***‘McCarthy victim clearedPerjury charges against Val R. Lorwin, assistant professor of industrial relations, have been dropped bythe Department of Justice at the request of Warren Olney, assistant attorney general in charge of the crinrvtinal division.Olney asked Federal Judge Edward M. Curran to dismiss the charges on the basis that they were irregu-| lorly obtained. Previously, the Department of Justice claimed that Lorwin had lied to a State departmentloyalty board when he denied having been a member of the Communist party.At the same time William A.-~—Photo by Bob Sbarge'Aw, Really, Ump?'says Mathews House player JoeZerbolio to umpire Bill Birenbaumat the annual Faculty-B-J softballgame. The ump was not swayed,however. (Story on Page 7.) Gallagher, who was responsi¬ble for obtaining the indict¬ment against Lorwin from agrand jury, was removed from hispost as trial attorney in the De¬partment of Justice.Judge Curran dismissed thecharge after Olney stated that itwould not be “fair” to prosecute to have been based mainly ontestimony by Harold W. Metz,former research director of theRepublican National Committeeand now research director of theHoover Commission. Lorwin andMetz had been friends at CornellUniversity, and later they roomedtogether in Washington whenLorwin on a charge obtained ir- they were government workers inregularly.Former roommate testifiedThe case against Lorwin seems'Face social ills'says Egypt leaderMadame Ahmed Hussein, one of Egypt’s outstanding fem¬inist leaders and wife of the Egyptian ambassador, openedthis year’s alumni activities with a discussion of “Women inthe Moslem World.” Madame Hussein spoke on Wednesdaynight in Mandel Hall under the auspices of the Gertrude Dud¬ley Foundation. the 1930’sMetz stated that Lorwin heldCommunist party meetings intheir Washington flat, and thathe showed Metz his Communistparty membership card.Lorwin made denialLorwin denied this, stating thaton one occasion (in 1935) Metzwalked in on a meeting Lorwinwas having with a group of Social¬ists. Since Metz seemed to be sus¬picious, Lorwin kidded him bya Lorwin spurnspayment offerVal Lorwin yesterday reject¬ed a proposed Congressionalmove to pay the cost he in¬curred fighting the charges.Senator Estes Kefauver (D.-Tenn.) was prepared to intro¬duce a bill to pay the expense,but declined at Lorwin’s re¬quest.Lorwin was denounced by SenatorJoseph McCarthy as case number54 in a list of 81 “disloyal” offi¬cials in the State department.On October 16, 1950, disloyaltycharges were filed against Lor¬win, and in February, 1951, the charges on March 28, 1952, andreinstated with back pay fromthe time of his suspension. At thistime Lorwin resigned to take upa post in the industrial relationsdepartment at UC.Then, on December 3, 1953, Witliam Gallagher of the Departmentof Justice obtained an indictmentof Lorwin from a grand jury. Lor*win was the only person in MoCarthy’s list of 81 who was everindicted. On May 25, 1954, thecharges were dropped, and GatSee “Lorwin," page £flashing a red-colored Socialist State Department loyalty-securityParty card. Lorwin indicated that board suspended him.he soon forgot the incident. Lorwin cleared in 1952However, on February 20, 1950, Lorwin was cleared of these Good-bye» The next issue of the MAROONwill be published during the firstweek of the Summer quarter.Students interested in workingon the summer issues should cometo the MAROON office on Mon¬day afternoon, June 21.“The underlying problemswhich women in the Moslemworld must face are not thedemands of their religion nor therestrictions on their sex,” MadameHussein emphasized, “but the gen¬eral social and economic ills whichhave resulted from the feudalcolonial status of their nations.”The gradual freeing of womenaoes not represent the influenceof the West, but is rather a re¬turn to the original ideals andpractices of Islam. ‘The comingof Islam,” in all aspects of society, withequal pay for equal work.“A general change in attitudehas been effected,” Madame Hus¬sein said. “The campaign for vot¬ing rights is succeeding: the prin¬ciple has been granted by the com¬mittee working on a new constitu¬tion, although the privilege willprobably be extended only to edu¬cated women.”Madame Hussein recounted thework of a group of women, ofMadame Hussein ex- which she was one, who have ven- University of Chicago, June 4, 1954plained, “raised women from merepossessions, to be bought, sold,and inherited, to legal individualswith property rights.”“In the Moslem religion, it isa duty to seek knowledge andacquire education. Only contactwith Byzantium led to the isola- tured into the rural communitiesto help them meet their manyneeds. In a village near Cairo, thisgroup established the first nurs¬ery school in the history of Egyp¬tian villages.“Others pleaded for the same,”Madame Hussein recalled. “The Many alumni even ts scheduled;LF sing to highlight weektion and veiling of women, who project was officially recognizedup to that time had been found in by the government, to be imple-all positions of leadership.” ' mented elsewhere. The WorldThe feminist movement has Health Organization too was im-been in existence for a century pressed, and offered aid; theyas a partwestern domination. The first demic disease in the villagespublic demonstration in which “There are now 375 rural socialwomen took part occurred in 1919, centers equipped with nurserybefore the unveiling, in the face schools. One-third of the ruralof British guns. Since the partial population is being served,liberation of Egypt in 1922, the “Thus women in the Moslemenrollment of girls in government world, as in any other world,”schools has increased 14-fold. The Madame Hussein concluded,first girls were admitted to the “must grapple with the problemsuniversity in 1929; today there are which face the community as a5.000. Women are participating whole.” As the last half of the University’s annual 10-day reunion begins, a number of alumnievents are scheduled, including the 44th annual Interfraternity Sing, at 8:45, Saturday eve¬ning, in Hutchinson Court.. - - The I-F Sing, the big event of each year’s reunion, will begin at the individual fraternitya,gflns! ®aw.ln,!t a way W1?f out epi‘ houses, with dinners served for their respective alumni. After varying amounts of song prac-irs demic disease m the villages. tice, the fraternities will begin assembling at Botany pond at 8:40 p.m. and separately marchinto Hutchinson Court. As in *the past, each group will beevaluated quantity- and qual¬ity-wise (for the Ringing), andthe winners will be announcednear the end of the program.After the singing, awards willbe made for scholarship, studentachievement, “C” Blankets, andChicago physicsts protestAEC Oppenheimer rulingThe recent developments in the case of Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, in which the notedphysicist was found a “loyal citizen” but still a security risk, have been criticized by someprominent UC scientists.Samuel K. Allison, director of the Institute for Nuclear Studies and professor of physics,said that the findings of the Atomic Engery Commission Security Board did not seem inter¬nally consistent.The organization of AtomicScientists of Chicago com¬mented through its informa- of Dr. Oppenheimer’s loyalty cago said in part in their corn-board, because I had expected ment:“By initiating this hearing thetion committee that the recent both confirmation of his loyaltyAEC announcement “is an unfor- and recommendation for re-in- government has laid itself opentunate development in a disturb- statement of his clearance. The to two serious charges. First, iting and frightening sequence of findings do not seem internally has dragged out old and well-events.” consistent to me, for if he is loyal known allegations at a time whenThe AEC board had stated in a and careful with secrets, why not they can serve no other purposes2-to-l decision that Oppenheimer listen to his advice, which he than those of political expediency,had contributed to delaying a con- based on the broad knowledge of Second, and more serious, it hascerted start on hydrogen bomb de- the whole atomic energy program, attempted to muffle a sincere andvelopment. The third member of The Atomic Energy Commission legitimate opponent of certain ofshould, of course, hear more than its policies by casting doubt onone consultant before coming to his patriotism and character. Suchimportant decisions. a procedure is characteristic of. _ .. “Oppenheimer has undoubtedly totalitarian governments, but<?r) did not hinder development been forceful and eloquent, argu- should not be used in a democ-of the H-bomb and there is abso- ing for his ideas of what would be racy.lately nothing to show that he done, but this should be the privi- .. We cannot understand how. lege of every citizen. The findings the majority have found Dr. Op-Allison’s full statement which are certainly an extreme example penheimer both fish and fowlwas issued on Wednesday fol- of ingratitude for service to the simultaneously—how can he benation.” at once a loyal citizen and a secwr-The Atomic Scientists of Chi- ity risk.”the board, Ward J. Evans, profes¬sor of chemistry at Loyola Uni-ersity in Chicago sharply dis-ented, saying, “he (Oppenheim-lows:T was surprised at the finding the Varsity Cup. The ceremonieswill close at 10:35 p.m., with thesinging of the Alma Mater, andafterwards the fraternities willhold open houses for their alumni.Other events include an alum¬nae breakfast at noon on Satur¬day in Judson Court dining room.The guest speaker will be FannyButcher, TO, literary critic of theChicago Tribune. She will speakabout “Some Authors I HaveKnown.”In addition, there will be a cita¬tion luncheon at 12:30 p.m. on thesame day, at the Quadrangle Club,honoring 26 alumni to be cited atthe Alumni Assembly. Dr. Car-pender of the radiology depart¬ment will speak on “Our Hospitalsand Our Medical Advances ”The annual Alumni Assemblywill be at 3:30 p.m. Saturday after¬noon, in Mandel Hall. The alumniConvocation nextFriday, Kimptonto deliver addressApproximately 800 students willbe awarded degrees at the two-hundred and sixty-first UC Con¬vocation next Friday. ChancellorLawrence A. Kimpton wili givethe convocation address.A single - session convocationwill be held beginning at 3 p.m.for the divisions, professionalschools, and the college. An¬nouncements of student prizeswill be made during the cere¬monies.Honorary degrees will beawarded at the convocation. Inaccordance with University prac¬tice, the names of recipients of thehonorary degrees are not madepublic in advance. gift will be announced, and alum¬ni citations will be awarded. Fea¬tured in the assembly will be apanel discussion on “Tomorrow’sUniversity Community: A Cam¬pus and a Neighborhood Meet theChallenge of Change.”A Chancellor’s reception will beheld at 5 p.m. in HutchinsonCourt. Following this there willbe a student awards dinner at theQuadrangle Club, honoring stu¬dent leaders of 1954. Guestspeaker will be Edward L. Ryer-son, chairman of the Board ofTrustees. All alumni and theirguests are invited. Tickets maystill be available at $3.75 each.Alumni are invited to attend asmany events as possible.Photo by Stephen LewellenCourtesy UC MagazinePromoted?Chancellor Kimpton in costumifor the Faculty Revels. (Other picture on Page 3.),Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON June 4, 1954Tillich tells relationshipof theology-psychoanalysisby Paul A. HoffmanDr. Paul Johannes .Tillich in a lecture May 18 defined the relationship between psycho¬analysis and theology. The 67-year-old world famous Protestant theologian spoke in BreastedHall in a discussion sponsored by the Channing Club.Dr. Tillich listed the maincontributions of psychoanaly¬sis to religion:1. It initiated the acceptanceof a movement outside theolo¬gy into theology.2. It initiated a discoveryof sin, which Dr. Tillich said,was too often confused withthe act “sins.” Sin—he saidit is always singular—was de¬fined as “universal estrange¬ment.”3. It initiated a rediscoveryof the demonic structureswhich determine conscious¬ness.4. It initiated a conquest ofmoralism in religion. Tillichsaid, “The fall into moralismwas a fall into estrangement.”5. It initiated a new wayof dealing with the history ofreligion.6. It initiated a rediscoveryof confession and counselling.7. It raised interpretationswhich systematic theologycould answer in religious sym¬bols.Dr. Tillich said “psychoanalysisbelongs basically to the whole ex¬istentialist movement of the 20thcentury and as a part of thismovement it must be understoodIn its relationship to theoolgy.”He continued, “Psychoanalysisand existentialism have workedtogether from the very beginningand have influenced each other inprofound ways.”Dr. Tillich then traced the his¬torical development of existential¬ist philosophy and its opposite,the philosophy of consciousness.The philosophy of consciousness intheology originated with Aquinasand became part of Protestanttheology through Calvin and Des¬cartes. He said the United Stateswas living in a “moralistic andrepressive type of Calvinismwhich is the result of the completevictory of the philosophy of con¬sciousness.”Pascal was the first existential¬ist and his philosophy can betraced through Schopenhauer andHegel to Kirkegaard. But withFreud, Dr. Tillich concluded,/‘what was theological becamemethodological or scientific.”He then discussed three stagesof Christianity and comparedpared them with their psychologi¬cal natures:1. The good creation whichis the essential.2. The universal fall fromgoodness which is existen-tional.3. The possibility of salva¬tion which is theological.Dr. Tillich then described thetwo shortcomings of psychology£nd existentialism. The first is« IOV1 $TOMT THE MOOH Freud’s “unclear ambiguous atti¬tude,” which could not distin¬guish between man’s essential andexistential nature.The second is the Freudian be¬lief that the libido can never befulfilled. Through religion it can,Dr. Tillich replied. “The analyist,”he said, “can be a tool of salva¬tion, but he cannot bring salva¬tion.”Concluding his lecture, Dr. Til¬lich said, “Psychoanalysts neednot know that they have giventhese gifts to theology,# but theo¬logians should know it.” that “Jesus will give his joy tohis disciples now,” in the earthlylife as well as the other life. “Eter¬nal fulfillment must be seen notonly as eternal which is present,T , . _ , but also as eternal which is fu-” *\1S ,SV,nday sermon May 16 ture. But if it is not seen in thea Rockefeller Chapel, Dr. Tillich present, it cannot be seen at all.”In the intervening Monday, Dr.but joy and pain can exist to¬gether. Joy and pleasure do notexclude each other, byt “joy ismore than pleasure.” “Blessed¬ness,” he said, “is the eternal ele¬ment in joy.”Dr. Tillich then challenged thosewho accuse Christianity of takingjoy from the Earthly life by pre- Dr. Paul Tillich . . .pBringloranotherlife. He replied wor](J famous Protes(,.lt fheol#.gian who gave four addresses oncampus this month.del Hall. The discussion on “Re¬ligion and Contemporary VisualArt” was illustrated with slides.The main point of this discus-chose as his text Paul’s word to^the Phillipians, Again, I will say, Tillich, on the invitation of John sion was Dr. Tillich’s assertion“r*h°1C*: He commente(* that £ Thompson, Dean of Rockefeller that secular art in the last fivertstians are accused of de- chapel, addressed a faculty gath- centuries is better than religiouss roying the joy of life and ering, speaking on “Myth and art. The common stereotvpes of*?uo * |’efer*'nce about Symbol in European Theology.” Jesus and the Virgin in Protestants^s’. 1S “isciples should look That evening, under the sponsor- and Roman Catholic painting areo e re eemed. ship of the Chapel Committee on “kitch” (freely translated as “re-He next defined joy. Pleasure, Religion and Art, he delivered an volting”). Great art today, hehe said, is the opposite of pain, extemporaneous address in Man- said, is secular. Hutchins innew positionin Ford fundFormer UC Chancellor RobertMaynard Hutchins became presi¬dent of the Fund for the Republic.He resigned his post as associatedirector of the Ford Foundationto accept the position.The Fund for the Republic is aFord Foundation subsidiary estab¬lished in 1953. Its declared aim issupport of “activities directed to¬ward the elimination of restric¬tions on freedom of thought, in¬quiry and expression in the UnitedStates, and the development ofpolicies and procedures bestadopted to protect these rights.”Announcement of the appoint¬ment was made by H. RowanGaither, Jr., president of the foun¬dation. Hutchins succeeds CliffordCase who resigned the post to runfor the Senate from New Jersey.Hutchins became associate di¬rector of the Ford Foundation in1951 after spending 20 years asPresident and Chancellor of theUniversity.WHERE THE UofCMEETS TO EATGofeUn’4FINE FOOD1321 East 5 7th Streetns TOASTS. ... ;t. Luckies tastet0 taste setter to tiroes -bloque^e^-' Luckies * /_buckybout the reateus/'/ l.S.;MF/\ ^ud*?£££ *•«’* S •» “b*“° —either. Today- tobacco. _btingfStrike means e proofsto taste better- ^ _ (<,m0us bucKV tones upuuer. Today, ^acC0. And ^bringsStrike means strike P»°^bi6 light,to taste bet** faltl0usbucky ^ up*“SS-rrTizL * its <°ie it taste eve« *’ ckylLuckies’ teb> tobacco to BeHai VV'COPS., THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANYJune 4, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Yearbook pressesisales now rollingEd MaupinC ap & Gown edi¬torKimptons planEurope travelChancellor Lawrence A. Kimp-ton and Mrs. Kimpton will travelto Europe this summer duringAugust and September.Although primarily a pleasuretrip, the Chancellor plans to visitmajor universities in Western Eu¬rope. At present, the itinerary in¬cludes England, France, West Ger¬many, Scotland, and possiblySwitzerland.The Kimptons will be guests atFrankfurt university, with whichUC has an exchange of professorsand students. Kimpton also willvisit the Sorbonne and the FreeUniversity in Berlin, as well asseveral other large and small uni¬versities. The 1954 Cap & Gown, the University of Chicagoyearbook, is currently being run off the pressesin its final form and will be on sale soon.The post publication price of Cap & Gown willbe $4.50 and may be bought from Cap & Gown’ssalesmen or from the Bookstore. Those wishingto order the book now may pay the $4 pre-publica¬tion price and receive their copies by mail.The slick-page 1954 Cap & Gown is divided intofive sections: The University, a 46-page capsuletour in words and pictures of the various depart¬ments of the university; an up-to-the-minute Chi¬cago Today section; twenty pages of group pic¬tures of students living in university housing; a106-page view of this year’s extracurricular high¬lights; and a section of photographs and creditsof UC graduates.The page size of the new Cap & Gown is con¬siderably larger than that of lastyear’s permitting greater flexibil¬ity in layout and the inclusion oflarger full-page photographs. Thetype styles chosen are likewiselarger and bolder than last year’sstyles.Accompanying the photographicreview of the university depart¬ments are editorial surveys ofthose departments written by de¬partment luminaries themselves.Each faculty author was givencomplete editorial freedom, andthe included articles differ in bothsubject matter and treatment.Among those articles includedare the dean of the College, Rob¬ert Streeter’s review of recentchanges in the College curriculumand of the redefinition and re¬location of the UC B.A., a descrip¬tion of the Biological Sciences di¬vision by Merle C. Coulter, assist¬ant dean of that division, and “TheHumanities,’’ an essay of A. S. P.Woodhouse. Dartmouth gradreplacing Qripas housing headArthur Kiendl, assistant dean ofthe college of Dartmouth univer¬sity, has been appointed directorof the UC Housing System; Kiendlwill assume his UC post in Sep¬tember when the contract of CarlM. Grip, present director, expires.Kiendl, a Dartmouth graduatewho also holds a degree from Co¬lumbia university, is a r.avy vet¬eran. He is married, has two chil¬dren. The Kiendl family will takeup residence in September in theBurton-Judson quarters currentlyoccupied by Grip and his family.Grip explained that the housedirector’s post is essentially ahalf-time job, “something for aPh.D. student.” Grip, who willfinish his psychology thesis thissummer, has no definite plans forthe future. At present, however,he is looking into openings in theteaching profession.Grip said, “It’s been a wonder¬ful job,” and went on to explainthat he was at the University ata time when many importantchanges were taking place.Give schedulefor registration Photo by Stephen LeweltenCourtesy UC MagazineOne, two, three, kick . . .went the faculty wives last night in the repeat performance of theFaculty Revels, “Come Back, Little A.B.” The visiting alumni packedMandel Hall to see the show.15 students receiveactivities awardsThe office of the registrar hasannounced the schedule for ad¬vance Summer quarter registra¬tion for students in residence. Col-ALEXANDER'S THE GREATPLACE TO EAT OFF CAMPUSOPEN DAY AND NIGHTYOUR HOSTS WILL BEGEORGE KYROS PETE HRISTAKOS1137 - 39 East 63rd Streetr-W-V W WW W'W fWV Fifteen students will receive Alumni-Dean’s awards at theAlumni Association-sponsored student awards dinner tomor¬row. The students named for the awards were chosen by thedean’s staff on the basis of their extra-curricular contributionslege students have until today to to the university community.register in advance. The schedule To be honored are Davis Bobrow for his work in bringingfor the divisions and professional together members of the fac- ~ ~ — ~ ~ 7— ~—schools follows: ulty and young students enter- ®ru,cer,Larkin’ fo^ IP ^JET jodaTsertt^admint™ it,B ‘he college; An-sliib Cheng " “ S oTsm-gradual,brarylehod CoZ« andtr he? worl-Tn S “ftjrt Dahlberg,June 7-11—humanities, medical student - Alumni Committee, theschool, social sciences, physical student Advisory Board and Nu ^ounc‘L Nanc> Cushua, as presi-sripncpc: hiolnpical Genres „.u°. AQ ,v-i- i- dent of the Orientation Board, andsciences, motogicai sciences. pt Sigma; and Elizabeth lerrar , „ . „ TTn;„a’u.,The student begins his registra- for her contribution to the recrea- u u ^rV^-ec*° the Uni'’er?ltJrtion in the office of the annronri .0F 1 F CC7Un on 10 1 . c through Nu Pi Sigma and the StU-uon in me oince 01 me appropn- tional and social extracui'nculum - . 4 emsate dean of students. The student on Wash Prom and Cap & Gown, dent Advisory Board and Elithen goes to the registrar’s office and her work as president of In- 1 »sh‘P in thewhere he has his fees assessed.► The last day to pay tuition with*► out a late-payment fee is June 21.Portraits byLOUISE BARKERPhotographer1457 E. 57th St. BU 8-0876 terclub CouncilFranklin N. Karmatz and AllenR. Janger will be cited for out¬standing journalistic achievement.Karmatz is editor-in-chief of TheChicago Review; Janger is atpresent a news editor for the MA¬ROON and will assume the post ^ , , , .. ... ,of MAROON editor in-chief next A . .. _ .Student Government.’Honored for their high stand¬ards of athletic achievement areAllen C. Bates, Robert E. Mann,Miss Audrey J. Rubovits, andAlex Shane. Mann, winner of fourmajor “C” awards, is captain ofthe basketball team; Miss Rubo-year.People Nave More Fun Tl\an Anybody!Have more fun with SHAFT HUMOR MAGAZINE!Suspense: "Hitler Ain't Dead!"Humor: The old Pro Returns!Satire, Comedy, Weltschmertx!In the "Summer Stuff" SHAFT now at:U OF C BOOKSTORE!When you pause...make it count...have a Coke•OTTieO UNOER AUTHORITY Of THE COCA-COLA COMPANY »YThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc."Cok*** k a rtgUlfJ lr«i)»wri O 1953. Th« Coca-Cola Compaay WHEN ARE YOU LEAVING?POOR MAN'S GUIDE TO EUROPE, by Dodge $3.50How to moke even your dollars travel farther!FIELDING'S TRAVEL GUIDE TO EUROPE $4.95More comprehensive than ever before. The revised 1954-55 edition.SUTTON'S PLACES, by Horace Sutton $3.50Witty, readable, full of atmosphere. By the travel editorof the “Saturday Review".1954 GUIDE du PNEU MICHELIN $3.50All who know tour “notre beau pays de France" with thisfamous food and lodging guide in hand.PASTENE'S AUTO GUIDE TO EUROPE $4.50Detailed information, with itineraries and maps for drivingeverywhere possible.RUBE GOLDBERG S GUIDE TO EUROPE $2.00You probably won't get anywhere with this one, but you'llhave a hilarious time along the way!UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue Athletic Association, is also a re-A1 . . , . cipient of a major “C” award.Also moving awards will be Ba,es was volun4r coach of ,hevarsity and junior varsity wres¬tling teams.In addition to his record in var¬sity athletics Shane will be hon¬ored for his fraternity activitiesand his participation in Iron Maskand Owl & Serpent.Also receiving awards will beFred Solomon, active in the Orien¬tation Board and the SAB, andEdward Maupin, cited for “hisloyalty to the best traditions ofstudent life at the University, andfor his lasting contributions tothose traditions as the editor ofthe 1954 Cap & Gown.”Students supportSenator DouglasThe campaign of Senator andUC professor Paul H. Douglas forre-election to the US Senate willbe supported on campus by theStudents for Douglas.The group plans to help out atthe Douglas headquarters and willassist the Senator in his campaignat suburban shopping centers, aswell as in the UC area.Them will be an organizationalmeeting on Tuesday, June 29, at8 p.m., probably in Soc. Sci. 122.For ‘ further information callCharles Doctor at Beecher Hall orHerb Schwartz or Bill Seltzer atPL 2-3790.UC studentsprevents attackTwo UC students foiled the at¬tempted rape of a Billings nurse <last Tuesday night. The studentscaptured the assailant, JamesSchaab, near 58th and University.David Splegler and RichardJohnson, members of Beta ThetaPi Iraternity, stated that theywere attracted by the nurse’sscreams after she had beenknocked down and dragged intosome bushes. They gave chaseand captured the assailant. j •i* A '*i -■emu"PPPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON June 4, 19gg■ c n tTm o Alumni returnIssued once weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at the publica¬tion office, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones:Editoriol Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1010; Business and Advertising Offices,Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, ond subscriptions bysnail, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.Arthur Brown Richard E. Wardeditor-in-chief managing editorNews editors: Noomi Birnbaum, Allen JongerNews Feature editor: Nellie StonemanFeature ediror: Doniel QueenSports editor: Paul A. HoffmanCopy editor: Joy BurbachAdvertising manager: Reva BrownProduction manager: Joanna HerlihyPage one assistant: Mitchell SleinCopy staff: Jerry Ex, Pom Brown, Jack Burboch, Williom Brandon, JeonCorlssonPhotographer: Joe WolfEditoriol staff: Brina Boilin, Robert Bloch, Davis Bobrow, Poul Breslow,Stephen Cohen, Diane Epstein, Al Fortier, Lennie Friedmon, SuzanneFriedman, Miriom Garfin, Roberta Hopkins, Brino Jaffee, Justin John¬son, Jan Mojde, Neal Mermall, Arnie Matanky, Spike Pinney, ElainePomper, Bob Quinn, Karl Rodmon, Wolf Roder, David Schlessinger,Warren Spachner, Fronk G. Ternenyi, John Twomey, Zahava Dudnik,Arlene Petersen, Robert March, Ken Karlin. This weekend sees the return of over 5,000 UC alumni totheir alma mater. The alumni will visit laboratories, class¬rooms, museums, and sports events, observing the activitiesand spirit of a. university devoted primarily to the ideals ofhigher education.We hope the alumni will enjoy their visit to the Universitytoday and tomorrow, and continue to lend her the same spir¬ited support in the future that she has had from them in thepast.University supports LorwinLetters..."Salt" biasedI would like to register a dissentDrool Frank Ternenyi s criticism lastweek of ''Salt of the Earth,’’ which he"restricted to those points dealing withHe position and validity as a work of*rt. 1 think that Ternenyi’s artisticstandards were melted down by his comsassion over the censorship of the film.1b film and play censorship cases I havenoticed two frequent reactions whichImpair artistic judgment. Men some¬times say of the best censored works:-it U7QC nnf q rorir onnrl film nloir 1 lar anachronisms which fidelity to truthwould easily have eliminated.Certainly “Salt of the Earth” presents,a civil liberties issue. It ought not to besuppressed because of prejudices againstthe beliefs of its director and producers.Only the willingness or unwillingnessof customers to attend the theatershould be the determinant of when andwhere it is shown. But if we let censor¬ship become the imprimatur of aestheticperfection, wTe become doubly the pris¬oners of the censor.Leon M. Despres The recent vindication ol Val Lorwin (see page 1) is impor¬tant in two respects.It is the first major judicial set-back for Senator McCarthyin his indiscriminate “subversive” search. It makes us won¬der: if number 54 on McCarthy’s list of “Communists” in theState Department is innocent, what about the other 80 of the81 he named?Most important, the case shows once again that the Uni¬versity of Chicago will not retreat from its traditions ofacademic freedom. Val Lorwin is innocent, but the importantfact is that the University stood by a member of its facultywhen he faced indictment, trial and a possible jail sentence.The University stood by Lorwin just as it stood by thosestudents, employees and faculty members who defied the Jen-ner Committee last year. For this action the University de¬serves our highest praise.Segregation must end"It was not a very good film (or play),tout of course it should not have been•ensored.” And when a mediocre workto censored for some political or puri-tanical reason, men sometimes sayOimply, in reaction against the cen¬sorship: "What a marvelous work ofart has been suppressed.” Ternenyioeems to have said just that of "Salt ofthe Earth.”Now in our university communityaearly everyone agrees that "Salt ofthe Earth” ought not to be censored,■whether by the city, the head of theSrojectionists’ union, or the Americanegion. But censorship, if it occurs,should not make “Salt of the Earth”Immune from the suggestion that it isless than perfect.Artistically, a film should have in¬tegrity. "Salt of the Earth” does not al¬ways have it. The screen introductionoays that all the characters are fictional,tout the hero of the film is a non-fic-tional character called “Mine, Mill, andSmelter Workers Union,” whtch isnamed, advertised, and apotheosized invery much the same manner which abig corporation uses to exalt itself insimilar public relations films. "Salt ofthe Earth” is in great part an advertise¬ment which seeks to create good willand sympathy for the "sponsor.” If"Salt of the Earth” were a work of artwith complete integrity, its producerwould have either announced that itwas an advertisement, or used a fic¬tional name such as "American MinersUnion” for the main character.The photography was excellent. Sowas the acting of the “non-professional”east, presumably recruited in the NewMexico area. The economy of sets andscenery was refreshing. But the actingand scenery were no better nor morestartling than In may excellent docu¬mentary films which you can rent fromthe International Film Library, the Brit¬ish Information Service, or the ChicagoPublic Library.The development of the narrative wasIn part juvenile and creaky. Workers,who are all "good,” fight a company,which is all "bad,” and win. At onepoint, without notice, the company ob¬tains a “Taft-Hartley” injunction whichforbids union members from picketing.A wife notices that the injunction doesnot refer to wives of union members.The wives quickly replace the men’spicket line and march for months with¬out a breath of injunctional disturb¬ance. Is it likely that a company whichreadily obtained such a "Taft-Hartley”Injunction without notice would havethen been unable to have it amendedto include “wives of union members act-Ig in concert with union members?"The film contains a good dozen of simi- Rosen shortsightedAs a pretty constant reader of theMAROON I feel duty bound to reply towhat I consider are the unjustified ac¬cusations made by Stanley Rosen. Fromhis letter it appears that Mr. Rosennourishes a bitter grudge against theMAROON and also possesses a degree ofshortsightedness. The "contradiction”which Mr. Rosen notes between state¬ments in the report of the “ scientific*survey” (the term ’’scientific” is Mr.Rosen's description, for the writer ofthe report does not use it) and in theeditorial column Is not only trivial, itis misapplied. For a more conscientiousreader might have noticed that theformer article was written by a non¬staff writer in his capacity as memberof an independent committee and thelatter was the personal expression ofthe editor. Is diversity of opinion soforeign to Mr. Rosen that when hesees it in a newspaper—"a forum ofdiffering views”—he calls it contradic¬tion? One cannot consider a newspaperas a single entity capable of self-con¬tradiction.As to Mr. Rosen’s second question,the most likely answer is that opinionsconcerning the cultural reviews werenot mentioned, because they were notoffered. I think that Mr. Rosen wouldbe exceedingly shortsighted if he in¬tended to imply that opinions aboutcultural reviews were deliberately ig¬nored. Other criticisms were included,why not these? It seems to me thatthe survey, conducted by a disinter¬ested university department—a seminarin communication—cannot be reproach¬ed with being biased.To my mind Mr. Rosen’s own com¬plaints on the cultural reviews “strucka new low” in criticism of the MAROON.His charges toward reviewers as "illiter¬ates" and “insensitives” who “pollute”your pages with their "juvenile Marx¬ism” is empty and unsubstantiated. Ithink that a writer is justified in ex¬pressing his own views, and to labelthese views as juvenile or insensitiveis not to understand and illuminatetheir faults. I can only hope that it isot customary for humanities majors tocall names rather than to criticize con¬tent.I believe that Mr. Rosen’s suggestionsthat the opinions of the reviewers aredesigned to impress readers as discredit¬able to the university and that it isthe intention of the editor to “destroy”or "degrade” the MAROON were con¬ceived in a state of extreme ire andthat in more thoughtful moments hewould not have uttered them. The veryleast I can say is that Mr. Rosen'scriticisms do not measure up to thosementioned in the report.Joel Picheny In an historic decision this month the Supreme Court of theUnited States abolished segregation in the public schools ofthe nation. At this late date the public was too well accus¬tomed and too well prepared for educational integration tocall the decision courageous, but nevertheless, it is an impor¬tant advancement, a milestone in American education.The Court recognized the far-reaching effects of the decisionand wisely realized that the school systems of over a dozenstates cannot be overhauled in an evening. Implementation ofthe plan may take time, but there is little doubt a significantstep has been taken toward ending school segregation. Thetemperateness with which the decision was received on thepart of many Southerners leads us to believe that cool headswill prevail to effect equitable implementation.Let us hope that the rash and irrational statements of theRussells and the Talmadges will be forgotten and that all ofus — Northerners and Southerners, white and Negro — caneffect a successful program of equality in education — andthat the effect of this decision will soon be felt in the explosivearea of housing, jobs, and recreational facilities.PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETInternational House Movie ProgramAssembly Hall, Monday and Thwrsdoy Evenings at 8:30 p.m.Admission 35cMonday, June 7—Alice in Wonderland (American)Thursday, June 10—Chaplin—Burlesque on Carmen(American)Monday, June 14—Take Care of My Little Girl (American)Thursday, June 17—Knickerbocker Holiday (American)Monday, June 21—The Razor's Edge (American)♦>N\\WWs**N\SWW\X\XVWOs\NWV*WN*WWS\X%\V*,.ElateThe Graduatewith Flowers fromMitzie’s Flower Shop1301 E. 55th 1225 E. 63rdMl 3-4020 HY 3-5353Flowers Wired Anywhere NO 7-9071 HIDE PARK THEATHE itA“/;dPARKStarting Friday, June 4RED GARTERSThe "surprise" art filmof the year ... a fancifulspoof of the classic shoot-'em-up Western, set tomusic and vividly filmedagainst dazzling stylizedsets.Plus UPA's cartoonWILLIE THE BRAVE BULLSMel Ferrer, AnthonyQuinn. The "sleeper" artfilm of the decade ... astirring story of men asbrave as bulls told againstthe gorgeous spectacleand music of the corrida,spoof on WesternsTHE KIDComing Friday, June 11TIMES GONE BYwith Gina Lollobrigida and Vittorio deSicaA sextet of adult stories ... a perfect blend of sex,sentiment, and sophistication in the Continental manner. . . with a dramatic highlight furnished by the Pirandelloepisode, written and acted in the rich, highly dramatictradition of the Comedia del Arte.Coming soonMargaret Rutherford in CASTLE IN THE AIRLILI and LIMELIGHTCarol Reed's THE MAN BETWEENPINOCCHIO and CYRANOStudent Rote 50c All Performance*If You Present Your H> Card ot th« Boxoffice Personnel CounsellorTraineesOpenings in our attractive per¬sonnel offices for two college girlsto leorn interviewing and voca¬tional guidance. 9-5, 5 doys.Typing not nec. Over $300 «month to start.See Star EmploymentService116 S. Michigon R-1206STote 2-3270Buy a round-tripticket ond save anextra 10% each way IOn*WoyAKRON, O. . . . $ 8.25 RoundTrip$14.85ANN ARBOR, MICH. 5.9S 10.7SBENTON HARBOR-ST. JOSEPH, MICH. 2.50 4.50BLOOMINGTON, IU. 2.60 4.70BLOOMINGTON,IND. 5.65 10.20BUFFALO, N.Y. . . 11.60 20.90CANTON, O. . . . S.25 14.85CHAMPAIGN, ILL. . 2.4S 4.45CINCINNATI, O. . . 6.70 12.10CLEVELAND, O. . . 7.60 13.70COLUMBUS, O. . . 7.05 12.70DAVENPORT, IA. . 3.85 6.95DAYTON, O. . . . 6.33 11.45DE KALB, ILL. . . . 1.35 2.45DENVER, COLO. . . 20.95 37.75DES MOINES, IA. . 7.35 13.25DETROIT, MICH. . . 6.50 11.70DUBUQUE, IA.. . . 3.4S 6.25FLINT, MICH. . . . 6.7S 12.15FT. WAYNE, IND. . 3.3S 6.05GRAND RAPIDS,MICH 4.50 S.10GREEN BAY, WIS. . 3.60 6.50INDIANAPOLIS,IND 4.20 7.60KALAMAZOO, MICH. 3.60 6.50KANSAS CITY, MO. S.20 14.80LIMA, O 4.70 8.50LOUISVILLE, KY. . 6.70 12.10MADISON, WIS. . 2.4S 4.45MANSFIELD, O. . . 6.70 12.10MATTOON, ILL. . . 3.30 5.95MEMPHIS, TENN. . 9.50 17.10MILWAUKEE, WIS. 1.70 3.10MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL, MINN. 7.30 9.95*MUSKEGON, MICH. 4.6S 8.40NEW YORK, N.Y. 18.95 34.15OMAHA, NEB. . . 10.40 18.75PHILADELPHIA, PA. 17.6S 31.80PITTSBURGH, PA. . 10.2S 18.45ROCHESTER, N.Y. . 13.35 24.05ROCKFORD, ILL. . 1.75 3.00*ST. LOUIS, MO. . . 4.95 8.95SALT LAKE CITY, U. 28.65 51.60SOUTH BEND, IND. 2.10 3.80SPRINGFIELD, ILL . 3.50 6.30SPRINGFIELD, O. . 6.60 11.90SYRACUSE, N.Y. . 14.75 26.55TOLEDO, O. ... 5.25 9.45WASHINGTON,D. C 16.55 29.80W. LAFAYETTE, IND. 3.10 5.60YOUNGSTOWN, O. 9.20 16.60f Eacanton tor* (U. S. Tox *xtro)forms subject to change without notice.JOHN STOCKS TRAVEL BUREAUAdministration Bldg.5001 S. Ellis Ave.Phone Midway 3-0800GREYHOUND\ >crn>-cfsqjQjJune 4, 1954 Supplement — Page 1 REVIEW OFTHE YEAR1953-54 Year of Self-Appraisal;School Takes Inventory of SelfCollege Changes AnnouncedMet by CooUHeadednessIn retrospect, the year 1953-1954 at the University of Chi¬cago was primarily a year of self-appraisal. While the wheelsof education continued to roll, none of the week-after-weekexcitement of some new crisis permeated the academic atmos¬phere as it had the previous year. Instead, it seemed as if theUniversity was taking inventory of itself, readjusting to itsown new administration and mid-century atmosphere inAmerica.This attitude manifested itself most in the new college pro¬grams. Uncertainty and anger had met the original threatof changes in the degree re¬quirements. While some ofthis attitude carried over intothis academic year, the new pro¬grams, when they were finallyannounced in the spring, were other UC professor (on leave ofabsence), Paul H. Douglas was re¬nominated by the voters as can¬didate for the Senate.Walter Johnson, chairman of New Deans for Oldmet (rom almost all quarters ‘,he hls'or-v department, returnedwith a cool-headed understanding fr°™ hjs round-the-world tour-it not agreement—of their pur- wlth Adlai Stevenson and saidpose. that Asia was “troubled and try-. ... . ing to reorganize itself after theUnderstanding their content war aruj a century of imperial-was a different matter, however. jsm -*The new programs were certainly Leo strauss opened the Wal-more complicated than the old. green Lectures with a four-partThe C ollege BA requires a maxi- discussion of Machiavelli. He saidmum of 12 comprehensive exami- sympathized with the “old-nations, a year of tutorial studies fashioned, simple-minded view ofand a bachelor s essay. The Hu- Machiavelli as a teacher of evil.”manities BA requires seven or Jacques Maritain urged relig-eight comps, six to twelve courses jous training for students in twoin the student s major department jectures on the aims of educa-and three to nine elective courses. tjon sponsored by the commit-The Biological Sciences and Physi- ^ee on SOcial thought,cal Sciences Degree mix college ^ former University professor,and divisional work throughout Edward Teller, was credited astheir four-year programs. In Law man reSp0nsible for the de-and Business three years of col- ve]0pment of the hydrogen bomb,lege work are climaxed by a year ^nd three Physical Science pro-iti the graduate school before the fessors made the front pagesacross the nation when theyrushed to the defense of J. Rob- For a few weeks in January and February itlooked as if there’d be a new dean every week.First it was announced that Robert E. Streeter(upper left) became Dean of the College whenF. Champion Ward (lower left) resigned to accepta Ford Foundation post in India. The’ followingweek saw Seward Hiltner (upper center) become acting Dean of the Federated Theological Schooland divinity school when Bernard M. Loomer(lower center) resigned amid much controversy.Then Morton Grodzins (upper right) became Deanof the Division of Social Sciences replacing RalphW. Tyler (lower right) who had resigned somemonths before.degree is awardedPersonnel ChangesHighlight Year ert Oppenheimer, the atomic sci-Three new deans assumed their entist accused of disloyalty. Theposts within three weeks at the three were Harold C. Urey, Sam-opening of the winter quarter.In the college, Robert E. Streetersucceeded F. Champion Ward; inthe division of Social SciencesMorton Grodzens followed Ralph uel K. Allison and Cyril S. Smith.' Noted VisitorsLecture HereThe largest lecture audience ofthe year turned out to hearW. Tyler and in. the divinities former US Ambassador to India,school and Federated Theological Chester Bowles, condemn theSchools Seward Hiltner became Eisenhower policy in the far East,acting dean after Bernard Loomer “us policy in India lacks cour-resigned amid much controversy. age and imagination,” he said andAt the start of the summer accused the Republicans of firstquarter Laird Bell retired as drawing up a budget and thenChairman of the Board of Trust- building a foreign policy aroundees. Edward L. Ryerson was it. He warned that the importantnamed to the post. decisions in the next 10 or 20 yearsCollege professors Henry Rago “will be made in the capitals ofand Fritz Caspari were dismissed the East.”because a lack of vacancies for- India and the differences be-bade their promotion. University tween East and West was the sub¬rules require advancement or dis- ject of a summer discussion bymissal for assistant professors Savepalli Radhakrishnan, theafter four years. ~ Vice-President of India. He saidthat there are no essential differ-I* acuity Doings ences between east and west.Make Headlines American policy was the focusThe biggest news story of the of the Walgreen lectures deliveredyear concerning any University of by Gordon Clapp. The then chair-Chicago faculty member was the man of the Tennessee Valleyindictment of Val Lorwin. The as- Authority Board of Directors de-sistant professor of industrial re- fended the TV A plan and said thatlations was indicted on a charge of controversy over the projectperjury before Senator McCar- springs from the novelty of thethy’s subcommittee. Lorwin, a undertaking and the breadth offormer State Department em- its subject matter.”ployee, was number 54 on Me- Novelists accounted for a goodCathry’s list of “communists” in portion of UC lectures. Joycethe department. But the case was Cary, Sean O’Faolain and Johnfinally dismissed last week after Dos Passos discussed aspects ofit had been shown that the federal the novel. Death snatched poetprosecutor, subsequently dismis- Dylan Thomas just a few dayssed from his post, had given mis- before his scheduled reading ofleading information to the grand poems in the fall quarter. Thejury which indicted Lorwin on young Welshman died of a brainthe charge that he lied when he hemorrhage in New York,denied Communist party member- Henry Schwartz, Russian ex-skip* pert of the New York Times,Joseph Lohman, lecturer in so- Lewis Galantiere of Radio Freeciology, returned from Korea Europe, and Carter Davidson ofwhere he supervised the prisoner the Chicago Council on Foreignexchange in the winter quarter to Relations jointed with UC’s Hansbecome the Democratic candidate J. Morgenthau and 14 other pro-tor Sheriff of Cook County. An- fessors and students in an all-day conference on Eastern Europeduring the fall quarter.Science also figured prominent¬ly in University lectures. NobelPrize-winner Hans Krebs, psy¬chologist Eric Erickson and an¬thropologist Margaret Mead dis¬cussed their research in lectureshere.Hans Kelsen, professor at NavalWar College, George Shuster,president of Hunter College,Meyer Kestenbaum, president ofHart, Schaffner and Marx, round¬ed out the Walgreen series forthe year.Government AmendsMichigan PlanThe same a t ti t u d e of self¬appraisal was found in the Stu¬dent Government this year. Afterthe ISL won 29 of the 43 Assem¬bly seats and elected Clive Graypresident, the Government setabout a re-organization of its lawsand services. Most importantchange was the unification of theBook Exchange, Ticket Agency,Mimeo Service and the newly cre¬ated Loan Service in a single Stu¬dent Service Center in the Rey¬nolds Club basement.However, the main issue in Stu¬dent Government was the Michi¬gan Plan which requires campusorganizations to remove any dis¬criminatory clauses by Octoberof 1953. The administration wasreluctant, though, to enforce theplan, and only after severalmonths of negotiations betweenthe Government’s committee onrecognized student organizationsand the administration was a solu¬tion reached. The plan drawn upby Dean Strozier and Eli Stein,the committee chairman allowedthe one.remaining group with adiscriminatory clause, Phi DeltaTheta fraternity, until next fallto remove the clause.Evidentally the Government ac¬tivity did not arouse campus en¬thusiasm for ISL, and the vote in the NSA elections gave 13 of the20 seats to SRP.Wash Prom TopSocial EventNew ventures for Student Un¬ion included hi-fi concerts in theReynolds Club at noon and aweekly publication, Forecast,giving social news. But their bigevent was^ the Wash Prom in Bart¬lett Gym. A weekend of activitieswas climaxed by the Prom itselfwhere 341 couples danced to themusic of Woody Herman’s bandand watched Jan Porter’s corona¬tion as campus queen.Shortly before the dance someindignant Green House girlsdoused two MAROON reporterswith water because they wereangered at a MAROON story ad¬vertising for dateless girls.The MAROON made news inother ways. A facetious want-adby a campus photographerclaimed blackmail photos were hisspecialty—he received a request!Spacewise, the biggest MA¬ROON story of the year was Man¬aging Editor Richard Ward’s tripto the Soviet Union. The secondexcursion of college editors be¬hind the iron curtain found Wardtraveling all over Russia.Football, VictoriesTop Sports EventsRumors of football beganspreading early in autumn, andwhen the smoke cleared, the ad¬ministration, the athletic depart¬ment and some students agreedon a proposal. If 100 studentscould be found to participate inan intra mural football program,intercollegiate play could be start¬ed the following year. However,student support waned and in theSpring the program collapsed.A string of victories in basket¬ball and track surprised manywho thought Chicago’s sportswere dying. Other athletic eventsproved less advantageous forMaroon teams, but the standard of play was above normal. TheJV track and basketball teamseach won the Private SchoolLeague crown.Goofiness TakesIts Proper PlaceThe silly and the goofy eventswithout which a college does notseem a college were still part ofthe University atmosphere. A B-Jemployee made front page head¬lines by slugging three robbersone night with a baseball bat hecarried for his own protection.The Cap & Gown made historyof some sort with their advertis¬ing— a picture of the Chancellorin his off moments labeled “Whathappens when Cap & Gown hitsChicago?” and a poster describingHortense Fandangle who enjoyedthe yearbook’s “Smutty approachto campus life.” A tear-out couponmarked “rippety-tear” which ap¬peared in the yearbook’s “WashProm Phoenix” inspired a letterwriter named “Publius” to sug¬gest that the whole Cap & Gownstaff be shipped to Northwestern.For an early morning diversion,a B-J student named George Ath-anson dragged afew of his friendsout on the Midway every morningat 7 and led them through a periodof calisthenics.Cultural ActivitiesAttract SpectatorsCampus cultural life was high¬lighted by the three issue of Chi¬cago Review, each winning morepraise than the previous. UT gavefewer performances this yearthan previous, but audience reac¬tion was favorable.Off-campus visitors included thefolk-singer and ban joist PeteSeeger, who twice filled MandelHall, and Paul Robeson who drewa large audience despite protesteby the American Legion.The outgrowth of the gymnas¬tics department, Acrotheatre,gave its annual spring show^ en¬titled “Acrodeo” this year, , -Supplement — Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON June 4, 1954Ed Maupin Drinks Beer . . .at one of the frequent Cap and Gown parties. The staff members ofthe “true-blue yearbook” often took time out on weekends to imbibealcoholic beverages. Editor Maupin (center) demonstrates the propertechniques of beer drinking, though some prefer cokes.at a reception in Moscow. The MAROON’s managing editor visitedthe Soviet Union with several other college editors. The reports ofhis travels were widely printed—in the MAROON, the Sun-Times,Ufe Magazine and the Congressional Record.Seeger Plays and Sings t . .at two concerts on campus during the year. Both times he drewcapacity houses in Mandel Hall as he sang folk songs and accom¬panied* himself on a five-string banjo. Other folk-singers, includingBig Bill Broonzy and Win Strake, also appeared at these concerts.B-J Boys Bend At 7 A.M. . . .in one of the diversions of dormitory life. The half-hour period ofmorning calisthenics was the idea of George Athanson (center) whorouted sleepy boys dut of bed for a period of sit-ups, knee bends,etc., on the Midway.Jan Porter Named Miss UC . . .was the headline after Wash prom. The campus queen was electedby the student body and officially crowned at the Bartlett gym danceby Dean of Students Robert M. Strozier. She is shown above dancingwith her date, Chris Smith. Student GovernmenCampus Life Shows LMajor Qovernment ProblemMichigan Plan Enforcementby Clive Gray,President, Student Government1953-54 saw Student Government make record progress inasserting its role as the representative organ of the studentbody before the administration. At the same time SG gavethe students the best tangible evidence so far of its desire toserve their material needs—the Reynolds Club Student Serv¬ice Center. ———————$400 in debt, and the book ex-But at the year’s end SG be- change, where students set theirgan to sense a failure to sell used texts on theitself and its accomplishments other students toto the student body. For of thecommittee chairmen and otherSG leaders who ran in the Aprilelection for delegates to the Na¬tional Student Association Con¬gress this summer, fully 50 percent lost. shelves forbuy, couldGovernment FacesPlan EnforcementThe year began as the Inde¬pendent Students League swungback into power with over two-thirds of the seats in the StudentAssembly, ISL's best majoritysince 1950. At once the assemblyfaced the problem of implement¬ing the Michigan plan, a provisionin the official Student Codepassed by SG in 1951, which seta 1953 deadline for campus organ¬izations with discriminatory mem¬bership clauses in their constitu¬tions to remove them or lose Uni¬versity recognition.The administration was makingclear that it would not allow SGto enforce the code against theone campus group with a “selec¬tive” clause in its (national) con¬stitution. The reason: this group,the Phi Della Theta fraternitychapter, was already workinghard in the biennial conventionsof the fraternity to remove theclause by a vote of all the chap¬ters and alumni groups. scarcely ever be found open. Pros¬pects pointed to a great jump inbusiness starting in the fall.In another student serviceproject, SG organized groups ofout-of-town students to travelhome on group discount plans atconsiderable savings to all par¬ticipants.The SG student needs cornmit-mittee continued the efforts ofthe 1952-53 group to found a stu¬dent housing co-operative wheremen or women students mightlive at great savings over bothneighborhood and dormitory costs.It collected and presented to acommittee of the Board of Trust¬ees a large pile of information onsuccessful co-ops at ten other uni¬versities and colleges. Impressed,the trustees approved of the pro¬ject, but it later developed thatthe Unievrsity had no funds tolend SG for the purchase of ahouse. Late in April SG lined upa hotel nearby where the studentsmight rent an entire floor; but asignature campaign failed to un¬cover sufficient interest on cam¬pus to launch the project nextfall.Discuss PlansWith AdministrationBut SG and its supporters wereaghast at the length of time thefraternity would require to re¬move the clause by a three-quar¬ters vote at two successive bien¬nial conventions, the necessaryprocedure under their constitu¬tion. As a result, lengthy discus¬sions were held between officersof the fraternity, SG leaders, ad¬ministration representatives, andfaculty members of the Student-Communications Board.Finally, with the advice of the SG Co-op SeeksSmaller BuildingSG continues to look for asmaller building in which to getthe co-op on its feet, but findsitself hampered by a Chicago ordi¬nance prohibiting the conversionof one-family dwellings or apart¬ment houses into any kind of stu¬dent dormitory unless adequateparking space off the street isprovided for one car to every fiveresidents.An SG - faculty - Administrationcommittee again chose two Chi¬cago students to study with fullscholarships at the University of Emphasis CIn Culturalby Dame^ QMAROON.ferfhi!This year has brought the ’bfgiFrankfurt (Germany) under the _ _SG Chicago-Frankfurt exchange phasis from performance to train:program. SG also prepared to re- activities. The major creative d’g!lacuUy"’membWr £Tand‘ ihe S™ f„r uc durinTi^r?^ Prf£nted fewe.r Public pcrfojmtn.dean of students Mr Strozier tIves UC*^g 19o4-55. The but have spent more time in Beltdecided to set a new deadline on g^mtoTnd^ had to^epoftponed shopS* ™S develoPment was m0fitOctober 15, after the 1954 Phi ®til itWni.id tre, Acrotheatre, and, to some r-De„a Thca convention. The ad- £aK™Vl°„dP.£ M the Camera Club. Sr?r P™M° “ student in . UC housing co-opera- At the beginning of .the Michigan plan by then if the tive h ^ « Universitv Theatre an.three-quarters vote had not been ^ ‘ y . . , Slidobtained, and the Phil Delta Theta 4 The Student - Faculty - Adminis- nounced a new organizational pol- <onchapter refused to repudiate its ration Court, which represents icy designed to acilitate broadei $hi(selective clause unilaterally. SG lhe Jud,clal bran<* of Student participation in the Theatre s ac- a,rthen voted 25-8-3 to amend the Gove™ment, plowed through an tivities. Included in the organize- dJ tCode in line with the agreement. unu.sualJy loaded docket and, in J»on was an expansion of thc^*various decisions, termed uncon- workshop, the informal sessions™eantim®’ Dartmouth stjtutjonal a 1952.53 by-law repri- in which the company gained ex-?O"el?_StU^ntw..V°!ed t0^nf0r.ce manded a campus group for vio- Perience by producing improvisa tqn twoihojdire1 J?artTr TTMlchlgan PIa” hy lations of the Student Regula- tions and sections of plays. BdtJ%4 and the University of Michi- tjons> and challenged the legality the substance of the new organ-gan had no Michigan plan at all. of certajn additions to the Code ization was the institution of theThe administration had vetoed, it. and Rcftu,ations made uniSer- Theatre “Group” whose member-ally by Director of Student Activi- shiP was entitled to observe and If (ties Birenbaum. Difficulties were criticize workshops and other in- 1 Tdeveloping toward the end of the formal activities of the company„ , • , .. . . . . . year between SG and Birenbaum as wel1 as the Public perfornv . -combined the student book ex- who challenged the grounds on ances. Although it has not yet Ja_nd min?e‘ which this decision was rendered been fully implemented, the T*"Group” plan has provided a basis jljEstablishService CenterThe SG Student Service Centerograph service at one spot in theReynolds Club and offered an en- As usual, the year was markedtirely new short term loan service J\y a ^tiof 1conc?.rd ^ween the Theatre^from^the * student*^ body. 103pub]dor $10 or less). The Center was t*** Parties. The minor- a^7tlc", ISnUct with its aSi wonopen five hours daily for the first Jty party (SRP) opposed most of ence'for'the company.* l:five weeks of the spring quarter, SG’s major policies, especially the Faced with the difficulties 6fand three hours daily until the Michigan Plan settlement and the training an almost entirely new fsummer. It did a daily business establishment of the Student company at the beginning of the,of $50 to $150, drawing just Service Center; and because the year (mo?t ,of the experienced ^“°n wav" “nYh° Tw ""IT Wre UnaM* *° *«"* upon “/mcalre”?!1^T stag°e/on& J*own way. Previously, the ticket candidates for the SFA Court, jus- four public productions this year.agency alone was losing $60 per tices were chosen as late as six Its first — Antigone — was a con-J/fquarter, the mimeo seivice was weeks after vacancies occurred. tinuation of the series of studio S««t J""* *' 1,54 the CHICAGO MAROON Supplement — Pag* Sit Exerts Authority;Little Social PressureSG Members Walk Out.. .in protest of the passage of controversial amendments to the Michi¬gan plan. The amendments agreed to by the ISL leadership and theadministration gave Phi Delta Theta fraternity an extension of timeto remove the discriminatory clause from their constitution. Butminority party SRP opposed passage and left the meeting when theamendments carried. Shown outside the hall after the walkout are(left to right) Ann Holcombe. Lyn Burns, Frank Kirk, Michael Kauf¬man, Michael Girsdansky. Matthew Prastein, Paul Breslow and Rob¬ert Floyd.Gordon Clapp Defends TVA Plan . . .in the Walgreen lectures last winter. The chairman of the TennesseeValley Authority board of directors (left) described the benefits theplan brought to the Southern states. He was introduced by HermanC. Pritchitt, chairman- of the political science department (right)Persopolis Ruins Described . . .in the first of three books on Darius, capital city of ancient Persia.The work, written by Erich Schmidt of the Oriental Institute wa»published last fall. Shown above are some of the 13 remaining col¬umns of the huge audience hall.Bill Of Rights Signing . . .was one of the highlights of Academic Freedom Week. Above BruceLarkin affixes his signature to the document as Director of StudentActivities William M. Birenbaum, Dean of Rockefeller Chapel JohnThompson, Dean of the College Robert E. Streeter, and Dean of Stu¬dents Robert M. Strozier (left to right) watch.Edward L. Ryerson . . .became chairman of the Board ofTiu^tees last summer succeeding♦sird Bell (left) who retired.After his first year in office, Ryer-»>n (above) made this statement:Tam delighted with the situa¬tion as I have found it, especiallytfie program of building new en¬rollment in the college. I havebeen’ impressed with the activitiesshowing interest of new possibil-ines in this enrollment. I thinkthis is very important for thefuiupe of the University. Anotherimportant thing is the South EastChicago Commission and its con¬cern 'with improvement in theI’niversity area and the rebuild-ifig’^f some parts of the neigh¬borhood which need to be rehabil-iated. I think these are the twoimportant factors showingsigns of progress, and also thequestion of the general budgetuhich' has been dealt with intelli¬gently.”Changedil Life Allcampus Events, PartiesSpark Campus Social Lifeby Bruce Larkin,former President,Student UnionThe UC social scene has been sparked this year by a seriesof all-campus events and the typically numerous small parties.The student body seems to appreciate smaller, less formal,and more spontaneous social activities than the organized stu¬dent organizations tend to put on. Though the tribulationsof the larger groups may be thought by some to indicate astudent distaste for socializing, many feel that this is not thecase. The students wish to socialize, and do socialize, butchoose and create their own activities.Many feel that there is little “social pressure,” as that ischaracterized at other colleges - :and universities. It is felt that n°rl.er’ candidate of Kappa Alphano one eroim — neither fra Psi fratermty for the title of Missternities, S?Innor* ^received her title a, the highters, nor Student Union-exer- P°“‘“' the promenade,cises any “control” over the social The s-lze the undergraduatesphere of activities. The bulk of steadily declining since thethe “social life” consists of small °* 3,421 in 1946-47—has pro¬fraternity parties, dorm parties, , fr a distinct and severe limitand even more usually simple to . fan&e in which the extra¬gatherings of friends. Even curriculum may operate. The bulkthough this is the case it is yet °* suPPort for social activitiesevident that there is greater pres- emanates from undergraduates,sure for “successful” social events 1 ose. *n . ® divisions are pre-than has existed for the past few ®ccuPied with study and are noyears longer interested in many of the*. “childish” activities of the collegetnese students. There are now onlytheThough we recognizefacts, we can still look atprincipal events of the year asmemorable occasions for thosewho attended.C-Dance FirstEvent of YearA “C”-dance was sponsored byStudent Union on the first Satur¬day of orientation week. Not onlyentering students, but also a largenumber of newly returned stu¬dents were on hand. At the tradi¬tional Chancellor’s Reception dur¬ing the first week of classes theChancellor, other members of theadministration, and their wives mare nowabout 1,100 students enrolledthe college.Social OrganizationsMust CompeteSocial organizations have foundit necessary to enter into gruel¬ing competition with each otherto secure necessary attendance.A social program should not oper¬ate at a consistent deficit. Thereis not sufficient rapport betweenleaders of sponsoring organiza¬tions or members of the adminis¬tration who advance the cause ofthe extra-curiculum and the massof students. There is a tendencywere present to welcome students t0 thiflk in terms of the immediat'to the University and formally post wargreet the returnees.Inter-Fraternity Ball featuredthe election of Miss Jamie Red¬mond as Queen of the Ball. PhilLevant and his orchestra provided period, or the timeswhen there was a great deal ofspontaneous interest in the organ¬ized, formal social aspects of theextra-curriculum. It would be un¬wise and unfair to indict the ad-dancing music at the Edgewater ministration for this failing; mostel Queen -eatur* editorbeginnings of a change of ent¬raining within student culturalduanizations on campus haventmeps than in previous years,Dehearsals, classes and work-lOBt notable in University Thea-r^.idings it began the previousyeaij* Unfortunately the capacityol the company allowed only oneSucti reading. The second produc-on, Anouilh’s Carnival ofhieves, translated by a UT mem¬ber, illustrated the potentialities0i the new members, and the last4feftuction of three one act plays4r owed the fruits of the expandedworkshop policy and the emphasisOn training. With the exception ofwo ^les and the director of theShortest play, the cast and thedirectors were new members andfie production was one of the bestof UTs career.Tffe other organization that hasShown considerable developmentif Acrotheatre. This year it insti¬tuted classes in modern dance andExpanded the dramatic potential¬ities of its usual media. Its onepublic performance, given lastiponth, indicated that it, as welltJT, could provide much worth-whij^ material in its workshops«n<l' classes.Another organization concernedvith an unusual art form is theCamera Club. Its annual exhibitl*st month revealed much worktforthy of artistic merit. If Acro-Attatre and the Camera Club fol-'the lead of UT and subjects«« “Cwkvrol," Supplement, pope 4 Beach hotel. The ball was well at¬tended, and well received by theten participating fraternities.Friday, the 13th of Novemberfound the “Bad Luck Ball,” aproduction of Burton-Judson andInter-Dormitory councils. Adver¬tising featured umbrellas (open!)hung inside the B-J dining halls,and “8-6alls” posted on campusbulletin boards.During the winter quarter of the burden for not routing thismisconception falls upon the bandof “student leaders.”The fact that social organiza¬tions must enter into competitionis a symptom of the situation. Notwrong in itself, it is instead indica¬tive of the fact that there existsless potential response to organ¬ized social functions than the pro¬grams of the sponsoring organi-Inter-Club sponsored the Inter-' zations re<*uire'Club Ball, and the dormitory There are only two solutions togroups once again held their quar- the problem, if the problem isterly dance. International House deemed worthy of solution. Thehas sponsored a fine formal dance organizations must alter their pro-each quarter gram, or the character and wishes4vi ^h Prom of the student body must change.Fv«„f While the first solution might well. . , be employed in the meantime, theBut the major event of the js bke]y to forge a morequarter was Washington Prome- permanent environment favorablenade. At the initiative of the Di- a socjai program. It is not pre¬rector of Student Activities Bart- mature to decide which prophe-lett Gymnasium was selected as^ c|es 0f the nature of future stu-the site, and a “big-name” band— dent bodies Wjn be found trueasking a big-name fee was hired wben their time comes. But theto provide entertainment. More consensuS( both among those whothan three hundred couples cele¬brated the 51st annual WashProm to the music of Woody Her¬man and his orchestra. JaniceREVIEWOF THE YEARThe Review of The Year wasedited by Paul A. Hoffman, As¬sisting in the writing were Ar¬thur Brown, Richard Ward,Daniel Queen, Palmer Pinney,Clive Gray, and Bruce Larkin.Photos appear by courtesy ofJoe Wolf, UC Press, UC De¬partment of Press Relations,Richard Kluckhohn, BobSbarge, Fabian Backrach, andStephen Lewellen. desire this change and amongthose who are repulsed by it, isthat the student body will take onan attitude more friendly to socialactivities and will reflect to agreater degree a way of thinkingsimilar to that of the more usualundergraduate school.There has been a place for tneextra-curriculum in most formu¬lations of educational policy prac¬ticed today. There has not al¬ways been a place for “social pres¬sure,” or for activities predicatedon that principle. This studentbody must charge future studentbodies to examine the state oftheir extra-curricula and decidewhether their emphase and oper¬ations are consistent with fruitfuleducation.Supplement—Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON June 4, 1954Spoil's Have Good YearDespite UC De-Emphasisby Palmer Pinney,Sports ReporterThis is the time of year whenathletes, coaches, and alumni areable to look back over a full yearof athletic activity and ask them¬selves, “How did we do?’'Even without the usual qualifi¬cations concerning player inex¬perience and the academic loadwhich discourages extensive prac¬tice, the answer is that we did wellthis year. From cross-country tobaseball, our teams gained morethan good exercise and goodsportsmanship; they also had thesatisfaction of winning. Not thatour athletic staff subscribes tothe theory of the Western Con¬ference coach who said, “Winningisn't the most important thing . . .it’s the only thing.” But no onelikes to become a virtuoso loser.According to the above, cross¬country must have been the mostsatisfactory sport of the year. Theskinny crew that tramples thegrass and disturbs the autumn airin Washington Park went unde¬feated in 8 meets. Team captainand iron-man Hal Higdon was theindividual hero of the season.He was defeated only once, byOwensby of Butler. Husky JimFlynn finished close behind Hig¬don in the majority of meets, fol¬lowed by a raft of promisingfreshmen, including Paul Baptist,Art Omohundro, and Ray San¬ders. These runners, plus LawtonLamb, Walt Deike, and A r n i eMeardon, won the Central AAUCross Country title for the UCTrack Club.Meanwhile, the soccer teammanaged to squeeze out a 4-3 over¬time win over Indiana in thg lastgame of the season, thereby tyingwith that team for third place inthe Midwest Conference. Howrough a sport soccer is may bejudged from what happened tofullback Pete Rosen earlier in theseason, after he had headed theball the wrong way past his owngoalie, Gerry Czamanske, to giveWheaton a 1-0 victory.That night Rosen was set uponby thugs; the last words he re¬members hearing before losingconsciousness being: “Czamanskesent us.” Both Rosen and Czaman¬ske were subsequently chosen tothe all-conference team, possiblyfor their fighting spirits.Basketball, Track TopWinter SportsWinter quarter sports werehighlighted by the improvedshowing in basketball and thenearly perfect record in track.The varsity quintet changed theprevious season’s 1-16 record intoan 8-8 mark. Centers Wally Loner-gan and Fred Hubbard, and for¬wards Bob Mann and Dave Smithpaced the varsity attack.The JVers won their secondstraight Private School Leaguecrown, but lost to Harvard in thefinal game * of the post-seasonplayoffs. The three players thatformed the nucleus of the JVteam were center Dewey Jones,forward Mitch Watkins, andguard Lynn Small.In track, one of the strongestaggregations of runners, jumpers,and weightmen in recent yearswas able to overpower every teamon its schedule except Marquette.Sophomore hurdler Frank Loo-mos, by great improvement, outof Austin high school, skimmedover the 70 yard low hurdles in:07.9 to break Vern Gras’ oldvarsity record. National six-kilom¬eter champion Walt Deike alsoset a new varsity record whenSHOULD AULDACQUAINTANCEBE FORGOTJimmy’s Frank Loomos . . .was perhaps the star athlete ofthe year. Almost unbeatable inthe low hurdles, the young track¬man also won regularly in thedashes and competed in the highs.he shaved nearly 20 seconds offthe old standard by running a9:19.6 two-mile.The mile relay team of DaveShepherd, Lowell Hawkinson,Ken Stapley, and the late GeorgeMcCormick came close to, butdid not lower, the record in theirevent. All four of these runnersfailed to compete in much of theoutdoor season. Neverthelessteam depth and versatility gainedvictory in all but one of the out¬door meets. Justin Johnson andDan Trifone were particularlyconsistent point scorers duringthe season.While the varsity was losingrunners during the outdoor sea¬son, the JV tracksters gained the services of the former three-mannucleus of the JV basketballteam. These three, together withJim Brown and Dick Scupi, werekey in winning a triangular meetwith state champ La Grange andcity champion Wendell Phillipshigh schools, as well as the PSLtrack championship. Lynn Smallscored two points for the team inthe state meet by taking 4th in the220 yd. dash.In those winter quarter sportswhich do not extend into the out¬door season, Chicago teams faredabout as well as in previous years.The fencing season reached itsclimax when the national col¬legiate meet was held here, inBartlett gymnasium. JV fencerMike Fain won the state foilchampionship to lead his teamthrough the season. Varsity swim¬mers had an average season, asdid the gymnasts, in spite of someexcellent performing by HerbTaylor.The Spring quarter saw a fairlytypical baseball team develop. In¬fielder Bob Mann provided power,polling two homers during theseason. Buzz Tarr turned in somefine pitching, and firstbasemanDave Utley and shortstop WendellMarumoto did some excellentfielding. Catcher Walt Walker hadmore than his share of difficulty,getting beaned one day and in¬jured on the hand the next.After participating in fall ten¬nis (and compiling a 5-0 recorddoing it) the netsters boggeddown to a 5-5 record in the spring.Bob Fox held the number onesingles post, and teamed withMyron Howland to form the firstdoubles team.Cultural...(from Supplement, page 3)their work continuously to a criti¬cal audience, they will show thattheir unusual forms can be orig¬inal, creative, and meaningful.The year before last a similaridea*to UT’s “Group” policy was instituted in the medium of mu¬sic. The University of ChicagoMusical Society gave bi-weeklychamber recitals by student in¬strumentalists followed by infor¬mal gatherings with the audiencesduring which the performanceswere discussed. This year, partlydue to a lack of physical facilities,only one recital was given. Eventhis one concert was a practicalsuccess. A student composer hada work performed and discussedand instrumentalists had the op¬portunity to perform in small en¬sembles before an appreciativeaudience. NOne of the most dynamic (andperhaps most neglected) musicalorganizations during the pastyear has been the UC Glee Club.Although it has presented fewfull concerts, it has deliveredmany informal recitals. In com¬bination with the UCMS it couldprovide the medium for increasedactivity by the musicians amongthe students. As in the past, per¬fection of performance is not im¬mediately necessary but will comeonly with frequent recitals beforean interested audience.The Student Union All-CampusArt Exhibit this year was con¬siderably smaller than in thepast. Insufficient preparation wasmade both proceeding and duringthe exhibit. Too few student ar¬tists were aware of their opportu¬nity. Yet, because the exhibit wasthe only outlet during the entireyear for student work in thegraphic arts, it is doubtful that itcould have presented either quan¬tity or quality.In the literary field this yearthe student has had a similar lackof opportunity. The three issuesof the Chicago Review, althoughcertainly more comprehensivethan in previous years, have con¬tained a very small proportion ofthe student writing done on thiscampus and submitted to theReview. Admittedly most of thework submitted this year has beenof too low a quality to print in themagazine; but it will remain sowhile the writers have no oppor¬tunity to present and discuss theirwork.Precisely the same type ofworkshop that exists in UT is feasible with the Review. Criti¬cism sessions may be instituted inwhich all the students who havesubmitted work participate.Works unacceptable for publica¬tion in the Review may be printedin a low cost format such aspianographing or even mimeo¬graphing. Only in this way willpotential student writers havetheir work read and discussed.The other student cultural or¬ganizations maintained theirusual output throughout the year.The University Choir presentedperformances of Handel’s Mes¬siah, Bach’s St. John Passion andMass in B Minor, and a group ofshorter works. The DocumentaryFilm Group presented three se¬ries of high quality films but adecline in film interest during theyear left the group financially un¬certain. The Folk-Lore Society, arevival of the defunct Folk Union,presented a number of successfulhootenannies and appeared in con¬cert with Pete Seeger. The IndiaAssociation presented a concertby Bala Krishna and a dance re¬cital by Vashi and Veena.The Renaissance Society’s mostnotable exhibit was of rarely seencontemporary German drawingsand prints, including artists suchas Grosz and Kandinsky.The professional events fell atthe extremes of unusualness andmediocrity. Mediocre were mostof the overwhelmingly pedanticUniversity Concerts, relieved onlyby the New York and Vegh stringquartets. Unusual were the per¬formance, (though not too welldone) of Everyman by the Chi¬cago Equity Theatre; the dra¬matic reading of Salt of the Earthby Academy Award winner, AnnRevere; the concert reading ofSusan Glaspell’s The Inheritors incelebration of Academic FreedomWeek by members of the cast ofThe World of Sholom Aleichein;the performance of Ravel’sL’Heure Espanol by the Interna¬tional Society for ContemporaryMusic; the two tum-away con¬certs by Pete Seeger, one withBill Broonzy and the other withElla May Jenkins and the Folk-Lore Society; and the first appear¬ance on campus since 1950 of PaulRobeson — from which 500 wereturned away.The A •Disc1367 E. 57th St.LP RECORDSHI-FIDELITY PHONOGRAPHSHY 3-5151RADIO REPAIROpen Weekdays til 10 GREETING CARDSSaturdays til 5 A CASA Book StoreCHOICE USED BOOKSNew Lot Just ArrivedGuaranteed typewriter repair service1117 E. 55th St. HY 3-96511 Celebrate Close Of Schoolwith 7 Hours of Fun ot the! "RIVERVIEW RAMBLE ftUnited Charities' Benefit1172 E. 55th ■imiiiaiiiiiiiiiiaiiimimiimiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiBiiiiiiiiiiiBiiiiiiiiiiiiu= STUDENTS & TEACHERS =1 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT i,| TOWNECRAFT INDUSTRIES, INC., has openings for | |5 well-dressed, neat-appearing men in sales department. Z 33 Full assistance and complete training given to men 3 33 selected. 3 Z3 NOT DOOR-TO-DOOR — Use of auto necessary in your £ ~S home area to secure appointments with contacts in the 5 53 field. ; ;S EARNINGS — $98.54 to $197.08 plus bonus and incen- £ ££ tives will be earned WEEKLY during summer vacation £ 5E with option to continue to work part-time after college Z 33 resumes in the fall. If you have had previous sales training 3 33 or enjoy talking to people like yourself and fit our 3 33 preliminary requirements, Z Zz Phone WAterfall 8-9874, Mr. Bouton, E EZ district manager Z E■ Monday, Wednesday, or Friday, 10 a.m. to 12 noon, ■ ■3 or 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., for appointment to interview. 3 3.TlllllBiailllllllBIBlIlllllllllIBBIIIIIIBIiaillBlllflBIIIBIBBBIIlIBBBBIBIIIR 111 Unlimited Admission to ALLPark's 36 Rides and ShowsHey Hey Humphrey and his bond, the11-11 Jazz Club, will ploy beginning 7:30 p.m.Picnic Area: Special EventsGuest Celebrities 3E5 p.m. to Midnight — Thurs., June 17RIVERVIEW PARKBELMONT A WESTERNSTUDENT TICKET: $2.50 5si39Tickets Available Beginning Suae 7 atWOODWORTH'S BOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St.iBCBititBMHaaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiufiBiii!4, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON ' '■ .rPag* 5UC Choir does the Bach'Mass in B Minor' poorlyAfter nothing but records, one is grateful to hear the Bach B Minor Mass in almost anylive performance. However, the UC Choir’s concert May 23 had certain serious faults. Themain trouble seemed to be with ensemble; the cellos and basses continually rushed, and inthe arias the solo instruments were almost never with the singers, although it was hard totell whose fault this was. The strings in general were poor, especially the violin solo. Thewinds were better, but the orchestra as a whole played everything, with few exceptions, asloudly as possible, and withandlittle expression.The soloists and choruswere distinctly below the levelof their recent performance ofthe “St. John Passion.” The cho¬rus settled down and was muchmore consistent toward the end;the fast numbers in generalwere good except that the earlyones were much too fast, andthe entrance of the “Qui tollispeccata” was very beautiful.The “Crucifixus” also was mov¬ing except for the cellos andbasses, but the pause before thefinal chord, especially after thesurpassingly lovely progressionin the third to last measure,was nothing short of idiotic.The soloists, except for the so¬pranos, were all right except thatthey never were with the orches¬tra, or the orchestra with them.A great deal of these diffi¬culties seemed to be results oftempi, which were often very fast and always erratic; not be¬ing able to .see the conductor,one can only conjecture as towhether it was his or the or¬chestra’s fault. Neither, in anycase, can be much commended;the winds might be excepted,but the strings were continu¬ally out of tune and never to¬gether, and did not reflect veryJO BANKSCreative Photography645 7 Cottoge GroveMU 4-7365 favorably on the Chicago Sym¬phony, which is one of the con¬cert’s main calling cards; onthe other hand, the tempi wereoften wrong, and the interpre¬tation ridiculous, the most glar¬ing example, the end of the“Crucifixus,” was already men¬tioned. Other than this, in the“Confietor” one would haveliked some slight change in dy¬namics, at the beginning of the“Et expecto.” Of course therewas little enough dynamicchange throughout, and thetempi not merely wrong butoften erratic and unsteady. Vagh String QuortttNext year's concert seriesfeatures return of quartetscompetence. Second, rehearsals ofthe orchestra alone and the or¬chestra with individual soloistsw’ould help immeasurably. Third,Bach is not the place for impres- grams; including the New MusicQuartet, playing quartets bySchumann, Kirchner and Beetho¬ven; the Budapest Quartet pre¬senting works by Benjamin Lees,Beethoven’s Op. 130 (with theRichard E. VikstromBUY A NEW CHEVROLET —TODAY’S BEST BUY IN SAFETY!IN THE LOW-PRICE FIELDBiggest brakes for safer stopping. High compressionpower for smoother going. In feature after feature,Chevrolet gives you the most—and the best—for yourmoney! We’re so sure of it that we invite you to prove itto yourself by any test or comparison you care to make.Come in now!Come in now andprove it for yourself! CHEVROLETNow's the time to buy! Get our BIG DEAL! Enjoy a New Chevrolet!YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER As announced for next year, the University concerts promiseto be one of the best series in recent years. The Autumn quar¬ter concerts begin with a program of Appleton and Field,~ .. . . .. .. . . noted piano team, in a recital of Brahms, Stravinsky, Bartok,Tailleferre and Ravel; this will be followed » Nov. 5 by aDhonv members is hardlv good recital of Grant Johannesen, pianist, playing Mozart, Beetho-enough TdverUstngSto warrarft°in- ven, Schumann, Faure andRavel.The remainder of the quar¬ter series includes a sonata recitalby Alexander Schneider, violinand Artur Balsam, piano, present-sionistic effects, and benefits ing sonatas by Schumann, Her- ron(jo finale) and William Denny;most by a careful, steady reading, bert Fromm and Ben Weber, and University Chamber Musicallowing the music to speak for the Grand Duo of Schubert; and payers, in a program of oboeitself. Fourth, it might be men- a program by Grace Creswell, con- quartets by William Shield, Moz-tioned that, however charming tralto, of ballads, songs and art antj Britten; and the Veghthe atmosphere, Rockefeller “white spirituals.” String Quartet, playing Beetho-Chapel is no place to hear music, The Winter quarter features yen’s Op. 135, Bartok No. 6 andparticularly music of some com- three string quartets and a cham- Mozart, K. 575.plexity of texture. ber group in a series of varied pro- The Spring Quarter openswith the New York Quartet, play¬ing Brahms’ Piano Quartet in A*remainder of the program to beannounced. Also featured arePhyllis Curtin, and the ShumanBrass Choir.Subscription tickets are on saleat the rate of $10 for the entireseason. Quarterly subscriptionsare $4.40 for the Autumn andWinter series, $3.30 for theSpring. Single tickets at $1.50 willgo on sale on the first day of eachquarter for that series.Artists in5 7th streetThis Saturday and Sunday, June5 and 6, will be the occasion ofwhat promises to be the largestopen air art fair held in the West¬ern Hemisphere. Over two hun¬dred painters, sculptors andcraftsmen have registered for theseventh annual 57th Street ArtFair, to be held on the north sideof 57th Street between Kenwoodand Kimbark.A nominal entry fee, and a seri¬ous approach to art being the onlyrequirements, the fair has provedto be a forum for a wide range ofartists. It has also proved popularwith Chicago residents since allworks displayed are on sale atreasonable prices.The works are in a wide rangeof media; oils, watercolors, etch¬ings, sculpture, and handicrafts,including ceramics, jewelry, andweaving.tfimiaiimiiiiHiiifiiintimiiiKmodern jazz |full line of all classical Sand popular records ■in all speeds :studentdiscountHours: 2 to 8Saturdays: 11 to 9the recordchest5112 s. lake parkauu.HmilMXH.Hmuu.Hii.i.iOnly Chevrolet in the low-price field gives you allthese "Best Buy” values—• BIGGEST BRAKES • HIGH COM-PRESSI0N POWER • FISHER BODY QUALITY • SAFETY PLATE GLASS• FAMED KNEE-ACTION RIDE • FULL-LENGTH BOX-GIRDER FRAMEti '• tt<- 'V VY OTHER COMPANY INNORTH AMERICAN HAS BUILT MORE AIRP WORLDHYDE PARK8 rm. res. 5 bedrooms, oilheat, enclosed front porch.Near grade, high school andU of C. Suitable for a largefamily.$2,000 down — $10,000DOrchesfer 3-1266Program for College GirlsI to 10 Weeks' Course • Don aid Emiag ClassesReasonable Tuition RatesCome in for a Free Trial LessonExcellent paying positions open to all grad¬uates. Free lifetime placement service. Onlyauthorized Comptometer School.COMPTOMETER SCHOOL1220 Merchandise Mart, Chicago 54, IN.Tel. Superior 7-0603BRANCH SCHOOLS6223 S. Western Ave. • GRovehit! 6-66S6721 W. Chicago Ave., C. Chicago, Ind.CAST CHICAGO 4006 organization, facilities and experience keep - aNorth American Aviation, Inc,years ahead in aircraft,.. atomic energy... electronics,.. guided missiles,.. research and development•rrV. K... You’re on your ownMoments ago his instructor said, “Good luck son.Now you try it alone!’ And as the young cadet turnsto his plane he feels a sudden thrill run throughhim. He is sure he’s ready... after those longmonths of tough, hard training. And he is ready.He’ll win his wings, because those who chose himknow he has the qualities a pilot must possess.You too can know the same thrill that youngman feels now... if you have the stuff in you tobecome an aviation cadet. Ahead of you lies a greatadventure ... flying with the U. S. Navy or Air Force in the planes that guard our nation’s shores.You’ll meet them all. Planes like this T-28, NorthAmerican’s trainer for the Navy and Air Force,that outflies many World War II fighters. Andwhen you’ve won your wings you may graduate toa squadron that flies FJ-3 Fury Jets, Korea-famedF-86 Sabre Jets ... or America’s fastest produc¬tion jet fighter, the supersonic F-100 Super Sabre.Yes, there’s high adventure ahead for you, if youtake the challenge a flying career in the servicesoffers now... if you’re ready to be on your own.Page 6 June 4, 1954'Salt of the Earth' hasdifficulties at openingSalt of the Earth, scheduled to open at the Cinema Annexlast Friday did not open. A capacity audience filled the theatreonly to find out that the Motion Picture Operators Unionwould not allow the projectionist to show the film.The audience heard addresses by Herbert Biberman, direc¬tor of the film, and Juan Chacon, male lead in the film, andpresident of local 890, Inter¬national Union of Mine, Milland Smelter Workers, whohad come in from New Mexico toattend the Chicago opening.Biberman asked that letters besent to the newspapers and tothe operators’ union, protestingthe action.The operator, a five-year em¬ployee of the Cinema Annex, had Lorwinof(from page 1)lagher left the DepartmentJ ustice.Gallagher claims that he wasnot fired, but resigned becausehis superiors directed him to dis¬obey a federal court order. How¬ever, Attorney General HerbertBrownell stated that “he (Gallag¬her) has been discharged for hisirregularities.”Irregularities chargedThese irregularities were listedas:that Gallagher had told thegrand jury that the Govern¬ment had two witnesses from theFederal Bureau of Investigationwho would support the grand jurytestimony of the single witness(Metz) who had testified againstLorwin; and that^ that Gallagher had told thegrand jury that it was notnecessary to call Lorwin or hiswife because they would claimthe fifth amendment (against selfincrimination) and refuse totestify. In fact, the government neverproduced the two FBI witnesses;and the records of the loyaltyboard showed that Lorwin and hiswife testified at length, vigorouslydenying any Communist affilia¬tion.Falsehoods citedWhen informed that the charg¬es against him were being drop¬ped, Lorwin stated: “In asking to¬day for a dismissal of the indict¬ment against me, the governmenthas admitted the obvious fact thatthere could be no other easeagainst me than that based onmisrepresentation, falsehood, orobstinate misunderstanding.“The allegations of Communismwere particularly outrageous inview of the long record of vigor¬ous anti-Communism in my workand outside activities,” continuedLorwin. “No responsible officialof the Department of Justice whotook the trouble to read that rec¬ord could have had the slightestdoubt that the department wasprosecuting an innocent man.” -Sports Briefs-Trackmen defeated twicefor first outdoor lossesThe Varsity track team ended the season with their first outdoordefeat of the year, losing to Central Michigan, 76-55. Running as theUC track club with the addition of Lawton Lamb and Walt Deike,they lost to the “coddled athletes” at Fort Leonard Wood, 73-58.Golfers suffer four defeatsThe varsity golfers ended the season with four losses, to LakeForest (5-13), Wayne (5^-6^), Glenview Naval Air Station (1-11)and Illinois Tech 3-91.Juan Chaconbeen called out of the theatre byClarence Jalas, business managerof the Moving Picture OperatorsUnion, Local 110. No replacementwas sent.The film is currently beingshown with union operators inLos Angeles and San Francisco,and has just finished a two and ahalf month run in two New YorkCity theatres. Reviewing its open¬ing in Mexico City, one of thecity’s newspapers called it the“most important film to have beenmade in North America.”Since the scheduled openingover six thousand people havebeen turned away from the Cin¬ema Annex. More than 650 phonecalls inquiring about the film havebeen received by the theatre.Referring to the actions of Jalasand Edward damage of theAmerican Legion, Biberman said:“These men. without regard forthe rights of freedom of speechcommunication, and assembly ofthe people of Chicago, are not act¬ing for themselves alone. Theyare continuing the two and a halfyear old attempt of similar ele¬ments in the motion picture indus¬try, who fear the competition ofsuch popular, realistic films asSalt of the Earth, to prevent thisfilm from reaching the Americanpublic. These Hollywood monop¬olizers of thought have spurredon many others to action destruc¬tive of every right of the artistand the public audience under ourlaws and traditions of individualliberty.” , MEDICAL SERVICES RAPIDLY RENDEREDOUR HEARTY BREW CURESCOMP FEVER, EXAMITIS,FALLING GRADESEye ExaminationsVisual Training I TDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist Ml 3-0524 1131-33 E. 55thfeaturingBallantine Ale and Beer1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372hm% 4, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON ?*• 7JVtrackmen win title againCoach Haydon smiles . . .with the JV track team after winning their seventeenth consecutivePrivate School League title. The white-haired mentor (right) hasother cause to grin—his varsity track squad just completed one oftheir most successful seasons in years.Maroon nine splitswith IIT, 7-6, 9-13In their final games of the year the Maroon nine split withIIT.The victory was a 7-6 win,in which good base running of play the Teehawks pushedwas the essential, for Illinois Tech across the winning run, with aout-hit Chicago, l3-9. “Buzz” Tarr triple and a bunt. John Broyleswas the winning pitcher, and started for the Maroons and wasstarring at bat were team captain belted for four runs in three in-Dave Utley who hit four for four nings. Jerry Bohman and Tarr re¬am! Jerry Couture who drove in lieved, pitching scoreless ball un-two runs with a first inning sin- til the thirteenth inning. Boh-gle. man’s 3 1/3 innings stint was aThe defeat was a heart-breaker no-hit affair, which included sevenfor the Maroons. After 13 innings strikeouts.on exhibition of pointings at(ottierB (lOU5C=!. , ...DOby Stan Williamson | |—1 j~jjoo o d food. .. * 17th straight championshipfor Haydon’s U'High runnersTed Haydon’s JV trackmen running under the colors ofUniversity High won their 17th consecutive Private SchoolLeague championship May 22. Running agairjt the six otherschools in the league at Stagg Field, the fleet-footed juniortrackmen won every event but the discus and the 880 yardrelay.Final score showed Chicago90^, Wheaton 36, Elgin 23*4, It's a hit . . .Luther North 20^2, Glenwood an error, a couple of fumbles and15, Luther South 6%, and North a bad throw—and so faculty thirdPark 3. baseman, Donald Meikiejohn getsTwo meet records fell. Mitch credited for a “home-run.” TheWatkins won the 180 yard low chairman of the social sciences 3hurdles in :21.3, cutting l/10th of course is shown at the right as hea second off the record set last started the swing that netted himyear by UC’s Sherry Gray. Dewey a four-base blow.Jones set a new high jump recordwith a leap of 5'11", bettering afive year mark of 5'914".Lynn Small won the 100 and220 yard dashes as well as thebroad jump. Jim Brown won the440 yard dash while Watkins tookthe 120 high hurdles. Dick Scupi,won the mile and Jones the half-mile. Chuck Youse won the shotput and Mike Chernoff the polevault.The previous week Small andBrown competed in the StateChampionships in Champaign,Small taking a fourth in the 220.Three days later the junior Ma¬roons achieved their final victoryof the year, defeating ThorntonTownship, 61-57. Watkins wonboth hurdles and the broad jump,Small both dashes, Brown the 440and Chernoff the pole vault. * *Photo by Bob SbargeFaculty softball teamloses in annual battle_ -BESERA^TrcWs: fiyoepark 5*4500£siXT\-THRIT TwP/T\^FOUR,vV^ODLA>V^AV'EMuS All that was lacking May 14B-J champions from Mathewsbattle was the man shouting,was clear and the day warm,a goodly crowd was assembledand the faculty team was as readyas ever they’d be.A double by Hugh Lane, a sin¬gle by Meyer Isenberg and thefirst of Mark Ashin’s two triplesscored two runs for the faculty.But Mathews came back in thelast half of the first and turned a when a faculty team faced theHouse in their annual softball“Beer! Ice cold beer!” The airAdjustable Wall Pull-UpLamp . . . Only $12.95With finger tip control. A touch of the knoband you have it where you want it. Glidesup and down. Swings left or right on polishedbrass arm. Extends 24" from the wall. Smartlystj led 14" metal shade available in jet black,forest green, chalk white or dull brass withfiber glass no-glare diffuser. Takes two bulbsup to 75 watts each.Herman’s935 E. 55m St. Midway 3-6700“where the prices are right”vv\\vwvN\\\v\vv\\\\v\v\w\\\\\m\Vv •Cool Summer Forecast For MenWearing Arrow LightweightsJudging from the current rush on for Arrowlightweights, it appears that the student body isheaded for a cool and comfortable summer. Arrowlightweight shirts and sports shirts ... in whiteand popular colors . . . are now available at allArrow dealers.ARROWTRADE ® MARKSHIRTS • Till • UNDERWEAR • HANDKIRCMKFS • SPORTSWEAR Real cool, man!Arrow LightweightShirts and Sports ShirtsCome on in. Look at theseshirts . . . examine the fab¬rics closely. And you'll seewhy these handsome light-weights .. . woven of airy,open-weave fabrics . . .keep you cool as a cucum¬ber even when the mercurysoars sky-high. ChooseArrow lightweight shirtsfor dress wear . . . light¬weight sports shirts for lei¬sure wear ... in white andsmart pastels. All tailoredof fine "Sanforized"® fab¬rics that won't shrink morethan 1%. Stop in, seethem today.Arrow Lightweight Shirts , , •Arrow Lightweight Sports Shirts. .. $3*95 up■Chicago - Evanston - Oak Park - Gary - Joliet - Alton —— walk and four singles off Ashin’sfast ball into four runs.Bill Birenbaum had a tough dayumpiring the game, but he camethrough it all resolutely, callingballs strikes and strikes balls, anddusting the plate with a Chicagodaily.Toward the end of the game-~after the fans and both teamswere on his neck—the director ofstudent activities remarked to fac¬ulty first-baseman Carl Grip,“Don’t you ever invite me to dothis again.” Grip replied, “Unlessyou call some more balls, I won’t.”On a series of walks and errorsin the fourth and fifth inningsMathews scored a total of sevenruns. Student-Faculty-Administra¬tion Court Justice Dan P"eldmangave his fellow justice Don Mei¬kiejohn a tough time in left-field,but Meikiejohn came through itall right, pounding a somewhatdubious home run in the fourthand sending a long fly to Feldmanto score Ashin after his secondtriple.Neal Huffaker’s pitching andLeon Rosenberg’s batting gaveMathews a 12-6 lead at the endof seven innings. Faculty captainAshin asked that the game beplayed nine innings—instead ofthe regulation seven to give theprofessors a better chance. Thisproposal was okayed by Mathews’captain, George Striker.The solid hitting of Bob Streeterhelped the old men slightly, butthey could not overcome the largeMathews lead. The final scoregave the faculty 9, Mathews 12.For the second straight year, theBurton Judson camps defeatedthe faculty.jj HFaculty 200 101 212— 9 11Mathews 401 340 OOx—12 12(Note: No error listings aregiven, as the reporter forgot tobring his adding machine.)You Are So Smart to Usea “Gentleman’s Groom-MasterFor that well groomed appearance.Train your hair to stay in place.Well-made of strong cotton netwith adjustable elastic neck strapto fit all head sixes. To use: Slight¬ly moisten and comb your hair andwear your “GROOM - MASTER"while you shave and dress. Just$L — we pay tax and postage.Imported and Distributed by:HOUSE OF DIANE106 E. Russell St. Barrington, III.Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON Jwi« 4, 1954Classified ...LostMexican silver bracelet set with ame¬thysts, on May 18. Reward. McCarn.Ext. 3231 (Office), Ext. 1071 (residence).Man’s horn-rimmed, bi-focal glasses.Wilson. 713B, B-J. KI 3-6000.FoundCollie, female, brown, with four whitefeet. Has thoroughbred characteristics.Also rabies tag. DO 3-0681.Tomato, two khiskes, half pound chop¬ped liver, mistakenly left in red Chevro¬let last week. Quinn, SO 8-2771.Rides WantedRides to NYC June 11, 12 or 13. Sharedriving expenses. Yudie, NE 8-0068 after9 p.m.Ride wanted Boston for couple leavingJune 16-19. Cantor, Ext. 3445 before1 p.m.Ride wanted Little Rock, Arkansas orany point south. Will share expenses.Wilson, 713B, B-J. MI 3-6000.Ride from New York or Connecticut toChicago around June 23, share expensesJean Carlsson, BU 8-9500.Riders WantedRiders wanted to Denver, Colorado,between June 2-5. Share expenses.Reichman, PL 2-9778.Riders to NYC leaving around June 10.Share expenses. Meier. FA 4-7354 (days).Girl who wishes ride to New Yorkaround June 12, brand new car, con¬tact Carole Reevman, Kelly, eveningsbetween 5-6.One rider wanted to NYC. Leave June12. Straight through, driving and ex¬penses shared. Jim, BU 8-1320 evenings.Riders wanted to Baltimore. Leaving.June 11, arrive same day, returningJune 22. Driving unnecessary, nominalCharge. Jay. PL 2-9718.Riders to Pittsburgh. Leaving Friday.June 11. Elliot Silverstein, MI 3-0800Ext 3759, or FA 4-1933.Riders wanted to California, end ofquarter. Will adjust date. Share driv¬ing and expenses. Ext. 2758-9 or PL2-0789.XFor RentApartment for sublease June 20-Sep-tember 15 completely furnished, 3*4rooms. *80. 5317 Kimbark. HY 3-0875“Levine.Rooms for men, linens furnished, kitch¬en privileges, *5-*7 a week. Phi SigmaDelta. PL 2-9477.Summer sublease, male student to sharesix-room apartment with three others.Kitchen facilities, bath. Convenient lo¬cation. reasonable rent. 6139 GreenwoodAve. DO 3-8575.Small light room, private bath forwoman. BU 8-4880 after 6 p.m.Special summer rates, single and -doublerooms. TV, washing machine, kitchenprivileges, AKK, 5725 Woodlawn.Clean cool rooms for summer quarter,TV, kitchen nrivileges. $30 per month.Phi Delta Theta 5737 Woodlawn. BU8-8956.Rooms for rent during summer. InquireAlpha Delta Phi house, 5747 UniversityPL 2-9718, Fred Smith.Two large furnished rooms, private bath,third floor. $15 single, $20 double. NO7-1379.Will sublet furnished University bar¬racks apartment mid-June to mid-Sep¬tember. Ext. 3268.Beautifully furnished apartment sub¬let June 20-August 25. Reasonable.’ utili¬ties included. Three rooms, near Uni¬versity, modern. HY 3-7495.Share spacious six-room apartment withtwo male students. Summer only. $28month. PL 2-3720.Lake Michigan cottage, modern, privatebeach, fireplace piano, screen porchFA 4-9191. v 'Modern large five-room apartment, sec¬ond floor. $100. See janitor at 5228 SWoodlawn or call CE 6-1770.Large furnished room, for male studentDrexel and 57th Street. DO 3-5145 after6 p.m.Rooms for rent, $26 tokitchen privileges. PsiUniversity, BU 8-9870. $30 per month,Upsilon, 5639Graduate student will share seven rooapartment with one or two others lorent. E. Meeron, MI 3-0800, Ext. 376Eckhart 17 days; 1407 E. 57th, eveningFour-room apartment for summer sub-^ly-August. Cool. airy. Vicinity57th and Kenwood. NO 7-6610.Student couple with seven-room apart¬ment will rent bedroom, study, privatebath, kitchen privileges, privacy, $36month. DO 3-4751.For SaleMen’s bike, American type. Excellentcondition, only $20. DO 3-3710.French Provincial furniture, informalfurniture, appliances, general householdgoods. Woman’s size 14, man’s 41 longclothing. Sale June 6 at 1155 E. 61st,third floor, NO 7-0999.Two tennis rackets, one case and press,$4 for lot. DO 3-7116 after 6 p.m.Ping pong table, 8x4, $15. Theater chairs,30-40, best offer. 5725 Woodlawn, PL2-9250.Radio, FM-AM for sale. Must sell, bestoffer gets It. PL 2-9250, ask for Max.GE automatic enlarger, timer, cabinetfor enlarging paper, enlarging easel.Total cost new about $35, First $15takes all. PL 2-3790, Chevrolet, *46, radio, heater, new tires.Alex Rodrigues, 6100 Klrmbark, at homeany time after 8:30 p.m.Twin beds, reasonable. MU 4-0069, eve¬nings.Kodak Tourist with f:4.5 lens, case,flash attachment, filters, perfect condi¬tion, PL 2-1419.LP phonograph attachment cheap. PL2-1419.Two 7.60x15 whitewall tires and two All¬state safety tubes, like new. PL 2-1419.Perfect condition, 1940 Nash, four newtires, 1953 parts. $100. MU 4-1821.Man’s bike, $9; woman’s bike with babyseat, $12. New tires on both. BU 8-8806.Ford tudor custom, maroon, 1949. Excel¬lent condition. $385. MU 4-2649.Full bed. 2 bureaus, wardrobe, any of¬fer accepted. R. E. O’Nell 1130 E. 62nd,evenings, 6-9.IBM Electromatic typewriter; excellentcondition; pica type face; impressioncontrol; price now $100. PL 2-7822.1940 Studebaker. $50. New wheels, bat¬tery, engine in good running order.Dawson. FA 4-8200.' WantedCampers, hikers, loafers, drivers; to theSmokies with SU for $35. Jordan Holtz-man, PL 2-9477.Man’s bicycle. English type, for under$25. Meier, FA 4-7354 days.Two- room furnished apartment. June 15.MI 3-0800, ext. 2753.Anyone having an extra College Gradu-tlon ticket please contact Patsy Allen,Gates 114.ServicesCreative Portraiture. All top qualityphotography. Low cost. High quality.Quick service. Joe Wolf, ES 5-1615.Mathematics. Special Instruction to fityour mathematical needs. Individual orgroup sessions. Albert Soglln, ST 2-6727.Rent an electric refrigerator as low as$4 per month. We also repair refrigera¬tors. CO 4-9231.Let me do your typing, 20 cents perpage. Kathleen Kenagy, BO 8-2068. Part-time baby sitting, evenings andweekends In exchange for room andboard. Sonnie Ostro, MU 4-3812.Take the Nat Sci I comprehensive atthe end of the summer. Private tutor¬ing for Individuals or small groups. PL2-3790.Help WantedDay Camp counselors, men and women,must drive and swim. Nine weeks sum¬mer employment, attractive salary. RE4-0010.Summer job for young man as PublicityDirector at the Mlchiana Summer Thea¬tre. Send inquiries to the Dunes ArtFoundation, Inc., Box 384, MichiganCity 26, Ind.Free room In return for work aroundthe house. 5725 Woodlawn. PL 2-9250.Calendar...Sunday, June 6University Religious Service forConvocation Sunday, Rockefel¬ ler Chapel, 11 a.m. The Rever¬end John B. Thompson, dean ofthe Chapel, will preach.Carillon Concert by James R.Lawson, University Carillomneur, Rockefeller Chapel at 1p.m. The program will includeAndante Contibile by Tchaikov¬sky, Menuetta by Haydn, Pray-er from the Octette by Schu¬bert, LaReve by Massenet, Fan¬tasia on a Flemish folk song byGaston Van den Bergh.The Channing Club will hold anall-day picnic at the Indianadunes. Bring food for twomeals, swim suit. Meet at ICstation, 63rd Street, at 8:45 a.m.Monday, June 7Alice in Wonderland, an Amer¬ican film, will be shown in In¬ternational House AssemblyHall at 8:30 p.m. Admission 35cents.Hfl CIGARETIE EVER WIMTSO HU SO MST!“What a pleasure to finda filter cigarette with a realcigarette taste, and the bestfilter of them all. There's noth¬ing like L&M Filters!'Star of "Tha Taahoust of tha August Moon'THEDISTINCTIVEM0N0CRAM CIGARETTEL IqhtcvncLNotion-WideDemand for LeMDrops Price!Save up to 4* a pack-40* a carton!Since LasM Filters were put on saleacross the country they have gained anation-wide demand never beforeequalled by any other cigarette in soshort a time.Already, thousands of big-city dealersreport — L&M their largest selling filtercigarette!Why have L&M Filters rolled up salesrecords like this? Because for the firsttime filter tip smokers are -getting whatthey want . . . much more flavor andaroma with much less nicotine.FROAfWiTOrOi/JUST WHAT THE DOCTOR ORDERED1. THE MIRACLE TIP.. • L&M’s exclusive filter tipcontains Alpha Cellulose ... for most effective filtra¬tion. Selects and removes the heavy particles, leavingyou a Light and Mild smoke.2. PUREST AND BEST filter made. Exclusive with L&M.Result of 3 years of scientific research ... 3 yearsrejecting other filters. This is it!3. MUCH MORE FLAVOR...MUCH LESS NiCOTINE.L&M Filters are the first filter cigarettes to taste theway a cigarette should. The premium quality tobaccos. . . and the miracle filter work together to give youplenty pf good taste.AMERICA’S HIGHEST QUALITY AND BEST FILTER TIP CIGARETTE