SU to publish newspaper;“Forcast” to appear at Prom 'US policy in Asia timid'A new weekly UC newspaper will appear on campus Mon- “American foreign policy in Asia lacks courage and imagination,” was the statement offormer US ambassador to India, Chester Bowles, speaking in Mandel Hall last Monday._ , nr. „ .. He continued, “we’ve got to come to grips with Asia, and do it soon. The important decisionsday, Feb. 20, according to spokesmen tor Student Union. The 0f the nextTO or 20 years will be made in the capitals of the East.”aim of the paper, which-is named the “Student Union For- Bowles said he felt that the Dulles foreign policy hadn’t substantially changed anythingcast, will be to inform the student body of coming social, as far as Europe was concerned; it still posed the threat of atomic retaliation as the answercultural, and recreational events and to promote such events, to Communist aggression. ButThe circulation of Forcast is to be about 3.000. It will be dis- in Asia, “atomic bombs don’t mitted areas of Asia. He urgedknock out industry, they simply that America ask questions like,kill people, millions of them. I “Does this policy add to the self-don t think we can form foreign j-ggpect and independence of thepolicy in Asia on this basis. countries to be helped?” instead“Military power alone can’t of wasting so much time discover- miiiion people annually and buildtributed free on campus everyweek, probably on Monday, and will consist of four 8*4 byAdvance copies of the first pages.issue will be given out at the staling that the MAROON doesWash Prom breakfast the morn-ing after the Wash Prom (Febru- no* ^evote enough space to UC s _ _ &ary 211. social program, Forcast spokes- can’t afford to be weak, but we and who does not. He assertedForcast will print advances of men said “. . . Furthermore—and can’t afford to accept military that some of those countries thatevents sponsored by campus this is the major problem—we strengths as a foreign policy, seem to oppose us in the UN, likegroups. It will also print reviews want social ballyhoo — publicity either. Military power just gives Burma, would be the fiercestof these events. According to SU and promotion—as well as com- us the chance to solve, but does fighters against the Reds becausespokesmen, the paper will not munication. This would call for not solve our problem.”cover other types of news and is a writing style drastically opposed Bowles described what ne callednot intended to be in competition to the MAROON’s. It would mean, Russia’s “new look” in Easternwith the MAROON. for instance, that we would want foreign policy: her increasing ap-The paper intends to support honest reviews rather than the peal to trade and development of He explained that if Nehru’splan is successfully completed in1956 it will make India independ¬ent of imported food supply, raisefood production 19 per cent, wipeout the malaria which strikes 100bring peace,” he went on. “We ing who likes the United Statesthey have convictions to defend.“We want their success, after all,not their gratitude,” he added.Served 19 monthsTurning to India, where heitself by the sale of advertising. MAROON’s pseudo - intellectual a “Russian Point Four” in wooing served 19 months as US ambassa-Forcast will be planographed, panning parties the underdeveloped and uncom-University of Chicago, February 12, 1954 31 dor, Bowles described the “epiccontest” in progress between theworld’s two largest countries.China has issued a challenge, hesaid: the Voice of Peiping hasasked India to match the outputof a China aided by the technicaland financial assistance of Rus¬sia. Nehru, “who refused a dicta¬torship handed him on a silverplatter,” must consider all theadded problems of democracy infacing the challenge. The peopleof India have voted him five yearsto carry out his plan—five yearsthat they felt they owed him forthe years he spent in prisonon their behalf, Bowles continued. dams and wells to irrigate a landarea equal to that of South Caro¬lina. In addition, the “village pro¬gram” will advance sanitation,agriculture and education all overIndia. India carries 98 per centof the cost burden.Bowles saw this plan as an ef¬fort to bring about what ArnoldToynbee has called the greatestrealization of our age—that it isno longer inevitable that manface poverty.Talk tapedIn a brief interview before tap¬ing a talk with Walter Johnson,chairman of the history depart¬ment, and Theodore Schultze, eco¬nomics department chairman, forthis Sunday’s UC Roundtable,Bowles compared the inherent de¬sire for democracy among Indianswith the conditioned responsive¬ness of the Chinese to a totalitar¬ian government.Gives text ofStrozier letterThe following is the pertinenttext of Dean Robert Strozier’s let¬ter to Eli Stein, Chairman ofCORSO:“The Administration suggeststo CORSO for its meeting on Jan-ln a stormy and invective-filled session the Student Government voted last Tuesday night to revise the uary 26 the following solution toMichigan Plan, and to extend the recognition of the Phi Delta fraternity until November 1, 1954. Also, g^n^e^Beta of^hrSeita Thetaunder the new statute, the fraternity may enforce its discriminatory statute as late as November 1956. until November l, 1954; that ifThe resolution was passed over the opposition of most of the members of the Student Representative the national convention of the PhiSC to revise Mich planParty who were present. Twiceduring the meeting, Matthew recognized student organization, Paul Breslow (Soc Sci), floorPrastein (SRP-Phy Sci),charging that the assembly’sactions showed “incompetence,”called for the dissolution of theStudent assembly. according to the new SG plan. leader of the SRP, then read aIf the national fraternity does list of citations where actions hadattain the necessary three-fourths been enforced at ten Other univer-vote to revoke the discriminatory A ..clause, a second national consecu- sltles and colleSes a^ainst d,s'The meeting concluded wnen all tive convention must take similar criminatory fraternity clauses,but one member of SRP walked action before the fraternity can be The material was taken from aout of the assembly. This action revised. The SG plan will allow publication of the Educationalwas to protest a ruling by Clive the UC chapter to enforce ilsGray, SG president. The ruling clause for two succeeding yearscalled out of order a motion, by until the 1956 convention, if the1954 convention votes against dis¬crimination.Stein emphasized in his argu¬ments for the bill that Robert M.Strozier, dean of students, hadFrank Kirk (SRP-Soc Sci), to re¬consider the action taken on theMichigan Plan. Gray’s ruling*wascalled an insult and a denial ofKirk’s legitimate rights by mem¬bers of SRP.Stein introduced billThe motion to revise the Michi¬gan Plan was introduced by Eli Affairs Commission of the USNational Student Association.Kirk motion defeatedAfter the revision of the Michi¬gan Plan had been voted a pre¬amble to the act, introduced byFrank Kirk, was considered and’, defeated. This preamble Kirk ex-defmitely indicated his approval nlaln<w1 „,ao Kirk-Breslow opposed the resolu¬tion, in the belief that such actionwould be hypocritical. It was hiscontention that many assemblymembers had voted for the re¬vision because they wanted nochange in Phi Delta Theta’s status.Chairman upheldFollowing the discussion on thepreamble, Kirk introduced his mo¬tion to reconsider the revision. Alengthy discussion of parliamen¬tary order followed. After thirty-minutes, the chairman was upheldin his decision to not recognizeof such action. Stein also stated plained, was meant to explain the.. . . ... , .. XT . action of fhe assembly, but wouldthat he believed the University . , „ . ... . *' .have no legislative force, as such.could not possibly “back - track’Stein. Chairman of the Committee from Strozier’s position.on Recognized Student Organiza¬tions (CORSO). The effect of theStein Act will be to grant the PhiDelta Theta fraternity recognitionuntil the next national conventionof the fraternity.If the September national con¬vention of Phi Delta Theta, doesnot rescind the “white aryan”elause, the UC chapter must re¬nounce the clause to remain a Actually last Tuesday’s bill hadbeen formulated in discussions be¬tween Strozier and Corso. Stroz¬ier’s position of support was for¬mally indicated to Stein in a let¬ter, dated January 25, 1954.Matthew Prastein called theStein Bill a “dishonest stand.” Heinferred that Student Governmentwas afraid to take any actionwhich would displease Phi DeltaTheta. At this point the SRP membersof the assembly left the session.This action left the assembly with¬out a quorum, so no further busi¬ness was taken up. The next SGmeeting will be on Feb. 23. Delta Theta Fraternity at its Sep¬tember 1954 meeting does not at¬tain the three-fourths majority re¬quired for the elimination of theselectivity clause, the local chap¬ter be required to renounce pub¬licly its adherence to this clause,as the chapters at Amherst andWilliams have already done.It would be my understandingthat, if a recommendation fromthe CORSO were approved by theStudent Government in line withthis suggestion from the Admin¬istration, Beta of Phi Delta Thetawould, before November 1, 1954,provide the Dean of Students witheither the confirmation of the sat¬isfactory vote in the national con¬vention or signify in writing itsown renunciation of the selectiv¬ity clause, at that time and there¬after. If neither of these is at¬tained then the chapter would nottie permitted to seek recognitionon the campus.”The preamble stated that theStudent Assembly believed “theUniversity community would bebest served by immediate enforce¬ment of the Michigan Plan.” How¬ever, it further stated that sinceenforcement of the Michigan Planwas contingent upon Universityapproval, the assembly could onlytake action which the administra¬tion would enforce.Expioin enforcement Next weekend University Theatre presents its forty-seventhImmediate enforcement of the major production, The Playboy of the Western World, by JohnMichigan Plan would mean the Millington Synge. The play will be presented Friday and Sun-immediate derecognition of Phi day evenings and in a Saturday matinee at Mandel Hall.Delta Theta. The Playboy cast will be headed by James Holland as theThere was strong opposition to playboy and Carol Horning as Pegeen Mike. Holland, a Uni-the preamble. Marlin Smith (ISL- versity art department Stu- Dublin premiere and the sameLaw) stated that “we should not dent and part.time instructor‘Playboy’ to open next week;Holland to star in Synge playMembers of SRP and supporters leaving SG meeting last Tuesday nightin a protest demonstration. Members of the minority party were protest¬ing ruling of the chair. Reading from left to right: Ann Holcombe, LynBurns, Frank Kirk, Michael Kaufman, Michael Girsdansky, MathewPrastein, Paul Breslow and Robert Floyd. admit to campus” that the assem¬bly had the weaknesses explicitlystated in the preamble.Counters trend,Jimmy's offersfree coffee, teaThe price of coffee may be ris¬ing, but at Jimmy’s, a popularstudent hangout, free coffee andtea will be served, beginning to¬night, during the final hour be- man Mahon” of this production,fore closing. Jim Wilson, owner of were both introduced to UT audi-the pub, feels that safety and con- ences in Carnival of Thieves lastviviality will be served if patrons quarter,“make the one for the road cof-fee or tea on the house.” at the University College, isperhaps UT’s most experiencedmember, listing appearances fromas early as 1948, when he tookpart in The Alchemist. His mostrecent appearance was as Azdak,the wi’ey judge in Brecht’sChalk Circle of last season. CarolHorning is a relative new-comerbut has won roles in several re¬cent productions both on campusand off. Barry Sherman, whoplays her fiance, Shawn Keogh,and Leon Wanerman, the “old strife marred its first Americanpresentation in Boston. The Irishplayers were jailed in Philadel¬phia. The play’s fierce reality andstrange Irish poetry have onlyslowly won acceptance. Today thedrama has become a permanentpart of the Abbey Theatre’s rep¬ertory and traveling troupes havecarried it to all parts of the world.Tickets for all performances areon sale now at the Reynolds Clubdesk.Jimmy’s, located at 1172 Earst55th Street, is open until 3 a.m.on Saturday nights, and 2 a.m.during the rest of the week. Few recent dramas have hadsuch a vigorous stage history asPlayboy. Synge’s anti - idealisticview of his Irish neighbors wasthe cause of riots at the play's Give exchangebenefitSpecial tickets for the perfor¬mance on Friday, Feb. 19, arebeing sold for the benefit of theFrankfurt - Chicago student ex¬change program. They may bepurchased for $1 at the SG office,302 Reynolds Club, or from SGmembers.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 12, 1954Erickson presents report;observes you th's problems“Adolescence is a crisis, but not a misfortune,” Erik H. Erickson, authority on child psy¬chiatry and psychoanalysis, concluded in his his paper, “Identity and Totality: Psycho¬analytic Observations on Problems of Youth.” He presented his report at the Fifth AnnualHuman Development Symposium, held in International House last Saturday.Erickson described “identity formation” as a lifelong process of self-definition, begin¬ning in childhood and culminating in a “full identity crisis” when the adolescent is forcedto make important irreversibledecisions.The 19- or 20-year-old mustmake an occupational choicewhich will immediately place him and thus, discover himself and and confusion of sexual identity,the world in which he must live. May deny usual identityShow creates own moratorium If the adolescent does not sue-Using George Bernard Shaw as c^ed *n forming a position iden-Midwest poetswill competeA new poetry competition andaward for Midwestern poets, un¬der the joint sponsorship ofTitled the “Annual Award forMew Poets of the Midwest,” thecompetition will feature as itsfirst award a public reading of nisin competition with others at the an example, Erickson showed tity, hemay decide to fai\ well,same time that he is faced with how a" individual may create his by adopting a ”efc>ahve. one, amaking an emotional commit- moratorium if the society complete denial of the identity setment. In order to make these does not offer him one. When up for him by his childhood envi-choices, he must have some type the adolescent Shaw found him- ronment or his society,of “psycho-social moratorium,” a self becoming a successful busi- Erickson concluded his papertime in which he may experiment inessman, he left his job, his by stressing the necessity of pro-with different identities, play friends, and his country to spend viding a moratorium and of allow-w i t h dangerous commitments, five years in complete seclusion, ing adolescents to make full useduring which he wrote five pages of it. “They must take a chancea day until he had written five with difficult situations that looknovels which were not published dangerous to us, but it would beuntil a few years before his death, better to encourage them to dareAt the end of these five years, he than to warn them prematurely,”emerged from this seclusion, hav- he stated,ing decided that he was “at home Davis, Piers discuss reportwith the immortal dead.” Erick- The two discussants of Erick-„„„ ,, r son considered this decision as a son’s report were Allison Davis,Poetry magazine, University Col- feabz.ation of his identity, mark- professor of education, and Dr.lege, and the Beloit Poetry Jour- !n£ the end of his five-year self- Gerhard Piers of the Institute ofnal, was announced recently. imPosed moratorium. Psychoanalysis. Davis discussedErickson’s own work at the the identity formation problemsAustin Riggs Center has been of the American middle class ado-concerned with'adolescents who lescents, arising from their needcannot make use of the institu- to avoid maturity in economicown works by the winning poet, tipnal moratorium offered by so- and sexual roles in order to pre-publication in Poetry and the ciety, or create one of their own, pare for their future occupationalBeloit Poetry Journal, and a cash as Shaw did. They are forced to role.prize of $100. The reading will turn to psychiatrists, judges, Piers showed that the problemtake place May 21 as part of a priests, or recruiting sergeants in of identity formation had beenaeries of poetry readings being an effort to overcome their "path- neglected by psychoanalyists be-presented this year by University ological moratorium,” the well- cause the conditions in Europe,College. known adolescent breakdown, where the science originated, re-The competition is open to any This breakdown is equivalent to duced the tensions which causepQ0^ whose work has not been at-tite identity diffusion, which is the full identity crisis describedpublished in book form and who usually characterized by loss of by Erickson, and, therefore, re-is a resident of Ohio, ^lichigan tirne perspective, over-conscious- duced the importance of the prob-Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Min- ness identity, work paralysis, lem.nesota, Iowa, or Missouri.Manuscripts submitted for judg¬ing may not exceed 20 double¬spaced or ten single-spaced pagesin length. They should be sub¬mitted, accompanied by a self-ad¬dressed stamped envelope, to NewPoets of the Midwest Award, Uni¬versity of Chicago, 19 South La¬Salle street, Chicago 3, Ill. Dead¬line for the competition is April1, 1954.Judges in the competition willbe Robert Glauber, editor of theBeloit Poetry Journal; GalwayKinnell, director of the LiberalArts program of University Col¬lege; Karl Shapiro, editor ofPoetry magazine; and SamuelYellen, editor of the Indiana uni¬versity poetry series. Rago will leave College;contract expires this yearHenry Rago, assistant professor of Humanities in the Col¬lege, will leave the University at the end of this year, it wasannounced recently. Rago made the following statement tothe MAROON.“The rumors that I am leaving the University are true. Mycontract expires at the end of this academic year, and bystatute I must leave unless —:appointed to permanent rank, strongly, that a statement is nec-This appointment the Univer- essary- Tlie Administration, as asity is unable to make because of matter °f courtesy, has left thethe limited number of such posi- responsibility to me.tions now available. The entire “I have no plans to announce,circumstance is attended by noth- Teaching at Chicago has beening but good will and good faith such a nourishment and delighton all sides. We are simply up and excitement that for the mo¬ilExtra Dividend DeclaredDaily 6-7 P.M. at theIT. T.= Ml 3-0524FTiEye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372COMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.• %Bor-be-cue chicken• Bar be cue ribsDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525 Look! all the colorsand patterns you want...in Arrow Sports ShirtsWe have the right Arrow sports shirtfor eveiy pair of slacks in your ward¬robe. Come, take your pick of oursmart selection — checks, plaids, solidcolors in every fabric and color youneed. And they're all WASHABLE.Stop in today . . . and see howArrows con spark your loaf life. scoo up against an impersonalthat can’t be helped.“I’m sorry that I have had torefuse to comment the severaltimes the MAROON has asked meabout all this. I thought that anypublic statement might presumemore interest thart the facts war¬rant; and in any case, because ofmy complete confidence in the Ad¬ministration, I wanted to leaveany such statement to the Chan¬cellor or to the Dean of the Col¬lege. It now appears to me, quitesituation ment it’s almost impossible to im-* agine myself teaching anywhereelse.”f YlTO \ WITH /ifOp♦and meet the peopleHawaiic4th ANNUAL GIRL’S STUDY TOURlie BY TOURl4* day*.Ionduefed. $495See your travel agent.STOP TOURS, Berkeley, Calif.1131 - 33 E. 55th =_CHieago - frontfon - Ook ?ark - Gory - Joliet - Alton You can send flowers any old time—Give a book to your Valentine!(And our apologue* to Ogden Nash)LOVE POEMS & LETTERS FOR ALL THE YEAR. $1.00A fervent note, a gallant verse,Price that fits the slimmest purse.VENUS IN THE KITCHEN by Pilaff Bey(Norman Douglas) $3.75Book makes claims for aphrodisia.Unconfirmed; but the food will pleasia.PERIOD PIECE by Gwen Raverat. $3.75Victorian sentiment by Darwin's descendiment.We have II. Allen Smith on the Practical Joke,line J. Thurbcr on an assortment of folk;Benton and Gibran, if your heart'strouble's serious,ft. Price's DROODLES, if it's delirious.GAMEMANSHIP, LIFEMANSHIP, HOPALONG FREUD,Nonsense and novels, all by the score,We've run out of rhymes — come into the store.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOK STORE5802 Ellis Avenue Chicago 37, IllinoisArroiv Sports Shirts HailedInter-Collegiate Champs!Once again, Arrow sports shirts have beat out allcompetition and won the title of campus cham¬pions. Winners on two counts . .. style and com¬fort . . . these champion sports shirts are nowavailable at all Arrow dealers.ARROWTRADE ® MARKSHIRTS ' TIES • UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTSWEARFebruary 12, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Robert E. Merriam, wardalderman, will speak on "Politicsand Chicago's City Government"at an open meeting on Thursdayat 8 p.m. in Sdcial Sciences 122. Forum sponsorsmusic commentby jazz writerThe Snell-Hitchcock forum willpresent Bill Russo, a young Amer¬ican composer, speaking on “Prob¬lems Involved in the Creation, In¬terpretation, and Presentation ofExperimental Modern Music” inthe Hitchock lounge next Wednes¬day at 8 p.m.Records, many of which are un¬available transcriptions, will illus¬trate the discussion.Russo has written most of theconcert library for Stan Kenton.As backgrounds for drama andmodern dance, his scores havebeen used by television and othermodes of presentation.Currently nine LP albums con¬taining his compositions are onsale, and a tenth. “Stan KentonPresents the Compositions of BillRusso” is now in preparation.Russo is at present writing aballet. Full agenda for Wash Prom weekendto include game, parties, performancesSeveral open houses, a basketball game, a breakfast in Hutchinson Commons followingthe Washington Promenade, and other events, were announced by the committee in chargeas the final schedule for the Wash Prom Weekend, extending from February 19-21.The Wash Prom weekend will officially begin with a basketball game between UC andElmhurst on Friday night, February 19. Acrotheatre will provide the “Wash Prom week¬end touch” in the form of half-time entertainment with other special entertainment pro¬vided by the Pep Club.The House Decoration con-and fraternity houses may compete, will have its judging on Monday afternoon, February 15. Mrs.Alma Mullin, assistant director ofEby to reveal'most importantbelief to PorterProfessor Kermit Eby of theindustrial relations department .will speak at the meeting of the Dcbst© wlfinGTSPorter Foundation on “This I rr i e .Hold to Be Most Important.” The OtlOrGCl TT66 tripdiscussion will take place at Inter- • _ ii _ J;,.—.— _national House in Room A at 7:30 f° MadlSOfl CampUSon Sunday. Winners in a campus-wide con-Eby, who has always played an test to choose a two-man UC de-impoitant role in his church com- bate team will receive an all-ex-mumty, is also interested in labor ., . . . .. TT . ...problems in the United States. He pense paid tnp to the Universltyheld the post of director of edu- of Wisconsin for the Western Con-cation and research of the Con- ference Debate League gatheringgress of Industrial Organizations April 8-10. Students interested infrom 1945 to 1948. competing for team positionsIn line with his religious inter- shoum fin 0ut application blanksest, Eby has just written a book, . 4, _ .entitled, The God in You.” at the Reynolds club desk-Applicants should be preparedto argue either side of the ques¬tion. “Resolved: Indian NeutralityIs Necessary for an Understand¬ing Between East and West.” Thiswas also the topic of a debateagainst two Indian students whoare on an Institute of Internation¬al Education sponsored tour ofthe U.S., which will be held in Soc.Sci. 122, April 1. Entrance forteam positions may be by individ¬uals or groups, although the judg¬ing will be on an individual basis.RECORDS10" LP 79c12" LP 98c & $1.8945 RPM 14 priceHermans935 E. 55th St.Open Thurs., Til 9Dance fro the Music ofDick Gerwin and His BandSATURDAY, FEB. 13INTERNATIONAL HOUSE8-12 P.M. Admission $1.00S. HUR0K presentsBROADWAY'S HIT DANCESpMCOMEDY! SONGS! BALLETS!"AN INTIMATE REVUE. AUDIENCES AREWELL ENTERTAINED!" -Tim. Mcgazin.SPECIAL STUDENT RATE:Sunday Matinee Only, Feb. 21Regular price4.203.603.001.80 Student rate(for Sun. mat.)3.002.40 t1.80.90Tickets available at Reynolds Club DeskOpera House — Feb. 19, 20, 21 (mat. Sunday) Ballroom into a replica of a South- be served in Hutchinson Corn-test in which all dormitories ern ballroom of the Colomal peri- mons following the Prom, from• !C ua!...„„ Tv!l°n„ °d. Murals of George Washington 1-3 a.m. Tickets for the breakfastwill, of course, be a part of the are $2.00 per couple, and should bedecoration plans. purchased with the Prom tickets.The highlight of the Prom will Sunday religious services arer^denTactivitTesTHarold Haydom ^ the c/owning of Mi.ss UC at planned as usual for Rockefellerassociate nrofessor of art and midnight by Woody Herman. The Chapel at 11 a.m. A performanceRobert L.McCaul, assistant to the J.^en, chosen by a campus elec- of the Agnes DeMille dance troupedean of students in the college tlon’ Wl11 have as members of her at the Civic Opera House on Sun-will comprise the judging com- ~ur> th\four remai"ine final‘ day afternoon will complete themittee. The contest winner will be lsts from the <*ueen contest* week end s round of activitiesawarded a winner's trophy, which To serve breakfast The Dance Theatre, a revuefor the past two years has been Preceding and following the comedy, songs, and ballet, willheld by Zeta Beta Tau fraternity. ball> °Pen houses will be held at offer the Sunday matinee at re-On Saturday February 20 Uni- Hitchcock and Burton - Judson duced prices. Tickets may be pur-versity Theatre is offering a mat- Courts. The committee has ar- chased at the Student Govem-inee performance of Playboy of ranged for a buffet breakfast to ment ticket agency,the Western World at a specialprice of $1.25 for all holders ofWash Prom bids. This perform¬ance will be held in the ReynoldsClub at 2:30 p.m.Colonial ballroom plannedThe Prom itself, to be held inBartlett Gymnasium from 9-1 onFebruary 20, is offering WoodyHerman and his Third Herd fordancing. Red, white, and bluebunting, and a chandelier of goldstars reflecting five different col¬ors, will transform the BartlettClub tea marks60th anniversaryInter-Club Council is sponsoringa tea to be held at the Kimptonhome in celebration of the 60thanniversary of the founding ofclubs on campus. The event,which begins the winter quarterrushing, takes place next Tues¬day at 3:30 p.m.Club members, rushees, alum¬nae, faculty members, and wivesof members of the faculty and theadministration will receive invita¬tions.Those who wish to rush maycontact Betty Ferrar, Greenhouse. Margaret Mead discussescultural changes of ManusResearch in the changes that take place in £ culture duringone generation, was the purpose of the second visit to NewGuinea that Dr. Margaret Mead made last year, 25 yearsafter her original trip. She brought back not only facts aboutthe changes which occurred among the Manus, a New Guineatribe she studied, but also some conclusions about the prog¬ress in the methods of studyof culture and personality thathave evolved in the last quar¬ter century. become familiar with many as¬pects of western technology andthought. The extent of this famil¬iarising process manifested itselffor discriminatingValentinesit'sRosemaryzwickdistinctivehand-madejewelryatBordelon Designs1424 E. 55thandUniversity Bookstore5802 Ellis Though she has not yet pub- in the tribe’s rearranging of itslished the details of her trip, Dr. homes, in its becoming stronglyMead in a stop at the University interested in the workings of newlast Wednesday, gave an informalintroduction to some aspects ofher findings.Identification helps rapportDr. Mead discussed the feelingof stronger identification that ananthropologist experiences withcertain tribes more than with oth¬ers. This feeling she attributed tothe fact that in the field differentresponses occurred from differentsocieties. There are places wherethe anthropologist, while gaininginsights into a culture is regardedas a rather strange outsider, elicit¬ing information and performingactions with which the individualsunder study have at best littlesympathy, and which they do notunderstand; on the other hand, machinesthere are groups with whom a Margaret Meadand in techniques ofchild care and medicine, and evenmutual intelligibility of motiva- in the readjusting of its chron-tion in many areas occurs. It is in ology.these that strong rapport is estab- New role for onth,apologistlished, Dr. Mead believes. The role of the anthropologistIn her re-visit to the Manus, Dr. js consequently changed. There isMead found that a stronger feel- more Qf a feeling of working to-ing of rapport existed than 25 gether with a common stake, andyears ago, because the Manus had Gf interchange of information. Inanswers to questions, Dr. Meadstated that she felt that a newaspect of her role was being apart of the change-causing fac¬tors among the Manus. Thisawareness entails, in research, aresponsible intervening towardschange, Dr. Mead stressed.Portrait* byLOUISE BARKERPhotographer1457 E. 57th St. BU 8-0876HARRY A. ZISOOK & SONSUniversity District Renting OfficeMAYFLOWER HOTEL 6125 KENWOOD AVENUELet us help youGET OUT OF THE ROOMING HOUSES ANDSUBSTANDARD BUILDINGS IN THE NEIGHBORHOODFor the convenience 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 that we mayassist you.AVAILABLE NOW AND/OR MARCH 1stHotel rooms with private bath and showerSgl.—$8 per wk.; dbl.—$12 per wk.Hotel apts. with switchboard and maid service1 rm. apt. at f90 per mo.2 rm. apt. at $107.50 per mo.office hours ... 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. . . . Monday thru FridayTHERE IS NO CHARGE FOR THIS SERVICEmain officeHARRY A. ZISOOK & SONSReal Estate100 W. MONROE ST. RAndolph 6-9250Serving Chicago since 1907 -FINE FOOD1311 East 57th StreetPresentingTOLK SINGBIG BILL BROONZVguitarFLEMING BROWN5 str ing banjoFRIDAY, FIB. 12 8: P.M.430 S. MICHIGAN AV.(Roosevelt College)Rm. 785 $1.20Sponsored byAMERICAN YOUTH HOSTELSPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 12, 1954Issued 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 byViail, $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 VogeltangerFeature editor: Daniel QueenSports editor: Paul A. HoffmanCopy editor: Shirley LongAdvertising manager: Reva BrownProduction manoger: Joanna HerlihyEditoriol 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 Mermoll, Justin Johnson, Wolf RoderCartoonist: Ray NelsonCopy staff: Jerry Ex, Pam BrownPhotographers: Joe Wolf, Richard KluckholnLetters...Explains preambleAs a member of SG, I shouldlike to explain my part in theaction in regard to the MichiganPlan.The Administration and a largesegment of Student Governmentwere opposed to enforcing theCode as it stood, feeling that PhiDelta Theta should be given moretime to work out its problem inIts national convention. Anothersegment felt that, in any case, itwas necessary to reach an agree*ment with the Administrationwhich it would be willing to en¬force and which would providefor a definite deadline.It was said that CORSO hadreached an agreement with theAdministration that upon passageof the amendment to the Code itwould accept the change and an¬nounce the new provision as offi¬cial University policy. This agree¬ment, and the publicity which canbe based upon it were, in fact, thechief reasons for believing thatthe Administration would join inenforcing the new provision.Neither of these elements wereexplicit when the Michigan Planwas made a part of the Code in1951. Accordingly, I introduced apreamble which stated the aboveagreement with the Administra¬tion and that if the Assembly hadhad sole jurisdiction in the mat¬ter, it would have enforced theCode as it stood. The preamblecould have served as a check onany tendency of the Administra¬tion to equivocate or backtrack.Most important, however, itwould have made the intent ofthe Assembly clear beyond doubtand would have explained to thestudent body the circumstancesunder which the decision wasmade.I voted for the amendment be¬cause the new position of the Ad¬ministration gives a real chanceof actual, if not immediate en¬forcement of the ban on discrim¬inatory fraternities. I believe thatan extension of time was not war¬ranted, but since SG does not SRP self-expressionistsI should like to call to yourattention the actions of the minor¬ity party at the meeting of Stu¬dent Government on Tuesday,February 9.After the passage of the amend¬ment to the Michigan plan, overnearly unanimous SRP opposi¬tion, an SRP leader made a mo¬tion to dissolve the Student Gov¬ernment. His reasoning was diffi¬cult to follow, but the burden ofit seemed to be that the Assemblyhad abrogated its responsibilityto the students by failing to adoptthe views of a handful of SRP’ers.After this motion was disposedof, and after a move to delay im¬plementation of the original billby reconsideration was shown tobe out of order, the minorityparty found that it had used upits rule book. Nothing daunied,they followed a procedure not un¬familiar to them; they made uptheir own rules.All but one of the SRP assem¬bly members and all of theirbroad base of popular support inthe visitors’ section marched outof the assembly room in protest.(There’s a rumor that they sere¬naded the majority party fromoutside the window, but the acous¬tics were bad and no one seems tobe sure.)As SRP may have suspectedtheir mass exit broke the quorum.This prevented the Assemblyfrom considering the next itemof business, a bill that had beenplaced high on the agenda on themotion of minority members andwas indeed sponsored by two ofthem.Their entire performance, withall its ludicrous sidelights, wasthe most graphic example to dateof the traditional SRP attitude to¬ward Student Government. Theiremphasis on self-expression,rather than on responsibility asrepresentatives of the studentscould have led only to the eventsof Tuesday night.Herbert Scbwortx,Vice-PresidentStudent Government Chides ISL, SRPWe feel that the events whichtook place in SG last Tuesday,culminating in the walkout' ofSRP should be-discussed with thecampus. We believe that the pom¬pous and self-interested action ofthe elected representatives ofboth parties shows a complete dis¬regard for their duties to the stu¬dents who elected them. There¬fore, so that in the future the stu¬dents will know for what and forwhom they are voting, what fol¬lows is relevant.The president of Student Gov¬ernment, Clive Gray, nas longamazed its members with his mis¬use of the powers of the chair.Tuesday his violations of parlia¬mentary procedure and of com¬mon courtesy raised questions asto his suitability for the office.Not only did he insult membersof the minority party seeking thefloor, but, when on a point ofprivilege, he was asked to cease,he shouted that the membershave “no right to criticize thechair.” In an insolent manner hestifled genuine applause by thespectators, saying that they hadno permission* to express them¬selves thusly. Finally, he refuseda minority member, Mr. Kirk, theright of reconsideration on themain motion (the Michigan PlanAmendment), completely withoutmoral or legal justification.A by-law of SG states that re¬placements must be made fromthe same party as that of themember who has resigned. Theexecutive council (ISL) has re¬fused to seat a member of SRPpetitioning to succeed an SRP’er.Pending a court ruling on the le¬gality of this by-law, the only eth¬ical course for the governmentis to seat the petitioner.Though the ISL forced adjourn¬ment by calling a quorum whenit could have continued business,the walkout of the SRP memberswas by far the most inexcusableaction of the evening. The walk¬out prevented.important businessfrom being enacted, some ofwhich was initiated by and of par¬ticular interest to the minority.It also seemed to show an emo¬tional, irresponsible outlook onthe part of those who partici¬pated. This, coupled with the ac¬tions mentioned above, indicatethat SG must take intelligentstock of itself if it is to be anymore than the debating societythat it has often been accused ofbeing.Karl RodmanJoel RosenthalLarry Lichtenstein -Collegiate Scene■Discrimination decreases;tie wearers face ostracismby John TwomeyThe University of Washington Daily reported the resultsof a survey of anti-discrimination policies on the campuses inthe Pacific Northwest. Students and administrators of 38 in¬stitutions of higher learning located in Montana, Idaho, Ore¬gon and Washington were questioned. The Pacific NorthwestCommittee on Human Relations in Higher Education whichconducted the study states that *no discrimination exists in ad- ture looks encouraging but leavesmission policy either in state- room for much improvement assupported or the non-supportcd witnessed by the report of wide-institutions. Service organizations spread discrimination in Greekare reportedly virtually non-dis- letter societies, off campus hous-criminatory, as are campus and ing, and job placement,faculty hiring policies. The pic- Ties tabooOn the Kansas University cam-WmckoM /li’etiirklN/i pus nlne male sociology studentsWinsberg disturbing recently cooperated with theirI am very disturbed by the professor in a week long endeavormusic reviews of Fred Winsberg. to learn more personally the con-The review in the 2/5/54 issue, cePt °* social sanctions. The es-for instance, I find absolutely Mnf ol,‘heir experiment in non-, , ,, J conformity was the wearing ofdeplorable. I can find no i cason ciasses> The experimentfor including personal dislikes or was predicated on the belief thatlikes of the works themselves, in “at most schools in the countryan article designed to inform the the wearing of ties is virtuallyreader of the merits, few or taboo for undergraduates.”many, of the performance. I find The students reported that allno interest in the fact that Mr. week long they were met withVVinsberg does not like tne Stra- questions, laughter, hisses, andvinsky Mass for a Mixed Chorus sometimes ostracism. One sopho-and Double Wind Quintet . . . more was told to stop wearing tiesI believe that this and the Byrd or he would give the fraternity a(which Mr. Winsberg also critic- bad name.ized) were performed for the en-tire public’s enjoyment, and notsolely for Mr. Winsberg’s dis¬pleasure. I am interested in thequality of the performance, notMr. Winsberg’s opinion df thequality of the masters. So, please,a little more consideration for the|a,i»r,<*,<,«»,«n»dt* fhyourbudgat.lI Soo your traval ogont. I:v ’ GO; WITH iMopyAND MEET THE PEOPLEin PRIVATE CAR TOURS ofEUROPEpublic.Fran Oshlag STOP TOURS, Berkeley, Calif.*7/te PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETafter the Wash Prom ...Alexander's1137 East 63rd StreetBravo! Encore!Welcome back this week, Mr. Guinness, inThe Lavender Hill Mob andThe Man in the White SuitComing—Feb. 26. All on one great film program—Annapurna, LittleFugitive; ond the UPA cartoons—Edgar Allan Poe's, The Tell-TaleHeart and James Thurber's, A Unicorn in the Garden.NO. 7-9071 HYDE PARK Til EAT HE ^A*Er<1PAKKStudent Rate 50c All Performancester, a common ground with the ^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii r i 'Administration had to be foundsooner or later. The most impor¬tant thing to do is to reveal theweakness of SG’s position.Frank KirkSRP Social Science ForValentinesTheDisc1367 E. 57th St.•THE RECORDOF THE WEEKBelshazzar's Feastby WaltonConducted bySir Adrian BoultWL 5248 . . . $4.29 ond tuxedo0rentalWashington Promit's for lL Wal P,romwie .)FLOWER SHOPEE TWO Convenient Locations EEH 1225 E. 63rd 1301 E. 55th JJ HY 3-5353 Ml 3-4020 j|= Special Student Discount =illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliii!!!!!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll^ Esquire712 E. 63rdNO 7-9160February 12, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Ward tells of Soviet education,recalls impressions of schoolsby Richard E. WardThe most vivid impressions from my trip to the Soviet Union were of our visits to theschools. Here we had the opportunity to freely talk with people our own age, and mostimportant, with common interests.Moscow University, or Lemonosov University, as it is named — after the noted Russianscientist, philologist, and poet — was the first of eight schools we visited.Moscow University is the largest in the Soviet Union, and the branch for scientific studies,which we visited, has 18,000 ——: —-— -, , , , . , r— of Moscow are all first-rate. It hasstudents studying in one hugesprawling 32 story building.This widely publicized structurehouses the laboratories, class¬rooms, cafeterias, lounges, gym¬nasia, auditoriums, and dormito- Reports on SovietThis is the second installment byRichard E. Ward, MAROON man¬aging editor, on his trip to theSoviet Union. The third installmentwill appear next week.lies. We were told that 6,000 stu¬dents live in the dormitories andthat the rest commute from dif- Moscow institute of foreign lan- numerous lounges and a largethe advantages of being new andnot having been bombed, unlikemost of the other schools we visit¬ed. The entrance halls and foyersare finished in marble, students'rooms — about the size of B-Jrooms—are brightly colored, withone student per room. There areferent areas of Moscow.Students greet editorsWe were met by a small groupof students on our arrival at theuniversity and were then official¬ly greeted by the pro-rector, the qUjrjng where we were from. Aguages, where our three interpret- student clubhouse,ers studied English. The day following our visit toAfter the interview, we touredthe university and spoke withstudents who came up to us in-second highest administrative official of the* school a New Year’s Eve party. Here Ireceived my first taste of Sovietvodka. Our interpreter asked ifstudent who noticed my curiosity ,ha„d kad v«!ka b?,°re' andUie —X, 'TVw, what kind. I said we had drunk„ , ,, invited me into his room. The stu- , ,Several students and instructors dent a friendly chap about twen- Sm,™off s and was not as goodexplained what was taught at the tv-five was in his fifth vear in as what we were Presently drink-university. The courses of instruo pyhysics. Conversation was diffi-lion include art, history, eco- cuj^ fjrst, as the interpretersnomics, law, philosophy, journal- were not present. The studentism, matematics, physics, chem- Sp0ke SOme English and German,istry, biology, geology, and geog- jn which we conversed. He wasraphy. We later learned that most planning to specialize in nuclearSoviet universities offer similar physics. I knew enough Russianareas of study. to be able to read the name ofTeachers in special schools Fermi, the author of one of his that this was because Smirnoffhad fled the revolution and hisvodka had not progressed since1917. 'Editor converses in GermanThe party was a gala affair.After a great amount of vodkatoasts, and food, we joined theFor students who plan to teach, books. He was anxious to know dancers. The girls with whom Ithere are special pedagogical in- about the student life in America,stitutes. Other specialized instruc- Moscow school first-ratetion is offered at schools like the The facilities at the UniversityA GAS A Book StoreVALENTINESContemporary and TraditionalGuaranteed typewriter repair service1117 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651Your futuredepends on theRIGHT STARTJoin a progressive dynamiccompany that is setting newrecords in the electronic industrySeniors 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.First 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 Placement Office for appointmentCAMPUS INTERVIEWSFriday, February 19 danced did not know EnglishAgain German was our mediumof communication.In Leningrad, we visited thePolytechnic Institute, or engineer¬ing institute. It was built in 1898and reminded me of Kent Hall.We were told that Botvinnic,world chess champion, is a grad¬uate of the institute.Program lasts five yearsThere are 9,500 students, engi¬neering and other technical stud¬ies, and a faculty of 950 instruc¬tors. The program of study lastsfive years, as at all institutions ofhigher learning in the USSR. Inhis last year the student writes apaper on some elementary scien¬tific investigation.Twenty-five per cent of the en¬gineering students are women. AtREADY TOPAINTBookcasesRecord CabinetsStorage CabinetsChests-of-DrawersHermans935 E 55th st.Open thurs. til 9VVVNXNVVNVNVWVVW' A scene in a biology class of the Girls' Middle School No. 19 in Tblisi,Georgia, U.S.S.R. The students shown are in their eighth year. On the wallappears a picture of Mkhurin, noted Russian naturalist who expandedthe theories of Darwin.the universities the ratio is about portant function'of the Komsomolhalf men and half women. is the training of youth for theWe visited the student hostel Communist party. The member-dormitory at the institute. At ran- ship consists of both students anddom we walked down corridors workers between the ages of 14and knocked on doors. Almost all and 25. Usually about 95 per centthe students were studying. The of the student body are membersexam session was in progress. We of the group. The executive coun¬learned that many of the exams cil serves a purpose similar toare administered orally. The exam that of a student council. Manysession lasts until the third week phases of the students’ extra-cur-in January and then the students ricular life are encompassed byhave a two week vacation. The the organization. In most schools,system almost coincides with the Komsomol publishes the studentsemester system. newspaper.Crowded condition* prevalent Soviets teach English, German ,The students in the dormitories Many students we talked withtalked freely. They spoke of the knew English. At present, Englishday when their school would be and German are the most widelylike Moscow University. At pres- taught foreign languages in theent, there are four students to a USSR for their use in technicalroom in the hostel. They said that studies. No student enters an in¬similar crowded conditions are stitute or university without aprevalent at other schools due to fair knowledge of a foreign lan-large influx of students after the guage.war and to destruction of former- Before attending the institutely existent living space. or university the student must beThe Leningrad students were a graduate of a “middle school.’*very insistent on knowing wheth- This is a ten-year school whicher all graduates of American in- the student enters at the age ofstitutions of higher learning could seven,get jobs. The students also asked Editors visit girls' schoolus about scholarships. Approx- We visited a girls’ middle schoolimately 90-95 per cent of the stu- in Tiflis, where we learned thatdents receive stipends. Their sti- the program offers the equivalentpends range from 250 to 750 in course material of an Americanrubles per month, and are for all high school. Recently, only sevenliving and other expenses of stu- years of schooling were compul-dents. Tuition is only 400 rubles sory in the USSR; now ten areper year. The students’ stipend required. The schools are separ-is based on. his scholarly achieve- ated by sex, except in rural areas,ments and number of dependents, The principal of the school in Tif-if any, and his year in school, lis, a handsome woman aboutAlso, if the student agrees to be fifty, told us she believes thatplaced in a position by the gov- Segregation of the sexes is bet-ernment upon graduation, he re- ter during school hours, howeverceives a small additional sum. that there is considerable con-Tech students learn politics troversy among Soviet educatorsWe talked about the curriculum on the question,with the Leningrad students. Two We visited many of the classesyears of political economy and in the school. In the English class,four years of physical culture are the girls were reading a passagerequired. Otherwise the study pro- about Byron. Their vocabularygram is similar to that of an was good, but their pronunciationAmerican engineering school. The needed polishing. They begin theirextra-curricular life has many foreign language in the fourthsimilarities also. Sports and cul- year of studies. For these girls, ittural groups are heavily stressed, was their third language. As theyOne organization, however, the were Georgians, they not onlyKomsomol < Young Communist knew their native tongue, but inLeague), is unlike any found at the second year they began thean American university. An im- study of Russian.RESTRINGWITHSTANDS OUTin play• Harder Smashese Better Cut and SpinSTANDS UPin your rackete Moisture Immunee Lasting LivelinessCOSTS LESSthan gutAPFROX. STRINGINO COST.Pro-Fected Braid.... $6.00Multi-Ply Braid $5.00At tennis shops andsporting goods stores.ASHAWAY BRAIDED RACKET STRINGChoice of The Champions International House Movie ProgramMonday, February 15 — KAMERADSCHAFT (German)Assembly Hall, 8:00 P.M. Admission 50c.Thursday, February 18 — GREEN PASTURES (American)East Lounge, 7:00 P.M. and 9:00 P.M. Admission 35c.GUEST STARS EVERY SUNDAY NITE-VS-“The Battle of the Hot Rhythms"EVERY NIGHT —7 Night* • Weebn 9unuaI mm 5DixieJAZZ VS• NEVBARCLAY DIXIE VS• JACK IVETTCornet• FLOYD BEANPlano• JIM BARNESDrum*• JUG BERGERClarinet• EDDIESCHAEFFERTrombootChet Roble, Sunday Nnight Guest StarPage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 12, 1954M'""/„ ho»HoPk«n*University(Smutty ca*k&k& events in Cice£ Classified ... ServicesFriday, Feb. 12Humboldt Club yill present Dr. Gamerlecturing on “Kleine Erlebnisse auftier deutschen Autobahn” at a meet¬ing at 4 p.m. in Wieboldt Commons408.•Greed,•* a film directed by Erich VonStroheim, will be shown by the FilmStudy Group at 7:15 and 9:30 p.m. atSocial Sciences 122. Series ticket $1,Hillel Fireside. Dr. James G. Miller, pro¬fessor and chairman, department ofpsychology, will talk on "The Impactof Religion on Personality” at 8:30pm., 5115 Woodlawn. The SabbathService will precede the #Fireside at7:45.Sunday, Feb. 14 \XockeicuvC1 Chapel Service at 11 a m.The Reverend John B. Thompson,Dean of the Chapel, will preach.Carillon Recital at 3:30 p.m. in Rocke¬feller memorial Chapel. James R.Lawson, Carilloneur. ,Italian ciup Meeting in Home Room-International House at 3:30 p.m. illus¬trated lecture on Italian cities.“My raiin and My proiession” is thetopic ox a lecture sponsored by Cal¬vert Club that will De given by How¬ard V. laliey of the department ofmusic, 4:ju p.m. at De Sales House,5735 university Avenue. It will be fol¬lowed at b p.m. by a supper, admis¬sion ao cents.VC Chapter oi the Intercollegiate Zion¬ist Feueration of America will hold ameeting, 7:30 p.m. at Hill el Founda¬tion. 'mere will be a discussion onrehgion in Israel, followed by singingana aancmg. Open to all uC students.VC Glee Ciuo reaearsal in Blaine Hallfrom 4 to 5:30 p.m.Porter Foundation will hold a discus¬sion and meeting at internationalHouse, Koom A, at 7:30. Hermit Eoy,proiessor of social sciences will speakon -This i Hold to Be Most Impor¬tant.” Refreshments.Monday, Feb. 15The Vvaigicen Founuation Lecture Ser¬ies, sponsored by the Vvaigreen Foun¬dation, will be continued 8 p.m. atJudd 126. "TVA: An Approach to theDevelopment of a Region,” will bepresented by Gordon R. Cnapp, Chair¬man of the Board, TVA.“Kameraschaf t” is the German filmthat will be shown at InternationalHouse, 8 p.m. Admission is fifty cents.Tuesday, Feb. 16The Inter-varsity Cnrisuan Fellowshipwill sponsor a luncheon, 12:3U to 1 :2Up.m., at Ida Noyes, tnird floor. MissAlice Reid, traveling secretary forIVCF will speak on "Should We Ac¬cept the Bible’s Claims About Itself?”Admission free.“The Brothers Karamazov” is the mo¬tion picture to be presented at Soc.Sci. 122 at 7:15 and 9:30 p.m. Admis¬sion 50 cents.An Organ Recital will be held at Rocke¬feller Chapel at 8:15 p.m. The ChapelOrganist will be Heinrich Fleischer.Compositions will include works byBach and Buxtehude.Communications Club wlil sponsor alecture at 8 p.m. at Soc. Sci. 201 byKermit Eby, Professor of Social Sci¬ences, on “Social Conscience and theFacts of Life.”Concert Band Rehearsal will be held8 p.m. at Sunny Gym, 5823 SouthKenwood Avenue.Wednesday, Feb. 17Carillon Recital wili take place 4:30p.m. at Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.James R. Lawson will be the Carillon-neur.“Faust, or the Moral Ambiguity of theQuest for Truth” will be discussed byProfessor Heller, In another lecture inthe series, “The Romantic Mind,”sponsored by the Committee on SocialThought. 4:30 p.m. at Soc. Sci. 122.Tour of the Physiology Building will bethe main activity at a meeting of thePre-med Club. Abbott 133 from 4-5p.m.VC Glee Club Rehearsal will be held atBlaine Hall from 7-8:30 p.m.One and Two-RoomFurnished KitchenetteAPARTMENTSAND ROOMSnicely furnished; clean, quiet; elec¬tric refrigeration; newly decorated;well maintained building.ALSO SLEEPING ROOMSREASONABLE6019-21 South Dorchester Ave.on Midwaynear all transportationring manager's bellhi '54Round Trip viaSteamship $40A 1FREQUENT SAILINGS 4»UV MToirist Round Trip Air*4338Choice of Over 100STUDENT CUSS TOMS $C A ATRAVEL STMT TOMSCOMHCTED TOMS «pUnhrortity Travel Co., offkhtbonded agents for all lino*, ho*rendered efficient travel serviceon a business basis since 1926.See your local travel agent forfaldore and deto«»UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq.,.Cambridge, Mass. Country Dancers will sponsor an eve¬ning of English and American Coun¬try Dancing, 7:45 p.m. at Ida Noyes,Cloister Club. Beginners welcome;please wear tennis shoes. Admissionfree.Science-Fiction Club will hold a meet¬ing 7:30 p.m. at Ida Noyes. Therewill be a recording. “Impressions ofOuter Space” and program notes bySamuel Mines. Everyone welcome.“ Loheleth: the Gentle Cynic,” is thesubject of a lecture that will be de¬livered by Coert Rylaarsdam, associ¬ate professor of FTS, Hillel Founda¬tion, 5715 Woodlawn, at 8 D.m. Ad¬mission free.SU Outing Club will hold a meeting forstudents interested in the ski tripthat is scheduled March 17-28. IdaNoyes at 8 p.m.‘‘The Problem of the Saar” is the sub¬ject of a lecture by Helmut Hirsch,associate professor of European His¬tory. It will be sponsored by theGraduate History Club and PoliticalScience Club, and will take place ata joint meeting of the clubs, 8 p.m.,at Ida Noyes, Sun Parlor, third floor.Kermit Flby, Professor of Social Scienceswill address the International HouseDiscussion Group on "Vested Interestsin Defense,” 8 p.m. at Int. House, EastLounge. Admission free.The Oriental Institute will sponsor anIllustrated lecture-on "Muslim Art InNorth Africa.” The speaker will beRoger le Tourneau, Professor of His¬tory and Civilization of the MuslimWest in the University of Algiers. Itwill be delivered 8:30 p.m. at theJames Henry Breasted lecture hall.Thursday, Feb. 18Hillel Foundation will hold a class 3:30p.m. at 5715 Woodlawn. Rabbi Frau-bart will lead the newly formed Tal¬mud class in “Kiddushln.” There willbe no charge.“preen Pastures,” an American film,will be shown at International House,East Lounge. There will be showingsat 7 and 9 p.m. Admission Is 35 cents.l’C Sailing Club will hold a racing class,7:30 p.m. at the Columbia Yacht Club.Professor Alfred Kraessel of the socialscience division center for economicdevelopment and cultural change willspeak on “Peru” at the auditorium ofthe Blackstone Library, 4904 S. LakePark at 8 p.m. Admission free. For SalePoodles, white toy pups. AKC. Call evenings, Herzog, MI 3-3185.9x12 French Wilton rug in excellentcondition, will sacrifice. Leave messagefor Bill Cohen, MI 3-0800, ext. 1072.Baby butler: safest most economic babyfeeding unit. Feldman, DO 3-1322.Heathklt pre-amp; painstakingly built;excellent condition. Sell or trade for$100 pre-amp. Bill VanArsdel. Ext. 1040.WantedSporting student wants sports car.Preferably MG In good condition. PaulWenger, 5747 University, PL 2-9718.Baby stroller cheap. Also 8X field glas¬ses. BU 8-7876.Indian type blanket for child’s bed.Used. Call WH 3-0440 evenings or week¬end.Riders to New York. Leaving March 19,returning March 27th. $25. Call LA5-3229. Quiet, competent bartender availablefor private parties. David Lester, 6042Ingleside.A good pitcure Is the best possible In¬vestment,. Contact Kluckhohn, c/oMAROON or Reynolds Club desk.Lettering artist. All forms of advertis¬ing. Finest signs my specialty. GilbertJ. Glnsburg, Hitchcock 46.Typing work wanted. Phone Mrs. Pan-nabecker, KE 6-8689 or see Pannabecker,Zoology Room 31-A.Will care for baby in my home.Licensed.BU 8-7613.Tutoring in Nat Sci I, physics, math.Call PL 2-3790 weekends.Mathematics special instruction to fityour mathematical needs. Individualor group sessions at our Loop office orlocation of your choice. Soglla Associ¬ates, ST 2-6727.Help WantedSummer camp positions. Counsellors,waterfront, nature, craft specialists forcamp near McHenry, Illinois. Excellentaccommodations. Room, board. PhoneHA 7-8220. Lost and FoundLost: One Soc Sci II notebook In Clas¬sics 16. Please return to Theoharls.547 B-J.Lost: Round silver earring, Social Sci¬ence Rkdg. or University, or 58th. H. MHughes, Ext. 2519 or PL 2-5656.Lost: Nat Sci 3 physical syllabus, part1, volume 1, Electricity and Magnetism.Last week, Reynolds plub. Joe Wolf.ES 5-1615.Lost: Huyghen’s “Treatise on Light”and Nat Sci 3 syllabus, part I. ShirleyRubin, DO 3-2808.Lost: Blue-green Parker 51 pen. Univer¬sity area. Monday, February 8. Call DO3-2775. Reward.Found: assorted earrings. Apply atMAROON office.For RentSpace for male sharing 5-room apart¬ment. Folksongs, psychology, authori¬tarianism. $25 month. 6347 Maryland.FA 4-0525.For man: small light room, semi-privatebath. $7. DO 3-0539.Large front room, newly decorated. Inhome of faculty member. Near campus.Call FA 4-3041.Furnished bedroom, adjoining bath andkitchen. Upstairs or private home. Male.Reasonable. 5429 Ellis. HY 3-9150.Graduate student to share 4-roomapartment with same. $30 month. UCvicinity. BO 8-1423 before 9 a.m. GUADALAJARASUMMER SCHOOLThe accredited bilingual summerschool sponsored by the Universi-dad Autonoma de Guadalajara andmembers of the Stanford Univer¬sity faculty will be offered in Gua¬dalajara, Mexico, June 27 - Au¬gust 7, 1954. Offerings Includeart, creative writing, folklore, ge¬ography, history, language and lit¬erature courses. $225 covers six-weeks' tuition, board and room.Write Prof. Juan B. Reel, Box K.Stanford University, Calif. FOR SALENo Doubt About ItThis is one of the finesthomes we've been privilegedto offer. Immaculate thruout, new gas boiler, new tilebaths, powder rm., rumpusrm., breakfast nook, fireplaces, deep freeze, largelandscaped yard with under¬ground sprinkling system.4 bedrooms plus maid'srooms, near campus. Sensi¬bly priced.56th Street nearKimbark Ave.CallE. Hector CoatesStvan-Mjorish, fne.1355 E. 53rd St.DOrchester 3-6200ITS ALL A MATTER OF TASTE. ^ana ee****9Rernst®4**Charley f Iowapn«ver9,t/ When you come right down to it, yousmoke for one simple reason . . . enjoy¬ment. And smoking enjoyment is all amatter of taste. Yes, taste is what countsin a cigarette. And Luckies taste better.Two facts explain why Luckies tastebetter. First, L.S./M.F.T.—Lucky Strikemeans fine tobacco . . . light, mild, good¬tasting tobacco. Second, Luckies are ac¬tually made better to taste better .* . .always round, firm, fully packed to drawfreely and smoke evenly.So, for the enjoyment you get frombetter taste, and only from better taste,Be Happy—Go Lucky. Get a pack or acarton of better-tasting Luckies today. If you're .WC4ee*',LrS^9«aou9t'‘BuyAllison Danz‘6 rtonlState CornWhere’s your jingle?It’s easier than you think tomake $25 by writing a LuckyStrike jingle like those you seein-this ad. Yes, we need jingles—and we pay $25 for every onewe use! So send as many as youlike to: Happy-Go-Lucky, P. O.Box 67, New York 46, N. Y.COm., THX AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANYUIGKIES TASTE BETTER CLKANIR,SMOOTHER!.’ Af jjy * • * ’/</# • f f * j • •:Februar/ 12, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Review presents its viewby the editors of the 'Chicago Review'Despite their suspicions as to our despondency and academic preoccupations, the editorsof the MAROON have asked us to discuss the nature and rationale of the Chicago Review.Reflecting on the seven-year history of the magazine we were reminded of a remark by Wil¬liam Carlos Williams which was recently called to our attention: in writing to MargaretAnderson, Dr. Williams observed that while some of the pieces which the Little Review pub¬lished were not good, the Little Review itself was good.Lest this sound too cavalier —:—— ——and ungrateful to our prede- “ * J wh!.ch *!sieaders manifest’cessors and present contribu- spond, but often with a diffidence In spite of the usual financialtnrc we hasten to add that the wh!ch belies a large student ^dY Problems the Review is currentlywhich has the reputation of being undergoing a process of growthhighly articulatecomment should be taken metaphorically: that is, the ChicagoReview' is more than the sum ofits parts; it is the idea of a worth¬while literary magazine, ratherthan this or that particular issue,which matters most.We cannot guarantee theGreat American Poem or Epic,and are unwilling to delude our¬selves into thinking that adher¬ence to certain political lineswill automatit'ally insure qual¬ity; what we can and do at¬tempt to do is to provide thiscampus with an open channelfor the creative and critical ef¬forts of the University commu¬nity. To this end we solicit thepoets and essayists hopefully,and wait patiently for the stu¬dent manuscripts.The former do respond — wit¬ness the appearance of TennesseeWilliams, Paul Eluard? Peter Vie-reck and others in the past andthe appearance of MarianneMoore, David Riesman, IsabellaGardner, W. R. Keast, among oth¬ers, in the issue which will be onNew and oldpottery exhibitLast Wednesday the Renais¬sance Society at the University ofChicago opened an exhibit in thegalleries in Goodspeed Hall, 1010East 59th St. The exhibition isentitled “A Selection of ModernPottery.” It will be open Monday-Friday 9-5, and Saturdays 1-5through March 3.Also in Goodspeed is a showingof ‘‘Daunian Pottery of the 6thto 4th Centuries B. C.,” from thecollection of Byron Farwell. Thisexhibit also opened last Wednes¬day, and will be open at times tobe announced. Perhaps this is a situation in¬digenous to an Age of Criticismand Self-consciousness, but wedo wish to state that all manu¬scripts are welcome and will bejudged impartially. The impor¬tant thing is that the Reviewdoes exist, and, while somethingless than a Cause, exists onlyin proportion to the active inter- and expansion: national and for¬eign distribution, as well as na¬tional advertising have begun inearnest. Campus sales and re¬sponse, however, remain our pri¬mary concern. The Review is de¬signed to represent and reflectthe talents and tastes of the Uni¬versity and needs the whole¬hearted support of its friends andcritics.'The World of Sholom Aleichem'to open at Eleventh St. TheatreThe World of Sholom Aleichem,the off-broadway play which re¬ceived unanimous critical praisefrom New York and nationalpress, will open tomorrow nightat the Eleventh St. Theatre. TheChicago production will co-starHoward Da Silva, who played Judin the original production of Okla¬homa; Ann Revere, who won anAcademy Award for her perform¬ance in National Velvet, playedthe lead in Children’s Hour andrecently appeared at UC, readingSalt of the Earth; and Joseph BenAmi, who has been called thegreatest Yiddish actor in America.A special student matinee will bepresented next Wednesday. CallHA 7-5570 for information. Howard DaSilva Acrotheatre initiatesmodern dance workOne of the newer additions to the activities of Acrotheatreis a program of modern dance.During earlier seasons, Director Bud Beyer became inter¬ested in the possibilities of combining acrobatics and the dance.Experiments along these lines began this year and attractedheavy support from veteran performers and fledglings in thegroup.“Before such experimentscould get seriously under¬way, it was necessary that Acro¬theatre members become thor¬oughly grounded in the stand¬ard or more fundamental tech¬niques of modern dance.” Un¬der the direction of Mrs. Do¬lores D. Wharton the group hasreceived basic training in thetechniques of such dancers asMartha Graham and Jose Li-mon. The modern dance classeshave attempted to achieve im¬aginative expression on the part •of each class member.In the last five months littleelse been accomplished except thegeneral training of the studentsin the use of the body, Beyer said.Nevertheless, effort has beenmade to give greater individualexpression within the acceptedtechniques of the dance. In addi¬tion, students have been givenfrequent glimpses and tastes ofsome of the more stylized per¬formers.The rtiost recent additions tothe modern dance programshave been some of the moreexotic areas of - dance such asOriental and Afro-Cuban.Student members of the groupare now in the process of prepar¬ing the choreography for someacrobatic ballets to be presentedon the April Mandel Hall pro¬gram. Chapel organistto give concertNext Tuesday, at 8:15 p.m.,Heinrich Fleischer, Chapel organ¬ist, will give a recital at Rocke¬feller Memorial Chapel, 59th St.and Woodlawn Ave. The programwill include the Magnificat quintltoni by Scheidt; Buxtehude's Pre¬lude and Fuge in F Sharp Minor;the Fantasy in C Minor, the chor¬ale prelude By Adam’s Fall IsMankind Lost and the Prelude andFuge in C major by J. S. Bach;and David’s Chaconne in A MinorH927). Admission is without tick¬et and without charge.Hiltner applies sex data objectively"Sex Ethics and the Kinsey Reports” by Seward Hiltner. Association Press (YMCA-YWCA), 1953, 238 pp., $3.00.H. L. Menken in his book of quotations has selected the following as one of several on the subject of sex:'There are three sexes; male, female, and clergymen."Seward Hiltner's new book on the first two mentioned sexes is a thoroughly honest and highly competentanalysis of Kinsey's findings and their implications for ethics.It does not pretend that) LAYWRIGHTSitAjLcJjru cljutrPLAYWRIGHTSTHEATRE CLUB1560 N. LaSalleTickets $1,50, $2.00Jan. 27 - Feb. 21Wednesday thru SundayCurtain 8:30Pick up tickets atthe Reynolds Club either Reverend Hiltner,acting dean of FTS, or hisreaders are members of a thirdand insulated sex, nor does it in¬timate that he and his colleaguesin the field of pastoral counselling round table, according to a fieldchairman of our acquaintance),and even bars serious reviewsof them from most periodicals,now that the thirty-day sensa¬tion is over. relate Kinsey’s data to theJudao-Christian view of sex heis adoit if not completely con¬vincing.The adroitness consists in draw¬ing out the implications of theIn contrast to the outpourings Old and New Testament attitudeshave some mystic absolutes up of such quasi-respectable sociolo- toward sex (torching that con-their sleeves, denied to lesser mor- gists as Pytrim A. Sorokin who firmed misogynist St. Paul verytals, some prepared lines to which thought with his glands in the lightly), and demonstrating withthey can retire in good order if January 10 This Week Magazine considerable dialectical skill thatthe going gets too objective. and muttered darkly about the Judao-Christian view of sexA fog of semi-hysteria today motherhood and the fall of Rome, is one which is non-absolutistic inDr. Hiltner’s book is a beacon theory and ever-ready for n^wof good sense in parlous times. data. It fails to convince becauseHiltner, in evaluating Kin- Dr. Hiltner is forced to admit thatsey’s work is both generous and such a non-absolutistic view is to-honest, and in his attempts tosurrounds the Kinsey reports.It keeps mention of them offthe air, refuses them discussiontime on serious panel programs(including our own U of C his major findings and their dif¬ferences from the pious as¬sumptions of the churches andthe YMCA, and an excellentpresentation of what is slowlyand deservedly becoming theaccepted pattern of understand¬ing the Judao-Christian in thebetter theological schoolsacross the country, and even¬tually, God wot, in the church¬es and temples of America. Thefact that such a book has beenpublished by the YMCA Pressitself is a heartening sign ofthis growth.Tis is a stimulating and valu-day emphatically not that of the able addition to the field of sexvast majority of Christians or ethics and deserves the attentionRECORDSALE-AND-A-HALFON RECORDS!Columbia LP's — Buy Them in PairsThe First at Full Price, the Second at Half PriceRCA-Victor LP’s 12" Are Down to $3.99Singly or in Sets!FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLYACT NOW! COMPLETE YOUR COLLECTION. GETTHAT BACH OR MOZART YOU'VE BEEN WANTING.A BIG SAVING ON GREAT VALUES.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue Chicago 37, Illinois Jews.The book is valuable to othersbesides pastoral counsellors be¬cause it is an honest evaluationof Kinsey’s methods (generallyfavorable), a recapitulation of of the general reader as well asThe specialist, t serves as onemore span in that long bridge hc-tw'een idealist ethics and socialdata which our society so badlyneeds. Joy ChidseyWashington Prom Corsagesatart miller’sBeachFLOWER SHOP1551 Hyde Park Blvd. FA 4-4200-01CA MP ’STUXEDO RENTALSpecial Student Rate For TheWash Prom6858 Stony Island FA 4-9550f I STARTED ^SMOKING CAMELS2.2. YEARS AGO. TMEW6ALWAYS TASTED BEST,ALWAYS SEEMED MILDEST.I THINK CAMELS GIYEANY SMOKER MOREPLEASURE. WHY NOTL TRY THEM? JPage 8 February 12, 1954Trackmen star in AAU meetREMEMBER?One year ago yesterday, the Maroon cagers ended a 45game losing streak by defeating Navy Pier 65 - 53. Causeof the victory is usually attributed to a giant pep rally whichdrew students from all the dormitories to the Field-Houseto cheer the Maroons to victory. Shown above are a portionof the enthusiasts about an hour before game time.Maroon cagers winclose contest, 77-75fry Richard HerwittFour quick baskets by Illinois Professional School at thebeginning of the fourth quarter last Saturday gave theJtfaroon quintet a scare, but the driving of Bob Mann enabledthem to capture a slim lead near the end of the game, whichthey held until the buzzer sounded. The final score was 77-75.Playing on a small strange floor, the Maroons immediatelytook control, and with Manngrid Dave Smith doing most of the final stanza, but the Maroonsthe scoring, ended the firstperiod with a ten point margin.The west side mini began to set¬tle down, and held back the Ma¬roon attack, so that the score athalf time read 42-31.Fred Hubbard fouled out in thesecond quarter, and guards BillLester and Dick Homer followedhim in the third and fourth peri¬ods. Wally Lonergan and Mannkept the Maroon attack going,while Professional was hammer¬ing away at the basket in the lastquarter.Professional took the lead forthe first time 'halfway through soon recaptured it. One by one theIllini added points until, with aminute and a half to go, Chicagofound itself at a four point dis¬advantage.A quick basket by Lonerganand a free throw by Walt Walkerbrought the Maroons within strik¬ing distance, and then two morebaskets put them ahead by a point.With seconds left to play, Smithbroke for the Professional goaland was fouled while shooting asthe game ended. He sunk one ofhis charity shots to make thetally 77-75. Relay team sets new meet record in mileFrank Loomos wins 65 yard low hurdlesby Justin JohnsonA new Michigan AAU record was set by the fast-stepping UC mile-relay-team at YostField-House in Ann Arbor, Michigan, last Saturday.Running against defending champion Michigan Normal College and Loyola University,the quartet of Dave Shepard, Ken Stapely, Lowell Hawkinson and George McCormick ledall the way as they were officially clocked at 3:25.7.At the finish Chicago was ———r—7. 77—TTTT—7- V —- -out in front by 30 yards. Wilh flnals’ £!atl"S th« fl«d by five ond off the UC record for the d,s-faster competition it is possible Hls for *he ®*ard “f' . . , . ... rvuL f 1 hurdles was :07.5, just :00.1 sec- JV trackmen defeatedab?e to seriously threaten the UC ond off the Yost Fieldhouse and The JV Track team placed secindoor record of 3 23 before the Rela^ record‘ °nd l° SchurZ in a 4“adranKularindoor record ot 6.Z6 betore the# .. track meet at the Fieldhouse lasteilFrank homos’ Chicago’s ace .ln the two-mile run, Captain Friday. Final score was Schurzhurdler, beat the finest from Mich- Walt Deike ran a fine race to ^4, Thorntoniean Michigan State Purdue and place third behind Warren Dreutz- Fractional 19}*, St. George olp., . , ler, former Michigan State star, Evanston 13. Captain Jim BrownOhio State m the low hurdles. and Wallingford of the University led the JV scorers with 11% pointsAfter winning his two qualifying of Michigan. Deike was unoffici- by winning the 440, tying for firstheats. Loomos ran away with the ally timed in 9:39, just 7/10 sec- *n *be high jump, and placingfourth in the high hurdles.Bill Mitchell won the lowhurdles, was second in the 60 yd.dash, and fifth in the highs. DickScupi placed second in the mile,came back to win the 880, and tiedfor fourth in the high jump. Inthe pole vault, Mike Chernoff andDave Northrop took second andtied for third.League leadingJVs to combatWheaton todayJV basketballers defeated NorthPark 40-34 Tuesday and tri¬umphed over Luther North lastFriday 59-44 to retain their firstplace tie in Private School Leaguecompetition. Today the juniorcagers face Wheaton, who sharefirst place honors in what appearsthe battle to decide the champion¬ship. Game time is 2:30 p.m. inBartlett Gym.Playing on the North Parkfloor, the Maroons eked out aone point lead at the half andpushed ahead to win by the finalsix points. “Mitch” Watkins washigh scorer with 17.SPORTS EVENTS THIS WEEKToday JVBasketball WheatonAcademy 3:30 Field-HouseTomorrow Track Wheaton OrWayne 2:00 Field-HouseIce Hockey DeKalb 1 :30 North-StandsSwimming St. Louis 2:00 Bartlett PoolWednesday Basketball ChicagoTeachers 8:00 Field-HouseThursday JV Track Austin H.S. 3:30 Field-HouseNU fencing teamslashes MaroonsNothwestern fencers beat theMaroons for the second timethis year Saturday afternoon 16-11. UC made its best showing inthe sabre competition, winning7 to 2.Dave Karcher scored three winsfor Chicago in the sabre matches,as Alex Shane and Dave Bobrowwon two each. Ernie Dunston wontwo matches with the foil. Leyden defeatsJV gymnastsLeyden Community High schooldefeated the JV gymnasts 50-47 \%last Thursday. Both teams reliedheavily on first year men, mak¬ing the meet an even match, butLeyden had the advantage ofhome grounds and a back injurywhich kept the Maroon’s JerryJordan out of the meet.Howthe stars gotstartedVJ -> Vaughn MonroeW * SayS:“In high school,[v-.- I spent all my sparev time playing withlocal bands.I had a lot to learn beforeI could lead my own band.I studied singing; eventually didthe vocals — and found thatthe colleges kind of likedmy recordings.Been performing for ’emever since!”t& MildnessQhd Fbvor R. J. Kayno'rin Tob. Co.Wintton-bolcm. N. O.START SMOKINGCAMELS YOURSELF!Smoke only Camels for 30 days —see for yourself why Camels’ cool,genuine mildness and rich, friendlyflavor give more people more purepleasure than anyother cigarette! V7 v vSij.lll1 i ..in i Pl i 'Him i1 ilMlili'—11 ilhllllllRiW i 'Ml ilMI|Williili iliililWi Hi hi IiIIIIIii ^Camels agree with more peopleTHAW ANY OTHER. CIGARETTE