Social Activities Councildissolved; question moveSocial Activities council (SAC) has been dissolved. Barbara Quinn, acting chairman, citedlack of interest and the fact that functions of SAC are being fulfilled by others as the mainreasons for the disbanding. Since no one has showed up for scheduled meetings, the group isconsidered dissolved.However, one of the members, Bob Berger, informed the Maroon that the lack of peopleat the meetings was due to a misunderstanding.Although he agrees thatagreesSAC is superfluous and willprobably be dissolved, hewants the official dissolutionto come from the membershipitself. He said that the twoother SAC members he hadtalked to agreed with him.SAC was formed in thespring of 1955 after the oldStudent Union was disbanded.The purposes of the new coun¬cil as set forth in its consti¬tution. were to plan all-campussocial events and regulate theentire social calendar so as tomaintain a balanced socialprogram and avoid conflicts be¬tween events. In its first year ofoperation, SAC declared itself tol>.‘ solely for the purpose of regu¬lating and encouraging socialevents, not executing them.With the resultant lack of ast11<lent organized and student-runpi inning organization, StudentUnion was re-formed last spring.St's function is to plan social af¬files. including Wash Prom,which was under SAC directionlast year. Sylvia Boyd, SU presi¬dent. remarked, “SAC was formedto sponsor events and to regulatecertain aspects of the University’ssoi it program. The reorganiza¬tion of SU has mitigated the nec¬essity for another group sponsor¬ing major events. It seems also that SAC was unable to obtain a strong interest in reorganizingthe power needed to regulate the SAC, and desire to do somethingsocial calendar.” . .. , ,. . . ... about it, the group may go backA change in the student codethat would have permitted SAC ‘ operation.to close dates on which all-campusevents were scheduled was de¬feated when submitted to cam¬pus referendum. At present, onlythe director of student activitiescan designate a social event “all¬campus” and thus close the dateto any other affairs.In addition to this restrictionon its planning and regulatoryfunctions, those functions weresomewhat taken over by the new“social and reservations counsel¬lor” of Ida Noyes hall. This posi¬tion was created to help studentgroups plan social events. Theoffice in Ida Noyes maintains acalendar of all social affairs toaid in such counselling—anotherfunction of SAC last year.Members of SAC apparentlyfelt that since all the functionsof the organization are beingtaken care of by SU and the socialcounsellor, that there was noneed to continue. Miss Quinnstated that after talking to in¬dividuals on the council (shecould never get them all togetherat once, not even for scheduledSAC meetings), she thought theyagreed that there is no need forthe council to go on. She said,however, that if students evidence Itchy feet? Be a diplomatEver yearn to travel, to dance among cherry blossoms inJapan, slosh through the canals of Venice, search for a fillingstation in Timbuctoo? If you are between the ages of 20 and 31and a US citizen for at least nine years, If you can read andwrite, if you have general ability and background and canchatter, gossip, or merely be morose in a modem foreign lan¬guage, drop in to Social Science 122 today at 10:30, 2 to 4, tomeet George Fennemore of the State Department. You too canbe nominated by the President m a foreign service officer ofclass eight, Vice Consul and Secretary in the diplomatic service.Pay is $4750 to $5350 per year, depending on age, experience,and qualifications, appointments being made to any of the 268embassies, legations and consulates abroad; or to the Depart¬ment of State in Washington, D. C., if the canals of Veniceleave you cold (and soggy’).u\ chlcaqo11 laroonVol. 65, No. 8 University of Chicago, Friday, October 12, 1956 31Chancellor greets UC’ersat annual autumn receptionClubs start seasonwith gala rushing teaInterclub rush tea for all women will be in Ida NoyesWednesday, 3to 5. Women "Students interested in clubs andin meeting the club women are invited to the informal tea.Rush week itself, October 21 to November 1, will featureparties each night of the rush- Five hundred and two peo¬ple went through the receptionline to shake hands withChancellor and Mrs. LawrenceA. Kimpton, Marshal Harold An¬derson, Dean and Mrs. McCreaHazlett, Dean and Mrs. John P.Netherton, and Dean and Mrs.Robert M. Strozier Saturdaynight at the annual Chancellor’sreception and dance. This num¬ber exceeded last year’s total byabout 150, estimated WalterJeschke, Ida Noyes guard, whokept the official count.Although the reception line end¬ed at 9:30, the dancing in the crowded Cloister club continueduntil midnight to the music ofWillie Schiller and his orchestra.Comparing it with his last UC ap¬pearance two years ago, Schillersaid that many more dancers“showed a lot of life” this year.A bystander noted that “When the fast music started, the floordidn’t empty.”Perhaps the most surprisingaspect of the large turnout wasthat it occurred despite a lack ofany concerted publicity.Student aides assisted at the re¬ception.ir\g period by the five girls’clubs.These women’s clubs now ac¬tive on campus are Delta Sigma,Esoteric, Mortarboard, Quadran-glers, and Sigma, whose totalmembership as of spring, 1956was 123. This is an increase overtiie figure for 1955, which was 91.Earh organization is represent¬ed in a club-ordinating groupcalled the Interclub council, whoseofficers are Elenie Kostopoulos,president; Brina Jaffe, vice-presi¬ dent; Barbara Quinn, secretary,and Roberta Smisko!, treasurer.The rushing chairman is MaryJane Slabodnik.Usual activities of the women’sclubs include social events andcharity work. Among the formerare coffee dates with fraternities,Interclub ball. Mother’s Day tea,and the Interclub Sing. The clubs’charity work and philanthropicendeavors include support of theWorld Service drive and the RedCross. Organizationsmust registerAll organizations on UC cam¬pus must be registered withthe Student Activities office.Organizations have receivedcommunication concerning theregistration of officers, mem¬bers, faculty advisors, meetingdates, etc. All groups that havenot yet received such lettersregarding registration mayget them at the Student Ac¬tivity office. photo by WilsoaChancellor and Mrs. Lawrence A. Kimpton speak with two of the500 people who attended the Chancellor’s reception Saturday night.Dean Streeter explains new requirements for quarterliesl>y Ronald GrossmanDouble-F, unearned-F, hon-est-F, R, non-efective students•— these are terms used by thecollege faculty in making therecent decision to change reg¬ulations governing the quarterlyexamination system.An interview — prompted bythese changes — with Robert E.Streeter, dean of the college,yielded much pertinent informa¬tion behind the reasons for thisChange.These new regulations are thefirst step in making the^juarterlyexams bear some “weight” in thestudents’ curriculum program, in¬stead of serving merely as advis¬ory grades.Study “non-effective” studentsBeginning in 1954, the Collegefaculty undertook a study of whatwas termed “non-effective” stu¬dents—those students who gaveso little evidence of work in a par¬ticular course, that no instructorwas able to pass any judgment onthe kind of work done by thatstudent.This study was prompted bythe number of unearned F’s (F'sgiven to students who failed totake the quarterly exam in a course). At the end of the 1954-55academic year, a list of compscores of these students was thencompiled.The faculty apparently found arather close correlation betweenthe work, or lack of it, from these“non-effective” students and theircomprehensive scores. And thescores were low.Decide passing grade necessaryThe final step in this survey,then, was last spring’s decision torequire the passing of at least onequarterly exam for comp registra¬tion eligibility.This created the term “double-F.” Any student who receives twofailing grades in a row, either asan unearned-F (given when thestudent fails to take a quarterlyexam), or the honest-F (self-ex¬planatory), is ineligible for regis¬tration for the comprehensiveexam in that course.“We are interested in preserv¬ing the standards of the compre¬hensive,” said Streeter. “The quar¬terly examination should closelyapproximate the comprehensive.”Asked about the grading of col¬lege quarterlies and comprehen-sives, Streeter said that the compsare not graded on the curve. “Cer¬tain anchor items are used year tion is being given to letting thequarterly exams count as part ofafter year in college comps. Inthis way the test is graded on anabsolute standard.”Explaining the grading system,Streeter mentioned that if thelowest average grade, for a num¬ber of years, on a quarterly was25, and the lowest grade for a cer¬tain year should be 28, probablyno grades of F would be givenout for that quarter.Will Quarterlies Count?Asked if any active considera-Using 100 as normal ineach of six grade categories,"non-effective" students arecompared with rest of thestudent body by this chart:NoGrade A B C D F examNumber 50 75 97 122 171 192Thus, these figures indi¬cate only one-half as manyA's are received by the non-effective students, three-fourths the number of B's,approximately the samenumber of C's and rnanymore D's and F's. the students’ permanent recordgrade, Streeter answered in thenegative. “However, some facultymembers certainly favor thismove,” said.Of great importance were theslight changes in procedure forregistering for an “R” whichStreeter cited.A student, to be eligible forregistration for an R mark,must fulfill these requirements:must have completed threequarters of registration, musthave passed all previous com-prehensives witli a total gradeaverage of C or higher, if get¬ting an R the second quarter,must not have received an Rthe first quarter, and most im¬portant, must register for theR within the first five weeks ofthe quarter with his advisor.Thus, the R mark is availableonly to second year students andabove. No entering students mayregister for the R before he hascompleted three quarters of reg¬istration.See other difficultiesDifficulties foreseen by the Col¬lege faculty with the new quar¬terly regulations are many. Thejoint-BA programs m which alarge number of College students are now engaged put more em¬phasis on the divisional courses inthe student’s program, since divi¬sional quarterly grades are finaland become a part of the perma¬nent record.What about the “honest F"—the student who earns the gradeof F in two successive quarters?Streeter’s reply indicated that insuch cases, the student wouldprobably be advised to drop thatparticular course and try to“make good” in the courses inwhich he was doing passing work.Try to stop crammingStreeter stated, “What we aretrying to do is to put the brakeson the ‘cramming’ which takesplace Spring quarter by studentswho have either failed entirely totake the quarterlies, or who havefailed throughout the year to ade¬quately prepare for the quarterly.A disproportionately large num¬ber of students receive the gradesof D or F, following a year ofstudies in which they have ne¬glected their courses and ‘cram¬med’ for the comprehensive.”“Requiring the passing of thequarterly exams should at leastgive a more accurate representa¬tion, grade-wise, of the student'swork,” he said.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROONFirst SG meeting businesslike;letter defends campus cops October 12.by Norman LcwakIn a sparsely attended meeting Tuesday nig ht the lame-duck 1955-56 Student Governmentcleaned up some odds and ends and prepared for the upcoming election in a swift moving,business-like session.The meeting, scheduled for 7:30, was called to order at 8:15 by Joel Rosenthal (SRP)who had assumed the presidency upon the absence of Jan Porter.'Miss Porter is in India for World University Service.After it was announced that sponsoring of a jazz concert withthere were 18 vacancies in the a campus jazz organization. TheGovernment, the quorum was argument centered around wheth-calculated at 17, which was the er this lame-duck SG should startvuivumvvu **1, x . , TTUIV11 ‘“V, Cl tills iaillC-UUUlV OVJT MIUU1U olwl lexact number of members pres- any business with which the nextent. The election and rules chair¬man, Bob Stein (SRP-phy sci),announced that the new Govern¬ment would consist of 52 mem¬bers, an increase of two overlast year.Stein then announced the peti¬tion dates (last date for filing isTuesday) and moved a ballot boxschedule which was passed withno debate.Debate on jazz showIn fact, the only debate all eve¬ning occurred on the last pieceof business: a motion to investi¬gate the possibility of SG’s co- Government might not agree. Themotion, amended and subsituted,finally passed, mandating an in¬vestigation team of two members(one from each party), but drop¬ping all mention of commitment.During the 20-minute questionperiod, only the question of howone gets on Student Governmentwas asked (and answered). Later,however, a young man asked andreceived permission to ask an¬other question—this time on stu¬dent parking. A motion waspassed to write a letter to DeanSAVE 40%DRY CLEANING4 DAY SERVICESIn by Tues. noon, back by Fri.In by Fri. noon, bock by Tues.STUDENT SERVICECENTERReynolds Club BasementHours: 11:30-1:30 3:30-4:30 Robert Strozier on this subject.Hear about copsAnother letter to Strozier wasreferred to by Phil Hoffman(SRP-coll) who was acting sum¬mer president. He had writtenStrozier to ask about the powersof the campus police in referenceto complaints SG had receivedabout the actions of some offi¬cers.Below is the text of Strozier’sreply:“I shall attempt to answer yourquestions concerning the campuspolice."The University has its own of¬ficers in order to insure the safetyof the students and of the Univer¬sity community. The members ofthis staff are under , the generaljurisdiction of the business office.Guy Lyman heads the campus po¬lice. The members of this staffare appointed as special police bythe Commissioner of Police, Cityof Chicago. They are deputizedand do have the power of arrestwithin the area of jurisdiction(55th to 63rd street and CottageGYove to the Illinois Central rail¬road). They have the right to askThere’s No Sale LikeWholesaleDear Student:Chances are, you love Cash-mere Sweaters by Hinda andother fomous brands.. . . Here's how you can save33 1/3% to 50%All Sizes — Colors — StylesBy Buying ot Wholesale PricesCome toSamuel Murrow &Company(In the heart'of theWholesale Market)Daily 9 to 5:30 Saturdays 9 to 3:30318 W. Adams St. Suite 401rain!SISTER,YOU’RE THESKIPPERINSou'westerOvrrt ht-Sho*MatchingU. S. Roynster®Coat, approx. $5.95.Hat, $1.65 Take command of sassy weather likean old salf in these saucy Sou’westerU. S. Gaytees. Wear them with theflashing metal buckles fastened orflapping. Sou’westers pull over shoeseasily, keep ’em slick as a whistle.And to clean Sou’westers, just wipeinside and out with & damp cloth.They dry for instant wear. GetSou’wester U. S. Gaytees now.$3.95Yellow, red, blue,black or white, withcorduroy trim.United States Rubber pnoto by Wilso*At the first Student Government meeting of the year Tuesdaynight, Frankfurt-exchange student, Friedrich Zoells, gets a f.<wpointers on student government from an SG member while MaryAnn Chacarestos listens in.any person on the campus to iden¬tify himself if identificationseems necessary. This is moreoften done, of course, at nightwhen persons from off the cam¬pus might be loitering near ourresidence halls."As far as students are con¬cerned, the campus police reportsits dealing with students to theoffice of the Dean of Students.Such reports are usually made toMrs. McCarn, assistant dean ofstudents, who represents the of¬fice in dealing with major infrac¬tions of rules on the part of stu¬dents. police, and we do not Intend thatthey serve as disciplinary officersfor students, a task which is, un.fortunately, reserved for the Deanof Students.”Some of the other business in-eluded appropriation of $100 forthe Frankfurt students, announce-ment of the safe flight to andfrom Europe of the Flying Tigertrip (students interested in goingnext year may sign up at Rey.nolds club desk or the SG office)’,and announcement that the appli¬cations for the 1957-58 Frankfurtstudents are due back October 25.Students may complain"Students who have any diffi¬culty with the campus police may,of course, talk with Mrs. McCarnor any other member of our staffor with Mr. Weston Krogman,business manager, or with Mr.Lyman. x“We hope that the studentsrecognize the reasons for havingthese safety officers and thatthey will cooperate with them. Itis true that at times undesirablepersons wish to frequent the cam¬pus. The guards must be alert toprevent unpleasant incidents fromsuch persons."At the same time, the Univer¬sity wishes to have the most cor¬dial and cooperative spirit be¬tween the students and campus Students neededto do work onSG committeesThere will be a meeting for allstudents both old and new whoare interested in working on theStudent Government committeeson Wednesday, October 17, at 7:30p.m. in the Student Governmentoffices in Ida Noyes hall. All thecommittee chairmen will be pres¬ent to explain the programs oftheir committees and to hear anysuggestions for improvement.Any student registered in theUniversity is eligible to sit andvote on these committees.University Buying ServiceFURNITURE - LAMPS - TV - RADIOSPHONOS - ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES, ETC.Faculty - Personnel - Student DiscountsHERMANS“/«r over 30 years”2310 E. 7 lsf St. Ml 3-6700Special Daily and SundayOne-half pound Tender Strip ( **00Steak, Grilled Onions, FrenchFries and SaladServing Hoadfairn and University of Chicago 28 YearsSTERN'S CAMPUS DRUGS(Formerly Reader's)61st & Ellis (1001 E. 61st)VISIT OUR COLLEGE ROOMHYDEPARK ACTORS WORKSHOP1506 hyde park blvd. KE 8-1504presenting every Friday, Saturday, Sunday at 8:45 p.m.Frankby WedekindTHE TENORHELLO OUT THEREMY VALISE * Be'nntfttWilliamby SaroyanWe welcome the support and participation of all peopleinterested in experimental drama. Acting classes will be¬gin on October 21. For reservations for the plays, orinformation about acting classes, call KE 8-1504.Student Admission $1.00General Admission $1.50»October 12, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON 9* tMeet at airportOver 50 UC Students for Stevenson, in white sweaters andblue “Adlai” hats, sparked a cheering reception given AdlaiStevenson at Midway airport Sunday evening. About 1,000,'vonson-Kefauver workers were waiting when Stevenson’scampaign plane, the “JoeSmith special,” arrived.UC students carried signs pro¬claiming “Stevenson the unini-rnous choice of students.” Theythe crowd in a chant of “Allthe way with Adlai,” which wasInterrupted with occasional shoutsof “shame on Yale!”, in reference to the jeering reception givenStevenson by Yale Students forEisenhower during the precedingweek.Stevenson greeted Holly O’Con¬nor, president of UC Studnets forStevenson, telling her the UC stu¬dents were “wonderful to come”and that the UC girls were “aw¬fully sweet.”7'he rest of the crowd, mainlyprecinct workers from the Chi¬cago Democratic organization;carried signs reading “MayorDaley welcomes Stevenson”; andindeed Mayor Daley did appear,several minutes late, to welcomeStevenson in person.Petition nowfor SG racePetitions for the upcoming Stu¬dent Government election mustbe submitted to the governmentby noon Tuesday. Any studentwho has been in residence onequarter is eligible.Petitions may be secured in theSG office, and must have the sig¬natures of 25 students, who neednot be in the division or schoolbi which the candidate wishes torun. The petitions may be circu¬lated in anyone’s name, but theprospective candidate must signbefore submission.Although party affiliation Isnot required, successful candi¬dates in the past have usuallybeen party members. Last yearfour independents ran. Of thesethree came in last in their schools,and none were elected.Candidates for the two campuspolitical parties will be chosenSunday. SRP will meet in IdaNcyes, ISL in Burton-Judson.Learn to be a dancing in¬structor and pay your waythrough college, or earn agood substantial living. Forinformation, contact:NATIONALBALLROOMDANCINGTEACHER'SACADEMY50 E. Oak MO 4-3440Also private andgroup lessonsOPEN SUNDAYS1 isitors welcomeCome in and let us showyou how in just 6 weeks'time you can earn a substan¬tial living in America's fast¬est growing business. Above: Holly O’Connor, president of UC Students forStevenson, keeps the rain from fulling on Adlai Stevenson’shead while Mareie Butter, also front the campus group,prepares to lend her support.Left: Richard J. Daley, mayor of Chicago welcomes Stev¬enson to the Windy city.Adlai wins—in pollIn a recent poll taken by thenational volunteers for Stevensonfifty-three per cent of the 987 stu¬dents questioned favored Steven¬son, forty-throe per cent Eisen¬hower, and four per cent were un¬decided.Universities sampled in the stu¬dent poll — taken by students —were: Columbia, UCLA, Univer¬sity of Florida, Harvard, Univer¬sity of Iowa, University of Mich¬igan, Woman’s college of the Uni¬versity of North Carolina, NotreDame, Swarthmore, and the Uni¬versity of Wisconsin. Ike needs helpStudents interested in doingprecinct work for PresidentEisenhower will meet tomor¬row at 10 a.m. in front of Harp¬er library. Meeting on the 59thstreet side of the library, thestudents will leave by car forwork in the 5th congressionaldistrict.It is not necessary to be forNixon, or to be a Republican,a spokesman for the groupstated—one need only like Ike.COMO PIZZERIAFree Delivery to I'.C. Students on Alt Pizza1520 E. 55 FA 4-5525SMALL SMALLCHEESE .1.15 PEPPER & ONION . 1.30SAUSAGE ..... . .1.45 SHRIMP 1.70ANCHOVY .... .1.45 COMBINATION . .1.75.!* •• • $>•’ , k K .'. A<s - s-1450 E. 57thNO MORE TIRESOME TRIPSTO THE WEST INDIESThe Domino, in its continuing struggle toanswer all your needs, takes pride in pre¬senting, for the first time on this continent,the "VOODOO - DO - IT-YOURSELF-KIT."Burlap bag contains: Genuine Voodoo doll,hand carved piercing needles, killed chickenfeathers, 100% throttling yarn, bag ofground voodoo earth, parchment scroll of se¬cret rituals. The cost... a laughable $1.50,easily recouped on the demise of unpleasantmaiden aunts. New center managementoffers two new servicesThe student service center located in the basement of theReynolds Club now offers two new services to UC students.One of these makes it possible for students to procuretickets to the Studebaker Theater at a 20 per cent discount, if orderedfive days in advance.Dry cleaning is also available at a saving of 35 to 40 per cent.Clothes are picked up and returned on Tuesdays and Fridays. Acharge of 50 cents is made for single pieces, $1 for two-piece items,such as suits.In addition to its new facilities, the book exchange service of thecenter is larger this year than in previous years at the same time.Any book listed in the Wilcox and Follett catalogue is available tostudents, and for a small service fee the service will sell a book forany student at the price stated.The new manager of the service is Thomas Vlaehos Kapantais ofHammond, Indiana. Kapantais attended Hammond high school, andhas been at UC for three years, during which time he served asaccountant of the Maroon. He is now working for a BA in philosophy.The center also operates a loan service and a student publicityservice.An Ivory Towermay be o fascinating place to work, but it is no refuge from cost-of-living storms.Prepare yourself for unexpected expenses (new tires, o bouncingbaby, yellow jaundice, etc.) by saving regularly where your moneyearns more.*You can save by mail or in person at theHyde Park Co-op Federal Credit Union5535 S. HARPER AVE. DO 3-1113*4 % dividend on savings for Iasi tiro yearsSPORTCOATSCorduroy . 16.95with matching trousers 6.95Button-down shirts 2.95 & 3.95Our prices can't be beat —it's smart to buy for lessD & G Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728(6in the Neighborhood for 40 Years”Hours: 9 a.m. 5 8 p.m., Mon. - FrL9 a.m. • 9 p.m., SaturdayStudent DiscountsCheer Adlaifege 4 October 12,H&ggfe&frA.PJLLYIn ii‘<S(* a tSpi i 1 i<rhl<kn(a Iml ijTt^'mN erMiv^6f;Chi^.^r 'T^o renowned?as<}&press* them soI\'esToptschoo)s«and*ithejfVonsequonr diminutionto Jf enerpvjfa'n^lf lrn^sn'^^^^of putl^f ort Hfsu ch^ppin i orBT^^ml»f£| Ipltt<■ r'sJ.<■ ^.uii liviisipt \f|vufpuhi.^^rsoffalit^gME iseri n^,er^so|t^^rna''rryfet u den tJ[a re|at; tiractedt byf^thel'well mod u la tcd£\ ok -p.-Jedu|joa ted^ip! erenPes®q^Hob^’s;|&^^ly je^ejt^ai^^incl]f po\ye l; f li 1 f'i;l i Pjd' 11 pffjl^ A d 1 a"ifS leyena. n® 11 C> u; Pver|fadmTl that mry$fchko 'Ad'a.'* hut;V th«ll*ljl(‘\ u.n P^h tffnu eflll !(!(',iS^t I SMt i J < ’ , \ y*to^ponah.U£s|pipda HIy j>l i.i •BfKhheralismioryth:'-vJ .in: i»1»s, thus Ji. veals itsc’ fi'idSI>eSpr.imanl\,encendered.VH.u-so mih hjHvtri at i<>nal|Ifouce^Datifc'at h e Kjbmerno t-So^jprnnis5^iaii^atisoglfa 1 ><•: .'i! 1 ?n?ffifsp| ffcfsf'.ikbiph i.y&rn ■<.'■■I<fiil 1 l|f'n.l*Tu 13PuT’u^tfTv':'; tttWr •;' o'-ft?” *?W?rr? ||g|j||§Pi3e rsor^^^fSwrTOnoiit h iopl^^pal 1 de^niel's t ud.pntjytojd yjr; ji^1 •_ '•/ ^ ^pB^uWTo^I^lt^iwrsifmS1p^f(^^rn'i^raIaipe|Bpljla|S^mT<*^i^Mi^iPnpn(1mt« nm^m^miSmysl'il l8nai^^^roi<w.n^3^Bsem^^f^nA^ftumil^aSM^Bo2TlK^:bjdl | I 11 ■ I IB iTtTSP iil, it • miii 1 > 114 y» 1 ■!\'' * 'iPF*vTIIRmunMcl jdifrc^s^oliumrijm&WSJ&Mm x.;:{v .■"V; '•"> ,<y,'*i*^:i4!E^k<y|g?^rnP|gp;h.o;\\- ri na tjpa rtu-uH^j^.>'Xil^jj!^Kii V|' ..••'«> k"ou u h.It he!>i Hi- ie'£a|'>p.^uSE^e|eij',n^pio';the:.tNVi:iffK^!j’'x,T^.! •;. -1 - 3L ?*. ’aF„ '..^1/la ■ ^ULTSB|tA|^^^^!llfi?n'f?^|^^;a^ilusM^^gooapT|giljy1l A; • ’ 'V." ''%&* ’ll iT-Tig . ~ J W~rV?n|pppxenMonltr|Enfnf?weai^^fiiii *11 "'^ri 1 ' i^lPiTf'Tam lilt 11 111 n '\'>mw ' W ••• 1 ■■>' ... . 'iLl'•& ~'i ii- if I,!^E'k '•’ v |<*~- ^y.«r • .-e” /if'"- vw^nfmaffffi 1 * *"«^ BA^J MMSHttjL^llfre^wwK^Uigiir*K^(wi:n®e'i"; ft .<?t«thWt^l'aT- K¥(Tfim 1 in m mm»maTi^Vi ilnn^tlfefvllpr^I^Ro';1 !>< 1* fm 'em 1 >ersWn^^^^ i -jFT'' 1 ' 3fT?igiikITSr'"'t^y* • ^ it ■ "'l. • i.t.Tn i}pr;. 1 • . 15.1 '■ ie.;P; • a!/fTn^Tfr* w^V*inri-:'i ■-»!/'.:? ?■*■<*£■ ,- • :iiT,'/f^r?'Tr^[f/jle 14tiihi^KHiawojnlEyvi-fi'a^iisi-ussiorWiiiT'ht«?IHK^*»<>WWIy'l>y*f',lltlfcl|tir m-, i’ it . •:. -!M^^8U'm'iin,MtRal|pmeMa^p;»jfg^Pn^"^a'm^mjsKe.nKesepi'?Eth^^Jr4?*y'^y'#«lBfiyi'n(iKiyr>rai»yf*'T2^^S?(im?lSei^W;:;^mWBtgst"’* v ■'-‘j^a'T- ■: ’, H^SE|gl|H||Ig|g tnx)iTOSili"”MTm^!matukt^MiM4^mMlma^^}SMii(3}MD]PW'f>s[imBp^^^^KCTBKWlPCTKl^gaRIEiag^lMffil v i i4|2 i| mmWMWLtnisyfogr^di(i Py^aTtei-j*!itaefi ^xet-ptoi^n'sfirrefu.s-iU’.fliil^aKf!■fcla - .-. -iMiMS&i - 4Mt ■. *«4!<’,.-'jyW1 '■ |4”,'8,.?3 m ah*- ■ 9 r?y.#' a /'Tf TT'"- • ~ n- i r 4* T" ~ ‘ji/. ■ -If' • f" ;•! a m i ie *11 u 1lirfl a i rltd^sfiidetnEleafdirIsgGadflvcurricular^ hohorf&oeieties;^:;':'!:i’'.’''>IB|wI^m Hf^neWOctober 12, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5biff bean and the goon men) \S to OlB.‘Tv\KT Vie LOOK VoR ogrLEADERS OF TOtAORROVl...TOD/\Y$ CO'-Eeoe STOOENTiVI ILL ONE DAY GWOF 1MEDESTINY OF THE VIORLD.7VE NINOS Oh' MANY GREATHEN have been forgedIN THE FEW YEARS ATFAMOUS UNIVERSITIES.A FEW OF 7r/ESE GREATHEN ATTAINED THEIRQUALITIES OF LEADERSHIPAT THIS EARLY AGE...SUCH A CHAMPION WASbifford bsauOY \NO^OE-R\ AT AM EARLY AGE BlFF SHOWEDGREAT AB'UTY IN ELEMENTARYSUBJECTS. HIS PARENTS DECIDEDTo SEND HIM To THE BESTuniversity IN the countryIN ORDER To ENLARGE HISEDUCATION... THE UNWERGtTYOP CHI GARGLE J ALONE AT FIRST, BtFF SOONMET MANY OTHER NEWSTUDENTS AND CEMENTEDMANY HAPPY FRIENDSHIPS... by Carl DoinickBiff Reviewed His studiesand GOT A GOOD NIGHTS SLEEP)for the: next Morning beganTHAT TIMET HOK10RED TRADITIONOF "orientation week"...PRoPecrv ofTWoN-fcVOSoNco '♦AtmNEXT EPISODE-.'‘BRMN-WASH WEEK*LETTERS TO THE EDITORSays Ike unscathedWhen Adlai Stevenson wenttumbling under the political voteof confidence bestowed upon Gen-oral Fisenhower in 1952, most fel¬low Democrats concluded thatIke. running on a non politicalrecord, was unbeatable. Today,though the Democrats degradeand deride Ike’s four year politi¬cal record, and hang it aroundhis no longer army uniformedshoulders, Eisenhower himself issoil left pretty unscathed.The general nature of an attackon the President’s conduct is thtfthe is influenced by the wrongpeople and delegates too much re¬sponsibility. When McCarthydropped this mild mode of criti¬cism and ripped Ike’s integrity,he wound up with a censurebranded on his record. Democrats,afraid of a similar backfire, haveheld off from broadsides on theEisenhower character-soul;Rejects optimismHarry Truman, kidding himselfInto thinking that a rough, rip-down-Ike campaign would havewon in ’52, backed W. Averell. “I-alone-was-on-to-the-KremUn,” Har-riman at the recent Democraticconvention. Rejection of theboundless optimism of Truman-Harrimanism and nomination ofStevenson continued the party’scommitment to the rough-on-is¬sues. easy-on-Ike philosophy.With the Democrats refrainingfrom a hate-ike campaign, thenation faces a presidential elec¬tion of less significance than thelast off-year campaign for Con¬gress. 1954 showed how well theDemocrats could do when the Re¬publicans were not directly led byIke. Exploiting unemployment,bacons;Ivy 5 hopCHICAGO'S NEWESTAND MOST DISTINCTIVEshop for men'Natural" for Autum*BalyantenTweed & Shetlandfrom Scotland$65°°608 n. michigen avenueWhitehall 3-2410 farm surpluses, and other dissat¬isfactory conditions, the Demo¬crats were able to do fairly well intheir nationwide vote for Con¬gress, which was not fully reflect¬ed in the number of Congression¬al seats won. (There are nowtwice as many marginal, 55 percent or less, Republican houseseats than there are Democratic.)The ’54 Democratic vote forCongress did not increase by asmany percentage points, state-for-state, over its 1952 showing asStevenson’s vote would have hadto increase In order to turn his’52 defeat into victory. So, if Ikehad outpaced his party’s showingby as much as he did in ’52, hewould have won had he been upin ’54.Outcome like ’52With the only major differencebetween the 1954 and 1956 elec¬tions being that the latter is apresidential election, with thepopular Ike the central figure, theoutcome should pretty much re¬semble ’52’s. The Democratic is¬sues of two years ago are weak¬ened by the pickup of employ¬ment, the dissipation of reds-in-government and MeCarthyism ashot issues should relieve the bet¬ter elements of both parties. Farm revolt and mass dissatis¬faction of merger-plagued smallbusinessmen appear to be limitedconditions unlikely to shift largeblocs of electoral votes. Althoughnot faced with the attacks ontheir ’52 fortress by the GOP Ko¬rea-Communism-Corruption bat¬tle cry, it will be pretty hard forthe Dems to crack the presentRepublican fortress of Peace-Prosperity - Progress. The bestthey seem able to do is to keepJim Eastland in his judiciarycommittee chairmanship and keepIke up a couple hours watchingTV before he is sure that he hasbeen re-elected.Adlai wants postThose Democrats who have theillusion of the ’56 campaign asbeing attempt number two of thepolitical Odyssey of Adlai Steven¬son fail to see that 1952’s “philo-politico” has been turned into1956’s avenging politician waginga dignified campaign to get morevotes, but still not able to resistmaking half - baked promisesabout ending the draft. Adlai wants thepresidency so badly he doesn’t evencare who his Vice-President is, Just solong as Kefauver’s presence on the tick¬et helps Stevenson win the top job.Stevenson seems reluctant to go be¬yond the Democratic portrayal of Ikeas poorly influenced, poor in his ownjudgment, and weak in his actions.Along with the possibility of PresidentNixon and the usual exploitalon of dis¬satisfactions. the implications aboutIke wraps up the Democratic campaign.Can be worseThe “even though things are pretty9A e tidAAuni PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433A CASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651ALL LAUNDRYSERVICES1. FREE pickup & delivery2. Wash & fluff dry3. Flafwork & familyfinish4. Shirts fir chinos5. Quality dry cleaning6. Any sixe cotton rugwashed fir driedRapid, ConvenientEconomicalUniversity Quick Laundry1376 E. 55th St. PL 2-9097>»«»»<♦>»>»><«»»»«>»»»»»»«»»«♦♦««*»»♦»«♦»♦♦♦ bad, given the wrong breaks, they canget much worse In four years” angle isnot a good enough method to use tothrow a party out of power. The Demo¬crats can’t attack what could happen;they must prove that wliat has hap¬pened is bad enough to warrant achange. They can’t win unless they canconvince the voters that Ike Is callous,narrow, foolish, and ill-willed. No Presi¬dent is ever defeated because he's apretty nice guy, but too lazy and weakand likely to die within four years. Gibes at golf and diagrams of the heartand ileum don't exactly prove that aman’s a rat.Adlai Stevenson, as much as he canilluminate the Issues by dangling draftdeferments, can do no more than labelhis opponent as half golfer, half hos¬pital patient. The only tear-down typeof campaign that the Democrats arenow waging is being executed four yearstoo soon: Nixon will not be the Repub¬lican candidate unt>' 19P0.Steve MagnusLikes Carlson write-upCould I add a note to yourfine story on Anton J. Carlson(September 28) for many ofus knew him not on the campusbut through his continuing devo¬tion to the needs of a free society.For years he was an ACLUmember and served on the Illi¬nois division’s advisory board. Hecould always be counted upon torespond to ACLU calls for help, and I am afraid we have to makeof them. Last year, he made sixspecial financial contributions,four to special ACLU cases, twiceto funds to fight the Broyles bills.He was a'brave, generous, andconcerned friend and we shallmiss him:Kenneth DoutyExecutive Director,American Civil Liberties UnionProgressivePAINT & HARDWARE CO.1154 - 58 E. 55 HY 3-3840Complete Line of Rental Tools and Equipment♦** •** ♦** ♦** A •$* **♦ *J* **-* **« •** **♦ **• %* **• **» ^| DOC FILM TUESDAY, OCT. 16 *Roberto Rossellini's(FLOWERS OF ST. FRANCIS£ Eight Episodes in The Life of*:* The SaintAdmission40c Sociol Science 1227:15 ond 9:15£ v <•IT’S FOR REAL! by Chester FieldGABRIEL DOOMOnce every month Gabriel DoomLocked himself up in a sound-proof room;Then he laughed out loud and rocked with gleeAt a life that was funny as life could be!He laughed at the weather, sunny on Monday,,, rainy on Saturday, rainy on Sunday.He laughed at the news so loaded with griefthat an ax murder came as a pleasant relief?'He cried, “what with worry, hurry, and strifeyou couldn’t ask for a funnier life 1 ’*m Oft At i In this fast-moving worldit's good to sit loose, relax and, enjoy thereal satisfaction of a real smoke »'•, aChesterfield. More real flavor, more Tssatisfaction and the smoothest smokingever, thanks to Acce-Royw.VTake your pleasure btgfSmoke for*fool»*»smoke Chesterfield!Page 6 i n t iniLAbu mARugWUS to have dinner Coming events on quadranglesSunday in Ida Noyes Friday, October 12, 1956The garden of Ida Noyes will be the scene of World Univer¬sity Service’s first big event of 1956.More than 50 former WUS workers and interested newstudents have received invitations to a pot-luck picnic whichwill last from 5 to 8 Sundayevening. Maroon readers whoare interested in eoming to theWUS picnic but who did not re¬ceive invitations will be very wel- m it tee membercome. They should contact Non-nie Kortschak, Foster 55, to findout what they may bring as theircontribution to the pot-luck din¬ner.Although the program Sundayevening will include baseball be¬fore supper, the serious intent ofthe meeting is to discuss the prob¬lems facing WUS in this year’s aged to line up an impressive fivehundred workers for WUS. “Let'shope that this year we ''an do thesame thing!” exclaimed one com-Calvert clubgives lecture; Students for Stevenson meeting. Eastlouttge, Ida Noyes Hall. 12:30 p.m.Student’s problem session presented byCalvert Club, 4:30 p.m. DeSales House,^5735 S. University Avenue.Gamin Dregs, Cap and Gown get-to¬gether for old and new members, 4:30p.m., Delta Upsilon.Supper meeting and discussion spon¬sored by Lutheran Students. Supper,-■ 6 p.m., discussion, "What is heresy?”7 p.m.Friday F r o li e , International House,8 p.m.“Autumn Dance,” Alpha Delta Phi,5747 University, 8:30 p.m.Discussion: “Jewish Identity; Does ItRequire Religious Belief?” sponsoredbf Hillel Foundation, 5715 S. Wood-lawn, 8:30 p.m. Sabbath services, 7:45p.m.William Vaughn Moody Lecture, MandelHall, 8:30 p.m. student exchange.Lecture and discussion: “The Philos¬ophy of Whitehead," sponsored byCharming Club, 1174 E 57th, 8 p.m.Open House given by Green House,3 p.m., first floor lounge, p.m., East Lounge, Ida Noyes Hal],Lecture: “Ways of Responding to knmpresented by Federated ThrolotirliSchools Wives’ class, 8 p.mvllle Theological School, 57thWood lawn. nMonday, October 15, 1956 Wednesday, October 17, 195$Maroon staff meeting, Maroon Office,Ida Noyes Hall, 3:30 p.m. This timea critique.('banning Club meeting, 7:30 p.m., Eck-hart 206.International House piovle: Cry the Be¬loved Country (English), 8 p.m., as¬sembly hall.Campus Archaeological Society meeting,8 p.m., Ida Noyes Hall. Interclub Council rush tea, 3-5 c mIda Noyes Library. - * ^Tuesday, October 16, 1956Saturday, October 13, 1956“American Catholics and theintellectual life” will be the sub¬ject of a lecture held at the Cal¬vert club. Given by Dr. Josephdrive for an even higher goal. Evans, M.D., and Edward T. Gar- students for Eisenhower leave HarperLibrary at 10 a.mvto do precinct work.Camping trip to Circle Pines. Michigan,leave T’a Noyes hall October 12, 7 p.m.Cost $10.Richard Dyer-Bennot folk music recitalsponsored by Independent Students’league, Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m.UC Choir. The Saered Note, program ofchoral music, WBBM-CBS, 10:15 p.m.Dotty Hess, chairman of the UC gan, PhD, the lecture will startWUS committee will introduce at 4:30 and will be followed by aIrene Gagadouki of International supper (75c).House who will tell of her experi- Dr. Evans, after teaching medi-ences with WUS in post-war cine at the University of Cincin-Greece, and Nonnie Kortschak nati, is now the head of Billingswho will explain how the WUS nuero-surgery department.drive operates in the Universityof Hawaii. Gargan, author of Alexis deToqueville: the critical years,Nonnie’s talk -will be especially 1848-1851, received his doctorateInteresting to the group because from Catholic university and isIn Hawaii last year they man- now teaching history at Loyola.A Campus-to-Career Case HistoryRoger Lindblom (left) discussing a construction job with J. R. Young, Wire Chief of Huron, S.D.“I’m learning more every day—and like it”Roger Lindblom, B.S. in General Engi¬neering, Iowa State College, ’49, is todayDistrict Plant Superintendent for the11,000 square miles of the Huron, SouthDakota, district.“The openings are there,” says Roger,“and the telephone company trains youto fill them. I joined Northwestern Bellin 1950 and spent one year learning poleline and cable construction. This, plusshort periods in other departments, gaveme a good telephone background.“My experience really grew when 1became an installer-repairman, then aconstruction crew foreman, and, in 1952,Wire Chief at South Sioux City, Ne¬braska. There I was responsible for the3500 dial phones that served the town. In March of 1954 1 went to Grand Island,Nebraska, to help supervise dial conver¬sion projects in that district. EverythingI’d learned to date came in handy onthat job.“A year later I went to Omaha on astaff assignment, and in March, 1956, Imoved up to my present position.“I head a group responsible for install¬ing and maintaining Plant equipment inthe Huron district. We supervise orderingand distributing supplies, and I’m re¬sponsible for personnel and employment.I work with other department heads inthe administration of our district“Each assignment I’ve had has beenbroader than the last, and believe me, themore I learn, the better I like it"Roger Lindblom is one of many young men whoare finding rewarding careers in Bell TelephoneCompanies* Bell Telephone Laboratories* West¬ern Electric and Sandia Corporation. See yourplacement officer for more information on careeropportunities in the Bell Telephone System.J HI.irk friars meeting. North Receptionroom, Ida Noyes hall, 7-10 p.m.Film: Flowers of St. Francis, presentedby Documentary Film Society, show¬ings at 7:f5 and 9:15, Soc. Scl. 122,40 cents.Theology conference for students pre¬sented by Calvert Club; 7:30 p,m„DeSales House, 5735 S. UniversityAvenue.Dance class and choreography workshopsponsored by Modern Dance Club,7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes Dance Room.Lecture: “Religion and Psychiatry”given by Canterbury Association,Brent House, 5540 Woodlawn, 8 pm.League for Civil Liberties talk: “TheStruggle for Integration,” 8 p.m , Soc.Scl., 201.Madrigal Singers rehearsal meeting, 8 Chicago Review staff meeting ( no n n.Reynolds Club. pLecture: “Republlcrats and Demunlt.cans—and the future of independentpolitical action.” presented by Youn*Socialist League, Independent Social.1st League, UC Socialist Club. 8 cmIda Noyes Hall. p ”Country Dancers meeting, 8pm )<wNoyes dance room. ’Friday, October 19, 1956Student’s problem session, sponsored b*Calvert Club. DeSales House, 5735 JUniversity Avenue, time to benounced.Hayride at Palos Park given by CalvertClub, transportation leaves DeSaleaHouse at 7 p.m.Former MPholds lectureSunday, October 14, 1956Holy Communion, 8:30 a.m., BondChapel.Lutheran Communion Service, Thorn¬dike Hilton Chapel, 10 a.m.University religious service. Rev. JohnP. Thompson preaching, RockefellerChapel, 11 a.m.Lecture: “American Catholics and theIntellectual Life,” presented by Cal¬vert Club. 4:30 p.m., DeSales House,5735 S. University Avenue, supper,6:30, 75 cents.Student Representative Party caucus.East Lounge, Ida Noyes hall, 7:30 p m.Dean StrosW v i Camera clubreorganizes “Significance of the Suez crisis*will be the topic of a lecture Tuefrday by Wilfred Wellock, forme*Labor party member of the Bri#ish parliament. It will take placeat 8 p.m. in the east lounge ofInternational house.Camera club is in the process ofreorganizing with a view to be¬coming more active. Accordingto Jordan Holtzman, president,“Last year we did not have a suf¬ficient membership, but this yearwe are looking forward to manymore activities.”The first meeting of the year.will be held in Eckhart 206. Mon¬day at 7:30 p.m. This will be anorganizational meeting and theofficers of last year will explainthe club to new members andshow them the darkroom facil¬ities. All students interested inphotography have been urged tocome to the meeting. Born in Lancashire 77 year*ago, Wellock studied at Edi*burgh, became journalist, lectu#er, author of 16 books, and men*ber of parliament, 1927 31. He hagundertaken three previous let*,ture tours in the United Statesand Canada.Wellock’s present tour is beingsponsored by the America#Friends service committee, andduring his stay in Chicago he willbe the guest of Internationalhouse.Oops...BOOK OF THE WEEKFoma Gordeyev by Maxim Gorky-360 pp. first time in English —$1.50Chicago Council of American-Soviet Friendship189 W. Madison AN 3-1877 In the story concerning the Jaj#anese social science student study*ing at UC, Dr. George D. Sto*dard, former president of the Un$*versity of Illinois, was erroneous#ly listed as present auditor of tbdstate of Illinois.The present auditor pro tern ofIllinois is Lloyd Morey.9 QjJkn, Cl (3o&£..SEW<?Of course. Mosteveryone does—ofteaBecause a few momentsmet ice-cold Coca-ColaRefresh you so.>• sparkling with natural goodness, pure and'wholesome—and naturally friendly to your figure.JFeel like having a Coke?tomio UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY tjTbo Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.^CdkoT h m rogbferod trodoiork. C 1956, THE COCA COLA COMM*****“!siif?£i?ff£If —isSWki, October 12, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Admission association Human factors blamedcounselors to conveneThe Association of College Admissions Counselors will hold for Ida machines failureits annual convention at the Congress hotel October 14, 15,and 16. Theme of the conference will be “Breaking down thebarriers between high school and college.”McCrea Hazlett, new dean — A possible explanation for the faulty operation of the Cloister club automatic food vend¬ing machines has been revealed to. the Maroon by Walter Jeschke, Ida Noyes guard.When the service man from the'Airport Vending company came to service the eight foodvending machines that dispense soup, hot meals, drinks, ice cream, cold sandwiches andof students in the college, is in the middle west, where over a . . .program chairman of the conven- hundred high school counselors cake> he found that the cause for the moperation of the soup machine was not a mechanicaltion. His program will include have been admitted to the organi- fault, but human deliquency.nancl discussions and workshops, zation. The number of college Apparently, some young the slot and the next student that the second slot marked chocolatepan< 1 (list unions aim ww ivsuups, b ...... * , . put his quarter in got the 25-cent candies gave Clark bars; the thirdanalyzing the various problems members exceeds 170. counterfeiter attempted to stuck. In his over-anxiousness to marked licorice gave Milky Wayconfronting the student entering The main objective of the or- hammer an old nickel into the get either his two bits back or the and the last, but definitely notcollege. Also participating in ganization, according to national size of a quarter in the hopes two dimes and a nickel, he pressed least, informed the confused stu-these discussions will be John president Harland White, is to of not only getting his soup, but jjj® ^edianism en0Ugh to bend in^eMonro, director of the Harvard effect a more thorough pre-col- ten cents in change as well! slot he would get a nickel candybar.Attention males;fraternity rushing, ., ... . , When last seen the person fromfinancial aid office, and Graham lege guidance program, enabling The machine that gives change the vending company was walk-Taylor, director of student em- students to better cope with fi- (two dimes and a nickle for a ing out of Ida muttering wordsployment at Harvard, authorities nancial, psychological, and guid- quarter) was also out of order. n°t suitable for print. “Even I wason loans and part-time work. They ance problems. ‘ Some one had poured syrup down j™bbj^|a^ ^ tbe w 0 r d s'''will discuss the financial barrier If the human factor jn the in-between high school and college. r\|« Hni Rl operation of the food machines Ot)CTlS TtCXt <IVCcJcPresent also in this connection U* • L^LyUyiCJ»> UUU ICIIIO I I I IUIIUI CU comes to a halt, students will find 1 t ^ ;i.wilt be John M. Stalnaker, president of the Nationalarship corporation. they can get a large selection of TT/^en national fraternities onnutriment for “reasonable” L/C campus will begin theirprices. rush week on October 22. AllHot soup sells for 15 cents; hot male students in the college willDoan Hazlett is particularly in- jn commemoration of its 25th anniversary, the Depart- meals (in cans) for 35 cents; cold be invited to the fraternity houses.naker, presi- . .Mern schoi Jufjng pediatric anniversaryforested in a workshop which will ment of pediatrics atexamine students* case histories, terday at a tea givenreproducing the usual admissionsprocedure. First considered willl>e the high school record; secondwill be college board scores andany late honors the student mayhave received. Then his perform¬ance as a college freshman will tilings was honored by 400 people yes-y the UC in the rotunda.The tea was the first in a series of events scheduled to takeplace yesterday, today, and tomorrow in observance of the anniver¬sary of the department. sandwiches for 25 or 30 cents; Each fraternity will hold twoPepsi, orange or lemon-lime soft rushing smokers which give stu-drinks for five cents; coffee or, dents the opportunity to get tosoon to be added, hot chocolate for know each fraternity and itsten cents; pies and cakes for a members._ ....... . . . . . . . , , . .. ,. , dime; and ice cream also for ten To be eligible for rushing anyOne of the highlights of the activities planned is the reading of cents. undergraduate must be seventeenscientific papers by eminent physicians from the leading universities There still seems to be a human by the end of the quarter in whichami hospitals in the United States. The major part of the scientific difficulty with the candy machine he is pledged, must have com-l>o reviewed. Hazlett likened the program deals with the nervous system as a tribute to Dr. Douglas Ida jsjroy9s office, but the pleted one quarter of residence,admissions counselor to a crystal Buchanan, professor of pediatric neurology at UC, who marks this fault lies with the vending com- and present evidence of havingbail gazer, and pointed out that, year the 25th year of his association with the university. Dr. Buchan- pany> a grade average cf 1.75 or better,although generally his informa- an is also being honored by the department of pediatrics at a tea on ~tion is correct, he is not always Saturday afternoon.Dr. Donald Cassels, UC professor of pediatrics, will preside at ananniversary dinner at the Quadrangle club tomorrow evening. Hon¬ored speakers will be: Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, dean of biologicalsciences and special assistant for health and medical affairs to thesecretary of health, education, and welfare of the United States;Dr. Franklin C. McLean, professor emeritus, department of physi¬ology; and Dr. Howell Wright, professor and chairman of the depart¬ment of pediatrics. . ^A right.The original purpose of theassociation was to establish acode of ethics between admissionsofficers. Today, the associationgives professional dignity to ad¬missions work, and investigatesillegitimate practices that may bereported. William E. Scott, nowUC director of admissions, wasone of the original organizers.The organization is still strongest The first slot marked gum Rushing week ends Friday, Oc-drops dispensed Hershey bars; tober 26.MOVING OCT. 15to 1342 E. 55th St.LARGE REDUCTIONSMODEL CAMERA SHOP1359 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA Discount SMALL 1.00MEDIUM 1.45 LARGE .......1.95GIANT 2.95TERRY’S PIZZAft The World’s Best”FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSWe also carry a full lino of Italian foodsCO-OP IS FOR EVERYONEWhoever you are, CO-OP in for you. Cooperatives are ownedmud controlled by their member-customers on the basis of thefollowing principles:CO-OP PRINCIPLES41. OPEN MEMBERSHIP — The Co-op is open to all, regardless of race,creed, or color.2. DEMOCRATIC CONTROL — One vote per member, regardless of numberof shares of stock.3. PATRONAGE REFUNDS — Competitive prices with profits returnedto members in proportion to their purchases.4. FAIR RETURN ON CAPITAL — Up to 5% is paid on investment inthe Co-op.5. CASH TRADE AND HONESTY —- No credit to customers, and fairweights and measures are given.6. NEUTRALITY IN POLITICS AND RELIGION —• Co-op is non-partisanin its action and education.7. PROMOTION OF EDUCATION — Membership participation encouraged;financial statements published.SHOP AT CO-OP SUPER MART5535 SOUTH HARPER Plenty of free parking- -rje r r «r* . jjPage 3 October 12, 1955VANAn exclusive, Hygi*enicolly cleon mov*ing service—ct NOEXTRA COST. For• <local or long-dis*tance moving, collNEWFLIP-TOP BOXFirm to keepcigarettes fromcrushing.No tobacco inyour pocket..Off-campus housing listed CLASSIFIED!Housing files are maintained by both UC and the Hyde Park-Kenwood community con¬ference, 1350 East 53rd, to aid in locating apartments in the University area.The conference maintains a list of apartments in Hyde Park containing both agency andprivate listings. Rents range upwards from $50 to $120 per month.University-owned buildings are managed by the Community and Real Estate office. Stu¬dents may obtain apartments through the University housing file, which has listing on filewith rents from $50 to $100.Single rooms as well as fur- by University purchasing and area. Private owners, of course,nished and unfurnished anart- neighborhood redevelopment have to face the seasonal occu-msnea ana umuimsnea apaii plans creates an even greater pancy problem and the resultantments are available. The file is problem for students looking for problems with subletting over thesmall at present, having been private housing in the University summer,depleted by returning students insearch of shelter.Four apartment buildings havebeen purchased to help meet theincreasing need for married stu¬dents’ housing. The buildings,joined by an open courtyard, arelocated at 54th and Woodlawn and54th and University. There are74 two and three room apart¬ments in the newly-purchasedbuildings. The apartments will beunder UC supervision and willpay rent according to schoolstandards.Present tenants will have theopportunity to renew their leasesthrough April 30, giving themseven months in which to findnew living quarters. They alsohave the option to cancel the leaseanytime before the date named.Relocation of tenants displaced the specific areas of the greatestneed for student housing.“We are doing our best to geta fairly honest and complete pic¬ture of the current situation,”said Jack Meltzer, director ofUC’s planning unit.The purpose of the question¬naire was to obtain a certainamount of basic information con¬cerning the amount and types of Student rote 5c per word. Others 10c per word. Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265WantedInventory housing needsDo you share your bathroom?This was one of the questions asked in a four-page housingsurvey questionnaire handed to enrolling students last week.The “Campus Inventory,” a joint project of UC and theSouth East Chicago Commis-Sion, was prepared to find out housing and other facilities need- For saleed in relation to the increased en¬rollment and crowded dormitoryconditions, said Meltzer. The re¬moval of the prefabs and the in¬creased enrollment of marriedstudents, some with children, hasfocussed attention on the problemof lack of family dwellings, saidMeltzer.The questionnaire also encom¬passed questions concerningtransportation and parking space. For rent Apartment to share with two male $*ndents. Good location, reasonable •,MI 3-0044. ‘em-BOOKKEEPERFull ChorgePleasant working conditions. Excellentopportunity for a student's wife. Five-day, forty-hour week. Salary. $80. PhoneBU 8-6711 to arrange for interview.PETERSONMOVING AND STORAGE55th & EllisWill help to pay expenses in return fora ride to campus from north. Mon.-Frl.,9:3C class and to north at 12:30. Mon.-Frl. Call Diane Jacobson, DI 8-3170.Children to care for in my home.MU 4-5522.Student for part time editorial work.Photographic knowledge. Work at home.Write A. P. L., 2746 W. 59th street. ServicesPainless tutoring in Russian by HarvardRussian instructor. jCall ES 5-1170Carmen's used furniture store. Mov iu'and light hauling. 1365 E. 55th mu4-9003, MU 4-8843.Mathematics. Tutoring and Instructionin the standard courses for individualor group. Loop or south side. Specialarrangements for group formed by your-self. Soglln and associates. 28 E jack-son. WE 9-2127.French tutoring, coaching and transla¬tions. Native teacher. Reasonable no7-6162.PersonalRefrigerator — good, used Kelvlnator,reasonably priced MU 4-5522.Washing machine. 6 lbs. capacity, $35;typewriter, portable, $30; utility cabi¬net, 36"x82"x22", $18; crib and mattress,$16; Kodak 35 with leather case, $25;baby basket, pad, $3; baby pottychair, $3. FA 4-4011.German - English flash cards coveringsome of the novels In German I course.$5. Call Bob, MI 3-5607.Room to share with student. HI-FI inroom. Call Daly. 6108 Ingleslde. DO3-0460.Rooms available in private home for 1or 2 students. FA 4-0197 or FA 4-6337. The certain and easy way to be sure oftickets for the Chicago run of the l itmusical comedy. Damn Yankees i« >0attend the preview, Thursday, Novem¬ber 1, sponsored by the board of di'tr-tors of the University’s Lying-in Hos¬pital. Special student tickets $3, at Rey¬nolds Club desk.Don't forget that Stephen Spender,noted British poet, critic and editor isspeaking in Mandel hail at 8:30 on Octo¬ber 31, under the sponsorship of ChicagoReview. Tickets available Chicago Kc-view, Reynolds Club. Reserved $2, gen.eral $1, students 75 cents.Students—help name the new girls'dorms by contributing to the Univer¬sity Campaign. Send $1 to the Leo pc ;<1-Loeb Memorial Hall Fund, Box 1 Ad¬ministration Building.Hess: baseball bat; Gagoudake: onequart of champagne; Avery: 2 lbs. hum-burger. Any questions? Nonnie.Has anyone seen my bookmark? It wasa very distinctive little book-mark,which-1 left in a C-Book. (Signed), aPhi Sigma Delta man.E.: C'mon, be human. Burnt onre neednot mean again. M.Alice; Please bring back my typing book.Desperate.First campus showing of recent Rossel¬lini film. Tuesday, October 16 SocialScience 122. Admission 40 cents. 7:15,9:15.PETERSONMOVING & STORAGE CO.55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterfield 8-6711LostThis Marlboro is a lot of cigarette. The easy-drawing filter feelsright in your mouth. It works but doesn’t get in the way.You get the man-size flavor of honest tobacco. The Flip-Top Box keepsevery cigarette in good shape and you don’t pay extra for it.POPULAR •filter price (MADE IN RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, FROM A NEW MARLBORO RCCVE) Men's black rimmed reading glasses.Friday evening near Ida Noyes. CallGregg Cooper, E-J. Reward.THEPIZZAKIDThe finest in pizzaSPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - RIBSITALIAN BEEF & SAUSAGESANDWICHES•WE DELIVER•Closed Tues.1125 E. 63 DO 3-9777October 12, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAR 0 0 N Page 9Hither and YonDebate sodas, sex, and segregationby Bob BrownGirls cause panty raid?University of Maryland: Stu¬dent Government here refusedto obey a faculty order to pay allhills for damage done in a recentpanty-raid on a women’s dorm.Explained student council offi¬cials: “The girls are really toblame. They incited the men toraid the place.” No comment fromthe girls. (The Diamondback)Yale dean wants womenYale: The Dean of Admissionsat this 200-year-old male strong¬hold of higher learning has pro¬posed that the college admitwomen for the first time in itshistory. Dean Arthur Howe, Jr.,said that the all-male college isoutdated, and that the need fortrained and educated women isincreasing.The dean’s suggestion was op¬posed by some students. Reasongiven: the college is overcrowdedalready, has no room for tooth¬some co-oeds. (The Dartmouth)Students' $Uos Angeles City College: Stu¬dent Government here now hasa budget running around $77,000a quarter. UC Student Govern¬ment, with about one-quarter ofI.ACC’s enrollment, has a budgetof about $6.70. The Bruin, stu¬dent newspaper at UCLA, has anannual grant of $23,000: TheMaroon receives $3,500.Probe discriminationBoston University: State legis¬lature investigatures are probingthe expulsion of two local sororitychapters from their respective na¬tional organizations. In both cas¬es, no reason for the expulsionwas given, although both expul¬sions came shortly after the so¬rorities had pledged Negro co¬eds. (Boston University News)Bulge battle on campusBall State Teacher’s College(Indiana): The switch from bil¬lowing summer cottons to close-clinging fall separates and skirtswill be easier for those girls whokeep control over their waistline,reports the college dietician here.She states that college co-edsare particularly prone to over¬weight because brisk ’tweenclasses walks give a girl quitean appetite, and because of con¬tinuous “social eating” at localmaltshops.The solution: just three normal.“I WON’T WEAR A THING/BUT TOWNE AND KING!” meals a day, no snacks, to keepthe figure trim and the waistlineslim. Maximum daily calories forthe average co-ed: 2,600. And thatdoesn't include any sodas. (BallState News)Look again . . .University of Toronto: The Var¬sity, student daily, headlined areport of a recent speech by Uni¬versity president Sidney Smithwith blaring headlines “Don’t tryto pass.” Then, in smaller typeunderneath, the paper repeatedthe second half of the quotationfrom the president’s speech: “Tryto get honors instead.” (TheVarsity)Scent-sational battleTexas A & M: Chemical war¬fare raged on this campus fortwo hours recently as four stu¬dents attempted to rout a skunkfrom one of the university build¬ings. It took chloroform, carbondisulphide, and long handledsticks for the students to emergevictors over the outnumberedskunk, who caried his own port¬able chemical warfare unit withhim. (The Battalion)Shades of 1984Kansas University: An IBMelectronic sorting machine in theregistrar’s office here went ber¬serk, confused the middle initialsof two students, and then elim¬inated one student from the col¬lege records. Robert A. Gallagerreported that the electronic brain,used to help sort registrationcards of students, had confusedhim with Robert D. Gallager. Themachine assigned all of RobertD.’s and Robert A’s classes to Rob¬ert D,, and then evidently forgotall about him. He’s still tryingto find out whether he’s legallyregistered. (University Daily Kan¬san)Segregation effort failsUniversity of Texas: DistrictJudge Dan Jackson dismissed anattempt by the head of the localchapter of the DAR to preventthe university administrationfrom using state funds to pay in¬structors while there are Negrostudents at Texas university.(Daily Texan) Political ban 'stifling'University of Illinois (ChicagoCampus): The Pier Illini, studentnewspaper on campus here, pro¬tested the university administra¬tion’s long-standing ban on poli¬tical speakers. Said the Pier Illini:the ban, which applies to all ex¬cept presidential and vice-presi¬dential candidates, is “intellectu¬ally stifling” and unjustified. Thepaper points out that most of thestudents are eligible to vote, andmany of them are veterans.To the serious sideRoger Keith, writing^ in theNation, surveyed a cross sectionof college newspaper editorialsrecently, and found them surpris¬ingly mature.“Amidst all this talk of 'juve¬nile delinquency,’ we tend to for¬get that young rollege peopletoday — at least the articulateleaders—are doing more seriousthinking of, talking about, andexamining our basic problemsthan any other segment of adult“society,” said Keith, quoting Syd¬ney J. Harris, newspaper column¬ist.Keith particularly praised theof today shows a surprising re¬sistance to the pressures of con¬formism, and are on the averagefar superior to their counterpartof the thirties.Kaith particularly praised thestand of the college editorials onthe questions of desegregation.Integration poses problemIn fact, the pressing problemof school integration in the south¬ern states has absorbed the atten¬tion of college editors all acrossthe nation.Here are some of the commentsand actions reported from collegepapers on this crisis:'No freedom involved . . .'University of Georgia: In 1953,the student newspaper,' the Redand Black, published this com¬ment in an editorial:“With Communism knockingat the Negro’s back door, we can¬not afford to let educational segre¬gation barriers stand." It is asplain as the red flag in Russiathat continued segregation and suppression can and will causethe death of democracy ...”The university’s regents wereshocked at this editorial. One ofthem, himself, a newspaper pub¬lisher, wrote as follows: “I triedto explain to (the Red and Blackeditors) that in their juveniledamn foolery they were hurtingthe university and the cause ofeducation in this state. I toldthem frankly that the money*needed for the operation of theRed and Black would be discon¬tinued unless they could do abetter job.”After the "young squirts” re¬fused to obey the regents’ order,the paper was suspended. The re¬gent commented:“There is no question of free¬dom of the press involved. Thequestion is whether or not theBoard of Regents is to be dictatedto by a handful of sissy, mis¬guided young squirts ... Every-time I see one of the sissy littleboys (the editors, and othersfavoring an end to segregation!hanging around some college, Ithink every one of them ought tobe made to play football . . .”Professors dodge quest-ionT u I a n e University (New Or¬leans): The Hullabaloo, studentnewspaper in this deep south uni¬versity, has conducted a vigorouscampaign to end school segrega¬tion immediately. Reports theHullabaloo: Tulan£ faculty mem¬bers seem unwilling to become“involved” in the question.No coddling necessary-University of Mississipi: Thecampus paper, the Mississipian,even though not in favor of dese-gration, sharply critized the uni¬versity administration for refus¬ing to allow an episcopal ministerto speak on campus. The minister,o $64,000 winner on a TV quizprogram, had stated that he wasgiving part of his winnings to theNational Association for the Ad¬vancement of Colored - People(NAACP).Said the Mississipian: “Univer¬sity students are old enough ,tothink for themselves and need nocoddling and protecting ...” Problem examined . . .Harvard University: The Har¬vard Crimson recently publisheda ten page special supplement de¬voted to the problem of schooldesegregation. The material forthe issue was gathered by theeditors, who travelled more than10,000 miles in the south to gaininformation at first hand.Among the issue’s highlights:—the problem of Negro edu¬cation is national, not section¬al: many northern Negroesare effectively segregated byhousing restrictions, lack ofadequate income to securerollege education for thei*children, etc.—hysteria, emotionalism, and,violence and near-violenc®make any reasoned discussionof the problem impossible inthe south—fear pervades the south.Many moderates are afraid tospeak out, because of econo¬mic, political and social pres¬sures.—southern legislatures oftenspearhead the fight againstdesegregation.—Negro students must betreated as individuals, not asa class or group.—it is just as bad to lean overbackwards in being “fair” to■ Negro students, as it is todiscriminate against them:the Negro student becomesself-conscious and awkwardwhen too much attention ispaid to him.—a moderate approach to theproblem has been made atmany southern schools anduniversities, particularly onthe borders of the deep south:but many more institutionsare "unalterably” opposed todesegrgation.The issue’s chief conclusionseems to be that a spirit of “grad¬ualism” is the only solution: thattime is needed to heal tempersand promote understanding: andthat northern extremists wishingan immediate and forceful end todesegregation are not wise intheir policies. ^ - ’~ MICKEY HOBBS, switch pitchtr8USH LEAGUE. OKLA.. Sept. 10-Top'teems in both major leagues are angling forthe services of young Hobbs, the sensationalright-and-left-hand pitcher who finished a12-0 season for his college team and struckout 26 batters in his last game for the PurpleSex. a local semipro outfit. Scouts are amazed•t Hobbs' ability to get his slider over thegilate occasionally with either hand. Posl-*ame post mortem shows Mickey wearing his«ew T&K collared pull-over.I T&K’s own blend of imported Lambs*Wools; new California colors; 38-46... 13.95k Crew length so* to match; 10!4-I3...1.95|Townie and Kino, ltd. ^w Coordinated Knitwear I1393 Broadway. Redwood City. Cgijomit _ Order Now and Save■' ^ 4IMPORTANT NEW BOOKS AT PRE-PUBLICATION PRICES•«,. 0The New World, by Winston ChurchillVol. II of History of the English-Speaking People $£00After November 26th $6.00The Testimony of the Spade, ■by Qeoffrey BilbyAfter November 12th $6.75The Earth We Live On, h Ruth Moore *550After November 12th $6.00S ML 50The Ladies Home Journal Treasury OAfter November 25th $7.50A Treasury of "True", by Charles N. Barnard *6°°After November 15th ..... $7.50UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUETPage 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 12, 1956J. Paul Sheedy* Was A Lone Wolf TillWildroot Cream-Oil Cave Him Confidence"I'm ftM-vad for affection**, wailed Sheedy, "but the girl* think Fm just acur. Whenever 1 paws to talk to one she makes tracks for the tall timberand hides." Poor old Sheedy felt so lousy he wanted to pack up and flea."Don't be sucha shaggy dog", said his Den Mother. "Getyourself some Wildroot Cream-Oil and spruce up.**Now J. Paul’s the most popular wolf in the forest,because his hair looks healthy and handsome, the wayNature intended ... neat but not greasy! Try WildrootCream-Oil yourself, in the bottle or handy tube. You’llsoon be a howling success with the girls.* of 131 So. Harris Hill Rd., WHliamsvillt, N. Y.Wildroot Cream-Oilgives you confidence PRE-ELECTRICSHAVE LOTION to get a better shave!Quicker . . . closer . . . smoother . . .no matter what machine you use. 1.00plus tatSHULTON Hew York • TorontoThere once lived a crazy,mixed-up old giant. He lived atthe top of a beanstalk and he gothis kicks out of a little red hen.Of course, that wasn’t bad, becausethat chicken laid golden eggs.Now down at the bottom ofthe stalk lived our boy, Jackson.Our boy was low on loot and hismother ... man, she wasn’t makingit at all. The feedbag was M. T.So Jackson started thinking of away to get loot fast: “How,” .said he to himself, “could I getthat frantic chicken away from thatcharacter upstairs?” He lookedaround the hut for something totrade—How about an old pianotoll? Mom’s bifocals? Uncle Looey’s plectrum banjo? Wait aminute!!! In the cistern was a six-cancarton of Budweiser! So he gets theBud and sashays up the stalk. Well,citizens, there’s no use dragging thisBudweiser bit out: The giant buys theBud, gives Jackson the hen, mom’sdoing great and so will you if you’reup to date. Get Budweiser, man...it’s the world’s favorite beer!All cisterns; • • and brothems, too,for that matter... should discoverthat there is a difference in beers.This Budweiser ...it is the most.KINO OP MUSANHEUSER-BUSCH,INC.*ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES.V w M ,V4.October 12, 1956 Page 11THE CHICAGO MAROONFormer Maroon staffers wed Education expertmade UC professorIn a double ring ceremony Saturday afternoon, Miss Jeanne Forrv Hargitt was marriedto Earl Myron Herrick. Both are former Maroon staffers. The intimate ceremony was heldin Bond chapel where masses of white chrysanthemums were illuminated by multitudes ofslender bride-like tapers. . , .. , , ,, „Jeanne, as she is affectionately known, chose a beautifully simple white bridal dress. Apoint d esprit lace over poie de soir, the ballerina length gown had a simple round neck andprincess point sleeves. Twolittle fairies of human origin, of the four-tiered cloud of whitedressed in fairylike blue velvet bridal cake.dresses, gravely strew flowers forthe procession. Jeanne had threeattendants clad in scoop-necksapphire blue velvet with mistyblue overskirts of silk taffeta. Inkeeping with the tranquility ofthe whole ceremony, the now Mrs.Herrick had flowers of the light¬est white pastel, pink and yellow;the attendants carried pastel flow¬ers of slightly darker shades.The reception overflowed withthe Herricks’ many friends andrelatives. Two wonderful punches,one champagne and the other thereporter neglected to ascertain,stood as sentinels on either side service center.The bride traditionally threwher bouquet which was caught bya friend of the bride.After the cheerful receptionhad reached its climax, the newlymarried couple departed on theirwedding trip. Herrick, in truehusband-like style, refused to dis¬close the destination of the goingcouple, even to the radiant brideherself.The new Mr. and Mrs. Earl Her¬rick plan to finish their degreeshere in the near future. Last year,Earl was popular man about townat the publicity service whileJean was manager of the studentLaw lectures beginHow lawyers achieve greatness without becoming SupremeCourt justices or attorneys general was the over-all topic pre¬sented at the first in a series oflectures sponsored by the UC Law the feud to preserve the lake frontschool on Wednesday evening.A distinguished attorney in hisgeneration, T a p p a n Gregoryspoke on the life of his eminentfather, the late Stephen StrongGregory.Gregory opened the lecture bydescribing his father as being"not a paragon”, but just a humanbeing with human faults. StephenGregory had compassion for the for park use. Gregory often de¬fended cases that public opinionhad already sentenced; such aninstance was the Pullman strikeconnected with Eugene Debbs.Dean delineatesforeign studyRobert Strozier, dean ofpoor, a quick, clear wit — occa- students, has consented to besionally caustic—and strongly ad¬vocated trial by jury. He believedthat labor unions were legitimate,and furthermore, necessary.Gregory elaborated on his fa¬ther’s illustrious career by citing present at the caucus nf theStudent Representative Party tobe held at Ida Noyes, Sunday, Oc¬tober 14, at 7:30 p.m.At the caucus which will beopen to allj Dean Strozier will_ , , . discuss the foreign student ex¬court records of cases in which Change with Frankfurt, Moscow,Stephen Gregory played outstandIng roles. In the 1890’s Chicagowas represented by Gregory inI r(r'BORDONEMovers and Light Hauling <VI 6-9832 ;< RELIANCE CAMERA APHOTO SUPPLIES1517 Coat 63rd St.BU 8-6040CREATIVE IMAGINATIONIN RELIGION...in terms dSearch for Fullfillment October 19Uses of the Past October 26People Around Us November 2The Living Universe November 9• ’*• ‘ ' . •" ’Y'-'Friday evening discussionsCoffee ot 7:30 Discussion of 8William Wallace Fenn House5638 Woodlawn AvenueSponsored by Channing Club and the First Unitarian ChurchLeslie T. Pennington, MinisterSTUDENTS LAUNDRY SPECIAL8 lbs. Laundry — Washedand DriedShirts finished to order 13c en. additional97KWIK-WAYLAUNDRY & CLEANERS1214 E. 61st St.(Between Woodlown fir Kimbork en 61st) ognized leader in elementary education,” has been named to‘‘assume major responsibility” for the center for teacher edu¬cation of the Department of education. The man, John I.Goodlad, whose appointmentas full professor in the Depart- of the National Education Assoeia-photo by Louise BarkerMr. and Mrs. Earl HerrickUC wins debatedecide football,college don't mixThe UC law students debat¬ed a team from Michigan Stateuniversity on television lastWednesday. The topic: “Collegi¬ate football should be deempha-sized.”According to Don McClintock,director of Student Forum, thestudio audience, which favoredthe home team at the beginningof the debate 13-2, switched toUC’s side of the studio 14-1 by theend of the half hour debate.McClintock said that the Mich¬igan state team, which took astand that football encouragescleanliness, “and cleanliness isnext to Godliness” suffered thefinal blow at the hands of a UCdebater who retorted “Cleanlinessis next to impossible in the Big10. ment of education was announcedMonday, has been professor ofeducation and director of the divi¬sion of teacher education forEmory university and AgnesScott college, Atlanta, Georgia.“His appointment,” ChancellorKimpton’s statement continues,"will enable us to establish coop¬erative relationships with a larg¬er number of elementary and sec¬ondary schools and to preparelarger numbers of teachers. Wealso are confident he will makeoutstanding contributions to cur¬riculum theory and research.”Dr. Goodlad’s, appointment pro¬vides that his special attentionwill be given to the preparationof teachers for elementaryschools.A native of Vancouver, BritishColumbia, Dr. Goodlad was edu¬cated at the University of BritishColumbia, and UC, from which hetook the PhD. degree in 1949.He was a teacher and adminis¬trator in British Columbia schoolsfrom 1939 to 1949, when he wentto Atlanta as staff member ofAtlanta area teacher service, join¬ing the faculty of Emory and itsassociated Agnes Scott college in1949.Dr. Goodlad is co-author of twobooks published this year, Educa¬tional Leadership and the Elemen¬tary School Principal, and TheElementary School. He also isadvisory author of EducationalLeadership, monthly publicationINSURANCEAUTOTERM INSURANCEPhone or WriteJoseph H. Aaron, '27 J►135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060;and Jerusalem. Time permitting,there will be a question and an¬swer period after the meeting. GABE S STORE FOR MENN.W. Corner 55th & Kenwood HY 3-5160SUITS — TOP COATSJACKETS — ACCESSORIES.CAMPUS WEARUniversity's finest store for menAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAi$400,000 PER DAY ...Every working day last year the Sun Life paidout an average of nearly $400,000 to policy¬holders and beneficiaries. In many cases theinsurance check represented the only fundsavailable at a time of dire need.Are your dependents similarly protected?Representative RALPH J. WOOD, JR., '48N. LaSalle Chicago 2, IllinoisFR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAHEY, PAISANIWe've got- 'em good, we deliver 'em hotPizza pie for your bull-session or get-togetherPhonesMU 4-1014MU 4-1015MU 4-9022 FREE DELIVERYon $2.00 or more5 p.m. to 3 o.m.7 doys a weekITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA1427 East 67th Street_ lo¬ tion, and author of chapters inscholarly yearbooks and articlesin professional journals.He has served as consultant Intraining methods to the U. S. de¬partment of public health and aschairman of the publications com¬mittee of the association for su¬pervision and curriculum develop¬ment since 1954. He is a memberof numerous national educationalassociations, including the associ¬ation of ehi’dhood education, theassociation for supervision andcurriculum development, the Na¬tional Education Association.Cap and Gownto take photosIndividual pictures for the Gapand Gown will be taken on Wed¬nesday, October 17, Thursday, Oe-tober 18, and Friday, October 19,in the Reynolds club lounge.Twelve wallet sized pictures willcost $2.50.The group picture schedule Isas follows: Fraternities and clubs*Monday night, October 22; Bur*-ton-Judson houses, Tuesday, Oc¬tober 23; C group, Gates, Blake,Snell and Hitchcock, Wednesday,October 24.Times to be announced.Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226,Student DiscountDelivery ServiceAMAZINGCHRISTMASGIFT OFFEROne 8 x 10 FinishedPortrait*650ONLYSelect from 6 ProofsThis Offer GoodUntil Wed., Oct. 31MAKE YOURAPPOINTMENTNOW!Photographer1457 - 59 E. 57BU 8-0876■P*ge 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON|iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiHiiiit!iiiimiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiniimiiiiiiwiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^Internalional House Movies |= Monday evening's, 8:0© P.M. —— Assembly Hall == Monday, October 15 — 45c — Cry The Beloved Country (English) =^umiitmiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiitiiuiiuimiinHiKHitmtudiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKimitiMiiiiiiiiiiiMiiimiiiF We Will Teach You How to DriveQuickway Driving SchoolDUAL CONTROL KE 6-116010% Discount to Students and UC Personnel October 12, 195$mmy’sSINCE 1940You Can Win a Cash Awardsand Scholarship Money for Your College inReader’s Digest$41,000 CONTEST Which six articles will readersof the October Digest like best?I. Norfolk’s Mend to troubled teen-agers. Story of the ar¬thritic cripple to whom youngsters flock for advice.3. The great Piitdewn hoax. How this famed “missing link**ih human evolution has been proved a fraud from the start.3. Hew te sharpen your judgment. Famed author BertrandRussell offers sis rules to help you form sounder opinions.4. My most unforgettable character. Fond memories of Con¬nie Mack—who led the Athletics for 50 years.5. Hew te make peace at the Pentagen. Steps to end ruia-ous rivalry between our Army, Navy and Air Force.6. Book condensation: "High, Wida end lonesome.” HalBorland's exciting story of his adventurous boyhood on aColorado prairie.7. Medicine's animal pioneers. How medical researcherslearn from animals new ways to save human lives.3. Whot the mess in Moscow means. Evidence that theCommunist system is as unworkable as it is unnatural.Open to All College Students (Faculty, too!)Nothing to buy...nothing to write...and you may find you knozv more aboutpeople than you think!How well do you know human nature? Can you tellwhat subjects interest people most? Here is a chance to test yourjudgment—show how good an editor you are—and you may win$5,000 for yourself, plus $5,000 in scholarship funds for yourcollege.It’s fun to try. Maybe you can top other students incolleges across the country . .. and you can match wits with theeditors of Reader’s Digest.Why do far more college graduates read Reader’s Digest thanany other magazine? What is it that makes the Digest the mostwidely read magazine in the world — with 11 million copiesbought each month in the United States, plus 9 million abroad?Why is it read each month by at least 60 million people, in 12languages—Arabic, Danish, English, Finnish, French, German,Italian, Japanese, Norwegian, Portuguese, Spanish and Swedish?Can you spot in a typical issue of Reader’s Digest the uni¬versal human values that link scholars, statesmen, scientists,writers, businessmen, housewives? Can you pick out the articlesthat will be most popular with the average Digest reader?You may find .. .you know more about people than you think!Here’s all you do. Study the descriptions (at right j of the articles in theOctober Reader’s Digest—or, better still, read the complete articles in theissue itself. (But you are not required to buy The Reader’s Digest to enterthe contest.) Then simply list the six articles—in order of preference—thatyou think readers of the magazine will like best. This will be compared witha nationwide survey conducted among a cross section of Digest subscribers.Follow the directions given below. Fill in the entry blank, paste it on apost card, and get it into the mail before the deadline. Additional blanks areobtainable at your college bookstore.All entries must be postmarked not later than midnight, October 25,1956.Don’t delay. In case of ties, the entry with the earliest postmark will win.lust pick in order the six articlesyou think most readers of OctoberReader's Digest will like the best.READER’S DIGEST CONTEST, Box 4, Great Neck, L I., New Yorkla the space opposite the word “FIRST” write the numberof the article you think will be the most popular of all.Opposite the word “SECOND” write the number of thearticle you think will rank second in popularity. List in thisway the numbers of the six top articles in the order of theirpopularity. (Note: Use only the numbers of articles you choose.Do not write the title of any article.) Clip and paete this cou¬pon on a Government post cord.N™* — AddressCUy Stateblame of college.... YOU CAN WIN:*5000 cash 1“ prizeplus $5000 for the scholarshipfund of your college or . . .*1000 cash 2nd prizeplus $1000 for the scholarshipfund of your college or. . .Any of TEN $500 cash prizesplus $500 for the scholarshipfund of your college or. . .Any of 100 $10 prizesin book credit from yourlocal college bookstoreAnd if your entry is the best from yourcollege you will receive an extra award—an additional $10 in book creditat your college bookstore.FOLLOW. THESE EASY RULES1. Read the description* in this adver¬tisement of the articles that appear inOctober Reader’s Digest. Or better,read the complete articles. Then selectthe 6 that you think most readers willlike best.2. On the entry blank at left, write thenumber of each article you select. Listthem in what you think will be theorder of popularity, from first to sixthplace. Your selections will be judgedby comparison with a national surveywhich ranks in order of popularity the6 articles that readers like best. Fill inand mail the coupon. All entries mustbe postmarked not later than mid¬night, October 25, 1956.3. This contest is open only to collegestudents and faculty members in theU. S., excluding employees of TheReader’s Digest, its advertising agen¬cies, and their families. It is subject toall federal, state and local laws andregulations.4. Only one entry per person.5. In case of ties, entries postmarkedearliest will win. Entries will he judgedby O. E. McIntyre, Inc., whose de¬cision will be final. All entries becomeproperty of The Reader’s Digest; nonereturned.6. All winners notified by mail. Listof cash-prize winners mailed if youenclose a self-addressed, stamped enve¬lope.DeaderlV DigestIts popularity and influence are world-wida f. Matter bridge builder. Introducing David Steinman,world leader in bridge design and construction.10. College two year* toonor. Here’s how extensive experi¬ments proved a bright lOth-grader it ready for college.It. Laughter tho bast msdicine. Amusing experiences fromeveryday life.12. Whot happens whoa wo pray far other* ? Too often wepray only for ourselves. Here's how we gain true rewardsof prayer when we pray for others.13. European vs. II. S. beauties. Why European women ar«more glamorous to men.14. Trading stamps—bonus or bunkum? How much of theircost is included in the price you pay?15. Living memorials instead of Bowers. A way to honor thedead by serving the living.16. It pays to Increase your word power. An entertainingquiz to build your vocabulary.17. Are we loo toft on young criminals? Why the best wayto cure juvenile delinquency is to punith first offenders.IB. Medicine man an tho Amason. How two devoted mis¬sionaries bring medical aid to jungle natives.14. Creatures In the night. The fascinating drama of naturethat is enacted between dusk and dawn.20. Whot your sente of humor toll* about yaw. What thejokes you lika, the way you laugh reveal about you.21. The sub that wouldn't stay dawn. Stirring saga of theU.S.S. Squalus’ rescue from a depth of 40 fathoms.22. Madame Butterfly in bobby tea. How new freedoms hsvschanged life for Japanese women; what the men think.23. Doctors should tall patient* the truth. When the doctoroperated, exactly what did he do? Why a written recordof your medical history msy someday save your life.24. "How^wonderful you ore..." Here’s why affectioaand admiration aren’t much good unless expressed; whylocked-up emotions eventually wither.25. Horry Holt and a heartful of children. Story of a farmerwho singlehandedly finds homes for hundreds of Koreanwar orphans.26. Our tax laws make at dishonest. How unfair tax lawsare causing a serious moral deterioration.37. Venereal disease now a threat to youth. How V.D. isspreading among teen-agers—and sane advice to victims.23. Secy. Beaten's faith in the American farmer. Why hefeels farmers, left alone, can often solve their own prob¬lems better than Washington.29. Your brain’s unrealized powers. Seven new findings tohelp you use your brain more efficiently.36. Britain's indestructible "Old Man.” What Sir WinstonChurchill is doing in retirement.31. Are furies giving away taa much money? Fantastiaawards juries hand out because they confuse compassionwith common sense. •32. My Iasi beet daye on earth. In her own words a youngmother, learning she had cancer, tells how she decided tomake this the “best year of her life.”33. Foreign-aid mania. How the billions we've given hav*brought mainly disappointment and higher taxes.34. Out where |et planes are born. Story of £dward AirForce Base, where 10,000 men battle wind, sand and speedbarriers to keep us supreme in the sky.35. Life In these United Stales. Humorous anecdotes reveal¬ing quirks of human ttaturs.36. Man's mast playful Mends the Land Otter. Interestingfacts about this amusing animal.37. Why not a foreign - service career? How our State De¬partment is making foreign service attracti ve to young^ien.3B. A new deed la the aid firehouse. How one town gotlower tax38, greater protection combining fire and police.39. Crazy man an Crazy Horse. Meet the man whoeestatue of an Indian will be the largest in history.40. Their business Is dyiramita. How the manufacture ofthis explosive has been made one of the safest industries.41. Hit beet custamer* are babies. How a kitchen strainerand a pint of mashed peas became the Garber Products Co.42. Smoky Mountain magic. Why this, our moat ancientmountain range, has mors visitors than any other.43. Call for Mr. Imurgency. Meet the Emergency Police,who get 8 million New Yorkers out of trouble.44. Beauty by the mite. How landscape engineers proveroadside planting is lifesaving as well as beautiful.48. Humor In uniform. True stories of the funny side oflife in our Armed Forces.46. Seven economic fallacies. The American EconomieFoundation explodes misconceptions about our economy.47. Admiral ef the Oreek ON Fleet. Story of Stavros Niar-ehos, who hes won a fortune betting on—and carrying—oil.THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 13October 12, 1956Hayek and Cochran debate on socialismby Oliver LeeIn debating whether or notsocialism is the road to serf¬dom, Friedrich von Hayek andpert Cochran failed to come toprips with each other’s argumentsjn the Public affairs forum Mon¬day, because they refused to agreeon the meaning of socialism andUie meaning of freedom, or itsopposite, serfdom.Hayek, professor in the Com¬mittee on social thought, is au¬thor of The Road to Serfdom towhich Herman Finer, UC profes¬sor of political science, wrote avigorous rebuttal titled The Roadto Reaction. Hayek was directorof the Austrian institute of eco¬nomic research in the late 1920’s,then for two decades was profes¬sor of economic science and sta¬tistics at the London school ofeconomics, and has been at UCsince 1950. Cochran is editor ofThe American Socialist and hasbeen active in labor unions. ..The contrast between the twodebaters was extreme, and lay notonly in the differences in defini¬tions they used. Hayek showedanalytical precision, dealt withthe topic in abstract terms, wascondescendingly polite to his op¬ponent and wore an expression ofmild amusement throughout<"It’s been so long since I’ve metan honest to goodness socialist”).Cochran, on the other hand,was rude (referring to one ofAROSTELEVISION & RADIOSates and ServiceWebcor chongtr, metal bote, ondcrystol cartridgeSpecial $41.951451 E. 57 NO 7-4253 Hayek’s arguments as “arrantnonsense” and repeatedly accus¬ing him of making “mystical as¬sertions”), awkward in presenta¬tion but achieving some eloquencewhen expressing his passionate-aversion for big corporations andhis sympathy for the workingclass.The difference in approach be¬tween the two men was put in anutshell when Cochran duringthe question period told a student,“you have just given a more elo¬quent statement of Mr. Hayek’sargument. . . . But you don’t rea¬son from the human point ofview, you reason from the pointof view of abstract theory.”Scores capitalismCochran's position was as fol¬lows. Capitalism has long sincedeparted from the idealized pic¬ture of free competition envis¬ioned by Adam Smith, and hasgiven way to ever-growing mon¬opolies. This development, hesaid, is endemic or natural to-capitalism.In the modern industrializedsociety, economic planning is anecessity, said Cochran; and theonly question in this respect is,“who is to do the planning?” Theplans of the corporations, becausethey are designed to benefit a small coterie of stockholders, are“irresponsible, anarchistic, cha¬otic, and destructive.” He blamedthe competitive economy for cy¬clical depressions, for the twoworld wars, and for the “gargan¬tuan growth of militarism” inthe modern world.Given economic planning as anecessity, pleaded Cochran, let itbe done by the government, whichis responsible to the electorate,and let the planning be directedby the will of the majority, andfor the benefit of the nation.Defines conceptsHayek, in rebuttal, set up rigidand narrow definitions of social¬ism and of freedom and concludedthat, thus defined, socialism andfreedom are incompatible.By socialism he did not meanthe “regulated, modified competi¬tive system which we know as thewelfare state.” Rather, he meantsocialism in the old-fashionedsense, which demanded unitarycontrol and direction of the meansof production', distribution, andexchange.By freedom Hayek meant notfreedom from want, freedom fromfear, freedom from exploitation,nor yet other forms of freedom,but freedom from coercion by thestate beyond the irreducible min¬ imum necessary for law andorder.Freedom, he said, means thateach individual is free to pursuehis personal ends, to choose hisoccupation, to select his locationand conditions of work. And thisis precisely what the plannedeconomy cannot allow, saidHayek. Ergo, socialism leads totyranny.Favors decentralizationCochran replied in turn thatalthough Hayek gave a narrowdefinition of socialism here, in hisbook on serfdom the entire thesiswas that public planning of anykind leads to totalitarianism, thatthere can be no middle way be-BETZ JEWELRYHyde Pork's Finest JewelersExpert Jewelryand Watch RepairingOMEGA - HAMILTON - LONGINEAND OTHER BRAND NAMEWATCHESSSA Discount to Students1523 E. 53rd PL 2-3038 tween economic competition andcentral direction.Concluded Cochran, “Unitarycontrol? Who says? Why can’tplanning be decentralized as itis in our political life? Not onlycan but should; not only shouldbut will.” He suggested that dif¬ferent spheres of economic plan¬ning could be delineated for plan¬ning boards on the city, country,state, and federal level.1367 E. 57th St.RECORD OF THEWEEKBeethoven SymphonyNo. 9FURTWANGLERLM 6043 $6.38BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGWINTER SPECIALTUNE UP $5.50 ^HARPER • Anti-Freeze• Snow Tires• Road ServiceSPECIAL ! !Heavy Duty Battery *14 95SUPER SERVICEDealer in Sinclair Products5556 Harper Ave. PL 2-9654 In commemoration ofFRANK LLOYD WRIGHT DAYa dinner honoring Mr. and Mrs. Wright will beheld in the Grand Ballroom of the Hotel Sher¬man, at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, October 17.Mr. Wright has promised detailed plans forhis much-discussed CLOUDSCRAPER.Rodney J. Griffiths, general chairmanFrank Lloyd Wright Day29 South LaSalle Street STate 1-1275HAVE A REAL CIGARETTE... Ut iCmd lt want a cigarette I can taste. That's whyI smoke Camels—and have for 10 years,ever since I was in college. It’s a realcigarette, all the way!”Helicopter ‘'J PilotDiscover the difference between “just smoking" and Camels!)B. J. Beynol.i* Tub. Co., WiixU» 6fcWn»,M. C. You’ll find Camels taste richer, fuller, moredeeply satisfying. The exclusive Camel blendof quality tobaccos gives you smooth smoking.You’re sure to enjoy Camels, the mostpopular cigarette today. They’ve really got it Ir*s* 14 THE CHICAGO MAROON vciooer iz, 1955Singers ’ new groupperforming madrigals‘‘Music flows through time; it doesn’t start and stop/' SuchIs one of the phrases that overflow in happy sincerity fromthe lips of “Matty” Zuckerbraun during rehearsals of his m°re!” of UC concert hoppers20-odd Madrigal singers. ~— , Q .—————: ”1' * “ A "1o"“* Tuesdays at 8 p.m. m the EastThe Madrigals originated. lounge of Ida Noyes.during the winter quarter of Culture VultureLists singers, symphonies, and showsTo quell the 1 -.gubrious “Never- Near campusGirls needed asdancing partnersEvening classes in contract On campus this weekravin’ about programs and playsmissed or overlooked last week,the culture vulture will try tokep similar birds in the universitycommunity informed about activi¬ties that might be termed “cul¬tural” on campus and in the out¬side world.”last year when Zuckerbraun or¬ganized an informal singinggroup in search of some “goodmusic.” The group gained popu¬larity and grew to 18 memberswith Matty as its conductor.The singers are now composed bridge and social dancing are Sa^a/t; £*g"»tS! h»iger?£uiof 13 women and nine men, an now being offered by the sing in Mandei hail for the thirdattentive, friendly group lacking women’s physical education de- year ln -a row' sP°n-sPrid -1SL.’ *£•only “two or three good basses.” partment.In addition to madrigals they singmotets and other light music andchoral work, all a cappella.The keynote of the singers ininformality, as is evemplified intheir coffee hour after rehearsals.In addition they join other cam¬pus singing groups, with the ex¬ception of the Folklore society,for song fests and “clambakes.”The Madrigal singers meetEye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 Mrs. Josephine Walters Smith,certified contract instructor, willconduct a series of eight lessons.They are to be held Tuesday eve¬nings in Ida Noyes library begin¬ning October 16. The cost of theentire course is $4 for studentsand $6.50 for non-students.Girls are needed for all socialdancing classes! To encouragetheir participation, men in theMonday evening class, from 7 to9, have volunteered to escort theirfemale classmates io transporta¬tion, in the case of commuters, orto the girls’ dorms.Further information can be ob¬tained at the Physical Educationoffice, extension 1000.The CoileqeLAUNDERETTE1449 Elast 57th St.MU 4-9236 concert begins at 8:30 General admis¬sion, $1.00, reserved seats, $1.50, tick¬ets on sale at student service center,Reynolds club desk, and at the doorSaturday night.Monday, October 15: Int house movie,the English production of Cry the Be¬loved Country, 8 p.m. Mandei hall.Tuesday, October 16: Doc film presentsThe Flowers ot St. Francis at 7:15 and9:15 In Soc 122. Admislson, 40 cents.Friday, October 19: UC concert, pre¬senting Robert Goldsand, pianist lnan all-Schumann program 8:30 pm.,Mandei hall, admission, $1.50.Hold Sigmarama;novel open housePhi Sigma Delta fraternity willpresent a new concept in all-cam¬pus open houses this Sundaynight at 8 p.m., as it presents“Phi Sigmarama.”The social night will consist ofdancing, a hi-fi concert, chess,checkers, bridge and ping-pong.There will be no admission Friday, Saturday and Sunday: HydePark actors’ workshop, 1506 Hyde Parkboulevard, presents three one-acters:The Tenor by Wedekind. Hello OutThere, by Saroyan, and My Valise, byBennet. Curtain rises at 8:45. Studentadmission, $1.00. general admission,$1.50.Downtown . . .Wednesday, October 17: Dinner honor¬ing Frank Lloyd Wright in GrandBallroom of Hotel Sherman, starting7:30. For Information call Frank LloydWright day office at 29 South LaSallestreet, ST 1-1275.Organizeorchestra Wednesday, October 17: Fine Arts quar¬tet will play program featuring twoBeethoven and one Bartok quartet atthe Goodman theater. Tickets maybe obtained from Allied Arts office20 Wacker drive. FR 2-0566. Curtaintime, 8:30, admission $2.00 or $9 oofor entire series of six.Chicago symphony concerts ..,Friday, October 12: Haffuer symphon-by Mozart: arias from Bach’s Weddingcantata: Stravinsky’s Song of theNightingale; four Strauss arias; andTchaikovsky's Cappricrio Italien. Mag¬da Laszlo, soprano; Izler Solomon,conductor.Thursday, October 18 and Friday. Octo.her 19: Encounter, Charles Turner-Mendelssohn violin concerto; Bee¬thoven's Eroica symphony. Berl Senof-sky, violinist; Fritz Reiner, directorSaturday. October 20: Marriage of Fi¬garo. Mozart: Dvorak's fifth svm-phony; Smetena's Moldau; Gluck bal¬let suite; Fiimsky-Korsakoff's Caprie-clo Espanol, Izler Solomon, conductor.Tickets for all Chicago symphonyconcerts may be obtained at the bosoffice, Orchestral hall. Arrangementsare being made for tickets to be avail¬able at 'the University.The Orchestra Comediae-Musi-calis, a new student organization,will hold a rehearsal. Doug Maur¬er. who composed the score forthis^ year’s Blackfriars show, isorganizing the orchestra chiefly ^ ^for the purpose of accompanying wednesda^T October*n: saiofuture Blac-kfriar productions.OCM-is intended as a twenty-five piece orchestra, but at thepresent it is limited to a nucleusof ten members. Of the fifteenremaining positions, it is desir¬able that the majority be filled bycompetent violinists.The possessor of a trap set orother percussion instruments isneeded even more urgently, how¬ever. All those interested in join¬ing OCM, regardless of what in- Studebaker theater . . .George Bernard Shaw's Androcles andthe Lion. Admission $100 and upCurtain 8:30 nightly. Sunday matinee!Lyric opera .m t. byRichard Strauss.Friday, October 19: Andrea Chenier, bvGiordano. All performances at CivicOpera house. Curtains, 8:30.UC physicisthonoredHERE ARE YOUR OLD GOLD Robert S. Mulliken has been_ named to the Ernest DeWitt» charge, and students can come struments they play, are invited Burton Distinguished ServiceI stag or drag. to contact Maurer at PLaza 2-5078. Professnrshin.Maurer, who studied conduct¬ing at the National Music camp atInterlochen, Michigan, will directOCM, until such time as it can bedetermined whether the Black¬friars’ budget will permit a proPUZZLESWINA TOURFORTWOAROUNDTHEWORLDSTARTNOW! PUZZLE NO. 4CLUE: Organized by Congregationalist*and Presbyterians in territory opened bythe Black Hawk War, this coeducationalcollege is noted for courses in anthropology.ANSWER—Name ■ . -AddressCity.S tote.College_Hold until you have completed all 24 puzzles PUZZLE NO. 5CLUE: This Florida college stresses a con¬ference plan and individualized curricu¬lum. It was founded by Congregationalistsand chartered in 1885.ANSWERNam*Address , ....Cily StaleCalleQeHold until you have completed all 24 puzzlesYOU’LL GO FOROLD GOLDSEither REGULAR, KING SIZE OfMm GREAT NEW FILTERSOld Golds taste terrific! The reasonOld Golds give you the besttobaccos. Nature-ripened tobaccos. • •so RICH,SO LIGHT,SO GOLDENBRIGHT!BEST TASTE YETIN A FILTER CIGARETTE PUZZLE NO. 6CLUE: Chartered in colonial day* byGeorge III, thia university’s name waslater changed to honor a Revolutionarysoldier.ANSWERNameA rbiressJState.CityCollegeHold until you have completed ail 24 puzzlesHOW TO PLAY!Start today! Play Tangle Schools. Re¬arrange the letters in each puzzle toform the name of an American Collegeor University. Professorship.Mulliken, hitherto a professorin the physics department, is anauthority on the spectra of mole¬cules. He has been a member ofthe UC faculty since 1928.His studies have made him afessional conductor. Besides its specialist in spectroscopic study ofprimary function, the new orches- the chemical bonds of molecules,tra may present its own concerts Ernest DeWitt Burton, in whoseduring the year or participate in honor the professorship is named,a joint program with the Con- was the third president of thecert band. University.MAX SCHACTMANChairman of the Independent Socialist LeagueONTHE FIGHT AGAINST THEATTORNEY GENERAL’S LISTThe ISL is the First Organization on the "Subversive"List to Have Received a Hearing from the GovernmentFRIDAY, OCT. 19th 8:00 P.M.ROOSEVELT COLLEGE430 S. Michigan AvenueADMISSION 50c and 25cSponsored by Labor Action ForumNICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063LIMITED OFFER4 PIZZAS FOR PRICE OF 3on group orders10% DISCOUNT ONOTHER ORDERSspecial prices only when deliveredFree delivery to IK of C. studentsOn any orderQuick, Courteous Service — 6 Days a WeekClosed MondaysTable Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M. Delivery Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M.Open till 3 A.M. on Friday and Saturdays ■-* A>October 12, 1956 Page ISBloch, Howat play well iff. Moore in Mandelwill read own poetrySparse attendance and excellent piano playing highlighted the UC Musical society’s firstconcert of the season. Robert Bloch, violinist, and Robert Howat, pianist, presented sonatasby Bach, Beethoven, Chopin, and Debussy to a rather apathetic audience of some 90 personsjii International house Sunday night.A very restrained performance on the part of both musicians of the Beethoven SonataNo. 1 in D opened the program. The steam heat in the assembly room proved insufficient asthe first two niovements, Alle a demonstrat}on Qf the technical doses, but I found this light and Moody lecture. There will be 7 z tt t : t rgro and Theme and Vana- di,ficulties inherent in the violin hnnnv snnat* to he aeeorded a no admission charge. poetI7 ^55 the American Acad., emy in lyoo*IVtiss Moore received tlie I^id.1 •After a short intermission, what coupled with an effortless display award in 1925 for her first Ameri Among her other works are inWell-known poetess Marianne Moore, will appear at Mandelhall tonight at 8:30. She will devote her appearance to a read¬ing of her poems as well as a short talk.This presentation will mark the 199th William Vaughn. ... „ -. difficulties inherent in the violin happy sonata to be accorded a no admission charge,tions, were played with a cold, sonata. mos t persuasive interpretation,precise caution that quite robbed After a short intermission what coupled with an effortless display ,1M .... ..........orous°paltjt^^loch^ndaHowat was to me the highnght ^"the^ of technique that, to contrast to can ££ 5S,loosened up somewhat in the final the first two selections> made the addition, she has been awardedmovement, however, and tore into £orse ^ soIo -no reDe^re" players aPPear to he enjoying the Helen Haire Levinson prizethe Rondo hammer-and-tongs, in- pj,nnjn>c t;n„0to k not themselves.Chopin’s Sonata in b flat minor,Opus 35 — the “Death March”fusing their unquestionable tech-rLptrtU^o^tmhaTrn -nTta^rom'Jh; crying =spresent in the first two move¬ments. for poetry, the Shelly MemorialMichael Rossntan theless, and Collected Poems, thelatter having received three lead¬ing American honors in 3951: theof the first movement throughthe delicate tinklings of the ratherdoleful Scherzo, from the sombreThe second piece on the pro- thunderings of the Marche Fune-gram was Bach s difficult Sonata bre through the Presto dash forin G for Violin. Unfortunately, the fin}sh ]jnei Howat acquitted ...... . , , .neither the piece nor the playing himself very well in a work that, *rom the inside are wanted to act as supers during the Lyric operadid anything to establish a pas- despite its unquestioned popular season, which started this week and will end in November.Lyric opera needs supersUC students interested in experiencing the drama of grand operaaward, and the Gold Medal for PulilMr prize the Bo 111 ngenaward, and the National Booksionate love for solo violin music appeal, requires nonetheless ain this reviewer. The first move- great deal of interpretative skillment, Adagio, was played with a and feeling. Aside from a fewmethodical warmth that seemed s]ight mars in the continuity of Male students who want to take parts which require no singingor acting to speak of can contact Jerry Mickle of the opera associationat HY 3-8144. Supers need not commit themselves for an entireto indicate Bloch’s fingers had'not the third movement his nlavin^ season, and usually attend one rehearsal for each performance theyyet limbered up, and the playing was virtually faultless: hisPpower- take part in.ful style aided a performancewholely in the mood of the music.. , , .. , „„„ The concluding work on Sun-££ 2LT2. day night's program was Claudein the succeeding Fuga and Si-ciliano confirmed this impression.The latter two looked quite la-and Piano. Some people may liketheir impressionism in smallfound strain and unevenness in - 0the whole of their length. The «i,afinal movement, Presto, wassomewhat better technically, butit was still evident that the violin¬ist was having himself quite atime with the composition. I amtold that this sonata presents im¬mense technical difficulties, butI hold to my stubborn convictionthat if a piece entails so muchconcentration on mechanical de¬tails that the playing sounds per¬petually labored and whatever lieswithin the music is denied release,then some slightly more acces¬sible work ought to be substi¬tuted in its place. The audiencewas prepared to hear music, not The Lyric theater, which features soloists of international repu¬tation, will this year number among its productions Wagner’s DieWalkure; Mozart’s Don Giovanni; Tosca, Girl of the Golden West,and La Boheme, by Puccini; La Traviata and La Forza del Destino,by Verdi; Strauss’ Salome; Andrea Chenier, by Giordano, and Ros¬sini’s Barber of Seville. award. Her latest book is Like aBulwark, which is to appear soon.Modern dancingfestival featureThe reorganized Modern danceclub will hold its first meetingthis Wednesday at Ida Noyes, at7:30.The group intends to prepareworks for performance at theFestival of the Arts.Classes will be held at IdaNoyes each Friday under permaenent instructor Maggie Nash.STUDENTWIVESWORK ON CAMPUSThe Personnel Office has awide variety of full-timeclerical and technical posi¬tions that are open. We aresure there is one that willinterest you.WE NEEDSecretariesStenographersTypistsBookkeepersClerksClinical TechniciansResearch Technicians(including)Medical ChemistsHematologistsHistologistsBacteriologistsBENEFITS INCLUDE3 weeks* paid vacation2 weeks* sick leaveTuition remissionLibrary and recreationalprivileges*"apply NOWPersonnel Office956 E. 58th St. What young people are doing at General ElectricYoung mathematicianhelps paceengineering advancesRecently General Electric developed acompact, new motor for industrial use. Butbefore the motor could be put into automaticproduction, one difficulty remained: to de¬sign a protective end shield that would con¬fine any possible explosion to the motor itself.The man who solved the tough mathemat¬ical problems involved is R. A. “Pete” Powell— a mathematical analyst whose job is to as¬sist other engineers in math problems whicharise in any number of different projects.Powell’s Work Is Varied and ImportantBecause he is not tied down to any oneproject, Powell seldom has two similar as¬signments. Taking established engineeringand mathematical principles, some of themextremely complicated, Powell applies themto advanced engineering problems. In doingthis, Pete is able to make such calculationsas the distortion of a small part of a jetengine caused by vibrations, the deflectionoccurring in a turbine part when it runs atoperational speeds, or the forces exertedupon a rotating shaft by lubricants.27,000 College Graduates at General ElectricWhen “Pete” Powell came to General Elec¬tric in 1953, he already knew the kind ofwork he wanted to do. Like each of our27,000 college-graduate employees, he isbeing given the chance to grow and realizehis full potential. For General Electric haslong believed this: Whenever fresh youngminds are given freedom to make progress,everybody benefits — the individual, theCompany, and the country.Educational Relations, General ElectricCompany, Schenectady 5, New York R. A. "PETE" POWElt joined GeneralElectric in 1953 after receiving hisB.S. in Physics in ’47 and his M.S. inMathematics in ’49, both from Purdue.From 1949-52 he completed furtherstudy in Physics again at Purdue.THE CHICAGO MAROONPage 16 October 12, 1955‘‘Heads up now . . . heads up!’Grid scrimmages plannedby Mitri Dozoretz“O.K.! feet ahead, now see if you can drill it into my belly.... hut 1, hut 2, hut 3 ... drive... hit ’im low . . . heads up . . These are the sounds floating over north field these daysas the 1956 version of the Maroon grid class mans the field. The still growing class of 42,headed by a coaching staff of four, are, in the words of athletic director and head coach,Walter Hass, “inexperienced but eager to learn.”Since the first practice session Monday, October 8, both coaches and men are preparingfor the two definite scrim¬mages scheduled thus far tobe played on the turf of Staggfield. They will be the first gridsquad sporting the maroon uni¬forms of UC to actively partici¬pate in a football game or a scrim¬mage with another college onStagg field since football wasdropped as a sport on campus in1939. In fact the squad will bewearing the same uniforms thatthe gridders of 1939 wore in theirlast game. The big question in theminds of the players and studentsis whether or not this is a sym¬bolic way to show everyone thatthe old way is returning.The two scrimmages will beheld on October 23 and 30 againstNorth Park college (which hasjust become a four-year school)and North Central college, respec¬tively. The scrimmages will justbe a practice session with thecoaches of both teams on the fieldat all times. Each squad will begiven an opportunity to run offseries of eight or ten plays againstvarious defenses without firstdowns or scores being recorded.A third scrimmage with the Uni- sayS tfiat y0U can gQ «jn out( or thusiasm.” T^be pattern last yearversity of Illinois at Navy Pier 0Ver” your opponents. was similar to the one this year;may be arranged. The 'squad boasts ten returnees that is a lot of conditioning mixedThe reason for these scrim- from the 1955 grid class as well with the fundamentals of footballmages according to Hass is not to two men with other collegiate ^nd all climaxed with a scrim*prepare the boys for intercollegi- experience and 15 with previous mage. Last year UC scrimmagedate football because this is still high school experience. Of the North Park college,a football class ft gives them (the ciass 19 are incoming freshmen, Then in January, 1936, the Uni-class) something to work for.” seven are sophomores, eight are versity Senate met to discuss theAiding Hass in molding a field- juniors and two are seniors. There plight of football. Voting againstable team for the scrimmages are are also six graduate students out a special committee’s report thatKyle Anderson, who acted as head for the class. ' football should return the Univer-c°ach for the 1953 grid class and Brief resume of grid movement sity Senate by a 24-14 vote turnedwno is now assistant coach and . Dro.footbaii netition was cir- this recommendation down. Thisbackfield coach; Dale Bjorkland, on“ImDufbv membera of killed all hopes for the return ofwith Hass fmmCrar£ir,nhrnlw the newly formed UC Students intercollegiate football at thatwith Hass from Carleton college, , Football on Aoril 30 1955 time but because of the return ofis line coach; while still another . 1 0 Da 1 Api the class in certain nuarters onenewcomer, Robert Kreidler, var- Sadf.'&lJfck can tear dTsetesion oTwhether itSanaloHyStace?hen “dthas will take two or three years forTo^Sanl left schoob The petition was met °|SS?“nSplayed center on the LaCrosse mi*ed emotions as 30 stu- basis similar to the baseball andState college grid team ancffeels dents ?"d pro1!esfs^s sflgnedthat football is “something that support football if it returned toall schools should have.- UC ,whde other ,^ude?ts signedmock petitions calling for athleticTo use split-T scholarships for intercollegiateThe 42-man squad boasting 40 women’s softball and one for in¬men in fhe weight range of 145 tercollegiate king • of - the - moun-pounds (Dick Pepelea”) to 225 tain.?o°Upniday ‘“fan1 m!bairan«drnhnl SnnT' "Foot coacWn* of Alvar Hermanson,with a split T formation. In the ^tl^ coming back to the^n! routed Lake Forest Academysplit T four men instead of the ve“ity 0[ Chicago campus" ap- by a score of 5-1 last Wednesdayordinary three line up to the right ^ r on Stagg Field. Goals for Chicagoof the center with the quarterback Peareu- This story told of the Were scored by Sutton, Giuara,directly behind the center and the formation of the 1955 football Wirzup and a confused Lake For-other three backs about two yards class which was formed to “satis- est defenseman. This aforemen-behind and perpendicular to the iy the needs and desires of cer- tioned goal was scored in a veryinverted human T. Hass asserts taln stU(*ents. rare play in winch a Lake Forestthat the “split T is easier to teach Forty men turned out for the defenseman faked out his ownto boys wi.th very little experi- first class held October 10, 1955. goalie on a corner kick and acci-ence,” w’hile Anderson feels that Anderson commented after that dently tipped the ball into his ownaside from its easiness to teach first practise that they (the stu- goal. The lone Lake Forest tallythat it is also very “versatile.” He dents) went at it with lots of en- waS made by Bill Bowmen, center.basis similar to the baseball andtrack teams.UC hooters beatLake ForestersThe UC Booters, under theARROW-CASUAL WEARA scoopfor ArrowHis Arfatv University sport shirt is big Knews with college men this Fall. Webrought custom shirtmaking to casual'wear with this one, from its button-.,down collar in front (and centers nback) to its action box pleat. “Custom*^patterns, too , . / authentic tartanStripes, tattersall checb^many other stripes.Tartans,^5.95^ checks and stripes incotton-raygn, $7.95.^ Football classes shoivzeal among playersby George KareazesThe first day of official practice for the football class lastMonday showed a tremendous amount of zeal on the part ofthe participants and seemed to be indicative of the player’sattitude toward football’s return to the Midway. As has beenpreviously stated, the returnof football to UC will not be onthe exaggerated level of Big Tencompetition, but rather, on thesmall-college scale.In view of the expandingprogram on campus it is consid¬ered logical to regard football inthe same way that all other sportsare at this school. That is, if thereare enough people interested in•participating in football the op¬portunity for them to do so shouldexist.The coaching staff, headed byWalter Hass and Kyle AndersonCross countryteam victoriousThe UC cross country teamdefeated Wabash college 23-34and Indiana Central college16-42 in a dual meet last Sat¬urday at Crawfordsville, Indiana.In the scoring against Wabash,Omohundro took first, Rhynethird, Houk fifth, Richards sixth,CarlShn eighth, and Hosea Mar¬tin ninth. Against Indiana thesame men placed 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 and8, respectively.These were the third and fourthstraight victories for the Maroonharriers, and they are looking for¬ward to the meet tomorrowagainst Eastern Michigan college(formerly Michigan State nor¬mal) and Loyola university inWashington park at 11 a.m. TheUC Track club will send a teamto Urbana to compete against theUniversity of Illinois Cross Coun¬try team on the same day.DON’T DELAYYou may win $ 5,000in The Reader’s Digest $41,000College Contest. You can matchwits, too, with other students incolleges across the country. Justlist, in order, the six articles inOctober Reader’s Digest.yon thinkreaders will like best! That’s allthere is to it—and you can win abig cash prize for yourself plusscholarship money for your col¬lege.Belter act fast, though . . . thecqntest closes at midnight, Oct.25.Get an entry blank now at yourcollege bookstore. with the assistance of Dale Bjork¬land who was a former assistantof Hass at Carleton, and RobertKreidler, a Pennsylvania Stategraduate, is responsible for mak¬ing this year’s squad more prom¬ising than last year’sPlayers returning from lastyear’s squad are Tank Cousens.'Max Clay, Jim Maleus, John Jure’seek, Bill Lester, Bill Poe, EdGaines and Pete Werner. The newplayers are enthusiastic and havea great deal of spfrit.The entire squad and nscoaches are looking forward tothe coming scrimmage againstNorth Park college; October 23 onStagg field.Profs edge newstudents in gameAlthough last week’s Ma¬roon erroneously called it afootball game, the annual newstudent-faculty softball gameended in a victory for the facultyby a score of 23-21 (a footballscore, if there ever was one).This was the third straight vic¬tory for the faculty. The new stu¬dents were hampered by the masssubstitution resulting from thefulfillment of a promise by AthanTheoharis, new student coach, toplay all new students who showedup.It was a close game all the way,with the new students leading 2<h19 going into the ninth. But atthat point the "old pros” hit in theclutch and scored four runs.DUNCANSTATIONERS1313 East 55th St.(Next to the Post Office)The most completeline of ARTISTS'MATERIALS inHyde PorkHours: Mon., Tues., THurs.,8:15 - 6:30Wed., Fri., 8:15 - 8:00Sot., 8:30 - 6:00Office Suppliesi\SA Discounthyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student rate 50c all performancesStarting Friday, Oct. 12 — FOR ONE WEEK ONLY!An Exciting Wonderful Film Program . . .Combining the Great Talents of a Host of Great Artists!ERNEST BORGNINE (Academy Award Star of "Marty”)in FADDY CHAYEFSKY's (Academy Award Writer of"Marty")"THE CATERED AFFAIR"with BETTE DAVIS and BARRY FITZGERALDLike “Marty", here is a realistic "slice of life" script with uncannyreportage of the speech and humor, emotions and reactions of thepeople all of us know ... of the people most of us are. ErnestBorgnine plays his taxicab driver with the humanity ond nobility hegave the butcher. Bette Davis is always effective, sometimes inspiredas a housewife drab. Barry Fitzgerald continues to charm in BlarneyStone-kissing fashion.— AND —A Sumptuous Hour-Long Concert ofMusic, Dance ond DramaDAVID OISTRAKH MARCEL MARCEAUThe World's Greatest Violinist The Great French Mimeplays _ in a 15 minute sketch"MAZURKA" -"IN THE PARK"GALINA ULANOVA the world's greatest' ballerina . . .star of "The Ballet of Romeo and Juliet" in a 20 minute short ballettaken from "The Stars of the Russian Ballet"."THE FOUNTAIN OF BAKHCHISARAI""For sheer barbaric splendor, dancing, and miming "The Fountain ofBakhchisarai" is a supercharged piece of ballet theatre!"— Sam Lesner, Chicago Daily News