rnoio uy janaismProfessor Werner Heisenberg,who spoke Wednesday on “Thetheory of turbulence” as one ofa series of physics lectures. Pro¬fessor Heisenberg developed,among other theories, the Prin¬ciple of Uncertainty. Explosion Noisy,Injures No OneA sealed, eight-inch glass tubecontaining diborane, an air reac¬tive compound, exploded in themoat in front of Jones laboratorylate Monday afternoon, after be¬ing thrown from a second floorwindow.Several student research assist¬ants, working on a problem in in¬organic chemistry, were presentat the time of the explosion. Noone was injured.According to the source inter¬viewed, it is customary to disposeof the left over diborane in themoat. The moat is floored withgravel. The tube usually breaksimmediately, allowing the chemi¬cal to burn harmlessly before ex¬tinguishing itself.On Monday the tube caught insome vines which cushioned itsfall, causing it to land intact.The resulting buildup of gasesdue to an abnormally long periodof containment before explodingcaused the loud blast heard bymany students in the quad. SRP-ISL DebateSet for WednesdayA debate about which political party represents UC studentswill be held next. Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. in Ida Noyes hall.Clive Gray, president of SG and A1 Forter, president of ISLwill defend the proposition, resolved: “ISL can best representUC students,” against Vera John and Marcus Raskin of SRP.Paul Breslow, president of SRP, said, “SRP is presentinga principled platform on the Yissues of student needs, aca¬demic freedom, discrimination,and student exchange. I hopethat all students who support ourprogram will work for its fulfill¬ment rather than merely give lip-service to liberal principles forpartisan advantage; a campaignshould be based upon issues rath¬er than smear.”Gray stated, “We have debatedthe SRP people before, and I haveyet to find anyone who heardthose debates and thought theSRP side was anything but hotair. We have not only the argu¬ments but also the record in Student Government, and I onlywish we had more opportunity topresent it to the campus.”The debate, a prelude to the SGelections on Thursday and Friday,is sponsored by the StudentForum under the direction ofMarvin Phillips. Name CrodzinsAdviser to LAKMorton Crodzins has beenappointed adviser to the chan¬cellor on special projects, Chan-hancellor Lawrence A. Kinip-ton announced today. Becauseof the responsibilities of thisnew position, Grodzins is re¬linquishing his present positionas dean of the division of thesocial sciences, and Chauncy D.Harris, professor of geopraphy,will serve as acting dean.SC Stops Move to AlterCandidate Petition DateA move to extend the final deadline on petitions for placeson the ballot at the forthcoming Student Government electionwas defeated at SG’s first meeting of the year Tuesday eve¬ning. The vote of 12-8 with two abstentions was along partylines, Independent Students league opposing and StudentsRepresentative party supporting the move.1 lie linal motion, as amend- countered with charges thated by Donald Anderson (SRP- this was merely a device to givesoe. sci.) would have extended SRP more time to find additionalthe final deadline for unindorsed candidates. Emil Johnson (ISL- Fermi in Hospital for SurgeryDr. Enrico Fermi, Charles H. Swift distinguished service professorin the department of physics and the institute for nuclear studies,underwent an exploratory operation last Saturday at Billings hospital.Attendants at the hospital described his condition as satisfactory,but declined to reveal what type oi surgery he underwent or theextent of his illness.Dr. Fermi’s offices in the research institute also did not disclosethe reason for his surgery but said that he would be released fromBillings at the end of next week and that he would need a “great dealof rest” and would be absent from his work for “some time.”Fermi, a mild-mannered refugee from Fascism in his native Italy,was a key figure in the development of the atomic bomb. He hadthe chief role in building the uranium pile, or reactor, in the standsof Stagg field in 1942, opening the atomic age.candidates until such time as“sufficient publicity” had beengiven. • *Tuesday was the final deadlinebut SRP found itself unable tocontest seven seats at that time.ISL also lacks one candidate.Cite Lack of PublicitySRP leaders complained thatthere had been insufficient pub¬licity previous to the deadline.Larry Lichtenstein (SRP-col.)asserted that the only substantialpublicity given as to the availa¬bility of petitions or existence ofdeadline appeared in a four-paragraph story in last Friday’sMAROON.This gave prospective candi¬dates only three working days inwhich to get petitions, procure thenecessary .25 signatures, and re¬turn the petitions to the SG office.Lichtenstein claimed that thismilitated against independentsv.ho wanted to run for SG. col.) claimed that SRP meant torun their candidates under an in¬dependent label for purposes ofthe election.SRP agreed to the Tuesdaydeadline at its passage last springand only wanted to change thedate because they were short oncandidates, charged Roger Wood-worth, ex-president of SG and ISL“elder statesman.” “If SRP orany independents were interestedenough,” he said, “they couldhave gotten the petitions and got¬ten them signed. . . . The C-Shopis just running over with peoplewho are willing to sign StudentGovernment petitions.”SRP is short two candidates insocial services administration,three in medicine, one in the busi¬ness school, and one in the federa¬tion of theological schools. ISLlacks a contestant for one seat inthe school of medicine. University of Chicago, October 15, 1954 > 3 1Prefabs Will be Razed;Remaining Tenants OrganizeAs of June 1955 the University’s pre-fab units will be torn down, displacing some 1,000persons from 380 families.Currently, the pre-fab council is attempting to reorganize in order to insure that it willremain a group after the pre-fabs come down. It would like to form an organization for allmarried students interested in providing better housing and solving other problems facingthem.. . administration. . can plan for the future.”The council was originally in the past, it has been success- According to Mitchell, the pre¬formed in the summer of 1953 ful in getting floodlights, having fab tenants “like the Universityto provide an organ through the University remove unused ice and want to be a part of the Uni-whieh pre-fab tenants and tenants boxes from the pre-fab units, and versity, or else they wouldn’t haveof other University housing could in increasing the number of come here. The University nowdiscuss their problems with the armed guards stationed in the has a responsibility to help us andarea. The guards were requested our families find a place to live.Water Floods Midway in DownpourStreets Become Rivers; Buildings LeakDuring the recent rains, watercovered the Midway from bank tobank and flowed in streams downstreet approaches in the immedi¬ate vicinity of the Quadrangles.The accumulation of five days’rain not only flooded basementsin University buildings, but alsoproduced such sights as barefootstudents walking onto puddle-spattered classroom floors inCobb.Sheets of water up to \Vz inchesdeep invaded the below-ground-level floors of about a dozen build¬ings on campus. The Buildingsand Grounds department also re¬ported approximately ten roofleaks, although there was no dam¬age beyond stained walls andceilings.Student reaction, according toa Maroon survey, ranged frbrn ex¬hilaration to depression. Several•students did not mind the wateritself, but complained that theirshoes had been completely ruined.Several sidewalks in the areawere flooded within a few incites°f bte edge because of the pluggedup sewers. On University avenue,cars parked along sidewalks pre¬vented effective leaf clearance bythe Bureau of Sewers. Three freshmen inspect results of rainstorm. Occupants of Mid¬way puddle are, from left to right, Ina Davis, Debby Mines, andRuth Gordon. after a number of disturbanceswere reported.As of now the University has nostated plan for the relocation ofthe pre-fab tenants, but they areconsidering the problem. RobertStrozier, dean of students, haspromised to give the council ananswer in January. “Meantime,we’re worried,” stated Scot Mitch¬ell, vice-president of the pre-fabcouncil. “The University shouldgive us a policy statement so weClubs StartFall RushingThe official rushing period forthe women’s clubs on campus be¬gins Sunday at six. During thefirst week each club will have oneparty, scheduled as follows:Monday—Mortar Board, Phi GammaDelta house, 7:30-9:30 p. m. ^Tuesday—Quadranglers, Phi Upsllonhouse, 7:30-9:30 p. m.Wednesday—Sigma, Zeta Beta Tauhouse, 7:30-9:30 p. m.Sunday—Delta Sigma, Phi GammaDelta house, 2-4 p.m.The clubs will have luncheondates in the coffee shop nextTuesday and Wednesday and inthe Hunt room next to Hutchisoncommons on Tuesday, October 26.The girls will also have coffeedates in the Hunt room nextThursday.The clubs are trying to contactall eligible girls. However, anygirls who are sixteen or over andare interested in joining a wom¬en’s club are invited. We have to provide a healthy,clean atmosphere for our kids.”The income of pre-fab tenantsruns anywhere from nothing to$6000 annually, with an averageof $2700. One-room units rent for$48, while two-room units are $55per month. A large proportion oftenants are GI’s and many ofthese have used up their GI Billcredits.Mitchell says he would like tosee “the University build one, per¬haps two or three low-cost apart¬ment buildings on the order of theOlander Homes (Chicago Housingauthority homes at 39th near thelake). This would house aboutone-third of the families withchildren w ho need a place to live.”CHA rents range from $27 to $62based on one-fifth of the family’sincome. Families must have anannual income of $3700 or less toqualify.SG Tells Voting LawsIndependent Students Leagueand Student RepresentativeParty slates and programs areannounced in the two page sup¬plement, pages six and seven,in this issue. Election story ison page 4.Changes in election laws con¬cerning who is eligible to votein the forthcoming StudentGovernment election, and theFEPC code, adopted by bothparties, are also explained. .Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON vcrover 13, 1*54Adler Returns to OpenWorks of Mind SeriesMortimer J. Adler returns toUC tonight to make his annualopening address in University Col¬lege’s Works of the Mind series,speaking on '’The nature of in¬tellectual work” in Kimball hallat 8 p.m.Tickets to lecture are availableat University College, 19 S. La¬Salle at $1.50 each.An outstanding figure on theUC campus during the '30s and’40s until he became director ofthe Institute of Philosophical Re¬search in San Francisco, Adlerwas one of the creators of the Ba¬sic Program of Liberal Educationfor Adults and has been an asso¬ciate editor of the Great Books ofthe Western World foundationsince 1945. Maroon Opens Picture ContestExplain rulesPhoto by Wolf How well do UCers know theirown campus?To find out, the MAROON isstarting a "Know the Quad¬rangles” contest, open to anymember of the UC community.The winner each week will bethe first person who correctlyidentifies the mystery photographwhich appears in the MAROON,and reaches the MAROON officewith the answer.The prize consists of a cartonof cigarettes.A sample of the little knownkind of places pictured from un¬usual angles is the photo of oneof the control rooms in ArgonneCancer research hospital. Thisweek’s mystery photograph ap¬pears on the left.MAROON staff members andtheir families are not eligible forcontest participation.Student, University Jobs HandledThrough Employment OfficeBy Lois GardnerStudents who want jobs, as wellas just anyone who wants towork for the University areserved by the employment officelocated on 58th and Ellis.All non-academic jobs, rangingfrom baby sitting to glass blow¬ing, are handled through thrSoffice in Ingleside hall, under thedirectorship of Fred Bjorling."The personnel office is sft upbasically to administer non-aca¬demic jobs at the Univesity ofChicago, to integrate the busi¬ness of correcting jobs to stu¬dents and helping them to findjobs off the campus,” Bjorlingstated.In this capacity the office di¬vides jobs into full-time andpart-time, student and non-stu¬dent, on campus ind off-campus. classifications. The office hasevolved gradually into its pres¬ent position, and 13 persons arenow employed there. During thepast nine months : pproximately1.500 persons have used the fa¬cilities of the office, and thenumber is expected to be wrellover 2,000 by the end of thisyear, according to availablefigures.Originally the office main¬tained only a file of availablejobs, and students selected thosefrom the file which seemed mostpromising. This system has beenreplaced by an interview process, which, according to the office, ikmore satisfactory in all respects.The office can match skills andjobs and have a better chance ofsatisfying both students and em¬ployers. In this system, possibleemployers can be checked beforestudents are sent cut.Mrs. Patricia Metcalf, inter¬viewer in charge of studentplacement, asserted that thissystem satisfies everyone in¬volved, and that “most of ouremployers are so loyal that it’swonderful.”The one open file remaininglists room and board openings—those which give a student hisroom in a private home in ex¬change for baby-sitting or otherACASA Book StoreScholarly used booksTypewriters bought, sold and repaired1117 E. 55th Si. Ill 3-5»65l2.98T JUST S*M» IT 0N>new LAMLight Diffuser... to transform oldfashioned fixtures intohandsome contemporarylighting. Washable andnearly unbreakable whitetextured fiberglas 14"diameter. Fits alldecors.HERMANS935 E. 55th Ml 3-6700‘‘biff enough to serve yon”“small enouyh towant to” C'llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll*I SAVE *1.061I EACH GALLON iPERMANENT TYPEANTI-FREEZE$189 Per CallonCASH AND CARRYREGULAR PRICE AFTER THIS SALE $2.95Will Not Boil Away — Lasts All WinterConforms to U. S. Army SpecificationsPreVents Corrosion — Ethylene Glycol TypeGood for a Limited Time Only!COME IN TODAY!iJEWELL SERVICE STATION!| AND PERFECT CAR WASH |S 5601 South Cottage Grove MU 4-9106 STiimiiiiiitimmimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiii?services, and sometimes board inexchange for housework.Another file of job situationsis maintained-^ places where stu¬dents in the past have securedoff-campus jobs which have beenparticularly interesting. Theseplaces are recommended by Mrs.Metcalf to students who mightbe qualified.All jobs, full-time, part-time,campus and off-campus, arelisted and recommneded on anon-diseriminatory basis, accord¬ing to the office, in line withgeneral University principles.Employers who desire to placeopenings with qualifications oth¬er than necessary skills are notSee ‘Student,’ page 12 'VfTTf.TTTVTmTTT.TTTTTTTTTTT.TTTT.t.fTTt.TTTTITALIANFIESTAPIZZERIALarge $2Special PizzaVa SausageVa AnchovyVa PepperVa Mushroom 1427 E. 67thMU 4 90569022FREE DELIVERYTO U. of C. STUDENTSOn orders over $2TABLE SERVICE11 A.M. to 3 A.M.Quick Courteous Service7 Days a WeekDELIVERY SERVICE5 P.M. to 3 A.M.^AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAiWhen you pause...make it count...have a CokeeomtD UNDER AUTHORITY Of THE COCA-COIA COMPANY IVThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.U « ri.lil<i.d kati-iwt O IM3, Coc« Cmlm C«Paft SOctober 15, 1954 in THI CHICAGO MAROONT, r' ; - .Photo by CooperRuth and Wolf Hydebrand, exchange studnite who recently mar¬ried, upsetting their living arrangements.Havoid Urey Airs Views uc PrankstersOn Scientists, Secrets, Security Pilfer (?)PeriscopeThe adverse effects of public preoccupation with problems of security and espionage uponIhe recruiting and training of competent scientists was emphasized in a speech made last Fri¬day by Harold C. Urey, Martin A. Ryerson distinguished service professor of chemistry anda member of the Institute of Nuclear Studies.Urey spoke at a dinner given in his honor by the Chicago chapter of the American Insti¬tute of Chemists who presented him with their 1954 testimonial award.Speaking on “Scientists, secrets* and security,” Urey statedthat some degree of military strength is vital to American ists in the United States at pres-security, but that the scientific knowledge necessary to ade- ent, he asserted, and internalquate military strength is being seriously curtailed by too security against Communist phil-much public intereference into osophy is being strengthened byporblems of security and espi- lean people should turn their at- vanishing of the small frac-inane among scientists. tention to the tar greater problem "on of( lh.e',P°PU'US t0 wh,lch ^om'A »«ons Dent motive of improving primary and second-Such episodes as the cross-fire ary schools from the standpoint . . ^. ■! ’of accusations surrounding Dr. of producing technical people, and P°SI Commenting on" American seEdward Condon and Dr. Robert of attracting a sufficient number pu . relati^n to the currentOppenheimer, and the publication of people who have natural ability international Dolitical scene Urevof a book attacking large numbers in the exact sciences into college. . , Pof scientists who have worked on “We face in this country a near- .. . . , ,, ,the hydrogen bomb, have created crisis in training scientists and more £ffectivel if the westerna tension in the field of science engineers, he stated. JPublic Contentedwliich is discouraging to peoplestarting the long road to a scien¬tific career.“The entire field of secrecy,either of scientific or non-scien-tific matters, should not concernthe average American more than security, Urey emphasized, is "aninternal feeling of well-being of union idthe body politic, and the absenceboth of violent religious, political, _and economic factionalism and of xvlTTl frtOYl tO A\Cetabout one per cent of the time any feeling that great injustice *that he gives to his responsibili- exists fqr a substantial fraction of Students at Teasties as a citizen, said Urey. the population.Instead, he suggested, the Amer- Such a condition of stability ex- Educational interest teas havebeen scheduled by Student Gov¬ernment through Wednesday inSwift commons. The teas, atwhich Mrs. Kimpton will be pres¬ent, are designed to give under¬graduates an opportunity to meetthe quadrangle faculty.Yesterday the first tea of theseries was held, with members ofthe physical sciences division pres¬ent. Today’s tea will have presentthe law faculty; Monday the hu¬manities and Tuesday the socialscience instructors will be on handto meet students.Exchange Students Get Married,Where Can They Live Now?Two German exchange students, Wolf Heydebrand and Ruth Keiling, here under the aus¬pices of SG on the Frankfort Exchange program, have disrupted arrangements made byboth SG and the office of Dean Strozier by being quietly married in Rockford, Illinois, twoweeks ago.The couple, fellow students in Frankfurt, were chosen out of a group of eight applicantslast March and arrived in this country on September 11. Plans had been made for Mrs. Hey¬debrand, formerly Miss Keiling, to live at International houseand Wolf to jjve at one of the fraternities changing each quar- wolf has three jobs and Ruth twoter. Since their marriage, the 3 which help defray the expensescouple have been living in an cause the former place was, “too °f their small, third floor apart-. T, , dirtv ” ment and meals.apartment on Kenwood avenue, uuiy- . . . A .. . ,. . , - ., . . , Under the conditions of their A sum amounting to one hun-but moved early this week to an G4 visas both are auowed twenty dred and fifty-five dollars, origin-address on Dorchester avenue, be- hours per week of part time work, ally earmarked for the cost ofMiss Keiling’s meals at Fosterhall, will be given to the couplequarterly. They have no incomeother than their combined earn¬ings and the SG fund.Clive S. Gray, president of SG,said in an interview that, “Its hap¬pened (referring to the marriage)and we wish them all possible suc¬cess. However, it is our experiencethat the best results, both for theforeign and American studentsare obtained when the foreign stu¬dent lives in student accommoda¬tions. How'ever, in this case, weare very fond of the Heydebrandsand will do everything possibleto help them.”George Stone, president of theinter-fraternity council, said thata plan was before the council tooffer meals to the Heydebrandsat one of the houses, changingweekly. “We were, of course, look¬ing forward to having Wolf at thehouses, but will do everything inour power to help these people.”Dean Strozier said that “thechange in status will not affectthe tuition and scholarships givenunder the exchange program. Wewere slightly disappointed (at themarriage) in that the idea of theprogram is to acquaint the for¬eign students with American con¬ditions which could best be donethrough the fraternities and thefacilities of International house.There has been no comment fromthe German end of the programas yet.”Chess BattlersMeet in TourneyChess enthusiasts will have achance this month to show theirmettle, since the chess club hasbegun a University-wide tourna¬ment. Any student or facultymember is eligible to compete.Games may be played eitherupon special arrangement or atthe regular club meetings Tues¬day nights at 8, in the Judsonlounge. The tournament is beingarranged so that players willusually meet opponents of theirown strength.democracies created a limited su-* per-government of limited powersA pre-requisite ot any national £ a"(ederal type... He su‘gKlMan organization based on the At- The periscope has beenstolen from thb submarinenow lodged behind the Mu¬seum of Science and Industry.Well, maybe not a real periscope,but a very good wooden modelmade for the museum by the USNavy at Portsmouth.Museum officials say the object,about five feet lortg and eightinches in diameter, disappeared aweek ago Friday. They addedthat it was dark out at the timeand mentioned that they saw somefellows around previous to theperiscope’s vanishing act.Harvey B. Lemon, a former pro¬fessor of physics at UC who isnow an adviser at the museum,called Robert Strozier Monday onthe matter. The museum had re¬ceived an anonymous telephonecall which tipped them off thatthe stolen periscope could befound at a fraternity house on theUC campus.Strozier then called William Bir-enbaum, director of student activ¬ities. Birenbaum contacted GeorgeStone, who is president of theinterfraternity council. Stonechecked all the fraternities. Thereport ... no periscope.The police are baffled. TheWashington park district stationdidn’t know the periscope hadbeen stolen. While a squad carwas cruising down 57th streetTuesday night a call was relayedto it. It purportedly originatedfrom the Phi Kappa Psi frater¬nity. The tip named men of thePhi Sigma Delta fraternity guilty,so the patrolmen proceeded totheir house on the double. Whenthey arrived the Phi Sigs wereengaged in divisional rushing. Athorough search of the houseyielded . . . nothing.Special Purchase!!The new GazelleA Raleigh Product Sf/ie t/l/itnn PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET3-Speed'Sturme-Archer'• Hercules• Dawes• Repairs• AccessoriesJackson Park Bike Shop5333 S. Lake Park Offer AgriculturalScholarshipsThe deportment of agricultureis offering $2,750 to $3,410 forsubprofessional scientific work incotton textile research, principallyin Washington, D. C. and vicinity.Successful applicants must be18, must be citizens of or oweollegiance to the US, must passan appropriate civil service exami¬nation, and must have fittingtraining or experience.Further information and appli¬cation forms may be obtainedfrom the US civil service com¬mission, Washington 25, D. C., orat the central post office of Chi¬cago, Canal and Van Burenstreets.READYFOR DICTATION...We are now able to offer a unique, new service to our customers . . .a telephone-tope recorder hook-up . . . just dial HY 3-5343 for detailsof our dictation-transcription service. If you are behind in your corre¬spondence, or if you would like to dictate your manuscript, this moybe your answer.UV 0 CJMQ HYDE PARK LETTER SHOPllT U-M*W 5646 S. HARPER AVE. Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 %Page THI CHICAGO MAROON October 15, 1954Issued *nce weekly by Hie publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publica¬tion oHice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones:Editorial Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1010; Business and Advertising Offices,Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed free of chorge, ond subscriptions bymoil, $3 per year. Business Office hours: I to 5 p.m., Mondoy through Friday.Alien R. Jongereditor-in-chief Richard E. Wardmanaging editorJ Editors' ColumnVoting AdviceWill Be AvailableEach year the Student Government ballot boxes on campusare surrounded by party members who supply pencils, partyplatforms, and free advice on exactly which square to mark.Since no voting booths are provided, this practice oftenreaches distressing proportions, with candidates watching tosee just who the voter picks.The blame for this cannot be placed entirely on those cam¬paigning since as long as some candidates engage in last min¬ute electioneering, those Mho refrain from such actions arhbound to lose votes.It therefore seems the task of Student Government, whichpasses the laws pertaining to election procedure, to preventthis practice.The present election law is less than effective. It providesthat there shall be no campaign literature distributed or dis¬played or any electioneering carried on within ten feet of anyballot box, “wherever practicable.” The “wherever practic¬able” clause, in itself makes the law meaningless. Also no pen¬alty is provided for candidates w ho break this law. Its enforce¬ment, moreover, is put in the hands of the election and rulescommittee of SG— many of whose members are candidates.Since crowds around the ballot boxes are large, often it isnecessary to remove the ballot at least 20 feet and in manycases further from the ballot box in order to mark it. Ten feetis thus a very unrealistic distance. At this distance, a prac¬ticed candidate can easily see how the student casts his ballot.It is important for the future of SG that the following pointsbe provided in a new and better law:1) No literature should be posted in such a way that it canbe read from the polling area.2 A table near the polling box should be provided at whichballots must be marked, and at which no electioneering isallowed. *3) No candidate should be allowed to watch any voter markhis ballot.4) Violators should lx* subject to a penalty, such as dis¬qualification, strong enough to insure compliance.5) A procedure should be provided by which non-candidatesmay initiate action against candidates who break the law'.6) A tribunal should be provided to decide such cases ofinfraction composed of non-candidates, such as the student-faculty-administration court.Until such action is forthcoming, the major political groupswill continue to electioneer near the polls, and frustrated vot¬ers will struggle in vain to keep their ballots secret.Allen R. .lancerJoy Burbach Letters WelcomedThe Maroon welcomes Wa¬ters from its readers. Any com¬ments on matters of interest tothe University community areappropriate subject matter.Letters should not exceed250 words. Letters exceedingthis limit will be subject toediting.The Maroon will not con¬sider for publication letterswhich do not bear the author’ssignature. However, the au¬thor’s name will be withheldfrom publication upon request.Letters should be addressedto Editor, Chicago Maroon,5706 University Ave.Letters . ..Grey challengedEditor, The MaroonClive Gray’s report on the NSAconference in last week’s Maroonclearly shows that he standsagainst student exchange with theSoviet Union. This means that heis opposed to US students partici¬pating in one of the most practicaland important programs for theeasing of the tensions of the ColdWar. Gray’s action at the NSACongress, where he was one of themost important leaders againststudent exchange with the SovietUnion (as reported in the ChicagoTribunei points out that he is notlimiting himself to a passive role.This active opposition to exchangedirectly contradicts boih the 1SLand SRP platforms in the NSAelection and the pre-Congress posi¬tion of the entire_U. of C. NSAdelegation (See Maroon Aug. 6).Gray tries to justify his person¬al opposition to student exchangewith the Soviet Union by arguingthat exchange and discussion bo-tweet Soviet and US students can-'not bring about any understand¬ing or communication. This is justa student version of the old can*aid pushed by the generals thatwar is inevitable and thereforenegotiations and understanding isimpossible. Perhaps Gray’s labelof the “intransigent Soviet mentality” might more aptly be applied to himself and the likes ofhim. For it is they who refuse toadmit that there are new possibil¬ities for peace, and that there havebeen successful negotiations re¬cently.During the summer there weretwo more delegations of US stu¬dents touring the Soviet Union.There was a magnificent ex¬change of ministers at the WorldCouncil -of Church meeting inEvanston. According to Mr. Graythe clergyman from Czechoslo¬vakia should not have been ableto understand the viewpoint of theclergymen from Chicago. Yetthese ministers were able to un¬derstand one another, and jointlycame out for co-existence of dif¬ferent political systems. They alsocalled for a ban on the H-bombBy this v e i;y meeting and ex¬change of opinions, the clergymen gave lie to the State Departmentand Mr. Gray’s position that ne¬gotiations and understanding be¬tween East and West are impos¬sible.In a similar way. a reciprocalstudent exchange with the .SovietUnion can also go a long way inbreaking down the barriers of thecold war. We are confident thatthe students at the U. of Chicagowould be interested in a visit ofSoviet students here.Paula ami Hartdd KaronI^abor Y<mth leagueNSA national scoredDear Sirs:It was with much interest thatI read Clive Gray’s article on the7th National Student AssociationCongress, in the last MAR(X)N;in particular, the paragraphs inwhich he ascribes to the 700 dele¬gates to the Congress an ''irre¬sponsibility" not in accord withthe best interests of the NSA. andspeaks of the need for the NSAstaff to control any such mani¬festations.As a representative of this cam¬pus to the NSA. however, I mustpoint out 1ha1 the NSA is a demo¬cratic Representative organiza¬tion; the ultimate authority on allquestions, and in particular thepolicy-making power reside with¬in the plenary convention of 700delegates from individual schools.They represent and are chosen byAmerican students; the NSA staffand National Executive Commit¬tee has no right to attempt to dic¬tate policy decisions to the Con¬gress. For example, the action ofthe NSA official who broughtinto the Commission on Interna¬tional Affairs a number of foreign\\ tfTake Trouble to VoteAsks Gray, SG PrexyV“Student Government has come a long way toward servingthe student body in the last year,” Clive Gray, president ofSG, said this week in commenting on the forthcoming elec¬tions. “I hope that people will show' their appreciation ofthis effort by at least, taking the trouble to vote.”According to SG voting regulations, a vote may be cast byappropriately marking an in- —: —~—:dividual's name, or simply ***«• anrt ,he law and “e",ra]turning in a ballot unmarked SC'1IJ" S both up one. On theor with less than the maximumnumber of candidates marked. other hand, physical sciences, bi¬ological sciences, and business areThe effect of the latter vote is each down one seat.an abstention which makes it*more difficult for any candidateto obtain a majority in the bal¬loting. The following number of mem¬bers will be elected from each sec¬tion of the university: college. 13;social sciences, 10; physical sci- students to speak against studentexchange with Soviet Russia, butnone of the many foreign studentspresent whose experience favoredsuch exchange, was entirely inex¬cusable. The situation reflects .thetendency of the functionaries ofany democratic organization tolook upon that organization as anend in itself, rather than as a me*dium for the advancement of theaims of its members, in this case,the NSA staff apparently felt thatthe NSA's “respectability*’ mightbe endangered if it took stand*on any issues.Robert W. Fiovd(NSA-SRP-Phy. Scl.)SG Arm of DeanAs an old student who has seenquite a few efforts put forth bythe politically active members ofthe student body, I must con¬gratulate the Student Govern-ment in its lalest super-colossalservice mart in a wire cage. Theservice is a proper diversion f^rthose who might otherwise be in¬clined to represent the studentsby whom they were elected.It has too often proven em¬barrassing to the administrationof our university for those in re¬spectable SG positions to clamorfor student rights, the collegeplan, academic freedom, and otherminor issues. The wire cage is ap¬propriately confining for suchpeople.We are proud of an SG whichhas recognized its value as an ex¬tension of the Dean of Studentsoffice and especially happy thatit squashed the radical efforts «.fthose w ho would have had a bookcoop instead.CriticINTERNATIONAL HOUSE MOVIE PROGRAMAssembly Holt, Monday ond Thursday Evening at 8Monday, Oct. 18—Dance Film Festival with Velcrie Bettis Jose Linton.Lucas Hovins, Uonova ,Lakshins Wana Singh, ond AustralianBallet Groups. Admission 45c.Thursday, Oct. 21—Rain (American (. Based on story by W. Somer¬set Maugham. Admission 35c.Your church away from home . . .UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF DISCIPLES OF CHRIST5655 University (Opposite Bartlett Gym'Communion 10:30 a.m. Morning Worship 11 a.m.Fellowship Dinners — Friday and SundayWranglers (supper and discussion)—Sunday, 6:00 pm.'48 Club (couples) —Fourth Saturday, 8:00 p m.DOrchester 3-8142 for information and reservationsI TO MEMBERS OF THE COMMUNITY AT LARGEThe Temple Isaiah IsraelChorol Societydirected by Andrew Foldiinvites you to join in the preparationof a concert celebratingTHE AMERICAN JEWISH TERCENTENARYRehearsals onThursdays at 8:30 p m.First Meeting Oct. 21 Temple Isaiah IsraelCommunity House, Room 265039 S. GreenwoodThere will be one more seat enees, 4; humanities, 4; medical,available in SG this year. Com- 3; law, 3; FTS, 3; biological sci>puted on the basis of enrollment, enees, 2; SSA, 2; business,college representation is up two Grad. Library, 1. 1; No MoreScratched IDStudents voting in Student Gov¬ernment elections will no longerhave the validations on their IDcards scratched. A new system,notching the cards on their sides,has been devised.Students must present their IDcards at balloting tables in orderto vote. The cards are marked toprevent plural voting.Previous methods involvedscratching the validation. Deepscratching, however, damaged thecards; and people unacquaintedwith the University, such as draftboards and discount services,thought the validation was can¬celler! by the'marks.The new method devised by Wil¬liam Seltzer, working in coopera¬tion with Albert C. Cotton,'bursarof the University, will not damage the card. w dorn^°11 5530 harperGifts # Gourmet's Correr • StationeryWe have large white Japanese Teapots6-cup sixe $3.50 • Teacups, 49c eachPage 5October 15/ 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROONWalgreen Lectures Starting Soonpublic lectures under the Charles R. Walgreen Foundation for theg)lHlv of American Institutions will begin on October 25.The lecturers for the autumn quarter are Sidney E. Mead, associateprofessor of history of American Christianity; Clarence B. Randall,( hairman of the Inland Steel company, formerly chairman of the U. S.Commission on Foreign Economic Policy; and Walter Johnson, pro¬fessor of American history and chairman of the department of history.‘ I he Shape of Protestantism in America,” is the topic of the firstseries of lectures to be given by Mead. They will be held in Room 122of the Social Science research building at 1126 East 59th, October25. 26. 28 and 29 at 4:30 p.m.What have VICEROYS gotthat otherfilter tip cigaretteshaven't got?-THE ANSWER ISIN EVERY VICEROY TIPInside every Viceroy tip is a vast networkof 20,000 individual filters to filter yoursmoke over and over again. You get onlythe full, rich taste of Viceroy’s choice to¬baccos . . . and Viceroys draw so freely.Yes, you get Viceroy’s remarkable newtip . . . with 20,000 individual filters . . .plus king-size length for only a penny ortwo more than cigarettes without filters.WORLD’S LARGEST-SELLINGFILTER TIP CIGARETTENewKing-SizeFilterTipyicEOnly a Penny or Two More than Cigarettes Without Filter*/»S' £1 is ft ■% V.; <* si4 2 2b* *s '•$ ^ ’ ‘ ♦’ ’ * Presents PlanFor Institute onLocal RelationsThe establishment of a“neighborhood institute” atUC was proposed at Tuesdaynight’s Student Governmentmetting by Ralph Fertig, chair¬man of the -University neighbor¬hood committee.The plan of the institute, asdescribed in Fertig's bill, is “tooffer (in symposium form) cours¬es of instruction and approachesfor integration of public, private,volunteer and corporate groups’interest in human relations, com¬munity conservation, renewal orredevelopment, and public policy.”A motion empowering the com¬mission on the neighborhood to“enter into discussions with ap¬propriate administration and fac¬ulty personnel” regarding theproposal was passed'unanimouslyby the assembly.Fertig reported that many peo¬ple in the various areas had re-ceived no special training in theirjobs and none had the benefits ofan integrated approach.He was of the opinion that suchan institute would be welcomedby people in the field. “Bringingthese people together on this cam¬pus.” he said, “would be a fineand useful thing.”Cap and GownElects OfficersMike Rogers, newly elected edi¬tor of the campus annual. Cap andGown, announced the appoint¬ments of Paul Hoffman and MarySpiegel as associate editors andBill Seckinger as business man¬ager, at their first meeting lastMonday.Rogers referred to plans for a“bigger and better annual, as orig¬inal and well done as the traditionhere at the University demands.”The “bigger and better” annualgoes to press on March 12, 1955,and it is scheduled for distribu¬tion June 1.Seethedelightfulhandmadependantsfor fallbyrosemaryzwick*2&*3atUnivorsily Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.andBordelon Designs1424 E. 55th St. UCers Take Humanities,French in Faroff LocalesTwo regular college courses taught during the summerquarter were given the added attraction of a different localeagain this year. French I was taught in Paris, and humanitiesI classes were held at Aspen, Colorado.“It was a good summer’’—at least for the nine studentswho took French on the scene. George L. Playe, who was incharge of the course, addedthat, “The total effect was agreat success.”Instruction began on theboat going over, which roundedthe coast of Ireland and landed atLe Havre. Base of operations wasthe Cite Universitaire, part of theUniversity of Paris. The students,who stayed at the Belgian pavil¬ion, experienced something newin co educational dormitories. Thegirls especially had some troubleadjusting to co-ed toilets andshowers. No untoward difficultieswere reported, though.Speak FrenchClasses were held three hours aday, five days a week, with lan¬guage I once a week. The coursewas the same as taught here oncampus, but with an added em¬phasis on conversational French.Besides heavy impromptu cov¬erage of Paris, the students tookseveral group tours. Reims, Tours,Mont St. Michel, San Mialo, Ver¬sailles, Chartes, and Fontaine¬bleau were all visited. Good foodwas plentiful, with prices aboutthe same as in the U. S., in spiteof the psychological effect ofspending francs at roughly therate of 350 for $1.The comprehensive exam wastaken in Paris the last day ofAugust. Mr. Playe mentionedthat the students did very well.A few of them also took theFrench II comp.Course Strenuous“Strenuous, but fine,” was Mil¬lard P. Binyon’s report of hisimpression of the humanitiescourse he taught this summer.Facilities were excellent for the14 students, he said. Various as¬pects of the large and complexAspen institute included the As¬pen art school and three musicalconcerts a week. There was alsoa student recital each week. Thegirls lived in the Gay 90’s housewhere hour-and-a-half informalPortrait byLOUISE BARKERPhotographer1457 E. 57th St. BU 8-0876 classes were held twice a day.Boys stayed in the smaller ad¬joining ski barn.Social life wasn’t neglected. Apicnic at Maroon lake, a visit tothe ghost town of Ashcroft, anda 40-minute trip from 7,900 feetto 11,300 feet on a chair ski liftprovided breaks from the books.There were no failures on thecomprehensive. It was given inthe new seminar building, and theessay topic was the room in whichthe test was taken.Five DebatersHead for PurdueStudent Forum debaterswill attend the seventh annualPurdue invitational ForensicConference this weekendwhere five UC debaters will meetin clash debate teams from 16 col¬leges selected for leadership intheir areas.Among universities representedat the Purdue conference thi&yearare Notre Dame, Purdue, U. S.Military Academy. University ofPittsburgh, and Utah.Debaters selected from Forummembers to represent the affirm¬ative on the topic, “Resolved:That the U. S. should extend rec¬ognition to Communist China,”are Donald McClintock and RogerBowen. Upholding the negativewill be Edward Renshaw and Jo¬seph Engel. John Merrill willserve as diseusion leader andMarvin Phillips, director ofForum, will be critic-judge.Following the Purdue tourna¬ment, UC debaters will meetteams from Northwestern, Brad¬ley, and University of Michigan.VOTE!Hyde park theatreon lake park at 53rdfniportmil AnnouncementCOMING FRIDAY, OCT. 22At Long Last —LA IiONDEno 7 9071 Hyde park theatre L^e53P,dkstudent rate 50cBeginning Friday, Oct. 15Vittorio deSica's latest and greatest“INDISCRETION OF AN “BICYCLEAMERICAN WIFE” THIEF”The wide range- of Vittorio deSica's directorial gen:us is admirablydisplayed in this program combining his latest production ... a roman¬tic melodrama, made in Italy, but spoken in English with an all Englishspeaking cast ... his greatest production of all . . . the great master¬piece of Italian realism wfnch was honored by the NY Film Criticsaward, a special academy award, and a large number of internationalprizes.Also UPS's latest and greatestFudgets Budget and Edgar Allan Poe's Telltale Heart IJCOMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th Sf.• Bar be cue chicken• Bar be cue ribsDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525IDPag* $ THE CHICAGO MAROON October 15, 1954if SRP and ISL State Their AimsISL Concept of SGby CLIVE GRAY, ISL memberNow in its fifth year as the majority party in Student Gov¬ernment, the Independent Students League approaches nextweek’s election in the hope of receiving another opportunityto serve the student body. Since its founding in 1948, ISL hasendeavored to learn from the campus what is expected ofStudent Government, and in formulating its platforms it haspromised to serve the campus inthe most practical ways possible. recor(js 0f the 1947-48 Student AsISL realizes that Student Govern¬ment has yet a long way to go be¬fore the campus views it as acompletely responsible and representative organ of student opinion ]eadersA J i. n a .< f ) nt- 4- ! n 1 c sembly picture, among othergems, a debate on the Communistcoup in Czechoslovakia and theSmith Act trial of 11 Communistand student service. But this isthe ultimate objective of ISL’s Oppose AuthorityBut the first ISL members sawpolicy in Student Government, jn attitude an unreasonableand the ISL candidates in this assumption by SG of authorityelection promise to work toward never granted it by the studentit by continuing and increasing body, so they campaigned then,the conscientious services built ’ • 0i--up by previous ISL Student Governments.The idea of Student Government as an organ of student serv as we are doing now. to make Stu¬dent Government first and fore¬most campus-oriented. ISL wonits first SG election in autumn1948. and under the direction ofice was also what motivated the president Alex Pope, set aboutfirst ISL group to organize andcampaign in an SG election back creating responsible student self-government where before therein 1948, just over a year since the had been little more than agita-establishment of Student Govern- tion and debate over “principles.”ment at University. At that time A permanent contribution of themost of the representatives in SG first ISL Student Governmentconsidered the body a forum for was the Student Book Exchange,debating virtually all major po- located first in Ida Noyes Hall,litical issues upon which the pre- later in Cobb, and at present invailing philosophy of students in the Reynolds Club, where lastgeneral and C students especially year’s SG combined it with sev-took a “progressive” stand. The eral other student services.SRP PlatformUniversity of Chicago students face many real problems. Living and educa¬tional expenses are high, academic freedom is under attack, discrimination isstill with us, and we find barriers growing between ourselves and students inmany parts of the world.In the belief that student action, well considered and vigorously implemented,can make effective and worthwhile contributions towards the lessening of theseproblems, SRP suggests the followingprogram. WE NEED STUDENT GOV¬ERNMENT:TO EASE STUDENTS’ ECONOMICBURDENS, SRP pledges to1. Initiate projects for student co¬operative housing, eating and book¬buying.Such projects have In the past beenfrustrated by administration opposi¬tion, but could be realized if an inde¬pendent source of funds were avail¬able.SRP will work with the newly form¬ed NSA committee on co-operatives,will initiate independent fund-rais¬ing projects and continue to work forsuch measures as the quarterly fee,which last year as a referendum re¬ceived the endorsement of a majorityof voters, although not the requisitetwo-thirds. A fee of this type wouldprove insignificant when comparedwith the savings possible.2. Request that the administrationobtain housing as comparable low-level rentals for the 350 families re¬siding in pre-fabs which are to betorn down. We will urge conferencesbetween these students and the ad¬ministration so that residents will beaware of university plans and the re¬moval to other quarters be smoothlyeffected.3 Work for the establishment of a$1 hourly minimum wage for studentemployees of the University.TO DEFEND ACADEMIC FREEDOMThe University of Chicago has an out¬standing tradition of academic freedom.We are proud that our University is oneof the’ few that did not dismiss pro¬fessors who refused to testify beforeInvestigating committees. During the first months of itsexistence, Student Governmentwas a rather unsteady organiza¬tion in which the Administrationwas reluctant to place any sig¬nificant trust or authority. So an¬other task which the first ISLerssaw very clearly was to persuadethe Administration that a continu¬ing and representative student or¬gan could be granted increasingauthority over student affairs.ISL Student Governments in 1948,1949, and 1950 negotiated with theDean of Students on this point,with the result that a Statute ofPowers was finally granted Stu¬dent Government. The Statutegave SG the authority to recog¬nize student organizations and en¬act regulations governing them,subject to the approval of the Ad¬ministration. The most importantlegislation passed by Student Gov¬ernment under this provision wasthe Michigan Plan, regarding or¬ganizations with discriminatorymembership clauses in their con¬stitutions, which an ISL StudentGovernment enacted in 1951.Pass on CodeIn 1950 negotiations were com¬pleted for the establishment ofa Student-Faculty-AdministrationCourt, which was to have jurisdic¬tion in cases arising under theStudent Code, Regulations, Stat¬ute of Powers of Student Govern¬ment, and the SG Constitution.The Court, which contains a stu¬dent majority, asserted its juris¬diction against the Administra¬tion in the MAROON case of late1951. At that time the editor ofthe MAROON was removed bythe Dean of Students in seemingcontravention of the StudentCode. The power of the Court re¬ceived a de'finite setback in thecase, but most of the parties in¬volved felt the prestige of theCourt and the weight of the en¬tire Student Government hadgroups, such as NAACP, and with ourfellow students at other schools Insupporting Implementation of theSupreme Court decision on discrim¬ination in education.2. Propose that SG, in conjunctionwith faculty and administration,adopt the Fair Educational Practicescode proposed by the UC chapter ofNAACP, including the following:a) All entrance requirements orquotas based on religion, race or na¬tional origin shall be abolished.b) All forms of discrimination inhousing, whether in dormitories orofficially approved residences shallbe abolished. Other housing whichgets preferential treatment, e.g.listings or recommendations to stu¬dents, faculty or employees, shall belimited to non-discriminatory hous¬ing units.c) All University Jobs shall be filledon the basis of ability and need only.Discriminatory employers shall notbe listed by the University’s employ¬ment office.d) University recognition shall begranted only to those campus groupsthat do not actually discriminate onthe basis of race, religion or nationalorigin. Any campus organization un¬able or unwilling to comply shalllose its campus recognition.3. Urge that such a code be adoptedby the state legislature, as a step inthe direction of racial equality inAmerican society, which alone canmake a truly meaningful equal edu¬cational opportunity for all.TO ESTABLISH INTERNATIONALEXCHANGESRP feels that dement Attlee’s state- made quite a dent in the unitedforces behind the Dean’s action.A third major step forward instudent self-government wastaken by last year’s ISL StudentGovernment, which won Adminis¬tration approval for a plan where¬by student organizations partlysubsidized from the student activi¬ties fund will have a say in theallocation of this fund. ISL’s goalin this matter is to obtain com¬plete financial autonomy for thestudent groups involved.Reflect Concern• Aside from its emphasis on thedevelopment of student self-gov¬ernment, ISL has represented andexpressed unambiguous studentconcern on the issue of academicfreedom. It helped found in 1949the first All-Campus Civil Liber¬ties Committee, to which repre¬sentatives of all campus organ¬izations were invited to discussthe issues raised by the BroylesBills, introduced into the IllinoisLegislature then and during thefollowing two legislative sessions.Every other year the campus hasbeen aroused by the threat ofthese Bills, which trespass onall constitutional safeguards forfreedom of speech. And each timea campus leader who belonged toISL has chaired the ACCLC, andtestified before a committee ofthe State Legislature to bring re¬sponsible student opinion to bearagainst the Broyles Bills.The most evident of ISL’s ef¬forts in SG have been those de¬voted to creating services for thestudent body in areas not dealtwith by the Administration. Thebest-known examples of these arethe Student Book Exchange, Tick¬et Agency, Mimeograph Service,and Loan Service, all of whichoperated separately for periods ofa month to six years, until theywere centralized last April in theReynolds Club.ISL PlatformThe Independent Students League (ISL) was founded in 1948 bv a group ofstudents who believed that responsible self-government in extra-curricular affairsis a vital part of the educational process. Since then, ISL has worked throughStudent Government to implement student opinion on matters directly affectingthe student body, and to establish programs for serving the material needs ofstudents.ISL believes that Student Governmentshould concentrate its efforts in areaswhich pertain to students as stu¬dents, and particularly to the prob¬lems of our campus. At the same timewe recognize our responsibility to con¬sider off-campus questions of directInterest to students and to the Univer¬sity community, such as Fair Educa¬tional Practices legislation, academicfreedom, federal aid to education, andthe University neighborhood. However,ISL believes that Student Governmentshould not pretend to speak for ourdiversified student body on general ISL SlateCollegeVirginia BickerstaffPeter CarmelA1 FortierEiichi FukushimaBob HeavilinRalph HenkleDewey JonesEmil JohnsonBob KurlandJan MetrosJean RaphaelBob ReichlerMary Joan SpiegelSocial ScienceMuriel BaronJoy Smith BurbachDon CassStan FoxClive GrayBruce MacLachlanArthur SolomonJane StanfordDave UtleyDick WeissLaw SchoolGeorge StoneBarbara VogelfangerHarold WardPhysical SciencesMario E. BaurRobert GiedtByron RaineyElias M. SteinFederated Theological SchoolsJack CampbellRoland DelattreClark KuchemanBiological SciencesGary FriedmanMartin GoutermanBusiness SchoolPat ParkerSchool of MedicineDaniel OfferNorman RoseSocial Service AdministrationDorothy IngorsollCharlotte SchpoontGraduate Library SchoolJerry O’MaraHumanitiesJim CampLou SchaeferRomeyn TaylorJerrold Zisookwill begin preparations for a studenteating co-operative.3) CHEAPER BOOKS—Inasmuch asUniversity Bookstore prices are exces¬sively high for both texts and syllabi.ISL will press for an agreement wherebythe Student Service Center can sellcertain new texts at prices near cost.In addition, an ISL Student Govern¬ment will negotiate with the Adminis¬tration to press for special studenthousing arrangements in the neighbor¬hood for students displaced by theproblems of national and international demolition of University pre-fabs. SGpolitics. will suggest that University-ownedISL’s most positive emphasis in SG Ridings now operated commerciallyhas been in the field of student services, profit be devoted to occupancy bywhere we have organized programs to stuaents.save students money and to serve im¬portant student needs. This platformoutlines the work of 1953-54’s ISL Stu¬dent Government, and presents the pro¬gram we will follow in the new 1954-55Student Government. TUITION. We believe that the basicproblem of student costs is high tuition,and we propose two specific approachesto the solution of this problem:1) The tuition increase in 1952 result¬ed in reduced tuition revenue becauseThe political climate created by the ment, “Co-existence or co-extermina-heresy hunt is a continuing threat to tion,” is a timely one. A relaxation ofthe University and necessitates the ac- present international tensions is essen-!Lve. d<“ense of this tradition. In order tlal lf there is to be a future in whichthat SG may contribute to this effort. we can exercise our skills and practice1. SRP will continue to act upon our professions. We feel that there arethe principle that academic compe- concrete contributions which Studenttence is the only criterion for the em- Government can make in this direction.Pioy?Ifnt. faculty. International exchange of students isj strict observation the most effective means by which stu-the Student Bill of Rights to insure dents may help lessen internationalthat student organizations are recog- tensions. SRP helieves that: STUDENT SERVICE CENTER. A major 2L tP® if1, enrollment, asachievement of the present ISL-led Stu- J'*1/** TTin?e' there*dent Government was the creation of :°r.e' ProP°se that the University under-the Student Service Center. The Student *a*e. a substantial and well-publicizedBook Exchange, Ticket Agency, Mimeo- tuition reduction with a view to lncreas-graph Service, and Railroad Discount *ng revenue by attracting more students.Service were centralized in one location, ,,2* Chancellor Kimpton should takeand are now operated several hours daily Iead ln organizing university edunlzed regardless of their politicalviews and may hear speakers of theirchoice.3. SRP will again support and willwork to encourage full campus par¬ticipation in Academic Freedom week.To be successful the week’s activitiesshould engage the whole campus, thevarious organizations as well as indi¬vidual students, in discussing theproblems of maintaining academicfreedom.TO CO-OPERATE WITH FACULTYAND ADMINISTRATIONSRP believes that the common inter¬ests of students, faculty and adminis¬tration could better be served by in¬creased co-operation, in both academicand non-academic matters, where theopinions of all are considered and therights of all maintained.We suggest:1. An expanded student-faculty re¬lations committee, placed on a real¬istic basis and including more stu¬dents. 1. SG should work with NSA to ex¬pand student exchange programs withall countries.2. Since the greatest danger to peacecomes from the tension existing be¬tween the United States and the So¬viet Union, there should be an effortto institute a two-way exchange pro¬gram between these countries.3. In the event that governmentalrestrictions makes the exchange ofstudents impossible, communicationshould be established through the ex¬change of exhibits and cultural mate¬rial between this University and oth¬ers abroad.4. In view of the fact that fourgroups of American students havetoured the Soviet Union during thepast year, but Russian students wish¬ing to tour the United States havethus far been refused visas, SG shouldpress for the granting of visas to stu¬dents from all countries.TO OPPOSE MILITARIZATION by a permanent staff. In additionStudent Loan Service was installed forthe first time.ISL will expand these services by:1) Widening the new policy of order¬ing second-hand book consignmentsfrom downtown dealers;2) Expanding the coverage of theTicket Agency, extended this past yearto the Lyric Theater Guild and the Shu-bert Theaters;3) Increasing the Loan Service fundsby SG approbation; and4) Publicizing and extendlng furtherthe vacation-tripService.ISL will also provide these new serv¬ices:1) The reactivated SG non-discrimina¬tory housing-file, repealed by an SRP-dominated Assembly in 1952-53;2) A Student Publicity Service, wherestudents can have posters made at costand placed promptly on bulletin boards;3) An indexed file of second-handgoods for sale to students;4) A register through which commut¬ing students desiring rides or riderscould be brought together;5) A register listing tutorial services cators in support of a federal scholar¬ship program on these lines:a. Scholarships would be awarded tostudents in all fields of knowledge, onthe basis of national competitive exam¬inations;b. The recipients of the scholarshipswould be free to attend any accreditedinstitution:c. The program would be administeredby professional educators, thus avoidingfederal regulation of education.CIVIL LIBERTIES. ISL vigorously sup¬ports equality of opportunity for allRailroad Discount students without regard to race, color,religion, or creed. Through StudentGovernment, ISL has worked to elimi¬nate discrimination on campus and inthe University community.Michigan PlanSG's most difficult problem last yearinvolved the “Michigan Plan,” enactedby SG in 1951. which provided that after1953 no student organization could re¬main on campus whose constitutionrequired it, even if unwillingly, to dis¬criminate on the basis of race orreligion. Last year only one campusgroup, a fraternity, still had such a con¬stitution. In the face of loud demandsUniversal military training is based2 A course evaluation nro^ram upon the Presupposition of inevitable*hi® «ow”LK"u«Me»p™effi r„,s5ror've* stM Govera-1. Inform the campus in detaileach department to meet withulty for critical discussion.TO COMBAT DISCRIMINATIONSRP believes that all, regardless ofrace, religion, or natural origin, deserveequal opportunity for education. Edu¬cation limited by segregation and dis¬crimination for some means limited__education for all. As an influential proposals to Congress,member of the community, the Univer¬sity should formulate and act upon apolicy of complete integration.SRP in Student Government will:1. Co-operate with NSA and other about the new UMT proposals of theEisenhower administration, whichhave the intended effect of “psycho¬logical conditioning.”2. Guarantee that there will be aco-ordinated and effective expressionof student sentiment against theseWIIAT KIND OF STUDENTGOVERNMENT?Student Government has been moreSee ‘SRP platform,’ page 11 available to students desiring special by the minority party that the fraternityheiP ln c°ur®esl and should be expelled at once, ISL decided6) A file of summer job opportunities, that the deadline should be extendedREDUCING STUDENT COSTS. ISL will until after the national fraternity con-develop programs to reduce student vention in September. Thus the localcosts in three basic areas: chapter would have a chance to achieve1) CHEAPER HOUSING—Last year’s f*nal elimination of the discriminatoryISL-SG won the support of a committee °laus? from its constitution. Lastof UC Trustees for the idea of a studenthousing co-operative. The next ISLStudent Government will search for ahouse for sale or rent near the campusin which conversion to a co-op wouldbe possible under zoning and buildinglaws. We will also seek financial supportfor the project in the form of a Univer¬sity loan, month the fraternity successfully elimi¬nated the clause, and ISL believes thatthis important blow against discrimina¬tion fully justifies our decision to allowthe fraternity „to remain on campus afew months longer.Non-Discriminatory Housing FileDuring the coming year, an ISL Stu¬dent Government will revive the SG2) CHEAPER EATING—A new ISL-SG non-discriminatory housing file. Estab¬ lished in 1952 when the Administrationrefused to eliminate discriminatory list¬ings from its own file, the SG housingfile could work, and that students weresufficiently Interested in the problem tosee that it did. Unfortunately, the filewas abolished ln 1952-53 when SRP con¬trolled Student Government. Theiralternative—to present petitions to theAdministration demanding that it mendits ways—brought no action at all. Nowthe Student Service Center, with itsregular hours, will be an ideal locationfor the revived housing file.Fair Educational PracticesISL will cooperate wtih various groupson campus to work out a Fair Educa¬tional Practices Code for the Universityof Chicago. In addition it will contactthis area's state senators and repre¬sentatives to enlist their support forFair Educational Practices legislation inthe State Legislature.ACADEMIC FREEDOM. ISL believes thatthe right of teachers to teach and stu¬dents to learn should be determinedsolely by academic competence. As ameans of implementing the general stu¬dent agreement on this proposition, ISLwill reactivate the All-Campus Civ ilLiberties Committee, formed of repre¬sentatives from all campus groups dur¬ing the State Legislature sessions of1949, 1951, and 1953 to combat the BroylesBills and other proposed legislationtending to restrict free speech. ISL willalso sponsor activities in connectionwith the NSA endorsed Academic Free¬dom Week in April.NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION.ISL members have been active ln theNational Student Association since itsfounding here in 1946, and an ISL mem¬ber is now chairman of NSA's NationalExecutive Committee. An ISL StudentGovernment will continue to cooperatefully with NSA, particularly in theseaspects:1) Information about NSA low-costsummer tours of Europe will be madeavailable in the Student Service Centerand arrangements for 1955 tours may bemade there;2) The NSA student discount systemwill be expanded to more neighborhoodstores; and3) Student Government will carry onits contacts with foreign student associ¬ations through NSA.FOREIGN EXCHANGE. The SG Frank¬furt exchange program, one of the firststudent-managed programs ln the na¬tion, was founded by an ISL SG in 1951Through the program, two UC studentsgo to Frankfurt and two Frankfurt stu¬dents come to Chicago each year. Thefinancial basis of the program consistsin support from the two universities, aswell as (on the UC side) the fraternitysystem, University Theater, and StudentGovernment itself. ISL will make ef¬forts to make the necessary financialarrangements for extending the programto another country, probably India.INCREASING STUDENT SELF GOV¬ERNMENT. Last year’s ISL StudentGovernment negotiated with the Uni¬versity Administration in the questionof allocating student activities funds,and won the Administration’s approvalfor a plan whereby representatives oiSee ‘ISL Fist form,’ page 7October 15, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Parties Give Histories and SlatesAs a special service to thestudent body of the Univer¬sity of Chicago, the Maroonis printing this two-pagesupplement in advance ofthe Student Governmentelections. The material onthese pages is designed toinform the student TheMaroon does not endorseeither party or their candi¬dates,*SRP SlateCollegeShirley LongCarolyn EggertJanice PorterKarl RodmanSuzanne FriedmannAnn Brooks HuddlesonBarbara KleinJean GourfainDavis BobrowNoel PearlmanRobert SbargeRobert SteinJerry SeifertPhy SciMonroe TngbermanMatt PrasteinRobert MarchMorris HirschFTSChristopher SmithLon SpeerGLSBarbara BirthwrightHumDoris CoopersonDale ChapmanPalmer PinneyJerrold LevyLawMichael GordonWard WrightMichael WyattSoc SciMorton LiebermanCaroline SwensonMilt KotlerRhoda SadigurPaul BreslowRobert ThomasDon AndersonJames FlynnAnn Casselman GraffRobert TreesRi Sci SRP History Toldby Paul Breslow, president of SRPOn October IT.mMZjthe Maroon reported the formationof a new campus political party, the Student RepresentativeParty (SRP), arising from the amalgamation of three liberalstudent groups.SRP’s first platform sharply criticized the previous (ISL)Student Government for its retreat on discriminatory housing;its dangerous Maroon “AdvisoryBoard,” which smacked of possi¬ble censorship of the campuspress; failure to act on co¬operative solutions to the studentseconomic problems and continualdepreciation of the need for cam¬pus participation in SG policy¬making and activity. ingness to co-operate with anygroups in carrying out its pro¬gram.Despite the obstacles of the lackof support from a majority of thecampus and ISL unco-operative-ness, the SRP-SG made an im¬pressive record.The SRP platform declared,"SRP asserts that there existsamong a substantial group of stu¬dents the feeling that SG hasceased to play an important rolein student affairs.”SRP felt that ISL had failed toact in defense of civil liberties andsaid, “We maintain and shall actupon the principle that not onlyacademic freedom but full civilliberties for all people regardlessof belief is a worthy student ob¬jective.”ISL Refuses Go-operationThe newly formed SRP won amajority of seats in the SG of1952-53, although it received lessthan 40 per cent of the vote. (Athird party, the IndependentCoalition, had run a campaign de¬voted largely to accusations ofpro-Communism against both ISLand SRP. Now that IC is no long¬er with us, such tactics have beenadopted by ISL campaigners.)The ISL refused to co-operatein assuming any responsibilitywhatsoever in the’ new SG. SRPhas repeatedly affirmed its will- Support Free PressAmong other things SG underSRP repealed the Maroon Ad¬visory Board and supported theprinciple of a free student press;established the Commission onthe University Neighborhood;conducted a petition campaign insupport of a non-discriminatoryhousing file; made the first por-posals and began work on co¬operative eating, housing andbook-buying services; re-estab¬lished the All Campus Civil Liber¬ties Committee; organized anactive defense against the Jennercommittee’s visiting inquisition;held the first Academic FreedomWeek on campus, which featuredSenator Wayne Morse as princi¬pal speaker; worked to expandthe SG exchange program tobring in countries other than Ger¬many, including those under Com¬munist control; established ademocratic replacement policy forSG and played a leading role inthe effort to save the HutchinsCollege Plan from extermination.SRP continued and expanded pre-Photo by Sam TiptonStudent Government members in conference. From left toLarry LichtensteinJoseph Yavit right: Jan Metros, Jim Handler, Monica Kozasa, Clive Gray. vious student needs programs ofvalue, while abandoning suchservices as the hat and coatchecking stand and the proposedlemonade stand, which seemed tous to be of dubious value.in the field of co-operative serv¬ices, SRP worked out detailed andpractical plans for a housing co¬op, which would have made goodhousing available for about $5 aweek, a book-buying service toobtain discounts on new textbooksand a snack bar for hot sand¬wiches and coffee during the dayand evening in the Reynolds Clubbasement. These plans were frus¬trated by administration unwill¬ingness to advance funds. SRPbelieves that they are still feasibleand has proposed methods of rais¬ing funds independently of theadministration.Increase PopularitySRP increased its popular voteconsiderably in the next two elec¬tions, for NSA delegates and SG,although it did not win a majorityat either election.As the minority party in theStudent Government of 1953-54,SRP indicated its desire to co¬operate with the majority. AgainISL insisted on all the say or noneat all.SRP opposed such ISL moves asamending the Michigan Planwhen it found the administrationunwilling to enforce the agree¬ment, the change in the nature ofthe Student Government Commis¬sion so that it concerned itselfonly with procedural problemsand its continual preoccupationwith trivial rules of procedure andlegal manipulation.SRP feels that this past year’sSG has been characterized by anattitude of majority partisanshipfor its own sake and a failure toundertake positive action in theareas of discrimination, civil lib¬erties and student exchange. Gen¬erally, ISL has acted only whenunder strong pressure, has beenunenthusiastic about anything butprocedure. The wire cage in theReynolds Club basement, whilemaking used books available ata slightly more convenient placehas been extolled by ISL beyondall proportion to its actual value.Handbook PartisanEven the Student Handbook, atraditional publication of SG, hasbeen used for political purposesand personal publicity for thePresident of SG. (One would thinkthat SG’s annual list of discountstores would be non-partisan, but that too includes a picture of Mr.Gray, and a page of comments byhim.)Instead of co-op housing ISLproposed to rent two floors of anearby hotel. SRPers felt that thiswas not of very great benefit tostudents. The plan failed for lackof potential residents.While a minority SRP continuedits program on campus with anumber of meetings, lectures andcultural activities and active par¬ticipation in Academic FreedomWeek.In the NSA election of lastspring, SRP won a majority ofseats on the delegation and over50 per cent of the total vote. Run¬ning on a detailed and practicalplatform of “Four Freedoms forthe Student,” SRP won the sup¬port of many independents whoagreed with its platform. SRPdelegates worked at NSA to carryout their program.Forget PromisesThe ISL delegation, after aninteresting display of doubletalk,forgot their campaign statementsand voted against a resolution en¬dorsing exchange with Commu¬nist countries. ISLer Gray ledthe fight against the exchangeproposal, while SRP-endorsed dele¬gation chairman Dick Ward andall other SRP delegates supportedthe resolution, as they hadpledged.A concluding bit of very recenthistory: At this week’s SG meet¬ing ISL Michigan Plan expertStein, in response to SRP ques¬tioning, stated that the discrimi¬natory fraternity on campus con¬tinues to have a discriminatoryclause, despite recent publicity tothe contrary, and will not stopdiscriminating unless its nextconvention, in two years, re¬passes the resolution repealingthe clause.At the same meeting ISL lead¬ers seemed surprised when askedby SRPers if they had pursued apolicy of accepting discriminatoryadvertisements in their publica¬tions. (At least one such ad wasrun.) They said that it had justnever occurred to them to pursuea policy of requiring non-discrimi¬nation, that one just doesn’t askbusinessmen questions like that.SRP has in the past, and con¬tinues, to believe that one of themost important functions StudentGovernment can serve is to helpbuildi a University community inwhich discrimination is unknown.ISL SRP OK FECP EducationEntrance Requirements: AH en¬trance requirements or quotesbased on religion, race, or na¬tional origin shall be abolished.Questions on application blankswhich pertain to race, religion,or national origin will be re¬moved and the requirement of aphotograph on the applicationblank will be ended. *Student Housing: All forms ofdiscrimination in housing,whether in dormitories or offi¬cially approved residences, shallbe abolished.In University-run residences,questions concerning race, re¬ligion, and national origin shallnot appear on housing applica¬tions, nor shall photographs berequested.For officially approved non-University-run houses, such ap¬proval shall be granted by theschool administration only ifthese housing units do not dis-minate.For all other housing whichgets preferential treatment, e.g.,listings or recommendations tostudents, faculty, or employees,such preferential treatmentshall be given only to thosewhich do not discriminate.Faculty Hiring: The hiring of fac¬ulty shall be done on the basisof academic competence andwithout regard to race, religion, or national origin.Employment: University jobs,v’hether for students or non¬students, shall be filled accord¬ing to ability and need only,without notice of race, religion,or national origin.For all other jobs which getpreferential treatment, e.g., list¬ings or recommendations to stu¬dents, such, preferential treat¬ment shall be given only tothose jobs which do not discrim¬inate.Campus Organizations: Universi¬ty recognition shall be accordedto only those campus groupsthat do not discriminate on thebasis of race, religion, or na¬tional origin. Religious organ¬izations who may require theirmemberships to accept certainbasic religious tenets are ex¬cepted.This Fair Educational PracticesCode, drawn up by the campuschapter of NAACP and based onsuggestions made at NSA, hasbeen endorsed by the platform ofboth SRP and ISL. Code AdoptedAn NAACP sponsored educa¬tional practices code has been in¬corporated into the platforms ofboth SRP and ISL for the comingcampus elections.The Fair Educational PracticesCode has been endorsed by bothmajor parties. The Code was for¬mulated by a committee of thecampus chapter of NAACP (Na¬tional Association for the Ad¬vancement of Colored People), anon-partisan organization.Included in the Code, which isbased on suggestions made at theNSA convention, are articlesagainst racial, religious, or na¬tional discrimination in studenthousing, employment, and en¬trance requirements. The exclu¬sion of photographs from en¬trance requirements is caused bytheir use for discriminatory pur¬poses.Other articles cover faculty hir¬ing, and campus organizations.♦- - — - ■ — *Voting Days at UC* October 21st and October 22nd jj*¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥■¥¥*•*¥*****•¥****'*'**■****'******** ¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥■ BA ChangesChange VoteStudents who do not have anymore standard college comprehen-sives to take but are still classifiedas "undergraduates,” will vote forStudent Government representa¬tives only in the divisions in whichthey are taking most of theircourses. This is in accordancewith the election law as amend¬ed by SG’s summer executivecouncil last week.Clive Gray, president of SG, de¬scribed the change as intended tomaintain the unity of the collegeas that body of students regis¬tered in a unified general educa¬tion program.The amended law also providesfor the election and rules commit¬tee of Student Government to sur¬vey the grade requirements ofcandidates in the forthcoming SGelections. This task was previous¬ly handled by the Administration.Under the new procedure the com¬mittee will receive a list of theletter grades received by eachcandidate from the Administra¬tion. There will be no indicationas to what courses the grades cor¬respond to. The committee willthen determine the average; ofthe grades in order to establishwhether or not a candidate meetsthe minimum grade requirementof a Straight “C.” ISL Platform ...(from page 6)campus groups subsidized by the Uni¬versity will have a say in disbursingthese funds. A new Student Governmentunder ISL will again work to obtain forItself and other student groups a greatervoice In the direction of student affairsby taking over certain functions nowdischarged by the Administration.EDUCATIONAL POLICY. ISL will reac¬tivate the Educational Survey Commis¬sion of 1951 -52*s SG to discuss recentdevelopments in University Educationalpolicy, particularly with regard to thenew joint degree programs. The Com¬mission will formulate conclusions, pub¬licize its findings and report them toappropriate faculty committees. TheESC will also tackle the question of ath¬letic scholarships, in an effort to un¬cover the University’s exact policy inthis matter.NEIGHBORHOOD. ISL believes thatStudent Government should cooperatefully with the Southeast Chicago Com¬mission and other community groupswhose purpose is to halt blight anddecay in this area of the city. ISL willalos expand the work of the Commissionon the University Neighborhood, withspecial emphasis on research into thesituation of student off-campus housing.ORIENTATION. Looking ahead to ayear from now, ISL will make plans tomaintain and expand the orientationactivities undertaken by SG this year.For the first time, several events werearranged for entering divisional studentsby Student Government, including Chi¬cago bus-tours, tours of the campus,and the very successful Divisional Nightwhich gave divisional students the op¬portunity to meet faculty and adminis¬tration representatives, as well asnumerous student organizations. SGalso co-sponsored Activities Night,printed and distributed the StudentHandbook, and prepared a booklet list¬ing neighborhood Student Discountstores for distribution at central regis¬tration.Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 15, 1954Nor dine Chills and Delights AudienceA hardy band of 400 people endured seven inches of rain last Saturday evening to see Ken Nordine, the well known tele- 1vision personality, give his program of readings at Mandel hall.In this, the first of a series of readings to be sponsored by University Theatre, Nordine alternately chilled and delightedhis audience with Poe’s “The Tell Tale Heart11 and several witty monologues. These last, known as “word jazz,” were accom¬panied on the piano by Dick Marx, and consisted of mildly ribald episodes more suggestive of the night club entertainer thanthe literary reader.Dick Marx also appeared ina solo capacity with severalPhoto by Joe Wolf presumably “cool” numbersand a well earned plug from Nor¬dine for a north side night club atwhich ne is appearing.In addition Nordine read sev¬eral poems by T. S. Eliot, includ¬ing “The Love Song of J. Al-Ken Nordine . . .. . . interprets “The Love Songof J. Alfred Prufrock for cap¬tivated audience at Mandel Halllast Saturday evening.Renaissance ExhibitVaried, DidaticTending to be more of a didactic display than a representa¬tive exhibit of the usual sort, the collection currently showingin the Renaissance society in Goodspeed galleries features avariety of reproducing techniques.However, with this purpose in mind, it is doubtful whetheran average viewer unfamiliar with the techniques could get avery clear picture of the methods of production or the ex¬pressive possibilities of themedia. Although certain tech¬niques were illustrated in greatdetail, such as lithograph andcolor-woodcut, in others tech¬niques less familiar, notably seri-graphing, the methods of produc¬tion were scantily illustrated.Furthermore, although flexi¬bility in a technique is certainlydesirable, it becomes invalid whenit does what might have beenachieved better by another meth¬od, and becomes mimicry of an¬other medium. The exhibit con¬tains a number of woodcut-likelithographs, silkscreen woodcuts,and tapestry-like silkscreens.Judged on their own merits, theworks vary in quality, but in gen¬eral show a preoccupation withtechnique which does not alwaysmake up for a lack in enthusiasmand freshness of subject matter. The main exception was a colorlithograph by Roozendaal entitled“Dogs,” a simple and forcefulcomposition which seemed, how¬ever, to be more adapted to awoodcut.Also of especial interest were“Roman Urchins,” an expressivealthough somewhat studied workby Federico Castellon. and “NegroGirl,” by Doebele.All works in the exhibit, spon¬sored by the InternationalGraphic Art society, are on sale,and may be viewed Mondaythrough Friday from 9 a. m. to5 p. m. and Saturday from 1 to5 p. m. F. G. Ternenyi fred Prufrock,” and “The Balladof Ihe Long Legged Bait,” by.Dylan Thomas. Although famil¬iar with the splendid readingsgiven these poems by their au¬thors, the reviewer was im¬pressed by Norditie’s completelydifferent but altogether satis¬factory treatment of them. Hebrought countless unsuspectedmeanings to light, which is ex¬actly what a good reader shoulddo.Toward the end of the programhe read the monologue of a spite¬ful man by Dostoevsky and hereindemonstrated his best talent —humor.The defects of the programwere largely mechanical. Thelighting technicians wepe in a re¬markably playful mood, and theirendless changing of the size andcolor of 'the spotlights achievedlittle consistency with the moodNordine was ti’ying to create.After a number of rapid-fire shiftsthrough the spectrum during aMarx solo, they hit upon a biliousgreen which they suffered to con¬tinue until the end of the number.This effectively squelched Marx’sfrequent attempts to smile.The height of their good hu¬mor was reached during thereading of “The Tell TaleHeart,” when they plunged thenearsighted Nordine into a pur¬ple gloom which forced him tothe raise the book nearly to hisnose.It is also regrettable that theprogram was not better planned.At the time of his greatest control of the audience Nordinewould succumb either to modestyor laziness and say, “Well howabout a little Dick Marx?” Unfor¬tunately the audience wanted alittle more Nordine. Accustomed to a fifteen min¬ute television show, Nordine a|>-parently does not have confi¬dence in his ability to sustainaudience interest for a longerperiod of time. There appearedto be no justification for thisbelief.Despite technical inconveni¬ences, however, the show was wellworth seeing. The richness ofNordine’s voice, his great ease andcharm, and the variety of his ex¬pression were quite sufficient toovercome the doubts of his listen¬ers on the value of literary read¬ing, should certainly not fail to catchit when he reappears this Spring.Roger YV. BowenAT OIVlStflH)4/5ths Scotch . . . l/5th Yankee IWhat a mixture of funl 1* ” P®Paul DouglasAle* MackenzieStudents presenting their ID cordsat box office will be admitted for 50cany week night, Saturdays and Sun¬days until 5 p.ni. TheDisc1369 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekBELLINI S NORMAWITH MARIA C'ALLASNICOLA ROSS -LEMENIAngel 3517C $17.85 Students1 FavoriteLAUNDROMATFor ihe Past Six Years1. Efficient Laundromat2. Shirts - Flat Work -All Laundry Services3. Lowest Prices inHyde ParkCome In and See OurNewly Remodeled Storewith the LATEST EquipmentUNIVERSITYLAUNDROMAT1376 E. 55th St. PL 2-9097PlaywrightsTheatre Club1205 N. Dearbornamnnnu'cs its Hullseason ...Held overIBSEN'S excitingPEER GYNTNightly thru Oct. 24to be followed by . . .Opening Tues., Oct. 26THE SEA GULLChekov's pastoral tragicomedySHAKUNTALAExotic East Indian ClassicRICH BUT HAPPYTheodore Hoffman—a new satireTIME FOR LAUGHTERtwo plays by Sholom Aleichemand Wolf MankowitzSpecial Student rateTues., thru Sat. (8:30)Sun. (7:30) $1.50 - $1.00Reservations Available atStudent GovernmentTicket Agencyor Call WHitehall 3-2272 London TroupeComes to CityThe Russian-Hungarian danc¬ers, Nora Kovach and Istvan Rab.ovsky, who made a sqpsationalescape last year from behind theiron curtain, will appear with theLondon Festival ballet when itcomes to the Chicago opera housefor a week, opening October 25.They will be featured with Tama-Those who missed the show ra Toumanova and Anton Dolin.Society Gives ConcertWorks by Ralph Vaughan-Williams, who lectured at Man-del hall last night, and threefirst Chicago performances willhighlight the first program ofthe year of the UC Musical soci¬ety tomorrow at Ida Noyeslibrary.One of the works, a sonata forclarinet and ’cello by Jerome Rosen, is due to appear on aColumbia record. Also featuredare compositions by RichardSwift, Milhaud and Prokofieff,for such varied instruments asviolin, flute, clarinet, ’cello, pianoand voice.The program begins at 8 p m.;admission is free.Your BookstoreIs Prepared to AdviseYou on Typewriter ProblemsPURCHASEREPAIROVERHAULRENTALAll Work QuaranteedUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis AvenueADVERTISEMENTliiiiiiiiimimimiimiiiimimiiimiiimmmiiimimimmiml Now Appearing \| The Sy Nelson Trio f«M mk| ★ Featuring §HAL RUSSELL§ WIZARD OF THE VIBES 1f Saturday, Sunday, |= Monday Evenings :I KENWOOD BOWLING CLUB I| 1361 E. 47th St. || ATIontic 5-9251 . ,.|Tiiiiimiiiiiiiimmmmirtimiiiiimiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiifi! You Can’t Buy It!Numerous publications are available at your campusbookstore representing various student interests. We hadhoped to be able to announce that The American Socialist,America’s newest radical publication was also available.We feel on the basis of our first nine months’ experiencethat there should be sufficient student interest in arealistic socialist magazine to warrant its sale on campus.Unfortunately our attempts to have the AmericanSocialist placed in your bookstore have met with repeatedrefusals, which evade a legitimate reason why the maga¬zine should not be available to students who may wishto buy it.While the University has found fit to subscribe to theAtnerican Socialist for its periodical room, and numerousstudents and faculty members are subscribers, the book¬store has used the excuses that they were not interestedin carrying anothr socialist magazine, and that there isnot enough interest in such a magazine.Certainly no new magazine can create interest orbecome known and purchased if not available or dis¬played. We feel that the question is not one of studentinterest, for we are sure there is much potential interestif the proper trial effort is made. The real issue at stakehere is whether the bookstore shall be the market-storefor the free dissemination of ideas.We’re sorry that the American Socialist isn’t availableon campus. However, the question of whether our maga¬zine, as a magazine of dissenting opinion will be madeavailable to the student body is solely dependent on theactions of the students themselves.THE AMERICAN SOCIALISTAvailable at newsstand, 57th and Kenwood6 months introductory subscription, $1.00Single Copy 25cAmerican Socialist—863 Broadway, New York, N.Y.■W onetime mf or ANOTHER i ve >TRIED PRACTICALLYALL OF THE CIGARETTEBRANDS. RESULT IS —|'m A STEADY CAMELSMOKER. I PREFERCAMELS' FINE RICHFLAVOR-AND, BEL/EVEME, THEY'RE genuinelyL MILD . YOU TRY Jk 'em and see f ^AGREE WITH MORE PEOPLEtton an/ otter cigarette!..and how it startedCedric Adams sai/s; “When I was at the University ofMinnesota, learning to be a reporter for the Daily, 1 lived onpeanut butter sandwiches. It took me nine years tograduate (with time out to earn tuition!) When I marriedand went to work as a cub for the Star. I lived op loveand macaroni. I worked like a horse writing about every¬thing on earth, before I made the grade as a columnist..Now I’m eating better — even better than a horse I”START SMOKINGCAMELS YOURSELF!Make the 30-Day Camel MildnessTest. Smoke only Camels for 30days — see for yourself whyCamels’ cool mildness and richflavor agree with more peoplethan any other cigarette!—IL J. lityii'jldi Tobuct o Company* WuwUm -tiftleM* N. C. STORY: Camels — America’s moat popular cigarette ... by fart,October 15, 1*54 *•*€ fJoe's Friends Run HereRobin Hood Men FeeE"Are Joe’s friends running in Illinois?” was the subject of an open forum ami discussionsponsored last Tuesday by Robin Hood’s Merrie Men.The group felt that Senator Joseph McCarthy’s “friends” definitely are running in theIllinois election, and that “McCarthyism” is an important issue in the campaign They speci¬fically named Joseph T. Meek and Richard Vail as “Joe’s friends.”The Merrie Men decided to organize a committee of volunteers to defeat McCarthy’sfriends in Illinois. This com-niittce will do whatever it can brand the story of Robin Hood -w j »to aid such organizations as "subversive” because it deals with A1 ClSClYyk LlMOthe Independent Voters of Illinois, stealing from the rich to give to y^i ^Students for Douglas, and Stu- the poor. llClTlS C OYICCYtdents for O Hara. Suzanne Friedmann, secretary r L X •Tn addition, the group felt that of Robin Hood’s Merrie Men, said, vJJ V_- vCCFl JWllSICindividuals should be encouraged "We feel that the Robin Hood♦o do everything they can to help organization can make an impor- The Masaryk club at thein the program. tant contribution in the election University of Chicago has an-Students who were on campus campaign by bringing out the nounced that it will present se-»lust year will recall the Merrie *ssue of McCarthyism.” lections from Czech music onMen as the group which distrib- Speaking at the meeting were next Friday, at 8 p.m. in theuted green feathers to protest representatives from various cam- home room of InternationalMcCarthyism. They felt the Sena- pus organizations. They included h Thp nroprnm win intor’s influence was manifest in Dave Hartley, from Students for ° se‘ 1 ne Program Will inthe alleged attempt of a member Douglas, Paul Breslow, of Stu- elude.' I he Moldau—Smetana,of the Indiana school board to dents for O’Hara. Piano Quintet—Dvorak, Gla-golic Mass — Janacek, andSymphonietta—Martinu. Theintroduction will be providedby Karel B. Jirak, well-knownCzech composer and currentlychairman of the theory de-partment in the school of mu¬sic at Roosevelt university.The Masaryk club has beenknorivn in the past on campusfor its music and cultural af¬fairs. Admission is free and re-UniversityA reeSocietyFreeAinSRP Appleton-Field piano teampresent program in MandelThe dtoo-p*arost team of Vera Appleton and Michael FieldwiM present a program of Brahms, Stravinsky, Bartok, TalJe-ferre, and Ravel next Friday, at 8:30 p.m. in Mandel hall.Since Appleton and Field joined their talents in 1953 theyhave made ten coast-to-coast tours and over 600 performancesin the United States and Canada.Tickets for this single perform- *ante may be obtained for $1 students will include Brahms*"Variations on a Theme ofP* l' fMWk Haydn,” Stravinsky's "Concertor ev-p«»r Duo Pinnoforti Solis," fourIJ9 HMPMNHh pieces from Bartok’s “Mikrokos-mos.” Talleferre’s "Jeux de PJeijqAir,” and Ravel’s "Feria.”‘ Pk»y Town Hal1Appleton and Field are the onlyduo-pianists to play three TownHall concerts in three weeks. ThisNew York performance, “Two Pi¬anos through Four Centuries,”was recorded by the State depart¬ment and rebroadcast throughoutthe world.Some of the team’s other“firsts” include the world prem¬iere of Bartok’s "Mikrokosmos,”the American premiere of Schu¬mann’s “Andante and Variationsfor Two Pianos,” the first record¬ing of Stravinsky’s “Concerto forTwo Solo Pianos,” and the discov¬ery of a hitherto unknown workof Franz Liszt entitled'“Variationsde Concert.”Duo-pianists Appleton andField who open the '54-’55 Uni¬versity Concert scries next Fri¬day in Mandel Hall.quarterly subscriptions to the Uni¬versity concert series are $4.40and season tickets are $10.Appleton and Field’s concert forfreshmenls are to be served.SAVE TIME —■'‘SAVE MONEYN & R Bonded MoversaltoNow and Us«d FurnitureMl 3-4196 1510 E. 55th5 “The Campus Drug Store”61st and Ellis — Opposite B. J.1> RUGS — COS M E T I C S(We Feature Only Nationally Advertised Products)Visit Our COLLEGE ROOM for Good Food The CollegeLAUNDERETTEt 1449 East 57th St.MU 4 9236 Lectures on LossOf US-PrestigeProfessor Hans J. Morganthauof the department of political sci¬ence will deliver a lecture thisSunday afternoon, October 17, at4:30 p.m. in the DeSales house,5725 University avenue, on thesubject, “The loss of US prestigein western Europe.”Professor- Morganthau is the au¬thor of such books as ScientificMan vs. Power Politics, In l>e-fense of the National Interest, andPolitics Among Nations. This pastsummer he lectured in Spain. Eng¬land, France and Switzerland, andtaught for one month at theSalzburg seminar on Americanstudies.October 15, 1954Congratulations on yourquick recovery. THE HAPPINESS BOYSWCalendar of Events Classified Ads Ride from 6016 Indiana to campus andreturn If possible. Will pay. Call Ext.1133.New "Silvered-Tip" write*the way you do . , . fine,medium or broad . with*out changing point*. Re¬fills available in blue, red,green or black ink. Get aPaper-Mate Pen todayl• Bankers approvee Ink can’t smear.'or transfer* Can't leakSilvered-Tiprefills... 491Fair ©If your hands rejoice in the pre*cise balance of a fine gun or thesweet response of a racing sloop, . . then you owe yourself an hour withthe Chevrolet Corvette.You’ll find it is, quite literally, like noother car in the world—a heart-lifting blendof the true sports car with all that is bestin American engineering.There is the velvet smoothness of aPowerglide automatic transmission (butwith the classic floor selector-lever).The trouble-free durability of a Chev¬rolet “Blue-Flame” engine (but with threeside draft carburetors to unleash its flash¬ing 150 horsepower).The ruggedness of an X-braced boxgirder frame (but with the astonishing im¬pact resistance of a glass-fiber-and-plasticbody). Luxurious seating for driver and passen¬ger in deep foam rubber (but cradled inthe traditional security of bucket seats).Generous luggage room, the panoramicsweep of a deeply curved windshield, theflair of tomorrow’s styling (but within thepolo-pony compactness of a real road car).The Corvette blends all this and more.For it is a driver’s car ... a low-slungtorpedo with a center of gravity only 18inches above the concrete . . . with outrig¬ger rear springs that make it hold to theroad like a stripe of paint... with a 16 toMake a date to drive the 1 steering ratio that puts needle-threadinjaccuracy at your finger tips.Frankly, the Corvette is a “limited edition,” made only in small numbers. It uintended only for the man or woman towhom driving is not just transportation bulan exhilarating adventure, a sparkling challenge to skill and judgment. If you are on<of these, then you owe yourself an houjwith a Chevrolet Corvette.Call us now and let us set up a demonstration run . . . for in a short 60 minute;you can discover that motoring has swhole new dimension of delight.150-h.p. overhead-valve engine with three side draft carburetors • Four-leaf outrigger springsin rear • Powerglide automatic transmission • Center-Point steering, 16 to 1 ratio • Form¬fitting individual seats • Full instrumentation, with tachometer, oil pressure gauge, and ammeter%YOUR CHEVROLET DEALERFriday, October 15Sabbath Service, 7 ;45 p.m. OnegSbabbat, 8:30 p.m. Sukkoth cele¬bration with readings by StanleyGevirtz, Hiilel house.Mom meeting for RepresentativeO'Hara, Senator Douglas, and Mr.Lohman, 7:30 p.m., Ida NoyesFrench club meeting, three shortfilms, 4 p.m. Ida Noyes library.Open house, Hitchcock house, 7:30p.m. Dancing and refreshments.Divisional Smoker*, 7:30-10:30 p.m.Delta Upsilon, 5714 Woodlawn,and Phi Delta Theta, 5737 Wood-lawn.FMm, AH Quiet on the WesternFront, 7:15 and 9:30 p.m. Nosingle admissions, series tickets$1.50, Social Sciences 122. Spon¬sored by Documentary Film group.Saturday, October 16Folklore Society "Wing Ding," 7:30p.m. Ida Noyes. Folk singing andelection of officers.Sunday, October 17University religious service, Rockefel¬ler Chapel, 11 a m. The ReverendJoseph Sittler, professor of sys¬temic theology, Lutheran Theologi¬cal Seminary.Open house at Green hall, everyoneinvited for refreshments and tourof the house, 2-6 p.m.Young Socialist League, businessmeeting, 3 p.m. Ida Noyes.Calvert Club, lecture and emergencygeneral meeting, 4:30 p.m., atDe Sales house, 5735 University.Professor Hans Morgenthau of thedepartment of political science willspeak on "The Loss of U. S. Pres¬tige in Western Europe."Glee Club meeting, 17 Blaine hallHall, 4:30-6 p.m. Everyone in¬vited for group singing.Channing Club, business meeting andsupper, Fenn house, 5638 Wood-lawn. Supper 50 cents.Independent Students League caucus,Judson library, Burton JudsonCourt, 7:30 p.m.Student Representative Party caucus,Ida Noyes, 7:30 p.m.Monday, October 18Motion Picture: Dance Film Festival (a series of dance films), Inter¬national house, 3 p.m. Admission45 cents.Tuesday, October 19Simhat Torah Service, 7:45 p m. fol¬lowed by folk dancing and refresh¬ments. Hiilel house, 5715 Wood-lawn. (No admission charge.)Lecture: "Language and the Child"by Dr. Wepman, 8 p.m., Judd 126,sponsored by UC Veterans NurserySchool. Admission 50 cents.UC Concert Band rehearsal and dis¬cussion of plans for year, 8 p.m.,Sunny gym, 5823 Kenwood. Bringinstruments.Young Socialist League and SocialistClub, lecture and discussion,8 p.m., Ida Noyes.Outing Club open meeting, IdaNoyes, 8 p.m.Wednesday, October 20Camera Club meeting, Eckhart 202,7:30 p.m.English Country Dancing, CloisterClub, Ida Noyes, 8-10 p.m. Bringrubber soled shoes. Instruction forbeginners.Thursday, October 21Student Government Elections. Pollsopen from 9:30 to 7 p.m.Motion Picture: s Rain (American).International house, 8 p.m. Ad¬mission 35 cents. For SaleArgus C3 telephoto lens. New—took onlya few shots. Cost $59.95. Price $40. CallHY 3-2142.Philco turntable 331/3 RPM, $5. Basereflex cabinet 31" x 24" x 12". $15. CallHendrickson, BU 8-9736.Photographic Enlarger. El wood 2*i x 3‘«condenser f4/5. Best offer. At bookstorephoto department. Joe Wolf, ES 5-1615.1951 Olds Super 88. Radio, heater, 4-door.Call HY 3-6514 after 6 p. m.% size violin, bow. and case. Reasonable.Phone Mrs. O’Farrell, ext. 1133. Eve¬nings, CE 3-3920.Friday, October 22Student Government Elections.open from 9:30 to 7 p m. For RentStudent or faculty. 4’aE. 68th St. 1st floor.FA 4-8615.ServicesPolls Situations WantedPiano for practice evenings. Can teachin exchange. G. Smith, Ext. 3131.Young lady, 22, high school graduate.Typing, key punching, fluent Spanish.Wants about 20 hrs. work weekdays be-tweed 4 p. m. and 1 a. m. Anythingconsidered. Call HY 3-7827. Ride to Columbia, Missouri, weekend atOctober 30-31. Will share expense*,driving. Bob Hearlla, 745 B-J.FoundTransparent plastic raincoat exchangedin Mandel hall for brown one. Anyonefinding himself In possession of a brownraincoat please contact BUI Thomassoo.733 B-J.furnished. 1716Mrs. Margolis,Two males wish to share five-roomapartment with student. $30 per month.Call NO 7-2624.Carmen’s used furniture store. Movingand light hauling. 1127 E. 55th St. MU4-9003.Mathematics. Instruction to fit needsof Individual or group. Soglin, ST2-6727.Need some typing done? Call KathleenKenagy, BO 8-2068.Creative Portraiture. All other photog¬raphy. ANYTHING photographed beau¬tifully. Low cost. High quality. JoeWolf, ES 5-1615.22% discount on 22,000 Items. New mer¬chandise. See catalogs in Student Gov¬ernment office, Reynolds Club basement.MIRIAM’S SHOPPING SERVICE, HY3-4970-1-2. OlftAAU dtdXMiL...Classiest shoes (or campus classmates... the smart, new City Club’55 models lor men! Comfort in every easy pick-up...every style...all fine leathers! • *895 to >15’*FREE GALendars "make dates easy." lusciousfull color GALendars for desk or wall. Yours Free atyour neighborhood City Club dealer’s, or write Peters ShoeCo ., Dept CN-10. 1505 Washington Ave.. St. Louis S. Mo.CARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreTypewriter* and DesksMoving and Light Hauling1127 E. 55th MU 4-90031October 15, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON R»«e 11Runners Romp Oyer PierPlacing nine runners ahead of Navy Pier’s first, the UC cross country team rolled up ascore of 15 to 50 while swamping the Pier Illini last Saturday in Washington park.A somewhat bewildered Pier team got a look at the UC harriers a short time before therace and a short time afterwards, but at no time during the contest. The UC men broke ontop and never were headed. SPORTSTomorrow: Cross CountrySoccer^Midwest Conference GomeCALENDARWheaton 1 1 a m. at Wheaton’ Purdue 2 p m. at LafayetteWalt Deike led the field with awinning time of 16:26 for thethree miles, closely followed byPaul Baptist, Lowell Hawkinson,and Tinkle Heyns in that order. new five- and seven-man teamrecords for three miles, the banterover cigars and champagne backin the locker room was somewhatsubdued. Tomorrow the harriersCompleting the rout, Jim I-lynn, face a powerfui Wheaton outfitSam Greenlee, Ted Fishman,Toulouse Otromundo, and JohnSmothers all crossed the finishline a full minute before the firstPier runner hove into sight.Although the performance setBETZ JEWELRYUnusual Jewelry Our SpecialtyExpert Jewelry and Watch RepairN.S.A. Discount to Students1523 E. 53rd PL 2-3038 led by NCAA two-mile championand former Japanese' Olympicrunner Kikuo "Cookie” Moriya.The Wheaton team will be abettedby a treacherous course wherebogs and potholes abound.After the rains earlier this weekthe course should be especiallyswamplike. Nevertheless, the UCrunners will invade Wheaton to¬morrow come oppressive heat orhigh water. Parson Gil Dodds,Wheaton coach, is likely to pro¬vide a little of each.Advertisement — Advertisement — Advertisement — AdvertisementOn Campus withM&QhuImaJi(Author of “Barefoot Boy With Cheek,” etc.)STUDYING MADE SIMPLEI have passed my thirty-fifth birthday, and my dewlaps droop andmy transmission needs oil. More and more my eyes turn inward,reminiscing, sifting the past, browsing lovingly among my souvenirs,for at my time of life memories are all a man has.And most precious are the memories of college. It still makes mypulses quicken and my old glands leap to life just to think of it.Ah, I was something then! "Swifty” my friends used to call me,or "Rakehell” or "Candle-at-both-Ends” or "Devil Take the Hind¬most.” My phone was ringing all the time. “Come on, Devil-Take-the-Ilindmost,” a cohort would say, "let’s pile into the old convertibleand live up a storm. 1 know a place that serves all-bran after hours.”So it went—night after mad night, kicks upon kicks, sport thatwrinkled care derides, laughter holding both his sides. "Come on,"Candle-at-Both-Ends,” my companions would plead, "sing us an¬other two hundred verses of Sweet Violets.”"No, my companions," I would reply with a gentle but firm smile,“we must turn homeward, for the cock has long since crowed.”“ ’Twas not the cock,” they would answer, laughing merrily.“ ’Twas Sam Leghorn doing his imitation of a chicken!”And, sure enough, 'twas. Crazy, madcap Sam Leghorn. How Imiss his gaiety and wit! I never tired of hearing his imitation ofa chicken, nor he of giving it. I wonder what’s become of him. LastI heard he was working as a weathervane in Tacoma.Oh, we were a wild and jolly gang in those days. There was SamLeghorn with his poultry imitations. There was Mazda Watts whoalways wore a lampshade on her head. There was Freddie Comowho stole a dean. There was Cap Queeg who always carried twosteel marbles in his hand. There was Emily Hamp who gilded herhouse mother.Yes, we were wild and jolly, and the wildest and jolliest was I . . .But not right away. I blush to admit that in my freshman year Iwas dull, stodgy, and normal. I finally corrected this loathesomecondition, but for a while it was touch and go. And, dear reader—especially dear freshman reader—be warned: it can happen to you.The makers of Philip Morris have bought this space so I canbring you a message each week. There is no more important messageI can give you than the following: College can be beautiful. Don’tlouse it up with studying. # 'That was my mistake. At first, cowed by college, 1 studied so muchthat I turned into a dreary, blinking creature, subject to dry-mouthand fainting fits. For a year this dismal condition prevailed—butthen I learned the real function of college. And what is that? I’ll tellyou what: to prepare you to face the realities of the world. Andwhat do you need to face the realities of the world? I’ll tell youwhat—poise, that’s what you need. And how do you get poise? I’ll’ell you how: not by keeping your nose in a book, you*may be sure!Relax! Live! Enjoy! . . . That’s how you get poise. Of course youhave* to study, but be poised about it. Don’t be like some clodswho spend every single night buried in a book. Not only are they notlearning poise; they are also eroding their eyeballs. The truly poisedstudent knows better than to make the whole semester hideous withstudying. He knows that the night before the exam is plenty of timeto study.Yes, I’ve heard that lots of people have condemned cramming. Buthave you heard who these people are? They are the electric light andpower interests, that’s who! They want you to sit up late and studyevery night so you’ll use more electricity and enrich their bulgingcoffers. Don’t be a sucker! _Clearly, cramming is the only sensible way to study. But beware!Even cramming can be overdone. Take it easy. On the night beforeyour exam, eat a hearty dinner. Then get a date and go out and eatanother hearty dinner. Then go park someplace and light up aPhilip Morris. Enjoy the peaceful pleasure it offers. Don’t gohome until you’re good and relaxed.Once at home, relax. Do not, however, fall asleep. This is toorelaxed. To insure wakefulness, choose a chair that is not toocomfortable. For example, take a chair with nails pointing upthrough the seat—or a chair in which somebody is already sitting.Place several packs of Philip Morris within easy reach. Goodmild tobacco helps you to relax, and that’s what Philip Morris is—good mild tobacco. But Philip Morris is more than just good mildtobacco; it is also cigarette paper to keep the good mild tobacco fromspilling all over the place.Now you’ve got the uncomfortable chair and the Philip Morris.Now you need light. Use the lit end of your Philip Morris. Do notenrich the electric power interests.Read your textbook in a slow, poised manner. Do not underline. Itreduces the re-sale value of your book. Always keep your books inprime re-sale condition; you never know when you’ll need getawaymoney.As you read you will no doubt come across many things you don’tunderstand. But don’t panic. Relax. Play some records. Remove acallus. Go out and catch some night crawlers.Relax. Be poised. Stay loose. And remember—if things really closeiu, you can always take up teaching.©Max Shulonan, 1954This column is brought to you by the makers of PHILIP MORRIS4 who think you would enjoy their cigarette. Wheaton Beats UC BootersWith Qoal in Final Minuteby Ralph HirschScoring in the last minute of play, Wheaton College's boot¬ers edged out the UC soccer team Saturday, 2-1.The Maroons, playing before a partisan crowd at Wheaton,went into an early lead when Roojan Ninasaganian pivotedbeautifully and tallied from fifteen yards out. Wheaton’sMike Hemans evened the score halfway through the secondquarter. His shot glanced off —the goal post, out of goal¬keeper Gerry Czamanske’sgrasp.For almost an hour the gamesurged back and forth, withneither team being able to score. Wheaton, as usual, was in topcondition, and controlled the ballmore frequently than Chicago.The L1C defense had to work hardto rebuff W’heaton's threats, cen¬ter-half Pete Rosen and goaliePointing the way, one Chi¬cago harrier guides anotheracross a bog, in a schema of theWheaton cross country coursewhere the Chicago team runstomorrow. In the last minute of play Wheat- Czamanske standing out partieu-on s Ron Loescher slammed apoorly cleared ball, sailing acrossthe goal mouth, into the net atpoint-blank range to win thegame for the Cruaders. It was agame in which only center-for-wards scored.FootballHutchins Finds FootballDistracting and Immoral“Chicago dropped football because the game hampered theUniversity’s efforts to become the kind of institution it as¬pired to be, one devoted to education, research, and scholar¬ship. Intercollegiate football has little to do with any of thesethings and an institution thatis to do well in them will haveto concentrate upon them and riditself of irrelevancies, no matterhow attractive or profitable,” saidRobert Maynard Hutchins in thisweek’s Sports Illustrated.In an article called “CollegeFootball’is an Infernal Nuisance,”former chancellor Hutchins statedhis violent aversion to the distrac¬tions and immorality of the sporton the collegiate level. Decryingthe fact that football has becomea symbol of college life, Hutchinsquotes the late Jeff Cravath': “Thefact that the system reduces theboys to perjurers, scalpers, andfootball gigolos is ignored.”He points out that a collegepresident must know the corruptpractices that are being used tobuild his football squad, but if hetries to stop them he runs afoulof prominent alumni on the boardof trustees or board of regents,or just alumni with endowment-available money. The presidentneeds that money to keep hisschool going.Hutchins places his hope in pro¬fessional football. He looks for atime when it will have progressed Athletic DirectorMetcalf commentsJ. Nelson Metcalf gave thefollowing comments on thefootball question:On Hutchins: “He refers tomany admitted evils in somefootball situations. The fact re¬mains that football is an excel¬lent game and that playing itcan be a valuable experiencefor boys physically qualified toplay it, provided it is conduct¬ed on a proper basis. It shouldbe used as part of the educa¬tional program, and not as aside show for public entertain¬ment or financial return.”On Grayson in the DailyNews: “No comment.”so far that people will not pay tosee collegiate ball. “When profes¬sional football has reached thispoint, we shall be able to disen¬tangle-sport and higher educa¬tion,” he says.“This,” he concludes, "happenedat Chicago.”Sports Briefs49ers Practice on Stagg FieldEvidently in accordance with Hutchin’s idea of destroying big col¬lege football by advancing professional football teams, the San Fran¬cisco 49ers have been given the use of Stagg Field for practice ses¬sions this week. Over thirty mighty graduates of college ball havebeen bruising each other there since Wednesday. On Sunday they willtry to bruise the Chicago Bears, but not on Stagg. The game will be aregular professional contest.WAA at Illinois NormalThree members of the Women’s Athletic association journeyed toIllinois Normal last weekend for a meeting of the Illinois Athleticfederation of college women. WAA president Elenie Kostopolus, vicepresident Trudy Martin, and volleyball manager Sandy Ford dis¬cussed and compared function of women’s athletics at member schoolsChicago, Illinois, Concordia, Bradley, and Wheaton. WAA is open toany woman student who participates in at least one major sport.Red Cross to RescueAfter all the rain earlier this week, the American Red Cross hassent out a release stating that registrations are still being acceptedfor Red Cross water safety and senior life saving classes which openedTuesday at Ida Noyes pool, 1212 E. 59th. Men and women 16 yearsof age or over who can swim at least 100 yards are eligible to take thelife saving course. The water safety instructor course is open to any¬one 18 years of age or over who is able to pass Red Cross swimmingand life saving tests. Only a nominal fee is charged.Touchball PostponedAlso owing to the heavy rain, intramural touchball games in allleagues have been postponed until next week. IM tennis is underwayin spite of the bogg weather, a winner to be determined in the com¬ing week. Questions concerning intramurals should be addressed toIM director Kooman Boycheff, Bartlett 105. larly. The Maroon line, spear¬headed by John Godfrey at inside-right, was most effective in thefirst half, but could not sel upmany scoring opportunities in thesecond.Football QoodFor Nation:Daily Nevus“For three months now therehas been juicy talk in pubs ahdclubs of a football renaissance atthe University of Chicago . . . sad¬ly we relate that all the talk is justthat,” said Harry Grayson in theChicago Daily News last Sunday.Once again a wave of nostalgiafor the old days of cheering standsand winning teams at Chicago hasexpressed itself. This time theDaily News recalled the “happierdays when ‘Stagg feared Pur¬due’ ” and Walter Eckersall, HugoBezdek. and Jay Berwangerhelped Saturday’s games becomeSundays headlines.The News quoted athletic direc¬tor T. Nelson Melcalf as saying,“If and when the University ofChicago increases sufficiently insize, and includes enough menwho can play football, Chicagomay reinstate football at the col¬lege, not the university, level.”Commented the News, “Met¬calf's statement smacks of the‘football is a dangerous game’thinking, which so many of oureminent empty-heads have beenloudly proclaiming for so long.”Former chancellor Hutchinswould seem to fall into this cate¬gory.Even though the article calledall-out pressure for football bad,it warned that “these are timesfor the strong only,” and con¬cluded, “you would think collegemen could get together on middleground and have everybody play¬ing a game that is good for ihenation.”No direct reference to Hutchinsor his theory of the relation be¬tween sport and higher educationwas made in the article.SRP(from page 6)of an acoustical experiment than theeffective voice of student opinion anda channel for student co-operation.We realize that our program is am¬bitious. We believe that it can bebrought into being when, and onlywhen, there is a real involvement of thestudent body in the decision-makingprocess of SG. Toward this end, we pro¬pose:1. That SG make use of campus ref¬erenda. opinion polls, regular news¬letters, and discussion groups.2. A constitutional amendment toinsure vacancy replacement policieswhich abide by the decision of thecampus and prevent partisan packing.3. A complete investigation andconsideration of the structure andoperations of SG directed toward theestablishment of more democraticprocedures.We of SRP pledge our co-operationwith all who join in supporting any ofthe goals outlined above, since onlya Student Government which considersstudent problems as more importantthan any partisanship can make ef¬fective and worthwhile contributions I*the welface of us all.Page 12 October 15, 1954Tolerance Possible OnlyWith Truth, Love, Intellect Faculty Softball Averts Loss;Beats Student Team 7-9“Can tolerance be reconciled with enthusiasm for a cause?” was the fundamental problemwhich Jacques Maritain, French philosopher, discussed in a lecture at Mandel hall, Thurs¬day, October 7.He concluded that they are reconcilable if only truth, love, and the resources of the intel¬lect are used by the defender of one view to gie justice to another. And as these three quali¬ties are inherent in all great philosophical and religious ideas, the goal is certainly attainable.This was the first of twowasseminars by Maritain on thesubject, “Tolerance; its mean¬ing and practical implication.” Inthis first lecture. “Truth and tol¬erance,” he discussed three majortopics: the general notion of tol¬erance, philosophical justice andtolerance, and co-operation be¬tween different religious faiths.Skeptics IntolerantHe attacked the view that theonly answer to intolerance is skep¬ticism. The skeptic believes thatanyone with convictions will auto¬matically tend to impose them onothers and thus make living to¬gether impossible. It follows thatthe only answer is the eliminationof convictions.“These people are the most in¬tolerant of all. Skepticism is theintolerance of doubt,” said Mari¬tain.The skeptic misses the pointthat “in reality, it is through ra¬tional means—persuasion and notforce—that man, the rational ani¬mal, forwards his views, and notthrough holy war. From thiscomes our belief that people have In a thrilling struggle last Friday, the faculty softball teamwas narrowly beaten by an eight inning, 3-run hitting spreeby the entering students team, 7-9 in 9 innings. After jumpingoff to a 5-0 lead in the first inning, the faculty saw its leadslowly chipped away while the students settled down to allowonly 2 more runs for the rest of the game.In the absence of a starPhoto by JakalskiJacques Maritainthe right to self-government.” Adenial of man’s rational natureleads directly to tyranny such asStalinism.But there would be more than simply man’s rational nature totemper intolerance. “Truth mustbe purified by genuine love. Hewho places in hell those who dis¬agree with him offends his ownGod.”Maritain then dealt specificallywith tolerance in philosophy andreligion.Systems Do JusticeHe pointed out that there is a“central intuition in all great doc¬trines” which recognizes that ithas a place in the universe ofthought and that other doctrinesalso have a place in that universe.Thus each system, taken as aunity in itself, can do justice toother systems.In theology, tolerance is reachedthrough mutual love of God. Thisis possible since we are dealingw’ith a fellowship of men and notof beliefs. It is a kind of forgive¬ness for the condition of men.“Here the ‘judge not’ of the gos¬pel applies with full force. Wecannot judge the innermost heart—all we can do it trust in God.And this is just what love and tol¬erance w'ould have us do.” nitoher for the students Neal RameS every year’ with the enler*pitener ior tne stuaents, iNeai ing students in the fall and theHuffucker, a second year stu- dormitory champs in the spring,dent pitched for the students, by jt was organjZed four years agoagreement with the faculty. After and presently has a record of 3a rocky first inning, Huffacker. won and 5 josd ^ highly informalreplete with a tricky slow ball andred earmuffs, held back the fac¬ulty w'hile the students went onto win.Stuart Tave started for thefaculty and confused the stu¬dent hitters during most of thefirst half of the game. However,w'hen the students began timinghis pitches and hitting him well,he was replaced by Mark Ash in.faculty captain, who had beenplaying shortstop. The game wassparked by masterminding onboth sides, including juggling ofplayers and positions, and an in¬tentional walk.Play Two GamesThe student team was organ¬ized and managed by GeorgeAthanson. who was also chief um¬pire. After the game. Reader’sCampus Drug store provided freecokes and pretzels to the partici¬pants.The faculty team plays two group with about six regularmembers, the team consists ofUniversity faculty and staff mem¬bers.Donald Meiklejohn, star third-baseman for the faculty, com¬mented that perhaps this pointsout something about the new en¬tering class. “They’re supposed toUNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingTwo barbers workingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorStudent Employment(from page 2)accepted for listing.Lists JobsClerical jobs are in most de¬mand; among others listed bythe service are hospital work,driving of trucks and cars, com¬munity center work and librarywork.“A student who comes to theUniversity with skill in typinghas a good chance to get a job,”said Mrs. Metcalf. “And one whocan take stenogaphy has an evenbetter chance.” A typing test isgiven to applicants, with a speedof 50 words per minute general¬ly required for most jobs.A student applicant for part-time work first fills out an appli¬cation and is interviewed byMrs. Metcalf, who informs himof available jobs which seemsuited to his particular abilities.Service ProvidedBaby sitting openings are list¬ed by the office as a special serv¬ice to interested students, whomust register and be interviewedin order to be eligible to securelistings.“There are as many and asvaried jobs as you would findoutside of school,” commentedMrs. Metcalf. Among the mostunusual she cited w'ere the stu¬dents who worked for CBS dur¬ing the presidential campaignsand the person who modelledtrusses for an othopedic asso¬ciation’s meeting.Non-academic jobs on campus,on a full-time basis, are handledthrough the office by Miss MaryFarrelly. These openings includeall service jobs on campus, withmany hospital openings.The general increasing unem¬ployment trend has affected jobsavailable fo students at the Uni¬versity as well. “We’re having tointensify our efforts to findjobs,” said Bjorling, “and it’s atwo-way proposition in that thenumber of jobs available is de¬pendent on how well the studentsdo.” Since there are fewer open¬ings, it is also necessary to bemore selective in recommendingjobs to students, he pointed out.rJ wonder what thevintner buys, onehalf so precious/'Jimmy’s1172 E. 55th It’s the FILTER that Countsand L&M has the Best!T *8 sweePin& the country ... a-Li 1V1 smash success, overnight! Nocigarette ever went so far so fast, becauseno filter compares with L&M’s exclusivemiracle tip for quality or effectiveness.From LaM you get much more flavor,much less nicotine... a light and mild smoke. And you enjoy all this in king sizeor regular, both ac the same low price.Our statement* of quality goes unchal¬lenged. L&M is America's highest qualityand best filter tip cigarette.Buy L&Ms—king size or regular—they’rejust what the doctor ordered.AMERICA’S HIGHEST QUALITY FILTER CIGARETTE•iKwnr* N«w Tomooo Co.