Larkin chairman of ACCLC Welcome alumni w/lf? 9--j O 1adopt activity-censorship rule Alumni prepare for reunion;by Prentiss ChoateAs watches in Law North approached 4 a.m. yesterday morning, the All-Campus CivilLiberties committee had a set of rules and officers. Elected chairman was Bruce Larkin(ADPhi), who defeated Paul Breslow (SG-SRP) for the post. Ken Marshall (Soc Demforum) became vice chair¬man-executive secretary, plan tours, dinner, showThe rules committee split 5-4 on ing “off-campus activity” to ex-, finer Rrpclnw Rule 6. The minority presented a elude correspondence and similaragain aereating r>resiow. substitute rule eliminating the au- activities, and making all expul-As expected, most intense con- tomatic-expulsion clause, re-defin- sion by two-thirds. After great de- “The mid-year reunion for 1955 will surpass — in bothscope and interest — last year’s program, which was ac¬claimed the ‘most outstanding in alumni history,’ ” said How¬ard Mort of the Alumni assocition.Over 1,100 alumni and visi-troversy came on the so-calledRule 6. ACCLC voted down all at¬tempts to amend the rule andfinally passed it 56-32.“Rule 6” provides that memberorganizations must obtain the ap- *We were fed up’ | bate this lost 33-52, with 3 absten¬tions.Another amendment to re¬quire a constitutional majorityfor expulsion, i.e., of all mem¬bers of ACCLC' rather than only tors will return to the Quad¬rangles tomorrow for thetours, dinner and show cele¬brating the reunion. of ceremonies.Hosts for the entire day arestudents. An enlarged special stu¬dent committee will help conducttours, attend the dinner, andIn the middle of the Rule 6 de¬bate a squad of masked B-J anduicaiiuAAviunu vwimui ... , j , , , . . t ucra vi mtiirr mim.ii umyproval ol the ACCLC steering J™'*"»'**tU^^“rS,‘those present «« voting. Jailedcommittee on any off-campus ac- an^ biought temporaij 38.43.tivity, with appeal to the ACCLC pandemonium by circling about presented the. AHvanrP nofit'P nf nn.r'am screaming “Chicago s not free! r a. 1 Kresiow presented tnear-tivitv or nronatxanda must and sprinkling deodorant on those [y’ino!',tTLsubslllute- He sf,d he be’pus activity or propaganda mustbe given, with no power of approval or disapproval.Failure to comply with thisprocedure results in automaticexpulsion, says Rule 6. Expul¬sion by majority vote is pro¬vided for disobedience ofACCLC’s decision on a proposedactivity. An organization mayl»e expelled for any reason bytwo-tliirds vote. present.A spokesman for the group la¬ter explained to the Maroon thatthis was a protest gesture againstACCLC’s parliamentary bicker¬ing.“We were fed up,” said thespokesman. “We’re against theBroyles bills too, but everythingkeeps turning into a battle be¬tween ISL and SRP.” lieved other provisions of the rulewere also unnecessary, but waswilling to compromise and makeonly these few revisions.The alleged cause of Rule 6,said Breslow, was a mass trip toSpringfield in 1949 where we weredenounced as irresponsible andSee ‘ACCLC,’ page 12 Twenty - two faculty - conducted usher at the variety show,tours have been arranged to begin The original student planningthe day. committee is Peter Carmel, SG;After the tours, visitors are in- Dale Levy, Student Union; Georgevited to a reception and special Stone, Inter - fraternity council;showing of student exhibits in Ruth Kopel, Inter-club council;Reynolds club under the auspices Sue Perkins, Inter-dorm council;of Student Government. Richard Prarie, B-J council; AllenDinner at 6 p.m. for 500 guests Janger, Maroon; David Utley,at the Quadrangle club is next onthe schedule. This will fill theclub to capacity.Climaxing the evening is an all- athletic department; and EmilJohnson and Audrey Rubovitz,student body.Tours at 2 and 3:30 p.m. willstudent variety show in Mandel cover the Ori^ptal institute, test-haili, featuring University Sym- ing laboratory, research insti-phony, Glee club, University Thea- tutes, reading clinic, meteorologytre and Acrotheatre. Allen Janger, department and National Opinioneditor of the Maroon, is master Research center.Kimpton answers students'questions on AB programs“There are certain important concerns that we share withour fellowmen and equally important concerns that belong tous primarily as individuals. . . . Undergraduate education inthe liberal arts and sciences should play an important part indeveloping both of these University of Chicago, February 25., 1955 31does not worry him at all, as therephases of human experience,” exists an underlying rationality.said Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton in his report to thecampus Tuesday evening.Kimpton spoke in Mandel hallbefore an estimated crowd of 250.The talk, based on questions sentlo the Maroon, dealt mainly withthe aims of a program of liberaleducation, its responsibilities tothe individual and to society.New AB attracts manyKimpton said that through thenew AB program, UC is oncemore attracting students withspecialized interests, who had pre¬viously been going elsewhere.Answering a complaint of “un¬tidiness,” caused when studentsstudy simultaneously in their par-tiofftar fields and under a generalprogram, Kimpton said that the“shaggy and unkempt quality” ‘Standards no lower’Kimpton said that UC stand¬ards have definitely not been low-ei-ed under the new program. Hestressed that, according to DeanStrozier and UC examiner Benja¬min Bloom, no student was ad¬mitted this year who would nothave been admitted three, five, orten years ago.Kimpton denied that the spiritof learning and intellectualism atUC has died down. He said thatwith “exciting teaching and a live¬ly sense of participation” and fa¬cilities for specialization, UC “pre-senst a great curriculum ad¬dressed to the major purposes ofliberal education.”(T!te complete text of theChancellor’s speech appears onpage 4.) No agreement on file letter;SQ hopes for ‘clear statement’by Fredrick KarstAgreement was yet to be reached this week between administration and Student Govern¬ment housing commission officials on the new letter to be sent to persons -placing listingsin the University housing file.Ken Marshall, a member of the $G housing commission said Wednesday, “We hope thatthe University administrationwill publicize a clear statementthat will encourage landlordswho cater to students to serveall students of good conduct with¬out regard to race, color, creed,or national origin.”Dean vetoed bill continuation of the administra¬tion discriminatory file.‘Maroon’ urged supportThe Maroon urged students to ised in this year's platform to re¬vive it.Upon taking office, however,ISL leaders decided to considersupport the SG file, but question- the question more thoroughly andMerriam may speak hereAlderman Robert E. Merriam, candidate for mayor, will probablyappear on campus before the mayoralty election, according to aspokesman for Young Republicans.Merriam was scheduled to speak here last Wednesday under thesponsorship of YR but was unable to on account of an unexpectedmeeting of the city council. Irving Koppel, an assistant to the aider-man. appeared in his place.This Sunday Merriam will hold an open house at 1463 East 55th.UC students are invited to come and meet the glderman and toask questions. Before 1950 the housing bureaumaintained two housing files, onefor white students and on^ forNegro students. In 1952 SG passedthe Carter-Tollett bill whichwould have excluded discrimina¬tory listings from the housing filehad it not been vetoed by DeanStrozier.Under the leadership of ISL,SG then passed the Coleman-Carter bill, which set up a non-discriminatory housing file run bySG concurrently with the admin¬istration file, in the hope that thisfile would take the place of theadministration file.SRP strongly objected to the ed its effectiveness. An editorial,May, 1952, said in part;“More accurately, the proposedsecond file is nothing more than asop to Cerberus, for the adminis¬tration-okayed plan possibly con¬tains sufficient physical difficul¬ties to doom the new file. Whilethe UC file is manned by paidlabor, and receives sanction andfinance from the University, theSG file will demand volunteer la¬bor, will have no official backing,and will of necessity be self-sup¬porting.”SG drops own fileIn 1953, while SRP was in con¬trol, the SG file was continuedbecause it was thought to be un¬successful. ISL contended thatthe file was successful and prom- eventually discarded the idea of aseparate file.Chinese studentsin open forumat Quaker houseTwo of the 35 Chinese studentswho have been denied exit per¬mits by the State department willtalk and answer questions abouttheir situation Sunday at 7:30 atQuaker house, 5615 Woodlawn.One of the students is Alex¬ander Wang, professor at IllinoisInstitute of Technology; the otheris a student at Northwestern uni¬versity. The meeting is sponsoredby Young Friends.Visiting English debaters to oppose UCersphoto by ZygmundRoger Bowenand DewaneBarnes (r to 1),prepare to refuteP t h e proposition1 that freedom ofspeech is sub-^ stantially de¬creasing in theUnited States to¬day.They will rep¬resent StudentForum Tuesdayagainst debatersfrom the Univer¬sity of London. Touring English debaters will be on campus next Tuesday evening to debate Student For¬um at 8:30 in International House auditorium. University of London debaters will defendthe proposition “Resolved: freedom of speech is substantially decreasing in the UnitedStates today” against a Chicago team of Roger Bowen and Dewane Barnes.A modified English debate style will be followed with unlimited time for the speakers andan audience decision. Members of the audience are encouraged to express themselves at anytime in any way they wish, with cheers or catcalls, with questions, or with statements of theirown which need not be to the point. They may interrupt the speakers for these purposes,and the speakers are at liberty to answer them, ignore them, or rebuke them.The London team, consisting of Jennifer Copeman and Lester Borley, both 23, are exten¬sive travelers having toured the countries of Europe. Miss Copeman and Borley are presidentand vice-president, respective-ly, of the London Union.Miss Copeman is a collectorof folklore while Borley’s prin¬cipal hobby is flying He is aformer corporal in the Royal AirForce.Bowen, 22, is in the departmentof English. He received his AB atBrown where he was president ofthe Brown Debating Union.Barnes, also 22, is a graduate ofthe University of Rochester and JenniferCopeman was also president of his collegedebating society. He is a studentin American history.The UC debate is the first in aseries which will take the Eng¬lish team throughout the north¬west, the Pacific coast area, andback through the south to con¬clude their engagements at theUniversity of Missouri on May 4.Among colleges oustanding inSee ‘Debate,’ page 3 Lester Borley•»<Pag* 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 25, 1955World University Service fund drive begins Monday;$2000 set as UC/s share in international programby Ronald GrossmanWorld University Service begins its fund-raising drive on the UC campus Monday. A non-profit organization with a pro¬gram of assistance and aid to students and universities abroad, WUS is conducting fund-raising drives on more than 700American campuses.WUS’s slogan, “Help them to help themselves,” should set the keynote for all-out support from this campus, according toChuck Mittman, chairman of the UC drive.“We’re setting the campus goal at $2,000,” Mittman stated. “The money collected here adds to a national total of $600,000 which will let WUS *givepump-priming support tomany projects directly affect¬ing the lives of thousands of stu¬dents all over the world.”Next Thursday and Friday willbe tag day, with girls of the Inter¬club council soliciting contribu¬tions and handing out tags for do¬nations. The girls will be distrib¬uted over the entire campus, sothat everyone may have a chanceto contribute and sport a WUStag. A sound truck, explaining thedrive, will also be on campusThursday.Students are prime concernWUS, with 22 national branchesWorking in various sections of theworld, has many and varied ac¬tivities. Since the major problemof foreign universities is the lackof sufficient facilities for propereducational and living conditionsof their students, WUS directsmost of its energy toward alleviating this situation wherever itexists. .For example, money from theinternational fund was recentlyused to provide two prefabricatedstudent housing units at the He¬brew university in Jerusalem, giv¬ing living accommodations to al¬most a hundred students urgentlyin need of lodging.100,000 pounds of U. S. food sur¬plus was sent to universities inover 25 cities in Germany to helpprovide free meals for needy stu¬dents, mostly refugees. Under“Operation Poinsettia” a Christ¬mas gift distribution programwas carried out, with students inJapan, Korea, Greece, and Yugo¬slavia receiving food packages.WUS provides hostels of utmost importance on manyforeign campuses, is providinghostels and student centers.Usually accommodating homelessstudents, these centers are oper¬ated partly through WUS funds.In Korea, WUS has opened ahostel in Seoul as part of a half¬million dollar program begun im¬mediately after the war to aidstudents in finding shelter andboard.A student center which is a com¬bination activities building andconvalescent home was openedrecently at Cairo university. This,and two other hostels, is the firststep in meeting housing needs ofa student population of more than35.000.Other centers are being eithermaintained or erected in the far-flung places of Beirut, Lebanon,Assam, India, and Djokjakarta,Indonesia.Active in student healthIn the field of student health,WUS has provided drugs, medicalsupplies, and health service cen¬ters for students in many coun¬tries, especially in the Middle andFar East, and in southeast Asia.The enormous scale on whichmalnutrition and disease under¬mines the health and constructiveabilities of students in these re¬gions is constantly a challenge tothe WUS program of mutual serv¬ice. In a situation of acute short¬ages of educational equipment,WUS endeavors to supply text¬books, lab equipment, and othertypes of needed materials.With limited resources, WUScannot hope to contribute largequantities of equipment, but itdoes follow the premise that any a ream of paper—will provide stu¬dents with facilities which we inAmerica take for granted.By thus aiding university com¬munities throughout the world tomaintain adequate programs fortheir students, WUS supports oneof the premises in its statutes which asks for a university com¬munity implying “A spirit of realunderstanding and collaborationto be fostered among the univer¬sity communities of all nations,thus contributing to social justiceand international peace.” WUS driveDormitory solicitations ofcontributions for World Uni¬versity Service on the UC cam¬pus begins Monday. Floor rep¬resentatives in the individualhouses will make personalvisits to all residents. WUS,which assists students and uni¬versities abroad, is conductingthe fund raising drives onmore than 700 American cam¬puses.For further information re¬garding the WUS campaign inparticular dorms, any one ofthe following chairmen may becontacted: International house,Irene Gagaoudol; B-J, JohnAvery; “C” Group, Suzzy Mat-t h a y ; Snell ■ Hitchcock, NedLyle; Beecher, Richard Berry¬man.Merriam, alumnus, nominated for mayor;carries on family tradition started by fatherHistory repeated itself Tuesday as Robert E. Merriam was officially named the Repub¬lican candidate for the Chicago mayoral race in the April 5 elections. A UC alumnus, atpresent an independent fifth ward alderman, Merriam is following in the family tradition byrunning for mayor. His father, the late Charles E. Merriam, chairman of the UC politicalscience department from 1923-1940, twice ran for the same office.The elder Merriam was also a fifth ward alderman, who campaigned actively for Theo-A pet project of WUS, and one contributions—be it a test tube or dore Roosevelt in the BullMoose campaign, and who in1911 won the Republican nom¬ination in the primary for mayor,but lost the election to CarterHarrison by a margin of 18,000votes. In 1919 he entered the pri¬maries again, but failed to win inthe initial election. During thistime he was a .faculty member atUC, as well as writing and lectur¬ing.Robert E. Merriam earned amaster’s degree in public admin¬istration at the University in 1940,and was active on campus in PsiUpsilon and Owl and Serpent.He, too, has taught at UC, aseminar on housing and redevel¬opment, and seminars on localand metropolitan housing. He alsotaught a course on political par¬ties at Northwestern university. 'It's time for a change/decides Ruth Wegenerby Mitri Dozoretz“You don’t need to write anything about me. I’m not veryimportant,” said Mrs. Ruth Wegener, secretary of the studentactivities. No attention was paid to her statement and ques¬tioning was continued in the following manner.“My sonwhetherForeign study from botany to ceramicsavailable in 15 countries this summerBotany in Germany, archaeology in Sweden, linguistics in the Netherlands, ceramics inDenmark: opportunities for foreign study in 15 countries are available for the summer of1955 and the academic year 1955-56, according to the Institute of International Education.Foreign governments, universities and international organizations offer scholarships toAmeiican students to study in The Shakespeare institute at mer, to produce Shakespeareancountries all over the world. Stratford-upon-Avon will be con- plays. The lecture program andMost scholarships include tuition ducting special tutorial groups in tutorial sessions at the summerand maintenance for an academic production and direction. Sir Law- school will relate to these produc-year, and some may be supple- rence Olivier and Vivien Leigh tions. Other opportunities formented with travel grants from will head the Memorial Theatre summer study are offered by thethe U. S. government. Company at Stratford this sum- British universities summer How old are you?(age ten) asks methere were trains when I wasborn.”Do you like it here? “Yep. It’s alot of fun.”What are you going to do? "I’mgoing from the activities to theacademic world.”Why? “I’m making more money there. It was a transfer, I wanteda change.”What will you do there? "I’llbe viewing students from thequarterly view instead of the pos-ter-ly view.”Oh, Mrs. Wegener is moving tothe Social Science office today toassume the secretarial duties ofMrs. Becker, who is going to Hol¬land.Hither and yonCarolina paper reportspetition for segregationby Joel PichenyA petition for continued segregated schools received 5,900signatures and was sent to Governor Hodges of North Caro¬lina, according to the Daily Tar Heel of the University ofNorth Carolina.Dr. W. C. George of the Uni¬versity medical faculty, the insti¬gator of the petition, said that thepetition “supporting a policy ofcontinued separation of white andNegro children in schools had itsorigin in a desire to strengthenthe hands of our legal representa¬tives who would protect us fromracial deterioration.“It was based on the belief thatbringing the two races togetherin intimate social and semi-socialrelations would further their fu¬sion into a mixed race and thatsuch fusion would greatly harmand perhaps destroy. Americancivilization. These beliefs are sup¬ported by scientific and historical to prompt and well-mannered ex-Dr. George said that there hadbeen no circulation in Chapel Hill,the university community, be¬cause “we were aware that strongpropaganda pressures” had ledmany people to “actively or pas¬sively support a program of racialintegration.”The Dally Tar Heel replied edi¬torially to Dr. George’s statementthat “people in Chapel Hill havecome to think of the race problemin concepts of slogans rather thanin concepts of people, situationsand consequences.” Replied theTar Heel, “. . . . prudent consid¬eration of people, situations andconsequences amid the present-day rivalry of systems must leadevidence.The petition asked the governorand the general assembly to do allwithin their power to forestall theSupreme court’s race integrationin schools decision. ecution of the Supreme Court’sdecisions.“Then the United States canface the W'orjd clean of hands,clear in purpose and united inspirit.” school committee: art, music andliterature of England in 1660-1780,at the University of London; con¬temporary politics and literature,at Oxford; and the development ofmodern western civilization atEdinburgh.Scholarships availableSeveral scholarships are avail¬able for the British schools. Clos¬ing date for admission applicationis March 28.Six week courses on Germanybetween east and west, medievalbuilding, and German and Aus¬trian music are offered by theAmerican Council for summerstudy abroad. Application dead¬line is March 15.Year’s program in SwedenIntensive language study andcourses in the cultural back¬ground of Scandinavia will com¬prise the first few months of theacademic year in a program forstudy in Norway, Sweden, Den¬mark, or Finland, announced theScandinavian Seminar for cul¬tural studies. Students will livewith Scandinavian families andparticipate in seminars, then willspend the rest of their time in afolk school, where they will followthe same curriculum as the Scan¬dinavian students. Cost of the en¬tire nine months program, includ¬ing room, board and tuition, is$800 plus travel, with two $400scholarships available. HOW CHRISTIANSCIENCE HEALS-how the power Christ Jesus usedhelps you solve your problems.Free Lecture Entitled“CHRISTIAN SCIENCE: HOWEVERY ONE CAN PRACTICECHRISTIAN HEALING”BYPeter B. Biggins, C.S.B.of Seattle, WashingtonMember of The Board of Lectureship of TheMother Church, The First Church of Christ,Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts.March 3 Thursday 8 P.M.CHURCH EDIFICE5640 BLACKSTONE AVENUEFebruary 25, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Margaret Anderson named queen:Miss University of Chicago 1955by Joy BurbachAn estimated 450 people saw Margaret Anderson crowned Miss University of Chicago 1955 by Chancellor Lawrence AKimpton at the Washington Promenade.“It’s one of the most warm and wonderful feelings I've ever had,” Miss Anderson, her expression one of smiles, said inher Marion, Virginia, accent soon after the wreath of white carnations was placed on her head.“I’m worried about that crown,” Kimpton remarked as Miss Anderson posed for newspaper photographers but Miss An¬derson, 18, remained poised and smiling even though she had great trouble keeping the wreath on her head.Miss Anderson,photos by ZygmundWill it stay on?A few minutes later, It wasChancellor Kimpton (above)who worried about the wr<»atii,while Margaret Anderson(right), Miss U of C, posed forphotographers, her smile firm,and her hands folded neatly.Phi Kappa Psireceives trophyfor prom displayRope, bodies, and a bed figuredin the prize-winning display inhonor of Wash Prom. Phi KappaPsi received a gold trophy fortheir body, hanging from a tree,and adorned with a sign saying“The ways of the world are cruel,r wasn’t invited to the WashProm.”Footsteps led up the house toa bed on the roof, labeled, “Shhh,I’m dreaming of the Wash Prom.”Jerry Mehrens, president of thefraternity, accepted the cup fromMiss Raphael at the prom.50,000,000IntellectualsCan’t Be WrongJimmy’s1172 E. 55th wearing awhite ankle-length gowntiered with rows of narrowruffled lace, received an engravedcup from Joan Raphael, chairmanof the Wash Prom committee.Deleon steals showFeatured singer Johnny Des¬mond, whose arrival by plane wasmade uncertain by the weather,failed to receive as much applauseas Tom Deleon, prom guest whojoined Desmond in a song andstole the show. Desmond’s appear¬ance was frequently interspersedwith appeals to purchase his rec¬ords.Chancellor Kimpton and MissAnderson led the grand marchdown the Knickerbocker hotel’sglass dance floor, lit from under¬neath with changing coloredlights. Mrs. Kimpton and John N.Dahle, Miss Anderson’s escort, followed, to the music of the Chi¬cago fight march by Phil Levant’seleven-piece orchestra.Candidates get braceletsEach of the seven candidatespicked in two eliminations fromthe nominees of student organiza¬tions, received a sterling silverID bracelet, engraved with hen in¬itials and “Wash Prom, 1955.”They were wrapped in white witha red ribbon.Miss U of C, chosen in an all-eampus election, was also award¬ed a bouquet of American Beautyroses, presented by Dale Levy,president of Student Union, whichmade the arrangements for the52nd annual Wash Prom.Cat barely out of bagOnly one unauthorized persondiscovered the identity of MissU of C before the 11:30 announce¬ment Saturday evening. She wasNO 7-9071Student Rate 50cHeld over through SundayVenic. UgetsuKim Festival• . . with the stors of RashomonFriday and SaturdayViva Zapata — 5:30, 9:00Ugetsu — 7:25, 11:00Hyde park theatre lake parkat 53rdbranoo Viva ZapataElia Karan, direchon, and John Steinbeck, scriptSundayViva Zapata — 1:45, 5:15, 9:00Ugetsu —3:40, 7:15, 10:55. rriestley sAn Inspector CallsStarting Monday, February 28Alastair Sim in J. B. Priestley'sFamous intriguinghit play"ABSORBING . . . SUPERB . . . Mr. Priestley's story and his technique for spinning it is absorbing. Hiscraftsmanship is absolutely superb." ■— N.Y. Times"Intelligently and arrestingly played. ALASTAIR SIM is a delightfully caustic performer." — N.Y. PostMarlon Brando in Stanley Kramer's“1 The Wild OneAn unique off-beat movie mode by Hollywood's most daring producer, who has proven again and againthat the most interesting entertainments come out of vital subjects . . . strikes at the heart of a newProblem in The Wild One and again creates a brilliant, gripping, motion picture. Marlon Brando is theonly man who could play The Wild One ... the role fits him like a glove. Beth Kinyon, undergraduate stu¬dent and president of Mortar¬board, the women’s club whichnominated Miss Anderson. MissKinyon was recuperating in Bill¬ings following an operation. “Ileft a note for Beth, telling herwho won,” Marie Schroer, chair¬man of the queen committee, ad¬mitted just before the dance.Miss U of C's party and theirescorts preceded Dean Robert M.Strozier and his wife, Mr. andMrs. Arther H. Kiendl, and the150 other couples who marchedthe grand march.Miss UC’s court toldTrudy Martin, escorted by Don¬ald Stewart, and wearing a whitelace gown with threads of goldinterwoven, led the court. AnnPeyton, wearing a red taffetagown, was escorted by Dr. Gun¬ther Bucheleres.Laurence Lichtenstein escortedCarolyn Eggert, who wore a dressof silk shantung with a whisperof pink. Rhinestones accented thebodice of the white net gown wTornby Rosemary Galli, escorted inthe march by Albert Fortier.Mary Ellen Leiberman was es¬corted by Bill Cohen as she tookher place in the grand march,wearing a beige chiffon formalwith a white - trimmed bodice.Black taffeta was worn by Mi¬chelle Herrman as Sander Abendescorted her in the march.Hal Levy, UC student, enter¬tained during a 12:30 orchestrabreak with a rendition of the “So¬liloquy” from Carousel. MaryJoan Spiegal, also a student, ac¬companied him.Foreign educators attendUC seminar on educationThirteen top-ranking foreign educators from eight coun¬tries are currently attending a seminar on university educa¬tion at UC.The seminar, which runs ties in Burma, India, Korea,through March 30, is designed Greece, Sweden, Iraq. Egypt, andto give the educators, all of whom ^ urkey.hold high administrative posts in They will attend group and indi-their own countries, opportunity vidual conferences on the organ-to study and discuss the system ization and administration of UC,of university education in the Un- as well as studies of the Col-ited States. lege, schools and divisions, andThe thirteen educators, in the (he student life.photo by Student UnionMiss University of Chicago of1955, Margaret Anderson.Martin Buberto be topic ofGilkey lectureThe Reverend Charles W. Gil¬key, first dean of Rockefellerchapel at UC, retired since 1947,will deliver the fifth annualCharles W. Gilkey lecture onTuesday. The Gilkey lectureshipwas established in his honor bythe B’nai B’rith Hillel foundationat C in 1950. to bring to the quad¬rangles leading thinkers in boththe Jewish and Christian faiths.Dr. Gilkey will speak on “Someevidence of the influence of Mar¬tin Buber on contemporary Chris¬tian thought.” and will be intro¬duced by Rabbi Louis Mann ofSinai congregation. The lectureis at 8:15 p.m. in Breasted hall,Oriental institute, and is open tothe public without charge.United States on Fulbright andSmith-Mundt grants, are rectors, The seminar is sponsored bythe University’s Committee on In¬deans and professors of universi- ternational Exchanges, in cooper¬ation with the conference board of'Debate'...(from page 1)debate, they will meet the Univer¬sity of Colorado, Stanford, theUniversity of Houston, and theformer national champion, St.Olaf.They will debate a great varietyof topics, among them recognitionof China, a question whose de-batability has presumably createdno public furor in England.In the past the Student Forumhas entertained teams from Eng¬land, India, and Australia. Ar¬rangements are now being madeto bring a team here from Cam¬bridge in the fall. Associated Research councils.Westberg to talkat RockefellerThe Reverend Granger E. West¬berg. chaplain of the Universityof Chicago clinics, will preach atthe 11 a.m. Sunday service inRockefeller chapel. *Westberg’s sermon topic will be“A next step in ecumenicity.” Hewas appointed first full-time chap¬lain to the University clinics in1952. In addition, he serves as as¬sociate professor of the Univer¬sity’s federated theological fac¬ulty.THANKS...to all of those who madethe Wash Prom a success.SUfmge 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 25, 1955Married studentcommunitiesWe are now on campus, and fac¬ing some problems which are un¬doubtedly not new for other mar¬ried couples, but seem to need tobe stated again. First, there is noway for newly arrived couples toget to know other married people.Friends are ordinarily made indorms and fraternity houses.There seem to be no activities formarried, people.Second, we had to go fifteenblocks south to find “living” hous¬ing. The prefabs aye passable, asemergency housing; indeed, somehave been fixed up quite comfort¬ably. But they are hard to keepclean, poorly furnished, and thespace heaters are dangers (whichis why we didn't move into aprefab).Finally, we think married stu¬dents should be able to live in“communities,” as students indorms do. Living together, wecould help each other with theproblems peculiar to student fam¬ilies. Perhaps some apartment buildings could be obtained withthis in view.A project of this scope mustrest with the University, but wemarried students, with the helpof (Student Government and theMaroon, could do a lot, with somesort of organization, toward stat¬ing these problems, and trying tosolve most of them ourselves.Lois ami Dayton PryorHousing info wantedAfter placing through a copy ofyour publication I feel encouragedto present a problem to you eventhough at the present time I amnot with the University. I am serv¬ing with the Army here in Georgiaand hope to be released in timefor the Spring Quarter. What Iconsidered to be well in advance,last September, I applied inno¬cently for a University apartment.Since then I have learned aboutthe situation in this field and havewondered and pondered how mywife and I are going to go aboutfinding a place within the shortspan between March 18 andMarch 28. the dates of my releaseand of the beginning of the Quar¬ter, respectively.It occurs to me that other stu¬dents must have encountered thesame difficulty and that I mightdraw from their experiences re¬garding living arrangements for married peoj^e without childrenand about the social situation forcouples generally.I should like to ask your con¬sideration for possibly printingthis letter in hopes that some mar¬ried students might write to me.Dal H. SchaeferClarifiesSRP's positionI would like to clarify SRP’sposition regarding the filling ofvacancies in Student Government.SRP’s policy, on this question, hasbeen (and still is), as follows:“That SRP believes that seatswhich are held by an elected partyshould be maintained by thatparty.” This has been our policyin order to avoid what has hap¬pened in the past; the situationwhere the majority party, holdinga slim edge, packs the Assemblyat the expense of minority partyvacancies and contrary to the vot¬ing wishes of the student body.Now in this year’s lopsided As¬sembly, the majority party haschosen to fill certain vacancieswith individuals not from theirparty. This choice was madeeither because they were unableor unwilling to fill these vacancieswith individuals pledged to theirplatform. SRP feels that the im- Issued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicogo Moroon, at the publica¬tion office, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones:Editorial Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1010; Business and Advertising Offices'Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions bymail, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.Allen R. Janger editor-in-chiefRichard E. Ward managing editorWilliam M. Brandon business managerportant point is that the electedparty has been given a chance tomaintain their elected seats, thefact that they have chosen not todo so is another matter.SRP, at the Caucus of 12 De¬cember 1954, passed, therefore,the following motion: “That ifthat party (won the seat) desiresto fill vacancies with individualsnot from their party, then SRPwill accept those seats.” 11 is inaccordance with this policy thatMr. Rosenthal and I have accept¬ed seats in the Assembly.If the majority party truly feelsthat SRP’s voting “percentage shows a segment of this rampiwwhich deserves a voice in ourschool government” (see MissMetros’ letter of last week), thenthe actions of the Government inelecting their eleven members tothe All-Campus Civil LibertiesCommittee was perhaps merely acase of bad arithmetic. The Gov¬ernment elected —over the objec¬tions of some in their own party—10 ISL’ers to ACCLC and onerepresentative from SRP.Don R. Anderson(SG-Soc. Sci.)Secretary. StudentRepresentative PartyKimpton address text givenIt is a strange contradiction within the University of Chicago that its great reputationhas come down through the years from its distinguished graduate training and research,but at the same time it is one of the very few major universities that has taken under¬graduate education seriously. In most major universities undergraduate education is del¬egated to a combination of impoverished and inexperienced graduate students and facultymembers who regard it as an odious chore that interrupts their important function of re¬search and graduate teaching.But the great debates over thepast half century at the Uni¬versity of Chicago have ragedabout undergraduate teachingand curriculum, and perhaps thisis the place to remind you that in¬numerable changes have been made inthe program since the beginning andwill continue to be made. Upon thewhole, all the changes have been pro¬ductive of beneficial results and, Imight add, of undergraduate suspicion.I have two difficulties of an oppositekind in talking about our new under¬graduate program and the reasons thatbrought it about. The first is that therationale and objectives of the programare so simple that a statement on themseems to prove only that we have a firmgrasp of the obvious. The second rea¬son. interestingly enough, is that theprogram is 60 complex that it is pecu¬liarly difficult to make a definitivestatement. On the side of simplicity,I have developed an allergy to the in¬flated and abstract prose with whicheducational institutions describe intheir catalogs or their self-studies whatthey are doing or should be doing. Wehave become so victimized by our ownpedagueee that we often conceal evenfrom ourselves what our rather simpleobjectives are. I do believe that the oldMark Hopkins definition of logs andeducation would sound something likethis today: ‘ Education requires the on¬going maintenance of an appropriateequilibrium between the teacher quateacher and the student qua student,to the end that meaningful and dyna- nition of this uniqueness of each in-mic interpersonal relations are fostered dividual that creates much of the Eng-equiliaterally in an envlronent of com- lish common law, and it is the funda-monality.” However complex the learn- mental respect that we have for the photo by GrossmanChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton disctisoes hit address with Allendanger, editor-in-chief of the Maroon. The address given in Mandelhail Tuesday evening was on general education at UC.develop within the student his capacityfor recognizing and following up anindividual preference or predilection_ _ ^ which Is peculiarly his. It may be read¬ing process is and it is a very complex individual that creates our concern for ing Kant or colloidal chemistry or rat-- - - - .... ... .—*- tling some bones in an anthropologicallaboratory, but the student shouldundertake it not because all men shouldstate, whether Hitler’s or that of Soviet share this educational experience butpsychological process indeed, I really such things as civil rights and academicbelieve that what we are trying to ac- freedom. Perhaps the reason most ofcomplish can be described very simply, us resist the idea of a totalitarianr J Uivlow’i- /VW that CnvlotBut let me turn to my second diffi- Russia, is because we don’t wish to beeulty. However simple it is for me to brainwashed and molded and created because he has decided that this ac¬tivity is important and interesting tohim as an individual.into someone else’s image of the waywe ought to behave and think. « ♦ ,These are the two aspects of man May I introduce two qualificationswhich have been recognized by almost here by way of clarifying my meaningdescribe, I must remind you that manydifferent persons—members of the col¬lege, divisional and school faculties—have had a voice in the construction ofthe programs. The result represents a _ __ , „remarkable act of academic statesman- all philosophers, and the literature is This program has nothing to do withship, and the objectives, though essen- full of such titles as "The World and ■ *-’*—•“— ’*— —tially similar, would be described some- the Individual,” “Science and Solitude,”what differently by each individual. "Man and Society.” Men have their pub-The new undergraduate program is the He or political or social life that theyresult of the collective wisdom of the share with their fellows, but withUniversity of Chicago, and it is not the Thoreau they have their Walden pondcreation by fiat of a single person or of which they possess as individuals,a coterie. This fact, may I add, is oneof the sources of its strength, but italso makes it difficult to describe tothe satisfaction of everyone. But having made this distinction, higher specialization or vocationalism ora trade school diploma. I am talkingabout liberal education, and it is mycontention that one element of it isthe requirement that a student demon-trate his capacity to work independentlyin a field or program of study whichhe has freely chosen. Secondly, it isridiculous to asume that these two fun-may I proced at once to blur it. Human L r men Mils of a liberal education areexperience is a rich and complex thing ti8and is not divided into two air-tight 5 *h* * * compartments. In all our social actions ^***®T5n* »~™ itilf68/rtrA__ ___ InHiviriimHcm with iik COUTSC ill t>llC hunfl&niti6S, lOT f XdHipl6,What should we expect of an under- and man’s individuality is changed and wl?lch has as its ™«in objective to de¬graduate education, at the University enriched bv his nartlcination in the ve*°P a commonality of communica-of Chicago or inded any great univer- social community Nonetheless It Is a tion and appreciation, will inevitablysity in the world today? An undergrad- meaningful distinction, for there areuate education beyond serving as an certain important concerns that we ^f'caU ‘d*.d'*f tx£a *w a „ Jf*1 thotend in itself, should be preparation for .'hare witb our felow man and equally arts. I suggest, on the other hand, thatadult life, and this leads us on to the important concerns that belong to us *8nquestion of what you wish to obtain primarily as individuals,from life and how you will and shouldlead your lives. Even the most cursory If it is both these lives that we shouldglance at man’s life in nature and so- lead, it follows that undergraduate edu geometry may well promote the stu¬dent’s knowledge and skills which heshould share with all men. These arematters of difference in degree andcation in the liberal arts~and sciences emphasis, and if we have had a faultshould play an important part in de¬veloping both of these phases of human in the past, it is perhaps treating thesethings as if they belonged to totallyciety suggests that human existence canbe profitably considered under two mainaspects—its public and its private side.From one point of view men share cer¬tain fundamental needs, problems andends. As a social animal, man must live an understanding of and participation marks to our new undergraduate curexperience. An education that prepares different worlds,a student for life should fit him for The relevance of these general re-rlculum should not be difficult to de¬tect. We now have quite an assortmentlows. These are complementary objec¬tives and every student has the rightwith his fellow man, communicate with in the more important fields of demo-him, work with him, share decisions cratic thought and action and at thewith him, and even understand and same time provide for the cultivation of of pathways — perhaps I should'"callappreciate him. Perhaps this is what those unique gifts and interests which them toll highways—to the bachelor’sPlato meant in The Republic when, in set the individual apart from his feldescribing the ideal state, he said thatit was marked by the fact that "friendshave all things in common.” But fromanother point of view each man isunique and special, firmly resisting allefforts to consign him to some com¬munal category. It was a needed correc¬tion of Plato perhaps that made Aris¬totle describe moral virtue in a highlyindividualistic way, recognizing that degree, but each of these differentroads reflects the view that a soundliberal education consists of general andto demand that his university pursue individual elements. In each case thethem wisely and well. In discharging the student receives a general education,first of these functions, the University not through an assortment of requiredbelieves that educated men and women electives or field distribution or similarshould possess in common skill and nonsense, but through a thoughtfuljudgment in the use of indispensable and substantial program of generalintellectual tools and a grasp of the education which has been evolved andirwir.ni* .I* niff*- orwi tv.,.* ~ . fdttg in the great fields of tested at Chicago over the past quartert1hls R good h«man inquiry. In discharging the sec- of a century. The College remains charg-and a significant thing. It is a recog- ond obligation, the University should ed with the primary responsibility for the University's work in general educa-' tion, and our program remains uniqueamong the universities of the world.At the same time the new curriculumoffers the undergraduate the oppor¬tunity and responsibility for testingand developing his powers in a fieldwhich commands his special interest.Thus the joint degrees combine thework of the College with the specializedprograms of the divisions of the bio¬logical sciences, the humanities or thephysical sciences.• • •Another variation combines the gen¬eral courses of the college with a year'sstudy in the diviison of the social sci¬ences and the professional schools ofthe University. It Is equally true of thecollege AB degree, with tutorial studyin which a council composed of bothcollege and divisional faculty membersdirects students in a year of individualwork designed to meet their specialneeds and interests.There is already one interesting con¬sequence of our new recognition of thedifference in talents and interests ofour undergraduates. In the past, manyof us have been struck by the prepond¬erance in our student body of youngpeople convinced before they enteredthe University of the merits of thekind of education they were to receive—salvation preceding matriculation, as itwere. But there were so very few ofthem! The majority of superior youngpeople who were considering an under¬graduate institution were already drawnto special interests in archaeology orchemistry or mathematics, and. thoughsuch students may have been wrong orbadly advised, they were both strong-willed and numerous—and they wentelsewhere. Under our new arrangementwe are once again attracting such stu¬dents who have a clearly developedspecial bent and In most cases with noprior commitment to the idea of a bal¬anced general education. In our asso¬ciation with these students it is ourproblem to see to it that, thoughbreadth was initially no part of theireducational purpose, it Is a consequenceof their arrival at Chicago. I wouldeven suggest that this extension fromthe already convinced to the initiallyindifferent or even skeptical may proveto be one of the most significant re¬sults following from the introductionof the new curriculum. If this newattractiveness to a wider variety ofsuperior students is. as some suggest,a lowering of standards, then I amhappy to see them lowered.A criticism that I have heard of ournew undergraduate program is that itseems to lack the tidiness, the neat¬ness. the uniformity of our old. It re¬minds me of a Britisher's descriptionof the institute of human relations atYale, abandoned in more recent years.He said that he didn't have the slight¬est idea what they were doing, he onlyknew that they were all doing it to¬gether. The fact that our present pro¬gram has a shaggy and unkempt qual¬ity does not worry me at all. so longas underneath it there is a thread ofrationality that holds it all together.It does not worry me. for example, thatthe student w'ho enters the Universitywith a particular interest already iden¬tified proceeds simultaneously with thegeneral and individual emphases In hisprogram. I see nothing reprehensible,either practically or theoretically, about.a young biologist setting to work in hisspecial field and concurrently encount¬ering the other kinds of educationalexperiences which are designed to pro¬duce the well-rounded man and citizen.It happens to be the case that manystudents do identify their special inter¬ests very early in the course of theirundergraduate experience, and theyneed early to develop the knowledgeand skills which are fundamental totheir more specialized work. Conversely,I see nothing at all wrong with thestudent who selects rather late in hisundergraduate education the area inwhich he has a special Interest and com¬petence and uses the broad generalcourses to determine the field of hisspecial concern.It has been suggested also by somecritics that in the interest of a tidyblueprint we should have arranged anexact and uniform proportion betweenthe general and the more specializedstudies so that a formula might havebeen developed and students fitted tothis procrustean bed. It would havebeen prettier, I have no doubt, andcertainly easier, but I am not sure that either of these objectives has anythingto do with education. It would take amaster draftsman of a kind not yet pro¬duced to draw a solid black line be¬tween the kind of education whichequips one generally for the affairs oflife and the kind of education whichministers to Individual purposes. Inour undergraduate program, as in edu¬cation generally, while there is an areain which general studies are dominantand another area in which special stud¬ies are uppermost, there is a very gen¬erous expanse of overlap. As I havesaid before, the general curriculum ofthe College has made an lmprcssnecontribution in the past toward devel¬oping the kind of competence that, wecall specialization, and this was provedby the results of the Graduate Recordexamination.We knew also that Instruction Inthe divisions and professional schools,though primarily directed toward spe¬cialized objectives, has served to enlargeand strengthen breadth of understand¬ing. clarity of statement, and discrim¬ination in judgment. If liberal educa¬tion addresses Itself to both genera]and individual objectives, and if It mayproceed concurrently on these twofronts which to some extent occupycommon ground, then we should ieelno concern about some superficial un¬tidiness. A magic formula, dictatingexact proportions of general and spe¬cial studies, could Of cotirse have beenselected, but the particular formulaof blend would be arbitrarily chosen—about as relevant to the real problemin 'hand as the price of potatoes inIreland in 1923. It Is the hard way. butwe chose it, namely, looking closely ateach special area and varying the blendto meet the individual case. In easeswhere the area of overlap is substantial,one solution to the problem of articu¬lating general studies and special stud¬ies Is appropriate. This holds, for ex¬ample. In my own field of philosophy.In other cases, a very different solutionis called‘for. in the languages or thenatural sciences, significant individualstudy can only proceed where there isan opportunity for extensive prelim¬inary work in a special field, and sincewe seriously intend to obtain this sec¬ond major objective of liberal educa¬tion, we must adjust the student’s pro¬gram to reflect this. Perhaps I shouldadd that admitting qualified youngpeople prior to high school graduationprovides a further element of untidi¬ness. This principle of flexibility, how¬ever shaggy and unkempt it may makeus appear to the tidy, arithmeticalmind, is in my judgment one of thereally strong points in the new pro¬gram. Symmetry is aesthetically gratify¬ing but it is no virttie if it Involveseducational dislocation, and I for oneam convinced that the roughness oftexture here reflects an underlying ra¬tionality.Finally, it has been suggested thatsomething of the spirit of learning andintellectuality has disappeared in ourundergraduate program with the newreorganization. This greatly puzzles me,if true, for I can only say that we haveat the University of Chicago in thenew program the greatest opportunitythat exists today in undergraduate edu¬cation. The small liberal arts college ofhigh quality has traditionally done asplendid Job in the more general as¬pects of liberal education, but it haslacked the personnel and the facilitiesto allow opportunity for the more spe¬cialized needs and interests of its stu¬dents. On the other hand, the majoruniversities have provided opportunityfor meeting the more specialized inter¬ests and concerns of their students, btitthe general phases of undergraduateeducation have been ill-taught andhave usually depended upon somewretched assortment or dlstribtition ofelectives. At the University of Chicagowe have developed over a quarter of »century a thoughtful and substantialprogram of general education in whichthere is exciting teaching and a livelysense of participation. Since our floorsopened in 1892 we have possessed great-specialists, and today our facilities forthe pursuit of the more specializeddisciplines are unrivalled. Put together,these things present a great curriculumaddressed to the major purposes of lib¬eral education.February 25, 1955 THI CHICAGO MAROON Pa|« 55530 harperGifts • Gourmet's Corner •Our collection of jewelry gets better all the time.Dozens of new designs in earrings for $1.25 a pairare now in stock. We have a new line of earringsfor $2.50 a pair that displays transparencies in en¬ameling used with great freshness and skill. Allare hand-made, of course, and the low price makesit difficult to resist owning many.UC club honorsCzech leader,former professorMasaryk club will commem¬orate the 105th anniversaryof Thomas G. Masarvk’s birthin an open program Wednesdayat 8:30 p.m. in International househomeroom. Admission is free.George C. Carson, professor ofmodern history at UC, will give abrief lecture on Masaryk’s contri¬bution in the fields of history andphilosophy. Frantisek Schwarzen-berg, professor of political scienceat Loyola university, will tell howMasaryk, one time professor atthis University, founded the Cze¬choslovak Republic with the helpof the-United States.Lilian Kasparik and Jirina Tu-zar will sing two of Dvorak’sMoravian duets and severalCzechoslovak national folk songs. Discusses folkloreThe utilization of folkloreand myth in modem fictionalworks will be the subject of afree lecture next Wednesdayat 4:30 pm. in social science122.Given by Northrop Frye ofVictoria college, University ofToronto, the talk is part of anannual exchange of lecturersbetween that university andthe UC English department.Frye, who has written a bookon William Blake and editedseveral of Milton’s poems, waseducated at Toronto and Ox¬ford. Questionnaire tests reactionsto fraternity rush procedureFraternity rushing will be subject to a critical going over, both for and against, by under¬graduate men who recently became eligible for rushing.All undergraduate men who became eligible for the first time this quarter will receive aform from the educational survey commission of Student Government.The commission hopes to obtain sufficient information to form a few generalizationswhich may be tested in subsequent, more intensive studies in the area of student activities,according to James Winkle- rrr r~—:man, chairman of ESC. Why or why not? Did you pledge? w°uld kf ^omPlet|d promptly and’.... , returned to the Student Govem-The questionnaire asks such Why or why not? Winkleman ex- ment officPquestions as, ‘’Did you rush? pressed the hope that the formsDebate Hutchins plan changesin bull-session style in lounge An estimated 123 men havepledged UC fraternities this quar¬ter. Zeta Beta Tau led the fieldwith 24 pledges, with Phi GammaDelta second with 19. Other fra¬ternities pledged eight to 13 stu¬dents each.Forum list told;A debate which combined all the outspokenness of an after-hours bull session with much team places fifth, J . of the level-headedness of a formal debate was presented by Student Forum members inA circle of amateur dramatists Reynolds club lounge yesterday afternoon. Fi”alists for the Student Forumwill read a passage from Karel ^ . speaking prize contest are JerryC apek s book President Masaryk ras ov^ e opic gp^^gj.g according to the style of and effect relationship between Reichman, Joseph Engel, Jan Nar-Tells His Story. “Resolved: the Chicago plan true old-Emrlish debates. the “Hutchins’ plan” and de- veson, and Michael Stanley. TheseAt the end a gioup of girls in nutlivpH jtc iiopfnlnpos”Czechoslovak national costumes haS outllved lts usefulness NarveSon stated that the tra-will serve refreshments and tradi- were on *"e affirmative side, ditional “Hutchins plan” was suc-tional Czech kolatehe. Rogei Bowen and Jan Narveson, cessfuj as an ideal but not as anThe event inaugurates a series on the negative side, Martha Sil- actuality. The plan, although ac- centered'' around his’ belief that debaters won five while losingof Masaryk celebrations in Chi- yerman and Mike Stanley; and on OP|Aratinfr tho trpnd to lihoral pdn liberal education is a necessary three to tie for fifth place amongcago, which will be climaxed by unpredictable side, over "f I f f u' framework for a thorough knowl- the twenty-five participants. Thethe dedication of the Masaryk me- unpieuiudme »iue, cation throughout the country, edee of SDeeialized education A<s affirmative team of Roger Bowenmorial on the Midway, opposite 35 spectators who were invited to ended in repelling potential stu- proojr stated that 99 per cent and Edward Renshaw was unde-the International house, this May. ask questions and interrupt dents from UC. Narveson’s j:ause of liberally educated graduates feated> vanquishing Ball’ State,plan” a n d de¬creased enrollment was received f°ur will compete next Friday,with noisy skepticism by the audi- * * *ence. At the D e P a u w tournamentStanley’s defense of the old BA last weekend the Student ForumA Campus-to-Career Case HistoryHe figures for the futureIt’s James KirchhofT’s job to lookahead. As a Plant Engineer withIllinois Bell Telephone Company, hehelps estimate telephone equipmentneeds years in advance.For example . .. when a new realestate development is in the planningstage, Jim figures how much tele¬phone equipment it will need whenit reaches its full growth. His esti¬mate is based on his knowledge of the equipment’s potential plus fore¬casts provided him of the area's rateof development. He then makes acomplete report that becomes ’basis of plans for the future.Jim can take a look at his ownfuture, too. In telephone engineeringhe can see a great many opportunitiesopening up in the next five years ...ten years. He can pick the one hewants and start working toward it.Jim graduated from Northwestern Universityas an E.E., class of 1952. His progress sincethen is typical of college men who have chosentelephone careers. If you’d he interested in asimilar opportunity, see your Placement Of¬ficer for full details. There are also openingswith other Bell telephone companies, with BellTelephone Laboratories, or Western Electricand the Sandia Corporation. BELLTELEPHONESYSTEM Preregistrationfrom March 7-18Advance registration for resi-liberally oplaced above the median in spe- Wayne, Illinois college, and Ohiocialized fields in national college State.graduate examinations. Further- ^he tournament was won bymore, he added, it is the liberally Wabash college who, with a 7-1educated person who is conscious- record squeezed by Ohio State,ly being selected for managerial whose single loss to Chicago costpositions in business. them the tournament on points.The sort of pseudo-specialization The other two leaders were Wash-embodied in the new BA plan is inSton and Northwestern, both ofleading the UC down the path to which won six out of e‘ght*becoming a trade school, saidStanley.The old BA plan was too rigid,Bowen criticized. It insisted thatevery student should be fit intothe same pattern and made littleallowances for individual differ¬ences.Bowen closed the debate at 2:30, dent students has been scheduledannouncing that the Forum had for March 7 to 18.planned other English-style de- Students of the various schoolsbates to be held soon. will register according to the fol¬lowing schedule: March 7-11, lawIJ nlv/zac school, humanities, businessVJOUianer ylVGS school, social sciences, graduatef -vIL- library school, and social servicebuuuiuyy lallv. administration; March 14, 15, and“Toward a clinical sociology” federated theological schools;will be the topic of an open lec- and March 14-18, physical scien-ture to be given by Alvin W. ?es> biological sciences, and med-Gouldner, tonight at 8 in social *ca^ school.science 201. Admission is free. The registration hours in allGouldner, editor of Studies in deans’ offices, except the businessLeadership and several articles scbo°k are 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. andon bureaucracy, teaches at the 1*30 to 4:30 p.m. Business schoolUniversity of Illinois. The lecture bours are 0 a.m. to noon and 1 tois presented by the Society for 4 p.m.Social Research. After registration in the officeof the appropriate dean of stu¬dents, the student will registerat the registrar’s office, the hoursof which are 8:30 to 11:45 a.m. and1 to 4 p.m.Payments will be made at thebursar’s office, the hours of whichhave been extended, on March 29and 30 only, to 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.RELIANCE CAMERA &PHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63rd St.BU 8-6040Pa$e 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 25, 1955CalendarFriday, February 25Mathematical Biology meeting, "On Re¬action Kinetics at Interfaces,” PeterGreene, graduate student, 5741 Drexel,4:30 p.m.University Concert, University Chambermusic players playing Mozart, Shield,and Britten, Mandel hall, 8:30 p.m.Movie, “Salt of the Earth,’* sponsored bySRP, Social Science 122, 7:30 and 9:15p.m. 50c admission.Humboldt club meeting, slides and com¬mentary on a trip to Germany, andrefreshments, Wleboldt commons, 4p.m., donations on refreshments.Hillel meeting. Oneg Shabbat, readingsfrom the works of Sholom Alelchem,5715 Woodlawn, 8:30 p.m.Saturday, February 26Master lesson in modern dance, MarkRyder and Emily Frankel, Ida Noyes,1:30 p.m. Members, $1.00; studentmembers, 50c; non-members, $2.00;student non-members, $1.00, admis¬sion.Square dance, sponsored by Circles andSquares, Ida Noyes, 8 pm. 25c ad¬mission.Sunday, February 27Episcopal communion service, Bondchapel, 8:30 a.m. Lutheran commun¬ion service, Hilton chapel, 10 a.m.University religious service, ReverendGranger E. Westberg, Rockefellerchapel, 11 a.m.Voung socialist League meeting, “TheFar Eastern Political Situation,” SidLens, director of AF of L local 329 andRobert Crane, assistant professor ofHistory, Ida Noyes, 4:15 p.m.Movie. “The Long Voyage Home,-’(American), B-J lounge, 7 and 9:30p.m. 25c admission.young Friends meeting, discussion onthe denial of exit permits to twoChinese students, 5615 Woodlawn,7:30 p m.Channing club meeting, “the Moral As¬pects of Community Redevelopment,”Mavnard Kreugar, speaker, 5658 Wood¬lawn, 6:30 p.m.NAACP meeting, panel discussion onBrotherhood week, Ida Noyes, 3:30p.m.Collegiate Sinfonietta rehearsal, Inter¬national house, 10 a.m.JSL caucus, Ida Noyes library, 7 p.m.SRP caucus, Ida Noyes, East lounge,7:30 p.m.Monday, February 28Movie, “Caged Women,” -(Swedish), In¬ternational house, 7 and 9 p.m.Organizational meeting for a campusanarchist group, 5838 Woodlawn, 6:45p.m.Tuesday, March 1Student Forum; University of Chicagovs. University of London, Resolved:That Freedom of Speech is Substan¬tially Decreasing in the United StatesToday, International house, 8 p.m.Concert band rehearsal, 5283 Kenwood.Student Government meeting, Lawnorth, 7:30 p.m., everyone welcome.Rocket Society meeting, Eckhart 202,7:30 p.m.Lecture, "Some Evidence on the Influ¬ence of Martin Buber in the Contem¬porary Christian Thought,” CharlesW. Gilkey, sponsored by Hillel,Breasted hall, 8:15 p.m.Wednesday, March 2Movie, “Salt of the Earth,” sponsoredby SRP, Social Science 122, 6:45, 8:30,10:15 p.m. 50c admission.Pre-med club meeting, election of offi¬cers for spring, Abbot 133, 4 p.m.Thursday, March 3Movies, “The City,” and “The River,*’sponsored by the Planning club, SocialScience 122, 8 p.m.Movie, “Harvey,” (American i, Inter¬national house, 7 and 9 p.m.TYPEWRITERSCLEANED ORREPAIREDWritten guarantee anall work tor one yearInspector and Estimator on dutyfrom 4 p.m. till 10 p.m.If you bring in this od withyour typewriter, you will re¬ceive free, a beautiful plostictypewriter cover.Discount of 10%for all students Classified AdsFor RentCouple to share very large house withseveral female graduate students. Rentvery reasonable. Call Int. House, Room619 or 623.Two bedroom home near Dunes Statepark. Large living, dining room. Avail¬able immediately. Death in family. NearSouth Shore R.R. Call CHesterton2464, days.Ride Wanted Do your classes leave something to bedesired: Come to the new. better pre¬ceptorial, University Theater's produc¬tion of Ibsen’s Wild Duck. March 9-13.LostRonson lighter. Black. Initials SRF.Lost Thursday, Feb. 17. Call HY 3-0786.Sheila.Lost chemistry book by Schlessinger inKent. Please contact Katherine Potter,Green Hail. WantedStudent 21 or over to drive stationwagon for school, 2:45-7:15 p.m Mon,-Thurs. $1.25 per hour. BU 8-7900.Graduate student needs room m returnfor baby-sitting, tutoring', secretarialwork, or what have you. Call F. Floyd.PLaza 2-6700, Room 132.String and wind musicians of moderateability for small chamber group. CallExt. 2855 between 12:30 and 4:00.A portable typewriter in good condition.Call Phyllis Schwadron, Foster Hall, be-twen 6 and 7 p.m. Must sell furniture by March 1. Livingroom and dinette sets. Other pieces.Excellent condition. Call DR 3-7413mornings.Modern sofa-bed, matching easy chairblond wood trim. Good condition. Rea¬sonable. ST 3-2258, after 6 p.m.Men’s black hockey ice skates withblade protectors. Size 8. Like new fa4-3711.12'4 inch television. $35: 9x12 rug, $10;lady's English bicycle, $30. BU 8-1454^evenings.Ride wanted to New York. To leave onor near March 18. Call Gail Westgateafter 8 p.m. BU 8-8424.Ride to New York on the 18th or 19th ofMarch. Cannot drive, but will shareexpenses. Call Joan Behrensohn. BU8-9165. ServicesPersonal Expert typing done—thesis, term papers,etc. HY 3-2066. Mrs. L. Farmilant. Rea¬sonable rates.Russian language tutoring and transla¬tions. Ml 3-7392, after 6 p.m.FoundFound female Siamese cat. Appearedshortly before Christmas. Vicinity SouthSide Midway and Ingleside. Anyoneknowing, call DO 3-1285 after 6.Hallam: Hurricane’s father is dead, butwe’re not sad. He's riding high on theblack streetcar. Quinn.Wanted: Everyone on campus to seeSalt of the Earth. Tonight and Wednes¬day evening, Soc Sci 122.•>"The Future of the WorldRests in the East ..."— Just East of the I.C. 7: .;ffleinre^ Sllll Dial1601 E. 55th St.la a*:,:Sjfe fjrft t/mm PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3 4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET 1948 Pontiac, hydra-matic drive, radio,heater, two-door. Just had completetune-up. $175. Karl Rodman, DR 3-01581026 Hyde Park blvd.super xx film. Outdated by about three ——months. Will sell VERY cheap Come in Subscriptions to all MAGAZINES. Newand bargain. Maroon business office and renewal. Bargains. Julius Karpen,Mon., Tues. or Wed. afternoons Room 411, B.J.., Ml 3-6000.For Sale16 nun Kodak Kodachrome, super x andLAUNDRY SPECIALSHIRTS 11c eachDeluxe Finished when Included with9 Lbs. Wash and Dry Only 89cKWIK-WAY Cash & CarryLAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING1214 East 61st St.I Between Woodlown Cr Kimbork)COLLEGE HUMOR NOT FOR SISSIES!“I (tilled Malenkov 'Fat-Boy' ""The float f amous Campus Murder!'9In the fabulous February SHAFT!Get it today at U of C Bookstore!' G. Rci*in, Bus. Mgr.SHAFTBOURGEAUS’1202 E. 55th St.HY 3-7912P^COMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.• Bar-be-cue ribs• Bar-be-cue chickenDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525 The beoutiful Bel Air Sport Coupe with Body by FisherIIt’$ highway robbery!For sheer fun out on the road,414-Chevrolet’s stealing the thunderfrom the high-priced cars!Up to this year, maybe there were reasons for wantingone of the higher-priced cars. If you demanded some¬thing really special in the way of driving fun, yousimply had to pay a premium to get it.Not any more! The Motoramic Chevrolet has changedall that. Who could wish for more'excitement than the new 162-h.p. “Turbo-Fire V8” delivers? (For thosewho do, 180-h.p. is optional at extra cost in all V8models.) Chevrolet also offers the two highest poweredsixes in its field.Come in and see how the Motoramic Chevrolet isstealing the thunder from the high-priced cars!motoramicSEE YOUR CHEVROLET DEALERFebruary 25, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Plan Purim carnival at Hillelto raise funds for five groups“Games, prizes, refreshments and dancing will be in storefor guests at the Hillel Purim carnival on Sunday, March 6,”stated Brina Jaffee, carnival chairman. The carnival is spon¬sored by Hillel foundation tcrraise funds for World Univer¬sity Service, CARE, Univer¬sity of Chicago settlement house,Jewish Board of Education, andHebrew university.Outing club planstrip to ColoradoSkiing on the 12,000-foot slopesof Arapahoe Basin, Colorado, isplanned for the spring interim,March 17-27.Outing club president DonWcntzel estimates that food,transportation and lodging willcost about $70. Everyone inter¬ested in the trip is invited to theOuting club meeting March 9,7:30 p.m. in Ida Noyes.Future Outing club plans in¬dude a barge trip on the Illinoisliver in May, and other trips dur¬ing the spring quarter.Choose an ExpertTHOMPSONMOVERSLocal and Long Distance MovingCO 4-7600 Purim commemorates the ef¬forts of Queen Esther, who wasresponsible for ruining a plan tomassacre the Jewish people inancient Persia.All the recognized activities oncampus have been invited to par¬ticipate in the carnival by man¬aging a booth. Some booths willsell party favors or caricaturesdrawn by an artist on the prem¬ises, offer to predict the future,or challenge you to shave a bal¬loon without breaking it.The climax of the evening wi(lbe the crowning of Queen Esther,herself chosen queen of ancientPersia in a beauty contest. Can¬didates are nominated by everyorganization participating in thecarnival. The winner will be elect¬ed by the students who attend thefestivity.Organizations that have in¬formed Hillel of their plans forbooths are Beta Theta Phi, DeltaSigma, Hillel council, Mortar¬boards, Sigma, Womens’ Athleticassociation, and the executivecommittee for World Universityservice.Other organizations that decideto participate should inform Hil¬lel foundation.24 hour service ondeveloping of filmBring them in todayand have them backtomorrowat theUniversity ofChicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE Crane, Lens, speakThe jiolitical situation in thefar east will be discussed thisSunday at 4:15 p.m. by RobertCrane, assistant professor inthe history department. SidLens, director of local 329,united service employees un¬ion- AFL, author of Left, Right,and Center and The Counter¬feit Revolution, will also speak.The discussion will take placein Ida Noyes hall, and is beingsponsored by the Young Social¬ist league.Both speakers have recentlyreturned from visits to the farcast. New $60,000 clinicfor children opensThe opening of a $60,000 clinic for psychiatric treatmentof emotionally disturbed children was announced recently byRay E. Brown, superintendent of UC clinics.Located on the fourth floor of the Bobs Roberts children’shospital, the 15-room clinic will be equipped to handle 100patients per week when operation is in full swing, probablyby mid-summer.The clinic is equipped withtwo children’s playrooms withone-way glass observation screensand an inter com system to enableTo discuss insanity;stress legal problemThe mental health problem, with special emphasis on legalaspects of insanity, will be discussed at a conference on "In¬sanity and the Law” to be held Monday at the law school. 'Purpose of the one-day conference is an exchange of ideasand information between the lawyer, the psychiatrist and thesocial scientist, according' to Allison Dunham, University ofChicago professor of law and —7—— : 7—7—chairman of the conference An afternoon session with fourr* conference. speakers will be held at 2:30 p.m.Invitations are .being sent by in james Henry Breasted lecturethe law school to interested pro- hall oriental institute, 1155 Eastfessional and stuctent groups in 5gth street. A 5:30 reception andthe Chicago area. The conference 6:15 dinner win be held in theis also open to the public.Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 Quadrangle club, with a paneldiscussion following dinner,Henry Kalven, Jr., professor oflaw, will preside at the afternoonsession.Green to hold partyGreen hall will have its semi¬annual open house Sunday, Feb¬ruary 27, from 2:30 to 5 p.m.There will be refreshments,dancing, and a general get-to¬gether between the old and newstudents. Everyone is invited tocome. doctors to observe children Mplay.Plans for the clinic include thetreatment and diagnosis of dis¬turbed children and training ofpediatric psychiatrists and psychi¬atric social workers.The Service club of Chicago,which observed opening of theclinic at a Quadrangle club dinnerFriday, has donated $6,500 to theclinic for decorating, toys, andtherapy equipment. •Reason given forantPUS feeling‘‘One reason America is dis¬liked abroad today is that shedid not live up to expectationsafter the last war,” said CharlesOrr in a talk last week. Professorof economics at Roosevelt univer¬sity and former holder of a post inBrussels, Belgium, Orr was pre¬sented by the Young Socialistleague.No one expected much of Hitleror Stalin, Orr maintained, butmany were shocked by what theyconsidered Roosevelt’s callous¬ness. Especially shocked werethose concerned with the fate ofeastern and central Europe.Orr asserted that America is indisfavor with Europeans, espe¬cially in England and Germany.Part of this, he maintained, is ac¬counted for by misunderstanding,envy, and cultural differences.It is important for socialists toattempt to overcome these prej¬udices which Europeans haveagainst Americans, while at thesame time differentiating them¬selves from the current Americanpolicy, Orr concluded.A CASA Book StoreUsed Books —— Bought and SoldGood background materialReliable typewriter serviceMY 3-9651 1117 E. 55th Street WANTEDA-1 man or gal to tell advertisingspace tor new slick magazine onSouth American affairs and travel.Requirements: Must be seriouslydedicated to printers' ink as acareer. Ample commission for rightparty with drawing account onspace sold. Work hours can be ar¬ranged. Some experience necessary.Call MI 3-7238after 11 A.M.iutHmnuHi.iiuiniimHaHiHHHiiinNnttsnninHHmmmmK aiiiiiiitimitibv E A SNACK... A LUNCH... A MEAL1 B"\ On a freshly steamedplace the puppy dog — bun, we tenderly- not a wiener, but ■i Tubeless tires repaired1 D a VIENNA puppy dog — red hot — pure ■am and mounted25nhNOATS mustard, relish, onions andhot pepper, complete witha generous portion of ourfamous french fried potatoes whichoften imitated but never excelled.NEDLOG orange and root beer isequaled and no extra charge is madecarry-out containers. areOurun-forPUPPY TOWNopen until 1 A.M.1351 E. 55th Street DO 3-9366Orders over $1.00 delivered A NEWSERVICE! IDEAS VS. No. 6McCARTHYISMREALISM IN ART by SidneyFinkelsteinpaper $1.50 cloth $2.50PRAGMATISM: Philosophyof Imperialismby Harry K. Wellspaper $1.50 cloth $2.75Available from Modern Bookstort,64 W. Randolph; how about UCbookstore?Send contributions to continue and.spread these ads to Jimmy Higgins,c/o Modern Bookstore, 64 W. Ran¬dolph, Chicago 1, 111.CONOCOItUaillMMniMMMIII sS 5 YJEWEL CONOCOSERVICE STATION“Home of 3'M.inute Perfect Wash”56th & Cottage Grove Aye.MU 4-9106■mimiimmmiimmmiiiibmhbmbsiibbwk aimimiiimiimiiiimiiiaiiiiiHtiaiiMiHiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiit' TheDisc1369 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekLouis Armstrongplays W. C. HandyColumbia CL-591$3.95Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 25, 1955SRP to show 'Salt of the Earth' tonightby Karl RodmanSalt of the Earth, a film depicting the actual events surrounding a strike of Mexican-American mind's, will be shown in social science 122 by SRP (Student Representative Par¬ty) tonight at 7:30 and 9:15 and next Wednesday evening at 6:45, 8:30 and 10:15. __This controversial, union produced film has aroused interest on campus ever since its ceiebra'te~the centennTal7juiy 5, of Collection of' WhitmanIvianuUC Press adds toWhitman centennialActivities across the nation arebeing planned and presented to 1860 edition of Leaves and usesnew material from the Barrettpresentation in Chicago has been effectively banned by the local Projectionists' union’s re¬fusal to show itThe film was scheduled toopen at the Hyde Park theatrelast May but was cancelled afew days before its opening datewhen the projectionists informedthe theatre that they would notshow the film. A month later acapacity audience filled the Cin¬ema Annex theatre only to findout that the projectionist hadbeen called out of the theatre bythe Moving Picture Operator’sunion.At the same time the film washaving highly successful runs inNew York City. Los Angeles. SanFrancisco and other cities. Thepresident of the projectionist’s un¬ion had indicated that the interna¬tional would not interfere withpresentation of the film. Never¬theless some local unions, includ- here privately last year by Docu¬mentary Film group, has won thepraise of critics throughout thecountry. It has received excellentreviews in the daily newspapersand labor press. The movie depictsthe actual events surrounding astrike of Mexican-American min¬ers for better working conditionsand equality of treatment.It is produced by the Interna¬tional Mine Mill and Smelter’s un¬ion and most of the cast consistsof the actual miners and theirfamilies who participated in thestrike. They give us a sensitiveand realistically moving portrayalof their struggles with the opera¬tors of the mine, and the strikebreakers and local police mobil¬ized by the operators.In time the miners realize thattheir situation goes beyond the right and obligation to participatein the strike on equal terms withthe men. Finally the Mexican-Americans come to realize thatvictory can only be achieved whenthey are united with their “An¬glo” brothers, miners and work¬ers whose interests are the same. the first publication of Walt Whit¬man’s Leaves of Grass.Among these is the announcedUniversity of Chicago Press pub¬lication of Whitman Manuscripts:Leaves of Grass, A Parallel Textby Fredson Bowers. The booktraces the successive stages ofcomposition of the poems in theing the Chicago local, refused to ‘immediate question of mine safe-project it.The American Legion had plan¬ned to p r o t e s t the New Yorkshowing but when an officer ofthe Legion saw the film he saidthat because the only “istic” thisfilm is “is feministic and that’snot against the law.” the Legionwould not interfere.Referring to the action of localmembers of the American Legion,Herbert Biberman. director, ofSalt of the Earth, said: “Thesemen. without regard for the rightsof freedom of speech, communica¬tion and assembly of the people ofChicago are continuing a two anda half year old attempt of similarelements in the motion picture in¬dustry who fear the competitionof such popular realistic films asSalt of the Earth to prevent thisfilm from reaching the Americanpublic.”A law suit has recently beenbrought by Biberman and the Cinema Annex against the projection¬ist’s union to force them to lifttheir ban.Artistically, the film shownCarmen comesBizet’s Carmen will be the thirdopera in the current series beingpresented at International houseby Chicago’s American Operacompany. The performance willtake place this Sunday at 3:30p.m. Tickets, available at theAmerican Opera company’s of¬fices in Kimball hall, range from$1.50 to $3.The cast for Carmen will in¬clude Gloria Kovacic Lustro inthe title role, with Bob Olson. Le-Moyne Hohenstein and LauraHowardson. Guest conductor willbe Max Metzger.; Nick Bova — Florist► 5239 Harper Ave.► Ml 3-4226l STUDENT DISCOUNT► DELIVERY SERVICEAAAAAAAA49 daysALL-EXPENSEESCORTED TOURS;Oeparfareu April 23. May 26, July IJ935It days vlo air $1090Visit Enalaftd, lalglum Holland, Ger¬many, Amtria, SwltMrland, Italy aodFranca.Your crottina In th# completely oir.conditioned 5.S. Homeric, private lux¬ury motor coach in Europe, fine hotelaccommodation^ all meali. extensivelight-seeing in principal cities and many"off the-beaten-poth ' places. Theatretickets, champagne dinner and manyother extras.You owe it to yourself to investigatethis unusuol offer.Writ*, phone or srop inwe/tA* travel bureau644 W. North Ave., MOhtwk 4-12477507 Cnttege 6r, TRiangle 4-3160Offlellt steamship ft airlines agent for all line* ty. They must look at their strug¬gle in terms of the effectswrought on their wives and chil¬dren. and the kind of life they livein the primitive company ownedhouses.With this grows the realizationthat the struggle must be wagedby all; that the women have theSIAMESE DOUGHNUTWilliam F. StephensFlorida State UniversityWORM CROSSING DEEP CRACKIN SIDEWALKNancy Reed InghamUniversity of WashingtonMEETING OF CHINESE ANDAMERICAN OIL WELLSGary A. SteinerUniversity of Chicago• • • * «n • * •• • * • ••••* ARMY ANTS GOING A.W.O.l.John J. PhelanBoston College scripts.Projects include a Whitmanexhibit presented by the Libraryof Congress during January, andlectures by David Daiches, MarkVan Doren and Gay Wilson Allen(who recently published a com¬prehensive biography of Whit¬man) also at the Library.Libraries throughout the coun¬try will show, photostatically re¬produced, the Charles E. Fein-berg collection of manuscripts,letters, and Jaooks. The AmericanAcademy of Arts and Letters inNew York is planning an exhibiton the decade 1950-60.Other contributions to the cele¬bration include a Whitman sym¬posium in April at Brandeis uni¬versity; special Whitman issuesof Beloit Poetry magazine. Poetry,and New Republic; essays andbooks by Milton Hindus, Gay Wil¬son Allen; and numerous Whit¬man readings.Rosaura Revueltas in Salt of the Earth.WHAT’S THIS? For solution see paragraph below.Droodle suggested by Norman Gerber, C.CMY,HAVE A LITTLE FUN when yousmoke. Enjoy yourself. Give your¬self the pleasure of a better¬tasting Lucky Strike. Theenthusiasm often inspired byLuckies’ famous better taste isillustrated in the Droodle {right)titled: Alphabet soup for Luckysmoker. So why stew over whatcigarette to smoke? Luckies’taste is letter-perfect. After all,L.S. / M. F.T.—Lucky Strike meansfine tobacco. Then, that tobaccois toasted to taste better. “/TsToasted”—the famous LuckyStrike process—tones up Luckies’light, mild, good-tasting tobacco to make it taste even better..,cleaner, fresher, smoother. Whenyou light up, enjoy the better¬tasting cigarette... Lucky Strike.STUDENTS! EARN $25!Lucky Droodles* are pouring in! Whereare yours? We pay $25 for all we use, andfor many we don’t use. So, send everyoriginal Droodle in your noodle, with itsdescriptive title, to Lucky Droodle, P. O.Box 67, New York 46, N. Y.•DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger PricaBetter taste Luckies... LUCKIES TASTE BETTER...Cdeanen, F^ske/i.^oofche/i!©A T.Ca product or t/&iS&iwuean >Jo^wco-^rrya<zr^> America’s leading manufacturer of ciqarrttrsFebruary 25, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON r«i« 9STUDENT REPRESENTATIVE PARTYPRESENTS THE MOTION PICTURESALT OF THE EARTHFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25th ,7:30 ond 9:15 p.m.WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2nd6:45, 8:30 ond 10:15 p.m.SOCIAL SCIENCES 159th and Universityadmission .50Recalls Whitman's Americanismby Joct Pi«*henyOne hundred years ago the first♦Hlition of Walt Whitman’s LeavesCrass was published. Emerson,from Concord, wrote the author:"I greet you at the beginning of a Tocquevillr said of him that"other writers look on a laboreras a laborer, a poet as a poet, apresident as a president, a mer¬chant as a merchant—and so on.He looks on the president as agreat career, which yet must have rnan. on Ihe laborer as a man, on_ r 1 .1 fhn nr\ot onrl oil thn rnot ao mnvi yyhad a long foreground somewherefor such a start."Whitman certainly did have» long foreground. His solidbase was an identification withall that was decent and fine inbis country: its earth, its phy¬sique, with its people and itsgrowth. He was sure that "al¬ways waiting untold in thesouls of the armies of commonpeople, is stuff better than any¬thing that can possibly ap|>earin the leadership of the same." the poet and all the rest, as men.Whitman himself testified to this:"I do not call one greater and onesmaller,” he said. "I have but onecentral figure, the general humanpersonality typified in myself.”His identification with his coun¬try is manifest and fulfilled in hisconcept of language. This, forhim, was not an “abstract con¬struction” made by the learned, broad and low, close to theground,”Whitman realized that wordsare develo|>ed from experiencewith the facts that they express,from man’s grasp of these facts.Wrote Whitman, “a perfectwriter would make words sing,dance, kiss or do anything thatman or woman or the natural|M>wers can do.” Thus he sawimmense opportunities for theEnglish tongue in America; awhole range of American factswere offering themselves.Though he believed that “thesubstantial words are in the, . ... , ground and sea,” his speech wasb^arJ0Sl0Ut.0.f,the Work’ StrUg- not a unified, concrete expression.Unlike his contemporaries Whit-gles, desires of long generationsof humanity; it has "its basesBell-ringers play Mitchell chimesThe 10-bell Alice Freeman Palmer memorial chime inMitchell tower (Reynolds club) is played for 15 minutes Mon¬days through Fridays at 12 noon and at 6 p.m. by membersof the University Societas Campanariorum (society of bell¬ringers).Tomorrow, in honor of theannual alumni midyear re¬union. the bells will sound twice.From 5:30 p.m. until 6 p.m. aconcert will be played by Roland1 Dickson and from 7 p.m. until7:30 p.m. William F. Pohl willplay. Each concert will be pre¬ceded by the Alta Mater.The bells were cast in 1907 bythe Whitechapel foundry in Lon-don. The largest bells weighs ap¬proximately 2.400 pounds, and isinscribed, “A Gracious WomanRetaining Honor.” The chime isone of eight in the United Stateswhich may be pealed in the Eng¬lish manner, known as “change¬ringing.” man was attracted by the widesw'eep of the industrial cities, thenfirst appearing. He sensed there apositive, though abstract and im¬precise future, and this togetherwith the earthy passion of hisoutlook resulted, at his best, ina dramatic fusion: his words ad¬here to concrete experience andBooks new & usedAlso Records: Caruso,Golli-Curci, etc.Open from 12 Noon till 9:30 p.m.White Boar Bookshop61 W. Division St. SU 7-3659 Bach Singers in recitalThe Bach Singers of the University of Chicago are lookingfor two tenors to add to the organization in preparation forthe forthcoming Lenten-Easter recital, to be given duringHoly Week in April.The coming recital is ex-peeled in constitute one of the 11most 1\ rical programs offered Jr'"/-b\ the Bat h Singers thus fat . V gf JBBSeveral rf tin- IT sele-iions ate Bdbeinr pet burned f<>i Die fir^t p a | “'l/time. I WThe requirements for joining Jfl- - -2arc prinripalK a lo\e lor singing. %\ ‘mtine background in group sing- IT .ing. but ;d>o\e all. work discipline. 'Interested pel sons m a v contact >Ki ederic I., I ’era. th» director of. Wfi|Hl4§fi9iprihe gioup. by leaving name andphone number with the secretaryof Rockefeller chapel.5 o milliontimes a dayat home,at work oron the wayThere’snothinglike a1. FOR TASTE...bright,bracing, ever-fresh sparkle.2. FOR REFRESHMENT...quick energy, withas few calories as halfan average, juicy grapefruit.BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY Of THE COCA-COIA COMPANY BYThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicogo, Inc.Toko" It a r#9U»#,.d earmark. © 1955, THE COCA COLA COMPANY ('onnie Millman and AndrewDuncan rehearse in UniversityTheatre’s production of Ibsen’sThe Wild Duck. yet* are bathed in imagination.Whitman’s most valuable con¬tribution was this vision of a fu¬ture America—his transformationof the real into the ideal. "I haveimagined a life which should bethat of the average man in aver¬age circumstances, and still grand,heroic.”He believed that here alone "allforms of practical labor are rec¬ognized as honorable,” and thatthe U. S., "a magnificent mass ofmaterial, never before equal’d onearth,” would progress naturally.Later on, Whitman formulatedserious questions: “If the UnitedStates, like the countries of theold world ,are also to grow vastcrops of poor, desperate, dissatis¬fied, nomadic, miserably-wagedpopulations, sue has we see loom¬ing upon us of late years . . . thenour republican experiment, not¬withstanding all its surface suc¬cesses ,is at heart an unhealthyfailure.”But despite his fears, his con¬fidence in his land won out."The poetry of other lands," hewrote, "lies in the past—whatthey have been. The poetry ofAmerica lies in the future —what these states and their com¬ing men and women are cer¬tainly to be."Concert tonight in MandelA concert by the University Chamber Music Players will be giventonight at 8:30 in Mandel Hall. Ray Still, oboe soloist, will performw'ith the players in performances of music by Mozart, Britten andWilliam Shield.’Wild Duck' next for UT;Ibsen's psychological playby Marvin PhillipsUniversity Theatre’s coming production of Ibsen’s The WildDuck promises to provide not only an evening of first-rateentertainment, but also a good deal of food for seriousthought. The play is deeply psychological, embodying a par¬ticularly Ibsenian view ofmarriage and the interper¬sonal relationships underlying it,as well as some broader looks atfamily life in general. Donna Holabird plays “theyoung wife" in Round Dance, arevival of Playwrights Theatreclub’s first comedy hit. Underthe direction of Rolf Forsberg,the production will open Thurs¬day at 8:30 p.m. and will run forone month.THE CHURCHIN A WORLD IN REVOLUTIONA. DALE FIERSPresident, United Christian Missionary SocietyDisciples of Christ♦ SunOoy, Feb. 27—General Services mi 11 A 5:30* Forum mt 1:15Youth Meeting mt 5:30UNIVERSITY CHURCHOF THE DISCIPLES OF CHRIST5655 University AvenueEverybody Welcome As George Bernard Shaw saidof the play, “Where shall I findan adjective magnificent enoughlor The Wild Duck! To sit there,getting deeper and deeper into theEkdal home, and getting deeperand deeper into your own life allthe time, until you forget you arein a theatre; to look on with hor¬ror and pity at a profound trag¬edy, shaking with laughter all thetime at an irresistible comedy; togo out, not from a diversion, butfrom an experience deeper thanlife ever brings to most men. oroften brings to any man . . ."In . . the most sympatheticand beautiful of plays . . asJohn Gassner describes The WildDuck, are manifest the tendernessand worldly understanding withw'hich Ibsen treats his characters,his disillusioned dismissal of ideal¬istic reforms, and his cold com¬passion for the inevitable tragedyof the situation he has created.The Wild Duck will be present¬ed March 9-13. Tickets are now onsale at the student service centerin the Reynolds club basement,and may also be obtained by wait¬ing University Theatre. Giouprates are available for the Wed¬nesday, Thursday and Sundayperformances. March 9, 10 and 13.CARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1127 E. 55 1412 E. 55MU 4-9003 MU 4-8980Louise Barkerphotographer"who capturesyourpersonalityas well asyour person”1457 E. 57th St.BU 8-0876Page 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 25, 1955Sports CalendarToday: JV Basketball, PSL Tourney, 7:30 and 9 p.m., fieldliouseJV Track, Hyde Park, Crane, and Horrison, 3:45 p.m., fieldhouseJV Gymnastics, Leyde.i Twp., 3:30 p.m., Bartlett gymGymnastics, Wisconsin State, 8 p m., Bartlett gymTomorrow: JV Basketball, PSL Tourney, 7:30 and 9 p.m., fieldhouseFencing, Northwestern, 1 :30 p.m., Bartlett gymBasketball, U. of III. at Chicago, 8 p m., at UICTrack, Invitational Meet, 2 p.m., fieldhouseThursday: Track, "B" team vs. Elmhurst and Wilson Jr.. 4 p.m., field-houseMatmen down IIT;Tie Notre Dameby Kent FlanneryOn the verge of nailing down their most successful seasonin recent years, the UC Varsity Wrestling team overcame Illi¬nois Tech on the Bartlett mats last Tuesday, 16-14.With the visitors leading 14-13, Chicago’s heavyweightLynn Illingworth turned themeet in the Maroons’ favor bydrubbing McNulty of Tech,12-5. to end a contest which sawthe lead change hands threetimes. Bates (147) and Flannery(130) contributed ten points toChicago’s score by picking upforfeits, while Don Donderi (123)beat Hayashi of Tech, 8-1. Ritter(137) lost a grueling battle toIIT's Weller. 10-4, and Shafer(167) was bested by Dugovic, 5-0, the meet for Tech, showed greatstamina as he fought off the pin¬ning attempts of Tech’s captainand 177 pounder, “Red” Krengel,though he lost on points.On the previous Saturday, theTigers had traveled to SouthBend, where they tied the Univer¬sity of Notre Dame, 16-16.The Maroons’ last meet will beMonday, the 28th, at Wright Jun¬ior College. Aurora quintet romps Fridaybeats cagers easily, 89-83U-High dribblers vincuntclassical hoopsters, 41-33: by Smoky GarciaRacing to a 53-29 halftime lead, the Aurora Spartans coasted to a 89-83 victory over theChicago Maroons at Aurora last Friday. The host Aurora squad set a blazing pace and hitfrom all over the court. The Maroons couldn’t match the Aurora drive and were only incontention in the first quarter.The Spartans utilized a fast break and pick-off offense to good advantage on their shortfloor. After building up a 20 point lead, Aurora substituted freely throughout the secondhalf. The Maroons rallied• strongly against the AuroraHigh dribblers vincunt nothing more than to malfe thescore close.Aurora had 6 players scoring indouble figures. Guard Dick Vesterled with 17 points and forwardUniversity High advanced into tonight’s semi-finals in the K?nt Smith hit for 15. Chicago'sprivate school league post-season basketball tournament by ]?,llly .L’este.r.lle<L;alIl ^corfrs withoutclassing Chicago Latin cagers 41-33, Wednesday. In regu- e l>1< ^ land andlar season play the J-Vers tied for fifth place in the 12-team M,tch Watk,ns each ta,hed 17'race.Forward John Davey led both wiU ** Played in the uc field' £££&teams in scoring with 20 points, house.The game was a sure thing for in other games Wednesday, LuU-High al lthe way. In the thirdquarter, Joe Stamp’s zone de¬fense held Latin to four points,and in the final quarter the sec¬ond string was sent in.Tonight the J-Vers play LutherSouth, the team that beat themin regular season play. If U-highwins, they will meet the winnerof the North Park-Harvard gamein the finals Saturday. If theylose, they’ll play the losers in aconsolation game. Both games Aurora (89)B FBerg.fNoble.fDowning.cther South beat Chicago Christian93-63, North Park beat Francis schTfer.gE.Lobb.gParker 50-44, and Harvard beat vester.gKeepers,gWheaton 52-46. Chicago (S3)Roland.fGarcia, fPelnberij.fChlsholm.fBtnford.cWatktns.cLester,gWalker,* B501445122 F P7 l0 t0 X0 I1 s7 X9 12 aHalt time—Aurora M; Chicago 28.|iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiimmmiiiiiiiiimitimtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii<HiiiiiimiiMiiiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiUiiiiuuInternational House Movies| East Lounge Mon. A Thurs. Eves, al 7:00 A 9:00 P.M.Monday, Feb. 28 — 45c — Caged Women (Swedish)Thursday, Mar. 3 — 35c — Harvey (American)5iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiitiiiiiHmiiinnwhile Norm Zenner (157) wasforced to default when his rib wasinjured.Jerry Hoffman of Chicago, in aspot where a fall would have tiedThe CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236next Sunday • Feb. 278:15 p.m.only Chicago appearancethis seasonoutstanding american humoristOGDENNASHin personAH seats, $1.50 — avoid the bo*office rush. Buy tickets today atthe Student Service Center.Temple Emanuel5959 N. Sheridan Rd.take 151 sheridan bus to the doorYOU MAYNOWTELEPHONEYOURCLASSIFIEDADSCALLMl 3-0800EXT. 1009Monday thruFriday10-12 2-5 General ElectricJOHN McCARTY joined C. E.’s Adver¬tising Department aa a copywriterafter army service and graduationfrom U. of Michigan in 1947. He haaheld his present job since June 1952.What young people are doing atYoung specialist incommunity relationsmakes friends in101 plant citiesCeneral Electric now has 131 plants in 101cities, and one problem is common to all:How can the company show people in everycommunity that it is a good neighbor?This responsibility is shared by many andstimulated by 32-year-old John T. McCarty.His job: Consultant, Program Services inPlant Community Relations.** McCarty’s work is varied, excitingMcCarty’s assignment is to help each of theGeneral Electric plants tell its neighbors whatit is doing, what it hopes to do, and how itfits into the community.He must be ready to travel to 26 states.He prepares community-relations manualsfor use in all 1C1 plant cities. He supervisessurveys of community sentiment, and teststhe local effects of the company’s advertis¬ing. And he helps plant management main¬tain friendly contacts with civic, religious,educational and other community leaders.23,000 cdHtge graduates at General ElectricThis is a sensitive and important job.McCarty was readied for it in a careful step-by-step program of development. Like Mc¬Carty, each of the 23,000 college-graduateemployees is given his chance to grow, tofind the work he does best, and to realize hisfull potential. For General Electric has longbelieved this: When fresh young minds aregiven freedom to make progress, everybodybenefits — the individual, the company, andthe country. Progress Is Our Most Important ProductGENERAL tM) ELECTRICVSwimmers splash to victory anddefeat, even record for seasonOn their two-day trip to St. Louis last week-end, the swimmers beat St. Louis universityby the score of 44-40, but lost the next day to Washington by the score of 52-31. But bybeating Navy Pier Tuesday 50-30 the team evened up its record at four wins and four losses.The St. Louis meet was close all the way. Mike Mandell, Lanse Felker, and Don McVickerwon the 300 yard medley relay, followed by a first place by Mauer in the 220 yard free style.McVicker recovered in time to take a second in the 60 yard free style, followed by Paul Sei¬ji n and Bob Trees taking firstand third, respectively, in the120 yard individual medley.Frank Chilton took third in thediving, Sellin, second in the 100-yard free style.A first place in the 200-yardbackstroke by Mandell and a firstand third in the 440-yard free styleby Mauer and Trees set the stagefor the free style relay which waswon by McVicker, Mauer, Man¬dell, and Sellin.Meet “ill-fated”The Washington meet was ill- fated from the start. The firstplace relay team of Mandell, Fel¬ker, and Sellin was disqualified bya bad turn. Seconds and thirdswere all Chicago could manageuntil the diving when Chilton tookfirst place.Strengthened by another freestyler, Benedict, the swimmerswere decisive in victory Tuesday.The relay team of Mandell, Fel¬ker, and McVicker won, andMauer and Trees took first andthird in the 220 yard free style.Benedict won the 60-yard freeAdvertisement — Advertisement — Advertisement — Advertisement style, followed by Sellin andMauer taking a first and thirdplace in the individual medley.Chilton took a second in thediving, Sellin a second in the 100-yard free style. Mandell and RonCrutchfield took first and thirdin the 200 yard backstroke, fol¬lowed by Felker and Lovinger,taking a first and third in the 200-yard breaststroke. Mauer took asecond in the 440. The meet wasclosed by the winning relay teamof McVicker, Benedict, Mandell,and Sellin.The Chicago team will meetIllinois Institute of Technologytoday at 3 p.m. at Bartlett. “He’s on an athletic scholarship at Northwestern”On Campus AfexShuJman(Author of ’•Barefoot Boy With Cheek,” etc.)SCIENCE MADE SIMPLE: NO. 2Though this column is intended solely as a vehicle for well-tempered drollery, the makers of Philip Morris have agreed tolet me use this space from time to time for a short lesson inscience. They are the most decent.and obliging of men, themakers of Philip Morris, as one would guess from samplingtheir product. Only from bounteous hearts could come such apleasurable cigarette—so felicitously blended, so gratifying tothe taste, so soothing to the psyche. And, as though bringingyou the most agreeable cigarette on the market were not enough,the makers of Philip Morris have enclosed their wares in theSnap-Open Pack, an ingeniously contrived wrapping that yieldsup its treasure without loss of time or cuticle. And, finally,this paragon of cigarettes, wrapped in the paragon of packages,can be had in king-size or regular, as your taste dictates. Whocan resist such a winning combination? Not I.A few weeks ago in this column we had a brief lesson in chem¬istry. Today we take up another attractive science —medicine.Medicine was invented in 1066 by a Greek named Hippocrates.He soon attracted around him a group of devoted disciples whomhe called “doctors”. The reason he called them “doctors” wasthat they sat around a dock all day. Some fished, some justdozed in the noonday sun. In truth, there was little else for themto do, because disease was not invented until 1492.After that doctors became very busy, but, it must be reported,their knowledge of medicine was lamentably meagre. Theyknew only one treatment-a change of climate. For example, aFrench doctor would send all his patients to Switzerland; aSwiss doctor, on the other hand, would send all his patients toFrance. By 1789 tiie entire population of France was living inSwitzerland, and vice versa. This later became known as theBlack Tom Explosion.Not until 1924 did medicine, as we know it, come into being.In that year in the little Bavarian village of Pago-Pago anelderly physician named Winko Sigafoos discovered the hotwater bottle. He was, of course, burned as a witch, but his sonLydia, disguised as a linotype, smuggled the hot water bottleout of the country. He called on Florence Nightingale in Londonbut was told by her housekeeper, with some asperity, that MissNightingale had died in 1910. Lydia muttered something and,disguised as a feather boa, made his way to America, where he'invented the blood stream.Medicine, as it is taught at your very own college, can be dividedroughly into two classifications. There is internal medicine,which is the treatment of internes, and external medicine, whichis the treatment of externes.Diseases also fall into two broad categories—chronic andacute. Chronic disease, is of course, inflammation of the chron,which can be mighty painful, believe you me! Last summer mycousin Haskell was stricken with a chron attack while out pick¬ing up tinfoil, and it was months before the wretched boy couldstraighten up. In fact, even after he was cured, Haskell con¬tinued to walk around bent over double. This went on for someweeks before Dr. Caligari, the lovable old country practitionerwho treats Haskell, discovered that Haskell had his pants but¬toned to his vest.Two years ago Haskell had Addison’s disease. (Addison,curiously enough, had Haskell’s.) Poor Haskell catches every¬thing that comes along. Lovable old Dr. Caligari once said tohim, “Son, I guess you are what they call a natural born catcher.”“The joke is on you, Doc,” replied Haskell. “I am a thirdbaseman.” He thereupon fell into such a fit of giggling that thedoctor had to put him under sedation, where he is to this day.But I digress. We were discussing medicine. I have now toldyou all I can; the rest is up to you. Go over to your medicalschool and poke around. Bring popcorn and watch an operation.Fiddle with the X-ray machines. Contribute to the bone bank... And, remember, medicine can be fun!©Mm Shulman, 1955The makers of PHILIP MORRIS, who bring you this column, havenursed their flavorful tobaccos to bring you the most pleasurablesmoke obtainable. New UC track team recordsparks athletic renaissanceby Sam GreenleeThere’s a strange phenomena on the Midway these days having nothing to do with theworld of nuclear physics. Rather it has to do with the world of sports, a field of endeavortoo often slighted on the campus. This stranger to Maroon surroundings is a winning ath¬letic team and it takes an old man to remember when such a thing last existed on the campus.Said team is the track squad Which has been bowling over opposition with the ease rem¬iniscent of the “Stagg fears Purdue” days of glory. So far the thinclads have lost only to BigSeven champions Kansas,squad they couldn’t have ap¬peared on the same track witha few years back, and gave a goodaccount of themselves. mile relay team, undefeated this ball. For those who think win-year, set another mark in their ning athletic teams in action areevent in 3:24.3. exciting things to watch here’sPerhaps, however, this novelty a suggestion to make it around tobe better kept secret lest it inspire the fieldhouse the next time theStrangely enough few people weeping about “the good old days” Maroon runners get ready to cutseem to be aware of the athletic when Maroon s(luads lost every- loose -a good tune will be hadrenaissance on tne clay track in thing from tiddly-winks to basket- by all.the field house but judging fromthe good cro\\d that watched theMaroons beat Wheaton and North¬ern Illinois in a triangular meet,7414-3614-18, last Saturday after¬noon the word must be gettingaround.Meet records fell like husbands’faces at a Liberace session at thetriangular affair Saturday.“Cookie” Moirya, Japan’s gift toWheaton, started things off bybusting his own meet record inthe mile by a good six secondswith a 4:18.6 clocking for thedistance. Then came FrankLoomos’ mark in the 60-yard dashof 6.4, Jim Brown’s 50.4 effort inthe 440 and Lowell Hawkinson’snew 1:57.6 mark in the half-milefor first place points for Chicagoas well as new meet records. The IfcUG gymnasts win;drop Wisconsin 51-45Herb Taylor scored an individual total of 26 points in Chi¬cago’s meet with Wisconsin’s gymnastics team last Saturdayat Bartlett to give Chicago a 51-45 victory over the Badgers.This was the first time ip three years that the Chicago teamhas been able to beat Wisconsin, ly weak in the flying rings andBob Herndon took first in thetrampoline and John Bowmanscored a first in the horizontalbar. Taylor took first in parallelbars and tumbling and second inthe trampoline, sidehorse, andhorizontal bar.The Chicago team was especial- tumbling events and were savedonly by Bowman's taking thirdplace in the rings and Taylor’staking first <by only 2 points) intumbling.The team will compete in theirlast home meet of the season thisFriday night at Bartlett againstWisconsin <LaCrosse) StateTeachers college winding up afairly successful season.Wild honey, locusts, _ _ ,sanctity, Pabst. . . ) P®ncers dropthree contestsWe carry ocomplete line ofwines, liquors andimports 55th fir UniversityMl 3-0524TERRY’S PIZZAfinest pizzos modeFREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95We also carry a full line of ilalian foods1518 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-4045 The gallant knights of Bartlettwere thrice skewered Saturday.After a severe defeat by Detroit,18-9, the swordsmen rallied, beingdefeated by narrow margins byWayne, 17-10. and Iowa, 15-12.The epee team was victorious inthe Wayne match, as Pete Claus,Gerry Czamanski. and Alex Shaneconquered their opponents. 5-4.The other outstanding showingof the day was that of the sabreteam against Iowa, 6-3. ChickAhlgren, Herb Zipperian, andDave Bobrow wve the partici¬pants.ACECYCLE SHOPYour BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we sellRepairs & Parts all makes819 E. 55 MI 3-26729 A.M. - 6 P.M.IN THE WHOLEWIDE WORLD — LIKE CHESTERFIELDelMwn rACCLC...(from page 1)Communistic. But, he pointed out,in 1951 a special selected delega¬tion went down—and exactly thesame thing happened. There is noreal danger of reckless action onthis campus, he claimed; but ifyou think there is, this rule doesnot remove it. Any organizationwanting to carry on such actionwould do so whether expelled ornot.Peter Greene (Phi Psi) repliedthat the intent of this rule is posi¬tive rather than stifling—it aidsand unifies the fight and providesthe best way to defeat the bills. Ofcourse we can’t hope to pleasePaul Broyles with anything wedc, he said; we’re not trying tc.These amendments, he de¬clared, deprive the body of thechance to decide what it wantsto do—these sections can makeor break our activities. Peoplehere are sensible and matureenough not to kick somebodyout without very good reason,he argued. He likened the ruleto a traffic light—it protectsthe smooth flow of action.Ken Marshall emphasized thatthis was a voluntary association,and any association not willing toabide by ACCLC’s decisions canwithdraw and act independently,not speaking in the name ofACCLC.Larry Lichtenstein (petitionmember) replied that an in¬dependently - acting organizationwould not represent itself asspeaking for ACCLC anyway. Ac¬cording to this rule, an organiza¬tion could not even write a letterwithout approval — this violatesthe rights of the organization, hemaintained. ACCLC will be in themiddle-of-the-road, he concluded,and it should permit both the farright and left to express theirpoints of view as well.Sylvia Boyd (Green) was elect¬ed recording secretary of ACCLC.defeating Debbie Mines and RussLeaf. Treasurer is Steve Fitch(Marired Students assn.), defeat¬ing A1 Tritter.Seven elected members of thesteering committee, in addition tothe chairman and vice chairman,include:VotesBob Heavilin 54George Stone 54At Fortier 52Barbara Stech 51Fred Reed 51Larry Lichtenstein 42Palmer Plnney 38Other candidates included:VotesDavis Bobrow 36Joanne Enos 36Carolyn Eggert 36Mike Gordon 27Steve Fitch 21Harold Baron 18Carl Frankel 18Debbie Mines 15Mary Ann Chacaresto* 15Pete Carmel 12 CHESTERFIELD 7o<tayYou’ll smile your approval of Chesterfield'ssmoothness — mildness—refreshing taste.You’ll smilo your approval of Chesterfield’squality—highest quality—low nicotine. February 25, 1955SFA court refuses Solomon's petition,denies him SC seat from med schoolThe Student-Faculty-Administration court denied Fred Solomon’s petition to be seated asthe third representative to SG from the medical school in a majority decision reached lastweek.The court concluded that “Solomon’s misadventures in seeking election to the student as¬sembly present an unfortunate picture of ill-advised procedure. Perhaps his and the campus’desires would best be served by seating him in the assembly. But decisions such as this havebeen left to the determination hitmnaiiv fnrhrii writA-in vntA^ the Assembly’s requirement thatcandidates declare themselves be¬fore election day.”‘Voters disfranchised*Justice Meiklejohn in his dis¬sent said that “the fundamentalquestion is that of the representa¬tion of the students who voted forSolomon and who are, by thisopinion effectively disfranchised.”He stated that as long as thereis the slightest ambiguity in theelection law ten voters should notbe denied the right to be effective¬ly represented.Fred Solomon commented tothe Maroon that “the principle in¬volved has been whether or nota voter may cast a ballot for can¬didates of his choice, regardlessof whether their names appear onthe printed ballot.“As Professor Meiklejohn point¬ed out, the court has disfranchiseda majority of the 1954 medicalschool voters. As far as I’m con¬cerned this decision shall remainfinal; I have no intention of apply¬ing for the vacant seat.”Of the student assembly. Wefind that they have decidedthis in a manner consistent withthe constitutional mandates thatmust guide their actions. Solo¬mon’s petition is therefore de¬nied."Justice Meikeljohn, in register¬ing the lone dissenting opinion,said that as long as there “is eventhe slightest ambiguity in theelection statute” the voters .forSolomon are being effectively dis¬franchised.Solomon received ten write-invotes in last October’s election,more than either of the other twocandidates for the three seatsfrom the medical school. But theelection and rules committee ofSG refused to seat him because ofthe election law which states.“Any writing on a ballot shallrender the ballot void.”Petitioned on two countsSolomon petitioned the court ontwo grounds, as summarized inthe court’s majority opinion: “Dthat the Assembly cannot consti¬ tutionally forbid write-in votesand 2) that even if the StudentAssembly could forbid such votes,the election law did not do so.”The majority opinion of thecourt was that it could not con¬sider the second point of the peti¬tion because “the jurisdiction ofthis Court does not extent to theinterpi'etation of statutes passedby the Assembly when no con¬stitutional issue is therebyraised.” The Assembly must spe¬cifically authorize the appeal.Law Is constitutionalThe Court boiled the questiondown to “w'hether the voters’ free¬dom to elect whom they please isnullified by requiring that all whocan be voted for go through someform of procedure before they areeligible to sit in the Assembly.”The court argued that “forcingthe candidates to avow their can¬didacy so that they are open tocomment or criticism seems a . . .desirable goal.” The Justices feltthat this goal is achieved with “lit¬tle offense at all, and perhapsgreat avoidance of confusion, in Qrabo of Englishdepartment dies;was noted authorCarl Henry Grabo, associateprofessor-emeritus of the depart¬ment of English, died Sunday inAlbuquerque, New Mexico, at theage of 73.Funeral services for Grabo wereheld Monday in Albuquerque.Grabo was graduated from UCin 1903, and joined the staff fouryears later. Since his retirementin 1947 Grabo has been residingin New Mexico.An authority on 19th centuryEnglish authors, particularlyPercy Bysshe Shelley, Grabo wasthe author of 13 books, and formany years the associate editorof the Chicago Jewish Forum.Grabo is survived by his widow,Eunice, and two daughters, Cyn¬thia Grabo, who resides in Arling¬ton, Virginia, and Mrs. CarolineBoyer, of Longmeadow, Massa¬chusetts. Present brotherhoodpanel at Ida SundayA program for Brotherhoodweek will be presented on Sun¬day by the UC chapter Na¬tional Association for the Ad¬vancement of Colored People(NAACP). Students from Roose¬velt University, UC, and repre-sentatives from the ChicagoNAACP Council will present apanel on “the improvement ofbrotherhood and race relations oncampus.”The discussion will be held at4:30 p.m. Sunday, in Ida NoyesHall. There is no admissioncharge.HOME PLASTICSDraperies - Curtains - Rainware10 % Student Discount1303 E. 53th StreetNO 7-5696tVMMMItflflMMMMM If l«IIIIMMMIMItlltltSVMItlllHMItlllllMltMIMIMM«IMMIMI II SHIMALEXANDER’SRESTAURANTMU 4-57351137 E. 63 StreetMore than just a good place to eatWe cater to parties and banquetsOpen all nightm,