Student Union has been disbanded.The decision was announced by Dale Levy, SUpresident, at a meeting of the executive board lastT uesday."Student Union has been losing its effective¬ness," explained DaleLevy, Student Unionpresident.The administration throughArthur Keindl, director ofstudent activities, said that rector of student activities; andMiss Levy.Communication neededKiendl. explaining why his of¬fice favored dissolution, said that“we want channels of communiea-<he leaders of various student tion on a grass-roots level. . . .groups will now be given a chance Over the years, there has grownto study formation of a new up a type of parallelism in slu-group. This will, in effect lead to dent organizations.”an overall re-examination of the He explained that there arestructure of student social activi- many small organizations doingties. essentially the same thing. ThereThe decision to dissolve was has l>wn little or no communica-made by a re-evaluation commit- don and coordination betweenice made up of Maury Mandel, SU them- Student Union was struc-tteasurer; Arthur Kiendl. direc- turally unable to do this. Kiendltor of student activities; Mary said. Re-evaluation of srests with student leadersby Joy Burbaeh and Allen dangerA major re-evaluation by students of campus social life and its conduct seemed in th*offing this week following the dissolution of Student Union, Tuesday."Responsible student leaders" ,will be given the opportunity to decide how campus socialevents are to be managed, Arthur Kiendl, director of student activities, said late Wednesday.The Kiendl statement Wednesday quited a two-day controversy with Student Governmentover SG's role in the projected re-evaluation and reorganization. Student Government, havingno voice under the original plan, reportedly feared that a second governmental organizationwas to be formed.People who wanted to continue the Student Union organization, however, remained essen-Alice Ross Newman, assistant di- T h e re-evaluation committeehad been formed to studj' theplace of Student Union on thecampus, and possible methods forcarrying out its functions.Had lost effectivenessAlmost all interested and in¬volved persons agreed that theStudent Union had lost its effec¬tiveness. Reasons offered for itsfailure were three fold.General student apathy andchanges in the social structure ofthe campus, difficulties with theorganizational structure of theUnion itself, and failure to obtaingoo I leadership all were suggest¬ed as causes.Student Union this year hadbeen forced to postpone the firstregular C-dance, Dance Macabre,“due to campaign activity on thepart of Student Union members,”Miss Levy said at the time. JoanRaphael and Jan Metros, at that tially unsatisfied early yester- that an enlarged committee of stu-day dent leaders, including most ofKiendl had announced plans |iein^r,„0,r£ai‘^°"S' W°UW_ , , be invited to take part.Tuesday of a Student Activities Controversv h a d centeredcouncil (SAC) to be formed by ' , y naa centered. .. , „ around two main points, the dis-representatives of the living ot student Union and the photo by ZygmundAs many spectators as boardmembers of Student Unionwere . present Tuesday after¬noon as Dale Levy announcedthe end of Student Union.time dance chairman and pub- f™ups on <ja™l>us- should they specific plan proposed to replace hour long closed meeting of Stu-lieity chairman were both running atcePl ms pi<*nfor Student Government. Othersblamed the failure on lack of co¬operation within the Union.C ancel eventsThe traditional Night of Sin, Albert Fortier, president of Stu¬dent Government, said Wednes¬day. “I didn’t think these peoplewould go ahead without consult¬ing with the rest of the campus.”Fortier’s comment came after a it.Original plan proposedThe plan as originally proposedTuesday, called for a five-manboard. “This board is conceived asa nucleus. I hope it will grow as a dent Government. Tuesday night.Fortier, explaining SG’s interestin the matter, said, “To some stu¬dents a formal social life is astudent service. We are alwaysinterested in the needs of the stu-and the art exhibit both were can- decision had been made to allow continuous organization designed dents.photo by ZygmundArthur Kiendl, director ofstudent activities. celled, while the Dance Macabre,a Halloween type dance, was heldthe first week in December. OfSU social events, only the WassailSee ‘SU.’ page « Student Government to sit in onthe planning meeting of SAC.Kiendl enlarges groupSince (hat time, Kiendl has said to meet the social activities needs Plan bitterly attackedof the students,” Kiendl said at The original plan for the SACthe Tuesday meeting of the presi- included only five groups, anddents of Inter-dorm council, Inter- was bitterly attacked on thisclub council, Burton-Judson coun- point. Some suggested that Stu-cil, and the Married Students asso- dent Government was more rCpre-ciation. George Stone, president of sentative. “I should also add thatUniversity of Chicago, March 4, 1955 31 the Inter-fraternity council, hadbeen invited but was unable toattend.Concerning the replacement ofStudent Union. Dale Levy, presi¬dent of Student Union since lastfall, said Wednesday. “I don’twant to see the Union dissolved,but if Kiendl intends to do it.which seems obvious, then I canonly hope that the campus willput their support behind SAC.”Bird favors UnionAllan Bird, publicity chairman See ‘SG/ page 1RECORDS FALLTwo world’s track rec¬ords were tied at the Uni¬versity of Chicago Trackclub’s invitational meet Sat¬urday.Terrill Burton of Miami (Ohio)skimmed over the 70-yard lowhurdles in :07.8 to tie the indoorrecord in that event. He finishedSG passes housing resolution;Acts to end "embarrassment"by Sue TaxLast Tuesday Student Government went "on record as being opposed to the present situa- g0vernmenttion whereby certain students making use of the administration's housing file are exposed to Kiendl Wedof Student Union, stated late about a step ahead of Chicago’sWednesday that he hoped to see Frank Loomos. Abe Butler ofSU continued. He also had claimed Baldwin Wallace sprinted 60 yardsto have 300 signatures on a peti- in :06.1, tying the mark in thattion 4o keep SU. Bird has been event.spoken of by sources inside the Several other excellent timesUnion as a prominent candidate were posted. Fred Wilt set a newfor the presidency of Student Un- fieldhouse record, winning theion. Elections were to have been two mile in 9:08.2. Phil Colemanhel dearly next quarter. of the UC Track club turned aA four-man committee from the very fast 4:11.2. in the mile.was sent to see (Turn to page 11 for news ofWednesday following an the entire meet.)'Salt of the Earth' is sellout;150 are turned from doorApproximately 150 people were turned away from eachthe possibility of embarrassment."The statement further resolved that the assembly instruct the neighborhood commissionof SG to offer its cooperation with the University administration in attempts to adjudicatecomplaints of any injustice to student tenants."The resolution was in re- states that “the University neither segregation are the same,” saidgard to a report by the com- approves nor disapproves off- Anderson. “Negroes have mademittee investigating University campus housing. However ... at great gains in This area whichpolicy on segregated listings in tjmes cards have been removed have not come about through __ _ , , _ ^(lie administration’s housing file. from the file in cases of extremely compromise. They have come 0f SRP’s three showings of Salt of the Earth Wednesdayposition clear, and not backing mSht The 10:15 Presentation of this union-produced filmdown.” was sold out at 9. The film was generally available. The immenseTwo amendments to by-laws shown is Soc. Sci. 122, and follow- interest shown by UC students inThere were two amendments *n£ the f‘rst showing on Wednes- sa|t 0f fhe Earth indicates thatmade to the election by-laws. day and the first of the two show- they have not been intimidatedFirst, that there shall be no elec- *n2s last Friday, discussions were by the attempts to suppress it.tioneering within ten feet of the held- “This interest also signifies theresolution, suggested wording is “bigger financially than segre- polling area and that the ballot Lenna Jones, chairman of SRP’s universal relevance of the prob-changes to make the statement gators and will do everything in box be included in that area. cultural committee, stated to the lems and struggle dealt with inmore forceful. its power to fight them.” Second, the question of writing Maroon: “SRP’s showing of the the film. SRP hopes that otherSubmitted by Ken Marshall, “The real estate agencies hold- on a ballot was clarified. Write-in film was one of our attempts to groups, noting our success, willSG’s representative to South East ing property of UC interest and votes are considered writing and present to the campus important show Salt of the Earth then**Chicago commission, the report the agencies with policies of most See ‘SU/ page 4 cultural achievements that are selves.”Dean Strozier, the report said, has poor physical condition or overt about by standing up, making thetentatively approved a letter to be discrimination.”»M11 to file listers outlining UC's Report falls shortZl'f Hmma °7 r1,"1., an,d Joel Rosenthal (SRP-huml and*» t0.,he land,°rds Don Anderson (SRP-soel support-n to students. ed the report and resolution, butWant forceful wording feIt they did not go nearly farThe report, as well as the SG enough. Rosenthal said that UCfury I PIE IHIIAUU JRARUUN March 4f 1^?^"Department of education experiments in teacher trainingIncreased emphasis is being placed on training of teachers by the ^UC division of education, Robert L. McCaul, assistant directorof the newly established center for teacher education, asserted. Active in instituting new concepts of teachers1 training, the Univer¬sity this fall partially reorganized its program, set up a new council on teacher education, a center for teacher education, ond put intooction two new programs.The council on teacher education, according to McCoul, is o high level group to formulate general policies which'govern teaching-training in the University. ~ ;Chairman of the council is an organized series of firsthandWendell R. Harrison, vice experiences with children. Theypresident of the University.The center for teacher education,»nder the direction of Francis F.Chase, chairman of the depart¬ment of education, was estab¬lished to carry out the policiesformulated by the council andacts as an information center.Under the supervision of theMew agencies, a unified pro¬gram of training for elementaryschool teaching was inaugurat¬ed this fall. Designed to experi¬ment in ways of improving thepreparation of elementaryschool teachers, this programoffers to graduates of liberalarts colleges who have had noprevious work in professionaledv-cation, a one year coursewhrch is adequate preparationfor Illinois state teaching. observe and study children of var¬ious ages in classroom and non¬classroom situations, make casestudies of children and do prac¬tice teaching. In the seminar pe¬riod they discuss these experi¬ences as a group with each otherand with the members of the fac¬ulty directing the program. Thereading and discussions developout of these observations.The second new -program in¬stituted this fall provides halftuition remission for personswith BA degrees who wish toenter into teaching and for peo¬ple already teaching who aretaking work on the graduatelevel. three areas of education: essen¬tial research in theory of edu¬cation, training of specialistsand training elementary andsecondary school teachers. Theincreased emphasis on the lat¬ter area is possible in part bythe new BA programs, underwhich a student nuiy preparefor teaching without extendingthe length of time necessary for a BA, and without necessarily the college, specific requirementsobtaining a MA. of the division involved and re-The educational programs of- quirements for teaching are ae-fered are unique in that they are complished by substituting indecentralized; the division itself place of electives in the division,prepares teachers for elementary five courses in teaching,school, secondary school work is a new brochure to be publisheddone under the supervision of the jn the near future, explains^ ihedivision in which the subject tobe taught is classified.Specific means of accomplish¬ing the general education aims of lege programs.possibilities for receiving teach¬ing training at UC to prospectivestudents, in light of the new col-Education dept, history showsemphasis on training, researchby Joan BehrensonThe evolution of the University of Chicago’s department of education from a group ofThe center for teacher educa- independent institutes and schools to a stable organization of co-operative parts has broughttion, besides supervising these with it also a change in basic theories.chures"postersnewsletters *Tn From a professional school set up primarily for the training of teachers, the school hasterviewing for the scholarships expanded its function to include a larger emphasis upon research and graduate work inoffered in education, and consulta- the scientific theory of educa-The program particularly en- tion with faculty on methods of tion, and is again beginning to This was only one facet of the tion had come to exist independ-ables women who have liberal establishing the programs. increase its emphasis on teach- educational picture at Chicago, ently as a school whose primaryarts degrees and who now find “The University is pioneering in er training. In 1899, through a grant of one purpose was undergraduate train-that thpv havp time with thpir new ideas in education,” said Me- The story of its evolution dates million dollars by Mrs. Emmons ing of teachers with graduatei .cy c line, wi uicii Caul «These two programs, to- back to the early days of the Uni- Blaine, the Chicago institute, with work being carried on by a depart-children in school or grown, to gether with the already unique versity when John Dewey headed a combined teacher training pro- ment of education in the graduateteach. decentralized organization, will the department of pedagogv, then gram, elementary school and kin- division of arts and sciences.“These are the logical sources help to make teacher education a- part of the department of phil- dergarten, was founded with Colo- Judd innovatesof more teachers” McCaul point- going concern, which it has not osophy, which primarily con- nel Packer, former head of Chi- It was with the coming of Juddo,.t FnrniiPd thin vpar *r-P a always been,” he pointed out. “It cerned itself with the investiga- ca£° normal school, as its direc- in 1909 that a new era began. Dur-y involves people from all over the tion of educational problems. tor- *n£Judds long tenure as directorIn June 1896. Dewey opened an In 1901- at the request of Presi- »ntil 1937 the “scientific theory”elementary school knowfas the d™t William Rainey Harper ofUniversity laboratory school, at the University of Chicago, the in5714 Kimbark.group of twelve, mainly house- University to make them moreWives. concerned in this problem.”The students participate in a Decentralized program unique$eminar-type training, based on The division is interested inHither and yonOppenheimer banned from speakingon University of Washington campus stitute became affiliated with theUniversity. In the summer of thatyear the school began sessions,still under Colonel Parker’s direc¬tion. The school occupied a partof w hat is now the bookstore f°r hs students.school of education became in1937 today’s department of educa¬tion within the division of socialsciences with emphasis now on re¬search, graduate work and a well-rounded cross campus educationwhile waiting for the completionof Blaine hall.I^ab school establishedIn the meantime, the Univer¬sity had changed the Chicagomanual training school and the After a period during which theteachers’ training function wasde-emphasized, the departmenthas turned to greater considera¬tion of how it can best dischargethis growing responsibility.(Graduates successfulThe department has duringthese years been relatively small,numbering as many as 200 stu-by Joel PichenyTwo weeks ago at the University of Washington (Seattle) Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer South Side academy into a secwas banned from lecturing by the university president, Schmitz. ondary lab school which came un-E. A. Uehling, acting director of the physics department which initiated the plan to bring der the contro1 of Dewey.Oppenheimer to the University, said that stifled intellectual atmosphere will not produce „Wiih Parker’s death in 1902 dents only in the crowded post¬good research. “Not only do we deny ourselves the opportunity of contact with one of the Dewey became head, until 1904, of war years. With its purpose pi ireally great minds of America, but we tell the world and we tell ourselves that we do not seek ,h,e newly'c°nsolidated school of marily to train scholars and reto become a great university.” —s education, which now mcorporat-T'u tt~: ° ,tt u- ed the secondary school and theIhe University ot Washing- dent said that his ruling will days later, stressed: “No blazing Dewey school. At that time theton Daily received over thirty stand. He said that his decision editorial appeared denouncing the ’graduate courses were still beingletters concerning the decision was based on “long and careful ban. It wasn't needed. The OA directed by the department ofwith all biyt one “vigorously pro- study of his (Oppenheimer’s) gov- faculty and student body did the philosophy,testing President Schmitz’ stand.” ernmental relationships.” He re- job quite adequately.The Daily itself interviewed a marked that his ruling did not re- “This isn’t ‘just another Dailynumber of faculty members and fleet on the physicist’s scientific crusade.. This is a campus cr„.capabilities nor his right to ex- safje and a mighty healthy onepress a point of view, nor did it search workers, many obtainedPhD’s to ultimately become lead¬ing educators and teachers in uni¬versities and colleges.Twenty-five became presidentsof higher institutions of learningfound that “not one personamong 35 interviewed . . . ap¬proved the decision of PresidentSchmitz.”Many organizations, includingthe all campus Organizations as¬sembly, have protested againstthe ban. The assembly, in a voteof 47-0, passed a motion asking erans organization and the cam at that.”involve the question of academicfreedom.After this stand was reiteratedan open forum was held, ^spon-sored by the campus YMCA, Vet- But by 1907 the school of educa- throughout the United States.‘'Enjoy Our Fine Continental Cuisine inRelaxed Atmosphere’*the president to reconsider his de¬cision “not to obtain Dr. Oppen¬heimer’s services . . .”Despite the considerableamount of comment made by bothstudents and faculty, the presi- pus ACLU. Petitions protestingthe president’s decision were cir¬culated and a number of facultymembers spoke.An editor’s note in the Univer¬sity of Washington Daily, a few B O R D O N E> Movers and Light Hauling1VI 6-9832 CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Doily (except Mondoys) from 4:30 - 10:00Sundays — 12 Noon - 10 P.M.1508 E. 57lh Street Phone 1*1.n/a 2-9355REQUISITES FOR THE SPIRITUAL LIFEA Vital FaithA Sense of MissionA Commanding LoyaltyA Sustaining FellowshipA Steadfast SpiritAn Assurance of VictoryPre-Easter Sermon SeriesCommunion at 10:30 Worship Service at 11UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THEDISCIPLES OF CHRIST5655 University AvenueDr. Irvin E. Lunger, ministerCome let ms worship togetherMarch 6March ISMarch 20March 27April 3April 10 COMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.• Bar-be-cue ribs• Bar-be-cue chickenDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525 booksbooksbooksbooks! used,new,foreignSCHNEEMANSRed Door Book Shop10% Discount to Students1328 E. 57 St. NO 7-6111l >'<.» «V WAV' \ s’.V- VV.V.V. .V.V.V .V.V W/.‘ W.V.V.V.V.W/AWMarch 4, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pag* 1McKeon to speak on Gilson Pre-registrationIn accordance with its tradition of annual tribute to the £q begin TtlOtlclclygenius of St. Thomas Aquinas, Calvert club is presenting Rich- ® Jard P. McKeon, distinguished service professor of Greek and Pre-registration for studentsPhilosophy, in a public address "T ,7"™ ™ T th^Un‘T^f ',y"r^Tr, j L,. IT . _ . will begin Monday. The scheduleon Gilson and The Unity of Pans teachers which included js as f0n0Ws-philosophical Experience at 4:30 Brunschvieg, Lalande, and Gilson March 7-u Business schoolpm., Sunday, in Breasted hall, exerted profound influence pro-Oriental institute, free of charge. femton>1£ , their use o£ te£ch.McKeon world famous ph.los- , that laid primaryopher and schotot:is American e^phasis on the use of ori„ina|delegate to UN . source materials rather than text-Scholar, historian, and ph.los- lKwk an(1 on .Vxl>licaHon duopher, Et.enne C.lson current y involving an understand- London debaters lick UC;say free speech declining“If the American people are confident of their governmentand their way of life they have no reason to fear Communism,’*stated Lester Borley from the University of London lastThursday night at Interna- *Social service admlntstra- tional house during the de- doners based most of their argu-Resolved: freedom of ment on mccarthyism and otherGraduate library schoolHumanitiesLaw schoolSocial sciencesdirector of studies at the Ponti- ing of the concepts, ideas and March 14-16 Federated theologicalschoolsMarch 14-16 Biological sciencesMedical schoolPhysical sciencesRegistration will take place in bate,speech is substantially decreasing such elements in the Unitedin the United States today.” States. The Chicago team, De-The London team, Lester Bor- wane Barnes and Roger Bowen,Torordo^iohied ^Uie^'facultjf^at m,ethods Present in the writings all deans’offices, except the busi- iey and Jennifer Copeman, gained stated that we haveof great men. As McKeon remark- ness school office, from 8:30 to .. . ._ frnpHnmParis in 1922 at which time Mc¬Keon began three years of intensive studies in medieval philos- proaob (0 higher education stem between 9 a.m. and noon and 1 who were taking the negativeophy under him. This began a from fbe Work of this Paris group, and 4 p.m. side of the question. The Lonlife long friendship between thetwo scholars.One of the deep rooted themesin Gilson’s long career has beenwhat he calls The Unity of Philo¬sophical Experience, which servedas the title for his series of Wil¬liam James lectures at Harvardin 1936 7. never really, . • . . -t irk .. a m the audience's favor and won had freedom of speech .n Americaned in an interview, many of the 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 to 4:30 pm. s . * u ,fundamental features of UC's ap- The business school will register the debate over the Chicago team in the true sense of the word.The Chicago team quoted his¬torical facts from the history ofour country, and illustrated thatfrom the time of the Alien andSedition acts to 1937 (when teach¬ers in 28 states had to sign loyal¬ty oaths* freedom of speech hasChinese student explains plightby Duchess Lough ran‘Foreign students should have the right to know that they will not be able to go back to not existe<Jfn his exposition of this theme, ing last Sunday night.McKeon will relate Gilson s his- —-their own country when they come here,” declared Alex Wong at the Young Friends meet- The Londoners offered the idesthat you cannot get rid of total!-During the 1920's th<f galaxy of their problem.torical studies to his nhiiosonhir The discussion was held for the purpose of enabling Wong the American Civil Liberties un- tarianism bY usin2 totalitarian^.. . , ... ^ P fo describe his nli^ht ?$nd thp nli^ht of othpr ^tiiHpnt^ • .. , , , , tic policies, 3ind thst since AmeivrowZ"oa pte^phy^ who arc not aliowedTo murn "to C ommunS! a"na WonR ” °““*d *hem he'P and ^ country lhae «he res,, J pimosopny ib . „ , ui~ - port- of the world should look up to itstudied not for its own sake, but that he hoped that his The u ht of the American air. must ^ strong and not ^ afraidas the fruitful matrix of prob- Story and the story of his Wang arrived in the United men who are being kept in China of Communism.lems that all philosophers must friends would help the people states in 1948 and attended the helped the Americans see that the The debate being in EnglishCe'- on th,s campus to understand University of Washington in Se- same thing was going on here too style, with free audience partict-attleand Brown university where wben tbey sdw our letter in their pation. the audience gave the Chi-he received a PhD in mathe- "^papers, Wang stated. cago team little voice to speak... TT . ... . Irn, The reply to their letter stated At one point the whole debate al-maties. He is now teaching at IIT. that ha(f of the Chinese students most turned into a free-for-all andThe first attempt he made to had been granted permission to much of what Barnes said wasreceive permission to leave was leave and that the eases of the re- lost amid the noise of the audi-in 1953 and it was not until this maining number who desired to once,year that he was finally granted retur" ,China ™ereu re-The steering committee of the All-Campus Civil Liberties such permission. hewf thTrmore than haff ^f Switch dieticianscommittee (ACCLC) has centered its work around securing lieved that more than half ofinformation concerning the Broyles bills.The main part of its investigation has been concerned withthe nature and extent of oppo-ACCLC committee begins;studies means to stop billsIn August of 1954 Wang and a these students are not being There’ll be some changes madegroup of his friends wrote a let- granted permission, but that there in the head dietician positions atter of appeal to President Eisen- *s n°tbing they can do but appeal C-group, B-J. and Hutchinson”'7 —y~ r :'~: bower and issued this leiier tr» to tbe American people. Commons today. Miss Boeltz, headSlUon, the legislative proce- ACCLC will be able to present . .. Wang concluded. “We are not dietician of C group, will-super-dure they must go through and their opposition. various newspapers all over thethe best means of stopping thebills. Communists; most of us arrived vise the Commons while MissACCLC has also scheduled Mr. the steerinS committee, other sub-In addition to the work done by country. A few newspapers car- here before the Communists took Kishimoto, B J head dietician, willried the story and the American over China. We only want to see 8° to C-group. Mrs. Baugh willBernard Weisberg prominent Chi- comm’ittes'Vavewnt acted’other Friends service committee and our families again and we hope leave the Commons for B-J.^go lawyer ^ graduate of the schools in Illinois. They reported that we ca" help promote mutual In honor of Miss Boeltz andUnTversUy of^ScIgo Law ihool. that they did this in order to in- , . f understanding between Commu- Miss Kishimoto. students andHe will speak at their next meet- form the school of their work and LUWei f dltJb IUIing, March 9 in Law North at 8 to enlist their support in Spring- - - . -pm. His talk will l>e about the field. SprinCJ interim tiTpSlegal aspects of the Broyles bills. In an official statement ACCLC York Central is offering aThe committee reported that stated that “The committee feels . . . , ..the bills were on the floor of the that the student body of the Uni- pec _ P®1* 000 uc ,on onSenate and were still being dis- versity of Chicago is not well round trip fares for student andcused. It was noted, however, that enough informed as to the nature faculty groups totaling 25 and publican nominee for mayor, will be held tonight under the spon-there is a strong possibility of of the bills.” It also announced traveling to the same destination sorship of Young Republicanstheir passing. ACCLC further its intensions of distributing this .i,* cnrinfT , . ’ ,stated in a press release that the information through mimeo- & T ,e °Pen boU!ie W,N begin at 9 and will be held at the Phi Gammabe Groups will leave March 18, and Delta house, 5615 University. All interested students are invited tohave the option of returning in nist China and the rest of the staff of C-group had a tea yester-worid.” day afternoon in Green lounge.Merriam on campus toniteAn all campus open house for Alderman Robert E. Merriam. Re¬bills will then move to the House,” graphed literature that willwhere organizations such as passed out on the campus.t^iMaiiiiii mwi—iiiii>iiiiiimiiiwiiniii*5A SNACK... A LUNCH...A MEALOn a freshly steamed bun, we tenderlyplace the puppy dog — not a wiener, buta VIENNA puppy dog — red Hot — purebeef — accompanied by a ngmustard, relish, onions and "1hot pepper, complete with X m M ua generous portion of our ^famous french fried potatoes which areoften imitated but never excelled. OurNEDLOG orange and root beer is un¬equaled and no extra charge is made forcarry-out containers. meet the alderman and ask ques-dividually if desired by April 4. tions about his program. Refresh- n/nJ,J ,*trilL*There are also other round trip ments will be served. W UTIU ICUCTUllbl UUKS, . f Lucy Law. national chairman ofxeduced fares available for m- Alderman Merriam, who is an the student Federalists, will pre-dividual and smaller group travel, alumnus of the University, where sent a lecture, “A Stronger UnitedArrangements for the special father was a member of the Nations-Student Interest in Eu-rate are made through the John political science staff, was to have rope and Asia- the east loungeStocks travel service in the ad- cooker. Oo caniDUS iast week but bouse tonight at^.poxen On campus tasi weex dui g T,avv wiio has served withministration building March 7-11. was prevented from doing so by fhe UN.l^ sponsored by ^uthEarly reservations are desirable an unexpected meeting of the side chapter, of the United Worldto help determine space needs. city council. , Federalists.PUPPY TOWNopen until 1 A.M,1351 !E. 55Hi Sfrert DO 3-9366Orders ov«r $1.00 dullver*diwiww—tl MYSTERY PHOTOoeSWo9dlmum's C&mtplrir Family Sh+e Store* 1133 East 63rd StreetOpen Mon. and Thurs. Evenings #The Maroon is once again going torun a MYSTERY PHOTO CONTEST.It will be sponsored by Charles ShoeStore. The winner each week will re¬ceive a certificate which is good for$5 worth of merchandise. Answersmust be submitted to Charles ShoeStore at 1133 East 63rd Street. Youmay either mail your answer in or elsebring it in. No answers by phone willbe accepted. In case of ties, the earli¬est correct answer will be the winningone. The winner will be announcedin the next issue of the Maroon.TODAY is your lost chance to getyour graduate photo in CAP AND GOWN ** ^sign up today in the North Lounge Reynolds Clubff€ 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON M»refc 4, )^55EditorialsBroyles Bills threaten our rights;ACCLC should publicize dangerThe "anti-subversive” bills of State Senator PaulBroyles tRep., Mt. Vernon) are now before thelegislature. Earlier, we stated that the bills wereSi threat to academic freedom because they allowedmen other than educators to decide who can teachfan the schools. There is a need now to be moreexplicit, to describe more fully our qualms aboutthese bills.Their danger to democracy lies in the followingbasic provisions: 1) that all state employees mustlagn loyalty oaths; 2) that any member of a "sub¬versive” or “foreign subversive” organization,knowing its character to be such, is liable to fiveyears imprisonment and $5,000 fine (a “subversive”organization being illustrated by the 260 groupsOn the Attorney General’s list); 3) that those per-faons who “advocate, abet, teach and advise” theCommission of “subversive” acts are liable to 20years imprisonment and $20,000 fine; and 4) thatO state employee who is a member of any of theseOrganizations (knowing or not) is subject to dis¬charge upon the discretion of his superior.The meaning of these provisions is serious. Thedanger lies in the fact that discharge is not depend¬ent upon proof of subversion. Mere membershipin any organization on the Attorney General’s list,Or mere refusal to sign a loyalty oath is enough tosubject any public employee to discharge. The bills*>ould have the effect of outlawing “subversive”Organizations, and of creating 'ear ridden institu¬tions of our schools.This year there are some significant changesfrom the bills of 1953. They are i) the elimination©f a textbook investigating commission; 2) theelimination of a special assistant Attorney Generalin charge of subversive activities (thus localizingthe authority); and 3) the attachment of TheUnited States Attorney General’s list containing260 “subversive” organizations.The first two changes have tended to allay thefears of many people. However, the last makesCampus leaders raise ireover issue that isn't there. “I expected I would be dropping a bombshell butI didn’t think it would be a hydrogen bomb.”Thus did Arthur Kiendl describe his formation©f the new Student Activities council (SAC) Wed¬nesday. He did not over state.Perhaps nothing in recent UC history hasaroused such immediate response and controversyas the formation of the new council.Within hours of the fishbowl announcement,Student Government had gone into closed sessionto discuss the plan. Both Kiendl and Dean RuthMcCarn were besieged Wednesday with individualstudents and delegations of students with requestsranging all the way from returning Student Unionto setting up an all campus student activitiescouncil with a membership similar to that of theAll Campus Civil Liberties committee. (ACSAC?)WUCB interviewed Kiendl Tuesday night; we w'erebeseiged Wednesday with statements from peopleboth in and out of the dissolved Student Union.The most ironic thing about this whole situa¬tion is that all the shouting is about a prospectthat doesn’t exist. Yes, Kiendl did set up a five-manboard and Kiendl’s original address did chargethem “with two primary areas of responsibility;co-ordinating, planning and executing, through,committees, the social program of the campus, andsecondarily, reviewing the entire*social activities program with the help of other interested andrep resen tative students.” He also did say he “con¬ceived” this group of five organization heads,“to be part of the governmental structure ofthe campus.’But it must be remembered that this programwas not uttered with any great finality, and hadbeen modified almost before Kiendl’s words hadstopped echoing through the “fishbowl.”It must be remembered that Kiendl has presentedno complete plan to the student body; he has pre¬sented only ideas for them to accept or reject.Kiendl appears only to be trying to accomplishcertain ends, in response to an expressed studentneed, the revivification of social life on campus.What is to be done and how it is to be done hasbeen laid in the laps of the student body, and itis apparently to remain there.Even the question of who shall be representedon this council during its period of re-evaluationof campus social life and its later constitutionalstage has not been finally settled.Granted that the way in which Kiendl’s officeoriginally handled the affair unnecessarily fright¬ened the campus; nevertheless the fact is that thestudent body is faced with the enviable situationof being able to evaluate student needs on a widescale and of being able to do something about them.I would like to voice two rathermild comments upon last week’sMaroon: First of all, there is the“adopt activity-censorship rule”headline. I do not believe that thiseditorializing is fair to those pres¬ent at the meeting that evening.The debate specifically consideredwhether or not Rule Six was un¬democratic or, a censorship rule.A majority of 56 to 32 felt thatsuch was not the case; in fact, themapority fell that the rule accom¬plished the goal of attaining andassuring a more democratic rep¬resentation off-campus of Iheviews of the student body. TheMaroon certainly has a right todisagree with this view, but suchdisagreement belongs on the edi¬torial page, and not in the head¬lines.I find, however, the attitude ofthe “masked bandits” more dis¬concerting, for it represents an alltoo prevalent misunderstanding©f the functioning of political par¬ties -it gives the false impressionthat the ACCLC representedmerely the appearance of twoblocs of voters who then exercisedtheir strength. If this were so, I doubt that the speakers such asMr. Breslow (who demonstratedmuch care in the preparation ofhis views) would have wastedtheir time. Actually, the situationwas more complex. True, therewere present two organizedgroups of voters who were suf¬ficiently well informed of the is¬sues discussed in the previousACCLC’s to have come to a deci¬sion on the problem of Rule Six.However, betweenthese twogroups of twenty-five to thirtyvoters sat a group of twenty tothirty independents — unknownquantities whose vote could bepredicted and counted upon byneither side. It was to these votersthat the speeches were addressed;and it was they who decided thefinal issues. I am thoroughly ac¬quainted with both of the groupsrepresented in the ACCLC and inwatching the representatives filein, I noted many faces unknownto both sides. These were the onesto be convinced.In a similar manner, the cam¬pus elections function. Any per¬son who has bothered (as I have)to analyze the election results will note a common core of known andpredictable votes on each side.From the existence of these or¬ganized voters the deduction is alltoo frequently made that the par¬ties impose their views upon thiscampus. The contrary is, however,the true situation. For it is asmaller but deciding group of in¬dependent voters who twice ayear decide the elections. As areaction to this independentgroup, the membership and poli¬cies of the parties remains fluid;no self perpetuating bureaucracycan impose its views. Rather, theparties fulfill the necessary func¬tion of defining attitudes and gen¬eral approaches towards a welterof detailed problems. Fluiditywithin the parties guarantees thatthe basic orientations presentedto the campus will vary with theconditions and issues. It is then upto the voters to decide. Of courseboth sides to any issue try tobring to bear as much votingpower as they can — that is theirright when they have individuallythought through the issues. TheACCLC is typical of this generalsituation. 1 Jerome A* Gramsttoe bills even more dangerous by eliminating theneed to prove the "subversive” character of anorganization. Though the list is printer! in refer¬ence to the clause speaking of the discharge ofstate employees, it is obvious that the organiza¬tions on the list would be used as definitive forany of the other sections of the bill.Former Governor Adlai Stevenson, vetoing thebills in 1951, stated “. . . I think there is in it moreof a danger to the liberties we seek to protect thanof security for the Republic. It reverses our tradi¬tional concept of justice by placing upon the ac¬cused the burden of proving himself innocent.”In 1953 after one of the bills had passed bothhouses of the legislature, Governor Stratton vetoedit under strong pressure from The Illinois Councilof Churches (with 1 million members), CIO, AFL(1.300.000 members), Chicago and iftinois BarAssns., NAACP, and civic, fraternal, farm and busi¬ness groups.However, this year Stratton has recommendedthat “our laws on subversion be strengthened”and the Broyles bills, sponsored by a majority ofstate senators, have had an early start. Thus thereexists an added chance of passage.Because of the threat to democracy that theBroyles bills represent; because of the addedchances within the State Government for their pas¬sage; and because of an encouraging, less intimi-datingly McCarthyite atmosphere, we urge the AllCampus Civil Liberties Committee (ACCLC) totake immediate action against the bills.ACCLC’s duty in the coming weeks, now withthe parliamentary technicalities ended, is to en-'courage the fullest discussion of the bills in itsown ranks, to inform the campus, to the widestextent possible, of the danger of the bills, and toorganize efficient lobbying delegations to go toSpringfield. This, with a minimum of bickeringand a maximum of speed. Issued once weekly by the publisher, TKe Chicago Maroon, at the publico.Hon office, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. TelephonesEditorial Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1010; Business ond Advertising Office/Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions Umoil, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.Allen R. Janger editor-in-chiefRichard E. Word managing editorWilliam M. Brandon business managerExecutive news editor Joy BurbochNews editors Diono Epstein, Bob Quinn, Dovid SchlessingtrNews feoture editor Lo.s GardnerFeoture editor ■ joe| p,chenySports editor Spike P.nneyPhotography editor Ronold GrossmonActing copy editor Jack BurbochAdvertising manager Gory MokotoffAssistant news editors Prentiss Choote, Berenice Fisher, Sue ToxProduction manager Mitchell SlemPersonnel monoger Jock BurbochCalendar editor Rosemory GolliEditoriol stoff Abotie,Som Blazer, Robert Bloch, Alice Brown, Roger Bowen, Paul Breslow,Alon Chorlens, Chorles Cooper, Duchess Loughron, Don Fisher, KentFlannery, Fred Freed, Smokey Gorcio, Sam Greenlee, Bonnie Greot-mon, Bill Koplon, Ken Karlin, Fred Karst, Bruce Larkin, FrankTernenyi, Roy Sanders, Gory Schwartz, Poul Hoffman.Business staff: city advertising monoger, Robert Lofts; business secretory,Don Miller; subscription monoger, Norman Lewok; billing secretory,Tom Kopontais.Photogrophers George Zygmund, Charles BeckerSC su(from page 1)render the ballot void.The assembly approved eightappointments to the divisional ori¬entation board. They are:Bob Baumruk, graduate libraryschoolJoe Shimbel, soe. sci.Robert Geidt. phy. sci.Joy Burbach, soc. sci.Bernard Del Giorno, businessschoolHelen Wheeler, soc. sci.Byron Rainey, phy. sci.Sam Venturella, soc. sci.Further appointments are pend¬ing. Shimbel was appointed tem¬porary chairman.MIT invitation toldPresident A1 Fortier announcedthat the Massachusetts Instituteof Technology has invited a two-man delegation to attend the Na¬tional Conference on Discrimina¬tion and Selectivity in AmericanUniversities this month.He also announced that the Lit¬tle UN conference will be held atthe University of Wisconsin. UCwill send a six-man delegation totake part of USSR in the mockUN session.The assembly appropriated $175for a proof press for the new SGpublicity service and appropriateda loan of $50 to the All CampusCivil Liberties committee for get¬ting started on mailings. (from page 1)I conceive this organization(SAC) to be a part of the govern¬mental structure of the campus,working in specific areas for thebenefit of students,” Kiendl hadsaid Tuesday to the assembledmembers of the proposed council.“We want to get at the student.We don’t feel that any group ad¬equately represents the students,”Mary Alice Ross Newman, assist¬ant director of student activities,said at the Student Union boardmeeting Tuesday afternoon, be¬fore the SAC meeting.‘Good reasons’ for excluding SG“I think there are good reasonswhy Student Government has notbeen asked to take over,” com¬mented someone at the boardmeeting.Fortier, SG president, saidWednesday, speaking for the Gov¬ernment, “We certainly won’t takeanything over against the will ofthe campus. ... I think the Gov¬ernment definitely has a duty tothe campus. We’re not trying totread on anybody’s toes.”Bruce Larkin, 1953-54 presidentof Student Union said earlyWednesday, “Until the position ofstudents and administrators pro¬posing change and re-evaluationhave been crystallized, most com¬ment regarding the Student Un¬ion problem will be made in avacuum. ... As long as the dis¬cussion proceeds in an open at¬mosphere it will be welcome.”Football defended byforum at open sessionThe audience at yesterday’sdebate in the Reynolds Club wenton the record two to one for thereestablishment of big time foot¬ball at UC. An ever-shifting audi¬ence, which at one time numbered85, drank free coffee and partici¬pated loudly in the South Loungeaffair. For the affirmative MaryAnn Chacerestos proposed the re¬turn of football as a fund-raisingplan to interest alumni and as ameans of establishing standardsof personal cleanliness which ap¬pear to be lacking at present.Davis Bobrow for the negativeboth defended the sanitation ofUC students and claimed thatfunds raised by football generallyare poured into sports ratherthan education and introduce anunhealthy element of alumni con¬trol.Continuing for the affirmative,Don MeClintock renewed the at¬tempt to lave the. student bod} and pointed out the unifying forceof football in student spirit. Thenegative constructive speechesended with Eddie Simmons whopainted a black picture of footballabuses elsewhere and maintainedthat the financial position of theuniversity was sufficiently soundand that its integrity need not becompromised by such money rais¬ing schemes. After an activeperiod in which many speecheswere made from the floor, Bob-row summarized for the negativeby illustrating the disproportion¬ate role football assumes whereit is encouraged on a large scale.MeClintock concluded for theaffirmative with the argumentthat the ideal of big-time footballis sound and the attempt to real¬ize the ideal while avoiding theabuses, as the Ivy colleges do, »•an intellectual challenge whichshould not be shirked.March 4, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Gilkey speaks on Buber'srole in modern theology“Thd unique thing in Martin Buber is not so much his phi!osophy as his religion,” said Charles W. Gilkey, dean emeritus World University Service,of the chapel, speaking last Tuesday in Breasted hall in the CARE, UC Settlement house,Qiant humantash, psychoanalyst to highlight Purim partyA humantash (triangular confection) two feet by one foot, will be raffled off at the an¬nual Purim carnival this Sunday at 6:30 at Hillel foundation.More than a dozen student organizations will be participating in the carnival which isbeing held to raise funds forfifth annual Charles W. Gilkey lecture.His topic was ‘‘Some Influences of Martin Buber in Con¬temporary Thought.”The Gilkey lectures were es- most important thing in life,tablished by Hillel foundationin honor of the dean emeritusat the time of his retirement asdean. The lecture two years agowas given by Martin Buber, whosework was the subject of Gilkey'slecture.The essence of Buber’s thought,which is expressed at greaterlength in his book I and Thou, isexpressed briefly in J. H. Olden’sbook. Life Is Commitment, Gil¬key explained. “A radical changein my thought . . . was broughtabout by I and Thou, Gilkey quot¬ed Olden.Man’s attitude toward theworld is twofold: toward things itis “I and it,” toward persons, “Iand thou.” Although the two atti¬tudes are not entirely separate,they are fundamentally differentand not interchangeable. The for¬mer attitude is the concern ofscience. The latter attitude, al¬though often neglected, is the To find out what love is youneed another person; you findout “by surrender, by committingyourself.”Buber’s influence upon modernChristian thought, Gilkey con¬cluded. is very great; he quotedPaul Tillich, who referred to Bu¬ber’s personality as the “radia¬tion of a mind full of God.” Hebrew university, and Boardof Jewish Education.Features of the carnival are for¬tune telling, dancing, refresh¬ments, caricatures, and games ofskill and chance.A guest psychoanalyst will beat the carnival to offer his serv¬ices to interested students. Theclimax of the evening will be thecrowning of “Queen Esther.” photo by ZygmundNominated to compete for the Queen Esther crown at the Purimcarnival are Sue Talmy, Hillel; Helen Easton, Phi Sigma Delta;Bella Rubinson, Sigma; Lyn Carter, Beta Theta Pi; Emmy Meyer,Mortarboards. Votes of those students attending the carnival willdetermine the winner.Midyear reunion attracts 1100 alumni;shows them facets of UC in actionWUS driveclose to goalThe WUS fund raising com¬mittee, under the direction ofChuck Mittman, reports that Last Saturday the annual mid year reunion of alumni, sponsored by the collegedivision of the alumni association, brought somt 1100 alumni back to the campusto see its facilities, programs, and activities. The main event of the day was a seriesof tours of various buildings, and laboratories of interest. Herewith are photographsof the tour through the UC clinics and Argonne Cancer research hospital.Dr. Donald King, research physicist at Argonne. explains the workings of the“cobalt bomb,” a high energy source of radiation used in cancer therapy. The sourceof this radiation comes from radioactive cobalt in the round projection at the top ofthe large circle. Dr. King and some of the alumni who were present for this part ofthe tour can be seen beyond the “therapy bed" which is in the center of the photo¬graph. This photo was taken through a $2500, two-foot thick, liquid filled, glasswindow which allows the radiation therapist a good view of the treatment givenmoney is rolling in from the patient without danger to themselves,dorms as the all-campus drivecomes to a close tomorrow.As hoped, the contributions todate have been averaging onedollar per dorm resident and theyare in easy reach of their $1,000goal for this aspect of the drive.In addition the faculty appeal hasbeen very successful and the tagday yesterday has augmentedtheir total.The commute reminded every¬one that there are only two daysleft in the dorm drive and thattoday as yesterday the girls clubswill be tagging on campus.UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingTwo barbers workingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor Dr. Lawrence Lanzl begins the tour of theArgonne sub-basement with an explanation of thelinear accelerator, with which he is experimenting.The 16 feet long accelerator, capable of producing60 million electron-volts has only recently beencompleted and its powerful radiation has still notbeen used experimentally on living tissue. Dr.Lanzl stated that experimentation on various kindsof animal tissue,but not human,will soon be ini-Published today .. *THE TVAby Qordort R. Clapp“. . . as timely as today'snewspaper, written by thenation's best informed manon TVA.”— David E. Lilienthal. . required reading notonly for every student ofgovernment but for everycitizen . . . Mr. Clapp's booksummarizes an inspiring rec¬ord.” — Senator Lister Hill$3.50from your bookselleror fromiwh• s**THE UNIVERSITYOFCHICAGO PRESS5750. EJli* Avenir* , atllHIUUIIIHiniHiniHIHIIIHIIMIIMIHIHmnillllllHmiHilllUUlHIKimlllltllltinMIlHIIIIHIMIIIIHIIIIIIHIHIIHIIIIHilS| International House Movies |E East Lounge Mon. & Thors. Eves, at 7:00 & 9:00 P.M. |S Monday, March 7 — 45c — Brandy for the Parson (English) :;§= Thursday, March 10 — The Bank Dick (American) =^lllltHllltllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIimilllllllllllimilHItllllllllllHIIIIttllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllliHlltlllUUIlin? tiated.Two alumnigaze with amuse¬ment at a displayof modern artpresented byStudent Union inthe south loungeof the ReynoldsClub. The art work, presentedas part of a stu dent activitiesdisplay, featured exhibits by manyprominent student organizations.-TTTTrTT Ttt ▼ V V WWW WWWWWVVVW VW+WWWVW 'WWW WWWW\UNIVERSITY FOODS .1129 E. 55th ;Open daily A Sundays: 9 A.M. till 9:30 P.M. *l NSA discount on $3.00 purchases <ALEXANDER’SRESTAURANT1137 E. 63 Street MU 4-5735More than just a good place to eatWe cater to parties and banquetsOpen all night Books new & usedAlso Records: Caruso,Galli-Curci, etc.Open from 12 Noon till 9:30 p.m.White Boar Bookshop61 W. Division St. SU 7-3659In'55Round Trip viaSteamship $401}FREQUENT SAILINGS AH VTourist Round Trip Air BETZ JEWELRYUnusual Jewelry Our SpecialtyExpert Jewelry and Watch RepairN.S.A. Discount to Students1523 E. 53rd PL 2-3038*365 .10 *460 .80Choice of Over 100STUDENT CLASS TOURS $C AATRAVEL STUDY TOURSCONDUCTED TOURS U pUniversity Travel Co„ officialbonded agents for all lines, hasrendered efficient travel serviceon a business basis since 1926.'y»r I...I MVIdetails or write us.UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq./’Cambridge, Mass. Students' FavoriteLAUNDROMATFor the Past Six rears1. Efficient LaundromatService2. Shirts - Flat Work -All Laundry Services3. Lowest Prices inHyde ParkConte In and See OurNewly Remodeled Storewith the LATEST EquipmentUNIVERSITYLAUNDROMAT1376 E. 55rh St. PL 2-9097Page 6 TNK CHICAGO MAROON March 4, 1955Coming campus events ClassifiedJapanese studygroup formingA Japanese study group withaims to encourage the adminis¬tration to start Japanese languagecourses, facilitate exchange of in-■— *- Condor, Morch 7*»ese, and provide an informal so- Fridoy, March 4Open house for Merriom, sponsoredby Young Republicans. Refresh¬ments. Phi Gamma Deito house,9:00 pm. Movie, "Mr. Smith Goes to Washing¬ton" (American). 7 p.m. SocialScience 122; 9:30 p m. B-J lounge.25c admission. For RentFront room in spacious apt. Coo*Jugprivileges If desired. 1544 E. 62nc( atHY 3-6264.rial atmosphere for learning moreabout Japanese language and cul¬ture is now forming on campus.Anyone who is interested in join¬ing should contact Bert Bauer atInternational house, Fairfax 4-8200, or campus 1203.Women compete inbasketball tourneyThe 20th annual basketball PlayDay will be held tomorrow at IdaNoyes and Sunny Gymnasium,Starting at 9:30 a m.Varsity and intramural wom¬en’s basketball teams from 15 Illi¬nois and Wisconsin colleges willcompete in the 30 games witheach team playing twice.Kimpton on the airThe UC Round Table radiobroadcast Sunday will presentChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton;Henri Brugmans, rector of theCollege of Europe. Belgium; andRichard P. McKeon, distinguishedservice professor of classics andphilosophy at UC.SU(from page 1)party went on as scheduled.Most of the Union’s efforts werethen concentrated on the Wash¬ington promenade, held two weeksago at a loss of slightly under$900.Suggestions for carrying on thefunctions of Student Union includ¬ed three main plans. The planwhich seems most likely to be fol¬lowed at the moment is the planto restructure the Union, under aStudent Activities council.Suggest reorganizationOther plans suggested that theUnion as such be disbanded andits minimum activities carried outby a number of smaller organiza¬tions, or that an alternate methodof choosing SU officers be picked.Another plan called for StudentGovernment taking over the Un¬ion activities.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 wig room, every Friday at 6 p.m.Joint •eminor: department of eco¬nomics ond the Cowles commission.Lecture by Professor Nordin ofIowa Stote college. Low south,7:45 p.m.Saturday, March 5Gymdondy party, sponsored by theInter Vorsity Christion fellowship.Ido Noyes gym, 7:30 - 9:45 pm.Folklore society porty, singing onddoncing. Phi Gomma Delta house,8 pm. 25c admission.Sunday, March 6Episcopal communion service. Bondchopel, 8:30 o m.Lutheran communion service. Hiltonchopel, 10 a.m.University religious service. ReverendWollace Robbins, president ofMeadville theological school,Rockefeller chopel, 1 1 o m.Young Socialist league meeting, 4:30p m. Ida Noyes. Bert Hoselitz, in¬ternational relations department,will speak on "the theory of classconsciousness."Lecture: "Gilson ond the unity ofphilosophical experience," RichardP. McKeon, speaker. Sponsored byColvert club. Breasted hall, 4:30p.m.Hillel's oll-compus Purim cornivol,57)5 Woodlown, 6:30 p.m.CHanning club meeting, Tom Wordlespeaking on the "challenge to Brit¬ish pacifists." 56 3 8 Woodlown,6:30 pm.Porter fellowship supper ond meet¬ing, Dean McCarn speaking on "adeon looks ot campus religion,"Swift holl commons, 6:15 p.m.ISL caucus, Ido Noyes Alumni room,7 :30 p m.SAP coucus, Ido Noyes eost lounge,7 :30 p.m.Collegiate Srnfonietto reheorsol, In¬ternational house, east lounge, 10 Movie, "Brandy for the Parson"(English), Internotionol house, 7and 9 p.m.Hillel meeting, reading of the Bookof Esther. Free Purim cokes, 5715Woodlown, 7:45 pm.German table, International housedining room, every Monday, 6 p.m.Tuesday, March 8Lecture, Tom Wordle, British paci¬fist, will speak on racism in SouthAfrica, sponsored by Young So¬cialist league. Ido Noyes, 8 p m.35c odmission.University mountaineers meeting, Ro-senwald 26, 7:30 p m.Concert bond rehearsal, 5823 Ken¬wood, 8 p m.SG meeting. Low north, 7:30 pm.Wednesday, March 9Comero club meeting, discussion onacquiring o new 4x5 enlarger.Eckhart 202, 7:30 p.m.ACCLC meeting, business ond ospeaker. Low north, 7:30 p m.University Theotre production, Ibsen'sThe Wild Duck, Reynolds club the¬otre, 8:30 p.m. Tickets availabletown center ot 19 SSHith Lo Salle,and by moil, $1.Zoology club meeting, "Oxygen iso¬tope analysis of shell moteriol."Cesare Emiliani, speaker. Zoology14, 4:30 p.m.Thursday, March 10University Theotre production, Ibsen'sThe Wild Duck, Reynolds club the¬atre, 8:30 p.m., $1 odmission.Movie, "The Bonk Dick" (American),Internotionol house, 7 ond 9 p.m.Lecture, "cosmic rays ond some prob¬lems of Galactic structure," spon¬sored by Astronomical society. Eck¬hart 133, 7:30 p m. PersonalThe new survey! History, sociology, psy¬chology. and sheer enjoyment. Otteredby University Theatre from March 9 toMarch 13 Inclusive, at 8:30 p.m. Title ofcourse: The Wild Duck. Get your classtickets for $1 at the student servicecenter or University Theatre office.Warning: No good on the comp! Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372Services■.earn folk-style guitar. Sooner than youthink you can accompany your favoritesongs. Group method. Low cost. BtrnieAsbel, AT 5-6550.Student wishes to teach Japanese.Rates reasonable. Call PL 2-9813. D.vlci.; Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.► Ml 3-4226| STUDENT DISCOUNT> DELIVERY SERVICE 3x5 CARDPOCKETFILEaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaJ occasion broughtCARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1127 E. 55 1412 E. 55MU 4-9003 MU 4-8980TERRY’S PIZZAfinest pizzas madeLENTEN SPECIALSLarge Cheese PizzaReg. 1.85* now 1.40 with this adBasket of Shrimp — 99cH> also curry a futl tine of Italian foodsFREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTS1518 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-4045SPECIAL OFFERFor the next two weeks only, the price of a year's subscription to the Maroon is cutfrom $3.00 to $1.50. Take advantage of fhis offer now. Subscriptions may berenewed at this price, also. Send the blank below to:MAROON, REYNOLDS CLUB5706 UniversityChicago 37I would like to have a year's subscription to the Maroon at the special price of $1.50.NAMEADDRESS□ $1.50 enclosed□ Bill me WantedKditoria), advertising and art work as¬sistants for new inter-American month¬ly magazine. Would like some of Pro¬fessor C. Fred Rippy’s old student!- whoare interested in current Latin Ameri¬can political history. Call Ml 3-7238after 6 p.m.Chorale singers with Collegiate Sinlonl-etta performance of Bach Cantata KO8-2680 or NO 7-0143.Ride WantedRide wanted to New York, to leave onor near March 18. Call Gall Westgateafter 8 p.m. BU 8-9424.For Sale1955 Webcor model 2110-1 tape recorder.Brand new. 35 per cent off of originalcost, total $135. Call Gary Stall at BJ,MI 3-6000.1949 DeSoto coupe, radio, 2 heaters, seatcovers. Must sell by end of quarter Bestoffer. Call Bob ’Smith. PL 2-2980 orMU 4-9825.12>a-inch television, $35 9x12 rug $10Lady’s English bicycle, $30. BU 8-14.74,evenings.Subscriptions to all Magazines. New andrenewal. Bargains. Julius Karpen, Room411, B-J, MI 3-6000. WANT A RIDER?NEED A RIDE?Advertise in theClassified AdcolumnLast chanceis next week!CALLMl 3-0800EXT. 1009Monday thruFriday10-12 1-5FLIP ANY CARDin or out instantlyGET AHEAD withthis ORGANIZERand REMINDERfuturo dates otforward without slipup.Carry oil of your octivo note* in thiiFockol File that has 8 tab dividers, ond holdsover 50 tords.Uso It for ClASS NOTES, FORMULAS.FXAM REVIEW NOTES, ASSIGNMENTSSOCIAL NOTES in conjunition with o hem*box filo.FLEXIBLE, NON-BUIKY, DURABLE — norigid motol — only slightly thicker fhoncords held within — ftip oat inactiv# cords— carry In ony pockot without damage otdiscomfort, long weor vinyl cover.Cards or# hold by 2 notches — notch themyourself with o 50c punch or gel themfrom <rs.Rocket Filo ond 120 cords $2.95 pcstpoid.10 DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE. E»tra.filler 100—40c, 500—$1.75 postpaid.Send check or M O. to TELLURIC MFG. CO ,R.O. Bon 3306 . Chicago 54, III.GUADALAJARASUMMER SCHOOLThe accredited bilingual schoolsponsored by the Universidad Auto¬noma de Guadalajara ond membersof Stanford University faculty willoffer in Guadalajara, Mexico, July 3-Aug. 13, courses in art, creativewriting, folklore, geography, history,language and literature. $225 coverstuition, board and room. Write Prof.Juan B. Rael, Box K, Stanford Uni¬versity, Calif. A CASA Book Storetwd Book a — Bought and SoldJust received5 new stock inpsychology and sociologyII¥ 3-9651 1117 E. 55th SlrootNThe corn grows toll in Hyde Parkalso in . . .SUN InlTlTBIinie1601 E. 55th St. wm■Your placement office hasjob-specification sheetsdetailing starting positionswith Chrysler Corporation.You may sign up now fora personal interview withinthe next few days.March 4, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Sociology Journal cites 1950 U. S. Census;predicts trebling of present city sizeBigger and bigger and biggergrow the cities of the UnitedStates. Within the next centurythey will probably double or treblein size. This conclusion, based oncity growth trends shown by the]50 United States Census, is of the most highly urbanized na¬tions in the world, Bogue pointsout. Of the larger nations, onlyGreat Britain and West Germanyhave a higher proportion of theirpopulations living in cities.In 1950, two out of three Ameri-reached in an article in the March cans were classed as city dwellers Bogue finds.American Journal of Sociology,published by UC.If there is a maximum size be¬yond which cities become too in¬efficient or undesirable as placesto live and work, American citieshave not yet reached it, Donald J.Bogue, associate professor of so¬ciology here, says in the article. by the census takers. And almostone-third of the employed workersliving on farms worked in non-agricultural industries in U150,many of them in the cities. Onlyone-sixth of the United Statespopulation were actual farmers, Merriam in open forumRobert E. Merriam. mayoral candidate, will answer the ques¬tion “Is corruption in Chicago a myth?” at a meeting of theEvening Alliance in John Woolman hall of the First Unitarianchurch Monday at 8 p.m.The meeting will offer the public a chance to question Mer¬riam in an open forum. “We hope that people representingmany different points of view will attend this meeting andexpress themselves frankly in the forum,” said Miss CharlotteLessman, Alliance president.WUCB & W 9YWQform RadioMidwayexpands schedule, plans new programsmous^Over l^mThio^people lived “The Promotion of broadcast activities at the University of Chicago” was announced as the objective of the new cam-in the New" York metropolitan Pus radio group, Radio Midway, which was formd his week when WUBC and ham station W9YWQ affiliated,area in 1950 and almost 5 million WUCB was founded in 1946; W9YWQ has achieved a great deal of success in the past, hut has been inactive for the pastin the Chicago area. Ten other two years. Radio Midway hopes to have W9YWQ on the air by October. Both stations will be located in Burton-Judson.urban areas had over 1 million A sixth day of programming by students has resulted from the recent schedule expansion of student radio stationpopulation each. WUCB. The group now broadcasts its own programs each evening, Monday through Saturday. The longer broadcastingThe United States is now one week has allowed the intro-Advertisement — Advertisement — Advertisement — AdvertisementOn Campus withMaxShulmanMwthor of "Barefoot Boy Cheek,” etc.)THE STUDENT COUNCILToday let us investigate a phenomenon of American collegelife called the student council. First of all, what is the studentcouncil? The answer is simple: the student council is a councilof students.Next, what does the student council do? Again the answer issimpfe: it meets.Next, what gfles on at the meetings? This question is rathermore complicated than the others. Perhaps it can best be an¬swered by reproducing here the minutes of a typical meetingof a typical student council.Meeting scheduled for 8:30 p.m. at Student Union Building,('all to order 9:51 p.m. by Hunrath Sigafoos, presiding. Motionto adjourn made by Louis Bicuspid, freshman representative.Motion ruled out of order by Hunrath Sigafoos, presiding.Hunrath Sigafoos called “old poop” by Louis Bicuspid, fresh¬man representative. Seconded by Delores Wheatgerm, sophomorerepresentative. Tabled by Hunrath Sigafoos, presiding.Minutes of last meeting read by Zelda Pope-Toledo, secretary.Motion to accept minutes made by Hunrath Sigafoos, presiding.Motion defeated.Treasurer's report not read because Rex Mercredi, treasurer,not present at meeting. Rex Mercredi, treasurer, impeached inabsentia.Motion made by Louis Bicuspid, freshman representative, toallow sale of hard liquor in school cafeteria. Seconded byDelores Wheatgerm, sophomore representative. Motion tabledby Hunrath Sigafoos, old poop.Motion made by Booth Fishery, fraternity representative, topermit parking in library. Motion referred to committee.Motion made by Gladys Algae, junior representative, to allowattendance in pajamas and robes at first hour classes. Motionreferred to committee.Motion made by Elwood Feldspar, athletics representative,to conduct French Conversation classes in English. Motionreferred to committee.Motion made by Esme Plankton, sorority representative, toallow hypnosis during Rush Week. Motion referred to committee.Motion made by Pierre Clemenceau, foreign exchange student,to conduct German Conversation classes in French. Motionreferred to committee.Motion made by Harriet Critter, ag campus representative,to allow faculty members above the rank of assistant professorto perform marriages. Motion referred to committee.Observation made by Martha Involute, senior representative,that in her four years on student council every motion referredto committee was never heard of again. Miss Involute was tabled.Motion made by Louis Bicuspid, freshman representative, toallow sale of hard liquor in Sociology I and II. Seconded byDelores Wheatgerm, sophomore representative. Motion tabledby Hunrath Sigafoos, presiding crossly.Refreshments served. Coffee, cake, Philip Morris Cigarettes.I’he following lesolution adopted by acclamation:“WHEREAS Philip Morris is milder, tastier, more exhila¬rating, and chock full of rare rich vintage tobaccos; andWHEREAS Philip Morris is contained in the patented Snap-Dpen pack which is the quickest, simplest, neatest container yetdevised for cigarettes; and WHEREAS Philip Morris, the mostcommendable of smokes in the most admirable of wrappings,is available in both king-size and regular; therefore BE ITRESOLVED that it is the sense of this meeting that PhilipMorris is far and away the best cigarette buy on this or anyother campus.”Meeting adjourned with many a laugh and cheer at 9:58.Respectfully submitted,Zelda Pope-Toledo, SecretaryC>M» (UiuIommi. l#V>runic,>rt of PHILIP MORRIS, ioho bring you ibis column, more•I'ot today's PHILIP MORRIS is the best ever. We knots you'Usecond the motion. duction of several new pro- breaks. WUCB is in a position to by Perez Prado and his orchestragrams. ignore these interruptions, and so who are famous for their mamboEach Tuesday evening is de- is able to present longer recorded rhythms.voted to recorded music too long works as well.”to be presented in a conventionalschedule. Station Manager JohnLyon reported, “The presenta¬tion of longer musical works issomething of an experiment inradio. Large scale radio has notdone it for some time; its longer At 8:30 WUCB presents StanKenton with his orchestra inmore of his jazz stylings. “Musica la Mood” at 8:45 is one of thestation’s “live talent” shows, withHarold Levy, a student in thecollege singing popular and semi-Feature programming Satur-day night includes thirty minutes of Israeli folk music ateight o’clock and a completeGilbert and Sullivan operettaeach week at eight-thirty.Here are some of the highlights classical songs. At 9 this eve-musical programs are primarily of tonight’s and tomorrow night’s ning another new program takeslive, and the interruptions be- program schedule over WUCB. to the air, with popular music intween acts or movements allow The “Spanish program” this eve- an easy mood on the “Joe Chris¬time for commercials and station ning at 8:05 will feature music tian” show.Tomorrow’s program highlightsInstructors to schedule owncollege quarterly examsOther than the Math 150 eours- She said that the individual in-es, there will be no published struetors would inform theii stu-schedule of college quarterly examinations for the winter quarter,announced Margaret E. Perry, as¬sistant dean of the college.IDEAS VS.MCCARTHYISMTHE ATOM SPY HOAX by Wil¬liam A. Reuben. A comprehensive,completely documented occount otevery case supposedly relating toRussian espionoge. Establishes therelationship between the voriouscases and the McCorthyitcs' poli¬tical need to keep the cold war hot.Available from Action Books, 165Broadway, New York City. 512 pp.$3 pre-publicotion price. PublishedMarch 5. How about the UC book¬store?Send contributions to continue andspread these ods to Jimmy Higgins,c/o Modern Book Store, Room 914,64 W. Randolph, Chicogo 1, III. dents of the times when their par¬ticular class would be taking theexams. These will be held duringone of the regular class meetingsselected by the instructors in thelast week-of the quarter. MissPerry urged that students; unsureof the exact dates check witheach instructor. will include the “Hebrew folksong show” at 8, and The Mikadoon the “Gilbert and Sullivan”show at 8:30.At 10 p.m., Saturday, WUCBwill present a recording of thedebate last Tuesday betweenteams from London Universityand the University of Chicago,on the subject, “Resolved, thatfreedom of speech is substan¬tially decreasing in the UnitedStates today.” “Cloud 640,” withBill Dunning wilt begin at theconclusion of the debate atabout 11:30.Some of the features next weekover WUCB will include selectionsThe only definitely scheduled from Kurt Tuchlsky’s “Zwischenexams, Math 150A and Math 150B, Gestern und Morgen,” on thewill be held in Rosenwald 27 and “German program” at 8:05 Mon-Kent 106. respectively, both on day; Aldous Huxley reading fromWednesday, March 16, from 3:30 Brave New World on “Vox Par-to 5:30. nassi’ ’at 9:30, and a program ofThe reasons given lor the virtuosity, ancient and modern,change were avoidance of con- on “Masterworks from France,”flict with divisional course exams at 10-which many students are taking Tuesday night will feature allunder the new plan, and making three volumes of “Bach’s Royalavailable more instruction time Instrument.”during the last week of the quar- “Orchestras of the World,” atter. 9:30 Wednesday night, will pre¬sent the Swedish Radio Sym¬phony orchestra performingmusic by six Swedish compos¬ers.1321 E. 31th St.—PL 2-92311411 E. 33rd St.—HY 3-3300Serving University PersonnelFor Years Rev. Ford lectureson immortalityA lecture on the topic “Psychicevidence and personal immortal¬ity” will be given by ReverendArthur Ford of New York at theHyde Park Methodist church, 54thand Blackstone. on Monday, at8 p.m.The public is invited to hearRev. Ford who is an internation¬ally known lecturer and writer onpsychic phenomena.ALLWESTMINSTERRECORDS 2.99ot one month onlyThe T^V •Disc1367 E. 57rage 8 THI CHICAGO MAROON March 4, 1955Review needs reappraisal: handsomebut unexiting; deficient in student workIn his prefatory note to the reader in the current issue of the Chicago Review, Editor F. N. Karmatzannounces that the Review “finds itself with the largest circulation of any cultural quarterly or Littlemagazine" in the UnitedAftpr two vpnr«; of has produced history that insures the student-author. The intelligentincreasing circulation, the ai?on.? outsUtnd* and informative book reviewsand informative book reviewsdemonstrate again that the Uni-“The versity of Chicago student hasto examine more closely the Language of Poetry” contains all learned how to read perceptivelyfunction of the Chicago Review as pitfalls of modern criticism and express his understanding of... e -m- j-.. ing scholars of our day.time has come for the editois Kenneth Burke’s article. Quartet comingThe Vegh String quartet willpresent the final Universityconcert of the quarter next Fri¬day, at 8:30 p.m. in Mandelhall. Admission Is $1.50.The quartet, which won theFrench Grand Prix de Disquesin 1952, will perform Bee¬thoven’s Quartet No. 16 in F,opus 135; Bartok’s Quartet No!6; and Mozart’s Quartet in DK 575.a literary quarterly.Unquestionably the “little”magazine has played an excit¬ing critical and creative part inthe literary world. But there isan even more important rolefor the college literary maga¬zine as an outlet for the imagin¬ative talent of the student. At¬tempting to encompass bothworlds by including work ofdistinguished author and stu¬dent, The Chicago Review hasachieved a certain notoriety.Unfortunately, it has failed toattain success in either capac¬ity. For the Review has neverbeen an exciting, imaginativeliterary production; nor has itfulfilled its function as a uni¬versity publication for the crea¬tive student.One could easily overlook thisfailure if the current issue did notglaringly emphasize the inade¬quacies of this editorial policy.Over two thirds of the magazineis devoted to mediocre writing byauthors whose connection withthe university is certainly tenu¬ous.Arnold Toynbee’s essay. “ABusiness School of IntellectualAction.” seems to have been in¬spired by a bright American busi¬nessman’s ability to hail a taxi inAthens. Toynbee, the scholar, hasall the admiration and little of theunderstanding of activity in thepractical world of business.Excluding the pedant, everyscholar will admit that a knowl¬edge of life beyond the printedpage increases his understandingof the written word. If Toynbeeis only learning this now, he hadbetter re-examine this work—butthere is no need for that. Withouta business background. Toynbee from sexual perversion to sup¬pressed symbolism with little ofits insight. Attempting to erecta Masonic order of “offices” inliterary criticism, Burke hascloaked his lack of real under¬standing in an incomprehensiblecritical jargon. After wadingthrough this long essay (the firstpart of which was in an earlierissue) we can only agree with himthat “Frankly, we don’t knowwhat all this adds up to.”Mark Kennedy’s short story,“Man in Motion,” is a totally un¬convincing rendition of a wellworn theme. Kennedy’s storyconcerning a professor’s deci¬sion over his wife’s protesta¬tions to lodge a Negro friend ofhis “radical” son lacks original¬ity. His handling of the situa¬tion is forced, and his dialogueis unbearably artificial. Partic¬ularly, the radical son lacksreality. No metaphysical youngBartok enthusiast in any seri¬ousness would say, “I’m wayovermatched. I could never lickyou on a decision. My onechance is to flatten you fastwith a wild swing.”Ben Shahn (ahother outsider)need hardly convince us that artshould express humanity. Any¬one acquainted with his work—his drawings in this issue are anexcellent example — knows thatShahn can express more human¬ity in a line than most painterscan effect in a mural.Finally. “A Letter from Li Po.”a lengthy poem by Conrad Aiken,does little to enhance the qualityof the imaginative work in theReview or to increase our admira¬tion for the famous Americanpoet.But this leaves little room for the work. The few student poemsare competent but shallow.Where, then, does the Review sup¬ply the demand for a literary stu¬dent publication?Cover design for the Springissue of the Chicago Review.Perhaps there is no demand.Perhaps there is no student ma¬terial worthy of publication. Ifso, this is certainly a deplor¬able situation, but a situationthat the editors must contendwith. For the Review can hard¬ly justify its publication of sec¬ond rate articles by famous au¬thors under the guise of in¬creased circulation. Without adoubt, the Review is more hand¬some and famous than it wastwo years ago. But the Reviewhas become a magazine with agreat deal of sizzle and very lit¬tle steak. It seems time for an¬ other of those “agonizing reap¬praisals” tliat have begun to in¬fest student activity rX the Uni¬versity. —Louis SchaeferIII wind blown wellThe oboe, reputedly an ill wind that almost no one blowsgood, was blown very well indeed at last Friday night’s Uni¬versity concert in Mandel hall. Ray Still was the oboist, andhe appeared with a group that called itself the UniversityChamber Music Players. The other members are David Mon¬tagu, violin, Sheppard Lehnhoff, viola, and Leopold Teraspul-sky, ’cello. All are local men,and of high calibre; unfortu¬nately, economic necessityprobably makes playing chambermusic more of a luxury for themthan a bread and butter type ofoccupation.Maybe lor tms reason they ap¬proach it with a special kind ofdevotion, for Mr. Still, at least,now in his second season as oboistwith the Chicago Symphony, gavea performance that was well nighfaultless; his tone and phrasingwere highly expressive, yet neverhas the saccharine sweet hyper¬lushness to which many oboistsseem prone. His technique and in¬tonation were above reproach.The Mozart Oboe Quartet in Fmajor, K. 370, was the big num¬ber on the program, and by andlarge the most gratifying. It isfilled with the juiciest sort ofideas, beautifully suited to thecharacter of the oboe, and to itssound when blended with strings. The other numbers in whichMr. Still appeared were WilliamShield’s Quartet in F, a light andvery pleasant piece that deservesgreater popularity, and BenjaminBritten's “Phantasy Quartet,” anearly work of his, and a not toointeresting example of neo - im¬pressionist English style.Between the three numbers thatincluded oboe there were two forstrings only—the Walter Piston“Duo for viola and ’cello,” andBeethoven’s Trio in D major, opus9, No. 2. These came off quite sat¬isfactorily in spite of occasionalpoor intonation and. in the Bee¬thoven, in spite of a violinistwhose style was essentially solo¬istic and who, consequently, wasnever really part of the ensemblein the best chamber music sense.—Willian KaplanPeterson Movingfir Storage Co.55th A Fills AvenueStorage facilities for a truck orcarload of household effectsPacking — ShippingLocal or long distance movingBUtterfield 8-6711 UUUUHUUUBUMaUiUUU^MUUUHUaaUUMHUUACECYCLE SHOPYour BicycleHeadquartersWe service whet we teHRepairs fir Parts all make.819 E. 55 MI 3-88729 A.M. - 6 P.M.For more pure pleasure... SMOBCE CAMELS SNo other cigarette is so rich "tastingP.S. No other brand has ever been able to match the pure pleasure in Camel's exclusiveblend of costly tobaccos! That's why Camels are America's most popular cigarette!-W.V.* ’.*.\’.':V v • .v.VWV ' B. J. Beynoldt Tobacco Co.. Wlniton-Seten, It. 0*yet so mild!Match 4, 1955 THI CHICAGO MAROON fife 9To ploy PistonTen members of the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra will pre¬sent their first concert as agroup Friday evening, in anappearance at the First Uni¬tarian Church, 57th street atWoocHawn. The program, co¬sponsored by the Channingclub and the First Unitarianchurch, for the benefit of theUnitarian service committee,features Beethoven’s Septet,Opus 20 and Walter Piston’s“Divertimento for Nine Instru¬ments.”Tickets, at $2 regular and $1for students, are available atthe Student Government serv¬ice center, the music school,and the First Unitarian church.UCMS to give‘different note’A sonata for string bass andworks for clarinet and piano givea different note to the UC MusicalSociety’s concert to be given Sun¬day, at 8 p.m., at Ida Noyes. Ad¬mission is free. UT plays Ibsen's 'Wild Duck';group to face five-act challengePlaywrights performs 'Exiles'as part of modern play seriesThe Playwrights Theatre club is initiating a new series ofconcert performances of modern plays. The series opened onFebruary 27 with James Joyce’s Exiles.On March 27 Carl Sterheim’s The Underpants will be pre¬sented, and will be followed by Brecht’s A Man’s A Man onApril 24, and E. E. Cumming’s Him on May 29.Playwrights says of this se- :—*ries: “Our experience with the have done has 15001,1 near d,®as*last three original plays we trous tmanewlly. We want to leelb * * able to rt§k full-scale productionof new plays, and when we findsufficient interest in a particularscript, we will."These Playwrights Studio pro¬ductions will be the test. If youare interested in modern litera¬ture and experimental theater,come and let us know.”At present, Playwrights is pre-renting Arthur Schnitzler’aRound Dance, their last year’scomedy hit. The cast includes An¬tony Holland, Elaine May, Eogene Troobnick, Donna Holabird,Vernon Schwartz and others. Theproduction is directed by RolfIn University Theatre’s pro¬duction of Ibsen’s The WildDuck Otto Senz appears as OldRkdal, Andrew Duncan as Hial-mer, and Connie Miliman asHedwig.by Martha SilvermanThe five acts of Henrik Ibsen’s The Wild Duck present a challenge to actors, director, Forsberg.Featured are the Gaubert "Fan- and technical crew, the University Theatre feels is seldom adequately met. The playwright,tasie,” Rabaud s "Solo de Con- whom Marvin Phillips, University Theatre’s director, calls “Norway’s greatest; the father §|& ^rours and Debussv s "Premiere Qf mCKjern drama,” offers a complicated structure of character, mood, scene, and actionwhich discourages many professional groups.For an actor, the problem of developing from act to act into a more real, more complexhuman being is accompaniedcours" and Debussy’sRhapsodie” to be played by HelenJoyce, clarinet and Marjorie Ben¬son, piano; a sonata by Ecclesperformed by Richard O'Neil,bass, and James E. Maynard, pi¬ano; Schubert’s Sonatina in GMinor played by Paul Revitt, vio¬lin, and Leland Smith, piano, andBeethoven's Sonata in G Majorperformed by Thomas Metzger,violoncello, and Gayle Hufford,piano. by the still greater one of re¬maining simple enough to begrasped by an audience. The ac¬tions and motivations of real peo¬ple are seldom simple, and Ibsen’speople are almost real; thereforethe actor must appear both deepenough to be believed, and sim-LAUNDRY SPECIALSHIRTS llceochDeluxe finished when Included wish9 Lbs. Wosh ond Dry Only....... 89cKWIK-WAY Cash & CarryLAUNDRY A DRY CLEANING1214 East 61st St.(Between Wood town b Kimborh) pie enough to be comprehended.This problem is shared, pos¬sibly to a greater degree, by thedirector.Marvin Phillips says of his pro¬duction, "This is not going to beinnocuous Hollywood style clap¬trap nor is it going to be pseudo-sophisticated Broadway hogwash;because we are a young, freshgroup, unhampered by many ofthe liabilities which a professionaltheatre faces, and playing to a re¬sponsive, literate, and understand¬ing audience, we can present Ib¬sen as he should be presented.” The technical staff of Univer¬sity Theatre have found the sets,lighting, costumes, and props forthe show anything but simple,with the utmost delicacy.The mood of the play, subtly shift¬ing in emotional content fromscene to scene, must be mountedOpening night is next Wednes¬day, March 9, and the show willrun every night from then on un¬til Sunday, March 13. Tickets are$1 and are on sale now at the stu¬dent service center or UniversityTheatre office.50 million times a dayat home,at work orwhile at playThere’snothinglike “ANGELS IN PIGTAILS!”— Dylan Thomas, 1953, concerningTHE OBERNKIRCHEN CHILDREN'S CHOIRHear them now on t-wo boootifwlly mode Angel rct«tds:THE LITTLE WHITE HEN, and other songs $2.98THE HAPPY WANDERER, and other songs $2.98And olso new on Angel Records —# The world generolly rales him"The finest French horn ployer of our time”Ispeciolly for him Paul Hindemith hos composed o Horn ConcertoAnd Benjamin Britten his written o Serenode thotemploys Voice, Horn ond StringsNow, H*e incomporoble Dennis Brain ploys, under thedirection of Herbert von KorojonTHE COMPLETE (4) HORN CONCERTOSOF MOZART Angel Record No. 35092 $4.98at theUniversity ofChicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE Anthony Holland plays the“Count” In Playwrights Thea¬tre Club’s presentation of Ar¬thur Schnitzler’s “RoundDance.”Louise Barkerphotogropher“who capturesyourpersonalityas well asyour person”1457 E. 57th St.BU 8-0876Moke a dote NOW with the 9009Your SundayCOED HOPCHEZ PAREESunday, March 6, 2 P.M.Dancing, EntertainmentCokesJust $1 00Moke your reservations now ot theStudent Service Center in the base¬ment of the Reynolds Club1. FOR TASTE...bright, bracingever-fresh sparkle.2. FOR REFRESHMENT..,a welcome bitof quick energy thatbrings you back refreshed.BOTTLID tfNMS AUTHOftllY Of THI COCA-COLA COMPANY StCoco-Colo Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc."Coke" h • registered trademark. C IMS. THI COCA COLA COMPANY NO 7-9071Student Rate 50c hyde park theatrestudent rate 50cStill playing thru Sunday, March iALASTAIR SIM in his new detective role loke porkot 53rdAn Inspector Callsin J. B Priestley'sintriguing hit playAn ingenious plot with on experiment-in-time twist typicol ot Priestley.Sim turns in his usuol coustic comic performonce.MARLON BRANDO . . . the only man who could playStanley Kramer's The Wild OneA sociol document os well os gripping entertainment . . . Kromer ogoinproves his point thot vitol subject motter moke tor wonderful theotre.Storting Monday, March 7of last... again* ... for FOUR DAYS 01%LY**Lili and LimelightPerformance TimeLili: 8:20 only Limelight: 6:00 ond 10:00*We presented these two wonderfully beautiful . . . warmly humon greotmotion pictures together once before . . . during July lost summer whenmany of you were not in residence. We ore pleosed to be able to mokeit up to you now. ^nh»»lutrty meott Iff VO helrf-orerlPage 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 4, 1955Cagers end season-2 defeats;IIT scores 81-66; Pier, 86-53 Sports BriefsIllinois Tech defeated theUniversity of Chicago 81-66 ina rough basketball game atthe fieldhouse last Friday. It wasa fairly even, though bruisingcontest most of the way. TheMaroons were down 10 points, 45-35, at the half but rallied to cutthe deficit to 4 points with 5 min¬utes left to go in the game. Techthen pulled away to win by 15points.Chicago went ahead 2-0 on abasket by Billy Lester but Techstormed to a 13-3 lead. The teamsexchanged baskets until the halfwith Tech holding a 45-35 margin.There was considerable roughplay, especially under the back-boards, with Maroon center, A1Binford, repeatedly fouled by thecharging Tech players. Chicagobegan to cut the Tech lead in thesecond half although TechhawksEd Thullen and Bob Moran scoredwell for the visitors. With 7 min¬utes left to go, Ed Thullen wasasked to leave the game for tryingto punt Mitch Watkins for a fieldgoal. Chicago then came within4 points of the visitors before theTechmen forged away.Tech forward. Ed Thullen, ledall scorers with 24 points whileteammate. Bob Moran chipped inwith 18. Billy Lester dumped in22 points for the Maroons.Illinois Trch (81) Chicago (66)GThullen.f 8 8 3Moran, f 6 6 2Plaetk.f 2 4 2Blatr.c 4 2 2Truesdale.c 0 14Chrtst'ns'n.g 4 4 1Gawel.g 3 2 0Totals GRowland,! 4Garcia,! 2Peinberg.!Chisolm.!Bin!ord.cWatkins,gLester.gWalker ,gTotals 25 16 26Once upon a timeThere dwelt a dragon with¬out fear.How that drag on'i ghostComes to Jimmy's for hisJimmy 9s1172 E. 55th“Have Yon Heard99THE PIZZA KIDis 63rdFeaturingPius at its FinestBar-B-Q Back Ribs - ChickenSpaghetti - Ravioli - MustaccoliItalian Sausage or Beef SandwichesKosher Corned BeefDaily: 11 tt.m. to 1 a.m.Sunday: 4 p.m. to 1 a.m.“fl'e Deliver”DO 3-9777 1125 E. 63rdJudaHtittpuulVole* and Vision• contain! an informative, conciae description ofl high fidelitytwenty-two photograph* o! VOICE ANDVISION cuttom installation#a complete, Illustrated directory of high fidel¬ity component#a handy guidebook for planning your homemueic system1955 QSZIHANDBOOK IMHdkd*ifay*M[mc6pgVoice and Vision, lac , Dept. V-l, 53 K.Walton, Chicago 11. The complete highfidelity parts house. WH 3-1166.Ic 0( .rvuM. ■ kj/l eijJ-L , . A'rBf l .Hi■HBlOsBWBSlIBMIWWi MBBBmS JV cagersfinish playAfter advancing to the semi¬finals of the post-season Pri¬vate School league basketballtourney, the JV cagers droppedtheir final two games of the sea¬son to finish in fourth place.On Friday, the JVers lost to thechampionship bound LutherSouth team, 42-28. Since LutherSouth had set an all-time PSLtourney scoring mark of 93 pointsin a previous game, this loss wasstill a fine defensive effort byCoach Joe Stampf’s junior cagers.On Saturday, the JVers lost theconsolation game to North Park,35-25. Luther South beat Harvardthe same night for the leaguechampionship. 77-72. Once again,the JVers played a good defensivegame.In the regular season, the cag¬ers finished fifth in the twelveteam Private School League.Their tournament performancerepresented a one-notch gain overthe regular season standings. by Smoky GarciaChicago ended the 1954-55basketball season with an 86-53 trouncing at the hands ofNavy Pier at the Pier last Satur¬day. The record for the seasonstands at 6 wins and 13 losses.Navy Pier, probably the bestteam the Maroons faced all year,jumped to a 43-24 half-time leadand were never threatened. Theyplayed a smooth, efficient offenseand used a fast break on the slowMaroon defense. The Maroonsstarted slowly and, outside ofBilly Lester, never warmed up tothe task before them.The Pier substituted freely andshowed a strong bench with manycapable reserves. The game degen¬erated into a farce in the last quar¬ter due to the laxness of the offi¬cials to call fouls and control thegame. The two referees resortedto some clowning in the secondhalf and seemed to forget aboutthe game.John Durkin of the Pier andBilly Lester of Chicago led allscorers with 23 points apiece. Fencer Bobrow smashes glassas mates lose to WildcatsA too- strenuous recovery by Dave Bobrow resulted in a shattered*pane of glass in Bartlett gym Saturday. Bobrow, fencing against on*of Northwestern’s wildcats lifted the end of his foil just in time tomiss Jan Metros' head, but not in time to miss the pane of glass,which splintered in what was easily the most dramatic moment ofthe meet. In the calmer remainder of the meet, Northwestern beatAlvar Hermanson’s crew, 16-11. Chic Ahlgren made the Maroon’sbest showing. He won all three of his sabre bouts.Chicago dropped the foil bouts, 7-2, the epee bouts, 54. but wonthe sabre bouts, largely thanks to Ahlgren, 5-4. Alex Shane won twoof the epee events.Chicago swimmers submerge IITWinning eight of ten events, Chicago swimmers completely sub¬merged Illinois Tech in Bartlett pool, 51-33 last Friday. Doug Maurerand Paul Sellin were double winners for Bill Moyle’s team. Maurerwon the 200 and 440 yard events, and Sellin took the 100 and 120yard distances.Bob Benedict won the 60-yard free style. Frank Chilton and BobHerndon placed one-two in fancy diving. Lanse Felker won his bestevent, the 200 yard breastroke.Today and tomorrow the swimmers will try to win the ChicagoIntercollegiate meet that they are hosting. Prelims will be held mBartlett pool at 7 p.m. tonight, and finals start tomorrow at 2 p.m.Qymnast Taylor high scorerThe varsity gymnasts achieved their second triumph in a row whenthey beat Wisconsin State Teachers college last Friday night at Bart¬lett by a score of 63Vi to 31 Vi.The scoring was led, as usual by Herb Taylor who chalked up atotal of twenty-five points for the team and would probably havedone better if it weren't for his hand strap breaking in the midst ofhis high bar routine. But as Coach Beyer says: “John Bowman looksbetter’’ so the varsity gymnasts may have seen another high scor¬ing all-around man.STOP HERE FOR LUCKY DROODLES!WHAT’S THIS?For solution seeparagraph below. *rrk /NAPOLCON LOOKING ATSitf IN HIGH MIHOtWillem Maurits Lange, IIISyracuse UniversitySNO VICW Of THOUSANO MILESor VftT STRAIGHT WHIIOsvaldo BacchettaSouthern Illinois University YOU'LL GET A BANG out of the Droodle above. The title is: Daredevil enjoy¬ing better-tasting Lucky just before being shot from cannon. Luckies aregoing great guns everywhere. The reason for their booming popularity issimply this: Luckies give you better taste. They taste better, first of all,because Lucky Strike means fine tobacco. Then, that tobacco is toastedto taste better. “It's Toasted''—the famous Lucky Strike process—tones upLuckies’ light, mild, good-tasting tobacco to make it taste even better . ..cleaner, fresher, smoother. Enjoy yourself when you smoke. Have a littlefun. Light up the better-tasting cigarette . . . Lucky Strike.DROODLES. Copyright 1953 by ltoc«r PrioaCOLLEGE SMOKERSPREFER LUCKIES!Luckies lead all other brands incolleges—auid by a wide margin—accordin' to an exhaustive, coast-to-coast college survey. The No.1 reason: Luckies taste better."Better taste Luckies...LUCKIES TASTE CHICK that iouncmNancy MastersonSj^ {J.C.L.A, BUTTON SUN THROUON•UTTONHOUGerry DavisRichmond Professional Institute•A T. Co. MOOUCT or CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!\ AMtKICA’f LCADIMQ MAMtfrACTUKCK or CIOAIITTIt7'ARROWCASVAL WEARaltoSHIRTS & TIESUNDERWEARHANDKERCHIEFSIF YOU OWNED ONLY ONE SHIRT...You’d make it the BRAND NEW Arrow Gabanaro.Brand new, is right. Gabanaro gives you wonderful sport-shirt softness in a year-round weight of rich rayon gabardine.And every one of these fine shirts ha6 the famed Arafold collarthat stays neat and fresh-looking, day after day.Get yourself the new Gabanaro. They come in a wide rangeof colors... in your exact sleeve length and collar size.The moment you experienceGabanaro’s flawless fit,you’ll knowwhy no man would go through 4 years of college without one.And, Gabanaro is only $5.95. There are 4375 menon this campus...(No wonder our new Arrow Gnbonaros go so fasti)It happens every time we unpack these fine Arrowsport shirts, they go like 60! And no wonder. Theseare beautifully tailored shirts that offer perfect fit.We have your favorite color, too ... in shirts that lookneat after days of wear. Get yourself a Gabanaro.They’re priced at just $5.95.■Chicago - Evanston - Oak Park - Evergreen - Gary - Joliet - Alta The 12 best Phi Psischallenge the 12 bestFijis to a tug-o -waracross Botany Pond to-day at 4:00.49 daysALL-EXPENSEESCORTED TOURSDepartures: April 23. May 28, July I —'IJ93531 doyt via olr $1010Visit England, Belgium. Holland, G*r.many, Austria, Switserlond, Italy ondFranca.Your crossing in the completely olr-conditioned S.S. Homeric, privote lux¬ury motor coach In Europe, fine hoteloccommodotions, oil meols, extensivesight-seeing in principal cities ond many"off-the-beoten-poih ' places. Theatretickets, champagne dinner ond manyother extras.You owe it to yourself to Investigatethis unusuol offer.Write, phone gr stop inw«€AA* TRAVEL BUREAUC44 W. North Ava., MOhewk 4-12477807 Cottige Gr., TRiengte 4-3160Officiti steamship & airlines agent for alt linr»av,v.v*v.; r~. ; •. // ,v„Choose an ExpertTHOMPSONMOVERSLocol ond Long Distance MovingCO 4-7600Nothing warms the heart of a track fan as much as seeing a new record tied for or set. There were quite a few toasted auricles andventricles at the fieldhouse Saturday as two world indoor marks were tied in the Chicago Invitationol indoor track meet.Providing the heart-warm- — ——ing were two runners fromtwo small Midwestern col¬leges, Abe Butler, of Baldwin-Wallace, who raced to a :06.1clocking in the 60-yard dashand Terrill Burton of Miami(Ohio) who skimmed the lowhurdles in :07.8.Butler, a compact speedster,had given notice of things to comeearlier in the season in defeatinghis school's most illustrious trackalumnus, Harrison Dillard in the45 yard dash. Butler blaster! offthe blocks with a perfect start andwas never hedged as he led thefast sprint field to the tape.Burton, who took a fourth placein the dash after getting off toa bad start remedied this defectin the 70 yard low hurdle event.He was pressed only by the Ma¬roon’s Frank Loomos while tyingthe indoor mark held jointly byOlympic champions. Bill Porterand Harrison Dillard.Stepping down to the 2 mile run from his usual 2 mile specialty,Bill Coleman ran the best time ofhis career in the shorter distance.He was caught by the timers in4:11.2 for the fastest race at thisdistance in the field this fall.Charley Jones, Iowa freshman,pressed the rapidly improvingNorthern Illinois College alumnusto finish a close second.In the two mile, Fred Wilt ledWheaton’s Kukio Moriya to the , „r . ,, _ . , , , „tape by five yards in a speedy room at the Wright Junior college gymnasium, where, only a few minutes before, the men m9:08.2. ... - - - “ - ------Chicago points were scored UC wrestlers lose meet, 18-16;'2 points from winning season'For a man who had just run his undefeated string ,to sixteen straight victories, player-coach A1 Bates of the varsity wrestling team looked as though he had lost his last friend.He sat with his stubble-coated chin in his hands, staring dejectedly at the floor in the lockerbyJim Brown and Ted Fishman inthe 440 yard run, Frank Loomosand Dan Trifone in the hurdle,Joe Howard in the shot put andArt Omohundro in the 80 yardrun. The UCTC shuttle hurdle re¬lay team took their event in ameet marked by high caliber per¬formances.Everyone in spiked shoes, itseems, has visions of laurelwreaths at the Olympic games inthe land down under next year. blue had squeezed by Chicago 18-16 in the Maroons’ final meet of the season.‘Just two points,” BatesREADER’Sthe campus drug store\ 61st & Ellis Opposite Burton-JudsonVisit our College Room and try our1 Sunday Student Special$100Sirloin Butt SteakFrench Fries — Salad BowlRoll and Butter moaned, “kept us from ourwinningest season in forty-eight years.” The rest of the teamwho were showering and dressingaround him said nothing, and onlyheavyweight Lynn Illingworth,who had pinned his opponent in1:47 of the first period, wore asatisfied grin. Besides Illing¬worth, who also remained unde¬feated for the season, three otherMaroons won matches: Bates(137) made his sixteenth straightvictory a win over Clary ofWright, 4-2, Don Donderi (123)massacred Keefer, 13-3, and KentFlannery (130) beat Bob Shan¬ahan, 9-4.At 167 pounds, John Shafer lost Sports CalendarToday: JV Track, Invitational relays, 3:45 pm., fieldhouseJV Gymnastics, Arlington Heights, 3:30 p.m., fieldhouseSwimming, Chicago intercollegiate prelims, 7 p.m., BartlettTomorrow: Track, N. Central invitational, 1 p.m., at NapervilleGymnastics, Notre Dame 2 p.m., at South BendSwimming, Chicago intercollegiate finals, 2 p.m., Bartlett9-8 to Zapatka of Wright on thebasis of one minute’s riding time;Jerry Hoffman of Chicago wasleading Anagostopoulis of Wright6-5 in the 177-lb. class when he fellinto a pinning hold. In the remain¬ing bouts, Rowe of Wright beatDan Ritter of Chicago, 4-0, at 147PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETSOCIALIST FORUM* Civil Rights and Democracy"*Speaker: M. Martin, Socialist Workers PartySaturday, March 12, 8:30 P.M.777 West Adams St. Donotion 35c lbs., and George Staab, substitut¬ing for the Maroons’ injuredFrank Richards at 157 lbs., wasdefeated by Giese.The team, badly hurt by in¬juries through the middleweights, finished the season withvictories over IIT and Marquette,tied Notre Dame, and lost only toWright and UIC.JV trackmenfinish thirdJV trackmen finished third Ina four-way meet last Friday atthe fieldhouse. Crane Tech wonthe meet with 58 points, HydePark captured second with 47points, and Marshall finished be¬hind University High’s 31 withonly 15 points.Tyler Tugwell scored the onlyJV first, in the pole vault. Sec¬onds went to Pete McKeon in thehigh jump, Ivan Carlson in the880-yard run, and John Keller inthe pole vault.Tie two world track records here!y f.; v • •• _ : 'IN THE WHOLE JJAWIPE WORLD— nU LIKE CHESTERFIELDG Lkgct <i Mm Tomooo Ca.J more fun. more friendson the train!Let yourvacation start atthe station!Take the train for a fun-filledtrip back home . .. with yourfriends along and room to roam.No tough driving to do, and nowaiting for weather to clear.Costs less, too . . . you andtwo more traveling together caneach savjg 25% of regular round-trip coach fares on most tripsof 100 miles or more by usingGROUP ECONOMY FARES.*Or, gather 25 or more headinghome at the same time in samedirection andyoueach save 28%,even if you return separately.* Except for local travel between New York-Waxhington and point* east of Lancaster, Pa.Atk your Railroad Ticket Agent Dabout Group Plait Saving!EASTERNRAILROADSYou’ll smile your approval of Chesterfield’squality—highest quality—low nicotine.7Ty CHESTERFIELD^^You’ll smile your approval of Chesterfield'ssmoothness — mildness — refreshing taste.African race problemto be subject of talkTom Wardle. English born Gandhian, w ill speak on the topic‘’Fighting Racism in South Africa" Tuesday evening in IdaNoyes at 8.While with the British army Wardle was in India, Malaya,Java and Ceylon. In civilian life he was an English lecturerwith the British council and a welfare office for refugees fromPoland and the Ukraine. UC squash racquets teamwins Chicago, Midwest titlesSquash racquets has suddenly emerged as a big “little sport”on campus. The University “A” team won the Chicago dis¬trict squash racquets association championship this winterand squash was played on an in¬Gandhi, at the farm his father hadbegun in Africa some fifty yearsjour-In 1948 he went to SouthAfrica to do social welfare before. He also worked aswork. He lived there for four nalist for Indian Opinion,years in Johannesburg, CapeTown and Durban. He resignedas personnel officer for the Dun¬lop rubber company because oftheir policy of racial discrimina¬tion.Wardle lived and worked withManilal Gandhi, son of MahatmaClub sponsorsdiscussion‘‘The Understanding and Useof Anxiety” will be discussed at8 p.m., Thursday, at William Wal¬lace Fenn house, 5638 Woodlawnavenue. Visitors are welcome tothe discussion group which meetsat the same time and place eachThursday through March 31.Sponsors of the meetings are theFirst Unitarian church and theChanning club. Tom WardleKappa Alpha Phi de-recognized;Phi Psis, Fijis plan tug-of-warBecause it did not have the required ten members KappaAlpha Phi fraternity was dropped from the student activitiesdirectory this week. As a result of this action they were notpermit tted a representative in ACCLC.However, after pledging, the fraternity will return to theminimum size from its present roster of nine members. Anumber of rushees have pledg¬ed the fraternity, the activi¬ties office reported.A 103-year-old rivalry betweenPhi Gamma Delta and Phi KappaPsi will be extended today as thetwo fraternities stage a 12-mantug-of-war at 4 p.m. at Botanypond.Phi Psi prexy Jerry Mehrensissued the following challenge to Roger Copel. Fiji president: “PhiPsi’s twelve best men will bethere; we hope the Fiji’s will beable to scrape up twelve men forthe duel." Replied Copel. “I don’tsee why we can’t make it.”Dark words of ropes, swimmingtrunks, and the possibility of afrozen pond were heard as thePhi Psi’s strategically withdrewfrom the Fijis’ house. tramural team basis instead of anindividual championship tourna¬ment for the first time this year.With more and better facilities,the sport might become evenstronger at UC; as it is. the firsttwo men on the Maroon team areIvy League graduates.Bart Lachelier, who won theindividual city championship, is aYale graduate who is studyingbio-chemistry here. The numbertwo man, Dave Symmes, is aHarvard man who is a Ph.D. can¬didate in biology at UC. He wasrunner-up in the city champion¬ships.Don Lautman. Bill Parkhill, andLowell Doak, and Stan Kaplanjoined these two to win the West¬ern team championship at Mil¬waukee. defeating teams fromMadison. Detroit, Cleveland, Mil¬waukee. and Indianapolis. Rumors squelchedA rumor that Language 1was to be dropped from thelist of required college courseswas squelched by Dean Street¬er Wednesday.Streeter acknowledged thatthe course has long been a subject of controversy, but no action concerning a change isanticipated. His official statement was, “No comment.”HOME PLASTICSDroperiet - Curtains - Rainwore10 % Student Discount1303 F. 55th StreetNO 7-5000