University of Chicago, January 14, 1Photo by ZygmundGeorge Well worth and Omar Shapley will do readings from Eliotand Kipling in the UT production Drama in Miniature.UT presents varied dramaforms in Reynolds ClubAn experiment in dramatic entertainment will be presentedthis weekend by University Theatre. Drama in Miniature,opening tonight in the Reynolds club arena theatre, is an eve¬ning of one-act plays, dialogues, dance, monologues, poetry,and skits of famous playwrights.Over 40 University Theatre members are participating inthe shows which feature such Student Qovernmentaddition of four new servicesFour new services were approved by SG for addition to the Student Service center thisweek.They include three new registers: a file of commuting students offering rides and studentsseeking rides to and from campus; a file of tutorial services offered and students seekingsuch services; and a file of second-hand goods for sale.In addition the government is purchasing silk-screen equipment to supplement the mimeo¬graph service. When thisservice.equipment gets set up (prob¬ably next week) silk-screenposter work will be offered tostudent organizations at cost.Case of Chinest studentsIn other action SG directed itscivil liberties committee to in¬vestigate the case of the 35 Chi¬nese students detained in thiscountry, some of whom are onthis campus.Three special committees wereset up: one to watch for possiblere-introduction of the Broyles billsin the Illinois legislature and re¬port concerning possible actionstudents could take to combatthem.Divisional orientation committeeAnother committee was tostudy eating facilities on campusand how they could be improved.The third was a divisional orienta¬tion committee of eleven mem¬ bers, for which applications arenow being taken.The appointment of Joel Ros¬enthal (SRP) to fill a vacancy inthe humanities division was an¬nounced at the meeting. Two va¬cancies remain to be filled in the social sciences division and one inthe medical school.In recent weeks Jim Handler(ISL) and Bill Seltzer (ISU havealso been appointed to fill vacan¬cies in the law school and college,respectively.playw rights as GcOige Bei- Drama in Miniature will be[jrrir S tW’ Frftnk ^ JVIolnar, formed in the Reynolds club Another committee was to of little significance, WilliamWilliam Inge, lennessee Wil- arena theater this Friday, Satur- study eating facilities on campus E. Scott, registrar, feels.and'wUtom ^hakes^Ire and Sunday at 8:30 pm. Ad- and how they could be improved. Percentagewise comparison, ninneness of^hL nrodue- T f «- >nd "<**3 are now The third was a divisional orienta- with the same week of wintertion lies in the staging and qual- °n S* e &t the Reynolds club desk- tion committee of eleven mem- quarter last year indicates a 13.7ity and quantity of plays. Empha- , P<*cent increase. But Scott notedsis is on informality and inti- \\ ftwi&A <KtnAs?n+ rtocncirtfiAM that this figure is misleading be-maey. Drama in Miniature is iVJLtif I ILU JUtUtHl LlooULltlllUTl cause of a large number of earlystaged in-the-round with William registrations in the downtownZavis acting as host and master L * branches. He said that at thisof ceremonies to introduce the / OTTflS, CtSKS CtClCCfUCltC tlOUSltlS time test year 738 students wereshows. 9 - 7 * O registered whereas 1,350 haveBarry Sherman, Al Buccino, Lack of adequate housing to meet the needs of married re8ist®red already this year. How-RingBU.Srdie?sOUleeTdoTdonen “"h “"hmmediate ,concern over the proposed pretab change over “a “ota!5 taken a^a“Tridpet of Creva ” ' demolition has brought into existence the Married Student later week in the quarter ’A premier showing ot Wiiliam ffsoclat‘on- Successor to the Prefab council an unofficialInges “To Bobolink for Her university organization to help solve the problems of prefabSpirit” will be one of the featured students, MSA, whose membership is open to all marriedshows of the evening. Inge, au- Students, will attempt to ex-thor of “Picnic” and “Come Back plore with the University locate married studentLittle Sheba,” dedicates his short means by which they can find Winter enrolment totaled;5605 register this quarterEnrollment figures totaled 5,605 for the first week of thewinter quarter, according to the registrar’s office.Because of the change in degree requirements and subse¬quent reclassification of many students a breakdown intoschools and divisions would be istration is complete and totalstaken, comparison with lastyear’s total will show littlechange in overall enrollment.lastyear.Scott predicted that when reg- Nominate prom queenNominations for Miss U of C,to be crowned at the WashProm February 1 at the Knick¬erbocker hotel, are now beingaccepted.All recognized UC groups areeligible to nominate a candi¬date. Deadline for turning innames to chairman MarieSehroer at Green hall is Tues¬day.play to Shirley Booth. Featuredin a cast of twelve are ChessiePlesofsky, Martha Silverman,Ned Galen, and Leo Stodolsky.George Wellworth’s oral read¬ings of T. S. Eliot and RobertBrowning will be staged as wellas Maggie Nash and James Sher¬wood’s dance - drama interprets-tion of the first scene of Shake-Services for SchevillMemorial services for Ferdi¬nand Schevill, professor emeri¬tus of history, will be held inBond chapel at 4 p.m. today.Schevill, an original facultymember of the University, diedDecember 10 in Tucson, Ari¬zona, at the age of 86.Speakers at the services willbe Arthur P. Scott, professoremeritus of history; NormanF. Maclean, professor of Eng¬lish, and James L. Cate, profes¬sor of history. housing.“The projected demolition ofthe prefabs has fostered chronicconcern among UC married stu¬dent tenants,” Earl Elliott, presi¬dent of MSA, pointed out. A sur¬vey conducted by the Prefab coun¬cil found that 200 married stu¬dents will be affected by such aplan.“In keeping with the stated pol¬icy of the Prefab council, MSA tenantsfrom their units without relocat¬ing them,” stated Elliott. “The as¬sociation also seeks to facilitatestudent-University understandingand planning in regard to a long-range, permanent communityhousing program.”Membership in the organizationis open to all married students,junior faculty members, hospital Elk’s head bows out of partyas revelry hasidark moment’The Phi Sigma Delta fraternity reported that its antiqueelk’s head had mysteriously vanished during a dark momentin their Gaslight Gaieties open house last Saturday evening.Members of the offended house stated that they would givethe responsible parties a short *residents and interns, fellows, and period of time before they un- ten minutes later, it was foundresearch assistants and associates whose families are living inSupreme Courtdecision is themeforNAACPexhibitThe importance of support¬ing the Supreme Court deseg¬regation decision will be theIheme of a three day exhibit bythe campus NAACP chapter inReynolds club north lounge, tie-pinning Monday and runningthrough Wednesday.Racist reactions to the decisionand an overall view of Negro edu¬cation will be part of the exhibit,which will also provide informa¬tion on the national youth legisla¬tive conference to be held inWashington, D. C., early in Feb¬ruary. opposes any plan which would dis- the vicinity of Chicago.Fraternity smoker scheduleannounced by IF councilThe schedule for fraternity smokers has been announced bythe Inter-Fraternity council. Smokers are planned to begin at7:30 p.m., lasting until about 10 p.m.ThursdayDelta Upsilon—Phi Sigma DeltaFridayKappa Alpha Psi—Phi Kappa PsiTo be eligible for pledging, aman must be 18 by the end ofnext Autumn quarter. To be ini¬tiated into a fraternity, he mustbe 18, have completed a year ofresidence and must be gettingalong “reasonably well” in hisstudies, according to GeorgeStone, Inter - Fraternity councilpresident.ZT IT l “The more different fraterni-DUllefm ties a man visits the better,”Stone also stressed. “He shouldJeannette Lowrey, director of try to get to all of them at leastpress relations of the University 0nce during the two-week period,of Chicago, died in Bartlesville, anfj make an effort to meet theOklahoma, Wednesday at the members.”home of her sister, Mrs. Jack “Each smoker is definitely openMoore. Miss Lowrey had been ill to everyone, with or without in-since late June, and had gone to vitation,” Stone continued, “andBartlesville in November, after if someone is accidentally over-an extended hospitalization in Bil- iooke(j in sending out invitations,lings Hospital of the University. this doesn’t mean that he is not■ 1 - - " - — ■■ wanted.” dertake measures to learn thewhereabouts of this prized pos¬session.At 11:47 in the evening, the PhiSig open house wras plunged intodarkness and confusion, as agroup of conspirators carriedaway the 20-year-old elk’s head.When normalcy was resumed that the main switch had beenthrown and during the mixup thiselaborate hat rack had hurriedaway through the back door. Itwas also found that this uniqueparty decoration had inflicted aslight injury on one of the mem¬bers of the party with its antlersbefore leaving.Week of Jan. 17-21MondayKappa Alpha Psi—Phi Delta ThetaTuesdayZeta Beta Tau—Delta U psi IonWednesdayAlpha Delta Phi—Phi Sigma DeltaThursdayPhi Kappa Psi—Phi Gamma DeltaFridayBeta Theta Pi—Psi U psi IonWeek of Jan. 24-28MondayPhi Gamma Delta—Psi UpsilonTuesdayPhi Delta Theta—Beta Theta PiWednesdayAlpha Delta Phi—Zeta Beta TauPhoto by ZygmunaMaury Levin spins the wheel of fortune as croupier at the PhiDelta “Gaslight Gaieties” open house.Fag* 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 14, 1955Jon'*'*'05530 harperGifts • Gourmet's Corner • StationeryFIRST SALEThonks to your heortening response — our sole will be continuedOwough this weekend.K)%, 20%, 30% off on mony itemsAlpha Delta Phi holds Dahl logically reformulatesopen house tomorrow nite y , r ibasic concepts of democraciesDancing to the music of Stu Clayton and his orchestra will be fea¬tured entertainment at Alpha Delta Phi’s annual open house tomor¬row evening. The open house, titfed Castle Rock, has been advertisedby t»eraldic battle flags displayed from the Alpha Delt house thisweek.Two hundred-fifty persons attended the Rock last year, when Clay¬ton put in his first appearance at the traditional all-campus event.Tl*e house, 5747 University, is located directly across from Eckhartand the varsity tennis courts. Doors open at 9 p.m. and the party isscheduled to end at 1.Li^ht refreshments and ice cream will be served.Hutchins praises Legion's newconcept' at local post meetingR)bert M. Hutchins, former UC chancellor, and recentjoirhje of the American Legion, Monday praised the Legion’s“new concept” of Americanism, in an address before Chicagopost 170 of which he is a member.Hutchins had. earlier re-Chess champin exhibitionCharles Henin, UC student andIllinois state chess champion, willgive an exhibition of simultane¬ous chess next Thursday at 8 p.m.at the Hyde Park YMCA, 53rdand Dorchester.The exhibition is sponsored bythe Hyde Park Chess club. Allwho wish to play or watch areinvited. Prizes will be awardedto the winners. An axiomatic reformulation of two species of democracy was advanced by Robert Dahl inthe first Two of his Walgreen lectures this week.Discussing ‘‘Some unsolved problems in the theory of democratic politics,” Dahl, associateprofessor of political science at Yale University, treated Madisonian and egalitarian democ¬racies as hypothetical systems and restated the central concepts of the systems as defini¬tions, axioms and hypotheses. ■ "fusedcameattefor to join the Legion be-he disapproved of itsto form a “litmus testand he had*PtsAmericanism,”difficulty disproving that the Le¬gion was “to the left of HerbertHoover.”In the address he referred tothe new approach of IrvingBreakstone, Illinois departmentcommander, and John W. Bottom-ley, chairman of the state Le¬gion’s education for freedomgroup, as a “concept of strength”which contemplates readings anddiscussions of basic documentsand “critical issues of our heri¬tage,” in a spirit "intended tosafeguard the American wayagainst dictatorships,” through aprogram of adult education. Other lectures in Dahl’sseries will be held this after¬noon and next weekDahl limited his investigationof democratic theory to the prob¬lems of describing the character¬istics and “necessary conditions”of a democratic theory, and of dis¬covering the unanswered prob¬lems and their method of solu¬tion.Madisonian democracy, accord¬ing to Dahl, was an attempt toreconcile the goals of politicalequality according to the “repub¬lican principle” and the protectionof a privileged minority.The central proposition in theMadisonian theory is: “if unre¬strained by external checks anygiven individual or group of in¬dividuals will tyrannize over oth¬ers.” Dahl stated that this hypoth¬esis rests on Madison’s definitionsof “external checks,” and “tyran¬ny.”Dahl’s analysis, which will ap¬pear in book form, ascribed to theMadisonian system four basic def¬initions (those of external check,tyranny, republic, and faction), abasic axiom, or central ethicalgoal (“the goal that ought to beattained, at least by the Americanpolitical system, is a non-tyranni-cal republic,” and ten hypothesis.BETZ JEWELRYUnusuol Jewelry Our SpecialtyExpert Jewelry and Watch RepairN.S.A. Discount to Students1523 E. 53rd PL 2-3038<c<OFcvwMr. Randall SpeaksHis Mind —A FOREIGN ECONOMIC POLICYFOR THE UNITED STATESBy Clarence B. Randall"A lucid, hard-hitting littlebook ...” — Charles J.Rolo, Atlantic Monthly"Concise, highly readableand understandable . . . "— Chicago Sun-Times"Interesting and stimulating. . . " — St. Paul PioneerPress"It scarcely could be better¬ed . . ."—Boston Daily Globe"A valuable contribution. . . " — Raymond P. Brandt,St. Louis Post-Dispatch90 Pages *195from your bookseller or fromThe University ofChicago Press5750 Ellis AvenueChicago 37, Illinois JANUARYCLEARANCEPHOTOGRAPHICEQUIPMENTSpecial price offerings while they lastCome in today,and look them overUniversity ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue“Enjoy Our Fine Continental Cuisine inRelaxed Atmosphere”CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Doily (except Mondays) from 4:30 - 10:00Sundays — 12 Noon - 10 P.M.1508 E. 57th Street Phone PLaza 2-9355Now playing at theHyde ParkTheatreMarlon Brando in“ON THEWATERFRONT”' alsoMark Twain*s‘Man with a Million’ The ambiguity of Madison’sternal checks ingovernmentaloperations, thenecessityof separationof powers, andeven the disad-vantages oftyranny itselfare largely un¬answered bythe Madisoniansystem,” Dahlstated.In regard to majorities imposed by the factsof a pluralistic society operateonly to curtain ’bad’ majoritiesand not ‘good’ majorities.”Robert DahlMadison’s treat¬ment of the control of factions,Dahl stated that “no modern Mad¬isonian has shown that the re¬straints on the effectiveness of C'mon, kidsAll groups who wish to herecognized as UC student or¬ganizations must register inthe Student Activities office byJanuary 28. .The group must have a faculty advisor and ten or moremembers who are students ingood standing at the Universitv. A registration form issuedby the activities office shouldbe filled out.Offers flOiise=iUGfIgo o d pood... eractoujfy'sen'&fto yfiujrpUaJurB0:rrL r'BEstRA^TrcWs: hyoepark 5-4500(5[XTV-THIUT tvvL^tV^FOURGV^ODLM^^AVFN lie-)^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiimimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiHimiMimmiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiHiiiiHiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiHitiInternational Houko Movie*| East l.oting** Mon. A Tburs. Eves, at ?:Otf A 9:00 P.M. == Monday, Jon. 17—45c—The Stone Flower < Russian I= Thursday, Jon. 20—45c—The Devil and Daniel Webster )Air*^nil =iiiiuiiiiiiiiir50 milliontimes a dayat home, at workor on the wayThere’s nothing like a1. PURE andWHOLESOME...Nature’s own flavors.2. BRIGHT, EVER-FRESHSPARKLE...distinctive taste.3. REFRESHESSO QUICKLY...with as few calorie*as half an averagejuicy grapefruit,IOTTIED UNDE* AUTHORITY Of 1HI COCA-COLA COMPANY tfThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc."Coli*" is « registered trade mark. © 195*, 1H« COCA-COLA COMPANYJanuary 14, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Linn House men secede; Movgenstern I Maroon mystery photonow have house in a house campaigningJustice House — a new house — established in Burton-Jud-son Court on January 5, has drawn papers seeking recognitionfrom the office of the director of student activities.Irked by the noisiness and what they termed “unfair” ac-t ions of other residents, eight of the twelve men living on thefirst floor of Linn House seceded to form Justice House.The new organization has on H. P. needsbeen recognized by the househead of Linn and by MeadHouse, with debates on the mat-tor now in progress at Matthewsand Coulter Houses.Officers elected are:House Head—Allan Bird. xPresident—Richard Neff.Vice-President—Charles ErnestGriffith III.Secretary—J. Craig Saunders.Treasurer—Bernard Bledstein.With quietness and no dues asits only rulings so far, JusticeHouse hopes to maintain its sepa¬rate status against other floorsof Linn and the four 1st floorLinn residents who do not con¬sider themselves part of Justice. Ford fellowshipdeadline setApplications for Ford foun¬dation fellowships for firstyear graduate study in thebehavioral sciences must be re¬turned by January 31 to Robert D.Hess, dean of students, division ofsocial sciences, it was announcedthis week.The fellowships, which carry anannual stipend of $1,800, are pro¬vided for students wishing to pur¬sue graduate studies in psychol¬ogy, sociology, anthropology, orrelated fields, but who as under¬graduates concentrated in otherfields. Dorothy O’Brien Morgen-stern, wife of the University’sdirector of public relations,William V. Morgenstern, is run¬ning fo# alderman in the fifthward, centering her campaignaround conservation of the HydePark area and the n<?d for great¬er police protection.Mrs. Morgenstern, who is run¬ning on Mayor Kennelly’s ticket,will be one of seven candidates inthe primary. Her petition, whichwas filed January 3, had over 600signatures.A member of the executive com¬mittee of the South-East Chicagocommission, the board of direc¬tors of Lying-In, and the Leagueof Women Voters, Mrs. Morgen¬stern has in the past worked onthe committees of many candi¬dates — Democratic, Independent,and Republican. Mystery proves to mysterious;last week's photo unidentifiedi°J/te 'fi/fatm PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226STUDENT DISCOUNTDELIVERY SERVICE For the first time, the mystery photo has gone unidentified.Last week’s picture is still a mystery. However, the Maroonhas decided that this photo must be decided before furtherpictures can be used. Therefore, we are again printing thephoto, this time in an enlarged version. More of the scene canbe seen this week, (above). 'Entries should be brought tothe Maroon office, in room 201of the Reynolds Club as soonas the photo is identified. En¬LOOK! LOOK! LOOK! LUCKY DROODIES!WHAT’S THIS?For solution see paragraph below.HOI* IN ONELeonard W. RozinUniversity of Kansas PHOTO FINISH OF HORSE RAC*BY SLOW CAMERAMANJohn DavisBucknell UniversityOBVIOUSLY, THE TITLE of the above Droodle is: 47insectology students enjoying better-tasting Luckieswhile studying 3 fireflies. All kinds of students arebugs about Luckies. Matter of fact, college smokersprefer Luckies to all other brands—and by a widemargin—according to the latest and greatest of allcollege surveys. Once again, the No. 1 reason: Luckiestaste better. They taste better, first of all, becauseLucky Strike means fine tobacco. Then, that tobaccois toasted to taste better, “/f’s Toasted” — the famous tries will be judged on the accu¬racy of the answer and the timeit is entered. All 'students of theUniversity of Chicago are eligibleto enter except members of theMaroon staff and their families.Rembrandt topicof deVries talkDr. A. B. de Vries, Europeanauthority on Dutch and Ger¬man art, will discuss “Rem¬brandt and landscape” Tuesday,January 18, at 4:30 p.m. in SocialSciences 122.De Vries is director of the Mau-ritshuis museum in Europe andof the Netherlands Institute forArt History, the Hague.Ealien to discussjuvenile readingin Nursery seriesPAINTBRUSH FOR PAINTING BARBER POLBEugene HellerColumbia University FLY SWATTER DESIGNED TOGIVE FLY SPORTING CHANCIAlan M. BeckerPomona CollegeLucky Strike process—tones up Luckies’ light, good-tasting tobacco to make it taste even better . . .cleaner, fresher, smoother. So, enjoy the better-tastingcigarette . . . Lucky Strike. •nt£,TO/Gr0>,ALL-DAY SUCKER FOR DIETERS"Befte/i taste Luckies... Judith Lee MidgleyAmerican UniversityLUCKIESTASTE BETTERCLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER! STUDENTS! EARN $25!Lucky Droodtes* are pouring in! Whereare yours? We pay $25 for all we use, andfor many we don’t use. So send everyoriginal Droodle in your noodle, with itsdescriptive title, to Lucky Droodle, P. O.Box 67, New York 46, N. Y.H9ROODLES, Copyright 1963 by Roger Price©A.T.C*. PRODUCT OP AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER OP CIOARBTTSS Mary Eaken, librarian ofthe UIC children’s book cen¬ter, will discuss “Principles ofselecting books for young chil¬dren” Thursday in Judd 126 at8 p.m.Miss Eaken, a graduate of theUC library school, has • writtenmany reviews of children’s books.This lecture is the second in aseries sponsored by the UC Vet¬eran’s Nursery school. Admissionto the lecture will be 50 cents.Playwrights Theatre Club1205 N. DearbornHELD OVER 2 WEEKS!“UPROARIOUS ..."Herman Kogan—Sun Times“Three Folkplays DELIGHTFUL."Sydney J. Harris—News1st Time in ChicagoSH0L0M ALEICHEM’SHit Comedy, "The Grand Prize"included in“A TIME FOR LAUGHTER"TUES. thru SAT. 8:30.; SUN., 7:30Reservations available at StudentGovernment Ticket Agency or callWH 3-2272 X t Hi!i ■fl■mmPat« 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON January M, 1955Dixon, UN representative,speaks on council's role“There is no shadow of doubt to my mind that, whilst recog¬nizing the security council’s limitations in the present circum¬stances, we must continue to support it and not lightly throwaway the advantages it affords to the free world,” affirmedSir Pierson Dixon, British permanent representative to theUnited Nations, in his address, “How the United NationsBrings Security and Peace,presented last Friday eveningat University college.The Security council, Dixonstated, has been unable to fulfill1 he responsibility which wasplaced on it in regard to the main¬tenance of international peaceand security because the SovietUnion has chosen to pursue theaim of world domination backedAnnounce datesfor divisionallanguage examsRegistration for the languagereading examinations open to di¬visional studehts only has begun,Applications are available inRoom 305 of the administrationbuilding. Registration deadlinesare: French, January 24; Ger¬man, January 31; and Spanish,February 7.Any other language exam de¬sired must be petitioned for, thedeadline being January 31.‘Up tofive days before the test regis¬tration can be cancelled; peti-t^tned-for exams cannot be camcelled.The dates for the test are asfollows; French, February 7;German, February 14; Spanish,February 21; and others, Febru¬ary 21.No longer available in the book¬store are the booklets describingthe test and containing samplequestions. They may be found inRooms 305 and 303 of the admin¬istration building and at the li¬braries. by the threat of armed force.“Indeed the most importantcontribution which the organiza¬tion has been able to make in thissphere over the years has beentowards the settlement of dis¬putes and differences between thenations of the Free World,” hesaid.“There is no doubt that thevery existence of the United Na¬tions and the solemn obligationslaid up Member States by thecharter is an important factor be¬hind all efforts by nations orgroups of nations to reach agree¬ment and reduce tension in anypart of the world.”“It is sometimes said that theUnited Nations is a liability forthe nations of the Free Worldbecause it provides a platform onwhich the Communist powers canadvance their own doctrines,”Dixon commented.Kimpton at dinnerfor faculty, trusteesThe annual trustees dinner forthe faculty was held Wednesdayevening in the Grand Ballroom ofthe Palmer House. Andrew W.Lawson, chairman of the depart¬ment of physics and professor inthe Institute of Metals spoke forthe faculty. Speaking for the trus¬tees was Fairfax Cone, presidentof Foote, Cone, and Belding lawfirm. Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton was also a principalspeaker. Edward L. Ryerson,chairman of the board of trusteespresided. Radar point protestedFor the past three years, sinceI came to Chicago, one of theparts of Chicago and the HydePark community which I havebragged about to out-of-townerswas the 55th Street PromentoryPoint. It provided us with some¬thing unique and special. In thesummer months we could go fora swim after work, on weekendswe had a place to sit and talk andgather which was uncrowded andattractive. It was the recreationcenter for a large section of thecommunity between April andOctober. Now we learn suddenlythat it is to be taken away fromus by the U. S. Army and thecivil defense program.While I, as a socialist and amember of the Young SocialistLeague may feel particularly ag¬grieved because of my basic dis¬agreement with the whole ap¬proach towards war and peace ofthe U. S. government and thusalso with their approach towardscivil defense, most of my resent¬ment, I think, can be shared byother non-socialist Hyde Parkers.They, like myself, should, Ithink, ask whether civil defensemust mean the destruction of ourrecreation areas at the will andwhim of our Army specialists. Inorder to save our city and our"society” must we first destroyits best features? This approachto "defense” is all too character¬istic of public policy in both thisand other arenas.Perhaps it is too late now forthe community members to re¬verse the City Council’s decisionto lease the land to the Army. ButI think we should still protest thedecision so that the Council willthink twice next time they leaseaway park areas to "protect” ourcity. Debby MeierRELIANCE CAMERA &PHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63 rd St.BU 8-6040TheDisc1*69 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekBach Aria GroupShaw Chorale3 Cantatas 60-41-427 AriasTwo 12" records$7.98 ••Meet fine friends and fine cocktailsface to face atIternie Kune'sSIJUT DIAL -■■ ■ ■,,:V■ :1601 E. 55th St. Just east of the I.C.r•• • • • 4- ‘ •• ACompleteLubricationsat JEWEL CONOCOSerrice Station and Perfect1 Car Hath5001 South Cottage Grove MU 4-9IOCVALENTINESPECIALOne8x10PORTRAIT- $595jiouhe d^arLcrPHOTOGRAPHER1467-9 E. 57th St.Coll Todoy hr Appointment Issued once weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon* of the publica¬tion office, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones:Editorial Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1010; Business and Advertising OfficesMidway 3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions bvmoil, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Frida>.ALLEN R. JANGER .editor-in-chiefRICHARD E. WARD managing editorWILLIAM M. BRANDON. . .business managerShakespearean justice themeat Moody series lectureCritic and author David Daiches will discuss “Guilt andjustice in Shakespeare” Thursday at 8:30 p.m. in Mandel hall.Daiches was an instructor in the English department andthe college of the University of Chicago from 1937-42 andwon a $1,000 teaching prize for his work in the college.The lecture will be the 193rdlecture series, which attemptsto use outstanding men in allfields as speakers. Admissionis without charge.Daiches, a lecturer in Englishliterature at Cambridge Univer¬sity, is Sn expert in the field ofEnglish literature, particularly inthe works of Robert Rurns.Daiches is currently in thiscountry at the invitation of the in the William Vaughn MoodyLibrary of Congress, which hacrequested him to speak at the cen¬tennial of Walt Whitman’s Iu-a\<sof Grass.Books by Daiches on contempo¬rary poetry and fiction have beenpublished by the University pic--His poems and sketches have fir.quently been published in tlu-New Yorker.Cohn & Stern’sSEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALEstarts Monday. Jan. 17thIt will be an event you can not afford to missHere are Ike reason*:All Kuppenheimer overcoats - suits - sportcoats - jacketsreduced 20%A few 19.95 jackets go for 11.95200 Sport Shirts, Odds and EndsValues up to 10.95 — Now 2.00Almost every item in tke store reduced at leost 20%Cohn & Sternthe sttere for men132» E. 53 StreetALEXANDER’SRESTAURANT1137 E. 63 Street MU 4-5735More than just a good place to eatWe cater to parties and banquetsOpen mtl night“Tell me, Euthydemus, am I rightly informed that youhave a collection of books written by the wise men ofthe past, as they are called'*""By Zeus, yes, Socrates", answered he, "and I am stilladding to it, to make it as complete as possible "'from Xenophon iw Hemoruhilia (4.2.8)the white boar book shopnew and used books61 West Division Street SUperior 7-3659TERRY'S PIZZAfinest pizxos madeFREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95 |MEDIUM.. 1.45 GIANT 2.95 §We also carry a full line of Italian foods1518 E. 63rd Sf. Ml 3 4045mums itfsvtfffiivfwinJanuary 14, 1955 Page 5Episcopal chaplain resigns Panel discussions, talks and sermonsCanon Bernard Iddings Bell, for the past nine years repre¬sentative of the Episcopal church at the University of Chicagoand chaplain to Episcopal students and faculty members, hasbeen forced to resign under doctor’s orders because of the lossof his sight.Canon Bell is best known atUC as the leader of the Episcopalcouncil, a faculty group, and ofCanterbury club for students. Hehas conducted a communion serv¬ice in Bond Chapel each Sundaymorning for Episcopalians oncampus. He also is known amongthe many American colleges anduniversities where he has lec¬tured.He was once a professor of re¬ligion at Columbia University andserved as warden of St. Stephen’sCollege on the Hudson. Canon Bell is the author oftwenty books and of many maga¬zine articles. His best knownbooks include Beyond Agnostic¬ism, The Church in Disrepute,Crisis in Education and CrowdCulture.“Canon Bell’s departure fromthe Quadrangles will be a per¬sonal loss to his colleagues andfriends here, as well as a distinctloss to the religious life of thecampus,” said Dean John B.Thompson of Rockefeller Memo¬rial Chapel. highlight campus area religious activityA panel discussion on “Psychiatry and Moral Responsibility,” led by an experimental psy¬chologist and a practicing psychiatrist, will be held Sunday at DeSales house, 5735 Univer¬sity, at 4:30 p.rn.Panel members are Rev. John B. Corcoran, a member of the faculty of the Dominicanhouse of Studies at River 77—7— :—7 7 7—7———7—— — 77—Forest, Illinois, and an expert- Adm'ss,°" » *"* and «*"»*• Pu«'to Ricam without rami or’ ^ «'in ho ooT-t/or? nftar the national prejudice, Vega reported._ . , ments will be served after themental psychologist interested m . ..the interrelation of the fields of a " _psychology, theology and phil¬osophy: and Dr. George T. Stan- The area offers two communitycenters to the Puerto Rican popu¬lation.Although migration from Puer-UNIVERSITY FOODS1129 E. 55thOpen daily A Sundays: ft 4.M. til! ft:!lO P.ll.NSA discount’ on $3.00 purchasesACASA Book StoreJanuary Sale20% discount books and Xmas cardsGuaranteed Typewriter Repair ServiceBY 3-9651 1117 E. 55th Street The southeast section of Chi¬ton, a practicing psychiatrist on cago, around Woodlawn and 63rd, . , _ .the faculty of the Loyola medical has best assimilated its Puerto becau^less "?o b°" a reschool. Rican population of any of the ’ h®cause , J °. b s are* * * * six Puerto Rican neighborhoods ava,,able unskilled laborers,“Organized crime on the South in the city,” stated Anthony Vega, r^a Poln,od out tbat man-\ eco-side,” a talk by Donald Blackiston, executive director of the Puerto Problems stlb remain tolaw enforcement officers for the Rican department of labor, before lcKea’South East Chicago commission, an open meeting of the evening Stroii"’*will be presented Sunday evening, alliance of the First Unitarian wi|j ^ j)r p^u»church Monday. ^■Tillich’a sermonSoutheast-siders have tak^n in f topic at the 11.m. Sundayservices in Rock._ _efeller chapel.You think you feel bod? m J|§| J Dr. Tillich isgm. , m professor emeri-V.ome to the ... U Wm, ^t^tus of philosoph¬ical theology atUnion theologi¬cal seminary and7 p.m., at the Disciples of Christstudent center, 5655 University.Pliolo by Zygmund serving as vis-professoro n t h e quad-rangles.Qroup formsto back DaleyStudents for Daley will meetagain this Thursday at 8:30 p.m.in Law South. All interested stu¬dents are invited.A group of UC students back¬ing county clerk Richard Daleyfor mayor of Chicago launchedthe mayoralty campaign on cam¬pus at an organizational meetingWednesday. Students for Daleychose Clive Gray as president andJulian Kahn as vice-president.Leading a discussion of thegroup’s platform, Don Cass,chairman of the fifth ward YoungDemocrats, quoted newspapereditorials from the Novemberelections citing Daley as repre¬sentative of the pro-reform, pro¬gressive element in the Demo¬cratic party. Proof of this, Casswent on, lay partly in Daley’srecord of pushing to the fore inhis party outstanding reform can¬didates such as UC criminologistJoseph Lohman. now Cook coun¬ty sheriff.I UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingTwo barbers workingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor1Read H er Own True Story! I*‘t W'as a RlurkmurlietCoed!"January's SHAFTCOLLEGE HUMORGet it at theUNIVERSITY BOOKSTOREACEC YCLE <91101*Your BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we sellRepairs & Parts all makes819 E. 55 >113-36739 A M. - 6 P M.\What young people are doing at General ElectricYoung manufacturingexpert pioneers inautomation atGeneral BectricIn 1964, our greatest shortage may be work¬ing people. This country’s demand for elec¬trical goods will be 100% greater than itis today. But there will be only 11% moreworkmen. How can production per man beboosted enough to close the gap?For one answer, 31-year-old P H. Alspach,Manager of Manufacturing Development atG.E., is exploring automation.Automation: Continuous Automatic ProductionAutomation is a way of manufacturing basedon the continuous-flow concept. Productswill be made, inspected, assembled, tested,and packaged by a series of integrated ma¬chines in one uninterrupted flow. As industryevolves toward greater automation, moreworkmen will become skilled machine spe¬cialists or maintenance experts able to con¬trol complete systems.Phil Alspach and the men under him nowdraft layouts for automatic systems, tacklethe engineering problems involved, designautomation equipment, and even build some.23,000 College Graduates at G.E.This is a big and important job. Alspach wasreadied for it in a careful, step-by-step pro¬gram of development. Like Alspach, eachof G.E.’s 23,000 college-graduate employeesis given his chance to grow, to find the workhe does best, and to realize his full potential.For General Electric has long believed this:When fresh young minds are given freedomto make progress, everybody benefits —theindividual, the company, and the country. PHIL ALSPACH joined G.E. shortly aftergraduation from Tulane (B.S. in M.E.,’44), has completed G.E.’s Engineer¬ing Progrdft, Class of 1945, and itsCreative Engineering Course, 1949.Progress Is Our Most Important ProductELECTRICGENERALFage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 14, 1955mClassified AdsPersonal“Comes the revolution" or not, you'llsee "The Bolshevik Empress’* this Fri¬day, Saturday and Sunday nights.DRAMA IN MINIATURE. UNIVERSITYTHEATRE.ESPCDon't forget. Fenner Brockway. LaborParty M. P. speaking for Young Social¬ist League. Wednesday, Feb. 2.ServicesLessons on the Classic or Spanishguitar. Accompaniments for folk, popu¬lar songs; sight reading; duets: ensem¬ble work. Beginners welcome. Also,singers and musicians available forclub performances. OA 4-7621.Local moving. Express service to andfrom freight depots. Rates reasonable.1309 E. 60th. MU 4-0435, John Sutcliffe.Will care for children in my home. Ex¬perienced. 1144 E. 61st.m Cooperative Nursery School. Enroll¬ments now open in kindergarten group.Trained, experienced teacher. Smallgroup permits individual attention.Varied indoor and outdoor equipmentfor projects in work and play. Newsemester begins Jan. 31. 5445 Hvde ParkBlvd. HY 3-7871.WantedYoung man for part time work in foodshop. 1369 E. 57th Street.Driver to work 2 days per week onSouth Side. Must provide own car. Pay$1.50 per hour. No 7-8029. Evenings.For Rent5310 W'oodlawn Ave., near U of C. Two-flat brick, stoker steam heat. 9-7 rooms.Two baths: both apartments available.Owner's apartment has den and break¬fast nook. Call Mr. Rogers, HY 3-8212or McKey and Poague. 1660 E. 55th St.Attractive room for rent within the spa¬cious facilities of Phi Kappa Psi. 5555Woodlawn. PL 2-9704.Large airy room, suitable for student.Quiet. Breakfast if desired. FA 4-1259.Neatly furnished room for a single.5250 S. Parkway. First floor. OA 4-0939.Call evenings.Unfurnished kitchenette for rent. 1357E. 53rd St. Call Carl. HY 3-5185.Rides WantedRide to New York on or about Jan. 21.Will share expenses. Call Stan, HY3-1732.Apartment to ShareSomeone to share six-room furnishedapartment with two male grad students.$40 a month. PL 2-3720.Share furnished five-room apartmentwith two male graduate students. 5465Greenwood. HY 3-2577.CalendarFriday, January 14French Theatre meeting, IdaNoyes library, 2:30 p.m. Re¬hearsal and discussion of futureplans.SValgreen lecture: “Leninist de¬mocracy,” Robert A. Dahl, as¬sociate professor of politicalscience at Yale. Social Science122. 4:30 p.m.JF'lm, “ Seven Deadly Sins”(French). Social Science 122.7:15 and 9:15 p.m. Admission40 cents.Archaeology meeting: Symposiumon careers in archaeology byprofessors Kantor, Ben Dor,and B r o n e e r, with RobertAdams as moderator. Ida Noyesalumni room, 8 p.m.Play, “Drama in Miniature,” Uni¬versity Theatre. Short plays byShaw, Molnar, Larner. Inge,Williams; Reynolds club thea¬tre, 8:30 p.m. Tickets $1.Saturday, January 15Folklore society party. Phi Gam¬ma Delta house. 5615 University,8 p.m. Bring instruments. 50cents for non-members. 25 centsfor members.Play, “Drama in Miniature,” Uni¬versity Theatre. Reynolds clubtheatre. 8:30 p.m. Tickets $1.Sunday, January 16University religious service, “Bestrong,” sermon by Paul Til¬lich. Rockefeller chapel. 11 a.m.young socialist meeting, IdaNoyes, 3:30 p.m.Panel discussion: “Psychologyand moral responsibility,” JohnB. Corcoran and George W.Stanton. Calvert club, DeSaleshouse, 5735 University, 4:30p.m. '( banning club dinner and meet¬ing, 6:30 and 7 p.m., Fennhouse, 5638 Woodlawn. Amend¬ ment of constitution and elec¬tion of officers.*-*Film, “Seal Island,” “Beaver Val¬ley” (U. S.), B-J council. Judsonlounge, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Admis¬sion 25 cents.SRP caucus, Ida Noyes eastlounge, 7:30 p.m.Chamber music recital, UC Musi¬cal society. Ida Noyes, 8 p.m.Play, “Drama in Miniature,” Uni¬versity Theatre. Reynolds clubtheatre. 8:30 p.m. Tickets $1.Monday, January 17Lecture series, “Existence and theChrist,” Paul Tillich. Mandelhall, 11:30 a.m.SG election and rules committeemeeting, Reynolds club fish¬bowl, 3:30 p.m. Open meetingto consider changes in SG elec¬tion law. especially concerningmanaging of the polls.Botany club meeting, “Osmoticproperties and permeability ofmitochondria to nonelectro¬lytes.” Daniel L. Harris, associ¬ate professor of physiology.Botany 106, 4:30 p.m. Walgreen lecture, “Polyarchal de¬mocracy,” Robert A. Dahl, asso¬ciate professor of political sci¬ence at Yale. Social science 122,4:30 p.m.Film, “The Stone Flower,” (Rus¬sian), International house, 7and 9 p.m. Admission 45 cents.Ice hookey, game, Universityhockey club. North stands, 8p.m. Contingent on weather.Tuesday, January 18Water safety and senior life-sav¬ing course, Ida Noyes pool. 6:30to 9:30 p.m. These Red Crosscourses will be held every Tues¬day evening for the remainderof the quarter and are open toall.Lecture series, “Existence and theChrist,” Paul Tillich. Mandelhall, 11:30 a.m.Lecture, “Rembrandt and land¬scape,” A. B. DeVries, directorof the Mauritshuis and theNetherlands institute for ArtHistory. The Hague. Social sci¬ence 122. 4:30 p.m.Christian Science testimonial meeting, Thorndike Hiltonchapel, 7 p.m.Film, “The Young Chopin” (Pol¬ish), Social science 122, 7:15 and9:15 p.m.Concert Band rehearsal, Sunnygym, 5823 Kenwood, 8 p.m.Bring music. Pictures taken ofgroup are now available.Lecture - discussion: “Agricultureand cultural change: the GeziraScheme in the Sudan,” Mr. Ar¬thur Gaitskell, C.M.G., formermanaging Director. Sudan Ge¬zira Board. Sponsored by thePlanning and AnthropologyClubs. Social science room 201,8 p.m.Wednesday, January 19Lecture - discussion, “The Oppen-heinier case — security systemon trial4” Harry Kalven, Jr.,professor of law. Students forDemocratic Action. Law South,4 p.m.Walgreen Lecture, “Equality, di¬versity, and intensity,” RobertA. Dahl. Social science 122, 4:30p.m. Science Fiction dub meeting, “Ascience fiction editor’s note¬book,” William L. Hamling, edi¬tor of Imagination magazina.Ida Noyes library, 7:30 p.m.English country dancing, IdaNoyes cloister club. 8 to 10 p.m.Wear rubber soled shoes. Iivstrtiction for beginners.Illustrated lecture, “Gods andkings In Hittite art,” Hans G.Guterbock, Oriental Instituteprofessor of Hittitology. Breas¬ted hall, 8:30 p.m.Thursday, January 20Lecture series: “Existence andthe Christ,” Paul Tillich, Man-del hall, 11:30 a.m.Film, “The Devil and Daniel Web-ster,” (U. S.), Internationalhouse. 7 and 9 p.m. Admission45 cents.Lecture: “Principles of selectingbooks for y o u n g children,”Mary K. Eakin, librarian chil¬dren’s book center. Sponsoredby veterans’ nursery school.Judd 126. 8 p.m. Admissioncharge.Chevrolet's stealing the thunder from the high-priced cars with the greatest choice going ofengines and drives! Look at all the ways youcan go when you go Chevrolet!You can have the new 162-h.p. V8—or you can takeyour pick of two new swcct-running 6’s.Then there's Super-Smooth Powerglide, new Over¬drive (extra-cost options) and a new and finer Syn¬chro-Mesh transmission.Come in and see how• « • - f much fun it is to drive theexciting new W ^ to £^0 • Motoramic Chevrolet ofyour choice. *NEW “TURBO-FIRE V8”WITH STANDARD TRANSMISSION NEW “TURBO-FIRE V8’’WITH OVERDRIVE NEW “TURBO-FIRE V8“WITH POWERGLIDENEW “BLUE-FLAME 123”WITH STANDARD TRANSMISSION NEW “BLUE-FLAME 123”WITH OVERDRIVE NEW “BLUE-FLAME 136”WITH POWERGLIDEEverything’s new in theMotoramic ChevroletMore than a new car^.a new concept of low-cost motoring/SEE YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER■January 14, 1955 /THE CHICAGO MAROONNew campus theat re groupto present all plays in FrenchA new theater group has beenformed on campus. This organiza¬tion, however, presents no com¬petition for University Theatre,differing in one significant aspect— the plays will be presented en¬tirely in French.The first presentation will beJean Anouilh’s "Antigone,” nextWednesday on WUCB’s regularlyscheduled French program at 8©’clock. The group, "Troupe Thea-trale de 1’universite de Chicago,”will function both as radio pro¬ducer and as an independenttheatrical organization. Qualifica¬tions for membership include anability to speak French and act inFrench plays, or willingness toassist in the technical aspects ofproduction. Anyone interestedmay contact Bryna Bailin, Green16.Advertisement — Advertisement - Shown above is the notedsemanticist S. I. Hay aka wa,who will preside over his fourthannual jazz concert in Mandelhall on January 25.Advertisement — AdvertisementOn Campos Afocfihuhnan(Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek," etc.)SCIENCE MADE SIMPLE: No. 1In this day and age, as I like to call it, everybody should knowsomething about science. Unfortunately, however, the great majorityof us are majoring in elocution, and we do not get a chance to takeany science. But we can at least learn the fundamentals.Though this column is intended to be a source of innocent merri¬ment for all sexes and not to concern itself with weighty matters,1 have asked the makers of Philip Morris whether I might not fromtime to time use this space for a short lesson in science. “Makers,”I said to them, “might I not from time to time use this space for ashort lesson in science?”“Bless you, lad!” cried the makers, chuckling. “You may cer¬tainly use this space from time to time for a short lesson in science.”They are very benign men, the makers, fond of children, smallanimals, community singing, and simple country food. Their benevo¬lence is due in no small measure to the cigarettes they smoke, forPhilip Morris is a cigarette to soothe the most savage of breasts. Irefer not only to the quality of the tobacco - which, as everyoneknows, is amiable, humane, and gracious — but also to the qualityof the package. Here is no fiendishly contrived container to fray thefingernails and rasp the nerves^ Here, instead, is the most simpleof devices: you pull a tab, a snap is heard, and there, ready at hand,are your Philip Morris Cigarettes. Strike a match, take a puff, andheave a delicious little rippling sigh of pure content.So, with the cordial concurrence of the makers, I will from time totime devote this column to a brief lesson in science.Let us start today with chemistry. It is fitting that chemistryshould be the first of our series, for chemistry is the oldest of sciences,having been discovered by Ben Franklin in 123 B.C. when an applefell on his head while he was shooting the breeze with Pythagorasone day outside the Acropolis. (The reason they were outside theAcropolis and not inside was that Pythagoras had been thrown outfor drawing right triangles all over the walls. They had severalmeetings outside the Acropolis, but finally Franklin said, “Look,Pythagoras, this is nothing against you, see, but I’m no kid any moreand if I keep laying around on this wet grass with you, I’m liableto get the break-bone fever. I’m going inside.” Pythagoras, friendlessnow, moped around Athens for a while, then drifted off to Brusselswhere he married a girl named Harriet Sigafoos and went into thelinseed oil game. He would also certainly be forgotten today hadnot Shakespeare written “Othello.”)But I digress. We were beginning a discussion of chemistry, andthe best way to begin is, of course, with fundamentals. Chemicalsare divided into elements. There are four: air, earth, fire, and water.Any number of delightful combinations can be made from theseelements, such as firewater, dacron, and chef’s salad.Chemicals can be further divided into the classes of explosiveand non-explosive. A wise chemist always touches a match to hischemicals before he begins an experiment.A great variety of containers of different sizes and shapes are usedin a chemistry lab. There are tubes, vials, beakers, flasks, pipettes,and retorts. (A retort is also a snappy comeback, such as “Oh, yeah?”or “So’s your old man!”(Perhaps the most famous retort ever made was delivered by noneother than Noah Webster himself. It seems that one day Mr. Web¬ster’s wife walked unexpectedly into Mr. Webster’s office and foundMr. Webster’s secretary sitting on Mr. Webster’s knee. “Why Mr.Webster!” cried Mr. Webster’s wife. “I am surprised!”(“No, my dear,” he replied. “I am surprised. You are astonished.”(Well, sir, it must be admitted that old Mr. Webster got off agood one, but still one can not help wishing he had spent less timetrifling with his secretary, and more time working on his diction¬ary. Many of his definitions show an appalling want of scholarship.Take, for instance, what happened to me not long ago. I went to thedictionary to look up “houghband” which is a band that you passaround the leg and neck of an animal. At the time I was planningto pass bands around the legs and necks of some animals, and Iwanted to be sure I-ordered the right thing.(Well sir, thumbing through the H’s in the dictionary, I hap¬pened to come across “horse.” And this is how Mr. Webster defines“horse”—“a large, solid hoofed herbivorous mammal, used as adraft animal.”(Now this, I submit, is just plain sloppiness. The most cursoryinvestigation would have shown Mr. Webster that horses are notmfffnmals. Mammals give milk. Horses do not give milk. It has to betaken from them under the most severe duress.(Nor is the horse a draft animal, as Mr. Webster says. Man is adraft animal. Mr. Webster obviously had the cavalry in mind, buteven in the cavalry it is men who are drafted. Horses volunteer.)But I digress. We were discussing chemistry. I have told you themost important aspects, but there are many more—far too manyto cover in the space remaining here. However, I am sure that thereis a fine chemistry lab at your very own college. Why don’t you go upsome afternoon and poke around? Make a kind of fun day out of it.Bring ukeleles. Wear funny hats. Toast frankfurters on the Bunsenburners. Be gay, be merry, be loose, for chemistry is your friend!©Max Sliulman, 1954This column is brought to you by the makers of PHILIP MORRISwho think you would enjoy their cigarette. Famed gospel singer starsin Mandel hall programMahalia Jackson, “queen of thegospel singers,” will be starred ina program at Mandel hall Tues¬day evening, January 25, at 8:15p.m. Arranged by S. I. Hayakawa,prominent lecturer, author, andjazz critic, the concert will besponsored by the Inter-Club coun¬cil and the cooperative nurseryschool.Mahalia Jackson has packedconcert halls in London and Parisas well as in this country. Bornin New Orleans, she has spentmost of her life in Chicago. Shehas made frequent television andradio appearances and is a suc¬cessful recording artist.The theme of the program willbe “How gospel song was born.”Fitzhugh ClarkTo call dance forCircles, Squares"Circles and Squares,” a folksong and dance group, was or¬ganized last Saturday.Fitzhugh Clark will call andinstruct the folk dances at IdaNoyes on the second and fourthSaturdays of each month from8 to 11 p.m. Admission is 25 cents.Officers already elected areSandor Schuhk, secretary, andAlvin Jensen, treasurer. EstherShefman is acting president untila permanent officer is elected.JANE LEE CHOP SUEY {To Toke HomeToble Service1205 East 55th Street 1MI 3-3*07 Hayakawa will trace the evolu¬tion of gospel singing, a modernurban outgrowth of the tradition¬al spirituals. Appearing also willbe Thomas Dorsey, outstandingwriter of gospel songs. Other ar¬tists will include blues singer“Mamma” Yancey, widow of thelate jazz pianist Jimmy Yancey,and string bass player Ernie“Big” Crawford.Tickets are $1.25 and are avail¬able at the Hyde Park Coop store,and at the door. Proceeds will goto the cooperative nursery schoolscholarship fund.Musical Societyto sponsor SeptetThe first performance in Chi¬cago of Stravinsky’s Septet high¬lights the program to be presenf-ed Sunday, January 16, by theUC Musical society at Ida Noyeslibrary.Leon Kirchner’s Little Suitefor piano, Schoenberg’s earlysong cycle, The Book from theHanging Garden, and the “SixDances in Bulgarian Rhythm”from Bartok’s Mikrokosmos, thefirst two also first performanceshere, will complete the programof the Musical society’s first con¬cert this quarter.The concert begins at 8 p.m.;admission is free.The Book NookBooks and GomesGreeting CardsRental Library1 *56 E. 53rd StreetDo you dig Tvrbian?*If not, let the fine Italian hand of Helen Panateros guide youthrough the mysteries of the dissertation. We dig everything fromresearch to final typing.Evenings from 5 to 8, Tuesdays and Thursdays 12 to 9 at HY 3-5343;Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays 9 to 5, e/o Geography Dept., Ext. 3551.Office: 5646 S. Harper Ave.* 1 trons.—Do you understand the Manual for Writers of Dissertations?)USEDBogzn Cot. Net$10550FM 400 TunerBogznNEW PH 10 Our Price$8950NEW PH 10AMPLIFIERTrades Accepted On The AboveLUND COMPANY5236 S. BlackstoneOpen Thurs., Eves. & Sunday AfternoonMUseum 4-5300READER’S“Tfie Campus Drug Store”61st and EHis Opposite B-J' /DRUGS-PRESCRIPTIONS TOILETRIES— FOOD —The way you like itVisit our College Doom Pa** 7Photo by ZygmundJon Jackson as GeneralStrommfest in a tense scenefrom Shaw’s Bolshevik Em¬press.Fine Arts quartetto give concertsat Kimball HallChicago’s Fine Arts quartet,one of the world’s foremost cham¬ber music groups, is presentinga series of 13-concerts at Kimballhall Tuesdays at 8:30 p.m.,through March.The Fine Arts quartet, whichis well-represented on LP discsand now records exclusively forWebcor tape records, is composedof Leonard Sorkin and AbramLoft, violins, Irving Ilmer, viola,and George Sopkin, cello.Each concert will be broadcast“live” from Kimball hall byWFMT. The series is being spon¬sored by Allied Radio corpora¬tion.Tickets to each full-length con¬cert will be available free at Al¬lied Radio’s studios, 100 NorthWestern avenue, or at 50 centsfrom Station WFMT, 221 NorthLaSalle street.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE _1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236/CARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1127 E. 55 1412 E. 55MU 4-9003 MU 4-8980COMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.• Bar-be-cue ribs• Bar-be-cue chickenDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525\V«9< I THE CHICAGO MAROON January 14, 1955Cagers lose, 57-76;JVers drop thrillerA short shot scores more often pufied away to a 45 to 29 halfthan a long shot. That’s the only time lead by working the ball inconclusion that can be drawn lor short sure shots,from the Maroon loss to Navy After the half the varsity be-Pier on Wednesday night. MM gnn to work much better as aLester scored 22 of the varsity’s team, particularly on defense, and57, using his overhead two-hand hi the third quarter actually out-push from beyond the free scored their opponents by makingthrow circle, but Don Wildner of a few tips and short set shotsNavy Pier scored 34 on short driv- themselves. But the strain wasing shots as he set a new Navy too great, and in the last quarterPier scoring record in leading his of the game the Pier team pulledteam to a 76 to 57 victory. away to a 20-point lead beforeThe Maroons were literally do- substituting four men with fivefenseless in the early part of the minutes to go and the gamegame in which the Pier Illini salted atva>._ Period 1 2 3 4 Total- Stubble wiltsUIC wins, 20-8by Itarleen FoleyShowing great improvement made noise simultaneously as cen-°vcr last year s squad, the V ar- fer \y0]ff and guards Davesi tv wrestling team took on Uni- penn an(j jQhn Davey led a clos-versity of Illinois at Chicago jng rally which tied the score,Wednesday night at Bartlett Gym. 32.32.The Illini won. 20-8, in a meet in jn two sudden-death overtimewhich every match was very periocis (the first team being ableclosely contested except for the score two points wins in such atwo which ended in falls. Heavy- period) Harvard scored first onweight Illingworth pinned his op- a foui shot, and then again to win,ponent. and player-coach A1 Bates 34.32. Both teams were previouslywon a decision in the 147-lb. class, undefeated in Private Schoo'lthese two accounting for Chica- League play.go’s eight points. — —— —Chicago 18 11 14 14—57Illinois 27 18 13 18—76* * *The JV game Tuesday withHarvard School produced moreexcitement than the varsity con¬test. Cheerleaders for both teams New sports shots grace gym;awe, impact aims of displayby Spike PinneyA moment of inspiration on the part of a coach and the skill and work of two student*have resulted in a series of twelve striking photographs on the walls of Bartlett gym.Gymnastic coach Bud Beyer got thefitt carried out in twelve large sporturing about two feet by twofeet. The pictures were printedon special equipment in Rev.Proffitt’s home in Hamlet, Indi¬ana.Basis for coach Beyer’s inspira¬tion was his dissatisfaction withthe previous display of small, hap- idea wTiich students Bob Sbarge and Rev. Henry Prof-pictures for the Bartlett lobby walls, each picture meas-These two donated their time inorder to produce a series of prints“having impact and catching theheight of athletic action.” TheUniversity paid for materials forthis photographic rendition ofsport. Proffitt and Sbarge did thework of finding simple and yetdramatic sports shots.StrainingAnd being stifledShooting hazard team shots. Beyer thoughtthat there should be somethingmore “awe-inspiring” to matchBartlett’s Gothic splendor. Andso he got in touch with Profittand Sbarge, both full time UC stu¬dents.Newcomers to the team, DanRitter (137 lbs.) and John Shaef-fer (177 lbs.) showed great prom¬ise, losing by close point scores totheir more experienced opponents.In the remaining matches, UICpicked up twelve hotly-contestedpoints from Varsity holdoversDonderi, Flannery, Richards andCarlson. In summing up thematch. Coach Bates expressed hisconfidence that this year’s tigersare better than ever, and lookedforward to the most successfulseason in recent years.SportsCalendarTodayr Swimming, Loyola,3:30 p.m., at Loyola.JV Track, Mt. Carmel H.S., 3 :45 p.m., Field House.Tomorrow: Track, Chicago-land open, 2 and 7:30p.m., field house.Wrestling, III. Tech, 3:30p.m., at III. Tech.Gymnastics, Indiana andNorthwestern 2 p.m., atIndiana.JV Basketball, NorthShore H. S., 2 p.m., atNorth Shore.Basketball, Illinois Tech,8 p.m., at III. Tech.Monday: Basketball, Chi¬cago Teachers, 7:30 p.m.,at Chicago Teachers.Tuesday: Wrestling, WrightJ. C., 7:30 p.m., Bartlettgym.Wednesday: JV Basketball,Chicago Christian, 7 p.m.,at Calumet H. S.Track clubHolds meetThe UC Track club will spon¬sor an AAU-sanctioned indoortrack meet in the field house Sat¬urday afternoon.‘"“Highlighting the meet will bean anticipated duel in the polevault with Jerry Welbourn, form¬erly of Ohio State, making a bidto join the select circle of 15-footvaulters.Providing competition for theformer Buckeye will be HarryMcKnight and Dale Foster of Illi¬nois, defending Big 10 co-cham¬pions.Frank Loomos, double winnerIn the Holiday Meet, LawtonLamb, Bob Theisen and WaltDeike lead the 45 UCTC entrants.Admission is $1.00, 50 cents forstudents and faculty, with theproceeds going to the US Olym¬pic fund. 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