Student activitieskeynotes AF weekTwo thousand students and faculty members have signedreaffirmations of the Bill of Rights, and the campus has beenflooded by thousands of leaflets, during the past five days ofAcademic Freedom Week. —7—~7 77777 :—. . . . ,. . feather in its cap! There are fewLast night a large audience in people left. on t^js campUS whoMandel Hall ' ^ore; have not participated in one wayeditor of the Sauk City Star, of or another in Academic FreedomSauk City, Wisconsin, tell about \yeek, either by attending one ofthe “Joe must go movement in numerous events, reaffirmingWisconsin. Gore was instrumen- jjjjj Qf Rights, or simply read-tal in the launching of the move- jng an(j discussing an article orment. Gore s talk was followed by ieafiet.a panel discussion by four UC pro¬fessors, Bruno Bettelheim, KarlLlewelyn, Harold Urey, and War- PacchC fa||#cner Wick on “academic freedom ,a,lv>and the disciplines." John Dos Passos, American nov-Karl Rodman, chairman of the elist and historian, will give aAcademic Freedom Committee,commented on the weeks activi- William Vaughn Moody lecture,“The Classics Axe Nearer Thanties, saying: “The University of You Think” at 8:30 p.m. ThursdayChicago has earned a big green in Mandel Hall, admission free. Dancing, jazzto raise moneyfor WUS driveThe World University Service'(WUS) is sponsoring a dance onApril 24 and a jazz concert onApril 25, to supplement its pres¬ent fund drive.The dance will take place in theCloister Club at Ida Noyes 9 p.m.and will feature Stu Clayton andhis orchestra. Although contractshave not yet been signed, DannyThomas is expected to appear.The jazz concert will be held inMandel Hall at 2:30 p.m. It istitled “Duos in Jazz’’ and will pre¬sent such well known jazz enter¬tainers as Baby Dodds, King Co-lax, Paul Bascomb, and the LeekBrothers.Proceeds of the dance and con¬cert and the money raised fromthe fund drive will be used to aidstudents in universities in Asia,Europe, and the Middle East. UC physicists rallyto aid Oppenheimeron disloyalty chargeUniversity of Chicago, April 16, 1954 31 Two prominent Universityof Chicago scientists havecome to the defense of Dr. J.Robert Oppenheimer, director ofthe Institute of Advanced Studiesat Princeton University who hasbeen suspended by the AtomicEnergy Commission from his postas director of the Los Alamosatomic research projects for rea¬sons of security. The two menare Samuel K. Allison, director ofthe Institute for Nuclear Studies,and Cyril S. Smith, director of theInstitute for the Study of Metals.While recognizing the necessityfor loyalty investigations, Allisonbelieved that an investigation“would completely establish thereliability of Dr. Oppenheimer."He said the “nation owes him adebt which it can never adequate¬ly repay. I do not know of anyother person in the United Stateswho could have provided the bril¬liant leadership at Los Alamosthat he did, working in selfless de-votiop, and endangering his pre¬carious health."Smith defended Oppenheimer’sright to decide that an all-out pro¬gram of hydrogen bomb develop¬ment was ill-advised. Part of thecharges against Oppenheimer in¬clude his reticence to proceed withH-bomb development. (The MA- Urey hitsAEC inquiryHarold C. Urey, Martin A.Ryerson Distinguished ServiceProfessor of Chemistry, hasadded his voice to the defenseof Oppenheimer. He called thepresent investigation “the mostunjust and*also the most fool¬ish thing that has occurred inall the current hysteria."Were he disloyal, Urey said,“the FBI and Military Intel¬ligence should have an ironclad case against him after theten years and more duringwhich they have known thefacts which have now beenmade public."Urey told the American peo¬ple to “realize how seriouslyour' science and technologyhave been damaged by theevents of the last few days. .. .If we wish to retain the phys¬ical, moral and intellectualleadership of the world, w eshould grow up and stop actinglike hysterical children."NSA elections this weekThe election of UC delegates and alternates to the National Student Association (NSA) will take place this Thursdayand Friday. To be elected are five delegates and five alternates to the annual Student Congress and ten alternates to theIllinois regional NSA organization. (See candidate list on page 4.)This year’s NSA’s Congress will be at Iowa State College in Ames, Iowa, August 22 to 31.At the Congress students will have the opportunity to exchange information and discuss proposals for student actionin areas of interest to the student.Problems with which theCongress will concern itselfrange from academic freedom,the running of student govern¬ments, elimination of discrimina¬tory practices in education, to re¬lations of US and foreign stu¬dents.The NSA is the largest Ameri¬can student organization. Morethan 300 college and universitystudent bodies having a combinedenrollment of over 1,000 studentsare represented by the NSA. TheNSA was founded at UC in 1948.The areas of problems to be dis¬cussed at NSA are divided amongtwenty-two subcommissions. Reso¬lutions originating in subcommis¬sions are then submitted to one offour main commissions and thengo a plenary of all the Congressdelegates.At the congress two main typesof resolutions are considered,those which are to be executedby the national officers of NSAand those which are recommen¬dations to member schools andregions.The Congress meets once a yearand forms the basic policies forNSA, but regional meetings areheld during the year. The regionsare usually guided by nationalNSA recommendations, but mayact independently within the re¬spective regions.Member schools are representedat the Congress by one to seven NSA polling placesgivenThursday, April 22Burton Moil4:45 p.m.-7:30 p.m.C-Group (Kelly)1 1 :00 o.m. - 1 :45 p.m.Cobb Holl9:15 o.m.-4:00 p.m.Harper West2:00 p.m. -4:15 p.m.Judson Hall4:45 p.m.-7:30 p.m.Law School lounge9:15 a.m.-1:15 p.m.Mandel Corridor9:15 o.m.-7:30 p.m.Friday, April 23 >Business School1:00 p.m.-3:30 p.m.Cobb Hall9:15 o.m. - 4:00 p.m.Mandel Corridor9:15 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.Med. Students lounge4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.Hitchcock lounge4:30 p.m. - 6:45 p.m.Social Science9:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.Swift Hall9:15 a.m.-12:45 p.m. SC places constitutionalchanges on NSA ballotdelegates and an equal number ofalternates, depending on the sizeof the school. Delegates havespeaking and motion privileges insubcommissions, commissions,and plenaries, alternates havespeaking privileges, only, in thesubcommission and commissions.Groans mingle with yowns os these sleepy B-J boys stretch to the sky*♦ 7 a.m. The calisthenics on the Midway — which has served to buildappetites both for breakfast and back-to-bed — was the suggestion of.George Athansoa (center). See “BJ," page 2 Student Government votedTuesday to put more questions onthe April 22-23 ballots, includingthe question of whether thereshall be five members of the Stu¬dent Assembly elected from thecampus at large.The four amendments to the SGConstitution were- recommendedby the government’s constitution¬al commission, headed by AllenColeman (soc sci), former SGpresident and current president ofthe Independent Students League(ISL).With the independents in SGvoting mainly against -the idea,the Assembly voted 14-11 to putthe question of adding the fivemembers at large to SG. A chancein the Faculty - Student - Adminis¬tration Court term was put on theballot by voice vote.Propose by-electionsA 17-10 vote placed on the ballotthe question of running by-elec¬tions to fill vacancies in SG, withthe SG executive council makinginterim appointments.The question of whether thepresident of the Assembly can in¬itiate the removal of executiveofficers was placed on the ballotby majority vote.Need two-thirds voteIn order to become part of theconstitution, the questions mustreceive a two- thirds favorablevote in next week’s balloting.Candidates in the National Stu¬dent Association election can with¬draw until 5 p.m. today. If theychange their minds afterward,Marlin Smith (ISL-law),chairmanof the election and rules commit¬tee, said their names will remainon the ballot.Debate membership listpPaul E. Breslow (SRP-soc sci),minority leader, moved amend¬ments to the Student Code whichwould have kept membership listsof campus organizations out ofthe hands of investigators unlessthe lists were subpoenaed, andwhich set up other safeguards forthe lists.After defeating Breslow’s mo¬tion, the assembly voted to send a letter to Dean of Students Rob¬ert Manning Strozier embodyingSG’s attitude on the protection ofmembership lists.Urges permanent policyThe resolution urges that theUniversity adopt a permanent pol¬icy of refusing to divulge mem¬bership lists without subpoenas,using its discretion in the furnish¬ing of membership informationabout individual students, and de¬stroying membership lists at theend of the school year. ROON reported April 2 that H*bomb development was advancedonly upon the recommendation ofDr. Edward Teller, a former UCProfessor.)Smith, who was a member ofthe General Advisory Committee,which Oppenheimer directed,from 1946 to 1952 (when the deci-sio was made), stated: “As seenwith the hindsight of 1954 therecommendation may have beenwrong, but that it was arrived athonestly by Oppenheimer andothers I have no doubt. . . . Theresolution of honest differences ofopinion among informed men isthe very basis of democracy andsuch discussion is difficult enoughunder atomic secrecy without per¬secuting one who proposed a lessprecipitous approach that that ul¬timately adopted by higher au¬thority.”Smith continued: “The action ofthe AEC will discourage free dis¬cussion of both politics and sci¬ence; if followed through it willeffectively suppress the veryoriginality of thought that gaverise to the bomb. Any action thattends to discourage imaginativescientists from devoting their tal¬ents to public service cannot helpbut do terrible harm to the futuresecurity of the country."'Run-for-furT boyscrush Chanute fliersby Justin JohnsonThe varsity track team gave a squad from Chanute AirForce Base the 15-event “run-for-fun” test last Saturday onStagg Field and found them milder, much milder. Leavingtheir planes in Rantoul, Ill., the airmen were unable to keepup with the jet-propelled Maroon speedsters, as Chicagobreezed through its first outdoor victory of the season, 93-38.All in all, 20 Chicago runners as he took the two mile in 10:35.3,united in capturing 10 firsts, with Paul Baptist and Ray Sand-11 seconds, and 11 thirds, ers gamboling across the finishslamming both hurdles, the shot line together to tie for second,put, and the two-mile run. Arnie Meardon and Art Omo-Joe Howard, Roger Forsyth, hundro met their match in Olym-and Clive Gray set the stage for pic star John Barnes in the 880,the contest by winning all places but nevertheless ran creditably toin the shot put. Howard threw finish second and third, respec-43'*6" to keep victory from the tively. The situation was repeatedgrasp of his teammate, Forsyth, in the 440 where Barnes, Chanute.In the discus event, Gray came ace, managed to stave off a bid byout of semi-retirement to send the Ken Stapley and Morgan Dam-platter spinning 114,TV4" for first erow at the finish,place, with Forsyth again being Maroons slam bortt hurdlesrelegated to a lesser role, this time In the high and low hurdles,third place. The weightmen com- Dan Trifone, Sherry Gray, Stap-pleted their chores in the javelin ley, John Lathrop, Frank Loomos,throw, where Larry Shaderwof- and Justin Johnson all displayedsky placed second for Chicago their talents, taking everything inwith Howard third. the timber-trials. Stapley took theHigdon wins mile run 220 yd. lows with little trouble,In the distance events, Hal Hig- Johnson finishing first in thedon won the mile in 4:31.9 in spite highs.of a heavy wind, with Spike Pin- This Saturday, the cindermenney not far behind in second place, will meet a strong squad fromLoose-jointed Jim Flynn had lit- Washington University at 12:30tie trouble running his own race p.m. on Stagg Field.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 16, 1954Speakers join against McCarthyism; Court invalidates regulationsdisagree about working with 'left' added to Code by BirenbaumBy David SchlessingerSenator Joseph McCarthy and his creed were friendless in an academic freedom discus¬sion at Rosenwald 2 last Tuesday afternoon; all participants strongly advocated academicfreedom, defined by one speaker as “the absolute right to search for truth, no matter wherethat search may lead.” Six speakers and the organizations they represented included, in theorder that they spoke, Eli Stein (Students for Democratic Action), Gerald Humphrey(Young Republicans), Earl Durham (Labor Youth League), Marcus Raskin (Young Dem¬ocrats), Bogdan Denitch(Young Socialist League), andDon Anderson (Socialist Par¬ty).Stein said "McCarthyism is a "like Hitlerism,” an expression of more directly suggested topic of“fascist, totalitarian, reactionary, academic freedom, proposed thatmonopoly interests” which "puts the criteria for judging teachersover the idea of a Communist con- on the university level be dissoci-spiracy in an attempt to gain sup- ated from any consideration of po-major threat to the long-range port for itself.” The issue of Com- litical attitudes. In' grade schoolsuccess of political democracy”; munism, Durham claimed, is a and high school, "where educationHumhrey, that he "deplores the “false issue; the real issues are is really indoctrination,” politicaluse of name-calling; there must peace, security, and democracy, attitudes should be consideredbe an absolute right to search for The LYL speaker continued with only as those attitudes may affecttruth on the basis of a standard a brief exposition of his own con- teaching abilities,of integrity”; Durham, "Witch- ception of the way to obtain these Denitch broadened the scope ofhunts are chipping away at the goals, claiming that “we must the topic once more by claimingfoundations of freedom”; Raskin, change the motive force of men"We want to seek to find out fun- from profits to social welfare.”damental problems and their an- Judge teachers by capabilityRaskin, limiting himself to theswers, a rational policy which can¬not work in an atmosphere ofhysteria”; Denitch,t“All who trulybelieve in academic freedomshould join to fight for it”; andAnderson, “Everyone must havethe freedom not to conform andto find truth for himself.”What it is; what to do that McCarthyism is “only a facetof the attack on academic free¬dom.” "McCarthyism,” DenitchSee "McCarthy," page 4BJ students stretch atsunrise across midwaySee picture, page 1Spring is budding on the Midway. Each morning more thanAlthough the speakers agreed 20 hardy residents of Burton-Judson Courts gather for earlyin censuring McCarthyism a n d morning calisthenics.opWoPn°nd"ffereda‘atout the exTt . Startling the early birds, human and feathered, by gather-nature of McCarthyism and the ^8 opposite Burton-Judson five days a week at a bright andmost preferable way to safeguard early 7 a.m., the group starts with a short warm-up and thenacademic freedom. puts in a brisk 20 minutes ofStein rejected two "extreme” side-straddle hops, push-ups,views of McCarthyism (“a power burpees, duck-walking, etc.struggle in the Republican party” Cadence ls counted by chamber-and a manifestation of our for- |jn jjouse staff member Georgeetgn policy ), stating that he con- Athanson> who has sparked andstders it a totalitarian movement organteed lhe movement single-which, by method if not purpose, handedoffers a threat to all of America’sdemocratic institutions. For the on^, PurPpse 1S healthypurpose of defeating McCarthy- exercise outdoors in the morningism, Stein suggested a “practical” air, now that it’s spring again,”attack to "make un-McCarthyism Athanson said. "It’s purely volun-a necessity.” This attack, he sug¬gested, would supplement ideolog¬ical refutation of witch-hunting."The recession,” Stein concluded,"may defeat McCarthy.” '‘We too wish Joe would go*Humphrey agreed with Stein inWishing that "Joe would go,”pointing out that the responsibleleadership of the Republican Par¬ty has repudiated his methods.The YR representative added,however, that the people, "recent¬ly educated to citizenship,” stillwant to know what is going on inrelation to Communist spy infil¬tration, etc.; unfortunately, "theyhave seen a way to an answer inMcCarthy’s tactics.”Durham sees McCarthyism tary and everybody is welcome.”Athanson organized a similarproject two years ago with fiftymen and women. "We hope thatsome of the girls’ houses will joinus again this year,” he said.The group has more than dou¬bled in size since the programstarted on Monday. It includesmembers of most of the B-Jhouses, both college and divi¬sional, according to Athanson.ALEXANDER'S THE GREATPLACE TO EAT OFF CAMPUSOPEN DAY AND NIGHTYOUR HOSTS WILL BEGEORGE KYROS PETE HRISTAKOS1137 - 39 East 63rd StreetTheDisc1367 E. 57th St.•THE RECORDOF THE WEEKFlorence FosterJenkinsSoprano AriasLRT 7000 . . . $2.99 HARRY A. ZISOOK & SONSUniversity District Renting OfficeMAVFLOWER 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 MAY 1stHotel rooms with private bath and showerSgl.—$8 per wk.; dbl.—$12 per wk.Hotel apts. with switchboard and maid service1 rm. furnished apt. at $733 rm. furnished apt. at $100office hours ... 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. . . . Monday thru FridayTHERE IS NO CHARGE FOR THIS SERVICEmain officeHARRY A. ZISOOK & SONS1711 E. 7lat Real EstateServing Chicago since 1907 The Student-Faculty-Administration Court struck down fiveregulations drawn up by Director of Student Activities Wil¬liam Birenbaum and an article in the by-laws of the StudentAssembly, when it declared both sets'of rules unconstitutionalFriday.Birenbaum had added the five paragraphs, dealing mainlywith social affairs, to the Stu- d voiddent Code and regulation. A The refused t0 consider abrief submitted to the court third case, brought by the Studentby Elias M. Stein (ISL-Phy Sci) Government, which asked for aon behalf of Student Government, decision on whether Birenbaum orheld that the student activities di- Student Union were respon-rector had no right to add the sible for having signs placed inrules because the administration restricted areas before the Wash-may enact temporary regulations mgton Promenade in February.only in cases of “urgent neces- — ’sity.”In effect, the court ruled thatthere was no emergency whenBirenbaum added his rules. Be¬fore handing down its ruling, thecourt noted that Birenbaum hadfailed to submit any defense ofhis action.Article X of the by-laws wouldhave given the court jurisdictionover decisions of the committeeon elections and rules dealingwith election violations.Marlin Smith (ISL-Law) arguedin favor of having the court takejurisdiction, but questioning indi¬cated that the court was not con¬vinced it had such power. Its de¬cision declared the article null The delightful story of a gent whowent on a wild weekend with hisfast-moving first loved namedand took his wife along!Dinoh Sheridan • Kay KendallJohn Greasonin technicolorTodov ot.k JO. 8 IS. 10 00 or arborn ai divisionStudents presenting their ID cordsat box office will be admitted for50c any week night. Saturdaysand Sundays until 5 p.m.Get,hot with a DOTrfis season-”l||i For scorecards you’ll be proud of,play the ball that gives you oilthese advantages:MAXIMUM DISTANCEPOWERED BY TRU-TENSION WINDINGABSOLUTELY UNIFORM PERFORMANCEPERFECT BALANCELIFETIME WHITENESSPROVEN LEADERSHIPSpaldimGfor maximum distance with durability play TOP-FlITE. •DOT* and TOP-FlITE sold through golf professionals only.Test TubeMysteries “Always loved toprobe the un¬known, so my jobas secretary to thehead chemist ismade for me....Katie Gibbs hasthe happy knackof matching thegirl and the job.”Every year bundreds of collegewomen use Gibbssecretarial training to secure the right joband assure rapid promotion. Special Coursefor College Women. Write College Dean for“Gibus Giri.b at Won.”KATHARINE GIBBSSECRETARIALBOSTON It, 90 MarltxKMth St. NEW YORK 17, 230 P«k AveCHICAGO 11. 91 E. Superior St. PROVIDENCE 6. 159 Anfelt StMONTCLAIR, N J„ 33 Plymouth St IWWr**t Cream (W it America's favorite hair tonic. U’l non-alcoholic. Contains soothing lanolin. Croontt hair, relievo* dryness, removes loose dandroft Cream W. Ckwtto! leu as 2*.%April 16, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Kharasch appointedto top chemistry postMorris S. Kharasch, chemist at the University of Chicago,has been named the first Gustavus F. and Ann M. Swift dis¬tinguished service professor of chemistry at the University,Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton announced Monday.Kharasch, a member of the UC faculty for the past 26 years,was made a full professor in 1930 and the Carl William Eisen-drath professor of chemistryin 1936. by the National Defense ResearchThe distinguished service Council-, .. ...... Elected in 1946 to the Nationalprofessorship was established on- Acadcray ol Sciences, the highestTT honor in the scientific field, Khar-der the will of the late Charles H.Swift as a tribute to his father,the early Chicago packer whohelped to found the University.Among a succession of discov¬eries in both theoretical and prac¬tical chemistry procured by Khar¬asch, an organic chemist, are:chemicals to prevent the forma¬tion of “popcorn” polymers thatclog the pipes in synthetic rubberplants; merthiolate, the mostwidely used antiseptic in Ameri¬can hospitals; contributions to thedevelopment of the cold rubberprocess; isolation and preparationof the drug ergonevine, widelyused in childbirth; new methodsof producing mercury compoundswhich have proved to be the firstefficient seed disinfectant, a dis¬covery which has saved farmersan estimated billion dollars an¬nually.During World War II Kharaschdeveloped 300 of the 1,500 pro¬posed chemical warfare com¬pounds examined in the secrettoxicity laboratory set up at UC asch was cited by the President ofthe United States for his scientificcontributions during World WarII. He was also awarded the JohnScott medal of the city of Phila¬delphia and the Theodore WilliamRichards medal of the AmericanChemical Society. Kelsen to deliverWalgreen talkshere next week“The Foundations of Democ¬racy” will be the subject of thenext series of Walgreen lectures.They will be given by Hans Kel¬sen, professor of international lawat the Naval War College.“Democracy and Philosophy” isthe subject of the first two lec¬tures, to be held on April 19 and21. On April 23 and 26, Kelson willdiscuss “Democracy and Reli¬gion,” and on April 28 and 30“Democracy and Economics” willbe Kelsen’s topic. All of the lec¬tures will be held in Soc. Sci. 122at 4:30 p.m. Davey to explainnew AB, BS degreesCollege students who wish additional information aboutthe new joint degree programs are invited to special meetingsby John R. Davey, dean of students in the college.The biological sciences degree will be discussed next Tues¬day, the physical sciences degree on next Thursday, and thehumanities degree on Tuesday, April 27.Students now classified in the — 7 7college or who enter the col- the present quarter or at someconege oi wno eniei me coi later pointj into one o£ the newlege before the autumn quar- “joint degree” programs and seekter of 1954 may qualify for the oniy new degree. Those whoAB degree of the college by com- wish to obtain a new “joint de¬pleting the requirements in effect gree” only, will have their require-at the time of their admission, as ment of general studies (compre-specified in terms of individual hensive examinations in the col-programs of comprehensive exam- lege) adjusted so that examina-inations to be passed. The same tions in excess of those specifiedrequirements constitute the gen- by the new program which theyeral studies portion of the new un- enter will not be requiredJewry to celebrateancient Pesach rite dergraduate programs for (1) the Students who expect to com-C I6?,, t ..°r ,tut?nal, s,“.die® plete the requirements of the col-and fr^onal “P“on lege for (^present (old) AB thisA® of *hlc°'legc- S(u,d?n's,maX quarter should apply for admis-obtain both the present (old) and ^jon , th divlsi<£ or profession.he new joint bachelor s degrees , schoo, , their choice in ,he(the AB awarded jointly by the usua, way. bu, if ,hcy seek one o{college and the division of the hu- ,be new degrees, they should spe-Passover (Pesach), the holiday commemorating the joyous mamties, or the SB awarded joint- cfy that pUrpoae wben makingexodus of the Jews from Egyptian slavery, will be celebratedfor eight days beginning tomorrow at sundown. During thisperiod certain foods are prohibited, such as bread and cake.Matzoh (unleavened bread) is a remembrance of the hastydeparture which did not allow time for the bread to rise.The Hillel Foundation, 5715 , , ,, w uiy Li id t puiuu^c wucu motivingly by the college and either the appiication. Such students will notdwision of the biological sciences re ister for further courses untilor the division of the physical sci- the quarter in which they startences) may do so; or students their residence in the division ormay transfer, either at the end of school.Woodlawn, will conduct itsannual Seder at 6:30 p.m. onSunday. The Seder is a traditionalmeal notable for particular foodsHI-FIDELITYComponentsAMPLIFIERS • SPEAKERS• RECORD CHANGERSTope and Disc Recordersand AccessoriesNet or Below Net Price*ROckwell 2-2262NABORHOOD TV4211 West Roosevelt Road symbolizing the sorrows the Jewsknew in Egypt, and more impor¬tant, their rejoicing for their re¬lease from bondage.Today at 7:45 p.m. there will beSabbath services in the upstairssynagogue. Following the servicesthe Passover Oneg will begin at8:30 p.m. with poetry readings byStanley Gervirtz and Aryeh Motz-kin.Passover lunches will be servedat Hillel from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30p.m., Monday through Friday.Reservations for both the Sederand lunches must be in by thisafternoon at 3 p.m. The Seder is$1.80 for Hillel members and $2.00for non-members; lunches are $.80for members, and $1.00 for non¬members.WHERE THE U Of CMEETS TO EATQoltlcn’dFINE FOOD13 2 1 East 57th Street Tickets to Sayao concertto be sold at student ratesBidu Sayao, Brazilian-born Metropolitan Opera singer, andmembers T>f the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, will be fea¬tured at the University of Chicago Settlement Benefit’s SpringFestival, April 29, at Orchestra Hall.* Tickets are on sale at Orchestra Hall, Reynolds Club, Inter¬national House' Woodworth’s Bookstore, and the SettlementHouse. Mail orders may besent to the Settlement House, American music will comprise thea ^ _ latter portion of the program.4630 McDowell Avenue. One- Patrons ol thc benefit are tn.hundred twenty-five tickets (usu- vited to a reception following theally $4.80) are available for $2.50 concert. Guest of honor at the re-to students presenting their ID ception will be Dr. J. Carloscards at the Student Government Muniz, Brazilian ambassador toStudent Service Center. the United States.The Spring Festival will markMiss Sayao’s first appearance inthe United States in five years.The first part of the program willbe devoted to the singing of someof her operatic recordings. LatinNO 7-9071 HYDE PARK THEATRE £tA?3Er/ARKSTARTING FRIDAY, APRIL 16John Huston's latest John Huston's greatest"Beat the Devil" "The Treasure of thewith Humphrey Bogart Sierra Madre" 'Jennifer Jones - Robert Morley with Humphrey BogartGina Lollobrigida Walter Huston"A screwball classic” — "One of the few movies whichTime Mag genuinely deserves to be calledgreat" — Life MagComing: "ROME 11 O'CLOCK and "100 MEN AND A GIRL"•vvv^-vvv-i-i-vvv-;— Int. House planshikes to PalosPark, arboretumTwo week-end hiking trips havebeen scheduled by InternationalHouse. On Sunday, April 25, therewill be an excursion to PalosPark. The appointed meeting is at9 a.m. in the International Houselobby. The hikers will join theAmerican Youth Hostel group atthe 63rd and Halsted elevated sta¬tion to catch the bus leaving forPalos Park. Hikers may bringlunches.The trip scheduled to meet Sun¬day, May 2, at 10:30 a.m. in thelobby, will lead to Morton's Arbo¬retum. If there are not enoughcars to drive to the Arboretum,hikers will meet the Youth Hostelgroup in Union Station and takean 11:20 a.m. Burlington train toLisle. Lunches may be broughtand eaten in the picnic grove. Forregistration and further informa¬tion contact George Karreman,Do. 3-6638.CANOE TRIPSQuetico-Superior Wilderness. Only$5.00 per man day for complete, outfit, aluminum canoe and food.For free folder and map write:Bill Rom, CANOE COUNTRYOUTFITTERS, Box 717 C, Ely,Minnesota.WIRE FLOWERS HOMEFOR EASTERMitzie 9s Flower ShopFROMBOTTLED UNDE* AUTHORITY Of THC COCA-COLA COMPANY BYTh« Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc. ."CaU“ U ■ irada-mariL O 1953, Th» Coca-Cola Company 1225 E. 63rd J!1301 E. 55HiMl 3-4020 HY 3-5353j. .j..;. •;* •;» »;• •;» «;• •;« *;• »;• **• •;> •{> .;Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 16, 1954Present position of Independent Students LeagueIssued once weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at the publica¬tion office, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones:Editorial Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1010; Business and Advertising Offices,Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions bymail, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.Arthur Brown Richard L Wardeditor-in-chief managing editorNews editors: Naomi Birnbaum, Allen JortgerNews Feature editor: Nellie StonemonFeature editor: Daniel QueenSports editor: Paul A. HoffmanCopy editor: Joy BurbachAdvertising manager: Reva BrownProduction manager: Joanna HerlihyPage one assistant: Mitchell SleinCopy staff: Jerry Ex, Pam Brown, Jock Burboch, Williom Bronclon, JeonCarlssonPhotographer: Joe WolfEditorial staff: Brina Bailin, Robert Bloch, Dovfs Bobrow, Pod Breslow,Stephen Cohen, Diane Epstein, Al Fortier, Lennie Friedman, SuzanneFriedman, Miriam Garfin, Richard Herwitt, Rolph B. Hirsch, RobertaHnpkins, Brina Jaffee, Justin Johnson, Jon Mojde, Neal Mermoll,Amie Matanky, Spike Pinney, Elaine Pomper, Bob Quinn, Karl Rodman,Wolf Roder, David Schlessinger, Judy Smith, Warren Spochner, FrankG. Ternenyi, John Twomey The -Independent Students League(ISL), since it was organized in 1948,has been the leader in student Govern¬ment and in the delegations which theUniversity sends to the PSA congresseseach summer. ISL has always recog¬nized that NSA, as an association ofstudents, does not have the power toeliminate discrimination all over theUnited States, to destroy McCarthyism,or to bring eternal peace to the world.We know that NSA can work to end dis¬crimination in the student community,that it can unify student support foracademic freedom, that it can help toimprove international relations throughstudent exchanges and conferences.Academic freedom:ISL believes that the current threatsto academic freedom can best be coun¬tered not by meaningless gestures andhollow rhetoric but rather by effectiveand responsible action. ISL will workfor NSA adoption of the following meas¬ures:1. Support of the right of studentpolitical groups to receive universityrecognition, including such basicallyundemocratic organizations as the La¬bor Youth League and Students forAmerica.2. A reassertion of NSA's belief inthe right of teachers to teach and stu¬dents to learn with regard only to com¬petence and not to political considera-ations.3. An amendment to the NSA Bill ofRights affirming the right of all stu¬dent organizations to hear speakers oftheir choice on subjects of their choice.Student travel:At present most of the NSA summerEuropean travel programs are plannedfor students in the social sciences, hu¬manities, and the college. ISL candi¬dates will strive to broaden the sum¬mer travel program to include trips forLetters ...Presents reasonsfor quittingLast week’s MAROON issue quoted me•s saying that “ ‘not enough work isbeing done’ ” by ISL, and that as aresult <3t this, I had resigned from theparty. The author of this story neverinterviewed me on my reasons for quit¬ting ISL, and I never made any publicstatement about my resignation fromthe party. Furthermore, I never madeany statement in which it was chargedthat SG or ISL (which the case may be)was "not doing enough work.” It wouldbe helpful to MAROON readers if youwould label your fiction as such.My actual reason for quitting ISL isthat I got disgusted with the pettyparty politics which ISL has been play¬ing. Among the more outstanding ex¬amples of such conduct have been: 1)the indictment of SRP for violatingprovisions in the Student Code whichwere so minor that Mr. Birenbaum un¬knowingly gave SRP permission to dothe "illegal’’ acts, and; 2) the refusalof the ISL-controlled Executive Councilto fill an SRP vacancy on the groundsthat someone had challenged the valid¬ity of a by-law compelling the Councilto replace resigning SG members withpeople from the same party, wheneverpossible. The real reason for this refusalwas the desire of certain members ofISL to keep out as many SRP’ers aspossible while the ISL-backed amend¬ment 66 the Michigan Plan was beingvoted Upon.It is needless to recount other ‘‘man¬euvers” for which ISL has become sofamous The above two instances shouldbe sufficient to give you some indicationof what made continued membership inISL so increasingly distasteful that Ifelt it necessary to walk out of theparty.Sol HirshEditor's noteThe HAROON regrets that readerHirsh's position was misrepresented inthe quotation, which was printed ingood faith, and is glad to have thisfuller exposition of his views.Shun party labelsA short time ago we decided to runas independent candidates for the posi¬tion of National Delegate to the NSA inthe forthcoming elections. But ourpetitions were not accepted withoutcomment; instead it was "suggested"by various “influential” people that wedrop from the race before it had begun.In fact when one of our petitions washanded in at the SG office it was re¬luctantly accepted with the comment:“Independent, eh? You’d better quitnow ’cause you don’t have a chanceagai ist the party.” But why not, wasthe *stonished answer. A patronizing•mil* was the reply.W% believe that we, as well as anyothei. student at the University, haveas n.uch right to seek office as does amember of a particular political group.In fact it is on this promise that weIntend to gtay in the race and let theUC voter decide on our ability for theoffice.Frank LoomosPhil WyattMcCarthy ...(from page 2)continued, “arises from the eco¬nomic policies established duringthe Truman, Franklin Roosevelt,and Eisenhower administrations?policies which set up as a neces¬sity production for war.” Suchpolicies, according to the YSL,make academic freedom impos¬sible. Instead, we have “the ridicu¬lous situation where each groupsays to every other ‘We havepurged more Communists thanyou have named’ at the same timethat all claim to champion aca¬demic freedom.”Denitch advocated a nation¬wide, “truly sincere” campaign to•“fight against witch-hunts and thebasic attack on civil liberties.Anderson, representing the So¬cialist Party, made the furtherpoint that freedom is necessaryfor all, that "we are not free un¬less we are all free,” and that "de¬mocracy necessitates academicfreedom for everyone.” NSA CandidatesNATIONAL DELEGATESISL SRPClive Gray Dove BobrowMonica Kozosa Paul BreslowBruce Larkin Larry LichtensteinJon Metros Karl RodmanEli Stein Richord WordIndependentFranklin LoomosPhilip WyattNATIONAL ALTERNATESISL SRPJoseph Brenner Lyn BurnsAlbert Fortier Frank KirkEmil Johnson Marcus RaskinHoward Turner Fred SolomonBarbara Vogelfanger Raymond WilkersonREGIONAL ALTERNATESISL SRPSton Fox Corolyn EggertPeter H. Greene Bob FloydJames Handler Suzanne FriedmannJoli Lasker David HartleyGilbert Lincoln Sol HirshAllison Logan Shirley LongUrsula Mathienson David-Gerald NoshNona M. Miller James RosenblumBob Reichler Colemon SeskindSobina Wagner James ViceReferendum to decideway to fill vacanciesThe following amendments will ap¬pear on the NSA ballot by a vote of SG.They require a two-third majorityto pass.1. Term of court: Amend the Statute ofPowers, by substituting in Article II,Section 2; "December 1” for “Novem¬ber 15” and "November 30” for "No¬vember 14.”2. Members at large: Amend the con¬stitution, by adding to Article II, A,4, "There shall be five members ofthe Assembly elected at large.”3. Executive officers of the Assembly:Amend the Constitution, by addingto Article II, F: "2. The president ofStudent Government may initiate theremoval from office of any electedexecutive officer of the Student Gov¬ernment. The president must presenta written statement of his reasons tothe assembly, and the removal fromoffice becomes effective only if iti6 approved by a majority of the As¬sembly within two weeks of the noti¬fication.” 4.Vacancies ii) the Student Assembly:Amend the Constitution by substi¬tuting for Article V. G. 1., the follow¬ing: “1. a. In the case of a resigna¬tion from the assembly, a by-electionto fill all vacancies in the assemblyshall be held at the next all-campuselection.b. The executive council shall be em¬powered to make interim appoint¬ments to fill vacancies in the assem¬bly, subject only to the grade andresidence requirements of the consti¬tution. All interim appointmentsshall lapse at the first occurence ofan all-campu6 election.”The following amendment will appearon the ballot , as the result of circu¬lated petitions;Resolved that vacancies arising inStudent Government shall be filledin the following way:1. In the case of a recognized cam¬pus political party, by anothermember of the same party.2. In the case of an independent,by an applicant of similar politi¬cal views.This amendment shall follow ArticleV.c. of the Constitution of StudentGovernment./ PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETCome and See 17sBesuchen Sie Uns Venez Nous VoirVisitanos Zo KhoditeSant attefe George emn open ang bottle is27 different languagesU TMl 3-0524 1131-33 E. 55thfeaturingBallantinc Ale and Beer students in specialized fields, such asmedicine, biological and physical sci¬ences, and law.Discount service:Our delegation will enlarge the pres¬ent discount service on the local leveland will work for a similar expansionon the national scale. We shall urgethat NSA make contracts with severalretail chains, such as A & P. stores,which will be applicable to students atall member schools.Discrimination in educationWe will work for NSA support of FairEducational Practices Acts on the stateand national levels. Such legislation en¬sures that the only requirement for theadmission of students to institutions ofhigher education will be their abilityto learn, without regard to race, color,or religion.We will work for NSA establishmentof a clearing house of information onthe progress of member schools In elim¬inating discrimination on their cam¬puses.Foreign exchange:At the National Congress, ISL dele¬gates will use their own practical ex¬perience in organizing foreign studentexchange programs to present the casefor greater student participation in thedirection of such exchanges.We will promote consultation amongmember schools on the problem of fi¬nancing student exchange programs.Along this line, the UC delegates willemphasize the valuable help given theexchange program by the campus fra¬ternities and women’s clubs, as well ascommunity foreign language groups.ISL delegates will support the prin¬ciple of exchange with all countries inthe world, including those behind theIron Curtain. At the same time theywill stress the necessity of the exchangeof ideas and information as the indjs-pensable condition of any exchangeprogram.ISL delegates, as they have done since1949, will continue to oppose affilia¬tion of NSA with the InternationalUnion of Students (IUS), a Communist-controlled group with headquarters in Prague. As in the past, ISL will urgeFederal scholarships program:ISL will work for NSA support of themovement to restore the funds for theFulbrlght Fellowship Program, whichhave tentatively been cut by five-sixthsin Congress.We shall advocate a program of fed-that NSA announce its readiness to co¬operate with IUS on projects of a prac¬tical, non-political nature. However,since such projects have failed in thepast because of the unreasonable con¬ditions posed by IUS, ISL delegates winurge the NSA to continue its presentemphasis on cooperation with the na¬tional student groupie of the free world,erally financed fellowships for studentsIn the humanities and the social sci¬ences. Such a program would be similarto the grants of the National ScienceFoundation to students In the physicalsciences, The program should be ad¬ministered by an agency of leadingscholars, such as the National ResearchCouncil, and should derive funds byCongressional appropriation.Student cooperatives:While developing the Student Gov¬ernment housing cooperative projectthis year ISL candidates found that in¬formation and suggestions from studentcooperatives at other schools were in¬strumental in bringing the student in¬terests committee of the Board of Trust¬ees to a favorite vote on the co-op.ISL believes that because many stu¬dents are unaware of the success whichco-ops universally enjoy in providingvastly cheaper living conditions to stu¬dent residents, the co-op movement i*less widespread than it might be. Ittherefore feels that much is to b«gained from stimulating interest andspreading information. They will there¬fore urge that part of the $25,000 grantNSA is now seeking from the FordFoundation be used to employ an ex¬pert on student government affairswho will travel to various Americancampuses and stimulate interest in stu¬dent co-operatives as well as studentextra-curricular self-government.Student Representative PartyFear of freedom is not uncommon inthe America of 1954. The atmosphereof the heresy-hunt, the legal and so¬cial pressures which demand conform¬ity to an Americanism quite foreign tothe democratic tradition have producedthat political phenomenon known asMcCarthyism.As students at a university with aproud heritage of freedom, we realizethat the liberty to learn, to discuss andto communicate, even across politicalbarriers, is essential to the progress ofour nation and of the world.We have seen the fruits of McCarthy¬ism in its attacks upon our educationalinstitutions. Instances of violations ofacademic freedom have steadily in¬creased. Few students are likely to joinwith those to whom the pursuit ofknowledge is subversive; there have beenmany protests of individual campusesagainst McCarthyism. Yet the largestAmerican student group, the NationalStudent Association, has done little toarticulate or encourage a principled, ef¬fective opposition to the odious assaultof the McCarthyltes.The defense of freedom cannot beachieved through passive disgust orviewing-with-alarm alone. We of SRPbelieve that students can and shouldmake their view known and heard. Tak¬ing our cue from an eminent late op¬ponent of the McCarthyite mentality,we suggest the following program of"four freedoms for the student,” a pro¬gram which we believe will help to re¬place the present inaudible whisper ofthe American student with a clear andcoherent voice.Freedom of thoughtThe freedom to think, study andteach without fear of repression becauseof charges of heresy is of vital concernto students. SRP will strive to bringNSA into full participation in the effortto preserve American liberties by mov¬ing that:1. NSA give genuine support to a na¬tional Academic Freedom Week. It gaveno assistance to those regions carryingout the program and did not attempt toexpand it to other regions. This pro¬gram should be a real effort on thepart of NSA to involve students in de¬fense of those freedoms so essentialto education, If it is not to be indoc¬trination.2. The NSA Student Bill of Rights beexpanded to include provisions protect¬ing freedom of thought and expressionin academic communities and the rightof students and teachers to exercise theprerogatives of democratic citizenshipwithout fear of subjection to dismissalor social castigation. SRP delegates willwork to insure that NSA actively striveto establish the Student Bill of Rightson more campuses and to secure its en¬forcement.Freedom from fearHysteria feeds upon an atmosphere ofinternational tensions and prospect ofwar. Within the last year the possibilityof lessening these tensions occurredwithin the student community when two delegations of US student editorstoured the Soviet Union. SRP agreeswith Director of Student Activities Wil¬liam Blrenbaum’s letter to the presidentof NSA that there should be a two-wayexchange of students. Therefore, wepropose that:X. NSA invite a delegation of Sovietstudent editors to visit the UnitedStates during the next year; and fur¬thermore, that such programs of ex¬change with other nations as exist beContinued aud expanded.Universal Military Training has re¬peatedly threatened American studentswith the prospect of a draft far moreextensive, permanent and with a longerperiod of service than any previous sys¬tem in American history. UMT is basedon the presupposition of a permanentstate of international tension. PresidentEisenhower, in commending UMT,stated, “Psychological indoctrinationrequires the longest time but unfor¬tunately it is never completely forgot¬ten.” Formerly NSA opposed such aprogram, but last year it failed to re¬affirm its position. Therefore, we pro¬pose that:2. NSA reaffirm its opposition toUMT and that it be prepared to organ¬ize student opposition if the measureis re-introduced in Congress.Freedom from racial andreligious discriminationEducation limited by segregation anddiscrimination for some means limitededucation for all. we propose that NSA:1. Establish a national committee,with a respected educator to advise andassist in the administration of the pro¬gram, to facilitate in establishing andenforcing Michigan Plan programs onmember campuses.2. Prepare and distribute, in co-oper¬ation with such groups at the NationalAssociation for the Advancement of Col¬ored People and the American CivilLiberties Union, a report on discrimina¬tory practices in ail phases of studentlife and on discriminatory and quota-limited admission practices existent to¬day in college and professional schools,to be based upon a national surveyundertaken by NSA and co-operatinggroups.3. Support the campaign of theNAACP to end segregated education atall levels and to equalize opportunityfor all groups.Freedom from wantA serious national decrease in collegeand university enrollment has focusedattention on the many economic diffi¬culties faced by students. In order tomake education possible without unduehardship, we propose that NSA:1. Facilitate the establishment of stu¬dent eating, housing and book-buyingco-operatives and assist them in obtain¬ing financial credit and stability.2. Publicize the need for federal aidto educational institutions and to stu¬dents.3. Prepare and distribute a report tothe American people on the economiccrisis in education.COLLEGE MENEarn $75 per Weekduring Summer(Part-Time IWork During College TermAlso Available)For Information Call: WEbster 9-6359Write:College Program DirectorSuite 1318330 S. Wells St.Chicago 6, IllinoisCAR ESSENTIALDames to welcome the springwith dance for selves, husbandsA spring dinner dance to be held Saturday, April 24, willbe the Dames’ Club Easter present to themselves. The entirethird floor of Ida Noyes has been obtained for the affair, withan 8 p.m. dinner in the west dining room followed by a 9 p.m.to midnight dance in the east auditorium, for Dames Clubmembers and their husbands.Members of the Dames club, a ' ~~ _ . 4 , ~... * . decorated in an Oriental motif,social organization for wives Following the dance win be aof the University students, midnight snack,will be admitted without charge This year’s dinner dance will beto the dance. Expenses will be the first admission-free dance thepaid with funds raised by flames Dames have presented. Other ac-th rough bake sales, benefit tivities of the Dames Club, an or-bridges and dues. ganization attempting to integrateAfter dinner, which will be pre- students’ wives into a well-plannedpared by the Dames themselves, social community, include the reg-Dames and their husbands will ular monthly Dames tea, bridgedance to the music of Bill Price tournaments, sewing circles,and his orchestra in a ballroom sports, community baby 'Sitting, New political group permanentby Arnie MatonkyAfter a fervent three hour and 15 minute discussion, the temporary political action com¬mittee voted 8-7 last Friday to elect permanent officers and to set up a statement of prin¬ciples at another meeting. The meeting was later set for 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at Ida Noyes.Friday’s meeting was called by a group which had left the Student Representative Party(SRP). It debated the question of organizing a third party on campus to oppose both theSRP and the Independent Students League (ISL) at the April 22-23 National Students Asso¬ciation (NSA) election.wus (formerly WSSF) sponsorsa Dance on April 249-1 place to be announced"Duos in Jazz"April 25 2:30 p.m.MANDEL HALL Ray Nelson (college)sparked the meeting by an¬nouncing that he could see noway of reconciling the two mainfactions within SRP, and that hecould not back ISL either becausethe organization “has backeddown on student needs when toldthat the administration is a littlebit opposed to them.’’Discussion of breakThe former SRP members led adetailed discussion of the eventsleading up to their break with theparty. Ralph Fertig (soc sci) saidthat in all 15 students have leftSRP, which is the minority partyin Student Government.Fertig declared that at the timehe w’alked out of SRP he had nointention of forming a new party,and that he would not lead any or¬ganization opposed to SRP candi¬dates in the NSA election, al¬though he might be a member.Peter Pflaum (college) said hebelieved that the University*is ata time of crisis. He criticized or¬ganizations which devote them¬selves to “social functions, com¬mittees and nice work” withoutconsidering the needs of the wholestudent body. SRP regains loyaltyof three objectorsDuring the week following lastFriday night’s meeting of the newpolitical action committee, politi¬cal loyalties oscillated and SRPmembership went alternately upand down.At press time, Robert W. Floyd(phy sci), Michael C. Kaufman(college) and Henry M. Mueller(college) had returned to SRP.Jan Majde (college) said he wasdisgusted because no one who waswilling to do something hadvoiced a stand. Majde, one of thestudents who had left SRP, in¬sisted that a third party is essen¬tial.The meeting drew toward anuproar, with cries of “Commu¬nists and fellow travelers” andparliamentary w’rangles.Defended partyPaul E.Breslow (soc sci), chair¬man of SRP, defended his partyagainst the charges levied againstit. He said that SRP memberssupport their NSA election plat¬form and intend to carry it out.IT S ALL A MATTER OF TASTEeu?S^he’''fresher' T ISL leaders who were present didnot take part in the discussion.Fertig announced that “I won’tunder any conditions return toSRP,” and the meeting boileddown to a friendly fight betweensupporters of a third party andproponents of a political actioncommittee which would take astrong liberal stand but would notrun slates of candidates.Declaring that “this group isnot essential nor desirable,” MissKay E. Schwartz (college) movedthat the committee be dissolved.Miss Jean Hargitt (college) thenmoved a substitute motion thatpermanent officers and a body of ^principles be voted on, which re¬ceived a 7-7 vote. Fertig as chair¬man cast the deciding vote tobreak the tie and set up the per¬manent committee.Christmas carddesigns soughtA design for a Christmas cardwhich extends a holiday greetingand conveys the feeling or idea ofinternational brotherhood is beingsought by the Chicago Chapter ofInternational House Associationwhich hopes to reproduce the cardand sell it in quantity. $25 will bepaid for full rights to the designchosen for reproduction.Deadline for entries in the de¬sign competition is May 31. Thereis no limit on the number of en¬tries anyone can submit. Cardsmay be mailed to InternationalHouse, 1414 E. 59th, and those notchosen will be returned if astamped and addressed envelopeis enclosed.Designs may be submitted inany size and may be planned eith¬er for printing or for silk screenmethod of reproduction. Not morethan two -colors of ink or paintmay be used, although an addi¬tional color may be introduced byusing colored paper. InternationalHouse would be interested in see¬ing some designs in one color,such as in white on a rich red orgreen paper.Ski enthusiaststo hold*reunionOuting Club ski enthusiastsfrom UC and Northwestern whoattended the ski trip to Coloradoduring the interim will hold a re¬union at 8 p.m. tomorrow nightat 5737 University.Veterans of the ski trip wereasked to bring prints, slides, andfilms taken on the trip for show¬ing at the meeting.Portraits byLOUISE BARKERPhotographer1457 C. 57th St. BU 8-0876fat '54Round Trip viaSteamship $40AFMQWENT SAILINGS A9V •Tosritt Rtid Trip AirSQftriO off *40 0*0 >»Ovw season ■tOO seasoneboiM d Over 111ST1BERT CUSS TOIRS $C A ATRAVEL STRRY TORRSCWRWTEC TORRS «RUmvsrrify Travel Co., officialbonded agenfs for all line*, hotrondcrod officiant trayl serviceon a bonne** ban* since 1926.^SaTyaar local travel 0901* tarfolder* end dof«»>er wHfa in.UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cartibridge, Mas*.—THE CHICAGO MAROON April 16, 1954Errors, erratic pitchingcause three UC defeatsby Lennie FriedmanIke Eisenhower didn’t throw out the first ball, nor did the Maroons jar tradition in anyway as the UC nine lost three straight games. Plagued by erratic pitching and spotty field¬ing in their three weekend games, the ball club was downed 15-3, 11-8 and 9-7.At Naperville on Friday the Maroons failed to hold the floodgates and were s\#bpt awayby North Central, 15-3. Team-captain Dave Utley drove in all three Maroon runs whichput Chicago ahead in the second inning, but a determined North Central team came backe later innings to take and and Mann flied t0 left to bring in proved to be his undoing. Maru-noicl tnetr i^au* Marumoto for the sixth and final moto, Mann and Utley kept upSharing the pitching Chores run 0J- inning. This put Chi- their fine hitting. Marumoto col-among his staff, Coach Kyle Cago-ahead, 8-5.Anderson started Jerry Bowman Youngquist walks firewho gave up two runs in three Youngquist relieved Bohman toinnings and was succeeded by hold the lead. After issuing fiveJerry Lux who was shelled in his passes, he was yanked for Lux Maroonsinitial appearance for 10 runs. wh0 again failed to stem the tideChuck Youngquist relieved Lux and by then Chicago was behindand finished the game by walking for good.around the last three North Cen- The Maroons held up well in Maroonstral runs. Most of these runs were the nightcap as long-John Broylesunearned, as^Chicago^ committed went the route and pitched fine St. Josephball. But three Chicago errors Maroons ■Sport Briefs-Acrotheatre spring showhas New Mexican motifsix errors. Chicago batters col¬lected eight hits off North Cen¬tral pitching with Utley andsecond-sacker Bob Mann gettingtwo apiece.Bowman starts againOn Monday Chicago played hostto the St. Joseph Panthers. Inboth ends of a double-header Chi¬cago pulled ahead to an early by Al Fortierlead and then fell apart under lected four hits during the dayand the longest Maroon blow ofthe season— -a triple.R H EMaroons 120 000 000 3 8 6No. .Central 002 051 223 15 10 2St. Joseph 021 204 2 11 6 2Maroons 020 600 0 8 7 6St. Joseph 300 002 4 9 9 1Maroons 104 200 0 7 7 3UC sailors to meetMidwest's top teamsCompeting in the Midwest Collegiate Sailing Associationpressure. Bowman again started Spring Intersectional Invitational Regatta, and launchingfor the maroon and white, giving pleasure sailing at Columbia Yacht Club, the UC sailors startu„n?^rJied.. !^nd one off the 1954 season with a big splash this weekend. The regat¬ta, to be held at the University of Michigan tomorrow andSunday, has a list of teams as impressive as its long name.Wisconsin, Washington, IIT,earned run in four innings.In the bottom half of ihe fourth,Chicago batters collected six runs.A walk to Gil Levine, a single by Acrotheatre is presently preparing its 1954 production,“Acrodea,” a presentation of modern, ballet, folk and acro¬batic dance as well as gymnastic performances on the horizon¬tal bar and trampoline. In the picture above Norma Fox, Bill Texterand Leah Condit (left to right) describe life in their adobe hacienda.The show, describing life in New Mexico, will be given in MandelHall on April 30 and May 1 at 8:30 p.m. and on May 2 at 3:30 p.m.Student tickets are available until April 22 at $1 each at BartlettGym and the Student Service Center in the Reynolds Club.This year’s show, produced and directed by Bud Beyer, director ofAcrotheatre and gymnastics coach, will feature the choreography ofDolores Wharton, Louise Fechheimer and Dorothy King. For non¬students general admission seats are $1.50 each, while all reservedseats are $1.85.Elmhurst downed in tennis meetCoach Bill Moyle’s netmen opened the season against the BlueJays from Elmhurst College by slamming out an 8-2 win. Bob Fox,George Stone, Tom Zukowski and Toby Owen had no trouble winning,but Duncan Burford dropped the second of his three-set match tohis opponent. The Maroons took all three double contests. #George Gray and a walk to Boh- DePauw, Michigan, Michigan uC’ers will be competing in the . ■ • amw _ ■ • •man loaded the bases. After Bruce State, Detroit, W ayne, Chi- twenty races for two new awards, Watkins, Jy trackmen win againColby was hit by a pitched ball cage. and _a guest team from the * major one for outstanding skip-and Buzz larr was safe on a field- Middle Atlantic district will com- ^ and a minor one available toer s choice, Chics^o held two runs pote in the number one ^lidwest both skippers and crews, to beacross. An infield hit by Wendell event 0f tbe Spring. Sailing club presented by the athletic depart-Marumoto and a shortstops er- t c m^ntror on Walt Walker's ground ball exPer,s “f"1 the UC Sa,llnS .brought around two more Maroon Club to swamp about hall the Back at Chicago, pleasure willrunners. Utley was hit by a pitch teams — especially neighbor IIT.International House Movie ProgramEast Lounge, Monday and Thursday Evenings at 7:00 P.M. and 9:00 P.M.Admission 35cMonday, April 19 — ORPHEUS (French)Thursday, April 22 — GENTLEMEN S AGREEMENT (American) start next Tuesday in the club’scompletely renovated maroon-and-white boat. This year schedulesfor pleasure sailing and racinghave been expanded to includeafternoons during the week, aswell as all day on weekends. Whilethese activities are for membersonly, new members are still beingaccepted for the spring quarter. The JV track team defeated Leo and St. George high schools in atriangular meet at Stagg Field last Friday, winning every event butthe mile and discus. High-point man for the lightweights was MitchWatkins who won both hurdle races, tied for first in the high jump,placed second in the board-jump, and picked up thirds in the discusand shot-put for a total of 21 points. Final score was Chicago 86*2,St. George 35, Leo 25%.Sports events this weekToday—the Maroon baseballers face Chicago Teachers at 3:30p.m. in Stagg Field. Tomorrow—the trackmen will nfbet WashingtonUniversity in Stagg Field at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday—the JV trackmenface Wendell Phillips and La Grande high schools and the varsityrunners meet Wilson Junior College, both events 4 p.m. at Stagg Field.star reporter,t started. • •IVE SMOKED CAMELS J. ALL OVER. THEworld, for. me, other.BRANDS JUST CAWV EQUAL «CAMELS' WONDERFUL> MILDNESS, RICH FLAVORT AND ALL-ROUNDSMOKING- PLEASURE JMARGUERITEHong Kong. SpokWhen my familyjournalism atfluency in Fren<corresponBuchenwald, 1and I’mCAMELS LEADin sales by recordNewest nationwide figures* fromthe leading industry analyst,Harry M. Wootten, show Camelsnow 50 t/10% ahaad of Hie•ecand-place brand—biggestpreference lead in history !•Published In Printers’ Ink, ISMr B. 1- Bsjreslds Tsbsms Co.. Wtnston-BsUm, N. aCamels agree with more peopleTHAN ANY OTHER. CIGARETTE 1^ MildnessQhd ffavor v■:»4* l,*ALApril 16, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Quartet capable, music lacking 'Inheritors' readingopens freedom weekIt is certainly commendable for a chamber group to perform contemporary music; how¬ever, it does not seem too much to ask that it should be good contemporary music. TheWalden Quartet s program last Friday at Mandel Hall was very contemporary, but unfor¬tunately not very good. The three quartets, by two Englishmen and an American, were va¬ried in style, but rather uniform in quality, which did little to recommend the performers’discrimination, notwithstanding their obvious good intentions and ability as performers.The first work, a theme andvariations by Alan Raws-thorne, was perhaps the mostindividual of the three, but wasseverely hampered by a faultytechnique in the use of the medi¬um, and a needless and artificialharmonic complexity which failedto disguise the melodic lackings.Rawsthorne, born in England in1905, wrote the work in 1939; yetit sounded very much like theeffort of a partly-trained student,admittedly a talented one, butpartly-trained nevertheless.Elliott Carter, the one Amer¬ican, offered an even more re¬cent work, written in 1951. Car¬ter was a student of Piston and,later, Boulanger, when he un¬doubtedly was one of the largegroup of Americans who, likeCopland, wrote much music inan experimental vein in the ’20s.Most of these later discardedthis early experimentation infavor of more substantial andindividual styles, especially un¬der the influence of folk music.The last quartet was a ratherearly work by William Walton,very conventional and almostromantic compared to the oth¬ers, sounded rather like thesolid classical work with whichconventional programs end aft¬er their Ravelian or even Bar-tokian excursions. Walton has,however, written much more in¬teresting music; this quartetseemed to be an exercise in aclassical form, very well con¬structed and very classical butwith very little interest as a piece of music. tion the well-known ones, whichFor all this, the Walden Quar- probably deserve to be heardtet still deserves some credit much more than these, not tofor programming contemporaryworks at all; still, why mostlyEnglish ones? Neither Rawstornenor, certainly, Walton, has beenmuch neglected, and there are anynumber of works by Piston, Cop¬land, Moore or Ive, just to men- speak of composers of other coun¬tries. The Walden Quartet certain¬ly are very good as performers,and if they can only improve theirprogramming we can hope forsome excellent concerts in thefuture. Robert BlockNew Huston film amusing;opens today at Hyde ParkBeat the Devil, opening tonight its greatest lapse into vacuous-at the Hyde Park Theatre, is a ness and poor taste in the depic-highly amusing film, but suffers tion of his cronies, grotesques whofrom a stridency and hysteria that for the most part have nothing tocomes when inventiveness is not do; it is especially painful to seebalanced by firm direction and Peter Lorre in one of these point- Last Sunday evening a group of actors from the cast ofThe World of Sholem Aleichem presented a concert readingof Susan Glaspell’s The Inheritors in Mandel Hall. The per¬formance marked the beginning of Academic Freedom Week.The Inheritors deals with the problem of conformity T>n aMidwest campus in the year 1921. The problems and lideascontained in the work are very —~ :—7—~ :—~r~much alive for us today, but SSSLVSSSL'“LlZ ^the actual literary expression has been taught. To do this meansof them is unfortunately dated, going to jail for assisting someNevertheless, the audience en- Hindu students who have beenjoyed the professional rendition agitating for Indian independence,given it by Howard de Silva, Gi- This character, as well as othersbert Green, Ann Revere, Marjory jn the play, suffers from the lackNelson, Ed Grower, and Cliff Car- 0f what we today call sophistica-penter. tion. Miss Nelson overcame thisThey provided a much appreci- difficulty and gave a believablea ted oportunity for UC to witness and sympathetic portrayal of thea well done concert performance, girl..This form of presentation, which This group came south to per¬is enjoying a popular revival con- form for the campus during thesists of actors reading from music hour and a half break betweenstands, with movement limited to matinee and evening perform-the bare minimum necessary to ances of The World of Sholomconvey the essential physical ac- Aleichem. They very generouslypurpose. The film, which is moreburlesque than farce, was directedby John Huston from a scenarioby Huston and Truman Capote,and bears all the earmarks of less roles, trying to cope with ex¬tremely poor material.In contrast to Morley and hisgang are Humphrey Bogart as anAmerican adventurer and Jenni-“SPORTSWITH*54-4 YOU KNOW YOUR BEERit’s bound to be BudWhen it comes to beer, millions ofpeople do “put all their eggs inone basket”. • . they always drinkBudweiser. They knojv that no otherbeer can match the distinctive tasteof Budweiser, brewed by the costliestprocess on Earth.(.Incidentally, Budweiser tastes wonderful withhard-boiled eggs!)Eftjo/Budweiserloads All Boors In Sales Today...and Through The Years!ANHEUSER-BUSCH,INC*91. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES donated their time to provide ation.Marjory Nelson portrayed the cogent beginning for Academicgranddaughter of the founder of Freedom Week,the college, who is faced with the Arlene Petersenahasty improvisation. It can hardly fer Jones as the dopey wife of abe considered representative of Britisher on his way to a drearyeither’s work. career in the colonies.The plot center, if the film can The film in general is overbur-be considered as having one, is the dened by a plot with a surfeit ofundoing of a group of rogues by turns and inventions, characterstheir own suspicions and machina- at loose ends, attempts at satiretions. Robert Morley, as leader of without a clear point of view, anda band of rascals who have de- an overly burdened literary dia-signs on uranium lands in British logue. This sort of satire needs,Africa, gives a very creditable primarily, a simple approach andperformance in the role .of a great lightness of touch, or elseMachiavellian schemer with a it collapses into a heavy-handedtendency to spout middle class and confusing lampoon,moral platitudes. The film makes Frank G. Ternenyi Everyman” interestingdespite its weaknessThe Chicago Equity Library Theatre gave an interestingperformance of Everyman in Rockefeller Chapel Mondaynight. The play’s plot consists of Everyman’s changing atti¬tude as he is forced to meet death and face'all its conse¬quences. The possessions he learns that he must lose arerepresented by individual characters who symbolize hisfriends, his goods, his knowl- 777 7 7—:edge and his strength. The est„o1 ^whence- Sarah Mineonowor of the nlav lie* in it* made the very dl£flcult Part ofPP...5r } e ^ 7? in Good Deeds a very successful one.ability to force the audience to On the whole, the cast tri¬umphed over the worst of mod¬ern costumes. Fellowship hadon a purple shirt and suspend¬ers which would have made hisfriendship with me impossible.Strength was dressed in a blackcreation that seemed to haveits origin in some comic book.The beauty and size of Rocke¬feller Chapel, the intelligent useof lighting, the music of the BondChapel choir and the organistH e n r i c h Fleischer contributedgreatly to the religious effect.K. G. K.UT preparesone-act playsThree one-act plays, to be givenin the round, will be UniversityTheatre’s spring quarter produc-Larry Kelly was very effective tion. The performances will beas Everyman. He projected very given in the Reynolds Club thea-clearly h i s changing emotions, tre May 7, 8 and 9, and the follo^and thereby maintained the inter- ing weekend, May 14, 15 and 16.recognize that men are alone indeath, and to remind them thatonly their good deeds will helpthem to face God after the grave.The play will succeed if it cancapture the other world atmos¬phere while maintaining the hu¬man drama of one man’s discov¬ery of the fate of all men. Inmany respects this group failed.Pierre Delattre as the Messen¬ger sounded like a high schoolvaledictorian. Lee Blattner asFellowship was often guilty ofan exaggerated rendition of Fel¬lowship apparently after themodel of a delegate to an Amer¬ican Legion convention. Caro¬lyn Poole as Discretion seemedto confuse discretion with a baddisposition. Dean Thompson asAdonai and Confession actedlike a self-conscious preacher,perhaps an understandableweakness.Books For Easter ReadingBEYOND ANXIETY by Pike $2.75Dean Pike shows how we can reach beyond the basicanxieties to greater understanding and fulfillment.CONSCIENCE AND COMPROMISE by Long $3.00A discussion of a method of Christian ethics, vital and read¬able, which should be of interest to college religious groupsand other laymen, as well as ministers and theologicalstudents.FOOLISHNESS TO THE GREEKS by Milford $2.50With point and wit the author expounds the view that lifeis richer and more meaningful under the conditions of theChristian faith (which the Greeks considered foolishness)than life under any other conditions.WHEN GOD SAYS 'NO' by Johnstone $3.50The autobiography of a well-known woman Congregationalminister who has had a story career in Chicago and NewYork State.MISSA SINE NOMINE by Wiechert $3.50A powerful novel about a bitterly disillusioned roan in post¬war Germany who fights his way back to an understandingof life. ,CHRIST IN THE HAUNTED WOOD by Ptaenger $2.75P The relevance of the Christian faith in helping Mon find hisway out of the "Haunted Wood" of despair and futility,is the theme of this book.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis AvenuePage 8 THI CHICAGO MAROON April 16, 1954University ofOklahoma '54The cigarette that gives you proof ofhighest quality—low nicotine. For thetaste and mildness you want—smokeAmerica’s most popular 2-way cigarette. v— /J ay n Stor of tho Broadway Hit"T#a and Sympathy"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.The cigarette tested and approvedyears of scientific tobacco research.Boy’s bike, generator, lights, book-carrier, $40. Catcher's mitt, baseballspikes, size 11, both $15 or best offers.M. Pastor, MU 4-6917.LP’s, 40 to 60 per cent off list price.Bach, Beethoven, etc. Call evenings, BU8-8928.Siamese kittens, fine specimens, house-broken before delivery to you. Reason¬able. NO 7-0999.Free old grand piano, good tone, Inter¬esting looking, needs tuning. X-3275,DO 3-7960.Wanted: Buyers of 45 and BP recordsand assorted books. Call Tom Upham,5747 University.WantedEnglishman and wife seek furnishedsub-let mid-June, July. August. NearUniversity. Call Dockrell, NO 7-9618.Students interested in working on acampus sports newspaper call Sheft atMU 4-9825.To buy or rent, set of Linguaphone orother French language records. Call FA4-8200, ext. 404.Man's lightweight bicycle. Fred Meier,FA 4-7354.ccmtftH* event* ck frUe£ Used girl's bicycle, lightweight, Englishtype, good condition. Call evenings, BU8-8928. For RentFriday, April 16A Community Good Friday Service willbe held in Rockefeller Chapel from12 to 3 p.m.The Business Club will meet in Haskellsecond floor lounge at 3:30 p.m. forcoffee and a talk by Charles Horn-gren.The Humboldt Club will hear a talk byProfessor Schultz in Wieboldt 408 at4 p.m. Refreshments.■illel Foundation Passover Oneg willfeature poetry readings by StanleyGewintz and Aryah Motzkln at 8:30p.m. Sabbath Service will precede theFireside at 7:45 p.m.“The Bride's Surprise” will be shown inB-J at 7:15 and 9:30 p.m. Admission25 cents.Sunday, April 18Rockefeller Chapel Service for EasterSunday at 11 a.m.Seder at Hillel Foundation, 6:30 p.m.Members $1.75, others $2 (by reserva¬tion only).Channing Club will have supper at6 p.m. at 5638 Woodlawn, followedby a discussion, “Is Utopia Neces¬sary?”•‘Boomerang” will be shown in B-J at7:15 and 9:30 p.m. Admission 25 cents.Tuesday, April 20Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship willhave luncheon and hear a talk byWilliam Norton of Trinity Seminary.Ida Noyes Sun parlor from 12:30 to1:20 p.m.The Mountaineering Club will hear atalk by Gaurang Yodh in Rosenwald26 at 7:30 p.m. Slides.The Politics Club will hear a debate, “Isthe Third Camp the Road to Peace?”in Ida Noyes (north reception room)at 8 p.m.The Graduate History Club is sponsoringan informal lecture by A. H. McDon¬ald. Professor at Cambridge Univer¬sity. on “Post-war Japan and the FarEast.” Ida Noyes Sun Parlor at 8 p.m.Wednesday, April 21The Pre-Medical Club will meet in Ab¬bott 420 at 3:30 p.m. for refreshments.At 4 p.m. Austin H. Riesen, associateprofessor of psychology, will talk on“Organic Psychology.”The Italian Club will hear a talk byProfessor Silverstein on “Living andStudying in Italy.” InternationalHouse. Room C-D, at 7:30 p.m.Sailing Club meeting in Ida Noyes EastLounge at 7:30 p.m.The Camera Club will hold a contestand salon in Eckhart 202 at 7:30 p.m.Prints and slides will be judged.Reverend Verne H. Fletcher will speakon "France’s Twin Dilemmas: Ger¬ many and Indo-China,” sponsored bythe Faculty-Graduate Committee forPeace Eckhart 206 at 8:30 p.m. Services 3-room furnished apartment, near cam¬pus. Also 2 furnished bedrooms. PhoneHY 3-1864.ClassifiedFor SaleCo-op apartment, 7 rooms, 2 baths. Sec¬ond floor, back yard, modern kitchen,paneled living-room. Ideal for facultyinvestment for moderate cost, lowmonthly assessment. 5711 Blackstone.HY 3-5473.15 Watt Williamson amplifier. Crafts¬man C-800 FM-AM tuner, Rek-O-Kutturntable, Evenings BI 7-2929.Bike, woman’s Roadmaster, new tires,perfect condition, best offer. Jospe, SH3-4677, Mon., Thurs. night, Saturday.19-10 Chevrolet two door sedan, goodrunning condition. NO 7-3391, 6032 S.Ingleslde, basement.Two tuxedos and one tails, worn once,size 36-37. Reasonable. SO 8-1587. Mathematics. Special Instruction to fitclalize in divisional requirements andcomps. Call evenings, BU 8-8928.Mathematics. -Specall instruction to fityour mathematical needs. Individual orgroup sessions. Albert Soglln, ST 2-6727.Rent an electric refrigerator as low as$4 per month. Also we repair refrigera¬tors. CO 4-9231.Creative portraiture. Top quality, quickservice, 50 per cent discount to Uni¬versity community. Joe Wolf, ES 5-1615.Will tutor physics student in Germanin return for help on Nat Scl 3 (Physi¬cal). Hirsch. BU 8-9736. Newly decorated 2 and l»(j room furnish¬ed apts., also large sleeping rooms 2blocks from UC, linens, maid servicereasonable rent. 6107 Dorchester Avenue’PL 2-9641.Rooms. Graduate students or Unlversltvemployees preferred. Alpha Kappa Kap¬pa medical fraternity, 5725 WoodlawnPL 2-9250.Room, comfortable, reasonable rent. MI3-9119.LostChemistry 105-6-7 notes In spiral boundnotebook, last Friday morning. RogerKallen, FA 4-1854.Notebook with OMP, Soc 3. Hum 3. andMath notes, vicinity Cobb. Return toJohnson, 5737 University.Today's CHESTERFIELD is theBest Cigarette Ever Made!AGENTSWANTEDin spare time you can moke moremoney faster and easier takingorders for "Holdrite", the new andbetter hanger for trousers, thanwith any other like product. Make$H) to $15 o day. Earn tuitionmoney during summer months. Nolong sales talk necessary. A provenproduct. Thousands in use. "Hold-rita" sells itself. Every man o pros¬pect for 3 or more. "Holdrite"fits into trouser cuffs, holds pressin, hongs wrinkles out. Saves press¬ing bills. All-metal construction.Trousers can't fall off. Retails for$1.00. Generous commission toagents. Send $1.00 today for start¬ing samples of 2 "Holdrites".ADDRESSWALLACEBRANDS CO.20 BroadwayToledo 4 Ohio Poems to be sungShib Mitra, psychologist fromIndia and an internationalHouse resident, will sing poemsof Sir Rabindranath Tagore atan International House partyon Saturday, May 1, at 8 p.m.Dr. S. D. Malaiperuraan will beguest of honor at the party.RE3TRINGWITHSTANDS OUTin play• Harder Smashest Better Cut and SpinSTANDS UPin your racket• Moisture Immune• Lasting LivelinessCOSTS LESSthan gutAPPROX. STRINGING COST;Pro-Fected Braid.... $6.00Multi-Ply Braid.. ....$5.00At tennis shops andsporting goods stores.ASHAWAY BRAIDED RACKET STRINGChoice of The Champions Largest Selling Cigarettein America's Colleges-CHESTERFIELDBfSTFOP YOUCopyright 1954, lioom A Must To»»ceo Co »