Grodzins succeeds Tyler as sponsorsstydcnt artSocial Science Division head show in MarchMiss UC will b« chosen at the Wash Prom, February 20, from the fivefinalists shown above: left to right, are Melicent Rupp, Quadronglers;Jamie Redmond, Snell House; Janine Johnson, Mortarboard; Janice Porter,Kappa Alpha Psi; and Barbara Horwitz, Kelly House.Five queens on viewLast Tuesday evening in Ida Noyes Hall, five finalists inthe UC queen contest were chosen. The judging panel, com¬posed of Helen Wells, women’s editor of the Sun-Times, Rich¬ard Filbrick, reporter for the Tribune, Hal Block of televisionand radio, Emmet Decimon,author of Fabulous Chicago,and Edith Grimm of Carson PirieScott, all UC alumni, reviewedthe girls. The finalists were select¬ed from a group of 15 girls elect¬ed as semi-finalists on Feb. 1. The contest will be climaxed onthe night of Wash Prom with thecrowning of the Queen by WoodyHerman, guest attraction for theballA Coke dance to be held thisafternoon in the Reynolds ClubLoomer: “Could’nt act constructivelyby Naomi BirnbaumThe MAROON attempted, in an interview this week with Bernard M. Loomer, who recently resignedas Acting Dean of the Federated Theological Schools and as Dean of the Divinity School, to discover thecauses of his resignation.Loomer first replied by stating, #Tm not really interested in rethrashing old straw. What happened inthe past is water over the ;dam and I am much more con- ments or promotions would not my primary passion,” Loomer re- felt it would serve no purpose tocerned about helping to find a be acceptable. marked. “Even if I were accept- hash over old controversies now.constructive solution to the pres- Loomer states reasons able to the Board of Trustees I Qouses |jstedent problem.” Loomer explained, “I had been would have resigned anyway.” The MAROON has learnedUnder further questioning recommended by Ure faculty com- to Dean however, of four causes of dis'Loomer remarked somewhat re- mittee for the Deans job. This oeen permmea io remain as l^eansignedly that he didn’t suppose he recommendation was not accept- of the Divinity School Loomer de- agreement between Loomer andcould keep on saying “No com- able to Kimpton and some of the new Articles of Agreement I the Boards. Loomer has long beenment.” He then declared, “I re- boards.” Chancellor Kimpton and would ”ot acceP^a^|e noted as a staunch “Hutchinssigned because it became ciear five Boards of Trustees (the UC the Board 01 trustees of the man» |n educational policy. Hethat I could no longer act con- of Trustees of the four federated Divinity Bcnool either, l would and Rjmpton disagree on Severalstructively It became clear also schools) must approve appoint- be unaccepn e as Dean o t e educational matters, includingfrom me ments °f this natUre- aPPajently some of proposals fo?that recommendations from me he had ^ the same reasons that made me amendi the educational pro-w.th regard to possible appoint- s, ^ as Dean 0l the Divinity unacceptable as a candidate for grams ol the thcologicai schools.School, Loomer replied that the , e , 0lJ ^derated meo- The Chicago Theological Sem-causes were concerned with the lo^a dCU if is "mT understand inary’ °ne of the four theologicalchanges in the functions of the f a J'schools, disliked many acts ofDean’s office under the new mg t * P Judgment that Loomer in his capacity as unof.Articles of Agreement. while I have been acceptable as ficjal head Gf the four schools forDean's function, changed Dean (of both the Divinity School several years. These were con.Under the new articles passed development of the f3tv°to its cerned mainly with his ideas onlast spring, concerning orgamza- claredP«j think that under the theol°glcal education and with histion within the Federated Theo- clarea* 1 !“inK tnat under applications of those ideas. Theylogical Schools, .he functions of LKCiX ta y' much disturbedthe Dean of the Divinity School £rticularl ?n terms ofe,ts ^mers desire to discuss a pro-were changed. The academic func- . churches and other grouns P° al f four-year Bachelor oftions that formerly belonged to X reS a dea^whh dSS Divinity degree’ inStead of therblt^eS”3 ° ™ VSUn dlllerent present three-year degree. Thisa 11 ies” grew out of his expressed con-_v ^ o When asked for the specific viction that the average B.D. grad-the functions that are left are causes °f bis unacceptability to uate of the theological schools isconcerned largely with “dealing Kimpton an<f t° the Boards of not adequately prepared to under-with churches, ministers, organ- Trustees, Loomer replied that he See "Loomer," page 5izations—in one sense public rela-Photo by Kluckhohn tions.Bernard M. Loomer “This kind of function is notChester Bowles feted;to give foreign policy talkChester Bowles, the former American ambassador to India,will speak here next Tuesday, Feb. 9, at the invitation of theCollege and the Center for Study of American Foreign Policy.The author of the recently published Ambassador’s Reportwill discuss “United States Foreign Policy in India and Asia”in Mandel Hall at 4 p.m.The India Association will —— rz ~———~hold an Indian banquet in his «“• A »ubl,c ‘ °r h's re’honor at Ida Noyes today at tent,on. was made by thc Tunesthe office of the Dean were transferred to the Dean of the federated faculty. According to Loomer lounge at 3:30 is being sponsoredas an opportunity for the campusto meet and talk to the five candi¬dates before the campus electionon Feb. 8.The Wash Prom committee, inaddition to sponsoring the Queencontest, has planned an entireseries of events for the week-endof Feb. 19-21, to be known asWash Prom week-end. Among theactivities during that week-endwill be a basketball game, a show¬ing of University Theatre’s pro¬duction of Playboy of the WesternWorld at reduced prices, severalopen-houses preceding the prom,and a breakfast to be held inHutchinson Commons from 1 - 3a.m. immediately after the dance.Dean Northropplans researchEugene P. Northrop, WilliamRainey Harper professor of math¬ematics in the College, has re¬signed as associate dean of theCollege to work “on assignment”by the University with the Na¬tional Science Foundation.He plans to devote a part of thisyear and possibly next year tostudying, with a view to their im¬provement, the processes bywhich scientists are presently be¬ing educated in this country.Northrop, who has been associ¬ate dean since 1946, plans to re¬turn to the College in October,1954 or 1955 as professor of math¬ematics.Hiltner sympathetic to policies“I have been very much in sympathy with what we have developed here in terms ofbasic academic policies-curriculum, fundamental work of students — and plan to continuethese policies,” stated Seward Hiltner, newly appointed Acting Dean of the Federated Theo¬logical Schools, in an interview with the MAROON this week.Hiltner, associate professor of pastoral theology, described the program which has beendeveloped here as growing out of a feeling that adequate preparation of students must in¬clude a broad grounding in the7 p.m. Bowles will deliver a shortaddress and answer qpestions. ,Bowles went to India, October,1951, doubling as the UnitedStates’ first ambassador to Nepal; of India when he was recalledlast year by the Republican ad¬ministration.With a conviction “that the his¬tory of our time will hereafter beit was his first trip to Asia. He written largely in Asia,” Bowleshad previously been governor of has spoken throughout the UnitedConnecticut. During eighteenmonths of service in New Delhi,his sincerity and disregard forprotocol won him great affectionamong the people of India. Nehrureportedly remarked that Bowleswas not only the ambassador ofthe United States, but that he States since his return, appealingfor “an enlightened, bi-partisanAsian policy.”“I came back from India,” hesaid, “with a feeling of how critic¬ally important it is to avoid mis¬understandings between the USand Asia. The gap is growing, un-and his family were the ambassa- fortunately. Time is running outdors of the American people as for Asia. total field of theology andreligion as well As specializedwork. He emphasized that he en¬visages no basic changes in aca¬demic matters, and that hispointment is an interim one, ex¬tending only until October 1.Hiltner declared, “I don’t be¬lieve that the Boards of Trusteeshave criticized our basic educa¬tional policy.” When asked aboutthe rumor that the boards wouldlike the theological schools toturn out more ministers, Hiltnerstated, “I don’t think that wecould handle many more studentsand still do the same caliber job.I don’t think that there is an en¬rollment problem, but in additionto continuing the work with ad¬vanced students, it may be thatwe can and should increase slight¬ly the number of B.D. graduatesand students.” Replying to questions about the‘public relations” functions of hisSaward Hilt tier office, Hiltner remarked, “I hopeto continue and extend the pro¬gram of interpreting our schoolsand our program to the churchesand others who may be inter¬ested. He continued, “I am con¬vinced that an increased and deep¬ened understanding of the policyand program that has been builtup here during the past ten yeafswould result in clearer and morewidespread approval of that pol¬icy and program throughout thechurches,”When asked if he had any ideawhy Chancellor Kimpton had ap¬pointed him to the Acting Dean’sposition, Hitlner replied, “I amhopeful that as one whose posi¬tion on educational policies hasbeen fully to support what hasbeen developed and yet as onewho has been at the University acomparatively short time, I maybe able to accomplish the actionsSea "Hiltaac," pa«a 5Morton Grodzins, professor of political science and editorof the UC Press since 1951, has been appointed dean of thedivision of social sciences, effective last Saturday.Grodzins succeeds Ralph W.who began a leave of absencelast June to become directorof the Center for Behavioral Sci¬ences, established by the FordFoundation. Grodzins’ appoint¬ment is permanent; but shouldTyler return, as Grodzins stated,“he would certainly be welcomedback at the University. He is agiant in the field of education.”Grodzins will continue in hiscapacity of UC Press editor in ad¬dition to his duties as dean. Tyler, professor of education,A member of the UC politicalscience department since 1945,Grodzins is author of “AmericansBetrayed,” a study of the treat¬ment of the Japanese-Americanson the Pacific coast after PearlHarbor. He was also principal au¬thor of the 1949 research report,“Federal-State Relations,” for theHoover Commission. Currently,Grodzins is awaiting the publica¬tion of his new book, “The Loyaland the Disloyal.”University of Chicago, February 5, 1954 UC artists are encouraged tosubmit entries for the All-CampusArt Exhibit, a Student Unionpresentation to last from March1 to 6. Entries for the exhibit maybe in either the graphic or plasticarts.By special arrangement thosestudents who wish to sell theirworks may attach price tags tothem during the display period.Applications listing name andaddress of the artist, and thename and type of his work, shouldbe made in writing or phone toStudent Union or the Office ofStudent Activities.•mb* 31Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 5, 1954Chemist extends atom calendarA new technique that may extend the “atomic calendar” back 44,000 years and make iteven more accurate was announced by UC chemist James R. Arnold, speaking before theScintillation Counter Symposium in Washington, D.C. An assistant professor of chemistryin the Institute for Nuclear Studies, Arnold was associated with Willard F. Libby, who orig¬inated the method of dating objects by the amount of radioactive carbon 14 which theycontain. The new device is described as ten thousand times more sensitive to radioactivitythan the Geiger counter used “tagged” atoms would be requir¬ed, as well.IMed. school testscheduled in MayCandidates for admission tomedical school in the fall of 1955are advised to take the MedicalCollege Admission Test in May,it was announced recently by Edu-are now simply dissolved in the cational Testing Service, whichfrom giving off as many electrons fluorescent liquid instead of being prepares and administers the testas it does at room' temperature, reduced to pure carbon, making for the Association of AmericanAn electronic system sorts out possible larger samplings and bet- Medical Colleges. These tests, re-from the electrical impulses only ter overall accuracy. Far smaller quired of applicants by almostthose at the energy level of the amounts of carbon 14 or other every medical college, will be giv¬en twice during the current cal-Erickson to be at humanin Libby’s process, which dat¬ed objects back only as far as25.000 years.Housed in a deep freeze unit,Arnold’s scintillation counter de¬tects, by means of supersensitivephotomultiplier tubes, the lightproduced by carbon 14 radiationsin a fluorescent solution. Thefreezing unit prevents the photo¬multiplier tubes, used to amplifythe energy of the light and trans¬late it into electrical impulses, radiation given off by carbon 14,yielding a more accurate count.Errors may be reduced from apossible high of 130 years underLibby’s system to as little as 17years.Smotler amounts neededIn addition, a more compact andefficient shield of liquid mercurywill replace the heavy iron shield¬ing formerly used to keep outcosmic rays. Samples to be dated AIMS told discriminationprevents equitable education“There is no way of getting an equal education in separateschools,” said Dr. A. M. Mercer in an informal talk to mem¬bers of the Association of Interns and Medical Students lastWednesday. Mercer, who is a member of the executive boardof the NAACP and a past president of the Cook CountyPhysicians Association, was speaking on the topic of “Dis-crimination in Medicine 1954, latlon at the "white" school, tendProgress and Pioblems. ,0 ma^e nie colored student un-Mercer sketched the long his- willing to apply for admission totary of discrimination in medi- a quota-university.cal schools. Even after the closeof the Civil War only a few Ne- Discrimination in Chicagoworks in several ways. Negroesdevelopment meeting endar year.Candidates may take the teston May 8 or on November 1 atmore than 300 local centers in allparts of the country. tApplication forms and a Bul-Erik H. Erikson, authority on child psychiatry and psycho- letin of Information are availableanalysis, will be guest speaker at the fifth annual symposium from premedical advisers or di-of the UC Committee on Human Development. The author of rectly from Educational Testing“Childhood and Society,” Erikson will speak on “Identity and ^crvice< Box 502, Princeton, N. J.Totality; Psychoanalytic Ob- — —— —: ComPleted applications mtudes; Dr. Rosalind Dymond, ofthe Counseling Center, on re¬search ip psychotherapy; Dr. Rob¬ert D. Hess, on transmission of groes were able to study medi- in some sections of the city havecine, and then only with the un- to go as far as twelve miles toderstanding that they would go reach a hospital that will admitto Africa to practice. Not until them. Chicago with its half mil-Howard University (1868) and lion Negroes, has only about 300Meharrwy in Nashville (1878) colored doctors and only one hos-opened their gates, did it become pital, Provident, to which a pri-possible for a Negro student to vate doctor can take his patients,obtain an education in medicine. According to Mercer, however,Today there are few interracial there has been some improvementinstitutions and most medical in this situation since the Corn-schools have a quota system. Sub- mission to End Discrimination instandard education from the first Chicago Medical Institutions wasgrade on, coupled with social iso- founded in the fall of 1950.servations on Problems ofYouth” during the afternoon ses¬sion of the all-day symposium. Itwill be held on Saturday, Febru- hol ical charac,e'rlstics fromary 6, at International House. * JErikson’s report will be dis- p l e t e a applications mustreach the ETS office by April 24and October 18, respectively, forthe May 8 and November 1 admin¬istrations. AC AS A Book StoreVALENTINESContemporary and TraditionalGuaranteed typewriter repair service1117 E. 55th St. HY 3-0651cussed by Professor Allison Davisof the Committee on Human De¬velopment, and Dr. Gerhard Piersof the Institute for Psychoanal¬ysis. William E. Henry, chairmanof the Committee, will be theafternoon session’s chairman.The morning session, between9:00 a.m. and noon, will be de¬voted to six reports presented bystudent and faculty members ofthe Committee on Human Devel¬opment. Dr. Helen L. Koch, pro¬fessor of child psychology, willreport on her studies of familyconstellations and sibling atti- parent to child; Miss ChristineKris, Institute for Juvenile Re¬search, on assessing physiologicalage; James Abegglen, on mobil¬ity trends in American business;and Benjamin Wright, OrthogenicSchool, on the personality attri¬butes of counselors of disturbedchildren.-FINE FOOD1321 East 57fh Street A CAMPUS-TO-CAREER CASE HISTORYWhen you pause...make it count...have a CokeSOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY IYCoca-Cola BoHling Company of Chicago, Inc.*CcL»" k o registered trade mark, © 1933, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY The class reunion at his alma mater,Swarthmore College, was an eye-openerfor Ed Mahler. The talk among theClass of ’50 switched to jobs. Ed hadtaken it for granted that everybody washappy with his work.Then he found that some of his class¬mates had had two or three jobs sinceleaving school. Others had kept thesame one hut vreren’t satisfied. By stick¬ing with his first job and intending tomake it a lifetime career, Ed suddenlydiscovered he had a head start.After being graduated with a B.A. inEconomics, he went to work for BellTelephone Company of Pennsylvania in1950. He reports he chose the TelephoneCompany because it seemed to offer thebeet chance for a career.After a year of training in which heworked in each of the departments —installing telephones, handling businesscontacts with customers — Ed felt hehad a good look at the entire company. It took a class reunionto show Ed Mahler, ’50tthat all first jobs arenot alike. He tells us why.<Reading time: 33 seconds)lie was assigned to the Traffic Depart¬ment, which has the responsibility forseeing that customers’ calls are handledefficiently. The job included personnelwork in addition to developing betteroperating methods and practices. Hewas quickly put on his own.Now Ed has been transferred to the•job of estimating the amount and typeof new equipment which will be neededin central offices as their customersincrease.Ed points out that projecting himselfinto the future isn’t anything new. That’sprecisely what he attempted to do wrhenhe chose his first—and only—job.• • •Ed Mahler’s job is with an operating com¬pany of the Bell System. But there arealso jobs for engineers, arts and scienceand business administration graduates withWestern Electric, Sandia Corporation, andBell Telephone Laboratories.BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEMFebruary 5, 1954 Page 3THE CHICAGO MAROONGreen douses Maroon reportersfound 'dateless' story insultingby William BrandonGreen Hall was not its usual orderly self last Friday whenpeared from their usual place and two MAROON staffers gotThe incident began when the MAROON published a noticethought “insulting.”“They were quite unsportsmanlike about the whole thing,”ws editor. “They didn’t even offer us a towel.”'I forgot to door m story with Green Hall. newsThe story appeared on page - . . . .. . . _.three of last week’s issue. The *° fin,? what the whole thin- wasarticle invited to a Hitchcock a never reall did>„ s!einw,‘,td°ut da,fs said. "There were about fifteen... Wasl' P'',’rr‘. P Parj' girls waiting for us headed bywas to give Hitchcock men the Mlss Flsh. They wereIrt muchopportumty of meeting campus thc mood lor ivl or ttiTheTrom " explanations. How could they goWKe to tne From. to the dance and admit that theyThe story was taken from a wanted dates for Wash Prom,calender form handed in to the they said. All they kept talkingpaper earlier in the week by Jay ___Schlossberg, a Hitchcock housemember. copies of the MAROON disap-an unexpected shower,that some of the Green girlssaid Allen Janger, MAROONed the possibility of peaceful set¬tlement.”Commented Schlossberg. “Thatwas the first time we invited a col¬lege house to one of our parties.We’ll think twice before we askthem again.”UC mountaineersform new club;will show slidesUC Mountaineers, a group forail students interested in rock-climbing and general mountain¬eering, was formed on campuslast Tuesday.According to the president ofthe group, David Solzman, the UCMountaineers has a twofold pur¬pose. The basic aim of the groupis to bring together all of thoseinterested in climbing and to ac¬quaint them with the techniquesand practice of safe mountaineer¬ing. The group also wishes to in¬troduce more students to the sportof climbing, and make availablebooks, periodicals, and picturesdealing with the sport.The first open program on Feb.16 at 7:30 p.m. in Rosenwald 26will be a showing of slides of theSan Juan mountain area of south¬western Colorado by Willy Weeks,a graduate student of geology. US loyalty programssubject of debateThe Student Forum, de¬bating society of UC, will engagethe University of California de¬bating team next Tuesday at 8:00p.m. in the Judson lounge. Subjectof the debate will be “Resolved:Executive Loyalty Programs onFederal and State Levels Are Un¬constitutional.”The University of Chicago teamwill take the negative position onthe question. The California team,which will take the affirmative, isparticularly intense about thissubject because of the firing ofseveral University of Californiaprofessors under the Californiastate loyalty program, accordingto Terry Sandlow, a member ofthe Forum.Dave Chale and Bob Zener willcarry the major part of the de¬bate for the Student Forum. Sand-low said it ought to be interestingto hear a University of Chicagoteam defending loyalty oaths. In spite of the events describedin the story, the Hitchcock dancecame off on schedule, Friday night.According to Jay Schlossberg, closeto 250 people attended the donee,roughly half of them girls.Demands apologyAround noon, Friday, MissHelen Fish, a resident of thehouse, phoned the Maroon officeand according to Janger, demand¬ed that he immediately come over about were ‘public apologies’ andto Green Hall to apologize to the ‘front-page retractions’.”girls for the article. She termed .. . .niPPrfH16 1“^ m°r miSherlbl* According to Schlossberg, who• y Iournal,sra she had escaped the water treatment, thePVPr QPPTl 1 ’showerbath came after about fif-Miss Fish added that she had teen minutes of “fruitless butstolen all the copies of the MA- rather funny” talk. A girl by theROON from Green Hall and that name of Terrye Sagan appearedshe would do it again in following Gn the stairs above and behindweeks if the apology was not the boys and emptied the contentsforthcoming. of a coffee-tin and a glass over“I couldn’t understand what she their heads,was angry about,” Janger said. Said Janger, “That sort of end-“It’s not our usual practice to TT , 1clear dances at Hitchcock with tlOWCLTCl tlUTtlCCleither Green Hall or Helen Fish..Green Hall was never mentioned hf>rtrlor even alluded to in the article.” fltUUof U. collegeto discuss peaceYour futuredepends on theRIGHT STARTJoin a progressive dynamiccompany that is setting newrecords in the electronic industry Reporters investigateTogether with Mitchell Slein, aMAROON reporter, and Schloss- University College has an-berg, Janger went to Green Hall nounced the appointment of John■ a m ■ A. Howard as Director of Busi-Int House group ness Studies.Howard, at present, holds therank of assistant professor ofbusiness administration at the UCA series of discussions on means school of business.of achieving world peace, spon- ‘ H succeeds Roval S Van desored by International House, will ^ succeeds Kojal b. Van de, , .j., . ,, , , Woestyne, who is now an asso-be held there in the East lounge at . . x * t , .q . ciate dean of the school of busi-8 p.m. on Wednesday evenings. TT , ... . , , .^k J ness. Van de Woestyne had nota-The first meeting, to take place ble success in the creation of theon February 10, will center its annual tax conference, accordingdiscussion on “Which Way to to Maurice F. X. Donahue, deanPeace? ’ Robert Pickus, director Qf University College. Van deof peace education for the Amer- Woestyne also has been active inican Friends Service Committee, the administration of the businesswill preside over this talk. administration Master’s programThe film, A Tune for Greatness, Howard hag been associate di.will be shown preceding the dis- rector of business studies sincecussion period. October 1952.Seniors and Graduate StudentsOpenings available for:ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS • CHEMICAL ENGINEERSMECHANICAL ENGINEERS • PHYSICISTSRAYTHEON is a pioneer and a leader in theelectronic industry.First to provide transistors in production quantities.Firsf to solve the problems of the mass productionof magnetrons.The leading supplier of commercial radar and under¬water sound equipment.Out front in research and engineering in receivingtubes, special purpose, klystron, cathode ray, andmagnetron tubes, digital computers, ultrasonic equip¬ment, control mechanisms, radar, communications,and TV equipment.Raytheon Manufacturing CompanyWaltham, MassachusettsCall your College PlacemenI Office for appointmentCAMPUS INTERVIEWSFriday, February 19 after the Wash Prom ...Alexander’s1137 East 63rd StreetHappy Hump DayUNIVERSITY TAP & LIQUORS1133 E. 55th Phone Midway 3-0524GIANT CLEARANCEOF OUT OF PAWNFINE SUITS & COATSWe MustMake Room $ 14 95CERTIFIED STATE PAWNERS838 E. 63rd St. Corner Drexel The new monkey in the bacteri¬ology deportment showed a markeddislike for bacteriological researchwhen it escaped from its cage lastMonday and tried to climb to theroof of Hitchcock Hall. It wasgently detached screaming from itsthird floor perch and returned un¬harmed to the laboratory by thepictured lab assistant.Conflict confusescalendar councilThe meeting of the Campus Co¬ordinating Council (CCC) orig¬inally scheduled for this after¬noon has been postponed becauseof a calender conflict.The CCC meeting instead willbe held next Friday at 3:30 in theEast Lounge of Ida Noyes Hall.Organizations who wish to regis¬ter events for the remainder ofthe winter quarter are urged todo so at the meeting, or to con¬tact the Student Activities Officebefore meeting time.Billiard provisionschanged at ClubEffective immediately, the bil¬liard room of the Reynolds Clubwill operate under a new system,and will be open Monday throughSaturday from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.Any player may check out bil¬liard and pool equipment from theinformation desk by depositinghis I-D card and assuming re¬sponsibility for the equipment un¬til returned. Fees remain thesame.While no attendant is in the bil¬liard room, candy is available invending machines, and cigarettesmay be obtained at the informa¬tion desk.Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372.Fage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 5, 1954Soviet factories described;farm life found difficultIssued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publica¬tion office, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones:Editorial Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1010; Business and Advertising Offices,Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by■sail, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.Arthur Brown Richard E. Wardeditor-in-chief managing editorNews editors: Naomi Birnbaum, Allen Janger, Nellie StonemanNews Feature editor: Barbara VogelfangerFeature editor: Daniel QueenSports editor: Paul A. HoffmanCopy editor: Shirley LongAdvertising manager: Reva BrownProduction manager: Joanna HerlihyEditorial staff: Robert Bloch, William Brandon, Paul Breslow, Joy Burbach,Allen Coleman, Sandra Epstein, Leslie Foster, Suzanne Friedman, RalphB. Hirsch, Roberta Hopkins, Arlene Kramer, Bruce Larkin, Jan Majde,C. Roy Maisch, Robert McCluskie, Spike Pinney, Merrill Rodin, KarlRodman, David Schlessinger, Mitchell Slein, Judy Smith, Franz Snyder,Harry Whiteley, Neal Mermall, Justin Johnson, Wolf RoderCartoonist: Ray NelsonCopy staff: Jerry Ex, Pam BrownPhotographers: Joe Wolf, Richard Kluckholn The average Soviet worker or collective farmer works quite hard. Pay for industrial laboris by incentive wages. We visited the ZIS automotive factory in Moscow, a tractor plant inKharkov, the second built in the Soviet union; a wool cloth factory in Tblisi was also onour itinerary.Soviet workers have a six-day work week with 48 hours per week required time on thejob. Workers receive four paid holidays per year and vacations ranging from two to fourweeks depending on the type of job. Wages are quite stable and their determination is notthe prerogative of the trade union.Comparison of wages difficult ~ ~~ ~ : 7 7 ‘T7 71The wages of the Soviet dren- The fee ls a percentage of model one. Its facilities wereof his American counterpart. Aclose comparison, however, isvery difficult.Prices appear to be set in rela* .tion to cost of production. The rir,|American dollar will pay fourJournalists, here'syour chance • . .Entering mid-year students —and all others interested in jour¬nalism — who would like to jointhe MAROON staff are invited tothe MAROON staff meeting nextMonday, 3:30 p.m., at the MA¬ROON office, second floor of theReynolds Club. Demand MichiganPlan enforcementLetters...Hits MAROON reportYour story, headlined "Matron leavesdorm-fire hazard present,’’ which ap¬peared on page three of the Jan. 29MAROON, is a gross and vile example ofbiased fiction, written and edited byhalf-wits. It contains a fantasticallylarge number of errors, some of whichhave caused me embarrassment.Paragraph 1, sentence 1: Referenceto a “Hitchock-Snell hall.” There isnot now and never has been such abuilding at the University—no morethan there is a Social Science Research-Harper- La w - Wleboldt - Haskell - Classics -Goodspeed-Gates-Blake-Cobb hall. Thereare two adjoining dorms known as Snellhall and Hitchcock hall. I shall assumethat "Hitchcock-Snell hall” refers toboth of them.Sentence 2: Reference to recently is¬sued Iront door keys. Snell residentshave had such keys for years.Paragraph 2, sentence 2: Reference toa "Larry Draper, president of theHitchcock-Snell house council.” ThereIs no such organization. The only or¬ganization which a name remotely re¬sembling this is the Snell-HitchcockForum, which is not concerned with thismanner. Mr. Draper is not now and hasnever been president of the Snell HouseCouncil.Sentence 3: Statement that “speakingfor the council he said that under thesenew conditions the fire alarm systemwas deplorable.” Mr. Draper has neverbeen authorized to speak for the SnellCouncil on this matter. If Mr. DraperIs quoted correctly (an event which Iconsider extremely unlikely), he is inerror. The reduction in service involvesno substantial change in fire alarmprocedure.Paragraph 3, sentence 1: Statementpurportetdly by Draper that this changeis not a breach of contract. I am notso sure of that. Neither Draper norI is a lawyer, however.Paragraph 7, sentence 1: When youare referring to statements by a person,you should at least get her name right.I expect that even such an Incompe¬tent Journalist as you will see the neces¬sity of printing this in your Feb. 5 issue.Larry FisherPresident,Snell House Council In view of the fact that a proposedamendment to the Student Code andRegulations will come ^ up before theStudent Government next Tuesday, wethink it ls high time that a clear analy¬sis of the situation should be presentedto the students.In 1951 the Michigan Plan was madea part of the Student Code and Regu¬lations. At the time it was passed, Stu¬dent Government held open hearingson the question. Phi Delta Theta madeno objections to the plan then. It wasnot until 1952, when the deadline forthe enforcement of the plan arrived,that Fhi Delta Theta began to complainabout the unfairness of the MichiganPlan. According to the provisions of theplan an extension of one year was givento the fraternity.The fraternity exhibited a great dealof lack of cooperation. They made noattempt to poll their alumni on thequestion and refused to report toCORSO what steps if any they hadtaken to eliminate their discriminatoryclause.Consequently during the campaignfor the Student Government electionslast October both SRP and ISL ran onplatforms calling for enforcement ofthe Michigan Plan.Last quarter CORSO began to investi¬gate the question. They opened nego¬tiations with Dean Robert M. Strozierand Phi Delta Theta.At first Strozier maintained that theadministration believed only In thespirit of the Michigan Plan and wouldnot enforce it since it believed thatPhi Delta Theta was living by thespirit of the law. However, he finallywas brought to the opinion that if thefraternity did not receive a three-fourths vote for the abolishment of theclause in their national convention,they would have to repudiate the clauseby November 1, 1954. However, if theydid receive the three-fourths vote, theycould continue to discriminate until1956, when either the clause would beremoved nationally or locally.What guarantee do we have that DeanStrozier will have any more respect forthe Student Code in 1954 or in 1956than he does now? Do we want a dis¬criminatory fraternity on our campusuntil 1956?The majority party in Student Gov¬ernment has continued to pussy-footon this issue for months. We as stu¬dents, demand that they keep theircampaign promises and take action onthe derecognition of Phi Delta Theta,so that we will not have a discrimina¬tory fraternity on our campus afterOctober 1, 1954, at the very latest.Norman Swenson Suxanne FriedmannMilchell Slein Lenna SchweitzerLyn Burns Judy SmithJoshua Leslie Richard KluckholmBarbara Klein will in cxpnnrfll nav the expenses incurred in feeding rusty; the common hall for reere-considerablv ess than those the children- These 80110018 have ation had no heat- Each familyeonsioemDiy Jess inan inose much better facilities for children had its own house with threethan do workers’ flats, so there rooms. They all appealed aboutis a strong inducement for the the same size. At the presentmother to leave her cfiild for the time, only the director’s quartersand a few other important build-Flots part of factory unit ings were electrified. Kerosene. Workers’ flats are often an in- was used for heat and light.rub-es. The beginning worker re- ^egraj part 0f a factory unit. They Each family had its own plot ofceives about 700 rubles, rhe aver- are jocate(j within walking dis- land for individual use. The plotsage worker with some skills will tance piant and are built by are used for raising the familyprobably be earning between 900 factory. up to one-half of the food and extra produce whichprofit of the factory may be used they may sell in special marketsto better the facilities of the work- in the city.ers. The profit of the factory is Farmer* proud of kolkhoznever a stupendous sum, of The Ukrainian farmers werecourse. very proud of their kolkhoz,We visited several worker’s though they readily conceded thatflats near a Tblisi wool factory, life was difficult. However, mostThe different buildings appeared farms do not own heavy harvest-much the same; we could surmise ing machinery. It is kept at gov-that their flats were about the ernment run machine-tractor sta-and 1,000. After a few years’ ex- same throughout. The distin- tions and rented to the farms.perience, skilled workers earn con- guishing feature of the flats was Each collective farm is a semi-siderably more. But 1,000 rubles their smallness. They were not autonomous unit. Its plan is setis not equivalent to 250 dollars. sub standard units—had kitcnen from above by the regional pian-and bath, two or three rooms, and ners, but the administration ispossibly a sun porch. Invariably local.Russian reportThe MAROON presents here thefirst in a series of articles by Rich¬ard E. Ward on his recent trip tothe Soviet Union. This article de¬scribes life on the farm and in thefactories he visited. Next weekWard will report on Soviet schools.Rent 5 % of incomeThe rent is not more than 5per cent of a workers income; someone slept in the living room. The present director hadfood is not expensive, but a rea¬sonable men’s suit will cost about700 rubles. No radiators in sight worked on the farm as a car-Two or three flats were com- penter and agronomist before be-fortably furnished, one was some- ing elected to his position.The trade unions are primarily what drab. I don’t recall seeing ZIS employs 10,000concerned with administering any radiators, but if there were At the ZIS plant in Moscowpensions, education and vacation any they were off. It was quite (ZIS meaning “Factory of Sta-programs, and worker’s recrea- cold. These were probably aver- lin”) there are about 10,000 work-tional activities. age flats. ers employed. The main productFew loaf on job , in Kharkov there is no tele- is four-ton trucks. The factoryVery few workers appear to vision yet. At a tractor factory also produced bicycles, refrigera-loaf on a factory job. Work norms there were only about 300 work- tors, buses and custom-made cars,are stiff but apparently well with- ers who owned automobiles. Con- such as ambulances and the ZISin the capacity of the worker, cerning automobiles, we were in- limousines. The latter item is pro-since we were told that almost formed that coal-miners have the duced only on special governmenteveryone meets them. greatest number among workers, order.The tractor factory in Khar- Collective farm viewed The factory is a vertical organ-kov which we visited had about The collective farm which we ization taking pig iron and unfin-13,000 workers, one-third of which visited was about 20 miles outside ished steel and producing onlywere women. of Kharkov. It had about 4000 finished products.Workers are young acres and supported 1,200 people. Stakhonovites spottedThe assistant director who took There were about 400 families We inquired as to the price ofus through the plant was also the and the same number of workers, some of the finished products,chief engineer. He explained that Only 70 of the workers were men. The refrigerator sold for 2,000about 60 per cent of the workers This, we were told, is an extreme rubles; the bicycles were pricedwere under 25. The minimum age example of the losses suffered by at 550 rubles. Only the govern-for workers is 17. the Ukraines during the war. ment buys the limousines.The assistant director was very// Vox populi, vox dei? ii anxious to hear our opinions onproduction methods in the plant.Conditions and assembly methodswere much the same as in Amer¬ican plants, but machinery wasnot as new.Factories maintain schoolsFactories maintain kindergar¬tens and nurseries for the chil- The farm was definitely not a (Continued next week)Guinness the Great • .. LoverinThe Captain’s ParadisewithCELIA JOHNSON — YVONNE DE CARLOEditor’s note: The MAROON did makeone major mistake in its story, namelythat Hitchock House is referred to inthe article as Hitchcock-Snell Hall. Re¬viewing the alleged “errors” individ¬ually:Paragraph 1, sentence 1: This is actu¬ally our error. However, the letter writ¬er’s assumption as to the meaning of“Hitchcock-Snell” is incorrect, as aremost of the letter writer’s other assump¬tions.Paragraph 1, sentence 2: Hitchcockresidents have recently been Issuedkeys.Paragraph 2, sentence 2: As the authorof the letter probably ls aware, LarryDraper is president of the HitchcockHouse Council.Paragraph 2, sentence 3; and para¬graph 3, sentence 1: Draper is accuratelyquoted. If he made an error in legalJudgment, this ls not the fault of theMAROON.Paragraph 7, sentence 1: This shouldread "Mrs. McCarn” Instead of “MissMcCarn.”The MAROON is sincerely sorry forthe errors It has made. However, wehardly believe the story qualifies as "agross and vile example of biased fic¬tion, written and edited by half-wits.” According to the MAROON of January29, the^reasons given for the addition ofan extra year or two to the U High pro¬gram were to satisfy "a wish on thepart of residents to have a four yearschool,” the changes in the College pro¬gram, and that “when you get too faraway from other schools it becomes verydifficult for them to learn from you.”As to the first, has there been a seri¬ous effort to educate the community, orhave we an acceptance of “vox populi,vox dei?” A poll of community resi¬dents, asking them what they believeto be the features of an accelerated pro¬gram might prove interesting, as did thenewspaper mis-accounts of the recentCollege changes.As for the third reason, one might askhow different is “too different.” Theprinciples of the accelerated programare not recondite. Is “too different”synonymous with “basically different?”Then progress is impossible, except ata snail’s pace.The reasons discussed made me won¬der whether the only unsuccessful as¬pect of the U High program hasn’t beeneconomic. Whether or not this is trueshould be made clear; if it ls, abandon¬ment of the program is only Justifiableif the most ardent promotional effortshave failed.Jim DavidsonZBT Fraternity presentsDixie DazeAnnual Open House 5749 WoodlawnDixieland, Progressive Jazz by Bill Huff trioSaturday, Feb, G . • • 9 to 12 RESTRINGWITH PlusTwo New U.P.A, CartoonsNO 7-9071 HIDE PARK THEATRE “^4PARKStudent Rate 50c All PerformancesSTANDS UPin your racket• Moisture Immune• Lasting LivelinessCOSTS Lessthan gutAPPROX. ITRINOINO COST;Pro-Fected Braid...$6.00Multi-Ply Braid $5.00At tennis shops and•porting goods stores.ASHAWAY BRAIDED RACKET STRINGChoice of The Champions HARRY A. ZISOOK & SONSUniversity District Renting OfficeMAYFLOWER HOTEL 6125 KEWOOD AVENUELet us help youGET OUT OF THE ROOMING HOUSES ANDSUBSTANDARD BUILDINGS IN THE NEIGHBORHOODFor the cdnvenlence and accomodation of the Students, Faculty andEmployees of the University we have opened a University District RentingOffice to serve you In obtaining better housing.Come in and let us know what your requirements are so 4hat we mayassist you.AVAILABLE NOW ANO/OR MARCH 1stHotel rooms with private bath and showerSgl.—$8 per wk.; dbl.—$12 per wk.Furnished l*/t rm. apt.—$70 per mo.Hotel apts. with switchboard and maid service1 rm. apt. at $90 per mo.2 rm. apt. at $107.50 per mo.office hours ... 9 aim. to 5 p.m. . . . Monday thru FridayTHERE IS NO CHARGE FOR THIS SERVICEmain officeHARRY A. ZISOOK & SONSReal Estate100 W. MONROE ST. RAitdofpk 6-9250Serving Chicago since 1907February 5, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5When you know your beer... it’s bound to be BudYou see it so often... a warm welcomefor a cold bottle of Budweiser. And it’sno wonder that the distinctive taste ofBudweiser pleases people as no otherbeer can do... for only Budweiser isbrewed by the costliest process on Earth*USTtN 70“SPORTS TODAY*WITH BILL STIRNAM KAMO ARTWORKMONDAY HMD FRIDAY.••4-1 Chet Roble, Sunday Nnight Guest Starleads All Beers la Sales Today...aad Through The Years! Victor 12” LP ... s3Columbia 12” LP *429atTheDisc1367 E. 57th St.9 GUEST STARS EVERY SUNDAY NITE <7“The Battle of the Hot RhythmsHEVERY NIGHT —7 Nights a Weel»Tenor HiDAVEDE VOREString BsM-TubnJAZZ VS• NEVBARCLAYCultar A Banjo• BOYDROLANDO DIXIE VS• JACK IVETTCornet• FLOYD BEANPlano• JIM BARNESDrum.• JUG BERGERClarinetO EDDIESCHAEFFERTromboneEVERY NIGHT”Loomer...(from poge 1)take the functions involved inpositions of religious leadershiptoday.Loomer has also been active insupport of the Rosenbergs, whowere executed as atom spies lastyear. His conviction of the in¬justice of their execution and hisefforts on their behalf causedmany members of the Boards ofTrustees to desire his removal asDean.It was reported to the MA¬ROON that Kimpton stated tovarious theological faculty groupsthat the Rosenberg case was acause of Loomer’s unpopularityamong the trustees.The fourth cause of Loomer’sunacceptability to the trusteesand to Kimpton, as it was report¬ed to the MAROON, is their con¬cern over "a dearth of public rela¬tions activities” of the Dean’soffice. 'Freedom' signerswantedIn conjunction with ''FreedomWeek", February 12 through 22,the campus committee for the Cru¬sade for Freedom invited the stu¬dent body to participate in thepassing and signing of "freedomscrolls," for the support of RadioFree Europe. All sudents interestedmay contact the Crusade for Free¬dom, Box 105, MAROON.Hiltner... UC district alderman believespolitical interests are picking upby Alan ColemanRobert E. Merriam, the Fifth Ward’s dynamic alderman, sees a marked upswing in in¬terest in the political life of the community throughout Chicago. “Apathy has been tremen¬dously reduced in the last year and a half, both in this neighborhood and in the city.”On the problem of deterioration in this neighborhood he said, “As a result of the com¬bined actions of the Hyde Park-Ken wood Community Conference and the South East Chi¬cago Commission and other groups, it certainly has leveled off.”“We have underCOMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.# Bar-be-cue chicken• Bor-be-cue ribsDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525 (from page 1)needed in the month ahead for themaintenance and extension of theeducational policies.”Ready to listenHiltner remarked that appar¬ently Kimpton felt that he (Hilt¬ner) would be ready to listen tothe various points of view andinterests that exist within thefaculty, since he had not heldany administrative position in thefederation or in any of theschools.Hiltner added that he had hadtwelve year*? of administrativework on the Federal Council ofChurches. ‘This may well havehad something to do with it.” way agreat many plans and ideas.Planning is the immediateproblem of these groups."There have been marked im¬provements; they have slowed Robert E. Merriam is aldermenof the Fifth Ward, in which theUniversity is situated. He graduat¬ed from UC in 1941.borhood.” But he stressed thatwhat has been done is only a be¬ginning.for discriminatingValentinesit'sRosemaryzwirkdistinctivehand-madejewelryatBordelon Designs1424 E. 55thandUniversity Bookstore5802 Ellis great many people to this.” Atpresent the committee that wasinvestigating police corruptionfor the City Council has been putout of existence by a court deci-down movement out of the neigh- tbe alderman. "Hie use of school sion Hence the committee andhr»rhr»rkH ” R.,t b* ttrBOc*A facilities after hours would be the Report are in a state of "re¬helpful. Some experimental pro- pose.”grams along these lines are being However, the decision has beentall *vwa „ carried out in other parts of the appealed to the Supreme Court,We need all the new building cityhe said. and when thev have decided thewe can get. This is the type of _ . . ana w*rn mey /iavr11aTciaea in*improvement we wish. However, nn th* ^ w the re^rt wdl bec°me •total density of Domilation should Commenting on the need for live issue again. But the strugglenot increase^ If anything it should Jmproved local shopping districts, for better city government cannotdecrease^Merriarnfav^mfolans he aS?ertGd that many business’ be won by one investigation, Met-to KniiH 'nfS H ir pl a men have been a httle slow to riam said- and the problems oisaid "Apartment^ buiMinnf’fmlv realize the P°ssibility for improve- the neighborhood cannot be dealtcommand^ oTohTpms T hgov ment* “However, they are gradu- with in the neighborhood alone,creaso tho LmanH for narVincr ady corn*ng *° realize that they “Even with active neighborhoodspace and adequate recreational S* ab‘“,y '° he‘P ‘h'"1' qhT* solve a11 ourfacilities ” selves. problems without concerning our-‘ “We are setting up a little ex- selves with those of the wholeJuvenile crime is related to the periment of refurbishing ward city. Our crime problem is af-housing problem. Its decrease headquarters to show how stores fected by the size of the policerests with the solution of social can be remodeled cheaply. They force in this area and this in turnand economic problems. More ade- can do a lot if they get together is determined by the city budget.”quate recreational facilities and help each other on the labor.” r. .should be provided, according to Leadership in the University hove more '"*«*«*♦community has provided “a real Throughout the city citizens areshot in the arm” in confronting beginning to take increased inter-both neighborhood and city prob- es* *n Chicago s problems, and arelems, Merriam said. consequently taking a greater in-In speaking about criminal *erest in political affairs. 4 Muchproblems, he pointed out that peo- £reafer selectivity in voting forpie in this area are more con- candidates is being exercised. Ifscious of crime. ‘“We need con- tbe Parties do not offer good canrsiderable improvement in law en- didates, citizens will bring pres-forcement agencies. There has sure for better ones,been some in this neighborhood Merriam optimistically suggest-in the past few years. But more ed that the increased interest inmen and a tightening of proced- city politics may be the beginningures are needed.” of better city government. HePolice corruption general: Merriam averted that there could be much"Police corruption is a general more direct participation by theproblem,” he said. This area is not University community. Universitymore corrupt than others. The precincts have a poor turnout,problem is part of the general which, however, is improving,corruption and inefficiency in the His final point was that “notcity government. enough politicians are coming outThe Kahn report "awakened a of the student body.”directionJimmyHOW THE STARSGOT STARTED... "WHEN I CHANGED TO CAMELS,I FOUND I WAS ENJOYINGSMOKING MORE THAN EVER lCAMELS HAVE A WONDERFULPLAVOR...ANO JUST THE RIGHTMILDNESS l"Lovely Hollywood StarMAUREEN O'HARA sav?:“My first stage appearancewas at age 5 — between actsin a school play —reading apoem. I’ve literally lived actingever since! First, in clubs,churches, amateur theatricals.I was on the radio at 12; in theAbbey Theatre at 14 — had Imy first screen test at 17. £Acting is hard work — /but I love it!” /St- Mildnesswet Ftivor ■>* A START SMOKING CAMELS YOURSELF!Make the 30-day Camel Mildness Test.Smoke only Camels for 30 days. See foryourself why Camels’ cool mildness and richflavor agree with more people thanany other cigarette!agree with mote peopleTHAN ANY OTHER CIGARETTE!Rage 6 February 5, 1954urn PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET 45 RPM Vi priceHermans935 E. 55th St.Open Thurs., Til 9Luther South downsJV basketballersby one point, 45-44Aurora, Elmhurstsquads overpowerMaroon cagersby Richard HerwittIn two well-fought contests on foreign floors the Marooncagers were trimmed by Elmhurst, 90-71, last Friday and byAurora on Wednesday, 84-80.The 25-plus scores chalked up by the centers of these twoteams were essential in the victories, although in both gamesthe Maroons, led by forwards Dave Smith and Bob Mann andby center Wally Lonergan,made valiant efforts andthreatened the score distributionin the last halves.The Aurora contest was nip-and-tuek all the way. Steadymarksmanship in the first quar¬ter resulted in the Maroons’ slightedge, 23-21. The Spartans, pacedby center Gene Downing, boundedback with 24 points to the Ma¬roons’ 20 making the half-timetally, 43-43.Hubbard stops AuroraFred Hubbard started the sec¬ond half for UC and kept Down¬ing under complete control. TheMaroons kept pace with Aurorathroughout the third quarter, andwhen the quarter ended, the Ma¬roons were one point behind.In the final period, the Maroonsforged ahead by a point or twoseveral times only to lose the leadto the avenging Spartans.Only in the last minute of playwhen Smith and Mann fouled-outSt. Louis drownsMaroon splashersMaroon swimmers were washedand hung up to dry by the Siwash-ers of St. Louis in Bartlett Poollast Friday. Only individual win¬ner for Chicago was Fance Felkerin the 200 yard breast stroke asthe Maroons lost 61-23. The teamof Bob Geidt, Roy Porterfield andFelker won the 330 yard medleyrelay.The swimmers finally found adiver in Bob Herndon, a trampo¬line specialist, who has been prac¬ticing his technique for futurematches. and the free-throws for thesefouls wex-e sunk that the gamewas won for Aurora. Downingled all scorers with 27 points withSmith’s 22 and Lester’s 16 as run¬ner-ups.Elmhurst downs MaroonsIn the Flmhurst contest lastFriday, the Maroons’ lack of ex¬perience on other courts showedup in the first minutes of play.The Elmhurst squad jumped toan 8-0 lead before the visitorsfound the basket. The Maroonsgained confidence in the secondperiod and scored as many pointsas their opponents, Smith andMann accounting for half of them.The half ended 42 for Elmhurst,35 for UC.The Maroons returned in thesecond half with renewed vigorand began to gain on Elmhurst.Elmhurst steadily pulled ahead inthe last period and won 90-71. PatLira, Elmhurst center, scored 28points. Lonergan led the Maroonswith 18 while Smith and Manntallied 16 each.SPORTS EVENTSTHIS WEEKToday — JV Track. Schurz H.S.,3:30, Field-House.JV Basketball. Luther North,3:30, Bartlett Gym.Tomorrow—Fencing. Woyne andNorthwestern, 1:30, BartlettGym.Wrestling. Marquette, 2:00,Bartlett Gym. -Westling. Wisconsin Ext., 8:00,Bartlett Gym.Thursday—JV Track. Lane TechH.S., 3:30, Bartlett Gym. JV Basketballers were evidentally following the exampleset by the varsity last week.After an extremely tight game with Luther South theMaroons wound up on theNelson Norgren, basketball coachTrack team loses;f i rst defeatof yea rby Justin JohnsonMarquette University gavethe varsity track team a battlelast Saturday in a dual meet atthe Fieldhouse. When the finaltape had been breasted, the Ma¬roon speedsters were on the shortend of a 56-48 score. Five meetrecords were broken as Chicagosuffered its first defeat in threestarts.The JV team lost to a strongWendell Phillips squad but nosedout Tilden Tech to place secondin a triangular meet at the Field-house last Friday.The final score was Phillips 52,Maroons 30, Tilden 25.Contest moral victorySeveral track followers com¬mented after the varsity meet atthe Fieldhouse that the contestwas a moral victory for Chicago.An examination of individual per¬formances supports this argu¬ment.Ken Stapley ran a sparkling1:57.1 to win the half-time, smash¬ing one record, and UC’s mile re¬lay team of Stapley, Phil Wyatt,Lowell Hawkinson and GeorgeMcCormick breezed through in short end of the score by onlyone point, losing 46-45, last Monday in Bartlett Gym.Coach Stamp! described the ?q26game: “We were outfought andoutplayed by a more determinedteam. That sums it up.” The “Flying Mites,” the Junior-Juniors won their first game ofthe year, defeating the Frosh-Soph team from Luther South,BulletinYesterday afternoon Maroontrackmen defeated Wilson Jr. Col¬lege 69Vi-34V* in the Fieldhouse.The Maroons were short-handedbecause Ted Haydon's top menwere taking a slight respite tounlimber for the Michigan A.A.U.meet tomorrow. High scorer for themeet was Don Trifone with 13points; Paul Babtist followed with10 Vi.3:29 to set another mark. McCor¬mick had earlier won the 440 in51.3 seconds.Loomis wins hurdlesCaptain Walt Deike once againcaptured the two-mile with JimFlynn behind him in second place.Frank Loomisx skimmed the low-hurdles in the very fast time of:08.0 to continue his winningstreak through four meets in thisevent. Tom Wilson aided the Ma¬roon cause with one of his bestvaulting performances to gain afirst place tie at 11'6".In the JV meet Mike Chernoffleapt 11'6" to win the pole-vaultwith his best jump of the season.Charlie Youse was the only otherChicago winner, taking the shot-put. Foiled again—III. downs fencersFencers from the University ofIllinois clobbered the Maroons23-4 Wednesday afternoon in theBartlett Gym meet.Chicago made its best showingin the epee matches as John Lyonand Ted Small each won a singlebout. Other UC wins were chalkedup by sabre-fencer Dave Karcherand foil-man Ernie Dunston.Phi Psi cagerslead intra-mtiralsAs intramural basketball en¬ters its fifth week. John Jane’sexpert team from Phi Kappa Psiis leading the Fraternity leaguewith an undefeated record of fivewins. Alpha Kappa leads the di¬visions with 4-0 while Beecher andSnell follow with 3 wins against 1loss each. Coulter House leads thecollege with a 4-1 record.RECORDS10" LP 79c12" LP 98c & $1.8978 RPM 8 for $1.00February 5, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7DocFilm to show ‘masterpiece’ series New Review'coming soonby F. G. TernenyiTonight the film study group of the Documentary FilmGroup will present its second series of the quarter: “Three The next issue of the ChicagoMasterpieces of the Cinema.” Unlike most DocFilm series, Review will be published on Feb-which are organized around some historical or analytic theme, ruary 38. It will be the largestthe purpose of the present series is to give a wide audience the number to date. Two recent trans¬chance to $ee certain important films that are shown at rare lati.ons of Marianne Moore, anintervals in this country. The ———: article by David Riesman, andsubject matter. some short poems of Isabel Gard-series includes October (TenDays That Shook the World)by Sergei Eisenstein, Greed, di¬rected by E. von Stroheim, and October depends on the rapid ner will be among the more mvpace, realistic detail, and sense portant contributions included,of wit and metaphor that Eisen- Last year the Review was re-Thll Irwa„ K,, stein is note<* for- The deals instated after seven years ofJ?® £ S™..? J f A by with the chaotic events that fol- failure. The Review has receivedlowed the establishment of the favorable comment from IsabelFalconetti 'Jeanne D'Arc' Carl T. Dreyer.It is interesting to note thatboth October and The Passionof Joan of Arc achieve a level ofdramatic intensity that has beenunequaled in cinema historythrough a profound understand¬ing of the relationship betweenthe form of the film and theChoir performs banal Stravinsky masssoloists, conductor do commendable job Provisional Government in 1917—the flight of Kerensky, the attackon the Winter Palace, and the tri¬umph of the Bolsheviks.The Passion of Joan of Arcreveals an intense, mystical ex¬perience through the use ofhypnotic, static images of greatbeauty, flawlessly composed,balanced in linear design anddistribution of masses.Erich von Stroheim’s films havebeen the center of controversythrough his daring use of unusual Gardner of Poetry Magazine.The circulation of the Reviewhas reached three thousand, andit is distributed to fifty-four lor*,eign countries.The NEW American Librarywill publish selections from theReview in a New World Writingedition. Oscar Williams will alsoinclude pieces from the magazine'in his next anthology.The Review will be sold on cam¬pus stands.sociological and psychological sub- tic revisions destroyed that con-Richard Vikstrom conducted his UC Choir, members of the Chicago Symphony, and vari- ject matter and their extreme ception. Even in this form it hasous soloists in a performance of old and new sacred music at Rockefeller chapel last Friday length. Greed had the dimensions been considered Stroheim's mas-night. The works of composers which were performed ranged in time from Giovanni Gabri- of a Comedie Humaine, but dras- terpiece.eli and William Byrd to Igor Stravinsky and Lili Boulanger.Gabrieli’s In ecclesiis benedicte domino is a bold and noble work which utilizes the stun¬ning contrast between brass choir and voice choir to great effect. It was performed withsomewhat less precision thanis desirable, but this was aminor distraction, and easilyexcused on the grounds that theperformers were still cold.Byrd’s mass in four voicesmay well be an excellent exer¬cise in four parts writing, butits length and lack of realrhythmic or harmonic interestmake it thoroughly monoto¬nous. By the time it was per¬formed the group had gainedenough composure to do an ac¬curate job.After the intermission cameStravinsky’s Mass for a MixedChorus and Double Wind Quintet.Listening to Stravinsky’s neweroutput is a distressing experience,for the man who contends thatemotion is alien to music hassucceeded in putting this theoryinto practice. Stravinsky was agreat composer when he workedin the tradition of 19th centuryRussian music — folk melodies,the brilliant orchestration of Rim¬ sky—and incorporated the newideas of primitivism and disson¬ance popular in France.But this particular exampleof neo-classicism — more prop¬erly, neo-monasticism—with itsobjectivity of expression,strikes me as an affectation. Itcontains no more in the way ofconstructive wizardry thanPetrushka, and is by compari¬son, barren of human qualities.Perhaps the forms which servedhis original success ar't no long¬er pregnant, but returning tothe fourteenth cenutry is equal¬ly sterile. In any case the workwas far from being dull, andthere is a certain amount of in¬tellectual pleasure derived fromthe contrapuntal gymnasticswhich testify to the composer’serudition. The performance,with the exception of a bad starton the part, of the winds, wasexcellent. Particularly praise¬worthy was the chanting of theCredo by the voices.Lili Boulanger’s arrangement It would not be fitting tosingle out any of the soloists.They all sang well. In none ofthe works was conspicuous vir¬tuosity called for, and part oftheir success consisted in beingunobtrusive. Judging by the ag¬gregate of sounds that oneheard from this invisible group,conductor Vikstrom did his jobwell. UC Musical Society presentsfirst concert program of yearTomorrow at 8 p.m. in Ida Noyes Library, the Universityof Chicago Musical Society will present its first program ofthe year. The group was founded in the autumn of 1952 toaccommodate performers who have insufficient time to par¬ticipate in the larger campus musical groups. Its programshave provided informal concert performances in which, ac-F“CJ Winsberg cording to a MAROON review¬er, “the obvious spirit of theperformers, and the active re¬sponsiveness of the audience weresufficient to bring about a re¬warding musical experience.”Tomorrow’s program will in-LAYWRIGHTSTtjhxjjtjru c£u£rPLAYWRIGHTSTHEATRE CLUB1560 N. LaSalleTickets $1,50, $2.00Jan. 27 - Feb. 21Wednesday thru SundayCurtain 8:30Pick up tickets atthe Reynolds Club of the twenty-fourth psalm served , . . T • u * tas an excellent contrast to the vetopment of Irish literature. In1904 he joined the Abby Theatre,and “Playboy of the WesternTickets availablefor Synge dramaTickets are now available for“Playboy of the Western World,” elude an oboe sonata by Handel,University Theatre’s February Mozart’s Adagio and Rondo forproduction. Performances will be violin, six songs by Poulenc, andgiven the 19th, 20th and 21st only, a group of short selections forTickets for all performances may bassoon by Swift and by Lelandbe obtained at the Reynolds Club Smith, a member of the faculty ofdesk. John M. Synge, the author the music department, who organ-of the play, has been called the ized this program. The perform-creator of Irish drama. He began ers whl include Robert Goldstein,his career in Paris, and only later, oboe; Burton Fine, violin; Pa¬li nder the influence of W. B. tricia Peterson, soprano; ZuniaYeats, returned to his native land Henry, piano; and Smith, pianoand became interested in the de- an(t bassoon.The Musical Society hopes tomass, for here the composer fash¬ioned a moving work with a bareminimum of musical devices, butthe inspiration is apparent.Portraits byLOUISE BARKERPhotographer1457 E. 57th St. BU 8-0876 World” was written the year after.The play deals with a half-idiotkept down by a tyrannical fa¬ther, who eventually strikes out,and then flies in horror under theimpression he has committed par¬ricide. He flies to a primitive com¬munity in the west, where out¬laws are admired. Here he revelsin his glory until a visitor comesto the inn at which he is stayingWHY TAKE NOTESThe Old-Fashioned Way★ ★ ★ ★Investigate the Easy, Simple,Time-SavingContoura WayCome in at your earliest convenience and look over thecomplete line of Contoura and Constat Equipment.This new and cheap method of taking pages and pagesof notes, even from books, will be gladly demonstrated.Units are now available either forSALE or RENTALUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue Chicago 37, Illinois present a wide variety of cham¬ber works throughout the com¬ing year. As it did last year, itwill encourage musicians toform string quartets, wind en¬sembles, and vocal groups andto prepare solo performances.Last year, in addition to its reg¬ular activities, it presentedpremiers of several works bycomposers from the Universitycommunity. A string quartet,organized for the Musical So¬ciety was scheduled to performon WFMT while another per¬former has been presenting aregular program of early musicon that station.This year, according to Smith, Leland Smiththe society has suffered from alack of student organizers. Thisprogram was organized, after con¬siderable difficulty, with only in¬significant help from students.Any one interested in the organ¬ization of the society or in per¬forming should contact Smith attomorrow’s program.As usual, everyone is invitedand there is no admissioncharge.International House Ho vie ProgramMonday, Febuory 8—MARRIAGE OF FIGARO (German)Assembly Hall, 8:00 P.M. Admission 50«.Thusday, February 11—NUMBER 13 RUE MADELEINE (American)East Lounge, 7:00 P.M. and 9:00 P.M. Admission 35c.YOUNG REPUBLICAN CLUBMid-Winter Organisation MeetingEast Lounge — Ida NoyesFebruary 10 Wednesday 7:30 P.M.Coffee Will be ServedClearance SaleatHermans935 E 55th st.Open thurs. til 9Page 8 February 5, 1954THE CHICAGO MAROONCalendarFriday, February 5The finalists in the Miss UC contestwyi be introduced at a Coke DanceIn the Reynolds Club South loungeat 3:30 p.m. Music, dancing, refresh¬ments. Admission free.A debate on the Bricker Amendmentbetween Kenneth Sears, professorof law, and Henry Brandt, attorney,will be sponsored by the Law Stu¬dents Club at 3:30 p.m. in Law North.“October” (Ten Days That Shook theWorld) will open the new Doc Fi'mStudy Group series, “Three FilmMasterpieces,” in Social Sciences 122at 7:15 and S:30 p.m. Series ticket $1.Another Whing Ding sponsored by theDC Folklore Society will take placein Ida Noyes at 7:30 p.m. Membersfree- non-members 25 centsThe Social Dance Club will offer in¬formal dancing in Ida Noyes Theatrefrom 7:30 to 10 p.m. for any studentwith 1 cent to pay the admission fee.Hillel Fireside. The Sabbath Service at7:45 p.m. will be followed with a talkon “Religion and Social Policy” byDonald Melklejohn, associate profes¬sor of philosophy, at 8:30 p.m. HillelFoundation, 5715 Woodlawn.Saturday, February 6The UC Musical Society will present aprogram in Ida Noyes Library at 8p.m. featuring Burton Fine, violin;Robert Goldstein, oboe, and PatriciaPeterson, soprano. No admissionZeta Beta Tau, 5749 Woodlawn, will holdan open house from 9 p m. to 1 a.m.Dancing and refreshments.Sunday, February 7Rockefeller Chapel Service. The VeryReverend James A. Pike, dean of theCathedral of St. John the Divine, NewYork City, will preach on “Self-criticism and Self-acceptance.” 11 a.m.Green Hall Open House. 3 to 5 p.m.Carillon recital by James R. Lawson inRockefeller Chapel at 4 p.m.UC Glee Club Rehearsal in Blaine Hallfrom 4 to 5:30 p.m.Porter Foundation. Ben Richardson, di¬rector of Beacon House will speak on“What is most important for me inChristianity” in International HouseRoom A at 7:30 p.m. Refreshmentswill be served.Monday, February 8The Walgreen Foundation lecture series.“Business and Society,” will continuewith Meyer Kestnbaum discussing“Business and the Community” inSocial Sciences 122 at 4:30 p.m.“Marriage of Figaro,” a German film,will be shown in International HouseAssembly Hall at 8 p.m. Admission50 cents.Tuesday, February 9The Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowshipwill hold a luncheon meeting from12:30 to 1:20 on the third floor of IdaNoyes Hally. Dr. Culver, instructor atTrinity Seminary, will discuss "Inwhat sense does the Bible claim tocome from God?”Chester Bowles, former U. S. Ambassa¬dor to India, will present a talk on“United States Foreign Policy in Indiaand Asia” in Mandel Hall at 4 p.m.This lecture is sponsored by the Col¬lege and the Center for the Study ofAmerican Foreign Policy.”Concert Band rehearsal in Sunny Gym,5823 Kenwood, at 8 p.m.Wednesday, February 10Pre-Med meeting in Abbott 133 from4 to 5 p.m. Dr. Clarence Monroe willtalk and show slides on plastic sur¬gery.Carillon recital by James R. Lawson inRockefeller Chapel at 4:30 p.m.“Economics and Politics” will be dis¬cussed by Meyer Kestnbaum in theWalgreen Foundation series on “Busi¬ness and Society.” Social Sciences 122at 4:30 p.m.The Young Republican Club will holdan organizational meeting in the Eastlounge of Ida Noyes at 7:30 p.m. Re¬freshments.The Camera Club will meet in Eckhart202 at 7:30 p.m.The Country Dancers will meet in IdaNoyes Cloister Club at 7:45 p.m. Be¬ginners welcome. Please wear tennisshoes.“Which Way to Peace?”, a discussionseries sponsored by the educationalcommittee of International House,will begin with thg. showing of thefilm, “A Time for Greatness,” afterwhich Robert Pickus of the AmericanFriends Service Committee, will leada discussion. International HouseEast lounge at 8 p.m.“The Dead Sea Scrolls” will be the sub¬ject of a public lecture by Ralph Mar¬cus. professor in the Oriental Insti¬tute. Hillel Foundation, 5715 Wood¬lawn, at 8 p.m.Thursday, February 11Sailing Club shore school. ColumbiaYacht Club at 7:30 p.m.“No. 13 Rue Madeline,” a U. S. filmwill be shown in International HouseEast lounge at 7 and 9 p.m. Admission35 cents. Classified AdsFo; Sale 4 Rooms furniture, new Zenith televi¬sion, dishes. Leaving town. Rooms forrent if desired. FA 4-3565.TV as is ?50. Call between 11-2, FA4-3290.AM-FM Zenith 1947 radio. $20. Call HY FOT Refit3-4568.DeSoto sedan, 1948, good condition, $60.See Hudgins, 1326 E. 57th, second floor,after 6 p.m.9x12 Green rug, cheap. Call MI 3-1334.Spartan AM-FM radio, year old, goodcondition, $35. Call BU 8-3837 evenings. Large front room, newly decorated. Inhome of faculty member. Near campus.Call FA 4-3041.Bachelor’s apartment, private entrance,newly furnished, no cooking facilities,>/2 block from University, $65 month.HY 3-1134. Lessons in Chinese, classic and vernac¬ular. Native teacher (ex-U. S. Army in¬structor). NO 7-6716.Portraits my specialty. All other photog¬raphy. Photos legible in all languages 1Inexpensive. Joe Wolf, ES 5-1615.Mathematics, special intsruction to fityour mathematical needs. Individual orgroup sessions at our Loop office or lo¬cation of your choice. Soglin Associates,ST 2-6727.Creative Photography—Portraits, ID’s,anything else. Student and Faculty dis¬counts — contact Kluckhohn, c/oMAROON or c/o Reynolds desk. author Daniel Sargeant “As DanteSaid,” Thursday, Feb. 10th, 8 p.m. 5544Woodlawn.i —;Want OMP offered this summer? Finout petition in Dean Davey’s office be¬fore March 1st.LostOne notebook. Social Sciences 2. Pleasereturn to Thesharls, 547 B-J.Basement room with private bath, $7 aweek. 5703 Maryland. Call DO 3-3710.Space for male sharing 5-room apart¬ment. Hi-fi. Non-authoritarian milieu.$25 month. 6347 Marvanld, FA 4-0525. WantedTuxedo, size 38 regular, worn threetimes. Reasonable. HY 3-0455.Baby butler, safest, most economicalbaby feeding unit. Feldman, DO 3-1322.German skis and ski shoes, excellentcondition, low price. InternationalHouse, Room 567.41-piece pottery set, used only fourmonths. % original cost. Purchased Mar¬shall Fields. Burbach, NO 7-6786.Maple furniture, China, glass, etc. Leav- Typing work wanted. Call Mrs. Panna-ing city. For information call weekdays, becker, KE 6-8689, or see Pannabecker,CE 6-6372; evenings FA 4-8710. Zoology, Rm. 31-A.Share 5-room apartment (Hyde ParkBlvd.) with 1 or 2 girls. 2 bedrooms,2 baths, furnished, good transportation, Porc/'M't/'i Icreasonable. KE 8-2126. r IU lbM. G. Sports car. Good condition. PaulWenger, 5747 University Ave., PL 2-9718.Trumpet player, seeking position Indance band. Four years professional ex¬perience. Sheldon Litt, MI 3-0800.Services Hitchcock thanks the “dolls” who madeour huge and unprecedented successpossible. We love you!Opus Dei invites faculty to lecture by One and Two-KoomFurnished KitchenetteAPARTMENTSnicely furnished; clean, quiet; elec¬tric refrigeration; newly decorated;well maintained building.ALSO SLEEPING ROOMS6019-21 South Dorchester Ave.on Midwaynear all transportationring manager's bell•F.Wow . . . T.m*c . . . tfw ItartwmwoLOWELL THOMAS.Mm M®noer*/i bfU. S. S4u Troop* ltrooth-tokimg SkiimfM Soef* AmticaiKo/coaooi /Acffoa. Adventure^Homo/ iu theEntire Fomiti/IJOHN JAY — America'! World ramou! Docu.mentary Photographer, Lecturer and Authorpersonally prefenti hit greatett motion picturein gorgeou! color ....Cavalcade oh Shu!10 Yarn in Ms# Molting —10,000 mile* of edvenhire 00 ) Continent*Wednesday — February 3 —8:15 P.M.Thorne Hall — Chicago Ave. &the LakeAdmission: $1.50 (tax incl.)Sponsored by: American YouthHostels Liggett & MyersTobacco Co. says...T^OR more than thirty years we have usedresearch day in and day out learning abouttobaccos and cigarettes in the public’s interest.Continuously we and our consultants haveanalyzed, experimented with and smoked allkinds of tobaccos... especially Southern Bright,Burley, Maryland and Turkish cigarette to¬baccos.Our own cigarettes and competitive brandshave been submitted to the most exactingscientific scrutiny including thousands of anal¬yses of millions of pounds of tobaccos.From all these thousands of analyses, andother findings reported in the leading technicaljournals, our Research Department has foundno reason to believe that the isolation andelimination of any element native to cigarettetobaccos today would improve smoking. For four years we have maintained in thesmoker’s interest an intensified larger scalediversified research program. A half-milliondollar 30-ton machine, the world’s mostpowerful source of high voltage electrons,designed solely for our use has tested tens ofthousands of cigarettes. This program hasalready given to us direct and significant in¬formation of benefit to the smoking public.Our consultants include Arthur D. Little,Inc. of Cambridge, Massachusetts, “one of thelargest and most reputable industrial researchorganizations in the country” (From BusinessWeek Magazine) and eminent scientists fromleading universities.Today the public can confidently choosefrom a variety of brands — by far the hestcigarettes ever made by the tobacco industry.BrandsTested and Approved by30 Years of ScientificTobacco ResearchCofjnfftt 19H Docm * Mm Tomooo Coil