Nix meeting: ISLNullification of all resolutions and bills of Monday’s Student Government meeting bythe Student-Faculty-Administration court was asked Tuesday by members of the Independ¬ent Students league.Setting aside as illegal the entire meeting was also requested by the petitioners, who calledit “in violation of the Student Government constitution, the Student Bill of Rights, and thebv laws of Student Government.” Welcome entrantsThe first meeting of the mid-year enterting class, which is un¬officially estimated to be around 90 students, will be held tomorrow.Dean Robert Streeter, Dean Robert M. Strozier, and Earl Medlinsky,president of O-board, will hold welcoming speeches which will befollowed by a talk from Benjamin S. Bloom, the University examiner.Thursday evening after four days of placement tests, the new stu¬dents will be given a dinner in the C-shop where a faculty panel willhold a mock symposium on mid-year students.After the dinner there will be an activities program in Ida Noyeswhich will be climaxed by an all-campus gala “activities review "Quorum absentLack of a quorum was themajor point of the petition.“At no time of the evening ofJanuary 23 was there a quorumpresent . . . The Chair declaredthat the quorum calls were ‘‘ab¬surd. frivolous, and dilatory” ... .the roll was not called to establisha quorum at the beginning of theStudent Government meeting . . .the chair declared that a quorumwas present by fixing the quorumas less than that specified . . .”(For a complete report of themeeting, see page 5.)Also argued was the lack of anagenda three hours before themeeting, as the by-laws required,and Hie passage of a bill repealingthis by law and making it retro¬active.Meeting time changedISL blamed the alleged lack ofa quorum on short notice givenfor the special meeting, and thefact that Monday is an inconven¬ient meeting time. Meetings areusually held on Tuesday evening.The appearance of Carl Bradenon campus under sponsotship ofthe Student Representative party,the majority party, occasioned thechange. ISL members first learn¬ed of the change Thursday eve¬ning following the meeting of the executive council which called thespecial meeting, they said Tues¬day.Passed at the meeting was legis¬lation which required a two-thirds majority vote. The minorityparty controls more than one-third of the seats ordinarily. Onlyone minority member was presentthroughout the meeting, althoughtwo others were present for briefperiods.Mozart programgiven tonightAn all-Mozart program inhonor of the 200th anniver¬sary of the composer's birth willbe given tonight in Mandel hallby George Schick, pianist andconductor, with members of theChicago Symphony orchestra.The works to be performed areMozart’s piano quartet in g minor,K. 478; quintet in E flat forwinds and piano, K. 452; and thedivertimento in D major forstrings and horns, K. 334,Tickets to the performance are$1.50 each, and are available atthe University concert office, 5802Woodlawn Avenue. Students withID cards may obtain tickets for$1 each. -|\a chucaao11 laroonUniversity of Chicago, Friday, January 27, 1956Braden describes caseby Judy PodoreAdequate and unsegregated housing for Negroes is the basic civil liberties issue in theSouth today, according to Carl Braden, who addressed an SRP-sponsored meeting in Juddhall Tuesday night. Braden faces 15 years in jail because he bought a house in a restrictedneighborhood of Louisville, Kentucky, and sold ;t to a Negro.Braden, describing his caseSG adopts statementon UC housing policySG’s policy statement on University housing, passed at theMonday meeting, reads in its entirety:“For five years, UC administrators have known that theprefabs must be razed. It seems inconceivable that during this lengthof time the University did not find it possible to develop a long rangeprogram which would have provided adequate housing for its stu¬dents and which would have prevented the undesirable ramificationsof the mass tenant evictions.That they have failed to do so clearly indicates that the administra¬tion operates in an incredibly inefficient manner or that the welfareof the student body has not been considered sufficiently importantto warrant intelligent planning.Therefore, be is resolved that1. SG condemns the callous disregard with which married stu¬dents and members of the community have been dealt in the Uni¬versity’s recent attempt to solve the immediate housing problem.2. SG affirms its belief that the University must assume fullres|H>nsibility for the housing of all its students.3. SG strongly holds that the University, in fulfilling its obliga¬tions to its students need not and must not, create new problemsfor a community already faced with numerous housing difficultiesof its own.4. SG urges the Administration to begin adequate and fore-sighted planning immediately to provide low cost housing for altstudents irrespective of their race, religion, national origin, politi¬cal belief, or marital status.Construct Accelerator additionA crane and men have begun work on the first steps toward creating new space for theUniversity’s accelerator building. An excavation has been started for an underground roomwhich will add to the usefulness of Chicago’s synchrocyclotron.Eventually part of Ellis itself will be taken up. Work started January 16, and the entireproject is expected to last sixmonths.The new room will measure30 by 50 feet and will be 12 feethigh. It is being built somewhataway from the main building witha tunnel connecting them.Addition neededThe space is made necessary bythe addition to the cyclotron of anexternal proton beam. An area isneeded into which to bring thebeam for work, a room equippedto handle it in safety withoutbuilding up excessive radiation.The beam will be brought,through tubes, from the cyclotroninto the underground room.The accelerator building housesthe synchrocyclotron and a beta¬tron both used in atomic and nu¬clear physics research.Excavation begins for an ex¬tension to the accelerator build¬ing. The new space, to extendpartly under Ellis street, will al¬low an addition to the synchro-cyclotron to be built* to an audience of about 60,said that without segregatedhousing, it would be much harderfor the South to maintain segre¬gated schools and segregation onjobs, which permit social andeconomic discrimination againstNegroes. Consequently, he said,efforts toward desegregation ofhousing are among the mostseverely punished offenses in theSouth. As evidence of this, Bradenpointed to his sentence (15 yearsat hard labor and a $5,000 fine)and * is $40,000 bond pending ap¬peal of his case — the highestbond ever set in the state of Ken¬tucky. and one of the highest everset in the United States.Harvey O’Connor, author andchairman of the Emergency Civilthis aroundbathing. This little item soldfor a cool ninety cents.One Mead houser bought ascratchy record of the ‘‘BattleHymn of the Republic” for thesole purpose of preventing anyone else from playing it. Hecracked it over his knee upon pur- Liberties committee, said in intro¬ducing Braden that ‘‘we have along way to go before completingthe job started on June 19, 1863.”He noted that Braden had com¬mitted the “unforgivable sin” inthe South — he had helped aNegro emancipate himself.Braden gave many details of hiscase.In May of 1954, he told thegroup, he bought a house in aLouisville suburb and transferredit to Andrew Wade IV, a Negroelectrical contractor and veteranof World War II. After the Wadesmoved in, rioters besieged theirhouse; and on June 27, the housewas half destroyed by dynamite.Protest against the incidentsled to a Grand Jury investigation.The Grand Jury, instead ol direct¬ ly investigating the bombing,began an investigation of the peo¬ple who had helped Wade, includ¬ing an investigation of theirassociations and their books; andthis investigation resulted in theindictment of Braden, his wife,and five others for sedition, undera Kentucky criminal syndicalismact of 1920, never tested in thecourts.Braden is the only one who hasbeen tried so far, and he is nowappealing to the Kentucky Courtof Appeals, with legal aid fromthe American Civil I.ibertiesUnion. He estimates that he hasspent half of the last two years incourt or in jail, including sixweeks of solitary confinement inKentucky State Prison.Mead auctions weird truckby Bob Hala«zSome of the wierdest contraptions ever conceived in the minds of demented B-Jers weresold on auction in Judson lounge Monday night. The goods were contributed and sold byMead house residents as a means of raising f ands. The house netted $23.39 for the 51 con¬tributions.One of the most interesting of the devices was a bar of soap with a rope fastened at bothends. An ingenious Mead houser who couldn’t find a soap holder in the shower stalls hunghis neck while chase. Another bought a lock andkey for the purpose of lockinganother resident out of his room.RevertSome house members seemedto be reverting back to childhoodby bidding spiritedly for suchitems as a cap pistol, a mask, abag of marbles, and six tennisballs-(dead). Other popular itemswere alleged opium pipe (empty),a bottle of gin about one-tenthfull, and a mop without a handle.For the literary minded therewas a Mad comic, a pocketbook ofKeats’ poetry, a pamphlet explain¬ ing the Federal Reserve system(free at any Federal Reservebank), several poeketbooks, andthe Virile Powers of Manhood byBernarr McFadden.Buy artThe art lovers bought suchitems asj, art reprints, touristtravel posters, a copy of Playboy,and a nudist yearbook.“Something for everybody” wasthe motto of the three auctioneers—Gene Miller, Steve Oppenheim-er, and Paul Thiry—and every¬body felt he got his money’sworth.photo by Wise Give Wilson programLectures and seminars will begin at UC Monday in celebra¬tion of the Woodrow Wilson centennial, 1856-1956. The cen¬tennial theme is “Freedom for man: a world safe formankind.”Lectures will be given in Mandel hall at 8:30 p.m. Monday throughThursday, January 30 to February 8. Admission is without ticket orcharge. The first lecture, on Monday evening, by a former presidentof the Rockefeller foundation, Raymond Fosdiek, will be “Personalrecollections of Woodrow Wilson.” Alben W. Barkley, former vice-president of the U. S., will lecture Thursday, February 2, on “Wilsonand Congress.”Seminars will be held Monday through Friday in Reynolds club at4 p.m., open only to invited guests. The final seminar will be heldin Reynolds club Friday, February 3, at 8:30 p.m. Arthur Link, pro¬fessor of history at Northwestern, will talk on “Wilson, the man andthe symbol,” next Monday.Materials relating to Woodrow Wilson will be exhibited in thecentral corridor, first floor, of Harper Memorial library, and in therare book room, Harper W61, which is open 9 a m. to 5 p.m., Mondaythrough Friday and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., SaturdayThe committee in charge: Herbert Emmerich, director of the Pub¬lic Administration Clearing house; William T. Hutchinson, professorof history; Walter Johnson, professor of history; Jerome G. Kerwin,professor of political science; Richard Storr, assistant professor othistory; and Quincy Wright, professor of international law.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 27, 1956HITHER AND YONThere’s No Sale LikeWholesaleDear Student:Chances are, you love Cash-mere Sweaters by Hinda andother famous brands.. . . Here's how you can save33 1/3% to 50%AM Sizes — Colors — StylesBy Buying at Wholesale PricesCome toSamuel Murrow &Company(In the heart of theWholesale Market)Dally 9 to 5:30 Saturdays 9 to 3:30318 W. Adams St. Suite 401Coming events at UC Fight cribbing; hit censorshipFriday, January 27Walgreen lecture. ''Power controls III:Federalism and fundamental rights,”Prof. Karl Loewenstein, Amherst col¬lege, 4:30 p.m.. Social Science 122.Mathematical biology club, "Topology,information theory, and life,” Prof.Nicholas Rashevsky, 4:30 p.m., 5741Drexel.Doc film: The Joyless Street, 7:15 and9:15 p.m.. Social Science 122, admis¬sion by series ticket only.Billel sabbath service, 7:45 p.m., andfireside at 8, "Of injustice and theprophets,” with Prof. Hermit Eby, 5715Woodlawn.Masaryk club, Prof. John Van Prohaska,"Recent advance in surgery,” speak¬ing nontechnically with films. 8 p.m.,International house, refreshments.University concert. Mozart birthday pro¬gram with George Schick, pianist andconductor, and members of Chicagosymphony orchestra, 8:30 p.m., Mandelhall.University theatre: Tonight at 8:30,scenes from plays by Clifford Odets,Tennessee Williams, Jean Girardou,Carson McCullers. and Jan de Hartog,8:30 p.m., Reynolds club theatre, aOcents.Saturday, January 28Varsity track meet, UC vs. Central Mich¬igan college, 1:30 p.m.. Field house.Varsity fencing meet vs. alumni, 2 p.m.,Bartlett.Varsity tennis matches vs. alumni,Field house, 3 p.m.Varsity wrestling matches. UC vs. NotreDame U., 2 p.m., Bartlett.Varsity basketball game vs. alumni, 3:30p.m., Field house.Varsity gymnastics meet, UC vs. IUinois-Navy Pier, 7:30 p.m., Bartlett.University theatre, Tonight at 8:30,scenes from plays by Odets, T. Wil¬liams. Giraudoux, McCullers, and deHartog, 8:30 p.m., Reynolds clubtheatre, 50 cents.Radio broadcast. "The sacred note."with music by Rockefeller chapelchoir, 10:15 p.m., WBBM.Sunday, January 29Episcopal communion service, 8:30 a.m.,Bond chapel.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, 11 a.m.,DeSales house.Lutheran communion service, 10 a.m.,Hilton chapel.Clinics religious service, 10 a.m., Bill¬ings, 0-4.Radio broadcast, "Who should pay formedical care,” with panel includingAneurin Bevan, M.P, 10:35 a.m.,WMAQ.University religious service, with Rev.Granville T. Walker of UniversityChristian church, Ft. Worth, Tex.,preaching, II a.m.. Rockefeller chapel.Baptist graduate student center, dis¬cussion on “The Baptist witness,”4 p.m., with buffet supper, 4901 Ellis.MAROON staff meeting, 4 p.m., IdaNoyes—3rd floor, ‘nuf said. University Peace center, lecture anddiscussion, 4 p.m.. International house.Intervarsity Christian fellowship ves¬pers, 4:15 p.m., Ida Noyes.Carillon recital, 4:30 p.m., Rockefellerchapel.Porter fellowship supper and discussion,on “An individual’s concept of thenature of man,” with Prof. KermitEby, 6 p.m.. Swift commons.Disciples student fellowship, meeting,6:30 p.m.. Disciples church, 57th andUniversity.Channing club. Harold Haydon speakson "Does modern art communicate,”8:30 p.m. First Unitarian church.B-J movie, 7 and 9:30 p.m., Judsonlounge, 25 cents.Monday, January 30Physiology seminar, "Studies on thecontrol of red blood cell formation,”4 p.m., Abbott 133.Human development lecture. "The Kan¬sas City study of adult life,” Juddcommons. 4 p.m.International house movie: The RedInn, 7 and 9 p.m.Lee memorial lecture, "The problem ofsynthesizing a hormone,” 8 p.m., Kent106.Woodrow Wilson lecture, "Personal rec¬ollections of Woodrow Wilson,” 8:30p.m., Mandel.Piano concert by Don Levine, a profes¬sional pianist, at Alpha Delt house,5747 University, 8:30 p.m., free admis¬sion.Tuesday, January 31Intervarsity Christian fellowship, lunch¬eon, 12:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Review staff meeting, 5 p.m., Reynoldsclub 302-304.Docfilm: Man of Aran, 7:15 and 9:15p.m., Social Science 122.Blackfriars organizational meeting, 7:30p.m. Ida Noyes 3rd floor foyer.UC Mountaineers, meeting and movies,7:30 p.m., Rosenwald 26.Concert band, full ensemble rehearsal,7:30 p.m., Sunny gym 302.FTS wives, meeting with Jerald C.Brauer, dean of FTF, speaking, 8 p.m.,5757 Woodlawn.Woodrow Wilson lecture, "The world vi¬sion of Woodrow Wilson,” 8:30 p.m.,Mandel. by Miriam GarfinA new honor code with “empha¬sis on the correction of cheatingrather than punishing an offend¬er” has been proposed at Brownuniversity. The proposed code isa revision of one which failed in1954 to get the 75 per cent back¬ing of the student body necessaryfor adoption. The major changeis in the procedure in reportingviolators. The current proposalstates that a person observingeither the giving or obtaining ofunauthorized assistance shall taphis pencil on his desk until he hasattracted the violator’s attention.If the violator persists in cheat¬ing, the observer shall confrontthe offender, asking him to turnhimself in. This failing, the ob¬server shall report the matter tothe Honor council, a body of un¬dergraduates which administerthe honor code. Under the previ¬ously proposed code, no warningwas to be given tc the offender.Oppose censorshipThe following editorial is re¬printed in part from the TampaMorning Tribune, January 17,1956:Within the last week, complaintsagainst censorship of news on collegecampuses In Florida have come fromtwo sources.Florida Intercollegiate Press associa¬tion, representing eleven colleges, pro¬tested in a resolution that most studentnewspapers are “merely mouth organs”for the college administrations and can¬not print news the authorities don'twant printed. The Florida Alligator, student publica¬tion at the University of Florida, com¬plained that although It Is free to printany news it finds, university authori¬ties often hold back information whichought to be made public.In one case, the complaint is againsta direct censorship of the newspapers; inthe other case, it is against a censor¬ship of the source of news.The student hears much about theImportance of the free press to theAmerican way of life. But what is he tothink when he sees the press closest tohim trotting about on a leash like a petPekinese?The student is told that one of thegreat virtues of our democracy is thatit allows the merits of ideas to be testedin the crucible of controversy. How doeshe square this with a policy which barsall controversial matters from the stu¬dent’s widest forum, the press?The student Is admonished, too, toexpect honesty and courage from thoseentrusted with high office. But whatweight can be given this instructionwhen he knows that those in highestauthority on the campus deliberatelyconceal Information because Its disclo¬sure might embarrass them or angertheir patrons?Colleges can practice hypocrisy andencourage cynicism by permitting noth¬ing but favorable news to pass throughthe guarded portals of the campuspress.Or they can provide a demonstrationof responsible journalism and honestadministration by allowing uncensoredpublication of freely-given Information—subject, of course, to normal penaltiesfor abuse.We think the authorities at both stateand private Colleges In Florida ought toponder well the Implication of thestudent editor's complaint*.Race relationsimprovedTuskegee institute last weekissued its annual repoit on racerelations. The report replaces theannual lynching report which the institution had published for myears.There are islands of tension andconflict in areas where adjust¬ment has been made,” said the re.port, “and some measures of ad.justment are noted in areas where• tension or conflict predominates. . . hundreds of formerly segre-gated schools have been desegre¬gated without creating serioustension or conflict.’It added however, “On balance,the year 1955 shows progress inrace relations. Further improve,ment seems possible throughmany avenues." The report saidthat there was a minimum of ton-sion in areas where civic leaders“responded affirmatively.”“Continued Improvement inrace relations can come If leadersat all levels take Increased Initia¬tive in promoting democratic di*.cussions and responsible actionon community problems and onopportunities for healthy commu¬nity development.”Marxists get voiceA recent indication, thai aca.demie freedom is increasing oc¬curred when thirteen students atSwarthmore college formed agroup devoted to the study ofMarxism. The speaker at theirfirst meeting was Robert Klon-sky, educational director of theCommunist party for EasternPennsylvania.WHAT’STHIS?For solution seeparagraph below.THERE’S NO QUESTION that Luckies taste better -they’re made of fine tobacco that’s TOASTED totaste better. There’s no question in the Droodle above,either (in case you were thinking it looked like a ques¬tion mark). It’s titled: Captain Hook reaching for abetter-tasting Lucky. If you’d like to get your hookson the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked, lightup a Lucky yourself. It’s jolly, Roger!DKOODLES, Copyright 1963 by Roger PriceLUCKIES TASTE BETTER - C/eaner. Fresher. Smoother!©AT. Co. PRODUCT or jjku/li&an AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTESv fOASt& f(LAST BAR OF SCHUBERTSUNFINISHED SYMPHONYTheodore Foe terU. of ColoradoEARN $| Cut yourself in on the LuckyI Droodle gold mine. We pay $25, for all we use—and for a wholeI raft we don’t use! Send your| Droodles with descriptive titles.I Include your name, address, col-. lege and class and the name and' address of the dealer in your col-I lege town from whom you buy| cigarettes most often. Address;I Lucky Droodle, Box 67A, MountVernon, N. Y. START OF SKI JUMPAS SEEN ST SKIERCarol NewmanU. of New Hainpehi/eThe tortoise has no housingworry. No mortgage problemhere! You should have none,either. By using the SUN LIFEMortgage Protection plan, youcan safeguard your home foryourself and your family in theevent of your death. Call me to¬day and let us discuss your prob¬lem together.SUN LIFE ASSURANCECOMPANY OF CANADARalph J.Wood, Jr.,'481 N. LoSoNeChicago 2,IMntoisFR 2-23906A 2-5273 CARELESSLY IRONEDHANDKERCHIEFK;mmo KauttoU. of IndianaJanuary 27, 1956 THE CHICACO MAROON Page iArts w&t Speciafcwbor) Small ClassesXa&mm Gro«ftt laboratory Experiments Hunwaltles Sod*l Sot-nces Pt)yyc.j! Soenas Bx&jgicjl SciencesMedicine law Divinity Social Service Graduate libraryThis display board has recently been placed in the lobby of Ida Noyes by the develop¬ment office. The board originally was used in the University's display at the NationalEducation association convention last year. Photographs will be replaced as they becomeoutdated.Explains German-Israeli relationsLong cup of coffee;WUCB still off airPhone line trouble kept WUCB off the air in C-group andInternational house this week. “We kept getting pay phoneconversations,” John Lyon of the station, reported. “Mostlythe operator asking the owner why the phone was off til*hook,” a phenomenon caused by the broadcasting.Sunday evening a man from the phone company promised“He would neither eat nor T , .. . ,, _ ', . , . Lyon blamed the trouble on andrink nor sleep until it was error in soldering by a phone com*fixed, Lyon said. He went pany employee, and noted that dif-out for a coffee break and we ficulty in repairing the troublehaven’t seen him since.” was occasioned by misnumberedlines in the rack room of tti^administration building.by Jack Burbach“It is very comfortable fora citizen of "the new Germanyto speak or think about theacts of Jewish persecutioncommitted under the Hitler re¬gime.” Eric Lueth, Hamburg jour¬nalist and chief of public relationsof c ho Hamburg senate, said Tues¬day.Lueih explained the complex¬ities in the present-day Germanattitude toward Israel and theJews. He said the Adenauer gov¬ernment was very slow in makingpeace with Israel and official res¬titution to the Jewish refugees,and finally did so only after acampaign waged by the pressunder Lueth’s leadership.Lueth explained that most ofthe older generation of Germansare either anti-Semitic or indiffer¬ent. but that the new generationis beginning to realize German’sresponsibility toward the newnation of Israel.Feel no guiltThe German right wing, fellow-travelers of Hitler, according toLueth, feel neither guilty nor re¬sponsible toward the new Jewishstate, whereas the German demo-era t s do.Lueth himself visited Israeltwice since the war; once incog¬ nito, as a German Jew, and lateras an open representative of thenew Germany. He explained thatthe disguise was necessary in thefirst instance because it was notthen “tactful” for a German tovisit Israel openly. Lueth saidthat the announcement of his in¬cognito trip aroused such strongsentiment both in Germany andIsrael against the necessity for aGerman to hide in Israel, as theJews had had to hide in Hitler’sGermany, that his next trip wasmade openly.Lueth declared that the entire Christian West should feel re¬sponsible for Israel, since anti-Semitism arises from religiousand theological jealousies. Luethconcurred with Toynbee’s conceptof two Gods, one of love and kind¬ness, and the other of jealousy.Explains exodusLueth claimed that the indus¬triousness of the new Israelshould serve as a model for theWest. He blamed the Arabs forthe present Arab-Jewish contro¬versy. claiming that the Arabs op¬pose for various reasons the cul¬tivation and irrigation of the des¬Norman Thomas to talk;also Milwaukee mayorNorman Thomas, six-time Presidential candidate for theSocialist party, and Frank P. Zeidler, mayor of Milwaukee,will be present at a reception under the auspices of the Social¬ist club, tomorrow afternoon from 3 to 5 at Ida Noyes library.Both Zeidler and Thomas are scheduled to speak at a cen¬tennial dinner in the evening at the Midland hotel. The dinneris in honor of the great Amer¬ican socialist and labor leader,Eugene V. Debs. Tickets forthe dinner may be obtainedthrough Don Anderson at DO3-2243. ert now being undertaken byIsrael.Lueth said that the mass migra¬tion of Arabs from Israel was notdue to persecution of the Arabsby the Jews. The Arabs have beenfollowing orders handed down byMoslem religious and politicalleaders, he said. Lueth claimedthat these immigrants have beenherded into refugee camps in theArab nations and have not beenintegrated into Arab society. Onthe contrary, according to Lueth,the thousands of Jews who havehad to flee from Arab countrieshave almost immediately been in¬tegrated into Israeli society.Hyde Parker’s serving on theChicago Debs’ centennial commit¬tee include Professors KermitEby, Rev. William Lovell, JoelSeidman. Alderman Leon Despres,Sidney Lens, Hal Charbnau, Fran¬cis Heisler. Debbie Meirer, EricaEnzer, and Don Anderson Eric LuethGlee club split in two;have mixed and men parts Roulette wheels abound Set AcademicFreedom weekfor April 9-13Academic Freedom week wtHtake place April 9-13, as pro¬claimed by Student Government.Letters will be sent out to allCampus organizations in regardto the week’s activities and ameeting will take place shortlyto get the week’s proceedings un¬der way. Some concrete planshave been made for this event,but SG encourages all studentsto attend the meeting and submittheir ideas.Academic Freedom Week Is anannual event proclaimed by NSA,in which several schools through¬out the country participate.Summer jobsnow openSummer work opportunitiesare now available, the person¬nel office has reported. Posi¬tions in farm work, mentalhospitals, resorts, foreign tours,camp counseling, etc., are listedat the reception desk in the per¬sonnel office on the second floorof Ingleside hall. Upon requestdom»n°5530 harperWhether or not your wardrobe needs freshening,and whether or not your budget can stand it . . .be sure to visit the DOMINO to see the excitingnew line of clothes we've brought to campus. Shirtsfor men, blouses and separates for women — allfeaturing beautiful, unusual fabrics and skiiiea tai¬loring. Most of them ours aione in Chicago.At a luncheon held Monday, January 23. for the leadersof social organizations on campus, Denis Cowan, UC Glee clubdirector, announced a general revision in the Glee club pro¬gram. The group of student leaders urged adequate publicityand a musically lighter program, but without forsakingthe classics entirely. The Glee club program nowoffers two activities: the mixed-voice Glee club and the new Men’sGlee club. Beginning Friday, Feb¬ruary 3, the mixed Glee club willmeet once a week from 4 to 5:30p.m. in Rosenwald 8. The Men’sGlee club will occupy the Wednesday evening time-slot of 7 to 9,beginning February 1, also inRosenwald 2.ml M \\ * &,: v mMafNBP& at 'Monte Carlo7 danceStudents whose gambling instincts have been “frustrated by good-clean-government and the bursar’s office,” are welcome at 9 tonightin the assembly hall, International house. The occasion is the Nightin Monte Carlo dance, for which the admission charge is advertisedas “a paltry 25 cents for house residents” and 35 cents for those onthe “outside.” Patrons are advised by International house that a vice¬squad raid has been rendered statistically improbable by “cutting-in”suitable authorities, a well-established statistical procedure.“American know-how in this field has been strongly supplementedby certain European gentlemen studying advanced probability atEckhart hall.” according to A. W. Ghent, chairman of the Interna¬tional house publicity committee. One of these has been hard at workon the roulette wheel, Ghent said, with his nox-mal deviation tableand his little lead weights. Patrons are advised to read this gentle¬man’s progress report, from which Ghent has quoted: “Yah, is work¬ing fine already, but is provision like barrels maybe being made for13.783 per cent of customers who is losing shirt?” these lists are available to stu¬dents. According to Mrs. Paulsor\,student interviewer, applicationsfor jobs in the National parksshould be made directly to theDepartment of Agriculture inWashington, D. C,, as sodh aspossible.In the Chicago area, summerjobs, including industrial fwork,driving, clerical, child care, andcampus positions generally donot open before late May or June.Students interested in thc-se^jobsshould talk to Mrs. Paulson afterMarch 1. A list of applicants willbe established beginning at thattime and students on the list willbe called as jobs come in.TERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best”FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95We also carry a full line of Italian foods1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045A CASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter ServiceHI 3-9651 1322 E. 55th St. ACECYCLE SHOPYour BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we sellRepairs & Parts all makes819 E. 55 Ml 3-26729 A M. - 6 P.M.GORDON'SRe'stauran t19*Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 27, 1956EditorialPoliticking childish“He hit me first.” “She bit.” “Mommy, he scratched me.”Well, maybe the charges hurled back and forth between thetwo campus political parties are more substantial than chil¬dren’s complaints, but they make Student Government into more ofa children’s game than a governing body.It is no wonder that students fail to become excited over elections,and that each election the per cent of vote declines. Almost all of themotions passed at Monday’s controversial meeting dealt with StudentGovernment itself. The last meeting was concerned almost entirelywith whether or not the treasurer’s report was legal. Previous meet¬ing have devoted up to 30 minutes correcting the minutes.Controversy, by the way, centers over whether SRP deliberatelyplanned a meeting when ISL members were busy, or whether ISLdeliberately boycotted the meeting. Indeed, more ISL than SRP mem¬bers belong to girls’ clubs and fraternities meeting Monday nights.However, Monday seems to be as good a choice as any, for a specialmeeting, and it does seem odd that only one ISL member made itfor the whole meeting.Until Student Government devotes itself to less childish activities,the campus can hardly be blamed for preferring the deliberatelyhumorous Intra mural debate program.Issued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermittentlyduring the summer quarter, on a non-profit basis by the publisher, the ChicagoMaroon, at 1212 East 59ith Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial offices,Midway 3-0800, ext. 1003 and 3266; Business and advertising office, Midway 3-0800,ext. 3265. Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Business office hours: 2 p.m. toS p.m., Monday through Saturday.Co-editors-in-cHiefJoy S. Burbach Palmer W. PinneyManaging editorDiane Pollock Business managerGary MokotoffAdvertising manager Lawrence KesslerCopy editor Norman LewakNews editors Robert Bergman, Jack Burbach, Ronald Grossman, Fred Kar6tCultural editor Judy PodoreSports editor Robert HalaszNews feature editor Sue TaxProduction manager Robert Quinn (Friday); Jean Kwon (Tuesday)Photo editor John BystrynCalendar editor Earl HerrickHither and Yon editor Miriam GarfinOffice manager ... Adrienne KlnkaidStaff: Ed Berckman William Brandon. Joyce Ellin. Saralee Feldman. Jean Hargitt,John Herzog, Joan Kruegar, Bruce Larkin, Oliver Lee, Robert Moody, DonaldWll6on, Marina Wirzup, George Zygmund,Letters'Mob was robbed'Must you rob the Mathews mobof the victory they fought so hardto win last Thursday in the Rey¬nolds club south lounge?The crucial hand vote went to thefavor of the men of Mathews house14-11, not against them. Obviously UCpublic opinion inflamed not by hardfacts or valid logic but by the purpleJ>asslon of the ‘'mob" shouted long andoud, ‘‘Stagg field should be a gamepreserve” Thursday afternoon.Possibly Mr. McClintock was strickenby pangs of remorse because the gaygirls of Green fell before the onslaughtof the Mathews mob. That his ownhand stayed beneath his shoulder whenthe time for decision arrived may indi¬cate that he was among the portion ofthose present who professed to favorapathy towards the monumental ques¬tion at hand, but actually believed Inthe cause the Mathewsltes were fightingfor. This group, it should be known,was only carefully contrived negativeevidence for a future Reynolds club de¬bate, ‘‘Chivalry is dead!"Whatever the motives behind theMAROON’s mistake, truth must out. Letthe world know the public’s cry is“Stagg field should be a game preserve!"Wrathfully,Dave ZackEd WiseThe Mathews Mob ’AC should meet’I was once informed that themajority party of SG favors in¬creased student participation inSG activities. At the beginning of thisyear, I was so interested in SG activitiesthat I became a member of the Activi¬ties Coordination committee. However,the AC committee has not yet met.Early this year, the assembly instructedthe AC committee to perform someduties which they presumably consid¬ered worth doing, but no one has evertold the committee members how theyare to carry out these duties.I have iieard that the AC committeeis planning the mid-year orientationnight. I hope that someone is planningthis event, but it certainly isn’t the ACcommittee, since it hasn't met to doanything. The Activities Coordinationchairman, Tom Kapantais, has recentlyresigned. I sincerely hope that the newchairman will enable the members ofhis committee to join in that partici¬pation in SG activities which was prom¬ised to us by his party in its platformlast fall.Earl M. HerrickPeterson Moving& Storage Co.55th A Ellis Avenue “A delicious French comedy—Fer»nandel is a joy throughout"N.Y. HERALD TR»».FERJSAMDEL \la o JeHfhlfal "tans tie fane" % ■ 1Storage facilities for a trunk orcarload of household effectsPacking — ShippingLocal or long distance movingBUtterfield 8-6711 /’toeTheepPIF\H«5mDMfreCfift AT DIVISI08Dolce far niente, at...We carry a com¬plete line of wines,liquors and imports 55th fir UniversityMl 3-0524 SG Controversy —SRP: meeting is responsibleThe position of SRP in regard to the ISLcharges concerning the SG meeting of lastMonday is very simple. The position of ISLis to accept absolutely no responsibility in SG.Therefore the entire burden of SG’s many activitiesfalls upon SRP, which had an elected majority ofone. SRP was able to muster 22 out of 23 of itsdelegates for the meeting last Monday, but theISL was able to get one of its over 20 delegatesto attend (two came later in the evening and an¬other sat in the hall, deigning not to enter). SRPwas willing to contact absent ISL’ers, but was un¬able to, because last year’s vice-president of theGovernment tied up the telephone for some 30minutes.Considering this attendance record to be a typi¬cal example of the cooperation offered by theminority party, we felt that it was in the best inter¬ests of the Government to conduct a businessmeeting, rather than to play parliamentary games.If the campus judges us to have been wrong in ouractions then we bow to the will of our constituents,but we feel that democracy is a two-way street, andthat if ISL insists on its “minority be damned”attitude, then they ought to clean up at home be¬fore they come running, waving the Student Code.Mary A. Cliacarestoslion YillarejoJoel Rosenthal “Wort until he comet out. If you both go in, therewill be e quorum."ISL: meeting violates rightsISL finds it ironic that the very partywhich loudly boasts that it is the true cham¬pion of civil liberties should call a specialmeeting on a day when it is well known that lessthan one-third of ISL Government members canattend; should deny the minority party the rightto know what is to be discussed ai this extra¬ordinary meeting; should repeatedly violate lawsdesigned to protect the basic rights of minoritygroups; should support unprecedented rulings in¬tended to disguise the fact that the alleged meetingwas illegal on several counts; and should railroadthrough controversial legislation by ignoringquorum calls or ruling them “Frivolous, dilatory,and absurd,” even though there was plainly noquorum present.A by-law of student government states "... theagenda shall be posted no later than three hoursbefore, the scheduled meeting.” This guaranteesthe student body and the minority party an oppor¬tunity to know the issues for the evening. LastMonday the majority party completely disregardedthis legal guarantee of minority rights when theyfailed to disclose an agenda until a few minutes be¬fore the meeting. At the meeting the majorityparty proceeded to repeal this important bylaw.They also made this repeal retroactive, in order tojustify their failure to inform the campus. If thisrepeal stands it will be possible to pass controver¬sial legislation without giving the minority party achance to discuss the issue and take a stand.In violation of the Constitution of Student Gov¬ernment and the basic rights of members of anydemocratic body, legislation was passed at a meet¬ing when no quorum was present. No roll-call wastaken at the meeting in violation of the by-laws.A quorum call showed that no quorum was pres¬ent. Later requests for quorum were ruled "ab¬surd, dilatory, and frivolous” by the Chairman.Because of regularly scheduled meetings andclasses, ISL automatically loses 16 of its memberson Mondays. The majority chose this time when theminority could not be effectively represented and when no quorum was present, to pass an ava¬lanche of controversial legislation, including threeby-law amendments, an amendent to the electionlaw, and a number of major bills.ISL has always believed that Student Govern¬ment can be an effective organ of the student body.Such blatant disregard for laws and rules designedto protect the rights of the campus to know, andof the minority to have a voice in the decisions »»tthe student government, weakens the regard of thestudent body for its elected representatives. ISLwill continue to support all legitimate and worth¬while work of the Student Government, but it can¬not tolerate an attempt to illegally enforce adespotic rule hy a fraction of the assembly.Jan MetrosJohn LyonEmil JohnsonRELIANCE CAMERA &PHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63rd St.BU 8-6040 “Enjoy Our Fine Continental Cuisine inRelaxed Air Conditioned Atmosphere**CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Doily (except Mondays) from 4:30 - 10:00Sundays — 12 Noon - 10 P.M.1508 E. 57th Street Phone PLaza 2-0555EVERYTHING PHOTOGRAPHICCameras . . .for the beginner and advanced photog-rapher 35 mm., reflexes and all the restProcessing Supplies . . .ive can fill all your dark room needs.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUEJanuary 27, 1956 THE CHICACO MAROON Page 5Alpha Delta Phi Presentsin Piano ConcertDONALD LEVINEot the Chapter House, 5747 UniversityMondoy, January 30 8:30 pm.Admission free and without ticketKapell: * , , . one of those pianists of which there are only *three or four every hundred years.”Malcuxynsky: "You possess full command of tone, tech¬nique, and personality ...”"9 0- Qofe-©Of course. ’Most everyone does —often. Because a few moments overice-cold Coca-Cola refresh you so.It s sparkling with natural goodness,pure and wholesome — andnaturally friendly to your figure.Feel like having a Coke?BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYThe Coco-Cola Bottling Company of Chicogo, Inc.’’Coke” is a registered trade-mark. 1956, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY Not enough SG memberscome to special meetingby Diane Pollock‘ Quorum” and “Dilatory” were key words at a stormy session of Student Government,held on Monday instead of at the traditional Tuesday meeting time, due to the schedulingof the SRP Bradon lecture for Tuesday night.Accusations that a Government meeting had been scheduled on Monday as “shrewdstrategy” to assure that “conflicts with fraternity and girls club activities would makeISLers unable to attend,” were countered by SRP charges that ISL had “spent the day”informing its people not to at- —— ——photo by WiseRequests for records for the new pink 120 play 45 rpm juke boxIn the Cloisters may be left in the student activities office, Ida Noyes.The machine, installed Tuesday evening, will be serviced weekly bythe Acme company.Original choice of records was determined by the records mostpopular at University of Illinois at Chicago, the company service¬man noted.Classical records available on 45 r.p.m., including extended play,may be placed on the machine.The modern machine has a popularity tabulator to determine howof ion each record is played.Yearbook faking photosPersonal portraits for the 1956 Cap and flown will be taken atReynolds club all day Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursdayof nex» week.For two dollars four shots will be taken. The student will selectone to appear in Cap and Gown, and may keep remaining glossyprints. Twelve wallet-size prints will be given free of charge to allstudents whose pictures appear in the annual. tend, and “had even stationedsomeone outside the door ofthe meeting hall to tell those whodid show up not to come in.” Thethree hour meeting, characterizedby the conspicuous absence ofISL, the stern and lengthy SRPdenunciations of the minorityparty, and the repeated call for aquorum count, was marked bythe swift passage of bills, resolu¬tions, and amendments to the by¬laws.David Farquhar, SG presi¬dent, (SRP) ruling two re¬quests for quorum count “dila¬tory and obstructionist,” statedthat “the minority party hasdeliberately impeded govern¬ment business tonight by in¬structing its members not toattend.” Jan Metros, (ISL-eol.)when her request had beenruled dilatory for a second time,said that the “entire proceed¬ings of this meeting will be tak¬en to the court.”Miss Metros, the only ISL rep¬resentative who was presentthroughout the entire meeting(there were never more than twoISLers’ in the room at any onepoint) was accused by majorityleader Don Anderson of havingbeen sent by ISL “specifically forthe purpose of calling the quor¬um.”Miss Metros first requestedthat a count be taken after thepassage of four amendments tothe bylaws. When Farquhar ruledthe request dilatory, there were23 people in the room, one shortof those necessary to constitute aquorum. Arnold Knephei, (ISL-med. however, took his seat im¬mediately after and his name wasentered in the minutes.At a later point, when MissMetros again asked for a count,there was, as several SRPersnoted, “clearly no quorum.”Farquhar, in asking the body touphold the “dilatory” rulingwhich he again rendered, ex¬plained that “Under normal cir¬cumstances when there are notPortrait StylistBlack and White andDirect ColorPhotographyBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. 24 people present, it is clearlynot dilatory to request a count.”Describing the ‘special’ aspectsof the situation, he said: “Ashead of this Government, 1 havethe responsibility of seeing thatIt behaves itself, and that itaccomplishes what it pledgedthe campus that it would ac¬complish.”Paul Breslow (SRP-soc. sci.pointed out that the change inmeeting time was “far from a de¬vious political maneuver on thepart of the majority party. Wenevertheless felt it our duty tocome and fulfill our responsibili¬ties,” he said, and added, “Itmight be interesting to recall thewierd Friday hours at which ISLSummer Executive council meet¬ings were called.”To the charge by Miss Metrosthat “It’s the same kind of tacticas the Senate calling a meeting onGood Friday,” Majority leaderDon Anderson retorted from hischair, “This is the first time I’veever heard party night, fraterni¬ties, and girls club meetings com¬pared on the same level withGood Friday.”During the latter part of themeeting SRP membership was di¬vided on the issue of the “legality” and “fairness” of the Chair’slast refusal to call the quorum,though the Chair’s ruling was up¬held in a 5-3-3 vote.Jan Porter (SRP-col. heldthat the ruling had been valid“up to the last portion of themeeting, just before the grouptook final action on the emer¬gency committee.”“There is no doubt in my mindas to what the tactics of ISL havebeen,” Miss Porter said. “I havebeen disgusted by those tacticsnot only tonight. But, this doesnot negate our responsibility totake a principled, fair stand. Acall for a quorum is never dila¬tory and absurd, particularlywhen there is obviously not onepresent.”Another source of contro¬versy at the meeting revolvedaround a resolution to set up aspecial committee to end dis¬crimination in all Universityhousing files. After debate a 13-1 vote empowered an emergen¬cy SG committee to “take allnecessary action in eliminatingall discriminatory featuresfrom the University housingn * 3mmy sSINCE 1940COMO PIZZERIA1520 E. 55 FA 1-5525Free Delivery to U.C. StudentsON ALL PIZZASMALLCHEESE . .1.15SAUSAGE . .1.45ANCHOVY . .1.45PEPPER and ONION . .1.30SHRIMP . . 1.70COMBINATION . 1.75SPECIAL!Vi Fried Chicken . . . .1.00Potatoes ond Bread files.” “All past Student Gov¬ernments,” the resolution states,. “have failed to eliminate dis¬crimination in the Universityhousing files, the administra¬tion of the University has takenno effective action towards theelimination of'this discrimina¬tion, and the SG believes theproblem deserves concerted ef¬fort.”Farquhar’s explanation that“though the committee does nothave to come to SG for approvalbefore it acts,” the Government“can vote to disapprove any ac¬tion and can deny responsibilityfor any action which the commit¬tee may take,” did not satisfy JoelRosenthal, who commented, “Idon’t like turning them loose witha complete carte blanche, no mat¬ter how responsible they are.”A proposal by MiltKotler (SRP-soc.) to amend the resolution sothe committee would not be em¬powered to act without securingeither the unanimous consent ofthe committee members or theapproval of the Student Goveln-ment, was defeated.Miss Metros, who had voted“yes” to the housing file commit¬tee asked to have her votechanged when she discovered thatthe Kotler “either-or” clause hadnot passed. Athan Theoharis <TSL-col.), in the room for a fev.* min¬utes, when asked if he too wishedto have his affirmative votechanged to an abstention, com¬mented. “Might as well. I don'tknow what I'm voting for any¬way.”Before any question had l>eenraised concerning quorums” andcounting (even before the rolewas called), four amendments tothe by laws and election lawswere passed: Write in votes weremade legal; the necessity for post¬ing the agenda of governmentmeetings three hours previous tothe meeting was abolished; a ma¬jority vote may invoke closureon any debate, providing 5 peoplehave spoken on each side of anissue; and a 20 minute period ateach SG meeting is to be devotedto a “town hall,” at which all stu¬dents are invited to discuss sndask questions of their SG repre¬sentatives.When the body was asked toappropriate $35.75 to Phi DeltaTheta in payment for meals thefraternity has provided oneFrankfort exchange student, itwas alleged that Phi DeltaTheta operates in violation ofthe Michigan code (which for¬bids discriminatory fraternitypolicies). Breslow suggestedthat “in the future a more dem¬ocratic fraternity, which doesnot discriminate, be secured toextend this courtesy to ex¬change students.”Farquhar was authorized tosign a contract with the “FlyingTiger” air line, if 66 UC stu¬dents planning summer Furo-pean trips wish to take advan¬tage of a $350 round trip ratefrom New York to Amsterdam.The “Flying Tiger” rate is onehalf of that charged by sched¬uled air lines.Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt RosenbaumQptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372IPage 6 THE CHICACO MAROON January 27, 1956Miss Carol Collier, prettysinger who will appear withBuddy Morrow’s orchestra atthe forthcoming Wash Prom. Prom committeePlans exciting' danceWash Prom committee is making plans to provide the “ex¬citement of downtown atmosphere” for the dance to be heldFebruary 27 at Hutchinson commons.The picture (left) is an indication of the quality expectedfrom Buddy Morrow’s orchestra, one of the country’s prom¬inent bands.Parties and open houses before and after the dance will beheld by several fraternities. The lounges in Reynolds clubwill be open, with music in each room.The committee will be work¬ing to turn the Commons intoa “more than adequate” ball¬room. UC prof debatesBe van on radioSpecial advantage of the Com¬mons is its proximity to the livingarea of most students.The committee feels that theevening of entertainment will ap¬peal to graduate and undergradu¬ate students alike students maybuy tickets now from committeemembers. Milton Friedman, professor ofeconomics at UC, tangles withEngland’s stormy labor-leader,Aneurin Bevan, in a discussion ofsocialized medicine, “Who shouldpay for medical care?,” on UC’sNew World radio program at10:35 a.m. Sunday, on NBC’s net¬work show Monitor.Classified AdvertisementsPersonal©ear Midas—I'm staking my claim fora date with you on February 3. Fondly,Goldigger.Who can make people understand. Com¬pass charges bar prices (no minimum)Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays?Dave, FA 4-2800.Dear Goldigger—It’s only fifty cents aperson to join the rush at Ida Noyes,February 3. And what an investment!Midas. For rentOne small apartment close to UC andIC. One person. 6023 Kenwood. BU 8-9424Pleasant room furnished as study withprivately tiled bathroom and sun porchIn private residence 54th and Green¬wood. $40. FA 4-0741.Dormitory rooms for men. $7.50 perweek. Kitchen facilities, linen, library-lounge. 6048 S. Harper. FA 4-2077, DE2-5833, ext. 49. Mrs Deaderlck. Three-room furnished apartment toshare with girl student. Near campusand IC. Piano. Call PL 2-9479 after 9:30p.m., H. Silver.ServicesPiano instructions with a pianist. Thor¬ough training. Beginners or advanced.At your home If north of 53rd or eastof Greenwood or at my residence studio.Norman Curtis, OA 4-9293. If not inleave message. Arts Festival dateFestival of the Arts was tentatively scheduled for April20-29 at last week’s first 1956 FOTA committee meeting.The faculty-student committee, headed by John Nethertoncollege dean of students, is planning an art exhibit, a concertby the University symphony, a jazz concert, athletic eventslectures, oratorical events and the Beaux Arts ball. In addi¬tion to other events given by art, music, literary, and theatergroups, International house will hold a festival of native crafts¬manship.Featuring both student tal¬ent and contributions by out¬side entertainers and lecturers,the program will feature new at¬tractions in addition to repeats ofthose sponsored by the variouscommittees of last year’s Festival.Students interested in joiningthe various committees may con¬tact one of the personnel at thestudent activities office in IdaNoyes hall.“The Festival gives promise ofbeing one of the biggest events oncampus this year,” a FOTAspokesman stated. “The Festivalof the Arts was a huge successlast year and with this encourage-; MALPRACTICE INSURANCE J► ALL LINES OF INSURANCE J► Phone of Write ]► Joseph H. Aaron, '27 \► 135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060] ment the committee is planningan extensive and elaborate pro¬gram.”Goldiggers hopGoldiggers’ Ball, a unique un¬dertaking in “mixer-dances” willbe given next Friday, Feb. 3. inthe Cloister club of Ida Noyeshall.Stag men and women are in-vited to attend this dance, spon¬sored by a council of women'sorganizations. According to MaryAlice Newman, if a couple wishesto attend “the girl must ask thefellow.”Tickets to the dance are 50cents per person.The ColleqeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236Your doctor will tell you — aNoDoz Awakencr i9 safe as anaverage cup of hot, black cof¬fee. Take a NoDoz Awakenerwhen you cram for that exam...or when mid-afternoonbrings on those “3 o’clock cob¬webs.” You’ll find NoDoz givesyou a lift without a letdown...nelpsyou snap back to normaland fight fatigue safely!lobMf t torga •conomy »!»« ft A** (for Cr»«k Rom and My*Dorms) 60 tablets —NODOZAWAKE NERSSAM A» COfFIITemporary interviewing jobs open withNational Opinion Research Center. 57X1Woodlawn. All work In or near HydePark during 6-week period. Flexiblehours but 40-hour week desirable. CallMrs. Calloway. FA 4-7354.MODEL CAMERA SHOP1.129 E. 55th St. H13.9259HyWe Park's Most CompleteCamera ShopNSA MiscountCrammingfor Exams?Bunny: Sadie said the weddiny is thetwelfth. Will you and Astrid be In? I’mgoing brick hunting with Lois andDiane Saturday. Rat is wonderful. Love,Dantes.Missing: A black-haired female, scar onleft side In form of letters ML.” An¬swers to "Llllith.” RewardSue: Just because you won the dancecontest, it doesn’t make you a BambiLynn, Moneybags.Gamin Dreggers: Today — same time,same place. Have a ball.Ukrainski kavaleri: Teper Ja choczu piti jna Juhoslawskyl balet. Hapcla,Mr. McNeill: Sorry, no by-lines. Toomuch work. Glad you’re with us. Weneed advice. SueMarv: It is true that ZBT has pledgesio burn? Save a few small ones for us.RGHelp wantedExperienced IBM operator. Part time.Call Mr. Meier, FA 4-7354, NationalOpinion Research Center,Babv-sitter, permanent. Monday-Friday.NO 7-6054. Young scientistworks on new waysto improve metalsToday scientists and engineers face one ofthe toughest barriers of all — the “inetalbarrier.” Modern technology has progressedso rapidly that today’s metals can’t meet thetremendous demands placed upon them. Forsuch fields as aviation, electronics, atomicenergy, present metals must be improved andnew kinds of materials must be developed.One of the young men playing a role inthis new and important field is 30-vear-oldDr. Roland P. Carreker, Jr.Carreker’s Work Interesting, VitalAs a research associate in the General Elec¬tric Research Laboratory’s Metals andCeramics facility, Carreker’s chief concernis the improvement of metals through newprocessing techniques.In his work, Dr. Carreker has dealt withsuch important metallurgical problems asmetal failure in high-speed turbine rotors,determining the strength of pure metalsfrom —425 F, the temperature of liquidhydrogen, to 2,800CF and economic studiesof new metallurgical processes.25,000 College Graduates at General ElectricWhen Carreker came to General Electric in1947, he already knew the work he wantedto do. Like each of our 25,000 college-graduate employees, he is given a chance togrow and realize his full potential. For Gen¬eral Electric has long believed this: Whenfresh young minds are given freedom tomake progress, everybody benefits — the in¬dividual, the company, and the country,Educational Relations, General ElectricCompany, Schenectady 5, IS, Y.What young people are doing at General ElectricFight “Book Fatigue" SafelyDR. ROLAND CARREKER joined GeneralElectric in 1947 after receiving a B.S.in 1945 and an M.S. in 1947 at theUniversity of Illinois. He received hisPh.D. in 1955 at R.P.I. under a G-Eprogram. During World War II heserved on active duty as a naval officer.THE CHICAGO MAROON Page TJanuary 27, 1956READER'SCampus DrugStore61 $t and EllisOpp. B-J CourtsThe U. of C/sFavorite MeetingPlace for 29 YearsVisit OurCollege RoomRegistered PharmacistsReady toServe Your NeedsAt All TimesSHIRTS II* fad.Beautifully Washed and Ironedwhen included with ourWASH and DRY service8 Lbs. - 89*KWIK - WAYCASH AND CARRY LAUNDRY1214 E. 61st Street Between Woodlawn one Kimbork“ftotiur Student Laundry for 45 I'enr#’’V.. and get a better shave! Old Spice Pre-Electric ShaveLotion sets up your beard—tunes up your shaver. Stops dragging,hogging and over-heating. The new, non-oily lubricant, “Isophyl”,*prepares the skin for easy gliding... lubricates the shaver cuttingedges for greatest efficiency. '^00SHULTON New York • TorontoNo federal tax♦Trade Mark hyde park theatrelake pork at 53rd NO 7-9071Student rate 50c all performancesStarting Friday, January 27WALT DISNEY'S Charming Shaggy Dog Story“THE LADY akd the TRAMP"DISNEY has done it again . . . achieved sheer motion picture magicin the first Cinemascope full-length feature cartoon ever to be made.First-rote entertainment tor everyone aged 4 to 90!ANDThe Ever-Enchanting “LIU” with LESLIE CARONJEAN PIERRE AUMONTKURT KASZNARMEL FERRERAt fast! At last! Coming soon!Coming next week!Starting Friday, February 3THE INCOMPARABLE FERNANDEL in"THE SHEEP HAS FIVE LEGS"and - * not to be outdone by MR. FERNANDEILMR. MAGOO wHI appear in FIVE FAMOUS CARTOON ROLESADPhi gives concert; UCer to solo Martha Schlamme gives concertbrings pianist LevineAlpha Delta Phi will sponsor a free concert Monday, Janu¬ary 30, 8:30 p.m. at the chapter house, 5747 University. Don¬ald Levine, a pianist who William Kapell and Witold Malcuz-ynsky predicted would become one of the world’s greatest,will perform compositions byBeethoven, Debussy, Chopin,Rachmaninoff, and himself. ^ f \ ^ ‘ JAlthough he was born in LosAn'.roles, Chicago claims Lovinoluvauso the pianist spent his hoy-and received his early musi- HHHHBi a 1 training here. At 15 he wasm .'icing lessons under scholar->hip with the late Ileniot Levy ofthe American conservatory, from ' ; , j?which Levine holds the degrees ofbachelor and master of arts. JkIIPPII-| would not be surprised,” |r* «/■:' , <:siaied the late William Kapell, Iff1renowned concert pianist, “if youbecame one of those pianists of § ? i ~ ' 4'11 nfiifii'L^T.'*which there are only three or four is Ikevery century due to your appar- Donald Levineent grasp of the monumental uonaia Lev neworks.”UT plays ‘Tonight at 8:30?Thomas Metzger, UC graduatestudent (music dept.), will solo atthe third chamber concert of theCollegiate Sinfonietta on Sunday,January 29, 8 p.m., in Fullertonhall, the Art institute, Michiganat Adams.Metzger, an artist student of theconcert-’cellist Leopold Teraspul-sky (who will appear at this sea¬son’s last Sinfonietta concert), hasplayed first ’cello since the groupwas founded on campus threeyears ago by its conductor, DieterKober; Sunday marks their 13thappearance.Metzer, who premiered Stamitz'first cello concerto last seasonwith the Sinfonietta, will give thefirst U.S. performance of the Con¬certo in G minor for ’cello andorchestra by G. Matthias Monn, aViennese contemporary of Mozart.The work was especially hand-copied for the Sinfonietta, for,even after 200 years, the concertoremains unpublished.Student discount tickets, 75c,can be obtained at the StudentService Center in Reynolds clubScenes from plays by Clifford Odets,Tennessee Williams, Jean Giraudoux, Car-son McCullers, and Jan deHartog will bepresented by University Theatre tonightand Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in the ReynoldsClub Theatre, in a program entitled To¬night at 8:30.The semi-annual series of workshop per¬formances will be repeated next weekend,February 3 and 4. Admission for any nightis 50 cents, and tickets can be purchasedat the door.Audience reaction to a special previewperformance two weeks ago indicated par¬ ticular enthusiasm for Nora Buch and NedGaylin, who played a scene from TennesseeWilliams’ The Rose Tattoo. Continued re¬sponse this weekend may warrant a laterperformance of the entire play.Casting for MandragolaDirector Alex Hassilev announced finalcasting for UT’s forthcoming production inMandel Hall — Machiavelli’s MANDRA¬GOLA. Included in the cast of nine areShelby Kavin, John Meyer, Sandra Platz,William Zavis, George Wellwarth, and Car¬ol Morning.FREE RESEARCH AIDIf you are doing research on theSoviet Union (or are just inter¬ested), use the help available at theoffices and library of the ChicagoCouncil of American-Soviet Friend¬ship, Suite 403, 189 W. Madison. AN3-1877, AN 3-1878. Open 9-5, Monday-Saturday. of 'Songs of many lands'Martha Schlamme, internationally-known folk singer, wiUgive a concert of "Songs of many lands,” sponsored by theStudent Representative party, in Mandel hall on Saturdayevening, Feb. 4. Tickets to the concert are available in theStudent Service center, Reynolds club basement, for $1 and$1.50.Miss Schlamme, a native ofVienna, has given concertsin England, Canada, andthroughout the United States;and her concerts have receivedconsistent critical acclaim.She has also made numerousradio and television appearances;and her songs have been recordedby the Columbia, Vanguard, andTikvah companies.Her repertoire, for which shehas traveled extensively in Eu¬rope and North America, includesfolk songs in more than a dozenlanguages, as well as classicalsongs. She accompanies her pro¬gram with commentary and anec¬dotes about her songs.Miss Schlamme will be accom¬panied in this concert by pianistTanya Gould. Martha SchlammeGarbo emotes again!Doc film gives 'Joyless,The Joyless Street, starring Greta Garbo, will be presentedtonight at 7:15 and 9:15 in Social Science 122 as the secondin a series of pre-Hitler German films sponsored by the Docu¬mentary Film group. Show comingThe film, directed by G. W.Pabst, is an exposition of thetragic downfall of the middleclass, and is valued today as a Preview of the Broadway hit,Inherit the Wind has been sched¬uled for Tuesday, Feb. 7, by thedocumentation of the background American Civil Liberties union.of Nazism.Admission to the film is by se¬ries ticket only.3/ie tjMum PHOTOGRAPHERS The play, starring Melvyn Doug¬las, is based on the Scopes “mon¬key” trial of the ’20s which hadClarence Darrow and WilliamJennings Bryan as opposing coun¬sels. The ACLU brought Darrowinto the case at the time.Tickets for the preview may beobtained from the ACLU office,19 South LaSalle.1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433The A •Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekHarry BelafonteVol. 2LPM 11503.19——“—Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON JF/nuary 27, 195$Written constitution in low esteem Intramurals in full swingsays Loewenstein, Walgreen lecturerby Oliver Lee“It is a tragedy that, just when nearly all nations of the world have come to accept theWritten constitution as indispensible, it has become alienated from the masses/’ said KarlLoewenstein, professor of political science and jurisprudence at Amherst college, in the fourthWalgreen lecture on “Political power and the process of government.”Except in the United States and in Switzerland, the written constitution has fallen intolow esteem. To the comman man, the constitution appears to be merely a plaything forlawyers and politicians, Loew-Athletic department holdsalumni day tomorrowSaturday has been proclaimed ty good old grads.Alumni day by the athletic de- Meanwhile, Bartlett gym willpartment, and most athletic teams be buzzing as the wrestling teamnow in competition will be par- takes on Notre Dame at 2 p.m.,ticipating on campus. while the fencers meet the alumniAt 1:30 p.m. the varsity track downstairs at the same time,team will take on their blood Finally, at 7:30 p.m., the gym-VaTr iousext'raucons titutional brothers, the UC Track club. This nasts will top off a sports daywill serve as a prevue to the var- with a meet against Navy Pier.enstein held. It contains thingsin which he is not interested,and of those things which con¬cern him most—good wages, jobsecurity, education for his chil¬dren. etc.—the constitution makesno mention.In the Scandinavian countriesIt is the social institutions that areimportant, and not the constitu¬tion. In Germany and Italy,Loewenstein reported, the com¬mon man pays no attention tothe constiution at all. It’s do or die for Salisbury in the college house bowlingleague, as they trail first place Coulter by four points. Salis¬bury will meet Coulter in the last match of the season, andthey must make a clean sweep of all four game points to tieCoulter. Even if Coulter wins, however, the other teams willhave another crack at them when a new season starts twoweeks hence. Mike O’Hara of ~ .7 —0 u , ,. . , . cheff, intramural director, has theCoulter has the highest pin j0b Qf arranging schedules andaverage, and he also holds the dates for more than a dozenhigh individual game record of teams in about twenty different215. sports.Bowling is only one of many in¬tramural sports now under way.In basketball, Psi Upsilon and Phi yg,^|aQQQ|C ODGflSKappa Psi lead the fraternity 9league, with 3-0 records each, ealoc #>AnfocfCoulter holds the college house 3,0VWMIC5Ilead by virtue of a 32-29 squeaker Cap and Gown has announcedover second place Vincent. The the opening of a sales contest,“Old Folks A. C.” and the Eagles, with prizes to be awarded to thecomposed of law school students, students who sell the largest num-are unbeaten in the fast moving ber of yearbooks.sity basketball game, in which theUC team plays the alumni. Seven¬teen lettermen from days of yorehave promised to play, and theyshould give the varsity a goodgame. While this is going on. BillMoyle, tennis coach, will havesome of his boys playing informaltennis matches against some pret- Other sports activity over theweekend will see the JV basket¬ball team play Harvard Highschool on the opponent’s floor Fri¬day. the varsity hoopsters at Il¬linois Tech to play the Engineers,and the varsity swimmers tangleagainst Bradley at Peoria Satur¬day.Baseball PracticingJV wins thrillerconstitution has become universaland the formula, “all power eman¬ates from the people.” is sacro¬sanct.The final lecture of the seriestakes place today at 4:30 p.m. collegiate baseball. The athleticdepartment provides all equip¬ment, including gloves and spikes,for baseball candidates, and CoachAnderson urges all interested tosee him.NSA researchers turn out reporton college governments leadersa function of the sort of school—public or private, Protestant,Catholic or nondenominational—but not of the size of schoolcontaining them. So says a re-port of the US National Stu-dent associations student ac- bating old issues, and doesn‘t ac¬tivities research project, entitled compiish anything, (2) it is aStudent Government, Student bunch of politicians who haveLeaders, and the American Col- ^eir ambitions in mind rather*e^e*, than the interests of the student v „ ... rYK,„ aiA,uStudent governments are an al- body, (3) it is a tool or puppet of straight victory from their Lutherthe administration. North counterparts.MiiiiiiiiHiiiiiHiiimiiimiHiiifiiiimiiHiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi'.| Check Those Features =I ✓ PROMPT SERVICE I| / DEPENDABILITY =5 V ECONOMY =E ... and then remember ... ES — The Students Favorite — Emost universal .characteristic ofAmerican colleges, according tothe recent publication. The gov¬ernments gain more prestige byobtaining new functions than bymaintaining old ones efficiently,the report states.UC alumnus Eliot Friedson ed¬ited the 88 page publication. It isavailable, at two dollars per copy,from the USNSA, 1234 GimbelBuilding, Philadelphia 7, Penna,Typical criticisms of a studentJO BANKScreative photography1420 E. 55H* MV 4-7988HSA Di*c««*tBooks Bought• Any Subject• Any Language• Any QuantityClark & ClarkMYdt Fa«* 3 03211204 E. 59th St. NICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063Barbecue Ribs - Chicken - Ravioli - SpaghettiFree delivery to 1I. of C. studentsOn any orderQuick Courteous Service — 6 Days a WeekClosed MondaysTable Service Delivery ServiceII A.M. to 2 A.M. 11 A.M. to 2 AM.Open HU 3 A.M. on Friday and Saturday divisional league.Many minor sports, such All students interested shouldas call Michael Birenbaum, salestechniques, such as pressuregroups, are deemed more rele¬vant to the attainment of the com¬mon man’s goals, Loewensteinstated. “There has been an escapefrom constitutionalism, and evenan escape from freedom. Thegates have been opened for thePied Pipers with their eschato¬logical promises, resulting in theestablishment of authoritarian, to¬talitarian, and autocratic govern¬ments.”Another reason why constitu¬tions have fallen into ill repute ...... . . „ , .. .. , . ,is that they often adopted to With spring still officially two months off, a class m base-camouflage autocratic institu- ball is being held in the Fieldhouse, where since January 10tions, Loewenstein pointed out. varsjty baseball candidates have been working out. The classply what they say. They have 1S held every day from 12:30 to 2 p.m., and Kyle Anderson,become a living lie.” baseball coach, reports that 21 men are enrolled in the class.In reviewing the historical evo- Many openings can be filled by baseball hopefuls, particu-enstein described the first period larly in .the Phching depai t-as that of the unwritten consti- nient, where not one veterantution, as found among the an- 1S back from last year. Coachcient Hebrews, the Greeks, and Anderson has scheduled a morethe earlv Romans. The second challenging slate of teams thanwas that of the formalization of last year's array, and six major table tennis, squash racquets, bad- manager, at the Cap and Gownminton, handball, and even horse- office, extension 3273, or come toshoe pitching, are played in intra- the office on the third floor ofmural competition throughout the Ida Noyes any Wednesday or Fri-intramural league. Kooman Boy- day afternoon between 3 and 4:30.The JV basketballers blew alate lead against Luther Northconstitutional rules, primarily in lettermen will be back to help Tuesd and went on t0 win aEngland but climaxed by the out. ...... A . ,adoption of the American consti- All male students, including thriller in triple overtime, 40-38.tution. The third period is the graduate students and freshmen, With the regulation game endedpresent one, where the written are eligible to compete in inter- at 38-38, the teams went throughtwo two-minute overtimes with¬out scoring a basket before StanGoldblatt scored from the keyholeto become U-High’s hero of thehour. John Davey, the JV’s majorattraction, missed four shots inthe overtimes before Goldblattplunked his in. Davey continuedto be big gun for the team with28 points, earning him the highestpoint average in the privateStudent government organizations and responsibilities are iea£ue-The JV squad had previouslysplit two other thrillers, losingto Luther South 62-57. but edgingNorth Park 49-48. The boys havelooked better with each progres¬sive game, and if a few will beback again next year. Coach JoeStampf’s job will be made easier.After the JV thriller, the frosh-soph team won their sixth Two C-Group teams are shown in competition in the Intramuralbowling league. The alleys are located in Ida Noyea basement,Where bowling Ls free, but players must set their own pins.| International House Ulovies || Room CDE, Mon. A Thurs. evening at 7 A 9 p.m. §Monday, Jan. 30 — 45c — The Red Inn (French)E Thursday, Feb. 2 — 35c — Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (American) |jHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimmtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiirB1 University Quick Laundry iE 1376 East 55th Street E| PLaza 2-9097 |niiiiiiitiimirimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiT If you are interested in the following titles, please callthe University of Chicago Press and ask them to releasethese books for immediate sale:Chiera: They Wrote on Clay $1.00Cassirer: The Renaissance Philosophyof Man $1.75Dewey: The Child and the Curriculum:The School and Society $1.25Hayek: The Road to Serfdom. . * . . . .$1.00Maritain: Man and the State $1.25Strauss, Anselm: The Social Psy¬chology of George Herbert Mead . .$1.50They are ready now. The warehouse has them. Thereis no reason (except a lack of interest in their own books)for the University of Chicago Press to refrain from releas¬ing them now to one of their most faithful outlets:SCHNEEMANN’S1328 E. 57th St.