring up the Schleswig-Holstein question, she’ll really be ready for him.Ready for that test tomorrow, too ... if that bottle ofCoke keeps her as alert tonight as it does other people.BE REALLY REFRESHEDBottled under authority ofThe Coca-Cola Company byThe Cece-Cele Bettlmt Company of Chkage, Inc.■ : r' . . —: .. ; .-VSchedule job interviewsRepresentatives of the following organizations will conductrecruiting interviews at the Office of Vocational Guidance andPlacement during the week of February 22. Interview appoint¬ments may be arranged through L. S. Calvin, Room 200,Reynolds Club.February 22—New York Life company, New York, will interview for bothpermanent and summer positions in its Actuarial depart¬ment. Candidates for permanent assignments must havecompleted mathematics courses through integral calculusas a minimum requirement. Summer positions are avail¬able to students completing their second or third academicyears, who have mathematical aptitude, and who may beinterested in an actuarial career.February 22—J. Walter Thompson company, New York, will interviewprospective graduates of any academic discipline interestedin these areas of advertising, editorial, research, media,TV-radio, public relations, and account executives.February 23-Kaiser Aluminum Chemical corporation, various locationsthroughout the U. S., will interview for positions in ac¬counting, business training, finance, industrial relations,market research, production, purchasing, sales, and salespromotion.February 25—City of Detroit Civil Service commission, Detroit, Michigan,will interview prospective graduates interested in positionsin accounting, business training, chemistry, economics, fi¬nance, mathematics, personnel, library, physics, psychology,purchasing, and statistics.February 25—Colgate Palmolive company, midwest locations, will inter¬view for field marketing positions in the Toilet Articlesdivision.February 26—U. S. Naval Weapons laboratory, Dahlgren, Virginia, willinterview mathematicians and physicists at all degree levelsfor positions in either research or development. Will alsospeak with S. B. and graduate level students in mathe¬matics and physics for summer positions if the full-timeschedule will permit. Kirkpatrick urges supportof Hyde Pk. developmentVice Chancellor of the University of Chicago, John L. Kirkpatrick, in a speech addressedto the South Shore Chamber of Commerce, has appealed to businessmen of the communityto support the Urban Renewal plan now being effected in the Hyde Park-Kenwood areas.Speaking briefly about the role of the South East Chicago Commission, Kirkpatrick saidthe Commission represents “all the prestige and influence that could be mustered from thecommunity sources and contacts. Merchants, bankers, realtors, educators, hotel operators,and professional men threw theirweight — and their money — intothe fracas.” The Commissionmaintains records which tell allpertinent facts about the propertyof the area, such as the conditionand status with the official de¬partments of the city; and hasbeen able to prevent taverns fromflagrantly violating closing hours,establishing itself as an effectiveenforcement agent.Kirkpatrick reviewed the his¬tory of neighborhood improve¬ment philosophies, pointing outthat the philosophy of conserva¬tion rather than total eradicationis more effective in “aging cities.”“Hyde Park,” he said, “has beenable to benefit from this philos¬ophy.”Three important achievementsof the Commission, Kirkpatrickstated, were sub standard reduc¬tions in the number of peoplemoving out of the neighborhood,in the number of overcrowdeddwellings, and in crime.Stating that three large pro¬grams had been approved, Kirk¬patrick cited the funds which willRefuses to answer SGWeston L. Krogman, managerof the UC bookstore, stated thatit was not his intention to submita written statement to StudentGovernment concerning the statusof the bookstore.Krogman, in a telephone inter¬view with the Maroon lastWednesday evening, said that hehad had talks with Ronald Shel¬ton, chairman of SG’s bookstorecommittee, and in these meetingshe thought that he had givenShelton all the information de¬sired without filling out the com¬mittee’s questionnaire. Sheltonhad submitted his committee’squestionnaire to Krogman lastDecember.Krogman implied that therewere many questions in the formto which he had no authority togive answer. When asked wherethe authority would come from,Krogman replied that it camefrom the central administration.The Maroon reporter then askedwhich particular office in the ad¬ministration gave authority inmatters of this kind. Krogmananswered, “The Chancellor’s of¬fice.”Krogman was then asked if hehad discussed the bookstore situ¬ation with the Chancellor. Krog¬man answered that he did not re-I>ort to Chancellor Kimpton butworked with William B. Harrell,vice-president of the University in charge of business affairs. TheMaroon then inquired whetherthe bookstore and the Vice-Presi¬dent’s office were planning anynew developments in regard to thebookstore.Krogman answered that therewere now no definitive plans. Hesaid that the construction of anew bookstore was under consid¬eration and that any other re-ararngements in the store’s pres¬ent setup were still in the discus¬sion stage.Krogman stressed the fact thatthe bookstore has no profit motiveas such. He said that he did notconsider the bookstore prices outof line with Woodworth's, for ex¬ample, or any of the downtownstores.The Bookstore committee’squestionnaire has asked Krogmanabout the current problem of the bookstore such as operation ex¬penses, efficiency, profits, prices,operational procedure, and usedbooks. The questionnaire furtherasks about the possibilities of es¬tablishing a cooperative book¬store or some other means ofprofit returns to students.hyde park's first cafeespressoopen daily till 1open weekends till 21369 East 57th StreetPROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO."Hyde Park's Most Complete Paint & Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th st.EUROPE 1960If you are planning a trip toEurope in 1960, you may wish tocheck on the following:1. Lowest air fares by scheduledairline, e.g., round-trip for twoNew York - Lcndon $689.44.Free advice on European hotelsand transportation.2. Purchase or rental of any Euro¬pean make car, also in connec¬tion with student flight.3. Choice of two all-expense, es¬corted tours: Tour I: 12 coun¬tries, 48 days. Depart viaCunard Line on June 10. Italyand Scandinavia OberammergauPassion Play. $1095.Tour II: 10 countries, 40 days.Round trip by air. 13 days inItaly. This tour starts from theU. of Chicago campus. $1125.For full information call or writeMr. Arne Brekke, 6009 S. Wood-lawn Ave., Chicago 37, III. BUtter-field 8-6437. Campus agent forIcelandic Airlines. Five yeors ofexperience in European travel. FREE PEN! FOR EVERY ORDERTIME (27 wks.) 1J*c * copyTIME (1 yr.) 7c a copyNEWSWEEK (17 Wks.) 9c * copyNEWSWEEK (1 yr.) 6c a copy 3.50US NEWS A WOULD REPORT (26 wks.) 11c a copy 2.67FORTUNE (1 yr.) 62c a copy *-56LIFE (21 wks.) 9c a copyLIFE (1 yr.) 7»£c a copy J-J®LOOK (8 mos.) 13c a copy 2.00SATURDAY EVENING POST (39 wks.) 16c a copy 3.96READER’S DIGEST (11 mos.) 17c a copy J-JJCORONET (7 mos.) 15c a copyTHE NEW YORKER (8 mos.) 9c a copy 3.66ATLANTIC MONTHLY (8 mos.) 31c a copy 2.56HARPER’S MONTHLY (1 yr.) 25c a copy 3.66SATURDAY REVIEW (1 yr.) 8c a copy 4.66THE REPORTER (10 mos.) 33c a copy 3.2iSCIENTIFIC AMERICAN (1 yr.) 50c a copyHOLIDAY (9 mos.) 39c a copy 3.56SPORTS II,I USTRATFD (17 wks.) 9c a copy 1-56SPORTS ILLUSTRATED (1 yr.) 7c a copyPLAYBOY (1 yr.) 40c a copyESQUIRE (8 mos.) 28c a copy 3.60TRUE (1 yr.) 34c a copy J.66MADEMOISELLE (1 yr.) 21c a copy 2.50HARPER’S BAZAAR (1 yr.) 25c a copy * 3.06GLAMOUR (1 yr.) 21c a copy 2.56VOGUE (1 yr.) 25c a copy - 5.06REDBOOK (9 mos.) 25c a copy 2.25LADIES’ HOME JOURNAL (9 mos.) 28c a copy 2.56HOUSE A GARDEN (1 yr.) 25c a copy . 3.00McCALL’S (9 mos.) 25c a copy 2.2aStudent Subscription Service, 2133N3, Norwood St., L.A. 7, Calif.Enclosed find $- for the above marked magazines. Send to:Name Class ofAddressCity□ New □ Renewal Zone .□ Gift from: State John L. Kirkpatrick, UCVice Chancellor, spoke onHyde Park redevelopmentbefore the South ShoreChamber of Commerce. be spent over a period of five orsix years. A total of $130 to $140million dollars of private and pub¬lic funds will be spent in HydePark-Kenwood:> T h e Universityhas spent $38 million dollars inthe last ten years and will spendanother $50 million in the nextfive years. All this will go into anarea of about 1000 acres in a veryshort space of time.“But,” Kirkpatrick continued,“we will have the toughest partof the job ahead of us. And that isRehabilitation with a capital R.”Eighty per cent of the HydePark-Kenwood area must be re¬habilitated rather than clearedout. This rehabilitation, he said,“will take education and hammer¬ing and constant lifting of com¬munity morale and pride andmore education and more ham¬mering.” The community must beconserved now, Kirkpatrickurged, “while the signs of blightand deterioration are still faint."Esterbrook fountain penswrite with the amazing newmiracle discovery—INK!Don’t bother to have your handwriting analyzed. It prob¬ably looks just like your room-mate’s.... No character at all.Wait until you come to your senses and buy the smart look¬ing Esterbrook Classic fountain pen—with the point that’scustom-fitted for you.The Esterbrook Classic starts writing instantly—the min¬ute it touches the paper. Feels so ‘right’ in the hand ... andlooks good, too! Choice of six colors.Another thing—the Esterbrook Classic always uses ink.You’ll like ink once you get used to it. It makes clearly dis¬cernible marks on the paper.Sde/it/toeH*T. M. The Esterbrook Pen Co. THE CLASSICFOUNTAIN PEN*2.95Other Esterbrookpens slightly tvgherFeb. 19. 1960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Reporter spends night as sleep subjectby Avima Ruder“Do you dream often?”asked the investigator as sheattached electrodes to myhead. “Yes,” I replied as Iprepared to go to sleep in themidst of a m a re of electricalequipment in a psychology re¬search room in Ingleside hall.Last Saturday night this re¬porter went to Ingleside hall tobe a subject in dream researchbeing conducted there. This re¬search project, headed by JoeKamiya, assistant professor ofpsychology, and financed by agrant from the National Instituteof Mental Health, is investigatingthe physiological basis of dreams.The data obtained from such ex¬periments is used by Kamiya andbis associates to study dreams."We’re interested in gettingdata relating physiological activ¬ity during sleep to dreaming, aswell as just studying the physio¬logical activities themselves,” saidKamiya.In order to measure these ac¬tivities, Kamiya has used overthirty subjects in 300 subject-nights of testing.His project, one of four UCprojects investigating sleep anddreams, started two years agoin an attempt to reach three ma¬jor objectives.The first of these involves the methods of dream research. Pres¬ent ways of measuring physio¬logical change during sleep anddreams include the study of brainwave patterns, eye movements,heart, respiration, and prespira-tion rates, body movements, andmuscle tension.Early investigations made byNathaniel Klietman of the depart¬ment of psychiatry showed thatpeople have distinctive brainwave patterns and rapid eyemovements during dreams. Thiswork also revealed that most peo¬ple dream 4-6 times a night, andthat dreams are, on the average,about fifteen minutes long,though some have been recordedwhich last up to an hour and ahalf.The second objective of dreamresearch is to find out how muchdreams vary, from night to nightin one individual as well as fromperson to person, by investigatingboth physiological data and dreamcontent. Dreaming in sequenceand the differences in a person’sdreams in one night are two ofthe subjects now being studied.The final objective of Kamiya’sstudies is to discover what causesdream differences between sub¬jects and to see if this is relatedto their personality differences.In order to measure the person¬ality differences of subjects, a battery of psychological tests isadministered to each subject.After completing these tests,the subject merely arrives at thelaboratory on the appointed dayone hour before his bedtime.Upon my arrival at the lab lastSaturday, I was asked to fill outa form describing my emotionaland Physical condition and mysleep habits for the last few days. The form also asked for a listof foods eaten and beverages im¬bibed in the last few hours.After a two and one-half hourwait for some Italian beef sand¬wiches for the experimenter andthe subject, the electrodes wereattached. These electrodes, whichare fastened with tape, acetone,collodion, and "electrode paste,”lead to a cable, which is connectedLUCKY STRIKE presents .i.Fnooa:Send your troubles to Dr. Frood,P.O. Box 2990. Grand Central Station.New York 17. N.Y.Deor Dr. Frood: Presumably college isa time of intellectual ferment... a periodof curiosity and discontent preceding aman’s plunge into commercialism andthe materia] life. Why must this inquiryafter lofty truths suddenly give way tocrass financial motives? IbidDear Ibid: It’s the children. All they seemto care about is food, food, food.»0* *0* *0*Dear Dr. Frood: I am a skin diver. Is itpossible to enjoy a Lucky under water?JulesDear Jules: Certainly. You may have alittle trouble lighting the match, however.*0* <0>Dear Dr. Frood: Every now and thenyou sneak a plug for Luckies into youranswers. Is this subliminal advertising?Psych MajorDeor Psych: No, sir. Subliminal adver¬tising is much less obvious. For example.Notice what the first letters of all thewords in the next answer spelL©x. r.cw SUBLIMINAL? FROODPLEADS NOT GUILTYDear Dr. Frood: Is there any old maximthat proves it pays for a young man togo to college? A. YomgmanDear Youngman: “Let us collectknowledge young. Soon thou rcapest in¬telligence kings envy.” (See previousquestion).*0* *0» *0»Dear Dr. Frood: I’ve been kicked out ofcollege, rejected by the Army, divorcedby my wife, disinherited by my father,and fired from my job. What is thereleft for me? Sturgis Dear Sturgis: You could still be black¬balled by the Book-of-the-Month Club.*0> *0» i0lFrood, Old Man—Seriously, friend, yourbrand of wit doesn’t sit with a sophisti¬cated student body. Try to sharpen it abit, old sock. Make it chic, what? Skoal.DinkDear Dink: Makes good sense, FriendDink. Will give it a go. Now, old bean, asfor that part of your letter you asked menot to print. Don’t be afraid of girls. Sureyou stammer and choke and blush. Butjust walk right up and announce, “Hi, I’mDink, and 1 think you’re swell.” Skoal.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 beats all the rest becauseL.S./M.F.T.— Lucky Strike means fine tobacco.TOBACCO AND TASTE TOO FINE TO FILTER!Product of x^itMxicwn <Ju&uxc-£crryx>i*^ — Jo&ucco is our middle name with an electroencephalographmachine (EEG). When this ma¬chine indicates an increase j'nphysiological activity, the subjectis awakened to check whether ornot he was dreaming.When all of my electrodes hadbeen plugged in, I was allowed tofall asleep naturally. I Uasaroused several times during thenight by the experimenter to re¬late my dreams, and after an¬swering such questions as: "Wereyou dreaming?”, "What was thedream about?”, "Did you recog.nize anyone in the dream'7,” ifell asleep again.This procedure is usually re¬peated 5-6 times a night, everytime an increase in physiologicalactivities is indicated, and sometimes even when it is not. Spotchecks such as these show theresearchers if their methods ofdetermining dream periods mereliable. Notable exceptions to therule of "increase in physiologicalactivity dreams” have been found.Subjects wakened from a deepsleep sometimes rememberdreams, while those engaged inmuch activity will occasionallynot recall having dreamt. It is achallenge to Kamiya and his fel¬low workers to understand thereasons for these exceptionalcases.One factor that may aid theInvestigators to uncover morefacts about the processes of sleepand dreams is the pattern ofsleeping. According to Kamiya w o"ride a roller-coaster” during thenight, alternating between petiods of deep and light sleep. It isin these periods of light sleep,which become longer and occurmore frequently as morning ap¬proaches, that dreams happen. Aperson may even have severaldreams in one period of lightsleep, separated by gross bodymovements which interrupt thechain of thought and sometimesprecipitate a new dream.When I awoke in the morning.I was asked to recall my dreamsof the previous night. If a subject is able to remember dreamsbesides those recorded, these areusually the dreams of the lastlight sleep period. After fillingout a form on my condition in themorning, I was sent home.Cheerful, newly decorated, attrac¬tively furnished apartment. Safe,fireproof deluxe elevator building.Doorman. Night watchman. Moidand linen service available. Rea¬sonable monthly rates from $87.50.Have a WORLD of FUN!Travel with IITA27tk Years Unbelievable lew CostEurope60 Ooy* $675Orient43-65 P.y.„X,from $998Atony fourl intludtcoftcg* cnditAlto low-cotf trip* to Max icotltt op. Sooth Amorico $4W up.Howoti Study Tour $59$ up ondAround tho World lilt! up.A*h Your Trovol A»or*t■ RHP MHk. m k. *»•■ ■HfMMft a NA Miltwouio hayii rI • CHICACO MAROON • Feb. 19, 1960SC seats three studentskBy a vote of the Executive council, two graduates and one undergraduate were seatedin the Assembly.Those seated were Paul Hoffer (Medical School), Daniel Klenbort (Physical Sciences),and Lincoln Ramairez (College). This action left eight vacancies which the Executive coun¬cil decided to delay filling for two weeks from their last Tuesday’s meeting. Before March1, applications will be accepted for those vacant seats if they are accompanied by a shortwritten explanation of the basis — ■-for the applicant s interest in SG. ^ handled in a “non-partisan” the Chancellor and other princi-Representation vacancies now oc- manner, especially so that dele- pal administration personnel withcuring are two seats in Federated gates without the rGS0Urces of a the four officers of the Assembly,Theological Schools, and one seat political party behind them are the editor of the Maroon, and theeach in Social Sciences, Humam- not financially prevented from — * — — •ties, Biological Sciences, Medical fining their office. 5) Establish-School, Social Service Administra- jng the NSA committee as ation, and Graduate Library closed committee with member-Scliool. ship composed of the entire NSAMaureen Byers, president of the delegation, whether or not theyAssembly, announced Thursday are members of the Assembly,that there will be an attempt to So that the policy of the SGfill the remaining vacancies be- nsa committee as presented tofore the Assembly meeting if the Assembly will be consistentenough appropriate applications with the policy and stands of theare received. Those graduate stu- NSA delegation taken at Region-dents who wish to apply for these ai and national congresses in the nonwhitec ontorincr n nmcrVi ment or stability than with price responsiblevacant seats must do so before name of the University of Chicago entering a neign- weakeni „ , dining proistation manager of WUCB. Priorto the monthly meetings a nagenda of major campus isuesand problems would be agreedupon. Jobs are available.The Office of Vocational Guidance and Placement has avail¬able many listings for summer work in camps, civil service,and offices. Jobs in YMCA and Boy and Girl Scout camps andsummer police work in New York State are just a few of themany jobs now on file.Listing in the Camp Counselor’s Referral Bureau is opento all men and women between 19 and 45 years of age. TheBureau, which serves both private and organizational summercamps in the Midwestern area, is run by Mandel Brothers. Offi¬cial application blanks for listing by the service are obtainableat Mandel Brothers, State and Madison.Information about these other summer jobs is available atthe Personnel office, Ingleside hall, 956 E. 58th street. Personsinterested in this summer work should contact Mrs. Joan Eadiethere.mm mmmm mma mm -Release segregation studyThe “widespread idea” that associated with price improve- leading to panic that have been5 pm Sunday. Between 3:30 and student body. b o r h o o d generally causes for some cases of de¬clining property values., .. . .. - - # # Laurenti’s study scientifically “The sale of one house to a non-.) pm bun ay, John Kim (Social Sciences) of property values to decline is tests the property-value belief white family may induce fear andru♦marln in nersnn CORSO £ave the reason for the challenged in “Property that otten is Cited by real estate widespread selling: this in itselfcept applica , cancellation of Mid-Year Activi- y i j p „ . . men and home owners in defense increases the supply of housingwithout written statements in the ties njght as an insufficient num-SG office (Room 218, Ida Nojes definite requests for ex-ha^R*_ hibit space from organizations.Jim Thomason, Election and He also reviewed a bill beforeRules chairman explained a reso- CORSO concerning reservation oflution recently presented to his meeting rooms and halls. This billcommittee concerning constitu- states its aim as a smoothing outtional amendments that would ef- and codification of present regu- of residential segregation. Heon says that this belief has arisenValues and Race,” a studymade for the CommissionRace and Housing, by Luigi because slums are commonly in-Laurenti. habited by minority groups. How-The work, a test of 10,000 real ever other economic factors—suchestate transactions in six cities as the pressure toward illegalof the northern United States, conversion of buildings — arereveals that where non-whites more important than race in de¬fect the relationship between the lations so that organizations are buy houses, real estate values are termining real estate values with-Assembly, the NSA delegation, given ways of obtaining adequate four times more likely to rise or in slums, Laurenti writes,and the campus. He presented and appropriate space for meet- remain constant than are prices in his study, Laurenti contraststhis summary of the provisions ings or events if they can show in areas remaining all white. the general maintenance of valuesand accompanying arguments of a clear cut need greater than that The Laurenti report toftk five in mixed and comparable all-white found several cases of mild pricethe bill: 1) Autumn quarter elec- of an organization which already years to do and covers a nine-year residential areas. “The evidence declines, but these were usuallytions for the NSA delegation: has such space reserved unneces- period of transactions in the San obtained indicated that non whitesSo that the delegation can gain sarily. Francisco Bay area and Philadel- were maintaining their propertiesexperience'by attending the two a bill to set up a “Chancellor's Phia> with supporting evidence at least as well as white home-from other studies in Chicago, and may cause temporary pricedeclines, Laurenti continued.Moreover this situation has some¬times been exploited by unscrupu¬lous real estate men of both racesin a process called ‘block busting,’in which one house is sold to anonwhite whose neighbors thenare stampeded into selling for lessthan they normally w'ould obtain.”“Block-busting” was rare in theareas studied by Laurenti; heregional congresses before theyattend the National congress inthe summer. 2) Automatic dele¬gate status for the editor of the gjve r aMaroon and the station managerof WUCB.So that the principle campusorgans of communications canhelp represent campus opinion inperhaps a less "partisan” man¬ner than delegates elected onspecific platforms. Part of theNational congress is a Collegenewspaper editor conference. 3)Automatic delegate status of thePresident of the Assembly.So that the Assembly electedin the Spring is guaranteed anofficial representative 4) Estab¬lishment of a separate budgetagency to raise and/or obtainfunds for all NSA expenses.So that all funds for NSA can Cabinet” was presented by JohnBrooks (Law School). The Execu¬tive council will study the bill,do pass” or "do notpass” recommendation, and pre¬sent it to the Assembly Tuesday.As introduced to the Council, thebill calls for monthly meetings of Kansas City, Detroit and Portland.Laurenti writes: “The majorstatistical finding is that duringthe time period (covered by thestudy) and for the eases studied(10,000) the entry of nonwhitesinto previously all white neigh¬borhoods was much more often owners in comparable areas,” hesaid. He suggests that, becausethe nonwhites who manage toenter all white neighborhoodsgenerally are more educated thantheir new neighbors, their abilityand willingness to maintain prop¬erty is generally greater.Laurenti describes the cycles followed by rises to or above theprevious level after two or threeyears. Laurenti found no cases ofcatastrophic decline of prices.Laurenti found that a few fi¬nanciers, by lowering the amountsthey will lend on property in inte¬grated neighborhoods, may makehouses more difficult to purchaseand so may depress prices by re¬stricting the potential number ofbuyers.L'HOMMEPREV0YANTsait que, pour garantir & safamille et k lui-m6me las£curit6 de l’avenir, il n’ya rien de mieux qu’un pro¬gramme d’assurance-vieform6 de polices Sun Life,adaptces k ses besoins par-ticuliers.RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LaSalle Chicago, III.FR 2-2390 • FA 4-6800Je reprisente la Compagnied’assurance-vie Sun Life duCanada. Nos plans moaernespeuvent it re adapt is d vospropt'es besoins. Puis-je avoiri occasion de vous exposerQuelques-uns de ces plans?Sans obligation, ividemment.SUN LIFE ASSURANCECOMPANY OF CANADA See The Dinah Shore Chevy Show In eolor Sunday*. NBC-TV -the Pat Boone Chevy Showroom weekly, ABC-TV.STEP OUT IN IT Impala Sport SedanGet the quiet proof of Chevrolet’ssuperior performance on the road—No other car in the low-priced threecan match the borne-on-the-windsensation you get from a ride in the1960 Chevrolet. But that’s not sur¬prising when you consider to whatlengths Chevy has gone to providefor your comfort at no extra cost toyou. As you drive, count the waysChevrolet has been thoughtful:Supple Full Coll suspension—Coil springs at all four wheels meltbumps as no other suspension can.Taking the punch out of rough roadsis their only function—they don’thave to anchor the rear axle.Butyl rubber body mounts—Thicker, newly designed body mounts further insulate you from the road.Body by Fisher—Only Chevy inits field offers the polish and crafts¬manship of Body by Fisher.Foam cushioned seats—Chevyoffers foam cushioned seats in bothfront and rear in all series but one.Safety-Girder frame—X-builtand not merely X-braced, the Safety-Girder frame affords greater rigidityto minimize twisting and squeaks.Hydraulic valve lifters—Oilhushed hydraulic valve lifters reduceengine noise to a whisper.Cushioned steering shaft—A universal joint and cushionedcoupling keep those annoying roadtremors from the steering wheel. Precision balanced wheels andtires—Here again Chevy has shownconcern for your comfort by elimi¬nating vibration in this vital area-tire life is longer, too.Easy steering ratio—Chevy’s highratio Ball Race steering takes thework out of steering for yorSuperior weight distribution—Chevy rides better, handles betterand stops better because the car’sweight is more equally divided be¬tween the front and rear wheels.Wide choice of power teams—Choose from 24 different power com¬binations to satisfythe itchiest drivingfoot—more than anyother car.Now-fast delivery, favorable deals! See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer!FEB. 19, I960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9■MHNMNmmm The case of the typing paperthat erased without a trace —or,EATON S CORRASABLE BONDTypewriter PaperIt's a cinch to '’rub out’’ I MM|typing errors and leave no"clues”, when you use tA.,Eaton's Corrasable Bond <y°Paper. Never smears, never 8 JKsmudges—becauseCorrasable’s like-magic Isurface ... erases without a ;®t|§§3S&trace! (A flick of the wrist "and a pencil eraser puts BTtilings right!) This linequality bond paper gives a I *handsome appearance to allyour work. It's a perfect « jSjgjjfg#'■ ;crime not to use it!• ‘ Erasable Corrasable Is available In all the weights youi'. n’lghtcrequ I re ysfronv: onionskin to heavy bond. In oon-* f f* * venient 100 sheet packets and 900-sheet ream boxesA Berkshire Typewriter Paper,’backed by the famousS&4 . Eatomneme. ;*$}&. r* JEATON’S CORRASABLE BONDMade only by Eatonwill be on display, at the Centraloffice this corning week and announcements concerning The coming drive have been made in by Eero Saarinen.■pMgmffmFor if you dig a modern filler cigaretteIt figures that it’s what’s up front that is the mostLike pure Flavorsville, orbit stuff, and all that jazz;And only K inston swings with. I FILTER-BLENP| upA real gone comho of golden, rich tobaccosSelected and processed like for filter smoking;That’s why, dear cats or even squares, it’s understoodWUS starts drive NDEA letters successfulWor$ University Service will conduct a fund drive at UCDowntown College center. The drive will continue fromThursday, February 25, until the following Wednesday.“At the suggestion of Professor John O’Dowd, dean of stu¬dents at the center, we will initial--& ‘, n i Congressmen have begun to affidavit in the National De- Mr. Michael Fox^T!SH^r^rRai,hr,JS^k downto»Tm,|hc"'laU-'afferZn answer student letters on the tense Education act. Several Con- ,oos Em, 60 th Streett £'nw,« “Rv **nd evening when classes meet.” loyalty oath and disclaimer gasman have commuted them- chicago 37, nimm,son, president of YVUb. By b r . selves to support repeal of theanalyzing the result of this in- III *11 - I 'cih \ rJ affidavit. Dear Mr. Fox:itial effort, we will be able to Dff*|T|<^n lOrCl 'Will SDfidlC.' :C ’ ' Members ofplan more efficiently when we willcontact the non-degree part time;students, she continued. '“Literature concerning W U S fit*oLVieotit* answers some students have re- _display, at the-Central Tuesday,. March 1. ^eocrastOT marks tte first use of t^e E ne vinogradotf, sec- have he,d that the inclusion of the. . .. auditorium of the new $4,100,000 Law school center designed retary o( „Conccrn.. saM ..Wc disclaimer affidavit, which y„„British lord will speakL British jurist, Lord Denning of Whitechurch, will talk on dent letter writing campaign, ex- tion mi(p of the Natiom^fL“The Judiciary in modern democracy” at the University on Pressed surPnso at ,he ffvorab,e fense Education Act. Although i_ . ■ , _ .... 1L. r: a. at-. answers some students have re- 1 ‘-Ss'M fMembers of “Concern," the Thank you for sharing with m*v group which organized the stu- your viewpoint concerning Seo-............... His views on the role of the did not expect any Congressmen oppose, is defensible in thatihemade, in Lord Denning, Lord of appeal judge in the growth of the law to commit themselves to support goaj 0f ^is acf is to strendk„ , „ in ordinary, sits as a member of have caused widespread jurispru- the repeal in personal letters. But .‘•V'olunteers are ni'i'd.'il to make England's highest court in the dential controversy. A reception several students have received e na tona defense program hgthe campaign a success ” Miss House of Lords and the Privy in the lounge of the Law school committals from Congressmen assuring scientific and technohv,i.•. .!> ’ council. Among his writings arefpenter will be held immediately who opposed the Kennedy-Clark cal resources and on the Inisis,Jackson continued.,.^ Anyone in-, ,.jp,I<0^dorn under the Law,” “The after the address. LordDenning repealer last year.” among others, that Congressionalterested should-^contact me ,in"R0art to Justice” and‘The Chang- will be accompanied by Lady Den- Vinogradoff explained that In an(j other Federal Covemit"1221) W»M • house Volunteering ing l aw.” ring at the reception. view of this preliminarv success, . ’ M* •:1 national sttident committ«- has Joyces are required to- been formed to urge all students a similar affidavit, / do agreeto express their views on the oath that the requirement is futile soand affidavit. The national com-, far as its purpose is concerned.mittee is acting as co-ordinator / agree aUo ^th, the contenti. nand inroimalion^center .for locar „la( M(. ^ Section Sm-committees which organize letter- ?- • . , .writing campaigns on their own wnten does not include evencampuses. The national commit- the limiting term “knoivingly” i«tee’s main office,is at Harvard too loose and therefore poses pos-university. - sible danger to innocent persons^“Concern’.’ is planning to con- , . <.. ... 1 ... A* . As you probably know, a stmt ortinue its letter-writing campaign . . ' ;here. Jenny Riesman, the group’s JfOn-Commumst a f f i davit; re-chairman, said,i “In view of the quired of labor union officialsfavorable, answers, received thus under the Taft Hartley Act wasfar, we feel it is very worthwhile repealed by the Labor Manage-to/ask'more students to/write. , n. . . . , -^ At * i 7,,cnf Disclosure Act of 1959. i‘.Concern has arranged for facul-,' . , .. 1ty members'to visit house coffee For these major considerationshours- during the next several as well as others which you sw/-.1° .N,h^o,h k*”1 aest’ you may assured o/Shyaffidavit with students. Members , . , ...of the group plan to canvass the su^K,rt °J legislation to re,, ,1entire: campus in the near future.* this provision of the National:De-to ask all students to write... .•/ fense Education Act. I deeply ap-Concern asks any student who predate and welcome the expres-receives an answer from his C’on-, r,/gressman to contact taye Wells. “(West), Eugene Vi nog r ad off With kinds regards, may I:;re-T a-i . " ■"* imain, m service.(Dodd).; or Jenny Riesman , ....(r,roPn '■ Faithfully yours," Printed below Is an answer re- ’ k / ~ ... .:*%ceived by Michael Fox from ( on Charle* C. Diggs, Jrgressman Charles Diggs of De- - •'Member of Congresstroit: iK. ;.(i-. •-A-\ United States of AmericaIWinston tastes good like a cigarette should !S i tEYHOLDS TOBACCO CO.. VMKTON-SALH H t EATON PAPER CORPORATION {IE) PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS1 . -• Coming events on quadranglesFriday* 19 FebruaryTh(, Eucharist according to the Lu¬theran nse, 11:30 am. Bond chapel,.'jtlnb, 2:30 pm. Reynolds club,south lounge. Come to listen or toMaroon staff meeting, 4 pm, Ida Noyeshall east lounge. All Maroon staffmembers and anyone Interested Inminim? the staff are Invited to attend.Motion picture (Doc films), 7:15 and% 15 pm. Social Sciences 122. “TheStory of Cost a Berllng” (GermanSabbath service. Hlllel foundation, 7:45'pm 5715 Woodlawn avenue.voung People’s Socialist league, 8 pm,Breasted'hall. Fenner Brockway, La¬bor member of the House of Commonsand president of the movement forcolonial freedom will speak on “Afri¬ca’s fight for freedom.” General ad¬mission, $l; students, 50 cents.Motion picture, 8 and 10 pm, Judsondining hall. "The Baker's Wife”(French film).University concert, 8:30 pm. Mandelhall. Sacred and secular music of theRenaissance And the twentieth cen¬tury by the Netherlands chamberchoir.Fireside conversation, Hlllel foundation,8 30 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue. “In¬terfaith cooperation; its vistas andlimitations.”Wing-Bing, Folklore society, 8:30 to 12pm Reynolds club. Admission free tomembers; to non-members, 25 cents. Carillon concert, 4:30 pm. Rockefellermemorial chapel. James R. Lawson,chapel carlllonneur.Independent Students league caucus,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes library. Openmeeting.Channing-Murray, 7:30 pn, 5638 Wood¬lawn avenue. Mr. H. Vandestappenwill speak on “Thoughts on art andZen.” "Bridge club, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Intercollegiate bridge tournament.Admission, 75 cents for undergradu¬ates competing for prizes.Musical society, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes hall,east lounge. Informal concert andmeeting.Radio broadcast, “The sacred note,”WBBM, 8:15 pm. A program of choralmusic' by the University choir, Rich¬ard Vlkstrom, director of chapel mu¬sic, conducting.Monday, 22 FebruaryArt exhibition, “Paintings by KathrynKlein Levin,” 10 am to 5 pm, Mondaythrough Friday, University Press, sec¬ond floor; through March 18, Art exhibition, "Contemporary portraitsby Chicago painters and sculptors”(Renaissance society), 10 am to 5 pm,Monday through Friday; 1 to 5 pm,Saturday; Goodspeed 108; throughMarch 21.Lecture series, "Advances In basic bi¬ology” (Division of the biological sci¬ences), 5 pm, Billings hospital P117.Dr. Hilary Koprowskl, director, WlstarInstitute, will speak on “Natural re¬sistance. to virus Infections.”Motion picture, 7 and 9 pm. Interna¬tional house. “On the Waterfront”(American film).Louis Block Fund lecture (Departmentof physiology and section of bio-psychology), 8 pm, Abbott 133. Mr.W. Loewenstein, associate professor ofphysiology, Columbia university, willspeak on “Energy conversion and theInitiation of nerve Impulses at a nerveending.”Campus action committee (Student gov¬ernment), 9 pm, Ida Noyes hall, room218.Television series, “A matter of sleep,”WBKB (Channel 7), following the last scheduled program’, Monday throughFriday. Nathaniel Kleltman, profes¬sor, department of physiology. Wednesday, 24 FebruaryTuesday, 23 FebruaryClassified Seminar (Institute for computer re¬search), 10:45 am, Research Institutes480. Anthony Turkevlch, professor, de¬partment of chemistry and EnricoFermi Institute for nuclear studies,will speak on “Monte Carlo calcula¬tions on intranuclear cascades.”The Eucharist according to the Lu¬theran use, 11:30 am, Bond chapel.Varsity wrestling meet, 4 pm, Bartlettgymnasium. Chicago versus IllinoisInstitute of Technology.Colloquium (Institute for the study ofmetals) 4:15 pm, Research Institutes211. Alan R. Allnatt, postdoctoral fel¬low, will speak on “Tonic conductivityin potassium chloride crystals.”Blackfriar board meeting, 6:30 pm, Man-del hall. Open meeting.Student government assembly, 7:30 pm,Old Law building, north hall.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30,Ida Noyes hall, room 213. Study anddiscussion of the “Acts of the Apos¬tles.”Television series, “All things consid¬ered,” WTTW (Channel 11) 9:30 pm."Communism In the Middle East.” Religious service (Divinity school), 11:30am. Bond chapel.Lecture (Graduate school of business),1:30 pm, Breasted hall, “Business poli¬cies, problems, and objectives as theyrelate to Atwood Vacuum Machinecompany.”Meeting of the faculty of the division ofthe physical sciences, 3:30 pm, Eck-hart 133.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm. Rockefellermemorial chapel. James R. Lawson,chapel carlllonneur.Evensong (Episcopal), 5;05 pm, Bondchapel.Hillel folk oance group, 7:30 pm, 5715Woodlawn avenue.Thursday, 25 FebruaryEpiscopal Communion service, 11:30 am,Bond chapel.Inter-varsity Christian fellowship, 12noon, Swift 202. Prayer meeting.Lecture (Department of psychology),2 pm, Swift commons. “Personality,performance, and predictability.”Microbiology club, 4 pm, Ricketts north,room I. “The effect of an antibioticon susceptibility of the mouse's In¬testinal tract to salmonella Infection.”For sale WantedSaturday, 20 FebruaryRecorder society, 1 pm, Ida Noyes hall.WUCB Station meeting, 2 pm. Mitchelltower, Studio “A.” All WUCB staffmembers.WUCB announcer auditions, 3:45 pm,Mitchell tower. Studio “A.”Basketball games, 6 and 8 pm, Fieldhouse. “B” team versus Glenview AirDetachment: Varsity versus Universityof Illlnols-Chlcago.WUCB broadcast of varsity basketball,7:30.Fifty - seventh annual Washingtonpromenade (Student union), • pm,Hotel Shoreland, Remington Rand grey Qulet-Rlter port¬able typewriter with case. Excellent con¬dition. Reasonably priced. Call MI 2-8120after 6 pm. Upright piano—In good condition. CallMI 2-8120 after 6 pm.1959 Triumph sedan, red. Owner leavingcountry, wants $1,250. BU 8-0560. Young man to share large apartmentwith 2 of same. Good trans. & full privi¬leges. Call BU 8-8219, 4-10 pm.Engagement ring. Original price $90. re¬cent appraisal of center diamond, $75.WU1 sell for $50. Call PL 2-0826. Girl student to sit In return for privateroom and bath. One-half block fromnew women's residence halls. MI 3-8859.Help wanted For rentSunday, 21 February Editorial secretary, for part-time workon Journal. Interesting and varied re¬sponsibilities, flexible hours. For Infor¬mation, call MI 3-0800, ext. 2759 or 2723. Two apartments, one four room and onethree room, both private bath. Fur¬nished. Clean and comfortable. Privateentrance. Located at 53rd & Ellis. Callfor appointment after 5:30 at eitherBU 8-2757 or MU 4-5990. GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOLSponsored by the University of Arizono in cooperation with professorsfrom Stanford University, University of California and Guodolojoro, itwill offer in Guadalajoro, Mexico, June 29 to August 7, courses in ort,folklore, geography, history, language, ond literature. $240 coverstuition, board and room.For more information, please write toProfessor Juan B. RaelBox 7227, Stanford University, Calif.igious service, 10 am, Hilton Sewing, alterations, hems. DO 3-1550.Radio broadcast, “Faith of our fathers,**WON, 0:30 am. The Reverend SamuelMiller, dean. The Divinity school. Har¬vard university.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10. and11 am, De Bales house, 5735 Univer¬sity avenue.Episcopal Communion service, 0:30 am,Bond chapelLutheran relitchapel.University religious service, World stu¬dent day of prayer, 11 am. Rockefellermemorial chapel. The Reverend Gran¬ger West berg, associate professor. Fed¬erated Theological faculty.Chime concert, 12 noon, Mitchell tower.Discussion, 1:45 pm, Judson lounge, tobe led by Chancellor Lawrence Klmp-ton. Everyone Is Invited.International House discussion, 2 pm,room A. For foreign students inter¬ested in participating In the festivalof nations. Refreshments will beserved.Organ recital, 3 pm, Rockefeller memo¬rial chapel. Music by Buxtehude,Bach, Franck, Reger, Messiaen, andDurufle will be played by RobertAnderson.Flection and rules committee (Studentgovernment, 3:30 pm, Ida Noyes hall,room 218. Full time summer positions, part-timepositions immediately — leading boys’athletic or swimming activities at theHyde Park YMCA. Call Mr. Rohmann,FA 4-5300.ServicesTyping. Reasonable, prompt service. CallNO 7-7799.Tutor, Finance major, knows earningpower of companies. ES 5-1346.PersonalCreative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.Hey George! Let’s go over to the NewDorm lobby tonight and watch theshow! Norville.Norville: Right! Let’s see how thatbrunette does tonight. George.Giovanni Moranl: Campaigning In themen’s dorm?Universal Army StorteHeadquarters tor sport and work wearFlap pocket wash Or wear ivy league trousers — Wash & wear dressshirts — camping equip. — Complete line of hods footwear —■ trenchcoats — luggage and trunks.1144 East 55th st. DO 3-9572reduction with this coupon _____^)4tllilMIII!Hlll||ill||||||tlt||||ft|||||||||t|t|||milllllflllll«»lllltlllllltllltlllllltltlltlHIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIlilllUIMHIItll&Fifty-Seventh at Ken,wo«<1 1wm m UNUSUAL F00UDELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICESiiumittNiuiHmimiimimimiimiiNiiiittiiiHiiiHiHRiniHiiHniiiiHiiiiiiiiHHiiitiiiiiniimiiimiHiiiHiHHiiHiiiiWhen you needPRINTINGcall the JAY bird!We've serviced campus printing ond mimeo needs efficiently since 1947.May we figure on your next job?• OFFSET PRINTING from your paper masters or ours ...a Resume fo • 500-poge report, neat end complete. Composition onIBM ond varitypers.• LETTERPRESS PRINTING • ADDRESSING• MIMEOGRAPHING from your stencils or ours. Tons ofstock on hand ready for immediate use. Skilled hands and modernequipment will moke yours a "jiffy job" ot JAY.Daily Pickups and Deliveries in U ot C AreaJAY Letter & Printing Service1950 EAST 75TH STREET, CHICAGO 49CALL HY 3-0802 A CAMPUS-TO-CAREERCASE HISTORY-V riMga’AA The telephone company reallyhelps you grow with your job itJohn T. Bell majored in History and Eco¬nomics at the University of Georgia. Ongraduating in June, 1957, he joined theSouthern Bell Telephone Company. business office representative, attended aninstructor’s school, and then taught classeshimself for several months.Today—less than three years later—heis a Public Office Manager for the com¬pany at Orlando, Florida. His office serves50,000 telephone accounts and handlesmore than a million dollars’ worth ofrevenue every month.John says: “I chose a telephone careerover a number of others because 1 wasimpressed by the company’s ManagementTraining Program and the opportunitiesoffered for rapid advancement. It was thebest decision I ever made.” Dealing with people—his "first love”—is John’s main job as Public Office Manag¬er. Besides handling personnel and otheradministrative duties in his office, hemakes many customer contacts in and outof the office. "Pm kept busy giving talksabout the company at meetings of busi¬ness and civic groups,” he says. "Also,I work closely with leading citizens onvarious civic projects. It’s mighty satis¬fying, and I feel it’s making a better man¬ager of me. The telephone company reallyhelps you grow with your job.:** * *John got his initial training at Jackson¬ville and Daytona Beach, where rotationalassignments familiarized him with over¬all company operations. Then he trans¬ferred to Orlando, where he trained as a Why not look into career opportunitiesfor you in the Bell Telephone Companies?See the Bell interviewer when he visitsyour campus—and read die Bell Telephonebooklet filed in your Placement Office.At left, John Bell explains a telephone training device to Mrs. Carolyn Dent of the Orlando office. Atright, he and banker William Dial discuss the local United Fund Drive, in which botn were active.BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESFeb. 19, I960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3-f *4 I*--5 ! lit■IPs< I■ mi t b..put§1if *1H 8l>&fW,‘. -■«:■ U!wsmmmmmmmCoach Bengston tells of I Berry talks for NAACPUCs athletic potential'According to Don Bengston, UC wrestling coach there is great potential for a strongphysical education program in the College. He spoke in the highest terms of the capableand dedicated coaching staff. Bengston commented that although the faculties and staffare available, many students do not take an interest in the program.Mentioning the low participation in some athletic activities and the fact that there seemsto be a lack of school spirit, Bengston said that the problem is one of “getting students toplay for the school ... We have —— —one of the academically best durjng high school and thus lack ston looks forward with eagernessschools in the country we will necessary skills when they get to the coming years when thegive them (the students) the fin- jn^Q coiiCge. “These students,” he physical education facilities willest physical education facilities if asserted, “often lack the competi- be able to match the academicthey want them. tive spirit which is so necessary facilities, for he believes that theCoach Bengston came to Chi- jn a well functioning democracy.” physical education program iscago this year by way of a high During the student’s physical strongly headed in this direction,school in Amery, Wisconsin, education program, Bengston con- He foresees increasing use beingwhere he coached for several tjnue(j( he becomes more compet- ma(ie of the great athletic poten-years. As an undergraduate at the j^jve responsive, and begins to tial that exists at UC.University of Minnesota he wres- prjde in his physical accom- The UC chapter of the NationalAssociation for the Advancementof Colored People presented Ed¬win C. Berry, executive directorof the Chicago Urban League,Leon Despres, alderman of the5th ward, and George Rawick, in¬structor in the Social Sciences, ina series of talks as part of thechapter’s celebration of NegroHistory Week.Rawick keynoted the serieswith his talk, ‘The Reason forNegro History Week,” on Tues¬day afternoon, February 16. Hesaid that the purpose of theweek’s commemoration was toreawaken the citizens of the Unit¬ed States to the history of theNegro in the United States. ‘‘Ahistory which is left out of ourhistory books.” Another purposetied and majored in physical education.Bengston spoke enthusiasticallyof the benefits of UC’s programof physical education classes. Hepointed out that many studentshave neglected physical educationChange Flight“There will be a change inthe proposed student flight toEurope,” announced GerhardRutkowsky, flight leader. “Theshorter flight, which was toleave on July 12, will leaveJuly 29. The flight will returnon September 3, instead of theoriginally scheduled August 16.Instead of going to Amster¬dam, the flight will stop atLondon and Paris. The flightwill also return from Londonand Paris, instead of fromBrussels, as was originallyscheduled. plishments. Playing on an inter¬collegiate team further helps buildthis character. Students begin totake pride in the school and wantto work for it. Bengtson spokewith approval of the members ofhis wrestling team who, althoughplaying a tough schedule, havetried their hardest to win.“Winning,” Bengtson said,“builds up a reservoir of charac¬ter which is called upon when theindividual or team loses.” Suchcharacter, according to Bengston,does not exist in a large enoughquantity among all Chicago stu¬dents at this time. When askedabout ways of strengthening thephysical education program,Bengtson commented that twoyears of required physical educa¬tion would be invaluable in devel¬oping the potential of Chicagomen. Bengtson also spoke of thepositive good which he said wouldbe rendered by a football team.Such a team, he stated, would aidin improving school spirit. Bens-THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree II.C. DeliveryTerry 9s Fourth floor of West winssecond annual skit contestYVest house four won the second annual Festival of theArts (FOTA) skit competition with a presentation entitled“South Side Story,” at the competition last Friday.Only four of the ten groups that had entered the compe¬tition appeared at the contest. _____of /'Tbne Will Tell.” The winningskit will be performed on WUCB’sSpoil Hermione Puremind,” bysecond floor North house, “So annual marathon next weekend,and may be* repeated during the1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045 I.WbyPhiC.— Mtt Festival oftheArtsTacoerding tofloor WesThTse8 *“ ^ f°Ur,h FOTA «“"»» Sehafte,Judges for the competition were winning skitMrs. Alan Simpson, Robert Street- 'vas ^ased on the difference be¬er, former dean of the College, *ween the students who enteredand Robert Ashenhurst, co-author ua^cr ^ew College and thosewho entered under the old system.The skit traced the change ofNew College people to “beatniks"and the change of the old stu¬dents to “bright, young collegestudents.”UO'N ,.V„A \ftoKS\aiev\ Yoo-, as fmmSm mSMOOTH SHAVi J - *Stays moist and firm throughout your shave!regular or new mentholatedTake your choice of new, cool mentholated or regularSmooth Shave. Both have rich, thick Old Spice quality-lather that won’t dry up before you’ve finished shaving.Both soften your beard instantly—end razor drag com¬pletely. For the closest, cleanest, quickest shaves... tryOld Spice Smooth Shave I 100each Qf(/ Cp'/irSMOOTH SHAVEby SHULTON• CHICAGO MAROON • Fob- 19, 1960 is to remove racial discriminationas a “legally sanctioned outlet*of our otherwise norma! angerAlderman Leon Despres in histalk, “The Negro in Hyde Park,”on Wednesday evening, February17, stated that urban renewal wiilnot be successful without openoccupancy.Edward C. Berry, executive di¬rector of the Chicago UrbanLeague, gave his talk. “Race Helations in Chicago, Now,” Tues¬day evening, February 16, in So¬cial Sciences 122, as the chiefspeaker of the series.Berry began his remarks bystating, “Chicago was the mostresidentiary segregated city inthe North.” Citing a study madeby two Northwestern universityprofessors based on the 1950 eonsus, which stated that Norfolk,Virginia was the most residential-ly segregated city In the countryand that Chicago was the secondmost.According to Berry. “Norfolkdoesn’t count because its population could easily fit into the 3800and Indiana block (here In Chicago). In fact, the 3 by 8 milearea is the world’s largest ghettoand has a population larger thanColumbus, Ohio.”“Race relations in Chicago arefar worse than they should be. Inthe five areas, employment, edu¬cation. housing, social work andreligion, where race relations canbe improved for the whole communitv, progress Is poor.“Living segregated as we do.with a ‘high gate’ between us. wedon’t know each other as per¬sons, negro and white. There areno peer relationships. When wedon’t know one another, we onlyknow about one another. Whenwe only know about one another,we know only stereotypes.”Berry went on to say that theUC campus provides a better op¬portunity for people of differentraces to know each other thanother campuses in Chicago.Even among social workersthere is a disparity, since in aworkshop of 30, only one had in¬vited a person of their peer groupof another race to a social func¬tion, i.e., a party or dinner. 7 ofthe 29 social workers live in theHyde Park area where there isn’ta lack of Negroes.However, “there is great hopefor Chicago because it has greatresources. This was best shownwhen the three largest religiousgroups, the Rabbinical Society,the Archdioceses and the Federa¬tion of Churches, testified beforethe Civil Rights Commission, onsegregated housing in Chicago.Church groups are holding fo¬rums all over the city to betterrace relations.”HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Down to Dawn 1342east 53 at.tyyforii|n car bespital & dimeSA 1-3161dealers hi:castrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli &michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespecialists hi: speed tuningcustom engine installationsclutchgear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachworkbeb lester MG psychiatrist7215 exchange ave.Chicago 90,illinoisNet HiUi • stadeat wha Thlsl Perspicacious...studies drowsily no msKw sharp! NiMi kseps yo*hew much sloop bo pots. owoko ood alert—-safely!If you find studying sometimes soporific (and who doesn’t?) the wordto remember is NoDozq. NoDoz alerts you with a safe and accurateamount of caffeine—the same refreshing stimulantin coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-formingNoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable.So to keep perspicacious during study andexams—and while driving, too—always keep N0D02 in proximity.Us *»{• star soaks tsbist — srailaMs everywhere. AssUtst Uas product si Crovs L*bs«tsrtts< Check your supply ... dieaverage college man owns atleast ten shirts. He consistentlytrays oxford cloth shirts with theArrow label. Reason? Only Arrowoffers the authentic, soft rollcollar, luxurious "Sanforized”fabric. Ask for the "Dover”collar. $5.00.•ARROW-WJisrsrsr you go .. .you took better mi on Arrow shirtSwimmers winTh0 UC swimmers in theireighth dual meet of the year de¬feated the University of Illinois ofNavy Pier by a score of 58 to 37.This gives the UC team a recordof 5 wins and 3 losses for thecar. all three of the losses beingto Big Ten teams.The first event of the meet, the400 yard medley relay, was takenby Chicago with a time of 4:20.4.In it were Bill Zimmerman, DanSiogal, Len Frazer and Dave Dec.The 220 yard freestyle was wonby Roger Harmon with a time of2-201. Chicago’s Hellmuth wasthird in this event. Tom Lisco ofVC won the 60 yd. freestyle in29.0 flat. In the 160 yard individ¬ual medley, Harmon took 1st andZimmerman took third. The div¬ing event was won by Joe Kypers would not let them pull away. TheMaroons grabbed early leads of11-6 and 21-14, but the Jays hungin the game on the outside shoot¬ing of forward Larry Becker andcenter Bill Mahoney and the Ma¬roons were able to build only a28-21 halftime advantage. Beckerhad 6 points at this point and Ma¬honey had 9, but the big scorersof the first half were Maroon for¬wards Gary Pearson and JerryToren who each tallied 12 mark¬ers for 24 of the 28 Maroon points.The game was turned to a com¬plete rout at the outset of thesecond period when the Maroonsscored 9 straight points to build a37-21 lead which the Blue Jayscould not whittle down eventhough they employed a tightscored 9 of his 11 total points inTom Lisco winning the 440 yard freestyleof the Maroon squad. UC placedfirst and second in the 200 yardbutterfly with Paul Hoffer andLen Frazer respectively. Liscoplaced first in the 440 yard free¬style with the outstanding time of4:58.8. In the 200 yard breast¬stroke, Dan Siegal placed secondin a dose race with Bob Cordekcoming in third.The varsity team left this morn¬ing by train for a dual meet inSL Louis this afternoon withWashington university. They willremain in St Louis overnight andtackle St Louis university tomor¬row. These two meets .are thelast two dual meets before theChicago IntercollegiateChampionships in March.Basketball team splitsThe University of Chicago var¬sity basketball team split twogames on their Eastern trip lastweekend as they beat Johns Hop¬kins university, 66-47, Friday, inBaltimore, Maryland, and thenwere defeated by Army’s CadetsSaturday in West Point, 59-48.This defeat was only the secondloss of the season for the MidwayMaroons and it leaves them witha 16-2 record before their finalfour games.The Maroons took charge of theHopkins game right from thestart. However, the Blue Jays the second half and with Pear¬son’s 10 added markers and To-ren’s 7, the Maroons easily pulledaway to the final 66-47 count.High scorers for the Jays wereMahoney with 15 points and Beck¬er with 12.Against the Cadets the storywas a little different. Again theMaroons began by Jumping to anearly 13-8 lead over the surprisedCadets. Baskets by Pearson,Woods, and forward Mitch Wat¬kins plus 7 free throws gave theMaroons their lead. However, atthis point, the Cadets, led by bigforward Lee Sager, rallied for 13straight points and from then onthe scrapping Maroons were justtoo tired to make it all the wayback.The Maroons got a good bounc¬ing around from the rugged re¬bounding twosome of Sager, whoscored 16 points in the first half,and burly center Lee Anderson,who grabbed many rebounds tostart Cadet fast breaks. Thispair’s rebounding and the steadyflow of fresh substitutes from theArmy bench was just too muchfor the Maroons to overcome, al¬though they did come within 4points of the Cadets in the secondhalf after trailing at halftime30-21.Whenever the Maroons did pullclose the Cadets put on a burst of speed and left the tired visitors.Adding to the Maroon woes wasthe fouling out of Pearson andToren midway through the sec¬ond half. Pearson and Watkinsscored 11 points apiece but Woodstook game honors for the Ma¬roons with 12 points. The hot-shooting Sager scored 23 pointsfor the Cadets and his only sup¬port came from guard Stu Sher-ard, who made three baskets inthe last five minutes to end upwith 10 points and seal the final59-48 victory for the Cadets.Track team wins first dual meetThe UC varsity track team wonits first dual meet of the seasonlast Friday, beating Wayne Stateuniversity 75% to 29%.Wayne State managed to winonly two firsts: shot put and 880yard relay. The Maroons took thehigh and low hurdles with JustinJohnson on the highs with : 10.00and Terry White on the lows with:08.6. White also won the 60 yarddash in :06.5, as well as placingsecond in the high jump and thirdin the pole vault.Gary Augustine and Gerry Geh-man placed 1-2 respectively in the440 yard run, with the winningtime being 53 seconds flat. VicNeill won the mile in 4:37.9 andplaced second in the 2-mile runbehind Wave Houk, winning with10:15.5. Dennis Rusehe won the880 yard run in 2:01, with PatPalmer taking third.According to mentor Ted Hay-don, the team seems to be show¬ ing improvement at every meet,and will be a strong contenderwhen the outdoor season comesaround.The UC Track club had a goodweekend at .the Illinois open trackmeet in Champaign. Six of a pos¬sible thirteen first were taken byUCTC entrants. Brooks Johnsonwon the 60 yard dash in :06.3 withA1 Jacobs and Ward Miller of theClub on his heels. Willie May wonthe 70 yard low hurdles in :08.4and took second in the highs.Ron Etherton won the 300 yarddash in 31.7 with George Kar-cages right behind him. MamonGibson and Ed Hoyle both vaulted14 feet, but Hoyle took the firstbecause of less misses at lowerheights. The mile relay teamstook first and fifth. The A team split(Bob Saddler, George Karcazes,Syl Robertson, Ron Etherton)won with a fast 3:22.2.Fencers lose friangularUniversity of Chicago’s fencersmet Notre Dame and Wayne Statein a triangular meet at SouthBend, losing the first to Wayne20-7, and then to Notre Dame 21-6.Throughout both meets Shel¬ton, Riopelle and Crane providedthe bright light for the Maroons,with Riopelle and Crane winningtwo of three each in a 5-4 winover Wayne, and Shelton taking2 of 3 from Notre Dame in a closeloss.In saber, Chicago lost 7-2 toboth opposing squads, with Capt.Elliot Lilien winning all fourpoints for the Maroons.The start of the 200 yard butterflyLady Maroons win threeThe University of Chicago’swomen’s basketball teams losttwo games Saturday, February13, to Concordia college. The finalscore for the varsity team was41-31. High scorers for the gamewere the UCTs captain AndySchmidt with 24 points and Con¬cordia’s Biberdorf with 20 points.Concordia’s B-team defeatedUC by a score of 38-19. Two Con¬cordia forwards, Beisel and Witt-hoeft, led the scoring with 18 and14 points, respectively.The University of Chicago’swomen’s basketball teams wontwo games from St. Xavier, Mon¬day evening in Ida Noyes gym.In the early part of the game theUC team got off to a good leadand was never passed, winningwith a final score of 56-19. TheChicago captain, Andy Schmidtwas the game’s high scorer with31 points.The B-team game Monday waspoorly played by both teams dur¬ing the first half, but the UC teamimproved in the second half towin by a score of 42-15. Chicago’sValerie Dalwin led the scoring with 17 points. Chicago’s JoanGayley, Diane Miller and Xavier’sAnn Rosensteel followed with 10,9, and 9 points, respectively. SueVelie scored the rest of the Chi¬cago points and Deir McGroganand Cathy Kenny scored the restof Xavier’s points.On Thursday, February 11,Fourth West II defeated SecondNorth, 51-11, and Fourth West Iwon by default over First Northand West, in the interdormitorybasketball tournament. The University of Chicago’swomen’s basketball team defeatedGeorge Williams college lastWednesday evening In Ida Noyesgym by a score of 58-32. The highscorer for the game was ChicagoCaptain Andy Schmidt with 37points.This latest victory gives thevarsity a 3 and L won-lost record.They have defeated Lake Forest,St. Xavier, and George Williamslosing only once to Concordia college.MODEL CAMERA The CollegeWholesale LAUNDERETTECatalogue Price* enCameras, Projectors, Recorders 1449 Ea«t 57th St.1342 E. 55tH HY 3-9259 MU 4-9236 (EuUegr iMrnNr eh grurralArrow OxfordButtondownsFeb. 19, I960 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13Lawyer, poet to visitA Man of Letters, the poet John Crowe Ransom, and a-Man of Law, the British Law Lord,Lord Denning, will continue the series of informal discussions entitled “My Life and Yours,’’Dean of the College, Alan Simpson announced today. Like their predecessors, the visitorswill meet with a selected group of about one hundred undergraduates in Ida Noyes Eastlounge to talk briefly about themselves and their work and to answer questions.The program at which Ransom will read some of his poems and answer questions willfollow coffee at 8 r>m on Monday,Fehruarv 20 Lord Denning will Lord Dennin2 ot Whitchurch is law must be responsive to modmtSerns ^tween^ 2and one oi the galaxy oi visiting cele- ern conditions. He has beennm the neit afternoon March 1 brl,les mvl,ed by the Law Sch°o1 great dernand as a Popular speak-pm the next afternoon Marcn i. university of Chicago to er in universities all over theAdmission to the program will . . . .. ihn rrtX7n all overu.c take part in the dedication of the world. Two volumes of hisbe limited to (1) the first fiftyr Zenia and Roland Bailey, producer and choral directorof South Side Story, look over script with Ruth Netherton,director of this years production.and pre-law students for the LordDenning talk. Categories (2) and(3) will be selected by facultymembers.John Crowe Ransom is bothpoet and critic. His writings in¬clude Chills and Fever and Graceafter Meat (two volumes of“This year's Faculty revels production is a loosely adapted unorth^dox“SnI^Tfversion of King Lear," said Carrol Bowen, publicity director orthodoxy (1930), The World’sNew 'Revels' showis based on 'Lear' lee-new Law School buildings. Simp- tures have been published undc'rson says that Lord Denning is the titles Freedom under the Im¬probably the most notable living and The Changing law. He is also-r oc-th ,o, advanced English lawyer, and considered the author of The Road to Justice.Hnmanttri ^ °» <be liveliest Appointment When he gives the Ernst Freundtion of the College for the Ran- to the House °* L°rds is the hiSh' lecture in the Law School in thesom lecture and*!’ social science e, ho^Brium can bestow on evening of March t. he wUlialKLord Denning has been a power- on *The Judiciary in Model nful advocate of the theory that Democracy."undergraduates who register inDean Simpson’s office (Room 203,Goodspeed Hall) by five o’clock,Evening with Peretzpresented by Lammof the production. “The play starts out with Lear and his BodyTacolkvtHm of critical es- of ’Lords winning the University of Chicago in a crap game, says and probably his most wide- rL. ■■Unlike some modernists."From there on. the show is com- - >ya«d »• fcgSSbZtiZmaUmtel Lamm explained, "Peretz did no,with Isaac in a search for tranquility insteadfor ecstasy.Unlikelove life indiscriminately with itsplete corn.” such as those of the Blackfriars.” New Criticism (1941)South Side Story is the title of The cast of this year’s show will He has taught at Vanderbilt and *10use last * n a> mg 1 • cruelty and evil or seek ever tothe production, which will be pre- be the largest in the history of Kenyon College and has served as Lamm spoke of the inherent .. v«0’ien* imoressionssented in Mandel hall on March Faculty Revels, according to Mrs. the editor of the Kenyon Review, universality of Peretz’s appar- nrtinn«? of his characters He4 and 5. Tickets for the show went Netherton. There will be several distinguished literary magazine, ently Jewish symbolism, despite ... . , makiru? realitv Dureon sale for the general public yes- specialty numbers, which have from 1939, the year of its found- the efforts of some of his biogra- . relevant before arkterday. They may be purchased at not been completely worked out ing, to 1959. Mr. Ransom is cur- phers to make it seem exclusively .... , t fiction He oftenthe Quadrangle club, 57th street yet. Some of the songs and pro- rently a visiting professor of Eng- Jewish. He then told how Peretz, _ , frnm the’ life aroundand University avenue, for $3. All duction numbers that have been lish at Northwestern university, who balanced in his works Has-seats are reserved. definitely set are “Madrigals for He will be introduced at the sidic mysticism with reality, hadAccording to Mrs. John Nether- Malcontents,” “U of C Calypso,” February 29th meeting by Ronald a reality which consisted in histon, the show’s director, “It is “Goodbye to Squallor,” “Piechart Crane, Distinguished Service pro- distrust of the power and corn-going to be a good show, as any- Howdown,” and “Our Old Man fessor emeritus of the University pleteness of rational thinking,one who knows Alec Souther- Has Loused Up the Plot.” of Chicago. and a mysticism which consistedland’s work has a right to expect.In the plot, we start from KingLear and leave him pretty quick¬ly. One of the very exciting partsof the show are the stage sets, de¬signed by Harold Haydon. Theyare non-representational formsand lighting effects, which willgradually flow from one to theother. Orchestra states program retreated from the life aroundhim, to recall it later in writing,in a purified and beautifiedform.”Lamm went on to discuss threestories specifically, among them“Buntche Schweigc” and “AndEven Beyond,” which he laterread in its entirety.“Buntche Schweige” is thestory of a poor man who sufferspatiently and uncomplaininglyAssisted by twenty-five new members and led by a new director, the UC Symphony or- through the worst possible mis-chestra has undertaken an ambitious program for the rest of'its 1959-1960 season. fortunes all his life. Having died“It’s a shame," commented director H. Colin Slim, “that a university of our intellectual and as«mded, he is told that he, . ....... , calibre doesn’t have the orchestra others have." To rectify this situation, the Music de- IPay have anyt/ung ,he wantsshow te“ lEiWenUal maUer," Ef^Toment The^heltram^ spent time and jnoney *° bmld up the orchestra and ^Hitter e™ ‘/"morning torcontinued Mrs. Netherton. “We lts equipment. The orchestra membership has risen by about 25% and the instruments breakfastavailable have increased by two ■kettle drums and a new double- short pieces, and then will return Arthur Soloman, the other winner “Despite the misconceptions ofbass. to the audience to hear the musi- of the contest will play the Men- some readers,” Lamm said,” thisThis year the orchestra is giv- cal story of Peter and the Wolf, delssohn Violin Concerto. story is not an example for Jew¬ing a series of three concerts and* ^arrat<-d by Frenchhorn player, “We will not Increase the num- *sh humor, a characterization ofare keeping within the traditionof our previous productions andother productions of this type,FRIDAY night fun!le cafe petiteBOHEMEFeaturing Luchino,Cellar Boheme Reviewand guest artistswithFlamenco, folk musicand other excitingentertainmentFun starts at 9 p.m.Thurs. — Drama GroupWed. — Poetry, Musicle cafe petite boheme343 E. GarfieldNear the El-stop • PL 2-9389 a children’s concert. Two-hundredchildren, between the ages of sixand thirteen will take turns sit¬ting in the orchestra during four Roger Downey.The second of the series con¬certs will take place in Mandelhall on March G, at 8:30 pm. Theprogram will include the Suite ber of concerts next year,” saidSlim, “because we spend half therehearsal time reading throughnew pieces. Sight-reading givesmore unanimity to the membersUNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1.453 E. 57thFine haircuttingFour barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor from Handel s Water Music, ar- Gf (be orchestra, and helps us to have.”the Jewish people, nor a ludicrouspicture of distorted and stultifiedvalues. Indeed, considering his de¬prived life, Buntche’s desire isthe best possible one for him toranged by Harty; Peter and theWolf, by Prokofieff; Haydn’s Con¬certo for Trumpet and Orchestra,with William Spady, co-winner ofthe concerto contest, as soloist;and Dvorak's Symphony No. 4 inG major. In the spring quarter, improve the quality of our per¬formance. We still need morestring players, and would like tohave faculty and communitymembers as well as more stu¬dents. This would give us a hard “And Even Beyond” is the storyof a Rabbi who disappears fromhis house each Yom Kippor, toascend bodily to heaven, as hisdisciples believe. A Litvak (Liter¬ally a Latvian Jew, but usuallyBicycles, Parts, Accessoriesspecial student offer <<i<ACE CYCLE SHOP j1621 a. 55th st. jNOMINATEJOSEPH D.LOHMANDemocratic CandidateFor GOVERNORwithIDEASandENERGYAS WELL AS VOTESVolunteers With Above, Call:Lohman for Governor Headquarters30 N. Dearborn CE 6-1181 MILESDAVISSEXTETTENO ENTERTAINMENT TAXNO ADMISSIONNO COVERJazz Concert TuesdayPARKING BY ATTENDANTSUTHERLAND47th & Drexel SfAe core to hold the orchestra to- portrayed as embodying the to¬gether as the students come and tellectual, skeptical elements ofgo.” Judiasm who criticised and rc-“Over GOO people attended the jected the hysterical, extatic Has-last concert. All we have to do disbelieving this theory.„ , , . ... „„ follows the Rabbi from his housenow, Slim concluded, “is fill Man- ono Yom Kippor morning. Seeingdel hall. It sounds better that the Rabbi go as a peasant wood-way ” - cutter to gather fuel for a poorold woman, he decides that theRabbi is indeed happier and holierthan had he in reality ascendedto heaven.PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55Hi STREET MIDWAY 3-4433Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 l.ake Park 4ve. Ml 3-3060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. —— 9 a.m. - II p.m. EUROPEWe'll see Hie usual PLUS.You're not herded around.A college tour that's different.EUROPE SUMMER TOURS255 Sequoia, Box 4Pasadena, California|rvrrrvtVTrvv?VTffy^TrvvvTvvv»>'r»»wrtv»vr>»t»^ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage & meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.14 BEVERLY HILLSNURSING HOMELicensed \ond opproved for oged,chronically ill and convalescentresidents. Registered Nurse andlocal doctor on call. Twenty-fourhour service, licensed practicalnurses and nurses aids. Excellentfood, convenient to bus and R.L,near churches of all faiths.10347 Longwood DriveChicago 43, III.Phone BE 8-4454• CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 19, 1960Culture VultureFor all those cheerful people who are going around repeating Ezra Pound's little ditty about Winter is icumen in, I gotnews. It came long ago, and it should go, already. I always thought that if I could make it through February, I could make itthrough the whole year. But at this point, I am beginning to have my doubts. All sorts of consoling souls are telling me thatMarch is three times as bad, and that winter is really just beginning. And that I shall have to go sliding through the slush onmy tractionless talons (I know, I ve used that phrase before, but I liked it, and besides, it was. last quarter) and have tolisten to screaming tires and smell burnt rubber at all hours of the day and night. The Chicago police should institute atest for snow driving, make themselves an artificial course, and teach people that it does no good at all to rev the motorand spin the tires and do nothing else at all. Why, sonny, back in them thar hills where I hail from, we got snow all winterlong, sometimes high as my head, but we go up them hills like a breeze. Don't even need chains. Yep. And it's ail a matterof■ knowing how to do it. But I gotta git back to work and tell all them folks about culture. And then, back to the hills.On campusTheatreUniversity Theatre is, as youall must know by this time, doingThe Yellow Loves, by HowardSackler, the co-winner of the 1959Sergei play-writing contest. Per¬haps this doesn’t mean much, butthe show is really good. In fact,it is off Broadway material, andit has been said that it may getthere yet. Rehearsals have al¬ready started, which is prettygood when you consider that thecasting was last week. But thereis still a dire need for people wholike to grub about and do techwork. There are five sets in thisshow7, designed by Chicago artistJo Lubin, which will be done ina Renoir-type style (at least Ithink it is Renoir). At any rate,it will have the effect of that pe¬riod. And there is a lot of paintingto be done, most of it as soon aspossible. Anyone interested inspending a few hours gettinggood and messy should contactRichard d’Anjou at UniversityTheatre.Blackfriars is . . . Blackfriars.They have another draft of theirscript, a director, a cast, music,and an orchestrator, and all theother things that are usually con¬sidered necessary to have a goodmusical. And that is just aboutall I know about Blackfriars thisweek. As I say, Blackfriars is . . .Blackfriars.MusicTonight, University Concertsis sponsoring the NetherlandsChamber choir, with Felix de No¬ble conducting this program ofwhat the music department callsFranco - Netherlandish composersand moderns. The Franco-Nether-landish composers’ part is madeup of pieces written in the fif¬teenth, sixteenth, and seventeenthcenturies: Clemens Non Papa,Obrecht, Josquin, Lassus, andSweelinck. The rest of the pro¬gram includes works by Monte¬verdi, Barbar, Martin, and Debus¬sy. The Netherlands ChamberChoir will perform in Mandel halltonight, at 8:30 pm. Tickets willprobably be available at the door.But I would suggest calling themusic department.This Sunday gives with theMusical society’s third informalgathering of the quarter. Thistime there is a definite program:songs of Bach, Schubert, andMahler; Mozart’s Flute Quartet,K. 298; and Haydn’s TrumpetConcerto, with Bill Spady makinglike a soloist. The Music societymeets in Ida Noyes East loungeat 7:30.The UC Symphony orchestrawill give their winter quarter con¬cert Sunday, March 6 in Mandelhall. The program will include theSuite from the Water Music, byHandel Harty; Prokofieff’s Peterand the Wolf, narrated by RogerDowney; the Concerto for Trum¬ pet and Orchestra In E flat, byHaydn, once again with Bill Spa¬dy as the soloist; and Dvorak’sSymphony No. 4 in G major.Motion picturesThe Baker’s Wife is beingshown by B-J tonight. This is aFrench film about a baker whosewife runs away w i t h a youngshepherd. The baker swears hewon’t make any more bread un¬less his wife returns, so thetownsfolk undertake the chore ofgetting her back. Next week, B Jwill show Sergei Eisenstein’s Po¬temkin. This film is based on anincident which occurred on thearmored cruiser Potemkin dur¬ing the 1905 uprising. The sailorsthemselves and the people ofOdessa were used as actors. B Jholds forth in the Judson halldining room at 8 and 10 pm, Fri¬day nights.Doc Films’ latest piece ofhodge-podge is The Story of Gos-U Berling, which is listed as "amost interesting biography star¬ring the great Greta Garbo,” andthat is all I know about that, ex¬cept that Garbo is always worthseeing. Doc Films shows itsmoom pitchers in Social sciences122, at 7:15 and 9:15, on Fridayevenings.This week, International houseis showing On the Waterfrontwith Marlon Brando, Eva MarieSaint, Karl Malden, and Lee J.Cobb. As I remember, this filmwon all sorts of Oscars, and is, all in all, a fine movie. Int housefilms are shown at 7 and 9 intheir East lounge. (Someday Ishall make a compilation of allthe East lounges on this campusand write a long introduction onti e subject.)The ISL people are bringingSergei Eisenstein’s AlexanderNevsky. This film is just great,and that is all there is to that.There is a battle on the ice thatis absolutely hair-raising, and allsorts'of blood and thunder, plus amusical score by Prokofieff thathas become a classic. AlexanderNevsky will be shown February27 at 7:15 and 9:15 in BreastedUT casts next playRichard d’Anjou,' assistant director of University Theatre,has chosen the cast for the winter quarter production ofHoward Sackler’s The Yellow Loves. The three leads are beingplayed by Stephen McDermott,Abbie Sheldon, and Jeff Chouin-ard.The Yellow Loves is based onthe life of the late-nineteenth cen¬tury French writer, Tristan Cor-biere, one of the so-called“Damned Poets.” The play con¬cerns his love for a Royalistcolonel’s mistress, and his death,brought on by his attempts to winher.Director Richard d’Anjou in¬tends to stage this show in Man-del hall because of the large cast(23 characters and a dog) and the Mortgage InsuranceEducational InsuranceConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.HA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986TAK&AM-Y5.NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecial in inf InCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOyan Dallj11 A.M. la 19:90 T.M.ononis to tam out1318 loot 63rd St. BU 8-9018 Clark theatreC ^\C at all timesspecial student price dark & mo4>ioaop/»n 7:30 c m.late thow 4 o m.fr. 2-2845juii present your i d, card to the eoihier ot the boxoffice“every triday is ladies' day — wornen odmitted for 25cfri. 19th"diaue”"the love lottery”sat. 20th"day of the outlaw”"IB seconds to hell”sun. 21st“wild is the wind”"sweet smell ofsuccess” fri. 2Cth“houseboat”"tunnel of love”sat. 27th"they came tocordura”"happy anniversary”sun. 29th"back to the wall”"gideon of Scotlandyard” fri. march 4th"borne before dark”"we’re not married”'sat. 5th"goliath and thobarbarians”"house or the sevenhawks” ssun. Cth"grand illusion”"tillie’s puncturedromance”DOCUMENTARY FILMS PRESENTS:GRETA GARBO in Stiller's"THE STORY OFCOSTA BERLING"Social Sciences 122Admission $.50 Friday, Feb. 19H»7:15 and 9:15 p.m. hall. Admission, 50c.ArtThe Renaissance society willopen a new exhibit this Sundayin Goodspeed hall: contemporaryportraits by Chicago painters andsculptors. The exhibit will runthrough the end of the quarter.Robert Pippenger, winner ofthe 1938 Prix de Rome will holdan exhibit and sale of his paint¬ings and sculpture on February21 from 2-6 pm at 5405 Dorches¬ter. All interested persons are in¬vited to attend.Off campusTheatreJ.B. is still at the Blackstone,and I still haven’t seen it, andwon’t until the 25th, so there islittle that I can say other thanthat it ran on Broadway for ayear or so, got excellent reviews,is about a modern-day Job, andprobably has very few seats leftfor sale.The Shaw society is putting ontheir production of Mrs. Warren’sProfession by (naturally) GeorgeBernard Shaw. February 21 at7:30 in room 730, Hotel Sherman,Randolph and' Clark. Student ad¬mission: 50c.Enrico IV, in a new English ad¬aptation, is still playing at theGoodman theatre, and will provequite interesting for Hum. 2 stu¬dents and anyone else who likesPirandello. The acting is stiff andin many places extremely artifi¬cial, but the production is compe¬tent. All of this seems to bedamning with faint praise, but,as I say, seeing Enrico IV is aninteresting way to spend an eve¬ning. MusicThe concert this week is FritzReiner conducting the Chicago or¬chestra in Bach’s Concerto in D,Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2, andthe Suite from the MiraculousMountain by Bartok.The Gallery concert in the ArtInstitute features the ChicagoChamber orchestra directed byDieter Kober this Sunday at 4 pm.The program includes the Sinfo-nia in E flat by J. F. Peter, theConcerto Academico by RalphVaughan Williams, and J. S.Bach’s Suite No. 2 in B minor.Gallery concerts are usually verygood, and what is even more im¬portant to the impecunious stu¬dent-types, they are free.Just as something that I for¬got and am much too lazy to putin as an insert, Rudolf Serkinwill play the Bartok concerto No.1 Thursday and Friday, February25 and 26 for the Chicago Sym¬phony orchestra. And it is theconsidered opinion of many peo¬ple that Serkin is one of, if notthe, greatest pianists living. Butat any rate, he is more than wellworth going to see and hear.Motion picturesThe Hyde Park theatre is show¬ing Ingmar Bergman’s The Magi¬cian, and Anna Magnani in TheGolden Coach. The Magician is,as anyone can plainly tell, abouta magician. But since most of theplot is the suspense type, and al¬most all the effects are the same,this bird will content himself withsaying that it takes place in mid¬nineteenth century Sweden, andis about a troupe of travelingplayers.LAKEfive complicated sets it requires.Chicago artist Jo Lubin is design¬ing sets reminiscent of Renoir andCezanne, and the show will becostumed in the same manner.The Yellow Loves will be perform¬ed March 18-20. Q PARK AT SjRD(Vyde park NO 7 9071the (Vyde perk theatreStarts Friday, February 19 — For One Week OnlyThe Near-sightedMISTER MACOOin his full-length feature debut1001 ARABIAN NIGHTS”44with Hans Copreid ('s voice) as the Wicked Wazir— and —Again! A Jean Renoir classic"THE GOLDEN COACH"Now! An exquisite fable in color . . . presenting AnnaMagnani in her English-speaking debut! Adopted byRenoir from an old Peruvian legend ... A re-creation ©fthe Commedia Dell 'Arte, popular Italian theatre of tha16th Century. The musical score is based on the wo.ksof Vivaldi, being heard on film for the first time."PULSING JOY ... ARARE WORK!"— TIME MAG. "A PERFECTLY MAG¬NIFICENT PICTURE!"— NEW YORK TIMES44* IffStarts Friday, February 26Ingmar Bergmann'sTHE MAGICIAN’with "The Smallest Show on Earth"Peter Sellers, Bill Travers & Margaret RutherfordFeb. 19, 1960 • CHICAGO MA R O O N • 15mil ||| || iMiUHIII IIIII 111 II I llllli mil miHow to publishJay Greenberg (left)MAROON feature editorand Ken Pierce, news editor,compare notes.Bill Bauer, business manager (left) and advertising man¬ager W. Brooks Bernhardt at print shop. Behind them are"mats" from old issues.by Jay GreenbergEach week’s issue of theMaroon, which appears everyFriday afternoon at variousplaces on campus, is the resultof over 300 man hours of work.The Maroon has an active staffof 20 people. This includes report¬ers, photographers, copy readers,the business staff, and editors.Friday is the first day of theweek for the Maroon staff. At4 pm on Friday afternoon a staffmeeting is held. The first item onthe agenda of the meeting is acritique of the week’s issue. Mis¬takes are pointed out during the weekly appointment with Chancel¬lor Kimpton on Monday morning.Monday is a busy day for thebusiness staff of the Maroon. Ad¬vertising manager W. BrooksBernhardt makes phone calls toall local stores, canvassing for ad¬vertisements. Any advertisementthat comes in the from NationalAdvertising service, an organiza¬tion that provides ads for news¬papers, is set up and readied forthe printer.Tuesday is the first of theMaroon's two “rush days.” Thepaper has two deadlines, one onWednesday and one on Tuesdaynight. A small percentage of thestories is turned in on Tuesdaynight.When a story is handed in, it isfirst given to one of the Maroon’sthree copy readers, who check thestory to correct grammatical andspelling errors. When the copy- has only four typewriters, so tenreporters and the business staffusually fight for those that areavailable. In addition to the storiesthat are being written, theMaroon’s weekly features, such asCulture Vulture and the calendarof coming events are usually writ-4en on Wednesday night.By 10 pm Wednesday,Maroon office is invariably buriedunder a pile of press releases andrough drafts of stories. The office,which is built to accommodateabout eight people comfortably, isoccupied by about 15, all of whomare rushing to get their storiesdone. There is a good deal of con¬fusion on Wednesday night.In addition to the work goingon in the editorial office, there isa great deal of work going on inthe Maroon’s jdarkroom, locatedin the basement of Ida Noyeshall. Most of the pictures used inthe Maroon are turned in onWednesday afternoon, and mustbe developed and enlarged to 8” x10* by 10 pm, when they arepicked up by the engraver.Wednesday night is also a busytime for the business staff. Sev¬eral advertisements do not comein until Wednesday afternoon, andthese have to be set up for theprinter.In addition to setting up lateads, the “ad dummying” must bedone. A list is made of all ads forthe week’s issue. Each ad is as¬signed to page in the issue, andthe “ad pyramid” is made. Thisinvolves marking out an area forthe way thatcritique, with a view toward con¬structive criticism.Before each meeting, severalthe editors meet, to make out anews chart. This is a list of allimportant events on campuswhich will occur in the followingweek. At the meeting these stor¬ies are assigned to reporters.No work is done on the 3faroonover the weekend. Some reporterswork on their stories, but theMaroon office is usually closed.Although Monday is usually aquiet day for the Maroon staff,a lot of the reporting work is be¬gun. Neal Johnston and LanceHaddix, co-editors-in-chief, have a readers have read the stories, theythe given to managing editorOzzie Conklin, who does any cor¬rection of errors in writing. Thestory is then “slugged,” instruc¬tions for the type size to be usedand number of inches over whichit is to be printed, are given. It isthen decided what type and sizethe headline should be, and theheadline is written.The first of two “copy pickups”is made on Tuesday night. A manfrom the Garfieldian printerscomes to the Maroon office to getall stories that have been turnedin. The stories are set into type atthe print shop, and are ready forThursday’s print shop crew.On Wednesday, the office is amadhouse. Very few reportersturn In their stories beforeWednesday, and the office is busyall day long with people typingtheir stories. The Maroon office Interior of the Garfieldian, where the Maroon is printed.they will appear in the paper. Thisis done so that the people whoassign the news stories to thepage will know exactly how muchroom they have on each page.The second copy pickup is madeat 10 pm on Wednesday. Afterthis pickup is made, the editorsusually take a short break to re¬cover from the confusion of thenight.If the paper is going to be 16pages or over, the editors “newspool” after the break. A list ismade of all the stories which havebeen sent down to the printer,along with such information ashow many inches long it is andhow it has been slugged. Fromthis list, it is decided on whatpage each story will go. The pageplacement is tentative only, andis usually changed at the printshop.Thursday is the Maroon’s big production day. If there are stor¬ies that break late on Wednesdayor early on Thursday, these mustbe sent to the printer early Thurs¬day morning. Most of the edi¬torials are not written untilThursday, and after they are writ¬ten they must be approved by atwo-thirds vote of the editorialboard. The board consists of theeditors-in-chief, the managing edi¬tor, and the business manager ex-officio, two people elected by thestaff, and one person appointedby the editors.At about 2:30 pm on Thursdaya shop crew of three or four peo¬ple leaves for the print shop. Mostof the work that will determinethe physical appearance of theMaroon is done at print shop. Theshop crew is usually made up ofone of the editors, the managingeditor, either the news or featureeditor, and one staff member.When the group arrives at theprint shop, they are given two setsof “galleys.” These are long stripsof paper with the stories andheadlines set up according to howthey have been “slugged." One setof galleys is proofread for typo¬graphical errors, and the other isused to “dummy” the page. Dum¬mying involves cutting out thestories on the galleys and settingthem up in the layout desired forthe page. This part of the job isusually finished by about 9 or10 pm, at which time the shopcrew takes a short break for din¬ner.—When corrections are made onthe page proof, they are sentdown to the linotypers, who makeall corrections that have beenindicated.After the pages are dummied,they are given to the staff of theprint shop. The stories are set intoa frame, according to the instruc¬tions on the dummied page. Fromthis frame, page proofs are made,which are copies of how the pagewill look when printed. Final cor¬rections of typographical errorsare made on the page proof, afterwhich it is returned to the printer.After the corrected page proofsare given to the printer, which isusually between 12 and* 3 am, theMaroon crew leaves the shop.However, the work on the paper isnot done at this point. From thecorrected page proofs, “mats” ofthe pages are made. These areplastic impressions of thepage, from which the cylinderwith which the paper is printed iscast.After the mats are made, theyare sent to another print shop, where cylindrical lead impres¬sions are made of them. Thesecylinders are used on the printingpress on which the Maroon isprinted.After the paper is printed,which is usually at about 5 amon Friday morning, Nathan Swift,circulation manager, picks it upand distributes it to various placeson campus and in the neighbor¬hood. The copies are usually avail¬able at about 7:30 am. The circu¬lation of the Maroon is 8,500copies.The Maroon is one of the fewcollege newspapers In the countrythat is completely free of facultypre-censorship. There is no facultyadvisor, and the administrationnever sees what will be printeduntil after the paper has beenpublished.Founded in 1892, the Maroonhas had five volume 1, number 1issues. The first issue, which waspublished in magazine form, waspublished on October 1, 1892. OnOctober 17 of the same year, thesecond volume 1, number 1, thefirst to have the form of a news¬paper, was published under thename of the University News. In1900, the Daily Maroon wasfounded, but quickly went bank¬rupt. The fourth volume 1, num¬ber 1 was published in 1902, againas the Daily Maroon. Shortly be¬fore World War II, the Maroonchanged from a daily to a weeklyformat, producing the fifth vol¬ume 1, number 1.The price of the Maroon hasvaried from 2 to 5 cents, the orig¬inal price being 3 cents. In 1940,at the suggestion of Dean of Stu¬dents Robert Strozier, the Maroonwas distributed free of charge.The present staff dates its pa¬pers from the first issue of theUniversity News, making this the69th year of the paper's publica¬tion.Co-editor Lance Haddixdummying the paper.Managing editor Gzzie Conklin in her lair.Co-editor Neal Johnstoncollecting material for astory.16 • CHICAGO MAROON * Feb. 19,1960•M / ;