Gray, new SG head, tells views; East-West trade needed,wants student-SG communication Quincy Wright tells forumby Beverly LutherClive Gray, Student Government president, said that he “would like to succeed in-showingthe administration, in persuasion of acts as well as in words, that students of UC are ableto govern themselves competently and responsibly.”Gray stated that communication between the student body and Student Government “hasnot been good because students have regarded SG as one more interest group, and theyhaven’t felt much closer to SG than they have, for example, to religious or cultural groupson campus. The only worth- Trade with the Iron Curtain countries may not be a possi¬bility at the moment, but it should be an aim of all thoseinterested in world peace, according to Quincy Wright, pro¬fessor of international law. Wright spoke on the subject lastMonday before a group of Stu-while way of getting morecontact between students andSG is for SG to perform servicesWhich benefit all students."Homes student services neededWhen asked to be more specificabout services which benefit allStudents, he named the loan serv¬ice, changes within the SG consti¬tution, and a more regularizedpublicity program for the SGmimeograph service, ticket serv¬ice, and book-exchange.« “I hope that SRP won’t feelthat we are all after them with anaxe, but that we want to bringthem in on a common program ofstudent services,” Gray stated.SG i« "student spokesman"Gray feels that the place of Stu¬dent Government on the UC cam¬pus is that of “an effective spokes¬ man for student opinion on suchthings as the Michigan Plan andacademic freedom. SG will alsotry to further the exchange pro¬gram with foreign universities.We don’t intend to make ourselveslook stupid by getting mixed upin problems such as the Rosen¬berg case, as last year’s SG did."He does feel that the scope of SG’sactions could include questions ofacademic freedom which mayarise on other campuses.Criticizes MAROONGray feels that the MAROONgave SG more news space than itdeserved, if one considers whatSG did for the students last year.“This year if we also fail we won’texpect to have the MAROON putin plugs for us everywhere."Gray is a graduate of the Col¬ lege and has studied a year at theUniversity of Frankfurt. While at¬tending the College he was presi¬dent of the University StudentsFellowship, a member of theHumboldt German LanguageClub, and of two honor societies.In June, 1953, he received theDean of Student’s special awardin recognition of his extra-curricu¬lar activities. together are less likely to fighteach other, because trade raisesthe living standards of the partiesinvolved, and because prosperouspeoples are less apt to take up ordent Forum debaters and oth¬er students.East-West trade has laggedin recent years because of theSoviet Union’s attempts to make cling to Communism,the Iron Curtain countries eco- if Malenkov has any concernnomically self-sufficient, and be- for raising the living standards ofcause of protectionist policies the Iron Curtain peoples, as some(such as tariffs and other trade evidence indicates he may, thenrestrictions) practiced by West- the West should explore the pos-ern nations, Wright said. The free sibility of negotiating trade con-nations should strive to achieve tracts which would make ex-freer trade the world over, he con- change of consumer goods pos-tinued, because people who trade sible, he concluded.Machiavelli first philosophicpropagandist, says Strauss“Machiavelli is one of the most shocking writers of alltime,” said Leo Strauss, professor of political philosophy,continuing the Walgreen Lecture series, “Machiavelli andMachiavellianism.” Machiavelli wrote his critique of Biblicalmorality and classical political philosophy circumspectly, be¬cause his teaching, Strauss concluded after a close analysisOf The Prince and the Dis- ——— — ——' .. . “^ and humility which it taughtcourses, was an engine of woul(j secure evil rule forever.subversion. Similarly, Machiavelli attacked“Earlier philosophers were re- tbe classical tradition which holdssigned to the fact that their ‘true’ ^at republic is one ofteachings would never supersede thought. “He opposes with amaz-the false; Machiavelli was the jng clarit^and force a realisticfirst one who attempted to con- approach to that of classical uto-trol the future by embarking on pianism,” said Strauss,a propaganda campaign,” Strauss By consciously lowering stand-asserted. “Machiavelli’s writings,” ards Machiavelli increased thehe said, “marked the beginning of probability of attaining the de-the Enlightenment.” sired society. “Modern thoughtThe unscrupulous cunning may appear more idealistic thanwhich we consider Machiavellian the ancient,” Strauss explained,surely existed before him. But he “because an increase in probabil-was the “first man of superior in- ity can be accompanied by antelligence who, without low mo- increase in concern for the indi-tives, tried to justify immoral vidual.”practices by reasoned argument,” Yet virtue can be practiced onlyStrauss went on. Machiavelli within society; people must betaught that what is in accordance educated to it. While this was al-with nature should be more than ways admitted, Machiavelli car-a rare occurrence; society should ried it a step further. “The educa-take its bearings from what is tors themselves must be educated,done. Men are by nature bad; they Thus the founders of society cancan become good, but the trans- have no virtue. The context information requires compulsion. which virtue is possible is madeMachiavelli attacked Christian- by immorality,” Strauss pointedity because the virtues of patience out. University of Chicago, November 6, 1953B-J riots over trophy;Linn, Coulter stage raidsby Karl RodmanBurton Judson court has been witness to water fights, riots, thievery and bitter rivalryduring the past week.The conflict began over a protested inter- mural football game between Linn and Coulterhouse, and centered around the College House trophy which was consequently awarded toLinn House.A protest immediately followed the game, claiming that Linn’s winning touchdown wasscored after time had run out.The protest was refused and Vincent House washroom. Unable Trophy disappearsthat night the trophy disap- 1? .find trophy they turned Meanwhile the whereabouts olneared from Coulter’s lounee !h6ir wrath on tfJe house f11™1' the trophy remains unknown. Itpeared Horn Coulters lounge, tuns, carrying out chairs, tables had been burned to Linn Housereappearing in Linn House. and ashtrays, and leaving the and made officially theirs, onlyCertain members of Coulter, in Coulter lounge quite bare. to disappear again last Tuesdaythe interest of fair procedure, Eventually Linn members, un- night. With both houses disclaim-then reappropriate&nheft.* trophy dor the guidance of house heads ing all responsibility for this ac-—which would not become Linn and a campus policeman, return- - tion it remais an unsolved mys-property until officially awarded ec* their “substitute” trophies but tery at the time of publicationonly after damage to the extent of who took the thing and wha* his$18 had been accumulated. It is motives may be.assumed that the bill will be paidby Linn House, however, in orderto remain consistent with theprevalent spirit their House Coun-sometime in the future.Mob forms to retaliateThis action caused a large mob,estimated at between 30 to 40 stu¬dents, to descend on CoulterHouse, attempting to seize the .trophy. Finding the front door c}} asked Coulter s Council to a4 * ° nicnnecinn onrl rrror»i miclir imnmHprotected, they forced entrancethrough devious means employ¬ing the fire escape and adjoiningNucleus still a mystery: Fermiby Nellie Stoneman .“We have no detailed understanding of the nucleus of the atom, in spite of the fact thatthe problem of the structure of the atom was solved by 1930,” said Enrico Fermi in the firstOf the Distinguished Service Lectures, “The Physics of High Energies.”Fermi, the Charles H. Swift Distinguished Service professor, member of the Departmentof Physics and the Institute of Nuclear Studies, and winner of the Nobel Prize for Physicsin 1938, spoke last Friday evening at the University College.“It is possible to amass a called mesonS( but not until 1947 energy is beyond imagination atgreat variety of data by meas- wag tbe Yukawa pi meson found, present.Unng and cataloguing without pj mesons needed Fermi concluded by telling hishaving detailed- understanding,” The question was how to pro- audience that when he enteredFermi explained. Physicists are duce the pi meson for study. A physics in the ’20s he had beentrying now to discover the nature method was suggested by analogy completely pessimistic, and whileOf the forces operating in the with the electromagnetic^field, in much more had been achievedatomic nucleus, but “direct meth- which electrons are bombarded than he then expected, he wouldods are impossible with particles with other electrons so that the speak as pessimistically today,ten thousand times smaller than field is shaken loose and the par- ■ I Jthe atom.” tides start traveling on their own. BOOK CO"Op piBlinCCi discussion and graciously invitedthem to take a share in payment.Coulter not passiveCoulter men, meanwhile, havenot remained completely passive.They preferred to express them¬selves in a more dignified man¬ner, and heartily disapprove ofproperty damage. Therefore as amore silent demonstration of theirpostiion, a small delegation visitedLinn House sometime betweenthe hours of 3 and 7 a.m. lastSunday. Upon awakening, LinnHouse with greeted with the name“Coulter” emblazoned in brightred paint on all their washroommirrors. Joyce Cary to speakJoyce Cary, English novelist,will deliver the 188th WilliamVaughn Moody Lecture on“The Novel of Ideas” next Fri¬day evening, at 8:30 p.m., inMandel Hall.Cary is the author of 15novels, his best known being“Mister Johnson,” “The Horse’sMouth,” and “Prisoner ofGrace.” He has also producedseveral political treatises andmany poems.Admission is without ticketand without charge.No measurements without theory But the relation between mass Plans for a Student Book Buy-“Furthermore,” Fermi contin- and energy presents a difficulty. - cooperative are now beinglied, “measurements without To fabricate the pi meson it re- drawn up by the Student Repre¬theory won’t go very far, and quired energy at least equivalent sentatjve party. In an effort totheory cannot be constructed in a to lts mass> or 140 million elec- fjnd out bow many students arepurely inductive- way. At present tron volts. interested and in order to find outthere is no theory which fits the The UC cyclotron accelerates which texts will be used and inexperimental data." protons to 450 million electron what quantity, members of theOne theory tested volts. Many of the protons merely coop committee of SRP are now"Ong theoretical idea, not quan- shoot through the target, but oc- interviewing departmental chair-titative but useful as a guide, has casionally one of the nuclei of the men, departmental clubs, and vari-been tested,” he said. In 1935 a target material atoms is struck ous professors and instructors.Japanese nhvsicist Yukawa ad* &nd mesons aie projected off in The next stage will be to usep^ng the idea of the field to all directions. the information thus obtained innuclear forces, postulated the ex- Ominous signs appear making contacts with publishersistence of an intermediate par- “But there are ominous signs," and distributors of text books,tide, two or three hundred times Fermi said. An alarming number These contacts will consist pri-heavier than that of the electron of other particles with much larg- marily of making discount andbut lighter than urotons and neu- er energies have been found in delivery arrangements, acc-oidingtrons. Cosmic radiation physicists cosmic radiations. A cyclotron to Richard Kluckholn, chairmantliscovered one of these particles* which can produce the necessary of the committee. Outing Club plans ski trip;destination is ColoradoColorado’s celebrated winter sports center at ArapahoeBasin is now within the reach of UC students. A ski trip,sponsored by the Student Union Outing Club, has been plannedfrom Dec. 18 to Jan. 3 and will cost about $95, includingchartered bus, transportation,room and board, and teaching . Less°ns art? provided at the. ’ . Arapahoe sknng center, and skisfacilities for those who are and chair lifts may be rented,beginners at the sport. Trails are graded in difficulty ac-A meeting for interested stu- cording to the experience of thedents will be held next Tuesdav at individual, no previous skiing ex-_ . ... . T, perience is necessary. Participants7:30 p.m. in the library of Ida jn tbe trip need not be membersNoyes. Ways and means of the 0f the Outing Club,trip will be discussed, and the Lake Arapahoe, about whichlimitation to 37 adventurers which the skiing activities of those par-exists at present will also be taken ticipating in the two-week tripup. Any one who is interested in will center, is situated 65 milesthe trip but who cannot attend southwest of Denver, in the heartthis meeting is advised by the Out- of the Colorado Rockies. It ising Club to inform Irma Arenz, yearly a major focus of winterCR 7-0328. sports.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 6, 1953(MORestaurant and Barbecuef 1411 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-5300Lectures relate College,religion, in Porter seriesDoes our present college system help the student developa sense of values or does it leave him floundering? This is therecurring question in the current Porter Foundation lectureseries on Christian Faith and a General Education.“It is said that our class work has destructive effects onthe faith of the students,” stated Gerhard Meyer, of the col¬lege economics department, at ~ 7the Nov. 2 lecture on the social tically speaking negligib e anscience program. He added ‘^n on.sCX.ions ZEf£however, that an3r.®^*”£t, more interpretive of meaningsdogmauc religious domination rath(?r tha/ Umited by a quasi.must be rejected, not m< y y naturai science method, for “faithgeneral educator bu a y js an encounter” which can bethe Christian. neither proved nor disproved.Meyer pointed out that the uni- n stm a mcmber otversity does have a senous re social science staff,sponslbihty which cannot allow it describedfcthe resent conege so-to retire behind a bias of pure sclence program as basicallyintellectualism, indifference to, or orientation to our Chris-omission of, the intrinsic valuesof Christian faith since “faith isthe center of education; orienting,inspiring and directing . tian society in which every studentwill get some value structure.“The Church as an institution hasthe important function of keepingMonday and Thursday Evenings ot 8Admission 50c“Faith is concerned w’ith the jaj{b alive, and the college’s reultimate source as a whole, while sponsibility is not in the develop-any scholastic science is relative ment of pure faith) but in relatingto a part. Faith and reason are jbe individual to the Americannot identical, but they are in con- tradition. This tradition is infusedflict only when one or the other, wjth Christian ideals havingor both, are idolatrous.” meaning for all, including non-Charles Bell, a member of the Christians,” said Stillman,college humanities staff, during jn the humanities lecture Pres-the discussion of the program of ton Roberts, of* the Federatedthe humanities curricular on Oct. Theological faculty, discussed26, asked: “Are we aiming at edu* e ' „ •eating the truly elect spirit, orare we aiming at saving the aver¬age person without confusinghim? . . . There is no other roadexcept free inquiry. If a person oreven a civilization buckles underthe tension, this is unfortunate;but it is for the best, as quality isof supreme value.”In his criticism of the socialscience program, Meyer said thatthe treatment of religion is prac-UN official talkson security pathsThe Assistant Secretary-Gener¬al of the United Nations, Benja¬min Cohen of Chile, will be thekeynote speaker of an ArmisticeDay program on Wednesday, No¬vember 11, at 8:15 p.m., at 32 W.Randolph, 12th floor. “Paths toGreater Security” will be the sub¬ject of the Chilean diplomat’sspeech, and part of a new UNfilm, “Fate of a Child,” will beshown in a program focusing onthe importance of the UN as apeacemaking body.Co-operating as the Chicago Co¬ordinating Committee for Peacein the sponsorship of the pro¬gram, are the UC Faculty-Gradu-ate Committee for Peace and oth¬er similar Chicago organizations.Tickets are $1.00 and may beobtained from the Faculty-Gradu¬ate Committee for Peace in theReynolds Club, or at the door. Talk on IndiaThe second lecture of the se¬ries on “India Between East andWest” will be delivered by SirFredrick James, former memberof the Indian Parliament and arepresentative of the Tata Cor¬poration Tor the United Kingdomand Europe. The UC Center forthe Study of American ForeignPolicy and the College are spon¬soring the lecture, scheduled fornext Thui'sday at 4:00 p.m. inLaw South."Modern Jew" topicof Hiller lecturesThe Hillel Foundation has an¬nounced a series of three publiclectures, entitled “Three Ways ofLooking at the Modern AmericanJew,” during the Autumn quarter.Murray Wax, instructor in so¬cial sciences at the Universityof Illinois, will deliver the firstlecture, “A Socio - PsychologicalView,” this coming Wednesday.Wax was formerly on the UCfaculty.The second lecture, “A Socio-Political View,” will be given byHerman Finer, professor of Po¬litical science at the University,on November 18. “A Religio-Cul-tural View” will be presented byRabbi Ralph Simon of Congrega¬tion Rodfei Zedek, on December 2.The lectures are on Wednesdayevenings at S:()0 p.m. at the HillelFoundation, 5715 Woodlawn. Sociological touroffered by SRPA sociological tour of Chicago’sSouth Side will be offered on Sat¬urday, November 14, by the Stu¬dent Representative Party (SRP).According to Lucius Meine,chairman of the SRP CommunityCommittee, the tour will take ap¬proximately four hours and willcost 50 cents per student. Meinestated that public housing proj¬ects, slum areas, and neighbor¬hoods which have been successfulin easing racial tensions will beincluded in the tour.Serving as tour director will beRalph Fertig, student in sociol¬ogy, former chairman of the Stu¬dent Government commission onthe university neighborhood, stu¬dent representative with theSouth East Chicago Commission,and an officer of the Chatham-Avalon Community Council. Fer¬tig stated that various communityleaders and housing officialswould be invited on the tour.Students interested in partici¬pating should leave their name,address and phone number in theSRP box at the Reynolds Clubdesk, any time before Wednesdayevening. Communication MAnew Soc. degreeThe Committee on Communica¬tion has announced a new pro-gram leading to a master’s degreein Communication, authorized re¬cently by the division of socialsciences.Designed primarily for studentswho intend to work as publicistsor propagandists and for thosewishing to do research for com¬mercial or governmental commu¬nication agencies, the programwill begin officially in the AutumnQuarter, 1954.Applications for admission tothis program are now being ac¬cepted. The Committee recom¬mends that students interested incommunication who plan to pur¬sue careers in college teaching oracademic research work towarda Ph.D. in one of the establisheddisciplines. Such students couldnormally offer communication asan outside field in the Ph.D. pre¬liminary examinations of theirdepartment.Students interested in this pro¬gram are advised to contact Ken¬neth Adler, the Committee's ad¬viser.International House Movie Programp.m.Monday, Nov. 9 — No Resting Place (Irish)Thursday, Nov. 12 — The Devil and Daniel Webster,(American)TELEVISIONRADIO SUPPLIESTRiangle 4-8070• Amateur Equipment• Amplifiers• Batteries• Books & Manuals• Chokes & Coils• Condensers & Cones• FM Equipment• Headphones & Kits• Microphones & Pick-Ups• Radios & Phonographs• Relays, Resistors, Speakers• Test Equipment & Tools• Transformers & Tubes• Vibrators & VolumeControls• Wire, Aerials, etc.Electronic Devices Designed &Built . . . Modern Catalog forIndustrial BuyersSelf-Service & Counter SalesFast ShipmentsLONG EXPERIENCE in helpingothers save time and money inthe use of electronic productsJ. G. Bowman & Co.513-17 East 75th Street College Men Look “SmootherThanks To Arrow GabanaroTrim-Fitting Sports ShirtFurthers New TrendTo NeatnessOne of the most marked changes in campus fashionsthis year is the switch to the neat sports shirt that fitsas well . . . looks as trim ... as a regular shirt. Thischange has been brought about by Arrow Gabanaro—a washable rayon gabardine sports shirt in exact collarsizes and sleeve lengths . . . Sanforset® to keep its per¬fect fit. Available at all Arrow dealers!ARROWTRADE <& MARKSHIRTS • TIES • UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS — THE HI-HAT CLUB1150 East 55th StreetPresentsTHE AHNAD JAMEL TRIOPopular Recording Artists Who HaveThrilled Audiences at Cafe Society andEmbers Club, N.Y.C. — plusChicago's Blue NoteAmerica's Finest Progressive Music Group ! ! INow Appearing — Every Thursday thru MondayWednesday Nites Hear the Intimate Music ofErnest Norckam and Norma TaylorYou look better... feel billet inArrow “Gabanaro":0 Sj Q • Sanforset® for lasting fitGet that smart neat look with Arrow Gabanaro ... America's# 1 sports shirt. Washable rayon gabardine ... Sanforset® tokeep its fit. With exclusive Arafold collar that brings you extracomfort, extra smartness, worn with a tie or without. Stop intoday... choose from many handsome colors in your exact size.l.kirflAA _ EvmiicIaji _ On Lr Pnvlr — r«i _ InliofHow the starsgot startedANNE JEFFREYS dreamed of being anopera star, studied long and hard.BOB STERLING could have been apro athlete, but chose the long, hardpull of acting. Both eventually wongood parts on stage, radio, TV.They met on a TV show ... sang animpromptu duet... became Mr. & Mrs.in real life ... and "Mr. and Mrs. Kerby'in TV’s brilliant,new "Topper” program!W WERE THANKFUL SO MANY OF OURTHEATRE FRIENDS TOLD US TO TRY CAMELS.70 ME THEIR MILDNESS IS TOPS-AND BOB^ MUCH PREFERS CAMELS' FLAVOR. PURE^ PLEASURE FOR BOTH OF US! ^m a YOU OUGHT TO TRY THEM! jStig ttewTV profcfam - CSS-TV Fridays StartsmokingCamelsyourself!Smoke only Camels for30 days and find outwhy Camels are first inmildness, flavor andpopularity! See howmuch pure pleasure acigarette can give you!Camels agree with more peopleSt—* THAW ANY OTHER. CIGAP-ETTE »Novembe*' 6, 1953 Page 3NY State U bans fraternities;moves to stopby Harry WhiteleyIn one of the most forceful moves ever made to end discrimination in fraternities and so¬rorities, State University of New York ordered all student social organizations to seyertheir national fraternal affiliations and to eliminate any racial and religious discriminationin the selecion of members within five years.The decree, made by the Board of Trustees, affects 25 different national groups at thetwo state medical schools and at nine teacher training colleges, which have a total enroll¬ment of 13,000. It will be effec¬tive immediately, but the filiated with recognized religious, f .. ., bodies. The trustees authorizeddeadlinc for romplianfe wouW Dr Carlson t0 declde whether agroup was scholastic, religious orsocial.be 1958, to give the organizationstime to work out financial prob¬lems arising from the edict.The trustees acted on the recom¬mendation of Dr. William S. Carl¬son, president of the State Uni¬versity, following instances of al¬leged discrimination in two unitsof the University. They adopted aresolution which said that no stu¬dent social group would be per¬mitted to exist on its campuses ifit had “any direct or indirect af¬filiation or connection with anynational or other organization out¬side its particular institution.”"Artificial criteria" allowedThe trustees also ordered thatno such organization should, in Incidents caused changeThe incidents on which Dr. Carl¬son’s recommendation was basedtook place during the academicyear of 1952, at the State Univer¬sity Teachers College, Cortland,N. Y. The question arose as towhether the local chapters of twosororities, Sigma Sigma Sigmaand Alpha Sigma Alpha, could ac- ganizations, Dr. Carlson said,“The real problem is not the for¬mal, written restrictive provisionsin constitutions, by-laws, etc., butthe actual pernicious practicesbased upon informal and unwrit¬ten tacit understandings andagreements.National organization "intolerable"“So long as student organiza¬tions are local in nature, the situ¬ation is manageable. But whenthey involve ties outside the uni¬versity, over which the universitycan exercise no control, seriouscept Negro girls as members. The conflicts may arise. This is some-local chapter wanted to admit thing a university cannot toler-them, but the national organiza- at# ...”tion said no. The question became U# continued by saying, “Ita major issue on the college cam- would be sophistry for the Statepus and the two sororities were University to vigorously combatsuspended by college officials. At discrimination in its admissionsP°!1C^ 5 the Albany College for Teachers and academic policies and, at theall sixty-two members of the Kap- tices among the extra-curricularpa Delta Rho fraternity had re- same time, condone those prac-signed ^n protest against the na- organizations which it recognizes,tional group’s refusal to approve The academic and extra-curricularfor membership five Jewish stu- programs intertwine to such a de¬gree in educating and molding astudent that they cannot be sev¬ered and each judged by contra¬dictory standards.”any rule which bars students onaccount of race, color, religion,creed, national origin or other ar¬tificial criteria.”The regulation does not applyto organizations with scholasticachievement as criteria for mem¬bership, such as Phi Beta Kappa,or to religious organizations af- dents who had been accepted bythe local chapter.In his address on national or¬For Thinkers Who Are DrinkersUNIVERSITY TAP AND LIQUOR1133 E. 55th Phone Ml 3-0524 Dorms defy fate;plan celebrationThe Bad Luck Ball, first Bur¬ton-J udson and InterdormitoryCouncil dance of the quarter, willtake place in the Cloister Club atIda Noyes Hall Friday, Nov. 13,from 9 to 12 p.m.Tickets are now available andcan be purchased from any I.C. orB.J. representative at $1.80 percouple. The band for the dancehas not yet been announced.A special attraction will be theelection of a Queen of Spades.Each college dormitory will nom¬inate one candidate for the honor.The finals are to be held at thedance. Dick Karlin is chairman ofthe event.Photographers studyuse, effect of filters^for color correctionsThe use of correction filtersand their effect on color balancein a photographic transparencywill be the topic for a lecture anddemonstration by Roland Royebefore the UC Camera Club Wed¬nesday evening at 8:00 in Eckhart202.Roye, member of the Photog¬raphy Society of America, willshow slides demonstrating the ef¬fects of various filters on a givenscene, and will discuss the use ofthese filters. The meeting will beopen to all interested persons. Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimptonwill appear on television this Sundayat 10:30 a.m. He will be the featuredspeaker on WNBQ’s educational tele¬vision series, "Live and Learn," wherehe will speak on "Problems of HigherEducation."Songs,food,drinkat Pre-Med ClubHippocrates HopThe Hippocrates Hop is thename of the Pre-Med Club partyto be held in Ida Noyes Librarythis Wednesday at 4:00 p.m.Featured will be the famouscadaver cocktail — the elixer oflife; the insults of an experiencedphrenologist, and a real alchemist—in action.The Pre-Meds invite everyoneto sing and eat, drink and dancewith them at their HippocratesHop.&Ae iMiAum PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET Hyde Park Theatreon Lake Park and 53rdStarting Friday, November 6two sophisticated adult comedies"the moon is blue" and "stalag 17"Student Rate 50c Phone NO 7-9071Starting Friday, November 13"the seven deadly sins"gems of acting and direction by the foremostscreen artists of France ond Italy There is a book youwant atSchneemann'sRed Door Book Shop1328 East 57th StreetSteven’s Lunch1321 East 55th StreetGood FoodLow Pricefcge 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 6, 1953Oberlin editor visits Moscow;tells of student newspaper thereI met no anti-eggheads in Russia,issued once weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at »he pubiica. Indicative of official Soviet attitudes toward higher education might be theHon office, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: . , , . . ® , , , Jr .Editorial office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. ioiO; Business and Advertising offices, newest, largest and most streamlined architectural show-place in the capital,Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by I JnivPr«;itv■tail, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. , J ' ,. , .i . , ,Arthur Brown Richard E. Ward From the 32-story top one gets a fine view of Moscow in the distance, andeditor-in-chief managing editor of the immense University spreading out beneath. On the way down, in the only: wlth tBe proepec'Tot'blg- streamlined elevator I sawLetters . . . during my trip, a studentLetter policyThe MAROON welcomes lettersfrom all of its readers. Any com¬ments on matters of interest tomembers of the University com¬munity ore appropriate subjectmatter.The MAROON reserves the rightto cut letters of more than 250words length. voice our disagreement with the prem¬ises on which you build your argument, proudly told me the descend-Startincr out as vou do. with the ^ *he asked,in yourNew student speaksI am a new student at UC and a mem-mVnnd^rmdnat^vpars'ifthe Uni" At an>' rate those who want to take anlng my undergraduate years at the Un active part in the game should be givenassumption that lootball Is not a sport, jng speed. “How fast,but a business, It Is understandablethat you conclude that any program do elevators descendof football at UC will threaten the ideals nnivorcitv?”you are presumably trying to uphold. UI,i s ’But look around you: have any other Entrance exams waivedvarsity sports in the university t«iKen ijp wn c a hlonrl dm "fTomon the perilous proportions you predict He was a Diona peasant iromfor football? if both baseball, our na- the Kursk area, proud of histional sport, and basketball, Americas ctroamlinpH linivcrsitv which be-number one spectator sport, have here Streamlined unneisity wmtn oeremained tractable in size and non-com- gan classes Sept. 1, proud of hav-mercial hi status, why should this same wnrbpH twn vphtq nn itc pan.atmosphere cause football to grow into WOlKed IWO years on IIS conan unmanageable colossus? struction prior to studying philos-Surely it would be more reasonable anV,u TTntranpp Avnm*? wp lsfprto await the reaction of the student °Pny* entrance exams, we laterbody as a whole to this proposed re- found out, were waived for Stu-instatement of football on a small scale . . vnlnntppr workers nn build-before you start tilting at windmills. aent volunteer worKers on Duua-Perhaps it will find favor, perhaps not. ing. Moscow reportThis account of Soviet studentlife wos written by Daniel Berger,co-editor of the Oberlin CollegeReview and is reprinted here.Berger was one of three collegenewspaper editors who returned re¬cently from a two-week visit to theSoviet Union.An account of other aspects ofSoviet life as seen by Berger, willappear in next week's MAROON. ty’s library had a great numberof English and American journalsand publications, more in thisfield, perhaps, than Carnegie Li¬brary. First one to catch my eyewas Radioactivity in Some OilFields of Southeastern Kansas,Geological Survey Publication988-E, U. S. Government PrintingOffice, 1953. Periodicals also wereup to date.In Kiev U., after the usual po¬litical discussion was more thanversify of Vermont I was closely asso- th ormort,lnitv to do soelated with the student new_spaper for maUn «tSr Find editors old for students usually antagonistic, almost twoBoth men seemed extremely hundred students ran to look atwell along in years for student the Americans. They were ex¬editors. I was impressed that both tremely friendly and eager to tryThe Moscow University, name were Party members, not mere out their English.mm decree It respect ^cf/the Editorial were sorry to see you yield to the tem- lishes twice weekly. For 18,000 the Communist youth organiza- We were guaranted the librarystaff and gained an idea Of the respon- muc°h afsh^weTon th^hVizon*56*81' 80 students in the new building and tion in the Soviet Union. — ed. had a good variety of AmericanRalph B. Hirsch on the old campus in downtown not^) Zakharov explained ap- literature. We were shown theMoscow, it prints 1,500 copies, pointment procedure as coming stacks, containing technical maga-Subscriptions are 16 rubles a year, from an annual student elected zines and tied up bundles of thesingle issues 20 kopeks. Most are confeernce. In answer to my ques- New York Daily Worker. Weread by students from, wall bulle- tjon> whether non-Party members asked again about literature. ItWants SOCCer instead hoards, a practice similar to COuld get the job, he and several was elsewhere in the library,the posting of metropolitan news- others smiled. Yes, he said, it came the answer, but we nevercould happen. My impression saw any-from the smile is that it doesn’t. A translator, who frequently an-The upper left hand, or lead, of swered us back without translat-a Russian paper is always the edi- ing> was a fourth-year Eng-torial. In this paper it is likely to student with a love for ourof the student newspaper, pub- Komsomols. (The Komsomol is Sees libroryClive GraySherrod GrayBob MarchDaniel Queen*ibility of journalists to their readers.In my estimation the writer of theeditorial entitled “We prefer no foot¬ball," is an extremely irresponsible per¬son from two points of view, first, asan amateur journalist (and there aresome fine amateurs in the field), andsecond, as a student. Even a statementof opinion should be defensible thoughit be an appeal to emotion. An editorialof a college newspaper should be espe- I wish to commend you on your ex- .daily well grounded in fact or at least cellent editorial on football in the Oct. papers on Walls outside,based on objective data. For are we not 30 issue. It sums up most of the things c ,. ,students interested in a search for which I would have said on the subject. td,*or is party membertruth? And are you of the editorial staff I would* only wish to add that there is a Four fulltime workers and overnot journalists in your own right inter- sport here at Chicago which is not only inn « t h o v c nut tho nannrested in reflecting truth? I realize that a better game than football, but also oiners put out uie paper,an editorial is not meant to be a fac- runs no risk of becoming a business. smaller in format than the Re-tual statement, but I do believe that One might well recommend that po- hut without nrlvprtisinfr FYli. x“ 1,110 11 io lu ir~** " ''*"* "*.”* ”7*an editorial must have as its purpose tentiai athletes think of coming out for view> but without aavert sing, r-ui chscuss exams, science and the literature. Twain, Dreiser, Whit-a seeking out of truth. This purpose soccer rather than engaging up the tor Avenir Zakharov has been a arrnniintr tn FHitnr 7a\c. man, Poe and Howard Fast arecannot be accomplished unless the thorny path of football, which, as the parfv mpmhpr dnrp 1Q4fi Previ- , d''t-OIUlnfo lo f-uuui hdktruths of facts go into its content. editorial pointed out, will sooner or later Farty. member since iy4o. .treyi harov. her favontes. We became friends,Specific criticisms to illustrate the become commercialized. I say that soc- ous journalistic experience in- T .. # •• him quoting favorite lines from Poe,point of this letter follow. Why did you cer is the better game, fully aware that aIh^ac Artitincr a militarv naner r7 ■ • • y j .. Tsay “not that we have anything against i am biased, but let me point out that eludes editing a military, paper Policy is made by a council sit- until it became evident I dldn tfootball" when you make it plain that in soccer every player uses his head to after serving with the Baltic fleet, tine every week New’s is mostlv know many.you have a great deal against football, think about what he is doing, while in Uo CoVc Via ic now a praduatp «tu- - b „ J ‘ t Te.g., you state "it is not a sport—it is football it is only the coach and the says ne is n £ . of campus interest, and mostly Leningrad University Libiary,a business, played and managed by quarterback that use it for thinking, the dent -with the faculty of journal- reads like American publicity much larger, had a better but stillerofessionals.” Of course that statement other players usually only knocking icm u , ^ . K , % limited if tkol itself is a generalization on a grand each other down in a rote manner. lSlH. handouts. Exception to the local limited collection, 11 the Card cata-scale and is probably supportable only As far as a spectator sport is con- Second in commend is the secre- interest rule was the picture of log I inspected was complete. The2nirieiXerehtotlbeSuh^1darasievidenceafor othe^co^ntrfeTare1^not'"eaVumerois tary, bald Semyon Gurevich, also Howard Fast awarding Paul director had returned the previ-your case. My point is that investiga- than the football fans here, and no less a Party member. His job corre- Robeson the Stalin Peace prize. ous week, he said, from a geom-tion may show your statement to be enthusiastic. To talk of taking up foot- „X rt:„ rnU o(ori„ rtoli, Thautrue or not. And i doubt whether you bail then can be justifiably called a step sponds to managing editor. His The same picture appeared in e,er s convention in Italy. I heyhave taken the trouble to get this in- in the direction of conformism, since an desk, covered with dummy sheets every Moscow daily. were the group that seemed most,0Y“Sri0worstrSter?oarn from the point of menT^n'favor"of ?ootbfiithil thaVn ’u and copy, was in the outer office Excellent restaurants, stream- willing to lend credence to whatview of good journalism takes form in the national sport, while soccer isn’t. where a dozen could easily work, lined little rooms with radios-— I said of American education and^tmottr uni versiues ^heTooTbaii pfay e'r footbaUf anT P^e cSom and wa“h Zakharov has a large, well-ap- all alike-small sandwich count- life. The students there, like theis seldom a student—he is merely a 200 a soccer game, we could use some more pointed and immaculate inner of- ers and book stores in the halls, rest of the city, seemed markedlySK 1 k"0W sports that would do justice to any rich paneling throughout, made mote Western.Steven Polgar executive.Hither and YonFind panty raids ebbing‘4. All students are asked toEducation for cavorting before 80,000Wildly cheering spectators.” In the in¬terest of decent journalism reject suchcrude pieces of work which assume thereaders’ minds to be of extremely lowlevel. Reject them, that is, unless youknow them to be defensible, unless youare satisfied that the facts have notbeen disregarded or distorted. I feelsure that the above quote was writtenfor the sake of itself, because it sound¬ed sensational and because it reflects a by Jan Mojdegeneral idea that many persons have of5KJS&.MttSSSS?iSSSStwh°the? Only two panty raids have been reported this year to date,0ne,,a‘l0wa SjatVnionfe at the University of Miami,involved. At Miami, despite the fact that printed invitations wereposition Concerning7 the^quesuon'Tt issued to the Party> things did not go over too well. The Miamifootban at uc i believe that the game Hurricane thinks that this is because several campus leaderslevel. The chancellor should make clear circulated through the crowd, warning freshmen that par-.‘.n5c5“u”/htflnrS ticipation could possibly wreck -g -- .to become a big business, and fears that their Chances Of joining a fra- n°l exiena on me PlaYlng Iieia-It would are Justified only if we believe , o They will form at the gate at thethat the chancellor would not stand leiriity. atIcta nf Wia fiAldfirm on this new position Football is very much in the. . . Ralph W. Conant pap^g across the nation these 4. All studen’Editorial unjustified days. It seems that there are the refrain from throwing any arti-This letter is in the way of being a following problems involved: cles during the game.^ How to get up enough spirit. #nolie ,mcs ollowed2. How to keep the damages “5; Snake lines by students willfrom spirit to a minimum. t>e discouraged, and will bring po-3. Should freshmen wear lice action if they get out of hand,beanies? “6. The two schools will ex-4. When should freshmen wear change newspaper articles as aguishing marks in the College cur- beanies? good will gesture. The presidentsriculum s approach to literature: Here is a selection of football of the two student councils will1. the emphasis on literary anal- news. exchange letters reporting anyysis of the formal type, 2. the Give behavior guida incidents.” (From the Technique,emphasis on Aristotelian rather “The following were adopted as Georgia Institute of Technology.)than Platonic analysis, 3. the em- guides for this year’s meeting of Student wants businessphasis on literature of the ancient Auburn and Georgia Tech. Said a sophomore at RichmondGreek type. “1. Rat caps, in the past a cause Professional Institute, transfer-Roberts finds that “Christian” of trouble, will not be worn by ring from Hollins College:and “modem” literature are con- Auburn frosh at all. Tech frosh “I transferred to RPI because Isidered in Greek terms, whereas will wear them only during the could not get business at Hol-he says that they “should be con- game. lins. . .sidered on their own terms.” He “Members of the Rambling Finally, from the UCLA Dailystates that “to analyze a work of Reck Club and Auburn’s ODK and Bruin comes the following an-literature in terms of just one Blue Key will be on hand before nouncement. Claiming that Phrat-theme is to make an incomplete and after the game to insure or- erers Will Endeavor To Burstanalysis and to arrive at only a der. WSC Bubble, the story says:partial understanding of that “2. Auburn fans will be seated “Phraterers is at it again,work.” in the temporary stands in front “This Friday they begin sellingThe lecture series continues o fthe Auburn section, rather than bubble gum for the express pur-Monday with Robert Moon of the in front of the Tech student seats, pose of blowing up WashingtonInstitute of Radiobiology and Bio- It was decided that Auburn root- State. Gum will be sold in front ofphysics lecturing on the college ers between Tech students and Kerckhaff Hall until 2 p.m.program of natural science. Rob- cheer leaders interfere with the ** ‘It’ll be a big blow,’ states Joert Palter of the College Natural proper execution of cheers. Gelerman, service chairman. TheScience Dept will discuss the sub- ”3. Lanes to escort the Tech proceeds will be donated to a Uni-Ject following the formal lecture, football team off the field will versity-recognized charity.”reply to your editorial of last weekWhile we can well understand yourPorter ... -(from page 2)what he considered as the distin- this new building one on which From talks with students at allthe Soviets spared nothing to three institutions I gained the im-make it their finest. Students pression of great drive; the goalknow it and are grateful. being often the contribution theySees US publications could make for the Soviet state.A small geology chemical analy- Not once did I feel a sense of re-sis lab was streamlined and effi- belliousness, or independencecient-looking. All fittings were from the ideals officially ex-Soviet-made. The geology facul- pressed.top DESIGN! top DESIRE!. . . and tops for your DOLLAR, too!consider for THANKSGIVING . . .dinnerware • Royal Berlin, Schoenwaldflatware • Facette, Milano, Linden,Form, Shadowpointcrystal • Leerdamfurniture • Herman Miller, KnollTHE MALIHINI 5481 S. Loke Park Av«.NOrmal 7-4915Daily: 10 to 6 . . . Evenings: Mon. & Thurs. till 9before you buysee the new SPARTON fm - amnothing comparable ot its pricespecification*phono input jockclip for external speaker6x9 heavy duty speakerpower transformereight tubeswell designed wood cabineton - off switch independent of volume controluniversity radio on 55th1149 e 55th streetNovember 6, 1953 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Dylan Thomas topresent poetryDylan Thomas, the Welsh poet,will give a reading of his poetryin Mandel Hall on Saturday, No¬vember 14 ,at 8:30. He will be pre¬sented under the sponsorship of(the Chicago Review. General ad¬mission will be $1.25, but studentsand faculty will be admitted for75 cents.Philip Toynbee recently hailedThomas as “the greatest livingpoet in the English language.”Thomas has written several vol¬umes of poetry and prose, and hisCollected Poems was publishedthis year by New Directions. Por¬tions of his newly completed’verse play may be read Saturdayevening.Thomas is stopping in Chicagofor a dinner being given by'• Poetry Magazine. His only publicappearance will be at the Uni¬versity.ImiimiimiiiiiiviiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinCampus Food ShopBAKERY AND HOME COOKED |FOODS i Student Court justices will be elected;explanation of judicial framework givenby Allan ColemanWithin the next few weeks the Student Assembly will be concerned with electing judgesto the Student-Faculty-Administration Court. Much time and energy will be expended, muchdebate will be engaged in, and emotions of leading Assembly members will probably beraised to a high pitch before the judges for the new term of the Court will have been selected.The question will no doubt be raised as to why these elections are considered of sufficientimportance to justify so great an expenditure of effort. Many students are only vaguely a<jv5se the Assembly as to wheth-aware of the existence of the Part II, appearing in next week'sMAROON, will deal with the easesdecided by the Court in its threeyears of existence.! GROCERIES - FROZEN FOODSCIGARETTES - ICE CREAM1369 E. 57th St.Chicago 37, III.MI. 3-7229Open TUI 10 P. iff. Court and know nothing of itsfunctions. The answer must besought in the nature of the Courtand the part it plays in the Stu¬dent Government. Most Ameri¬cans revere the august dignity ofthe U.S. Supreme Court and theConstitution. A similar feeling to¬ward the Student Court and thedocuments which it interprets hasbeen engendered among studentsinterested in campus politics. OurCourt is adorned with a symbol¬ism and prestige analogous tothat of the federal court.Examine framework of courtWhen we think of courts weimagine judges looking dignifiedand impressive in their flowingblack robes. The robes, the gavel,the bench are all part of the pompwhich gives the Court its theatri¬cal character. Underneath thesebadges of office, however, areplain men. It is our purpose hereto examine the plain unarrayedframework of the Court first, andthen to trace its development. Thefirst part will be definitive andbare, while the second will beillustrative and vital—it will at¬tempt to put the robes on theman, so to speak.UNIVERSITY FOODSEast 55th Street PhoneQuality GroceriesVegetables and FruitsFresh Bakery Goods DailyOpen 9 a.m. . 10 p.m. ind. Sunday(Closed on Fridays)TOUGH, LONG-WEARINGPLASTIC SOLESExtremely fastand durable...\Withstands greattemperature changes•’Easiest in the world to ski on," saysHannes Schmid,* famous international star.•’Spalding is leading the field In qualityand workmanship.”Other Spalding features: Patented inter-locking edge construction with offset screwholes. Shock-absorbing tip and tail section.See the big 1954 Spalding Ski Parade at yourfavorite ski shop — Top-Flite, Continental,Air-Fllte and many more in a complettrange of prices. "member Spalding advleery etaffSpaldinGSKIS THI PACK IN IKIINOfar your «opy fjili^ " 'SI.,"How to Care for Yaur Ikls"contain* helpful hint* on *kiinsexercltc*. waxing instruction* todtki etiquette- Add re**A. 0. ST AIDING S SROI, INC,CHIcepee, Mom. As the U.S. Supreme Court can¬not be comprehended apart fromthe Constitution and the organiza¬tion of the whole federal govern¬ment, so our Court cannot be un¬derstood without some knowl¬edge of the basic documents ofSG and its organization. TheCourt, along with the Assemblyand its Executive Council, and theUC delegation to the National Stu¬dents Association, is a branch ofSG. Its function is to decide casesinvolving the regulation of stu¬dent organizations and to inter¬pret the basic documents.SG only nominal befoie 1950Before 1950 SG was a govern¬ment in name only; it had nothingto govern except itself. In the win¬ter and -spring of that year thebasic documents giving SG regu¬latory powers over student organ¬izations were drafted in a seriesof discussions between leadingmembers of SG and the Admin¬istration. Frank Logan, then pres¬ident of SG, and Merrill Freed,who was later to become chiefjustice of the Court, wrote the SGproposals. Counterproposals weremade by Robert M. Strozier, deanof students, William Birenbaum, astudent at the time, and ArnoldBergstresser, assistant dean ofstudents.In early April the final propos¬als were presented to the Assem¬bly where they were debated andadopted with only two dissentingvotes. Later in the month in theNSA election they were ratifiedby the. student body by more thana two-thirds majority. Finally inthe first weeks of the fall quarterof 1950 the Administration ap¬proved them and they became aneffective body of law.Documents describedThere are three major docu¬ments which, taken together, con¬stitute the legal framework of theCourt. We ignore here the SGConstitution which is an enablingact passed by the student bodywhich merely defines the pow¬ers of the Assembly.) The first ofthese is the Student Bill of Rights.This is the keystone to the wholeframework. In the dignified lan¬guage of legal pronouncementsits Preamble solemnly proclaims:“In order to preserve and guaran¬tee to the students of the Univer¬sity of Chicago those conditionsindispensable to the full achieve¬ment of the objectives of highereducation in a free democratic society, the University of Chicagoholds the following rights essen¬tial to the complete developmentof the student as an individualand to the fulfillment of his re¬sponsibilities as a citizen of thatsociety.”Some of the rights cover suchmatters as admissions policy; thepower of students to participatein campus and civic organizations,to use campus facilities, to hearany speaker on any subject, tohave a democratic SG; and soforth.Bill of Rights supremeThe Bill of Rights is the su¬preme authority in substantivematters of policy. Ambiguities orconflicts of policy are resolved inaccordance with the general prin¬ciples of this document.These general principles areelaborated into concrete rules inthe second major document, theCode of Regulations. First of allthe requirements necessary forstudent organizations to receiveofficial recognition are defined.Official recognition is importantbecause no organization can useuniversity facilities unless it isofficially recognized. The remain¬der of the Code and Regulationsconsists of detailed procedures tobe followed and conditions to becomplied with in order that allcampus groups may have anequitable share of the advantagesof such recognition.Statute gives SG authorityThe final major document is theStatute of Powers of the StudentGovernment. It establishes theauthority of SG to regulate cam¬pus groups and provides for themachinery to enforce this author¬ity. With the adoption of this doc¬ument SG was empowered to ad¬minister the Code and Regula¬tions; this power had previouslybeen exercised solely by the officeof the dean of students.The machinery of enforcementis patterned on the state systemof a public prosecutor, a grandjury and a trial court. The Statuteprovides for a Committee on Rec¬ognized Student Organizations(CORSO) to act as prosecutor,gives the Assembly grand juryfunctions, and establishes theCourt.CORSO has major powersCORSO is a standing commit¬tee of the Assembly and has fourmajor responsibilities. The firstis to investigate all infractions ofthe Code and Regulations, and to er it considers the evidence oispecific violations to be of suf¬ficient weight to make indictmentby the Assembly necessary. If theAssembly does indict an organiza¬tion, then it is the responsibilityof CORSO to prosecute the casebefore the Court.The third responsibility of COR¬SO is to examine all applicationsof groups for official recognitions,and to make recommendations tothe Assembly on these matters.Finally it is their duty to considerall proposals to alter or amendany of the basic documents, andto make known such proposals toall campus groups in order thatthey may offer objections andsuggestions.Court tries indicted groupsThe Court tries organizationsthat have been indicted by theAssembly, and if it decides theyare guilty sentences them. It mayalso hear cases brought by indi¬vidual students which involve theconstitutionality of activities ofthe Assembly, or acts passed byit. This may include infractionsof the Bill of Rights.Thus the Court stands at theapex of the judicial progress inSG. It is the final arbiter on thestudent level of problems involv¬ing campus groups, and of inter¬pretations of all the basic docu¬ments. It is thus easy to see whyit has achieved a certain dignityand prestige, and why the Assem¬bly carefully selects its justices.Repair YourBICYCLESNOWWe specializelight-weightrepairinAce Cycle Shop819 E. 55th Ml 3-2672IT ’S TIMETHE HOLIDAY SEAS0H WILL BE FASTUP0H YOUSTARTED YOUR GIFT LISTS YET ? ?If you are going to give a gift to someone who froths atthe mouth at the mention of a Contax or a Speed Graphicwhile you froth at the thought of paying for it don't throwout the thought of all photographic gifts. Come on in andlet us know what he (or even she) already has and we'llbe glad to tell you what would be a fine gift to add to it.I,Remember; Time Magazine of November second re¬ports that" ... 27 million families own cameras . . ." andthere are "... 35 million amateurs." Even if you readsome other news magazine these are figures to thinkabout.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue Chicago 37, III. in '54Round Trip viatfeamship $40 AREQUENT SAILINGS 4WV*»Tourist Round Trip Air*3G5"-2» ’424" ±Choice of Over 100STIDERT CLASS TOURS $EJATRAVEL STOUT TOOR* WfCORDICTED TOURS ipUniversity Travel Co., officialbonded agents for oil lines, hasrendered efficient travel serviceon a business basis since J 926.bSee your local travel agent torfolder* and detail* or vnrH^e u«^UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mass.^■Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 6, 1953Swim squad boasts strong Winter sports Slow on hills, rest at red lights,record under coach Moyle make official Harriers beat Pier, Teachersby Sherry GrayThe Varsity swimming team, since 1948, has won 38 meetsand lost 10. How is this possible? We don’t worship schoolspirit, pressure recruiting, or gate receipts. And yet we canproduce winning teams. Maybe money and ability aren’teverything. Perhaps dedication to physical culture, withoutpressure to win and without the screams of hysterical crowds,is enough to inspire a good team.Let the swimming team testify. termen: Lancing Fekker, breast-The squad has never recruited a s>r0^ art‘s.'' ***-star or charged a dime for admis- a«.r?ke P*?***sion. Yet they have won 80 per Chicago Intercollegiate Divingcent of their contests since 1948, Champion in 1953.including the Chicago Intercol- All able bodied students, withlegi in 1949 and the Swimming or without experience, are cordi-and Diving Championship in 1950. ahy urged to attend practice Mon-The one man responsible for day and try for a berth on thethis amazing record is coach Wil- squad.liam J. Moyle. Moyle treked to This year’s schedule promisesChicago in 194G with a long list of to witness many hard fought andaccomplishments in swimming exciting contests. The boys willand tennis. He was a swimming attempt to uphold their fine tradi-coach with Iowa State and the tion in six dual meets and oneU.S. Army and aquatic and tennis championship event. Our seasoninstructor at Bradley and USC. opens December 8 against NavyDuring his tenure at USC he Pier, followed by Loyola, Greatswiped the Wimbleton Singles Lakes N.T.S., Bradley, St. Louiserown in England and his team v and Washington u. The Chi-won the National IntercollegiateChampionship.This year’s squad will developaround three returning major let- cago Intercollegiate Champion¬ships on March 5 will climax theseason.Sailing club in local regattaby Spike PinncyThe University of Chicago Sailing Club will compete in anelimination regatta on Lake Michigan tomorrow and Sundayagainst six other Midwestern schools. Winner of the regattaearns a starting place in the Timme Angsten Memorial Regat¬ta on Thanksgiving weekend, biggest fall sailing event in theMidwest. The Sailing*Club will vie for a starting spot tomor¬row with Northwestern, IllinoisTech, Minnesota, Wisconsin, fvery other Wednesday at 7:30Washington U., and Marquette. *n *da Noyes, with a movie orThe recatta will start from the guest sPeaker usually scheduled.Colombia Yacht Club, new head- Wednesday Bob Smith, Greatquarters for collegiate sailing in ^“ipe?gU1" an<* Lake “lchl-Chicago. Northwestern, Illinois, fn d,"gh>' champion spoke onand theU. of C. recently combined racing technique and Bob Baron,their facilities there in order to "f* C‘ubs c,hief :nst™c,°r' ex.provide better sailing for all three the elemen,s »l sailing toschools. Located at the foot of ^in rs‘Washington St. on the Lake side Membership is still below quota,of the Outer Drive, the Yacht Club anc* according to A1 Fortier, Clubnow has a combined collegiate President, the best time for inter;fleet of five boats with several es^ed students to join is now whilemore in drydock. there are a few weeks of sailingA coeducational group, the Club shore schools and other ac-holds parties after most of its tivities will continue throughoutsailing events. Club meetings are winter, but now beginnerscan experience the pleasure of debut MondaySix Junior Varsity sports maketheir annual debut next Monday.The sports are basketball, swim¬ming, wrestling, fencing, gym¬nastics, and indoor track and field.Most of the varsity teams are al¬ready underway, but new menare still heartily encouraged tocome out. The JV basketballsquad, last year’s PSL champions,will be coached again by JoeStampf; the track team, PSLchampions since 1938, look for¬ward to another great season un¬der the guidance of Ted Haydon;the JV fencing team will operateunder a new mentor this year,Allen Bates; the fencers will workwith Alvin Hermanson; the gym¬nasts with Erwin Beyer; and theswimmers with Bill Moyle andKooman Boycheff. All boys whodo not have a twelfth grade cer¬tificate are urged to spend one ortwo hours a day with their favor¬ite team. Every squad holds itspractice sessions in Bartlett Gymexcept the varsity cage team andthe junior and varsity trackteams, which train in the FieldHouse located at 57th and Uni¬versity. by Dan TrifoneHaydon’s varsity harriers destroyed Navy Pier’s hopes foran undefeated season in a crucial meet Saturday, Oct. 24.Chicago triumphed by a 22-33 score at Montrose Beach, thePier’s home course.Hal Higdon took his usual first place, running the three-mile course in 14:58. Jim Flynn followed Higdon across thefinish line in the first bitterly coldmeet of the season. Johnny Smoth¬ers finished fourth, a few yardsahead of teammate Paul Baptist.Ken Stapley, hampered by recur¬rent injuries but steadily improv¬ing, came in tenth.The team really galloped overhill and dale last Saturday in Mil¬waukee. They ran on boulevards,side streets, a golf course, andacross mountains, cliffs, and gul-leys to a decisive 21-37 victoryover Wisconsin State TeachersCollege.Hal Higdon and Jim Flynn con¬tinued their one-two routine, forthe fourth time. Johnny Smoth¬ers, Paul Baptist, Ken Stapley andRay Sanders clinched the meetfor Chicago, grabbing fifth, sixth,seventh, and eighth places. Thecontest witnessed a number offreak accidents. Stapely and Bap¬tist were almost run over by aMack truck backing out of a drive¬way. Joe Letson and Art Omo- fone took a brief rest to enjoy thescenic view of Lake Michigan.Tomorrow the thinclads willrun against the Bradley Braves at12:15 in Washington Park.Booters win twoRoosevelt College helped to fat¬ten the Chicago record by losingtwice to the booters, 4-0 and 2-0.In the first game, Alex Shane,inspired by his private cheeringsection, got hot and scored threegoals. Jerry Czmanski took a napin the goal, having to make oniyone stop all afternoon. The fourthgoal was scored by John Godfrey.In the second game, Spike Pin-ney tallied in the second quarteron a pass from Shane. The scoreremained static until the fourthquarter when Doug McLeanscored thirty seconds after he wasinserted at right wing. Opponentsare finding it impossible to stopMcLean’s tank-like style of play,hundro wer£ delayed by red lights Next game is Saturday at Whea-and heavy traffic, and Dan Tri- ton.Cagers look goodNelson Norgren’s varsity cageartists, in their first test of theseason last night, scrimmagedwith the Berwyn Young Men’sClub in the Field House. After thegame, assistant coach Kyle Ander¬son observed that his team dis¬played “remarkable spirit and de¬termination.” Seventeen Chicagomen saw action in a game whichwas designed to reveal our strongand weak points. Anderson saidthe team seems to be a tremend¬ous improvement over last year’ssquad. Some of the boys who lookespecially good are Hubbard,Levine, Homer, Walker, Smith,and Lester. Both Norgren and An¬derson are waiting anxiously forseveral of last year’s lettermen toappear at practice.The squad will play four seasongames before the Christmas holi¬days. Their first contest is withGeorge Williams College in earlyDecember. actual sailing.Room and board in exchange forbaby-sifting. Own room and bath.Call HY 3-5666 on Saturday orlater.-FINE FOOD1321 East 57th StreetEye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 Lre we stretching things a bit? May*be — but when you find out how mildand sweet and refreshing the Medicopipe can be, you’ll go for Medico, too!It’s the replaceable filter in Medicothat makes the big difference. Thatlittle filter traps dangerous nicotineand tars, disagreeable juices and flakes.That’s why countless smokers, begin¬ners and old timers alike, who neverenjoyed the pleasures of a pipe, now en¬joy the clean mild fragrance of Medico— the pioneer in filtered smoking.Try a Medico Pipe. See why Medico’sfilter has sold over a billion to datel Urgent...repair quickly. JGale winds ripped through Alabama and Georgia last spring, de¬stroying 500 homes, leaving 2000 homeless, killing and injuring 382.Thousands of telephones were out of order—hundreds of polesdamaged and destroyed. Communications had to be restored quickly.They were! Here’s how:1. Engineering teams rushed to the stricken area. In hours, theydetermined material and men needed to restore service.2. Based on these reports, equipment —as far off as Chicago andNew York—began rolling toward the area.3. Telephone crews arrived from as far away as Atlanta and Bir¬mingham-engineering and accounting forces, construction, cabletesting and repair teams.4. Red Cross, hospital and other essential installations were rushed.5. The public was informed of progress by daily newspaper andradio releases.Result: in 3 days, Columbus, Georgia —which suffered 10 milliondollars property damage—had half its out-of-order telephones work¬ing and Long Distance service nearly normal. In another 3 dayssubstantially all service had been restored.Planning and co-ordination among many telephone people witha varie'ty of skills made this quick recovery possible. It illustratesvividly the teamwork typical of Bell System men and women.There’s room on this team for a wide range of college graduates —business and liberal arts, as well as engineering. Plan for your futureby getting details now about job opportunities in the Bell System.Your Placement Officer has them.BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEMs-BESSS;) A MEDICO VJ'Q-MEDICO FILTER PIPES(Mi nrlttfit styltt til tint Writ*Hide* Pitts. Ik. M. tt.ltrlMkltt IGABSHIREstyled by• MAMHATTAN «m.I CO.. 444 OAO.SOM AVIHOI. HIW »0«. ■».». ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INCST.lOUtS. MO. NEWARK. N.1Hunting for the best? Let the world-famous Budweiser label be your guide.People everywhere prefer Budweiser...because it is brewed and aged by thecostliest process known. That’s onereason why Budweiser haspleased more people thanany other beer in history.EnjoyBudweiserToday353-15At last, a sportshirt made forsports. I t’s 1 ight enough, warmenough, full enough, toughenough. Yet, because it’sManhattan tailored it’s smartenough to win a scholarship.It’s made of versatile, wash¬able gabardine . .*. and itbelongs in your wardrobe.Long sleeves... pick stitchedpockets and collar, and comesin more colors than Fall.$5.95See GABSHIRE today—at yournearest Manhattan dealer s.'Malfi' stylistically superb social commentaryOne of the best constructed expositions of social conflictto be written in recent years, The Fields of Malfi. by DavidShepherd, is now being premiered at the Playwrights TheatreClub, 1560 N. LaSalle. In it are pointed out the clash of theleisured, conservative, landed aristocracy with the forces ofmodern economic necessity; the suspicion of the peasant to¬ward the advocates of agrarianreform; the difference of atti¬tude between the rapaciousbourgeois who would use the ma¬chine to further his own well be¬ing and the enlightened farm la¬borer who conceives of progressin terms of human betterment;and the extreme difficulty involv¬ed in the interaction of irreconcil¬able classesThe play, as was its prototype,Webster’s The Duchess of Malfi,is set in the south of Italy, a re-g i o n traditionally agricultural,conservative, aad in the post war inert to the industrial influenceof the north. From this setting,from the situations pointed up,one is forced to anticipate an ulti¬mate resolution in the form of thedescent or the ascendency of oneof the characters of the play—andhence of class he represents. Yet,in spite of the remarkable compe¬tence with which the playwrighthandled most of his dramatic situ¬ations, this resolution is, at best,ambiguous.For out of a situation in whichthe staunch conservative aristo¬crat, Vittoria, is defeated; in Zohra Alton as Dianca and Marvin Peissner as Guido in "Fields of Malfi."Italy of Shepherd’s play, rather which the laborer, Anton, is ableStudent members and guests — only $1.00Now ploying, Thurs., Fri., Sot., Sun.8:30 p.m. through Nov.The Premiere of an OriginalDavid Shepherd's annualmembershipduesfiftycentsTHE FIELDS OF MALFI Playwrightsmature — witty — provocative Theatre"A classical play on o modern theme. Incest,violent romance breaking through class barriers,ond the struggle for the new power introducedby machinery — powerfully written and pro¬duced with every resource in Chicago availableto on original play of distinction." Club1560NorthLaSalleWHitehall3-2272Performance or membership information on requestSeen on every campusfrom MAINE to U.C.LA. not only to show the inevitabilityof social progress but to resolvepersonal conflicts by means ofa realistic approach to the situa¬tion; in which the entrepreneur,Fernando, finds violence his onlymethod; and the Christian chari-tist, Guido, is dismayed at the det¬rimental effect of his hypocriticalcharity, comes a culmination inthe question that the action of theplay has been answering.An inevitable conclusion is builtup to, and yet, in the manner ofPirandello the conclusion is leftto the decision of the audience—the drama is incomplete.In the idealistic plays of such asPirandello, irresolution is permis¬sible, for ideas in themselves areirresolute and the drama takesplace in questions to be answeredin the mind of the observer—butin a play dealing with social real¬ity the drama must take placewithin a real context — on thestage, an abstract of reality.A number of reasons may beconjectured for the indecisivenessof the play but the most likelyone lies in the limitation intro¬duced by the use of Webster’s (orBandello’s, as it may be) plot. The personal situations of theearlier play arise out of a socialbasis quite different from that ofpost-war Italy. Although the alti¬tudes of the various characterscan be brought up to date, the re¬lationships become stilted whencontrasted with these attitudes.The new basis gives rise to newrelationships which the limita¬tions of the prototype do not al¬low. Indeed, the difficulties en¬countered in the use of Webster’splot to depict a contemporary situ¬ation are so great that Shepherdmust be commended for overcom¬ing them even as much as he has.Either the old relationships orthe new situations must yield andin the case of the indecisiveness,it is the situations that yield. Butin some cases relationships haveyielded. In particular that of Biana—the daughter of the old aristoc¬racy who oversteps her class—toher brothers, Fernando and Guidois unclean. This lack of clarity ismost apparent in the unevennessof Fernando’s development, an un¬evenness that could not be en¬tirely ascribed to Eugene Troob-nick’s portrayal of the character.Nevertheless, in most cases Shep- Early musichere tonightThe Pro Musica Airtiqua, agroup devoted to the study andperformance of Renaissance andMedieval music, will be presentedin the second University concertin Mandel Hall at 8:30 p.m., today.Their program will consist ofmusic of the thirteenth throughsixteenth centuries and will iivelude vocal pieces and instru¬mental ensembles by P e r o t i n,Machaut, Defay, des Pres, Mone-verdi, and Lassus.The group was founded in 1933,in Brussels, by its director, San¬ford Cape. It consists of a vocalquintet, three viols, a lute, and arecorder.herd achieves the necessitatedcompromise in a very fruitfulmanner.The performance, it will sufficeto say, reflects the remarkabledevelopment of the company’sacting abilities. Full justice is ac¬corded the precise and frequentlyvery expressive dialogue of theplay. The individual dramatic se¬quences are presented with all thecogency the writer imparted tothem and, indeed, Shepherd’s con¬trol and application of theatricallanguage and style is nearly con¬summate.In this, the second play to comeout of the Ttheatre’s playwright-ing workshop, Playwrights hasshown that plays unreservedlyworth seeing don’t always (ifever) come from Broadway, De¬spite its one major fault, TheFields of Malfi is a finished playthat puts many of the craftsmenof Broadway to shame and that,for the cogency of its social char¬acterizations, puts the legions ofthe Great White Way among thecampfollowers of Philistia.Daniel QueenWhen you know your beer. . .ITS BOUND TO BE “SUV\This scene reproduced from Chesterfield’sfamous “center spread” line-up pages incollege football programs from coast to coastliViVliliim^rI 'j f«ge 8 November 6, 1953cam&ite events Classified ads...Friday, Nov. 6Humboldt Club meeting at 4 p.m. InWieboldt Commons. James T. Joneswill give a talk entitled ‘‘Zurueck zurNatur im Sueden.”Hlllel Fireside. Rabbi David Graubartwill speak on the Sabbath in JewishTradition.” HilleX Foundation at 8:30p.m. The Fireside will be preceded bySabbath Service at 7:45.Sunday, Noy. 8Rockefeller Chapel Service. The RightReverend Stephen F. Bain, Jr., willspeak at 11 a.m.VC Polish Club will meet In Interna¬tional House at 2:30 p.m. All Inter¬ested persons are invited.Wrauglers Club meeting. After supperDr. Granger Westberg, Chaplain of theUniversity Clinics, will give a talkentitled ‘The Inter-relationship ofMedicine and the Clergy." UniversityChurch of Disciples of Christ at 6 p.m.Methodist Student Fellowship supperand discussion in the Chapel Houseat 6 p.m. Dr. David O. Williams willspeak on "The Divorce-Principle andMarriage.”“A Streetcar Named Desire" will beshown in B-J udson Lounge at 7 and9:30 p.m. Admission 25 cents.Candlelight Vespers in Bond Chapelfrom 5:30 to 6 p.m., featuring theWesley Hospital Nurses Choir andMiss Sabine Jospe in the Hymn Dance.SRP Caucus. 7:30 p.m., B-J. Everyoneinvited.Monday, Nov. 9Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship willmeet lor a luncheon in Ida Noyes SunRoom from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m.Hillel Foundation. The Advanced FolkDance Group will meet at 3:30.“No Resting Place,” an Irish film, willbe shown in International House atThere is a book ofverse you want ofSCHNEEMANN'SRed Door Book Shop1328 East 57th Street 8 p.m. Admission 50 cents.Tuesday, Nov. 10Two experimental films, “LTdee" and“II DemOniaco Nell’arte,” will be pre¬sented at 7 :15 and 9:30 In Social Sci¬ences 122 by the Doc Film group.Admission 50 cents.SU Outing Club will hold a meeting forpersons Interested In a Christmas skitrip. Ida Noyes Library at 7:30 p.m.If you can’t attend the meeting callIrma Arnez at CR 7-0328 for informa¬tion.Wednesday, Nov. 11The “Hippocrates Hop,” a Pre-Med Clubparty will be held In Ida Noyes Libraryat 4 p.m.The Country Dancers will meet In IdaNoyes Cloister Club at 7:45 p.m. Pleasewear tennis shoes.The Politics Club will continue Its serieswith a discussion on “Socialists andthe Labor Movement.” The discussionwill be preceded by a business meet¬ing at 7:30 p.m.Hillel Foundation. The first of a publiclecture series entitled "Three Waysof Looking at the Modern AmericanJew” will be presented at 8 p.m. Mur¬ray Wax, instructor of social sciencesat the University of Illinois, will rep¬resent the Soclo-psychological view.Thursday, Nov. T2Hillel Foundation. Rabbi David Grau¬bart will lead a lecture-discussion onthe Siddur. 5715 woodlawn at 3:30.“The Devil and Daniel Webster,” anAmerican film, will be shown in Inter¬national House at 8 p.m. Admission50 cents. FOR SALEModern three-piece sectional sofa, $50.Blonde corner end table, $15. Both goodcondition. DO 3-0338.New grey broadcloth Rothmoor coat, 12-14 black Persian lamb collar, cuffs. Paid$125, sacrifice $65. Ext. 1220.Mouton coat. Good condition. Size 16.Best offer. Call WA 4-9764 after 6 p.m.Winter coat. Brown. Little worn. Rea¬sonable. T. Lewlnson. Call Ml 3-6000,Ext. 644. Connecting bath. Phone HY 3-1864.Room for female. $8 weekly. Kitchenprivileges. 1157 East 56th Street. CallHY 3-9533.Want employed girl to share hotelapartment. Hyde Park near lake. DE2-1995, 9-5, Monday through Friday.LOST AND FOUNDLost: Small black six-ring loose leafnotebook with scattered notes, addressesand doodling inside. Call Dick ward,MAROON office, Ext. 1010. Reward!Parker “51” found October 23. Leave de- Zenith AM/FM 7H* speaker. Will nayup to $25. Phone PL 2-9684. A. Lang.mayer. '.liittrRiders to Michigan State College, Sat¬urday morning. Share expenses. Roundtrip. Call Stan, BU 8-9870.PERSONALSAnyone knowing the whereabouts ofMaurice Bram please contact me Imme¬diately. Urgent. Steve Steinberg, 7272112th Street, Forest Hills, New York.SERVICESConcord 12 watt amplifier; pre-amp;separate bass, treble controls; 3 inputs;range 30-20,000. Evenings, BI 7-2929. WANTEDFM tuner, amplifier, J-speed recordplayer, speaker and cabinet. Cheap.Call BU 8-8015 after 6 p.m. Ride to Peru or vicinity. Sooner the bet¬ter. Michael Robins.. .. . _ . .RCA radio-phonograph, 3-speed changer.Also Zenth AM/FM radio with dl pole.Marvin, DI 2-1200. giving and/or Christmas. Will sharedriving and expenses. 241 B-J. BillLelcht.Hi-Fi tuner and 14 watt amplifier withpre-amp and 2 channel controls. Mlnkua—Beecher Hall. Ride from Madison-Central. Will shareexpenses. Call ES 8-3092.Ride to Cincinnati area Thanksgivingweekend. Will share expenses. ContactEmerson Seim, Hitchcock.Make your own mobile. Complete k$t$3.95. Model Camera, 1329 East 55th.Packard 4-door sedan, 1937. Excellentmechanical condition. Tremendous In¬side space. Call Alan Tritter, FA 4-2878. Wish to buy good used Leroy LetteringSet. Phone NO 7-1238. AH photography. Portraits a specialty.Kluckhorn, c/ct’MAROON or c/o Anthro¬pology Dept.Student’s wife desires typing work. Rea¬sonable rates. See Mr. Pannabecker,Zoology 31-A or phone Mrs. Panna¬becker, KE 6-8689.Dressmaking, alterations, remodeling.Reasonable. Phone mornings or eve¬nings, FA 4-7646.Portraits, groups, weddings. Candida.All high quality, low-cost. PHOTOG¬RAPHY. Joe Wolf, xESsex 5-1615, 83596. Cregler.Mathematics, physics and chemistry tu¬toring. UC approved. Leave message forEll Comay. Ext. 1203 or FA 4-8200.FOR RENTRoom for man. Block from campus.ACASA Book StoreCarefully selected stock of Used BooksORDER YOUR PERSONALIZED CHRISTMAS CARDS NOWFROM OUR CHOICE COLLECTIONTypewriters Bought - Sold - Repaired1117 E. 55th St. "* HY 3-9651 Highlands Chicken ExpressV2 Southern Fried ChickenCreamy Cole Slaw and Rolls$135FREE DELIVERYDinners, Steaks, Chops and Short Ordersat Budget Prices1516 E. 55th St. BU 8-9220CHOICE OF YOUNG AMERICAFOR THE FIFTH STRAIGHT YEAR -CHESTERFIELDIS THE LARGEST SELLING CIGARETTEIN AMERICA'S COLLEGES ...by a 1953 survey audit of actual sales in morethan 800 college co-ops and campus storesfrom coast to coast. Yes, for the fifth straightyear Chesterfield is the college favorite.CHESTERFIELD IS THE ONLYCIGARETTE EVER TO GIVE YOU PROOFOF LOW NICOTINE, HIGHEST QUALITYThe country’s six leading brands were ana¬lyzed—chemically—and Chesterfield was foundlow in nicotine—highest in quality.CHESTERFIELDBCSTfORYOU