f IUniversity of Chicago, December 3,Former associates‘Father of the atomic bomb' to speak in Rockefeller todayTwo associates who spanned both the Italian and American scientific periods of EnricoFermi, Nobel prize physicist of the University who died Sunday, will speak at his memorialservice. The service will be held this afternoon at 2 p.m. in Rockefeller chapel.Herbert Anderson, professor of physics in the Institute for Nuclear Studies, will speakon Fermi’s scientific achieve-ments in the United States. Segre, now a professor of physicsSU announces social plans:C-dance, party, Wash PromThe annual convention of the Vampires, Witches, Ghouls,Werewolves, and Warlocks Chowder and Marching Society,Inc., will be held in conjunction with Student Union’s DanseMacabre tomorrow night, announced Jan Metros, executivedirector of the VWGWWC&M, recently.Honored guests will include the Three Witches, late of Broadway’sMacbeth, who will serve their specialty, Virginia ptomaine punch, toguests with ironclad stomachs.Welly Shiller’s Murmuring Mandrakes will furnish music for theearthbound beginning at 9 p.m., and the cock will crow at 12. Admis¬sion in Earth-America cash (please, no bewitched or bemilderedMartian Confederate) $1.75. Surprisingly, guests are to come in ordi¬nary informal dress.A stellar cast of entertainers will present their own interpretationof “A Night on Bald Mountain,” or ‘‘On Top of Old Hairless.”★ ★ ★ »‘‘Here we come a-wassailing” will be the melodic theme of theannual SU wassail party to be held Wednesday. The wassailers willcelebrate from 4-6 p.m. at Ida Noyes hall.The party traditionally marks the beginning of the Christmas sea¬son on the UC campus. Highlighted activity of the afternoon will bethe collective decoration of the Ida Noyes Christmas tree, completewith hot punch and Christmas carols.Admission to the party is without ticket or charge.★ ★ ★Formal announcement of the plans for the 52nd annual Washing¬ton Promenade was made this week by Dale Levy, president of Stu¬dent Union, the organization sponsoring the dance.This year’s Wash Prom, traditionally the biggest dance of the UCsocial system, will be held in the grand ballroom of the Knickerbockerhotel on February 19.Music for the dance will be provided by Phil Levant’s orchestrafeaturing vocalist Johnny Desmond, and Lavonne Carroll.SU’s dance chairman is holding an organizational meeting in theReynolds club “fishbowl” today at 3:30. SU has opened the meetingto any students who are interested in working with the Wash Promcommittee.SQ to take UC student pollon Commons cleaning issue inThese included the first con¬trolled nuclear chain reaction,conducted under the stands ofStagg field, December 2, 1942.Build cyclotronAnderson worked with Fermiduring his entire American ca¬reer, which began at ColumbiaUniversity, moved to the Univer¬sity of Chicago in 1941, and con¬tinued at Los Alamos, where theA-bomb was constructed. Ander¬son then collaborated with Fermiin building the University of Chi-c a g o ’ s synchrocyclotron, withwhich the Italian-born scientistcarried on his post-war studies ofthe forces holding together thenucleus of the atom.The other speaker is Emilio at the University of California,who holds the first PhD awardedunder Fermi when the latter be¬came professor of theoreticalphysics at Rome. He collaboratedin the early studies for whichFermi won the Nobel prize, andlater worked with Fermi in theUnited States at Los Alamos.Presiding at the services willbe Samuel K. Anderson, profes¬sor of physics and director of theInstitute for Nuclear Studies, inwhich Fermi held the Charles H.Swift distinguished service pro¬fessorship.Piero Guadagnini, Italian con¬sul-general in Chicago, will rep¬resent his government at the serv¬ices. See page two for completedetails on the death of Dr. En¬rico Fermi. A summary bio¬graphical sketch of the scien¬tist also appears on that page.Open advanceregistrationfor next quarterCollege students alreadyregistered for the winter quar¬ter will receive their classtickets through the mail by De¬cember 6, according to the Deanof Students’ office.Those students in residence whohave not yet registered will beable to do so in advance for thewinter quarter, between December6 and 17. Also students wishing tomake changes in their registra¬tions must make appointmentswith their advisers during theregistration period.The last day to pay tuition with¬out a late-payment fee will beJanuary 5. The bursar will extendThe rally, scheduled for next Tuesday, was sponsored by his office hours on January 4 andCancel McCarthy*censurerally as Senate gives verdictA scheduled rally supporting censure of Senator McCarthywas cancelled this week when the Senate took action beforeit could be held.Young Democrats, Young Re¬publicans, Students for Demo- Students league, Student Rep-cratic Action, Independent resentative party, NAACP, Chan-ning club, and Robin Hood.It was to feature Jim Doyle,co-chairman of Americans forDemocratic Action and Demo¬cratic national committeemant-. • n'jji r ttci from Wisconsin; Morris Rubin,Francis Biddle, former US editor of the Progressive; Sid Wil¬liams, chairman of the ChicagoUrban league; and several UCfaculty members.Ex US attorneytalks on HolmesA petition to determine stu¬dent opinion of the administra¬tion’s plan to clean theCommons has been preparedby Student Government for circu¬lation in the Commons-C-Shoparea.According to the letter, signedby A1 Fortier, SG president, theadministration is planning toclean the walls, woodwork, win¬dows, and ceiling of the Commons,at a rumored cost of $5,000 to$8,000. Members of SG have feltthat this money could better bespent in some other way in the Commons-C-Shop area, for the im¬provement of these facilities.The questionnaire asks if thestudent feels that the Commonsshould be cleaned; if other places,such as Reynolds Club Lounges,Swift Commons or WieboldtLounges, could be utilized for C-Shop type service; and if thereare any other suggestion for im¬proving Commons - C - Shop serv¬ices.Examples of what the Commonswould look like of the presentplans were carried out are in thesoutheast corner of the Commons. attorney general, will discussthe place in constitutional his¬tory of Oliver Wendell Holmes,justice of the Supreme Court1902-1932, at 8:30 p.m. Monday inBreasted hall, Oriental institute.This is the last of a series of sixfree public lectures on justices ofthe Supreme Court, sponsored bythe UC law school.Author of a biography of Jus¬tice Holmes, Biddle was law clerkto Holmes 1911-1912. He is formerjudge of the US third circuit courtof appeals and former solicitor-general of the United States.Law students plandance conflictingwith next C-DanceContrary to the regulations ofthe student code, the Law Stu¬dents association will hold a danceat the same time as the all-campusStudent Union dance this Satur¬day. SU president Dale Levycalled the double scheduling a“misunderstanding” and said thatVincent Diana, president of thelaw group had apologized.Miss Levy emphasized that Stu¬dent Union will not bring charges,and has fully accepted the apol¬ogy. However, she hopes that or¬ganizations will note that no socialevent may be held at the sametime as a social event of an all-University nature, according tothe student code. All socail eventsmust be registered with the stu¬dent activities office. 5, opening at 9 a.m. and closingat 5 p.m.Students register according tothe following schedule:December 6-10: biological scien¬ces, medical school, law school.December 13-15: federated theo¬logical school.December 13-17: humanities, so¬cial sciences, graduate libraryschool, physical sciences, socialservice administration.December 14-17: business school.Finer teaches credit coursein 12-program TV seriesAn experiment in offering University of Chicago creditcourses on TV opens January 2, as Herman Finer, professor ofpolitical science, begins his twelve-program series of weeklytelecasts titled “Governments and Human Nature.”Such courses are new to the r ~ ——:—: —Chicago area thoueh thev mcmber of me political science de-cnicago area, jnougn iney partment of the UniveJsity inhave been offei ed in other sec- 1945 was a member of the facultytions of the country under the 0f University of London andauspices of the universities of visiting professor at Harvard. HeCalifornia, Utah, Omaha, and Mi- js qie author of numerous booksami, among others. jn the field of political science.WNBQ will broadcast the series Registration for the course ofon its “Live and Learn” program,Sunday mornings from 1010:30.The course is devoted to under¬standing the essentials of govern- twelve lessons is being handledthrough the home study depart¬ment of the University, with a feeof $22.50 covering cost of syllabusand grading and return of the les-ments of great modern nations sons. Satisfactory completion ofand how they make policies thatmay affect the way of life of theUnited States. Great Britain,France, Germany and the SovietUnion will be analyzed, with acomparison of their politicalmethods with each other and withthose of the United States.Among the factors determininginternational war and peace thatwill be discussed are security, in¬terest, spiritual values and law.Qsiestions from viewers will beanswered to a limited extent.Dr. Finer, before becoming a the course will provide one-halfunit of regular credit.MAROON errsThe Maroon apologizes formisspelling the name of Mil¬lard P. Binyon, professor of hu¬manities in the college whodied November 23, in lastweek’s issue. Binyon’s firstname was printed as Willard,rather than Millard.I.THE CHICAGO MAROON December 3, 1954Fermi. UC scientist, dies at 53Cancer claims Nobel prize winning physicistwho achieved first nuclear chain reactionby Ronald Grossmanby Ronald GrossmanEnrico Fermi, an architect of the atomic bomb, whose basic discoveries in physics openedthe atomic age, died early Sunday at his home at 5327 University. Funeral services wereheld on Monday for the man who led a team of scientists at the University of Chicago toachieve the world’s first sustained nuclear reaction.Fermi, 53, had undergone what was described as an “exploratory” operation in Billingshospital on October 9, which revealed an advanced stage of cancer. He returned to his homeseveral weeks ago, and spentmost of his time answeringletters. Atomic Energy commission forhis work on the atomic bomb. Theaward, the first such to be author-Fermi, a Charles H. Swift dis* jze(j un(jer the terms of the newtinguished service professor ofphysics, had been with the Uni¬versity since 1945 when he joinedthe Institute of Nuclear Studiesin the research institute.Award from AECOnly two weeks ago, he wasawarded a $25,000 prize from theEnrico Fermi atomic energy act enacted thisyear, was bestowed upon Fermiwith the approval of PresidentEisenhower.The award oiled Fermi for his“especially meritorious contri¬butions” in atomic energy. Thecitation also noted Fermi’s con¬tributions to basic neutronphysics and the achievement ofthe controlled nuclear chain re¬action. Rear Admiral Lewis L.Strauss, chairman of the com¬mission, commented in an an¬nouncement at the time thatFermi’s work had been of “tre¬mendous importance” in the de¬velopment of atomic energy.“As much as any individual, heis responsible for the achievementof the controlled release of nu¬clear energy,” Strauss said.The Fermi award was also an¬nounced on the floor of the UnitedStates Senate on the day it wasgiven.Not due to radiationAnnouncement of the AECaward reportedly was advancedbecause the critical nature of Dr.Fermi’s illness was commonknowledge among scientists.An atomic research associateof Fermi said that the fatal can¬cer was not caused by Fermi’sexperiments with controlled nu¬clear energy. They did not sub¬ject him unduly to radioactive substances, he added, and anysuch injury from radiationwould have affected the eyesfirst.Physicians suggested an explor¬atory operation when Fermi re¬turned ill from a visit to Italy inSeptember. The operation re¬vealed cancer so generalized thatany treatment would have beenineffective.Many express regretsDr. Fermi's untimely death wasfelt in many ways on the UC cam¬pus.Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimp-ton, on a trip to the east withDean Robert M. Strozier, alteredhis plans so that he could returnto Chicago for the memorial serv¬ice which will be held today at2 p.m.Expressions of grief came frommany well-known figures at UC.Samuel K. Allison, director of theInstitute for Nuclear Studies,spoke for the scientists at the Uni¬versity of Chicago.“There Is no doubt amongthose who knew him well thatEnrico Fermi was one of themost brilliant intellects of ourcentury,” Allison said.“His associates at the Univer¬sity of Chicago, where lie wasthe intellectual leader of thephysics group, know that hisloss can never be adequatelyreplaced.”Harold Urey, Martin A. Ryer-son distinguished service profes¬sor of chemistry, a long time Enrico Fermi in front of a control panel which he used in his work.friend and associate of Dr. Fermi,also expressed his/deepest senti¬ments at the loss of the greatscientist.threat creative featFermi died just a few daysshort of the twelfth anniversaryof the world’s first atomic fire,which he supervised on thesquash court under the weststands of Stagg field on December2, 1942. Chancellor Kimpton, whoserved for a time as UC admin¬istration officer of atomic energywork being conducted on campus,called the achievement “one of thegreatest feats of creative effortman has ever achieved.”Fermi also served as a consult¬ant in the design of the Univer¬sity’s synchrocyclotron, one of theworld’s most powerful atomsmashers. He was a member of the Amer¬ican Philosophical society, theAmerican Physical society andSigma Xi, honorary scientific fra¬ternity. In 1938, he received theNobel prize in physics for hisstudies.Dr. Fermi’s wife, Mrs. LauraCapon Fermi, is well known forher recently published book,Atoms in the Family, describingher life with the famous scientist.The couple had two children,Nelia and Giulio. Giulio, 18, at¬tended the UC college from 1951to 1953. He is now studying math¬ematics at Oberlin College.Fermi’s death came on the veryday that the Maroon congratulat¬ed him in an editors' column forhis Atomic Energy commissionaward for meritorious work inatomic energy.'Father of the atomic bomb' risesto world fame from humble startMore than any other man of his time, Enrico Fermi could properly be named “the father of the atomic bomb.”The son of a railroad official, he was born in Ron^e, Italy, on September 29, 1901. He studied at the University of Pisafrom 1918 to 1922, and later at the Universities of Leyden and Gottingden. In 1924 he was appointed lecturer at the Uni¬versity of Florence.It was his epoch-making experiments at the University of Rome in 1934 that led directly to the discovery of uraniumfission, the basic principle underlying the atomic bomb as well as the atomic power plant.In that year, he began tobombard atomic nuclei withneutrons.With extremely simple equip¬ment, Fermi began systemati¬cally bombarding the elementsin the periodic table, beginningwith the lightest element andmoving up to the heavier ele¬ments. In the process, Fermiand his associates analyzed thechemical end products of theneutron bombardment.When at last they came touranium, then the heaviestknown element, they found thatmore than one element was pro¬duced by the bombardment, andthat at least one of the radioac¬tive products seemed to he noneof the existing elements closeto uranium. Actually they hadnot produced a new element, in 1938.Fermi, unhappy in ’Mussoli¬ni’s Italy, especially from thetime when the Italian dictatorbegan promulgating anti-Sem¬itic laws to please Hitler, tookthe opportunity to escape fromthe Fascist-ridden land when hereceived his award in the au¬tumn of 1938. ting of the uranium atom in sible.America took place. It was not It was twelve years ago thislong before the epoch-making ex- week, on December 2, 1942, thatperiment was carried further at Fermi and the team of scientiststhe University of Chicago, where he led lighted the first atomic firethe first nuclear chain reaction on earth, on a gloomy squashtook place under Fermi’s direc- court under the west stands oftion. Stagg field.As early as March, 1939, less Creates atom pilethan three months after his arriv- Enrico Fermi was the chiefLeaving Italy with his wife and in£ in u- s » Fermi, armed with architect of that atomic furnace,two children to go to Stockholm, a letter of introduction from Co- which he named “pile,” but whichhe informed the Italian authori- lumbia to Admiral S. C. Hooper, has since become better known asties he had accepted a temporary in Washington, tried 1o interest a nuclear reactor, the technicalteaching post in an American uni- 1,.ie Navy Department in the pos- name for an atomic power plant,versity. He arrived in New York s*Bility of an atomic bomb. After Fermi had set the atomicon January 2, 1939, and quietly Start Manhattan district furnace into successful operationassumed a permanent post on the Unsuccessful in negotiating for in 1942, Dr. Arthur Holly Comp-support at first, Fermi and other <?n’ now of Washington Univer-seientists persisted. Realizing the s*ty> St. Louis, and director of thedanger that confronted the free Metallurgical Laboratory, tele¬world because of the swift work phoned an impromptu coded mes-which the Nazis were doing in sa£e to Dr. James B. Conant, thenphysics faculty at Columbia University.Opens epochHe could not have come at amore opportune time. In Ger-but, as later analysis showed, w --- „ ... .. . - „ Tr •that had split uranium atoms. many, unknown to him, a team of Germany, they induced the most president of Harvard UniversityDr. Fermi also gained fame Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann, famous scientist - exile among and also head of the National De¬while still in Rome for another who had been repeating the pio- them, Albert Einstein, to write fense Research committee,major discovery, essential for the neer exPeriment begun by Fermi the historic letter to President Dr. Compton said: “The Italianproduction of atomic energy. This in Rome in 1934, had stumbled Roosevelt, which led to the even- navigator arrived at the shores ofwas the all-important observation llPon the world-shaking discovery tual development of the $2,000,- the new world.” Dr. Conant thenthat neutrons can be slowed down that the shooting of neutrons at 000,000 Manhattan Engineering asked, “How were the natives?”from speeds of more than 10,000 uranium resulted in the splitting District, as the atomic bomb proj- Dr. Compton replied, “Verymiles per second to speeds of only of the uranium atom, or uranium eet was known. friendly.” Thus was word receivedone mile per second by making flsslon Dr. Fermi, in association with hy Washington that the firstthem pass through light elements, Bohr arrived in New York on Leo Szilard, another exile, then atomic fire in history had beenand that such slowed-down neu- January 16, 1939, and at once com- began working at Columbia on kindled.trons become more than a hun- municated the news to physicists the construction of the first exper- Fermi’s first “pile,” activateddred times more accurate in hit- in Princeton. Soon it reached Dr. imental “piles.” By the time the at the University of Chicago, wasting their targets in the nuclei of Fermi in Columbia, who passed it government was ready to support the forerunner of all the atomicatoms, and thus creating new ele- on to other colleagues. On the the project with substantial funds, power plants now being built andments, than fast neutrons. night of January 25, 1939, in the the Fermi-Szilard team had laid planned for the generation ofThese led to Fermi’s receiv- basement of Pupin Hall on the down the groundwork that made atomic power for industrial anding the Nobel Prize in physics Columbia campus, the first split- the first chain reaction “pile” pos- other peacetime uses. “Architect of atomic bomb”lectures before one of his phys¬ical science classes..loins UC staffAt the war’s end when the Uni¬versity of Chicago decided to keeptogether the nucleus of the scien¬tists who had worked in the Met¬allurgical laboratory on the cam¬pus on the development of thebomb, Fermi joined the staff ofthe newly founded Institute forNuclear Studies in the then newResearch Institute at 57th andEllis. In the Institute, Fermicontinued his investigations ofthe atom’s fundamental proper¬ties, concentrating on the natureof particles constituting the nu¬cleus, or heart of the atom. As anaid in this investigation, Fermiserved as a consultant in the de¬sign of the UC’s synchrocyclotron,until recently the most powerfulatom smasher in the world./December 3, 1954 Pagt 3THE CHICAGO MAROONSeioff analyzes foreign policy failures:blames over-confidence, over-suspicion Maroon mystery photoAmerican foreign policy is thevictim of both over-suspicion andover-confidence on the part of theAmerican people, stated MaxBeloff, professor of history atNuffield college, Oxford Univer¬sity in a lecture at Social Science 122 Wednesday evening.Analyzing the problems peculiarto democratic foreign policy, Bcl-off noted that Americans feel thattheir foreign policy can accom¬plish more than it has but areoften unwilling to adopt meansSAVE z50%on the followingBogen R. 300 TunerDo. 10 AmpflierGarrard R. C.80 Changer this complete set50‘149Altec Lansing Corner Cabinet $ 59.50Fisher 50A 50-Watt Amp $127.50Browning R. J. 42 AM-FM Tuner $110.00R. C. 80 Changer $ 37.50Livingston Arm $ 9.50Rek-O-Kut 3-Speed $ 45.00We accept trades on the aboveCustom Audio and Component CabinetsCash or budgetLUND; COMPANY5236 Blackstone Ave. MU 4-5300Open Thursday and Sunday eves, till 8 p m.Shop now for Christmas and relax!Why not shop now for Dads, uncles and brothers? The campusstores are near, less crowded, and loaded with smart Arrowitems for the male side of your Christmas list.Be it shirts, ties, casual wear, handkerchiefs, or underwear.Arrow has them in smooth styles and perfect fit. Get them nowand spend your vacation days restin’ and rompin’ in the easysocial manner. Slide down to the man who sells Arrow andsolve your Christmas-shopping cares today IA/WOIV SHIRTS & TIESUNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • CASUAL WEAR appropriate to their foreign policyends. For instance, while com¬munist governments resort to in¬ternal revolutions to win overstates, Americans have been con¬vinced that “disapproval, loud andpublic, and in suitable termswould be an effective political fac¬tor leading to the disappearanceof the regime at -which it wasaimed.” Beloff stated that our re¬cent attitude toward. China, likeour attitude toward the USSR inthe thirties, has reflected thispeculiarly democratic conviction.Beloff, an historian with a par¬ticular interest in American andSoviet histories, discussed “Thedemocratic control of foreign pol¬icy,” under the auspices of the UCcenter for the study of Americanforeign policy.Paradoxically opposed to Amer¬ican over-confidence, Beloff added,it is a tendency for Americans toreadily blame treason and sheerstupidity for foreign policy fail¬ure.There also exists a “tendencyto over-value common sense,” ac¬cording to Beloff. “Commonsense,” however, fails to providethe knowledge crucial to foreignpolicy, knowledge about the for¬eigner. One of the most importantquestions in our foreign policy, hecontinued, is how far the foreignpolicy expert will be allowed tovoice his opinions and what insti¬tutions will give his opinioneffectiveness.Congressional hearings are away of sounding public opinion photo by ZygmundThe first UC student to reach the Maroon office with the correctidentification of the week’s mystery photo will receive a carton ofPhillip Morris cigarettes, donated by the Phillip Morris company.Entries must state what the object is and where it is located, andshould include the name, address, and telephone number of theentry. All entries must be brought to the Maroon office.Fifteen rahs! Count them, fifteen!Itchy turtleneck sweaters, too!by Diana Epstein associates, Joan Kaplan, Donm‘We’ve got the coach, we’ve got Masters, and Dave Leonetti corvwhich are not available in other the team, we’ve got the pep, we’re tinued to cheer,democracies, he added. on the beam . . . fifteen rah’s for When asked where the grou&The visiting historian stated the basketball team. Rah, rah, was to cheer. Ruth explained, “Atthat his current trip to the US has rah, rah, rah, rah, rah, rah, rah, the game tonight.”convinced him that the US is' a rah, rah. rah. rah, rah, rah!” “Game?” I questioned,“profoundly pacifistic country.” These were the cries emanating «<Yes » she said “basketballThe contrary impression which from the pool table area on the you know where they have a ballour policies create abroad Beloff second floor, Reynolds club, d • » (repeatedly nattine ?attributed to our democratic pecu- Wednesday evening Intrigued smalf imaginary dog 0n the head)hanties. In a democracy tern- passers-by, who went to mvesti-porary public frustration can gate found four cherleaders . . .easily be manifested in foreign cheering!policies and create misimpres- However, unfamiliar with thesions. On the other hand, he added, concept this Maroon reporter sweaters?Ruth said, '‘‘they’re hotpolicies of the USSR sound less asked, “What are you doing?’ and itchy >. »Now we’re going toaggressive because Soviet foreign “What are you?” ask the administration for cheer-policies are not directly respon^i- “We re cheerleaders ... cheer- leatjing skirts,” Ruth explainedble to the public and do not, con- ing,” Ruth Kopel, wearing a white iongjngiy> “but we had enoughsequently, vent frustrations of the turtle-neck sweater, replied. While f.rniIwip „pttjnfT thp oWPa+proSoviet people. Ruth was being interviewed, her also we ^oul/like to get maroonand white Chicago megaphones."With a background of “rah’s"from her fellow cheerleaders, whocontinued to practice during theinterview, Ruth recited the mostpopular UC cheer: “Chicago, Chi¬cago, Chicago, Go; Go, Go, Go ...”The squad, established for thefirst time in “quite a while” lastyear, now has eight members. AsI admired their perky whiteArrow s-t-r-e-t-c-h thatCHRISTMAS Vacation!How? you say...do your gift-listingright here. We’ll send your purchasehome for you. We have everythingthat dad, pals, and kid brotherswant, and A.LL labeled “Arrow.Famous Dart white shirt, GordonDover button-down, Gabanaro sportshirts. Plus shorts and undershirt#and handkerchiefs. Priced right.::::::::::::: iiiiil!®f§ | Christmas is icumin in.Need one go cuccu?Stop the rush andshop in peaceAnd save you moneytoo!Just for you . ..Miriam’sShopping Servicegives you 22 per centdiscount to University ofChicago Studentson all kinds of top-qualitymerchandise. Everything youneed for Christmas.See our catalogues in theStudent Activities Center—Basement of Reynolds Clubor browse through ourcomplete cataloguesat our new office.13-40 East 55 StreetIt's the easy way to shop.Order from us. We pick upand deliver to you.And besides your peaceof mind you savetwenty-two per cent.Miriam’sShopping Service13-40 East 55 St.HY 3-4970Hours:9-5 — Mondoy-SoturdayChicago - Evanston - Oak Pork - Evergreen - Gary - Joliet - Alto*THE CHICAGO MAROON December 3, 1954Rage 4Editors' ColumnMourn death of FermiIt was only last week that Enrico Fermi’s name appeared in thiscolumn. At that time we had had occasion to comment.on a new honorconferred upon Dr. Fermi. Now Enrico Fermi is dead. In fact, he wasa dying man when the Atomic Energy Commission conferred uponhim the singular honor of its first special award for contributionsin the field of nuclear physics.It was impossible to ignore Enrico Fermi, the internationallyfamous nuclear scientist; he had wrought one of the modern wondersof the world. He was more than a Nobel-prize winner; Time magazinehad called him the greatest living atomic scientist. He was enor¬mously productive at 53 in a science where most great contributionsare made by men in their late twenties. A scientist once said thatif was impossible to discuss nuclear physics for five minutes withouttalking about Enrico Fermi.But those who knew the man as the dedicated scientist he was aresure that his greatest satisfaction came from the work itself, ratherthan from the world wide recognition it brought him. The explanationof this is simple: Fermi was a humble man. His humility manifesteditself in his modesty, his dealings with friends and associates, and inhis attitude towards his students. People came to know and respectthe man because of this feature of his personality.It is true that Fermi’s achievements will be a source of inspirationto the generation of physicists who come after him. May the humilityof this man, whose intellect demonstrated the highest powers to beachieved from the mind which the Creator bestowed upon man, alsobe an inspiration and set a keynote for our lives.Dr. Fermi’s death is a tremendous loss to the University of Chicago,to the nation, and to the world. To his bereaved family, may we extendour deepest condolences.Allen R. JangerRonald Grossman EditorialMaroon frowns on debate nixOf all the people in the world one of the lastyou’d ever expect to rocket to national prominencewould be Herbert L. Cushing, President of theKearney State Teachers’ College, Kearney, Ne¬braska. Yet he manager! to do so on October 26thwhen he told the United Press that he had forbid¬den the college debating team to compete on thesubject of recognizing Communist China.“I personally feel,” Cushing said, “that back ofit all is a bit of a desire on the part of somebodyto indoctrinate a few thousand American collegeyouths with what 1 consider to be a dangerousphilosophy.”The statement, did not occasion the usual stam¬pede of not-meism, but enough other colleges fol¬lowed suit to warm the cockles of Mr. Cushing’sfreedom-loving heart. He was .joiner! by the otherNebraska teachers’ colleges, the University ofOmaha, a solid third of the country’s Catholic col¬leges, and most shocking of all, West Point andAnnapolis. Most of the reputable universities, how¬ever. held the line, and strong statement by bothUC‘s director of student activities, William Biren-baum, and Northwestern’s debate director, GlenMills, were on the UP wire the same day. It isworth noting that neiiher the University of Ne¬braska nor Notre Dame, along with most largeCatholic universities, have follower! the lead oftheir small but vocal colleges.A sample of the minority Catholic attitude,which must not be taken as the opinion of thehierarchy which has already given the topic fullclearance, was received by the Student Forumoffice on October 29th. The letter, in the form ofa manifesto, was sent to the nation’s universitiesby the College of St. Rose, Albany, New York.Among the numerous whereases we find the fol¬ lowing:“WHEREAS the so-called People’s Republic ofChina has established itself as a ruthless dictator¬ship, and suppressed the religious and politicalfreedom of the Chinese people,“NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED thatwe formally declare our opposition to the NationalDebate Topic . .Apparently anyone who might wish to knowjust what freedom the Chinese people ever hadto lose or to inquire just what Chiang Kai-Shek’sdictatorship ever demonstrated in the way oftruth, had better not ask his questions at St. Rose.It was this ostrich-like attitude that lost the friend¬ship of China in the first place, and is now on theverge of losing Asia Itself.But even the possible loss of Asia is overshad¬owed by the possible loss of freedom of expres¬sion in America, for what would it avail to winsuch prizes for a country whose national char¬acter is in the process of melting away? The only“dangerous philosophy” easily detectable in thecurrent controversy is the attitude of Cushinghimself.It is most gratifying to note that the Presidentfeels the issue serious enough to risk a comment.In response to a question as to whether or not thedecision to prevent the West Point and Annapolisteams from debating the question “coincides wiihyour views on intellectual freedom?” the Presidentsaid he would trust their judgment if they wardedto argue about Red China and would allow themto state their rase as strongly as they wished. Theregrettable aspect of the affair is that such astatement was necessary. Our forefathers heldthese truths to be self evident.Issued 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, and subscriptions bymail, $3 per year. Business Office hours: I to 5 p.m., Mondoy through Friday.ALLEN R. JANGER editor-in-chiefRICHARD E. WARD managing editorWILLIAM M. BRANDON. . .business managerExecutive news editor Joy BurbochNews editors Diana Epstein, Bob Quinn, David SchlessingerFeature Editor. , Suzonne FriedmannSports editor . Spike Pinney Maroon staffer casts fishy eyeon SQ stamp appropriationsEditor’s note: The incident common toil on in the ac¬companying statement is true. The author wants )tunderstood that he is completely serious and wrote thearticle with a straight face. The staff wants it under¬stood that these are not necessarily their views andotherwise wash their hands of the whole business.It was brought to the uneasy attention of Student Governmentechelons at a recent SG meeting that the appropriations they hadgranted for 500 postage stamps in a short-term interval was sus¬piciously large. When asked to account for the use of stamps, offi¬cials of the majority party (which shall remain nameless) could onlymurmur something to the effect ihat "Well, uh. we do, uh a LOT ofmailing.”The Maroon is too honest a publication to accuse ISL (which shallremain nameless) of feathering their nests with purple replicas ofG. Washington, but we would like to publicly ask ISL (which shallremain nameless) members to answer the following questions:Production manager MitcheH Slein is IT TRUE THAT CLIVE GRAY CORRESPONDS DAILY WITHPhotography editor Ronold Grossman A PEN PAL IN CAPETOWN, SOUTH'AFRICA?Copy editor . Jean Carlsson is IT TRUE THAT ELI STEIN MAILED IN 219 POSTCARD VOTESPersonnel manager Jack Burboch IX) THE MORRIS B. SACHS AMATEUR HOUR?Advertising monoger Gary MohotoffEditorial stoff Joe Abatie, Poul Baptist, Sam Blozer, Robert Bloch,Alice Bloom, Roger Bowen, Paul Breslow, Alan Charlens, PrentissChoate, Charies Cooper, Kent Flannery, Fred Freed, Rosemary Galli,' Lois Gardner, Som Greenlee, Bonnie Greatman, Bill Kaplan, Jean Kwon,Bruce Larkin Carolyn Martinetti, Joe Picheny, Ed Regal, Sue Tax,Frank Terneriyi.Business stoff City advertising manager, Robert Lotts; Business secre¬tary, Don Miller; Subscription manager, Norman Lewak; Billing secre¬tary, Tom Kapantats.Photographers Frank Jakalski, Victor Pasnick, Sam Tipton, Joe Wolf IS IT TRUE THAT JAN METROS ENTERED 132 NATIONAL LIM¬ERICK CONTESTS DURING THE LAST MONTH?IS IT TRUE WHEN SABINA WARNER BOASTS OF NEVER HAV¬ING SENT ANY SG MAIL EXCEPT BY SPECIAL DELIV¬ERY?IS IT TRUE THAT ANTON DEPORTE COLLECTS STAMPS?These are the questions. The Maroon will wait for ISL (which shallremain nameless) officers to answer them.Roltert QuinnCHRISTMASGIVE TiffREVISEDSTANDARDVERSIONBIBLETtu PEtffCT 6«n ». J. V. *.Ctnuine leather (10.00•utkram $ 6.00Illustrated editions • $3.15 t 13.50Come in and see ourcomplete selectionWOODWORTH’SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. >-a a a a a a a a »*eTr»TTrrTVvvrTvvwvwvrTrUNIVERSITY FOODS1129 E. 55thOpen daily A Sundays: ft A.i*f. till 8:30 IMI. JNSA discount on $3.00 purchasesITALIANFIESTAPIZZERIALarge $2Special PizzaV* SausageV* AnchovyV* PepperV4 Mushroom 1427 E. 67thMU 4 90569022FREE DELIVERYTO U. of C. STUDENTSOn orders oyer $2Quick Courteous Service7 Days a WeekTABLE SERVICE DELIVERY SERVICE11 A M. to 3 A.M. 5 P.M. to 3 A.M.AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAA -A. A. AAAA Crammingfor Exams?Your doctor will tell you—aNoDoz Awakener is safe as anaverage cup of hot, black cof¬fee. Take a NoDoz Awakenerwhen you cram for that exam...or when mid-afternoonbrings on those “3 o’clock cob¬webs.” You’ll find NoDoz givesvou a lift without a letdown ...Kelps you snap back to normaland fight fatigue safely!SAFI A$ COFFEf LettersSidelight on musicYour music critic, Robert Bloch,has a deft pen, and he used it togreat advantage in his discussionof the Rphneider-Balsam concertin last .Saturday’s Maroon. He alsorevealed that he has read widelyin the literature of music critic¬ism. However, he has either readtoo rapidly, or he is withholdingsome interesting information. The“Victorian music critic named diBassetto” was, in fact, none otherthan Bernard Shaw.Shaw wrote under the name“Corno di Bassetto” during (helate ’80s and the early ’90s forat least one small London paper(the Star) and perhaps for others.His two columns a week in theStar, for which he received abouta guinea, comprised his firststeady employment. The name,Corno di Bassetto, means BassetHorn. TheJBasset Horn is a rarelyused variety of tenor clarinet,which has a particularly tonelesstone. Shaw says, in his introduc¬tion to the first volume of hiscollected music criticism, that ifhe had know what the BassetHorn sounded like when he chosethe name, he would have chosenanother. Sincerely,Robert J.WoifsonACECYCLE SHOPYour BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we sellRepairs & Parts all makes»IHE. 55 Ml 3.30729 A.M. - 6 P.M.IjCOMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.• Bar-be-cue ribs• Bar-be-cue chickenDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525THE CHICAGO MAROON Pag# 30eeember 3, 1954WORLD’S LARGEST-SELLINGFILTER TIP CIGARETTENewKing-SizeFilter TipViceroyf / C'GA»eTTc*^ K'HC.SIZ fOnly a Panny or Two More than Cigarettes Without Filter* Por thoseuouknoiUBudweiserWORLD’S LARGEST-SEUING BEERANHSUSftlt-ftUSCH, INC., ST. LOUIS • NIWARK • LOS ANOtlCSND, when friends come to callduring the friendly HolidaySeason, serve Budweiser, thePerfect Host to a Host of Friends.REAT gift idea! Budweiser,the world’s most distinguishedin bright new Holiday Cartons ofsix or twelve cans. beer,Vets should register Drives to renovate UC environsprogress,regress simultaneouslyApproximately 22.000 Illinoisveterans in training under publiclaw 550 were warned by the Vet¬eran’s administration regional of¬fice last week that their allow¬ance checks may be delayed ifthey fail to submit their monthlycertifications before December 10.Under the law, a veteran must fill out a monthly report of train¬ing signed by both the veteranand a responsible official of hisschool. It is the responsibility ofthe veteran and the school tomake sure that the report issigned, correctly completed, andsent to the VA regional office,2030 West Taylor, Chicago 12. VAcannot send out checks until theyreceive the report.What have VICEROYS gotthat otherfilter tip cigarettes• haven't got? by Arnie MetankyThe campaign to improve the neighborhood around the University of Chicago took on*step forward and another step backward this week.On the positive side, James C. Downs, Jr., the city’s housing and redevelopment coordina¬tor, submitted to Mayor Kennedy and the city council an ordinance authorizing Chicago toapply for federal funds to be used in planning its first urban renewal project.This project would improve the appearance of the area bounded by 47th street, CottageGrove, Lake Michigan and the *north boundary of the UCcampus. Delays action vember 12 to Albert M. Cole, ad-The council delayed action on ministrator of the Housing andThe step backward came when the second proposal, backed by Home Finance agency, along withthe city council delayed approval Mayor Kennelly and by Merriam’s documents showing in detail thatof the Hyde Park redevelopment housing committee, that the city the city meets the requirementsprogram. The Hyde Park plan had seek federal funds’ to build 3800 of the housing act of 1954.been recommended by the coun- public low-rent housing units. On November 19 the city coun-The low-rent housing would be oil’s housing committee approvedused to relocate people whose a resolution certifying the needhomes had been torn down to f°r the 3800 low-rent housingmake way for the city’s redevelop- units. Only 35,000 such units canAt the council’s Monday meet- ment and public improvement be built under the provisions ofing Alderman William H. Harvey projects. The city council will the 1954 act.The Hyde Park projects de¬ed's housing and planning com¬mittee, headed by Alderman Robert E. Merriam.‘Too few hearings’complained that Merriam’s com- take up the question again on De-mittee had not held enough pub- cember 9Before a municipality can ob¬tain federal aid, the Federal Hous-lic hearings on the Hyde Parkproject.Harvey showed his fellow aider-men pictures of some of the build¬ings which would be torn down.He insisted that the buildings are housing, slum clearance or urbanin good condition, and said, renewal work ferred by the council Monday in¬volve 47 blighted acres betweenKimbark and Lake Park avenues,ing and Home Finance agency 53rd and 57th streets. About 700must dertify that the municipality homes, a shopping center andhas a “workable program” for parking facilities would be con-Subniits planMayor Kennelly submitted Chi¬cago’s “workable program” No- structed on two sites proposed bythe South East Chicago commis¬sion (SECC).Explains planJ. Ross Humphreys, chairmanof the Chicago land clearancecommission, testified before thecouncil’s housing committee onNovember 23 pointing out thatthe plans are interim proposalsshowing what the commission be¬lieves should be done in the area.First meeting is scheduled for to- Illinois law requires the landThe Chicago Sun"-Times dis- day at 8 p.m., at Ida Noyes; all clearance group to submit to theclosed yesterday that only one of those interested axe invited to at- city council the plans of the re¬tend. • developers before the land is sold.Officers are president, William Humphreys said the plans wereHallo, a student of assvriology; an excellent technical job but notvice president, Nick Millet, col- final.“These people’s homes are atstake.”Merriam replied that only fourper cent of the homes to be torndown are owned by their tenants. — , ,The council voted 30 to 8 to send £* OTTtX CLVClTClCOlOQ:\the program back to the housingcommittee for further study andfor more public hearings.The housing committee will club on campusA new club, the Archaeologyhold another session on the pro- club, foi'med on campus recently,posal next Wednesday.the homes mentioned by Aldei'-man Harvey is to be torn down aspart of the Hyde Park project. Ac¬cording to the newspaper, a sur¬vey showed that “eleven of the Julian H. Levi, executive direc-lege; and secretary, Penny Wea-twelve houses used as exhibits by dock, Mesopotamian archaeology, tor oLthe SECC, told the commit-Ilarvey are not in the redevelop- The club’s faculty adviser is Rob- tee that the projects are endorsedThe one house aetu- ert Adams of the department of by 33 community organizationsthe Oriental repi’esenting 9500 families inHyde Park and Kenwood.ment area.ally in the area is located at 1322 anthropology andEast 54th. institute.THE ANSWER IS20,000 FILTERSIN EVERY VICEROY TIPInside every Viceroy tip is a vast networkof 20,000 individual filters to filter yoursmoke over and over again. You get onlythe full, rich taste of Viceroy’s choice to¬baccos . . . and Viceroys draw so freely.Yes, you get Viceroy’s remarkable newtip . . . with 20,000 individual filters . . .plus king-size length for only a penny ortwo more than cigarettes without filters.Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 3, 1954Coming Campus Events Want AdsSaturday, December 4Basket-ball gome, 8 p.m., Field house.UC concert bond will ploy ot game.Sunday, December 5Young Socialist league meeting, 4:30p.m., Ido Noyes. Discussion of thenature of the Russian stote.Film: "Alexander Nevsky" (Rus¬sian). 7 and 9:30 p.m., Judsonlounge. Admission 25c.Charming club supper ond meeting,6:30 and 7:30 p.m., 5638 Wood-lawn. Movies to be shown.Young Friends supper and meeting,6 and 7:15 p.m., 5615 Woodlawn.Meeting with three foreign studentsto discuss academic and politicalfreedom in their countries.Calvert Club meeting, and supper,4:30 and 6 p.m. Discussion on"the Catholic in a secular univer¬sity."University religious service, 1 1 a m.,Rockefeller chapel. Speaker, JamesLuther Adams, professor of Chris¬tian ethics.The Messiah, performed by UniversityChoir and members of Chicagosymphony orchestra. 3 p.m., Rocke¬feller chapel. Richard Vikstrom,conductor; Heinrich Fleischer, or¬ganist, Dorothy Linden Krieg, so¬prano; Audrey Paul, contralto;Denis Cowan, tenor; Kay Graves,bass.Monday, December 6Film: "Tight Little Island" (British),7 and 9 p.m., International house.Admission 35c.Lecture: "Justice Oliver WendellHolmes," by Francis Biddle, formerattorney-general of the U.S. 8:30p.m., Breasted hall, Oriental in¬stitute.Physiology club meeting, 4 pm.,Abbott 133. Speaker, Norman R.Alpert, assistant professor of phy¬siology, University of Illinois, on"The oxygen-debt hypothesis."Anarchism discussion group meeting,6:45 p.m., 5638 Woodlawn.Tuesday, December 7Film: "The Experimental Art Film".7:15 and 9:30 p.m. Social Science122.Mountaineering club meeting, 7:30p.m., Rosen wa Id 26. Program,three movies: "Enough Rope","Military Rock Climbing, Tech¬ For RentWUCB vacationsToday is the last day WUCBwill broadcast its own pro¬grams of WEFM from 9 a.m.to midnight.Regular programming willbe resumed in January. WUCBis heard at 640 kc. on the AMdial in B-J, the C-group andInt house.“Iltive Vou Heard'19THE PIZZA KIDis on 63rdFeaturingPizza ot its FinestBar-B-Q Back Ribs - ChickenSpaghetti - Ravioli - MustaccoliItalian Sausage or Beef SandwichesKosher Corned BeefDoily: 11 a.m. to 1 a.m.Sunday: 4 p.m. to 1 a.m.“We Deliver99DO 3-9777 1125 E. 63rd If you want to put in aClassifiedAdCall Ml 3-0800Ext. 1009Mon.-Fri. 10:30- 11:302:30-5:30HAVING TYPEWRITER TROUBLE?Prompt, reliable repair serviceTypewriters rented, bought and soldACTIVE TYPEWRITER SERVICE1452 E. 57 St. PL 2-0541(Special Student Discount)CAMPUS FOOD SHOPDelicatessen & BakeryLeave your party order with us136?) East 59 Street Ml 3-7229Choose an ExpertTHOMPSONMOVERSLocal and Long Distance MovingCO 4-7600 MODEL CAMERA SHOPSth AnniversaryRegister for $555.00 in Free PrizesMODEL TRAINS - PLANESPHOTO SUPPLIESNSA Discounts1329 E. 55th St. HY 3-9259 2\'i rooms, $37.50. South Shore. Firstfloor, electric kitchen, I. C. and CTAconvenient. No children. Call RE 4-7088.LostDark horn-rimmed glasses; near Green¬wood and 60th. Reward. Clifton Whar¬ton, 1121 East 60th, PL 2-1358. 1948 Nash Ambassador. 4-door, tan-brown, white wall tires, radio, heater,overdrive, anti-freeze. Fine conditionthroughout. $225 or best offer Webcor2010 tape recorder. Like new, $135. FredSmith. NO 7-9743, evenings.South Wind auto heater, gasoline pow¬ered. Good condition. $20 or best offer.Hnrdyman, 520-B, call B-J.Spanish guitar, brand new condition,nylon strings, $20 with case. Marc Leo¬pold. 510 B-J, Ml 3-6000. Students interested in taking advantageof a group discount ticket to Miamiduring winter interim, please call MarvFriedman, B-J.Completed O-Board applications by De¬cember 5. Be sure recommendations(two with each application) accompanyapplication.Riders or ride, leaving about December17th, fast trip to _J.os Angeles. Bam¬berger, HY 3-4366, evenings.Services Wanted Wanted: Female to share 3'/2 roomapartment, 49th and Drexel. Call Ken¬wood 8-2786 after 6 p.m.nique", ond "Military Rock Climb¬ing, Movement of Troops". JeonDevoux will speak on "North* faces".Wednesday, December 8Zoology club meeting, 4:30 p.m.,Zoology 14. Speaker, William K.Baker, Oak Ridge national labora¬tory, on "Gene position and geneaction".Lecture illustroted with music: "Con¬temporary trends in Jewish thoughtond music", by Ira ond JudithEisenstein. 8 p.m., 5715 Wood¬lawn. Dr. Eisenstein, Anshe Emetcongregation, is eminent authorond leader of the reconstructionistmovement; Mrs. Eisenstein is na¬tionally known music researcherond lecturer.Symposium: "Climatic change", 7:30pm., Eckhart 133. Speakers, Le-lond Hurberg, on "The geologicalrecord", and Cesare Emilieni, on"Change in ocean temperatures".Sponsors, American Meteorologicalsociety ond Earth Sciences seminar.English country dancing, 8-10 p.m.,Ida Noyes cloister club. Instructionfor beginners. Wear rubber-soledshoes.Thursday, December 9Pre-Med club donee, 6:30-10 p m.,Ida Noyes. Contact Room 710, B-J, before Tuesday if you plan toattend.Film: "Charlie Chaplin Festival A"(American). 7 and 9 p.m. Inter¬national house. Admission 35c.Symposium: "Climatic change", 7:30p.m., Eckhart 1 33. Speakers, SverrePetterssen, on "The meteorologicalrecord", ond Harold C. Urey, on"The phyiscol basis of climaticchange". Local moving. Express service to andfrom freight depots. Rates reasonable.1309 E. 60th, MU 4-0435, John Sutcliffe.Typing done. Term papers and theses.Call KE 6-8689. Mrs. Stanley Bohn.Photography by Don Chapp carefxillydone at reasonable rates. Call MU 4-0563evenings.Dressmaking, alterations. Quick service.FA 4-7647, mornings or evenings. Female student: Will exchange room and Persona!board in lovely home for baby sitting,dishes, own room and bath. Call DR3-4684.For SaleOak studio couch, floor fan. oak dinetteset. Many other nearly new qualityitems priced for quick sale. Leavingcity. Mornings, evenings, DO 3-0334. Riders to Denver, Colorado, Sunday,December 5. Return January 3. ContactJ. Richman, MU 4-5506.Research lab assistant. Prefer some col¬lege female with physics and/or mathbackground. Technical duties Includeoperation of scientific measuring equip¬ment, analysis of data, plotting and fit¬ting curves to data, etc. Excellent com¬pany benefits. 5-day week. Good salaryrates. Ideal conditions. Apply Employ¬ment Department, Zenith Radio Cor¬poration, 6001 W. Dickens at Austin.Two male students desire to rent apart¬ment during Christmas interim. ContactArredondo, 426 B-J, MI 3-6000. To whom It may concern! Please stoptaking down our Wash Prom postersStudent Union.Magnolia: I can’t go through with ItI’d rather go home to mother. (Signed)Oedipus. ^Ramona or anydne: Why don’t youwrite? My address is in Sports BriefsJustin.Z. B. You’re not paying your classifiedad bills. The Business Staff.Dragon: H;ippy Birthday. Will send cardnext week. Love. J. B.Boston and New York, Cleveland andHoward Johnsons; a good trip, S:un Tep-litz and group.HEARD THE NEWS?Now you con buy AMERICAN EXPRESSMONEY ORDERSatREADER’S CAMPUS DRUG STORE1001 E. 61st Street Pay gas - light - phone bills tooA CAMPUS-TO-CAREER CASE HISTORYW. D. Garland, E.E. ’52, Univ. ofCalifornia, is working for the PacificTelephone Company. We thoughtyou’d be interested in what Dontold us about his first assignment.(Reading time: 45 seconds)Here Don Garland makes noise distribution measurementswith a Level Distribution RecorderMiy job is to help solve problemsof noise and other interference on tele¬phone lines due to power interference.Inductive co-ordination is the technicalterm for the work.‘‘First thing the Chief Engineer ex¬plained to me was that ‘all the answersaren’t in the book.’ He was right. Mostof the problems have required a com¬bination of electrical engineering, aknowledge of costs and generousamount of ingenuity. I like it that way.It’s given me an immediate opportunityto put into practice the theory I learnedat school. “In addition to this on-the-job ex¬perience, I have attended several spe¬cial training courses conducted by thecompany. Now I’m breaking in a newman, just like when I started.”• • •Don Garland’s work is typical of manyengineering assignments in the BellTelephone Companies. There are simi¬lar opportunities for college graduateswith Bell Telephone Laboratories,Western Electric and Sandia Corpora¬tion. If you’d like to get more details,see your Placement Officer, He will beglad to help you.BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEMDecember 3, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7iscriminatory file reflects UC areaby Palmer PinneyAny University of Chicago student seeking an apartment this week might have comeacross a card in the University’s housing file carrying the following address and information:0040 Ingleside, 2 rooms, 1 bathroom, 2 single beds, $32.50 per month, available from Oct. 1.Any Chicago student desiring this particular apartment might have left the housing bu¬reau's files on the Administration building’s first floor, walked west to Ingleside and south tojust short of 61st Street, and read a sign in the window of 6040: 2 Room Apt., Furnished,stove and refrig., also Sleep- —ing Room (White).And any Negro studentreading this sign wouldturned back toward campus, per- :APT.FURNISHED$ TOVI R £ F ff f &-SLEEPING(white.f Photo by TiptonListed in the housing file is this apartment at 6040 Ingleside.formed us that no vacancies ex- of concern. As a member of theisted. Subsequent to'our visit, sev- Woodlawn Property Owners’have eral white friends secured apart- league, the business agent for thements. An obvious case of dis- school was active in promotinghaps to try another address from crimination.” restrictive covenants throughoutthe University’s file. Speaking of the Midway Plais- the area.”Problems arising from the list- a^e APts-; the same student said Supreme Court rulesing of discriminatory landlords in The landlords son told us that In May of 1948 the Unitedtiu' hmisinr file are neither recent vacancies existed. We were to States Supreme Court declared,u t ire In fact a little over four come back the next day and make that covenants which restrict the the occupancy standards agree- nance standards for all buildings.no ‘ ‘ final arrangements for renting, purchase and occupancy of land ment; an agreement imposing lim- One of these responses is givenThe landlord told us that day that on a racial or religious basis can itations on the use of property >n the Local Community Factit was a mistake by his son.” no longer be enforced by the such as limiting the number of Book for Chicago, 1950: “EeforeProblems and incidents like courts. persons per room, preventing con- the Negroes moved in, Hyde Parkhlo nniv to Neeroes This^sv'stem these, arising from the listing of Since then one of the chief re- versions which create crowding, had experienced an increase insaved some embarrassment to Ne- discriminatory landlords in the Sponses to Negro influx has been and agreeing to certain mainte- conversions; this was acceleratedhousing file, hurt the individualsyears ago, the housing bureaumaintained two files, one gener¬ally available only to white stu¬dents, the other generally availpro students, but it also createdembarrassment for landlords whowere asked whether or not theywould accept Negro students, and involved very much in themselves.But in order to be understood theymust be set in a background,resulted in a Negro file that listed and S!°nuS ,pa„ °f a total sitaa'tion. In Hyde Park, as in otherhousing generally more extensiveand further distant than thatgiven in the white file. city communities, the key to thistotal situation is the influx of_ , . „„„„ , Negroes into previously all- orIn February of 1950 three stu- nearly all-white areas. Concert band reorganized:to play Sat. at Field Housedents met twice with Dean Rob¬ert E. Strozier protesting this sys¬tem. As a result of the meetingsDean Strozier, in the words ofone of the participating students,”... announced that beginningwith the summer quarter the sep¬arate filing system would be abol¬ished. He did not feel that the Population ChangesIn the decade between 1930-40,total Negro population in HydePark—between 51st and 60th, andfrom Cottage Grove to Lake Mich¬igan—rose only ten per cent. Inthe decade 1940 50 it rose 206 percent. Total Negro distribution inthat decade increased to 3.2 perUniversity could at this time re- cent( having remained at a confuse to list rooms of landlords stant 1.1 per cent during the pre-w ho are known to follow a dis- ceding ten years. These dry per-criminatory policy but said that centages evoked some warm re-no such notations would be made sponses from organizations inon the cards. He said, further, Hyde Park.Before 1948 these responsestook the form of race restrictivecovenants: written promises byin their Pr°Perty owners not to sell orrent property in some cases toany “non-Caucasian” and in otherthat a letter would be sent to alllandlords informing them of thisnew policy. ... It is hoped that,in this way, landlords will be lessprone to discriminaterenting policy.”No change since 1950“At thisup to the present, and landlordsseem as prone to discriminatenow as they did four years ago.In the summer of 1953, for in¬stance, two Negro students soughtan apartment near the University.According to one of them, nowliving in Burton-Judson courts,“Upon finding a vacancy listedin the University housing files,we attempted to secure an apart¬ment at Midway Drexel Apts, stitution might be surrounded by October 1898. William Rainey(6020 Drexel). The landlord in- a Negro community has long been Harper, first president of the Uni- Photo by TiptonDespite contradicting labels, this is the UC Concert Band, one¬time owner of the world’s largest bass drum, at practice for itsappearance at tomorrow night’s basketball game in the field house.Left to right are, in back row: Carol Werner, Roland Finston, LewisGross, and Benjamin Muckenhoupt; front row: Neil Huffaker,Marty Campbell, and Sam Teplitz. Conducting is Bill Kaplan.by Don FisherUC Concert band is now back on the Quadrangles, and will streetswith the coming of this newgroup. The formation of theSoutheast Chicago commissionrepresents an effort on the partof the community to stay the tideof conversions and to maintainHyde Park as a middle class resi¬dential area for ail racial groups.Leadership in the commission isproyided by the University of Chi¬cago.”UC sets policyAnd again from the thesis: “InWoodlawn, a number of newapartment buildings have beenerected both by the University ofChicago and by private builders.In addition, the University hasbought a number of old buildingand remodeled them. They are at¬tempting to raise the propertyvalues of the community by newbuilding and to make the neigh¬borhood more attractive to peoplein a higher income bracket.”University policy is apparentlyaimed at maintaining Hyde Parkand the northern portion of Wood¬lawn — Woodlawn lies betweenSouth Park Avenue and LakeMichigan, and 60th and 67thas an interracial middletime" has extended SongoliaiTor j'ew'Eh anees'?™1 make its first appearance resplendent with new uniforms, class residential area. HoweverOne of these responses was stated Saturday at 8 p.m. at the Field house to give support to the judging from the experience ofby the author of a Master’s thesis Maroon basketball team in their game with Chicago Teachers three law school students, thissubmitted in 1951 on The Neigh- college.horhood Improvement Associa- T f ,,nder the nresident- versity and so,° cornet in 1heLast year, under tne president group organized the band. The area can be said to be interracialonly in a limited sense.Students look for homeThese three students, one ofthem Negro, started searching forharry lundinteriors5236 s. blockstonemu 4-5300open thurs. eves. tion: A Counter-Force to the Ex- , . . _ , ,pansion of Chicago’s Negro Popu- shlP of Roland Finston, the band organization made its first pub-Iation: “The western section of played at five basketball games lie appearance on December 16,Hyde Park and neighboring and performed for the Acrothea- 1898, and was an immediate sue- an apartment together onSeptem-Woodlawn is dominated by the tre 'Show in Mandel hall. cess. Remunerations offered to ber 18 °* this year. At first theyUniversity of Chicago commu- The history of the band has students giving time to the group went to real estate agents. AHnity. The possibility that this in- been both long and colorful. In helped in the growth as well as th^ee of thei«- well dressed andH the popularity of the group. over 21< went through approxi-In 1922, C. D. Greenleaf, prom- lately the same routine eachinent alto player in the band, gave time they entered a real estate of-the University 100 instruments, Rce- They spoke to a secretary,among them “Big Bertha,” the telling her they were willing tolargest bass drum in the world, fake anything from 414 to sevenlounge bed of wrought ironand colorful tartan, gay, newand comfortable, too!The ideal lounge bed for your home, or child’sroom. We show it with sturdy black wroughtiron base, no-sag spring unit and a really •com¬fortable innerspring mattress covered in black,gray and red cotton tartan.Mattress reverses for extra wear, has a plumpmatching pillow filled with crushed chicken feath¬ers. Very compact,measures 28 x 73 inch¬es. Attractive, easy-to-clean! Save now at thisspecial price!with reversible innerspringmattress and pillow,complete39 50 The giant was more than eightfeet in diameter and required aspecial express car for its trans¬portation when it traveled withthe band and football team.When the drum had been com¬pleted in the Conn factor in Elk¬hart it was too large to be re¬moved from the building; conse- rooms anywhere from Marylandto Harper and from 47th to 59thstreets. The secretary gave thema list of places. They were askedto fill out an application, and toldthat the renting agent had tospeak to the owner, and so theyshould wait until phoned.After this, they attempted phon-quently, a portion of the factory mg, using numbers given in news-wall was removed. Throughout PaPer classified sections. Theythe years, the drum proved a called about 60 places in this way,troublesome mascot, but one of were told to see various superin-which the team was, nevertheless, tendents, and after deciding, inproud. Bertha now resides in the most cases, to rent, were eithermuseum in Indiana. given the application routine orUC had a real concert band for told that students aren’t a goodthe first time in 1928. Peter Clark risk or that the owner was awaywas conducting, and under his on vacation,direction the football parade band All attempts unsuccessfulwas regrouped Into a straight Next they tried agents whoconcert band. The band’s best year dealt in Negro real estate, butwas 1930, not only on the local these agents were willing to rentlevel, where it was the most pop- only at prohibitive prices. In allular activity on campus, but in these attempts they had refer-competition with all “Big Ten” ences from law school officialsschools, Chicago’s band ranked and prominent men both in thefirst from every angle. city and elsewhere.One of the main reasons for On September 26 they werethe band’s popularity was its rented a place by the landlord’sbreaking of tradition. It was no wife, who evidently didn’t detectlonger a military band, but a top- the skin color of one of them,notch parade and concert band lor later the landlord told themwhich introduced the “stutter that he wanted to serve noticestep” and the “crash halt” as part on them. On October 1 they aban-of its marvelous stunt formations, doned the struggle and split up,Not only did band members also having tried real estate agents!sing, but now they even began newspaper ads, and several hous-four part vocal harmony. ing file addresses. Only one ofThe current band, meeting ev- the places they tried said an out-ery Tuesday night at Sunny gym, right, “We don’t take Negroes.”5823 Kenwood, at 8 p.m., is build- Visits cause evictioning on its present membership of There have even been two25 players. See ‘Housing,’ page 1Zf*9« 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 3, 1954Playwrights Shakuntala creative;fantasy varied, flavor refreshingA colorful Indian fantasy is now in performance at Playwrights. In their production ofShakuntala by Kalidasa (written between the first and third centuries), the directors haveincorporated material from Kalidasa’s sources, the Mahabarhata and the Ramayana, re¬sulting in a rich creative presentation.The attractive feature of Shakuntala is its wholehearted spirit of abandon, its refreshingspirit of “diversified and unponfined play.” One happily notes Kalidasa’s ignorance of stageconventions and the absence of *the usual “unities.” This is not their son.to say that Shakuntala is one Through all the diverse facetsbig bundle of confused frolic, forthe central theme is of a serious,touching folk nature. Yet all arti¬fice is dropped and the simple,varied sentiments of the partici¬pants are allowed free reign.In bare outline the plot con¬cerns a youthful, good-naturedking with an intense desire fora son, the king’s selfish highpriest, and a humble yet per¬ceptive, prophetic hermit. Thepriest, while praying intenselyfor a son for the king, gets side¬tracked by a beautiful nymphwho promises him a son, andthe result is his daughter, Sha¬kuntala, whom he curses andwho is adopted by the hermit.Shakuntala is a gentle sweet of the play: Shakuntala’s soft,firm determination to regainher forgetful lover, and the boy¬ishness and boisterousness oftheir son; the hilarious comicinterlude with the clever, sharp-tongued mendicant and his deal¬ings with a gullible merchantand the merchant’s amusinglysluttish wife; through the ado¬ration for Shakuntala of thechief sculptor who is also thefrenzied museum guide, whohundreds of years later is en¬tranced by the sculpture;through all this runs the streamof a vivid, colorful fantasy,varied in scope, legendary incharacter, free in spirit.Unfortunately, the cast seemsyoung girl, and when she acci- to feel somewhat uneasy in somedentally meets the king some of the roles. Perhaps the unusualyears later in her guardian's her- form of the play is the disruptingmitage, the two fall in love. The factor, but be that as it may, fewking vanishes and Shakuntala sits of the cast are able to thrustquietly in her garden, convinced themselves into the mood of the king is unspectacular thoughcompetent, and VernonSchwartz as Durvasas the high-priest portrays well the latter’svicious, morbid nature.Shakuntala is sensitively playedby Sarah Mineo and Ranne Sioux’characterization of her son vs re¬plete with boyish gusto. To thisreviewer, the most pleasant as¬pect of the production was An¬tony Holland’s clear, pointed Mad-havya, the mendicant. His verypronounced and somewhat arti¬ficial diction fitted very well intothe part of a clever roguish hyp¬ocrite.The Manipuri dancing ofNina Guha is absorbing; par¬ticularly so, was her exquisiteuse of her hands. In fact,throughout the performancethis device — manipulation ofthe hands (mostly on the partof the women)—did much to en¬hance the expression.united; and thus they are — as if each actor had acted in athrough the adoration of the different key.king's chief sculptor (who usesher as his model for an inspiredsculpture which delights the king,and causes him to send for themodel t; and through the inno¬cence and adventurousness of In particular, Kdward Asnerhas a tendency to lean towardthe grandiose in his roles; asthe hermit, his accentuated dic¬tion and eloquent tone are outof place. Rolf Forsberg as theGrace Creswell singsfolk songs in MandelGrace Creswell, soprano, willpresent a program of Americanfolk songs at the fourth Univer¬sity of Chicago concert of the sea¬son on Friday.English and Scotch ballads aspreserved in the Southern Appa¬lachian mountains will providethe program for the concert, tobe held at 8:30 p.m. in Mandel hall.Miss Creswell, who grew up inJAPAN ART SHOPShop small but reliable1342 E. 55 St.Ml 3-9408 the Tennessee mountains, form¬erly conducted a radio program,“The Hill Girl,” in Nashville, Ten¬nessee. She has sung her specialbrand of folk music at concertson the campuses of universitiesall over the country. UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57th✓ Fine haircuttingTwo barbers workingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor(iEnjoy Our Fine Continental Cuisine inKelaxed Atmosphere"CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Doily (except Mondays) from 4:30 - 10:00Sundays — 12 Noon - 10 P.M.150ft E. 57tli Street Phone I'l.nza 2-JI555(z/iaA . /? 'rrlAs.\ m$MMUClois"! er CLb c\'\2IVeHie ‘bhiller t his Or^he^fraDec. 4uSl/COMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.Golden Brown SouthernFried ChickenDelivered $1.00Delivery AnywhereFA 4-5525 A SEASONABLE THOUQHT:Our stock includes a fine selection ofIMPORTED BOOKSin all fields at civilized pricesHandsomely yiSi-wrappedmailed free in the U.S.SCHNEEMANN'SRed Door Book Shop1328 East 57th Street NOrmal 7-6111*Kook-Cellar to the University Community" The AMERICAN OPERA COEye Examinations presentsVisual Training RIGOLETTOby Verdi — in ItalianDr. Kurt Rosenbaumuptornetrist Featuring SHEILA MEYERS, 12-year-old Soprano, plus full cast,chorus and orchestra.EDWARD EARLY, Conductor1132 E. 55th Street INTERNATIONALHOUSEHYde Park 3-8372 Saturday, Dec. 11 — 8:15 P.M.Tickets: $1.50, $2. $2.50, $3A CASA Book StoreCHRISTMAS CARDSCONTEMPORARY -CONVENTIONALIMPORTED FOREIGN LANGUAGEFeaturing one of the largest and most distinctivecollections of 5c cards in the cityHY 3-9651 1117 E. 55th StreetThe latest point of interest isthat they shall one dav be re- work. The impression was almost simple setting, which consist¬ed of four or five large screens atangles to each other and provedappropriate for the many tab¬leaux. Yet in certain significant,intense scenes a more vivid, imag¬inative background would havebeen preferable. Joel Plchery ANYTHINGat the HYDE PARK LETTER SHOP5646 S. Harper Ave. (37 > HY 3-5343HELP WANTEDS We need men who are interested in selling. You 2E do not need to be experienced. If you can obtain EZ the use of a car and are willing to learn, we will £mm mmS pay a guaranteed salary, a very high commission, jjjZ and a bonus. Only three sales means $135 in your Z; pocket. Work evenings and weekends at your z2 convenience. This will not interfere with school. 2E No matter what your field, you must be able to z» sell yourself. We will teach you while you earn, z2 Call HU 6-0583 anytime before Thursday.Ask for Mr. GoldennBfBiifiitiamaBaBiaBiBBiBiaifaiiBfBifiaiiifiimBBiiBBBaaiaiaiiaiiiimi?This Ad is WoHh ' 15°°on the purchaseof this completeHIGH FIDELITY SYSTEMSmand enjoy aprofessionalhome musicsystem ofyour own.PermofluxDiminuetteSpeaker System lessBringthis ad toDDn artfiurKrU nagel, Inc.918 East 55th Street _” Butterfield 8-5050Hours: 9 a m to 6 p.m., Mon. thru Sat. If you bring this ad.U29”Visit usand see the latestequipment in Hi Fi.• Easy Lay-A-Way Plan# Convenient Time Paymentse Generous Trade-in AllowancesOpen Wed. evenings to 9. iDecember I, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON rageItalian film depicts miners’ tripstruggle through alps for workThe Path of Hope, an Italian film with English subtitles, is opening in Chicago today at theCinema Annex, 3210 Madison. The film deals with a group of Sicilian sulphur miners who,unable to support themselves, leave with their families in order to find work in France.To afford the illegal entry which they must make, the Italian villagers take a long anddifficult trip through northern Italy, and over the Alps. Many give up hope before Franceis reached. ;Kaf Vallone plays a widow- have traveled across a whole ooun- film, the Italian Salt o# theer with three children who try tor a chance at life in a new It was directed by Pietromanages to save the beautiful Germi, and was filmed in Italy,Plena Varzi from a bandit during Exhaustion, desperation, en- Sicily, and the Alps. The projectthe course of the journey. treaty are written on their faces, involved such feats as photog-When it seems that the limit of Their hopes, their lives are in his raphy six thousand feet high inendurance is reached they arrive hands; without a word, with a the snowy Alps, and the playingat the frontier. There they are £e|stur* °* understanding he 0f scenes 1200 feet down in asurprised by French and Italian hr,‘des away. The other guards sulphur mine. Crowd scenes andguards on skis. •'Where are you ,ollow The Journey is over. Hope parts w*re taken from life.— bes beyond. The movie took five months toMany critics have eaWed this complete.Glee club to premier Provencalcarols excavated from UC libraryThe University Glee club, conducted by Peter Gram Swing,will present its annual Christmas concert in Bond chapel nextFriday at 8 p.m.Featured on the program will be two Provencal carols neverbefore sung in the United States, and of which Harper libraryhas one of the only two extant copies. A motet by ThomasTallis, “O Nala Lux,” will also included in the program Are Byrd, Twelve year old starsin even older operaAn International house audience will hear the operaticdebut of a twelve-year-old soprano from Gary, Indiana, onDecember 11, when the Loop’s well known American Operacompany will travel out here for a special performance ofVerdi’s Rigoletto.Mme. Anna Del Preda, general director of the opera com¬pany and “discoverer” of the American Opera company said re-coming from?’’ asks the Frenchguard. "From Sicily," is the an¬swer. In amazement and pity theFrenchman looks at the men, thewomen, and the children, whoPlaywrights Theatre Club1205 N. DeorbornTONIGHT AT 7:30Tues. fhru Sot. 8:30fht romantic Hindu fantasySHAKUNTALAauthentic Manipuri dancesfor phone resv. & membershipsCall WHitehall 3-2272I Htl DRK.N S THF.ATREI'bis Afternoon at 2:30flans Christian Andersen's"The Emperor's New Clothes'* unusual young singer, willbring Sheila Meyers, whomshe calls Ma beautiful twelve-year-old child with the voice of awoman,” to head a speciallychosen cast for the Verdi opera.Supporting Sheila, who will singthe role of Gilda, will be LeMoyneHohenstein as Rigoletto and acast that includes Bert Sterling,Ambrose LoPresti, Beatrice Rie¬ger. Francis DiSimini, GeorgeGaynor. Raife Sanberg, Gene Cor¬bin and Greta Ynve. Chorus andorchestra, made up of membersof the Chicago Civic Opera com¬pany, will round out the produc¬tion. Maestro Edward Early willconduct.Sheila Meyers is the youngestsinger Mme. Del Preda has everencountered in 25 years of operamanagement to undertake a fulllength opera role in a major pro¬duction, the noted head of the cently. This will be Sheila's debut,although she has a backgroundin music, dancing and dramatics;she has sung, danced, and appear¬ed in school affairs and has sungon Chicago radio stations but thiswill be her first big-time venture.The Rigoletto production at In¬ternational house on December 11will begin at 8:15 p.m.Ticket prices are $1.50, $2. $2.50,and $3; all UC students may claima 20 per cent discount on identi¬fication.Open art showAn exhibit of paintings,drawings, prints, and smallsculpture will open Saturdayat 8 p.m. in Goodspeed with aholiday party for members andguests of the Renaissance soeiety,be given for the firat time inChicago,From the Magnificat in F.-Flatby J. S. Bach, the Glee club willsing "Vom Himmel Hoeh.” AlsoINTERNATIONALiant f.oiiMan. A Thnr*. HOUSE HO VIESEves. «l 7:00 A 9:00 P.M.Monday, Dec. 6, 45cThursday, Dec. 9, 35c - - Tight Little Island (British)Chaplin Festival A (American) “Salve Sanctus Parens,” Holst,"On Christmas Day,” Brahms,"Marienlieder,” a collection of He¬brew Christmas music, Sweelinck,“Hodie Christus Natus Est,” andJ. S. Bach, "To Thee Alone BeGlory,” from Cantata 41.Accompanying the Glee club onBond chapel’s baroque organ willbe William Hutchinson. Fifth annual performance ofHandel’s Messiah this SundayUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOAPPOINTMENT CALENDARA beautiful 8 Vi x 11 -inch calendar, printed in two colors,with a campus scene on every page.AVAILABLE DEC. 10, AT U. OF C. BOOKSTORE $STUDENT PRICE $1 Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226STUDENT DISCOUNTDELIVERY SERVICE The University of Chicago choirand members of the Chicago Sym¬phony orchestra will give a per¬formance of Handel’s MessiahSunday at 3 p.m. in Rockefellerchapel.Student tickets at $1 are avail¬able today only; an ID card is re¬quired. Tickets are available oncampus at the chapel office, Stu¬dent Service center in the Rey¬nolds club, and Woodworth’s book¬store. General admission is $2. This fifth annual performanceof the Messiah by the Universitychoir will be given by a chorus of42 and an orchestra of 21 players.Handel’s original score will beplayed in this Baroque perform¬ance Messiah. (A Mozart arrange¬ment is commonly used.)Richard Vikstrom will conductand the soloists are Denis Cowan,tenor; Audrey Paul, contralto;Kay Graves, bass; Dorothy Krieg,soprano; and Heinrich Fleischer,organist.Theno 7 907i hyde park theatre lake parkat 53rdstudent rate 50<Now playingAudrey HepburnWinner of Ihe Best Actress Academy Aword »n 1954 , . . winner ofNew York critics' best femole performance ciword for her stoge bitOndine.William Wyler's Sabrinawiider's Roman HolidayBoth rated current and choice — Time magazine.Coming soon: Caine Mutiny, Rear Window: High and Dry; Bread, Loveand Dreams; Mr. Hulot's Holiday, and Flomcnceou. Disc1369 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekBritten — Ceremony ofCorotsCopenhagen Boy's Choirconducted by BrittenLD 9102 $2.95NICKY'SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55th StreetNO 7-9063 ,Frrr delivery to l/. of f. studentsOn any orderQuick Courteous Service — 6 Days a WeekTable Service11 A M. to 2 A.M„ Delivery Service5 P.M. to 2 A.M.Open HU .** A.M. on Frida* and Saturday the happiestmusic alive.iiiFeaturing theDIXIE DUKESEvery Friday firSaturday nightOpen till 4 & 5 A.M.Free Parkingacross the streetAVALONCOCKTAILLOUNGE(FORMERLYTHE ST. MORITZ)1629 E. 79 St.RE 4-8729 Books Are Gifts of Lasting Value ...Give BOOKS for Christmas!PICASSO AND THE HUMAN COMEDY $25.00A suite of 180 drawings by Picasso concerned with thecomedy of love A collector's item — already out of print!POEMS, 1923 - 1954, by Camming. $ 6.75Brings together for the first time oil the poems fromoil the collections of verse Cummings has published todote. -AS I SEE, by Artxybo.heff $ 7.50More than 100 drawings and two full-color pointings,along with notes ond commentary by the artist.WOODLAND PORTRAITS, by Klute $20.00A collection of superb nature photographs, with photo¬graphic data about each pictureGOTHIC PAINTING — EGYPTIAN PAINTING each $20.00The two latest volumes in Skira's Great Centuries of Paint¬ing series.University of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Avenue 1JYou are cordially invited to aFree Lecture on Christian Scienceentitled “Christian Seienve: The uaj of Healthand Security”By Ella H. Hay, C.S., Member of the Board of Lectureshipof The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ,Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts.Tenth Church of Christ, ScientistOf ChicagoC'hnreh Kdil’iee. 5610 Itlaekatone AvenueTHURSDAY, DEC. 9, 1954At 8:00 P.M. Doors open at 7:15 P.M.it.Page 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 3, 1954Track Clyb 2nd in national contest;lose only to New York Athletic ClubLast Sunday the UC Track Club cross country team turned in a great team performanceto upset long-established Eastern team standings in the National AAU 10,000-meter US crosscountry championship which was sponsored by the Penn athletic club on a rugged 6.4-milecourse in Fairmont park, Philadelphia. The UCTC entered a full eight-man team composedof Paul Baptist, Phil Coleman, Walt Deike, Jim Flynn, Lowell Hawkinson, Hal Higdon, Law-ton Lamb, and Art Omohundro. pmim i*When the final results werein, the New York athletic club,perennial team championsemerged with a narrow threepoint win. scoring 45^ points toUC's total of 48. The* Penn ACwhich had been expected to giveNew York AC its toughest com¬petition finished in third placewith 49 points. The New YorkPioneer club was fourth with 98;Shanahan C.C. finished fifth with107; Penn AC “B-’ team was sixthwith 134; and the Baltimore Olym¬pians placed seventh with 149.Individually the Maroon har¬riers ran well. Phil Coleman, for¬mer Southern Illinois Universityrunner, placed fourth behind God-don McKenzie of the New YorkPioneer club. Browning Ross ofthe Penn AC. and Horace Ashen-felter of the New York AC. WaltDeike placed 10th; Hal Higdon,11th; Lawton Lamb, 15th; Jim List statisticsIn eleven weeks of running,19 members of the cross coun¬try team have traveled a totalof 4,325 miles, most of them inWashington park. This dis¬tance, which literally stretchesacross the country, breaksdown to an average per runnerof 227 miles for eleven weeks,or about 20 miles per week. Flynn, 23rd; Paul Baptist, 28; ArtOmohundro, 30; and Lowell Haw¬kinson, 51; in the field of sixtyrunners.Closeness of the team score canbe indicated by the fact that NewYork AC scored 3, 6, 9, 10, and 17,while UC scored 4, 7, 8, 11, and18, in the team scoring after un¬attached runners were eliminated.The New York team consistedof former Champions Horace andBill Ashenfelter, Curtis Stone,Fred Schoeffler, and CharlesTrayford. Frosh-soph basketballers split twoIn spite of a frosh-soph basketball loss to Westcott Vocationalschool’s juniors earlier yesterday afternoon, 30-24, Joe Stampf’s JVteam came back to beat the senior team, 30-22, in llartlett.High scorers for U-high were Ray Hardvall, forward, and JoelWolff, center, each with eight points.2>«iiiiiiiiaimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiti««iitiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiimmmmiivnimv«Mci«ivvimviiiuil|«laiimf||a||||ALEXANDER’SRESTAURANTi 1137 E. 63 Street MU 4-5735 >More than just a good place to eatWe cater to parties and banquets5 §HOME PLASTICSDraperies - Curtains - Roinware10 % Student Discount1303 E. 55th StreetNO 7-5K90 Sports CalendarToday: Swimming, Wright Jr. College, 3 :30 p.m.,Bartlett pool.Tomorrow: Basketball, Chicago Teachers, 8 p.m.,Fieldhouse.Tuesday: JV Basketball, Calumet H. S., 3:15p.m,, Bartlett gym.Wednesday: Basketball, III. Prof. Schools, 8 p.m.,Fieldhouse. TERRY’S PIZZAfinest pizzas madet| FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95We also carry a full line of Italian foods1518 E. 63rd St. " Ml 3-4045Students' FavoriteLAUNDROMATFor the Past Six Years1. Efficient LaundromatService2. Shirts - Flat Work -All Laundry Services3. Lowest Prices inHyde ParkCome In and See OurNewly Remodeled Storewith the LATEST EquipmentUNIVERSITYLAUNDROMAT1376 E. 55th St. PL 2-9097New "Silvered-Tip" write*the way you do . . . fine,medium or broad ,with¬out changing point*. Re-Jills available in blue, red,green or black ink. Get aPaper-Mate Pen todayl• Bankers approve• ink can’t smear: vor transfer• Can’t leakSilvered>Tiprefills... 49#rei*Traded WHAT’S THIS DROODLE?For solution see paragraph below.LADY SCRUTINIZING SKYIN MIRROR AFTER USINOVANISHING CREAMLili WhitfieldUniversity of North Carolina SWISS CHEESE MAD*•Y I.8.M. MACHINSMart FinkBrooklyn CollegeTREE BEING FELLiOtV MIDGET ANO TALL FRIENDDonald O. KistnerTexas Tech GIRL WITH PONT TAILBIDING FONTWilliam H. HarrisWashington State CollegeACCORDING TO THE LARGEST and latest coast-to-coastcollege survey, college smokers prefer Luckies—andby a wide margin. The No. 1 reason: Luckies tastebetter. Thousands of students appreciate Luckies’better taste almost as much as the pair in the Droodleabove, titled: Sweethearts attempting to kiss andenjoy better-tasting Luckies at same time. Luckiestaste better for good reasons. First of all, LuckyStrike means fine tobacco. Then, “It's Toasted” totaste better. This famous Lucky Strike process tonesup Luckies’ light, good-tasting tobacco to make ittaste even better—cleaner, fresher, smoother. So,enjoy the better-tasting cigarette . • • Lucky Strike.T3ettea taste Luckies...LUCKIES TASTE BETTERCLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!©A. T. Cd, NODVCT Of Lucky D rood leu* are pouring infWhere are yours? We pay $25 forall we use, and for many we don’tuse. So send every original Droodlein your noodle, with its descriptivetitle, to Lucky Droodle, P.O. Box 67,New Yo k 46, N.Y.• DROODLF.S, Copyright 1953, by Roger PrMAMERICA'S LEAPING MANUFACTURES OR CIGARETTE'SDecember 3, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 11Sports BriefsProfessor Finer flails fighters;Is told sportmanship is corny U C wins basketball startMaroon basketball fans, that select few, went home smiling through their tears Wednes-, .. . , day night after the varsity opened their 1954-55 season by trouncing the Fifth Army head-Evidently operating oni the pnncipie that political science stu- quarters team 71 to 49. Although the score was high the caliber of play was low, and it wast°r"0dnas'hreeda OH a TwS ™ <* opposition which prevented a different out^Je. ’hampionship fight. A fyPlcal early season game, it was rough and very ragged, and the roughhouse was notFormer welterweight Finer—who still enjoys the pugilistic game pttrbed^by^the eiratiC foul calling of the teferees. At some times the most blatant fouls wereover television-complained about the phony alibis and bad sports- ignored while at others body ~ firct v„r„itv tramp oivn thic tD!lm ♦{-..’TITimanship of one of the fighters. “Aren’t we all tired to death of clinch- contact alone was enough to Wayne Pomrehn a 6'5" renter test * 1es and rabbit-punches, and men who instead of appreciating the provoke a penalty. Even a was in briefly to’mve Fred Hub- Chicago Fifth Armv hqssuperiority of the other man, try to find alibis? What kind of lesson technical foul on A1 Binford for bard a breather, and looks like Feinber„ Ff 7 F5 Fg ^ pis this to our youth. bouncing the ball too hard after be wdj bejp as will Jim Strawn, Garcia ° oDaily News sportswriter Jack Mabley replied (in part): “Dear a penalty call, failed to halt the another tall guy Hubbard 3Herman, don’t bring youth into it. If our youths are going to get their mayhem. Satnrriav thP Marnnn* will cm omoral inspiration from what they see in the boxing ring and on tele- High scorer for the Maroons a„ainst their first college comne- chLhofm ?vision, we’re due for some rough years ... Sportsmanship? Don’t be was Bill Lester, the only letter tition of the year when Uiey take Pomrehn ocorny.’’ winning guard returning from on the Chicago Teachers team in ESt™ alast season. Although the smallest the Field house at 8 p.m. Last Thompson oman on the floor throughout year the Teachers gave the squad walker 3much of the game, Bill was out- a sound thrashing in two games, WatkJns 2standing on defense as well as 97 to 65 and 80 to 51. They willcontributing 25 points to the var-Justin Johnson runs again 2**>320010090012 2 Halen1 Terhars4 Olsen0 Vermer1 Hohold1 Tanner0 Merril0 Heuer0 Kauss002025 21 15Justin Johnson, who used to run—and win—the high hurdles andthe broad jump for the UC track team, ran—and lost—a 220-yarddash for the US Air Force recently. He picked up second in the race. ghy Votai*Johnson, who used to be reached at BJ, now needs this information yCoach Norgren started a vet¬eran squad including four mem¬bers of last year’s team. Theystarted very slowly, but werenever behind due to Army’s lackof scoring punch and their ownAlan Bates’ “tigers” proved themselves by defeating an under- fair defensive rebounding whichmanned Moody Bible Institute team Tuesday in a practice meet, rarely allowed the Army more varsity volleyball team, Wheaton college maintained a slimTheir opponents brought only three wrestlers to the meet, and all than three shots at the basket, second-half margin to win 27-25 Tuesday in Ida Noves Thison his letters: A/C Justin M. Johnson, AD 13518996; Group 6, Squad¬ron 1, Flight 2; Box 1540; Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio,Texas.Wrestlers beat Bible Institute !; WAA bows twice in volleyball;Kelly leads 'plaque' contestDespite attempts by the Women’s Athletic association'sthree were beaten by Bates’ boys.rii/ie tjd/iwni which was not enough for themFred Hubbard, who played center the final game of the season,neu nuDDara, wno piayea center „„vp tup tparT1 a vprord of national headquarters are corn-through most of the game, was ? • d defeats P^ed Wlth tjlose .of twenty otherhis usual smooth self, sometimes lW0 wms ana seven aereats. colleges and universities. Highamazing his teammates as much Earlier in the week the varsity ten scores are entered,as the opposition by his unexpect- tpam lost to Navy Pier by 33-20. ,ed passes. Walter Walker, a In this year’s interdormitory 28 swimmersfreshman last year, showed im- competition for the WAA plaque tprovement while putting up a Kelly leads jwith 15 points, five JOT t)i(XCeSfrom places won in the volleyball * *tournament and ten from places vyi ppf tnnrt\)won in the swimming marathon. 111 l'UL4t4VGreen is second.with 13, ten from When coach Moyles’ swimmingvolleyball and three from swim- squad takes on their first compe-ming, Foster gained three in tition of the season today no lessvolleyball and five in swimming than 28 swimmers will be tryingfor a total of eight, and Gates’ for places on the first string in thedefense before fouling out in the lone point came from the swim- ten-event meet,last quarter. Dick Rowland also ming competition. Included among the outstand-contributed actively with 10 Points won in volleyball were in£ prospects are Bob Geidt,points, while Mitch Watkins, an tabulated on the basis of a three- Lance Felker, Eob Herndon Ronr„lf . ^ _ ,, . _. game tournament. Green won two Crutchfield and Mike Mandel.outstanding player on the junior gameS; downing Foster 41-26 and Intramural w inner Bill Whitneyvarsity last year, showed real droppjng Kelly, 34-26. Kelly won and many others are also going tothe remaining game for Foster, make the Chicago team tough this34-22. year-Results of the 16th annual inter- . Events in the meet include ninecollegiate telegraph!# bowling mdividuai contests, and one relay,meet held yesterday afternoon in over 3ar s-Ida Noyes alleys won’t be knownuntil the scores telegraphed toPHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3 4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETR A SNACK...A LUNCH!...A MEAL IVIENNA EDHOT On a freshly steamed bun, we tenderly 5place the puppy dog — not a wiener, but 5a VIEN-NA puppy dog — red hot — pure “beef — accompanied by ■■ ■mustard, relish, onions and * 1 Lw ( Shot pepper, complete with f ■a generous portion of our HI Zfamous french fried potatoes which are ■often imitated but never excelled. Our ENEDLOG orange and root beer is unequaled sand no extra charge is made for carry- Eout containers. SPUPPY TOWN)open until 1 A.M. E1351 E. 55th Street DO 3-9366 sOrders over $1.00 delivered STSiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiE; ^mrunwwwi»wi» HtaBrHi aigHmnrHrmBE ASOUTHERN COLONElHistoricThomas JeffersonKit solid game both on offense anddefense.The brightest spot in the pic¬ture wras the newcomers’ perform¬ance. Joe Feinberg filled out thestarting team and played goodaggressive ball, particularly onEg ELouise Barkerphotographer'‘who capturesyourpersonalityas well asyour person”1457 E. 57th St.BU 8-0876 SAVE TIME — SAVE MONEYN & R Bonded Movers— also —New and Used FurnitureMl 3-4196 1510 E. 55thmFREE4 .4.bet:zCift of interest irt Thomas Jeffer.son Land. 4 square inches —"Southern Plantation" as describedin Free Document (7y8”xl6")your name Lettered on Document.FREEHandsome Colonel’s Certificategiving you the rank of Colonel in"The Confederate States." (8VikII"I your name in Old Englishstyle letters.FREEShort history of the Life andWorks of Thomas Jefferson-withhis picture (printed on back ofLand Document!ALL ABOVE ClVIN FREE — WHIN YOU PURCHASE —FORONLY $1.00 — A HANDSOME COPY <ir’»17”) of THEDECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE — EVERY AMERICANHOME SHOULD HAVE THIS CREAT DOCUMENT FRAMEDPrint Name and Address and Send With $1.00 To HistoricalProperties. Inc., P. O. Bo* 884. Charlottesville. Virginia. YourKit will be sent te you promptly. theGifts Gourmet's Corner 5530 harperStationerys Exquisitely bejeweled ladies' slippers from the Philippines. Eachpair is completely hand-made ond of o different design andcolor. Price $4.95. .mmmmmMOTOR TUNE*5.95 UPsix-cylinder carsJEWEL CONOCO.Service Station and Perfect Car H’aafi —5G01 South Cottage Grove MU 4-9106 FLYUNITEDAIRCOACHLow fares, frequentschedules, and fast flightson United’s 4-Engine AirCoaches help you make ihemost of your vacation.ALSOFamous 1st Class Main-liner Flights with lull-course mealtime service atlares comparable to 1stClass rail with berth.'UNITED-sTHE CHICAGO MAROON December 3, 1954Page izSocial Sciences praisedin report published todayA Report on the Behavioral Sciences, a self-study preparedat UC and sponsored and financed by the Ford foundation,was released by the University of Chicago press today.The report praised the “research-oriented” faculty, divi¬sional organization, caliber of the students, facilities, andpublic relations program; but criticized the shifting of Uni¬versity funds from generalfunds to specific “projects.” havioral sciences comes fromRecommendations of the re- “creative specialized researchesport include changes in organiza- ... in an atmospheie which wel-tion of behavioral sciences, the conies diversity and encouragesestablishment of fellowships and critical discussion, and profes-scholarships, and allotment of S1°nal schools play an importantfunds for informing the public of r<de *n 44ds research.work. Standards may be endangered“The committee is impressed ®ut the report warns that thewith the genuine strength of the University s freedom and highUniversity in the area of the be- standards are endangered by ahavioral sciences, which it match- skl44 • • • of financial suppoit fromed only by interest in its further general University funds to re¬development,” said Sol Tax. pro- s4r*c4ed project funds and thatfessor of anthropology and chair- the University tends too much to¬man of the committee in charge ward mak,nS lts new enterprisesof the study. “We find this inter- Int° permanent commitmentsest in every division in the Uni- Members of the committee thatv e r s i t y , in the professional prepared the report are Tax, Ben-schools, and in the college. The Jam,n S. Bloom, UC examiner andmethod of attack varies greatly, professor of education; Everettbut recognition of the importance 9' Uughes, chairman of the so-of understanding human behavior eiology department; Howard F.is at every hand.” Hunt, associate professor of psy-„ , , .. . chology; Edward H. Levi, dean ofFive schools part.c.pale the law school; and Robert Red-The division of behavioral sci- field. Robert M. Hutchins distin-ences of the Ford foundation in- guished service professor of an-vited 15 universities to submit thropologyproposals for study of their ownactivities in the behavioral sci¬ences. Of the 14 universities thatdid so, the foundation chose theproposals of Harvard. Stanford.North Carolina, Michigan, andChicago, and gave each $50,000with which to conduct its study.In accordance with the founda¬tion’s specifications for the gen¬eral form of the study, Chancel¬lor Lawrence A. Kimpton in thesummer of 1953 appointed a com¬mittee of six faculty members tocomplete the study.The committee found that “theUniversity has the initial advan¬tage of a faculty predominantlyoriented toward research” andthat the “grouping of departmentsinto divisions has encouraged atremendous interchange of ideas.”One of the strengths of UC’s be-Housing...(from page 7)cases of eviction this quarterstemming from Negroes visitingthe apartments of white students.In one of these, it is reported, sixtenants made racist comments inthe presence of the visitors. In theother the student leasing theapartment didn’t know of herneighbor’s feelings until told byher real estate agent.Discriminatory listings in theUniversity housing file seem toreflect, then, discriminatory feel¬ing and practice in the Hyde Parkcommunity, a community inwhich the appraised value of Uni¬versity real estate is nearlytwenty million dollars and inwhich leadership, by virtue of theSoutheast Chicago commission,“is provided by the University ofChicago.”||in'55Round Trip viaSteamship $0 0 AFREQUENT SAILINGS fcWW «R U. C. debatersat U. of IowaStudent Forum debaters Mi¬chael Stanley, Joseph Engel,Roger Bowen, E.nd John Merrillleft yesterday for the Universityof Iowa, where they will partici¬pate in a debate tournament to¬day and tomorrow on the ques¬tion “Resolved: that the UnitedStates should extend diplomaticrecognition to the Communistgovernment of China.”A Chicago team consisting ofRichard Johnson, Engel, HollyO’Connor, and Paul Weiss com¬piled a record of five victories andthree defeats on the same topic atthe Bradley invitational tourna¬ment November 19 and 20.The affirmative team of Engeland Johnson won all four of theirdebates, meriting the highestaward of the tournament, a “su¬perior” certificate, an honor shar¬ed with only twelve of the 142affirmative debaters competing.La bo rite to talkon British policyDr. David Ginsburg, director ofthe research department of theBritish Labor party, will speak at4:30 this afternoon in Social Sci¬ence 107.He will answer questions con¬cerning British politics, includingforeign and domestic policy andintra-party problems. Carnegie Corp.grants a millionfor educationOld 'bohemian' strongholdlacks funds, closes downWhitman Co-op house, once famous stronghold of “bohemi-anism” on the UC campus and one of the last remaining co¬educational student co-ops in the country, finally folded lastmonth.Financial straits and a lack of members finally forced thecollapse of the house, which has been taking tremendous lossesfor the last three years. Thehouse has now been vacatedand the furniture sold, and thebuilding itself is up for sale.In fall 1951 the administration— _ - prohibited the students from liv-Exploring important new devel- jn Whitman because of al-opments on the educational scene teged insufficient separation ofis one basic goal of grants the sexes. (Women lived on theamounting to $1,281,000 announc- second floor of the house and mened this week by the Carnegie cor- °n the third.) Prior to this banporation. ?° PeJ f"4 or ™or,e °f Whitman-Among the grants is one of *tes 413(4 been students.$200,000, which will be divided The same year the house sus-equally among Chicago, Colum- tained a total loss of approximate-bia, Harvard, atul. Yale, to con- ly $5,000. The tailspin continuedtinue for two more years a pro- into last year, and then thingsgram of “internships” in general leveled off. But this fall the houseeducation. suddenly found itself with praeti-Undcr this plan, started three cally no residents. It took severalyears ago with corporation sup- hundred dollars loss for twoport, faculty members from months and then called it quits,smaller colleges participate in the Whitman house is owned by“imaginative general education United Co-operative Projects,programs” at the four universi- which once operated five housingties. “Their experience enables co-ops in the Hyde Park area,smaller colleges to benefit from UCP now has one operating housethe pioneering work of the larger left, Ingleside house for familyschools.” units.Tourist Round Trip Air*365" <£* !424" -Choice of Over 100STUDENT CLASS TOURS $C J ATRAVEL STUDY TOURSCONDUCTED TOURS UpUniversity Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines, hatrendered efficient travel serviceon a business basis since 1926., , ' ''' v ’See your loccl travel agent forfolders and detail* or writeUNIVERSITY TRAVEL, CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mass. 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