College rates with country's higheststudy of young scholars disclosesThe College of the University of Chicago ranks among the highest in the coun¬try in the production of "promising young scholars and scientists," according toThe Younger American Scholar: His Collegiate Origins, published today. Thej?ook, a UC-Wesleyan University publication, was written by Robert H. Knappl?"d oSnPUniversitve Dsvchol' (11-9)- and Julliard (11.2) iol-/ Wesleyan University ps>choI- lowing Chicago (6.) was tied with] ogists. __ Columbia for fifteenth place onPlacing above Princeton, the humanities.Harvard ,Yal*- The -survey next attempted toMU. UC had 48.8 scholars per corroiate cost iocation, age,ji)00 college graduates, a rate amj type of administration withwhich was exceeded only by roduction of scholars.Swarilimore and Reed.The purpose of the survey was colleges rate highto compile a roster of younger With respect to size, it appearsAmerican scholars and scientists tbat among liberal arts and tech-who show promise of intellectual nical colleges, the smaller sizeac complishment, and to determine brackets produced most abun-patterns and characteristics of dantly; while among universities,undergraduate institutions pro- sizp sppms tn havp mt,p rp,atinn- Slight pouse . . .This issue of the MAROON isthe lost for he Winter quarter. Thenext issue will be published onApril 3. Humanitiesnow con: • • •page 2lacing such individuals.List dsfinition of "scholar size seems to have little relation¬ship to the production of scholars.With respect to cost of attend-31The survey defined a young ance- there ls a ver>' marked su-"scholar” as a student who (1) Priority . m the production ofearned a Ph D. since 1948 in one those mstitutions having the high-of the universities sampled. <2> est fosXf* *or example, the mostwon a post baccalaureate fellow- cost‘y flfth °f tbe universitiesshii) of scholarship since 1946 were more than three times as scholar is a rare exception amongfrom sampled universities. (3> re- productive than any of the re- their graduates.”ceived a private fellowship from mainrng four fifths. . .one of the foundations sampled, In general, the South, the Moun- r1™* *C, °° * ®“ ron 8,5or 14 • had been awarded a gov- tain states, and the Pacific ranked . Wlth re^Pet 1 to type 01 ^min¬er nmcnt fellowship by the US lowest, while New England and lstraton- the non-denominationalPublic Health Service, the Atomic the North Central states ranked Pnvate sth()£ls were ™uch n™reEnergy Commission, or the Ful- consistently high. .productive than any of the otherbright Program. , . categories: Catholic, public, and*, , . , Scholar* rore Protestant.Of the 377 undergraduate in- Discussing the results of this . .st.tut.ons included in the survey, distribution of schoiars, the au- uIn drawing conclusions fromthe highest were Swarthmore, thors state; .... . perhaps the first . heir data’ thue au h°rs lsta^ed;w.th 61.2 male scholars per 1000 matter which should be com. ‘... there can be little doubt thatgraduates^ Reed (53.1) Chicago mented u is the concentration amoaS the graduates of our un-(48.1), Oberlin (39.8), Haverlord of schoiarly creativity among a productive institutions, there exist University of Chicago, March 13, 1953Six ACCLC members speakto legislators at SpringfieldSix students from the All-Campus Civil Liberties Commit¬tee journeyed to Springfield last Wednesday in an effort todetermine the attitudes of the Illinois state legislators on the“anti-subversive” Broyles bills.(39.d), California Institute of surprisingly small group of in- individuals of high talents wholechnoiogy (38.2) Carleton stitutions (only) fifty or so exposed to a different sort of(3b.4», Princeton (32.4), Antioch institutions out of the more than community influence, and favoredJSo • Iiar^ard ,(27,-3K and Yalu eight hundred granting baccalau- ^,th morc stimulating education-(27.2). MIT ranked seventeenth reat0 degrees attain a rate of al opportunities, might well con-on the list and Columbia was production ,of male scholars) in tnubdte significantly to Americantwenty-third. excess of ten per thousand.... On scholarship.Chicago third in sciancas the other hand all the remaining “While there are probably cer-Breaking down the survey by institutions are crowded within a tain merits in specialization, sodisciplines, Cal Tech was first in narrow range lying from zero to marked a degree of specializationthe sciences (38.2 male scientists ten per thousand, with very heavy jn the production of youngerper 100 graduates), followed by concentration at the lower value, scholars as we have found seemsSwarthmore (34.6). Ch icago “Thus it may be pointed out to us to approach a monopoly and(27.7), Reed (26.5) and MIT that the production of young to leave undeveloped and unpro-**9-*’- scholars, in general, rests on a ductive large segments of theIn the social sciences. Swarth- particularly narrow base within American system of higher edu-more had 19.9, Reed (17.7), Chi- the American' system of higher cation. We strongly suspect thatcago ) 14.6), U. of the South (13.4), education, with some three score under proper circumstances, ef-and Carleton (12.8). Haverford institutions, at most, showing sig- fective recruitment of youngerhad the highest rate of human- nificant and impressive rates of scholars could be accomplishedities graduates (23.7). with Ken- production, while among the re- from many institutions now vir-yon <20.2), Oberlin (12.2), Queens mainder tfie dedicated younger tually barren of productivity.” The group was not able toexplained Marlin Smith, vicethe state Senate was meetingin committees and the Houseof Representatives was in ad¬journment. Smith stated that ithad not been anticipated that thelegislature would not be in ses¬sion.According to Albert Sciaky, amember of the ACCLC steeringcommittee, it was the generalopinion of those legislators withwhom the group talked, that theBroyles bills would probably passin the Senate, where they are cur¬rently under consideration by theCommittee on Aeronautics andMilitary Preparations. However,Sciaky said it was not yet pos¬sible to determine opinion in theHouse of Representatives becausethe bills have not yet been for¬mally introduced there.There are presently twenty-sixmembers of the State Senate, Sci- speak with many legislators,chairman of ACCIC, becauseaky stated, who had voted for theBroyles Bills in the 1950 session.Five of the Senators were in theHouse of Representatives at thattime, he explained.Matthew Dillon, chairman ofACCLC, stated that it is plannedthat a member of ACCLC willtestify at the open hearings onthe Broyles Bills to be held in thenear future.'Religions ignore diversity': Meadby Naomi BirnbaumSpeaking on "Religion and Cultural Diversity," Dr. Margaret Mead, author and anthropologist, stressedthe lack of allowance for diversity within most religions, which has resulted in a secularization such as isnow prevalent in our own culture.This secularization would probably be succeeded, she stated, by either of two new forces. One possibility,Dr. Mead hypothesized, would be : — r—r~7 r ~~ ~ : ~ : ~ ~ 7~z ; . „a .religious revival of the same dlverse people to live together, though their religion is Protes- alternating periods of religionkind that has occurred after Exomine faiths tant and they use the Bible.” and secularization throughoutevery period of secularization, a “Let us not look at religions in "T ar*,y„°ne tXI??e’. . M . history with a revival of religionreligion bound up intimately with terms of how they give a place for tujVTf6 varioi^ beliefs ^nd^he foll°wing every secular period,thn rMiitura rv# tirv,,. ^ ™ . A lure oi various Deneis ana me °the culture of the time and there- diversity . . . There are great re- attitudes and factors of the timesfore doomed to eventual cV'cline. ligions and iust religions We say attdudes. and la( tors o1 tne 1 meThe nthpr altar-native dip fpit ic lu . U JUbl i !u * i y and environment . .ioe other alternative, she felt, is that every people that we know , . f f ei ht around*the emergence of a new type of anvthimr about has some religion carry a ld* orireigm arouna,religion 3 rplimnn <!trir>r»pH nniv d y"f , . • • considerable amount from t.._religion, a religion stripped only —religion defined as relationship t which rreatpd them Ifto Us abstract philosophical uni- to the universe which contains cou 1 y vvhlch created them* 11versal elements, allowing for di- SOme supernatural element . . .versity at any point in time and The just (primitive) religions allfor change through the ages, and deai with birth, death, fishing . . .therefore avoiding secularization. jn terms of religion. They are t'cUav* Thi«Trp»tp<?Human culture,” stated Dr. bound ud with the local environ- the cul^u.re of 11S .CI??t.^1sMead, “makes it possible for peo- ment. They have a kind of toler- cof?Petltlon "fithm -the mdivid-ple to get along who it would anee which is very difficult toseem unlikely to get along to- combine with a great religion,gether ... A striking thing about They are culture-bound, geog-man is that he can live in such di- raphy-bound, non-competitive...”versity. Human culture is a sys Secularization can come whenReligions religion is corrupt, when there isa a withdrawal of religion from itsthe function. Corruption is a good ba-See "Mead," page 5 BulletinYesterday the physical sci¬ences division passed a state¬ment of general principles tobe used in working out a de¬tailed program which wouldlead to a new bachelor’s degreein physical sciences.According to information re¬ceived from the office of the'Dean of the Phy Sci division,the three main points of thestatement are the following:1) The program should beopen to high school graduatesor to students who liave com¬pleted the equivalent of fouryears of high school.2) The program should nor¬mally take four years of workat the University.3) The objective shall be tomaintain an approximatelyequal balance between special¬ized courses and general edu¬cation.A committee in the physicalsciences is being formed towork out the details of theplan, which is expected to becompleted before the end ofthe Winter quarter.you participate in ^ religion, youparticipate partly in the cultureof the period in which that re¬ligion was formed and partly inual’s personality structure be¬tween the patterns of the pastand the present cultures.”Religion, secularization alternate Noted writer here for lecture;will read own short storiesDr- Mead gave as examples of Katherine Ann Porter, noted American writer, will give areading of her short stories tonight. The reading, which is aDr. Mead went on to note the william Vaughn Moody lecture, will take place at 8:30 p.m.tem which makes it possible for Qef mU dlSCOUTlt Ine^lowedng Judls " ^Mohammedanism, Judaism, Bud- 1UU UlaLUWfl1 inS * lowering Judas. ,dhism, and Hinduism. She went \ J UnllsUnrr She has Published few books. Two collections of shortIlf on to speak about Christianity *'»*' UWUllJlg stories, The Leaning Tower, andbecause, she said “you are most Round trip raii discounts are Flowering Judas; and a book of „has extraordinary purity andfamiliar with it, I think. stm available for students and short novels, Pale Horse, Pale concentration; jt is deiiCate yeti Christianity very broad faculty traveling to New York the °n y Wdrks strong, and very clear; all the"Christianity attempts to pro- next Friday. The reduced rate is hctl£n which have been made pub- drosg hag been distilIed out1 vide for the whole of man’s life. $46.05, a 28 per cent discount, and Some of her many essays on .| it has some of the attributes of a includes a reserved seat on the Hterature and Mexico have been Miss Porter was born in Texas,culture seen clearly in medieval “Pacemaker” on the eastbound published m her latest book, Ihe and educated in Southern conventCatholicism*. . . the attempt to trip. Days Before- schools. She has traveled a greatcreate a complete culture is obvi- All reservations must be made It has been said of Miss Porter deal, and lived for several yearsous in some new religions such as at the John Stocks Travel Bureau that "few persons have built so in Mexico. In describing herselfthe Huddenites. They live in cohe- in the administration building be- solid a reputation on so small a she once wrote, “Politically mysive communities in the United fore Tuesday. Return space may published output; she is the near- bent is to the left. As for aestheticStates, with special kinds of be arranged either here or in New est American equivalent to Kath- bias, my one aim is to tell aclothes, agriculture . . . and are York, and individuals may return erine Mansfield, with the same straight storj and to give trueMargaret Mood stronger in the world outside as late as April 5. artistic scrupulosity.” Her prose testimony.”T-Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 13, 1953Humanities division proposes conventional BAby Caroline Lee and Joan BrennardThe humanities division is currently considering a plan whereby thebachelor’s degree would be awarded by that division upon completion of,a four-year program. This program would consist of approximately twoyears of .general education, and two years of specialized work in the humanitiesdivision.Under the present divisional program, many students do not have time to takeenough courses in fields related to their major subject,- according to Napier Wilt,dean of the humanities division.“We regard the general education program (the first two years under the plan)as being entirely up to the College faculty, but we hope they will make some provi¬sion for more foreign language in the program/’ said Wilt.This plan comes on the heels of a recommendation, passed last Thursday by thehumanities faculty, that the University institute a BA and BS degree to be given See "Editor's column," po<je 4after the normal 4-year period of study.The chart below lists the questions answered by Dean Wilt and Grosvenor Coopermusic department head, and members of the College faculty who contributed tothe book The Idea and Practice of General Education. The material on the left imme¬diately preceding the charts is the part of the recommendation which explains thereasons for recommending the instiution of a four-year BA and BS, passed by theHumanities faculty last Thursday. On the right appear excerpts from The Idea andPractice of General Education, explaining the theoretical basis of general educationIt is hoped that the material contained in the chart will gain greater clarity withthis background.In the years since the relocation of the bachelor’s degree and the installation of the three-year MA programs, the course of events has in three important respects diverged widely fromexpectations held when the above actions were made.It was assumed and stated that the general education, to be marked by the award of theBA, could and would be given in two academic years after high school and that the three-yearMA program would be based on the successful completion of such two years, in the Collegeof elsewhere. It has turned out that the College prescribes as general education, work which inthe majority of cases requires three years beyond high school.It was assumed and stated that the pattern ot awarding the bachelors degree on the com¬pletion of two years’ work would be widely followed, and that at any rate the program asgiven here would be attractive and would draw many students. T^ie pattern has not beenadopted in other schools and it has not been sufficiently widely accepted by parents ana stu¬dents for the new BA to take place, even at UC, that the old BA had.There has been in recent years a serious and continuing decline in registration, a declinemuch greater than was expected in terms of readjustment after the postwar increase, andgreater than in comparable institutions where the conventional four-year bachelors degree isgiven. from m proposal ot the Humanities Faculty to the Council of the Senate “The development of men and women in whom the best pos¬sibilities of human nature are realized to the limit of each in¬dividual’s capacity is a primary concern of general education.These possibilities include the development of social and politi¬cal wisdom, the capacity to appreciate and enjoy the productsof man’s creative activity in literature, music, and art; andman’s capacity for reflective thought concerning the nature ©fthe Universe and of man’s place and role in it The developmentof these possibilities is not and cannot be the chief concern ofprofessional schools, whose task is to train competent special¬ists . . . The uniqueness of the College has emerged in its at-“The general courses of the College reflect, furthermore, theCollege’s concern with teaching students to think for them¬selves rather than with providing a mass of information on ahost of subjects concerning which it might be pleasant to havestudents informed, or even with a set of general truths. It isnot the purpose of the College to instruct members of the risinggeneration what to think but, rather, to teach them how tothink.”From The Idea and Practice of General Education (UC Frees, 19501Questions asked by the MAROON|, What deficiencies, if any,are there in the presentCollege program whichmight hamper the studentwho goes on to graduatework? Answers of the Humanities faculty| A \ As it stands now the college takes too' much time for the high school gradu¬ate. Originally, the College wasintended to take two years, and now,tor most high school graduates,it requires three years tor completion.Normally for the high school graduateto receive an MA here it takes sixyears or more, whereas a masters de¬gree ot a conventional school requiresonly five yeors work. (Napier Wilt,Dean of the Humanities Division) Answers of College faculty members|M\ Never at any point have the general education requirements been expanded without' resistance from those who argue that it takes too much time. This resistance survivesin the current resolution of the Humanities Division. But the relation of professional togeneral education is no longer argued as an either-or proposition. Most ot the outstonding legal, medical, engineering schools and associations have recognized the necessityfor giving the professional specialist a general education. Certainly on this campus th«question is not whether students going an to professional studies should by-pass thegeneral education program. The problems ora rather problems of how best to articulatethe two kinds of training in terms ot scheduling, proportions of time, etc. (MoynordKrueger, associate professor of social sciences, College.)IB) It was assumed and stated that thepattern of awarding the bachelors de¬gree on the completion of two yearswork would be widely followed ondthat at any rate the program as givenhere would be attractive and woulddraw many students. The pattern hasnot been adopted in other schools andit has not been sufficiently widelyaccepted by parents and students torthe new BA to take the place, evenat UC, that the old BA had. (Fromthe Humanities faculty recommenda¬tion. I 4B) \Vhile the Chicago Pian may not have been adopted in its entirety by many schools,there can be no question that the College has been exercising influential leadership ixAmerican education. Visitors and inquiries are now coming in from hundreds of Ameri¬can and many foreign educational institutions. College syllabi and texts have been pur¬chased by over 200 schools and colleges. Members of the Chicago faculty are increas¬ingly recognized by the Foundations who have singled the College out for teachertraining programs, special seminars in curricular development and teaching methods,scnolarship programs, etc. (Russell Thomas, professor of humomties, College.)1C) We would like very much to see moreforeign language in the College pro¬gram. 1C) The College recognizes that there are coses where students have made early coieerdecisions and want to move into the fields of professional study as soon as they enterthe College, and cases where the prerequisites tor advanced study, e.g., in foreign Ion-guages, must be taken early or not at all. A semi-professional degree which combinesgeneral ond specialized studies seems to be the most promising solution for these coses. IProvision for these cases leaves the BA unimpaired as the general education degree. |(Moynord Krueger.)H*s the decreasing enroll¬ment any direct relation¬ship to the program thatthe College offers? 2) 1 here has been in recent years a seri¬ous and continuing decline in registra¬tion, a decline much greater than wosexpected in terms of readjustmentafter the postwar increase, and great¬er than in comparable institutionswhere the conventional four-yearbachelor's degree is offered. (From♦he Humanities faculty recommenda¬tion. ) 2) Since the peax pcst-war enrollments of 1947 most colleges and universities of the coun-tiics have hod falling enrollments! Within the University of Chicago the College hos notsuffered more than most other divisions of the University. It has, however, been orguedtnat the ODsence of a tour-year bachelor's degree has been on important factor in thea-cline of College and University-wide enrollment. It is probably true that there oresome prospective students who do not come because of this factor. We believe, however,)that there is probably a greater number who come to the University because of its dis¬tinctive College program. We feel that everything should be done to accommodate thosespecial groups ot studen.s who, for one reason or another, want a college program thatgives them the opportunity for some earlier specialized work. But we do not believe that•r is in the interest of the University or of the graduate divisions and the professionalschools to undertake modifications in this direction which lower the University's highsrandards ot scholarship and teaching, and which weaken its reputation as a courageousand imaginative leader in American education. (Milton Singer, choirmon, social sciencesstaff, College.) 'If any disagreement be¬tween the humanities andCollege exists, what is thesource of it? 3) The originol set-up os authorized bythe Council provided for a programof two years of general education atwhich time a BA would be awarded.This was to be followed by three yearsof specialized education, after whichtime the MA would be awarded. TheCollege hos increased the time re¬quired to three yeors, for the majorityof students. The humanities programhas not exceeded the three years orig¬inally allotted to it. (Deon Wilt.) 3) The 1942 legislation empowered the College to award the bachelor's degree "in recog¬nition of the completion of general education, as redefined by the College faculty." ThsCollege has taken seriously the task of redefinition of general education. There was »♦two-year limit on it. (Moynord Krueger.)The rumor that the College and the divisions have smoked the peace pipe is slightlyexaggerated. Thera is, however, a solid foundation for this rumor. The recently createdjoint B. S. degree in the Biological Science Division end the College is a cooperativesolution of common problems. And in its relations to the Social Sciences Division #"<lto the professional schools the program ot the College seems to provide an adeqwotelfoundation for advanced and professional studies. We are also confident that the issue*which remain to be resolved in relation to the Humanities Division and the Physxo*Sciences Division will be solved shortly to the mutual satisfaction of the Divisions ondthe College and in the best interest of the University and the student body.The College faculty has no illusion that the program it has developed is perfect ondthe only one possible, it appreciates that the resources of a great university including itsdistinguished research and professional faculties have played an essential part in rflsuccess and it welcomes any expression of interest in the program on the part of thesefaculties. The College faculty is strongly convinced that its past achievements and th«possibility of further improvement depend primarily on its continued ctidtflM *s onindependent faculty with the responsibility and freedom to do the work of the Uni¬versity in general higher education and with the power to award the BA degree. (MiltonSinger.)4, What will be the status ofthe present College BA, ifa bachelor’s degree is of¬fered by the Humanitiesdivision? 4) The College Bachelor's degree, as ithas been understood recently, wouldstill be obtainable by anyone desiringto do so. (Deon Wilt.) 4) The proposal to create a new BA to be awarded by the Humanities division is not exoctlyparallel to the practical solution reached in the case of the new BS degree. The newjoint BS will not signify the present College degree plus specialized work in the BiologicalScience Division — it will be a first professional degree in the departments of thc(Biological Science Division, involving a good proportion of general studies. The presentBA degree should remain the University's sole BA degree. A good practical compromisein the case of relations between the College and the Humanities Division would becreation of new degrees for that division which would be genuinely parallel to the newBS, soy, A B Litt, B Mus, B Phil, etc. I am confident that a solution olong these l>nC*would be favorably regarded by the College faculty. (Williom O'Meara, professor ©'philosophy, College.)Would such a degree tendto decrease the importanceof the College BA? 5) No. (Dean Wilt.)If the University mokes certain thatthe degrees have different names.(Grosvenor Cooper, chairman of themusic department.) 5) For many students there would be no "College BA," there would be a university BAgranted on the recommendation of a division. For students who decided to take a Coll£9eBA as the sole and terminal degree in higher eductotion, the College BA might ton-tinue to be what it is now — the conclusion of a good education. Or it might not. T 0result in any case would probably be confusing o "terminal" ond prc-professionol in¬dents alike. 'g, If only eight College cours¬es are required, will gener¬al education be impaired? 6) No. (Dean Wilt.) ’Ye*-'TGrosvervor Cooper, chairman ofthe department of ‘music.) , 6) Post experience in American higher education here and elsewhere suggests thot this ^likely. President Concrht of Harvard; commenting.on general education, remarked:the program ever comes to be regorded as the property of a group of deportments,effectiveness will . disoppeor." .jReyeJ. .Denpey, associate professor, sepal sciencet College.)*March 13, 1953 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3PR On NSA ballot Academicfreedom counterfeiters get 5 years;The all campus election to choose delegates to the National Subject 0/ telegTClm, j * Aoo^iofmn IWCA ) h,U1 •_ * • O II I ^ — I Iallowed 30 days to appealWilliam Hopkin and Richard McLeod, former UC studentsdents Association SutTcommis- who turned counterfeiters in order “to make money to gosion on Academic Freedom. “Con- through school,” were sentenced a week ago Tuesday to fiveStudent Association (NSA) will be conducted on the prin- r . . c. , . „ciple of proprtional representation this year The Student ment reeefvj the fonowinrS":Representative Party was able to get the PR (proportional gram from John H. Naisbitt,representation) bill passed at Tuesday s Student Government chairman of the National stu-meeting in spite of strong and solid opposition from the Independent Student League. — : ————- *5*011 011 nvaucillic I A cruuill. V^UIl* v“* w“CJ** "vav uvucvaavvva u »» V.vi\ x uvuvtuj to **TOThe original bill was amend- chan^d ufeir viL gratulations nd best wishes for ¥ears apiece in a federal Prison by US District Judge WalterA ,m/nral timpc and finallv • °,. irom nay to a very productive academic free- J. LaBuy.ed several times, ana nnaiiy aye, since according to Robert’s dom week Although we were en-substituted by the following: Rules of Order, only those voting couraged to note that Senator Hopkin, who was a pre-med student at UC and a member“1. The ballot shall be divided aye may move for reconsidera- Taft has taken an ACLU stand on °f the Phi Kappa Psi frater-inio three categories, the first for tion. Immediately after the vote freedom, we are all aware that nity until he was arrested Jan.five National Delegates, the sec- Paul Breslow (SRP) blocked re- attacks on education by certain 27 by Secret Service agents,ond for National Alternates, the consideration of the PR Bill by congressional committees, veter- and McLeod, a student at the Uni-third for ten Regional Alternates. moving to recess, which passed, ans groups and other self-appoint- versity before the present year, Carnival forms ready"2. The names of all candidates Reconsideration wou 1 d have ed Americanists are increasing were found guilty on all seven Organizations wishing to entershall be listed on the ballot; can- meant further delay which may daily. counts of the indictment. They booths in the All Campus Carni-did tes endorsed by a party under kill the bill because of the short- “As Mr. Justice Douglas wrote were given five-year sentences on Val may pick up applications inthe party name, independents sep- age of time before the NSA elec- fn his dissenting opinion in the all counts, but the sentences will the Student Union office, if theyarately. Feinberg case, “Fear stalks the run concurrently. The maximum'3. The voter has as many votes SRP contended that the PR class rooms.’ This fear, which is sentence which each could havein each category as delegates in system was a more representative accompanying self censorship, received was 95 years,the category. He votes for the in- one, that the make-up of the NSA precludes inspired teaching and Counsel for the two defendantsdividuals whom he prefers. delegation would under PR more broad learning. Attacks against had not appealed the conviction“4. The votes shall be tallied as closely approximate the make-up academic freedom must be vig- by Thursday, but Judge LaBuy,a> total votes received by each “* *u~ - - SU briefsof have not already received appli¬cations in the mail. These applica¬tions must be returned to the of¬fice by April 3. Questions concern¬ing the carnival should be ad-— —, — -0 — 0 dressed to Nancy Lee, HY 3-8155,me campus politically, that orously resisted. As it is increas- presumably anticipating such an during the next week.IVnulH crot enafe : i__ Jiff: n. r . i . _ .. ^ a i • •.*.party b) votes received by each parties would get seats propor- ingly difficult for teachers to action within the thirty-day limit Elec!'officerscandidate. tioned to the percentage of cam- combat these attacks, because of fixed by law, ordered that Hop- Election of SU officers for the“5. The candidates in each party pus votes. ISL considered PR un- * * *shall be ranked in order of votes desirable in this case because ofreceived. the importance of unity within“6. The percentage of total the NSA delegation. Delegates tovote received by each party ealeu- NSA last year (ISL) stressed thelated similarly for independents, importance of an effective delega-“7. For each 20 per cent of total tion based upon intra-party agree-vote in first two categories, and rnertt. fear for their jobs, it is left to the kins and McLeod be given leave following year was recently held,students to lead the fight. • as “poor persons” to file a request Bruce Larkin was elected presi-“We must protest every viola- for transcripts of the trial pro- dent Thelma Yutan, secretary,tion of academic freedom, no mat- ceedings to be made at court cost. an(j Eliot Goldstein was relectedter where it occurs, because any Records must be prepared for all treasurerattack on any university threat- cases v/hich are brought on ap- pjck up arjens our'own, and threatens Amer- peal before a higher court, and vfor each 10 per cent of total votein the third category received byd party, one candidate is elected.“These party candidates are The argument that PR wouldgive too much power to partieswas then advanced by membersof ISL. SRP answered this by ica. This week you are setting a the cost of having this done issplendid example for the stu¬dents of the nation. May we allreaffirm our faith in academicfreedom and, with Jefferson, often higher than the appellantscan afford.The counterfeiters were stillbeing held in the Chicago Countyserve the sentences.chosen in the order of ranking as claiming that PR would give no swear eternal hostility against ev- jail, and it was not yet determinedto votes received; as in six inde- more power to the parties than ery form of tyranny • over the where they would eventuallypendents are elected when they they already hold since one not mindhave a higher percentage of the picked by the parties would alsovote than that remaining to par- have had to run independentlyties after subtraction of the ap- under the former system. Artists whose entries have beenexhibited in the recent art exhibitare requested to call for them atthe student activities office be¬tween 2:30 and 4:30 p.m. Rey¬nolds Club council is . not re¬sponsible for entries not removedby Wednesday.propriate percentage for eachelected candidate.”After three hours of debate theroll call vote revealed an evenlysplit assembly 2222. The presi- Another point of SRP was thatPR would lift the choice of thevoters from the realm of per¬sonalities to the realm of plat¬forms and ideas. Some ISL’ers Polish leader speaks to YR forCollege examsdent, Julius Lewis (SRP), was asserted that the platforms were by Jon MajdcEurope can be federated only in terms of regional group- MHumlAmeTiB. M^ndei Halt30 P m*ings, based on common economic and political interests.Otherwise the diverging interests of the big countries, asabout to cast the^ deciding vote not mature enough to give voters well as the disproportion in size between such states as Ger-when George Kaufman (ISL) and a real choice of ideas. Others of many with a population of over sixty million and AlbaniaWilliam Pozen (ISL), two of the tho opposition party maintained with a population of a million and a half will not permit thethat choice based on personalities small and medium sized coun-SHOE REPAIRSubstantial Discountsto Students“IT MUST BE DONE RIGHT"HOLLIDAY'S140? East 61st Street(at Dorchester Ave.)Phone NOrmal 7-8717Two blocks from Inti. House w'as a justified one. tries to be really free; a posi- in or(^er t0 have time to answertive scheme where such Qu^ttons about either Polish orfreedom can exist has o be held pilsudskl Sieves that thereup o urope e ore 1 /T. /, are two major obstacles to Euro-overcome its traditional differ-, , , . r. ..,. ,. , , f pean federation, even discountingences as well as the problem of *J.+ o“Safe Buy l Ised Cars” jjn:: Lake Park Motors, Inc.<► 5600 Lake Park Ave. liooo Your Lincoln - Mercury Dealer <►► Offers Some Real Buys in oGood Used Cars Ranging from $295 Up £<► very real divergent economic in¬terests in its different sections.At the same time federation isthe only answer which will insurefreedom for the small and medi¬um countries in this era of greatpowers; today, only Russia andUSA can be really called sov¬ereign.This is the opinion of Row'mundPilsudski, chairman of the freePolish movement NiD (Independ¬ence and Democracy) and chair¬man .of the Union of Polish Federialists. Pilsudski lectured before a the present political situation inwhich Russia dominates half ofEurope. The first, a practicalproblem, lies in the fact that theEuropean nations materially dif¬fer in size and economic power.“No one w'ants to exchange Rus¬sian domination for German dom¬ination,” Pilsudski said.The other obstacle consists ofpsychologica’ problems. No* onenation trusts another nation. Tiedin with this are cultural differ-last week. Though Pilsudski’s lec¬ture was concerned with federa¬tion, he spoke only one-half hour ences, often not appreciatedenough in the United States,„ „ ... . .. which are immeasurably greater WC1U oc^°.?n?.”e^“b.!Cyn£„U!YT'et,1yg than those laced by the original 1-2:3013 states when this countryunited.For Pilsudski the solution liesin forming regional blocks of sim¬ilar interests, which could dealwith each other on equal terms.In the West, a beginning hasbeen made with such projects asthe Schumann plan, Benelux, andthe Council of Scandinavia. Wednesday, March 18, 8-9:39 o.m.Humanities 3B, Mandel HallHumanities 3B (Art), Lexington 6Humanities 3B (Music), Lexington 5Humanities 3B (French), Co’ob 310Humanities 3B (German), Cobh 101Humanities 3B (Spanish), Cobb 10?,10-12 o.m.English B, Sections aa, Cobb 312; ab,Cobb 409; ac. Cobb 101; ad. Cobb102; ba. Cobb 103; bb. Cobb 316;be, Cobb 104; db, Cobb 402.10:30-12 o.m.Greek IB, Cobb 310,1 :30-2:3Q p.m.Natural Sciences 3B (Physical),Eckhart 133Natural Sciences 3B (Biological),Kent 103Natural Sciences IB, Mandel HallThursday, March 1 9, 8 ;30-1 0:30 a.m.French IB, Kent 103French H1B, Cobb 102Spanish IB, Cobb 110German IB. Mandel HallLatin IB, Classics 20Russian IB, Cobb 305French 2B, Cobb 10110:30-12 a.m.Social Sciences SB, Maodel Hall1-2:30 p.m.Mathematics B, Mandel HailMathematics 2B. Cobb U03-4:30 p.m.Social Sciences IB. Mandel HallFriday, March 20, 9-10 a.nr.History B, Mandel Hall10:30-12 a.m.Social Sciences 2B, Mandel Hallcapers call for Coke Physics B, Kent 106Students taking the Humanities3 parent course are advised bythe Humanities examiner, thatpart of their quarterly examina¬tion will be based upon a sheet ofsupplementary readings whichmay be picked up from instruc¬tors or from the College Humani¬ties office in Lexington Hall.THE GOLD COAST THEATRE(Clark & North)CHICAGO PREMIEREStarting Friday, March 20Charlton Heston in JULIUS CAESARProduced and Filmed in Chicago by David BradleyALSO: Norman MoLaren'sBEGONE DULL CARE— (Music by the Oscar Petersen Trio)and GRANDMA MOSES(The life and works of the artist in full color)Student Rate: $.50, upon presentation of ID card(Take subway "A" train to Clark & Division; transfer to northboundClark St. car to North Ave.)BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANT SYCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO, Inc.fcarapfctorarfhtNfe-marfr. ' © 1952, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY Household T.V. - Radio - Phonograph andTelevision Sales and Service1217 E. 55th ST.Free Pick-Up and DeliveryFA 4-1960 T.V. RentalsRLisLi)il I:7\1i:* 1 1 Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 13, 19531— Editor's columnHow many new bachelor's degrees?The meaning of the confusing maze of events surrounding the changes and proposedchanges in the bachelor’s degree may perhaps become clearer from an explanation of someof the background of the faculty’s current deliberations.One of the most confusing elements of the whole situation is that in each area wheredegree changes are being planned, there are different specific problems involved. For in¬stance, the humanities division is attempting to meet different problems than those con¬fronting the physical sciences "Peace, pure and simple"—Robert Maynard HutchinsIssued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publicationoffice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice, Midway 3-0800, Ext. —J *J “3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed 'J I1UUUI9, ACicpiiUIICS. LullOrialt. 1010 Business and Advertising Offices, Midwayfree of charge, and subscriptions by mail, $4 per year.general education'"We'll hove severol degrees"One striking fact emergesdivision. However, each of are convinced of the value of the said that there exists a .feelingthese changes takes on great- College program as it is now—i.e., among some humanities facultyer significance if all, or even the program of 14 comprehensives members that the College hassome, of the different plans are •—and who feel that abridgement taken the BA away from the hu-put into effect, because the ques- of the present program will im- manities division. This is perhapstion then arises, “What is to be- pair general education. understandable in terms of thecome of the idea of a unified To deal with particular prob- above figures showing distribu-lems that arise in .the relation- tion of College courses, plus theships of the various divisions to dropping enrollment in the hu-the College, articulation commit- manities division. However, it isfrom the series of recent actions: tees have been set up. Such prob- hardly the ideal basis for makingThere are some divisional faculty lems have already been settled for a decision involving basic educa-members at this University who the social sciences and biological tional theory, particularly whenwould like to scrap the College as sciences divisions by these faculty that decision will affect a part ofwe know it. Some of them say articulation committees. the University which has exertedthey’re for general education; a However, there has been a tend- such an influence on educationalfew admit they’re not, but plans eney on the part of the humanities thought in this country as has theare now being contemplated by division to consider their pro- College.at least two divisions (humanities posed four-year BA as solving Throughout the recent period,and physical sciences) which, if articulation problems analogous there has been an unwillingnessput into action, might in effect to those settled by the new BS on the part of many faculty mem-decimate the College. As Gros- degree, which will be jointly bers to let the students knowvenor Cooper, chairman of tl*e awarded by the College and the what is happening. Although stu-jnusic department, said, “I think Bi Sci division. This, I think, is dents know they have no voiceIt’s fairly clear that'we will end misleading. in the decision-making, the facul-«p with several varieties of bach- College gives six Hum courses ty must expect the students, be-elor’s degrees in the University. The College requires six courses cause of the very nature of theirThere’s the BA and the BS, and that fall within the realm of hu- training, to be actively concernedther^ probably will be at least two manities (the three-year humani- about a matter such as this whichmore." ties sequence, English, foreign affects an aspect of the UniversityThese plans, very generally, language, and OMP), whereas it which has been so important towould reinstitute a four-year is possible to get the BA with only them. Joan Brennard Caroline LeeEditor-in-chiefManaging Editor: Robert PetersExecutive Editor: Jan MajdePage Editors—News: Tom Thorner, Richard WardFeatures: Daniel Queen; Sports: Harry HirschBusiness managerProduction Manager: Robert March YCopy Editor: Georgie Pushhard Ward •Joan Brennordbachelor’s degree to be given by one course in biological sciencesthe division not iointlv with the (Hat Sci 2). This would seem to “ “ ~ ~ 77 7uit; uiviisicm, jjui jumuy wiui uie . „ _ _ No mention of age limit of contestantsCollege. They would require the place the Bi Sci division at a Was madehighschool graduate to take, at greater disadvantage than the ,Jehe„,Ad\f £? S$„n2.the most, eight courses in the Col- Humanities, in terms ot the back- first drink.” This organization is in aleee although it is nointed out bv ground of College graduates en- to know. The various schoolsjege, aiuiougn 11 is poimeu oul uy e .** ___• of studies of alcoholism now know thesethe proponents of the plan them- tering the division. (Some provi- two facts: (1) that every man, woman,selves that the average hi eh school sion for more foreign language in and child in the world today, is a po-eeives mat me aveiage lugn scnuoi .. tential alcoholic; and (2). that anyonegraduate is now required to take tne college couia prooaoiy De Who wants and takes a drink of liquortwelve comDs The obvious conclu- made, according to Edward Rosen- (even a glass of beer) at approximatelyiweive comps. 1 ne uuviuus luxiliu ’ . ° the same time every day, is an alcoholic.sion is that it is felt that at least heim, associate professor of hu- Alcoholism is growing very fast, espe-four College courses are not nec- manities in the College, since in- ciaiiy in women. Many of the veryjoui cujitge cuuises ctic mn Jiec . „ . finest periodicals in the country refuseessary. sufficient language background IS to sell advertising space to any formMany people like CollegeOf course, there are a great division.)many people on the faculty who Several faculty members haveone of the major problems for the °f beverage alcohol. These number moreJ than 2,000.Letters ... The long-argued Scriptural question.“Am I my brother’s keeper?” Is easilyanswered for many of us, "Yes, inso¬far as I never tempt him.” Your liquorimplicit in Mr. Filosa’s letter is that ®ds which some former MAROON staffsthe moral standards to be adopted are hiw® refused to accept, are undemo-Japa Mr. Fllosa’s. The letter unfortunately FT*.! Jr. ,1s „th® staff s own affalr }*omits any clarification on this point.” llectively it wants toI would caution Mr. Filosa from con- s^°Pn,s.' ,to urSe otherMr._r_nese student- writes 4 .The following is a letter received by eluding that simply because a segment R0,?1 esP®ciallyr. Joel Frias, who submitted it to of the student population does not jfS® Trej^fr®~'® most per‘m\rook fnr nuhlication. The cor- share his moral values, this segment nliiIOUS lnlns * can tninK or. However, granting for discussion’ssake—but not admitting—that It werein the spirit of the American schemeto ask the terrible question, to whatend should one answer? A witness hasa right to expect that his questionersstand in good faith. This means thatthe questioners must ask their ques¬tions as a means of getting answers.Now, what is the nature of a McCarthyor a Velde investigation? When one isbefore the committee his name is wit¬ness, his status is defendant, thecharge is nonexistent, and the verdictwas guilty before he arrived. When thegreat, grey finger points at him, whatshould he answer? “No?”If he answers, “No,” he is a liar.Obviously he Is a Communist or Sena¬tor McCarthy would not have calledhim. Can such reason be denied? Hemay answer “Yes” and slink away tostarve in restaurants that "don’t servehis kind.” His children will never for¬give him for what their classmates didto them. Few friends will recognizehim. Credit will be difficult—althoughnecessary without a job,Whether or not you are or ever werea Communist, the best answer seemsto be no answer. "Co-operating”, withbullies does not placate them. Of course,a refusal to answer Is proof of guilt.Besides, there is a law above theConstitution. It is God’s Own Law.Senator McCarthy knows that law. Hesaid so. Being a man above mankind,he may judge of men. (McCarthy isGod, and I’m Napoleon, but pay noattention to Andelson — that boy’scrazy.) Why is no answer the best an¬swer? Because you can’t clear yourself.You may Just as well protect yourselfand maintain your self respect all atone fell swoop.There is one alternative. If you can’tbeat ’em, join ’em. Perched on the sa¬cred shoulder of the Designator, youmight—in between asking for crackers—point your claw in various directionsand shout, “Polly sees a Commie. Awk.”If you don’t know any bonafide Com¬munists, the fellow next door who did¬n’t return your rake last summer isfair game for a starter.I take issue with you on only onepoint, Miss Brennard. I do think thenation ought to concern itself with thepossibility of Communists ‘’within.”Experience in other countries is causefor thought on this point. However, Isteadfastly maintain that the worst wayto deal with a swallowed worm is toshoot him. But that’s another argu¬ment . . .R. 6. Steven*the MAROON for publication. The cor- share his moral values, this segment , , . .respondent is a Japanese student. lacks moral values. It would seem that ®r® t J?1Ct»,J?b lnI read your letter to the editor of the Mr. Fllosa’s observations on campus °F“®r 1 ea™estly urge that youTokyo Evening News, I want pen pals, morality might have been put forward ^our next Tssue Mv'hJfst.1 t.« ei2f*too. On McCarthyismin less pungent metaphor, and with your next issue. My best wishes to you.more awareness of differing moral Mrs. P. CoulterGerald Mogovero On investigationsSuggests SG projectWe all Japanese wish war would en- .tlrely disappear from the world. Once coaesI heard such a story about Napoleon,that is, once he said “There is not the j should likp to take thic nrmnrtaait.S* rl?S; Suggests SG project “tothe world. irthinknithae w^lmpor? sp?£flc ^project ‘whlch^uden?8 Gov- tC?n Sadditi^ I^wlsh^o ^d^^^rlti'tant thing for the people to understand ernment could undertake with small cig£ t th T “ “1“®each other, and to be in correspondence trouble and which would be of value to £15£L t*n‘cb M88,®?;with another nation Is of much help to the university community. March “J»ue itaned bv 13 ff n,™understand each other and it will lead Besides the people actually ln resi-. bers Not only fs It mo allvthe world to peace. dence at the University, the University ?fre®’ un-American to tZ SenatorI d$ not know what articles are writ- community includes alumni, ex-stu- McCarthy seriouslv but It is Imn^uwIten in the series of articles on Japan dents, employees of the University, and “om a pr^ti^l standnolnt imposslbleby E:nle Hill, but I can assure you that those who share interests with UC, but Gn ahp m j fd Siththe us TonI tell you correctly about Japanese cus- have never been In residence. Many of stitution as a base it is imnronrr for atoms, manners, and opinions, and I these people lose out on opportunities legislator to inquire into one?sPDohtlrswish to hear the American lives and because there is no way for their address past present Q0r future A sneoifircustoms, etc., above all about American to be obtained by friends traveling charge of violation of a statute ‘wouldStudents, student lives and university, through, prospective employers, and be entirely different 51811116 wouldI live in Tokyo and I am a student others who would have some reason forIn the third year ln the department of wanting to locate them.Student government could run a file The MAROON staff Is to be congratu¬lated on the two editorials which ap¬peared in the March 6 issue. They putsquarely one of the chief dilemmas ofthe modern American liberal: shouldhe hold tight and ride out the storm,or should he stand and fight totali¬tarian tendencies on their own^round?It seems that both the group edi¬torial and Miss Brennard’s editorial areconcerned primarily with preservation of our constitutional guarantees. Twomajor points of difference exist, how¬ever: one is the question whether theseguarantees are deeply rooted enough tooutlive the onslaught of thought-poiketactics; the other is the q u e s 11 0 0whether McCarthyism thrives on or x,weakened by bitter resistance to it.These disagreements are over extreme¬ly complex historical, legal and politicalissues, which ought to be InvestigatedIn a more dispassionate setting thanthe editorial page or the Letters col¬umn. The University could make nogTeater contribution to the present situ¬ation than to sponsor a series of semi¬nars designed to deal directly with thenature and seriousness of the presentthreat to our constitutional guarantees.But even though these particular dis¬agreements cannot be settled here, Ifeel a couple of things ought to besaid about them from the context ofthe Judeo-Christian faith. In the firstplace, any assumption that “good” willtriumph Just because it Is “good" Is outof bounds. Liberalism to the contrarynotwithstanding, the basic Judeo-Christian conviction is that not our“good” but God's goodness triumphs,and the two may not be synonymous.It is a temptation to assume withoutstrong historical and political evidencethat our constitutional guarantees willremain intact because they are ln somesense “good” ln themselves, and the"good” is ultimately stronger than evil.Such a faith has no basis in the re¬ligion of either the prophets or theearly Christian church. Neither wouldhave survived its Immediate socio¬economic setting had its faith been inthe ultimate triumph of the “good” atits time.Second, the Judeo-Christian under¬standing of struggle and suffering isthat it is neither to be avoided at thecost of one’s principles nor pursued asevidence of one’s principles. That is, aJeremiah might seek strenuously togain Influence over the king's policies,or a Jesus ln Gethsemane to avert thesuffering of the cross, but when it be¬came evident that such would involvea defection from their religious voca¬tion, the tragedy had to be borne Ifthe facts of history seem to indicateit, a struggle to the death to preserveour constitutional liberties may be inorder, but the danger Is always greatthat the struggle itself will become all-important and the perspective of God'sultimate triumph even through ourdisaster be lost. This would be tragedyIndeed. A security based ln politicaland social structures Is shaky at bestand in times like ours may engendereither blind compliance or bitter hatred.The arguments of the two editorials, Ifnot secured firmly ln a super-historicalloyalty, might well lead either to easycompliance or to unreasoning bitter¬ness.Not all of us take seriously theJudaic and Christian faiths. For some,therefore, this letter will have a ple-in-the-sky ring to It. But for others Ihope it will help give some religiousdimensions to the present unhappydilemma.Ted Mill*applied chemistry at the YokahamaUniversity, I am studying about glass for the university community. This fileIn rt»y professor's laboratory. would be similar to the one at the Ad-My hobbies are stamp collecting and ministration building information deskmust?, sports, above all mountain for students. Only those who are mem-ellmtJng, skiing, and skating are the bers of the University community wouldmost skillful sports. About music I like have reason to register. A nominal fee,*11 sorts of music which have the gen- such as twenty-five cents should betie and peaceful tune, for instance, charged. Since each name and addressSchubert and Chopin, etc., and Amer- would take a 3x5 card, Student Govern-Ican swing like “White Christmas,” too. ment would make a small profit fromIf you are acquainted with school the file. The file could probably behoys or girls, will you Introduce to me kept at the Information desk in the adthem. I want to correspond with them, building, or else in the Reynolds club,too.t The one problem would be gettingHomo Motohiko publicity so that there would be a large693 3-Chome Moaome Ota number of registrants and so that thoseT k J pan looking for people would use the file. ALVIN JEWELRYWatch Repairs1372 East 55th St.BUtterfield 8-8373Sin must be definedMr. Filosa, in his interesting rhetoric,failed to propose any solution to thepractical problems suggested by hisletter. Over a period of time, and with the aidof the MAROON and use of bulletinboards, this could be accomplished.David ChaleAgainst liquor ads —I find myself confused by the policyIf "sin” is to be rooted out of the of the MAROON editorial staff. You‘university, a working definition of the condemn a good sporting game of has-term, sin, must be agreed upon. If Netball as wholly pernicious and at the“moral values ’ are to be established, game time Invite your readers throughthere must be a choice of values to be your liquor ads, to become alcoholics,adopted. What definition of sin, and Like the purpose of all saloons—(awhat moral values does Mr. Filosa pro- jew high-class magazines on rackspose a non-denominatlonal university change nothing)—the purpose of liquoradopt? Who in the university commu- ads js to make drinkers out of non-nity shall choose these values, and drinkers, and severe alcoholics out of so-how shall the choice be made? Are we cajie<i moderate ones. Both are for theto be subject to the personal convic- purpose alone of selling as much liquortions of Chancellor Kimpton and Mr. as jx^ibie for profit.Grip, or shall this admittedly serious At the university of Chicago at thematter be decided by student referen- present time, about 25 per cent of thedum? students are under age. Yet theNeither solution would appear satis- MAROON invites them to drink liquor.tactc$\ but the fact that someone In your last Issue, a free bottle ofwould have to do the choosing cannot Scotch is offered in exchange for anbe denied. The assumption seemingly ad to be placed ln the Cap and Gown./« A «|« «♦« «*« A •*« •*« «*« «*« «*• •*« A •** «*« «*• ♦♦♦ ♦** «$♦ *** «J« «$• ******•j* Loom French with Experienced Native Teacher — Direct Method *j*X Amlree Ridoux 1X Formerly with the Voice ot America and Berlitz School Of Languages £y. Ml 4-0917 5225 RlackMone X Spring’sComingget flowers atNick Bova5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226attention!• special discounts• free deliveryanywhere March 16—Charlie Chaplin Film Festival—American— Admission 45c — Four shorts, "The Rink," "TheVagabond", "The Adventurer", and "Easy Street".Coming Attractions . . .March 23—The Moon and Sixpence—American—Ad¬mission 45c — Starring George Sanders, HerbertMarshall, Doris Dudley. W. Somerset Maugham'sfamous novel burst upon the screen as a picture ofrich maturity. From London's fashionable WestEnd to a shabby Parisian garret, the raucous water¬front of Marseilles and finally to a coral isle in theSouth Seas, we see an artist with a harried soul seek¬ing escape and room for expression.March 30—The Passion According to St. Matthew—Admission 55c—In commemoration of Holy Week,International House presents this great religiouspicture. Produced in Vienna, this picture was di¬rected by Robert J. Flaherty, world famous for hisdocumentary#films. The Vienna Philharmonic Or¬chestra and the Vienna Choir Boys are featured inBach's Oratorio. Shown are the religious paintingsof such artists as Raphael, Titian, Murillo and Leon¬ardo de Vinci.International HouseAuditorium VMarch 13, 1953 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Mead(from page 11sis for a new religion: it createsmoral indignation*“There is another cause ofsecularization,” stated Dr. Mead.“Religion gets itself cluttered upwith too many irrelevant detailswhich aren’t compatible with theculture of the present members. For example, the groups thatcame here from Europe taught their children both the basic beliefs of their religions and unim¬portant cultural details. The sec¬ond generation has tested thesmall details and has given up thewhole system ... A religion en¬cumbered with another culturewill crack when transplanted.”Must integrate all types“Can a religion hold within itsgrasp both the individual isolatedmystic and the person who findsfulfillment in his fellow men, theMrs. Lowengard, the gem of the kitchen,has the continental touch with breast ofroast duck, grilled lamb chops, and smokedtongue. ' Her recipes for mocha creamtortes and cheese cake make them specialdesserts.University cognoscenti make Lowengard'sdining room their week-night rendez-vous.Dinners served from 5:30 to 7:30 PM,except Mondoys.©wengard’s'"'cLcwydC'on mxMmZ kin5231 South kimbark Ave.116$ East 55th Street 24-Hour Service PLoza 20246University GarageTHORNTON ROGERSExpert Service on All Cars• COMPLETE WINTER TUNE-UP• WASHING-GREASING• BRAKE SERVICE• ROAD SERVICENSA Student Discount on Parts, Gas and Oil one who never prays in publicand the one who only prays inpublic? Can it develop good phil¬osophers and hell-fire preachers?They don’t usually go too welltogether . . . Some religions insome periods in history have beenable to do this. Then you reallycan have a religion and a way oflife that completely coincide.However, we have had throughhistory continually the failure ofthe great religions to be inclusive:they contain outmoded elementswhich allow secularization tocome in.“It is possible,” Dr. Mead con¬cluded, “that this circle is in¬evitable, that from this seculariza¬tion some new revival of the samekind of religion will take place”and the cycle will continue in¬definitely. “Or it is possible thatsomething different has happenedthat will make us able to createa religion Without cultural pheno¬mena, a religion of abstract philo¬sophical, universal beliefs.”Communism like a religionDuring the course of her lec¬ture and during the questioningperiod that followed, Dr. Meadreferred to Communism in thefollowing way: “It’s possible tolook at Communism in SovietRussia as pretty much a religion.It lacks some of the attributes ofreligion: it doesn’t inculcate hu¬mility, for instance. But historyis treated like God. You can sub¬stitute God for history in Com¬munist writings without noticing evettfo ck fauefiFriday, March 13William Vaughn Moody Lecture. Kath¬ryn A. Porter. American story writerand critic, "Readings from HerWorks." Mandel Hall, 8 p.m.Saturday, March 14Varsity Fencing Meet: Chicago vs.Wayne University and Monmouth Col¬lege. Bartlett Gym, 1 p.m.Varsity Track Meet: Chicago and theMidwest Colleges. Field House, 6:30p.m.Sunday, March 15Convocation Prayer Service and Sermon:The Rev. John B. Thompson, Deanof the Chapel. Rockefeller Chapel,11 a.m.Radio Broadcast: University.of ChicagoRound Table, WMAQ and NBC. 12:30-1 p.m.Channing Club: Supper, 6 p.m., pro¬gram 7:15 p.m. Group Discussion withInterns in Community Service. FirstUnitarian Church, 1174 E. 57th.Viennese Waltzing: International House,8 p.m.Monday, March 16Exhibition (Rennaissance Society):“Current Ways with Color Prints,"with examples from the study collec¬tion of the Department of Art. "TheMalefactors,” a group of paintings byRichard Guy Walton. Goodspeed 108,Monday-Friday. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship;Luncheon Meeting, speaker Miss Vel-any bumps in the syntax ... Itis possible that Stalin and Leninwill become prophets at whosetombs miracle happen ...”Dr. Mead is the a^ociate cur¬ator of ethnology in the AmericanMuseum of Natural History inNew York. She is the author often books, among which are“Coming of Age in Samoa” and“Male and Female.”a no tLer ¥/Ae ty&lium PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETaimiimiiiiimmimimiiiiiiifi m« Pickett, "The Life of a Mission¬ary.” Ida Noyes Hall Sun Parlor, 3rdfloor, 12:30-1:20 p.m.Motion Picture: Charlie Chaplin FilmFestival, “The Rink.” “The Vaga¬bond," “The Adventurer,” and "EasyStreet.” Int. House, 8 p.m.Tuesday, March 17Worship Service (Federated TheologicalSchool); Joseph Bond Chapel, 11:30a.m.Religious Service (Christian ScienceOrganization): Thorndike HiltonChapel, 7 p.m.Wednesday, March 18Mathematics Club: "The Normal Formof Analytic Differential EquationsNear an Equilibrium Solution," Pro¬fessor Carl Ludwig Siegel, Universityof Gottingen. Eokh&rt 206, 4:30 p.m.Country Dancers: English and Americancountry dancing. Ida Noyes CloisterClub, 7:30 p.m., bring tennis shoes.Science Fiction Club Meeting: Talk byEdward Wood. “The Publishers—TheirInfluence on the Science FictionField.” Ida Noyes East Lounge, 7:30p.m.Baha’i Fellowship: Informal lecture byMiss Evelyn Larson on “World Growthof a World Faith.” Ida Noyes NorthRoom, 7:30 p.m.Thursday, March 19Statistics Seminar: “Estimation of theInterval Mortality Rate for ActuarialCalculations,” Dr. Joseph Berkson,Division of Biometry and Medical Sta¬tistics, Mayo Clinic, Eckhart 203,4 p.m.Lecture (The Art Institute and theCommittee on Social Thought): "TheEgotist: Three Dramatic Treatments.III. Ibsen's The Masterbuilder. DavidGrene, Associate Professor of ClassicalCulture, Committee on SocialThought. (Final in a series of threelectures.) Soc. Sci. 122, 8:30 p.m.Friday, March 20The Two-hundred Fifty-fifth Convoca¬tion: Chancellor Lawrence A. Klmp-ton, presiding. The address: "Scholar¬ship for Pleasure,” Jakob A. O. Lar¬sen, Professor of Ancient History.Rockefeller Chapel, 3 p.m.Varsity Track Meet: Chicago vs. WrightJunior College and University of Illi¬nois (Navy Pier). Field House, 4 p.m.Saturday, March 21Dance Symposium (Women's Divisionof Physical Education): ContemporaryDance by Delta Bannister and Mod¬ern Ballet by Walter Camryn. IdaNoyes Hall. 1-4:30 p.m.Saturday, March 21through Sunday, March29: Spring Recess.Friday, April 3Lester Horton Dancers, sponsored bySRP. Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m.University Theater: Shaw’s "Arms andthe Man.” 8:30 p.m. To be presentedSaturday, April 4, and Sunday, April 5.«r ► THERE MUST BE A REASON WHYCamel is America’s most popularcigarette —leading all other brandsby billions! Camels have the twothings smokers want most—rich, fullflavor and cool, cool mildness...pack after pack! Try Camels for 30days and see how mild, how Davorful,how thoroughly enjoyable they areas your steady smoke!K. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N. 0.More People Smoke iqareflePage 6 >• > v'.THE CHICAGO MAROON March 13, 1953DocFilm continues extensive activities Festival in FrankfurtThe Documentary Film Group, according to the Museum of Modern Art, is America’soldest film society. However, as with most groups that are formed by enthusiasts, nobodybothered to record the founding and chronicle the early activities. The film group, as judgedby program notes and old publicity is about 15 years old.Files of old publicity pro¬vide the richest sources fordata on the group’s activity.One trend that stands out is thegroadenir g of scope and interest.Until the winter of 1947 the adver¬tising bore the legend, “for therealist study of our era via non-tiction films.” Typical of pro¬gramming at that time were docu¬mentary films such as SpanishJCarth, Man of Aran, Tsar tojbenin, The Wave, and Fight forLife, and experimental a v a n tgarde films, including the workof Maya Deren and the abstrac¬tions of John Whitney. At presentthe slogan on the publicity putsthe purpose more modestly andmore generally as “for the inten¬sive study of the motion picture.”Programs now are built around acentral unifying conception. Typi¬cal in recent years are (spring’48) The Motion Picture: A De¬veloping Art; (fall ’49) The YearsBetween: An Era of Depression;(winter ’50) Five Great Directors;(winter ’51) The American Film;(summer ’51) Comedies’ GreatestEra; (autumn ’52) The GermanCinema, and (winter ’53) TheSoviet Cinema.Parallel with its effort to bringsignificant films to the universitycommunity, the group has pro¬duced three films: Opus 1. a docu¬mentary on University Theatre;Housing America’s Students, astudy of the university housingproblem; Being and Becoming, asatire on university life producedby Alan Rosenblatt in cooperationwith Doc Film. Just completedand yet to be premiered is TheBlack and Blues, an animated ab¬straction in the manner of Nor¬man McLaren; and now beingcompleted is an untitled documen¬tary sponsored by the ChicagoLand Clearance Commission.These recent films are under thedirection of the groups’ chairman,J. M. Kossack. Documentary Film Group shooting crew engaged in additional filmingfor a synchronized sound documentary on Chicago's housing problems,sponsored by the Chicago Land Clearance Commission.formal discussion sessions, and creased and the demands of theIndicative of the group’s keyposition in the film society move¬ment is the fact that it acts as aclearing house of information andadvice for film societies in theUnited States and Canada, andwas chosen to undertake the NSAsurvey of collegiate film societies.This important study was pre¬pared by Ernest Callenbach.Besides showing and producingfilms, and acting as an informa¬tion center, the group holds in- has brought to the campus impor¬tant figures of modern film mak¬ing and criticism. With the co¬operation of the Renaissance So¬ciety, Maya Deren, a leader inthe American avant garde move¬ment, and Dr. Roger Manvell,head of the British Film Insti-t u t e , presented illustrated lec¬tures in Mandel Hall. Vittorio De-Sica, director of Shoe Shine andBicycle Thief, gave a lecture-dis¬cussion, through the courtesy ofthe Italian Consulate.All these functions establish theidea that the group continues toview its function as one of bring¬ing the university community toregard the film as an importantart form and social document. Ithas become increasingly difficultfor the group to meet these aimsas the active membership has de¬ university community for “sim¬ple entertainment” has increased.As evidence of this trend, F. G.Ternenyi, now working on a studyof the film, notes that immediate¬ly after the war the group had itsmost financially successful yearsshowing almost exclusively docu¬mentaries and experimental films.Nowadays, attendance at docu¬mentaries is so poor that thegroup has had to arrange for twofree showings a quarter in orderto bring these important films toa large audience. He attributesthis change in part to a growingdissillusionment with the effec¬tiveness of political and socialactivity.Ralph Wiggen, business man¬ager, and Fred Smith, technicalchairman, have indicates that un-Sce "DocFilm," page 7 by Don LevineUC exchange student in FrankfurtFebruary figured here as a festive month. The German stu¬dents’ extra-curricular thoughts bounced back and fdrth be¬tween the annual Fasching (carnival or Mardi Gras)celebration and the newly completed student house. Whilethe Fasching festival has a long tradition among GermanCatholics, especially along the Rhein River and in Bavaria,Frankfurt lies in what is es¬sentially Protestant territory,and did not hop onto the car¬nival wagon until after WorldWar I. Then the business worldproceeded to make a commercialsplash, reminiscent of Christmas,out of the festival.The few days before Ash Wed¬nesday were well taken care of,with large New Year’s Eve-typemasquerade balls, elaborate MardiGras parades in several cities, andgeneral determination to jumpthe bounds of sensual moderation.Every other organization in thecity, including a number of Uni¬versity departments, threw to¬gether some sort of jolly eveningfor its m^nbers. Among the mostfrequent costumes: Americancowboy and American Indian.Among the more frequent dilem¬mas: final exams for many stu¬dents fell during the week offrolic.Student housing dedicatedThe following week-end foundlarge, colorful flags fluttering out¬side the main University building.The Frankfurt Studentenhaus, aproduct of long thought, hard en¬deavor, and many Deutsch marks,was ready at last. Official inaug¬urate ceremonies in the elegantmodern structure included a per¬formance of a chorus fromHaydn’s “The Seasons” with astudent orchestra and student-di¬ rected choir; addresses by severalnotable, among them GermanFederal President Theodor Ileussand American High Commission¬er Conant; and a production of alittle - known festival play byGoethe. Frankfurt’s favorite son,called “Epimenides’ Awakening."Mr. Conant was enthusiastical¬ly received, in part because liebrought greetings to the ascom-blage from the John McCloys.The former High Commissionerhad^iven the initial boost to theconstruction of the house with agrant of a half million marks,after the city and Hessian stategovernments had assured himthey would chip in substantiallyto carry* it through. (This theydid to the tune of a million marksapiece.)Student role activeStudents played an active rolethroughout the construction ofthe house. The Student Govern¬ment was represented on theBuilding Committee; studentscontributed financially throughthe allocation of part of their stu¬dent welfare and activities fee atthe beginning of each semester;and several students did volun¬teer work to help landscape andclear rubble on the grounds lastsummer. Further, an internation¬al work-camp had worked on thefoundations during the summerof 1951.iyXyWIyFOR AN EXCITING SUNDAY TREATENJOY BRUNCHAT MORTOIMSA new breakfast-lunch service everySunday from Neon to Three P. M.Meat end "brunch" with your friends In« warm, congenial atmosphere. Choosefrom many delightful Brunch specialtiesdesigned to satisfy the most dis¬criminating. Served complete...S125Ei m n in•2a. Q L*Q Hi:R X O Ki S from5487 Lake Park Ave. PLasa 2-9088Opm te 2 A. M.. closed TuesdayFred FarkMg j( WAREHOUSE |1 REMOVAL SALE || WE’VE SCOOPED THE BOOK MARKET AGAIN — this time with a tremendous special purchaseH from New York’s largest jobber, who’s moving his warehouse for the first time in 13 years! ThousandsH of fine volumes at a fraction of their original published prices — and there’s a SPECIAL OFFERH — THE MORE YOU BUY THE MORE YOU SAVE. Hundreds of titles to choose from — wonderfulH books on subjects ranging from art to zoology . . . handsome gift editions ... color print portfolios —S all brand-new, all terrific values. Come in today — our quantities are limited! §§CLARK & CLARK1 1204 E. 55 th Street BOOKSELLERS10 A.M. - 9 P.M. Daily HYde Park 3-0321March 13, 1953 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Lohman says Illinois law has harmful effects on state parole useby Clive Gray and Perry GoldbergJoseph D. Lohman stated in a recent Interview with the MAROON that Illinois lags behind the rest of the nation as regards the relative number ofpersons to whom it gives conditional releases (paroles) from its prisons. He said that approximately 40 per cent of Illinois’ released convicts are paroled,whereas in other states this figures runs as high as 85 per cent.Lohman attributed Illinois’ retarded standing in the parole field to a 1943 amendment to the state’s Indeterminate Sentence Law.Prior to the amendment, persons convicted in Illinois courts were not sentenced by the judges. Instead, they were committed to prison to serve a termwithin the statutory limits for the crime of which they were convicted; it was left to the parole board to determine the length of this term.Judges S2t limitsThe 1943 amendment, how- ciety Hence; accor(iing t0 Loh.ever, required the judges to man, a spread of less than threefix both the minimum and ycars between the minimum andlimits. ~ , maximum terms of sentence im-maximum limits ot the sentence posed by a Judgc has ,he elfectwithin the statutory limits, thus rendering the parole board power¬taking the decision as to how long less to deal with a large numbera person should serve out of the of convicts. These convicts appearhands of the parole board. on the parole docket after servingLohman said the disadvantages their minimum terms of sentence, Joseph Lohmen, lecturer in theUC sociology Department, is for¬mer chairman of the Illinois StatePardon and Parole Board. He wasappointed by former Governor AdlaiStevenson and was relieved fromhis position when Governor Strat¬ton took office. the parole board. He stated that, cent of these men had a subse-under the amended interminate quent conviction for a felony orsentence law, 77 per cent of 1,520 misdemeanor.: * 'commitments to the penitentiary Give parole recordoccuring in Cook County from On the other hand, an addition-Jan. 1, 1949, to Sept. 30, 1950, had al 106 had been subjected to thea spread*ef less than three years supervision of the parole boardbetween the minimum and max¬imum terms of their sentences. during the same period, and werechargeIn conclusion, Lohman statedthat the parole board is betterqualified to determine the lengthof this amendment come to light but when the parole board hears ing to Lohman; whereas, if the Furthermore, he said, in the year eventually released on parole. Ofin actual practice, where a judge that they have less than three parole board possessed jurisdic- July 1940-July 1941, while the pre- these, only 19 men, or 17.9 perwho has a definite opinion as to more years to serve, it often has tion over him he mi„ht have t0 vious law was in effect, 75.9 per cent had a subsequent convictionhow long a given individual no choice but to deny their peti- thlKPP„inB cent of a11 releases from Illinois while on paro!e or following dis-should serve in prison passes a tion and retain them in prison un- serve up to 20 years, thus ceasing penitentiaries had been carried . f ,sentence with a very short spread til the expiration of their full sen- to be a threat to society. through under parole supervision, ^ pbetween its minimum and maxi- tence, hoping to afford society a Lohman said that giving “clev- while in the year July 1950-Julymum terms. This moans that the certain amount of security in the er” criminals unproporticmately 1951, 59.2 per cent of the menparole board, which cannot pa- interim. short sentences in this manner were released in this manner,role a convict until his minimum Boaid hampered it imnncsihlA for thp na- The effect of the present check Df time an individual offenderterm of sentence has expired, and Lohman also pointed out that p p on the parole system. Lohman as- . ,, than the courts sincehas no jurisdiction over him after under the amended law, judges r°le board to treat these persons serted, is to jeopardize public se- . ’. .the maximum term has expired, are empowered to fix a very short differently from first offenders curity. He said that if convicts " should be able to base its de-at which time he is released un- maximum sentence. Therefore the and young delinquents, although who at present are released after cision on the very important fac-parole board is not free to decide considerable more time is essen- their sentences have expired could cor of the rehabilitative progresswhether the public security miti- tial to a successful rehabilitation be submitted to parole supervi- of the offender while Jn prison,gates against the early release of program in the case of the profes- sion over a period of at least three Furthermore, he said, the parole^ a given offender who is a con- sionals. In addition, Lohman said, years, the relative number of boardshouldtakeintoconsidera-s iderthreey ears to" be the "amount *irmed criminal. He said that down-state courts fix, on the aver- these men who commit stibse- tion psychiatric, psychological,of time required for the' parole sophisticated criminals from Cook age, lengthier sentences than do quent-crimes and become repeat- and sociological circumstances inboard to rehabilitate a convict in County were prone to exploit the Cook County courts for the same ed offenders would be significant- the case history of the individual,law by “bargaining” with the offenses. This practice, which it is ly decreased. Lohman cited a re- and can thus formulate as objec-court for a lesser sentence in ex- now virtually impossible for the cent follow-up study comparing tive and accurate a decision aschange for a “guilty” plea. Thus a parole board to correct, breeds the subsequent conviction records possible,professional burglar, who, accord- considerable resentment and ill of paroled and unconditionally dis- Offers suggestionsing to the law, can receive a sen- feeling among prisoners by giv- charged felons. A total of 794 men Lohman also gave the MA-tence of anywhere from one year ing rise to a sgnse of inequality committed to the penitentiary ROON a list of suggestions forto life, may be sentenced for one and injustice. from Cook County under the pres- improving the Illinois state pa-to three years. With time off for Hits sentencing ent sentence law had left prison role system. He emphasized thatgood behavior, he will serve his Such sentencing practices, said upon expiration of their sentence the board should be comprised ofterm in 2V2 years, and be back on Lohman, have served in large by 1948. By 1951, a check with the individuals with technical knowl-the job in no time at all, accord- measure to check the operation of FBI disclosed that 248, or 31.2 per edge about crime, law enforce¬ment, and parole. Good characterconditionally, has only a veryshort time in which to work withthe individual in such cases.Moreover, parole experts conthe outside world before he canbe released without danger to so-Camp Counselors WantedLearn while you earnSmall, progressive SouthwesternMichigan boys’ camp has openings forwaterfront, riding, cabin counselors.Write or phone:Steve Baumann. 1157 E. 54th St.PLaza 2-0039Who of American cars .. •The striking new Bel Air 4-DoorSedan, one of 16 beautifulmodels in 3 great new series.new ChevroletOnly tho world’s largest producer could build a car likothis at such low cost to you!This is an entirely new kind of car—a car so luxurious, sorichly finished in every detail that it stands out, above andbeyond all others in the low-price field.In the new Bel Air Series you will find four wonderfulmodels—the 2-door and 4-door sedans, the sport coupe, theconvertible. Every one of these new 1953 Chevrolets bringsyou new high-compression power, new and greater performanceplus amazing new gasoline economy!Here is a wonderful choice. Wouldn’t you like to stop inend see the great new Chevrolet for ’53 today?(Continuation of standard equipment and trim illustratedis dependent on availability of material.) CHEVROLETMORE PEOPLE BUY CHEVROLETSTHAN ANY OTHER CAR!SEE YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER FOR ALL YOUR AUTOMOTIVE NEEDS!Conveniently listed under !'Automobiles’! h your lotai classified telephone direttery and humanitarian instincts arenot sufficient qualifications formen who are facec^ with as diffi¬cult a task as that of determiningthe fitness of convicted criminalsfor re-entry into free society, heasserted. Definite technical com¬petence is indispensible.Among the proposals was a sug¬gestion that the parole board beput on a full-time basis, and thatits members hold staggered termsof at least six years to establishcontinuity and remove the boardfrom political pressures. Anotherimportant improvements, he said,would result from eliminating thepresent ambiguity between thegranting of parole and the admin--stration of parolees. It wouldmake parole more effective, heconcluded, if the board memberscould keep in closer contact withthe actual situation of the paroledindividual than is now the case.Docfilm .. .(from page 6)less the group secures new mem¬bers and increased attendance a'drastic curtailment of activitieswill be necessary.Meanwhile plans for the springquarter are under way. WilliamSeltzer, publicity director, has an¬nounced the tentative programfor the coming quarter to be aseries entitled, Experiment in theFilm: A Survey of the AvantGarde Cinema and Its Influence.A number of significant featurepresentations are planned andtwo free documentary programs,The Forgotten Village andRubens, have been scheduled.TheDisc1375 E. 57th St.Record of the WeekDINU LI PATTIPianist-BACH-MOZARTML 4633MOM1KI, hI'HjI Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 13, 1953Horton group to do modern danceThe Lester Horton Dancers, a modern dance repertory group from Los Angeles, will appear Friday, April3, at 8:30 p.m. in Mandel Hall under the sponsorship of the Student Representative Party.The Horton group, in existence for over a decade, considers itself a part of the modern dance movementrebelling against the relative rigidity of ballet. It would not replace technique with chaos but would de¬velop a modern technique ner’s Gesamtkunstwerk, Horton their identities to share a chorus;to allow dancers to create has choreographed interpreta- The Beloved—a duet between lov-movements more flexibly. tions of the poetry of Garcia erg. three Dedication8_to Hiro-Formerly an anthropologist, Lorca and of the pamtmg of . aul shjma (q an(J (o some olHorton ijop iri hm xvittr.rhorpopranhv nf a knowledge nf The program for this concert the modern dance pioneers; and admirers. The Student Represent-other cultures M a n v of his includes Seven Scenes with Balia- The Face of Violence—a dance ative Party is sponsoring it withdances are based upon the cere- Wilt—balllbilli being the between- interpretation of Oscar Wilde s the desire to share an evemng ofmnnipt; and dannp« nf the-scenes common choruses Salome. According to Marian common enjoyment with theGarde L*nema and Its Influence’’’ various primitive societies. As a wherein all the characters drop Orans, vice-chairman of SRP, others who are interested.”begins Friday, April 10, and con- result of this interest in folktinues for the next four Fridays, morees he has choreographed“Time in the Sun,” MarieSeton’s version of S. M. Eisen-stein’s unfinished classic, “QueViva Mexico," one of the mostimportant films in the Docu¬mentary Film Group’s springseries.The series, “Experiment in theFilm: a Survey of the Avant “there are cultural as well as po¬litical bonds which unite studentson this campus. Some of us havealready seen the Horton Group inaction and have become ferventOther significant films in theseries are Rene Clair’s “Entr’¬acte,” Dali’s “Le Chien Ande-lou,” “Fall of the House ofUsher,” “Object Lesson,” “Mr.Motorboat’s Last Stand,’ing the Lambeth Walk,”“Uberfall,” “Song of Ceylon,”“Romance Sentimentale,” “TheLate Mathew Pascal,” and “BalletMecanique.” such folk inspired dances as TheHoly Rollers and Barbara Allen.Evidencing an awareness of so¬cial conditions, he, in response to UT to produce 'Arms and the Man'Rene Clement's best filmnow at World Playhouse Marvin B. PeisnerAfter the spring holidays, University Theatre will continue its policy of interesting andthe persecution of Mexican vjtaj theater with the production of Shaw’s Arms and the Man, beginning the weekend of"Swing- youths in Los Angeles, protested April 3 4 and 5 Thig pro(juction is scheduled to run for a second weekend, and it may alsor m’piece cahed YThe Par/an? after run for third and fourth weekends if sales so encourage. , . -the events of World War II pre In directing Arms and the Man, I have tried to understand Shaw’s points of view on threesen ted a dance caHed Warsaw main levels according to his intent as one can gather from reading the preface, under-Ghetto. In the tradition of Wag- standing the play, and devel- teer be bad not qUjte succeeded not naturalism. Here again, weoping the production, these in droppinjr aii the lowest influ- have tried to operate within thethree levels are the formal, ences Qf farce. When he does terms Shaw has demanded bythe economical, and the motiva- SCore, however, and he scores building solid characters withintional. On the formal level, Shaw usually in Arms and the Man, he the situations portrayed. We haveis by admission and intent parody- scores effectively, uproariously, also remembered that wp caning the then current and still an{j magnificently. We have tried utilize the freedom of voice, move-popular musical comedies of Gil- t0 relate them tw the staging in' ment, and other general stagingForbidden Games (Jeux Interdits), now playing at the bert and Sullivan. They in turn terms of sight, sound, and move- that will integrate with and pointWorld Playhouse, Michigan and Van Buren, is the most re- were parodying Wagner. In all ment as much as possible. This in- up the whole effects, the corn-markable and moving film to come from France since the these reversals the rebel artist eludes not only acting and direct- plete point of view of Shaw.days of Carnival in Flanders and Zero lor Conduct. This film "as as much'"debted to his cred- ing but also scenery, costumes, Members of the cast for Annsmarks the emergence of Rene Clement as one of the world's ‘"Ihaw °himLlf°radmits lighKtin,E\'”akeuP’an,dHm“sic- Ev: "uV.M“"rfre: ?ai"V: An"lrao^imrr nnc in c;, ^ „ ... f ,, 0 .. practice, bnaw mmseii admits erybody has contributed ideas and Petry, Catherine—Ann Schwert-hDadm dnectois. *n his previous fllms> Battle of the Kails, learning from these sources as insights from the first readings ley and Honore Singer, Louka—MaLna^riPnfent HhfnLpH lent death-converge on the sav- well as desiring .to inject the Up to the present. Judy Wezelman, Bluntschli -Malapaga, Clement displayed f « of thp ad„lt -<„amos» needle of irony. Indeed-, according ,oxta, . Marvui Peisner, Russian Officera facile talent and an ability age folly of me adut games to Shaw, both he and Gilbert and °n, the motivational level ^ - Eugene Troibnick, Nicola -to make the mundane seem 1m- Clement s direction of the child Sullivan were using and parody- cliardcb-r a°d situation, Shavv Robert YVilde, Petkoff Arthurportant. In Forbidden Games he actors, Brigitte Fossey and ing the comic and the romantic P°ses his most challenging de- Qeffen, and Sergius Tom Erhartsuccessfully handles subject mat- Georges Poujouly, is masterly; styles of the sixties and the sev- ?tarT? for actors and director. Heter of great difficulty and equally the children display an able range enties. Keeping this in mind, wegreat importance.The story, from a novel byFrancois Boyey, is vigorous, un¬contrived, and convincing. In thesummer of 1940, German planesstrafed a column of refugees flee¬ing Paris; the parents of a five-year-old girl are killed. The girl,Paulette, wanders from the bloody See “Games,' page 12 have used whatever will point up atlonf beautifully into the formalthese musical, technical, and Palo(^> and hie economic satire,dance effects in voice, movement, a so ,ias, creat^f rea^ peopleand blocking Wlth real relatlonships and moti¬on the economical level, Shaw vations- Hte has not merely set uputilizes his sights for satiric ef- one °f ^wo dimensional stockfects above the parody. Shaw’s props in people or events so thateconomical concerns were aimed he ca" P^ve his point. He hasnot only for the waste of war, crfted real characters, not can-Recent worksin new exhibitCurrently in the Goodspeedroadway into the still peaceful Hall exhibition galleries of the the separation of the classes, andFrench countryside. She is found Renaissance Society is a show the principle of business beyond „and taken home by Michel, an called “Current Ways with Color and above pleasure, but also for a*f feleven-year-old peasant boy. Prints” Including some recent the detriment of these upon love,Paulette is sheltered by the works by Chicago artists with decency, maturity, nationalism, catures, with situations arisingfrom their needs and demands.lated to parody, to satire, andeven to farce. They are honest Repair YourBICYCLESHOWWe specializein light-weightrepairAce Cycle Shop819 E. 55th Ml 3-2672boy’s family and in the activities examples from the Study Collec- imperialism, etc. Arms and the and real* but tbe concern is ironyof this peasant family sources and tion of the Art Department. Also Man is very early Shaw, 1896- ^~X"X~X*4"X~X~X~X~X-X~X~X"X~X~X-<"X~X~X~X~X»**X"X"X<reflections can be seen of the on exhibition are a group of 1898; and, although he well under-deadly “game” the Stukas paintings by Richard Guy Wal- stood the Fabian point of view as $‘played” with the refugees of the ton, The Malefactors. lecturer, organizer and pamphle- XXroad. The boy’s family feuds withthe family across the brook, andthe eldest son dies while his par¬ents debate whether to dose himwith castor oil.The two children develop theirown “game of death”: an animalcemetery that started with Paul¬ette’s machine-gunned puppy andled to stealing grave-yard crossesand killing small animals in orderto bury them. The authorities -come for Paulette and take her toan orphanage; she is separatedfrom Michel and the film endswith her wandering, identificationtag around neck, through the con¬fusion of a Red Cross station.Clement’s intention is to indictthe cruel and incomprehensible“games,” especially that of war, -indulged in by the adult commu¬nity. The examples he chooses,from the strafing to a grotesquefight in a cemetery, are shock¬ingly apt and sometimes shock¬ingly funny. At one point Michelkills a cockroach, a victim fortheir cemetery; he plays at beinga dive-bomber and with a bomb(his pen) stabs it. When Paulettereproaches him, he replies ap-propos the utterances of manystatesmen: “I didn’t kill him, thebombs did.”The allegory and symbolism ofthe film are knowingly executedand completely unstrained. Rare¬ly are the elements of a picture,so broad in scope, better synthe¬sized and digested. Everything—■intellectual mockery, slapstickcomedy, pastoral beauty, and vio- Key io the future —Gibbs TrainingGibbs secretarial training opens doors for college women tocareer opportunities in their chosen field. Special Coursefor College Women. Five-school personal placement service.Write College Dean for “Gibbs Girls at Work.”Katharine Gibbs /iBOSTON IS, 90 Marlborough Straet NEW YORK 17. 230 Park Avanu*CHICAGO 11. 51 E. Superior Streat PROVIDENCE 6, 155 Angell StreetMONTCLAIR, N. J. 33 Plymouth Street BECKER’S TV am* RADIO CLINICSALES AND SERVICERADIO - TV - AND RECORD PLAYERSStudent and Faculty DiscountsNO 7-4253 1451 E. 57th Street|V ****** *•* *!* ♦** *•« lfx-LI,JJ. Paul Sheedy* Switched to Wildroot Cream-OilBecause He Flunked The Finger-Nail TestyMf/ f-ffA^aub*****Seriously, there's afirm, comfortablefeel to City Club Shoes *89S to♦I4’»that, together withabsolutely correct styling,gives you confidence andassurance. They're rightiail the way through —even to price.. True •Esquire *ArgosyAmerican Here’s a sad cotton tale: poor Paul was In a stew about his hare until his pawwrote: “I ear you got a bun on because your girl left you. Now, lettuce look atthe bre’r facts. To get in on the bunny huggin’, smart rabbits foot it down toany toilet goods counter for Wildroot Cream-Oil, America'sbiggest-selling hare tonic. So fuzz thing tomorrow, invest 29(in a^bottle or handy tube. Contains soothing Lanolin. Non-alcholic. Grooms the hare. Relieves annoying dryness. Re¬moves loose, ugly dandruff. Help^ you pass the Finger-NailTest.” Sheedy tried Wildroot Cream-Oil and now he’s a jumpahead of every Tom, Dick and Harvey. So what’re you wait¬ing fur? Get Wildroot Cream-Oil today, and ask for Wildrootat your barber’s. You’re bound to like itlrf V. V* '♦ of i 31 So. Harris Hill Rd., Williamsville, N. Y,Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y.*:sMarch 13/1953 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9University Choir to sing 'St. Matthew Passion7Caroline LeeSunday, March 29 at 3 pm., The University of Chicago Choir, soloists, and Members of the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra, Richard Vikstrom conducting, will present Bach's St. Matthew Passion. This will bethe second consecutive year this work has been presented.The Cnoir faces a task of great dimension in the St. Matthew Passion. The work is of large scope dra¬matically and musically; —: : —A n rnmnlpfp knnwlprlna Ueed ttie chorus is really a chorus a view of the entire work and of played by Julius Klein, viola dar» S3S.TSS isstTi'i Sr! —sr " “s„': «■««*.»«*work—that is a combination of portray the disciples, the group ing .the chorus, orchestra, and tbe chapel office. Downtownrecitatives, chorales, large cho- of believers, the vengeful crowd, soloists to the story line. they may be purchased at Her-ruses, small choruses, arias, and and—in the chorales—the congre- Carl Honzak will again sing the man Savner and Sons, 117 N.duets, it presents an unusual gation. role of the evangelist; Rheinhold Wabash. Mail orders will be re¬problem. The work of the choir becomes Schmidt, who assisted in the per- ceived at the Chapel Office, Uni-The pillars of its basic frame- more difficult as the story be- formance of Israel in Egypt ear- versity of Chicago, Chicago 37.work are the three towering cho- comes more stark and brutal and ^er year, will sing the role Students planning to leave theruses which mark the beginning, more groups become involved. It’ *^esus’ the arias will be per- city during the Spring interimmiddle, and end of the work. In- is necessary that the singers have formed by Marion Davis, soprano; should remember that this per-• ' Elizabeth Brown, contralto; Ralph formance occurs on the SundayQuartet plays excellent Mozart; bass. The accompaniment will be ning of the^pring quarter.Tippett selection rythmic but dull Poets' Company production of new playsproves value of stylized spoken theatreManuscripts wantedToward the end of April, theMAROON will publish a specialsupplement to be titled "MAROONSymposium." Critical papers^ of abrood ond generally communicablenature, in the arts ond to a lim¬ited extent in the socidl sciences,are now being solicited.The orticles should be between1000 ond 3000 words in lengthond should be typewritten withmorgins set at 10-70.Address manuscripts to the Sym¬posium editor, CHICAGO MA¬ROON, Faculty Exchange, or placethe manuscripts in the MAROONbox ot the Reynolds Club desk.Previous notification of an in¬tention to contribute—ond of thenature of the contribution — wouldbe greatly appreciated.One of England’s younger musical aggregations, the Ama¬deus Quartet, consisting of Norbert Brainen, first violin;Siegmund Nissel, second violin; Peter Schidlof, viola, andMartin Lovetto, cello, performed in Mandel hall last Fridaynight.Mozart’s A Major Quartet, K. 464, (one of the six Haydnquartets), served as a pro-gram opener. If the group’s faster movements. In terms of the jn jts own right without re¬name indicates any special combined anticipations the re- gard to the action that sup-regard for Mozart, it was borne viewer possesses he was reminded ported it. We were able to sit backout by their performance of K. of a documentary on sheep rais- and hear> during the course of7oqiq„,i the evening, scores of handsome4b4. There was a maximum of con- mgm New Zealand. lines read with tone anQ distinc-sideration for its musical values, The final work was Beethoven s tion.unhindered by technical problems. ® **** quartet, opus 130. It was In particular, The Widow, byA work by the contemporary given an excellent reading, par- Edwin Honig, presents a series ofEnglish composer Michael Tip- ticularly in the last two move- rich and compelling images whichments. The reviewer has only a unveil a curious dramatic situa-few quibbles to make about the tion, and it was read, by Carolfirst and fourth movements. The Horning and Nancy Mikolic, withAdagio introduction and its re- a pace and intensity in agreementturns within the first movement with the style of the author,were slighted by not being played Eclogue, by Jane Mayhall, isslowly enough. They are of great an uneven and complicated essayfrom The Vhoirtone'below.^Har- (lramatic importance within the -on one modern man, one mod-movement. A little more cres- ern woman and a bed—into whichcendo-decrescendo in the fourth Estelle Luttrell and Marvin Peis-Last Sunday night University Theatre sponsored the first offering of the Poets’ Com¬pany — three scripts chosen by Reuel Denny and Ruth Herschberger, produced by CharlesMason, and directed by Paul Sills.It was a great pleasure to be able to hear language that had style spoken from the stage;language that was interestingpett, followed. Tippett seems to beakin to the great Ralph Vaiighn-Wililams, but writes almost intol¬erably dull music. The voices wan¬der around in modal patterns. Theend of the movement is heraldedby coming up to the major chordmonically, nothing happens. For¬tunately there is considerablerhythmic ingenuity in the work,which imbued some life into the movement would have revealedits character more clearly.It seems that music lovers now ner invested wit and tension, fromtime to time. Aside from the bigmetaphors, this piece is contrivedtend with. When one considersthat its members are all in theircomes remarkable.Fred Winsberg“HOLIDAY IN EUROPE”★ 66 days $1125Guarantees noink-stainedhandsor clotheseveragain... have another great quartet to con- to be poetry largely because ofcertain scattered rhymes.Good News of Death by Louistwenties, their achievement be- Simpson is even more uneven, so poets can fjn(j attractive lighting• - • uneven that I came to feel that ... . , ' . „the author’s best lines are buried and Agroundin a rhetorical dump that would atis Personae. It was proved thatgrace no stage. This piece is again self-conscious language can givean essay on Orestes and Christ the same allure as the costumedand half the play is taken up with actor. It was proved that the uni¬antique stories which were spok- versity actor, if not a profession-en by Eugene Troobnick and Gene at actor, can read with intelligenceHalboth. and poise. It was not proved thatIt was proved on Sunday that the people who write poetry canlower themselves to telling a sim¬ple story, or can present a dra¬matic situation that could be ex¬citing, even without words, oreven say something imme¬diately understandable and com¬pelling. As for the direction, inhis concern to get the poetry ontothe stage, Sills forgot to get hisactors acting, and with the excep¬tion of Charles Mason’s exagger¬ated pastoral businessman, wesaw no characters that wouldmake the performance as dra¬matic as it was poetic.David Shepord photo by kent mepherronReuel Denney — shown here in a directional copacity — who withRuth Herschberger chose from among submitted monuscripts three scriptsfor production by the Poets' Company.TWOSUMMER TOURSFOR STUDENTSSpainItalyAustriaSwitzerlandGermany For Information WriteBelgium JACK H. UHLHolland 5200 S. HarperEngland or call eveningsFrance MUseum 4-6081 Altman's WoodworkReupholsteringFA 4-37005401 Lake ParkPushbuttonretractablepoint.can'tleak,transfer,smudge,smear orfade-ink ispermanenton paper. DIGGING BEYONDTHE TIGRISby Linda Braidwood, Oriental Institute Associate. .$4.50Linda Braidwood tells the happy story of an adventureinto the archaeological past — from its original planningstage in the University of Chicago Oriental Institute tothe actual field work in the Kurdish hills, 200 miles northof Baghdad in Iraq.SEE THE SPECIAL WINDOW DISPLAYwith pictures and findings from the Dig. The musical world wos stun¬ned lost week by the announce¬ment of the death of SergeiProkofiev, the Soviet Union'smost respected composer, ondconsidered by mony the great¬est living composer.Prokofiev wos in the midstof a prolific period, hoving re¬cently completed the oratorio,ON GUARD FOR PEACE, hisseventh symphony, the balletSTONE FLOWER, ond o newversion of his opera, WAR ANDPEACE.Prokofiev wos the only oneof the Soviet composers whospent a considerable time inthe west. His works were favor¬ably received upon his return tothe USSR, where he wrote hismost famous compositions. Dur¬ing the 1948 criticism of musicin the USSR, Prokofiev wascriticized for "formalisfic er¬rors." His most recent workshove received favorable reviewsin Pravda.Knishes - Chopped Liver - Blintzes - Gefilte FishJ. B. American and Kosher RestaurantMU 4-9123 1004 E. 55th StreetAUTO RALLYALL CAR OWNERS INVITED70,000 word refills only 494Always a clean Paint ANTHROPOLOGY TODAY—Prepared under the Chair¬manship of A. L. Kroeber $9.00The first stocktaking of the whole of our knowledge ofman as it is embodied in the work of modern anthropology.The Best Books are at theUniversity of ChicagoBookstore• ’ 5802 ELLIS AVENUE • BRING YOUR OWN LUNCHESMops, instructions, ond positionswill be given ot the storting pointAWARDS FOR 1st AND 2nd PLACES!ENTRANCE FEE — 50cUniversity Automobile Club5710 S. Wood lawn (Rear)SUNDAY —MARCH 15th10 A.M.(In cote of inclement weather — Mar. 22)That’s right! In the U. S. Air Force, it’s not thesize of the man in the fight—it’s the size of theFIGHT IN THE man! And Aviation Cadets must haveplenty of it. For Cadet training is nigged. If you’regood enough ... tough enough ... smart enough ...if you can take it while you’re learning to dish itout, you can have one of the most fascinating careersin the world. You’ll be equipped to fly the latest,hottest planes. You’ll be prepared to take yourposition as an executive, both in military and com¬mercial aviation as well as in industry. And whileyou’re helping yourself you’ll be helping your country. WIN YOUR WINGS! It takes little over ayear to win your wings as a Pilot or AircraftObserver (Navigator, Bombardier, Radar Operatoror Aircraft Performance Engineer). But at the endof your training you graduate as a 2nd Lieutenantin the Air Force, with pay of $5,300.00 a year.ARE YOU ELIGIBLE? To qualify as an AviationCadet, you must have completed at least two yearsof college. This is a minimum requirement—it’s best if you stay in school and graduate. Inaddition, you must be between 19 and 26 Yi years,unmarried, and in good physical condition.New Aviation Cadet Training Classes Begin Every Few Weeks!HERE’S WHAT TO DOtI. Take a transcript of your college credits and a copy ofyour birth certificate to your nearest Air Force Base orRecruiting Station. Fill out the application they give you2. If application is accepted, the Air Force will give you aphysical examination.3» Next, you take a written and manual aptitude test. 4. If you pass your physical and other tests, you will bescheduled for an Aviation Cadet training class. TheSelective Service Act allows you a four-month defermentwhile waiting class assignment.WHERE TO GET MORE DETAILS:Visit your nearest Air Forco Base, Air Forco Recruiting Officer, Ofyour nearest Air Force ROTC unit. Or write to: Aviation Cadet,Headquarters, U. S. Air Force, Washington 25, D. C. TO THE CHAIRMEN OF ALL RECOG¬NIZED STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS:In accordance with the provisions ofArticle One, Section Seven of the Sta¬tute of Powers of the Student Govern¬ment, I am writing to Inform you thatthe Committee on Recognized StudentOrganizations is considering the follow¬ing proposals:I. JOSEPHSON BILLArticle One, Section Seven of theStatute of Powers of the Student Gov¬ernment shall be amended to Includea definition of the term "Regulations."The present reading, “Regulations,and the alteration a-nd amendmentthereof, may be Initiated by both theAdministration and the Student Assem¬bly shall read, “Regulations,Including the Code, the Statute ofPowers, and the section appended tothe Code entitled Regulations, and thealteration and amendment thereof,..."II. JOHN BILLA. Student organizations seeking rec¬ognition may rile in the Office of theDirector of Student Activities either alist of ten student members or a swornstatement In which two officers certifythat the organization has ten members.B. Names thus submitted to the Of¬fice of the Director of Student Activitiesshall be released only under subpoena.In accordance with the regulations,the proposals are listed In an OfficialRegister, easily accessible to all studentsat the Reynolds Club desk.We shall be glad to hear from anyorganization which wishes to commenton these proposals, or to make othersuggestions.Lawrence A. KaufmanChairman, CORSOCANOE TRIPSInfo Quefico—Superior WildernettOnly $4.85 to $5.40 per personper dmyFor Free information, writeCanoe Country Outfitters■ill Rem, Box C Ely, MinnesotaCARMEN'SUSED FURNITUREWe Buy and Sell AnythingDesks, Typewriters, LampsMoving and Light Hauling1127 E. 55th MU 4-90031116 E. 63rd PL 2-90161547 E. 63rd NO 7-9773Local andLong Distance MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetBUtterfield 8-6711DAVID U SUTTON, PreeidentPage 10 March 13, 1953Classified ads ...WANTEDThree Outing Club campers want rideto vicinity of Smoky Mountains duringInterim. Will share expenses. Call C. S.Wright, MI 3-6000.Second-hand tuxedo. In good condition,to suit height 6 ft. Allck Bartholomew,396 International House.Radio Teehnichian. Full or part time.Apply la writing, stating qualifications.The Disc, 1367 E: 57th st. Student couple need ride—NY vicinity,interim. Expenses. BU 8-1409. evenings.Ride to Washington, D. C., after 19th.C. Ross. Call UN 4-5802, Evanston.Ride—share expenses, round trip, NYC.Naparst, Chamberlin House, MI 3-6000.Ride wanted, Cleveland, March 20, 21.Leave message, Demb, 3275.Wanted: Riders NYC interim, roundtrip. E. Meeron, Ext. 2753, Elkhart 17.Interim ride to Boston ’wanted. D.Queen, MI 3-1632. Ride to New York for Spring recess.C. Glelt, Mi 3-0800, Ext. 1072.Riders or ride wanted to Washington,D. C. Leaving March 23, George Holle,BU 8-9870. *Job: College student wants employmentduring the interim, will do most any¬thing for reasonable wages. Send wordto MAROON, Box 333.Student wishes furnished apartment.Maximum $70 per month. Call BU 8-9541after 6 p.m.Men’s lightweight bicycle, reasonablypriced. R. B. Uretz, campus Ext. 2597 or DO 3-8575.SERVICES^Piano lessons at reasonable rates. HY7-3818, 1345 E. Marquette.Home typing done, quickly, neatly. CallMU 4-5589, Thelma Baer. 6-10 p.m.Sewing, alteration, bachelors’ repairs,appointment only. Mrs. Edna Warlnner,5625 S. Dorchester, MU 4-4680.Student’s wife wishes to care for pre¬school age child all day. Phone PL2-5081. Covered buttons, buckles, buttonhole*monogrammlng done while you well'752 E. 51st, northwest corner, 51st andiCottage. AT 5-6860.Instruction:Voice placement and coach¬ing, Frida Savinl, 1465 E. 50th St.MISCELLANEOUSLost: Light tan and black scorpion. An¬swers to name of Cleantn. Glasser, DO3-8506. 'Driving to California, March 20. Ext1250. Eves. HY 3-3087, Karush.Can take two or three riders to Pitts¬burgh or Phllaielphla. MO 7-7888.Lost: Dark brown tortoise shell eye¬glasses, navy case. Ronne Rone, Green64.Lost: Civil procedure text book, Mon¬day, Robert Kutak, BU 8-9870.Lost: Brown brief case, Initials LVM,black notebook with law notes, briefs!Reward, Morgan, FA 4-8896.FOR SALEMaroon sofa with zip-on covers. Excel¬lent condition. BU 8-6536, after 6 p.m.Table loom—weaves 38". Call VA 6-4257after 6 p.m.Foster-Kelly record sale, Tuesday after¬noon, 3-10-'53, Kelly card room.Swap Craflcx 2!ix3|4 Extar, meter, forpress type camera. J. MacGahan, MI3-7 “-7141.Plastic recording tapes. Used onceStandard size. Bargain at $2.95 earnCall MI 3-4469.Complete Goethe, 6 large volumes (cot¬ta), $6: Century Dictionary and En¬cyclopedia, 10 volumes, $7. Call HY3-4254 after 6 p.m.Legal noticeaw mootsSURVEY 1rtual student to-1 Reveals moreenv other curette::^ucUies’be««t syuoenys 1hmioh^'”le survey^80 jading.„ferLu<*'«thMarch 13, 1953Wrestlers endwith win, loss UC takes 3rdJV's take close secondin Invitational RelaysCoach Ted Haydon’s fleet JV trackmen just missed a vic¬tory over five other competing teams last Friday in the firstannual High School Invitational Relays. The final score wasSchurz, 68 V4 J University High, 63%; Palatine, 14%; ArlingtonHeights, 42 y2; Riverside-Brookfield, 33%, and Reavis, 4.The Junior Marooners won three out of the four relayevents. They won the distance—medley in 11:30.5 with Art This is the first meet this sea-Omohundro, jack Risden, son for both Small and Jones, andDewey Jones, and Spike Pinney given a little time to get intorunning: the two mile relay in shape, they show promise of turn-8:55.0 with the team of John Kar- ing in finer performances. Larrycazes, Tom Pape, Don Williams, Shaderowfsky and Chuck Youseand Tom Lubenow; and the sprint took third and fifth, respectively,medley in 3:55.0 with Omohundro, in the shot put. Mike ChernoffLubenow, Lynn Small, and Wil- vaulted 11 feet again in the poleliams. vault to tie for first and narrowlyIn the 880 relay, U High came missed clearing IT 6".in third, with Small, Pape, Wil- Medals were awarded to theliams, and Lubenow, who pulled winning relay teams and ribbonsa muscle in his leg but finished to placers in the individual events,anyway. If it wasn’t for this un¬fortunate accident, we would have | ~ . . | 1. IItaken the relay and perhaps won I Sports calendar | UC rencers split dual meets Dodd keepswinning streak—Page 11Playing host to the sixth an¬nual Chicago IntercollegiateIn return meets against both swimming and diving champion-Augustana and Wisconsin Exten- ?tiips last weekend, the Varsity• . , 0 ^ „ .. swimmers splashed their way tosion last Saturday, the Varsity third p]ace ^yola won the 'eetwrestlers came out even. Augus- with 73 points, Navy Pier was record intact last Saturday whentana won the afternoon match, second with 59 points, while UC it defeated Shimer College, 45-29,i?-1,1’ *?•*•«?* their v‘etory scored 39 points. IIT came in a jn Bartlett Gym. The DoddmenTin the ^Itjoh^Afdentaw dip 213 at tha ha,t alter h°ld'"gevening matches. ped 7 seeond ott o? the old rec- Shimer “> a scoreless secondCaptain A1 Bates, Frank Rich- or{j se^ by ucs Lou Rivws to win Quarter,ards, and Hal Ladas won their the 60-yard free style in 29.3 sec- In the first half, Shimer em-bouts in both meets for UC. Stu 0nds. ployed a zone defense, but DonZimmerman and Don Abelson Joe Ellis, Bob Giedt, and Lans- Kl]nit_ „nd Jerrv Luk- kent sink.were able to defeat their Wiscon- jng Felker won the 330-yard med- .sin Extension competitors, while jey relay for UC with a time of mg set shots Wlth deadly accuracyBob Behrendt, and George Staab 3:19.8. Ken Kline and Ellis placed to spoil this strategy. During thelost close decisions in each meet, one-two in the diving champion- second half Shimer switched to aWhile the team finished its ship, Kline scoring 243.85 points. man-to-man defense and Doddseason with a three victory, five Giedt placed third in the 100-yard switched to its substitutes. Dodddefeat record, Coach Antonacci backstroke and the 200 yard back- demonstrated an excellent de-praised the fine competitive stroke. Jerry Mehrens placed fifth fense, constantly stealing the ballspirit shown by the team, and in the 200-yard backstroke, while from Shimer to score,hoped that many of his men will Roland Von Hentig took fourthreturn next year. in the 200-yard breast stroke.the meetIn individual performances, the Frv*y,\ **arc\ * ftrackmen did fairly well. Captain ySherry Gray took the high hur¬dles with his best time this year,09.2, second in the low hurdles,and a tie for fifth in the highjump. Lynn Small came in sec- p.m., Field House-Central AAU meet.Saturday, March 14Track—10 a.m.. Field House—ChicagoPublic Hlgli Schools final*.Varsity fencing—1 p.m.. Bartlett Gym—Wayne and Wisconsin.Varsity track—6:30 p.m?. Field House—Midwest Conference meet.©nd in the 60-yard dash and fourth Friday, March 20• *rnnnSnn Ur^ori Varsity track—4 p.m., Field House—HI the running broad jump, aside Navy Pier and Wright Junior Col-from his fine performance in the lege,relays. Dewey Jones tied for first Thufsd°yApril2. ... JV track—3:30 p.m., Field House—in the high jump. Morton High school. High point men for Dodd wereKunitz with 15 points, Luks andDave Smith with 8 each, andGeo ge Gross and Carl Saganwith 6 points each. Lee Waner-, Notre Dame’s high flying fenc- sabres won, 7-2. The foil team man added insult to injury wheners stabbed the Varsity fencing was defeated, however, 6-3. «. he substituted for Gross in theteam last Saturday, 20-7, but the Dick Leek, competing in his third quarter. He had an injuredUCers recouped with a 16-11 vie- second meet, swept all three of ankle, and was forced to hobbletory 'against the University of his matches against Kentucky in about the court, but took a passKentucky, at South Bend. the epees. as soon as he entered the gameThe Notre Dame team swept The Varsity fencers face Wis- and made an accurate set shot toall three events from UC, winning eonsin and Wayne tomorrow in add 2 points to Dodds total,the foil division 8-1, the sabres their final meet of the season in6-3, and the epee 6-3. Against Ken- Bartlett Gym. Both teams aretucky, the UC epee team won tough, but the swordsmen hopetheir division, 6-3, while the to pull an upset.piana Y*'**ol y/»shinitoi%\j niversnyfiSSX Nothing-no. nothing-beats better tasteand LUCKIESTASTE BETTER!Cleaner, Fresher, Smoother!Ask yourself this question: Why do I smoke?You know, yourself, you smoke for enjoyment.And you get enjoyment only from the taste of acigarette.Luckies taste better—cleaner, fresher, smoother! | ||Why? Luckies are made better to taste better. And,what’s more, Luckies are made of fine tobacco.L.S./M.F.T.—Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco.So, for the thing you want most in a cigarette...for better taste—for the cleaner, fresher, smoothertaste of Lucky Strike ...Be Happy-OO MKKfl [HP Trackmen beatElmhurst, 70-35The Varsity track team cap¬tured nine first places Thursdayto defeat Elmhurst, 70 to 35, in adual meet at the UC Fieidhouse.Justin Johnson, sophomore broadjump ace, was high point man forChicago. Justin won the high hur¬dles with commendable form andannexed the broad jump with aleap of 20' 5".The other Chicago winnerswere Jim Flynn, 2-mile; FrankLoomos, 60 yard dash; Bill More-men, 440; and Jack Meardon, mile.Tom Wilson and Bob McDougaltied for first in the pole vault andthe mile relay team (Dave Shep¬pard, Bill Pozen, Walt Deike,and Meardon) won their event.4th in Narth CentralDisplaying promising ability inthe field events, the Varsity tracksquad placed fourth Saturday inthe 14th Annual North CentralIndoor Meet at Naperville. JoeHoward, former JV heavyweightwrestler and track star, tossed theshot 44' 9" in win this event, andJustin Johnson, high point manfor UC, placed second in the broadjump with a 21' 2" effort.Two other promising perform¬ances were turned in by JimFlynn (5th, 2-mile) and Tim Nu-veen (5th, mile). Frank Loomosplaced 3rd in the 60-yard dash and4th in the 60-yard low hurdles.After the meet Coach Ted Hay-don said he had no complaints, lieproudly pointed out the fact thatthis year his boys grabbed threetimes as many points as they didin '52. “What more could a coachask for?’’Partrails byLOUISE BARKERPhotographer1457 E. 57th St. BU 8-0876PBOl f....A.*!*"»•* *"'**&&&&sSp-27i AMERICA’S .leading manufacturer of cigarettes Chicago GreenwoodCurtain CleanersCurtains, Drapes. Blankets,Spreads, Table Linens, Slip Coversand Banquet Cloths1032 E. 55TH ST.ALL TYPES OF HOUSECLEANINGWALLS, WOODWORK, 1NS1DBWINDOWS, ETC.Try My Specialties—Non-skid Floor WaxCali Beilis KE 8-07586 to 8 A.M. or After 6 P.M.Furnished RoomFor Rent — To StudentKitchen PrivilegesPL 2-2015 6128 EllisAfter 6 P.M.mmPage 12 HE CHICAGO MAROON March 13, 1953SC civil liberties committee suggestssolution to discrimination, slum problemPositive methods for relieving the discriminatory housing situation prevailing in the im¬mediate University area have been suggested by the Student Government Civil LibertiesCommittee.Its report, written in view of the activities of the Southeast Crime Commission (SECC),analyzes the various problems facing this community. It commends the University’s par- at 8:30 p.m., Saturday, April 25,ticipation but suggests it has been inadequate in dealing with the problem of discrimination. Sunda3r> April 26,The discriminatory practic Aero sells ducatsTickets wiii be placed on saletoday at the Bartlett Gym officefor Acrotheatre’s performance of“Aero Antics.” Special studentrate tickets will be sold until April17 for $1.00 each. After April17 general admission andreserved seats will go on sale for$1.50 and $1.85 each, respectively.The performances will be givenin Mandel Hall.es to which the report refersare primarily those againstthe Negro and other minoritygroups by the landlords in theUniversity area. Stressing the re¬lationship of discrimination to thedevelopment of slums, the reportemphasizes the practicality of theUniversity’s assuming an unequiv¬ocal position regarding discrim¬inatory prdfctices. The Univer¬sity’s role of unusual prominencein this community places it in anespecially advantageous and oblig¬atory position to alleviate thediscrimination-slum situation, thereport indicated.SECC programThe committee states that theUniversity, in recognition of idsinterests and obligations in com¬munity activitism, has undertakenthe following program in conjunc¬tion with the Southeast CrimeCommission:1. Crime prevention measures,e. g., improvement of the localpolice force, street lighting, etc.2. Encouragement of generalrepairs and improvements bylandlords and tenants in this area.3. Efforts to have building, sani- 4. Encouragement of home own¬ers to remain in this area and notsell their property.5. Where buildings are beingsold, sellers are encouraged to sellto people who will occupy thepremises.6. Encouragement of investingand building in this area.7. Encouragement of good rela¬tions between people of diversebackgrounds living in this area.Block organizations and local civicgroups, rather more significantlythan the University itself, are en¬gaged in this attempt.Needs housing fileA necessary addition to this pro¬gram, lhe committee felt, is the ating a long standing abuse,would at the same time afford theUniversity an opportunity to ex¬plain its principles to the com¬munity.”reaching our goals.”Last year, due to the refusal ofthe Administration to rid its hous¬ing file of discrimination, SG setup its own housing file. It did thisin order that this important serv¬ice be provided on a non-discrim-inatory basis. However, the com¬mittee indicated that the SG hous¬ing file could be only a temporaryand inadequate effort because itlacked the necessary funds, facil¬ities, and personnel.The committee feels that, if re- Games ary and beautiful film and it isnot too much to say that its everydetail and technique is not onlycompetent but inspired.J. M. Kossockm/'l For Spring Trips Homeelimination of discriminatory list- lief from discriminatory practicesings in the University’s housing are to be achieved, the administra-file. “The institution of non-dis- tion must commit itself to a posi-criminatory practices in the Uni- tive program, closely supportedversity housing file, while elimin- by student activity and interest. (from poge 8)of characterization and emotion.They are moving, comic, and nat¬ural, and only the most hardenedchild-beater could Resist them. Thepeasant family is well handled;Lucien Hubert gives a remark¬able perfbrmance as the father.The film’s musical backgroundis scored for a single guitar andused sparingly and very effec¬tively. Two simple themes recurthroughout the picture, one a‘,T)ourree” by DeVisee, and theother, the love theme, introducedat the children’s first meeting, asixteenth century Spanish folkmelody.Forbidden Games justly wonthe Grand Prize at the 1952 VeniceFilm Festival. It is an extraordin- We Always SayToday's Best Bay isThe GreyhoundJyfDebate questions merits of fraternitiesA debate on the merits of UC fraternities was held in Burton lounge last Tuesday. Thespecific topic was “Is the present emphasis on UC fraternities a backward step?”“The one good thing about fraternities is that they make good hotels when there is an_ ___ ..... excess of students on campus,” stated Kenneth Tollett. His first objection was that fraterni-tation. and zoning ordinances en- ties are homogeneous groups, that one doesn t meet the different types of people with whomforced. one must deal in society. HeLandau talks onTunis, MoroccoRom Landau, British authorand teacher, will talk on “Moroc¬can and Tunisian Independence:Urgent Issue in the United Na¬tions” in the International Houseauditorium Wednesday at 8 p.m.Landau has lived for a consid¬erable time in both Morocco andTunis and has reported his ob¬servations in many books and ar¬ticles. His American writings in¬clude the Carnegie Endowment’spamphlet, “Morocco” and an ar¬ticle, “The Lobby that Runs NorthAfrica” in the Catholic weekly,America.The International House meet¬ing is sponsored by three groups:the Political Science Associationand WORLD of UC, and the SouthSide Chapter of the United WorldFederalists. also stated that fraternitiesare not a problem at UC be¬cause of strict control of themby the University administration.Toilet concluded by saying that“as long as fraternities are notemphasized they are all right.”Claims fraternities 'teach democracy'Bob Millnickel arguing for fra¬ternities said that the question isreally "do they serve a useful pur¬pose today?” He felt that theyteach democracy and also give thestudent some business experience.“In the dorms,” Millnickel con¬tinued, “the meals are plannedand the building is cared for, ifsomething goes wrong the respon¬sibility does not fall on the stu¬dent; in an apartment you havethat experience but in an unrealway; in a co-op although youhave the same problems as in afraternity if things don’t, workwell one leaves; a fraternity hasstronger ties.”Replying to the charge that fra¬ ternities are homogeneous, he an¬swered that there must be someamount of homogeneity. “Howelse could they be responsible forthe moral conduct of their mem¬bers?” concluded Millnickel.Fraternities limit contactsThe next speaker, Harry Fisher,was against fraternities for col¬lege students. He claimed thatfraternities are inconsistent witha liberal education, because theybring about limited contact withother students.Attacking discrimination, hesaid, “college fraternities will not be a positive force on campus un¬til discrimination is cleared out.Says fraternities not homogeneous“TJiere are greater cliques inBurdton-Judson than in fraterni¬ties,” crarged Bob Coutek, the lastspeaker. “Fraternities are heter¬ogeneous groups and people withdifferent religions and opinionsbelong to them.” Referring to fra¬ternities as an experience in liv¬ing, he concluded by saying thatthey are “one way of achievingthe ideas we learn about in col¬lege and the divisions.” BUY A ROUND-TRIPTICKET AND SAVE ANEXTRA 10% EACH WAYICheck these low fares!On*WayAKRON $ 7.75ANN ARBOR . . 5.50BENTON HARBOR-ST. JOSEPH . . 2.50BLOOMINGTON, ILL. 2.60BLOOMINGTON,IND. 5.45. . . Except beer, everything else that is man'sfood agrees indifferently with my taste/—MontaigneUniversity TavernTHE RED DOORSALEHf are placing on sale at much reduced prices alist of 20 fine technical titles.Acts of the International Congress ofUltracoustics, 1950Black: The Nature of Mathematics. .Bonfante: Semantics (1)Bourbaki: Book II Chapter III (2)de Broglie: Atomes, Radioactivite,Transmutations (1 )Butterfield: The Origins of ModernSciences (1)Heath: Scientific Thought in thederived from Mechanics (3)Heiberg: Geometrical Solutionsderived from Mechanics (2)Hogben: Chance & Choice by Cardpack& Chessboard (1)Homebeurger^ The Negro-AfricanLanguages (11Howard: Analytical Syllogistics ....Neurpth, et al: Encyclopedia &Unified SciencePrigogine & Defay: ThermodynamiqueChimique Vol. IIRignano: The Nature of LifeRussell: Introduction to MathematicalPhilosophy U)Schillinger: Mathematical Basis ofthe ArtsSwineford: A Study in Factor Analysis:The Nature of the General, Verbal &Spacial Bi-Factors (11Vallois: Les Hommes Fossiles (1)Weil: Varietes Abeliennes et CourbesAlgebriques (1 )Wcyl: Philosophy of Mathematics& Natural Science. (1THE RED DOOR BOOK SHOP1S28 E. 57th St. Chicago 37, Illinoisreduced(1) $12.50 to $ 6.00(5) $ 3.75 to $ 1.75(1 ) $ 2.25 to $ .75(2) $ 3.00 to $ 1.00(1) $ 1.00 to $ .50(1) $ 3.00 to $ 1.25(3) to $ .15(2) $ 8.40 to $ 3.50(1) $12.50 to $ 6.00(1) $ 5.00 to $ 2.50(1) $ 4.00 to $ 2.75(2) $ 1.25 to $ .75(1) $ 8.00 to $ 5.50(2) $ 2.50 to $ 1.25(1) $ 2.75 to $ 1.75(1) $15.00 to $ 3.95(1) $ 2.00 to $ 1.00, (1 ) $ 7.50 to $ 3.50, (1) $ 2.75 to $ 1.00. (1) $ 5.00 to $ 3.75 Held Over 2nd WeekCharles Chaplininwith lovely Claire Bloom,my son Sydney, andmy old friends and colleaguesNigel Bruce and Buster KeatonWELCOME CHARLIE5)It's great to have you here. We receivedmore requests for any Chaplin filmthan all other films put together. Twicethis year we served up 1915 one-reel-ers . . . and the hungry snatched at thecrumbs. What a pleasure to serve thesumptuous repast of Limelight!Friday and Saturdays 6, 8:20, 10:50Weekdays at 6:30, 9:20Sunday at 2, 4.30, 7, 9:30hyde park theatreLake Park at 53rd NOrmal 7-9071- BUFFALO . .CANTON, O.CHAMPAIGNCINCINNATI .CLEVELAND .COLUMBUS .DAVENPORTDAYTON, O. .DC KALB . . 11.607.852.456.507.606.803.206.151.30DENVER 20.95DES MOINES. . . 7.00DETROIT 6.00DUBUQUE .... 3.45ELGIN 85FT. WAYNE ... 3.15GRAND RAPIDS,MICH 4.50GREEN BAY . . . 3.60HARRISBURG, PA. 15.00INDIANAPOLIS . 4.10KANSAS CITY . . 8.20LIMA 4.45LOUISVILLE . . . 6.60MADISON, WIS. . 2.45MANSFIELD, O. . 6.50MATTOON . . . 3.30MEMPHIS .... 9.50MILWAUKEE ... 1.55MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL . . 7.30MUSKEGON . . . 4.65NEW YORK . . . 17.95OMAHA 10.05PHILADELPHIA . 17.15PITTSBURGH . . 9.75ROCHESTER . . . 13.20ROCKFORD . . . 1.75ST. LOUIS .... 4.95SALT LAKE CITY . 28.65SOUTH BEND . . 2.10SPRINGFIELD, ILL. 3.50SPRINGFIELD, O. 6.35SYRACUSE .... 14.45TOLEDO .... 5.25WASHINGTON,0. C 16.05Vt. LAFAYETTE, IND. 3.10YOUNGSTOWN . 9.00(U. s RoundTrip$13.959.904.504.709.8520.9014.154.4511.7013.7012.255.8011.102.3537.7512.6010.806.251.555.70S.106.5027.007.4014.808.0511.904.4511.705.9517.102.8013.158.4032.3518.1030.9017.5523.803.00B.9551.603.806.3011.4526.059.4528.905.6016.20Tax axlra)A GREYHOUND REPRESENTATIVEwill be at theJOHN STOCKS TRAVEL BUREAUTuesday, March 17to sell tickets and give InformationJOHN STOCKS TRAVEL BUREAUAdministration Bide. 5801 S.IWU Av#»Phene Midway 3-0800GREYHOVNB