Ground-breaking begins UCs role in space monthUC President George WellsBeadle will break ground forthe new $1,750,000 Laboratoryfor Astrophysics and Space Re¬search at 11 a.m. today, openingthe third National Conference onthe Peaceful Uses of Space.The conference marks thefinal week of Midwest SpaceMonth, which began April 9. Gov¬ernment agencies, industry, anduniversities in the Midwest arejointly promoting Space Monthto bring more government re¬search and development con¬tracts to this area.Harvey Golomb namedCap and Gown editorHarvey Golomb, a secondyear student in the College,has been selected editor of the1964 Cap and Gown. In addi¬tion, Stan Karter, first year stu¬dent in the College, was namedphotography editor and RichardBall, also a first year student, wasnamed business manager.Golomb commented that therehas been greater interest in theyearbook this year as indicated bythe 750 books already sold thisyear as compared with the 350sold last year. Because of this ris¬ing interest, there will be manyadditional features in next year’sbook.In order to accomplish this ex¬panded coverage, the Cap andGown is in need of several personsto fill vacancies on its photogra¬phy, editorial business staffs. Spe¬cific positions open are copy editor,sports editor, and advertising man¬ager. Students to work on the staffare also needed.Interested students should turnin their names, addresses, inter¬ests, and qualifications to the Capand Gown mail box at the firstfloor desk in Ida Noyes by 5 pmMonday. The University’s formal partici¬pation in Space Month will be dur¬ing this week. UC’s contributionswill consist primarily of lectures,discussions, and conference spon¬sorship and participation.Speakers at the ceremony willinclude Thomas Skull, director ofgrants and research contracts ofthe Office of Space Sciences of theNational Aeronautics and SpaceAdministration, and Glen Lloyd,chairman of UC’s Board of Trus¬tees.When it is completed next year,the Laboratot-y will be one of thenation’s first interdisdiplinaryspace research laboratories andwill serve as the headquarters formany theoretical and experimentalspace studies. The laboratory willbe located at 56th and Ingleside.After the ground-breakiugtwo of the scientists who willwork in the new Laboratory willspeak at a luncheon in the Quad¬rangle Club, 1155 East 57th St.John Simpson, professor in thedepartment of physics and in theEnrico Fermi institute, will speakon "Astrophysics in Space,” andAnthony,Turkevich, professor inthe department of chemistry, willdiscuss "Chemical Interests in Space.” Turkevich is an authoritjon meteorites and is currently de¬signing experiments for surfacestudies of the moon.At the luncheon, a report on the"Major Unsolved Problems in theSpace Sciences” will be presentedby Urner Liddel, chief of NASA’slunear and planetary sciences ef¬fort.Technical sessions for theThird National Conference onthe Peaceful Uses of Space willtake' place in Kent Chemicallaboratory, and in the Centerfor Continuing education begin¬ning tomorrow.Atmospheric SciencesHorace Byers, professor of Me¬teorology, will preside at a sessionon “The Dynamics and Physics ofthe High Atmosphere.” Includedamong the speakers at the sessionare Colin Hines, professor of aero-nomy, Bernard Haurwitx, profes¬sor of geophysics, and Adam Ko-chanski, from the US WeatherBureau."Large Scale Atmospheric Cir¬culation” will be the subject of asession held in the afternoon.Sverre Petterssen, professor ofmeterology, will preside.Philip Thompson, from the Na¬ tional Center for Atmospheric Re¬search, Boulder, Colorado, willspeak on the Dynamics of I argeScale Atmospheric Circulation,”and Alton Moody will discuss"Data Collection Satellites.”Social Science's ProgramThe morning session of the So¬cial Sciences program tomor¬row will deal with space andhuman behavior. The sessionwill be held in the Center forContinuing Education.Sheldon Korchin, of the NationalInstitute of Mental Health, willspeak on “Stress Reactions inSpace Flight.” Korchin will dis¬cuss the way in which astronautsare selected, and how these menare able to perform under greatstresses, according to D. GaleJohnson, dean of the division ofsocial sciences.Randall Chambers, from the Na¬val Air Development Center inJohnsville. Pennsylvania, willspeak on “Human Behavior Dur¬ing Acceleration Stress.” RobertVoas, of NASA, will discuss“Space and Human Behavior.”The afternoon session will dealwith the politics of space ex¬ploration. Included among thespeakers are Joseph Goldsen, ofVol. 71 — No. 101 University of Chicago, Wednesday, May 1, 1963 31Seek student housing lobbyMaroon staffelection meetingThere will be a Maroonstaff meeting a week fromFriday to elect next year'seditor. Students who hovebeen working on the Ma¬roon for more than onequarter may attend. UC CORE plans to send abus-load of students to Spring-field next Wednesday to lobbyfor the Freedom of ResidenceBill which is under considerationby the state legislature.CORE and some members ofthe faculty will give testimony onbehalf of the bill. A letter urgingpassage of the bill signed by 150members of the faculty will alsobe presented. The Freedom of Residence Billwould prohibit discrimination inthe sale or rental of all housingon the basis of race, religion ornational origin with the follow¬ing exceptions: 1. owner occu¬pied buildings of three units orless; 2. bona-fide private clubs,and 3. religious institutionswhich give preference to adher¬ents of a particular religion.The bill would prohibit discrim¬ination in the financing of all hous¬ing and would establish a five-Shultz: unskilled workers need helpThe nation’s “unskilled andunschooled” workers are mostin need of help and least likelyto get it from the present ar¬ray of government retraining pro¬grams, George P. Shultz, Dean ofthe Graduate School of Businesstold a meeting of the US Chamberof Commerce in Washington yes¬terday.Private industry, on the otherhand, is providing training for theschooled and skilled employees,Shultz said. Shultz is an authorityon the problems of labor-manage¬ment relations and of retraining workers displaced by a changingeconomy.In his talk entitled “The Chal¬lenge of Unemployment,” Shultzdeclared that "policies for fullemployment and efficient labormarkets go hand in hand.”He commended recent laborlegislation insofar as the conceptinvolved is one of adjustment tothe difficulties of an area, indus¬try, occupation, or group of peopleby expanding individual skills andjob horizons.But he criticized the govern¬ment retraining programs for con¬centrating too heavily on thoseMaroon staff photoLast weak, there was a large sign between theseposts, indicating that the landmark behind them is theRobie House. This week, however, the sign is gone. 'Wheth¬er it was stolen, removed by Robie House guardians, ormerely colored transparent is a mystery. persons most easily trained andplaced.Shultz said that in private in¬dustry, "the number of people in¬volved in training, if extrapolatedto a national estimate, certainlyexceeds three million."“This is a truly massive pro¬gram, going on all the time, moreimportant in large companies thansmall, and, no doubt, following thenormal course of private incen¬tives, emphasizing skills useful tothe firm and workers best able toacquire these skills — the young¬er, better educated workers."Many more employees will re¬ceive training this way thanthrough any governmental pro¬gram, however grandly con¬ceived,” Schultz stated.Shultz commented that the roleof the government program is avital one, however. "It should helpthose who fall outside the naturalscope of private efforts.”Shultz warned against the use of“solutions of expediency” to com¬bat unemployment. Such solutions,he said, "move away from theconditions for a healthy labormarket."The challenge of unemploy¬ment is to design private andpublic policies that raise unem¬ployment and that are consistentwith long-term goals."It is important . . . from thestandpoint of meeting long-termmanpower developments as well asimmediate unemployment problemsto make the labor market processas efficient as possible."Shultz concluded by saying that"the objective of general improve¬ment in labor market processes canprovide a theme and a guide tothe adjustment of private and pub¬lic policies.” member Fair Housing PracticesCommission with staff and withthe authority to initiate, investi¬gate, and pass on violations ofanti-discrimination policies.The buses will leave Chicagoat 10 a.m. and arrive in Spring-field at 2 p.m. Students will at¬tend hearings on the bill at 3:30.During the day, many studentsare expected to visit membersof the legislature. The buseswill arrive back on campus atapproximately 10 p.m. Theround trip fare is $4.90.CORE expects students fromother campuses as well as mem¬bers of city-wide CORE to go toSpringfield also.CORE is also urging students tosend letters to President Beadleurging University support of theFreedom of Residence bill.UC students have not gone tolegislative sessions in large num¬bers for about 10 years, accord¬ing to Bruce Rappaport, COREchairman. The Freedom of Res¬idence bill should excite, morestudent interest since it dealswith a problem relevant to stu¬dents. Rappaport noted that UC.students live in the most inte¬grated area in the state.”CORE will have a table in Man-del corridor beginning tomorrowto pass out copies of the letter toBeadle and to sign up students forthe buses.Barefoot boyto run againJoe Olive, fourth year stu¬dent in the college who wasthrown off the track team lastweek for “failure to come topractice and disregard for goodappearance,” has been reinstatedas of this week, according to Sid¬ney Stein, assistant track coach,who had dismissed Olive.Olive had run barefoot in a race,grown a beard and pinned an oldcompetition number on his back.Stein, Olive, and Athletic Direc¬tor Walter L. Hass met yesterdayto discuss the matter, and Olivewas reinstated after agreeing inwriting to “practice to the best ofmy ability ... to try to look pre¬sentable at meets and keep a goodcoach and athlete relationship.”Neither Stein nor Hass wasavailable for comment. the RAND Corporation, and Ed¬ward Shils, Professor in theCommittee on Social Thought.Hans J. Morgenthau, professorof political science, will speak onthe “Political and Social Implica¬tions of the Space Age” at 8 p.m.in Breasted Hall. Morgenthau iscurrently a Visiting professor atthe Institute for InternationalStudies in Geneva. He will fly herefrom Geneva to give the speech.The Atmospheric sciences’ pro¬gram will continue on Friday, andone of the sessions will deal withSatellite Meteorology. Verner Su¬omi, professor of meterorologyfrom the University of Wisconsin,will speak on the use of SatelliteData in Studies of Large Scale At¬mospheric Phenomena.”At another session Fridaymorning, Harold Urey, NoblePrize winner, Martin .Ryerson,and distinguished service pro¬fessor emeritus of chemistry,will serve as the honorary chair¬man for a discussion on "Extra¬terrestial Biology.”In the afternoon, a session willbe held on “Experimental SpaceBiology and Medicine, the LawSchool Auditorium, 1121 60thStreet. Included among the speak¬ers are Allan Brown, professor ofBotany at the University of Min¬nesota; and Col. John Stapp, ofBrooks Air Force Base, Texas.Several sessions will be heldat the Argonne National Labo¬ratory which is operated by UCfor the Federal Government.Other sessions will also be heldat other universities in the Chi¬cago area.Economic AspectsOn Wednesday, May 8, "Eco¬nomic Impact of the Space Pro¬gram” will be the topic of a ses¬sion whose speakers will includeUC President Beadle, and AnthonyDowns. Downs will speak on “TheEconomic Importance of the SpaceProgram in the National and Re¬gional Economy.”Newton Minow, chairman ofthe federal communications com¬mission, will speak on “Free En¬terprise in Space.”The deadline for scholar¬ship applications is today.All applications should bereturned to the Office ofAdmissions and FinancialAid, Room 201, Administra¬tion Building.Maroon staff photoWorkmen begin diggingtrench for new sprinklersystem for and under theQuadrangle grass. A grass>oots movement will be ini¬tiated this week to "pro¬vide the University of Chi¬cago with a greenswardthat will moke botanistsenvious."rin««ifSo<i Quo,e of tlie d*yMt-mM We doubt that, t)FOR RENT, APTS., ROOMS, ETC.ROOM and kitchen, priv. for female inexchange for baby sitting. BU 8-6672WANTEDSCHOLAR (Ph. D.) part time to assitdirector of social research org. Musthave managerial experience. DO 3-7873.FOR SALEMust sell 7,000 books and periodicals inItalian, Latin, Greek. French and Ger¬man from 16th to 19th century, in thefields of humanities, literature, medi¬cine, law, philosophy and all fields.Archaeological pieces from 2nd centuryB.C. from $1.50 up. Oil paintings andlithographs, old stamped post cards andletters. Open 11 am to 9 pm. 2915 W.Cermak Rd. FR 6-6992 or 247-1264 We doubt that the CorporateUniversity owns un-curbed dogs,but we are sure that many of itsstaff, faculty and students do.—letter from the Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Confer¬ence to UC President GeorgeBeadle requesting the Uni¬versity’s cooperation in acampaign to improve the ap¬pearance of the neighbor¬hood. Letters toHeagy of GNOSISattacks Jacobson letterTO THE EDITOR:In his letter to the Maroon, Mr.Jacobson of POLIT, makes three from “rigid party-line voting.” Inthree cases only half of the GNO¬SIS delegation voted together, andin no vote did all vote one direc¬tion. Not much of a block, is it?main contentions: 1. That GNO-Calendar of eventsFOR SALE, 1950 Chevy, good cond.Reliable transportation $100. 752-3530.MUST SELL TR-3, ’59. Many extras,•all ST 2-1660 from 9 to 5.PERSONALSClothes Need Mending? Call HY 3-4538.Also alterations. Varsity Tennis Match: Chicago vs.Illinois Tech, Varsity Courts. 1:30 pm.Film: The Big Sleep, with HumphreyBogart, 3:30, 45c. Doc Films.Second Annual Midwest Film Fes¬tival: Film Festival winners, Kent 107,7:15 and 9:15 pm.UC CORE meeting: Springfield dem¬onstration plans, Baldwin banquet, IdaNoyes Hall, 7:30 pm. SIS should have made its slatingrecommendations at an open cau¬cus; 2. That GNOSIS voted as ablock at last Tuesday’s SG meet¬ing and 3.' That more POLIT mem¬bers should have been elected tothe SG Executive Committee.On Campos withMaxShuIman(Author of “I Was a Teen-age Dwarf," “The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillis," etc.)FILLING A WELL-NEEDED GAPAlthough my son is a college freshman, I am glad to say thatbe is still not too old to climb up on my lap and have a heart-to-heart talk when things are troubling him. My boy is enrolledat Harvard where he is studying to be a fireman. From thetime he was a little tiny baby he always said he wanted to bea fireman. Of course, my wife and I believed that he wouldeventually grow out of it, but no sir, the little chap neverwavered in his ambition for one minute!So here he is at Harvard today hiking courses in net holding,mouth-to-mouth breathing, carbon tetrachloride, and Dalma¬tian dogs. It is a full schedule for the young man, and that, infact, is exactly what we talked about when last he climbedujM>n my lap.He complained that every bit of his time is taken up with hismajor requirements. He doesn’t have so much as one hour aweek to sample any of the fascinating courses outside his major— history, literature, language, science, or any of the thousandand one things that appeal to his keen young mind.I am sure that many of you find yourselves in the samescholastic bind; you are taking so many requirements that youcan’t find time for some appealing electives. Therefore, in to¬day’s column I will forego levity and give you a brief survey ina subject that is probably not included in your curriculum.■j$s mi M ivoOlJI have asked the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes whether Imight employ this column —normally a vehicle for innocentmerriment—to pursue this serious end. “Of course you may,crazy kid,” they replied kindlily, their grey eyes crinkling atthe corners, their manly mouths twisted in funny little grins.If you are a Marlboro smoker—and what intelligent humanperson is not?—you would expect the makers of Marlboro tobe fine men. And so they are—wonderful guys, every man-jackof them—good, generous, understanding, wise. They are eachtipped with a pure w'hite filter and come in soft pack or Flip-Top box.But I digress. We were going to take up a topic you areprobably unable to cover in your busy academic life. Let usstart with the most basic topic of all—anthropology, the studyof man himself.Man is usually defined as a tool-making animal, but I per¬sonally do not find this definition entirely satisfactory. Man isAot the only species which makes tools. The simians, for ex¬ample, make monkey wrenches.Still, when you come to a really complicated tool—like alinotype, for instance—you can be fairly sure it was made byHomo sapiens—or else a very intelligent tiger. The question oneshould ask, therefore, is not who made the tool, but what didhe do with it.For example, in a recent excavation in the Olduvai Gorge alarge assortment of hominoid fossils was found, all dating backto the Middle Pleistocene Age. Buried with the fossils was anumber of their artifacts, the most interesting being a blackmetal box which emitted a steady beeping sound. Now, ofcourse, zoologists will tell you that tree frogs make such boxeswhich they employ in their mating activities (I can’t go intodetail about it in this family newspaper) but the eminent an¬thropological team, Mr. and Mrs. Walther Sigafoos (both heand she are named Walther) were convinced that this particularbox was made not by tree frogs but by Neanderthal men. Toprove their point, they switched on the box and out cametelevision, which, as everyone knows, was the forerunner of fire.If there is anything more you need to know about anthro¬pology, just climb up on my lap as soon as my son leaves.© 1U63 Max Shut manThe makers of Marlboro Cigarettes who sponsor this column, oftenwith trepidation, are not anthropologists. They are tobacconists—good ones, I think—and I think you’ll think so too when you sampletheir wares—available wherever cigarettes are sold in all fiftystates. The idea that a party caucuscomposed primarily of non-Assem-bly members should do facto electthe officers of Student Govern¬ment is abhorrent to the principleof representative government. Yetthis is exactly what POLIT advo¬cates and has, in the past, prac¬ticed. The SG Assembly represents6000 students. For the elected rep¬resentatives of these students torelinquish their authority to 30 orless non-Assembly members whohappen to show up at a caucus ispatently absurd and irresponsible.The GNOSIS slate was drawnup by its parliamentary caucus.Unlike POLIT, we reserved thispower for those persons who hadbeen elected for this purpose. Un¬like POLIT, our slate was notbinding, but consisted only of rec¬ommendations. At our open cau¬cus, that Sunday, any student whowished to was allowed to give hisopinions; but the final decisionswere left up to the individual As¬sembly members.If Mr. Jacobson would consultthe minutes of the Assemblymeeting, he would find that GNO¬SIS did not vote as a block in asingle contested election. In con¬trast, POLIT voted together everyvote, as they do every year.Last year with almost the exactsame percentage of the vote, PO¬LIT elected a 100% POLIT Execu¬tive Committee. In its slate recom¬mendations, GNOSIS listed twonon-GNOSIS members. At themeeting only seven of those rec¬ommended were elected, includingan additional opposition member.Since GNOSIS has twice as manymembers in the Assembly as PO¬LIT, it is rather obvious that thereWere a great deal of deviations It is especially paradoxical to notethat Mr. Jacobson was one ofthose elected because GNOSIS didnot vote as a block.Mr. Jacobson states that becausePOLIT received more votes thanGNOSIS, and because their candi¬dates were more qualified (usedas meaning experienced) thentheir GNOSIS counterparts, moreof them should have been electedto the SG Assembly.That POLIT received more votesthan GNOSIS, is probably correct;but an analysis of our electoralsystem will show that this fact istotally meaningless. The trouble isthat each college student votes 18times (one vote for each of 18candidates), *fvhile graduate stu¬dents only vote one to nine times.Thus, the college vote is grosslyoverweighed. For example, therewere 16,000 votes cast in the col¬lege by 1086 voters. In the Busi¬ness School there were 133 votescast by 46 students. The BusinessSchool has 4.2% as many votersas does the college, but only 0.8%as many votes. This is because itforms a smaller constituency thanthe college; thus giving each voter3 votes instead of 18. Because allgraduate voting units are smallerthan the college’s, they only cast9% of the votes, while containing29% of Ihose who voted. The onlysituation in which the percentageof votes would be significant is ifeach voting unit were the samesize, or if there were only one vot¬ing unit. Clearly the significant in¬dication (other than the numberof Assembly members electedfrom each party) is the per cent-age of voters to vote for eachparty. This can easily be found bydividing the number of votes castfor each party in each voting unitby the number of seats in thatunit and adding for all of the units.The result is that GNOSIS wasfavored by 43% of the voters, PO¬LIT by 34%, the Liberal Party by13%, the Law School Party by5%>, and independents by 5%. Withthis in mind let us proceed withthe argument. Mr. Jacobson ignores the factthat experience alone will not re¬sult in a good officer. True, mostof the opposition candidates hadmore experience. However, one isso antagonistic and belligerentthat he could not have been effec- *tive in any of the posts for whichhe was nominated, one was expe¬rienced by virtue of having beenin the Assembly the previous year,but is just as incompetent now ashe was when he entered it; andone did such a poor job in the postthat gave him his experience, that ;he should not even have been nom¬inated for it again.These are all example of whyexperience cannot be the soleguide in selecting SG officers,however they skirt the main issue.That is that GNOSIS won, andwon with a two to one majority. *As such, GNOSIS had a moral ob¬ligation to elect an Executive Com¬mittee that can and will carry outits platform. 66% of the voters inthe last election considered achange more important than PO¬LIT experience. It would havebeen irresponsible for GNOSIS to «have ignored this sentiment byelecting many more POLIT mem¬bers to the Student GovernmentExecutive Committee than it did.TOM llEAGY.Contends that D & Lis really a love story1X5 RW ON D&L:David and Lisa is certainly anordinary film, but only the bluntof hide could interpret its largeappeal as do-it-yourself Freud.Quite simply, it is a love story. Weneed no psyche experts for Dav¬id's disorder, since it is only anexaggeration of a universal dis¬tortion. His fear of touch as an ex-ternalization of everyone’s fear ofthe risks of human involvementand the dissolution of individual¬ity, and his Ahabic anger at hisultimate helplessness in the faceof death, are universal fears. Thesame can be said for Lisa. This,and the beauty of their small loveaffair is enough to explain its ap¬peal. To the critic who called it“love in a looney bin,’ I say it’s thebin we’ve all been in.DALE FITSCHENRoosevelt UniversityIT’S A GAS!(and easy on it)This is quite a car... the Rambler American 440-HHardtop. Clean lines and a sporty flair. Looks thatsay "go." A power plant that has the message, plussaving ways with a tank of gas.Plenty of people room. Buckets, console, and138-hp engine standard. Twin-Stick Floor Shiftadds lots of action at little cost.Rambler prices are tagged to save you money.And you keep saving after you own one. More serv¬ice-free. Muffler and tailpipe designed to last atleast as many years as the original buyer owns thecar. Double-Safety Brakes (self-adjusting, too) anda host of other solid Rambler features. Why not seeand drive a Rambler soon—at your Rambler dealer. You call the play withTwin-Stick Floor Shift—has Instant Overtake.RAMBLER’63Winner of Motor Trend Magazine Award:“CAR OF THE YEAR”2 • CHICAGO MARO ON • May 1, 1963Betti play gets sound reckoning Brown gets hospital award(Company of the Four pro- toppled, be prepared to see through Condon as an Engineer, and Jaythe glass, but not darkly. Wittenber as Maupa are all good.“The Queen and the Rebels” is You, as I, may find some objec-strong drama; the Company of the tion to the staging. Too much ofFour give it an intense presenta- what is important is played withtion. Nowhere in the campus area the back toward the audience. Anddo we have as thoroughly a pro- when Argia, the prostitute, ex-Tf vo„ arp tvnicnl of mnnv fessional group; and even though plained her life to the queen, Ilir ' , f , ‘ no performance is inspired, each did want to see the expression onUC students l.e. a tinged SO- is competent and germane to the her face. It is not only words thatcialist revolutionary, a bud- theme of the play. move an audience. Besides, Missding’ social scientist bursting: Th° play concerns a prostitute Hayes knows how to use facialduction of Ugo Betti's "TheQueen and the Rebels;" May2, 3, & 5 at 8 pm; May 4, a^6 & 9 pm; 1174 E. 57 Street;Students $1.50)with panaceas for suffering “so- who seeks out an old lover as a expression to complement a verbalemotion. Lighting was adequate,as were most of the costumes.ciety,” a bit of a coward (though c^ance tor survival. There iswho would admit it), a fine speci- f revolution going on, but saidmen of IBM’d alienation—beware fallen woman encjs up with an es- Again, Miss Hayes’ clothes madeof seeing the new Com-nanv of the caping and terrified queen on her her look matronly rather thanFour production “The Queen and ^anc^s- What happens to our heroine tired, worn-out, or used. But thesethp Rebels” bv the late Italian ma^es f°r f,ne drama, considerable are quibbles over a good produc-playwHght Ugo Betti. But S you «•»!*«* a"d the elucidation of an tion.are heedless of the warning and a®eo ° theme. What gives the pjay One more thing. At first you maycan find pleasure in a profound 1 P°wc! is the situation within find the small theatre distracting;which that theme is acted out. but give it a chance. The advan-i ortunately for the Company of tage of sitting so close to thethe Four, Bette Hayes acts the actors is that you can observe theprostitute's role with skill. Though subleties of movement and ex-she lacks some grace in move- pression. In this play such close-ment and, perhaps, has not exer- ness brings even greater intensity,cised enough range throughout the You may come away involved andplay, her face is marvellously ex- wringing wet. The play is long and. . piessive, her voice right. Indeed, sometimes wordy, but it doesn’t( hicago Symphony concert only her emotional force carries seem to matter. /scheduled for this weekend. In- one throush an over written fourthstead, the final two concerts of the act’ Pownall gives theyear will be conducted by Walter ?ueen proper balance betweenilendl; the program will include Ae,aL and dl£nity- 1)0,1 Stroup andthe Fingal’s Cave Overture by A1 Pass,man render sound perform-Mendelssohn. the Mozart Clarinet anCes as ?ian f an£ Ra,m’ thoughConcerto, and Richard Strauss’ ^ ™y ^1 hat Passman occas-Kin Heldenleben. lonally overacts.Opposite Miss Hayes in the roleAccoi ding to the Orchestra Hall 0f Commissar Amos i; BoardmanBox Office, persons who have pur- O’Connor, a Charles Laughton of achased tickets for the concert and man. If he is not really a com-vi^ed^.rogra^win he°nc,mftteH missar. it is all right; he is sonor- Russian artist Marc Chagall\ is* u piogiam witl be peimitted ous and moving just as heto return their tickets.evening of theatre, then be pre¬pared to have a favorite god or twoReiner won't appearbecause of fatigueDue to fatigue, Fritz Reinerhas been obliged to cancel hisUgo Betti’s “The Queen and theRebels” is a great play. In theCompany of the Four production, itis given a sound rendering. It isnot for the chicken-hearted nor theposeur nor the manipulator . . .or is it? Joe Ehrenberg Ray Brown, vice presidentfor administration, has beennamed the recipient of theAmerican Hospital Associa¬tion’s Distinguished Service Awardfor 1963.The award is made annually toan outstanding- leader in the fieldCrewe will visitSoviet installationsDr. Albert V. Crewe, directorof the Argonne National Labo¬ratories, was one of nine mennamed last week to visit anumber of scientific installationsin the Soviet Union.Crewe and the others were ap¬pointed by Glenn T. Seaborg, chair¬man of the US Atomic EnergyCommission. The US scientistswere invited to come to Moscowby Andronik Petrosyants, chair¬man of the State Committee ofUSSR Council of Ministers on theUtilization of Atomic Energy.In addition to visiting Soviet in¬stallations, Seaborg and Petrosy¬ants are expected to sign a memor¬andum pledging cooperation be¬tween the US and the Soviet Unionin the peaceful uses of atomicenergy. of hospital administration. Brownwill receive it during the Associa¬tion annual meeting in New Yorkfrom August 26-29. He is the 28thperson to win the award.Brown has long been active inhospital administration. Beforecoming to UC, he worked at hos¬pitals in the south in administra¬tive positions. His first positionhere was as superintendent of theUniversity of Chicago Clinics. La¬ter he served as director of theuniversity’s graduate program inhospital administration, and aspresident of the Association in1955.PATRONIZE OURADVERTISERSChagall lithographs shownFifteen color lithographs byjust as ne is.Paul Kelvyn as the Porter, John11iililire CalendarArtAssemblages, by Bruce Conner, Lex¬ington Studio Gallery, show continuesthrough May 12, free. FOTA sponsors.Student art show. Ida Noyes Hall,show continues through May 12, free.FOTA sponsors.Chicago Area Invitational ArtistsShow, continues through May 12, free.• FOTA sponsors. New Dorm.Malta: Paintings. Sculpture,Drawings from Chicago Collection,Goodspeed Hall, through May 11, Mon-day-Friday, 10 am-5 pm, Saturday, 1-5pm. Renaissance Society sponsors.Free.Robie House Tours, Saturdays 10 amto 4 pm and Sundays 1-5 pm. $1. Ad¬mission fee goes to Robie House Re¬storation Fund Folk Dance Leadership Council ofChicago.May 5, 8:30 pm—“Here and Now with are currently on display atHillel, 5715 Woodlawn.The exhibition, which began onApril 25, will run through May 12.Admission is free of charge.Ten of the lithographs in the ex-Watchers,” dance performance by hibition are from Chagall’s ArabianErick Hawkins and Barbara Tucker,music by Lucia Dlugoszewski, MandelHall, $3 and $2. FOTA sponsored.Music Nights series, which the artistoriginally created as illustrationsfor a book. The five others wereall exhibited previously at theScheherazade 1954 exhibition: loaned to Hillel by Joseph RandallShapiro.Also on exhibit are several worksof sculpture and painting by Law¬rence Tanner, a resident of HydePark who has previously exhibitedin the Chicago area.TJhe collections may be viewedMonday through Friday from 9:30a.m. to 6 p.m., and on Tuesdayevenings. BeautifulDaytona Larkfully equipped, manyextras; bucket seats, radio& heater, automatic,electric windshieldwashers, 4 door hardtop,consolelike new$1799°°SOUTH SIDE STUDEBAKER, Inc46th & Cottage GroveBO 8-1111May 2 and 3, 8:15 pm—All-Wagnerand program conducted by Fritz Reiner, •, _ . ..2 pm Friday, which closes current Scenes of Paris. The collection wasseason of Chicago Symphony Orchestra,Orchestra Hall.May 3, 8 pm—Concert of eletronicmusic by composer Milton Babbitt,Breasted Hall, free. Sponsored by theFromm Music Foundation.May 4, 8:30 pm—Chamber music con¬cert by violinist Isidore Cohen, accom-63 selections of paintings, drawings, panied by Robert Helps. Mandel Hall, ,and sculptures from collection of Mr. $3 for public, $1 for students. Presented 116XV mOlltn.and Mrs. Edwin E. Hokin of Highland by Music Department and the ChamberMusic society?May 6. 8:15 pm—The Chicago Sym- stituted this spring by the Haver-phony Orchestra lcd.by Walter Hendl. . . fafM1itv members after it wasa special concert as part of the activi- 1010 iacuity memDeis, alter it wasties of Midwest Space month. Orches- tried with success last May andtrMliya«; 8:30 pm-Lyric Trio composed aKain this past January,of Arthur Tabachnick, violin; Shirley The plan allows each student,Evans, violoncello, and Hilde Freund, ... , . . .piano. Second City cabaret. 1846 N. with certain minor limitations, toWells, Admission $2 and students $1.50. decide the date, time, and placej. . . that he wishes to take each exam-Park, Illinois, McCormick Place Gallery. May 3-June 6. Free. Exhibit in¬cludes early Picasso, Miro, Roualt, andmoderns such as DuBuffet, Poliakoff,and Bouras.Ceramics, by Gertrud and Otto Natz-ler. Art Institute of Chicago, throughJune 9. free.66th Annual Exhibition by Artists ofChicago and Vicinity, Art Institute ofChicago, through June 2. Free.Films Set own examsStudents at Haverford Col¬lege will be able to scheduletheir own final examinationsThe system is being officially in-May 1-7:15 & f>: 15 Winning films fromMidwest Film Festival, Kent 107, $1.25, ination. The tests will be taken.K'LtK’SM8”" without monitors and will be sub-FOTA sponsors. Program also includes sented by the Company of the Four, ject to the Haverford honor code,other goodies. John Woolman Hall, 1174 E. 57th, $2 mlMay 2-8 pm “A Movie” and “Cosmic an(j students $1.50. The purpose of the plan is toRay” films by Bruce Conner, FOTA May 2, 3, 4, 5. 8:30 pm—“Tonight at eliminate crowding of examinationsartist in residence (see art exhibit): 8:30,” with “Slight Ache,” by Pinter, , , „and experimental films by Glenn Al- "Exception and the Rule,” by Brecht into one or two days, and as a re-vey, Jr. Mandel Hall, $1.25. Twist an{j “La Ronde”, by Schnitzler—all sult, to permit the student as muchmovies in addition to regular fare. one-acts. University Theatre, $1.50 and ’ nn^ihleMay 2-8 pm “The Voung and the $1 for students. extra study time as possiDie.Damned,” by Luis Bunuel, Art Instituteof Chicago. Free to members and 50cgeneral admission.May 3, 8 and 10 pm “No Time forSergeants,” B-J Cinema, Judson Din¬ing Hall, Admission 50c.May 5, 8 pm “Rules of the Game,”by Renoir, Illinois Institute of Technol¬ogy. Grover M. Hermann Hall, Dear¬born and Federal, 75c.May 6, 8 pm “Caesar and Cleopatra,”made in USA but not with those two,International House, Assembly Hall. rmaMOn Divers Arts: The Treatise of TheophilusTranslated for the medieval Latin, withintroduction and notes by John G. Haw¬thorne and Cyril Stanley Smith .. $8.50The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave»DanceMay 4—1 pm. Master class in mod¬ern dance conducted by Erick Haw¬kings, Ida Noyes Hall, $2 or $1 withticket to Hawkins performance. FOTAsponsored.May 4, 2 pm and 8 pm—3 Folk DanceMay 5, 2 pm—Workshops with SonneyNewman, Ida Noyes Hall, 25c for all* 3 sessions, 50c for last two and 75c forthe last session, sessions are free tomembers of UC Folklore Society andRENT-A-CARPER DAYPER MlPER MILEATOMIC CARRENTALS. INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155 HOBBY HOUSERESTAURANTOpen Dawn to DawnBREAKFAST DINNERLUNCH SNACKS1342 E. 53rd St. ops perspiration odoreffectively it actjtiSpeed Stick, the deodorant for men! Really helpsstop odor. One neat dry stroke lasts all day, goeson so wide it protects almost 3 times the area ofa narrow roll-on track. No drip, never tacky!Fast! Neat! Man-size! Mennen Speed Stick!All it takes is one clean stroke daily!May 1. 1963 CHICAGO MAROON* ■ : ■ * r - i w t t * :*■<-sZ$ys>yyyss?s.\;• ? PQRA .GENTLER,SMOOTHER• TASTE ORDINARY CIGARETTES'—~—CHESTERFIELD KINS. ENJOY. THELONGER' UNfcTH OF„OMESTERFJELO:» kingif mi MiiifriiaftMii^v.v.wST'-1' i-,'V ——May 1. 1963Hollins gets writers in residence Summer tutors sought(IP) — Eight writers inresidence have been namedby Hollins College in Virgi¬nia for the 1963-64 academ¬ic year.Novelists Robert Penn Warren,William Golding, Peter Taylor andAndrew Lytle, and poets AllenTate, Karl Shapiro, Richard Wil¬bur, and Howard Nemerov willeach pay visits of several days toFew NDEA bad debtsBad debts are proving tobe “astonishingly small” un¬der the National DefenseEducation Act loan programfor college students.US Commissioner of Education,Francis Keppel told a House ap¬propriations subcommittee thatonly $700 of the $218,000,000 lentto students after the program be¬gan in 1959 and up to June 30 lastyear had been written off as un¬collectible. More than 37.000 stu¬dents were repaying their loanshe said.Education USA the Hollins campus.They will consult with literaturestudents, read student creativewriting manuscripts, take part inseminars, and give public read¬ings.Warren, whose novel “All theKing’s Men’’ is generally recog¬nized as one of the noteworthyworks of 20th Century fiction inAmerica, is known as a novelist,poet, and critic.Golding’s novel, “Lord of theFlies,” is currently the most wide¬ly read work of fiction on Ameri¬can college and university cam¬puses.Taylor, who teaches at OhioState University, is one of themost highly regarded of post-World War II Southern writers.Lytle, currently editor of theSewanee Review, is author of ‘‘TheVelvet Horn” and other novels.Tate, Professor of English at theUniversity of Minnesota, is a ma¬jor figure in 20th Century Ameri¬can poetry.Shapiro, whose poems of World War II catapulted him into na¬tional prominence, is one of thecontroversial figures of the currentliterary scene. He is editor ofthe literary magazine “PrairieSchooner.”Wilbur, who teaches at WesleyanUniversity, is generally consideredamong the three or four importantAmerican poets of the post-WorldWar II generation.Nemerov, whose recent book ofpoems was “The Next Room ofthe Dream,” is on leave as writer-in-residence at Hollins from Ben¬nington College. UC students are needed asvolunteer staff and tutorsin Boston, Hartford, NewYork, Philadelphia, Balti¬more, and Washington as part ofthe summer education projects ofthe Northern Student Movement(NSM).NSM will administer educationalprojects in the six cities throughthe summer and throughout theacademic year.Each project during the summerwill have a staff of seven studentsworking fulltime, a volunteer staff,a student director, and an adult3 teachers get NSF grants The Queen and the RebelsCompany of the FourMay 2. 3. 4. 5Nightly 8 pm, Sat. 6 & 9:301174 E. 57th St.$2.00, students $1.50OA 4-8228Faculty members Alfred L.Putnam, George Van Bieser-broeck, and Philip E. Eatonhave received National Sci¬ence Foundation grants totaling$54,100 for research and trainingin science and mathematics.An “in-service program for highschool mathematics teachers” hasbegun under the direction of Put¬nam, associate prcfessor of mathe¬matics, with the help of a $2,100grant. Teachers from Chicago andsurrounding communities are at¬tending a two-quarter sequence of courses in foundation of mathe¬matics.George Van Biesbroeck, profes¬sor emeritus of astronomy at Yer-kes ObservaLory, has received$9,900 studies of the positions andmovements of astronomical bodies.A grant for $42,100 was presentedto Eaton, assistant professor ofchemistry, for the study of the“chemistry- of tricydo decane.”This new organic ring structurewas synthesized by Eaton recentlyand is now under study aimed atunderstanding its relation to othercompounds and the element ar¬rangements of the ring. PLAYS uvtuai STAYS uvuiai LOWER in COSTI_ AMAWAY VMTMI(— v 7 for IwmiRiMl PlayJI(A Approi String Inf Coot^ Tannl* tlI Vy \ /f$?/ ashaway PRO-FECTEBwlr F#rC,»*HtfApproi Stringing ConiTnnnis $7Badminton «^71 ASMAWAT MUlTI-nr•RAIDED RACKETSTRING Badminton... $4psppwpv pars p esrrsp gpms w roar? pppms'21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE20 WONDERFUL SMOKES!Vintage tobaccos grown, aged, and blendedmild.. • made to taste even milder throughthe longer length of Chesterfield King.CHESTERFIELD KING lliaitu™?0rlipipsrtdAPyETTESTOBACCOS TOO MIU) TO FILTER, PLEASURE TOO GOOD TO MISS Chesterfield Kief's extra length adds (0your pleasure in two ways: 1. the stnokamellows and softens as it flows throughthe longer length. 2. Chesterfield King**21 tobaccos havl mon mild, gentlefllYOf t9 givia advisory board.Volunteers in each city will beprovided with housing, but will beexpected to secure whatever em¬ployment is necessary to covertheir expenses for the summer andschool year. These volunteers willbe expected to give any time they*,are not working on their jobs tothe educational and non-academicprograms of that city. They willparticipate in staff meeting andbe given some responsibility eitherin the tutorials or the initiation ofother programs, such as a youthpublication. ,The responsibilities of the studentstaff will fall into the categoriesof administrative and communitywork. The administrative work willconsist of setting up and directingtutorial programs for secondaryschool students, remedial readingprograms and possibly adult edu-wcation programs. The staff wouldspend the remainder of its timeworking in a limited geographicalarea to involve students and adultsof that area in programs designedto complement the tutorials.During the academic year, asmaller staff will continue botht,at the academic and extra-aca¬demic projects initiated during thesummer months.Further information can be ob¬tained from Peter J. Countryman,executive director, NSM, 404 AYale Station, New Haven, Conn.Chicago Review topublish winning playThe Chicago Review willpublish Herbert Lieberman splay “Matty and the Moronand the Madonna,” winner of,this year’s $2,000 Sergei Prize fo*’an original new play.The Review, a literary maga¬zine published by UC studentswhich publishes world by profes¬sional and non-professional writers,will publish the play in its Augustissue.The University of Chicago Iawards the Sergei Prize every twoyears, with money from a trust 'fund set up by the late Mrs. jCharles H. Sergei.Kenneth Tynan, drama criticfor the London Observer and fi¬nal judge in the contest, said theplay “leaves behind it a bitterly jviolent impression of love denied,frustrated, misdirected* and des-^troyed.”Issue new journalAn international publicationfor reporting research in allareas of accounting has bee.\jstarted by the Institute ofProfessional Accounting of theGraduate School of Business in co¬operation with the London Schoolof Economics and Political Science.Entitled ‘‘Journal of AccountingResearch,” the first issue is ex¬pected to appear in next month;The Journal will be issued twiceyearly, in the spring and autumn.David Green, Jr., Professor inthe GSB is editor, assisted by aneditorial board of six, three fromeach school.Members from the GSB are Sid¬ney Davidson, Arthur Young Pro-fessor of Accounting; Charles T.Horngren, professor, and GeorgeH. Sorter, assistant professor.Nicholas Dopuch, assistant pro¬fessor in the GSB is the editor ofthe section on research reports.Calls texts antiquatedMost science texts are an-tiquate by the time they arepublished, Keith R. Kelson,deputy assistant director ofthe National Science Foundation,told the American Textbook Pub¬lishers Institute at its annual meeltdiing recently.“Most of diem have a chapterof ‘Modern Development,’ ” Kel¬son said, “but those are the de¬velopments that have changed thecontent of the first 20 chapters inthe book . . . We must get downto principles and not just presetfacts . . . You don’t do this withchapters full of facts and ‘ModernDevelopments’ at the end. These‘Modern Developments’ should bethe whole course.”•—Education USA