■f/ Alumni plan reunion activities ^ team defeated// Twenty-two campus-wide tours, a dinner at the Quadrangle Club, and an all-student vari¬ety program will highlight the alumni open house program scheduled for the weekend ofFebruary 27. iThis program is a continuation of a series of annual mid-year reunions spon¬sored by the Alumni Association and co-ordinated by Howard Mort, the association’s execu¬tive secretary.The activities are open to all a scene from “Playboy of theChicago alumni; this year a rec¬ord crowd of one thousand par¬ticipants is anticipated, an alumnispokesman said. Western World,” the glee club isalso scheduled to present a med¬ley of songs. Comedy and acro¬batic will be provided by Acro- Delougaz, curator of the OrientalInstitute of his experiences asfield director of the first Ameri¬can expedition to Israel; an elec¬tion-year discussion of method-Plan calls for the first phase theatre and their pint-sized ology in poll-taking and opinionof the program, beginning at 3:45p.m., Saturday, to feature an all¬campus open house during which22 tours will visit special depart¬ments to examine new facilities counterparts,theatre.” “Miniature Aero- evaluation by Clyde Hart, directorof the National Opinion ResearchCenter; and an exhibition of theReading Clinic.Harold Urey will answer theTo accommodate the large num¬ber of participants, four of the 22tours are being given twice, onceand learn of the progress of the at 1:45 p.m. and again at the later question “When was the earthdepartments during the past year. time. The tours to be given twice formed and what was its source?”After dinner and a visit to the are: a tour of the meteorology de- in a talk on “The Origin of thepartment with a demonstration ofhow air currents are traced andweather forecast a week in ad¬vance: a description by Pinhausstudent art exhibit in the Rey¬nold’s club, alumni will see a newall-student variety program.University Theater will present Earth.” Following the talk visi¬tors to the atom science buildingswill inspect the cyclotron andbetatron. on NBC quiz showOn The College Quiz Bowl Washington and Lee Universitydefeated a team of UC students by a score of 250-200. Theprogram was recorded last night in Rosenwald 2 and will bebroadcast Sunday at 5 p.m. over NBC radio stations (InChicago, WMAQ-670).The UC members, Sylvia Boyd, Stan Fox, Leonard Freid-man and Joel Kupperman will “each receive a Longine wrist- they face a team of Princetonwatch for their participation boys next Sunday,on the program. The members of the ChicagoWashnigton and Lee receives team were chosen after a series500 dollars to be spent by the of tests administered by Studentschool for winning the contest. Government and the office of theThe southern university now en- Director Activities.The tests wereters its third week of competition given to determine theii “generalon the program. Having defeated knowledge in the fields of polit-the girls from Smith last week, ical science, history, literature,geography, music, are, sports andcurrent events,” according toClive Gray, Student Governmentpresident.Caylon askscourt's viewon SC by-law Israeli off icialto talk hereUniversity of Chicago, February 26, 1954 . D 1MAROON loses social life;StudentCode was breachedThe MAROON has been forbidden to hold social events forthe next ten weeks by William Birenbautn, director of StudentActivities. This action was taken because the MAROON helda staff party the night of the Wash Prom and because theparty was not registered withthe Student Activities office. Brown stated: It seems to me. . that the sections of the Code inBirenbaum stated in a memor- qUestjon have two purposes: first,andum to Eli Stein, chairman of to prevent conflict in time amongthe committee on recognized stu- student activities, and second, todent organizations (CORSO), that keep social events from becom-the annearance of an advertise- *ng to° ‘wild.’ The MAROON partytlu appearance ot an advertise wag a c]osed staff party and wasment in the February 19 MA- not meant to compete with theROON for thp staff party and the Wash Prom. Hard liquor was notoccurrence of the event violated served. Therefore, I do not feelcertain provisions of the Student tbat violated the spirit of theCode. Soc 2 rescheduledThe Social Sciences 2 quarterlyexamination has been rescheduledto 1 -2:30 p.m. in Judd 126 onWednesday. March 17, the Collegedean's office announced.There was a typographical er¬ror in the listing for the Englishquarterlies. The English B exam¬ination will be held on Wednesday,March 17, at 10-12 p.m. in thefollowing rooms:sec. aa) Cobb 312sec. ac) Cobb 103sec. ba> Cobb 101sec. be) Cobb 416sec. ca) Cobb 102sec. ga) Cobb 104secs. ab. bb. cb, da, gb) Judd 126 “A vacancy shall be filled by amember of the same party as theone who resigned to create thevacancy.” *This section of the Student Gov¬ernment By-Laws is being con¬tested by Aubrey Galyon, ISL ma¬jority leader.Galyon is exercising the right ofany student to question the con¬stitutionality of an SG law.Student Faculty AdministrationCourt will announce its decisionon this controversial issue today.The argument was brought be¬fore the Court last Friday. SRPmembers Huey Thurschwell andPaul Breslow defended the by¬law.Members of the court areGeorge Kaufmann’ chief justice,Anton De Porte, Dan Feldman,Albert Sciaky, Donald Meiklejohn,chairman of social science 3, Mal¬colm Sharp, professor of law,and Robert C. Wolner, assistantdean of students. “Peace in the Near East"will be the topic of Abba Eban,ambassador of Israel to theUnited States and chief Israelidelegate to the UN, in an addressMonady, March 8, at 8 p.m. inJudd 126. The talk is sponsoredby the Political Science Associa¬tion.Eban, who has been activelyengaged in Israel’s politics fortwelve years, became his coun¬try’s Ambassador Extraordinaryand Plenipotentiary to the UnitedStates in 1950. Since his appoint¬ment, he has been engaged instrengthening the relationshipsbetween the United States andIsrael. He has also been active insettling problems about Germanreparations. Previously, he wasa representative of Israel in thatstate’s fight for independence andlater in her fight for admissionto the UN.Prom queen describes reactionsCode and Regulations.These provisions provide that a by Etaine FomperWith the crowning of Miss Janice Porter as queen, the University of Chicago queen con¬test effected its finale at the Washington Promenade last Saturday night. The new queenBrown continued: “However, it was chosen over four other final contestants, who subsequently became her court..is obvious that legally we are Miss Porter is completing her second year in the College and is a graduate of the Univer-registered student organization guilty of violating the Code, as sity High school. Although just sixteen, she is fairly certain in what field she will essentiallymay not have an activity at the charged by the student Activities concentrate for her future career. Following two more years in the College, she intends tosame time as an all-campus activ- office. Therefore, we accept any enter the social sciences divi-reasonable penalty imposed by siQn for research work in a were difficult to recall for Miss In response to a query on howbranch of that department. Porter, except that “I trembled she felt now that all the celebra-Considered in her plans is the pos- from head to foot.” The poised, tion and clamor were over, Missity (such as Wash Prom); and itstates that all parties of these or¬ganizations and a list of chap¬erones must be registered and ap¬proved by the Student Activitiesoffice.Birenbaum made chargesAction against the MAROONwas initiated by the Student Ac¬tivities office when Birenbaum re- that office without appealing tothe SFA court.”CORSO accusesSU of illegalpublicity displayStudent Union has been ac- sibility of culminating her studies .five foot, seven inch brunette de- Porter replied, “I only hope thatin a teaching career.Speaking of the University’spresent program of educationMiss Porter said, “Two years ofstudy at UC have convinced methat a liberal arts education is nec¬essary for a fuller comprehensioncused of illegally distributing and appreciation of specialized scribed her present feelings as I actually deserved the h o n o i“awfully happy—terribly excited.” which has been bestowed on me."quested that CORSO of Student promotional material for the material.Government take disciplinary action against the MAROON. COR¬SO met last Tuesday and recom¬mended that the student activitiesoffice forbid the MAROON tohold social events through the Campus provides opportunityOn the subject of UC campusactivities, . “This campus providesthe opportunity to meet peoplewith diverse backgrounds andvarying interests,” she observed.Washington Promenade. The ac¬cusation was made at the Commit¬tee on Recognized Student Activ¬ities (CORSO) meeting last Tues¬day. Action by CORSO was de-fered until its next meeting.The regulations which SU may Revealing her own “varying in¬sixth Saturday of the spring quar- have violated are similar to those to_„ct.c » Pnrtpr’s extra-cur-ter. Birenbaum adopted and im- on which SRP was indicted and the lmutposed this recommendation. Un- convicted by SG and the Student neuter en P®der the Code, the MAROON may Faculty Administration Court, of diversity from the more seriousappeal this action to the Student- Washington Promenade advertise- organizations. Student Forum,Faculty - Administration (SFA) ments were placed on the tables World University Service, and Stu-Court. the Commons and the Coffee dent union, for example, to suchThe MAROON may be further Sbop „ Tbe regulations provide erouDs as Acrotheatrepenalized if Student Government tbal * recognized student organ-votes to indict the paper before izatlons may post materials on and Pep Club,before the SFA court. So far no designated bulletin boards pro- When asked what importanceaction has been taken by SG. vided that they^ conform to the s^e thought the Miss UC ContestEditor of the MAROON, Arthur Regulations . . . (Part One, 1J.-B, had -n the roje of a unjversity,When asked about the posters, particularly UC, and the effect ofWilliam Birenbaum, director of such a contest on student interest,student activities, stated: “The Miss Porter stated that studentsmaterials in question were dis- **p]ace varying emphasis on dif-played as a result of special ar- , . . . . ..rangements between this office lerent iace,s of the Umve,rsl‘>’change in location are included and Residence Halls and Com- community . . . for part of thein changes in the International mons. The Wash Prom is an of- campus the UC Queen ContestHouse movie schedule. Beginning ficial University event, largely was important—it certainly wasMonday, February 22, Monday financed by and partially planned ^or me „night movies will be shown in the by this office. You may consider '. ,East Lounge instead of the As- these signs the notices of an ReJ; ,.sembly Hall, Admission will be official agent of the University, Recollections ot the moment herlowered to 35 cents. namely, this office." name was pronounced as QueenInt. House setsnew movie priceReduction in admission andDean of *tudctnfr* Robert M. Strosier crown* Janice Porter, Mi** UC, atthe Washington Promenade./■'wglljfr ' ,v' —Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 26, 1954Advance Registration for theSpring Quarter 1954Law schoolSocial SciencesMarch 8-12 HumanitiesGraduate library schoolSocial service administrationMarch 9-12 Business SchoolFederated Theological schoolsPhysical sciencesMarch 15-19 Biological sciencesMedical schoolCollege students already registered for the spring quarter willreceive their class tickets through the mail by March 8. Studentswishing to make changes in their registrations must make ap¬pointments with their advisers during the registration period,March 8 to 19.The student begins his registration in the office of the appro¬priate dean of students. The last day to pay tuition without alate-payment fee will be Tuesday, March 30. Critic O’Faolainto discuss heroesat Mandel talkSean O’Faolain, Irish novelist,biographer, and critic, will deliverthe 189th William Vaughn MoodyLecture on Tuesday. O’Faolainwill speak on “Six Novelists inSearch of a Hero” in Mandel Hallat 8:30 p.m.O’Faolain is the author of “ANest of Simple Folk,” “A Purseof Coppers,” “Wolfe Tone,” “TheIrish,” “Summer in Italy,” andother books.Admission is without ticket andwithout charge. Education chairmanleaves UniversityMaurice F. Seay, professor and chairman of the departmentof education, has announced his resignation and his departurefrom the University. Seay is leaving to assume the positionof director of education of the Kellogg Foundation.In an interview with the MAROON Seay stated, “I wasfaced with a choice between ~two very desirable alterna- offered more opportunities totives, accepting the offer of this me-position or remaining here. Only Seay s duties with the Kelloggafter considerable thought did I Foundation will consist of makingdecide that the Kellogg position maj°r policies with respect toraising funds for educational pro-Poet SchwartzSG amends election bydaws to teach at ucTwo amendments to the by-laws of student government, pertaining to elections, werepassed at the student government meeting Tuesday night.The first of the two proposed amendments contained two parts, only one of which waspassed. This part, passed unanimously as a by-law of student government, established thetimes of both the SG and the NSA elections to be the Thursday and Friday of the fourthweek of the autumn and spring quarters, respectively. It also provided that the announce¬ments of elections, filing pro- —cedures, rules defining valid PR, parties will not run their best votes are usually spread outballots, and other pertinent infor- candidates, but will rely simply among several candidates. There-ination shall be made at least one on their platforms and machines, fore a system of PR tends to per-week prior to the deadline for fil- A person might be prominent in a petuate minority groups andbug petitions and shall be promi- political party but still disliked gives them the right to voice theirlently displayed on campus and by the campus. We are going fur- opinions.”through an all-campus newspaper, ther and further towards creating The other amendment thatMo FR vote foils a stratified political system.” passed concerned the jurisdictionThe second part of the bill, con- Lichtenstein (SRP) declared of the court in election disputes,timing provisions which are in- that fbe present system, whereby It provided that during the weekCompatible with PR, received a a political party can receive forty of a general election the SFAf©te of 20-12, but not the neces- per cent Df the vote and still have Court shall have jurisdiction int*ry two-thirds vote. A motion onjy one.third of the seats in the the interpretation and enforce-Ifas made^by Paul Breslow (SRPL government, is not democratic. ment of election laws. Any candi-PR destroys brood parties” date’ an^ electoral group, or party grams.“I’m not leaving,” Seay contin¬ued, “because of any lack of con¬fidence in the University. In fact,my confidence in it now is greater_ . „ . * .. . than what it was when I cameDelmore Schwartz, writer a d here three and a half years ago.critic, is to be a visiting teacher at j’Ve come to know the Universitythe University of Chicago during and its programs bettei. I thinkthe Spring Quarter, the depart- the program here nas beenment of English has announced* changed in response to new situa-Schwartz is to teach two courses, tions, and I fully approve of theseone in advanced creative writing changes.”and the otfier in modern American geay Wju leave the Universitypoetry (1914-1940).Schwartz is an associate editorof the Tartisan Review and hascontributed to that magazine andthe The .Saturday Review, TheKenyon Review, Poetry, The Se-wanee Review, The Nation, TheNew Republic and Commentary.Minority floor leader, to considerthese two parts separately, since*nese iwo pans separately, since ' may appeal for a court order. Anhe pointed out that the second PR tends to encourage splinter in:unction mav be jssue(i bv anart of the bill would nermanent- £rouPs to run, asserted Marlonpart of the bill would permanently eliminate the possibility of proportional representation in coming elections. He continued that Smith (ISL). It tends to destroy P?nel,of two of the justices, pre-a broad-based political party. “It vlously selected by the court. Anyis my opinion that a political Party to the disPute may ask thefull court to review the action.court must meet within twoit was undemocratic to pass a by- Par*y with a broad base is morelaw closing the door to PR with- democratic. You have more disci- aDDeal has beenout first submitting the question PIme5 flghts are worked out with- daJ* after the aPPeal ha* beento the campus in the form of a in the Party rather than on thegovernment floor.”Even though a minority group sometime in May.Lohman to speakon PW's, KoreaRecently returned from Korea,Joseph Lohman, lecturer in so-His latest books are Genesis ciology and Democratic candidate(1943), a story in verse and prose; tor sheriff, will talk cn his expe-The World Is a Wedding (1948), a riences in the Far East as head ofcollection of short stories; and lbe UN “explanations” team.Vaudeville for a Princess (1950), This will be his first lecture toa collection of poems. Two other an all campus gathering since hisbooks published in 1938 and 1941 return. Lohman will be sponsoredcontain fiction, poetry and dra- by the Young Democrats on Mon-mas. Schw’artz taught at Harvard day in Soc. Sci 122 at 8 p.m. Ad-University from 1940 to 1952 and mission will be free and all stu-last year taught at Princeton. dents and faculty are invited.referendumSince the vote of a member ofthe assembly on this question only gets ten per cent of themight be determined by whether votes, it gets ten per cent of theor not he favored PR, Clive Gray, seats under PR, stated Frankpresident of student government, Kirk (SRP). “This is as it shouldruled that the discussion on the be. Under the present systembill could concern itself with the such a group has no voice as theirmerits of PR.Golyon: "PR aids machines'*Aubrey Galyon (ISL) statedthat the common opinion is thatwith PR, the campus will be bet¬ter represented. “However,” hesaid, “if we should operate under Portraits byLOUISE BARKERPhotographer1457 E. 57th St. BU 8-0876 ALEXANDER'S THE GREATPLACE TO EAT OFF CAMPUSOPEN DAY AND NIGHTYOUR HOSTS WILL BEGEORGE KYROS PETE HRISTAKOS1137 - 39 East 63rd StreetStudents — Facultythe Socialist Party is holding anorganizational meeting at 5721S. Kenwood, March 1, 8 p.m.Members - Ex-members - FriendsEye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372McCarthyism,what it is—and how tofight itSpeaker Murry Weissstaff writer for"The Militant"on national tourSocialist Workers Mall777 W. AdamsSat., March 6 8:30 p.m. Big Rush On For New ArrowsAs Color "Clicks” with CoedsSurvey shows that gals favormen wearing Arrow Shirts instripes, checks and solidsCollegians throughout the country are showingtheir colors — in new check, plaid, solid tone*Arrow shirts. Reported favorites for their dash¬ing good taste, they have the latest collar styles.ARROWTRADE ® MARK features the “smoothest line”in town...Arrow Shirtsin checks,stripes,solid colors*4.50 upTry a line that'll wow your women—our line of colorful, newArrow Shirt*. The/re the "lasfcword" in ityle-in trim, goodtaste. And we have a handsome selection in checks, plaids,solid colors. See how they pep up your wardrobe — andyour appearance, too — in a wide range of the world'ssmartest collar styles. Tapered to fit your torso in fine “San¬forized"® fabrics that won't shrink more than 1%. Come,look over our collection of Arrows today.-Chicago - Evanstae - Oek Park - Gary - Joliet - Alton.SHIRTS • TIES • UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTSWEAR1February 26, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Wash Prom weekend 'success'Dance called ‘UC’s best’by Student Union prexy“Bartlett Gymnasium is not the ballroom of the PalmerHouse, but it was the scene of UC’s most successful dance inrecent years,” said Bruce Larkin, president of Student Union.“While the cost of the band was much greater than any othersince Tex Beneke played for us in 1948,” he continued, “thefavorable reaction of those who attended seemed to justifythe expense.”Larkin’s enthusiasm was echoed by students who singledout as high points of Wash msm**** ^ A ^ Dean Strozier and Miss UC of 1954, Jan Porter, Mrs. Strozier; Al Gruber, chairman of the Wash Promafter the coronation ceremony Saturday night, leading committee; Helen Fish; Harry Oleynkk; and Jamiethe grand march of the 1954 Washington Promenade. Redmond, a queen contest finalist.To the left of Miss UC and her escort are: Chris Smith;Prom Weekend the BartlettGym decorations, UT’s pro¬duction of “Playboy of the West¬ern World,” and breakfast in can¬dlelit Commons.“A peachy idea,” said LangCollins of Green House onthe subject of Bartlett’s use asballroom. “It was convenient,”she added, “and it was largeenough that there was space todance without jostling your neigh¬bor.”Paula Sansone, anotherGreen resident, also liked thechoice of Bartlett as the Prom’sscene. She thought though thatdress was not as formal as a hotelballroom might have produced.Miss Ferror pleasedChairman of the Wash PromQueen Contest committee,Betty Ferrar, was also pleasedwith the dance’s outcome and itslarge attendance. She said that341 tickets were sold—an increaseof 160 over last year’s showing.The opinion of many students isthat this was due to the fame ofWoody Herman's band, but Lar¬kin said, “Whether we shall in thefuture hire so well known a bandis a question which future Stu¬dent Unions will have to answer.If campus reaction is any indica¬tion. I would say that such astep would be well advised.” •Heads namedWash Prom committee headswere: Bill Rosenthal, decorationchairman; Betty Ferrar, contestchairman; Chuck Curtis, financechairman; Ray Wilkerson, saleschairman; Gil Dahlberg, program¬ming chairman; and Noel Perl¬man and Lou Schaeffer, publicitychairmen. The ballroom decora¬tions were due to Walter Jesky’splanning and Ray and P e r d i t a' Kcfo \ with i5Xopy^\’and meet THE PEOPLE ofHawaiiI4th ANNUAL GIRL’S STUDY TOUkl[Beach rasldanca, special events![conducted. $495 49 days.1_ See your travel agent.STOP TOURS, Berkeley, Calif. Isp Glee Club to present songat two concerts this weekThe University Glee Club is scheduled for two appearanceswithin this week. The first will find the club sharing MandelHall stage with Acrotheater and Collegium Musicum at theannual alumni show tomorrow evening. The second will be awinter quarter concert to be presented in Graham TaylorChapel next Friday at 8:30 p.m.For students wishing to at-To the music of Woody Herman's band, Queen Jan Porter and herpartner, Chris Smith, dance at Wash Prom, held in Bartlett Gym lastSaturday.Nelson’s execution. Approximate¬ly 50 persons were actively en¬gaged in working for the successof the Washington Promenade,including Don Fisher, BurtonJudson council head, and An ShihCheng, Interdorm council head.During ticket sales, many sec¬tors of the university were be¬sieged; International House, di¬visional students, faculty andalumni received special attention.Harold Donohue, editor of thealumni magazines, aided thecause by printing stories on^theevent in both Tower Topics andthe University of Chicago maga¬zine.'Excited students'Director of Student Activities,William Birenbaum, said “Therehave been few events that haveexcited students as much as theWashington Promenade did. Itwas a success because everyonehad a good time.” Birenbaumstated that the Wash Prom was“financially satisfactory,” and that he favors “having on campusan event of this scope again.”In gratitude to those who tookpart in the preparations for theProm, Bruce Larkin asked thatthe following message be pub- onPnincr pxerrises of the BerkshireWished to the campus: “The Union °P!T? ,‘h'^s„h*Ietend the alumni affair thereare a few tickets availablefrom Glee Club members. Admis¬sion to the Graham Taylor Chapelconcert will be without ticket andwithout charge.The concert program featuresRandall Thompson’s “The Peace¬able Kingdom,” a sequence ofsacred choruses for unaccompa¬nied mixed voices. The text isfrom the prophecy of Isaiah.Also to be performed is Thomp¬son’s “Alleluia.” This compositionwas written at the request of thelate Serge Koussevitsky for the G. Wallace Woodworth on July8, 1940.The motet “Hail GladdeningLight” by another contemporarycomposer, Canada’s Healy Willan,will also be presented. Dr. Willanis organist and choirmaster ofSt. Mary Magdalene Church inToronto.Two Negro spirituals “Roll, Jor¬dan, Roll” and “Rock-a My Soul”complete the program.Thompson, born in New Yorkin 1899, is a graduate of HarvardUniversity and one of few Amer¬ican composers to have held bothwishes to thank the many peoplewho worked on the Prom. It is afact—and not merely an over¬worked expression—to say thatthe Prom would not have beenpossible without their help.” the Prix de Rome and the Gug-Music Center. This first perform- genheim Foundation Fellowship,ance was by the student body of He is currently Professor of Mu-the Center under the direction of sic at Harvard.Student robbedA UC student was robbed oncampus last Wednesday night.The student, who has askedthat his name be withheld, hadhis watch and eight dollarstaken from him by threearmed boys ranging in agefrom about fourteen to eight¬een. Nothing more is knownby the police about the iden¬tity or whereabouts of theassailants.RESTRINGWITH (Half Price’ world trip offeredby American Youth Hostels“See twice the country at half the price.” With this phrasethe American YouthTHostels, Inc., announces its 1954 summerprogram of trips throughout the world.Travel in the various locales is usually by foot or bike. Alltraveling is done in co-educational groups of ten.Information and descriptive folders will be available at ameeting to be held Wednes¬day, 7:30 at Ida Noyes Hall.Eighteen trips are scheduledfor this coming summer. Trips toEurope, lasting 10 or 11 weeksincluding transportation time, willbe conducted in England,. France,western, northern, southern,southwest, and central Europe.Sailings are from New York, Bos¬ton, and Montreal. The cost variesfrom $575 to $686.Those interested in trips withinthe Americas are offered a greatvariety, ranging from a four weektrip to New England for $100 toa seven week tour of Hawaii byair at a cost of $590. In between,in cost, time, and distance, aretours to Quebec, Nova Scotia, NewEngland, the Canadian Rockies,Alaska and the Yukon, and Mex¬ico.If time is short and the “EuropeUrge” strong, several trips areoffered as a solution: four weeks;to the British Isles, $700; Franceand the low countries, $745; andthe Rhine Valley, $760.STANDS UPin your rackot• Moisture Immune• Lasting LivelinessCOSTS LESSthan gutAPMOX. STRINGING COST!Pro-Fectod Braid.... $6.00Mvltl-Ply Braid $5.00At tennis shops andsporting goods stores.ASHAWAY BRAIDED RACKET STRINGChoice of The Champions mccarthyism 1954:The American Citizen Talks BackHear a free discussion on civil liberties in the United States byHarvey O'Connor 1. F. Stone Eorl B. DickersonWriter, labor publicist who de¬fied Hie McCarthy Senate inves¬tigating committee. He is authorof "Mellon's Millions," "The As-tors," "The Guggenheims," andothar books. Widely known newspaper report¬er and columnist whose cour¬ageous reporting of tha Wash¬ington scena has won nationalacclaim. He now publishes the1. F. Stone Weekly Newsletter. Pominent local attorney, formeralderman and leader in civic andnotional affairs. He is presidentof the National Lawyer's Guildand a national board member ofthe NAACP.Sunday, Feb. 28, 8:30 p.m., K.A.M. Temple, 50th & DrexelCHICAGO COMMITTEE FOR ACADEMIC AND PROFESSIONAL FREEDOM UC Red Crosschapter to openannual fund driveThe University of ChicagoAmerican Red Cross chapter hasannounced the beginning of itsannual fund raising drive in con¬junction with the national cam¬paign. Norman Strominger, a rep¬resentative of the UC chapter saidthat the campus drive will be onbetween March 1 and 5.In its bulletins for the 1954drive, entitled “Do unto others..and “Facts for 1954,” the RedCross has outlined the purposesof its drive. Among these objec¬tives are services to the ArmedForces and veterans, the blood pro¬gram, disaster, safety, and nurs¬ing services, and the Junior RedCross and International Relations.The Red Cross appeal for thisyear has set a minimum goal of$3,450,000 for this area. In settingaside the month of March, Presi¬dent Eisenhower has said: “Wgfind the Red Cross on duty every¬where . . . always true to theirbelief that people, and only peo¬ple, matter...”MONTHLY REVIEWASSOCIATESinvite you to hearLao Hu barman onBehind the Lobor Problem TodayTonight, Feb. 26 — 8:30 p.m.Woodrow Wilson Room116 S. MichiganStwdont Rote 75«/Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 26, 1954MAROON prints news only pf£® " at. t.bp TTniversitv rIssued once weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at the publica-lion 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 tree of charge, and subscriptions bymail, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p.m„ Monday through Friday.Arthur Brown Richard E. Wardeditor-in-chief managing editorHews editors: Naomi Birnbaum, Allen JangerHews Feature editor: Nellie StonemanFeature editor: Daniel QueenSports .-alitor: Paul A. HoffmanCopy editor: Shirley LongAdvertising manager: Reva BrownProduction manager: Joanna HerlihyCartoonist: Ray NelsonCopy staff: Jerry Ex, Pam BrownPhotographers: Joe Wolf, Richard KluckholnFrom the MAROON Constitution, Article VI: To becomeeffective as voicing the opinion of the Chicago MAROONeditorials must receive a two thirds majority of the affirma¬tive and negative votes cast at the meeting consideringthem. Editorials receiving a simple majority may be printedover the names of those approving, at the discretion of theauthor. Student Union has recently published a report which states thatthere is a general feeling that “the UC social program was beingseverely hampered and harmed by a lack of publicity, recognition,and communication”; and that the MAROON fails to give the socialprogram enough space. The report goes on to say: “Furthermore—and this is the major problem—we want social ballyhoo—publicityand promotion—as well as communication.”Therefore, Student Union has decided to publish a weekly paperof its own, the Student Union Forecast.We feel that the MAROON must make clear its position on cover¬age of campus social events.1) The MAROON attempts to cover news of general interest toUC students. This includes social events as well as academic, cul¬tural, religious, sports, and (campus) political news. However, theMAROON attempts always to present in its news pages facts, notopinions. Therefore such expressions as “interesting,” “jolly,” “gay,”or “exciting” must be left out of news stories concerning socialevents, future or past. The facts presented in a non-partisan papermust be indisputable facts insofar as it is possible to make them so.But the MAROON does try to give adequate coverage, especiallyof announcements and advances, to all campus activities.2) The MAROON Calendar of Coming Events is open to all recog¬nized student organizations who wish to use it. This calendar is nevercut to make room for other articles.3) The MAROON does not print ballyhoo for any organization,including itself. A friend of mine, who is a studentat the University of Chicago has toldme that due to the atmosphere nowprevailing at the U of C and the generalapathy of the student body, schoolspirit, as well as enrollment, has beendropping.An esoteric clan at the U of C, com¬monly referred to as the “RAH, RAH!”element, has been trying to alleviatethe apathetic situation. The recentWash Prom, the Pep Club, Cap &Gown, the SU Forecast, and the succes¬sive crowds at varsity basketball gamesseem to Justify their attempts.But why is it that a small, yet nolsv,group of “intellectual snobs” object toany resurgence of campus activities?Can it be that they are trying to moldeveryone else in their own image? Thissame objection was raised towards Cap& Gown for their harmless, althoughpopular, Hortense Fandangle advertise¬ment in the “Wash Prom Phoenix.”I must confess that 1 have a solutionfor student apathy at the U of C. Toparaphrase Mister Publius’ letter in lastweek’s MARO.ON, I would urge Mr.Klmpton—as a goodwill gesture—to giftwrap the Phi Gams, DUs, Phi Delts,Zebes, etc.; the Cap & Gown staff; thePep Club; and Bill Birenbaum, and re¬turn this spirit-spreading package tothe University of Chicago campus.Snickerty - snack! Snickerty - snack!Snickerty-snack.— PortirioCode must be revisedLast Saturday the MAROON received a copy of the followingletter:,“On page 11 of the Feb. 19, 1954, MAROON, an advertisement ap¬peared reading: ‘MAROON staff party, Saturday, February 20,9 p.m., 5216% Drexel. Staff members only.’“The appearance of this announcement and/or the occurrence ofthis event violates Part I, IV, Paragraphs c, h, g, and 1 of the Code,and Part II, Regulations B, I, and“Under Article Two, Section Six of the Statute, I recommend thatthe Assembly take the appropriate disciplinary action against theMAROON. Within the provisions of the same section of the Statute,it is my recommendation that the MAROON be prohibited from spon¬soring further social activities until further notice. I will await theadvice of your Committee before taking this step.(signed) W. Birenbaum”In other words, William Birenbaum jntends to restrict theMAROON under provisions which have been rarely enforced. Why?Because we scheduled a party for staff members only on the nightof the Wash Prom and printed an announcement of the party. Wedid this knowing full well that only three members of our staff wereattending the Prom and that we would be offering it no conceivablecompetition. We can only interpret Birenbaum’s charges as an ex¬tension ad absurdum of the arbitrary and undemocratic use of theCode that has been developing on the part of the Administration.Up to the past few months and since the Student Code and Billof Rights was adopted, the Administration has disregarded its trivialprovisions and relaxed the unduly restrictive ones. The Code wasapproached in a consistently liberal manner—for the Code originallygrew out of the widespread protest over a number of repressiveactivities on the part of the Administration.Nevertheless, since the advent of the new chancellor, the Code andits Bill of Rights have become endangered to the point that now theAdministration discounts and backs down on the Code’s more liberalprovisions, such as the Michigan Plan, and then proceeds to renderthe entire Code ridiculous by castigating the MAROON for throwinga party!The attitude of the present Administration had its graphic begin¬ning in the suspension of the MAROON and dismissal of its editorin the Autumn of 1951. In its action it completely disregarded theBill of Rights and thereby provoked strong protest on this and othercampuses and received the criticism of the National Student Asso¬ciation Academic Freedom Committee.Yet possibly because the protest was not strong enough, the fol¬lowing months brought further mitigation of the democratic spiritof the Code. The right of dissenting groups, such as the LaborYouth League and a large number of ad hoc to exist, was jeopardizedby the policy of turning the required membership lists over to gov¬ernment agencies, including the FBI. Members of these organiza¬tions were offered a blacklisting in reward for exercising their rightto congregate and speak.More recently, the right to petition was greatly endangered. Al¬though the action involved was taken by Student Government, it wasa reflection of the trend initiated by the administration. Because, inthe Student Representative Party’s campaign to secure pledges forits Co-operative Book Store project, it neglected a part of the codewhich had always been considered too restrictive to fully enforce,SRP was indicted and convicted by the Student-Faculty-Administra¬tion Court. The provisions in question provide that petitions may notbe circulated in those places—including the C-shop and the Mandelcorridor—where a petition may be effectively examined and dis¬cussed. The conviction not only placed an organization into a posi¬tion where its right to present activities and speakers of its choicecould easily be challenged, but it provided precedent for suppressionof a primary outlet of free speech and argument.The Administration’s ambivalent attitude toward the Code is evi¬dent in the recent circumstances regarding the Michigan Plan. Ap¬parently the administration feels now a repressive interpretationmay be placed on one part of the Code while another part of thecode may be watered down, if not neglected.This ambivalence can only result in harm to the rights and privi¬leges of the student body. We should demand that the Code be inter¬preted and amended so that it can only be applied in the liberal tradi¬tion of the University of Chicago. In the case of the Michigan Planwe must hold Strozier to his agreement to .enforce the plan as re¬cently amended. In the case of petitioning, we must support theright of any organization to petition in the most effective way anddemand that unduly restrictive provisions be stricken from the code.Whenever the Administration puts forward such petty charges asthat presently against the MAROON, we must force these real issuesinto the foreground. The two-faced administration must be shown aone-faced Code and Bill of Rights.Daniel Queen, Ray Nelson, Mitchell Slein, Suxanne Friedman, RichbrdWard, Harry Whiteley, Robert Bloch, Frank Ternenyi, Naomi Birnbaum,Fred Winsberg, Shirley Long. Letters...Students ApatheticAs an alumnus living in me univer¬sity community I have been able to fol¬low the attitudes and the activities ofthe administration and the studentbody with perhaps a little more insightthan the average alumnus whose solecontact is through the various publica¬tions of the Alumni Association. Formore than several years I have beenconcerned with what I think is a fail¬ure in our much vaunted system of lib¬eral education. The student is taughttc think, is given a considerable amountof factual knowledge, is given thechance to develop a great deal of selfdiscipline, but in the field of studentsocial activities there is an Insidiousapathy. It is not that the Universitydoes not furnish the facilities; I doubtif many other institutions offer more,but when student organizations mustdraft people to fill their officer posts,when the Student Government mustadvertise on bulletin boards for peopleto fill vacant seats, when the schoolyear book fails for lack of people inter¬ested enough to subscribe or do thenecessary work, when WASH PROM, oneof the few formal dances held on cam¬pus, loses large quantities of money (asit did last Saturday) beeause of lack ofattendance, something is wrong.Participation in student activities isas much a part of a liberal educationas an understanding of Aristotle. Infact, if one is going into a vocationwhere public contact is involved, exper¬ience gained from participation in stu¬dent activities is invaluable. If studentsonly realized this there would be keencompetition for the various editorshipsoffered on the Cap & Gown, theMAROON would be a dally paper notonly to satisfy student needs but to givejobs to all those interested in serving onthe paper; other organizations wouldbe more efficient and Interesting be¬cause members would be more activeand original hoping that someday theymight deserve to be an officer in thatorganization. I consider the experiencegained as an officer in student organi¬zations as valuable as any other phaseof my education at the University.Many men considered successful intheir fields have made the same state¬ment.What causes this apathy? It may bethe attitude of the administration. TheUniversity tries to give the student afree hand in his affairs. This meansthat those few students who are ac’iveget experience more valuable than thatobtained at other schools while themajority is left wandering aimlesslymissing a valuable part of their "liberaleducation." Whatever the cause orwhatever the cure you laggards aremissing the boat and the opportunity todevelop the leadership qualities thatwill make the difference between suc¬cess and mediocrity in later life.An Alumnus UT 'bigoted'1367 E. 57fh St.•THE RECORDOF THE WEEKPete Seeger Concert2 10'LP s . .$6.00 S.G. needs powerIn your edition of February 12, yougave the false impression that I hadleft the Student Government meetingof the preceding Tuesday as a part ofan SRP "protest demonstration.” Al¬though a member of SRP and awarethat such a demonstration was takingplace, my reasons for leaving the meet¬ing at that time were not connectedwith the protest demonstration. To putit briefly, I had Intended to leave themeeting after the disposition of theissue centering around the MichiganPlan and my leave-taking coincidedwith that of the demonstrators. I donot feel that I was deliberately mis¬represented by the MAROON, but Iam concerned that the false impres¬sion of my position, which was un¬doubtedly communicated to my readers,be corrected. Although there ' was cer¬tainly some justification for the pro¬test, which was in objection* to themethods used to render the minorityineffective, I did not think that awalk-out was the most advisable courseof action.My letter of last week, which it wasnecessary to cut in order to find roomfor it, trailed off with the bald asser¬tion that, "The most important thingto do is to reveal the weakness of SG’sposition.’’ This assertion needs someexpanding before it becomes under¬standable. I was referring to the factthat Student Government has so littlepower of decision-making in the Uni¬versity set-up that it very often cannoteffectively represent the student body.At many other schools which are moreconservative in makeup, the StudentGovernment has role jurisdiction overtl*e recognition of student organizationsand other purely or primarily studentaffairs. It is pretty clear that dividingthe jurisdiction at any point with theAdministration will largely emasculateSG’s power at that polht. That is thesituation which needs to be correctedbefore the student body can be said tohave any amount of self-government.Frank KirkSRP—Social Science “Chicago lamed Center of Bigotry”headed a news story on the 19th pageof a Chicago evening newspaper. TheUniversity Theatre hardly contributedto the lessening of national and relig¬ious prejudice by staging “The Playboyof the Western World” on the eve ofBrotherhood Week!If "Streetcar Named Desire” is offen¬sive to Pollsh-Americans and “The Mer¬chant of Venice” is still objectionableto many Jews, can “The Playboy of theWestern World” be any less offensive toIrish Catholics today than it was to thepeople who rioted against performancesof the play in the early 1900’s not onlyin Dublin but in New York and Phila¬delphia?Sygne, himself a member of a minor¬ity (Protestant^ group, poured out hislatent bitterness against his Catholiccompatriots with -a mordaclous humornot even Swift could have matched(though perhaps future generations—unfamiliar with the Irish stereotype—may rate it below his great tragedy,“Riders to the Sea,” ana u uasey s earlyworks). But Sygne wrote for liis Irishcompatriots. His death within two yearsmay have been hastened by the reali¬zation of what a portrait of the Irishpeople he had given to the world. ThePLAYBOY should be left on the book¬shelf for the scholars, students andlovers of Irish literature.John SwitolskiDearborn11 • ' I■Tj -FINE FOOD-132 1 East 57th Street ^ut/rnct' Xyiivierin a return showing of\ fjamlet| « by William Shakespeare ,Jean Simmons . Felix„Aylmer I! Today at: 6:15, 9:00 j.. At Popular PricasStudents presenting their ID cards otbox office will be admitted for 50cany week night. Saturdays and Sun¬days until 5 p.m.T/te PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETInternational House Movie ProgramEast Lounge, Mondoy and Thursday Evenings at 7:00 -P.M. and 9:00 P.M.Monday, March I — CANADA AT THE CORONATION (Canadion)Admission FreeThursdoy, Morch 4 — JULIUS CAESAR (American)Admission 35cA CASA Book StoreGOOD USED BACKGROUND BOOKSBest prices paid for Scholarly used BooksGuaranteed typewriter repair service1117 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651no 7-9071 HYI1E I*AIIK T1IEAT1IE LAKEPABKat 53rdStarting Fri., Feb. 26 .All On One Great Film ProgramANNAPURNALITTLE FUGITIVEandTwo UPA cartoons:Edgor Alton Poe's THE TELL-TALE HEARTJames Thurber's A UNICORN IN THE GARDENStudent Rota 50c All PerformancesIf You Present Your ID Card ot tho BoxofficoFebruary 26, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5COLLEGIATE SCENELaw requires state bookswith nori'Communist oathSad news has come from the southland. The Plainsman,'the student newspaper of Alabama Polytechnic Institute tellsof new inroads made upon freedom of expression. It seemsthe state legislature of Alabama passed an act which says ineffect:“ (1) The schools of this state shall not use any textbookor other written instructional Police, "howlers" guard campusThe robbery reported in the box below led the MAROON to find out what kind of protec¬tion the University and the police give to the campus and what measures the student cantake to protect himself.A joint interview with Tony Eidsen, the chief of the campus police and with W. R. Zell-ner, the man in charge of Buildings and Grounds, revealed the following facts about whatthe University has done tomaterial which does not con¬tain a statement by the pub¬lisher or author thereof indicatingthat the author of the book or theauthor of any writings citedtherein is or is not a known advo¬cate of communism or Marxistsocialism, is or is not a memberof the Communist party or anyCommunist front organization.(2) The use of literature pro¬hibited by the act may be enjoinedupon the application of any resi¬dent taxpayer.(3) All literature previouslyadopted or approved for use mustbe made to conform to this act byJanuary 1, 1955.”Definition of "aggressive date"?At Baylor University in Waco-Texas, a university psychologist,Robert D. Wickham, has reportedsome interesting anxiety patternsafter a study of some TOO coeds.He reports, ‘‘The assorted prob¬lems of courtship and marriage,including fear of ‘aggressivedates’ leads to more anxietyamong college coeds than . anyother cause.” ‘‘More than 50 percent of 700 girls expressed a con¬scious fear of ‘aggressive dates.’ ”Another significant statistic re¬lated that about 47 per cent fearthat they will never be able tofind a husband.Lob work: Communist huntingAttorney General HerbertBrownell has instituted a plan toutilize the nation's law studentsin “volunteer laboratory work.”The scheme employs law studentsas part-time Communist huntersand set them to work digging upevidence and information neededto prosecute subversives and crim¬inals. Forty-eight law studentsfrom the New York City are nowworking without pay in the of¬fices of the US attorneys in Man¬ hattan and Brooklyn. Brownellhopes to recruit law students inother states to help in each of thenation’s ninety US attorneys’ of¬fices.Realism invades ivory towerThe recent storm on a midwestcampus over the use of live babiesas training aids in a home eco¬nomics course seemed to be cen¬tered on how far institutions ofhigher learning should go in theirquest for realism in instruction.Duke University recently aecept- help safeguard its students.Mr. Eidsen said the campuspolice maintain a continualgpatrolof University property. This pa¬trol consists of two cars with two-way radios and a number ofed a $10,000 cash fund from aWinston-Salem philanthropist togive students in the businessschool practical experience inbanking and investment tech¬niques. With the reservation thatthe students could not sell shortor buy on margin, the studentboard of directors, six studentselected each school term, are freeto make investments, buy stocksand bonds, and generally use themoney as practical business men. armed, experienced patrolmenwho walk their beats. The patrolsare so staggered that no two offi¬cers will be at the same place atthe same time unless an emer¬gency arises.“All dorms,” Zellner said, “areequipped with blanket or curtaintype flood lights; i.e., lights whichthrow their beams ovei a largearea.” He further .explained thatall dorms have prowler typealarms on their fire escapes.“These^alarms,” he said, “if setoff, give out with a continuoushowl. This howler, which is seton the outside of the building, willcontinue to howl until the policearrive. Then either one of the cam¬pus police or one of the B and GJoseph Lohman describes repatriation workof Korean prisoner exchange group“We went to Korea not to persuade the PW’s to return, but to give them an opportunityfor free decision,” Joseph Lohman, former civilian consultant to the army with the UNCommand Repatriation Group, told the MAROON in an interview this week.The Joint Chiefs of Staff appointed Lohman to his post in Korea. “Stars and Stripes”called him “the quarterback of our team.” *Lohman, UC sociologist and lecturer, was formerly chairman of the Illinois State Pardonand Parole Board and is nowa Democratic candidate forsheriff of Cook County.According to Lohman, the PW’swere “caught up in the web ofcommunist intrigue and conspir¬acy.” The prisoners were neverseen individually by the group.Freedom to come back was “se¬verely limited” by their surveil¬lance of each dther and the pres¬ence of the other communists.Dickinson, one of those who didreturn, came back “almost by ac¬cident,” Lohman said. He got atoothache and while in the hospi¬tal decided he “might as well gohome.”“The most important accom¬plishment of the mission was togive the Indians, Swiss, andSwedes experience with the com¬ munist methods,” Lohman assert¬ed.“One of the major weapons inthe communist arsenal, if not themajor weapon, is group organiza¬tion, and through such organiza¬tion, the calculated use of the in¬dividual as an instrument of theover-riding purpose. That* purposeis nothing less than the incitementof world revolution with the totalvictory and hegemony of the Com¬munists. The chief measure whichthe Communists employ in put¬ting down free expression is . . .the systematic destruction ofprivacy.”Lohman was in charge of work¬ing out the content and strategyof the procedures in Korea. Heformulated a “seven-point prin¬ciple designed to raise questions in the men’s minds as to what hadreally happened to them.” Themain import of the seven pointsis that choice under duress, orwithout full information, is notfree choice.“Our policy position,” Lohmanexplained, “dictates that the re¬turned PW’s will not suffer as aresult of their exercise of theirright to remain for the 90-day pe¬riod.” Each man's case will beconsidered on its merits, withproper consideration of influenceexerted on him, and each man willreceive the benefits which ac¬crued to him (back pay, etc.) dur¬ing this period.“The men will, however, be heldresponsible for actions or state¬ments made during that time,”Lohman said. engineers must turn it off andreset it. This same alarm will setoff a signal at the annunciator atthe attendent’s desk of the par¬ticular dormitory involved. Thi*same alarm will set up a dupli¬cate signal in the annunciator atthe main switchboard of the uni¬versity. These signals will alsoring until a guard or an engineerresets it.Zellner then explained that theprefabs have a howler and a rotat¬ing flood light set up on a tall postin the center of the prefab area.Any person living in the area orany guard may set off thesealarms. These alarms can be seenand heard a long way off by anyof the patrols in the area. Thesealarms also require a guard or anengineer to reset them.It was also learned as a result ofa phone conversation with an Of¬ficer Coffee (at the Hyde ParkPolice Station) that two HydePark police cars patrol this areacontinually. Fifty Seventh andFifty-Ninth Streets are also pa-troled by officers walking theirbeats. In addition to the protec¬tion of the Hyde ParJ;area is patrolled bylice cars, pooled police cars fromthe downtown area, and Park Dis¬trict Police cars.Channing Lushbough. househead of Hitchcock Hall, in a re¬cent house meeting offered adviceto the campus. 1) Do not carry•arge sums of money with you,carry only what you may need.2) Do not walk the streets aloneat night. 3) If you must for somereason leave the dormitories ofyour own homes always let some¬one know that you are going outand what time you expect to be in.4) If your person or your propertyis molested call immediately thecampus police and then call thecity police. If you are south ofthe Midway call the WoodlawnPolice. If you are north of theMidway call the Hyde Park PoliceIf you are on the Midway call th«Park District Police.irk Police, thisWoodlawn po-IT I STARTED >SSMOKING CAMELS AFTERTRYING MANY BRANDS. I FOUNDCAMELS' MILDNESS AND FLAVORFAR MORE ENJOYABLE THANTHE REST. YOU WILL,TOO1.WHy DON'T YOU TRYK CAMELS TODAY? ft J. Reynolds Tob. Co.Wm«ton-Salem, N. C.Jane Greer says: “I wasa band singer when a picturemagazine asked me to posein the new WAC uniforms.Hollywood saw my picture,liked it and overnight I wasin movies. From then on,it was hard work andperseverance.”START SMOKING CAMELS YOURSELF!Smoke only Camels for 30 days and find out whyCamels are America’s most popular cigarette.See how mild and flavorful a cigarette can be!we/ flavor Camels agree m more people“THAKI A MV OTHER. CIGARETTE 'Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 26, 1954(Zontinq- ca*n6*t<i event* in 6%ie£Friday, February 26•The Third Camp" is the topic of adiscussion sponsored by the PoliticsClub at Ida Noyes, 8 p.m.Billet Fireside. Student Panel discussion"Can Religion Be Taught?” by MuniFinkelstein, Stanley Gevlrtz, GuntherHeilbrunn, Aryeh Motzkin; Roy Pros-terman, moderator, at 8:30 p.m., 5715Woodlawn. The Sabbath Service willprecede the Fireside at 7:45.Bumboldt Club will present a lecturein English by Professor Bergstraesseron “The Future of German-AmericanRelations,” at Wieboldt 408, 4 p.m.Donation 10 cents. Refreshments.The Walgreen Foundation Lecture Serieswill be continued at Judd 126, 8 p.m.“TVA: National Power Policy,” will bepresented by Gordon R. Clapp, Chair¬man of the Board, TVA.University Concert: The Vegh StringQuartet in a Beethoven," Bartok, andBrahms program. Mandel Hall, 8:30p.m.Sunday, February 28University Religious Service. The Rev¬erend George Gordh, Chaplain, Hol¬lins College, Virginia, will be theguest preacher. Rockefeller MemorialChapel. 11 a.m.UC Polish Club will hold a reception fornew members at International House,3 p.m. There will be a talk by LeonKupeck, attorney and newspaper col¬umnist on "Politics in Chicago." Re¬freshments.Carillon Recital: James R. Lawson.'Carillonneur, Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 4 p.m.Chamberlin Open House. Light enter¬tainment. B-J, 2-5 p.m. Refreshmentsserved.Glee Club Rehearsal: Singing, 4:30-6:30.Blaine 117, 59th and Kimbark.flillel Foundation Open House. Recep¬tion for midyear entering students,5715 Woodlawn, 7:30-10:30. Refresh¬ments. singing, and dancing.Calvert Club will sponsor a lecture byDr. E. M. K. Geiling, professor ofpharmacology, entitled "Medicine andMorality,” at De Sales House, 5735University Avenue. It will be followedby a supper at 6 p.m. for 65 cents anda meeting for the quarter.The Porter Graduate Fellowship willsponsor a talk by Professor J. Harou-tunian on the meaning of the cruci¬fixion, at International House, RoomA, 7:30. Discussion and refreshments.Monday, March 1••Canada at the Coronation" is the titleof a film to be shown at InternationalHouse, East lounge at 7 and 9 p.m.Admisison 35 cents.Toung Democrats Club will sponsor aspeech by Joe Lohman, Democrat can¬didate for sheriff, on his experiences in Korea. Lohman talked to the “21“who didn't return, the Communistexplainers, and the Indian guards.Social Sciences 122, 8 p.m.‘‘A Glance at Contemporary Educationin Britain" is the topic of a lecturegiven by Miss Sheila Butler, seniorlecturer. Southlands College, Univer¬sity of London. Judd 126, 4 p.m.Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship willmeet for a luncheon and a talk byMiss Grace Lincoln who will speakabout her experiences as a missionaryin Morocco. Ida Noyes, third floor,12:30-1:20 p.m. Everyone invited.“Can Adults Be Educated?” A discus¬sion on the effectiveness of adult po¬litical education, will be the topic ofa lecture sponsored by the Communi¬cation Club. Participants includeKenneth P. Adler, instructor in com¬munication as moderator, Ralph W.Tyler, professor of education andCharles A. Nelson, executive directorof the American Foundation for Poli¬tical Education.A William Vaughn Moody Lecture willtake place at Mandel Hall at 8:30 p.m.Sean o'Faolain, Irish novelist, storywriter, biographer and critic willspeak on “Six Novelists in Search ofa Hero.” mUC Mountaineering Group will hold adiscussion on basic climbing tech¬niques and principles. Rosenwald 26,7:30 p.m.The Pre-Med Club will meet at Abbott133 from 4 to 5 p.m. Tom Dutcher,President of the Student AMA willspeak on "The AMA.”The Center for Study of American For¬eign Policy will sponsor a lecture deal¬ing with Great Britain, the SovietUnion and the United States. Thespeaker is J. H. A. Watson, Counsellorat the British embassy in Washing¬ton, D. C. Soc. Sci. 122, 8:15 p.m.Admission free.Wednesday, March 3University Glee Club will have a re¬hearsal from 7 to 9 p.m. Blaine 117,59th and Kimbark. -A Carillon Recital will take placed :30p.m. at Rockefeller Chapel with JamesLawson as carilloneur.“Chicago at Mid-Century” is the sub¬ject of a lecture series sponsored bythe Department of Geography. Thefirst in the series, "Chicago: Unlver- Classified ...For RenfFurnished room kitchenette. Linen, re¬frigerator, utilities. $9.20 week. BU6-9736.Sleeping rooms for men, clean, quiet.$6.50 up. 1514 E. 54th.Large, airy room, private family. $6 aweek. Meyers, 5323 Ellis, DO 3-0500.Newly decorated 2 and lVa room fur¬nished apartments, 2 blocks from Unl-slty. Linens, daily maid service, reason¬able zent. 6107 Dorchester Ave„ PL2-9641.sity and Region,” will be delivered byHarold M. Mayer and Aklen K. Phil-brick, Assistant Professors of Geog-graphy, at Social Science 122, 8 p.m.The Decline and Fall of Magazine Sci¬ence Fiction is the title of a discus¬sion sponsored by UC Science FictionClub. Edward Wood will lead the dis¬cussion. Ida Noyes, 7:30 p.m. Admis¬sion free.UC Sailing Club will hold a generalmeeting in which spring preparationswill be discussed. A motion picturewill be shown also, at Ida Noyes EastLounge, 7:30 p.m.International House Discussion Groupwill deal with "East-West Trade:Road to Peace or Appeasement?" Thespeaker is DeWitt Gilpin, Internation¬al Representative of United ElectricalWorkers Union. East Lounge. Int.House, at 8 p.m.“Ireland and the Twelfth-CenturyRenaissance" is the topic of a lectureto be given at Breasted Hall, 8:30p.m. The lecturer is Professor CharlesW. Dunn of University College, Uni¬versity of Toronto.Thursday, March 4“Julius Caesar" is the United Statesfilm that will be shown at Int. House,7 and 9 p.m. Admission is 35 cents.Sailing Club will sponsor a racing class,7:30 p.m., at Columbia Yacht Club.Calvert Club will sponsor its annualAquinas Lecture, “How the HumanMind Knows God.” The speaker isJames F. Anderson, professor of Phil¬osophy, University of Notre Dame.Breasted Hall, 8 p.m. The lecture isopen to the public. Personals WantedNan: Contact me Immediately in re¬gards to Phyllis. Call me at home orMAROON. Mickey.Dear Publius: Someday I’ll find you.Sincerely, Hortense Fandangle, c/o Capand Gown, Reynolds Club. Skiers for wonderful vacation March19-28. Cost only $75. Call Don WentzelStudent Union, Ex. 1003.Wanted to rent: Garage to store 19»boat until May 15. Call Robert BaronFA 4-1294. .Classified ads are free for 15words to any student, faculty mem¬ber or employee of the University.Lost and FoundLost: Elgin wrist watch, metal band,last seen in Burton recreation room.Contact Alan Harrod, 848 B.J.Lost: gold colored Schaeffer pen; Sat.,3 p.m., between Culver and Harper.Reward. Howard Goldfine, Hltchock.Lost: Hand wrought silver wedding ringon campus last week. Reward. Phone3782 or BU 8-6763.Lost: Copy Shakespeare. (Harrison edi¬tion) in or near B-J. Please call ArthurWaldman, MI 3-6000.Found: one dollar bill. Owner muststate time and place it was lost. EugeneMeyer, Hltchock Hall. Ride wanted to Florida between quar¬ters. Will share driving, expenses. Leavemessage at FA 4-8200, rm. 920.Jovial fraternity men desire ride ~toNYC over interim. $25. Contact Appel orRosenthal. PL 2-9647.Ride to NY about March 20-29. Willshare expenses and driving. Stan Pul-rang, KE 8-1005.Girl’s bicycle; FM radio. Call Interna¬tional House, Room 418.Employment for Saturdays and/or week¬days and/or week nights. I am 20 andmale. R. Smith, PL 2-2980.Ride to Philadelphia, March 18. Willshare expenses. Pastor, MU 4-6917.ServicesFor SaleClean 1937 Pontiac 8, 4-door sedan, ex¬cellent condition, uses no oil. Try it.$95. MU 4-3984.FM tuner, Howard model 482, FM. $15.Call DO 3-0017.K & E log log duplex decitrlg slide rule,12-lnfch, mahogany with case, $15.Roger Bernhardt, DO 3-2531.1950 Dodge 4-door sedan, excellent con¬dition, good tires, chrome, battery, oneowner. Cajl HY 3-8645 evenings.Not thing of beauty, Joy forever, butruns good. '47 Nash. R., H $125 BU 8-9870, Alexander Mathematics, special instruction to fityour mathematical needs. Individual orgroup sessions at our Loop office orlocation of your choice. Soglin Associ¬ates, ST 2-6727.Typing done accurately, reasonably. CallMrs. Pannabecker, KE 6-8689. or se*Pannabecker, Zoology 31-A.Piano lessons at home. Oberlln gradu¬ate, 1948. Call MU 4-1458 after 6 p.m.WITH fcopX-and MEET THE PEOPLEin PRIVATE CAR TOURS ofEUROPE|«t pr*co» designed To fit your budget.|your trovol ogont. ISTOP TOURS, Berkeley, Collf.ITS ALL A MATTER OF TASTE''to eaF" “/onepncX to knowK flSSttSEW*-ART H0DESThe greatest blues pianistand his Backroom BoysfeaturingJimmy Granato, ClarinetSeven years at the RadioCity Music HallFive years with JimmyDuranteMuggsy Dawson, CornetJust returned fromEuropean tourHappy Gormley, DrumsFormerly with theThird Army BandEddie Schaefer, TromboneFormerly with theChez Paree orchestra,Jazz Limited, radio andrecordsAUematin^BandPHIL DOOLEYand his comedy jazz band3 years at the Palmer HouseEddie Smeeth, Pianofeatured with name bandsNev Barclay, Guitar andBanjoformerly with Lew Breese,Red Hodgson, Gennettrecordings, WGN, Mutual,and CBS networksl%o cover and no minim Mm When you come right down to it, yousmoke for one simple reason . . . enjoy¬ment. And smoking enjoyment is all amatter of taste. Yes, taste is what countsin a cigarette. And Luckies taste better.Two facts explain why Luckies tastebetter. First, L.S./M.F.T.—Lucky Strikemeans fine tobacco .. . light, mild, good¬tasting tobacco. Second, Luckies are ac¬tually made better to taste better . . ,always round, firm, fully packed to drawfreely and smoke evenly.So, for the enjoyment you get frombetter taste, and only from better taste.Be Happy—Go Lucky. Get a pack or acarton of better-tasting Luckies today.COLLEGE SMOKERS PREFER LUCKIESA comprehensive survey—based on31,000 student interviews and super¬vised by college professors—shows thatsmokers in colleges from coast to coastprefer Luckies to all other brands! TheNo. 1 reason: Luckies' better taste!”• csss—COPR., THK AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPARTLUCKIES TASTE BETTERFebruary 26, 1954 ^ ^ L-J-$P2SiTHE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Playwrights do Murder in Cathedral; JJT OV6T CLtTlbitiouSunconvincing performance of dull playLast Wednesday night Playwrights theater club opened a four-week run of T. S. Eliot’sreligious play, Murder in the Cathedral, a play based on the murder in his cathedral ofThomas Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury, by agents of the king of England, Henry II.This is a poetic drama presented in the Greek classic form, dealing with the struggle be¬tween the church and the state. Thomas Becket, the Saint Thomas of Chaucer’s “CanterburyTales,” was the king’s chancellor under Henry II and was made Archbishop of Canterbury,the head prelate of England,in an attempt to combine the generally found to be a competenttwo offices. Becket though, actor, in his performance ofupon attaining the latter office, Becket was unconvincing. Theresigned the former and held him- chorus of women was not too bad,self to be representative only of though at times it used manner-the church and of the Pope. This, isms which seemed to be carriedof course, brought him in conflict over from the recent performancewith the king and he was forced to of Three Penny Opera. With thego in exile for seven years, after exception of Alex Horn whowhich the king, under pressure played a tempter and a knight,brought by the Pope, invited himback for reconciliation. Upon ar¬riving in England, Becket reas¬serted his power as representativeof the Church and the Pope. Theplay deals with the events that fol¬lowed.Eliot treats Becket as a trueChristian who attains martyr¬dom for the right reasons andin the proper maimer. lie showsBecket coming out unblemishedafter going through varioustemptation's administered by allthe conniving forces in Englandand even the temptation of hispride. Finally, when Becket iskilled by agents of the king, theChurch is triumphant. ThePriests understand, the peopleunderstand, and the cause of theking is defiled.The play drags badly due to thelength and overuse of the choralinterlude. The performance on thewhole was also dull and unimag¬inative. Ed Asner, whom I have the cast did not show an under¬standing of the message carriedby the play.The group concerned itself,apparently, with only the inter¬nal conflicts of Becket in hisdeveloping martyrdom. Theypaid little attention, beyond his striving to remain a good Chris¬tian, to Becket’s cause — hisstruggle with the Churchagainst the state in a battle notfor equality, but for supremacy.A better performance wouldhave stressed the message withwhich Eliot ties the play to¬gether.It is not hard for one to seewhy a company with the liberaltraditions of Playwrights the¬ater would present an uncon¬vincing performance of a playwhich advocates salvation ofman through the supremacy ofthe church.Albert Sciaky University Theatre produced a funny, spirited play lastweekend. It was purported to be a rendition of Synge’s Play¬boy of the Western World, which is also a spirited play. Un¬fortunately, the spirits weren’t the same. UT’s production wasalmost a burlesque of the wonderfully wry and realistic playSynge evidently had in mind. The imposition of UT’s tradi¬tional ballet-like style on such * “material was disastrous. The stage, muttering some lines andaudience laughed at all the shouting others,wrong places, but in this produc- James Holland turned in a finetion they seemed to be the right performance. I suppose it wasn’tplaces. This gave the performance his fault that he couldn’t look likean Alice-In-Wonderland quality, Christy. Lawrence Zerkel, Suz-with confusion substituting for anne Mehler, Leon Wannerman,Synge’s feeling. Martha Silvermand and CatherineOtis Imboden’s direction of Allison made rather good at-the complex, yet uncluttered tempts at their roles. Lois Karbel,plot left everything to be de¬sired. The girls fluttering andposturing around the stage hadmore character than the spit¬fire Pegeen. The ballet businesswas tasteless and overdone,thoroughly overwhelming theplot. Worst of all, the dictionwas so bad that less than halfthe lines were understandable.The players pranced about the the perennial UT charmer, man¬aged to upstage everyone andmake too much of her bit part.The handsome set designedby Stanley Kazdalis deservesall sort of praise. It’s toobad th&Lso much work had onlythat bit of imagination to graceit. UT has been much more suc¬cessful with less ambitious pro¬ductions.Review shows good student workThe current issue of the Chicago Review, although on the whole average and unspectacular, does containseveral items of decided merit. It is gratifying to note that UC students have contributed some of the mostsatisfactory work. However, criticism of the Review must go beyond the particular merits of the separatecontributions to the consideration of whether full advantage is made of the Reviews potentialities. Chiefamong these potentialities are its possibilities for unrestricted student contributions, its non-departmentalstatus, and lack of attach- w ~~ _ , .ment to any partisan writing and several short book their self-imposed isolation from Had they no aversion to a broadgroup. The success of the Review reviewsmust be judged in relation tothese factors.The student contributions inthis issue were limited to creativeFOR THAT ‘‘NEW LOOK”IN HOME AND GARDEN . /.RINEHART GARDEN LIBRARY .<■ each $ 1.50Evergreens, Lawns, Roses, Annuals, Vegetables,Small Fruits. Practical up-to-date guides.HOW TO RESTORE CHINA BRIC-A-BRAC ANDSMALL ANTIQUES by Yates $ 3.00Expert'instruction on how to pick up the pieces!HOW TO MAKE MOBILES by Lynch $ 3.00Be your own Calder. Instructions and diagrams.HOUSE AND GARDEN'S GUIDE TO INTERIORDECORATION $10.00Most comprehensive guide to decorating. Almost2000 illustrations!HOMES OF THE BRAVE by Robsjohn Giddings. . .$ 3.50A critical survey of modern architecture fromranch house to fish bowl . . . with Mary Pettydrawings.GUIDE TO EASIER LIVING by Wright $ 2.95Built-in convenience and streamlined routinesfor Apartment^and House.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue the day-to-day world. Yet his“flow-of consciousness” presenta¬tion makes the development ofhis characters unclear to thereader who has not had directcontact with the attitudes andpersons involved. He does notCircle proceeds through the devel- reaiize that art, being a communi- Schero, who discusses K e a t' *o p m e n t of some compelling cat[ve medium, tries to make the more meaningful work which de*imagery but suffers from unclear- content of its subject matter real mands a deeper analysis,ness in reference. to its entire audience.Most significant werethe poems Phoenix by MichaelGirsdansky and Full Circle byPeter Hanen. Phoenix is a wellconstructed poetic transformationof the well known legend. Full and insightful consideration ofthe works in relation to the livesand times of the poets they wouldnot have been stopped at thatlevel. Keast, in speaking of th«introverted and arid Steven’spoem is not so much at fault asBoth deal with the unpor- Marianne Moore has trans-tjuiee of human values, but lated two fables of La Fontainethat are parables on human sit¬uations. The Wolf Plays Shep¬herd shows the downfall of thewolf-hypocrite for, “a counter-terfeit’s sure to be exposed tolight. / A wolf is a wolf in everypulse; / No use pretendingsomething else.” Digger andPartner is the amusing fable ofthe miser who finally learns tospend his wealth. Miss Moore’swork has a very direct commu¬nicative power, for she hasplaced the fables within a clear,unpretentious poetic form thatadds to the incisiveness of theparables. Compared to the mud¬dled efforts of an E. E. Cum¬mings they are models of hon¬esty.W. R. Keast and Elliot M.Schero contribute the major criti¬cal articles, the explication of theargument in Wallace StevensThirteen Ways of Looking at aBlackbird and the line of develop¬ment in Keats’ Ode on a Greciancontextual analyses, yet most ofArtur Castillo’s short story is respectively. Both are sounda penetrating study of a group of their conclusions about the mean-“Bohemians” whose behavior and *n£ °* tlie P°emspolitical attitudes suffer from *rom vaguenesswhere Girsdansky affirms them(“But from the ashes comes theticking of the egg / And thepain is fierce but quick / Andin it find my own hot Resur¬rection”), Hanen only assertstheir necessity (“Out of sun,landed leaves go black / butwho can tell which branch isdead / when leaves are gone.”Fox, Red Fox, a short story byRene D. Hamm suffers from anincomplete development thattends to assimilate both charac¬ters to a type—the isolated ro¬mantic. This, despite the appar¬ent intention of the writer tendsto place the woman in an extreme¬ly reprehensible light.Encounter, by Patricia Mc¬Kenna, beyond its symbolismand form borrows from the ro-Ynantic tradition its conceptionof values: that values are ahindrance to life. This miscon¬ception vitiates the value of thefinal revelation — the meaning¬lessness of life without values.suffer eitheror obviousness. The major substantive essay,David Riesman’s Freud, Religionand Science, suffers from the ap¬parent lack of any critical method,and indeed, it is difficult to seehow a method can be applied inthe face of so many vague andshifting references. This is urvfortunate for it tends to throwdoubt on even the more plausibleassertions. Selection of a reallysignificant issue, one that had sgenuinely problematic naturiwould have -compelled a more rig¬orous approach.Most of the remaining worksare by non-student contributors,indeed non-student works com¬prise the bulk of the magazine.It is apparent that the bestwork should b e encouraged,either the editors of the reviewhave not taken full advantageof student work or studentwriters have neglected a majorcreative outlet. Surely there arestudents capable of writing onsocial and philosophic issuesand of creating prose and poet¬ry dealing with real problemsbeyond the narrow institutionalpoint of view toward which theReview tends.Frank G. TernenyiDaniel Queen' PUBLIC LECTURE9 N“AMONG THE PHILOSOPHERS: SWEDENBORG"Swedenborg's philosophy comprisesa "two-world" system which is notdualism, and is, in a sense, prag¬matically self - checking. As astructure for a theology, it is re¬markably consistent and distortionfree. He developed the concept ofcorrespondences of discrete de¬ grees, a principle of unity that logi¬cally meets the objections of allclassical systems. A rational faithis so interwoven with the logic thathis philosophy as a whole does notfit readily into classical schemes.There is a synthesis of many ideasfrom other philosophers, with astrong empirical current.* DR. HOWARD SPOERLProfessor of philosophy at American International College, Springfield, Mass.Sunday Evening, February 28th 7:00 P.M.THE SWEDENBORG PHILOSOPHICAL CENTRE5710 South Woodlawn You Are Welcome 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 accommodation of the Students, Faculty andEmployees of the University we have opened a University District RentingOffice to serve you In obtaining better housing.Come in and let us know what your requirements are so that we mayassist you.AVAILABLE NOW AND/OR MARCH 1stHotel rooms with private bath and showerSgl.—$8 per wk.; dbl.—$12 per wk.Hotel apts. with switchboard and maid service1 rm. apt. at $90 per mo.2 rm. apt. at $101.50 per mo.office hours ... 9 a m. to 5 p.m. . . . Monday thru FridayTHERE IS NO CHARGE FOR THIS SERVICEmain officeHARRY A. ZISOOK & SONS1711 E. 71st Real EstateServing Chicago since 1907 FL 2-5960Page 8 *••• /THE CHICAGO MAROON February 26, 1954Gagers fellElmhurst;IIT winsby Richard HerwittIn their best-spirited and best-played game of the season, theMaroon basketballers avenged aprior defeat at the hands of Elm¬hurst College by whipping them,68-55, in the Field-House last Fri¬day. On Tuesday, however, CoachNorgren’s men were at a decideddisadvantage on Illinois Tech’scourt and dropped their match tothe giant Techawks, 75-53.After a four point deficit in thefirst quarter, Dave Smith and BobMann started hitting the Elmhursthoop on set shots while Fred Hub¬bard rebounded successfullyagainst Pat Lira, Tech’s, star cen¬ter, and the Maroons took a onebasket edge at the half.After a nip-and-tuck third pe¬riod, Chicago, found itself in the by *l7.l!°rt,*r . - , a ... ,driver’s seat in the final quarter With Spring a few weeks away the UC Sailing Club is busyand steadily pulled away from preparing for the 1954 sailing season. In Thursday nighttired Elmhurst. Severai tallies shore-school classes at Columbia Yacht Club, landlubbers havewere made on fast breaks and foul been instructed in the basic points of nautical skill, while ad-shots as Dick Homer led fourth vanced members have picked up valuable pointers on racingquarter scorers. tactics learning the ropes from old salts.Besides informal parties, a bigUC sailors preparefor conning seasonTech’s Lira led the scoring with Commodore Ellsworth Me*”i,,h9nnda„“a"s Clenachan has been »Ianninsthe Spring racing schedule when Chicago plays host to Min-with other midwest schools. Boat- nesota, Washington, D e P a u w ,repair will be keeping Fleet Cap- Northwestern, Marquette, andtain Bob Baron busy between now HT.!iMaroons with 20 and 19 points•ach. ’The Tech game was one-sidedfrom the beginning. Chicagoplayed a slow game to keep thescore from mounting, but theycould not penetrate Tech zone de¬fense. At half-time the Maroonstrailed 30-17.The second half was playedfaster than the first, but the Ma¬roons’ deficiency in height gaveTech more chances to break andtip under the board. Chicago gotWithin 12 points of Tech at onepoint, but IIT quickly increasedits lead to win by an easy margin.Wrestlers splittwo contests and launching date, which iswhenever the ice melts in theGrant Park Harbor.The Sailing Club has been apart of the extra-curricular pro¬gram since 1939, making it oneof the oldest collegiate sailing or¬ganizations in the midwest. Thewar interrupted activities from1942 until 1946 when returningveterans re activated the club.Chicago member of associationIn 1948 Chicago became one ofthe charter members of the Mid¬west Collegiate Sailing Associa¬tion, which has since grown to 27members. During the followingyears the club offered a variedThe UC wrestling squad split program to the student body,two matches at Augustana Col- After most of the leaders leftlege last Saturday. The Maroons school in 1951, the club was in-defeated Augustana 21-11 and lost active for a year.With the beginning of 1953 theclub activity increased greatly.Large - scale publicity attractedmany new members, the instruc¬tion program was revised and ex¬panded, and there was an increasein sailing for pleasure. While theracing results were not outstand¬ing, many pepple participated inthe enlarged racing schedule.Other colleges participateThis year the Midway marinerswill have collegiate company atthe yacht club. Northwestern,Illinois Tech and UC have ar¬ranged to combine their fleets andother facilities to benefit allschools. Every weekend studentswill be congregating at the clubto spend the days sailing on LakeMichigan. The sailing team willtravel across the midwest, andon off-dates will practice amongthemselves.With McClenachan and Baronpacing the team, the sailing teamexpects its best season in fouryears. New members will be Maroon trackmendefeat NorthwesternBradley and Loyolaby Justin JohnsonCoach Ted Haydon’s track team proved once again thatthey can “run for fun” and still beat the best by handingNorthwestern, Bradley and Loyola a decisive defeat in aquadrangular meet last Saturday at the Fieldhouse.The varsity rolled up 69 points, winning four events, whiletheir Big Ten opponent, Northwestern, placed second with 51.Bradley scored 30 and Loy- •ola 25. little closer to the University ofFrank Loomos continued his un- Chicago record in this event, run-defeated string by winning the ning a fast 3:24.8. An improve-low-hurdles in meet-record time ment of less than two seconds inof :08.0, also taking 2nd in the this event would shatter a Chicago60 yard dash and 4th in the high- record which has stood for overhurdles to lead Maroon scorers, twenty years.George McCormick thrilled the Loyola send* rooter*crowd by coming from behind at It is interesting to note that thethe tape to win the 440 in 51.1. Loyola team had as many cheer-Ken Stapley once again won nis ing enthusiasts at the meet asspecialty, the 880. Chicago. Perhaps future contestsMaroon* sweep two-mile will attract more Maroon support-The turning point of the meet ers’ s‘nce team has won con-came in the two-mile run, when sisterly this year.Captain Walt Deike led Jim Flynn. The final result of the JV meetHal Higdon and Paul Baptist, all last Thursday was Austin 57, Uni-Chicago men, to a four-man sweep versity 34, and Riverside-Brook-of the event, scoring 14 points, field 16. Captain Jim Brown set aDeike and Higdon had earlier new JV record in the 440, runningtaken 2nd and 4th in the mile. a ver.v *ast :52.8. Other victorsThe mile-relav team of Dave were Dick Scupi in the mile-I he mile relay team of Dave Chuck Youse in the shotput antiShephard, Phil Wyatt, Justin Mike Chernoff, who tied for 1stJohnson and McCormick crept a in the pole vault.iheTSsms.civ3presents....to Western Illinois Teachers 29-3.Coach Allan Bates was the onlyMaroon to win a match againstWestern Teachers.Swimmers loseto WashingtonThe varsity season closed forMaroon swimmers last Saturdayas they were drowned in BartlettPool by the Washington Bears,59-26. Next week the swimmingMaroons participate in the Chi¬cago Intercollegiate matches.Qymnasts loseto Indiana, NUDespite excellent trampolinetumbling by Bob Herndon, theMaroon gymnastics team droppedmatches to Indiana and North¬western by scores of 50 Vz-45% and50-46, respectively.SPORTS EVENTS THIS WEEKToday JVTrack Hyde Pk. & CraneTech H.S. 3:30 Field-HouseFencing Ohio State 4:00 Bartlett GymJVBasketball Private SchoolLeagueSemi-Finals 7:30 Field-HouseTomorrow Fencing Iowa andMich. State 1 :30 Bartlett GymTrack Monmouthand Butler 2:00 Field-HouseWrestling Notre Dame 2:30 Bartlett GymJVBasketball Private SchoolLeagueSemi-Finals 7:30 Field-HouseThursday Track Elmhurst& Wright Jr.College 4:00 0Field-House