Festival of the Arts opens todayThe seventh annual Festival extravaganza; it has a more im- This year’s committee has Winners of all student contests be a special one man show of this% Arts onens todav portant purpose—that is to tap agreed with the policy of a Fes- will be announced in a special years Festival artist in residence,ot tne ai u> pc •>* the resources of student talent tival presented for and by student reception to be held on Friday Frank McGarrell in the PierceThe week-long event will which exists on this campus. body and has worked hard in ah afternoon, in the Reynolds club towers lounge,feature theatrical events; lectures “It is for this reason ” she went attemPt to carry it through. The south lounge. Prizes will be A special reception will be heldbv visiting poets, authors, and on to sav» that wp havp PXDanded success of this year s Festival awarded by Mrs. George Beadle for Mr. McGarrell next Thursdayartists; musical offerings by The the number of art and photeg- dePends more than ever before and Mrs. Glen Lloyd. Other art at 4:30 in the Ida Noyes hall. OnChicago Piano quartet, and by ranhv ovhihitc ctnrtpnt rrmcbpai on an enthusiastic response from exhibits will include the faculty Saturday afternoon, there wfll bethe Lenox String quartet; recep- events and student writing con- the students- art show in Ida Noyes hall, an a reception for Margaret Webster,tions for famous visitors; and ex- tests 'This year’s FOTA will be Exhlbits of student art work exhibit of new works in Lexing- Shakesperian authoress, at 3:30hibits of their works.FOTA SupplementSee pages 7 to 9 for • specialMAROON supplement on the Fes¬tival of the Arts. A completeFOTA calendar, a history of theFestivol and features on the sep¬arate events are included. mnph rincpr tn that nr i o. wiU take Place during the forth- ton hall, a show of sculpture and in Kelly hall. At 12:30 this aftcr-inaliv conceived hv its creators coming week at the New women’s architecture including work by noon, the-official opening of theTTie success of this year^ FOTA dormitor^, Burton-Ju dson Frank Lloyd Wright in Lexingtp< Festival wiU take PWcjN&H*-Courts, and Pierce Tower. All dis- hall, and a collection of painting^ chmson commons. Whatyears'the^student bSTto be°'!fn (rom 9:00 am * L>'nda “c^ur tofchafcSj low is the ttlgt theparticipate. We have the perform ,lU 10:00 Pmdai|y- house. 518 Woodlawn. There >wll murfs. <-.101ers. We need the audience. ' /J“This year we have reliedalmost entirely on students in theorganization and planning of theFestival. The administration hasplayed a smaller part than everbefore and I hope this continues“This will be the smallest FOTA in the future. The Festival shouldin many years, but hopefully, it remain a student activity and notwill be* the most exciting,” an- become a promotion tool for thenounced Rena Matusen. this University except in the ways ityear’s Festival chairman. We will attracts attention by and of itself,have less off-campus participa- A number of people in the admin-tion. than in previous years. In- Oration have agreed with hisstead, we have planned it so that philosophy. Of course, one con-the student body can take an ac- sequence of this policy is the factfive part in it. Part of the reason }ka* *ke development office is nofor this is necessity—we are oper- l°nger willing to supplement the, Festival’s budget. Even thoughaung under a smaller budget than we have minimiZed the amountin past years; but necessity is Df off-campus participation, wethe mother of . . . We have man- have had some trouble making Two hundred delegates to man, fourth ward alderman. Har-aged to operate with this limita- ends meet. This seems to be an the annual spring assembly of ry Kalven of the law sch<>o1 wdi,ion. FOTA need not be a grand ever-recurring probiem of FOTA." the I]]inols . Wisconsin region w^kshops will be held to-of the National Student asso- morrow in Cobb hall. One of theVol. 69 — No. 66 University of Chicago, April 21, 196!NS A regional meets hereConvocation ticketsavailable to studentsThree hundred tickets will inaugurated in October, 1951,be available for students to there were no tickets for stu’the 292nd Convocation, Thurs- e”t.f , ... , .. -—day morning, May 4, in Rocke- have invited to participate to the regional executive commit-teller Memorial chapel at which in the Convocation, either march-Delegates to the assembly willelation arrive on campus this aft- most interesting of these, accord-ernoon for A weekend of work- ing to regional officers, will beshops, discussions, and legislative the workshop on first-year stu-plenarv sessions. dent orientation. Karl Bemesderf-er, president of O-board, and dean XXJll uluvnM slUu«i«Central headquarters for the as- of undergraduate students George vited to attend workshops and legsembiy is set up m Ida Noyes playe are ^th on the panel. Len isiative committees, but are rewhere the first Ao°r Jbbb* has Friedman of the UC NSA delega- quested not to dominate the dto-been converted to a legislation tion wi1]and information center. The Stu- Ameriea and Europe. Oofefc1075. Federal government and higleer education. Cobb 1016. Regional programming. Oobb1027.Student organizations. Cobb1038. Academic freedom. Cobb 104All University students are bi-, . il . Time schedules for the work- Six schools, which are not mem-LI ?hops and legislative committees bers ot NSA, George Washington,Lawrence, St. Xavier, Crane, Lin-second floor has been turned over f0uow:Workshops. 9 am-12 noon1. Civil Rights. Cobb 3082. First year student orientation.Cobb 116 coin, and Bogan Junior collegeare sending observers to the re¬gional. This is ordinarily a prepar¬atory step before formal affilia-3. Student responsibility to the tion with the Region,community. Cobb 109 Neal Johnston, a member of theChancellor George Wells Beadle ing in the Academic Processionwill be formally inaugurated. The or as guests. Wives of faculty be housed in International housetickets will be given to John members also are invited, to the and other campus housing facili-Netherton, Dean of Students, for limit of the Chapel capacity. ties. Space limitations have madedistribution. They will lie avail- Following his formal induction ** necessary to accommodate some 4. Government aid and projects. University delegation and chairable next week. as Chancellor by Glen A. Lloyd. delegates in off-campus student Cobb 107 man of the Region, said that theThe inauguration committee chairman of the Board of Trus- aPartments.lias planned the Convocation pri- tees, Beadle will give the only The opening session of the re-marily for the University com- address of the Convocation. gional begins at 8:30 tonight withmunity. Invitations to other col- Delegates from approximately welcoming speeches and a panelleges and universities were lim- 275 colleges and universities in- discussion on fair employmentited in order that students and eluding some foreign universities, practices legislation. Panel partici-faculty could be given the oppor- and from 100 learned societies pants thus far include Abnertunity to participate. When Chan- will be among those present at Mikva, state assemblyman andoellor Lawrence A. Kimpton was the Convocation. University alumnus, Claude Hoi-Beadle speaks at dorm 5. International affairs. Cobb 101 spring regional would be "an ex-6. International student organiza- cellent opportunity for UC stu-tions. Cobb 102 dents to find out at first hand7. Preparation for the fourteenth just exactly what NSA is allnational NSA congress. Cobb about — what it does and how it103 operates. Students are invited to8. Aims of education. Cobb 104 bother the delegates as much asLegislative committees. 1 pm-5 pm they care to with questions, argu-1. Northern civil rights problems, ments, and invitations to parties.Cobb 308 Students are encouraged to par-2. Southern civil rights problems, ticipate in workshop and commit-Cobb 116 tee discussions, but it should be3. International affairs, Africa borne in mind that the weekendand Asia. Cobb 109 is only so long and there is a4. International affairs, Latin great deal of work to be done.”George W. Beadle was guest of honor at a dinner given by New dorm last Friday evening.Some 250 residents of north, west, and east houses attended the dinner as well as a re¬ception beforehand and a discussion afterwards. Members of the administration and someNew dorm faculty fellows were also present. Studentv ” uvuu lacuitj Aciiuyvo wuic awu piracni, ■During a question-and-answer period after the dinner, Beadle defended the ideas of UC’s Ql'QQQIltprojected dean’s list and regularly issued grades. challengesstatistics“Ideally it would be nice if wedidn’t have to work for grades... but it’s a practical world. Let’slace it . . . although in a way it’stoo bad.”* Grades are a stimulus, proddingthe student to produce good work,said Beadle. "We’re competitive. . . like it or not,” he stated. Beadle mentioned Reed collegeas an example of an institutionat which students do not receivemarks, although they are grad¬ed. They spend much of their en¬ergy there, he said, trying to findout what their grades are.Beadle, commenting on the re-Chancellor Beadle speaks about some of the problemshe will have to face to students at New dorm. cent loss of professors, calledturnovers “normal.” They are badonly if the institution loses on thetrade. He cited the recent addi¬tions of “top” men—Neal, Davis,and Dam—to the Law school fac¬ulty to show that UC’s facultyis improving.Beadle also said that the num¬ber of applications to UC haveincreased this year; whereas twoother “top” institutions’ applica¬tions have decreased.Beadle ended his comments byquipping, “I’m in sympathy witheverything.”John Netherton, dean of stu¬dents, also participated in the dis¬cussion. He urged support of thenewly elected Student govern¬ment (SG).“Now that you’ve voted, staywith it. Somehow,” he said, ad¬dressing the students, “you’venever quite been heard from.” Hegave equal blame to a lack of SGsupporters and to SC’s slow prog¬ress.“An informed and intelligiblestudent voice is always welcome,”he concluded A student has stated thatCollege administrators reliedon outdated information informing the new requiredresidence rule.“According to more recent data,it appears that only 1.5 times asmany apartment dwellers asdorm residents drop out,” saidTyler Thompson, 21, fourth yearstudent.Earlier in the year, UC officialshad stated that between two andfour times as many apartmentresidents as dormitory residentsdropped out.The University announced lastfall that, beginning with thisyear's entering class, undergrad¬uate women would normally berequired to live in the dormitoriesfor four years, undergraduatemen for two. The dropout ratewas given as a major reason forthe new requirement.Thompson’s study, made fromregistration data, was called “avery careful piece of work” byJames Davis, assistant professorof sociology and senior study di¬rector for the National Opinionresearch institute. “Using Thompson’s data,” con¬tinued Davis, “the difference inthe drop out rate between apart¬ments and dormitories is notstatistically very impressive.“This result might have beenobtained if nothing but the lawsof chance were operating,” saidDavis.Commenting on the residencerule, Alan Simpson, dean of theCollege, has stated: “Even if itwere true that the same percent¬age of apartment residents asdormitory residents dropped out,the case for the residence rule re¬mains strong, since students liv¬ing in apartments are deprived ofthe valuable educational experi¬ence of dormitory living.”Persons supporting a “volun¬tary residential college” havemaintained that an enforced residence rule will hamper thegrowth of UC’s residential col¬lege.See ’required residence nunnecessary', an editorial onthe dorm rule discussion, onpage 4.SC announces final election resultsTfct Coco-Colo Co. of Chicago, liM.6660403635282521271611St353426221754535048474746444441414139391191195618 Maureen Byers, POLITli*n Friedman, POLITJohn Kim, POUTPaul Ia»vy, POLITJohn Brooks, PROPaul Hyman, IRPWillard Ayres, PRODiant ha McJilton, PROJohn Mills, IRPJerry McBeath, IRPDan Schubert, PROLloyd Howells, PROFrederick Miller, IRPSteve Meltz, IRPArthur MacEwan, write-inNSA alternatesKarl Bemesderfer, POUTJim Thomason, POLITLiz Heath, POLITC’ar.vle Oeier, POLITElliot TJiien, IRPDick Merbaum, POLITRichard Altenbernd, PROJudy Fischman, PROShelley Frost, PROBob Hauser, IRPEd Moorman, PROPaula Rothenberg, PROSid Weissman, IRPSheldon Glasser, IRPStan Cohen, independent*A three-way tie for th<seats in biological sciences and atwo way tie for the last seat inthe business school will be decidedby the new assembly of Studentgovernment at its first meetingnext Tuesday.HD. O. Tsoulos was elected asa member of the Practical Reform organization, but has statedhis intention to vote for POLIT,and to join the POLIT caucus.5535515114834*4457355348314313■300295289230181twoBottled under autnortty ofThe Coca-Cola Company byDR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometristin theNew Hyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th St. " DO 3-7644Eye Examinations Contact LensesNewest styling in framesStudent Discountthe farthersmoke travelsAir-Softened,the milder,the cooler,the smootherit tastesFollowing are the final stand¬ings of candidates for Studentgovernment in last week’s elec¬tion. Winners of seats in the Gov¬ernment, or as National Studentassociation delegates or alter¬nates are boldfaced.CollegeElliot Lilien, IRP 501Karl Bemesderfer, POLIT 403Jim Hiomason, POLIT 402Abby Sheldon. POLIT 384Len FYiednmn. POUT 382Gene Vmogradoff, POUT 361A1 Levy, EBP 345Caryle Geier, POUT 338Paul Levy, POLIT 334Paul Hyman, IRP '333Jane Saxe, POLIT 324Roger Levin, POLIT 316Dick Merbaum, POLIT 315Sherwln Kaplan. POUT 304Sid Weissman, IRP 296Pete Harrison, IRP 294Mike Ormond, POLIT 294Dave Levey, POLIT 291Bruce Vermazen, POLIT 290Jerry McBeath, IRP 281Jill Gerson, IRP 280 Arthur Schneider, IRP 279Carl Feinstein, POLIT 278Nancy Driessel, IRP 277Ron Dorfman, POLIT 274John Mills, IRP 273Jay Budin, IRP 267John Fritz, IRP 266Dick Jacobson, IRP 256Stan Irvine, IRP 254Jon Stephens, IRP 250Marjorie Hey man, POLIT 247Bruce Stark, PRO 246Marshall Wais, IRP 245Bill Rutiser, IRP 243Stan Brandes, POLIT 238Stephen Moul, IRP 215Judy Fischman, PRO 209Richard Altenberd, PRO 208Maro Van Wormer, IRP 207Frank Slobetz, POLIT 204Willard Ayres, PRO 201Diantha McJilton, PRO 197Sid Worzburg, PRO 184Richard Shaker, PRO 183Jay Mulberry, PRO . 178Shelley Frost, PRO 176Leonard Johnson, PRO 173Robert Brooks, PRO 172John Steed, PRO 172„. . a magnificent dancer . . .joyce trisler & companyDANCE THEATRE11►►►►►►► Aprf 28—8:00 p.m. Reservations: Mondel Holl dance newsExt. 3280 George Duncan, PRO 169Merle Kharaschj PRO 157Paula Rothenlierg, PRO 155Carolyn Rapp, PRO 147Stanley Stewart, PRO 144Scotty Dean Moorman, PRO 144Biological sciencesClaire Berg, PRO 8William Coleman, PRO 8David Ingle, POLIT 8Steven Obrebski, POLIT 6Business school*Edward Morgan, PRO 22Robert Savard, IRP write-in 20Lloyd Howells, PRO 19A. W. Johnson, PRO 19Divinity schoolPhillip Smith, PRO 35Jerry Walker, POUT 33Susan Cook, PRO 29D. Lowell Hayes, PRO 17Jackson Pyles, POLIT 16EducationLowell Larson, PRO 12Sybil Murray, write-in 3Graduate library schoolJim McGregor, PRO 7HumanitiesRobert Strozier, PRO 17Naomi Woronov, POLIT 15Rufus Nightengale, PRO 13Thomas Esper, PRO 11Ronald Burton, IRP 9Law schoolJohn Brooks, PRO 73 Bill Lee, PROEd Moorman, PROMark McSweeney, IRP -Richard Ausbrook, IRPJohn Weiss, POLITTed Lindauer, IRPStan Cohen, POLITArt Rubin, POLITMedical schoolJudy Broder, POUTD. G. Tsoulos, #James Winebright, PROPhysical sciencesMax Plager, PROK. Narayana Swami, PROG. L. Malli, PROLyden Erickson, PROC. Clark Kissinger, POLITG. Weisz, POLITSocial sciencesNeal Johnston. POLITJohn Kim, POLITCarol Horning. POLITLarry Landry, POUTPhil Calkins, POLITBernard Munk, POLITTadao Ok am or a, PROAlan Dowty, POLITSam Peltzman, PROJohn Blair, PRODonald Rosenthal. PROStephen Sachs, PRODan Schubert, PROLeo Snowiss. PRODan Jordan, IRPSybill Murray, IRPSocial serviceadministrationIrene Posner, POUTSusan Swede, POUTRichard Wright, PRONSA delegatesNeal Johnston, POUTTHIS ONE’S!THE SATISFIERMake a date* with flavor. Try Chesterfield King.Every satisfying puff is Air-Softened to enrich theflavor and make it mild. Special porous paperlets you draw fresh air into the full king length oftop-tobacco, straight Grade-A all the way.Join the swing tomm kinga tlggetf & Myers Toboceo Co.1 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 21, 1961r'Group hires actor to give HUAC viewsThe man who stalked out inthe middle of his debate withWilliam Mandel last Fridaywas hired from a talentagency for $25.Some 330 people saw “CaptainRichard Landau” rise in the mid¬dle of Mandel’s remarks againstHI’AC and shout, “I object. I can¬not debate a man who has insinu¬ations in every sentence,” andthen left.The debate between Mandel. aSan Francisco broadcaster withstrong anti-HUAC views and“Landau,” who appeared as a“spokesman” for the conservative,anti Communist, pro-HUAC John Birch society, was sponsored bythe now defunct Progressive In¬sight. (PI).PI had originally planned topresent Captain Isaiah Hamptonagainst Mandel;- however, twodays before the debate, Hamptoncancelled his appearance becauseof naval maneuvers.When Revilio Oliver, the Birchsociety executive who had recom¬mended Hampton, couldn’t pro¬duce a substitute for Hampton,PI called local talent agencies inan attempt to hire someone todebate against Mandel.According to Kevin Krown,Dick Dolnick, and Philip Dale,student leaders of PI, it was “a hasty decision in a timed mis-judgment for which we apologize.”A manufacturer’s representa¬tive who is also a part-time actorwas referred to PI. PI had re¬quested a conservative, politicallyoriented actor to debate as a per¬son, rather than as an actor.The first time the PI leaderssaw the actor, whose identity theoffice of student activities will notreveal, was half an hour beforethe debate.According to PI leaders, theactor informed them about 10minutes before the debate thathe was going to walk out duringthe debate.The actor explained his action to Perry Constas, director of stu¬dent activities, in a phone con¬versation on Wednesday.His decision to walk out wasprompted by the meeting he hadat 3:30 with members of PI. “Hethen sensed that the audiencewould be completely in sympathywith Mr. Mandel and left wingphilosophy,” said Constcs. “Healso realized that Mandel seemedoverwhelming as a debator.“He decided to make severalstatements expressing oppositionto Mandel and then walk out.”The PI leaders said that whenthey heard Landau’s decision sosoon before the debate, they pan¬icked and decided to present theCouncil opposes residence ruleThe first year council votedto oppose the four-year resi¬dence requirement for womenand the two year requirementfor men. and to support the volun¬tary residential college.The council did not oppose thecompulsory requirement earlierin the year because it felt thatdoing so would have been fruit¬less and detrimental to rapportwith the administration, accord¬ing to a spokesman for first yearcouncil James Newman, assistantdean of students, had told thegroup that all student oppositionto the compulsory requirementwould be in vain.New statistics on the drop outrate which were presented to thecouncil showed that the dropoutrates, as presented by the adminis¬tration last summer, were not cor¬rect: i.e., that the dropout ratiobetween apartments and dormi¬tories was considerably less thanthe administi'ation’s statistics oflast year indicated. Thus, thecouncil decided, the need for thecompulsory residential college, asindicated by the dropout rates,no longer exists.In a letter to every first yearstudent, the council stated that:“The only reason that Dean Neth-erton offered for the applicationof the rule to our class in hisspeech to the college faculty onFebruary 23 was the ‘urgency ofthe situation In the spring’; thatis: the administration’s statisticswhich showed the dropout rateD & G CLOTHES SHOP851 E. 63 rd St.Dacron and Wool NaturalShoulder Suits $39.95 for apartment dwellers to betwice as high as that for dormi¬tory residents. A more recent sta¬tistical study, however, shows thedifference in the dropout rate byresidence is considerably less thanhad previously been estimated.Thus, there is no apparently sub¬stantial reason for the require¬ment to be applied to our class.”The first year council, like thestudertt committee on residentialpolicy (formerly Committee ofhouse presidents), also opposedthe petition plan on the groundsthat there would “be no estab¬lished, objective criteria for deter¬mining exceptions.”The petition plan was proposedby John Netherton, dean of stu¬dents as a means to administerthe rule’s flexibility. However, thecommittee on residential policyfelt that the petition plan as pro¬posed this year would be no im¬provement over the status quo.The presidents were supportedby their house constitutents intheir opposition to the plan.Numerous other groups havesent letters and petitions to the dean of students’ office opposingthe residence requirement.Student government voiced itsopposition to the rule last fall,attacking the requirement as hav¬ing “no beneficial effect,” and asdoing “harm to the Universitycommunity if it be retained.” Inits resolution, SG also supportedthe voluntary residential college.Several houses on campus dem¬onstrated official opposition tothe rule. East house, the largestmen’s housing unit on campus,in a special referendum, voteddown the four year requirementfor women and the two year re¬quirement for men by a vote of83 to 23. One hundred and sixballots were cast.East house opposed the rule onthe basis that, “The administra¬tion, in opposing these regula¬tions, seems to us to be greatlyexceeding their proper role ingoverning the private lives of thestudents.”North house prepared a reportexplaining both sides of the issue,and put ballots in each resident’s mail box. North house residentsopposed the requirement by avote of 101 to 1.West house residents expresseddisapproval of the requirement.Kelly house unanimously en¬dorsed SG’s position, and Greenhall circulated a petition opposingthe requirement which was signedby an overwhelming majority ofthe house. debate anyway.Landau was introduced as aretired member of the US army,and a member of the ChurchLeague and Anti-C o m m u n i s tLeague. PI and several studentswho attended the debate claimLandau was never presented asa member of The Birch Society,but only as a spokesman for itsviews.It was later discovered that al¬though Landau is a conservative^be is not a member of the ChurchLeague or anti communist league.Preceeding the actual debate,each man was given several min*utes for brief comments, in which,according to observers, they both“more or less smeared theiropponents’ character and beliefs.”When Mandel started to com¬pare the program of HUAC withthe program traditionally em¬ployed by fascist groups, Landavleft the debate.Landau told Constas that heleft “as a person and an Americancitizen, and not as an actor” be¬cause of audience support of Man-del and Mandel’s presentationfilled with insinuations that wereimpossible to follow or debate.After Landau’s exit, Mandel(Continued on page 161ItANDELL-HARPERSQUAREBeauty and Cosmetic Salon5700 Harper AvenueMrs. Billie Treg'anza, Prop. FA 4-2007 Not this: • student who - This: perspicacious ...drowses over books no matter sharp I NoDox keeps yoohow much sleep he gets. owoke and alert—safelyiIf you sometimes find studying soporific (and who doesn't?), the wordto remember is NoDoz.® NoDoz perks you up in minutes, with thosame safe awakener found in coffee or tea. Yet NoDozis faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutelynon-habit-forming, NoDoz is soldeverywhere without prescription. So,to keep perspicacious during study and 'exams—-and while driving, too— galways keep NoDoz in proximity.Tho safs stay awafca taNat—avallaWa svarywtiars. Another tins product of Brora Laboratories.A SUN LIFE POLICY FOR EVERY NEEDTAh2AM-\&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN IMS HEPOpen Dally11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDBRS TO TAKB OPT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-8*8 A Mortgage Protection policy safeguards yourhome for your family; when you die, sufficientfunds are made available at once to pay off thebalance owing on the mortgage.RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LaSalle Chicago, III.FR 2-2390 • FA 4-6800SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADABOOKS FOR THE CIVIL WAR CENTENNIALTHE AMERICAN HERITAGE PICTURE HISTORY OF THE CIVIL WARNarrative by Bruce Catton . .$19.95,.. $6.00EUROPE LOOKS AT THE CIVIL WAREdited by Beile Becker Sideman and Lillian Friedman.A collection of European opinions on the Civil War,set down in The words of that period, 1859 - 1865.A CIVIL WAR TREASURY OF TALES, LEGENDS AND FOLKLOREEdited, with on introduction by B. A. Botkin.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE$7.955802 Ellis Avenue D. S. Passmore, Manager ANNOUNCES MANY CAREER OPPORTUNITIES ASREVENUE AGENTSPECIAL AGENTTAX EXAMINERCAREERS OFFER1. Rapid planned promotion*2. Highly divorsifiod oxporionco3. Comprahansivo training program4. Fine career development opportunities5. Important responsibilities in o minimum of time'6. Mooting and dealing with people from all walk* of lif*QUALIFICATIONS REQUIREDGraduate* with majors in accounting or business adminis¬tration. Other fields of study such as economics, finance,law and other fields may qualify.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACTYOUR COLLEGE PLACEMENT DIRECTORRECRUITMENT COORDINATORINTERNAL REVENUE SERVICEP.O. BOX 1193CHICAGO 90, ILLINOISApril 21, 1961 CHICAGO MAROONRequired residence is unnecessaryTlw* controversy concerning the newly-established residence requirement maysoon come to a head. Dormitory contracts/or next year will be sent to studentsshortly, and reports are expected fromboth student and faculty committeeswhich are currently reviewing the situa-tioaDiscussion of the policy had greatly in¬creased in the past several weeks, withmany students and faculty members of-ngw jynterpretfiilons and solutionsto the problem. We feel that It is timeto review and evaluate the many divergentapproaches suggested.The purpose of the rule is to establisha residential college, a principle withwhich there is no disagreement. Dean ofstudents John P. Netherton .says that thepurpose of the rule is to show that theUniversity has shifted its ideas on wherestudents should live. Where in past yearsthe emphasis wfas on off-campus living,in the future dormitory life will bestressed.The administration has done a lot tomake the dormitories a more pleasanthome for students. Apartment-dormito¬ries, which will be available for the firsttime next year, are a definite improve¬ment. The dining halls of several houseshave been opened for studying at night.These are both commendable changes.But on top of this the University would attempt to legislate a residential college.But this residential community, to be suc¬cessful, should have freedom — freedomto think, the freedom to discuss one’sideas with one’s fellow students. It is acontradiction in terms to force a studentto live in a dormitory where he can exer¬cise this freedom.The history of the Universily of Chicagois the history of an institution dedicatedto the hypothesis that the student is a re¬sponsible and mature individual, capablegf managing his academic career intel¬ligently. Unjess this hypothesis be dis¬carded (and recent statements by UCadministrators lead us to believe that itwill not) if the dormitories offer an attrac¬tive, stimulating environment, studentswill choose to live in them of their ownvolition.Dean Netherton has recently offeredanother justification for the rule. He saysthat he wants to know the reason for astudent leaving the residence halls, andthat he will deny permission to move onlyto the very few students who have demon¬strated a need for dormitory environment.A residence requirement seems to be anunusually cumbersome means for attain¬ing this end. Would it not be far less com¬plicated to say “Any student may leavethe residence hall after his first year, butbefore he does so he must confer with thedean of students’ office. In those unusual oases where it is felt that a student is notable to deal with an apartment environ¬ment, he will be strongly urged not to”?In effect this is serving the same end asis the requirement. It merely expresses apositive, rather than the current negativeapproach to the situation.Alan Simpson, dean of the College, saysthat since he has announced the rule hehas a commitment to parents of studentsto maintain it. But when parents and stu¬dents were deciding whether to chooseChicago or another university, there wasno rule other than the one year require¬ment. What happened to this commit¬ment?We are most pleased by the manner inwhich student discussion of the new policyhas proceeded of late. The First-Yearcouncil, after originally declaring that therule w’as “here to stay” has reconsideredand issued a statement objecting to the re¬quirement. Discussion by Netherton’s stu¬dent committee on Residential Policy, al¬though resulting in another negative state¬ment, w'as mature and rational. It is thistype of behavior that should convince theadministration of students’ ability to de¬cide for themselves where they shouldlive.A recollection of the College faculty,passed in 1952 and entitled “A ResidentialPlan for the College” has been used byNetherton as a precedent for the new reg¬ulation. But, as Tyler Thompson points out in an article in the forthcoming issvioof Phoenix magazine:“What is not clear from the speech isthat the 1952 mandate was for a residen¬tial college, not a residence rule. Therewere two focal points to it, better physicalfacilities, and more members of the farul-ty living in them. These two points areclosely related. As the one changes, so willthe other. The dormitories can become aresidential college as more faculty live jnthem. On the other hand, more facultywill live in them as the physical fa( iliiiesimprove. It is a sad commentary, and atrue one, on the present dormitories thatvery few faculty members will live inthem.”It is only through a distortion that the1952 declaration can be interpreted as a“mandate” for the current action. Or ifit was, why should it have been allowedto languish for eight years?A meeting of the College faculty isscheduled for next week. We hope thatthe question of whether to endorse theresidence requirement, even with its pro¬vision for exemptions, will be discussed.We expect that, in the near future, theadministration will see fit to rid the Uni¬versity of an unneeessary regulation. Oncethe rule is gone, w>e are confident thatfaculty members, students, and the ad¬ministration will begin to work in earnestto achieve the mutual benefits resultingfrom a voluntary residential college.Krown group condemnedA debate was scheduled last Fri¬day between William Mandel, theman who called the House com¬mittee on Un-American Activitiesa “collection of Judases” and arepresentative of the ultra-con¬servative John Birch society. Thedebate never came off; in its placewas substituted a fraud.Progressive Insight, a month-old student organization, hadplanned the debate. It was orig¬inally to have featured Mandeland Captain Isaiah Hampton, aleader of the Birch group. How¬ever, when Hampton was unableto appear, a substitute had to befound.The man who did appear saidhis name was Captain RichardLandau. US army, retired, a mem¬ber of the Church league and theAnti-communist league. He statedthat he would speak “for the JohnBirch society.”After a brief introductory state¬ment by each participant, Mandelbegan his opening speech. Afterten minutes of the speech, “Lan¬dau” walked out of the room, stat¬ing that he could not debate a manwho used Mandel’s tactics.That evening it teas learnedthat the man who representedhimself as Landau was an actor,hired by the officers of Progres¬sive Insight from a talent agency.At an open hearing before theCommittee on Recognized Stu¬dent Organizations (CORSO) ofStudent government, KevinKrown, president of ProgressiveInsight, refused to reveal the ac¬tor’s real name. He did state, how¬ever, that the man was a memberof the Church and Anti-commu¬nist leagues, and (hat he had beenhired to debate, not to walk outLetter on Mandel. Krown did admit, how¬ever, that officers of the organiza¬tion knew, one-half hour beforethe debate was scheduled to begin,that “Landau” had decided toleave rather than to speak in thedebate.When the actor was located bythe Student Activities Office hestated that although he was per¬sonally a conservative, he be¬longed to none of the namedorganizations. He did say that hehad been hired to debate, and thatwalking out had been his ownidea.The story of exactly what hap¬pened in the negotiations betweenProgressive Insight and the tal¬ent agency may well never beknowm. What is certain, however,is that Progressive Insight tookmoney from over 300 people whoexpected to hear a debate, al¬though the organization's officersknew that such a debate wouldnever occur.Any profit which might havebeen made from the debate wasto be donated by Progressive In¬sight to the University of ChicagoStudents for Civil liberties <UC-SCL). When they learned of thefraud, UCSCL announced that itwould accept none of the money.This action is most commendable.The action of Progressive In¬sight has done a great deal ofharm to the University and to thestudent movement in general.Liberal movements are alwayslooked at askance by the generalpublic. A great deal of money hasbeen spent trying to prove thatthe San Francisco student demon¬strations against HUAC werenot communist inspired. If such movements are ever tohave an effect, people must beconvinced that their leaders arcintelligent, rational, honorable in¬dividuals. Last Friday’s incidentdemonstrated none of Ihese char¬acteristics. Rather, it was astupid, childish, and dishonestsolution to the problem created byHampton’s inability to debate.Early this tveek, five oficers ofProgressive Insight announcedtheir resignation from the organ¬ization. Since this reduces thetotal number of members to lessthan ten, the number requiredfor recognition as a student or¬ganization, Progressive Insighthas ceased to exist as an officialgroup. Therefore, no actionagainst the group can be takenby either SG or CORSO otherthan passing a motion of censure.UC administrators plan to bringthe matter up before the Disci¬plinary committee. These plans,however, are too indefinite at themoment to warrant comment.We hope that the leaders ofProgressive Insight realize thedisservice they have done; tothemselves, to the University, andto the cause of civil liberties it¬self.They have done a disservice tothe conservative organizations in¬volved, by allowing a man whowas not their official representa¬tive to appear and to walk out.This does not seem compatiblewith the principle of free speech,which Progressive Insight sostrongly supports.Punishment seems meaningless.Wo can only hope that those in¬volved have profited from the ex¬posure of their deception.Meiklejohn tells plansDear Miss Kingsbury;This is to acknowledge for theFaculty Committee on ResidentialPolicies your letter of last weekexplaining the position you took wisdom of the residence require¬ment, but that is only a part ofour charge. Indeed, since on every¬one’s account the great bulk ofstudents will be living in thedormitories, it is clear that thein your regent discussions withDean Netherton. As you know,our Committee is hoping to meetwith each of you, in two or moreseparate groups, in order to hearat first hand your views on howresidential policies for CollegeStudents may be improved.I think that I should make itclear, for our Committee, that weare endeavoring to assemble theinformation relevant to the en¬tire residential situation so as toadvise Dean Simpson as respon¬sibly as we can. We are happy tohear opinions on the justice or major part of our inquiries meneed to be directed at suggetions for improving dormitoiresidence conditions. We have rceived many suggestions ardoubtless will hear many morA word of clarification isorder about the timing of our rport. Questions have been raisiabout whether we should codude our deliberations, so asadvise Dean Simpson, b e f o rhousing contract arrangemenfor next year must be completeWo have not been asked to coiplete our report at any partir4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 21, 19< lar time related to the housingcontract calendar; I think itwould be misleading to suggestthat we ate to be expected tothrow our weight into the deci¬sion about the requirement as itaffects students who are to bein their second year next year.As a standing committee of theCollege Faculty we will reportwhen we think we have some¬thing useful 1 o tell Doan Simp¬son. Any intimation, -then, of theresidence requirement's s t a t u sfor next year cannot at presentbe expected to hinge on the com¬mittee report that we have notas yet produced.Donald MeiklejohnChairman, Committee onResidential Policies LetterMandel notes pictureof himself deansDear Sirs,I thought that you might beamused to see this photographwhich you ran last September inyour orientation issue. It showsDean Mary Alice Newman andDean George Playe serving megarbage at Camp Williams Buyduring O-Week. Looks like they had me pickedout and everything planned evenbefore classes began. Who knows,maybe there was some element oftruth in last week's Gadfly afterall. Frightening, isn’t it?Richard Mandel,Chairman,First-Year Council(Editor's note: see picture onnext page)Editor-in-chiefKen PierceBusiness managerWill iam G. BauerEditor emeritusProduction editor. . .News editorFeature editorNational news editor.Political news editorNeighborhood news editor.Culture editorSports editorGadfly editorCopy editorResearch editorCollege editors .Colendar editorEditorial secretaryPhotography coordinator. ,Circulation managerBusiness office manager. .Classified managerSubscription manager. . . . Advertising managerRaymond A. MitchellNeal JohnstonAvima RuderJay GreenbergFaye WellsGene VinogradoffCaryle Geier. Ron DorfmanDotty Sharpless........... Chuck BernsteinRobert Strozier, Jr.John JuskeviceCarole Quinn. Loura Godofsky, Judy ShopiroDonna BergMichelle SeligsonAl BergerNate SwiftJoan Helmkin.Maurice ZeitlinPhil HydeEditorial board: William Bauer, Jay Greenberg, Ken Pierce, Avima Rude^Gene VinogradoffEditorial staff: Horry Adler, Phil Altboch, Willard Ayres, Michael Bates, MaryClaire Beck, Lee Brozgold, Alix Cromelin, Betsy Ebert, Gary FeldmorsSuzy Goldberg, Gary Greenberg, Art MacEwan, Doug McCullough, BobReiser, D. V. Roo, Ronnie Rosenblott, Mike Shakmon, Irene Sidor, JohnSteed.Photography staff: Danny Auerbach, Som Leinhordt, Don Lyon, Stan SloitAPete Stenn, Doug Thornton, Sam Zopler.Sports staff: Mike Cannes.UPS signifies University Press Service, maintained by the National Studentassociation. ,The Maroon is issued every Friday during the school year and■mittently during the summer quarter, by students of the UniversityChicago. Inquiries should be sent to the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hah.E 59th Street. Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0600, extensions 32M3366. Distributed without charge on campus. Subscriptions by mail, $3 per y *Office hours: 1 to 5. Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar , V4 pm, Tuesday: deadline for advertising and editorial material, 3 pm, weuday before publication. .All unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the officialthe Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signed editorial material representsindividual opinions of the authors.♦ 'lLettersFirst year council opposes residency ruleBELLEBARTHIF I EMBARRASS YOU,TELL YOUR FRIENDSpearlWILLIAMSA TRIP AROUND THEWORLD ISN’T A CRUISEB.S. pullVsFAIRY TALESHere’s one filler cigarette that’s really different!The difference is this: Tareytoii’s Dual Filter gives you aunique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL, definitely proved tomake the taste of a cigarette mild and smooth. It works together witha pure white outer filter—to balance the flavor elements in the smoke.Tareyton delivers-and you enjoy-the best taste of the best tobaccos.dual filterTci / eytonApril 21, 1961 CHICAGO MAROONFellows who will live inChicago oreo during sum¬mer ond WANT TO WORK—We hove openings lor youColl us atWA 5-7717orWA 5-83224-6 p.m.Also ask about ourScholarship ProgramCar NecessaryProduct of <//*. c an vaeeo t ft<Jo6ajCt» a mtr middle name <0 *- ? <*»'Pure, white.outer filterACTIVATEDCHARCOALinner filterDour first year student.The purpose of the first-yearcouncil is to express and forwardthe criticisms, suggestions, andopinions of the first-year studentsconcerning problems particularlypertaining to our class. We feelthat the most effective way to dothis is through personal discus¬sion. rather than bold and some¬times offensive public declaration.Although we have not taken pub¬lic, uncompromising stands, wehave clearly expressed the posi¬tion and views of the first-yearclass through rational and calmdeliberation with administrators.bage at- George Williamscamp during O-week. Seat¬ed at the table are RichardMandel, chairman of thefirst year council I 2nd fromleft) and M. Alice Newman,assistant dean of students(center). See letter on p. 4. Within this framework of an ad¬visory and communicative organ¬ization, however, we feel thatthere is room, when appropriateand necessary, to publicize ourbeliefs.On February 28, after havingmet with members of the admin¬istration, we sent out a letter tothe first-year class stating whatthen appeared to be the truth: “Itnow seems obvious that the dormrequirement is here to stay; itseems equally as obvious that itmight not lie the horror that itappeared to be at first.” LastMonday we again met and re¬ considered our views in the lightof increased effective activity oncampus for the abolition of therule and new developments con¬cerning the validity of the re¬quirement. Considering thechanged situation, we now feelthat it is necessary and worth¬while to publicly state our posi¬tion on the new residence rule.The only reason that DeanNetherton offered for the application of the rule to our class inhis speech to the College Faculty-on February 23rd was the “urgen¬cy of the situation in the spring;”that is; the Administration’s sta¬tistics which showed the dropoutrate for apartment dwellers tobe twice as high as that for dorm¬itory residents. A more recentstatistical study, however, showsthat the difference in the drop¬out rate by residence is consider¬ably less than had previously beenestimated. (Full details in theMaroon for Friday, April 21.)Thus, there is no apparently sub¬stantial reason for the require¬ment to be applied to our class.Furthermore, w e previouslywere led to believe that the re¬quirement would be interpretedflexibly, that .sensible exceptionswould easily be made. It nowseems obvious, however, Mr.Netherton’s meetings with thestudent committee on residentialpolicy and the subsequent letterfrom its members and the com¬ments of the Dean, that there willlie no established, objective criteria for determining exceptions. The council knows that thefirst-year class cannot accept. therule because of the manner of itsintroduction, the method of itsadministration, and the now ap¬parent lack of reason for its ex¬istence. Given the present an¬tagonism among the first - yearstudents towards such an unrea¬sonable rule, although the letterof the residential college could exist next year, its spirit cannotand will not.We agree with the ideas pre¬sented in the letter on the resi¬dence rule written by the studentcommittee on residential policy.We will continue to work for avoluntary residential college andfor improved student facully ad¬ministration communications andrelations.First-Year CouncilFoster to become officesThe second floor of Foster house will be converted to officesnext year, announced James E. Newman, assistant dean erfstudents. By fall of 1962, all of Foster will be offices for thesocial sciences department.The need for the conversion —— ; *rstems from the new plans result- l°nS ran8® P*ansing from the 5.4 million dollar §rouP arf *hat all.o£ wlU on®Ford foundation grant to UC. day be office buildings; however.The grant calls for study of no further conversions other thanunderdeveloped and newly inde¬pendent nations. For these pur¬poses a new language laboratoryis to be set up in the basementof the social science building.Hiring additional personnel andspace for offices now in the base¬ment of the social science buildingnecessitated the conversion of thesecond floor of Foster. that of Forster are planned in theforeseeable future, said Newman.Blackfriars —MAD MONEY(see theatre page — details IFor PRINTING Call JAY!OFFSET * LETTERPRESS ★ MIMEOGRAPHINGDAILY U. OF C. PICKUPSCmII JAY Letter & Printing ServiceNO 7-2110 1950 East 75th StreetTareyton delivers the flavor...Young Republicans hold annual meetingby -John SteedST. PAUL, Minn. — Someeleven UC delegates attendedthe annual meeting of theMid-west federation of CollegeYoung Republicans, held herelast weekeend. The conventionwas highlighted by election ofregional officers, adoption of aplatform, and a floor fight whichbrought out the police riot squad.The Friday session consisted oflittle official business except reg¬istration. There was, however,much “politicing” and campaign¬ing. The convention seemed tosplit down into two groups ■— onebehind Jim Abstine find.) forpresident and one behind PeteMc-pherson (Mich.).On Saturday there was a debateand eventual acceptance of a rela¬tively conservative platform. Butsome excitement started whenGovernor Anderson (R-Minn.)spoke. Although most people gavehim a warm welcome, a few dele¬gates, apparently from his homestate, booed him.This booing was just the be¬ginning. At file o’clock in the afternoon the chairman, a Mc¬Pherson supporter, stated thatthe convention would adjourn un¬til the evening session so thatbanquet tables could be set up inthat room.Many of the Abstine supportersfelt that this was merely a politi¬cal move. They reasoned thatthey had a majority and couldwin the election right then, butlater in the evening many of theirbackers might have left for theirhome schools. So when the chair¬ man asked them to leave the con¬vention room a loud “no” arosean dthe Abstine supporters re¬mained in their places.After the officers left, a dele¬gate went up to the platform andsaid that since there were no of¬ficers of the party present, hewould be temporary chairman.Although the Abstine delegateswere quite willing to remain, oneof their “members” convincedthem that in the time between thesessions they could not only con¬ firm their strategy among them¬selves but they could also tellother delegates of the “unfair”proceedings of the afternoon ses¬sion.The main point of the eveningsession was the Credentials com¬mittee report. The report pro¬posed to exclude several delegatesfrom the convention because ofimproper registration. After atwo hour floor fight by the Ab¬stine delegates the report wasamended to admit the contested delegates as full-fledged members.This amended report passed theassembly.After this, “because of the late¬ness of the hour” and because ofother reasons (possibly that mostof the delegates that had beencontested and were then seatedhad been Abstine supporters, Mc¬Pherson conceded the election toJim Abstine without a vote beingheld. The Abstine slate went on totake virtually all of the Mid-westand regional offices.Classified AdvertisementsFor rentComfortable 5 Room Apartment, withadjacent sun deck and screened inporch. Available June 10. Call: MI 3-0699.Two Unfurnished Apartments. 2 bed¬rooms, 4 rooms with porch. Both withfireplaces. Large front and back yards.Call: DO 3-3335.Creiger Manor1*2 to 3 Room Furnished Apts., nicelyappointed. Elevator building. $80-$120per mo., utilities included. Quick accessto University via public transportation.Mgr. on premises. Call: PL 2-9237.Ellen Coughlin Beauty SalonNOW OPEN IN OIK NEW LOCATION5060 Loke Pork Ave. Ml 3-2060Open Hon. - Sat. — 9 a.m. - I f p.m. 2 Room Furnished Apartments. NearU. of C., International House, ICRR,and bus. Call: BU 8-9424.Chatham Park Village ApartmentsA small town within a Big City. 3 to 5rooms, I and 2 bedroom units. $98 to$135. Applications invited from well-qualified prospective tenants who areseeking the unusual in apt. accommoda¬tions now or early spring. Privatelypoliced. 63 fireproof bldgs., close tocomplete shopping, churches, andschools. 22 min. to Loop by IC, adja¬cent to Unlv. of Chgo., Skyway to Ind.and Mich. Park-like terrain, amplestreet or garage parking.Model Apt. Offices on Premises737 E. 83rd PL TRiangle 4-4700Furnished ApartmentsShorelane Apts. 5135 S. Kenwood. Offers1 to 3>2 efficiency units attractivelyappointed, month to month occupancy.$80 and up. Elevator; fireproof bldg.Mgr. on premises.2 and 3 Room Furnished Apartments.Private baths. $70-$85 per month. Walk¬ing distance of U. of C. HV 3-2525. Sublet for 2 Yrs. 7 Rm. Apt. Ideal for HY 3-2664.family or sev. adults. Newly dec., com-pletely turn. Appliances, air cond., lin¬ens, etc. New Hyde Park. Near UC, IC, _________shopping. $185 a month. MU 4-3428. EarnFor saleBeautifully redecorated nine-room HydePark corner Town House. Car pool toLab School available. Shown by ap¬pointment. Phone: FA 4-6119.CO-OP APT. FOR SALE ~~PROMENTORY APTS.55th South Shore Dr.Modern apt. 5 rooms, 2 baths. Deluxecarpeting and drapes Included. Upperfloor. All electric kitchen, board ap¬proval. Call Mr. Lowenthal today.McKEY and POAGUE1501 East. 57th St. DO 3-6200Rugs, Embroidered Chinese Wall Panel,pictures, linens, Miscellaneous. Reason¬able. MI 3-5984.LUCKY STRIKE PRESENTS:DOELDRs FrSoD :| dr. frood's thought FOR the day: A little learning can; fee a dangerous thing—especially in a multiple-choice exam.DEAR DR. FROOD: I have calculated that if the population explosioncontinues at its present rate, there will be a person for every squarefoot of earth by the year 2088. What do you think of that?Statistics MajorDEAR STATISTICS; Well, one thing's sure, that will finish off the hula-hoopers—once and for all. I DEAR DR. FROOD: I have been training our1 college mascot, a goat. He has learned how toopen a pack of Luckies, take out a cigarette,light up and smoke. Do you think I can gethim on a TV show?Animal Husbandry MajorDEAR ANIMAL I’m afraid not. To make TV now*adays, you've got to have an act that's reallydifferent. After all, there are millions of Luckysmokers.DEAR DR. FROOD: I am a full professor—andyet I stay awake nights worrying about my abil¬ity to teach today’s bright young college stu¬dents. They ask questions I can’t answer. Theywrite essays I don’t understand. They use com¬plicated words that I’ve never heard before.How can I possibly hope to win the respect ofstudents who are more learned than I am?ProfessorDEAR PROFESSOR: I always maintain that noth¬ing impresses a troublesome student like thesharp slap of a ruler across his outstretchedpalm.DEAR DR. FROOD: You can tell your readers for me thatcollege is a waste of time. My friends who didn’t go tocollege are making good money now. And me, with mynew diploma? I’m making peanuts!Angry GradDEAR ANGRY: Yes, but how many of your friends can dowhat you can do—instantly satisfy that overpoweringcraving for a peanut. DEAR DR. FROOD: Could you give a word ofadvice to a poor girl who, after four years atcollege, has failed to get herselfinvited on a single date?Miss MiserableDEAR MISS: Mask?mmTHE RECRUITERS ARE COMING! THE RECRUITERS ARE COMING! And here’s Frood to tel!you just how to handle them: These representatives of big business are, on the whole,alert fellows. They may be aware that college students smoke more Luckies than any otherregular. Let them know that you know what’s up—offer them a Ldcky, then tap your craniumknowingly. Remember—today’s Lucky smoker could be tomorrow’s Chairman of the Board.CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change!Product of tS/w •dm&iictvn — c/u/wteecr is our middle nameC 4, r. co,CHICAGO MAROON Earn *85 weekly during summer aboardpassenger ships as waiter or waitressMUST BE U. S. CITIZEN. For completedetails send $1, Lansing InformationService, Dept. B-20, Box 74, New York61 N. Y.SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITYSummer Sales opportunity with scholar¬ship program. Now Interviewin'.; [orlimited group from this campus. Workin the area of your choice. Nationallyrecognized. AA-A1. company. Car neces¬sary. Contact Ed Nowaszyk, 3454 W 7<>thSt. Chicago 52. Ill. WA 5-7717 or WA 5-8322. 4-6 P M.WantedHEARSE superb condition. 16,000 miles.$500. FA 4-6994.Kenwood Mews townhouse, one year old,8 rms., 2*2 baths, air conditioned. Call: 3 Women Wish to Share house anhworking girl Call; FA 4-1721, eveningsonly.One or Two Girls to share 6 room fur-nlshed apartment. $42 a month. Avail¬able June. Own bedroom. Must see toappreciate. MU 4-8584.Advertising Solicitor. 25% commission!Call: BU 8-8268A Light-weight Bicycle second hand.Call. Dorothy Datz. MI 3-0730.Mature, responsible girl to accompanyfaculty family on Northwoods vacationfor month of August. Share care of twochildren. $75 plus room and board.Unlimited swimming, fishing, sunningCall: DO 3-3898.ServicesSewing. Alterations, Hems. BU 8-6001Typing. Reast MI 3-5218^PersonalsCreative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377K. K. does not exist. He Is merely afigure of M. F.'s disturbed ImaginationWell PLAYED Pipe Makes PromenadesLess Dismal.Happy Birthday Sandy!! From GBC.I just want to comb my hair. But youcan t: There are men in there.Dear Marge. Don't worry, It was a wrongnumber. The stranger on WoodlawnAve.RichardStern, 193. Fred Dolln, “l5T.Betsy Ebert, Betsy-Ebert, Betsy*'Ebert,Betsy Ebert. Betsy Ebert, Betsy Ebertilave a rooting-tooting 21st, EHPTThe Ubiquitous OneEye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetot University AveHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscountEUROPE orSOUTH AMERICAin 1961?We orrange for low-cost air travelon regularly scheduled aircraft toEurope and South America. Roundtrip summer season fare from NewYork to Luxembourg, for instance,is only $358.20. We con save you$424.40 on a round trip ticket toBuenos Aires!In connection with the studentflight to London on June 19, weoffer a 38 days' escorted tour of10 countries plus four weeks ofstudy in Europe for only $775.00,and 15 days in Scandinavia for$196. We arrange for purchaseof European cars of any make otwholesale prices, or for low-costrentals. Free consultation on travel.For full information,write toMr. Arne Brekke1207 E. 60th Street,Chicago 37,or coll (days or evenings)BU 8-6437.April 21, 1961Seventh Festival embodies spirit of foundersMIt began modestly, even in-auspic'ously. A small groupsat around a conference tablelast fall and talked of a week¬end where the originality of ourstudents could be demonstrated.Aft and music were to be thelocus of the Festival.”So the late Robert M. Strozier,then dean of students, describedthe birth of UC’s Festival of thearts in 1955. This week will seethe opening of the seventh annualFestival, an event which con¬tinues to be based on the plansoutlined above, despite controver¬sy over policy and problems ofexecution.Gerhard Meyer, associate pro¬fessor of economics in the college,had long dreamed of such a week¬end, and it was he who organizedthe first steering committee: “theidea occurred to me and I wentaround and buttonholed a fewpeople." While admitting that he“had a lot to do with the origin,”Meyer' says “I was only a cata¬lyst: I actualized something peo¬ple were all ready to do. The Fes¬tival should stand on its own feet;the umbilical cord was cut longago — there’s no need for it."According to Meyer, three ideaswent into the plans for FOTAfrom the first. “I felt that therewas a real contribution of extra¬curricular groups that o u g h tto is* recognized, especially the ex¬tent to which the It n man it it's comealive in their work, so that theycomplement the academic workof the curriculum, in a sort of'applied humanities.’“Secondly, a University whichis somewhat formless (and this ispart of its greatness) needs some¬thing like a festival as a meansof creating what you might callbridges, an opportunity for mak¬ing connections on various levels— between art groups which com¬pete with or ignore each other,between the faculty and the stu¬dents. between the University andthe community surrounding it. The effectiveness of each of thesegroups would be increased bytheir cooperation in a joint ef¬fort.”Finally, Meyer emphasizes theimportance of the student in mak¬ing or unmaking the festival.“The main emphasis should be‘for students and by students’ —with faculty help where needed;I have always thought of the ad¬ministration’s role in FOTA as asupporting, not a controlling,one.”Present at the first FOTA meet¬ing were Joshua Taylor. RichardVikstrom, Harold Haydon, Mar¬vin Phillips, Peter Gram Swingand Meyer and Strozier. A four-day Festival period was set up,one which would coincide withthe txaditional Parents’ weekend.A student, Arthur Green, assumedthe general chairmanship, withHaydon and Taylor as co-chair¬men.“Our original idea,” explainedHaydon, “was not to bring in anylarge numbers of events, or to‘import’ a festival, but rather tohighlight unnoticed events hereon campus by bringing togetherall exhibits, contests, productionsand so forth into one short pe¬riod.“In short we wanted to empha¬size our own indigenous culturalevents, together with a few spe¬cial events. YVe wanted to havesome fun.”By April, the Festival plans hadexpanded to include Internationalhouse’s Festival of nations; a UTpresentation of Gogol’s InspectorGeneral; three concerts; a stu¬dent art exhibit; varsity track,tennis and baseball; acrotheatreand modern dancers. Highlight ofthe Festival were the Beaux ArtsBall and William Carlos Williams’reading of his poetry in Rockefel¬ler Chapel.By the following year, whenPenny Rich and John Nethertonwere planning the second FOTA,the Festival time had been ex¬panded to a five-day period offer¬ ing some 15 events, including alecture by Eudora Welty, the nov¬elist and short story writer; UT’sThe Ghost Sonata; the worldpremiere of Ruth Page’s modernballet Suzanna aiul the Barber;and, of course, the Beaux Artsball.1957 was a rather difficult andharassing year for the plannersof FOTA, according to MaryJeanne Carlson, co-chairman thatyear. “We were on a very lowbudget,” she recalls, “and planswere completely disorganized be¬cause of a lack of continuity inleadership. You got to be chair¬man by a sort of osmosis.”A sports car rally was “a greatfiasco,” says Mrs. Carlson; on theother hand, Martin Buber spoketo standing-room-only at Rocke¬feller Chapel, and the revivedBlackfriars gave their first full-length production since 1942: ThePassing of Pahli Khan. *The 1957 FOTA was widely pub¬licized as the first entirely stu¬dent-run Festival; as Mrs. Carlsonput it however, “since only Mr.Strozier, Mr. Price, Mr. O’Connelland Mr. Haydon really knew whatwas goiilg on, we depended ratherextensively on the faculty and ad¬ministration.”Probably as a result of theseconditions, the Festival of 1958saw every committee co-chairedby students and faculty members. Rochelle Dubnow and EverettKline (both students) were co-chairmen of the Festival as awhole, which has been character¬ized as “esoteric” and “experi¬mental.” There was a discussionand presentation of “Music Con¬crete and Electronic Music” — at¬tended by about five people, saysMiss Dubnow; the sports-car rallywas omitted from the program,and the annual student art exhibit was held in the Robie house.“The question of the experimen¬tal approach versus bringing es¬tablished ‘big names’ to the cam¬pus was one of the biggest dis¬putes at committee meetings” re¬calls Miss Dubnow, “but the mainpoint was that we simply hadn’tthe funds to attract the bignames.”(Continued on page 8)Major music events setSince its beginning in 1955, Selections of Russian folk and er and clarinetist Dan Rosenblum.the Festival of the Arts has church music will be presented Folk music afficianados andemphasized art and music and * the ch?ir' w^h "as *0™>a ^ "‘S,this vear will be no exceDtion last duarter and « directed by tamed Monday April 24; the Col--fnfhe LXn days. I-OTA wiS S’ojen Lazarevie, a member of legium Musieum is presenting apresent eight major musical ,he slavrc languages staff. concert of Fourteenth, fifteenthevents. ' Sunday April 23rd, at 4 p.m., and sixteenth century music un-At the official opening of the Burton-Judson courts will hold der the direction of Howard M.Festival, the University of Chi- the second in its series of stu- Brown, at 8.30 at the law schoolcago Russian choir will give a dent recitals, presenting Janet auditorium, while at the sameconcert in Hutchinson court this Zlotow and Howard Schoenberg- time in Ida Noyes theatre thereer, pianists, singer Roliand Hans- Jn*23afternoon at 12:30.FOTA Calendar of EventsFriday April 21Official opening; of the Festival, outdoorconcert: the Russian choir, 12:30 pm,Hutchinson court, 57th and Univer¬sity.Florence James Adams Poetry ReadingContest (preliminaries), 3 pm Bondchapel, 1025 E. 58th street.Lecture (Emily Talbot lecture), “Hisinfinite variety” — a Shakespeareananthology, 3:30 pm, Law school audi¬torium, 1121 E. 60th street. MargaretWebster, actress, director, author.Lecture, “Modern Yiddish poetry” (withreadings), 8:30 pm, Hillel foundation,5715 S. Woodlawn, Edward Stankie-wicz, visiting associate professor oflinguistics.Blackfriars’ “Mad Money” — an originalmusical comedy, 8:40 pm, Mandel hall, 57th and University: tickets. FOTAbox office, Mandel hall: $2.00-$2.50.Saturday April 22Informal reception for Margaret Web¬ster, 3:00 pm, Kelly lounge, 5848 S.University."Movie, (Documentary film group)“Dreams that money can buy,” 3:00,7:15, 9:15 pm. Social Sciences 122, 1126E. 59th street, admission 50 cents atthe door.Blackfriars' “Mad Money.” 8:40 pm,Mandel hall, (repeat of April 21 per¬formance. )Sunday April 23Rockefeller Memorial chapel religiousservice, 11:00 am. 59th and Woodlawn,Rev Thomas Driver, Union Theolog¬ical Seminary, “The Earth is theLord’s.” Festival of the Nations, internationalexhibit of painting, sculpture, docu¬mentary films, food bazaar, 3-6 pm.main lounge and patio. Internationalhouse, 1414 E. 59th street.Student Recital. 4 pm, Judson lounge,Burton Judson courts, 1005 E. 60thstreet.Illustrated lecture. “Rembrandt as aProtestant artist,” 7 pm. Chapel house,5810 S. Woodlawn, John Hayward,assistant professor in the Divinityschool.Blackfriars’ “Mad Money,” 7:40 pm,Mandel hall, (repeat of April 21 per¬formance.)Festival of the nations: evening pro¬gram, “Songs and dances from manylands,” 8 pm, assembly hall, Interna¬tional house, tickets: $1.Monday April 24Movie. “The Bolshoi Ballet,” 8 pm. as¬sembly hall, International house,admission: 50 cents at door.Concert, Fourteenth, fifteenth and six¬teenth century music by the Col¬legium Musicum. 8:30 pm, Law schoolauditorium, 1121 E. 60th street, underthe direction of Howard M. Brown.Hootenanny. 8:30 pm, Ida Noyes Thea¬tre, 1212 E. 60th street, featuring theStony Island Boys. Nick and Paul, SuePollard and special guests.Tuesday April 25University of Chicago Symphony Or¬chestra. music by Bach, Beethoven,Charles Ives, Berlioz, 8:30 pm, Mandelhall. 57th and University, H. ColinSlim conducting.Wednesday, 26 AprilLecture, “Subject matter in recentpainting,” 4 pm. Pierce Tower, 5514 S.University, James Joseph McGarrell,Festival artlst-in-residence.Joyce Trisler and company. “Techniquesin contemporary dance,” a lecture-demonstration, (Emily Talbot lecture),8 pm, Mandel hall, 57th and Univer¬sity.Lecture, (the History Club), “The poetperplexed; Tagore.” 8 pm, East lounge,Ida Noyes Hall. 1212 E. 59th street,Stephen Hay, assistant professor, his¬tory department.Thursday April 27Lecture, “The Kibbutz in Israeli proseand poetry,” 3:30 pm, Hillel founda¬tion, 5715 S. Woodlawn, Moshe Sha¬mir, Israeli novelist.Informal reception for James JosephMcGarrell. Festival artist-in-residence.4:30 pm, Ida Noyes hall, 5831 S. Uni¬versity.“The Bartered Bride,” presented by theUniversity of Chicago Laboratoryschools. 8:00 pm, Mandel hall, 57thand University.Friday April 28Florence James Adams Poetry ReadingContest (finals). 3 pm. Bond Chapel,1025 E. 58tli street.Divinity School Worship service, 11:30am.-Bond chapel. Lecture (graduateschool of business). 1:30 pm. Breastedhall, “Management reaction to recentantitrust decisions.” Walter E. Hoad-ley. vice-president and treasurer, Arm¬strong Cork company.Meeting of the Faculty of the university school, 3 pm, Swift Common room.Lecture (Festival of the Arts), 4 pm.Pierce hali, “Subject matter In recentpainting,” James Joseph McGarrell,festival artist in residence.Carillon recital, 5 pm. Rockefeller Me¬morial chapel, Daniel Robins.Episcopal Religious service: Evensong,5:05 pm. Bond chapel.Lecture (history club), 8 pm, Ida Noyes.East lounge, “The poet perplexed:Tagore in America,” Stephen N. Hay,assistant professor, department of his¬tory.Emily Talbot lecture, 8 pm, Mandel hall.“Techniques in contemporary dance:lecture-demonstration,” Joyce Trislerand company.Country dancers. 8 pm, Ida NoyesIsraeli Folk dancing, 8 pm. Hillel foun¬dationAwarding of student art. literary andphotography prizes: presented by Mrs.George W. Beadle; Reception 4:30 pm,South lounge, Reynolds club, 5706 S.University.Joyce Trisler and company in an eve¬ning of Dance Theatre, 8:00 pm. Man-del hall, 57th and University; tickets:$3.50, $2.50, $1.50. FOTA box office,Mandel hall, or call MI 3-0800, ext.3280.University Theatre, “Home of theBrave.” by Arthur Laurents. 8:30 pm.Reynolds club theatre. 5706 S. Univer¬sity; tickets: $1 at Reynolds club desk.Saturday April 29University Theatre, “Home of theBrave,” 8:30 pm. Reynolds club thea¬tre, (repeat of April 28 performance.)Beaux Arts Masquerade Ball, theme:“famous paintings,” 9 pm. Law schoollobby, 1121 E. 60th street, $3.50. FOTAbox office. Mandel hall.Sunday April 30Rockefeller Memorial Chapel religiousservice. 11 am. 59th and Woodlawn,Rev. Theodore A. Gill, president, SanFrancisco Theological Seminary,“Judge Not.”Concert, The Rockefeller MemorialChapel Choir of the University of Chi¬cago. 3 pm. Rockefeller Chapel. Rich¬ard Vikstrom will conduct the choirand members of the Chicago Sym¬phony Orchestra In Bach's Third suitein D major for orchestra and Hay-don’s Harmonic mass. General admis¬sion. $3. for students, $1.Concert. Chicago Piano Quartet, 8:30pm. Mandel hall, 57th and University,Fritz Siegal, violin,^ Milton Previs,viola, Robert La Marchina. cello,Marion Hall, piano; tickets: $1 atFOTA box office, Mandel hall, or theMusic department.University Theatre, “Home of theBrave,” 8:30 pm, Reynolds Club thea¬tre (repeat of April 28 performance.)Monday May 1Lecture. (William Vaughn Moody lec¬ture) “Tradition and individuality inan age of technology,” Leon Kirchner,American composer and musician. 8:30pm. Mandel hall, 57th and University.Wednesday May 3Concert, Lennox String Quartet andLeon Kirchner, music by Leon Kirch¬ner, 8:30 pm, Mandel hall. 57th andUniversity. Paul, UC student Sue Pollard andspecial guests.Music by Bach, Beethoven.Charles Ives and Berlioz will beplayed by the University of Chi¬cago symphony orchestra Tues¬day April 24 at 8:30 p.m. in Man-del hall. Under the direction ofColin Slim, with Easley Black¬wood, the orchestra will give Bee¬thoven’s “Three aequale for fourtrombones,” “The unansweredquestion” by Charles Ives (1908),the Suite number four in D majorof J. S. Bach, and Berlioz’ RomanCarnival overture.On Sunday April 30. the Chica¬go Piano Quartet will playFaure’s Quartet in C minor, opus15, Hayden’s Trio in C major andBrahms’ Quartet in G minor, opus25. The members of the Quartetare Fritz Siegal, violinist and con-certmaster ot the Grant Park Or¬chestra and the Lyric Opera Sym¬phony Orchestra, Milton Peeves,principal violist of the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra, Robert LaMarchina, principal cellist of theChicago Symphony Orchestra,and Marion Hall, pianist.Tickets are $1 and are availableat the FOTA box office in Man-del hall. The concert, to be heldin Mandel hall, will be at 8:30p.m.The Festival’s primary guestartist in the field of music is thepianist and composer Leon Kirch¬ner, who will give the YYilliamVaughn Moody lecture on Mon¬day May 1, and whose music willbe performed by the LennoxString Quartet on YVednesdayMay 3.Kirchner’s lecture, at 8:30 pmin Mandel hall, will be on “tra¬dition and individuality in an ageof technology.” The program forthe Wednesday evening perform¬ance consists of Kirchner’s StringQuartet number One, which wonthe 1949-1950 New York Critic’sCircle Award, his Trio, and hisString Quartet number Two,which won the Circle Award forthe best new chamber work per¬formed in the 1959-60 season.April 21, 1961 • CMICACO MAROON • 7!^Q& Campos(.Author of“l Was a Teen-age Dwarf,” “The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillis" etc.)A ROBE BY ANY OTHER NAMEAs Commencement Day draws near, the question on everyone’slipe is: “How did the different disciplines come to be marked byacademic robes with hoods of different colors?” Everybody—but everybody—is asking it. I mean I haven’t been able to walkten feet on any campus in America without somebody grabs myelbow and says, “How did the different disciplines come to bemarked by academic robes with hoods of different colors, hey?”This, I must say, is not the usual question asked by collegianswho grab my elbow. Usually they say, “Hey, Shorty, got aMarlboro?” And this is right and proper. After all, are they notcollegians, and, therefore, the nation’s leaders in intelligenceand discernment? And do not intelligence and discernment de¬mand the tastiest in tobacco flavor and smoking pleasure? Anddoes not Marlboro deliver a flavor that is uniquely mellow, aselectrate filter that is easy drawing, a pack that is soft, a boxthat is hard? You know it!But I digress. Back to the colored hoods of academic robes.A doctor of philosophy wears blue, a doctor of medicine wearsgTeen, a master of arts wears white, a doctor of humanities wearscrimson, a master of library science wears lemon yellow. Why?Why, for example, should a master of library science wear lemonyellow?Well sir, to answer this vexing question, we must go back toMarch 29, 1844. On that date the first public library in theUnited States was established by Uiric Sigafooe. All of Mr.Sigafooe’s neighbors were of course wildly grateful—all, thatis, except Wrex Todhunter.Mr. Todhunter had hated Mr. Sigafoos since 1822 when bothmen had wooed the beauteous Melanie Zitt and Melanie hadchosen Mr. Sigafoos because she was mad for dancing and Mr.Sigafoos knew all the latest steps, like the Missouri CompromiseMambo, the Shay’s Rebellion Schottische, and the James K.Polk Polka, while Mr. Todhunter, alas, could not dance at allowing to a wound he had received at the Battle of New Orleans.(He was struck by a falling praline.)Consumed with jealousy at the success of Mr. Sigafoos’slibrary, Mr. Todhunter resolved to open a competing library.This he did, but he lured not a single patron away from Mr.Sigafoos. “What has Mr. Sigafoos got that I haven’t got?” Mr.Todhunter kept asking himself, and finally the answer came tohim: books.So Mr. Todhunter stocked his library with lots of dandy booksand soon he was doing more business than his hated rival.But Mr. Sigafoos struck back. To regain his clientele, he beganserving tea free of charge at his library every afternoon. There¬upon, Mr. Todhunter, not to be outdone, began serving teawith sugar. Thereupon, Mr. Sigafoos began serving tea withsugar and cream. Thereupon, Mr. Todhunter began servingtea with sugar and cream and lemon.This, of course, clinched the victory for Mr. Todhunter be¬cause he had the only lemon tree in town—in fact, in the entirestate of North Dakota—and since that day lemon yellow has ofcourse been the color on the academic robes of library science.(Incidentally, the defeated Mr. Sigafoos packed up his libraryand moved to California where, alas, he failed once more. Therewere, to be sure, plenty of lemons to serve with his tea, but,alas, there was no cream because the cow was not introducedto California until 1931 by John Wayne.) ® m) shuiauw* * *And today Californians, Happy among their Guernseys andHolsteins, are discovering a great new cigarette—the un-Hltered, king-size Philip Morris Commander—and so areAmericans in all fifty states. Welcome aboardt LecturesLiterary events of this year’sFOTA consists of three lec¬tures, a contest and theawarding of a special fictionprize sponsored jointly by FOTAand the Phoenix.The issue of the Phoenix whichappears today will include theprize-winning story, the result ofa contest for prose fiction from1,500 to 5,000 words.This afternoon the preliminar¬ies of the Florence James AdamsPoetry Reading contest will beheld in Bond chapel at 3 o’clock;the finals will be a week fromtoday, same time and place.This evening at 8:30, the Hillelfoundation will present a lectureon “Modern Yiddish poetry” withreadings, by Edward Stankiewicz,visiting lecturer in linguistics.On Wednesday April 26, theHistory club presents StephenHay, assistant professor of His¬tory in a lecture on “The poetperplexed: Tagore,” at 8 pm inthe East lounge of Ida Noyes hall.The final literary lecture of thisyear’s Festival will be anotherpresentation of the Hillel founda¬tion: the Israeli novelist MosheShamir, who will speak Thursday tog nand contest setafternoon at 3:30 at the Hillelfoundation on “The kibbutz inIsraeli prose and poetry.”Shamir is a leader of the mod¬ern literary generation in Israel,and a writer whose novels andplays have been awarded the Israel Bialik Prize for 3955 aSabra (native born) Israeli Sh?mir is best known in this countryfor his novel King of Flesh andBlood, which had been translatedinto English, Spanish, Italian andDutch. T1dudrphbe ling <huy,”at SoThconsisix Pa “celTheFern:andetManscorefor tand Jplacead miThtlonathe J"TheTheThcaher <balleis wcThFOTA lacked fundsTHE NEW GREENWINDOW ROOMof the La BohemePrexentsJazz Chicago StyleVoir AppearingMitchell Roberts Triowith Rick MartinFri., Sat. fir Sun. at 9:00 p.m.963 W. DiverseyHARPERLIQUOR STORE1114-16 East 55th StreetFull line of imported ond domesticwines, liquors and beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONE(■ ▲ M 123:iFA 4-13187699 (Continued from page 7)Kline added that another prob¬lem was the chairmen of FOTAwere not elected until the end ofthe fall quarter, which made itdifficult to attempt anything butthe experimental. It was thereforeestablished in the FOTA constitu¬tion that future heads of the Fes¬tival be elected not later than theend of spring quarter the yearbefore each festival.In 3959, author Saul Bellow lec¬tured, the University choir pre¬sented Handel’s “Israel in Egypt,”THE FRET SHOP1551 E. 57th St.Open Evenings, 5-10 p.m.and WeekendsInstruments, New, Used, AntiqueGuitors, Banjos, Mandolins, etc.Supplies — RepairsTemporary Phone — Ml 3-3459TTVTTTTTTVTVTTVTTTTTTTVVTTVVTTTVWVVVTTTTTTfTTFIRST CULTURAL ATTRACTIONatMcCORMICK PLACE THEATREBALLET SCHEHERAZADEperformed by theRegional Ballet Ensemble of ChicogoAnd^ / IA Symphony by theChicago Businessmen's OrchestraSaturday, May 6th — 8:30 p.m.all tickets $3.00Telephone WA 2-6914 afternoons or evenings for ticketsKi-WWWWWVXWWWWWWWXWWWWWWItXXXW,4 PIZZASFor The Price Of 3NICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780 *SYRACUSE UNIVERSITYSEMESTERS ABROADSemester in ITALY Semester, in GUATEMALAFall or Spring Spring semester onlyLiberal Arts Progrom Liberal Arts ProgramJuniors and 2nd semester Juniors and 2nd semesterSophomores SophomoresNo languoge prerequisite Competence in Spanish requiredFor information:ACADEMIC PROGRAMS ABROADUNIVERSITY COLLEGE610 E. Fayette Street Syracuse, N.Y. and an exhibition was held of thegraphic works of Pablo Picasso.• There was also another attemptat a sports-car rally.)“The only great change 1evoked was a derision that asports car rally and similarevents were not really germane,’*remarked last year’s FOTA chair¬man AJice Schaeffer recently.As always, it was a disputedpoint whether the ratio of im¬ported events was too great inproportion to examples of localtalent. This would appear to bea basic problem in the planningof the Festival, and an extiemelydifficult one to resolve, dependentas FOTA is on the participationof the student body, which, it is,agreed by all, is both phenomenal¬ly talented and extraordinarilylethargic. Among those concernedin the past and present withFOTA, there is a lack of agree¬ment on the means of utilizingthe talent and breaking throughthe lethargy.Mary Alice Newman, a^-ritantdean of students, favors a ■ rashprogram” in which the Festivalbrings local and imported talentto the attention of the studentbody by scheduling speakers andexhibits in the dorms and class¬rooms during a short period ofVTTVVVWTirt WV ».Bicycles, Parts, Accessoriesspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1621 a. 55th st.Joseph H. Aaron, 71The Conner* SentMutual Life InsuranceCompany of HartfordSince 1846, over 100 years, hassafeguarded your family.135 S. LaSalle St.Sake 825 RA «-!«#«fatopek'to[ Steamship $375 UPRound Trip frequent soilingsTMft Round hip h AIR II SHANNON LONDON FAIIS ■$298.00 $313.00 $331.60Rstet to other destinations on requestCRIMSON SERIES ofSTUDENT TOURSfor folders and detailsSee your local travelUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, MassPhoto exhibits plannedThis year’s Festival will in¬clude many movie and photog¬raphy exhibits. The first willbe Documentary Films show¬ing of “Dreams that money canbuy,” this afternoon and eveninga i Social Sciences 122.This highly experimental film‘consists of six sequences in whichsix people reveal their dreams ona “celestial psychoanalytic couch.”The portions were directed byFernand Leger, Max Ernst, Alex¬ander Calder, Marcel Duchamp,Man Ray, and Hans Ricter. Thescore was composed especiallyfor the film by Darius Milhaudand John Cage. Showing will takeplace at 3:00, 7:15, and 9:15 pm;admission is sixty cents.This coming Monday, Interna¬tional house movies will bringthe award winning photoplay,"The Bolshoi Ballet,” to campus.The film will include the BolshoiTheater Ballet company in a num¬ber of short sequences, and a fullballet, “Giselle.” The entire affairis woven together by a plot.This weekend the student pho¬tography show will begin in the new Law School lobby. Enoughspace will be provided so that allstudent photography- of qualitymay be displayed. The exhibit willbe open from 9 am to 11 pm daily,9 am to 5 pm on Saturday, andnoon to ten pm on Sunday. Allentries must be submitted by five pm today.Winners of the student photog¬raphy contest will have theirworks displayed in the southlounge of the Reynolds club from9 am to 5 pm every day exceptSunday. Admission to all exhibitsis free.Several theatrical eventsto be presented hereFOTA will bring numeroustheatrical events to campus inthe coming week. The first ofthese is the 1961 Blackfriars’production of “Mad Money”; as inpast years, this musical comedyis entirely student-written, actedand produced.The show concerns itself witha group of respectable citizensliving in a respectable midwestemtown, who, for want of anythingbetter to do, decide to rob thetown’s respectable bank. It willfeature Jerry Mast, Keith Ander-s to get big namesconcentrated artistic and festivalmood. Rena Matusen, this year’sFOTA chairman, would like tosee the Festival steering commit-ice on a standing basis, feelingi hat there are too many eventsin too short a time for anyone toIn- more than confused by the va¬riety and richness of what is of¬fered. Harry Price, director ofspecial events, on the other hand,feels that the “Festival should besomething really special, featur¬ ing some spectacular event thatdoesn’t go on throughout theyear.”FOTA seems destined to go onexperimenting with different ap¬proaches to this problem — a so¬lution that is all to the good inthe mind of founder GerhardMeyer, who believes that "it hasimproved each year, each Festivaladding to the next and profitingfrom the mistakes of the yearbefore.”Plan Beaux ArtsThe theme of this year’s Beaux Arts Ball will be “GreatPaintings;” and in keeping with this, the ballroom will bedecorated as the Louvre art museum. This year’s ball will beheld in the new Law school auditorium. This location, accord¬ing to Carole Hughes, “with its son, Jim R a s s, Amei Wallaeh,Stephani Mora and Alice Schaef¬fer in the roles of the town’srespectable citizens. Ken Davidsonof the Blackfriars’ board washeard to say, “this year’s Black¬friars is trying something new:we have a plot.”Tickets for this extravaganza,priced at $2.00 and $2.50, are nowavailable for performances FridayApril 21 through Sunday April 23.The boxoffice is located in thecorridor of Mandel hall, where thecurtain rises at 8:30 promptly.The next major dramatic offer¬ing will be a lecture-demonstra¬tion by Margaret Webster at 3:30pm this afternoon. Miss Websteris a world-famous Shakespeareanactress and directress, but she isprobably best known for her book,Shakespeare without Tears.The lecture, which will be givenin the Law school auditorium,is entitled “His infinite variety—A Shakespearean anthology,” andwill include a presentation byMiss Webster of some of thescenes which she has played onthe professional stage.On the evening of ThursdayApril 27, the University Labora¬tory School will give a perform¬ance of Smetna’s opera, "The Bar¬tered Bride,” in Mandel hall at 8.University theatre is schedulinga production of Arthur Laurents’“The Home of the Brave” in theReynolds Club theatre. The dateis as yet undetermined.?reat size and large plate glasswindows will provide an excel-ent location for a dance.”Thus far two of the judges haveiccn selected; they are Joycerrisler, world-famous ballet danc-% and Norman B. Boothby, Dean>f the Art school at the ChicagoVrt institute. Prizes will be of-'•red in a number of categories,neluding the funniest and thenost original couple, the bestnale and the best female, and thex?st groups of ten or over and ofhree to ten. According to Misslughes, all couples of three will receive honorable mention foruniqueness. Coffee mugs will bedispensed as souvenirs.Ken Pierce and his band will pro¬vide the music; and the Black¬friars will provide the entertain¬ment consisting of new and oldBlackfriar “dance, song and snap¬py patter.”Bids priced at $3.50 per coupleare now on sale at the FOTA box-office located in the Mandel hallcorridor. If you are going to move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trou¬blesome problem.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 E. 55th St.BU 8-67111.PHOTOGRAPHS WANTEDfor the 1962 University CalendarCampus ScenesStudent LifePhone: Mr. Switx, ext. 3039VI Wear Contact LensesDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometiitf1132 E. 55th St.•t University Ave. HY 3-8372Welcome springheorts!Take •« Evening Walkto theGreen Door BookshopQuality PaperbacksNow Open Every Evening to 12:301450 E. 57th HY -3-5829ffldmciA Mast Pleasant Coffee House-Book Shop Small .. .$1.00MediumLargeExtra LargeGiant . . $3.951518 I. 63rdTHREE PIZZAS FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree t/.C. DeliveryTerry ’sMl 3-4045paintings by Lynda McNeur of San Francisco"ADAM MEOLAM AND HIS WORLD"seven ails depicting the "gods" of our ageAndSHEKINAHseven oils expressing aspects of the Divine PresenceCHAPEL HOUSE5810 S. WoodlawnPresented by The Porter FoundationAPRIL 22 - 30 Photographers for this supplement: Danny Auerbach,Danny Lyon.Have a ballin Europethis Summer(and get college credits, too!)Imagine the fun you can have on a summer vacation inEurope that includes everything from touring the Conti¬nent and studying courses for credit at the famous Sor-bonne in Paris to living it up on a three-week co-educa-tional romp at a fabulous Mediterranean island beach-clubresort! Interested? Check the tour descriptions below.FRENCH STUDY TOUR, $12.33 per day plusair fare. Two weeks touring France and Switzerland,sightseeing in Rouen, Tours, Bordeaux, Avignon, Lyon,Geneva, with visits to Mont-Saint-Michel and Lourdes.Then in Paris, stay six weeks studying at La Sorbonne.Courses include French Language, History, Drama, Art,Literature, for 2 to 6 credits. Spend your last week touringLuxembourg and Belgium. All-expense, 70-day tour in¬cludes sightseeing, hotels, meals, tuition for $12.33 perday, plus Air France Jet Economy round-trip fare.STUDENT HOLIDAYS TOUR OF EUROPE,$15.72 per day plus air fare. Escorted 42-day tourincludes visits to cultural centers, sightseeing in France,Switzerland, Italy, Austria, Germany, Luxembourg, Den¬mark, Sweden, Norway, Scotland, England, Holland andBelgium. Plenty of free time, entertainment. Hotel, meals,everything included for $15.72 per day, plus Air FranceJet Economy round-trip fare.CLUB MEDITERRANEE, $13.26 per day plusair fare. Here’s a 21-day tour that features 3 days onyour own in Paris, a week’s sightseeing in Rome, Capri,Naples and Pompeii, plus 9 fun-filled, sun-filled, fabulousdays and cool, exciting nights at the Polynesian-styleClub M6diterranee on the romantic island of Sicily. Spendyour days basking on the beach, swimming, sailing—yournights partying, singing, dSncing. Accommodations, meals,everything only $13.26 per day complete, plus Air FranceJet Economy round-trip fare.i —— — — — — — — — —j MR. JOHN SCHNEIDERI c/o AIR FRANCEI 683 Fifth Avenue, New York 22, N. Y.| Gentlemen:I Please rush me full information on the following:□ French Study Tour □ Student Holidays Tour1 □ Club MfditerranfeI N»nu» - - - - ■I Address —College ...I City 7.r>na StateAIR*FRANCE JETApril 21f 1961 • CHICACO MAROON • 9Excuse our UNSUBTLENESSbut . . .Jrt3<3w.'$d)\uro|(^\j • f*-£u*v^<3Lij -r“Ppril - a,l • £2. • A5*—TTick-^Es^*2.60 +XOO Ii^Vmddl I4dl\ t>6K OtticA"/\ 5"TOO ft. 0*1we*«w? IHL3-O8O0 e^.3l80jMAD MONEY!An Original Musical ComedyTonight!Tomorrow!!Sunday!!!Tickets at: MANDEL HALLBOX OFFICE*1.50 and *2.00Phone Reservations:Ml 3-8600— Ext. 3280 LIMITED toSTUDENTS ANDFACULTY OFTHIS SCHOOLAN RCA VICTOR • 21 INCHorotherfabulousprizesinLORILLARD'S CAMPUS SWEEPSTAKES!An RCA PortableStereo Set Mark 38Ail RCA TransistorClock Radio A Royal Portable Typewriter • A Polaroid Land CameraEnter Today! Print your nameand address on the back of a pack (or reason¬able facsimile —see rules) of any one of these 5Lorillard products—and deposit it in theLorillard Sweepstakes entry boxes, located onand around campus. Enter as many timesas you like.••••••••••••••f••••••••••••••••••••••••••a01961 P. lorillard Co.READ COMPLETE SWEEPSTAKES RULES HERE:1, Each entry must consist of one empty pack of anyof the following brands: Kent . . . Newport . . .Old Gold Filters, Straights , . . Spring OR—a plainpiece of paper which has the "hand” drawn blockletters of any of these brands drawn in any .size.Your name and address must be written on the back.Deposit your completed entry in the LorillardCampus Sweepstakes entry boxes.Closing time and date indicated on campus posters.There will be a random drawing in which the prizewinners will be selected in consecutive order. Draw¬ing will be held under the supervision of the collegenewspaper staff. Enter as many times as you like.Only one prize per contestant. Entrants need not bepresent at drawing to win.3, Lorillard Campus Sweepstakes is open to all stu*dents, faculty and staff members of this school.4, Lorillard Campus Sweepstakes is subject to allFederal, State and Local Laws,5, Students and faculty whose immediate families areemployed by the P. Lorillard Co. or its advertisingagencies are not eligible.ENTER Contest closes midnight, (date).TODAY! Date of drawing to be announced. PRODUCTS OFP. LORILLARD COMPANYF/ril with the Finest CigarettesThrough Lorillard ResearchDROP OFF STATIONS FOR LORILLARD SWEEPSTAKESUniversity Bookstore5800 S. Ellis Ave.Billings Hospital Gift Shop954 E. 59th St.Reynolds Club5706 S. University Ave.Reynolds Club Barber Shot5706 S. University Ave.Ida Noyes Hall1212 E. 59th St.Tropical Hut Restaurant1320 E. 57th St.Stineway Drugstore1335 E. 57th St.Stern's Drugstore6100 S. Ellis Ave. UC Downtown Center (Coffee shop)Lake St. & Garland Ct.Burton-Judson Courts1005 E. 60th St.New Women's Residence Hall5825 Woodlawn Ave.Pierce Towers5514 S. University Ave.Walgreen Drugs1554 E. 55th St.PRIZES ARE ON DISPLAY ATSTINEWAY DRUGSTORE1335 E. 57th ST.10 • CHICACO MAROON • April 21, 1961Coming events on quadranglesFriday. 21 April,lh school Clothing sale, 8:30 am to 5u' sunny gym, 5823 South Kenwoodavenue: bring clothing, etc., for con¬tributions.Tenth Annual Business Economists con¬ference. 9 30 am, morning session,George J. Stlgler, Charles R. Wal¬green professor of American Institu¬tions graduate school of business,^residing: "What is the WPI goodtor?” Richard Ruggles, chairman, de-na’-orient of economics, Yale univer¬sity "How good Is the CPI?” AlbertRf4s associate professor, departmentof economics. 12 m, luncheon: "Eco¬nomic policy: outlook and prognosis,”Arthur F. Burns, president. NationalBureau of Economic research.1 in he ran Religious service: Matins withsermon, 11:30 am. Bond chapel.Baseball game, 3:30 pm, Stagg field,Chicago "B” team vs. Valparaiso uni-versity "B” team.Motion picture (documentary filmgroup). 7:15 and 9:15 pm, Social Si-ence 122, "The Louisiana Story.”Motion picture, 8 and 10 pm, Burton-Judson courts, From Here to Eter¬nity.”Lecture series: Works of the Mind (uni¬versity college), 8 pm, 64 East LakeGreet. ‘'Some principles of politicalphilosophy,” Joseph Cropsey, assistantprofessor, department of political sci¬ence and the College.Saturday, 22 AprilBaseball games, 10 am, Stagg field, Chi¬cago vs. Wabash college; 2 pm. Chi¬cago vs. DePauw university.Recorder society, 1 pm. Ida Noyes, in¬struction followed by informal groupplaying.Reception for Margaret Webster, 3 pm,Green hall.Motion picture (documentary filmgroup), 3, 7:15, and 9:15 pm. Social Sci¬ence 122, "Dreams That Money CanBuy.”Black friars: "Mad Money,” 8:40 pm,Mandell hall. Sunday, 23 AprilRadio series: Faith of our Fathers, 8:30am, WGN.Radio series: The Sacred Note, 8:15 pm,WBBM. Program of choral music bythe University choir, Richard Vik-etrom, director of chapel music, con¬ducting.WUCBFriday, April 219:00 Webern — Three Songs, op.23.Mozart — Quintet in B flatfor Strings, K. 174.Scarlatti — Sonatas forHarpsichord.Hindemith — Sonata in Cfor Violin and Piano.10:00 Torelli — Concerto Grossoin a, op. 8, No. 2.Vaughan-Williams — Sym¬phony No. 8 in d.Schubert — Symphony No.3 in D.Sunday, April 238:15 Shaw — Don Juan in Hell—with Charles Boyer, AgnesMoorehead, Charles Laugh¬ton, Cedric Hardwieke.10:00 Rimsky - Korsakov — Ca-priccio Espagnole, op. 34.Prokofieff — Concerto No.1 in D for Violin, op. 19. Monday, 24 AprilLab School Clothing sale, 8 am to 5 pm.Sunny gym, 5823 South Kenwood ave¬nue.Joint seminar (departments of mathe¬matics and statistics), 4 pm, Eckhart207, “Games and certain new axiomsin mathematics,” Hugo Steinhaus,professor of mathematics, Universityof Wrotaw, Poland. Tuesday, 25 AprilLab School Clothing sale, 8 am to 1pm, 5823 South Kenwood avenue.Varsity Track meet, 4 pm, Stagg field,Chicago vs. University of Illinols-Chl-cago.Dames club, 8 pm, Ida Noyes, chit-chatand beginning bridge, call Ann Moore,BU 8-2956.Italian Centennial celebration (Ctrcoloprogram guide \Ravel — Sonata for Violin Mozart — Symphony No. 38and Piano. in D, K. 504, “Prague."Riegger — Symphony No. Tuesday, April 253, op. 42. 10:00 Haydn — Quartet in b forTchajkovsky — Symphony Strings, op. 33, No. 1.No. 5 in e, op. 64. Goldmark — Rustic Wed-Monday, April 24 ding Symphony, op. 26.8:30 Holland Festival 1960 first Wednesday, April 26of four programs. ^*00 Civil Liberties in tti6 Mod-9:00 Strauss — Serenade in E «n U. S. — the April 1stflat for Winds, op. 7. Mandel hall meeting.Strauss- Don Juan, op. 20. 8:30 Mozart — The Magic Flute.Ives — Sonata No. 2 for 11:00 Once ’n for All — jazz withViolin and Piano. Ed Malone.Vivaldi — Concerto in g for Thursday, April 27fhTwo Cellos. 8:30 Palestrina — Missa Papae10:00 Berlioz — Nuits d’Ete, op. 7. Marcelli.PAUL’S HARDWARE & PAINT SUPPLYHyde Park's Largest Hardware StoreSTUDENT DISCOUNT906 E. 55Hi Ml 3-9754 Itallano), 8 pm, Ida Noyes library,"Commemorative program on theRisorglmento,” Joshua C. Taylor, pro¬fessor, department of art and theCollege: S. William Halperin, profes¬sor, department of history; Danilo L.Aguzzi, instructor, romance languagesin the College.University Orchestra concert, 8:30 pm,Mandel hall, Three Aequale for FourTrombones, Beethoven; The Unan¬swered Question, Ives; Suite No. 4 inD major, Bach; Roman Carnival Over¬ture, Berlioz.Wednesday April 26Lecture, 3 pm. Ida Noyes, East lounge,"The Spanish Civil war: 1936-1940,”Saul Mendelson. sponsored by theYoung People's Socialist league.Student recital, 4 pm, Burton-Judsoncourt,Thursday, 27 AprilLecture, 3:30 pm, Hillel foundation,"Tile kibbutz in Israeli prose andpoetry,” Moshe Shamir, Israeli novel¬ist.Reception for James McGarrell, 4:30 pm,Lexington hall.Dames club, 8 pm, 1171 East 61st street,sewing, call Peggy Stikas, DO 3-8419.Opera (laboratory schools), 8 pm. Man-del hall, "The Bartered Bride."EVERYCOLLEGESTUDENTneeds thisbookfrom abstract ideas...fundamental knowledge at Esso Researchto increasehis ability tolearnAn understanding of the truthcontained in Science andHealth with Key to the Scrip¬tures by Mary Baker Eddy canremove the pressure which con¬cerns today’s college studentupon whom increasing de¬mands are being made foracademic excellence.Christian Science calms fearand gives to the student the fullassurance he needs in order tolearn easily and to evaluatewhat h.e has learned. It teachesthat God is man’s Mind—hisonly Mind—from which ema¬nates all the intelligence heneeds, when and as he needs it.Science and Health, the text¬book of Christian Science, maybe read or examined, togetherwith the Bible, in an atmos¬phere of quiet and peace, at anyChristian Science ReadingRoom. Information about Sci¬ence and Health may also be ob¬tained on campus through theChristian ScienceOrganization atThe Universityof ChicagoMeeting timeTuesdays at 7:15 pmj Meeting place: ThorndikeHilton Memorial Chapel1150 East 58th Streetj UllHUUUUU^lUUcrease the diffusion coefficient to anextent not predicted by the diffusiontheory. Observations also show theseeming contradiction that increasingthe path length with immobile ob¬structions, in the form of a variety ofcarbon black particles, also increasesthe apparent diffusion rate 2.5 times.Re-examination of well known equi¬librium uptake data poses such ques¬tions as: Why does a butyl rubbervulcanizate sorb twice as much cyclo¬hexane as n-hexane when the latter hasa much more flexible structure? Howdoes a butyl elastomer distinguish be¬ tween the flat plate structure of benzeneand the chair structure of cyclohexanewhereas natural rubber does not?Critical experimentation, togetherwith mathematical studies, havestrengthened the thesis that the solventmolecules pass into the elastomer bysuccessive adsorption on successiveplanes. The elastomer chains appearto play an active role in the transportprocess rather than the passive one re¬quired by diffusion..., adapted Jrom a scientist’s notes atEsso Re sea rch and Engineering CompanyP. 0. Box 45B, Linden, NewJersey.Adsorption rather than diffusion maybe the controlling mechanism in thetransport of liquids through elastomers.This new hypothesis is supported byevidence obtained by Esso Researchscientists using a novel photo shadowmethod for continuous measurementof swell in elastomers. As a result ofthese fundamental studies, more inti¬mate knowledge of structure and in¬creased understanding of segmentalmotion may make possible more pre¬cise predictions of polymer behavior.Increasing the cross-link density inan elastomer network appears to de¬April 21, 1961 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11THE FROMM MUSIC FOUNDATIONANDTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICACODEPARTMENT OF MUSIC PRESENT THE MUSIC OFKs&w* ■■ 'i, % — %on Wednesday, May 3, 1961 at 8:30 PMMandel Hall, 57th and University * Chicago, III.The University ofChicago has also.invited Mr. Kirch-ner to deliver thenext WilliamVaughn Moodylecture on May 1,1961 in MandelHall at 8:30 P.M.His subject willbe TRADITIONAND INDIVID¬UALITY IN ANACE OF TECH¬NOLOGY. Thereis no admissioncharge. PROGRAM*STRING QUARTET NO. 1TRIO FOR PIANO, VIOLIN AND CELLOintermission?STRING QUARTET NO. 2PARTICIPANTS LEON KTRCHNER • PIANOTHE LENOX QUARTETtADMISSION m Tickets are obtainable mt the/ UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGODEPARTMENT OF MUSIC, ROOM 1025802 South Woodlawn AvenueorAt- the box office of Mandel Hallone hour before the concertCRITICAL COMMENTS ON THE PROGRAMMED WORKSSTRING QUARTET NO. 1Leon Kirchner, who won the 1949-1950 NewYork Critics' Circle Award for this String Quar¬tet No. 1, is one of the most brilliantly giftedcomposers in America today. Every work ofhis seems to be an act of confession. The formof each composition seems to have come intobeing inevitably from the creative conception.I know very few contemporary composers whohave this power to mold their music white-hot,so to speak From the first bar of this stringquartet to the last, the span of creative tensionis never lost. One senses that the composer must have had a feeling of discovery in writingit, as if new tonal worlds were opening beforehim.—Robert Sabin, Musical AmericaTRIOThe impact of this music is little short of over¬whelming. Its relentless drive does not, how¬ever, conceal its lyrical high purpose, thegrand logic of its design, or the sensitivity tosubtle effects of color which is characteristicof Kirchner.—Alfred Frankenstein, High FidelityThis work has been recorded by Epic with Mr.Kirchner as pianist. STRING QUARTET NO. 2Mr. Kirchner's Quartet No. 2 is the achieve¬ment of a mature and original composer. Hedominates his medium and bends it to admir¬able purpose. His quartet flows so naturallyand lyrically that one reacts only to content.His ideas are chosen felicitously for the fourstringed instruments, and they are worked outin a manner that seems inevitable. One doesnot need a special initiation to grasp this music.—Howard Taubman, The New York Time*The String Quartet No. 2 was given the NewYork Critics' Circle Award for the best newchamber work performed in the 1959-1960season.12 • CHICACO MAROON • April 21, 1961Sports Newsgers will face Bradley in '62 seasonby Chuck BernsteinEXCLUSIVE — Chicago’sbasketball team will playBradley next season, an¬nounced athletic director WaltHass and cage coach Joe Stampf.The Maroons will invade theBraves’ Robertson Memorial field-house in Peoria, capacity 16.000,on February 17, a Saturday night.Bradley is consistently one ofthe nation’s powerhouses. Lastseason it was ranked third mostof the year and will have fourstarters returning, including 6’6"all American Chester Walker.In 1958 and 1960, the Braveswon the National invitational tour¬nament title, after finishing sec¬ond to Cincinnati and and OscarRobertson in the fast paced Mis¬souri valley conference for threestraight years. Coach Chuck Os-bom declined an NIT bit after lastseason. Games with Cincinnatiand Louisville are sandwichedaround the meeting with theMaroons.Stampf said he was “proud andflattered’’ that Bradley had soughtlo play Chicago, which last seasonfinished among the top eightsmall college teams.Hass and Stampf added thatbooking the contest was in keep¬ing with their policy of schedulingone big game a year. “Two yearsago it was Army, and last yearDetroit,” said Hass. “We think theboys on the team enjoy it; itgives them something at which topoint during the season.” It alsoshows how they can do againstthe best.Netmen win fourBill Moyle’s strong tennis sex¬tet has posted a 4 wins, 1 loss rec¬ ord to date. The ftr?!season came at thevery strong Wheaton college teamlast Friday. Returning from anundefeated southern tour againstsix schools, Wheaton defeated theMaroons 7-2.The only singles’ winner forChicago was Max Liberies.Though being down 5-3 in thethird set and also 5 match points,he edged out a victory over HalPeterson 6-3, 4-6, 7-5. The onlydoubles victory for Chicago wasscored by Liberies and Provineover Wheaton’s Peterson and Iha6-2, 1-6, 6-2.All of the preceding matcheswere played indoors. In the firstmatch of the season, Chicago de¬feated Bradley University 7-2.Winners in singles for Chicagowere Albats, Friedman, Cooke,and Provine. Wollan lost a closetwo-set match and Liberies lostin three sets. Doubles’ winnerswere Cooke and Friedman, Albatsand Wollan, Liberies and Provine.In the second match. Chicago shutout the U. of Illinois at Chicago9-0. Singles’ winners were Fried¬man, Albats, Cooke, Wollan, Pro¬vine, and Liberies. Winners indoubles were Wolland and Cooke,Friedman and Albats, Provine andLiberies.In the third match Chicagosmashed IIT 8-1. In their nextmatch Chicago shut out Roosevelt7-0. This afternoon, the netmentravel to Northern Illinois univer¬sity at DeKalb. A week from to¬day, the tennis squad arrives toGreencastle, Ind., for the GreatLakes Regions Invitational. Thistournament, hosted by DePauw,promises to show the best smallcollege tennis competition in themidwest. performrackets ox a.Two fine p4tehj;ig .pfrfsrraancqsby Chicago MaroonNemon Taylor and Bill Petermanwere not enough to stop the Chi¬cago team from losing its ninthand tenth straight games of theseason last Saturday at Staggfield. Wayne State of Detroitblanked the Maroons in both con¬tests of the doubleheader byscores of 4-0 and 8-0.Taylor’s performance In theopener was overshadowed by thepitching of Wayne State’s JerryNewman, who held an inept Chi¬cago hitting attack to but onehit. Dick Thompson singled in theseventh inning for Chicago tobreak up Newman’s bid for a no¬hitter.Peterman was victim to weakfielding on the part of his team¬mates, who committed some tenerrors behind him. Only one ofthe eight Wayne State runs wasearned, as the Chicago infield"played patty-cake with groundballs more often than not. TheMaroon hitters did manage toclout out three hits in the game.A unique idea in doubleheaderswill be tried this Saturday. Chi¬cago plays Wabash college at 10am in the opening game, and willthen meet DePauw at 2 pm in thenightcap. Both games will beplayed on Chicago’s Stagg field.Tracksters competeEight varsity track men willcompete in the Ohio relays at Columbus, Ohio, on Saturday.Lejnieks, Young, Gehman, Wil¬liams, McKenzie, and Baker willcvxPrTise tti» Jfjr threerelays and~E?oftbt1' ITTlrirun the 3000 meter steeplechase.Benefiting from two warm-upmeets, the Maroons made a muchbetter showing against Wisconsinof Milwaukee last Saturday atMilwaukee. The final score was80-51, but the Maroons outscoredUWM 45-32 in the nine runningevents, winning five in a row fromthe 440 to the 220, and also win¬ning the mile relay.Williams, McKenzie and Geh¬man swept the 440, Lejnieks wonthe 100-yard dash, and SteveMcCready ran his best hurdlerace to win the high in 16.2.Baker, who had run second in themile, finished strong to win the880 with freshman Rich Bisk insecond place, and Lejnieks be¬came a double winner by takingthe 220. The relay team of Bisk,McKenzie, Williams, and Gehmanhad no trouble winning.The downfall of UC came whenUWM swept four field events: the pole vault, high jump, shot,and discus. Jim Young’s thirdplace in the broad jump and JohnMusgrave’s first in the javelinthrow wej-Q the onl^ points UCcould pick up in tfie eventsPat Palmer and John Bolton tooksecond and third in the 2-milerun. and Young picked up a thirdin the 220. Twenty-one men par¬ticipated in the meet.April 14 the UC track club senta squad to Carbondale to run theSouthern Illinois university salu¬kis club. Final score was Salukis86, UCTC 45. Dave Styron equaledthe world record of :09.3 in the100-yard dash as Ira Murchisonand Brooks Johnson of UCTCtrailed in :09.5 and :09.7.UCTC won the shot, high jump,and pole vault to stay fairly closethroughout the meet, but SIU'spower was too great. Tom Lennoxand Rick Chase ran 1:56.4 and1:56.8 to take second and thirdbehind Jim Dupree of SIU, whowas fourth in the Olympic trials800 meter run. Frank Loomos,former varsity star, placed inthree events for UCTC.Blackfriars —MAD MONEY(see theatre poge — details) 'wwwawa'u eeevt TTwnnrr w wwwwwwwwwwww w w a aVwGw*ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA 1ORDER 3 PIZZAS AND GET ONE FREE!• beef • sausage and meatball sandwiches<Free Delivery Over $2.00 !MU 4-9022, 1014, 1015> spaghetti►►►►►►►►► 1427 East 67th st.Gifts far AN OccasionsK0GA GIFT SHOPImparted and Domestic Dry GoodsChino wo re - Jewelry - KimonosSondols - Greeting CordsLay-AwoyNlsa Kaga 1203 E. 55 St.Nil 4*6856 Chicago 15, 111. UNITARIAN MEETS YOUR NEEDS?Group Discussions Led By:PAIL HANOIETT a MALCOLM SUTHERLANDCARL HENNERSTROMApril 26, 8 p.m. 5638 WoodlawnPUBLIC INVITEDfwww ▼▼ nfnfnt 'wvwvv vvwv vwwvwwv vwv v w ▼ <r ▼ ▼ wwv".... original, fresh and zestful.. ." \voriety \<ii<► April 28—8:00 p.m. Reservations: Mandel Hal! Ext. 3280 Jjoyce trisler & companyDANCE THEATREAFTER SHAVELOTION Refreshing antiseptic action healsrazor nicks, helps keep your skinin top condition. 1.00 plus teaSHULTON New York • Toronto wAUTHENTIC INDIA MADRASis a Brooks Brothers specialtyOur University Shop has an unusuallydistinctive selection of hand-woven IndiaMadras sportwear—made on our exclu¬sive models in unusual colorings, predom¬inantly reds, blues and greens, including:Our Good-Looking Odd Jackets, $35Bermuda I.ength Shorts, $ 12.50Button-Down Collar Pullover Sport Shirts, $8.50A nd beach-wear, neckwear, belts, etc.f ♦KSTAIilSHIO liltCCfcJOTHlKjDgORtns furnishings, Hats hors74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILLNEW YORK * BOSTON • PITTSBURGH * SAN FRANCISCO • LOS ANGELESApril 21, 1961 • CHICACO MAROON • *31Excuse our UNSUBTLENESSbut . # #X Italian centennial celebratedErL(Mvi-fWurc}flu • £I Xfrnl-X) -11-15'TicSTeT^s —i *XQD 1WwUl lldl\ ^ OffiCA-l\ «"KX) a. onw»*.««* 1 |Hi>0800 t*L.3!80jMAO MONEY!An Original Musical ComedyTonight!Tomorrow!!¥Sunday!!!Tickets ot: MANDEL HALLBOX OFFICE*1.50 and *2.00Phone Reservations:Ml 3-8600 — Ext. 3280 Italian history, art, andliterature will be discussed byUniversity professors nQ^*week in a. pei^b ration of thecentennial of Italian unification.The program will ta*ke place nextTuesday, April 25. at 8 pm in IdaNoyes library, under the auspicesof the Italian club.The historical events which ledto Italian unification will be con¬sidered by S. William Halperin,professor of history. Joshua Tay¬lor, chairman of the departmentof art, will speak on some aspectsof Italian art during this period,and Danilo Aguzzi. instructor ofItalian, will deliver a talk on therelation between literature andthe political events of the time.The centennial commemoratesthe crowning of Victor EmmanuelII as King of Italy, after a warSee the New York Hit Musical&at theDEL PRADO HOTEL53rd and Hyde ParkSpecial Student Discount forTuesday, Wednesday ond ThursdayPerformances $1.75©United Feature Syndicate, Inc.A brand newcollectionof SundayPEANUTS stripsPEANUTSEVERYSUNDAYBy CHARLES M.SCHULZThe perfectspring pick-upONLY $JlAt your college bookstoreHOLT, RINEHARTAND WINSTON, INC. which involved Austria, Italy, andSicily.In 1848 Cfl'rlo Alberto of Savoy,who had finally assumed the lead¬ership of the Italian liberationmovement, declared war uponAustria. This war is known inItalian history as the first war ofindependence. It ended with thedefeat of the army of Savoy andthe subsequent exile of CarloAlberto. However, his son, Vit¬torio Emanuele II, aided by his folRQU-- uamillo Cavoursecured the alliance of NapoleonIII of France and won the secondwar of independence in 1859. Dur¬ing the same year Giuseppe Garibaldi began his legendary expcdition against the kingdom ofNaples, which ended in 1861 withthe liberation of Sicily and south¬ern Italy. In March 1861 VictorEmmanuel II was proclaimedKing of Italy “by grace of Godand the will of the nation.”Abstruse alliteratorsattack jejune journalby Harry Adler andAvima RuderAbecedarian. That’s theword that best describes thespring issue of Phoenix maga¬zine, on sale shortly. The stu¬dent attempts at fiction, poetry,and fraternity cartoons all havefaults that could be corrected bya rudimentary knowledge. How¬ever, “If You Want An Educa¬tion,” a reprint of a 1948 Univer¬sity pamphlet, and the essay onthe new residence requirementsby Tyler Thompson are wellworth a quarter.Chuck Vernoff’s “Two,” whiledistinguished from most tyroeantries at poetry by its use ofrhyme, is an achlamydeous at¬tempt to assimilate Jack Kerouacand Robert Frost.Both “The sun and the field andI: dilemma” and “A Pearl” werewritten under the false impres¬sion that profundity of languageproduces profundity of ideas.They are abysmal.“Bryan” is one of the two shortstories in the issue. Unfortunate¬ly it is not short enough. Begin¬ning with a striking portrait of anTheSlew Gate ofOPENSTIIKSIMV, APRIL 25withSHQSHANA DAMARIIsrael's Greatest SingerTHE CLANCY BROTHERSwith Tommy MakemIreland's Greatest Singers1036 N. State SU 7-2833$1.50 Admission — Sunday-Thurs.$2.50 Friday and SaturdayNo Cover — Never a Minimum egocentric brat, it degeneratesinto a manual on How To RaiseYour Adolescent. By the timethe reader reaches the end of“Bryan,” he feels as if Ann Lan¬ders had crucified him upon aCross of Guilt.“Go and Catch a Falling Star”is a rather pointless tale of asoldier in Japan gone a-whoring,who reads Mad magazine. He“knows the price of everythingand the value of nothing.”Tyler Thompson has writtenfor this issue of Phoenix an exhaustive article exploring all farets of the idea and practice of aresidential college In additionto sketching the history of theresidential college and outliningthe arguments on both sides,Thompson, who made his ownsurvey of dropout rates, comesup with results conflicting withthose bantered about by the broodof deans. While poor writingmakes the article difficult to read,it is certainly worthwhile.One of the most important jobsof the editors of a magazine suchas Phoenix is the seeking of student talent. The last issue con¬tained a reprint from the publicrelations office; this issue in¬cludes a lengthy piece on “TheMusic Criticism of Ezra Pound”by Marshall Bialosky. assistantprofessor in the humanities. Whileerudite and well written, the es¬say has no place in a student lit¬erary magazine.Having said this, we go on toswallow our words and commendPhoenix for resurrecting “If YouWant An Education,” published inthe era of Him Who Needs NoMention. But then Hutchins bolongs anywhere.CANOE TRIPSinto the Quetico-Superior Wilder¬ness. For individuals or groupsWrite Bill RomCANOE COUNTRY OUTFITTERSEly, MinnesotaTHE LIMELITERSORCHESTRA HALLSaturday, April 29 8:30 PMPrices: >1.75 - >2.50 - >3.50 - $3.83Tickets available at:DISCOUNT RECORDS — 201 North LaSalleHYDE PARK CREDIT CO-OP — 1526 E. 55th StreetFrank Fried PresentsCOME AS A FAMOUS PAINTINGAPRIL 29 ■’AINTINuBEAUXARTS ** BALL• CHICAGO MAROON April 21, 1961Culture VultureWe are taught to sacrifice ourselves to others, to win the recognition of the world by belittling ourselves for the masses.Our worth is measured in the eyes of our fellow man. What has become of the standing-alone which characterizes brave minds,independent souls, and creative genius? Which will best rekindle the vitality our world has lost: a humble pie filled with chunksof man's smallness and worthlessness in the face of the almighty universe? Or a community of men standing tall and straightand taut and clean . . . and alone? Greatness can come only through aloneness.On campusTheatreTonight! At eight-forty! TheMandel hall curtain will sweepback and up, and with a silver ti¬rade of trumpets and tympany,Biackfriars 1961 will be on stage.Mfad Money, written by Mel andPeggy Rosen, directed by RobertAshenhurst and Roland Baily, isa merry must and a frantic bust.Stamping and stomping, crooningand crowing, rumbles and rhapso¬dies are only a few of the ele¬ments which impart to the showthe traditional Black friar Vital¬ity.Tickets are on sale at the Man-del hall box-office at $2 and $1.50for students and faculty; seatsstill available for all three per-fot mances, tonight, tomorrow,and Sunday.Dance' On Campus” culture is of ne¬cessity inextricably intertwined —at this season of the year — withPOTA. And surely this is just andright. One of highpoints of thisyear’s festival, and certainly aunique innovation for the event,will be An Evening of Dance The¬atre done by Joyce Trisler andCompany, a New York troupe.The performance, to be givenat 8 pm on Friday, April 28 inMandel hall, will be comprised offour short works of contemporarydance-drama, choreographed byMiss Trisler. The aura of the eve¬ning will be one of modern mys¬ticism, created by the eerie in¬tensity of the (highly trained) hu¬man body.Tickets can be procured at theMandel hall box-office, or call MI3-0800, ext. 3280, for $3.50, $2.50,and $1.50.MusicFOTA is a wonderful excuse forbringing elite culture to the cam¬pus, and not only the elite but alsoihc unusual and the original. Most striking in this category on themusical front will be a concert onMay 3 by Leon Kirchner. Thiscontemporary compose r, who“molds his music white-hot,” willbe featured at the piano and ac¬companied by the Lenox Quartetin renditions of three of his mostprominent works, String QuartetNo. 1, Trio for Piano, Violin andCello, and String Quartet No. 2.Members of the JoyceTrisler and Company troupeduring a recent performance.The Kirchner Concert is beingjointly sponsored by the FrommMusic foundation and this Univer¬sity. Admission is free: for ticketswrite to the University of Chicagoconcert office, 5802 S. Woodlawn,Chicago, 37. Enclise self-addressedChicago, 37. Enclose self‘-ad¬dressed, stamped envelope.In addition to our own Choirand Glee club, we have an unpre¬cedented campus organizationwhich has sprung from the ranksof Russian Civ. students. The Rus¬sian Chorus is a noisy group, fullof youlliful vitality, and as such,is destined to be the most acceptedgroup on campus (At any rate,that is what they have shouted tothe winds. They may get consid¬ erable competition from'vitalitypersonified .. . Biackfriars!). Pre¬sided over by Stephan Lazarevitch,the group will be belting out twoperformances this week-end: onein Hutchins'on court today atnoon, and the other at the Inter¬national house Festival of Na¬tions on Sunday evening.The Shorey house Coffee hourwill be the scene of a special at¬traction next Monday evening.Jack Elliot, a folksinger of theWoody Guthrie tradition, will ap¬pear during a stop-over on hisway to the West Coast. Elliot hasbeen in England for eight years,where he has built up a wide fol¬lowing and has been avowed asone of America’s leading folk-sters. Having established himselfacross the seas, he is returning tohis native land to carve his namein American popular opinion.Ait and ArchitectureThe intellectual institution onthe Midway boasts a range ofarchitecture from gargoyle-tradi¬tional to Saarenin-modern. An ex¬hibition opening in Lexingtonhall, 5831 University avenue, onApril 24 (and running throughMay 20) will be taking a moreunified view of the situation. En¬titled The Midway Garden (1914-1929), the exhibition will featurephotographs and plans of FrankLloyd Wright’s neighborhoodarchitecture, and models, draw¬ings, and sculpture by AlfonsoIanelli, done for that particularWright structure.CinemaThe cinema will be up againsta stout brick wall this comingweek, though there are probablya number of folks who prefer themovies to the highbrow nonsensethat is about to abound.B-J is offering this evening aformer Academy Award winner,From Here to Eternity, starringBurt Lancaster, Frank Sinatra,Deborah Kerr, and Montgomery Clift. The movie is of substantialstature, and the Vulture has beeninformed that the equipmentacross the Midway is of soundmind and body. Shows at 8 and 10.Admission 50c.At International house on Mon¬day evening, the dance will be fea¬tured in a film of the Bolshoi Bal¬let, featuring Galina Ulanova,Raissa Struchkova, and NikolaFadeyechev. Selections from sixballets lead up to the main fea¬ture, Giselle, a complete ballet intwo acts. Comparison of this fine¬ly rich traditional (so to speak)dance form with the brilliant in¬novations of Miss Trisler and herTroupe, promises to be rewardingindeed. Admission 50c. Show time8 pm in the Assembly hall.Documentary Films has adouble-barrelled presentation thisweek-end. In addition to theirusual Friday night selection, theyare featuring an ultra-modernfilm on Saturday.Friday evening in Social Sci¬ences 122, 1159 E. 59th street, at7:15 and 9:15, Robert Glaerty’sThe Louisiana Story will be onthe screen. Flaerty, the master ofthe doc film, has chosen the mod¬ern music of Vergil Thompson toback this film which was com¬missioned by a major oil compa¬ny. Admission is 50c.Saturday the 22nd at 3 pm, 7:15,and 9:15, again in Social Sciences122, they will reveal a specialFOTA program featuring DreamsThat Money Can Buy, a full-length film composed of six se¬quences about the dreams of sixpeople being psychoanalyzed on acelestial couch. The fantasy wasdevised and/or directed by artistsMax Ernst, Marcel Duchamp,Hans Richter, Fernand Leger,Alexander Calder, and Man Ray.Tickets will go on sale one-halfhour before each performance for60c.Off campusMusicBiackfriars open tonight Loop cultural activities have al¬most come to a standstill in def¬erence to the burning torch in thesouthern skies, but not quite. This afternoon’s Chicago Sym¬phony concert will feature EugeneIstomin as piano soloist in Beetho¬ven’s Piano Concerto No. 5 in Eflat major, Opus 73. Istomin wonthe Philadelphia Orchestra youthaward in 1943, after havingstudied with Serkin and Horszow-ski, and was Ihus launched on acareer which has taken him,among other places, to nearlyevery Casals Festival in Prades,Perpignan, and Puerto Rico. Theremainder of the program in¬cludes Berlioz’ Overture to Bea¬trice and Benedict, and Dvorak’sSymphony No. 8 (the old No. 4)in G major. Opus 88.On Friday the 28th, the after¬noon concert will feature the Sym¬phony Orchestra and Choir, di¬rected by Margaret Hillis, in anall Beethoven program. FritzReiner will be conducting the Or¬chestra both weeks. Student tick¬ets are available for $1 if pur¬chased before 1 pm. Concertsstart at 2 pm.Long a favorite with ChicagoFolk Music enthusiasts, the Gateof Horn is moving from its old,familiar haunt to a sparklingmodern, two story building at1036 N. State street. To celebratethe Gate’s new face, Israeli song¬stress Shoshana Damari will beon hand for her Chicago debut.Also on the program are the Clan¬cy Brothers with Tommy Makem,who were an integral part of theUC gigantesque Folklore Festival.CinemaOne of the Hyde Park’s currentfilms sounds as if it belongedright here. Butterfield 8 is, how¬ever, in John O’Hara’s novel, aNew York exchange. This film,starring Elizabeth Taylor, EddieFisher, and Laurence Harvey, isthe story of a too-beautiful girlwhose childhood thoroughly twist¬ed her psyche. She lives by moresof her own and wakes up ashamedand repentant only when it is toolate. Laurence Harvey, fast-risingstar of “Room at the Top,” playsthe married man who uncon¬sciously awakens a sense of dig¬nity in the girl; Eddie Fisher isthe one man who understands her.A red carpet will be un¬rolled in Mandel corridor to¬night to herald the formalopening of “Mad Money,” the1961 presentation of the Order ofBiackfriars. The show, whichopens In Mandcll hall at 8:40 pm,will run through Sunday. Thered carpet is an attempt, accord¬ing to abbess emeritus Abby Shel¬don, to revive some of the tradi¬tions of Biackfriars, which hasa 57 year history."Mad Money” is the fifth musi¬cal comedy produced by the groupsince Biackfriars was reestab¬lished on campus in 1957. Theoriginal book by Peggy and MelRosen, with music and lyrics byMel Rosen, tells of a group ofrespectable small town citizensw ho decide to rob the town bank.The show was adapted for theMandel hall stage by Marty Rab-mowitz and Robert Reiser.Robert Ashenhurst will directMad Money,” which featuresKeith Anderson, Jerry Hyman,Gene Kadish, Jerry Mast, Stepha¬ nie Mora, Jim Riss, Alice Schaef¬fer, Abby Sheldon, and Ami Wal-lach. More than fifteen chorusmembers will appear in the pro¬duction.Roland Bailey is musical direc¬tor for the show. Sets have beendesigned by Dottie Sue Fisher andMarty Rabinowitz, costumes areby Carol Horning, and lights areby Ann Folke. Phil Hyde andMaggie Stinson are, respectively,technical director and stage man-ager.“The Passing of Phali Khan,”complete with an all-male chorusline, was the first presentation ofthe Biackfriars in 1904. For manyyears afterwards the musicalcomedy group was the biggestextracurricular group on campus.One of the first of the collegiatemusical groups in the cauntry,Biackfriars attracted an audiencefrom all over Chicago. Openingnights were formal affairs with ared carpet rolled out from theMandel door for the pleasure oftuxedoed patrons. The budget forthe annual spring show was inNOW PLAYING"NEVER ON SUNDAY"StarringJULES DASSINMELINA MERCOURIBest Actress — Cannes Film FestivolDearbornAt DivisionPhone DE 7-1763h**W student rote for all performances seven days e weekJust Show Caahter Four f.D. Card the tens of thousands of dollars.The Biackfriars continued witha show each season until 1942,when a great break in traditionoccurred. With a multitude of eli¬gible actors engaged by theUnited States army, the groupwas forced to combine with TheMirror, an all girls musical reviewwhich had been formed duringthe thirties.A second great break with tra¬dition occurred the following yearwhen no show appeared at all.Biackfriars appeared again in1956 with a brief review presentedat that year’s Beaux Arts ball. Afull length show, “Gamma DeltaIota” was presented in 1957. Itwas followed by “Alpha Cen-tauri,” "Sour Mash,” and “SilverBells and Cockle Shells” last year. .Clark theatredork & madisonfr 2-284550 m specialv collegeprice* ladies day every fridayall sals admitted for 25c* different double feature daily* open 7:30 a.nt.late show 4 a m.* write in for free program guideApril Film Guild Classicsfri—21st "the price of feor""inn of the 6th happiness"sot—22nd "circle of deception""pay or die"sun— 23rd "meet me in Las Vegas""it's always foir weather" LAKEthe /park at S>rd(A-yde park N O 7 • 9 O 7 1theatreAcademy Award ShowStarting Friday April 21stB. LANCASTER ★ S. JONESin“ELMER GANTRY”This year's electrifying shockerplusELIZABETH TAYLORin John O'Hara's"BUtterfield 8"with EDDIE FISHERStudent Rates Only Upton Presentation of Student ID CardsWeekendPatronPARKINGNOW FREEon FridaySaturdayand SundayAT CITY PARKING LOT5230 S. Lake Pork Ave.(Just North of Walgreen's)Have Your Parking Ticket Stomped at Theatre Bo» OfficeApril 21, 1961 • CHICAGOn MAROON • MCORSO questions Krown(Continued from page 3)continued talking for more thanan hom\ He discussed the “prob¬lem of assuring the governmentof the US that the right to hearany views the people are inter¬ested in hearing remains in thehands of the people.”Mandel said that he “will defendthe Birch Society and the commu¬nists’ right to be heard equally.”He also stated that “the right tokeep secrets goes with the rightto be heard.” Mandel answeredquestions for half an hour afterhis talk.PI charged 50 cents admissionto its debate. It announced in ad¬vance that it would contributeany profits from the debate toUC Students for civil liberties(UCSCL).UCSCL found out after the de¬bate that “Landau” was a “fraud.”On Saturday, it issued a state¬ment indicting Pi’s actions andcomplained to the committee onrecognized student organizations(CORSO), listing 5 chargesagainst PI, as follows:—There is no such person as“Captain Richard Landau, USA,(retired!.”— The person representing him¬self as “Captain Landau” was anactor hired by the leaders of PIfrom a Chicago booking agencyfor $25.—The actors brief self-introduc¬tion and opening statement wereprepared in advance bv membersof PI.—The actor planned from thebeginning to walk out indignantlyhalf way through Mandel’s open¬ing statement.—M a n d e 1, when questioned,said that he did not know any¬thing about the imposture. Theonly people who did know werethose members of PI who madethe arrangements for the meetingand the actor himself.PI acknowledged four of the charges as true, but emphaticallydenied that it had anything to dowith the preparation of Landau’sopening statement.UCSCL. in its statement, guar¬anteed “the Birch Society theAnti-Communist League or anyother such organization” the op¬portunity to have its positionheard on campus to compensatefor the great disservice which hasbeen done both to the cause ofcivil liberties, in the name ofwhich the debate was held, andto the conservative anti-commu¬nist movement, whose ‘represen¬tative’ was made to appear ludi¬crous in the eyes of the audience.”Corso holds hearingCORSO held an open hearingMonday afternoon, at which itquestioned Krown, Dolnick, andDale. CORSO will meet againnext week to consider the com¬plaints of fraud and the possibilityof further action.James E. Newman, assistantdean of students in charge of stu¬dent activities and George Playe.undergraduate dean of students,are discussing whether the stu¬dents responsible should be refer¬red to the discipline committee forpossible further action.Citing the preamble to the SGStudent Code. Newman said,“There has been a mutual under¬standing between the Universityand its student body for manyyears as to student rights in ex¬tra-curricular activities, and thestudent responsibility that followstherefrom.“The individuals involved in thisepisode have in my mind been flagrantly irresponsible. This is adeparture from the acceptedstandard of behavior of studentson this campus, which hasshocked the entire community.I’m sure that the individuals in¬volved have already felt the dis¬approval of their fellows in justmeasure.”Constas agreed, calling the epi¬sode a “flagrant insult to thehighest standards of academicfreedom, for which UC stands.”'Example of error'He said he would like to forgetit and “let it rest as an exampleof human error, mismanagement,and incompetence.” However, hehopes the “leaders of PI havegained greater understanding andare generally cognizant of theiractions and their consequences.”Constas made clear, however,that Pi’s action will not changeanything with student activity-ad¬ministration relations, because hestill has “enough faith in the in¬telligence and sound judgment ofcampus organizations.”AL SAX TIRE CO.DistributorsU.S. Royal Tires — Delco BatteriesFront End — Wheel BalancingBroke ServiceSpecial Discounts toStudents and Faculty6052 Cottage Grove Ave.DO 3-5554-5Just South of the CampusvTwvTvrvTVVTvvyvvrrrvwvTvvvvvvv’v"... the very epitome of poetryjoyce trisler & companyDANCE THEATREApril 28—8:00 p.m. Reservations: Mandel HallVVVTWVVVVVVVTVTV^ny timesExt. 3280From Here To EternityFrank Sinatra• Donna Reed *8 Academy AwardsNew York Film Critics Award as Best Picture 1953Burt LancasterMontgomery Clift Deborah KerrErnest Borgnine Next FridayIngemar Bergman'sNAKED NIGHTTonight at 8 and 10 p.m. B-J Cinema 50<16 The best tobacco makes the best smoke!B. 1 Reynold* Tobacce Co., Winston-Salem, N. C.-have a CAMEL• CHICAGO MAROON • April 21, 1961 Excuse our UNSUBTLENESSbut . . .^0^MAD MONEY!An Original Musical ComedyTonight!Tomorrow!!Sunday!!!Tickets at: MANDEL HALLBOX OFFICE*1.50 and *2.00Phone Reservations:Ml 3-6800 — Ext. 3280