Fourteen remain inprom queen contestThe semi-finalists for the Wash Prom queen were chosenWednesday night at Ida Noyes by a judging committee in¬cluding Robert M. Strozier, dean of students, Mrs. Mary AliceNeuman, assistant director of stu¬dent activities, and Mrs. LawrenceKimpton. The contestants, whosenumber was narrowed from twen¬ty-seven to fourteen, were judgedon beauty, poise, and personality.The eandidates, who will competeagain Monday night are: M. An¬derson, Mortarboard, L. Blum-berg. B-J Council, M. Chesslin,Beecher House, S, Dewes, AlphaDelta. Carolyn Sygert, SRP, R.Galli, Phi Gamma Delta, E. Gins-burg. Linn House, M. Herman,Phi Kappa Psi, M. Liberman, RedCross College Unit, S. Loffbou-row. Delta Upsilon, T. Martin.Quadranglers, A. Peyton, Foster,A. Rubovitz, WAA, E. Wijkman,Vincent House. Three of the four judges forMonday night’s contest areknown. Among the judges willbe Joan Kohn, an alumi of Chi¬cago, who graduated in the clasdtof 1946. She is now publicity di¬rector of the Chicago EducationalT.V., Association and publicity di¬rector for the Chicago U.S.O.UC graduate Marjorie Fullmer,who was fashion reporter for theDaily News, is another of theMonday night judges.Warren Pursel, the third ofthe chosen judges, graduated theUniversity in 1942. He was a mem¬ber of Kappa Sigma and campuscorresponden for the Tribune.Mr. Pursel now owns a public re¬lations firm. Administrationvetoes SQ co-opfund requestStudent Government’s requestfor funds to establish a living co¬operative was denied by the ad¬ministration, Wednesday. DeanStrozier and William B. Harrell,vice-president in charge of busi¬ness affairs, took the action.They said that SG had nogro.unds for asking the board oftrustees for the $17,500 needed toestablish the co-op. At present,they said, 20 vacancies exist inthe girl’s dormitories and 20 inSnell-Hitchcock.SG plans included establishmentof the co-op in a building at 5558Ellis, housing approximately 20people at a cost of $25 per personper month.The $17,500 was needed to fillSG’s plans for converting the sec¬ond and third floors into fourteenseparate rooms, the first floorinto a lounge, dining room andkitchen, and for furnishing. Kimpton to spealUC educational aimsChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton will present a talk to UCstudents Tuesday, Feb. 22. Kimpton’s talk on the aims andpurposes of general education in Chicago is being given undersponsorship of the Maroon.mm UC students will have the oj>portunity to submit questioncto Kimpton in advance of hi*3 speech. Questions directed to thoChancellor must be submittedthrough the Maroon.The Chancellor’s speech resulVed from an invitation from theMaroon. The staff of the Maroonvoted to sponsor a talk by Chan¬cellor Kimpton to allow him to ex¬plain present University policiesto UC students.Students desiring to submitquestion to the Chancellor shouldaddress them in care of the editorof the Maroon, Reynolds Club 20Lphoto by GrossmanLawrence A. Kimpton Chicago Theological Semi¬nary is celebrating its centen¬nial this year. This monthmarks the beginning of its cele¬bration. Special feature ma¬terial, describing some of theSeminary’s work and listingsome centennial events, ap¬pears on page 2.SQ sets up foreign exchangefund, seats new membersUniversity of Chicago, January 28, 1955 31Sitwell greeted with applause;reads 15 poems dramaticallyby David SchlessingerDame Edith Sitwell read dramatically 15 of her lyric poems to a filled Mandel hallWednesday evening.The program of readings was divided into two halves, each half beginning with a trio ofpoems, the first trio written during the air-raid days in London in 1940, the second orig¬inally presented as part of her popular set of rhythm poems-with-music, “Facade.” Aftermoving through highly varied subject matters and treatments, the first section of the pro¬gram concluded with the pas-toial “Harvest,” the secondwith the hopeful “Canticle ofthe Rose.”The tall, graceful Dame Sitwell,clad in a black dress and envel¬oped in a crimson and yellowcape, exhibited her noted vocalversatility to an appreciative audi¬ence: one-eighth of the durationof (he program was taken up byapplause.The three poems which beganthe program were read for mem¬bers of the U. S. Army and Navyin one of Dame Sitw'ell’s first“real contacts” with America.They included “Still Falls theRain,” “Lullaby,” and “Serenade(any man to any woman).” Thereadings continued with “TheYouth with the Red-Gold Hair,”“Most Lovely Shade,” “The PeachTree,” “A Bird’s Song,” and “Har¬vest.”After an intermission, duringwhich, as she remarked to the au¬dience, “You can relax and I canrelax” (a line with an unusualm e t r,i c structure of its own)Dame Sitwell continued with thegay audile pyrotechnics of “Pol¬ka.” “Scotch Rhapsody,” and“Through Gilded Trellises” (allfrom “Facade”), then moved more seriously through “Heart andMind.” and “The Beekeeper”(founded on a hymn), and con¬cluded with “The Canticle of theRose” (written after she had readthat vegetation had begun togrow' once more at the ruins ofHiroshima).At the close of the readingsafter prolonged applause, DameDame Edith Sitwell80enter in mid-year classThe size of this year’s mid-year entering class representsan increase of 14 per cent over last year, the Admissions officeannounced this week. Most of the 80 entering students arewinter graduates of Chicago highschools, but the class includes 29representatives of 16 states andone student from Ramat-Gan,Israel.Classes for new entrants willbegin February 7. The accelerated^courses offered to college stu¬dents are Soc. 1A and 1TA and 2A.English, math, and humanities 1and 2.Orientation period for new stu- through next Saturday. Displaysand demonstrations of the activi¬ties of various campus organiza¬tions will be presented on StudentGovernment’s Activities nightThursday from 7:30-10 p.m.Robert M. Stozier, dean of stu¬dents, and Robert E. Streeter,dean of the College, will speak ata “welcome” meeting for the en¬trants at 10 a.m. tomorrow in Sec. Sitwell commented that “Mybrothers and I have always pro¬fessed that American audiencesare the most wonderful audiencesin the world, and tonight's audi¬ence confirms my profession . . .you do teach us. you know', bywhat you like.” The audience re¬sponded with further lessons.Tillich demands religionresist dehumanizationby Clark KuchemanReligious socialism must resist the various forms of de¬humanization which are manifest in the Twentieth century,emphasized Paul Tillich Wednesday in a discussion sponsoredby the newly formed Social Democratic forum.The principles of religious so- A special fund for improvement of the foreign student ex¬change program was set up by Student Government lastTuesday, and an initial $100 appropriated for it. Proceedsfrom a forthcoming SG-sponsored performance of Macbethby Playwrights theatre were voted to go to this fund.An amendment was defeated which would limit use of thisfund to expansion of the ex- *change program to other uni¬versities, rather than onlyFrankfurt. Paul Breslow (SRP-soc), who introduced the amend¬ment. maintained that the pur¬pose of the exchange programwas to foster international under¬standing. To have exchange withonly one school, in a nation thathas more exchange students thanany other, does not further thisend, he said.Ralph Henkle (ISL-col) indi¬cated general agreement withBreslow, but did not want tolimit use of the funds to this pur¬pose. He believed that the Frank¬furt program should be placedon an independent and self-sus¬taining basis first.* * *Educational survey commis¬sion was instructed by the as-cialism. according to Tillich, pro¬fessor emeritus of philosophicaltheology at Union Theologicalseminary in Newr York, were de¬veloped in Germany during theyears prior to the rise of Hitler.At that time the traditionalchurch became identified withdying German imperialism, andthe religious socialist movementsought to achieve an integrationbetween the insights of religionand socialism.The first principle of reli¬gious socialism, according toTillich, was that “socialist uto¬pianism must be tempered bythe religious insight that theKingdom of God can never berealized within history.” On theother hand, he continued, thechurches are to be called uponto face the demonic forces ofhistory. In pre-Hitler Germany,these “demonic forces” wereseen to be chiefly nationalismand capitalism.Tillich stated that, according tothe principles of religious social¬ism, at a particular historicalmoment a special demonic force,that is, a structural evil, can beattacked by the structure of socialism and of detached irrel¬evance in religion, he emphasized.Tillich pointed out that thetransformation sought by re¬ligious socialism is not merelyan economic transformation,but involves the whole of man’scultural life, including his in¬tellectual life, aesthetic life,and political life. This trans¬formation Tillich described as“theonomy,” the cultural situa¬tion in which ultimate meaningis seen to be manifest in finitereality, although not identicalwith it.The function of religious so¬cialism now, Tillich continued, isto resist the dehumanization ofman. The tendency of modernculture has been to reduce mento mere sets of conditioned re¬flexes; Tillich cited communisttyranny as an extreme contem¬porary form of this tendency.“In totalitarian systems of anykind,” Tillich declared, “man isdeprived of his subjectivity and istransformed into a cog in a ma¬chine. Whereas, he concluded,capitalism seemed once to be thechief cause of dehumanization,dents begins today and runs Sci. 122. grace in history. This idea avoids totalitarianism now deserves theboth the danger of utopianism in attack of religious socialism. sembly to interview the Univer¬sity administration regardingits position on athletic scholar¬ships, as well as the possibilityof a return of football.* * *A proposal that SG lobby fora fair educational practices act(FEPC) in the Illinois state legis¬lature was postponed until nextmeeting. SG members wantedmore time to study the four-pagedraft bill, which was patternedafter the New York state FEPCact.* * *Don Anderson was sealed Inthe social sciences division, thesecond SRP member to be ap¬pointed to an ISL vacancy thismonth. Emmet MeGeever, anindependent, was seated in thegraduate library school.SRP now holds five seals Inthe assembly. Al Fortier, S<>president, explained that Ander-son (SRP) was appointed be¬cause it was felt that “he wouldpresent a strong and articulatevoice on a particular point ofview.”Applications are still beingtaken for vacancies remaining insocial sciences and the medicalschool. A medical school seat hasbeen vacant since October; andno one has applied for it.Fred Solomon, who claimed theseat on the basis of write-in votesin a case before Student-Faculty-Administration court last fall, hasdecided ‘not to apply for the va¬cancy.* * #A fluid duplicating machine hasbeen purchased for the publicityservice for $180, to supplementthe mimeograph machine.[Curtis Edgett ofLab school dies!Curtis S. Edgett, social scienceteacher at the laboratory school whowas on leave of absence this year,died last Friday at Billings hospital.Edgett, who had been ill since lastspring, became critically ill early lastweek, and suffered a heart attack onFriday afternoon.Edgett, 48, a native of Malden,Massachusetts, had been teaching atthe laboratory school since 1944,and had previously taught in Massa¬chusetts high schools and held posi¬tions on the Malden city council andfirst national bank.He is survived by his wife, theformer Alice Eggert. Mrs. Edgettteaches in the Chicago public schools.Funeral services for Edgett wereheld on Monday at Bond chapel.CTS history has been long and variedThe Chicago Theological seminary was founded in 1855 by a group of Congregational ministers and laymen, accordingto its charter, “to furnish instruction to young men preparing for the Gospel ministry” and was to be “equally open to alldenominations of Christians” — a very forward-looking provision for that day.New England Congregationalists, who migrated westward, settled in relatively large numbers and founded churches bythe middle of the last century;they no longer found hometies and ways of life back east inNew England adequate to thenew life in the midwest. To pro¬vide a supply of young ministers,sufficient in numbers and suitedby training for the new condi¬tions, called for the founding ofa theological seminary. Ministersand laymen from six midweststates joined in securing a charterfor the Chicago Theological semi¬nary.These men then invented a newkind of curriculum, intended toprovide for the values of the twotraditions of theological educa¬tion they were familiar withinthe east: learning how to be aminister, by becoming an appren¬tice to a famous minister, or byattending the specialized kind ofgraduate theological school which The nameplate next to the en¬trance of CTS.had come in existence in the firstquarter of the nineteenth century.This educational program was thefirst of a succession of innova¬tions designed by the seminary to meet changing conditions inchurch and social order.By the 1880’s the New Englandmigration was succeeded by avast wave. of migration fromnorthern Europe.In 1915, during the presidencyof Ozora S. Davis, the seminaryleft its buildings on Union Square,west of the loop, and moved to alocation alongside the campus ofthe University of Chicago, in re¬sponse to the University’s offer ofclassroom space and other aca¬demic cooperation.In the late nineteen twenties,the Lawson bequest released theimagination and power of theseminary in terms of fresh pion¬eering. (Victor Lawson was edi¬tor of the Chicago Daily Newsand a director and president ofthe Associated Press.) It estab¬ lished the department of religiousdrama and religious journalism;teaching and research in the rela¬tion of religion to mental illness;and the department of researchand survey, the first major en¬deavor in a theological seminaryto make the methods and findingsof the social sciences available tothe Protestant ministry.In 1943, during the presidencyof Albert W. Palmer, a liaisonbetween the seminary, the di-ing seminaries was formed. TheDisciples Divinity House andMeadville Theological schools atthe University of Chicago, theseminary, and the divinity schooloperate through the federated the¬ological faculty. This faculty isunique in American Protestanttheological education. It differsSee ‘CTS/ page •LecturesJanuary 31: John Short, Minis¬ter St. George’s UnitedChurch, Toronto Canada,“Preaching in the context ofour times,” 8 p.m., GrahamTaylor Hall, 5757 University.February 1: George F. McLeod,founder and leader of theIona Community in Scotland,“The Iona community: Anexperiment in work and wor¬ship,” 8 p.m., UniversityChurch of the Disciples ofChrist, 57th and University.February 2: Walter G. Muel-der, Dean, Boston universityschool of theology, “The roleof the church in the respon¬sible society,” 8 p.m., Univer¬sity Church of the Disciplesof Christ, 57th and Univer¬sity.February 3: Albert BucknerCoe, Moderator of the Con¬gregational Christian church¬es, “Congregationalism-histo-ry and promise,” 8 p.m., Uni¬versity Church of the Disci¬ples of Christ, 57th and Uni¬versity.»*§« 2 January 28, 1955Chicago Theological Seminary begins centennial yearCentennial celebration to have wide scope;will be noted by related groups and churchesThis month marks the beginning of the centennial celebrations of the Chicago Theolog¬ical seminary.The theme, “For Christ anc} the Church,” chosen for the centennial, expresses the widedimensions of concern that the celebrations will include.One of the stated purposesCTS CentennialThe King carves roast pig at the Festival of Nations dinner inIda Noyes hall. photo by GrossmanCrusaders dine at festivalThe Chicago Theological Seminary Festival of Nations, held in IdaNoyes, Wednesday night, had as its theme, “A 15th century cru¬saders’ reunion in a French baronial castle.”Theology students, professors, and alumni, in authentic dress, sataround the long banquet table, representing eleven nations.An exotic food specialty from each of the countries was carried in,with trumpet fanfare, in a processional highlighted by a great platterbearing a medieval-style roast pig, apple-in-mouth.Some of the other rare dishes were borscht from Israel; Suki-Yaki,Japan; Adabo, Philippines; Harush, Persia; Aros Valencia, Spain.Midwest Congregationalistsmeet for ministers’ weekDuring the twenty-fourth annual ministers’ week of theChicago Theological seminary, January 31-February 3, min¬isters of the Congregational Christian churches representingseventeen midwestern states will meet with ministers of sev-ral other denominations at the seminary at 5757 Universityavenue, to celebrate the opening of the seminary’s centennial.“Christo et Ecclesiae,” “ForChrist and the Church,” is thetheme chosen to express theemphasis of the centennial. Rath¬er than being on historical valuesalone, the stress will be on endur¬ing traditions and their correlatedhopes for the future, common tothe CTS, the churches and Chris¬tian people as individuals.Highlights of the week will bethe Alden-Tuthill lectures givenby outstanding preachers andtheologians. (See below for lec¬ture schedule.)Ministers’ week gives ministers for the centennial Dlannine is td celebrate congregational- of the centennial, various groupsior me centennial planning is -sm in particular and protestant- related to the seminary are plan-ism in general. This means that ning a wide range of programs,the centennial will not concern a special alumni committee isitself only with a celebration of making preparations for “A Sun-theme eXDlsiined the one huntJre(* years of the day of concern for the ministry ”seminary. Rather, it will be used to be held Sunday, May 22. This“For Christ and the church,” as an occasion to make signifi- program is designed to confrontthe theme of the Chicago Theo- car,t contributions to the church- the churches of the seminary’slogical seminary’s centennial, is a . chun h related colleges, insti- alumni and the Congregational*w. , .. .. tutions of theological education, Christian churches of the seven-translation of the motto on the and to individual Christians with teen states closely related to theeast face of the cornerstone of an emphasis on the ideas, persons, seminary with the problems andthe men’s dormitory: Christo et agencies, realities, traditions and possibilities of the ministry. “AEcclesiae. hopes which are common to them Sunday of concern for the min-The earliest use of the motto, al1* ^ istry” will emphasize the minis-according to the researches of Many centennial celebrations try as a profession and the pres-A. C. McGiffert, Jr., president of will be held away from the sem- ent and future needs of theCTS, goes back to the University inary. To implement the purposes churches and their ministers,of Franeker, founded in northHolland in 1585. William Ames >took the University’s motto forthe title for his inaugural addressas rector of the school. The mottoappears on the title-page of abook of his which was almost re¬quired reading in many 17th-cen¬tury colleges.In the course of its journeyingfrom Holland to CTS, the themewas picked up by Harvard col¬lege and now appears, along wifhVeritas on the official seal ofHarvard university.a unique opportunity to exchangeideas with leaders in religiousthought as well as to attend morn¬ing classes and afternoon conver¬sations with members of the fed¬erated theological faculty. The material on this pagewas compiled and edited byDiana Epstein, Maroon newseditor. Much information wasreceived from the public rela¬tions office of CTS, headed byMisa Virginia Mitchell. Photo¬graphs are by S t e p h e 11 Lew-ellyn, UC magazine pho¬tographer.A C. McGiffert, Jr.fpresident of CTSSunlight streams through the windows ofdent prays alone. Ministers browsing through the l>ook stalls are attending theannual Ministers’ week conference. The book exhibit is in the Clar¬ence Sidney Funk Cloisters, the walls of which contain memorialstones from various places of significance in history.Seminary usesWright housefor meetingsThe Frank Lloyd Wright house,located at 58th and WoodlawnAvenue, is being used as a con¬ference house by the ChicagoTheological seminary during min¬isters’ week.The house is an example of the“prairie school” period of Wright’swork, and is owned by CTS.Facilities include four confer¬ence rooms seating from 20 to 75persons, two chapels, and sixrooms made up for dormitorystyle sleeping for 44 persons. Nodining facilities are available inthe house; groups will use theCommons or International House.Graham Taylor chapel, where a theological stu-THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Pointing to the early tragedies of all are guilty to some extent, lieShakespeare Daiehes explained commented.Daiches said that Shakespeare’slater works showed a more benev-photo by ZygmundMarking the opening of the 1955 Cap and Gown sales, A1 Fortier,Sti president, orders the first yearbook from Mike Rogers, Capand Gown editor-in-chief.Cap and Gown yearbookschedules sale next weekPre-publication sales of the 1955 Cap & Gown, UC yearbook,are now' open. Sales tables will be manned in Cobb, Mandel,and Burton-Judson during the coming week.Students graduating this year may have their photographstaken for inclusion in the Cap& Gown. Appointments may Tho 1955 f * Gown will belie made at a table near the 260 PaRes in ^nsth- This year’sReynolds’ club desk betw'een bo°^ wil1 ** en£rave<R the previ-9:30 and 3:30 any dav from now ous two vo,umes have been re‘until February 4. The pictures Produced a photo-offset proc-themselves will be taken Febru- ess' Editor Mike Ro^ers states. 11 ... „„ that engraving will result inarv 7, to February 11, but an ap-J r more nrnfessmnal looking hoipointment will be necessary.The pre-publication price of Cap& Gown is $4.00: $2.00 now and$2.00 at publication, or the total more “professional” looking book.Braille in HebrewThe book of Genesis in inter¬now. After pre-publication sales national Hebrew and Hebrewthe book will be sold at $4.50. In sHf taught, embossed in braillewere recently presented to theaddition to sales at tables during jiarj-y r. Chapman library of thethis coming week, salesmen will Hillel foundation, 5715 Woodlawn.he circulating on campus. Pre- Donated by the Blind Servicepublication purchasers will re- association, the braille books andceive a receipt to be presented in other volumes in the Hillel libraryMay w'hen the book comes out. are available to all students. ‘Innocence can become evil’,Daiches says of Shakespeareby Duchess Lough ran“The innocent often create evil by their very innocence,” claimed David Daiches, formerprofessor of English at UC, during his lecture on “Guilt and justice in Shakespeare”, beforea large audience at Mandel hall last week. Daiches began his lecture by cautioning his au¬dience against laying the dead hand of historical conformity on Shakespeare by viewing hisplays solely from the Eliza- ’bethan point of view He "Su*h” as the absence of inno- Measure” where all of the char-, . , . -jw., , . cenee and completed this defini- acters are guilty, even the judge;aaviseu instead that the indi- ^jon stating that innocence can Shakespeare considers no humanvidual listen to W'hat the play often assume the aspects of evil, being is able to judge another, forsays and judge from his own per¬sonal experience and knowledge.Daiches defined ShakespeareanSG commissionstudies studenthousing problemStudent housing, discrimi¬nation and community devel¬opment are some of theconcerns of SG’s commissionon the University neighborhood.Anyone interested in working onthis commission is asked to con¬tact Jane Stanford at Interna¬tional house or the SG office inReynolds club.Location, availability and pricerange of housing for both marriedand single students, and especial¬ly the fate of the prefabs, are thecommission’s main concern. Rede¬velopment proposals for theneighborhood which affect stu¬dents are also studied.The question of discriminationwill he investigated in cooperationwith SG's civil liberties commit¬tee. but the chairmen of bothcommittees consider discrimina¬tion only one aspect of the neigh¬borhood problem which concernsstudents.Two new groupsform on campusTwo new student organizations,Students for Despres and StudentZionist organization, have beenregistered this week with the stu¬dent activities office.Students for Despres plan tocampaign for Leon Despres, can¬didate for fifth ward alderman.President is Daniel Buckholder,vice president John Gilmore.Student Zionist organization isan educational and social groupemphasizing Zionism and Israel.President is Victor Rosenshine. this theory by stating that thereal tragedy in each one of themis that the main character, who is .essentially good and innocent, de- °ler,t attitude toward innocencesires to undo the past, (as in the than his earlier works. In the lat-case of Hamlet and Lear) while er tragic-comedies the innocentthe man of the world (Marc An- achieve redemption throughthony and Iago) would have seen magjc or coincidence thereby il-that purposive action toward the ]ustrating Shakespeare’s viewfuture would be the only solution. that the on]y way ,he innocentDaiches stated that justice is can bring good out of evil is bythe punishment of evil and illus- the intervention of fortunate co¬trated through “Measure for incidence.Guests Jive show spotlightMarch of Dimes marathonby Bruce LarkinTwenty-four consecutive hours of entertainment will beoffered tonight and tomorrow by WUCB, campus radio sta¬tion. The WUCB March of Dimes marathon will be broadcastto residents of Burton-Judson. courts, C-group, and Interna¬tional house at 640 kc. on an • *List recent changes in faculty;several in biological sciencesA survey of the college and the divisions showed’that there were a number of changes inthe UC faculty at the beginning of the winter quarter.The greatest number of changes occured in the division of biological sciences. JosephP. Evans, formerly associate professor of surgery at the University of Cincinnati, has beenappointed professor of neuro-surgery. Another new appoint- Wilber G. Katz. James Parker There will be only one changeinent is Frank W. Putman, a Hall professor of law and former jn the division of the humanitiesMarkle scholar, who is asso- dea" ot th<? law school, will go for the win(er qUarter. Professor a.m. dial. The program willbegin at 8 p.m. today.Alderman Robert E. Mer-riam, candidate for mayor of Chi¬cago, will be among featuredguests. Merriam is scheduled toappear “after 10:30” this evening,probably at 11.The marathon, being run forthe fourth year in a row, will orig¬inate in Burton lounge of Burton-Judson courts. Visitors will beable to watch all of the proceed¬ings as they take place.The Burton-Judson switchboardwill be open for incoming callsSaturday morning. The Burton-Judson telephone number is Mid¬way 3-6000. Burton lounge, too.will be open, and coffee will beserved to visitors.Student Union has offered thenumber one Washington Promen¬ade bid to the individual who con¬tributes the most in the marathondrive for $500. Five hundred dol¬lars was the amount contributedin 1952, when the marathon firstwas put on.Persons pledging at least 25cents to the March of Dimes col¬lection will be entitled to requestrecords; WUCB will play them ifthey have them in stock. Record¬ed mus-ic will be played betweenmajor portions of the schedule.The schedule is as follows;8:00 p.m. Friday—Kick-off ceremonies;Dean Strozier, special gueston leave of absence this Febru- r .ary. He will teach at the Ur.iver- Max Ftsch- vlslUnS professor ofsity of Wisconsin. phlisophy at the University of I1K-Robert Gomer and Murray Gell- nois, will deliver one seminar aMann, former assistant profes- week on Hegal. Fisch, who wasthe social sciences division at UC sors, have been appointed asso- reCently in Italy under the aus¬pices of the Fulbright foundation,ciate professor in Argonne’s department of biochemistry.Austin H. Riesen has been ap¬pointed associate professor ofpsychology. lie was formerly in Sorry, wrong numberStudents are requested touse the campus phone numberwhen calling Green or Hitch¬cock halls. Incorrect numbersfor these dormitories have beenlisted in the student directory. 9:00—Guest appearance by ArthurKiendl, director of student ac¬tivities9:30—UC Glee club11:00—Alderman Merriam. special aruest11:30—Chancellor Hutchins' farewell ad¬dress12:15 a.m Saturday—"Four S»tn*s laThree Acts," opera with llbrettaby Gertrude stein1:15—Music by Gienn Miller2:00—‘‘Three-penny opera," Jazz byKurt Weill4:30—Dixieland jizz5:30—Artie Shaw and his orchestra7:00—Band Music: including the UOConcert Band8:00—Ralph Flanagan9:00—Duke Ellington10:00—Joseph Marais songs11:00—Bitt Hutchinson at organ12:00—John P. Netherton, special gueat12:30—Beatrice Knv sings1.00— Songs by Hal Levy in a live per¬formance2:00—"America was promises.” ShlmerCollege choir, a cantata for or¬gan. piano, and choruses, byArchibald MacLeish and FrankPooler4:00—"Trial by Jury," Gilbert Si Sulli¬van5:00—Brahms' Marianlieder—UniversityGlee club6:00—Missa Papa Marcell!. P. lestrina6:30—University of Chicago quartet, laa live performance7:00—"The Investigator,*• a gentlesatire"8:00—Final March of Dimes reportNew housing groupto meet in Mandelto discuss problemsThe newly formed Married Stu¬dents association will meet Thurs¬day, at a time and place to beannounced later on the Mandelhall bulletin board. Under the neworganization, the meeting will beopen to all married students, jun¬ior faculty members, hospitalresidents and interns, fellows,and research assistants, and asso¬ciates.The organization grew out ofthe pre fab council, an unofficialorganization to which representa¬tives were elected.is particularly interested in thehistory of American and Italianphilosophy and the history of sci¬ence.There will be two visiting pro-and has just recently been ap- ciate professors in the divisionpointed to the biological sciences of the physical sciences. Gomer isdivision. William D. Neff has been in the institute for the study ofpromoted from associate profes- metals and the department ofsor of psychology to professor of chemistry. Gell-Mann is workingpsychology. in the institute»for nuclear stud-Ilarry Trosman, assistant pro- ies and the department of physics. . . ,fessor in psychiatry, and James Robert S. Mulliken, professor f^ssors in the divinity school thisM. Goldinger, assistant professor of physics, will be on leave of ah- quarter. L. J. Van Ilolk of themedicine, are leaving the staff senee for one year beginning Jan- University' of Leyden and Davidthis quarter. uary 17. He will be science attache Jenkins, who lectures here annu-There will be two visiting lec- at the American embassy in Eng- adv dining the winter quarter,turers at the Law school this quar- land. Professor Joseph Evans of yan Hoik win also be here dur-ter. John P. Dawson, visiting pro- the division of biological sciences ,n£ tde spring quarter,fessor from the University of was the first to hold this posi- In the college, Isaac Rosenfeld,Michigan, will be on the UC cam- tion. According to Mulliken, his novelist and critic, has been ap-pus during the winter and spring duties there will be to “represent pointed lecturer in humanities forquarters. Dawson, who received American sciences officially in the winter and spring quarters,his JD and D.Phil. at Oxford, will England, try to maintain the good He will teach a section of Human-teach English legal history. Carl relations between the two coun- ities 1. Rosenfeld, a UC graduate,McGowan, a Chicago lawyer, will tries, and represent the United taught at New York university,be a visiting lecturer this quar- States in international scientific and most recently has been assist-ter. conferences." See ‘Appointments,’ page 5 pnoto by GrossmanAndy Stenn, and Harry Weingartner (I. to r.). workers in theCombined Jewish Appeal drive which opened Wednesday, meetwith Oscar Kenign, director of Hillel, and co-chairmen Helen ttasto«and Bob Marcus, to discuss campaign plans.h4 TNC CHICAGO MAROON January 28, 1955Editor's columnUC spirit dissolves into resignation;warrior king, happy band echo pastIn this week’s Time maga¬zine there are catalogued thepositive gains made by theUniversity during the Kimp-ton administration. ButChancellor Kimpton himselfadmitted that one of the majortasks still faring the Universitywas to rebuild UC into the “ex¬citing” place it had once been.This reporter will agree thathe has seen more exciting days atthis University and he w’ill grant,as the article maintains, the prob¬ability that the absence of menlike Enrico Fermi and Louis Thur-atine has had a great deal to doWith it.But one aspect, we believe, hasbeen slighted by the Chancellor,the decline of the college spiritamong students.Of college students today itmight be said that there is analmost complete laek of unify¬ing spirit. Students feel no tiebinding, or even connecting,themselves to their universityor to each other. Each goes his own way: his loyalties, if any,belong to a close-knit group offriends or associates.A college which was once di¬verse has become atomized.What has brought about thechange? “Chancellor Kimpton”was once the pat answer studentsgave for everything that hap¬pened on this campus. But itwould be as foolish to lay thechange at his door as it would beto say that he bore no responsibil¬ity. The causes are complicatedand can be sketched in only light¬ly and admittedly impressionis¬tically.The old UC college spirit was,by and large, a quiet thing. Onedid not raise beer mugs to it. Onedid not sing songs about it. Onedid not even admit it was spirit.Yet it was felt and expressed.There was a common faith inthe values and prejudiees of theintellectual life, the common an¬tipathy toward conventional so¬cial life, the common attitudestowards athletics in general andfootball in particular, and the common love of argumentationand dispute. Still, there was alsosomething far deeper, bindingus closely. One heard, as itwere, a quiet echo of Shake-scare’s Henry V crying to liisarmy, “We few, we happy few,we band of brothers.”It was very easy for students tothink of themselves as somethingspecial. The outside world was al¬ready convinced of it. This re¬porter, for example, stopped buy¬ing dust covers because he wasembarrassed by the looks of awehe got commuting to school eachday. In addition, there were spe¬cial exams, special syllabi, andeven special courses for UC stu¬dents. And they liked the feeling.But there was something moresubtle that set them apart. Toperhaps a greater degree than atmost schools, UC students comehere planning eventually to workin government, in social agencies,to do research, or to teach. Aboutthem seems to hang already asense of purpose in life.They fall into, what is called in America, the “intellectual class.”For such people the old col¬lege spirit turned their educa¬tional years into an inspiring,exciting experience. Why?Here was wit to salve the in¬tellectual inferiority complex.Here was aj-ademic excellence.Perhaps most imj>ortant wasthe status in American educa¬tion, accorded to UC. The Col¬lege was placed in the vanguardof academic progress. Hutchinswas viewed as a warrior-king,marshalling h i s outnumberedlegion into battle against theacademic past.The roots of this spirit werealready under fire when then-Cliancellor Hutchins left. Amer¬ican intellectualism was comingunder heavy attack, and, al¬though the Maroon was fever¬ishly printing articles to provethat the Chicago plan was beingadopted by other universities,falling enrollment was a con¬stant reminder that the A.B.was not an absolute success at home. Students were thereforeuneasily anticipating change inpolicy. And they were expectingthe worst.Any change in University policywould have been met with hostil¬ity, or at least suspicion, but Uni¬versity policy as it was announcedcould not have been belter cal¬culated to destroy the collegespirit. Intellectual excellence, thecrusading spirit of the college, andthe very spirit of separatenesswere put under fire.The new curriculum made itvery clear that if UC had everheen in the vanguard it wasn’tmaking a point Of it now.The goal was now the balanceduniversity with “normal” well ad¬justed students. AdministratorKimpton was not a warrior-king.His administrative successes onlymade the old spirit more difficultto maintain.The question remaining is“What comes next?”Allen R. dangerEditor-in-chiefLettersDiscriminatoryhousing HitLast summer my wife and Iwere beneficiaries of the Maroonpolicy of not accepting advertise¬ments unless the goods or serv¬ices advertised are available to allstudents. We answered an apart¬ment ad which had appeared inthe Maroon and were given the“I’m not prejudiced, but . . . ”line. When we informed theMaroon that this advertiser dis¬criminated against Negroes, theyimmediately wrote to explain toher their policy and to notify herthat as long as she continued todiscriminate she could not adver¬tise in the Maroon. By the timewe applied for the apartmentagain the landlady had changedher policy. Her explanation of thechange was quite simple: she wanted a student trade: to get astudent trade she would have toadvertise in the school paper; shecould not advertise in the schoolpaper if she continued to discrim¬inate. We got the apartment andlived there for three months. Ourstay was even more enjoyablethan we had anticipated and ourrelations with our landlady andneighbors were quite pleasant.We left in the autumn to takeadvantage of the lower rental andgreater convenience of prefabresidence.Last week we were informedthat our former landlady is nowadvertising an apartment for rentthrough the Univeristy housingfile. Further, we are told that thisapartment (in the building inwhich we lived) is not available toNegroes, that a policy of dis¬crimination has been reestab¬lished for the building.I submit this as a contributionto current discussion regardingdiserimination and the Universityhousing file. A. Roy Huddleson Berates SGIn the Maroon of January 21,there appeared a letter by Mr.Stein (ISL-phy sci), concerningthe matter of the 35 Chinese stu¬dents, which had come beforeSG. The author goes on to state,“this is not a question of aca¬demic freedom but a question ofinternational relations ...” LastTuesday SG again discussed theissue, this time with regard tosponsoring a program that wouldpresent the issue to the campus.A convenient quorum call pre¬vented a decision from beingreached.What was made clear, however,during the debate was that theAmerican Civil Liberties unionfeels that both legal and "human”rights have been violated, ‘some¬thing which no one denied dur¬ing SG debate. But it seems thatif civil liberties conflict with whatis mystically termed "internation¬al relations,” it is to the neglectof the former. It would seem that when civil liberties need their liberal, leave not more unto Cae-most spirited defense is where sar than that which is Caesar’s,there is grave temptation to yield Joel Rosenthalthem before sacrosanct expedi- (SRI*-Humanities)ency. Let SG, if it is responsibly See ‘Letters,* page 6Issued once weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at the publica¬tion office, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones:Editorio! Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 10)0; Business and Advertising Offices,Midway 3-0800, Exf. 1009. Distributed free of chorge, and subscriptions by•nail, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 fo 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.ALLEN R. JANGER editor-in-chiefRICHARD E. WARD monaging editorWILLIAM M. BRANDON. . .business managerExecutive news editor joy BurbochNews editors Diona Epstein, Bob Quinn, David SchlessingerFeature Editor Suzanne FriedmannSports editor Spike PmneyProduction manager Mitchell SlemPhotography editor Ronald GrossmonHigh cost of room’ board, books attackedby Student (government: Fortier, SQ presidentby A1 Fortier, president of student GovernmentSolutions to the high cost of room, board and books are the biggest projects plannedby Student Government for this year.A plan, still in the early stages, to allow the book exchange -to sell new books, is beingprepared. In connection with this, the committee is trying to find out how much of a profitthe bookstore makes on texts.Within the next three weekto the long-standing problemof discrimination by landlordslisting their establishments inthe University housing file. KenMarshall, Jane Stanford, and Ro-meyn Taylor have led the work onthe file.Their approach has been to con¬sider the problem in the light ofthe much larger problem of dis¬crimination in the neighborhood.Discussions were held with theadministration, communitygroups, and interested individu¬als.The emphasis of their plan is toconvince landlords not to discrim¬inate, rather than simply remov¬ing the discriminatory listings.Sponsor "Macbeth”Playwrights Theatre will per¬form Macbeth February 15 inMarnlel hall, proceeds going to theforeign exchange program. If pro¬cess are sufficient the exchangeprogram may be extended to oth¬er countries this fall.Preparations are now beginningter the observance of Academic ; we expect to be able to a nrFreedom week, called by NSA forthe third week in April.Center succeedingThe student service center hasproved a great success. As a re¬sult of streamlined managementand a high volume of business,the services made a modest profitlast quarter. It is planned to turnmost of this over to the exchangeprogram.The selection of books in thebook exchange was augmented bybooks on consignment from adowntown wholesale dealer. Theloan service has been so popularthat an additional sum of severalhundred dollars had to be ad¬vanced temporarily to it.Three new small services havejust been included: a file to in¬clude second-hand goods, fromautomobiles to pogomobiles; a fileto facilitate communication be¬tween students desiring rides andcar-owning commuters, and oneto include qualified tutors avail¬able.The election and rules commit- ounce a satisfactory solutiontee is looking into the question ofthorough revision of the electionprocedure, with private boothsand voting machines being con¬sidered.For entering divisional and pro¬fessional school students, SG lastweek set up the divisional orienta¬tion commission which will pro¬vide a program acquainting themwith the University and the com¬munity. The Government willagain sponsor a midyear collegeactivities night to which all stu¬dents are invited.Soviet editorsIn the field of academic free¬dom, a bi partisan letter was sentto John Foster Dulles, urging ad¬mission, providing certain condi¬tions are met, of a group of Sovieteditors, and pledging the SG’s fullcooperation if they are admitted.The profits of the student direc¬tory, put on sale last month, willalso go to the exchange program.Copies of the director are stillavailable at the service center.The first issue of the StudentGovernment Newsletter was Albert Fortie/, president ofthis year’s Student Government,makes his mid-year report tothe campus in the aeeomptuty¬ing article.printed this week. The Newsierter, designed to supplement rath¬er than supplant Maroon cover¬age, will be issued semi-monthly,with regular reports of all SGactivities.A proposal for a fair education¬al practices code for Illinois hasbeen presented to SG. The bill pro¬ hibits discrimination in admissionpowers of private universities. SGrepresentatives would contactleaders at Springfield to lobby forthe plan.Broyles billsA select three-man committeeof the assembly is watching de¬velopments in Springfield in re¬gard to the “Broyles bills” or sim¬ilar legislation. These bills, intro¬duced at the beginning of each ofthe last three sessions of the statelegislature, would threaten the ex¬ercise of academic freedom at thisuniversity.If the bills are re-introduced,the assembly will probably set upthe all-campus civil liberties com¬mittee to present an organizedfront for the student body.Survey educationThe educational survey commis¬sion has been re-established. Thisgroup will look into certain phasesof educational life, including ath¬letic scholarships and the “re¬turn” of football, and report itsfindings to the Assembly.The Government is alwaj'S in¬terest ed in your comments, criti¬cisms, and ideas. SG meetings areheld on alternate Tuesdays, andare open to all members of thecampus. In addition, representa¬tives of Student Government canbe contacted daily in the SG officein the Reynolds club.Page 5January 2S, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROONIf you re a poet, look ... Ellis discusses Catholic churchand religion in school system$1000 Sergei prizenow offered to playDeadline for the 1955 CharlesH Sergei $1000 prize competition[or original unpublished full-length plays in March 1, MarvinE Phillips, director of Univer¬sity Theatre, announced recently.The biennial Sergei prize con¬test. which is administered byUC. was established by AnnieMeyers Sergei in memory of herhusband, Charles M. Sergei, civicleader of Chicago and founder ofthe Dramatic publishing com¬pany.Judges of the contest, who, ac¬cording to Phillips will be “ex¬perts in the field,” have not yetbeen announced.Full details of the contest maybe obtained by contacting Phillipsat 306 Reynolds club. $100 prize to be givenundergrad for poemThe Academy of AmericanPoets prize of $100 will be award¬ed this year for the first time toan undergraduate for the bestpoem or group of poems submit¬ted during the year, Elder Olson,associate professor of English,announced.The poem or group of poemssubmitted has no restriction asto length, but all manuscriptsmust be typewritten and in theEnglish office not later thanMarch 15. Entries should be un¬signed but accompanied by asealed envelope containing thename of the writer.The award, which will hence¬forth be given annually for fiveyears, is made possible by a be¬quest of the late Mary CummingsEddy. can Catholicism, Ellis declaredthat the “black legend of Spain”has obscured the Catholic role incolonization. “Historians bred inthe tradition of sixteenth-centuryEngland succeeded in a remark¬able degree in passing on to gen¬erations of Americans a thor¬oughly biased view of Spain’s ac¬complishments in the new world,”he said. of -American Catholicism camefrom the minority group in theAtlantic coastline colonies, ratherthan from the more favorably-placed Catholics in Spanish andFrench colonies.Catholic expansion began withthe insignificant minority in theEnglish-speaking colonies andreached out, often in advance ofCampus WUS chapter electsofficers, plans ’55 fund drive“Help them to help themselves” is the slogan of the WorldUniversity service on campus, which elected officers of theircentral committee Monday evening. With Charles Mittmanas president, WUS made plansLast year the campus organiza¬tion of WUS raised $1000. Mostof the money came from the dor¬mitories. One dance and two con¬certs were held.for this year’s fund-raisingcampaign.Tag day organized by Inter-clubcouncil, will1 be held March 3 and4. As last year there will be acharity dance, to be held on April23. The campaign in the dormitor¬ies will consist of floor representa¬tives making personal solicita¬tions. Easter Sunday there will bean appeal at the Rockefeller serv¬ice. The goal for the campus thisyear is $2000 and the world goalis $590,000.The World University .serviceis organized for the purpose ofproviding funds to students lack¬ing sufficient facilities for propereducation. There are 22 nationalbranches working in Asia, themiddle east, western Europe, andnorth America. The World Uni¬versity service is sponsored inter¬nationally by the World’s StudentChristian Federation, Pax Rom¬an.) TMCS, and the World Unionof Jewish Students. With its head¬quarters at Geneva, WUS worksclosely with the agencies of theUnited Nations, non-governmen¬tal organizations, and nationalunions of students. Crane talks onIndia problemThe problems of modernnationalist India will be dealtwith by Robert I. Crane*, as¬sistant professor of modernhistory at UC, in a series of threelectures Monday, Wednesday, andFriday in soc. sci. 122 at 4:30 p.m.In a series designed to "illum¬inate. for an American audience,the attitudes, goals, objectivesand characteristics of Indian na¬tionalism.” Crane will discuss thepast development of Indian na¬tionalism in his Monday lecture,the goals and objectives of thenationalist movement in hisWednesday lecture, and “Pro¬grams and policies of the govern¬ment of independent India” onFriday. The role of the Catholic schools in America, the effectiveness of the colonial AmericanCatholic church, and the church’s withdrawal from politics in the nineteenth century wereemphasized by the Reverend John Tracy Ellis in three Walgreen lectures this week on “TheCatholic church in the United States.”Ellis, professor of church history at the Catholic University of America and secretary ofthe American Catholic Historical association, said Wednesday that the increase in juveniledelinquency points up the needfor moral training in theschools.As a result of the increase injuvenile delinquency, the placeof religion in the schools has be¬come a subject for widespreaddiscussion within national edu¬cational bodies, Ellis commented.A major accomplishment of theCatholic church during the yearsfrom 1850 to 1900 was its wideestablishment of parochialschools, said Ellis. This schoolsystem was expanded after it be¬came apparent that no comprom¬ise could be reached betweenchurch and state concerning re-1 i g i o u s instruction in publicschools.Reviewing the history of Ameri-McLeod preachesThe Reverend Sir George F.MacLead, founder and leader ofthe Iona community in Scotland,will preach at the 11 a.m. Sundayservices in Rockefeller chapel.MacLead is in the United Statesas Harry Emerson Fosdick visit¬ing professor at Union theologicalseminary. American occupation, to fuseAnd yet it was the Spaniards with the descendants of the orig¬inal Catholic French and Spanishsettlers in the west and south.Last lecture in Ellis’ series willbe given today, at 4:30 p.m. insocial science on “American Ca¬tholicism in the Twentieth Cen¬tury.”who evolved in the mission sys¬tem the most successful institu¬tions for dealing with the Indians.It was likewise by virtue of themissionaries’ elaborate accountsof exploration through unchartedareas, accompanied by detailedmaps, that the cartography of theWest was advanced.”The Reverend Ellis pointed outin the second of his lectures that -flthe American Catholic has always / *'*'•'been fcee to choose his own politi- Flu vaccine is being offered UCcal party without guidance from students in the form of shots byStudents may getvaccinethe church.Discussing the formation of theAmerican Catholic character inthe nineteenth century, Ellispointed out that the main stream Billings’ student health service.The shots are precautionary, notcurative. The injections may besecured free of charge during theregular student health hours.Appointments... TV course enrollment at 66;Finer program caHed success(from page 3)ant professor of the humanitiesat the University of Minnesota.Last February he served as lec¬turer in American philosophy andliterature at the Salzburg seminarin American studies in Austria.Reuel N. Denney, associate pro¬fessor of social sciences in thecollege and chairman of the socialsciences 2 staff, is in Austria thisquarter as a lecturer at the Salz¬burg seminar in American stud¬ies.H. Stefan Schultz, associateprofessor of German in the col¬lege and in the German depart¬ment, is a visiting professor thisquarter at Ohio State university.There have been no changes int,he division of the social sciencessince the beginning of the au¬tumn quarter. Educational TV in the Chicago area has had a successfulstart, the UC home study department reported Monday. Reg¬istration for credit for the University-NBC “Live and learn’*course “Governments and ~human nature,” conducted by ceiv^ one-half unit of regular Uni-vGrsitv credit.Herman Finei, professor of jn addition to the registrantspolitical science over WNBQ on for credit, 236 TV-viewers haveSunday mornings at 10 a.m., now copies of the synabus, of-total 66, the department says. fered for $2.00 to those interestedFirst educational TV course jn wider and guided study of theever offered for credit in the Chi- course’s subject, but not in takingcago area, the 12-program series it for credit.of weekly telecasts is similar to The University stopped takingone Finer regularly gives on the credit registrations after the thirdMidway. lecture, but will continue to sellNO 7-9071Th.greatestshowever toappear onscreen* ofllvde ParkTheatre hyde park theatrethe* Wateh forannouncement ofour NewWideHigh**screen’’"’‘The better tosee subtitlesmy dears! Held over 2nd Week lake parkat 53rdstudent- rate 50cThe Great French Chaplinesques Comic VirtuosoJACQUES TATI Writer, Director, and Star ofMr. Hulot's HolidayGRAND PRIZE at the CANNES FILM FESTIVALos well as"THe year's funniest film ... a modern masterpiece!"— and — andAn exclusive showing of an extraordinary film!peg All the gorgeous pulsating excitement of ballets1-lamenCO espagnols . . . with breathtakingly beautifulphotography of scenic splendors of Spain. It's an exquisite composite ofballet and documentary . . . with warm human values reminiscent ofRobert Flaherty's work. COMING: Carmen Jones, Children of Paradise,Queen of Spades; and the George K. Arthur Martin et Gaston, and theGentlemen in Room Six. Viewers who wished credit for the syllabus. Added indication ofthe course registered with the interest in the course: the book-University’s home study depart- store reports a sharp increase inment. Upon satisfactory comple- sales of books recommended intion of the course, they will re- the syllabus.MAX BROOKCLEANERSTAILORSLAUNDERERSQuality and Service Since 1917OUR TRUCKS ON CAMPUS DAILYFOR PROMPT SERVICE — Phone Ml 3-74471013 - 15 E. 61st St. Opposite B - J*1/ cilenlineS1367 E. 57th St.Open Weekdays 'til 10 p.m.Saturdays 'til'5 p.m. {.Gardens• i.'£°o**S5 FOR EVERYONEWHO EATS!Enjoy Your FoodWithout StarvationThis book is fun to read andinformation is sound and re¬liable—colorfully illustrated.Get your copy todayOnly *25°WOODWORTH’SBOOK STORE1311 E 57th Si ,Page 6 January 28, 1955TNI CHICAGO MAROONCalendar of coming eventsFriday, January 28Lecture, “Existence and theChrist,” Dr. Tillich, speaker,Mandel hall, 11:30 a.m.Walgreen lecture, “AmericanCatholicism in the TwentiethCentury,” Dr. Ellis, speaker.Social Science 122, 4:30 p.m.JHovie, “Le Million,” French, so¬cial science 122, 7:15 and 9:15p.m. Series ticket only, $1.50.Mathematical biology meetingand lecture, 5741 Drexel, 4:30p.m.Gold Rush Gallop party, spon¬sored by Hitchcock house, intheir lounge, gambling, danc¬ing, and refreshments. 2 p.m.,men, 35 cents.Archaeology club party, games,dancing, and refreshments. In¬ternational house, room B, 8:30p.m., 25 cents admission.Hillel fireside and Sabbath serv¬ice, discussion of Edmund Wil¬son's New Yorker article,“Eretz Israel.” 5715 Woodlawn,7:45 p.m.University Concert, New MusicQuartet will play Shumann andBeeethoven, Mandel hall, 8:30p.m.Saturday, January 29Varsity basketball game, Chicagoversus Aurora college, field-house, 8 p.m.Young Socialist League openhouse, 5018 S. Woodlawn, 8:30p.m.Sunday, January 30Episcopal communion service,Bond chapel, 8:30 a.m.Lutheran communion service, Hil¬ton chapel, 10 a.m.University religious service, Rev¬ erend George MacLeod, Rocke¬feller chapel, 11 a.m.Chamber music concert, Collegi¬ate Sinfonietta, Internationalhouse, 4 p.m.Calvert club panel discussion,“Theology and human evolu¬tion,” Father Motherway, S.J.,and Father McDonough, speak¬ers. 5735 Univeristy, 4:30 p.m.('banning club discussion, “UnitedNations Charter Revision,” 5368Woodlawn, 7:30 p.m.Movie, “Thirty-nine Steps,” Amer¬ican, 7 and 9 p.m., J u d s o nlounge, twenty-five cents ad¬mission.Combined Jewish Appeal cam-pa i g n , through February 5,sponsored by the Hillel founda¬tion. Funds will be solicited.Monday, January 31Lecture, “The development ofnationalism in modern India,”Robert Crane, speaker, socialscience 122, 4:30 p.m.Movie, “Der Hauptman Von Koe-penick,” German, Internationalhouse, 7 and 9 p.m.Alden-Tuthill lecture series, spon¬sored by Chicago Theologicalseminary, “Preaching in thecontext of our times,” ReverendShort, speaker. Taylor hall,8 p.m.Astronomical society meeting,elections and future activities,Eckhart 133, 7:30 p.m.Maroon staff meeting, constitu¬tional amendments to be dis¬cussed, Maroon office, 3:30 p.m.Hug Ivri meeting, 5715 Wood¬lawn, 12:30 p.m.Tuesday, February 1Movie, “Razuinov,” French, socialClassified AdsFor saleWoman’s ice skates (figure), size 9. CallDavid or Judy Singer. HY 3-5762.Nationally advertised, interwoven ArgyllBocks. $1 per pair. If you bring in thisad you get a second pair for 1 cent.Jack’s Store for Men. 1121 E. 63rd St. Y. S. L. Non-Rocking Castle OpenHouse — all your guitars, friends, andfrivolity welcome. Saturday, Jan. 29,5018 S. Woodlawn — 8:30.Hallam: Vulcan's torch was green Dec.21. Black street — car didn't stop then.Quinn.Spike Finney's address is 5424 Ellis Ave. science 122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.,forty cents admission.Lecture series, “The Iona com¬munity: an experiment in workand workshop,” Reverend Mac¬Leod, University Church of theDisciples of Christ, 8 p.m.Hillel coffee hour. ProfessorMeiklejohn will review thebook, Adventure in Freedom.5715 WToodlawn. 3:30 p.m.Band rehearsal, Sunny Gym, 5823Kenwood, 8 p.m.Christian Scientist testimonialmeeting, Hilton chapel, 7 p.m.Wednesday, February 2Lecture series, “The role of thechurch in the responsible so¬ciety,” Reverend Walter G.Muelder, speaker, 57th andUniveristy, 8 p.m.Lecture, sponsored by the YoungSocialist League. “Dissent fromthe cold war,” Fenner Brock¬way, speaker, Judd 126, 8 p.m.Carillon recital, Mr. Lawson,Rockefeller chapel, 4:30 p.m.English Country dancing, Cloisterclub, Ida Noyes, 10 p.m.Science Fiction club meeting, IdaNoyes library, 7:30 p.m.University Theatre tryouts; cast¬ing for Ibsen’s The Wild Duck.University Theatre, Reynoldsclub, 7 p.m.Girls’ basketball game, sponsoredby the WAA. Ida Noyes hall,3:30 p.m.Thursday, February 3Life sketch class, sponsored bvthe art department, Midwaystudio. 7:30-10 p.m.University Theatre tryouts, Rey¬nolds club theatre, 7 p.m.Movie, “Green Pavfures,” Ameri¬can, International house, 7 and9 p.m.Lecture series, “Congregational¬ism — history and promise,”Reverend Albert Buckner Coe,speaker, 57th and University,8 p.m. Letters...Speaks on missilesThe Debby Meier letter of Jan¬uary 14 attempts to add a some¬what moral note to the questionof placing a guided missile con¬trol base at the 55th Street Prom¬ontory. ... In general the pro¬tests to such land leases and with¬drawals pose this question: howmuch will the community permitin the name of defense?There are as many answers tothis question as there are per¬sons yet willing to articulate theirpolitical beliefs. While it may beof some interest to note that Deb¬by Meier or someone is objectingor supporting the land use as aDemocrat, a Republican, or a So¬cialist, it is also of little rele¬vance. While the efforts of these,and other groups may be forworld peace on a variety of termsit is obvious that we cannot beassured of the success of anysuch group, or all groups to¬gether. A common aspiration forworld peace cannot do away withthe current race for military su¬periority." ■' ’ — *Criticizes MarooncoverageI am writing to tell you of myfeeling of outrage upon seeingyour treatment of the death ofProfessor Dora Goldstine. In mytwenty years of familiarity withthe University’s undergraduatepublications I cannot recall a com¬parable specimen of had taste.Even the more flamboyantdaily-newspapers which, unlikethe Maroon, can at least invokethe principle of topical, compre¬hensive news coverage—did notdescend to the kind of distasteful,undignified account which theMaroon carried. And these news¬papers, in carrying the story ofDora Goldstine’s death more ac¬curately than the.Maroon, and afull day before the Maroon, de¬stroyed any excuse, in term^ of a“reportorial” function, which youand your associates might have tooffer. In some areas the question ofcommunity support of defenseland uses is considered by a jointmilitary-civilian committee. Theytry to avoid unpopular land with¬drawals where other sites maybe used as alternatives. Thisavoids also the use of public se¬curity and military defense as apolitical showcase for well mean¬ing, if misdirected, protestalions.. . . It would be most unrealisticto expendtaxes, natural resources,the ingenuity of our best engbneers and scientists, and the train-in gof our military leaders— as wehave done in efforts to erect themost modern and efficient meth¬ods of defending our cities fromaerial attack—only to allow en¬thusiastic but unequalified socialgroups to tell their defenderswhere to fight the battle.... I am not at all in favor ofsuicidal martyrdom because theother side isn’t playing the samegame as my side. I do not enjoythe prospect of an unexpectedatomic punctuation mark to ihelife of myself and family in aUniversity prefab.Lachlan MacDonaldQuite apart from the vulgarand inhuman way in which yousucceeded in exacerbating thepain which many of us felt atMiss Goldstine's death, your storydisplayed a complete indifferenceto the values and interests of anacademic community. Miss Gold¬stine was a wise and distinguishedscholar. Her teaching and researchrichly enhanced the prestige ofthis University. Her life was de¬voted to professional activity ofthe highest order and to the pur¬suit of a wide range of intellec-tual interests. The great tragedyof her death did not lie in the un¬happy circumstances of her finalillness but in the loss which herprofession and the University suf¬fered in the passing of an ableand honored colleague. TheMaroon’s failure to recognize, inthe slightest way, the nature ofher accomplishments is inexcus¬able. Edward Rosenheim, Jr.Assl. prof, of humanitiesComplete hi-fi set. Webcor 3-speedturntable; diamond needle with threeGE magnetic cartridges; ThordarsonAmplifier and preamp; 12 inch Jensencoaxial speaker in cabinet; reasonableprice; call Robert Blumer, BU 8-9870 or5639 University.TV set. Top condition. Only $25. DickFireman. BU 8-9268.Dining room set. Birchwood. And bed¬room set. Cherrywood. Heavy straightlines. Custom-made. Excellent condi¬tion. Call PL 2-6119.Moving. Selling bookcases, radio-phonocombination, bicycles, television, house¬hold furnishings, reasonable. BU 8-1454,evenings.Science fiction magazine collection forBale. Discounts on purchases of morethan five books. Call The FriendlyMartian. MI 3-6000. B.J. 551.PersonalRemember Bevenite on Cold War. Judd126, Feb. 2, Wednesday.Not responsible for debts contracted bymy wife. E. B. Zurick.Prospective Grads. Register for yourpictures to be taken at Cap and Gowndesk in Mandel corridor.Anyone wishing to contribute to theCurtis Edgett memorial fund, contactAnne Smith or A1 Manaster. WantedBaritone needed by male quartet. DickFireman. BU 8-9268.Steel-edged skis in good condition.Length about 6'3". Also poles. Mrs. PiaTannhauser, ext. 2677, days.Car wanted by UC student. 1949-50 M.G.TOwn Hall 3-0695.Help wantedMen or women, 21 or over, drive stationwagon for schools, mornings or noons.$1.25 hour. BU 8-7900.Supervisor of steno pool; secretaries.Work for distinguished professors ininteresting positions at the Universityof Chicago Law School. Pleasant work¬ing conditions. 37V2-hour week, threeweeks vacation, two weeks sick leavewith pay. Shorthand and typing re¬quired. If vou qualify, apply PersonnelOffice, 956 E. 58th.Someone with ear interested in trip toNew Orleans over Spring vacation. Willshare expenses. Call Sam Blazer, Int.House, Room 340. Up to 10:15 p'.m.For rentRoom for rent in co-op type studentapartment. Kitchen. $30 month, includ¬ing utilities. MI 3-3416, evenings.ALEXANDER’SRESTAURANT1137 E. 63 Street MU 4-5735More than just a good place to eatWe cater to parties and banquetsOpen all nightZT SERVICEby the most modern instrumentation available.Solely for high fidelity components ond systems.LUND COMPANYMU 4 5300 5236 S. Blackstcne-Open Thurs. Eves, and Sun. Aft. Clark and Clark’s/luncial Clearance olOLD BOOKSWill Start SATURDAY, JANUARY 29 at 10 A.M.As customory oil books in this cleoronce will be sold at theuniform price of5‘ A POUND(minimum sale 10c)To satisfy those of our customers who have hitherto avoidedweighty books ot these sales a bulk price of>1°° a BUSHEL(your selection)hos been established for the saleCLARK CLARKBooksellers to the University of Chicago Community Since 19241204 Eost 55th Street Chicago 15 HY 3-0321Mater*; 10 AM. to 9 PM. Closed SundaysJanuary 28, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pag* 7SG stymied over Chinese student repatriation issue... by pn»tice ChoateIs the case or the 35 Chinese students a civil liberties issue? Is it a legitimate concern of Student Government? Debateraged on these issues for over an hour at SG last Tuesday.The questions were never resolved, for by the end of the debate enough members had left to break the quorum.rI he center of this controversy is approximately 35 students who have applied for visas to return to their native Chinaand have been refused. One is " —■"on this campus, but wants tofceep his name out of publicity.They are the remainder of sev¬eral hundred Chinese who cameto this country to study around1947. Originally all were detained,but have been progessively re¬leased until only students in cer¬tain branches of the physical sci¬ences remain.SG’s civil liberties committeerecommended no action on thismatter. Joel Rosenthal (SRP-hum > moved as a minority reportthat SG sponsor a meeting oncampus with Wang and one ortwo other speakers on this ques¬tion. Ken Marshall, SG representa¬tive to South East Chicago com¬mission, reported a discussion onthe subject with a representativeof American Civil Liberties unionwhich is handling many of thesecases. The only legal infringe¬ment, he said, comes from the factthat a court ruled a year ago thataliens cannot be denied visas with¬out a hearing; many of the 35have not had hearings. However,he said, ACLU feels that behindthe legal issue lies an importantmoral issue.ACLU also emphasized, accord¬ing to Marshall, that the trainingthe students received here couldhave been gained in China itself;it just would have taken longer.Barbara Vogelfanger (ISL-law)asserted that this is no longer anAdvertisement — Advertisement — Advertisement — AdvertisementOnfonpos withMccfihuhnan(Author of ••Barefoot Boy With Chsok," oto.)THE TREEHOUSE OF THE AUGUST MOONSpring is just around the corner, and with spring, as always,will come tree-sitting contests. This I applaud. Tree-sitting ishealthful and jolly and as American as apple pie. Also it keepsyou off the streets. •Tree-sitting is not, however, without its hazards, as you willpresently see when I tell you the dread and chilling tale ofManuel Sigafoos and Ed Pancreas.Manuel and Ed, friends and room-mates, were walking one daypast the folk music room in the School of Dentistry and FineArts. Suddenly they stopped, for coming through the door ofthe folk music room was a clear and thrilling alto voice singingthe lovely folk tune, I Strangled My True-Love with Her OwnYellow Braids, and I’ll Never Eat Her Sorghum Any More.When the last shimmering notes of the ballad had died away,Manuel and Ed rushed into the room, and there they thoughttheir swelling hearts must burst asunder. For the singer was asbeautiful as the song! Fair as the morn she was, doe-eyed andcurvilinear.“My name is Manuel Sigafoos,” cried Manuel Sigafoos, “andI love you madly, wildly, tempestuously!”“My name is Ed Pancreas,” cried Ed Pancreas, “and I loveyou more than Manuel Sigafoos.”“My name is Ursula Thing,” cried the girl, “and I’ve gota jim-dandy idea. Why don’t you two have a contest, and 1 willgo steady with the winner?”“What kind of contest?” cried Manuel and Ed.“A tree-sitting contest,” cried Ursula Thing. “Natch!”“Done and done,” cried Manuel and Ed, and they clamberedup adjoining aspens, taking with them the following necessaries:food, water, clothing, medicaments, bedding, reading matter,and — most essential of all — plenty of Philip Morris cigarettes.We who live on the ground, with all the attendant advan¬tages, know how important Philip Morris cigarettes are. Think,then, how much more important they must be to the lonely treedweller — how much more welcome their vintage tobaccos, howmuch more soothing their mild pure flavor, how much morecomforting to know as one sits in leafy solitude that come windor weather, come light or dark, Philip Morris will always remainthe same dependable, reliable, flavorful friend.Well supplied with Philip Morris, our heroes began their contest- Manuel with good heart, Ed with evil cunning. The shockingfact is that Ed intended to win the contest with a Machiavellianruse. It seems that Ed, quite unbeknownst to Manuel, was oneof three identical triplets. Each night while Manuel dozed onhis bough, one of Ed’s brothers — Fred or Jed —would sneakup the tree and replace him. Thus Ed was spending only one-thirdas much time in the tree as Manuel. “How can I lose?” said Edwith a crafty giggle to his brother Fred or Jed.But Ed had a surprise coming. For Manuel, though he did notknow it himself, was a druid! He had been abandoned as aninfant at the hut of a poor and humble woodcutter namedWinthrop Mayhew Sigafoos, who had raised the child as his own.So when Manuel got into the tree, he found to his surprise thathe’d never felt so at home and happy in his life, and he hadabsolutely no intention of ever leaving. -After four or five years Ed and his brothers wearied of thecontest and conceded. Ursula Thing came to Manuel’s tree andcalled him to come down and pin her. He declined. Instead heasked her to join him in the tree. This she could not do, beingsubject to acromegaly (a morbid allergy to woodpeckers) soshe ended up with Ed after all.Only she made a mistake — a very natural mistake. It wasJed she ended up with, not Ed.Ed, heartbroken at being tricked by his own brother, tookup metallurgy to forget. • •Crime does not pay. 8hu,*>»n- **•This column io brought to you by the makers of PHILIP MORRIScigarettes, who suggest that if you are ever up « Ire* when try*ing to find a gift, give PHILIP MORRIS. They're sure to please. issue of civil liberties but one ofinternational diplomacy.Paul Breslow (SPR-soc) repliedthat this detention predates theers. When other countries havedetained aliens nobody has ques¬tioned that this involves civil lib¬erties. To sponsor a meeting onthe issue does not commit thegovernment to any particular po¬sition, he said; it only gives thesestudents a chance to be heard.There was no objection to de¬tainment of German students inthis country during World WarII, maintained Eli Stein (ISL-phy). We are in much the samerelationship with China, he said,and this is only a means of pro¬tecting the interests of Americancitizens in China.And this would put SG in theposition of discussing foreign pol¬ icy, he continued, something tra¬ditionally regarded as none of itsbusiness. This is not the properforum for such an issue, heclaimed.Clark Kucheman GSL-FTS) ex¬pressed uncertainty as to the civilliberties implications of this issueand moved to return it to com¬mittee for more facts. This wasdefeated. It was his quorum callwhich later ended the meeting. Unknown sleuthsolves last photoin mystery contestThe Maroon concluded its se¬ries of mystery photo shots lastweek with an unsolved photo¬graph of the gargoyles on the sideof Mandel Hall.Although an answer was sub¬mitted, the contestant failed toleave his name and address onthe entry.A series of future contests willbegin again at some future date.Prizes of the now concluded seriesof mystery photos were cigar¬ettes donated by the Philip Morriscompany..a * ■ Eastern expedition discoverssite of ancient settlementMan’s first permanent settlement was found to date backbefore 5,000 B.C. according to a discovery made in Iraq byDr. Robert J. Braidwood, director of UC Iraq-Jarmo expedi¬tion in the middle east.Microfilms of political trialsnow available in Harper libraryMicrofilms of 23 important political trials in the UnitedStates were presented recently to the University of Chicagolibrary. The microfilms con-UC'ers can giveprogram, ideasStudents have an opportunityto submit ideas for programs ofthe coming channel 11 education¬al television station, according toEdward Rosenheim, assistant pro¬fessor of humanities in the col¬lege and executive secretary ofthe radio office.The complete schedule of pro¬grams has not yet been drawnup. Ideas are invited—it has beensuggested that all ideas be senteither to the station (at the Mu¬seum of Science and Industry) orto the UC radio office, from whichthey will be forwarded to the sta¬tion.“UC’s contribution to the pro¬grams of Channel 11 should fallchiefly in three categories,” saidRosenheim. They can utilizecourses on the undergraduatelevel, information about researchin the various laboratories and in¬stitutes on campus, and notablepersonnel in a variety of fields, hesaid. dense in 80 reels some 170,000pages of legal records.Records of such trials as thoseof Alger Hiss, the Rosenbergs,Judith Coplon, and the eleven topCommunist leaders charged withconspiracy, from indictmentsthrough pleadings, briefs, and de¬cisions by the Supreme Court areincluded in the collection.The microfilm record of theRosenberg case is probably iheonly fully complete documenta¬tion of that case in existence. Re¬search for the microlilmmg addedmaterial which is not ordinarily apart of a formal court record. Thismaterial includes the appeals forexecutive clemency after convic¬tion had been affirmed by the Su¬preme Court in both a regularand extraordinary session.“The microfilm record is an in¬valuable source for lawyers, his¬torians, and others on the develop¬ment of the law and on the his¬tory of the Communisl parly inthe United States,” stated HermanH. Fussier, director oj the UClibrary.CIRCLE THIS DATEFEBRUARY 2, 1955You can discuss career opportunitieswith our representative at this timeOur THREE MINUTE STORYis in your Placement OfficeElectro Metallurgical CompanyUNION CARBIDE A Division ofAND CARBON CORPORATION Braidwood, professor of oldworld archaeoolgy in the Orientalinstitute, reports that exploratorydiggings uncovered a prehistoricsettlement even older than thevillage of Jarmo, Iraq, which hadbeen considered the oldest set¬tled village until now.The main object of the expedi¬tion, which started early last fallas a joint project of the UC Orien¬tal institute and its department ofanthropology, is the study of thedawn of civilization in the middleeast in the period 7,000-10,000years ago. This was the timewhen early man was turningfrom a cave-dw’elling and nomadicfood-gathering way of life toliving in settled communities,domesticating animals, and be¬ginning to grow food. Archaeol¬ogists consider this transition thefirst great revolution in man’shistory, as of as great importanceto civilization as the industrialrevolution in the xiineteenth cen¬tury.Concert bandblares onEnergetic and spirited, the re¬cently organized UC concert bandhas livened up two varsity basket¬ball games this season.But even in the midst of thebasketball season, the band is al¬ready turning its attention to¬ward more musically serious mat¬ters — in particular, an outdoorappearance on the quadranglessome evening in April. It is nowexploring the band literature tochoose a suitable program lorthis occasion.Handicapped by its relativelysmall size, the band urges bothinterested students and others inthe university neighborhood tojoin. Particularly needed are clari¬net and French Horn players. Re¬hearsals are held Tuesday eve¬nings at 8 p.m. in 302 Sunny Gymi Kenwood between 58th and59th).BETZ JEWELRYUnusual Jewelry Our SpecialtyExpert Jewelry and Watch RepairN.S.A. Discount to Students1523 E. 53rd PL 2-3038VALENTINESPECIALOne8x110 PORTRAITjCc $^95Be 4?er,Guide i/~>arPHOTOGRAPHER1467-9 E. 57th St. BUtterfieM 8 0876Coll Tcxileiy for Appointmentr<9« s THE CHICAGO MAROON January 2S, 1955SG sponsors performance of 'Macbeth' Lauded group playsin Mandel hall for exchange program Beethoven quartetSG is sponsoring the only performance on the south side ofPlaywright Theatre club’s production of Macbeth. The per¬formance is for the benefit of the Frankfurt student exchangeprogram, and will be presented Tuesday, February 15, at8:30 p.m. in Mandel hall.The production features some innovations, one of which isof themale witches in placetraditional females. Directedby Paul Sills, who also direct¬ed King Henry IV, Part II, forPlaywright’s summer Shake¬speare festival. Macbeth will bestaged on levels and not use a cur¬tain. Lee Henry, who receivedrave notices for his acting in theShakespeare festival, has the title role. Anthony Holland, formerUC student, will be heard as oneof the witches. Macbeth marksthe fifth Shakespeare play thatPlaywrights will have produced,and the first to be seen in Mandelhall.Tickets for the performance areavailable at the Reynolds club in¬formation desk. The New Music quartet, in the first University of Chicagoconcert for the winer quarter, will present an evening ofchamber music at 8:30 p.m. next Friday in Mandel hall.Both traditional and contemporary music will comprise theprogram by Broadus Erie and Matthew Raimondi, violins;Walter Trampler, viola, and David Soyer, cello,thecal acclaim m the Maroon, “afirst-rate quartet.”Other concerts this quarter willfeature the Budapest string quar-In addition to the Schumann Quartet in A major,opus 41, no. 3, and the Beetho¬ven Quartet in G major, opus 18, qui(lno. 2, the New Music quartet will tet, the University Chamber Mu-play the modern Leon Kirchner sic players, and the Vegh stringquartet, which won him the Music quartet.Critics award in 1950. Tickets for the series are $4.40;The last time it appeared here admission for the single concertin 1951, the Quartet received critl- is $1.50.Lee Henry who has the titlerole in the Playwrights produc¬tion of “Macbeth.” Ugetsu displays union of realism andRare works legend with tasteful techniqueto be playedThe Collegiate Sinfonietta con¬ducted by Dieter Kober will fea¬ture another in its series of con¬certs for soloists and chamberorchestra this Sunday afternoonat 4 p.m. in he auditorium of In¬ternational house.As usual, the conductor haschosen a variety of rarely per¬formed works in contrastingstyles by composers of differentperiods. The concert will openwith a concertino for four violinsand string orchestra attributed terthe little known Carlo Riciottiand also to the more famous Gio¬vanni Pergolesi. The real author¬ship has still not been settled bymusicologists.Another interesting piece to beheard is the Fantasia on one note—the theme note C played by theviola is played throughout theentire work—by Henry Purcell,another composer of the baroque•era.The solo work of the afternoonwill be rendered by June Blume,flutist; Burton Fine, violinist;Thomas Metzger, violincellist andGayle Hufford, pianist, all ofwhom are well known on campusthrough many past appearancesas solo chamber performers aswell as with the Collegiate Sin¬fonietta. They will play at thistime the Trio Sonata from theMusical Offering by Johann Se¬bastian Bach.The concert will close with amodern version of a Suite ofRenaissance Dances, dressed upin contemporary harmonies bythe Englishman. Peter Warlock.Admission to these concerts isfree and without ticket.NOW ON THE AIR ..."CAMPUS Ugetsu, the Japanese prize-win-ning film at the Carnegie, is sure¬ly worth your attention. It is thesecond picture from Japan to bereleased in America.It is based on an old Japaneseclassic, we are told, and isremarkable for its union ofrealism and legend. It relates,against the sixteenth - centurybackground of feudal wars, thestory of two rural neighboringfamilies, both men of which arepotters.One of the men dreams ofbecoming a great samurai (war¬rior). On a trip to town to selltheir wares, he buys a suit ofarmor and sets out to fulfillhis wish. His wife, who has ac¬companied the two men, is rav¬ished by a group of warriorsduring her search for him. Theother potter, whose wife andchild have stayed at home, isseen and admired by a beau¬tiful noblewoman, first attract¬ed by his work, and is inducedto become her husband. The de¬velopments of both stories arestrange and bitter, and are uni¬fied in moral.The first potter becomes a fa¬mous samurai, but returns to findhis wife a prostitute. The secondpotter, already remorseful, dis¬ covering that the noblewoman isa ghost who had died without lov¬ing a man, runs away trying todestroy the entire bewitchmentaround him. The ghost is de¬stroyed by the potter’s unwilling¬ness to remain, and he emergesfrom . his stupor to see a ruinwhere the noble mansion was.Upon his return home he findshis family—his wife now deadand a ghost. He, his wife’s ghost(now just audible), and the othercouple settle down to work con¬tentedly, quietly and modestly.Both lustful illusions havebrought vileness and degradationand suffering, although one hasbeen a dream of temptation, theother an illusion of ambition andgreed. The desires have beenfalse, but their consequences havebeen reST.The trouble that we of thewestern world may have withthis Japanese work will be thatof the Jaj>anese concepts ofghosts. For us, their forms areusually unseen. We know oftheir presence in us or with usby their subtle influences. Butthe Oriental ghost of Ugetsu,while in effect the same, moredirectly influences its victims.It can be felt, and it is not forcedto reveal itself as a ghost, un¬ less he does so accidentally orwilfully. For us, it may be dis¬concerting to see a ghost invad¬ing our store of human charac¬teristics.Its moral (at least what thisAmerican sees), that one had bestremain within his limits, can beagreed with or not. The point isthat it is decidedly the right onefor the persons it is interested in.Artistically, Ugetsu is expert.The photography and the direc¬ tion fully create the myth at¬mosphere within the detail ofthe real. So do the actors. Par¬ticularly excellent are the noble-woman, her seduced potter,and the samurai. Ugetsu indi¬cates once again that the Japan¬ese have much to contribute tothe film, both in style and insignificance. They have a taste¬ful and delicate technique withwhich to show us their values.by Sam BlazerRELIANCE CAMERA APHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63rd St.BU 8-6040 CARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1127 E. 55 1412 E. 55MU 4-9003 MU 4-8980ij/te tfMmm PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET^•lltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllltllltllUlllltlltltlllllltllllllttttlllllllllllllllltltHllltlllttlllHtlllttel wm mMUM l it TOO II <<<<By plane New York - London - New York <49-day trip from June 29 to August 16 J[ England, France, Monaco, Italy Yugoslavia, Austria, Switzerland, ]Germany, Holland. <[ Conducted by Dr. E. Bourbousson, assoc, prof, modern languages at j<<<<<Oregon State College.PRICE $1070> WRITE TO Dr. Bourbousson, Oregon State College, Corvallis, Ore.for more informationIntellectual Difficultiesand ChristianitySATURDAY 10:15 A.M.W Jtt B I 1110 KC ON YOUR DIAL 5ACECYCLE SHOPYour BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we sellRepairs & Parts all makes819 E. 55 Ml 3-26729 A M. - 6 P.M. 4llllllllllllllllimillllitlllllllllllftlllllllllllllllllllllilllltllHtlll!ltllllltllllllHlltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll<IIMil£International House Movies= East Lounge Mon. & Thurs. Eves, at 7:00 A 9:00 P.M. |= Monday, Jan. 31 — 45c — Der Haoptman Von Koepenick (German) =Thursday, Feb. 3 — 35c — Green Pastures (American) | | sWiiiiitiiiiiiHiiitiiiiiiiiltiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiitfiititiiiifiiiitiiiiittitiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiimiiitttitiiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiiiititii^ Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood =UNUSUAL FOOD |DELIGHTFUL |ATMOSPHERE |POPULARPRICESMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiimiiiiiiiiif^%* *1* %♦ *1* **♦ •!* *1* *1* *1* *X* *X* *!♦ *!♦ *!• **• %♦ %• *|** Order corsages from your campus floristI Mitzie’s Flower Shop f•j* at two convenient stores$ 1235 E. 63rd St. 1301 E. 55th St. || HY 3-5353 MI 3-4020 XX 10% mnd 20% student discount TA CASA Book StoreUsed Books —— Bought and SoldGood background materialReliable typewriter serviceMY 3-9651 1117 E. 55th StreetEye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 dorft'n°5530 harperGifts O Gourmet's Corner O StationeryWe have a new line of enamel on copper jewelry with whichwa are delighted. The designs and craftsmanship are as fineas we've seen. We still con't believe the prices.Earrings $1.25 and $1.50Cuff Links all $1.50Pendants $1.50 f#***** J », W55 TNI CHICAGO MAROON Ra§« fUT casts lor-Wild Duck' Mafiatig Jackson rocks in gospel singUniversity Theatre is schedul¬ing Ibsen’s The Wild Duck andGogol’s The Inspector Generalfor March and April productions.Acting and production tryoutsopen to all University studentsand personnel will be held Feb¬ruary 2, 3, and 4 in the Reynoldsclub theatre at 7 p.m.The Wild Duck, one of Ibsen’smust beautiful and moving dra¬mas, will be cast this comingweek. There are three women’sroles and ten men. Produetion,back-stage, and promotion workwill be scheduled and open to allinterested persons.Marvin Phillips, director of Uni¬versity Theatre, advises that ac-lors and persons interested inacting for the first time, read TheMild Duck before tryouts. Theemphasis in casting will not beon experience or technique, butintelligence and understanding ofthe script. Left: >1 ah alia Jackson sing¬ing her theme song, “Move OnUp a I.iMJe Higher” in Mandelhall last Tuesday evening. Be¬low: She appears delivering oneof her famous gospel songs.photos by GronrimanSchneider aives Mahalia crowd vigorousii i^iv4vi Rhythmical clapping and enthusiastic foot tapping were the S]benefit concertAlexander Schneider, noled vio¬linist, is giving a benefit per¬formance for combined Jewishappeal at Mandel hall, Saturdaynight. February 12. Tickets are$1 and can be purchased at Hillelfoundation.THENew Low Prices DocumentaryFilm GroupONLong Playing Records 7:15 (j 9:15Social Sciences 122Fri., Feb. 4 — Moan a(Amer.) 1.50 series ticket398 for 12” and $298 for 10” Toes., Feb. 1 — Razamov(French) 40cmokeBuilding Your Record CollectionEosy on Your Pocketbookflake your seleeiions after listening to themon our high fidelity equipmentUniversity ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue1Courtesy AlwaysELLIS FLOWER SHOPBeautiful Flowers — moderate PrieesSTUDENT DISCOUNT1103 East 63rd Street BUtterfield 8-6565 - 66International House PresentsTHE NORTHERN LIGHTS Choose on Expert«.THOMPSONMOVERSLocal and Long Distance MovingCO 4-7600Annual Winter Formal Dance( Friday, February 4 10:00 P.M. to 1:00 A.M.LUCIO GARCIA and his orchestraAdmission $1.25 If you yront to. put in aClassifiedAdCall Ml 3-0800Ext. 1009Mon. - Fri.1:30 - 5:30 photo by GrossmanPoking bacludage after Tuesday’s concert are Mahalia Jackson,“queen of the gospel singers,” and S. I. Hayakawa, prominent lec¬turer, author, and jazz critic. Hayakawa presided over the concertand gave commentary on “How gospel song was born.”spontaneous responses of the capacity crowd to the songs of MahaliaJackson, “queen of the gospel singers,” who appeared in Mandel hallTuesday evening.Introduced by S. I. Hayakawa, noted semanticist, Mahalia told theaudience that shecould not “use words and things like Dr. Hayakawa;my songs do the talking.” Her robust good humor was as well re¬ceived as her dynamic renditions of blues, jazz, and gospel songs.With her on the program were Thomas Dorsey, outstanding writerof gospel songs, Ernie “Big” Crawford, string bass player, and “BigBill” Broonzy and Studs Terkel, who were invited on stage from theaudience. Rembrandt influenced by trendof Dutch art, own personal lifeby Fred FreedThe trend of Dutch art around1630 toward realism and Rem¬brandt’s personal life were twopowerful influences on the de¬velopment of his landscape, saidA. B. de Vries, European author¬ity on Dutch and German art, in alecture last week.De Vries, director of the Mau-ritshuis museum and ofk theNetherlands Institute for ArAlis-torv at the Hague, discussed"Rembrandt and landscape.”He pointed out that while Rem¬brandt used many different tech¬niques—oils, etchings, and char¬coal among others—in all of themwas the common element of rea- his landscapes,” said de Vries.Dutch art of this period alsoemphasized the use of light andcolor as well as this representa¬tion. Rembrandt made use of anof these traits.“Rembrandt’s landscape paint¬ings show an extremely subjectiveattitude toward nature,” said deVries. “His paintings are an ex¬pression of mood of his mind andnot his eyes . . . We are left withnot so much the place fas in hisdrawings) as with the distressand power of nature.“Although his later works bycontrast are rather serene, allcontain the human touch, whichis so important for Rembrandt.”v ..... , . . Although Rembrandt becamehsm or imitation developed interested in the landscape ratherlate in his development and onlyaround 1630.Imitation in Dutch art was not,however, simply an attempt tocopy nature, but was more “rep¬resentation.” This representation,which involved deviation fromnatural forms where this suitedthe artist’s purpose, often gavethe artist an unconscious meansof self-expression.“Thus Rembrandt learned firstto follow nature, but he was al¬ways unconsciously compelled toexpress something of himself in a very limited number of hislandscapes exist, this creates noproblem since “the genius ofRembrandt is expressed in all hisworks of art,” de Vries pointedout.His differing moods and atti¬tude and his ability to use thevarious media in their expressionindicates the depth of the man,he concluded.CTSCOMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.• Bar-bo-cue ribs• Bar-be-cue chickenDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525 tfrom page 2)not only from other seminaries Inthe Chicago area, but it differsalso from denominational and un¬denominational seminaries acrossthe country. It is the first majorinstitutional expression, on thelevel of theological education, ofthe ecumenical movement.Institutions, representing fourdenominations have united inmaintaining a single faculty. Thefaculty is large enough to enableit to carry on its work of teach¬ing, publication, and research.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236TheIdeas Vs.McCarthy ismSILAS TIMBERMAN — A newnovel written wid published byHoword Fost. Professor Timber-man's ivory tower is no defensewhen the McCarthyite* ottock thecompos.Avoiloble at Modem Book Store,64 W. Randolph, for $3.00; howabout UC bookstore?Send contributions to continue andspread these ods to Jimmy Higginsc/o Modem Book Store, Room 914,64 W. Randolph, Chicago I, III. Disc1369 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekMario GallossingsPuccini AriosAngel 35195—SportsBriefsJV cagers win;Down ParkerForward Bob Wieseneck scoreda free throw in the last possiblemoment Friday to tie the scoreagainst Francis Parker. 34-34, andthen the JV cagers went on towin in overtime, 40-34. GuardJohn Davey was high scorer forthe winning team, dropping in 10points. Both Wieseneck andDavey scored all the six points inovertime. Wieseneck hit on a fieldgoal and Davey scored a fieldgoal and two free throw's.Francis Parker (341Corcoran,!Lowry.!Slrmnons.cArmento.gFrtstrom.gSchwake.gSchmidt,gTotals U High (40)2 Hardvaal.I 35 Nelson,! 1 22 W’seneclc,! 2 64 Wolff.c 2 05 Davev.g 4 20 HUU 2 2013 3 18 Totals 14 12 13Swimmers loseto North CentralMaroon swimmers found them¬selves on the short end of a 67-17score Saturday against NorthCentral College at Naperville.While North Central was settingthree records and winning all thefirst places, the best Chicagocould do was to take four secondplaces. Sellen won two of theseand Lance Felker and Frank Chil¬ton got the others. The swimmershave an open date today and ahome meet with Bradley nextFriday.JV trackmenSecond of threeJV’ tracksters came out in themiddle of a triangular meet in thefieldhouse Friday; Du Sable wonwith 52. University High was inthe middle with 27, and LakeView finished third with 16. PeteMcKeon, Harry Milbum. and PeteSciaky shared high-point honorsfor the Juniors with five pointsapiece. Other scorers were GeorgeKarcazes. Joe Kriz. Bill Harmon,Dave Chernoff, and Eric Noble.Hockey practice:Bumps, bruisesA dozen hockey sticks havebeen broken and at least an equalnumber of bodies bruised inhockey practice under NorthStands so far this winter. A num¬ber of players from Canada andEastern schools with previous in¬tercollegiate hockey experiencehave reported, according to man¬ager Larry Gross. Practice gamesare played Monday and Wednes¬day evenings at 8 p.m., Fridayafternoons at 4 p.m., and Satur¬day afternoons at 1 p.m. If theicy weather continues there willbe a full schedule of games thisseason.WAA plans forbig open houseThe Women's Athletic Associa¬tion (WAA) has completed round-robin badminton, continues var¬sity basketball, and will begininter-dorm bowling next week.The organization is planning itsopen house for one w'eek fromTuesday to include roller skating,square dancing, and social danc¬ing besides bowling, table tennis,and billiards. 1955Fieldhouse features talented trainerby Spike PinneyThe fortunate few who receive soap, towel, and medication in the fieldhouse locker-room are well acquainted with trainerWally (the Big Wall) Lonergan. Equipment may be in the hands of Walter E. Parker and his assistant Jerry Giles, but forblisters, there's no one like Big Wall.The remainder of humanity can know of Wally only through rumor or written account. Unless, of course, they bring theirblisters and ailments to Wally’s domain in the fieldhouse trainingroom. It is there that he opens blisters, closes lacerations, and re¬duces bumps. And it is there that he sometimes recalls that “mygreatest operation was removing a corn from Walter Deike’s littleleft toe.”Wally, who is now completing his master’s degree in the businessschool, has been trainer for one year. His qualifications for the job,not counting his steady good humor, include knowledge gained atBrooks Army medical center, and as athletic director of the psycho¬logical warfare center.Wally was a basketball lettemian last year at UC, and at Idahocollege before bis army days. At Idaho he was all Northwest Conference in basketball, 1949-50. He also was in football and trackthere.“I have a great knowledge of veterinary medicine which enables meto treat horses and the track team,’’ more than sums it up.In all serious cases Big Wall consults the UC Track club’s famousdistance man and med student, Walt Deike. “Walt agrees that intreating compound concussions of the muscle cast, I excel.’’ Charlie-horses are the most common training room complaint.Wally, who gives a lot of nib-downs, believes that his pleasantsurroundings and the ty|>e and condition of people he comes intocontact with daily are the most likeable features of his job. Theleast likeable? “The side of people I see.”Returning to his corns, lacerations, and blisters, Wally’s final com¬ment ran, “What this country needs is a good ten cent jar of analgesicbalm.”Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226STUDENT DISCOUNTDELIVERY SERVICESpecialOrchid Corsages$1.50 and up photo by GrossmanWally (The Big Wall) Lonergan bandages Jim Strawn.WHAT’S THIS? For solution see paragraph below.■■Alt VMW or HMM VIM ON TMCOfWGalm R. FisherUniversity of Californiamoist or sioriSILLING BLIVATfO SHOtlRobert F. Collum IIAdelphi A STUDENT’S BEST FRIEND is LuckyStrike. At any rate, the greatest,up-to-datest college survey showsthat college smokers preferLuckies to all other brands—andby a wide margin. Once again,the No. 1 reason: Luckies tastebetter. They taste better, first ofall, because Lucky Strike meansfine tobacco. Then, that tobaccois toasted to taste better. “It'sToasted'*—the famous LuckyStrike process—tones up Luckies’light, good-tasting tobacco tomake it taste even better. Luckiestaste better anywhere, any time,as illustrated in the Droodle above, titled: Skier enjoyingLucky while whooshing underbridge. Next time you make tracksto a cigarette counter, Be Happy—Go Lucky. Enjoy the better¬tasting cigarette ... Lucky Strike.FIRCPOM IN CITY WMMIUTOTS RROTNRR OWNS MM FACTO* TWilliam C. Jankowski, Jr.Boston UniversityARRIVAL Of IMAPORI (NOMAS CM SOMCarol HannumWashington StateBeftei taste Luckies... Lucky Dr oodles* 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.Bo* 67, New York 46, N. Y.•I) ROOD LESS. Copyright 1953 by Roger PriceDAT.Cs. MtOOVCT ft# ...Cteoaea, Faesket,SiaootW!■MIUCA'I LA AO I NO M AMOVACTURRS 09 CIOAASTTftSJnwwy Zti 1955 Fa*« 11THItake Marquettein away wrestling meet CHICAGO MAROON—Cagers drubbed, 72-48By a team score of 18-16, the University of Chicago wres¬tlers defeated Marquette university on its home grounds lastSaturday.The victory, UC’s second as against two losses, was sweetrevenge for A1 Bates’ Tigers, by Smoky GarciaElmhurst college drubbed the UC basketball team, 72 - 48, in the fieldhouse Saturday.Taking the play away in the second quarter, Elmhurst pulled steadily ahead to win an easyvictory. Don Hohman scored 25 points for the victors and did his bit defensively by holdingBilly Lester, Chicago scoring ace, to 14 points. Pat Lira, six-foot, six-inch Elmhurst center,was limited to 19 points but, -IQ-1'7 , and Carlson (167) gave a goodwho lost by an 18-17 score to „ . , .. . ... *'. rpi account of themselves while los-Marquette last year. The score . .came as an upset against the to more experienced oppo-strongest Marquette team in re- nents. Then Chicago’s heavy-cent years. weight, Lynn Illingworth, pinnedSeveral of the matches were Gershaw in 1:50. UC’s otherwrestled out of weight order, due heavy, Jerry Mehrens, won by ato the fact that two of MU’s grap- *al1 *n 4:30 of his exhibitionpiers were late in arriving. John match.Shafer of Chicago initiated the At this point the team scoreactivity by losing a hard-fought was 18-13 Chicago with the 147-lb.bout to McPhillips in the 177-lb. match still to come. Had Ataliano,class. Eton Donderi won a forfeit Marquette’s undefeated statein the 123-lb. class when his op- AAU champ, been able to win by aponent, Leverenz proved to be in- fall, the score would have beeneligible. He then wrestled Lev- deadlocked. But UC’s Dan Ritter,erenz in an exhibition bout and in what proved to be the highwon decisively, 11-4. Kent Flan- point of the meet, staved off Ata-nery of Chicago then defeated Bob liano and, although he lost onKarczewski, Marquette team cap- points, preserved Chicago’s vic-tain and fourth-ranked Wisconsin tory.130-pounder, 3-0. Player-coach Bates, whose winA1 Bates added another five streak now stands at 15, an-points to UC’s score when he nounced that the Tigers’ nextpinned Ryan in 2:50. Owen Ren- meet would be at University ofnert and Norm Cook, substituting Illinois at Chicago (UIC) on Feb-for the injured Richards (157) ruary 11.TERRY’S PIZZAfinest pizzas madeFREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95H’e also carry m full line of Italian foods1518 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-40455 o million times a dayat home, at work or on the wayThere’snothing1. Bright, bracing taste .,ever-fresh and sparkling.2. A welcome bitof quick energy ..brings youback refreshed.•OTTLED UNDE* AUTHORITY Of TMI COCA-COLA COMFANY BYThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.*Xe*a- it a registered trade mark. O 1*33. THE COCA-COLA COMPANY was a tower of strength underthe boards.The Maroons played sloppy andlethargic ball and showed noneof the spark and aggressivenessthat they exhibited against Illi¬nois Tech and Chicago Teachers.Their rebounding was mediocreand their drive, until the latterpart of the game, was non-exis¬tent. Poor Maroon shooting anda loose defense contributed to thethoroughness of the beating.The game started very slowlywith Elmhurst leading 14-8 at theten-minute mark. They then be¬gan to catch fire and played con¬sistent ball to drive to a 36-23lead at halftime.The Maroon cagers ralliedsomewhat to cut the Elmhurstlead to nine points in the thirdquarter. It was too little too late,however, and the visitors pro¬ceeded to ring up a 20-point leadwhich was never threatened. Bothteams substituted freely in thelate stages of the game.The UC record is now four winsin, ten games.ELMHURST 72 CHICAGO 48G F P G F PSchrantz,! 0 0 2 Rowland,! 2 1 0Lee.f 0 0 1 Garcia,! 1 0 0Schrupp.f 7 0 4 Chisholm,! 3 0 1Peterson,! 0 0 1 Felnberg,! 0 1 3Lira.c 6 7 3 Bln!ord,c 0 5 5Bacevicis.c 1 0 3 Strawn.c 0 0 1Anders’n.g 1 4 0 Lester,g 5 4 3Hohman,g 9 7 2 Walker,g 1 0 1Bodnam.g 1 4 0 Watkins,g‘ 4 4 5Hamllton.g 0 1 tTotals 25 22 16 Totals 16 16 20 photo by GrossmanBill Lester (43) scores Saturday while AI Bin ford (37) watches.Track team triumphs;Takes Iowa State, 601/*-431/*by Sam Greenlee •Paced by captain Frank Loomos’ triple win performance, the Maroon track squad coastedto its first dual meet win of the indoor season Saturday afternoon, defeating Iowa Statecollege, 601/2 - 43J/2- Scoring nine first place finishes and sharifig a tenth the thincladswere pressed only in the pole vault and broad jump by an outclassed Iowa State squad.Loomis, the Dillard-type an(j jow hurdles, all in top times,sprinter-hurdler, showed the The little speedster should be ameager crowd why he de- real threat in the NCAA outdoorserves national prominence in his hurdle event barring injuries,specialty as he racked up wins Chuck Rhyne and Art Ohmo-in the 60-yard dash and the high hundro collaborated to give Chi-Sports CalendarToday: Basketball, Concordia, 8 p.m., at Con¬cordiaFencing, Lawrence Tech and Wayne, 7:30p.m., at WayneJV Track, Schurz and Tilden, 3:45, fieldhouseTomorrow: Track, Michigan AAU, 8 p.m., atMichiganGymnastics, Northwestern, 2 p.m., at North¬westernJV Basketball, Wheaton, 7 p.m., at WheatonFencing, Michigan State and Detroit, 2 p.m.,at Michigan StateBasketball, Aurora, 8 p.m., fieldhouseHockey, Wheaton, l p.m., at WheatonThursday: JV Track, Wendell Philips, St. George,Thornton Fractional, 3:45 p.m., fieldhouseSquash, Lake Shore club, 3:30 p.m., at LakeShore clubi. GREENBERGMEN'S FURNISHINGS & SHOES1222 E 63 Street BU 8-778010% Bring indiscount this ad andon anything get ain the store cago a one-two finish in the mile■with Rhyne moving away with afine finishing kick to win in 4:28.5after trailing his pace-settingteammate most of the way.Paul Baptist posted an easywin in the two-mile run and onlylack of competition prevented hisposting a faster time than the9:5 he ran. Baptist, a mainstay ofthe cross country squad last fallindicated an ability to take upmuch of the slack created by theabsence of distance ace WaltDeike.Ted Fishman, shooting for theChicago squad record of 1:55.9 inthe 880-yard run overpaced him¬self and still won his event withease in a creditable 1:59.4. TinkieHaynes, South Africa’s gift tothe squad, finished fast to giveChicago a one-two scoring in thehalf-mile event.Smooth striding Jim Brownscored an easy victory in the 440,never being pressed after takingthe lead at about 300 yards.Other firsts were scored byHoward in the shot put with a46' 5" toss, and Mason with afirst place tie in the high jump.The miles relay team scoredan impressive win in their eventby coasting to an easy eight-yardvictory over the Iowa State entryin spite of sloppy baton passing,recording a 3:28.3 time.After a Thursday afternoonintra-squad warm-up meet a nine-man squad plus several UCTCentrants will journey to the Uni¬versity of Michigan field house.BRAKEADJUSTMENTAT JEWEL CONOCOService. Station and Perfect Car Wash5601 South Cottage Grove MU 4-9106 Books new & usedAlso Records: Caruso,Golli-Curci, etc.Open from 12.Noon till 9:30 p.m.White Boar Bookshop61 W. Division St. SU 7-3659IPage 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 28, 1955CHESTERFIELDYou’ll smile your approval of Chesterfieldssmoothness — mildness — refreshing taste.You’ll smile your approval of Chesterfieldsquality — highest quality — low nicotine. UOSfTTiDinner, scrolls salute Ureyfor courage in Sobell caseOne thousand copies of a scroll, saluting Nobel prize win¬ner and UC Professor Harold C. Urey for his “distinguishedcareer as scientist and citizen,” are at present in circulationinternationally, and will be presented to Urey in a boundvolume on February 12 at a dinner in his honor.The scrolls, distributed by the Chicago Sobell committeewhich is sponsoring the din¬ner, salute Urey further: as ascientist “you have led a lifededicated to the pursuit of truth.”As 9 citizen “you have been atonce a stubborn and relentlesscritic of tyranny and a sane andeloquent spokesman for restraint,decency and tolerance in publicaffairs. In your protests in theRosenberg and Sobell case, even you have exemplified the vitalprinciple of speaking out firmlyand courageously when one deep¬ly feels an injustice has takenplace.”Copies of the scrolls are beingdistributed by stiffients and as¬sociates of Urey in the chemistryand physics departments, and inthe institute of nuclear studies.to those who may disagree with Responses have been received byyour evaluation of the case itself,NAACP toWashingtonTwo UC students, Sam Green¬lee and Don Anderson, will repre¬sent the campus chapter ofNAACP at the National Youthlegislative assembly in Washing¬ton, D. C., next Thursday.Both will take part in meetingsand discussions built around thetheme of “Youth and the chal¬lenge of integration.” The assem¬bly. which will last through theweekend, hopes to present Presi¬dent Eisenhower among itsspeakers. Last year Vice Presi¬dent Nixon and Senator PaulDouglas were two of the confer¬ence speakers.Other students interested in at¬tending the assembly will need$20 for round-trip bus fare, andseven dollars per day living ex¬penses. Purpose of the four-dayassembly is “To inform the youthof the great social, economic, andpolitical problems confronting thecountry today, and to encourageand help them to participate inthe civic affairs of their respec¬tive communities.”Literature topicof Lowenthal talkShakespeare’s The Tempest,Act-?* Scene I will be the startingpoint for “An exploration in thesociology of literature,” a talk tobe given by Leo Lowenthal to¬night at 8 p.m. in soc. sci. 201.Lowenthal was. until recently,director of the evaluation staff ofthe State department’s interna¬tional broadcasting service and adirector of the Voice of America.While on leave from his presentposition with the US informationagency, Lowenthal is currentlyvisiting professor of sociology atthe University of California.A guest of the Society for So¬cial research which is sponsoringhis talk, Lowenthal’s major aca¬demic work has been in the fieldsof communications research,popular culture and the sociologyof literature.Lowenthal’s talk will be opento the public. the committee from Great Britain,France. Sweden, Mexico and Al¬geria. Next week a list of eminentfigures who have signed the scrollwill be made public.Featured as speakers at the din¬ner, at the Hamilton hotel, will beCarey McWilliams, editorial direc¬tor of the Nation, Dr. Percy Juli¬an, famed chemist and 1950 win¬ner of the “distinguished citizenof Chicago” award, and professorHarry Kalven of the UC lawschoolTickets for the dinner, at $6.50apiece, may be procured from theSobell Committee, 20 W. JacksonBlvd., room 1301, WEbster 9-5992. Labor MP talkson war dissentFennel Brockway, British mem¬ber of Parliament, will discussthe “Dissent from the cold war;the growth of a third camp” atJudd hall Wednesday evening at8 p.m. Admission to students willbe 35 cents.Brockway, a leader of the Asianand African independence move¬ments, is currently on a tour ofthe U. S. under the sponsorshipof the American Friends Servicecommittee.For the last eight years Brock¬way has become especially notedfor his anti-colonial position, oftenbeing referred to in the House ofCommons as the “member forAfrica.”Lab school won'tadd another yearThe laboratory school, whichadded an eleventh grade to itscurriculum last spring, will notadd another grade this year, an¬nounced Harold B. Dunkel, direc¬tor of pre-collegiate education.Lab school previously had aten-year program which preparedstudents for early entrance in thecollege. The aim of the new pro¬gram is to present students withtheir twelfth - grade certificatesafter the eleventh grade. Whenthe plan is perfected no twelfthgrade will be necessary, as thesame amount of work will be cov¬ered in eleven years. NSA writes Strozieron discriminationA majority of the UC National Student Association dele¬gates have requested a statement from the University regard-ing the listing of off-campus student housing.The request in the form of “ —•a. letter to Dean of Students David Hartley, James Vices, joejRobert M. Strozier was occa- Ri<*ard Ward, . . . , The delegates who declined tosioned by a provision of the re- sign the ,etter included Alber” ™7VT°A c,~5~ Fortier, Clive Gray, Janice M*tros, Bruce D. Larkin, and Bar¬bara Vogelfanger.cently formulated NSA Fair Educational Practices Code.The NSA code states in part:“Educational institutions havea responsibility to assure equaloff-campus services to all stu¬dents whenever possible. Admin-istralions should take positive Inlernatlonal house wi|| hsteps to encourage non discnmin- j(s torma|atory practices in rooming houses T ■ i, .. „and should not include on lists of on Friday, February f atapproved housing, places which ha,f ' ' assemblydiscriminated on the basis of race,color, creed, or national origin.” Int. house hasquarterly formalFive NSA delegates who didnot sign the letter said in a state¬ment to the Maroon that Student hall.Lucio Varga and his eight-pieceband will be on hand for theevent. Admission is $1.23 per per¬son.The chairmen of the formalGoverfTment, not the NSA delega- have announced that all basket¬ball players who are active in theintramural program in the frater¬nity, divisional, and collegeleagues, may obtain courtesy tick-tion, was the proper group tomake such a request to the University administration.The signers of the letter to Strozier included: Lawrence Lichten- ets to the dance through Mr. Boy-stein, Fred Solomon. James Rosen- cheff at Bartlett gymnasium,blum, Carolyn Eggert, Ray Wil- They point out that it is one ofkerson, Shirley Long. Bob Floyd, the few opportunities for a dateSuzzane Friedman, Sol Hirsch, to cost nothing.The Book NookBooks and GamesGreeting CardsRental Library1456 E. 53rd StreetconditionedAirroundail yearJimmy’s1172 E. 55th IN THE WHOLE WIDE WORLD NO CIGARETTE• boom * Mnu Tomoop Co>