Williams here for arts festivalWilliam Carlos Williams will read and discuss his renowned contributions to the field of poetry and hitarafeife newt Ffidoy, as partof the Festival of the Arts.His talk at 3 p.m. in Rockefeller chapel will be one of the highlights of the Festival. In connection with WifRam's reacting.Harper library will feature an 7Williams innew exhibit exhibit of his works through- b from ordinary American life.” tional Book Award; in 1952 he Some of his most recent worksout the Festival In Williams received the was appointed Consultant in include Hie Desert Music and.* Dial award; in 1949 he was made poetry to the Library of Con- Other Poems; Make Light of It;Williams, in spite of a profes- a Fellow of the Library of Con- gress; and in 1953 he received the Collected Stories; The Build Up,William Carlos Williams works, s*on in the field of medicine, has gress: in 1950 he received the Na- Bollingen prize in poetry. and The Autobiography,and exhibits in connection with long been active in literary circles. ‘ “1the bicentennial of Samuel John- He first became recognized in theson’s Dictionary, will be featuredin the special collections reading extensiveroom of Harper library during theFestival of the Arts. revival of Americanpoetry prior io World War I. Al¬together, he has written some 37A third exhibit, described by the hooks of poetry, novels, plays, es-head of the department of special says, and autobiography,collections, Robert Rosenthal as For his half-century of contri-“an unusual and amazing presen- butions to American literature,tation of 19th century children’s Williams received this judgment:books using bizarre illustrations “No poet since Whitman has moreof animals and scenes^ to teach decisively changed the orientationmoral lessons, polite social con- of American poetry, directing itduct and, to a lesser extent, some toward a new metric and languatekernels of scientific fact,” will be cut free from British tradition. University of Chicago, April 8, 1955 31displayed on the first floor. His best work springs direct-Plan UC visit of Soviet editorsUC students will conduct the eleven Soviet youth and stu¬dent editors during their visit to Chicago during the earlypart of May.At the suggestion of Student Government and other in¬terested students, three co-chairmen have been named tohead a reception committee for the editors. The co-chairmenAlbert Fortier, StudentareGovernment president; AllenJanger, Maroon editor-in-chief; and Richard Ward, formerMaroon managing editor whotoured the USSR in Jan. 1954. The final decision for the datesof the Soviet editors’ visit will bemade tomorrow by officials ofInternational Institute of Educa¬tion (HE), who will confer withdean of students Robert M. Stro-Chancellor’s Student Council willbe convened to hear student sug-A meeting of the members of zier. The HE is currently making agreed, however, on the body toarrangements for the nationwideitinerary of the Soviet editors atthe request of the state depart-gestions for the editors’ itinerary mentand program during their stay in The Soviet editors, according toChicago. Other interested student latest available information will nity COUnCil, would make the corn-groups may sent representatives )?e S/1'03?'? *wo days, Ma> m}ttees the executive branch of af -i-.-u ...:n U. 7 and 8. or May 9 and 10. student governmental organiza-The Maroon and Student Gov- ^jon including the present Stu-ernment are sponsoring student ^ent Government’s functions. Theorganizations of the editors visit other plan, proposed by MorrieNew Student Union plans debated;Stone suggests SG include SU roleSharp words and loud disagreement marked the Tuesday open meeting of the StudentActivities council. Source of dispute was two proposals for organizations to replace the re¬cently disbanded Student Union.The council will reconvene in open session Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. in the Reynolds club“fishbowl” to discuss any new plans submitted by interested students since no agreement wasreached at this week’s meeting. Plans should be sent to the Student Activities council, Rey¬nolds club.Both of the new plans would ment, the defunct Student Union, Dyer-Ben netin Mandel hallconcert tomorrowset up committees responsiblefor projects in the area of stu¬dent activities. The two plans dis¬pick the committee chairmen andto which the committees would beresponsible.The plan proposed by GeorgeStone, president of Inter-frater-to the meeting, which will be heldTuesday at 4 p.m. in the secondfloor Conference Room of the Ad¬ministration Building. to UC.SC acts to bring ironcurtain refugees to UC Mandel of the old Student Unionand Ruth Kopel. former presidentof Inter dub council, $ets up aseparate organization with anexecutive council which wouldbe self-perpetuating.Under the Stone plan thoseelected to the legislative branchof Student Government wouldThe “Kucheman Plan’’ passed include refugee students from all pick the committee chairman. Un-, * i„r_0 tct mainriiv vote at totalitarian countries; such as Ar- der the Mandel-Kopel plan anby a large ISL majority vote at tJna and Spain executive council with supervi¬se Student Government meeting Kucheman explained his view sory members from most of theWednesday night. The bill enables that «the major form of tyranny groups on the current SAC, plus“qualified students who have es- today is that of the Soviet imperi- members from other living groupraped from countries dominated alism. The bill is directed toward organizations and a member-at-by the Soviet Union to study at those who have been oppressed large would be set up. This board,UC under the sponsorship of SG.” by this form of totalitariansm.” plus the chairmen of the workingClark Kucheman (ISL-FTS) ex- Barbara Vogelfanger (ISL-Law) committees would pick the newplained that the bill was nol in- emphasized her position that this board ot commute cha.rmen andtended to affect the political situ- bill did not close the door to for- living-group members,ation of peaceful coexistence or eign exchange with USSR, but Groups on the current SAC areatomic war but that it would lend it did illustrate her position on Inter-fraternity council, Inter-“moral encouragement and sup- civil liberties and academic free- dorm council, B J council. Inter-port” to those refugee students dom for all students. club council, Student Govern-who expressed their belief inWestern democratic institutions.Paul Breslow (SRP-Soc) ques¬tioned the value of the bill. Kuch¬eman reiterated its purpose andstressed that these students“could participate in the recon¬struction of democratic education-ail institutions in their nativecountries should this become pos¬sible.”Mr. Anderle of the MasarykClub and also a member of theNational Union of Czech students and participating but non-votingmembers from the Maroon. Mar¬ried Students association with¬drew its representative last week.While the Stone plan combinesthe areas of the old Union andStudent Government, the Mandel-Kopel plan would require somesort of a line to be drawn betweenthe two. according to Miss Kopeland Mandel. The plan does notset up the machinery for such adivision.Adoption of the Stone planwould require a campus referen¬dum. since it involves changes inthe constitution of Student Gov¬ernment. The other plan’s statuswith regard to an all-campus voteremained unclear.Stone said he thought “it wouldbe a wholesome situation if sociallife became the problem, ratherthan the situation in Red China,”in SG elections.Under both plans it was stres¬sed that the Maroon would re¬main a separate organization,without any budget setting orother interference from any other Richard Dyer-Bennet willappear on campus tomorrowevening in a program of folkmusic. The entertainer, com¬poser, and musicologist will per¬form at 8:30 in Mandel hall. Tick¬ets are $1.50 for reserved seatsand $1 general admission, and areavailable at the Student ServiceCenter.“One thing that sets him apartfrom other folk singers is therange of his repertoire. He filledthe stage with a gallery of wist¬ful, touching humorous charac¬ters,” the New York Times saidof Dyer-Bennet.His program is entitled “theVoice of Ministrilsy” and is billedby S. Hurok as “a program of thebody. However, Stone suggested world’s great traditional songs.”that the Cap and Gown and theChicago Review might very wellfall in the realm of his expandedstudent government as far as al¬lotments of funds are concerned.Also considered was a thirdplan which would keep the old SUplan but would greatly limit thescope of its activities. Dyer-Bennett has made concertappearances throughout theUnited States and Canada, andhas been heard on such nationalradio programs as “CarnegieHall.”The program is sponsored bythe Independent Students League.Identity is problem of adolescence: Havighurst“I don’t know where I’m going,” a college graduate once said to Robert J. Havighurst, professor of the UC department ofeducation.The plight of this psychological adolescent is not strange in our modern society, Havighurst stated in his Channing lectureTuesday on the influences hindering and helping the adolescent to achieve his identify in our world.In comparatively simple societies, or even in American society of 50 years ago, the adolescent was seldom worried aboutwhat he would be or what role he would play in society. He worried only about his success in fulfilling that role. Today,in exile* spoke 7n^favor^ of* the however, he is worried about * ——bill. Then he was questioned by what he is to be, said Havig- Havighurst correlated the sue- When a society knows what its society “lost its nerve,” and suf-SRP members of the assembly on hurst. cess of an individual in identify- values are and where it wants to fered retardation. It is conceiv-his positions concerning civil lib- Adolescence ends ing himself with the success of go, the youth has a relatively easy able that our society has lost itserties and peaceful coexistence. Borrowing Erik Erikson’s idea his society in identifying itself. time of achieving identity. nerve, too, he warned.He explained that his experience that the well-adjusted individual Youth “falls apart” Lacks direction Discussing the social mechan-w 11 h peaceful coexistence had goes through life by completing Hagihurst said that the classic “Our own society does not know isms of individual identificationbeen discouraging. After World sets of psychological “tasks (for Sioux society which conceived of where it wants to go, what its in modern society, HavighurstV\ ar II the Czech students had instance, tasks concerned with as- j{Sejf ag a noble warrior group values are, and has even lost con- stated that the period of adoles-welcomed as friends the Russian serting autonomy for the child of provided its youth with prede- fidence in itself,” Havighurst said, cent identification is more pro-students and they took over the 3-5 years old), Havighurst stated termined roles which the youth It offers ample opportunity for longed in socially mobile classes,country, he said. that THE problem of adolescence was expected to fill easily. Mod- identification through vocation A child exposed to the influencesThe SRP contingent argued that is that of achieving an identity. ern Sioux society, however, being and marriage, but little moral or of the laboring classes often as-the refugee plan would close any Psychological adolescence ends neither American nor truly In- intellectual aid. It is the role of sumes an identity role by the timepossibility of foreign exchange when the individual has identified dian, neither warrior-like nor ef- education to provide this moral he is 16 or 18 by having to makewith USSR, that the bill grants himself, and knows what he will ficiently agricultural, has no iden- and intelectual aid, he empha- vocational and matrimonial choio*special favors to certain students, be in society. titfy and consequently offers its sized. es at this age.and that is a “slap in the face” to Most young mental patients to- youth little identity. The modern The society of the third century Upper-class problemsthe Russian editors who are visit- day suffer from anxieties over Sioux youths seem to psychology BC had the potential of being as At the same age, however, aning our campus soon. It was sug- what to be in future life or what cally “fall apart” at adolescence, far advanced as 19th century adolescent in an upward-orientedgested that the bill be extended to to believe in, he said. Havihurst said. European society. But Hellenic See ‘Havighurst,’ rage •f*9« 2 THE CHICAGO mXkOoTT —Rangoon teachers in seminarcompare US-Burma schoolsThe University of Rangoon, Burma, has both similarities to and differences from Ameri¬can schools, but its major problem is that its requires many prospective students to attendother schools, Ma Tin Saw Mu and Ma Thein Nyant, Burmese women from Rangoon, point¬ed out. Mrs. Mu and Miss Nyant have been on the UC campus for two months, seeking aidfrom American schools in the solution of administrative problems.They are participants in the University of Chicago seminar on educational administrationwhich is a part of the USgovernment’s leader-specialist a big do after each win.” ers and 50 per cent of the peopleprogram. This plan was set up Students in Burma and through- in medicine.under the Fullbright act, and in- out the East are much more po- Women also participate widelyvolves the exchange of leaders in litically active than groups here, in athletics, one of the fields invarious fields from the participat- the women felt, with political or- which they became active aftering nations with specialists from ganizations of every opinion, in- the war.the United States visiting their dependents, and non-partisans. Social sciences staff from UScountries. Others from India, Tur- With no newspaper, students pub-. The University is organizedkey, Korea, Sweden and Iraq also lish magazines and issue pam- with two years of intermediatevisited the University, the second phlets for every occasion, par- courses on the first level, includ-«uch group to attend Chicago. ticularly political. ing English and Burmese, andWith 1,000 instructors for 8,000 Women's role increasing !wo years of bachelor work lead-students, lack of manpower isn’t Women’s participation in the !° a degree. The upper levelthe University of Rangoon’s main University and its activities and consists of faculties of arts, sci-problem. In contrast to many US jn Burma itself has undergone a enccs, agriculture, education, en-schools, Rangoon is overpopulated tremendous increase, they noted, gineering, education, law, forest¬and must frequently deny en- Before the war there were 350 ry> medicine and social sciences,trance to applying students. Build- women at the University of Ran- The s°cial sciences program is aings and other facilities are lack- goon, now there are over 3,000. bran°h of Johns Hopkins instituteIng. In the women’s dormitory of Women have been taking an ac- social studies and has six Amer-which Miss Nyant is in charge, tive role throughout Burma; they *can professors. Masters degrees280 are living in a building de- constitute 80 per cent of the teach- are offered only in the arts, sci-jsigned for 100.Western influences strongThe women commented on theWestern influences on their cam¬pus, and felt that the Burmese in Arnett dies ences and social sciences. No doc¬torates are available.Instructors have approximately17 hours a week of classes andconferences, but must be presentTrevor Arnett, honorary trussome respects out-Ameriean many tee of the University, died last on campus daily from 9 a.m. untilUS student bodies, including UC. week at Fort Lauderdale, Florida. 3:30 P-m. Seventy-five per centNot content with one queen con- Arnett, 84, was an authority on attendance is compulsory for stu-test, they have competitions for college finance. He was vice pres- dents, who have about five hoursMiss University, Miss Burma, ident and business manager of °f classes a day, from 7 a.m. toMiss Rangoon and others, com- UC from 1924 to 1926 and previ- 4:30 p.m.plete with bathing suits, and also ously UC auditor and chief ac-hold Mr. contests. countant. He retired from UC inStudents politically active 1936. He was a trustee of the Uni-Sports activities, though gener- versity of Atlanta and Rockford,ally limited to inter-hall competi- Spelman, and Morehouse colleges,tions, have "shields and cups and Services were held for Arnetton Tuesday in Atlanta. photo by BeckerThe blessing Is recited over Hie wine at Hillel’s Passover seder,held Wednesday and Thursday. On the table are the matzoh (un¬leavened bread), bitter herbs, and egg which are a part of thisceremonial dinner, traditionally held on the first and second nightsof Passover. The holiday marks the flight of the Jewish people fromPffypt under Moses, and is commemorated at the seder withsymbolic foods and the reading of the Passover story.Lecture schedule givenFour lectures will be given this week as part of the series by thecommittee on social thought.H. Stanley Bennett, lecturer in English at Emanuel college, Cam¬bridge, and Alexander White, visiting professor, will speak on "Somemen and women of the fifteenth century.” The lectures, sponsored incollaboration with the English department, will be given next Mon¬day and Wednesday at 5 p.m. in social science 122."Public education in French Africa south of the Sahara” will bethe topic of two lectures by Marshall H. Stone, Andrew MacLeishdistinguished service professor of mathematics, on Tuesday andThursday in social science 122 at 8:30 p.m.m jr; yr ]Louise Barkerphotographer"who capturesLouis Schaefer,Richard Elielwin fellowshipsTwo students of the UC Englishdepartment have been awardedWoodrow Wilson fellowships fora year of graduate work at otheruniversities.This university will in turn re¬ceive six graduate students whohave been awarded Wilson fellow¬ships from other schools.The two UC students are Rich¬ard A. Eliel and Louis C. Schae¬fer. Eliel will study at Princetonand Schaefer at Cornell.The seven who will study atUC come from Tufts, Fresno stateand Reed colleges, Harvard, De-Paul and Washington universitiesand University of Toronto. Theywill study English, anthropology,political science, economics andphilosophy. *vrrrrrvrrrrryHick Bova — Florist \5239 Harper Ave. <Ml 3-4226 <STUDENT DISCOUNT «i ►I ►►►\ DELIVERY SERVICE <AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAi yourpersonalityas well asyour person”1457 E. 57fh Sr.BU 8-0876 UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingTwo barbers workingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor Quetico-SuperiorCANOE TRIPSOnly 15.50 per person per day forcomplete camping equipment, Grum¬man aluminum canoes and choicefood supplies. For free Informationwrite:CANOE COUNTRY OUTFITTERSBill Rom, Mgr. Bos 717C, Ely, Minn.CARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1127 E. 55 1412 E. 55MU 4-8980 MU 4-9003The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 [fTt»TTyytfTTfy»T»»Tt»?iI BORDON E i> <> Movers and Light Hauling <► VI 6-9832 ]iAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAl She's worth the best...Memie't Sin Dial TavernWILBUR JUST WOKE UP TOTHE FACT THAT HE£ IN CLASS! A CASA Book StoreUsed Books —— Bought and SoldJust received new stock inpsychology and sociologyBY 3-9651 1117 E. 55th Street 1601 E. 55th St.Just east of the I.C.■ -KtlP ALIRT FOR ABITTCR POINT AVtRACtlDon’t let that "drowsy feel¬ing” cramp your style in class... or when you’re "hittingthe books”. Take a NoDozAwakener! In a few minutes,you’ll be your normal best...wide awake . . . alert! You*doctor will tell you—NoDozAwakeners are safe as coffee.Keep a pack handy!15 TABLETS, 35c•Phi-Beta”pack35 tabletsk handy tin NODOZAWAKENER5 4 PROVENCALRestaurantFraneais IDEAS VS. McCARTHYISM No. 9FALSE WITNESSby Harvey MatusowAstounding expose of the ultimate in McCarthyite ''jus¬tice" in America, the pack of informers paid for perjuredtestimony to jail the political opposition. Urider thisEisenhower - Brownell "justice" Matusow now goes tojail for "obstructing justice" by revealing the truth, whilethose jailed on the strength of his lies remain imprisoned.25MODERN BOOK STORE64 W. Randolph, Room 914Chicago 1, IllinoisKEEPS HAIR NEAT, BUTNEVER-uChV-GREASY.''RELIEVES DRYNESSSTGET WUDftOOTCREOfOILOMRUE!'ONLY CREAM-OIL GROOMSAND CONDITIONS HAIR —THE NATURAL WAY IT-w w'April 8, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3City elections: trouble, promises for UCHow to run an election: Despres, new alderman for 5th ward,5 UCers learn grim lesson states views on housing for studentsby Davis Bobrow by Fred KarstFive UC students, Don Anderson, John Gilmore, Milt Kotler, MattPrastein, and David Bobrow, participated in a unique educational experi¬ence last Tuesday — “trouble shooting’' in “west side bloc” precincts dur¬ing the city elections. Classes met from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Faculty membersin this educational experience were provided, with few exceptions, bymembers of the west side bloc.A few lecture notes seem inorder. The five UC election“trouble shooters,” sent to thewest side by Citizens for Mer-riam to stop election irregulari¬ties in west side precincts, re¬ceived their first call five minutesafter the polls opened. In precinct17 of the 27th ward, neither Re¬publican judge was present. Onehad been told by the Democratic we’ll blast you out.” In anotherprecinct, as the Citizens for Mer-riam squad walked in, the Demo¬cratic captain nodded his head,and they were shoved, and told bythe chief judge of the board toget out. “The landlords now take advantage of the students by breaking upapartments into small cubby-holes” said Leon M. Despres, new aldermanfor the 5th ward, in a statement to the Maroon Wednesday. Despres, backedby the regular 5th ward Republican organization and the IndependentVoters of Illinois, defeated his run-off opponent George Uretz in Tuesday’selection. The 5th ward includes the University and most of its residents.“The Hyde Park redevelop-NSA elections 2 weeks awcty ment plan is only the begin¬ning of what can be done inthe 5th ward,” said Despres., __ “Housing is the most importantOn Thursday and Friday, April 21-22, the student body will problem the 5th ward is now fac-elect UC’s 20-man delegation to National Student associa- ing. It is very important to the UC22« MX?aldeS^* ti0n- and p°ssibly VOle on a referendum concerning SovietMarzullo (25th-Dem.), told the exchange. ward resident may only be here ateam “This is my ward, and I’ll Filing deadline for petitions didates. Independent Students short time, but the student bodyprecinct captain that she had been take care of everything.” for candidacy for the delegation league has not completed its plat- as a whole will always remain.”replaced. A woman had been Alderman Marzullo was asked is next Tuesday. At press time form; Student Representative Despres also stated that hesworn in as GOP judge. Checks by one of the Merriam trouble- neither campus political party party has but has not made it hopes to be on the housing com-revealed she was not a registered shooters to remove his campaign *ia<* determined its siqte of can- public.voterOver ten people had voted al¬ready; their voting cards in theprecinct binder had not beenmarked as required by law. Oneperson of the disqualified listfrom the board of election com¬missioners had voted without be¬ing challenged.In the 32nd precinct of the 25thward, the election board refusedto instruct voters on the modelmachine. Instead they wouldthrow the curtains wide, tell thevoter how to vote, and not stepout of the machine or allow thevoter to ballot privately.The trouble-shooting team en¬tered precinct 53 of ward 24. andcouldn’t see the voting machines.They were in another room. The“Republican” judge was forced tocall the election board, althoughthe Democratic precinct captain button in the polls. Shortly there¬after, a car drove up from eachend of the block; they doubleparked, and over a dozen largefellows, all wearing Daley but¬tons, surrounded the polling place.The trouble-shooters managed toget to a drugstore phone. Thelarge fellows moved over in frontof the drugstore.The police were called; theyarrived in fifteen minutes. Mean¬while voting was proceeding. Theofficers proceeded to call thelarge fellows by their first namesand they moved away. As they To observe Qood Friday,Easter Sunday servicesThe Rev. Jerald C. Brauer, newly-appointed dean of the federatedtheological faculty, will preach at Good Friday services in Rocke¬feller memorial chapel.Brauer will speak on “The enigma of the Cross” at noon servicesin the chapel, sponsored by the Council on Churches of Hyde Park,Kenwood and Wood lawn. mittee of the new city council. Ac¬cording to a statement he madelast week, housing is the mostcritical problem the ward is fac¬ing. “The next four years will bethe 5th ward’s most crucial years.I cannot emphasize too stronglythe importance of maintainingand improving existing housing,of preventing blight, and of pro¬viding new housing in this wardfor people of all income levels.”He pointed out that students Inthe Hyde Park-Woodlavvn areamust be included in these housingplans., . t L ^ J 4,1 would like to get hold of theleft the troubleshooting team Brauers appointment as president of the Federated Theological two plans for redevelopment ofwas tofd by one o? Mar^uHo^ Faculties was announced by Chancellor Kimpton last week. Brauer, the area, both the one the Univer-v " an ordained Lutheran minister, holds a PhD in church history and isthe author of Protestantism in America.supporters, “Don’t come back inthis ward.”In precinct one of the 25th ward,two UC students acted as poll-watchers all day. The trouble- si ty has and the one the SouthEast Chicago commission has. My•k if -k ro^e as an. alderman is that of anintermediary between the TTC, theAn outdoor Easter sunrise service will be given on campus Easter SECC, and the city council.”shooting team arrived at 1:30. Sunday by the Methodists, Congregationalists and other protestantgot on the phone, opening his con- They asked the Democratic judge groups.versation, “Hello, Joe — this is to stop instructing the voter on The service will be held at 5:30 a.m. Sunday in the courtyard ofSam.” The machines were moved the machine alone, with the cur- the Chicago theological seminary on 58th between University andin plain view of the board. tains closed. The Democratic cap- Woodlawn. In the event of rain they will be held in Bond chapel.So much for the academic part tain came in and started to shove Wallace W. Robbins, president of Meadville theological school, willof the day. One trouble-shootingteam was called “Commies” twice,“phonies” four times, and were the team around. He was askedto remove his Daley button. Hisresponse was “Get the hell out oftold innumerably “Get out, or here.’ preach. The services are to be followed by a breakfast at Chapelhouse. *★ * * UT keepsits life, spirit* an «v«nlng olbsrnle asbelfl*mtn0 brown0<*rrl armslrongto .. prttoatorf •*KHmrlmm <■•«. to.Mtoto, tUirngmIrMay. mprH I*. •91.10 to to<—•mmwm youth hostelssponsored by “The spring of souls” will be the topic of the sermon by John B.Thompson, dean of Rockefeller chapel, at the Rockefeller Easter serv¬ice 11 a.m. Sunday.The choir will sing J. S. Bach’s “Singet dem Herrn,” a motet fordouble choir.At 10 a.m. the brass choir, directed by Leland Smith of the musicdepartment, will give a pre-service performance from the rampartof the south facade of the chapel.Offerings will go to World University service.ALEXANDERSRESTAURANT1137 E. 63 Street MU 4-5735More than just a good place to eatWe cater to parties and banquetsOpen all night University Tavern will be opentonight!An effort to prohibit the saleof alcoholic beverages in the 49thand 27th precincts of the 5th wardwas defeated in the city electionslast Tuesday. Voters in the area,bounded by 55th and 56th streets,Ingleside and Woodlawn, defeatedthe referendum measure 273-199.According to the proprietor ofthe University Tavern, which isin the area that would have beenaffected by the law, no similarmeasure can be submitted to thevoters in that area for the nextfour years.He said that it is not completelyclear even now who initiated thedefeated referendum.NO 7-9071 hyde park theatre Lake Parkat 53rdstudent rote 50cSTARTING TKIUAY, APRIL SMARLON -‘DESIRE’BRANDOAs Napoleon toJEAN SIMMONS In Cinemascope and color!— and —Conrad Veidtas Metternich with Lillian Harvey ink k CONGRESS DANCES”We consider this a tour de force if unique, apropos, altogetherdelightful film programming—or in two words . . . WOTTA COM¬BINATION! The Napoleonic Era, thoroughly explored . . . first in thespectacular, magnificently staged, wide screen. Annamarie Selinkowith the special appeal of the Brando brand of full-bodied acting . . .and secondly in Erich Pommer's romantic comedy classic (1932!) inthe time-place setting of of the Congress of Vienna, which is ratedtoday by New York Timet' Bosley Crowther os “one of the greatestmusicals of all timesV* TERRY’S PIZZAfinest pizzas madeFREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALV 1.00MEDIUM 1.45 LARGE 1.95GIANT 2.95We alto carry a full line of Italian food*Special This WeekPresent this coupon and you will receive 35ccredit towards any pizza eaten at our store1518 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-40457 /ii'Y f\ I lv/I mmm Choose an ExpertTHOMPSONMOVERSLocal and Long Distance MovingCO 4-7600TYPEWRITERSCLEANED ORREPAIREDWritten guarantee onall work for one yearInspector and Estimator on dutyfrom 4 p.m. till 10 p.m.Discount of 10%for all studentsIf you bring in this ad withyour typewriter, you will re¬ceive free, a beautiful plastictypewriter cover.BOURGEAUS’1202 E. 55th St.BY 3-7912 i fiil1 •'1/ 11mmm7•ii Page 4 TNK CHICAGO MAROON April 8, 1955Jukebox, poor food citedin SF C-Shop debate“The basis of education is gastronomical” Roger Bowenstated Thursday in the Reynolds club during the debate Re¬solved: “The C-Shop is a shame.”Bowen speaking in the affirmative made a reference tothe bad facilities, overcrowding, poor food, the juke-box andthe unfriendly service offered in the C-shop and was sup¬ported by Davis Bobrow.The negative side of the with the affirmative and it wasquestion was supported by decided that the C-shop is aBasil Galetas and Bill Tsokos, who shame,maintained that the C-shop maybe a disgrace but it was most cer¬tainly not a shame, by their defi¬nition.”Bobrow stated that if theamount of money used for clean¬ing of the commons was used to ClrOlin for l cnlritimprove the C-shop, the improve- ar,niment would be great. He also Meets On April 19wtadP rpfprpnpp tn ntnpr nnliAPPS • l-F council adds to powerin new 'provisional' rulesThe Inter-Fraternity council has obtained the sole powerof recognizing a student organization as a fraternity on theUC campus under its new “pro-The next debate in the Reyn¬old’s club will be held next Thurs¬day when the question will beResolved: Movies are better thanever.made reference to other collegeshe had visited who did not, as theUC, have a 50 million dollar en¬dowment fund and yet manager!to have better eating facilitiesthan the University offers.Basil Galetas offered thethought that the C-shop served areal function in the life of theStudent, in that this was the best April 19.The group of students and fac¬ulty members who last week metat the suggestion of Dean RuthMcCarn for the purpose of dis¬cussing ways and means of help¬ing undergraduate students de¬velop a sense of belonging to theUC will meet again on Tuesday, visional” constitution adopted ata recent IF council meeting.An organization not recognizedas a fraternity will be permittedby the new IF council constitutionto continue on the UC campus asa “social club,” however.The new IF provisional consti¬tution also gives the council thepower to expel a member of thecouncil who the council feels hasno longer fulfilled the require¬ments of a fraternity.At the same meeting at whichthe new provisional constitution Brina Jaffee heads l-CBrina Jaffee, a member ofSigma, was elected presidentof Inter-club council at thecouncil’s Monday meeting. Shewill hold office for a year.was adopted Larry Sherman ofZeta Beta Tau was elected thenew president of the IF council.The proposed return to the cam¬pus of Tau Kappa Epsilon nextfall will not take place at least un¬til a later time, the council an¬nounced. Hutchins attacksDismissal system“The right question about ateacher is whether he is compe¬tent,” said former chancellor Rob-ert M. Hutchins in a speech bofoiethe Academy of Political and So¬cial Science last week in Phila¬delphia.Hutchins criticized the summa¬ry dismissal of teachers who re¬fuse to answer questions aboutCommunist affiliations.He told several hundred dele¬gates from educational, civic, com¬mercial and scientific organiza¬tions that “we have been so busybeing sophisticated anti-Commu-nists, detecting the shifts and de¬vices of Communist infiltration,that we have failed to observethta our educational responsibil¬ity is to have a good educationalsystem.”place for a tired student to sub¬limate.The audience, composed of ate students will bejnostly C-shop customers, agreed topic of discussion.A proposal for having regularassemblies for all the undergradu-the mainSpring SaleONBOX CAMERAS$>00 and upHave You Tried TRIEX?If NotYou Should TRY IT!Now Available in All SizesYou Will be Amazed at the ResultsUniversity of ChicagoBookstore58th ond Ellis ALLWESTMINSTERRECORDS 2.99ENDS APRIL 9ot TheDisc1367 E. 57MASQUERADE COSTUMESLorgest and finest selection in town. 1/3 discount to Beoux Arts Boll Masqueraders.NEW YORK COSTUME CO.Hours: 9-6 10 W. Hubbard Open Sat.: BEAUX ARTSMASQUERADE .8AIXPRIZES FoRZEST CoSTUmES V/VMASK/AjcS-/rr MI ON|G-HTAPBIL 16*- l®cMlOpjnHUTCRTNSOy COMMONS .a cc^ple.•. tickets available at Reynolds cluB• £• \ • •* • A*■ & •U.lV.VApr*! 8, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Past fStudent-faculty arts to be festival themeThe first annual Festival of the Arts, scheduled for April 14 -17, gives promise of being UCs biggest student-facultyundertaking. All over campus musicians, writers, singers, dancers, actors and athletes are completing plans for the four-day celebration which will attract parents, alumni and trustees to the quadrangles.Arthur Green, student in the college, and Josh Taylor, assistant professor of art, co-chairmen of the festival, say theyare “painfully but happily overwhelmed” by the immensity of the job they have undertaken due to the enthusiastic responseto the first announcement of the festival.IT 'Hvn?nf)thp<Art<fnro^rarn^ var*ety °* the many artistic activ- elude the Camera club in Mandel liams, distinguished American1*esi,, ^ . * ities normally engaged in by stu- hall, special collections in Harper poet, winner of the national bookthey say, was impressive dents and faculty members.” and the Oriental institute, an art award and the Bollinger prize,even before people returned for The Festival will open at 4 p.m. show in the Renaissance society will read and discuss his poetry,the new quarter. Now, the van- Thursday, to the pealing bells of galleries in Goodspeed and ex- Friday evening at 8:30 Univer-orgamzations are rushing Rockefeller Chapel in a special amples of sculpture by Chicago Sity Theatre will present itsfourth and major production ofin Goodspeed and ex-ous organizations aretheir plans to completion. program by Carillonneur James artists out-of-door^ in the quadThe Festival of the Arts has R. Lawson. The first event opened rangles.been described as “a demonstra- will be the student art exhibition At 3 p.m. Friday the star out-tion of the integration of the arts in Lexington hall studio. side attraction of the Festival ofto display the best works and Other exhibitions which will the Arts will be heard in Rocke-draw attention to the quality and run the length of the festival in- feller chapel. William Carlos Wil- the year, Gogol’s Inspector Gen¬eral. First festival eventsTHURSDAY, APRIL 144 p.m.: Oartllon concert by James R.Lawson, Rockefeller chapel caril¬lon.Student art exhibition, openingreception and awarding o€ prizes.Lexington hall studio.6 p.m.: Recital by Socletas Campa-nariorum, Mitchell tower chime8:30 p.m.: Concert by Collegiumsymphony orchestra and Rocke¬feller chapel choir, Mandel halLFRIDAY, APRIL 15'12 noon: Special music, Mitchelltower chimeConcert by UC concert band,Hutchinson court.3 p.m.: William Carlos Williams,reading and discussing his poetry.Rockefeller chapel.8:30 p.m.: “The Inspector General"by Gogol, performed by Univer¬sity Theatre, Mandel hall.Masquerade ball letsCarpenter, doctor: czar goes on Knights into Commons“And if I refused—well, it might get back to the Czar, and there’s always one’s careerto think of.” The Beaux Arts masquerade ball, gala event of the springNikolai Gogol tore into peasants and officials alike to write Russia’s greatest satiric- Festival of the Arts, will begin at 10 p.m. Saturday, April 16farce . . . The Inspector General. University Theatre, with the help of Gogol, nineteen in Hutchinson Commons.actors, a director and assorted ig April 15, 2; and 24. of rehearsal have prompted direc. |he ‘faCUlty'a,U'committeo' anjcarpenters, will produce the Injuries occurring each night tor Marvin Phillips to hire trained . ^ y , ,, . C-shop will remain open well past- . acrobats, Bud Beyer and a doctor, trustees, me Dan is expected m^night. Tickets, at $3.50 perProduction director Andrew decorated Commons ° & ^ ^ couPle> are available at Reynold*Duncan has created a setting »?r,, t Commons. club or by mail from Mrs. MaryL»uncan nas creaiea a sewing Molly Lunsford and John Neth- n j Ilniversitv of Chi.bold imaginative and shocking. erton, co-chairman, describe prep- S™8’ ° ’ Umversity of C1*“Stylized theatricalism mcorpor- arations as ,.the most elaborate cag°'undertaken for any spring quar¬ter social event within recentmemory.” The Commons will bedecorated in a medieval theme,according to the chairmen. “Acomfortable seats will be open for heraldic motif,” they report, “will eated this week that invitationsperformances each night at 8:30. ^ featured throughout with for the Festival of the Arts whichTickets are $1, and each pur- shields, banners and other ‘when- were sent to parents of studentschaser of an Inspector General knighthood - was - in - flower* trap- in the College are bringing in aticket will receive, upon presenta- pings in evidence. Much will be substantial number of positivetion at the box-office, a 25 per made of special lighting effects,” replies.cent discount to Playwrights The- the chairmen say. She said that more than 70 par-Arrangements have been made ents have shown a desire to al¬to throw open portions of the Rey- tend the reception which will bsnolds club in order to provide given for parents and friends inlounge* facilities. Music will be by Ida Noyes at 4:30 p.m. on Satur-Benny Young’s orchestra and the day, April 16.ates the constructivism of theRusisans with the exotic style ofthe Oriental,” Duncan com¬mented.Mandel Hall with over 1,000 Invite parentsDean Ruth O. McCam indi-atre club’s prodetion of Sopho¬cles’ Oedipus Rex. Sophocles’tragedy will be performed in Man-del hall Tuesday and Wednesday,April 26 and 27. Curtain 8:30.Alex Kasseler and Martha Silvertnann in rehearsal for TheInspector General.Variety of sports eventson Art Festival scheduleA large portion of the Festival of Arts weekend is to bedevoted to athletic endeavors, a field not always thought tobe apart or incompatible with artistic pursuits. For this week¬end on the UC campus, at least, the two will be as closelyassociated as they once were in other civilizations and cul¬tures.Saturday, April 16, will find The third athletic squad to par-three teams representing the ticipate in the weekend program Chicago sculpture fftllprizej ,in open air exhibit ^ art contestUC quadrangles will be adorned with an outdoor exhibit ofworks by seven leading Chicago sculptors in connection withthe first annual Festival of the Arts on the midway campus.According to Freeman Schoolcraft of the art department,the exhibit will be not only the first such exposition in thehistory of the University, but one of the most representativeoutdoor exhibitions of Chica-University of Chicago in asmany sports activities.The Maroon tennis squad, unde¬feated thus far this season underthe tutelage of tennis coach BillMoyle, will go through its pacesas part of the festival against theUniversity of Illinois at NavyPier.The U of C nine, who have beenworking out daily under the direc¬tion of coach Kyle Anderson, will will be Ted Haydon’s track squad,slowly becoming one of the mostrespected teams in the area. Thethin clads, fresh from a highlysuccessful indoor season, will beprovided with stiff competitionfrom Central Michigan college ofYpsilanti, Michigan.Sports enthusiasts will be pro¬vided with a wide choice duringthe Festival of Arts weekend withthe baseball, tennis and trackface their second opponents of the squads cavorting under what allyear with a double-header against concerned hope will be sunnyChicago Teachers college. skies. go sculpture to be held inyears.The dozen works to be shownwill range from pedestal-size tolarger-than- life figures in stone,bronze, iron, plaster, steel andterra-cotta. Artists who are con¬tributing examples of their workinclude Edouard Chassaing, Mil-ton Horn, Marion Perkins, EgonWeiner, Jon Fabdon, RaymondFink and Schoolcraft. All sevenwere recently named by the Artinstitute as among Chicago’s out¬standing sculptors.Cost of the exhibition has beenunderwritten by the Universityin keeping with the theme of itsfirst arts festival: “A demonstra¬tion to the community of the qual¬ ity and variety of artistic activitycarried on in our midst.”Schoolcraft, who is arrangingthe exhibition, pointed out “thatsculpture has a difficult time inpresenting itself to the public be¬cause* of the physical problemsinvolved in exhibiting a nd be¬cause it is neither accepted norunderstood to the same extent asother art forms.”“In this display,” Schoolcraftcontinued, “I’ve tried to selectsculptors who have made demon¬strable contributions to our every¬day cultural environment. Com¬missions executed by these mencan be found throughout thecountry, and particularly in theChicago area, in connection withboth public and private buildings. Rainey Bennett, interna¬tionally known painter, andJoseph Randall Shapiro,prominent art collector, willselect the five winners of $100in prizes at 4 p.m. Thursday isLexington hall studio in conneotion with the first annual Festivalof the Arts.Freeman L. Schoolcraft, direc¬tor of the campus studio gallery^described the prizes: $25 for thebest oil, plus an honorable men¬tion; best example of sculpture^including mobiles, $25. There willbe a $20 award for the outstand¬ing watercoolr and $15 each forthe best etching and drawing.”The student art exhibition willopen with a reception in the canvpus studio. After refreshments;Bennett and Shapiro will an¬nounce their selections.The studio will be open to visi¬tors until 9 p.m. every night ofthe Festival of the Arts. All theexamples displayed will be on e*hibit for three weeks.Music, music, music, featured in festivalBells, chimes, choir, band, Collegium Musicum, Chamber Music society — music from six different groups will be an integral part of the firstannual festival of Arts, April14 -17.Chimes, bells ringin concertsOn opening and closing daysof the Festival will be perform¬ances on the Rockefeller chapelcarillon, at 4 p.m. Thursday and4:30 p.m. April 17, by James R.Lawson, University carillonneur.Mitchell tower chimes, playedby students in the Societas Cam-panariorum (Society of Bell Ring¬ers), will ring often as introduc¬tions to other Festival events.Choir, orchestra performHeralded by the Mitchell towerchimes in a half-hour prelude ofBach selections, the Collegium Musicum and Rockefeller chapelchoir are scheduled to present themajor concert of the first annualFestival of the Arts at 8:30 p.m.Thursday in Mandel hall.Opening the program is the 40-piece Collegium Musicum, organ¬ized ten years ago as an amateurgroup of faculty members, stu¬dents and residents of the Univer¬sity community. The Choir of 48members will be featured a ca p-pella in Bach’s “Sing Ye of theLord.”Director of the .joint perform¬ance is Richard Vikstrom of themusic department, director ofchapel music at the University forthe past five years. Band brasses blare twiceBrasses will blare in two specialoutdoor programs by the UC con¬cert band during the first annualFestival of the Arts, the concertsbeing performed in Hutchinsoncourt at noon on April 15 and 16under student director WilliamKaplan. In case of rain they willbe held in Mandel hall.Under the presidency of PhilCohen, the band of 28 players rep¬resents a cross-section of the Uni¬versity which, while heavily un¬dergraduate, reaches from the bio¬logical sciences to the psychologydepartment for membership.The projected concert programincludes Offenbach, Strauss, Go¬ mez, and a group of marches, ac¬cording to Leland Smith, instruc¬tor in the Music department andadvisor to the group.Glee club invaried programThe Glee club, with Peter GramSwing conducting, presents itsspring concert in Mandel hall onApril 16 at 8 p.m. Featured willbe two Chicago premiere perform¬ances, 16th century motets, spirit¬uals and folksongs.Feature chamber musicFour UC student composers willhave their works featured by theUniversity chamber music societyin its eighth performance of theyear, April 17 at 3 p.m. in Ida Noyes hall as a part of the FirstFestival of the Arts.Student composers representedare Robert Bloch, Richard Swiftand Robert Goldstein, all of whomare studying composition in th«department of Music, and GilbertFischer, a doctoral candidate inthe department of Philosophy. Inaddition, works by Britten andHindemith are scheduled for th«concert.The society was organized fhresyears ago to encourage the per¬formance by students of chambermusic. “It has also tried to stress,*said Leland Smith, instructor inthe Music department and advisorto the Society, “unusual modemmusic.*p»9« 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 8, 1955EdifronolsACCLC rally significantly poor;Blame functionings of ACCLCA week ago Thursday, ACCLC sponsored an allcampus rally on the Broyles bills at Mandel hall.Participating on the panel were UC professorsHarold C. Urey, Harry Kalven, and Donald Meikel-john, with Calvin Stillman chairing. Most of theseats on the central aisle were filled, but few oth¬ers. The attendance scarcely exceeded that ofACCLC membership.The reason for this failure can be laid to someextent on lax publicity. Posters were put up acouple of days in advance of the meeting and werefar from striking. Publicity leaflets were circulatedonly in a limited way.But more significant for the rally’s failure, wefeel, are defects in the functioning of ACCLC itself.ACCLC thus far has not brought the danger whichthe bills represent home to the campus. It has notdistributed information as to content and changesin the bills. It has no reason to expect the campusto respond to a rally the campus has not beenprepared.Secondly, the members of ACCLC evidently hawnot felt it their responsibility to spread, throughtheir organizations, discussion of the developmentof the bills and of the role that ACCLC is taking.ACCLC cannot be an effective campus wide organ¬ization unless every attempt is made to involve atleast the support of member groups.However, this does not mean that ACCLC isdoomed. There are a number of educative projects ACCLC might undertake to arouse the campus.ACCLC could distribute a periodical bulletin onthe progress of the bills and of ACCLC itself < per¬haps starting with the implications of the recentlyadded amendments); it could publish exerpts fromHutchins’ dramatic testimony before the legisla¬ture six years ago; compile statements from fa¬mous figures and active organizations which havetaken a stand against the bills; and give accountsof the extent of resistance to the bills and thechances for their passage.It is also essential for ACCLC’s effectiveness forits members to alert themselves and to try to acti¬vate the organizations which they represent. Thiscan be done by giving periodic reports onACCLC’s progress at meetings of the membership,by sending the minutes to the membership, byholding campaigns within each organization tosend postcards to Stratton, and by holding discus¬sions, perhaps with speakers, on the bills.We suggest that the steering commitiee urgedACCLC representatives to encourage organiza¬tional support of the delegations to Springfield,possibly with some observers accompanying thedelegates.We particularly stress that ACCLC must notlull itself into inactivity either because of the latedate or because of the discouraging response tothe rally. ACCLC can still accomplish one of itsmajor aims—to work up campus wide discussionon all aspects of the Broyles bills. Issued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publico,tion offices, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones:Editorial Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1010; Business and Advertising Offices,Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions bymail, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.Allen R. Janger editor-in-chiefJoy S. Burbach managing editorWilliam M. Brandon.... business managerExecutive news editorSpecial projects editor. Festival of the ArtsNews editorsNews feature editorFeature editorSports editorAdvertising managerPhoto editorProduction managerAssistant production managerPersonnel managerCalendar editor Bob QuinnDiana EpsteinSue Tax, Spike PinneyLois Gardner». Joel PichenySam GreenleeGary MokotoffRonald GrossmanPrentiss Choate.... Duchess Lough ranJack BurbachRosemary GalliEditorial staff Joe Abatie, Ellen Abernathy,Joan Behrenson, Sam Blazer, Robert Bloch, Alice Bloom, ChoneBlumenfeld, Roger Bowen, Alan Charlens, Steve Cohen, CharlesCooper, Mitri Dozoretz, Barbora Fischman, Don Fisher, Kent Flannery,Smokey Garcia, Paul Hoffman, Bill Kaplan, Ken Karlin, ^red Karst,Bruce Larkin, Linda Liberia, Gene Rochlin, Karl Rodman, DavidStudent apathy wins victory;ask thoughtful response to billsIn keeping with the remarkable strength andvitality of student apathy on this campus, only ahandful of students came to Mandel hall to hearHarold Urey, Harry Kalven, and Donald Meikle-john discuss the Broyles bills at a rally sponsoredby the All-Campus Civil Liberties Committee lastweek.Even though this scant attendance is entirelyunderstandable—the Broyles bills rank second onlyto Student Government as an object of studentapathy—it is unfortunate that more students didn’tattend the Mandel hall rally. Their lack of interest,strong and vital as it is, would have met a criti¬cal test.They would have risked being amused by Urey’scolorful comment on the bills: “Broyles and hissupporters live in a different world. ... If all theCommunists in the United States died tomorrowmorning, our situation would still be the same, wewould still have the external threat. . . . There isthe rarest foolishness you can imagine in thesebills.”They would have risked being interested by Kal-ven’s clear analysis of the bills: “They containfour basic provisions. In the first, sedition is de¬fined as a serious crime. In the second, a newcrime, becoming a knowing member of a subver¬sive organization, is defined. In the third, a loyalty program for state employees is set up. In thefourth, proposals for a loyalty oath are made . . .The Broyles bills have a legal illiteracy aboutthem.”Most important of all, apathetic students wouldhave risked being moved to action by Meiklejohn’scall for “immediately and rhetorically effectivemeasures.” Since Urey and Kalven had answered:“What does it matter?” Meiklejohn completed thework by answering the second: “What can I doabout it?”His answer was concrete and precise: "Write toGovernor Stratton protesting the bills.”This is the answer that should serve to movethe most energetically apathetic student. In 1953,Stratton vetoed a similar set of bills. This year hisstatement that the bills have been amended to thepoint where he thinks they are acceptable, coupledwith his statement that he will reserve final deci¬sion until the bills are on his desk in final form,seems to be a device for arousing and gauging pub¬lic response.A thoughtful, literate letter to the Governor isthe most effective form of response. Copies of theBroyles bills and commentaries on them are avail¬able from ACCLC. All that is needed is responsefrom a student body that is both thoughtful andliterate, if sometimes uninterested.Hope for better understandingseen in visit of soviet editorsEleven Soviet student editorsWill arrive in the U. S. in lessthan a week. They will in all like¬lihood arrive at Chicago towardthe end of the first week in May.The Maroon takes this opportun¬ity to welcome the editors, and toexpress its support for the tripand the strong optimism withWhich it views their arrival.These sentiments rest first ofall on a belief in the fruitfulnessof contact with other nations.The Kani, the Fordham Collegenewspaper, commented: “thecommon purpose of all who seeka higher education is made invinc¬ibly clear when young people ofall nationalities and viewpointsare permitted to meet and inter¬act.” But second, and more signifi¬cant at this time, is the positiverole the trip can play in lessen¬ing world tensions and furtheringworld peace. As the Wayne Uni¬versity student council has stated,“The universities of the worldhave long stood as defenders offree thought and of the free ex¬change of ideas which has in thepast helped to alleviate the mis¬understanding and misconcep¬tions which bring about worldtensions.”Students all over the countryhave expressed approval for thevisit. Forty-four student councilsand editorial boards joined thestudent council of Oberlin andSwarthmore colleges in adopting resolutions of invitation. AtUCLA 3,500 students voted fourto one to invite the editors. Or¬ganizations at schools have inde¬pendently invited the Russian edi¬tors.We feel that behind this over¬whelming sentiment is a recogni¬tion, on the part of students, ofthe aid such a project can give tothe establishment of internationalunderstanding. After all, as hasbeen said many times, when webecome acquainted with a personwe are less prone to fight him;he is no longer a remote stranger.The meeting of Soviet and Ameri¬can students thus will provide anexcellent opportunity for further¬ing universal understandingand friendship among students.Due to the great response the Maroon received last quarter, we are extendingthis offer.For 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 this offer now. Subscriptions may berenewed at this price, also. Send the blank below to:MAROON, REYNOLDS CLUB 5706 UniversityChicago 37 )I would like to have a year's subscriptionNAMEADDRESS to the Maroon at the special price of $1.50.□ $1.50 enclosed□ Bill me Schlessinger, Frank Ternenyi, Richard Ward.Photographers Charles Becker, George ZygmundBusiness stoff: city advertising manager, Robert Lofts; business secretary,Don Miller;' subscription moneger, Norman Lewak; accountont-in-charge, Tom Kopantais; political advertising manager, Fred Freed;delivery manager, Harold Boron; loop delivery manager, RobertCampbell; sales manager, Ronald De Fratus.Reprint-Broyles’ bills ‘superfluous’;hit as affront to civil libertiesfront the Chicago Daily News, April 5. . . The Broyles bills would require all public employes,both state and local, to take an oath that they are not Com¬munists, or members of a subversive organization.If these bills are made into law it will be a felony knowinglyto join or remain a member of any one of the 264 organiza¬tions now on the U.S. Attorney General’s list of subversiveorganizations.No exemption is made, ap¬parently, even for the FBIagents who join these organiza¬tions for the purpose of learningabout their activities. Thorough¬going zeal by state’s attorneyswould seriously hamper federalagents in their efforts to enforcefederal laws. These agents wouldnot be convicted, but they wouldcertainly be “uncovered.”In one respect, the bills havebeen improved over previousmodels. It is no longer proposedto designate an assistant attorneygeneral especially to ferret outand prosecute such cases.The proposals are still super¬fluous, still an affront to civilliberties, and still a potentialsource of dangerous mischief.For instance, the requirementthat schoolteachers sign non-Communist oaths could be turn¬ed into a fearsome weapon ofpersecution.A teacher holding unpopularideas could be thoroughly ruinedmerely by the necessity for prov¬ing that his ideas did not makehim either a Communist or Redsympathizer.It is fantastic that an individualwho is impelled to join an organi¬zation which appears to havesome harmless or even laudableobjective, should have to consultthe subversive list before doingso, under the possibility otherwiseof finding himself charged with afelony.Certainly there has been toomuch careless joining of fellow-traveling societies, and certainlyone should be wary of the causeshe is persuaded to support. Buta felony charge, when neither in¬tentions nor actions were unpa¬triotic, is too drastic an invasionof personal freedom to tolerate.Supporters of the Broyles billwill tell you that these objectionsare fanciful and that administra¬ tion of the bill would avoid suchevils.But since there are already am¬ple laws to protect us against realoffenses, the only way the Broylesmeasures could be inoffensivewould be if they were passed andthen forgotten.Perhaps that is what the legis¬lators have in mind, after theyhave registered their hatred ofcommunism. But the opportunityfor a pink-chase by the profes¬sional patriotis would always bepresent, and the intelligent wayto insure against such abuse isto defeats these bills. Or. barringthat, a veto by Gov. Stratton.Missing a letter?Are you missing an importantletter or package that shouldhave reached you long ago? Thefault may lie in your failure tofollow a number of simple ruleslaid down by Faculty Exchange,the intra-University postal serv¬ice. Many letters marked “Uni¬versity of Chicago” are simplysent to Faculty Exchange andleft unclaimed.At this time of year when thestudent directory is out of date,each student should ensure hislisting in the files of the informa¬tion office by:1) Filing out an address cardat the administration building information desk.2) Giving the street number aswell as the hall in his address ifhe lives in a dorm.3) Remembering that exceptfor B-J, no registered, insured, orCOD mail is delivered to dorms—it goes to Faculty Exchange.4) Remembering not to use thedesignation “University of Chi¬cago” on mail if any other is avail¬able.April 8, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Poetry readers to Report from Madisonreceive prizes in - —- ,Adams xontest RGCl vhllldA change of date of the pre¬liminary competition in the barely misses UN seatThree UC students—Sylvia story of the UC delegation at the agreed to move reconsideration.Boyd, Paul A. Hoffman and Medison meeting. This one pur- When the motion was present- while the chair cast about for ameans to declare it out of order.Florence Adams poetry reading a iwuman axiu uiccung. nus une pux- vviitrxi mo xxiouon was present- xiieans io uecxare n out oxcontest has been announced bv ^an^ce Metros—“represented” P°se dominated all the delega- ed, the Communist nations When he finally hit uponthe English department. It will be USSR at the annual **on s ac^*ons.held on Thursday in Thorndike United Nations conference held a rea-Hilton chapel at 3 p.m. to avoid at the University of Wisconsin stomped in again. The chairman son, the Soviet nations, this timedeclared the motion out of order joined by Sweden, stomped oat,and a lengthy parliamentary as the meeting adjourned.“Point of order”Wh6Il Svl g j • anu cm. jicn g my pai namcmai yconflict with the William Carlos over the interim. Over 50 mid- question of admitting Communist *’ran2le followed, effectively stif- The conference was the firstWilliams reading on Friday. - western schools participated, each china in the Security Council ses- mg *urtber Assembly action. attended by the University of Chi-The finals will be held in the rePresenting a different nation, in sjon Saturday morning. National- Muster forces . eago. Our delegates came awaysame place at 3:30 p.m. Friday, a mock UN session. ist China vetoed. The United King- That evening Sylvia Boyd ar- with flying colors. Everyone wasApril 22, to determine first, sec- From the beginning, the Soviet dom voted "yes,” the US abstained ranged a caucus between the talkinS about Jan Metros’ per^ond and third prize winners who delegation for admission of Red in return for a Soviet abstention USSR, Indian, Egyptian and Swed- formance in the Human Rightswill received $75, $30 and $20, re- China to the UN. When the vote on admission of Japan. ish delegations. Here Sweden’s commission; one girl actuallyspectively. finally came on a “recommends- The Soviet delegation found an- chairman (James Birmingham, though* she was a Communist.Students wishing to enter the tion” to seat Red China, it re- other means of getting the nro- now a uc stu<*ent) presented a sy*v,a Boyd was described4- wtncf am am Ua UPfl 3 tVIQlAriftr Kilt 1 o tK a _ fr> ■ icontest must register on or before Monday in the English office,Wieboldt 205, and have the ap¬proval for their selections of Mrs.Judith S. Bond in the modernpoetry library, Harper W62. ceived a majority, but lacked the posal to the Assemblv floor after Proposal that the Assembly “rec- "striking to the jugular.” Wiscon-x«7A.fMr-ric H ^ w me Assemoiy IlOOl alter * . ,, r. ..... A, 7. sin an d North Parlr rvUW,,necessary two-thirds vote, 26-17The story of how this vote caucusing with India.When China’s name w>as called ommend” to the Security Council s'n ant^ North Park College pro-evolved - the record of confer- on the first roll ca]1 at the first that it seat Libya, Finland, andthe Chinese People’s Republic. Alland compromises, horse- Assembly session Saturday eve- that evening and Sunday morning,ann Korowminc' m fK a . _ _ J CAphuHc xi/orn tKo pvatrades and harangues — is the ning, Hoffman rose and objectedpoint of order.’ seconds were found for the pro¬posal; when it went to the floor,Advertisement - Advertisement - Advertisement - Advertisement delegation whfch^ans** Vh 22 nations were backing it.roll was not the “properly accred- The s£ssion Sunday afternoonited representative of the govern- saw a chan£e m the Soviet attl‘ fessors approached the UC dele¬gates and congratulated them.But the crowning glory (or in¬sult) came when a Wisconsin pro¬fessor, watching Hoffman in aparliamentary wrangle, told Syl¬via Boyd, “He’s better than Vis-hinsky.”FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSEThe first thought that comes into our minds upon enteringcollege is, of course, marriage. But how many of us go aboutseeking mates, as I like to call them, in a truly scientific manner?Not many, you may be sure. Most of us simply marry the firstperson who comes along. This can lead to unpleasant conse¬quences, especially if the person we marry is already married.^ Let us today make a scientific survey of the three principlecauses of marriage—homogamy, personality need, and propin¬quity. We will examine these one at a time.Homogamy means the attraction of like for like. Tn marriageit is rarely opposites which attract; the great majority of peoplechoose mates who resemble themselves in taste, personality,outlook, and, perhaps most important of all, cultural level.Take, for example, the case of two students of a few yearsago named Anselm Glottis and Florence Catapult. Anselm fellmadly in love with Florence, but she rejected him because shewas majoring in the Don Juanian Poets and he was in the lowlyschool of forestry. After graduation Anselm got a job as aforest ranger. Still determined to win Florence, he read everysingle Don Juanian Poet cover to cover while sitting in hislookout tower.His plan, alas, miscarried. Florence, sent on a world cruiseas a graduation present, picked up the betel nut habit in theIndies. Today, a derelict, she keeps body and soul together byworking as a sampan off Mozambique. And Anselm, engrossedin the Don Juanian Poets, failed to notice a forest fire whichdestroyed 29,000,000 acres of second growth blue spruce. Today,a derelict, he teaches Ilerrick and Lovelace at the ConnecticutSchool of Mines.The second reason why people marry, personality need, meansthat you often choose a mate because he or she possesses certainqualities that complete and fulfill your own personality. Take,for instance, the case of Alanson Duck. As a freshman, Alansonmade a fine scholastic record, played varsity lacrosse, and wasvery popular with his fellow students. Yet Alanson was nothappy. There was "Something lacking in his life, something vagueand indefinable that was needed to make his personality complete.Then one day Alanson discovered what it was. As he waswalking out of his class in Flemish pottery, a fetching coednamed Grace Ek offered him a handsome brown package andsaid, “Philip Morris?”“Yes!” he cried, for all at once he knew what he had beenneeding to round out his personality—the gentle fulfillment ofPhilip Morris Cigarettes, the soul-repairing mildness of theirvintage tobaccos, the balm of their unparalleled taste, the easeand convenience of their bonny brown Snap-Open pack. “Yes,I will take a Philip Morris!” cried Alanson. “And I will alsotake you to wife if you will have me!”“La!” she exclaimed, throwing her apron over her face, butafter a while she removed it and they were married. Today theylive in Prince Rupert, British Columbia, where Alanson is withan otter glazing firm and Grace is a bookie.Propinquity, the third cause of marriage, means closeness. Puta boy and a girl in a confined space for a long period and theywill almost surely get married. A perfect example is the case ofFafnir Sigafoos. While a freshman at Louisiana State, he wasrequired to crawl through the Big Inch pipeline as part of hisfraternity initiation. He entered the pipe at Baton Rouge. Ashe passed Lafayette, Ind., he was agreeably surprised to bejoined by a comely girl named Mary Alice Isinglass, a Purduefreshman, who had to crawl through the Big Inch as part of hersorority initiation. When they emerged from the pipeline atBurlington, Vermont, they were engaged, and, after a good hotbath, they were married. Today they live in Klamath Falls, Ore.,where Fafnir is in the weights and measures department andMary Alice is in the roofing game. They have three children,all named Norman. , shuiman, 1955For your enjoyment the makers of Philip Morris have prepared ahandsome, illustrated booklet called MAX SHU PM AN REVISITED,containing a selection of the best of these columns. Get your copy,absolutely free, with the purchase of a couple packs of Philip Morrisat your favorite tobacco counter. Hurry! The supply is limited. ment of China, which is the Chi¬nese People’s Republic.Reds caucus tude — becoming friendly, peace-loving, conciliatory. When the 7aLLL^,Swedish proposal came to the OtMUtilt IUUUKlSLSReds caucus floor, Birmingham referred to 1 TI7 J 7After several minutes of par- Russia’s vote to admit Japan as ICCtVC W CCLTlCSCtCiyliamentary discussion in which “the first time a great power had X* L.s- T> 1Jan Metros kept referring to the been willing to compromise on a tO DTOylCS“delegate from the island of Tai- major issue.” 0 ^wan,” the chair ruled that Na- Nationalist China had the ques- UC students Bruce Larkin, Paultionalist China should be seated. tion split. Libya and Finland were Breslow, and Albert Fortier go toThe USSR appealed. “recommended” by voice vote, the Springfield Wednesday to testifyOnly the Soviet bloc voted to Soviet Union voting “yes.” against the Broyles Bills on theoverrule the chair; the Arab Gall it quite behalf of UC students. Open hear-league and the Southeast Asia na- The Chinese proposal missed on the bh\s are being heldtions abstained. When the US, by the required two-thirds by three before an Illinois house commit-its agreement abstained, its an- votes. Three nations which sec- ,ee on veterans’ affairs,nouncement was greeted with onded the proposal were absent All persons who can provideboos. from the meeting. transportation Wednesday areThe appeal was defeated, where- Immediately, the Soviet attitude asked to contact Bob Heavilin atupon' the Soviet and People’s Re- changed. Hoffman moved to “re- BJ- or Bruce Larkin at the Alphapublic delegations withdrew. In consider and enter on the min- Delta Phi house,the lobby they caucused with the utes” the motions on Japan, Libya The only recent activity of thechairman of the Denmark delega- and Finland. To this Sweden add- All-Campus Civil Liberties Cona¬tion, which had voted to uphold ed the German question. mittee. formed to combat the bills,the chair. When it was explained This move suspends all action was a rally in Mandel hall onethat this motion was the only taken on a proposal. Although week ago Thursday. See page sixopportunity to seat Communist he knew it was out of order, Hoff- for news and comments on theChina, Denmark’s chairman man defended it for half an hour rally.$10,000 GIFTTO THE UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGOWe presume it would make modest headlines if the RED DOOR wer,e togive $10,000 to the University. As a matter of fact, students and facultyof the University of Chicago have received more than thot from the REDDOOR BOOK SHOP since we started our discount plan.We do not regard it os our function to sell remainderswants at prices anyone can afford/' 'books no oneWe do believe it incumbent on us to provide books of permanent valueand interest at the lowest prices consonant with continued, efficient op¬eration and with certain legal regulations.The RED DOOR offers discounts on all American books to bona fide stu¬dents and faculty members. In addition, we supply any foreign book onspecial order at the foreign price. In this way savings of up to 50realized by those who avail themselves of our services. '% areIT IS EASY, AGREEABLE AND PROFITABLE TO SHOP FOR YOLRBOOKS AT THE RED DOOROpen Daily from 10 A.lf. to 10 P.M. and Sunday from 2 P.M. to 10 P.M.(Occasionally closed for a few hours on warm, sunny afternoons)SCHNEEMANNSRed Door Book Shop1328 East 57th StreetBook Cellar to The University of Chicayo CommunityPage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 8, 1955Playwrights repeats success;reviewers acclaim ‘Oedipus’Playwrights Theatre Club will repeat its tremendous suc¬cess of last week with two performances of Sophocles’ trag¬edy Oedipus Rex at the Eleventh Strett Theater, 72 E. 11thSt., this Saturday and Sunday evenings at 8:30 p.m.Acclaimed by the audience and the reviewers alike, WilliamMarshall, who is featured in the lead role, received the longestand most fervent ovation mthe history of Playwrights.Claudia Cassidy in the Trib¬une aid that “a great play is downfrom the shelf, revitalized by apowerful individual perform¬ance.”Irving Sablofsky, writing in theNews, thought Oedipus “a strik¬ing production ... as powerfulas anything the theater can of¬fer.” Members of the audiencestaged an impromptu party forthe cast in a Loop hotel after theperformance.Kober leadsRobert Speaker, well - knownbaritone, will be featured inBach’s Cantata No. 56, “Ich willden Krenzstab gerne tragen” onthe Easter concert of the Colle¬giate sinfonietta, conducted byDieter Kober. The concert is inMandel hall this Sunday at 4 p.m.Admission is free.Other highlights include thefirst perfomance of the instru¬mental Sonata for the CantataNo. 45, “BedenJce Mensch dasEnde” by Buxtehude, and what isprobably the first extant violinconceto, Torelli’s Concerto n DMinor, to be performed bjr Rob¬ert Bloch.Handel’s Concerto Grosso in Fand the Fifth Brandenburg Con¬certo of Bach, the latter featur¬ing June Blume, flute, RobertBloch, violin and Gayle Hufford,piano, complete the program,Havighurst...(from page 1)class is just beginning to realizethe complexity of his society andthe difficulty in achieving anidentity. Under the influences ofCollege education, an adolescentis frequently in his twenties be¬fore he decides whether he is tobe a conservative businessman, ascientist, or a Bohemian.The achievement of identity,Havighurst said, consists in mas¬tering five developmental tasks;learning acceptable male or fe¬male roles, finding a vocation,achieving emotional independ¬ence, gaining values, and prepar¬ing for marital and family roles.The influence of parents and peergroup have both harmful andbeneficial effects on the adoles¬cent, he said.Peer group dangerousAlthough the parent-child rela¬tionship is necessary in theachievement of the adolescent’sdevelopmental tasks, a prolongeddependence upon parents cankeep a child from achieving anidentity. Although influential inwrestling the adolescent fromparental control, the adolescentpeer group sets up rather coarsestandards and tries to impose con¬formity, Havighurst said.COMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.• Bar-bo-cue ribs• Bar-be-cue chickenDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525 Playwrights remains barredfrom its Near North Side quar¬ters pending the outcome of acontroversy with city officials.U’of C campus organizations havecome to the aid of the Club: Uni¬versity Theatre. NAACP and SRPare sponsoring two performancesof Oedipus in Mandel Hall on the26th and 27th of April.In addition, UT and Play¬wrights have announced an ar¬rangement whereby theater-goerswho attend both The InspectorGeneral, UT’s spring production,and either Mandel Hall showingof Oedipus Rex can obtain a 25per cent discount on the prices ofboth admissions. Police to censor foreign films;‘obscenities’ in Annex filmIn response to the showing of the Polish film, Five fromBarska Street, at the Cinema Annex last Friday (for whichfree tickets were distributed on campus last week), PoliceCommissioner O’Connor has ruled that hereafter foreign filmsmust be reviewed by policemen who understand the language.He issued the ruling on the grounds that the film contained“about 15 obscenities.” Com-Hold art classA life sketch class will beresumed this quarter, co-di-Traditional Greek style dic¬tates the robe and mask thatVernon Schwartz wears in Play¬wrights' production of Sopho¬cles’ “Oedipus Rex.” plaints were received at hisoffice from viewers who saidthat the characters in the filmwere cursing in Polish.The police censor board re- rected by Art department stu-viewed the film o/i c e and dents Ron Benson and Ed Zolpe.granted a permit because the ac- Held in Midway Studios, 6016tivities were “lily-clean.” O’Con- South Ingleside, on Thursday eve-nor revoked the permit after dis- nings from 7:30 to 10 p.m., thecovering the true nature of the class will offer its students oppor-film. Five from Baraka Street tunities for drawing from thedeals with the lives of war op- nude model. Poses will be bothphans in post-war Poland. - short and long.£/Ae PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET WANTEDExclusive U. S. distributor for Reichert Microscopesdesires to appoint campus representative to acquaint med¬ical students with features. Note Reichert Microscopesare sold directly to students at great savings to the student.Write to: William J. Hacker & Co., Inc., 82 BeaverStreet, New York 5, N. Y.HEY,THERE! MORE LUCKY DROODLES!WHATS THIS? For solution see paragraph below.COTTONTAIL RABBIT ONMOONUT NIGHTArlen J. KuklinUniversity of Nebraska TWO MM FIGHTING OVSR WORMJoseph BexU. C. L. A.HOT DOG ON HAMBURGH SUNBurt GriffinWake ForestSTUDENTS! EARH $25!Lucky Droodles* are pouring in! Whereare yours? We pay $25 for all we use, andfor many we don’t use. So, send everyoriginal Droodle in your noodle, with itsdescriptive title, to: Lucky Droodle, P. O.Box 67, New York 46, N. Y.*DBOODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price ARE YOU LOOKING for a completely enjoy¬able cigarette? Then get a clue from theDroodle above, titled: Smoke rings blownby riveter enjoying Luckies. Fasten on toLuckies yourself. Luckies are such greatshakes because they taste better. Andthey taste better for excellent reasons.First of all, Lucky Strike means finetobacco. Then, that tobacco is toasted totaste better. “It’s Toasted”—the famousLucky Strike process—tones up Luckies*light, good-tasting tobacco to make ittaste even better ... cleaner, fresher,smoother. So, whenever it*s light-up time,enjoy yourself fully. Enjoy the better-tasting cigarette ... Lucky Strike. POORLY MAM SLICI ORswiss CHiisaDavid. Russell WatsonFranklin & Marshall'rfc TO*/ nBeftea tasle Luckies...LUCKIES TASTE BETTER CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!CA. T. Co. PRODUCT OF u&am, America's LEADING MANUFACTURES OF CIGARETTE*AfH* a, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Fage 9DocFilm begins series tonight; In memory of Binyon% f A nA^Amytnn/in nf UotT/ln’o IHfln b-nAwn C*\\ 10 r+nf HnFrench, German, Russian filmsThe Documentary Film group begins its Friday spring study series, Films of Childhood,tonight in social science 122. The four films, in the order to be shown for the next fourweeks are: Zero de Conduite (French, 1933); Emil and the Detectives (German); The Roadto Life (Russian); and Poil de Carotte (French, 1932).The first film is by the noteworthy experimental director, Jean Vigo. It was banned inFrance when it first appeared. A boys’ boarding school is shown in all its ugly reality, butthe teachers are seen as they —appear to the boys’ minds, Roml to Life is the first sound Duvivier, who also - made Underfrightening and grotesque, film to be produced in the Soviet the Paris Sky and Pepe Le Moko. A performance of Haydn’s little known Quartet, Op. 51,“The Seven Last Words of Christ,” will compose a Good Fri¬day program to be given tonight at Mandel hall at 8:30. Fea¬tured on the program will be Joshua C. Taylor as the narra¬tor. The concert is in memoryof Millard Binyon, late profes¬sor of humanitiesThe work will be performed bythe Alexander Schneider stringquartet, including AlexanderSchneider and Isadore Cohen, vio¬ lins; Karen Tuttle, viola; andDaniel Saidenberg, ’cello. Thisgroup was formed in 1951 for thepurpose of playing Haydn stringquartets, and has recorded all ofthese for the Haydn society.Utilizing unusual camera work, unjon. This movie, directed by It depicts the isolation of a boyVigo succeeds in working up - - - - -many valid and provocative picVigo succeeds in working up Nicoiai Ekk, shows the Russian born to parents approaching mid-many vana ana provocative pic- mejhod of dealing with juvenile rp „ a . , , , .torial and psychological State- delinquents by setting them to ?le ag<\ Tormented by ]ackments. work; in this case at building a ove arK* sympathy, the boy isEmil is the story of a small boy railway from a collective farm fianlly driven to attempted sui-who visits Berlin and is robbed, to the city. Contained in Road to cide. Bauer plays the father whoThe film deals with the self dis- Life are many fine examples of cannot understand his son.cipline of a street gang which the experimental use of sound. Admission to this series is bysuccessfully pursues the thief The final picture of the series, series ticket which can be pur-through the city. Poil de Carotte, was directed by chased for $1.25 at the door.The third picture, the Russian the noted French director, Julien Showings are at 7:15 and 9:15,and there will be a discussionafter every show.Other DocFilm activities whichare of interest are the showingthis Tuesday evening at 7:15 and9:15 p.m. for 40 cents of SergeiEisenstein’s great Mexican epicTime in the Sun (Que Viva Mexi¬co), and the second part of theGorki trilogy, My Apprentice¬ship on Sunday, April 17, at 8:30p.m., as DocFilm’s contributionto the Festival of the Arts. No, dorm food is not the greatest— not even the greatest evil“Dormitory food may not be the greatest but it’s good forthe soul,” Jan Metros stated during a debate, “Resolved:"Enjoy Our Fine Continental Cuisine inRelaxed AtmosphereCONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Daily (except Mondays) from 4:30 - 10:00Sundays — 12 Noon - 10 P.M.1508 E. 57th Street Phone PLa/a 2-9355WANTEDGOOD PICTORIAL PHOTOGRAPHSCampus Scenes — Student LifeWill pay commercial ratesPhone T. M. Switz, Ext. 3039y&an undergraduate favorite...our"346" GABARDINE SUITOur attractive "346” worsted gabardine suitsare made with swelled edges, patch pocketswith flaps and center back vent... in our owndistinctive shade. All sizes, including extralongs. Coat and trousers, $90"346” Tropical Worsted Suits, $68"3 46” lightweight Tweed Sport Jackets,$55 to $65KSTAtUSHfD Wiglens f’urnistitngijfnis {robots546 MADISON AVENUE, COR 44TH ST., NEW YORK 17, N. Y.BOSTON • CHICAGO • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCO dormitory food is the greatest’Judson lounge before a groupof about forty students.Miss Metros’ statement ledto a brief discussion about theexistence of the soul, which wassoon ended when Jan Marvis,debater on the negative side,stated that he had two souls oneof which he left in a suitcase andthe other he carried with him toOMP class.Despite the efforts of the af¬firmative debaters — Jan Metrosand Donald McClintock— to con- last Tuesday night at Burton¬negative side — Jan Marvis andEllen Abernetny — were ^victori-ous when the majority of theaudience decided that the foodcouldn’t even be classified as thatbad.The next debate at B-J will benext Tuesday evening at 7:30 p.m.The topic will be “Resolved: Thatfraternities and sororities aregreater than dormitories.” It isexpected that the debaters willvince their audience that B-J food demonstrate their usual thought-is the greatest, not the greatest f.ul handling of serious nationalgood but the greatest bad, the issues.Send Flowers for EasferMitzie ’s Flower Shopaf two convenient stores1225 E. 63rd St. 1301 E. 55th St.IIY 3-5353 Ml 3-402010% and 20% student diseount......... Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372When the littleFlatiron Building was theworld’s most famousskyscraperBudweiserled all beers insales. And.. *UNMUIIt . IUKN, INC.•V. touts • NtWAlK • to* ANGIilt still leads the world’s beersin sales and quality because... because it’s Budweiserwore thr>Sowetli^ ■ npremia f**? /PSJ^erfJ!lSHIRTS 11c eachDeluxe Finished when Included with9 Lbs. Wash and Dry Only .89cKW1K-WAY Cash & CarryLAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING1214 East 61st St.» (Between Woodiawn & Kimbark)LAUNDRY SPECIALBobby Jones registered woods and irons, and JimmyThomson registered woods are SYNCHro-dyned®clubs ... the only clubs made that offer you perfectbalance . .. and an identical contact feel. -Because every one of these clubs swings and feels alike. . . your golf becomes more uniform, your shots con¬sistently better. With golfers reporting handicaps cut byas much as % .. . these are the clubs to play.Make your next round a better one ... with Spalding.awip/uivoYOU’RE A BETTER GOLFERTHAN YOU THINK!Snofa WINSTON Me.■. J. NTNOLM TOUAOCO OO., KIMITOM-•»«_ CM . «. C'WINSTON brings flavor bac cto filter smoking!■ It didn’t take long for word to getaround campus! Winston’s got real flavor—the full, rich, tobacco flavor you want.No wonder so many college men andwomen are getting together on Winston!Along with finer flavor, Winston alsobrings you a finer filter. The exclusiveWinston filter works so effectively, yetlets the flavor come right through toyou. Easy-drawing—that’s Winston!Page 10 April 8, 1955ClassifiedFor Rent Much storage and closet space. Housewell set back behind white picket fenceon lot 60x100. Attractively landscapedwith brick terrace. PA 4-0783.Hi-fi 40-wat amplifier. Just $35 forquick sale. McKinley Elementary School,2040 W. Adams. CalendarFurnished room in six-room apartment,kitchen privileges. Sublet—late June toSeptember. $40 per month. PI. 2-3720.Phone evenings.Bedroom apartment. Free gas. electric¬ity, parking. Private bath. Refrigeratorand range. Rent $79. Newly decorated.Sullivan. 957 E. 54th Pt., DO 3-3090.Six room apartment near U of C. Preoparking. Newly decorated Reasonable.Mr Sulivan, 957 E. 54th Pt.. DO 3-3090.Five-room furnished apartment, 502Faculty building, 6019 Ingleslde Ave.,to be sublet May 1 to September 30,1955. to couple with faculty connec¬tion. Call FA 4-0111. PersonalNot responsible for injuries incurred atshows of the Inspector General, April15, 23, 24, Mandel Hall.Demon’s A Good Quarter is coming.Elect Karpen and De Pratua to B-JCouncil. NoticeThe deadline for items to beincluded in the calendar ofcoming events is now 5 p.m.Tuesday evening. All regis¬tered student organizationsmay submit events to be listed.They must be brought ormailed to the Maroon office,Reynolds club 201.WantedServicesExperienced father wishes to exchangesitting time for tutoring by member ofcollege math department. PL 2-5600.Grad student, expert dishwasher andbabysitter will exchange services forroom and board or make other arrange¬ments. Call DR 3-0961.You can rent an electric refrigerator. $5per month. We also repair refrigerators.CO 4-9231.Learn folk-style guitar. Sooner than youthink you can accompany your favoritesongs. Gorup method. Low cast. BernteAsbel, AT 5-6550.Come one, come all to Young SocialistLeague Social this Saturday night! Seemovie to end all movies! (Those whocame to previously scheduled showingcome free—all others, 35c.) 9:30, 54266 Maryland. Salesmen urgently needed to sell ads forspecial issue of Maroon that is comingout next week. 10% commission on allads sold. Apply Maroon Business Office.Today: 1-5; Monday: 1-5.24-year-old Med student wants room¬mate for 4-room furnished apartment,four blocks from campus. $66 permonth. DO 3-2531.World Book Encyclopediae. 155 McIn¬tyre Court, Valparaiso. Ind.Riders to New York City wanted. Shareexpenses and driving. Leaving Satur¬day. April 9. Call Eddy. MU 4-2523.Zenith AM-FM radio. Will pay up to*20. Tang Tsou, 1156 E. 57th St- PL 2-9815. Call In evenings. Friday, April 8University concert, Schneider Quartetplaying Haydn’s “Last Words,” Man-del Hall. 8:30 p.m.Movie; “Zero De Conduite,” (French),Social Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.Admission by series ticket only.Saturday, April 9Richard Dyer-Bennet, folk singer, pre¬sented by Independent StudentsLeague, Mandel hall, 8:30 p.m. Ad¬mission $1, $1.50 for reserved.Lenten-Easter recital, Bach singers.Bond chapel, 4 p.m.Square dance, sponsored by Circles andSquares, Ida Noyes. 7:30-10 p.m.Sunday, April 10F.piscopal communion service, Bond chapel, 8:30 a.m.Lutheran communion service, Hiltonchapel, 10 a m.University religious service, Rockefellerchapel, Dean Thompson will give thesermon, 11 a.m.Easter concert, collegiate slnfonletta.Mandel hall. 4 p.m.Movie: “Casablanca,” (American), B-Jlounge. 7 and 9:30 p m. 25c admission.Glee club reheari-.l, 117 Blaine, 4-6 p m.I SI, caucus, B-J. Slating and platformdiscussion, 7:30 p.m.SRP caucus at Ida Noyes. 7 JO p.m.Tuesday, April 12Meeting of Canterbury Club, Episcopalstudents. Dr. Baer speaking on the“Origins of History of the Book ofCommon Prayer.” Refreshments anddiscussion afterwards. Brent House,5540 Woodiawn at 7:45 p.m.Social Democratic Forum, discussion ledby Dr. Paul E. Hanchett on the book“Capitalism. Socialism and Democ¬racy" by Joseph Schumpeter. Mead-vllle House, 5650 Woodiawn Avenue.4 p.m.Wednesday, April 13Movie: “Time in the Sun”- El sen stein Doc Film. Soc Set 122, 7:15 and 11$,Admission 40c.Folk Dancing, Country Dancers. Eng¬lish and American country dances,everyone welcome. Ida Noyes Cloister7:45 p.m. Please wear tennis shoes ’Student Government Divisional orien¬tation Commission, OrganizationalMeeting. Ida Noyes Alumni Room,8:30 p.m.Italian Club Lecture. Dlscuslsoo on re¬cent industrial development In ItalyRoom A, International House, ■ p.m'25c non-members.Science Fiction Club, presentation of arecording of Orson Welles In his fa¬mous broadcast “Invasion from Mars.”Everybody welcome.Pre-Med club, Abbott 133, 4 p.m. DrCarlson, speaker.University Glee Club, rehersal. m-.wi-jHall. 6:30-8 p.m.Thursday, April 14Graduate History Club Meeting. Pro¬fessor Stanley Bennett speaking on“English Social History in the MiddleAges.” International House, Room A.7:30 p m.Brent House, Activities Night. EpiscopalCenter, 5540 Woodiawn. 7:30 p.m.|j!IIIIIMIIMUIIIIIIIWIIIIMfflllttNIHIHtHtl!lfflnttllHtllltl!lllltllllllMHttHltllllHIIIIIHIMJUIMIIMNIIIUIIlllUllllllt!j| International House Movies| East (,•■■!« Mom. A Thurs. Eves, at 7:00 A 9:00 P.M. |Mondoy, April II — 45< — TV* Cantor’s Sow (Yiddish)Thursday, April 14 — 35c — Of Mica and |T«iiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiii«uiiiRUsed Spanish language records. Latln-American pronunciation. Call AN 3-4999afternoons.Ride from 4700 North, 23*0 West to cam¬pus. 9:30 Monday through Friday. RA8-6497 after 6.New conductor needs old musicians forlonely band. Join the Band IFor SaleStorkline baby carriage with accessories,$15. L. W. Tinnen, 1126 E. 61st St. (Pre¬fabs )1109 E. 48th St. 2-story white paintedbrick carriage house of unique charmand construction. Ground floor: living-dining room (36x16), with fireplace,large terrace, compact kitchen, study,furnace-utility room. »/2 bath. shop, toolshed. Many unusual built-in features,automatic oil hot water heat. Secondfloor: 4 distinctive bedrooms. 2 baths. Peterson Moving& Storage Co.55th A Ellis AvenueStorage facilities for a trunk orcarload of household effectsPacking — ShippingLocal or long distance movingBlJtterfield 8-6711 Co&eqe htow u/£yWINSTONchanged America's mindabout filter cigarettes!.SEPTough track, teachers beat UC runnersby John SpauldingJourneying to Milwaukee last Saturday the track team close its indoor season in a highlycontested struggle with Wisconsin State Teachers and their tiny uncooperative track. TheMaroon runners emerged from the meet a disappointing second by the narrowest of 5-pointmargins.The real villain was the track itself, an unresponsive 135-yard oval furnishing crowdedturns and scant 40-yard straightaways with structural overhangs and traffic congestionpresent to harrass almost —every event. Starting off Chicago’s scoring edged by Milwaukee’s speedyWith this physical backdrop burst in the field events were Dan Stan Fusek. Trifone and Watkinsthe meet was further peculiarized irifone, who soared.to a stratos- placed second and third in theby one-sided individual events, in Pheric 6'2" In winning the high highs making it a sweep,spite of the close team score; and ^umP> and Joe Howard, who con- Exerting dominance in the twofour relays. The first places were hnued his winning ways with a mile, Chicago swept all threeexactly divided between the two mee* record shattering shot putof 47' 8%”. Following Trifone inteams, up to the last event, withChicago registering an over¬whelming 44 points to Milwau¬kee’s 6 in the shot put, hurdles,2 mile, high jump and 24-lap re¬lay, while Milwaukee piled up analmost equal 42-4 point margin inthe remaining six events.The score was virtually tiedright up to the final event, andwhen Milwaukee copped that themeet was decided, the exact finalscore being 52 4/5 to 48 1/5. the high jump were Mason, in2nd, and Dewey Jones, who tiedfor 3rd with a small group of Mil¬waukee jumpers and thus ac¬counted for the difficult fractionsin the final score.In the running events reliableFranke Loomos skimmed throughhis high and low hurdle specialtiesfor wins and racked up the goodtime of :06.0 in the 45-yard lows.Loomos had to settle for a secondin the 40-yard dash, where he wasREADER’S61st & Ellis 'the campus drug store”Opposite Burton-JudsonVisit osar College RoomTRY OURSunday Student SpecialServed from M2 (Soon) to 8:30 P.M.Sirloin Butt Steak OnlyFrench Fries — Salad Bowl &*00Roll and Butter $|<. ARROW GUARDS-BRIEFLY, THEY'RE COMFORTABLEOne thing every man wants in underwear is COMFORT! And,Arrow has it. Arrow Guards, of fine combed cotton, give firmbut comfortable support They1 keep their shape .. . giveperfect fit where you sit.If you prefer a short, Arrow offers the Sprinter model withelastic waist-band, or snap-front model shown below. If youlike fancy patterns, slip into a pair of Arrow LOVE MATCHshorts (below right), one of several Arrow specialty prints.Arrow Guards, $1.20. Shorts, $1.50. Fine Arrow T-shirts, $1.25.T|4 UNDERWEARSHIRTS & TIES'VAA CASUAL WEAR~r HANDKERCHIEFSIV, places with small Paul Baptistleading Ray Saunders and JimFlynn around the 25 laps to winin 10:20.1.The Maroons ended its victorieswith a triumph in the 24-lap re¬lay, in which each runner runs4 laps (or 828 hard-fought yards).Art Omohundro, who previouslyhad garnered a disappointingthird and a spike wound in themile run, ran a fine lead-off andgave the team a nice lead. TinkieHeyns, running second, tangledwith one of Milwaukee’s toughestmen, and when the third leg cameup it was a dead heat again. TedFishman then proceeded to runnearly up a couple of walls in fi¬nally crushing his opponent onvarious turns, and when ChuckRhyne, in anchoring, held off theever dangerous Jim Perez the vic¬tory was sealed.But Chicago’s scoring punch was matched by Milwaukee’sdominance of the remaining fieldevents and three shorter relays.Led by George Appleby, who polevaulted 1211" and broad-jumped21'2" in sparking his temmates toa sweep of these two events, andby Fusek, Eichfeld, and Perez,who ganged up various ways towin the 4, 8, and 12-lap relays,Milwaukee burst through In thesefive events with 33 points to Chi¬cago’s none.In spite of a very strategic bitof running by Frank Loomos inlanding off the final 8-lap relay,Milwaukee speedsters sprinted byTrifone, Brown, and Rhyne totake the relay and the meet.The University of Chicago trackclub, bolstered by new memberBill Conrardy who recently placedthird in the 1000-yard run in theChicago Relays, takes on its firstoutdoor opponent in meetingChanute air force base on Staggfield at a p.m. Saturday. Chanuteoffers at least one threat in JohnBarnes, Occidental Alumnus andNational 880 champ in the recentpast.Sports calendarSaturday: Track, Chanute APBWednesday: Baseball, ChicagoTeachers oollege, 3:30 p.m., Staggfield.Thursday: JV track, Luther North,3:30 p.m. Stagg field.Our answer to the Mambo —Arrow underwear!We’ve long suspected the Mambo started with ill-fitting,uncomfortable underwear. Why else the squirms andanguished looks?Bring your wracked frame into us. We’ll show youArrow underwear (Guards or Boxer styles), that giveyou unbounded comfort and classroom ease. We’ve ArrowT-shirts, and shoulder-strap athletic shirts, too. They’reof fine combed cotton, offered at unruffled prices. Arrowunderwear, $1.00 up. Arrow T-shirts, $1.25.Chicago — EvanstonOak Park — EvergreenGary —— Joliet — Alton Ted FishmanRunner hurtTed “Punchy” Fishman, prom¬inent member of the strong Ma¬roon contingent of middle dis¬tance runners and member of thesquad’s indoor record-breakingmile relay team, may be lost tothe squad for the season. Fish¬man suffered a sprained ankle at¬tempting a Willie Mays stylecatch in a neighborhood softballgame Sunday afternoon.Fishman, peering over his swol¬len foot, predicted that he wouldbe running again in a week. Fish¬man’s doctor stated that it wouldbe six weeks before the Maroonrunner would be able to compete.Baptist's songReturning from Saturday’strack meet with Wisconsin State,UC’s combination pole - vaulterand distance man Paul Baptistgrew tired of quoting Shake¬speare to his attentive team¬mates, and amused himself in¬stead by composing and conduct¬ing the following ditty, sung tothe tune once reserved forMO-T-H-E-R:H is for the heartaches whichwe cause him,A is for the anguish which hefeels,Y is for the youths which hemust handle,D is for the dinners and themeals;O is for the oaths which he sup¬presses,N is for the nerve which he dis¬plays;Put them all together, theyspell HAYDON,He’ll be another Stagg one ofthese days.Coach Ted H a y d o n , whosecharges had hit a sour noteagainst Wisconsin that day, saidonly, "That’s real nice, fellas.”Published today ♦ ♦ .THEY THOUGHTTHEY WERE FREEThe Germans: 1933-45By Milton MayerThrough the eyes of ten everydoycitizens in a small German city,the author portrays the rise ofdictatorship as seen by the manin the street. Because he livedamong these people and achieveda frank and intimate relationshipwith the "ten little Nazis" whosestories he tells, Mr. Mayer feelsthat he understands the humonmotivations and weaknesses thatled a notion to the bottom of thepit. If there is a beast in theGerman people, then there is abeast in all of us, he implies,and the conviction that "it can'thappen here" appears very fragile,indeed.$4.75from your bookselleror fromThe Universityof Chicago Press5750 Ellis AvenueV.V FBI arrests UC student on 950 students,sc New food plan toldcharges of "draft dodging" awaits final SG votegot JuM ... and'$ got everything!For an Important FIRST JotSuccessful career women recommend Gibbssecretarial training as the door-opener tothat important “first" job, and the all-roundpreparation for advancement to the top.Write College Dean for Gibbs Girls at Work.Special Course for College WofflesKATHARINE .SECRETARIALBustos It. 21 Marlborough St Nos York IT, 230 Park Avo.Providence t. 155 Angeh St Montclair. N. J„ 33 Plrmoath StGIBBS Dig those L&M’s! — America’s best filter cigarette.What a filter—that pure white Miracle Tip really filters. And youget all the taste! Campus after campus agrees “L&M stands outfrom all the rest!”’ C Doom * Mvtas Tooacco Co.Myron E. Holland, UC student, was arrested last Friday byagents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The agents,in arresting Holland, charged him with failure to report forarmy induction last November 22.Holland, who holds a master de¬gree from Occidental ^pllege, hasbeen studying for a doctor’s de¬gree in psychotherapy and coun¬seling at UC for the last twoyears.Claiming to be a “humanist,”Holland declared that his “philo¬sophical, psychological, sociologi¬ cal, intellectual and spiritual rea¬soning” prevented him from com¬plying with his Pasadena, Calif.,draft board’s order.William Hart, assistant UnitedStates attorney, said that Hol¬land is not a conscientious objec¬tor. Holland declined to explainwhy he did not appeal for such aclassification. A petition calling for a ref¬erendum which would favorinternational student ex¬change between all countries andwelcome the visit of Soviet ed¬itors, received the signatures of950 UC students this week.The referendum may not be putbefore the student body since theStudent Government at its meet¬ing on Wednesday passed unan¬imously the substance of the ref- Provencal restaurant for satisfac-A second food plan for UC students, this one sponsored inStudent Government by ISL, seems likely to appear soon.Student Government, through its ISL majority, scheduledan eating plan resolution fourth on its agenda Wednesdaynight, but never reached action on the resolution. The resolu¬tion, formulated by Pat Parker and members of the BusinessClub who investigated eatingplan possibilities for SG, read:“The Treasurer of the StudentGovernment is authorized, sub¬ject to the final approval of theassembly, to contract with theUC student leaders meet;watch new problemby Diana Epstein“It’s a catastrophe,” the crowd moaned as they watcheda cat up-a-tree in front of Kent hall Monday noon.There was an estimated audience of over 300, not includingpassers-by; many of the observers were cat lovers, someweren’t cat lovers, quite a few were student leaders, andmost were just enjoying a beautiful spring day.When it looked as thoughthe cat would not come down,the Animal Welfare leaguewas called. Soon afterwards, aman came, wearing spiked shoesand armed with a long, loopedpole and a cat-cage.Amidst cheers, he climbed theti-ee! He raised the pole to en¬circle the cat in the loop. The catadvanced — farther into the tree.Perched on a long, twig-clutteredbranch, he was safely out of reachof the cat-pole. The crowdcheered.‘Everyone’s rooting for the cat— it’s that kind of campus,” DaveBobrow, student leader, com-n*nted.After several unsuccessful at¬tempts to catch the cat, the rescueworker climbed higher into thetree. And so did the cat. Allcheered again. “The cat’s agenius,” someone yelled.Bruce Larkin, student leader,expressed an opinion which wasshared by many UC observers:“It’s a transgression of civil liber¬ties to stop this cat from goingwhere he chooses; there are nolaws.” He added a more personalview’: “as a cat owner I knowthat if I returned home, reportedthat I’d been rooting for the cat-napper, my cat would be angry.”Another political viewpoint wasexpresesd by Paul Hoffman, stu¬dent leader: “To paraphrase AdlaiStevenson: I think the Universityof Chicago has enough to do with¬out trying to control feline delin¬quency.”Although he was the favorite,the cat was finally caught. It wasa dramatic moment. There weremixed emotions: some called it a“moral victory”; others applaud¬ed the animal welfare worker;but everyone was glad the catwas unharmed and safe.A large group rushed to con¬gratulate the cat as he sat quietlyin his cage after it was all over. “What is going to be done w'ithhim?” was the question in alltheir minds. They urged, “Don’tgas him — Give him a good meal— Wash him.” erendum.According to the statute ofpowers of the Student Govern¬ment, a bill will be submitted tothe Student body as a referendumunless SG enacts the provision ofthe referendum prior to the dateof the election at which the refer¬endum would be considered.Albert Fortier, SG president,said yesterday that the referen¬dum would probably not be sub¬mitted to the student body. How¬ever, the SG elections and rulescommittee will make the finaldecision on the matter today.The petition for the referendumwas circulated by a newly-formedstudent group, the Committee forthe Referendum. tory meals for students at notmore than approximately $1.00.”SRP has already inaugurated a“Student Restaurant Program”with the cooperation of Collier’sHouse. Nicky’s Pizzeria, and ThePizza Kid. The three restaurantsare offering 10 per cent discountswith the purchase of a mealticket, and up to 20 per cent onintroductory specials.Milt Kotler, chairman of theSRP student needs committeethat organized the SRP plan,stated: “Does SG want to do any¬thing about food discounts ordoesn’t it? I rather think the lat¬ter. If their purpose is sheerlypolitical in attempting to saveface in light of SRP’s accomplish¬ments in this area, then the Pro¬vencal Bill certainly proves it.. Pat Parker, speaking for theSG plan, said: “A bipartisan Stu¬dent Government group last Jan¬uary set a date for the release ofa restaurant report, and left itscommittee open to all who wishedto make suggestions. Had SRPwished to serve the campus rath¬er than play politics they wouldhave worked with the SG grouprather than throwing together aplan to release immediately priorto our release date.”ACECYCLE SHOPYour BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we sellRepairs fir Parts all makes819 E. 55 Ml 3-26729 A.M. - 6 P.M.CAMPUS “STAND-OUTS Man Most Likely To—mmy sSINCE 1940