Kermit Eby talks on war trendscites unemployment, bureacracyby Fran* Snyder“The essential act of war is destruction, not necessarily of human lives, but of the prod¬ucts of human labor. This quotation from George Orwell’s “1984” opened Kermit Eby’stalk on “Vested Interests in Defense” last Wednesday evening.I hat s 1984, said Eby, professor of social science, “and from it arises the greatest prob¬lem for the Judeo-Christian ethic today — how to produce maximum employment and ab¬sorb production surpluses short of war. All other questions are relegated to insignificance:no government, socialist, com-munist or capitalist, has beenable to do it.”Notes growing unemploymentIn a short review of the pros¬perous economy after 1939, when“in .spite of all the efforts of theNew Deal there were still ninemillion unemployed,” he estab¬lished the vital correlation be¬tween farm prices, corporationprofits, and employment and thestimulation of two wars.Increased defense expendituresand foreign aid have held up pros- give the implication of cause andeffect, he said. “There’s no insid¬ious plot in Wall Street”; but, ashe explained it, there is evidencethat industry—and labor and agri¬culture. as well, are “accommodat¬ing to the situation . . . it’s easierto follow the trend.”“There is a great temptation tointensify crisis,” Eby said. He ex¬plained that this was augmentedby a tightening military bureau-peritv, Eby said, but today “there cracy which treats the public likeare three million unemployed bythe latest figures and labor papersare bordered in black.” The fourmillion unemployed in 1950 fright¬ened labor, too, he continued, butthat was before the Korean War.Sees no plotWhat's next? He didn’t want to children. The bureaucracy as¬sumes the planning of militarystockpiling, allocation, civil de¬fense . . . and the right to ques¬tion their decisions is increasinglydenied on the grounds that thepublic don’t know all the facts.”The one fact they ought to know, he continued, is that in an atomicwar there is a 50 per cent casualtyrate. “The military,” he added, “isconvinced that the other 50 percent will successfully win the warfor us.”Tension increasingEby stressed the importance ofmaintaining freedom to speak upagainst this accumulation of ten¬sion. He saw it become an uncon¬trollable impetus in Japan andGermany before the last war, hesaid. “Speaking for peace mustnot become subversive,” he con¬cluded. “We must follow the leadof the President in organizingwhat good will there is. As longas they keep talking, they won’tbe shooting.”Eby’s talk was the second in asee "Eby/' page 11 Cathyrine Allison, James Holland, and Carol Horning in a scene from"Playboy of the Western World” to be given by University Theatre thi*weekend in Mandel Hall. Tickets far the Sygne play are on sale now atthe Reynolds Club desk. JiSG passes Mich Plan revisions;provisions acceptable to StrozierUniversity of Chicago, February 19, 1954 31Clapp defends TVA planby Joanna Herlihy“Controversy over the TVA springs from the novelty of the undertaking and the breadthof its subject matter,” according to Gordon Clapp, UC alumnus and, since 1946, chairmanof the Tennessee Valley Authority board of directors. Clapp opened his six-lecture WalgreenFoundation series at 8 p.m. Monday in Judd 126 by presenting a view of the TVA as anintegrated approach to resource development.In the development of this river basin proje?t affecting seven states, the TVA had to co¬ordinate numerous govern-mental agencies and private entirely disproportionate to the whole lower Mississippi Valley,interests. While doing this, potential of its natural resources. The general economic advance-it developed administrative tech- These resources had to be rehabil- ment of the region, reflected inniques which have been emulated itated, however, through such the increased proportion of thethroughout the world, said Clapp, measures as flood control by dam national tax burden now’ borne byHowever, the project has been the building and reforestation. Both it, contributes to a stronger na-target of adverse criticism from this rehabilitation and the much- tional economy as a whole. “Ifmany quarters since its inception needed stimulation of the area’s that is favoritism let us recognize21 years ago. economy could best be met by an it as favoritism for the strengthTVA pragmatic solution to need integrated program, it was felt, and well-being of the AmericanClapp defended the TVA from Only an organization of the mag- people,” said Clapp,attacks which hold the project to nitude of TVA could coordinate TVA self-liquidatingbe an “adventure in socialism” by so vast a program. In describing the organizationstressing the pragmatic quality of No favoritism involved of the TVA, Clapp characterized itits aims and methods, and point- In response to the criticism that as a “new administrative device”wig to the great expansion of in- the TVA is developing one favored which is clothed with the author-dustry in this region, previously region at the national expense, ity of government, yet embodiesshunned by private capital. He Clapp said, “Federal funds are in- the flexibility and initiative ofemphasized that the TVA was not vested in this region ... ultimate- private enterprise. The only ap-created with commitments to an ly for the national benefit.” One propriations which the Authorityabstract system of doctrine, but third of the hydro-electric power receives from Congress are forwas a response to practical needs produced by the river system non-revenue-producing activities,of a large depressed area of the serves the Atomic Energy Com- such as flood control and the im-country. mission’s projeats in the area. In provement of navigation. FundsDuring the early 1930s, Clapp addition, the control of the waters for capital expenditures in thedeclared, the low productivity of of the Tennessee River system production of power are borrowedthe Tennessee Valley area was relieves flood condition in the from the government, but are be¬ing repaid ahead of schedule.The effects of the TVA on theTennessee Valley itself, an areaabout one and a half times thesize of New England, were firstdiscussed in terms of electricpower, navigation, and flood con¬trol. Later Clapp asserted, “Elec¬tricity . . . has helped to spark agreat economic change.” The im¬proved standard of living for thepeople of the region is exemplified Choose scholarsfor SG exchangeThe successful UC applicantsfor the Student Government ex¬change program with FrankfurtUniversity were announcedWednesday by Clive Gray, pres¬ident of Student Government.James V. Compton and JosephZeland will s p e n <1 the 1954-55school year at Frankfurt Univer¬sity and under the exchange pro¬gram two Frankfurt students willattend UC. Leslie Mittelman wasnamed first alternate.Compton holds an MA in his¬tory from UC and is presentlystudying in the education depart¬ment. Zeland will receive his Col¬lege AB in June.The students from Frankfurtare granted free tuition from UCunder the program which is ad¬ministered by the SG. The firstexchange was in 1952-53. The provisions of the MichiganPlan as revised by Student Gov*ernment on Feb. 9, have been ap*proved by Dean of Students, Rob¬ert M. Strozier. Strozier indicatedhis position on Feb. 10 in a letterto Eli Stein, chairman of the SGcommittee on recognized studentorganizations (CORSO). (See textof revised Michigan Plan onpage 4.)Stein told the Maroon earlierthis week he felt it was importantthat Strozier had definitely ap¬proved the Michigan Plan.“The legislation adopted by theStudent Government and ap¬proved by th.« Administrationseals the question of the imple¬mentation of the Michigan Plan,’*Stein stated.He emphasized: “It is my opin¬ion that the legislation adoptedwill effectively eliminate discrim¬inatory membership requirementsin University organizations by theend of 1954.” . .Quiz team represents UC;SC sponsors radio battle“We hope the student body will give our team whole-heartedsupport when they enter into their first clash against QuizBowl champions this Thursday,” stated Clive Gray, StudentGovernment president.The contest will be held in Rosenwald 2 at 7 p.m., and willbe broadcast over NBC on Sunday, Feb. 28, at 5 p.m.College Quiz Bowl is a radio *program presented by the seph Engel, Stan Fox, LeonardNational Broadcasting Com- Friedman, Joel Kupperman, Janetpanv in which two teams, consist- Robb, David Schlessinger, anding of four members each repre- Robert Ziner.senting two colleges or universi- The results of a test consistingties, compete in a quiz session for 0f sample questions from previ-a $500 prize. The administration ous Quiz Bowl programs will de-of each college may use the money termine the six finalists (fourfor any activity it desires. team members, two alternates).At the time the MAROON went The examination will be judgedto press, eight UC students were by members of an SG committeevying for positions on the team, and William Birenbaum, director“Of the fifty applicants, the con- of student activities,testants were- reduced to their A committee consisting of mem-present number after three rounds ^,5 of the studerits body and ad-of tough quizzing, stated Gray. ministratiVe officials at UC hasThese eight are Sylvia Boyd, Jo- decided to use this prize to finance. a student exchange program withIndia. If the UC team remains inthe competition, the committee44 per cent of the national average to more than 60 per cent sincethe beginning of TVA’s activities.The Walgreen Foundation se¬ries on the TVA will continue to¬day and next Monday, Wednes¬day, and Friday in Judd 126 at8 p.m.NSA sets freedom weekKooert soarge (uap as uown)Gordon R. Clapp, chairman of the TVA board of directors, being in¬troduced by Herman C. Pritchitt, chairman of the political science depart*ment of the social science division, at his lecture last Monday. A national academic freedomweek was proclaimed at the De¬cember meeting of the NationalExecutive Committee of the Na¬tion Student Association, accord¬ing to Karl Rodman, chairman ofthe Academic Freedom Subcom¬mission, Illinois region, of theNSA.A steering committee to encour¬age student participation in aca¬demic freedom week was set upyesterday. The committee is being by the fact that the average percapita income has increased from wi^ decide'what otierTrojectswill receive the money.If, however, UC doesn’t win thefirst battle, each member of theteam will receive a Longine wrist-watch.Those who regret not enteringthe competition may be consoledafter noting some of the examina¬tion questions below.(1) Name three American trait-scendentalists. (2) From whatpoem are the following linestaken? Who is the author?“I could not love thee, Dear, somuch loved I not honor more.”(3) Name as many FrenchPremiers, since 1944, as possible;(4) To the number of days in theweek in the French revolutionarycalendar, add the hour which theclock struck when the mouse ranup it; from the sum, subtract theelectoral votes which Landon gotin the 1936 presidential election.headed by Rodman and PeterGreene, chairman of the StudentCommittee on Academic Freedom.According to Rodman, the steer¬ing committee is contacting prom¬inent persons to speak on campusduring academic freedom. The re¬cordings made during the hear¬ings of Senate subcommittee of in¬ternal security of UC personnellast June, will be played duringthe academic freedom week, Rod-man added.mammmmaammPage 2 February 19, 1954Test poetry Heller delivers lectures on "Artist and the World"readers soon Describes romantic mindPreliminary competition in theFlorence James Adams poetryreading contest, conducted by thedepartment of English, will beheld in the James Henry Breasted “The early romantics attempted to incorporate all thoughtand feeling into a rational system,” said Erich Heller, pro¬fessor of German literature at the College of the University ofWales. Heller spoke Tuesday night in the first of a series ofHall of the Oriental Institute, 3:30 lectures presented by the Committee on Social Thought andp.m., April 23. The finals .will be the Department of Germanic Languages and Literature onheld at the same time and place .*The Artist and the World.”on April 30 to determine first, “Attempting to integratesecond and third _pr.ze winners art and sciencei the -interesting’who w ill receive $7o, $30, and $20, amj the ‘objective,! the romanticsrespectively. failed,” Heller stated. “However,they did not fail because of theThe contest is open to all stu- and the reason of a central Crea¬tive Intelligence. Kant had thendenied that man fits into an orderand stated instead that man ere-dents in the Lniversity from the over.sensua]ity generally attribu- ates the order into which he fits,ages of li to 2b, inclusive, who tecj f0 them; rather they failed be- After this, Fichte developed a the-eause of over-rationality.” ory in which he replaced God by“Over-rationality,” Heller feels, a sort of superego. Finally, theis one of the outstanding features early romantics misinterpreted Romantic Faust legend providestheme for historical discussionby David SchlessingerIn the second of his three-lecture series on “The Artist andthe World,” Erich Heller discussed “the exceptionalness ofthe last 400 years,” orienting his remarks around the themeof the story of Faust.The first appearance in German literature of the Faustlegend h|is been marked by 7 *historians in a 1587 publica- mantic philosopher Schopenhauer,tion. Its basic theme—the adjust- who exerted enormous influencement of man to the dissolution of on Mann. Schopenhauer postulat-the previous belief in a divinely- ed that everything that exists isordered world—found immediate a manifestation of one force: thehave completed at least two quarters of residence and are regis¬tered for two or more courses inthe present quarter. Studentswishing to enter must registerby April 16 in the English office,Wieboldt 205.All selections read must be fromnon-dramatic poetry and musthave the approval of the depart¬ment of English, represented byMrs. Judith S. Bond. Mrs. Bondmay be consulted between 9:30and 10:30 Mondays, Wednesdays,and Fridays in the Modern PoetryLibrary, Harper W62.More stress is laid on interpre¬tative reading than on declama¬tory aspects of vocal expression.Therefore, the reading is froma book and is not “recitation.” of the romantic mind.” In further Fichte s thought into a doctrine ofdeveloping this and other charac- omnipotence of the ego. popularity throughout Europeanliterature and has remained pop¬ular until now.Faust expresses conflictThe story of Dr. Faustus hasgreat appeal because it empha- evil Will. In order to be objectiveabout itself, the Will had to splitinto parts, and men are only partsof this Will. In other words, theWill split into quantitative sec¬tions; but it remained qualitative-teristics, he relied greatly on his¬torical analysis.Troces philosophical thoughtHe took as the starting point ofthe romantic period the turn bythe German philosopher Schlegelfrom the traditional views of Ger¬man philosophy—as representedin Kant—to a modification of thephilosophy of Fichte. The earlyscholastics had attempted to justi¬fy to man the order in God’s cre-ated world. Rationalistic philos¬ophy had assumed a fundamentallikeness between man’s reason sizes the clash between the law of ly the same evilness.God and/that law which man isunto himself. To Marlowe, FaustRomantics in dilemmaThe romantics now found them¬selves in a dilemma: at the sametime that they claimed man’s ere- became a searcher for the order ofation of reality, they found man reality. To the age ot reason,frustrated by that same reality Faust was an intellectual heroin his attempts to create. Heller demonstrating the triumph of thesees this dilemma as the source of desire for pure reason. But to theClapp relates TV A success:labor, management cooperate“The TVA is a record of men at work,” summarized GordonC. Clapp, chairman of the board of the Tennessee ValleyAuthority, speaking on “Men and Management Rebuild ARiver,” in Judd Hall Wednesday. His talk was the second ina series of lectures, sponsored by the Walgreen Foundation.“Money, materials, and men are the basic ingredients inbuilding a dam; however,‘man’ is the greatest ingredi¬ent,” Clapp concluded. TVA hasbuilt 20 dams in 20 years—an im¬pressive record—but, Clapp con¬tinued, “dams are not built to ere- employees and officers ... is made romantic irony, the “perpetualplay between opposites.” Thesame opposition can be seen inthe conflict between the individualand society. The romantics werealways bothered by oppositions,particularly the opposition be¬tween the infinite variety foundby historical research and the uni¬versal criteria demanded by abso¬lutism. They could not, for exam¬ple, evaluate a work within itstimes, and also judge how itshould appear to all times.“Provide a center"The romantics thought the solu¬tion to their problem lay in theprovision of a center for thoughta ndaction. Hegel, for example,thought the poetry of his timewas inferior because “it had nocenter, no mythology.” Unlike an-~ cient writing, which had centeredemployee selection methods, ere- around its own mythology, the romantics, Faust was the expres¬sion of their own internal conflict.The “internal conflict” of Faustwas perpetual for the romantics:a tension between the desire forknowledge and the feelings ofemotionalism. In Goethe’s greatwork, there is an attempt to re¬solve this conflict; Faust is giventwo souls. This, however, solvesnothing. The two souls certainlycannot act independently and arereally not two souls, but are onlyone soul divided within itself.Faust, Goethe—all the romantics,were torn between a belief in in¬tellectual striving toward ultimatereality and a belief in the power However, embarrassed and frus¬trated by the presence of otherfragmentary Wills, each frag¬mentary Will is opposed to allothers. To Schopenhauer, thismeant that man can turn againstthe Will and establish a sphere ofpure artistic contemplation farabove the world of the evil Will.Leagues with DevilFrom the doctrine of Schopen¬hauer developed much of the ro¬mantic speculation and glorifica¬tion of art. Mann, indeed, tookSchopenhauer to heart when hebegan to write his Faust. How¬ever, he found that rejection andtransscer.dence of the world couldnot be accomplished by somethingartistically outside the real world;it had to be accomplisned by aleague with the supernaturalDevil. Once again, in Mann, the“evil,” morally wrong Faust isseen—the tragic Faust of Mar-of the self, between a desire for lowe.ated by the problematic unem¬ployment despair of the '30s, wasprecedential. “Appointment of rest and a striving for truth, be¬tween despair and optimism.Schopenhauer influenced MannIn the period separatingGoethe’s world from the world ofwriting of his time was center- Thomas Mann, the next greatless. But the creation of a MannFaust which complements that ofthe sixteenth century certainlydoes not solve the moral problempresented in the Faust legend, aproblem which remains with us^interpreter of Faust, lived the ro- today. In the words of Goethe,ate impressive statistics.”People are the most importantfactor in resource development.Hot only is the welfare and hap¬piness of individuals its true pur¬pose, but they are the means bywhich that development is accom¬plished; their genius, their ener¬gies and spirit are the' instru¬ments; it is not only “for the peo¬ple” but “by the people.”People create efficiencyThe task of harmonizing and, on the basis of merit and efficien¬cy alone,” states section six of theTVA Act.To determine merit and skill,examinations were given to menin the region; they tested abilityto follow oral and written instruc¬tions. These exams made historyin the process of selecting and re¬cruiting of a labor force. The“form 10” process laid the basisfor understanding throughout thevalley. The foundation for “selec-from time to time, adjusting the tion on merit” was laid,intricate, detailed maze of pieces Develop labor relationsthat make up the unified develop- Later, steps in the developmentment of resources in a world of of TVA organization included atechnology is something that sim- more intricate labor-managementply cannot be done effectively setup: committees were formed,from some remote government or collective bargaining introduced,business headquarters. The people agreements were signed, and themust be in on that job. The neces- apprenticeship system adopted,sities of management make it “The TVA has proven, contrarymandatory. Efficiency, in the to popular myth, that governmentbarest operating sense, requiresit. There is nothing in TVA ex¬perience, Clapp related, moreheartening than this: that devicesof management which give a liftto the human spirit turn out sooften to be the most efficientmethods.It became evident to the earlyplanners of TVA organization in1933 that a valley developmentenvisioned in its entirety couldbecome a reality only if the peopleof the region did much of theplanning and participated in mostof the decisions.Introduce merit systemDuring a period when piecemealbuilding of projects was common,the TVA was an unusual, if notunique, construction effort. It’s enterprise can be more econom¬ical and more effective than pri¬vate enterprise,” Clapp stated, cit¬ing the Shawnee Steam Plantproject as evidence.Am\mvvm\\vREADY TOPAINTBookcasesRecord CabinetsStorage CabinetsChests-of - DrawersHermans935 E 55th st.Open thurs. til 9DANGER! IT’S CONTAGIOUS!The Howling Laughter inTHE “NARCOTICS ISSUE!” ofSHAFT HUMOR MAGAZINE!Read: “Confessions of a Licorice Eater!"Roar at: “Fertility": A Tale of Soviet Love!Get the Yak-Filled Shaft at U of C BookstoreToday! LISTEN TO"SPORTS TODAY”WITH BILL STERNABC RADIO NETWORKMONDAY THRU FRIDAY354-1 When 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.EnjoyBudweiserleads All Beers In Sales Today...and Through The Years!ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC.ST. LOUIS, MO. NEWARK, N. J.February 19, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Ready reference guideWoth Prom WeekendFriday, February 198:00 p.m.—Basketball Game FieldhouseChicago vs. ElmhurstSaturday, February 203:30 p.m.—University Theater presents Synge's 5550 University"Ployboy of the Western World"7-10 p.m.—Open houses atBurton-Judson Courts Mondel HallBurton LoungeSnell-Hitchcock8:00 p.m.—Fraternity open houses* •9:00 p.m —THE WASHINGTON PROMENADE Bartlett Gymnasium12:00 mid.—Crowning of the Queen1-3 a.m.—BreakfastSunday, February 21 Hutchinson Commons11:00 a.m.—Chapel Services Rockefeller Chapel2:30 p.m.—Agnes DeMtlle Dance Troup* Closed parties Opera House Pizza pie crazehits UC campus,C'shop compliesLovers of pizza need not searchthe surrounding neighborhoodshops at night any longer. TheReynolds Club coffee shop, in re¬sponse to what Commons officialstermed, an overwhelming demandfrom UC students, has decided toinclude pizza pies on their eveningmenus.Bar-b-q beef and chili (withcrackers) which are now servedduring the day, have also beenadded to the nighttime menu.The pizza will be a twelve inchsize and will cost $1.20. A quarterof a pie and a cup of coffee willbe 40c.This new menu will be availablethis evening for the first time.Harada to talkThe second in a semi-monthlyseries of discussions for univer¬sity students on the Buddhist re¬ligion will be held at the ChicagoZen Buddhist Church, 1316 N.Clark St., on Monday, March 1,at 8 p.m.After an absence of two years, the International House The discussion will be led byAssociation is sponsoring a series of language tables in the Mr’ H.arry Harada. the librariandining room of International House, of Omental books at Northwest-— ,,.i. , ^ . ern University.In addition to the French“KSStJX; UC Protestant groups to observethe house now plans to have a . a I f ' IGerman language table. The table universal prayer day tor studentsis planned for Monday nights at t I6 p.m. All students, faculty mem¬bers and those interested in meet¬ing and discussing with Germanspeaking people are invited to jointhe table for dinner.According to Marianne Aspman,co-chairman of the program com¬mittee of International House, theFrench table has been a success¬ful venture. She expressed confi¬dence that the German tablewould do just as well as theFrench table. If the tables meetthe expectations of the programcommittee, a Spanish language Propose student tax reliefto encourage enrollmentsSpeaking before the House of Representatives late lastmonth, the honorable Abraham J. Multer (Dem., N.Y.) urgedthe support of his bill (H.R. 1274) providing that full reason¬able expenses for college education should be tax deductible.Multer declared, .. we should, if possible, give every childin this country an opportunity to get a college education. Thisbill will go a long way toward ——7 — t~bringing that about by making *> JVTSSJ:it possible for these parents,who, if they can get this tax re¬lief, will get at least some help insending their children through though it is a step in the rightdirection. The present lack of stu¬dents in colleges and universitiesis due to the inability of parentsto pay tuition, Multer believes. Hethe colleges, and universities of eXpresse(j his appreciation of col¬our country.The recommendation of the lege organizations and publica¬tions and of the National StudentHouse ways and means committee Association, for their help in sup-to continue the present $600 ex- porting and publicizing his bill foremption beyond the age of 18 if making educational expenses taxthe child is a student, does not, in exempt.International House to addQerman table on MondaysThe Universal Day of Prayer for Students will be observedby all Protestant groups at the University of Chicago Sunday,at 7:30 p.m., in Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.This annual observance is celebrated in colleges and uni¬versities in 54 nations around the world. The speaker will beMr. Herluf Jensen, a member of the central committee of theWorld Student Christian Fed- rat €eration.Students of various denom-nations, races, and nationalitieswill participate in the service atRockefeller Chapel; the proces¬sional will include the officers and groups with work on the campus:Baptist, Christian Science, Con-gregational-Christian, Evangelicaland Reformed, Disciples of Christ,Episcopal. Lutheran, Methodist,Presbyterian. Society of Friends,and Unitarian.An open house and coffee hourfor all students will be held atChapel House, 5810 WoodlawnAvenue, immediately after theservice. This social hour will bepresented by the Methodist Stu¬dent Fellowship with BarbaraFrederick as chairman. SU, Outing cluboffer ski tripsDays of exciting skiing and nights of parties await UCskiers in two student-sponsored ski holidays, a week-end tripto Mt. Telemark, near Cable, Wis., and a 10-day excursionto the Colorado mountain ski runs.Skiers who enjoy battling seven to 14 inches of Wisconsinsnow may join the Feb. 27 trip to Mt. Telemark. A chargeof $25 will cover all costs, in-— Portraits byLOUISE BARKERPhotographer1457 E. 57th St. BU 8-0876FOR SALEApartment — 7 rooms, 3 baths,'elevator; 4 exposures. 4 blocksfrom University.HY 3-9137 eluding transportation andlodgings and food at the com¬fortable Mt. Telemark lodge. Fur¬ther information may be obtainedfrom the SU office or from DickSommerfield, Ba. 1-3864.Best midwest snowsMt. TelemaTk is said to have thebest skiing snows and skiing fa¬cilities in the midwest. Eight runsof varying heights and degrees ofdifficulty, the highest of.whichreaches to 2.600 feet, wall chal¬lenge new and experienced skiers.Colorado trip plannedContinuing its popular series of in the sky, and daily meals at theBlue Ribbon Tap are included inthe seventy-five dollar charge. Ar¬rangements may be made by con¬tacting Don Wentzel at SU. A de¬posit of twenty-five dollars mustbe placed before March 10.Open to beginnersThe vacation trip is open to be¬ginners and veterans of formerski trips. For beginners equip¬ment rental is available; the lodgeis offering expert instruction byone of the country’s leading in¬structors, known to Coloradoskiers as “Sympathetic Max.”Skiers will maneuver runs in-Christmas and Spring vacation .... ,skiing trips, SU Outing Club will tricately arranged over the 12,000also offer another ten-day holiday fAoot hlSh mountains of the snowyon skiis, March 19-28. Arapahoe Basin. For skiing overTransportation by chartered UC aru falling into, jhe mountainsbus, lodgings at the Dillon’s hotel %rex blanketed by thirty inches ofColorado snows.When you pause... make it count... have a Coke A CASA Book StoreVALENTINESContemporary and TraditionalGuaranteed typewriter repair service1117 E. 55th St. ~ H¥ 3-9651 -FINE FOOD'32 1 East 57th StreetlOTTtED UNDE* AUTHORITY Of THE COCA-COIA COMPANY ETCoca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.O 1*53, Tk» Coco Cola Co*p«<*ytACak#" it • rogittorod trad#-work. ^fnriimiiiiiiw^iiiinrriniiiRa’ivaiii'iinriiiiiiiwwiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiWKaTrmiiiiiiiiiiwraiiTTTTTiTTTTTigywifTTiTiTmmiiwTOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKBFor the |1 Washingtonit's Prom J| • A -1€ £ JFLOWER SHOPTWO Convenient Locations 1! 1225 E. 63rd 1301 E. 55th !! HY 3-5353 Ml 3-4020 1Special Student Discount |Sth ANNUAL SUMMER ADVENTURE!CRUISE TOUR ... A unit* credit, S. P.l», S.S. President Cleveland, June]11 - Sept. A. See your travel agent.STOP TOURS, Berkeley, Calif...-V-t.4 P>9« 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 19, 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, ond subscriptions by■fioil, $3 per yeor. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.Arthur Brown Richard E. Wardeditor-in-chief managing editorNews editors: Naomi Birnbaum, Allen JangerNews Feature editor: Nellie StonemonFeoture editor: Daniel QueenSports editor: Paul A. HoffmonCopy editor: Shirley LongAdvertising manager: Reva BrownProduction manager: Joanna HerlihyEditorial stoff: Robert Bloch, William Brandon, Paul Breslow, Joy Burbach,Allen Coleman, Sandra Epstein, Leslie Foster, Suzanne Friedman, RalphB. Hirsch, Roberta Hopkins, Arlene Kramer, Jon Maide, C. Roy Moisch,Robert McCluskie, Spike Pinney, Karl Rodmon, David Schlessinger,Mitchell Slein, Judy Smith, Franz Snyder, Horry Whiteley, Neal Mermoll,Justin Johnson, Wolf Roder, Stephen Cohen, Jock Burboch, Frank G.Ternenyi, Richard Herwitt, Davis DobrowCartoonist: Roy NelsonCopy stoff: Jerry Ex, Pom BrownPhotographers: Joe Wolf, Richard Kluckholn Gives text of Michigan Planas revised at last SG meetingResolved, That the following be added as Section 11, A, 8, e:1. However, campus groups affiliated with national organizations that have discrimina¬tory clauses in their national constitution after October 1, 1953, may appeal to the StudentAssembly for an extension of recognition until October 15, 1954.2. After October 15, 1954, such organizations shall automatically lose recognition andshall be ineligible to receive further automatic or official recognition, unless one of the fol¬lowing conditions has been ful-If is by faith, brother, thot ye understandLetters ...Defends critics' rightsApropos those readers of you whoseem to be harassing your music critic.1 would like to bring the followingcomment. Any appraisal of a perform¬ance cannot possibly be divorced fromone’s pleasure or displeasure of the to¬tal form of the composition. Since thereis no universal criterion to determineas to whose attitude in this regard isvalid, one takes it for granted that theappraisal of a music critic reflects moreor less, his own opinions.The very fact that some of yourreaders cannot recognize this simplebut fundamental truism indicates theirreal rather than apparent frustrationin a direction which they seem to beunable to face and admit. Had Mr.Winsberg spoken highly of Stravinskyfor example, I have strong doubtswhether you would get the same objec¬tions to him regarding the interjectionof personal bias into his review.In my judgement, Mr. Winsberg, whocertainly cannot be regarded as ex¬empt from error, criticized Stravinskymuch more mildly thaa this musicalapostle of contemporary malaise de¬serves. Unable to convert his intenseneurosis into intelligible creativity andpossibly beauty—as Beethoven so mas-tefully succeeded in doing—he con¬tinues helplessly, and, with the stub¬bornness of a blind fanatic, desperately,to take refuge in the senseless labyrinthof technique. Remember his motto al¬luding to "My thoroughly worked outcompositions!”’Let us not confuse the incidence ofthe musical reverberations of our per¬sonal miseries with the standards ofclassicism that goes beyond mere re¬verberation of human misery, over¬comes it and culminates in a tangibletriumph of art. This, I submit is a farcry from the compulsions of ineptneurotics, who, under the watchword"modernism” keep trying to be differentunder all circumstances.Irene Homner why cannot our self-sufficient concert-goer form his own opinions about bothand dispense with reviews altogether?But clearly performance and inter¬pretation are meaningless apart fromconsiderations of the purpose andscope of a work. These considerations,far from being settled for all time, areperpetually open to the discussion andrevision which form the chief creativefunction of criticism.Judy SmithDislikes AdsWhom does CAP AND GOWN thinkit is appealing to by such advertise¬ments as:Cripes! What a Book!!! Hortense Fan¬dangle, freshmen. Green, is snowed bythe 1954 CAP AND GOWN with PhoenixSupplement. She goes ape for its suavesophistication, Its scintillating humor,its smutty approach to campus life.If this is the new approach to ayearbook on this campus then I amgoing to keep my $4. Do the editors ofCAP AND GOWN really think the ma¬jority of the students want a yearbookof suave sophistication with a smuttyapproach to campus life? It seems to methat there is something seriously wrongwith the whole idea of what a year¬book on this campus should be. Doesanyone seriously think that the year¬book as foreshadowed in its advertisingcampaign and the special Wash Promissue of the Phoenix is representativeof campus life and the vast majorityof the students? It seems to me thatsome few are trying to mold everyoneelse in their own image.Lorry Littlejohn filled:A. In case of a local organ¬ization whose national organiza¬tion has adopted an amendmentstriking the discriminatory clausesubject to ratification at one fur¬ther convention of the organiza¬tion, the local organization mustfile a statement to this effect withthe Student Government and theDean of Students’ office by Octo-*ber 15, 1954. If this aforesaidamendment to the national con¬stitution is not finally ratified bythe next meeting of the nationalorganization, the local organiza¬tion shall be entitled to receiverecognition only under condition“B” below’.B. In any case not covered bycondition “A” above, it shall benecessary for the organization inquestion to file yearly publicstatements that the organizationis not bound by any discrimina¬tory clauses, local or national.This condition shall be consideredfulfilled only if in the period ofOctober 10 through October 15 ofeach year the organization fileswith the Student Government andthe Dean of Students’ office thefollowing statement:“We, (name of organization),state publicly and officially thatwe are not bound by any constitu¬tional provision and structure, by¬law, or agreement in any form, tolimit or prohibit membership inour organization on the basis ofrace, religion, color, or nationalorigin.”3. Failure to comply with atleast one of the conditions “A”and “B” above by October 15 ofeach year after the passage of thisbill, shall automatically result inloss of recognition for the organ¬ization in question, provided thatwhen a statement is filed afterthe first national convention, asindicated in “A” above, that state¬ment shall suffice until October 15of the the year in which the sec¬ond convention occurs. This lossof recognition shall not necessi¬tate action on the part of the Stu¬dent Assembly, but shall be auto¬matically enforced by the Deanof Students’ office.sibility seemed quite obviously to be toexpress our views. When preventedfrom doing so (even the rules havebecome ineffective in this year’s SG),there was little reason to remain asan audience for the president's freneticrationalizations of his distortions ofparliamentary law.Unfortunately the space limitationsof the MAROON prevent me from pre¬senting the details of the situationwhich led up to the walk-out. I wouldcall the attention of the campus to thefollowing facts:1.The Stein amendment makes mean¬ingless the power and effectiveness ofStudent Government.2. ISL, contrary to Its election pledges,did not enforce the Michigan Plan,but amended it to prevent its appli¬cation against the one discriminatory.1 3. No attempt was made by ISL toinvolve the participation of the campusin the Michigan Plan amendment dis¬cussions.4. Undemocratic and Illegal tech¬niques were used by the majority partyto secure passage of the Stein amend¬ment.Paul BreslowChairman, SRP College Quarterly ScheduleWinter, 1954The following exominotion schedule hos been prepored for the presentWinter Quarter:Monday, March 15-2:30-4:30 Humonities 4 B Mandel HollWednesday, March 178:00-9:30 French IB Judd 126French H1B Cobb 306French TIB Cobb 305French 2B> Cobb 415Germon 1B Mandel HollSponish IB Cobb 110Greek 1B Cobb 408Lotin 1 6 Cobb 408Russion IB Cobb 41610:00-11:30 Social Sciences 2B Mandel Holl10:00-12:00 English B: Cobb 312sec. oa) Cobb 103sec. ac) Cobb 101sec. bo) Cobb 416sec. be)sec. ca) Cobb 102sec. go) Cobb 104secs, ob, bb, cb, da, gb) Judd 1261 .00-2:30 Social Sciences 1B Mandel Holl3:00-5:00 Humonties 3B Mandel HallHumanities 3B (French) Cobb 104Humanities 3B (Germon) Cobb 309Thursday, March 188:00-9:30 Social Sciences 3B Mandel Hall10:00-11:30 Mathematics 1B Mandel HallMothematics 2B Eckhart 1331:00-3:00 Natural Sciences IB Mandel Hall3:30-5:00 Humonities 2B Mandel HollFriday, March 198:00-9:30 Not Sci 36 (Biological) Judd 126Not Sci 3B (Physical) Cobb 110facts were presented and the omissionof other facts.The emphasis on the SRP walkoutovershadowed the constructive step ineffectively eliminating discriminatoryobligations on the part of fraternitieson this campus. It was most disappoint¬ing to note that no statement from anISL spokesman, explaining this amend¬ment to the Code, was Included tocounterbalance the SRP objectionsgiven In some detail. The student bodyhas the right to learn through Its news¬paper that an overwhelming majorityof Student Government supported theISL sponsored proposal as being themost effective and realistic way of put¬ting an end to legally enforced dis¬crimination among UC fraterntles. Thevote was greater than 3 to 1 in favorof the amendment to the MichiganPlan.No matter of SG business In recentyears jias received as much publicity asthis plan and yet that night six mem¬bers of SRP were absent. Opposition tothe amendment seems to have beenconfined to a handful of persons whoare either doctrinaire or Just plainstubborn.The whole report of the action re¬sulting from the motion to reconsiderwas meaninglessly garbled. Robert’sRules of Order says that a motion toreconsider is out of order If it appliesto a change in the rules of a body andif that change needs previous notice tomembers of that body. Such was thecase Tuesday night. When the Assem¬bly voted that the President was cor¬rect in his ruling that the motion wasout of Oder and that proper parlia¬mentary procedure must be followed,the SRP members walked out. It wasas simple as that.One further observation about that"walkout.” The next item of businesswas to have been a SRP sponsored billwhich through the courtesy of the ma¬jority party had been raised to a highplace on the agenda. They chose to re¬pay this courtesy by walking out tobreak a quorum.Finally, perhaps a more adequatestody would have resulted If theMAROON reporter had not Joined SRPin walking out of the Student Govern¬ment meeting.Jbbrey E. Golyon*L Floor Leader. S. G. 1951. That they bargained away theirrights and some non-aryan blood for abird In the bush, seems not to botherthem.We caution the student body to keepits eyes open, lest the bird in the bushslip away as effortlessly as his prece-cessor.J. W. 'Gray replies*Ordinarily It would not be in myprovince as Student Government presi¬dent to reply to a partisan letter suchas appeared in last week's MAROONcriticizing by chairing of Tuesday’s SGmeeting. However, I have been warnedthat since the three signers of the let¬ter, though all staunch members ofSRP, also state their disapproval ofthat party’s disgraceful walkout In themeeting, the letter thereby assumes adispassionate and hence plausible tone.So perhaps I had best enter a lewwords in my defense.The primary charge, that I "immor¬ally" ruled the reconsideration motionout of order, Is nothing short of face¬tious, since the ruling was based on anexplicit and obvious point In Robert'sRules of Order, what that point Is, andthe fact that the Government votedto support my ruling, is explained Inan adjoining letter.The charge that I "insolently” at¬tempted to “stifle genuine applause bythe spectators” must be a Joke, as thewriters know full well that SG, as near¬ly all democratic assemblies, limitsnoise-making In its sessions to actualmembers. It Is well-known that un¬democratic pressures can easily resultfrom allowing unrepresentatives groupsto lobby vociferously In a small assem¬bly.I might correctly be criticized forcalling down an SRP member in themidst of his parliamentary attack onme, though he deserved little else afterhis sassy provocations had greatly ad¬ded to the tenseness of the meeting.I would like to conclude by sayingthat anyone who is Interested to knowwhether SRP members are given cour¬teous treatment In SG debates would bewelcome to come to this Tuesday’smeeting and observe.Clive Groy, PresidentStudent GovernmentApproves WinsbergIt is unpleasant to imagine whatwould remain if the emasculation ofFred Winsberg’s music reviews demand¬ed by Fran Oshlag (MAROON, Febru¬ary 12) were carried out. One whoclings tubbornly to the belief that thereIs more to listen for at concerts thanvirtuosity will applaud a reviewer whoexpresses Intelligent opinions on thequality of the works performed, al¬though his opinions may differ fromone's own musical preferences or fromaccepted views' of "masters” and mas¬terpieces. Since there is at least asmuch room for diisagreement about themerits of a performance as of a work, Walkout*misunderstoodI had hoped that SRP’s walkout fromthe student assembly would serve todramatize the Issues involved In theMichigan Plan amendment—a positionwhich had been obscured In the assem¬bly by the majority’s suppression ofminority and thp partisan behavior ofSG’s president.The humorous letter of Mr. HerbertSchwartz has, however, destroyed thathope—It was probably foolish to thinkthat ISL would ever honestly informthe campus of Its activity.It is, of course, a lie that SRP walkedout in order to provoke the calling ofa quorum, nine ISLers left and but sixSRPers. The quorum was called by anISL member.Mr. Schwartz, who almost neverspeaks in SG, apparently has such con¬tempt for self-expression that he i6led to suggest a dichotomy between Itand responsibility to the electorate.Since we were elected by students whoknew our opinions on the MichiganPlan—unlike the ISL, which disguisedits true attitude—the course of respou- Export PepChancellor Klmpton, referring to thecollege changes, has often boasted oftaking a step toward closer “harmonywith our sister institutions.” In connec¬tion with furthering the cause of col¬legiate conformity, I submit the follow¬ing suggestion to the administration.An acquaintance of mine who Is nowan undergrad at Northwestern has toldme that due to the failure of the Wild¬cat football team this fall, there hasbeen a disturbing drop In the tradi¬tional school spirit of the student bodythere. After reading the Camp andGown’s special Wash Prom “Phoenix”supplement 1 would urge Mr. Klmpton—as a goodwill gesture—to gift wrapthe Phi Gams, the rest of the Cap andGown staff, the Pep Club, and BillBirenbaum and send this spirit-spread¬ing package to the Evanston campus.Rippety-tear! Rippety-tear! Rippety-tearl. —PubliusMAROON distortsLast week’s MAROON story aboutStudent Government’s revision of theMichigan Plan resulted in some confu¬sion because of the light in which the S. G. locks spiritLike the power of royalty, which isgranted by God, the power of StudentGovernment Is granted by Dean Stro-zler. A gTant from the former seems tobe somewhat more durable than onefrom his UC analogue, however.In 1951, Dean of Students Robert M.Strozier, entered into an agreementwith the student body of UC, throughits elected representatives, which pro¬vided, In effect, that no discriminatoryfraternity would exist on this campusIn 1954. But when 1954 finally rolledaround the dean contended that it wasonly the spirit of the agreement thathe had approved. We contend, In sup¬port of the dean’s position, that calen¬dars are notoriously lacking In spirit,but It also seems to us that our studentgovernment is equally deficient in elanvitale.Instead of fighting for Its Just posi¬tion, SG chose to back down meekly,and wait until next fall, and possibly1956. Strozier was pleased enough tosend a letter to these valiant peopleagreeing to enforce the new provisions,and they graciously conceded that Stro-zier’s word, vintage 1954, Is of a rarerbouquet than Strozler’s word, vintage SRP upheldAs a member of SRP I must take ex¬ception to the remarks of Messrs. Rod-man, Rosenthal and Lichtenstein, asprinted in last week’s MAROON, con¬cerning the SRP members from theStudent Government meeting of Febru¬ary 9. These good gentlemen, all mem¬bers of SRP, referred to the walkout as“by far the most inexcusable action ofthe evening” as “irresponsible” and Im¬plied that their fellow SPR’ers had ex¬pressed a lack of interest in the prob¬lems of the campus.Quite apart from the question of theletter Is the fact that its submission bythese gentlemen, before they had anopportunity to solicit the opinion ofthe rest of the caucus, stands as an In¬sulting example of unconcern for theparty and a profession of little faithIn their fellow members.The action of all but one of iheSRP members of SG (Mr. Lichtensteinsaw fit not to walk out) was as under¬standable and proper as It was com¬patible with the party’s platform (whichwas supported by 45 per cent of thevoting campus). The Michigan Planwas to end discrimination in campusorganizations by October, 1953. As part<* the Student Code, it stood as aFebruary 19, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5To take grad photosCap and Gown is now takingphotographs of students who planto receieve a degree in June or inDecember. Pictures will be takenon the third floor of the ReynoldsClub. Call Cop and Gown at Uni¬versity extension 1060 to make anappointment. Eby urges sincere writingto communication membersSCjr to considerco-op housing Poetry contestopen to UCersPrizes of $100 and $50 are of¬fered for an original poem orcycle of poems in the John Bil- “This sounds something like ‘Confessions of an Opium Eater,’ to title my talk ‘Remi-lmgs f iske poetry contest. The niscences of a Propagandist.’ I would never confess to being a propagandist,’’ said KermitEby» professor of social science and former director of education with the C.I.O. He thenp ’ ’ good-naturedly explained to the Communications Club last Tuesday that he consideredhimself an educator rather than a propagandist. The difference, he maintained, is that thepropagandist advocates, as the only point of view, that which benefits some private inter¬est, while the educator recog- — 7 — 7 —7—— 7nizes other points of view and tal to the accePtance of the speak- a great deal of importance on per------- ’ er (or writer).” - sonal contact and experience, andnot later than May 1; they arenot limited as to length, subject,or form.All regularly registered s t u •dents in the University are eli¬gible to compete. Only unpub- defends that one which “serveslished poems may be submitted the larSer interest of public ad-in the contest, and the Univer- vancement.sity reserves the right of first Eby said he believed that “anpublication of the winning contri- organization grows stronger asbution. the people in it know more—not aAlso on the tentative agenda Each contestant should submit loyalt^waT^^v^tothe udices’’*was intuitive and*couldn’t6 his entry typewritten and signed er.. My loyalty was always to the be taught; at the same time, hewill be the question of what with a pseudonym. A sealed en- human aspiration in the labor stresseS that you don-t have toshould be done with the money velope should be enclosed contain- movement-from the College Quiz Bowl—if ing a card bearing the pseudonym, Te,,s how t0 influence opinionThe student housing coopera¬tive will be under consideration atthe next meeting of Student Gov¬ernment, according to Clive Gray,SG president. • . Eby cited as an “absolute and with it the vitality of the parableparamount necessity” finding the ■—the illustration drawn fromcommon ground with an audience, one’s own life. He concluded, how*In large part, he felt that “getting ever, that the best training forthe feel of an audience — understanding its aspirations and prej-the UC team wins the radio quiz.The student needs committee hassome bills to present to the Stu¬dent Assembly, Gray also stated.The SG meeting, which is open the name of the contribution, andthe name and address of the con¬tributor.The prizes may be withheld if, He then went on to outline theprerequisites, discovered duringmany years of speaking and writ-ing, for successfully influencing tajned that “there is nothing cynpublic opinion. First, he said, ical in finding something outbe a farmer to talk to farmers.Emphasizes personal contactEby said he often found hiscommon ground in “washroomsand over lunchpails,” and main- persuasive writing “is to writeand write and write—for speak¬ing. to speak at every opportu¬nity.”Likes convincing writer“The prize in my classes goesto the student who can write con¬vincingly for the greatest diver¬sity of audiences,” Eby said. Hepointed out that “one of the great¬est wastes in the world” was theaccumulation of ideas at UC thatto student visitors, will be held in the °Pinion of the judges, none “you can’t be effective in selling about Wesley before talking to a J^ve.r got bJyond the doctoratenext Tuesday, Feb.North at 7:30 p.m. 23, in Law °f the poems submitted merits the an idea unless you believe it”; and group of Methodists.” He placedawards. second—“the message is inciden- Positions offeredPositions in chemistry, physics,mathematics, metallurgy, and en¬gineering are being offered by theUnited States Civil Service Com-/Croup norms in industry discussedby business executives in conferenceThat study of group norms in industry~is conducted on presuppositions similar to the sophomores3or” juniors niajoring yourstudies of any particular group anywhere was the essence of a paper delivered by Dr. Rob- in any of the above fields andert K. Burns of the Industrial Relations Center before the American Management Associa- must pass a written test,tion. *The business executives met in the Palmer House for a three-day conference last Tuesday, y « j ♦ jSurveys of employee attitudes can serve business as bench marks of the present and goal Interns in education named:posts for the future, Burns *thesis, and he asked, “Why nottranslate these wonderful nuggetsinto the language of life?” Hecited the large audiences of farm¬ers, church people and womenwho could be reached with these“nuggets” through magazines, ifthey could be written in the par¬ticular vernacular of the audience.But, he concluded, “You’ve got towrite out of the white heat ofconvictions, so that whenyou read what you have writtenyou even believe it yourself.”said. He spoke at a session onspecial personnel techniques.Fundamentally, Burns said, theattitude survey is an artificialway of determining attitudes andfeelings. It fragmentalises andcompartmentalises employees’ at¬titudes into various categories andareas of interest, such as pay, working conditions, the boss, andso on.The advantage of this method,according to Burns, is that it helpsthe person who lacks the skill toexpress his feelings or who hasno other channel for self expres¬sion. Its disadvantage is that a results is impossible, and if pos¬sible, would be meaningless.“We cainnot simply combine thescores into totals and sub totals,”Burns declared. “We must do three come to ChicagoTwelve college and university teachers have been namedmore than this. We know from by Chicago, Columbia, Harvard, and Yale universities as in-empirical studies that work terns in general education for the academic year 1954-55, itgroups develop their own norma- was announced last month by F. Champion Ward, now retiredmPchanTcaTl^tPrnrPtlTtinn of" the tive standards of behavior which dean of the college. Ward is a member of the committee onare both expected from members internships in general education, under the auspices of theand enforced on them. In a sense, carnegie Corporation.Your 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 the questionnaire results are noth¬ing more than basic clues, the pri¬mary data, from which is recon¬structed the complex pattern of .. eral education at the four institu-Each of the four participat- tions are not identical, they doing institutions accepts three have the common educational pur-of the visiting teachers for a year pose of providing students thor-attitudes and feeling which exist of intensive residence for study ough basic training in the broadih each group. ”The job of interpretation, Burnsexplained, is fundamentally one ofdrawing together all the responses of its program of general educa- fields of human knowledge. Mr.tion. Each visitor teaches one Ward also stated, “the knowledgecourse as a part of this study.“The internships established byto individual items from a group the Carnegie Corporation areand relating these back into ameaningful whole. Through thelanguage of the'questionnairs, thetest interpreter must determinewhat is behind what the em¬ployees say, and what problemsthey may be trying to express. unique in providing for study ofgeneral education, and they areimportant because of the growinginterest in such education,” Mr.Ward stated.Although the programs of gen- which will be most helpful to oth¬er institutions is gained by directassociation.”The interns for the next year atthe University of Chicago are:Frank C. Erk, associate profes¬sor of biology, Washington Col¬lege, Chestertown, Maryland.William Henry Spragens, asso¬ciate professor of mathematics,University of Mississippi.Marvin B. Sussman, assistantprofessor and chairman, depart¬ment of sociology, Union College*Schnectady, N. Y.HARRY 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 1s«Hotel rooms with private bath and'showerSgl.—$8 per wk.; dbl.—$12 per wk.Hotel apts. with switchboard and maid service1 rm. apt. at $90 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 Chemistry manhonoredWilliam F. Libby, professor ofchemistry in the Institute of Nu¬clear Studies, was honored at Co¬lumbia University Wednesday.Libby was awarded Columbia'sChandler Medal, which is givenfor outstanding achievement in thefield of chemistry. Libby is the or¬iginator of the Carbon 14 methodof accurately determining the ageof organic materials.BEETHOVENMISSA S0LEMNISTOSCANINI2 records — $7.98Advance ordersbeing taken nowTheDisc1367 E. 57th St.Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 19, 1954Ward surveys Soviet artReports on USSRThis is the third installment byRichard E. Ward, MAROON mon¬aging editor, on his recent trip tothe Soviet Union with six otherAmerican college editors. The con¬cluding installments will appear inthe next two weeks.Most of the Soviet students we met showed a great amount of interest in American cul-wral life. The students wanted to know what literature we studied in school. They inquiredabout our symphony orchestras, ballet troups, and theatres.At Kiev University, which has an enrollment of 6,000, we met some students who had anexcellent knowledge of English. We were told that the main English and American writersthey had studied during their schooling were Shakespeare, Dickens, London, Twain, Dreis¬er, and Howard Fast. Other ‘Widely read American authors bum of the opera, “Boris Godu- a rather unfriendly light. I couldare Steinbeck and Heming- nov” for 40 rubles or $10. There not help but laugh at the cari-jfvay. 1 were four 12-inch L-P records used cature of McArthur. However,The students that study English in the recordings. They were the “criticism” was rather sharp,read these writers in English, more expensive than individual The young people were interestedMost students however, read them disks, which were about $1.75. in our opinion of the “criticism.”in Russian translations, we were The price of the records par- While in Moscow we heard atold. _ tially reflects the Soviet attitude performance of the State Orches-Mike: an expert on America toward culture, our interpreter in tra of the USSR. I was disappoint-There was one student at K:e\ Kiev explained. He stated that ed that there were no classicalUniversity whom we called Mike, books, and admissions to concerts works on the program, becauseHe was evidently preparing to be were also inexpensive. that would have afforded me aan expert on America. Mike was Ballet- lives up to its reputation better chance to compare it w’itha graduate history student, but he j visited the ballet six times other orchestras I have heard. Itand also went to some concerts is supposedly the best orchestraand opera performances. We in the Soviet Union,usually sat in the front row of the On the evening we visited, thetheatre; our tickets were not in- major work was Shostakovich'sexpensive. new Tenth Symphony. It was itsThe ballet was excellent in all second performance in the Sovietthe cities we visited. There were Union. We learned that it is cus-few empty seats at the ballet, tomary for Soviet composers toalthough performances are fre- be present at early performancesquently repeated. Outside of Mos- of their works,cow young people comprised the Meet Shostakovichfirst took us to task in a discus- majority of the audience. After the concert the composersjsion of Faulkner, his favorite In Kharkov, at the performance discuss the performances withAmerican author. of the Red Poppy, over two-hun- members of the orchestra. WeMike said that he didn’t think dred young people surrounded us asked our interpreter if we couldMcCarthy is “representative of during one of the intermissions, meet Shostakovitch. The inter¬file American people.” But he fol- It was almost impossible to keep preter spent both intermissions onlowed this by saying he felt it up with the numerous questions, the matter with apparently no"very significant” that McCarthy which were mostly about Amer- results. At the end of the concertoccupies an important post in our ican student life. f he suddenly announced that wegovernment. MacArthur caricatured were going to meet Shostakovich.Disturbed at “bobby-soxer" label The Red Poppy, familiar to Dmitri Shostakovich was shyPravda wasn’t the only news- many Americans, has been but friendly during the interviewpaper Mike read. He told us that changed in recent Soviet adapta- He told us that he liked Coplandbe read the New York Times ac- tions. The ballet portrays former and Gershwin. His next work willcounts of the first college editois American relations with China in be an opera he revealedtrip to the Soviet Union last Sep- —— — — ! 1tember. He was very upset thatthe students from Kiev Univer¬sity had been described as “bobby-Soxers.”Fortunately I had read the ac¬count, also. I remembered thatDan Berger, editor of the OberlinCollege Review, had stated in theTimes, that the Kiev Universitystudents “flocked around him likebobby-soxers.” I explained thatBerger was not calling the stu¬dents “bobby - soxers,” but wasusing the term to describe thelarge number of students who hadcome up to him during his visitto Kiev University..Whirlwind Americon tarriesDuring my stop in Kiev, I de¬cided to buy some records. Myguide took me to a newly builtgroup of stores. The record shopwas very crowded, but the guideexplained to the clerk that I wasan American and naturally in ahurry. We monopolized the clerktor over an hour during whichtime I spent 165 rubles, or about$41.My main purchase was an al- The above photograph shows a party held in the St. George's Hall ofthe Great*Palace of the Kremlin which the US student editors attendedduring their visit to the Soviet Union. The party was held during eveningof January and was sponsored by the Central Committee of the Komsomol(Young Communist League) and the Moscow trode unions. Young work¬ers and students from the Moscow area attended the party in differentnational Russian costumes. Richard Ward and Dave Barney, editor fromReed college, ore shown on the left and right sides of the Russian studentin the center.Prima ballerina gives autobiographyWe also had a back-stage inter¬view at the Bolshoi Theatre inMoscow. During our last full dayin Moscow we saw a performanceof the Swan L.ake Ballet. I hadpreviously seen the ballet in Kiev.It was interpreted differently ateach theatre, but the Moscow per¬formance was definitely a moreelaborate performance.The prima ballerina was a verybeautiful girl of eighteen. WhenI asked how much ballet trainingshe had had she said that shebegan going to ballet school atnine and finished when she wassixteen. She said that talentedgirls and boys are sent to specialschools at a yoiing age. Theseschools are free and are combinedwith regular academic studies. We saw innumerable bookstoresand book kiosks in the Soviet Un¬ion. Our hotels had bookstalls,and there were two within a blockof our hotel in Moscow. There washardly a block in the central dis¬tricts of the cities we visited whichdid not have a bookstore.The bookshops had a wide selec¬tion of books. Marxist writingsand literal y classics from manycountries were prominently dis¬played in the windows. The largerstores also had a wide selection oftechnical, scientific, art and mu¬sic books.The most popular Russian writ¬ers, we discovered, were Tolstoi,Pushkin, Gorky, Gogol, and Tur-genyev. Dostoievsky, the Russianwriter who was most familiar tous, was not as highly regarded bythe students w ith whom we spoke.RESTRINGWITHSTANDS OUTin play<• Harder Smashese Better Cut and SpinSTANDS UPIn your racket• Moisture Immunee Lasting LivelinessCOSTS LESSthan gutAPPROX. STRINGING COST;Pro-Fected Braid... $6.00Multi-Ply Braid $5.00At tennis shops and•porting goods stores.ASHAWAY BRAIDED RACKETSTRING. Choice of The Champions_ . ■<» /tb /tsptaeftco//,/tb a// my///ib OAei/ro/etbw/if) Me year'# new /cfea /'/? MtsHdHt/ This Delray Club Coupe combines all the colorfulsmartness of a sport model with an interior that’sdesigned for everyday family use. Seats, sidewalls, even theheadlining, are all of soft, lustrous vinyl in color treatmentsthat harmonize with the exterior color of your choice.And this new interior is just as durable and practical as it isbeautiful. The vinyl is easily washable and amazingly resist¬ant to scuffing and wear. You don’t have to worry aboutlittle feet on the seats or the things that little hands mightspill. And for grown-ups, here at last is a coupe that pro¬vides all the between-seat knee-room of a 2-door sedan!The Delray Club Coupe is only one of the wonderful newChevrolet models that make up the lowest-priced line inthe low-price field. Come in and look them over.^e°L OF S*W*G** or EKCtwVMORI PEOPLE BUY CHEVROLETSTHAN ANY OTHER CARISEE YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER FOR ALL YOUR AUTOMOTIVE NEEDS!Conveniently listed under "Automobilesn in your local classified telephone directoryf VFebruary 19, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Statute,college enrollmentfactors in college releasesA University of Chicago statute and falling college enroll¬ment were sharply underlined last week by news of the re¬lease at the end of the spring quarter, of Fritz Caspari andHenry Rago, assistant professors in the College.Statute number 13 prescribes that an assistant professor¬ship is a temporary appointment. An assistant professor maybe appointed for two terms of not routine. They are, he said,three years, under the statute, “excruciatingly difficult.”By the end of that time the He denied that the college staffassistant professor must have was being cut. The ratio of facultybeen promoted to an associate pro- members to students is betterfessorship. If he has not been pro- than it was last year. But, he said,moted, either because of lack of that there must be some relationability or of open professorships, between the size of the facultyhe is released by the university, and the size of the student body.Associate professors have “indefi- He emphasized, howeyer, thatnite appointments,” and tenure, while enrollment was certainly aA similar arrangement exists factor, it was hardly the onlyfor instructors. They have four factor,years in which to rise to assistant The Collegiate SceneprofessorshipsThe statute further providesthat decisions on an assistant pro¬fessor’s status be made in the fallof the academic year which endshis contract. If not promoted heis notified by December 15.“The operation of the statutemay create inconvenience andhardship at particular times,”commented Robert F. Streeter,newly appointed dean of the col¬lege, “but the statutory provisionis designed to insure, in the longrun, the quality of the Universityfaculty.”Streeter said that the decisionson professorial appointments were facultyfull-time student studentequiva¬ enroll¬ facultylents* ment ratio1953 74 1063 1.4.361952 91 1350 14.761951 114“ 1601 14.071949 129 1930 14.811947** 155 2603 17.71’’'Many members of Hie collegestaff divide their time between thecollege and other units of the Uni¬versity; hence, the number in thiscolumn doesn't represent directlythe number of college staff mem¬bers.**1947 was the year of peakenrollment in the years followingthe war. Students to go to USSRSwarthmore College’s East-West Club seems to be leading collegiate America in con¬sideration of summer trips for students to the Soviet Union. In answer to a Swarthmorequestionnaire asking about plans or interest in sending students to the USSR 10 easternschools replied that while no plans had been made there existed a good deal of interestin planing inter-collegiate trips to Russia. A City College of New York campus-wide stu¬dent referendum showed 75.8 per cent of the student body in favor. The East-West Club ofSwarthmore in cooperation —77 :—7 777 r : :with Swarthmore Student Those ,n *a™r °?. r'ba"" >he r e g i s t e r. n g ot d ajrVinrirnl ic anincr nhoaH with and more scientific football at students. By means of closed-uouncn s going «neaa wiin Kansas University are rejoicing circuit television a communica-mquiries aqd plans with the hope over tbe appointment of Charles tions system was instituted thatof sending a group of students to father as head football coach, eliminated waiting in line andRussia this summer. Mather gained a spectacular rec- programming mistakes which for-DNnrth ChmiinaV naiiv Tar HppI ord at Massi,lon (Ohio) high merly resulted from the time lag.. , school with the aid of such inno- caused by ordinary communica-recently advertised a book for the vations ag having a TV set beside tions>o a a^e ’ • . * him on the bench so he could gain Don't wreck neckingcut, which professed to give the & better perspective of his The dormitory council at »heins and outs of the draft law. team Another technique used by University of Houston issued theThe book contained chapters on Mather is to study m0tj0n pic- following regulations governingail disquahfying physical and tures oi the games after which he social conduct on campus:mental defects, what is limited and hig gtaff grade each member “1. Area outside of ‘D’ and ETservice, and who is eligible for it, as hig performance on-all 47 exemptions and deferments IBM cardsB The cards are thenstudent rights, how to deal with egged through machines to re¬local boards appeals medical ex- CQrd each la ,g ficie Taminers, little hints that make a J dorm reception rooms ap¬proved for goodnight kissesonly.“2. Cullen boulevard side of ‘D’dorm, recommended.“3. Cars in dorm parking lot onlyif we can see your heads show¬ing over the seats.“All other areas are taboo. Don’tHarper investigated, found treasure trove;first editions, Lincolniana, incunabula hereby WherTmany people think about libraries, librarians and quanities of books generally, they picture dusty shelves andmusty librarians balding students bent over formidable books Harper boasts a modern poetry collection, modern poetiyBut this is not a true picture of UC’s library, or of its staff, and bowed scholars peering at obscure manuscripts,records, many of which are recording made by the poets themselves; a microfilm reading room, where prominent new spapei sdating from the middle of thelast century up to the presentday can be read; a collection ofLincolniana, including some ofLincoln’s personal books, (and hismother’s kitchen cabinet), a col¬lection made by Dr. Barton andpurchased after his death by thelibrary. It also includes a collec¬tion of rare books including over160 volumes of incunabula, thefirst books printed in the 50 yearsafter the invention of printing,from about 1450 to 1500.All of the facilities are availableto students carrying at least onecollege or division course. The li¬brary is open from 9 a.m. to 10p.m. The micro-film reading roomis open at the same time, but isclosed from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. TheHarriet Monroe Modern Poetryroom is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. This many faceted organizationbegan in 1891 when William R.Harper, first president ‘of the Uni¬versity, bought the entire con¬tents of an antiquated bookshopin Berlin. These books, some 240,-000 volumes, became in 1883 thefoundation of the University’slibrary. Since that time the li¬brary has grown rapidly, and hasbecome one of the largest univer¬sity libraries in the country.The library system today con¬tains 2,000,000 volumes, 1,000,000of which are in the Harper-Wie-boldt-Classics complex, and theother 1,000,000 are in the thirteendepartmental libraries on cam¬pus, each one in itself a sizeableunit.Its growth was so rapid thatby 1947 the University had to re¬vive a plan, the origin of whichStudent SpecialSEVEN MONTHS TO PAY FORNEW PORTABLE TYPEWRITERRen!’ If For Three MonthsApply Rental Paid to Purchase Price. Call Mr. Gerson — Extension 3317or come in and talk to himUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue . . ,. , wonder what Stage has to saydifference, how to get a discharge abou, a„ thlsfrom service, etc. When the man¬aging editor of the Tar Heel tele- TV registersgraphed for a copy he was in- Modern design is also makingformed by the publishers that, the big difference over at Chicago gg about wrecking the necking“Our advertising campaign had Teachers College. The staff of the bv usjng the taboo areas.”such an unexpected large re- Audio-Visual Center of that schoolsponse, that we completely ex- took time out from their duties of JRiypnhrilJmhausted our first printing . . .” instructing the teachers-to-be in LIUU1UUWIIS yw-wioNeedless to say many indignant audio-visual aids to teaching to PYrhntl (TPletters were sent to the editors of help in the spring semester reg- CAUIrU/l^Cthe newspaper denouncing the istration. A coaxial cable was set A letter, concerning possible ex¬company that printed the book up to run from the Audio-Visual change with students of the Sovietand the paper for advertising it. Center to the two rooms utilized Union, was sent to James Ed¬wards, president of the NationalStudents Association, by WilliamBirenbaum, Director of StudentsActivities. The letter asked thatinvestigations be made about thepossibility of having Soviet stu¬dents take trips in the UnitedState, similar to the ones taken bythe U. S. student editors in the So¬viet Union. Inquiries would bemade of the proper Soviet andAmerican authorities.“I’d see nothing wrong in tripsof this nature,” said Birenbaum,when questioned, “with qualifiedSoviet students, visiting theUnited States, and I think it wouldbe even better if qualified Sovietstudents would be permitted tostudy at a University in the UnitedStates. If one believes in the ideaof international exchange and thefree flow of ideas, this idea shouldbe logical to them. I see nothingsubversive in this idea. If we be¬lieve in ourselves, we shouldn’tbe afraid to let others see us aswe are.”A recent article, published inthe Sun-Times of February 17th,stated that the United States ispermitting Soviet skier, Yuri Ser¬geevich Afanasev and an inter¬preter to come here this week foran international ski meet in Ish-peming, Michigan. There will beno “rigid” restrictions placed onhis movements. Th^United Statesalso seems ready to let a Russiantrack team come to the UnitedStates for meets in several Amer¬ican cities and a chess team toenter this country for a tourna¬ment in New York.In reference to this piece of in¬formation, Birenbaum said thatif they let Soviet athletes enterthe United States, they should cer¬tainly permit Soviet students toenter. "has been lost, which would, ifexecuted, accommodate the fur¬ther expansion, not only of Chi¬cago’s library but also of fifteenother midwestern university li¬braries. From the combined ef¬forts of these universities, camethe Midwest Inter-Library Cen¬ter.This unique institute, the firstin the country, enables memberlibraries to avoid duplication inkeeping or purchasing little usedreference books, and clears muchneeded space for the accommoda¬tion of the rapidly growing wealth considered worth reviewing inPoetry and worth keeping on theshelves in the office. They repre¬sent only a minor proportion ofthe number of volumes sent in;the collection is Therefore a selec¬tive one, reflecting the criticalstandards of the magazine.Inscribed first editions availableThere are a good many rareand valuable items. For example:The first edition of General Wil¬liams Booth Enters Into Heavenand Other Poems by Vachel Lind¬say, inscribed as follows:“To my good and very loyalof books. Twelve of the fifteen friend, Harriet Mom^e, with par-members use teletype to commu¬nicate with the center.Poetry collection impressivePerhaps the most interesting ofthe facilities within the Harperlibrary is the Hariet Monroe Mod¬ern Poetry Collection which ishoused in Harper W62 (WestTower).This collection was willedto the University by Harriet Mon¬roe, founder and editor of Poetry:A Magazine of Verse, and was ac¬cepted in 1938. The original col¬lection contained about 2,350books—volumes of verse, critic¬ism, and anthologies, most ofwhich were review copies sent tothe magazine since its beginningin 1912. Nearly all were first edi¬tions, and some were inscribed bythe authors. These books are forthe most part those which were ticular thanks for the goodness ofMarch 1, 1914, the friendship ofmany of the godly, includingW. B. Yeats, and the general,elaborate goodness of her heart.Nicholas Vachel Lindsay.” In¬scribed first editions of Smokeand Steel, by Carl Sandburg, ofBirds, Beasts, and Flowers, byD. H. Lawrence, and of Rena¬scence, by Edna St. Vincent Mil-lay are to be found there.The collection also includedfirst editions of the rare ThreeStories an dTen Poems, by ErnestHemingway, issued in Paris in1923, and of On Heaven and OtherPoems, by Ford Mdox Ford; thefirst Paris edition of Hart Crane’sThe Bridge; first editions of Ar¬chibald MacLeish’s three earliestsec "Horper,” page 12Here’s the AnswerTo Your Laundry Problem2-Hour Laundry Service2-Day Shirt Service1-Day Cleaning ServiceOpen every evening until St vVUxrfcSundays 9 ’til 4Hyde Park Self-Service Laundry912 E. 55th L ; WITH LstOp/Q\no MEET THE PEOPLE orMEXICOwooks Summer Sett Ion of U. eflxleo . . . week end excwrelone.l545 . . . See your travol agent.|STOP TOURS, Berkeley, Calif.* %Me$5-RECORDS10" LP 79c12" LP 98c & $1.8945 RPM. Vz priceHermans935 E. 55th St.Open Thurs., Til 9■ ■7Page 8 February 19, 1954Sholom Aleichem' breath of fresh airSaturday night marks the 200th performance of the New York production of the Worldof Sholom Aleichem. A second company, now appearing in Chicago %t the Eleventh St.Theatre with Howard DaSilva, Anne Revere, and Jacob Ben-Ami, has been formed for anational tour — an extraordinary development for off-Broadway theatre.. What is the ap¬peal of “Sholom Aleichem”?Sholom Aleichem’s world is a place where humanism is unashamedly championed. “Forwhile wisdom is no substituteAnne Revere for a piece of herring, a housewith only fish is not a home.”The culture of an oppressedfolk finds at least three modes inwhich it expresses its aspirations,because, as it develops, it is in¬creasingly threatened with de¬struction. The World of SholomAleichem represents these threePlaywrights Theatreto produce Eliot playWith T. S. Eliot’s Murder in the Cathedral, which opensWednesday night, Playwrights Theatre Club at 1560 N.LaSalle is continuing its experimentation with varied formsof significant drama. According to Playwrights, the play is“a drama of internal conflict about the efforts of Thomasa Becket to do the right deed for the ‘right’ reason in attain¬ing martyrdom.”Eliot, in 1935, when Murderin the Cathedral was written,had developed a mature style.After the play’s first productionand the production, some yearslater, of the controversial Cock-tall Party, Eliot was recognized to in the interest of national au¬tonomy and reduction of churchabsolutism. Written in the formof a Greek drama — completewith a chorus from the plebis¬cite, it differs from most Greekdrama in that it concentrates onthe internal struggles and eu¬logizes the mortal ideals of asingle person, Thomas, the rep¬resentative of the Church.Eugene Troobnick, as a tempterof Thomas a Becket.be as accomplished a dramatistas he is a poet. Playwrights hasfelt that now, in view' of the cur¬rent success of Eliot’s newestplay, The Confidential Clerk,would be an appropriate time forthe revival of his first play, al¬ready a classic of its kind.The play tells of Thomas aBecket, Archbishop of Canter¬bury in the twelfth centuryduring the waning of the Nor¬man conquest and describes hismurder by agents of the Crown For their production, Play¬wrights has done extensive re¬search enabling them to repro¬duce the Medieval setting, that ofIvanhoe on the one hand andRobin Hood on the other, of theplay. Problems of historical andreligious accuracy have been han¬dled by Crieghton Clark and AlanMcPherron, both of whom havestudied at Anglican colleges.The set design and lighting isthe work of Arthur Knight, aformer Art Institute studentw’hose work has recently re¬ceived recognition in a nationalpublication.Marvin Peisner, who has beenseen in leading roles in previousPlaywrights productions and wnohas acted and directed plays withUniversity Theatre and Tonightat Eight-thirty, will direct theproduction. His cast, selected fromthe leading players of the com¬pany, includes Edward Asner asThomas; Eugene Troobnick,Thomas Earhart, Alex Horn, andPaul Sills as the four tempters;and Zohra Alton, Jo Trites, AnnPetry, and Elaine May (who willdirect Playwrights next produc¬tion, Miss Julia) as the chorus ofwomen of Canterbury.Performances are Wednes¬days through Sundays at 8:40p.m. For reservations call WH3-2272.International Hou.se Movie ProgramMonday, February 22—THE WELL DIGGER'S DAUGHTER (French)Assembly Hall, 8:00 P.M. Admission 50c.Thursday, February 25—OLIVER TWIST (English)East Lounge, 7:00 P.M. and 9:00 P.M. Admission 35c.’ Bravo! Encore!We Had to Hold You Over, Mr. Guinness,That's Why We're Again PresentingThe Lavender Hill Mob andThe Man in the White SuitComing Next Friday — Feb. 26. All on one great film program —Annapurna, Little Fugitive; and the UPA cartoons—Edgar Allan Poe'sThe Tell-Tole Heart and James Thurber's A Unicorn in the Garden.HYDE PAHK THEATRENO 7-9071Student Rate 50c All Performances LAKE PARKat 53rdafter the Wash Prom ...Alexander’s1137 East 63rd Street modes through three stories se¬lected from Jewish literature.The stories are presented witha conscious understanding ofthe social role of fancy, illusionand reality in folk expression. Sweig, nothing is all. Yet, manLs created In the image of God,not the ox in the field whosevision is a clump of grass and afew hummocks of dirt. Seeingthe condition of Bonehe the an¬gels bow their heads in humanshame!One can, of course, laugh atreality and ignore its essentialcharacter. This is the wisdom of apeople that laughs at itself witha mouth that tastes of sorrow.Such is the humor of the firststory “The Town of Chelm,’’ thetown of Beloved Fools. But laugh¬ter, unless it deepens, is only anexperience that may easily be¬come acrid to the taste. The worldof Sholom Aleichem is the livingtradition of the Maccabees, not ofMickey Katz. If the Jews laugh and dream,they must also struggle. “Gym¬nasium,” the High School, bySholom Aleichem is set in CzaristRussia and is one family’s answerto the quota system. In contrast tothe other two stories where fancyand illusion are the predominat¬ing moods, realism dominates andforcefully projects life into tnetheatre. Jacob Ben-AmiTheThe second story, the tale ofBonehe Schweig, by Peretz, isa classic of the Jewish folk lit¬erature. It is the dream ofheaven and the criticism of thatdream. It tells of a manwho suffers in silence, is offeredall Paradise in reward and asksonly, “Please, if eveiy morningI could have a hot roll with apiece of butter on it.” To Bonehe son of Aaron Katz, thegrocer, has become determinedto eifter the Gymnasium. In awealth of descriptive materialSholom Aleichem lays bare thesocial antagonisms which giverise to Aaron’s “troubles.” Musta man stand erect and suffer orlive “cautiously and quietly”—on his knees? To put the ques¬tion is to answer it. little of what is said in the Jewishfolk literature is said explicitly.A culture, like the Negro, thfcIndiaji, the Mexican, developingunder conditions of deliberate at¬tack can hardly afford the luxuryof “liberty.” Hence while its con¬tent remains profound for all peo¬ple it takes on those charac¬teristics—deepened shadings andforms which are the creation ofthe specific experience of theJewish people and require a spe¬cial use of intelligence to handleand make meaningful.One should point out that very This reviewer prefers to leavethe discussion of the specificSee ''Sholom/' poge 9A CAMPUS-TO-CAREER CASE HISTORYFresh out of school, Bob Wilson, ’53,was put to work on a Transistor projeclat Bell Laboratories. He explains whyhe never had time to be awed.(Reading Time: 39 seconds)Bob Wilson works on a “breadboard” circuit, study¬ing the electrical properties of a carrier system.“In some ways it was hard to believe. Ihad received my B.E.E. at the Univer¬sity of Delaware in June, 1953, and aweek later I was working in the world-famous Bell Laboratories.“But I didn’t have time to be awed be¬cause they put me right to work. Theygave me responsibility fast.“My group was working on the experi¬mental application of transistors to carriersystems. My assignment was the elec¬trical design of a variolosser for the com¬pressor and for the expandor to be locatedin the terminals. great new discoveries continually turnedout by the Labs.“Now, I’m in the Communication De¬velopment Training Program, continuingmy technical education and learning whatall the Laboratories sections do and how,their work is integrated.“In a year I’ll be back working withthe group with which I started.”“The supervision I received and theequipment I had were tops. I quickly dis¬covered that I had to rely on my ingenuityas much as on the college courses I hadtaken. Perhaps that’s one reason for the Assuming responsibility fast is a commonexperience among the engineering, phys¬ical science, arts and social science, andbusiness administration graduates who jointhe Bell System. Bob Wilson went withBell Laboratories. There also are job op¬portunities with the operating telephonecompanies, Western Electric and SandiaCorporation.BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEMFebruary 19, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9Bloch displays instrumental variety PreS3 to PrintEby, M cKeonDiscusses instruments;pieces not worth effortSuzanne Bloch, who sings,plays the lute, recorder, andvirginal presented what onemight call for want of a bettername a lecture-demonstration lastFriday.She plays the lute competently,it seemed, though I could reallynot hear this extremely soft-tonedinstrument in Mandel Hall. Herrecorder playing was perfunctory,and marked by poor intonation,lack of rhythm and poor tone withfrequently audible overtones. Asthe performer herself pointed out,she has an untrained .voice. Her otony, and arevirginal playing was unspectac- careful playing. The University of Chicago Pressby Robert BlochLast Friday, with the title of “Lutenist, Singer to the Lute,Player of Virginals, Recorders,” Suzanne Bloch, daughter ofthe composer Ernest Bloch, gave a program of little heard has announced the followingmusic in Mandel Hall. The lute is a plucked instrument of the books by UC faculty members tomandolin type, which, it has been said, the player spends half be released during the winter andhis life tuning. Lutes had sometimes as many as 26 strings, spring: The Poetry of Dylanwhich were tuned in pairs, likeundeserving ofular.What remained was a pseudo-innsicological lecture on the in¬struments and works performedaccompanied by a good deal ofinsipid and often inaudible gab¬bing. The general level of mu-sicological commentary wassomething like, “Back in thedays of the Renaissance, beforepeople had radio and TV, theyhad to make their own enter¬tainment.” Even though her voice is notof top quality, she was wonder¬fully imaginative in her singingof some delightful folk songs,and would have done well toinclude more of these on theprogram.I can only ask why anyone both¬ered to present this program. the mandolin. Although veryrare nowadays, it was once asmuch a household instrument asthe piano is now, and a great dealof music was written for it, most¬ly in the “tablature” style of no¬tation. It is a very soft instru¬ment, and therefore not too suitedfor concert hall performance,which may be one reason it fellout of fashion.The recorder, a whistle-mouth¬piece precursor of the flute, ismuch commoner today. Thepieces on the program wereplayed without accompaniment,giving only a general idea ofthe music.To hear a movement of a Han¬del sonata on it makes it evidentwhy it was replaced by themore modern wind instruments.It has a rather hollow tone qual¬ity, dubious intonation and a lim- snialler, softer and with a small¬er range. The pieces Miss Blochplayed on it included a very in¬teresting set of variations byWilliam Byrd on the Hexaehordof ut-re-mi, ut being the oldname for do; that Is, the playersings a scale on the syllablesut (Ut pronounced approximate¬ly as in French), re, mi, etc. upto la, and then back down to ut.This is sung a number of timesagainst varying accompani¬ments on the virginal.The last group included a num¬ber of songs with lute accompani¬ment. These were all of the char¬acter of folk songs, and in themthe delicate and unobstrusive qual¬ities of the instrument wereshown to the greatest advantage. Thomas by Elder Olsen; The Godin You by Kermit Eby; Capital¬ism and the Historians; edited byF. A. Hayek; Past and Future byWilliam H. McNeill; and Thought,Action, and Passion by RichardP. McKeon.The Columbia University Presswill publish The Proustian Vis¬ion, by Milton Hindus, formerly ofthe UC faculty.These books will be reviewedin subsequent issues of the MA¬ROON, as will American Laborfrom Defense to Reconstructionby Joel Seidman and Higher Edu¬cation and the Human Spirit byBernard Meland, both of whichwere issued during the autumnby the UC Press.Time was when the University ited power of expression, all ofconcert series included the Buda- which are not very well made uppest Quartet doing a complete for by a certain quaintness ofIn addition to some charming, cycle of late Beethoven, Istomin sound. With the exception of thehut none the less monotonous old and Schneider playing all the Handel, however, which soundedmusic, Miss Bloch lifted a few Beethoven violin sonatas, Kirk- distinctly unsuited to the instru-lines of Bach from the St. John’s patrick playing Scarlatti, the New ment, the pieces on the programPassion, a gigue from a Bach Music Quartet playing Purcell, illustrate the technical aspectsSuite, and a movement from a Bartok, etc., or Schneider, Bach, of the instrument very well.Handel flute sonata, performing Apparently this is not sufficiently The virginal is a keyboard in-all of them as lost children who esoteric. strunient with plucked strings,strayed away from medieval mon- Fred Winsberg similar to the harpsichord, onlyRenaissance Society beginning exhibition ofa selection of modern pottery in QoodspeedThe Renaissance Society is currently exhibiting “A Selection of Modern Pottery” to runin the Goodspeed Hall galleries until March 3, 1954. Eighty pieces of pottery by 27 profes¬sional potters of the United States and England are represented. Latest 'Review' completed;displays varied selectionsThe Winter-Spring issue of the CHICAGO REVIEW, onsale Monday, features the poetry of Marianne Moore andReuel Denney and essays by David Riesman and Leo Strauss.The Moore poems are two translations from the fables of LaFontaine, The Wolf Plays Shepherd and Digger and Partner.Reuel Denney presents A Criticism of Sculpture and Affec¬tion for a Countryside. Freud, i , . nrwirw/Religion, and Science is the ^ H 1 ^ u KLVILW’subject of David Riesman’s 'muter - spring w*. • vex b • no iessay and Leo Strauss has writtena note on his book, Natural Rightand History. 4? Foil Circle arret hamAThe magazine is composed of ,four sections: poetry, essays, fic- „tion, and reviews; the division „ e,„, ,, L„„ ^ „<*,page of each section is illustrated n . . tbt Movement of (be Child Within Her Blanche eoMUwmwith a lithograph from a series of » cr,»w JANE W. 9TEDMA*f&uns by Psblo Piccisso. (The m /n«criwiwiuvuduhbiititles of the lithographs may or hThe exhibit contains a wide variety of pottery, much of it incidentally representative of may not be related to the contents >•*«*contemporary work in the craft. A definite effort to emphasize high-fire ware, is being made of lhe %alious secti°ns.)by the society. And this is justifiable — in stoneware and porcelain the finest inherent qualities of pottery are achievableand offer the greatest chal¬lenge to the potter’s ability.The selections are excellent. Mostof the shapes are careful varia-tion of traditional ones and often "S'1*61" tastes-the glazes are equally subtle and Particularly commendable areconservative. However there do the Natzlers (though their best isoccur, though not in combination, not exhibited) for shape and col-a few fire bodies, flash and glassy or; the work of King for glaze;glazes, or meaningless shapes for and of Scheier for ambition. Acoredon coffee pot by Helen Reif- The poetry section also includes "Phoenix, one of a cycle of Fiske * OJ,H,,Gr,(,mVnprize poems by Michael Girsdan-sky, and Crystal by Jane W. Sted-man, who holds a Carnegie Teach¬ing.Fellowship in the College. The |(Jremainder of the essay section is „ ^Amnitsdevoted to a piece on Wallace Fox, Bed Fomi A Crmt'i fob of Work PATMUA MC&ANM*MNC ». NAMMI120 h’rv Booksler and a stone bowl by Charlotte Stevens’ Thirteen Ways of I^>ok ^Bach To BroadwayS. HUROK presentsBROADWAY'S HIT DANCESmCOMEDYI SONGS! BALLETS!"AN INTIMATE REVUE. AUDIENCES AREWELL ENTERTAINED!" —Time MagazinePrices: $4 20, 3.60, 3.00,2.40, 1.80OPERA HOUSEFeb. 19, 20, 21 (mot Sunday) Aronson are perhaps the finest inthe collection. A stoneware pot¬ter's pot by Patriarch BernardLeach evokes investigation and re¬flection.The show is the first of its sorton campus in recent years. The ing at a Blackbird by W. R. Keast,a professor of English at CornellUniversity and a criticism by El¬liott M. Schrero, Ph. D. candidatein the English Department, ofKeats’ Ode on a Grecian Urn. Thefiction section centers about Jef¬fery, a chapter from the Rite, a Sholompieces are well displayed and offer novel by iocai writer Arthur Cas-mformative texts written by Wil- tn]o Taken in the review sec.ham Tanon, UC instructor in pot- tion are ,^nguage as Gesture by^ry‘ ex]hlblt ,a^S af Richard P. Blackmur, The Young-thoughtful selection, the study of er American Scholar by Robert H.which will stimulate intelligent in- j^napp an(j Joseph J. Greenbaum,terest and develop critical faculty , * . _T , .of the craft. and Son£s for a New Ameri«» bySeymour Howord Charles G. Bell.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiimiiiiimiiii;On Sale MondayTheCHICAGOREVIEWMARIANNE MOOREREUEL DENNEYDAVID RIESMANLEO STAUSS (from page 8)aspects of the production to thereader. Suffice it to say thatArnold Perle’s adaptation andthe music of Serge Hovcy arethe work of craftsmen. Thework of Jacob Ben-Ami andAnne Revere needs no com¬ment. Under the direction ofHoward Da Silva the productionhas given to an audience whatis still the living truth in tradi¬tion. In a country whose demo¬cratic and humaniist traditionsare being replaced by forgeries—by the sadism and cynicismof the Spillanes—a little honestyabout the past is like a freshbreeze toward the future.R. R. J.Pier lllini throwMaroon wrestlersCoach Allan Bates was the onlyMaroon winner last Friday as hiswrestlers were pinned by a stronglllini team at Navy Pier. Chicagolost 27-3.This week the Maroons travelto Rock Island to face Augustanaand Western Illinois Teachers.Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372■HnHHHIBHPage 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 19, 1954JV cagers clinch league tittleAthletes to beginbaseball practice• Spring is officially here whenthoughts begin to turn from bas¬ketball and winter sports towardthe national pastime, basball.Baseball players are alreadypracticing during lunch hours inthe Fieldhouse, unlimbering theirwinter muscles. Official practicebegins March 1.Coach Anderson has issued aproclamation inviting all poten¬tial DiMaggios to try-out for thevarsity squad. Class sessions forhopeful players are being heldMonday through Friday from 12to 2 p.m. or from 3:30 to 5 p.m.Wisconsin downsvarsity gymnastsCoach Bud Beyer’s gymnastslost last Saturday to Wisconsin,52 44. Herb Taylor won the side-horse and high-bar events whileRon Graham tied for first on thetrampoline. Bob Herndon placedsecond in the trampoline competi¬tion.Tomorrow the gymnasts travelto Evanston to face the North¬western squad they defeated ear¬lier in the season.Letters...solemn contract between the adminis¬tration and the student body. The Codewas violated by the University's refusalto enforce the plan. At this point ISLrushed manfully to the battlementsand raised a great trophy of comprom-ice. They passed (on February 9) theStein amendment which delays enforce¬ment by derecognition of offending or¬ganizations, until fall of 1954 or per¬haps even until 1956. By refusing toenforce the Code now the Dean is clear¬ly shown not to be responsible for hisword pledged to the government. Thuseven eventual enforcement will dependon his mood, the pressures of the Boardof Trustees and even perhaps on theweather. This Is a sellout of the Michi¬gan Plan. Moreover, It Is an abdicationof the scanty power of Student Govern¬ment—a power which rested solely onthe right to control recognition of stu¬dent organizations. In effect, a StudentGovernment no longer exists on thecampus.This was the position that SRP mem¬bers found themselves In before the endof the meeting. A bill had been passedcompromising the fight against dis¬crimination (the platforms of bothparties committed SG to this struggle).The same bill tiad effectively abdicatedthe rights and powers of SG. Enoughhas already been said about the author¬itarian way the chair and the majorityparty cut off debate, insulated membersand spectators and misinterpreted rulesin Its frantic attempt to get the com¬promise through the Assembly.If Mr. Lichtenstein and his cohortswould make the effort of reading theplatform upon which our party was se¬lected to SG they would discover thatSRP is committed to fighting, not com¬promising discrimination. They wouldalso discover that SPR is pledged to astrengthening, not an abdicating, of theautonomy of- the Student Assembly.They would then realize that SRP hadtaken on February 9, the only actionproper to it. Walking out was the mosteffective possible means by which todramatize to the campus an offensiveaud undemocratic sellout.Michael Kaufman IN THE still of the night—high above a sleeping Americancity—an unidentified aircraft is spotted. In a matter ofseconds a lightning-like jet interceptor takes to the air.Unerringly, with an Aircraft Observer showing the way, theAir Force F-94 Night Fighter speeds to intercept thestranger. The Aircraft Observer is the man behind the pilot—the officer who keeps America’s planes flying on courseand on target. Without him the Air Force couldn’t do its job.What is the Aircraft Observer?He’s a Radar Officer . . . employing an all seeing eye thatpenetrates where human sight fails.He’s an Aircraft Performance Engineer Officer... know¬ing everything there is to know about his plane ... keepingit fit for the skies and ready for action.He’s a Navigation Officer .. . plotting his plane’s course... with an entire crew depending on him for a safe flight He’s a Bombardment Officer... in full control of the planeover the target area .. . the Air Force Otticer who “lowersthe boom” on the enemy.What the Aircraft Observer getsHe earns over $5,000 a year. His silver Aircraft Observerwings give him prestige and distinction, and he wears thobars of an Air Force Lieutenant. They mark him as theeyes, ears, and brains of America's Number One flying team.What it takes to be an Aircraft ObserverIThe Aircraft Observer must be sound of limb, keen of mind,and above all, must have the determination to be the best.To qualify as an Aircraft Observer you must be single,between 19 and 26*4 years old, and a high school graduate.However, it will be better for you and the Air Force if youstay in college and graduate before you apply. Then you,too, can be one of the best... as an Aircraft Observer.WHERE TO GET MORE DETAILS:Contact your nearest Aviation Cadet Selection Team,Air Force ROTC Unit or Air Force Recruiting Officer.Or write to: Aviation Cadet, Headquarters,U. S. Air Force, Washington 25, D. C.Wheaton defeated, 50^45, as Coach Stampfwins second consecutive private loop crownCoach Joe Stampf’s JV basketballers clinched their second consecutive Private SchoolLeague championship last Friday afternoon in Bartlett Gym.The junior Maroons defeated Wheaton Academy, 50-45, to assure first place honors.Wheaton had entered the contest tied with UC for the league leadership.The Maroons took an early lead and never trailed. The half-time margin of 10 points was cutin the final quarters as Wheaton players rushed UC dribblers and repeatedly stole the ball.But the Maroon chances weregreatly increased by the large of the season for the junior Ma- jubilant throngs in cheering each SPORTS EVENTS THIS WEEKToday Basketball Elmhurst 8:00 Field-HouseTomorrow Track Loyola,Bradley andNorthwestern 2:00 Field-HouseSwimming Washington 2:00 Bartlett PoolMonday Cr JV Private SchoolTuesday Basketball LeaguePrelims 7:00 Field-Housenumber of Wheaton fouls andby the excellent shooting of MitchWalkins who accounted for overhalf of the Maroon score with his2fi points.Todd forfeits gameThe contest was the final gameWhile rink meltshockey club winsA1 Selwood scored eight goalsas the ice hockey club pummeledDe Kalb on the melting ice be¬neath the North Stands last Satur¬day afternoon. The final scorewas Chicago 10, De Kalb 3.Skating was hard in the unusu¬ally moderate weather. By the endof the contest the rink was trans¬formed to a swimming pool andthe skaters splashed through wa¬ter and slush to advance the puck. roons. This week’s contest withTodd School had previously beenforfeited in favor of UC.Stampf has coached four cham¬pionship teams with JV basket¬ball here. The 1947 team broughtStampf his first victory, which hefollowed by leading the junior Ma¬roons to the crown in 1951 andagain in 1953. His team finishedthe current season with seven vic¬tories in eight contests.U-High cheerleaders attendAn overflow crowd filled Bart¬lett Gym to cheer the Maroons tovictory. Cheerleaders from Uni¬versity High led the rooting of tlTe Maroon basket and in booing thereferee’s decisions.A large contingent of Wheatonfollowers also attended, navingbeen conveyed to campus in sev¬eral school buses.In the curtain raiser Friday, thejunior juniors, the Frosh-sophteam from U-High lost to theWheaton Frosh-sophs, 51-31. Phi Psi, Coulter St. Louis drownswin intramurals UC swimmers(45)3 2Maroons (50) WheatonWatkins 11 4 3 Palmer 5Wasserman 115 Johnson 2 0 2Shakow 0 0 1 Ericson 0 0 1Jones 111 McKellin 574Small 16 2 Adolph 3 0 5Hodes 2 6 0 Beveridge 115Harper 102MAROONS 16 15 10 9—50WHEATON 11 10 11 13—45 Phi Kappa Psi fraternity coppedthe intramural basketball cham¬pionship witlfan 8-0 record for theyear. Zeta Beta Tau was a closesecond with 7-1 in the fraternitycompetition.Coulter house, although it lostits final game of the year to Linn,took first place honors in the col¬lege division with an 8-2 total.The divisional championshipwas being decided as the MA¬ROON went to press. St. Louis drenched the swim¬ming Maroons last Saturday 57-2t»in Bartlett Pool. Chicago took the300 yd. medley relay and Roy Por¬terfield won the 200 yd. free¬st roke. Bob Geidt was victor inthe 200 yd. backstroke.The final dual meet for varsityswimmers will be held tomorrowin Bartlett Pool when Maroonswimmers face Washington Uni¬versity.February 19, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 11.Maroon cagers fallas Pier, Teachersscore 30 point winsby Richard HerwittThe Chicago cagers were taken down to inglorious defeatat the hands of two excellent quintets this week. Last Satur¬day, the Illini of Navy Pier trounced the Maroons, 80-51; andWednesday, the men from UC were taken by Chicago Teach¬ers College to the tune of 87-53.Apparently feeling at home for the first time this seasonin a game away from theField-House, the Maroons jumped Lester tarns in good jobto an early lead against the Pier. Again Lester turned in a beau-The score showed a 15-12 advan- „tage at the first quarter. But the guarding Willie Jones,Illini recovered from their shock the deadly center of Chicagoand promptly ran the half-time Teachers, while Dick Homer heldrantally to 38-24. After that theypulled away at a steady pace.Lester cuts Pier scoreLaurels for the Pier game go toMaroon guard Bill Lester who,despite a heightmanaged to keepscoring aee Gary Viner, to eight ,al]ied i8and 14 respectiveiy.points. Bob Mann led the Maroonscoring with 17 points, with run¬ner-up Dave Smith accounting foreight.In the Teachers game the Ma-rons were scored upon just afterthe initial center jump and neverreally threatened to tie the game.The Teachers squad calmlypounded away at the basket whileChicago fought for every point itgot. At half-time the visitors hadas many markers as the Maroonshad at the end of the game. another fine shooter to a bareminimum of points. Helmar Ring-strom of Teachers led all scorerswith 23 points, while the Maroonsdisadvantage, were again paced in the scoringIllinois’ high- column by Smith and Mann whoHied 18 and 14 respectively.Tomorrow night the cagers playtheir last home game of the sea¬son against Elmhurst College.MAROONS (53) TEACHERS (87)Smith 5 8 2 Rlngstr’m 10 3 1Mann 5 4 2 Hennessy 5 0 3Garcia 1 0 0 Lecos 1 0 1Lonergan 4 0 3 Schultz 2 0 2Hubbard 0 2 1 Donahue 1 0 0Homer 0 2 2 Jones 8 0 4Lester 2 1 1 Lyden 1 0 2Walker 0 0 0 O’Farrell 4 5 1Colby 1 0 0 Reilly 3 1 3Snyder 1 0 1Moscato 3 0 1MAROONS 12 18 7 16—53TEACHERS 28 25 22 12—87 Photo by Joe WolfFrank Loomos, the Maroon's star hurlerFencers defeatedin two contestMaroon fencers dropped twomatches last Saturday by identi¬cal scores. Facing Wisconsin andDetroit teams in Madison, thefencers lost 15-12.Chicago won the epee competi¬tion 6-3 against both teams, bptlost in the foil and sabre matchesto both squads. Alex Shane madethe best showing for the Maroons,winning both his epee contests. Track records fallas Maroons defeatWheaton and Wayneby Justin Johnson %The Varsity Track team ran their season’s total to five vic¬tories against only one loss by winning a double-dual meetlast Saturday at the Fieldhouse, defeating Wheaton College67 2-3 to 36 1-3 and Wayne University 80 to 24.Chicago won eight of the 12 events against Wheaton andtook all but the high jump and broad jump against Wayne.Frank Loomos set new meetrecords of :06.4 in the 60-yd. dashand :08.0 in the 70-yd. low hurdles.Walt Deike set a new meet stand¬ard in, the two-mile run againstWayne, running 9:42.0. GeorgeMcCormick tied the 880 recordHarold Moore namedSTet aanerS„^e1ayMS <° board of fOiSteeSBradley, Loyola and Northwest¬ern will invade the FieldhouseSaturday for a quadrangular meetwith the Varsity in what looks tobe one of the best meets of theindoor season.in the Wayne meetJV team places secondIn the course of being thorough¬ly defeated by Dunbar TradeSchool last Thursday, the JV run¬ners edged out an old rival, LaneTech, in a triangular meet at theFieldhouse. Final score was Dun Harold A. Moore, senior vice-president of the Chicago Titleand Trust Co., was elected a mem¬ber of the board of trustees ofUC, it was announced Monday.Moores activities with the Uni¬versity include work with theCitizens Board and Alumni Foup-bar 51, University 31, Lane Tech dation. In the community, Moore0/1 is on the executive committee ofthe Community Fund of Chicago,Inc., a director of the WelfareCouncil of Metropolitan Chicagoand the United Service Organi-24.Winners on the JV team wereMike Chernoff in the pole-vault,Chuck Youse in the shot-put andDick Scupi in the 880. Captain Jim-NEA REPORTEducators condemn trendtoward big competition Brown scored second in the high- zation, and a member of the boardhurdles, 440 and the high jump, of the Salvation Army.Paul Rozin picked up a second in *+ ■the 880, while Dave Northrop was wrQGHSfrQ'QVGS , , ,placing third in the pole-vault.John Saada finished third in themile.Eby1 from page 1)series on means of achievingworld peace, which is being spon¬sored by the International HouseEducation Committee. Othershave been scheduled for the next (from page 9)Miss Bloch told how musi¬cologists had shattered her ro¬mantic notions about the song“Greensleeves” by explainingthat the title refers to the greensleeves worn by streetwalkersin order to avoid grass stains.The words of Jhe ballad makethis rather plausible:Thy gown was of the grassy green,Thy sleeves of satin hanging by,The National Education Association charged lastweek that emphasis on bigtime sports has becomeso exaggerated that even grade-school boys arefeeling the pressure.In strong terms the association condemned theinjection of high-powered competition, promotionand commercialism into school athletic programs.Traces of professional baseball’s farm systempervade athletic programs from the college as fardown as junior high school level, the NEAcharged.Unless this “alarming and unhappy trend” ischecked, they warned, the nation’s children canbe cheated educationally and possibly injured phy¬sically and mentally.NEA releases sports reportThis condemnation was revealed in a 116-pagereport, “School Athletics: Problems and Policies,”prepared by the educational policies commissionof the NEA and the American Association ofSchool Administrators. It was released at theA ASA convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey,last week.The 18 educators and laymen who compose thecommission urged schools to plan their athleticProgram tp benefit all students. Athletic programsshould be financed from school funds, rather thangate receipts, they said.Coaches abandon good sportsmanship“Stress on winning the game” pressures teach¬ers into pampering skilled athletes, forces coachesto abandon principles of good sportsmanship and causes students who are not athletically inclined tosuffer a loss ol face among their classmates.Recruiting pressure begins with professional in¬terest in college players and is passed from thecolleges to the high schools, which in turn startgrooming players in junior high schools, the re¬port continued.Business lure young athletesThe present trend is to lure 8- to 12-year-old boysinto hignly-organized sports. Unfortunately, thispressure is outside the jurisdiction of the schools,being brought from such places as adult organiza¬tions and business firms.“Interest in some colleges in recruiting highschool athletes leads to many abuses,” the reportcharged, condemning the prevalent practice of thefree trips to college campuses, elaborate entertain¬ments, phoney tryouts and financial inducementswhich many schools utilize to gain athletes fortheir teams.The commission concluded with the followingrecommendations:1) Eliminate highly organized competition inthe form of leagues and championships;2) Eliminate the tournaments, frequent con¬tests, long seasons and “little bowl games”;3) Eliminate trav&l to games beyond the im¬mediate neighborhood;4) Eliminate the playing of games on otherthan school property.“Athletic games in all cases should be playedwith the emphasis on fun, physical development,skill and strategy, social experience and goodsportsmanship,” the report concluded. ui Hanging dv,three Wednesday evenings, at 8 Which made thee be our harvest queen,- - in the East Lounge of Int. --?-yeA _thou woul.?nst not love me.p.mHouse.List future talksOn Feb. 24 — “Peace throughArmaments: A Military ManViews the Problem of Peace,” byCapt. Willard Chambers, FifthArmy; on March 3—“East-WestTrade: Road to Peace or Appease¬ment?”; and on March 10—“TheUN: Propaganda Weapon orMeans of Achieving WorldPeace?” by Quincy Wright, pro¬fessor of political science. Greensleeves was all my joy,Greensleeves was my delight;Greensleeves was my heart of gold,And who but Lady Greensleeves?”Or earlier:I bought the kerchiefs for thy headThat were wrought fine and gallantly;I kept thee both at board and bed,Which cost my purse well favorably.Greensleeves was all my Joy, etc.MAROON STAFF PARTYSaturday, February 20, 9 p. i3She PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET WHERE THE U OF CMEETS TO EATQcAcUrtvdFINE FOOD1321 East 57th Street Selective ServicebulletinAll eligible students who intendto take the Selective Service Col¬lege Qualification test in 1954should file applications at once forthe April 22 administration, Selec¬tive Service National Headquartersadvised today. .An application and a bulletin ofinformation may be obtained atany Selective Service local board.Following instructions in the bulle¬tin the student should fill out hisapplication immediately and mailit in the special envelope provided.Applications must be postmarkedno later than midnight, March 8,1954. Early filing will be greatlyto the student's advantage.Results will be reported to thestudent's Selective Service localboard of jurisdiction for use inconsidering his deferment os astudent, according to EducationalTesting Service, which prepares ondadministers the College Qualifica¬tion test.^fARLttt^OJDICKby At CAPT I'M NOT ANVFACE ff I'M AN LHONEST-TO-GOODNESS, LAWABIDING LION !! IN FACTI'M PRESIDENT OF VOU CAN'T FOOLFOSDICK.V-NO SELFRESPECTING LION WOULDEVER HAVE SUCH1 )/ BUT,WHERELF- cL. CAN A POOR,HELPLESSLION r—Ia. AT ANV TOILETRIESCOUNTER. OCTWILOROOTCREAM-OIL, CHARLIE.? IBUTTHATWOULD _BE ILLEGAL?MV NAMEIS LEONARD? 521614 DexelSTAFF MEMBERS ONLYWiMroot Cream Oil is America’s favorite hair tonic. It’s non alcoholic. Contains soothing lanolin. Grooms hair, relieves dryness, removes loose dandruff. Got Wildroot Cream-Oil, Charlie! tow as 29*. BRASS LEGSCorner mounting V-type6" set of 4. . $ 5.9512" 7.9521" 9.9510" 6.9516" 8.9528" ....Hermans935 E 55th st.Open thurs. til 9Fsge 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 19, 1954Classified...For Sale1946 Dodge club coupe, light blue—clean. $300. Call DO 3-1751 after 4 p.m.1940 Studenbaker In good running con¬dition. New battery and tires. $55. MI3-4058 after 6 p.m.Maple furniture, china, glass, etc. Leav¬ing city. For Information call weekdaysCE 6-6372, evenings FA 4-8710.Pesk. $15; Knight amplifier, $15; Web¬ster LP changer $10, hour spools of wire,$1.50 each. MU 4-4587.Brand new Remington razor. Retailsover $30. Bargain, $20. Call BO 8-4036of ter 8:30 p.m.PersonalsWant OMP offered this summer? Fillout petition in Dean Davey’s office be¬fore March 1.WantedStudent wants small, cheap garage,near campus. Paul Wenger, 5747 Uni¬versity. PL 2-9718.Speaker for hi-fi system. State make,model, and price. Call DO 3-6838.For RentNewly decorated room furnishedapartments. Also sleeping room. 2 blocksfom University. Linens, dally maid serv¬ice, reasonable rent. 6107 DorchesterAve. PL 2-9641.Furnished room kitchenette. Linen, re¬frigerator, utilities. $9.20 week. BU8-9736.Riders WantedMedical student driving non-stop LosAngeles March 19. Will take two or threedrivers. Harvey, FA 4-8520. 6 p.m.ServicesUkulele lessons given. Reasonable rates.Contact Bob Benjaminson, B-J, Room245. Phone MI 3-6000.Mathematics special instruction to fityour mathematical needs. Individual orgroup sessions at our Loop office or lo¬cation of your choice. Soglin Associates,ST 2-6727.Buy books cheap. All kinds. StudentBook Exchange, basement Cobb Hall.Tuesday, Thursday, 11-2.Now! Now! Now! Have Joe Wolf takeyour picture with your date at WashFrom!!LostManila envelope containing statisticaldata last Saturday between campusand Gordon’s. Leo Subotnik, MI 3-7319.Harper...(from page 7)books. Tower of Ivory, The Hap¬py Marriage, and The Pot ofEarth. Among the collection areoriginal printings of RobertFrost, T. S. Eliot, Amy Lowell,and others. Even the more fa¬mous examples would make along list.Poets' manuscripts preservedAnother interesting feature isthe collection of manuscripts. Itwas Miss Monroe’s practice tokeep the corrected proofs of eachissue in a large envelope. Alongwith the proofs were kept themanuscripts of the poems, ifthese were in hand-writing orsigned by the poets. Among them• are signed manuscripts by RupertBrooke, Tagore, Joyce, Lindsayand others.By far the most valuable partof the collection is the completefile of poets’ corespondence ac¬cumulated during the firsttwenty-four years of the maga¬zine. One of the most recent addi¬tions to the collection is the 400records of modern poets readingtheir own works, and records ofolder poets read by accomplishedreaders. Most of the modern poetsare represented, as are those fromas far back as John Donne.For people who want to readwhat the newspapers were sayingten, twenty or seventy years ago,the micro-film reading room canSupply a filmed facsimile. Newsof the past 75 years is still wait¬ing to be read.GUADALAJARASUMMER SCHOOLThe accredited bilingual summerschool sponsored by the Universi-dad Autonoma de Guadalojara 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. Rael, Box K.Stanford University, Calif. Friday, February 19Le Cercle Francals will sponsor an Illus¬trated lecture on “French Impression¬ists” by Joshua Taylor, assistant pro¬fessor of art, at 3:30 p.m. in Ida Noyeslibrary. Admission Is 25 cents to non¬members.Valentine Frolics sponsored by theInter - Varsity Christian Fellowshipwill take place at Ida Noyes, Cloisterclub, between 7:30 and 10 p.m. Theprogram will include games, refresh¬ments, singing and a devotional.Hillel Fireside: “Song of Songs: A Liter¬ary Approach” will be the subject ofa lecture by Abraham Malaural, visit¬ing lecturer from the Hebrew Univer¬sity in Jerusalem. Hillel Foundation,5715 Woodlawn, at 8:30 p.m. The Sab-both Service will precede the Firesideat 7:45 p.m.UC Badminton Club will meet at IdaNoyes, 7:30 p.m. The group is opento all UC students and staff members.“The Passion of Joan of Arc,” the lastof a Doc Film study group series ofthree will be shown in Social Science122 at 7:15 and 9:30 p.m. Admissionis by $1 series ticket only.“The Playboy of the Western World”will be presented by University Thea- events i*c &%ie£tre at 8:30 p.m. In Mandel Hall. Tick¬ets for 75 cents are available at theReynolds Club desk.Saturday, February 20Wash Prom, with music by Woody Her¬man and his Third Herd, will takeplace In Bartlett Gym from 9 p.m. un¬til 1 a.ni. Admission $5 per couple.Breakfast will be served in Hutchin¬son Commons following the dance.Sunday, February 21Rockefeller Chapel Service at 11 a.m.The Reverend Wallace W. Robbinswill preach.A Carillon recital will be given by JamesR. Lawson In Rockefeller MemorialChapel at 4 p.m.An Open House and Coffee Hour forstudents will follow the UniversalDay of Prayer Service. It will takeplace 8:30 p!m. at Chapel House, 5810Woodlawn Avenue.A Unfversal Day of Prayer for Students’Service will take place In RockefellerMemorial Chapel, at 7:30 p.m. Mr.Herluf Jensen, a member of the Cen¬tral Committee of the World StudentChristian Federation, will speak.The Plavbov of the Western World will be presented In Mandel Hall at 8:30p.m. by University Theatre. Ticketsfor 75 cents are available at the Rey¬nolds Club desk.Monday, February 22A German Language Table will meetat 6 p.m. In International House cafe¬teria. ,The Astronomy Club will meet to see amovie, "Explosions on the Sun” anddiscuss the alumni exhibit. The meet¬ing will be at 8 p.m., Eckhart 133.A French film, “The Well-Digger’sDaughter,” will be shown in the As-'sembly Hall of International House at8 p.m. Admission Is 50 cents.Tuesday, February 23Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship willmeet for luncheon and a talk by Mr.C. Stacy Woods, General Secretary ofIVCF on “Other Views of the Bible—Neo-orthodoxy.” Ida Noyes, thirdfloor, between 12:30 and 1:20 p.m.Everyone is Igvlted.“The Origins of the Alhambra and theSpirit of the Eleventh Century in ls-lalamic Spain” is the title of a lectureto be delivered In Breasted Hall at8:30 p.m. by Frederick P. Bargebuhr,professor of religion, at the State Uni¬versity of Iowa. The lecture Is spon¬sored by the Oriental Institute anddepartment of art.Student Government meeting In LawNorth at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, February 24A Carillon Recital will be presented inRockefeller Chapel at 4:30 p.m. byJames R. Lawson.The Pre-Med Club will meet to observeoperations at Billing* Hospital. Con¬tact officers of the club for furtherInformation.The Department of Anthropology willsponsor a lecture on '‘Anthropologyand the Humanities,” by MeyerFortes, professor of anthropology atthe University of Cambridge. SocialSciences 122 at 4:30 p.m.Communication Club will sponsor a talkand discussion on “The Problem ofNational Character—Method of Ap¬proach and Suggestions for Intercul-tural Communications.” Haskell HalLRoom 203, at 8 p.m.International House Discussion Groupwill hear a talk on “Peace througharmaments: A military man views theproblem of peace” by Captain WillardChambers of the Fifth Army. Thegroup will meet at 8 p.m. in the EastLounge of International House.Thursday, Feb. 25“Oliver Twist,” an English film, will beshown In International House, Eastlounge at 7 and 9 p.m. Admission35 cents.Sailing Club racing class. 7:30 p.m.,Columbia Yacht Club.Today's Chesterfield is theBest Cigarette Ever Made!The cigarette tested and approved by 30years of scientific tobacco research.The cigarette with a proven good recordwith smokers. Here is the record. Bi-monthlyexaminations of a group of smokers show noadverse effects to nose, throat and sinusesfrom smoking Chesterfield.Deborah Kerr stars in the Broadway Hit “Tea and Sympathy**The cigarette that gives you proof ofhighest quality—low nicotine—the tasteyou want—the mildness you want.America's Most Popular2-Way CigaretteCopyright 1914, Licetn A Mr«» To**CCO Cor