Plan fall under+grad meetings Language I droppedto develop sense of belonging ^rom college coursesby Joy BurbachUndergraduate assemblies will be held beginning next fall. Ruth McCarn, assistant deanof students, and a committee of student, faculty, and administration, met Friday to discussthe possibility of such assemblies, and reached agreement in favor of them.The proposed assemblies first be «an extension of the orien- demic dress for University en-will be held three times a tation program.” trants, as a way of making stu-quarter. Attendance would Disagree on topics dents feel it “is something” to be anot be required, but the assem- Except for the talk by Dean student at the University of Chi-blies would have the official sane- Streeter, no definite plans for as- ca£0-tion of the dean, according to sembiy topics have been decided. Certain topics touchypresent plans. Mrs. McCarn said this week that MacLachlin opposed assembliesThe assemblies would aim to- such things as the changes in the topics such as the seven men-ward solving the problem of help- examiner’s office would, in her tioned by Lewalski. He said thating undergraduate students “de- opinion, be valid assembly topics,velop a sense of belonging to this while others pressed for assem-campus,” Mrs. McCarn stated, blies dealing with the personal‘It’s not sure that having regularmeetings (of the undergraduatebody) is the only answer, but itis something that might work andwhich we haven’t tried.”Begin with entering classThe first such assembly will begiven early in the fall quarter,and will feature a speech by Rob¬ert E. Streeter, dean of the col¬lege, probably dealing with edu¬cational policy. Following assem¬blies will probably be listed in theorientation literature, althoughthey will be for the entire under¬graduate body, not just entrants.“We have to start with the en¬tering class,” Dean of StudentsRobert M. Strozier said vin sug¬gesting that the assemblies atLAK chidesB&G costs“We don’t run this campus forBuildings and Grounds,” com¬mented Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton when informed of therental rates charged by B and Gfor the use of campus buildingsfor student affairs.Promising that he would doeverything he could to reducecosts for campus affairs, Kimptontold I-F council members, “Thenext time you fellows want tobold a dance on campus, let meknow and I’ll take care of It foryou.”Kimpton. talking informallywith members of the Inter-frater¬nity council after their annualChancellor’s dinner Monday night,remarked to Dean Robert Strozier,also a guest at the dinner, that hewished more of the students’dances would be held on campus.Strozier cited to the Chancellorthe $750 charge which B and Gcharged for the use of the com¬mons for the recent Beaux Artsball.“That figure was more than thetotal cost of the Inter-fraternityball,” said Larry Sherman, IFcouncil president. life of students.At the Friday meeting KenLewalski, house head of Coulter,made seven special suggestionsfor assembly topics in the field ofstudent problems. Among his sug¬gested topics were “moral choicesinherent in professional life,”“self-discipline as an alternativeto coercion,” and “the traditionof service among intellectuals insociety.”Such things as the questions ofclass cutting, failure to turn inassignments, the decrease in thenumber of students taking pre-ceptorials, and official announce¬ments could be subject matter forthe assemblies, Lewalski sug¬gested.Asesnihlies “artificial”Two-day conferences on matters .In the moral-social-political fieldwere suggested by Maynard Krue¬ger, associate professor of eco¬nomics, as one suggestion for abetter way to accomplish some ofthe aims of the suggestecLassem-bly program. Krueger called con¬vocations and assemblies “syn¬thetic.” As little as has to be doneby the assembly method shouldfollow that method, he said.The recent Festival of the Artswas a putting together and show¬ing of things already here, andwas therefore indigenous andpreferable to artificial programs,he said.Bruce MacLachlin, a social sci¬ences student and a member ofStudent Aides assisting in regularUniversity convocations, spoke infavor of a ceremony in full aca- from his own feelings and his ob¬servations of students reactionsto convocation topics, he felt suchtopics were to be avoided.Terry Lunsford, a law student,favored a “liberal helping” ofcommunication at assemblies. OfSee ‘Assemblies,’ page 10 Language I will no longer be offered in the college. Thisdecision was reached last Thursday when the college facultydecided that the course was “no longer useful in the collegecurriculum.”n rRobert Streeter, dean of the college, stated that the decisionwas based mainly on the fact that the course had ‘‘failed tomeet the objectives of a general language course.”The number of class meetings, usually ten throughout one quar¬ter, were not sufficient to give the student a good basis of generallanguage, Streeter further stated.John P. Netherton, incumbent chairman of language I, said thatthe educational question of the method of offering the course throughthe foreign language courses was referred to the foreign languagefaculty for further study.The course will remain as a requirement for graduates until June30 of this year. Those students not graduating this year will nothave to take the course.University of Chicago, April 29, 1955 31New World planned for June 19 debateas UCs Round Table goes off the airNew World replaces The University of Chicago Round Table on June 19 at 11:35 a.m.as UC’s contribution to educational broadcasting, functioning as a part of the NationalBroadcasting Company’s 48 hour weekend Monitor cycle.With one of the largest single blocks of time in NBC’s new weekend educational presen¬tation, New World will attempt “to illustrate the dual role of the universities in contributingto the rapidly changing pattern of modern civilization and in solving the problems the sci¬entists and s c h o la r s havehelped to create,” accordingto Edward W. Rosenheim Jr.,UC radio director.Interviews, discussions, docu¬mentaries, actual academic expe¬riences and quasi-dramatic epi¬ sodes will be utilized to meet thisgoal.In Rosenheim’s judgment. NewWorld “will have the flexibility topresent many kinds of interestingaspects of the relation of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, of education.Flanders here for conferenceSenator Ralph E. Flanders will be on campus this week to participate in an all-day con¬ference on world affairs, sponsored by the Student Representative party and Students forDemocratic Action. The topic of the conference, which will begin at 9:45 a.m. tomorrow inMandel hall, will be “The reality of disarmament.”Other participants in the conference will be Bruno Bettelheim, UC professor of educationand psychology and principal of the Sonia Shankman orthogenic school; Maynard C. Krueger,associate professor of econom¬ics at UC; Arthur H. Rosen-feld, research associate at theinstitute for nuclear studies; and chairman of the atomic scientistsof Chicago; and Gottfried Kinder-mann, research assistant at thecenter for study of American for¬Acrotheatre must dissolve after 13 years;Beyer lists finances, apathy among causesAcrotheatre will disband next year. After thirteen years ofactivity, several major productions and nation-wide publicity,one of the University’s most widely-known student groups willcease to exist.Four reasons for the disbanding were given by Aero direc¬tor Erwin F. “Bud” Beyer. Meyer, who nursed the organiza-tion from an informal mwtmg dents show inle,.est.of gymnasts and cheerleaders Acrotheatre lost its entire bankto^a polished combination^ot balance when only 168 people at-.. ~tended its show for the Festivalof the Arts. Aero canceled whatwas to have been a “Carnival”show this Saturday in Mandelhall in order to stage the festivalshow, and so lost its chance to re¬gain its financial balance.Requirements on Beyer’s timecome from gymnastics and therequired gym program. This timeotherwise would have been spent,according to Beyer, consolidatingAcrotheatre and its personnel,General apathy on the part of stu¬dents, the third reason for Aero’sdissolution, came after thirteenyears of successful and vigorousactivity in the group.Beyer cited poor campus pub¬licity from the Maroon as thefourth reason. He felt that cam¬pus support was lost in this way.ballet, musical comedy, drama,and circus, listed financial trouble,other requirements on his time,member apathy, and poor recentpublicity as reasons for Aero’sdemise.Beyer will remain at his presentpost as gymnastics coach nextyear. There is possibility of arevival of Acrotheatre after nextyear if Beyer and enough stu-Two performers in “Mag¬ic Rope,” Acrotheatre’s firstproduction which attractedwide publicity. Even LIFEmagazine covered the 1948show, which combined bal¬let, musical comedy, drama,and circus. Now Aero hasdisbanded. eign policy.Kindermann is the formerchairman of the Austrian foreignaffairs committee in Vienna, for¬mer press officer for the UnitedNations secretariat, and twiceAmerican student delegate to theUN World Student conference inGeneva.Admission will be 50 cents forstudents and $1 for visitors. Thosewishing to attend should registerfrom 9:45 to 10 a.m. at Mandel.Registration wjll be followed bya welcome from Milt Kotler andJohn Gilmore, chairmen of thejoint planning committee.There will be three speakers be¬tween 10 and 12 noon. Kruegerwill speak on “Disarmament andour search for a goal,” Rosenfeldwill speak on “Disarmament inan atomic age,” and Bettelheimwill discuss "A psycho-analyticapproach to disarmament pro¬posals.”The conference will reconveneat 1:30 p.m. after lunch. Kinder-man will then speak on “Disarm¬ament and political delusion,” andFlanders will give the last talk,discussing “American responsibil¬ity for world disarmament.”Follo\ fng each speech will be aquestion period, and a panel dis¬cussion will conclude the pro¬gram. Participants in the panelwill be Krueger, Kindermann,Bettelheim, Flanders, and FrancisSchwartzenberg, professor of po¬litical science at Loyola universityand former Czech ambassador tothe Vatican. and scholarship and research tothe affairs of the world,” provid¬ing a new and broader opportu¬nity for educational networkbroadcasting.As did the Round Table, NewWorld will draw upon outside au¬thorities as well as the faculty andperhaps students of UC. “Thework of natural scientists, socialscientists, humanists, and all theother specialists in the academiccommunity have a direct bearingon the issues unique to our time.It is this aspect of the world oflearning which New World willinterpret,” said Rosenheim.New World, as'Was RoundTable, will be entirely a UC pre¬sentation, with Rosenheim respon¬sible for the program content andproduction.NSA election resultsIndependent Students leaguewon a substantial victory overStudent Representative partyin last week’s NSA elections.The winners:National Delegates:Clive Gray (ISL) 717 votesJan Porter (SRP) 695A1 Fortier (ISL) 674Bruce Larkin (ISL) 643Jan Metros (ISL) 638National Alternates:Eiichi Fukushima (ISL) 674Carolyn Eggert (SRP) 619Barbara Vogelfanger (ISL)594George Stone (ISL) 589Monica Kozasa (ISL) 579Regional Alternates:Bob Heavilin (ISL( 633Pete Carmel (ISL) 623Hal Levy (ISL) 611Paul Breslow (SRP) 594Sylvia Boyd (ISL) 588Richard Johnson (ISL) 574Lynn Chad well (ISL) 572Bob Geidt (ISL) 548Joyce Everett (SRP) 544Joli Lasker (ISL) 5361,335 students voted, a totalof 22,464 votes were cast, andISL received 53.2 per cent ofthe votes while SRP received46.8 per cent. These figures arethe corrected totals taken afterMonday night’s recount.ton predicted that byRelaxing after the dinner,Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 29, 1955Kimpton sees sound, active frat system uc alumniby Ronald Grossman"Let me reiterate what I have said in the past: I am ail forfraternities at the University of Chicago.” With these wordsChancellor Lawrence R. Kimpton opened his after-dinner re¬marks at the annual Inter-fraternity council Chancellor’s din¬ner Monday night.The dinner, an informal affair, was held at the Alpha DeltaPhi fraternity house for the more generousthan mostChancellor and guests DeanRobert Strozier, Student Ac¬tivities Director Arthur Kiendl,and Chaplain Richard Young,alumni counselor for Alpha DeltaPhi. Three delegates from eachfraternity were present. Kimpton opened an informalquestion and answer session cov¬ering fraternities, their role oncampus, and campus affairs ingeneral.Looking to a sound fraternitysystem in the near future, Kimp-photo by GrossmanChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton laughs at a comment madeduring after-dinner conversation at the Inter-Fraternity councilChancellor's dinner.Alpha Delta Phi alumnus, chaplain Richard Young, and IF presi¬dent Larry Sherman look on.photo by GrossmanThe Chancellor and Dean Strozier pose with IF council.Front row, kneeling, are Marty Dillard, Kappa Alpha Psi; GeorgeStone, Psi Upsilon; and Chuck Mittman, Phi Sigma Delta.Back row, 1. to r., are Dick Walton, Beta Theta Pi; I>arry Sher¬man, Zeta Beta Tau; Dean Strozier, Chancellor Kimpton, Stu Zim¬merman, Phi Delta Theta; John Smothers, Alpha Delta Phi, andLance Felker, Phi Gamma Delta.Illinois Bell Telephone givesopen house for UC membersThomas S. Devine, the district commercial manager of the IllinoisBell Telephone company, has announced an open house exclusivelyfor UC administrative personnel, faculty, the student body andtheir guests.The open house, in the form ofa tour, will be held at the HydePark Telephone Exchange build¬ing, 6045 Kenwood. It will beginon May 10 and continue until the13th, from 3 to 9 p.m. daily. Re¬freshments will be served.The tours will start with a briefintroduction giving some pertin¬ent information about the com¬pany and its operations such asthe area of coverage, number oftelephones, revenues, etc. Thenwill follow a step by step peek atthe machinery and the people whoprovide the public with the meansto make calls at any time of thenight and day almost anywhere inthe world.Of interest to many studentswill be a machine that can playtic-tac-toe and beat you everytime, “voice mirror” telephonethat lets the speaker listen to hisown voice. And one of the mostrecent developments in moderntelephoning, a telephone that re¬quires no hands and enables oneto talk to his party while severalfeet away from the phone. If onehappens to be interested in theweather in New York, an operatorwill demonstrate the speed of thekey pulse system which enablesone to talk to some one in NewYork city in as little as three sec¬onds and at the same time giveyou the local weather.Included in the tour will be astop at the maintenance center.Here much of the switching forlocal calls is done by an ingeniouscomponent called “cross bar.”“Cross bar” is so fast a methodof routing calls that as little asone and one-half seconds is need¬ed to complete a local call, as op¬posed to 10 or 12 seconds bymanual operator.Also to be seen will be the longdistance office, the testing and in¬formation center. The latter twoare the real working areas. Thetesting center has the job of main¬taining a high level of service atno cost to the customer, yet theirwork must be done with as littlelost time as possible. These twodepartments, according to T. B.Beste, company official, exemplifythe desire of the telephone com¬pany to give more and better serv¬ice to every subscriber. versity should have an undergrad¬uate body of about 3000, morethan double the number it has atpresent. He pointed out the ex¬tremely unusual faculty - to - stu¬dent ratio of better than 4 to 1here, adding, “a larger under¬graduate body would correct thissituation.”“I want a large undergraduatebody here—one that is 50 per centor better of the total enrollment.Undergraduates give life and toneto a University.”“However, in the future the un¬dergraduates will probably becomposed of more high-schoolgraduates and less of the earlyentrance students.” The univer¬sity faces some serious problemsand responsibilities in admittingyoungsters from their second andthird years of high school. Stroz¬ier pointed out that is especiallyimportant for fraternities, in thatthe fraternities on this campushave a minimum of restrictionsregarding the conduct of theirhouses. Admitting 16-year-olds(the IF council has consideredthis) might force the Universityto impose more regulations on thefraternities.Kimpton questioned what activ¬ities the fraternity men took partTHIS ARROW SHORT STORYMAKES REAL SUMMER SENSEHere’s a really smart summer combination ... get*ting more popular every day. Arrow gingham shirtsand fine Arrow walking shorts. They’ll keep youcool, and give you comfort when you want it most.The shorts are comfortable, practical, right in styletoday. We wouldn’t be surprised to see more shortsthan “longs” on most any campus this spring.Get Arrow walking shorts priced from a mere$3.95 in denim ($5.00 in other fabrics). Get frostyArrow ginghams, too, from $3.95. Broadcloth checlq(left), $5.00.A/mowCASUAL WEARSHIRTS & TIESUNDERWEARHANDKERCHIEFS in and was given a run-down byIF president Larry Sherman.Kimpton was glad to hear thatthere were fraternity men on theMaroon staff, stating “The Ma¬roon was one of our weak pointsin the activities program, but itlooks much stronger now.”Asked about plans for the fu¬ture concerning the University,Kimpton pointed out that themain concern now was raisingmoney. “We are literally askingeveryone in the world for money,”he stated. "We are meeting soonwith many of the great founda¬tions in New York which were soliberal with grants in the past.”Citing recent gifts, Kimptonmentioned that last Friday he Re¬ceived a check for $250,000 fromthe Field foundation and a fewweeks ago a gift of $75,000 fromone of the McCormick family.We face three immense prob¬lems in our plans for bqilding upthe campus, Kimpton declared.He proceeded to outline thembriefly as a fairly unbalancedbudget, the large amount of chil¬dren who will soon be enteringcolleges and universities, andmost important for UC, the neigh¬borhood we are located in. Gifts from alumni to collegesand universities in 1954 were $20.883,548, equivalent to the incomefrom a half billion dollars of en.dowment, Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton announced Wednesday.UC stood high amog institu¬tions in alumni financial support,with $400,689 in expandable fundsfrom 11,003 donors.Speaking at a reception for Chi.cago area chairmen and commit-tee members of the UC alumnifoundation, Kimpton said, “Asthe principal continuing source ofunrestricted contributions, annualalumni giving is the financial lieblood of most private institutions,including the University of Chi¬cago.Cap and Qotvnon the press?Cap and Gown is off to press,editor Paul A. Hoffman announc¬ed this week. “Barring earth¬quakes, cyclones, or similar actsof God, the yearbook will be outon time.”Hoffman announced that Mi¬chael Stanley will handle the pro¬motional campaign for the year¬book. Stanley has previously pro¬moted U.T.’s production of TheInspector General. Both declined—at this time—to divulge whatwould comprise the campaign. "Itwill be big!” was all Hoffmanwould say.Cap and Gown is offering acase of beer to each fraternitywhich has 75 percent of its mem¬bers subscribing. Those subscrib¬ing 100 per cent will receive apony keg. *s Q u A R E s.are cool these daysYou’re living back in the cutaway days if you’renot keeping calm and cool in our Arrow walkingshorts and gingham shirts. We’re stocking a won¬derful selection in both departments ... so, comein out of the sun. It’s cooler inside... inside oneof these smart Arrow summer Combinations. Arrowginghams from $3.95. Arrow walking shorts,$3.95 to $5.95.Chicago — EvanstonOak Park — EvergreenGary — Joliet — AltonApril 29, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON P«9* *ISL elects 16 out of 20 delegates for NS A.election determined by ballots in last boxbf Spike WwneyAt 12:45 a m. Saturday morn¬ing. after four hours of readingAnd checking ballots, chairmanCiark Kucheman of the electionand rules committee stood on atable in the Reynolds club northlounge and read the names ofthose elected delegates to the Na¬tional Student association.Sixteen candidates from the In¬dependent Students league andfour from the Student Represen¬tative party won places on thenational and regional delegations.(See list of complete election re¬turns on page one.) Regional del¬egates will meet here with aboutG5 other NSA delegates from this region on May 7 and 8. Nationaldelegates will attend the NSA na¬tional congress between August21 and 31 at the University ofMinnesota.Both ISL and SRP were appre¬hensive before Friday’s votecounting. Larry Lictenstein, for¬mer SRP chairman, said, “I’m un¬certain but hopeful’’ about SRPchances at 8:30 p.m. At about thesame time Anton DePorte, ISLmember, said, “After last year, nocomment,” in regard to ISL hopes.Only candidate willing to com¬mit himself was Clive Gray, whoflatly predicted, "I’m sure thatISL won.” His confidence wasborne out after the four hours ofcounting when his own total of 717 votes topped those of all othercandidates.First indication of the ISL vic¬tory came at 8:55 when partial re¬sults from the first of the fourballot boxes were in. “The Mandelbox looks very good, and if we’redoing as well in Mandel as weseem to be doing, we’re in,” saidJim Handler of ISL. “Fortier, Lar¬kin, Gray and Metros seem to bein.” ISLer Roger Woodworth saidat the same time.As ballots from the Cobb hallbox and the social science and C-Group boxes were counted, SRPhopes of gaining places, especiallyin the ten regional delegates, rosesharply. One SRPer estimated that seven out of the ten might goto his party. But ballots from thefinal box, which was located atvarious times in Burton corridor,the law school, the business schooland International house, were pre¬dominantly ISL.WUCB assigned five staff mem¬bers to election coverage. Whilecheckers and watchers kept busycounting, WUCB broadcast spotannouncements of the results.Most of the ballots were split be¬tween the parties. As Bruce Lar¬kin observed after Kucheman’sannouncement, “People are votingon personalities and not issues.”For the winners, Clive Graysaid, “I'm very glad that my con¬ fidence in the votes of UC ha*been borne out. I think they elect¬ed a sensible slate on a sensibleplatform, and I’m sure we’ll doour best to carry it out.”For the losers, Davis Bobrowstated, "Far from being discour¬aged. we’re very pleased with theshowing we made in the under¬graduate vote.... The great manyof us who believe in the need fora truly liberal national and cam¬pus student organization hope towin next year.”On Monday, a recount of thetotals of seven candidates washeld in the Student Governmentoffice. No change in standing re¬sulted.;hyde park theatreNO 7-9071/ Lake Park at- 53rdsfudcnf rate 50cHeld Over — Friday & Saturday, April 29 & 30Cannes Film Festival Grand PrixILLICIT INTERLUDE’A sensitive story of a strange youthful love affair.. . brilliant STOCKHOLM ROYAL OPERA balletsequences . . , superb photography.— AND —J. ARTHUR RANK’S‘The Seventh Veil’with JAMES MASON-ANN TODDA challenging suspense story . . . one of the firstpsychological" films and still one of the best. . .first-rate concert piano music.STARTING SUNDAY, MAY 1SOL HUROK presents _ _ _ _Title role sung by ^ ft | |H| jf| *RENATA TEBALDIS HUROK, the old magician of show business, has doneit again! His first film presentation upholds his reputa¬tion for discovery and backing of the finest in the finearts of the theatre . . .AND FOR ONE GREAT REASON, if no other! The in¬comparable voice of LASCALA'S great soprano RENATATEBALDI . . . who wowed them at the MET last year likeMARIA CALLAS did here at LYRIC THEATRE. LYRIC—not satisfied with less than ALL of the best—plans nextseason to bring us CALLAS and TEBALDI in tandem.Here's YOUR opportunity to hear TEBALDI'S gloriousvoice—a privilege you'll pay many dollars for—IF youcan get tickets come next fall's opera season.AND —... All Academy Award Entr'actes ...1. MISTER MAGOO ... in his CINEMASCOPE debut. . . "WHEN MAGOO FLEW".— Winner of 1 955 Academy Award, CARTOONCATEGORY.2. "THIS MECHANICAL ACE" ... a semi-humorous,semi-serious look at our machine-ridden era.— Winner of 1955 Academy Award, 1-REELCATEGORY.3. "THURSDAY'S CHILDREN" ... an enthralling Brit¬ish-made short documentary about the world of littledeaf children at MARGATE SCHOOL ... a beautifullywritten commentary is feelingly spoken by OLD VIC'SRICHARD BURTON.— Winner of 1955 Academy Award, 2-REELCATEGORY. Administration, students discuss plansfor integration of women on campusby Lorraine KatzSuggestions for the unification and organization of women on campus were discussedTuesday at an open meeting of the Inter-dormitory council. Ruth McCarn, assistant deanof students; Mary Alice Newman, assistant director of student activities, and several stu¬dents attempted to find solutions to the problem of what the group felt was a lack of “senseof belonging” among UC women.Establishment of an all-campus women’s organization laid along lines of the Inter-collegi¬ate Associated Women Stu-dtmls was sn^fmstpd as well ance of women’s organizations Four students who spoke, Maryas a Sistor- nlan and an divicIed either alon£ under-gradu- Joan Spiegel, Elaine Kostopolous,„ d oig-sister pian, ana an ate ancj post graduate lines or in Miss Gurskis and Margaret Beau-all-year orientation board. accord with the status of the stu- det, had recently attended theMrs. Newman stressed that no dent, “unattached, engaged, or convention of the Intercollegiatespecific plan was implied in the married.” Perhaps a course in Associated Women Students inidea of re organization, and that married life might be offered for Kansas City. UC is not now ait would have to take its form their benefit. member of this assaciation.and function from the specific Ensuing discussion raised an IAWS officers are members ofcharacter and needs of the cam- all-year orientation board as an a board concerning itself withPus- alternative to the “big-sister” such matters as regulation ofDefinite plans of action will be plan. Mrs. McCarn remarked, “I women’s wearing apparel anddiscussed at the first Inter-dorm vifw the “big-sister” plan with hours rules. Membership of suchmeeting of next fall, although any mixed feelings. In some places it a board also includes administra-plans would be envisioned as con- works very well, but in others it tion representatives and studentsgets very stereotyped.' from club and dormitory groups.eerning all women on campus,not only those in the dormitorysystem.Addressing herself to the speci¬fic problems of UC co-eds, studentElaine Kostopolous noted the highdrop-out rate among first-yearstudents. ‘The trouble is,” shesaid, “a lot of us are just indivi¬duals. We don’t feel part of alarger group.”Doubts were expressed at themeeting, however, that this pres¬ent striving for unity might en- Four social theorists discusseconomics and social changeViews on “economic theory and social change” will be airedat UC next Thursday in a symposium by a “classical ’ econo¬mist, a utilitarian philosopher, a Keynesian economist and aMarxist-socialist.Frank Knight, distinguished service professor emeritus ofdanger the existing desirable social sciences and philosophy, Abram Harris, professor ofdiversity in student life.Specific suggestions for com¬batting the feeling of alonenesswere offered by Jackie Gurskis.She proposed establishment of a“big sister” plan as an aid to social sciences in the college;Charles Orr. Roosevelt college the Vc ‘Classical” school ot eco-professor of economics, andHal Draper, editor of Labor Ac¬tion, a Marxist-socialist weeklynewspaper, will hold forth at 8campus unity. She also recom- p.m. Thursday in Judd 12G.mended establishment of an alii- Knight, a leading member of‘‘Enjoy Cur Fine Continental Cuisine inRelaxed Atmosphere”CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Daily (except Mondays) from 4:30 - 10:0015OB r. Daily (except Mondays) from 4:30 -Sundays — 12 Noon - 10 P.M.37th Street Phone PLaza 2-9355 nomics, stated that this sympo¬sium is a “valuable means of pub¬lic education.” Harris is knownta students of social sciences 3 asa supporter of John Stewart Milland the Utilitarian philosophers.Orr, a Keynesian economist, hasjust returned to the United Statesafler working in Paris for UNES¬CO’s adult education program.r beginsireen series.PARTYOPEN HOUSEPHI KAPPA PSIENTERTAINMENT & REFRESHMENTSSATURDAY, APRIL 30th5555 IVoodin’wii S:SO P.M. 'politics of fear'See the striking newsculptured jewelrybyRosemary Zivick• distinctive • handmadependants 2.00 & 3.50 Marshall Smelser, associate pro¬fessor of history at Notre Dameuniversity, will begin a series ofsix lectures on “the polities offear,” beginning Monday underthe sponsorship of the Walgreen’foundation.The lectures will deal with fac¬tional history and the politics ofthe period of the French revolu¬tion.Smclscr wil speak on May 2,4, G, 9, 11, and 13. The respectivetopics of the lectures will be theMonocrats; the Mobocrats; theAnglomen; the Jacobins; suppres¬sion, 1798-1800; and resurgence,1798-1801.Ail lectures in the series willbe given in social science 122 at4:30 p.m. There will be no admis¬sion charge.earrings 3.00 cuff links 3.00(plus tax)UNIVERSITYBOOKSTORE5S02 Ellis Avmm RELIANCE CAMERA APHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63rd St,BU 8-6040 IS ILila1bftTNI CHICAGO MAIOON April 29, I955Challenges theory that industrialism grew from capitalismThe theory that industrial civilization hod Its roots in the rise of capitalism is a fallacy of Karl Marx and his followers which haserroneously colored 611 modern historical thinking, asserted John U. Nef, UC economist and historian, Tuesday evening.Delivering the last of three public lectures on "the birth of industrial civilization," Nef attacked the materialist conception of his¬tory and stressed the necessity of developing a "historical humanism."This “historical humanism” ' “ ——-ntiliTpH hv Nef in mind on quantitative rather than this definition had been accepted, with the multiplication of com- as a controlling principle of■pp oa , y qualitative values, beginning in “it was inevitable that attempts modities, the reduction of costs of duct and even of thought.”kis lectures inquires into the the jaie 16th and earjy 17th cen. should be made to measure hap- production and the lengthening Mathematicschanges in values and ideas which tury, said Nef. This switch in em- piness,” he said. of the average life span.unified men of different epochs, phasis paved the way for the in- Production for comfort began Class conflict no answer , , change in this attitude candustrial revolution of the 19th consequently, man’s thinking *j*»™** these terms, said whe^ the Tdea amse tL^i" r Vshifted at the end of the medieval the distinction between in- quantitative relation^ P,e*period from the qualitative atti. dustnal civilization andpnor hu- ls(Kiq between the am,mm Z•nd frowns upon pessimistic in¬terpretations of history which em¬phasize the disunities and strug¬gles of men, classes, and nations.“The idea of class struggle as century.Closely bound to happinessthe TridAction 'of man societies does not rest on money in circulation and the ge^This qualitative - quantitative , bieets was an end in PurelY economic foundations eraj jevej Df prices. As a result,transition was closely bound to a °tie quantitaUve ap- a conflict between classes or be’ economics as a separate subject. change in man’s concept of happi- jjjj; o°{ produ?tion for the use tween nat ions^andthereforeea - o£ study appeared for the firstthe source of material progress is neSs. Taking on a specific world- P mankind Nef not be explained by the Ma t time jn man’s history, Nef said,bated partially on an erroneous ly character, happiness came to and comfort of mankind, Nef ateriahstic interpretation of his- ^ ^ of mathematics on ainterpretation of history, Nef be defined during the 17fti cemindustrial civiliza- l°5Jef linked the risC Gf the quan- larger scale than simple countingSlated‘• , • a rfvili U ?ea^fin commSs tion involved a new concern of titattve approach to economics and recording also appeared dur-The Senesls of Vjf U,fy from a and hthe lengthening of life for men as consumers and producers an dother aspects of life with the the_ same Per,(^-nation resulted chiefly from a and xneT Onoe with exact quantities or values, . f precise calculation. “As Another basic change, accord-new emphasis laid by the human human beings in general, w nse o^ ^ on numbers ing to Nef. has been the attitude— ■ ~was vague, mystical, transcen- of men toward time. The habit ofdenttal or artistic,” he said, “the treating time in terms of precisehuman mind had neither the de- measurable units is characteristicsire nor the means to treat the of rontemporary industrial civili-multiplication of economic output zation.Coming campus events in briefChanning club supper and discussion,Fenn house, 5638 Woodlawn, 6:30 p.m.Friday, April 29Business club coffee hour, Bernard B. 1SL caucus, Judson library, 7:30 p.m.Berger, speaker. Haskell commons, 3:30 SRP caucus, Leo Huberman, speaker,p m. Ida Noyes, 7:30 p.m.Billel fireside, performance of the folk Lecture: “What Is Buddhism?” Charlesdance group and lecture. 5715 Wood- Long, speaker. Judson lounge, 1:30lawn, 8:30 p.m. p.m.Peace center organizational meetings, Young Friends lecture and discussion,6 p.m. Discussion and folk dancing. Charles Orr, speaker. Quaker house,5615 Woodlawn, 50 cents for supper. ^ p.m.Movie, “Foil De Canotte,” social set- Movie, “The Life of Mahatma Ghandi,” THutsdoV MdV 5_ . „.,e „ rr, RpriM International house assembly hall, , , . f. . . , ,Lecture: "Communication of technicalMovie: "The Ways of Love,” social sci¬ence 122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.Hillel lecture: "Freedom and religion,”Dean Thompson, speaker. 5715 Wood¬lawn, 8 p.m.Pre-med club picnic, at the point. Meet¬ing at Ida Noyes, 5 p.m., 25 cents ad¬mission.Lecture: “The Foreign Policy of Yugo¬slavia,” Leo Mates, speaker. Breastedhall, 4:30 p.m.ence 122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. Seriesticket admission only.Monthly Review associates meeting, lec¬ture by Leo Huberman. Room 833, finearts building, 8:15 p.m. 75c admission.Walgreen lecture: "The Jewish Revival,”Nathan Glazer, speaker. Social science122, 4:30 p.m.Saturday, April 30May Day social, sponsored by the YoungSocialist league, 5441 Kimbark, 9 p.m.Sunday, May 1Episcopal communion service, Bondchapel, 8:30 a.m.Lutheran communion service, Hiltonchapel. 10 a m.University religious service. ReverendWallace Robbins speaking, Rockefellerchapel, 11 a.m.Young Socialist meeting, Ida Noyes,3:30 p.m.Porter fellowship meeting, "Findingwho you are,” supper. Swift com¬mons. 6:15 p.m.Movie, “Captain from Castile,” (Ameri¬can), B-J lounge, 7 and 9:30 p.m.,25 cents admission. International house assembly hail,50 cents admissionItalian club meeting, “Recent Develop¬ments in Italy,” room a, Internationalhouse, 3:45 p.m.Monday, May 2Walgreen lecture: "The Monocrats,”Marshall Smelser. Social science 122,4:30 p.m.Movie, “The Count of St. Elmo (Italian),International house, 8 p m.Tuesday, May 3Rocket society meeting. Eckhart 203,7:30 p.m.Channing lecture: “What it means tobecome a person,” Carl Rogers, speak¬er. Breasted hall. 8 p m.Lecture: “The functions of .spirit-mediumship,” Raymond Firth, speaker.Social science 122, 4:30 p.m.Wednesday, May 4 ideas in underdevelopedChapel house, 7:30 p.m.Canterbury club meeting, 5540 Wood¬lawn. 7:45 p m.Symposium: “Economic theory and so¬cial change,” Judd hall, 8 p.m. 25cents admission for students, 75 centsadmission for non-students.Movie: “Viva Zapata,” (American), In¬ternational house, 8 p.m.CARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1127 E. 55 1412 E. 55MU 4-8980 MU 4-9003 TERRY’S PIZZAfinest pizzas madeFREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL .MEDIUM ],00 LARGE 1.951.45 GIANT 2.9511 e also carry a fall line of Italian foodsSPECIAL THIS WEEK — Present this coupon and youwill receive 35c credit towards any pizza eatenat our store.1518 E. 63rd St. 3-4045Walgreen lecture:Smelser, speake:4:30 p.m. ■The Mobocrats.”. social scienceACASA Book StoreaUsed Books — Bought and SoldGood background materialReliable typewriter serviceBY 3-9651 1117 E. 55th StreetQuetico-SuperiorCANOE TRIPSOnly $5.50 per person per day forcomplete camping equipment, Grum¬man aluminum canoes and choicefood supplies. For free informationwrite:CANOE COUNTRY OUTFITTERSBill Rom >lgr. Box 717C, Ely, Minn. The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 When little horse carskept big cities on the go, Budweiserled all beers in sales. And ♦ * ♦UMMERCHEKfor 3 P’sPEACE OF MINDThat comes from knowledge your car is in safestpossible mechanical condition.PROTECTION OF PROPERTYThat keeps value of your car high.PLEASURE IN DRIVINGThat comes from ease of handling, instant powerresponse, smooth riding, of properly serviced car.Our skilled service men, tvorking trith modern pre¬cision equipment, are prepared to insure all ofthese throuyh the *'Double - Safety'’ SUMMER - CIIEKlisted inside.^ G & H Service Co.Operating Jewel Service A Perfect Car Wash5601 Cottage Grove MU 4-9106 still leads the world’s beers in salesand quality because. ♦. because it’s BudweiserSomething mre t/m ^udweiseflager beer ~ Bvdmser qw#/itj/f• n.I.SIl-lvKH. ** • •)ffi. ipvti • • lOi ANGIll*.April 29, 19S5 . THE CHICAGO MAROON Pag* 5Qlazer begins lectures on Judaism in America;‘ethnic particularly essential to Jewish religionyby Frederick David Freed“There is a conflict between thesociety America wants to become—-and, indeed, the kind of societymost Jews want it to be,” saidNathan Glazer, editor of AnchorBooks and former co-editor ofCommentary magazine, in the in¬troduction to his Walgreen Foun¬dation lecture series on “Judaismin America.”Glazer’s first lecture was de¬voted to “The forms of Judaismin America—1654-1900”; he dis¬cussed in his second lecture “Ju¬daism and Jewishness 1890-1940.”Judaism religious and ethnicHe pointed out that Judaismcontains both religious and ethnic elements. Thus, “the loss of spe¬cific ethnic characteristics alsomeans the loss of some part ofJudaism, for Judaism refers toa body of religious practices em¬bracing all of one’s life, more thanto a set of beliefs.”“And yet the Jews have foundin America a society which canlegitimately demand the abandon¬ment of their ethnic particularity.Is not every right of citizenshipgiven them, are they not in theeyes of the law fully equal? . . .This is the dilemma of Judaismin America.”Pulled toward assimilationThus American Jews find them¬selves pulled toward complete asAdvertisement — Advertisement — Advertisement — AdvertisementQbfontms withMttfihnfman(Author of “Barofoot Boy With Chook," tie.)THE GIFT HORSEMany of our friends will soon be graduating. What kind of giftsshould we give them?Here is no simple question. It is never simple to find gifts forpeople who have everything, and college students, as everyoneknows, are the mostly richly endowed of mortals. They’ve gotbeauty and truth. They’ve got rhythm. They’ve got stout hearts,willing hands, and a clear vision that dispels the miasmas of thefuture as the morning sun sears away the last wisps of a coolnight’s fog. They’ve got heaps and heaps of money, as who wouldnot who has been receiving such a huge allowance over fouryears of schooling?What can we give them that they don’t already have?One infallible gift for the person who has everything is, ofcourse, a stethoscope. New models, featuring sequined earpiecesand power steering, are now on display at your local surgical sup¬ply house. Accompanying each stethoscope is a gift card with thislovely poem:When you hear your heart beat,When you hear it pound,Remember me, your buddy,William Henry Round.If, by some odd chance, your name does not happen to beWilliam Henry Round (you’re laughing, but it’s possible), hereis another dandy suggestion for the person who has everything—a gift certificate from the American Bar Association.These certificates, good at your local lawyer’s, come in threeconvenient sizqs: small, medium, and large. The small certificatecovers title searches and writs of estoppel. The medium sizecovers torts, claim jumping, and violations of the Smoot-HawleyAct. The large one covers kidnapping murder, and barratry.If, by some odd chance, you don’t know what barratry is (you’relaughing, but it’s possible), it is arson at tea. This interestingcrime is called after Cosmo “Bubbles” Barrat, a captain in theBritish navy during the last century, who was addicted to burn¬ing his ships. One man o’ war after another fell victim to hisincendiary bent. The Admiralty kept getting crosser and crosser,but every time they called in Captain Barrat for a scolding hewould roll his big blue eyes and tug his forelock and promisefaithfully never to do it again. Oh, butter wouldn’t melt in hismouth, that one!So they would give him another ship, and he would soon reduceit to a scattering of charred spars. He burned more than 120,000ships before he was finally discharged as “doubtful officer mate¬rial.”After his separation from the navy, he moved to Vienna wherehe changed his name to Freud and invented Scrabble.But I digress. I was listing gifts for the person who has every¬thing, and here is another one. This gift, in fact, is not only forpersons who have everything, it is also for persons who havenothing, for persons who have next to nothing, for persons whohave next to everything, and for persons in between. I refer, ofcourse, to Philip Morris cigarettes. Here is the cigarette for every¬body—for everybody, that is, who likes a mild relaxing smoke offine vintage tobacco in a handsome brown package that snapsopen with the greatest of ease. For those, if such there be, wholike dull, nondescript tobacco in a package that requires a bur¬glar’s kit to open, Philip Morris is definitely the wrong gift.Among the newer gifts that warrant your attention is a revolu¬tionary development in the enjoyment of recorded music. This isthe Low-Fi Phonograph. The Low-Fi, product of years of patientresearch, has so little fidelity to the record you put on it that if,for example, you put Stardust on the turntable, Melancholy Babywill come out. This is an especially welcome gift for people whohate Stardust.Finally there is Sigafoos Shaving Cream, a brand new kind ofcream that makes whiskers grow in instead of out. You just bitethem off in the morning.Copyright. Max Shuiman, 1955To Max’s suggestion to give PHILIP MORRIS for gradu¬ation, the makers of PIIII.IP MORRIS, who bring you thiscolumn, add m hearty amen. similation into American societyby the very tolerant nature of thatsociety, but they cannot give upthose ethnic ^elements which areso essential to their religion.Glazer, in his first two lectures,discussed the historical develop¬ment of American Judaism large¬ly in terms of three epochs: theorthodox Sephardic and Ashkan-osic congregations of colonialAmerica; Reform Judaism’s peri¬od of dominance extending fromthe middle until the end of thenineteenth century; and the firsthalf of the twentieth century inwhich the Jewish religion lost im¬portance among most Jews andthe emphasis was placed largelyon the ethnic elements inJudaism.He argued that the most im¬portant heritage of the earlyJewish community — before theGerman immigrations of the1840’s and 1850’s — was the pat¬tern established in AmericanJewish life “of a Jewish commu¬nity with no overall headship,with a great variety of independ¬ent and uncoordinated institutionsdealing with all aspects of JewishSDA and SRPpresent their First annualWORLD AFFAIRSCONFERENCETHE REALITY OFDISARMAMENT — ?APRIL 30, MANDEL HALL9:45 to 10:00Registration — Mandel Cor¬ridor.Students: $.50 — Visitors:$1.00.Welcome—MILT KOTLERand JOHN GILMORE,Chairmen of Joint Plan¬ning Committee.10:00 to 12:00Disarmament and Our Searchfor a GoalMAYNARD KRUEGER,Associate Professor ofEconomics.Disarmament in an AtomicAgeARTHUR H. ROSENFELD,Chairman, Atomic Scien¬tists of Chicago.A Psycho-Analytic Approachto Disarmament ProposalsDr. BRUNO BETTLE-HEIM, Professor of Edu¬cation and Psychology.12:00 to 1 :30Lunch — Convenient facili¬ties in building, Hutchin¬son Commons.1:30 to 3:30Disarmament and PoliticalDelusionGOTTFRIED KINDER-MAN.American Responsibility forWorld DisarmamentSenator RALPH E. FLAN¬DERS.Panel Discussion andQuestions life, of which the synagogue isonly one.”Reform Judaism dominates“With the immigration of largenumber s of German Jews in the1840’s and 1850’s, American Juda¬ism began the movement towardAmericanization which led to themodernization of its ritual in Re¬form synagogues,” Glazer contin¬ued. “This step toward a greaterintegration with American life,although opposed by the olderorthodox synagogues, united thegreat majority of AmericanJews.”These new immigrants werestrongly influenced by the ele¬ments of reform which were com¬mon in German Jewry at thistime. Reform, which had begunwith the emancipation and enlight¬enment occurring after the Na¬poleonic conquests, was beginningto dominate in Germany at thistime.The intellectual foundation ofAmerican Reform Judaism waslargely laid by David Einhornwhile Isaac Mayer Wise estab¬lished most of its organizations,such as the Hebrew Union Col¬lege.The radical reformers led byEinhorn proclaimed Judaism as a“progressive religion — based onreason — that can change as con¬ditions change.” It was no longera nation but a "religious com¬munity.”With its intellectual foundationand its organizational basis, itlooked as though Reform Judaismhad carried the field toward theend of the 19th century, but thegreat immigration of eastern Eu¬ropean Jews largely changed thepicture.These Jews had a strong andunthinking attachment-U> a formof Judaism which completely en¬veloped their lives, and dictateda large part of their behavior,Glazer pointed out.Effect of enlightenment differs■ “But this was only one half ofthe picture of the spiritual lifePeace Centerweighs policyPeace Center, a new studentorganization, will hold its secondorganization meeting tonight at 6,Quaker house, 5615 Woodlawn.Discussion of program and poli¬cies of the organization is plannedtogether with supper and a socialprogram.Peace Center plans to workboth indirectly and directly to¬ward permanent world peace.Programs of research, discussionsand lectures, exhibits, films andliterature are under considera¬tion. Other plans are work to in-f 1 u e n c e policy-makers, workcamp-type conferences, work withconscientious objectors, and co¬ordination with similar efforts atother schools.Temporary chairman of thegroup is Bob Trees.c/fie tM/wWWl photographersMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETPROVENCALQ RestaurantFraneais1450 E. 57th Street5 p.m. - ^ a.m.cafe espress from 9 p.m.Closed Wednesday* of the east European Jews. Theytoo, after all, had been affected tosome extent by contemporarythought. ... In eastern Europe,its effect was totally different.. . . Enlightenment in eastern Eu¬rope meant either Zionism, So¬cialism, or diaspora nationalism.In every case, there was no placefor religion, traditional or Re¬form.”This was completely opposed tothe Reform concept of a “relig¬ious community.”Eastern European immigrantsfound their religious doctrine in¬adequate to sustain them in theUnited States, and thus, particu¬larly in second generation Amer¬ican Jews, religion lost a greatdeal of importance.Religion loses importanceDuring the years from 1890 to1940, while religious participationon the part of the Jews declined,a very active Jewish life whichhad nothing to do with Judaismflourished in the United States,Glazer said.Jewish leaders such as Morde-cai Kaplan attempted to preservesuch aspects of Judaism as itscustoms, languages, nationalhopes and culture, aside from re¬ligion, by arguing that Judaismwas not a religion but a religiouscivilization.“Kaplan provided a rationalefor those Jews who no longer be¬lieved in the divine institution ofJewish religious law, but never¬theless wanted to keep on livingas Jews.”Winners selectedin poetry contest;first prize of $75Martha Silverman, college stu¬dent, won the $75 first prize inthe Florence James Adams poetryreading contest held .last Fridayafternoon at 3:30 in the Thorn¬dike Hilton chapel.The second prize of $30 wentto David Chaney of the FederatedTheological school. Third prizeof $20 was won by William Zavis,humanities student.These winners were chosenfrom a slate of six finalists byErnest Sirluck, associate profes¬sor of English, Joshua Taylor,assistant professor of art, andMarvin S. Phillips, director ofUniversity theatre.Miss Silverman is currently inLondon, England, auditioning foracceptance in the Royal Academyof Arts.Polio vaccinationwill cost you $5Billings announced this weekthat polio vacination cost will be$5 per shot for students and $3per shot for faculty members andhospital employees. Two shotswithin three weeks is required togive protection. •For an Important FIRST JobSuccessful career women recommend Gibbsecretarial training: as the door-opener tohat important '‘first” job, and the all-roundpreparation for advancement to the top.Write College Dean for Gibbs Giwls at Work.S*mM Court* for Colie** WoumKATHARINE IBBS:3o»ton 1«, 21 Martbonwgh St NwrVofk 17. 230 Per* Ay*.:To*iS*Mot, Hi Aa«*M St MonkMr, N. J., 33 PlymauMi StPage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 29, 1955Issued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publica¬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 editor .News editorsNews feature editor. .......Cultural editor . . . .Sports editorAdvertising managerPhoto editor . . . .Production managerAssistant production managerCopy editorPersonnel managerCalendar editor Bob QuinnSue Tax, Spike Pinney, Diana EpsteinLois GardnerJoel PichenySam GreenleeGary MokotoffRonald GrossmanPrentiss ChoateDuchess LoughranLinda LiberaJack BurbachRosemary GalliEditorial staff Joe Abatie, Ellen Abernethy,Joan Behrenson, Sam Blazer, Robert Bloch, Alice Bloom, RogerBowen, Alan Charlens, Steve Cohen, Charles Cooper, Mitri Dozo-retz, Barbara Fischman, Don Fisher, Kent Flannery, Smokey Garcia,Paui Hoffman, Bill Kaplan, Ken Karlin, Fred Karst, Bruce Larkin,Gene Rochlin, Karl Rodman, David Schlessinger, Frank Ternenyi,Richard Ward.Photographers Charles Becker, George ZygmundBusiness staff: city advertising mcnager, Robert Lofts; business secretary,Don Miller; subscription manager, Norman Lewak; accountant-in-chatge, Tom Kapantais; political advertising manager, Fred Freed;delivery manager, Harold Baron; loop delivery manager, Julius Kar-pen; sales manager, Ronald De Fratus. who have already left their coun¬tries and cannot return and whoconsequently can do nothing atall in their native lands.As far as I personally am con¬cerned the real issue is whetherwe as students are to embroil our¬selves in the task of manufactur¬ing Cold War propaganda. Theproponents of the plan offer notreasons for its existence but ha¬rangues against the evil Reds.The Russians may be devils (redones, at that), as are most peoplewe dislike, but devils are difficultto destroy without destroyingourselves; in this they resemblewitches, as the nation seems to bediscovering.We know very well that peopleunder pressure of war are neverfree. If we are interested in re¬laxing restrictions on freedomboth here and in the Communistcountries, would it not be moresensible to devote ourselves toworking for peace?I oppose the Kucheman Planbecause of its assumptions aboutthe proper course of action forstudents, because of its demon¬strated effect on constructive stu¬dent activity and because I amsick of Cold War propaganda anddon’t think we should be involvedin generating more of it. I amall in favor of granting politicalasylum to ariyone. Communist'oranti-Communist; I am not in faTvor of confusing this goal with ahypocritical device which injectsinto student affairs the kind ofirrelevant passion w h i c h hasmade a shambles of so many lib¬eral organizations.Paul BreslowClarifiesletterI should like to call to your at¬tention that the editing of my let¬ter on the Kucheman plan inad¬vertently produced certain crucialomissions which could possiblylead to several misconceptions.The letter was a criticism ofboth the SRP and the ISL for at¬tempting to make a political foot-abll out of a question which in¬volves basic human rights. Theletter, as edited, could have im¬plied support to the ISL. Actually,my full letter made it clear thatthe type of reasoning the SRPwas employing on this questionwas equal to if not more preve-lant in past positions taken bythe ISL. For example, I notedthat the SRP’s position on theKucheman plan was based on thesame kind of undemocratic prem¬ises upon which the ISL basedits position in regard to the Chi¬nese students detained by theState Department.Debbie Meier* * *Editor’s note: Space require¬ments usually demand that lettersover 250 words in length be cutin some way or other. Thg editortries to make these cuts in keep¬ing with the spirit of the letter.Breslow presentsown positionI am not sure that I am one ofthe ‘‘left wing libertarian ele¬ments on campus” to which Mrs.Meier referred in her letter of lastweek, but I am a member of SRPand am anxious to correct her dis¬tortions and misrepresentationsof the position of those opposedto the “Kucheman Plan.”1. SRP had no desire to makethe plan the “major campaign is¬sue.” We did not do so in fact.The plan was actually trivial andused more as the basis for asmear campaign against SRPthan anything else.2. SRP did not oppose theI BETZ JEWELRYUnusual Jewelry Our SpecialtyExpert Jewelry and Watch RepairN.6.A. Discount to Students1523 I. 53rd PL 2-303* Kucheman plan for “one and onlyone reason.” The coincidental tim¬ing of the plan with the proposededitor’s trip was but one of thecomments some members of SRPmade about the plan. This in itselfwas not an argument against theplan but partial proof of the factthat ISL was more interested inthe plan as a political device thanas an indication of support foranti-Communists. . . .SG has only limited time andresources and must exercise con¬siderable selectivity in choosingits projects. Heretofore SG hasnever obtained scholarships forstudents except as part of an ex¬change program. The refugeeplan is not exchange.The issue is not whether theRussians are democratic; bring¬ing two exiles to Chicago for oneyear will not make the Russiansmore or less democratic.The issue is not whether weare sufficiently anti-Communist;it is obvious that the Americanpeople—and the University of Chi¬cago — are anti-Communist andhave been quite adequately ex¬posed to anti-Communist propa¬ganda.The issue is not the propertreatment of refugees; the Cru¬sade for Free Europe will spendits scholarship money anyway.The university would certainly ac¬cept their money for scholarshipsto be administered through theusual channels.The Kucheman Plan is not aplan for political asylum for es¬capees; the people brought herewould remain for only one year,would be two in number andwould have already obtained asy¬lum elsewhere.The Kucheman Plan is not aplan to encourage the defense ofdemocracy; it rewards only those When only 140 students froma student body of this size re¬spond to a poll, the half-page inthe Maroon devoted to their re¬sponses hardly seems justified.Not only is this a very smallsample, but there is also no rea¬son to believe it is even a randomsample since a selective factormay determine who takes thetrouble to fill out such a ques¬tionnaire, and is even more likelyto enter when polls are distributedby “Maroon staff members andtheir friends”—hardly a randomprocess of selection.You are to oe congratulated fornot drawing any conclusions fromthe results of the poll, but the al-'lotment of so much space to itcarires the implication that theresults had some statistical sig¬nificance. I’m afraid the only safestatement you might have madeabout the academic freedom pollis that, due to inadequate distribu¬tion and response, no safe state¬ment can be made about it.Name Withheld* * *Editor’s note: Every effort wasmade to get responses from asmany different kinds of peoplewith as many different interestsand attitudes as possible. This isone of the reasons that the sam¬ple is so small. We completelyagree that no accurate statisticalconclusions con be drawn fromthe poll. We feel, nevertheless,that the type and variety of re¬sponses that were printed gavethe poll some significance.Clutostf an ExpertTHOMPSONMOVERSLocal and Long Distance MovingCO 4-7600Labor Youth LeagueMAY DAY DANCESat., April SO, 1955Ben Mittleman Center2733 W. Hlrsch 9:30 Donation 50c Fobion "art"defendedYour editorial protesting thedamage to sculptor John Fabion’snude in a “panty-raid” type cam¬pus prank during the Festival ofthe Arts was excellent. You might,however, have commented fur¬ther upon one of the equally-cheeking excuses advanced: thatthe work was “not artistic,”Such comments, no doubt bysome “non-objeetivist” neo-philis-tines, offer an. interesting con¬trast with Fabion’s generous at¬titude. When asked whether hewould sue for damages, the sculp¬tor replied that he did not wishto take any action that mightcause the university to place aban on future outdoor art ex¬hibits..John SwitalskiPraises politicsat UCFor too long a time the Ameri¬can college student has possessedthe reputation of political apathyin contrast to his contemporariesin Europe. Ilis energies, it wassaid, were directed toward thecontinuation of high schoolpranks rather than a familiariza¬tion and respect for the institu¬tions that he was soon to inherit.It was, therefore, with greatpleasure and comfort that I readthe last issue of the Maroon. Al¬though personal circumstances have not permitted me *to becomedirectly active in campus politicswhile here at Chicago, the re-sponce of the students of thisUniversity, as well as all otheruniversities all over the nationto the present political situationwas most gratifying and carrieswith it my warmest support.Certainly it is the privilege ofthose who any moment may becalled upon to defend the nation’sinstitutions by means of militaryarms to learn the responsibilitiesof representative government dur¬ing time of peace. It is also theproper role for the potential load-ers of the nation, largely locatedin the universities, to exhibit areadiness to preserve these insti¬tutions that they may he calledupon to defend. I do not wish tomake any political value judge¬ment on any issue; I just wish tosay that it is about time that thenation's college students have an¬swered the challenge on a reallylarge scale. To all such individualsI say, “Good luck!”Allen SultanErrata . . .In last week’s photograph ofthe counting of contributionsto the World University senice, Dorothy Denton of thedean of students’ office waserroneously named Mary AliceNewman. Also John Averv waswrongly named Jay Avery.MARCON receivesAll-American ratingThe Chicago Maroon has received an “All-American” rul¬ing for the first half of the 1954-55 school year.“All-American” is the highest rating given by the Associ¬ated Collegiate Press, a national college rating service.This is the first time since the spring term of 1953 theMaroon has been accorded top honors.ACP judges rated as out¬standing the Maroon’s cover¬age of the academic side ofschool life and research.Bonus scores and superior rat¬ings given only “for papers show¬ing unusual imagination and in¬itiative, within the bounds ofsound journalism” were awardedthe Maroon in the fields of <*rea-tiveness, news stories, style andeditorials.Over two-thirds of the remain¬ing categories earned (he higheststandard rating, excellent.Typical comments made on;TTTTT¥yTyVTTT¥yTTT¥'ryT:^Educational Insurance?;| Phone or Write J’ Joseph H. Aaron, '27 <’135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060<| Chicago 3, Illinois ’——— mu 11 ii— ihbbwi——NEW BOOKS IN SOCIOLOGYAND PSYCHOLOGYTRUANTS FROM LIFE, by Bettelheim... $5.00The rehabilitation of disturbed children. Fourcase studies which form a companion volumeto LOVE IS NOT ENOUGH.DELINQUENT BOYS, by Cohen $3.50Why gangs grow, and what happens whenlower-class gangs are judged by middle-classstandards.POLITICS, PLANNING AND THE PUBLICINTEREST, by Myerson and Banfield $5.00What happens when public housing becomes amajor political controversy.THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF MORALEXPERIENCE, by Mandelbaum $5.00A new approach to ethics through the psycho¬logical and sociological phenomena of moraljudgment.University of ChicagoBookstore58th and Ellisstories and features were:“Your interpretative piece <<ndiscrimination in housing wavwell-done.”“Your editorial policy is strong:your comments developed in alogical, thoughtful pattern.”One criticism leveled at the pa-per was the lack of humorousmaterial.In achieving the award the Ma¬roon was in competition with allcollege weeklies from colleges anduniversities with enrollments inexcess of 4,000.When I am dead I hope it may besaid: “His sins were scarlet, buthis books were read."— Hilaire Belloc,On His BooksWHITE BOAR BOOKSHOP61 W. DivisionOpen from 12 Noon til! 9:30 P.M.April 29, 1955 THE CHICA60 MAROON Pag* 7'Freedom and Psychoanalysis’ relation sketched;Hedda Bogar states concept of one vital to otherThe discussion of a relationship between psychoanalysis and freedom is not foolish, argued Hedda Bogar, lecturer in Three lectures remain in thethe psychology department, in a talk at Hillel last Wednesday. Channing club series on “TheList lectureson identity andcultural change"The concept of freedom is vital to psychoanalysis,” she continued. "The relations of the unconscious and conscious de¬fine for the individual the possibility of freedom or subjugation.”Experience may, Dr. BogarWhy do morecollege men andwomen smokethan any otherfilter cigarette?BECAUSE ONLY VICEROY GIVESYOU A PURE, NON-MINERAL,NON-TOXIC FILTER WITH20,000 FILTER TRAPSIN EVERY FILTER TIP!1 Yes, only Viceroy has this filter composed of 20,000tiny filter traps. You cannot obtain the same filteringaction in any other cigarette.Besides being non-mineral and non-toxic, this cellu¬lose-acetate filter never shreds or crumbles.The Viceroy filter wasn’t just whipped up and rushedto market to meet the new and skyrocketing demandfor filtered cigarettes. Viceroy pioneered. Startedresearch more than 20 years ago to create the pureand perfect filter.Smokers en masse report that filtered Viceroys havea finer flavor even than cigarettes without filters.Rich, satisfying, yet pleasantly mild.5 Viceroy draws so easily that you wouldn’t know,• without looking, that it even had a filter tip . . . andViceroys cost only a penny or two more than ciga¬rettes without filters!That’s why more college men and women smoke VICEROYSthan any other filter cigarette ... that’s why VICEROY is thelargest-selling filter cigarette in the world!420,000 TINYFILTER TRAPS...>lus Richer, Smoother Flavor identity of modorn man.’'On May 3 Carl Rogers, UC pro¬fessor of psychology, will speaksaid, lead to fear of unhappi- infantile impulses may be inade- on “What it means to become a.f quately handled by the ego. person.” Joel Seidman, associateness oi punishment it certain _ As repressed strivings, these professor of social sciences at UC,thoughts, actions or feeling are jmpUises continue to exhibit in- will speak on “economic freedomsentertained These thoughts are, fluence on all the decisions of thetherefore, often banished (repres- individuai; they are “the instru-sed) into the unconscious in order ments of psychological slavery.”that the individual retain a bal- Hope for mentally mance between needs and demands. jn mentally ill individual,But if the individual cannot en- there are fights or conflicts totertain certain thoughts or actionor feeling, his thoughts and ac¬tions and feelings are to that ex¬tent limited: he is, in short en¬slaved.Realization is liberationIt is the purpose of psycho¬analysis, as Dr. Bogar formulatedit, to allow the individual “to and modern man,” on May 10.The series will be concluded onMay 17 by Bernard M. Loomer,professor on the Federated Theo¬logical faculty, discussing “Iden¬tity as integrity.”The lectures will be given atstop repressed desires from re¬turning; the solution he finds may Breasted hall at 8 p.m.be that he must discard some Bert F. Hoselitz, professor inareas of life completely. Thus, a the social sciences, and Josephviolently repressed sexual cun- Kitagawa, assistant professor onosity may lead to the stifling of all the Federated Theological faculty,curosity. If he can break such a will present two lectures on “Con-crippling effect, experimentation, versation or cultural transforma¬learning and criticism may be tion?” during the next two weeks,learn the rules of life,” allowing made vigorous again; if he can- Hoselitz will speak May 5 onhim to live by the reality prinei- not, he may never think. “the communication of technicalpie—“able to make choices ... in short, she concluded, his lib-' ideas in under developed areas.”with the air of an insight into eration, his freedom, will consist Kitagawa will discuss Christiannecessity as opposed to the Slav- jn a renewed ability to know. The missionaries in foreign culturesfreedom to lead a full, rich, ma- on May 12.ture. creative life will be his once The lectures, the last two in amore; the choice is not made for series on “Ambiguities,” will behim by psychoanalysis; but it is held at Chapel house, 5810 Wood-made possible for him. lawn, at 7:30 p.m.ery of the passions.”“The unconscious must becomeconscious,” she emphasized. “Itmust become known by reason,or as Freud put it, “Where therewas id (early, disorganized desiresinadequately taken care of), thereshall ego be.”Thus, the liberation of the in¬dividual from unsatisfactory orvicious attempts to resolve con¬flicts is seen as the purpose ofpsychoanalytic therapy.Suppressed desires enslaveIt is at certain focal points inthe individual’s development to¬ward maturity, Dr. Bogar expand- ACLU attacks Housecensorship of texbooksThe American Civil Liberties union has declared its opposi¬tion to textbook censorship bill 539 introduced in the Illinois....... . house of representatives. The ACLU’s Academic Freedomed, that crippling repressions maybe most often expected: the committee, headed by Donald Meiklejohn, associate professorbaby’s desires for immediate sat- of philosophy in the College,isfaction and rage when not im- state(j the bill, “would servemediately satisfied, or the asser-tion of stubborn independence at UP a 0* SO-called socialabout seven, or the enjoyment and studies more appropriate for adisplay at the first discovery of subject population than for asexual differences—immature or school group of future citizens.” The bill is supported by the Amer¬ican Legion on the grounds thatit would tend to bring school andcommunity into closer contact.The ACLU assert that “the menwho sponsor this legislation donot understand the function of aneducational system in a free so¬ciety. They seek a school systembased on the idea of indoctrinationof children with the preconceivednotion of a small group of styledpatriots.” The bill would enabletween Leslie T. Pennington, minister of the First Unitarian any three persons who are eitherArrange'pulpit exchange';Unitarian ministers switchAn international pulpit exchange has been arranged bechurch of Chicago, and Eric Shirvell Price, minister of theUllet Road Unitarian church of Liverpool, England.Price will hold his first serv-ice in Chicago on Sunday, at11 a.m. He is the editor ofFaith and Freedom, a journal ofprogressive religion which circu-[TTTTTTT; BORDONE►’Movers and Light Hauling T,<4 lates both in England and inAmerica.During his occupancy of the ex¬change pulpit in Liverpool, Pen¬nington will address the Confer¬ence of the International Religi¬ous Fellowship in Barston, Chesh¬ire on “Urban renewal in Chi- members of a public school fac¬ulty or administration, or parentsof a student in a public school torequest evaluation of any teach¬ing material being used in a socialscience course which he believesto be, “antagonistic to or incom¬patible with the ideals and prin¬ciples of the American constitu¬tional form of government.”The superintendent of educa¬tion must appoint a local commitv,tee of five members, only two otScago.” He will also speak to theministers of Liverpool on “The which may be connected with theMinister’s role in the urban com- S(-'hools. This group may approveor disapprove the test in accord¬ance with the criteria statedabove. A school board may thenimmediately discontinue the useof the unapproved material.tyndo*t ^e4ttucicutt4,1321 E. 31th St.—PL 2-92311411 E. 33rd St.—HY 3-3300.^Serving University PersonnelFor Years Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372Louise Barkerphotographer"who capture*yourpersonalitya* well asyour person"1457 E. 57H» St.Ml 8-0876Page 8 April 2$, 1955THE CHICAGO MAROONUT plays ‘Inspector’ skillfully, Trombone, piano programbut like farce instead of satireBobrow winsFord grantOne of 19 fellowships grantedby the Ford foundation for grad¬uate study in the behavioral sci¬ences has been awarded DavisBobrow, a student in the college.Bobrow will work in the UCcommunications department un¬der the fellowship.The award, worth $1,800 forfirst-year graduate work in anyfield that contributes to a scien¬tific understanding of individualbehavior and human relations, ispart of a Ford foundation pro¬gram to encourage more youngpeople to enter the behavioral sci¬ences.This year’s fellows were select¬ed from among 86 applicants in58 educational institutions. Recip¬ients are free to study at anyuniversity.SINCE 1940 or, who acted a trifle too loudlyand colorlessly.Thus the play was well pre¬sented and technically adequate(though perhaps the short side-scenes, switched from the cen¬ter of the stage to a corner forparticular sequences, couldhave been better integrated intothe whole). The defect was theinsufficient unity and consisten¬cy in interpretation; the com¬edy was not seen as a unifiedsatire, but as a farce in whichthe aim was to make each ofthe characters as funny as pos¬sible. —Joel PichenyDuring the last two week-ends University Theatre per¬formed Nicolai Gogol’s well-known satire, “The Inspector-General.” The play was performed conscientiously, if notabsorbingly, and was on the *whole a competent job. Theproduction was coordinated,and the tableaux and setting werewell worked out.The comedy concerns the ex¬pected arrival of an inspector in asmall Russian town. The mayor,the commissioners of health andeducation and the other officials,fearful of their negligent ways,are thrown into confusion. Intheir panic they notice a strange,r'Uent young man and concludethat he is the inspector in dis¬guise. They jump.on to him and intheir efforts to ingratiate them¬selves, with bribes, et al, do notnotice that he is at first quite sur¬prised, and then proceeds to takeadvantage of the situation (evento the extent of proposing to themayor’s daughter), being only animpoverished dandy himself.The production was weak inits interpretation of this theme.Many of the characters choseto make themselves funny bymeans of mannerisms andquirks. They developed theirown peculiar walks, twists andaccents. This amounted to anunnecessary burlesquing of thecomedy, for the play is an ef¬fective satire as a unit, portray¬ing the pettiness and decrepid-ity of the life of Russian officialdom rather than the charactersas ludicrous in themselves.3*me of the caricatures werevery effective, notably MarthaSilverman as the spoiled, fairy¬like mayor’s daughter, constantlyovershadowed by her mother. Oth¬ers, acting naturally in distinctionto most of the cast, were OttoSenz as the false inspector’s serv¬ant and Omar Shapli as the may- Final University concert of the spring quarter will be a trombonqand piano program by Davis Shuman and Leonid Hambro, at 8:30p.m. next Friday in Mandel hall.Shuman, member of the faculty of the Juilliard school of mustsand distinguished concert trombonist, will be accompanied by Hanvbro in a recital of music by Beethoven, Hindemith and Bach.Admission to the concert is $1.50.UC musical society programto contain three ambitious worksPerformances of three ambitious works compose the program tobe presented Sunday by the UC musical society. The concert, to begiven at 8 p.m. at Ida Noyes, will feature Beethoven’s Sonata No. 31in A Flat, Op. 110. performed by Robert Howatt, and Bartok’s Sonatafor SoloViolin, written in 1944 for Yehudi Menuhin, played by RobertBloch. Both are students in the music department.The remainder of the program will be a performance of Schubert’sQuintet in A Major, for violin, viola, cello, bass and piano, called“The Trout’’ because it includes variations on Schubert’s song ofthat title. This will be played by Robert Bloch, violin; Harold Joachim,viola; Thomas Metzger, cello; Richard O’Neill, contrabass; and Rob¬ert Howatt, piano. There is no admission charge.Ever Wonder how your telephone calls are handled1BRING YOUR UC FRIENDS AND SEEAT THE HYDE PARK TELEPHONE BUILDING,6045 S. KENMORE AVE.Special Open House for University people, Wed., May 11,through Fri., May 13 3:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. dailySEE the modern magic of dialing.SEE the new Speakerphone, for hands-freetelephoning.SEE Amanda, the automatic telephone receptionist.STUDENTS, FACULTY AND FRIENDS INVITEDWe've sent you an invitation folder through themail. This invitation is your ticket of admission.If yours didn't arrive or you've misplaced it, callMiss Chapman on PLaza 2-9960, ext. 645. We'llroll out the red carpet for you — take you behind the scenes of your telephone exchange for a mightyinteresting visit!IF YOU PREFER TO COME IN A GROUPIf you'd like to bring a group of ten or more,please telephone for an appointment so we'llbe better able to accommodate you. Call MissChapman pn PLaza 2-9960, Extension 645.Thomas S. Devine,District Commercial ManagerILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANYTheDisc1367 E. 57WestminsterSalecontinuedthrough May 7all records $2.99 mmHow does your voice sound to others over the telephone? Stepright up and hear for yourself over the Voice Mirror. See the Bell Laboratories’ "thinking machine.” Match your witsagainst this electronic brain in a game of "ticktacktoe."&.Ever wonder where the wife from yottr telephone goes? FoHowthe path it travels on the interesting, instructive Cable Display. t takes nimble fingers, alertness and accuracy to operate aswitchboard. Watch the “voice with a smHe” on the job!B« twt Ml4 wotck Mm great now TV show "DAMON RUNYON THEATRE" — jn yowr popar far timi aad statioaApr* 19, mj THI CHICAGO MAROON lift S-Soprano impressive;song choice poorPhyllis Curtin, soprano, who appeared in concert last FridayJn Mandel hall, has a big handsome voice and an equally hand¬some presence. Her intonation and vocal production is secureand her diction in German, French and English is admirablyclear. Most important, her approach to the music she sings isintelligent and thoughtful.If she seemed cold at first aura of chic religiosity, and thein the opening group of four word setting is frequently awk-Mozart songs, part of the fault ward- Both Miss Curtin and herJay with the apathetic audience, accompanist, Gregory Tucker, didHowever, both Das Veilchen and them best to make them palatable.An Chloe were warmly sung. Four This same Tucker was responsibleBrahms and five Faure songs tor two dismal songs with “moon-completed the first half of theconcert. Among the happiest per¬formances of the evening^werethose of Brahms’ Botschaft a*ndlimner leise wird mein Scliluin-mer and Faure’s latrines.The major novelty was SamuelBarber’s Hermit Songs. Writtenin 1953, this is a set of looselyconnected medieval texts trans¬lated into something approachingEnglish. The music is in Barber’sweary drawing room style with an June” texts. Equally dismal andamateurish was Daniel Pinkham’sSing Agreeably of Love.Miss CuKtin’s singing is con¬vincing but 'her choice of modernsongs is not. This writer, for one,can think of enough good modernsongs to fill a half dozen recitalprograms, and I'm sure therewere other members of her audi¬ence ruefully compiling their ownlists during the interminable Bar¬ber. —Richard SwiftALEXANDER’SRESTAURANT1137 E. 63 Street1 MU 4-5735More than just a good place to eatWe cater to parties and banquetsOpen all nightjo milliontimes a dayat home, at workor while at playThere’snothinglike aSO BRIGHT ... so right foryou ... so tangy in taste,ever-fresh in sparkle.SO BRACING J. . so quicklyrefreshing with its bit ofwholesome energy..BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY IVThe Coco-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.Koto" k « f*gbt*r*d trod* mark. C 1955. THI COCA-COLA COMPANY Studs Terkel to head show‘I come for to sing’ in MandelAward shorts shown here“Thursday’s Children,” a 20-minute British documentary film aboutsmall deaf children, will be one of three Academy Award winningshorts to be shown at the Hyde Park theatre starting Sunday. Thethree will be presented with Sol Huronk’s operatic film Aida.“Thursday’s Children” was shot in one of the private houses thatmake up the junior section of a British school for the deaf. The filmtraces the development of children who have never heard anything.When the children come to school for the first time in their lives,they find themselves no longer different from other children aroundthem. The final sequence—the children together at tea—stresses themutual trust and spontaneity of expression that deafness and theirlife at this school gives them in compensation. "Their world cannever be the same as our world, but it can be a good one all the same.” Studs Terkel, actor, folk mu¬sicologist and TV personality,appears next Saturday nightleading the folk program, “ICome for To Sing.” He current¬ly has an hour long TV showSunday nights and a folk pro¬gram on WFMT Thursdaynights. “I Come for To Sing” isfeatured Monday evenings atthe Blue Note. $ Studs Terkel, noted Chicagotelevision star and folk musicolo¬gist, is heading a folk program “ICome for To Sing,” on May 7 at8:15 in Mandel hall. Admission is$1.25.Appearing will be such per¬formers as Big Bill Broonzy, inter¬nationally known blues singerwho has written almost 300 bluessongs; Larry Lane, who special¬izes in Elizabethan ballads mostof which he learned from thismother in his home town of Mar-celine, Missouri; Ella Jenkins,with her Afro-Cuban songs andrhythms; and Fleming Brown,banjoist, singing frontier andmountain songs.The program will consist ofsongs on certain themes, such aswork songs, to which each of theperformers with their varied back¬grounds will contribute.Tickets may be obtained at theHyde Park co-op, 5535 Harper, orat the Student Service center inthe Reynolds club.Doc film to show ‘Miracle’,film banned here: ‘immoral’Next Wednesday the Documentary film group will show“The Miracle,” a film directed by Roberto Rossellini, andbanned in New York on grounds of being “sacrilegious” andhere because it was judged “obscene” and “immoral.”“The Miracle,” one of a group of three, entitled “Ways ofLove,” concerns an Italian peasant woman who belieyes thatshe has conceived from SaintJoseph. The film was banned sioners’ approval. The case wasin New York urjtil the Su- brought to court,, but when itpreme Court ruled that the film reached the Supreme Court it waswas a means of communication thrown out on a technicality,and therefore entitled to added Thus, ‘ The Miracle has neverprotection as such. been shown in Chicago.In Chicago, when the police The two other films in the triocommissioner banned the film, the are “A Day in the Country,” di-American Civil Liberties union rected by Renoir, and “Joffroi,”bought it, planning to show it, as directed by Marcel Pagnol. Show-a test case, without the commis- ings are at 7:15 and 9:15 in socialTYPEWRITERSCLEANED ORREPAIREDWritten guarantee onall u'orlc for one yearInspector and Estimator on dulyfrom 4 p.m. till 10 p.m.Discount of 10%for all studentsIf you bring in this od withyour typewriter, you will re¬ceive tree, a beautiful plastictypewriter cover.BOURGEAUS’1292 E. 55th St.IIY 5-7912 science 122. Elaine Jenkins is featurednext Saturday night in “I Conie'for To Sing” with her bongodrums.Bloch successfulin violin recitalAn ambitious and successfulviolin recital was given at Hillellast Sunday by Robert Bloch, amusic student at UC. His musi-cality proved sound enough notto depend on any sort of extrani-ous and studied vivacity.Perhaps at times Bloch did suc¬cumb to an extraneous lack ofvivacity, as with the “Praeludiumand Allegro” of Pugnani- Kreis-ler. Brahm’s Third Sonata, fur¬thermore, received too pale a ren¬dition, partly because the Hillelpiano doesn’t allow more than amezzo forte.Mr. Bloch’s considerable tech¬nique, especially his fine intona¬tion and phrasing, were particu¬larly evident in the first and thirdmovements of Bach’s G MinorSonata, Ernest Bloch’s “Nigun,”and Sarasate’s arrangement ofChopin’s E Flat Nocturne. Theprogram concluded by three un-controversial numbers of LeonStein. Marion Bloch providedstrong support at the piano.—Thomas Metzger.Show group revivedThe popular experimental theatre group, “Tonight at8:30,” is being revived by the University Theatre for thepurpose of performing original or little known plays underthe direction of students.The first production will be These Performances will follow, , ^ . two evenings of Franz Kafka sheld on Saturday and Sunday “The Trial,” which will be pre¬evenings, May 14 and 15, and will sented here by the Northwesternf consist of three one-act plays. Hall University Theatre on Thursday,Tayler will direct Luigi Piran- an(l Friday, May 12 and 13. TicK-delle’s “Chee-Chee”; Andrew Dun- e<s f°r each show will be $1, andcan will stage Sean O’Casey’s both may be seen for $1.50. Per-“Bedtime Story”; and an original formances will begin at 8:30 forscript, “Enterprise,” by R. Din- each of the four evenings.woodie, will be under the direc¬tion of Dave Shephard of Play¬wrights’ Theatre club.Hear blues, ballads, Afro-Cubanm rhythm—New 1955 editionBig Bill BroonzyLorry Lone Fleming BrownElio JenkinsTAT*1’0 Sat. Night, May 7—8:15Mandel HallAdmission $1.25Tickets may bepurehased atStudent Service CenterReynolds Club BasementSponsored by; UC Stu¬dents for Consumer Coopfor the benefit of CirclePines Center** An i interracial Coop form-camp located in Cloverdole,Midi, These shows will stress inti¬macy and informality in an at¬tempt to break down the artificialbarrier which often exists be¬tween the play and the audience.For this reason audiences will belimited to 120 each night.COMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.• Bar be-cue ribs• Bar-be-cue chickenDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525p*f< 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 29, 1955ClassifiedServicesDret«Mtkil(, alt«ntioat. Phaoe tuora-or evening*. FA 4-lii*.LostBrown terinf cm* oontnining vslusMsnotes »t SRP party. Onll James Qrtger.WA S-8941.One green wallet. Lost between Cist andLying-tu Cali Dolores Dennings, MU4-7435WantedFive men, 29-39, ear necessary, to earn$36 per week for 18 hours work. Call BE1-3922, between 5:39 and 7:39, Mondaythrough Friday.Student twenty or older to drive stationwagon for school. 11:39-1:30. $1.25 perhour. BU 8-?900.Girl full-time for laboratory work onDo. Urey's Isotope project. No experiencenecessary. Call Ext. 3735. H. Craig orC Emillani.Secretarial position available. Hillelfoundation. Full time. For interview callPL 2-1127, Mon -Frl.For RentNew York summer sub-let. 4 brightrooms, furnished. One block from Co¬lumbia campus. Overlooks Hudson. $105plus utilities. Call Elihu Katz, Ext. 3449or MU 4-2382.Lake Michigan cottage, modern, privatebeach, woods, screen porch, fireplace,piano. FA 4-9191.Complete set of the Encyclopedia of theSocial Sciences (1953). Excellent condi¬tion. $55 Call DO 3-1654.6-Room furnished apartment. Subletsummer quarter. $120 month. PL 2-3720.Call evenings. Perfect condition. 1949 DeSoto. Radio,2 boaters, turning lights, spotlight,backup lights, seat covers, snow tires.MU 4-9925 days. PL 2-2990 nights.Leaving town. Five rooms of furniturefor sale. Reasonable. PL 2-2999.Drums—SUngerlsad white peart. Beatprofessional. Six Zitdjian cymbals. Floortom, bass tom. bass drum, snare drum.Case and opvers and all attachments,1909 value selling $3*0. SO 8-3224.Eeaitb Transoceanic radio, perfect con¬dition. 899. Phillips phonograph, 3-speed,automatic, I" speaker, 839. PL, 2-9999.Large 5-roem co-ep apartment. Thirdfloor near 91st and Klmbark Finestbuilding and best transportation. Fur¬niture, books, etc. Call HY 3-6539. Ifnot home call again.Hi-fi 49-watt amplifier. Just 835 forquick sale. McKinley Elementary School,2040 W. Adams.Singer portable sewing machines. 833and up. DO 3-1937.Kodak Dualflex camera with flash. 810.DO 3-7958.PersonalCome one, come all to May Day Social,April 30. 9 p.m—May 1st. Here Is yourchance to hear the International. Seccalendar of events.Wanted: People interested in passing60C III, history, social science and econexams,and just plain Interested for sym¬posium Thursday on economic theoryand social change. See calendar, (p.s.Frank Knight, Abe Harris, Chas. Orr andHal Draper are speaking.)Join the happy throng tomorrow at thePHI PSI Esquire party. Free refresh¬ments and entertainment.Wanted: Capacity crowd at I COMEFOR TO SING starring Studs Terkel.Come!VINCENT MACHINISTS: Unite to keepthe softball team in the hands of theGood Ones! Crush the counter-revolu¬tionists, deviationists, whisperers, andOligarchs! Let Virtue Triumph! With alittle effort, we can lose eight gamesthis season! Assemblies . . .'(from p*g? 1)the seven topics dealing withproblems of students which Lew-aLski mentioned, Lunsford said,‘Too liberal a dose of them wouldmake a kind of a secular chapel."Student opinion this weekranged from approval of the planto dismissal of its Importance.Paul Hoffman, Cap and Gowneditor, commented, “If the deancan get anyone there, it's a fineidea. He may get a few ‘freshmen’at the first meeting, but afterthat when assembly sessions arecalled they might find more inter¬esting things to do, such as workon Cap and Gown."Asks intellectual independenceFred Solomon, a member ofboth the student advisory board,and orientation tx>ard, comment¬ed, “If I were an undergraduateI would be very interested in ask¬ing the various deans about cer¬tain problems related to the pres¬ent and proposed state of thecollege. For instance, I would liketo hear what they think about theeducational theory underlying thediscussion method, the new de¬gree programs, and the role ofextracurricular activity in theeducation experience.“On the other hand.” he con¬tinued, “I would feel foolish at¬tending a lecture on general prob¬lems which I could solve onlyafter considerable thought, read¬ ing, and participation in small dis¬cussions.“In other words, if I had comehere to learn how to think I wouldbe delighted to hear how the col¬lege is set up to help me achievemy purpose; but I would not beespecially eager to hear what con¬clusions a dean thinks I shouldreach about the good life.”Want “college community"Student Government presidentA1 Fortier said, ‘The idea of vol¬untary undergraduate assembliesshould not be harmful, and mightbe useful as a supplement to theprogram here."Earl Medlinsky, new OBoardpresident and a member of thecommittee which recommendedthe assemblies, commented thisweek, “I would like to see stepstaken to produce a college com¬munity. I feel that informal andnon - compulsory meetings spon¬sored by the Dean’s office wouldserve as a valuable channel ofcommunication between the ad¬ministration and the undergradu¬ate student body. They should lienon-academic in the sense thatthey would be directed toward thePeterson Moving& Storage Co.55th & Kills AvenueStorage facilities for a trunk orcarload of household effectsPacking — ShippingLocal or long distance movingBKtterfield 8-C7I1 personal questions that confrontstudents.This “college community" wasalso referred to by Rick Prarie,president of Burton-Judson coun¬cil, who said, “I hope that besidesclarifying to the student his in¬dividual station as an undergradeate, this program of assembliescan lead to a more cohesive groupspirit of unity within the collegethan now exists."Jim Rosenblum, past presidentof O’board, commented, T thinkthat if they (the assemblies) canbe made to serve a good purpose,and the topic for the first onemakes me think they will, theywill be a good thing for the under¬graduate body."ideas vs.No. 12McCARTHYISMPETE SEECER...and the Almanac Singers in “Talk¬ing Union,", 12" LP FolkwaysFP85-1. Includes: We Shall NotBe Moved, Casey Jones, SolidarityForever, Hold The Fort, TalkingUnion, Which Side Are You On,etc.Available from The Music Room,129 W. 44th St., New York 36,for $4.25 plus postage; how aboutUC Bookstore?Send contributions to continueand spread these ads to JimmyHiggins c/o Modern Book Store,Room 914, 64 W. Randolph. Chi¬cago I, III.Furnished apartment. Sublet 3 monthsor 15 months, beginning June 15. Sixrooms. Near campus. $120. HY 3-3087.Rooms for rent. $22-$35 per month. 62008. Woodlawn, Cooking facilities avail¬able. Call PL 2-9081.Single sleeping room. 7625 S. Vernon,close S. Parkway or 75th St. bus. largecloset, $6 per week. VI 6-6414.Student wanted to share attractive 4-room apartment. $30 monthly. 6123Woodlawn. Joel Llcht. NO 7-2624.2 Blocks from campus. Bedroom-sittingroom. Kitchen privileges $35. HY 3-8460.Private bedroom in 6-room apt. Kitchenprivileges. Near UC. Newly decorated.$10 a week. Sullivan. 957 E. 54th PI.Faculty apartment. 3V* rooms to rentfurnished. June 1 to September 25. Tele¬phone MU 4-0098.For SaleTypewriter portable. Has every officemachine feature plus more Used verylittle, $65. Also. Victor electric adder.Julius. HY 3-2644.Lady’s English bicycle. Fully equipped.Excellent condition. $35 or nearest offer.Ext. 1178.; Nick Bova — Florist!5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226STUDENT DISCOUNTDELIVERY SERVICE'New . ..THEY THOUGHTTHEY WERE FREEThe Germans: 1933-45By Milton MayerThis story of Hitler's Germany hasnever been told before — the storyof the LITTLE people and how theybecame Nazis; the story of the de¬sires, satisfactions, and terrors thatlay within their hearts. Throughthe eyes of “ten little Nazis” inone German city, Mr. Mayer por¬trays the rise of dictatorship asseen by the man in the street."IT IS NO EXAGGERATION TOCALL THIS BOOK A CONTEM¬PORARY CLASSIC, DESERVINGTHE WIDEST POSSIBLE AUDI¬ENCE." — Sydney J. Harris, CHI¬CAGO DAILY NEWS.$475from your bookselleror froma.■‘q.s'AThe Universityof Chicago Press5750 Ellis A«mm DICK FETTER joined G.F. in 1947 afterreceiving a B.S. from Bucknell Uni¬versity, and serving 32 months in theAir Corps. At C.E. he completed theBusiness Training Course, class of ’49.What young people are doing at General Electric" ' ' " 1 '4 1 1 ' :J.Young managerhandles financesfor building of$5,000,000 plantIn the next ten years, the demand for GeneralElectric industrial heating equipment willdouble. To meet this demand, a giant newplant (model at right) is being built atShelbyville, Indiana.The plant will cost $5,000,000, and theman responsible for handling finances for' the entire job is 32-year-old 11. E. Fetter.%Tetter’s job is important, responsibleDick Fetter’s work as Financial Manager ofthe Department began long before GeneralElectric started building the plant. lie andhis group first had to estimate probable op¬erating costs and predict whether the plantwould he profitable.Now, during construction, Fetter’s chiefconcern is keeping track of all the expenseson this multimillion-dollar project. Whenthe plant is completed, he will set up acomplete financial section and manageeverything from tax, cost, and general ac¬counting to payrolls, budgets and measure¬ments, and internal auditing.25,000 college graduates at General ElectricThis is a big job. Fetter was readied for itin a careful step-by-step program of devel¬opment. Like Fetter, each of the 25,000 col¬lege-graduate employees is given his chanceto grow, to find the work he does best, andto realize his full potential For GeneralElectric has long believed this: When young,fresh minds are given freedom to make prog¬ress, everybody benefits —the individual, thecompany, and the country.April 29, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 1!Varsity and track clubrunners shine at Ohioby Sam GreenleeA combination of Track club and varsity thinclads journeyed to Columbus, Ohio, last week¬end to compete in the Ohio relays. The trip proved fruitful and the tracksters returnedwith record-breaking wins and relay points after engaging in the tough competition offeredby the cream of the east and the Big Ten.Track club runners Phil Coleman and Bill Conrardy accounted for most of the laurels as they chalkedup wins and records in their specialties. Conrardy, along with Tom Jones of Miami (Ohio), was oneof the meet’s only two double win- * — ——ners. The Loyola alumnus walked runner’s take-charge per- Dewey Jones, and Mitch Watkinsaway from the field and won as he f°rmance in the mile run. The took a second behind a speedypleased in the 600-yard run, estab- Southern Illinois teachers college quartet from Penn state. The Ma-lishing a new meet record of alumnus took the lead off the last roon hurdlers led until Rod Perry,1:11.8 in the process. turn and won going away over indoor conqueror of Harrison Dil-Later in the afternoon, Conrar- Lowell Zellers, formerly of Indi- lard, moved the eastern squad twody scored a tougher win in the ana- Coleman’s record breaking yards in front.1000-yard run, staving off ex-Ohio was 4:11.4. Track club mem-state star and former national ker Bob Kelly finished fourth,collegiate and big ten champion The Chicago sprint medleyLen Truex in a stretch duel thathad spectators on their feet. Con¬rardy established another Relaysrecord of 2:12.8 for the distance.While erratic Wes Santee’s fu¬tile effort to break the four-min¬ute mile in the Kansas Relays wasbeing adequately alibied by pressassociation releases, Phil Cole¬man’s faster, record-breaking per¬formance was being completelyignored in Columbus. Spectators,if not the press, were impressed,however, by the Maroon track team of Jim Brown, Mitch Watkins, Lowell Hawkinson and SamGreenlee took a fifth place in thiseveht in which Pittsburgh,chored by pan-American cham¬pion Arnie Sowell, broke the oldrecord. Brown posted a 51.2 timeon the. lead-off quarter leg. Hawk¬inson and Watkins followed with220 times of 23.3 and 23.6 withGreenlee anchoring the team witha 1:56.3 half-mile leg.The shuttle hurdle relay squadof Dan Trifone, Frank Loomos,Golfers win JV track winThe Maroon linksmen endedtheir match with Loyola last Fri¬day afternoon in a 9-9 tie. Lowscorer for Chicago was Bison,who came in with a 75 card.Saturday afternoon the golferschalked up their first win of theseason against the Illinois Pro¬fessional School on the Longwoodcourse with an 11-7 victory. Black¬wood and Bison recorded the lowscores for the Maroons with 77and 79, respectively.The Chicago golfers tee off atWhite Pines Golf course thisafternoon at 3:30 against theUniversity of Illinois at Chicago.JV golfers fared less well thantheir varsity counterparts, beingshut out 12-0 by Hyde Park highon the Jackson park course lastFriday. *Women winThe UC women’s softball teambested Navy Pier’s women’ssquad 11-3. Pitcher Kay O’Farellturned in a stellar performancefor the Maroons, walking onlytwo and striking out three.The UC win is to serve theWAA squad as a warm-up for atough contest with DeKalb nextweek. Sparked by Jerry Jordan’s 22-point spree in five different eventsthe JV tracksters chalked uptheir third consecutive cinder vic¬tory over Mount Carmel in Staggfield Wednesday afternoon, 65-63.The strong showing of the out¬door team is in sharp contrastto the mediocre indoor record ofthe squad which has been bol¬stered by additions in the middledistance and distance events.Highlight of the meet was theduel between team-mates IvanCarlson and Bob Wiesenck in the880-yard run. Wieseneck took overfrom his Maroon squad memberat the last turn to win by fiveyards in the creditable time of2:09.5, his best of the year.The JV’s iced the meet in win¬ning the mile relay in the goodtime of 3:46.7. The baton squadwas made up of Pete Langrock,Carlson, Devon Cunningham andWieseneck.Linn triumphsLinn House, in defeating thePhi Gams last wek emerged theall-university volley ball cham¬pions.First game softball scores re¬sembled basketball results as PsiU blasted Phi Gam 40-2 and PhiPsi bested Alpha Delt 36-7 for theopening I-M softball games. Jim Brown added points in the300-yard run, finishing third inthe elongated sprint.Phil Coleman returned to gaina third place finish in the 1%-milerun with a fine last quarter kick,an" in which he moved up from a far-back 17th place.Joe Howard, Chicago’s out¬standing weight man, suffered alet down from his recent perform¬ances, throwing the shot put 44'11, a far cry from national col¬legiate champion Tom Jones’ win¬ning record breaking 57' 81/i"heave. Roger Forsyth continuedhis gradual improvement with arespectable 43' 4" toss in thisevent. Best toss for the Maroonsquad, however, was Phil Swctt’s45' 2" effort.Placed in the seeded mile relayheat on the basis of its fine indoorrecord-setting 3.22.5, the Chicagoteam found itself vastly out¬classed. The team, composed ofhurdler Dan Trifone competing inhis fourth event, Ted Fishman,hampered by a sprained ankle,Lowell Hawkinson, whose train¬ing had been interrupted by hisactivities *as minister of a Rock¬ford church, and Sam Greenleewas a far cry from the finely con¬ditioned quartet of Brown, Fish¬man, Rhyne and Hawkinson thatestablished the indoor mark.The mile .squad neverthelessturned in an adequate perform¬ance, but adequate performancesweren’t enough in a race in whichMichigan posted a superlative3:14.7 clocking.The competitive edge attainedagainst such fine competition lastweek-end should be enough toovercome a good invading Albionsquad this Saturday. The track¬sters face the Michigan college at10:30 in Stagg field.NOaMMBm&im control69c • tub* Is your hair ah asset, ordoes it have that greasy,patent-leather look 7This product will keep your hairpleasingly neat and attractive.It’s not greasy, contains noalcohol, no oils, no coloring. Errors sink Maroonnine in two gamesThe Maroon nine, still plagued by errors, dropped twogames during the past week, bowing to North Central college8-4 and to Illinois tech 14-7. The butter-fingered Chicagosquad, probably still suffering from early season jitters, postedeight errors in the two contests.The North Central squad, scoring five of their eight runs on justtwo hits in the fifth and sixth —innings, built up enough of a lead difference although the Maroonsto coast home with an easy win were outhit only fifteen to four-over the luckless Maroons. tee.Scoring in the North Central Chicago tied the score 2-2 irrthehalf of the fifth inning was ac- test half of the second inning oncounted for by two walks, a stolen hits by Gil Levine, Bill Miller, A1base, an error and two wild Binford and Jeff Marks. A three-pitches. The sixth inning portion run splurge in the third movedof the fiasco came on two singles, the Maroon squad into a 6-3 lead,a walk, another error and a stolen The scoring was accounted for onbase to account for three more hits by Kent Karohl, Walt Walker,unearned runs. Dave Utley, Gil Levine,The Chicago rally was started George Gray and a walk to Billoff with hits by center fielder Gil- Miller. The two stolen bases con-Levine and Right fielder AI Bin- tributed to the offensive fire-ford. Bruce Colby drew a walk, works.loading the bases. A North Cen- The Techmen moved into a tietral error resulted in the two Ma- with a three-run fifth inning onroon tallies in their portion of the three hits and a fielder’s choicesixth inning. and were never headed thereafter.Doubles by George Gray and The Illinois Tech squad accountedPaul Baptist accounted for Ma- ^or three runs in the sixth androon scoring in the seventh. seventh innings and finished theThe 14-7 Illinois tech rout in slaughter with a two-run ninth.Stagg field Tuesday afternoon Pacing the rugged Tech attackwas marked by five Chicago er- werfe shortstop Giebelhousen andrors which more than-offset the center fielder Stron with threefourteen Maroon hits. The Tech- and f°ur safeties, respectively.Hawks combined fifteen hits with Top hitter for the Maroons wascapitalization of Chicago defense center fielder Gil Levine withlapses to account for the scoring three hits.The Maroons face Knox collegein a double header tomorrow at1:30 in Stagg field.SportsCalendarToday: Golf, University of Illi¬nois at Chicago, White Pinescourse, 3:30Tennis, Marquette, VarsityCourts, 1:30Tomorrow: Track, Albion col¬lege, Stagg Field, 10:30Baseball, Knox college, StaggFild, 1:30 ab r h ab r hLevine, rf 3 0 1 3ook,2b 5 1 1Colby,3b 2 0 0 3toffer,lb 5 12Karohl,ss 5 1 0 DuPlessis.s 4 2 1Ptley.lb 4 0 1 Hauch.rf 2 1 2Miller,p 3 0 0 Bansemer.cf 3 0 0Baptiste,p 2 1 2 3’hmquist.cf 1 0 0Gray,If, c 5 1 2 Koatz.lf 3 1 1Binford.rf 4 1 1 Reitzel.lf 1 0 0Walker,c 1 0 0 Haas.p 3 0 2Mazukelli.lf 3 0 0 Janca.p 1 0 1Mann 3 0 0 Hadradre,2b 3 1 0Harvey ,c 2 0 1Totals 35 4 7 AlBkecht.c 2 0 1* Totals 35 8 12R H EChicago .. 0 0 0 0 12 10 0—4 7 3N. Central ,0 2 1 0 2 3 0 0 x—8 12 4R H EIll. Tech .. 1 1 1 0 3 3 3 0 2—14 15 1Chicago ... 0 2 4 0 0 0 0 1 0—7 14 5Move for grid returnThe return of the great American grid sport to the UCcampus as soon as possible has become the watchword of anewly formed student organization.Net men loseCoach Bill Moyle, worried lastweek about the then undefeatedtennis squad’s upcoming matchwith DePauw, had his fears vindi¬cated as the DePaul team blankedthe Maroons 9-0. This loss turnedthe tables on the Chicago netmenwho were becoming accustomedto rolling over the opposition inlike fashion and dealt them theirfirst defeat of the season.aillllllllHHHIIIIMIIMWIIIIHIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIllllHIIIIIIIIIHMIlMiHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIHIIHIIIIIIIIIIII§ International House Movies || East Lornge Mon. & Tliurs. Eves, at 7:00 & 9:00 P.M. || Monday, Moy 2 — 45c — Count of St. Elmo (Itolion) |= g§ Thursday, Moy 5 — 35c — Vivo Zapato (American) s:^IIIUIItltlllimtHllllltllllllllttlllHIIIIIIHItMtflltltllllllllllllHIHIIIIIIIIItlllHIHIHIIHHHHItlHtttllltllHlIIIIttiniHIttli^THE HOUSE >rf MEhL, INC.Sftns Jjljj ZfoiUtri** VAGABOND SCHOONER — College men and women are now beingaccepted for this summer's amateur sailing cruises.7 week Caribbean cruise, $4853 week Bahamas cruise, $213Write for full details to:VAGABOND SCHOONER11307 Church Street Chicago 43, Illinois This group which is headed byBill Carstadt and Nick Mano-loff is currently circulating peti¬tions through the University,which when signed pledge thesupport of the signee to the re¬turn of inter-collegiate football tothe UC campus. They plan to pre¬sent the signed petitions to DeanStrozier for possible channelingto the board of trustees.Bill Carstadt announced thatmembers of the committee wouldbe situated at tables outside ofCobb hail from 9 to 4, Monday andFriday, and in the Reynolds clubfrom 11:30 to 1 on the same days.ACECYCLE snopYour BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we tedRepairs fir Paris all makes819 E. 88 MI 3-2878f A.M. - 6 P.M.Page 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON AprN 29, 1955Two fraternities have affairsPhi PsiAbsent from the UC for severalyears, Phi Psi’s “Esquire” partyreiurns to campus tomorrownight at 8:30 p.m. with an arrayof talent, including musical en¬tertainers and a guest star fromNorthwestern university.Special lighting and sound in¬stallations have been set up as apart of the preparations at thePhi Kappa Psi fraternity houseat 5555 Woodlawn.Students, faculty members, andothers attending will find“mounds of food and pools of liq¬uid refreshments offered for self-serviced consumption,” according'•^to George Staub, Phi Psi socialchairman. “Everyone is invited,with or without escorts,” headded.There will be no admissioncharge, and all refreshments willbe free. Delta UDelta Upsilon’s annual Rosedance will be held tonight in thefraternity’s house at 5714 Wood-lawn avenue.Stu Clayton’s band will openfestivities at 9 p.m. The dance hasbeen an annual spring affair formore than ten years. This year2,000 roses will cover the entireinterior of the house. DU hopes toduplicate its success of last yearwhen the Rose dance was the bestattended fraternity open house oncampus, according to fraternityofficials.The rose was chosen as the ap¬propriate flower after the war,when the fraternity instituted itsdance. Three white columns cov¬ered with the flowers will risefrom the first to the third floor.A canopy covering will grace thefraternity entrance. Student defermentdeadline May 9May 9 and 20 are final dead¬lines for students seeking draftdeferment for the next aca¬demic year to complete the twonecessary registrations.If they have not alreadydone So, they must register forthe Selective Service systemcollege qualification test byMay 9.Before May 20. each studentseeking draft deferment shouldrequest the registrar to submitSSS Form 109 to his localboard, send the official letternotifying his board that he in¬tends to continue a program o“fstudy leading to a degree, andfile an SSS information card,since the present cards becomeobsolete. This should be donebetween May 9 and May 19,following a schedule to be post¬ed by the registrar’s office.The Selective Service systemcollege qualification test isscheduled to be administeredagain on May 19. Closing datefor registration is May 9, andregistration may be made atthe local board at 1519 West63rd street. It is advisable toregister well in advance of thedeadline.Students should be in at leasttheir first year of undergradu¬ate work and must have re¬ceived their 12th grade certifi¬cate to be eligible to take test.BJ snack bar jeopardizedby Steve CohenAfter its second year of running at a loss, the Burton-Judson snackbar may be closed down. The future of the snack bar will be de¬cided this Tuesday at a meeting of representatives from the B-Jcouncil, the snack bar. and Resident Halls and Commons, theUniversity’s food dispensing de- • Agreement reachedon make-up of SACOne of the knottiest problems facing the Student Activitiescouncil — that of who is to be on the policy making boarddrew close to solution Tuesday. SAC, which is drafting theconstitution for a new body to replace the recently disbandedStudent Union, provisionally agreed on a plan of organization.SAC will meet Tuesday at 2bowl to continue discussion ofthe plan which SAC chairmanGeorge Stone will put in con¬stitutional form vote by the body.The plan is intended to producean organization working on ap¬proximately the same level as theStudent Union but attemptingbetter ties of cooperation and re¬sponsibility with the campus andadministration.Continuous close contact withthe campus as a whole is desired.Students not living in organizedliving units would have access tothe board through the petitionedseats, although these seats wouldbe open to anyone.The new plan, ending twoweeks of fruitless deliberations,would set up an eleven-man boardmade up of five representativesof living groups, five selectedfrom a group of petitioners, andone representative of the faculty.The term of the board would runfor one year.Under the plan there would betwo representatives from the :30 p.m. in Reynolds club fish-men’s dorms, one from the wom¬en’s dorms, one from Internation-al house, one from the fraternitiesand one from the faculty. Exactlywho would choose these rcpreson-tatives remained to be compleetlyworked out.The remaining five positionswould be filled from amongpetitioners by the previous year'sboard. 150 signatures would beneeded by each petitioner to qual-ify. If less than five people quali-fied for consideration, emptyseats would be filled by the board.Under the tentatively approvedplan, petitions will be circulatedbeginning March 1, to be due atthe end of the winter quarter.The old board must choose be¬tween the applicants, or electmembers in case there are notenough applicants, by the secondweek of the spring quarter. Thenew board may then meet to be¬gin planning for the next year,although the old board will haveresponsibility for the spring ac¬tivities.partment.The snack bar might be closedbecause it is incurring too largea debt. In its first year of opera¬tion it made a profit of over $o00.but last year lost several hundreddollars and is presently $2L6 inthe red. The loss might have beeneven greater had food costs notbeen cut ovei* four per cent.CreatejJ in 1953 by the B-J coun¬cil, the snack bar is supplied withfood by Resident Halls and Com¬mons, and is run for the councilby student manager, Athan Theo-haris.B-J Council feels that unless aprofit, or at least a small loss, canbe shown, the snack bar should beclosed. Rick Prarie, president ofthe council, said, “I feel that thesnack shop is a good thing, andthat it has been well managed,but a difficulty arises when it al¬most breaks the council. The bigproblem is lack of volume—al¬though we’ve improved the atmos¬phere by putting in a piano andhaving posters put on the wall.”Prarie regarded the present sit-m uation of the snack bar as stillawkward and felt that a new ar¬rangement, such as putting thesnack bar under private manage¬ment or obtaining some moneywith which to expand facilities,was necessary.Theoharis also regards themain problem as one of lack ofvolume, but said that “if we couldget some good advertising thecustomers would start coming in.”Theoharis added, “Two yearsago when we had good publicityand an enthusiastic patronage wehad over 1800 customers in onemonth. This year, with practicallyno advertising, our best monthwas only 800 customers.“We can’t run a comprehensiveadvertising program because wehave neither the time to do it our¬selves nor the money to hire some¬one to do it. I think that althoughwe ourselves are partly at fault,the council could have helped usout.“As a matter of fact, severalcouncil members didn’t know thatwe are run by the council untilwe presented them with the billfor the loss.”Margaret Hunt, food supervisorfor Residence Halls and Com¬mons, said that she regards thesnack bar as an essential part ofthe University’s food system, butdoubted that it could ever be runat a profit. She emphasized thatthe snack bar is the only placeconvenient to a large number ofstudents for a late hour snack,fend that its closing would be agreat loss to the University. BuyCHESTERFIELDtoday! You'll SMILE your approvalof Chesterfield's smoothness—mildness—refreshing taste.You'll SMILE your approvalof Chesterfield's quality—highest quality low nicotine.Largest selling cigarette in America's colleges• boom 0 Mfo» Tomcoo C*