Beadle helps break groundfor space research centerThe Laboratory for Astro¬physics and Space Researchis an ideal example of the fur¬thering: of our objectives inspace exploration at the basic andapplied levels, stated UC PresidentGeorge Wells Beadle at theground-breaking ceremonies forthe new $1,750,000 space research hand space is a huge laboratorybut launch vehicle capability isextremely small. The Mars Mari¬ner flight, for example, can carryonly 40 pounds of instruments.”Future space probes will collectinformation about the moon’smass, its magnetic field, and itsseisic activity. ‘‘We want to knowwhether the surface is dust orcenter.Beadle was one of five Univer¬sity and government officials whoparticipated in the ceremonies be¬hind the Enrico Fermi Institutesat 56th and Ingleside Ave. Theothers were Glen Lloyd, chairmanof the Board of Trustees; ThomasSmull, director of grants and re¬search contracts for the office ofspace sciences; John Simpson, pro¬fessor of physics; and Urner Lid-del, from the National Aeronauticsand Space Administration.“It is fitting that the laboratorybe built here for it was here thatA. A. Michaelson measured thespeed of light, and that GeorgeEllery Hale first described theshape of the Milky Way, orgalaxy,” Beadle continued.Beadle traced the long history ofUC's envolvement with the fron¬tier’s of space science, and pointedout that today meteorological ad¬vances have been made by sev¬eral members of the faculty whopredicted the age of the solarsystem, the existence of solarwinds, and are now working onthe development of nuclear pro¬pulsion.At a luncheon following theground-breaking, John Simpson,professor of physics, and AnthonyTurkevich, professor of chemistry,described the research which theEnrico Fermi Institute for NuclearStudies will conduct in the newspace science building. In addi¬tion, Urner Liddel, chief of NASA’sdepartment of Lunar and Plane¬tary Sciences, spoke about un¬solved problems in the space sci¬ences.Simpson Is studying the mag¬netic environment of the earth,using a “new astronomy” whichdetects'magnetic fields by the de¬flection of charged particles.Simpson is examining cosmicrays, particles coming to the earthfrom outer space, and is trying tofind out where these particlesoriginated and how they were nat¬urally accelerated. He mentionedradiation belts associated with theearth, the sun, and the entiregalaxy.“We think the sun’s corona attimes ejects high temperature pro¬tons, called ‘plasma,’ ” Simpsonexplained. “This results in a largescale magnetic field system whichdeflects particles away from theearth.The energy of isotopic particlescan be studied during a solar mini¬mum, Simpson said. “In the Yearof the Quiet Sun, 1964-5, we willtake part in NASA’s space probeand take advantage of the ‘labora¬tory of space.’ ”Simpson added that the spacecenter will aim at maintainingindividual initiative among themembers of UC’s space programand will give graduate students anincreasing role in the research.Turkevich stated that the FermiInstitute’s chemists will occupy10% of the new space building tocontinue their work with mete¬orites. “Meteorites are old so theyhave history recorded withinthem,” Turkevich said. “Theycome from places until recentlyunaccessible to us and they repre¬sent our only example of extra¬terrestial material.”In addition, chemists are design¬ing instruments to travel to themoon on future NASA spaceprobes. “We will use data gatheredby these instruments to make achemical analysis of the moon,”Turkevich explained.Liddel, who has long encouragedgovernment support of universityresearch, said that “physicistsmust be persuaded to think bigand act small.”(At the present time, he said,"multi-billion volt accelerators areneeded to look at smaller andsmaller dimensions. On the other To change womens housing plansiwoja tumoapiicic. expiainea. "ine administration is the decisions regarding petitions'Grass roots' movement beginsrocks, whether it is radioactive ornot.”In 1964, a Mariner satellite willfly by Mars, Liddel continued. “The administration is mak- quite aware of the sentiment of to be excused from the residence“This satellite will be equipped j^gr ©very effort to change undergraduate women on the Har- requirement by Friday of thiswith television cameras to improve it i women’s housing- Per Surf, and is making every ef- week, he said,our visual knowledge of the LtS P,an* IOr wome**S Housing to change its plans.” Objections had been raised byplanet. In 1966 we hope to land a neXt year/ 80 WOmen Final plan, should be announced students and parents when thecapsule on Mars to gain informa- wdl have a variety of suitable al- next week, .aid Vice. administration announced plans totion about the possibility of life ternatives, said Director of Stu- jjie ,;gn;ng up for next year, use the Harper Surf hotel at 54there.” Liddel challenged the sci- dent Housing James Vice yester- dormitory .pace i. expected to and Harper as a dormitory forentists present at the luncheon to day. .tart at the end of next week, he undergraduate -women severaldevelop equipment which can Just what plans will be made continued. weeks ago. C-Group is scheduledmeasure the water content of are still indefinite, however, Vice Students should be notified of to be converted to office space atMars atmosphere. explained. “The administration is the decisions regarding petitions tbe er*d of this year.Poll, by the Maroon Indicatedthat .tudent. would prefer livingin 5400 Greenwood, an apartmentdorm currently u.ed by men. In-UC President George Rea- The operation, which includes the higher education,” commented ternational House, or one floordie and a costumed cut-up insjallation of a sprinkler system Beadle of East House, to living in theand the reseeding of the campus The Committee on Grass has no Harper Surf,by June 1, will be financed by chairman. There are no officers The administration has beenfunds provided by donors who have of any kind. Unlike most UC trying to make some change in... . . specifically asked that the con- groups and offices, it is unalter- plans to give students a more(COG) will issue a proclamation tributions be used for campus ably and utterly opposed to suitable set of choices than thoseat 11 a.m. today to kick off a beautification. bureaucracy and administrative currently offered, said Vice, butA team of 16 men has already machinery. has been having difficulties inbegun work on the project, which There are no meetings, no dues, making arrangements,includes sowing 1,000 pounds of no sub-committees, no publications, One problem faced is that there..... , „„„ grass seed that is expected to no insignia, and no initiations. are not as many spaces availableperennial shooting up of COG, an grow in both shade and open There is no membership list. Only jn International house as the ad-interdisciplinary a s s e m blage of areas. the love of grass binds the mem- ministration had thought at theUC academicians and administra- “While most universities find te™ together. time of the Maroon polls Iagt weektors dedicated to providing UC themselves facing encroachment To join the group, a simple affi- The women’s dormitories nowwith a “greensward that will from asphalt walks, this university davit which states that the signer scheduled for use next year aremake botanists envious.” is pledged to continue its great does not believe in the destruction Black.tone hall, at 58 and Black-The proclamation, which will be heritage of open expanse as a of grass and which need not be .tone, and New Dorm, at 58 andissued on the grass in front of proper and fitting setting for submitted to anyone, is sufficient. Woodlawn.the Ad Building, will propagateCOG’s year-old tradition of com¬municating to the inner man, orat least his outer foot, in “asfrom the Elizabethean factionof the Committee on Grass“grass roots” movement aimed atbeautifying the campus.The event will mark the possiblypt ujA-i cum lilting Dvuiiig iui ouuiiiuicu to any one, is smiicient. W oodlswn.Nubian tombs are major discoverywitty and scholarly manner aspossible,” an appreciation of thebeauties of grass.Last year, hand-lettered pla¬cards anonymously changed atnight (or early in the morning)enlisted the support of pedestriansin keeping off the newly plantedgrass in the “circle” of the mainquadrangle. The 12-foot wide flag¬stone walk currently in the centerof the circle was installed wherea dirt pathway had been worn.Some 2,000 tulips and many moreblades of grass were planted alongand around this walkway.Despite the University’s appoint¬ment of a “Tulip Advisor,” thebulbs were later found to be de¬fective, and the campus’ tulipswere replaced by hardier plants.Encouraged by last year’s suc¬cess, COG this year intends tofacilitate and promote the' beau¬tification of the quandrants thatmake up the campus’ mainQuadrangle. The discovery of two tombsin Nubia by an Oriental Insti¬tute archaeological expeditionhas proved to be a "majorarchaeological discovery of currenthistory,” according to the Insti¬tute.Professor Keith C. Seele of theOriental Institute led the expedi¬tion to Nubia, a land of greatarchaeological importance whichwill be flooded by the Aswan Damnow being built on the Nile River.Seele first told of his discoveryin a one-sentence telegram to theInstitute on April 2. It read, “Haverich New Kingdom tomb morethan 60 finds including alabasterand copper objects of exquisitequality.”The Institute learned of the de¬tails of the discovery in a letterfrom Seele which arrived April 22.It reveals that two tombs werefound, sealed and intact, whichcontained objects notable for their “unusually fine quality,” accord¬ing to Robert M. Adams, directorof the Institute.According to Adams, the newdiscovery is comparable to that ofthe tomb of King Tutankhame,made in the 1920’s.The tombs were those of twoNubian women who were apparent¬ly wives of Egyptian officials sta¬tioned in Nubia. According toAdams, the discovery is very help¬ful in answering the historicalquestion of how much influencethe high culture of Egypt had inNubia, which was ethnically dis¬tinct from Egypt. Seele’s letterindicates that this influence wasprobably great.Seele inferred this from the in¬scription on the coffin of one ofthe women. He writes, “Her namewas Sensenbu, but there were ad¬ditional words which said that shewas also called (in one column ofhieroglyphs) Tibu or (in another column) Tabi. ... We feel certainthat this is a Nubian name, thatthe variant spellings indicate thatthe Egyptian scribe had difficultyin rendering it in hieroglyphic, andthat we thus have in this burial ofa Nubian woman evidence of theEgyptianization of Nubia.”The discovery of the coffins wathe climax of two days of explora¬tion of a burial ground whichyielded a “wondrous array” ofbeautifully made objects. Seele’sletter traces the probings, startingwith the discovery of the cemetery,which was a “precisely cut rec¬tangular shaft . . . filled withseven or eight layers of burials.”The first woman’s coffin was foundin this shaft.The “jackpot” came when theparty detected a burial chamberleading off from the shaft, sepa¬rated from it by a mudbrickblocking. The “wondrous array ofpottery” in this chamber was, ac¬cording to Seele, “distinguishedfrom earlier finds (of the sametype) by bands of white painteddecoration which in the darknessof the tomb lent to it a certainindefinable grandeur.”Louis Zabkar, the other Institu-tute staff member on the expedi¬tion, recorded and sketched eachobject in its place, and the team“began the search for the remoter‘treasures’ of the tomb.” Theyfound “a graceful jar of copper orbronze,” and several bowls of cop¬per which had been “plated with ayellow metal.” The climax of thefirst morning’s work was discoveryof “an exquisite bronze . . . mir¬ror, with handle in the form of aslender, graceful nude girl, fea¬tures . . . delicately engraved,with outstretched arms. , .The next day, the team cameback to the shaft and cleared theeast chamber, opposite the onecleared the previous day. This con¬tained the second, more important,woman’s coffin, among manysmaller objects of “admirable”style.The party is investigating burialfields along the Nile, and has ex¬cavated almost 900 graves. Theperiod during which this tomb wasbuilt was the “New Kingdom”which lasted from 1570 to 1085B.C., and was the period of thegreatest expansion of the Egyptianempire.John Simpson, president Beadle, Glen Lloyd, Thomas Smull, and Urner Liddel brokethe ground yesterday for the new Laboratory for Astrophysics and Space Research be*bind the Enrico Fermi Institutes, at 56th and Ingleside Ave, Maroon staff photoUNIVERSITY OFuniversity llieairepretestsIn nig lit illPINTER- _ AlllpA SLIGHT ACHESCHNITZLER-LA RONDEBRECHT-THE EXCEPTIONAND THE RULEReynolds Club TheatreTickets on sale at Reynolds Club, 5706 Univeisity,at the door, or ky mail. CHICAGO1. My theory on looking for a job i. Dae your head. man. Have youtis—Play it big! Shoot for dad set up appointments withthe top! Go straight to the mm of the big shots he know*.Bren for your interview. He • a veterinarian.I don’t know any presidents.S. Beautiful! All you have to dois find a president who likesdogs. You'll have him eatingout of your hand in no time.I don’t know an fclkhou™dfrom an Elk.$. A letter to the employntml iimis^sWHo ho ho! You’ve a lot to learn.Then how come I landed agreat job at Equitable —an executive training spotthat’s interesting, paysa good salary and has a lotof promise for the future. 4. Frankly. I don't know what else tateH you. You’ve got a problem.It’s not as bad as it seems.My idea is to find out the nameof the employment managerat the company I’m interestedin. Write him a letter telling himmy qualifications. Spell out myinterests, marks. Simple as that.•eBay, oould you set something upfor me at Equitable?Pm not the presides^but I’ll Lac.Yfoe Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States M 948Home Office: 1*85 Avenue of the Americas, New York 19, N. Y.See your Placement Officer for further information, or write to William E. Blevins, Employment Manages. Prices are fantasticTO THE EDITORS!... An item in your recentarticle on the new women’s dorm(4-18-63) has finally succeeded instirring me from my lethargy. Iread, to my surprise, that nextyear women students will becharged $82.50 and $67.50 for thedubious pleasure of residing in,respectively, single and doubleClassified.4PTS., ROOMS ETC.TWO girls want 3rd to share 7 room,large, nice apartment. DO 3-2762.HELP WANTEDCOLLEGE men who need $1,000 thissummer call STU at UN 9-4318.FOR SALEFOR SALE, 1950 Chevy, good cond.Reliable transportation $100. 752-3530.PERSONALSBORROW TR-3 SERVICE no charge,contact SHIFTY AL c/o Snell Lend aCar service.HEIDEGGER claims human daseinperpetuates itself through conscioushistorical events. The Spring FestivalBall at the International House on May11 will exist for three historically con¬scious hours, from 9 to 12 All inter¬ested in perpetuating their daseinshould attend.RESIDENTS of New Dorm — watchmailboxes for your ticket to theSPRING THING.FREE sports car driving instruction,car furnished by instructor. ContactDAN the MAN.CORE MEMBERS, CORE SUPPORT^ERS—SUPPORT OPEN OCCUPANCYLEGISLATION, MAIL YOUR "FAIRHOUSING BILL” LETTER TO PRES.BEADLE. IMMEDIATELY.The SPRING THING is the THING.Bring your own marshmallows—Intra-Court supplies the rest.TO PLACE a classified ad, call ext.3265 (MI 3 08001. Special student, facul¬ty, and University staff rates.P.A.M. You're finallyin, somewhat dis¬guised. XXX the PhantomKelly has women, song, and coffeeKelly lounge, tonight 9-11.KILL Ann's turtle jello.SIX dexies, two bennies, a tree anda red, a half a bottle of scotch, slabsof chocolate birthday cake, and anascot, yeah.FLY jet to Europe, June 13-Aug. 5.Scheduled 707 Jet, $295 round trip.Children \'2. Call now'—Joan Mahoney,extension 3272. rooms in—I shudder at the word—a dorm. Having been a victim ofa dorm for two quarters, I con¬sider myself qualified to voice mythoughts on the point. Fortunately,in my case, being clear of headand straight of thought, I soonsaw what I must do—get out. But,as I understand it, women thesedays are not allowed to—get out.... It occurs to me that one ofthose women who pay $82.50 for asingle room in the dorm might paya mere $5.00 more and have myfive room apartment, or an-apart¬ment just like it. Then, havingtaken this course, if she foundherself a roommate, she wouldend up paying $43.75 a month fortwo and a half private rooms, or,if she liked, five rooms shared.Calendar of eventsSpace Month Program, AtmosphericSciences Program. Kent 107, 9:00 am.2:30 pm (by invitation.) Social SciencesProgram. "Stress Reactions in SpaceFlight,” Sheldon J. Korchin, NationalInstitute of Menial Health, "HumanBehavior During Acceleration Stress.”Randall Chamber, US Naval Air De¬velopment Center, "Space dnd HumanBehavior.” Robert B Voas, MannedSpace Flight Center. National Aeronau¬tics and Space Administration. Centerfor Continuing Education. 9:30 am."The Organization of Space Explora¬tion,” Joseph M. Goldsen, The RANDCorp., 2 pm. "The Political and SocialImplications of the Space Age.” HansJ. Morgenthau. Breasted Hall. 8 pm.Campaign kick-off: Committee onGrass at the University of Chicago,G. W. Beadle and student, proclama¬tion and campaign buttons, east of theAd Building, 11 am.Episcopal, Holy Communion, BoindChapel, 11:30 am.Lecture Series, “Language. Myth,and History of Indonesia: Hinduism.Buddism, and Islam in Indonesia,”Committee for Comparative Study ofNew Nations, Committee on SouthernAsian Studies. Department of Linguis¬tics, Mr. Berg. Breasted Hall, 3:30 pm.Lecture, "The Composer and thePublic since the Eighteenth Century.”Herr Prof. Walter Wiora. Universityof Kiel, Ida Noyes Hall, 4:30 pm.Lecture, "Test Ban: UC StudentPeace Union a Scientific and PoliticalAppraisal," Robert Pickus and RichardPreston, Social Science 122. 7:30 pm.Films, "A Movie” and "CosmicRay,” Bruce Conner and Glenn Alvey,Jr.. Mandel Hall. 8 pm, $1 25.FOTA Exhibit. color lithographs,Marc Chagall and sculpture. LawrenceTanner, tnrough May 12lh, Hillel Foun¬dation. I was able to furnish my wholeapartment for $25.00; so if shefollowed my example, and usedrestraint and good judgment inher purchases, she would be aheadof her dorm-sister in not the sec¬ond month, but the first.And living in an apartment hasits advantages! There is a pleasantand satisfying feeling in being ableto get up from one’s reading andtake a walk to the kitchen todrink a cup of home-brewed cof¬fee—or even to take a walkaround the rooms without leav¬ing the privacy and sanctity of fwhat’s one’s own. Then, too, myapartment i? a home to me. I defyany dorm-dweller to think of hisor her single $82.50 or double$67.50 room as home,. . . Why is the Universitycharging such fantastic prices forits rooms, single or double? I am,,not at all versed in the problemsof University finances; but I amintimately acquainted with thoseof student finances; and from mypoint of view, a student’s pointof view, the instituted Universityrates lor dormitory rooms are an iout-and-out gouge.If someone in the University ad¬ministration feels there is some¬thing wrong here too, I will bemore than glad to put him intouch with my realty company—an organization that, as the situa¬tion stands, seems eminently bet¬ter equipped to handle it.CHARLES B. DANIELSBells Bells Bells BellsTO THE EDITOR:Isn’t New Dorm lucky? Bells,bells, bells, bells, bells, bells, bells.E. ALLEN POEChicago MaroonEditor-in-chief Laura GodofskyBusiness Monomer .. Stephen H. KirinNews Editors Andrew St* inRobin KaufmanCity News Editor. .... .John T. WilliamsAsst. City News Editor.. .Gary FeldmanFeature Editor Ross Ardrey^,Culture Editor Vicky ShiefmanOUR "346" SPRING SPORTWEARfeaturing new oxford weave tropicalsOur Spring sportwear selections, de¬signed and tailored on our good-lookingmodels for the younger man, are out¬standing. Newest and most important in¬novation is our exclusive oxford weavetropical material in sport jackets and OddTrousers, that has surface interest andsubtle colorings unobtainable heretofore.You’ll like, too, the new designs and col¬orings in our lightweight worsted jackets."346” Sport Jackets, $60 to $75"346” Odd Trousers, $25 to $29.50ISTAlilSHE01818S^ens furnishings, flats ?r$bofs74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL.NEW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • SAN FRANCISCO • LOS ANCELES R eyr rite Editor ........ Sharon GoldmanAsst. Rewrite Editor......... Bob LeveyPhoto Coordinators .... Les GourwitzStan KarterNight Editors Mike SilvermanMaryann TaranowskiSports Editor ........ Rich EpsteinExecutive Secretory Marvell|i AltheimerCirculation Manager Bill BennettEditor Emeritus Jay GreenbergStaff: Barry Bayer, Sue Goldberg, JackieFriedman, Samye Fuqua, Robert Wil¬liams, Dave Richter, Sue Guggenheim,Jane Rosenberg, Earl Chnldin, KathyFritz, Dave Aiken, Tom Heagy, JimByer, Deirdre Holloway, Arthur Kaufman,Michael Kaufman, Pete Rabinowitz, CarlErickson, Ron Dorfman. Murry Batt,Steve Sharnoff, Richard Bushong, EleanorKniebler, Paula Hiza, Richard French,Tom Stanton, Gail Kirnbauer, JeanKaplan, Katy Dusak, Bud Horowitz, Kely»Cohen, Bob Ackerman, Bill Caffrey,Cameron Ballou, Jeff Kaplan.Issued free of charge on the Quad¬rangles every Tuesday through Fridayduring the academic year by studentsof tho University of Chicago.Opinions expressed is signed articlesrepresent those of the author only.Opinions in editorials officially representa constitutional consensus of the Marooneditorial board. The Maroon makes nopretense of representing studnt or Uni-**-versity opinion.Address all correspondence to: ChicagoMaroon, 1212 East 59 Street, Chicago37, Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-0800;exts. 3265 & 3266. Subscription by mailis $4 per year.Tho Maroon is a charter member ofthe United States Student Press Asso-iation. and subscribes to its news serv¬ice, the Collegiate Press Srvice (CPS).TIKI TOPICSHave you heard! CIRALS,HOUSE OF TIKI is servinglunch! Slopped in willi friendsfor lunch the other day, and-what a pleasant surprise. Oneof the Daily Lunch Specialswas Fried Chicken SandwichPlate for 90c. The Special ofthe Day “Beef Stew” was^delicious for only $1.00. Cock*tails are available. Kitchen isopen from 11:00 A.M. to3:00 A.M.CIRALS, HOUSE OF TIKI v1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-758551st and Lake Park2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Moy 2. 1963Midwest Film Festival journal College sponsors variantof English Comp, courseThis year the College is teaching one of the variants, point-Because of our association made into a book or radio play, sonal reaction as much as intellec-with the Midwest Film Festi- Still photography also quite good tual analysis. Its that feeling thatval and the large number of but two did not add up to any* we think judges won’t admit to. _films screened this year, we Fishman sponsJri^'th,eeexpen^ntai(midwest v.p. of American Federa- Variants of the general efiuca- firsttion of Film Societies) andhave decided to publish some im¬pressions of the Festival ratherthan attempt the impossible taskof writing thirty-odd unbiased re¬views. The following diary is af¬fectionately dedicated to GretchenWeinberg.April 25Missed 2h show—bad time, con¬flicted with work. Arrived at Cen¬ter for quick liquid lunch—ran intojudges who said showing postponedtill 8—Had dinned with them. Jerryw'ent into some Lenny Bruce rou¬tines that nearly gave Tyler heartfailure.The more I see of Kael the moreI like her—she is quite opinionatedand impossible to argue with butmuch of what she says is sound—she’s a sweet old bitch.Missed first shorts because ofdinner. Connection got off to a finestart. The first reel seemed a bitcontrived — as cinema and asdrama. Machine difficulties broughtthe show to a painfully lingeringhalt. Audience was very sympa¬thetic and a goodly number heldon to tickets for the promised Sun¬day showing. Second show madeup of competition shorts. We weretoo unnerved to stay around. Real¬ly felt sorry for those who hadworked so hard to get the filmand make the Festival. Some ofus went up to Knight’s room wherewe found solace and spiritual joyswapping Hollywood and Chicagostories and killing a half bottle ofscotch.Hope tomorrow’s program willbe more successful and the troubletonight won t hurt attendance toomuch.April 26Missed 2h show.7h show went off pretty smooth- technique. (Colpi was responsiblefor editing L’Annee Derniere AMarienbad.)Another try at 35 mm almostcame off—alas more difficulties.Show continued with competition a fel¬low from USIA dropped up. Paulinewas in rare form and although shesaid we could quote her, most ofwhat she said is unprintable (won- tion English compositioncourse as well as seven sections ofthe regular composition course.The three variants, English 111- quaterly examination wa.sabout the same as those achievedby students in the regular courses.However, on the second quarterlyexamination the students in thevariants scored lower than thoseshorts. FISH a beautiful, if unim- der if the Maroon has ever had 112-113, attempt to cover the same jn the standard sequence.aginative color study. Mr. Hayashia film haiku—misty quality of aJapanese wash. Wotan’s Wake awild spoof on everything fromDolce Vita to King Kong. Veryfunny for those who know the artfilm bit. Surprised that some ofthe audience missed some of thebread parodies on what we thoughtwere well known films. First ofNational Film Board of Canadashorts—Runner beautiful exampleof sure film making—editing, pho- a libel suit?).April 27Made the 2hd show! Gloryoskyand all that rubbish. Most of thefilms generally competent but notoutstanding. Autumn ^semi-abstractshort on amusement park. Interest¬ing that it was made for educa¬tional television. Que Puerto Rico!showed that Orfeu Negro has hadsome effect on home movies.Images Fromcolor abstracttography and sound meticulously rather strange—had an uncomfort-combined. The commentary by able feeling that it was either anAuden surprisingly bad. Sunday imitation or parody on Marienbad.on the River well photographed Relied too much on fast cuttingand edited but what intent it might than good film making. St. John’s subjects as the normal course, butmeet half as often during the yearand do half as many assignments.The variants are geared to dis¬cover which parts of the existingEnglish course could best be short¬ened, and what effect the use ofcomplete texts has on the students.One of the experimental sec¬tions has kept the English syllablewhich contains short essays andNature beautiful excerpts from various longer works,on plants. Wisp but in the two other experimentalsections complete books have beenused. During the first two quartersthese included The Education ofHenry Adams, to illustrate ex¬pository writing, and Thomashave had seems lost. Its sort of College weird mixture of ballyhoo Paine’s Common Sena happy study of Negro churchouting. Full of unimaginative bits—a day in the life of X. Very littlematerial, if any, presented to givelife to tiie study. Much reliance ol“cute” shots of babies, kids, oldpeople, young people etc. Remin¬iscent of Weegee’s film New York.Later that evening Kael summedit up by asking Hitchens (Sundaydirector) “why did you .... upa good movie?”Lonely Boy ended show. Mar- and good filming. At its best whenthe camera wandered around thisstrange little college—worst whenit focused on student seminars.Why do college films have to showclasses? These are very personalevents that have more meaningto the participants than to the cas¬ual spectator. Disintegration Lineabstract with plot. Might hold to¬gether better with a sound track.Four Seasons Swiss film usingVivaldi’s music for rhythmic prin- se, as an exam¬ple of an argumentative essay.The experimental variants alsoused Freud’s The Future of anIllusion, and The Human Use ofHuman Beings. During the springquarter, however, much of theclass time In all section of theEnglish composition course is be¬ing devoted to writing a longpaper.Although no definite conclu¬sions have been reached, RonaldWeiner, instructor of English andpletely unedited footage—yet theunobtrusive editing was responsiblefor much of its success—and sowas Paul Anka. Good show, thingslook promising.ly-good house. Msfeme!* Meurt, apo|js Fi]m and wenl up toMen of the Whale interesting gee j^ae] was somewhat ner*French shorts. Madame had verygood dialogue which should students more than theciple of editing. Well done but for . - -- —velous documentary on Paul Anka. SOme unknown reason parts of the teacher of one of the variants, ob-Very spirited had quality ol spon- audience found it laugh-provoking. *«rved that complete texts seem totenaity, almost as if it were com- Night Tide started, looked good but interestsound failed today. Oh well. Audi- syllabi,ence seemed less understanding. JohnFestival people somewhat resigned.Rumors around that Festival maybe canceled, or at least will notattempt to show 35mm films.To Be ContinuedRWymphony concert out, vous about appearing on Kup’s^ show with Hedda Hopper and AdelRogers St. John. Talked aboutfilms. Have noticed how difficult it ‘Tonight at 8:30’ W’illoughby who is alsoUCLA students rejectquarter system planStudents at the Universityof California at Los Angeleslast week voted against a pro-Universfty Theatre will pre- *>osec^ Quai’ter plan of year-The special concert by the has been to pin any af the judges sent its annual “Tonight at tTmfap^oved"a trimesteXst^K, down on their aesthetic—All have o.q/y> frmioTif tnmnrmw e ea a mmester systemChicago Symphony under strong feelings about fnms but are t ^ 1 ™011 ow, Sat- by a 53.47 percent margin.Walter Hendl, W’hich was to more apt to sneer when disagreed UlClay, and ounday in Key- The quarter plan, similar to thatbe presented May 6 as part with than offer a definite principle nolds Club at 8:30. in effect at UC, had been expectedof Midwest Space Month, has been of film judgment. Jerry does give The program will consist of three to win in the student vote, accord-cancelled. Due to the cancellation reasons sometimes but there is a one-act plays, “Exception and the ing to Harry Scherer, editor of theof Fritz Reiner’s programs, Walter certain cageyness about the way he Rule” by Brecht, “Slight Ache” by campus paper. The student vote isHendl will conduct °the regularly answers. We may be projecting our Pinter, and “La Ronde” by not binding. The results have beenscheduled concerts this weekend own feelings, but it seems that Schnitzler. forwarded to the State Board ofonjy> much of criticism is based on per- Tickets are $1.50 for non-students, Regents, which has final say on$1.00 for students. which system will be instituted.TYPEWRITERSSee Our Window Disploy.Inquire About the Line We Carry for Rent or Sale.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE.HOBBY HOUSERESTAURANTOpen Dawn to DawnBREAKFAST DINNERLUNCH SNACKS1342 E. 53rd St. BeautifulFlowering Plants20% Discount to FacultyAnd Students UponPresentation of I.D. CardBova Florist* Where Your Dollar Has Blooming SenseOff the Corner but on the Square” RENT-A-CAR^£5 PER DAYPER MilPER MILEATOMIC CARRENTALS, INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155BeautifulDaytona Larkfully equipped, manyextras; bucket seats, radio& heater, automatic,electric windshieldwashers, 4 door hardtop,consolelike new$1799ooSOUTH SIDE STUDEBAKER, Inc46th & Cottage GroveBO 84111READMORE,RETAINMORE,GETBETTERGRADES seecanIs it worth a halfhour of your time tohow you, too,learn to read 3to 10 times fasterwith greater under¬standing and reten¬tion? See a demon¬stration of the revolutionaryWood method of reading on:Monday, May 6, 7:30 P.M.At Central YMCA-Room 10019 South LaSalle StreetChicago, IllinoisThis new way to read will helpyou do better on exams, cutyour hours of study to giveyou more time for other activi¬ties. Personal attention is giveneach student by skilled teach¬ers. Summer classes are nowforming.Coll for FREE BROCHUREEvelyn WoodREADING DYNAMICS INSTITUTE180 West Adams StreetChicago 6, IllinoisSTate 2-7014 CEntraI 6-8600REYNOLD'SCLUBTHEATRESTUDENTS $1.00 TONIGHT AT 8:30 OPENS TONIGHTPLAYS BY PINTER (ABOUT LIFE), BRECHT (ABOUT JUSTICE)AND SCHNITZLER (ABOUT SEX) AND FRIDAYSATURDAYSUNDAY8:30 P.M.May 2. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON» i i ' 1 (MM |f c ii A !»ftY.- Little gallery is served Campus cops stop..i . • '• r i May Day celebrationwith termination of lease aL cam„us ooncemeThe little Gallery at 1328East 57th street, has beenserved with a “termination oflease” notice effective May 31.The city, which had purchased theproperty, notified the bookstore’sproprietor, James Staver, of itsaction Tuesday.Roy Rettig, the urban renewalofficial who signed the “termina¬tion of lease” notice, said that heexpects to receive a request fromStaver for an extended stay in hispresent location.“I assume that he will be givensome consideration,” Rettig said.He refused to say whether other“termination of lease” noticeswere served in the general areaof the Little Gallery. The owner of the Tropical Hut,which is next door, said that hisrestaurant has not received sucha notice although the City has pur¬chased the property.Staver plans to seek an exten¬sion because he feels that it wouldbe impossible for him to prepareto move in the time allotted.Staver also envisions difficulties inrelocating since 90% of his businessis with University students, facultymembers and employees. He notedthat many persons come in duringtheir lunch hours.If the bookstore were relocatedat 53rd and Harper in the proposedartisan center for example, thebusiness could not possibly maimtain its present status as a “Uni¬versity bookseller,” according toStaver.Phi Delts help HPKCCEighteen members of theUC chapter of Phi Delta Thetafraternity painted and washedwalls last weekend in twostorefront buildings leased by theHyde Park-Kenwood CommunityService Center.The buildings, located on 55thStreet near Kenwood, ^*re sched¬uled for demolition within twoy£ars, but will be used for Centeractivities until they are torn down.The Center, which is located at54th Street and Kenwood, hopes tohave a new annex before thebuildings are torn down.The Hyde Park-Kenwood Com¬munity Service Center providesmeeting and classroom space forneighborhood residents, particu-Intramural scoreboardLast night’s intramuralgames featured the battles ofthe giants as top teams in twoleagues met. Vincent (2-1)defeated Thompson S. (3-0), 23-9,while Henderson S. (2-1), dumpedEast I, 33-8, to create a three-waytie for second, all teams having3-1 records. Chamberlin held itslead of one game by downing TuftsS. 11-8. East III edged Shoiey S.30-29.In the divisionals Diner’s Cluband the Law School, both unde¬feated, clashed with the Diner’sClub, which held the later score¬less for four innings, winning 13-7to take undisputed first. In othergames Dr. Kildare’s 23, Samurai’s12, and Beer-Bellies 28, Outlaws 23. larly the underprivileged. It plansto use one of the 55th Street build¬ings for more classroom space, andthe other for library space. Thecenter currently operates a neigh¬borhood lending library.Joe Brisben, president of PhiDelt, said that the clean-up projectwas carried out in conjunction withthe national fraternity’s Commu¬nity Service Day. In past years, thePhi Delta have worked with theBoy Scouts and the YMCA, headded. Alert campus policemenbroke up an early morningMay Day celebration yester¬day. Two UC students weretaken to the campus security of¬fice at 3 am after they attemptedto raise an American flag and a“cross eyed phoenix” on the flag¬pole in the middle of thequadrangles.The students, while raising theflag, tried to fend off off question¬ing policemen with a “letter ofauthorization” from a high up uni¬versity officer on official-lookingstationery. The policemen promptlycalled the official whose “signa¬ture” appeared, and were told thatthe letter was not real.Returning to the scene of thecrime, the police ordered the stu¬dents to stop what they were do¬ing. The offenders were taken tothe campus security office. Theywere released after they presentedtheir Identification Cards, and theirhouseheads had been called to re¬turn for further questioning in themorning.More decorations had beenplanned, said one of the students,“but we were stopped by the po¬licemen’s efforts.”Other Burton-Judson residentswere more successful in their MayDay efforts. Three red flags ap¬peared in the B-J courtyard thismorning over the entrance to Vin¬cent House, with a sign “is gloriousMay Day, comrades.” Miami experimental dormhas a minimum of rulesThe one lotion that’s cool, exciting-brisk as an ocean breeze!The one-and-only Old Spice exhilarates...gives you that great-to-be*alive feeling...refreshes after every shave...adds to your assurance. Jand wins feminine approval every time. Old Spice After Shave Lotion,'1.25 and 2.00 plus tax. SHU LTONthe shave lotion men recommend to other men l The University of Miami(Florida) has announcedplans for an experimental dor¬mitory in which restrictionswill be limited to the “bare neces¬sities.”No restrictions on student activ¬ity will be imposed at all by theschool. Administration and rulemaking will instead rest with acommittee, or council of residentsof the dormitory, both male audfemale.The plan was reported as de¬signed to develop students’ respectfor rules which will eventually beestablished by their elected repre¬sentatives. The Miami administra¬tion plans to deal with the govern¬ing student council “as a matureand responsible unit of the acad¬emic community,” and will allowit full control over its own activi¬ties.The planning committee hasdrawn up a code of conduct forthe dormintory, which it will rec¬ommend to the first council ofresidents.Curfews will be eliminated forwomen as well as men, on thegrounds that they should be treatedas equally as possible.Rather than restirct the students,the rules would ask that they signout in the evening by indicatingwhere they intend to be. This will be used only to account for stu¬dents who are out unusually late,and those not wishing to sign outat all would not be required to.Students expecting to remain outovernight will also be expected toleave a number where they canbe reached in case of an emer¬gency. This rule may be puheldmore strictly to avoid legal com¬plications, but the number of afriend or relative will suffice.Similarly, there will be no re¬strictions on dress or movementthrough the building.Stern receives awardRichard G. Stern, associateprofessor of English, has wona $500 award for his novelIn Any Case, from the Friendsof Literature. The prize, called the“Foundation for LiteratureAward,” was presented at thegroup’s annual Shakespeare dinnerlast weekend.The group is a Chicago-area as¬sociation of “patrons of literature,”according to Arthur Heiserman, as¬sistant professor of English in theCollege. Heiserman accepted theaward for Stern, who is currentlyin Rome under a Fulbright fellow-STUDENT GROUPSTest ban to be discussedRobert Pickus, National Co-ordinator of Turn TowardPeace, and Richard Preston, a physicist at Argonne NationalLaboratories, will discuss “Test Ban—A Scientific and Po¬litical Appraisal” at 7:30 tonight in Social Science 122.The program, sponsored by the closer to signing a test ban treatyUC Student Peace Union (SPU), than ever before. Therefore thewill launch a city-wide SPU cam- Peace movement is conducting, . . . . _ . campaigns to gain public supportpa.gn for a test ban treaty. for a treaty and to presume thePickus, a member of the National President and the Senate to signAdvisory Board of the SPU and and ratify a treaty.”the founder of peace centers Weiner stated that a test ban isacross the country, will concen- necessary to slow down the armstrate on the political need for a race by checking the proliferationtest ban and the problems involved of nuclear weapons and to elimi-in obtaining one, while Preston, „ate fallout.” He explained thatwho is chairman of the Chicago the SPU will follow up tonight’schapter of the American Federa- meeting with a drive to obtaintion of Sc'i ntists and a contributor signatures for a petition to Presi-to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scien- dent Kennedy and Illinois and Wis-tists, will discuss the scientific consin senators,aspects of the problem. He added that anyone interestedJoe Weiner, chairman of the UC in working on the petition cam-SPU chapter, stated, “It is now paign should call him in Burton-generally believed that the United Judson or Bob Hambourger inStates and the Soviet Union are Pierce Tower. Rek-O-CutTurntablewith Base ami ShureTone aim, new, used$130.00 value to besold at owner’s cost,$100 — Call ext 3185 TOA Wide Variety of tours:MUSIC and DRAMAART and ARCHITECTURECOLLEGE CREDITMICROBUS... ISRAELDRIVE YOURSELFand low-price "ECONOMY" Toursor Form Your Own GroupAsk for Plans and profitableOrganizer ArrangementsSpecialists inStudent Travel Since 1926far folders and detailsSee your local travel agent or write usUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq , Cambridge. MasvQJgjIntracourt CouncilPresentsThe Spring ThingSunday, May 54:30 P.M.New Dorm Court YardStudent-Faculty DinnerThe 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 4-8228Book Sale in the HumanitiesSwift Commons9-5, May 2nd & 3rdbyDivinity School Students Association